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TO THE LADIES
and everybody else for that matter.
Are you aware of the fact that you will save yourself a great
deal of bother and worry, not to say anything about time and
cents, if you will drop in our store first when you are on the look
out for the many little and large things in your daily wants.
_r~u~ u_>—!_i~ u~ _r-
Remember We Keep Nearly Everything
and this fact can be verified if you “Ask for what you don’t see.”
Come here first, and if perchance we don’t have what you desire,
will take pleasure in telling you where you’d be most likely to
find what you w-ant.
Do you see the point? Well, if we can’t supply your wants, ve save
you time and worry by helping to find such articles as we don’t
sell. Come to see us.
Yours to please,
B. F. Reeves.
Garden Hose and &
Lawn Mowers
ARE NOW TAKING THE PLACES MW
OF THE SPADES AND RAKES.
The Flowers and Vegetables Need /
Sprinkling and the Grass 1 i j
Must Be Cut.
Save Money and to Save Labor
Purchase All Carden Implements Here.
\Vt* have h line that is unsurpassed for quality. The design of each artiele is
perfect. A partial list will be sufficient to give an idea of value:
Good Three-piv Rubber Hose for Tb.e. Good Lawn Good
Garden Hose, 25c. Just received a large lot of Peerless Ice Cream Freeze s
from $1.50 up. I>e sure to come and examine my Water Coolers. You will
need them soon.
I am ami will still continue to lead the market in Paints and Painters’Sup
plies Remember, I carry a large assortment of Pine Fittings, Waterworks
Supplies, Electrical Supplies, Packing, etc., and will make you prices right.
Come to see me if you intend buying a Reaper, Mower or Rake. lam agent
for Walter A. Woods’, the best on the market, and none can touch my prices.
J. B. BANKSTON.
GO TO
Suggs Bakery
And Restaurant
For a good meal
only 25 cents.
Bring in e your
Eggs and Butter and
don’t forget my fresh
candies Chocolates
Especially.
SUGGS, The Baker.
STOPPED FREE
B -T K" Permanent!) Cured b)
1 I X OR. KUNE'S GREAT
I I V NERVE RESTORER
N* Fit* after Mil di 'i vii
H OOWUITATION, MiMil ot V* mUI. ttnito*
• TKIAIL BOTTI.K FRKIi
Permanent Cura, **' *•? uw*>r*r wjuf. •* •>
Nm.oimi Kptlepay . Spaama, Hi. \ itua
Dance. Debility, Kxhauation. Kuo<Ud is.i.
OK R 8.11 INE.LfI 93’ ** St* p J? iU<l *JPh'-
President
Suspenders
Durability
\ Metal Parts Rust I fj
\Positively Guaranteed if IMJ 1
" president " is on buckles. /sjjf\f /"" J
\r by mail postpaid. j At/ /
or dark. wtdr or narrow JUUNij M y M
C. A. Vdgarton MFC. CO.
80,y83. SWriAF.
A. K. HAWKES
The Famous Atlanta Optician
RECEIVED
GOLD MEDAL
Highest Award Diplomas of Honor
For Superior Lens-Grinding and Ex
cellency in the manufacture of Spec
tacle and Eve-Glasses. Sold in over
8,000 Cities and Towns in the United
Stales.
ESTABLISHED IH7O.
These Famous Glasses for Sale by
J. H. BATE & a
EYESIGHT TESTED FREE.
Caution : Hawkes’ glasses are never
peddled Be sure that “Hawkes” is
stambed on frame.
THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THURSDAY, MAY 28. 1903
Illinois Central
Railroad
Offers very low rales on following dales:
Colonist tickets to California, Utah, Nevada,
New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Oregon,
Washington, Montana. Idaho, Wyoming, on
sale daily until June 15
ST. LOUIS AND RETURN.
One fare plus 25 cents. On sale June 16-17,
good to return until June.2s
SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES AND
RETURN.
National encampment G. A. R Tickets on
sale July ill to August 13 Good to return un
til October 15.
DENVER. COL., AND RETURN
On sale June 30 to July 9. Good to return
until August 31.
Through Pullman sleeping car daily between
Jacksonville, Macon, Atlanta, Chattanooga,
Nashville and St Louis. Free reclining chair
car between Nashville and St. Louis, and
through Pullman sleeping car daily between
Nashville and C hicago. This is the only double
track line between Chicago and the Ohio river.
For full particulars, rates, tickets and pam
phlets, address
FRED. D. MILLER,
Traveling; Passenger Agent,
No. t Brown Building. Atlanta, Ca.
Wife —A woman’s work is never
done.
Husband —You have anticipat
ed me. That shirt of mine still
lacks its needed buttons. —Rich-
mond Dispatch.
Don’t forget the old man
with the fish on his back.
For nearly thirty years he
lias been traveling around the
world, and is still traveling,
bringing health and comfort
wherever he goes.
To* the consumptive he
brings the strength and flesh
he so much ii?eds.
To all weak and sickly
children he gives rich and
strengthening food.
To thin and pale persons
he gives new firm flesh and
rich red blood.
Children who first saw the
old man with the fish are now
grown up and have children
of their own.
He stands for Scott’s Emul
sion of pure cod liver oil —a
delightful food and a natural
tonic for children, for old folks
and for all who need nesh and
strength.
fCOTT * BOWNE, Chemists.
—415 Pearl Street, New York.
50c. and *I.OOj all druggists.
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
A Few Useful Hints That Careful
Housekeepers Will Appreciate.
Use a long handled brush in
cleaning the walls or, more proper
ly, a long handle ending in a wire
frame covered by a lamb’s wool bag,
which may be slipped off and beaten
And washed.
Paint should never be scrubbed,
but wiped with a soft woolen cloth
dipped in warm water. A slight
touch of sand soap may be used on
a stubborn stain. Dry with a piece
of flannel cloth after a good rins
ing.
To clean swansdown make a
warm lather of soap and then gently
squeeze the down in it until it is
quite clean. Rinse in fresh cold
water with a little bluing in it. Aft
erward shake the w’ater out and
hang in the air to dry.
Alcohol will remove grass stains
from linen with very little rubbing.
If you value your eyesight, don’t
have any room lighted by a glaring,
unshaded light,especially from over
head. Lights should be shaded so
that there shall be no glare.
If bread has been baked too
brown, or if the crust has been
blackened in an oven made too hot,
do not attempt to cut off the black
with a knife. As soon as the loaves
are cold go over them with a coarse
grater.
Several green coffee beans left to
soak in the unbeaten white of an
egg will color cake icing a delicate
green. The beans should be re
moved yid the egg whipped and
used for the icing.
Garnishing of hard boiled eggs in
basket shape may be accomplished
by cutting off straight the ends of
the hard boiled eggs and across
through the center. Take out the
yolks from the upper parts and fill
them to a pointed shape with a
salpicon of vegetables cut in small
squares and combined with a little
mayonnaise or simply fill them with
jelly-
Substitute For Linoleum.
The following directions are giv
en for a homemade substitute for
linoleum on the kitchen floor: Take
any old carpet that is whole, but too
shabby for use, clean thoroughly
and tack it down smoothly on the
kitchen floor. Then make a good,
thick boiled starch of flour and wa
ter. Rub a coat of this starch in
the carpet with a whitewash brush
and in about twenty-four hours or
when the starch is thoroughly dry
give it a coat of paint, any color de
sired. Dark red is a desirable color
for a kitchen. When the paint is
dry, give a second coat, and you will
have a cheap and durable floor cov
ering, equal to linoleum, at about
one-fourth the cost. By giving it a
coat of paint once a year it will last
for years.
Bogus Maple Sirup.
An agricultural exchange gives
full instructions for drawing the
sap and making maple sirup and
maple sugar. These products are
not made from maple sap except in
a few New England localities. Ma
ple sirup is made from glucose, sor
ghum sirup, hickory bark and other
flavoring substances, and the sugar
is made from cheap Muscovado sim
ilarly flavored. New England alone
could consume three times as much
maple sirup and maple sugar as are
made from maple sap in all the
United States, and 9!) per cent of
all that is so made is consumed in
the states where so made.
For the Hands.
Keep a bottle of glycerin and rose
water, mixed, near the sink and
whenever the hands have been wet
rub a few drops of this over them
before drying on the towel. It is
wonderful how much this does to
prevent chapping, which during
frosty leather is a misery to most
women doing general housework.
Of course the same emollient should
be used at night just before going to
bed, but this alone will not heal the
roughened skin when the daily work
| includes frequent dishwashing and
care of stoves.
Oyster Catchup.
Did you ever hear of oyster catch
up ? It is extremely nice and “tasty”
to eat with cold meat thinly sliced
or with fowl. Use fifty oysters
and their liquor, half a pound of
anchovies, half a pint of white wine,
j a small lemon, sliced. Boil slowly
for half an hour, then strain. Add
; quarter of an ounce of cloves, the
; same amount of mace and whole
pepper and salt to taste. It will
keep well in bottles and may be
used occasionally as one desires dur
i ing the winter.
The Oyster Frier.
A most useful article of house
hold cookery is the oyster frier
with the wire duplicate inside the
i regular saucepan. This skeleton
j looking affair can be raised out of
the pan and attached to the handle
of it while the oysters, nicely fried,
can drain off all the superfluous fat
that .they absorbed during the cook
■ >ng- *
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
Some Suggestions as to the Proper
Care of Lamps.
A lady who believes in having her
| “light to shine” says in a farm pa
! P er:
Asa general thing, as much wit
goes to the care of lamps as to the.
boiling of eggs. In the first place,
they should receive due attention
every day. Leave their large silk
or paper shades in the parlor or liv
ing room except when it is necessary
to take them out of doors to use a
fine hairbrush for cleaning the dust
from their folds or flutings. Carry
the lamps to the kitchen and set
them down upon double folded
newspapers. If they have porcelain
shades, wipe these as you take them
off and set aside with the chimneys.
Should they need washing put them
into a basin of hot water which you
have softened with a little ammonia
or borax. Don't use soap, as it is
apt to make them cloudy. This
done, turn up the wicks of the lamps
and with a bit of stick or a match
scrape off the charred edges. Do
not cut them unless the wick is very
uneven. Remove the rims that sur
round the burners and wipe them
off with the old flannel or soft cloth
you reserve for your lamps.
Now fill the lamps, and do it care
fully to avoid an overflow. The best
plan is to keep a small funnel with
the oil can and, inserting the point
of the tube in the opening provided
for filling in the side of the lamp,
pour cautiously until the reservoir
is full. The lamps that are made
with reservoirs which fit into outer
jars are decidedly the easiest to fill.
Whatever kind you use, wipe the
outside of the reservoirs after you
have filled and closed them, that the
persistently -percolating oil may have
no unnecessary encouragement to
exude. Be very sure no drops of oil
have trickled down upon the outside
of the lamps to make their way to
the bottom rim or feet and leave a
greasy place on the stand or shelf.
Give a final rub to the outside of
each lamp, replace the rim, chimney
and shade. *
Sometimes it will be necessary to
give the lamp a thorough washing
in hot water and ammonia. Noth
ing but a free use of a powerful al
kali will remove the clinging grease.
When a lamp burner is clogged and
gives a poor light, boil it for an
hour in water with a lump of wash
ing soda or a little borax.
Cooking Squash.
Steamed squash will take about
three-quarters of an hour if piled in
a drainer so the steam can circulate
between the pieces and covered
tightly. Boiled squash requires one
half hour. Whether steamed or
boiled, the squash when it is cooked
tender should be pressed through a
coarse sieve to remove the strings,
then seasoned while it is hot with
three-quarters of a teaspoonful of
salt, a scant salfspoonful of white
pepper and a tablespoonful of but
ter, well stirred and beaten in. It
is best to melt the butter in a nice
enameled saucepan, add the salt and
pepper to it, then stir in the squash
and beat it on the stove for three
or four minutes until it becomes
steaming hot. It may he kept hot
for ten or fifteen minutes if cov
ered and protected from scorching
on the back of the stove.
The Transformed Laundry Table.
The colonial laundry table, which
can be bought in many of the shops
for a trifle over $4, would fail to
recognize itself when transformed
by clever treatment into a highly
prized piece of decorative furniture.
The particular one in question is
stained to a n-ost satisfying shade
of green. The movable broad table
piece is turned backward and forms
the high back of this original wide
seat. There is a skillfully carved
Celtic border surrounding this, and
the seat and sides of the bench part
are carved even more elaborately in
the same style. Even without the
two embossed leather pillows this
piece of furniture would cost close
to SIOO.
Creamed Calf’s Liver.
Into a pan put five tablespoonfuls
of butter. When it is melted, put
into it one pound of calf’s liver cut
fine, salt and pepper; brown careful
ly and cook for eighteen minutes.
Take up the liver and place it on a
hot platter. Add one slice of onion
to the gravy and let it cook one min
ute. Add one tnblespoonful of flour
and cook, stirring until it begins to
froth. Draw the pan back and grad
ually add one pint of milk and cook
one minute, stirring all the time.
Put the liver in the pan with the
gravy and stew very slowly five min
utes longer.
Table Covers.
Cretonne table covers match the
coverings of bedroom furniture.
These are made in the daintiest of
ways, and only the best of French
cretonnes are used. A border of
heavy lace or a knotted fringe in
corresponding colors usually is add
ed as an edging around the cover.
ITCHINGJCZEMA
M Otter Mil, Mi aoi
Seal; Most
Instant Relief and Speedy
Cure Afforded by
Mcira Soap, Ointment and Pills
Then All Else Fails.
COMPLETE TREATMENT, SIM
The agonizing itching and burning of
the skin, as in eczema; the frightful
scaling, as in psoriasis; the Toss of hair
and crusting of the scalp, a3 in scailed
head; the facial disfigurement, as in
pimples and ringworm; the awful suf
fering of infants and the anxiety of
worn-out parents, a3 in milk ernst, tet
ter and salt rheum, all demand a rem
edy of almost superhuman virtues to
successfully cope with them. That
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills are
such stands proven beyond all doubt.
No statement is made regarding them
that is not justified by the strongest
evidence. The purity and sweetness,
the power to afford immediate relief,
the certainty of speedy and permanent
cure, the absolute safety and great
economy, have made them the standard
skin cures and humour remedies of the
civilized world.
Bathe the affected parts with hot
water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the
surface of crusts and scales aud soften
the thickened cuticle. Dry, without
hard rubbiug, and apply Cuticura Oint
ment freely, to allay itching, irritation
and inflammation, and soothe and heal,
aud, lastly, in the severer forms, take
Cuticura Resolvent Pills, to cool and
cleanse the blood. A single set is often
sufficient to cure the most torturing,
disfiguring and humiliating skin, scalp
and blood humours, with loss of hair,
when all else fails.
Sweet is tasted best on the tip
of the tunge, soul- on the edge and
bitter at the base.
It Will Pay to Look Into
our plan of having one man or woman
in each town in Georgia to represent
our Goods, which liave sold 25 years
wholly by our local agents, who earn
good wages the year round. You take
orders for our Goods —we send them to
you freight prepaid-You deliver them
and collect the money —If you want a
nice little business write for particultrs
to A. Ler Wade Genl Agt. (P-24) .Bos
ton, Mass.
CASTORIA.
Bears the 1(18 Kind Have Always BoUgtS
% r-
I
Mental images themselves con
stitute the motive, the springs of
action for all tve do.
The landlady—Which part of
the chicken do you prefer, Mr.
Lanks?
The Boarder—Either half will
do, thank you, Mrs. Hungerford.
Puck.
Deadly
Grasp of Grip Pros
trated Me.
Dr. Miles* Nervine
Built Up My
Shattered Nerves and
Gave Me an Appetite.
Of the millions of people, who today suffer
from nervous or heart weakness, a large per
centage trace the cause directly to deadly
LaGrippe. It is a germ disease.'and makes
a diiect attack upofi the nerves, putting an
extra strain upon them at the time their vital
ity is at the lowest ebb. If LaGrippe has
left you w.th a shattered nervous system, with
loss of appetite, lack of energy, insomnia,
frequent headaches and morbid tendencies,
you should strengthen the weakened nerves
with Dr. Miles’ Nervine. It will undo all
that grip has done, bring back appetite, rest
and restore the nerves to their normal activity.
"I want to write this testimonial for the
benefit of those who have suffered from that
dreaded disease—-LaGrippe. I suffered sev
eral weeks with it, and nothing I tried seemed
to benefit me in any way, shape or form (I
suffered almost death) and tina \y ray
daughter recommended Dr. Miles’ Nervine
to me and I can truthfully say from the first
day I felt better than in weeks. It gave me
relief, huih'up my shattered nerves and gave
me a splendid appetite. I cannot speak too
highly of it and want to say, each and even'
one who has suffered from LaGrippe will
find instant relief by getting a bottle of Dr.
Miles’ Nervine. Insist on haring it and take
no other. It fs simply splendid. Hoping
this will benefitsome poor sufferer I remain, 1 *
—Mrs. George B. Hall, J ackson, Tenn.
All druggists sell and guarantee first bot
tle Dr. Miles’ Remedies. Send for free book
on Nenroos and Heart Diseases. Address
Dr. Miles Medical Cos, Elkhart, Ind.