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Professional Cards!
J. L. UNDERWOOD,
Attorhey-at-Law asd Reai.S
Estate.
Office in Bennett’s Building, Broadj
•treet.
F. L. LEWIS,
Physiciak akd ScaOKON.
Office at Drug Store of Lewis Drug
Co’s., do ing the day.
at night. Prompt attention
to all calls.
I A Bath. R D Basil M E Bosh’
1. A. BUSH & SONS,
Attorn e ys-at- La w,
Camiixa, Qa.
Commercial law a specialty. . .
|H. C. Dasher, Jr. W. H. Hoggaad.
DASHER & HO iGARD.
Attorkeys-at- Law,
Camilla, Ga.
lOffice in Enterprise Building.
|D. A, SPENCE,
Dental Surgeon,
Pelham, Ga.
Office in new City Hall.
The best quality of work ati
reasonable charges. Your pa-|
tronage solicitated.
Db. J. L. Brown,
Physician and Surgeon,
Camilla, Georgia,
Residence phone 4. Office phone 30.
Fire Insurance,
J. C. Turner, Agent.
represents the following Fire In¬
surance Companies:
Liverpool and London and Globe. Hartford
Fire. Home Insurance Co of N- Y.
Greenwich Insuranc 9 Co
YOUR BUSINESS
tlp*fo*date Goods at the
Old Heliable
J. W. Joiner’s
Jewelry Store,
Albany, ■ Georgia.
......a comsTE uhi or......
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry,; Silver
and Plate Wares,
• •
Cutlery, Notions, Fancy Ar¬
ticles, Stationery, etc.
All kind* of Repairing Watches, Clocks,
Jewelry at short order and at lowest pri¬
ce*. I respeotfuily |*oliclt a portion of
the publio patronage.
J. W. Joiner,
Washington St.
ALBANY, - - GA
<*>
o
I A Great
! Consolidation,
| Stanley’s Business
| t Colleges at
Thomasville, Ga.
| and Macon, Ga.
^ To be combined in
I One School at Macon.
£ 9
^ Special car, carrying 75 or
^ Thomasville more students, will leave
»
§ MAY 20th.
% Enter at Thomasville and
§ enjoy iree ride to Macon
^ Exceptionally low rates offered.
o Write for Terms.
|G. W. H. Stanley, President.
S. | Macon, Ga.
A Simpler Life.
While one-third of the world
is gone tearing mad after extrav¬
agant novelties, and another
third is fretting its heart out be¬
cause it hasn’t any show at all
in the race for superfluities, the
upper third has settled itself
down to the practical problem of
getting rid of tne things it doesn’t
need—the very unnecessities, in
short, for which the other two
thirds are crying their eyes out.
Let the "vulgar herd" seek as
it will to complicate living with
more and more possessions, all
thinking women are intent on
the problem of simplifying life.
To do this they are weeding
out the superfluities among their
belongings, setting simpler feasts,
choosing simpler clothes, and
making intelligent efforts in
every way to disencumber them¬
selves and their households from
the elaborate customs and cares
which leave no time for a single
enjoyment of living.
This is why so many of what
are known as the "first families"
are going off somewhere in the
back woods to spend their sum¬
mers, away from the wearisome
bustle of "elegant" existence.
In a log camp they don’t have to
be elegant. They don’t have to
have things—not even servants.
One famous arti3t, whose summer
camp is in some deliciously re¬
mote spot, parcels out the work
among his rich guests. Up there
they get their only chance to
wash dishes, sweep, cook and
make the beds. And history
says they enjoy mightily that
simple method of living and
working.
The leaven is working well.
The woman of fashion who erst¬
while boasted of a solid silver
table service, has freed herself
and her "help” from its bondage,
with the exception of the knives,
forks and spoons, declaring that
the burden of keeping it properly
cared for was too heavy to be
borne, and in fact—to use a
homely phrase—"the game was
not worth the candle.”
Another gave a most success¬
ful luncheon last summer ou the
lawn undei the trees, serving a
first course of iced muskmelons,
next hot coffee, with ham and
chicken sandwiches, and lastly
blackberries and cream, cookies
and baskets of fruit.
When this sort of thing can be
done to the great satisfaction of
everyone by the mistress of one
of the first families of a fashion¬
able suburban town the exhaust¬
ed toiler, struggling for berib
boned, lace-doilied luncheon and
dinner "effects" may well pause
to consider whether the required
strength and money cannot be
more wisely expended than in
this particular kind of "fleeting
show."
The sooner all of us get back
to the knowledge that many pos¬
sessions are a delusion and a
snare, and that the less we have
to look after the longer and hap¬
pier we shall live, the better it
will be for us all.- Philadelphia
Bulletin.
Triumps of Modern Surgery.
Wonderful tilings are done for the Ira¬
nian body by surgery. Organs are ta¬
ken out and scraped and polished and
put back, or they may he removed eu
tirely; bones are spliced; pipes take the
place of diseased sections of veins; anti¬
septic dressings are applied to wounds,
bruises, burns and like injuries before
inflammation sets in, which causes them
to heal without maturation and in one
third the time required by the old treat¬
ment,. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm acts
on this same principle. It is an antisep¬
tic and when applied to such injuries,
causes them to heal very quickly. It
also allays the pain and soreness. Keep
a bottle of Pain Balm in your home and
it will save you time and money, not to
mention the inconvenience and suffering
which such injuries entail. For sale by
Lewis Drug Co.
J. B. Wilson Co.,
Are offering splendid bargains to the public in
j§ Hardware and Plantation Supplies*
A full line of Cutlery. m
See our line of Stoves: all sizes and prices to suit the
times.
A full line of
Dry Goods, Notions and Furnishings.
We want your trade and will take pleasure in showing you goods and quote you the
lowest prices.
tfti Our ’Phone is No. 48. J. £4 Wilson Company.
m WSm
Found Her Father.
Mr. John Dinkins, the man who
was so eagerly sought by his
daughter, Mrs. Mav Dinkins,
telephoned the Times-Enterprise
Wednesday morning that he was
at Pelham and was anxious for
his daughter to come there. The
lady and her little child had been
here for a week without funds
ard in great mental anguish at
being unable to find her people.
The Times-Enterprise assisted
her in identifying herself, and in
ascertaining that the Pelham
man was the right party. She
left at four thirty Wednesday af¬
ternoon for Pelham and was met
there by her father and taken to
his home four miles from that
city.—Times»Enterprise
Sued By His Doctor.
“A doctor here has sued me for 112.50
which I claimed was excessive for a case
of cholera morbus,” says R. White, of
Coachella, Cal. "At the trial he prais¬
ed his medical skill and medicine. I
asked him if it was not Cliamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhtea Remedy he
used as I had good reason to believe it
was, and he would not say under oath
that it was not.” No doctor could use
a better remedy than this in a case of
cholera morbus, it never fails. Sold by
Lewis Drug Co.
No More Betting on Races.
Atlanta, Ga., May 11.—By a
decision of the supreme court of
Georgia here today betting on
horse racing in Atlanta, or in fact
in Georgia, is debarred. Solicit¬
or Hill of the supreme court has
made a long and stubborn fight
against betting on races. The
decision of the supreme court
was in the case of the State vs.
the Ponce de Leon Commission
Company. Charlie Jones, mana¬
ger. The commission company
closed its doors today.
ILLINOIS CENTRAL R. R.
Direct Route to the
St. Louis Exposition.
Two Trains Daily.
THROUGH SLEEPINTG
CARS FROM
Georgia, Florida And Tennessee.
Route of the famous
DIXIE FLYER
Arriving St. Louis in the morning
Season tickets with limits Dec. 15th,
sixty days, fifteen days and 10 days.
Two low rate coach excursions each
month.
For ran* from vour city, also for book
showing Hotels, Boarding Houses, quo¬
ting their rates, write to
Fred D. Miller,
Traveling Passenger Agent,
No. 1 Brown Building,
Atlanta, Ga.
Hah igb Eamar,
The Leading Blacksmith,
Corner Scott and N. Broad Sts.
Is prepared to do first-class work-in"
Blacksmithing. Horseshoeing,
and General Repairing. . .
When in need of work call on me.
Look This Way.
Having purchased the interest of Mr, R. L. Rachals in
the Lumber and Building material Business, we have
formed a co-partnership and will be pleased to serve the
public with anything they want in all kin Is of
|| Lumber, Mouldings, Brick and Lime
As wdl as all others kinds of
Building Material,
| l ncludin g Mantles, Doors,
Sash and Blinds.....
M Call to see us and get prices. Yours for Businass,
HOLTON & HARRELL.
AVERY <& COMPANY
51 $ 53 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga,
Engines, Boilers &F- Saw Mills
All Kinds of
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LARGE ENGINES AND BOILERS
SUPPLIED PROMPTLY.
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Grain Separators,
All kinds of Patent Dogs, Circular saws, Saw Teeth Locks,
Steam Governors
Mill Supplies, Engine and Mill repairs. Send or Catg
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