The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, July 30, 1914, Image 3

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-MILLINERY BARGAINS- -AT THE- -LITTLES! PRICES- Our Millinery Buyer is now in Cincinnati, Ohio, buying our Fall and Winter Stock. And it will begin coming in next week, and to make room for same, we must close out the few Hats we now have left in stock. There are only a few Trimmed Hats left and they must go right now — Nus Sed. F Atkinson Millinery Company LIME! LIME! LIME. 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 4221 C, A. DOZIER) Real Estate I 4nd Insurance I Ro. 1 State Bank Bldg| Will be glad to sell to you, )r for vou, and will insure your property in the very best Companies at the lowest rates possible. COME TO SEE ME Gasoline Engines, Wood Turning Outfits, Pump Jacks, Saw Mills, Shingle Mills, Power Cane Mills, Black and Galvanized Pipe, Brass Goods, and Fittings. fiaiDesville Iron Works. Member Chamber of Commerce, GAINESVILLE, GA. I I 14 dF ' iSCL t j *cr..p. Vie appetite, j I plccso the taste and ‘ ii the body. i Cr.’.ep, ciean and fresh— | |j r cents in the moisture- ' . proof package. .1 I Baronet Biscuit I Round, than, tender— with a delightful flavor appropriate for luncheon, tea and dinner, io cents. I ’I aI i ■ .* ; Zu Zu Prince of appetizers. I Makes daily trips from I Ginger-Snap Land to ; waiting mouths every- I where. Say Zu Zu to ’ the grocer man, 5 cents. I b Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look far that name i X = ======_J' STOMACH SUFFERERS If You Wish To Obtain Complete and Permanent Results Try Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy One Dose Will Convince You V t 1 Vfcnder Jul. Re racdy <-L L .will 4 sW st 9JO Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy is well known throughout the country. Many thousand people have taken it for Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailments and report marvelous results and are highly praising it to others. Astonishing benefits sufferers have received even from one dose are heard everywhere and explain its tre mendous sale. It rarely ever fails and those afflicted with Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailments, Indigestion, Gas in the Stomach and Intestines, Dizziness, Fainting Spells, Colic Attacks, Torpid Liver, Constipation, etc., should by all means try this remedy. The benefits stomach sufferers who have taken Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach .Remedy have received is in most cases a lasting one. After youhave taken this Remedy you should be able to digest and assimilate your food, enable the heart to pump pure red blood to every part of the body, giving firmness and strength to fibre and muscle, lustre and sparkle to the eye, clear ness and color to the complexion and activity and brilliancy to the brain. Do away with your pain and suffering and this is often possible with even one dose of Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy. Interesting literature and booklet describing Stomach Ailments sent free by Geo. H. Mayr. Mfg. Chemist, 154-136 Whiting St., Chicago, 111. For Sale by Dr. J. B. George, Gainesville, Ga WOMEN Women of the highest women of superior education and I refinement, whose discernmci and judgment give weight and t force to their opinions, praise the wonderful corrective : and curative properties of Cham- ; berlain’s Stomach and Liver T?.b- < lets. Throughout the maay stages of woman’s life, from girlhood, through the ordeals of mother ? hood to the declining years, there i I is no safer or more reliable med- . I 5 ' ? ; j icine. Chamberlain’s Tablets are i i told everywhere at 25c a box. ' * ; STUMPS AND STUMPS. Bacon—This paper says that a western railroad lends stump-pullers to farmers at a nominal rental as onl way of encouraging business. Egbert—Encouraging business ? I should think it would hurt the dentists’ business. UNDOUBTEDLY. ‘AVhat did the Indian squaw call her dog?” “I didn’t hear, but I know what he is.” “He’s a cur.” “Sure, a squaw-cur.” “Then a saloon deg is a bar-cur.” SOMETIMES. Teacher—Tommie, this great man about whom we have been reading is called an unconscious humorist. What is an unconscious humorist ? Small Boy—A joker that’s fainted away.—Life. WHERE SHE GOT OFF. “Father says mother’s an old cat and mother says father’s a silly owl.” “Well, that ain’t nothing to cry for.” “Yes it is. What am I?” Disillusionment. A woman had three caskets to give to a man. One day she read in his eyes that he could take but the near est and lowest, and that instant arose from her heart the wailing cry, “The king is dead.” —Will Levington Com fort. Only One “BROMO QUININE” To gretthe genuine, call for full name, LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. Stops cough and headache, and works off cold, 25c. Week-End Rates. Round trip week-end rates from Gainesville, to all Gainesville Mid land Railway Stations. Two trains daily, tickets sold every Saturday and Sunday, limited to following Monday. Two connections daily via Monroe for Augusta, Ga.. ami va rious points. Connections at Athens with Seaboard. Central and Georgia R. R. R. L. Mobley, T. P. A., W. B. Veazey, Traffic Manager. Gaines ville. Ga. Farmers Hall and Forsyth Counties. Insure your Homes, Barns. Live stock, ami Farming Tools in the Farmers 1 Co-operative Fire Insur ance Co. George Lathem, Agt.. Gainesville. Ga. 7 Room Home For Sale. The Jno. Stringer place on Oak St Good 7 room home, large lot, good barn, well fixed up. For sale at a bargain, on easy terms. For partic ulars address WOODRUFF MA CHINERY MFG. CO.: t? ----- Winder, Ga. Land for Sale. If you are looking for a home, come to Bishop, Ga. See Fam brough-Porter. Co., they can tit you up with just what you want in town lots or Farms, etc. Fa in b rough- Porter Co. House for Rent Seven rooms; on Hudson street. H. L. Gaines. CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND BRAND. a Lndlea? A(.k you r DrugirUt for ,A £..4\ ( lil-eh --..ter’e L r.moiul K<<l an/. Gold T-k — t I’xes. sealed with Blue Ribbon. W Take no other. Buy of your ’ I / “ fflT Dfieeist- AskforCIiI.CIJES.TER’R [» Xf DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 2/ A®* AJ yfars, known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable A —r SOID Bi DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Heard in Gainesville How Bad Backs Have Been Made Strong—Kidney Ills Corrected. All-over Gainesville you hear it. Doan's Kidney Pills are keeping up the good work. Gainesville people are telling’about it—telling of bad backs again. Yon can believe the testimony of your own townspeople. tell it for the benefit! of you fcwho are suffering- If your back aches, if you feel lame, sore and miserable, if the kidney* act too’ frequently, or passages are painful, -canty »ofi’ color, use Doan’* (Kidney Fill*. rhe remedy that has helped so many of your friends and neighbors. Follow this Gainesville citizen’s advice and give Doan's a chance to dojthe same for you. J. T. Byrd, locomotive engineer. 14 Banks St.. Gainesville, says: “The constant jolting and jarring I get in my work i* hard on my kid neys acted irregularly. Doan'* Kidney Pill* brought me prompt relief and I firmly believe that they are a reliable remedy." Price 50c. ar all dealer*. Doan’* «tmply a*k for a kidney remedy— get Doan'* Kidney Pill—the *ame that Mr. Byrd had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Props.. Buffalo, N. Y. ’ -*■ ■ ’ — r'LDrST OF f ’ L SCHOOLBOOKS ‘lipp: Tablets 1 Lnivcrstty cf Penn sy. ania I 'nc jbted’y Have That Ck.-m lj Distinction. Professor Langdon of Oxford, England, who is spending some time at the University of Pennsylvania, has discovered that one group of the famous Nippur tablets stored at the university are in reality the oldest schoolbooks known to exist. They show that the children of the an cients learned much that the boys and girls of today have to study. Ac cording to these tablets the children of 5,200 years ago were taught arith metic, geography, history and gram mar just like the children of today. The multiplication tables are re markably distinct, and in plain nu merals show the incontrovertible fact that three times one are three and five times one are five. On one tablet the schoolboy has been given a lesson in phonetic signs corre sponding to the shorthand of mod ern times. The Summerians, the authors of these tablets at the Penn sylvania university, also invented the use of writing syllables and com bining them into words, being the first step toward the alphabet. —The Christian Herald. WHY HE WANTED TO KNOW Theatergoer Had Reasons for Inquir ing as to the Length of Scene That Was Coming. When “Monte Cristo” was first produced at the Adelpha theater, London, many years ago, it did not appear in the abbreviated form that playgoers have since become used to. It is said that, as originally shown, it took three nights to give. Natu rally, pruning and condensing were very much in order. But even at that, on occasion of which reference is about to be made, the perform ance was scarcely half over as the bells tolled the hour of midnight. The late George Belmore was playing Caderousse and the audience was in a supersomnolent state when he came in and said: “Listen! I have a tale to unfold.” A bright young chap sitting in front was awakened by the exclama tion. Quickly he got to his feet and in a most plaintive voice said: “Will it be long, sir? For if I miss the last ’bus to Putney I’ll have to stay all night or walk home, sir.” LOOKING AHEAD. Francis B. Sayre condemned di vorce in a New York interview. “We should select our wives with prudence,” said Mr. Sayre, “having a proper regard for the the perma nent character of marriage. We should look far ahead. We should foresee.” He laughed, and added: “Yes, look ahead, foresee—that’s the idea—like the private in the shoeless regiment. “During the Civil war, you know, there was a regiment called the shoe less because its men had no foot gear. “In this regiment it was customary for every man, after taking careful aim at an enemy, to shout before he fired: “ ‘Them’s my shoes.’ ” RAPID WORKER. “My friend Chamberton turns out four novels a year.” “A literary celebrity, eh ?” “Say, rather, a literary celerity.” THE OLD LADY AGAIN. Mrs. Kawler —Is it true that your cousin, Mr. Perkins, is married? Mrs. Bl underby —Yes. Robert has joined the benedictines. TURNED DOWN. Playwright—Then you think my play would take too long. Manager—On the contrary, I’m afraid it wouldn’t take at all. APT DESCRIPTION. An affinity is generally a woman with blonde hair who has more of the home-breaking instinct than a burglar. BOUND TO MAKE ENEMIES. Marriage is indeed a serious prob lem to the girl who has sixteen dear friends from whom to select eight bridesmaids. PESSIMISM TRIUMPHS. "When failure comes along and up sets our plans it isn’t every man who can save a few chunks of hope for the future. '