The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, July 31, 1902, Image 7

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BEST FOR THE BOWELS ff tori haven’t a regular, healthy movement of the hnwels every day, you’re ill or will be. Keep your hr.wels open, and be well. Force, In the shape of vio lent ohvsie or rilla>oison, is dangerous. The smooth# LgV easiest, most perfect way of keeping ihe bowels clear and clean to to take CANDY CATHARTIC . EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY Pleasaht, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Bicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10, 25, ami 50 cents per box. Write for free sample, ami booklet on health. Address 433 STERLING ItESEDY 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: Thomnston street: ’Phone 9. DR. J. M. ANDERSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, BARNESVILLE, GA. Residence: Thomaston street. ’Phone No. 25. C. H. PERDUE, DENTIST, BARNESVILLE GA. gg’-Office over Jordan’s Drug Store. J. A. CORRY, M. D., BARNESVILLE, GA. Office: Mitchell building. Residence: Greenwood street. Office hours: 7 to 8 a. m., 11 to 12a. m,sto6pm 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. |3?“ 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, 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. o. M JONES, Prop.. Main street, next to P. O. W. B. SMITH, F. D FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS. ODOKI ESS EMBALMING FLUII W. B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker BARNESVILLE, GA. My little son had an attack of whooping caugh and was threaten ed with pneumonia : but forCham 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 sale by Jno. H. Blackburn. COTTON RULES CHANGED. Farmers of Georgia Will Save Thereby $750,000. An agreement has been entered into between the railroads and the Southeastern Cotton Buyers association for the coming season which will mean a saving of at least .$750,000 to the farmers of Georgia alone, and about the same amount to those of Alabama. This is important news for the cotton growers in all the territory around Barnesville. Farmers are entitled to every advantage possi ble in the sale of their cotton and there are movements on foot which will largely increase their profits, if they sell their cotton in Barnesville the coming season. At a conference held in New York Thursday between the exec utive committees of the South eastern Cotton Buyers association it was agreed by the railroads to moderate their former compress payments, to abolish almost en tirely concentration charges for inland points and to allow ship pers to route cotton as they please. The cotton men are jubilant over the concessions made by the railroad company and from now on it is believed harmony instead of friction ftill exist between the two associations. Sometime ago the railroads notified the compress men that only six cents the hun dred pounds would be paid for compressing cotton, and no assu rance given about the concentr% tion charges which were amount ing to from one to three cents the hundred pounds and the cotton shippers were thinking that they would have to allow' the railroads to ship their cotton as they de sired. But at the conference the rail roads agreed to pay six cents the hundred pounds for compressing cotton in Georgia, which cotton was to he shipped to either North or South Carolina and that in Al abama the price to be paid for compressing should be seven and one-half cents the hundred pounds where the cotton was to be ship ped to either of the Carolinas. The railroads also agreed that where the cotton was to be exported or shipped to the New England states they would pay seven and one half cents the hundred pounds for such cotton compressed in Geor gia and eight and one-half cents the hundred for such cotton com pressed in Alabama. Before the cotton to he shipped from Georgia was not to be compressed, that is where it had to go to the Carol i nas, and only six cents was to have been paid when it was to be exported or shipped to New Eng land. The concentration charges which have heretofore been from one to three cents the hundred pounds will practically he abol ished. The railroads also agreed to allow the shippers to route their own cotton. Last year the railroads routed all of the cotton shipped. The roads reserved the right, however, to route the cot ton when the shippers had no preference. The agreement is for the coming cotton season and will go into ef fect as soon as the first shipments are made. A TEXAS WONDER. HAIjI/S great discovery. One small bottle of Hall’s Great Dis covery cures all kidney and bladder troubles, removes gravel, cures diabe tes, seminal emissions, weak and lame backs, rheumatism and all irregularity of the kidneys and bladder in both men and women, regulates bladder troubles in children. If not sold by your druggist, will send by mail on re ceipts of sl. One small bottle is two months’ treatment, and will cure any case above mentioned. Dr. fv \\ Hall sole manufacturer. P. O. Box 629, .St. Louis, Mo. Send for testimonials. Sold by AV. A. Wright. Martin, Tenn., June 3. 1901. This is to certify that I have used Hall’s Texas Wonder for kidney trou ble and have never found anything |ts equal. Its merits are wonderful. Try it, as I did, and be convinced. Rev. R. C. Whitnei.l. OA.BTOHIA. Baan tie st The Kind Yaa Haw Alwajs BougM 57 THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1902. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. A Handy Little Implement For Use In the Kitchen. A pineapple eye snip does away with much of the difficulty of par ing the prickly fruit. . In appear ance it is like a small scissors. At tached to one end is an open loop of steel. At the other is a sharp edged spoonlike arrangement of steel, which when the snip is closed fits into the loop. After the pineapple is pared you open the snip the width of the eye of the pineapple, place the spoon part under the eye, lower your hand, press the spoon in until the upper knife touches the pine apple, then close the snip, and the eye is out. The eyes can be extracted from potatoes in the same way. To re move the cores from apples and quinces for baking purposes the spoon part only is used. You insert this at the stem end to the center of the fruit and give the spoon a turn or two around the core, which will come out quite readily. A Colonial Room. Color is one of the important considerations in furnishing a colo nial room. The rich etfect of the mahogany furniture is much in creased by a creamy yellow tint of wall. If an oriental rug with mus tard yellow tones predominating covers the center of the floor, which should, of course, be stained a dark brown, the result will be pleasingly harmonious. Window curtains of yellow brocade silk should be in colonial style, looped back with cord and tassels and with lambre quins, says the Brooklyn Eagle. It will also be in keeping with colonial ideas to have the straight backed chairs upholstered with yellow silk. Shelves containing some old blue china and pieces of pewter or silver will be set olf well by the yellow wall. Pictures should be chosen carefully, lest their too modern look interfere with the harmony of the room. Copies of old masters in old style frames are safe subjects. Toaster For Gas Stove. If you have a gas stove, you will find useful a bread toaster specially designed to be used with such a stove. It is made of sheet steel. The base looks like an eight inch square shallow pan, in the center of which rises a perforated fuanel, point up. Around the cone a wire frame is devised to hold upright four pieces of bread, one on each side, which can be toasted all at the same time. The hollow cone rests over the flame and becomes incan descent from the heat of the gas. When it is cherry red, the flame is regulated so that the cone is kept this color. The reflection of the heat toasts the bread. For Porch Decoration. Anew idea in porch decoration is to fill a large stone pitcher with wild flowers or gay garden blos soms, such as peonies and scarlet geraniums. The pitcher is either of a Delft type or decorated with some large floral design. One of the fem inine members of Brooklyn’s artist colony has painted a number of pitchers for the summer cottage porch. In addition to the Delft dec orations, one design that is especial ly attractive shows a spray of hops encircling the pitcher. This hop vine will harmonize effectively with the scarlet geraniums with which it is proposed to fill the pitcher. Frozen Buttermilk. Anew recipe which makes a nice luncheon dish is frozen buttermilk. To one gallon of fresh buttermilk add two cans of standard condensed milk, vanilla and sugar to taste. Put in ice cream freezer and freeze as ice cream. Many people in mak ing this strive to make it too much like ice cream and so sweeten it too much. Care must be taken not to get it too sweet. A suspicion of tartness makes it delicious, but when too sweet it is insipid. Summer Covering*. If the summer coverings for pol ished tables are made at home, it should he remembered that a close fitting cover of some soft fabric of the flannel variety should first be fitted over the polished top and cor ners. The domett flannel or white outing flannel is suitable for the purpose. This prevents the stiff holland from scratching the sur face, as might otherwise be the case. The high finish of the piano top needs similar protection. A New Fabric. For wicker furniture upholstery, for cushion covers and for inner hangings in halls, libraries, dining rooms and the like linen taffeta, showing a dot in the weave, is first choice. It comes in all colors, dou ble width, at 75 cents, but green is the most admired, a shade between olive and sage. Red is next best, but in some rooms it is just the thing. Surroundings and furnish ings must, of course, be taken into consideration. An Essay on Newspapers. A; twelve-year-old boy in a Western school prepared an essay on “The Newspaper,” which he recently read at the Friday after noon's literary exercises. The essay contains much originality, if not great chunks of wisdom and information. Following are some extracts: “Newspapers are sheets of paper on which stuff to read is printed. The men look over it to see if their names is in it. I don’t know how newspapers came into the world. I don’t think God does. The Bible says nothing about edi tors, and 1 never heard of one be ing in heaven. The first editor 1 ever heard of was the fellow who wrote up the flood. He has been here ever since. “Some editors belong to the church and some try to raise whiskers. All of them raise the dickens in their neighborhood. “Sometimes the paper dies, and then the people feel glad, but some one starts it up again. Editors never went to school, because ed itors never get licked. Ourpaper is a mighty poor one, but we take it so ma can use it on her pantry shelves. Our editor don’t amount to much, but paw said he had a poor chance when lie was a boy. He goes without underclothes in winter, wears no socks, and has a wife to support him. Paw has not paid his subscription in five years and don’t intend to.” GOOD FENCING CHEAP. Ready Built, Woven Wire Fences Are Winning Their Way on Merit.. Good, tight, durable fencing can now be put up on every boun dary of a farm or plantation so cheaply that there is no excuse for broken down fences and costly ne glect that costs more in injury to growing crops than would pay for new fencing. The factories are turning out such immense quan tities of the steel wire fencing known as the American Field and Hog Fence, that the price lias be | come wonderfully low, consider ing the fact that the best Besse mer steel is used and highest grade galvanizing. The fencing comes from the factory in rolls of forty rods and less and the setting of posts is the chief labor involved in modern fence building. The American Fence stands all kinds of strains, heat and cold, bulls and boys. It is the fence that fences and the fence of real economy. It is sold in all parts of the country and at the general stores. Everybody interested in the fencing problem should put up a section of American fencing and see how it stands in competi tion with fences that are built with a great deal of hard labor and at greater expense. A Kansas man fell off the porch and broke his leg while helping his wife to do the washing. And here is the Savannah Press’ com ment on the incident: “This is a lesson for the man who bothers around in places where lie lias no business.” State of Ohio, CiTV of Toledo, ( Li eam County, ( ” Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A Cos., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every ease of catarrh that | cannot be cured hy the use of HALL’S CATARRH CURE. FRANKJ CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this fjt.li day of Decem ber, A. D. IHWS. A. W. GLEASON. ,• —■*— > Notary Public. i t { HEAL > > „J Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Add reHS F. J. CHENEY A Cos., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are tin- best. Coherent Answer. Helen —“J have jusl refused to marry Mr. Gingerly.” Edith—“ft! did he propose?” Helen —“Well 1 can’t say posi tively, but that is how 1 construed his incoherent remarks.” —Brook- lyn Life. "C” With a Tail. " The “C” with a tail is the trade mark of CasCarets Candy Cathartic. Look for it on the light blue enameled rnetal box! Each tablet stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, ioc. Uneeda Biscuit Right from the oven as fresh as to day’s bread and just as wholesome. Served in a dust proof, moisture proof, odor proof package—the like of which you never saw before. A lunch done up in tempting style for just Five Cents THE MOTHERS of Tomorrow—Tlin Ol<l Idea nial i lie New. The following from one of our exchanges is too loose, though we have forgotten the name of the exchange: “There has been, ac cording to history, ail idea in the world that education was intend ed for boys, and hoys only; that women had no need of any book knowledge more than to read, write and figure a little; that to educate a girl was a waste of en egy, time and money; and too, that all education would not and could not be of any advantage to the female sex. Tilings for girls to know were how to spin, weave, wash, sew, cook and all such drudgery work as might need to be done in house keeping, and when she advanced beyond this she was getting on forbidden ground for a women. “Such was once the prevailing idea in regard to the education of the female sex, and even ’today some of our people cling to that nonsensical idea. “The girls should know how to do all these things mentioned, and more. The old idea of Ibis being sufficient knowledge for a girl has been abandoned by our best and broad-minded people. They see that to educate the girls of our land means more content ment for that sext, but, on the contrary means true happiness and prosperity for the rising gen eration. The girls of today are to be mothers of tomorrow; and oh! how thankful a boy or a girl should lie who has an educated mother. An educated mother al most means an educated son or daughter. A child who never hears poorly spoken English never speaks such. It is the mother who has the everlasting influence over son or daughter; and for these reasons if for no other, give us educated women —women with an all-round education, and Christian women. “So give us rightly educated mothers’ and we will have less trouble with the young generation, need fewer lawyers, fewer prisons, £1 a vfe #agm ■ ■n o Is the name sometimes given to what I lalSStfßflllfllllX 'S generally known as tin- RAD DIS III\|YIIEASE. It is uot confined to dens of v vice or the lower classes. • The purest Ia it. /I Vk a ■/> an and best people are sometimes ■C|JK4b4| infected with this awful malady iIIWU Y vIOVII through handling the clothing, drinking from the same vessels, using the same toilet articles, or otherwise coming in contact with persons who have contracted it. It begins usually with a little blister or sore, then swelling in the groins, a red eruption breaks out on the body, sores and ulcers appear in the mouth, the throat becomes ulcerated, the hair, eye brows and lashes fall out; the blood becoming more contaminated, copper colored splotches and pustular eruptions and sores appear upon different parts of the body, and the poison even destroys the bones. S. S. S. is a Specific for this loathsome disease, and cures it even in the worst forms. It is a perfect antidote for the powerful virus that pollutes but is guaranteed a strictly vegetable compound. # • Write for our free home treatment book and learn all about Contagious Blood Poison. If you want medical advice give us a history of your case, and our physicians will furnish all the information you wish without any charge whatever. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, 6A. fewer sheriffs, and have fewer drunkards. Wo will have more churches and hotter members, and better citizens and better truer and happier homes. Hu manity will then stand on a high er and nobler plane than ever before.” For Over Sixty Years. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over sixty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething with per fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. It will re lieve the poor little sufferer im mediately. Sold by druggists in every part of the world at 25 cents a bottle. Be sure ask to for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing syrup, and take no other kind. Don't Try— To make a man believe that smoking affects his nervous sys tem. To secure a woman’s good will when there is another woman in the case. To convince a woman she is in error as to her estimate of a man’s disposition. To show a woman how foolish she appears when she becomes mannish in her ways. r\AM s T TOBACCO SPIT L/WIN I and SMOKE 1 Your Llfeawayl You can hr ciirr'l of any form of tobacco using easily, 1* matin well, strong, magnetic, full of new life nnd vigor by taking MO-TO - BAO, that make* weak men strong. Many gaia ten pounds In ten days. Over 800 f OOO cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Ilook st ami advice I'UEE. Address STERLING EMEDY CO., CHi-ago or New York. 437 Visitor (to Nebraska farmer) — It has been pretty hot out he#e this summer, bus it not? Farmer —Hot? well, rather, Why, we even had to put ice in the pond to keep the ducks from luying hard-boiled eggs.—Judge. OA.STQH.I2Li Bear* the jO ll* KM You Have Always Boupt “How to treat tramps” is being discussed by the newspapers. Our experience is that it is quite a plenty just to leave the demijohn where they can reach it. —Atlanta Constitution. Ten years ago I contracted a bad case of Blood Poison. I was under treatment of a physician until I found that hecould do me no (food. Then began taking 1 8.8.8. I commenced to improve at once and in a very short time all evidence of the disease disappeared. I took six bot* ties and today am sound and well. K. M. Wall, Morristown, Tenn. the blood and penetrates to all parts of the system. Unless you get this poison out of your blood it will ruin you, and bring disgrace and disease upon your children, for it can be transmitted from parent to child. S. S. S. contains no mercury or potash,