Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, October 29, 1902, Image 8

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YHE GAINESVILLE NEWS. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 29, 1902. Tommy—I think, mamma, it wiTl be more interesting if yon remind him of those happy days when yourr loves were young and fresh. A man likes to hear sweet tilings wkeil *fie~ comes home at night tired and weary. BRAIN WORK a Aexa8 court trie and hung the Leg| Buchanan all Jn 0I)e courts were as proini in dealing with cn m ; anan’s class nurt | would have no 0 p make sentational stoi “South’s Mob Law.” Its Effect Upon tlie Body and the S 3 -)« r Kind of FOod Tt Demands. The changes of tissue in the brain that take place during study and thought are very important and very rapid. It has been estimated that three hours of brain work cause as great an exhaustion of the forces of the body as an entire day of manual labor. This waste must be replaced by abundant food, but its selection re quires careful consideration and often self denial, for many things which the physical worker can eat with perfect impunity are slow poison to the brain worker, who exercises the brain at the expense of the body and rarely gives the latter sufficient exercise to counteract the mental strain and keep it in condition to resist disease. Bear in mind that, while the waste of the body is much more rapid, the depriva tion of physical exercise encourages torpidity of the voluntary functions and renders them sluggish in eliminat ing these wastes; therefore it is of the utmost importance that the tasks im posed upon them should be light. Brain workers require the most con centrated and easily digested foods. They should eat fresh beef and mut ton, fish, eggs—cooked in many forms, but never hard boiled or fried—oysters and crisp salads, lettuce, chicory, toma- toes, watercress, etc., with mayonnaise or French dressing. They should begin the day with fruit and make it form the principal part of luncheon and Ire very sparing in their use of cereals, eschewing entirely white bread and oatmeal. Their ideal luncheon, which* must be light if they continue to vrork in the afternoon, is a glass of milk or cup of hot chocolate or, better still, a glass of fresh buttermilk, with two or three graham wafers or a bit of toast and some fruit, an apple, figs cr an or ange. Rongh on Father. Perdita—If you continue much longer to play cards with my father, I won't marry you. Jack Dashing—If your father contin ues to play cards much longer with me, I won’t need to marry yon.—New York News. If a man has a new story, better let him tell it and get it over with. He will not be satisfied until he does.— Atchison Globe. Refractive Power of the Ruby. -The primitive form of the spinel ruby is like that of the diamond, eight sided, which distinguishes it at once from the oriental - stone. The color of the genuine ruby is that of the arte rial blood, or pigeon’s blood, as it is called. It is extremely hard and after the sapphire is the hardest of the corundums, which renders it difficult to understand why the earth so rarely gives it up. Its tint is as beautiful by artificial light as by day, and its pow ers of reflection are so great that an cient belief credited it with power of emitting light. The ancients even sup posed that it would shine through clothing with undiminished power. Heart Trouble \ fled Doctors, Dr. Miles’He&rt Curt Nervine Cured ty There is nothing more necessary J than sleep and rest 1! these are fej if yon rise in the morning mote t3 when you went to bed, there is an jS the nerves plainly present If weak, or there is an inherited tej that direction, your weakened soon so affect your heart’s action as Cj on serious, chronic trouble. Dr. 5% vine is a nerve tonic, which qritfttb so that sleep may come, anditoW stores the weakened nerves toM strength. Dr. Miles’ Heart Caj,. blood and heart tonic which rej^aj tion of the heart enriches the bloc*^ proves the circulation. “Some time ago I was sufeiuja ™ Mrs. Tupman, a prominent lady QP of Richmond, Va., a great sufferer with woman’s troubles, tells of her cure by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham : -—For some years I suffered with backache, severe bearing-down pains, leucorrhoea, and falling of the womb. I tried many remedies, but nothing gave any positive relief. “ I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in June, 1901. When I bad taken the first half bottle, I felt a vast im provement, and have now taken ten bottles with the result that I feel like a new woman. When I commenced taking the Vegetable Com pound I felt all worn out and was fast approaching complete nervous collapse. I weighed only 98 pounds. Kow I weigh 109£ pounds and am improving every day. I gladly testify to the benefits received.”— Mrs. It. C. Tupman, 423 West 30th St., Richmond, Va. When a medicine has been successful in more than a million cases, is it justice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not believe it would help me 55 ? Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and discour aged, exhausted with each day’s work. You have some derange ment of the feminine organism, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. Mrs. W. H. Pelham, Jr., 108 E. Baker St., Richmond, Va., says s “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—I must say that I do not believe there is any female medicine to compare with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, and I return to you my heartfelt thanks for mlliiplllSi^ w kat your medicine has done for me. Before taking the Vegetable Compound I was so badly The German Wife’® Vocation. It is a common practice in Berlin for the wife to stay at home when the hus band and family go to the seaside. In this way the wife enjoys her own holi day, for there is no housekeeping to be done. She foregathers with friends— “grass widows,” like herself—and they take their meals at restaurants, spend their afternoons and evenings at popu lar places of entertainment and thor oughly enjoy themselves.—London Ex press. with heart trouble. At times ayhatj seemingly stop beating and atothouj beat loudly and very fast Tiatti hours sleep each night in ten month n I could get. One week in last Septes never closed my eyes. I got Dr. Kies’S: and Heart Cure at a drugstore mb* burg, after spending $30000 hi THE MILKY WAY, cines and doctors in Louisville, Sba Frankfort, Cincinnati and Lawns] and in three days have derived mar.! . A System Wliich Gives Us a Vc^ue Idea of tlse Eternity of Space. The Milky Way, the grandest feature of the “firmament which bends above us,” the hazy path which so majestic ally bands the whole fabric of the skies together, is now known to be composed of a grand aggregation of at least 18.000,000 suns, each as large as or larger than that which makes vege table and animal life an earthly possi bility. One is apt when allowing the mind to revert to the contemplation of these misty and indistinct astronomical subjects to measure their magnitude or attempt to measure it by making terrestrial comparisons. It is obvious, however, upon more mature reflection that such compari sons are worse than “odious.” The bulk of our sun exceeds that of the earth 1,200,000 times, being 600 times great er than that of the bulk of his whole train of planets taken collectively. This being the case, what basis can we use for calculating the magnitude of 18,- 000,000 suns, each, as I have said be fore, probably larger than that which gives us heat and light? The infinite number of suns which, taken together, make up the "Milky Way are not set at a uniform distance from our earth or even from our sun. In fact, they appear to work altogeth er independently of eithef this mun dane sphere or onr “glorious orb or day.” The majority of them are plant ed at a distance too remote to be even imperfectly measured or understood.- Some of them are so near (?) that light, which travels at the rate of 185,000 miles per second, would cross the distance between us and them in the period of about an even ten years. Others, however, are so remote that it would take a full thousand years for their light to reach us. Tes, Indeed! When a man gets tired out and ill, he goes fishing, returning shortly with three wall eyed pike, restored health and a blister on his nose. When a wo man feels that way, she hangs around the house and cries if anybody looks at her. It must be lovely to be a man.—Chicago Record-JEToroia from the use of your remedies thaal from all the doctors and their media think everybody ought to know of tk velous power contained in your raw W. H. Hughes, Fox Creek, Ky. All druggists sell and guarantee i tie £)r. Miles’ Remedies. Send for fa on Nervous and Heart Diseases. 1 Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, lad. L v off that I thought I could not live much a WM ^vl|g|||L lon £ er * little work I had to do was a burden to me. I suffered with irregular • .BjPPSiSf WwSrx menstruation and leucorrhoea, which caused 1151111 an irritation of the parts. I looked like ^3— jjgg: one who had consumption, but I do not look Jfii fu? ^di ^ ow ’ ^ owe ^ y our wonder- “I took only six bottles, but it has made me feel like a new person. I thank God that there is such a female helper /| lr| 11 3 Be it, therefore, believed by all women who are ill that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the medicine they should take. It has stood the test of time, and it has hundreds of thousands of cures to its credit. Women should consider it unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass., will answer cheer fully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. Perhaps she has just the knowledge that will help your case— try her to-day — it costs nothing. 0PAAA FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures oi > *1811111 above testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness. VUUUU Uydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Uynn, Mass. If Not, Why Not? Here you will find all that’s freshest and best in fancy grocery line. We keep replenishing our stock asGi therefore, can fill your orders any time. | Have yon tried onr Coffees and Teas ? i We handle the celebrated Chase & Sanborn’s and Coffees—the best in the world. j What about Canned Goods? j Unless you buy the Royal Scarlet, you do not get best. We are sole agents in Gainesville for these g 00 ^ and you can only get them from us. Heinz’s Celebrated Pickles. j THAT’S GOOD Hard on tlie Father. A little girl three years old who is very fond of music has a father who cannot distinguish one tune from an other. However, she is always urging him to sing. He was trying his best to please her with a hymn one day and flattered himself that he was do ing very well. Suddenly the little ty rant turned upon him and demanded: “Why don’t you sing, daddy? You’re only making a noise.”—New York Press. Perfumes In Ancient Days. Old as the history of the world itself is that of the queen of flowers. The ancient Greeks and Romans reveled in roses. They were ’used lavishly at their feasts. In the time of the republic the people had their cups of Falernian wine swimming with blooms, and the Spartan soldiers after the battle of Cirrha refused to drink any wine that was not perfumed with roses, while at the regatta of Baise the whole surface of the Luerine lake was strewn with flowers. A Carious State of Affairs. You must be very cautious how you treat your neighbor in Isle of Jersey, for he can have you arrested on the slightest pretext and if he has a grudge against you can bring about such a calamity by simply giving a fic tional account of your misconduct to the nearest lawyer. The latter will de mand a fine, and should you decline to pay it he will cause you to be thrown into prison to await trial. Then, even if you are acquitted on the ground that the charge is unfounded, you have ab solutely no claim against your persecu tor, though you may have suffered a couple of months’ imprisonment for nothing.—London Tit-Bits. Try them. In fact, we have ALL to eat, and we sell it AT THE RIGHT PRICES. Can’t we do some business with, you? Telephow your orders, and same will have prompt attention. v Not Keeping; Up. Mr. Upjohn—I wish you would tell Kathleen she cooks her steaks too much. Mrs. Upjohn—You tire three girls late, John. The name of the present cook is Mollie.—Chicago Tribune. Doing No Harm. One day Willie, aged five, was cry ing, and his mamma said: “Willie, you are getting your face all dirty from crying.” Ai 4 Willie stopped long enough to reply : “Well, it wasn’t clean when' I start ed.” And then he went on.—Brooklyn Eagle. • Losing the Match. Captain Golding—Play cricket? Why, I haven’t touched a bat or ball since I was at school. Harold—But this morning mamma Was telling papa wlmt a good catch you were!—Punch. Corner N. Bradford ’Phone 131. A Collection In. Siglit. “Now,” said the irate debtor, “if you disturb me again you’ll-get wbat you’re looking for.” “Thanks,” replied the urbane col lector.- “I will try to make it con venient to disturb you at about this time tomorrow. A document relating to the sale of land, dated 1592 and signed by Guy Fawkes, was recently sold in London for $505. Houston : Post. Thoughtful Tommy. Mrs. Mann—Tommy, yon have been a very naughty boy. When your papa conies home, i shall tell him about you. Practically all the exports of Africa are natural products, while her imports are exclusively articles. Friends on an airship voyage should never fall out.—Chicago News.