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Rheumatism,
Scrofula and fvla*
iaria Gambihed
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured Them -
f^ow Perfect?^ Weil.
u i*y trouble began with a pain in my
left thign. I labored on for several
months when I had to give up. In a short
time I was completely prostrated. I was
told that my disease was rheumatism,
scrofula and malaria, but the prescrip
tions I tried did not benefit me. I re
membered having once used Hood’s Sar
saparilla for blood poisoning with good
results and I determined to resort to it at
this time. I bought six bottles of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla and four boxes of Hood s Fills
and followed the directions. Iam thank
ful to state that I am entirely cureo.and
am today as well as I ever was in myiife.
JamesM. Sutherland, S. W. Cor. Whit
taker and Jones Sts., Savannah, Georgia.
> _ Sarsa-
ts the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1;
fix for .$5. C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
do not cause pain or gripe.
Hood’s Pills All druggists. 25 cents.
taken you forty years, it
to make you what yon are,
your varied lessons of ex-
Tkey Are Children.
Don’t expect too much of them;
it has taken you
may b<
wit'i a
perience, and I will dare say you
are a fa.nltv being at best. Above
all, don’t expect judgment ki a-
child, or patience under trial,
Sympathize in their mistakes and
d e v etop 11 » su h ^r m a-
oi the
most
Pff 1
taken n
w
1:0'
f
the
•A - i < te fr*»m
e r l a r f t ■, t -r- iv s r * i} : e
• }\iih haV" always
arne^t• iutm!*#-t us i he things
ich make fur better citizenship,
nb'v in the direction o
education of liOf young.
he past thirty years,five hundred
and hi i v mil*.ion dollars have, ac
cording to the most competent
estimates, be'e-n expended in the
south in tile building and main
tenance of the schools and col
leges. There is not a community
troubles; don’t ridicule them.
Remember not to measure a child’s
trial bv your standard. “As one
whom his mother comforteth,”
says the inspired writer ;and beau
tifully does he convey to us the
deep, faithful love which ought to
be found m every woman’s heart,
the unfailing sympathy with all
her children’s griefs.
Let the memories of their child
hood lie as bright as you can make
them. Grant them every innocent
pleasure in your power. It has
often roused our indignation to
see how carelessly their little plans
were thwarted by older persons,
when a very little trouble on their
part would have given the child
pleasure, the memory of wdiich
w r ould last afiifetime.
Lastly, don’t think a child’s
hopeless because it betrays some
very bad habits. We have know n
children who seem to have been
born thieves and liars, so early
did they display these most unde
sirable traits of character; vet we
have lived to see them become no
ble men and women and ornaments
to society,
had wise, affectionate parents.
Whatever else you may be com
pelled by your circumstances in
life to deny your child, give it
w r hat it most values—plenty of
love.—The Christian Common
wealth.
in all the south where there afe
not ample school facilities, and in
ail the states there are univer
sities of high rank, and numerous
denominations and nonsectarian
colleges,- seminaries and acad
emies. Many technical and in
dustries schools have been estab
lished and are in flourishishing
condition, and education for tha
hands as well as the head is pro-,
vided.
The south now has 100,115
teachers at work, four times as
many as in 1880; and has 4,932,-
476 children in attendance at its
public and private schools. It is
speeding -ip 19,878,464 a year for
public education, or nearly four
times as much as it* did seventeen
years ago.
This work
out increa
indebted]less of the south? As a
matter oi fact, that indebtedness
has been materially reduced, and
now represents mainly the invest
ment of the educational, charita
ble and other funds of the state.
has been done with-
iing the tax rate or the
This is the way the editor feels
when he does his sentiment in
blank verse:
‘T would flee from the city’s rule
and law T -—from its fashions and
forms cut loose—and go where the
During strawberry grows on its straw and
the gooseberries grow on its goose,
where the catnip tree is climbed by
the cat as she clutches for her prey
-—the guileless and unsuspecting
rat on the rattan bush at play; I
catch with ease the saffron cow~
and the cowlet in their glee, as
they leap in joy from bough to
bough on the top of a cowslip tree,
and list while the partridge drums
his driwn and the woodchuck
chucks his wood and the.dog de
vours tne dogwood plum in the
primitive solitude.
“O let me drink fropi the moss-
2rown pump that wasjiewn from
the pumpkin tree! Eat mush and
milk from a regular stump from
folly and fashions free—new gath
ered mush from the mushroom vine
and milk from the milkweed sw r eet,
with pineapple from the pine. And
then to the whitewashed dairy I’ll
turn where the dairymaid hasten
ing, hies her ruddy and goldenr.ed
butter to churn from the milk cf
her butterflies, and I’ll rise at
morn with the earliest bird, to the
fragrant farmyard pass,and watch
while the farmer tur»s his herd of
grasshoppers out to grass.—Pacific
Onion.
Women Quickly
And Perfect Health PainleKly^^g^
feting womanhood hy lmp f „ obtain-
Methods. Marvelous reSU ’^ J a h been saved
edand many suffering women ha ^ ^
treyn the knife. First treatr
10c to pay postage. Address,
enng women nave V
First treatment sent free .or
WlNgy
The’ Dentil
Mrs. Dr. Mary A. Brannon, Specia'ist,
Atlanta, Ga.
102 Capitol Aveuue,
MONEY TO loan.
We now have plenty of money to loan
on improved farm lands and Gainesville
city property- Terms and interest
liberal. Call and see us.
((i mo ) Dunlap & Pickkell.
Room 3, Gordon Iff c.
ville, Georgia.
A Liberal Amount ,,f
mount o]
Solicited.
C. A. DOZIER.
Real Estate and Insur-
ance ?\gent.
Office No. 1 State Bank Building,
Sell, exchange and rent all kinds of
real estate. Have in hand anything
you want in this line. v\ ill make it to
your interest whether you want to seii
or buy.
Will insure* Your property against
loss by fire in .old-reliable prompt pay
ing companies
- • .
Class in Book-keeping and Commercial
methods taught by
*?
jpff lK 4
.£2 4oFrb i % \ a DI - * yfif
ABOVE -
SEA. b
suit _
i..A r • a
D A H L.O M c! G A (
A college edtidhtion Une reach.i
U.S., Normal and Bur'ines*
E. P. Mitche!
j—From' ‘‘The Empire of the
South,” by Frank Presbray. Pub
lished by the Southern Railway,
Washington, D. C.
A Timely Friend.
With perfect propriety may we call
that excellent remedy, Salvation Oik
a timely friend. This liniment rapidly
cures rheumatism, neuralgia and pains,
when otfier remedies fail. Mr. Jno.
M. Hall, Ashland, Va., writes : “I
suffered with rheumatism in the ankle
and the muscles connected therewith.
Salvation Oil at once relieved the sore
ness, reduced the swelling, and cured
the pain. No other liniment that I ever
used did me so much good.”
An Uncertain Disease.
There is no disease more uncertain in its
nature than dyspepsia. Physicians say that
the symptoms of no two cases agree. It is
therefore most difficult to make a Correct
diagnosis. No matter how severe, or under
what disguise dyspepsia attacks you. Browns’
Iron Bitters will cure it. Invaluable in all
diseases of the stomach, blood and nerves.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold bv all dealers.
Expert Accountant, A few more pupils
desired. Call * or auvuess No. 2 State
Bank building*.
For a perfect fit go to
C: H. SAUNDERS.
Over Owen’s Furniture Store.
“The Artistic Tailor.”
Large line to select from. Also
patterns m stock.
Good laboratories; 1:
ran te; military, disc
religions in flue *ccs
State; abundance : 1
from $75 to--$25i> X y.
or private fam 'd s.
teachers; full fac '
control of the Drive
atorv ciast>.. Co-ed uc
line;
or fei
tutioii ionnned special..
means. Send for cata' _r
Engines. Boilers, Saw Mills, Cane Mills,
SOUTHERN RAILVv'J
ih
Condensed Schedule of Pa^enjw]
In Effect Oct. 16, 1S9S.
Northbound.
Ves. No 181
| No. 12 No. 38 Evf
i j; a .
*)'• Sun.
WROUGHT IRON PIPE AND FITTINGS.
Bi ~ass Goods and Gene?~al Engine
ana Saw Mill
Suppl
les.
Army End-Men.
According to war notes of Mr.
John Fox Jr, in Harper’s Weekly,
We must confess they | Kentucky volunteers had for sorne-
Late Literary News.
It is not often that.a contribu-
or to a magazine spends five mil
lions or so of dollars in fitting
himself to write knowingly of a
subject. But if popular report
he true, that is, approximately,
the sum which Joseph Leiter ex
pended in the acquisition of the
information necessary to prepare
the article which appears over his
signature in the November
Cosmopolitan on “Wheat.” This is
Mr. Leiter’s first appearance in
literature but lie handles the pen
with a bold firm hand that shows
him a man of resources.
Another Cosmopolitan contri
bution which will appeal to every
man and woman i3 the attempt
of Harry Thurston Peck to an
alyze the component parts of the
modern Woman of Fascination.
By what does woman fascinate?
Is it beauty? grace? spirit? charm
of manner? what? Evasive ques
tion ! But Mr. Peck goes at it as
a man who has studied and has
experience. * ‘
time a difficulty in getting their
rations from Uncle Sam. The col
onel fared like the private and
treated them as if they were sons
of his, but this did not alter the
fact that at first they almost
starved.
The boys kept up theff spirits,
however,and were even disposed to
indulge in pleasantries at their be
loved colonel’s expense and one
morning a company lined up be
fore his tent, sang him a song and
told him how hungry they w r ere.
Then they had a request to make
which they feared he might not
grant. The colonel told them to
make the request fearlessly.
“Please, sir, have you a calen
der?” asked a deep voice* respect
fully at one end of the line.
“A calendar?” repeated the col
onel. “Why certainly. Orderly—
But what do you want with cal
endars?” he asked a bit mystified.
“Please, sir,” 9aid a squeak from
the littlest man at the other end
of the line, “we should like to eat
the dates,” and thereupon the sol
diers ran. •
Somehow the story of the dearth
of food got abroad aj)d proved a
blessing. It touched the hearts of
the mothers in the blue grass and
bear-grass and after that the boys
had the fat of the land.
Architectural Iron Work, Sash Weights, Etc.
BRASS and IRON CASTINGS.
Repairing Machinery of all descriptions.
GAINESVILLE IRON WORKS,
Office and Shops on Main street at Southern R. R. Depot.
Lv. Atlanta, C. T.
“ Atlanta, E. T.
“ Noreross
“ Euford
“ Gainesville...
“ Lula
Ar. Cornelia.
; 7 53 a
j S 5j a
| 9 .10 a
hj I *5 a
Id a
j 10 5a a
11 25 a
12 00 m 4 7:3
1 M p 5Y'J
6 '>•?!
i 7 tjjsjj
2 22 p 7
f2 42 p 8 %pi|
f3 09 pi
Lv.Mt. Airy
“ Toccoa
11 3) a
11 53 a
12 2! ra
12 52 p
1 46 p
2 34 p
8 37 p
4 20 7 1
, 4 3h'p
5 03 p
5 25 p
6 30 p
9 52 p
3 3) p
“ Westminster
“ Seneca.
“ Central
“ Greenville ...
“ Spa r i anburg.
“ Gaffneys
** Blacksburg ..
“ • King’s Mr....
** Gastonia
Lv. Charlotte ...
Ar. Greensboro
5 22 p |j|
6 10 p j|
6 44 p 1
7 00 p '
8 22 p i
10 43 p
tv. G reensboro..
Ar. Norfolk... .
Ar. Danville
11 25 p
11 51 p •!
Ar. Richmond ... j
6 40 a
6 40 a *1
Ar. Washington
6 42 a ij
“ Baitin’e PER.
8 03 a .5]
“ Philadelphia.
IU 15 a
“ New York ...
12 43 m ,*!
»
Fst. MI
Ves. >o.ll !
Southbound.
No. 35
No. 37 bub
Dal 1 v.
Dailv. ^
“ Philadelphia
“ Bal-fc.iofe...
V* ashingtaq.
Lv. Richmond ..
3 50
4 oU p
6 55 Pi-..
! 6 31 a’ 0 20 pi
ll 15 a 10 45 p —
12 01 m 12 Olnt i--- r -' •
TEACHERS WANTED.
Union Teachers’ Agencies of America.
Pittsburg, Pa., Toronto, Can., New Orleans, La., New York, N. Y.,
Washington, D. C , San Francisco, Cal., Chicago, 111 ,
St. Louis, Mo., and Denver, Col.
There are thousands of positions to be filled during the school
term caused by resignation, death, etc. We had over 3,000 vacancies
during the past season. Unqualified facilities for placing teachers in
every part of the United and Canada, as over 95 per cent, of those
who registered before August secured positions. One fee registers in
9 offices. ADDRESS FOR APPLICATIONS TO PITTSBURG, PA.
MALSBY & COMPANY
57 SOUTH FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, GA.
Lv. Danville
Lv. Norfolk
Ar Greensboro.
0 15 p
5 50 a
9 b5 p;
6 45 a
6101 ■
I -
Lv Greensboro | 7 26 p 7 05
Ar. Chariot te ... IP 00 p 9 25 a Iff
Lv. Gastonia lit 49 p if*
“ King's Aft.... j I jl»l,
“ Blacksburg .11 81 p 10 45 a W-
f Gaffneys 11 443 p Id 58 a| I
** Spartanburg. 12 25 a II 54 a
" Greenville....! 1 25 a 12 30 pi .
** Central j !
“ Seneca I 2 30 a 1 33 p 5 iff
“ Westminster.
“ Toccoa ! 3 25 a 2 18 p 6 oOP*-
“ Mr. Airv ■
Cornelia
“ Lula
“ Gainesville...
“ Buford
“ Norcross..
Ar. Atlanta. 3L T.
Ar. Atlanta, C. T.
4 do
.. f3 00 p l C
a f3 18 p ?•
a 3 37 p
o to
o 10
5 10
...
I 9435*
'4'55'p!lO»Kj
3 55 p
f.aLV-
NORCROSS NOON
Daiiy Except SorJap
Lv. Atlanta, central time
Ar. Normoss, eastern time
Lv;
Noreross. eastern time
Ar. Atlanta, central time..
GENERAL AGENTS FOR
All druggists sell Dr • Miles' Nerve Plasters.
Erie City Iron Works, The Geiser Manufacturing Company, The N
Birdsall Company, Hunger Improved System for Ginning
Cotton, R. Hoe & Co., Henry Disston & Sons*, James
Ohlen & S^ns, Gardner Governor Company,
Penberthy Injector Company.
ew
Carrying complete line of En
gines, Boilers, Saw*Mills, Separa
tors, Grist Mills, Saws, Pumps,
Injectors, Grate Bars, and Steam
and Pipe Fittings.
“A” a. m. “P” p. m. “M" noon-
Chesapeake Line Steamers in
between Norfolk and Baltimore.
Nos. a7 and 3b—Daily. WashintP' on
western Vestibule Limited. rn '— r "'
ands
Throngi
sleeping ears between New Itork
leans, \*ia Washington, Atlanta ^aDu^^
ery. and also between New YorksEt
viaWashington, Atlanta and
class thoroughfare coaches betwee
ton and Atlanta. Dining cars serve^
en route. Pullman drawing-room »
between Greensboro and Norfolk,
nection at Forfolk for OLD POD• ^ ff
arriving there in time for breakfast-
Nos. 35 and 35—United ^ Tate!, n a;
runs solid between Washington an j
leans, via Southern Railway. A. * jj
and L. & N. R. R., being composed 01
car and coaches, through without
passengers rf all classes. P'fTt
room sleeping cars between Ne _
New Orleans, via Atlanta and w
Leaving Washington each Wednesow^
Bleeping car will run through he*
Lugton and Fan Francisco witn
. Nos. 11,37. and 12-Pullman ^
beiAveen Richmond and Charlo • . a
southbound Nos. 11 and 37, north
88 and 12 ,
FRANK S. GANNON, J■ fa
Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr.,
Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, . S. H-
. Gen" I Pass. Ag’t .. Ass tGen*
Washirrsrtoii, D.
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN ORDERS AND INQUIRIES
^V^Catalogue fre® by meDtionmg this paper.
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