Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, September 24, 1902, Image 5

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fHE GAINESVILLE NEWS, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 24, 1902 Already mtimatea. ULziiiea, as i nave simply because of the sanction which, it has gained by customary usage in fairy tales generally. Do you compre hend, Emerson? Little Emerson—Perfectly,; mamma. —Judge. < G. J- &JS. EAILRUA1) RiCKLY ASH BITTER CURES CONSTIPATION. “ For two years I suffered ter ribly from dyspepsia, with great depression, and was always feeling poorly. I then tried Ayer’s Sarsa parilla, and in one week I was a new man.”—John McDonald, Philadelphia, Pa. IT MADE LEM AIT BE SIGH THE BABT GREB Don’t forget that it’s fi A y e r ’ s ” Sarsaparilla that will make you strong and hopeful. Don’t waste your time and money by trying some other kind. Use the old, tested, tried, and true Ayer’s Sarsapa rilla. $1.00 a bottle. All drugglate. Ask your doctor what he thinks of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. He knows all about this grand old family medicine. Follow his advice and we will be satisfied. •- ■■■ J. C. Ayer CO., Lowell, Mass. asaBMggapaggggg A Deep Mystery. It x/, a mystery why women endure Backache, Headache, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Melancholv, Fainting, and Dizzy Spells when thousands have proved 1 hat Electric Bitters will quick ly cure such troubles. “I suffered for years with kidney troubles,” writes Mrs. Phebe Cheriey, of Peterson, la., “and a lame back pained me so I could not dress myself, but Electric Bitters wholly 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. O. BROWN’S DRUG STORE. Do Not Sleep on Your Left Side. When a patient complains of a bad taste in his mouth every morning on waking uji, says a physician, the first question I ask him is as to the position he assumes when going to sleep. An immense number of people sleep... on the left side, and this is the most e|kn- mon cause of the unpleasant taste The Other Fellow. It is seldom now-a-days that the the ater going public have an opportunity of seeing something new in the theat rical line—but m the play of “THE of the unpleasant taste which is generally attributed to dys pepsia. If a meal has been taken with in two or three hours of going to bed, to sleep on the'left side is to give the stomach a task which it Is difficult in the extreme to perform. The student of anatomy knows that all food enters and leaves the stomach on the right side, and hence sleeping oh the left side soon after eating involves a sort of pumping operation which is any thing but conducive to sound repose. The action- of the heart is also inter fered with considerably, and the lungs are unduly compressed. It is probable that lying on the back is the most nat ural positiojn, but few men can rest easily so, and hence it is best to culti vate the habit of sleeping on the right side. It is very largely a matter of habit, and the sooner it is acquired the better for the. sleeper and the worse for the physician. day, Sept.,27th. Mr.Harry West, the German dialect comedian, supported by a company of unusual merit will present a play that is bound to please and amuse all classes of Theatre pat rons. Originality is the mam theme— and such has been accomplished-—com edy in abundance is offered. The com plications that arise during the action of the play are indescribable. Vaude- Lv New York, PR R {, 12 55 p nr Lv Philadelphia, P R R ! 3 29 pm Lv Baltimore, P RR -j 5 45 pm Lv Washington, P R R 1 6 55 p m Lv Richmond. SAL Ry j 10 40^ p m Lv Petetersbuig, “ { 11 31’ p m Lv Norlina } 2 05 a m Lv Henderson ** | 2 30 am Lv Raleigh “ | 8 46 a m Lv Southei n Pines “ { 5 37 a m Lv Hamlet '* { 6 30 am N j No 403 Lv New York, N Y P & N { f7 55 a m Lv Philadelphia “ i ‘10 20am Lv New York. OD S S CoJ f3 00 pm Lv Baltimore, BSPCo { — Lv Wash’ton, N & W S B J — r - Lv Portsmouth, SAL Ry! iMXTp m' Lv Weldon . “ | 1133 p m Ly Norlina “ { 12 53 a m Lv Henderso i “ | 120 am Lv Raleigh “ 1 302 am Lv Southern Pines “ {, 5 18 am Lv Hamlet !* }6 45 aNn Lv .Wilmington “ { _—— Ar Charlotte *'• “ { 9 51: a m L7 Chester “ J 1008 Am Lv Greenwood “ 1 12 07 p m- 1 Lv Athens | 219 p m Ar Atlanta J “ 1 3 35 pan.: Ar Augusta, C&WC !. m , j Ar Macon, C of Ga y j 72^b^V Ar Montg’m’ry A & W F{ 9 % onf Ar Mobile, L & N 2 55 a m Ar New Orleans, L &N{ 7 30 am Ar Nashvijle N C &St L{ 5 5*5 a m Ar Memphis j . 4 OO p.m, been engaged, making m all one of the most complete attractions that will ap pear at this house this season—and one that is bound to give the best of satis faction. Prices, 75. 50, 35 & 25 cents. Old Soldier’s Experience. M. M. Austin, a civil War veteran, ->f Winehester, Ind., writes: *‘Mv wife Tlie* Backet Shop. The name bueliet shop is said to have originated in Chicago when legit imate brokers would not handle an or der for less than 5,000 bushels, and a lot of places sprang up where men of small means could speculate on .a tri fling capital, as small as a dollar, and these speculators were spoken of con temptuously as buying and selling wheat by the bucket full The term was eventually applied to all broker- age in stocks and grain when the amounts dealt in were* smaller than legitimate dealers or brokers would handle and more particularly to places where there were really no legitimate transactions, but. where the proprietor and customer simply bet on the mar ket, the proprietor allowing the cus tomer to take either end of the bet in consideration of a commission, which In reality is his percentage in the game. f6 30 pm 6 30 pm 10 05 am 12 36 pm 2 pm 245 pm 427 pm 643 pm 8 05 pm 3 30 p m 10 45 pm 1120 pm 1 32 am 4 08 am 5 30 am She Didn’t Wear a Mask. But her beauty was completely hid den by sores, blotches and pimples till she used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. -Then they vanished as will all Eruptions, Fever Sores, Boils, Uleers, Carbuncles and Felons from its use. Infallible for Timbers of oak keep the old homestead standing through the years. It pays to use the right stuff. “ Men: of \oak ” are men in rugged health, men whose bodies are made of the sound est materials. Childhood is the time to lay the foundation for a sturdy con stitution that will last for years. Scott’s Emulsion is the right stuff. Scott’s Emulsion stimulates the growing powers of children, helps them build a firm foundation for a sturdy consti tution. NORTHWARD r; -Daily ! ; No 402 Lv Memphis, N C dl St'Ll ' 1 00 p in Lv Nashville, | 10 55 p m Lv New Orleans, L&N J 745pm Lv Mobile, L & N | 1220a m Lv Montgom’ry A & W PJ 6 20 a m Lv Macon, C of Ga { 8 00am Lv Augusta, C & W C _ } 940am Lv Atlanta, f S A L Ry { 12 00 u’n Ar Athens, - * ‘ { 2 48pra Ar Greenwood “ ; 4 50pm Ar Chester, “ { 6 43pm Lv Charlotte* “ J 630 p m Lv Wilmington, “ {330pm Lv tfaralet, ** J 9 50pm Lv So’thern Tines, “ { 1055 pm. Lv Raleigh. “ { 100am Ar Henderson* '* j 2 27am Lv Norlina. SAL Ry J 310 a m Lv Weldon, •• J -4 20am Ar Portsmouth, “ { 700am Ar Wash’ton, N & W S R! ^ Ar Baltimore, B S P Co { Ar New York, ODSSCoi . Ar Phila’phia, NYP&NJ f5 46 r> in ] Ar New York, “ i .8 40 o m i Blen and Salutes. A recent writer shys: “The China man bends to the very ground when he salutes; the Russian, farther west, takes off his hat and scrapes with it his very path; in Prussian Konigsberg, always farther west, the passersby sa lute each other by taking off their hats or caps very low; in Berlin the head covering is raised but little; in Paris still less, in London not at v all or with a difference. The American keeps his hat on immovably and never bends, but all civilized nations, of course, take off their hats to the ladles.” Hon; Henry Wattersou, .editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, goes after the Four Hundred” with a sharp stick, and dubs .them as a “gaDg of unclean birds.” e > o? to tons of hay and t as a fertilizing crop, $20. is ? er ac . re * Full information * u OQr Fall Catalogue L s . lssu ed, which we will mail free u pon request. f?P Cata! °S«e also tells a i l a bout Vegetable and Farin vm! sfor FaH Planting, Seed heat,'Oats, Rye, Barley, Vetches, Grass and Clover Seeds, etc. pnceslof o° r FaU Catalogue and es of any Seeds desired. 5 A Heathen's Idea.. A Chinaman who acted as secretary to a former Chinese minister to Eng land has published a book in which he says: ; / . ... •* “There is nothing which an Ameri can won’t say, there is nothing which an Englishman won’t eat. there is nothing an Italian won’t sing, there is no measure to -which a Frenchman won’t dance, and there is nothing Rus sians won’t covet.” Toads: aT.k*tcian<ia».sc* t:Kit.n n naickiy ascertain «%r oouiiou Jne . invention-i-3 pro^ah‘*7 r.wnai- • tionsstrieilyconn.ientiftl. Bandlxxtooa f-atnr sert Jirtest asenc»- for ss«i»rir.»r paitffi v Patents .siren toronsh Mann A Co, rece; spc-fai iMftce, vr;t-ionfc charge, in the ^If5? Lv Hamlet. “ { 940pm j Lv t>o'thern Pin-s, “ i 10 32pm *, Lv Raleigh, {1228aml Lv Henderson, “ i 144 am f Lv Norl na, “ ! 210am ! Lv Petersburg “ J 4 09 a ni { Ar Richmond. ** ; 4 .%• a m ! Ar Washington, PRR ‘ 8 45a m l Ar Baltimore, PRR { 10 03 a m • Ar Philadelphia, PRR J 12 27 p m | Ar New York, PRR | 8 j Note-fDaily Rxcept Sunday, 9 20 ar 10 09 am 1207 pm 1 27 pm 2 15 pm 433 p m 5 35 pm 9 40 pm J12 5 pm 2 50 am CS0 am T.W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, • Richmond, ¥a. ilh’.?trated wiifiklv. c ii t»f uuy trier 1 !On J'tomiil. OVfti-sc. 53 our Tnorlha, Sold by all mr.vr.-v-’.ilv! • I & Nsw-Ysr! <r Office. *?95 T SLa i* ytautqn, D. G, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409-415 Pearl Street, New York, -r 50c. and $1.00: all druggists. FOR SALE BY DR/E. E. DIXON & CO- What Answer Could She Make? tfntlier—Elsie, your sister tells me took a second helping of pudding Itllrs. Brown’s today. Yittle Elsie—So I did. mamma. •io you t h5uk that was right ’ FIsle?” ,.y eS . You know you have often told not to contradict any one, and Mrs. said, ‘I know Elsie will have second helping to pudding.’ and I a uidD ’ t contradict her, could I?”— vyasliiuff 110 " star ‘ Tit For Tat. A lgy__When he married the widow, he stoPP ed smoking. Maud-Why? »j<r V _-Well, She gave up her weeds f0 r him. and he gave up the weed for her. . Certninly a Clover Lawyer. “Is he a good lawyer?” » A good lawyer! Why. say, I’ve |known* him to prove the truth of what j is ,;t so and not half try!”—Chicago ! post The trusting shoemaker is apt to get Lenten out of his boots—Philadelphia [Record. An Atlesjniite Supply. “Henoock has given up smoking, eh', fThat takes a good deal of will power.” ••Yes. E:« wife has it.”—Puck. A Beautiful Bird Tliat Suffers to Help the Fashions. When you see a woman with a band of W'liite plumage almost invisibly tinted with blue and green and more strongly with golden brown ornament ing her hat, know that from one to six of these harmless, lovable, sweet voiced little grebes were stripped from chin to vent to supply it. And when you see that other woman wearing a cape the collar of which reaches above her ears and the skirt to her shoulders and it seems to be made up of almost indiscernible sections the size of your hand know that each section stands for the life of one of these charming little chatterers. The breast of the grebe is its curse. Its feathery are so tiny and fine as to. be almost spineless, so thickly set they stand on end and so delicately colored as to render ade quate description impossible. Crested grebes are killed without mercy for this little patch of rare feathering, and the little marsh ones do not es cape. There is no bird slaughter for plumage more wanton unless it be that of the egret, which takes the life of the brooding bird for a few beauti ful feathers found on the shoulders only at nesting time and leaves the young to die as they may. For a perfect fit go to t 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 cleaneoand pressed. All work giv« i prompt a enti-on. GEORGIA IRAILRO AD. information as to Routes, Schedules and Rates, both MGER and FREIGHT, Write to either of the nnder- [signec, you will receive prompt reply and reliable information. C. McMillin, Gen’l Ag’t. Pass. Dep’t. : ^ G-. Jackson, Gen’l. Pass. Agt. A. Dawson, S, A. Augusta, Ga. 3 - E. Magill, S. W. Wilkes, Gen’l Agt. T. F. & Pass. Agt. Atlanta. Ga. W. Hardwick, W. C. Raoin, Gen’l. Ag’t. Sol. Ag’t. Macon, Ga. _ ^ M. McGovern, C. D. Cox, J1 G. A. Gen’l Agt. Augusta, Ga. Athens, Ga. Catching Bools Titles. Most readers would be at a loss to discover the source of some book titles and would forget if they ever knew that “The World Well Lost” Js bor rowed from Dryden, that “A~ ©ream and a Forgetting” is Wordsworth’s phrase and that it was Othello who loved “Not Wisely, but Too Well.” We might add that in spite of the famili arity of the famous “Elegy” not one reader in ten will trace Mr. Hardy’s “Far From the Madding Crowd” to Gray or will connect “One of Three” with the mariner who held the wed ding guest with his glittering eye. Mr. Hardy’s titles, like Howells’, are al most invariably attractive. “A Pair of Blue Eyes,” “Two on a Tower” and “The Return of the Native” stimulate curiosity. Often a proverb or any other famil iar phrase is as good as a recognized quotation. “Put Yourself In His Place” and “It Is Never Too Late to Mend” were strokes of genius on the part of Charles Reade, and “Second Thoughts,” “Dead Men’s Shoes” and “The Root of All Evil” are hardly less inviting.— Blackwood’s Magazine. Hot Air In Boston. Little Emersion—Mamma, I find no marginal note in elucidation of this expression, which I observe frequently to occur in my volume of “Fairy Tale Classics”—“with bated breath.” What is the proper interpretation of the phrase? Mamma—“With bated breath,” my son, commonly occurs in fairy tales. Your father often returns from pisca torial excursions with bated breath. The phrased in such instances, howev er, has no significance as applying to the bait employed to allure the fish, but is merely an elastic term of du bious meauimr and sivmjeionR A Gesture and an Accent Tlmt He Could Not Reproduce. - The Figaro relates the following an ecdote about Frederic Lemaitre: “He had acted with marvelous success in a play by D’Ennery and Marc Fournier when one evening after the second or third performance he was suddenly addressed by a stranger, ‘How much will you take to be ill tomorrow, the day after tomorrow^ and for a month T “Lemaitre dragged the unknown un der a street lanterij and looked at him. He was a well known writer. ‘It is you!’ said the actor. ‘Why do you wish me to be ill?’ “The other hesitated slightly as he explained his strange proposition. He was inspired by an insane hatred to ward Marc Fournier and had sworn to avenge himself on his enemy by all/ conceivable means. ‘Help me to wreck his drama/ he concluded, ‘and I will make you rich. I have the means to do it. You earn a great deal. I will give you ten times as much for six months longer thiin your piece will last. Will you agree?’ “Lemaitre had quickly recovered himself. lie seized the man by the col lar, shook him hard for a minute and then, with a vigorous kick, thrust him away, crying: TIdw much will I take? Thirty pieces of silver, Judas!’ “An del actor who told the story added. ‘How often has Frederic Le maitre sighed in my presence when he recalled the episode, “Alas, I shall nev er be able to reproduce the gesture and the accent of that moment!” ’ ” Sc*.£J>VLE IN EFFECT JAN 20, 1901. La stem liiaudatd (75th (Meridian) Time No. 82 leaves 7:17 a. m. for Social Circ No. 84 leaves 12.30 v. m. tor Winder. No. 86 leaves 3:00 p. m. for Jeflfetson and * j cial Circle. No. 88 leave* 7,55 p. m. for Teffersou* No. 87 arrives from Jefferson 8,18 a. m No. 85. arrives from Social Circle 1,37 a. m. No. 83 arrives from. Social Circle 4,35 p. m. No. 81 arrives from Social Circle 8*37 p. m. ST7NDAV TRAINS. No 92 eaves 7,35 a* m. for Social Circle. No. 96 leaves 3.40p. m. for Social Circ No. 98 leaves 4.-00 p. m. for Jefferson. No. 99 arrives8:45 a. m. from Jefterson. No. 97 arrives 10:20 a.m. from Social Circle No. 91 arrives 2,45 p. m/from Social Circle. Connections. No. 82 connects at Winder 9,30 . a, m. for Ath ens arriving Athens 10.il a. m. No. 82 connects at Social Circle with i»a. R, R -for Augnsta 10*26 a. m For Atlanta It. 55. t, m Arrive Augusta 2.25 p, m.; Arrive Atlanta 135 m." ( No. 84 connects at Winder for Athens And Atldnta2,19 p. nr.; arrive Athens 2.50 p. m.; ar rive Atlanta 3.00 p. m. No. 84 connects at Social Circle for Augusta a m.; arriveiigusta 9.Y5 p. m. No.86 connect-* at Social Circle for vumt 7.45 p. m.; arrive Atlanta 9.20 p. m^ Samtjei. C. Dttneap, . Receiver Money Loaned On Farm§. We make loans on improved farms, in Hall, and the surrounding, counties, on ten years time, with the privilege of making payments on the principal sum at any time. For further information apply to R. P* Lattseb, Room 4. State Bank Building, Gaines ville, Ga. ‘ ' Between Hew York, Philadelphia, Balti more, Wasbiogtoo, Richmond, Atlanta, Hew Orleans and Points North, East, South andWest IN EFFECT FEBRUARY 24th., 1901 { 1200 u’n { 8 00 pin { 2 48pra { 11 23 pm ; 4 50 p m { 2 04 am { ;6 43 p m { 4 25 am { 630pm { 5 00 am { 330 p m { -- , , r { 9 50 p m } Sl?ans£ { 10 55 p m. { 9 03 am ! 1 00 a m { 11 30 am ,* 2 27 a m { 1 00 pi { 310am f 2C6 pn J •4 20am | 310- { 700 am { K. _ * - . j £51 ! { t C4. i—j fife } f5 46 rv tn } 5 :t. i .840 p m { 8 \f i No 44 { no e