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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1897)
CATHARTIC vo&caAiefck. V, CURECOHST!PATIO^^ 25 * SO * DRUGGISTS j ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED !? cnre any caseof constipation. Cascarets are the Ideal Laia-, . . *, u R ?iVrJiV™ t i. T £* Bele . r *np or *ripc. hut cause easy natural results. Sam-i pie and booklet Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO.. Chicnso, Montreal. Can., or Sen Vork. sn.j PRIVATE SANITARIUM L DISPENSARY For the Treatment of all Diseases of WOMEN First-Class in every respect. 18 years of successful operation. Every disease, but only Female treated. Permanent cures made in short time of curable diseases, and medicines furnished at reasonable rates. Dr. Rosa F. Monnish is a graduate of German and American Colleges, and has cured thousands of patients all over the Southern States. A limited number oi patients accommodated in the Sanitarium. Ladies unable to come can have medicines sent to them by stating full particulars of their diseases. Send stamp for answer. Correspondence and consultation strictly confidential. Office hours from 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 P. M. Address, Mrs. Rosa Freudenthal Monnish, M. D-, Junction Peachtree. N. Forsyth and Church Streets, ATI ANT A, GA. W. A. MONNISH, M.D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. ATLANTA, GEORGIA. BRANCH OFFICE: —Room No. 2 3d Floor, Chamberlin-Johnson Building, Corner Whitehall and Hunter streets. Take Elevator. RESIDENCE: Cornsr Peachtree and Church streets. SPECIALTIES: —Diseases of Women, Diseases of Skin And Nervous System. Medicine Furnised. Calls Promptly Attended. Hours: 10 A. M. to IP. M 2:30 P. M. to 6 P. M. TncDir nw n The wonderfui Hf l\lOn|ln, Blood Purifier ... Cures absolutely Rheumatism, Scrofula, Syphilis, Old Sores, Constipation, Gout, and All Diseases caused by impure Blood .... TO STAY CURED • • • Africana Has Never Failed In a single instance out of the hundreds treated. Therefore, we offer it to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to undertake the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible cures have Africana is made altogether from herbs, is perfectly harmless and yet is the most powerful and surest remedy ever dis covered for the above named diseases. Write for further particulars, testimonials, etc. Africana Cos., Atlanta, Ga. For sale by Chambers Drug Store, Barnesville; Luther Holmes, Milner- r opt} JJWjLIPPMANS GREAT REMEDY)-/. w This great remedy is indorsed by " physicians, and prescribed by them all over the world. Positively guaranteed to cure the most stubborn cases. The formul is published plainly on every bottle. Asa tonic it is Superior TO ALL Sarsaparillas For Female Complaints and building up run-down sys tems it acts like magic. Try a bottle and be convinced. READ THE TRUTH EXTRACT FROM BOOK OF TESTIMONIALS. “ Was a rheumatic sufferer for 18 months. Derived no benefit from physicians, treatment at Mineral Well*, Tex., or Hot Springs, Ark. My doctor declared my condition hopeless, but as a last resort advised P. P. P., Lippman’s Great Remedv. Jlirough its use 1 am t/ulttc a wpll TTiftii.’ 1 F. TIMMINSt of Timmins & Hines, Leading Grocers, Warahacbie, Te*. Indorsed by B. W. FsAKass, Druggist. • 4 P. P, P.. Lippman’s Great Remedy, cured me of difflcnlt breath ing and palpitation of the heart. Had not slept on either side for two years; now I sleep soundly in Do Leon, Te*. " Sworn to and subscribed before me,” j. M. Lambebt, Notary Public. “Suffered for years with a disagreeable eruption on my faoa. Various failed to remove it. Three bottles of P. P. P. Lapp* man’s Great Remedy, completely cured me." Capt. J. D. JOHNSON, Savannah, Ga. i Sold by all druggists, • \ LI PPM AN BRO’S. proprietors. < UPPMAN’S BLOCH-SAyAN NAtt.GA. This Will Interest You. The Atlanta Weekly Journal isnov, running a missing word contest. For fifty cents they send the Week ly Journal one year and allow the pe; son sending the subscription on. guess at the missing word. The sen tence selected is: “He who has ceased to enjoy hi; friend’s has ceased to love him. The missing word is the one neces sary to fill out the above sentence and make perfect sense. It is not a catch word, but is a plain, every day Eng lish word. To the person first guessing the right word The Journal will give 5 per cent of the amount of subscriptions received during the three months that this contest lasts, and 5 per cent ad ditional will he evenly divided be tween all other persons who may guess the missing word. The Weekly Journal is a first class family paper having ten pages filled with matter that will interest all mem bers of the family. It has a first class woman’s page, an admirable children's department; at least one story every week; a vast amount of miscellaneous features; and all the news in the world. Address, The Journal, Atlanta, Ga. Now that the airship has been seen in Rome and Fitzgerald there can no longer be any doubt as toils existence says the Savannan News. It was no doubt sent out from the west with a cargo of colonists. These georgians who saw it should go gunning. There is a big prize waiting for the man who captures it. Domestic Joy. The charm of domestic joy will be preserved, if those parents, who fear the early death of one of their loved ones when attacked with a serious throat or lung trouble, resort at once to Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup, a never-fail ing remedy. “I used Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup for my son, who was eight years old. He has been troubled with a bron chial cough since he was two and a half years of age, and I have tried every thing, hut found Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup does him the most good.” Mrs. A. Geib, 317 Demott St., West Hobo ken, N.J. Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup costs only 25 cents, and is cheaper than the dealer’s big profit making substitute, because Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup always cures while the substitute does not. CUR|S| dyspepsia! ;CATARRH J MALARIA @ KIDNEY—I TROUBLES 1 PIMPLES i BLOTCHES 1 SOLD SORES | BLOOD — | poisoning! SCROFULA&t v’ At .- ’ jl WONDERFUL 1 ’ REMEDY. J SEND FOR erfS \ BOOKLET. eJOa MAKING FALSE EYES. MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL OPTICS A DELICATE OPERATION. Hundreds Turned Out Weekly—Prlee Va ries From S5 to SCO anil Oceasionally SCO—Ready Made Eyes Are Cheap, but Those Made to Order Come High. There are many curious industries in this big city, and one that ranks pre eminent in the peculiar line is a glass eye factory. It may seem strange that there should boa sufficient demand for glass eyes to support such a factory, es pecially as it employs a number of skilled workmen all the year round. But when one learns some of the secrets of the trade all cause for wonder van ishes. Tho prime reason for its existence is that a glass eye does not last more than a year, and very often not more than six months. Of course this necessitates the purchase of new optics every little while by afflicted people, and the num ber of people who use these eyes is sur prisingly large, judged by the yearly production of the factory. Five hundred eyes are turned ont weekly, or about 2(1,000 in the year. Not all of these are sold, but this per centage is very small. The unsold ones are stock eyes—that is, they are used in the sale department of the factory or are sent to dealers throughout tho coun try as samples. The prices of glass eyes vary consid erably. An ordinary ready made eye costs $5, while a made to order eye, with tho pupil and cornea carefully col ored, costs anywhere from $lO to S3O, and occasionally as much as SSO, but this latter price is a rare one. Boor peo ple can only afford the ready made eye, and a large number of these are always kept in stock in different shades of blue, gray and brown. Gray eyes are the most common, then comes blue, and then brown. Black eyes are a myth, and the factory has never had a call to make one. Oph thalmic hospitals are the largest con sumers of the false eye. These buy in quantities, and naturally get the prod uct at reduced rates. They buy the or dinary, ready made eyes, as they are used, for the most part, on poor people who are financially unable to bo fastid ious in the matter of exact color. Tho most startling feature of the fac tory is the cabinet in which the stock eyes are kept. They are placed in large trays, sectioned off into tin squares, each square containing an eye., Blue eyes of many shapes and shades are in one tray, brown eyes of all kinds in un other and gray eyes of many varieties in | a third. When a purchaser comes in, he or she is fitted with an eye from one of these trays, and if the bnyer is content, with tho ready made article a duplicate is furnished from the stock. If lie made to order article is wanted, he sample is sent up to the workrooms with instructions covering the minor changes or improvements that can be made. All of tho regular customers have sample eyes in the factory. This en ables them to send from a distance for a duplicate, and anew eye, perfectly fitting and of the correct color, is ship ped to them. The reason that the eyo wears out is that tho action of the tear—which is acid—affects tho enamel, roughing the edges and surface and causing an irri tation of tho eyelids. There has never been a time in the history of tho world that artificial eyes did not exist. The ancient Egyptians, 4,000 and 5,000 years ago, wore false eyes of gold and silver, and later of cop per and ivory. It is on record that two patriotic Lutetians, when their country was iu financial distress, generously presented their golden eyes to the pub lic treasury. During the middle ages porcelain superseded metal in the mak ing of artificial eyes, and a century ago tho glass eyo arrived. Now enamel is considered to be the best material for the work, and it is used to the exclu sion of all others. The process of making the eyes is easily described, but the work calls for much delicate and painstaking labor on the part of seven or eight skilled work men. Formerly one man made an arti ficial eye fronrf the crude to the finished state, but now the work is divided into a number of specialties, each man per forming only a fraction of the whole task. In its initial stage the eyo is a long, slender stick of enamel, made of per fectly transparent and fusible flint glass. This in placed in a crucible and exposed to great heat. The globe maker places tho enamel over a blowpipe supplied with wind, which is pumped by engine power into a large cylinder and stored under water pressure. Under the care ful manipulation of the workman tho enamel tube is formed into an oblong globe, just the size and shape of the human eye. Next it passes into the coloring room. A piece of colored enamel is placed on the summit of the globe, and this is gently heated in a small flame and con tinuously rotated. Gradually this takes the form of the iris, and then a spot of darker enamel is added to represent the, pupil. Then this is covered by a thick layer of crystal to form the cornea. At this stage the eye is detached from tho blowpipe and cooled, and then sent to the cutting room, from which it emerges shaped into a small hollow oval with irregular edges. The cutting is a difficult process, as a hair’s breadth deviation in size will make a material difference in the fitting. The edges are fired and the eye allowed to cool slow ly, this being the annealing or temper ing process, which toughens the enam el and renders it less liable to break. The final work is the polishing, and then it is ready for the owner. The coloring work is the most deli cate of all, as sometimes eight and nine colors are worked in to give tho correct shade.—New York Cor. Washington Post. A FIGHT .N SCHOOL. -Order! Order i ” cried the teaeh**y Bet tho naughty tiling was dono— Eddie rubbed nut Tommie's lessou. And the light had just begun. Little chubby hands were clinching Jackets torn and rumpled hair. Tlioy oow.d never sit together, They were such a t >..ghty pair. 60 tho teacher straightway Mood them In tho corner, with high caps, And two little outstretched palms From her ruler got ten slaps. “Now, then, tell me all tho trouble," Said tho teacher at recess, But they Ixjth talked loud together, Each ono anxious to confess. “Hush, now,.children," said the teacher; “Let Eddie speak; one at a timo.” 60 Eddie answered, all defiance, “Tom said his.ma uz prottier'n mine." ~1.-la Uamiuond Clark in Kansas City Star. Consistency. She was just 5 years old, but she was capable e* emotions which in their in tensity would strain tho capacity of much larger breasts than hers. "I am mad as a bull,” she cried. ”1 am going to grow me some horns and run everybody out of tho house.” Her grandmother overhoard the re mark and called the little one to her side. ‘‘You wouldn't run your grandmoth er out of tho house, would you?” she asked. ‘‘N-no,” the tot replied, relenting under the personal appoal. “You could bido.” “Would you run your mamma out?” “No. She could hide too. ” “Your papa and Aunt Mary and Jack —what übout them?” persisted tho grandmother. “They could all hido. ” “But, my dour, what use would youj horns be if we could all hide?” “Oh,” she replied with delightful inconsistency, “but I could find you. though. ” —New York Mail and Express. Mountain Ciimbiug. In a sketch of Sir William Martin Conway, the mountain climber and ex plorer of the Himalayas, Tho English Illustrated Magazine says that he has the “climber’s walk”—that is, a gen tlo roll of the body, with no unequal steps, but swinging his logs with rhyth mic precision. He is a slim man, but tough, full of energy mid with iron muscles. When climbing tho Hiinala yas, 110 spent 84 days 011 snow and gla oier. During that time ho truversorf from end to end tho throe longest known glaciers in the world outside the polar regions and landed on tho summit ot Pioneer peak, 22,000 foot high, tho groutest height yet reached by man. Mile. llaco. M. Trebuchet. who died in Paris tbs other day, was the guardian of Mile. Adele Hugo, the insane daughter of tt.\ poet, now about 60 years old. The fos • tuno which Mile. Hugo inherited ha# increased under the management of N. Trebuchet, so that sho is now, French pa pers say, several times a millionaire, til 10 is confined in a private asylum, her only pleasure being to visit tho theater. It is always difficult, however, to gel her to leave the building after the per formance, us she thinks a play never anus. Appreciation. An unoedote, illustrating tho urbanity of Dr. Max Norduu's character, as well as bis keen sense of humor, is told in connection with a story of I. Zangwill. Dr. Nordau had never met Zangwill, but was a great admirer of “The Chil dren of tho Ghetto” and its author’s lit erary causeries. One day a friend, know ing this, came to him and said : “Mr Zangwill lias been writing about you in The Pall Mall.” “Indeed,” said Dr. Norduu, with an air of great interest. “Ho gives a perfect appreciation of you,” the fricud continued. “Do tell me what ho said,” said tho author, relaxing into an attitude of pleasurable anticipation. “He says you’re an idiot.” The funny part of tho story is that during a recent visit to England Dr. Nordau mot, Mr. Zangwill and told him the incident. Rainer Wilhelm ft* Stage Managers Borne nmusing anecdotes are related in tho press with respect to tho kuisci and the new Berlin Opera House. His majesty may often be seen in tho morn ing, in civil dress, wearing a white oloak and smoking a cigarette, crossing on foot from the palace to the Opert House. There arrived, ho takes his po sition on the stage or follows the re hearsals f/orn his box. Many comical encounters have occurred in the semi darkness between kaiser and scene shifters, ignorant of the visitor’s idea tity. The emperor, indeed, leaves tbe discovery of his presence to chance, but this is often betrayed by an objection from/ a coulisse which unexpectedly breaks in during tbe progress of a re hearsal. This fortuuato gift of observa tion is usually so well employed in criticism of the arrangements which have been made that the general man ager, stage manager and director of tho ballet are unable to better achieve suc cess than by following his suggestions. The kaiser, it is related, once forgot to throw away his cigarette on entering tbe Opera House, Tho inspector there upon respectfully called attention to the fact, and his majesty replied. “The regulations for the preservation of or der in this house naturally hold good also for me.”—Westminster Gazette. What Constituted tho Insult. “Are those the photographs I order ed?” asked the customer. “Yes, sir,” replied the photographer. “They’re paid for, I believe?” •Yes, sir.” “All right. Wrap them up. Thanks! @ood inor—say, do you think I look like the photogruphs?” “Oh, yes, the likeness is excellent!” “Say, will you do me the favor to aome out with me into the alley? I’d bke tbe privilege of building a face om foa like that!”—Chicago Tribune. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these I/ttle Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tonguo Tain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. The* Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Doea* Small Price. VBiH m m from TT.ri. Journal of ITmUc&q ■ 3 A Prof. W. H. Peeke, wha H makes a specialty of Bg m ■ ■ a V Epilepsy, has without ■■■ ■ ■ Wk doubt treated and cur- SS ■ ■ ■ ed more cases than any ■ ■ H m living Physician; hi* §tg ■ H k V success is astonishing. gga JO, We have heard of case* of 20 years' standing j^? a nd H b s Ijlil lus w “narge bot tlo of his absolute cure, free to any sufferer* who may send their P. O. end Express address. We advise nny one wishing a euro to address PfoLW. E, PEE&V- p, J).. 4 Cedar St., Hew York Sir Walter Scott’s First Brief. Sir Walter Scott had his share of the usual curious experiences shortly after being called to the bar. His first appearance as counsel in a criminal court, was at Jedburgh assizes iu 1708, when he successfully defended a veteran poacher. “You’re a lucky scoundrel,” Scott whispered to his client when the verdict w r as given. “I’m just o’ your mind,” returned the latter, “and I’ll send you a maukin (i. e., a hare) tho morn, mau.” Lockhart, who narrates (he incident, omits to add whether the maukin duly reached Scott, but no doubt it did. On another occasion Scott was less successful in his defense of a house breaker, but the culprit, grateful for his counsel’s exertions, gave him, in lieu of the orthodox fee, which he was un able to pay, this piece of advice, to the, value of which lie, the housebreaker, could professionally attest: First, never to have a large watchdog out of doors, but to keep a little yelping terrier within, and, secondly, to put no trust in nice, clover, gimorack locks, hut to pin his faith to a huge old heavy one with a rusty key. Scott long remem bered this incident, and 80 years later, at a judges’ dinner at .Jedburgh, 110 re called it in this impromptu rhyme: Yelping terrier, rusty key, Wus Walter Hcott’s best Jeildart foo. —Westminster Gazette. The Furnc of <iiftceliolrling. In every town there arc broad shoul dered, stalwart men leading idle lives and complaining that they can get noth ing to do. Their ruin dote s hack from a little federal office, which unfitted them for useful work. They lost their places and will stand around for the re mainder of their lives, living on their friends and waiting for an appointment. —Atlanta Sun. Tutt’s Pills Cure AH Liver Ills. Twenty Years Proof. ’ Tutt’s Liver Pills keep the bow els in natural motion and cleanse the system of all impurities An absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, con stipation and kindred diseases. “Can’t do without them” R. P. Smith, Chilesburg, Va. writes I don’t know how I could do without them. I have had Liver disease for over twenty years. Am now entirely cured. Tutt’s Liver Pills Everybody Bay* 80. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most won* derful medical discovery of the age, pleas ant and refreshing to the taste, act geutly and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever, habitual constipation anil biliousness. Please buy and try ft box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, 2f>. 50 cents. Hold and guaranteed to cure by ail druggist#. Tetter, Salr-Kheum and Eczema. The intense itching and smarting, inci dent to these diseases, is instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain’s Eye and Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases have been permanently cured by it. It is equally efficient for itching piles and a favorite remedy for sore nipples, chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites and chronic sore eyes. 25 cts. per box. Dr. Cady’s Condition Powders, are just what a horse needs when in bad condition. Tonic, blood purifier and verriyfuge. They are not food but medicine and the best in use to put a horse in prime condition. Price 25 cents per package.