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T H E NORT H GEOKGI AN
Published every Friday by J, E, Kirby
V year • • SI.OO
6 month* - . - - 50
3 months • • - 25
lettered June 10, 1902, as second c<ass
matter, post office at Cumming,
Ga,, Act of Congress of
March 3, 1879,
We are not responsible for the views
of our correspondents.
Phone No, 44.
CUMMIVG, GA. JUNE 25 1909
Court house Singing.
The next regular June singing
will convene at the Court House
in Cumming on the fourth Sunday
morning at 9 130 o’clock.
He sure to bring both old and
new books. The first lesson after
dinner will be sung from the old
books.
Prof, J. B. Vaughan was sick
last year and could not come, but
he says if not providentially hin
dered he will be present this time,
also Prof. J. L. Moore, of Bethle
hem, Ga,, and Prof. Smithwick, of
Orange, Ga., and other good sing
ers have promised to be on hand.
Respectfully.
M. T. Wallace,
Pres.
Anyway, the chap who thinks he
knows it all, doesn’t know a lot of
things that is said ot him behind
his back
We do not know of any other'pill that
!s as good as DoWitt’s Little Early Kis
ers, the famous little liver pills —small,
gentle, pleasant and sure pills with a
reputation. Sold by J. llockonhull.
Discourteous Husbands.
We recently heard a woman re
mark : “I suppose my husband is
as good a man as ever lived, but
his mother did not train him to be
courteous to ladies. His 'sisters j
were his slaves, and thereby lie is
spoiled as a husband. I wish I
could train several hundred boys
to be husbands for the next gener
ation. Do you suppose they’d con
sider it their prerogative to drive
the girls out of the easiest chair,
take the sunniest corner of the
room, the best place by the light,
throw books, papers or slippers
down for someone to pick up,
grow up with the idea that a wife
must be a valet and the rest of the
household stand respectfully by to
obey trders? You smile, but this
is anything but a subject to laugh
over. 1 really believe that hus
bands never think that their un
kind words hurts. They don’t
realize the difference to us—for
instance in their manner when they
come to dinner. All day the wife
has been alone with the servants
and the children, and is moie hun
gry for a kind word from her hus
band than an epicure feast. He
comes in just as the dinner bell
rings. ‘For a wonder, dinner is
once ready on time.’ the husband
says. Couldn’t he have saved the
heartstab by saying, ‘That’s a pleas
ant sound to a hungry follow.’
And if dinner is not quite ready,
why need he say, ‘Of course not;
never is.’ In working mottoes for
the home, why hasn’t someone
taken Wesley’s remark, ‘l’d as
soon swear as fret,’ instead ot hang
ing up, ‘I Need Thee Every Hour.’
Of course men appreciate their
wives, but they too often keep their
polite manners and courteous way
for others.”
■ ■ —— ——
Trouble Makers Ousted,
Wtien a sufferer from stomach trouble
takes Dr. King’s New Life Tills he’s
mighty glad to sec his Dyspepsia and
Indigestion fly, but more lie s tickled
over his new fine appetite, strong nerves
healthy vigor, all because stomach, liver
and kidneys now work right. -5c at
John HockenhulTi.
The best pleasure is the purest
pleasure. There are roses with
out thorns. The busy man must
have some pleasure, some recrea
tion, some relaxation. He ougnt
not to have it on the street with
gossiping chatterers, or at the
gambling table with the dissolute
or wanton. He ought to find it at
home. He ought to do something
in wi.ich his family could have a
part. It ought to be pure eleva
ting, stimulating. The rm>n that
13 so considerate and equiposed,
tha f will make this matter no sec
ondary affair, but give it the best
thought of his life, will make a
better man, a moral citizen, more
considerate husband, more loving
father. He will find his family
ties strengthened, so that as his
children grow to manhood and
womanhood, no place will be so
attiactive to them as the fireside at
home. These are the pleasure
that remain, that do not wither
with time, that do not grow bitter
with the years.
We want girls of sense, girls
who have a standard of their own,
independent of conventionalities,
and are brave enough to live up to
it; girls who simply won’t wear a
trailing skirt on the street because
fashion dictates; girls who will
don what is pretty and becoming
and snap their fingers at the edict
of an ugly style. We want good
girls, girls who are sweet right
straight out from the heart to the
lips; innocent and simple minded
girls with less knowledge duplicity
and evil-doing at 25 than the pert
little school miss of ten has now-a
days. We want careful girls and
prudent, who think enough of the
generous father toiling early and
to maintain them in comfort or of
the gentle mother denying herself
much that they may have pretty
things, to take care of theirolothes
and draW the line sharply between
the essentials and the non-essentials
of their needs; girls who strive
fully as hard to save as they do to
spend ; girls who are unselfish and
thoughtful and seek to be a joy in
the home rather than an sxpensive
burden.
Training The Girls.
The foundation ot society rests
on its homes. The success of our
homes rests on the wives. There
fore, first of all, teach our girls
how to be successful wives. Be
gin in their infancy to develop their
or-aracters. Teach them that jeal
ousy is an immorality, and gossip
a vice. Train them to keep the
smallest promise as sacredly as an
oath, and to speak of people only
as they would speak of them.
Teach them to look for the best
quality in everyone they meet, and
to notice other peoples faults only
to avoid thein. Traiu them to do
small things well and to delight in
helping others, aid the necessity
for sacrifice for others’ pleasure as
a means of soul development.
Once given a firm foundation of
character like this, which the poor
est as well as the richest can give
to their girls, and no matter what
necessity arises, they will be able
to rise above it.
TEETHING
makes baby nervous and fretful,
and stops gain fn weight.
SCOTT’S EMULSION
is the best food-mcdicine for teeth
ing babies. It strengthens the
nerves, supplies lime for the teeth,
keeps the baby growing.
Get a small bottle now. All Druggists
DOfTHt W O RLD
\ Better Not Get
Dyspepsia
If /'ou can help it Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by
effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion.
Buft don’t trifle with Indigestion.
Al great many people who have
trlflled with Indigestion, have been
gorily for it —when nervous or
chrfonlc dyspepsia resulted, and
thejy have not been able to cure it.
FJse Kodol and prevent having
D? "spepsla.
'Everyone is subject to indiges
tion. Stomach derangement follows
Btomach abuse, just as naturally
just as surely as a sound and
■kpilthy stomach results upon the
■ ng of Kodol,
experience sourness
W omach, belching of gas and
■C-seating fluid, bloated sensation,
owing pain in the pit of the
stomach, heart burn (so-called),
diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or
chronic tired feeling —you need Ko
dol. And then the quicker you take
Kodol—the better. Eat what you
want, let Kodol digest it.
Ordinary pepslp “dyspepsia tab
lets,” physics, etc., are not likely
to be of much benefit to you, in
digestive ailments. Pepsin is only
We Invite You to Make This
Bank Your Depository.
If you have an idle hundred —or fifty —or
any other amount, which you desire to lay
aside for safe keeping, bring'it to this bank
foitsafe keeping.
We issue Certificates of Deposit payable
on demand; also Time Certificatesjbearing
interest.
j \ V
Bank of Buford,
BUFORD,,OA.
SPECIAL PRICES
ON DENTAL WORK.
Amalgam Filling, 25c and up Porcelain Crown, $--5° ®- nd U F
Gold Fillings, 75c and up Plates, single, $4- 00 and u f
Bridge Work, per tooth, $4.00 Partial JPlates 3,50 and up
Gold Crown, 4-°° Extracting*teeth 25c
All work guaranteed. As to my reputation, inquire of the people who had
me do work tS and 20 years ago. lam a graduate of the Philadelphia Dental Col
lege. I graduated in March, 1890. Come and see me.
Dr. M- F. M. KELLY, Dentist.
Take Time.
Let us take time for the good-bve
kiss. We shall go to the day’s
work with a sweeter spirit for it.
Let us take time to speak kind
words to those we love. By-and
hv, when they can no longer hear
foolishness will seem more
wise than our best wisdom. Let
us take time to be pleasant. Ihe
’courtesies which we often
omit bacause they are small will
some day look larger to us than the
wealth which we have coveted, or
the fame for which wj have strug
gled. ’Let us take time to get ac
quainted with our families. Ihe
wealtlij you are accumulating may
be a doubtful blessing to the son
wh* is a stranger to you. Your
beautifully kept house, busy moth
er- can Ml ever be a home to the
you have no time
to carreMi.
When! i woman has curly hair of
her ownir.be can’t appear any more
honest al 'Ut it than she could if it
weren’t.'T
SOLD BY JOHN HOCKENHULL.
a partial digester—and physics are
not digesters at all.
Kodol is a perfect digester. If
you could see Kodol digesting every
particle of food, of all kinds, in the
glass test-tubes in our laboratories,
you would know this just as well
as we do.
Nature and Kodol will always
cure a sick stomach —but in order
to be cured, the stomach must rest.
That is what Kodol does —rests the
stomach, while the stomach gets
well. Just as simple as A, B, C.
Our Guarantee
Go to your druggist today and get a dol
lar bottle. Then after you have ued tne
entire contents of the bottle If you can
honestly say, that It has not done you any
good, return the bottle to the druggist and
e will refund your money without ques
tion or delay. We will then pay the drug
gist for the bottle. Don’t hesitate, all
druggists know that our guarantee is good.
This offer applies to the large bottle only
and to but one in a family. The large bot
tle contains V/t times as much as th# fifty
cent bottle.
Kodol is prepared at the labora
tories of E. C. DeWitt & Cos., Chicago.
Sheriffs Sales.
GEORGIA —FORSYTH COUNTY.
Will be sold before the court bouse I
door in the town of Cumming in said
county, at public outcry, to the highest
bidder for cash, within the legal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in July, 1909,
what is known as the J H L Hawkins lot
of land No [ 1054] one thousand and fifty
four, lying and being in the 3rd district
and Ist section of Forsyth county, Ga,
Levied on as the property of John H L
Hawkins under and by virtue of a fi fa
issved from the Justice Court of the 879th
District, G. M., in favor of John A Kelly
vs John H L Hawkins. Said property
found in possession of said John H L
Hawkins. Said property pointed out by
John A Kelly, plaintiff in fi fa and levy
made and returned to me by WT Merritt,
L. C. This lune Bth, 1909,
W. W. REID,
Sheriff.
GEORGIA—FORSYTH COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern : F T
Wills, administrator upon the estate of M
W Wolfe, late of said county, deceased,
having filed his petition for discharge,
this is to cite all porsons concerned, kin
dred and creditors, to show cause, if any
they can, agaist the gftinting of this dis
charge at the regular term of the Court
of Ordinary of said county to be held on
the first Monday in July. 1909. Given
under my hand and official signature, this
7th day of June, 1909.
H. V. JONES, Ordinary,
If you want good job printing,
bring it to us.
Professional Cards.
, Jl>A ywy^,
W. B. HANS A AD, .
dentist,
[BUSIIA BUILDING]
BUFORD, GEORGIA
E, O. DOBBS,
Attorney at Eaw,
BUFORD, GA.
DiTm! F. M. KELLEY,
DENTIST
CUMMING GEORGIA
Phone 43.
CHAS. L. HARRIS.
Attorney at Law.
CUMMING, GA.
General practice in all the Courts.
Office: Court House.
l. and. Rhodes!
DENTAL [SURGEON.
CUMMING GEORGIA
J. C. STONE, M, D„ Phg.,
CUMMING and ALPHARETTA, GA.,
R. F. D. Nos, 3 and 1.
Calls honored in day time $1.25.
At night SI.SU.
Obstetrics uncomplicated $5.00,
Connected with all local telephones.
Notice of Intention to Introduce
Bill.
Nptica is hereby given that pursuant
to section 7, Art. 3. Par, 16 of the Con
stitution of the State of Georgia, em
bodied in section 5778 of the Civil Code
of 1895, I will introduce at the next sess
ion of the General Assembly of Georgia
which convenes on the 4th W ednesday
in June, 1909, a local bill to be:
An Act to amend an Act approved Oct.
10th. 1885, repealing an Act approved
Dec. 27th, 1845, entitled an Act to incor
porate the town of Cumming in Forsyth
county, Georgia, and for other purposes,
to provide for a mayor and council and
to define their duties, to change and fix
the corporate limits: to establish and fix
police regulations; to provide a manner
oi raising revenue therefor; to provide a
manner of working the roads, streets, and
side-walks therein ; to authorize the levy
and collection of taxes on the property
therein and all business or callings; to
provide for a famtary board ; and to pro
vide for the condemnation of private
propertv for streets and side-walks and
for the public safety ; to provide for a
Board of Commissioners of w ater and
lights; to prouide for the condemnation
of nuisances: to provide for the laying off
the town into wards and to provide for
the regulation of railroads, street and
I electric car lines, telegraph and telephone
lines, to provide for a system of electric
| lights; to provide for a system of water
j works and for other purposes,
A. H. WOODLIFF.
New Style
Edison Phonographs & Records
for sale by
S. G. CLEMENT,
BIG CREEK, GA.
Write for catalogue and prices.
Let us Equip Your
.
machine with gear attachment to
play Amberol 4 minute Records
Mr. Edison’s latest Invention
Does not interfere with playing
! old style records.
S. G. CLEMENT,
Big Creek, Ga.