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VOL IV
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This picture is the trade mark of
SCOTT’S EMULSION, and is on
every bottle of SCOTT’S EMUL¬
SION in the World, which now
amounts to many millions yearly.
This great business has grown to
such vast proportions,
First ;'-Because tlie proprietors
have always been most careful in
selecting the various ingredients
used in its composition, namely;
the finest Cod Liver Oil, and tlie
purest Ilypophospliites.
Second:"Because they have so
skillfully combined the various
ingredients that the best possible
results are obtained by its use.
Tiiird :=Because it has made so
many sickly, delicate children
strong and healthy, given health
and rosy cheeks to so many pr.lc,
anaemic girls, and healed the lungs
and restored to full health, so ramr
thousands in the first stager; cf
Consumption.
It you-have not tried it, rend for free sample,
its agreeable taste will surprise ycu.
SCOTT & DOW NIC, Chemirtr,
409-415 Pearl Street, Nc-w- Vcr::.
sc*.- and Ai.co; ell druggists.
Good For Preserves.
I.g-t s])r'ny a feminine botanist bios-
son- laden eftme upon a masculine nat¬
uralist who was just in the act cf
cramming a wriggling something into
,
a tomato can in which something else
wriggled.
“To preserve them,” lie said, fee.ing
that an explanation was in order.
“Do they make good preserves?”
asked ' the sister scientist. — Youth’s
Companion.
They Couldn’t IJnrt.
“The ladies in our congregation are
pretty fond of me,” said the minister's
ini.- h vous little boy. “Nearly all of
tliei. gavq pa some slippers on his
birthday.”
“1 thought your pa-alwnys uses a
slipper to spank jjtou with.”
“So ho does, Lift these he just got are
the soft kind, that's all made out o’
wool.”—Philadelphia Press.
A man who is much afraid of drafts
has a feather suspended from the coil¬
ing by a light silken thread. Should
the feather move in the slightest de¬
gree hc doesn’t rest content until he
finds out where the draft comes from.
Demand For Excelsior.
The present .annual production in
this country of excelsior i.s about GO,000
tons. Put to a great variety cf uses,
excelsior is most commonly used for
packing purposes, and in such uses it
is employed for many very different
kinds of things. It is used, for exam¬
ple, in the packing of things so fragile
as eggs and things so solid as iron
toys. In the various uses to which it is
put excelsior is most in demand where
.manufacturing is carried on, so that
the .larger part of the great quantity of
this material now produced in this
country is used east of the Mississippi
river.—New York Sun.
No one can reasonably hope for good
health unless'his bowles move once
each day. When this is not attended
to. disorders of tti* stomactie arise,
hd ousness, headache dyspepsia and
piles soon follow. If you wish to avoid
these ailments keep your bowels reg¬
ular hy taking (’h imber'ain’s Stomach
and Liver Tablets wh n required. They
are so easy to take and mild and gentle
in eff,.ct. For sale by Copeland Bros,
Bremen; S Gaulding & Go. Waco.
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“ZDajo.’t Gicro TJjp tlxo JS^inp.*’
HUCHANAN. DA,.. FRIDA , DKCHM IE R 28 1900.
11 mi |« 4 'ib re C runp.
Mr It Gray, wlm lives near Amenia,
Diirhess'e.oiint . V V., says : “Cham-
berluiti’s Coin'll Remedy is the best
rued .me 1 have ever used. It is a
line children’s remedy for’croup and
never lails to cure. VVheri triveu as
soon as the child becomes hoarse, or
even after the cranny cough has devel
oped, it will prevent the attack. This
should be borne in 111 : rid and a bottle
i <»f the Cough Remedy kept at hand
i ready for instant use as soon as these
i symptoms appear. For sale by Cope-
land Bros, Bremen; S. G Gliding & Co.,
Waco
I.lmlted.
“Great Scott, and the hank 1ms gone
up for $500,000! For how much ate
the directors responsible?”
j “Only for the failure.” — Denver
News.
Among the tens of thousands who
have used Cluuiib- rlain’s Cough R-m-
edy for colds and la grippe during the
past few years, to our knowledge, not
a single case lias resulted in pneunio-
u a. Th is. Whitfield & Co , 210 Wab
ash avnue, Chisago, one of the
prominentVe a; 1 drugists in tliatcit.v,
in speaking of this, sajs: ‘-We rec¬
ommend Chamberlain’s Cough Reme¬
dy for la grippe in many cases, and it
not only gives prompt and complete
recovery, but also counteracts any ten
deucy of la grippe to result in pneu
monia For sale by < h>p. land Bros
Bremen; S.Gaukling & Co Waco.
BABY’S PORTRAIT.
[Sketched by his mother.]
A little head of shajv:*ly moid,
Two baby eyes so Flight and bold,
A dainty little nese;
Two little chec ks so round and fair,
With tiny dimples hiding there
Like dew drops in a rose.
A little month so fragrant sweet,
A tiny ho\hJ0t? dimpl ing < ’• in so neat,
And n :i ‘ to kiss;
Two A bi'by^Kehead c*dn|Krear.-: uth with in its nl*ce,
m i t >ee,
i X's’V&W photograpb. is this?
| sturdy shoulders, broad and s pnere,
Two chuM-y hands so fat and fair,
And cunning feel so coy;
A roguLii smile for you and me,
Sweet baby wrys; now, don't you aee
The portrait of our boy ?
—Pearson’s Weekly.
TAKING IN MR. MOODY.
How Hia Cosifideree AVas Abased by
the Natives oi' jtellumy.
When D. L. Mo:;;];; wont to Bethany
during liis travels i:t the east, he was
very soft hearted over all the multi-
tude of beggars there, not only lx cause
the place is so unusual, hut because he
was moved by its beautiful traditions.
He gave quantities of “backsheesh”
and then asked if any of the children
had the names of .Mary and Martha.
Yes. indeed,-they lmd. And that open¬
ed his pockets again.
The news of his generosity spread
through lite village, and new claim¬
ants came until his visit seemed likely
to result in a fight for existence. The
case was getting desperate, and he
told the dragoman to call for silence
while he made an address. Then he
said:
“I have come (3,000 miles to see this
little village of Bethany? It was a
place my Master loved to visit, and I
have come to see it because he loved
it. 1 am very glad to meet you all. but
now 1 want to be alone. 1 have no
pore backsheesh, and I bid you good-
by.”
A tine looking boy of 10 replied to the
address. He spoke fluently and with
the grace of an orator. Mr. Moody
was delighted with the beginning of
his oration, but not with its conclusion.
“We are glad to see the gentleman
and his friends who have come so far,
but tlie gentleman must not think that
his actions are equal to the importance
of his visit. Six thousand miles is a
long way to come, and the gentleman
must have sacrificed much to make the
visit. In consequence it is natural for
us to expect that he would be munifi¬
cent in backsheesh. This he has not
been, and we now expect that he will
give us a great deal more.”
Mr. Moody tyas so disgusted that he
abandoned the situation entirely and
hurried away with his friends.
“I did think,” said lie, “that boy had
a soul above backsheesh.”
“And did you think, too, that some
of the children were named Martha
and Mary?” he was asked. •
“Certainly. Why not?”
Nothing; only they were all boys.”—
Youth’s Companion.
A Settler.
A 5-year-old hoy went with liis moth¬
er to make a Rail. The. lady of the
house, wb<4 was fond of children, told
him she meant to asfk his mother to I t
her have him. "I >on t you think your
1 mother uouhl let me. buy you?” ‘She
asked.
“No, ma’am,” answered little
fellow; “you haven’t g 1 Honey
enough.”
’blow much would It take?” she eon-
tinu ( -vl.
“Three hiuidic-d d liars,” said the boy
promptly, .as if that world settle the
matter at once for ail.
“Oh, well, (bon,” said the woman, “I
them I can manage it. Ii 1 can, v: 1
! you vine and stay with me?”
1 ‘ N °’ mn ’" m ” hc sa,d ’ wi,h (k ' clsio11 '
"Mamma wouldn’t sc II me anyhow.
There are live of us, and mamma
wouldn't like to 1 reak the set.’’-—Buf¬
falo Enquirer.
j WORN OUT LAND.
It Can Be Restored to Fertility by
Jadiciea > Fertilizing."
Question. —What can ho done to re*
store my worn out land?
A gentleman, who removed to Geor-
| west ®i a from few one of tiie states visited of tlio Atlanta great
a years ago,
during the Interstate Fair, held in Octo¬
ber. In speaking of worn out, lands ha
said that Georgia farmers were not thd
! .only ones who by- an exhaustive system
j of cultivation had deprived good lands
j of their fertility. When people began
j to settle up the western states and found
lands that gave yields of 40 and 50
bushels of wheat to the acre, they
j used the same land year after year with-
out returning anything to the soil, with
j the result that the yield diminished un-
j til 6 busheD to the acre was the best
! tha *L uklbe ° b ! ai U ° d S ; Jme ot the R
,
blooded cattle for the dairy and for beef,
saviug the mamufo and apfHying it to
the laud in order to improve the pas-
ture grounds. It was soon discovem!
that wherever cattle were kept the laud
| was being rapidly restored to its origi-
nal fertility. Now there is no such
! thing as worn out lands among good
| farmers in the west. • Skillful fertilize,-
| tion and rotation of crops keeps tits
| land productive.
This gentleman purchased a place in
Georgia on which most of the land was
what is caljpd worn out. He went to
work to build it up according to the
j methods so often recommended by this
department, viz: judicious fertilizing
with both commercial and homemade
fertilizers, studying the nature of hit
soil and trying to supply it with the ele-
' ments most necessary for its renewal. \
Among other things lie purchased sev-
eral fine Jerseys, which supplied him
with milk and butter not only for home
consumption, but also for sale. The!
droppings from these cows were care¬
fully collected and applied to the land in
some places alone and in others in com¬
bination with other fertilizers. He
rotated his crops also and now considers
his farm among the best of its size in;
middle Georgia. He regards the pea- j
vine hay as one of the best restorers of
land and thinks highly also of the velvet
bean. This gentleman says that no land
that has ever been good can become so!
exhausted that its farming.—State fertility cannot be Agri- re- j ;
stored by skillful ,
cultural Department. I
That Tired I’fetinyr.
“There’s no doubt about it,” says a
prominent vegetarian, “that for endur¬
ance, for hard work, vegetarianism is
the only tiling. Do you know why? It
is because in vegetables you eat no
tiredness. In meat or fish or poult;y
you eat a great deal of tiredness, and
t.hnt is why the meat eater after a
'hearty meal feels lazy and heavy and
disinclined to work. He has absorbed |
with his meat a great quantity of uric |
acid, and the definition of uric acid has
been given by an eminent scientist as
the ‘Essence of tiredness.’ He who eats
only vegetables is never tired aftet a
meal—never.”
Toil.
If you want knowledge, you must toil
for it; if food, you must toil for it, and
if pleasure you must toil for it. Toil is
the law. Pleasure comes through toil
and not by self indulgence and indo¬
lence. When a man gets to love work,
his life is a happy cue.
Hardest Tact of the Day.
Harduppe—I always do my hardest
work before breakfast.
BorroWell—What’s that?
Harduppe—Getting it.—Philadelphia
Record.
Tlie lest and Cheapest shoes on
earth are those “sample shoes;” to
he found only at McCalman’.s
r*Tf~ j" cr'i" ■« r~-<r'v f* 'r-v-rrrn^
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an A riencts
In order that I r ;nay be. able to compete with 1
-j
1 ither cash, houses and other towns, after Get. 1 A
1st ! wii! sell strictlv FOR CASH FOR, THREE 1
MONTHS, OCTOBER, NOVEMBER and DE¬ y
CEMBER, and w ill offer you some Bargains in 1-
Groceries, Dry Goods and Shoes.
'i A counts trial are wifi also convince due October you. My 1st. notes Please and settle ac¬ i }
by that lime. ! wiil also Buy your cotton and y
1 pay the highest market price for the same. y
September 20th, 1900.
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! And weak and exhausted t when not properly
grow when the fuel nour- low.
ished, just as an engine loses its power runs
The loss of nervous power is seen in the failinp- health and the
wasting form. It is felt in the aching head, the throbbing heart,
the irritability, indigestion, restlessness and loss of sleep. Re-
build the worn-out nerves, rest the tired brain and add new fuel
to the vital fires with the best of all tonics, Dr. Miles' Nervine,
“1 never had anything do me so much pood as Dr Miles’
Nervine. I had been suffering from blind piles fur some time
and had lost so much blood that my nerves were in a very bad
condition. I bought a bottle of the Nervine on trial and it
did me so much good that I have since taken two more. The
result, is my health has been wonderfully improved and I am
very thankful that I gave it a trial.”
J. B. II.ENSLBE, Ringgold, Ga.
ers’.Ms hLpe® N IfJf#€ i?Mes : \ * A
% ■
k..
is food f r the worn-out .nerves and the weary brain. It
is a food for the over-taxed and weak digestion. It.
nourishes, fortifies and refreshes the whole system.
s 0 ia by druggists on guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
CARROLLTON MARBLE WORKS.
sAgS: A ■ Fencing, Monuments, FOREIGN Granite D. Headstones, L: AND Curbing, HEARN, DOMESTIC Tombs, Etc. Mgr. MARBLE. Prices Wire and to Iron suit
you. First-class work guaranteed. All orders
promptly filled.
Carrollton Marble Works, Carrollton, Georgia.
* . jft T _ , M TW
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For sale by II 1> I jjsseie . i.llehe Ha o. e»**,
-
Twelve Mouths Support.
(J ^ 1Iara i, ((l , Count. V .-
Mrs, W, A. Hannah, widow of W A.
Hannah, deceased, has in proper form
applied to the undersigned for twelve
months support ft r herself and tailor
children of said deceased, out ot t he
estate of said di cens'd. Now, this is
1 epe all, persons kindred and credit-
r S that said applies' ion will be heard
,.t mj flic- m Buchanan, Ga., on the
first Monday in January. 1901.
Thus. A. Hutcheson, O. dinarv.
Mon (I Citation.
rai-iin e only
O u. Brn t \ ood et a! have
filed their petition, in proper form,
praying for commencing the establishment at the county 01 a
public road Wadded,
line at the residence of Jesse
running west through the lands ol
() 1) Port-wood, M. A Goldin, B F
Raines and R w Rainey the Dr ike-
town and TeinnD road near the
deuce of R u Rainey, mid r vi .n Mrs
have reported that said road should be
established. This is to cite all persons
that said application will he heard
ny office in line' anal), *G 0 , on - In
third Monday in IDc. 9t0. Th s z «>
venabor 1971 ,M »
Thus. A. Hutcheson O'dutary .
NO 4
Notice Of Total Divorce.
Hettie j. Smith vs. W. 1 . Smith.
•.araison Superior Court, .inly
ItFtO — Eibel lor toial divorce-.
io\> I Smith: You are her' by com¬
manded to be ui:o appear at the : ext
January term, 1901. of said couit to
a> s ver the above ease. VV itnes the
Hon . ( . G. Janes, judge of sxi,j court.
Jesse Bead. G . S. C.
Money fo Loan.
Foreign capitalists will make loans;
se :ured Dy.firsj mortgage, on imptov-
eit 1 arms m tin's ana aojoiuiog oouii-
ties, vi rea-onabh' - rates, interest
greatly reduced, See us before hor-
r'win=r. COr.E <fc COBB.
B.>X 41 Carrollton, Ga.
l)f. R. I >. t I r 1 t L T-r 1 ! */ CHIiSON - ''t r t— x t
PPVS 1 CJAN AND SURGEON.
BUCHANAN. GEORGIA
Calls answer d at d! hours.
if <a its Morphine and WhlslcevhnN
treated without pam yr
I fr confmemeat. Cure gnatnn-
teed or 00 pay. B. H. VKAL,
COBB itarium. Mati’gr Lithia Springs Sati-
Bo* 3. Austell, Ga.