The Georgia cracker. (Gainesville, GA.) 18??-1902, May 10, 1902, Image 2

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Be Sure To .Register. We are informed that there are a great many people in the county who are not registered, and who therefore cannot vote m'^the state primary un less their names are entered upon the registration /books, which close in a short time. Be sure to register if you ARE YOU WISE i&rsgk ination there is no remedy to equalM “I was very poorly and could hardly get about the house. I was ti|ed out all the time. Then I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and it only took two bottles to make me feel perfectly well.”—Mrs. 51. S. Swin- ney, Princeton, Mo. ANNOUNCEMENT. . . Beginning with our next issue, which is Volume XIV., Number 1, the name of this paper will be changed from The . Georgia Cracker to the Gainesville Industrial News, which name * : • 1 ': • . . * • " - was given to this publication when founded in 1888, fourteen years ago. The day of publication will also be changed from Saturday to Wednesday. This is done for the reason that the mail schedules to country offices have been so changed as not to deliver it upon the day it is published. We believe the above changes j will meet with the approval of our ^ 4 • patrons and Tedound to the benefit of the paper. The Gainesville Industrial News more clearly identifies us and makes clearer our aims and purposes, viz: the industrial development of the best city, county and section of the * I Empire State. Therefore, beginning next Wed nesday, May 14, 1902, we will greet you as the Gainfsville Industrial News. J . The ladies wonder how Mrs. B. man ages to preserve her youthful looks. The secret is she takes Prickly Ash Bitters; it keeps the system in perfect order. Dr. E.E. Dixon & Co. Tired when you go to bed, tired when you get up, tired all the time, why? Your bipod is im pure, that’s the reason. You are living on the border, line of nerve ex haustion. Take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and be quickly cured. on the charge of defrauding the Chicago Portrait Co., of about $450, in that he j delivered portraits here and in Jackson county, collected for same and made no return to the company. He was bound over to the superior court under a $400 bond, in default of Which he went to jail. He then swore out a warrant for B. P. Hartley, the prosecutor, charging false imprisonment and will institute suit for-damages. Hartley’s bond was placed at $100 and he put up the money and was released. However, the Sheriff Ask your doctor what he thinks of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. He knows all ahont this grand old family medicine. Follow his advice and we will be satisfied. / J. C. Ayer Co.. Lowell, Mass. and a sure way to treat a case of Sore Throat in order to kill disease genns and insure healthy throat action is to take half a glassfull of water put into it a teaspoonful of Mexican Mustang should not follow the sheriff with their advertising, and which case was decidedly adversely to the “high cockalorum’s by Judge Lumpkin in the Superior court, but won by them in the making of ajiew law by the Supreme court, has gone down in ignqmmous de feat by 800 majority in the pri- I mary held in DeKalb this week, j and the “sheet” to which he| moved succumbed several months ago. - Retribution sometimes appears tg be mighty slow, but it is just as sure—and there are some, not very far away, upon whom it is I descending slowly but surely. * and with this gargle the throat at frequent intervals. Then bathe the outside of the throat thoroughly with the lini-1 lent and after doing this pour some on a soft cloth and wran/ -mvnri npr>t 1>. ic o Vn«TTTVTC {'TTTeJ? IT MAY R1C Yfll? lon S 1)6811 troubled with a running II 892 rt s E9L IW sore or nicer. Treat it at once with 3Iex£ •an Mustang tdinaaenfc and yon can depend upon & speedy cure. A TEST THAT. TELLS KILKENNY OAT FIGHT, i Candidates Terrell and Gperry, and their lieutenants, are engaged n a fierce war of words, making charges and counter charges world without end. Candidate Estill, in the meantime, is going quietly among the people, meet*- ing them face toJace and telling them how he stands upon every question in which they are inter ested. Indications are growing that he will be the next Governor of Georgia, as the people want a fair, honest, conservative busi ness man and Christian gentle men as their, chief executive. A PROGRESSIVE MOVE. The result of the bond election Tuesday emphasizes the fact that Gainesville is going forward, and not backward. The people have put themselves very emphatically on record as favoring improve ments, and soon our city is to have an excellent new school building, a system of sewerage and macadamized streets. If these are not evidences of prog ress we don’t know the meaning of that word. By these improvements our property will greatly enhance in value and our city will take rank j with the most progressive muni cipalities of the country. We must in the future, pis in! the past, stand shoulder to shoul der and continue to work for the upbuilding ot our beautiful Queen City of the Mountains. ’ ADMIRAL SAMPSON DIES. Admiral William T. Sampson, officially recognized as the hero of Santiago, has fought his last great fight and in the great battle death conquered. , He died in Washington Tues day afternoon of cerebral hemor- rage. His remains were interred at Arlington yesterday. Admiral Schley made the fol- when told of term of court, is not the William Giles of • Hall county, who is well and favorably known in this section, espec ially in and near Bowmre, where he resides. Try our Headache Tablets. Robertson &. Law. Governor Candler has appointed Dr. J; B. Rudolph of Gainesyille asoDe of the twenty-two delegates from Georgia to the American Congress of Tuberco- losis, which meets in N.ew York May 16th, 17th and 18th. Stepped Into Live Coals. * “When a child I burned my foot frightfully,” writes' W. H. Eads of Jonesviiie, Va., “which caused horrible leg sores for 30 years, but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve wholly cured me after everything^ else failed.” Infallible for Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Sores, Bruises and Piles. Sold by M. C: Brown. 25c. Mr. Robert N. Majors announces his candidacy for Tax Collector in this issue. He is one of the best citizens in Hall county and would make a good officer. He asks for support upon, hi* own merit, and says he is making the race, not for fun, but to win. Mri Monroe McConnell has just com pleted a pretty cottage on Broad street. He has just moved in and feels hap py in his new home. - Mr. Len C. Baldwin, representing the American Saving Stamp Co., has been in the city this week and has placed saving stamps with a number of lead ing business houses, as will be seen by the advertisement on-the first page of this paper. Read this offer and save yonr trading stamps. The presents to be given away, all of which are well worth having, are on exhibition at W. H. Summer’s jewelry store. Never were sIlowil in such exclusive aesi^n year for the .Young, Middle aged or old man Mr. H. D Jaquish spent a day or two in Dahlonega this week in company with some prominent mining people. lowing statement Admiral Sampson’s death: “II regret very much the death of Ad miral Sampson, and I sympathize with his family. No one has ever heard me utter one unkind wordr about him.’' - It might be truly said of Ad miral Sampson, paradoxical as it that his friends were Got About Ten Gallons. Tom Sanders’ restaurant was raided last Saturday morning and about ten gallons of blockade liquor was cap tured. Tom was not in as he had evidently heard the officers knew he had recieved the whiskey and, there fore, did not care to be about. The whiskey was in jugs, bottles and a ten- gallon can, made to fit under a buggy so&t .* Deputy collector Ben Landerd was given the whiskey by the police Long distance Phone ItS WHER! Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use la time. Sold by druggists.. may seem, his worst enemies We delight to meet such good and clever men as Messrs. Clint Simmons of Candler, Will-Crow and Felix House of Gillsville, Andy Olivet of Polasville, Henry Stephens of Murrayviile, Dr. B. W. Lockhart of the Glades, Billy Bolding and Virgil and Gus Roark of the Fork, Billy Buffington of Oconee Mills, David Jarrett of Tad more, Frank Duncan of Clinchem, Harrison Deaton of Chestnut Mountain, Z. J. Hudgmsof Sugar Hill, all of whom were in town this week. . “ RETRIBUTION COMES. One, C. H: Talley, sheriff of Be- Italb county, who gained consid erable notoriety by changing his advertisements from the DeKalb New Era to the DeKalb .Stand ard, after which the latter paper maudamused the Ordinary and other county officers calling upon them to show c. uvi why they Rttiiding material* Are you going to build a house?. If so see J. T. Hargrove at his lum ber yards. I have in stqck flooring, ceil ing,siding, framing,laths, boxing, base hoards, moulding of all kinds etc. Also get up varanda trimmings and brack ets. J* T. Hargrove. A dance was given at tjbe Horse Guards’ armory yesterday evening m honor of Miss Mary Pillow, who is visitingjher sister, Mrs. J. M. Oliver. The Sunday schools of the city' will' hold a union picnic at an early date. | The time and place have not yet been selected.