Newspaper Page Text
VOL. IV
Help Nature
Babies and children need
proper food, rarely ever medi¬
cine. If they do not thrive
on their food something is
wrong. They need a little
help to get their digestive
machinery working properly.
S^EMUfeSj ? 11
COD LIVER OIL
WfTN ffYPOPHOSPMTES "LIME 4 SOM
will generally correct this
difficulty.
If you will put from one-
fourth to half a teaspoonful
in baby’s bottle three or four
times a day you will soon see
a marked improvement. For
larger children, from half to
a teaspoonful, according to
age, dissolved in their milk,
if you so desire, will very
soon show its great nourish-
ing power, If the mother’s
milk does not nourish the
baby, she needs the emul¬
sion. It will show an effect
at once both upon mother
and child.
50 c. and $i.cio, all druggist*.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
HAD NEVER BEEN ABROAD.
Bat For All That He Had Traveled
“Far and Wide/'
“Have you spent all of your life right
here in this one place?” asked a stran¬
ger of an old fellow he came across
seated on a rail fence whittling in front
of a log and slab cabin In one of the
back counties of Arkansas.
“Not by a derned sight!” was the
terse reply. “I been hyar the better
part o' the time; but, la, 1 bev traveled
fur an wide!”
"Ever been abroad?”
"Well, not eggsackly to say abroad,
ouless you call It goin abroad to go
from bere way over to Petersvllle. 1
been over thar twice In the last 40
year. It’s 3(% miles to Petervllle, an I
been furder than that, fur my ole wom¬
an an me went clean to Hogback ridge
on our weddln tower, an that’s 41 mile
from here. Then I been over In Pettis
county to see my wife’s folks twice, an
that’s twenty odd mile from here. Then
1 been over to Rocky HIU ez menny ez
four times, an that’s 18 mile. Ez I say,
I been here most o’ the time, but then
I’ve traveled fur an wide all the same.
I’ve seen the big four story mill over to
Petersvllle an the engine kyars over to
Peavtlle. I rid three miles on ’em,, an
it’s all I want o’ the pesky tilings. I've
seen a calf with two beads an a feller
tha t could eat fire and dance on broken
glass in his bare feet. I see a man
hung once an a boss race far a pane o’
$65. Yes, sir; 1 been fur an wide, an 1
reckon I’ve seen the biggest part o’
what there Is to see in this world, an I
don’t lot on doln no more gaddin
about. ’ ’—Llpplncott’s.
Tke Giraffe’s TlalilfT.
A giraffe Is very timid on hearing
slight sounds, but is indifferent to load
ones. A writer In The Leisure Hour
Bays: “Noisy sounds. Uke a man walk¬
ing by with hobnail boots, It does not
notice, but a lady coming In with hard¬
ly more sound than the rustling of her
dress makes It start, with pricked ears
and ’ eyes distended. We remember
well, after a terrible explosion of gun¬
powder on a barge on the canal, ask-
ing the keeper of the giraffes of that
day liow they bad taken It and he said
he was surprised bow very little notice
they took. They jumped to their feet,
but almost at once lay down again
when they.-found nothing, happened.
“But,” he added, “If 1 were at night-
THE TRIBUNE.
M 9- Give Up tlio Ship.”
RUCHANAN, GA,. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, uoi.
time to creep along that gallery In my
socks they would he so seared that 1
believe they would dash themselves to
bits.” They fear the lurking foe. and
a blng bang scares them less than a
faint, rustling sound. They are in that
respect very deerlike.”
REVEALMENT.
Let me tell how rhythm with lti rhyme sbeold
flow:
A* the laugh o! leave* when aoft aephyrs blow;
Aa the wave* with gracile hand
Write their names upon the sand.
Let m* tell how music with It* verse should mate
Aa the dark with dawn, rapt. Inviolate;
Aa th* soil and tun disclose
Sweet communion in a rose.
Let me tell how fancy from the heart ihould
leap;
As the cloud full fraught rise* from the deep;
A* the spring at God’s behest
Wakes, and, to, the world i* blest 1
—Clarence Ur my in Independent.
ON THEIR SEA LEGS.
Csttl* and Harm Do Not Get Fright
coed la Hoagh Weather.
“Do the horses and cattle get fright¬
ened and make much disturbance Id
rough weather?” asked the writer of
a New York dealer who ships cattle
abroad.
"Bless you, no. They’ve got sea legs
that would put an old salt to shame.
Occasionally a horse will lose his bal-
lance. but a bullock Is the greatest bal¬
ancer you ever saw. They are knowing
brutes too. You know, we put them
four In a pen. Well, you’ll never find
all four standing up or lying down at
one time. They figure the thing out
and decide how they’ll get the most
room and most comfort. So two of
them stand up while two lie down.
When they get tired, they shift the
watch.
“The horses like to be talked to when
there's a big sen on and things are
pretty lively. They always like cer¬
tain men better than others. So do
the cattle. We have one man who can
do anything wjth them. Every bul¬
lock and horse ou the. boat knows him
by the time we’ve been out two days.
He comes In handy when there’s an
accident
“It's mighty .seldom that a serious
accident happens nowadays, but once
In awhile a horse or a bullock does
get thrown and breaks a leg or does
some bad damage. We don’t carry a
veterinary. The men kuow as much
about' ordinary cattle and horse ail-
meats as any vet. and If one of the
brutes breaks his leg there's nothing
for It but to kill him. A veterinary
couldu’t do anything for h.m.
“The company charges from $0 to
$20 a head for carrying cattle and
from $27 to $250 a bead for horses.
When the government Inspectors stop-
ped overcrowding, they cut down the
carrying capacity of some boats 75
head. That made a pretty big hole In
the ship’s profits In the course of a
year.”— Exchange.
Lincoln’s Swear Word.
One story that Is told of Lincoln re¬
lates to that extreme, correctively crit¬
ical attitude which Secretary Seward
always maintained toward the presi¬
dent
Mr. Lincoln and the secretary bad
managed to escape from a man who
had been boring them, and as they
reached the bouse the president threw
himself into an armchair and ex¬
claimed:
“By jings. governor, we are here!”
Mr. Seward replied by asking In a
reproving tone:
“Mr. President where did you learn
that Inelegant expression?”
Mr. Lincoln Immediately turned to
several young men who had entered
the room in time to hear the exclama¬
tion and saidf
! “ Young gentlemen, excuse me tot
swearing before you. ‘By Jings’ Is
swearing, for my good old mother
taught me that anything that bad a
'by’ before it is swearing. I won’t do
so any more.”—Youth’s Companion.
Only Snabarned.
Last summer two little girls in a
College avenue family were repeatedly
remonstrated with by their Indulgent
mother for playing bareheaded In the
sun. “You will be burned so badly,”
■aid she to them finally, “that people
will thl* are black children.” Her
warning bad tittle effect, however, and
ehe gave u trying to keep their hate
on.
One day e e sent them to a neighbor
a block or distant to make some In¬
quiries con nlng & washwoman. Mrs.
8., the nel .tbor in question, mistook
them for the children of a Mrs. Black
who lived In another Street nearby.
“You are the little Black children,
are you not?” she asked. - •
“Oh, no,” came the prompt response
from the, elder-, , “Only sunburned.”-
Indlanapolis News.__
COST LY OF DfOT^T
tome Sell at Retail For Mare Than
Their Weight In Gold.
“The price of many drugs used In
medicine Is astonishing to those who
are not acquainted with the subject,”
remarked a druggist. “There are sev-
ernl that are worth their weight In
fold (about $20 an ounce), while $2,
$3 or $5 an ounce are quite common
prices In pharmacy. I filled a prescrip-
tion the other day that cost $25. But
there Is one drug that I can recall
which is worth much more than Its
weight In gold. That Is pseudo pbyso-
atlgmlne. I don’t think that it has a
popular name. It is too rich for that.
In the pharmacists’ list It is quoted at
$1 a grain, or $437.50 an ounce. The
seed from which the drug Is made
grows in India and Brazil, as well ns
In parts of South Africa. This seed,
tradition says, was once used by na¬
tive cnlefs as an ordeal. The ordeal
generally resulted In the death of the
man upon whom it was tried and sc
was considered as a great truth finder.
The prepared Irug Is sometimes used
now In prescriptions for the treatment
of heart disease.
“Another drug which takes the palm
for costliness Is. curiously enough, the
one which Is perhaps the most widely
known by name of them all to the gen¬
eral public—namely, musk. Its retail
price at the present moment Is about
$50 an ounce. $000 a pound apothecary,
or 2% times the value of pure gold. 24
carats fine. It is obtained from the
musk deer, a very rare animal, and is
contained In a follicle, of which there
is only one In each animal, so that an
amnee of the drug represents approxi¬
mately one of these precious animals.
As it Is largely used for scent, the de¬
mand constantly exceeds the supply,
and the price has been steadily ad¬
vancing. There is uo reason why it
should not eo to $250 or $500 an ounce
during the next few years, as the musl.
deer Is gradually vanishing from th*
face of the earth.”-Kansas City Jour
nal.
Inherited Prowess.
“To what." sked the young woman
with the notebook, "do you
your remarkable power in training
these animals and keeping them in
subjection?”
"Well." replied Mile. Castella.
lady wonder of the arena. ”1 think l
Inherited It from my mother. She was
a strong minded woman. My father
was a regular bear, and she bad to
subdue him about once a day as long as
she lived.”—Chicago Tribune.
They Hold More.
“Do you ever wish you were a girl?”
asked the visitor who was waiting In
the reception room,
“Only at Christmas time,” answered
the boy. who was lingering In the door-
way.
“Why do you wish it then?”
“Because of the stockings they wear,”
was the prompt reply.—Chicago Post.
If Saved Her Life.
G< och’8 Mexican Syrup has accom¬
plished a cure in this neighborhood
which has astonished the people. Miss
Davis was given up to die by
attending physician She had lung
fever, The doctor satd she would die
before morning, and advised to discon¬
tinue his medicine as it was doing her
no good. H.r parents had a bottle of
Gooch's Mexican Syrup and Gooch’s
Quick Relief in the house- 1 bey at
once began 10 give the Syrup in doses
one hour apart, and frequently bathed
her chest with Quick Relief, Before
morning she was better, and after us¬
ing a few bottles of each, she is almoi-t
as well as evr>, It was almost like
raising the dead, and has established
the reputation of Gooch’s Mexican
Syrup here as a cough remedy ; we can
sell nothingelse.
J. & N. Sands. Trimble, AthensCo. O.
Gooch’s Mexican Syrup cures a sim¬
ple cough as if by magic, aid is the
best remedy fur whooping cough
Price 25 cents.
If Is hardly believable that anybody
should not know whst a “snaffle" is,
but a London magistrate recently desir¬
ed to be Informed, and nobody conld
tell him what a snaffle might be. A
solicitor thought It was the same thing
as the “curb,” and the clerk had an
idea It was a kind of cold in the head
which horses caught, causing them to
snuffle a good deal.—London Answers.
A Famous Temple.
The most magnificent work of archi¬
tecture in the world Is the Taj Mahal,
In Agra, Hindustan. It was erected by
Shah Jelian to the memory of fils fa¬
vorite queen. It Is octagonal In form,
of pure white marble, inlaid with Jas¬
per, earnellan, turquoise, agate, ame¬
thysts and sapphires. The w rk took
22.000 men 20 years to compl te, and
there were free gifts and the
* ah ,°!V wns * ree 1116 C08t * 8 e8t * mate< * at
Helping Him.
1 Mr. Backward-Well—er— yes. since
you ask me. I was thinking of consult¬
ing a fortiine teller.
Miss Coy—To find out whom you will
marry, eh?
Mr. Backward—Why—er—yes. 1—
Miss Coy- Why not ask me anti save
the fortune teller's fee toward the price
of the ring?— Philadelphia Press.
An Order Conld He Filled.
Customer (in Boston restaurant)—
Waller, have you any fried eels?
Walter- We have eels. sir. and they
are susceptible of being fried.—Les¬
lie’s Weekly.
The first mention of stamps Is In the
letters of the old Bishop Synesius of
Cyrene. on the Greek coast of Africa,
400 years after the Christian era.
Sheriff Sales for first Tues
day in Dec, 1901.
w ILL be sold befor- the court houae doer
in Buchanan, Ga, within the legal hour* Dec.
of sale on the lirst Tuesday in
1901, to the highest bidder for cash, the
following property, to-wlt:
Also at the same time and place will
bn gold the following described prop¬
erty. to-wit: One house and lot in
the town of Waco, Ga., said lot con¬
tain ng two acres more or ess, in land
lot No 240in the Seventh district and
Fifth section of Haralson county,
Ga, Said lot is bounded on the north
by the Southern railrdad and on the
east by the Brooks land, L a vie*l on
uni to be sold as the property of Peter
Huner under and by virtue of a 11 fa
issued from the justice’s court of the
226th district, G. M. in favor of Nel¬
son & Co. Defendant in ti fa notified
of levy as required by law.
Also at the same time and place will
be sold the following described prop¬
erty, to-wit : AH that tract or parcel
of land lying and being in Haralson
county, state of Georgia, described as
follows : The port h half of lot of land
No. 301 in the Eighth district aud 5th
secti n of Haralson county, Georgia,
containing one hundred aud one and
one-fourth acres, more or less. Said
property levied on aud to be sold as
the property of the defendant, *J. W,
Powell, by virtue, of a ft issued from
rhe superior court of Haralson county
in favor of the Equitable Mortgage
Company. Written notice of this levy
has been given to tenant in possession
a* required by law.
This November 7, 1901,
G. A. Shblnot. Sheriff.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Georgia Haralson county.—
Notice is hereby given to all debtors
anil creditor of the estate of John W.
Tomlinson, late of said county, de¬
ceased. to render in an account of
fhejr demands to me within the time
prescribed by law, properly made out.
And all persons indeb r ed to said de¬
ceased are hereby requested to make
immediate payment to the undersign¬
ed. This Oct. 1, 1901
G. W. Cantrell,
Admr of John W Tomlinson’s estate.
Petition For Administration.
Georgia, Haralson County:
To all whom it may concern,—N. C.
McPherson having (n proper form ap¬
plied lo me for permanent letters of
administration on the estate of J. E.
Jolley, late of said county, this is to
cite fill find singular, the creditors and
next of kin of J. E. Jolley, to be and
appear at my office within the time
allowed by law, and show c*»use, if anv
they can, why permanent administra¬
tion should not be granted to N C.
McPherson on J, E- Jolley’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture, this the 24th day of Oct., 1901,
Thus. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary,
Rule Nisi to Foreclose Mortgage
Superior Court, Haralson County, Ga.—
January Term, 1901.—It being repre¬
sented to the court that by by deed the *f petition
of Mrs. R. B. Bacon mortgage,
dated the 16th day of April, Eighteen hundred
and ninety-eight, Thomas O. Butler and Lottie
E. Butler conveyed to the said Mrs R. B. Ba¬
con the real estate as described in the forego¬
ing petition for the purrose of securing the
payment of the sum named In said mortgage,
and set out in the said foregoing petition.
It is ordered, That the said defendant do pay
into this court, principal, by the interest first and day costs of the due next
term the on
a,id mortgag, or show cause, If any he has to
the contrary, or that in default thereof fore¬
closure be granted to the said;petitioner of said
mortgage, and the equity of redemption of the
said defendant therein be forever barred; and
that service of this rule he perfected on said
defendant according to law.
This July 15, 1901. C. O. JANES,
Judge Superior Court Haralson County
Healthy ChUilreu Are Happy.
Mother’s Worm Syrup makes chil¬
dren healthy by expelling the worm
that make them ill. Children eat it on
bread.
NO 50.
7JX< «
ALL WOMEN
Wine of Cardui is the guardian
of a woman’s health and happi¬
ness from youth to old age. It
helps her safely into womanhood.
It sustains her during the trials
of pregnancy, childbirth and
motherhood, making labor easy
and preventing Hooding and mis-
oarriogo. It gently leads her
through the dangerous period
known as the change of life.
WINE" CARDUI
cures lsucorrhcea, falling of the
womb, and menstrual irregularity
in every form. It is valuable in
every trying period of a woman’s
life. It reinforces the nervous
system, acts directly on the geni¬
tal organs and is the finest tonic
for women known. Ask your
druggist for a $1.00 bottle of
Wine of Cardui.
I using Batearille, Wine Ala., July and 1L, Thed- WOO.
am of Cardui
ford's Black-Draught already. and I feel like a
different woman Several la¬
dies hero keep the medicines In their
homes all the time. I have three girls
and they are using it with me.
Mrs. KATH BROWDER.
For advice and literature, address, giving
symptom,, "The Ladica’ Advisory Depart¬
ment ”, The Chcttanooga Medicine Company,
Chattanooga, Term.
Application To Probate Will.
Mary D. Evans, propounded vs. Heirs at law
and Legatees of A G Brannon.
Application in Court of Ordinary of Haralson
County. deceased. Ga.. to probate will of A. G Bran¬
non.
To W. A. Brannon, 8 . A. Brannon, Meritt,
Texas, and Eufratees Evans, Arthur Evans and
!.ee Evans, of Heflin, Ala. You are hereby no¬
tified to be iind appear before the Ordinary’*
Court of said courty to be held on the first
Monday in December, if 1901. why thm and there to
show cause, any exists, the paper offered
last for probate will and by petitioner, of Mary G. D. Brannon, Evans, aa the
testament A. lata
of said county, deceased, should not be proven
in solemn form and admitted to record ss the
last will 'nd testament of said deceased. This
Sept. 16,1901. Thoa. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary.
Real Estate For Sale.
We have for sale a good farm on
Lookout Mountain, five miles froji
Fort Payne, Alabama., consisting of
120 acres; about 26 acres in cultiva¬
tion , good orchard, good bouse, sev¬
eral lasting springs, good corn mill,
water power tor gin and saw rill;
seventy-five acres of fine land to clear.
A great opportunity for the right
man. Terms: $500; $200 cash, one,
two and three years for remainder
wilh 8 per cent interest.
We also have several hundred acre*
of fine land on Sand and Lookout
Mountain, mostly unimproved, which
we will sell at reasonable prices.
Small cash payments—long time for
remainder, Address
HOWARD & ISBELL.
[47-81] Fort Payne, Ala.
Dismission From Guardianship.
Georgia. Haralson county.—H. C.
Ayers, guardian of W. H. and J. W.
Bowman, has, in proper form, applied
to me fora discharge from his guardi¬
anship of W H and 1 W Bowman, this
is therefore to notify all concerned, to
file their objections, if any they have,
on or before the first Monday in De¬
cember next, else he will be discharged
from his guardianship as applied for.
This October 21, 1901.
Thus. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary.
NOTICE.
All parties indebted to the un-
dersigned are requested to call and
make settlement at once or else
their accounts will be placed in
the hands of an officer for collec-
tion. T. P. Moore.
Honey To Loan.
ForHifeU capitalists have money
to loan on improved farms at a
very tow rate of luterest. If you
want money see me at once.
W. P. Colk,
Carrolltou, Ga.
Administrator’s Sale.
Georgia, aralson county.—
Agreeabl*- of to ai> order of the court
of ordinary said county, will be 1
sold before the court house door, in
Buchanan Georgia, between the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
December, 190 •, for cash, the following
described property, to-wit: The north
half of land lot No 164 in the Seventh
district and Fifth section of Haralson
county Georgia, containing lo 1 1-4
acres, more or less Sold as the proper¬
ty ol R M, Stanford, late of said coun¬
ty deceased. This Nov. 7, 19 1 ,
Mrs. Launa S’anford,
A dm*, of R. M. Su.ifhrd,