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BAD
BLOOD
“CASC.IKKTS do all claimed for client
ana are a iruiy wonderful medicine. 1 have oiien
wished for a medicine pleasant to take and at last
bare found it in Casearets. Since taking them, my
blood tias neon uiiritled and my complexion has im
proved wonderfully and 1 feel much better in every
way Mits. SAUdK K Sellars. Luttrell. Tenn.
m Jy CATHARTIC
tsace mark riqisterco
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
ktrrlißK Rrßirdr t'ompnnT, rMf-icrn. Munir.at. Nr" York. 319
MTft DAP Sold and miaranteed bv all drug
■ I U-QAV gists to (THE Tobacco Habit
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
A. PIERCE KEMP, M. D.,
GENERAL PRACTITIONER,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Jordan’s Drue Store.
Residence: Thomaston street: ’Phone 9.
DR. J. M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Residence: Thomaston street.
'Phone No. 25.
C. H. PERDUE,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE GA.
|3?"Office over Jordan’s Drug Store.
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.
DR. K. L. REID,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Offiice over First National Bank.
Residence, Magnolia Inn.
GEO. W. GRICE,
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Work done promptly and neatly.
S3P~Office over Middlebrooks Building.
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,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
General practice in all courts—State and
Federal.
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.
Loans 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. O.
W. B. SMITH, F. D
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA
EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS.
ODORI ESS EMBALMING FLCII
W. B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker
BARNESVILLE GA.
31 y little son had an attack of
whooping caugh and was threaten
ed with pneumonia; but for Cham
berlins' Cough Remedy we would
have had a serious time of it. It
also saved him from several
severe attacks of the croup
H. J. Srickfaden, editor World-
Herald, Fair Haven, Wash. For
■aale by
Jxo. H. Blackburn.
Sign of Prosperity.
Newspaper advertising is admit
tedly a sign of business prosperity,
the thermometer that records the
business temperature. The most
successful merchants have been
the largest newspaper advertisers
The size of a merchant’s business,
however, need not necessarily de
termine the amount of his adver
tising appropriation. The point
is to advertise—and keep and ad
vertising. The people who read
newspapers read advertisements,
because when in want of anything
the surest, handiest and quickest
way to find it is through the
columns of a newspaper. Banks,
churches, libraries and other insti
tutions have awakened to the
benefits of newspaper advertising.
The cards of physicians, of all
schools are seen in the papers, a
practice formerly considered at
variance with professional ethics.
All lines of trade and professions
are represented in the newspaper
advertising of today. The trend
of advertising is newspaperward.
—Printers Ink.
Virulent Cancer Cured.
Startling proof of a wonderful
advancement in medicine is given
by druggist (r. W. Roberts, of
Elizabeth, W, Ya. An old man
there had long suffered with what
good doctors called incurable can
cer. They believed his case hope
less till he used Electric Bitters
and applied Bucklin’s Arnica
Salve, which treatment complete
ly cured him. When Electric
Bitters are used to expel bilious,
kidney and microbe poisons at the
same time the salve exerts its
matchless healing power, blood
diseases, skin eruptsons, ulcers
and sores vanish. Bitters 50c,
Salve 25c at W. A. Wrights.
World’s Greatest Bridge.
The greatest bridge in the world
is said to be located in the wilds
of Burma, far from the nearest
point of European civilization.
It is 2,260 feet in length, 500 feet
in height, cost nearly $1,(XX),000
and spans a tremendous gorge in
the heart of a forest. What is
more, it was built by American
engineers in the comparatively
short space of ten months amid
difficulties almost inconceiveable.
Every bolt, truss and span was
made to plan in Pennsylvania,
shipped to Burma, together with
all the machinery neoessary for
its construction, and when placed
in position every part fitted to
the fraction of an inch. The
whole thing is looked upon as a
triumph of American engineering
which has given our skilled work
men world-wide prestige.
‘‘Take care of the pennies and
the pounds will take care of them
selves.” Large things are but an
aggregation of small things. If
we take care of the small things
we are in effect taking care of the
large things which the small things
combine to make. Take care of
what you eat, and how you eat,
and your stomach will take care of
such trival things? That is why,
someday, the majority of people
have to take care of the stomach.
When that day comes, there is no
aid so effective in undoing the re
sults of past carelessness as Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery. It strengthens the stomach
and restores the organs of digestion
and nutrition to a condition
of healthy activity. It cures
biliousness, heartburn, ilatul
ence, indigestion, palpitation,
dizziness cold extremities and a
score of other ailments which are
but the syipptons of disorder in
the stomach and its allied organs.
Dogs sometimes have more
sense than people. A Mississippi
family moved to Oklahoma, carry
ing a dog. The other day the dog
came back to Mississippi, lean
and lank, having walked over 500
miles. He had enough of Oklaho
ma.
A REAL FRIEND.
“I suffered from dyspepsia and in
digestion for fifteen years,’’ says W. T.
Sturdevant of Merry < >aks, N. C. ‘‘After
I had tried many doctors rnd medicines
to no avail o*e of my friends persuad
ed me to try Kodol. It gave immediate
relief. I can eat almost anything I
want now and my digestion is good. I
cheerfully recommend Kodol.” Don’t
try to cure stomach trouble by dieting.
That only further weakens the system.
You need wholesome, strengthening
food. Kodol enables you to assimilate
what you eat by digesting it without the
stomach’s aid.
Jno H Blackburn.
L. Holmes. Barnesville, Ga.
Milner, Ga.
THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1902.
A LITTLE NONSENSE.
Smile and Forget Your Troubles al
the Sayings of Youngsters.
Teacher—Willie, can you tell me
why the multiplication table stops
at twelve?
Willie—l guess it’s because thir
teen at a table is unlucky.
Small’Tommy after being severe
ly chastised by his mother for dis
obeying her ran to his father and
said between sobs, “Papa, how d-did
you c-come to m-marry such a
w-wonmu as m-mamma is?”
A little fellow, aged four, accom
panied his father to the park one
day, where he saw a diminutive
monkey with whose playful antics
he was greatly pleased.
“What did you see, dear?” asked
his mother upon his return home.
“A funny little boy with a tail,”
replied the small observer.
“How old is your bahv brother ?”
asked little Tommie of a playmate.
“One year old,” replied Johnnie.
“Huh!” exclaimed Tommie. “I’ve
got a dog a year old, and he can
walk twice as well as that kid can.”
“Well, lie ought to,” replied John
nie. “He’s got twice as many legs.”
—Chicago News.
Concerning the Cat.
The cat that nightly haunts our gate.
How heartily we hate her!
Some night she’ll come and mew till late.
But we will mu-ti-late her!
Westward Takes Its Way.
“Well,” asked Uncle Hiram,
“how wuz the circus ?”
“Fine!” answered Uncle Si. “It
wuz so hot in the tent that the
sweat poured out o’ me, the narrow
board on which I set made my bones
ache, the red lemonade give me a
headache an’ my shoes hurt so that
I thought someone wuz burnin’ my
feet with hot irons.” —Indianapolis
Sun.
Left In the Dark.
A little girl about three years old
was out playing when suddenly it
became very cloudy. She ran into
the house and startled her mamma
by saying:
“I’m not going to stay outdoors
any more.”
“Why ?” asked her mother.
“Because God blowed the sun
out.”—Little Chronicle.
They’re Growing Up.
“By George, I’m beginning to
feel pretty old.”
“Why ? You don’t look it.”
“I know, but I’ve just been intro
duced to a stunning girl whose pic
ture I remember seeing in
zine as she sat in a washbowl, pos
ing as an advertisement for a baby
food factory.” Chicago Itecord
llerald.
Blowing Up.
“Isn’t it awful how thin Mr. Hen
peck is now,” remarked Mrs. Gab
bie to her husband. “And he used
to be so stout.”
“Perhaps,” chimed in little Wil
lie, remembering his trouble with
the bicycle tires—“perhaps his wife
forgets to blow him up regular, like
you said she useter.”—Philadelphia
Press.
Not a Good Expression.
“It is so foolish to speak of fall
ing in love,” said the romantic girl.
“I’o fall implies a drop, a going
down, while love is something high
and exalted.”
“Perhaps you are right,” answer
ed the prosaic man. “Possibly it
would he better to say that we fall
into wedlock.”—Chicago Post.
* Very Loving.
“Phwat is thot, me bye?”
“Ut’s th’ lovin’ cup. ’Tis a good
thing to show good fellowship in
our lodge.”
“Ut is indade. Awn phwat a
dandy t’ing to hit some wan wid in
a fight!”—Chicago News.
A Prize Winner.
She (proudly)—Oh, Henry, I got
the prize at our women’s club!
He—Good!
She —Yes. I blackballed more
members during the past year than
any other member. Ohio State
Journal.
Connoisseur.
Estelle Ah, his proposal was
just like a dream!
Agnes—Well, you ought to know,
dear. You’ve been dreaming of that
proposal for years.—Brooklyn Life.
IK&
lilf
I Wf\ Said Wit to Wisdom- rJ Wt
I fil full stomach ma%es
I (I a
|I, 1 Said Wisdom to Wit— (.ft \
m Uneeda Jj -f
f/ Biscuit fL m
fur jjfll wfflSs’;
Ili j Five Cents a Package. KgWwft JPMW
% If /m W'ut
flw / NATIONAL BISCUIT OOMPANY lUv/jjVfc ' WXi'Y
1 ill? II Hffci
Sensitiveness and Success.
Many people are kept back, in
their efforts to got along in the
world, by over-sensitiveness. We
know able young men and women
who are well educated and well
fitted for their callings, but so ex
tremely sensitive to criticism or
suggestions that they never rise to
the places to which their abilities
entitle them. Their feelings are
constantly being wounded by fan
cied slights in the office, the shop,
the store, the mill, the factory, or
wherever; else they may happen to
be. They carry about with them,
most of the time, a sense of injury
which not only makes them un
happy, but also to a great extent
mars their efficiency.
Over-sensitive people are usual
ly very fine-grained, highly organ
ized, and intelligent, and, if they
could overcome this weakness,
would become capable, conscien
tious workers. This failing—for
it is a failing, and a very serious
one, too —is an exaggerated form
of self consciousness, which, while
entirely different from egotism or
conceit causes self to loom up in
such large proportions on the
mental retina as to overshadow
everything else. The victim of it
feels that, wherever he goes, what*
ever he does, lie is the center of
observation, and that all eyes, all
thoughts are focused upon him.
He imagines that, people are criti
cising his movements and his per
son, and making fun at his ex
pense ;|when, in reality, they are
not thinking of him, and perhaps
did not see him.
This so de
structive to happiness and success
and, incidentally, to health—for
whatever destroys harmony de
stroys health —betrays, in a sense,
a lack of self-respect of which no
man or woman should voluntarily
be guilty. To be a complete man,
one must be conscious, but not in
an-offensive way, of his own worth
and dignity. Ill’ must feel him
self superior to envious criticism
or ridicule. When someone told
Diogenes that he was derided, lie
replied: “But I am not derided.”
Jl" counted only those ridiculed
who feel the ridicule and are dis
composed by it.
The surest way to conquer mor
bid sensitiveness is to mingle with
people as] free as possible, and,
while appraising your own ability
and intelligence at least as impar
tially {is you would those of a
friend or acquaintance, to forget
yourself. Unless you can become
unconscious of self, you will never
either appear at, your best or do
the best of which you are capable.
It requires will power und an un
bending determinat ion to conquer
this arch enemy to success, but
what l*as been done can be done,
and many who were held down by
it for years have, by their own
efforts, outgrown it and risen to
commanding position s. —Ex.
OABTORZA.
BmhUm lh Kind You Haw Aiwaji BoogM
How Mueli Sleep In Needed.
The old question of how much
sleep is needed isup again. Ohi
cago has a “Four Hours Sleep
Club”composed not of young and
hustling business men, but main
ly of elderly men of leisure. The
theory of the members is that too
mueli time is wasted in sleep.
Like John Wesley, they think
sleep is a matter of habit when it
exceeds four hours sleep.
But the Philadelphia Record
very correctly oqserves that “no
doubt some persons can accustom
themselves to doing witli four
hours sleep, or to the need of ten
hours. Still, in every cane the
amount of sleep which is actually
required to preserve mental and
physical health and energy is reg
ulated by the waste of tissue in
the day. One may not bo able
to terminate exactly what that
requirement is, hut. he can avoid
the extremes. Unfortunately
there is no warning when habit
induces u person to take too little
or too much sleep; But the gen
eral opinion is that seven or
eight hours of sleep is needed by
the mature who have not reached
old age, and whose occupations
are not exceptionally exacting.
Persons who take too little sleep
will almost certainly break down
earlier than they would if they
should sleep enough. There is
less danger in excessive sleep than
in too little”
Of what does a bad taste in your
mouth remind you? it indicates that
your stomach is in bad condition and
will remind you that there in nothing
so good for such a disorder as Chamber
lins Stomach ik. Liver Tablets after
having once used them. They cleanse
and invigorate the stomach and reg
ulate the bowels. For sale at 50 cents
per box by
Jno. H. Blackburn.
“Notice.”
All parties holding cotton re
ceipts against the Granite Ware
house are requested to bring them
forward for the purpose of check
ing up, as I have sold the ware
house to Messrs. Baird & Hunt
who will take charge August 15th.
Please give this your prompt
attention. Yours truly,
J. 1,. Kennedy.
m. A It is the right of every child
to be well born, and to tile
rQI CIII3 f*-' 19 “ ““i.'iTh A” Wfz •fj
Responsibilttylil %&,
responsibility, and how important that Qt/f<r'
M no taint of disease is left in th> blood
■II 1 All to be transmitted to the helpless ViiM, entailing the most
pitiable suffering, and marking its little body with offen
sive sores and eruptions, catarrh of the nose and throat, weak eyes, glandular
swellings, brittle bones, white swelling and deformity.
How can parents look upon such little sufferers and not reproach
themselves for bringing so much misery into the world f If you have
any disease lurking in your system, how can you expect well developed
healthy children ? Cleanse your own blood and build up your health, and
you hr venot only enlarged your capacity for the enjoyment of the pleasures
oi life, but have discharged a duty all parents owe to posterity, and made
mankind healthier and happier. .. .
There is no remedy that so surely reaches deep-seated, stubborn blood
troubles as S. S. S. It searches out even hereditary
S/A'T poisons, and removes every taint from the blood,
\S\ and builds up the general health. If weakliftgs
kjil a re growing up around you, right the wrong by
putting them on a course of S. S. S. at once. It is
a purely vegetable medicine, harmless in its effects, and can be taken
by both old and young without fear of any bad results %
Write us about your case, and let our physicians advise and help you.
This will cost you nothing, and we will also send our book on blood and
•kin diseases. THE SWIFT FPFOIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Ga.
llenry lievt Pillion.
The little son of Mr. and Mrs.
L. Z. Elliott, Henry Levi, died
June Utii at the age of 11 months.
The precious one from us has gone
and its place is vacant in our
home, which never can be filled
and never more can its cooing
voice bo heard, and its bright eyes
look into ours, and its sweet cun
ning smiles lie seen on earth. But
it is smiling among the angels in
Heaven, and wearing a golden
crown.
O death where is thy sting? O
Grave where is thy victory? asleep
in Jusus! oh, how sweet to be for
such a slumber meet! with holy
confidence to singtlmt death hath
lost its venom’d sting. Sleep on
sweet babe and take thy rest, now
we can’t creep to its cradle side
and ask sweet babe to take thy
physics, and it open its mouth
so sweet and obedient. But how
sweet to think it is asleep and
resting at the saviour’s feet, where
it has no pains. For thirty days
the precious little babe suffered
with great pain, and on its thir
tieth day fell asleep in Jesus where
it will have no pains.
We should not weep and moan
over the little babes for wo know
they are safe in Heaven.
God knows best for all things,
he is gathering his little ones
home.
“I will utterly consume all
things from the land,” saith the
Lord.
Nellie Heakden.
♦IOO REWARD, *IOO.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dread disease that science has been
able to cure in all its stages, and that
is catarrh. Hall’s Gatarrli Cure is the
only positive cure known to the medi
cal fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a consti
tutional treatment. Hail’s Catarrh
Cure is taken internally,* acts directly
upon tiie blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up
the constitution and assisting nature
in doing its work. The proprietors have
so much faith in its curative powers,
that tiiey offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Bend
for list of testimonials.
Add ress
F. J. CHENEY A Co.,Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists. 7fic.
Hall’s Family Bills are the best.