Newspaper Page Text
CASTOR A
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 80 years, has borne the signature of—
a,l<l has been made under his per
(jT*. sonal supervision since its infancy.
' Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are hut Ex
periments that trillo with and endanger the. health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
\nd Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and 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-Tlie Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE. CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of _ .
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
CASH STORE.
SPRING AND SUMMER TRADE.
J. W. HIGHTOWER,
--dsaljSß m
HARDWARE,
Stoves and Tinware,
Apicnltiiral Intents, Beilin, Carriage Material, Cutlery, House
Fereisluii E-ds, Geos, Pistols, Anuminition. Etc.
FARMING IMPLEMENTS.
My store is headquarters for all kinds of Farming Imple
ments such as Plow Stocks, Cotton Planters, Plows, Chains,
Collars, Backhands, Lines and almost everything needed by the
farmer.
House Furnishing Goods.
1 carry complete lines of Cooking and Heating Stoves, Tin *
ware, Woodemuare, Crockery, Cutlery, Silverware.
Electric Liilit and latemrks Fauna
Call to see my stock, examine my goods , and get my prices .
/ will appreciate the patronage of the people.
J. W. HIGHTOWER,
BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA.
The Barnesville Planing Mills
JUST RECEIVED^*
50000 Feet Nice Kiln Dried Ceiling *ft
4| Yard full of boards and framing. W
ft/ Side track blocked with Shingles.
Have Lime, Brick, Laths, and all kinds of Builders’ Sup
plies. We are headquarters for Paints and Glass, of which
we always have a FULL STOCK, and can supply your wants
on short notice. No trouble to make estimates, and will
gladly give any information in the construction of anything
in wood.
Turner & Prout
GOOD MANNERS.
The presence of good manners is
1 nowhere more needed or more elec
tive than in the household, and, per
haps, nowhere more rare. Whenever
familiarity exists, there is a tendency
to loosen the check upon selfish con
duct, which the presence of strangers
involuntarily produces. Many per
sons who are kind and courteous in
company are rude and careless with
those they love best. Good manners
are made up of small sacrifices, and
certainly nothing can more thorough
ly secure the harmony and peace of
the family circle than the habit of
making small sacrifices one for an
other. Children thus learn good
manners in the best and most natural
way, and habits thus formed will nev
er leave them. Courtesy and kind
ness will never lose their power or
their charm, while all spurious imita
tions of them are to be despised.
Unite firmness with gentleness. Let
your children also understand that
you mean what you say. Teach them
that the only sure way to appear
good is to be good. Teach them
self-reliance, not self-indulgence. If
they give way to ill-temper, wait until
they are calm, then gently reason
with them upon the impropriety of
their conduct. Such treatment of
children is really the education of
home life and will show itself slowly,
but certainly. It does not require
what we would call a “school,” but is
by far better because each one can
be taught until the impression is left
indelibly on the minds. What moth
er has not experienced that her
children remember things which she
had quite forgotten in the long ago.
This itself should show mothers that
young minds are very susceptible.
Therefore be careful how you act and
speak before them; they will do just
as you do and speak as you speak:
when probably corrected by older
persons will frankly say, “Mother said
so,” while mother will blush and be
embarrassed. In conclusion I would
say that no definite rule for the train
ing and home education can be laid
down, every child is an individuality
itself, but every child has a sympa
thetic chord, which, if once touched
at the right time, will respond willing
ly and freely as its power will allow,
and if kept in remenbrance will save
a mother a world of annoyance.
It makes no difference how bad
the wound if you use DeVVitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve, it will quickly heal and
leave no scar.
Dit. W. A. Wright.
L. Holmes.
The Boy’s Couipostion on Masonry.
An Illinois boy was asked to write
an essay on Masonry, and here is
what he wrote:
‘•King Solomon was a man who
lived so many years in the country
that he was the whole push. He was
an awfully wis§ man, and one day
two women came to him, each hold
ing to the leg of a baby and nearly
pulling it in two, and each claiming
it. And King Solomon wasn’t feeling
right good and he said: ‘Why couldn’t
the brat have been twins and stop
this bother?’ and then he called for
his machete and was going to Wey
lerize the poor innocent little baby
and give each woman a piece of it,
when the real mother of the baby
said: ‘Stop, Solomon, stay thy hand.
Let the old hog have it. If I can’t
have a whole baby I won’t have any.’
Then Solomon told her to take the
baby and go home and wash it’s face,
for he knew it was hers. He told
the other woman to go chase herself.
King Solomon built Solomon's 'Tem
ple and was the father of Mas ns.
He had seven hundred wives and
tiiree hundred lady friends, and that's
why there are so mat y Masons in the
world. My pa says King Solomon
was a warm member and I think he
was hot stuff myself. That is all I
know about King Solomon.”
DACITTAUC SECURED. May deposit money
i Uul 1 11/Fin /or tuition In hank till position U
v w #*cured, or will accept notes.
Cheap board. Car fare pa hi. No vacation.
Enter any time. Open for both sexes.
PRAUGHON'S jO /Lfr
PRACTICAL y7£>A
BUSINESS
Niuhvllle, Tenn. Savannah, Ga.
Galveston, Tex- 9 Texarkana, Tex>
Indorwfl by merchant* and hanker*. Three
month*' bookkeeping with u* etjoal* *lx. elfcwhcre.
All commercial branch*, taught. For drcular* explain
ing *• Home Studr tvwree.” add re*. “ Depaitment A,”
For college catalogue, addreea “ Department ,x 4.
Be Careful
No woman can be too careful of
her condition during the period be
fore her little ones are born. Neglect
or improper treatment then endan
gers her life and that of the child. It
lies with her whether she shall suffer
unnecessarily, or whether the ordeal
shall be made comparatively easy.
She had better do nothing than do
something wrong.
MOTHER'S
FRIEND
is the one and the only preparation
that is safe to use. It is a liniment
that penetrates from the outside.
External applications are eternally
right. Internal medicines are radi
cally wrong. They are more than
humbugs—they endanger life.
Mother’s Friend helps the muscles
to relax and expand naturally—re
lieves morning sickness—removes
the cause of nervousness and head
ache— prevents hard and rising
breasts—shortens labor and lessens
the pains—and helps the patient to
rapid recovery.
From a letter by a Shreveport, La.,
woman: “I have been using your
wonderful remedy. Mother’s Friend,
for the last two months, and find it
just as recommended,”
Druggists sell it at $1 per bottle.
THE BRADRELD REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
Send for our free illustrated book,
“ before baby is born.”
ISOTHERMS.
(Farta Abont laothernile Map* Tlmt
Art Rarely Learned at School.
Here are some definitions of isotliorms
that appear in American textbooks of
geography:
“Those lines which are drawn through
places with an equal average of temper
ature are called isotherms.
“Isotherms are lines connecting
places having the samo mean tempera
ture for particular periods, as the whole
of the year, the winter or summer
months, etc. •
“If upon a map all places having
the same mean temperature are con
nected, by lines, such lines are called
isothermal lines or simple isotherms. ’ ’
These definitions are part of the
truth, but not the whole of it. It may
not be a great calamity, but the fact is
that most boys and girls leave school
with a misconception as to what an
isotherm is, and they rarely find out in
later years.
They all know that two elements,
latitudo and altitude, are the main fac
tors in determining the mean temper
ature of a place; that the farther s
place is from the equator and the highei
it stands above sea level the cooler its
climate is. But they do not know that
isothermic maps take into account only
one of these elements, and that is lati
tude. They eliminate the influence of
altitude. The isotherm passing over the
top of Pike’s peak does not show the
moan temperature at the summit ofrthe
mountain, hut what the mean temper
ature would be in that immediate neigh
borhood if the land, instead of rising
high above the sea, stood at tho level of
Coney Island.
Do you see the reason for this? It
may he easily explained. Most of the
land dbes not rise so high above tho sea
that the temperature is greatly affected
by altitude. To the" majority of man
kind latitude is a far more important
climatic element than altitude. Now.
tho effects on temperature of both lati
tude and altitude cannot well he shown
on one man, and isothermic maps were
devised to show the effects of latitudo
and some other element, such as posi
tion near the sea or in the far interior.
An isothermic line, therefore, does not
show the actual mean temperature of a
place pn it unless that place is at sea
level. But it is easy to deduce from the
isotherm the actual mean temperature
of a place, if wo know its elevation
above the sea. Hew this is done is very
clearly explained by Dr. H. It. Mill,
the British geographer, as follows:
“The air grows cooler by 1 degree F.
for every 270 feet of elevation above
sea level, hut isothermic lines show’ tho
sea level temperature. In using isother
mic maps we must therefore remember
that places 000 feet above the sea level
have a temperature 2 degrees lower
than the isotherms indicate; places
6,000 feet above the sea, 22 degrees
lower; those 12,000 feet above tho sea,
46 degrees lower, and tho mountain
slopes 18,000 feet above the sea no less
than 66 degrees lower than the sea level
temperature shown by the isotherms
This accounts for the fact that none of
the important towns in the tonijierate
zones is situated more than 2,000 feet
above the sea, while in the tropics they
are built at as great elevations as 8,000
or 10,000 feet.”
Weather charts are an exception to
this rule. They record tho actual
thermometrical readings at the points
of observation. —New York Sun.
DANGERS OF THE GRIP.
The greatest danger from La Grippe
is of its resulting in pneumonia. If rea
sonable care is used,however, and Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy taken, all
danger will he avoided. Among the tens
of thousands who have used this remedy
for la grippe we have yet to learn of a
single case having resulted in pneumo
nia, which shows conclusively that this
remeey is a certain preventive of that
dangerous disease. It will cure la grippe
in less time than any other treatment
It is pleasant and safe to take. For sale
by J. 11. Blackburn,
Rothschild Poslng-aa- n< Beggar,
• One of the closest frienefcs of Baron
Rothschild of Paris was-Gairolus Dur
an, the artist, says Haqter’s Round
Table. During the entire ctmirse of a
certain large dinner party the great
financier noted that the painter kept
looking at him with a most'intent and
jteculiar expression. After the coffee
and cigars, the Baron drew his friend
aside and said: “My dear fellow, pray
tell me why you have stared at me so
peculiarly this evening?”
“I'll tell you with pleasure,” an
swered Duran; “I am painting a beg
gar for the salon, and had looked all
over Paris for a suitable head to draw
from. I’ve finally found it. Yours
is the ideal.”
Rothschild laughed heartily, and
promised to sit for his friend in suita
ble attire on the following day.
During the progress of the sitting a
young artist, one of Duran’s pupils,
came into the room. Naturally, he
had not been in a position to meet
people of Baron Rothschild’s impor
tance, and so did not know, him.- but
the beggar's miserable rags, wan face
and wisttul expression appealed deep
ly to the young man’s sympathies
Waiting until his master was busy
mixing colors, the pupil took a franc
from his vest pocket and held it out
behind his back to the model, who
seized it with feigned avidity.
When the sitting was over Roths
child made inquiries of Duran con
cerning the philanthropist, and was
informed that he was a student of
great promise and attainments, but
among the poorest of the inhabitants
of the, Latin Quarter.
Some six months after this occur
rence the young man received a note,
which ran about as follows:
“Dear Sir—The franc that you
gave in charity to a beggar in the
studio of M. Duran has been invested
by us, and we take pleasure in for
warding to you our check for ?,000
francs, the principal and increment of
the same. Yours, etc.,
“Rothschild & Cie."
A foul breatli is one of the greatest
afflictions that a man or woman can
have. An affliction nqf only to
themselves, but to those with whom
they come in contact. A foul breath
is a great discourager of affection. It
would probably lie more so if people
only realized just what a bad breath
means. Bad breath is one of the
symptoms of constipation. Some of
the other symptoms are sour stomach,
loss of appetite, sick and bilious head
ache, dizziness, heartburn and distress
after eating. These things mean
indigestion. They lead to dyspep
sia and worse things., 'JT e y all start
with constipation, and constipation is
inexcusable because it can be cured—
cured easily, quickly and permanently
by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant
Pellets. They give to nature just
the little help that she needs. There
is no case of biliousness, constipation,
indigestion, heartburn, or any of the
rest of the night mare breeding brood,
that the little Pellets willl not cure.
Send 21 cents in one cent stamps
to World’s Dispensary Medical Asso
ciation, Bdffalo, N. Y., and receive
Dr. Pierce’s i<aoS page Common
Sense Medical Adviser, illustrated.
A spider can live.ten months with
out food.
A frog cannot breathe with its
mouth open.
'There is not one illiterate family
in all Denmark.
Smoked snow water is a favorite
drink in Lapland.
Pneumonia, lagrippe, coughs,
colds, croup and whooping cough
readily yield to One Minute CougH
Cure. Use this remedy in time and
save a doctor’s bill, or the undertak
er’s. Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Hoi.mks.
The Automobile Club of Paris has
already 1,300 members.
Gold coins are in circulation twice
as long as copper coins.
VELVET BEANS.
*
The greatest fertilizing and stock
food plant for the South yet known
full, discription tree. Package 10c
qt. 30 cts. post paid, peck 60c, bush
el S2OO E. O. B. Ocala, Address.
J. B. Sutton Seedsman,
Ocala Fla.
Dost Tobacro Spit tad Smoke Tour I,lf* Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netlc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Uae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 60e or 11. Cure guaran
teed Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or New York.
“Pitts’ —-
Carminative
Smvmd My Bmby’m Utm.”
¥¥
LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG CO..
I can not recommend Pitts’ Car
minative too strongly.”' I must say,
I owe my baby’s life to it.
I earnestly ask all mothers who
have sickly or delicate children just
to try one bottle and see what the
result will be. Respectfully,
Mrs. LIZZIE MURRAY.
Johnson's Station, Ga.
¥¥
Pitts w Carminative
lm mold by mil Orugolmlm.
PRIOC, an OEMTM.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
6. POPE HDGDLEY, M. D.
BARNES VILLE, GA.
Office hours, 10-11 a. m., 2-4 p. m.
Phone, Office 57, Res. 10.
2y“Office llugnley Building.
JOHN M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON,
Bamrsvllle, Os.
Office in Untrue*' 111111111111;. over Rons* Racxet
Residence at Mrs. Connolly's on Forsyth
.Street. Calls promptly attended day or night
in the city or country,
# .
E. C. RIPLEY,
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON,
BARNEBVIIAJE, GA.
< MMce over New Smith Saving* Rank.
Resilience, Tliomaston Street Phone 74
DR. WM. J. COX,
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON,
JtAKNESVILLE, GA.
Special attention given to Throat and Nasal
diseases.
Office over Chambers’ l>rng Store. Residence
RluUick House. Hours 11 to 12—2 :o 3.
A Pierce Kemp, M. D.,
GENERAL PRACTITIONER.
**S“Office over Chambers Drug
Store. Office 'phone 44. Residence
Thomaston st., phone 51.
——
LENKA R. WHITPDBD, M. H
GENERAL PRACTITIONER.
Office at l)r. Head's Residence on Greenwood.
Street.
Massage given to ladies at office or their own
residence. :>lls answered promptly night or
day. ITione til.
DB. FRANCIS McCANBLISS.
Diseases of Women and Children
a Specialty.
OFFICE HOCUS a.m.to 11 a. in.; :t ]>. m. to
4 |>. in.; 7 |>. in. to Kp. nr.
Realili-inc anil office at the ('apt. K. J. Murphey
plain. PHONE: 211.
U, R. NEXT
at the City Barber shop. First
class workmen. I have a fine pre
paration for removing Dandruff
and stop falling hair. Only 250
per bottle. Trial free.
GEO. W. JORDAN,
The Barber.
W. B. SMITH, F. D.
FINEST EDNKRAL CAR IN GEORGIA.
EXPERIENCED KMBALMERS.
ODORLESS EMBALMING FLUID
W, B. SMITH, Leading' Undertaker
BARNESVILLE OA.
St- Germain Female Fills
The only original and genuine French-
Female Regular, of Mine. St. Ger
main, Paris. Unsurpassed as being
safe, sure and reliable in every case.
S6ld under positive guarantee of
money refunded. Get the genuine.
Price SI.OO per by mail. Soly
Agents for the United States and
Canada. KING HA R VA RI) CO,
Washington St, Chicago
* HW* U* ny WLVJI Is Highly Rf-eom- z
: U FivklW* w meiuh-d fur (lotions, Z
: Coujh.Hoaksbnkss, g
- NlllMa boKKThroat, BroH- g
; IfJif•Trsl?TO*jr ilk *1 111 IT, x, Asthma,®
:II dWlqitll *IB whooit <1 Conan, z
\ BBS9L.~Js9BSB and All I)l*<-as*s of g
: the Throat, Lungs arid Bronchial Tutxsa. z
- x positivk Specific fob Cbodf. 5
iiiiitnimiiMiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniliiilir
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
Itartificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea.
Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps,ana
all other results of imperfeetdigestioo.
Prepared by E. C. DeWitt A Co-, Chicago, j