The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, September 04, 1902, Image 6
j Moved
| Again..
• I have bought the
> Rouss Racket stock of
[ goods, formerly run by
• J. R. Deavours.
f I got it cheap, too.
| You can buy goods from
me now at
Half
l
Price.
I
1 Understand me, please—
HALF PRICE
i and lots of stuff less than
half. Of course there are
some things that are
worth some more than
half—full value, in fact —
but you can buy anything
and everything in this
stock for less than you
can buy the same goods
elsewhere.
I’ve got a little of every
thing. Come to see me
intheJ.G. Smith build
ing. I have moved my
stock of GROCERIES,
too, and it will be an easy
thing for us to get up a
trade.
Jim Reeves
CGNTRICUTORY NEGLIGENCE.
A joint committee of the recent
session of the Louisiana legislature
vi.-ited the slate penal farms at An
gola ami llojk' for tl# purpose of
reporting on the work done by the
board of control. The members of
the committee spent some time talk
ing with the negro convicts, and
presentl\ one of the negroes recog
nized a member of the committee,
who is a rising young lawyer not a
thousand miles from New Iberia.
“You know Mr. B. inquired one
of the gentlemen.
“Yaas, sah. I knows Mr. It. well.
He's do one dun sent me hcah,” re
plied the darky with a grin spread
all over Ids face.
The gentlemen had not heard of
Mr. It. ofl ieiating as a prosecuting
attorney and wanted to know how
lie came to send the convict there.
“lie wuz mail lawyer, sah.”
Mr. It. acknowledged that the ci
gars were on him, provided the in
cident did not get any further. —
New Orleans Picayune.
Gold Dollars at a Premium.
The United States gold dollar is
so scarce that dealers in old and
rare coins are advertising every
where for them, offering from $1.50
to s.'s apiece for as many as they
can get. Since 1889 the United
States mints have not coined any
gold dollars. Since then their value
has increased steadily. In the mint
in Philadelphia, where the dies for
all United States currency are
made, a reporter for the Philadel
phia Times was told the present
value of the gold dollars of 188!'.
Those marked C (Carson City) arc
worth from $1.75 to $2.50; those
marked D v Denver) are worth from
$2 to $2.50; those marked S (San
Francisco) are worth from $2 to
$3, and those without any mark,
indicating that they were minted in
Philadelphia, are worth from $1.50
to $1.70.
FORTUNE l AYORS A TEX AN
“Having distressing pains in head,
hack and stomach, and being without
appetite, 1 began to um I*r. King’s New
Lite Fills.” writes \V. I*. Whitehead, of
Kennedale.Tex., “ami soon felt like a
new man.” lufalable in stomach and
liver troubles. Only 25c at W. A.
Wright’s drug store.
All the world laughs at a lover.
OUR CORRESPONDENTS.
J"tewartville Notes.
(Received to lat* for publication last wwk.)
Miss Lucile Burdick will close
here school next Friday.
Mr. C. W. Jones was in the city
Saturday afternoon.
Miss Made Haile has returned
to her home in Macon.
Mrs. R. R. Hall visited relatives
in Barnesville last week.
Mr. J. B. Trice passed through
the city Sunday afternoon.
Mr. T. J. Hutchinson was in the
city a short while Friday.
Mr. S. P. Cooper and family
visited relatives here Wednesday
last.
Mr. J. S. Williams and wife
spent Sunday with Tom Abbott
land family.
Mr. C. A. Parker was in the
city Sunday afternoon.
Look out for Pansy next week.
“Bikdib.”
Liberty Hill-
Fodder pulling is over with and
cotton picking is the order of the
day.
The meeting closed at Liberty
church witli twenty-oue converts.
Will Farlev, Arthur Jackson
and Blanford Daniel attended the
camp-meeting at Bluff Spring last
Sunday.
Mr. Tom Gordon will soon com
plete the new store for Mr. L. F.
Farley.
Mr. Van Milner, near Barnes
ville, attended the baptising at
this place Sunday.
Mr. A mas King, of Barnesville,
spent Inst Sunday with George
Sawley and attended preaching at
Liberty church
The many friends of Mr. J. A.
Sawley regret to h'arn that he |
still continues quite ill, after a
sickness of fifteen weeks.
George Sawley, of this place was j
seen last Sunday going down the
road.
A HOY’S WILD HIDE FOR LIFE.
With family around expecting him to
die, and a son riding for life, 18 miles,
lo get Ur. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, Coughs and Colds, \V.II.
Brown, of Leosville, Ind., endured
death’s agonies from asthma, but this
wonderful medicine gave instant relief
and soon cured him lie writes :“ I now
sleep soundly every night.” Like mar
velous cures of Consumption, l’neu
| moil in, Bronchitis, Coughs, (’olds and
! Grip prove its matchless merit for all
Throat and bung troubles Guaranteed
bottles 50e and $1 .00. Trial bottle free
at W. A. Wright’s drug store
Bluff Spring Camp-meeting.
Bluff Spring camp-meeting is
now in session, and I sincerely
hope that it will be productive of
much good. The preaching has
been able and apparently very ef
!fective.
We sometimes hear good people
at camp-meetings, and other
places of worship singing the fol
lowing words; "Old firne Reli
gion is Good Enough for Me.”
But 1 think that we need anew
religion, anil one that consist of
honesty, fidelity, charity, benevo
lence and love, and not a mere
emotional religion. The old
religion lias become adulterated
and consequently wo need one that
will keep a man in his proper
orbit, and make him do right
under any and a'l circumstances.
O, that we had in our country
such a religion as Paul had, when
ln> learned to be content in any
condition in which God saw lit
for him to he placed. He was the
ripest scholar spiritually that the
world has ever produced.
J. B.
1118 LIFE SAVED HY CHAMBER
LAIN’S COLIC, CHOLERA AND
DIARRHOEA REMEDY.
“B. L. Byer. a well known C(Xper of
this town, says he believes Chamber
lain’s Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy saved his life last summer.
He had been sick for a month with
what the doctors call bilous dysentery,
and could get nothing to do him any
good until he tried this remedy. It
gave him immediate relief.” says B. T.
Little, merchant, Hancock, Md. For
sale by
Jno. H. Blackburn,
THE BARNESVILLE NEWSM GAZETTE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902.
Match Game.
A nice game of baseba 1 was
played here Friday afterno< n be
tween two picked teams.
After hearing that Zebuloi could j
not be here, the large crowd w'as j
somewhat disappointed alid as;
there was enough good players in
the city to compose two good
teams, a game was soon in
progress.
The playing was good at times
and the strike work was also very
good. The game was won by the .
South side team by a score of 10!
to 9.
H. C. LEGO DEAD.
A Former Citizen of Pike County
Passes Away in Troy, Ala.
Mr. Henry C. Legg, who was,
up to several years ago, a resident
of this county, died at his home
in Troy, Ala. few days ago.
About 10 years ago Mr. Legg
moved to Alabama, and has since
been living there. He was an old
confederate veteran and has scores
of friends in this county who sin
cerely regret to learn of his death.
He was practical, and had been
making love on that basis. She
was a little that way herself. “Can
you cook?” he inquired. “Can
I you supply everything to he cook
ed?” she replied. It was a
match.
NOT DOOMED FOR LIFE.
“I was treated for three years by good
doctors,” writes W.A. Gree, McCon
nellsville. 0., “for Piles, and Fistula,
but, when all failed, Bucklen’s Arnica
Halve cured me in two weeks.” Cures
Burns, Bruises, Cuts, Corns, Sores, Er
uptions, Salt Rheum, Piles or no pay.
25c at \V. A. Wright’s drug store.
"War’s Hideous Din” No More.
Colonel Humbert of the French
Colonial artillery asserts in La
France Militaire that he has invent- ,
ed an apparatus which can be
alfixed and adapted to all rifles, pis
tols, revolvers and cannon of any
caliber and which completely does
away with the flash, the sound and
the smoke. The colonel asserts that
the use of his instrument will end
by making war an impossibility.
Ready For Anything.
“But why,” we ask of the great j
inventor, “do you have this huge
balloon at the top of your machine !
and the large wheels and steering |
gear beneath it?”
“Because,” lie answers with pa
tient consideration for our inability !
fo grasp an idea when it juts out be- i
fore us, “I am not sure yet whether j
this will be an airship or an auto- j
mobile.” —Baltimore American.
A Change of Heroes.
A soldier in one of our hospitals j
who had lost one of his arms was |
rejoicing in the fact. Said he: “My
great-grandfather lost a leg in the
Revolutionary war and our family
lias been bragging over it ever since.
That story is an old one, and now
I am going to be the hero of the
family.”—“The Military Common
wealth.”
Women play whist as skillfully j
as men do tattering gracefully.
I Perfect and Peerless
Rheumatism
and all Liver, Kidney and Blad
der trouble* caused by uric acid
in the system. It cures by
cleansing and vitalizing the I
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
never disappoints It cures in
-1 falliblv if taken as directed.
Try it and be convinced that
it is a wonder and a blessing to
sutTeringhumanity.
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
vour druggist cannot supply you
It will be sent, prepaia, upon
receipt of price. Address:
I’KICSOL CHEMICAL CO., U Ancle*. Cal.
or thi
' LAMAB A BANKIN Dill 0 CO.. AUaafm. da.
Diurihatln Ajtau.
DR. T. S. HOL
LEYMAN SAYS
ALL CHRONIC DISEASES CAN BE
CURED IF HIS ADVICE
IS FOLLOWED.
Editor News-Gazette:
“During the past year I have treated
in Macon and vicinity, many hundreds
of patients, suffering from chronic dis
eases of nearly every variety, and not
in a single instance have I failed to
effect a cure where my advice has been
been followed to the end. This leads
me to believe nearly all chronic mala
dies can be cured. So well satisfied am
I of this fact, that I will give a written
guarantee of a positive cure to every
patient I treat, or, in case of a failure
I will forfeit the entire fee. To those
who are ailing and whose cases have
baffled others, this will be glad news,
so I w'ould be pleased to see it publish
ed in your columns.
“The maladies which prevail in this
section, and which I am most often
called upon to treat, are catarrh and
catarrhal deafness, male and female
weakness, blood and skin diseases,
goiter, cancer, rupture and diseases of
the rectum. Also the opium habit.
Scores of representative citizens who
have been cured by me will bear evi
dence of this fact”
Dr. Holleyman is the chief consulting
associate physician of the British Medi
cal Institute, located at 354 Second
street, Macon, Ga.
He makes no charge for examination,
and should he find you incurable he will
frankly tell you so.
Hours, 9 to 8; Sundays, 10 to 1.
Why I am an Odd Fellow.
1. It is the strongest fraternal
and benevolent order in the w r orld.
2. It does more for its sick,
needy and distressed members
than any other secret order in ex
istence.
8. It seeks to improve the mind
and moral character of man, and
fosters a spirit of fraternity.
4. It teaches the fatherhood of
God, and the brotherhood of man,
and that it is more blessed to give
than to receive.
5. Its members are bound to
each other by everlasting Friend
ship, Lov£ and Truth.
6. It recognizes man’s helpful
ness and the need of co-operation
in all relations of life, and seeks
to enfold within its protecting
arms the whole of the white human
race.
7. Its subordinate lodges are re
quired to pay sick and funeral
benefits to worthy members, and
they cannot evade it if they would.
8. Its perfect system of paying
benefits, and of existing benevo
lence, cannot be surpassed by any
other institution on the globe.
9. It maintains and supports
homes and educational institu
tions for its orphan children.
10. It maintains and supports
comfortable homes for its aged
and indigent members, and for
the widows of deceased brothers.
11. Its credentials to its mem
bers (visiting cards) are recognized
in every clime and country where
civilization is founded.
12. It is the only fraternal and
benevolent order that recognizes
woman as a co-worker in its mis
sion for the relief of suffering hu
manity.
“Cleanliness is next to godli
ness.” Dirt and depravity go
hand in hand. This is just as
true of the inside of the body as
the outside. Constipation clogs
the body and clouds the mind.
Constipation means that corrup
tion is breeding in the body, poi
! soiling the blood with its foul
| emanations, befogging the brain
with its tainted exhalations. Con
stipation is the beginning of more
diseases than, perhaps, any other
single disorder. The consequences
of constipation are legion. Head
ache, pain in the side, shortness
|of breath, under fullness after
; eating, coldness of the extremities,
nervousness, indecision, lassitude,
dizziness, sallowness, llatulenee,
land a score of other ailments are
directly caused by constipation.
Cure constipation and you cure
! its consequences. The quickest
cure of this evil is obtained by the
use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel
lets. They are small in size hut
wonderful in result. They cure
permanently. They contain no
: injurious ingredients. The use of
| them does not beget the "pill
habit.” Ask your druggist for
them.
Send 21 one-cent stamps, the
expense of mailing only and
receive Dr. Pierce’s Common
Sense Medical Adviser, in paper
j covers. This work contains 1008
I pages and 700 illustrations. For
81 stamps it can be had in sub
stantial cloth binding. Address
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, X. Y.
LIST OF GRAND JURORS
Chosen and Selected for the County of
Pike, First Monday in Aug., 1902.
Barnesville District.
Anderson, D. L.
Bate, W. T.
Berry, R. S.
Berry, W. D.
Blackburn, J. H.
Butts. B. H.
Cochran, T. W.
Cornell, G. C.
Ely, A. .T.
Ennis, W. M.
Fogg, J. L.
Hardy, B. H.
Hunt, J. L.
Jordan, H. G.
Lambdin, A. M.
Mitchell, W. H.
Maddux, P. H.
Matthews, R. G.
Marshburn, V. O.
Middlebrooks, I.
Miller, W. P.
Milner, JB. J.
Milner, J. B. P.
Milner, J. S.
Murphey, A. O.
Murphey, O. A.
Murphey, E. S.
Murphey, E. J.
Prout, W. A.
Rogers, E. L.
Reeves, J. M.
Stafford, J. W.
Stafford, W. C.
Smith, W. B.
Swatts, R. L.
Tyler, C. T.
Wilkinson, W. K.
Driver District.
Akin, B. S.
Blake, W. N.
Bottoms, F. R.
Brown, C. H.
Coggin, S. S.
Drewry, F. S.
Holsey, W. T.
Johnson, R. C.
Reeves, A. D.
Reeves, W. D.
Reynolds, Henry
Scott, Jos. M.
Steger, F. W.
Eighth District.
Alldredge, J. L.
Cannafax, L. W.
Jones, T. Z.
Means, ,T. M.
Means, W. H.
Norman, M. A.
Owens, Early
Parker, J. W.
Slade, J. C.
Waller, A. P.
Weaver, J. F.
GEORGIA, ) We, the undersigned Commissioners appointed by his
PIKE COUNTY, i Honor, the Judge of the Superior Court, and qualified hy
the Ordinary of said County to revise the Jury lists of said County, do herqby
certify that the above and foregoing is a correct and complete list of persons
this day selected by us as Grand Jurors from the Digest of the Receiver of Tax
Returns for this year. J. W. STAFFORD,
R. Y. BECKHAM,
F. S. DREWRY,
G. E. STRICKLAND,
W. P. HEMPHILL,
U. L. TAYLOR,
Commissioners.
J. B. Mathews, Clerk Board Commissioners. This August 6th., 1902.
The HEADY BUIL T
* - . : ... : . ..* ... ■ ,■ .
FENCE isBEST
r ■ . > . . - ., , ■ ■ ■ > •
|f|i It’s a better fence than any other yc.u can get or make, no matter IB
fl|g[ how much you spend or how long you work at fence building, HB
fpfl and the big saving of it is that it comes ready-built from the HR
Bitretch and staple as soon as your posts are set. ■£s(
:r rod of fence without going to your dealer’s
CAN JC, FENCE I
iuy it if you see it, because it speaks for itself
ance, economy —the fence that fences. If your H|
AMERICAN STEEL AND WIRE CO., Eg
Chi.,.go, N..V VDrk,^^|
The longest way home is the
shortest road to a family row.
The safest thing for a man to do
who is afraid of getting married is
to fall in love with several
women.
A woman’s instinct makes her
as sure that burglars have tried to
get in her house as if they had left
the cards.
By rounding out the years youth
gets Hat.
Get What You Ask For!
When you ask for Cascarets Candy
Cathartic be sure you get them.
Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C.
Never sold in bulk. A substitutor is
always a cheat and a fraud. Beware!
All druggists, ioc.
Whittle, T. E.
Wood, J. C.
Wood, J. R.
Eppinger District.
Barrett, R. L.
Barret, W. J.
Bloodworth, W. M.
Howell, S. A.
Lifsev, J. S.
Lifsey, W. T.
Norris, W. C.
Reid, J. B.
Slade, S. S.
Slade, J. W.
Starr, J. H.
Story, T. W.
First District.
Banks, C. I.
Blake, I). P.
Coggin, Josephus
Coggin, J. L.
Carreker, W. A.
Hooten, E. L.
Huckaby, W. T.
Jack Son, W. B.
Prothro, C. P.
Scott, Z. L
Scott, R. M.
Sullivan, T. C.
Molina District.
Beckham, T. C.
Brooks, J. M.
Brooks, J. W.
Carmichael, J. A. Jr.
Carreker, J. P.
CaTreker, H. J.
Drewry, F. E.
Dunn, J. C.
Hardy, S. L.
Jordan, J. H.
Jordan, J. T.
Jordan, M. K.
Pirkle, W. L.
Phillips, J. M.
Willis, D. M.
Milner District.
Blood worth, H. G.
Bolton, W. H.
Cauthen, J. F.
Childers, W. T.
Farley, L. F.
Fisher, J. J.
Harden, E. K.
Head, J. B.
Hunt, T. J.
Jackson, R. F.
Martin, J. C.
Rice, W. M.
Tyus, J. T.
Tyus, W. G.
Wei den, G. T.
Willis, J. W.
A story is told of how Mrs. Caro
line Corbin, of Chicago, became an
active anti-woman suffragist. She
was a school friend of Miss Susan
B. Anthony. In later years the
two women met in Washington.
“What have you been doing all
this while?” asked Miss Anthony.
“Bringing up four boys,” was
the answer.
’Boys ! ’ exclaimed the outspoken
Susan. “What under the sun is
a woman like you doing with four
boys?”
“I don’t know. Would you ex
pect me to strangle them?”
“Bosh!” was the reply. “You
should never have had them. They
will be nothing but men.” —New
Y'ork Tribune.
Concord District.
Beckham, J. C.
Fossett, .J. T.
Lee, J. H.
Madden, J. F.
Madden, W. F.
McDaniel, J. S.
McElveen, A. A.
Milner, R. A.
McLendon, R. H.
Oxford, H. C.
Oxford, A. B.
Smith, J. H.
Strickland, W. H.
Strickland, G. E.
Ward, J. M.
Waller, N. B.
Piedmont District.
Bussey, T. L.
Collier, I. C.
Graham, W. H.
Harp, A. G.
Harp, G. T.
Matthews, Charles
Smith, .T. W.
Warthen, J. T.
Whittle, W. B.
Second District.
Barrow, E. P.
Brown, L. M.
Buffington, J. Q.
Coker, P. R.
Davis, J. A.
Eppinger, J. E.
Hemphill, W. P.
Hemphill, W. R.
Hemphill, H; E.
Harris, H. C.
McElroy, R. R.
McKinley, E. E.
Moore, J. A.
Moore. B. A.
Powell, W. E.
Segraves, J. P.
Shackleford, J. H.
Shackleford, S. E.
Zebulon District.
Beckham, R. Y.
Blasingame, T. J.
Brazier, W. H.
Bates, Walter
Baker, E. H.
Baker, J. T.
Dunn, J. D
Dozier, E. W.
Franklin, W. J.
Fincher, W. T.
Howell, W. E.
Hooten, Lemuel
Harper, C. H.
Howell, J. H.
Kendrick, M. A.
Ridley, G. B.
Sullivan, C. W.
Wright, J. A.