The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189?, March 19, 1896, Image 3

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EVERY FAMILY SHOULD KNOW THAT Is a Tery- remarkable remeuv, both for 77V TERSAL and EXTERNAL use, and won dcrful in its quick action to relieve distress. Pain-Kilter |fU^t. cn c.W~ Chills, Diarrlitra* Crumps, Cholera, and all Bowel Complaints. Pain-[fitter l * Tllv nusTrem. mcIMAM LX MIICM e ,fy known for Sou Sieknt**v Sick I*el*rhc, l*sin in the Back or Side, I then hid ilm and Neui alcin. Do [fitter* is VPf l uestionably the MADE. It brings speedy and permanent relief In all cases of Bruises, Cuts, Sprains, Severe Burns, <fcc. Dain—tfillfil* * 9 the well tried and MCtIIM MXmIIL'I trusted friend of the Mechanic, Farmer, Planter, Sailor, and In fact nil classes wanting a medicine always at hand,and safe to use internally or exteruallf with certainty of relief. IS RECOMMENDED By Physicians, by Missionaries, by Ministers, by Mechanics , by Nurses in Hospitals . BY EVERYBODY . Do f _IfI / / is a Medicine Chest in mCM.HI MxIMMCM Itself, and few vessels leave port without a supply of it. Af¥“lXo family can afford to be without this invaluable remedy in the house. Its price brings It within the reach of all. and it will annually •ave many times its cost In doctors’ bills. Beware of imitations. Take none but til* gen wine "Pkbey Da via* Cures. Botanic Blood Balm^*: The Great Remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Eating and Spreading Sores, Eruptions, and all SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES. Made from the prescription of an eminent physician who used it with marvelous success for 40 years, and its continued use for fifteen years by thou sands of grateful people has demonstrated that it is by far the best building up Tonic and Blood Purifier ever offered to the world. It makes new rich blood, and possesses almost miraculous healing properties. WRITE FOR BOOK OF WONDERFUL CURES, sent free on application. If not kept by your local druggist, send SI.OO for a large bottle, or Sc.eo for six bottles, and medicine will be sent freight paid-by BLOOD BALM GO., Atlanta, Ga. CATARRH, Local Biser.3 BjpgSSSS and is the result of colds B® S^a^H^Hrin I and sudden climatic Ktißmp!?®" caang s. gM It can bo < ured by a Hbs > pleasant remedy which SaL -OsS is applied directly in; o the nostrils. Being very quickly’ absorbed it ■■ gives relief at once. ELY’S CREAM BALM is acknowledged to be the most thorough cure lor Nasal Catari li. Cold in Head and Hay Fexer of all remedies. It opens and cleanses the nasal passages, allays pain and imtiamation, heals the soies, pro tects the membrane from colds, restores the senses of taste and smell. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY LEOTHEfifs, 50 Warr en £:t. ,N . SOUTHERN RAILWAY. SCHEDULE IM EIfFKCT, FEB. 23<1, 1800. ■ Northbound. -No. 131 No. # I No- 7 Lv. Brunswick 815 pm 1 \ 9 25am “ Everett 935pmL •• • ■ • Josup 10 lup ml 325 am 11058 m • Surroney 1 f 07ai ,11 st)am • Httzlehnmt | o00am:l~ dipm “ Lumber City ; olaonii 103 pm “ Helena 1208 am 5 atom; 159 pm “ Normandale j flOPamj 215 pm “ Eastman 6 31am 2 40pm Cochran 106 am! 7 08am 320 pm “ Macon 2 20am 8 45am j 4 60pm “ Fio villa 19 55am, 600 pm “ McDonough 356 am! 10 38am! 4 43pm Ar. Atlanta 500 am 11 45am 760 pm *■ Chattaiiooga 9 45am i 7 15pm j 4 25am Clncimiafr.lj. & C~~~ l Taspm 7 loam 620 pm Southbound. No. 14 No. 10i No. 8. Lv. Cincinnati. Q. A 6T: 8 00apa*i0i5)pini 7 09am Lv. Chattanooga. ! o(X3pm 345 am 12 10am “ Atlanta 1050 pm 410 pm j . 20am “ McDonough 11 45pm 515 pm! 8 2.Jam “ Flovilla A 0 00pm : 9 02am Ar Macon 1 25am 7 lopm 10 20am *■ gpm 1207 pm “ Normandale i ®J‘2P m j J *®P m “ Helena.. 840atn 959pmi 18opm •• Lumber City I JO 83pm j * j®Pm “ Hazlehurat JObpm 303 pm 44 Surrency D 48pm, 4 13pm Ar .Tesup 5 40am 12 30am j o 09pm Lv. Everett 6 25am .... 010 pm Ar. Brunswick 7 15am 17 IQpm Trains 7 and 8 constitute the Fast Day press Tie tween Brunswick and Chattanooga, with Pnllinftn sleeping cars between Atlanta and Chattanooga. Also make connection a, Everett with F. C. & P- B- R. to and from j Flf>rida. Trains 13 and 14 oArry Pullman sleeping car between Brunswick and Atlanta, uniting at I Evorott with the “Cincinnati & Florltla Limi ted” via Everett, which is a solid vestibuied train between Cincinnati and Jacksonville, cur rying Pullman sleeping car and day coaches between those points, also Pullman sleeping car between St. Louis and Jacksonville; and having Pullman connection to and from Kansas City via Holly Springs. , , Trains 9 and 10 carry Mann Boudoir sloeping car between Cincinnati, Atlanta a:id Jackson ville via Jos up and Paint System; also between Lou: jville and A: lan * a via g ton. y esti buled day coaches l>etween Ciiicinnati and ♦ 1 ant a. (nnoctions at Union Dopot Atlanta for all points nor h, f*ast and west. W. H. GBKEN. .J. M. UUi.P. bivi’l Supurlnteaclout, Traffic Mtsnagor, Washing ton, D. V. Wushingt D. C. W. A. TURK, 8. H. HARD Wit :K. Gvu'l Pass. Agt. Asst. < ii Pas-,. Agt. Washington, D. C. A an’a.6a. oobie'B Aluminum Coffee Economizer s FITS AMY COFFEE POT Free Trial No Kctt needed to wttle. Keep* the pot H clean inside. heer rusts or -. ■'.....J blackens. Wi- guarantee our _ <2 Economiser to make better.fc 1 --^*4 The Coffee stronger and richer coffee, it lit Price with 1-3 less. w ooy ,> ?M Phot CAa each purchaser one week a OUC trial Free, and if not r * lu factory can be returned and A we will refund the money* ■ \ / Q ARTHUR L.DOBIEA CO. rant Building, Atlanta, o*. v. 1 1 an unavoidable scoop. “What the blankety blank is the matter with our correspondent at Willows?” Shouted the managing ed it. r of the Ex miner to tne telegraph ditor. as i.c burst into the eflhet u ith a copy of a rival daily in his baud. “Here’s a story as big as a house from Willows, and that lltnk -11;, blank sou of a gun’s slipped up nit.” The telegraph editor took the pa ■ per which his chief thrust at him and - <?. two columns of a terrible tragedy , YYbi-h had paralyzed ihe community ' ;*t Willows. A highly-respected 1)- lod duggist at that place, whose cub I mre bad made a maik for him among I his fellows, had been foully murder ed under circumstances of singular atrocity. It was a splendid story from a newspaper point of view, and all the dailies in the neighbering big city had made the most of it except the Examiner. * Nothing could have exceeded the managing editor s wi ath at beiDg so Badly scooped, and the telegraph ed itor’s efforts to soothe the irate man were unavailing. It was finally decided to investi gate, and a telegram was sent to the delinquent correspondent, which brought a reply that changed comedy into tragedy. Here are the telegrams. “Why was not murder reported by you for the Examiner? No further use for your services/’ The answer: “Yourcorrespondent Ia us the man murdered. He has no | further use for your paper.' 1 These are facts. The Examiner of hue above story is the one published in bau Francisco. Mrs. Anna Gage, wife of Ei- Qeputy U. S. Marshal, Columbus, Kan., says* S “I was delivered of TWINS in less than 20 min utes and wit It scarcely any pain after using only two bottles of “MOTHERS’ FRIEND” DID NOT STJPFEB AFTERWARD. fi3T*Sentby Express or mall, on receipt of price, per bottle. Book “TO MOT1I1SBS” mailed free. BBADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, A. SOLD BV T ▼. DRUGGISTS. FOR ONLY 25. CENTS! The Georgia Farmer ONE YEAR FOR 25 CENTS' Just Half Price. ADDRESS AT ONCE. The Georgia Farmer, 7 1 Barnesville, Ga. P. S. The Home & Farm should be in every farmer's home. JESSIE JAMES, JR., IN ST. Joseph. Jessee James, Jr., the son of the noted bandit, was in the city this week for tb first time since his fath er was killed by Bob Ford. The young man is now a resideut of Kan sas City and while here went out to the house where his father was killed and looked over the premises which are kept in the same order as on the day that Fords bullet laid the outlaw low. Young James, although at the time his father was killed was but a small boy, mu tubers vividly his res dence here and told some interest ing f .cts relative to Lis early exper ience, which discloses how little his father feared the pe> pleof St.Soseph. “Wbeu I was a boy here”, he said, “my father fr. que-ntly look me to the fire department station near our house, to T< nth and Olive streets, to see the firemen practice. I will ii6v er forget the delight this sight brought to me, and it seemed to hold some sort of a fascination over fath er, too. M any a time have we stood on the out side and watched the well -trained horses jump into the har ness. 1 strolled down to the hose house over the same streets, as neur as I can remember, that I used to toddle with my father. I remember distinctly the old World’s Hotel building, which I now find is used as a furnishing go< ds factory. When we lived on Lafay'ette strtet often in the evenings my father would lake me over 1o the hot e l ,where In- would sit and talk for houiswilb prominent men stopping there. I remember that tueie was a littly winding patli down the vacant hillside at the iei>r of our house, and we always travers ed it in going to the hotel. No me ever suspected that he was other then the Mr. Howard he claimed to be.” A HOUSEHOLD TREASURE. D. W. Filler, of Canajonuiie. N. Y., says he alway s keeps Dr. Kings New Discovery in the house and his family has always found the very best- results follow its use; that he would not be without it if pjrocnra ble. G. A. Dyfeerann Druggist, Cat -kill, N. Y.,sayß that Dr. King’s New Discovery is undoubtedly the best Cough remedy; that, he has used it id his family fer eight, years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. YVhy not try a reme dy so long tried and tested. Trial bottles free at S. B Burr Jr’s Drug Store. Regular size 50c. and SI.OO. OF LOU!3/I LB, KENTUCKY THE HOME PAPER. The morning papers lay on the seat beside him in the elevated train. He was reading with eagerness an awkward, crumpled little sheet. The printing of the paper was uncouth, for it looked as though half the let ters were mashed. The impression of the type was dull and blurred It was the weekly paper, printed in the little town where this prosper ous, well-dressed New Yorker had been boru and bred. Many a man who has carved his fortune in this city, hails the little couutry piper every week as a welcome messenger It tells how are flourishing, how the fences are being whitewash ed every spring, and perhaps once in a Yvhile there is a paragraph about the dear old mother, who has got in to print by entertaining the sewing circle. And the prosperous New Yoiker reads it entire,, while the metropoli tan sheets lny beside him unheeded. When TRaliy was sink, we gave her Castor!#. When sho was 11 Child, slie cried for Castor!#. When she became Jliss, she citing to Castor!#. When f he had Children, sho gave them Castori* PREHISTORIC LITERATURE IN AMERICA. Th 1 only eviden.ee that has ever been found going to show that the prehistoric cave-dwellers of America Uad a written language was discover ed for the first time iu the year 1891 Iu the summer of that year Profs. Shaler and Warren, the former of Yale C lleg-, ma lea thorough ex ploration of what is known as Fall ing Spring Cave, in the Sequatchie Valley,State of Tennessee, and 1 here in found incontrovertible evidence that the prehistoric Americans were a ra'e of civilized beings, possessing a literature and an alphabet. In one of tue galleries of the cave tuey found the body of a human boiug, transformed to stone by the Salta and silica in the dripping wafer, and near by a largo ov-d slab, upon which were carved 4G>7 words. In all these words, some of which contained nine and ten letters, only 32 diff rtnt characters were used proving con clusively that their alphabet was one of 32 letters only. It not only is s?, it must bo so. One Minute U iugh Cure acts quick y, and that’s what makes it go. Dn. W. A. Wright. Offers to Send The TAKE LIFE AS IT COMES. There is one sin which is every where, and by everybody is under estimated and quite too much over looked io valuations of character. It is the sin of fretting. It as common as air, ns speech; so common that unless it arises above its usual raonr tone, we do not even observe it. Watch an ordir ary coming together of people and we will see how many minutes it will be before somebody I frets—that is, makes more or less complaining statements of something or other,‘which most probably every one iu the room or the car, or on the street corner, knew befor<\and which most probably nobody can Lei. . Why say anything about it? It is cold, it is hot; it is wet, it is dryjsomebody has broken an appoint ment. ill-cooked a mea!; stupidity or bad faith somewhere has resulted in discomfort. There are plenty of things to fret about. It is astonish ing bow much anuoyauce and dis comfort may be found iu the course cf every day’s living, even at the simplest if only one keeps a sharp eye on that side ct things. Even holy writ says we are boru to trouble as the sparks lly upward. But even to the sparks flying up ward in the blackest smoke,there is a blue sky above, and the less time they wuste on the road the sooner they will reach it. Fretting is ull time wasted on the road. Not ouly dots fretting worry us and those around up, but nm-tnb. 1 that nothing brings the riukW t more quickly. W. J . Fieice, Rc public, In., savi “I have used Oue All mi to Cough Cut in my family mid for myself, wit h e suits ho entirely satisfactory that I can hardly find words to express my self ns to its merit. I will neve, fail to recommend it to other , on every uc.-asiou that presses itself.' Du. \V. A. Wright. -VmK a, • /Vom V.ri.Jmmmt nf MntMw £e n” J „ Prof. W. H. Peeke, who ■ w makes a specialty of B A B H A. ' Epilepsy, has without B B doubt treated and cyr ffl * B B wh. ed moreenses than anv 'm B I living Physician; his M ra M h W success is astonishing. JjjL JL Wo have hoard of cuses cured by fiirpn^ IjUI \j\m ■ bot tlo of his absolute cure, free to any aufferors who may send their P. O. and Express address. We advise any one wishing a euro to nddress fwtW • H. ff.FiKK, ?• 9,, 4 Cedar St., New York Horned Farm i THE BEST SPRING MEDICINE is Simmons Liver regulator. Don’t forget to take it. Now is the time you need it most to wake up your Liver. A sluggish Liver brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague, Rheumatism, and many other ills which shatter the constitution and wreck health. Don’* forget the word REGULATOR. It is SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR you want. The word REG ULATOR distinguishes it from all other remedies. And, besides this, SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR is a Regulator of the Liver, keeps it properly at work, that your system may be kept in good condition. FOR THE BLOOD take SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. It is the best blood purifier and corrector. Try it and note the difference. Look for the RED Z on every package. You wont find it on any other medicine, and there is no other Liver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR-the Kingof Liver Remedies, Be sure vou get it. J. H. /.cilia At Cos., Philadelphia, Pa. v.VEWALL PAPS mau, at w.iols a pan; as 1 nfl 1 New (kail'll.-* ;;e. ami up \ Warrant- Avw i;iffr.in gi- m . “ “ I ed lo suit 0., m l Hauler son- ow rates. v_ or money ij-L.il - ) s iidSe-uts for postage t~ Refuno- P,].-,,, 1 .educt wti'ti ordeiiiiK I ED. yiwO K. u. Cady, ) i/r-oa 1 3- > Wislmiiiiste, .-t , I . Od. ) /rovßleiice, KI. L.b.ral Liscounta to Clubs and Arent*. fNEm | It There w ere 3,134,934 Prick n ges of 1 |l| I I Hikes’KoOT!.'-':::u field i:i 1594, 'I || which made 13,073,73.= gallons, | || or 313,494,7°° gl'issia, suffi- | lv, cicnt to give every limn, wo. M utan und child in the United m W States, five gh::.. cs each —did IE H you get your i.hnr ? lie sure J| I und get soEif thin year. IE II A25 ceit prickin''* mill 'a 5 ga.lons. | m !' hw. i c very wiiMU. ! 111 IRES' 1| .Root-beer.. J CIUS. E. HIKES CO., I’hU^ulSi MACON NIHTHEN R. R. Time Table, June 1895- Rend TTp | STATIONS. | Read Pown 8 :10 ain I hv Macon Ar 1045 p m 10 35 ain I Maohen |431 prn 11 23 ain | Madison 348 pm 12 45 p m I Athens | 2 30 p m Connection at Machen with Middle Seorgia and Atlantia at Mao Ison with the Georgia railroad, ami at Athens with Richmond and Danville anil '-eorgia, i'lorolina and Northern railroad. For farther information Address A. 11. I’oKTKit, -upt. BPARKEITiS KAIR BALSAM ftiid the hair, mot** n luxuriant growth, ver Falls to Restore Gray hi t > its iouthlul Coler. vt Hi-.i.p He huir fulling. &)(•. an'l I .Of >at h> „ Uno, Parker’n Ginger Tor. 1* . ii nn 4 tuo worst 1 High Weak L IJi P'llu , Jin! i; v Jon, j’ain, To 1 : • 1 lifiuie.flOcts. eIKDMRoORNth Thi ~'ilv ,„n*cun,.. 2‘jrn. jp • all pui • *' ‘ • ilibCU X CO. S. BREAKFAST-SUPPER. EPPS'S GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. COCOA BOILING WATER OR MILK. . FARMERS SHOULD EXPEKIMEMT and not always take the word of Interested parties. Very few of them tiavo any ld. a how much the common soft wire will stretch. They may have b<;n lead to believe It a mere trifle. It lap easy matter to prove that a. No. 9 wire, under a strain of afxiut 1000 lbs. will stretch fl-om 1 to V/, In. per loot and It never takes up Its own slack. That accounts for those little end ratchets tilling up so ?u ickly. Our local a/rent will furnlabapower ul stretcher for this experiment. PAGE WOVEN WIRE FENCE CO.. Adrian. Mich. f W9VBI HIRE F£llliEKK§| l.Vtiy pay GO to 'u. u rod W / kB f#-:i g win ;i y< i can makotho VOy r( Jri be, t Woven Wire K-.nce A-AAaA/ IB *ii i tli. li< r (s bl;;lj.bu!l htioatyyVv/yyyA B i,iff f-.-l fhioon tlyiit, r -' ■' ffl to 20c. A RCMIM S„, A man and bov ..n maJco am — 'a-talogiKi Addi ' y^wg-T^SgSKiTSELM[AH aROB. 9 M