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BABY EASE.
The Best Spring' and Summer
Medicine for Babies (SI Children.
Spring and Summer bring grave dangers to babies and children.
Thousands of little ones die of bowel troubles brought on by eating
unripe fruits, vegetables etc. Serious results often follow a slight
derangement of the digestive organs. Baby Ease is the safest, most
effective ond best medicine for all stomach and bowel troubles of
babies and children. Pleasant in taste—children like it.
25 CENTS FOR LARGE BOTTLE
If your druggist hasn’t it, write to the manufacturer,
T. P. MARSHALL, MACON. GA.
Ask about the FREE GOLR RING offer.
MACHINERY
— . • . ■ • a • • 9 M ■
We
Manufacture
the best
Saw '
Mills
ON THE
MARKET
Let us have vour Orders for Mill Supplies!or ShoplWork.
Mallory Bros. Machinery Cos.,
Mention this paper. MACON, GEORGIA.
A w o has most remarkable tonic proper-
A m J ties for all who live in malarial dis-
Malaria and tricts. A never-failing remedy for
A&UC Cure all ma l aria l diseases. 'mSSWSuC*
Clothing for
Men and Bovs.
The largest men’s, youths’ and boys’ clothing store in the whole |
South. Back of it is a reputation of over 37 years or honest business.
We manufacture every garment in our own factory —giving you
not only the highest’qualities but saving for you the manufacturer’s
profit. I
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Furnishings, l
Bags and Trunks, Tailoring.
Our 1903 Spring and Slimmer Catalogue will tell you all (
about it. Free for the asking.
EISEMAN BROS.,
11, 13, 15, 17 Whitehall St.,
ATLANTA, CA.
Washington, D. C. Baltimore, Md. .
On to Tybee!
The greatest of all Southern Seaside Resorts.
Having added many improvements
to the already splendid accommodations,
Hotel Tybee
is better able than ever to take care of the ever increasing crowds
that will this year flock to that popular resort. The rates—s2.so
per day and $12.50 and sls per week, are in the reach of all. Special
rates to large parties.
The Pulaski House is the best and most convenient place
at which to stop while in Savannah.
CHAS. F. GRAHAM, Proprietor.
WMkg ML B Two hundred young men and ladies to
WmmM y Baa 9 M qualify for paying positions. Ifyouarein
m I ■ I mmmJ terested, write us for our handsome illus
trated catalog.
The Lanier Southern Business College
Macon, Ga.
DR. WOOLLEY’S
SANATORIUM,
108 WALTON STREET.
Opium and Whiskey Habits Cured.
This institution presents to the afflicted a perfect place of rest and
complete restoration. If you have a friend afflicted write for a book free.
DR. B. M. WOOLLEY, Atlanta, Oa.
’Phone 704.
THE BARNEBVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1903
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
An Elaborate Application of Ideas sf
Art to the Matchbox.
The vogue for things artistic in
the line of house furnishings has
resulted in the matchbox being em
bellished to an extent that warrants
its being considered a work of art.
One 6uch box deserves this appella
tion, at any rate. It Ain panel
form, upon which a skilled artist
has -painted in water colors a fire
place scene with brass candlesticks
and blue delft plates on the man
telshelf. This old time fireplace is
deep and wide, and over the firo
which appears to be cheerily burn
ing in the interior hangs a big black
pot. This pot is fashioned *1 tin,
cut in half and attached to the
painted crane, and serves as a recep
tacle for the unused matches. To
the right of the fireplace is a tiny
wood box for the burned matches.
The foreground of the panel shows
a bare floor and a strip of rag car
pet laid before the fire.
Engines.,
Boilers,
IGrist Mills
it Ginning
Machinery
■ ■ m i i
Molded Chicken.
For chicken in mayonnaise select
and cook a young fowl. Separate
the meat from the skin and the
bones and cut the meat into dioe.
Season lightly with salt, white pep
per and celery salt. Make one and
a half cupfuls of good mayonnaise
dressing and whip into it one cup
ful of whipped cream. Dissolve one
heaping tablespoonful of granulated
gelatin in a little hot water and
add to the dressing. Mix thorough
ly with the chicken and pack in a
jelly mold. Stand it on ice until
firm, then turn out of the mold and
serve on a bed of crisp young let
tuce leaves.
Ladies'
Hands
My experience with
PEARLINE leads
me to think it milder
on the hands, and it
takes less of it than
of to soften hard
water. I am pleased
with results.
Mrs. Rev. S. E. V.
One of the Million*. 686
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f DANGER l|| ,
It is courting danger to stand under
Icy eaves. Not a few have learned this
to their cost. Every winter injury and
even death are reported as the result of
this carelessness. But there is a far
more popular way of courting danger.
Every man or woman who neglects a
cough is inviting sickness, and many a
fatal sickness has its beginning in a slight
cough.
The timely use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery will cure the cough.
Even when the cough is obstinate and
there is hemorrhage with emaciation and
weakness, "Golden Medical Discovery"
always helps and almost always cures.
" I was troubled with a bad cold, which settled
on my lungs and left m< wilh a miserable
cough.” writes Mr Joseph I) Burns, ol 318
Uuestis Street, Ithaca, New
York. "I used two bottles of
your ‘ Golden Medical Uiscov
cry.’ after which my cough
disappeared entirely. I can
not recommend your medi-
Accept no substitute for
"Golden Medical D
cry.” There is nothing
"-r'Jh "just as good” for dis
eases of the stomach,
; 'sM blood, and lungs. Sub
let. jif.jM stitution means a little
more profit to the dealer
hut a loss to you.
l< r l The Common Sense
Medical Adviser, irjoß
large. _ pages, in paper
covers, is sent free on
118 receipt of 21 one-cent
V,i jl stamps to pay expense of
mailing only. Address
JwwT Dr. R. V. Pierce, Bttf
falo, N. Y.
INDIGESTION
riIDCH immediately by
V LJ IY CmJ the use of Hicks
10c, 25e, 50c,
at Drugstores. vapllUlllC
A BRAVE IRISHMAN. 1
Orderly Riley, Who Met Death With
“Courage, fidelity, honesty, are the
soldier’s cardinal virtues, which, sum
med up, read the plain and simple do
ing of one’s duty. And It was in Rice
Graves’ battery before Fort Donelson
that the virtues of the Confederate sol
dier were tried to the uttermost,” said
the old staff officer.
"Among them aH Tom Rltey, the or
derly, shone out resplendently, for he
went to certain death against orders
because he thought It was his duty.
Graves’ bottery had been got up In the
lower port of Kentucky. ‘No married
man nor men with sweethearts need
apply’ had been tin? order of the cap
tain in organizing it. And the battery
looked the part. They were the dare
devils of Donelson. They would sing
while they shot and crack Jokes repuls
ing a charge. The captain had made
Riley onlerly to keep the wild Irishman
in order. Between the two there was
an affection almost brotherly.
"On the second day of Donelson
Graves’ battery was In a mighty tight
box. The battery had been ordered
Into the rifle pits, and It seemed to the
men that about a million bluecoats
were shooting at them. For hours they
lay under the leaden storm. The enemy
kept coming closer and closer. Some
thing had to he done. To show one’s
head above the trenches meant death.
“ 'Run out a gun and let ’em have It,
boys,’ said Graves.
‘‘One round was fired, but It seemed
only to bring down on that spot every
Federal gun in reach. To reload the
Confederate piece one man had to show
himself. The gunner sprang to his
place, rammer In hand. The piece was
reloaded, but the cannoneer fell dead.
Again the gun from Graves’ battery
spoke. A second time It was reloaded,
and a second cannoneer lay dead beside
his piece.
"Time after time this was repeated.
The dead piled up about the gun. The
entire Federal fire concentrated In an
effort to silence It It took two men
now for one shot. The battery boys
had quit Joking. They lay grim and de
termined in the pit. As one fell the oth
ers moved up toward the gun. The
nearest would say, ‘Goodby, fellows,’
and Jump to his place, only to fall a
minute later. The captain had ordered
Tom Riley to stay behind when the bat
tery went Into the pits, but scarcely
had the-men got settled before Riley
appeared.
“ ’I couldn’t help It, sir/ he said to
Graves and took bis place among the
men. Slowly death worked Its way
along the line toward Riley. Now he
was three, then two and one before the
captain knew It. Then Graves saw the
danger.
“ ‘Come here, Riley/ he cried. 'You
are not a gunner. You are my orderly.
You have no business there/
‘‘The cannoneer before Riley fell
dead. The wild Irishman seized the
rammer and turned to the captain. ‘lt
Is my duty, sir/ he said.
"Then, as though on parade, but with
desperate swiftness, he begnn to load
the gun. A shot knocked him to his
knees, but be staggered up again and
finished the work. Then he turned and
bowed in the direction of the bluecoats.
“ ‘Why don’t ye learn how to shoot?*
he yelled.
“He stepped back Into cover and fell
bleeding from half a dozen wounds.
" ‘I wouldn’t ’a’ given ’em the satis
faction o’ knowing It/ he murmured
faintly.
"Two of the men picked him up ten
derly and began to carry him to the
rear. They passed Graves, and Riley,
looking up. saw tears in his captain’s
eyes.
"The orderly, already dying, was re
called to life. He forced a bloody laugh.
“ ‘Shure, captain, dnrllnt/ he cried,
‘don’t yo mind. Why, I ain’t had so
much fun since me mither died/
“And Tom Riley tried to salute, but
died before he could quite manage it.”
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Cansrlei ns Weather Prophets.
“I have heard of all sorts of barome
ters, or, rather, weather signs, but I
know of no more reliable weather
prophets than my birds,” said a Balti
more lady who owns several canaries.
‘‘l can almost always tell when It Is go
ing to rain by the distinctness with
which I can hear the trains at night,
but the birds are even more reliable
than that. If I hear them singing In
the morning early, before I take the
coverings of their cages off, I know
that the day will lie a good one, no
matter If It Is raining at the moment,
but if they do not sing I am sure there
will lie bad weather before the day Is
over. I have never known them to fall,
and £ never think of going shopping or
calling unless the birds sing In early
morning. That Is why I never get
caught In the rain, as many of my
friends do. That poor weather bureau
man, who makes so many mistakes in
his prophecies, ought by all means to
get himself some canaries.”—Baltimore
Sun.
The Cautious Cossack.
Says a Russian traveler: ‘‘The Cos
sack bears himself as If there was al
ways a Klrgbeez with a spear before
and a Bashkir with a drawn sword be
hind him. He always appears angry
and extremelycautlous.as if he were on
the battlefield watching his enemy and
careful of attack from behind. Com
ing into contact with a stranger, the
Cossack looks at him with a searching,
scrutinizing eye; his talk Is like that
heard In a cross examination at the
bar: his Interrogations are catching
questions. So they are all, the men and
the women, the young and the old.
The Insolence of their young children
and aged persons makes a revolting im
pression. Probably all Russia was In
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
as the Cossacka are at present—power
•u>. b.-rsh. Insolent, half savage.”
CASTOR IA
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been,
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of—
and has been made under Ills per
, sonal supervision since its infancy*
' Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THK CKNTAUH COMPANY, TT MURRAY CTRCCT, N(W YORR CITY.
Let us Help Yot Fiml a Home In the
Southwest.
Along the Cotton Belt Route,
where land can be bought for $2,
SB, $5 an acre up—cut-over timber
land that affords good range for
live stock ; 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 laud
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 witli
a Camera,” “Fortune in Growing
Fruits and Vegetables,” List of
Real Estate Agents Along the Cot
ton Belt,” “Developing the 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 sellone-wuy tickets from St.
Louis, Thebes, Cairo and 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. W. Laßkaumk,
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
tling indicates an
unhealthy condi
tion of the kid
neys; if It stains
your linen It Is
evidence of kid
ney trouble; too
frequent desire to
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. 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 times
during the night. The mild and the extra
ordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon
realized. 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
and a book that tells
more about it, both scntßiyffiiH
absolutely free by
address Dr. Kilmer & nom# of swimp-Hoo*.
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
mer’s Hwamp-Root, and address, Bing
harnpton.N. Y.,on every bottle.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
A. PIERCE KEMP, M. D.,
GENERAL PRACTITIONER,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Jordan's Drag Store.
Residence: Thomaston street: 'Phone 9.
DR. J. M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Residence: Thoinaston street. 'Phone No. IH.
Office over Jordan's drug store.
J. A. CORRY, M. D.,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office: Mitchell building.
Residence: Forsyth street. Phone 28.
Office hours: 7toß a. m., 11 to 12a. m.StoQp'm
DR. K. L. REID,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Offilce over First National Bank.
Residence, Magnolia Inn.
C. H. PERDUE,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE GA.
t3F~Ot flee over Jordan's Drug Htore.
J. R. SIMS,
DENTIST,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
WOfflce over B. F. Reeves’ store.
C. J. LESTER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
EDWARD A. STEPHENS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
General practice In all courts—Btate and
Federal.
OP-Loans Negotiated.
W. W. LAMBDIN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BARNESVILLE, - GEORGIA.
Will do a general practice in all the courts
—Htate nnd Federal—especially in the counties
composing the Flint circuit.
Loans negotiated.
GEO. W. GRICE,
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Work done promptly and neatly.
over MiddlcbroGkH Building
W. B. SMITH, F. D.
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA
EXPERIENCED EMBALMERS.
ODOKI ESS EMBALMING FLUID
W, B. SMITH, Leading Undertaker
BARNESVILLE GA.
Jordan, Gray & Cos.,
Funeral Directors,
Day Phone 44. Night Phone 58.
OABTOniA.
Bean the /) The Kind You Have Always BoogM
TANARUS"