The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, November 13, 1902, Image 4

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Imbml I WHY are they GOOD and CHEAP? I GOOD because made of best Bessemer steel, B heavily galvanized —last a lifetime. B CHEAP because woven by improved machinery ■ immense quantities. B Delivered in rolls all ready to stretch and staple. Every rod guaranteed. Sold ■ everywhere. If your dealer hasn’t them, write to B AMERICAN HTKEI. Sc WIRE CO., B Chicago-New Vork-Bau Frauclsco-Denver. g NEW MONEY FOR OLD. There is an unprecedented de mand for new money. In reaching out for the evidence of wealth {es thetic taste is asserting itself in the choice of the tokens of prosperity. New, clean, crisp notes are in de mand, and persons do not hesitate to ask for them, 't here is a strong ly asserted objection to receiving old, dirty, crumpled paper money that looks as though it might he a vehicle for all sorts of disease germs. This fact is iu evidence at the window of every bank paying teller in the land and at the cash counter of every store. “Please give me new money,” and “Will you give me a cleaner bill in filace of this one?” are requests leard thousands of times every day. These requests arc having their effect so far that there is a growing tendency to pay out only the clean, unobjectionable money. It is an illustration of the old truth that people get what they want and insist on having. Every bank will verify this fact. Old and objectionable bills go into them, but they do not go out to their customers. They go to the redemption division of the national treasury, where they are exchanged for new money and then destitoyed. That department reports an im mense increase in this branch of its business. STARTLING, BUT TRUE. “If everyone knew what a grand medicine Dr. Kings New Life Bills is,” writes D. H. Turner, Dempsey Pit., you’d sell nil you had m a day. Two weeks’ use has made anew man of me.” lnfalliable for constipation, stomach and liver troubles. 25? at \V. A. Wright druggist. 4|* • The Plngpong Favor. Latest among dinner favors is the miniature pingpong table. It is 4 inches long by 2 wide and stands an incli and a half high. The table and legs uppear to be of high brown wood with a fine grain, and the top is covered to within a quarter of an inch of its edge with light green cloth. The pingpong net is of white blond cloth, held in position by two pearl headed pins. Neurone corner of the table a tiny ball is caught, and at the other a minute racket tied with a pale green bow is fastened. In the lower part of the table is the box for ice cream. Badly Shattered Nerves and Weaß Heart,. Too Nervous to Sleep or B.est. Dr.Miles* Heart Cure and Nervine Cured Me. A shattered nervous system nearly always }eads to some affection of the heart, espec ially where the patient’s heait is weak from hereditary or other causes. Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure is not only a treat heart regulator, but it is a blood tonic which speedily corrects and regulates the heart’s action, enriches the blood and improves the circulation. It will build you up lust as it did Mr. Crawford whose letter follows, and greatly improve your general health: “I have been so greatly benefited by Dr. Miles’ Nervine and Heart Cure that I freely recommend them as the best remedies for the diseases they are recommended to cure. When 1 began taking these medicines I weighed scarcely 140 pounds, my nerves were badly shattered ana my heart troubled me a great deal. I had pain in my left aim and shoulder, had difficulty in sleeping on mv left side, had frequent smothering spells and my heart would flutter and palpitate. I could eat scarcely any kind of food without suSering great distress, and was so restless and nervous that 1 slept little night or day. Now I am never bothered with my heart, my nerves are steady as a die, 1 sleep well, eat well and weigh 163 pounds. lam happy now and am trying to make back the money 1 spent for doctors who did me no good while I was iIL"—T. R. Craw roan, Center, Texas. All druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Mites’ Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Cos. Elkhart, lad. A LIGHT IN THE WINDOW. The Bril Ikli Medical liiKtilule, Located al. ;IA4 Second Sit., Macon, Ga.,AViH Give Free Services for Three M onllns lo All Invalids AVho Cull Before Dec., sth. Fast living, yielding to the despotic demand of modern society and close application to hard mental and man ual labor, are several cause's which are wrecking the constitutions of thous ands of Americans every year. Eighty percent of those afflicted are enduring the pangs of mental misery which unfit them for the duties of life. These people are despondent, dejected, discouraged, troubled with insomnia, shun society, distrust old friends, ab hor new ones; with them the vigor of youth is a thing of the past; many of them have paid large amounts of money in vain for a cure. The British Medi cal Institute has a light iu the window for all such invalids. During the past five years it has treated and cured 18,- 86-1 cases, and eighty-five per cent of them were cases of this’kind. It guaran tees a complete cure in every case it undertakes; it is incorporated under the laws of the state of Michigan, with a paid up capital of $60,000, there its guarantee is good. It treats and cures male and female weakness, catarrh and catarrhal deaf ness; also varicocele, rupture, goitre, cancer, morphine habit and all diseas es of thi' rectum. At its Macon branch, located at 354 Second St., has given free service to all invalids who called during the past twelve months, and it will continue giving free services for three months longer (medicines excepted) to all who call before Dec. sth. The chief associate surgeon of the Institute is in personal charge of the Macon oflice. Office hours: 9a. m. to 8 p. m. Sun days, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Si'kciai, Notice —If you can’t call send stamp for question blank for home tratment. His Wit Saved Him. In the early Indiana days, when both judge and attorney literally “rode the circuit,” a newly elocted judge, noted for his lack of personal beauty, was plodding along on horseback between two county seats one fine summer day. Sud denly he was confronted by a hunt er, who unslung his squirrel rifle from his shoulder and ordered the horseman to dismount. Somewhat startled by this peremptory com mand, the jurist began to remon strate. He was quickly cub short, however, by the remark: “It’s no use talking. I long ago swore that if I ever met a homelier man than I am I’d shoot him on sight.” The judge,sizing up the situation, promptly got oil his horse. Hold ing his arms he faced his assailant and said, “If I am any homelier than you are, for heaven’s sake do shoot, and be quick about it.” Needless to say, his wit saved him. Theatrical Interpolations. It is related that Feehter was more than once the victim of an outspoken denizen of the topmost circle. On one occasion in a melo drama the tragedian was slowly pay ing over a sum of money to the vil lain. Everything depended upon whether he had sufficient money for his purpose, and the paying out was most deliberate —so deliberate, in deed, that a member of the audience wearying of the scene enlivened the liroceedinga bv yelling, “Say, Mr. 'editor. give him a check.” On another occasion, whfXt the plnv was “Monte-Christo,” the hour 12:30 and the end not yet in sight, the curtain rose discovering Feehter in an attitude of contemplation. Not a movement, not a sound, broke the silence until a small but clear voice in the gallery queried in tones of anxiety, “I hope we are not keep ing you up, sir?”—Chambers’ Jour nal. If you are billions and seeking advisers. Take DeW’itt’* Little Early RisiVs, Just before going to bed. You will find on the morrow. You are rid of your sorrow— That’s all; just enough said. These famous pills do not gripe, but move the bowels gently and easily, cleansing the liver Their tonic effect gives strength to the glands, prevent ing a return of the disorder. Jno. H. Blackburn, L. Holmes, Barnesville, Ga. Milner. Ga. THE BARNESVILLE NEWrAZETTE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13,1902 COKCENSfa* STO3IE >. Driving a Bargain With a Was ingtor blag'* ox people in;a large cit , such at W'ii.-liington,” said an old Wash ingtoniiin the other day, “it 'ecalis to my mind a litfle incident which ■ oars Ago. was vention, and the city,- of <j Jtirse, contingent of folks 4 from thejeoun try, the real plain people, who.‘fofm the bulwark of the nation/ 1 “All wanted to E(£*Jt&iO|ghts, quite naturally, and some of them were trying to gel through on a very small margin financially and besides probably had been warned to look out for the man with the golden brick. A party of six, both men and women, came out of the Post building one afternoon, and a tall, rawboned old man with a pa triarchal board rushed out across the plaza and hailed a passing Four- teenth street car. “ ‘Say, mister/ he cried, brandish ing his weather beaten umbrella at the driver, ‘what ’ll you take us up to. Mount Pleasant for?’ “ ‘How many aro there of you?’ “ ‘Six/ came the answer. “ ‘Well, I’ll take you all up for 5 cents apiece/ said the driver, smil ing benevolently at the bucolic group. “ ‘l’ll go you/ responded the countryman, and with the triumph ant air of a woman who has just made a bargain counter look like three lead dimes he shouted back to his party: ‘He’ll take us up for 5 cents apiece. Come on.’ And they all scrambled in among the amused passengers. “It’s dollars to doughnuts that those folks who were running up against the wiles of city life never learned that the bargain they struck cost them 5 cents more than six tickets would have filched out of their exchequer.” Washington Post. Had Confidence In the Doctor. At the annual meeting of the As sociation of Military Surgeons of the United States Major John Van “THE DOCTOR TOLD ITS TO MAKE THE COF FIN.” R. Iloff in the course of his speech accepting the presidency of the asso ciation told the following story: “A lady was passing through the wards of an overcrowded military hospital when she suddenly encountered two men sawing and hammering on some boards. She looked at them in some surprise and wonderingly asked, ‘What are you doing there, my men?’ They looked up at her, and one of them said: ‘What are we doing? Why, we are making a cof fin; that’s what we are doing.’ ‘A coflin?’ she asked. ‘For whom are you making a coffin ?’ ‘For that fellow over there in that bed. Don’t you see him?’ The lady looked in the direction indicated and saw a man apparently in good condition and watching the operation with great interest. ‘Why, that man is not dead, and, indeed, he does not look as if he were going tQ die. Can’t you postpone this work?’ ‘No,’ the men said, ‘we can’t post pone it. The doctor told us to make the coffin, and he knows what he gave him.’ ” It Was Poor French. When the Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis was a seminary student, it is said that lie prided himself on being more proficient in modern languages than his fellows. When it came his turn to say grace in the “mess room,” he persisted in saying it in French until he was cut short by the gruff remonstrance of a wild western theologue—“Oh, here, Hil lis. cut that.” “I suppose you object to what you don’t understand,” retorted Hillis. “It ain’t that,” replied the other, j “so much as that I dou’t believe the l Lord himself knows what you are : saying.”—New York Times. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. How to Put the Attractive Glaze on Rolls and Loaves. The glaze on Vienna rolls and bread is one of the reasons that this delicious breadstuff is so popular. A glaze on other breads also has frequently been desired. Accord ing to the statements of an author ity on breadmaking, this glaz.ed sur face effect can only be produced by the admission of steam into the oven while baking. It is done this way: Place an open pan of water in the oven and let it heat long enough to give off sufficient steam to sat urate the air in the oven. When the loaves are put in, they should be quite cool, and owing to their coolness a momentary condensation of steam is effected over the whole surface of the loaf. The steam com ing in contact with the loaf renders soluble the starch on the outside surface, and as the water dries off leaves a soluble starch, a part of which lias been converged into dex trin. This also serves the purpose of keeping the interior of the loaf moist by preventing the rapid evap oration.—Kitchen Magazine. Practical Book Covers. I have discovered an easy way to prolong the life of paper bound vol umes. With ordinary paste made from flour or starch paste a piece of calico or gingham to the paper cov ers. The cloth should be in one piece just as the paper covering is. Dry under a weight to prevent curl ing. The paper covering is usually well glued to the back of the vol ume, but in use it soon breaks. The cloth prevents this. If the cloth used is in a plain color, it may be ornamented with a few stitches or strokes of the brush. This little discovery has given me much pleas ure, because 1 need no longer be ashamed of the appearance present ed by the cheap edition that 1 must often buy if 1 am to read a coveted book at all. And I can pass the book on to a friend without fearing that the first or last pages may be lost.—Good Housekeeping. For the Amateur Laundress. The woman who prefers to laun der her own handkerchiefs and lace fixings rather than to trust to the vagaries of the average laundress or laundryman can now perform the task with appropriately sized ma chinery at least so far as the wring ing of the dainty articles is con cerned. A small wringer has just appeared, and at first glance it sug gests a toy. A saleswoman when asked if the miniature contrivance were not a useful sort of plaything replied indignantly: “No, indeed, madam. That is a wringer for handkerchiefs and any other little articles you like. How do you ad just it? Why, it will fit a little washtub, and you can get that easy enough.” This latest convenience for the amateur laundress costs a little over half a dollar. The Top of the Piano. It seems to he the custom to ar range a miscellaneous collection of photographs and bric-a-brac on top of the piano, making sort of a dis play shelf of the noble instrument. We wouldn’t think of putting fancy articles on top of the stove if it had no fire—not unless it was entirely disguised, for a stove is a stove. To be sure, we don’t build fires in a piano, but we mean to put life into it when touching it, and we want to be free to open the top whenever we feel iike it. Why not keep it just a musical instrument and not put anything on it? The simple, bare surface will grow restful to the eyes and will suggest sweet music’s shrine. —Musician. Oven Temperature For Cake. The correct temperature of the oven for various cake mixtures is often a vexed question for the ama teur cook. A cake which is made with butter needs a moderate oven; a cake made without butter wants a quick oven. For‘small cakes and cookies the oven should be moder ately quick. Cakes that have au ad mixture of molasses burn more eas ily than others and should be watch ed closely. They require a moder ate oven.* If the cake browns quick ly after going into the oven, there is too much heat. Remove a lid from the top of the stove or put into the oven a dish containing cold water. Jellied Bouillon. If bouillon is not made a first course, it may be served'-jellied and with almonds as a salad course. It is particularly pretty when served in individual molds. The jelly is easily made from extract of beef, well "seasoned, diluted with hot wa ter and made into a delicate jelly with dissolved gelatin. A little is put in the bottom of the molds, and the almonds, blanched and cut into strips, are arranged in a pattern in the jelly before the molds are filled. When ready to serve, turn out on a bed of lettuce hearts and send around with the course a stiff may onnaise. agvv MOZLEY’S Lemon Elixir. A Pleasant Lemon Tonic. Cures indigestion, headache, malaria, kidney disease, fever, chills, loss of appetite, debility, nervous prostration, heart failure, and appendicitis, by reg ulating the Liver, Stomach, Bowels and Kidneys. 50 cents and SI.OO a bottle at druggist. Rev. John P. Sanders Writes. Dr. H. Mozley, of Atlanta, Ga : I have been relieved of a trouble which greatly endangered my life, by using Mozley’s Lemon Elixir. My doctor de clared my only relief to be the knife, my trouble being appendicitis. I have been permanently cured and am now a well man. I am a preacher of the M E. Church South, located in the town of Verbena, Ala. My brother Rev. E E Cowen, recommended the Lemon Elixir to me. Ship me a half dozen krud bottles C. O. D. ge ON ACCOUNT of long connection with the banking business and close connection with financial centers throughout the coun try, the management of Citizens Bank of Barnesville is able to give its patrons unexcelled service. Deposi tors seeking investments have the benefit of our knowl edge of securities, etc. The CITIZENS BANK OF BARNESVILLE solic its the accounts of individuals, business firms and institutions. Its financial standing is of the highest. \ C. H. Humphrey, J• IVi CSibßlllSSf President. From Manufacturer to Vou We are the only retail clothiers in the South who manufacture all the clothing they sell. Our Atlanta store is the lar gest men’s and boys’ outfitting establish ment in the South. In purchasing from us, you not only secure a saving of the middle-man’s profit, but you secure the most fashionable and most serviceable clothing, shoes, hats, furnishings, trunks, suit cases, traveling bags, etc. $ t Orders by mail filled satisfactorily. Send for our catalogue. EI/EMAN BROT, (OUR ONLY ATLANTA STORE) ii, 13, 15 and i i Whitehall Street. EISEMAN BROS., ATI ANT A GEORGIA EISEMAN BROS., Washington, D. C. A 1 LAll 1 A, Baltimore, Md. fBUCmUGHTj OBSTIPATIONJI a Constipation is nothing more £ jjS than a clogging of the bowels “ and nothingless than vital stag- H nation or death if not relieved. , If even- constipated sufferer could realize that he is allowing poisonous filth to remain in his system, he would soon get relief. Constipation invites all kind of contagion. Headaches, bilious ness, colds and many other ail ments disappear when consti pated Bowels are relieved. Thed ford's Black-Draught thoroughly cleans out the bowels in an easy and natural manner without the purging of calomel or other vio lent cathartics. Be sure that you get the origi nal Tliedford's Black-Draught, i made by The Chattanooga Medi- I cine Cos. Sold by all druggists in ' 25 cent and SI.OO packages. Sorran. Ark., Hay 26. 11*01, I cainot recommend Thedford’s Black- I>raa>ht too'l.lnh It. 1 keep It In my house aiwthe tlae aad hare ased It for the lait tea year*. I merer (tare ui children any Other laxatlre. I think I could nerer be able to work without It on account of belnar troubled with coasUp-tlon. l'onr medicine Is all that keepa me up. C. B. HcFARLAXB. FREE! FREE!! FREEH! 25,000 Bottles. Every reader of The News Gazette is entitled to one. Here is a propsition which will interest every reader of this paper. Gilbert’s Gravel Weed Com pound has met with the most cordial reception of any remedy ever put on the market. It has effected quick cures and gives such genuine satis faction wherever introduced. Mr. E. O. Mays, engineer for the Southern Ry., was cured of a severe kidney trouble by this wonderful medicine. Hon. Walter A. Given, a prominent druggist of Gurley. Ala. says: “It is the most wonderful riiedicine of the age.” We have hundreds of similar grateful tributes from those who have used tins medicine. So confident are we of the merits of our remedy that we are willing to have you try it with out one cent of cost. If you suffer from Brights Disease, diabetis, gravel, inflamation of the bladder, pain in the back, sleeplessness, nervousness, indigestion, rheumatism or are in a general rundown condition, write to day for a sample bottle which will be sent you absolutely free. Address, The Squaw Y t ine Medicine Cos.. * Huntsville, Ala. Regular size 50 cents per bottle. Sold by John H. Blackburn, Barnes ville, Ga. city larber7hop. Hair cutting a specialty, by best of artists. My QUININE HAIR TONIC is guaranteed to stop hair from falling out. 0. M. JONES, Prop., Main street, next to P. 0. Kodoi Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eaft*