The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, November 26, 1903, Image 4

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\x^JA\ViMasxjaerrr^ Badly Shattered Nerves and Weak Heart. Too Nervous to Sleep or Rest. Dr.Miles’Hcart Cure and Nervine Cured Me. A shattered nervous s\ stem nearly always leads to some affection of the heart, espec ially where the patient's hentt is weak from hereditary or other causes. l)r. Miles’ 1 h art Cure is not only a great heart regulator, but it is a blood tonic which speedily corrects and regulates the heart’s action, enriches the blood and improves the circulation. It will build you up just ns it did Mr. Crawford whose letter follows, and greatly improve your general health: “I have been so greatly benefited by Dr. Miles’Nervine and Heart Cure that 1 freely recommend them as the best remedies for the diseases they arc recommended to cure. When I began taking these medicines I weighed scarcely 140 pounds, my nerve- were badly shattered and my heart troubled me a great deal. I had pain in my left arm and shoulder, had difficulty in sleeping on mv left side, had frequent smothering spells and my heart would flu11>-r and palpitate. I could eat scarcely any kind of food without suffering great distress, and was so restless and nerve us that 1 slept little night or day. Now 1 am never bothered with my heart, my nerves are steady as a die, I sleep well, eat well and weigh 163 pounds. I am happy now and am trying to make back the money I spent for doctors who did me no good while I was ill.”—T. R. CRAWFORD, Center, Texas. 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, Ind. WIIAT GERMAN TLERS DO. Their Farming Experience in Northern Alabama. iSovDi'al yours ago forty families of thrifty Germans settled at Sand Springs, in the northern portion of Limestone county, Ala> | banm. The placo is fifteen miles j front a railroad station of any im- j portanoe, and lies in the router of | what is known as the great bar- | The oaks lmd pit r- tho NiisId describing the Germans there, YALIJA Mli'K Mining Lands FOR SALE- I have the following gold mining proporitics for sale in While 500 acres, 12 miles north-oast of Daldonega, in the above county. Two veins opened up. from s 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, AV I I, McA fee, URAL ESTATE AGENT, Daillonioga, Ga. rens of'Northern Alabama, area is covered with scrub and thick underbrush, and been neglected for fanning poses. A dispatch to villo American experience of tin says: “These Germans now til! have nice farms, well improved, and on this land, which was regarded by the natives as being too poor to raise even a fuss, those Germans grow from a half to a Gale of cot ton to the acre and from twenty to thirty bushels of corn. They have accomplished this result by fertilizing tin* land and by their ! | )(1( , n ( . :1UM .,| mode of cultivation. “They are all well-to-do good livers, l t;ook dinner one of them the other day the meal was good enough SET- | had been charged with stealing a : I loaf of bread and ba 1 ncknowl ; lodged his guilt, rendering as an excuse that tie was very hungry, 1 had non the wagon standing in Iho street and could not curb the i ! temptation to take and cat. i Whereupon the mayor fined every | man in the Court roam tell cents for letting' a man In in the city 1 1 who wits so hungry In; hud to be I conic a criminal in order to obtain I | , , f % I ! food with which to satisfy Ins longing. The judge was the first to pay his line. He placed a dol- lf in the hat. The deputy took up the collection which amounted j to The mayor then an- 1 non need that Ibis sum was l lie 1 man's lino and that the line w s | remitted. Turning to the pti - oner lie said, “Climb out of hero , now and prove me u true profit ( when I say you will never do this j thing again.” Hero truly did i mercy temper justice, and if the j man was not u hill v had, and i what man is, that sentence was the beginning of a reform. If in truth he was a good man who had been driven to desperation by his hunger absolute justice would hnye ^ for his release. So I whether the sentence was one of mercy or one of justice it was a credit to the judge, which should not he overlooked. and | with and for a D. CHALMERS STOW, And [Funeral Director & Final calmer Dealer in COFFINS, CASK Ed'S, COFFIN FIXTURES, and BENGAL ROHES, Dahlonegu, Ga. G.H. McGUIRE, THE JEWELER. CLARKESVILLE ST Da 11 Lon kg a , Ga. Clock and Watch Repairing a Specialty. picnic. Before dinner wo sat down to a table on 1110 veranda and drank wiuo of my host’s make ’in the good old German way,’ as he expressed it, d'he wine, although new, was very clear and excellent. “Every farmer lias a vineyard, and each one of them makes from 200 to (300 gallons of wine every year, d'hey also have fruits of all kinds, and have demonstrated the fact that this barren land ’ will raise fruits as well as-scrub oaks, d’hey also raise vast quantities of Irsh and sweet potatoes, and say they have no trouble in keeping them all the year round. They tlso raise a good many cattle, sheep, goats and hogs. The creeks on the borders of the barrens teem with trout and other fish, and these Germans spend many leisure moments fish ing. One thing very noticeable about these farms is the cleanli ness of the farms and barnyards. They sweep both every few days. visited several of these farms, and found all their barns full of fodder, hay, corn and oats, “d’hese Germans are very clam- ish in their mode of living, though they seem to enjoy a visit from an American, and treat him with tho utmost respect and politeness. “During the past year these barrens have been settling up quite rapidly with Germans, Swedes and people of small means from the North. d'he land has been selling at from fifty cents to £2 an acre, d'here is room here for many hundred more families. “To the Alabamian who is ac quainted with this section of country, but who has not been Out ot Date. 1 he once pop ilar cus o 11 of publishing a list of wedding pres ents in connection with a marriage notice, which was never in good taste, has become obsolete. Now, the next reform demanded by good taste is to cut out the “card of thanks’’ that usually appears the day after the funeral, or when your barn burns, baffling the heroic efforts of your neighbors. Tho “card of thanks” gives some people the cold chills. There are sonic feelings of gratitude that should never be paraded in print. Just why this is so we may not all understand, but it is true just the same. Cut out the published “card of thanks,” but someday tell your friends in a heart to heart talk- how you love them and how their kind ministrations canto to yon in hours of darkness like a ray of light from Heaven. Your neigh bors who have kept vigil with you at the bedside of a sick child desire no thanks in a newspaper and the public in general has no interest in the matter.—Greenville Herald. Why She Wouldn’t. of Georgia, Lumpkin County. To all whom it may concern: Mrs. Sarah Aim Lance, widow Joseph. V. Lai ce, deceased, having due form applied to the undersigned for a years support out of the estate of the deceased, and appraisers having made their return to me of the same, all persons concerned arc hereby required to show cause if any they can before the Court of Ordinary of said county outlie lirst. Monday in December, 190.‘i, why said application should not be granted. Oiven under my baud and official signature. This the 3rd day of No vember, 1 03. John liftt, Ord’y. BARBER SHOP. W HEN wanting a nice clean shave, hair cut or shampoo, call on TIcnry Underwood, First-class barber shop in every respect, where he will he found ready to wait on you at any time RPYSKTONEYCURI motive niiiucya auu Siauuui* SitySit here for many years, a description * n,( >i mation that yoi of it now will read like a fairy ‘ ! ne for five lon «» wet tale, : :id the citizen who ha9 lived near hero all his life—well, he does not believe his own eyes when ho sees a farm of one of these thrifty Germans.” Mercy vs. Justice. The following is reported to have occurred in Toledo some days ago. A culprit was brought be fore Jones, the mayor. The man “No, Mr. Slowtui,” said the fair possessor of the square chin, “I must respectfully decline in bi coming your other half.” “B-but why? asked the aston ished voting man, who had 1 e- lievod that lie was tho favored one. “Because,” replied the female extender of the frosty digit, “the man I marry must be brave and fearless. Tonight you let out the have loved weary years, bi t have not dared mention it until the present meeting. A man who has no more nerve than that would hide under the bed while his wife went down stairs to inter view a burglar who was making a raid on the family larder. There fore, Mr. Slowun, I will work the piano for a little slow music while the curtain drops on the farewell scene. You will find your hat on the usual peg of the" hall rack. Good evening.” FIRST CLASS Photographic yjm. Hone SEVEN REASONS Wilt HONEY AND TAR is a Household favorite Everywhere for Goughs, Golds, Group, BroncfLitis, Pneumonia, Grippe and all other Throat and Lung Trouhlss It quickly stops coughing, tickling in throat, difficult breathing and pain in the chest and lungs. It immediately relieves the spasms of Croup and Whooping Cough and effects a speedy cure. It contains no opiates or other poisons and can be given with safety to children and delicate persons. It contains no harsh expectorants to strain the lungs or astrin gents to dry the secretions and cause constipation. It prevents Pneumonia and Consumption, strengthens the lungs and cures LaGrippe and its after effects. It will cure Consumption and Asthma in the early stages and give comfort and relief in the most hopeless cases. It is pleasant to take and at once produces a soothing and strengthening effect on the lungs. A Severe Gold For Three Months, The following letter from A. J. Nusbaum, of Bates- ville, Ind., tells its own story: “I suffered for three months with a severe cold. A druggist prepared me some medicine, and a physician prescribed for me, yet I did not improve. I then tried FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR, and eight doses cured me.” A Chattanooga Druggist’s Statement. Robert J. Miller, proprietor of the Read House Drug Store, of Chattanooga, Term., writes: “There is more merit in FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR than in any other cough syrup. The calls for it multiply won derfully and we sell more of it than all other cough ' syrups combined.” SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY Dr, C,H. Jones. •vi i& f f 8 * £ .t? W L R ft f f f/ fi & f ^ € ,»■ \ § 4 fed, t, HI u - *•'». 1 i: i"v jl s M I] n (1 y -*V -vtaA L % 'r l G Ri* -i. ' 1 % pU&SJFJ fife iij J, F. MOORF o r r s\i s n v- i f ■:R ' , ■ ?' , : r: ji ? • •- . . ’’ -AT- Dahlonega Portrait Jgo’d Next Door Above Masonic Hall, G D. BRUCE, Gen Manager OTT Tm ffil