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FISH
Fresh Fish
Every Friday and Saturday.
Salt Fish
We have them on hand at
all times.
C. F. BRIMBERRY
THE GROCER
PHONE 29 AND GET IT QUICK
Kodol
For Dyspepsia and Indigestion
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas on
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,
etc., a little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly
ices _ iol supplies the same digestive
that are found in a healthy
omach. jestion Being a liquid, it starts
at once.
Kodol not only digests your mouthful food,
but help* you enjoy every
you eat.
«5£ Tpu need a sufficient amount of
wholesome food to maintain
itren irength and health.
But, this food otherwise must the be digested of
thoroughly, indigestion and dyspepsia pains the
are
result.
When your stomach cannot do its
work properly, take something Kodol the to
help thing your stomach. that will give the is
only ach stom¬
complete rest.
Why? Because Kodol does the
aame work as a strong stomach, and
Coes it in a natural way.
Drug Co.
A delicious, refreshing, and health-giv
ing drink manufactured from purest ex¬
tracts and syrups. Strict attention given
to cleanliness in everything we bottle.
Orders Solicited
Bludwine Bottling Co.,
CAMILLA. GA.
Wertz & Son,
THOM ASVILLE* GA.
Electrical Contractors and Constructors.
All kinds of Lamps, Fixtures and Supplies.
Manufacturers Agents for Gasoline Engines.
Machinery and Tools of All Kinds.
WRITE FOR ESTIMATES
Also dealers in Sporting Goods, Bicycles, Etc.
Every Kind Repairing. Prices and Work Guaranteed.
Money Loaned
Absraots of Title
Loans negotiated on farm lands at lowest rate
of interest. When calling to see me bring all
deeds and other evidence of title in your pos¬
session affecting property.
H. C. DASHER, JR., Camilla, Ga.
So. don't neglect your stomach.
Don't become a chronlo dyspeptic.
Keep your taking stomach little healthy Kodol. and
strong You don't by have a Kodol
to take all
the time. You only take it when
you need it.
Kodol is perfectly harmless.
Our Guarantee
lar Go bottle. to your Then druggist today and have get a dol¬
alter you used the
entire contents of the bottle If you can
honestly say that it has not the done druggist you any
good, he will return refund the bottle to without ana
your money ques¬
tion or delay. hesitate, We will then druggists pay the drug¬
gist. Don't all know
that our guarantee is good. This
in a family. The large bottle contains £
times as much as the fifty cent bottle.
Kodol is prepared at the laborator¬
ies of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago.
In Borrowed i
Plumage
The College Cloakroom Maid
and the University Porter
By JANE OSBORN.
Copyright, 1909, by Associated Lit¬
erary Press.
When Thoraby college opened last
autumn there was a new maid in the
cloakroom. Something about her dark,
close fitting dress, her small, ruffled
apron and her parted hair, tied with a
big black bow at the hack of her neck,
suggested a French maid much more
than a student. But the fact was that
Molly Dodge really was a. poor south¬
ern girl working her way through the
woman's department of this big uni¬
versity.
During the three or four hours that
Molly was not attending lectures she
had to stay In the stone floored, locker
lined cloakroom and be ready at any¬
time to get students’ hats and coats or
put them away In their owners’ lock¬
ers.
At first It had seemed not at all bad.
for Molly had a soft, lovable, southern
way of talking and honest brown eyes
that made all the girls like her. But as
the months passed they became accus¬
tomed to seeing her every day, and
they passed her thoughtlessly by. It
would not have been so hard If Molly
had been intellectual, but she was uot
at all fond of books. In fact, If she
had had a chance she would probably
have been a little frivolous.
But there were two things that made
Molly’s life bearable. One was the
daily visit of the university porter, and
the other was the appearance now and
then of new and pretty hats and
wraps. Molly had a little mirror over
her desk In the elonkroom, and when¬
ever any specially charming hat ap¬
peared on the clothing counter she
would wait till the girls had left the
room and then with It on her own pret¬
ty head steal an admiring glance at
herself over her desk.
And the porter! Well, he used to
come over from the university every
day with the students’ mail, which It
was Molly’s duty to sort and distrib¬
ute. Of course a woman student of
Thornby college ought not to have
flirted with so humble a personage as
the university porter, but Molly was
only half a student. The half that was
cloakroom maid looked forward with
impatience to the daily visitation of
the porter's cheerful smile and conta¬
gious laugh.
On rainy days Molly had to handle
countless damp and muddy rubbers
and galoches and dripping umbrellas.
That alone would have made her dis¬
like the rain, but besides that students
always wore their old hats when It
rained.
She was looking out of the Iron bars
of her basement window at the gloomy
sky one dark day In March when all at
once there swept in a stately senior, a
veritable billow of soft black furs. She
carelessly slipped them off, smiled at
Molly and hurried off to her class.
“What a dream!” thought Molly.
“And on a day like this! But what
does It matter when one has a car¬
riage ?”
Molly raised the soft pieces gently
from the counter and started to put
them in their locker. But the tempta¬
tion was too great. She came back and
replaced them lovingly on the counter.
Then very carefully she pinned the
toque over her piquant little face and
glanced approvingly at her Image in
the mirror over her desk. If only she
could see the rest, she wished. In a
flash she jumped over the counter,
closed the door Into the hall and slip¬
ped into the luxurious coat. Then she
stepped up to the students’ long pier
glass.
“If only It were a little longer,” sho
thought. And then, turning around at
the sound of the opening door, she
faced the porter. He closed the door
quickly and stood against It. Then he
turned to Molly and laughed. But Mol¬
ly didn’t laugh back. She slipped out
of the furs, sprang over the counter
and, with a guilty blush, took the
morning mail.
The next day when the porter came
Molly was deep In a volume of Horace.
“Nice book you’re reading, Molly,”
remarked the porter, and Molly, the
student, smiled coldly without raising
her eyes.
After that the porter left off the
“Molly” from his morning’s salutation,
and Molly had no difficulty in repress¬
ing him. In fact, she was a little dis¬
appointed that he took his squelching
sowllltogly.
Cures ach, Headache, Torpid Biliousness, Sour Liver Stom¬ Sick and □RIND thoroughly sallow Cleanses complexions the and system clears of
c Vi°.«a c n?To1Sf‘ Laxative Fruit Syrup p Tu guaranteed and blotches,
About a month after the episode of
the furs there was a dance in the col¬
lege gymnasium, and Molly, as was her
custom on such occasions, took her
place as maid in the dressing room.
Here she buttoned gloves and slippers
and arranged ruffles and bows for her
more favored colleagues till her fingers
were numb. Then during the long
hours of the dance she was supposed
to sit and guard the wraps and lend
her aid in case of a dilapidated coiffure
or torn ruffle. But tonight strains of
the dance music took possession of
Molly’s soul and started her dainty
feet tapping on the stone floor. Her
curiosity and her loneliness had the
upper hand, and she slipped out of the
dressing room, ran along the corridor
and up the wide stone stairs toward
the gallery overlooking the gymnasium.
As she was hurryiug timidly along
she had to pass one of the lecture
rooms, which had been converted for
the occasion into a men’s checking
room. Three young men were standing
idly smoking. There was something
about-the cut of an eveuing coat that
fascinated Molly, and she turned In the
shadow to look.
Suddenly her heart stood still. It
really was the porter, the tallest one,
with the light hair. He was laughing
now. She was just turning to run
when he faced about. And just for a
second his eyes metiers through the
darkness of the dimly lighted corridor.
She had been discovered deserting,
and by the porter! As she couldn’t go
back to the dressing room now with¬
out bolug seen openly, she fled to the
gallery and slipped Into a seat.
So the porter was probably a student
from the university! The porter whom
she had tried to repress was a friend
of some girl at the dance. Her head
swam with the excitement of the infor¬
mation.
Just then the violins struck up a
dreamy waltz. She leaned forward as
far as she dared to see the dancers.
Oh, If only she had that blue satin
gown! She seized It enviously lu her
Imagination. And then as the dancing
began her thoughts floated out on the
music, and she danced with them.
Just then she heard steps behind her,
and, looking back Into the shadow, she
saw dimly outlined the face of the por¬
ter.
“Hello, Molly,” he said cheerfully.
“Sh!” She put her hand to her lips.
“Some one might hear.”
“Well, let’s sit somewhere else. I
hate to whisper.”
"All right.” Molly rose timidly.
They passed by a short cut out In the
starlit campus.
“This is a great deal better,” he said
as he helped her on to a secluded ledge
of the great stone building. “You look¬
ed lonely up there watching the dan¬
cers.”
“I wasn’t lonely. I like to see them.”
“Oh, they aren't bad,” he said dryly.
“But when a fellow’s working his way
through his last year he hasn’t much
time to waste. I say,” he said, looking
at her curiously, “what were you think¬
ing nbout up there?”
“Oh, I wasn’t thinking at all! I was
Just making believe—waltzing off lu
that soft blue sutiu dress. The music
gets hold of me like that and drives
away the cloakroom and the wet um¬
brellas and rubbers and cross sen¬
iors”—
“And obtrusive college porters who
catch you dressing up In other peo¬
ple’s furs?” he laughed.
“Oh, no!” she said, without smiling.
"I never can make the porter fade
away with the wet umbrellas and rub¬
bers. He seems to stay and watch me
float around in other people’s blue
satin dresses, dancing with other peo¬
ple’s partners. He just stays and
laughs.” She looked up at him. “Only
there won’t be any porter In the cloak¬
room any more. There will Just be a
poor student working his way through
college like the cloakroom girl. I shall
miss the porter, I think.”
“But he couldn’t stay, you know,”
he said. “The cloakroom girl liked
him at first, and the porter used to
look forward all day to seeing her the
next. Then one day she remembered
she was a student and he was only a
porter, and after that she was cold
and distant. But the porter went
right on dreaming about her. And
now,” he said, taking Molly's tired lit¬
tle hand in his, “he is going to let the
poor student try his luck.”
And that luck was In his favor was
proved by the absence of Molly In the
cloakroom when college opened In the
fall.
_
Mrs. S. Joyce. Clarement, N. H.,
writes: “About a year ago I bought
two bottles ot Foley’s Kidney R emedy.
It cured me of a severe case of kidney
trouble of several years standing. It
certainly is a grand, good medicine, and
I heartily recommend it.” Spence Drug
Co.
Anything in
Your Eye
Many people who come to
us for eye examination im¬
agine that there is some
foreign substance in their
eyes. We can sometimes
hardly convince them that
these grity, sandy, scratch¬
ing, irritating conditions
are symptoms and effects
due to refractive errors
which may be corrected by
the use of proper Glasses.
LET US TAKE
THE GRIT OUT
GIT! JEWELRY STORE
Camilla, Ga.
Professional Cards.
F. L. Lewis,
Physician and Surgeon
Office at Lewis-Brown Drug Oo.,
during day, residence at night.
Prompt attention given calls.
Jan. 1,1908
W. II. HOGGARD,
Attorney at Law,
Camilla, Ga.
Office in front room over Bank of
Camilla, will practice in all courts
Collections a specialty.
Jan. 1, 1908
J. A. McDANIEL,
Dentist,
Office in Spence Building, Scott St.
Camilla, Ga .
Oct. 11,1907
Dr. J. L. Brown,
Physician and Surgeon,
Camilla, Georgia,
Office in Lewis-Brown Drug Oo.
Residence pbone i. Office phone SO.
Jan. 1, 1908
(7. A. STEVENSON,
Physician and Surgeon,
Camilla, Ga.
Ofliceo ver Spence Drug Company.
Office Phone 2—2 Rings.
Residence Phone 89. Night Phone 45.
May 1, 1909.
E. M. DAVIS,
Attorney - at-Law,
Camilla, Georgia.
Will practice in all courts. Office
over Citizens Bank.
Jan. 1, 1908
W. N. Spence M. O. Bennet
SPENCE $■ BENNET
Attorneys and Counselors at Law,
Camilla, Georgia.
Office in Spence building. 1-22-8
A. S. BACON , M. D.
SPECIALIST
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Office Hours:—9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p.
m. 2:80 p. m. to 5:80 p. m.
Phones :—31-28-386-40.
Albany, - - - Georgia.
60 YEARS' 'i
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