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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1890)
Have good animals on the farm, such is horses, cows, etc. JN '• ’.ful with I!* 1 stork. bousing nud e-Vng them. 1 tie feed -ii >n!d bed oii. and to th° n- j * d~ of the .iui iijats, and must be liberal. The feitilizers made on the farm ph* aid he c: ref ally f-r,v and. Th-y t-boi 1i be fitted f>r the difierent crop -by ary pu.c'ased audit on lice-' and appiiel m quantities 1 e-t ad&i-trd to the land to be plant ed. In the Spring and Summer every body is liable to Bowel troubles. Ijai ar’s D .nrbaea Mixture is the be. c t medicine b-i thrvu. T ]rr pavation should be thor ough rid the laud planted at the proper time, ami the cultivation should go on at the pi op. r time, and in the b< stmanner. Nothing should be negßch Ito insure t n abundant yield. % IJi] ' good ln-lp and' ktep them at WOk ' ii the farm, just as the manu factioer would do in his factory. 1 Sue -k this speech, as I tell you, tripp ngly on the tongue. Say that on -< f the great benefactions of the a"e is a small bottle of Salvation Oil O . I the gre test cure on earth for pain. f Onl v 27 cents. good agricultural Bids lo work with, nut necessarily PRtpcm-ive one but suclwis are strong [durable aud effective. *Those which I save manual labor largely are most ik only as much land as yon can thoroughly enrich and work to advantage. The day is past for H.kumning vast fields and gathering a lit t! * more than a baby carriage could ihttlJ. t When lovely woman stoops to fol -I\’, and goes out in the snow without her India rubbers, the only art to cure her cold is to buy one bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup at £scts and take it. But your produce in good shape for marketing, deliver properly and get afe ir ] lice for it. It is m this way that wile awake farmers make their occupatic n ray as well or bet ter than any other laboring pursuit. Dr. John Bull of Louisville, Ivy., showed his love for little children when he invested those dainty little candies ho named Dr. Bull’s Worm Desuoyers. for the children but it’s death to tlie worms. Thousands of cattle have died this season for lack of grass and water Ariz on a. New Mexico and portions of | Colorado, where a prolonged drought has occured. One of the cheapest and best made fountains in an ordinary flower pot reversed into a glazed saucer. Fit a cork into the hole A the pot, fillet vßth water it. W M In all cases where a diuretic is re spired, we reccomend the use of Dr. Hi' Antidote, as relia ble its effects, also palatable. The condition of the corn crop is lowest in the eastern part of the Ohio valley and relatively high in the corn states further west. be a competitive exWPft of fruits at the World’s fair between California and Florida. From Emporia, Kan., come reports of a mammoth procession of Farmer’s organizations headed by the Farmers Alliance, in which some 20,000 per sons joined. DII.J)B*JMMON DS LIGHTEN G lienmdy fpr Rheumatism has received the unqualified endorsement of the medical faculty as being a safe and remarkably efficient preparation for the relief and speedy cure of Rheu matism. Its work is so speedy and miraculous that benefit is felt from the first dose, and one bottle is war ranted to cure any ordinary case. bv druggists. Price $5, for %arge bottle, or sent by prepaid ex press on receipt of price by Drum mond Medicine Cos., 48-50 Maiden Lane, New York. If the borers were not sought for during August, gvwver all quince, perch, apple and trees now, and kill the quince and peach tree will do good unless its owner makes Rigorous suc cessful war upon the borer. Cut clear down to the bottom of the hole, and leave it so that no water can re main in it, to save rotting.—Farm Journal. 1 F CEIE K Ait NIC A SALT E The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Fleers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores. Tetter. CkapecT Hands, Chilblains Corns, ana all Skin Eruptions, and pcstive cures Files or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cec is per box. Fatale by FY^j^jhtower. JOSH BILLINGS’ PHILOSOPHY. All successful flirts have sharp f J > —on.' e'" th kopon yu and n- on the o?be” ]lu ll >v. Vaui'y is called a dacrecll and lj pas bun. but the good tbiiigs that men do can eften be tr c, and lew tlitir van ity than tew thi ir virt-ew Man is a 1 ih eddikated animal. Don't never proves;, yuug man; for if yutnovesY wrong, nob. dy will forgit it, and if yu provesy eight n> bodily will remember ii. Tongue tied wimmrn are very sknrse an 1 very valuable. Excentricitys when ih y are natral are some mdika-huu ova superior mind; tl oz- who think different from others arc apt tew act different. Vain men should be treated azj boys treat b adders—bio them up till j they bust. It z a grate art ts v* be superior ! tew others without letting them kno it. t There iz not only phuu but thare iz virtew in a harty laff; animals can’t laff :%ad the devil wont. Don’t never quarrel with a loafer. Skurrillilf iz Liz trade; you never kan makethHi ashamed but ne iz sure taw makT yu. I hav alwuz noliced that the best talker whoze thoughts agree with our own. He who ackquires wealth dishon estly iz too corrupt to enjoy it.— York weekly. ELECTRIC BITTERS. This remedy is becoming so well known and so popular a| to need no special mention. All who have use Electrict Bitters sing the same song of pillse.—A purer medicine does not exist and it to do* all that is claimecr Electee Bitters will cure all disease of the haver and remove Pimples, Boday Saft ivllffm and other affections caused by impure blood.—Will drive Malaria fiom the system and prevent as well ar cure all Malarial fevers.—For cure of Headache,, Ccn sumpation and Indigestion try Elec tric Bitters—Eutii^s&tisf action gua ranteed, or m^prrefunded. —Price 50 cts. per bottle at J. W Hight^^BsDrugstore. —More human beings live on ba nanas than Ijpe on flour. —The ideal melon is of tho size and foim of a large ostrich egg. A piece of old sacking, tacked ov er the roost and then frequently sat urated with oil is an excellent le vice for keeping off the lice. is the time to select out the poor mongrel fowls, lat them up well and dispose of them. By so doing you will improve your flock. WHEN DOCTORS FALL OUT. “A philosophy for dogs” is what Carlyle pronounced one of Prof. Tyndall’s carefully prepared lectures. Ha said it with a disdainful snort, too. AY hen eminent authorities like these disagree, you canupt blwnetke public for being the prem ises; but when from a subject is showered wit 11 eonimen dation, it is you to be of a columns to rnerdßaote the many elament whence have come praise AA estmoreland s Calisaja To/c. Its popularity is pketnenay Mr. J. 8. Duckhalter, of Augusta, Ga., finds the Tonic a rare anti-periodic and an eradicator of malarial poison from the system He is pleased to reccomend it to his friends. It is for sale by J. W. Hightower. A neglected orchard full of weeds ar.d grass is nice place for field mice in winter, This fact should be con soling to the shiftless fruit grow er. \ * When a successful fruit grower goes into general farming he will be a better farmer than the average man. Fruit culture has been education to him. Mounds about trees if well made and beaten hard may keep mice from girding them in winter, but they will not pay to build against the peach borer. The expense of fruit culture is of ten increased by the use antiquated or worn out tools. The amount and ease of the work accomplished by using good tools often makes poor tools costly at any price. PILES PILES ITCHING PILES Symptoms —Mixture; interne itch ing and stinging most : t niglj worse by scratching If allc-' < and to con tinue tumors form, wl i u often bleed and ulcerate. becomir _ very sore. Swayne's Ointment sti s the itching and bleeding, heals uh - ration and in most cases removes tin- tumors. At druggists, or for 50 cents. Dr. Swayne &|^MPMadelpliia Men Should Wear Corsets. It may sound awful to say so, but do you know I think that men ought to wear corsets? Not steels, stiff whale bones and strong lacings and all that, but something to remind them that nat ure intended them to stand straight, and that they should lay claim to a sugges tion of a waistline. When a man gets to be 30 cr a little more he goes all to pieces in looks, unless he is made of un common metal. At 30 a man is married or gives up the idea. Whatever his con dition, his main object in life is to take comfort. He takes comfort. In a year or #wo his shoulders, that were firm and square, take on a pathetic droop. The coat that was buttoned up with so much pride and showed off the symmetrical back and waist in such fine lines is apt to swing open, the smooth front becomes a wrinkled neneftity, and that waist line, that was so symmetrical, is lost in what is called a “stomach.” I know some men take great pride in that comfortable looking stomach. It does show that life is worth the living, but it rJso proves that a man is getting on in years, and each year .vdds several inches-' to* the waist measure, and—and—it isn't graceful if it ir comfortable. Now, a corset or baud, say eight or ten inches wide, made with heavy cords j stitched in solidly to give firmness, in the front several pieces of silk elastic tape and the back provided with buckles and straps, would not be uncomfortable to wear and would be a support for the stomach that cannot stand too much comfort without a sacrifice vf symmetry and gract, —Chicago Herald. They’ve Lost 31 ill joins. A thief undiscovered belongs cts mr.yh■ to the outfit of a phenomenally fame-as singer as her indispensable rtrage pot. The lack of a perfect shape does not sig nify, but the lack of a thief would be ruin. Adelina Patti lins been robbed by night and by day, in Europe and Amer ica, on shore and at sea,-in hotels and on* railway Jpains. Carlotta-Patti and Chris tine Nilsson Hid—but why mention na^s. An incredible'- amounts- of diemonds and jewels in this way without ever tunning up again. Kut the lady artists are forgiving. They.dk). not prosecute the thieves. They do not go to the police. They do not offer rewards. Perhaps they know that the gold in-their throats can easily be coined, and that their rippling notes can soon be chamged into rows of pearlk They are easy go ing anAsoon forge * their loss. A-acyal presenimto a lady artist which does not get st*n has missed its object, and cases have indeed occurred where pres ents which were never given were stolen, —Pall Mall Gazette; Double Sashes far Railway Car?. In consequence of tlio decided 1 addition > to the comfort of travelers of double sashes- in passenger cars by reason of the prevention of the admission of cold air in winter and dust in summer several railway companies have decided to use double windows altogether in the future,- and this conclusion has probably been hastened by the fact that many best day coaches and chair carßiyal special cars in the richness of plushes and interior decorations, and 1 they cannot afford t o-have such: fittings rapidly destroyed by the dust. The comparative ease with which at car fitted with double windows can be heated in winter is also a consideration. They not only prevent cold air leaking in where it is not wanted, but they also interpose a layer of comparatively still air between the warm air in the car and the cold atmosphere outside, thereby preventing the loss of considerable heat by conduction and convection.—New Orleans Picayune. * A Dentisit's Wages. Dr. Anderson, the Fifth avenue dem tist, who plugs up the molars of me Four Hundred, says that he has made SSOO in a day, but only once. A lady came to him who wanted diamonds put in a gold filling of her front teeth. “It waevident,” said Dr. Anderson, “that she* ad just come into her inheritance. She seemed so anxious to spend money. I didn’t approve of the diamonds, and told her so, but she would have them, and I lmmored her to such an extent that my day’s work netted me SSOO. AVhat do I make ordinarily? Well, I charge S2O an hour, and I rarely work more than five hours. People don’t care to come before 10 in the morning, and late in the afternoon the light -is not good. One hundred dollars a day is about the extent of what a dentist can make, and it is the most exacting of all the professions.”—New York Press. A Salamander Clock. % That a clock would continue to run in the midst of roaring flames for any length of time few people would be lieve, jet that such was the case in the fire which destroyed the Sycaway villa near Troy has been proved conclusively. 1 From tbe ruins of the building was taken a sinalP calendar clock. The hands had stopped at 11:40 o’clock, or nearly an hour and a half after the fire broke out. The calendar dial showed the hand at Sunday. The clock was de stroj'ed by the heat and flames bej'ond all hope of repair. It must have con tinued to run long after the villa was a blackened ruin. It was found in the center of a pile of debris.—Albany Ex press. Francis Wilson’s Success. To what do I attribute my success in burlesque opera? Well, I imagine that it is principally due to the manner in which I work. I like the stage and love to act. From the moment I appear I enter with zest into the fun of the per formance, and the humor is all from the heart. And what comes from the heart is always convincing.—Francis Wilson in Kate Field's Washington. * The floating island in Sadawga lake, m the town of Whittingham, A't., is one of the most remarkable freaks of nature and one of the greatestfcuriosities in the world. The island contains over a hun dred it actually floats upon the toi^ftf^Vater. Women on Another Star. In Catmlle Flammarion’s last romance of the stars some quaint and interesting fancies are given regarding the planet Mars. The poet-astronomer imagines that in our next starry neighbor the density is so slight that material sub stances are very light, and that thus the living beings corresponding to our selves are vastly more ethereal,- delicate and sensitive than the inhabitants of earth. Dwelling farther from the sun than we, tlieir optic nerve is more pow erful, and that fact, together with su perior magnetic and electric influences, creates senses- unknown to us and un imaginable by us. Everything is so much less ponderable, so much more un substantial than with ns, be goes on to fancy, that the people there might be called thinking and living winged flow ers, for ru the tenuous atmosphere wings had the first chance at development, rather than a more terrestrial method of ge#ing about, evolution having taken place in a series of winged species, and the people living a3 much an tire air and on aerial plants as on 1 the ground. Here also the density of the body and its weight being so slight, all organisms are very light and delicate, ik> other food being taken thava; that drawn from the atmosphere; thus the female sex is the predominating one, living, or* the airs of spring and 'the perfume of flowers, the absence of gross food preventing groso ideas and clarifying the intellect to*an immense power, while an unspeak able charm is exercised by these-women in-tin* fluttering of their wings and in the kiss of a mouth that never has•oat*ai. —Harper's Bazar. Special Delivery Staippsi He-was a stamp* fiend, young and'pre cocious. The plain American stamp, had no interest for him. Ho was making a collection of foreign ones,-and so when they sent him down 4;© the postoflic® fos a package he did. not pay much atten tion, but brought it home sad. .handed it over, and skipped out to play tag. Next day they showed him anew sister whci had arrived. He looked at-her with 6ome*uriosity. “Sfly, where did she comerfroru?” “Oh, from licavern” “From heaven! Is lmow. That, was tile package I brought from the postoffiee yesterday, and I nevre.kno wad .anything about it”' " “Yea.” “Golly!: why didn't you save me the stamps?’—San Francisco Chronicle. LADIES pleading iitoaio, or children that SMnt NaildLa®. up, should- take ikowsi’B j.ir i*mrasas. this plmmbi to taka, &irm MaAtria, Indices: %mii ui jm f waUrA it. / ’ 1891. | flarpß/s Magazine, ILLUSTRATED® 81 The- important series of papers cm South America, by Theodore Child, will be continued in Harper's Maga zine dining the greater part of the year 1891. The articles on South CaSfornia, by Charles Dudley War ner,.will also be continued.. Among other noteworthy attractions will be a novel by Charles Egbret Craddock a collection of original drawings by AY. At. Thackeray.,, now published for the first time; a novel written and illustrated by George da. Maurierp a novelette by AYilliam Dean Howells; and a series of papers en London by Walter Besant. In the number a variety of illus trated papers and other articles on subjects of timely interest, as well as in the unrivalled character of its short stories, poems v etc., Harper’s Magazine will continue to maintain, that standard of excellence for which, it has been so long distinguished. Harpers Periodicals* t Per Year. Harper’s Magazine 84.00 Harper’s Weekly 4.00 Harper’s Bazar 4.00 Harper's Young People 2.00 -Postage Free to all subscribers in te United States, Canada, and Mexico. The Volumes of the Magazine be gin with the Numbers for June and December of each year. AVhen no time is specified, subscriptions with the Number current at ihe time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper’s Maga zine for three years back, in neat cloth binding, w'ill be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of §3.00 per vol ume. Cloth Cases, foutbinding, 50 cents each—by mail, post paid. Index to •Harper’s Magazine, Alphabetical, Analytican, and Classi fied, for Volumes Ito 70, inclusive, from June, 1850, to June, 1885, one vol., Bvo, Cloth, $4.00. Remittances should be made by Post-office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chances of loss. Newspapers are not tu copy this ad vertisement without the express or der of Harper Adctess: HARPERS A BROTH ERS, York. I RHEUMATISM, AMD PAINS’ ' READ Msjirs. C. L. F.iti & C:., of BssczoriUe, Ah., ~r.it tilt “SOT6AITS ZJmXSI ij i Dead Shot for Dots. V?a enrol two gsrere casa oa exp p'.aee that sseasl certain to dio.” i If yen are interertsd inthoahore, I TT2ITS to these parties ands . that tostiaenials art OSIT7IITE. The WEBB MAN FG. CO. prop'rs tiivsHville Jenn. ATLANTA, Ga., AND DALLAS, TEXAS, iWI aijaLiaruE’-ft.oTrru.jsiis Cotton Gins, Feelers, Gonfisnsors & Presses,! 00T"3?02>T SZSrEHZD- Olla HvXlifeuS, Shafting, Pulleys, Wand Mils. Tanks, Pumps, Eta* Awarded the Gold Medal ar the International Ootior. Exposition for best Gin, vritku. Awarded. F%ur Gold-Medals at the Texas State Fair for best Gin, leV Feeder, best Condensers and best Display. Also, first Premiums at Georgia F.’Jraß *nd Scuth Carolina State Fair, and Gold Medal at tlie Industrial ExpiUiufl Charleston, 8. C. 3Fo>2=t- FZIZOBS. WHIGHTfIWFfi cL 11. Ally n i u it l. J }: Main St?e©t. Barnesirill-a, Ga- M •> —— -d|; ■ So’dd, and Powdered Extracts, Elixirs, Sebrile Elixivs, and Gelatine Coated Pills and Granules. Medicated Syrups, full liaj Tinctures, Patent and Proprietary Medicines full up, Beef Mellina Infant Food, Peptogine Milk Powder*, s Ointments of every Kiß| PATENT, PROPRIETARY AND OFFICINAL. J:! Lins of Plasters corapleto. Surgeon’s Needles, Silk and dermic Syringes. Handkerchief Extracts—the best quality and iM -, variety. 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