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Arc You Interested in Our Prizes?
If you are not you should get interested right away, before the others get so far ahead that you wont be able to
catch up. The prizes we are offering are the handsomest ever given away here around Christmas time. They are m
thoroughly practical, as well as beautiful, and the young ladies who win them will have a lasting reminder of the M
loyalty of their friends. There remains now less than a month’s time before the contest closes. Get your friend in the I m
race and help her win one of these handsome prizes. m
Hall Trees. New Furniture.
Several especially handsome Our easy payment plan makes We have just received a big
designs uality quartered in Hall oak Trees. and large Best it possible for you to furnish suites, line of the handsome nobbiest new lot bedroom of fur-,
q home and for it with¬
French bevel mirrors. Ele¬ your pay niture ever shown in Camilla
gant in designs. out hardly missing the money. at the price—
$7.50 to $50 $25 to $75
Tapestry, Velvet, Axminister and Matting Rugs
Our Rug department Is worth coming miles to see. In it we have collected the handsomest line of Art Squares and
I#* Rugs ever exhibited in Camilla. For service we reccommend the Matting Rugs, but for beauty and luxury the hand¬
II some line of Velvets, Tapestrys and Axministers can’t be excelled. The Art Squares are 6x9, 9x12 and 12x15 feet and
are worth from $2.50 to $25. The Rugs range from 75 cents up. Call and let us show them.
Camilla Furniture Co. m
Funeral Embalmers Directors M. Exclusive territory Schulz for Agents the Pianos famous in this m if
Day Phone . . No. 86 and Organs. m
Night Phone No. 90 L. J. hay, Manager. Camilla, Ga.
m
Bethany Items.
Mr. and Mrs. Guss McElvey,
of Pelham, spent Sunday with
their daughter, Mrs. Henry Kemp.
Mrs. Ed Wilson and daughter
Miss Beatrice spent Tuesday with
Mr. Mercer Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hilliard
spent Sunday in Camilla.
Mr, Collins Cochran spent Satur¬
day with his father Mr, 0. C.
Cochran.
Miss Mollie Collins and Mi's.
G, M. Cochran, of Camilla, visited
in our midst last week.
Mrs. Pat Griffin and Miss Jen¬
nie Butler of Bainbridge spent
several days with Mrs. Oscar
Sapp.
Mr. Frank McElvey attended to
business in Camilla Saturday.
Miss Kelly, of Grady county, is
spending several days with her
sister, Mrs. W. G. Lawrence.
Messrs. J. I), and Walter Cul¬
pepper, of Meigs, spent Thursday
with relatives.
Mrs. Cull Campbell has returned
to her home after a week or two’s
visit with her father, Mr. Bob
Eackley.
Mr. John Moore and little
daughter, Lillian, have returned
to their home at Florilla after
several days’ visit to his father-in
law, Mr. Jim Battle.
Mr. Mercer Wilson spent Sun¬
day in Pelham.
Miss Zudie Sapp entertained
several of her friends last Friday
night.
Mr. Levin Stewart spent Sun¬
day with Mr. Ed Smith.
Mr. and Mi's. Bob Backley
spen tFriday in Camilla.
Mr. Turner Stewart, of Attapul
gus, spent several days here last
week.
Mr. J. R. Cochran spent Friday
in Meigs.
Mr. Joe Stevens, of Camilla,
spent Friday with Mr. Walter
Stevens.
Mrs. Raymond Cochran spent
Tuesday in Camilla.
Mrs. W. B. Collins spent Thurs¬
day in Camilla shopping.
Mrs. Judson Sapp’s little boy
had a narrow escape last week
when he fell in the lire. He was
burned badly.
Mrs. Will Smith spent Friday
in Camilla with her mother Mis.
George Baggs.
Rose Bud.
Better Than Calomel.
Dodson’s Liver-Tone. It Livens the
Liver.
Y*u can understand the action of cal¬
omel on the liver by taking the example
of a man running. A man can run
fast for a time, but exhaustion will
take place and he will have to stop and
rest. Calomel over exerts the liver and
causes it to becomo very active for a
time, but leaves the liver exhausted and
languid. In a short time malaria has
made such gain that the liver cannot
expel it. Dodson’s Liver-Tone acts on
the liver mildly and gently. Instead of
exhausting the liver, it strenglitens it,
and gives renewed energy to rid the
system of malaria. Dodson’s Liver
Tone does not cause nausea, or un¬
pleasantness of any kind, or restriction
of habits and diet.
Spence Drug Co. sell Dodson’s Liver
Tone under the guarantee that they
will refund your money, if for any
reason you are not satisfied.
Not to Be Balked.
The Lawyer — The precedents are
against you, madam.
The Lady—Well, sue them too.
-^ i ,, ^
Mrs. S. Joyce, Glareinent, N. H.,
writes: “About a year ago I bought
two bottles ot Foley’s Kidney Remedy.
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.
Mr. Joseph Murphy.
The number of people who suffer
from stomach trouble is beyond telling.
Often, too, it is the strongest and most
robust who suffer in this way. Joseph
Murphy, 1726 W. Market St., Indian¬
apolis, Ind., was so afflicted and for
years tried everything, but he was not
cured until he took Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin, the great herb laxative
compound, which also cures constipa¬
tion, indigestion and all liver"and bowel
troubles. It is absolutely guaranteed
to do what is claimed, and if you would
like to try it before buying, send your
address for a free sample bottle to Pep¬
sin Syrup Co., 119 Caldwell Bldg., Mou
ticello, 111. It is sold by Spence Drug
Co. at 50c and f 1.00 a bottle.
Orchids.
Only $5 Is paid in Brazil to the finder
of an orchid which is sold in New
York for $150 or more.
Hexamethylenetetramine.
The above is the name of a German
chemical, which" is one of the many
valuable ingredients of Foley’s Kidney
Remedy. Hexamethylenetetramine is
recognized by medical text books and
authorities as a uric acid solvent, and
antiseptic for the urine. Take Foley’s
Kidney Remedy as soon as you notice
any irregularities and avoid a serious
malady.
Definition.
A has-been may be described as a
man whose coat shines, but whose
shoes don’t.—Lippincott’s.
Mrs. Fenbee of Tennessee.
The stomach is such an easy organ to
get out of order. One is troubled with
it in the form of -indigestion, another
heartburn, flatulency, etc. Mrs. Fenbee
of Cumberland Furnace, Tenn., suffered
for seventeen years from sour stomach.
Naturally she tried “everything” and
she says nothing ever benefited her un¬
til she took Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep¬
sin, and that cured her. It is absolutely
guaranteed to do what is claimed, and
if you want to try it before buying, send
your address for a free sample bottle to
Pepsin Syrup Co., 119 Caldwell Bldg.,
Monticello, HI. It is sold by Spence
Drug Co. at 50c and $1.00 a bottle.
----«■*>-«-
Send us your Job Printing.
Edison Phonographs
and Records
Having secured the agency for Edison Phono¬
graphs and Records, I will be glad to have all
those interested to call at the Spence Drug Co.
and see and hear their latest 2- and 4-minute
Records played on the Fireside Phono—the
new $22.00 machine.
LEON ROLES, Enterprise Camilla, Office
Ga.
Camilla
Hardware Co.,
rDEALERS m=
Shelf Hardware and •tr
General Farm Tools
7
Broad Street Camilla, Qa.
Telling the Age of a Fish.
The age of a fish can be determined
with accuracy by inspection of the oto¬
liths. or bony concretions which are
found in the auditory apparatus.
These otoliths increase in size during
the entire life of the fish, each year
adding two layers, a light colored layer
formed in summer and a dark layer
formed in autumn and winter. The
alternate layers are sharply contrasted
and very distinct, so that there is no
difficulty in counting them. The num¬
ber of pairs of layers is equal to the
number of years the fish has lived.—
Scientific American.
Absentminded.
An English paper says that the
champion absentminded man lives
at Belham. On one occasion he
called upon his old friend, the fam¬
ily physician. Alter a chat of a
couple of hours the doctor saw him
to the door and bade him good
night, saying: “Come again. Fam¬
ily all well, I suppose ?” “My heav¬
ens!” exclaimed the absentminded
beggar. “That reminds me of my
errand. My wife is in a fit!”