The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, June 26, 1902, Image 2

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Now= Is the Time! For —find morn the butter, for it put* new life in apparel, and a different as pect to man. '> on 11 find in my store many brands of Laundry and Toilet Soap. As Ive said before, nobody undersells me, as I don’t al low t his thing. I’ve got a lot of Oa. Cane Syrup that IM be glad to dispose of for a little 1 lit of money. There is no glucose in it yet, and on this account you can buy it cheap if you buy it quick. 1 ’ve just received the nicest lot of .. .FANCY CRACKERS. .. to be found in our town. To the lovers of good things these will fill the bill. I’ve got to many Mason’s Fruit Jars, —quarts and halves —also plenty of rubbers for vour old jars. If you are the business man, I think you’ll see me before you buy these things. I’ll sell you flour close, and if you want a little meat — I’ve got it too. 1 ’m going out of the (’rock ery, tinware and glassware business. Your money talks and talks loud on this stuff’ at my store. I’ll expect you soon, Jim Reeves A Thoughtl'n 1 Mother Sayh: That if you want your children to bo court<'ouh you must treat thorn with respect. That they will invariably copy your manners, so you must take cure that they are the best. That you should be as careful of their feelings as you wish them to be of the feelings of ot hers. That when it is necessary to ad minister reproof, it should be given in private. The most, children are sensitive on this point: it injures their self tespoet, and they fool it acutely, though they are not able to express it in words. That to tell a child in public that it has been rude or lacking in good breeding is as unwarrant able as it would be to toll a guest 80. That it is no excuse to argue that you are doing it for the purpose of making the child better and more thoughtful.—Exchange. A TEXAS WONDER. HAIil/H (iItK.VT lUSC'OVKHY. One small bottle of Hall’s Groat I'is covery euros all kidney and bladder troubles, removes gravel, euros diabe- j tes, seminal emissions, weak and lame backs, rheumatism and all irregularity of the kidneys and bladder in Imth men and women, regulates bladder troubles in children. If not sold by your druggist, will send by mail on re ceipts df sl. Otto small bottle is two months’treatment, and will cure any ease above mentioned. Hr. K. \V. Hall sole manufacturer I*. O. Box St Louis. Mo. Send for testimonials. Sold by \V. A. Wright. Martin, Tenn., June S, 1901. This is to certify that 1 have used Hull’s Texas Wonder for kidney trou ble and have never found anything its equal. Its merits are wonderful. Try it, as 1 did, and be convinced. RkV. It. C. WIIITNKLL. HICK’S CAPUDINE Cures all Headaches, Colds, LaGrippe, Neuralgia, etc. Your money back if it fails. 15 and 26# at all*Drugstores. For sale by Jordan Itros. A W. A. Wright. Miss Bennett Entertains. Miss Ida Bennett gave a pleasant little party Thursday evening, at the home of Mr.and Mrs. A. O. Bennetts, on Forsyth street, in honor of her guests, Misses Clyde Doe, Ophelia Bridges and A Hie Smith, of Griffin, who were tin; charming visitors to her during commencement. It was one of the most enjoyable events of com mencement festivities. The young people were turned loose in this hospitable home and were free to amuse themselves as they saw fit, which they did. There is no more hospitable place in the city the c ty than at this home where you are made to have a good time in spite of yourself. Music, vocal and instrumental, was rendered which added to the entertainment greatly. Cream and cake was served as refreshments in a dainty design. The affair was exceedingly pleasant to all those who were so fortunate as to be there. Those present on this occasion were: Misses Lucile Blackburn, Olive Wi'liams, Priscilla Stroud, Annie Latnbdin, Lottie Akin, Collier, Summers, Laura Summers, Clyde Doe, Allie Smith, Opehlia Bridges, Marie Wilhoit, Mirta Monsal vatge and Hattie Jordan. Messrs, Robert Brown, Jackson Bush, Pearce Hammond, Brough ton Hardy, Clarence Willis, Leon Porch and George Mitchell. Thousands Saved By DR. KIND’S NEW DISCOVERY This wonderful medioine posi tively cures Consumption, Coughs Colds, Bronohitis, Asthma, Pneu monia, Hay Fever, Pleurisy, La- Grippe, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup and Whooping Cough. Every bottle guaranteed. No Cure. No Pay. Prico 50o.&$l. Trial bottle free. Thoughts on Womankind. A woman’s power avails most when it is asserted least. I take it for granted that a man and a woman are of the same worth and not of the same kind. A woman's special and inesti mable value in the world lies just in the qualities which make her womanhood. The worst slavery is t hat which makes a woman pretend to be a man. She can never do anything in the world that will he worth half as much as what she can be. But she can never be her best unless she does something and docs it well. Strenuous life for girls is like martial music for violins. They can play it, but it does not sound well. There is an air pure, serene, stimulating, in which it is pleas ant to live and easy to work and sweet to rest. Some people are alVays surrounded by an influence which has the same effect upon the spirit that this tine air has upon tlie body. It. comes from the heights of a clean, steady, cheerful, unselfish life. The wom an whose soul walks in these lofty places carries their emanations with her wherever she goes, and has power to lead others upward. —Henry Van Dyke in Harper’s Bazar. READ IT IN HIS NEWSPAPER. George Schaub, a well known German citizen of New Lebanon. Ohio, is a constant reader of the Dayton Volkszeitung. He knows that this paper aims to advertise only the host in its columns, and when he saw Chamberlain's Pain Balm advertised therein for lame back, he did not hesitate buying a bottle of it for his wife, who for eight weeks had suffered with the most terrible pains in her back and could get no relief. He says: “After using the Pain Balm for a few days my wife said to me, ‘I feel as though born anew,’ and before using the entire contents of the bottle the unbearable pains had entirely vanished and she could again take up her household duties.” He is very thankful and hopes that all suffering likewise will hear of her wonderful recovery This valuable liniment is for sale by Jno. H. Blackburn. THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, .TUNE 26, 1902. CONDENSED STORIES. What Senator Platt Has Learned About Newspaper Making. Senator Platt of Connecticut says that he has learned one great truth about the newspaper business after many years of reading them. A number of newspaper men, says the Washington Post, went in to see him after a meeting of the commit tee on Cuba to learn what had been accomplished toward the Teller in vestigation. Senator Piatt made a very brief statement regarding the proposal to call President Havemey er and others of the sugar trust, and it was suggested to him that a little more detail would he accepta ble, as a column story on the sub ject would be desired by the news papers. Mr. Platt smiled quizzically at the newspaper men a moment and then told of his great truth. “The newspapers nre not inter ested in anything that is completed. You want a column about a subject that has not yet developed, but when I looked in the newspapers this morning to see what they said about the agreement on the Chinese exclusion bill I could find almost nothing.” The newspaper men agreed with him. Joked a Future Senator. Ex-Senator Edward 0. Wolcoct established a law and real estate of fice with his brother in George town, Colo., at the outset of his ca reer, but as the law department of the concern was unprofitable he de- “SAY, YOUNG FELLF,!:, WHICH OF YOU ALL IS EDV" cided to move on to a neighboring camp, where silver had been struck, lie packed his belongings on a don key and at the last moment decided to take with him the firm’s old sign, “Ed Wolcott & 8r0.,” which had just been replaced by anew one. When he arrived at his destination, the miners gathered around and looked him over, staring hard at the sign strapped on the donkey. “Say, young feller,” drawled one of them, “which of you all is Ed?” Stockton’s Famous Riddle. Frank 11. Stockton’s famous sto ry, “The Lady or the Tiger?” set everybody guessing. It was a topic of conversation when Mr. Stockton' met 1 halyard Kipling at a reception and informed the latter that he con templated going to India. “I’m glad to hear it!” exclaimed Kipling enthusiastically. “I know just what we’ll do with you over there when we get you away from your friends and family. We’ll lure you out into the jungle and have you seized and bound by our trusty wallahs. We’ll have you turned on your hack and get one of our biggest elephants to stand over you with his fore foot poised above your head. Then I’ll say in my most insinuat ing way, ‘Come now, Stockton, which was it —the lady or the ti ger ?’ ” It was told that an enterprising magazine manager offered him $lO,- 000 if he would reveal the true end jf the famous tale, but Stockton was true to his story and declined the offer. His Eminence “Martin Kelly.” Cardinal Martinelli learned Eng lish in Dublin, Ireland, and speaks it with the soft, mellow brogue of the educated Irishman from that part of the Emerald Isle. The cardinal tells a good story about his accent. Shortly after his arrival in this country an old wom an called at the delegation upon some matter of minor importance and was granted an audience with the affable apostolic delegate. Then site start led the people of Washing ton by assuring them that the new delegate was an Irishman. “Indeed, then, he is Irish;” she said, “because I heard him talk. And, sure, isn’t his name Martin Kelly?” It is quite a joke now among ec clesiastics to allude to his eminence as Martin Kelly.—Washington Cor. New York World. The Keason For The Buttons. The following interesting expla nation for the row of buttons on the sleeves of the German sol diers’ uniform is from Invention: “Frederick the Great liked to see his soldiers smartly dressed. He discovered that many of the men were in the habit of wiping the perspiration from their faces with their coat sleeves, and gave the coat an untidy appearance. In order to stop this practice, Frederick ordered that a row of buttons should be placed on the upper edge of each sleeve. In this manner the habit was broken up. But the buttons remained, and when their original purpose was forgotten they were placed on the under side of the sleeve, to be out of the way.” Saved From An Awful Fate. “Everbody said I had consump tion ,” writes M rs. A. M. Shields, of Chambersburg, Pa., “I was so low after six months of severe sickness, caused by hay fever and asthma, but few thought I could get well, but I learned of the mar velous merit of Dr. Kings New Discovery for Consumption, used it, and was completely cured.” For desperate Throat and Lung Diseases it is the safest cure in the world, and is infallible for Coughs, Colds and Bronchial Af fections. Guaranteed bottles 50c ands].oo. Trial bottles free at VV. A. Wright’s. Big Burglar Proof Vault. The great steel vault which cost $185,000 to construct, is 58 feet 6 inches wide, 88 feet 6 inches deep, 8 feet 6 inches high and is guard ed by a circular door of steel 8 feet in in diameter and 24 inches thick, weighing more than 40,000 pounds, has recently been com pleted in New York City. Al though doubt has been expressed as to the existence of areally burg lar proof safe, this steel vault is declared proof against fire, burg lars and earthquakes. It will contain 16,000 sate deposit boxes and guard many millions of dol lars in specie, stocks, and bonds. THE HOME GOLD CURE An Ingenious Treatment by Which Drunkards are Being Cured Daily in Spite of Themselves. No Noxious Doses. No Weakening of the Nerves. A Pleasant and Posi tive Cure for the Liquor Habit. It is now generally known and under stood that Drunkenness is a disease and not weakness. A body tilled with poison, and nerves completely shatter ed by periodical or constant use of in toxicating liquors, requires an antidote capable of neutralizing and eradicating this poison, and destroying the craving for intoxicants. Sufferers may now cure themselves at home without publicity or loss of time from business by this won derful “HOME HOLD CURE” which has been perfected after many years of close study and treatment of inebriates. The faithful use according to directions of this wonderful discovery is positive ly, guaranteed to cure the most obsti nate case, no matter how hard a drink er. Our records show the marvelous transformation of thousands of Drunk ards into sober, industrious and upright men. WIVES CURE YOUR HUSBANDS! CHILDREN CURE YOUR FATHERS! This remedy is in no sense a nostrum but is a specific for this disease only, and is so skillfully devised and prepar ed that it is thoroughly soluble and pleasant to the taste, so that it can be given in a cup of tea or coffee without the knowledge of the person taking it. Thousands of Drunkards have cured themselves with this priceless remedy, and as many more have been cured and made temperate men by having the “C UR E” administered by loving friends and relatives without their knowledge in coffee or tea. and believe today that they discontinued drinking of their own free will. DO NOT WAIT. Do not be deluded by apparent and misleading “improvement ” Drive out the disease at once and for all time. The “HOME HOLD CURE” is sold at the extremely low price of One Dollar, thus placing within reach of everybody a treatment more effectual than others costing $25 to SSO. Full directions ae jompany each package. Special advice ay skilled physicians when requested without extra charge. Sent prepaid to any part of the world on receipt of One Dollar. Address Dept. II 20, EDWIN B. OILKs A COMBANY. 2330 and 2332 Market Street, Philadelphia. All correspondence strictly confiden tial. LEADS THEM ALL. One Minute Cough Cure beats a'l other medicine I ever tried for coughs, colds, croup and throat and lung troubles,” says D. Scott Currin of I.oganton, Pa. One Minute Cough Cure is the only absolutely safe cough remedy which acts immediately. Mothers everywhere testify to the good it has done the little ones. Croup is so sudden iu its attacks that the doctor often arrives too late. Itjy ields at once to One Minute Cough Cure. Pleasant to take. Children like it. Sure cure for grip, bronchitis, coughs. Jxo. H. Blackburn, Barnesville, Ga. L. Holmes, Milner, Ga. JOHN T. MIDDLEBROOKS Only the Best. THE HIGHEST PRICES FOR THINGS YOU HAVE TO SELL. I want your Chickens. Eggs, Butter, Hams, Potatoes and will give you the very best prices possible. the LOWEST PRICES ON THINGS YOU HAVE TO BUY. I always carry a full line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, and have them marked down to the very lowest notch and can make it to your interest to try me. I have recently added to my stock of Groceries a line of FARMERS’ SUPPLIES, such as are necessary for every farmer to have. I also have a complete line of Crockery and Tinware. I don’t give trading stamps, but give you the amout off on the prices. Don’t forget the place, I am not on the corner any longer, but am still “in the ring” when it comes to competition, and can knock most of the rest of them out. Yours truly, John T. Middlebrooks. J ;^T a t> The BEST Threshing Outfit j 1 pinniimn for a threskerman to buy and for a farmer to use is the i-arquhar Celebrated I | FARQUHAR BCIIER AJ AX 1 llKi^lllAGand the *WKQLIIAK SEPARATOR. Engines I * havinq exploded made in sizes 4 li. p. and up, and combine the advantages of all successful engines. I J 9 Easy stea.iters and develop more tlian rated horse-pow er. Have driver’s seat, foot- I Drake and two injectors. SU'A RATO IIH of all styles and ./••s tor merchant threshing or farm use. Farqimar i machines haw all late improvements, they thresh and clean ail kinds of grain perfectly. ■ ■ ■ - qhirri jjj Wpl" V T y ~f Engines. Tnrcshing Machi uery , ~ 5 4 ' Saw Mills, Agricultural lmplenumts, free. A. B. Farquhar Cos., yosk, pa. IMPORTANT TO COTTON GINNERS, Investigate the most complete and efficient ginning system on the market. The Murray Cleaning Feeder —the best feeder in the world. Plain Gins, Huller Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Single and Double Box Presses, Pneumatic Cotton Elevators, Cyclone lint Hues, etc. BETTER PRICE FOR COTTON. Demands l~2c Pound More. F. H. Lummus Sons Cos., Columbus Ga. BOSTWICK, Ga., Feb. 11, 1902. Gentlemen —I wish to express my entire satisfaction with the three 70-saw Battery Gin Outfit, the Cleaning Feeders and Pneumatic Elevator, Double Box Steam Cylender Press —in fact everything complete. Everything works as nice and as smooth as can be ; the workmanship and material are unsurpassed ; COT TON GINNED ON YOUR SYSTEM DEMANDS FROM J£th TO K CENT MORE PER POUND THAN WHERE GINNED ON OTHERS. The “Lummus” Sys tem is death to competitors in this section, and wins all customers who give it a trial. I have gained custom from a distance this season, growing out of the efficiency of your ginning system. In quality of work, of good sample, clean ing seed and quick work, I would recommend your machinery to all parties thinking of installing a plant for ginning cotton. Yours truly, (Signed) E. It. Jones Obtain our estimates and particulars before purchasing. F. H. Lummus Sons Cos Columbus Ga. Insurance, Fire g Accident. ON Otis A. Murphey, And protect yoursef against Fire and Accidents. \A INDIAN TER. 2 Are bf st reaclhsd b>\the Colton Belt, wnich line! runs two trains tkdayffroni Mi mphis to Texas', f / without change. xheseVtrains either reach; “V*" director make close cqnnecuo i J for aljparts of Texas, Oklahoma f andlpdianTerritory. \\ I S ft. wort • )| S ---——-* •tm.,0.0 Ay\ ! Y~~~~ ‘ MiLLSbqRO Vf r wACCr\'n r 7 SAN ANTQ.IO y \ \ I V\ If you want to flny) a gZort borne n in Texas, where \big' crops are if \ raised and where peyople prosper. J ~ 1 write for a copy of ouTUiandsorae S booklets, Homes in ine) South- ✓v west” and ‘ ‘Through Te/xas with y a Camera.” Sent freeCfTSlany- C E. W. LaBEAUME, G. P. 4 T. A., ST. LOUIS, R). POTTS-THOMPSON LIQUOR CO., Atlanta, Georgia. ACME XXXX Pure Rye Whisky. It is Old, and Absolutely Pure. It Has Few Equals-- If Any. Stone Mountain Corn Whisky, The purest and best brand of Corn Whisky made in Georgia Recommended very highly for Medicinal Purposes . '. SOLD BY The Barnesville Dispensary.