Newspaper Page Text
BEST FOR THE
BOWELS
If you haven’t a regular, healthy movement of the
bowels every dav, you’re ill or will he. Keep your
bowels open, and’ho well. Force, fu the shape of vio
lent physic or pill poison, is dangerous. Ihe smooth
est, easiest, most perfect way of keeping the bowels
clear and clean is to take
EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Cood, PoGood,
Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10, 25. and 60 cents
Ker box. Write for free sample, ami booklet on
ealth. Address *33
STERLING REMEDY COMPANY, CHICAGO or NEW YORK.
KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. J. M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Residence: Thomaston street.
’Phone No. 25.
A. PIERCE KEMP, M. D.,
GENERAL PRACTITIONER,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Jordan’s Drug Store.
Residence: Thomaston street: 'Phone 9.
C. H. PERDUE,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE GA.
tS”Offlce over Jordan's Drug Store.
G. POPE HUGULEY M. D.,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office hours, 1-11 a. m., 2—l p. m.
J. A. CORRY, M. D.,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office: Mitchell building.
Residence: Greenwood street.
J. P. THURMAN,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Jordan Bros’ drug store.
Residence, Thomaston street; ’Phone, No. 1.
Calls promptly attended.
GEO. W. GRICE,
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Work done promptly and neatly.
over Middlebrooks Building.
A. A. MURPHEY,
LAWYER.
BARNESVILLE, GA.
C. J. LESTER,
Attorney at Law
BARNESVILLE, - - - - GA
Farm and city loans negotiated al
low rates and on easy terms. In of
fice formerly occupied by S. N.
Woodward.
R T. Daniel. A. B. Tope
DANIEL & POPE,
ATTOENETS-AT-LAW
Offices at Zebulon and Griffin.
EDWARD A. STEPHENS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
General practice in all courts—State and
Federal.
tSr“Loans Negotiated.
W. W. LAMBDIN,
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
Will do a general practice in all the courts
—State and Federal —especially in the counties
composing the Flint circuit.
. Doans negotiated.
Jordan, Gray & Cos.,
Funeral Directors,
Day Phone 44. Night Phone 58.
CITY BARBER /HOP.
Hair cutting a specialty, by
best of artists. My QUININE
HAIR TONIC is guaranteed to
stop hair from falling out.
0. M JONES. Prop.,
Main street, next to P. 0.
W. B. SMITH, F. D
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGI>
EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS.
ODOR! ESS EMBALMING FLUII
W, B. SMITH, Lending Undertaker
BARNESVILLE. GA.
“A neighbor ran in with a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Colic Cure and Diar
rhoea Remedy when my son was suf
fering with severe cramps and was
given up as beyond hope by my regu
lar physician, who stands high in his
profession. After administering three
doses of it, my son regained conscious
ness and recovered entirely within
twenty-four hours,” says Mrs. Mary
Haller, of Mt. Crawford, Va. This
Remedy is for sale by
Jno. H. Blackburn
i ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
The Many Uses That May Be Made of
Paper In the Kitchen.
A housekeeper in The National
Stockman suggests many ways to
use paper in the kitchen. She says:
One can hardly realize until trial
is made what a saving there may be
by using paper instead of the dish
cloth for wiping greasy pans and
dishes. I fold a soft newspaper so I
can with a knife run through many
folds at once and cut into conven
ient size, make a hole through the
corners of many thicknesses at once
with the.large jneajt fork or shears
points —hang the whole bunch with
in reach of the place in which I
stand at dishwashing. It is easy to
take a piece to wipe away anything
that ought not to go into the dish
water. When the outside of the
milk pail has some extra soiling on
it, take a piece of paper, dip into
water, wipe the milk pail and put
the paper in the “burning bucket,”
as we call the trash bucket. Of
course we do not want the outside
even of the milk pails to get so
dirty, but on the ordinary farm they
sometimes do, and I try to do the
next best thing to keeping them
clean —that is, cleaning them in the
easiest way.
In dressing a turkey or even chick
ens I lay some thicknesses of paper
on the table, and when done I can
take up the whole mess and throw
what the cats and living chickens
will eat to them and the paper to be
burned, saving the soiling of any
thing that has to be washed.
Downfall of China.
As almost all cooks have a “china
record” that is lamentable, the con
dition of the china closet in the
average household is a cause of con
stant annoyance to the housewife.
The final sorting of table furnish
ings after the festivities are over is
always accompanied with forebod
ings on the part of the mistress who
has learned by experience that every
dinner or luncheon marks the fall
of some fragile piece of pottery.
Many a hostess has been forced to
limit her guest list to the number
of available cups and plates, and the
less vigilant in household matters
have often been horrified to behold
the most important or critical guest
surrounded by a collection of china
that looked liked nothing so muejj
as the odds and ends to be found on
a bargain counter. Dealers in fine
china are making prices just now
that might be found more than in
teresting to those with whom the
replenishing process is always in or
der, and many a rare bit of ware
that would serve nicely as a dining
room decoration can be picked up
at one-half the usual cost. —Pitts-
burg Dispatch.
Linen Covers.
In the way of fancy table linens
one that is decidedly new is a double
effect. The center is of some color
around which is appliqued a very
heavy border of white, the width of
the border being about as much as
the diameter of the center. The
edges are all frayed out, the color
and the white intermixing in a very
effective manner. The white mate
rial at both edges is frequently em
broidered, the embroidery tacking it
on to the under piece of the mate
rial. The whole is decidedly strik
ing, novel and effective.
Another idea in fancy table linen
shows embroidery of silk and drawn
work both worked up in the same
design on a piece of linen. The
drawnwork is made to fit in most
neatly and forms a part of the de
sign and is not, as is frequently the
case, a separate adornment.
Colors That Blend.
An error which the inexperienced
house furnisher often makes is to
put two reds of different tones in
rooms that open into each other. A
hall perhaps will have terracotta on
the walls and there will be red in
the dining room to which it leads.
This is wrong. Put a negative color
on the hall, a tone of buff or mastic,
with a small broken figure in self
tones, that there may be no sugges
tion or strong contrast to the red
of the adjoining room. If blue is
to be used in the dining room, not
too light a yellow may be put on
the hall. It is these jarring ar
rangements in adjacent rooms that
may destroy wholly an effect in ei
ther apartment that by itself or
properly complemented would be al
together charming.
To Keep Ice In a Sickroom.
A medical journal tells how a
saucerful of shaved ice may be kept
in a sickroom through a day and
night, if need be, even with a fire in
the room. Put the saucer holding
the ice in a soup plate and cover it
with another; then place the soup
plate thus arranged on a good heavy
pillow and cover it with another pil
low, pressing the pillows so that the
plates are completely imbedded in
them. The paragraph adds that
one of the best ice shavers is an old
jackplane set deep. It should be
turned bottom upward and the ice
!■:.•.cd L.-kward and forward over
the cutter. • v’/XY' *,
COMMISSIONER’S REPORT.
Commissioners of R. and R. Pike
county, April Ist, 1002. Present:!
Hons. E. C. Akin, W. M. Hartley
and AV. D. Dingier. The follow
ing bills were approved and order
ed paid:
J. D. Hightower, cables and
supplies for bridges if 28.9S
J. C. Slade, four kegs of nails
for bridge 13 00
AV. N. Moore, rebuilding bridge,
Ist dist 2 50]
W. A. Whatley, rebuilding
bridges 12 50
Jordan Meadows, work on
bridge 1100
J. W. and J. C. Slade rebuilding
six bridges 213 00
J. W. and J. C. Slade,lumber for
bridges 73 46
Dr. A. G. Harp, rebuilding a
bridge and material 36 00
G. W. Allen building 2 bridges.. 12 00
J. W. Evans, rebuilding bridges 17 50
Sam Collier, cutting ditch 3 60
D. P. Blake, lumber for bridge.. IS 66
W. J. Gregg, rebuilding and
hauling lumber 39 50
W. R. AVright, building chimney
at county farm 9 50
S. J. McDaniel, 5 bushels of peas
for county farm 3 75
Jim Sutton, state witness 2 50
Elliott and Harley, building
houses at county farm 22 00
D. P. Blake lumber for bridge.. 22 25
D. P. Blake, vaccinations 3 70
AV. Marshal, hauling lumber for
road 1 06
C. AV. Green, janitor for court
house and work on pipe 7 75
C. AV. Blount, lumber for bridge 10 54
J. E. Eppinger, lumber for
bridge 2 63
C. H. Harper, supplies for coun
ty farm 19 43
B. J. Milner, repairs on bridge.. 12 20
Gid Oliver, work on bridge 2 00
AV. H. Newton A Cos. bushel
lime 50
E. F. Dupree, salary as judge of
County Court 50 00
J. S. Milner, lumber for bridge. 12 45
J. S. Milner, lumber for bridge. 495
J. S. Milner lumber for bridge 666
AV. S. Hoyle, hauling rock on
road 1 20
Pierce A Cos., supplies for county 90U
J. I’. Seagraves, lumber for
bridge 10 12
C. B. Perkins, nails and road
book 95
S. S. Marsh, lumber for road . 483
AV. D. Bishop, lumber and cut
ting right of way 11 86
S. S. Barrett, lumber for bridge. 240
J. P. Crawford, lumber for
bridge 7 50
Ernest Reeves, lumber and rock
in washout 34 90
Oliver Kent hauling rock 2 50
C. L. Cox, hauling rock 4 00
J. A. Garland, repairs on bridge 31 40
H. G. Jordan, nails for bridge.. 12 01
J. T. Wright, work on bridge... 4 00
11. T. Sikes, work on bridge and
lumber for same 80 15
Alexander and Legg, lumber for
road 1 06
J. S. McDaniel lumber for
bridges .. 8 77
Alexander and Legg, lumber for
Barker’s bridge 128 00
AV. J. Reeves, lumber for bridge 12 13
T. E. AVhittle, lumber and re
pairs on bridge 223 33
AV. T. Childers, work on bridge. 500
M. G. Harrison, supplies for
county 3 05
G. AV. Allen, repairs on bridge.. 4 50
AV. F. Gresham, lumber for road 320
G. AV. Allen, tools and nails
for road 10 25
G. AV. Legg, lumber for bridge.. 40 76
AV. A. Whatley, lumber for
bridge 2 63
G. AV. Evans, repairs on bridge. 22 50
AV. J. Akin, filling washout in
road 5 00
W. J. Akin and P. AV. Ethridge
repairs on bridge 22 00
F. B. AVilder, chimney irons for
county 80
AV. J. Franklin, supplies for
county 11 01
Mrs. M. J. Green, right of way
for public road 25 00
R. J. Maugham, lumber for road 225
AV. J. Hartley, work on heater. . 100
H. Crawley, repair on bridge 20 00
B. A. Moore, hauling rock for
road 2 75
B. A. Moore, hauling sills for
bridge 4 00
H. L. Green, (Coroner) two in
quests, Moses Stenson, Col.,
and T. AV Dumas, white 34 00
Green Mangham A Cos., supplies
for county 1198
J. S. Park, lumber for road 3 33
William Brown, damage 3 (XI
AV. J. Gregg, repairs on bridge.. 11 <X)
C. J. Adams, cutting ditch 6 35
Sullivan, Slade A Cos., supplies
county 2411
Floyd Slade, attending ram Mar 200
C. H. Hartley, agent, fruit trees
Let St
Atone.
Scott’s Emulsion is not a
good medicine for fat folks.
We have never tried giving it
to a real fat person. We don’t
dare. You see Scott’s Emul
sion builds new flesh. Fat
people don’t want it. Strong
people don’t need it.
But if you are thin Scott’s
Emulsion is the medicine for
you. It doesn’t tire you out.
There is no strain. The work
is all natural and easy. You
just take the medicine and
that’s all there is to it.
The next thing you know
you feel better — you eat better
—and you weigh more. It is
a quiet worker.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE. ChemitU, 409 Pearl St., N. Y.
40c tod ft .00-, all druggists.
for county 6 50
B. Z. AVilson, Supt. Cos. farm... 20 00
Tom Kendrick, work on County
farm 6 00
B. Z. AVilson, supplies for pau
pers on farm 2 50
Charlott Battle, cooking and
washing for paupers 6 00
R. G. Alangham hauling rock on
the road 2 00
AV. J. Franklin, supplies for
county 2 15
J. C. Slade, lumber for bridge.. 15 70
J. W. and J. C. Slade, building
bridge 208 00
J. C. Slade, hauling rock to fill
washout 3 00
S. S. Slade hauling rock for road 17 50
J. AV. Cauthen, lumber for road 733
Pike County Journal, publish
ing commissioners report 1 50
Mrs. E. Thomas, lumber for
bridge 8 00
J. AV. Means, ordinary, lunacy
trial, George Daniel 14 OKI
E. li. Connally, filling washout. 2<X)!
AV. N. Blake, lumber for road... 85 i
AV. TANARUS, Cockran putting in terra
cotta 2 50 I
F. AV. Stegar, lumber for road . 80 ]
AV. D. Dingier 2 day regular ser
vice 6 00!
AV. M. Hartley, R. R. fare to At
lanta and fixtures court house 6 30
T. M. Willis, repairs on bridge.. 3 (X)
Dave Franklin, hauling lumber
for bridge 2 50
J. C. Lifsey nails for bridge 7 80
J. H. Milner, sheriff, carrying
prisoners from Zebulon to Mc-
Donough ...('. 5 23
J. H. Milner, jail expenses
and waiting on county court.. 32 80
C. AV. Oliver, board for Feb. and
March 15 80
B. S. Akin, Clerk services ’ 15 (X)
B’ville Planing Mills lumber for
road 4 45
J. H. Milner, sheriff, insolvent
cost C. C 93 50
J. M. Smith, sol’g P. T.C. C. in
solvent cost 5 00
Mrs. 1). A. Speigle, burial ex
penses for Mrs. Carden, pauper 4 (X)
G. J. Fincher postage stamps .. 1 00
E. C. Aiktn, )
AV. .M. Hartley, > Corn’s
AV. I). Dingler. \
B. S. Akin, clerk.
For Over Sixty Years.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
has been used for over sixty years
by millions of mothers for their
children while teething with per
fect success. It soothes the child,
softens the gums, allays all pain,
cures wind colic and is the best
remedy for Diarrhoea. It will
relieve the poor little sufferer
immediately. Sofd by Druggists
in every part of the world at 25
cents a bottle. Be sure and ask
for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing
Syrup, and take no other kind.
MODERN METHODS.
That are Applied to Criminals and
Orphans of Georgia.
The modern spirit considers
nothing as worthless, but seeks to
find what all kinds of so-called
waste are useful for, and utilize it.
See how the great packing houses
use the hair and hide, the blood
and bone, the horns and hoofs
and every fibre of the slaughtered
beef. This is true of all modern
manufacturing, and the fortunes
are made out of the former waste.
Shall we not use this method
with waste humanity? The
churches have done great work on
many lines. The state has res
ponsibilities, too. Today many
valuable men, because they have
committed some crime, are sent to
the wasts pile to he punished and
not saved. There is a valuable
man in most of these, which, by
the state wisely developing their
hands, heads and hearts, we can
save the useful life. Today the
lack of this developemet, and the
education received from older
criminals turns them back to us
confirmed criminals. Parental
neglect of hand and heart is large
ly responsible for these being
criminals, but the state confirms
them in it.
Georgia’s Prison Commissioners
should be empowered to use mod
ern methods of hand and brain to
save every criminal to a useful
life; particularly ought this to be
done for the young. We need a
great state Juvenile Reformatory.
The Orphans Home at Decatur,
Hapeville, Macoh and elsewhere,
are doing a great work for desti
tute children, many of whom
come from fearful immoral sur
roundings, and by modern train
ing of the whole child, they are
sending them out to bless the
state. This they do without help
from the state, hut through the
voluntary gifts of the public. Let
the people give gladly to save
these children. Let there be no
“waste pile” for human beings in
Georgia, hut let her find nuggets
of real gold in every child, or
thoughtless youth, or accidental
criminal in her borders.
11. L. Crumley.
BETTER THAN PILES.
The question has been asked, “in
what way are Chamberlain’s Stomach
A Liver Tablets superior to pills? Our
answer is: They are easier and more
pleasant to take, more mild and gentle
in effect and more reliable as they can
always be dependend upon. Then they
cleanse and invigorate the stomach
and leave the bowels in a natural con
dition, while pills are more harsh in
effect and their use is often followed
by constipation. For sale by
Jno. H. Blackburn.
|Y. APRIL 24, 1902.
A Daily Problem
Solved
It’s discouraging work to fill the lunch hag day
after day. It’s uninviting to open the lunch bag
and find the eternal bread, bread, bread. Bread is
good, but it’s monotonous —it lacks novelty.
Break the monotony with the new delicacy—
Uneeda
Biscuit
Nutritious—healthful —satisfy- X* 'X
ing. Uneeda Biscuit are sold f \
only in the In-er-seal Package, I 1
which keeps them airtight and
moisture proof.
MOTHERHELPS
Some Timely and Readable Sug
gestions For Mothers on the
Bringing up of Children
and Other Branches
of Womanhood.
Prepared for the NK\ys*GAZETTE.
“Motherhood is at last, the
crown of womanhood, in compari
son of which the diadem of royalty
is but a glittering toy. To infuse
the mind with elevated thoughts,
to train the sensibilties to the
touch of delicacy, and generosity,
to inspire an ambition to he good
and useful and thus evolve solid,
symmetrical character, is the pro
vince of maternity which finds its
complement in the sphere of the
divine.
This work, in the order of Prov
idence, stands next to, and is a
part of that of redemption.”
THE JUDGE’S MOTHER.
Mrs. Smith had a paper to write
for her club. The subject she had
chosen was: How can women
uplift the coming generation?”
She was puzzled to choose the
best of the many ways which sug
gested themselves to her. Should
it be through art, lecturing, liter
ature or good reform?
She confided herdifficulty to old
Judge Adams, who was sitting with
her husband on the veranda.
“I can only give you my expe
rience,” he said. 1 was one of five
brothers. All were men who exer
cised a strong influence in the
world, and each one of - us owed
his bent and force of character to
our mother,
“Our father died when we were
children. Mother made us wlmt
we were. Until we were gray-lmir
ed men we went to her whenever
we were in perplexity. ‘Mother,’
we would say, ‘what is the right
thing to do in this case?’ She
knew nothing of law or politics,
but she always knew the right. I
think,” said the judge gravely,
“that my mother influenced the
next generation to her own more
strongly than any other human
being I. ever have known.”
“She no doubt had a powerful
mind and a broad education?”
asked Mrs. Smith.
“No.” The judge smiled. “She
got her hold on us in very simple
ways. I remember one of them.
When we came home from school
on cold days, mother was sure to
he waiting beside a big fire. Off
OLD PEOPLE
Do not always receive the sympathy and attention yjjtf
they deserve. Their ailments are regarded as purely
imaginary, or natural and unavoidable at their time of
life. Disease and infirmity should not always be
ated with old age. The eye of the gray haired grandsire
may be as bright and the complexion as fair as any of i
his younger and more vigorous conipani
Good Blood Is tho soorot of ho 'y old ago, for it regulates
and controls every part of the body, strengthens the nerves, makes the
muscle3 elastic and supple, the bones strong and the flesh firm; but when
this life fluid is polluted or poisoned and loses its nutritive, health sustain
ing elements, then there is a rapid decline of the vital powers, resulting
in premature old age and disease. Any derangement of the blood quickly
shows itself in an ulcer, sore, wart, tumor or some other troublesome
growth upon the body, and rheumatic and neuralgic pains become almost
constant, accompanied with poor digestion and cold extremities.
S i—i ,—| S. S. S. being purely vegetable, is the safest and
best blood purifier for old people. It does not shock
yN or hurt the system like the strong mineral remedies,
hO) but gently and thoroughly cleanses the blood and
J stimulates the debilitated organs, when all bodily
ailments disappear. S. S. S. is just such a tonic as old people need to
improve a weak digestion and tone up the Stomach. If there is any heredi
tary taint, or the remains of some disease contracted in early life, S. S. S.
will search it out and remove every vestige of it from the system.
Write us fully about your case and let our physicians advise and help
you. This will cost you nothing, and we will mail free our book on blood
and skin diseases. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY. Atlanta. 6a. V
came our wet shoes and stockings;
she rubbed the cold feet warm with
her own hands. Then there was
always a huge brown jug waiting
before the lire with roasted apples
and sugar and hot water in it, and
each one had his mug of the deli
cious stuff; and we sat and grew
warm and joked and laughed, and
no doubt opened our little hearts
to the dear wise woman.
“All day long she was our com
rade. We carried to her all our
secrets and miseries when we were
men, as we had done when we were
boys. Two of us were ministers,
two legislators who helped to form
the laws of new States, but I
doubt, if one of ns ever took an
important step in life without
being influenced by the opinion of
that one good woman.”
Mrs. Smith looked uncertainly
at her paper on which she had
scribbled “artists, lecturers, civil
and political reformers.”
“You think, then,” she said,
“that woman’s strongest hold
upon the world is at home, through
love and a Christain life?”
The Judge’s eyes twinkled. “I
can tell you only what I know. £
cannot decide for the world,” he
said. —Youth’s Companion.
1 GAVE THEN MYSELF.
Said a mother to me one day:
“When my children were young I
thought the very best thing £
could do for them, was to give
them myself. So I spared no pains
to talk with them, to teach them,
to pray with them, to he a loving
companion and friend to my child
ren. I had no time to indulge
myself in many things which £
should have liked to do. I was so
busy adorning their minds and
cultivating their hearts’ best af
fections that 1 couid not adorn
their bodies in fine clothes, though
J kept them neat and comfortable
at all times
“I have iny reward now. My
sons are ministers of the Gospel;
my grown-up daughter a Christian
woman. J have plenty of time
now to sit down and rest, plenty
of time to keep my house in order,
plenty of time to indulge myself,
besides going about my Master’s
business wherever He has need of
me. T have a thousand beautiful
memories of their childhood to
comfort me. Now that they have
gone out into the world I have the
sweet consciousness of having done
all I could to make them ready
for whatever work God calls them
to do.” —Life of Faith.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cura
Digests what you eat*