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THE GAINESVILLE NEW’S, WEDNESDAY APRIL g. 1903.
The only kind of consump
tion to fear is “neglected
consumption.”
People are learning that con
sumption is a curable disease,
jt is neglected consumption
that is so often incurable.
At the faintest suspicion of
consumption get a bottle of
Scott’s Emulsion and begin
regular doses.
The use of Scott’s Emulsion
at once, has, in thousands of
cases, turned the balance in
favor of health.
Neglected consumption does
not exist where Scotts Emul
sion is.
prompt use of Scott’s Emul
sion checks the disease while it
can be checked.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists,
pj-415 Pearl Street,
50c. and #1.00; all druggists.
New York.
A bar magnet arranged in con
nection with the handle of the
razor is the newest device for
k e epmg that useful instrument
sharp for a long time. As you
pass the razor over your face the
magaet draws tho edge, and so
prevents it from becoming blunt
so soon as it otherwise would do;
when at rest the edge lies along
the mignet so that the cutting
part is always under magnetic in
fluence.
Some Buddhist Laws.
Prof. Maxwell Sommerville was
discussing the other day the
Buddhist faith, for which he has a
profound respect, says the Phila
delphia Record. Some of the
striking tenets of Buddhism that
he quoted were:
Use not perfumefabout thy per
son
To cough or sneeze in order to
win the notice of a group of girls
is a sin.
Destroy no tree.
Drink no intoxicating beverage.
Care for the aged and infirm.
It is sinful to|Jthink; one way
and to speak another.
It is a sin to pass judgment on
the acts of other men.
Give no flowers tc women and
sing no gay Bongs.
Keep neither silver nor gold.
When vou eat make not a noise
like a dog.
It is a sin to eat of the flesh of
man, elephant, horse, crocodile,
dog, cat, tiger or serpent.
A priest may not was-h himself
in the twilight nor dark, lest
le should unknowingly kill eome
insect or other living thing.
Lend nothing cn interest.
The Kutnal Life Insurance Association of Georgia.
°® ce ’Atlanta Office, 503 English-Anierican.
Hen. J. L. Webb,lPresident; John A. Da,win, Secretary-Treasurer and General Manager.
BIMONS, DIVISION AGENT, GAINESVILLE, GA.
B. F.
Every Member of the Household.
I never tire of talking about Cheney’s
Expectorant. I have given it to my
children, to my wife, to my mother
and to the domestics of my family.
Bach will heartily endorse its merits.
R. L. Poster.
Richmond, Va.
Confessions of a Priest.
Rev Jno. S. Cox, of Wake, Ark.,
writes, “For 12 years I suffered from
Yellow Jaundice. I consulted a num
ber o' physicians and tried all sorts of
medicines, but got no relief. Then I
becan the use of Electric Bitters and
feel that I am now cured of a disease
that had me in its grasp for twelve
years.” If you want a reliable medi
cine for Liver and Kidrev trouble,
stomach disorder or general debility,
tret Electric Bitters. It’s guaranteed
by M. C. Brown and Or. J. B. George.
Only 50c.
The life insurance question is no
longer whether a 'man should insure,
but simply the best company in which
to insure.
Life insurance «business has in our
day attained vast proportions, and
many people who formerly gave but
little heed to the subject are now deep
ly interested.
Unfortunately with the march of
time the life insurance business has
become very complicated and expen
sive, and the average person either has
not the money to pay the annual prem
iums, or has not the ability or time to
study out the plans of the average poli
cy offered by an insurance agent.
WHY CANNOT A NUMBER OF PEOPLE BAND
TOGETHER IN A COMMUNITY?
This is a natural question. Why
cannot a number of people in a com
munity band together, and at the
death of a member, each member pay a
certain sum to the beneficiary? The
economy of such a plan would be very
great; the money would be kept in the
community and insurance would be re
duced to a minimum. This question
which has occurred to many a man has
been completely answered by the Mu
tual Life Insurance Association of Geor
gia. This organization, chartered by
the laws of the state of Georgia, has
been organizing Life Insurance divis
ions in this sii.te for the last sixteen
months, following out the plans under
successful operation in the state of
Pennsylvania and several of the south
ern states.
THE PLAN
is the simplest and most natural. The
state is divided into a. number of divis
ions, each division being made up of
one or more counties. These divisions
are each officered by the best men in
•ounties where the diyisions are orga
nized, and the money with which to pay
the death claims is kept in trust by an
accredited and bonded officer in each
of the divisions, so that in the event of
a death the money is right at home
with which to pay the claim and each
community has the advantage in the
first place of knowing exactly the state
of the division in the way of member
ship, but he also realizes that the small
amount paid out by him goes to pay
the widow and orphan of a neighbor or
friend.
The plan originated m Philadelphia
twenty-two years ago and has been op
erated in Pennsylvania, Virginia and
North Carolina with success. The an
cient order of Foresters established in
1835 is alive with a membership of 168.
000 and an average death rate of 12.1
per 1,000 members. The objections to
the mutual or fraternal order of insur
ance have long since been exploded
and this class of insurance is now re
garded as not only the cheapest but al
so as the safest and most reliable. The
only institutions in any country, inde
pendent of the state, that have at
tained the age of one hundred years
are fraternal or mutual, or mutual or
ders.
THE RESULTS.
In sixteen months, without noise or
advertising, the Mutual Life lusurance
Association of Georgia has issued more
than eight thousand policies among the
best people in the state, and is repre
sented in forty-four counties, and ap
plications are coming in from all over
the state to organize more divisions.
INSURANCE AT COST.
That the Mutual Life Insurance As
sociation of Georgia furnishes insur
ance at actual cost is further evidenced
by the fact that a distinction—a slight
one—is made between the county and
city divisions. In the latter the actual
expenses are necessarily higher and
for that reason in city divisions an ex
tra dollar is charged in each class for
initiation fee in order to pay the med
ical examiner and other necessary ex
penses, and for a similar reason a uni
form charge of $1.50 annual dues is
levied on each member. In every in
stance thirty days of grace is gives
each member to pay the mortuary as
sessment or the annual dues.
The By-Laws give full particulars of
the working of each division, and the
Mutual Life Insurance Ass< c ation of
Georgia points with much satisfactios
to . successful record of benevolence,
giving protection at home, at a nominal
cost to our widows and orphans.
ENTIRE COST IN THE ASSOCIATION.
Initiation fee. first annual dues and
one advance assessment:
At ages from 16 to 30 A ... .$3.00
At ages from 30 to 40 B .&L09
At ages from 40 to 50 C $5.00
At ages from 50 to 60 D $6.00
These amounts are paid only one
time. One year from the date of poli
cy and annually thereafter, the annual
dues are:
Class A
Class B .1.1.00
Class C 1 i 2s
Class D 2.50
When a death occurs in a division
each member of that division is assess
ed $1.15. As long as there is no death
!n a division, no assessment is made
and beyond the annual dues which re
main the same as at age of entry, no
monthly assessments are made as is
the case with so many assessment com
panies. In the Mutual of Georgia, the
principal laid down is: No death in a
division, no assessment because none
is needed, and each division is respon
sible only for the deaths in that divis
ion.
In city divisions one dollar extra is
charged for initiation fees, and the an
nual dues are fixed at $1.50 for all
classes.
OFFICERS HALL COUNY DIVISION—H. B. Smith, President, Gainesville, Ga.; W 'H Crair
Secretary and Treasurer, Gainesville, Ga. Directors, P. N. Parker, T. H. Robertson. /. E. Redwine it'
Gainesville, Ga.; C. R. Faulkner, Bcllton, Ga. J ’ J
Wax is not gathered from flow-
era nor from any other source,
but is a natural secretion of the
bees and is only produced by them
during heavy honey flows.
Umbrella bearers are showD in
ancient sculptures at Persepolis,
where a king is depicted iu royal
(State attended by a fly flapper and
[an nmbrella man. Iu Persia the
[Umbrella is still an appendage of
toyaity.
Atlanta has planted both feet
firm and is pulling strong for the
Presbyterian university. Atlanta
has the fortunate tact of getting
almost anything she wants, and
her success in this new move looks
assured.
The white brakemen of the
Central of Georgia Railroad, be
tween Macon and Atlanta, have
requested these in authority to
take off ail negro brakemen along
this line and appoint white men
instead.
INTO
New Quarters
lightly Locked From
Nervous Spasms.
Physicians Could
Not Prevent Fits.
P P * Miles’ Nervine Cured
My Wife.
riedirf!P es Nervine has been successfully
^rs hut lousa ,nds of cases of nervous disor-
fhen ", ever ^ as ** made abetter record than
Th 0U c nn f ln the treatment of fits or spasms.
Pearly p S . testimonials prove this, and in
hat th„ c, ei T lnst ance the writer has stated
ine Wa , U cease d after the first dose of Ner-
thp f n ii i ' iV ^ n - The statement is repeated
‘^tOUoYVmg;
avinl e !L years a £° my wife commenced
O'Be'r.h^ a . SI ? s or fits and I called in my
teed. fj^ !cia . n , an fi h e said she was para-
ay e C , ^ed her with salt water and
} toe ^omel.and she eventually got
1Q ther Q \. r ’ , but J n a short time she had
cd f 0r ac ‘ c * She was confined to her
ict heln K P ree 5f! on ths and the doctor could
imes Yen-1' *l a d fits frequently, some
0 rnnii Vere ‘ ^ er l> a nds would cramp
'ot so hUl 1 ^ ot °P en them and she finally
finally t co ^ a F s , wou ^ become locked.
i°°d and nrU j doctor was doing her no
'®ative bottle of Dr. Miles' Re-
tt «6t from .l 1 ?* S . he received so much
' 0re - Shp v the ^ r , st bottle that I got some
!t has never'if i ak £ n a numb er of bottles
iSe - She n1c had * f * since taking the first
ties’ Nerv. i hl T nks ver y hi S h ly of Dr.
themt them a ^ ver . Tills and is never
?this testing , ere ts any way of mak-
1 the good t k n granger do so because
y P r -Miles Restorative Nerv-
JLille, Y. Allen, P. mL,
(All d A . *
Dr. Miff*' 5 .and guarantee first bot-
Nervous and” 1 ^! 1165 ' ^ end f° r free book
■Medical cl!; E,?hXlnd. AddreSS
A Love Letter-
Would not interest .you if you’re
looking for a guaranteed Salve for
Sores, Burns or Piles. Otto Dodd, of
Ponder, Mo., writes: “1 suffered from
an ugly sore for a year, but a box of
Ib'cklen’s Arnica salve cured me. It’s
the best salve on earth. 25c at M. C.
Brown’s and Dr. J. B. George’s Drug
Stores.
Henry C. Moore of Sioux City
believes that it is possible to in
terbreed the Arctic musk ox with
cattle of the temperate zone, and
that the stofck so produced would
be able to withstand the severe
winters of the United States. He
has been in communication on the
subject with Pearv, the Arctic ex
plorer, who is favorably impressed
with the idea. “The vaet loss of
the present season among herds
on the Western ranges,” said Mr.
Moore, “emphasizes the necessity
of trying to infuse hardier blood
into American cattle.”
Marie Corelli, the authoress,, in
protesting against the erection of
a Carnegie library at. Stratford-
012-Avon declares that the erec
tion of the library would involve
the demolition ot ancient honsep,
which are landmarks of Shake
speare’s time. Miss Corelli’s
protest has been commended.
The dentist who has married a
young woman whose father had
$40,000,000 will have all the gold
be needs in his business and a
pull everywhere.—Augusta Chron-
jiclej ,
I have moved into the store formerly
occupied by J. B. Mathis & Co., next
door to Palmour Hardware Co., where I
will be glad to have my friends and cus
tomers call.
t
I have more room, better light
more inviting, quarters to show
through my mammoth stock of
goods, shoes, clothing, hats, gent’s
nishings, etc.
I am still catering to the best trade
in this section, and will be glad to sell
you. Don’t forget my superior stock of
Groceries, Feed Stuffs, etc.
Yours Truly,
JOHN H.TURNER.