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THE
GAINESVILLE NEWS, WEDNESDAY JULY 2 1902
Cfte Gainesville Hews.
INDUSTRIAL
Official Orsrari City of Gainesville
Gainesville, Ga., July 2
1902.
WarnI
tow. democratic nominees
- The state convention of the
Democratic party met in At.
lauta today at noon in the hall of
the house of representatives. > The
delegates from Hall county went to
Atlanta this morning, The con
vention nominated the following
ticket:
For Governor—Joseph M. Ter
rell.
For Secretary of State—-Phil
Hook.
For Treasurer—Robert E. Park.
For Comptroller General—Wil
liam A. Wright.
' For Attorney General—John C.
Hart. ' " "\V ’•
For Prison Commissioner—*
Thomas Eason. ^
For Commissioner of Agricul
ture—0. B. Stevens.
For State School Commissioner
—W. Bi* Merritt.
For Associate" Justices of the
Supreme Court—A. J. Cobb and
Samuel Lumpkin.
Judges and Solicitors general
for twelve of the circuits of the
state, includibg J. J.~ Kimsey and
W. A. Charters for judge and
solictor respectively of the North
eastern circuit, were also norni
sated.
THE POPULAR VOTE FOR GOV
ERNOR.
Terrell ...... ..—65,736
Guerry ... —-——41,454
Estill — — -32,588
The above is the popular vote
for governor in the recent demo
cratic primary, in which Hon.
J. M. Terrell carried seventy-nine
counties, with 196 votes in the
state convention; Col. J. H. Estill
thirty-five counties, with 88 Votes,
and Hon. Dupont Guerry twenty-
three counties, with 66 votes.
The last of the returns were re
ceived by Chairman Brown, of the
state committee, last Saturday
and by him made public, and they
show that Mr. Terrell received
62,736 votes, as against' 41,454 for
Mr. Guerry and 32,588 for Colonel
Estill.
Terrell* s plurality over Guerry
was 21,282 and over Estill 30,148.
Colonel Estill received a smaller
popular vote than did Mr. Guerry,
though he carried a larger number
of chunties, This was due to the
fact that Colonel Estill carried a
number of his counties by small
majorities and many of them were
til counties in population.
IT IS RIDICULOUS.
Why is it that the Atlanta
Journal is forever pegging away at
Governor Candler? Upon every
occasion that paper tries to tbrdw
off onhrm, or say something about
him in an endeavor to hold him
up to ridicule. Just take the fol
lowing in a recent idsue of that
paper: ■ f ■
Governor Candler has arranged for
the $150,0C0 to pay the school teachers,
hut declines to tell where or how he got
it. He may make that known this
afternoon, he says.
When asked about the matter this
morning Governor Candler joined both
hands by putting the thumb on his
right hand on the little finger of the
left hand. Then he raised both hands
to a level wi« h his nose and put the
thumb of his left hand on the point of
rris nose and wiggled his nose. While
keeping his hands in that position he
said: '
“The teachers will be paid soon.”
Whey, questioned further the chief
executive continued to wiggle his hands
and fingers. -
Now, the idea of such a thing!
Digests what yon eat.
This preparation contains alLof the
digestants and digests all kinds ol!
food. It gives instant relief and never
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. The most sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It
prevents format i on of gas on the stom
ach, : relieving all distress after eating;
Dietin g unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
ft can’t help
but do you good
Prepared only by E. tt DeWitt & Co., Chicago
The SI. bottle contains times the 50c. anfe
Who ever heard of a Governor of a
great state like Georgia wiggling
his fingers, in the manner indica?
ted above, like a school boy
Don’t you know be is too dignified
and too big for such a little thing
as that? Gainesville may never
have another one of her citizens to
occupy the office of chief executive
of the great state of Georgia, and
we protest against the attempt at
humor with Governor 'Candler
sought to-be brought about by
the Atlanta Journal.
Just Suppose.
Just suppose all the meat and
lard consumed in the South, to
say nothing of hay, oats, and flour,
was raised at home; wouldn’t wo
have; money to burn?
That all the money that has
been paid out for mules to make
cotton since the war had been
raised in Georgia,. the people
would have money to throw away
at jay birds.
That if all or the greater propor-
tion of the cotton made m the
South had been manufactured into
the thousand and one things
needed by the people, not only of
this country but.foreign coun
tries, wouldn*t. we be the Tichest
people on earth.—Baxley News.
With King Neddy taking up so
much space m American newspa
pers King Teddy will have to
smoke up or be forgotten. But the
British monarch can’t take a horse
over a fence, even if he is a little
strenuous just now.-Atlanta Jour
nal.
It was surely a wise provision
that barred the statue of any
“hero” out of the Hall of Fame,
until he had been dead ten years.
Just suppose they had put up a
statue of Dewey or Hobson or
Freddy Funston at the close of the
war!—Macon News.
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
You Can Exercise Skill In Properly
Cleaning a Floor.
Genuine skill can be exercised in
cleaning a floor as in anything else.
After the rugs and carpets have been
taken np a floor that is not finished
in any other way should be thor
oughly scrubbed and dried before it
is covered again. It is economy to
lay down floors of matched boards
of good, seasoned wood, which will
not warp and show the cracks. Aft
er the carpet is up and the dust has
been thoroughly swept up and has
settled scrub the wood with warm
water and sal soda, cleaning and
scrubbing about a square yard of
surface at a time. It pays to have
two pails, one of soda and water to
scrub the floor with and one of clear
hot water to rinse it up with. Use
two cloths, one to wipe up the floor
and the other to dry with. When
the floor is scrubbed, wash and dry
these cloths before you use them for
another cleaning. If the floor is
hardwood, it would better be dress
ed by a regular finisher, as there are
few maids in this country who are
willing or intelligent enough to do
this work, thdiigb this is the regular
part of the maid’s work abroad, and
the tools furnished in this country
for the purpose are much easier to
handle than those used in Europe.
Cushion in Italian "Cut Work."
Italian "cut work” embroidery,
similar to that in vogue in the four
teenth and fifteenth centuries, to
gether with the' fine linen thread
lace of the same period, was con
spicuous in a recent exhibit of art
embroidery. The work is done on
linen and is remarkable for the clev
er adaptation of the geometrical cir
cle and square in its designs. The
"buttonhole,” the raised "satin” and
the "Weaver’s” or "darning” stitch
es are those most commonly used.
The lace is imported and very much
resembles the Maltese lace in char
acter. A pretty sofa cushion is
made of two squares of linen (14 by
14 inches), ornamented at the four
corners' oh cither side, with a de
sign in "cut work” embroidery; a
broad insertion of lace unites the
two squares, the handsome crimson
brocade of the cushion being reveal
ed through the lace.
Some crimnals who are insane
deserve death a lot more than
some who are sane. Whose death
would be of more benefit, than
that of a man, who in anger, kills
another one ; or that of the wom
an nuree, Jane ToppaD, who, with
morbid insanity, went about pois
oning those Jwhom she nursed,—
Macon News.
After the extensive experiments
that have been made on mosqui
toes with keroeine oil, the theory
ias been established that kerosine
builds up the system of debilitated
mosquitoes.
Then the baby ts mostlike-
r ly nervous, and fretful, and
p doesn’t gain in weight.
The New Centerpieces.
Centerpieces and doilies are most
ly lace trimmed this season, not
with renaissance lace, however, as
has been the case now these many
seasons. -Some very fine pieces of
the renaissance are still to be found
in which there are noticeably few
of the rings which made that lace
so heavy. The Austrian handmade
lace, known as crepon, has almost
completely usurped its place. There
are also some centerpieces decorated
with white Irish embroidery and
some made of Chinese grass linen,
embroidered in the rose, dragon
and cherry blossom designs that
have long been familiar on fans and
other trophies of the orient. Some
of the grass linen pieces have the
white ground, with blue or white
embroidery of white. There are
scarfs as well as centerpieces in
\hesA importations.
RAIN NEEDED WASHING. '
Mr. Richard Mansfield is not cel
ebrated for his lively sense of hu
mor, but this serious cast of his
mind does not prevent him from
occasionally indulging in a bit of
humor no less enjoyable because
unconscious. Recently in conduct
ing a dress rehearsal of a play in
which occurs a rain scene Mr. Mans
field and his entire company began
coughing violently from a shower
of dust which suddenly filled the
wings. "Stage rain” is generally
made by the dropping of split peas
in a drum cylinder, and in this case
there was an instant suspicion that
the "rainbox” had not recently been
cleaned.
But none of the stage hands vol
unteered the information until Mr.
Mansfield fiercely exclaimed:
"I demand to know where this
abominable dust comes from!”
Finally one of the men, more
courageous than his associates, ven
tured the explanation, "I think it
comes from the rainbox, sir.”
"And ca-4-n’t you wash the
rain?” inquired Mr. Mansfield in
all seriousness.—Saturday Evening
m
IF YOU WILL PUT
with this gargle your throat often it will quickly cure a Sore Throat,
‘ £>)_
I Keep this
r '• fact always fresh in your memory:—
' For Cut s, Mashes and all Open Sores, you
need only to apply
w exican ff^uslang ^inimeni
a few times and the soreness and inflammation will
be conquered and the wounded flesh healed.
* To get the best results you should saturate a piece
of soft cloth with the liniment and bind it upon the
wound as you would a poultice.
25c., 50c. and $1.00 a "bottle.
If EMC P AM CYC UN your poultry and at the very first sign of
StE. ju I He'S L I L UW jEtpup, Scaly Legs. Burnblefoot or other
diseases among your fowls use ^lexical! Mustang Liniment*
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
Miss Parloa's Recipe For Making a
Delicious Orange Pudding.
In a recent cooking demonstra
tion Miss Parloa showed how to
make a particularly delicious orange
pudding. The materials were a cup
ful of finely powdered cracker
crumbs, one cupful and a half of
granulated sugar, three tablespoon
fuls of powdered sugar, one cupful
of water, two tablespoonfuls of but
ter, the rind of three oranges and
juice of six and half a dozen eggs.
Soak the cracker crumbs in the
cold water for an hour. At the end
of this time grate upon them the
rind of three oranges, using only
the thin yellow part. Squeeze the
juice from half a dozen oranges and
add to the mixture. Break the eggs,
separating three whites from the
yolks and putting them away in a
cool place. Put the butter in a
warm bowl and beat until soft and
creamy; then gradually add the sug
ar. Beat the eggs, except the re
served whites, until-light and frothy
and add them to the sugar and but
ter. Stir this into the orange and
cracker mixture. Butter a pudding
dish holding two quarts and a pint
and pour the pudding into it. Bake
for an hour in a very slow oven.
Use the whites as a meringue.
t —
A Morganatic Marriage.
A friend called to see Russell
Sage a few days ago and in the few
minutes he remained incidentally
asked the financier his opinion of
Cecil Rhodes’ will.
Mr. Sago replied that he did not
consider Rhodes’ idea of the unifi
cation of the English speaking peo
ples a practical one and that if any
alliance came about between the
United States and Great Britain it
would not be for sentimental rea
sons, but rather through commer
cial and financial interests.
\"Then, Mr. Sage,” said his ques
tioner, "you think if any closer po
litical relations are established be
tween John Bull’s monarchy and
Columbia these will be the result of
great industrial schemes engineered
by such men a3 J. Pierpont Mor
gan ?”
"Yes; what one might perhaps
call a Morganatic marriage,” chuc
kled Uncle Russell.
GOLDEN Alii
PURE OLD
LINCOLN CO.
JFIVE (5) BOTTLES
L Express Prepaid,
for
The most perfect Whisk;
ever distilled. Better thaa
the other follows sell for
$5. We are distillers, wMeL
makes a big difference, ill
shipments in plain boxes;
money back if yon want it,
5 bottles, $3.45, express pail
13 bottles, 6.55, express pais
12 bottles, 7.90, express pail
15 bottles, 9.70, express pail
A sample half pint by ex
press prepaid for 50 cents in postage stamps.
AMERICAN SUPPLY CO., Distillers,
MS X»ln St., . . Memphis, Tcu
Joke on a Tomb.
Visitors to the mausoleum of Ice
land Stanford in California will re
member the inscription in marble:
Lelantl Stanford.
Born In Mortality
March 8. 1S24:
Passed to Immortality
> -Tilno 91 15209
SOOTHERS RY. SCHEDULE.
Trains from Atlanta,£for’Luis.
Toccoa, Greenville,! Spartauburg,
Charlotte, Washington and* East,
pass Gainesville: No.* 36,;^
Mail (daily) 2:28 a. m; No. ^
(daily) 10:37 a. m; Nc.138, lif
ted (daily) 2:25 p. m; No.
Express, (daily) 2:45 p. in;
iS, Bwxle (except Sunday) 7:33p
m.
Trains from Washington, Ca
lotte, etc. for Atlanta, etc.,
Gainesville: No.| 35, Fast
(daily) 4:29 a. m; No. 17, BeK
(except Sunday) 7:20 a. m:
39, Express^daily) 2:45 P* ®
No. 37, Limited, (daily) 3:30pj
m; (daily) 8:28 p.m.
Through trains foFWashiDgto^
New York, etc. Connections m
Lula for Athens, at Toceo*
Elberton, at Greenville for Col*
umbia, etc., at Spartanburg
Asheville, Columbia, Charles^
etc., and at Atlanta for all P 0 * 0
North, West and South.
R. SMITH,
Real Estate & Renting:
'GAES'ESYIUI.E, CrA.