Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, August 06, 1902, Image 8

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THE GAINESVILLE NEWS WEDNESDAY AUGUST 6, 1902. educate . rowing, j^eave the tiller, come and sit by me and take this other oar.” . • “But this is not coeducation, Mr. McCorkle,” she said, noticing that they were a long distance from all the others. “This is segregation.” And she put the boat about.— Chicago Tribune. Taking *a Cneerful View. “There’s one thing about the Song’s recovery that .encourages me,” said the man who was being taken to the hospital. “But his trouble wasn’t anything like yours,” replied the nurse. “I know it. Still he was worked over by five or six doctors.”—Chica go Record-Herald. A Quiet Time. Visitor—You say things have been quiet out here this season. Kansas Rube—Ya-as, stranger, "very quiet, ’cept fer a cyclone, two tornadoes and lour waterspouts and a. few seventeen year locusts —New York Journal. We. have long accepted that our pennies and other coins were germ carriers, but it is a surprise to be told that those trifling bits of metal that we use so freely and scatter so widely, the common pins, are quite . big enough to carry the deadliest of germs. Yet why not? We know that a pin scratch occasionally pro duces virulent blood poisoning, and, though it has been assumed that the trouble came from the open wound rather than the actual pin, it might easily.under this new reading pro ceed from a poisonous germ carried by the pin itself. The constant cry against germs and microbes and the apparent fact that there seems no escape from contact with them need not be com pletely discouraging. The average healthy mortal in good condition resists the attacks of these minute enemies pretty effectually. The real value of the germ agitation among the laity is because of its en couragement to general sanitation and cleanliness, conditions in which all communities have vastly im proved of late years.—New York Post. Sallow, ^ Bilious People r SW need a gentle stimulant for the liver ^IS^and a tonic for the system. This essentialviv W? combination is found in f iMOM’S LIVES FILLS 1 I^'^andTONIC pellets They do the work completely and thoroughly, and make strong men and women of invalids; they assist Nature to a healthy normal condition, and i k banish disease in a natural, easy way. 25c a J bos from all dealers. Write for Free M Samples, jSP BROWN MFC* CO. MJ NEW YORK and QREENEVILLE, 4 gk TENI^.s Looking For His Class. The following advertisement ap peared the other day in a London paper: “An American gentleman visiting London, whose tastes tend to theaters and frivolities father than to archaeology, botany, etc., de sires entree to congenial (bohemian) society. Liberal terms.” FOR THE LITTLE ONES, A Family of Chicks That Untrammeled IVian. Mrs. Dash—-Don’t you ever visit m summer? Mrs. Rafeh—Oh, no. David al ways wants to go where he can pay board and act disagreeable when he feels like at.—Detroit Free Press. Were Hatched In a Tree. About May .1 one of our hens, which was known, to he laying, to tally disappeared. For some ten days she baffled all our efforts to discover any trace of her. At last Bhe was found sitting on the eggs she had laid in a squirrel’s nest in a Scotch fir tree 'at a height of six teen feet from the ground. For the remaining eleven days of her incubation the hen was watched descending and ascending from bough to bough to her high perch, at first every day once, but latterly once every other day, as far as could be observed. On Thursday, May 22, the hen was found with six live chickens and two dead ones at the foot of the tree. Unluckily no one wit nessed the actual descent. She could not, however, he persuaded to enter an ordinary hen coop. With some trouble the hen and her six chickens were got eventual ly on to some straw in an old rail way carriage, which I had erected some years ago on the edge of the hen run, which is sheltered from the north wind b}' a fir plantation, where. many squirrels build their 4 nests. In order to convey her chickens from the railway carriage to the ground the hen was seen to ^spread out her tail and descend with all six young chickens at once on her hack. Doubtless she had conveyed them down the sixteen feet from the fir tree in the same fashion, but probably only one or two at a time. —Letter in Nature. “A Sunflower Concert.” Fasten a sheet to two tall posts placed- at some distance from the wall, or it can be fastened in a wide doorway. Paint on the sheet as many green stalks with leaves on ■them as you desire flowers. At the top of each stalk either paint the vellow petals of a sunflower or cut Hiem from yellow paper and paste to the sheet with mucilage. After the flower is completed cut a ring from the center, leaving an open middle in each flower. Behind the sheet are as many little girls as flow ers, standing so that the faces pee]) forth from the hearts of the blos soms. In front of the sheet some real grass is scattered; there are 2lso a rake, water sprinkler and a. few pots of flowers to give a gardenlike effect. Two young girls in broad, flower trimmed hats stand .in this garden and lead the 'little living sunflowers in song This is a very “taking” and pretty -entertainment, and the painting is so coarsely done that no one need hesitate to try it. Effect only is aimed at, and two hours will bo -quite sufficient to accomplish it.— New York World. Hanna's Hash. Senator Hanna’s- chef prepares com beef hash according to the fol lowing method: Equal parts of boiled prime corn beef and potatoes are used, the beef chopped as fine as* possible and the soft, mealy potatoes cut into tiny cubes. A small onion is minced to add flavor, and the dishes are rubbed with a head of garlic. Another garlic head is wrapped in a piece of fat and thrown into the center of the hash. The whole is Belong to that class of inflammatory and disfiguring skin eruptions cause more genuine bodily discomfort and worry than all other diseases. The impurities or sediments which collect in the system becaia of poor digestion, inactive Kidneys and other organs of elimination j- taken np by the blood, saturating the system with acid poisons and fluid that ooze out through the glands and pores of the skin, producing an ind* S'cribable itching and burning, and lean cheerfully endorse yourS. s,s. the yellow, watery discharge forms as a cure- for Eczema. I was troubled into crusts and sores or little brown 'with, it for 25 years and tried numj and white scabs that drop off leaving ustaFafew^tU-es^ofl. S the skm tender and raw. The effect ly relieved. Wm. Campbell, of the poison may cause the skin to 313 W. Central 8t., Wichita, Ku crack and bleed, or give it a scaly, fishy appearance; again the eruptionsma? consist of innumerable blackheads and pimples or hard, red bumps npci the face. Purification of the blood is the only remedy for these vicious ska diseases. Washes and powders can only hide for a time the glaiisj blemishes. S. S. S. eradicates all poisonous accrnni Cool In Summer, Warm In Winter. Whereas the earth gets thorough ly heated with a week of sun, the temperature of the sea takes many ■weeks to -rise and is at its highest point at a time when the soil is al ready cooling off. During the win ter the sea slowly gives up its sum mer heat and so warms the air above it and the land near it. In summer the process is reversed. His Last Wail. The white robed nurses quieth busied themselves at the patients bedside. He was plainly breathing his last. “Have you anything to say ?’ tenderly asked the attending phy sician. “Nothing—nothing!” gasped th< dying man. “It is only this regret this remorse, this terrible blow tc His Sympathetic Nature. “Well, I’m glad this ragtime mu sic is getting out of date,” re marked the business man. “I’m sure it gave me indigestion.” “Nonsense!” “Fact. The orchestra at the res taurant where I take my lunch al ways played it, and I couldn’t help keeping time with my jaws.”-—Phil adelphia Press. Cutting Capers. Stand with the toes together and hands on hips; spring upward and 2s you rise in the air cross your feet and return them to the same posi tion. The toes must be kept point ed, or they will strike against each other as they attempt to cross. Do not heed the curious sensation as if the feet were held by bonds, but .persevere. Home Gymnastics. Place both fleet together, the toes -ona line, and the hands on the hips; now kneel slowly until both knees rest on the ground. Rise again, without removing the hands from the hips, on the toes from the line. Do it twenty times at least without stopping. Dolly's Mishap. Tiie doctor came, and he said ’twas plain That dqlly’s trouble was chronic, -And he thought a ride on a railroad train Would suit her best 'far a tonic. So I wrapped-her up with the greatest care And put on . her Sunday bonnet, ALnd the. engine—that was the rocking chair— With Engineer Harry upon it. ed all the antispeed laws in Chris tendom against automobiles and then—and then to be run over by an ice wagon!” It was too much, and he gave up the ghost in mortal agony.—Balti more News. t- A Good Hearted What you buy here is fresh and nice—you can count or in other words, men with good sound hearts, are not very numerous. The mere a s i n g number of sudden deaths from heart disease daily chron- icled by the m J||» I press, is proof JjpSly of the alarm- jTtejjj ing preva- SjSb lence of this dangerous complaint, and as no one can foretell feU/jgr \ • just when a fatal collapse A- Kreamer. will occur, the danger of neg lecting treatment is certainly a very risky matter. If you are short of breath, have pain in left side, smothering spells, pal-, pitation, unable to lie on side, especially the left, you should begin taking Still Keeping Office Hours. When ex-Speaker Thomas B. Reed was asked recently if he in tended to become a permanent resi dent of New York, he answered: “I find that the financial importance of a New Yorker is gauged by the earliness with which he leaves the city and the lateness of his return. His riches are measured by the length of time he stays away.” “But how about yourself ?” asked one. “Well,” he said slowly, “I am still keeping office hours.”’ that. We have no'old stuff to unload on our customers. Means a great deal, so we always please our trade, would be glad for you to come in and let us show you what we doing for others -We are perfectly willing to sell You cheap. Finger Impressions. Remarkable testimon} 7 to the val ue of the npw system of identifying criminals by their finger impres sions was afforded in the case of a man charged at Westminster, Eng land, with theft. While in Hollo way the, accused had - finger impres sions taken, and they were found to accord with those of a man sen tenced at Reading in 1899 to six months’ hard labor for a jewel roh-r bery. The prisoner, who now gave a different name, admitted that he was the man. Heart Cure possible forme to lie down,and I could neither sleep nor rest. My decline was rapid, and I realized I must get help soon. I was advised to try Dr. Miles' Heart Cure, which I did, and candidly believe it saved my life.” Dr. Miles* Remedies are sold by all drugF'.sts on guarantee, Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart. Inti. X gave my dolly all she would need And propped her up with a pillow; - SSae was flying along at lightning speed In her palace car *of willow. But all .at once she .fell on'the track; Oh, ’twas a dreadful ending! flESie engine rocker went over her back, And I’m ’fraid she's past all mending. —Eudora S. Bumstead In St. Nicholas Her Observation. “Miss Gloriana,” said the college athlete in the outing suit, resting on his oars a moment. “Jot ns