Newspaper Page Text
CEDARTOWN STANDARD.
VOLUME 14.
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 27, 1900.
NUMBER 48.
Like the
Deadly
Undercurrent
which grasps one without warning,
the mucous membrane which lines
the entire body suddenly becomes
weakened in some spot mid disease
is established. It may be of the
lungs, the head, throat, stomach,
bowels, or any other organ. Where-
ever it is, and whatever it seems, it
all spri-.gs from the same causey-
CATARRH
or inflammation of this delicate pink
membrane.
The system is weakened in win
ter. The delicate lining is more
susceptible to irritation or inflamma
tion, and thus we have pneumonia,
grip, colds, coughs, fevers, etc., all
catarrliiil conditions which may
easily be checked by one catarrh
cure—Pe-ru-na.
That’s the only way out of it.
You may dose forever—you will
not be well until you try the true
cure and that is Pe-ru-ua. You
may think your trouble is some
other disease and not catarrh. Call
it what you will, one thing is sure,
your system is affected and must be
treated, and Pc-ru-na is the only
remedy which reaches the right
place mid docs cure.
Dr. D. M. Hawaii, of Ccdartown, the
able and popular chairman of tho
board of County Commissioner!", was
in town Monday.—Itockmart Slato.
Tho kidnoys ache when they nro over
worked and tho trouble gets serious un
less promptly removed. Prickly Ash
Bitters is a reliable kidney tonto and
bowel regulator. T. F. Burbank.
If tho flying maohino is finally per
fected thoro will bo more elopomonts in
high lifo than over.
In biliousness, Ilerbine, by expell
ing from the body the excess of bile
and acids, improves the assimilative
processes, purilles the blood, and tones
-rip and strengthens tile entire system.
Price r>0o. T. F. liurbank.
Hotty—I think Tom loves mo with nil
his heart. Why, ho actually threatened
to shoot himself if I did pot' look upon
him with favor.” Bertha—“How like
Tom! That’s what he always snys.
Funny, isn’t it.”
ABOUT RESCUE GRASS
a coiWtKSi’OXiiriNr uivks his
ICXCKUIKVOK WITH THIS
VALUABLE OltOP.
PROPER SEASON TO PLANT
If Properly Cared For It Can He
Brought Up to it High State of
Production In Georgia,
Colonel O. B. Stoveus, Commissioner oi
Agriculture:
Question.—I hnvo rend with muoli In-
torost your nrtlclo on Roscno Grass pub
lished in ouo of your monthly talk!
somo tlmo siucc. 1 linvo determined ta
try this grass this fall, nml should like
for you to glvo mo, if possiblo, tho oxpo-
ricnco of somo who have triod it in
Middlo and Northern Georgia. Hoping
to hoar from you by Nov. 15.
Aswan.—Iu roply to your inquiry
wo nro satisliod that wo cannot bottoi
nuswor your lottor than by giving the
oxperioncu of Mr. .t. P. Baxtor of Su-
wnuoe, Git., mid Mark W. Johnson ol
Atlanta.
In roply to an iuqulry of oura Mr.
Baxter wroto us ns follows:
Suwaneh, Go.
Hon. R. F. Wright, Assistant Commis
sioner of Agrlcultnro, Atlanta, Ga.:
Desk Sill-Iu roply' to your request
abont my oxpcrienco with Roscuo Grasi
I answer that I think it to bo tho fluust
gross for winter grazing and tho most
prolific grass of southern latitudes. Re
quiriug a rich, loamy soil, coming up in
September,, growing rapidly ovon dur
ing tho coldest win tor days, uffordlng
rich pasturugo of tlio most succuloul
stems and leaves from Deo. 1 to May 1,
or it may bo mowed for hay two to throe
times during April and May, and then
allowed to maturo n crop of seed, which,
in gathering, will shatter or leave
enough seod on the ground to reseed the
land, so thnt ouo sowing, if properly
treated, will suffico.
I have boon growing It for flvo yoari
and liavo, after mowing two or three
times, made at tho rato of 100 to 150
bushels of seod per aero. Got oft of 1
rod, measurod, garnered and threshed
by others, IV, peeks, equal to 000 bush
els per acre.
Tho seed may ho sown from Juno to
February.
Thoro aro Bomo peculiarities about tho
grass sood. They will Hof germiuato hi
summer, tho colder the wonthor in win
ter tho fnstor It grows, nnlsss tho stomi
liavo commenced jointing, when afroozc
will kill it down, only to como ont
again In iucronsod numbers. It make!
n gradual growth wliou not grazed ot
mown. Mowing it down only hnstont
its growth. I have had tho somo plat,
part mown onco and part twleo, all um-
tnro at tho samo time.
I have throo plats which maturo abont
May 1 to 10. Owing to soed of houdt
not nil rtpentng at samo rune mongo
seed will bo loft on the ground to re
seed the laiid.
Two of thou) plats I break up abont
Juno 1 to 15, fertilize and sow in pen,
tho otlior I plant in corn and fluid buaus.
I think the grass by t-iis process im
proved tho last throo years, ami male
splendid crops of noi vino liny and corn
and tx-aqs, the soo 1 lofc on tlm ground
in Mav lying dor itailt until tho cool
The Delicious
Fragrance
from a hot
Royal Baking
Powder biscuit
whets the ,
appetite. The
taste of such
a biscuit—
sweet, creamy,
delicate and
crispy—is a joy
to the most
fastidious.
R OYAL Baking
Powder improves
the flavor and
adds to the healthful
ness of all risen flour-
foods. It renders the
biscuit, bread and cake
more digestible and
nutritious.
Royal Baking Pow
der makes hot breads
wholesome. Food
raised with Royal will
not distress persons of
delicate or enfeebled
digestion, though eaten,
warm and fresh.
Imitation baking powders almost invariably con
tain alum. Alum makes the food unwholesome.
ROYAL OAKINO POWDER CO., 100 WILLIAM 6T., NEW YORK.
nignts In September.
The sood nro quoted by seodtnon at L-S
cents per pound, but abont 100 pound)
may be had of Dr. A. M. Winn & Son
of Lawroncovillo, Go., nt 15 cents pot
pound, or 10 pounds nt 18 cents, or ot
undorstguod a small amount, say 150
pounds, nt samo price.
Noto—Thirty pounds will sow out
aero.
WHAT SIR. JOHNSON SAYS.
Mr. Mark AV, Johnson, lu nil artlola
which appeared In tho Southorn Culti
vator of Oot. 1, said:
“This grass Is comparatively a stran
ger to tho cotton states, yet iu somo lo
calities it is \voU known nml lias becvi
cultivated for niauy yours. It has sov-
eral looal uumo", erroneously glvou to
it, such as “Arotlo grass,*’ "Winter
grass, ” Danish Roscuo," oto. Its proper
name, howovor, Is llosouo grass nml its
botauionl unmo is Bromua Schrndorl. It
belongs to tho Bromus family, of which
thoro nro sovernl varieties, viz: Bromus
tnermls, Bromua Mollis, Bromus Prn-
tousle—nil of them bciug more or less
vnluablo for liny nml wlutor pasturage.
Moro especially for imstnrago. Somo of
tho group aro annual nml somo peren
nial. They will grow on dry, aria soil*,
whoro most otlior grasses would fall.
“Among tho pornninls tho Bromua
inermis Is probably tho host, as It grows
frooly on sandy, dry and arid soils,
whoro tho hotter grasses would fall.
Tho Roscuo is an annual, growing from
1 to 8 foot high, nml is a romnrknhlo,
luxuriant plant, with blades ns lnrgj
as bnrloy, nlTordiiig excellent winter
pasture until tho lattor part of May or
Juno (according to locality), when It
goes to sood mid dtos down, shedding Its
sood upon tho ground, which will ooniu
np again ns soon ns fall rains sot lit.
Aftor it shods Its soed tho ground may
bo plautod in Bomo other oultlvntoil
crop, bucIi as will ha laid by not Inter
than July, and after cultivation censes
tho Rcsouo will como again. In ordor
thnt it may rosood tho ground tho i«s.
turlug should censo about May 1. A por
tion of tho crop may ho rororvod for
sood, in which ouso tho grazing could ha
continued much lougor.
“Liko all tho Bromus family, tho Ros-
ouo should ho planted only daring tho
fall. As tho sood aro largo, it requires
from 80 to 30 pounds por acre. Bow on
any soil that will iiinlto corn, oats or
ootton; hrenk soil flno, broadcast ami
covor with harrow or a treotop drag.
Reseno grass will grow woll on tho gray
nud samly soiIb of tho cotton bolt, whore
orolrard, bluo, Timothy nnd olovor will
not snccood, nml tho’coldest wintor does
not injure it nt all. Its chief vnlno Is
for wintor grazing, or outtiug nnd food-
lug green, in such sections where tlio cli
mate nml soil nro not suited to tho finer
grasses. When winter's chilly frosts
oho nli otner vegetation ou too noin
this grass remains groon nnd succulent
rescuing lb-- cattle from hunger, licnc.i
tho immo.’’—Stato Agricultural Depart
ment.
Red Hot From The Cun
Woo tho hall that hit G. B. Stondman,
of Newark, Miok., in tho Civil War. It
caused horrible Ulcors that no treat
ment helped for 20 years. Then Book-
Ion’s Arioa Salvo onrod him. Cures
Cuts, Brnisos, Burns, Boils, Felons,
Corns, Skin Eruptions, Best Pilo cure
on enrtb. 25 ots. a box. Cure guaran
teed. Sold by E. Bradford, druggist.
When n modern Sampson porforms iu
pnblio his aim is to bring down tho
houso. r
Many persons have had the expe
rience of Mr. Peter Sherman, of North
Stratford, N. II., who says:- “For
yenrs I suffered torture from chronic
indigestion, hilt Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
made a well man of me.” It digests
wlint you eat and is a certain cure for
dyspepsia and every form of stomach
trouble, it gives relief nt once even In
the worst cases, and can’t help hut do
yon good. E. Bradford.
ORDER OF COURT.
•Oedamown, Ga., Deo. 18, 1000.
It is ordered by tho Court that Tues
day, January 8th, 1001, bo set for hold
ing motion court at tho Court Honso in
Ccdartown, Georgia, at which timo all
motions for now trials, eertiorarios,
demurrers and all other matters to ho
tried at Cbambors, ha taken up in thoir
regular order and heard, and all motions
ho continued until that timo. It iB
farther ordorod that Court shall meet
ot lOo’oloek a. m. on January 8tb, 1001,
and continue from day to day-until all
business is disposed of, or nntil tho pre
siding Jndgp shall adjonrn tho samo.
O. G. Janes, J, S. O.
Cat Their Sentences snorr.
Many people In every walk of life,
and particularly traveling men, seem
to have a craze for abbreviation. On
almost every page of tho hotel register
may be found some unique freak, of
abbreviation.
Two abbreviations thnt have been
noticed are "X. O.” nnd "Z. O." Any
where but In tho residence column of n
hotel register they would bo very puz
zling. Of course It Is easy to under
stand thnt the “O." means Ohio, nnd ns
there Is but one town In tlmt state thnt
begins with "Z,” Zanesville, nnd hut
one the name of which begins with
“X,” Xenln, It Is'easy to understand
tlio abbreviations, nnd they save n lot
of time nnd Ink.
“11 worth" Is not so easy to under
stand perhaps, hut when "Kansas" Is
written nfter It Is easier. Another
puzzling abbreviation Is ”10," hut
when it ls'"tilinttnuoogn, 10,” It Is not
hard to read. Columbus Is usually
written "Cols." and Chicago "Cgo.”
The final "h" In tin* old fashioned way
of spelling Pittsburg, which has been
almost entirely dropped elsewhere, Is
usually used In the abbreviation which
most Plttsburgei'B write (“Pgh.") nowo-
days.-Chlcago Chronicle.
TOYS, TOYS. DOLLS, DOLLS.
Biggest Line in Rome.
Childrens’ Shoes, size 8 to (1, 4c. All Wool Dress Goo 1 ' Double Width, per yard,' 7e.
This is by far the Largest Store ever in Rome. We
now occupy the Entire Building==24i, 243 and 245
Broad street, and have every Nook and Corner of
the Three Floors filled with new, up=to=date Dry Goods,
Millinery, Shoes, Clothing, Crockery and House Fur=
nishings. We Wholesale and Retail, and at lower
prices than any house in Georgia. Come and see, and
we guarantee to save you money. Read these prices;
they are only a few of the many bargains. The
whole store is full of them.
CLOTHING.
We bought- the stock of Cloth
ing of :i big manufacturer, nud
can-nnd do sell Clothing cheaper
than any houso in Romo,
Men’s $4 suits - $2.10
Men’s 5 suits - 8.25
Men’s 8 suits - 4.45
Men’s 10 suits - 5.08
Men’s 15 suits - 0.08
Boys’ $1 suits - 48c
Boys’ 2 suits - 1.25
Boys’ 2.50 suits - 1.48
Boys’ 8 suits - 1.08
Boys’ 4 suits - 2.25
Boys’ (5 suits - 8.50
Ladies’ Fine Plush Capo, Fur
Trimmed, each only 80c
Good Yard - wido Bleached
Sheeting - 4Je
Mattress Ticking, 88-in. .wide 4^c
Fine Double Fleeced Outing,
ITen’s Underwear good style - 5e
8 Spools best Six-Cord Thread 10c
SHOES.
Men’s heavy Shirts
Mon’s heavy 60c Shirts
Men’s heavy 75c Shirts
Boys’-50c Shirts
GooiTOalico Remnants
2 Papors Needles for
Toilet Soap por cake
10c Tar Soap
Octagon Soap
8i-in Fine Comb
1 pint Tin Cup
Pie Pintos
25e
38c
48c
80c
2c
lc
lc
2c
8c
lc
lc
lc
Tailor Suits.
This is the largest and finest
Sait Department in North Geor
gia. The suits aro all new styles,
lino material and best workman
ship. Prices are from $2.08 to
$45 suit; every garment guaran
teed to tit.
Wo have the biggest stock
Leather Shoes in Rome, all solid
leather, and-priced so low-you
need not buy the cheap paper
shoes. We buy all our shoes
direct from manufacturer and got
the lowest price nnd sell ns wo
buy, Cheap.
Boys’ Wool Hats , - 6c
Pins, per paper - lc
Ladies’ Ribbed Vest J8c
Children’s Cloaks - 20c
All Wool Fascinators 15c
Fine All-Wool Fascinators,
all colors; bonded 25c
24-in. Umbrellas, 25c
Pretty bright Dress Plaids,
per yard - lUc
12 Envelopes for - lc
12 Sheets Paper - lc
Vaseline, per bottle - ' 2e
Good Machine Thread, 200 yd
spools, only - 2c
In the New Crock=
ery Annex.
Full Size No. 7 Box Stove, $4.60
20-inch Fire Shovel 5c
10-quart Disli Pan 15c
17-quart Dish Pan 10c
No. 2 Glass Lamp complete 10c
Decorated Plates, set- 25c
Gups and Saucers, sot. 20c
Tumblers per sot- - 10c
Goblets por sot - 28c
Tin Dippers • - 8c
Syrup Pitchers - 8c
Cream Pitchers - 8c
Glass Vase - 0c
Largo Bowls each 8,5,8,10 and 15c
Crystal Glass Sugar Dish, Cream
Pitcher, Spoon Holder and
Butter Dish, all for 25c
ITILLINERY.
This is one of tho largest and
finest Millinery Departments in
the South. Our milliners aro the
most skilled in tlio city, and buy
ing as we do in largo quantities
from first hands, we sell cheaper
than any other store in this sec
tion.
One large lot Felt Hats trim
med with Silk, Ostrich Feathers,
Fancy Pompons, etc., all colors,
choice. - 98c
Big line fine Trimmed Hats at
$1.25, 1.48, 1.98, 2.25, 3.98, 3.25
and up to $20.
Turkey Red Table Damask,
(S0-in. wide - 19c
Fine Bleached Table Damask 19c
Lonsdale Bleached Cotton,
yard wide - Ole
27-in. Checked Cotton Ging
hams, yard wide - 3|c
Heavy double Front Overalls,
strapped buttons - 88c
LANHAM & SONS,
ROME, OA
*
245 Broad Street.
Corner 3rd Ave.