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Epos [[■: EalcNnp
Tlit' third year of my poultry busi
ness finds me with the finest lot of pure
fired poul:ry that I ever owned. My
yards are so mated and cared lor as to
produce the very best results. My
prices are very reasonable, quality con
sidered.
Light Brahmas R id Barred Plymouth
Rocks Eggs. 15 for $1.50.
Single Comb White Leghorns, Single
Comb Brown Leghorns, Rose Comb
Brown Ley horns and Black Minoreas,
15 Eggs. for SI.OO
Any information gladly given. Ad
dress
DR. F. V. TURK,
Stilesboro.
DR. HARK H. GRIFFIN,
DENTIST.
3 C FICE :
(iilreath Buildr g TTo Stairs over
NVws n 1 f'Mii 'n. Office.
CAKTEPSVILLE.. jA
Real Estate Insurance
C. H. AUBREY,
Attorney at Law.
Loans Negotiated.
Office in Sam Jones building
Wo pr mpliy obtain U. S. and Foreign
PATENTS
Send moue-t, sketch or pboj of invention for <
free report on patentability. For free book, <
Ho".’ to Securer n inr II KDIfQ write!
Patents inj I ilML>L~mMniw _to_ <
mww
DPPQffw'U.S.PAT^HTOFFICE
Some Reasons
Why You Should Insist on Having
EUREKA HARNESS OIL
Uneaualed by any other.
Renders hard leather soft.
Especially prepared.
Keeps out water.
A heavy bodied oil.
Harness
An excellent preservative.
Reduces cost of you" harness.
Never burns the leather ; its
Efficiency is increased.
Secures best service.
Stitches kept from breaking.
Oil
|s sold in all
Localities Manufactured by
Standard Oil Compitny.
Anyone sending a ske’.rh hti ' ' ; rescript ion ma
pilckly ascertain our opinion free whether ar
invention is probably patentable. Communict
(ions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent.
*nt free, oldest aeenry for seeming patents
Patents taken tl.roach Munn & Cos. recetv
tvrruil notice, without choree. in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cif
rulatior. of any srientrdo Journal. Terms, **i b
year ; four months, $1 .Sold by all newsdealers
MiINN & Cos. 36,Broadwa> New York
Branch Othce. 2o b it.. Washington. P. C
Libel for Divorce.
A r irgil A. Jones) In the Superior Court
vs. \ ot Bartow County,Ga..
Mary Jones. J July Term. 19<t4.
To the defendant, Mary Jones: You
are hereby notified, required and com
manded to be and appear, personally or
by attorney, at the superior court to be
held iu and for said county of Bartow,
on the second Monday in Julv next,
then and there to answer the plaintiffs
libel for divorce, and in default thereof
the court will proceed as to justice shall
appertain
Witness the honorable judge of said
court this 18th dav of April, 1904.
A. w: FITE, J. 8. V. C. C.
William Ihincai j In the Superior
vs. • Court of Bartow Cos.,
Rosa Duncan. ) Georgia.
To the defendant. Rosa Duncan: You
are hereby notified, required and com
manded, personally or by attorney, to
be and appear at the superior court, to
be held in and for s-id county of Bar
tow, on the second Monday in July
next, then and there to answer the
plaintift’s lih<-1 for a total divorce, and
in det'aul' thereof the court will pro
ceed as to justice appertains.
Witness' th honorable judge of said
court this April 18, 1904.
A. W. FITK. J. S. C. C
C. A 39 T O n I -A- .
Beam the The KM Hate Always Bougtt
t-
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
House Cleaning and the Health of th#
family,
I he best thing that could happen
to the average house is to get rid of
about half the stuff it contains. The
habit of homekeepers should be to
guard against household conges
tion. At the season of the year
when house cleaning is about to be
done it would be advisable for ev
ery woman to go over the house
from top to bottom in order to get
rid of all this nuisance.
Many lirtmes- are not only filled
up with a lot of rubbish, but they
are so filled with line articles that
the overcareful housekeeper fears
the air and sunshine might fade an
elegant rug, carpet or some fine
drapery. Household furnishings
that are too delicate to stand fresh
air should be eliminated at once, as
a careful and scientific housekeeper
cannot afford to give room to any
thing that is not healthy and sub
stantial. A house that is too fine
for use is seldom kept as clean as it
should be, for the reason that pure
air and sunshine are excluded, and
a home full of impure air is just as
dirty as one where soap and water
are used too sparingly. Sunshine
purifies and cannot be excluded
from the home that is well kept and
clean.
It is often a good thing when peo
ple are obliged to move. It is then
they will see the folly of collecting
unnecessary articles of furniture
that serve to crowd rooms and at
tract dust. —New York Globe.
The Linen Closet.
Plenty of space is indispensable to
insure the linen cupboard being kept
in proper order, and wide shelves, if
possible, which can be pulled out,
are convenient and conducive to
tidiness. The most suitable cover
ing for the shelves is white cartridge
paper, which is stiff enough not to
crease or get out of place. The
linen should then be arranged in as
methodical a manner as space will
permit. The sheets should he plac
ed together in pairs and tied up in
piles, according to the kind. On
a separate shelf the pillowcases
should be arranged in a similar man
ner. The towels should also have a
shelf devoted to them and should
be divided into sets; likewise the ta
ble linen on another shelf. Two
shelves should be set apart for mis
cellaneous things and one used for
sideboard cloths, tray cloths, doi
lies, etc., and the other for all house
hold cloths. If these have typed
borders, with their respective names
woven thereon, it will not be neces
sary to use descriptive ribbons, but
they should be tied into bundles
with ribbon or tape, so that the va
rious sets may not he disarranged.
The linen cupboard should be well
supplied with hags of dried laven
der, which, besides making it de
liciously fragrant, will act as a pre
ventive against the ravages of moths.
—Ladies’ Field.
Handy Writing Desks.
A handy writing desk which may
be purchased or made for a song is
simply a hoard 20 by 36 inches, says
a writer in the Washington Star.
Two screws in the back of the top
and two brass chains suspend it
from the ceiling against the wall. A
brass hook on each side and a brass
chain attached to the wail will let
it down and hold it in position when
in use.
Another writing desk is made on
the principle of a table. It is of
weathered oak and plain. The cen
ter is divided lengthwise by a parti
tion about eighteen inches high,
each side of which is fitted up
with compartments for stationery,
stamps, pens and blotters. Two
persons can thus write at the desk
at the same time, each without dis
turbing the other.
Monograms on Fine Pottery.
Have your monogram or coat of
arms on your fine pottery, coffee and
tea sets. These are the pretty things
in beautiful dark pottery, small
round ball teapots and tall, slender
coffeepots, with sugar bowls and
cream jugs to match. These are
bound with silver around the top,
the edge of the cover, the nose and
the base held in place by tiny chains
of the metal. On the sides of the
different pieces are cut out initials
in silver or a medallion upon which
can be engraved insignia, initials,
name or anything desired.
A Unique Cozy Corner.
Perhaps you have a crib about 3
by 5 feet stored away in the garret.
If so, and there is a space in the
children’s room, put it there. Re
move the drop side and make a cre
tonne cover for the mattress, add a
few sofa pillows and there is a cozy
corner for the boys or girls to “curl
up” and enjoy their books in.
To Preaerve Color.
To preserve the green color in
green vegetables, like peas and
bears, the lid should never be on
while they are boiling.
NEW THOUGHTS.
Are you growing more attractive as. you
advance in life ?
"Given a healthy body,” says Dr. R. V.
Pierce, the speeial
tist in woman’s dis
eases, of Buffalo,
N. Y., "and a
healthy mind, and
everyone can culti
vate and enjoy hap-
We must eat
properly and di
gest well to be
beautiful. It is a
fact that any form
of dyspepsia may
in a few days trans
form a clear, white
skin into a mass of
pimples and black
spots. A beautiful
woman has the
beauty of her stom-
Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical
Discovery main
tains a person’s nutrition by enabling one
to eat, retain, digest and assimilate the
proper nutritious food. It overcomes the
gastric irritability and symptoms of indi
gestion, and thus the person is saved from
those symptoms of fever, night-sweats,
headache, etc., which are so common. A
tonic made up largely of alcohol will
shrink the corpuscles of the blood and
make them weaker for resistance.
"This is to certify that I have used Doctor
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, think it's
the grandest medicine in the world,” writes Mrs.
V. M. Young, of Weir, W. Va. "I had dyspepsia
in its worst form. I decided to try your med
icine. I used five bottles, and now I am doing
my own housework. A number of my friends
also are using Dr. Pierce’s medicine and they
recommend it highly. May God bless you in
your grand work.”
Dr. Pierce believes that a tonic made with
alcohol will shrink the red blood corpuscles
and make the system weak for resistance;
that is why he avoided the use of any alco
hol or narcotics in his "Medical Discovery,”
which contains the pure extract from roots
and herbs without a particle of alcohol.
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical
Discovery.” There is nothing "just as
good ” for dyspepsia or debility.
Biliousness is cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
Bathing In Dew.
It was the ’oveliest rosebush! The
glossy green leaves were almost hid
den by clusters of pretty pink roses.
As the glad sunlight touched the
mountain top a fly came from the
heart of a rose, balanced himself on
one foot, and with his curious thou
sand eyes looked for a dewdrop.
j Just at that moment a sun ray
kissed the rosebush, and hundreds
of dewdrops shone like jewels in the
i Ugh*.
! The fly spread his gauzy wings
and traveled until he found a drop
of dew in a crumpled rose leaf.
I Then, swinging gracefully for
ward, he plunged his head and face
in the bath. It must have been cold,
for he shook himself with a little
shiver and held his face up to the
sun to dry.
i He then dipped his right front
foot into the rose leaf bathtub, and,
lifting it up to the side of his body,
shook tiny sparkles of water all over
himself, using his feet as sponges.
After bathing himself nice and
clean, he flew to a peach tree, and,
finding a pink, juicy peach, ate his
breakfast with the greatest satis
faction.
Some Big Fliers.
Of birds now in existence proba
bly the one with the greatest ex
panse of wing in proportion to the
body and with the greatest power
of flight is the frigate or man-o’-war
bird. This bird apparently flies
more by skill than by strength, for
it has no great carrying powers.
The wandering albatross, the largest
of all sea birds, is also one of our
strongest fliers. One bird was
known to fly at least 3,150 miles in
j twelve days. This bird was caught,
tagged, released and caught again.
Where the Question Came From.
Master Fred is one of those little
people whose curiosity knows no
bounds and who seem always wound
up to ask questions.
Ope day he was to have his hair
cut, and his father jokingly said it
must be cut very short to stop his
asking so many questions.
“Oh, that wouldn’t do any good,”
said Fred. “You’d have to cut my
head clean off! The questions are
inside of it.”
Very Cue-rious.
*
<■
'-j- * 1 *■
Oh, a heathen Chinee,
On the limb of a tree,
Pished with his cue in a brook.
He said, “All the day
I have fished this way.
But catch nothing by hook or crook.”
Bull Pups.
An insurance company in London
will insure any animal but a bull
pup. Some of these canine risks
were once taken at a high rate and
the bull pups died. The premium
was doubled and more risks were ac
cepted. Still the bull pups died.
Now there has been no business in
this direction for some year*.
CONDENSED STORIES.
The Young Lady and the Horrid Man
From the Twelfth District.
A story is told about an experi
ence of Mayor McClelljin a few years
ago at a social affair in Washington.
Mr. McClellan was then congress
man from the Twelfth New York
district. He was introduced to a
gushing youffg woman, daughter of
a western Democratic politician.
She was deeply interested in politics,
but her knowledge was not propor
tioned to her zeal. She had a broth
er living in New York who had am
bitions for the career of a states
man, and she was bubbling over
with the young man’s plans.
“My brother’s going to run for
congress,” she remarked by way of
introduction.
“Ah,” said Colonel McClellan.
“Y'es,” she continued, “he’s going
to run in the Twelfth district. He
thinks there ought to be a gentle
man in congress from that district,
and a horrid Tammany man ha- the
place now.”
Colonel McClellan did not disturb
her joy by disclosing the identity of
the “horrid Tammany man.”
Cashing a Yellow Chip.
A merchant who occasionally sits
in a quiet game of draw absent
mindedly dropped a yellow poker
chip in the contribution basket.
The late Bishop Dudley of Ken
tucky found out who dropped the
'OIT-
_____
“CASH me out of the game.”
chip and, putting it in his pocket,
waited until he met his parishioner
on the street.
“How much are yellow chips
worth in a poker game?” asked the
bishop casually.
“Usually $5,” was the reply.
“Well, you can just cash me out
of the game,” remarked the bishop,
as he handed out the familiar chip.
The merchant doubled the value of
the chip.—New York Times.
Wouldn’t Let Hanna Finish.
Myron T. Herrick, governor of
Ohio, referring to the hard work of
his campaign last fall, told this sto
ry about the late Senator Hanna:
The senator had made five speeches
during the day and was pretty bad
ly used up when he returned to the
private car in which the spellbind
ers were traveling at night. He ac
cepted a proffered glass of brandy,
hut before drinking it said:
“Boys, I feel like a fellonv who en
listed in the early days of the civil
war and was soon in a battle. Be
ing wounded, he was left on the field
for dead, while the army, defeated,
beat a retreat.
“As the wounded man, sore, hun-
“As the wounded man, sore, hun
gry and bloody, but still able to
walk, staggered along in the wake
of the army he talked to himself as
follows:
“‘I love my country. I love it a
lot. I am willing to fight for it.
Yes, I am willing to die for my
country. But, by thunder, when
this war is over I will never love
another country!’
“When this campaign is over,”
concluded the senator, “I’ll never” —
He was not allowed to finish the
sentence. —-Rochester Herald.
Modern Extravagance.
Concerning a very modish woman
of today, the late J ulian Rix, paint
er and critic, had this stoi*y to tell:
“Mr. Rix, I’ve come to ask you a
great favor,” she said, as she fairly
burst into his studio one fall day.
“Everything I have is at your
command, madam.”
“I want to show you some coats
of arms and ask your advice about
making a choice.”
“Which side of the family do you
wish to follow, maternal or”—
“Oh, neither! The herald says I
can choose any of these. I want
something that will look well on
whist counters.”
“Yes ? Well, what about this ?”
“That will do nicely. But don’t
you think I ought to have more than
one? Ido tire so quickly of things,
you know.”
T| Jk W W VEGETABLE SICILIAN
p/iLLo Hair Renewer
”ny not stop this falling of your hair? At this rate you will soon
be without any hair’ Just remember that Hall’s Hair Renewer
- stops fallin s_hair, and makes hair grow. “ rid 1 ’ 110 *
ffiDßi
for HaH \ 1
Strained, Sprained or Sore Muscles HUB V
and for Wounds or lojurlis K JW. \ J Jl
THERE IS NOTHMIG “JUST AS GOOD” WBJ h TWI
Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic WWm ■ ™
A dote token when tired it VfrP V’HWV
eihilaretino nnd relreehing
lOc and 50c Vfl
SHBRROUSB MEDICINE CO. Mfrs.& Props R \\ |
NEW ORLEANS, LA. M\
- ]
n—
#Wf ME TEATS m TO fflp-
Say Mister!
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS.
We have a large stock of hay, corn,
oats, cotton seed meal and hulls. Come
to see us now, or call us on the phone.
, J, E, FIELD l SON.
i
THERE’S ROOM FOR SUCCESS
IN THE GREAT SOUTHWEST
Have \ou ever considered the great advantageot this feature of the
Southwest —plenty of elbow room— w here three, five,even ten acres
mar lie hail at the price •f single aere in vour home seel Ion? It’s
worth considering," especially when the gieat productive worth of
the land is taken into account. It’s a wonderful lertile section,
there is no better agricultural section in this country, and farms
are cheap out there--in Arkansas. Oklahoma and Texas—simply
because there are more farms than farmers. Can you attord to
ovenook an opportunity ol this kind? Our illustrated booklets
will give you the particulars in detail. If not interested vourself
wrue lor them an v way in behalf of your less favored relatives and
neighbors.
(Mention thin Paper.)
■Rock Island]
P System 1
BURPEE’S seeds
ww ■• ■ Hi ■■ MW if yon want the choicest vegetables or most beautiful
flowers you should read BURPEE’S FARM ANNUAL FOR 1904,-so well known
•as the “ Leading American Seed Catalogue." It is mailed FREE to all. Better send your
address TO-OAV. W. ATLEE BURPEE l CO.. PHILADELPHIA. '
Indigestion Causes
Catarrh of tHe
Stomach.
For many years it has been supposed that
Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion
and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the
opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re
peated attacks of Indigestion inflames the
mucous membranes lining the stomach and
exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus
ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of
the juices of natural digestion This ia
called Catarrh of the Stomach.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
relieves all Inflammation of the mucous
membranes lining the stomach, protects the
nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a
sense of fullness after eating, indigestion,
dyspepsia and all stomach troubles
Kodol Digests What You Eat
Make the Stomach Sweet.
Bottles only. Regular size. $ 1.00. holding 2Vt time*
the trial size, which sells for 50 cents.
Prepared by E. C. DeWITT A CO., Chicago, 111.
S> 1 1' M. F. WORD*
* Early Risers
The famous ii.Me pills.
ONE FARE
Plus 2 Dollars
For the Round Trip
First and Third
Tuesdays ol each
Month.
S. L. PARROTT,
District Passenger Agent,
Atlanta, Ga.
JOHN SEBASTIAN,
I'asNenirt-r Traffic Manager,
CHICAGO, ILL.
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
Safe. Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist for
rHIg'HKMTKRM KX44LIMH in Bed and
Ur id metallic boxes, sealed with bl"a ribbon.
Take no other. Refuse dangerous nubntl
tutionaand Imitations. Buy of your Druggist,
or send 4e. in stamps for f’artirnlars, Teatl
monirla and “ Relief for Ladles." in letter,
by return Stall. 10,000 Testimonials. Bold by
all Druggista.
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO.
8100 Stadlaon Square, PHILA., PA,
Mention this enena
For Sale.
Ai reasonable prices: Residences on
Rowland. Leake. Erwin and Cassville
ttreets. flood farms mid mineral lands,
vs Land and Immigration Agt. of the
S.r.iSSt. L. Ry. persons seeking tn
estrnent tnrough the Railroad Cos. are
•“'erred to me. Let me list vour prop
erty.
C. H. AUBRE*,
Attv. at Law.