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Agricultural N<
[Jailed
The Ideal Horm
Did Not Close For a
W eeK.
Heart Trouble Baf
fled Doctors.
Dr. Miles’Hoart Cure and
Nervine Cured Me.
There is nothin" more necessary to health
than sleep ami rest. If these are denied vou,
tf you rise in the morning more tired than
when you went to bed, there is an affection of
the nerves plainly present. If your heart is
tveak, or lliere is an inherited tendency in
that direction, your weakened nerves will
soon so affect your heart’s action as to bring
on serious, chronic trouble. IJr. Miles Ner
vine is a nerve tonic, which quiets the nerves,
so that sleep may come, and it quickly re
stores the weakened nerves to health and
strength. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is a great
blood and heart tonic which regulates the ac
tion of the heart, enriches the blood and im
proves the circulation.
"Some time ago 1 was suffering severely all( ] Webster took Sticll inkiest
with heart trouble. At times iny heart would
seemingly stop beating and at others it would
beat loudly and very fast. Three to four
hours sleep each night in ten months was all
1 could get. One week in last September 1
ncverclosrd myeyes. 1 got Dr. Miles’ Nervine
and Heart Cure at a drugstore in Lawrence-
burg, after spending £300.00 ' n medi
cines and doctors in Louisville, Shelbvville,
Frankfort, Cincinnati and Lawrcnceburg,
and in three days have derived more benefit
from the use of your remedies than 1 got
from all the doctors and their medicines. I
think everybody ought to know of the mar
velous power contained in your remedies."—
W. H. HUGHES, Fox Creek, Ky.
All druggists sell and guarantee first bot
tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book
on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lnd.
tics Department 1
1 of Agriculture id milking expen-
■ incuts to determine the extreme '
life of seeds, and the results will,
no doubt, expose the fraud of
wheat gathered from Ejryplain j
mummies and allowed to be several j
j thousand years old and sold to
| farmers for the purpose of re in
troducin'* old Egyptain varieties, j
Very few seeds will return their
vitality for more than twelve
yoais, while most seeds lost; life at j
from two to live years.
When wo consider the illustrious 1
men, who wore agriculturists, we
realize the farmer’s occupation
needs no exctiso or apology.
Washington’s greatest delight was
in agricultural pursuits; Jefferson
wished to be known as a farmer
in
! agriculture, that he invented a
plow. Besides those mentioned
above, Greely, the editor; Whits
tier, the poet; McCormick, the in
ventor; Moody, the evangelist,
and Grant, the soldier, were sons
of farmers. The brightest student
nt Yale today is from the farm.
It is claimed that a fruit grower
in Georgia sold his peach crop this | j
year from his 30-nero orchard for
*‘5,000 on the trees. 1 Ins farm five j , ^^ (
....... 1. 4. E ... I ..... .1 I ' ' ’
foundation of modern
and the very coni
Th<
izatio
moral society are the family
the home. In savage life
spirit of individualism predomi-
tri’es; there is no instinct of solid
arity. but as a man becomes civil
ized he realizes more and more the
yalue of cooperation, and the
more truly civnlized he becomes
the more coherent become tbc
family and the home. Sever a
man or a nation from the ideal of
siliglen: ss of matrimonial alliance,
the family and the home, and at
once lliere idebasement in moral
life, and women, as some one lias
said, in.--lead of being what God
intended her to be, “a helpmeet to
YAJiTLTA BIT,SO
Mining Lands
FOR SALE-
T have the following gold mining
properities for sale in
Wllite (sit,
500 acres, 12 miles north-east of
Dahlonoga, in the above county. Two
reins opened up from K inches to two
feet wide, running £0.00 per ton mill
test. Veins run through the entire
500 acres. This property also con
tains very valuable placer diggins.
"Water in abundance for all necessary
mining operations. Well timbered
and a farm of 00 acres in cultivation.
Titles clear and perfect .
Address for particulars and prices,
W I L. McAfee,
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Daiii.onkga, Ga.
man, incomes
slave.
Home is the |
best, because it
motIh r is, and
her loy
mid
his pi:iy thing
iluco that we love
is the place where
there, beenuse of
fostering care, is
years ago was bought for two
lars per acre. Another peach
grower received 8l.2~> per crate in
the field for his crop of -1,000
crates.
The United States Department
of agriculture shipped, as a sort of
experiment, one hundred crates of
Elberta peaches from Marietta,
Ga., to London. These peaches
came from the orchard of Mr. W.
15. Turner.
The American apple in some of
the foreign markets brings a high-,
or price than the American orange.
More attention should be given
to fruit culture in Georgia.
Macaroni wheat was introduced
into the U. S. only a few years
D. CHALMERS STOW.
the place of greatest earthly se^
entity. Man cannot create the
home atmosphere; he may climb
to great heights of fame; he may
win great battles; lie may triumph
ovt all competitors, and thereby
amass great riches; he may master
eienees, acquire a facility in
innumerable languages, live or
man, with all Ids power,
genius and "native ability, cannot
make a home. That remains the
ta-k of woman, and in this she re
mains supreme. Home ought to
be the place whore we can find the
ino>; refreshing rest. Home ought
to he a place of genuine warmth;
but some homes are as cold as ice,
which breathe an atmosphere as
cold as a breath from the polar
zone. Let our homes be places of
joy, love and brightest .sunshine.
Home ought to be a place of ens
during love, the love which out
lasts the wedding day and pro
duces a life which is one long, un
broken honeymoon. Home is the
molding-place of character. Your
child has a right to insist that you
live such a ilfe as will exalt the
ago. It is grown m dry regions i standard of true manhood and true
Funeivil
Director*
Embalmer
And Dealer in
COFFINS,
CASK ETS,
COFFIN FIXTURES,
and
BURIAL ROBES,
Dahlonoga, Gil
F0LEYSK5DNEYCURE
Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right
G.H. McGUIRE,
THE
JEWELER,
CLARIvESVILLE ST.,
Daiilonkga, Ga.
Clock and Watch Repairing
a Specialty,
JBlanks Dor Sale
At the Nugget office-/you will
lind 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 ofAttorney,
Witness Sammons,
J. P. Summons.
Justice’s Court Fifas,
Forthcoming Bonds,
Constable’s advertisements,
Bonds for Title,
Affidavit & Bond for Garnishment
Administrator’s Deeds
and Attachments.
where other varieties do not thrive
well. It is a hard wheat and is
difficult to grind, but makes exs
eellent flour. The yield in tho IJ.
S. has increased in three years
from seventy-live thousand to ten
million bushels.
The largest farm in the South
west is in Oklahoma. The wheat
fields are one thousand acres each,
ind requires thirty binders three
weeks to cut the crop, and a dozen
or more steam threshers forty
days to thresh it. Tho corn rows
are one and a half miles long and
it requires three hundred men and
live hundred mules to handle the
crop.
Tho German Government has
recently contracted with the two
expert cotton growers in Texas to
go to South Africa to develop cot
ton farming there.
Certain soils in Texas have been
found to bo similar to tho soils of
Cuba which grow such lino tobacs
co, hence the Texans are given a
a good ileal of attention to tobacco
culture, while the Cubans are be-,
coming moro interested in the
growing of cotton.
The tobacco expert of the U. S.
Dept, of Agriculture has resigned
his position in order to establish a
largo tobacco farm.
John G. Carlisle, Secretary of
tho Treasury under President
Cleveland has bought a farm near
Greenwich, Conn., and will move
there.
Chas. W. Davis,
N. G. A. C.
womanhood. Your child has a
right lo demand that you do noths
ing to stain by sin the name you
bear and which you bequeath to
him as a life possession. Give
your child a sweetly religous at
mosphere in which to grow; not
one of monotonous “don’t” and
“you must not,” but one that
presents the attractive eido of
Christianity. Let Christ be the
unseen but truly recognized guest
in your home, and teach your child
the religion of “the Book.”— G. R.
Stair.
-eJI 3 liUUift.*
cures the most obstinate-
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. If your kidneys are de
ranged, commence by taking
once. It will maize you well.
hyslcten Healod, Flow Prescribes ft 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
1 have been greatly bothered with kidney and bladder
trouble and enlarged prostate gland. 1 used everything
known to the profession without relief, until I commenced
to use FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. After taking three bot
tles f 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 Got Up Several Times Every flight
Mr. F. Arnold, Arnold, la., writes: “ I was troubled
with kidney disease about three years. I was nervous
and all run down, and had to get up several times during
the night, but three bottles of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE
effected a complete cure. I feel better than I ever did
and recommend it to my friends.”
TWO S22SQ 50c $1
FOLEY & COMPANY
''///// CBSCAOO, ILLINOIS
yy///.. u. 5. a.
Dr, C,H. Jones.
E3SBBBBS
Mollie Melton, Alias Clarissa
Owens, was arrested in Savannah
recently for having drawn a large
pension from tho government,
claiming to be her own brother’s
widow. In 1863 Isaiah Owens ens
listed in the Thirty-fourth United
States Volunteer Infantry. He
served two years and then return
ed to his home on Whitmarsh Is
land, near Savannah, he being dis
abled. He died shortly afterwards,
Clarissa Owens, wife of the sol
dier, died in 1879. When the law
of 1890 went into effect, and every
widow of a Union soldier became
thereunder entitled to a pension,
the sister of Isaiah Owens, one
Mollie Melton, formerly Mollie
Fraser, nee Owens, applied for a
pension. Her claim was proven
and allowed and she received $’200;
and later she received 8200 more.
At almost the same time that sho
tiled her application under the law
of 1890, she filed an application
under the old law, in which she
claimed nil allowance of 812 a
month from the date of the death
of her husband (in reality her
brother). The amount which would
be due simply as a first payment
< on this claim would be 81,000.
mmmsmsmmammmm
FIRST CLASS
Photographic Work Hone
J. F. MOORE & CO.
-AT-
Dahlonega Portrait fgo’a Gallery,
Next Door Above Masonic Hall,
|G D, BRUCE, Gen Manager