The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, July 23, 1903, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Advertising Medium, Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information. VOL. XIV—NO. 21. n miln millp m » DAIILONEGA, GA., THURSDAY, JULY 23. 1903. One Dollar Per Annum W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Proprietor D r Dry Goods, Notions. Shoes. Hats, Clothing. SPECIAL PRICES IN GROCERIES. Feed Stuff A SPECIALTY. Come and See Us. BARGAIN STORE, ♦ ST3iEigK^jwZiT.».<iByWHIR^Bfc!HMIBHWBSBg5SBf9v?T~-j3EgSr?;Kr5?S!!>?.?-^a (Anderson | A Jones CLOTHING, | iShoes, ◄ ► HatsJ Furnishings, $ ♦ ♦ ♦ | Guns, Machines, Groceries. t Clothing a specialty.! They will sell you clothing for cash| [at Gainesville or Atlanta prices. At |nice line of samples and will take ♦ lyour order for tailor made goods. D AHLONEGii. laivery Stable, Moore Bro-, IPropi*'^. Local And Other News. I land of Dcstinv. Location, nomas Bum. RUN A. DAILY HACfi LtNE to and from O ainosyilie. FARE, *1.50. ^ight this way if you need a*ay kind of blanks. We have tin m on hand, cheap. The crops of this county are looking fine now and a big yield will he made if they are not in jured later. A good deal of corn, meal and fodder is being hauled here from | lacked am Hall county. Also from Dawson., carrying much of the money away that could go to resident far rivers if they would manage right, by devoting their entire time to farm- i n gv There will not be any block* ade brandy or any other kind, manufactured in the county this year on account of the failure of the f’ nit crop. Illockaders will have to make and sell corn juice if they expect to be the guest of Uncle Sam. The loop at Chattahoochee Park was completed last Saturday after noon and the electric cars “looped the loop” last Sunday, and will continue to do «o hereafter. The undergrowth at the park will lie cut down at an early date, and lie- fore long walks will be laid out and graded. The dam on llie Chattahoochee will hardly bo con* pleted before November.—News. As usual one of the town pumps is out of tix again. One or the other is always out of repair. When children are not playing wiUh 'them they are being used to supply water for stock, which keeps them in motion most all the tune and out of fix. The pumps can’t stand it. It takes too much to try to keep them up. The best and cheapest plan would be to use a couple of buckets and a chain instead of spending any more money on these pumps. Sensational preachers should he put under bond and allowed to run at large only during good be havior. They are amenable to no laws of propriety or customs of polite society. They give wings to more mischief in a single min ute than reputable clergymen are able to overcome in a twelve- month, and arc not satisfied unless they arc the ccntrcss of perpetual petty rages in the pulpit than it allows elsewhere*, but to' such an extent are sensational preachers abusing their privileges that the time is not far di taut when com mon decency will revolt, and, men like Dr. Broughton will be sub jected to proper restrictions in the interest of public safety, truthfully remarks the Albany Herald. The quickest way to get I rid of sensational preachers is to i remain away from the church ! when their day conies. I hen i they will lie compelled to leave j the pulpit aud follow some other ! occupation besides what they call ! preaching, that will suit them I much better. “1 had rather an odd experience in this state a few years ago,” res marked a Toledo man who was a guest ul a Chicago hotel last .week, 1 | says the Chicago duurina-l. “I was driving across the ' country with a single horse when ; a bull broke out of a Held and at- killed the horse. But ' for a tree being handy 1 might have shared the same fate. I had | hired the rig of a liveryman, and he demanded pay for the horse. ! Naturally enough I demanded an equal sum from the owner of the j bull. He claimed that he had hired a neighbor to make the fences safe, and that the neighbor must be held. When it got along lo the neighbor he scratched his head and said: “ TT11 not to blame, for it. If the bull hadn't, bad horns lie couldn’t haye torn the fence down.' “There was a lawsuit in which j the four of 1* were mixed up,” ; continued the Buckeye, aud 1 have I always admired the erudition of j the justice of the peace who tried the ease and squelched it at that early stage. “ ‘As for the killing of the j horse,' he said, ‘lie might have I been struck by lightning or met I a circus elephant and fallen dead. | Thai lets the hirer out. As for | the owner of tlie bull, I10 didn’t set. | him on, and that lets him out r% % Dealer in r* 9 General Merchandise. La Senorita. DRV GOODS KIND, A SPECIALTY ALL KINDS OF SHOES FOR Ladies and Gento. .Art in Shoemaking. Kxact Reproduction of litis Style Shoe. FRIGES REASONABLE. What to Teach the Boys. A philosopher 1ms said that true education of boys is to “teach them what they ought to know 'when they become men.” 1. To be true and to bo genuine. No education is worth anything I that does not include this. A I man had better not know how to i read, and bo* (true and genuine in I action, rather (than lie learned ib< | sll sciences aud in <ili languages, j^ s | and be at the same time false in u Dealer i n FAMILY GROCERIES AND General Merchandise. Make it Short. A11 exchange gives the follow ing good advice: ‘ Long visits, long exhortations, long essays and long prayers seldom protit those who haye to do with them. Life is short. Time is short. Moments are preoious. Learn to condense, abridge and intepsify. We can endure many aches and ills that arc soon over, while even pleasure grows insipid and pain intolerable if they are continued beyond the limits and convenience. Learn to be short. Crop oil the branches, stick to the main side of your case. ; if you pony, ask for what you be lieve you will rccteve and | don9 with it; if you speak, ; your message and held your peace; 1 if you write, boil down two sen- l tonces into one. for the man who mended the fences, he did the best he could with the rails he had, aud nobody can blame him. It’s a ease of Providence, with the horse coming along and the bull bursting the fence at the right minute, and costs will be divided among the four of you, and the bull’s horns be sawed off and a ring put in nose.’ ’’ Rejected. “Gwendoline!” he implored, raising his voice in tremulous pleading. “Dearest love? 1 did not mean—I only meant—” But she had arisen from the ottoman and stood before him, imperious, haughty, scintillating, with all the arrogant beauty of a proud belle of the upper West Side. Stretching herself to her fullest extent of four feet six, and •casting a withering glance upon the trembling wight, she pointed to the door. “Go, George W, Vanderscottl” she cried. “Go, before 1 call the butler and have you removed by fore?. 1 have given to you, freely, a young girl’s first love, a young girl’s tender initial passion, a young girl’s trust and confidence. Despite your wealth of billions I have consented to wear your name and sport your ermine, and would have adorned your palace in West End avenue as never palace was adorned before. But this ends it all. Never — oh I never — will Gwendoline McMutt consent to 'heart and countefeit in life. Above all things, leach the boys that truth is more than riches, power or possessions. 2. To be pure in thought, lan guage and life—pure in mind and body. 53. To be unselfish. To care for the feelings and comforts of oth- his j ers. To be generous, noble and I manly. This will include a gen uine reverence for the aged and for things sacred. ■1. To bo self-reliant and -seltf- helpful, even from child'heod. To be industrious always, and self- supporting at the earliest possible age. Teach them that all honest work is honorable; that an idle life of dependence on others is disgraceful. When a boy has learned these things, when he .lias made these ideas part of him—however poor or however rich—he has learned the most important things he ought to know. Dogs as Policemen. During the Boer war one heard a good deal of dogs as scouts, hint they have now- actually been en rolled in Denmark and Belgium as part of the police foi’ce. They are mostly drawn from the collie breed, and it takes ‘ about four months to train them to their work. They can cleverly climb walls after a disappearing fugitive or eatcli him by the neck and hold him fast without hurting him till help arrives. These humble ad- el n man who had presumed to | ditions to the police force are not k her what may bo—nay, is—1 only used for tracking special CITY DIRECTORY SUPERIOR COURT. 3rd Mondays in April and Octo ber. J. J. Kimsey, Judge. Cleve land. Ga. W.A. Charters, Solici tor General, Dahlonega, Ga. COUNTY OFFICERS. •John Ilult', Ordinary. John II. Moore,Uleik. James iVI. Davis 43her Ut. K. J. Waldon, Tax Collector. James V Itealan. Tax Receiver. V. U. Mix, County Surveyor. Joseph B. Brown, Treasurer. I). 0. Stow Coroner. CITY GOVERNMENT. It. If. Baker. Mayor. Aldermen: E. S Strickland, J. E. McGee, F G. Jones. J. W. Boyd, T. J. Smith. W. P. Price,Jr. Wm. J. Worley, Clerk. James V. Ilarbison, Marshal. RE 1AGIOUS SERVICES. Baptist Church — Rev, J. R, Gunn, Paster. Services Sunday at 11 and at night. Prayer meeting rimreday night, Sunday School at 9 o'clock. Methodist-.-Services ove.'y Sun day at 11 and at night. Rev.. E. O. Marks, Pastor. Prayer .meeting every Wednesday night. Sunday School at V o’clock. Presbyterian—Scrviuoa only on 1st and 3rd Sundays. I).J BlaokwcH., pastor. Sunday School 9 a. in. MASONIC.. Blue Mountain Lodge Nq. 38, F. <fc A. M., meets list Tuesday night of each month.. 4t. M. Kakcut., tW, Mf K. of P. Gold City Lodge No. 117, meets every Monday night in their Castle Hall, over Price’s store. WiiAinox A mucus on, C. C. I). C. Stow, R. R. of S. D, J. Bj.aokwem,, P. Law, her age ! ” ■— Harold New York Herald. -nay, Wilder, in criminals, but are on duty every) night from 9 o’clock till f> tbe next morning, accompanied by a policeman. In Beigiun they are •used in the prisons to prevent at tempt- at .escape, and since this plan has boon adopted there lias not been u single prisoner willing to test the powers of these canine The freezing cure is going ahead in France. The well invented by M. Raoul Pictet is described as a fur-lined steel cylinder about 5 feet deep. In this is placed the sufferer from lung, stomach or kidney disease, from five to fifteen j wnr ders.—Londan Tatler. minutes, and a liquefied of aulpu- rous and carbolic acids, at 110 de grees below zero, is circulated by special pumps between the double walls of the cylinder. Bv eight get j applications of this treatment, loll ! which gives no sensation of cold, K. H. BAKER, Attorney ?it Da’klmuxjci, Ga. All lci(.-:il business promptly attended to ’ Win. X WORLEY, Attorney at Law, AN D REAL ESI ATE AGENT, Dahloneqd, Ga- llr. II. C. WUELfllEU^ Physieiita & Surgeon, (Dahlonega, Ga. BARBER SHOP. w Why She Was Discharged' 1 wish I knew M. Pictet claims to have cured his own dyspepsia of fifteen years’ standing.—Exchange. Homely Heiress how to have my photograph taken j so it would bo sure to please dear . George. Her Maid (knowingly)—Well, j I have no objection to sitting for you.—Chicago News. IIKN wanting a nice dean shave, hair cut or shampoo call on Ilcury Underwood First class barber shop in every respect next iloor to Duckett’s store on main street where they will be found ready lo wait on you at any time. Send TJs Y our jorw fOlEYSKlDNEYCURl Makes Kidneys Md Bladder Right