Newspaper Page Text
Don’t
Forget
Please
that I have purchased the
j. R. Deavours’ stock of
goods, valued at $1,500.
Remember, too, that I got
it cheap. Remember, too
that I am offering it
cheap.
I candidly tell you —
if I have what you want —
and the chances are that
I have it —you can buy
it of me for LESS, much
less, than the same goods
can be bought elsewhere.
Do you hear me ?
Look at This and
Weep for Joy:
$200.00 in Millinery—half price.
$200.00 in Ribbons —half price.
SIOO.OO in books —ltnlf price.
$200.00 in notions, etc—half price
On glassware, crockery
and tin ware, I’ll make it
warm for competition.
My stock of GROCER
IES is complete, and my
prices are right.
1 desire your patron
age.
Jim Reeves
October Sheriff Sales.
Will be soli! before the courthouse
door in the town of Zebulon, Pike coun
ty, (in.,on the first Tuesday in October
190k’, between the hours of 10 o’clock a.
in. and -l o’clock p. in., to the highest
bidder for cash the following described
property to-wit: —
One side lwr coil and spi'lilß latino , James \
Mover make, running gear red, laxly black.
Levied on tilelu'onerty ofj. B Head. Also one
.lames ,v Meyer buggy, end spring, (miniod
blaek. Also oneblaek mare mule about 7 years
obi, about IS lumds high Also one two horse
wagon, painted rod, repaired by l ergusim.
Also one liay mare about I 11,.,I 1 ,., hands high, about
1* years old. Levitxl on the property ofJ.W.
Woodall under a ti.fa. issiusl from theeounty
court of Pikeenu’ ty in favor of \V. A. I.esm e,
trniisferee, against ,1. W. Woodall and ,i- B.
Brail. Legal nottee given of tliis levy as requir
ed by law. This Sept the 4th. IW)2
ALSO
At tlie same time and plnee the fotlowin ? de
serilw'd property to-wit: Twenty Ken's of land
more or less, in the litli district li. M. of Pike
county,Ua., and trounded as follows: on tin l
north by .1 K Madden AtSotls ,on tin- west liy
Mrs. I.iasie Banka and Mrs. Alice t\sites, on
the tout it by Mrs Llaaie Hanks and the lands
foruierlv otvned by J. M. 1 .aw Teller and on tin l
east bv lands formerly owned by J.M. Law
renee. I,,'Vied on us tin- property of J. M. Law
rence, decease , try virtue of and tosatisfy all
fa. from the county court of Pike county in
favor of J K Madden vs .1 M M 1 aiwi-enee,
drs-eased Notice given of this levy as requir
ed try law This tin- 10th day of Sept 1002
ALSO
At the same time and place the following de
scribed property to-wit: Consisting <rf lots of
land nets 184, it#), ISA, 100, 17, ltWand CIS in the
Oth district of Pike county, Oa , containing
eleven hundred (1100 acres more or less Said
tract irf land known as the Jin.sey Neal place
Sail! land IroumUsi a follows: on the north by
.1 B Matthews and Mrs Kessett, n tin- east
bv Mrs Ftrsselt anil Mrs Oxford, nt) thctouth
by Klkinser,-< k ami on tin- west by Jas Madden
and T J Williamson Leviisl on as the prop
arty of A I> Higgins, trustee of M. S. Higgins
under a ti fa issued from the county court
of said county in favor of the Merchants ami
Planters irunk vs A D Biggins trustee for M
S Riggins Written notice given of tins levy
as required by’ law This the Oth day of Sept
ItkK
J, H. Mii.nku, Sheritt.
OWES HIS LIFE TO .V NEIGHBOR'S
KINDNESS.
Mr. 11. I* Dauglu>rty, well known
throughout Mercer anil Sumner coun
ties, \V. Va., most likely owes his life
to the kindness of a neighbor. He was
almost hopelessly alflieteil with diar
rhoea; whs attended by two physicians
who g)sve him little. i f any relief, when
a neighltor learning of his serious con
dition. brought hint a bottle of Cham
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, which cured him in less than
twenty-four hours For sale by
•Jxo. H. BhAt'KBUKX.
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. 0.
Help A Noble Institution.
The county authorities of Pike
were exercised to know what to do
with a little nine months old baby,
whose mother has just been sent
to the insane asylum, and who
1 had no kindred. Their appeal to
the Decatur Orphans’ Home was
quickly answered, and the babe
found a welcome in the baby
cottage. The child was so attract
ive that in two weeks she was
adopted by refined, loving chris
tain people, and she is the light
' of their home.
We wish the friends of God
could see the wise training which
is given to these orphans at Decatur
to help them to be noble, useful,
and valuable citizens. The abso
lutely destitute are gathered from
every part of North Georgia. Here
are a few illustrations:
Recently a little cripple came
hobbling in to our Home from
the country. He has serious hip
joint trouble, and has to lift one
of his legs with his hand as he
walks. He has suffered extremely.
He was bereft of both parents of
both parents before he was four,
and now his poor adopted mother
is in the act of dying with a can
cer.
The mountains sent there a poor
’ boy whose history was so sad.
He was deserted by his father in
infancy. His uncle ran away, and
when the neighbors looked for his
mother they found her in a hastily
dug grave, where the murderer
had thrown her. The poor boy
| was alone, all alone in the world.
Middle Georgia last winter sent
two fine little boys as any one
could find. Their father was in
heaven, their mother insane, their
adopted father lying helpless from
a paralytic stroke, and their poor
adopted mother unable to earn
the needed bread. They were
doubly- orphaned.
Two hundred and thirteen
orphans were helped there last
year. One hundred and fifty are
constantly in the Home. How are
they fed and provided for? Hav
ing no endowment or state aid,
they turn to all friends of human
ity and ask them to put in a full
day's work for them on Orphans’
Home Work Day Saturday Sept.
28th, and to send up their earn
ings through one of the methodist
Sunday Schools on Sept. 28th, or
directly to us. We ask for the
orphans' sake that every one with
a tender heart keep this Work
Day. W. R. Branham.
E. A. Gray.
\ HOY’S WILD RIDE FOR LIFE.
With family around expecting him to
diq, and a son riding for life, IS miles,
to get Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, troughs and Colds, W.H.
Brown, of Loesville, 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, Pneu
monia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and
Crip prove its matchless merit for all
Throat and Lung troubles Guaranteed
bottles 50e and *I.OO. Trial bottle free
at W. A. Wright's drug store
There never was a paper in any
locality that gave all the news,
says an exchange. It, is so often
that some persons come or go that
the editor does not see. It hap
pens t hat a family is missed several
times. They get tin' impression
that the paper does not mention
t hem or has a grudge against them.
The paper has no ill feeling, no
enmity against anv one. Most
people take the local paper.
Don’t, lie afraid to give tin* editor
news of interest. Perhaps you
think the paper has shown partial
ity. hut try and see if it does not
treat you well if you give it a
cha nee.
A REMARKABLE RECORD.
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy has a
remarkable record. It has been in use
for over thirty years, during which
t'me many million Ixittlcs have been
sold and used. It has long been the
standard and main reliance in ‘the
treatment of croup in thousands, of
ho nes. yet during all t his time no ease
has ever been reported to the manu
facturers in which it failed to effect a
cure. When given as soon as the child
becomes hoarse or even as soon as the
jeroupy cough appears, it will prevent
the attack. It is pleasant to take,
many children like it. It contains no
opium or other harmful substance and
may be given as confident to a baby as
to an adult. For sale by
Jno. H. Blackrcrn.
Educate Tour Bowel. With Cascret*.
Camty Cathartic, cure constipation forever,
. ,oc. 23c. ItC.C.C. tail, Uru£ists refund money.
THE BARNESVILLE NEWB-GAZEE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1902.
Raised on “Chawed Guzzle.”'
1
1
Senator Carmack, of Tennessc
who was conspicuous during th
last session of Congress for hi,
attacks on the conduct of the waj
in the Philipines, used to be a
newspaper man before he entered
the arena of politics, says the New
York Commercial. He was asked
the other day if he was sensitive
to the bitter criticisms made by
some of the newspapers on account
of his arraigment of the Amer
ican soldiers in the Philippines.
“Not in the least,” he replied,
“and that reminds me of a story.
There used to be a man in our
town who was not very tall and
who was so bow-legged as to ap
pear deformed or crippled. But
he had plenty of muscle and a
good deal of grit. One time the
bow-legged man became involved
in a dispute with a husky six
feeted who, becoming tired of the
verbal argument, advanced upon
his opponent with a threatening air
and said:
“ ‘You little runt! I’ve a good
notion to chaw your guzzle I—
whatever that may mean.
“At this the bow-legged man
immediately gathered himself to
gether, squared off and said: All
right! I’ve been mostly raised on
chawed guzzle, so sail in!”
“As I was once a newspaper
man,” concluded Senater Car
mack “I don’t much care what
they say about me. Besides, I’ve
been raised on that sort of things.
OABTORIA.
B**r, the KM You Have Always Bought
Helpful Hints.
Camphor put in drawers or
trunks will keep away mice.
Rub hinges with a feather dip
ped in oil, and they will not creak.
A small bag of sulphur kept in
a drawer of cupboard will drive
away red ants.
Boil three or four onions in a
pint of water, apply with a soft
brush to gilt frames, and Hies will
keep off them.
A spoonful of vinegar put into
the water in which meats or fowls
are boiled tender.
Equal parts of ammonia and
spirits of turpentine will hike
paint out of clothing, no matter
how dry or hard the paint may be
Saturate the spot two or three
times, then wash out in soap-subs.
A little charcoal mixed with
clear water thown into a sink will
disinfect and deodorize it.
The odor of sweet-peas is so of
fensive to flit's that it will drive
them out of a sickroom.
A fever patient can be made cool
and comfortable by being fre
quently sponged with water in
which a little soda has been dis
solved.
Brass works can be kept beauti
full bright by occasionally rubbing
with salt and vinegar.—September
Woman’s Home Companion.
The Eminent Kidney
and Bladder Specialist.
The Discoverer of Swamp-Root at Work la
His Laboratory.
There is a disease prevailing in this
country most dangerous because so decep
tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by
it—heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure
or apoplexy are often the result of kidney
disease, if kidney trouhle is allowed to ad
vance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack
the vital organs, or the kidneys themselves
break down and waste away cell by cell.
Then the richness of the blood—the albumen
—leaks out and the sufferer has Bright's
Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root the new dis
covery is the true specific for kidney, bladder
and urinary troubles. It has cured thousands
of apparently hopeless cases, after all other
efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent
and dollar sizes. A sample bottle sent free
by mail, also a book telling about Swamp-
Root and its w’onderfu! cures. Address
Dr. Kilmer & Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. and
mention this paper.
%
When your
deny it!
The goodness ot Uneeds Biscuit Is
preserved by the In-cr-seal Package
Reactions of a Bachelor Girl.
Aan is known by the company
he |eps and a woman by the
comny she doesn’t keep.
Ste of the fastest people are
slowivhen it comes to settling
bills
Bjthe time a girl gets used to
beintissed and begins to like
it, ti man gets tired of kissing
her.
Evkas the first, but not the
last Mnun to discover that a little
know'Jge is a dangerous thing.
Sucjsthe world’s progress that
a joufty on the broad road to
destrilion is now accomplished
in anutomobile.
We jar much of the mantle of
charit but some of us never get
more in enough of it to make a
stylisljathing suit of.
Worjn read the sporting news,
not bejise they like it, but as one
of the jiany stunts they perform
in ord to be man’s intellectual
equal.-41 iss Edna Cain, in Quit
man Fr- Press.
Wonderful World.
Everiay the thought that t'his
world ia magnificent body be
comes irfe and more manifest.
Just a f years ago we knew com
parative; little concerning the
planet <i which we live, much
less of |e constellations above
us. Dun: recent years, however,
star-gaze; have made wonderful
progress,is the following from
the Lonai Spectator shows:
“In his kure of Saturday at the
Royal Insfution, Sir Robert Ball,
late astroimer-royal in Ireland,
stated thtive now knew the exis
tence of 8(100,000 of stars or suns,
many of tlnr much more magni
ficent thalthe one which gives
light to ousystem. The major
ity of are not visible
to the eye Seven recognizarble by
the telescoi, but sensitiue photo
graphic plss have revealed their
existence tyond all doubt or
question, tiugh most of them
almost iinnceivably distant,
thousandstens of thousands
of times asjr off as our sun. A
telegraphiojessage, for example,
which woil reach the sun in
eight minks, would not reach
some of the stars in 1,800 years.
“An avere of only 10 planets
to each sun iicates the existence
within the rrow range to which
human obse ition is still confined
of at, least 8 XX),000 of separate
worlds, man of them doubtless
of gigautc si, and it is nearly
ineonceivabl that these worlds
can be whol! devoid of living and
sentient, bigs upon them,
probably mo ill in our sense, as
all matters list decay, certainly
finite; and a-n what is the rel
ative positioiif mankind?”
If sciencelontinues to grow,
after the laps of a few thousand
more years. ] ‘haps, we will all
lie on speakii terms with some
of the people >ove us if circum
stances be su< that a visit from
one to the otl ‘ is a little out of
the question.
o AS' OHI A.
B*an the Kind HaW Wwa,s BOUglli
T* C&'tfiz&K
9 r i. . _i ; . H
SPfEXASI
AND INpIAN TER. /j
Are bf st reached by\the Cos ton Belt, Wuich line! yjf-r
runs rwo trains ydayTfroni Mi mphiA to Texas', f /
without change. xheselttairts either reach j ‘v”
direcnor make close connecYon''^J w . __ , J
for all! parts of Texas, Oklahoma \
and I pdianTerritory. \\ I
rr. wnßTyy.v v jr f and
' 5 jg, A/ j <
7 SAN \ \ / V\ "
If you want to fltfkd a home ' Yri? n
In Texas, where\t>lk r crops are if \
raised and where peygble prosper. J 1
write for a copy of ouPUtandsome S
booklets, •• Homes in tns) South- Sv
west” and “Through T<Jxas with y
a Camera.” Sent free(fio\any- c
body who is anxious to better hisy N. B. BAIRD, T. P. A., • • ATLANTA, GA.’
• f E. ff, LaBEAUME, G. P. &T. A., ST. LOUIS, ID.
Let us have your Orders for Mill Supplies or Shop Work,
Mallory Bros. Machinery Cos.,
Mention this paper. MACON, GEORGIA.
For the Next 50 Days
we will sell No. 2 Shingles at
$1.50 per thousand.
BARNESVILLE PLANING MILLS.
Hon. J. L. Webb, President. John A. Darwin, Gen’l Mgr
PROTECTION AT HOME FOR THE WIDOWS AND ORPHANS.
THE MUTUAL LIFE
OF GEORGIA.
Do you want an income for life,
and the best and easiest Company to
get business for? 'What the Southern
is to fire, the Mutual Life of Georgia
is to life.
You can write three men out of
five, as other agents are doing that.
Why not you? We want an agent in
this community. He must be an hon
orable gentleman. None other need
apply. Where we establish an agent
the Company introduces itself.
If you want the agency for this
territory apply with reference to J.
A. Darwin, Gen. Mgr., Athens, Ga.