Newspaper Page Text
TF 9 ;<• H — A 1 Ty^Y i k T H
•k i\
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VOL. IV
Rf
B
"
T> Wi
is all right, if you are too fat;
and all wrong, if too thin already,
r Fat, . enough i for r your habit, I,- is •
healthy; a little more, or less, is
no great . i harm. rp I iat, r consult i
oo
a doctor; too thin, persistently
thin, , . no matter what cause, take
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver
Ou.
There are many causes of get¬
ting too thin; they all come
under these two heads: over¬
work and under-digestion.
Stop over-work, if you can;
but, whether you can or not,
take Scott’s Emulsion of Cod
Liver Oil, to balance yourself
with your work. You can’t live
on it~true—but, by it, you
can. There’s a limit, however;
,.. 11 tor r It. •
you pay •
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver
Oil . the readiest for
IS cure
u can’t eat,” unless u.uubb it iLcumcb mines of ui
your doing no WOrk--you can’t
long be well and strong, without
some sort of activity auivny.
this Th3 picture genuine on has It, ,^|gL Ik
take no Other.
, fr^^sarnDibits jSFEiL
<?reeabie'taste will a-
.*». Wm\IB m\
surortso you.
SCOTT & SOWNE iy i
Chemists, -•cs?-
40S New Pearl Yoik. Street,
50c. and $1.00; all druggists.
A MATTER OF TEMPERAMENT.
‘The (lay 1 r fine,” quoth Mary Jane,
•'Yet, lest it should come on to rain,
My waterproof and umbeTell
And rubber shoes 1*11 take as ■well;
For, though these may be troublesome
In case the showers do not come,
Methitiks ’twere better, after all,
To be prepared, lest worst 1 befall.’*
•'The day is fair,” cried Jeanne Marie;
“The ctay is fair—ah, tres-joli!
My gayest hat. my prettiest dress,
l shall put on. What happiness!
But if it rains—well, wha,t of that?
I’ll pat another dress and hat!
Ah. f»ut I’ll look so fresh and £ay
The sun will have to shine all day!”
— Alice Reid in Harper’s.
FLAVOR IN FOODS.
TbJ* Quality is as Much a Necessity
a* Is Nutriment.
Chemist's tel! us that cheese is one of
the most nutritious and at the same
time one of the cheapest of foods. Its
nutritive value is greater thau meat,
while Its cost Is much less. But this
chemical aspect of the matter does not
express the real value of the cheese as
s. food. Cheese Is eaten not because of
its uutritlve value as expressed hy the
amount of pvoteids, fats and carbohy¬
drates that it contains, but always be-
cause of its flavor.
Now, physiologists do not find that
flavor has any food value. They teach
over and aver again that our foodstuffs
ore pvoteids,fats and carbohydrates and
taut as food flavor plays absolutely no
part.. But at the saute time they tell us
that the body would be unable to live
upon these foodstuffs were it not for
the flavors. If one were compelled to
eat pure food without flavors, like the
white of an egg. It Is doubtful whether
one could for a week at a time consume
a sufficiency of food to supply bis bod¬
ily needs. Flavor is as necessary as nu¬
triment. it gives a zest to the food and
thus enables us to consume it properly,
and, secondly, it stimulates the glands
to secrete, so that the foods may be
satisfactorily digested and assimilated.
The whole art of ceoki-g, the great
development of flavoring products, the
high prices paid for special foods like
lobsters and-oysters—these and nurner-
ous nther factors connected with food
supply and production are based solely
upon ibis demand for flavor. Flavor is
a necessity, but it is not particularly
Important what the flavor may be. This
is shown by the fact that different peo-
CiCi* have. swcJt djllorejiL tajifes in this
"Doja't aivo Up tti© Ship.”
BUCHANAN, GA,. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, iqoi.
respect. The garlic of the Italian arm
the n-d peppe, of the Mexican serve
tlit* same purpose as the vanilla which
wt* put in our Ice cream, and all play
the part of giving a relish to the food
and stimulating the digestive organs to
proper activity.—Professor LI. \Y. Corn
in Popular Science Monthly.
Tiie Hanimlna Bird'* Flljrtit.
The flight of the little humming bird
Is more remarkable than that of the
eagle. We can understand the flapping
of tlie eagle’s Immense wing supporting
a comparatively , lKht „ 0(ly . But our
little bird has a plump body. His wings
are not wide, but long, so he must
move them rapidly to sustain his
weight. and this he can do to perfcc-
tion. The vibrations of his wings are
so rapid as to make them almost invisi-
l,1 °- He can nS( ' t!K ‘ m to SHStn!n 1,im -
self in midair, with bis body as motion-
less as if perched on a twig. In this
way he can sip the nectar of the deli¬
cate, fine stemmed flowers without
alighting for a moment. He never
alights while so engaged. He moves
from flower to flower with a graceful
and rapid movement, sometimes chas¬
ing away a bee or humming bird moth,
of which he is very Jealous." Nor is he
much more favorably Impressed with
any small birds that seem in his way.
He knows his power of flight, and he
has no fear of any other bird.—Henry
Hales in St. Nicholas.
Lenities For the Zoo.
The national zoo has just received
through an animal dealer in Philadel-
phia a magnificent pair of the large
black and white lemurs indigenous to
(* ie island of Madagascar. This m»kes
the fourth pair of these animals
brought to this country, and. ill addi-
ti<m to highly attractive by rea-
*
g()n of fhojl . ( , oat of , ong j pf b , ac k an( j
snow white bair aud their abnormally
large ■ W they are Of
very great interest from the viewpoint
of science and evolution.
The lemur stands in (lie same rela-
tion to apes and monkeys as tliey in
turn stand to the human race, only in
the case of the lemurs and apes the
“missing link” connecting the two gen-
en> 18 1,1 len! 8,1,1 ac,,,nl existence, he-
j n g realized in the "aye-aye.” a peeul-
iar animal, also of Madagascar, that is
as much lemur as it is simian.
The Itrlorl Conrlroue.
A story oft told Is that oi Eoi'd -.
wlio when a young man was opposing
Mr. Fngden, .subsequently lord chancel¬
lor of England, in a parliamentary con¬
test. “He’s the son of a country bar¬
ber." said the noble lord.
Ileplyil^t afterward. Mr Sugden said:
“His lordship has told you that I aw
nothing but the son of a country bar-
her, but be has not told you all, for 1
have been a barber myself und worked
In my father’s shop, and all 1 wish to
say about that is that had his lordship
been born the son of a country barber
he would have been a barber still. That,
to my mind, is quite clear.”—Household
Words.
He Had Great Expectations.
“How do you account for the fact
that Miss Bullion, the wealthiest heir-
ess of the season, is going to marry
Nodo, who hasn’t a cent to his nameV”
“Oh. but he has great expectations.”
“He has? What are they?”
“He is going to marry Miss Bullion.”
—New York Times,
Rules of grammar cannot give us a
mastery of language, rules of rhetoric
cannot make us eloquent, rules of con-
duct cannot make us good.—Aphorisms
and Reflections,
Inherited Prowess.
“To what,” sked the young woman
with the notebook, "do you attribute
your remarkable power in training
these animals and keeping them In
subjection?”
“Well.” replied Mile. Castella, the
lady wonder of the arena. “I think 1
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 yon wish it then?”
“Because of the stockings they wear,”
was the prompt reply.—Chicago Post
A DARWINIAN THEORY.
Why the Drowning: Man Always
Throws t’p Ills (Hindu.
The usual idea that a drowning man
Is stretching out his hands for aid or
“catching at straws” is not altogether
satisfactory. A possible explanation
has lately been suggested, and this
?tl p p0S e S n,af fne drowning h,an. losing
all his acquired habits and even some
of those inherited from more recent
parents, in ids terror g ..os hack to the
Instinctive movements of Lis arboreal
ancestors, and the movements of the
drowning man are those of a frighten-
ed ape seeking safety hy clinging to
tin* nearest tree.
The movement is certainly instinc-
tive, for it can only be eliminated by
considerable training and voluntary
efforts, and yet it is fatal to the indi-
! vidual, for the specific gravity of no
: hitman body is so nearly that of water
’
that .. . ,, the removal i of . the arms from the
supporting fluid at once sinks the face
beneath the surface. In cases of so
called “cramps” the victim, often a
highly trained swimmer, generally
throws up the hands, hut these cases
are probably due to heart failure, and a
similar movement takes place on land
when the subject receives a fa tab heart
wound, and it is even a common ex¬
j pression of shock or astonishment. The
ordinary .. movements of . walking ,, or run-
ning would keep a man’s face above
water, but these curious climbing
movements of both hands and feet
make floating impossible and are re¬
sponsible for many deaths by drown¬
ing.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Why HI* Clock Was Slow.
There is an Italian fruit dealer, with
a well stocked store near one of the
suburban railway stations, who has
adopted a unique device, and one
which shows a deep knowledge of tin
man nature, to hold his own in coai-
petition with another dealer. whose
stand is some fifty yards nearer the
station than his own. A. commuter
was leisurely peeling a banana in his
store the other (lay when the Italian
remarked:
"Y.on gotta flV minute before your
train.
“No: twenty.” re:,!., d t.m cmnmuter.
glancing at a I'.f e’oi k on the wall
“Ti:ata dock fi: nrtiute slow "
.<•> tt
said tie- P.e.'.e ' I kee;m :t -■ i v.
: IV; pi’ us d tn a-here. I ka iti
clock, getta excite, go way. not hn.v
Time to buy fit Pedro’s stand. Dbtta
here Now keepa clock slow, get
tmteha trade. AO. .... I not iettu peep]
miss train 1 reiki th"in af’er they
buy de hanau'.”—New York Commer
eial Advertiser.
It SarciS SIci* Life.
Gooch’s Mexican Syrup has aecmri-
uGheri a cure in this neighborhood
which has astonished the people. Miss
Davis was given up to die hy Iter
a t te n d i 11 g p h y i via n S h o had lung
-, n -er, The doctor said she would
b-fore morning, and advised to diseon-
ti(iu** hi., m ■ ire as it >> (Icing her
nog' (1. H'r parents had a bottle of
Gooch’s Mexican Syrup and Gooch’s
Quick Belief in ihe house ” bey at
once began to give the Syrup in doses
eve hour apart, aud frequently bathed
her chest with Quick Relief, Before
mart ing she was better, and after us-
ing a few bottles of each, she ts almo; t
as well as ev H was almost like
raising the dead, and has established
ihe reputation of Go oil’s Mexican
Sirup here as a cough remedy ;we can
sell nothingelse.
J. & N. Sands, Trimble, Athens Go. O.
Gooch's M' xican Syrup cures a sim¬
ple cough as ifb.v m . a d is the
best remedy ffir whooping cough
Price 25 cents.
Notice Of Dismission.
Georgia, Haralson County. adminis¬
Whereas. Walter Morrow,
trator of J. C. Murray, represents to
the court in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has
fully administered J. C. Murray’s
estate. This is therefore to cite all
persons concerned kindred and cred¬
itors to show cause, if any they can,
why said administrator should not be
discharged from his administration
and receive letters of dismission on the
first Monday in Feb,, 1902. This No¬
vember 6. 1901.
Thos. A, Hutcheson, Ordinary,
AppS'calior, Tor Administration.
Georgia Haralson County.
To all whom it may concern;—F. I*.
Smith having, in proper form applied
to v e for permanent letters of admin
istratii n on the estate of L. G. Smith,
late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular the creditors and next of
kin of L. G, Smith Vo be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by
law, aud show cause, if any they can,
why permanent administration should
not be granted to F. P. Smith on LG.
Smith’s estate. Witness my hand an*
-(fic»a’ signature, this the 6th day of
November, 1901.
Tims. A. Hutcheson , Ordinary.
Pile-aitse Cures Piles.
... . refunded if it ever fails.
Sh riff Sal s for first l ues
clay in Dec, 1901.
TYT \jy 1 ’'- M>,< ' he for tin; court turns? d<«»
"/m 'ViV/YUI'' Tufflt.C
highest Bidder t'«*i v».«u, the
f ° aIYAD .
me ami ph.ee will
b . M>!ll th e following described prop-
erty, to-wit; One house and lot in
the town of Waco, Ua„ said lot con-
aio ng t v« acre, more or ,es-. in laud
X > 2-40 1 o the S-venth district and
Filth s ciio'i o I bu'a'.soii e; u nt y,
(1 i. S lid lot is b iU' dsd >in (he north
. t .... ! T 'A f . " ‘
,
east i) y t ile Brooks hind , Levied on
u ; hf . S))Ut aS the pr „ pwrt) of , V ter
n-mer under and t>v virtue oi n ti fa
j SSIJ q rroni . he j ;s'iiec's eo.irt of the
22i>! h district, (1 M. m 1 vorot Nel-
son & Go. I) 'eml.nt iti '.a notified
levy us required (m law.
Also at the same time and pi ee will
b“ s| ild fh» following described prop-
erty, to-wit: AH that tract or parcel
of land tying' and being in II iralson
county , state of Georgia, described as
The north half of lot of land
Xl) 3o , , h „ , hlh llisrrict an d ,5th
section of Haralson county, Georgia,
containing One hundred and one Said »nd
one fourth acres, mure or less.
property levied on and to be sold i;i
i lie property of the defendant, .J.
Powell, bv virtue of a 11 issued from
i be superior court of Ilaraisott county
ti favor of the Equitable Aloriguge
Company. Written notice of possession this levy
tias been given to tenant in
a- required by law.
This November 7, 1901,
<}. -V. Skelnct. Sheriff.
Notice to Debtors smsl Creditors.
Geory-ia Haral-on county.—
Notice is hereby given to all debtors
at ,t creditor of the estate of John \V.
Tomlinson, late of said county, de-
s-d. to .render in an account of
Ih-ir demands to ins within the time
,'"rson«T/,dJK to"^
■.-.sed are hen-hv request-,! to make
.... m ,ir t I the und rsign-
_ Tho* G- 1 . 1 . 1191
I G, W. Cantrell,
! Adu r of John W T"tnb tisoti’s estate.
Priitlvn 5’»r Aiimluistrattoa.
,
Jjar.is,.,, c„„,.r i;
,! ' ; ' ’ .' 1 H 1 1 m ’*• —N '•'* (
l.i-r ,ersoi> , v; eg in proper form a;. -
>li to etc or p-rtrunenf letters of
lino uiioiiin nnl'i,. ,',t-.i.' tutc Of o' ; 1,' h
. -j.
iclley. la'P (it . . l county, this lo
sai is
cite t'.ii and singular, tite creditors and
m-xf of kin of E. Jolley, t<> he and
appear at iny oflic within the time
allowed by law, siidshow c„use, if any
they can, why pertmuient H(imini=trn
'in" should not- he granted to N. C.
McPherson on J. E. Jolley’s estate.
Wit megs my band and official signa
,urf L this fb^ 24tb day of Out., 1901 .
Thos. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary,
Rule Nisi to Foreclose Mortgage
Superior Couit, Haralson County, < 1 a.—
January Terra, 1901.—it being repre¬
sented of R. to B. Bacon the court that hy by deed the at mortgage, petition
Mrs.
dated the ltith day of April, Eighteen hundred
and ninety-eight, Thomas O. Butler and Lottie
E. Butler conveyed to described the said Mrs the It. forego¬ B. Ba¬
con the real estate as in
ing petition for the purpose 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, by the fiist day of the due next
term, id the piincipal, show interest and if costs lie has on
S' mortgag, or cause, any to
the contrary, or that in default thereof fore¬
closure be granted to the said petitioner of said
mortgage, and the equity of redemption barred; of and the
said defendant therein he forever
that sin vice of this rule bn perfected on said
defendant This according 1901/ to law.
July 15, C. G. JANES,
Judge Superior Court Haralson County
A itiRlaik! rater's Sale.
Georgia, Haralson County.
• Agreeable to ' n order passed hy the
court of ordinary of Haralson county,
,Ga.. wi I be so d before the court
house door, at Buchanan, Ga., be¬
tween the legal hours of sale, on the
first Tuesday in December. 1901, for
cash, tiie following describ' d proper¬
ty, to-wit: Eighty-live acres of land
more or less, being tiie south-east half
of (and lot No 209 in the Seventh dis¬
trict and H'ittli section of Haralson
county Georgia, except 20 acres in the
south-east corner of said lot as de-
cribed in deed from John ShHnutt to
W J Reeves. Al-o except two acres
near Die center of the south line said
two acres knov^n as church property;
ilso exoep' a small tract in the south¬
west corner of said lot deeded to Mark
L Dean by VV J Reeves; with good
dwelling and outbuildings situated
thereon, To be sold as the property of
Mrs. Elvira Robinson, deceased.
This November 6, 901.
Jesse lien!], Admr.
Notice For Year’s NupporJ.
Georgia, Haralson county.
Mrs. M. A. Boswell, widow of J. A.
Boswell, deceits- d, has m proper form
ipplied to me for a twelve months
• upport out of the estate of said J . A.
Boswell. Now. this is to cite all and
Angular '■ he creditors and nest of k'n
.if J. A Boswell that said application
wilt tre heard at mv office in Buchan¬
an, Ga., at 10 o’clock a. tn.,on the first
Monday in December, 1901. This No¬
vember 7, 1901.
Thos. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary.
NO 51.
<"W JMy
N-
ML WOMEN
9 Wine of Cardui is tke guardian
W of a woman’s health aud happi-
fi ness from youth to old age. R
g helps her safely into womanhood.
[ H of It sustains her during childbirth the trials und j
pregnancy, g 8
\ motherhood, making labor easy
| i and preventing flooding and mis- j
carriage. It gently leads her R
ffi through the dangerous period K
u known as the change of life. f
iiSE 0f €MISUl
g cures leucorrhoea, falling of the
a womb, and menstrual irregularity
u in every form. It is valuable in
every trying period of a woman’s
b life. It reinforces the nervous
g system, acts directly on the geni-
Rj tal organs and is the finest tonic
“ for women known. Ask your
druggist for a $1.00 bottle of
Wine of Cardui.
nsHjt Bateaville, Wine Cardui Ala., July aud 11, T’hod- 1900. i |
I am of
ford fUuax-Jlr.nislit. and 1 feel like a j j
different diea here woman 'K.rei tha already. medicines Several in their la- j
hoir.ee all tke using t hue. it with 1 have three girls j 1
and they are KATE rue. UKOWDER. |
Mrs.
For litTature, addr
symptoias, " lae Ladies’ Xdfisor rK Loisirt-
The ("'auauooga MedleUe omtaujy,
I CliHltanwga, Teiui.
tiqiliviifiou To Vroiiale Mill.
Mary I>. Uvans, proponnder, vs. Heirs at law
and Legatees of A (4 Brannon. of Haralson
Application <4a.. in Court probate of Ordinary will of A. U Bran-
County. deceased. to
noil.
To W. A. Brannon, S. A. Itrannon, Merrit,
Tex.is, and Kufratees Evans. Arthur Evans and
l.re Evans, and of Iletlin, Ala. before You are hereby Ordinary’s no¬
tified to lie appear the flint
Court of said com ty to lie held on the
M> ndav in December, 1901. then and there to
show cause, if any exists, why the paper offerrd
for probate l>v petitioner, Mary D, Evans, as the
last will and testament of A. G. Brannon, late
of said county, deceased, should not be proven
in sol'lull form and admitted to record as the
W in .,ml testament of said deceased. This
Sept. I6.10J1. Thos. A. Hutcheson, Ordinary,
Rea! Estate For Sale.
We have for sale a good farm on
Lookout Mounfatn, five miles from
Fort Payne, Alabama., consisting of
120 acres; about 2o acres in caltiva-
tion, good orchard, good house, sev-
ra! lasting springs, good corn mill,
water power for gin and saw mill;
seventy-five acres of fine land to clear.
A great opportunity for the right
man. Terms; $600; $p200 cash, one,
two ami three years lor remainder
with 8 per cent interest.
We also have several hundred acres
of fine land on Sand and Lookout
Mountain, mostly uriinr. proved, which
we will sell at reasonable prices.
Small cash payments — long time for
remainder, Address
HOWARD & ISBELL,
[47-8t] Fort Fay ne, Ala.
Dismission From Limrdianslnp.
Georgia. Haralson county.—H. C.
Ayers, guardian of W. H. and J. W.
Bowman, lias, in proper form, applied
to me fora discharge from his guardi¬
anship of \V II and ' W bowman. this
is therefore to notify ail concerned, to
file their objections, if any they have,
on or before the first Monday In De¬
cember next, else tie will b<* discharged
from his guardianship as applied for.
This October 21, 1901.
Thos A. Hutcheson, Ordinary.
NOTICE.
All parties indebted to the un¬
dersigned are requested tocalland
make settlement at once or else
their accounts will be placed in
the hands of an officer for collec¬
tion. T P. Moore.
Money To Loan.
Foreign capitalists have money
to loan on improved farms at a
very low rate of interest. If you
want monev see me at once.
W. P. Cole,
Carrollton, Ga.
AumliilMralor’if Sale.
Georgia, aralson county.—
Agreeable to an order of the court
of ordinary i f said county, will be
sold before the court house door, in
Buchanan Georgia, between the legal
he irs of sale, on the first Tuesday in
!> comber, 190 1 , for cash, the following
described property, to-wit: Tiie north
half of lurid lot No 164 in the Seventh
district and Fifth section of Haralson
county Georgia, containing 10; 1-4
acres, more or less Sold as the proper¬
ly ot R. M. Stanford, late of sa«d coun¬
ty deceased, This Nov. 7, ID 1,
Mrs. Launa Stanf<—d,
A dm x. of JR. M. tttaniord.