Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, August 13, 1902, Image 5

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- - - . ■. I’HE GAINESVILLE NEWS, WEDNESDAY AUGUST 13, 1902 TAKE prickly ASH BITTERS for Indigestion, Constipation, Kidney Troubles, f0 K sale BY DK. E. E- DIXON & CO. W. R. DEXTER, FUNERAL DIRECTOR and dealer in 411 kinds of funeral furnishings £j c0 teams and prompt attention given to all calls either day or Light. Parlors and \*are rooms South Bradford street di rectly in front of court housn. GAINESVILLE GEORGIA. For a perfect tit go to C. H. SAUNDERS Moved to Daniel Building, over Mrs. J. E. Jackson’s store. "The Artistic Tailor.” Clothes cleaned and pressed o: short notice. Also LADIES - SKIRTS cieanen and pressed. All work gi\< prompt a ention. S. C. Dunlap, Jr. J. B. Thompson. Dunlap and Thompson. INSURANCE AGENTS. FIKE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, AND SURETY BONDS. OFFICES DUNLAP BLDINft. Phones 35. Cheap Excursion Rates, To Charleston and Return Account of South Carolina In ter State, and West Indian Ex position. For the above occasion the Georgi Rwailroad will sell round trip tickets at very low rates. Three Daily Trains between At lanta aDd Charleston. Through sleepers on trains leav ing Atlanta at 3:00 aud 11:45 p. m., and Charleston at 5:10 and 11:00 o’clock p. m. For sched ules, dates of sale aud limits on tickets ask agents Georgia Rail road or the undersigned. C C McMillin, A. G. Jackson, G. A P D G. P. A. Augusta, Ga. S. E. Magill, C. D. Cox, Gen’l Agt. Gen’l Agt. Atlanta. Athens. E. P. Bonner, W. C.McMillin, U. T. A. S. F. & P. A. Macon Macon. t U H. Hill, T. A. Thomas, V T. A. Atlanta. Ga. C. T. A. Atlanta 50 YEARS*' EXPERIENCE Trade Mark? Designs Copyrights &t:. Aiiyon^senrtlpjr a ^tvetr.h amicieacriutlon m ouiewiy ,w«taln (nr opi:nnh tree whether :i- Jhv.Mition Ik prohnhiy patentable. Communie, ions strict lyr- ►mPJentinL Handbook on Paten* >i lost naency lor ••eeurinp pufeurs'. latr-ms akc-n thr-.tsph ALuiUi & Co.’V.ce: tKHije, trPhour. charge, in f! e> Mm ■\ r.an(*Fo—,»17 |’itStrnt«i weekly, Incest cir- • iuau..i »-f mty : .-ientifics journal. 'J’ernm. $3 k» : , r . ; «L’U r rjw, *,Ow, (L Sola byal) newsdealer? if ff» York -*mch Office -<• T fit. ^ s - r .aito" & r C The United States is the greatest pa per producing country on the face of the globe, its total output being a little over 19,000,000 pounds a day, of which nearly 5,000,000 goes to the newspapers of the country; 2/650. 000 is used for. the printing of books and a little over 1,000,000 for writing. The rest is wrap ping paper and boards of all kinds. Besides this, 11, 0C0,0Q0 pounds of pulp are produced. Old Soldier’s Experience. M. M. Austin, a civil war veteran, ->f Winchester, Ind., writes: *‘My wife was sick a long time in spite of good doctor’s treatment, but was wholly cured by Dr. King’s-New Life Pills, which worked wonders for her health”. They alwavs do. Try them. Only 25c at M. C. BROWNJS DRUG .STORE. A Chicago architect professes to have discovered that the real, underly ing cause of moral, social and political degeneracy in our large cities is the “apartment” house or “flats” which he says, ruins home life, discourages procreation and encourages a life of ease and luxury, to the physical and mental disadvantage of the American housewife.—Exchange. She Didn’t Wear a Mask. But her beauty was completely hid den by sores, blotches aud pimples till she used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all Eruptions, Fever Sores, Boils, Ulcers, Carbuncles and Felons from its use. Infallible for Cuts, Corns, Burns, Scalds and Piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c at M. V BRON’S May Yohe’s antics_^&re disgust ing enough to jar the mermaids off their cable roosts as the news of them passed by. Casey—Did, ye go over t’ see Kel ley lasht noight? Costigan—Oi did not. Afther Oi’djwalked two thirds of th’ way, oi was too toired t’ go a step fur ther,so Oi turned round an’ walk- .. - / • • ed back home again.— Judge. * # A Kentucky judge deputed to in vestigate a mountain feud, has re turned his commission to the gov ernor declining to serve. There are limits even to a Kentuckian’s rashness. Tot Causes Night Alarm. “One night mv brother’s baby was taken with Croup,” writes Mrs.J.C. Sni der. of Crittenden, Kv., “It seemed it would strangle before we could get a doctor, so We gave it Dr. King’s > New Discovery, which gave quick relief and permanently cured it. We always keep it in the house to protect our chil dren frbm Croup and Whooping Cough. It cured me of a chronic bronchial trouble that no other remedy would relifevc,” Infallible for Coughs, Colds. Throat and Lung troubles. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at M. C. BROWN’S. The Birmingham News thinks that those convicts in Sing Sing prison who issue a weekly paper can hardly guarantee t<? give the news. They have no reporters on the outside, and inside facts are suppressed. The Columbus council allows bicycles to be used on the side walks. That is sad news for the ladies and babies of the the town, who will have* to be run over or get out and trust to the good nat ure of horses and automobihsts. Major Ransdell, the sergeant- at-arms of the house, lost his right arm in the civil war, and Congressman Hooker, of Miss issippi, bis left. When either buys a pair of gloveB, he gives the oth er the old one. CALLING UPON A FRIEND. Tlie Way In Wlifcii Two English Ac tors Once Paid a Visit. Here an amusing story of Messrs. Toole and Brough, the English comedi ans. Having appeared conjointly in a drama/“Dearer Than Life,” in which they wore very ragged, woebegone cos tumes, they visited the well known artists Fradelle and Marshall to be photographed in their rags. While waiting “between the plates’? Toole,' who was fond of a lark, suggested to his brother comedian to sally out and call upon a certain mutual acquaint ance, who would be horribly shocked at receiving visitors in such a garb. Brough at once assented, and, popping on their battered hats, out into the street the pair slipped and made for the house of their friend. Of course the neat housemaid and th^^aeater Buttons were horrified and Reclined even without being asked to purchase matches or the like. “I axes your pardon,” said Toole in an assumed tone. “You’re making a slight mistake. We want to see your master.” And he mentioned the gen tleman’s Christian name and that of his wife. “W|e have important business with him,” chimed in Brough. The girl’s face wore a dazed aspect, and she said: “Master nevar sees the likes of you at his house. He’s most pertickler, ain’t he. Charles?” appeal ing to tlie page. “You must be making a mistake.” “Oh, no, we ain’t!” responded Toole with supreme gravity. “But I’m sor ry William*’—the Christian name of the gentleman— 1 “is out. I haven’t got a card about me,” pretending to fum ble among his rags, “but tell your mas ter that his two cousins from the work- house called as they were passing through London.”—London Tit-Bits. PENNY POSTAGE. The Incident That Led to Its Estab lishment In England. Many years ago, when Queen Vic toria first began to reign, it cost nine- pence to send a letter from one Eng lish city to another. In those days the postage was not paid by tbe sender of the letter, as is now customary, but by the receiver. So, of course, there were many poor peopl^ who could not afford to pay ninepence when their mail arrived, and it dften happened that they were obliged to forfeit the letter^. One day a man named Rowland Hill was riding on the outskirts of a city, and he saw a postman bring a letter to a youug girl and demand ninepence for it. The girl took'the letter, scru tinized it carefully and then handed it back to the man, saying she could not afford to pay the postage. Thereupon Rowland Hill, being a kind hearted man, rode up and insisted upon paying it himself. When the postman had gone, the girl confessed to her bene factor that the' letter was from her lover, and to avoid paying ninepence on every letter he made certain marks on the envelope which she alone could decipher. “But.* said Rowland Hill, “don’t you kuow you are doing something very dishonest in thus cheating the government?” The girl admitted she did, but there was no other way to do. Hill rode away and meditated over this little incident, and his farfamed idea of “penny postage” was the re sult. At first he was laughed at by every one, but he fought bravely and finally was rewarded by seeing his idea in practice all over the land.—New York Tribune. A Deep Mystery. It a mystery why women endure ( Backache, Headache, Nervousness. • Sleeplessness, Melancholy, Fainting, and Dizzy Spells when thousands have proved that Electric Bitters will quick ly cure such troubles. “I suffered for years with kidney troubles,” whites Mrs. Pbebe Cherley, of "Peterson, la., “and a lame back pained me so I could not dress myself, but Electric Bitters whollv cured me, and, although 73 years-old, I now am able to do all my housework.” It overcomes Constipa tion. improves Appetite, gives perfect health. Only 50c at M. C. BROWN’S drug store-. A Tribute to the Drowned. It would be difficult to conceive a more touching and beautiful cere mony than that of the children of Gloucester throwing a bouquet into the sea for each sailor who left that port the past year,and has not re turned. Where are the poets' flights of fancy now?—Boston Herald. ■ Hats. Although panama hats are quite the rage in this country, very few of our people know that the real, genuine article is known in its na tive home on the isthmus and South America by its Spanish name of “sombrero jipijapa.” Given in Eng lish these words form the allitera tive combination “heepee-hahpah hat.’ ? This statement is vouched for by a gentleman connected with one of the isthmian legations.— Washington Star. Diabolical Revenge. A diabolical story of revenge comes from Granzendorf, Austria, where a man called Balika tied his enemy, Joseph Balan, to the wheel of a wagon and then drove at a fast pace down the street. When the villagers hurried to stop the horror, it was too late, for Balan was al ready dead. His murderer was at once arrested. *? I had a very severe sickness that took off all my hair. I pur chased a bottle of j|yer’s Hair Vigor and it brought all my hair back again.** D. Quinn, Marseilles, Ill. One thing is certain,— Ayer’s Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and the hair grows, that’s al! there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al ways restores color to gray hair. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send’us one dollar and we will express yon a bottle. Be sure and give the name Of your nearest express office. Address, J.C. A HSU CO., Lowell. Mass. 1 Charles E. Hicks, of Atlanta, tried to commit suicide in Savan nah the other Saturday by swal lowing a corkscrew. At last ac counts Hicks was on his way to Gainesville still surrounding his corkscrew. G. J. & S. RAILROAD ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAISL AT GAINESVILLE, GA. UUUfcS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. . Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use io time. Sold by druggists. ISfST 3t.*JAEI>UEE IN EFFECT JAN 20, 190D Eastern Utaudard (75tb (Meridian) Times- No. 82 leaves 7:17 a. m. for Social Ciro. No. 84 leaves 12.30 p. m. tor Winder. No. 86 leaves 8:00 p. m. for Jefferson &udT r j dial Circle. . No. 88 leaves 7,55 p. m. for Teffersou. No. 87'arrives from Jefferson 8,18 a. m No. 85. arrives from Social Circle _ 1,37 a. ns. No. 83 arrives from Social Circle 4,35 p. m. No. 81 arrives from Social Circle 8,37 p. m. SUN PAY TRAINS. No 92 eaves 7,85 a. m. for Social Circle^ No. 96 leaves 3.40p. m. for Social Circ No. 98 leaves 4.-00 p. m, for Jefferson. No. 90 arrives 8:45 a. m. from Jeflerson. No. 97 arrives 10:20a.m. from Social Cirtl-a No. 91 arrives 2, 45 p. m. from Social Circle. Connections. No. 82 connects at Winder^,30* ;a. m. for Affci ens arriving Athensl0.ll a. m.- No. 82 connects at Social Circle with Ga. R.Jfr for Augusta 10*26 a. m For Atlanta 11.55 t. ra Arrive Augusta 2.25 p.im.; Arrive Atlanta 135 m. No. 84 connects at Winder for Atl ens apS Atldnta 2,19 p..m.; arrive Athens 2.50 p. ax- rive Atlanta 3.00 p. m. No. 84 connects^at Social Circle for Augusta a> .■v p. m.; .sniwiigt’jt* 9.25 p. m. No.86 cianect-, at A>2tal tircie f*r L-.t iat: 7.45 p.m.; arrive Atlanta 9.20 p.m^ 1 , ' Samuel c. Dunlap,. deceives Money Loaned On Farms. We make loans on improved farms* m Hall, and the surrounding counties,, i on ten years time, with the privilege of j making payments on the principal sum. at any time. For further information: apply to R. P. Lattneb, \ Room 4. State Bank Building, Gaines- ville, Ga. While engaged in a game of “j ickstones” in LaureDs county S. C,, two negro boys ^got into a fight and one killed, the other with a rock —Ex. c. A. DOZIER. Real Estate and Insure ance f Office No, 1 State Bank Building, Sell, exchange and rent all kinds c eal estate. Have in hand anythin} oil want in this line. Will make it ' our interest whether you want to se r buv. Will insure your property against toss by fire in old reliable and prompt paying ^companies % Don’t Be F'oollsli. Look at your friends and acquaint ances. You see them deliberately act ing the fool every day. Possibly you can look your friends over with less prejudice than you can look yourself over. Are you acting the fool and causing yourself unnecessary annoy ance? There are so many foolish peo ple in the world that you often find startling things in looking yourself over with candor and fairness.—Atch ison Globe. Breathing: of Insect*. Insects generally breathe through special pores in various parts of their bodies, and if these pores are closed by oil they are suffocated. Any one^nay test this by dropping sweet oil on the thorax or back of a wasp. It very soon dies. For this reason oil has been found one of the best things .to use for the destruction of insects. Strictly Business. x? *Have yon observed that man who has been abusing you?” “Yes.” answered Senator Sorghum placidly. “I’ve been watching him with a great deal of interest. If 1 wanted anybody abused, I don’t know but I should hire him in preference to anybody I \ know of.”—Washington Star. ' l-r.4 Scotland Yard. jJTew Scotland Yard is connected fcy means of a tunnel with Westmin ster Bridge District railway station. An annual rent is paid for it to the railway company by the home of fice, and in case of any riot or civil disturbance great bodies of police could be* drafted speedily from va rious parts of London and marched through the tunnel unperceived by the rioters. Kew Scotland Yard is the key of the situation so far as central local ity is concerned, inasmuch as it is adjacent to the houses of parliament and close to Whitehall and all the government offices. If any great civil disturbance occurred, it is more than likely that it would take place within this area.—London Globe. Between Few York, PMMelpMa, Balti more, Washington, RicMonC Atlanta* Few Orleans and Points* Forth, East, South and West IN EFFECT FEBRUARY 24th.. 1801 SOUTHWARD Dailv No 31 Lv New York, P R R ! 12 55 p m } Lv Philadelphia, PRR! 3 29 pm S Lv Baltimore, PRR 1 545 pm j Lv Washington, PRR} 6 55 pm | Lv Richmond. SAL Ry} 10 40 p m { V -1 ti 111 v! m I Dairy No Z37 Lv Petetersbmg, Lv Norlina Lv Henderson “ Lv Raleigh Lv Southern Pines “ Lv Hamlet 1131 pm I 205 am j 2 S0 a m } 3 46 am } 5 37 a m { 6 30 a m } No 403 { f7 55 a m { 10 20 am Lv New York, NYP&Nj Lv Philadelphia “ { LvNewYork.ODSSCoJ f3 00 pm | Lv Baltimore,.B.S POo l —~~ ! Lv Wash’ton, N& WSB1 — — ! Lv Portsmout! 3 S A L Ry! 9 00 p m } Lv Weldon “ I Lv Norlina “ ! Lv Henderso i “ 5 Lv Raleigh “ ! Lv Southern Pines “ { Lv Hamlet " * 8 55 pxtx* 1126 pun 1133 p m 1255 am { 1 20 am} 302 am j 518 am} 6 45 am } Lv Wilmington .** } Ar Charlotte “ ! L? Chester “ ! Lv Greenwood » Lv Athens “ ! Ar Atlanta f “ ! Ar Augusta, C & W C } Ar Macon, C of Ga } Ar Montg’m’rv A & W P} Ar Mobile. L & N } Ar New Orleans, L & NJ Nashville N C& StL! 5?5 a m } Ar Memphis ' } 4 00 pm ! 9 51 am} 10 08 am ! 12 07 pm ! 2 19 p m j 3 85 pm I 510 pm !-. 7 20 p m | 9 20 t> m ! 2 55 a m i 7 80 am \ H10* am- 11 00? arts 4 12 pi» 8 30 pros 6 55 pna 8 10 am NORTHWARD* ! Dailw Lv Lv Lv Lv LV Lv Lv Ar Ar Ar Lv Lv Lv Lv Lv Ar Lv Lv Ar Ar Ar Ar Ar Ar Memphis, N C & St L! Nashville, ! New Orleans, L&N f Mobile, L&N Montgom’ry A & W PI Macon, C of Ga .1 Augusta, C & W C ; Atlanta. J S A I. Ry ! Athens, “ { Greenwood “ J Chester, “ J Charlotte* “ J Wilmington, “ i Hamlet, “ t •So'them 1‘iutSi “ J Raleigh. “ Henderson* “ ; Norlina. SALRy Weldon. *,* : Portsmouth, “ t Wash’ton. N & W S R! Baltimore, B S P Co ! New York, ODSS Coj Phila’phia, N Y P & N! New York, ** . dan?— No 402f- ! No 38 100pm 1 ’ 8 45 p ro 10 55pm-} '9 30am 7 45 p m { 12 20 am !- 6 20 a m ! 8 00am 9 40 a m 1200 n’n j 248 p m } 4 50 pm] 6 43 p m ) 6 30 p ra 3 30 p m l. 9 50 p m- {’ 10 55 p ra ! PO0 a m 227am j 3 10 a in J 4 20am j 700am ! 1 30 pro? ! 4 20 pro J 8 00 pm * i 11 23 pm. * 2 04 am/ - ) 4 25-am • * o CKJ-am 3 . 40e:. gfjf-a tria II 3Vzzsv [ 1 CO pm 2 00 pn 310 p-j c C.- M ra.'S fl -v* - Lv Lv Lv Lv r ▼ Han>let. ^o'thern Pin “s, Raleigh, Henderson. Vorl n^. l S40pm ! s ! No 44 ! No | 9 40 p m ! ! 9 2»» aizr ! 10 S2-p m | 10 4-0 am J 12 28 a m 1207 pm ; 1 44 a m j 1 27pi» 1 9 Iftfljp ! 2 Ut —TTI I.v F’etershurw . •• j 4'twa lfii ! 43?-v m *.r Richmond. “ • ! 4 ~Ai a tn '■ ATA pni Ar Washiisgton, PRR J 8 45 a m \ 9 40 r.m Ar Paltimore. PRR I 10 03 a nr : J ,r> ' Ar Philadelphia, PRR ! 12 27 p m j 2 56 asac* Ar New York, PRR ! 8 | KJOana Note-fDailyExcept Sunday,