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BUSINESS CARDS.
W. O. BUNN. w. H. TBAWIOK.
BUNN ic TRAWIOK,
ptitoPfieY^ at Law.
Richardson Bldg, CEDARTOWN.
All bumneas placed In our hands will
be given prompt and vlglant attention.
f, H. SANDF.RB. ]■ K DAVIS
SANDERS & DAWS,
Attorney® L,aw,
Office In Chamberlniii lliilldlng,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
W, F. WURRBR
ATTORNEY - AT • LAW.
CEDARTOWN GA.
W ll.I, practice in all tlie Court, oi
Polk, Paulding,lOayd and Haral
son OouhtieH, and In all the oourt. of
Georgia, State, Federal and Supreme.
Also. In Alabama oourte by special ar
rangement.
W. K. riKLncn. 'V. W. MUNDY.
FIELDER & MUNDY,
ATT0RNEY8 • AT • LAW,
Obdabtown, Oboboia.
Proir. ft attention given to all business.
Collections a specialty. Office up-stairs
In Stubbs Building.
THE CEDARTOWN STANDARD
Published Every Thursday in the Year
B. B. KUSSBLL, I EDITORS.
W.S.OOLBMAN, ( «»noiU».
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year .. fl.00
six Months 50
1 umn Months 26
Official Organ of Cedartown
and Polk County.
Advkrtimino Ratrs will be furnished
on application.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1901.
J.A.BLANCH. K.A.IRWIN. J. A. W BIGHT.
Blance, Irwin & Wright,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
tiaoawrowN, Ga.
Office in Chamberlain Building.
Wm. JANES,
Attorney - at - Law.
Office In Richardson Block,
CEDARTOWN, » » GEORGIA
J. C. WALKER,
Attorney at Law.
Kichardnon Building,
Cedartown, - Georgia.
gl^Colleotions a Specialty.
E. P. SHANNON,
LAWYER.
Office with Ledbetter fc Hurt In.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
H. M. NICHOLES,
LAWYER.
0oinmi8Bioner to Take Testimony.
Office In Judge’s room at Court House.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
J0RR If. VIS0R,
mmRFJBT - fl® • UflW,
Office at Co
CEDARTOWN,
rt House,
- GEORGIA.
J. A. LIDDELL,
Physician - and - Surgeon,
Cedartown, Georgia.
W. A. CHAPMAN,
Physician 0 Surgeon,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
r. r. SErFircs,
^Physician and Surgeon,—
CEDARTOWN, GA.
Calls answored promptly day or night,
W. G. ENGLAND,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA.
Calls attended day and night.
CHAS. VANN WOOD,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Office over Willingham’s store,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
J. W. GOOD,
Physician • and • Surgeon.
Offioo over Willingham's Store,
CEDARTOWN, GA.
Cedartown mines and ships
more Iron Ore than any other
point in the whole South, out
side of Birmingham.
JUSTICES, NOTAItlES, BAILIFFS
Perfect t County Organization for
Mutual Interests.
In response to the cull issued
Inst week by Esquires J. A.
Burdette and J. A. Wilson, the
Justices of the Peace, Notaries
Public and Bailiffs of the county
met Monday at, the Court House.
’Squire J. A. Burdette was
elected temporary chairman, and
an excellent permanent, organiza
tion was effected by the election
of the following officers:—
President—J. A. Wilson.
Vico President—J. B. Jones.
Secretary—W. V. Tumlin.
The organization is for the pur
pose of looking after the mutual
interests of the justice court, of
ficials of the county, and will
doubtless prove of great benefit
to them and to the county.
The following gentlemen were
present from "thy various, dis
tricts :—
Cedartown—J. A. Burdette, ,1. P.;
J. A. Wilson, N. 1\; G. J. Weaver and
W, V. Tumlin, I,. C.
Hampton's—T. J. Dempsey, J. X’.;
1.. Siitlierlln, X. I’.; K. H. Carter, L.
C.
E.om Hill—W. A. Hackney, J. IV.
,1. N. Torrence, N. X*.; PL C. Hackney
ami A. .1. XXoberts, X,. C.
ltockmart—M. A. Hanie, I,. C.
Blooming Grove—A. M. Watson, N.
l’.j It. It. McKibben and Geo. Moore,
1.. 0.
Young's—.1. B. Jones, N. 1’.; Jesse
McKibben, L. 0.
Fish—I,. Y. Jackson, J. I’.: J. R.
Davis and J. V. l'bilpot, L. C.
browning's—H. II. Tibbitts, J. 1’.;
N. V. 1’arriB, N. I’.; Noble Brown nml
I. M. Brown, I.. C.
Lake Creek—B. II. Harris, J. 1’.; W.
J, Brown, N. 1’,; Leonard X’arris and
Paul Karris, I„ C.
Aragon—T. N. Vinson, J. 1’.; S. K.
Jones, N. I*.; J. T. Sheffield and G. E.
Gurley, L. C.
Antioch and Buncombe were not
repress!) toil.
The next meeting of the organ
ization will be at 10 a. in. on the
first Monday in October at the
Oourt House.
ONLY PUNS!
When you visit the loo plant,
If your nook you would save,
Beware, sir, of slipping—
You mivht have a dose shave
For the lee man’s a Barber.
When you visit the coal yard,
Don’t have the least fright;
The coal man’s the owner,
And Coleman’s all right,
Ami the coal man’s a Good man,
When you visit the wood man,
Don’t think ho’s the host of us
Because from on high
He looks down at the rest of us.
High-towet’s the woodman
—Not Milton.
J. H. HINES,
Physician - and - Surgeon.
Office with Dr. J. A. LlddeB,
CEDARTOWN, - GEORGIA.
Pull togotlier-
for Cedartown!
-nil together-
33. IF. Sin^ES,
DENTIST.
Oilers their services to the public Office
In First National Bank building. Office
hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. ui.
J". IP. OIR^IEIEIPL/,
DENTIST,
HONEY to LOAN.
If you want money for investment
or other purposes, for one or more (up
to 10) years, at lowest rate of interest,
No lirolioi’ M CoiuiiilNsiou,
apply to British & American Mortgage
Co., Ltd*
fielder & Mundy,
1 Counsel, Cedartown, Ga.
■uterest and broker’s
ot, but call on us.
• >ur subscription to
n a local option election last
ek, Carroll county went “dry”
by the good majority of 1)51.
Notiok—You are hereby re-
inested to call and pay your sub
scription to Tuk Standard while
attending Polk Superior Court.
Hon. Wm. 11. Hunt, of Mon
tana, has been appointed to suc
ceed Hon. Ohas. H. Allen, re
signed, as Governor of Porto Rico.
Glenn, the ton-year-old son of
Col. Phil G. Brvd, died Thursday
from the etfects of a fall at the
State Capitol. Col. Byrd was
superintending the cleaning of
the big building, and the boy was
going around with him. The lit
tle fellow leaned too far out of a
third-story window, lost his bal
ance and fell to the window ledg<
below, fracturing his skull and
inflicting fatal injuries.
Mil. WADE IN MILWAUKEE.
Mr. Geo. 11. Wade, the capable
vice president a,nd general man
ager of the Josephine Mills, has
been making an extensive tour of
the North in the interest of
that.splendid industry.
The Milwaukee (Wis.) Daily
Sentinel, of Aug. 27th, has the
following interesting mention of
Mr. Wade’s visit to that city:—
It would bo difficult to find a more
enthusiastic believer in the development
of the South, and especially Georgia,
than is George H. Wade, representa
tive of the Josephine Mills at Cedar
town, Ga., In speaking of the cotton
industry in his flection, Mr. Wade, who
in at the Kirby, naid :
"In the la«t four years there has been
a remarkable inoreaso in the develop
ment of this indufltry in our city. We
have added to our manufactories at
least 100,000 cotton spindles, and what
is known as highland long staple cotton
is sold all oyer the world. My particu
lar trade is a line grade of cotton un
derwear, and we have an extensive mar
ket in the Northern states, and aim to
sell from cotton field to jobber direet,
having fi£ds of growing cotton within
a short distance of our mills.
“Attention is just being attracted to
the development of our valuable min
eral resources, and I predict Georgia,
within a short time, will rank among
the first gold-prodnoing states. The
consolidated Gold Mining Company, at
Dahlonega, Ga., is the largest invest
ment in a gold-mining venture in the
state, and represents an investment of
$1,600,000.
“The ore is a low grade and is ex
tracted by the chlorination process.
Many smaller prodneing mines are in
the Piedmont region of the Appalachian
system. Oar iron and coal properties
are largely known.
“The state is also rioh in timber re
sources, our long-leaf yellow pine being
the most important. One ooncern owns
160,000 acres of timber land. Owing to
the increased demand, oaused by the
supply in the Northwest becoming more
limited, the cost of acreage has good
up, the timber selling at from $3 to $5
an aero. Borne of the largest sawmills
in the United Btates ore in Georgia.
“This virgin forest of pine is first
utilized in the turpentine industry, the
trees being tapped. This can be done
for four successive years, and, while it
does not kill the timber, it stops its
growths, and exhausts the supply of
pitch. The trees then become availa
bio for the sawmill. It is said the tap- i
ping prooess has increased lumber val
ues by making the timber less heavy
and less sappy. Northern and Eastern
capitalists are making extensive pur
chases of timber lands.
“Another industry is our cottouseed
oil trade, whioli, under a process of re
finement, produces excellent cooking
oils, sold by some of the trade as olive
oil. One of the largest establishments
in the state extracts and sells it as
cooking oil, and is doiug a largo busi
ness. It is superior to oleo oil.
“We expect to lead iu export trade,
and the Philippines will give u« a now
market. Even to-day, after practically
only a few years’ experience iu manu
facturing lines, 75 per cent of the
brown sheeting in use iu China comes
fiom the South, aud much of it from
Georgia.
“We have excellent railroad facilities.
A line is being constructed from Bir
mingham to Brunswick, which will
opou a new timber and agricultural
section with vast undeveloped mineral
resources. We have every natural re
source, liberal laws as regards corpora
tions, fine water supply, cheap fuel and
competent aud reasonably cheap labor.”
A Shocking Calamity
“Lately befell a railroad laborer,”
writes Dr. A. Kellett, of Williford,
Ark. His foot was badly crushed, but
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve quickly cured
him. It’s simply wonderful for Burns,
Boils, Piles and all skin eruptions.
It’s the world’s champion healer. Cure
guaranteed. 25c. Sold by E. Bradford.
THE NEW YORK WORLD.
Thrice a-Week Edition—The Most
Widely Read Newspaper in
America.
Time has demonstrated that the
Thrice-a-Week World stands alone in
its class. Other papers have imitated
its form but not itssuooess. This is be
cause it tells all the news all the time
and tells it impartially, whether that
news be political or otherwise. It is, in
faot, almost a daily at 4he price of a
weekly and yon cannot afford to be
without it.
Republican and Democrat aliko can
read tho Thrice-a-Week World with ab
solute confidence in its truth.
In addition to news, it publishes first-
class serial stories and other features
suited to the home and fireside.
The Thrice-a-Week World’s regular
subscription price is only $1.00 per year
aud this pays for 156 papers. We offer
this unequaled newspaper and the
Standard together one year for $1,05.
The regular subscription price of the
two papers is $2.00.
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
WITH
McDONALD-BRETT
FURNITURE COflPANY.
House-Furnishing Goods of
All Kinds.
Wag—“Do you believe that a howl
ing dog forecasts a death V” Wig—“Cer
tainly. Somebody kills the dog.”
B. W. Pursell, Kintersville, I*a., says
he suffered 25 years with piles and
could obtain no relief until DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve effected a perma
nent cure. Counterfeits are worthless.
E. Bradford.
You can’t learn to plow without get
ting your hands blistered.
An apt answer is credited to the well-
known Lord George Sanger, of oircus
fame. On being asked what steps he
would take should a certain wild beast
break out out of its cage, he replied
with all naivete, “D—d long ones.”
persons ►
have hair
that is
stubborn
and dull.
It won’t
grow.
What’s
the reason? Hair
needs help just as
anything else does at
times. The roots re
quire feeding. When
hair stops growing it
loses
its lus
ter. It
looks
dead.
East and West R’y of Alabama.
In Effect April 14, 1901.
KA8T BOUND TRAINS.
No. 4. No. *2.
Leave— (Daily’) ex-Sun. Sun
Pell City
Piedmont....
Esom Hill...
Cedartown..
Grady
Fish Creek
Rock m art
Aragon
Taylorsvillo...
Cartorsville...,
i 94k) a in 7.10 a
2.02 pm 10 12
8.00
8.19
8.2-1
8.39
8.46
8.58
9.30
3.43
3.48
4.04
1.12
4.30
10.51
11.20
11.33
11.88
11.53
11.69
12.13 p I
12.45
WK
ST BOUND TRAINS.
No. 1.
No.
3. No 85.
ljeave—
(Daily)
ix-Sur
. Sun. only
Carters ville
..10.15 a
n 0.40 pm 1.15 pm
Taylorsville
.. 10.62
7.12
1.47
Aragon
.. 11.08
7.24
2.01
Bookman...
.. 11.10
7.31
2.07
Fish Creek..
.. 11.28
7.40
2.22
Grady
. 11.33
7.51
2.27
Cedartown ..
.. 11,55
8.10
2.40
Esom Hill...
.. 12.39
3.09
Piedmont,...
.. 1.29
3.48
Pell City
.., 5.35
0.50
Close
connections
is follows:—
Cedartown with Central <
1 Georgia, at
Kockmart v
ith Southern
Railway at
Cartorsville with W.
A A.,
at Piedmont
with E, T. V. A G.
mn
Hair
visor
acts almost instantly
on such hair. It
awakens new life in
the hair bulbs. The
effect is astonishing.
Your hair grows, be
comes thicker, and all
dandruff is removed.
And the original
color of early life is
restored to faded or
gray hair. This is
always the case.
$ 1.00 a bottle. All druggists.
•• I hftvo used Ayer’s Hair Vigor,
and am really astonished at tho
good it has done in keening my
hair from coming out. It ft the
best tonic I have tried, and 1
shall continue to recommend it to
my friends.”
* i'lgi
r
lV-VTVT
t Hair
x. write the Doctor about it.
DR. J. C. AYER, Lowell. Mass.
Central of Georgia Railway Co.
Olutttanoogu Division.
Schedule in effect July 28,1901.
Lv Cliattan'ga
Battlefield
Ch'kam'ga
La Fayette.
Trion
Sum'rville
Lyerly
Rome 1138
Ar Cedartown U30 1
Between Cedartown
No. a
Lv. Cedartown 112 .ropin'
Uuchauan. 1 17
Bremen ; t 34
Carrollton..! 1 14
5 14
5 44
5 54
I 9 551
Newn
Go to Monteagle!
In tlio mountains of Tennessee,
2200 feet above hoh level.
Cool Nights!
Pure Fresh Air!
Mineral Waters!
Monteagle, Lookout Mountain, East
Biook Springs, Monte Sano, Estill
Springs, Nicholson Springs, Beershcba
Springs, Fernvale Springs, Kingston
Springs, and mauy other favorably-
known Summer Resorts located on
Nashville, Chattanooga and
St, Louis Railway.
phlet
1 8 52
14pm
Carrollton.
Bremen
Buchanan•;
Ar Cedartown.
Between Chattanooga and Cedartow
No. 1 No. 3 No. 59
Lv Cedartown ji 10 1 6 00 am j 6 30am,
Rome 3 00 I 6 *o I S to i
Lyerly 3 56
Trion™ 1 ^. 4
La Fayette - 4
Ch’kam ’ga 5
Battlefield • 15
’ Cliattan'ga ti
1 5®
I >2 45P*n
Nos. 1 and 2 daily.
Nos. 3 and 4 Sunday only T .
Nos. 97, 98, 99 and 100* daily’ except
Sunday.
Nos. 99 and 100 arrive and depart
Iron C. H. A S. shops near Montgomery
ayenue.
Connections made at Chattanooga,
Tf nn., with all roads lor points North
and West.
For any information apply to
Thro. D. Blink, Gen. Supt.,
Savannah, Ga.
C. B. Wilburn, Superintendent,
Rome, Ga.
B. A. Fite, Agent, Cedartown, Ga.
J. H. Latimer, Sou. Tass. Agt. , . „ _ . .
Chattanooga, Teon. VIRGIN IA COLLEGE
H. F. Smith, W. L. Danlet,
Traffic Mgr. Gen. Pass. 4«t.
Nashville, Tenn.
Double daily train service to Buffalo
and Niagara Falls. Queen A Crescent
Route,
Excursion rates to Pan-American
Expo. Queen & Crescent Route.
FOR YOUNG LADIES.ROANOKE,VA.
Opens Sept. 21st, 1901, One of the
leading Schools for Young Ladies iu the
South. Now buildings, pianos and
equipment. Campus ten acres. Grand
mountain scenery, Valley of Va.,famed
for health. European and American
teachers. Full course. Conservatory*
advantages in Art,Music and Elocution.
Students from thirty states. For cata
logue, address, MATTIE P. HARRIS,
President, Roanoke, Va.
june28-Sw
Pay up your subscription to The Standard
at once.