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Hammocks and Porch Shades.
The re inforced brands best on the market. Make your
hot porch coo' and delightful. If costs you very little and adds
greatly to the comfort of your family.
i
■■■ MF?'
* H Screen Doors and I I
Windows. I l
teKSgpi® |;o!M
Keep up the fight; we have
Porch
—^z~z — — 5 the fly on the run. Make T Jkß
c/udor the victory complete.
RE-ENFORCED
HAMMOCKS
the kind that last
PALMOUR HADWARE CO.
LIME! LIME! HME,
Having purchased the Deal Lime Quar
ries, we are now prepared to furnish Lime
in any quantity, for agricultural and for
building purposes, at cheaper prices than
it has ever heretofore been sold. Our
Kilns are running night and day. Everybody
knows and wants
DEAL’S HALL COUNTY LIME
Address
Deal Lime Development Company,
Gainesville, Ga. Phone 422
Chronic Diseases Cured.
AFTER THIRTY-FIVE YEARS of successful practice and
study of Chronic Diseases, for the last seven years I have
cured every case where patients have followed my in
structions, in the following diseases* Cancer, Tumor, Ulcer,
and Dropsy.
If interested, send me description of your ailment with
SIO.OO, and I will send you one month’s treatment by return
mail. Address —
J. A. LATtIEM, M. D.,
Oakwood. Ga.
Some Cures:
G. G. Bowman, ulcer sub-maxillary gland, Buford, Ga
W. F. Dover, cancer temple, Cumming. Ga.
.1. F. Jones, cancer cheek. Lula. Ga.
R. T»: Loggins, cancer forehead. Leaf, Ga.
W. A. .Jennings, ulcer of lip, Oakwood, Ga.
Walter Reed, tumor of neck, Oakwood, Ga.
O. \V. Gilstrap. cancer : i hand, Gainesville, Ga., R. 6.
Mrs. John (iilstrap, cancer eye. Gainesville, Ga., R. 6.
\\ orthy Martin, cancer tongue; and mother cancer face, Doughertv,
Ga., Route 1.
Sallie Graham, cancer head. Dougherty, Ga.. Route 1.
Mrs. Mary McKinney. Dropsy.
GAINESVILLE RAILWAY AND POWER CO
OWNED i LOCALLY
Furnish Street Car Service, Electric Lights and Power
R educed Rate* on Cars by Purchase of Street Car Tickets.
Schedule and Prices Fuim hed at Office
C. A. DOZIER
Real Estate
And Insurance
No. 1 State Bank Bldg
Will be glad to sell to you, or
for vou, and will insure your
property in the very best
Companies at the io west rates
possible.
COME TO SEE ME
lElectrlcl
i Bitters i
8 Succeed when everything else falls j
P In nervous prostration and female q
I' weaknesses they are the supreme |
remedv, a thousands have testified. $
| FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND ?
3 STOMACH TROUBLE |
C it is the best medicine ever so>u g
I over a druggist’s C' .r.ej. |
Tjiilmw— ■» jwmmw mr
Lne-etia ssi scult
'-zi- the appetite, ;
-zizz.z:. t'.-.z taste and ;
ij nourish the bod y. j
:■ Crisp, clean and. fresh— !
5 cents in th r moisture- .
j proof package.
I
i '' ; jjß|
| f
Baroaet Biscuit !
Round, thin, tender— j
with a delightful flavor j
appropriate for
luncheon, tea and
dinner, io cents.
Zu Zu
Prince of appetizers.
Makes daily trips from
■ Ginger-Snap Land to
waiting mouths every
where. Say Zu Zu to
the grocer man, 5 cents.
Buy biscuit baked by
NATIONAL
BISCUIT
COMPANY
' A Iways look for that name
—
Your Stomach Bad?
JUST TRY ONE OOSE of
fWayr’s Wonderful Stomach Bemedy
and Be Convinced That Yon Can
Be Restored io Health
You are not asked to take Mayr’s Wonder*
ful Stomach Remedy for weeks and month!
before you receive any benefit —one dose is usu
ally required to convince the most skeptica
sufferer of Stomach Ailments that this great
remedy should restore anyone so afflicted t<
good health. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach
Remedy has been taken by many thousands 4
people throughout the land. It has brought
health and happiness to sufferers who had de»
paired of ever being restored and who now pro
claim it a Wonderful Remedy and are urging
Others who may be suffering with Stomacl>
Liver and Intestinal Ailments to try it. Mini
you. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy £
so different than most medicines that are put ot
the market for the various stomach ailment!
'—it is really in a class by itself, and one dos.
will do more to convince the most
sufferer than tons of other medicines. Result:
from one dose will amaze and the benefit;
are entirely natural, as it acts on the sourci
and foundation of these ailments, removing th<
poisonous catarrh and bile accretions, and allaj*
Ing the underlying chronic inflammation in th,
alimentary and intestinal tract, rendering th;
same antiseptic. Just try one dose of Mayr’;
Wonderful Stomach Remedy— put it to a tesl
todaj— you will be overjoyed with your quid
recovery and will highly praise it as thousand;
®f others are constantly doing. Send for bookle ;
on Stomach Ailments to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg
Chemist. 154-156 Whiting St., Chicago, 111.
For Sale by Dr. J. B. George, Gainesville, Ga
I WOMEN
| Women of the highest type,
women of superior education aid
refinement, whose discernraeM
and judgment give weight ■
force to their opinions, ’
praise the wonderful corrective i
and curative properties of Cham
berlain’s Stomach and Liver Tab- i
lets. Throughout the many stages
of woman’s life, from girlhood, I
through the ordeals of mother- i
hood to the declining years, theie -
is no safer or more reliable med- j
icine. Chamberlain’s Tablets are ’
sold everywhere at 25c a box. j
HIS FIRST WINS’
Edward Must Have Enjoyed It So
Much After That Long
Illness.
By MARY STEWART CUTTING
Good evening. Mrs.. Callender —
good evening, Mr. Callender. You
see I have my husband with me! Ed
ward has said all through his illness
that the very first time he went out it
would- be over here to your house, so
you see it’s quite an event.
The doctor said this morning,
when he found Edward so depressed,
that if the weather continued to be
mild it would be the very best thing
in the world for him to have a little
change of scene and thought —to be
taken out of himself; that’s what he
really needs now.
He wanted to come over here
alone, but 1 said to him: No, Ed
ward, I don’t dare let you go with
out me. I’m so afraid you might do
something imprudent.
Os course he doesn’t realize it; but
he has to be watched every minute,
especially now that he begins to
seem all right. You have to be so
careful about ptomaine poisoning.
Mrs. Callender, would you mind
moving your chair a little, so that
Edward can move his out of the
draft? No. Edward, you don’t feel
it now, but you will feel it.
Thank you, Airs. Callender, Per
haps I shall be more at ease about
him if the window’s shut It’s all
very well for you to say you like the
air, Edward; you don’t realize now
how dangerous air is, but if you wake
up in the middle of the night with
a pain in the back of your neck and
I have to go down and get hot water
bottles for you, you’ll wish that you
had been more careful.
What do you think, Mr. Callender
—I have heated 117 water bottles for
him in the last three weeks!
Edward, dear, put your feet up on
this ottoman —I know Mrs. Callen
der will excuse you. I’ll throw my
cape over them, in case they might
get chilled.
Ed wal'd! How can you act like
that, so perfectly silly? Very well,
then, never mind about the cape.
Aren’t men just like children? I'm
sure you wouldn’t behave like this.
Air. Callender, if your wife took you
out after such a severe illness as he
has had ! Well, it’s very kind of you
to speak that way.
I'm sure T have tried to do all that
I could —nobody knows what I’ve
been through. I’ve had to keep ev
erything to myself. He was so ter
ribly ill that first week —he doesn't
realize how ill he was. If it wasn’t
the dreadful pain in his head it was
pain all over him.
I put sixteen plasters on him a
day, and when you consider what
that means, Mrs. Callender, running
up and down two pairs of stairs to
the kitchen and back again to make
each plaster, besides everything else
that came on me—o, yes, I know
that T ought to have had a trained
nurse, but at the time I was so anx
ious about Edward —when it’s your
husband you feel as if you must do
everything yourself for him.
Yes, that’s what uses you up so,
standing on your feet. I said to Ed
ward today: Edward, if you realized
all I go through, standing on my
feet—
Yes, dear, I knew you wanted me
to send for your mother to help me,
but—. He doesn’t understand, as
you would, Mrs. Callender, how
much work it makes to have an
other person —and especially an old
er person, like your husband’s
mother—in the house during sick
ness.
Airs. Delaney is perfectly dear and
considerate, but you can’t treat her
like anybody else—you wouldn’t
want to, of course, and besides, she’s
one of those people who can only eat
verv simple things, and you know
how much trouble that makes with
the girl in the kitchen—it means
something extra cooked for each
men], and we are always getting out
of the right cereal,- no matter how i
I try not to!
I really felt, just now, that with ■
Edward as he is, I really couldn’t ■
stand anvthing more on my mind.
He looks a great deal better, I !
know, but his color isn’t quite right >
even vet —you can notice it around |
his nose and under his eyes. Aou 1
ought to have seen him at firsthe 1
was actually green. Yes, you were,l
Edward; the doctor said —
Why, Edward ! Very well, dear, 1
it’s all right: we won’t say any more I
about it. Just let me feel your hands
a moment. You don’t think you’re
getting too tired? No, dear, 1 know
' /
. you don't like me to ask you how you
I feel, but it is necessary sometimes.
Don't you think you'd better have
| a glass of milk, dear? I know, Mrs.
; Callender, that you’d just as lief
1 get it for him. Never mind, Mrs.
I Callender, when he speaks like that
I I just let him alone. Why don’t
1 you talk to Mr. Callender, dear?
I Is that a cigar? Now, you don’t
1 want to smoke? 0, Edward, I wish
i you wouldn't! Why can't you just
1 enjoy seeing Mr. Callender do it?
Well, if you must!
You've no idea how irritable he
. gets, Mrs. Callender —he doesn’t
: hear; he’s talking to your husband.
It’s his nerves, of course; ptomaine
I poisoning upsets you all over —it
i seems to come out in a new place
! every day.
Yesterday I bought him some
, shirts at a sale in town —they were
I really beautiful quality—the only
1 thing the matter was that thev were
a little tight in the neck, and he
really became almost—uncontrolled
—at the idea of wearing them.
Even when I pointed out to him
that as I bought them at a sale they
couldn’t be exchanged, it made no
difference to him. Men have no idea
of economy.
What is that that you are telling
Mr. Callender, Edward ? It isn’t the
latter part of May that Mr. Fales
had the accident; it was the first of
June. I remember about it partic
ularly, for I was washing my hair
when it happened, and I always
washed it the first of the month, be
cause that woman I went to said it
stimulated the growth if you had
a regular time for it, although mine
comes out in perfect handfuls.
Well, dear, you always want me
to be accurate. I assure you, Mr.
Callender, I’ll never forget that
morning. I heard Mrs. Fales
scream, and then I saw Edward
rushing down the road with his hat
off. and the first thing Mr. Fales
said to him when he was regaining
consciousness was “Drive that fly
away—drive that fly away!” and all
that Edward could say- —he was so
distracted—was, “Which one, which
one?” And Mr. Fales gasped, “The
one with the blue eyes!” Now, I
can’t see anything amusing in thaL
can you ?
Well, Edward, why didn’t you tell
it yourself, then; I’m sure nobody
was preventing you. Well, dear,
don’t talk if you don’t want to.
Was that your new maid who went
through the hall just now, Mrs. Cal
lender? She looks as if she had a
cheerful disposition.
0, yes, the one I have is neat, but
she doesn’t seem to get anything
done. She cries all the time, the way
they always do when they have a
lover. We have done nothing but
change all summer. Edw’ard says he
is sick and tired of hearing about
servants, but 1 tell him if the burden
of it all fell on him, as it does on
me, he'd find out the difference.
The things they do pass belief; I
had a cook the first Christmas after
we were married, twelve years ago,
and she—yes, Edward, dear, I know
you’ve heard the story often before,
but Mr. and Mrs. Callender hare
not, and I am telling it to them.
Well, dear perhaps we had better
go home. You see, Mr. Callender,
he’s not had as much dissipation a*
this for a long time. When I think
of all those nights when I sat watch
ing beside him, with the light
turned down in the room so that I
could only just see his face, and with
all those queer, creepy noises around
that you seem to hear in the house
after midnight when everything else
is still, it made it seem as if nothing
was ever going to be the same any
more —as if the children and I— O,
when I think of that and look at him
now, it makes me so happy!
Whv, Edward, dear, you mustn’t
help me down the steps; I ouglit to
be doing it for you!—Boston Globe.
QUEEN DISLIKES SHOOTING.
Queen Mary makes no secret of
the fact that she cares nothing for
sport. This season she has not
joined the “guns” even once at
luncheon.
Nor does Princess Mary like to see
animals killed. Some years ago,
when the Prince of Wales first start
ed shooting, he begged his sister to
come and admire his prowess. She
went, but the sight of the birds fall
ing made her ill, and forthwith she
decided the moors were no place for
her.
INDORSED.
Hobson—Are you in favor of that
curfew law?
Dobson —Yes; I’m in favor of any
law that reduces the number <rf
dogs.— J udge.