The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, March 05, 1914, Image 3

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New JArrivals This it i p/ ’ \ Week WE have received some awfully swell Suits, Skirts and Dresses this week right up-to-the-moment as to Style, Fabric and Workmanship. that are a credit to any firt-class manufacturer. UITS of Silk and Wool, in all the new shades of Blue, Tan, <3 Purple, Tango, Etc., in all the New Crepe Weaves, Silks, Moires, Gabardines, Serges SIO.OO to $40.00 DRESSES of Silk, Wool, Cotton and Lace. Dresses for Street, Church, and Evening wear, everyone bearing the stamp of authenticity of the best producers of the very best in J)ressdom. SKIRTS of Wool, Silk and Cotton in all the new bustle and minaret styles. They have the style, snap and individual ity that so appeal to the good dresser. They should be seen be appreciated $3.50 to $20.00 The sooner you buy the more wear you get out your Suit Dress and Skirt. MIEWMAM-FRIERSDH-McEVER CO. “Ours Are Different.” so us iv 0 Stop a Minute! No — Ye Lovers of High* ? (Condensed) Art Tailored Cloth= , Statement of Condition of Clermont Banking Co., LT ' Clermont. Ga., <ng, call at the Eagle 44 ■ At the close of business Feb. 25, 1914. Office and Let me k .oans and Discounts $16,519 71 Capital Stock $15,0v •X’ Estate and Fixtures- 3,976 59 Undivided Prohts 6ft Guarantee Fund 1,239 80 Dividends Unpaid 2 show you two Sam- 11 52 Deposits. 15,291 and in Banks 14,419 94 Cashier’s Checks 18t ‘ Bills Payable o,OOG -■ole Lines of Ameri- S ; I ”.7: CL ? 36,167 561 36,16. f an and European above is a correct statement of the condition of our bank twe y .. . days after the annual meeting, when last year’s profits were disposed, Woolens in Qualities and naturally we are proud of it, vs i All deposits are guaranteed. Six per cent per annum paid on 7 , , ‘. WW six months or longer. Never shown here bayking business is# solicited. . ‘tXey Feel Good —They Look Nice of goods. They Fit Well Around the Neck . CUT, FIT, AND WORKMANSHIP IS GUARANTEED * W. T. HARRISON, l» ■t ■ ■ i —- __ Cleaning and Dyeing. The business of C. B. CHEEK. Cieanerfendj Dyer, is under a management and in a new, clean building, and offers the same good service to its old customers, and solicits the pat ronage of the new ones. Goods called for and delivered promptly. , ESTEN HOWINGTON. W. Broad St.^‘ ct a lone 628. , , ni 7 " XMrector. tions have - cen made. Ihe medals are then presented with suitable ceremonv to the employees by the mayor at h:< office in the presence of the employers and friends of those to be honored. This institution is held in high regard by those for whom it is in tended. It is. in fact, a form of decoration bestowed by the French government like that of the Legion of Honor. Those who have received the medal are permitted to wear on the lapels of their coats, or, in the case of women, pinned on their cor sages. narrow tricolor ribbons of red. white and blue. This thirty year medal today is regarded as a groat factor in bring ing about solidarity, esprit, loyalty to employers and cordial relations between them and their employees. The humblest laborer is just as much entitled to his tricolor and his medal at the end of thirty years as the head of a department. —New York World. ; 'J - | I I I? n v I S « -- - y—. loa ■ J < vftA' fejjMßio . 18l ft ; -Try The Best Way to Prepare Your Land-- For Spring Planting is with a Chic and Drag Harrow. We have both and the best on the market. ? PRUITT-BARRETT HDW. CO. Gainesville & Northwestern Railroad to Arrive Gainesville. No. 3 : 9.15 a. m Leave Gainesville. No 4 9-45 a ‘ m JNO. 4 4.55 p. m OUR BUSINESS IS BANKING Our effort is to attend to that business Our aim is to please. Our wish, to succeed. Your patronage will be appreciated. Your interest will be cared for. Tfj Os and You’ll bt fleuad STATE BANKING CO., T. E. ATKINS, W. R. WINBURN President. Cashier. R. J. SANDERS, Vice-Pres. Oysters INice and l ? resli HOME-MADE LARD The Best of Everything! Byron Mitchell Gainesville Roller Mill The above concern is now in new hands, H. A. Terrell, M. M. Ham, J. H. Martin and W. N. Oliver having purchased the entire property, and are now putting it first-class order throughout. New belting cloths are being added to the flour mill, and the best flour is being turned out. A machine to clean corn of rotten and faulty grains, etc., has been installed. There is no pellagra in meal from this mill. It tastes like corn bread your mother used to make when you were a boy. Best Flour, Corn Meal, Bran and Shorts Are keptonfhand for sale at all times. Delivery Wagon I will deliver all orders promptly any where in the city. Patronize this home institution; get the. best and enjoy health and long life. Gainesf ille Roller Mill Co, PHONE 269 H, A. TERRELL, Manager. DANGERS OF ROAD DUST. Lade Vith De / er.ms, It is a Seri ous "le .w- .0 Health. T i . Io 1 ssion of the question of the connection between dust and disease, now that so many pe.sons are constantly exposed to dust as they run over country roads in their automobiles. Sir James Crichton Browne, president of an English sanitary inspectors’ associ ation, calls inteniion to the increas ed dangers, warning motorists that they should be careful to dress all cuts or abrasions which lay them open to injection. The germs of tetanus are frequent on these roads and may <-asily be picked up by any open wound. He said, further, that road dust had become a wide spread and in some places intoler able nuisance, calling for prompt abatement. The chief danger at tending it was, however, tetanus or lockjaw, a rare disease no doubt, but one the death rate from which showed a decided increase. All motorists and dwellers on the highway should be warned that they should keep covered and free from road dust all cuts, wounds or abra sions on the hands or face and that they should seek immediate treat ment when road dust had found its way under suspicious circumstances into one of these. Perhaps one of these days the armamentarium of a well appointed motorcar might in clude a tube of tetanus antitoxin for immediate application to the dust impregnated wound. But apart from the risk of its conveying tetanus, road dust was deserving of the severest reproba tion. It might, when dense and tainted with the bacilli, set up tuber culosis. It certainly aggravated it and all other respiratory diseases, and it emulated town dust in setting up putrefactive changes in food and drink. Indirectly, too, it was high ly detrimental to health, for wher ever it abounded the windows of houses, factories and workshops had to be kept closed, and so unneces sary supplies of vital fresh air were cut off. The suppression of road dust was therefore a matter of pri mary sanitary importance and of ever growing importance, owing to the great increase of motor traf fic.—Xew York World. Wagner’s Portrait. When Wagner was in England supervising the first production of his operas, the music enthusiasts commissioned the artist Herkomer to paint the musician’s portrait, but Wagner was dashing about in such a state of frenzy that he re pelled impatiently every attempt to get him to give a “sitting.” Still, Herkomer stuck to him like a lim pet, fed with him, walked and talk ed with him, watched him conduct his orchestra, write music and read books. At last, when every attempt to secure a “sitting” had failed, Herkomer rose early one morning, painted with frenzied speed all day, spent a short night in restless sleep, rose early again and painted furi ously, till on the second evening he sat down exhausted —but with his picture finished. Wagner was called in and threw up his hands in amaze ment. “Ah!” he cried. “Wonder ful! That is exactly how 1 would like to look if I could.” Other Times, Other Manners. Little Miss Progressive had paid an afternoon call upon her new neighbor across the street, who had not been very generous in sharing her toys, from all accounts. “Well,” said her mother in re sponse to her remarks, “if anybody had treated me like that when I was a little girl I should have gone home.” “Umph,” returned the small wo man with a shrug of her shoulders, “things have changed since you were a little girl, mother! I slap ped her face and stayed.”—Wom an’s Home Companion. Water Haul. “Good morning, ma’am. May I ask if your husband is at home?” “He isn’t.” “Perhaps you can tell me what I want to know. Is he carrying any life insurance?” “Is his life insured ? Is that what you mean ?” “Yes, ma’am.” “It is, sir. But don’t make the mistake of thinking he’s doing the carrying of the same. I’m doing that myself. And I’m carrying all he’s worth. Good morning, sir.”— Chicago Tribune. Lighting the Smoke. Let a candle burn until it has a good long snuff, then blow it out with a sudden puff. A bright w-reath of white smoke will curl up from the hot wick. Now, if a flame be applied to this sihoke, even at a distance of two or three inches from the can dle, the flame will run down the smoke and rekindle the wick in a very fantastic manner. To perform this ceremony nicely there must be no draft or “banging” doors while the mystic spell is rising.