The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, October 29, 1903, Image 2

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The I Nugget, DAHLONEGA, OCTOBER 29, Itf03 Biictrfil at tln> Dnlilmiogn, C n. I*. (' an Spcntld CIiirs Matter, Official Organ of both City mid County. Mr. John Hoff, out* present or dinary, says that ho may bo a can didato for re-election. The Monticello News found its way to onr table for the lirst time last week. It is an elegant paper and the citizens of that llniving place should fed proud of it. Mr. Dunk, Holliflcld says he thinks he will bo in the race for county treasurer of this county next term. Mr. J. Ik Hrgwn, the present official, says on account of havinir had it two terms in succes sion he will not lie a candidate for re election. iThe Cabb;u;o Worm Si it seems the of Nort !i t icol by the report t in the cabbage; people in a section i i are so alarmed mt a worm found mown there is of JOHN H. MOORE FOR In order to secure certification of his milk by the milk commis sion of New York City the dairy man must have a clean cement floor stable, with whitewashed walls and abundant windows. Cows must be sponged and their tails scrubbed before each milking. White suits must bn worn by at tendants, bottles and utensils scald ed and tilled bottles kept on ice and shipped only in refrigerato* cars. Mr. .Tim Wood, tvho lives in Critter, recently had a sow to give birth to eight pios, all of which had fully developed teeth. The result was the sow refused to nour ish the pigs. Mr. Wood got Dr. Ezzard and Dr. Haygood to ex tract the pigs’ teeth, and from the months of the eight pigs they pulled 08 teeth. The pigs now be ing nourished by the sow and promise to develop into tine hogs, says the Dalton citizen. An acre in : early potatoes, an other in onions, another in early cabbage, another in strawberries, a hundred good hens and two cows will one year with another give the family a better living than they can get out of an $000 salary, and the head of the house will have two thirds of the year to work at some other business, truthfully remarks the Marietta Journal. And thero would be not only bet tor living but better health. Stay on the farm. This is from the Ac worth Post: “The man who stood up for his town,” was the subject of a sketch by a noted divine in an evening paper recently. No trait is more admirable in a man than loyolty t,o the community in which ho lives. Stand up for your town and make people to know that you are proud of your citizenship, and like a great lecturer told a London audi ence of the American people, “if you are not proud of ns we will make you so before wo have done.” Last week down at the Canada Lumber Company camp in Worth county Ned Jack Ferguson col ored, who had been sent up from Talbot couuty for life for murder, in 1895, rushed upon Henry Tuck er, colored, with a knifo’ and stabbed him to death. Henry Tucker was sent to the penitentiary from Sumter county in 1892, for horse stealing for fifteen years. The murderer was delivered to the sheriff of Worth couuty and will be tried for his crime. There was no apparent cause for the killing. Commissioner of Pensions, J. W. Lindsly, says present indica tions are that there will be one thousand more applications for pensions in 1904 than there were in 1908. He says, however that this number does not represent the excess over last year’s roll, for many of those have died or moved, but states that the list will bo in- incrcascd at least 800 names. He adds that while $16,000 was re turned to the state treasury this year from the $870,000 appropri ated for pensions, that next year the entire amount will be consum ed without any being returned to the treasury, and with good chances there will be a deficit in the amount. a highly poisonous character that I they no longer hayc that vegetas bio on their bills of fare. The! story that was circulated and cent to the newspapers was that a sped- j men of the worm had been sunt ti | the sate chemist, who had report-; ed that it contained poison enough to kill fifteen people. It was also stated that several persons had! died mysterious deaths, that all of them had eaten cabbage shortly | before they died and that the coil- 1 elusion bud been reached that they wore victims of the worm. We did not publish the story because we were of the opinion that if any such worm had been sent to the state chemest and lie had made the sensational report credited to him, the fact would have reached the public from At lanta long before it was circulated in that part of the «tat.e Biliousness. The liver must be gently stirred so that the bile will be thrown off in the right' channel; the system must be invigorated DEALER IN m 11 MflRJ S W rW* " tlYER C - J $ 1 and TONIC Pellets form the Mild Power Cure /, that completely does 1 he work without shock J ' or injury to any part of the system. S T COMPLETE TREATMENT Fresh Meats, • Sausaee.Etr ALSO A FULL LINK op FAMILY GROCERIES. I n Simmons BuTdino- '"r„ 25 doses 25 cents at all dealers. •.v. J'"‘S Co., New V«'A' N v : 2,1 FOR SAIF BY DR. C. H. JONES. Elections will he held in eleven states next Tuesday. The cotton crop has been injur— in which led by the frost down the country, it was attracting attention. Uncle Dirk Wbelchol says he As a mattei of fact, however, *11 thinks of making the race for specimen of the woi m was sent 10 (; ounty treasures again, the Department of the Agriculture at Atlanta, but it was not submit- J Mr. Ellis Beelc and , Roberts, a daughter j Roberts, of this place, ted to the stale chemist. It was not thought necessary to submit it to him. The state entomologist pronounced it an “eel worm,” but apparently did not think it of enough importance to give much attention to it. He did not think it would I ill a person who swallowed it. We call attention to this matter for the reason that as far as now known considerable loss has been inflicted upon the cabbage grow ers of North Georgia by the circu lation of the story. There is no this It is said that Cant. W. J. ley is thinking of making the for clerk Superior court in county next time. Near Jackson, Miss., this week, a negro girl left to nurse two while children, got tired of them and choked both to death. T. S. Weayer, an aged Confed erate, died in Atlanta last week resulting from a wound received in the war forty years ago. A bailiff was lined $500 for I lighting a negro woman in Atlanta some time ago, whoso big lip ! caused him to lose his temper Miss Nellie of Mr. Al. w< rc [ weds (It'd in Gainesville last Wednes day. B >tli of D ib Ionega. Sheriff ILvis went down near | Aural ia yesterday and arrested Dick \\ ilhamsou, who is charged with burglary, by breaking into 1 Mr. Jack Castlehery’s house some time ago while the own r was ab sent and taking siime gold nuggets. Edgar Loveless, after working m tlie Nlookt offieo over two years has derided to move to Daw- sou county, live with hi- relatives and make a crop. Pie is a good, industrious boy and not an ill word has ever pas-ed between us during all this time. Success to him is our host w isin s. good reason for thinking that th worm is poisonous, or that it [ while in the discharge of his duty, would cause trouble to any one j The cashier of a New York haul getting it into Ins stomach in eat- j stole one hundred' thousand dol ing cabbage. It is probably a harmless purhsito that can be easi ly washed off the cabbage on which it finds a lodgment, or which is wholly destroyed in the process of cooking that vegetable. Thero seems to be no doubt, how ever, that the worm caused a gen uine scare in several North Geor gia counties where the cabbage is extensively cultivated.—Savannah News. Ruining The Negroes. Judge William T. Gray, of tho Richmond county Superior court, created quite a sensation Monday morning in charging the grand jury by eloquently attacking tho State law that allows the negro to be a beneficiary of tho school tax money paid to the comities and State by white citizens, says the Gainesville Eagle. Judge Gray declared “that he doubted the wisdom of these laws, lie doubted if they were justice to the white people. He declared that as the law is now, the negro is being fitted for stations in life to which he cannot aspire with any hope of filling, and never can while the wh'te race is supreme in the south. On the other hand, he is being unfited for tho walks of life that are open to him, as labor er, servant and field hand. Judge Gray declared the negro is being made dissatisfied, discontented and at war with life. Judge Gray declared that in his knowledge Confederate veterans, who are hardly able to care for their own children and home, are forced to see a part of the mite of taxes he pays to the state go th tho education of the negro. As a remedy for the evel, Judge Gray suggested the creation of a public sentiment that would lead to re pealing of tho present law. Judge Gray declared that the time is ripe for the agitation winch will lead I bus, spent it on a woman, and did not get her. Wo borrowed a dol lar and a half, spent, it on one and got her. That’s the difference says the Harmony Grove Citizen. A special from Columbus, Ga., says: The sale of cabbage iu this section has decreased very mater ially since the report that pois onous worms have been found in them. Dealers say the business of handling cabbage has been serious ly injured. “How dear to our heart is tho steady subscriber, who pays in ad vance at the birth of each year, who lays down his dollar and lays it down gladly, and casts around the office a halo of cheer. Ho never says ‘stop it I cant afford it’, nor ‘I’m getting more papers than I can read’, but always says ‘send it—the family like it—in fact, we all think it a household need,’ How welcome he is when he stqps in the sactum, bow he makes our heart throb, how lie makes our feet dance. We outwardly thank him, we inwardly bless him; the steady subscriber who pays in an ad- yancc.”—Americas Press. Millard Lee will have to be re spited by the Governor again unless the Supreme Court decides his case before next Friday anoth er stay of the execution will be necessary as when the last respite was granted in .July, it was limited to Get. i0. If a motion for a new trial is refused then Lee will be hanged, but it is stated by Lee’s attorneys that they hayo no possi ble doubt of the result as the rul ing of J edge Roan they sav was wrong. If Lee gets a new trial and the next jury before which he is tried finds him sane another appeal to the Supreme Court will betaken. 'Die next respite will make the seventh time that Leo has had bis death sentence stayed to such a sentiment in tho south, j ^ £°' e,n ° l * Morality, Ins honor declared, did Wc umIor3l>ni , ,| lat c not come from education, neither | jn AlllinU tllU could it be legislated into the bus man heart. Tho church and homo was the place where it could be successfully taught. Pi ice week endeavor ing to get a pardon for the Beas ley boys who were sent up from Lumpkin county 20 years each IF YOU WISH YOHi; i uot long ago, convicted of killing Pickpockets have been getting two men not far from Dahlonegn, in their work in Atlanta during the who will likely lie successful iu past few days. j bis efforts. 222 South Peoria, St., Chicago, Ili,., Oct. 7, 1902. Eight months ago I was so ill that I was compelled to lie or sit down nearly all the time. My stomach was so weak and upset that I could keep nothing on it and I vomited frequently. I could not urinate without great pain ami I coughed so much that my throat ami lungs were raw and sore. The doctors pro nounced it Bright’s disease and others said it was consumption, it mattered little to mo what they called it and I had no de sire to live. A sister visited me from St. Louis and asked me if I had ever tried Wine of Cardui. I told her I had not and she bought a bottle. I believe that it saved my life. I believe many women could save much suffer ing if they hut knew of its value. Don’t you want freedom from pain? Take Wine of Cardui and make one supremo effort to ho well. You do not need to he a weak, helpless sufferer. You can have a woman’s health and do a woman’s work in life. Why not secure a bottle of Wine of Cardui from your druggist to day? WsaE°CftftDyi CITATION. Georgia, Lumpkin County. To all whom it may concern: 13. R. Meadors and It. N. Mays, Ad ministrator of John Mays, represent to the court in their petition, duly filed, that they have fully discharged all the duties of their trust, and pray to be finally discharged from said trust. I will nass upon the same on the 1st Monday in November. 1903. This 5th day of October, 1903. John IIuff, Ordinary. JBlanks Bon Sale At the Nugget office "you will 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 Bonds, Constable’s advertisements, Bonds for Title, Affidavit k Bond for Garnishment i Admiuist rator’s I feeds and Attachment::. , With the Freshest & Purest! RUGS TO BE HAD, C^RRY TtyEM TO THE DRUG STORE OF . H. JONES, Where you will also find a complete line of Tobacco, Cigars, Paints, Oils, Leads, Stationery, tombs, llruste Rubber Goods and Druggist’s Sundries gen erally, PRICES RIGHT. Low Rates VIA. j. T. MILLER’S Dry Ms, shoes and Ciotlii 8k The Most Direct Route to HAPPINESS, CONTENTMENT AND PROSPERITY. For further particulars call at Aurai’itf and let us make you prices on Fall, Wintei and all other goods. TAX COLLECTOR’S 2N\ ROUND. Cane Creek, Nov 2—from 8 to 11 a. in. Hightower, 2—2 to 4 p. in. .Tones’ Creek. 3—8 to 10 a. in. Nimblewill. 3—1 to 4 p. m. \ ■'*** Mill Creek, 4—10 fib 3. Auraria, 5—10 to 4. Martain’s Ford, 6—10 to 4. . *■») Wahoo, 7—10 to 4. Shoal Creek, 9—10 to 4. Crumby's, 10—8 to 1! a. m. Frog Town, 10—2 to 4 p. m. Chestal.ee, It—10 to 4. Porter Springs. 12—10 to 4, Yahoola, 13—10 to 4. Dahlonegn, 14—10 to 4. Davis, 16—10 to 1. K. J. Wat.dkn, T. C. BARBER SHOP. W HEN wanting a nice clean shave, hair cut or s.hampoc, call on Ilenry UnderwixW, First-class barber shop in every aspect, where he will lie found readv to wait uu you al any time FALL & WINTER Goods Call at once- Mrs, (*»rirkl ,,,l ‘ | .