The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, August 14, 1902, Image 6

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i% fiv4.%r Small crops, unsalable veg etables, result from want of Potash. Vegetables arc especially fond of Potash. Write for our free pamphlets. GERMAN KAT.I WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. rn.RY.GO. y PERFECT PASSENGER AND SUPERB SLT: PING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Southeast Connecting ri t 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. THEO. D. KUNE. W. A. WINBURN, General Bup‘t, Traffic Manager, J. O. HAILE, General Pa.t'r Agent, P. U. ROBINSON, A.e't General Pasa'r AgenL SAVANNAH, GA. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of thi digestnnts and digests all kinds of food. Halves Instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food 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 format ion of gas on t lie stom ach, relieving all distress after eating. Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can’t help but do you good ftvpnredotilyby F.C. PkWittA- t'o..OhteaM flic |l. bottle cou lulus -S limes tlie isle. situ. Tradc Marks Df SIGNS r , Copyrights Ac. Auvone semltnn n aketi'h Mil dww-rlptlon may Bill, lily nimnnln mtr opinion free wln-ilier an invention m probihljr pniMKAblt. IVmmunlon iioniiiitrtctift'ottflddntlAl. Hiindbtv'k on I’wtonU ?ut troo. oMt'Ht juronoy for aeouiiiw I‘fttotits taken through Muvttt Cos. rocolro fjn> hil noitcfi, without ohrtTHO. in too Scientific American. A h*n<lomoly flhwtmtivl wivklr. I ctr rnlitum of any aofontttSo lourtml. ’I omi. a y\ar : four months. |>l. Bold by all newdelorn. MUNN&Co. 36,8r0id **> New York Bmui !> otlu-o. i> F St, WaahmiHon, D. C. Wanted I NVENTORS tn writ** for our confidential let lor before ap plying for patent; it may he worth money. We promptly obtain 17. S. and Foreign PATENTS and TRADE MARKS or return EN TIRE attorney's fee. bend model, sketch or photo aud we send an IMMEDIATE TREE report on patentability. we (ttve the best legal service and advice, and our charges are moderate. Try us. SWIFT & CO., Pateunt Lawyorm, Opp. U.S. Patent Qfßce,Washington, D.C. I Wanted Help. |Ve want to build a school house at Piedmont. We are now touch ing sixty pupils in an old barn like concern made of the ruiriH left by be cyclone of a few yearn ago, We are in the natural center pf a territory containing a hun dred students who are deprived of attending during the most of the year on account of inadequate ac comrfiodatioiiH. Our community is poor, composed principally of tenants. believing that the future of our I section depends on this work, we appeal to those who have landed ! interests here, to those in sur rounding towns who are benefitted by our patronage, to those to whom offices of county or state are intrusted and are interested in their welfare, to all lovers of chil dren, education and noble endeav or—to these we appeal for assist ance in this much needed work. Through the kindness of the News-Gazette we will give the subscription list in full each week. Send your subscriptions to the bui 1 ding com mittee. J. C. Collier, I. C. Collier, T. M. Allen, Z. B. Head, 11. Cato, W. B. WnrTTLE, .James T. Wart hen. j stifiscßirrioNß to date: J. C. Collier SIOO.OO i I. C. Collier 50.00 11. .T. Cato. • • 10.00 ! G. 11. Collier 5.00 C. 10. Casey 5.00 A . A. Sutton 5.00 .1, T. VVartlien . 10.00 ; James C. Collier 5.00 Z. 11. Elliott ... 5.00 VV. T. Waller 8.00 J. G. Spear 5.00 I W. B. Whittle 8.00 W. J. Adams 10.00 It H Nelson 5.00 N. \V. Hurst 3.00 /. It. Head 5.00 I .1. If. Torbert ‘2.00 ! G. T. Harp 5.01) T. E. Bussey 2.00 W. T. and J. W. Elliott 4.00 M (t. Ilfirrissuii 1.00 Bike County 100.00 T. S. Yates - 5.00 ('lias Matthews 2.00 C. J. Harrell 1.00 Congressman C. E. Bartlett . . 10.00 $371.00 James 'l'. WArthen, Secretary. Ilolanlc Blood Halm l or The Blood. If you suffer from ulcers, eczema, scrofula, blood poison, cancer, eating sores, itching skin, pimples, boils, bone pains, swellings, rheumatism, catarrh, or any other blood or skin disease, we advise you to take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. IE). Especially recom mended for old obstinate, deep-seated eases, cures where all else fails, heals every sore, makes the blood pure and rich, gives the skin a rich glow of health. Druggist, $1 per large bottle. Sample sent free by writing Blood Balm Go., Atlanta, Ga. Describe t rouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. Medicine sent at once, prepaid. Justice to the Editor. in the Missouri State senate a hill came up aiVocting the week ly newspapers of the state. In discussing the bill Senator I leather said: “No man in the community does more for the public and re ceives less for it than the country editor. If all the space he employs in booming the town in helping individuals, in making statesman —sometimes out of pretty raw material —were paid for even at. half the legal rate, he would he the richest man in the country. Few country editors arc rich, hut they are of more service to the communities where they live than the wealthiest man. They arc in the forefront of every movement of progress. They do the work and leave the emoluments to others. A good, clean, honest newspaper —and most country papers are good and dean and honest —helps on every Worthy cause and deserves every worthy encouragement. It fights the party battles, holds up the hands of the reformer and makes the scoundrel afraid. ,11 ST LOOK AT HKK. Whence t'anit' that sprightly step, fault loss skin, rich rosy oomploxion. smiling fact', llores ; ht'r secret. Slit' uses Hr. King s New Life I’ills. Result, —All organs active, digestion good, nt> headaches, no ehauce for “blues.' Try them yourself. Only 25c at W. A. Wright. A woman takes a good deal of pride in thinking what would be come of her husband if she were dead. How Are Vr Hltfneys t Dr Hobbs' Sparagut Pills eureall kidney Ilia. Sam -1 fie free. Add BteiUnf Hemvdf C\K,ct*ic**oor N.\ THE BARNESVJLLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1902- Some Reasons Why You Should Imut on Hi ving EUREKA HARNESS OIL Uneqtiaitd By any other. Render.-. hard '-ather soft. Especially prepared#, - Keeps out water. . "fill? heavy bodied <’ii. ‘M# Harness An excellent preservative. Reduces cost of you- harness. Never burns the leather; its Efficiency is increased. Secures best service. Stitches kept from breakiag. Oil |s sold in all Localities Manufactured by Standard Oil C ompany. Pointed Paragraphs. It’S an easy matter to master the grief of another. It’s easier to earn money than it is not to spend it. Borrowing may be a disease, but lending is insanity. Cupid puts in a good deal of his time at target practice. The average woman acts first and thinks it over afterward. Faith is not very plentiful, but [the supply equals the demand. Woman’s ruling passion crops out in her desire to rule her hus band. Things are actually what they seem —about one time in a hun dred. The microbe never bothers the man who is unaware of its exis tence. The man who is too lazy to stand up and tell the truth is apt lie about it. No man is ever so friendless that lie can’t find some to jolly him along. The briny breakers at the sea i shore are less dangerous than the ; heart- breakers. —Ex. |-N 8V 15 TOBACCO SPIT | and SMOKE Your Lifeawayl You can lie curd of any form of tobacco using easily, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor by taking MO-TO-BAO, that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days. Over 300,000 cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book let and advice FREE. Address STERLING REMEDY CO., Cl''-ago or New York. 437 The Largest Tree. The dispatches from California this week told <>f the largest tree in the world as follows: “What undoubtedly is the larg est known tree in the world has ! been recently discovered two and a half miles from the Sanger Lumber Company’s mill at Con verse Basin, far up in the Sierras, : in this county. The discovery was made by a party of hunters, but little credence was given to the report until the tree had been visited by the people who have ! verified the finders’ statement. The monster was measured six feet from the ground and it took a line 154 feet and 8 inches long to en circle it making it over 51 feet in diameter. This tree is a few rods from the company’s boundary line and is on the government reserve, hence it will stand to interest sightseers and will escape the woodman's ax. LJ Host Lough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Let those who have thought it warm for the past few weeks lis ten to this: During the two or three years the young colony of Coaehilla, Cal., has made money in tie' water melon growing busi ness. This year a largo acreage was planted in melons. Last Friday, when the melons were about ready for market, a sand storm occurred. It lasted for three days, during all of which time the lowest temperature in shade was 120 degrees. The mel ons wen* literally cooked on the vines, and the loss by the growers was total. We sometime have warm days in Georgia, but never anything like that. —Jackson Ar gus. . Educate Tour Bowtlt With Ounrttl. Curdy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. loc. c. C.C. C. tail, druggists refvnd money. A Negro On the Negro. j W. W. Lucas, a negro preacher i who is field agent of the Negro | Young People’s Christian Educa j tional Congress, has preached Ito large congregations of negroes down in Mobile. Here are some things he said to the colored j bretheren: “I have decided that the only | way to get rid of the ‘Jim Crow’ i car is to get rid of the ‘Jim Crow !negro. “If I could use 200,000 bars of soap on the unwashed negroes that travel on trains and hang a round depots I would solve the negro problem about 20 per cent. “Lazy, ragged, barefooted fel lows longing for silver and long white robes and counting them selves worthy, neglecting to pro vide a home on earth for their families and yet claiming a home not made with hands in God’s heaven! “The white man is trying to make this earth blossom as a rose, and the negro is getting ready to die! “The white man is organizing business enterprizes and the neg ro organizing societies to turn out at their funerals! Now, I object to a hundred dollar funer al for a 50-cent negro ! “The negro eats up and dresses away all lie makes. One square meal on Sunday sweeps away all the wages of the week. He re minds me of the mule which ate up the shipping tag from his leg An old negro exclaimed: ‘Gee! dat mule done et up whar-he’a gwine.’—That’s the way the negro does. He eats up his living.” This kind of talk may not make the Reverend Lucas especially popular with his race, but lie is a better friend to them than those who entertain the sons and daugh ters of Ham with noisy sermons about golded slippers and long white robes. —Ex. [BOY CURED OF COLIC AFTER PHYSICIAN’S TREATMENT IIAD FAILED. My boy when four years old was taken 1 with colic and cramps in his stomach. I sent for the doctor and he injected morphine, hut the child kept getting worse. 1 then gave him half ateaspoon | ful of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera [ and Diarrhoea Remedy and in half an hour he was sleeping and soon recover- I ed —F. E. Wilkins, Shell Lake, Wis. Air. [ Willis is book-keeper for the Shell Lake i Lumber Cos. For sale by Jxo. H. Bi.ackbuhx. Mr. Kinsman, a Bible student, of Erie, Pa., has discovered a the ory by which he proves there are no women in Heaven. From the same chain of evidence he can not prove them to be in hell and explains that there is no distinc tion of sex when they reach the great beyond, or they all turn to males. The Constitution thinks this man should be turned over to the Federation of Woman Clubs to be dealt with, especially by the chilis. CASTOHIA.. Bears the I* lß Kinli You Have GotlgM Bl nr Information Cheerfully Furnished. A correspondent asks if the“g” is silent in Mascagni. It —well, it depends a little on how you pronounce it. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. My Hair “I had a very severe sickness that took off all my hair. I pur chased a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor and it brought all my hair back again.” W. D. Quinn. Marseilles, 111. One thing is certain, — Ayer’s Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and the hair grows, that’s all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al ways restores color to gray hair. 81. M a Mile. Alt Ininlft*. If jour drngreist ran not supply you, send ns one dollar and we will express tous bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express oftice. Address, J.C. AYER CO.. Lowell. Mass. A LITTLE NONSENSE. Budget of Jests Gleaned From a Yon kers Jokester. She—You say the table groaned funder the weight of the season’s products ? He—Yes; they were playing ping pong on it. She —I don’t understand why a barber talks 60 much to his custom ers. He — because his custom ers are not women. He wouldn’t have a chance if it was otherwise. Bacon When those two men formed a partnership, they turned in everything they had. Egbert—Yes; I notice they both turned in their toes. “If you didn’t knock spots out of your last summer’s suit,” remarked the observer of events and things, “it is now time to take it to the tailor and have them taken out some other way.” Yeast —What is the average speed of an automobile? Crimsonbeak—lt’s hard to tell. You see, it goes fast when it does go, but when it breaks down it’s still for a long while.—Yonkers States man. A Partnership. “How is it that Dr. X. has so many patients ?” “Oh, his wife gives a dinner every month, and people who get dyspep sia there keep him busy.” Time Saved. “Some of the most successful Americans,” said the sententious summer hoarder, “were obliged in youth to study by the light of pine knots.” “Yes,” answered Farmer Corn tossel; “that’s where they had a big advantage. They didn’t have to spend a large share of their lives dodgin’ live wires an’ learnin’ not to blow out the gas.”—Washington Star. A Gentle Reminder. It was 11:30. “Yes,” she said, although the re mark seemed a little abrupt, “I al ways sleep well.” Then she paused and plaintively added in a hopeless murmur, “When I get a chance.” Whereupon the youth, who had been overstaying himself, took his hat and softly stole away.—Cleve land Plain Dealer. Putting It to the Test. Ethel—George has told me that he will kill himself if I do not con sent to be his. What shall I do? Her Mother—Wait, my child, and see whether he does or not. If he fails to do so, you will know r that he is not worthy of your love. —Chi- cago Record-Herald. One Sided. Hardhead —Well, every man has a right to his opinion. Pepprey —Yes, but the trouble is he can't be made to realize that there may be a wrong to it.—Phila delphia Press. For the Land’s Sake. “Will you share my humble lot?” begged the suitor. “Yes, if there’s a cottage on it,” answered the crafty maid. —Phila- delphia Record. Down at the Shore. Alice —They say there are many good fish in the sea. Flora—Yes, anu lots of lobsters up here ou the beach. —Philadel- phia Bulletin. The Satisfaction He Got. Irate Passenger—You’ve carried Me twice as far as I wanted to go! Street Car Conductor —That will be another fare, please.—Ohio State Journal. The Optimist. Grandpa—Well, Horace, we have not caught any fish. IPs hard lines. Horace—But we had good'luck diggin’ worms. —Chicago News. Thousands Have Kidney Tiouble and Don’t Know it. How To Find Ont. Fill a bottle or common glass with y OU r water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a ArT3s_t4! # . sediment or set. /'jWH f~v J Cd tlin S indicates an ' v 7 r w > J ®)£^x7D unh ® allh > r cont} ‘' TTCH Y/ hon of the kid- A WlMzri'f I 1 V neys; if it Stains y° ur linen Rj s \ ITfCZj fhJ evidenc Of kid- JM \ W nff tZLMt ne y trouble; too j : frequent desire to _- ’ pass it or pain in . ! " • the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and blad der are out of order. What to 80. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage, it corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extra ordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its won derful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in 50c. andsE sizes. You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful discovery and a book that tells more about it, both absolutely free by mail, address Dr. Kilmer & Home of Swamp-Root. Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men tion reading this generous offer in this paper. Hard Man to Kill. A Frankfort, Incl., dispatch to the Cincinnatti Enquirer says: Milton Jones, a farmer, yester day accidentally shot himself through the left hand and left leg, and again broke all known re cords of accidents. Four years ago a team of horses ran away and threw Jones in a creek, knocking him senseless, and he was taken out of the stream apparently dead. He re vived, however, and a few months later was attacked by a mad bull and frightfully gored. He recov ered, and a little later, while blow ing stumps with dynamite a pre mature expolsion blew him thirty feet. He escaped with a few bruises and lacerations. Then a horse kicked him, breaking five ribs and an arm, but a few months put him in shape to climb a tree for wild bee honey. He fell and lodged in a fork of the tree, where he remained for three days and nights until rescued. He man aged to escape further accidents until this harvest, when, while helping a neighbor to thrash, he was struck in the head by a pitch fork, the tines penetrating his skull. The surgeons said he would die, but he recovered. Yesterday Jones took his revol ver to do a little target shooting and it accidently discharged, the ball plowing through his hand and leg. Bets are offered that he will recover. CANDY CATHARTIC . (giwcaftgto Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good.’’ t Perfect and Peerless | ftheumaiism and all Liver, Kidney and Blad der troubles caused by uric acid In the system. It cures by cleansing and vitalizing 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- I 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: IRICSOL CHEMICAL CO.. Laa A.ftie*, Cal. •f the LAMAR k RASKIN BRIO CO., AUaaU, oa. bUiriMia* Apala.