Newspaper Page Text
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IllllH'flUu,., ■ ■ , . ■ ■ In
Preparation for As
similating the Food and Regula
ting the Stomachs and Bowels cf
Promotes Digestion.CheeTful
nessandßest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
Jiuspa of Old fIrSAMUELPIi uHE/E
J\urpkm Smd~
jQx.Scnna * 1
JRocAtUc Salts - * I
. fbuse Seed ♦ I
JVppemiiat - >
Jh Gardens* Soda * 8
f farm Seed - I
)
Aperfect Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness andLoSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature oP
NEW ~YORK.
EXACT COPT OF WEAPPER.
CASH STORE.
SPRING AND SUMMER TRADE.
J. W. HIGHTOWER,
—XJEAIjBR UC2XT—
HARDWARE.
Stoves and Tinware,
Apiltnral lanterns, Beilins, Carriase Material, Cillery, Hoose
Fmisliii Goois, Gnus, Pistols, Amiitioa, Etc.
FARmmG IMPLEMENTS.
My store is headquarters fir 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.
I carry complete lines of Cooking and Heating Stoves, Ttnr
ware , Woodenware , Crockery , Cutlery , Silverware.
Electric Liilt aii faterio® Fifflres.
Call to see my stock, examine my goods , and ge> my prices .
I will appreciate the patronage of the people.
J. W. HIGHTOWER,
BARXESYILLE, GEORGIA.
The Barnesville Planing Mills
JUST RECEIVED -^
m Yard full of boards and framing. W
0/ Sidetrack blocked with Shingles,
Have Lime, Brick, Laths, and all kinds of Builders’ Sup
plies. We are headquarters for Paints and Glass, of which
we aiways 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
ICASIIIft
£j For Infants and Children.
I The Kind You Haye
Always Bough!
1 Bears the / *
Signature / /fir
of w
r\ Jfc The
m Kind
\J You Have
Always Bought.
lOASTBRIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. ftEW YORK CITY.
GOOD MANNERS-
The presence of good manners is
nowhere more needed or more effec
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 j
certainly nothing can more thorough-1
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 lffothers 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.
If you suffer from tenderness or
fullness on the right side, pains under
shoulder blade, constipation, bilious
ness, sick headache and feel dull,
heavy and sleepy, your liver is torpid
and conjested. DeWitt's Little
Early Risers will cure you promptly,
pleasantly and permanently by re
moving the congestion and causing
the bile ducts to open and flow nat
urally. They are good pills.
Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Hoi.mes.
— *
“Theodore,” said Mrs. Hardscrab
ble, looking up from the paper, “I
see that a New York banker has giv
en $3,000 to the Princeton debating
society. How ridiculous. You don’t
have to give women money to learn
how to learn how to talk.”
“No,” responded Mr. Hardscrabble,
feelingly, “I’ve noticed it's when you
don’t give them money that they do
their best talking.”—Life.
DACTTIAMO SICOUBED. May deposit money
rllM I 111 1 A lor tuition In hank till position la
x vm x xvn u „r w m acce pt notes.
Cheap board. Car fare paid. No vacation. ,
Enter any time. Open tor both sexes.
PRAUGHON’S S? jOrf
PRACTICAL
BUSINESS^
Nashville, Tenn. rt* Savannah, Ga.
Galveston, Tex. Texarkana, Tex.
Indorsed by merchant* and banker*. Three
mouths’ bookkeeping with us equals six. elsewhere.
All commercial branches taught. For clrculars explain
ing “ Home Study Course,” address ** 'Jepaitment A,
For collet catalogue, address “ Department a 4.
Mr. Peck—By jing, I had a funny
dream last night. It seemed that I
was away off in south Africa, where
diamonds were lying all around me
in heaps.
Mrs. Peck—Did you seem to see
any as small as the one in the engage
ment ring you gave me?—Chicago
News.
VELVET BEAN'S.
The greatest fertilizing and stock
food plant for the South yet known
full, discription tree. Package ioc
qt. 30 cts. post paid, peck 60c, bush
el S2OO F. O. B. Ocala, Address.
J. B. Sutton Seedsman,
Ocala Fla.
Out in Kansas
lives a happy wife. She writes: “ I
have used Mother's Friend before
two confinements. The last time I had
twins, and was in labor only a few min
utes. Suffered very little.” The reason
why
Mother’s Friend
does expectant mothers so much
good is because it is an external liniment,
to be applied upon the outside, where
much of the strain comes. It helps be
cause the pores of the skin readily absorb
t, and it comes into direct contact with
and is absorbed by the parts involved.
Morning sickness is quickly banished,
and nervousness is kept completely away.
The sense of dread and foreboding is not
experienced, even during labor itself.
Confinement is short and almost without
pain. Recovery is quick and sure. Best
of all, Mother’s Friend benefits the
unborn just as much as the expectant
mother, and when the little one comes it
will be strong, lusty and healthy.
Druggists sail Mother’s Friend for $1 a bottle.
Send for our free book on the subject,
finely illustrated.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA. OA.
Living lit Venezuela.
Any one going to Caracas with an
idEa of economy had much better scan
a few figures which the Venezuelan
Herald prints. It costs a good deal
to maintain any sort of social position,
says, the Herald, and, therefore, to
settle in Venezula on a small salary
is to partake of the life of the immi
grant.
A little house for two —small, clean
and comfortable houses are very rare
—rents at from S4O ot $55 per month.
A cook costs $lO per month, and a
maid, who does not know how to sew
on a button, $5, and it requires three
maids to perform badly the service of
one untrained girl.
Marketing is a very high, and cloth
ing exorbitant. There is no such
thing as a ready made sui*. Cabs
cost 80 cents an hour, gas 20 bolivars
per 1,000 feet, and the hotels charge
from $2.50 to $lO per day, and are
second rate at that.
It makes no difference how bad
the wound if you use DeWitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve, it will quickly heal and
leave no scar.
Dit. W. A. Wright.
L. Holmes.
Glue Closes Woman’s Mouth.
Such a point has been reached that
it seems as if it were impossible to
obtain any more pure home made
sugar. James Linney, aHarrodsburg
merchant, purchased several pounds
of what was represented to him as a
pure article the other day. An old
lady came in and purchased two
cakes. She took about half of one in
her mouth and began to chew until
she could chew no more. The mer
chant and those standing about in
the store, seeing she could not open
her mouth, became alarmed, thinking
the elderly woman had a severe at
tack of lockjaw. But, to the chagrin
of the obliging 'merchant, he soon
discovered he had been imposed upon
by some unscrupulous person, who
had made the “sugar” of some kind
of glue. It was necessary to heat a
kettle of water and melt the stuff be
fore the old lady could open her
mouth; However, she hadn't forgot
ten how to use it when the glue had
been removed.—Harrodsburg (Ky.)
Damocrat.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Slj?.
Signature of L&aSTX
The Toaday: “These international
marriages are bringing Britain and
America nearer together.”
The Other: “I wonder if that
isn’t why ships go between Liverpool
and New York so much more quickly
than they used?”—Detroit Journal.
Matchmaking In Japan.
There exists in Japan among some
of the classes a certain custom of hir
ing a midwoman, makoda or profes
sional matchmaker, in order to make
on engagement between a couple. It
pften happens that a family will de
sire an alliance with another family
with whom they are intimately ac
quainted. Then are the services of
the professional matchmaker invalu
able. To be successful in such a
profession one must never be known
as such to the family she desires to
court. Very often makodas and mid
women follow this profession foryears
and yet are not known as such save
to those who have employed them.
Most of the matchmakers are very
honest and it is their duty to discover
all the good and bad points of the
couple and point them out to the
parents; they give good advice and
do everything possible to promote the
happiness of the pair. They travel
back and forth to.the homes of the
young people, who are entirely igno
rant of their motive, carrying compli
ments and presents and trying in a
delicate manner to work on their sen
timent.
J. I). Bridge, editor and proprietor
of the Democrat, Lancaster, N. H.,
says: “I would not be without One
Minute Cough Cure for my boy,
when troubled with cough or cold.
It is the best remedy for croup I
ever used. Dr. W. A. Wright.
L, Holmes.
Manila’* Insect Pests.
“The mosquitoes congregate around
our camp at night by the thousands,”
writes George C. Nichols, to folks in
Girard. “My hands and face are
literally covered with lumps I al
ways imagined that New Jersey was
the headquarters for the little pests,
but Manila has derived that neck of
the woods of all such honors. And
ants—gee whiz! they are here by the
millions; red ants with jaws like croco
diles, black ants with a stinger shar|>-
er than any bee that ever manufac
tured honey; brown ants, grey ants
and arfts with wings and ants with
nothing but a determination to make
life miserable for a soldier. They,
build nests in your hair, pull your
ears, fill your nose, crawl over your
shirt and under your shirt, and, in
fact, they get in your shoes, torture
you in daytime, sleep with you at
night and eat with you at dinner
time. Why, as I write, a couple are
crawling over this very page, as if to
show contempt for my opinion of ants.
So you see soldiering in the Philip
pines is no snap.”—Kansas City Jour
nal.
If you have piles, cure them. No
use undergoing horrible operations
that simply remove the results of the
disease without disturbing the disease
itself. Place your confidence in De
Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It has
never failed to cure others; it will not
fail to cure you.
Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Holmes.
Deacon Goode: “Ah my dear sir,
yo u ta'k of your pleasure, but what
are to the joy which comes from self
denial?”
The Agnostic: “If it is such a
pleasure to deny yourself, what mer
it is there in denying? Why not de
ny denying yourself, and so you have
the pleasure of doing what you want
to do?”—Boston Transcript.
Don't think you can cure that
slight attack of dyspepsia by dieting,
or that it will cure itself. Kodol
Dyspepsfa Cure, will cure it; it di
gests what you eat, and restores the
digestive organs to health.
Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Hoi.mes.
“Mrs. Tirnberlake told me she was
going to have her porch painted this
spring. ”
“What color?”
“That will depend on the tint of
her new porch costume.—Cleveland
! Plain Dealer.
Pneumonia, lagrippe, coughs,
colds, croup and whooping cough
readily yield to One Minute Cough
Cure. Use this remedy in time and
save a cfoctor’s bill, or the undertak
er’s. Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Hoi.mes.
■% 111 M m and Whtokey IlaMta
■ n %5 111 cured ui home with
mM M 111 Iwl out |>aiu. Book of pur
ili § Iwl titular* aent FREE.
UfaBMBBBB bii wooixey, m.d.
i “Pitts’ —-
i Carminative
I Mmvad My Baby’m Ufa.”
i **
! UMAR S. RANKIN DRUG CO.t
I I can not recommend Pitts' Car- \
1 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
I to try one bottle and see what the
• result will be. Respectfully,
’ Mrs. LIZZIE MURRAY,
) Johnson's Station, Ga.
¥¥
I Pitts' Carminative
I /a mold by mil Drum/fata.
PRIDE, aa DENTS.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
G. POPE HGGOLEY, M. 0.
BARNESVILLE, OA.
Office hours, 10-11 a. m., 2-4 p. m.
Phone, Oflioo 57, lies. 10.
25T”Office Huguley Building.
JOHN M. ANDERSON,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON,
Bartlesville, da.
Office in Holmes' building, over Roush Usenet
Residence at Mrs. Connelly's on Forsyth
Street. Culls promptly attended day or night
in the city or country,
E. C. RIPLEY,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Office over Xew South Savings Bank.
Residence, Thouinston Street Phone T 4
DR. WM.J. COX,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON,
BARNESVILLE, GA. *
Special attention given to Throat and Nasal
diseases.
Office over Chambers’ Drug Store. Residence
Blalock House. Hours 11 to 12—2 io 3.
A Pierce Kemp, M. D.,
GENERAL PRACTITIONER.
teirOftice over Chambers Drug
Store. Office 'phone 44. Residence
Thomaston st., phone 51.
*
LENNA R. WHITFORD, I. D. 1
G E NERALPRAC TIT IO N E R.
Office at Dr. Head’s Residence on Greenwood,
Street.
Massage given to ladies at office or their own
residence. Calls answered promptly night or
day. I’hone 64.
DE. FRANCIS McCANDLISS.
Diseases of Women and Children
a Specialty.
OFK 1C 10 HOURS !l a. in. to 11 a. in.; 3p. in. to
. 4 |>. nv; 7 )). in. to Bp. in.
Residence anil jofllne attheCapt.E. J. Murpbey
piano. PHONE; ifil.
U, R. NEXT
at the City Barber shop. First
class workmen. I have a fine pre
paration for removing Dandruff
and stop falling hair. Oily 260
per bottle. Trial free.
GEO. W- JORDAN,
The Barber.
W. B. SMITH, F. D.
FINEST FUNERAL CAR IN GEORGIA.
EXPERIENCED EMBALMEKS.
ODORLESS EMBALMING FLUID
W, B. SMITH, Leading'Undertaker
BAKNESVILLK GA.
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.
Sold under positive guarantee of
money refunded. Get the genuine.
Price si.oo per box by mail. Solo
Agents for the United States and
Canada. KING HA R VARD CO,
Washington Ht, Chicago .
: the Throat, Lungs and Bronchial Tubes, s
i a positive Specific foe Cbodp. £
iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiilir
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
Itartificiaiiy digests the food and aid 9
Nature in strengthening and recou
6tructing 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 cure 9
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea.
Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps, ana
all other results of imperfect digestion.
Prepared by E. C. DcWltt A Cos.. Chicago, j