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“A tape worm eighteen feet long at
least came on the s;ene after my taking two
CASCARETS. This lam sure has caused my
bad health for the past three years. lam still
taking Cascarets. the only cathartic worthy of
notice by sensible people ”
Guo. VV. Bowles, Baird, Miss.
M jI P CATHARTIC -a
himm
TRADE MARK PEOISTERED
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, the. 2ic. 60c
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Kernelj l umpen;. < liirncu, Montreal. Nei. York. SIS
Hn.TA.RAP S°ld and guaranteed bv alldrug
nu- I U-DAU gists to ( IKETobacco liablt
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.
|3t“Office over Jordan's Drug Store.
G. POPE HUGULEY M. D.,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office hours, 1-11 a. m., 2—4 p. m.
Of'fiiee Huguley building.
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.
IS'-Office over Middlebrooks Building.
A. A. MURPHEY,
LAWYER.
BARNESVILLE, GA.
C. J. LESTER,
Attorney at Law
BARNESVILLE, - - - - GA.
Farm and city loans negotiated at
low rates and on easy terms. In of
fice formerly occupied by S. N.
Woodward.
R T. Daniel. A. B. Pope
DANIEL & POPE,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Offices at Zebulon and Griffin.
EDWARD A. STEPHENS,
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
General practice in all courts—State and
Federal.
Ids’ iiCaua a'i6j;uuow'u.
W. W. LAMBDIN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESYILLE, - GEORGIA.
Will do a general practice in all the courts
—State and Federal —especially in the counties
composing the Flint circuit.
Loans negotiated.
Jordan, Gray & Cos.,
Funeral Directors,
Day Phone 44. Night Phone 58.
CITY BARBER YHOP.
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. O.
W. B. SMITH, F. D.
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGI>
EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS.
ODORIESS EMBALMING FLDIt
W, B. SMITH. Leading Undertaker
BARNESVILLE. GA.
BETTER CUT THIS OUT.
Every mother should be quickly sus
picious of worms when their children
act as if they were going to be sick.
Worms are known to be the first cause
of much ill health. Young and old
very often are sufferers from worms
when a mother thinks it is something
else. Remember, a very harmless, yet
always effective remedy for stomach,
tape or pin worms, is a 25 cent bottle of
Mother’s Worm Syrup.
ESTABLISHMENT OF NEfiRO INDUS
TRIAL SCHOOL DENOUNCED.
Mr. Rose, of The Rock, Renders Some
Strong and Practical Points in
Opposition to its Existence.
Editor News-Gazette :
I notice in the Thomaston
Times an application fora charter
which looks to the establishment of
a Negro Industrial School in the
heart of Upson county, on the
plantation of Mr. J. T. Blalock,
some three miles east of The Rock.
I had hoped that before this some
one more capable than myself
would have publicly opposed the
establishment of such an institu
tion. It is very surprising to the
people of Upson county, and in
other places where they are known,
to find the names of Mr. Blalock’s
family heading the application.
Some of the applicants for this
charter are from Boston, the birth
place of southern slanders, and
bloody shirt manipulators; the
so-called literary center of the
universe, from which emanates
volumnes of densest ignorance con
cerning the conditions existing in
the South.
Other petitioners for this char
ter were born and reared in Upson
county. They are familiar to us,
and certainly the people have a
right as citizens and property
owners and heads of families to
register a vigorous protest against
the establishment of a negro insti
tution and community by those
whose every sentiment of loyalty
to parentage and native land and
heritage should restrain them
from such a rash proceedure, such
as would be destructive to the
homes and happiness of the good
people. What I may say herein
has no reference to those petition
ers whose homes are away and
whose every instinct is foreign to
the sacred memories that cluster
about our southern homes and
firesides. They are beyond the
reach of influence and persuasion
coming from this source. Yet, I
cannot think that the petitioners,
whose names head this application
for charter, are beyond the influ
ence that can be brought to bear
upon them regarding this matter.
They certainly have not forgotten
what a noble escutcheon, what an
honorable heritage were bequeath
ed to them by a Godly parentage.
By right of birth and inheri
tance they are the legatees of
sacred memories and beautiful
sentiments which go to make up
the rich romances of one’s life be
gun in the south.
Southern loyalty certainly has
not been transplanted by contact
with foreign spirits and northern
Negrophilism. The love for the
old homestead, around which
should cling memories that are
pure and fond, most assuredly lias
not been crushed and subdued by
far less ennobling ideas gathered
from a few years residence among
those whose every impulse and in
tention are foreign to those which
tend to the good of southern man
hood and womanhood.
Certain it is, that they will not
ignore the righteous indignation
of a citizenship which has a right
to appeal to them when their
lives and property are placed in
jeopardy. They must listen to an
appeal against an invasion of an
element that will inevitably bring
discord and disruption where there
are now places of happiness, un
disturbed since the days of the
Civil war.
These Petitioners will certainly
not be the means of having trans
planted into our very midst an
institution which will forever up
set ehe possibility of a permanent
settlement of the labor question,
which will bring the price of land
ed property ruinously low and
make a chasm between the whites
and blacks that cannot be abridg
ed save by bloodshed and com-
BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1902.
plete extermination.
If these people persist in con
sumating their plans 1 am com
pelled to characterize it as an ig
noble desecration of a landed
heritage. He who loves his neigh
bor must love mankind best. If
they persist they will trample
upon and crush every sweet senti
ment of home, of kindred and
friends. They will give deaf hear
ing to the appeals of a better and
nobler nature; they will subdue
conscience and turn away from
the mute appeals of years filled
with memories that should be sa
credly remembered and cherished
as a sweet habit of the blest.
These remarks are not the re
sults of an overwrought imagina
tion, but the results of deliberate
reflection and deep seated convic
tions that 1 am right in my views
about the matter. I have already
seen something of the evil effects
that this school will exert. It is
bearing fruit already. The negroes
are considerably wrought up over
the matter and have begun to de
port themselves in a manner that
forbodes serious trouble. They
are putting forth all sorts of vag
aries doubtlessly not dreamed of
by their would-be benefactors.
1 will say here, that but for the
interference of northern Negro
philists, there would be no
negro question, no such thing
as a race problem in the south.
The negro as we find him in the
country today is neither touch
ed nor troubled by all this slob
bering poured upon him by
the north. He is an object of
anxious solicitude, of all of which
he is entirely ignorant. If left
alone he will work out his own sal
vation and make the south the best
laborer to be found in the world.
No, it is the worthless half ed
ucated class of negroes around the
cities and towns who are causing
so much sympathy (?) to pour
down from the north. This class
is utterly worthless and is a me
nace to the body politic. Yet our
friends, the petitioners, would
convert over honest negro laborers
throughout the country, into just
such an abominable horde of non
producers.
The negro is an inferoir race
and much like the North Ameri
can Indian will die out linden the
mere pressure of civilization.
He is not, as a race, capable of
receiving but little enlightenment
and will never get beyond the
stage of superstition. Futher
more, let us admit for sake of ar
gument that he can be educated
Blood.
We live by our blood, and on
it. We thrive or starve, as
our blood is rich or poor.
There is nothing else to live
on or by.
When strength is full and
spirits high, we are being re
freshed, bone muscle and brain,
in body and mind, with con
tinual flow of rich blood.
This is health.
When weak, in low spirits
no cheer, no spring, when rest
is not rest and sleep is not
sleep, we are starved; our blood
is poor; there is little nutri
ment in it.
Back of the blood, is food,
to keep the blood rich. When
it fails, take Scott’s Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil. It sets the
whole body going again—man
woman and child.
If yoo have not tried it, Rend for free sample,
its agreeable taste will surprise you.
SCOTT & EOWXE, Chemists
409-415 Pear! Street, New York.
50c. and Ji.oo; all druggists.
gg Good things are good so far as they do good. This
Ag axiom applies with force to the plain goodness of
Ag Uneeda Biscuit. They’re good because they taste good V.
fg and do good.
|| JJneeda^Biscui^g
Wk *re good for the grown man as well as the boy— as good Jg
'A for the baby as the mother. Are not only good, but keep Jg
good. You can always depend on them. That’s Jg
against your biscuit experience—and you can’t Jg
understand it until you examine the jg
In-er-seal Package in which they jg'
are always sold.
to a level with the whites indus
trially or otherwise. Then what
do we have? Just imagine the
whites and blacks of this country
equally educated. (That’s the
purpose of this northern move
ment.) You will have a condi
tion for which there is no prece
dent in all the world’s history.
Two races living together, equally
refined, educated and enlightened.
It is paradoxical and falls with
its own incumbrance. God so
made this part of the country that
we must have manual laborers,
those that must go to the field
and endure the heat and the cold.
The negro is the only laborer in
the world who can do t hat success
fully in the south or in other semi
tropical or tropical countries.
There is not an instance on record
of an educated negro doing every
day field work the year around.
The more you educate him the
less manual labor he will do.
These are facts with which any
observant man or woman is fa
miliar.
Another thing beyond question
ing is this: You put the negro
on an intellectual basis with the
whites, the certain result will be,
he will then try to force the so
cial equality; then comes exter
mination. If you educate him in
all the industrial trades, he then
comes in competition with the
white mechanic, machinist, eligi
neer, electrician etc. By necessi
ty he must work if at all side by
side with the white man. We need
but to imagine flic situation but
for a moment. Any sane person
can foresee something of the re
sult from such conditions.
1 hold that you cannot success
fully educate the negro indus
trially without first giving him
j considerable literary training.
So that this Industrial School
is nothing more nor less than
Ia project for the all-round de
' velopment of the negro.
As I have said before, two races
j of equally enlightened people will
i never live peacefully or otherwise
ion the same soil. You may search
'history in vain for an example,
j The weaker must be servants to the
I stronger. If the weaker is equally
(educated with the stronger he will
not be servant to the latter with
-1 out the cruel strokes of a tyrants
imperial sway, or a decimation
(likethe French revolution. Even
!as far back as A. D. 150 at the
battle of Chalons on the soil of
France, the liuns, a mongrel horde
from the east, and an inferior race
attempted to establish themselves
among the more enlightened
Franks. It was a world decisive
battle in favor of the superior
race for it checked the onslought
of the Mongolians and stopped the
tide of Asiatic Conquest—lts in
fluence can be felt to this day be
cause it was a struggle of the civil
ization of the west against the
savagism of the Mongolian hordes
from the far east.
The superior race with its
Roman laws of freedom and
religion of Christ was then left to
work its way on toward the grand
climax formed in the liberality of
our republican institutions of to
day. Cicsar with bis Roman
legions attempted to establish
himself beyound the Chalk Cl ill’s
of Albion but t lie Angles would
not tolerate his interference and
he never succeeded, after two
attempts, in planting a colony on
the soil of old England. We find
a trace, now and then in the
names of some English towns, the
only record left to remind us of
Ciesar’s bold attempt at Conquest
beyond the channel—Even at a
much later day, and at our very
feet do we find an utter failure in
the attempts of two distinct races
to live on the same soil. Cuba to
day is a bold refutation of the
theory now trying to be put to
practice by our so-called northern
philanthropists.
It is sufficient to say that the
Anglo-Saxon is and forever will
be the dominant race in thiscoun
try, brooking no opposition from
any source. That dominancy will
prevail at any cost.
Wisely enough did Cod put the
negro, the mule, and the cotton
field in close proximity, one useless
without the others. What would
become of our cotton lipids, our
southern commerce but for the
negro laborers. It would destroy
half the commerce of the country
to interfere with the peaceful and
quiet life of the ordinary country
negro. He cannot be supplanted
as a field laborer. 1 believe it
was a divine arrangement of Cod
in the great economic distribution
of wealth and power that the negro
as a laboring factor was placed
here among us—Any outside inter
ference will be a direct thrust at
the divine plan of an all wise
Creator.
The fact the petitioners will
also establish a white school in
the same locality does not alter the
serious consequences that will fol
low the establishment of a negro
school. From the very nature of
the case the white school will be a
failure for the lack of patronage.
1 make the paradoxical statement
that if the negro school succeeds
it will lie a failure from the fad
that it will breed dissension, dis
cord, and internal trouble, the end
of which we ca.inot foresee.
CANCEROUS
mm m mm. mtm mm Are in many respects like other ulcers or
sores, and this resemblance often proves fatal.
Valuable time is lost in fruitless efforts to heal
the sore with washes and salves, because the germs of Cancer that are multi
plying in the blood and the new Cancer cells which are constantly develop
ing keep up the irritation and discharge, and at last sharp shooting pains
announce the approach of the eating and sloughing stage, and a hideous,
sickening cancerous sore begins its
destructive work.
No ulcer or sore can exist with
out some predisposing internal cause
that has poisoned the blood, and the
open discharging ulcer, or the fester
ing sore on the lip, cheek or other
part of the body will continue to
spread and eat deeper into the flesh unless the blood is purified and the
Cancer germs or morbid matter eliminated from the circulation.
S. S. S. cleanses the blood of all decaying effete matter. It has great
antidotal and purifying properties that soon destroy the germs and poisons
and restore the blood to its natural condition. And when pure blood is
• If you have an ulcer or chronic sore of any kind, write us about it, medi
cal advice will'cost you nothing. Books on Cancer and other diseases of
the blood will be sent free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. y
Moreover the white school idea
came as a second consideration.
Beware of the Greek’s bearing
gifts, a Trojan horse filled with
black skins.
If these petitioners could hear,
as 1 have heard, the outspoken
indignation of the people on this
matter, surely they would stop a
momentand reflecton their course;
surely they would seriously con
sider before going further in a
movement which is openly oppos
ed by every man, woman and
child in this country born of South
ern womanhood In no unmis
takable terms here tli% very best
people denounced the undertak
ing. Their indignation will soon
reach the point where forbearance
ceases to be a virtue.
I would respectfully ask the
petitioners to first ascertain the
feelings of our best people before
it is too late to stop this move
ment. If they do so, lam 'con
fidently sure that they would find
themselves the only advocates of
such ii scheme. Surely they will
not put in practice a movement
which by principle and every
instinct of southern pride our best
people most heartily condemn.
If however they mean to perist
in this movement pray let them
plant their institution in some
northern city where its damning
influence cannot reach our homes
and firesides.
Mr. Editor, 1 will have consid
erable more to say on this subject
in the future if your space is not
too limited.
“Deus protector noster.”
The Rock Ga. A. A. Rose.
May, fith 1902.
For Over Sixfy Years.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
has been used for over sixty years
by millions of mothers for their
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softens the gums, allays all pain,
cures wind colic and is the best
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immediately. Sold by Druggists
in every part of the world at 25
cents a bottle. Be sure and ask
for Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing
Syrup, ami take no other kind.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat*
In February, 1899, I noticed a email
lump on my lower lip. The doctor cau
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out into an open aore. I began to take
S. 3.3. and after I had taken seven bot
tles the place healed entirely and no
eigne of the dleeaee have been eeeu
since. W. P. Brown, Hollands, S. C.
carried to the ulcer or sore the healing process
begins, the discharge ceases and the place heals
over and new skin forms. S. S. S. is a strictly vege
table blood purifier containing no mercury or
minerals of any description.