Newspaper Page Text
CEDARTOWN STANDARD.
DEVOTED TO THE PEST INTERESTS OF, CEDARTOWN AND POLK COUNTY.
VOLUME To;
OEDARTOWN, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 25, 1901.
NUMBER ‘24.
The tripping ifeet—the sparkling
■eye—the graceful movement—-be
long not alone tot he budding maiden.
These graces are the right—aye
duty of every woman until the hair
whitens—and regal dignity replaces
them.
The mother 'who guards her
strength has so much more to de
vote to the care and education of
her dear ones. She • should be a
comfort—a cheer—always.
Yet how many fee! that they
have the strength to properly bal
ance the home ? The world is list
less, weary and morbid. Its blood
moves sluggishly and is full of im
purities. It needs a kindling, in
vigorating tonic to set it afire—it
needs Be-ru-na,
THE ONE MEDICINE
in the world which women may
rely upon positively. Pe-ru-na is
good for everyone, blit particularly
for women. The various weak
nesses which affliettheir delicate or
ganism spring from inflammation or
catarrh of the mucous lining,and Pe-ru-na
fs a specific for catarrh in any organ of
the body. Any congestion of a mucous
membrane simply means catarrh of the
•organ affectefT. This is why Po-ru-na
euros all sorts of troubles where other
remedies fail. If there is a catarrhal
atfection the matter with you anywhere
Pe-ru-na will cure you.
TRIP TO BUFFALO.
GEORGIA. KDITORS DO THE PAN*
AMERICAN SHOW.
Sights and Scenes Along the Way.
A Pleasant Onting for the
Preen Party.
The Pan-American is all the “go”
now tor sightseers, and Buffalo is the
Mecca for the American tourist,
j One hundred and forty Georgia edit-
j ors and tfoeir ladies “did” the big
| show In approved style the past two
| weeks, and all bring back with them
j glowing accounts of a delightful trip.
! On the With of July, three Piillinau
J sleeping cars, chartered for the press
party, left Atlanta over the Southern
railway for Buffalo, N. Y., arriving
there Thweday 'night. At Chatta
nooga, the -oiuHnnati Southern took
charge of <mr -sleepers, and at Cincin
nati, the Big Four road hurled us
through tihe utate of Ohio to Cleveland.,
where the Lake Shore road took us i«
tow for (Buffalo.
Going through Ohio, one gleans
many reasons why that state is so
populous and wealthy. Great railways
and trolley lines traverse every portion
of the state, and line lands everywhere
murk the prosperity of the faru»ers.
lu everyftown and city there are facto-
riesof all kinds, making something to
sell and drawing money from every
quarter of the country. Then, too,
Ohio Tends the pension roll, receiving
from the government over !|;lH,0(tej00D
a year. The farmers were just reaping
wheat and mowing ha}*, and cherry
trees were full of fruit.
After being quartered at our hotel,
we were taken in tow by the press
representative of the Exposition, Air.
nowlcrt.Jand|t hat meant passes to every
th i tig ita be seen. All tile way from
Government building to the Midway,
everything was wide open to the press,
ami nothing remained unseen after fche
Georgia editors took charge of the
grounds.
You can’t judge aipnblic man by what
be flays. Ten times out of eleven ho
daren’t say what be wants to or feels
like flaying.
The Cure that Cures
Coughs,
Co/dm,
Grippe,
Whooping Cough, Asthma,
Bronchitis and Incipient
Consumption, Is
oTJos
(JU%
The REMEDY"
’ Cura W<T*rt MW, ItitHH.
Z5«^50tW
Saturday, ithe 13th, was Georgia Day
at the show, and appropriate exercises
were observed in honor of the editors.
Our entire party gathered in the Tem
ple of Music -ait .2 o’clock, and two
thousand spectators listened to the
ollieial welcome and'How of eloquence,
interrupted by tilie strains of New
York’s famous 74th [Regiment band.
The speakers were generously ap
plauded, and good fellowship was en
thusiastically in evidence.
Sunday was given over to Niagara
Falls, and the trip will always be re-
I me inhered by the party. Leaving
Buffalo by boat, we aaJJed down stream
and took the trolley ou the .Canadian
side, passing the rapids above tile falls
and landing first at this famous cata
ract. No one has ever yet penwed a
description of this wonder of nature,
for words and fancy cannot approach
its grandeur. It must be seen to he
realized, and then one goes away won*
dering in his inind what to say about it
or how to tell what he has seen.
Passing down towards Lake Ontario,
the cars go near the monument of
General Brock, the corner-stone of
which was laid by King Edward while
on his visit to America as the Prince
of Wales in the ’50*s. Crossing back
to the American side, we pass up the
gorge, view the whirlpool, and see the
most wonderful spectacle in the world
—the Rapid* of Niagara. Graham, the
noted swimmer, passed down the rap
ids Sunday afternoon at H :H0 o’clock,
in a big barrel of his own construe*
tion. He is the only man who ever
passed through the rapids alive, and
this was his second trip. Thousands
lined the gorge and covered the high
bridges and stood on every available
space to witness this daring feat, and
juntas his big red barrel was whirling
through the fiercest fury of the mad
waters, our car stopped to give us the
best possible view. Barring.a few
bruises and heavy jolts, this hardy
professional came out of the ordeal a
living man.
vc« cat.
all of the
• .. i kinds of
-el:**T arid never
,s you to eat all
• most sensitive
'v its use many
, s have been
else failed. It
luach troubles.
course, one will tell you that when
you once see an exposition, all have
been seen,—and that is true in a meas
ure—but each great show has some one
distinctive feature. The electrical
display and illumination at Buffalo
clfyses anything yet attempted, the
lectrical tower being the most beau
tiful and brilliant spectacle on the
grounds. The color-scheme of the
buildings is one of tlie beauties of the
show, and heightens much the gor
geous effect of the architecture. The
Midway is possibly the greatest ag
gregation of attractions ever brought
together at an ‘American show, and
embraces nearly every topic of public
interest from the wheezy spieler to the
Philippine Village.
The War Department of the Govern
ment Exhibit is very fine, and is in
charge of C’apt. P. O, Harris, of the
Regiment, 13. 8. Army, who is one
of the most popular and accomplished
•Officers in that arm of the service. He
is an old Cedartowvi boy, and has won
his way to promotion by gallant and
meritorious conduct. Captain Harris!
occupied a seat on t he rostrum ivi the
Temple of Music on Georgia Day, and
received quite a cordial and enthusi
astic welcome at the hands <<vf the
editors. He showed many attentions
to my own immediate little party., and
contributed much to the pleasure of
our visits to the grounds. Tin* Phil
ippine exhibit in the Psychology
building is one of the most unique to
be-seen, and this, witli the splendid
array of the War Department collec
tion, reflects much credit on the scope
and completeness of Captain Harris’
work.
■Returning home,twelve of the party
•stopped at Cleveland, O., and were
taken in tow by Mr. W. II. Hunt and
Mr. Edward A. Roberts, two clever
and prominent business men of the
Forest City. After refreshing at the
iMollendeii House, Cleveland’s leading
•hostelry, the party visited the leading
•newspapers and took a tally-ho jaunt
•through the city. Gut Euclid avenue,
which is said to be the most beautiful
•residence street in America, over the
boulevard, up the heights of the mill
ionaire colony, round by the 'Garfield
Memorial, through Lake View ceme
tery and the park, one sees a display
•X,f wealth and beauty rarely equaled in
this country. We saw .the homes of
ithe Liannas and the Rockefellers acid
the ipalaces of the hosts of millionaires
that have helped to make Cleveland the
first city of <Ghio. She ha*' over .CiOjOOO
more people .than Cincinnati., and is by
far the wealthiest of Buckeye cities.
The party is indebted to Messrs. Hunt
and Roberts for one of the most d«
lightful incidents or the trip, and
Georgia is tiieir’s ff they should
come tioutit..
*
A day iu CiucUinoti is well worth
one’s time, a«d our stop-off ttiere
proved a great recreation for the party
The zoo there is the greatest in this
country, and Walnut Heights com
prise one of tiie handsomest residence
sections to be found. Cincinnati is
great commercial town, and there is
much of interest to be seen by the
visitor from any quarter.
Taking final leave of the North, we
sought our sleepers and headed for
Georgia over the Queen <fc Crescent
and the Houthern Railway, the great
est railroad system in the Booth, and
landed home delighted, but tired and
sleepy. There are an hundred things
we could say about this trip, which is
one of the most enjoyable outings ever
taken by the Georgia editors, and later
we may do so. W. H. C.
A Monster Devil Fish
destroying its victim is a type of con
stipation. The power of this murder
ous malady is felt on organs and nerves
and muscles and brain. There’s no
health till it’s overcome. But Dr.
King’s New Life Pills are a safe and
oertain cure. Best in the world for
stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels.
Only 20c, at E. Bradford’s drng store.
The odor of a well-cooked dinner is
the incense of domestic love.
Poison
Poison
Buffalo is a city of over 5100,000 peo
ple, ami has one of the famous thor
oughfares of America—Delaware ave
nue. One thing quite noticeable there
is the fact that the street cars wait for
everything else, while in Atlanta
everybody am! everything give the
cars right of track. A form of pro
tection for animals is used there in the
shape of a straw hat for horses—(we
saw no mules nor negroes in Ohio
worth mentioning)—with a big sponge
in the top of the hat, which is kept
wet all the time. These hoods looked
more grotesque than ornamental for
head-gearing, but it enables the horse
to withstand this excessively hot
weather.
The show is \yell worth going to see,
tirucstbehoc. size, besides the country along the way adds
RADFORD.
) the interest of the trip. Of
Mean souls, like mean pictures, are
often found in line looking places.
You can never cure dyspepsia by
dieting. What your body needs is
plenty of good food properly digested.
Then if your stomach will not digest
it, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will. It con
tains all of the natural digestants,
hence must digest every class of food
and so prepare it that nature can use
it in nourishing the body and replac
ing t!ie wasted tissues, 1 fills giv'
life, health, strength, ambition, p
blood and good healthy appetite.
Bradford.
The world may owe every man a liv
ing but it takes a hn9tler to collect it.
Courtship carries more passengers
than auy other ship.
3 Syrup Pepsin cures
.Sold by all druggists.
BtibOD SATURATED WITH T0IS0M 'OAK.
Sr, John Frist, of Bewr Station, Dol.,
•wattles: “I w»« poemonek with poibaftt oak
wfeiich went through my blood, utul my
ooaiditiou became eo shHouh tlia'u the
vtazt.orn all said 1 tvjrdd auot icet well. I
1 evm allied in a pvKuj4«m» 'condition, oon-
ftuml to the bou»?, far ntir months, when
I maw 8. S. fl. advertised! <aud betfwn its
A**n, soon vei>iii:ijw# thiut it was doing mo
tV»oil. I continued the vtiedicine acid was
traced entirely. 1 tbaitk Lt the bmt blood
uumlioiiie made.”
eldom more than three
BOTANICAL REPTILES
Their Sting Sets tHe Skin on Fire and Fills
tHe Veins with a Violent, Lingering Poison
These plants seem to partake of the nature and character of the
serpent; hi winter time beiny comparatively harmless, but when warmed
into life by spring and summer beat they become extremely venomous
and spiteful, emitting a milky juice that burns and blisters like a fiery
acid, producing quick inflammation and painful swelling, Some persons
are so susceptible to these vegetable poisons that coming' in their vicinity
will produce almost as much discomfort and pain ns handling them;
their thin and sensitive skins seem to absorb from the surrounding
atmosphere the acrid juices emanating from these plants. There is
seldom a picnic or family gathering in tie woods but that some mem
ber «fi the party eomes.in contact with Poison Ivy, Oak or some other
hurdiul plant or weed, wild through the open pores the poison is carried
i. to tike overheated blood. Poiscm Ivy is found clinging to tree trunks,
fences or rocks, sometimes reach
ing great heights.; the leaves are
nearly square iu shape, smooth
and shiny and three on each stem;
the flowers arc-r.'f a greenish white
color, and the berries pule "green or
white. The Oak is a small shrub, <
•k-et high, its *aze depending upon the nature of the soil,
location, etc.; the leaves are long and pointed with saw-
jr !3ke edges and a'downs’ appearance underneath. While the two plants are entirely unlike
tan appearance, the poisonous .effects are very similar.
.After the swelling subsides the skin remains for a. Song
vicue in a rough and inflamed condition, dotted here and
shore with had looking ailoers and little festering sores.
It is truly remarkable with what regularity and
certainty the disease ret tons, and aihvays on schedule
time, appearing the :s:iinemonth., day and hour, almost,
that it did the year before. Don’t be deceived should all
the signs of the poison varnish soon after the first attack—the acrid juices have been taken
through the open skin pomas into the blood, and the most persistent and faithful use of
external remedies can never dislodge them, and next season, and for years to come, you may
expect to endure the same bodily tortures; the blood in the meantime becoming so saturated
and charged with the poison that each succeeding attack
leaves the body weaker and recovery more uncertain and
slow, and thus the once simple malady ends disastrously.
For every poisonous plant, tree, shrub cr flower, nature
has wisely provided an antidote or cure. The roots and
herbs of which S. S. S. is composed quickly, surely and
permanently overcome and drive out of the blood and
system the effects of Poison Ivy, Poison Oak, Virginia Creeper, Thunder Weed, Sumac and
vegetable poisons of every variety. S. S. S. will be found an invaluable and perfect antidote
for poisons of this class. There is never any return of the aggravating symptoms after a
course of S. S. S., as it destroys every vestige of the poison.
Don’t abandon hope because of repeated failures. .State your case to our doctors; we feel
sure they can help yon. Medical advice will cost you nothing and is strictly confidential.
Book on Blood and Skin Diseases free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca.
RETURNED EVERY fiPRWG FOR 18 YEARS.
Mr«. A. IT. Bounctt, ei T&ccoa, Oa., whoso
case in ainiiiiu* to tUoiitian&fi of others who
cumo iu contact witli thqpo
“When eiL h. yoiiY? cltl my Jit-rip brother i
I wove poisoned t4 Imndlinrr fsofson oak,
ami it broke out cn tin every spring for
eighteen /tar;. Some one vooomvVo-dod S.
£.. S., which cured iib eomple’siy, and wo
l.ewo seen no sig-nu of the eruptions for
COULDN'T CALL HIM CRAZY.
Jest m ITtwaitapcr Headliner Mum
bling From l’ore« of Habit.
The young man with the haggard
look Hat in the ienr tar of an elevated
train, Htaring and staring at one of the
advertisements.
•‘English beauty shoes,” he mumbled
to bis companion. “That's what lie
Buys.”
“Yes,” suid (he other, “hut that's too
short.”
"Hid. hm,” the lmggnrd man replied.
“Beautiful shoes from England”—
“That won’t fit. It’s long,” was the
curt reply.
“Well, then, ‘Beautiful English
shoes’
“That’s only three words. You’ve got
to have four, you know.”
“That’s so. thut's so. Ah, 1 have !t!”
he cried bo loud that all the other pas
sengers In the car gave a jump. “ ‘Eng
lish shoes of beauty,’ 23 letters and
spaces at Inst.”
A compassionate old man looked up
from his newspaper.
“What’s the matter with your
friend?” he asked. “Is the chap suf
fering from delirium tremens?”
“Oh. no,” the n
assuringly. “You
with his night’s
newspaper,
you kno’
bled off
addressed replied
he’s just through
rU on a morning
headline 'writer,
and altera fellow has scrlb-
of 2.”* loiters and
It. Ev
for oboiit eight hours
eta that habit and can
advertisement, e
steady he
t get over
•rap
of paper lie sees for several hours aft
erward uutil bis mind gets rested-
well. lie begins to count the letters and
spaces mid turn the wording Into n
headline that will tit. It Isn’t exactly
delirium tremens. It’s something worse.
The headlines of 23 letters and spaces
go wriggling around In that poor over
worked brain much worse than
snakes.”- Chicago Chronicle.
When anger rises judgment takes a
back seat.
Hope is the mainspring that makes a
man’s wheels go round.
Tarantulas Are Rnemlea,
Tarantulas are considered deadly foes
to each other and are seldom found In
company. When Imprisoned together,
there is a fight, one succumbs und Is
eaten by the victor. Nature has done
a service In making the tarantula so
hideous and formidable looking an ob
ject Indeed, It Is owing to this repul
siveness that no greater number of per
sons are stung. The sight of the great,
hairy spider crawling near by will
cause a cold, creeping sensation down
the back of almost any one.
A Victim's Argument.
“You have no nerve at all,” said the
disgusted dentist to the patient who
was making a frightful fuss.
“Now listen to that,” returned the
patient warmly—“blaming me for lack
of nerve when you told 'me not five
minutes ago that you’d extracted most
of It and intended to kill what was
left”—Chicago Post.
A liar of (lest.
How thankful we should be for one
day’s rest in seven. All we have to do
on the Sabbath Is—split the wood, light
the lire, dress the children, feed the
mule, rend the paper, figure up how
much we’ve lost during the past week
and then go cheerfully to meeting.—
Atlanta Constitution.
Caulng by ConlrnrlCM.
“When a lady says ‘No,’ she means
‘Yes,’ ” observed the philosopher of tlie
boarding house, “and when her papa
throws you down the front steps and
swears at you until you have disap
peared lu the gloom there seems to be
something contrary about him too.”—
Baltimore American. -
Mrs. Orimsonbeak—“It seems to me,
if matches are made in heaven, it is
strange that there are so many unhappy
marriages.” Mr. Orimsonbeak—“Oh,
you forget; it is the matches that are
made there—not the misfits.”
ie of Hall’s catarrh c
FRANK J. CHENEY,
n to before me and subscribed in mv nre»
This 6th day of December. A. D., i
| BKAL. |
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
nets directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Fills are the best.
Excursion rates to Pan-American
Expo. Queen & Orescent Route.
A mislaid switch is apt to a reck a wo
man’s train of thought.
A Postmaster Writes :
“I wish to add my statement to the
genuine merit of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin. I have tried many remedies
but have found your Syrup Pepsin su
perior to all other laxatives and stom
ach medicines. My wife and I both
use it and know it does all you claim
for it. Yours sincerely,
G. O. Kiknk.
Alma, Ivans., Dec. 22, I!KX).
.Sold by all druggists.
Kisses and rumors go from mouth to
mouth.
Youth sticks the sugar-coating and
loaves the bitter pill for old age to chew.
FOUR IN ONE
S PRICKLY ASH BITTERS
CurM th« KIDNEYS, the LIVER, the STOMACH and the BOWELS.
i by T. F. Burbank.