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r W- ’ w ~ - , j •
News that every Woman will be Intereste
PALMOURS CLEAN-SWEEP SALE. ..
„ nffpred in Ladies Ready
Of all Ladies'Saits and dresses. The greatest baig<uns * r All this season’s styles, all the lates
the year in Gaines ville. Every Suit and Dress must go, not on • Q om e to-day. It would be folly not to,
shades and fabrics. You cannot afford to miss this great opp
for these prices rule.
The Suits The ® resse j 500
I lIV WMI vv AB $20.00 Dresses, now $ 1 3.UU
All $3O, 35 and 40 Suits, at $20.00 AIIVSSsW. 17- 50 Dl ' esses ’ at 12.50
~ M All $15.00,13.50 Dresses, at 10.00
All $22.50. 25,27.50 Suits, at 1 5.00 Q
O $12.50 Dress,-’ nOW b>DU
All $lB and 20.00 Suits, at |2.50 All $lO.OO Dresses, now
4.50
- All $6. 00 Dresses, now —■
All $12.50,15,16.50 Suits at 1 0.nn .
— Bering
You will have to see these to appreciate the values we are o^
COME TO-DAY
w. j. & E. C. PALMOUR
THE LEADERS OF FASHION
GAINESVILLE, GA
P. ?/. All Our Chri'stmas Goods NowOn Display..
MOVINM PICTURE FAKES.
How Trick Rilms, Showing | mpo *.bl
EJ.foct,, Are Produr e( j.
The camera i J i \ n . ,„ c dium
by which a great nmtr , | e v.-r tuck
fil'"* "re taken. Fir ,f of nil a film
consists of a wriyr (1 f .|j|| photo
graphs, each als.e L |, a |f an inch in
Oeptli, which atr both photograph
ed and thrown.' U p oll the screen at a
normal speetl 0 f sixteen per second.
The stop cur icra, however, is so ar
ranged tha* one single frame of the
film tnay be exposed, the camera
stopped un( ] alterations made, only
the eff f c t s 0 f wliich are lilmed.
A r ian is knocked down and ap
pare n tJy r un over by a steam roller,
nut aii SO ou as it is off him he rises
ur id walks away full of life. This
’,B how such a picture is taken: The
stop camera films the man being
knocked down by the steam roller,
the knockingdown part being a clev
er acrobatic feat, and then the cam
era is stopped, the real man slips
out of “the lines,” a dummy is sub
stituted, the camera gets going
again, but the film shows no break.
When the steam roller has passed
9ver the dummy the camera is stop
ped, the dummy removed, and the
real man lies down in its place, aft
erward to jump up in a very lifelike
manner.
Another variety of trick film
that has long mystified picture go
ers is that of the bricklayer who
falls from the top of a -kysuraper
into the street below, apparently
without being any the wip for it.
His legk, arms and hend sundered
on the pavement mysteriously re
assemble, allowing the bricklayer to
get up and walk away. Kxaciiy the I
same procedure is used, the top of
the skyscraper usually being erect
ed in the studio and backed up by
cleverly painted scenery. The cam
era records the man’s fall up to a
certain point and then stops, while
the man is safely caught in a net
hidden below. The next scene is in
the street aDd shows the dummy
crashing to the ground, the parts
detaching themselves on concus
sion. The reassembling is done by
means of invisible wires; then the
camera is stopped and the real man •
substituted, and one leans back and j
says: “Marvelous! How on earth is
it done?”
Occasionally one sees motorcars i
climb up bare walls —a seemingly
impossible feat. The wall is a piece
of painted scenery laid upon the
studio floor. The car drives over it,
while the camera is placed up
When the film is in its nat
ural poeflikm it appears as if the
car were miming up a perfectly per
pendicular wall. —Pearson’s Weekly-
Fancy and Fact.
“So you managed to propose to
that gud at last?” said one young
tman.
“Yes, but the dialogue wasn’t any
-1 hing like what I had figured out.
I intended to say: Tlortense, I have
loi regarded you with the affection
sue h as a man feels for but one wo
man l an the world; the woman he
wou. U make hia wife. Will you be I
mince” And I thought she would
say si uncthing like this: ‘Harold, 1
feel t bat I can trust my future hap
piness t you.' ”
“Th * sounds fine.”
“Ye t; but what took place? I
showed ■ her the engagement ring
and sai J .Huh ?’ And she just saiu,
"nd put it on.”—Wash
ington
’NeV and Youth.
Do nfcrvoas people retain theii
youtfb better than others? A write!
says: “Tire ytawth keeping fotlk trie
always i>itoyarat and mercurial, with
a treanei Vlous power of recovery
from tine worst strokes of sickness
or miefo.rtune. They usually
highly nervous people, and this
agrees- with the dictum of a medical
friend- who tells me that it is really
the nef.-veathat keep the life young
and tka* the highly strung people
are longer lived than the stolid, un- j
emotional: sort. They are more- pli
ant asnd their ‘nervousness’ is the
■result of generating nervous force
quicker <£kan they use it up.”
He Knew the Difference.
“Spell ‘dough/ Dick,” directed •
teacher of a little negro pupil.
“T)-o,” said Dick promptly.
“No, that is not right,” smiled j
the teacher. “Who can tell Dick j
how and why he is wrong?”
“He’s wrong ’cause there’s twc
kinds ob do,” shrilled another dark
skinned youngster. “De do’ what
jo’ shets, an’ de do* what you eats
—an’ de do what yo’ eats is writ
vridout de ’posfrrophe at de end.” —
Chicago Record-Herald.
The Modern Wooer.
“George, you must go right away
and ask papa for my hand.”
“That’s all right, little one. 1
asked him first.”
“What! You didn’t wait to-ask
me!”
“Xixy, Mabel. I’m a busy little
man, girlie, and I waste no time an|
chances.”— Cleveland Plain Dealar.l
■amis. jttirV 1 * 1 DECEWBER **“
DIET i VND HEALTH
i TINTS
By HR. T >- ALIEI *
Food
NUTRITION I BY
TOO MUCH P AT IN
DIET* BY.
“Too much fat ! a frequent
caui-e of trouble, a many chll
dren are often un Vntwtlpnilly
overfed with fat," says Dr.
John Ruhrah In the journal of
the American Medica 1 Asocla
tlon. “These are case t <? f mal
nutrition in which lartte .quan
tities of butter, erojn, coo llv ‘
er oil anc ether tits ar,e give n
with the idea of fattening the
child and restoring itu normaf
condition. The reel It le that
the nutrition is not improved
but is usually made worse.”
Fat prevents the accl ss of the
saliva to the starch in the
mouth and stomach and also
Interferes with the action of
the gastric and intetfiaal juices
upon the protiids. The stan
dard dietaries gi/e two ounces
of fat as the required amount
in the daily ration of tiic aver
age man doing moderate work,
but none is furnished the horse,
except the small percentage he
■nay get in cat3 or corn. The
c wv that makes four per rent
In her milk gets none in i
anc i ft has been shown by >e
cent experiments that calves
do t ttter on m-lh wth little
fat. The Invalid is a'ways ad
vised v 7 take to.et v/lihout but
ter arxi certainly bread is more
digestible for the dyspeptic
without flutter, hovwever desir
able it may be to cater to the
taste.
'Copyright. Ull. UV Joeßh Bowles.)
Great tat Charm.
As self-consciousness is the most
ham I* ring and distressing trait a
woman can have, its opposite is cor
respondingly attractive. The faculty
of <juicK sympathy, of being able to
throw her interest at once into the
interest of the other person. Is per
haps as great a Charm as a woman
can poa ess. It outweighs brilliancy.
—Oara Louise Burnham.
Regulations.
Ob remarking some time ago that
stsdenXs cannot be driven anywhere
by regulations, I was contradicted by
the dean itf another institution who in
sisted thati by regulations they can be
driven to the devil I accepted the
1 awrendn ect. —President Lowell, in
Harvard Graduates’ Magazine.
USEFUL HOLIDAY
GIFTS
We are Ready in Every Detail
For the Host of Xmas Shoppers
Ready with the most brilliant
gathering of Merchandise ever
brought to this city.
CHRISTMAS 1913 is goiir; down in history as a trib
ute to the long-headiness of An zirican Men and Women.
(Gifts this year., as never before, will be mostly of the
practical sort.
This store suggests at every turn, what folks want
most —Things they would buy for themselves.
If you want your gifts to be genuinely appreciated
come to this store and learn what delightfully appro
priate things we have.
MRS. J. T. SMITH
MAYWVII.LK, - - GEOIIGI A