The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, July 10, 1902, Image 6

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Its quality influences mmJJjI , . the selling price. Profitable fruit growing insured only when enough actual V Potash is in the fertilizer. Jrajflj Neither qiointHy nor /V\' r for our />w lxok ■ V I CT-RMAM KAT.I WORKS. kkiUiij 50 YZARS* Om^^H^EXPERIENCE OB ah H v x_ J J I L| J llnkS I* 1 mm j| J, Him iivJffrJS rim mlk 11 IgjMß4HisJ|s* V- Sil S ’ l HQ®** Trade Marks _ Designs > Copyrights Ac. * Anyono nendlnff a aketah and description may quickly aacartaln our opinion free whether hii Invention w probably patentable. Coinniunlca. tlons strict ly confidential. Handbook oil Patent* went free. Oldest agency for securing patenta. Patents taken through Munn A Cos. rectstye tpfcutlnotuf , without ehargo, In the Scientific American. Ahnnrtiomelr llln*tn*loa wi-okly. l,*rxe*t dr- I'nl.ttmi of miy Mlentlflc Journal. Term*. fi * rear- four month*. *l. Bold by all tietrdealer*. MUNN &Cos. 36,Bro#dway New York Branch Offlo*. IBS K Ht, Waihlnifloti, 1). C. \o!^/ PERFECT PASSENGER AND SUPERB SLf!'PING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Southeast Connecting at SAVANNAH with STEAMSHIP LINES PLYING BETWEEN Savannah and New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore AND ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST Complete information, rates, schedules of trains and sailing dates of steamers cheerfully furnished by any agent of the company. 7KSO. D. KLINE, W. A. WINBUNN. General Bup‘t, Traffic Manager. J. O. HAILE, Gsnaral Pans r Agent, f. J. ROB'NSUN, Au'l Qaneral Paaa'r Agent. SAVANNAH. QA. hr ncQLDEN AGE PURE OLD LINCOLN CO. fHISKEY VE<s> BOTTLES £ f\ M r Express Prepaid, $ Jtfj Tho most porfort Whiskey over distilbwl. Bettor then other follows sell for 15. We are distiller*, which mokes a big ditTorenre. All shipments in plain boxes; money back if yon want it. ■ S bottle*. $3.45. rxpres* paid 10 bottle*. 6.55. exprets paid 12 bottle*. 7.90. express paid 15 bottles. 9 70, express paid A sample half pint by ex press prepaid for 50cents iu postage stamps. AMERICAN SUPPLY CO.. Dlatiliera, ••• Male !.. . . Memphis, Tree. wanted Inventors to write for oar contidential letter before ap jilving for patent; it may be worth money. We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign PATENTS or photo and we send an IMMEDIATE FREE report on patentability. ( give the beat legal service and advice, and our charges are moderate. Try u*. SWIFT & CO., PmUmt iawyart, •pp. US. Paten! Office,Washington, D.C. CONDENSED STORIES. How Grant Handled a Case of Petty Persecution. The recent exhibition here of models for the memorial which the nation will erect to General Grant has brought to light many stories regarding that great commander. An interesting one was told the oth er day by a retired politician, a warm friend and great admirer of the general. During the Grant ad ministration a bloody shirt Kepub ; lican, hearing that Miss Jackson, the daughter of the famous James Jackson, Ellsworth’s slayer, was I holding an office under the govern ment, secured her discharge and the ! appointment of one of his constit uents to her position. The fatal envelope announcing her dismissal brought great distress to the poor girl, who was the breadwinner for a number of people, and she hardly knew which way to turn. Friends finally advised her to go directly to the president and lay the matter be fore him. This was a difficult thing for a sensitive young woman, who understood and appreciated the prejudice that existed against her, to do, but there was no alternative, and she courageously sought out General Grant and told him her story. He was indignant at the treatment she had received and promised her an immediate rein statement. His first request to her former chief was returned with the indorsement, “There is no vacan cy.” To this General Grant replied with a brevity for which he was fa mous: “Then make a vacancy. This government is too powerful and too magnanimous to wage war on wom en and orphans.”—Washington Post. A Doubtful Remark. Admiral Schley was strolling around the picturesque naval ceme tery at Annapolis the other day when, happening to meet an old "IT WILL lIE STILL FIN Ell, YOUB HONOR." sailor, he remarked, “Jack, this is a beautiful spot.” Saluting, tho weather beaten salt replied, “Aye, aye, sir, ami it'll he still liner, your honor, when some more of our good admirals get planted here.” Explosion of a Depew “Jolly.” Several months ago a constituent of Senator came to him to seek his influence in getting an of fice. “You write n letter telling what you want, and 1 will forward it with my indorsement,” said the sen ator when ho had heard the man’s story. Several weeks later tho man met the senator in the capitol lobby. “You remember telling me to write you a letter,” he said. “Oh, yes,” was Mr. Depew’s reply as lie cordially grasped his visitor bv the hand. “Let me see. You sent* me the letter, didn’t you, and, if 1 remember rightly, 1 indorsed it strongly.” “No,” said the man. “I never wrote the letter. I’ve been sick.” — Washington Letter. Eloquence In Blank. One of the humorous incidents of the recent French elections is the joke perpetrated by ouo of the can didates in Auvergne, who was op posing the sitting member. lie had distributed thousands of copies of a blank pamphlet bearing the title “Speeches by M. Chose In the Chamber of Deputies of IS9B - Asa rule deputies’ speeches are used against them by their op ponents, but in the present, instance j the member for Auvergne never once opened his mouth during the whole session, llis parliamentary ! eloquence was therefore represented by a dozen pages of blauk paper. A Tribute to the Drowned. It would be diflicult to conceive a more touching and beautiful cere ! many than that of irfic children of j Gloucester throwing a bouciuet into the sen for each sailor who left that i port the past year and has not re turned. Where are the poets’ flights : of fancy now ?—Boston Herald. The BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY , JUIA 10, 1902. Dark Hair “ I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor for a great many years, and al though I am past eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head.” Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have, ff it’s gray now, no matter; for Ayer’s Hair Vigor always re stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling of the hair, too. SI.OO a bottle. All drunlata. If your druggist cannot supply yon, acrid us one dollar and we will express you a Pottle. He sure and give the name of your nearest express oflice. Address, J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. He Hatches Eggs. John Filson, a farmer living seven miles south of Eminence, Ky., is the proud father of forty four little chickens. Much of the credit for the results are due how ever to the practical bent of his wife’s mind. For months past Filton has been ill with a form of low fever. He was the whole support of his family, and the affairs of the household became sadly straitened as the weeks passed, and there was no signs of improvement. The woman become desperate, but inspiration at last came to her, and she decided to utilize : the husband’s bodily heat in ordt r [to help out the strained resources. Borrowing some eggs from a nieghbor, she placedthem in the lied with her husband, but so pro tected that they would not be crushed by his movements. The experiment proved successful, and at the end of four weeks the setting was finished. Only four of the eggs failed of results. Father and chickens are crow ing over their good luck, and Filson’s fever has begun to sub side. When a strong man grows weak it is a woman he seeks for a crutch. Youth will follow the torch in any hand; age wishes to carry it in its own hand. Since the day of mother Eve all the world has been looking for a pretty woman who did not know it. There are many women who can decieve their own husbands, but few who can decieve their friends. Most ambitions came down very hard without going up very high. All women like good boys for sons; for all other purposes they can stand a little of the other kind. The Sume OKI Story. J. A. Kelly relates an experience simalar to that which has happen ed in almost every neighborhood in the United States and has been told and re-told by thousands of others. He says:‘’Last summer I had an attack of dysentery and purchased a bottle of Chamber lin's Colic, Cholera and diarrhoea Remedy, which 1 used according to directions and with entirely satisfactory results. The trouble was controlled much quicker than former attacks when 1 used ot her remedies.” Mr. Kelly is a well known citizen of Henderson, N. C. For sale bv Jxo. H. Blackburn. Being a hale fellow well met is about as much to the man who is it as being a bottle of beer that is not flat and so is sure to bo dis posed of. Mica JL oßtakes short roads. AXLE JL light loads. (jREASE for everything that runs on wheels. Said Evorywhoro. y i by mSDiHDeiLCO, J r ALL OVER THE HOUSE. An Attractive Bedroom That Didn't Cost a Large Sum. A clever Chicago woman who thinks that everything French is delectable has fashioned for herself a rose and white bedroom with a few touches of gilt that has a decid ed air 6f a strictly French apart ment, and comparatively little mon ey lias been expended upon it. She has covered the walls in white cretonne, with a four inch wide stripe of pink roses, which oc curs at intervals of a foot and a half. The woodwork is white, and the picture molding of white makes a cove, and it and the ceiling are white. The bed is of whitewood, and a panel of cretonne well covered with pink roses has been inserted in the head and foot boards. The -coverlet is of the same fabric. The chairs have white and gilt frames and are upholstered with the rose cretonne. An effective screen has the lower halves of the frame covered with the cretonne, and in the upper portions is pink india silk shirred. Pink silk pillows adorn the lounge, which is covered with pink denim, and the pink denim is used for the heavy window draping and the portieres. The floor is covered with rose pink filling. The sasii curtains are of brus sels net trimmed with renaissance braid, a medallion of lace inserted in the center. A writing table is of whitewood, its fitments of plain pink porcelain. The dressing table is of white and gold, the top covered with a bit of pink damask edged with gold braid. The bathroom, which is connect ed with this attractive bedroom, has a floor of pink tiles, and the walls are covered with a pink and white enamel paper. Overdoing the Housekeeping. Two women who sat behind us on the train recently exchanged a few brief opinions concerning the land scape and then settled down to the more congenial subject of their im mediate friends. “Yes,” remarked one of them, “Jane’s a nice woman, and her husband thinks the sun rises and sets right where she is, but it doesn’t worry her a mite if her carpet has to stay down three years at a stretch. Now, I just about fly to pieces if I can’t get all my housecleaning done right on time.” It seems possible, however, that the criticised Jane’s household philosophy may have much to do with her husband’s appreciation. There are times when the house wifely virtues have to take a vaca tion and when we do most for those around us by ignoring some appar ent duties. The woman who will “just about fly to pieces” because nonvital plans are deranged may be a good housekeeper, but she is a poor wife and mother. —Rural New Yorker. Split Pea Soup. Split pea soup is one of the tast iest, most nutritious and most eco nomical of soups. Put a cupful of the peas to soak over night in three quarts of cold water, having first washed them thoroughly. The next morning put in a saucepan, adding a ham bone if you have it or a little piece of bacon and the rind, togeth er with a sliced onion and a tiny bit l of red pepper. Simmer for four or five hours until perfectly soft, add ing more water from time to time as required. When nearly ready to serve, pass the peas through a sieve [ and add to the pulp enough stock, j water or milk to make a soup about the consistency of cream. Thicken slightly with a tablespoonful of flour and one of butter cooked to gether and made smooth by half a cupful of the liquor before adding to the pot. This thickening will keep the heavy part of the soup . from settling to the bottom. Serve with croutons. A good dried bean soup may be made in the same way. Attractive Dutch Screen. A pretty screen for a country house has a framework of dark oak, with a few crossed bars in the pan els, which are draped with green mercerized cotton. At the top of each panel is a bright colored pic ture of Dutch life, the center one being the familiar posters of Queen Wilhelmina with the tulip that was brought out at the time of her coro nation and the other two represen tations of domestic scenes iu Hol land. A Novel Tea Table. A quaint tea table has been re modeled by a Brooklyn woman from an old round stand which has been in the possession of her family for many years. A shelf matching the top was skillfully inserted half way down the length. The wood being much discolored and battered, the table was treated to two coats of white paint. A coat of enamel paint finished the renovating process, and the result is very satisfactory. Perfect and Peerless ‘Rheumatism and all Liver, Kidney and Blad der troubles caused by uric acid in the system. It cures by cleansing and vit-.lizing the blood, thus removing the cause of disease. It gives vigor and tone and builds up the health and strength of the patient while using the remedy. URICSOL is a luminary in the medical world. It has cured and will continue to cure more of the above diseases than all other known remedies, many of which do more harm than good. This great and thoroughly tested . and endorsed California Remedy i never disappoints. It cures in -1 fallibly if taken as directed. * Try it and be convinced that it is a wonder and a blessing to suffering humanity. Price SI.OO per bottle, or 6 bot tles for $5. For sale by druggists. Send stamp for book of partic ulars and wonderful cures. If your druggist cannot supply you it will be sent, prepaid, upon receipt of price. Address: URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., Los Ai|elei, Cal. or the LAMAR & RANKIN DRI'G CO., Atlanta, Ga. Distributing Agents. Summer complaint is unusually prev alent among children this, season. A well developed case in the writers fam ily was cured last week by the timely use of Chamberlin’s Colic, Cholera and Diarahoea Remedy—one of the best patent medic'nes manufactured and which is always kept on hand at the home of ye scribe. This is not intend ed as a.free puff for the company, who who do not advertise with us, but to benefit little Sufferers who may not be within easv access of a physician. No family should be without a bottle of this medicine in the house, especially in summer-time. —Lansing, lowa, Journal. For sale by Jno. H. Black burn. Man’s path to duty leads from the school, woman’s from the church. J. W. Cabaniss, President. C. H. Humphrey, cashier. CITIZENS BANK OF BARNESVILLE, GA. Capital, $25,000. StocKholders’ Liability, $25,000.. DIRECTORS: J W. Cab-miss, president Exahange Bank of Macon ;E. Rumble, Merchant, Goggans, Ga ,J. L. Pitts, of Pitts-Gray Cos ; J. C. Collier, of J. C. Collier Cos. ; J M. Means, Cotton Buyer, Meansville; V.O Marshburn, Merchant; T. W. Cochran, Livery; R. P Spencer, of Columbus; Thos. J Peeples, Cashier Maddux-Rueker Banking Cos., Atlanta; C H. Humphrey, Cashier. This bank solicits accounts of merchants, individuals and corporations, and. extends every facility consistent with sound banking principles. R. P. Becht, Pres. E. G. Becht, Sec. & Treas. Chas. Becht, V. Pres. Honest Pianos at Honest Prices. Becht Piano Cos., Manufacturers and Dealers In High Grade Pianos and Organs STEINWAY & SONS., HOBART M. CABLE, SOHMER it CO., STEGER & SONS, SINGER, Pianos. BURDETTE it MILLER, Organs. us for Catalogues and Prices. fprW Special prices for the holidays. BELL PHONE 1565 ENGLISH-AMERICAN BUILDING ATLANTA. - GEORGIA, J. D. HIGHTOWER, SUCCESSOR TO J. W. HIGHTOWER HEALER IN Agricultural, Mechanical and Buiders' Hardware, Farm Eauiuments, Water Supnlies. Guns, Cutlery, Silverwares Disk's non-rustible Tinware, China and Glassware, Decorative Bric-a - Brae, Crockery and Queensware, wooden ware, Stoves, Holloware, Paints, Oils, Brushes etc*, etc. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of th£ digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the foor 1 you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gas on the stom ach, relieving all distress after eating. Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can’t help but do you good Prepared only by E.O. DeWitt & Cos., Chicago The (X. bottle contains 2H times the 50c. size. A Colossal Statue. The colossal equestrian statue at Rome of King Victor Emmanuel 11., which is now nearing comple tion, is about thirty-three feet in height from the level on which the horse stands to the crown of the king’s head. The feathers in his helmet are about five feet extra. There will be space for one or two persons to get into the head and for four or five in the head of the horse. The scale of the figure is about that of the Bavaria statue at Munich. Great Baseball Records. The baseball records of the past are brilliant ones and an incentive to all players. The great unaided triple play of Paul Hines at Provi dence in 1878 has never been equaled. Xeither officially have the throwing of a ball by John Hatfield, in 1872, a distance of 133 yards 1 foot 7 1/2 inches; Harry Eel-thong’s running of_the bases in 14y 2 sec onds in 18G8 and Hugh Duffy’s bat ting average of .438 in 1894. —Bos- ton Globe. The Limit. A young swell wore anew style evening coat at the Waldorf-Asto ria, in New York, the other night. It was a swallowtail, with velvet collar and a pocket for a handker chief in the left breast. A tiny lace handkerchief peeped from, the pock et.