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CARROLT/TOff. cml
. Local News are you sure
Mrs. J. C. Carlton, cf Atlanta
iis visiting in the city.
Almost every day we are re”
ceiving new novelties in Jewel-
try* Creel Jewelry Co.
Misses Nora and Georgia
Turner spent last week visiting
relatives in Atlanta. j
New line Belt Buckles, Hat
and Sash Pins Novelties, etc,,
just received. ,
Creel Jewelry Co. |
We have just received a car
of nice buggies and surreys in
addition to a good stock ot vehi
cles already on hand.
Stewart & Fleming.
Out of town guest at the Lyle-
•Shaw wedding were Dr. and
Mrs. W, C. Lyle and Mr. an d
Mrs. Joe Lyle oi Augusta,' Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Teague ot Iron
City, Ala. and Mrs. Walker
Brock of Tallapoosa
The protracted meeting which
for the past two weeks has been
held at the First Baptist church
and wfiich closed on last Tues
day was one of the most inter
esting and success ul ever con
ducted in Carrollton. About
forty-five members were added
to the church.
Quite an interesting series of
meetings hns been in progress
at the Baptist church since Sat
urday. Several additions by let
ter and experience have resulted
up to Thursday morning. Rev,
Mr. Jackson of Atlanta with
other ministers, are assisting the
pastor, Rev. W. W. Roop .—
Bremen Gateway.
A Revelation
It is a revelation to people the
■severe cases of lung trouble that
ihave been cured by Foley’s Honey
•and Tar. It not only stops the
<ough but heals and strengthens the
lungs. L. M. Ruggles, Reasnor,
Iowa, writes: “The doctors said 1
•had consumption and 1 got no bet
ter until 1 took Foley s Honey and
Tar. It stopped the hemorrhages
.and pains in my lungs and they are
now as sound as a bullet.” Sold
hy Hamrick’s Pharmacy.
Jhon Riha of Vining, la., says
have been selling DeWitt’s Kid-
y and Bladder Pills for about a
year and they give better satisfac
tion than any pill 1 ever sold. There
.are a dozen of people here who
have used them and they give per
feet satisfaction in every cases
have used them myself with fine
results.” Sold by Hamrick’s
'Pharmacv.
That the lee ereem you bay U strictly
PURE I
Do you know that the makers' hands
were clean, flies excluded from the factory,
and freeiers and other ntensUs kept in
Sanitary Condition?
Why take any chance where your health
1s concerned 1 Why not
MAKE AND FREEZE YOUR OWN ICE CREAM
In 10 MINUTES
FOR Ic. A PLATE with
Jell-0 ICE CBM Powder
It Is so easy. Simply stir contents of
one 13c. package into a quart of milk and
freeze! without cooking, heating or the ad*
dition of anything else. This makes two
quarts of ice oream, dean, pure and whole*
some. A good ice cream freezer can bo
bought for a dollar or two which will last
for years, and will soon save its cost.
2 packages JELL-O ICE CREAM Pow
der foT 25c.
Flavors: Chocolate, Vant'/la, Straw•
berry, Lemon and Unflavored.
Sold by all good grooers.
k The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, Ns Y.
PILES
get Immediate relief from
Dr. Slioop's Magic Ointment
HER REMORSE.
Th* Story of ■ Gold Coin and an
Obliging Young Man.
“Will somebody tell me how I
can pay back $5 which I lawfully
owe?” wailed the wife of a United
States senator at a supper given the
other night in Washington. “I
shall willingly give another $5 for
a helpful suggestion. I had to go
to the capitol last week, and so I
went in a herdic. I dropped my
nickel in the place assigned, and no
sooner had I done so than I gasped,
for I suddenly realized that my
nickel was a five dollar gold piece
which my husband had given me the
year of our marriage. I had al
ways kept it in my purse for senti
ment, and then you know it is wise
to have $5 on hand anyway. I told
the driver, and he said he could not
help it; that I would have to ride
to the end of the line, where the
cash box could be opened. I almost
was in tears ns I explained that I
could not do it, that I had to meet
my husband and that I was in an
awful hurrv.
“I looked so miserable that a nice
looking young man across the way
told me to cheer up. Ho would
ride to the end and collect the gold.
Thereupon hS handed me a new
five dollar gold piece with a bow
which Chesterfield might have en
vied. My grateful outburst was cut
short by having to scramble out of
the herdic. Imagine my horror
when I got home, in turning my
purse upside down, to have the
missing gold piece tumble in my lap.
I was overcome with horror. I was
mortified beyond measure by the
conduct of my husband, who laugh
ed brutally and said that for a new
kind of skin game it was not had.
But think of that poor young man,
his ideal of women shattered, out
$5, for I have no more idea where
to find him than I have now to lo
cate a new comet, and the cynical
way he will henceforth look at all
gray haired old ladies in trouble— :
oh, it is awful!”—Xew York Frcss.
Points d’Angl.t.rr. Laos.
Louis XIV., by the advice of his
minister, Colbert, encouraged lace
making in France. The Venetians,
who had hitherto monopolized the
art, issued decrees forbidding their
craftsmen to leave the republic un
der heavy penalties, but in spite of
this the “points de France” soon
equaled the “points de Venisc.”
The origin of the name “points
d’Angletowe” is curious. In 1662
the English parliament forbade the
import of foreign lace, but flax
grown in England was not fine
enough for the best lace, for which
there was a great demand at the
court of Charles II., so the mer
chants “bought up the choicest laces
of the Brussels market., smuggled
them over to England and sold them
under the name of ‘points d’Angle-
terre.”’
Shut Him Up.
The owner of a few houses in one
of London’s poverty stricken streets
had difficulty at times in getting his
rents in or tenants out. One Mon
day morning he called at a house
where the tenant was a bit behind
and, as usual, had to swallow the
old, old story of “only just started
work.” In the afternoon the prop
erty owner went to sec a big cricket
match between two prominent
clubs, and who should he meet on
the ground but his backward tenant.
“What’s the meaning of this?”
said the irate landlord. “You can’t
pay your rent, and vet you can af
ford to attend cricket matches.”
‘I couldn’t ’ave come at all,” was
the cool reply, “if I ’adn’t sold the
hack door for firewood!”—London
Scraps.
Inkhorn Terms.
Among other lessons this should
first be learned—that we never af
fect any strange inkhorn terms, but
to speak as is commonly received,
neither seeking to be overfine nor
yet living overcareless, using our
speech as most men do and ordering
our wits as the fewest have done.
Some seek so far for outlandish
English that they forget altogether
their mothers’ tongue. And I dare
swear this—if some of their moth
ers were alive they were not able to
tell what they say, and yet these fine
English clerks will say that they
speak in their mother tongue if a
man should charge them with coun
terfeiting the king’s English.—Wil
son’s “System of Rhetoric, 1553.”
Royal Golfer.
King James II. was a fine golfer
in the sense of fondness for the
game, and in other senses too. He
it was as Duke of York who, when
challenged by two English noble
men at the Scottish court to a
match, the duke to take any partner
whom he could find, took to his side
an Edinburgh shoemaker named
John Patersone. The duke and Pat-
ersone won, and the latter, being
given half the stake, built for him
self a house, which is to be distin
guished by the record upon it in
Canongate to this day.—Fry’s Mag-
A Millionaire’s Art Within the Reach of All
This beautiful Florentine Alabaster cast—THE
CHEFRY BOY—a work of art that compares
favorably iu design with the highest priced
marble statuary, sent to you securely packed for
only
« •
"flinch 9 high—Finished In twelve colors
•rue to - Life—colors that can be washed
with soap aud water without injury to
the delicate tints,
$3.00
Money refunded if not entirely as represented. It
is pei-fect iu detail, in artistic conception, and in
realistic coloring, adding a rich, imposing appear
ance thst the finest furniture fails to give. If yon
like beauty and culture in your home, get this
classic statue, which is a master piece worthy of a
place in your home. Write to-day.
THE FRANCIS STATUARY CO., Dept. A.
WELLINGTON, OHIO.
A catalog containing upward of four hundred illustrations free with every order, or sent for
twenty cents in stamps, which will be refunded to you with first order.
We want a representative in every town.
ART GLASS WINDOWS.
Why Load I* Uud For Binding th.
Piaca. Together.
In the making of art glass win
dows one of the most important
things is the lead used for binding
the different sized pieces of glass
together. If two pieces of glass of
different color or tint are placed
side by side and viewed from the
dark, the light passing through the
glass into the spectator’s eyes, the
effect will be 'very unsatisfactory.
Like magic this changes when a
strip of lead is laid between the two
pieces, each being luminous with its
own individual color, yet blending
beautifully with its neighbor.
It is customary for the art glass
painter to make colored sketches
for windows, drawn to one-half or
one inch scale. After these sketches
have been accepted as satisfactory,
if it is for a figure window, he
makes a full size cartoon on paper
in crayon, showing all lights and
shadows as well as the outlines.
Early Italian painters used smooth
whitewashed boards for this pur
pose, but now it is done on so called
eggshell surface paper.
The full sized drawing is laid on
a thin and a heavy sheet of detail
paper. Between the design and mid
dle, as well as the lower paper,
there are thin sheets of blackened
pnper. All these are fastened to
the drawing table with thumb tacks.
Then all tho lines arc run over with
a finely pointed ivory pencil. When
done the drawing appears on tho
thin as well as on the thick paper,
the former being tho working draw
ing for tho leader, while the latter
is cut up by the glass cutter for his
patterns to cut the glass to correct
size and shape. If the paper were
cut with an ordinary knife or scis
sors the glass with the lead would
work out too large. To allow room
for tho lead a two bladed knife, with
tho blades set nearly one-eighth of
an inch (the thickness of tho core
or heart of the lead) was formerly
used, but the cutting is now dono
with three bladed scissors.
When tho various kinds of glass
have been cut tho pieces are set to
gether with came or glazier’s lead.
These are strands of lead with a
groove on either side. The artisan
who sets tho pieces of glass together
does this on the outline tracing or
working drawing by first placing
each piece in its proper position.
Ho nails a straight edge along the
edge of his work table nearest him,
along which he places a strand
or border lead, pressing tho glass
into the groove of the same and
keeping the glass. temporarily in
place with wire nails tacked into the
table. These he draws out when
placing the inside lead and tackB
them alongside the next piece of
glass, and so on to the finish.
When the entire panel is thus
leaded together tho joints are sol
dered first on one, side. Then the
panel is turned, and the other side
is treated in the same way. Next
the cementers tako the light an.
charge and rub in the cement (thin
putty) with brushes and clean it
off with sawdust, whieh is also
manipulated with brushes, but these
are of somewhat stiller bristles. Tho
cement fills up all spaces between
the lead and glass, binding the two
firmly together and making it
weather proof. Strengthening or
saddle bars are placed horizontally,
so that the lights will withstand any
windstorm.
The leading of all styles of art
glass is done in the same manner.—
William Schroeder in Western Jour
nal of Education.
A Familiar Experience.
The family was expecting callers
after dinner, and each member was
secretly dreading the ordeal, for
the guests to be were unmistaka
bly dull—the kind that are always
called “worthy”—doubtless a great
comfort to their families, but not a
source of joy as entertainers.
“I feel sleepy already,” said one
member of the family. “I know I
shall go to sleep sitting in my chair
while they are here.”
“Better tako a nap now,” said
mother, “and perhaps that will re
fresh you so you can at least keep
awake during the visit.”
The drowsy member disappeared
to her room, but after about fifteen
minutes she returned, saying:
“No; there is no use in trying. I
can’t sleep till they come.”—New
York Press.
The Point of View.
Fuddy—It is the same with hu
mor as with everything else. A
good deal depends upon the point
of view, I suppose. There was Tol-
fet, for instance, who was butted by
Clough’s billygoat. It seemed aw
fully funny to the rest of us, but
Tolfet didn’t laugh a bit. Doesn’t
appear to be any sense of humor in
Tolfet.
Duddy—Oh, I don’t know. Yon
can’t expect a man to laugh very
heartily at what is going on bdhind
his back. And you say yourself a
great deal depends upon the point
of view.—Boston Transcript. ^
(Specials from the store of Bradley, Hyatt & Co.)
Lace D or Panels
—for 75c
Full size and can be made to fit
any size door—the material is
net lace with battenburg and hon-
itan braid designs and produces
cool and pleasing effect over glass
doors and panel windows.
Formerly priced $1.25 to 2.00,
Choice 75c.
(Specials from the store of Bradley, Hyatt & Co.)
Lace Curtains
Value up to $2.50, for $1.65
All Lace Curtains that were for
merly priced I.90, 2.00, 2.25, 2.50
and in all there is about 50 pairs,
all in the new designs.
Special per pair $1.65
9
(Specials trom the store of Bradley, Hyatt & Co.)
Bleached 10-4 Sheeting
—for 25c yard.
< j
10-4 Bleached Sheeting — the
“Snow white” kind and formerly
priced 35c yd, we are placing on
sale only as loug as present
quantity lasts.
Price per Yard 25c
(Specials from the store of Bradley, Hyatt & Co.)
12|c Colored Lawns
—for 9c yard.
Twenty-five different styles Col
ored Lawns in dots, rings, stripes,
plaids and geometrical designs—
formerly priced I2|c yard.
Special per Yard 9c.
CARROLLTON, GA.
The
Georgia School
of Technology
is better equipped and organized in a!!
departments than ever before, and pre
pared to do the best work in its history. $ >
Free Scholarships
In order to afford the young mti'
of Georgia high class technical educa
tion, fifteen free scholar3nips aui 1
assigned to each County in the
State. Take immediate advantage
of this opportunity and write 1'cr
latest catalog, containing all in
formation necessary for prospective
students, and setting forth the ad
vantages of the Georgia Tech.
Advanced courses in Mechanicr!,
Electrical, Textile, and Civil Engi
neering, Engineering Chemistry,
Chemistry and Architecture. Ex
tensive rand new equipment cf
Shop, Mill, Laboratories, etc. New
Library and netv Chemical Lalc:_-
tory. The demand for the School’ 3 grad
uates is much greater than the supply.
Next session open3 Sept. 30th.
For further information address E. C.
MATHMON, A M-, IX. 3,‘Prei.. Atlanta, Ca.