Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XIII
vived by her husband and one lit
tle daughter. Her remains were
carried to Laurel Hill cemetery
last Sunday morning at 10 o’clock
and interred, Revs. A. A. Tilly
and D. S. McCurry conducting the
The- friends *of
fire department in town, and a fire
truck was sent in response thereto.
The water in the tank proved en
tirely insufficient to stay the blaze
and the structure burnt like tin-
*
der. In BO minutes after it caught
it was a ruin. Save for the water
in the tank the building had no
protection.
There were 75 inmates in the
home. The building was insured
for $20,000. It cost about $40,-
000. Scarcely anything has been
saved. A movement has been
started to rebuild the home by
popular subscription..
her ability to make that home a
home. This is a knowledge which
does not glare oppressively in the
drawing-room; but when she mar
ries it becomes more and more
golden year by year. The young
Southern mother happily married
does not think her life restricted
because that life is homelife. She
does not feel ‘cabined, cribbed,
confined.’ She enjoys brief ex
cursions into the outside world;
but Bhe tires readily, and on the
return journey her eyes light up
as the car-wheels whir under her,
and she thinks, ‘Each revolution
is that much nearer home! ’ If
some wrestler wearied in the arena
of earth’s activities, some cynic
sickened with ‘this deep disease of
life,’ should seek her m her peace
ful fastness, and, borrowing from
sardonic Iago, tell her that her
mission is to ‘suckle fools and
chronicle email beer,’ she would
smile superior. She knows bet
ter. Home«is home—in summer
when the wide fields stir not in
the swooning noons; in autumn
when hillside and valley blaze in
a riot of hue; in winter when the
mild air has a tang that merely
hints of snow in the’ far country
whence the wild goose beats his
way with steady wing; in spring
time when she sees ‘the fat soil
rise and roll in smooth, dark waves
back from the plow.’” '
[Find Peruna to be an Unfailing and Prompt Remedy.]
Miss Mary Goerbing, of Medford, Wis., speaks
in glowing praise of Peruna as a catarrhal tonic
and nerve restorer. She says:
"/ take great pleasure in acknowledge
ing the curative powers of Peruna. As a
nerve tonic, a gentle stimulator to a slug*
gish system, as an appetizer and restorer
jglgptis strength nnd vitality of worn-out
women, it is very superior.
mmm f * ^ find it fe splendid as a preventative
*° r etching cold, and whenever / feel
used up / take a dose or two and it never
fails to relieve me.”
Tired Women.
Depression of the nervous system during the
11 heat of. summer months is a fertile source of
I blood impurities* That tired feeling, which is
the natural result of the depressing effect of
J] warm weather,quickly disappears when Pernna
* * I 18 taken. •.
> V I Thousands are daily testifying to its
m J priceless benefit. General lassitude, dull
gif ' Jg heavy sensations, continued tired feelings,
with irregular appetite and sometimes
loss of sleep. Peruna meets every ihdU
funeral services
Mr. Bailey,sympathize with him
m his bereavement.
CARRIED A GUN
In the Woman’s Home Compan
ion for October Mr. H. S. Canfield
has an entertaining article on
“The Southern Girl of Yesterday
and To-day.” He compares the
girl of the South with the girl of
the West and North and finds
much in the former's favor. He
says:
“In former days the more slaves
a girl’s father owned, the more
she felt it a requirement to become
an accomplished housewife. These
recondite arts, of which we men
pierce not the mysteries and see
only the results, are preserved to
day ‘down Southland if there is
one qualify which more than an
other endears a Southern girl to
her worshipers it is her love of
home, her pride in her home and
was lined and costs,
which amounted to $45.00,
'Children’s
The observance of
Djay ” at Hobjbs’ chapel last Sun
day was an interesting event, in
the history of that place. An in
teresting program had been well
prepared and was most excellent
ly rendered. The children acquit
ted themselves nicely, and reflec
ted credit not, only upon~-4bem-
eelves but also upon -their teach
ers. The program consisted of
songs and recitations, and inter
esting talks were also * made by
Rev. J. A. Wynne, Prof. A. W.
YabHoose and others. This school
is in a thriving condition and
Col. W. I. Hobbs, i t’s superin ten -
dent, is proud of what it has
done. \
Miss Mary Goerbing
SMOTHERED TO DEATH.
Royston, the 10-year-old son of
Mr. J. A. Nix was smothered to
death on Mr. Aaron Pass’ place
late last Tuesday afternoon. The
boy was playing on a pile of seed
cotton in an outhouse when be
fell on his head and was unable
to extricate himself. Death en
sued in a tew moments. His re
mains were carried t(3> Mossy creek
church in White couhlgr for inter
ment Wednesday.
TH AND BROWN OUT. [ friends are glad to know he is suc
ceeding so well. It will be inter
esting to know that the West is
considered the best section for
lecture work, with the East a
close second. The south is giving
increasing patronage to lectures
and other lyceum entertainments,
but it is yet considered the poor
est field for this class of work.
Mayor Mitchell reduced the sen
dees of J. H. Smith and C. L.
Brown last Monday morning and
their fines were paid* and they
were released. Their fines were
made $10 and costs each, which
amounted to $17.50, or $85.00- in
Both cases. They give bond to
ta*the feet and hence through the
. whole body the path of disease is.
often plainly marked. f\A^7l
Don’t c^tch cold from wet feet.
Wear a pair of our strong, hand-
some,, and well made SHO£S t
^ and be independent of the weather.^. ^
Men’s and Women’s Shoes are both
. made of honest material. There
is no filling up with useless trash.
Real leather and good workman
ship do not cost much here. .
Brown’s Celebrated 5-Star Shoes, from $2 to
$3.50. W. P. Taylor’s Foot Glove $8:50. All Summer
Footwear at sacrifice prices.
Early Fall Clothing is now being received in specially
attractive lots. Extraordinary values and beautiful
patterns will nredominate the coming season in our
store. A handsome lot of suits and odd pants now on
display. Unheard of reductions will be made on all
summer clothing.
SHIRTS! We are giving some heart-rending sacrifices in
shirts of all kinds, for instance: $2 Manhattan Shirts
to go at $1.50; $1 50 Manhattans at $1.25; $1 Monarch
Shirts given away at 85c. Also, big line dress shirts and
work shirts at similar reductions. Come while you can
ENON ASSOCIATION.
ROAD IS CHANGED.
Thq Enon Baptist Association
will convene with Mt. Carmel
church, 5 miles Southeast of Lula,
Ga, Friday before the third Sun
day in October. This is a young
association but a thriving one, and
it is expected that not only a large
crowd will be present but that
other churches will join. Rev.
W. L. Barrett is moderator of the
association, and Mr. M. K. Wood-
all is clerk.
The new road to Clark’s bridge
has been cut out and graded. The
road hands of the Gainesville dis
trict cut it out Friday of last week
and Saturday they graded it. The
road is in good fix far a new
thoroughfare and it is believed
that it will have a great benefit
to the people. Much feeling was
engendered over the road hands
trom all over the district having
to cut out and grade the road.
Some greatly objected to the work,
and some were opposed to chang
ing the road anyway. However,
the road is changed, the work is
done, and the bad feeling will soon
pass away. . : * 1
Atlanta, Sept. 30. —The Sol
diers’ Home was reduced to ruins
by fire at an early hour Monday
morning. -No lives were lost in
the conflagration, but the inmates
lost nearly all their personal ef
fects. Fire was discovered in the
upper part of the building at.8:15
o’clock. It started in the garbage
plant. C
Immediately this discovery was
made, and alarm was given and a
hose line attached to the tank in
the rear of the building, and the
inmates hurried from their rooms.
An appeal for aid was sent- to the
MRS. J. E. BAILEY DEAD.
*-°l. H. W. J. Ham leaves about
le fifteenth instant for a thiee
l0D ths lecture tour. He states
l &t there is a greater demand for
| 8 jectnres now than ever before.
9 is employed by five lecture
lre atiB each one of which writes
they can give him all the ex
hales he can fill. It will be
possible for him to fill all the
* offered . him. Cob Ham’s
The death of Mrs. J. E. Bailey
occurred at the home of ‘her hus
band on Findley street at 1 o’clock
a. m. last Saturday, of blood poi
son. She had been ill only a short
time and her death was a severe
shock to her friends and relatives.
Mrs Bailey was a consistent Chris
tian woman and was a member of
thA Methodist church. She is sur-
(HYNDS CO’S OLD STAND.)