The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, June 11, 1904, Image 1

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Iced Advertising MedLr, levotsd ta Local, Mining and General Information. One Dollar Per Annum VOT.. XV- VO. DMIf.ONKGA, GA., SATURDAY, JUNK n. 190.1. ^ r * 15. 'TOWNSEND, Editor and Proprietor « ivr- nvrmuvw « C LO H I N G. When You Arc by My Side., I .DVC. Yost of Living at the St. Louis 1 air. The world is full of gladness And life is all a song, Wit.li never n touch of sad news, And never a day too long; The skies aro bright and hoaming, No cloud can e’er abide, And there’s no time for dreaming When you are by lny-sjtle. When you are by my side, love, When you are by my side ; Tin* world is full of gladness With never a touch of sadness When you are by my side. The violets are sweeter, The birds more gaily sing; The moments, love, are Heeler, And ten-fold blisses bring; The brooklets bubble merrier, Monotony’s denied, And all of nature’s cheerier When you are by my side. There’s never a thought of sorrow And never a thought of care That may be mine tomorrow. No thought of past despair; No thought of coming an revoir, j () j.* )|, (: Thy presence, sweet, denied The thought of parting 1 abhor When you are. by my side. —Lawson A. Fields. 5 Largest, Best k Cheapest Stock 1 las Confidence in the Geor gia Mines. 1004, Ever Brought Here. Abundance of Dry fronds and Groceries. Cl! & BRO DAHLO N E< J-A. J Livery Moore I3ro> Propr’s. It lew suite si Sellen SI. J! I X DAILY HACKLINES to and from G ainesyille. FARE. SI.50* Leave—7:80 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. 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 Huff, Ordinary. John H. Moore,Cleik. Jatne9 M. Davis Sheriff. E. J, Walden, Tax Collector. James L. Healan, Tax Receivi V. It. Hix, County Surveyor. Joseph B. Brown, Treasurer. D. C. Stow Coroner. CITY GOVERNU ENT. It. H. Baker. Mayor. Aldermen: E. W Strickland, E. McGee. W. B. Townsend. E. “I find Thedford’* BlacV-Draw^ht ft ?ood medicine for liver disease. It cured my on after he hod spent SUif) with doctors. It is all tbo med icine I fake."—MRS. CAROLINE MARTIN, Parkersburg, W. Va. Vickery, T. J. Jr. Smith. W. P. Price, Wm. J. Worley, Clerk. Geo. W. Walker, Marshal. RELIGIOUS services. Baptist Church — Rev. W. Taylor, Paster. Services Sundae Prayer meeting 11 and at night Thursday night. Sunday School at i) o’clock. Methodist —Scrvioe.s eve *y Sun Jay at 11 and at night,. Rev. J. D Turner, Pastor Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Sunday Scltooi at 9 o’clock. Presbyterian—-Services only or 1st amH 8rd Sundays, D. J Blackwell, pastor. $u*kday School U a. in. 1 f your liver does not act reg ularly go to your druggist and secure a package of Thedford’n Black-Draught and take a dose tonight. This great family medicine frees the constipated bowels, stirs up the torpid liver and causes a healthy secretion of bile. Thedford’s Black - Draught will cleanse the bowels of im purities and strengthen the kid neys. A torpid liver invites colds, biliousness, chills and fever and all manner of sick ness and contagion. Weak kid neys result in Bright's disease which claims as many victim* as consumption. A 25-cent package of 'Thedford’s Black- Draught should always he kept in the house. “I n«ed Theilforrt’s Black r*.-3Sirht for live r aud kidney com- tiioints and found nothing to excel ft "-WILLIAM COFFMAN, Mar blehead, Ill. Adel, Iowa, May 31, Mu.W. 15. Townsend, Dahlonega, Ga. ' My Dear Sir: I enclose you money order for i $1.00, paying for my Nugget from June 17th 1904 to June 17th i 1905, as per the date on the wrap per, and l would thank you -to change said date so 1 will know you get the remittance all right. To one who was born in Iowa and has lived here all Ins life The Nug get lias lots of things in its locals that are interesting, for they are different. Then 1 am a little in terested in your mining field and hope to be more so soon. I think if the Georgia field was known and capital would go in there that you have one of the richest on this continent. Fellows will send money out to Colorado on almost any pretense to invest in almost any of mining stock, good, bad and indifferent, who just laugh if you tell them Georgia has a great field and is one of the safest dis tricts in the country. They do pot know that there is a mine in that state. Of course Colorado advertises and pushes all the time. They blow their own horn so loud that it drowns the shunt of some other fields but it pays them. 1 like The Nugget very much and while I get perhaps over one hun dred papers and magazines a week 1 know Tut: Nugget from its wrap per aud never miss reading an is sue. As was so in ihe ease of the great exposition at Chicago in ’1 spit *111(1 the Fan American fair at Buffalo in 1901, there are now numerous reports of extortionate hotel and other charges at St. Louis. Many who were alarmed h.v the reports went to Chicago and Buffalo and found, to their relief, that they ei uld live decently and comfortably at comparatively moderate rates. Travellers who know how to protect their own interests, and are not disposed to demand the best of everything in sight will no doubt have a similiar experience at St. Louis. are informed that it cost Secretary Hay and his parly $28 a day each during a week recently spent at the St. Louis fair, and this is cited as a “fair illustration” “shameless greed” of the hotel keepers. But is it? Every party hound for St, Louis will not feel obliged to choose the hotel se lected by the Hay party, or feel the need of the same number or luxurious rooms, or require the same number of bottles of ebam- pagne and expensive liquors. An account of the experiences of a Western man of more moderate tastes, which we find in the Charleston News and Courier, gives, wo think, a fairer idea of what the average visitor to St. Louis may expect. The Western man referred to is Mr. Frank F. McLoman, “re sponsible head” of # the Topeka State Journal, and the facts of his 'experience, which we take at second hand, are as follows: He stopped at the Inside Inn, Just within the gates of the exposition. ’It cost him 5 cents each for him self and his party to go from the ■railroad station to tho exposition grounds. He found the charges for rooms at this place (ranging from $1 a day to $5 for each per son, according to the size .of his pocketbook and his desire for conveniences and I (Entries. He was able to get breakfast for 50 cents a head, luncheon for 50 cents and dinner for 75 cents. He found (he charge -for service in barber shops 15 cents, the same as in Topeka. Newspapers could lie bought for 2 cents each, and ci gars that could be smoked for 5 cents, although better ones could be bought for 10 cents. Instead of paying $4 an hour for an auto bile to ride around the grounds the editor from Topeka paid 50 cents for the round trip, aud instead of paying $2 for a carriage to go to r**B*li« * T Th6 Most Complete Line of T 'W And All Ollier Kinds ol / Mens, Ladies & Childrens Shoes ■I1XVFK BROUGHT TO O A IT L () 1ST KG A. • Other Goods Too Numerous to Mention. VI. P. PRICE, Jr. SATTERFIELD Dealer in FAMILY GROCERIES AND General Merchandise. Another Love Letter Her Solicitude. The 9th District Committee. *the exposition grounds, he paid 5 cents street car fare. He found that while persons stopping at «one W. B. Smith of Hall, permanent chairman. Committee by counties: Gilmer, M. J. Webh. Towns, iQ. C. Wyly. Lumpkin, T. S. Littlefield. Union, T. J. Christopher. Hall, R. D. Mitchell. Banks, Dr. O. N. Harden. White, Geo. S. Kytle. Cherokee, i ) . P. DuFrco. Fannin, J. Sff. Witzell. Dawson, A. E. Bond. Pickens, Dr. W. 15. Tute. Forsyth, Dr. John Hockeulntll. Gwinnett, M. S. Cornett. Jackson, W. F. Boggp. Habersham, Harold Ketron, Milton, Titos. L. Lewis. Rabun, J. C. Pickett. of the big hotels in the city would It will be well enough for all persons in Georgia to remember The family medicine in thousands of homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood .Syrgp. | that a new law forbids any sein- tii " ] ing from the first of June till the | last day -of August. Should you neglect to do this a few fish may cost you thirty or forty dollars when (Court convenes. have to pay $4 a day for each per- | son for a room, there were hun- j dreds of places within a few min- i*ntes" walk or ride of the grounds I where comfortable rooms could he had for $1 a day, and over two 1 hundred hotels where the prices ranged from 50 cents for lodging and upward, and live hundred restauran.s where the provender could be obtained at the home i prices. — Macon Telegraph. The interior of a cannon is per haps the last place in the world j one would associate with a siesta, i and yet India possesses 11 gun which is capacious enough to form j a chamber where officers retire for a siesta during the heat of the day. This cannon, which is beyond question the largest in the world, is probably also one of the oldtst. It was cast nearly 400 years ago by a famous chief of Ahmednug- ger, and came, into English pos session when India was enuquerod. —London Standard. May iO, 1904. Mr. Can Hulsey, My Deau Lover: Sweetheart, 1 want to come to see*yon, and maybe I willl come ! and maybe 1 won’t. Darling, you are the sweetest boy I ever saw in life, and maybe I will call you my own sweet darling some of these days, if the other’s don’t beat me, 1 but 1 hope they won’t, darling. Maybe if nothing don’t interfere with us I can get to make your old I bones pop. Oh, darling, how I could make you run. Maybe I , will get to see you, if you will J come down here to meeting. 1 j | would take you and not let you j ! go back to that old dam. Maybe I you won’t long, if I could gel to I ; see you. Sweet little darling, Can, ! I you must come and set me, for 1 1 ; loyo you better than any boy I ever saw in life, and 1 wish that I j I could know in my heart that you loved me. Darling, 1 don’t know whether you like me o*r not, but 1 am sure I like you. And darling, i you have got my heart and love, and I hope I have yours. If I knew that I have got your heart 1 hey had just telephoned from downtown that Hubby was se riously mi u rod and was fast losing consciousness. rite wife was distracted. Grief, perplexity, exasperation, were on her face. At last she gasped into the moulhpicc of the phono: “1 suspect 1 cannot get down there in time, for my new hat hasn’t come from the miliner’s yet, lint if I can’t please ask him, lies fon* he loses consciousness, what he did with tho theatre tickets for tonight.” And then, her grief obtaining mastery, she fell in a dead faint.— -Baltimore American. 1 In* value of psychic influence in tbo practice of medicine is be ing demonstrated in the case of Mrs. Jane 8alee, eighty-four years of age, who is in the City hospital | being treated for insomnia. Mr3. I Salee is being put to sleep every ' night with a hypodermic injection | of pure water iu place of mor phine, which she thinks she is get ting- Cincinnatli Commercial * Tribune. and love 1 would be happy, darl mg. 80 I will close for this time. • Mrs. It. 41. Flant, of Macon. 80, darling, this is a May lice, but (i 1 • declines to accept any of the I hope the next one won’t lx*. 80 $750,000 insurance money due the good bye, sweet dulling—my owu esiaic, mu'i creditors will gut every darling, Can. penny wf lints amount. > £