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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1898)
DR TICHENOR S ANTISEPTIC S®SFOR MAN OR BEAST. FOR EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL USE.'?S^SS3*- HOfilS Wounds, Bums, Bruises, Scalds, Cuts, Sprains. &c. GlireS Colic, Cramps, Cholera Morbus and Indigestion. FOR STOCK—CoIic, Botts, Foot-Evil, Scratches, Wire Cuts. Etc.i&r^** \o &voe SaVvs^aeVvow — 50c, alioWVe. USE ]P O N-D’Sl THE “ flO^gs OLD JS^ RELIABLE MSfflSffl FAMILY V REMEDY FOR PAIN X KOT Over 50 Years the Standard. | CURES HEMORRHAC * :5? BUY THE CEHUIH& tsx Your Merchan lor Dr. MuffOt’S Little Bock IllJblß Information. FTB6. HEARKCN TO WORC3 OF EXPIRItiJCK AND WI3DOMI There wax tt wnmat., ax I've heard tell. But xhe heard good news, in her hour of need, Who was always complaining, she wet never well: Of Moffett's wonderful INDIAN WEED, ■ |V 1 F*-v | r jv ■ |ip* Zteg-ulates anil Relieve* Woman of all sains and Troubles Peculiar I U IAn W . ... to Her Hex. TKY IT AND BK WELL AGAIN TEETHtfNA'S the best-we *ll know that, B*l*y .* sirk. the mother • in trouble. % makes the BABY bright anrt fat Give TEETHING —tt II soon weigh Joub>* TÐINA’S the best and sure to sell - Because it unices the baby well. LET ME PAINT your Metal Root. I will furnish material, labor, paint the roof for 50c a sq. of 100 sq. feet and give you a written guarantee that “If the above named roof leaks or needs painting at any time within ten years from date, I am to do the work needed without any expense to owner of building.” Albany, Ga., June 5, 1897. We know Mr. Harvey English to be a citizen of Dougherty Ca, Ga., property holder therein; that he has done a large amount of painting in Albany, Ga. We have heard of no complaints about his work. Work en trusted to his hands will be faithfully executed, and his guarantee is good. J. T. HESTER, Tax Collector; SAM W. SMITH, Ordinary; S. W. GUN NISON, Tax Receiver; R. P. HALL, Clerk Superior Court; W. T. JONES, Judge County Court; W. E. WOOTEN, Solicitor General Albany Circuit; ED. L. WIGHT, Mayor of Albany and Representative Georgia Legislature; B. F. Brimberry, John Mock, C. B. James, Agent Southern Express Compa ny; N. F. Tift, J. C. Tabot, L. E. Welch, A. W. Muse, Y. G. Rust, Post master; J. D. Weston, S. R. Weston. Albany, Ga., January 25, 1595 Mr. Harvey English has stopped a very bad leaking roof for us with his English Paint. I recommend his paint to anyone who is troubled with leaky roofs. Georgia Cotton Oil Cos., Albany Mill, F. WHIKE, Sup’t. Albany, Ga.. July 13, 1895. Mr. Harvey English painted the tin roof on my house which leaked badly in many places. I am well satisfied with his work and the paint used by him. JOHN D. POPE, Attorney-at-Law. Albany, Ga., November 19,1895. The roof painting done for me by Mr. Harvey English has been and still is one of the most satisfactory jobs of work which I ever had done. He stopped all leaks in a large tin roof, and I I have no agents, no partners. I do not sell English Paint to painters. English Paint is a shining glossy black. English is white, plain white. I don’t paint shingle roofs. HARVEY ENGLISsHi Albany, Ga. PAINT STOPS LEAKS; YES IT DO. lL , 4 £ AIDS DIGESTION, REGULATES THE BOWELS, CURES CHOLERA-IN FA NTUM, and MAKESTEETHING EASY. M DR-I^F^rrs UfEMALE MEDICINE e^S * Gives Rosy Cheeks, Strength, Health anoHappiness To VIOMAN. PREPARED ONLY BY C.J. MOFFETT?*. D., sums, Mo. Mothers, hearken! whits / tell TEETHINA cures them of all pain. What will ma t yur baby well~~ And gives them rosy cheeks again. —' Ye; give the child Dr. Muifait’iTEKTUlKA (Teething Powders), and save its life TEETDINA Allays Irri tation, Regulates the Bowels, Aids Digestion, Strengthens the Child, Oaree Eruptions and Sores, and makes Teething Ussy. Reip.oveai and Frevente Worma. there were a great many. Hi* whole transaction was fair, business-like and satisfactory. Respectfully, A. W. MUSK. Albany, Ga., January 29,1897. Having had Mr. Harvey Knglish to paint several roofs with his incomparable preparation for stopping leaks it a fiords me pleasure to bear testimony to his honest workmanship and to the fact that “English Paint Stop* the Leaks; Yes It Do.” JOSEPH S. DAVIS, Cashier First Nat’l Bank. Albany, January 28, 1897. Mr. Harvey English has covered the roof of the engine room of the Albany Water Work* with his roof paint and I am well satisfied with the work. He has also done some work for me per sonally, two ye**rs ago which has proved satis factory. C. W TIFT, Chief Engineer Albany Water Works. fl Jettersonlan Love flttair. “Jefferson had his unpleasant rem iniscences of his alma mater. Although he was a tall, thin, raw boned youth with red hair, angular features and freckled face, he fell desperately in love with Rebecca Burwell, a young girl of fine family, famous beauty, and high intelligence, a type of those wo men in that portion of the Old do minion whose influence was as bound less as the sea that leaves its shores. When she smiled on him he was the happiest boy within the sound of the college bell. She gave him a watch picture, which he regarded as more precious than his birth-right. Its loss caused him agonizing grief. He writes to his old friend Page, after ward governor of Virginia, from col lege : ‘The accursed rats ate up my pocketbook within a foot of my head and carried away my silk garters. Of this I would not have accused the devil, for rats will be rats, but some thing worse happened. It rained all night. When 1 went to bed I laid my watch in its usual place. In the morning I found it in the same place, but Quantum mutatus ab illo! All adoat in water, let in at a leak in the roof. Now there were a thousand other spots where it might have chanced to leak as well as this one. But it is my opinion that the devil came and bored a hole over it on pur pose. Well, my poor watch lost her speech. I should not have cared much for this, but the water got inside the watch case and destroyed the price less picture, and I would have cried bitterly had it not been beneath the dignity of a man.’ “Poor .fellow, after all his wild de votion he was jilted for a handsome college swell. Whereupon he wrote again to his friend : ‘I am sure the, man who powders most, perfumes most, embroiders most, and talks most nonsense is most admired; but some have too good sense to esteem such monkey-like animals as these, in whose formation the tailors and bar bers go halves with the Almighty.’ “He invites Page to take a trip with him to Europe that would last two or three years, and writes: ‘lf we should not both be cured of love in that time, I think the devil would be in it.’ “But this disappointment in love did not prove a perpetual frost upon his affections. In due time he fell in love with the charming widow Martha Skelton, and the union proved a peculiarly happy one, and for many years was a source of the greatest do mestic felicity. It is quite a coinci dence, if not a consolation, to us or dinary mortals that Jefferson, like his illustrious contemporary, George Washington, the father of his country although so great and first, in so many things, was not first in every thing, for they both married widows, and had to be satisfied with warmed over affections, however sweet and precious.”—Speech of Col. William I.amb at University of Virginia Com mencement. FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS Mrs. Winsj.ow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty y'ears by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little sufferers immediately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world at 25 cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. The Highest Idea. Jesus teaches the best and the tru est and highest idea of God that it is possible for man to conceive; and of all the doctrines of God that have ever been taught or propagated in the world, this alone can satisfy the crav ings of man’s spiritual nature and en able the soul to rest secure in the consciousness that the arm of the Almighty and the All-good is ever outstretched to protect and defend. Would you seek after a teacher that can lead you up to the author of your being, and place your spirit in com munion with the God that made it, and hush your anxious fears with the assurance that the arms of His mer cy circle you now and evermore, you must find that sacred teacher in Je sus, for in this respect it is true that “never man spake like this Man.” Pointed Paragraphs. Some folks never expect to get what they expect. A fish in the hand is worth a dozen in the angler's story. All things come with the waiter who serves an order of hash. With a Leiter purse, flour by any other name would smell as wheat. It is always easier to love an enemy after you get the better of him. Drop a secret in the average wo man s ears and her tongue begins to work. It’s a poor obesity remedy that is unable to make the patient's purse thinner. Kissing may not be dangerous, but it often causes palpitation of the heart. No matfer what a woman’s age may be she never thinks she looks it. The shoemaker who fits a woman’s feet to her satisfaction performs a heroic feat. Homeopathists tell us that like cures like, but they fail to suggest a cure for dislike. Girls that are always harping on the rights of women usually get left in the matrimonial shuffle. An Ohio jury failed to reach an agreement, after three days’ delibera tion. A jury of women could have disagreed in.three nrnutes.—Chicago News. Dlieoui of the Blood and Nerve*. No one need anffer with neuralgia. ThU disease ia quickly and permanently cured by lirowns’ Iron Hitters. Every disease of the blood, nerves and stomach, chronic or otherwise, succumbs to Drowns’ Iron Bitters. Known and used for nearly a quarter of a century, it stands to-day fore most among our most vnlned remedies. Browns’lron Hitters is sold by all dealers. Christ’s Law of Lore. Christ’s law of love knows no ex exception. It embraces all that can be loved. It looks upward to God, the Giver of all good, and outward to every human being. It excludes no foreigner and no enemy; for even the enemy is to he loved as one’s self. Above all it does not forget God. It recognizes Him as the uni versal Father, the source of every blessing, the fountain of goodness and love, the author of Life, temporal and eternal, through whose Son we have salvation, and it gives him the fullest love of the heart. It reaches out be yond family and neighbors and citi zens to all humanity everywhere, the most ignorant and degraded—and it despises, none. It loves all. It is the grandest, the most expansive of all sentiments, that which most en larges the soul, that which brings man nearest to God. If the church by its ideals is lifting, and if it shall finally' conquer the world, it is be cause its outreach is larger than any other that the world knows. Patriot is noble, but Christian consecration is divine. Jesus gave the highest law, the most pholosoph’cal rule of pure ethics, nay, of pure religion, the world has ever heard, that beyond which human speculation cannot rise, when he laid down that law, not of justice nor of righteousness, on which Chris tianity rests: “Thou shalt love the I.ord thy God with all thy heJrt and thy neighbor as thyself.” The Chief Burges of Milesburg, Pa., says IJe Witt’s Little Karly Kisers are the best pills he ever used in liis family dur ing forty years of house keeping. They cure constipation, sick headache, and stomach and liver troubles. .Small in size but great in results. Dn. W. A. Wkioht. European newspapers are getting all the fun they can, or all the fun they dare, according to their place of publication, out of the German Em peror’s determination to go to Jerusa lem as a “personally conducted Cook’s” tourist. He leaves his own dominions in his own yacht, but as he reaches Egypt the tourist com pany takes charge of him. H|||na and whiftkey Habit* D ■ 111 curc'l Ht home with- B B 111 MVfl out |>aln. hook of oar 1§ * IVI *1 Honiara aent V KRK. B.M WOObLKY, M.l). Atlanta, taw. Office 104 N. Pryor BL OeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salv* Cures Pile} Scald*. Burnt. The Unlettered Learned. Crudity of diction is not always in dicative of crudity of thought. The latter has been longer in the world than language, for the primevel sav age was not without the elements of mind, when gestures and grunts were his sole means of expression. To re bel is as human as to err, and he who defies grammar is not necessarily a fool. How often do we hea it said: “Oh, lie’s an uneducated man,” and so pay no serious attention to what the “unfortunate” may have to say. It may happen that we may suffer more than he does by such assumed superiority. The round of the sea sons can effect as much as a college curriculum to an open-eyed man. Not in the same direction, not witli equal artistic finish; but fool himself who sets down the untutored student of the outdoor world as little better than a fool. By syntax and prosody we cannot solve.the problem of an oak tree or that of the minnow in the brook that flows past its gnarly roots. Greek philosophy does not explain the color of a flower, nor Roman so phistry why birds build nests. —Lip- pincott's. CA.BTOHI A. Boars tha /) Hie Kind You Have Always Bought B tr The Best Way. There is a best way of doing every thing—of carving a joint, sweeping a room, or holding a plow or keeping books. The educated man or wo man is the one who does the things' he or she has to do in the best way, without the waste of time or force. Many of these best ways we have not wit enough to discover for ourselves. There is an immense stock of experi ence handed down to us through old er people. To a child the father and mother represent the wisdom and skill of the race. If they do not someone else does. At any rate we enter into our heritage of the past in just so far as we learn from someone how to do the things we are called to do in the best way. Few people realize that the thing which will make them efli cient and skillful is just this matter of learning in some way or other how to do things in the best way. That is the difference between the raw “help” and the trained servant; between the bungler and the artisan; between the man or woman who is always worried, flurried and the person who does twice as much and yet has plenty of leisure. We have made a great gain in the art of living when set before ourselves the problem of finding out the best way of doing common duties. The editor of the Evans City, Pa., Globe, write*, “One Minute Cough Cure is rightly named. It cured my children after all other remedies failed.” It cures coughs, colds, and all throat and lung troubles. Du. W. A. Wiiioirr. McKinley to the Old Vets. President McKinley, responding to the message of the Confederate vet eran's, sent thanks to General Gor don, adding: “The present war has certain’y served one very useful purpose in completely obliterating sectional lines. The response to the nation’s call to arms has been equally spontaneous and patriotic in all parts of the coun try. The veterans of the gray as well as of the blue are now fighting side by side, winning equal honor and renown. Their brave deeds and the unequaled triumphs of our army and navy have received the gratitude .of the people. To have such a hearty commendation from yourself and col leagues of the work of this adminis tration in the conduct of the war, and the pledge of whatever support may be needed to help in bringing it to a successful completion, is indeed grat ifying. Tru Allen's Foot-Ease- A powder to be shaken into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen, nervous and hot, and get tired easily, if you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blis ters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. 'Fry it to-day. Sold by all druggists and Shoe stores for 25c. Trial package free. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Dr. Miles’ Nervine A REMEDY FOR THE Effects of Tobacco. THIS excessive use of tobacco, especially l:y young mon Is always Injurious and undoubtedly shortens llfo materially. Mr. Ed. C. Ebsen, compositor on tho Contra- Costa lVeu’B, Martinez, Cal., writes; *'l have used I)r. Miles’ Restoratlvo Norvlno andro celvod much benefit from It. I was troubled with nervousness, dizzy spells and sleepless ness, caused by tho use of tobacco and stim ulants. I took I>r. Miles’ Nervine with mar velously good results, allaying tho dizziness, quieting tho nerves, and enabling mo to sleep and rest, proving In my caso a vory beneficial remedy." Dr. Miles* Restorative Nervine Is especially adapted to restoring tho nervous system to its normal condition under Buch circumstances. It soothes, heals and strengthens. I)r. Miles' Remedies Dr.Jvß are sold by all drug-BFy gists undr a positive guarantee, first bottle BLNOrVITTG S benefits or money re- fel 1 jB funded. Hook on dls- u m. oases of tho heart and nerves free. Address, HHUIHH DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. 4 FAVORITE AND 0 MOST POPULAR FLOWERS* PANSIES, NASTURTIUMS IWEET PEAS, one Pkt. of ch variety for only C n(> . > lb. Iddria, of Tub F.1.0d, U blOd if imn c.l.lofii. .nil ri.1.1 Cultura, , •111. * MWUICOTT. Ili Utlt ttlss—selu, Flee. SENT FREE To Housekeepers— LieblQ COMPANY’S Extracts ot Dec! COOKBOOK telling hew to prepare many de licate and deilcious dishes. Address, ElEiyG CO., O. 2713, Hev *lortp ' I Excnrslon tickets At reduced rates between loeel points Are on isle After 12 noon Saturdays, And nntil 6 p. n„ Mondays, good returning nntil Monday noon following date ol sale. Person* contemplating either a bust* ness or pleasure trip to the East should Investigate and consider the advantages offered via Savannah andMteamer lines. The rates generally are eonalderably cheaper by this rente, and, In addition to this, passengers save slopping ear fare,and the expense of meals en rente. We take pleasure In commending to the traveling pnblte the route referred to, namely, via Central of Georgia Railway to Savannah, thence via the elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam ship Company to New fork and Boston, and the Merchants and Miners 11ns to Baltimore. The comfort of the traveling public Is looked after la a manner that defies criticism. Electric lights and electric hells) handsomely furnished staterooms, modern sanitary arrangements. The tables are supplied with all the delica cies of tho Eastern and Southern mar kets. All the lnxary and eomforts of a modern hotel while on hoard ship, affording every opportunity for rest, recreation or pleasure. Each steamer has a stewardess to look especially after ladles and chil dren traveling alone. Steamers sail from Savannah for New fork dally except Thursdays and Sundays, and for Boston twice a week. For Information as to rates and sail ing date* of steamers and for berth reservations, apply to nearest ticket ageat ef this eompaay, or to J. C. HAILE, Gen. Passenger Aft, *. M. HINTON, TraMe Manager, Savannah, Ga*