Newspaper Page Text
BUSINESS CARDS.
W, H. TftAWlOK.
BUNN & TRAWIOK,
afe Iiaw,
(OUIco, 1st Nut. Dank JllJff.)
CEDARTOWN, OA.
All business placod In our liamlH will
Iio given prompt and vigilant attontlou.
I. n. oandkrb. J. k. davib
SANDERS & DAVIS,
Attorneys at Law,
Omco In Chamberlain Building,
oedArtown, ga.
W. B. JPURRBR
ATTORNEY • AT - LAW,
CHDARTOWN OA.
W ILT,practlooln alt the Courta ol
Folk, Paulding, Floyd and Haral-
aon Countloa, and In ' all the courta of
Goorgla, Htato, Fodoral and Supreme.
Alao, In Alabama courta by apodal ar
rangement.
W. It. FIRLDRn. W. W. MUNDY.
FIELDER & MUNDY,
ATTORNEYS • AT • LAW,
Obdartown, Georgia.
prompt altontion glvon to all buHinoRH.
Colloctlonw a Hpoolalty. OUIco up-Htnlra
In Stubbs Building.
Wm. JANES,
Attorney - at - Law.
Plrat National Dank Building.
CEDARTOWN, - » GEORGIA
J. C. WALKER,
Attorney at Law.
Over Pint National Rank Duilding,
Cedartown, - Georgia.
£WG'olleotlons a Specialty.
H. M. NICHOLES,
LAWYER.
Commissioner to Tako Testimony.
Oillco In Judgo’s room at Court House.
OEDARTOWN, GA.
J. A. WRIGHT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Oedautown, Ga.
OfOco with J. A. Blanoo, in Ohamber-
Inin Building.
J. A. LIDDELL,
Physician - and - Surgeon,
Cedartown, Georgia.
W. A. CHAPMAN,
Physician 0 Surgeon,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
R. FJ. SPICKS,
t=Physician and Surgeon,=s
OEDARTOWN, GA.
Onlis answorod promptly day or night.
W. G. ENGLAND,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
OEDARTOWN, GEORGIA.
•falls attended day and night.
CHAS, VANN WOOD,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Oillco over Collins tk Holmes,
OHDAKTOWN, GA.
HENRY M. HALL,
Physician - and - Surgeon,
OEDARTOWN, GA.
Otlioo with Dr. J. A. Riddell.
B. F. Sims. Wm. II. Marsh.
SIMS & MARSH,
DENTISTS.
Offers tlieirHorvloaa to the publio OiUoo
ovor J. S. Stubbs’ storo. Office hours 0
a. in. to 5 p. m.
J". IE 3 . GKRiIEIEIR,,
DENTIST,
Tenders his servloos to the public. Of-
lice ovor tho Racket Store.
•Phono 110.
ME CEDARTOWN STANDARD
Publlabod Every Thuraday In tho Yoar
B. n. BUSSELL, /
W. S. OOLBMAN,. J BDITon "-
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Ono Yoar - fl.00
Six Months 60
lurco Montha .26
Advibtuino Rates will bo furnished
on application.
THDB5DAY, OCTOBER 11,1900.
Cedartown mines and ships
more Iron Ore than any other
point in the whole South, out
side of Birmingham.
Democratic Ticket.
For President,
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.
For Vice President,
ADLA1 K. STEVENSON.
For Representative in 67th Congress,
JOHN W. MADDOX.
MONEY to LOAN.
Wo are prepared to NEGOTIATE
LOANS in any amount desired, on
approved FARM LANDS as se
curity. For further Information up-
S ly at onr office in the Stubbs
uikling, Cedartown, Ga.
Fielder & Mundy.
The Interstate Fair opened its
gates yesterday in Atlanta, and
will close Saturday,October 27th.
The Bryan and Stevenson Club
should have on its enrollment the
name of every Democrat in the
county.
Hon. J. B. Sanders, of Corinth,
lias been elected to tiro Legis
lature from Hoard county, He
is a brother of Ool. J. II. San
ders, of Cedartown.
Mr. J. J. Hamilton, tho clever
postmaster at Rome, lias posi
tively declined to accept the
empty honor of'the republican
nomination for Congress from
this district.
Ool. J. M. Rudolph, of Dalton,
A’as elected Coroner of Whitfield
county last, week. “Jim” wns
formerly a populnr Cedartown
boy, and his friends hero predict
that he will hold inquests with
duo dignity and dispatch.
Tho report is confirmed of tho
capture of about sixty men of Co.
F, 20th Regiment, on Mnrin-
duque Island, ono of tho smaller
islands of tho Philippine group,
but details are still lacking. A
largo number of Georgia boys are
enlisted in this regiment.
Mr. E. W. Marsh, ono of At
lanta’s oldest and wealthiest, citi
zens, died Sunday night. He was
well known and highly respected
in this Section, and until recently
was interested in some extensive
ore properties west of Cedartown;
his son, Mr. McAllen B. Marsh,
having an elegant home near the
property.
Tho populists sooth to have
“cut no ice” anywhere in Geor
gia except among our next-door
neighbors. In Haralson they
elected everything hut Tax Col
lector, and in Paulding all but
Senator, Clerk and Treasurer.
Elsewhere in the state the popu
lists generally have returned to
the Democratic fold.
Major Livingston Mims was
elected Friday as Mayor of At
lanta. He is a prominent in
surance man and the President
of the Capital City Club. There
wore three other candidates in
the Hold, and the contest was a
hot one. Major Mims—and At
lanta, we trust,—is to ho con
gratulated on his victory.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure,
Digests what you eat.
It artifletally digests t he food and olds
Nature iu strengthening and recon
structing tho exhausted digestive or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest-
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Slcklleadache.Gastralgia,Cramps,and
all other results of Imperfect digestion.
Prepared by E. C. Dewitt A Co.. Chicago.
E. BRADFORD.
Democratic white primaries,
in which all who would agree to
abide the results were invited to
participate, have been popular
and successful in Georgia coun
ties this year. In Fulton unpop
ular citizen—,1 udge Hulsey—who
was beaten in the primary for
Ordinary, thought lie would try
his luck as an independent, and
got the heating lie deserved. In
Floyd and Bartow counties the
primary nominees were given a
little excitement by opposition
tickets, but an overwhelming
majority of the white people of
those counties stood nobly by the
nominees, and they were all
elected—just as they should have
been. ,
BIO COTTON RECEIPTS.
Codartnwn Buyers Reaching Out
1'nrCoiton—Largest. Ronofpts Last
Friday and Saturduy.
Cedartown is taking the lead
among North Georgia points us a
cotton town. Our buyers are
bidding for receipts, nnd a largo
area is bringing this product here
for the reason that no place is
paying such high figures as Co-
dartown.
Lust Friday and Saturday over
500 bales wore bought from
wagons on our streets, for which
over $25,000 were paid.
Cotton is now coming in at the
rate of 200 hales per day, and an
immense nmount of money is
turned loose for this crop to our
farmers. Huruison county,Chero
kee and Oleb'urne counties, Ala.,
and portions of Floyd county are
contributing to tho stream of
wagons pouring into Cedartown
daily, and the farmers aro re
turning home satisfied that they
have made good money by mar
keting their cotton here.
Mollified.
The bond of tho household wns Into
getting home. lie wns very Into. It
wns long past midnight. Indeed the
little clock on the hall mnntel hml Just
struck 3 o’clock when ho enme walking
In. lie hnd been out with tho boys,
and his wife rcpronched him.
‘'Why, It's cnrly yet It’s not late.”
Just then the clock sounded one, two,
three.
The wife looked at him with grim
rebuke. lie caught her eyo nnd Jcrkod
out this reply:
“Well, now, If you wnnt to bellovo
that dnrued $1.00 clock before your
dear husband, It’s nil right.”
It wns n similar occasion, only more
so. At this tlmo ho wns n little drunk
er thun usual. Ills stop wns unsteady,
but he hnd uot lost his courteous man
ners. She met him at tho front, weep
ing reproachfully.
“Oh. John," sho pleaded, "wlint
makes you do tills way?”
"You are—lilc—so awfully pretty—
hie.” ho said, making nn oxtravngnnt
how nnd kissing her. "that I llko ta
ble—to sco you double."
Aud she put him tenderly to bed,
bathed Ills forehend the next morning
nnd forgot about tho scolding she had
fully determined to ndmlulstcr to him.
—Missouri Excelsior.
A Flornl Noeebleod.
Why spoak of tho lovely painted trll-
llums, with their threo dnlntlly crin
kled petals, stronked with rose purple?
says Bradford Torroy In Tho Atlnutlc.
One after another I gathered them
(pulled them, to speak with poetic lit
eralness), each fresher ami handsomer
than tho ono before It till tho white
stems mnde a handful.
"Oh,” Bald a man on n hotel piazza
as I returned, "l sco you have nose
bleed." 1 wns putting my hand to my
pocket, wondering why 1 should have
been tnkeu so childishly, when It enme
over mo what he men lit. Iio wns look
ing at tho trllllums aud explained, lu
nnswor to a question, that ho liud nl-
wnys heard them ended nosebleed.
Somewhere, then—I omitted to Inquire
where—tills Is tlielr "vulgar" name. In
Frnucoula tho people call them Benjn-
mlus, which has a plensnut Biblical
sound—bettor than nosebleed, nt all
events—though, to my thinking, trll-
llum Is preferable to cither of them
both for sound and for sense.
Tile Traces of llio llcnsts.
On every side In tho Malay wilds tho
traces of tho beasts—which hero live
ns secluded, as snfo from molestation,
as did their ancestors lu pro-Adamite
days—are visible on tree trunk, on
beaten game path nnd on tho yielding
clay at tho drinking plnces by tho hur
rying stream. Hero a belt of mud nine
feet from tho grouud shows that an
elephant has rubbed Ills Itching back
ngnlust tho rough bark of a tree, nnd,
sec, conrso hairs are still sticking in the
hardened clny. There a long sharp
scratch repeated at rcgulnr Intervals
■narks the passing of a rhinoceros.
Hero again Is tho pad mark of a tiger,
barely nn hour old, and tho pitted tracks
of deer of all sizes and varieties sur
round tho deeply punched holes which
are the footsteps of nn elephant—
Blackwood’s.
lie Took It.
While the Into James H. Beard, fa.
tiler of Dan Beard, the artist, was
painting a portrait of Zachary Taylor,
ho said to him, “Well, general, I sup
pose you nre to be our next president?"
“I hope not," grunted the bluff old
hero. "No military innn has any busi
ness In the presidential chair, hut II
they offer It to mo I suppose I’ll be
fool enough to accept It."
And he wns.
Good News for Our Readers
Who have scrofula taints in their blood,
and who has not? Scrofula in all its
forms is onred by Hood's Sarsaparilla,
which thoroughly purifies the blood.
This disease, wbiob frequently appears
in obildren, is greatly to be dreaded.
It is most likely to aft'eot the glands of
the neck, which become enlarged, erup
tions appear on tho head aud face, and
the eyes nre frequently affected. Upon
its first appearance, perhaps in slight
eruptions or pimples, scrofula should
he entirely eradicated from the system
by a thorough course of Hood’s Sarsa
parilla to prevent all the painful nnd
sickening consequences of ruuning
scrofula sores which drain the system,
sap the strength and make existence
utterly wretched.
ATLANTA DAILY CONSTITUTION
Now Running a Special Campaign
Offer, Only $1.00.
The Constitution of Atlanta, Ga., Is
now offering Its Dally and Sunday
editions complete to new subscribers,
from the date the order reaches that
office until November 10th for only
$1.00. This last campaign offer will
take the subscriber beyond and give
him the full newa of the Presidential
eleatlon. The period thus covered will
be of unusual Interest, not only be
cause of the election and the questions
pending thereon, but It will be full of
events, and guesses at the truth of
reported events in China. The
struggle Is on between the “yellow
terrors” and the “foreign devils” and
It will consume the world's attention
for many months to come. It is prob
able that South Africa will become
peaceful on a basis that will allow the
spuuky Boers to lay down their arms
with honor. Cuba and the Philippines
are with us until their status is deter
mined: their questions will continue
to be ours. The Constitution always
covers all the news completely and
this exceptional offer will doubtless
test their full capacity in supplying
the paper to thousands of thirsty
subscribers. The sooner you send for
It the longer you will get paper for
your dollar.
While anil Heil Wines.
White mid red wines otvo their dif
ference to the fact that, while the for
mer Is permitted to ferment without
the grapo skirts, these nro allowed to
remain In tho case of tho latter. Tho
color of the grapes makes no difference
wiintovor to the color of tho wlno
which they produce, for tho Julco of
all grapes Is as nearly as possible col
orless. For Instance, tho grape which
yields champagne Is almost black In
outward appearance.
Hnrd Lack.
Perry I’atetle—Please, lady, help a
poor man wat’s bln outer work fer
more'n n year.
Kind Lady—Here’s a qunrter, poor
man. Cnn't you find anything at all
to do?
Perry Patetlc—No, lady. It'a so long
since I done n Job o’ work dnt I don't
tlnk I’d rccltorulzo ono now If it como
Up nn took Its hat off tor me.—Phila
delphia Press.
Tho first coffee house In London wns
opened In 1852 by the Greek servant of
a Turkey merchant.
East and West R’y of Alabama.
HAST BOUND TRAINS.
No. 4. No. 2. No. 34.
Leave— (Daily,)ex-Sun. Sun. only
Pell City
Piedmont
Kao in Hill....
Cedartown....
Grady
Fish Creek....
Hock mart
Arauon
Taylorsville..
7.00
7.1ft
7.23
7.39
7.47
8.03
8.40
9.40 am
2.02 pm
2.45
3.25
3.42
3.47
4.04
4.10
4.23
8.00
7.10 a i
10.12
lu.ol
11.20
11.33
11.38
11.53
11.59
12.13 p i
12.45
Leave-
WF-hT BOUND TRAINS.
No. 1. No. 3. No. 35.
(Daily)ox-Sun. Sun. only
Cartersvlllo.
Taylorsville...
Aragon ;...
Rook mart
Fish Creek
Grady
Cedartown
Ksom Hill
Piedmont,
Poll City
10.00 A m
0.40 pm
1.15
10.34
7.12
1.17
10.49
7.24
2.01
10.57
7.31
2.07
11.11
7.40
2.22
11.15
7.51
2.27
11.30
8.10
2.40
12.45 p in
3.09
1.42
3.48
5.50
0.60
Close connections as follows:—
Cedartown with Central of Georgia, at
Hock mart with Southern Knilway at
Cartersvllle with W. & A., at Piedmont
with E.T. V. AG.
RAILROAD CO.
Passenger Schedule in effect April 10,1900
SOUTHBOUND.
STATIONS. No. a No. 4 No.ia No.
Lv Chattan’M
Trion
Sum’rville
Lyerly
Buchanan
Bremen....
Ar Carrollton.
NORTHBOUND.
STATIONS No. 1
Lv Carrollton. 1 50pm
Bremen a 17
Buchanan- a 33
Cedartown 3 20
Rome 4 os
Lyerly 4 5S
Sum’rville- 5
Trion 5 26
LaFayette- 5 54
Nos. 1 and 2 daily.
Nos. 3 and 4 Sunday only.
Nos. 9,10,11 and 12 daily except Sun
day.
Trains Nos. 9 and 10 arrive and depart
firm C. R. A S. shops near Montgomery
avenue.
Connections made Bt Chattanooga,
Trim., with all roads lor points North
ard West.
For any Information apply to
C. B. Wilburn,
President and Traffic Manager.
B. A. Fitf., Agent, Cedartown, Ga.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Georgia, Polk County.
All persons indebted to the estate of
the late J. A. Orebaugh are hereby noti
fied to make immediate settlement, and
any having claims against said estate
will please present them at once. This
Aug. 2oth, 1900. E. W. Orebaugh,
Administrator.
September
And other Autumn months are best tor
painting houses, wagons, buggies, fences
and the like.
October „ perhaps
the best month of all. Everything is dry,
and the weather is usually fine for such
work. But, if not done sooner, begin in
November
Sure, and get it done before rainy weather
sets in. And don’t forget, please, that I have
the largest and most varied stocks of Paints,
Oils, Varnishes and Brushes ever carried in
Cedartown—and they are for sale the fastest
kind!
E. BRADFORD.
GoodGinning
I invite all my farmer friends to
to bring me their cotton for ginning,
and will be glad to see new friends
as well as old. # I have leased the
West & Jones Gin, and am prepared
to give Prompt, Satisfactory Work.
I will furnish
Bagging and Ties Free!
I guarantee Fair and Square
Treatment to all.
T. M. HIGHTOWER.
Hew York Bargain Store.
NEW STORE!
NEW GOODS and
OLD PRICES!
- We have just returned from New York, where we bought
a full line of fancy and up-to-date —
Dry Goods and Clothing.
We bought them cheap. We sell them cheap. Wo want to
close out our stock
BELOW COST, -4-
Our prices are the same as they were when cotton was
only 4 cents a pound.
Don’t miss this great opportunity to get a bargain in any-
tiling in our line.
COME ONE, COME ALL!
^Goldstein & Berkowitz,
Worms vSS:
For 20 Years Has Led all Worm Remedies. (_
SOLD BY ALXj DHUGGrlSTS.
[Prepared by JAMES F. BALLARD, St. Louis.
FOR SALE BY T. F. BURBANK.