The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, August 14, 1902, Image 3

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Mexican Mustang Liniment cures Lameness, Soreness, Stiffness and Spavin in horses. The quickest r , way. The cheapest \ / v '\\' The surest way i tocure ( Fire Durns, V/ Powder Burns, / fl \f \W/ Scalds from I V\J >®7* tearn or Water, f I " Bevere ie case j may be, is to saturate a piece of soft, old linen cloth with Mexican Mustang Liniment and bind it loosely over the wound. It gives quick relief from the sting ing, smarting agony, prevents inflam mation from developing, heals the sore with a haste that is most gratifying, and so thoroughly that it seldom leaves a scar. Keep tho cloth wet with tho liniment. Mexican Mustang Liniment euros Bumblefoot, Frosted Combs, etc., in Poultry. To Those who Desire to be Always Well Dressed Yet may be perplexed regarding the means for gratifying that clesire at the least possible cost, we suggest our Mail Order 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. 0. I)., 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—Eveningl—Evening Dress. —Tuxedo Dinner Jacket, 3 rinco Albert Frock Coat 4—Rul ing Clothes. s—Single Breasted Business* Suit. 6—Double Breasted ack uit. 7 Norfolk Suit. B—Flannel uit. 9—'Top Coats. 10—Liveries and Uniforms. 11—Fur nishings. I—Shoes. 13— uit Caßes, Bags and Hat Boxes. BOYS’ CLOTHING. 14 Piece Outing Suit. 15—3-Piece Suit. 15 —Norfolk Suit. 16 —Boys’ .Sailor Suit. 16__p ( .ter 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. Fine Steaks and Roasts^^fe2> 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. HATTHEWS & SON P. S. J. W. Stocks is with us and solicits the patronage of his friends. Wright & Carfield 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 How 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 • 18 00 Interest on deposit @ 6 %, • 4% Dividend on 100 Shares Steel Common, . $718.00 e DEBIT. Less 6% interest on 100 shares Steel Common, * m °° • $460.00 This is over 50 per cent, a year on your investment without considering ANY advance in the stock at ail, and we have no hesitancy in saying t tat we fully believe this stock will sell a GREAT DEAL higher. A Big Bull Market The indication. are, that we are on the rergeof one o( the bifgeat boll markers the country has ever known. It is rumored that John >V . ha.es 8 backed bv a pool of s2so.ooo.ooocomposed of J. Pierpont Morgan, Marshall Field. John J Mitchell, President Illinois Trust Cos., Moore Bros. : and sirreral other'rapiataiists for the purpose of putting prices very much high.r. - would advise the’immediate purchase of all good dividend paying stocks, such as Manhattan, St. Paul Rock island, and I copies Gas. Write for Special Letter Diving run ueuuis. THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE THURSDAY, AUGUST 14. 1902. “Boys in Bine” Soon to lie “Boys in Green.” The “boys in blue” will soon be but a memory. The United States army, from lowest grade of enlisted may must be newly uni formed by Jan.l, 1908, in acoor dence with regulations prescribed by a general board, which makes important changes in the color and cut of the clothes worn by the service. The famous dark blue is to be displaced in service dress for all officers and men by an olive green woolen suit. Olive green is not regarded as a pretty color for sol diers by the board, but it isclaim to be one of the best for conceal ing their presence at long dis tances. The cadet gray of the West Pointers was found to turn black at a distance of 1,100 yards,, and to be easily seen at greater distances. Red was not a good color, and olive green, the least i festhetic of all colors tried by the board, was adopted as the stand ard color of the soldier when he is in the field. The State and National Guard organizations mustalso adopt olive green for the fatigue or every-day uniform, and soon the blue will pass from army use, except for dress purposes and on State occa sions for officers and men. Khaki will be the material for the sol diers in the tropics and in sum mer time, while the material for winter wear will be of heavy wool en goods. All Chronic Diseases. Successfully Treated by the Hrittisli Doctors and They Will Make No Charge for Their Services to All Who Call ai their Office at :i54 second St. Macon, Oa. lie fore Aug. 15. A staff of eminent physicians and surgeons from the British Medical In stitute have at the urgent solicitation of a large number of patients under their care in this county, established a permanent branch of the Institute in Macon at No. 354 Second street. These eminent doctors have decided to give their services entirely free for I three months (medicines excepted) to all invalids who call upon them for treatment between now and Aug. 15th. These services consist not only of consultation and examination and ad vice, but also of all minor surgical ! operations. The object in pursuing this course is to.become rapidly and personally ac quainted with the sick and afflicted, and under no conditions will any charge whatever he made for any services ren . dered for three months to all who call before Aug. loth. The doctors treat all forms of diseases and deformities and guarantee a cure in every case they undertake. At the first inter view a thorough examination is made, and, if curable, you are frankly and kindly told so; also advised against | spending your money for useless treat j ment. Male and female weakness, catarrh : and catarrhal deafness, also varicocele, goitre, rupture, cancer, the opium habit and all diseases of the rectum, are positively cured by their treatment. The chief associate, surgeon of the Institute is in personal charge. Hours, 9to 8. Sundays, 10 to 1. Special Notice : —lf you cannot call send stamp for question blank for home treatment. TO MY FRIENDS. It is with joy I tell you what Kodol did for me. 1 was troubled with my stomach for several months. Upon being advised to use Kodol, 1 did so, and words cannot tell the good it has done me. A neighbor had dyspepsia so that he had tried most everything. I told him to use Kodol. Words of gratitude have come to me from him because I recommended it—Geo. W. Fry, Viola. lowa. Health and strength of mind and body, depend on tin; stomach, and normal activity of the digestive organs. Kodol, the great reconstructive tonic, cures all stomach and bowel troubles, indigestion, dys pepsia. Kodol digests all the food you eat. Take a dose- after meals. Jno H. Blackburn. L. Holmes. Barnesville,Ga. Milner, (ia. Maiden Speeches. Eighty years or so ago a distin guished Irish member of the Brit ish parliament named Dogherty, who subsequently became chief jus tice of Ireland, asked Canning what he thought of his maiden speech. “The only fault I can find with it/* said Canning, “is that you called the speaker ‘sir’ too often.” “My dear friend,” said Dogherty, “if you knew the mental state I was in while speaking you would not won der if I had called him ‘ma’am/ ” Whiteside, another Irish member who also became chief justice of Ireland, used to relate that on see ing during his maiden speech the speaker’s wig surrounded by blue j flames he knew it v a A time to sit 1 down. Get a free sample of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets at Jno. If. Blackburn’s drug store. They are easier to take and more pleasant ir. effect than pills. Then their use is not followed by constipation as is often the case with pills. Regular size, 25c per | box. OPENING A JACKPOT. The Kansas friends of Gone Ware have dug up an English edition of “lronquill,” annotated liberally in explanation of its Americanisms. The refrain, “Who openeth a jack pot may not always rake it down,” suggests difficulties disposed of in a footnote, which lays down a safe and conservative rule for foreigners in the great American game: “The ‘jackpot’ is a feature of a gambling game at cards in which each player contributes an equal amount of money to the formation of the ‘pot.’ To ‘open’ a jackpot means to start the gambling for that particular pot. It can only be done by that player who lias a hand of a certain prescribed degree of excellence. If he can sustain his supremacy, he may win, hut in the course of the play he may lose. If lie wins, he wins all; hence to open a jackpot, in slang parlance, means a person with a temporary advantage endeavoring to get all that his associates have in sight. Four kings is a good hand to open on.” Butler of Isaac Khan. General Isaac Khan, minister plenipotentiary from Persia to the United States, is decidedly cosmo politan in his habits and tastes. Even among his servants at the le gation several countries are repre sented. Ilis butler is a Persian, but the assistant butler is an Irishman. One day the minister happened to overhear a conversation between the Irishman and a tradesman. The Irishman was discussing the language spoken nt the legation. “Can you understand it?” asked the tradesman. “Not at all, at all,” replied the butler’s assistant, “but Oi make them think Oi do.” “Is that so ?” “It is so,” he went on. “They think Oi know the Persian gibberish and that Oi’ve thraveled in their country, but the fact is Oi’ve never been to South America in all my life.” —Saturday Evening Post. Storing Electricity. We note with regret that while the great electricians all speak hopefully of the transmission of power they are much more reserved about the great need of the hour — better means for its accumulation. If we could but store energy in some way not involving excessive weight, all means of transit would be rap idly improved and steam would speedily come to be regarded as an antiquated motive power. The dis covery will come, for hundreds of the keenest minds in the world are engaged in the research; but mean while the progress of locomotion halts. With a cheap and light ac cumulator the world will be a very small place and will soon contain but few obscure corners.—Specta tor. Rough on Twain. The Missouri papers are telling this story of Mark Twain’s recent visit to the state: A big crowd gath ered at a railway station to meet him. A little boy knew that some body was coming, but ho did not know Mark Twain from Bossie Francis. This kid perched himself on top of a freight car, where he could see what happened. The train rolled in, and as Mark stepped off the people became excited and shouted: “Here he is! Here ho is!” The kid on the box car thought a great criminal had been caught and shouted: “Git a rope! Git a rope!” Dr. Clemens laughed till the tears ran out of his nyes. Children and Bchool. It is curious the difference in the regard children have for their school and school work. When a lire started in the Warren street school one day recently, a little girl went sobbing down the street, with streaming eyes, because she feared her school was to be destroyed. A moment later a boy came tearing down the street on his wheel work ing overtime and shouting: “Hur rah, kids! The old prison’s on fire!” —Toledo Times. Ambiguous. One of the weekly papers has just unearthed a quaint army order. It deals with the machine guns pro vided for certain volunteer corns and advises that, where possible, “mules should be employed to draw them.” “When a mule is not avail able, however,” it goes on, “any in telligent noncommissioned officer will do instead.” There are several ways of calling a man an ass.—Lon don Globe. Cause and Effect. Dr. Filler —Your husband’s stom ach is in very bad condition. Mrs. Newliwed—Oh, my! Do you think my cooking is responsible for it? Dr. Filler—Well, it’s a severe case of gastritis, and — Mrs. Newliwed—Gastritis? Gra cious! It’s that gas range he made me use this summer! —Philadelphia Press. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in uso for over 30 years, has borne the signature of -and has been made under his per- Bonal supervision since its infancy. /'Ct-CC*uAC Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that tritle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops ami Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It eures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Scars tho Signature of _ The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY OTRKCT, NfW YOR* CITY. CONDENSED STORIES. Wilton Lackaye’s Estimate of a Rival Uncle Tom. Wilton Lackaye, the actor, has been credited with some very bright impromptu sayings, generally hav ing tq do with the people and things of his calling and for Unit reason not always to be appreciated by the layman. This, however, seems like one well within the grasp of even nontheater goers. In the winter of 190001 Lackaye was playing Uncle Tom in a Chicago revival of flic popular old drama made from Mrs. Stowe’s book. During the engage ment there the play was produced at low prices in another Chicago theater, and Lackaye, with some of the fellow members of his company, went out one afternoon to see their roles acted by the minor players. The Uncle Tom of the low price performance was an immense elinp, weighing at least 300 pounds. When the performance was over, one of his companions turned to Lackaye and asked: “Well, Will, what did you think of the big fellow in burnt cork?” “Anatomically great! Unclc- Tomically putrid!” was Lackayo’s reply.—Philadelphia Times. A Dark Pledge. The appearance of Grace George in a revival of “Frou Frou” in New York brought from the past an an ecdote of Mrs. Potter when she was presenting her ideas of Gilbert® in SHE L'AL'OHT JfOLO OF ITS HAND WITHOUT A WORD AND WHIRLED IT AFTER HER. the same play. The actress de scribes it as her “worst moment,” and it is told as follows: She was a little lute for her third entrance, and, seeing the child, a;, she thought, waiting, as usual, in the wings for her to take it on and show it to its reputed father, caught hold of its hand without a word and whirled it after her on the stage, delivering the lines which called the actor’s attention to the “pledge of our mutual love.” A perfect roar of laughter broke from the audi ence. Mrs. Potter gasped, looked at the child and nearly fainted. She had brought on a negress of the blackest type. Bdneata Yoar With Cat*cared. Undjr Cathartic, cure constipation forever. iq b.2&c. If C. C C. (all,druggist*refund tuouei. University of Georgia. 102nd /esslon. September 16th, 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. Ghancelor. i LiiJ 111JA^^ =r - 3Cl '7Vvkl 111 IJLLtI l rj Vl ' ft t | ' Mrs. Laura*. S. Webb, Vlct-Friwiiirnt Woman** lirm 'Tilllr Clulm of Northern Ohio. “I dreaded the change of life which wai fast approaching. I noticed Wine of Cardui, and decided to try • bot tle. I experienced tome relief the I lirit month, so I kept on taking !t for three month* and now I menstruate with no pain and I shall take It off *nd on no w until I have passed the climax." Female weakness, disordered menses, falling of the womb and ovarian troubles do not wear off. They follow a woman to thechange of life. Do not wait but take Wine of Cardui now and avoid the trou ble. Wine of Cardui never fails to benefit a suffering woman of any age. Wine of Cardui relieved .Mrs. Webb when she was in dan ger. When yon come to the change , of life Mrs. Webb’s letter will '■ mean more to you than it does I now. But you may now avoid the 1 suffering she endured. Druggists sell $1 bottles of Wine of Cardui. iWiNEor CARDUI) |ron MOUNTAIN Route! 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. 80th. For further information write I. E. Rehlander, T. P. A. Chattanooga, Tenn.