The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, July 30, 1903, Image 4

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Reflect i< We ms o Woman. Forgot His Wedding Day. the people tnost we think about most. A “return” of love may some-; times simply imply its rejection, j l.ovt is a species of fascination*,! but fascination is not always love, j Absence may make the “heart grew fonder,” but it is often of the other girl. Women are the most sympa thetic beings in the world—in some cast's in others, men. There may be as “good fish in the sea as ever wore caught out,”| hut there are no duplicates. Isn’t it strange that a woman j can t be simply friendly with some men without their falling in h ‘with her? There’s many a man been won by u woman’s smile where friend ship alone was thought of on the part of the woman. II .1 woman loves a man she generally. secs in him ideality enough. When she marries him she discovers the reality. Why is it that the person capa ble <;( giving the greatest happi ness is capable also of causing the most intense pain? . Love may-he the source of un- * alloyed pleasure to some, hut to a great many it is the source of j more pain than pleasure. 1 he hardest, thing in the world ! to make a girl believe is that a man is in love w ith her when he pays less attent ion to her than to | other gi rls. .Music has not. only “charms to! soothe the savage breast,” but it is also one of the greatest mem ory-preservatives of love known to ei\ ili/.ed man. The most beautiful’ and' never failing characteristic of true love it, its willingness to forgive any oiVei.se, however great., committed by it s object. While a declaration of love that does not imply marriage should be considered an insult, a propo sal i f marriage without love is equally an insult to every right- 1 'linking woman. It is always a surprise to a woman 1 o find out) that'a man is! in love with her, and it is gener ally equally a surprise to the man that she 1’i-ciprocates it. As in other things, so in marry ing a man never knows wdiat he can d< till he tries, and sometimes does not know then for some time to come. \s goes the old prov erb. "You can't always sometimes tell. ’—Dalton Citizen. He Didn’t Understand. A little fellow out West Rhx- bury way some ten years old', per haps twelve, bested his grandmoth ers the other day rather neatly. All three were at the tablo when one of the ladies casually mention ed die name of the family nurse. Immediately the little fellow want ed to koow r who the lady was. Ope grandma innocently remark- j ed that ii was the nurse that took cave of the boy when he wasj born. “But why didn't mamma take ''are of me? 1 was her baby, wasn’t, i D queried the little fel low. “True,” says grandma; "but you see, mamma 1 doesn’t un-> id-stand how to look after little 1 diics, particularly the tirst one, ■ 'd we have to have nurses who I r e learned how in the hospitals.’’ That seemed to settle it, but all of a sudden the little fellow blurted 1 out: “Well, than, who took care o'? C du?”— Boston Traveler. Yeung Men And Women, Attention. ’! lie North Georgia Agi icuitui al College, established by the state, oilers the greatest and most pav ing investment. Tuition free, board cheap, climate healthful, surrounuings cheerful, discipline exact, scholarship high distinguished graduate students, able teachers, the state championship for oratory and has the fiuest cadet corps un der a most, distinguished Point graduate. For putlicnlurs, write to Du. IS. S. Avis, President, Dablonoga, Ga. “We hear a good deal about the busy men of Now York,” said one of them, “but I have a friend- in Wall street who has broken the record. “I was in his apartment a few nights ago after the theatre, and lie was chatting with me about the deals of the day, and as he chat ted he wns running over a bundle of memoranda. All at once lie stopped as if he lmd been shot. “‘Great Scott 1 ’ he exclaimed, ‘I’m to be married tomorrow to a woman in Chicago, and I had for gotten the date completely. Say, old man, come with me and help me pack up. Of course, I can't make it now to. save my life, even if I hired a special engine and car, for the wedding is set for tomor row morning at 10 o’clock.’ “W hile *he began pitching his livings into his trunk T wrote out a message to his sweetheart, and hurried it to the telegraph office. My friend left on the first train out and after his arrival in Chi cago he wired back: “ ‘It’s all right. She has the measles.’ ” Too Scientific. The principal trustee of school district No. 1(1 was entertaining a young man fresh from college who had driven out to his home to ap ply for the position of teacher of the school in that district. As they sat on the porch after dinner the trustee casually called attention to a familiar little orange colored Img with black spots on its back that wns crawling on tlie floor. “I s’pose yon know what that is'/” he said. “Yes,” replied' the applicant, eager to show his technical knowl edge. “That is a Uoceiuclhi sep- tempunetata.” “Young man,” was the rejoins dev, “a-feller that don’t know a ladyhug when lie sees it, can’t gel my vote for teacher in this dis- l rich”—Youths Companion. Kpitah Too Suggestive. A man whose cheerful occupas tion is that of making tombstones in telling h's friends about a wom an who visited his place last week and said she wanted a nico tomb stone put over her husband’s grave, with some short, simple inscrip tion on it. Be asked how she would like the word “Resurgam.” She in- qnirod as to its meaning, and when ho translated it as “1 shall rise again,” she said, in a panic. “No, no, mister; make it ‘Rest in In Peace!,”—Now York Press. In finding fault it is very easy to bo untruthful and unfair.— Atchison Globe. Cultivate a Good Temper. The good tempered person num bers ten friends to the one possess ed by the person who grumbles, or is cross and fault-finding. Good humor is contagious, and one doesn’t in the least mind being ex posed to it, in hope of catching it. The infectious spirit meets a ready response in most of us; if it docs not, the cause of tho whole trouble lies within ourselves. No outside remedy cun aid us. A girl of this type is quickly sought after by hoys for skating parties, and other pastimes, for her aid mirers know that no mishaps will rutile her good humor, no trivial experience cloud the suuniness of her temper. She is selected before all others, and, instead of anxiously waiting for invitations, is obliged to refuse them. Ex. A Kentucky man is going to write the thrilling history of his life. Tho salient features of the story, according to his own pros pectus, are that his father never spent a penny for his clothes from infancy on, that ho was U> years old before he had a pair of shoes, that in the thirty-five years of his life he has worked only thirty-five days, that ho has never owned more than one book, that hij never missed a meal in Ins life and never paid for but three, and that ho has written 842 love letters and never received one. When the book of this Kentucky genius gets on the market, the historical novel will have to take a back seat.—Sav. News. Cured At 70 of Heart Dis ease Contracted During Civil War— Veteran Grateful. Dr. Miles’ Heart Cur© Effected Cure. Heart disease is curable, but in people of advanced age it does not readily lend itself to ordinary treatment. There is, however, hope for all suffereis in Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure, which we know from watching hun dreds of cases and from the letters of grateful sufferers, will cure where all else has failed. It is not only a wonderful cure for weak and diseased hearts, but it is a blood tonic, a reg ulator of the heart's action and the most effective treatment ever formulated for im proving the circulation of the blood. “During the Civil war I contracted heart disease, and in 1896, while living in the grand old town of Lexington, Va., 1 grew so much worse, I left there with my wife to visit my sister-in-law, Mrs. T. A. Kirby, at Roanoke, Va. While I said nothing to anyone J never expected to live to return to the dear old town. On reaching Mrs. Kirby’s she insisted I should try Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. 1 pro cured a few bottles of it, al.-o the Nervine and Tonic. After using one or two bottles, I could see no improvement, and I despaired of ever being better, but my faithful wife in sisted on keeping it Up, which I did. Im provement soon began in earnest and I took in* all fifteen or sixteen bottles. I was re stored to perfect health and while 1 am 70 years old, I am comparatively a boy. You sir, arc a benefactor, and I cheerfully recom mend Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure to suffering humanity.’’—J. L. Slaughter, Salem, Va. All druggists, sell and guarantee first bottle Dr. Miles’ Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Addres Dr. Miles Medical Co., Klkhart, lad. ESTZSI It has earnest It holds 1 West ispecial bargains! t t t ALWAYS ON HAND AND OFFERED TO THE TRADE AT iJ. F. MOORE & COMPANY. We Deal In Staple Dry Goods, Shoes, Pants, Overalls, Groceries, all kinds Farm Implements and Mining Supplies at very reasonable figures. In fact any and everything you need. G-rent-ly reduced Prices in A111 ny A r (i c 1 e s. J. F. Moore & Co. I jST ice- die a] ? (JD > t iiin n\l FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE Gtiaraniesti tar fill Kidney and Bladder TrooMn. Is Safa and Sijn FOLEY’S KIDNEY BORE FOLEY’S' cures the most obstinate cases of kidney and bladder diseases. It supplies the kidneys with the substances they need to build up the worn out tissues. It will cure Bright’s Disease and Diabetes if taken in time, and a slight disorder yields readily to the wonderful curative power of this great, medicine. It sooths and heals the urinary organs and invigorates the whole system. II your kidneys are de ranged, commence by taking f S SCII1NEY CURE at once. It will make you well. A Physician Healed, How Prescribes It Dally Dr. Geo. Ewing, a practicing physician at Smith’s Grove, Ky., for over thirty years, writes his personal experience with FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE: “For years I have been greatly bothered with kidney and bladder trouble and enlarged prostate gland. I used everything known to the profession without relief, until I commenced to use FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. After taking three bot tles I was entirely relieved and cured. I prescribe it now daily in my practice and heartily recommend its use to all physicians for such troubles, for I can honestly state I have prescribed it in hundreds of cases with perfect success.’’ Had to Get Dp Several Times Every Night Mr F. Arnold, Arnold, la., writes: “ I was troubled 1 witn kidney disease about three years. I was nervous and all run down, and had to get up several times during tne night, but three bottles.of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE effected a complete cure. T feel better than I ever did and recommend it to my friends.” TWO SIZES 50c and $1.00 Dr, C,H. Jones. Blanks For Sale I " ' ' At the Nugget office you will j find the following blanks: Warranty Deeds, Mortgage Deeds, Mortgage Notes, Mortgage Fifas Chattle Mortgages, Plain Notes, Common Leases. Miner’s Leases, Criminal Warrants, Peace Warrants, Options, Power of Attorney, Witness Summons, J. P. Summons, Justice’s Court Fifas, Forthcoming Ponds, Constable’s advertisements, Bonds for Title, Affidavit Pond for Garnishment Administrator’s Deeds and Attachments. PREPARED ONLY BV THE GREAT LANIER. Are you Interested in Youi Future Welfare? Equip yourself with a firaeUc.nl business education and you will be prepared to meet' t he iespor.sibilitjit-s of life:. We are placing: many young men and ladies in- paving [Kisitions. IF YOU BESIHE TO b]l i!' YOi iiS.fi.F for teaching or civil service, you can make no mistake in pic-paring at our school. i) IIVEIY Tf 1 v.Plfpnq |\T Pimh'l D. CHALMERS STOW, The Lanier Business College, MACON, (.1 A, THE MOST RUSTICAL COLLEGE IN AkjERICA. FIRST CLASS IT un eral Director & E mb a liner And Dealer in COFFINS, CASKETS, COFFIN FIXTURES, and BURIAL ROBES, Dahlonega, Ga. Photographic Work Qone AT :Dahlonega Portrait £§o’d gallery, Next Door Above tonic Hall, G D, BRUCE, Gen Manage] ThjlPeople s_Paper- Eg THE ATLANTA HEWS F!JELUDED DAILY LX TPT SUMD • V. Ably Ldited by John Temple Gntv es Under MannLremenf of ("buries IUnud- y (lit: All absolutely Five and Independent Daily Newspaper. ' ' v when important news of the world, mailed diivi t lo subscribers ' at the i ale of ONE CENT A DAY. | a •specialty, j biibvcnptiouts aceptedut Lite i 'dice oj A ' '(>(’-■' T lOUTSfiKHAK ! ’ uli KtM1T hU:ar ™ ca- for children; safe, sure, A'a opiates , T I j E A FLA NT A *- E V;., - * ; “ 11 ‘ G.H. McGUIRE tiik JEWELER CLARKKSYILLK ST. Daiii.uskoa, Ga. Clock and Watch Repairing