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THE NUMBER OF DEPOSITORS
to be seen daily at the teller's window is pretty
good proof that—
THE CITIZENS BANK
is popular among all classes.
Our policy has made it so. Business is con
ducted on safe lines. Only investments 'of a legiti
mate character are considered. The interests of our
depositors are held to be of foremost importance. We
deal in nothing of a speculative nature.
J. VV. CABANISS, Pres. C. H. HUMPHREY, Cashier.
State Depository. N
MACHINERY
We
Mannfacture
the best
Saw
Mills
ON THE
MARKET
Let us have vour Orders for Mill Supplies or Shop Work.
Mallory Bros. Machinery Cos.,
Mention this paper. MACON, GEORGIA.
Ayer's
Malaria and
Ague Cvre
IB ■ a BA B ESjWB B— jgEhv Two hundred young men and ladies to
lflg Mjk 111 y ffiaa U jfl qualify for paying positions. If you are in
■Vm I RB 9 Ska Iferfr terested, write us for our handsome illus
trated catalog.
The Lanier Southern Business College
Macon, Ga.
TO CURB A COLD IN ONB DAY
Tabu Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
drnir'gists refund the money if it fails to cure.
■R w witniat.nre is on box. 25c.
J
GEORGIA j
y
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLOPING-CAR SERVICE
BETWEEN
ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS
IN THE
Southeast
Connecting at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
PLYINQ 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
wny agent of the company.
TMEO. D. KLINE, W. A. WINBURN.
General Sup't, Traffic Manager
J Q. HAILE, Genera! Pas'r Agent,
f, <L ROEUMSON, Ass't General Paee’r Agent
SAVANNAH, QA.
A positive specific for bilious fever,
malaria, chills and fever, malarial
poisoning, malarial debility, malarial
dyspepsia, dumb ague. A ph?e, u foci ß :
“Are you sure he loves you?”
“He told me so.”
“Did lie tell you before or after
you received vour uncle’s legacy?”
.“After. I asked him why lie
didn's tell me before, and be bad
a very good reason.”
“What was it?”
“He said be loved me all the
time, but he didn’t tell me so be
cause lie needed a good deal of en
couragement. ”
“And your late uncle supplied
the encouragement?”
“Yes. Wasn’t it dear of him?”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
April Sheriff Sales.
Will be sold before the court house
door in the town of Zebulon, Pike coun
ty. Ga., on the first Tuesday in April
1903, between the hours of 10 o’clock a.
m. and 4 o’clock p. m., to the highest
bidder for cash the following described
property to-wit: —
One vacant lot containing one fourth (‘4)
acre of land more or less in the town ofßarnes
ville and bounded as follows: en the north by
an alley, on the west by Susan Jones, on the
east by Emmett Connaly and on the south by :
John Fambro. Levied on as the property of j
Kols-rt Jones by virture of and to satisfy a tag
fi fa issued by .t no T. Hunt, tax-collector of)
Pilte county for state and county taxis* for the :
year 1908 Levy made by J N. Jordan, K. (' , j
and turned over to me to advertise and sell. !
This the 4th day ay March 1903.
ALSO
at the same time and place one farm situated
in the 9th district (4 JI of Pike county, Ga., j
being lot No. 4 and containing two hundred]
(200 1 acres of lend- Levied on as the property
of Wiley Cook by virtue of and to satisfy a fl fa
issued from the superior, court of Pike county
in favor of The New Mouth Saving Hank vs T.
Z Jones et al. Tenant in posessipn given notice
of this levy as r<-quired by law Tills the 3rd
day of March lffjis.
J H. Milker. Sheriff, j
Dr. Whatley’s Iron
and Herb Tonic.
An absolute spicific for Malaria,
Chronic rheumatism, White swell*
ing, Scrofula. JEczerra, Old spreg,
Hereditary Faint, Allblood pois
ons and impurities—For reference i
Capt. J. A. Stafford, The Rock
Ga., G. N. Middlebrooks J. P.
The Rfs*k. Ga., R C. McFarlin,
A'atesviile, Ga.. G. C. Hammons;
To bier. Ga. For sale by
J. H. Bi.A' kui;rn, Barnesville, Ga.
Dixie Med. Cos, The Rock. Ga. 1
Wealth of the South.
At the commencement of the
year SK)B the wealth of the South
was as great as that of the entire
United States in 1860, and all of
this has been created since the
the close of the Civil War. There
are now over one thousand two
j hundred million dollars of South
ern capital invested in manufact
uring enterprises alone, and the
annual output of tbo same exceeds
one thousand five hundred million
dollars.
The South produces seventy-five
per cent of the tobacco raised in
the United States.
The annual product of the cot
ton field is more than ten million
bales against half that quanitity
twenty years ago. With twenty
two million dollars invested at
that period she manufactured less
than two hundred thousand bales
of her own cotton. To-day, with
one hundred and fifty million dol- 1
lars invested capital, she is manu-i
faoturing more than one million j
five hundred thousand hales.
In 1880 she had only forty cot
ton seed oil mill's, with a capital
ot three million five hundred
thousand dollars. To-day she has
more than five hundred cotton
seed oil mills, with a capital of
nearly fifty million dollars, and
a product of about one hundred
and twenty-five million dollars.
The annual cousumntion of cotton
seed by these mills is about two
million five hundred thousand
tons.
She is producing two hundred
million bushels of grain more
than she was twenty years ago.
The South produced in 1901
over fifty-three million tons of
bituminous coal, more than eight
times the output of the entire
country in 1860.
Her annual pig iron product i
about three million tons, and is
more than times the output of the
entire country in iB6O.
Twenty years ago she had but
little more than twenty thousand
miles of railway ; to-day she has
fifty-five thousand miles. In 1860
there were but four hundred miles
of street railway in the entire
country; now the South has about
three thousand milss.
The output of the furniture in
dustry in 1902 exceeded fifteen
million dollars.
Engines,
Boilers.
Ifirist Mills
, Ginning
Machinery
Within twenty years the South
lias added seven million spindles
to her mills, while the addition in
sill other sections of the United
States has been only two million
spindles.
In 1900 the petroleum output
of the whole country was only five
hundred thousand barrels ; now the
South is marketing over twenty;
million barrels a year, the output I
being limited only by transporta- j
tion facilities.
Since 1800 the capital invested
in manufacturing has increased in
the South three hundred and
forty-eight per cent., an increase
of only two hundred and fifty-two
per cent, in the entire county.
The increase in value of the pro
ducts of the South has been two
hundred and twenty per cent,
against one hundred and forty
two per cent, in the nation. The
increase in value of farm property
has been ninety-two per cent, in
the United States.
More than one-half of all the
standing timber in the United
States is in the South.
About seventy-five per cent, of
the world’s cotton is raised in the
South.
State ok Ohio. City ok Toledo / ks.
Lt-cus County. j
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Cos. doing business in the
Cit of Toledo, County and State afore
said, and that said firm will pay the
sum of ON E U UNDRED D<ILL A K.S for
each and every ease of Catarrh that
cannot be cored by the use of Hall’s
Catarrh Cere. Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1886.
-- ( A. W. Gleason,
J seal (■ Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, and acty directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. ChexkY A Cos., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggist, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY. MARCH 26. 1903
From a Literary Point of View.
‘‘Waldenmf,” said tha young
wife meeting him at the door,
‘■you are two hours later than
usual. What detained yon?”
Waldemnr had been in attend
ance at a political caucus in the
reajr of a saloon, but to tell the
bald truth would shock her.
tie decided to embelish it
slightly.
What do women know of poli
tics anyway!
"Necessary business mv dear.”
lie replied. “I was detained by
necessary business.”
“What kind of business?”
“Well it was what you might
call public business. Something
in the nature of reform you
know.”
“What kind of reform?”
“Ur—municipal reform. A lot
of us got together to talk up cer
tain matters that in our judge
ment need straightening.”
Where did you get together?”
“Where do you suppose if not
in my office?”
“I don’t know. Did you get the
things straightened out?”
“Not altogether. We were
merely deliberating.”
“You smell of beer.”
“Well, of course, some of the
other fellows drank beer.”
“In your office?”
“I mean, of course, they had
been drinking beer.”
Your clothes smell of old
tobacco."
“I came home in the smoking
car. The other cars were all
crowded.”
“So long after the rush hour?”
Sin? shook her head.
“Waldemar,” she said, “judged
soledy on its literary merits, your
first attempt at sustained fiction
is a sorry failure. Take my advice
and don’t try it again.”
It l(hll Pay to Look Into
Aur plan of having one man or woman
in each town in Georgia to represent
our Goods, which have sold 25 years
wholly by our local agents, who earn
good wages the year round. You take
orders for our Goods —we send them to
you freight prepaid-You deliver them
and collect the money—lf you want a
nice little business write for particultrs
to A. Ler Wade. Genl Agt. (P-24 ) .Bos
ton, Mass.
Johnny Knew.
The remarkable institution
known as the object lesson was in
progress at a London board school
the other day, and the lady teach
er had chosen the tear-compell
ing onion for her subject.
She wished to know if her pupils
had entered into the essence of
the thing, as it were; and to find
this out she dangled a specimen
of the vegetable before her class.
“Can any of you,” she said j
pointing to the roots, “tell me i
what these are?”
There was a silence which could
have been felt in the class-room,
j and the teacher’s pretty face took
|on a look of gloom. Had all her
patient teaching been wasted? she
wondered. Was there not one
juvenile mind into which her
words of wisdom had penetrated?
But just then a little hand from
| the middle of the class went up.
“Ah!” she cried, “1 should
think you big boys would feel
j ashamed of yourselves to find the
| smallest one in the class ready to
answer. Well, Johnny, what are
they?”
“Please teacher,” lisped the
i little fellow, “them’s its whisk
ers,” —London Answers.
A CHILD KNOWS ITS FRIEND.
The children are eager for a dose of
of Cheney’s Expectorant whenever
liicy are threatened with a cold or
c oup. 1 prefer Cheney’s because it is
so agreeable to take, and it’s results
are sooner seen than that of any other
preparation. Mrs. L. D. Johnson,
Winston, N. C.
Reflections of A Bachelor.
Either "a man gets spring fever
or he makes a fool of himself j
planting a spring garden.
When a man is worried about
his business his wife is sure it I
would improve if their minister
preached a sermonjabout the good :
and faithful servant.
A\cgetable Preparation !br As
slmilating ilte Food andßeg ula -
ting the Stomachs andßowela of
Promotes Digeslion.Checrrul
ness and Rest .Contains neither
Opium. Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Naiic otic .
flMpc of om a sami TiPirc/is/i
fiuujtkm Seed * v
A lx. Senna * J
floch'/tlf Sa/ls - J
Auixe Serel -
/)>nbenmnt - /
UijCdHu/natrSodn + |
C/gnfted .Ww
Hutte/y/r'en rfaror. /
A perfect Remedy forConstipa
fion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms,(Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature oF
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
Let ns Help Yol IGml a Home in the
Southwest.
Along the Cotton Belt Route,
where land can be bought for $2,
SB, .I*s an acre up—cut-over timber
land that affords good range for
livestock; rich bottom lands for
corn, wheat, oats, cotton ; uplands
for fruits and vegetables-—peaches
pears, plums, strawberries, toma
toes, potatoes, onions, melons —
finding good markets at fancy
prices in the North on account of
excellent qualities and marketing
ahead of other sections. A land
where living is cheap—lumber at
$7 to $8 a thousand, fuel for the
cutting, range for the stock nearly
the year round, garden truck for
the table from March to December.
The farmer who pays high rent in
the North or tills worn out soil in
the East, is missing some of the
best things of life by not securing
a home in the Southwest.
Write for copies of our “Homes
in the Southwest,” “Glimpses of
Southeast Missouri, Arkansas and
Louisiana,” “Through Texas with
a Camera,” “Fortune in Growing
Fruits and Vegetables,” List, of
Real Estate Agents Along the Cot
ton Belt,” “Developing tin* St.
Francis Coutry,” “The Diver
sifier,” a fruit and truck growers’
journal.
On first and third Tuesday of
Mch.&Ap . the Cotton Belt Route
will sell one-way t ickets from St.
Louis, Thebes, Cairoand Memphis,
to points in Arkansas, Louisiana
and Texas, at half the one-way
rate plus .$2.00, or round trip tick
ets at one fare for the round trip
plus $2.00.
For full information, address,
E. \V. La Reap me,
G. P. & T. A.,
St. Louis, Mo.
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-
ITjTQ 'Ty‘C'4 tling Indicates an
K, Jt3>77 5) unhealthy condi
ruj: {[ bon of the kid-
WA IjPjjTfZr ' i \J neys; if it stains
I your linen it is
<il [ FnyTjyl J evidence of kid-
AJIA \i J iff / jney trouble; too
Sequent desire to
. xJV pas3 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. Kilmer's 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 tim3
during the night. The mild and the extra
ordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon
realized. It stands the highest for rt3 won
derful cures of the most distressing cases.
If you need a medicine you should have the
best. Sold by druggists insoc. andsl. sizes.
You may have a sample bottle of this
wonderful discovery
and a book that tellsgrtjjjjftprt?
more about It, both
absolutely free by mail, —Agg: EdLjitkZ-ff
address Dr. Kilmer 8t Home of Swamp-Root
Cos., Binghamton, N, Y. When writing men
tion reading this generous offer in this paper.
Don’t make any mistake, but remem -;
ber the name., Swamp-Root, Dr. Kil-I
mer’s Swamp-Root, and address, Bing-1
hampton, N. Y., on every bottle.
CiSTOSIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the /„
Signature /jw
of W
a J[v In
fir U se
1/ For Over
Thirty Years
BIIT9HSA
YHC CCNTAUtI COMPANY, NCW VOBH CITV.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
A.
GENERAL PRACTITIONER,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Junkin'* Dnur Store.
Residence: Tlionmston street: 'Phone 9.
C. J. LESTER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
EDWARD A. STEPHENS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
General practice in all court.—State and
Federal.
MT I johiih Nogotiated.
W. W. LAMBDIN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
Will do a general practice in all the courts
—Htato and Federal—especially in the connties
Composing the Flint circuit.
Loans negotiated.
GEO. W. GRICE,
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Work done promptly and neatly.
t 3 #" Office over Middlebrooks Bui M bur
W. B. SMITH, F. D.
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA
EXPERIENCED KMBALMFRB.
ODOR! FSB EMBALMING FLUID
W. B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker
BAKNFSVILLK GA.
Jordan, Cray & Cos.,
Funeral Directors,
Day Phone 44. Night Phone 58.
DR. J. M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Residence: Thomas ton street. 'Phone No. 28.
(>ffio over Jordan’s drug store.
J. A. CORRY, M. D.,
BAKNEBVILLE, GA.
Office: Mitchell building.
Retddence: Foreyth street. Phone 28.
Office hours: 7to Ba. ni., 11 to 12 a. in, sto ftp m
DR. E. L. REID,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Offllce over First National Bank.
Residence, Magnolia Inn.
C. H. PERDUE,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE GA.
MV' Office over Jordan's Druir Store.
J. R. SIMS,
DENTIST,
BABNESVILLE, GA.
IWOlfl- e over B. F. Reeves’ store.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and l iuidren.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature of