The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, July 24, 1902, Image 7

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Mexican Mustang Liniment for horse ailments, for cattle ailments, for sheep ailments. The most sensible thing to do when suffering from Bruises or Cuts is to treat the wound with Mexican Musikng Li m mm emit, because it is noted for its ability to drive out sore* ness and inflammation, after which it heals the damaged flesh in a remarkably short space of time. For oj*>n wnundn soak a cloth with the liniment and bind on the same as you would a poultice. For other hurts apply freely and rub it well in. For MAN, BEAST or POULTRY. Mexican Mustang Liniment is a sure remedy for curing Scaly Legs among poultry. To Those who Desire to be Always Well Dressed Yet may be perplexed regarding the means for gratifying that desire at the least possible cost, we suggest our Mail Ordel - De partment. We fill out-of-town orders the day they are receiv ed. Money sent with order is promptly and cheerfully re funded if goods sent do not please, or we send C. O. D., sub ject to examination ; or when satisfactory references are sent we send goods on approval. Write for handsome illustrated booklets— sent free; ask for numbers desired. MEN’S GOODS. I—Evening Dress. —Tuxedo Dinner Jacket. B—rinco Albert Frock Coat 4—Rid ing Clothes. s—Single Breasted Business Suit, 6—Double Breasted aek uit. 7 Norfolk Suit, (i—Flannel uit. 9—Top Coats. 10—Liveries and Uniforms. 11—Fur nishings. I—Shoes. 13 —uit Cases, Bags and Hat Boxes. BOYS’ CLOTHING. 14— -Piece Outing Suit. 15—3-Piece Suit. 15—Norfolk Suit. 10—Boys'Sailor Suit. 10—Peter Thompson Sailor Suit. 17—New Columbia Double Breasted. 17—Double- Breasted Jacket and Pants Suit. 18 —Boys’Coatee Suits. 18—Full Dress Tuxedo. 19— Irvington Suits. 19—Russian Suits. o—Wash Suits. EISEMAN BROS., Department l. Atlanta, Georgia. Washington, D. C. Baltimore, Md. Seasons and Styles. Come and go but the appetite remains the same. Pine Steaks and Roasts Are as necessary and as much wanted this season as last and we are still in the market to supply these wants. We will take your orders by phone, or otherwise, and deliver promptly. Our meats, fish and oysters are always fresh and first-class. P. F. fIATTHEWS & SON P. S. J. W. Stocks is with us and solicits the patronage of his friends. Wright & Garfield Bankers and Brokers. 52 Brodway, New York. Branch Offices: 30 West 23d St. 219 West 125th St. Orders solicited for the purchase or sale of STOCKS. BONDS. GRAIN. COTTON, in any amounts for cash or on moderate margin flow To Make More Than 50 per cent. A Year on Your money EXAMPLE: Buy 100 Shares United State Steel Common (say 43) on 3 percent, margin. CREDIT. Margin deposited $900.00 Interest on deposit (B 6%, 18.00 4 % Dividend on 100 shares Steel Common 400.00 $718.00 DEBIT. Less 6% interest on 100 shares Steel Common, $258.00 $480.00 This is over 50 per cent, a year on your investment without considering ANY advance in the stock at all. and we have no hesitancy in saying that we fully believe this stock will sell a CREAT DEAL higher. A Big Bull Market The indications are, that we are, on the verge of one of the biggest bull markets the country has ever known. It is rumored that John W. Gates, is backed by a pool of *250,000.000 composed of .1. Pierpont Morgan, Marshall Field. John J Mitchell, President Illinois Trust Cos., Moore Bros, and several other capitalists, for the purpose of putting prices very much higher. We would advise the immediate purchase of all good dividend paying stocks, such as Manhattan. St. Paul. Rock Island. Atchison common, Steel and Peoples Gas. Write for Special Letter Giving Full Details. THE BARNESVILLE *TBW.S-GAZETfS THURSDAY, JULY 3i, 1902. GERMS ON PINS. We have long accepted that our pennies and other coins were germ carriers, but it is a surprise to be told that those trifling bits of metal that we use so freely and scatter so widely, the common pins, are quite big enough to carry the deadliest of germs. Yet why not? We know that a pin scratch occasionally pro duces virulent blood poisoning, and, though it has been assumed that the trouble came from the open wound rather than the actual pin, it might easily under this new reading pro ceed from a poisonous germ carried by the pin itself. The constant erv against germs and microbes and the apparent fact that there seems no escape from contact with them need not be com pletely discouraging. The average healthy mortal in good condition resists the attacks of these minute enemies pretty effectually. The real value of the germ agitation among the laity is because of its en couragement to general sanitation and cleanliness, conditions in which all communities have vastly im proved of late years.—‘New York Post. Hanna’s Hash. Senator Hanna’s chef prepares corn beef hash according to the fol lowing method: Equal parts of boiled prime corn beef and potatoes are uged, the beef chopped as fine as possible and the soft, mealy potatoes cut into tiny cubes. A small onion is ’minced to add flavor, and the dishes are rubbed with a head of garlic. Another garlic head is wrapped in a piece of fat and thrown into the center of the hash. The whole is then mixed thoroughly and nicely browned in a big skillet or frying pan. During this operation disks of Bermuda onions cut so that each round shows every ring of the onion are thrown into a deep dish of pure lard and browned delicately. When these disks are crisp, they are used to garnish the edge of the platter, and the hash is served garnished with parsley or herbs, and the usual condiment is a squeeze of lemon. His Last Wail. The white robed nurses quietly busied themselves at the patient’s bedside. lie was plainly breathing his last. “Have you anything to say?” tenderly asked the attending phy sician. “Nothing—nothing!” gasped the dying man. “It is only this regret, this remorse, this terrible blow to my self respect!” lie breathed now in a labored manner, and they bent lower to hear his story divulged. “Oh,” wailed the unfortunate, “to think —to think that J have smash ed all the antispeed laws in Chris tendom against automobiles and then—and then to be run over by an ice wagon!” It was too much, and lie gave up the ghost in mortal agony. —Balti- more News. Still Keeping Office Hours. When ex-Speaker Thomas B. Reed was asked recently if he in tended to become a permanent resi dent of New York, he answered: “I find that the financial importance of a New Yorker is gauged by the earlinees with which he leaves the city and the lateness of his return. Ilis riches are measured by the length of time he stays away.” “But how about yourself?” asked one. “Well,” he said slowly, “I am still keeping office hours.” Finger Impressions. Remarkable testimony to the val ue of the new system of identifying criminals by their finger impres sions was afforded in the case of a man charged at Westminster, Eng land, with theft. While in Hollo way the aecused had finger impres sions taken, and they were found to accord with those of a man sen tenced at Reading in 1899 to six months’ hard labsr for a jewel rob bery. The prisoner, who now gave a different name, admitted that he was the man. Her Observation. “Miss Gloriana,” said the college athlete in the outing suit, % resting on his oars a moment, “let us co educate a little in rowing. Leave the tiller, come and sit by me and take this other oar.” “But this is not coeducation, Mr. McCorkle,” she said, noticing that they were a long distance from all the others. “This is segregation.” And she put the boat about.— Chicago Tribune. Looking For His Class. The following advertisement ap peared the other day in a London paper: “An America* gentleman visiting London, whose tastes tend to theaters and frivolities rather than to archaeology, botany, etc., de sires entree to congenial (bohemian) society. Liberal terms.” A CLEVER CLERK. Once upon a time the famous banking house of Hope of Amster dam sent a young clerk to negotiate a matter of business with the Bar ings in London. Treated with gen erous hospitality, the clerk became intimate with the family and made an impression upon the daughter. He asked permission of the father to urge his suit, and after rebuking him for his presumption Baring told him that were he a partner in the Hope house he might listen to him. The clerk, after succeeding with his mission, returned to Am sterdam and told what Baring had held out to him. He then asked to be made a partner on the strength of his prospects, and the Hopes agreed. Asa partner the clerk re turned to England and eventually married Miss Baring. Ho remained in England, entered parliament and became Lord Taunton. The clerk’s name was Labouchere, the father of Henry Labouchere, the famous ed itor of Truth and an M. P. One of Senator Hoar’s Habits. One of Senator Hoar’s peculiar street car habits is his seemingly unconscious desire to get a sent near the door where he is to get out. The other day he boarded a long F street car which was well filled. The venerable senator had to take a seat near the front end. As the car proceeded toward the capitol the passengers gradually got out. Ev ery time a person next to the sena tor got out he promptly slid into the vacated place. By repeating this sliding operation a half dozen times the senator arrived at the seat next the door, which he held the balance of the journey. The senator seemed preoccupied the while with other matters, his lips were moving rapidly, evidently trying to keep pace with his thoughts, and when he executed the move for his departed neighbor’s seat it was with the unconscious eagerness of a small boy after an apple.—Washington Star. A Breezy Day In Douglas. Douglas has had a little warm “spell,” writes a correspondent of the Arizona Republican. The ther mometer stood at 10G in the ice box, but as there was no ice in it at the time the mercury was excusa ble. These warm days the valley is entertained and malaria dissipated by an endless succession of little corkscrew winds. They are about as big around as an old maid’s waist and about a mile high. They go waltzing along among the mesquites and across the street, where the dust is so deep you have to wear snowshoes, and they will chase you as a coyote chases a jackrabbit, till they catch you, douse your nose and ears full of sand ami skip merrily away, almost laughing at you. I saw one yesterday that filled the heavens with everything, from a Po lice Gazette to a War Cry. French Politeness. Leon Bourgeois, the new presi dent of the French chamber of dep uties, represented France at the peace congress at The Hague and gained there a reputation as a dip lomat. He has been minister of public instruction, lie is an orator and possesses all the arts of the trained parliamentary speaker. To M. Deschancl, whom he has beaten in nis new office, lie said: “I suc ceed'you. I shall never replace That was a delicate way of softening defeat which is not habit ual at the Palais Bourbon. Contested Seats in Congress. Under the lav/ every contestant for a seat in congress is allowed $2,- 000 for expenses, provided the con test is regular, and it is remarkable that in nearly every such case the contestant finds that his expenses foot up just the $2,000. Congress man 'Tompkins of the Twelfth Ohio district, whose seat was contested by John J. Lentz, is a notable ex ception to the general rule. Mr. Tompkins sent in a bill for sl,- 999.0(5, positively refusing to charge the government a penny more thdn was right. His Sympathetic Nature. “Well, I’m glad this ragtime mu sic is getting out of date,” re marked the business man. “I’m sure it gave me indigestion.” “Nonsense!” “Fact. The orchestra at the res taurant where I take my lunch al ways played it, and I couldn’t help keeping time with my jaws.”—Phil adelphia Press. Exercise Without Exertion. Mark Twain occasionally makes a grim effort to earn a reputation m a philosopher. Recently he lail down the,dictum that a malarial chili has one advantage, for through its agency, according to his concep tion, it is a means by which “an all wise Providence has devised a way by which man can indulge in exer cise without exertion.” nimTWtßr:triTiTim, “liaTTiiTi irnmthwiwuiitnfflfltfw CASTQRI4 ■■■ r-.^Rwwfcai.ii' AVegetable Preparation for As similating ihcFood andßegula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of iMßßtoiiHiiiig Promotes Digeslion.Chcerful ness and Rest. Contains neitlier Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. FJot Narcotic. n*peaf(fU nrSAMUELMVmR f\mvkm ,W - V Mx.Smnn ‘ 1 A!mU U* SmUt - I Jhu*r <Wrf • I HfbemwH - / IhTarbMtrXoHa* I hlnpSfd- I ; Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa Ron, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SIJEEP. Facsimile Signature or NEW YORK. > EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. An Unwilling Juror. A New Hampshire judge has in his possession the following letter sent to him by an old farmer who had been notified that, he had been drawn as a juror for a certain term of court: “DeerJedge; I got your letter tollin’ mo to come to manchesstor an’ do dooty on the joory an i rite you these fue lines to let you know that you’ll have to git someone else for it ain’t so that I kin leave home now. I got to do some butcherin’ an’ sort over a lot of apples just about the time the joory will be settin in your Court. Si .Jackman of this town says that lie would as soon as not go, fer lie ain’t nothin’ else to do just now so you better send fer him. I hate the worst way not to oblige you, but it ain’t so I kin at present. Ennyhow J ain’t much on the law, never havin’ been a joory man ’ceptin when old Bud Stiles got killed by the cars here some years ago when 1 was on that set on the body with the koroner. So you better send fer Si Jackman, for he has got some kin in man chesster he wants to visit enny how, an’ he’d be willin’ to go fer his car fare there an’ back. Aneer baek if you want Si.”—Lippin cott’s for July. SAVES A WOMAN’S LIFE. To have given up would havr incut death for Airs. LouisCragg, of Dorches ter, Mass. For years she had endured untold misery from a severe lung trou ble and obstinate cough. “Often,’’she writes, “i could scarcely breathe and sometimes could not speak. All doctors aud remedies failed till f used J)r. King’s New Discovery for consumption and was completely cured.” Sufferers from cough, colds, throat aud lung trouble need this grand remedy, for it never disappoints, cure is guaranteed by W, A. Wright. Price 60c and SIOO. Trial bottle free. Obeyed Orders. “What was the cause of that awful racket and disturbance in your office just before you came?” asked one of the tenants on the third floor, says the Chicago Tri bune. “You know that young cowboy that came yesterday to begin the study of law with me?” said the other. “Yes,” “Well, I thought lie might as well begin at the bottom, and I told him that when became down this morning the first thing for him to do would be to dean out the office. lie found half-a-dozen fellows there waiting for me, hut he did it, all right.” ailt "tJHIi rtrtKtAU Il'ilATS fourth Hynip. Twu: In times. HoM by ctrugtft&t*. iH COTIM For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the / Signature /Jvp ‘ffl Ai' Use \Y For Over Thirty Years HUM THK OtMTAUN COMPANY. NK)Af VOW* CITY. University of Georgia. 102nd/ession. September 18th, 1902 Academic Department, Law Department, Agricultural Dept. No tuition to residents of state except in Law School. In Agri culture, Short Winter Course, One Year Course, and Full Course Dormitory room free. Excellent board in Denmark Hall SB.OO per month. Write for handbook and catalogue to Walter B. Hill, Athens, Ga. Cbancelor. tlo pain or discomfort at the menstrual period. No woman needs to have any. Wine of Cardui will quickly relievo those smarting menstrual pains and tho dragging head, back and side aches caused by falling of llie womb and irregular menses. WINE° CARDUI has brought permanent relief to 1,000,000 women who suffered I every month. It makes the men strual organs strong and healthy. It is tho provision made by Na ture to give women relief from the terrible aches and pains which blight so many homes. G hkknwood, La., Oct. 14,1900. I have been very nick for pme time. 1 was taken with, a revere jjh,ln In my side asd could not vet any relief until I tried a boitlo of Wine of Cardui. Be- | I fore Iliad taken ail of it I was relieved ■ l'rd<!rtu^;tcmr y that you w ° a I Mss. M. A. Yooirr. ■ For advice and literature, address, giving i,mo- I tonm. Jhe ladies' Advisory itepartmont, Tue ■ ChatlanooKa Medicine Cos., Chattanooga, Tenn. I ;V-- " = I' ' RON N Route .•• 'v ' • ' - 1 l " ■ EXCURSION TO CALIFORNIA VIA MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILROAD. Tickets on sale to either San- Francisco or Los Angeles and re turn at very low rates, August Ist. to August 7th. Final limit to return Sept. ROth. For further information write I. E. Rehj.andkr, T. P. A. Chattanooga, Tenu.