The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, December 22, 1898, Image 1

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the Elag-le Publishing Company. VOLUME XXXVIII. H. E. AfflOE fc GO'S New Fall Goods! Our stock embraces an immense variety of Dress Goods in plain and fancy weaves—Coverts, Broad-Cloths, Ladies’ Cloth, Pingalines, Poplins, Whip Cords, Crepons, Bengaline, Chenille Dress „ Goods, and Chenille Trimmings to match. Silks, Ribbons, Satins, Laces, Embroideries, Hosiery, Underwear, Gloyes, Men’s and Ladies’ Mackintoshes, Blankets, Cartains, Rags, Hassocks— All fresh choice goods, at exceptional values. ’ D Dress Goods, with a very few ex- vJ <J It I lllvJlJkJ ceptions will be cheaper than ever instead of HIGHER. -4-NEW LOT LADIES’ FINE SHOES JUST IN 4- Prettiest, Newest Styles. Our Clothing Stock Surpasses all former efforts. The goods wear well and fit well.— Over fourteen hundred suits to select from, and they are going at a bargain. We wish to call the attention of «« THE SEMINARY GIRLS **** To our 11-4 All Wool $3 50 Blankets. They are Beauties. R. E. ANDOE & C0.. 1 ' ■ ?• -A* st .* HEADQUARTERS for HM and Lowest Prices. THE BEST SHOES AND HATS. We have a very large stock snd will close them out at lower figures than you can buy anywhere else in the city. WE WANT COTTON SEED, And will pay the highest mar ket price. Fine Stock of Staple and Fancy Groceries, The Freshest and Best. HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAID FOR GOLD DUST. W. J. & E. C. Paimour. At John F. Little’s Old Stand. Apg TT LOOKING Y nu for SOMETHING A GOOD TO EAT ? WE HAVE Best Flour in city, Finest Grade Coffee, Nice Hams and Breakfast Bacon, Whole Wheat, Wheat and Oatmeal, Heinz’ Celebrated Pickles, Sauces and Catsup, Heinz’ Mince Meat, Fresh" Candies and Crackers, Butter and Eggs, Fruits and Vegetables, Canned Goods, Etc. Everything delivered promptly, and satisfac tion guaranteed. H. R. GRINER & CO. WINTER IS COMING! Wholesale V\Jxl±J kX„ Prompt Delivery! We can and will make it to your interest to trade with us. Respectfully, E=>. IST. THE GAINESVILLE EAGLE THE BEST STOCK FEED. Oats, Corn, Hay, Bran, and Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls. All fresh and clean and of the very best quality. WE WANT COUNTRY PRODUCE, And will pay right up to the very top notch. GOING OUT op the—- Retail * Trade! Having determined to go exclusively into the Manufacturing and Wholesale Trade, we Pnt on the market for what they will bring, our entire stock of Dry Goods, Notions, Dress Goods, Clothing, HATS, SHOES, Etc. Fifty Thousand Dollars worth of Goods TO BE SLAUGHTERED REGARDLESS OF COST TO US I Bargains for Everybody! Come quick I Get choice I Tempting rates offered Merchants to replenish stocks. Will sell entire tail Stock to some live man and secure him the largest established business in Northeast Georgia. Bring the cash. Nothing charged. ’’•■* ■ - •; J. G. Hynds MannfaoflfWß GAINESVUJLE, Are You Going to Build? SPECIAL OFFER- ZA ZA ZA /A ZA feet Flooring at 18 per thousand. 11)11 I II II I feet Weatherboarding at $8 per thousand. J- xJ 4 v_z V/ v7 feet Weatherboarding at $6.50 per thousand. Write or call for prices on Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings, Brackets, Columns, Stair and Veranda Balusters, turned and sawed Shingles, Paints, Oil, Lead, etc., if you or your neighbors are going to build. We are manufacturing some lines of Furniture and Safes that will pay you to examine before buying. You will be the gainer. Solid Oak Suts, $8; Solid Oak Dressers, $4.50 ; Solid Oak Beds, $1.75. QUEEN CITY PLANING MILL COMPANY. J. Gr. Ilynds Nlfg-. Co., Proprietors. Waterman, Burnett & Co., ( EXCLUSIVE | Clothiers, Tailors, GENTS’ FURNISHINGS and SHOES, I Mrs. J. E. Jackson. MILLINER Novelties, Fancies and Specialties exclusively our own. 'VTewness and completeness now 1.1 reign supreme. Hats of every style, price and quality. New line of Infants’ Headgear. Novelties in Neckwear and new Fall Shades of Gloves. j Established in 1860. GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1898. It rests with you whether you continue nerve-killing tobacco habit. N U-TO-U removes the desire tor tobacco, out nervous distress, expels A I tine, purifies the blood, re-^4ff a I k . stores lost manhood.^ W I boxes inhe B>*YOTOBA( from own druggist, who ■ 11 vouch torus. Take it with wl,l > Patiently, persistently. One box, SI. usually cures; 3 boxes, llM, B'uars-nteed to cure, or we refund money. Starling BemtdyCa., Chleaga, Hantraal, law lark. JOHN MARTIN, NACOOCHEE, GA. REAL ESTATE. Mines and Mining Lands, Faims and Farming Lands, Timber and Wild Lands SOLID INVESTMENTS AT TEMPTING PRICES. Correspondence Invited. ■Dre. RYDER & MERRITT, DENTISTS. GAINESVILLE. - - - GA. j Dental work of all kinds done in a , skillful manner. Crown and Bridge j work a specialty. Libel For Divorce. Matildy Nix 1 Libel for Divorce vs. ! In Hall Superior Court, William Lee Nix. ) January term, 1899. To William Lee Nix, greeting: By order of the Court, I hereby notify you ; that on the 10th day of November, 1898, Matildy i Nix filed a suit against you for total divorce, I returnable to the January term. 1899, of said | court, under the foregoing caption. You are further notified to be and uppear at the next i term of said court, to be held on the third Mon | day in January, 1899, to answer plaintiff’s com ; plaint. In default thereof the court will pro ceed as to justice shall appertain. Witness the Hon. J. J. Kimsey, Judge of said Court, this 12th day of November, 1898. J. W. OSLIN, C. S. C., Hall County, fla. Abams, Dean & Hobbs, I Plaintiff’» Attorneys. A Tremendous Smashup. While Mr. and Mrs A. J. Odell were driving out near Eli Strickland’s, five miles from the city, last Thursday, a runaway team hitched to a two-horse wagon plunged into their buggy from the rear. The team belonged to C. L. Deal and had been standing on the side of the road, where it had been left by the driver, King Hemphill, while he cut a load of wood, when it took fright at a wagon driven by Mr. Asbury Hubbard. The team sped down the road and over taking the buggy, the tongue of the wagon was driven against Mr. Odell’s back with terrific force. The buggy was overturned and the occupants thrown to tl e ground. Mr. Odell is seriously hurt, while Mrs. Odell received many painful bruises. The horses became tangled up in the buggy and one was thrown. The three horses, buggy, and wagon were jammed together and blocked. It e would seem impossible for just such a catastrophe to occur again without the loss of life, and the escape of Mr. and Mrs. Odell in this case appears as a miracle. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. “Mystic Cure” for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately dis appears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by E. E. Dixon & Co., Druggists, Gainesville. It Stuck to His Fingers. Bart Ward of Bark Camp district came to the city last Wednesday and made himself a little familiar around Hosch Bros. & Co’s store. While no one was looking he picked up a package which had been sold to another and put it in a sack which he carried and which con tained some other bundles. He left at once for home. He had come to the city in a wagon with Joe Patterson. On reaching Soapstone hill the wagon was overtaken by Carlton Hosch, who ac cused Ward of having the package, but Ward, being a middle aged man-, had no trouble in bluffing young Hosch, who is still in his teens. On his return to the store H. A. Heard, a salesman, jumped astride a bicycle and overtook the turnout near Antioch. He, too, demanded the goods. Ward re sented the charge that he had stolen a package, and said the sack only con tained an old hat and a few things, but nothing of the character described by Heard. Mr. Heard asked Patterson to look into the sack, which Paftterson proceeded to do, hauling out the stolen goods. Patterson flatly declined carry the. goods any further for his companion and the package to» Mr. Hea(4». Ward thechurned that Wbfd purchased it Pains in the chest when a person has a cold indicate a tendency toward pneumo nia. A piece of flannel daiipened with Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and bound on to the chest over the seat of pain will promptly relieve the pain and prevent the threatened attack of pneumonia. This same treatment will cure a lame back in a few hours. Sold by M. C. Brown & Co. Good English Blood. Hugh Fowler, the Englishman who enlisted as a volunteer with the Gaines ville boys, has returned to England. On leaving he said he would tell his home people that the United States was English to the core. He doubtless feels that way, and there was not to be found throughout the community a more loyal citizen to our government during his temporary stay among us. If troubled with Dizziness, Furred Tongue, Bitter Taste in Mouth, Bloated Feeling after eating, Constipation or Sick Headache, use Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. To the Silent City. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Martin died last Thursday at their borne three miles from the city. Its remains were buried at Sardis church. John Leckie, a highly esteemed Con federate veteran, died last Thursday morning at his home in Candler district at the ripe age of 68 years. The burial took place the following day at Hope well church. He leaves a large family and many friends. Billy Sargent, age 78 years, died at the county farm Thursday. His remains were taken to Yellow Creek for burial. A Shattered Nervous System. -I NALLY HEART TROUBLr Restored to Health by Dr. Miles’ Nervine, L MR. EDWARD HARDY, the jolly man ager of Sheppard Co’s, great store at Braceville, 111., writes: “I had never been sick a day in my life until in 1890. I got so bad with nervous prostration that I had to give up and commence to doctor. I tried our local physicians and one in Joliet, but none gave me any relief and I thought I was going to die. I became despondent and suffered untold agony. I could not eat, sleep nor rest, and it seemed as if I could not exist. At the end of six months I was reduced to but a shadow of myself, and at last my heart became affected and I was truly miserable. I took six or eight bottles of Dr. Miles’ Nervine. It gave me relief from the start, and at last a cure, the great est blessing of my life." Dr. Miles’ Remedies Dr. are sold by all drug- mbAi gists under a positive K** J <3 guarantee, first bottle 3 benefits or money re- funded. Book on dis- . Sfl eases of the heart and nerves free. Address, DR. MILES MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart, Ind. .OO Per Annum in Advance. I SANTA CLAUS AND THE BAD LITTLE BOYS. I. This is what the Fire said To the little boys in the trundle bed, While the blaze was burning red and blue And the wind sang over the chimney flue: “Bad little boys, They get no toys— They will never taste o’ the Christmas joys; They will never know Where the reinde" £- «, » With Santa ciaus o’er therChristmas snow; O’er the housetops high He will pass them by; Over empty stockings they’ll weep and sigh— He will pass them by, He will pass them by!” 11. And the little boys in the trundle bed Turned to the Fire, and weeping, said: “When your red flames glow They chatter so. If it wasn’t for you he would never know' If it wasn’t for you We’d have toys, too — Talking, talking the long night through, While the shadows flicker and dance about; O for a rain to put you out!” 111. But the fire said: “The skies are bright; There'll be no rain from the clouds to night; And when he comes With his horns and drums, And a sleigh half full of sugar plums, J’ll blister his feet With my burning heat, And drive him back to the snow and sleet! I’ll make him fly O’er the housetops high— Over empty stockings you’ll weep and sigh; He will pass you by, He will pass you by!” IV. That is what the Fire said To the little boys in the trundle bed; And then, they covered each curly head And cried themselves to sleep. But when all save the noisy Fire was still (Ever singing its angry will!) And on the housetop, and on the hill The snow lay white and deep. There came the sound of a tinkling sleigh, . , And a fairy trumpet blew far away.; ’ And Santa Claus', in his'eoat gray, .. Came on with* a merry shout! . And over the chimney shaking the show To the plaoewhere he knew the flames • mfist glowc- e TjMs -flakes feU the hearth below ' - *. darWneH l*h ’ sped, And standing close by the trnndle bed, And seeing the sorrowful little boys, He filled their stockings and hats with toys! —Frank L. Stanton. The Sure La Grippe Cure. There is no use suffering from* this dreadful malady, if you will only get the right remedy. You are having pain all through your body, your liver is out of order, have no appetite, no life or ambi tion, have a bad cold, in fact are com pletely used up. Electric Bitters is the only remedy that will give you prompt and sure relief. They act directly on your Liver, Stomach, and Kidneys, tone up the whole system and make you feel like a new being. They are guaranteed to cure or price refunded. For sale at M. C. Brown & Co’s drug store, at only 50 cents a bottle. Solicitor City Court. The act establishing the City Court of Hall county was so amended last Satur day as to provide for the appointment of a solicitor for the City Court by the gov ernor. Saturday was the last day of this session of the legislature and the bill was pressed through about 10 o’clock Saturday night. Governor Candler ap pointed F. M. Johnson city solicitor af ter the act was passed, and his appoint ment was confirmed by the senate before 12 o’clock. Mr. Johnson is an able lawyer and a big-hearted man, and his many friends throughout the State will be glad to learn of his appointment. His appointment has given universal satisfaction here. Mothers, we call your attention to Pitts’ Carminative. It acts promptly, it is pleasant to the taste, and the children will take it without coaxing. It relieves promptly and permanently. If we can get you to use it, you will get others to do likewise. E. E. Dixon & Co. sell it. Picklesimon’s Prosperity. Adolphus Picklesimon, one of Union county’s most industrious and progres sive farmers, was in Dahlonega the other day with a load of produce to sell. He is about forty-five years of age and never wore an article of store clothing in his life. All his clothes are made at home. He even tans the leather and makes his own shoes, purchasing no wearing ap parel unless it is a hat. He even manu factures his own guns. His daughters handle the old fashioned loom and wheel instead of a piano or an organ, and the boys use the plow handles and hoes in place of a football or bat. All of which is the cause of the prosperity the whole family are now enjoying.—Nugget. Operating in Buford. J. W. Jett, A. M. Jett, and Oliver Clark Lave leased the lowa Planing Mill at Buford and will operate it next year. This is a splendid piece of property and these three men are well qualified to con duct such a business. J. W. Jett moved his family to Buford Monday. His brother and Mr. Clark will move down just as soon as they can get vacant houses. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by M. C, Brewn Co, NUMBER 51 A Chlorination Plant. The chlorination or Theiss process is the thing without which gold mining is an uncertain and unsatisfactory vocation. This process ttorks successfully all grades of ores from one-dollar ore up, and gets about all there is in it at an in significant cost. i The obstacle in the way of a plant! is always a formidable one, the cost being something like $35,000. The new mining company that has bought up practically all the gold lands about Dahlonega are blessed with ampl# capital and seem! to know what to do wijji it. They will ersct a chlorination plant? and having done this, will get 95'per cent of the gold, whereas the old quicksilver method wias likely to get 25. The Manufacturers' Record says this week : - | Dahlonega—Gohl Mining, Mills, etc.' — The Dahlonega Consolidated Gold Min ing Co., H. D. Ingersoll, manager, (men tioned last week at length) is to install new and improved machinery; will er|ct a 200-stanip mill or two 100-stamp mills, and a plant to treat the sulphurets. ; It is not decided yet whether said plant wlill be a cynanide or chlorination, but West ern plants will be examined before de cision is reached. Two bur J; cd mien will be employed. The company s lands aggregate over 460,000 acres. A Narrow Escape. Thankful words written by Mrs. Ada E. Hart, of Groton, S. D. “Was taken with a bad cold which settled on my lungs; cough set in and finally terminatjed in Consumption. Four doctors gave me up, saying I could live but a short time. I gave myself up to my Savior, deter mined if I could not stay with my friends on earth, I would meet my absent odes above. My husband was advised to get Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds. I gave it a trijal, took in all eight bottles. It has cutjed me, and thank God I am saved and now a well and healthy woman.” Trial bot tles free at M. C. Brown & Co’s drug store. Regular size 50c and sl. Guar anteed or price refunded. ' Reducing -Stock. R. C. Carithers, who eatne here from » Madison county a few weeks ago and opened a store in the Dixon store-room on Main street, had a trade-wind of home kind to strike him last Saturday and he sold out his stock of goods*at any price the public would offer for the different - articles he carried. A *s4*so hangibjf store lamp sold for 25 cents. As 4 50 oil tank sold for sl. A ease of soap which, he was offered $5 for during the day was sold at night for-75 cgnts. People bought many articles' which they did not need because they went so cheap. •• w Me. Carithers said be to At-V* • lant? to enter business.. . P&wer of tie Magnet. VA.X ' - - ArMteel t.eeflie, wbidK had- * £ Powerful by a. - and drew to it a speck of steel that jvas imbedded in the rear of George Fritrs tein’s eye and threatened to make ikim blind. Before the magnet was brought into play the exact position of the trou blesome speck was located by an X-jray photograph.—Chicago Record. Remarkable as have been the strides made inoperative surgery, they do not outshine advances made in other branch es of healing science. Mrs. Charles John son, whose husband is an engineer on the G. C. & S. F. Ry., at Cleburn, Texas, was laid out for dead while in the agonies of heart failure. The final return to Con sciousness gave the victim another chance for life—she embraced it and won. Ina recent letter Mrs. Johnson writes: “The sufferings I endured from my heart trouble were something terrible. I would have fainting spells, my head would throb and my eyes would bulge out as though ready to burst. My bauds and feet would become swollen and black spots like mortified flesh would appear on my body. Then my heart would stop beating ami the most agonizing pains would shoot through my body, and final ly choke off my power to breathe. The Dr. Miles’ New Heart Cure was recom mended to me and at last I decided to give it a trial. The first three doses brought relief In a week I was feeling much better, and now I am entirely free from the pain and suffering of that terri ble disease.” Doings in Dawson. From the Advertiser : Dr. Burt killed a three hundred pound hog this week. After grinding quite a lot of sausage from the choice parts his good wife sent The Advertiser force a dish full for which we return many thanks. Some of the stockholders of the Bar rettsville mining company visted jthe property a few days ago. They contem plate pushing work on their property and will have about sixty hands em ployed first of the year. Wasting in Children can be overcome in almost all cases by the use of Scott’s Emulsion' of Cod-Liver Oil and the Hypophos phites of Lime and Soda. While it is a scientific fact that cod-liVer oil is the most digestible oil in Ex istence, in SCOTT'S EMULSION it is not only palatable, but it is already digested and made ready for immediate absorption by the system. It is also combined with .c_t the hypophosphites, v inch supply a food not only for the tissues of the body, but for the bones and nerves, and will build up the child when its ordinary food does not supply proper nourishment. ! i L I , Be sure you get SCOTT'S Emulsion. See that the . man and fish are on the wrapper. I All druggists ; 50c. and SI.OO. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York.