The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, September 04, 1902, Image 7

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Biliousness “I have nod your valuable CASCA* BETS and find them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliousness anu am now com pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. Once tried, you will never lie without them in the family." EDW. A. Marx, Albany, N. Y. HR CATHARTIC mmwate TRADE MARK REGI3TZREO Pleasant. Palatanie. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicaen. Weaken, or Grine. !oc. Ujc. aUc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sorlinc H- ni.ii. l umpanj, l lik-nro. Montreal. Saw York. 321 IM.Tn.RAft Sold ana guaranteed by ail drug- NU IU DNU gists to Cl KE Tobacco Habit. 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. 36. J. A. CORRY, M. D., BARNESVILLE, GA. Office: Mitchell building. Residence: Greenwood street. * Office hours: 7 to Ba. m., 11 to 13 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. Offiiee over First National Bank. Residence, Magnolia Inn. J. R. SIMS, DENTIST, BARNESVILLE, GA. )ffice over B. F. Reeves’ store. C. H. PERDUE, DENTIST, BARNESVILLE GA. tS’-Offlce over Jordan's Drug Store. EDWARD A. STEPHENS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA. General practice in all courts —State and Federal. JS*”'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 TANARUS, Daniel. A. B. Pope DANIEL & POPE, ATTOKNETS-AT-LAW Offices at Zebulon and Griffin. GEO. W. GRICE, PHOTOGRAPHER. Work done promptly and neatly. Office over Middlebrooks Building. W. B. SMITH, F. D- F7NKST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS. ODORI ESS EMBALMING FLUII W. B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker BARNESVILLE, GA. 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. 0- M. JONES. Prop., Main street, next to P. O. CASTOBIA. Bear* the _/) N® Haw * lwa l S T 1 , | ' ALL OVER THE HOUSE. ! Points on Furnishing a Bedroom With Crape Paper. _ For the trimmings I would select either red, orange, pink or dark blue, but of course one could use a favorite color. 1 will begin with the bed, as that is the most prominent part of the room. For pillowshams take two pieces of the paper, each three feet long, and join together by overlapping edges and sewing care fully together. Now take another piece, four feet long, and cut in two lengthwise. Carefully sew these two pieces together, end to end, then run on to the body part, gath ering a little as you go. Always overlap edges when sewing, for the work will not be neat if you do not. When this is finished, sew on to all seams common feather edge braid. This gives a pretty finish and also hides all seams. This will complete the shams. Now for the bedspread. Take live strips five feet long and sew together lengthwise. Finish the seams with the braid and the end of the spread with rutiles of the paper and finish with the braid. Now for the bureau cover. Take a piece one and a half yards long and finish ends with rutiles and braid. A splasher may be made by taking one yard of the paper and carefully turn ing the ends over and sewing the finish with the braid. Curtains are quite difficult to make, hut with a little pains it can be accomplished. Take a piece sev en feet long and turn ends and finish with the braid, and then put a narrow ruffle of paper down the front and around the bottom edges and bind with braid. This is one long curtain, and the opposite one is to be made flic same, but you must be very careful about putting the ruffle on or you will get it wrong. — Sarah’s Mamma in Boston Globe. Household Hints. The longer and drier table linen is ironed the better it looks. To clean brass gas fixtures nib them with cut lemons and then wash them off in hot water. A bruise may be prevented from discoloring by immediately applying hot water or a little dry starch moistened with cold water. In boiling eggs hard put them in boiling water ten minutes and then put them in cold water. It will pre vent the yolk from coloring. A harmless and cleanly treatment to drive away mice is to saturate a cloth with cayenne pepper in a solu tion and stuff it into the hole. Dry cayenne thrown about will keep ants and eoehroaches away. Perfumed Linen. Linen should be kept in perfumed drawers. Sachets containing the housewife’s favorite scent scattered about the drawer will impart the perfume. Aromatic shavings, leaves and flowers sewed up in bags may be substituted for the sachets. Ce dar shavings, cassia buds, powdered sassafras, rose leaves, leaves of the rose geranium, branches of lavender and sweet verbena are all delicious in odor. A few drops of perfume on sheets of white blotting paper will impart a fragrance to linen. Preserved Plums. Pour boiling water over the plums, then remove the skin. Make a sirup ©f one pound of sugar and a teacup of water to each pound of fruit and when boiling hot pour over the plums. Let it remain over night, then drain, boil again, skim and pour over the plums. Let them re main in this another day, then put over the fire in sirup and boil until clear. Remove with skimmer, pack carefully in jars, boil the sirup until thick, pour over the plums and seal. Covers For Polished Tables. If the summer coverings for pol ished tables are made at home, it should be remembered that a close fitting cover of some soft fabric of the flannel variety should first he 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. Canned Fruit In Hot Weather. An expert on domestic fruit can ning tells us that, being obliged to store her jars in an upstairs room, she is driven to various expedients to keep down the temperature dur ing hot weather. One plan 13 to wring two large Turkish towels out of cold water and hang them over a line in a current of air in the room to be cooled. The evaporation of the water as the towels dry lowers the temperature several degrees. Screens For Curtains. Japanese screens of finely carved wood are taking the place of cur tains. The screens are of the same length and depth as the windows. The designs are of Japanese foliage with the branches in openwork, with quaint birds with outspread wings hovering over the flowers. THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THUIIsDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902. Sentimental Song. There is the man behind the counter, and the man behind the gun, the man behind the buzz-saw and the man behind his son; the man behind the times and the one behind his rent, the man behind the plough-shares and the man be hind the fence; and the man be hind the whistle and the man be hind the bars, and the man behind the kodak and the man behind the cars; the man behind his whiskers and the man behind his fist, and everything behind is entered on the list. But they have skipped another fellow of whom nothing has been said —the fellow who is even or just a little ways ahead ; who always pays for what he gets and whose bill is always signed— he’s a big sight more important than the man who is behind. All we newspaper people and mer chants and the whole commercial clan are indebted for existance to this honest, noble man. He keeps us all in business and his town is never dead —and so you all take your hat off to the man who is ahead. LINGERING SUMMER COLDS. Don’t let a cold run at this season. Summer colds are the hardest kind to cure and if neglected may linger along for months. A long siege like this will pull down the strongest constitution. One Minute Cough Cure will break up the attack at once. Safe, sure, acts at once. Cures coughs, colds, croup, bron chitis, all throat and lung troubles. The children like it. Jno.H. Blackburn, L. Holmes, Barnesville, Ga. Milner, Ga. The Average Man. What a delightful person he is, the average man, and how the heart goes out to him in special gratitude now again. He lias never written a magazine article, sunk a war ship, discussed a polit ical or economical situation in the people’s column of his paper or made stump speeches; he never preached a man into heaven nor tempted him into the roads that lead to the other place; he loves his wife and children, works for his daily bread and enjoys it; proba bly has his little personal sins and personal hobbies, but doesn’t in flict them on you. He doesn’t make many demonstrations of friend ship but is mighty good to a fellow who is down on his luck ; he quietly pays his church dues and the sub scription for his town paper; he isn’t a hero, but he is the heart a.id life and backbone of America. TAKE CARE OF THE STOMACH. The man or woman whose digestion is perfect and whoso stomach performs its every function is never sick. Kodol cleanses, purifies and sweetens the stomach and cures positively and per manently all stomach troubles, indi gestion and dyspepsia. It is the won derful reconstructive tonic that is making so many sick people well and weak people strong by conveying to their bodies all of the nourishment in the food they eat. Rev. J. H. Holladay of Holladay, Miss., writes: Kodol has cured me. I consider it is the best remedy I ever used for dyspepsia and stomach troubles.. I was given up by physicians. Kodol saved my life. Take it after meals. Jno H. Blackburn. L. Holmes. Barnesville, Ga. Milner, Ga. Love thy neighbor as they love themselves. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Don’t Know it. How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a . . sediment or set tling indicates an Tj, unhealthy condi rnfj' {[ h° n °f '^ e bid ' \ 1 V ne y s • it stains J y°ur linen it is J! r-^PU' cv idence of kid- J-Jh. Vw in r*/ ney trouble; too i_i'y pass it or pain in *• —the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and blad der are out of order. What to Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Ki!mer'3 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 realised. 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. andsl. sizes. You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful discovery f' > i and a book that more about it, both absolutely free by address Dr. Kilmer & Home of fiwamp-Kw*. Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men tion reading this generous offer in this paper. i Said the Jester —A. J to the King- .. 'JEL Uneeda Jli& WM Biscuit |St if/ill -Godzooks!” yrr 4 quoth the king— *UT;A j| IJa "It’s no jest to )|TV, ih yglgl make a man hungry” ( 7* . NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY ■- MJSI The Seed of Kindness. A big parade was passing through the city streets. There was the usual crowd of spectators elbowing each other for the best places. The small hoy of the bootblack and the newsboy type was everywhere. There could In* no doubt but that lie would see all of that wonderful, glittering array. He sat on top of hitching posts, looked from the roofs of byslidings, hung half way up on telegraph poles, clung to the sup ports of bill-bars, or at the very least, occupied the front rank in the street. A crowd of these happy little fellows bad secured a good place on the shady side of the street. Some had their blacking kits swung over their shoulder, and all were munching peanuts or candy. Along the streets came a weary looking, poorly dressed woman, pushing a little cripple girl in a wheel ebair. The brass bands were heard in the distance, and the children along the line began to shout, “There it comes 1” The woman looked anxiously at the dense ranks of sight-seers, hoping for an opening through which she could push the little chair. No doubt she hud walked a long way for the sake of bringing a glimpse of pleasure into the child’s hard life. But the peoplo who saw her trying to get through were selfish ly intent on their own enjoyment and instead of making room, turn ed away from her and stood rigid ly in their places, Just then one of the hoys saw her. He turned instantly to his companions: “Say, fellows,” he said, “there is a little lame girl that can’t get a pluce. Most likely she don’t get many chances to see a parade, and we can see all that comes to town. Lets give her our place, and we can run futher up the street and get another.” “All right,” came from half a dozen of the boys at once. The boy who had spoken pushed throught the crowd. “Say missus,” he said “you can have our place out here for the little girl.” With the boy’s help the chair was quickly guided to the place, and the boy with his companions ran away. He was only a ragged little street urchin. His language was plentifully interladed with the roughest slang, but he had love in his soul, and all who saw the simple, unassuring deed were to think that the seed of kindness is found everywhere, and hears fruit in the most unexpected places.—Exchange. CASTOniA. Bsartbe The Kind You Hate Aiwa/s Bought T* A Missouri grocer hauled up for selling a plug of tobacco on Sun day, contended that tobacco was a neccessity of life in Missouri, and the court sustained him. How Arc Your Kidney* 9 Vr Hobbc' BparatfUJi Pill*cure all kidney HU. Ham* pie free- AOd tiuunuu Hewed j CV, Chicago or N. V A Gentleman. Mark Twain is angry because Mrs. John Jacob Astor says that if a man has not been to college 1 e is not a gentleman. The hu morist gives this definition: “A kindly, courteous, unselfish man, who thinks first not of him self but of his fellow-men. That is what a gentleman is—not one of these society chappies, who in reality is one of the most selfish men on earth.” In other words, a gentleman is a gentleman. Neither birth, educa tion or money is essential to the gentle condition; only a true heart, a right spirit and a sense of manly honor is needed. The easiest way to tell a gentle man is not by his clothes, his position, his wealth, but his purity of thought, his kind unselfish dis position. There are true gen tlemen among the most lowly, while snobbery is not absent from those in the highest walks of life. A PARSON’S NOBLE ACT. “I want all the world to know,” writes Rev. C. J. Rudlong, of Ashaway, R. 1., “what a throughly good and re liable medicine I found in Electric Bit ters. They cured me of jaundice and liver troubles that had caused me great suffering for many years. For a gen uine, all-around cure, they excel any thing I ever saw.” Electric Bitters are the surprise of all for their wonderful work in Liver, Kidney and Stomach troubles. Don’t fail to try them. Only 50 cts. Satisfaction is guaranteed by VV. A. Wright. A chinaman who acted as secre tary to a former Chinese minister to England has published a book in which he says: “There is noth ing in which an American won’t say, there is nothing which an Eng lishman wan’t eat, there is noth ing an Italian won’t sing, there is no measure to which a Frenchman won’t dance and nothing Russians won’t covet.” OASTOniA. Bearg the /j The Kind You Have Always Bought When a man gets up in the night and barks his shins on a rocking chair you can never make him believe his wife and idn’t arrange it just that way on purpose. It is the right of every child IHaII to be well born, and to the H^flll I. parents it must look for Tmi,jf* MSTa ■ health and Responsibility sg _ g, responsibility, and how important that Uqi Tr' ■ no taint of disease is left in the blood "* '* fig to be transmitted to the helpless > hild, entailing the most pitiable suffering, and marking its little body with offen sive sores and eruptions, catarrh of the nose and throat, weak eyes, glandular swellings, brittle bones, white swelling and deformity. How can parents look upon such little sufferers and not reproach themselves for bringing so much misery into the world ? If you have any disease lurking in your system, how can you expect well developed, healthy children i Cleanse your own blood and build up your health, and you hr.ve not only enlarged your capacity for the enjoyment of the pleasures oi life, but have discharged a duty all parents owe to posterity, and made mankind healthier and happier. There is no remedy that so surely reaches deep-seated, stubborn blood S- _ troubles as S. S. S. It searches out even hereditary poisons, and removes every taint from the blood, VV, and builds up the general health. If weaklings jJil are growing up around you, right the wrong by putting them on a course of S. S. S. at once. It is a purely vegetable medicine, harmless in its effects, and can be taken by both old and young without fear of any bad results. • Write us about your case, and let our physicians advise and help you. This will cost you nothing, and we will r,!so send our book on blood and akin diseases. THK jrwirx .specific co„ Atlanta, Ga. Won Bride in Twenty Minutes. Sergt. Harlis in Chicago went into a restaurant on Sunday, Au gust 4th, to get lunch. He saw that the girl cashier was pretty and stopped to talk to her. “I’m getting tired of restau rants,” said he; “I wish I could try home cooking for awhile.” “Why don’t you?” “Because I can’t find anybody that will have me.” “Well you haven’t asked every one. You haven’t asked me.” The soldier proposed immediate ly; the girl accepted; the sergeant hurried to Waukegan and return ed in half an hour with Justice Cummings, and the wedding cere mony was performed at the bride’s home in High wood. Right after the ceremony Harris received a letter informing him of a bequest of $25,000 from an uncle in Wisconsin. Part of this is farm which struck Harris as a good place for a honeymoon as well as for a home. So at 8 o’clock the bridal couple left the fort for Winconson. OWES HIS LTFE TO A NEIGHBOR’S KINDNESS. Mr. I). P. Daugherty, well known throughout Mercer and Sumner coun ties, W. Va., most likely owes his life to the kindness of a neighbor. He was almost hopelessly afflicted with diar rhoea ; was attended by two physicians who gave him little, if any relief, when a neighbor learning of his serious con dition, brought him a bottle of Cham berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which cured him in less than twenty-four hours. For,snle hy Jno. 11. Blackburn. “What is the pedigree of your calf?” asked a wouhl-be buyer of farmer. “All I know is that his father gored a book agent to death, tossed a justice of the peace on top of a barn and stood a lightning rod man on his head in a fence corner. His mother chased a female lec turer two miles one day. If that ain’t pedigree enough to ask $47 on you needn’t take him.” P% IST" TOBACCO SPIT L/VJIM I and SMOKE ■' " i Your Lifeawayl You can cured of anjr form of tobacco UKing easily. i>e made well, at rung, magnetic, full or new life and vigor by taking HO-TO-BAO, that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten (lays. Over 800,000 cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book let and advice FREE. Address STERLING sI'.MIUIV CO., Cld-ago or New York. 437