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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1897)
Let The Whole World Know The Good Dr.Miles’ Heart Cure Does w-cEArii’ DISEASE, In;:, ita vtctisa at a jr"8l disadvantUKO. Always taught that “ ■'■* heart disease Is Incurable, when tho symptoms i ecomo wolldcOnod, tho patient I’Of OKO'j alarmed and a uorvous panic takes place. Hat v.licn a i-;:ro roniedy is found and a euro cfTectod, after years of suffering, there 1j great rejoicing and dr ire to “let tho whole world know." Mrs. Laura Wine inger, of Selkirk, Kansas, writes; "I desira to let the whole world know what Dr. Miles* r , r IYI it AC* Heart Curo has done for • 1 tlls mo. For ten years I had Heart Cure pain In my heart, short ness of breath, pal pita* ReStOreS Uou, pain lr. my leftside, T-I Hh oppressed feeling In my chest., weak and hungry spells, bad dreams, could not lie on either side, was numb and suffered terribly. I took I)r. Miles’ Heart Cure and before I finished tho second bottle I felt Its good effects, I feel now that lam fully recovered, a.id that Dr. Miles’ Heart. Cure saved my life." Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is sold on guarantee that ilrst bottle benollU, or money refunded. A BOON TO HUMANITY I CUSHMAN’S MENTHOL INHALER jjdfaL&fo, tireatent Diwowj of 19th Century. Z-iWiL Cun * all trouble* of tliu Jrv&fbl-. I mat! Throat. CATAKItII, IIKADACIIK, A /t? NEURALGIA, LaGRIPPE. Ww * 3 WILL CURE *4 Uv Knn'.l ii s. Smin.il* itfCACR ') K*tSU < 'Highll.K I.^, J'VW.' ■ J //LA tST Cmillmu’u une flee it w CT<Jh, fv K " ,t,;cI,UK It lihh no ©qtml for x COl.Drt.Hore i hroat \ Htty I**var, Bron -1 \Vv* * V chltl*. L* ORIPPH. \ /f- The iiiott Refuelling * V yj llk nml Jli-nlfliftil aid to I yr lIKAiiACHK .Sufferers, ' Bring* Kleip lo tho ’keejdem i .'ure* fn*onin!a and Nervous Pro*tratioo. I S'MMlNin IIV riItSMSAAR M'IHHMIHU.. J. U NNOX HHOW.NK, I’ |( (/. h. Kd. Hrnlor Surgeon to th* (Vmtral London I'hrnnl and inr Hospital. "Tbr vapor of Menthol the kt In a manner hardly lws than mariflmii, acuio Cold* In thi bead. For nil form* f muni ilWaair*. riioin* "l.nrm lion u il natural Itrutthway, | pr**t-rlb# CIiHIIMAN’N Al I N I 1101. INIIAI.ItII lo th# 1 1Ihii nl hundrmtt per annum," 1)11. HIIOWNK al< any* : ’’Alwav* carry th* Irjreidmu IfF.SV* TIIdI, I\ 0 41, Kit known \t Cl SIIMAN'N. wMrh should lie ured not •niy on Hi* lirNt approach, hut three nr four time* a <ta\ during an •pl.Umlr, and ntway* In cold catching **ath*r by tlm* subject to h*ad ndda." HtCt Ilf M7A f 1)0 J- H. a dltlnir..lbe4 ■Wn u.ltr.oJfcfa • phvti. lan of New York, tatd ; " Inhaled Menthol It |Htrii< uUrly d#trnrtl\* lo th* Ilf* <d the Infloenxn hat Till," DK. S. ft. IHb'lOP, Sin*.'n in tli llllnoii ( hanlahle Fv# and Bar luhnuary, Chicago, *ys i '’You nml no othr aituw.nr* of my go.* I opinion of your Tuhalor, *hru I lay that I aiu conlitliy using and prjrrrlWn* Ihun for my Don’t bk fooled with -.vi.rihlasv Imitation*. Take only Cl Mll ■ A VS. I't-lra, 50a. at all DrugglrU, or mailed postpaid on icrrlpl •f price Will* for took on Mvutliol and tetlluionUli. AItKNISI WANTED. A.ldre*. (uhaMii Drug Cos., liomdom, led., or Ki Dearborn St, Chicjgt Noftant Mir llnndfi. Qo and get u ’Aki box of < iialuuun'a Menthol Xlttlnt ititd lum|) It In tho hotiMo. u is tho mtfust reiih.tly it ltd huivm for Cuts, Hurra. Hrular, Sculda, ClmDiuul liuridit, Borta, or ttny akin tM upilom*. It la quick to relieve |mln ami iiittutumuLlon. I* or Furm* •ra ertteked hands It Is it wotidorful cure. Lurgust Box of otiiuuunt on t!t market. <’urt'tl 11 Ik Mother* t'AItTHAOE. Mo., July 2H, IWV.-Vour Menthol Mult v oured motliur s hands, hho has hail no trou* bl© wiMt her hands nlmo I got her the box. .My mother Is lihdd.v and doing all her own work again. Kbe was notable to do any work for three years on qeoo.iitiof her hand-*. Your llalui has cured them. 1 titanic you very much. Hoy Kaiim. It Arts 1.11(0 s Charm. BaI.KM. Ala , A,rll rt. I-ai!. —I have used your Men thol llttlni on some old bed sores, and on two or throe e tses of Itch mid other eruptions; the patients ■ay It"acts like a Olittrtti.'' I’leaseaeml four boxes Balm. 1 Intend tooncournge tlm use of your prepa rations because they do act sure enough •* like a Charm." 1). W. Ki.oYl>. M I) If you cannot get it of yoor druggist send Jisc. for one box bv mull. Hold by all loading druggist* Cushuiau Druii Jo.. VlMcet.t.es. ludluua. free mam, referehce book. [Slxtv-four ptwes) for men uml women who *ro niUloUxl with uny form of private 'Unease peculiar to tbel sex, errors of youth, ooalagl* Ous dtset.sos, fcmalo troubles, ota, ole. Sona two S-oont stamps, to pay postage, to tho I'jau.arj rncalallsta and lihvslclans In this Country. DU. HATHAWAY & CO., 2'Jji So. liroud bt., Atlau'.a, Ga. { . /WEAK HEN WOHIEN.*S| , X xx Ith f Vllmlll.T or ih* ovll flit- Mh of ox } f r 'm h xvrUo us and we will muni you \ Jr IKKK by IVKAII* tlo unfailing and J : yVr B Jf.?■“S ANTO S0 'fr r-U'" n (Jusiantee that ’ xvtil restore your Mn nKth amh Victor. I’se It kill Pay If Nttlstiod. Addresa, } Lu MADRID CO., - Cincinnati, Ohio.; 1 '..MTUOimHCEA nod al l FKMAIK DIB!' AMX ( W -lio (or t'KKtL simple Homo Treatment. J ! I*o D nml psy lr Nat tutted. Address. A La 2LAI>BII> CO., Ciurlmutll, Ohio. J DRUM KENNESS, fouiiii habit J ftfe&rDIPSO SPECIFIC. jr\ Sullied For part lonian niMma S FlDKlttfO., Cluciunati, Ohio, i BSUIFfION.No n JV!> # ovorv wlllonreConsuuip- /j£y IT \ when nil vise falls. S *WN C partlcnlaiti, Address S *o' ( UIIiWBIIM-O, X m l j Yor (^pjCoXwrefe. ELY’S CREAM BALM t a positive euro. Apply Into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 50 crnls at Druggists or bv mail : samples lOe. by mall. RLY BROTHERS, 60 Warren St., New York City. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. If you want to Quit tobacco using; easily and forever, bemuae well, strong, magnetic, full of new life aud vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. Many gnin ten pounds in ton days. Over 400,000 cured. Buy No-To-Bac of your druggist, under guarantee to cure, 50c or 11.00. Booklet and samplo mailed free. Ad. Bterllng Remedy Cos., Chicago or New York. YOUNG fIMERIGfI. As the hoy begins so ends the man. I The boy who makes the teachers be live that he is devout in Chapel will make a preacher who will bring Christianity into contempt; and the boy who makes! the highest average by cheating in examinations will make a tricky politican. ihe lad whether rich or poor, dull or bright, looks , straight into the eyes and keeps his answers inside of the truth, already 1 counts friends who will last him all his life, ami holds a capita! that will bring him a inrer interest than mon ey. Then get to the bottom of things. You see how it is already as to that, it was the student who was grounded 'in the grammar, who took oft the Latin prize; it is l lie clerk who studies the specialty of the house in oft hoi; ■ who is to be promoted. Your happy ! go-lucky and hit-or-miss sort of fel low generally turns outthe dead wright |of the family, 99. cases out of 100. Don't take anything for granted, gel Ito the bottom of things. Neither be sham yourself nor be fooled by a sham. The strong, splendid life oi General Robt K. Lee, and his heroic conduct at the time of his greatest suffering, suggest a lesson for Amer ican boys to which, we think, they will be glad to have their attention | called. The noble manhood of the president is the fruit of a well spent boy hood and youth. It would no doubt have been spoiled if he had at tempted to bring into bis youthful life that experience which we call “sowing i wild oats.” Theseare our preparation days, boys, j for a splendid manhood by drawing I into your life now good and true and j beautiful qualities? Or must the con | sequences of a season of sowing wild oats run all through your life, shutting out its possible nobility, perhaps j scorching and withering every, high j and noble aspiration as with a moral j simoon 1 Don’t do this boys, is the saying of! all who read this article.—The Crim j son and White. BUCKI.EN’S ARNICA SALVE. The Best Salve in the world for ; Cuts, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum i Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands,; Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Krup-! tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to gtve perfecr satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents perbox, For sale by W. li. Chambers. The Macon Telegraph says it is a 1 queer state of affairs, when nearly | every fellow who wants an office feels moved to twist his face out of shape and go croaking over the land like an escaped raven from some land of the wretched. OASTOniA. Tie fio- _ ft Correction. Mr. Editor:—ln my recent con tribution to your paper, headed “A chapter from life,” your printer makes me responsible for one or two rather absurd utterances. In the sentence, “While perchance hard by, within sound of the rippling music” etc., he makes me say “nkithkr sound of the rippling music.” And in the closing sentence of the story “Soughing pines" becomes “songing pines.” These are small matters, and per haps no one noticed the errors; yet they are expressions glaringly incor rect, and the sight of them over one's signature, will, if he be a careful man, produce a slightly uncomfortable feel ing. Doubtless my own poor penman ship is responsible for the mistakes. A. B. Pope. FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS.. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by mil lions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gmjjs, allays all pain, cures wind colic amb is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little sufferers immediately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the worid at 25 cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. Two more eighteen story hotels to cost $3,000,000 are to be erected at once in New York City and the archi tects say they are to he the finest structures of this class in the city. An eastern college girl jilted a poet and married a butcher. Level head ed girl. We may live without poetry, music and art. but not without spring lamb and mint sauce.—Savannah Press. OASTOnXA. 3. A DOG THAI OtwCO Be Knew V.'lieo It ■ in to Ott Ui* Mk . L No oro that !;: i vei doubted hat I*o rea.-on ■' >'■ ■ -bt, but occasionally 1 would •§ who •Was Dot inel:; and ♦ . . . and then I would fell 1 :h- r a iiig stoiy; My parlor v a ■ o ■ mate frlixli opened l y i Led rooiu, a back A < . •< j ate may bodes - . n; ; ■ 1 o v all of a fort, . ■ • • b n war tin to htuu i J ‘ tj iv: if ii":i ■ m, l. ■ ■ on jo, ar. * iters ivi* odi* to, . ; u 11 in 'he 11, •" • *■: 'TO 1 liiV bed lie <■'.*; and. I Ji . , ’ Ut. it v*t and muddy, .1 n>i • ■ -I.v,.'te As i fell nijiiged Li , i ii my bed Spain. | , v . yet on ii ; but, no mat , . (j / I came in, l would al ; , j;, tii the floor, though I ■, . i ,m it i rnnipled eouditiou of '!;< :M. be laid been on it, and of tea 11,9 * not where be bad slept \vou( still be warm. One evening I went out, leavi.-c Bombshell lying by the parlor ,tov Out of curiosity I peeked through H • half lurnecl slats of my shutters ;.•• watched him I''roiii my position I v üble to see tho whole of both of v rooms. For awhile Bombshell did not mov then lie raised his head and looked the door; finally he got up, stretche himself, yawned sleepily, walked lo the bed, jumped up, and put his fore paw. - on it. Standing in this position, a thought struck him, and he said to him self: “Suppose that my master hasn’t gcue! Be will catch mo and then I shall get. a licking. I'll go and make certain that ho is not coming hack.” I know that ho said this because bt took his paws off tlio bed, walked can tiously back to tho frontdoor, and, wifi his ear close to the crack, he listened At. last, satisiiocl that I had really gone, he trotted back to the bed, jumped or it, curled up and went to sleep. After such n clever act I thought that ho had earned his sleep, so 1 wont awaj and left bun. St. Nicholas The Oniy Wiy, Mr. William Spark in hid “Musical Memoirs” tells a story of ',ho famous Wesley which was related to him by Mr. Bishop, the London organ builder. Wesley w: a great extemporaneous fugue player, and on the occasion tc which Mr. Bishop referred had been asked to show off anew organ by play ing a voluntary at the afternoon service previous to the rending of the first les son. Before going to the organ he asked the vicar, who was un amateur organ ist, how long the voluntary should last. “Oh,” replied the vicar, “please | yourself, Mr. Wesley. Say five or ten minutes, but we should like to hear as much of the different stops as you can oblige us with. ” When the time came, after a few pre liminary chords, Wesley started a fugai subject, which ho worked out iu a mas tcrly way in about a quarter of an hour, and the vicar was about to commence reading the lesson when the inexhausti ble organist started a second subject, and this he developed iu the same ab struse, elaborate manner as the first. The congregation at the end of hall an hour began to show signs of weari ness. The vicar beckoned to Mr. Bish op and begged him to stop the too prolix organist. “Oh,” replied the organ builder, “1 can soon stop him if you give mo au thority and will take the consequences. ” He approached tlio organ blower, and holding up half a crown he said hur riedly: "Como aud take this. I am just going.” The blower pumped the bellows full Mid mado for the half crown. Bishop detained him until the wind went out with a suck and a grunt, and poor Wes ley was left high and dry in the middle of his double fugue. MMimk Terrapin run*. • 1 have controlled tlie entire snpplj of Chesapeake bay diamond back terra pin for n good many years,” said Mr. A. T. Lavallotte of Orisfield, Md. “In times gone by terrapin were so plentiful that they were fed to the negro slaves, being about the cheapest kind of food at that i>eriod. Some of the masters would fverfeed their slaves to such an extent that they were compelled to sign arti cles of agreement that terrapin should not be fed but onco or twice per week. If anybody doubts this, there are old documents still on file at some of the county seats of the eastern shore of Maryland that will confirm the truth of what I say. “The price for terrapin increased with the demand up to 1893, the sup ply during that time being on the do crease. ’Full counts’—that is, specimen* measuring seven inches and over and weighing from three to six pounds— wore worth then from SOO to 41 SO per dozen, six inch counts weighing from 1 3 4 to 2 a 4 pounds bringing lrom S3O to SSO a dozen. The saialler sizes, con taining few eggs, am never iu great de mand. During a single season I have sold Deliuouieo’s $15,000 worth of ter rapin. I have also supplied John F. Chamberlin for years, :uid he can come nearer tolling a perfect terrapin by its outward appearance than any other man in this country. “SinoG 1593 the price has decreased, while the supply has not increased. This is owing to the practice of small firms in shipping common southern. North Carolina and Texas terrapin and trying to palm them off on buyers as the genuine Chesapeake article. The trick, however, rarely succeeds. “A large eight inch terrapin is said by scientists to be 60 to 70 years old. In not one case in a thousand do tho males measure over five inches or weigh I OTar one pound. V[ashiugtou Busk AMERICAN PATRIOTISM- With the dawning of last Tuesday morning came the birth of one of the grandest and most patriotic demon strations the world has ever witnessed. A spectacle that ought to move to the utmost depth the spirit ot loyalty in every American citizen, Last, North, West, and South. Even the arches of the ancient Romans and Greeks, erected in hon or of those departed heroes and their triumpant conquests, could not have been more impressive or expressive of, a nation's loyalty or nation s love for their dead leaders, than the erection of that magnificent emblem of patrio ism on the banks of the Hudson in honor of Gen Ulysses S. Grant. It has been built at the cost of nearly $600,000 every cent of which has been contributed by the pub lic. The ragged little news boys can gaze upon that structure with a national pride, such as but few except ; Americans can possess, and say I have done something towards perpet uating the memories of our illustrious countryman though I gave only a few pennies. I am a southern boy, son of a con federate soldier, and the South with her dead is as dear to my heart as it was to any soldier who poured out freely his life blood in her defence. Yet I can not do otherwise than es teem Gen. Grant. Asa soldier we ad mired his skill, as an American we liked him and as a friend to Gen. Lee, and to the South during her Recon struction days we loved him. When Gen. Lee surrendered to him at Appomattox, what did that magnanimous man do? Did he con fiscate what little property the South ern soldier had and ill treat him as some had done? No; he gave Gen. Lee an order for rations enough to last our soldiers several days Bear in mind now that our men had not had any thing to eat except a little parched corn in two days be fore Grant supplied them with food. When (Ten. Lee asked him if he intended to take the horses belonging I to the Confederates, he dropped his j head on his breast a minute, and' then raising it said; No, I guess they j will need their stock to make crops with which to feed their families.” We would love him for this consideration if for nothing else. But he did more than this, after the assasination 01 President Lincoln, some of the lead ers of the North wanted to wreak vengeance on the already defenseless South, but Gen. Grant said no, and what he said was authority. Soon after Lincoln’s death Andrew Johnson assumed the reins of govern mental affairs and offered SIOO,OOO for the captue of our Jefferson Davis. He was captured and imprisoned in Fortress Monroe, and there subjected to all kinds of cruelties. When Johnson made an attempt to give him an unfair j trial, Gen. Grant interfered with the proceedings; and demanded that Pres. Davis be given an impartial trial. Owing to efforts of Gen. Grant, Horace Greely, and others, he was liberated from his prison (Hades) on bond, and was never brought to trial. As soon as peace came he did all, in his power to defend the South from malignant and almost inhuman attacks made on our people by some in the North. He died, a friend to the South. “Honor to him who self complete and brave, In scorn can canoe his pathway to the grave, And heeding naught of what men think or say, Make his own heart his world upon his way.” L. The above was clipped from The Crimson and White. The natural loss of hair, either by disease or the age of the hair itself, may be replenished with a heavy growth by Hall's Hair Renewer. Croup and whooping cough are | childhood's terrors; but like pneu ! monia, bronchitis, and other throat j and lung troubles, can be quickly j cured by using One Minute Cough Cure. Dr. W. A. Wright. Mrs. Anna Gage, wile of Ex- Deputy U. S. Marshal, Columbus, Kan., says: of TWINS in SgL^mSS FRIEND” DID NOT SUFFER AFTERWARD. tystentby Express ormail, on receipt of price. • 1.00 per twine. Book "TO iIOTIIERS* matted free. BBAPFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA. SOLD BY TLX DRUGGISTS. AVege table Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula ting ihe Stomachs andßowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness andßest.Contains neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral, Not Narcotic. Rec-’pc of Old BrS/SMUELPI7CEEII jPump/cui Seed " 4lx. Senna * j lioclitiu Stills - I /inisc Seed * I Peppermint - > Jh Carbonate Sofa * I fibrm Seed - Clarified Sw/ar - hinlevyrcen Flavor. J Apcrfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of new Stork. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. GORDON INSTITUTE ~ BARHESEILLE, GEORGIA. SAYS DR. CANDLER “There is no better training school in the State or South. The most experienced corps of teachers in a secondary school in the State. The best equipped and appointed building. _ Instruction is given at the cheapest rates in the ordinary branches of an English education, in music, art, military ‘‘and physical culture and mechanical drawing. The pupils of Gordon Institute are noted for their profi ciency in the studies which they have taken here —none has ever failed to enter on examination the college for which he applied For further information, apply to JERE M, POUND. President, Turner 6c Prout HAVE GOT Shingles at Last AND ALL SORTS Dned.Dressed.and Matched Lumber mule & buggy Horse for sale. DR. HATHAWAY * CO. The RELIABLE SPECIALISTS, Regular Graduates In Medicine, Authorized by the State. Six National Banks for Financial Reference, thousands of Cured Patients all over the United States ns to our professional ability. All business conducted on a strictly profes sional basis andstrictlycontidential. Consultation Free atofflee or by maiL Treatmentsent everywhere free from observation. No interference wiUrbusiness while using medicines. Seminal Weakness and Sexual Debility (SpxT.HATor.Rrre:a awt> Impotixct) canard by youthful follies and ex s. % cesses, producing nervousness, los.es, pimples and blotches on the face, A rushesof blood to the head, palnsln tho back, confused Ideas and for mSW r#"lyfg getf Illness, bashfulness, aversionto society, loss of sexual power, loss of ■3R- -roSwfP. vy manhood, etc.,cured for life. We can stop ntcht losses, restore lost 1BB L RtM sexual power,restore nerve and bratn power, enlarge and strengthen weak parts and make you fit for marriage. X--BML ": I'TMTk- Cvnhilis that terrible disease. In all Its forms and stages, cured ""“I®’ lor life. Blood Poisoning, Skin Diseases. Ulcers. 6wel ; ; tings. Sores, Gen- rrhcraZ: Gleet, and all forms of Private Diseases cured. . Stricture! ermaaently cured without caustic or cutting. No pain. Patient can use the treatment at home. ETdH,-jr ? Ladies *' l ' tr ' E H" *0 a- irate dl-caKS pcroUar to your set. at [ 'ffa™ - , jour own home -without Instruments. Many cured after ‘ 1 other doctors have failed. Canetve you proofs. PhpiimntiNm The Great French Rheumatic Cure. A BURE CURE. The greatest dlscor ■vicuiuauj.u ery In the annnla of medicine. Onedoso gives relief; a few doses remoTe fever and pain In joint*—a cure Is bound to take place. Send statement of case. Bn-xG for Doth sexea.6l pages, with full description of above diseases, the effects and cure, sealed L,w,v In plain wrapper, free. Read thlallttle book and send for Symptom Blank. No. 1 for Mens No. 2 for Women; No. 3 for Skin Diseases; No. 4 for Catarrh. Take no chances and obtain the best by consulting the Leading Specialists in the United States. honesty! dr. HATHAWAY & CO.. SKILL I 22j Sooth Broad SL, • • Atlanta, Gau SEE THAT THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE j OF I IS ON THE | WRAPPER OF EYEEY r‘ BOTTLE OF CfISTORIfI Castorla is pnt up in one-sizs "bottles only. Ii is not sold in bulk. Don’t allow anyone to sell yon anything else on the plea or promise that it is “just as good” and “will answer every pnr pose,” 45' See that yon get O-A-S-T-O-S-I-A. The fao- simile rpf // . a Is on