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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1899)
HOW OH She looks Poor clothes csnnot nuke you look old. Even pile cheeks won’t do it. Your household cares may bo heavy and disappoint ments may be deep, but they cannot make you look old. One thine does it and never (alls. It Is Impossible to look young with the color of seventy years in your hair. Ayers Hair vigor permanently postpones the tell-tale signs of age. Used according to directions it gradually brings back the color of youth. At fifty your hair may look as it did at fifteen. It thickens the hair also; stops it from falling out; and cleanses the scalp from dandruff. Shall we send you our book on the Hair and Its Diseases?/ Th*t Boat At/trlom free. It roa do not obtain all tha bona fltt yo*i •KMctMt from tli# me of Jh VH’or, wrtto tha doctor about It. >roba jr there ta acme dltßuultr with our ganeral aratam which TWnSflfiETaMAffEa: He Knew How to Take It. Here is a story which is vouched tor by a local Standard Oil official, says the Cleveland Plain Dealer. It concerns a certain superintendent who was sent up to the company's works at Whiting, to oversee matters. One morning as he was strolling about with his eyes open he discov ered an Irishman laying pipe in the customary excavation. The super intendant is a very irrascible man. In addition to this, he has a wonder ful command of sulphurious language. Something about the man’s work displeased him, and he suddenly opened up, or, rather down, on the poor fellow with all his heaviest ar tillery, But, though he condemed him to perdition in a dozen different ways, the man in the ditch never so much as looked up. If he had been deaf and dumb he couldn’t have taken his roasting more stolidly. The superintendent suddenly pulled up in his tirade. “See here, my man,” he roared, “don’t you know I’m giving you hell?” The pipe layer paused. Slightly turning his head he squinted up at the superintendent. “An ain’t I takin' it like a little man?” he asked quietly. A Story of Sterility, SUFFERINQ AND RELIEF. [LETTER TO MES. I'INKHAU no. 69,186] “Dear Mils. I'inkham —Two years ago 1 began having such dull, heavy dragging pains in my hack, menseis were profuse and painful, and was troubled was leueorrhoea. I took patent medicines and consulted a phy sician, but received no benefit and could not become pregnant. Seeing one of your books, 1 wrote to you tell ing you my troubles and asking for advice. S' on answered my letter promptly and I followed the directions faithfully, and derived so much benefit that 1 cannot praise Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound enough. I now find myself pregnant and have begun its use again. I cannot praise it enough."—Mrs. Cora. Ullso-n, Yates, Mamstuk, Mich. “Tour Medicine Worked Wonder*." “I had been sick ever since my mar riage, seven years ago; have given birth to four children, and had two miscarriages. I had falliug of womb, leueorrhoea, pains in back and legs: dyspepsia and a nervous trembling of the stomach. Now 1 have none of these troubles and can enjoy my life. Your medicine has worked wonders for me.”—Mas. b. Babhuabt, NkACastuc, Fa. HE BOILFsD THE WINE. “Apropos of the hardships of our boys in Cuba,” said an officer who saw a goood deal of duty on the is land, to a representative of the New Orleans Times-Democrat, “I’ll tell you a bit of a story. Shortly after our regiment went on duty near San tiago, at the beginning of Wood’s administration of governor, we began to be able to take a little better care of ourselves than we had done through out the campaign. Ope of our cap- tains—l won’t mention his name, for he’s sore about this aftair—was a great crank on the subject of mi crobes, and took extraordinary pains to avoid their society. He had pick ed up a raw Cuban cook, and gave him the most explicit orders to boil all the water used in the mess, no matter where he got it. ‘Boil every thing we drink,’ he said, ‘or I’ll kick your backbone through the top of your hat.’ “The Cuban promised faithfully, and obeyed the order to the letter. A week or so afterward the captain, while foraging about town, was pre sented with a quart bottle of cham pagne from one of the ships. He was overjoyed, and, securing a small lump of ice, he hustled back to camp and turned over his prize to his cook. ‘I want you to get up something extra good today,’ he said, ‘for I’m going to ask a few friends to dinner to help drink this wine.’ At the appointed hour the party assembled, and, after serving a repast of stewed beef and sweet potatoes, the cook stalked in, carrying a steaming saucepan half full of a muddy-yellow liquid. ‘What in thunder is that?’ asked the captain. ‘That’s the wine, senor,’ replied the Cuban gravely. ‘1 boil ’im good deal, an’ ’e mos’ all go ’way.’ The guests roared with laughter, and the captain was so thunderstruck he couldn’t say a word. He subsequently recovered himself sufficiently to grab a cleaning rod and chase the Cuban nearly half a mile. After that all anybody had to do to get a fight was to say ‘boiled champagne.’ When I left the wound still rankled.” THE COMING WOMAN. Who goes to the club while her husband tends the baby, as well as the good old fashioned woman who looks after her home will both at times get run down in health. They will be troubled with loss of appetite, headaches, sleeplessness, fainting or dizzy spells. The most wonderful remedy for these women is Electric Bitters. Thousands of sufferers from Lame Back and Weak Kidneys rise up and call it blessed. It is the medi cine for women. Female complaints and nervous troubles of all kinds are soon relieved by the use of Electric Bitters. Delicate women should keep this remedy on hand to build up the system. Only socents per bottle. For sale by W. A. Wright. Ideal satisfactions can be post poned a long time without inconven ience. Take a pill that is a pill, built on medical science by an able physician; such is the short story of Dr. Sawyer’s Little Wide Awake Pills. W. C. Jordan & Bro. Inventors of automobiles to be used in Paris will have to study with great care the regulations issued by the minister of public works, which enumerates all sorts of require ments that the vehicles must fulfil. They must be so constructed as not to allow any matter to escape which might cause explosions or cause any unpleasant smell. They must also be made so as not to frighten horses. The handles regulating the machin ery must be so arranged that the driver can work them without taking j his eye off the route he is following. The carriages must be built that nothing will obstruct his view ahead, and the various gauges, etc., must be so placed that they are lit up r dark. Every vehicle must be pro vided with two distinct systems of brakes, each capable of shutting off automatical)’ the motive force of the motor and bringing it under instant control. Scanty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Ca sea rets, Candy Cathar tic clean youi blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the laiv liver and driving all im purities front the body. Itegin to-day to banish pimples, IxiiU, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cuscare ts,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 29c, 90c. i PLANT LIFE, to be vig orous and healthy, must have Potash Phosphoric Acid and Nitrogen. These essential elements are to plants, what bread, meat and water are to man. Crops flourish on soils well supplied with Potash. Our pamphlets tell how to buy and apply fertilizers, and are tree to all. OERriAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau New York. William Black’s Distal-bed Dip. There lingers in Oban a legend to the effect that one hot day William Black, the novelist, went to a quiet place out of sight to swim. He un dressed in a remote part of the rocks. When he was in the water, a woman, deeply immersed in a blue volume, which was “The Princess of Thule,” came and sat unwittingly near his clothes. The swimmer, tired with his exercise, was> anxious to return to his garments, but the lady on shore was far too engrossed with the for tunes of Princess Sheila to heed the coughing intimations ol his presence. Presently matters came to a crisis. A sportsmae passed along the rocks and discerned Mr. Black’s dark head bob bing above the waves. He took it for a seal and was taking a deadly aim when Mr. Black jumped up in the water and implored: “Don’t fire. I’m a human man.” There are some things you can do without but you can’t afford to risk another day without a bottle of Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic, the greatest chemical discovery of the age. Heals Cuts, Burns, Gun-shot Wounds, etc., quicker than anything. And don’t forget that it cures Colic, too, while you wait about ten minutes. For further information apply to any one who has tried it fairly. Poison Hemlock. Water hemlock is a deadly plant common in most country neighbor hoods. Its roots are eaten often in spring by mistake for some edible root, and death frequently results. Cattle are often poisoned by drinking water in marshes where it grows. The poison hemlock from which the Greeks made poisons is a near relative to the water hemlock. It stands from two to seven feet high and has clusters of small white flowers and large parsleylike leaves. The stalk, being hollow, is often made in to whistles by country boys, and many children are poisoned in this lashion.| QUICK CURE FOR COUGHS AND COLDS, : PYNY-PECTORAL The Canadian Rented* for all TBROfIT AND LUNG IFFLGTiOIS. ! Large Bottles, 25 ora. DAVIS A LAWRENCE CO., Lim., Prop's Pirry Davis' Pain-Killer. FOB BALM ar DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS. Hon. C. B. Parker, of Mcßae, Ga., has donated to Mercer University the sum of SIO,OOO to be used by the trustees of the institution in any way which they may see fit. Mr. Parker did not enjoy the advantages of a college education, and it is mainly for this reason that he endows Mer cer, so as to assist ambitious young men of the country. tear Headache for Forty Years. For forty years I suffered from sick head ache. A year ago I began using Celery King. The result was gratifying and surprising, my headaches leaving at onee. The headaches used to return every seventh day, but thanks to Celery King, 1 have had hut one headache In the last eleven months. I know that what cured me will help other*.—Mrs. John IX Van Keuren, Saugertles, N. T. Celery King cures Constipation and all dls eaaea of the Nervee, stomach. Liver and Kid ney*. Sold by druggist*, a&o. andSOc. * A Doabtfal Story •( the Hah. A droll story is told of a mishap to a pickpocket is going about town that I hope is true, but like all too good stories, one is inclined to doubt its veraciousness, says the Boston Her ald. It seems, however, that a subur banite who had been in town doing her spring shopping on very limited means finally took the electric for home, with precisely $2.63 in her pos session. After paying her fare, she tucked the purse in her pocket—won derful woman, she had a pocket!— and thought no more about it. The car started crowded, but after a while the passengers thinned out, and when the lady reached her destination she was nearly alone. On arriving at her home she made the discovery that her purse was gone. The pocket had been picked, and she remembered that, in one of the various jolts and shakings up, a man leaned heavily on her side, had apologized, and shortly after pushed off the car. Well, there was less than $3 gone, if the pocket book was new and pretty. The next day the lady had occasfcn to feel in that pocket of hers, when lo and be hold! she picked out a diamond ring of great brilliancy! There was but one conclusion regarding its presence there. The ring had slipped from the finger of the thief who had picked her purse. To be brief, this unex pected booty has been carried to a well known jeweler, who appraised its worth at SBOO. Now the question is, where did the pickpocket get it, and what lurid expression did justice to the occasion when he discovered the loss of such a gem to gain a paltry $2 58. FREE OF CHARGE. Any adult suffering from a cold settled on the breast, bronchitis, throat or liina Troubles of any nature, who will call at tolin H. Blackburn’s, will be presented with a sample bottle of Boschee’s Ger man Syrup, free of charge. Only one botrie given to one person, aud none to children without order from parents. No throat or lung remedy ever had such a sale as Boschee’s German Syrup in all parts of the civilized world. Twen ty years ago millions of bottles were given away, and your druggists will tell you its’success was marvelous. It is really the only throat and lung remedy generally endorsed by physicians. One 75 cent bottle will cure or prove its value Sold by dealers in all civilized countries The London of Pepejg. It is disappearing fast; it has al most vanished, the London ofPepsys; but a few traces of it are still left and should be visited by lovers of the past and reade r s of the famous “Di ary,” betore they are entirely swept away. Regret can never cease that a threatening of blindness should have forced Pepsys to close his man uscript 34 years before his death and that thus it should only depict 11 years of his life for us. Yet, as Mr. Lowell said, “the lightest part of the diary is of value, historically, for it enables one to see the London of 200 years ago, and, what is more, to see it with the eager eyes of Pepsys,” while there will be few of its readers who will deny that “there is probably more involuntary humor in Pepsys’ Diary, than any book extant.’’—Pall Mall Magazine. Last fail I sprained my left hip while handling some heavy boxes. The doctor I called on said at first it was a slight strain and would soon be well, but it grew worse and the doctor then said I had rheumatism. It continued to grow worse and I could hardly get around to work. I went to a drug store and the druggist recommended me to try Chamber lain’s Pain Balm. I tried it and one half of a 50-cent bottle cured me en tirely I now recommend it to all my friends.—F. A. Babcock, Erie, Pa. It is for sale by J. H. Blackburn, druggist. Northern critics of the South claim for themselves a superior civilization, and therefore the moral right* to de nounce us for our treatment ot the negro. Some striking manifestations of this superior civilization have been chronicled in the newspaper press during the past few days. One of them was reported in the New \ork Hera’d of recent date. At Tarrvtown, N. Y_ a few days ago there was an attempt to lynch a negro for precisely the same crime which oftenest leads to lynching in the South; and the at tempt would no doubt have been successful if the fellow had not been spirited away to the jail at White Plains. “The feeling here against negroes is very strong,” said the Her ald’s report. —Savannah News. The Maid and the Miracle Man As Seen by an Old Maid. Asa sample of what an old maid can do with a pen we submit the fol fowing: “Man is a two legged ani mal that chews tobacco and walks on the forked end. Most men are born, we never heard of but one what wasn’t and he was made of mud. fustforsam ple. Man’s life is full of disappoint ment, growls and smokes corn-cob pipes. He goes forth like a lion in the morning and leaves the wood for his wife to chop, and in the evening he sneaketh home with his pants rip ped, and raises Cain about hard times. He has lagrippe on road working days, and walks twenty miles to a cir cus. He will chase a jack rabbit twenty miles through the snow, and borrow a horse to ride half a mile to the postoffice.” EISEMAN BROS! —ATLANTA^^- The largest stock of Clothing, Hats and Furnishings in the South. Thousands of styles for you to select from and prices here are from 25 to 50 per cent, cheaper than any where else, that’s because we are manufacturers and do not pay a profit to middlemen. V V V V *.* v Men’s Nobby Suits, - $5.00 up to $25.00 Boy’s Long Trouser Suits, $4.50 up to $15.00 Boys’ Knee Trouser Suits, $1.50 up to SIO.OO We buy the best fabrics and choose the newest and handsomest patterns and coloring that are produced. Buy here once in person or through our mail order department, and the satisfaction you’ll receive will make you a permanent customer of .’. .*. EISEMAN BROS. ( Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall‘Street., STORES < Washington, Cor. Seventh E Streets. ( Baltimore, 213 W. Gemini Sireet. 15-17 WHITEHALL ST—Our Only Store in AtKi We Manufacture and!Sell Engines, Boilers, Cotton Gins Cotton Presses, SeedCctton Elevators, Grist Mills, weoperateMachine Shops and]Foundry* We handle p a J| Supplies* MALLARY BROS & CO* MACON, GA. Mis* Lucy Tucker, the daughter of a prominent fanner ofVersailles, Ind., was the victim of nenrons prostration. Most of the time she was confined to bed, and was on the verge of St. Vitus’ dance. It was a pitiful case which medical science failed to conquer. Finally a doctor prescribed Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Her father said: “We began giving the pills at once, and the next day we could see a change for the better in her. We gave her one pill after each meal until she was entirely well. She has not been sick a day since. We think the cure almost miracu lous. Frank Tucker, Mrs. F. Tucker. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Tucker, being duly sworn, state that the fore going is true in every particular. Hugh Johnson, Justice of the Peace. —From the Republican, Versailles, Ind. Dr. William*’ Pink Pills for Pale People contain, in a condensed form, all the ele ments necessary to give new life and rich ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neural gia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after-effects of the grip, palpitation of the heart, pnle and sallow complexions, and all forms of weakness either in male or female. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People ar* never sold by the dozen or hundred, but always in pack ages. At all druggists, or direct from the Dr. Wil liams Medicine Company. Schenectady, N. Y. t 60 cants per box, 6 boxes $2.60. The Price of Asparagus. At dinner one day Mr. Gladstone remarked that the best asparagus was j£2 a bundle. Mrs. Gladstone, who was present, was moved to say: “How can you possibly know that? lam sure we have bought none.” “No, my dear,” was his instant re ply; “but when I see anew thing in the shops I always like to inquire the price, and I went into a shop in Pic cadilly this morning and asked what the remarkably fine asparagus they had in the window was selling at.” Truly the old simile of the elephant’s trunk was not inapplicable to the in tellect of Mr. Gladstone.—Reed’s “Life of Gladstone.” One Minute Cough Cure, cures. That is what it whs made for. : Saw Mills, ..and., everything ..in the.. Machinery Line. : Get our Prices be fore buying