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BEST FOR THE
BOWELS
If You-liaren’t a regular, healthy movement of the
every (lay, you’re ill or will be. Keep your
howels open. tm<l be well. Force, in the shape of vio
lent ohvsic or pill poison, is dangerous. The smooth
est easiest. most perfect way of keeping the bowels
clear and clean is to take
CANDY
Mmm CATHARTIC - .
EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good,
Never Bicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10, 25, and 60 cents
Eer box. Write for free sample, and booklet on
ealth. Address 433
STERLING REMEDY 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.
J. A. CORRY, M. D.,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office: Mitchell building.
Residence: Greenwood street.
Office hours: 7toß a. m., 11 to 12 a. m,sto6p m
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.
Ofliice over First National Bank.
Residence, Magnolia Inn.
J. R. SIMS,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
IKjg-Office over B. F. Reeves’ store,
C. H. PERDUE,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE GA.
@r-Offiee over Jordan’s Drug Store.
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.
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.
GEO. W. GRICE,
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Work done promptly and neatly.
over Middlebrooks Building.
W. B. SMITH, F. D
P.NEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA
EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS.
ODOR! ESS EMBALMING FLUID
W. B. SMITH. Leading Undertaker
BARNESVILLE GA.
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. Prop.,
Main street, next to P. O.
CASTORZA.
Bear* the The Kind You Have Always Bought
HOW STAIN'S ARK REMOVED.
Boiling; Water Is Used for Spos
Caused by Fruit Juice.
All stains should be removed
before the articles, are put in the
wash tub. The sooner a stain ia
treated the more readily it will
yield to treatment.
Pour boiling water through fruit
stains; when obstinate, soak in a
solution of oxalic acid. Wash
vaseline stains in alcohol; paint
in turpentine or alcohol; varnish
in alcohol; grass or other green
vegetable stains in alcohol; kero
sone or molasses; for stains from
blood, meat juice, use white of
egg in cold water.
In the case of milk, cream,
sugar or syrup stains, soak in cold
water. Tar, wheel grease, or
machine oils stains should be
rubbed with lard and allowed to
stand a few minutes, then they
should be washed with soap and
cold water.
Tea, coffee or cocoa stains should
be removed with boiling water, if
obstinate, with a weak solution of
oxalic acid.
A TEXAS WONDER.
HALL’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. E. W. Hall
sole manufacturer. P. 0. 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 its
equal. Its merits are wonderful. Try
it, as I did, and be convinced.
Rev. R. C. Wiiitnell.
Youth and Age.
It is "said that, a woman is no
older than she looks and a man
no older than he feels. Certain
ly the age at which bachelors
and old maids become old de
pends very much upon themselves.
The man or woman who pos
sesses a well regulated mind and
a kind, pleasant disposition is
never referred to as an “old bach
elor” or “old maid.”
A selfish, easily irritated man
is “a miserable old bachelor.”
The term “old maid” is frequently
given to the woman who interferes
with everybody, and does her best
to make life miserable.
HIS SIGHT THREATENED.
“While picnicing last month my 11-
year-old boy was poisoned by some weed
or plant,” says W. H. Dibble, of Sioux-
City la. “He rubbed the poison off
his hands into his eyes and for awhile
we were afraid he would lose his sight.
Finally a neighbor recommended De-
Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. The first
application help him and in a few days
he was as well as ever.” Forskin disease
cuts, burns, scalds, wounds, insect
bites, DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve is
sure cure. Relieves piles at once.
Beware of counterfeits.
Jxo. H. Blackburn.
Bartlesville, Ga.
L. Holmes,
Milner, Ga.
Half the world falls into temp
tation and the oth >r half is tempt
ed into falling.
You can never make a woman
understand that a crying baby in
bed-room can break a man’s rest
as much as a flock of mosquitoes.
Summer Excursion Tickets.
To the Seashore, Lakes and Moun
tains via Central of Georgia Railway,
are on sale daily at all coupon ticket
offices, good for return until October
31st, 1902.
Full particulars, rates, schedules,
etc., will be cheerfully furnished upon
application to any agent or representa
tive of the Central of Georgia Railway.
W. A. Win burn, Traffic Mngr.
,T. C. Haile, Gen. Pass. Agent.
F. J. Robinson, Asst Gen Pass Agt
The average man who borrows a
thousand dollars from a friend
saves up that amount to pay back,
but goes and buys an automobile
while his friend continues to ride
in street cars.
Summer Excursions hy Rail ami Sea.
The Central of Georgia Railway and
■ connections arc now selling round trip
tickets to New York, Boston, Baltimore
and Philadelphia via Savannah and
■Steamship Lines at very low rates.
Tickets include meals and berth aboard
ship. Much less than all rail. For full
particulars, berth reservations, rates,
etc., apply to any agent Central of
Georgia Railway.
THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY; AUGUST 14, 1902.
Orchard and Garden.
Laud cannot be too rich or too
mellow for fruit.
Manure for the garden should be
free from weed seed.
One can always find moisture
under a heavy mulch.
Asa rule in the orchard, level
cultivation is best.
If you allow too much top on a
feeble tree you will kill the tree. |
Set strawberries the whole depth
of the roots, hut do not cover the j
crown.
Young trees may be pruned to j
almost any desired shape.
The care given fruit plants this
season practically determines the
product next.
The head of a tree needs to be
fairly open to admit sun and air
for full growth of fruit.
Rapid growing trees have a softer
hark than slow growing ones, and
are less able to resist disease.
Red clover is one of the best
plants for the orchard. It keeps
the ground loose and enriches and
shades it.
Trees that were grafted in the
spring shopld be gone over now
and all water sprouts cut away in
order to secure a thrifty growth.
If there are fruit trees that are
not bearing as they should stir
the soil thoroughly and apply a
good dressing of manure.
In the fall after the leaves have
dropped is generally the best time
for taking cuttings from quinces,
but they may be taken later.
Young strawberry plants are
easily killed if strong fertilizers be
applied directly on them after
they are set out.
Mulching continuously is not
always advisable as it draws the
roots too near the surface so that
they lose their hold upon the
soil.
In preparing the ground for
straw-berries plow well and apply
a good dressing of well-rooted
manure, working it thoroughly
into the soil.
Stop the raspberry canes by
pinching them off when they are
two and a half to three feet high
making them branch more freely.
The object of a mulch is to pre
vent evaporation of moisture from
the soil. Litter of any kind,
chips, straw, earth or stones will
answer.
Change of color in the fruit,
the readiness of the stalk to part
from its branch on gently raising
the fruit, the ripening of worm
eaten specimens, these are the
signs that indicate the proper
season of gathering pears.
The greater the distance from
market the harder peaches should
be when gathered. The fruit
should still be firm when it reaches
market.
Select the first day after a heavy
rain for transplanting celery. Be
sure to press the soil very firmly
around each plant.
Pruning can be done now if the
other work will permit, and bud
ding may be done as soon as the
buds are sufficiently matured.
A dressing of commercial fertil
izer well worked into the soil this
month will help in securing a
good crop of straw-berries next
season.
Apple orchards that are making
too much growth of wood may
often be brought into fruit bear
ing by severe summer pruning.
In pruning roses, cutting back
closely produces, as a rule, fewer
blossoms of finer quality, while
| those not so closely pruned will
bear a larger number of smaller
flowers.
The quince is a great feeder and
needs good cultivation. No other
fruit requires so much manure and
such thorough cultivation. If
the trees are neglected there will
be no fruit.
At this time it will often be ad
visable to sell fruit at home at a
little less price than to pack arid
ship to market and run the risk
of selling in a well-stocked market
while the expense of shipping is
saved. —The Republic.
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
Popular Novcltie* For Home Use and
Decoration.
When burlap is used to cover the
walls of a room, a'stenciled border
frequently is chosen instead of the
frieze formerly in favor. Holders
for pansies in rock crystal effects
ire dainty little affairs.
Gosseware is the new English fad
for country house use. Its surface
has a rich tone of cream white, and
the decorations do not interfere
with showing broad spaces of it, so
that the effect is light, clear and
cheery. “Old English” glass for tu
ble use ranks among handsome and
useful articles at the jeweler’s.
Of dainty aspect is a “milk tum
bler” of milky white porcelain with
a gilt edge or decorated with a
graceful garland of gay little flow
ers.
Among suggestions for country
homes is the Darby and Joan chair,
a low rocker for two on the one
foundation. These odd pieces are
in different woods, such as oak, wal
nut, ash and pine, and they come in
wicker, rattan, old hickory and oth
er materials.
Thero is a decided tendency in
wall papers to imitate the effects of
cloth weaves. Cartridge papers have
taken to themselves the sheen of
sateen, others are crinkled and
ribbed like bedford cord and still
others with a print representing the
threads of organdie, very much like
the effects in the organdie station
ery that has been so popular.
Glass candlesticks in the quaint
colonial style are s6en. Glass table
ware of the same period is in evi
dence also.
Macaroni and Aprlcota.
A dish to be served at luncheon in
place of meat may be made with
macaroni and a can of apricots.
Parboil half a pound of macaroni
and toss it afterward into a pint of
milk that has been brought to the
boiling point. The milk should -be
sweetened with two tablespooßfuls
of sugar. Let all simmer until the
macaroni has absorbed nearly all of
the milk. It will be necessary to
stir frequently to keep the macaroni
from sticking to the bottom of the
sauccpnn. Drain all the liquor in
tho can of apricots from the fruit
and add one cup of the juice to the
milk and macaroni. Cover the pan
well and set hack on the stove for
fifteen minutes. Remove from the
fire and cool. In transferring to the
dish on which it is to he served
form a pile of the macaroni in the
center of the dish and cover it with
the apricots, arranging the pieces in
layers around and over it.
Lovely Table Decoration.
The electric lamp has kept pace
with the development along artistic
lines that is apparent in all branch
es ef household fitments. The in
candescent lamp is now admitted to
the dining table, although until re
cently tho incandescent burner was
thought to shed too pitiless a glare
to be desirable for dining table il
lumination. The glare has been in
geniously softened, and at a recent
dinner the electric lamp which oc
cupied the center of t lie tabic was
the most effective decoration that
could be imagined. The pedestal
and supporting column were of sil
ver gilt, around which were grouped
charming female figures in French
bisque. The incandescent burners
were shaded by glass globes in soft
hue of rose. These in turn were
veiled with numberless strings of
pearls in rose white tint, and the
light shone through with u softened
glow that was delightful.
Recipe For Graham Bread.
One quart of warm water and one
compressed yeast cake dissolved in
half a cup of warm water. Stir in
two quarts of graham flour and al
low it to stand in a warm place un
til light, which usually takes about
an hour. Then add onetablespoonful
of salt, one cup of warm water and
mix in 1% quarts more of graham.
Knead a few minutes ou the board
and mold into loaves. Allow to
rise until double their original size
and bake. The foregoing recipe
will give a more porous bread if in
stead of using all graham one-half
entire wheat flour is used. If liked,
two tablespoonfuls of molasses may
be added to the mixture.
Moldings Instead of Poles.
The use of moldings in place of
poles at windows is extending. A
new treatment of this sort has a
short valance of sheer drapery in
figured design falling from the
molding across the window frame
with straight hangings to the floor
on either side of the same material.
Underneath and close to the sash
are short curtains of similar weave,
but plain tint, harmonizing with the
ground of the other hangings.
Background For China.
The plate rail i3 a popular form
of decoration for modern dining
rooms, but it i.s well to bear in mind
the fact that the china, whether of
modern or old time design, shows to
best advantage against a wall cov
ering in plain colors.
Yes® r
Uneeda
Biscuit
are better to-day than ever!.
The In-er-seal Package keep* them fre*h, crisp and good.
Here’s a Chance.
Fifty healthy young men from
here or elsewhere can get a job at
Washington in the department of
agriculture—that is if they want
the job.
After they read the requirements
there may not be much of a rush.
Dr. Wiley, the chief chemist of
the department, and a man of
scholarly research, is just now
looking into the matter of the
effect on foods of various ingredi
ents used for coloring or flavoring
purposes. He wants fifty young
men of good habits and good health
to enter into a contract with the
Department to eat whatever he
wishes them, and submit to a care
ful and systematic course of ob
servation, to see how far it is safe
to eat poisons, and see how far it
practicable put poisonous articles
in staple articles of food.
All the young men will have to
do will be to eat. Dr. Wiley will
do the rest, unless the poison gets
busy and begins to work. The
test will last for ten days, and the
candidates for the sinecure will be
obliged to report to the depart
every day between certain hours
and tell how they feel.
Each test of poisonous food will
followed by a similar test with
good, substantial, normal food.
The scientists of the department
will then make a comparison of the
conditions following the use of
each kind of food, and the result
will be reported to Congress.
One application of this series of
tests will be to determine whether
this country should pursue a re
taliatory course toward those
nations that practice discrimina
tion against American food-stuffs.
One of the first tests to be made
would bo to decide whether the use
of borax in the preservation of
meat products is deleterious or not
Germany has anew law soon going
into effect excluding our meats
that have been preserved in this
way, and the experiment is most
timely and important.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digest* what you eat.
S.CROFULA@Sft
I bequeath to my children Scrofula with all its w!
attendant horrors, humiliation and suffering. This is a
strange legacy to leave to posterity; a heavy burden to 14
place upon the shoulders of the young. \
This treacherous disease dwarfs the body and hinders n| •' fipfOl J
the growth and development of the faculties, and the jfl
child born of blood poison, or scrofula-tainted parentage, <1
is poorly equipped for life’s duties. ll
Scrofula is a disease with numerous and varied
Symptoms; enlarged glands or tumors about the neck
and armpits, catarrh of the head, weak eyes and dreadful ££
skin eruptions upon different parts of the body show the ”
presence of tubercular or scrofulous matter in the blood. This dangerous
and stealthy disease entrenches itself securely in the system and attacks
the bones and tissues, destroys the red corpuscles of the blood, resulting in
white swelling, a pallid, waxy appearance of the skin, loss of strength and
a gradual wasting away of the body.
S. S. S. combines both purifying and tonic properties, and is guaran-
S. —, teed entirely vegetable, making it the ideal remedy in
all scrofulous affections. It purifies the deteriorated
blood, makes it rich and strong and a complete and
KmM KjJ permanent cure is soon effected. S. S. S. improves
the digestion and assimilation of food, restores the
lost properties to the blood and quickens the circulation, bringing a healthy
color to the skin and vigor to the weak and emaciated body.
Write us about your case and our physicians will Jreerfully advise and
help you in every possible way to regain your health. Book on blood and
skin diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Gt,
Plodders and Hard Workers.
If we were to examine a list of
the men who have left their mark
on the world, we should find, say*
Success, that, as a rule, it is not
composed of those who were
brilliant hi youth, or who gave
great promise at the outset of
their careers, but rather of the
plodding young men who, if they
have not dazzled by their bril
liancy, have had the power of a
day’s work in them, who could
stay by a task until it was done
and well done; who have had
grit, persistence, common sense,
and honesty.
It is the steady exercise of these
ordinary, homely virtues, united
with average ability, rather than
a deceptive display of more showy
qualities in youth that enables a
man to achieve greatly and
honorably. So, if wo were to
attempt to make a forecast of the
successful men of the future, wo
should not look for them among
tho ranks of the “smart” boys,
those who think they “know it
all” and are anxious to win by a
short route.
SHATTERS ALL RECORDS.
Twice in hospital, F. A. Uul
ludge, Nerbena, Ala., paid a vast
sum to doctors to cure a severe
case of piles, causing 24 tumors.
When all failed, Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve soon cured him. Subdues
Inffaminaation, conquers Aches,
kills Pains. Best, salve in the
world. 25c at W. A. Wright’s
drug store.
“But you are taking consider
able risk in letting your young
men owe two or three weeks
board.”
“Yes, there is some risk,” an
swered the boarding house keep
er, “Hut then, you see, they
worry over it so that they loose
their appetites, so I save money
in the long run.”
CASTOR IA
For Infant* and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the S'#
Signature of C