Newspaper Page Text
the Eagle Publishing* Company.
VOLUME XLL
Andoe & Co.
1 his progressive store grows greater and grander
every day. Each coming season challenges the pre
ceding one for supremacy. • In richness of style, variety
of display and economical Pbice-Making, this store has
long held first place in the ranks of Northeast Georgia
merchandising. ,
e ask an inspection of our superior stock for Fall
and Winter 1900. (
■ The New Silks and Dress Goods are
JNTe-w" Silks.
hi 1 affeta, Royal Armures, Gros Grains, PeaudeSoie, Fancy Silks,
Satin Duchess, Liberty Satin, Etc.
NEW DRESS GOODS.
lii French Venetians, Camel’s Hair, Whip Cords, Pebble Cheviots,
( amel s Hair Cheviots, Granites Melrose, Diagonals, Ladies’ Cloths,
Bioad (. loth in black and all the new Fall colors, Oxfords, Homespuns,
and Plaid backs for Ladies’ Walking Skirts.
FRENCH FLANNELS.
The kind that are all the rage for Ladies’ Waists.
DRESS TRIMMINGS.
More elegant than ever before. Everything that is NEW, Stylish,
and Tasty. All-over Taffeta Applique, Renaissance All-over, Net Jet
All-over, Black Silk Net All-over, and Arabian Lace All-over in Dark
Kcrue, with bands and edges to match. These goods are very scarce,
but as usual this store is ready with the right things.
LACES AND EMBROIDERIES.
An exceptional showing. Cambric Enib Sets, Nainsook Sets, In
fants’ Sets, and all-over Enibro of new and dainty designs. Also a big
line of embroidered White Flannels for Skirts and infant’s wear.
W E HA\ E A GRAND COLLECTION of wonderfully good values
in White Goods, Table Linens, Ribbons, Curtains, Hosiery, Fascinators,
Blankets, Bed Sheets, Pillow Cases, Quilts, Counterpanes, Matting,
Carpets, Rugs, Etc.
I F) GLOVES.
if / Handsome line of Ladies’ and Gents’ Kid WW
|w / Gloves for dress. Also Men’s heavy Gloves, and V Y '
IJ / Ladies’ and Children's Silk and Cashmere Gloves. aAAA
NOTIONS.
Big values at little prices in Dress Shields, Elastic Webbs, Velve
teen and Brush Binding, Hose •Supporters, Combs, Pins, Pencils, Belts,
Soaps, Shoe Polish, Powder Boxes, Etc.
CORSETS.
The new straight fronts and a full line of other new shapes.
CLOTHING _
and li \ \
HATS.. \y [ -
We have recently added J L=
1,500 feet of door space to vl
accommodate this immense itTUT \
stock. We have everything \ \ \ \
new and up-to-date for 111 \
I Men, Boys, and Children, I I
• in Suits, Overcoats, and 1 I
HatS I
CLOAKS.
t x : 1. • / u . .1... ri 1? i 01 • . >■
Latest ideas in ( loaks, Capes, rurs, and Skirts. Handsome Crea
tions which surpass all previous efforts.
NECKWEAR.
This line must be seen to be fully appreciated. All the new shapes,
Puffs Imperials, Knots, Four-in-Hands, Bat Wing, Ties, English
Squares, Bows, Etc.
vOS. Don’t forget this department,
•> Own Make * it is more complete than ever.
The
t BBasa Pakm j iJ Society Girl.
I /J SEE
/ /’/
ink
jK is branded
ON EVERY
Mat Kid
Light So,c -
High Military
GROCERIES.
This line is always full and complete. YOU are cordially invited.
R. E. AN DOE & CO.
Georgia.
14 Main street. Phone 9.
.--^. lU '—■
THE GATneWtTeE EAGLE.
Gosw Mdse. CoJ
' We now have the most complete stock of Fall
Winter Goods we have ever offered, and at prices tIS'
will be to your advantage to investigate. ai
The best fabrics at the lowest price that is possiblj
for them to be sold at is the plan we have adopted Xi
move the j
' Immense Stock of Goods j
W e have laid in this season. We only have time aim
space to give a few prices which will convince you thJ|
we mean all that we say when we assert that weaH|
offering special thrall trad<y
Kip Bais, 6-10, per pair, -» 50 cents.
Kip Bals, 9-12, - - - - 65 “
“ “ 12-2 - - - - 75 “
Ladies’ I. Kip, 3-6, - - - - 75 “ •
Ladies’ Don. Button, 3-6, - - • 85 “
Mens’ Vel. Kip Bal, 6-11, - - - 90 “
Mens’ Satin Calf Bals, 6-11, - - - SI.OO
“ V. Kip Ga. Ties, - - - SI.OO
Ladies’ best Kip Bals, 7-8, - - - SI.OO
Big lot Samples, 75 centt to SI.OO.
Gate City Plaids, per yard. - - - 4 l-2c.
Asheville Plaids, - - - . 5 3-4 c.
Dress Outing, - - - - sc.
Dre?s Prints, - - - . 4 C . -.
“ sc.
Homespun Jeans, - - - . 17 i_2c.
Hustler “ - - - . 20c.
We have the best values to offer in Boys’, Gents
and Mens’ Clothing.. An immense stock to select from
Call on us before you buy a winter suit of Clothes. W 0
will save you money.
Our Shoe Department is full. We can suit you ill
size, quality, and price. /
See our Blankets, Comforts, Capes, Overcoats, Hats.
Caps, Gents’ and Ladies’ Underwear. Also beautiful
line of Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, and Ties.
Complete line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, fresh
and pure.
Feed stuffs of all kinds.
Early Bird Tobacco 30 Cents Per Pound.
Call and see us. No trouble to she 1 '
We Have Them.
You Need Them Now.
iILIT b b Hr—-
m-wi-w-wj - -wyWJMmMr
Guns and Pistols,
Engines and Engine Supplies,
Harness and Saddles.
Come and see them.
PALMOUR HARDWARE 00.,
a Gainesville, Ga.
WE MUST CLOSE OUT
Our Big Line of Clothing
Shoes, Hats, and Odd Pants
Right away. Our buyer leaves soon for the Eastern markets to make im
mense purchases of Fall Goods, so we are slaughtering prices to make room.
Here are Some of the Things we are Almost
Giving Away:
Big lot Straw Hats to close out at cost.
Big line of Summer Dress Goods to go at cost as
long as they last.
Big lot Cottonades for Pants, 15c. quality at 12ic;
12ic. quality at 10c; 10c. quality at 71c.
Big lot Cotton Checks at 4c. yard and up.
Calicoes at 4c. and sc. yard.
Overalls at your own price.
BEST LUSTE
Staple and Fancy Groceries
msr tgtwjst.
Good Green Coffee, 8 and 10 lbs. to the sl. Tobacco, 30c. lb. .and up.
Other groceries in proportion. Headquaiters for Hay, Corn, Oats, ani
Bran at wholesale. See ns before you buy or sell.
Just received car load of Cotton Seed Hulls. J.
W. J. & E. C. PALMOUR, >
Gainesville, Georgia.
-w - -
■ 860.
SA I NE6V I QCTOBBR IL 1900.
fe HELP FOR YOU
HMkLrT For honest treatment and a speedy cure write
or go to Dr. J. Newton Hathaway whose
great reputation is a sufficient guarantee of
satisfactory results. Consultation o * t by’miiFree.
d““* Contiacted or Hereid
■ OlSOn tary Syphillis ia all its
i terrible stages, producing copper-colored
I spots on face or body, little ulcers on the
t tongue, in the mouth or throat, falling out of
1 the hair or eyebrows, decay of the flesh or
■ bones, completely and forever eradicated
I without the use of injurious drugs, leaving
r the systenft in a pure, strong and health
-F Ml state.
hot '■enlarged veins, which
lead to a complete loss of
| sexual power; 'also Hydrocele, Gonorrhoea,
■ Gleet, Stricture and all Private and Venereal
and Weaknesses of men quickly
* And Takes Great P d Ws to
Husband Properly Dressed.
The wife of a man who served with
distinction as a cabinet officer during
a recent administration entered a tailor
shop near Fifth avenue a week ago
and said to the proprietor:
“I am Mrs. So-and-so, and I don’t sup
pose that women come into your shop
very often.”
“A good many women help their hus
bands to select their clothes,” said the
proprietor.
“Well, I am glad to hear that,” said
the woman. “I have bought my hus
band’s clothes for him ever since we
were married, and if I did not look out
for them he would not have any
clothes. He never thinks of them.
Didn’t even when he was in Washing
ton, though he was always properly
dressed. Now I want some spring
clothes for my husband. I will select
the samples for three suits, and I will
tell you just how to make them. When
my husband comes to get measured,
don’t pay any attention to his orders
about the clothes if he gives any. If
he ordered his own clothes, he would
not be suited anyway.”
The proprietor found that this wo
man knew as much as the average
man about men’s clothes, and he ac
cepted her directions. On the follow
ing day, when her husband came in,
the proprietor recognized him from his
pictures and said:
“Mr. So-and-so, your wife selected
goods for three suits of clothes for you
yesterday, and if you will step back I
will show you the patterns.”
“Young man,” said the ex-cabinet
officer, “I would not dare to interfere
with my wife’s selections. Just take
my measure as quickly as you can and
make the clothes as directed.”
After the measurements had been
made the ex-cabinet minister hurried
out without asking what style of suits
had been ordered for him.—New York
Sun.
Compliment With a K.
AhnrJ 1 * HaH p* krtf filly I I >
I Jewel nie other
She leaned across_the table—
the table next to me—to say it, and she
meant well.
“Oh, Miss Dumdum,” she said cor
dially, “I’ve got a trade at last for
you!”
“A swap?” asked Miss Dumdum,
beaming with anticipatory delight.
“Uhhuh!” answered the other. “Lieu
tenant Bulbul said it.”
“Oh, do tell it!” pleaded Miss Dum
dum eagerly.
“It- was an awfully nice one,” said
the first girl, “and Lieutenant Bulbul
meant it too. He said you waltzed di
vinely. He said he was awfully sur
prised, too, to find it out, so I know he
meant it. He said he wouldn’t have
thought from seeing you walk that you
could dance at all.”—Washington Post
Arrest
disease by the timely use of
Tutt’s Liver Pills, an old and
favorite remedy of increasing
popularity. Always cures
SICK HEADACHE,
sour stomach, malaria., in :m es
tion, torpid liver, constipaticr
and all bilious diseases.
TUTT’S Liver
•W—rv
EVERY woman suffering from any female trouble can be
helped by Mrs. Pinkham. This statement is based on
sound reasoning and an unrivalled record. Multitudes
of America’s women to-day bless Mrs. Pinkham for competent
and common-sense advice. Write to her if you are ill. Her
address is Lynn, Mass. Absolutely no
Ji charge is made for advice. “I suffered
H seven years and would surely have died
but for your help,” writes Mrs. Geo.
CXmwwMEb Bainbridge, Morea, Pa., to Mrs. Pinkham.
gimtJ “It is with pleasure I now write to inform
■CrMB df Vfl you that lam now a healthy woman, thanks
gjiyni *° y° ur kind advice and wonderful medi
wlr cine. I can never praise it enough. 1 was
a constant sufferer from womb trouble, and
leucorrhcea, had a continual pain in abdomen. Sometimes I
could not walk across the floor for three or four weeks at a
time. Since using your medicine, I now have no rrore 1 ear
ing-down pains, or tired r
feelings, and am well and '•f
hearty. I shall recommend ~L' c/xI
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- / 'r
table Compound to all my (\'' ‘■'a
suffering friends as the p *'/ I II J' j
greatest remedy for all yk Ai win '
female weakness. ’’ 'Tr '' V -yl ? ’./
Mrs. Susie J. Weaver, fes Y\ '1
1821 Callowhill St., Phila- ~
delphia, Pa., writes: \\ £ j;'& ■ -
•‘Dear Mrs. Pinkham —I CS v- - ’• ~
had inflammation of the fp.' / '
womb and painful men
struation, and by your
z advice I began taking < | pXX'C
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- 1 ; (O X fgSSSu
table Compound. Have 8 Mill; W'.X.
taken four bottles and used ■;\ :
one package of Sanative >'l
Wash and feel like a new
woman. I thank you so
much for what your medi-
cine has done for me.” -T7TL'.iKXIJf3f
Mrs. M. Baumann, 771 W. 21 st St.,
R Chicago, 111., writes: “After two
months’ trial of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 1 can
not sa.y enough in praise for it. I was a very sick woman
with womb trouble when I began its use, but now I am well.”
Kidney and Urinary
cult. Too Frequent, Bloody or Milky Urine;
all functional diseases of the Heart, Lungs,
Liver and Stomach; also Catarrh, Rupture,
Rheumatism, Piles, Fistula and all Blood
and Skin Diseases and al) Female Ductse*
treated according to the latest and best
methods known to medical science.
Home Trcstmcnt
cessful. Write for frt| batAja just published aDu
Symptom blank if yoq> cannot call.
J. NEWTON ItATHAWAY, M. O. A
Dr. Ha<tha-«y A
South Broad* Street, Atlanta,
MENTION THyS PAPER WHEN WHITING.
k The S-.-G.
a. prer TveJ, 1
a mark, without a bound,
ft'r—neth the earth's wide regions round;
It plays with the clouds, it mocks the skies,
Or like a cradled creature lies.
I I’m on the sea, I’m on the sea,
■ I am where 1 would ever be,
! With the blue above and the blue below,
And silence wheresoe’er I go.
If a storm should come and awake the deep,
What matter? I shall ride and sleep.
1 I love, O, how I love to ride
On the fierce, foaming, bursting tide,
• Where every mad wave drowns the moon,
i And whistles aloft its tempest tune,
And tells how goeth the world below,
And why the sou’west wind doth blow!
I I never was on the dull, tame shore
But I loved the great sea more and more,
, And backward flew to her billowy’ breast,
’ Like a bird that seeketh her mother’s nest—
And a mother she was and is to me,
’ For I was born on the open sea.
The waves were white, and red the morn,
In the noisy hour when I was born;
r The whale it whistled, the porpoise rolled,
. And the dolphins bared their backs of gold;
, And never was hoard such an outcry wild,
I As welcomed to life the ocean child.
I I have lived since then, in calm and strife,
I Full fifty summers a rover’s life,
With wealth to spend, eand a power to range,
’ But never have sought or sighed for change:
And death, whenever he comes to me.
Shall come on the wide, unbounded sea!
[ —Barry Cornwall.
Roek-a-by,' Baby.
, Rock-a-by, baby! On the tree top,
When the wind blows, the cradle will rock;
When the bough bends, the cradle will fall—
• Down tumbles baby, cradle and all.
’ Rock-a-by, baby! The meadow’s in bloom;
Laugh at the sunbeams that dance in the room;
Echo the birds with their own baby tune
[ Coo in the sunshine and flowers of June.
1 Rock-a-by, baby! As softly it swings
Over the cradle the mother love sings;
Brooding of cooing at even or dawn,
What will it do when the mother is gone?
1 Rock-a-by, baby! So cloudless the skies,
! Blue as the depths of your own laughing eyes;
| Sweet is the lullaby over your nest
That tenderly sings little baby to rest.
i Rock-a-by, baby! The blue eyes will dream
Sweetest when mamma’s eyes over them beam;
Never again will the world seem so fair;
Sleep, little baby! There’s no cloud in the air.
Rock-a-by, baby! The blue eyes will bum <
And ache with that your manhood will learn;
Swiftly the years come with sorrow and care, L*.
► .slioulderj muy
Rock-a-by, biby! There’s coming a day ' I ,
Whose sorrows a mother’s lips can’t kiss away;
Days when its song will be changed to a moan,
Cress that baby must wear all alone.
Rock-a-by, baby! The meadow’s in bloom;
May never the frosts pall the beauty in gloom;
Be thy world evtr bright as today it is seen,
Rock-a by, baby! Thy cradle is green.
—Old Song.
Miss Pittman Made Young.
Mr. Hollie Young and Miss Annie Pit
man were married Sunday Sept. 30, at
the home of the bride’s parents near
Lula, Esquire S. S. Herrin officiating.
The groom is an excelieht young man
and the bride is a young lady who is
much admired in the community in
which she lives. They have the best
wishes of a large circle of friends.
Dorsey’s New Trial.
White county superior court is in ses
sion at Cleveland this week. Judge
Estes and several members of the local
bar are attending it. The' Dorsey mur
der case is the most important criminal
case that is so be tried at this term of
the court. Dorsey was tried at the last
term and sentenced to life imprisonment,
but the supreme court has since granted
him a new trial.
Will Run a Store.
Idus Bowden of Thompson’s Mills and
Prof. Charles Millican of Chestnut Moun
tain have bought out James Hudgins, a
merchant at Chestnut Mountain, and will
double the size of the stock of goods car
ried by Mr. Hudgias.
—' , ufr —- - ' ■~£
Per Annum .
Presbyterian Church Again Singed.
There was a small fire at the Pres
byterian church Sunday night, caused by
the falling of a chandelier that hung in
the center of the church. The chan
delier was hung on a wire rope and was
held in place by a weight. It was so ad
justed that the sexton could, by the use
of a rod. pull it down and light the
lamps and then let it back up to near the
ceiling.
On this occasion he lit the lamps in it
and let it up as usual. When Mr. Sirap
-1 ’son, the pastor, arrived a few minutes
before time for services, he told the sex
ton that the lights were not bright
enuogh—to pull the chandelier dowu and
.turn the wicks up a little. The sexton
u attached the rod and began to pull, thf
wire rope broke loose from the
l zod down the chandelier
a h ’sb. The oil saturated the a
for some distance In a
" ! tlaniAß from thaJlooj
i names irom tu| u
werZ
Tie tire company was on 1 A n a
few minutes, but it was not ne<* D 1
use the hose. The chaudeliel^ ary °
total loss and four pews wer* ..
charred and the wall paper ,
smoked. ad,y
The damage is not very great and is
covered by insurance, except the chan
delier, which cost S7O.
Everyone is rejoicing that the lamps
did not fall at a time when people were
sitting under them.
Cold Steel or Death.
“There is but one small chance to save
your life and that is through an opera
tion,” was the awful prospect set before
Mrs. I. B. Hunt of Lime Ridge, Wis., by
her doctor after vainly trying to cure her
of a frightful case of stomach trouble
and yellow jaundice. He didn’t count
on the marvellous power of Electric Bit
ters to cure stomach and liver troubles,
but she heard of it, took seven bottles,
was wholly cured, avoided surgeon’s
knife, now weighs more and feels better
than ever. It’s positively guaranteed to
cure stomach, liver, and kidney troubles
and never disappoints. Price 50c. at M.
C. Brown & Co.’s drug store.
Vestibule Hits Freight.
The Southbound Vestibule train ran
into the rear end of a freight train near
the Southern depot last Friday after
noon. The plodding freight train was
clearing the main line as the svsift,
smooth-running Vestibule came gliding
along. It bad the right of way and was
coming around the curve at the upper
end of the railroad yards when the
engineer observed that the freight bad
not entirely cleared the track. He
quickly reversed his engiue, threw on
the air-brakes, and jumped for his life.
The fireman and brakeman followed.
r They were on the ground when the
C£Mh-C*MAr A tiii ....
The fiwoosp y the 'ffttJ’H| Xrtnu was
. badly damaged. /The passenger engine
was only slightly damaged. The passen
gers on the Vestibule were jarred—noth
ing more. A frightful accident was
averted by the quick work of the engi
neer.
Everything was soon in older and the
passenger train rolled up to the Southern
depot.
A Night of Terror.
“Awful anxiety was felt for the widow
of the brave Gen. Burnham of Machias,
Me., when the doctors said she could not
live till morning,” writes Mrs. S. H.
Lincoln, who attended her that fearful
night. “All thought she must soon die
from pneumonia, but she begged for Dr.
King’s New Discovery, saying it had
more than once saved her life, and had
cured her of consumption. After three
small doses she slept easily all night,
and its further use completely cured
her.” This marvelous medicine is guar
anteed to cure all throat, chest, and
lung diseases. Only 50c. and SI.OO. Trial
bottles free at M. C. Brown & Co.’s drug
store.
The Great Carnival.
Quite a number of Gainesville people
attended the Athens carnival last week.
Among them were Jno. T. Dorsey, Will
Moss, A. R. Dorsey, Jasper Thompson,
Joe Landers, Owen McDermed, S. C.
. Dunlap, jr., Howard Thompson, John H.
Martin, Mrs. S. C. Shewmake, Mrs. J. H.
Martin, Miss Effie Shewmake, Miss Ar
montine Sanders, and Miss Una Webb.
They report a most delightful trip, and
say that people who are accustomed to
attending carnivals pronounce this one
the best that has been given by any city
in the state during the present year.
At no Time is Man Secure from at
tacks of such disorders of the stomach
as cholera morbus, cramps, and diarrhea;
but these complaints are common during
the heated term, when it is dangerous to
negleet them. Pain Killer is a remedy
that has never failed and the severest
attacks have been cured by it. Avoid
substitutes; there is but one Pain-Killer,
Perry Davis’. 25c. and 50c.
Is Building Residence.
Miss Ella Davis is having lumber
placed on her vacant lot on N. Prior, near
Park street, and in a short time will
erect a residence on it. Miss Davis is
now teaching school at Tallulah Falls
and it is her purpose to make Gaines
ville her permanent home as soon as her
school is out.
A Frightful Blunder
Will often cause a horrible burn, scald,
cut, or bruise. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve,
the best in the world, will kill the pain
and promptly heal it. Cures old sores,
fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns,
all skin eruptions. Best Pile cure on
earth. Only 25c. a box. Cure guaran
teed. Sold by M. C. Brownn & Co.,
druggists.
An Hundred and 12.
Wiley Pierce, of the famous Ben
Smith’s district of Gwinnett county, was.
in the city last Saturday. He is the
grandson of Wiley Pierce, sr., who is the
oldest man in Georgia, being 112 years
of age on his last birthday. The old
gentleman is well preserved in spite of
the fact that he has lived a century and
a dozen years.
MmBEB 41.
z
Roundup and
S j3r otton wltn mt Rcstt 1
v M j|Bk-Moore, a business woman of
Miss., who conducts
on -which sbe makes
■‘WKtton a year, Augast 15 last
’ fr Tths OaklaudGin Co.: “During ,
season, I had the cotton raised
; town, gitmed at jour
nn an your .roundlap
t*ashioned square • u cb higher
JAn the spring after the an
Fcrop was fully realized tian it was £
Tog lb. Un. it X
, o lJd.d to bold, and did’“t Mll OT '
t-Lo th. n,..k.t .1
grades of each being the same and Mold ■
both lots to Hjujey
Mt wade. oeuU
cotton and 9 34 cents for my round^^^ -
cotton. * .
“I watched the cotton markets here
very carefully during the past, season,
and the roundlap cotton always brought
a Psmium of from 1-2 to 3-4 more than
the sq. tales of the same grade.
N. E. Shockley
Died last Saturday her home in
Polksville. Her remains wore interred
at the Shockley burial groufiQ Sunday.
Mrs. Shockley was a good womWri and
had many friends in the community.
A Monster Devil Fish,
Destroying its victim, is a type of Con
stipation. The power of this murderous
malady is felt on organs and nerves, and
muscles and brain. There’s no health
till it’s overcome. But Dr. King’s New
Life Pills are a safe and certain cure.
Best in the world for stomach, liver, kid
neys, and boweis. Only 25 cents at M.
C. Brown & Co.’s drug store.
A Blighted Flower.
The little four-monshs old infant of
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Haynes of Chestnut
Mountain died Sunday from meningitis.
The interment took place Monday.
Cornered at Last.
Charley Davis, who has resided in
Quillian’s district for two years past, and
who has been dodging the officers for six
months, was arrested last Saturday by
Bailiff Bell and brought to the city and
lodged in jail.
Davis is charged with assault and bat
tery and disturbing divine worship.
Bailiff Bell arrested him several months
ago on these charges and tied him
securely with a rope, but his friends
rescued him, cut the rope he was tied
with, and turned*him loose. II t> has
since been in hiding until SatijHay,
.safely landed him behind the bars. • ♦
Takes a Helpmeet.
Rev. George R. Brown of Forsyth
county and Miss India Miller of White
couuty were married last Wednesday,
the 3rd instant, at the home of the
bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Newton
Miller of Mossy Creek. The ceremony
was performed by Rev. C. T. Brown,
brother of the groom.
It was a very quiet home wedding with
only a few relatives and intimate friends
present.
The bride is one of the most attractive
young ladies in White county. She is a
graduate of Brenau college and was re
garded as one of the brightest girls of
her class.
The groom is a son of Hon. B. H
Brown of Forsyth county and is a rising
young minister, who has a bright future
before him.
Will Resume the T.
J. W. Emmett will from now on sign
his name as J. W. T. Emmett, which are
his full initials. His father’s initials
were J. W., and after his father’s death
J. W. T. Emmett dropped the “T” in his
name and signed it as his father signed
his. But a few years ago another J. W.
Emmett came into Hall county, failed to
pay his taxes, and then moved away leav
ing some tax fl fas against him. The re
sult of this was that J. W. T. Emmett’s
name was stricken from the registration
list by the Board of Registrars on account
of these old fi fas against this other J. W.
I Emmett, ana Mr. Emmett was not al
lowed to vote at the election last week.
’ Mr. J. W. T. Emmett has his tax receipts
a
for 23 years past. He will hereafter re
sume the use of the “T” in signing his
name so that such a mistake cannot oc
cur again.
> Will Talk of Poe.
’ The life and writings of Edgar Allen
’ Poe will be the theme for consideration
and discussion at the next literary meet
' ing of the Epworth League, which will
' be held at Miss Effie Shewmake’s next
Tuesday evening.
FREE BLOOD CURE.
An Offer Proving Faith to Sufferers.
r
r Is your Blood Pure? Are you sure of
I it? Do cuts or scratches heal slowlf?
! Does your skin itch or burn? Have you
1 Pimoles? Eruptions? Aching Bones or
. Back? Eczema? Old Sores? Boils?
. Scrofula? Rheumatism? Foul Breath?
Catarrh? Are you pale? If so purify
your blood at once with B. .B B. (Bo
tanic Blood Balm.) It makes the Blood
Pure and Rich, heals eveiy sore and gives
a clear, smooth, healthy skin. Deep
! seated cases like ulcers, cancer, eating
sores, Painful Swellings, Blood Poison
are quickly cured by B. B. 8., made espe
! cially for all obstinate Blood and Skin
Troubles. B. B. B. drains the Poison
and Humors out of the blood and entire
system so the symptoms cannot return.
Give it a trial. It cures when all else
fails. Thoroughly tested for 30 years.
( Sold at drug stores at $1 per large bottle,
, 6 large bottles (full treatment) $5. Be
( sure the bottle reads Botanic Blood
( Balm. So sufferers may test it, a trial
( bottle given away absolutely free. Write
1 for it. Address BLOOD BALM CO.,
f Atlanta, Ga. Write to-day. Describe
trouble and free medical advice given.
1 For sale by Geo. H. Fuller Drug Co.,
Gainesville, Ga.