The Cedartown standard. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1889-1946, October 25, 1900, Image 4
IIUMINKMW CAHUH.
, II. TKAWIOK,
BUNN & TRAWIOK,
]Rbfe©p^eY^ at; haw,
(Office, lHt N«t. Hank Rlrig.)
CKDAKTOWN, GA.
All biiHinoMH placed in our hamlH wll 1
bo given prompt and vigilant attention.
J, II. SANDKRB. J. K. DAVIS
SANDERS & DAVIS,
Attorneys at Law,
Office in Uliamborlain Building,
CEDARTOWN. GA.
W. R. NURI^ER
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW,
CEDARTOWN GA.
W ll.Lpraotlooin all tbo Court, ol
l’olk, Paulding,Floyd and Haral-
non Count Ion, nnil In all tbo court, of
Georgia, .State, Foiloral and Supreme.
Also, In Alabama oourto by spoclal ar-
(angomont.
. k. nnr.nnn.
w. w. MUNDY.
FIELDER & MUNDY,
ATTORNEYS • AT • LAW,
Okdahtown, Georgia,
Prompt attention glvon to all business,
(lolledIons a specialty. Oflleo up-Htalrs
in fttubbs Building.
Wm. JANES,
Attorney - at - Law.
ldr*t tfntlonnl Rank Building,
CEDARTOWN, - s GEORGIA
J. C. WALKER,
Attorney at Law.
Over PI fit National Uniik llullillng,
Cedartown, - Georgia.
£<^"Oolleotlons & Specialty.
H. M. NICHOLES,
LAWYER.
OoinmiBslonor to Take Testimony.
Office In Judge’, room at Court Houso.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
J. A. WRIGHT,
Attorney at Law
Okdaiitown, Ga.
Olllco with J. A. Blanco, in Chamber
lain Building.
J. A. LIDDELL,
Physician - and - Surgeon,
Cedartown, Georgia.
W. A. CHAPMAN,
Physician 0 Surgeon,
CEDAHTOWN, GA.
R. F|. SI?r^KS,
^Physician and Surgeon,^
OEDABTOWN, GA.
Calls answered promptly day or night.
w. G. ENGLAND,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA,
t’alla attended day and night.
CHAS. VANN WOOD, ,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Olllco over Collins A Holmes,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
HENRY M. HALL,
Physician - and - Surgeon,
CEDARTOWN,JG A.
Ollloo with Dr. J. A. Liddell.
B. F. Sims. Wm. H, Mansn.
SIMS & MARSH,
DENTISTS.
Offers tholr services to the public Office
aver J. S. Stubbs' store. Offioe hours 0
a. in. to 5 p. in.
J". IP. GKE^EIEIR,,
DENTIST,
Tenders his services to the public, Of-
tleo over the Rackot Store.
•Phono 110.
HONEY to LOAN.
We are prepared to NEGOTIATE
LOANS la any amount desired, ou
approved FARM LANDS as se
curity. For further information ap
ply at our offleo In the Stubbs
building, Cedartown, Ga.
Fielder & Mundy.
Kodo!
Dyspepsia Cure.
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature In strengthening and recon
structing the 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,
SlckHeadache,Gastralgla,Cramps,ond
oil other results of Imperfect digestion.
Prepared by E. C. D.WItt A Co - Chicago,
E. BRADFORD.
ME CEDARTOWN STANDARD
Published Every Thursday in thoYear
. H. OOLKMAN,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year fi.oo
Six Months go
lisree Months 26
Advibtmino Katx> will be furnished
on application.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, I9C0.
Cprlartown 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,
ADLAI E. STEVENSON.
For Representative in 67th Congress,
JOHN W. MADDOX.
TO MAKE THE SOUTH HIGH.
WORKING FOR THE SOUTH.
Mr. M. V. Richards, laud and
industrial agent, of Southern
Railway, who has excellent op
portunities for gauging the move
ment of immigration to the South,
stated last week at Birmingham
that more people were now com
ing to the South than ever before,
and that ho expected the heavi
est immigration since the estab
lishment of his department. In
an Interview in the Birmingham
Age-Herald he said:
"Wo now hnvo sovoral hundred people
on tho road to tlio South ovory day,and
luquiricB como into my office by tbo
thousands. Tho immigration business
tho paBt year has beon at least 75 por
oont larger than over before. Tlioy
are coming irom ovory sootion of tho
North and tho WcBt, and from Europo,
Every Btoamor that comes to this
oountry brings many inquiries to my
offioo, and when tbo immigrants laud iu
Now York or olsowhoro many of thorn
come dircot to tho Southern, a condi
tion that did not oxist until rooontly.
Our advortisomouts at tho Paris Ex-
positl on liaB dono a world of good, and
wo are feoling tho results ovory day.
It has bcon ouo of tho boat things ovor
dono in tho way of plaoing tho advant
ages and tbo induoomonts of tbo South
before tho Europoan countrios."
, This is a gratifying situation.
It is but a lmturnl result of the
persistent, Intelligent mid far-
reaching work carried on by Mr.
Richards,which is of such a char
acter that his department of the
Southern Railway, maintained
upon its present- policy, may bo
expectod to show steadily-in
creasing results to tho advantage
of the South.—Manufacturers’
Record.
Macon and Columbus have both
adopted the white primary sys
tem for their approaching muni
cipal elections.
It is estimated that, the crops
of Texas \yere damaged to the
oxtent of $5,000,000 by the de
structive storm of Sept-. 8th, at
which time the city of Galveston
was destroyed.
Thk Okdaktown Standard is
sued nn extra 8 page paper last
week making 10 pages on account
of legal advertising, \Vliich was
the most legal advertising we
have recently seen in a county
paper.—Ellijny Times.
Thk Cedartown Standard oontains
27)4 columns of Sheriffs sales of ‘‘un
returned lands” for taxes. What is
the matter with old Polk county?
Have the people quit giving in their
lands up there for taxes.—Marietta
Journal.
Nay, brethren; it is jpst a
straightening out of the errors of
omission and commission for the
past ten years.
An exchange makes the follow
ing “dollar-us” hint to its read
ers, and The Standard hereby
says “ditto —“There i$ a little
matter of bu$ine$$ that we
would like to mention to $ome of
our $nbscril)or$ before we forget
it, but we are a bit timid and
don’t ju$t know how to go about
it. However, we hope $ome of
them will con$ider that we have
been very quiet all the $ummer
and brilig'up the $uhjeet Some
time when in our pre$ence.
Great men are mindful of little
thing.!, hut to $ome we will he
obliged to $peak the word.”
Southern farmers should not permit
the present prices of cotton to divert
their minds from the necessity of di
versifying their crops. It is in diver
sification that their hope ofIndepen
dcnce and wealth lies. Cotton prices
will not always remain high. Seasons
of depression will coino again, when
those farmers who oontlnuo to make
cotton their sole crop will have abund
ant ocoaslou to regret their look of
foresight.
There Is no better time than the
present to make arrangements for de
voting acreage and attention to sev
eral products next year. The extra
money that will come from the cotton
this season will place the average
farmer in a position to take lip other
lines of production without having to
burden IiiixiBclf for the purpose of so
doing. New lands can be opened up
for tobacco; additions can be made to
the herds of cattle; more fruit trees
can be planted; the llocks about the
barnyards can be Increased; the acre
age for wheat and oats can be extended.
In short, there arc dozens of ways in
which the farmers of the South can be
come “expansionists” at home, wholly
"within the party and the constitu
tion," and they ought to do it for their
own good.
During the past two or threo years
diversified farming lins made fairly
good progress in the South. In tills
state the wheat orop is now quite 1m
portent, but it Is not nearly so large as
it should be. A chemist’s report pub
lished the other day showed that as
fine wheat can be raised In Georgia as
in any other state uf the Union,
certain grade of wrapper tobacco,
raised in South Georgin and Florida,
recently took tho first prize nt the
Boris Exposition, showing wlmt can be
done In that line. The fruits of Geor
gia and Florida are recognized os
being among the best in the world.
Indeed, it would probably be impossi
ble to mention any agricultural or hor
ticultural product of the temperate
zone that cannot ha successfully pro
duced in the South.
While a start lias been made in the
direction o"f diversifying crops, it is as
yet only a start. We are still buying
corn, lard, meat and flour from the
West, and potatoes, turnips, butter,
cheese, canned goods and ninny other
articles of food from tho North. We
do not oven produce all of the clilokens
nnd eggs we ent, hut get them in large
quantities from non-ootton states, and
pay good prices for them. We send
literally millions of dollars per year
away from homo for food that might
better than not be produced at home.
The start tlint has been made in home
production of food crops nnd provi
sions ought to be encouraged by every
means possible. And those who hnvu
made the start ought to talk it up to
their neighbors who have not, and try
to get them to Join the procession.
Agitation will get the nll-ootton farm
ers interested, and once they have got
into thu way of planting corn, sugar
cane, wheat, onts, etc., in addition to
cotton, they will wonder why they
stood in their own light so long.
And, ns was said above, there is no
time better than the present, when
cotton prices are good, to make ar
rangements for other crops. Diversi
fied farming not only means inde
pendence for the intelligent nnd in
dustrious farmer, but it means that
when the system becomes anything
likugeuerul in the South, good prices
for cotton—the money crop—will be
praetically assured.—Savannah News.
THE GEORGIA STATE FAIR.
The success of the Georgia State
Fair, whloh will open at Valdosta on
Gctobcr 30 and continue through the
week, is already assured. The entries
already in nro sufficient to make the
moat magnificent agricultural exhibit
over seen at any State Fair in years,
and entries yet to come will doubtlei
make it the best ever seen In Georgia
Nine counties linve secured apnoe and
have prepared exhibits to contest for
tho thousand dollars offered for the
connty exhibits, and there are more to
follow. These are from some of the
best agricultural counties of the state,
nnd their collections will rival those
ever gathered from nny section. It is
gratifying to know that Georgia is
again to linve n State Fair In which
the agricultural department Is proml
nent and genuine, and one that the
entire Btate will be proud of. There
has not for years been a fair in which
so large a percentage of the people
have taken genuine Interest and active
part, and the results are already in
evidence.
The exhibits of live stock will equal
those seen anywhere this year, andjthc
array of blooded cattle, sheep, swine,
poultry and pet stook will be worth
traveling miles to see. Many of the
exhibits in this department will be
sold during the Fair at reasonable
prices, thus nlfordlng breeders in tills
section an excellent opportunity to
stock their farms.
“For threo days and nights I suffered
agony untold from an nttnok of oholora
morbus brought on by eating encum
bers," says M. E. Lowthor, olork of tho
distriot court, Contorvilio, Iowa,
thought I should surely dio, ned tried a
dozon different modioinoa but all to no
lurposo. I sont for a hottlo of Oham-
lorlaln’a Colio, Oholora and Diarrhoea
Remedy nnd threo doses rolioved mo
entirely.” This remedy is for ealo by
E. Bradford, druggist.
C. PHILPOT,
Real Estate Agent
CEDARTOWN, GA.
SPECIALTIES.
I®"FOR SALE-Cily Lots, Rest
donees, Timber Lunds, Business
Property.
*©-•1,000 acres Fine ORE Property
near E. A W. road for sule.
*©-Farm Lands. Some of the Finest
Farm Lands in Georgia, in Either
Small or Large Tracts—Also in Mid
dle and South Georgia.
*©-Taxos Paid, Rents Collected.
Red Hot From The Gun
Was the ball that hit G. B. Steadman,
of Newark, Mioh., in tho Civil War. It
oausod horrible Ulaers that no treat
ment helped for 20 years. Then Buok-
lon's Arioa Salve cured him. Cures
Outs, Bruisos, Burns, Boils, FelonB,
Corns, Skin Eruptions. Best Pile ouro
on earth. 25 ats. a box. Ouro gunran-
. Sold by E. Bradford, druggist.
When the girl of the period invests
in stooks she is interested in quotation
marks.
It Happened In a Drag Store.
"One day last winter a lady oame to
my drag store and asked for a brand of
ooogh medioino that I did not have in
stook,” says Mr. O. R, Grandin, the
popular druggist of Ontario, N. Y.
"She was disappointed and wanted to
know what oough preparation I oould
rceommond. I said to her that I could
freely reoommend Chamberlain's Oough
Remedy and that she oould take a bot
tle of the remedy and after giving it a
fair trial if she did not find it worth the
monoy to bring back the bottle and I
would refund the prioe paid. In the
course of a day or two the lady oame
baok in company with a frieni iu need
of a oough medioino and advised her to
buy a bottle of Chamberlain's Oough
Komedy. I consider that a very good
recommendation for the remedy.” It
is for Bale by E. Bradford.
The tiresome orator tries to make up
iu length for his deficiency in depth.
We are apt to condemn in others what
wo praotioe ourselves without scruple.
For all fresh outs or wounds, in either
the human subjeet or in animals, as a
dressing, Ballard’s Snow Liniment is
excellent; while for sores on working
horses, especially if slow to heal,or sup
purating, its healing qualities are nn-
equoled. Prioe, 25 cts. and 50 cts. T.
F. Burbank.
BAST BOUND TRAINS.
No. 4. No. 2. No. 34.
Leave— (Dally)ox-Sun. Sun. only
Boll City
Piedmont
lCsoin Hill
Codartown
Grady
Flsli Creek
Hockmart
Aragon
Taylorsville...
Cartersville....
7.00
7.18
7.28
0.40 a in | 7.10 a in
2.02 pm 10.12
lu.ot
11.20
11.33
11.38
11.53
11.60
12.13 p 111
12.45
WHAT BOUND TRAINS.
No. 1. No. 3. No. 35.
(Daily)ox-Sun. Sun.only
Cartorsvllle...
Taylorsville...
Aragon
Rookmart
Fish Crook
Grady
Codartown
Esom Hill
Piedmont,
Poll City
10.00 a m
10.34
10.41).
10.57
11.11
11.15
11.30
12.45 p m
0.40 pm
7.12
7.24
7.31
7.46
7.61
8.10
1.15 pm
1.47
2.01
2.07
2.22
2.27
2.40
3.09
3.48
0.60
£S"Close connections as follows:—
Cedartown with Central of Georgia, at
Rockmart with Southern Railway at
Cartersville with W. A A., at Piedmont
with E. T. V. A G.
Southern
RAILROAD CO.
Passenger Schedule in effect April 16,1000
SOUTHBOUND.
STATIONS.
La Payette.
Trion
Sum’rville
Lyerly
Buchanan .
Bremen
Ar Carrollton.,
No. 4
350 pm
J5S
is
3 36
I §4
7 35
NORTHBOUND.
Lv Carrollton.
Bremen
Buchanan
Cedartown
Rome ...
Lyerly
|4 5^
Sum’rville- 5 16
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
from C. R.«& S. shops near Montgomery
avenue.
Connections made at Chattanooga,
Trim., with all roads lor points North
ard West.
For any information apply to
C. B. Wilburn,
President and.Traffic Manager.
B. A. Fite, Agent, Cedartown, Ga.
Pay up your subscription,
September
And other Autumn months are best tor
painting houses, wagons, buggies, fences
and the like.
October
is 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.
New 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. We want to
close out our stock
4- 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
thing in our line.
COME ONE, COME ALL!
-^Goldstein & Berkowitz.
WoRMilRSIS
For 20 Years Has Led ail Worm Remedies.
«aj-VT.V% T3.-V A — - --.KIWI 1
, s°x.xa as-y jx,x.x. diujogieits
| P y JAMES F. BALLARD. St. Lou!s. :
FOR SALE BY T. F. BURBANK.