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are made every day by their
carelessness. Cure that case of
l^^Kf pation and Indigestion ere it’s chronic.
■ RM®hnßl
AND TONIC Pellets—a remedy that assists
Nature and does not get in her way. Strong
purgatives gripe and make confirmed in-
valids. Ramon’s act gently and
effect permanent cures.
Complete Treatment
cts.
The Vigil.
I’m waiting and watching, my darling, for you—
Only for you, O, sweetheart of mine!
Somewhere there is a dear spirit as true
As the faithful stars to the skyland blue,
* Or the earth’s rich soil to the honeysuckle vine,
Or Heaven to the saint’s enrapturad view.
Fair Hope now sends her white-winged ships
To float far away on the bosom of Time,
Beneath the bent skies where the rain drop drips,
From the lowering cloud’s overcharged tips
On the hungering grasses of every clime;
That may find you on some of their trips.
Somewhere, it may be far over the seas,
I know that one bosom is breathing for me,
And on Thought’s continuously wavering breeze,
Where doubts delight to toss and to tease,
O, sweetheart of mine, in searching for thee,
My spirit now rides the tremulous seas!
Then I invoke just one earnest prayer,
To Him who created yon blue upper sea,
That with loving fingers, He’ll temper the air
And carry my ships to a harborage where
Some song bird will send the glad tidings to me,
That, patient and happy, my darling is there.
It requires no seer to tell mortals why
One bird will stay on, while others may fly,
On swift speeding wings, from a lowering sky,
As long as its mate may suffering lie
With just enough life to helplessly cry,
Though a haven of safety may offer near by.
While one small quivering life-laden ray
Os light shall descend from the heavens above,
To glitter and shine, and constantly play
With chasing the night and forming the day,
No action of mine shall turn upon Love,
And cause her from me to pass slowly away.
So, awake or asleep, I am dreaming of thee,
As the short years into eternity roll,
And I hear at this moment a rich melody,
Coming not from the land, nor yet from the sea,
That brings such a rapture into my soul,
I seemingly pass to a heavenly lea.
And the skies are all clothed in sapphirine blue
With rays of sunlight piercing them through,
While Love is adorning the whole world anew,
And the rich golden days are breaking into
Such blissful moments so pure and so true
That, in ecstacy, darling, my soul walks with you.
And the way is so bright with the gleam of a light,
In which I can see such wonderful things,
The Seraphim pointing their luminous flight,
Through the highways and hedges of spiritual night,
With celestial glory and hope on their wings,
That transposes grief into perfect delight.
Ah! could they but stay on the earth evermore,
No need would there be to pass through the vale
Os the shadow of death to enter the door
Os heavenly bliss, while here on the floor
Os the earth, where mortals grow pale,
Renewal of strength would constantly pour.
Some time, it may be, they will come here to stay,
Creating all things in this world anew,
Their pure beams driving all night far away,
Thus making one brilliant perpetual day
To gladden the lives of the good and the true,
- Who, with newness of life, are adorned when they pray.
Then I’ll not fret, though all of the past
Has hurriedly drifted unheeded away,
If I can but make an anchorage fast,
And debark in a port of safety at last,
Where the Fates are suffered no longer to play
Sad’ freaks with the hopes they delighted to blast.
Oh! would I could tell this beautiful night,
Just whither my sool is venturing to,
And where it will end this hungering flight,
This moving unrest of ecstatic delight,
That carries it on and pierces it through,
With peculiar sensations by day and by night.
We cannot learn all as we pass here below,
Os the hidden wherefore of circumstance dim—
Sufficient to the wise to be able to know
That One has drcreed that here we shall grow
Through purity into conjunction with Him,
Who bendeth the heavens as man would a bow.
I can not tell why, but I know it is so,
That yonder, where sings the robin and wren,
As hurriedly on life’s journey I go,
The fair winds of Heaven that propitiously blow
On the glad faces and brows of pure men,
Will bring her to me —and then I shall know.
And when the sweet spirit shall come back to me,
From her mystical wanderings over the sea,
With a palace of love in a cottage shall we
From burdensome care abide ever free,
And happy as birds that in summer agree
To wreathe them a nest in some blossoming tree.
—J. P. Caldwell.
THE GAINESVILLE EAGLE, FEBRUARY 5, 1903.
From Lawrenceville News.
The government has granted
Mrs. Sarah Maffett a pension of $8
per month, as the widow of Ham
ilton Maffet, for services rendered
by him in the removal of the In
dians from Georgia several years
ago. The amount that was due
Mr. Maffett at his death last Feb
ruary, and the amount that has
accrued since that time, has also
been paid to his widow.
The telephone line from Nor
cross, gotten up by Mr. Franklin,
will soon be completed, the posts
being in position within a short dis
tance of Lawrenceville. The cen
tral office will likely be in the
Cornett hotel, and then we can all
talk over the telephone, as it will
be a free line.
No man in Gwinnett county has
had more trouble within the last
year than Stiles Young, of Lilburn.
His doctor bills for this time were
more than $305, thus showing the
amount of sickness in his family.
Mr. Young is a good citizen, and he
has the sympathy of his many
friends in the county.
EVERY CHURCH or institution
supported by voluntary contribution
will be given a liberal quantity of the
Longman & Martinez Pure Paints when
ever they paint.
Note: Have done so for twenty-seven
years. Sales: Tens of millions of gal
lons ; painted nearly two million houses
under guarantee to repaint if not satis
factory. The paint wears for periods
up to eighteen years. Linseed Oil must
be added to the paint, (done in two
minutes.) Actual cost then about $1.25
a gallon. Samples free. Sold by our
agent, M. C. Brown, Gainesville, Ga. :
Surveying for Railroad.
We learn from the Blairsville
Herald and the Young Harris News
that surveyors are at both of these
points surveying the Tennessee,
Georgia, and South Carolina Rail
road. The most hopeful indication
of the building of the road is that
the county of Union is being flooded
with timber buyers.
The Thief...
...of Beauty
Im Captured by Bradfield’s Regulator.
Thousands of young women are awaking to
the fact that inherited comliness has been stolen
away and instead of glowing cheeks, bright eyes
and the tell-tale wrinkles of pain
have ta keft the place of these former charms,
These are the warning feelings! Weak, tired
and exhausted in the morning, no life, no ambi
tion to enter upon their former pleasures, irrit
able, cross, discouraged, dull headaches, general
dispirited feeling, sleepless nights, cold feet, poor
circulation, “bearing down” pains. All these
symptoms indicate deranged and weakened or
gans. Shattered nerves and exhausted energies
follow the weakened condition of the female
organs as surely as night follows day. Save
yourself from more terrible results, redeem your
youth by taking ■ ——i
Bradfield’s
Female Regulator
The most strengthening, invigorating, men
strual regulator in the world.
It relieves painful menstruation, profuse men
struation. obstructed menstruation, inflamma
tion of tne vagina, displacement, membranol
catarrh, nervousness, headaches, et cetera.
Beauty of face and symmetry of form are the
result of the use of these health drops.
Os druggists SI.OO. Our book, Perfect Health
for Women, mailed free.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA;
FOR CHEAP RATES ~
TO
TEXAS, ARKANSAS, LOUISIANA,
OKLAHOMA, INDIAN TERRITORY,
CALIFORNIA, COLORADO, UTAH,
WYOMING, OREGON, MONTANA,
WASHINGTON, an* Other Pointe
West, Northwest and Southwest,
Write or call on
J. G. Hollenbeck,
District Passenger Agent,
Louisville and Nashville R. R.,
No. 1 Brown Bldg, Opposite Union Depot,
- Atlanta, Ga.
Insurance-Fire and Life.
I have entered the Insurance business,
and will esteem it a favor if those desi
ring Fire or Life Insurance will allow me
to show them what I have before taking
out a policy of any kind
Respectfully, GUY CLOPTON.
Third floor, Hudson House Bldg.
BAN NE R SA LVE
the most healing salvo in the world.
a I
Field I
makes a fat purse. I
A fertilizer without
sufficient _\l
Il Potash
IB is not complete.
S S O ur oo^s are complete treatises
■ ■ on fertilizers, written by
■ ■ men who know.
■ ■ Write for them. '
Is GERMAN
■ ■ KALI
DR. A, E. MERRITT?
DENTIST.
Hudson Hou
Building.
Rooms 1 and 2.
All work guar
anteed, and done
in the m ost artis-
I jBSjSF tic manner.
Treating and
regulating chil
- ' dren’s teeth a
specialty.
Cheap 14 at ■ess
TO
Texas,
Indian and Oklahoma Territory,
VIA
The West Point Route.
The quickest and best route to all
points West.
For county maps, rates, schedules,
etc, write
Geo. W. Allen, J. P. Billups,
T. P. A., G. P. A.,
ATLANTA, GA.
W. N. PILLOW, - Owner.
GAINESVILLE
Transfer Co.
Room 2, State Bank Building.
General hauling and delivery of
all kinds of freight.
Heavy hauling and household
moving a specialty.
For efficient and quick services
call Phone
J. R. CROMARTIE, Manager.
INSURANCE.
Dunlap & Thompson,
Insurance Agents.
Fire, Life, Accident, Liability, and
Indemnity Bonds.
Dunlap Building, Gainesville, Ga.
Phones 35 and 140.
“Choctaw Route.”
VERY LOW RATES,
One Way or Round Trip,
To
INDIAN TERRITORY,
OKLAHOMA,
and TEXAS.
Twice a Month.
FREE RECLINING CHAIRS
from Memphis to Texas,
NO CHANGE OF DEPOTS at
Memphis by this Line.
Write, for full particulars:
S. L. PARROTT,
Trav. Pass. Agent,
No. 6 N. Pryor St,
Atlanta, Ga.
C. F. W. Gunther,
Baker and Confectioner.
Orders for Bread from other towns
promptly filled. Maker of Gunther’s
famous Caramels, Cream Peanut,
Chocolate, Cream, and other Candies.
Fresh Cakes always on hand.
One ire More
lOR
i. I. IIIKIB.
On Wednesday, the 28th day of this month —January
—we will open up in our new place of business, in the
Dean Building, on the corner next to the post-office, the
place that the J. E. Murphy Co. has just vacated.
At that time we will have more than $30,000 worth
of seasonable goods to close out, and only 45 days i»
which to close them. These goods must be sold in order
to make room for our immense stock of new Spring
Goods, which will be coming in about the middle of
March. We know, to get rid of this large quantity of
goods in so short a time, will require a great sacri
fice. We must offer inducements that will bring us
more than our usual number of customers; but we have
concluded to do this.
Below we quote a few prices. Remember, “first
come, first served.” Don’t put off coming. If you do,
some of the goods may be closed out:
2,000 yds. Indigo-blue Calico, 6c. quality, at 10 yds. for3Bc
2,000 yds. Outing, best 6c. quality, at per yd 2c
One big lot Worsted Dress Goods, mostly remnants—goods
we have been selling off of all winter at 20c., 25c., and up to
50c. per yd., now at, per yd 12c
1,000 yds. yard-wide Bleaching 4 C
1,000 yds. Fruit of the Loom Bleaching, 10 yds. for7sc
1,000 yds. Shet and Pillow Case goods at less than wholesale cost.
LINENS.
One lot of fine Table Damask, mostly in short pieces, 2| to 3 yd.
cuts, worth 65c., 85c., and SI.OO a yard, to go now at, per
yard 39c., 49c., 50c
Big lot Table Napkins to be closed out in this sale at at nearly half
price.
20 dozen large Hand Towels, best 7|c. value, now at3c
One lot 12c. and 15c. at 8c
CORSETS.
One lot R. <fc G. Corsets, the SI.OO kind—everybody knows them—
long as they last, at i:39e
One lot of R. & G. Corsets, latest short style, SI.OO kind, now st__ 69c
JACKETS AND SKIRTS.
One lot ChildrenJJs Jackets, worth SI.OO, $1.25, and $1.50, all to go
in this sale at, each
One lot Ladies’ Jackets, best $3.00 value, now at ; ___sl.9s
Our best $5.00 Jackets at 1 350
One lot Ladies’ Skirts, worth $2.50, $4.00, and $5.00, now at
HOSIERY.
One lot Men’s, Ladies’, and Children’s Hose, the kind we have Deen
making a run on at sc. a pair, and the best values we ever had
at 5c., now at, per pair g c
One lot Ladies’ Hose, the 12|c. and 15c. kind, now at 8c
One lot Men’s best 10c. Hose, all now at 5 C
All the higher-price Hose at wholesale cost.
■ __i
UNDERWEAR.
Prices on our Men’s, Ladies’, and Children’s Underwear will simply
be slaughtered. They must be sold; they take up too much
room to carry over. Don’t fail to see this line if you need
them.
SHIRTS.
One lot of Men’s and Boys’ Work Shirts, 25c., 30c., and 35c. values,
all to go now at, each
One lot Men’s Dress Shirts, the 40c. kind, in this sale at 19®
One lot Men’s Dress Shirts, our full line of 50c., 75c., and SI.OO
Shirts, the greatest values ever offered in Gainesville, to go in
this sale at 39 C> an( j gg a
SHOES.
50 pairs Children’s Shoes, small size 15 C
100 pairs Children’s Shoes, worth 75c., atso®
100 pairs Children’s School Shoes, $1.25 kind, at 7s e
100 pairs Ladies’ coarse Shoes, worth 90c., at so c
100 pairs Ladies’ fine Shoes, worth up to $1.25, at 7s c
100 pairs Men’s Georgia Ties, worth sl.lO, at75 C
100 pairs Men,s fine Shoes, values up $1.25, in this sale at 7s c
All our higher price Shoes will be reduced to wholesale cost, except
the advertised brands.
CLOTHING.
In this department we have got to make our greatest sacrifice. We
have more Clothing than anything else, and it must be closed out. We
only ask our customers to come and see, and we promise and guarantee
to sell them cneaper than any other store in Northeast Georgia.
Remember our new place—(be J. E. Murphy Co. Store.
Respectfully,
G. F. Turner Co.