The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, July 10, 1902, Image 3

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PIMPLES “My wife bad pimples on Uer face, out she mis been t.ikimr OASCARKTS and Uies* have all disappeared. I had been troubled w-th constipation for some time, but after tak me the first Cascaret I have had no trouble •vith this aliment. We cannot speak too high ly of Cascarets ” Fred Wartman. 670S Germantown Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa. M J$ CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c.6tfc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterliaf Kemerij Company, Chicago, Montreal. Sew York. *tl4 MTfl D kt* Sold and guaranteed by all drug* • I U"Dflw gists to CtKR Tobacco Habit. 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. 26. C. H. PERDUE, DENTIST, BARNESVILLE GA. 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, BAKNESVII.BE, GA. Ofliice over First National Bank. Residence, Magnolia Inn. 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. It 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. 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 /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. F.NKSTFUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA EXPERIENCED EMBAI.MERS. ODORI ESS EMBALMING FLU U 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 berlins’ Cough Remedy we would have had a serious time of it. It also saved him from several severe attacks 6f the croup H. J. Srickfadex. editor World- Herald, Fair Haven, Wash. For sale by J NO. H.' BIAXBBCEN. Kitchen Helps. To clean a greasy sink a little parffin oil, rubbed on with a piece of flannel, will save a great deal of trouble. Ordinary tea marks on china may be readily dissolved by scrub bing with a soft brush dipped in salt water and vinegar. If new tinware is rubbed over with fresh lard and thoroughly heated in the oven before it is used, it will never rust afterward, no matter how much it is put in water. A good way to clean zinc uten sils is to dip a piece of cotton in kerosene and rub the articles with it until the dirt is removed. Dry afterwards with a clean cloth so as to get rid of all grease. For stained tinware borax pro duces the best results. If the tea pot of coffee pot is discolored on the inside, boil it in a strong solution of borax for a short time and all its brightness will return. Cans and kettles partly filled with water should not be placed on the stove to soak, as it only makes harder to clean. They should be filled with cold water and be kept away from the heat. 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 but by strengthening the bowels enable them to perform their own work. Never gripe or distress. Jxo. H. Blackbvrx. Barnesville, Ga. L. Holmes, Milner, Ga. Envy. Envy is a disease which fedds on our growth. It is its own destiny. Its prevalence is its se verest condemnation. It is the one pain which we suffer. It is the one weakness which is too strong for all. If it were the smallpox we would call in a phy sician and tack up a red card on the house. But as it is envy we feel that we are made that way and mistake complacency for re signation as we submit to it pangs. Asa matter of fact, there is nothing of which we can afford to be envious. Every peach has a pit—though we can’t see it. Life is life, and God has no special moulds. The king upon the throne has more opportunities for bitter, galling disappointments than the peasant in the hut. Each are equally the spirit of fate or the masters of circumstances — as they may choose. When you are tempted to envy the fortune of others, bear it in mind that from every hill top there looms a valley—and that so long as the i heart can desire the lot or the possessions of others there will j always be others to envy. Envy is a foolish waste of priceless happiness. 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. L’oc at W. A. Wright’s drug store. There is not an authenticated case of snake bite cured by whis key. Plenty of individuals bitten while under the influence of liquor have died, and large amounts of alcohol have failed to save the life in many cases. Only about in six of those bitten by venomous snakes dies. The remaining five are cured by anything they hap pen to have taken. Stimulation is excellent, but the giving of whiskey to drunkeness by lower ing the resistive vitality has un doubtedly been a causeative fac tor in many deaths supposedly ; from snake bite that would other wise not have occurred. —Ameri- can Medicine. H Bert TLm Good. Ue B Fp, in time. Sold bj tiroggiMr. cl . THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1902. A LITTLE NONSENSE. How a Quiet Game of Pingpong Spoil ed a Sensation. ‘‘Listen, sister. I believe I hear the voice of a maa!” exclaimed Principea as she tiptoed across the room and placed her ear against the elevator shaft. Miraposia joined her aged spinster sister, and together they heard these words, spoken in dulcet tones, float up from the flat below: "Ah, thirty love. Now let’s make it forty love.” "Horrors'! Miraposia, do you think they are speaking of oscula tion ?” “Sister Principea, I am shocked at your suggestion. The honor of the building demands an investiga tion. Come.” Together they stoically stalked down the stairway to the flat below’. The’door was open, and Harold MeSwat bade them enter. “We are having a delightful game of pingpong. Miss Flatdweller has just won the game. Will you join us ?” The invitation was coldly de clined, and the spinners sought the seclusion of the apartments, crushed that the vernacular of pingpong had robbed them of a choice bit of gossip.—Toledo Bee. A Reasonable Request. I xffl * jfJr jOC fßi VI “Excuse me, sir; I can’t see a thing. Will you oblige me by hold ing your ears closer to your head?” Applying the Rule. Mamma—How is it, Johnny, that you are so late from Sunday school? Did you come directly homo from church ? Johnny (aged six) —No, mamma. You see, the teacher told us about cleanliness being next to godliness, so after Sunday school some of us boys went in swimming.—Chicago News. Needless Precaution. “Don’t move,” said the burglar, showing his revolver, “and don’t make a noise, or I’ll” — “Say, you needn’t worry,” the man whispered. “I’m just as anx ious as you are not to have her w r ake up until after you get away.” —Chicago Record-Herald. Glad of the Chance. “Did the old man seem to hesi tate when you asked him for Lau ra?” “Not a bit of it. He said the ca terer and the florist owed him a lot of money, and it would be a good way to get even with them." —Cleve- land Plain Dealer. The Way Now. “Do you think she is going to marry Lord De Broke ?” “Very likely. I understand that the expert accountant who has been going over her father’s books has reported very favorably to his lord ship.”—Boston Herald. Old Proverb Applied. “I hear you call that runaway auto of yours Circumstances. How did you happen to give it such a queer name?” “Because it’s something over which I have no control.” —New York World. Bad Boy. Teacher —Why did you do that? Pupil—Oh, just for fun. Teacher—But didn’t you know it was against the rules ? Pupil—Sure; that’s where the fun of it came in.—Philadelphia Press. No Wonder. “That sign, 'Closed. Taking Stock,’ has been in that window for more than a w r eek.” “Oh, that’s all right. The store is closed. The' constable is taking the 6tock.” —Chicago American. A Liberal Preacher. Patience—ls your minister liber al in his views? Patrice—Oh, yes; he often preach- j es for two whole hours.—T onkers Statesman. Uneeda Dl SCU It The Hospitality of the New South. So much has boon said and written, bot h in fact and fiction of the hospitality of tho south in ante-bellum days tho “old south” —that the hospitality of the southern people characterizes that period. Perhaps no living writer has done so much toward immortalizing this hospitality of the old south as has Thomas Nel son Page in his masterpiece, “Red Rock,” and the short sketches. All this is well enough, as is always fiction based on fact if the picture is not overdrawn, which here is an impossibility, for the most fanciful imagination and elo quence of tongue or pen falls short of exaggeration. But, however, loyal southerners of this genera tion, this day —the new south — feel a certain peculiar pride and honor which wells from loyal southern hearts in sustaining this hospitality which their fathers maintained as a mark of southern aristocracy of the old south. Southern hospitality is by no means extinct, as some writers would, intentionally or uninten tionally, leave an impression by their works and writings. It is still pregnant within the hearts of of southerners of the new south, and will ever be until southern aristocracy has passed into obii vation —and southern aristocary will never be abolished until the mighty illumination of the earth casts its rays of sappilhrine gold on southern hills and valleys and fields no more. True it is, and a sad fact, that southern mansion of ante bellum days, with spacious halls, mahogany fittings, and rich gran deur, is gone, likewise its lord, the southern gentleman in im maculate linen, who considered labor and the commercial life be low him —thanks to the civil war. Here was entertained his guest, even though he be a friend or travelling stranger, and accepting the hospitality of a night’s lodg ing, he was invited to prolong his tay —and no greater insult could be imposed than to offer base coin as pay; the appreciation of the guest bade him welcome and all that was there; horses, carriages, slaves, were all at his command. All that is gone, it has passed like the reading of a fairy tale or a sweet dream. —Ex. ALL MOTHERS KEEP IT HANDY. “My inothersuffered a long time from distressing pains and general ill health due primarily to indigestion.” says L. W. Spalding, Varona, Mo. “Twoyears ago I got her to try Kodol. She grew better at once and now at the age of seventy-six, eats anything she wants, remarking that she fear;- no had effeci as she has her bottle of Kodol hand Don't waste time doeortoring symptons go after the case. If your stomach is soundyour health will be good. Kodol rests the stomach and strengthens the foody foy digesting your food. It iH nature’s own tonic. Jso. H. Blackburn, L, Hoi.mbs, Barnesville, Ga. Milner, Ga. ( Other people bow the'wind and we reap the whirlwind. How Plain Girls Win Handsome Husbands. The following was written by Mrs. Myrtle Bayne Pasley social editress of tin* Macon Evening News, clipped from the News. “There are a few regular occa sions on which every pretty gitl feels inclined to give vent to her feelings by a ‘good cry.” One is when her plain sister enters into the bonds of matrimony with an exceeding good looking man. It. is very mortifying, if you happen to be pretty, to be left out in the cold, and the pretty girl never has understood, and never will understand, how it is. And perhaps, it is really a good thing for the beauty of the family that she is so ignorant on this matter. If she fully comprehend ed the brain workings of that strange creature man, matrimony would lose its dearest charm. The handsome man marries the plain girl. Cry as we will, this is a fact, and one that we may test the actuality of every day if we will. To take up the question of for lorn beauty. Why is it?? A man who is good-looking must admire beauty. He does admire it; he cannot help himself. Then why, the pretty girl inquires, does he marry her plainer sister? The answer may best he found in the letters of twelve intelligent men on the subject of choosing a wife. Each one stated seriously what qualities he would look for in a possible partner and set them down in order, the most impor tant first, the less important fol lowing. Taking an average, their ideal was to be as follows: (1) Kind-hearted, true and sympathetic;, (2) lively and fond of children; (i>) proud of herself for the sake of friends; (4) a good house-keeper and a busy bee; (f>) a graceful figure and beautiful; ((>) wealthy and clever. The plain girl scores at once with her sympathy; it is her chief and most, powerful weapon against a man. The girl with good looks Rheumatism The liniment bottle and flannel strip are f t. *L W ■'apMlL familiar objects in nearly every household. WL They are the weapons that Jiave been used for "Jm., ‘ generations to fight old Rheumatism, and are . about as effective in the battle with this giant /aBR . 3P disease as the blunderbuss of our forefathers 1 * would foe in modern warfare. ' Rheumatism is caused by an acid, sour ™ condition of the blood. It is filled with acrid, irritating matter that settle# in the joints, muscles and nerves, and liftiments and oils nor nothing else applied externally can dislodge these gritty, corroding particles. They were deposited there by the blood andean be reached only'through the blood. Rubbing with liniments sometimes relieve temporarily the aches and pains, but these are-only symptoms which are liable to return with every change of the weather*; the real disease lies deeper, the blood and system are infected. Rheumatism cannot be radically and permanently cured until the blood has been purified, and no remedy does this so thoroughly and promptly as S. S. S. It neutralizes the acids and sends a stream S— —of rich, strong blood to the affected parts, which dissolves and washes out all foreign materials, and the sufferer obtains happy relief from the torturing pains. Km)) KJH 8. S. S. contains no potash or other mineral, but ** is a perfect vegetable blood purifier * and most exhilarating tonic. Our physicians will advise, without charge, all who write about their case, and we will send free our special book on Rheumatism and its treatment, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. has no need to find friends by being sympathetic, and it is doubtful if people would believe her sympathy to be genuine. At all social gatherings the plain girl, is so much alone that her man ner appears at. once modest; and retiring. Let a handsome man give her half an hour of his com pany and her whole mind is bent on being agreeable. But the pretty girl has a score of men to talk to, and falls into a habit of inattention. The pretty girl really has a harder time than the plain girl. State ok Ohio, City ok Toledo, ) Lucas County, i Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of K. J. Cheney A Cos., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will jmv the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of catarrh that cannot tie cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CUKE. FRANKJ CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this oth day of Decem ber, A. D. 1880. A. W. GLEASON. ' '■— Notary Public. ) / , HEAL Mali’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Address F. J. CHENEY A Co.,Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. The multitude of sin that is covered by elmrity is not to be mentioned in the same breath with the multitude uncovered by it. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Here is the meanest story ever reported: A Tampa uiun lay sick, and the neighbors sent in so many good things that, when he recov ered, his wife wouldn’t let the neighbors know, but kept him locked up two weeks longer that she might continue to get ices, pudding, fruits, etc, for herself and the children.—Tampa Tri bune.