The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, July 03, 1902, Image 7

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BEST FOR THE BOWELS If tou haven't a reeulnr, healthv movement of tbs hovels every day, you’re ill or will be. Keep your howelsopcn.andbe well. Force,in the shape of vio lent nfavsie or pill poison, is dangerous. The smooth est easiest. most perfect way of keeping the bowels clear and clean is to take EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10, 25, ami 60 cents per box. Write for free sample, and booklet on health. Address 433 STERLING HEBEI)Y COMPANY, CHICAGO or NEW YORK. KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN PROFESSIONAL CARDS. A. PIERCE KEMP, M. D., GENERAL PRACTITIONER, BARNESVILLE, GA. Office over Jordan’s Drug 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. over Jordan's Drug Store. J. A. CORRY, M. D., BARNESVILLE, GA. Oflice: 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. 1 GEO. W. GRICE, PHOTOGRAPHER, Work done promptly and neatly. 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. H'-Loans Negotiated. W. W. LAMBDIN, ATTORNEY-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 JHOP. Hair cutting a specialty, by best of artists. My QUININE HAIR TONIC is guaranteed to stop hair from falling out. 0- M. JONES, Trop., Main street, next to P. 0. W. B. SMITH, F. D. FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS. ODORI ESS EMBALMING FLUIt W. B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker BARNESVILLE, GA. My little son had an attack of whooping caugh and was threaten ed with pneumonia; but for Cham berlms’ Cough Remedy we would have had a serious time of it. It also saved him from several severe attacks of the croup H. J. Srickfadex, editor World- Herald, Fair Haven, Wash. For sale by Jno. H. Blackburn. What Women Admire in Men. “Women abhor cowards, and still more sneaks; though, I regret to say they often endure cads in way that belies their intelligence and good taste. They have quite a pathetic desire to look up to men; to feel their superiors in strength of body and mind, in calmness of judgement and clear ness of intellect. And it’s indeed a pity that men so often seem to go out of their way to destroy this most cherished illusion. “Above everything a woman ad mires strength in a man. It may be strength of body—she will worship a Hercules with the brains of a guinea pig. It may be strength of intellect she will adore a savant with the body of a Qibbon monkey. It may be strength of ! character—she will break her heart for a politician or a financier who is unswervingly wrapped up in dreams of personal advancement, and who possesses no more heart than an oyster. But strength in some form she craves unceas ingly. It is an hereditary instinct that has been bequeathed to her through Eve’s first disappointment when Adam was tried in the balance and found wanting. Woman, secretly conscious of her own physical weakness and lack of intellectual strength, demands her own deficiencies. Even the strongest woman, strong in body and in mind, well-balanced as Athene herself, though they may shield and protect the weakness of the men they love and stoop to help them, will never do so with out a secret feeling of contempt and disgust which is destructive of all ideals. “Man, in spite of that deplora ble start made by Adam, was in tended to be woman’s protector and refuge from all harm.” POISONING THE SYSTEM. It is through the bowels that the body is cleansed of impurities. Constipa tion keeps these poisons in the system, causing headache, dulness and melan cholia at first, then unsightly eruptions and finally serious illness unless a remedy is applied. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers prevent this trouble by stimulating the liver and promote easy healthy action of the bowels. These little pills do not act violently hut by strengthening the bowels enable them to perform their own work. Never gripe or distress. Jxo. H. Blackburn. Barnesville, Ga. L. Holmes, Milner, Ga. The Potato as a Medicine. The good results of administer ing potatoes in certain forms of diabetes are affirmed by a French physician, Dr. Moose, who states that he has effected cures by this means. “M. Moose thinks,”says the revue Scientifique, “that this treatment probaly acts by alkili zation of the humors, in the same way as the treatment by the alki line mineral waters of Vichy; besides this, potatoes contain oxy dases and bring to the tissues fer ments favorable to those oxida tions that are habitually retarded in diabetes patients. The quan tity of potatos that should be taken by the invalid varies from two and one half to three that of the bread eaten. But altered po tatoes should not be employed; when jellied, they contain sugar; in too warm a medium they begin to sprout and their germination also develops sugar, as well as solanin.” The writer remarks that in the spring, when potatoes are scarce, and not very good, potato-bread may be used to advantage, al though little known. This is pre pared by mixing, in propotiopsr varying from one quarter to one third, wheat flour enough like ordinary bread to make it palata ble to persons who feel that they must have plenty of the latter. The use of the potato instead of bread deprives the body of certain useful phosphates that are con tained in the latter; but this ob jection may be removed, we are told, by adding eggs to the diet, especially the yolks. IF A MAN LIE TO YOU, And say some other salve ointment, lotion, oil or alleged healer is as good as Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, tell him thirty years of marvelous cures of piles, burns,boils, corns, felons, ulcers, cuts,, scalds, bruises and skin eruptions prove it’s the best and cheapest. 25c at W. A. Wright’s drug store. THE BARNESVTLT.EYE^TS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1002. FOR THE LITTLE ONES. - Little Mildred’s Ride on the Nice Con ductor’s Car. As Mildred and Cousin Laura got into the car it started with a jerk, and Cousin Laura sat down hard. Mildred, too, was knocked off her feet, and, worst of all. that lovely hag of sugar plums broke, and the candy rolled all over the iloor. “Oh, dear!” cried Mildred. “All my sugar plums are gone!” Xo, not all, for the conductor gathered up the broken bag with the few that were left inside it and gave it to her. ‘Tank you,” said Mildred. “I’m sorry I spoiled ve Iloor of your car.” The conductor smiled. “Xever mind, missie. It’ll be swept up, and you’d never know the difference. But it’s too bad vou lost your can dy.” “Isn't lie a nice conductor?” Mil dred said after he had taken their fare and gone away. “I wish 1 didn’t spoil ve Iloor. Don’t you fink, Cousin Laura,” she went on after thinking a few minutes, “vat may be ho might like a sugar plum ?” “I shouldn't wonder if he would,” said Cousin Laura. So by and by, when the conductor came through again, Mildred pulled at his long coat, and he stopped. “Won’t you have some sugar plums?” she asked, holding out the hag. The nice conductor smiled again. “Thank you,” he said, taking one. “I wanted you to have some,” said Mildred gravely, “ ’cause you didn’t scold me one bit. And I like to not be scolded.” The nice conductor laughed this lime and began to tell Mildred about his own two little girls. Mil dred listened hard and made him take two more sugar plums, one for each of them. And when Mildred and Cousin Laura got off the car at last the con ductor waved his hand to them, and Mildtad waved back. Then she gave a little skip and squeezed Cousin Laura’s hand. “Wasn’t he a real nice conduct or?” she said. Lvs Lovett in Brooklyn Eagle. Sells Papers. Maurice Gogle of Middleville, Mich., is eleven years old and has supported himself since his eighth year selling papers. His father died when he was seven. He is an agent for the Grand Rapids Evening Press and has so much work to do that he employs a boy to help him. He works every evening delivering pa pers and collects on Saturdays. Be sides, he helps around the house, splits all the wood and helps to take care of his baby sister. Last year he made SBO clear and bought him self a wheel, all the clothes he need ed and books, besides putting S2O in the bank. lie expects to do bet ter this year. Still lie finds enough time for sport. These facts do not come from the hoy himself, but from one of his elders who knows Him. This is the sort of hoy we delight in honoring. —American Boy. The Strainer Would Leak. A small boy was sent to the shop one day by his mother to have anew sieve put in the milk strainer. When he caine back with the mended strainer, he set it on a chair and poured some milk into it. Of course the milk ran upon the floor. Then he looked up at hi mother and said: “Why, mamma, it leaks just as bad as ever.” Lunchtime. Please hurry, little mistress, It’s very hard to wait, For when I jumped I thought I saw Some bones upon the plate. Please hurry, little mistress! We want our milk and meat; We love to run and romp and play. But, oh, we love to eatl I know I am too greedy. Impatient and all that, And Clover walks along so nice. But Cloyer’a Just a cat. —Youth’s Companion. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. i What to Do if a Child Is Accidentally Poisoned. Some children seem to have the knack of endangering their small I lives with alarming frequency, and it is well to be prepared for all sorts 1 and conditions of emergencies. There is the child, for instance, who has the mania for tasting. Nothing is safe from its small lips, from the dregs left at the bottom of father’s coffee eup to the fascinat ing bottles on mother’s washstand. This tasting mania is very apt to end with the child being poisoned sooner or later. All lotious and lin iments should be kept under lock and key. Some cough mixtures contain a large percentage of opium, and as they are sweet to the taste a tiny child is very apt to seize the bottles if left within its reach and drink the entire contents. Fortunately some poisons have -the effect of making the child sick and so lessening the danger. But do not wait for nature to relieve herself in this way, but give the little one an emetic made with two heaped up teaspoonfuls of mustard, mixed in half a teacupful of warm Water. Should Ibis not act in fif teen minutes, repeat the dose. Aft er the chiid has been sick give copi ous drafts'of warm water. The symptoms of opium poison ing are vomiting, drowsiness, end ing finally in stupor. At all costs the little one must be kept awake, or, poor mite, lie will never wake again, llesort to smart slaps, if nec essary, to effect this and carry him into the air. In all cases of poison ing remember: First. —Send instantly for the doctor. Second. —Make the child violent ly sick. Third.—Keep him awake. And, finally, 1 would suggest that a child with a “tasting mania” should he cured of its propensity by leaving an attractive looking but bitter tasting liquid within its reach. Bathroom Conveniences. The bathtub has been called one of the best symbols of modern civ ilization. Certainly the condition of the bathroom is a good index of the character of the housekeeping. If not so luxurious as the baths of the days of “Quo Vadis,” the up to date bathroom of fashionable ele gance at least outrivals them in the. completeness of its appurtenances. In the simple matter of soap dishes there is a surprisingly extensive ar ray. Especially attractive are those of nickel. There are simple skele ton trays which allow the water to drip through the bars. Small nickel trays are corrugated, thus prevent ing the soap from lying in the wa ter. Circular and elliptical dishes are equipped with a perforated tray which performs the same service in the interest of economy. Some of these dishes are furnished with cov ers. Dishes with a nickel frame have porcelain trays. Very conven ient are the nickel dishes which can bo readily and securely attached to the side of the tub or fastened to the wall. How to Make Paper Cases. Cut six pieces of writing paper, measuring four and a half inches square. Fold each side over to the depth of one and a quarter inches, which will give at each corner a square of one and a half inches. Cut on one side of this square only; turn tho sides up and fasten with a paste made of a teaspoonful of flour and about four tablespoonfuls of tepid water. Pour the remainder into a saucer, the depth of which will probably be an eighth of an inch. Dip each case into the batter and then into fine breadcrumbs; dip into the batter again, then again into the crumbs. Have a frying pan on the fire with hot drippings; take each case by the bottom and hold it deep enough in tho hot drippings to brown the breadcrumbs. The re sult will be a pretty paper case, two inches square and an inch and a quarter deep, which use as directed. Unique Floor Covering. A woman who for years has used the ordinary table oilcloth to cover her bedroom and her summer cot tage floors says it is the cheapest and most satisfactory covering she knows of. Site lays it with plenty of paper underneath to give it spring and body. Contrary to one’s first impression, it wears remarka bly well and is much easier wiped off and kept clean than the bare floors. If one has never investigated table oilcloths, she will be surpris ed at the wide range of patterns and colors offered for sale even in coun try stores. Two very pretty ones were noted lately in a desert camp house. On the little dining room was a small oak leaf pattern, green on a brown gTound, looking when down much like the old fashioned “three ply.” The other was a neat geometric design in shades of brown. /' '’■'To'- 5 ' ( encourage v the I / Uneeda \ l Biscuit ) Everybody needs Unda Biscuit. The Invalid who requires nourishment; the chtldof delicatedlgeetion ; the | worker of sturdy appetite, find In UndH Biscuit both substance f al and sustenance. The In-er-eal Paokage keeps them fresh and good. L BIRDS. Birds are absolutely necessary on the farm, wisely observes the Farm-and Ranch. This applies in all probability to all kinds of birds. We have given the crow a bad name because at a certain season lie pulls up our corn plants that ho may eat the sprouted ker- I nels. lie works for us during eight or nine months of the year for which we give him no credit what ever. Thoughtless fruit growers have been known to shoot robins because they eat a few cherries. They have worked all the spring and early summer to destroy the insects that would have ruined the crop, and the few cherries they eat make but a small con pensation for efucli a valuable ser vice. Woodpeckers are denounc ed because they peck holes in the bark of the trees. It should be remembered that they are after grubs and insects, and the holes are bored just deep enough to dis lodge them. Kingbirds are said to be very fond of honey bees, but when killed and their stomach I contents examined very few honey bees are found, even when caught working directly among the bees, 90 percent, of their food consists of injurious insects. They are a valuable protection to tho orchard and chicken yard. The bluejay luih been called a thief, which is probaly true in a limited sense, though direct evidence is scarce. He eats corn only when nuts and acorns are out of season ; one-fifth of his food is made up of injurious insects, and his nest robbing propensities have been exaggerated. Every farmer should study the bird question, bird laws are not enforced as they should be. Agents of large mil linery establishments shoot birds in great numbers for their plum age. It is to the farmer’s interest to put a stop to the killing. All birds should be protected.—Ex. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Cj OLD PEOPLE Do not always receive the sympathy and attention which’Em they deserve. Their ailments are regarded as purely TaK Is >-w imaginary, or natural and unavoidable at their time of 1 life. Disease and infirmity should not always be associ- Hr a ted with old age. The eye of the gray haired grandsire may be as bright and the complexion as fair as any of his younger and more vigorous compani " ' Good Blood In tho noorot of ho y old ago, for it regulates and controls every part of the body, strengthens the nerves, makes the muscles 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 , —, S. S. S. being purely vegetable, is the safest and best blood purifier for old people. It does not shock vN, or hurt the system like the strong mineral remedies, KOI KO) but gently and thoroughly cleanses the blood and 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. Atlaota. Ga. Molina News. Molina is now busy with canta lope shipping. Messrs. Garland and Brooks are gathering large quantities from their farms. A pretty homo wedding was that of Miss Emmie McDowell, of this place, and Mr. John Allen, of Zebulon, which took place at the borne of the bride’s parents. The ceremony was performed by Rev. C. M. Brittian. Many handsome bridal presents were received. Misses Virgie and Jessie Brooks have returned to Chipley after a pleasant visit of a week with their friends and relatives here. Miss Maie Hastie, of Warm Springs was the guest of Mrs. J. H. McDowell last week. Miss Maud Smith, of Woodbury, is visiting Misses Edna and Evelyn Brooks this week. Mrs. Estelle Johnston and little daughter, of Brundage, Ala., is visiting her sister Mrs. C. P. Jor dan this week. Miss Elvie Bnrtee, an attractive young lady of Woodbury, is visit ing her brother, Dr. Bartee. Little Miss Bernice Brooks is visiting her cousin in Thomaston this week. Miss Lena Cox is now visiting her sister at The Rock. We are glad to see our bright faced school girls at home again, to spend the holidays. Misses Edna, Evelyn, Clara, and Blanche Brooks of Cox College, Miss Pearla Piikenton, of Gordon Institute, and Miss Lily McDowell, of La- G range. “Tobk.” NEED MORE HELP. Often the over-taxed organs of diges tion cry out for help by dyspepsia , pains, nausea, dizziness, headaches, liver complaints, bowel disorders. Such t rouble call for prompt use of Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They are gentle, thorough and guaranteed to cure. 25c at YV. A Wright’s drug store. It is strange how some men re turn to the bottle years after they discarded swaddling clothes. Samson was the first man to bring down the house.