The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, March 16, 1899, Image 4

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Crippled by- Rheumatism. Those who have Rheumatism find themselves growing steadily worse all the while. One reason of this is that the remedies prescribed by the doctors contain mercury and potash, which ul timately intensify the disease by caus ing the joints to swell and stiffen, producing a severe aching of the bones. B. S. S. has been curing Rheumatism for twenty years—even the worst cases which seemed almost incurable. Capt. O.E. Hughes, the popular railroad egndnctor, of Columbia, 8. C„ had an experi ence with Rheumatism which convinced him that there is only one cure for that painful dis ease. He says: “I was a great sufferer from mus cular Rheumatism for two years. I could get no permanent relief from any medicine pre scribed by my physician. I took about a dozen bot tles of your 8. 8. 8., and now I am as well as I • ever was Inmy life. lam sure that your medicine cured me, and I would i recommend it to any one' suffering from any blood disease. Everybody knows that Rheumatism is a diseased state of the blood, and only a blood remedy is the only proper treatment, but a remedy containing potash and mercury only aggravates the trouble. S.S.S. r Th. Blood being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to the very cause of the disease and a per manent cure always results. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed to con tain no potash, mercury or other dan gerous minerals. ' Books mailed free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. |f Yon Do, Come to Mo. THE war is over, and we have demonstrated to the world that our country is the strong est in the family of nations, that our citi zens are the best men on earth, and that American soil is worth more than that of any other portion of the face of the globe. 1 have on hand for sale a part of this glorious country, consisting of Farms, Stores. City Resi dences, Building Lots, Gold Mines, and, in short, every kind of Real Estate that a man or woman may desire for a happy home or a com fortable living. On account of the stagnation of business during ’96 and ’97, and as a result of the war with Spain prices reached their lowest notch. Prospects are now much brighter, bus iness is looking up, and I believe now is a good time to invest. I can still sell at lowest prices. I have a large number of Building Lots that I am selling at low prices and on small pay ments, putting it in the reach of all to buy. I have been in this business a long time, many of you have dealt with me, and I propose to continue to act for the interests of bath buyers and sellers. I ask all who desire to buy, or have property they want to sell, to call on me or write to me. I will benefit you either way. C_7 a jV • ID CD jZ I icin' 9 Real Estate and Insurance, No. 1 State Bank Building, GAINESVILLE. GA. SEND US ONE DOLLAR new 1S»1» iout. r.l high grade RESERVOIR COAL AND POOD COOK STOVE, by freight C.0.D., subject to examination. Examine it at Sour f re 1 g h t i epot and if - r ‘ found perfe ly satisfactory tK (MJ and the Kreatrst ,‘lB zjBI ■tore bargain d | Al’Y.dY *|' MrVAeiWl you ever r ]n | i ’ ffejic 5 *' Egy £>} ] iwj®—' saw or . i f 11 Srr heard of, wXh “f pay tlie freight .j- ™*™' acme PRICK. % ' fit $13.00 Rlßfi less the WOP DlflU •1.00 sent MjSf ’ Ji WRITE FOR OUR BIG FREE fie*igh? and STOVE CATALOGUE charges. This stove is size No. 8, oven is 16J£xlSx11. top is 42x23; made from best pig iron, extra large flues .heavy covers, heavy linings and grates, large oven shelf.heavy tin-lined oven door, handsome nickel plated ornamen tations and trimmings, extra Large deep genuine Standish Eire clain lined reservoir, handsome large ornamented base, eat coal burner made, and we furnish FREE an extra wood grate, making it a perfect wood burner. WK ISSUE A BIN D ING GUAHANTEK with every stove and guarantee safe de livery to your railroad station. Your local dealer would charge you 825.00 for such a stove; the freight is only about 81.00 for each 500 miles, no we Gave vou at least 810. Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.* (Inch CHICAGO. (Bears, Koebuck A Co. are thoroughly reliable—Editor.) Grass Seed. Clover Seed. A fresh Supply just in. White Oats, Il AI \ Texas Rust-proof, Grazing Oats. Uli. A kJi 90-day Oats. Seed Potatoes.... Early Rose, Goodrich, Peerless. A Special line of Garden Seed and Onion Sets. W. J. & E. C. Palmour. O if” 1 9 jfs cut this ad out aud send to us and if you f" 111 IVQ B itiHK liva East of the Rocky Mountains we will ■ ■■ send this HICH-CRADE TOP BUCCY to you by freight C. O. D. subject to examination, you can examine it at your Height depot and if you And it KQI AL TO AST *IOO.OO TOP BlGl>Y you ever ta-v. perfectly bati-'factorvand the OKASDKST BAKGAIS TOf HAVK bvkrskknorhkardof, OUR SPECIAL OFFER PRICE $55.00 and freight charges, less the pay the railroad agent rnivu juu.vu One Dollar sent Wlth order . Sr IN OUR OWN FACTORY IN CHICAGO, >m the best material money can buy. While in iggy Catalogue we show, Top Buggies made by •s at 521.50, $28.75 and $34.75 the exact that are sold by machinery dealers, at •45.00 to a being widely advertised by many at *35.00 to *60.00. %CME QUEEN AT $55.00 is the most value ever offered, TUB LOWEST PRICK EVER HE BEST BI <;t.T THAT CAN BE BIILT. We maintain our own five story buggy factory for the sole purpose of buiidiugand selling a BETTER BCOBT THAN WK CAN Bl Y ELSEWHERE and to SAVE OVR CI'STOMKRS MANIFACTI RER'S PROFIT. Every Buggy We Make Is Guaranteed Five Years and They Will out wear Five Ordinary Factory Rigs. THE MATERIAL AND LABOR IN OUR ACME QUEEN cost more than double that in the ordinary factory buggy. We use a *S.SO cushion cloth, some use 90 eent; we use a *1.50 head lining, some use 40 cent; we use/S eent leather, some use 9 cent; weuseSt.so colors and varnishes, some use 75 cent and (1.00. WE PAY ALMOST DOUBLE the price most makers • rvxecu /zviiD nueai mavc ■> >' ,a - v for Wheete, Axien, Springs. DaUea aad Soeheta, ACME QUEEN. (OUR OWN MAKE.) because WE want THE BEST. Our wheels, gear and bodies are Water Rubbed and the Material and Labor in Paintlse OUR ACME QUEEN, would paint three eheap bnegiea. $55.00 BARELY COVERS COST of mate .land labor, leaving us the smallest profit imaginable, but we are building 70 buggies a day aud to advert .se our buggy factory we are willing to SELL THEM ON • 1.00 PROFIT EACH. We know *70.00 daily profitmt 70 buggies will satisfy us, advertise us everywhere and build up the LARGEST BUGGY BUSINESS IN TILE WORLD. THE ACME QUEEN we build in narrow or wide track, cloth or leather trimmed, end springs, buffed leather quarter top, solid panel back, springs in bac!:. baihrr entered Bow. and Nnta, Rubber Step., Velvet Carpet, b0dy,24x54 inches. No. 1 Sarven’s patent screwed rim wheel p.Hied in 16 ecate, body black, gear dark green with very delicate modest striping, complete with shafts, side and back curtains, boot storm apron and anti-rattlers and shafts. Pole, Neekroke and IV hi He trees in plaee of shafts, fl .75 edra. Bl KI.T WEIGHS 400 POINDS and the freight will average for 200 miles. *2.00: SCO mileeu, *2.75: 400 mi ... #7.25t M'd miles, **.6O: 1,000 mlleo, C 6.00. ccun PYrt! I AQ with yoar order. UK GIAFAVTEE the Buggy to Reaeh Ton Safely and OuiyMVlvE yvl.LHn jf satisfactory, pay the railroad agent balance, (54.00 aad freight ehargoa, otherwise pav nothing and the agent will tetr, rn baggy at our expense and we will return yourtt.OO. DON’T BUY A CHEAP FACTORY BUGGY sold almost exclusively by all Machinery Dealers and catalogue Homes. BUY THE BEST BUCCY MONEY CAN BUILD, direct from the Maker at the LOWEST PRICE EVER KNOWN. ORDER TO DAY. DON’T DELAY. WRITE FOR OUR FREE BUCCY, CARRIAGE AND HARNESS CATALOGUE. Address SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), CHICAGO, ILL. A Shrewd Youngster. Uncle (to nephew playing the game of war with a companion of his own age)—“lf you take the for tress within a quarter of an hour I’ll give you a dime. Youngster (a minute iater) — “Uncle the fortress is taken; now let me have the dime.” Uncle—“ How did you manage it so quickly?” Youngster—“l offered the besieged a nickel and they capitulated.” The Curative Properties, Strength and Effect of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Med icine are always the same. It cannot be equalled, Instincts of a Woman. A little girl who had for some time wanted a dog was taken very ill. One day when much better she told her mother of her desire and begged her to ask her grandpa to buy her one. The mother answered that “grandpa” did not like dogs and probably would not be willing to buy one. Then seeing the little invalid look sadly disappointed, she said: “Wait till you get well, my dear; then we will see.” “Ob, no,” answered the child, whose few years had taught her some wisdom. “The more sick I am, th( more likely he will be to buy it for me.” $ BRADFIELDS* | FEMALE f | REGULATOR 1 L gives nature the mild assistance x needed for the regulation of the T V menses. It is of wonderful aid to x v the girl just entering womanhood, F F to the wife, and to the woman ap- f 4 proaching or going through the turn J 4 of life. Women who suffer from F p any unnatural drain, any bearing- 4 F down pains in the lower abdomen, i \ falling or displacement of the \ x womb, can quickly cure their troub- J ’ ’ les at home, completely away from t x the eyes of a physician. A few F F doses taken each month will regu- F F late the menses perfectly. F <t Large bottles sold by druggists for sl. A ( ) The Bradfield Regulator Company, Atlanta, Ga. £ JOHN MARTIN NACOOCHEE, GA. REAL ESTATE. Mines and Mining Lands, Fat ms and Farming Lands, Timber and Wild Lands SOLID INVESTMENTS AT TEMPTING PRICES Corr«sponden«e Invited. VI. C. ROBERTS. JEWMLER. Repair Work Done Promptly. Remember the place : RIGSBY’S SHOE STORE, Gainesville, Georgia. Statue to Miss Winnie Davis. Richmond, Va., March 9.—At a meeting of the Richmond chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy, last night, the design for the statue to be erected in Hollywood over the grave of Miss Winnie Davis, the “Daugh ter of the Confederacy,” wae chosen and approved by Mrs. Davis. The design, which is by Zalvey, of New York, is the figure of a.sitting augel. It is to be of Italian marble and will be erected by the Daughters of the Confederacy. Mrs. Davis writes: “When I found it possible for this statue to be erected over Winnie’s grave, I had feeling nearer akin to happiness than I had ever known since her death.” Shorten the time of Confinement, Strengthen mother and supply Breast Milk for Child by using Simmons Squaw Vine Wine or Tablets. General Gasper S. Ochoa, the owner of the mining land on Po pocatepetl, the Mexican volcanic mountain, has just closed a deal for its sale to a syndicate of English cap italists, the price being $250,000 in gold. The most extensive sulphur deposit in the world is located in the crater of the volcano, and it is the intention of the syndicate to build a cog-wheel railroad to the top of the mountain in order to handle the pro duct. Rob Childbirth of its terrors and min imize the pain and dangers of labor by using Simmons Squaw Vine Wine or Tablets. Mrs. Sheridan and Mrs. Logan are among the largest women pensioners of this country. They receive res pectively $2,500 and $2,000 a year Ladies desiring a contented and happy old age should use Simmons Squaw Vine Wine or Tablets commencing at 40 years old and continue during “Change of Life.” Possibly we shall do more business with Spain hereafter than ever be fore, and the people of the two coun tries will understand each other bet ter than prior to the war. Savannah has shipped to Spain some 64,000 bales of cotton since the first of Octo ber, besides lumber, staves and naval stores, and a large increase of immi gration from Spain is noted at New York. Creeping CnsafOM Do not think for a single moment that consumption will ever strike vou a blow. It does not come tfiat way. It creeps its way along. First, you think it is a little cold; nothing but a little hack ing cough; then a little loss in weight: then a harder cough; then the fever and the night sweats. The suddenness comes when you have a hemorrhage. Better stop the disease while it is yet creeping. You can do it with Wger’s Cherry Pectoral You first notice that you cough less. The pressure on the chest is lifted. That feeling of suffocation is removed. A cure is hastened by placing one of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Plaster over the Chest. A Book Free. It is on the Diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Mfr As U 9 Freofy. I If you have any complaint whatever B and desire the best medical advice you . can possibly receive, write the doctor 1 freely. You will receive aprompt reply, without cost. Address, M DR. J. C. AYER. Lowell, Masi. The most fascinating inven. I > t ion of the age. Al ways ready f to entertain. It requires nq > skill to operate it and repro duce the music of bands, or, chestrns, vocalists or instru jfcrj mental soloists. There is nothing like it for an even ing’s entertainment at home or in thesocial gath ering. You can sing or talk to it and it will reproduce immediately and as often as desired, your song or words. Other so-called talking machines reproduce only records of cut and dried subjects, specially prepared in a laboratoiy; but the Graphophone is not limited to such performances. On the Grapho phone you can easily make and i nstantly reproduce records of the voice, or any sound. Thus it con stantly awakens new interest and its charm is ever fresh. The reproductions are clear and brilliant. GiapfiopfionesaresoiflioiSiOup Manufactured under the patents of Bell, Tainter Edison and Macdonald. Our establishment is head quarters of the world for Talking Machines and Talking Machine Supplies. Write for catalogue. Columbia Phonograph Co., “Dep’t 30," 919 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, ... - D. C. NEW YORK. PARIS. CHICAGO. ST. LOUIS. PHILADELPHIA. BALTIMORE WASHINGTON. BUFFALO. Drs RYDER & MERRITT, DENTISTS , GAINESVILLE. - - - GA. Dental work of all kinds done in a skillful manner. Crown and Bridge work a specialty. FAMOUS SHEEP DOGS. THESE CANINE WONDERS CAME FROM NEW ZEALAND. A Batch of Stories, Illustrating the Rare Intelligence and Faithfulness of the Animals, Told by an Old Time Colorado Sheep Man. “The most celebrated breed of shep herd dog ever known in the west, ’ ’ said Jud Bristol, the old time sheep man of Fort Collins, Cdt>., “were these bred from a pair of New Zealand dogs brought to Colorado in 1875. I had several of their pups on my ranges and could fill a volume with instances of their rare intelligence and faithfulness. “I remember one pup in particular. He was only six months old when he was sent out one day to work on the range. At night, when the herd was brought up to the corrals, we saw at once that a part of the herd was miss ing. There w«*re 1,600 head in the bunch when they went out in the morning,but when we put them through the shoot we found that 200 were miss ing. The pup was also missing. “Well, all hands turned out for the search. We hunted all the night and all of the next day, and did not find the lost sheep until along toward night. But there they were, all herded in a little draw, about five miles from home, and there was the faithful dog standing guard. The wolves were very plentiful in those days, and the dog had actually hidden the sheep from the animals in the draw. The poor fellow was nearly famished, as he had been for 36 hours without food or water. From that day he became a hero, but was so badly af fected by hunger, exposure and thirst and subsequent overfeeding and petting that he died not long afterward. “This same pup’s mother was an es pecially fine animal. One night the herder brought in his flocks and hurried to his cabin to cook himself some sup per, for he was more than usually hun gry. But he missed the dog, which usu ally followed him to the cabin of an evening to have her supper. The herder thought rather strange of it, but made no search for the dog that night. But when he went down to the corrals the next morning he found the gate open and the faithful dog standing guard over the flocks. The herder, in his haste the night before, had forgotten to close the gate, and the dog, more faithful than her master, had remained at her post all night, though suffering from hunger and thirst. “On another occasion this same dog was left to watch a flock of sheep near the herder’s cabin while the herder got his supper. After the herder had eaten his supper he went out to where the sheep were and told the dog to put the sheep in the corral. This she refused to do, and although she had had no supper she started off over the prairie as fast as she could go. The herder put the sheep in the corral and went to bed. About midnight he wae awakened by the loud barking of a dog down by the corrals. He got up, dressed himself and went down to the corrals, and there found the dog with a band of about 50 sheep, which had strayed off during the previous day without the herder’s knowledge; but the poor dog knew it, and also knew that they ought to be corralled, and she did it “Another good story of this same dog: One day she was sent out with a new herder to an outlying ranch some 15 miles distant. That night she came home, and by her actions told us that there was something wrong at the ranch. Well, we mounted our bronchos and went over to the ranch, and very soon found out what the matter was. The new herder was simply a tramp, who as soon as he had got a good feed had lit out and left the sheep uncared for save by his more faithful compan ion, the dog. “One time we had a tenderfoot come to work for us, and the boys had filled him so full of hair raising stories that he never went out on the range without expecting to be either eaten by bears or scalped by Indians. One day he came running to the house, all out of breath, declaring that he had seen a bear. We laughed at him and sent him back to the range. “A few days afterward he came in again, more scared than ever, and said it was a bear that time sure. Well, we took our guns and a foxhound and went out, and, sure enough, over on a hill we saw a large black animal. It wasn’t a bear, but we couldn’t make out ex actly what it was. We sent the hound and the shepherd dog that was tending the herd out on its trail, while we fol lowed on foot. The dogs chased the ani mal over he hill out of sight. Soon the shepherd dog came trotting leisurely back and took her place with the herd again. Over in a gulch we found the hound standing over a dead animal, which upon examination we found to be a big black Mexican sheep. Now, that shepherd dog, as soon as she found it was nothing but a sheep, had given up the chase and returned to her flock. She knew it was not game and of no account, while the hound had followed the trail and killed the sheep.”—Den ver Post. Knew Her Business. Lady—l wish to get a birthday pres ent for my husband. Shopwalker How long have you been married, madam? “Ten years.” “Bargain counter to the right, mad am. ” —Boston Traveler. Some Advlee. “I would advise the young man,” said the corn fed philosopher, “to form his friendships among men older than himself. By the time he is at middle age they will all be dead and can’t bor row his money.”—lndianapolis Jour nal. The Christian era was not introduced as a basis of reckoning time until the sixth century. The Sweetwater, Tenn., Telephone tells a story of a female Sam Jones, who is stirring up the people out in Missouri. In a sermon recently, she is represented to have said: “There is a man in this bouse who is untrue to his wife! I am going to throw this hymn book at him.” She raised the hymn book as if she was going to throw it and every man in the house ducked bis head but one to avoid the book. Then she blistered the dodgers and lauded the one true man. It was afterwards learned that he was deaf and dumb. So far as their personal history is concerned, Messrs. Fairbanks and Beveridge, who will represent Indiana in the Senate of the next Congress, have much in common. Both were born in Central Ohio, both taught school and afterward studied law, both reside in Indian apolis and both are members of the same Methodist Episcopal Church. THE FICKLE SEA Who has heard the cod line singing o'er ihe bow? Who has hauled the flashing prey across the wale ? Who has felt the wet brine stinging on the brow When the boat is all a-stagger 'neath the gale? Who has laid him in the sagging of the sail While the masthead’s nodding sleepy to the moon, And has slumbered till the stars grow dim and pale ? Fill your bumpers! Join the chorus of my croon! Oh, the fickle, fuming, frolic fretting sea! Oh, the limpid, lapping, laughter loving sea We who love her fill our glasses To the best of all the lasses, And we drink a briny bumper to the sea! Who has lain upon the sloping deck awash? Who has hauled and clewed and chanted in the wind? Who has watched the mainmast bending nigh a-crash, While the rival boat's a-droppingoff behind ? Who has leaned against the creaking, jolting wheel Through a moonlit summer night on south ern sea? Who has felt the old sea longing that I feel ? Fill your bumpers, men, and shout aloud with me! Oh, the singing, sighing, salty scented sea! Oh, the rushing, roaring, ramping, raging sea! On your feet and clash your glasses, “To the best beloved of lasses— Here’s a brimming, briny bumper to the seal’ —Richard Stillman Powell in Criterion. THE PROFESSOR’S ADVICE. It Wan Followed, but It Spoiled the Next Recitation. They tell this story of a college prank the boys at Princeton played on Profess or “Winky” Young, professor of as tronomy. His recitations were recently held the first thing in the morning, and he had to admonish the students in his division to correct the fault of tardi ness, which he claimed was increasing in a lamentable manner, and when one of the students explained that they all studied so late at night they were apt to oversleep in the morning he kindly advised them to secure alarm clocks, which he said were one of the most val uable and useful inventions The next day nearly every student in the class came into recitation with an alarm clock in his pocket, which by pa tient and united effort were set so that one would go off promptly at every suc cessive minute of the hour. The effect can be imagined. Shortly after the first student was called to recite one of the clocks in the pocket of a boy at the oth er end of the room went off with a ter rible clamor, and before it had finished a second in another part of the room made even a louder racket There was a brief interval, which the professor utilized to call up another stu dent, but the latter was scarcely on his feet before the third clock went off. The performance was continued for half an hour or more, when the professor, who had a keen sense of humor, recognized the situation and cut short the fun by terminating the recitation The boys explained that they had followed his advice and secured alarm clocks, which they were carrying around with them because they were likely to fall asleep at most any time. —St Louis Globe- Democrat Nnbnr Pasha and the Pipes. Soon after the occupation of Cairo by the British troops the late Nubar Pasha took a prodigious fancy to the music of the Black Watch and had the idea of having a servant taught the use of the bagpipes. Nubar dispatched a French friend, who spoke English very well, to interview a piper on the subject. Donald replied “Weel, he micht learn or he micht no' Bit, let me tell ye, it needs wind an mickle strength tae fill the bags o’ the pipes an keep blawin Sae if yin o’ thae Egyptian chaps took the job on he’d need tae be bandaged yin o’ ’ mummies, or maybe he’d burst him sel’. ” This conversation was reported to Nubar, who took the piper’s remarks seriously So he gave up the idea of having a skirler attached to his house hold, as the use of the bagpipes was at tended with the prospect of such dan ger to the performer.—Westminster Gazette A Button Collection. A New York lady’s pet hobby is a marvelous collection of all sorts and sizes of buttons Some of the enamel and minature painted ones are veri table works of art, while paste and precious medals worked in various ways supply other fascinating specimens. The greatest rarities are two Chinese official buttons, which in reality are decorations, and buttons from off gar ments known to have been worn by Marat, Robespierre, Charles Dickens, Sir Walter Scott, Washington, Nelson, Byron. De Foe, George 11, George 111, Napoleon, Wellington, Bismarck, Irv ing, Garfield and numerous other celeb rities of both sexes. The collection numbers some 10,000 specimens.—New York Telegram. The Old Oaken Bucket. “The Old Oaken Bucket’’ was in spired by the following conversation Woodworth, the author, said to a friend, “There is no drink better than brandy. ” The friend replied, “Yes, there is— a drink from the old oaken bucket that hangs in the well at home. ’’ To Yell. Tommy—Papa, what is it time to do when the clock strikes 1 ? His Father —Time to go to dinner, son. Tommy—Then what is it time to do when mamma strikes one?—Jewelers' Weekly A million silver dollars would occu py, in round numbers, 120 cubic feet Therefore a room or rather a box 6 feet long, 5 feet wide and 4 feet high would accommodate them comfortably. The political term “dark horse” orig inated from the habit of jockeys paint ing some fast racer in dark colors and entering him in a race under a fictitious name and thus winning Hunting in Cuba will be a fash ionable sport some of these days, be cause Cuba is a great game country, and the kind of game found there gives the best of sport. There are deer, which come to the edges of the openings and clearings at dusk and dawn to feed. Countless flocks of pigeons and doves bend the branches of the trees by their weight. There are long, thick snakes fit to try a sportman’s skill with a gun or rifle— snakes that furnish beautiful mottled skins for trophies. Wild boars live in the dense wooden brush and it takes a hardy man to face a wour.ded one. There are wild dogs, too, and many birds of the most beautiful plumage. Wild fowls are found on all the streams; in the thickets live large birds, chiefly guinea bene. In cidentally hordes of stray outlaws may add to .the excitement of a hunt during the next few years. ? Any Girl Can Telit /7 * physician who makes the w 50 test ' s honest about it can / 7 tell you that, in many cases.the I Kg number of red corpuscles in the s' blood is doubled after a course v of treatment with Dr. Williams* zj 7 Pink Pills for Pale People. r A That t * lis means good blood. k? (G; may not be entirely clear from \ the doctor's statement, but any M girl who has tried the pills can tell ty you that it means red lips,bright/* Z/ 1 eyes, good appetite, absence of F (G, XTmjSEjml headache, and that it trans- w forms the pale and sallow girl w Jl ,nto a maiden who glows with J 7 the beauty which perfect health SI M alone can give. fa Mothers whose daughters » fe grow debilitated as they pass f 7 from girlhood into womanhood 7 rJ) should not neglect the pill besty v 511 adapted for this particular ill. r /t nwl ’1 Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale 17 ' People act directly on the blood V ’ and nerves, invigorating the body, j the functions and restoring strength and health yf the exhausted woman when every effort of the phy sician proves unavailing. Frank B. Trout, of 103 Griswold Ave., Detroit, Mich., says: “At the age of fourteen we had to take our daughter from school on account of ill health. \\ she weighed only 90 pounds, was pale and sallow and the doctors said she y* >ll had anaemia. Finally we gave her Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. fUL When she had taken two boxes she was strong enough to leave her bed, and - *’7 in less than six months was something like herself. To-day she is entirely IL y /* cured, and is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing 130 pounds, and has never Zn had a sick day since.”—Detroit Evening News. ri \ rhe oVtXe J genuine ,* Mil d)IHEBE&P «*««»?«• L, $7 printed, in redUnkon i-jMI/ [ £h>te pnper indbews Schenectady,** (C Ku e it or cures rvc«. vj tne roll tA the crlat' Ki fruwfex wA ttevve Tonic The American Idol. There is one American hc.ro of the Spanish war, and only one, who has escaped criticism and ridicule by his countrymen. That man is Admiral George Dewey, United States navy, the con queror of Montejo and Manila. This fact stands out in striking contrast when the bitterness and denunciation and strife growing out of the war is recalled. Where is n, 'other figure of the war who has not been harshly and severely criticized and denounced in some quarter, justly or unjustly? Dewey is the only one. That this man who was advanced to the rank of admiral of the American navy without an objection and with patriotic fervor on the part of the nation is the one striking and lead ing figure of the war there is no question. There is a lesson in the career of Dewey which will become important when the history of the war is finally made up. No American finds fault with Dewey; no American would take from him one flower laid at his feet by the grateful American public; no American is jealous and envious of George Dewey, the greatest hero of them all. He is the idol of the American people. From one end of this country to the other, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, through the north and south, and west and east there is nothing but honor for Dewey, and patriotic praise afld expressions of happiness on the part of the press and people that America has a Dewey. Long may the admiral’s flag float in the bre< ze and arous:- the burning patriotism and love of the American people for a real American hero. Reindeer Herds Increasing. Rev. Sheldon Jackson, United States commissioner of education, has returned from Alaska. The sec ond week in August he visited the coast of Siberia, where he secured over 150 domestic reindeer, and had them shipped to Alaska to replace part of the herd taken from Cape Prince of Wales to relieve the imprisoned whalers at Point Barrow. Dr. Jackson is encouraged by the large natural increase in the Alaska herd. The Laplanders were estab lished at Unaliklik. From there they will be sent to different parts of Alaska when there is call for their services as mail carriers. Many of the Laplanders have taken out first citizen’s papers. Tom Blodgett, a self appointed leader of the republican party of Georgia, was tried last week in Cher okee Superior Court in two cases. He defended himself. In one case he was acquitted but was found guilty in the other and fined SIOO and costs. There were 500,000 Indians in this country a century ago; there are 300,- 000 now. It has cost the United Stales so far one thousand millions of dollars directly to conquer the Indians and we are now paying $9,000,000 a year to keep the remain der peaceable. Washington as a Business Man. At the time of his deaih he was supposed to be the largest land holder in the country being possessed of 51,395 acres, exclusive of the Mt. Vernon estate, his town properties, and the real estate of his wife. The value of his property at his death, again excluding the Mt. Vernon estate and the property of his wife, was estimated at $530,000. The estate at Mt. Vernon included 8,000 acres. In Ford’s “Washington” an account is given of the stock on the Mt. Vernon property. It appears that in 1793 Wash ington had 54 draught horses on the estate, 317 head of cattle, 634 sheep and “many” hogs. The hve stock was valued at his death at $35,000. In addition to the draught horses already mentioned, he had in 1799 “two covering jacks and three young ones, ten she asses, 42 working mules and 51 younger ones:” Mt. Vernon was a community in itself, including some 300 persons. Washington had his own blacksmith shop, his own brickmaker and masons, his car penters, shoemaker and weavers. We can readily understand how it was that while he was president be was continually thinking of Mount Vernon. Flushed Cheeks, Throbbing Temples, Nausea, Lassitude, Lost Appetite, Sallow Complexion, Pimples Blotches, are warn ings. Take Dr. M. A. Simmous IJver Medicine. Paper cellars are being turned out by only two firms in this country, one in Boston and the other in New York. Their total annual output is i from 20,000,000 to 25,000,000 collars. Time was when the paper collar was the correct thing. They have gone with the linen duster. No other medicine builds up and for’i fies the system against Miscarriage as well as Simmons Squaw Vine Wine ot Tablets. _ In view of the fact that it has got to be a regular thing for wholoai charges of bribery to be made when ever a United States Senator is elec ted, it has been suggested by the De troit News that if it is impossible Ü bring about the election of senators by a direct vote of the people, a pub lic auction, giving all bidders ar. equal chance, would be better than the present system. To restore the Clear Skin, the Bright j Eye, the Alert Gait and Sound Health use Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. I A Savannah man shipped a thou sand dozen eggs to Havana, and will , »et $1 60 per dozen for them—one I ° r 1 thousand six hundred dollars for the : lot. ! ■ Tonight If your liver is out of order, causing Biliousness, Sick Headache, Heart burn, or Constipation, take a dose of Hood's Pills On retiring, and tomorrow your di gestive organs will be regulated and you wiD be bright, active and ready for any kind of work. This has been the experience of others; it will be yours. HOOD’S PILLS ar sold bv all medicine deniers. 25 cis. How He Did It. A Sussex laborer who was giyi n<r evidence in a case of manslaughter, arising out of a quarrel of two com panions, one of whom bad been killed by the other hitting him with his pickaxe, gave the following lucid description of the act: “You see, he pecked he with a peck, and he pecked he with a peck, and if he’d pecked he with his peck as hard as he pecked he with his peck he’d ’a killed he instead o’ he killin’ o’ be.” Parsnip Complexion. It does not require an expert to detect the sufferer from kidney trouble. The hollow cheeks, the sunken eyes, the dark, puffy circles under the eyes, the sallow parsnip-colored complexion indicates it. A phytician would ask if you had rheu matism, a dull pain or ache in the back or over the hips, stomach trouble, desire to urinate often, or a burning or scalding in passing it; if after passing there is an unsatisfied feeling as if it must be at once repeated, or if the urine has a brick dust deposit or strong odor. When these symptoms are present, no time should be lost in removing the cause. Delay may lead to gravel, catarrh of the bladder, inflammation, causing stop page, and sometimes requiring the draw ing of the urine with instruments, or may run into Bright’s Disease, the most dangerous stage of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmei’s Swamp-Root, the great discovery of the eminent kidney and blad der specialist, is a positive remedy for such diseases. Its reputation is world wide and it is so easy to get at any drug store that no one need suffer any length of time for want of it. However, if you prefer to first test its wonderful merits, mention the Gaines ville Eagle and write to Dr. Kilmer <fc Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle and book telling all about it; both sent absolutely free by mail. The sun of the great Worth of Pari®, after a calculation of the amount spent in Fiance upon ladies’ dresses, es’Jmates the average yearly j expends urea tor gowns and mantles at the sum of $200,000,000. Fifty millions of this is paid by American, English and Russian women. This recalls the fact that it was the French dressmakers who first <!enied the re ports ihat France was unfriendly to the United Slates during the early days of the war with Spain. ARE YOU j 1 in health, constitution undermined by ex i travagance in eating, by disre i garding the laws of nature, or i physical capital all gone, if so, NEVER DESPAIR Tutt’s Liver Pills will cure you. For sick headache, dyspepsia, ; sour stomach, malaria, torpid liver, constipation, biliousness I and all kindred diseases. Tutt’s Liver Pills an absolute cure. MONEY TO LOAN. We now have plenty of money to loan on improved farm lands and Gainesville city property. Terms and interest lib eral. Call and see us. DUNLAP A PICnBLL. C. H. WINBURN. DENTIST. CROWN and Bridge work a Specialty. A lib eral amoun of patronage solicited. Orvios. BOOM 3. &OBDON BLOCK, UP STAIBS.