The Search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 18??-1903, July 13, 1901, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

The Search-Light. BAINBRIDGE, JULY 13, 1901. CHUBCp DIRECTORY. I’RIMHVTKHIAN Oilmen. i Uov. It, I’rtMtor. Service* iVl, inti, aril ilikpM|i SumfuyH ul 11 it. 11 atm l 7 :;P.i i». »i», I'ruyeT mwtfmr Wotlno^liij T::J0 i>. in. fluiMl iv ii. in.; J. * Until .vi-il, yttfrlli* welcome iiArnsi om;ifi(in. K«v. W. U llicliunl-*, l>. I>., PitHor.—.Her Vico-* fc\yry i*iim!uy at 11 o’clock u. m. hikI 7-.*0 p* lit. Hiibbiitli school at ti :4ft it. in. I’ni' nr mccttiiK every Tlmriwluy evening lit 7 :3o. All lire eonlliilly niviietl lontteml all tlieoe ^rvtoiw, \ f, M. 1C. (lllll 11CII, HOl'TII. 1 wJL W. V. Hintttif I’lMtut 1 .—Preuctiinp o/dTrHubbiitliut 11 a. hi. mill 7-.H) p. in. Prayer meeting U’odneMiliiy evening. Hub oath Mcltool tit 10 n. ui. All ure conlinlly In v ted to nttend ul) the hit vice*. VI.cAllen. Hlg Nuuslmuin. h. k. Ilrliixon * ALLEN & COMPANY. f:rb ii2aui{*r2®B mei}ts HAlNBHlDiE. - GEORGIA. MIIK OlllVr WK VH » AflNK. Hut her beauty was completely hidden Iiy sores. Mooches. and pimples til! she used ,Bu k mi's Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all Eruptions. Fever Sores. Boils. Ulcers. Scalds ard Files. Cure guranteed. 25c at li. L Hicks.’ A Syracuse man lost, hie life while trying to rescue bin straw lint from the water. Now if it had been a woman. 01.0 NOI.OIKK'M KXl'KKIK.VK. M. M. Austin, a civil war veteran, of Winchester. Ind., writes: ‘'My wife was sicK a hmg time in spite Of good doctor’s treatment, but, was wholly cured by Dr. King's New Life Fills, which worked wonders for her health." They always do. Try them. Only 22c at K. L. Hicks’ drug store. ItuiuoiiHc trusts in the wnrions lines of industry are being constantly organized and they argur no good for the peace and prosperity of the country. "1 wish to truthfully state to you and tiie readers of these few lines that your liodol Dyspepsia Cure is without cpies- tion. tiie host and only cure for dyspep sia that 1 liaAe ever come in oontact svitli and I fcaAo used many other pre parations." John Beam. \\ est, Middle- st x. Fa. No preparation equals Kodul Dyspepsia Cure as it contains all the natural diygestants. It will dige-t all kinds of food and can't help but do von good It. U. Hicks. Parry Lee, formerly editor of the Jackson Argus, Ims entered the rain- ialrv. It is enough to give a man remorse of conscience to run n coun try paper. Those famous little pills. DeWitt's Little EHrly Kisers, compel your liver and bowels to do their duty, thus giving yon pure, rich blood to recuperate your i ndy. Are easy to take. Never gripe. L Hicks. tT'li i s southern man for president idea, like the Keely ranter, would be a g«»od tiling if it would work, says tiie Atlanta Journal. Yes, but un fortunately it wofi’t work. \You «w.u never, cure dyspepsia by di- e'ujg. AVhat,your body needs is plenty > : good food properly digested. Then it \our stoiumch will not digest, it. Kodul D» spepsi* cure vpiil. It contains allot tl:e natuisl digestants. lienee must di- ifl every class of food and so prepare if .->• t,liat nature can use it- in nourishing i .ie body and replacing the wastt d tis sues, thus giving life health, strength. au.Utiou. pure blood and good healthy appetite. K L. Hicks, lo.\« WAMiKHisoe or freight «;aks. The car accountant is a typical in stance of development in the railroad business. In tbe earlier day lie did not exist. The superintendent was supposed to know in a general way wlmt was being done with the com pany’s cars. The custom was for railroads to carry throng! freight as far as the end of their own lines in their own cars. Then it was trans ferred to tbe cars of tbe foreign line and so assisted on the next stage to its destination. So much time, bow ever, wns lost in making the trans fers that the needs of shippers forced upon the railroads a departure which lias nmv become their general cus tom. Railroads permit all loaded cars to go through to their destina tion without transfer and allow one another a certain sum for the use of cars. This results in scattering the ears of the different roads over every section of track in the country. It produces the extraordinary prooes sious of many-colored travelers from distant lands that delight the eyes of youngsters at a railroad crossing. In theory the cars are permitted to run through over foreign roads to their destination, on the condition that on their arrival they shall be unloaded promptly and started on the journey home. In practice, the freight agent is apt to use the cars that ure most handy, regardless of their ow nership. An agent in Min ueapolis would hardly think twice before filling up a Maine Central, freight car with a consignment for -Manitoba. The agent at Manitoba would not suffer a pang of conscience when lie found himself stuffing the same Maincfcar with a cargo of sup plies for Waco, Tex. Thus are he gun the wanderings of a car to which, if it was not for the car ac countant and Ins memoranda, there would sometimes he no end. It is by no means easy to bring the wanderers home. When the Maine Central’s car accountant learns that his car ir being unduly knocked about on foreign roads his first news is that it lias spent two weeks in the yards at Minneapolis. A tracer is at once forwarded to the transportation department of the railroad which is believed to he hold ing the car. By this time the car is on its way to Manitoba. A tracer follows it there, but with the similar result of finding that the car has been dispatched for the southwest A letter to the company operating out of Waco brings an answer to the eff .cl that the ear is there, but is being held to await the disposition of the consignee; cr that it is crippled and has been run into tbe shops tor repairs, or that it has been loaded again, in which case the company promises politely to unload it and send it home immediately. The ear is promptly switched on to a branch line for some local consignee and is not heard of again except by the needy agent who captured it, until it turns up in a tail end collision in the slate of West Virginia. Luckily it, is not a hit injured, and is able to continue it wanderings, pursued by more and more vigorously worded correspondence, until somebody sends it home. "The pastor of a negro church in : i mal district pul his petition recently -,’Lawd, if you think we liez rain I . ».enough, please tell de rain ter quit' Jh«l''h?s that annoy you so will be 1 “ ■ quickly and permanently healed it von > vi.iutng; but ef you don’t think we’s ' ~ Jiud, giiough please fergi.ve us for ,JL«gli.in‘ gram, eu growlin’!’’ TOT CAUSES 3IGIIT UIRH. “I saw a pathetic thing at the meeting of Confederates in Memphis in May,” said one of the yhung men who belongs to the Louisiana divis ion, Sons of Veterans, according to the New Orleans Times Democrat, “and it impressed me with the great reverence for a flag which we find in human nature. Of course there is nothing new about the love one may have for the flag of one’s country, but the seeue I have in mind was particularly pathetic because, proba bly, of it* historic grouping and the singular sadness of the story of the Confederacy. “Hanging from a pole that pro jected over the sidewalk on Madison street, the central street of the city was a huge flag, which had gone through many ol the fierce battles ol the sixties. It was torn ami tattered and full of holes made by shot and shell during the war. But for ap in scription which it bore one might have thought it merely a stained bundle of rags, run out on the pole, for the amusement of the idly curi ous. But across the flag was written in hold letters ‘One Hundred and Fifty-fourth Tennessee, and above the inscription was a large picture of Leonidas Polk. An old Confederate who passed along Madison street stepped when he reached the point where the flag had been hung. H looked at the flag for some time The expression of his face changed and he seem to forget the crowd that jostled by him. He was, perhaps, reviewing the campaigns of Polk and the many bloody skirmishes through which he and Ins comrades had pass cd in the sixties. After he had looked at the flag for some time he walked up dose to it, felt of it, and then with the faded and almost colorless shreds he wiped away the tears that tilled his eyes and then walked silenty down the street toward Con federate headquarters.” DR. S. J CHESNUT. Physician and Sttrcem Treats diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve should be promptly applied to emits. burn and scald.-. It soothes and quickly heals the injured part. There are worthies- counterfeits, he sure to get DeWitts. K li. Hick-. There is a whole lot of wisdom the following advice now going the rounds of the press: “My son, follow not in the footsteps of the loafer, and make no example of lnm who is tired for verily I say unto you, their busi ness is overstocked, the seats are oc cupied. It is better to saw wood at twi) hits a cord, than to whittle in a loafing match and cuss the govern ment. My son, whilst thou hast left in thy skull vhe sense of a jay bird, break away from the cigarette habit, for, lo thy breath stinketh like a glue factory and thy whole appearance is less intelligent than a stone dummy. Yea, thou art a cipher with the rim knocked off.” An exchange says it takes a rich man to draw a check, a pretty girl to draw attention, a horse to draw a cart, a porns plaster to draw the skin, a toper to draw the cork, a free lunch to draw a crowd, an adver tisement to draw trade. Use De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salvo. Be ware of worthless counterfeits.’ K. L. |f • I am indepted to Quo Minute Cough Cure for my present good health aud my life. 1 was t-eated in vain by doc tors for lung trouble following la grippe. I took One Minute Cough Cure and re covered my health." Mr. E. H. Wise. Madison,. Ga h L. Hicks. Hicks. The Pope Jacob L. Beach, formerly a moni- not allowing the | bw ° f the Geor g ia Pri »°" Uommis- yoatig King of Italy to pick up all ' 8,0 "> wa8 0,1 Th ' ,r8<ia - V Ust acquitted the coin collections in the Italian! a . t Bru,,NW > ok of fraudulent transao- Six ,thousand pieces, con- i 1,0,18 as c,erk ol t,M# s : l H ‘ rior u0 " rt ' " f All call# promptly attended. OFFICE OS Bronghton Street. BOWER&Bt At’orney,.^ bainbkidge 6 Practice in the s tat . and Justice courts. ^ . ° Ki,01£: Old Sea J mg. 18 I. E. MATHIS, Contractor and Builder. B AINB RID OK, OA. Bids Submitted on All Kinds of BRICK: or : WOOD : WORK. 12 -1 tf R. J. ROONEY, Contractor and Euilder. • — • Estimates cheerfully furnished on all . . classes of building. . . J. W. BURNEY, ft^filWT ftp BUILDER BAINBKIDGE, GEOKGIA. 025“'Agent for Hardwood Mantels Doors, Sash and Bln ds, and eoutracts for first-class Cement Sidewalks. Fresh Meats OF _A.11 Kinds AT MY NEW BUTCHER - SHOP, ON W ATE It STREET. JETE H. POWELL. TOMB STONES, AND G- R AUS ATTORNEY^ Office With Towintuj j and. BAINBRIDGE j One night my brother's baby was takdi with Croup, writes Mrs. J. 0. Snider, of 'narkel. —, , , Crittenden. Ivy., It seemed it would taiuuig many rare papal cuius which ' T ' 11,1 county. Beach was formerly strangle before we could get a doctor, so i were collected by Cardinal Randi ki " g ° f uo;, " t >' Pities. He WH gave It Dr. King’s New Discovery, j h;lvu b , H| , ht b p Uo and dominated the politics of Br.ina- wlnch gave quick relief aud permanent- > _ ” ' . I wick for several veara ■ ly cured it. We always ke.-p it iu 'added tq the. fine collection m the wlut lor8e ^ r!tl the house to protect our children from | Vatican. '.Many fell into the Cardi-1 Clara: Hattie says she goes a great Croup and Whoopiug Cough. It cured nal’a hands in 18li£ for their weight [deal into company. me of a chronic bronchial trouble that in silver, when Pope Pius introduced I Bertha: That’s nolle Sim <top« i.o remedy would relieve. Infalliable ,, . , , I ' no lie. Sim goes for Coughs. Colds. Throat and Lung tlu? ^ rt ’"‘:h monyMn system and the j into the subway for a oir between truuuies. uOo and §1.00. Trial bottle- ol<1 were l ’> lilt ’ half-|nst five and six o’clock every ,f -o t*ee at li.'L tlicks government. j evening.—Boston Transcript. Do you contemplateerecting a monument or toiub ?tone. or in any way im proving i ouv cemetery lot? if so, write me at CUTHBERT* GA. 1 will submit designs and pnees and will call at voar home to see you. The best work of all Grades of Granite and luTastle PRICES TO SUIT YOU. T. G. SPEARMAN, Cuthbert, Ga. To the Public; 1 nave aj very large spring and sum mer pasture near town where 1 will take cows at morning and graze them during the day. returning same at night, for the sum of §1.25 per month. GEO. D. GRIFFIN. BO YEARS' L EXPERIFNCF Patents TRADE MARKS Desiqns Copyrights Ac. a 5Ketrh an<1 description may quickly uscertnin our opinion free whether an invention Is probably patentable. Communlca- Handbook on Patents Bent tree. Oldest ucency for securing patents. Patents taken through Mann & Co. receive tpccial notice, without charge. In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest cir- enlatlon of any srtentifle Journal. Terms. $3 a *** newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 38,BrMd * 1 '!'' New fort Branch OUloe. 625 F St. Washington, O.C. W. I. GE Attorney andCounwl* COLQUITT, _ | Office: In Courtl ALBERT H. RM Attoney at y BAINBKIDGE, - .7 Office Over Bainbridgel J- STERLING R0| ATTORNEY AT BAINBKIDGE, . Will practice malld JOE. H. GUI Attorney at It BAINBRIDGE. - t&~ Will practice lav teg courts, except the criminal! city court of Decatur coj Fuono in umce. JOHN C. CHfl ATTORNEY-ATlil BAINBKIDGE. Will practice law in allij 1 JkTTORXTE YS ATI Bainbridge, Will practice in all tlieFeJaj Courts Offices: L’p^j Building. SZC ZTX7SSSJ Attorney-at-Iq BAINBKIDGE. - Will pi.mtice in all the t lal attention given to real I mercial and corporation pjj Office in old Bank F ALBERT GR Tongoral A COLQUITT, ■ 0 Best Work. Shtinfactiw DENTAL SUROj BAINBRIDGE, IfcjyOffice—Corner WiH streets, in Chason BuildiuW DR. H. D- W Dentist) —offich Over H. B. Ehrlich ij Bainbridge. re For $1.30 the i’wioe a-iVeek AtliJJ* Juvenile Journal, oue ve>j We send rf Light »»! j Copatitution. J, VVesefO Light and Do Yon Want Job Work? „ ? f ! t Lnvelopes, Cards, [Note Heads'. Letter Heads, Bill Heads. Statements Dodg. 'ers. Checks. Blanks. jPosters. Business Cards. Receipts, etc r.ni . oal1 fjHE Search-Light Job Office to get them. Prices cheap and •vorkdo neat oneTrv us. Week Savannah Nen- 1, FOR $1.50 W esendj Light* a-Week New York New subscription'C r these offers. Subscnr AT ON<