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Silverware and Cut Glass
OF RARE BEAUTY
Can be found at our Store, as we have selected a classy line
of patterns for the June bride.
There is a distinctiveness and quality about our patterns that
is uncommon.
Here are a few medium priced susgestions:
Individual Berry Forks Cut Glass Sherberts
Individual Ice Cream Forks Cut Glass Vases
Individual Ice Tea Spoons Cut Glass Tumblers
Individual Salt Spoons Cut Glass Ind. Salts
Individual Orange Spoons Cut Glass Ice Bowls
Individual Salad Forks Cut Glass Water Jugs
By all means come and see our beautiful line of Silverware
and Cut Glass.
Numberless designs can be shown you if you will give us the
chance. We will be especiallv pleased to show you the
newest patterns in TABLE AND HOLLOW WARE.
Geo. E. Lederer,
Jeweler
Watch and Jewelry Repairing a Specialty.
6 Washington Street —next to Sirger Sewing Machine Co.
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FIREPROOF I
* Cannot burn—never leak —look well—and ■
are inexpensive. They cover the best homes, ■
J \ churches, schools and public buildings all over ■
/ \ the country. H
/ \ 7 For Sale by g
A. H. O’SHIELDS, Gainesville, Ga.
OUR BUSINESS IS BANKING |
Our effort is to attend to that business. I
Our aim is to please. 1
Our wish, to succeed.
Y.iur patronage will be appreciated.
our interest will be cared for. >
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STATE BANKING CO.,
T. E. ATKINS, W. R. WINBURN '
President. Cashier. j
R. J. SANDERS, Vice-Pres.
GAINESVILLE RAILWAY AND POWER CO
OWNED! LOCALLY
Furnish Street Car Service, Electric Lights and Power
Reduced Rates on Cars by Purchase of Street Car Tickets.
Schedule and Prices Fuim.hed at Office
Simmons’ Seed Com
For Sale
Samples of Seed Corn and Irish Junipers can be seen a
the Piedmont Drug Store.
Also FRUIT and ORNAMENTAL TREES
GRAPEVINES, ETC.
For prices phone or write —
P. B. Simmons,
PHONE 2704 GAINESVILLE, GA.
SOME DONT’S
For Stomach and Liver
Sufferers
Don’t take medicine for your Stomach ail
menta morning, noon and night, as usually suet
medicines only give temporary relief and simpb
digest the food that happens to be in the Stomach
Don't permit a surgical operation. There is
always serious danger in operations and in man>
cases of Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailment'
the knife can be avoided if the right remedy v
taken in time.
Don’t go around with a foul smelling breath
caused by a disordered Stomach and Liver, to the
discomfort of those you come in contact with.
If you are a Stomach Sufferer don't think you
cannot be helped, probably worse cases than
yours have been restored by Mayr’s Wonderful
Stomach Remedy.
Most stomach ailments are mainly caused by a
catarrhal condition. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach
Remedy not only removes the catarrhal mucous
but allays the chronic inflammation and assist*
in rendering the entire alimentary and intestinal
tract antiseptic, and this is the secret of its mar
velous success.
Don’t suffer constant pain and agony and
allow your stomach ailments to physically under
mine your health. Ko matter how severe your
rase may be or how long you have suffered —one
Tose of Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy
;hould convince you that you can be restored to
lealth again. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy
las been taken and is highly recommended by
rfembers of Congress, Justice of the Supreme
Sourt, Educators, Lawyers, Merchants, Bankers,
Doctors, Druggists. Nurses, Manufacturers,
’nests, Ministers, Farmers and people in all
valks of life.
Send for FREE valuable booklet on Stomach
\ilments to Geo. H. Mayr, 154-156 Whiting St.,
'.hicago, 111.
For Sale by Dr. J. B. George, Gainesville, Ga.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND.. X
Ladles! Ask your Druggist for /A
Chl-ches-ter’s
I*ll Is in Red and bold
boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. \/
Take no other. Buy of your -
Druggist. Ask forCin.CIIEB.TERV>
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 25
years known as Best,Safest, Always Reliable
OBYOMJGGISISEVEBWM
I Are You a Woman ?
I* Cardui
I The Woman’s Tonic
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS
Seashore Excursion
VIA
Southern Railway
Premier Carrier of the South.
I
From Atlanta
Thursday, June 15th, 1914
$6.00 Jacksonville Limit 6 days
SB.OO Tampa Limit 8 days
$6.00 Brunswick Limtt 6 days
$6.00 St. Simon Limit 6 days
$6.00 Cumberland Limit 6 days
$6.00 Atlantic Berch Limit 6 days
Tickets good returning on any regular train within limit
I
|
DAYLIGHT TKAIX
Lv. Atlanta 11.10 a. m.
Ar. Jacksonville 8.20 p. m.
Coaches—Sleeping Cars—Dining Car
■siriiwsmsw—wteMS—a
Two Special Night Trains
I
FIRST SECTION l| SECOND SECTION
Lv. Atlanta 10.00 p. m. Lv. Atlanta 10.10 p. m.
Ar. Jacksonville 8.10 a. m. Jacksonville 8.25 a. m.
Solid Pullman Train First Class Coaches
No Local Stops will be Made.
Passengers for Brunswick, St. Simons and Cumberland will be handled in extra coaches
on Train No. 16 leaving atianta 7.45 am., arriving Brunswick 5.45 p. m.. Al«o in extra
coaches and Pullman sleeping cars on regular Train No. 24 leaving Atlanta 9.35 p. m., arriving
Brunswick 8.00 a. m. Both these trains make direct connection with boats for the Islands.
For furher information ask Southern Railway Ticket Agents
J. C. BEAM, A. G. P. A. R. L: BAYLOR, D. P. A
I Atlanta, Georgia
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Coughs and Colds Weaken
the System
Continued Coughs, Colds and
Bronchial troubles are depressing
and weaken the system. Loss of
weight and appetite generally follow.
Get a 50c. bottle of Dr. King's New
Discovery to-day. It will stop your
cough. The first dose helps. The
best medicine for Stubborn Coughs,
Colds and all Throat and lung
Troubles. Mr. O. H. Brown,
Muscatine, Ala., writes: “My wife
was sick during the hot summer
months and T honestly believe Dr.
King's New Discovery saved her
life.” Good for children. 50c. and
SI.OO, at your Druggist.
HAYE PRETTY HAIR
Thick Soft, Fluffy, and no Dandruff
—Use Parisian Sage.
If your hair is losing its natural
color, coming out and splitting, or
lacks that enviable softness, gloss
and beauty, do not despair—pretty
hair is largely a matter of care. If
it is too thin make it grow. If it is
harsh and brittle soften it up—lubri
cate it. If you have dandruff it is
because the scalp is too dry and
flakes off. Freshen up the scalp
with Parisian Sage—all dandruff
disappears, falling hair and itching
head cease, your hair is doubly
beautiful.
Parisian Sage, sold by Dr. J. B.
George and at all drug counters, is
just what you need —a large bottle
costs but 50 cents. It surely makes
the hair lustrous and seem twice as
abundant. You connot be disap
pointed in Parisian Sage.
r vr.
r. - •
Letters Uncalled For
Remaining on hand in the Gaines
ville post-office for the week ended
June 15, 1914:
ladies:
Miss Nellie Albright, Mrs. A. B.
Allen. Miss Mandy Brown. Mrs.
Minter Brackett. Mrs. Foster Bent
ley, Mrs. Eliza Hubbard, Bell Hen
drix. Miss Beverly Hayden, Mrs.
Dora Kitchen. Miss Simmie Reed,
Miss Mattie Schmitt, Miss Hattie
Smith, Miss Essie Sanders, Miss
Lucile Usher, Miss Bertie Whelcher.
GENTLEMEN;
L. F. Broome, W. T. Cooper,
Willie Dosie, Rev. Wm. R. Deal,
Gien Gall way, O. B. Hughes, J. H.
Hood, Tern Jones. Wilmer Jenkins.
James Kiger. Walter Nesley, Wil
liam Riley, Talmer Strickland, L.
L. Scruggs, D. E. Warley, Jim
Woods.
Miscellaneous.
Star Grocery Co.
Persons calling for same should
say advertised, and give date. One
cent due on each letter.
Mrs. H. W. J. Ham, P. M.
We All Feel That Way.
To the unthinking, senseless
knocker who is nothing more than a
monumental nuisance that planks his
bag of bones upon everything for the
common good that comes up. May
the bubonic plague grasp him. —Peta-
luma Courier.
Hot Weather Tonic and Health
Builder
Are you run down Nervous
Tired? Is everything you do an
effort? You are not lazy—you are
sick! Your stomach, Liver, Kid
neys, and whole system need a
Tonic. A Tonic and Health Builder
to drive out the waste matter —build
you up and renew your strength.
Nothing better than Electric Bitters
Start to-day. Mrs. James Duncan,
Haynesville, Me., writes: “Com
pletely cured me after several doc
tors gave me up.” 50c and SI.OO, at
your Druggist.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve for Cuts.
NO NEED TO GIVE UP GAMES
Men of Middle Age Will Feel Better
If They Occasionally Indulge In
Favorite Pastimes.
The age at which men find them
selves compelled by pressure of bust*
ness or the cares of life or by phys
ical infirmity to give up their favorite
game is advancing, says the Youth**
Companion. Once upon a time gam—
were almost exclusively for tho—
who were still in school or in college.
When a boy took up what was de
pressingly referred to as “the serious
business of life” he was expected to
abandon the frivolous point of view
that playing games was supposed to
denote. The boys of that period are
today serving a late apprenticeship
at the game of golf or spending fre
quent afternoons as spectators of pro
fessional ball games.
Having found out for themselves
that such early deprivation is a mis
take, they do not impose it on their
sons. Innumerable Americans are
nearing middle age who are almost as
active on the tennis courts or on the
golf links as tn the days of their
youth. Football, of course, they have
had to give up; it cannot be played
as the casual recreation of a busy
man. To baseball some men cling,
although with difficulty; it requires a
larger number of players than is
readily available. Yet, on holiday oc
casions, when middle aged men long
out of practise engage in baseball,
there will always be a fair proportion
of them who show that they retain
much of their juvenile skill and alert
ness. They do not slide to bases, but
they field the ball cleanly and bat
vigorously, and not only feel them
selves, but make the observers be
lieve that with a little practise they
could, in the vernacular, "come back.”
The giving up of games should be
so gradual, so voluntary, that it in
volves no sense of loss or of sacrifice.
Generally speaking, so long as a man
has an impulse and a desire to play
a game he will be the better for
yielding to it. That is the wisdom
that the new generation has learned.
SPEECH THAT WON THE GIRL
Really Marvelous Combination of
Words Left the More Humble
Suitor Simply Nowhere.
J. B. McGhee of Roswell, N. M.,
writes to tell of a negro girl who had
two “cullud” suitors, says the Kansas
City Star. One was a hard working
negro who always had a job, but was
a little short on style. The other nev
er worked, but wore fine clothes and
adorned the street corners, and was
without money most of the time. Both,
wanted to marry the girl and she, al
though strongly in favor of style her
self, had a strong hankering after the
one with the steady job. So she de
cided she would invite them both to
dinner, wait on them herself, and the
one who had the best manners she
would accept. Accordingly they came
to dinner.
She first waited on Jim, the hard
working negro, and said: “Have
sugar and cream in your coffee, Mr.
Jim?' "Cream only, if you please,
ma’am,’ replied Jim.
Then to the stylish suitor. “Have
sugar and cream in your coffee, Mr.
Sambo?” “Both if you please, Miss
Dinah,” said Sambo, and he added:
’Miss Dinah, you knows de homo
jonah, rajikal, trajical, incomprehen
sible, compound extract of de root-a
toot-toot ob the sugar, mixed wid de
double distilled compound discombil
ities ob de cream, makes de coffee
obsquob.”
He got the girl.
King Louis’ Brief Triumph.
One hundred years ago Louis XVIII,
who with the overthrow of Napoleon
had ended his long exile in England
and had returned to France, made his
formal entry into Paris to ascend the
throne of his ancestors. The grena
diers of Napoleon’s old guard lined
the streets of the French capital and
shouts of joy greeted the royal pro
cession as it made its way to
Dame. Beside the king, in the open
carriage drawn by eight white horses,
was seated the duchess of Angouleme,
formerly the royal princess, who had
been under her uncle’s protection ever
since those who were nearest and
dearest to her had died on the guillo
tine during the reign of terror. On
entering the palace of the Tuileries,
which she had last left when a child
22 years previously, the duchess
fainted in the arms of her uncle, the
king.
Love Your Work.
Do not look at your work as a dull
duty. If you choose you can make it
interesting. Throw your heart into it,
master its meaning, trace out the
causes and previous history, consider
it in all its bearings, think how many
even the humblest labor may benefit,
and there is scarcely one of our duties
which we may not look to with enthu
siasm. You will get to love your
work, and if you do it with delight you
will do it with ease. Even if at first
you find this impossible, if for a time
it seems mere drudgery, this may be
just what you require; it may be good
like mountain air to brace your char
acter. —Lord Avebury.
Typhoid and Tuberculosis.
Col. C. E. Woodruff of the United.
States Army Medical corps has dis
covered that typhoid fever leaves its
victims peculiarly susceptible to
tuberculosis, the chief reason being
the great lowering of the vital power
of resistance to the bacilli of this dis
ease.