Newspaper Page Text
*
k Shattered
System.
FINALLY HEART TROUBLE.
Restored to Health by Dr. Miles' Nervine.
M B. ED WARD HARDY, the Jolly man
ager of Sheppard Co’s, great store at
Braceville. HI., writes: "I had nerer
been sick a day in my life until in 1890. I
got so bad with nervotus prostration that I
had to give up and commence to doctor. I
tried our local physicians and one in Joliet,
but none gave me any relief and I thought
I was going to die. I became despondent
and suffered untold agony. I could not eat,
sleep nor rest, and it seemed as if I could
not exist. At the end of six months I was
reduced to but a shadow of myself, and at
last my heart became affected and I was
truly miserable. I took six or eight bottles
of Dr. Miles' Nervine. It gave me relief
from the start, and at last a cure, the great"
est blessing of my life.' r
Dr. Miles* Remedies
are sold by all drug
gists under a positive
guarantee, first bottle
benefits or money re
funded. Book on dis
eases of the heart and
nerves free. Address, .
DR, MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
Dixie.
Sousa’e band had 5,000 persons
for an audience in the Metropoli
tan Opera House, New York, the
other night. The band played a
number of patriotic airs, “The
Star Spangled Banner,” “March
ing through Georgia,” “Ameri
ca,” “Yankee Doodle,” and one
or two others. Each tune was
greeted with a lively demonstra
tion. Finally the band swuug in
to “Dixie,” as the audience caught
the notes “bedlam broke out,”
according to the New York Herald.
From a thousand throats “there
went up the famous rebel yell,”
continues our informant, and the
“house went.” Dixie is a simple
tune, but is inspiring. Before any
air, it must stand the test of com
petition with “Dixie” in the way
of thrilling the heart and quick
ening the pulse.
Why don’t you dress that Wound
with Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic instead
of that old greasy salve or ointment?
It will prevent or remove inflamation
and soreness and heal it much quicker
and is so much cleaner and more pleas
ant. Only 50 cts. a botttle by druggists
And It Ib Wisdom.
The Bible says : An old man
for counsel and a young man for
war.” And it is true. Elect Al
len D. Candler to the governorship,
and give Bob Berner and Spencer
Atkinson each a captain’s com
mission and let them go to Cuba
and win their spurs.—Dalton Ar
gus*
We talk much about the advan
ced age and activity of England’s
Grand Old Man, but lose sight of
our own. In the United States
senate Mr. Morrill, of Ver
mont, has just passed his 88th
birthday in health and the vigo
rous possesion of all his faculties.
He is only three months younger
than Gladstone and bids fair to
long survive him.—Augusta Chron-
i le.
Germany is now the best educa
ted nation of the continent, yet on
ly 100 years ago German teachers
in many parts of the country were
so poorly paid that they used to
sing in front of houses in order to
add to their income by odd pence.
HE WOULDN’T GIVE UP
Qonsul General Lee Tells a Good
Story on Himself.
Here is one of Consul-General
Lee’s good stories, told on himself:
We had surrendered at Appomat
tox, and I was riding slowly across
the desolate country toward my
home. My heart was heavy, my
thoughts were sad. Rounding a
curve in the road I saw .an old
man plowing close to the fence.
As I approached him he eagerly
inquired of the news at the front.
‘It is bad, very bad,’ I replied;
‘General Lee has surrendered.’
‘What is that you are sayin’ ?’ al
most screamed the old fellow.
‘General Lee has surrendered and
all is over.’ For fully a minute
he regarded me, and then said with
great contempt: That’s all you
know about it. That little no
’count of an upstart Fitz Lee mout
have surrendered, but Uncle Rob
ert? No, sirree, never! Get up
Bess.’”
God’s Money.
At no point does nature take
into question dollars and cents.
No one pays the grass to grow nor
the flowers to bloom; the trees
and rivers have no bank account,
and sunshine and air have no
profit and loss account to worry
over. Everything is free so far as
nature is concerned. She merely
exacts a tribute of labor from man
when he wishes to change the
form in which he finds natural
products to one more to his liking.
What the creative power is we do
not know, but it’s enough to give
one appendicitis to hear some mis
erable human worm, puffed up by
the possession of a few bits of
metal, sagely remark that “Gold
is God’s money. ” Gold won’t buy
life nor stay the hand of death
one instant. You might throw a
ton of gold to a hog and he would
continue to root just the same.
Not a star would twinkle less
brightly because of a lack of
money; not a cloud less would
sweep the sky for all the treasures
of Monte Cristo. Gold is nothing
in the eyes of the universe. Yet
man values it above his life and
sells himself body and soul to
this inert metal.
The manager of an opera house
in Rockford, Ill., has made a vig
orous protest to the city council,
claiming that the churches and
private halls, which are not re
quired to pay an annual license,
as the theater is, have ruined the
latter’s business by entertainments
and concerts.
The biggest rope ever used for
haulage purposes has just been
made for a district subway in
Glascow, Scotland, it being eeyen
miles long, four and a half inches
in diameter and weighs nearly six
tons.
Diseases of the Blood and Serves,
No one need suffer -with neuralgia. This
disease is quickly and permanently cured
by Browns* Iron Bitters. Every disease of
the blood, nerves and stomach, chronic
or otherwise, succumbs to Browns’ Iron
Bitters. Known and used for nearly a
quarter of a century, it stands to-day fore
most among our most valued remedies.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
The oldest match manufactory
in the world is in Sweden. Match
es were made there long before the
old, roughly-trimmed splinter of
wood, tipped with sulphur, was dis
carded with the tender boxes for
which they were used. In twenty-
five years the export trade of Swed
en in foreign matches increased to
1,000,000,000 boxes a year.
The Thing For Farmers To Do.
If this country gets into a war
with Spain and cannon begin to
boom, the chances are that it may
be the beginning of an era of wars
and rumors of wars, says an ex
change. These things come by
turn, as it were. The world has
been at peace a long time. People
are restive and there seems to be
an appetite for a little blood let
ting. There is no telling when it
will end.
Meantime what is the prudent
thing for the southern farmers to
do?
The history of all such conflicts
shows that in such time food sun-
plies are in demand and cotton
goes low. Would it not be well
and prudent then to curtail the
cotton crop and increase the food
crop? Look a little more care
fully after the pigs and cows and
hogs and sheep. Make enough of
these things for home consump
tion and a little over to sell. The
cotton crop should be the surplus
crop.
The wise mariner consults the
barometer and scans the horizon
before he sets sail.
The wise farmer will look to all
these things before he pitches his
crop.
Railroad Mileage-
The Railway Age, in discussing
the construction of new roads in
1898, says: “Already by the end
of the first three months 375
miles of new track have been laid
in 1898. Work is in progress on
ninety different lines, aggregating
2,725 miles, (though, of course, all
these lines will not be completed
in the present year,) and there are
725 miles in addition which are
now under contract or about to be
let. It will not be surprising if
the total new mileage of the year
should exceed 3,000 miles, and it
is improbable that it will be less
than 2,500 miles.”
A Chapter on Man.
Man that is married to woman
is of many days and full of
trouble. In the morning he
draweth his salary and in the
evening, behold it is gone. It is
a tale that is told. It vanisheth
and no one knows whither itgoeth.
He riseth up, clothed in the
chilly garments of night, and
seeketh the somnambulent pare
goric wherewith to sooth his in
fant posterity.
He cometh forth as the horse or
ox, and draweth the chariot of his
offspring. He spendeth his shekels
in the purchase of fine linens to
over the bosom of his family, yet
himself is seen in the gate of the
city with one suspender.
Yea, he is altogether wretched.
—Robert J. Burdett.
Do Not be Fooled
With the idea that any preparation
your druggist may put up and try to
sell you will purify your blood like
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This medicine
has a reputation—it has earned its rec
ord*. It is prepared under the perso
nal supervision of educated pharma
cists who know the nature, quality and
medicinal effect of all the ingredients
used. Hood’s Sarsaparilla absolutely
cures all forms of blood disease
when other medicines fail to do any
good. It is the World’s great Spring
medicine and the One True Blood Puri
fier.
Seattle, in the state of Wash
ington, is profiting by the Alaskan
gold excitement, and its citizens
fully expect that it will have a
population of 100,000 by the end
of 1898.
Argentina’s farmers, encouraged
by the improved prices for wheat,
increased their acreage enough to
have 40,000,000 or 50,000,000
bushels of wheat to sell this year,
an increase of 75 to 100 per cent
over recent years.
Dr.' Tichenor’s Antiseptic is the most
wonderful healing compound offered to
the public. For abrasion of the skin,
laceration of the fiesh, burns by flame
•or steam, hot metal, rope burns, or sun
burn, ring-worm, ’‘poison oak,’’ etc.,
it is pre-eminently superior to anything
One fair trial will convince the most
skeptical. Sold by all live druggists.
All the land above sea level
would not fill up more than one-
third of the Atlantic ocean.
Wanted—Everybody and his wife to
go to his druggist and get a bottle of
Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic, the most
wonderful healing compound of the
nineteenth century. It preserves the
flesh, prevents inflamation or suppura
tion and heals like magic. Pleasant as
perfume and stainless as rose water.
Railway Line or Clothes Line,
Which?
Speaker Reed recently wanted
to see a political friend and wired
him to come immediately to Wash
ington. The friend started at once
but was delayed by a wash out on
the railroad. He repaired to a tel
egraph office and sent this message
to the czar: “Washout on the
line; can’t come.” In due time he
receiyed the following message
from the speaker: “Buy* a new
shirt and come anyway.”
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The leaf of a creeping moss found
in the West Indies, known as the
“life plant,” is absolutely inde
structible by any means except
immersion in boiling water or the
application of a red hot iron.
A Flag of Warning,
Beware of the dry, tickling, hacking,
morning cough, for it warns 3 0U that
consumption lurks near. The famous
Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup will cure it.
“I had a very bad cough. One doctor
pronounced it consumption. I used
Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup and was com
pletely cured; the cough left me and
has never come back. Simon Smasal,
375 31st Street, Chicago, Ills.” Dr.
Bull’s Cough Syrup costs but 25 cents.
Ask for Bull’s, take only Bull’s.
The little “ring” peanners do
not seem to worry about Berner’s
gold record and Spencer’s sub-
treasury record, nor the Journal’s
gold record, nor the Telegraph’s
gold record, one-tenth as much as
they “tend like” they worry about
some of Allen Candler’s “environ
ments.” Really Col. Candler’s
environments are the people ot
Georgia.—Dalton Argus.
Fits
from TT.S. Journal of Sledicint
Prof. W. H. Peake, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur
ed more cases than any
living Physician; his
success is astonishing.
We have heard of cases
Of so years’ standing
^ cured by
\jW± Lite
large bot
tle of bis absolute cure, free to any sufferers
who may send their P. O. and Express address.
We advise any one wishing a care to address
InLW, S. rmffr. 7. D.. 4 Cedar St., Hew Tor*
Horse Owners! Use
GOHLBATTI/TS •
Caustic
Balsam
1 Safe Speedy and Positive Gore
The Saffent, Eest BLISTER ever used. Tsket,
the place of ali liniments lor mild or severe action.
Removes all Bunches or Blemishes from Horses
end Cattle. SUPERSEDES ALL CAUTERY
2Jrj FIRIfOG • impossible to produce scar or blemish.
Every bottle sold is warranted to give satisfaction
Price $|,5G nsr bottle. fcoid by druggists, or
tout by express, charges paid, with full directions
for its u.-e. iiend for des-riptive circulars. ->
-HE LAW RENCL-WlLLt AMS CO., Cleveland. O,
se-isasmioo**
Write for our interesting books “ Invent
or’s Help ” and “ How you are swindled.”
Send us a rough sketch or model of your .
invention or*improvement and we will tell ?
you free our opinion as to whether it is '
probably patentable. We make a specialty
of applications rejected in other bands.
Highest references furnished.
\ MARION & MARION
l PATENT SOLICITORS & EXPERTS
S Civil & Mechanical Engineers, Graduates of the
\ Polytechnic School of Engineering. Bacln lois in
\ Applied Sciences, Laval University, Members
( Patent Law Association, American Water Works
C Association, New England Water Works Assoc,
f P. Q. Surveyors Association, Assoc. Member Can.
( Society of Civil Engineers.
L Offices • i Washington; D. C.
offices. | Montreal, Can.
Tbs fu-
liails
tfgaattxr#
a
’ is OS
every
vrapper.
The monument erected by the
Chester county, (Pa.) Historical
Society to mark the site where
Lafayette was wounded at the
battle of the Brandywine, is in
correctly located and the govern
ment contemplates erecting a new
and more enduring 9liaft.
5
ONE OF TWO
W.i v j
The bladder was created -
pose, namely, a receptae 1
or
urine, and as such it is
°5<J
for
any form of disease except b '
two ways. The first w ay : s
perfect action of the kirl a .- ^
second way is from careless 1 ,
ment of other diseases.
CHIEF CAUSE.
vs.
Unhealthy urine from
kidneys is the chief
“Shall 1 not tafc ». irir.o r*a?e
in mine inn ?”—Hknky IV.
Elegant
Meals
Tb«» R,—t in the City. Prompt
A i s —:«i ion a:;.I High, Cool,
Airy Room*. You pay only
i-.r wUi order.
p r :
U t a <
er’s
W
Nonesuch
Lunch Rooms
For Lcidies and Gentlemen.
f’tting Poor-. Toilet
Convvniciu.cn are provided.
Co.% Peschtr*-# *nd M.-jrietta Sts.
SiuiCing. ATLANTA, GA.
-
T/ Xr. ELEVATOR.
PI FT ri FLOOR.
cause offeT
troubles. So the womb. lih e A
der. was created for one r 1
if not doctored too much V,
to weakness or disease, ex,
cases. It is situated back ol *
close to the bladder, the- e fo *
pain, disease or inconven;^ *
tested m the bladder or > r ;»
sage is often, bv mistake. l
female weakness or worn! , ^
u ironkL
some sort. The error b *
VtiSljy
and may be easily avoids t
out correctly, set your urine
twenty four hours; a sediment'^
tling indicates kidney or biadd °V
ble. The mild and the ex* ^ ^
’effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swam-
great kidney, and bladder -
soon realized. If you need a ^
you should have the bes; ^
gists fifty cents and one t 3 . ^
may have a sample bottle
phlet, both sent free bv m -’ .
ceipt of three twoeent stanr-o'"
cost of postage on the bottlf
The Georgia Cracker and se
dress to Dr. Kilmer
ton, N. Y. The proprietor
per guarantee the genuineness * -2
offer.
J
: :^r&
Uo " Engs*
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
HASHVilLE, TENN.
OFFICIALLY REPRESENTS
United Confederate Veterans,
United Daughters of the Confederacy
The Sons, and other Organizations.
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S. A. CUNNINGHAM.
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{Positions,,,
Guaranteed
Under reasonable
conditions ....
Patents
I HADE iriAnna
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description map
aalckly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly oonfldentiaL Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for ■ ©curing patent*.
Patents taken through Mnnn A Co. receive
special notice, without charge, la the
Scientific American.
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Terms. $3 a
A handsomely illustrated weekly,
eolation of any scion tide Journal. Terms. 93 a
year; four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUIHUCo.**”"—” Hew York
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Free tuition. We give one or more Ireettt
arships in every county in the U. S. Wiiea I
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The most thorough, practical and pm
schools of the kind in the world, an .••del
patronized ones in the South. Indorsed 5?'»
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weeks in bookkeeping with us are ?r~.i
twelve weeks by the old plan. J. F. En.
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of bookkeeping, “Double Entry Made Eisr’J
Home study. We have prepared for m
study, books on bookkeeping penmaniiipH
shorthand. Write for price ^ list “Home Sof* |
Extract. “Prof. Draughon—I leamecb
keeping at home from your books, while!)
a position as night telegraph operator.’
Leffikgwell, Bookkeeper for Gerber &»
Wholesale Grocers, South Chicago, IIL
(Mention this papef-when urritmz- A
Gainesville Transfer Gw
OPERATE BITS LINES OX SCHEDULE*
The Gainesville
Transfer Com
pany issues the
following tick
ets which will
be sold at the
rate of 28 tick
ets for $1.00.
5c.
I DAY TRIP.
Good only over our Lines
To any point in city limits, Including
New Holland and Gower.
Gair.esvilla Transfer Co.
5 cent? :S 1
tc Belle tfljf
both morJ
and eve£
until rs r;: 1
notice.
When you want a Messenger Boy Fhone !C-
• • ^ . £ yl I
Charges, 10 cents for delivering messages, and 5 cents io» •
to message, within city limits.
Kindly phone 102 your orders, and if you wish, we will ru ,
up for your train, either day or night, in case you have a
your residence. • *
The Gainesville Telephone Company will have an opd r - : \J
will remain on duty all night and protect our patrons fr c!!1
convenience of missing trains. Respectfully,
GAINESVILLE TRANSFEK
ft’-
Dr.
3
Antiseptic.
For Man or Beast, for External and Internal Use.
Heals Wounds, Burns, Bruises, Scalds, Guts, Sprains, Etc. Cures Colic, Cramp*
Cholera Morbus and Indigestion.
A
FOR STOCK—Colic. Botts, Foot-Evil, Scratches, Wire Cuts, Etc.
Guaranteed to give Satisfaction—50c. a bottle. (July 1st.) Sherrouse Med. Co., Mfrs. and Props., New Orleans, D-