Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, August 27, 1902, Image 2

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THE GAINESVILLE NEWS WEDNESDAY AUGUST 27, ‘ 1902, BBLLTON. The thermometer went so high last week that we couldn’t locate it with a spyglass. Dr. Qnillian is now living near the Southern depot, on East Broad street. The brethren have not called any pastor at the Baptist church this year. They are just waiting for a volunteer to drop in, or probably they will estab lish a Quaked church here some time in the future. We have a nice school building which is now being completed. It is no trou ble for our town to boom after a political campaign. The mayor says how can a man with a palmetto fan in one hand, and a ther mometer in the other .enjov this hot August weather? There are fine prospects of bountiful harvests, and we’ll soon be able to shout hallelujah and invite the preach- There is more Catarrh ip this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last -few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease -and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires consti tutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured bv F. J. Cheney & Co*. Toledo, Ohio., is the only con stitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system.. They offer one hundred dol lars, for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo,O. Sold by Druggists 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. MOZLEY’S LEMON ELL INDUSTRIAL Regulates the Liver, Stomach, Bowels and Kidm For billionsness, constipation and malaria. For indigestion, sick and nervous headache. For sleeplessness, nervousness, heart failure, and nervous prostration For fever, chills, debiJity and kidney diseases take Lemon Elixir. Ladies, for natural and thorough organic regulation, take Lemon Elhj 50 cents and $1,00 a bottle at druggists. Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga. How much better off will the world be, whej some of these ex peditious do reach the pole? ~ The return of organ from abroad will at least give ns a rest from. Gates. The ceuter of the stage is not big enough for both at the same time. A Prominent Minister Writ After ten years of great suffering from indigestion, with great g* prostration, biliousness, disordered kidneys and constipation, I have been*' by Dr. Mozley’s Lemon Elixir, and am now a well man. REV. C. C. DAVIS, No, 28Tatnall St., Atlanta, Ga. Elder M. E. Church, South. An evidence that **Lo the poor In dian” is at last becoming civilized is now before us. The first case on re cord where a full-blooded Indian has petitioned for a divorce has occured in the federal court at Pawnee, when Spah-Pah-Bear asked for a legal sepa ration from his wife, Mad Bear. He charged her with infidelity, abandon ment and with gross neglect of her household duties. The plaintiff is very old and almost blind ancL was ac companied *by several sons and daughters. The wife did not appear in court. Important To Cotton Ginnrs, BETTER PRICE FOR COTTON The reputation of the Georgia peach has been made and has come to stay. Of course there will be imitations, but consumers will soon learn to take only those with the genuine name blown in the bottle.-Albany Herald. Columbus TO THOSE WHO DESIRE TO A Missouri grocer hauled up for selling a plug of tobacco Sunday, contended that tobacco was a necessity of life iu Missouri, and the court sustained him. er to dinner. Many of our, leading poets have sijgned contracts to pick cotton. They are at last resolved to do some good for the country. The people ate very heartily at camp meeting last Sunday. Even the saints Yet see what it can sometimes do I had healthy human appetites, for a man like Theodore Roosevelt. | it’s our opinion that the race prob lem could be easily solved by more “‘What is the pedigree of your I ploughing and less preaching. ’Calf?” asked a would-be buyer of The parsons don’t preach long serr farmer. “All I know is that his I “ now-a-days; they just point to Tne office that comes nearest to seeking the man in the United States is that of vice-presinent. •father gored a book agent to death, tossed a justice of the peace on top ~ot a barn and stood a lightning rod man on his head in a fence corner. His mother chased a female lec turer two miles one day. If that mn’t pedigree enough to ask $47 on .you needn’t take him.” The Federal prison at Atlanta lias proved a valuable institution to the newspapers of that city. It is a rare month that does not see the thermometer and advise the con gregation to. think of the hereafter. About all of us have discontinued fishing in the Chattahoochee river for this season. We have found out that fishing doesn’t pay. Miss Gertrude Oliver is assisting Miss Julia Oliver in school at White Hall. Spencer has decorated our fish pond beautifully. The alligators have taken to the woods, and all you have to do is to jump in and imagine you are at the seashore. . . Most of our people will make enough some convict escape from the pris- this vear to pay their debts and thank on, and the papers use two col- the Lord. turns daily, to say nothing of a * Miss Annie Pittman has returned whole lot of pictures, out of each home after a long stay in the Gate affair. It makes Atlanta newspa-1 Clt y* per enterprise show up well, but fooks rather bad for prison. (Communicated.) Is It Mal practice, or Ignorance of tie Law? It’s hot weather, brethren; but hot weather on this earth is preferable to the prospect of it hereafter, so let us be thankful. The Mayor’s Matinee. The proceedings in the Mayor’s court have been of the usual order At last week’s session of the City [ this week. -court, Mr. J. F. Duckett, who, as Otho Witt (col.) acted disorder- I understand, is a deputy sheriff, ly and was fined $5.00 and costs, was Bworn in as a bailiff to wait which he paid, upon the court, A scrip for his On the same charge Wash per-diem as a bailiff was not made Barnes (col.) was up before the cut; when an account for same Mayor, but was found not guilty, was made out and presented to John Jackson also proved his Judge Prior, he, without hesita- innocence of the same charge, tion ordered the amount, $10, Wesley Thompson, (col.), paid .paid out of the county treasury. $1.00 and costs for taking the This is contrary to law and liberty °f getting drunk, must certainly be illegal. A dep- Alex McTeer, (col.), was most nty sheriff cannot, in- accordance too “rowdy’ ’ for the peace of the with the law, be sworn in as bai-1 community, and was fined $1.00 Don’t neglect the warnings of nature. If your appetite is poor, breath bad, tongue coated, you will be sick unless* you take steps to put your system in good condition. Prickly Ash Bitters is the remedy you need. It cleanses the entire system. —Dr. E. E. Dixon&Co. Fortify the body to resist malarial germs by putting the the system in perfect order. Prickly Ash Bitters is a wonderful system regulator.—Dr. E. E. Dixon&Co. Aguinaldo has been remarkablyquiet I Yet may be perplexed regarding the means for gratifying that desire at\ since his release from custody as a pris- least possible cost, we suggest our Mail Order Department. We fill on oner of war. A cable says he has been ( town orders the day the^ are received. Money sent with order is promptly i , . . . ,. , , , cheerfully refunded if goods sent do not please, or we send C O D sabie spending most of his time studying text | examination; or when satisfactory references are sent we send goods can proval. Write for handsome illustrated booklets—sent free; ask for books of the English language, in prep aration for a visit to the United States. Some time ago a letter was recieved at the War Department from a member of the Anti-Imperialistic League in Boston asking if there was any offical reason why Aguinaldo should not come to the United States. The department replied that there was no such reason. It is un derstood that preparations for his re ception have been goingpn quietly since toat time.—Savannah News. desired. MENS’ GOODS. liff and receive pay, neither can a deputy sheriff receive per diem Tor attendance upon any court ex cept in counties having twenty- •four thousand or more inhabit- was fined and costs. Henry Johnson, colored, was also fined $1.00 and costs for his hilarity. J. W. Simmons, colored, proved Keep the body healthy at this season by using Pricly Ash Bitters. It is a necessary condition to successfully re sist malarial germs.—Dr. E. E. Dixon & Co. 1— Evening Dress. 2— -Tuxedo Dinner Jacket. 3— Prince Albert Frock Coat. 4— Riding Clothes. 5— Single Breasted Business Suit. 6— Double-Breasted Sack Suit. 7— Norfolk Suit. 8— Flannel suits. 9— Top Coats. 10— Liveries and Uniforms. 11— Furnishings. 12— Shoes. 13— Suit Cases, bags and Hat boxes. BOYS’ CLOTHING. 14— 2-Piece Outing Suit. 15— 3-Piece Suit. 15— Norfolk Sait. 16— Boys’ Sailor Suit. 16— Peter Thompson Sailor suit 17— New Columbia Double Breast 17— Double-Breasted Jacket Pants Sait. 18— Boys’ Coatee Suits. 18— Full-Dress Tuxedo. 19— Irvington Suits.. 19— Russian Suits. 20— Wash Suits. Hoax:—“The automobile is here to stay. ” ' Joax:—I rather thought it was here to go.—Ex. Washington, D. C. EISEMAN BROS, Department A. Atlanta, Georgia. Baltimore,] -ants. If Judge Prior did this his sobriety, and was acquitted, knowing the law, it is wrong. If Etta Neal, colored, was fined she does not know the law,- then isl $1.00 and costs because of the way lie the proper person to administer in which she sought to avenge an the law? insult. On two former occasions this vjwas done and a scrip made out for “the oer-diem, without complaint, being persuaded that this practice would stop somewhere or some tune, but it seems to con tin ae un abated. Now, no one could possi bly take any exceptions to Mr Duckett as an officer, because he Mr James Reese, who has been in the Phili pines for the past two years, do ing hospital corps, is at home on 4 a va cation. He will leave soon for Wash ington, where he will be stationed. Busy Days. In these busy days, that seem to come and go with ever increasing rapidity, and which we treat as though they were opportunities tor the indulgence of carnal appe tites merely, you hear men talk a- bout “killing time.” Oh, better kill anything than time; better was.te anything than the moments lit as yet with the light of hope; better fritter away any wealth that hap pens to be in your possession than these days oyerfiowing with grace and tenderness of God ; for every day is an opportunity to choose, and each choice is the building of | another stone into the foundation on which eternity will erect Athens aud Church, streets torn down, and a black-smith shop is is a good man and an efficient offi-1 being put on that site. It is being ■cer, but this thing.of drawing on * erected *>y Mr * Gaines. the treasury, contrary to law, -should be investigated by the peo- Mr. James Duulap left vester- ple, and those practicing such day for Atlanta, after a two weeks methods should be relieved of | vacation spent with his parents their|responsibilites. fit is hard . . w ^ -enough for the people to pay such J Miss Rilla Dozier leaves featur- expenses as are authorized by law. (day for Carrolton, where she Tho8. M, Bell. The negro house on the corner of j Iy m has been {the structure, a structure true to the character of the foundation aid.—Ex. COMFORT H Floyd Dunel, the two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J, D. Stewart I You "Want died at the holme of its parents, on Athens street, Monday afternoon. The funeral services were conduc ted by Rev J. C. Otwell yester-j has day, after which the remains were . i. i i interred at Alta Vista cemetary. a position in the public schools. inwrrea NO ONE LEFT OUT. We Are Prepared to Sell Yott Require. and Once Worn Yon Will Have Else. U/at^rmap, Burkett 9 i&l38S&2 V.'s- HHHhI ns HH9