Newspaper Page Text
,£k Thereby Hangs
’T'll a Tale.-'-^c^
/i*m\ I you are not careful where you make pur-
IJI chases, it. brings sorrows and dark frowns
/i*l\ IT / "ft l obscure thy furrowed brow, where
bright smiles was once wont to play hide-
and-seek. It does not bring your money
J Groceries, Tinware and
B Crockery
are of two kinds—one kind is good—one
ll]_j 1 a kind bad. The bad kind is never cheap
Cttajj R enough—even at half the price you have to
£jP2lj pay for them. The good is always cheap
4} yf ‘ enough if you buy them here. Try it and
let the goods prove the wisdom of coming
Ta here again. Pleased customers prove our
tale. Remember We Keep Nearly Every
thing; Ask for What You Don’t See—Most
Ukeiy We Have It.
B. F. Reeves.
j A Golden Rule
of Agriculture:
I Be good to your land and your crop
[ will be good. Plenty of
Potash
I In the fertiliser spells quality j A,.*—
and quantity in the har-, J .(fabOj
vest. -Write us and t
- we will send you,
frte, by next mail,
our money winning 7!s!
GERMAN KAU WORKS, jJ m&siiM,
M Nuhu Street, JW
r***- /\wM
. Dr. A. S. Dyar& Cos.,
* M PHYSICIANS AND SPECIALISTS,
J j <'jV 34a p * nch,re ® Atlanta, Ca.
v Af 2 Chronic, Nervous,
I /fS' and Private Diseases
4/# Our Specialty.
i p UK. S. DYAK.
J_„. /rvlle Debility, Spermatorrhoea, Seminal Los.e*. Night Emissions. Loss
.vurVUUb o! Vital Powers, Sltvplwtsin-jw, Desixmilencv. li< vs-. of Memory,
Confusion of Liens, Blurr liefore the Kyee. Lassitude, Languor, Gloomintws, IK-nres
si<*n of Slants. Aversion to Soe iet y, Easily Discouraged, I .ark of Confidence, Dull,
Listl. ss, Unfit for study or Business, and finds life a burden, Savely, Permanently
an u Phi v atki.y Cured.
R I /-A rv H Ql/Jei Discasos, SyphllUa, a disease most horrible lt its re-
DIOUU dnu OK in suits, completely eradicated without the use of mer
cury, Scrofula, Krvsijielas, Fever Bores, blotches, pimples, ulcers, pains in the head
and bones. syphiUltie sore throat.month and tongue, glandular enlargement of the
ms-k, rheumatism, eatarrh. etc., permanently cukkd when utiikhs have vailed.
U’ nari; Kidney and bladder troubles, weaK book, burning urine, frequency
llllcll V of urinating, urine high colored, or milky sediment t>n sanding,
Gonorrhoea, Gloat. Cvstitla, etc , Permanently Cuhed when Others Failed.
OUR SUCCESS ts ed on facts. First—Practical Experience Steond—Bvery
case is spts-iaUy studied, thus starting aright. Tliird —Medicines are prepared in our
laboratory exactly to suit each ease, aiul furnished to our patients without any ad
ditional charge or cost, thus effecting cures without injury.
t*“< lur new and improved system of mail treatment enables us to treat and cure
patients at th< ir own homes just ns successfully ami satisfactorily as by a personal
interview and examination Therefore if you cannot call write us for perfect Ques
tion List, for men and women. State which you want. We absolutely guarantee a
cure in every case accepted by us for treatment Thousands eunxl A friendly letter
may save you future suffering awl shame, and adit golden years to life.
Address" or call on DR. A. S. DYAR A CO., 34'n Peaclnree St , Between
Marietta and Walton Streets. Atlanta, Georgia
THE KICKER.
It is said that the Creator
Had some useful end in view
When he fashioned the mosquito,
That so pesters me and you ;
And also that the little Ilea
Makes lazy men move quicker,
But what is wonderful to me,
Is why he made the kicker.
The kicker never finds time
To promote a scheme or measure;
But in tearing down what others build
He finds his greatest pleasure.
He talks of unworthy motives,
Selfishness, and false pretense,
And always sees a nigger
In the woodpile or the fence.
He waits until a plan is made;
Then like a child at play,
Declares lie’ll surely quit the game
Unless it’s played his way.
He forgets that a true American
Should yield with due respect
To the will of the majority
And the measures they elect.
’Tis not. for me to question Nature,
But what justice can you see
In letting the pesky kicker live
While you crack the little flea?
And if there is a hereafter
Provided for the human race,
And the kicker goes to heaven,
1 would prefer the other place.
—Saturday Atlanta ,
Journr
Court Adi auruer- j =
The adjourite ," ,
Superior Court , .1 of Pike
last.. r l lie fir .rued Friday
were consutr , 3 days of court
111 the \\ *t i<ini Cf the demurrers
would no* ] mve asp. As the court
tlie bala’ had time during
throiijg’ ( the week to get
over > with the case it had to go
caae s j• all the other liank
W’ th'am ne next -Ap r *l term. The
■l* ,i s th case will then he taken up.
least. .ought it will consume at
A week or more.
ERA LIES A GROSS PER MONTH.
1 him* many calls for Cheney’s Ex
pectorant. A single test is all that’s
nejessary to convince people of its
Value.
Henry E. Lampkin.
St. Louis Mo.
O A.STOH3CA..
Btan th* /) Ito Kind You Have Always Bought
TANARUS" G&ytf&s&t
THi BARNESVILLE NE( V-GAZETTE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1902
KMI.HTs 01 FYTHiA#OiI iAMZEI)
Officers Were Ktacted ami
Tuesday Night.
r.edge No. 146 at/reat nesville ’
I Ga. of Knights of Pj i was or
ganized Tuesday nif, soil, the Odd
Fellows’ Hall, and ’atf/tj at 20 of
the city’s best young men con
j stituted t he new lodge.
The lodge was instituted by
Grand Chancelor F, M. jSommer-
I kamp, of Columbus, Ga.. CSoisted
by W. C. Warren, of Atiat i , E.
L. llanea, J. L. Davia, 1 wl?Bai
ley, W. P. BowdeiJJH will
iams, W. F. mJI
members of the (lr\
The following areltionsywrs of
the new lodge; He.l {
Chancellor Com Mes oft- A.
McCrary; Vice Clialf a mofflP.. J.
Stephens; Prelate, Jld havß Oor
ry ; Master of Work, Dlkoft. P.
Kemp; Master of Exchlfcilr, C.
H. Humphrey; Master
and K of R & S, H. ShiGray;
Master of Arms, W. C. Jordan;
Inner Guard, Merritt Thurman;
Outer guard, O. M. Jones; Post
Chancellor Commanders, F. A.
Stafford, A. Peacock, A. P. Kem ?
W. H. Mitchell; Trustees, R.
Morris, T. E. Minhinett and y
H. Mitchell.
During the installation r
ments were served bet* resit
degrees, and the occasi- " ,-n the
, on
very plesant one. , was a
EOR A BAD ' c ~ -
If you have a had ' <LD.
good reliable medici col , „
niis Cough Remedy " e lij pi S r
lieve it, and to all' *® M Chamber
inflaination of th' ■**. • and
For sale hv Tno J t 'he irritation and
lor sale by Jno. H and lungs.
flJackbufh
w*
“What / More Meals.
boy,” a? jdo f or my little
W0 < ?T t V ant mamma, “so that he
}■ .ve t' to ca t between meals ?”
re Pb' l( j £}, ae meals ficker together,”
>e young hopeful.
cxpei /
jj-.p. Intent With Crystallization.
mon ;e a saturated solution of com
tals- eoda in water. When the crys
wn stop dissolving, although the
ter is stirred repeatedly, the fluid
' , ready for use. Pour the clear
duid in another gtyss in which you
are going to try the experiment.
Fasten a lima bean to a piece of
cord and the other end of it to a
match or small piece of wood. Tie
a nonporous object—for instance, a
glass ball—to the same stick and im
merse both bean and glass ball in
the solution. Let the solution
stand, and in a little while a pecul
iar crystallization will form. Needle-
IN THE SOLUTION.
like sticks of soda appear on tlie
bean and cover it completely, giving
it the appearance of a porcupine.
The beau has completely disap
peared, while the other object, the
glass ball, lias not changed at all.
The cause of the crystallization is in
the porousness of the bean —that is,
it absorbs the water, and the soda
contained in the solution, not be
ing able to soak into the bean, set
tles on the outside of it, forming
the crystal needles described above,
while the glass ball, not being po
rous, does not take up any water
and therefore causes no crystalliza
\ion.—New York Tribune.
Cleaning Windows.
Tlie cleaning of windows may be
greatly facilitated by first dusting
them with whiting. Sew up some
whiting in a small linen bag and
rub the whole window and ledges.
Rub this off with a rough cloth and
polish with chamois. Another plan
is to rub the glass with a chamois,
dampened with whiting and polish
with soft cloths.
For Cleaning Wood Tables.
To clean wood tables and shelves
use this mixture: Half a pound each
of soft soap and sand and a quarter
of a pound of lime. Mix and apply
with a scrubbing brush. Rinse with
plenty of clean water, and when dry
the wood will be spotlessly white.
Kodoi Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat*
FALLING >
■
jf jampoos of
And light dressings of Cuticura
Ointment, purest of emollient skin
cures. This treatment at once stops
falling hair, removes crusts, scales,,
and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching
surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles,
supplies the roots with energy and
nourishment, and makes the hair grow
upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp, when all else fails.
Complete Treatment
For Every Humour, sl, consisting of Cct-
ICUKA Soap (250-). to cleanse the skin of crusts
and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle;
Cuticuka Ointment (50c.), to instantly allay
itching, inflammation and irritation, and
soothe and heal; and Ccticgra Resolvent
Fills (25c.), to cool and cleanse the blood.
Ccticura Resolvent Pills (Chocolate
Coated) are anew, tasteless, odorless, eco
nomical substitute for the celebrated liquid
Ccticura Resolvent, as well as for all other
blood purifiers and humour cures. In screw
cap vials, containing 60 doses, price 25c.
Sold throughout tkt world. Briti.h Depot: JT-2S,
CS.rtei'hou.o Bq., London. French Depot: S Rue de l
Pii. Pori*. Pottkb Dbco a*b ChSh.Cobs.. Props.
FOR THE LITTLE ONES,
A Northland Story cf How the Robin
Clot a Red Breast.
A long, long time ago there was
only one fire in the northland, for at
that time there were no matches.
In the northland there lived a
polar bear, 1 and he thought when
the man that took care of the fire
and his son died he could have the
northland all to himself, because
when the fire was out the people
would all freeze.
At last the man got very ill, and
his son had to take care of him and
also tend to the fire. Hut at last
the son got so tired that he could
not tend to the fire. This was what
the polar bear was waiting for, so he
went up to the fire and gave it a
knock with his wet paw, and he
kept slapping it until he thought
that the fire was out.
A gray robin was flying that way,
and, hunting about among the ash
es, she found a little spark of fire
that the bear had not put out. Then
she flew down and fanned it till the
red fire was ablaze again.
It took her quite a long time to
get the fire blazing and while
she was getting the jTe to go her
breast was scorched red by the heat
of the fire, and that is the story of
how the robin got her red breast.
Easy Fishing.
There is a fish that frequents in
large numbers the shallow seas off
the shores on northwest America
from San Francisco to Sitka that
loses its life through leaping too
readily. Whenever it is alarmed it
bounds out of the water. Now,
there are few better students of na
ture than the Indians of the Pacific
coast, who take advantage of this
foolish habit to get food without
working hard for it. When they
see the great shoals of fishes swim
ming near the surface of the wa
ter, they get out their canoes and
beat the water with the paddles, ut
tering hideous yells the while. Ter
rified out of their small wits, the
fishes jurnp up into the air and fall
into the canoes by the hundred.
The Indians also capture them by
the net and spear.
How a Boy Got Back His Ball.
Some boys playing baseball in the
street knocked the ball against the
window of a house and smashed a
pane of glass. The ball fell into the
yard, and one of the urchins started
to recover it when a woman ap
peared and screamed:
“You boys can't have that ball!
You’ve broken one of my windows!”
The boy at the gate pulled off his
hat and made a bow expressive of
the most profound respect.
“We’se didn’t do it. lady,” he
said. “It was de ball. See?”
They got their ball on the strength
of this arrniment. —New York New*.
CASTOHIA.
Bw * Ihe Hind You Haw Always Bought
!ryrtKi ■ ■
A MISFIT
in quality or price is never found in this store. We have
brought each to a height which can be declared perfect. This
condition has been reached through constant effort to get at
the best WE SELL HIGH-CLASS
Harness and Horse Goods
at the price of the cheaper goods. Give yourself additional
cause for
Thanksgiving
by purchasing all necessary supplies here. These prices will
show that a decided saving can be effected.
J. B. BANKSTON,
Manager of the Bankston Hardware Cos.
THE WAY
Pride of Bartlesville Flour is Made.
FIRST: We buy the finest wheat possible to secure, and tributary to Nashville
is grown the finest wh at in the world for producing flour to make buscuit, light
bread and pastry.
NEXT: We scour and clean the wheat thoroughly in one of the most complete
and perfect plants for this purpose it is possible to obtain, realizing that if the dirt
is not removed before grinding, it cannot be afterwards, as it reduces as fine as the
flour, and will pass through the finest bolting cloths. This process of cleaning and
scouring takes out all the foreign substance, and even the dirt in the crease Of the
grain, which is extremely hard to get rid of, and also removes the woody fibre from
the end of the wheat, which few mills ever attempt to take off.
The wheat having been perfectly scoured and cleaned goes through the latest
improved roller and plan sifter mill in the country, snd during this process is most
carefully watched over by a miller of twenty-five years experience. We do not try
to make the greatest possible amount of First Patent, but only that pro
portion which insures the highest quality of both First and Second grades. We also
make low grade flour, but do not quote it, as it t oes into our Ship Stuff.
Cleaning our wheat so perfectly before grinding makes very expensive milling:
that is, it increases the cost of the flour so much that it must be sold for a little
more money than when made in the ordinary way. We concluded, though, some
time ago there was enough trade in our territory that would appreciate the very
fine t, purest and most nutritious flour to take the output of a mill of our capacity
making this class of goods at the slight increased cost, and judging from our large
sales and many voluntary letters of praise for flour received daily from customers
since we began milling on this plan, we made no mistake. Only a few days ago one
of our regular customers dropped in to see us w'hile in the city on his way East
and remarked that he had no trouble in getting 25 cents per barrel n ore for our
flour than for the corresponding grade made by other mills. We show-ed him
through our plant, and he was surprised to see how perfectly we cleaned the grain.
We also took him through our Cooking Department . In this we have an old time
colored cook, Aunt Virginia, v ho bakes the flour and meal, which is taken from the
packers in our mill every two hours night and day; thus making it impossible for
inferior flour and meal to go out without our discovering it. This insures perfect
uniformity of our goods, as we know exactly what we are making at all times. It
would do you good to see some of the biscuit and com bread Aunt Virginia sends
into our office almost hourly each day. Nothing could be prettier, purer or
better.
We dislike to talk about other mills, but for bur mutual interest we want to tell
you how many of them make their flour. But few of them even attempt to grind
the finest wheat, claiming they can make flour cheaper out of low grades. We
admit that they can do this, and they can sell it, too, often easier than we can
ours at the slight advance we ask, but we arj sure it is not so good, white, pure,
sand wholesome. It contains dirt and other non-nutritious substances. At
a casual glance it may sometimes look as white as ours, but when it so appears,
on close examination, it will ba seen to have a bluish cast, this being conclusive
evidence that it contains but little which is the strength or nutritious pan of the
wheat, and is of a creamy color. By grinding poor wheat, and using but little and
often poor cleaning machinery, they get more flour [or rather more flour and
dirt combined], and at a decreased cost. We though, think if every customer could
see the dirt, etc., which we take out and many other mills grind, they would not
object to paying a little more for our flour.
Pride of Barnesville is the best. You can buy
it here and nowhere else. ? .
sf. • j ■ . ....
JOHN T. MIDDLEBROOKS.
FOR THE LITTLE ONES.
How Polly Mada Mirrors of Spoons
and Had Fun at Work.
Every Saturday Poliy has to soour
the spoons. That is alfthat moth
er asks her to do, and it does not
take much time, but Polly lias al
ways dreaded it so long beforehand
and grumbled so while she rubbed
them that it seemed like very hard
work indeed. Every week it was
the same old story, and you would
think that the little girl was asked
to clean the family plate in some
big house.
But last Saturday mother beard
her laughing all by herself in the
kitchen and asked what she was do
ing.
“Makingmirrors, mother!” shout
ed Polly gleefully.
So mother came to see. Polly
was rubbing away on a spoon, and
when it grew quite bright and shiny
sure enough there was a little mir
ror in the bowl of the spoon, and
such a funnv Polly reflected there,
with very fat cheeks and very small
eyes and no hair. When she moved
her head, her cheeks grew thin and
her eyes as large and round as an
owl’s. How Polly did laugh!
Then she scoured another spoon,
and soon there was another tiny
looking and another queer lit
tle Polly as funny as the first.'
When she had twelve of these
droll little mirrors, her work was
done, and she was surprised to find
that it was only play after all.—
Philadeb
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
How to Make a Shoe Case That Will
Keep Out Dust and Moths.
The old fashioned shoe bag, was
our first convenience and a bussing,
but it had disadvantages. *Tf of
wool, the moths ate holes in the
pockets and if ,pf cleanly linen dust
got into every gather and fold and
into the pockets themselves. If it
was tacked to the wall or door in
stead of being hung bv loops on
small hooks, these pocket? were
rarely shaken out, and then if of
wool what a riotous time the moths
did have!
In place of rows of pockets use
strong straps of suspender webbing
or leather, as one pleases. Mark off
spaces of five inches width across a
closet door on the inside. If more
are needed, do the same ten inches
below.
Tack the strap across, with eight
inches of strap to each five inch
spifee. Double carpet tacks are
firm and neat, brass headed tacks
ornamental. Use either. Into each
loop slip one shoe. This sort of
shoe case is “made in a jiffy” and
enlarged by another row ,of loops
as fast as required.
For children’s shoes or for fa
ther's one ha3 only to tack straps
with the less or greater length of
loop the size of shoe requires. An
eight inch loop holds a 2so. 5 la
dies’ shoe just right.—Keziah Shel
ton in Ladies’ World.
Xodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you sab