The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, April 30, 1903, Image 1

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Bythe Eagle I’liblishing- Company. VOLUME XLIV. Some Stylish Oxfords. The finest variety is shown in the Line this season, and all women who value comfort, love beauty, or appreciate economy are invited to in spect these shoes. ALL SHAPES, ALL LEATHERS, ALL STYLES FOR ALL OCCASIONS. A feast for the eye and a delight for the foot, as well as a saving for the purse. PRICE: B $2.50 1 AKU • $3.00. n ■ Andoe & Bell. 14 Main St. Phone 9. 25 TH SEftS'O'N. IHKKOBRI OPttHWL BEGINNING Tuesday, March 13,1903. NOVELTIES IN READY-TO-WEAR, INFANT’S HEADWEAR. Mrs. J. E. JACKSON. E. E. Kimbrough, Insurance and Real Estate. The following properties are offered for sale: Elegant residence property, Green St. 7-room dwelling and very large lot, with a 2-room house and large barn on the premises, on Summit st. 7-room dwelling, and lot 120x200, cn West Broad st. 4 vacant lots, each 22x95, on Main street, adjoining Richmond House property. 20 vacant lots inside city limits, an Duncan's Mill street, adjoining Pacolet Mill property. These lots will be sold at a low value, and may be paid for in installments if desired. 9-room dwelling S. Main st. 6-room dwelling cor. College ave and Bradford st. 2 large 2-story brick store houses Main st.: gilt-edge, property. Foley’s Kidney Cure mtkes kidneys and bladder right. The Gainesville Eagle. B, D. Langford’s Sale List. t I . | 6-rooni house Green street. I 8-room house Academy street. 5-room house Grove street. 7-room house Main street. 4-room house Rainey street. • 4-room house Summit street. I 4-room house North street. 4-room house Prior street. I 4-room house Banks street. 4-room house Spring street. 4-room house College avenue. 4-room house Palmour street. 2 brick stores Main street. 4 vacant lots Prior street. 10 vacant lots Davis street. 1 vacant lot near Gainesville Cotton j Mill. ; K) vacant lots Railroad avenue. j 1 vacant lot Main street. , 3 small farms at Poplar Springs. 160 acres 3 miles south of city. I J. O. ADAMS, ;ATTO RN E Y AT LA W, I Gainesville, Ga. Room No 4, State Banking Bldg. 1 Phone 123. “Rocky” claims a specialty. Gen eral practice in all the courts. Quick loans negotiated on town property. Loans on farms for five and ten years time. GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA. THURSDAY. APRIL 30, 1903 MEMORIAL DAY. To the women who worked and waited and wept at home, and for the love of whom Southern soldiers fought ; for it was as truly loyal to give their lives to their loved Southland as to give their lives for the cause that was lost. Today we lay Upon the honored grave Os him who gave— Counting no cost— His life for the cause that was lost The flowers bf love, And, looking above, Where the stars and the bars In a cloud-phantom stream, There we bear to the air • In the story and song, And the legend of dream. And the rythm of rhyme, The name that to fame Will be known for all time, For the woundings he wore. For the sorrowings sore, For the burthens he bore, For the blood that he shed, For the death he could wed. For the scars ~ He could claim , ; For the stars • * And the bars. And yet, forget Not her who wept thro’ weary years Hot, burning, bitter tears. Waiting the while r In patient devotion. Flow’rs pile O’er the mound where she sleeps, Where loyalty keeps There the stars and the bars In a heart that is still; For above all the love Os his country and creed Was her love, to the will Os the soldierly deed. Her faith to the death And her hope cheered the charge, And her sacrifice large; For to wait was her pin t Os the battle; her heart Was torn by the rain of the shell Where her soldier-lad fell; Her gift was to give Him she loved, and to live Thus bereft what was left Os a life that no strife Os the fighting and fray Could hurt deeper. Then pay But the tribute that’s due To the women thus true Who did what was d< to do For the stars ( And the bars. —D. G. B. Thxis Hvihh tlxo XVox-ld Away - Tuesday next will be legal sale day. Solicitor-General Charters and Court j Stenographer Swain were here this week. Miss Susie Hancock has returned from a visit to Jefferson. Willis Roark will shortly move to Atlanta. Mrs. S. T. Looper and Mrs. J. A. will visit relatives in Dalton i next week. Mr. F. M. Loden has begun the erec tion of a neat residence for Mr. J. Esten Whelchel on College Avenue. Miss Middie Carson of Harmony Grove is the guest of friends in the city this | week. Miss Glover Henderson, now of At j lanta, is visiting her grandparents, Dr. and Mrs J. W. Oslin. John C. Smith of Atlanta visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith, here i this week. Mr. W. A. Wilson, formerly of this i place, has moved to Atlanta, where he lias a position at the Federal prison. \ irgil Thompson of Sugar Hill, who ! has a position in Atlanta, moved his family to that city last week. Mr. R. T. Kenimer and daughter of : Cleveland are spending this week in ' Gainesville at the Aldington. Col. John T. Boiffeullet, accompanied ■by his niece, of Macon, spent part of last week in Gainesville. ' Mr. W. R. Canning left Tuesday morning for New York on a business . trip. J. Tot Walker of the Candler Horse i Guards has been promoted to a ser | geant’s place from corporal. Mi 1 , and Mrs. Otis Lathem and little ) son are visiting Capt. J. C. Hill's family , at Greenville, S. C. Mr. H. H. Dean came back yesterday from Albany, where he went this week 1 to meet with the directors of the Greater j Georgia Association. Charlie Findley came up from his work in Savannah Monday to see home , folks here and attend to some proses- I sional business. Rev. J. A. Wynne accompanied the i family of Prof. Van Hoose to Eufaula ! Tuesday, where the remains of Rev. A. Van Hoose were carried for interment ; in that city. Established in 1860. Arthur Roper now has a position in the commissary at New Holland. Mr. W. M. Cathay has returned from a visit to his daughter in Alabama. Mr. H. G. Heath arrived in the city last Friday and will make this his home. The Bailey building, at the corner of Bradford and Oak streets, is nearing completion. Col. J. E. Redwine and Dr. J. W. Osliu are in Macon this week in attend ance upon the meeting of the Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons. Mr. H. R. Calloway of the Everett, Ridley, Ragan & Co. firm, was in the city this week looking after their fac tory interests. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Moore died last Friday morning, aged two weeks. The burial was at Alta Vista cemetery Friday afternoon. Miss Mamie Simmons will leave today for a five weeks visit to Washington City. Baltimore, and Richmond and other points in the Old Dominion. Dr. J. W. Osliu will visit New Or leans about the middle of May to attend the Confederate Veterans Reunion. He will visit his daughter, Mrs. Crawford, before returning. The Richardson Brothers, en masse, came over last Saturday from their new home in Lavonia to spend a few days in their old home in Gainesville. Their many friends were glad to see them. ? Mrs. R. Burnett, Mrs. W. H. Evans, and Miss Mary Ella Perry have re turned from Marietta, where they at tended the conference of the W. F. M. S. of the Methodist church. ( ; Mr. G. D. Lay has been off duty rhis j week resting and getting well of a bad ■ ease of mumps. Almost his entire fam-! ily have suffered from this unpleasant i malady. Mrs. S. C. Shewmake, Mrs. R. E. An doe. and Mrs. W. F. Quillian leave to day for Madison to attend the ence of the W. H. M. S. of the Meth odist church. i Mrs. F. A. Bunkley of Wetumpka, Ala., visited her parents, Col. and Mrs. A. D. Candler, here last week, return ing Monday to her home. She was ac companied on her return by her sister, Miss Annie Candler. 81.00 Per Annum in Advance. Oscar Moore of Athens was in the city a day or two this week. Mr. W. S. Cox came down from Young Harris this week. Mrs. Griffin of Atlanta is the guest of Mrs. J. G. Hyuds this week. Justice court for the 411th district meets tomorrow. Mrs. John Turner is visiting her par ents at McDonough. Miss Maggie Dunlap is visiting Mrs. V. M. Montgomery at Spartanburg. Mrs. J. B. George is visiting her mother in Buford. Mr. Walters. Wills is still a very sick man, though improving. Mrs. Lee Parnell and Master R. E. Lee, jr., are visiting in Atlanta this week. Miss Georgia Abbot returned Monday from a three months stay in Yeung Har ris. Mrs. J. A. Parsons leaves this week for Young Harris to visit her parents and her two sons. Miss Woodie Whitehead has com pleted her second year successfully as teacher of the Grayson high school. Miss Fletcher Charles of Flowery Branch was the guest this week of Misses Carrie and Mamie Gaston. Mr. J. E. Murphy, now of Charlotte, stopped over with his friends here last Friday and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Norton of New Holland leave this week for South Car olina for the summer. 1 Mr. W. R. Walker, who has been quite ill for some time, is much im proved. Mrs. Will Porter is visiting her [ mother, Mrs. Dr. Quillian, of Buford, who is quite ill. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Dunbar visited Mrs. Dunbar’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Roper, at Buford last Saturday and Sunday. The family of Dr. J. W. S. Moore have moved from Clarkesville to this city. They are occupying the Adair 1 house on Green street. The Postal Telegraph Co. has re cently installed offices at Cornelia, Toc coa, and other points north of. Gaines ville on the Southern Railway. ; Mr. Frank Vance of Greenville, S. C.. j and Mr. Ed Chapman of the same place are visiting their uncle, Mr. H. S. Davenport* Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Q. Whitehead are being congratulated upon the ar i rival in their home of a fine, saucy, ten i pound boy who arrived Tuesday. J. Austin Bell, who has been very sick for the past two weeks, is now inprov ing, though not out of danger by any means. Ike Lipstine of Atlanta and Ed Berg strom of Athens, two of the Queen City boys of the times ago, were circulating amongst their old friends here this week. Gainesville Lodge No. 219, F. and A. M., will hold a regular communication next Tuesday evening. Work in E. A. and M. M. degrees. Both the Gainesville Cotton Oil Mill and the new Planters Oil Mill will run ' their machinery next season by electric-; ity- Mrs. A. B. Pojie will this week move : to Gainesville from Zebulon, having ] rented the Quattlebaum place on Green street. Mrs. Capt. Kidd, who has been visi ting her husband, who is constructing > the electric line here, returned to her : Ohio home this week. Messrs. Stallworth and Thompson of New Holland, Mrs. F. H. Logan, and Miss Mattie Tilson, of this city, are spending part of the week in Spartan burg. Judge J. J. Kimsey of Cleveland, ac- ■ companied by Mrs. Kimsey and their daughter, Mrs. Frank Logan, are spend* the week in the city. They are stop ping at the Arlington. I Miss Obie Stevens of Lexington will i give her graduating recital at Breuau i next Tuesday afternoon at 5 o’clock. | She trill render selections from Haydn,: Beethoven, Rubentein, Henselt. and! Chopin. Mr. Henry Robertson, who is Grand Marshal of the Grand Lodge of Georgia, I. O. O. F., will go to Tallulah Falls to night or tomorrow to institute a new lodge of that order at that place. He instituted a new lodge at Duluth last week. The friends of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. S. Moore and Mrs. Smith regret to see tliem leave Clarkesville. Mr. Moore has been in Gainesville some time. Mrs. Smith and Miss Hattie left Saturday. Mrs. Moore and Lawrence are now with Mrs. Deadwyler, but will leave in a day or two. —Clarkesville Advertiser. NUMBER 18. | Duncan Johnson, of Johnson Bros., has been quite sick for the past week. Chief Bartow Parks spent the fore part of the week in Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Davis spent the , past week in Atlanta, guests of the Pied ■ mont. Mrs. Esther Hall of Ingleside is in the ! city on business and on a visit to her mother. Mrs. C. H. Backus. A Smail Blaze Occurred Tuesday night at Dave Mont gomery’s store on High street, occa sioned by the explosion of a lamp. Ten or fifteen dollars will cover the damage. Got Fine Property. Quillian Bros, have purchased the Owens property on Maple and West Broad streets, adjoining their ware house, and are planning some large im provements for the early future. Found Unlucky Hole. Mr. W. J. Keesee, while removing . an old roof from a stable Tuesday, stepped through a hole in the covering and fell 12 or 15 feet to the floor below, hurting himself considerably. No bones were broken, however, and he will be all right again in a few’ days. Love at First Sight. Miss Hulda Bryant and Mr. W. J. Harley were married at the home of Mr. J. M. Sheffield, near the Gaines ville Cotton Mills, Sunday, Rev. D. S. Grindle performing the ceremony. The young people had never seen each other .till the day they were married. Allen-Phillips. i Miss Bessie Allen and Mr. William Phillips, two popular young people of Candler district, were happily married, last week at the bride’s parents' home, Mi 1 . R. C. Simmons, J. P. Both young people are members of prominent fam ilies and have many friends in their community. < A Romantic Marriage . Occurred Monday evening, when Miss | Mary Osborne and Mr. John C. Bell 'were united in matrimony, Rev. J. A. ! Wynne performing the ceremony. The young people are from White ; county, and are members oiVv-' c ! iuent families of that count Caught for Caws. Arnold Tumlin, while plowing yes terday captured a full-grown, healthy crow which had lit in the field where he was at work. It is very seldom a crow’ can be approached within gun range, and less frequently can a grown, healthy crow’ be captured. His crow ship had his head in a bob' and was in terested in holey things, or making some entomological investigations and be ■ame so intent that he was bagged be fore he knew about it. Two Graduating Piano Recitals By pupils of Prof. Pfefferkorn will be given this week at Brenau. Miss Haidee McKenzie of Montezuma will give her recital this afternoon at 5 o’clock. There are five numbers on the program, embracing compositions of Greig. Schumann. Moszkowski, Liszt, amt Verdi-Liszt. Miss Lois Allen of Toccoa will recite at 5 o’clock Saturday evening. The program will consist of numbers from Bach, Beethoven. Schumann, Mosz kowski and Nicode. Coin Stuck on Him. Tom Oliver, a colored boy working at the Southern depot, was arrested by Policeman Bagwell Tuesday, charged with larceny. Money had been missed for some time, in small amounts, from the cash drawer, and Tom was sus pected.' A trap was laid for him. he w’alked in and was nabbed. He took only five half-dollars, though there was about S9O in the cash drawer when* he abstracted the amount from it Tuesday. He plead guilty and was sentenced to pay a fine of $35 and costs or serve 12 months in the chaiugang. Cagle Again Found Insane- Judge Kimsey heard the habeas cor pus case Monday in the matter of the recent trial of Mr. C. D. Cagle for lu nacy, setting aside the finding of the. Ordinary's Court on account of infor malities and illegalities, it being shown that at the time he was tried Mr. Cagle was six or seven miles from the court, and further that the required ten days notice had not been served. Conditions of law having been met. Mr. Cagle was again put upon trial on a writ of lunacy Tuesday. About 20 witnesses from Lula and vicinity were here and the ease at tracted considerable attention, being fought vigorously by attorneys for and against finding Mr. Cagle subject. The jury recommended him a fit sub ject for the Stare Sanitarium.