The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, September 04, 1902, Image 2
I 4sljl k 7r -’
M}JJ Fruit.
£RrsHr Its quality influences
y&JjL , the selling price.
Profitable fruit
growing insured o///y
when enough actual I
fif Potash
iErl is in the fertilizer.
| Neither quantity nor I
IfcZ'nj quality possible I
without Potash.
fS'fa* 0 ' Write (or our /w hook* |
LaC /j living dtu,il.
■ kali works. I
H Nassau at.. New York City. I
[*#*•*- . .: _->• WnL' J
GEORGIA,
rn.RY.GO. V
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLOPING-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.
THEO. D. KLINE. W. A. WINBURN,
Qneral Sup’t, Traffic Manager,
J. O. HAILE, General P.’r Agent,
9. J. ROB'NSON, An t General PauY AgenL
SAVANNAH, QA.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of tht.
digoslants and digests all kinds of
food. It gives instantrellef and never
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the foot* you want. The most sensitive
6toinael s can take it. Ry its use many
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cured after everything else failed. It
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ach, relieving all distress after eat ing.
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It can't help
but do you good
ftvpaivd only by E. O. DfcWm.V t'o.,OhU*aiN
I'lu' (1. bottle coululus Sf times the SOe. aUtv
EXPERIENCE
Trade Marks
Designs
MH" ' ✓ Copyrights Ac.
* Anyone Rending a nkctch ami description may
quleklv nsoertain our opinion fwo whothw an
invention is probably patentable. tVniniunlcn
Hons mrieUT confidential. Handbook on Patents
pent f rM. Oldest ncenoy foraocurimt patents.
Patent* taken throufb Muim A To. receive
9pfCit*l notice, without ctmrye. iu tHo
Scientific American.
A h.nrtiM'mply tlhntMtod wi'vktv. 1 v<Mt Cir
culation of any wlentlOc Journal. Term., t< a
vw four month*. |L Sold by all m’wmtonh'r*.
MUNN &Cos. 36,8r0ad ’“‘> New York
Bramh Otllce. fttt K Sf.. M'*htu.-t in, D.C.
wanted Inventors
to write for our confidential letter before ap
plying for patent; it may be worth money.
We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign
PATENTS
and TB DE MARKS ir return EN-I
TIRE attorney s fee. Send model, sketch
or photo and we send an IMMEDIATE
FREE report on patentability e give
the beat legal service and advice, and our
Charges are moderate. Try us.
SWIFT & CO.,
Patent Lawyers,
Opp. U.S. Patent Office. Washington. D.C.
Wanted Help.
We want to build a school house
at Piedmont. We are now teach
ing sixty pupils in an old barn
like concern made of the ruins
left by the cyclone of a few years
ago. We are in the natural center
of a territory containing a hun
dred students who are deprived of
attending during the most of the
year on account of inadequate ac
commodations. Our community
is poor, composed principally of
tenants.
I Believing that the future of our
! section depends on this work, we
appeal to those who have landed
i interests here, to those in sur
rounding towns who are beriefitted
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
Nkws-Gazhttk we will give the
subscription list in full each week.
Send your subscriptions to the
building committee.
J. C. Collier,
I. C. Collier,
T. M. Allen,
/. B. Head,
JI..J. Cato,
W. B. Whittle,
James T. Warthen.
M BSCJUITIO.VS TO DATE :
J. c. Collier. SIOO.OO
I. C. Collier 60.00
11. .7. Cato 10.00
G. H. Collier : 5.00
C. K. Casey 5.00
A. A. Hutton 5.00
J. T. Warthen 10. 00
James C. Collier 5.00
Z. 11. Elliott 500
W. T. Waller 8.00
J. (}. Spear 5.00
W. 15. Whittle 8.00
W. J. Adams 10.00
I? 11. Nelson 5.00
N. W. Hurst 3.00
Z,ll. Head 5.00
J.R. Torbert 2.00
(L T. Harp 5.00
T. L. Hussey 2.00,
W. T. and J. W. Elliott 4.00
M. G. llarris.son 1.00
Pike County 100.00
T. S. Yates 5.00
(Jims Matthews 2.00 1
C.J. Harrell 1.00 j
Congressman C. h. Bartlett. 10.CKJ
Hill Stallings, 2.00 j
J. It. Franklin, 5.001
Dodd Grocery Cos., 5.00 j
K ing I lard ware Cos., 5.00
J. S. Milner, 3.00
G. 11. Warthen, 10.00
A Teacher 1.00
GrllinGro.Co 5.00
$407.00
James 'l'. Warthen,
Secretary.
[LJ Best < much Syrup. TuhUh Good. Use g
Pri in time. Sold by druggists. gf
Distrustful Haste.
The small daughter of a German
town dentist was recently sent on j
an all-summer visit, to an aunt in
Mishappen, Pa. The child had
always been very devout, and at
home had been in the habit of
kneeling by 7 her bed, saying her
forma! prayer aloud in her moth
er’s hearing, and then inaudibly
adding a little invocation of her
composition. When bed-time came
the first night at her aunt’s the
child called the latter to hear her
prayers. As usual, when she had
finished, she started on her whis
pered appeal. The aunt, not know
ing the little habit, and
thinking it a mere manifestation
of sleepiness, said somewhat im
patiently :
"Ilurry, dear! —hurry!”
“ ‘Hurry, dear-hurry!’ repeated
the child, indignantly mimicking
her aunt. Then, with pious scorn,
she added: “What kindofa house
is this, anyway? ‘Hurry, dear! —
i hurry!’ A person is not given
time here to talk a minute to the
Lord!”
Half- Sick
“ l first used Aver’s Sarsaparilla
in the (all of 1848. Since then I
have taken it every spring as a
blood-purifying and nerve
strengthening medicine.”
S. T. Jones. Wichita, Kans.
If you feel run down,
are easily tired, if your
nerves are weak and your
blood is thin, then begin
to take the good old stand
ard family medicine,
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
It’s a regular nerve
lifter, a perfect blood
builder. S | N a bottle. All drujitft*.
Ak yor doctor wli.t he fhmks of Ayer’.
SorSHfwrtlls Ho knows U shout thi* grand
old Isiplly medicine Follow hi* advice aud
we will be mttsßed
J. C. AVRR Cos., Uowell. Mas*.
THE BARNESYILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902
FOR THE LITTLE ONES, v
\ .
The Boys Who Thought Thompson
Seton Was a “Reg’lar Bird.”
K Ernest Thompson Seton chose,
he could write a book on his lectur
ing adventures that might prove as
interesting; though in a very differ
ent way*, as his “Lives of the -Hunt
ed.” The other evening lie was stop
ped at the theater door by half a
dozen ragged boys, one of whom
said:
“Say, mister, are you de jay dat
talk- about de animals?”
! “Yes.”
“Well, say, won’t you give us a
pass ?”
“Jlow many are there of you?”
“Only eleven” (others now ap
pearing).
Mr. Thompson Seton called his
J manager and said:
“Pass these eleven boys.”
“There’s eighteen now,” said the
spokesman.
“All right; pass eighteen,” said
the man of the beasts, for lie never
sends a child away if he can help it.
During the hour and a half lecture
i he had no more appreciative hearers
i than those eighteen newsboys. After
it was over he stepped out the back
way, and here were the eighteen
waiting as before.
Their spokesman now came for
ward and expressed the sentiments
!of the others in language more
forceful than ornithologically cor
rect :
“Say, mister, that —was —great!
You’re no jay. You’re a bird —a
reg’lar bird!”
When the Trustees Come.
Sometimes when rne an 1 all the rest
Are busy on a sum
The teiu'her says, "Now, look your best
Before the trustees come.”
An’ then she picks up ev ry scrap
An’ rubs the blackboard down,
An’ we just sit with hands In lap,
When the trustees come aroun’. lay
It seems so awful long to us
To sit so still an’ straight,
But wo just das’ent make a fuss fflßßf,
While they investigate,
An’ if we even whisper low
We see the teacher frown, fj&t
An’ ev’rything must be Just so $5
When the trustees come aroun’. .
■V'"v |
Then Squire Jubb will take his stand
An’ read from off a card
An’ ask where did John Cabot land
Or something just as hard.
An’ then he’ll ask, one at a time,
To write the oceans down,
An’ you must have your mem’ry prime
When th trustees come aroun’.
An’ while the squire turns his face
An’ talks on cold an’ heat
Young Dr. Jones has found a place
Beside the teacher's seat,
An' she just shows his words confuse
An' lets her eyes drop down.
But wo must mind our “p’s” and “q’s”
When the trustees come aroun’.
—Victor A. Hermann.
Why Ethel Behaved.
Ethel used to play a good deal in
the school. One day she had been
very quiet. She sat up prim and be
haved lierself so nicely that after the
school was over the teacher re
marked :
“Ethel, my dear, you were a very
good girl today.”
“Yes’m. 1 couldn’t help being
dood. I dot a stiff neck!”
Earns a Thousand Dollars a Year.
One of the pluckiest little busi
ness men in the country is Carl Gus
tafson, the son of Charles Gustaf
son, a fireman at the steel mill at
New Castle, l’a. Although but thir
teen years of age and but 4 feet 4
inches in height this little fellow
travels all over the country selling
a well known typewriter, drawing
a salary of SI,OOO a year. The boy
has helped support his family since
he was nine years old. At the age
of twelve he was employed as a mes
; senger boy by the Western Union
Telegraph company in New Castle.
J. 11. W. Marriott, superintend
ent of agencies of the typewriter
company, while in the Western
CAUL GUSTAFSON.
Union Telegraph office in New Cas
tle was attracted .by Carl’s bright
face and learned upon inquiry some
thing of his history. Learning that
the bov had a fancy for machinery.
Mr. Marriott took his machine apart
wild offered Carl 25 cents if he could
put it together again, lie succeeded
in doing it in less than ten minutes.
Mr. Marriott offered to take the boy
with him on his travels. The bov ac
cepted, and lie became a traveling
salesman, going to Baltimore, New
York, Philadelphia, Boston and oth
er places selling the machines.—
American Boy.
Are You Drifting?
Have an object in life —a pro
gram —and make existence inter
; eating and profitable by trying to
carry it out —don’t drift,
i Most people, especially in cities,
drift along from year to year,
without aim or purpose, living an
unplanned, hand-to-mouth life,
and consequently making no men
tal, moral or financial progress.
This is the greatest mistake in any
life, since these people who con
fess themselves failures, would
have reached a desirable and sat
isfactory position, had they early 7
planned for it and steadily kept
it in view.
Too many men (some from ne
cessity 7 ) takes the first job that
presents itself without ever con
sidering whether it suits them and
without trying to improve them
selves therein or devising any 7
method or scheme for success in
it. They are drifting through the
world, without becoming profi
cient in anything or in any way
improving themselves or their
prospects; they stick at nothing
long enough to excel and succeed
only in tearing up the tender plant
of experience before it is half
matured.
Men do not shape their own fu
ture according to any preconceived
idea, or according to the advice of
any competent advisor but simply
allow themselves to be shaped and
marred by the accidents and inci
dents of life. They 7 drift into bus
iness, politics, into professions
and become victims of circum
stances and general failures, catch
ing on to anything that comes
along.
If they have any idea at all they
are vague, and that strenousness
necessary to attain success is con
spicuous only’ for its absence. They
are drifting—trusting in luck —as
if success was a thing to be gained
at haphazzard, without definite
ness of purpose, plan, or contin
uous effort.
‘‘No solid, substantial, charac
ter building,” says the Scotsman, i
“or success-building can be done ,
with our definite aims. The things j
which endure, which stand the i
test of time, are built up slowly 7 , i
symtematically and patiently, ac- 1
cording to a definite plan. Per
manent success is the outcome j
of consistent thought and action,
and the man who would succeed
must have a program and work
according to it.
Success thus attained is one’s
own success, not a happy accident
and is all the more satisfactory
for being the result of a long cher
ished plan. No doubt the element
| of chance enters into every 7 career.
| Some are born with advantages
of wealth, intellect and sensible
parents, while others lack all these
helps. Some have opportunities
that are not open to others. But
the drifter is not the man to keep
I his wealth, develop his intellect,
|or he guided by his parents. Nor
jis he prompt to -seize an oppor-
I tunity, because the first steps of
j every successful career are thorny
and difficult and repel the man
1 without a definite plan of life. It
j is not quite enough to work hard
lat anything that comes along,
but one must select the thing that
is best for one’s powers and stick
to that. In brief, it comes to this :
i “Use your head-piece!” One must
keep up lively thinking as he goes
through life, so as to remain true
to the aims and ideals that he
has deliberately adopted and
; found to be good.
m v OSJO H
\ 3A, °
\jM aavubivisr I'lMralV a
yUW L<l Pir t:|
mw! nv* - *®* 3 °i 1. 1 ,. v ; (, I irTJwf
(J ' -pinow Auu|pao ji sn 'ftmKyi/! I
W% SVOJ SB *>|.Ul— JU| OlUl.lllp I* 1
■lll -uoo U| 11 Kind viqwild puu ijo jaqiUAj
■{. uqi sdßum *nq 'JAlwq -y <x, i .wJoq
M l ®q puu Aiaojou
X L. UO ssauJßH
fj -moo u JO pm* isiow
sqi S| sauujuq JSu|
-j(oO[joodpuuMioq
huigoo; pooU y ~
Malaria! Ever have it? Know all about
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Malaria and Ague Cure. dSiSk:
M^^^ERY
Let us have your Orders for Mill Supplies or Shop Work,
Mallory Bros. Machinery Cos.,
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This Offer is to Cash Subscribers Only.
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The News-Gazette.
For the Next 30 Days
we will sell No. 2 Shingles at
$1.50 per thousand.—
BARNESVILLE PLANING MILLS.