The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, August 01, 1901, Image 7
ylpy
lt gk g
WOMANS RELIEF!
A really healthy woman has lit
tle pain or discomfort at the I
menstrual period. No woman
needs to liave any. Wine of i
Cardui will quickly relieve those
smarting menstrual pains and
the dragging head, back and I
side aches caused by falling of
the womb and irregular menses. I
WINE OF CARDUI|
has brought permanent relief to]
1,000,000 women who sufferedl
■every month. It makes the men- 1
I st.rua! organs strong and healthy.
litis the provision made by Na-i
[tdre to give women relief from'
the terrible aches and pains which
blight so many homes.
Greenwood, La., Oct. 14,1300.
I have been very sick for some time.
I was taken with a severo pain i:i ir.y
side and could not get any relief until
I tried a bettio of Wine of Carded. Be
fore I had taken all of it I was relieved
X feel it my duty to say that you have a
wonderful medicine.
Mrs. M. A. Yount.
Tor advice an diiterature, address, giving eyrap
ton:s.“Tlic Ladles’ Advisory I>epa.u.-ient,”T.ie
Cfcattanooga Medicine Cos., Chattanooga, Teno.
W. E. R. OFALA
Taking Eflect Jan, 13,1901.
Mo IFA9BSNGEB W No 2 1 ASSENGEII—EiR-I
DAILY. DAILY.
Lv Carters vill* 10. loam. Lv fell City 930 an
- sttaboro.. 10.89 “ “ Coal City 10.15"
.. Tayl’rev’le. 10.52 “ “Ragland 11.10"
Hock mart 11 l'i “ “ Poke's 12.15 pc
i.ralv 11.33 " “ Piedmont.... 2.02 "
• ><larton.. 12.15 pin “ Warner's. 2.39“
■Warner’s ,12 45pm “ Cedartown.. 8.28,"
■ i'iedmunt... 1.29 “ “ Grady . 3.43
■ Date's.. 3.15 ” “ Rockmart... 4.04 "
" Ragland.... 4.23 • “ Tnyl’rwv’le.. 4.30 ••
1 >al <'irv 5,10 “ " Stilesboro ... 445 "
4' Pell City.. 5.35 “ Ar.Oartersville.. 5.15 ••
Mol Passenger—WeptiNo 4 Parsenoeb— Eari
DAILY EX. HONDAY. DAILY’ EX. SUNDAY
uv CarterHvllle.. 5.55 pm Uv Cedartown...7.so ud
Stilesboro... 6.19 “ “ Grady .8.08
■■ Taylorsville 6.32 “ “ Rockmart.. ..8.29 ”
•• Rockmart... 6.57 Taylorsville ..8 53 ••
Grady 7.17 " “ Stilesboro.. ..9.00 ••
. 4r Cedartown... 7.35 “ |Ar atCartersvllle 930 •
No. 35 Passenger—W No. 34 Passenger— E
SUNDAY ORLY. | SUNDAY ONLY
LvCarterville..l.ls p mjbv Cedartown 11.20 c
“ 5ti1e5b0r0....1.37 “ 1 " Grady 11.33
“ Taylorsville 1.47 “ “ R0ckmart....11.53 “
' R0ckmart.....2.07 “ j “ Taylorsville 12.13 pa
"Grady 2.27 “ “ 5ti1e5b0r0....12.23 “
ir Cedartown...2.4o “ lAr Cartervi!le..l2.4s‘
Soutnern Railway
6888 Wiles —^
One Management.
PENETRATING
EIGHT SOUTHERN STATES.
Solid Yestibuled Trains,
Unexcelled Equipment
Ft’st Schedules.
DINING CARS
Are operated on Southern Railway
Trains
OBSERVATION CARS,
On Washington and Southwestern
Vestibuled Limited, and Washington
ami Chattanooga Limited via Lyneb
burg.
Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars
Of tlie latest pattern on all through
trains,
J, H. CIJLP, Traffie Manager,
Washington, I>. C.
W. A. TURK. Gen. Passenger Agent,
Washington, I). r .
C. A. BENSCOTKK, Ass’t C.en. I'afHtryrr Agt
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Hhal6 r KB4. I
Cleanse* and beaut I He* the bair. |
Promote* a luxuriant growth. f
Mever Fails to Hestore Gray
Hair to its Youttiful Color. (
Cures scalp diseases it hair tolling.
jjQc.andfl.OUat Druggi ls J
teLK &&M W THBh*
fisssuisr poftßßS
WKUiHG THE WiHggUBBU SDMSIOHITY W
f]aafflHKKay^
BRADLEY. GRIFFIN & CO.
SALES AGENTS.
NEGROES ARE
BARRED.
Importations From the South Met
by a Mob at Chicago.
QUITE AN UGLY SITUATION.
Train is Stopoed by Armed Man-
Negroes Frightened-
Many Deserted.
Chicago, July 25. —While resi
dents waited along the tracks of
the Chicago Junction Railway this
morning to bar out a train load of
Southern negroes, the train was
sidetracked at Blue Island.
The Illinois Central turned the
special over to the Junction Rail
way. When Blue Island was
leached it was decided not to pro
ceed to Melrose Park till in the
morning. The negroes declare
that they would not nav e come had
they known such a tempest was
brewing.
It was declared on the train that
one hundred deserted at Fulton.
lud., and had gone to work for a
railroad company.
At Blue Island a peace commit
tee awaited the negroes hoping to
persuade them not to leave the cars
and the* engineer to pull out to
some safe place.
One hundred and twenty-five
men, armed with revolvers, scat
tered along the tracks awaited the
negroes.
RUSH FOR LANDS-
Hundreds Going From Tennessee
to the New Country.
Chattanooga, July 25. —The rush
to the opening of the new lands in
the Kiowa-Apache tract is attract
ing considerable interest in local
railroad circles at present.
This rush has been on for a
month and the last day for the
registration for a chance at the
land is July 26th.
For the past few nights, and
days, too, for that matter, the train
from Memphis has pulled out from
the Central depot, with from fif
teen to a hundred people bound for
the new country, The railroad
men say that when these trains get
into Memphis they are packed full,
and people clinging to the hand
rails. Memphis is said to have
been overrun with emigrants tor
two weeks past.
One party who lias been out in
the new country lately, stated to a
News reporter that it was a great
sight to see the people flocking
into the territory. He said:
“El Reno, the center of the at
traction, and from which point the
drawings for the new land will be
made, is crowded and packed with
all classes of people. Some of
those going out there arrive with
only enough to file tneir papers
and get in position to be in the
rush. On the other hand, there
are many old soldiers, wealthy peo
ple, who are there for the excite
ment of the thing, and all kinds of
gratifiers. The town of El Reno,
which has about 1,500 population,
is now overrun with about 75,000
people, and from now until about
a month after the allotment of the
lands there will be great inconven
ience and suffering.
“There are about 14,000 parcels
of land and there are now about
115,000 people registered for a
chance at these. It is about a ten
to one shot, and there will be many
losers.’’
Hast Tennessee is contributing
her quota to this rush, as in every
thing else, and not a train has gone
west since the rush began but has
carried a number of people from
this section of the country.
Millionaire Works as a Laborer-
Arthur Lee Cabanne, the young
society man of St. Louis, who gave
up his home to work as a laborer
in a steel factory, promises to
eclipse the career of Charles Read's
hero m “Put Yourself in His
Place.” Mr Cabanne has received
offers of marriage from numerous
young women, among them a belle
of Toronto, Canada, who tells him
she has $600,000 in her own right
which she is willing to give him
for a start in life if he will marry
her. Mr. Cabanne is twenty-five
years old, a college graduate and
an athlete.
His father, J. Charles Cabanne,
is one of the most influential and
wealthy merchants in St. Louis.
Young Cabanne's desire was to
carve out a career for himself in
dependent of any help from his
family. He selected the steel bus
iness for his future field, and wish
ing to learn it from the bottom up,
secured a position as a laborer in a
factory in east St. Louis. He gave
au assumed name, but a former
F'wCbill ClH*
” Is GUARANTEED
coachman of the family recognized
him. Now Mr. Cabanne is on the
pay roll under his right name. At
the same time he lives with his
fellow workers, limits his expenses
to his pay, and is learning the
steel industry by contact with the
details. He will spend five yeais
as an apprentice in the factory be
fore he will seek fipr a higher pos
ition. •
A Ministers’Good Work.
“I had a severe attack of bilious
colic, got a bottle of Chamber
lain's Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy, took two doses
and was entirely cured,” says Rev.
A. A. Power, of Emporia, Kansas.
“My neighbor across the street
was sick for over a week, had two
or three bottles of medicine from
the doctor. He used them for
three or four days without relief,
then called in another doctor who
treated him for some days and
gave him no re’iet", so discharged
him. I went over to see him next
morning. He said his bowels
were in a terrible fix, that they
had been running off so long that
it was almost bloody flux. I asked
him if he had tried Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea rem
edy and he said, ‘No.’ I went
home and brought him my bottle
and gave him one dose; told him
to take anothe:' dose in fifteen or
twenty min ites if he did not find
relief, but he took no more and
was entirely cured. I think it the
best medicine I have ever tried.”
For sale by Hall and Greene.
SHE DIDN’T WEAR A MASK.
But her beauty was completely
hidden by sores, blotches and
pimples till she used Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve. Then they vanished
as well all Eruptions. Fever Sores,
Boils, Ulcers, Carbuncles and
Felons from its use. Infallible for
Cuts, Corns, Burns, Scalds and
Piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c Young
Bros, drug store
A Wonderful Discovery.
The last quarter of a century records
many wonderful discoveries in medicine,
but none that have aceomplished more for
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns’ Iron Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
and neither man, woman or child can take
it without deriving the greatest benefit.
Browns’Jron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
CASTOniA.
Bears the ' ,,(3U avo Always Bough)
A coated tongue, foul breath, sour
stomach, can be cured by using K, K.
K, Pills. 25 cents. I>o not gripe.
To Live 100 Years-
Rev. Everett E. Hale writes for
the Chicago Record-Herald on the
art of living a hundred years. He
boils it down into t hese words:
1. Rule both your mind and
body with an iron hand" You are
a master.
2. For the body, enough good
sleep, enough good food, enough
good excercise.
3. For the mind, regular work,
in the line of your genius and stop
when you are tired.
4. After you are 40 you may,
if you are not a fool, choose your
own rules, your own medicine and
your own food. But you will find
that the moie you are in open air
and the more you are with other
people, the better you will suc
ceed. You will also find that there
is nothing gained by brooding over
failure.
| ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND |
PPKt!kif:
. There is no kind of pain l
Jor ache, interna) or exier- 1
* nal, that Pain-Kiiier will 1
? not relieve. 1
A LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB
STITUTES THE GENUINE BOTTLE *
x BEARS THE NAME,
Is PERRY DAVIS & SON.
SOLD BY YOUNG BROS., DRUGGISTS.
LION COFFEE
A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL!
|[ I -J If you went to buy a lion
' I vj whelp you would’nt accept a
I/] ’ • 7 kitten as a substitute, even if
v l the dealer urges you.
)V, l/Sv 6 *1 \% / Now, don’t accept a substi
fTJ’’ tmefor
LIQM coffee
- | Tl —1 V \ It is bound to turn out a com-
I _y tnzn —- — men yellow cat, with none of
—-—-. I— 2 ~—- the strength of the lion.
Watch our next advertisement.
You want LION COFFEE because it is LION COFFEE.
If, on the other hand, you want a coffee which, in order to hide imperfections, is “highly
polished” with eggs and other preparations, then do not buy
LIOM COFFEE.
If MON COFFEE were common, ordinary stuff, coffee drinkers would’nt insist on hav
ing it. It is used in millions of homes because it is the best Coffee In the World for the
price. If you doubt this, take a single package home and try it.
package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptive
l- No housekeeper, in fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in the list some article
which will contribute to their happiness, comfort and convenience, and which they may have by
simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from the wrappers of our one pound sealed
packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold).
WOOLSON SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OHIO.
PENNY POSTAGE-
An Effort Will Soon be Made to
Establish It.
Washington. July 25. Some
there are who say that the next
great step to be taken in postal
progress will be to provide a pen
ny postage. That would serious
ly reduce government postal reve
nues at first, but it is calculated
that there would within a short
time be a sufficient increase in the
number of letters going through
the mails to almost make up for the
loss.
It is quite possible, when the
question of pennv postage comes
up, that the weight of a letler that
can be sent for one stamp will be
reduced to one iialf an ounce in
stead of one ounce, as now. That
would give the bulk of letters go
ing through the mails the advant
age of penny postage and cause
voluminous correspondents to pay
the government fully for its ser
vices in carrying their letters. It
may be several years before penny
postage is established, ’ u. tl a; it is
sure to come is generally, believed.
It Saved Hi* Baby.
“My baby was terribly sick
with the diarrhoea, we were un
able to cure him with the doctor's
assistance, and as a last resort we
tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy,” says
Mr, J. H. Doak, of Williams,-Ore
gon. lam happy to say it gave
immediate relief and a complete
cure. For sale by Hail and Greene
Druggists.
OLD SOLDIER’S EXPER
IENCE.
M. M. Austin, a civil war veteran,
of Winchester, Ind.,writes: “My
wife was sick a long time in spite
of good doctor's treatment, but
was wholly cured by Dr. King’s
New Life Pills, which worked
wonders 'for her health.” They
always do. Try them. Only 25c at
Young Bros, drug store.
To Hang Pickpockets-
Fort Sill, O. TANARUS., July 23. —A law
and order league has been lornied
here to suppress the dozens of
crooks who have infested the coun
try since the Kiowa-Comanche
registration began. The organiza
tion has decided to print and dis
tribute hand-bills bearing the fol
lowing:
“Notice is hereby served on all
confidence men, pickpocket*,
thieves and crooks who are caught
plying their vocations that they
will be hanged to the nearest tree.”
What most people want is some
thing mild and gentle, when in
need of a physic. Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver Tablets fill
the bill to 1 dot. They are easy
to take and pleasant in effect. For
sale by Hall and Greene.
I) .H. J. Williams, ot Social Circle,
writes that it gives him pleasure to add
liis endorsement and praise for Kidd’s
Konstipatiou Kure, (K. K. K. Pills.)
CASTORIA.
Beers the J? Kind Have Always B°'-^
Farm Loans Negotiated.
miLNER & miLNER,
Attorneys at Law
CARTERSVILLE. GA
Commercial and Corporation Practice
and Collections.
Offices with Judge T. W. Milner over
Bank of Cartersvifle.
DR. WILLIAM L. CASON,
DENTIST-
Office: O ’er Young Bros.’ Drug Store.
CARTERSVILLE. CA.
‘1)11. CLARK H. GRIFFIN,
DENTIST.
—OFFICE .
U|i-Kt*lr. Opposite Wirnl's i>Tn*4rtore,
CARTERSVILLE,GA.
Citation for Dismission.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
Chas. A Davis, executor of the last will and
testament of Martha E. Jackson, dece.ved, hav
ing hied bis petition for discharge from said ex
ecutorship, this is therefore to cite all persons
concerned, to show cause agarnst the gran ing of
said discharge, it anv they can, at the regular
term of the Court of Ordinary for said county to
be held on the first Monday in September, noi,
else the same will be granted as applied for. This
June 3, 190;.
G. W. H ENDIJICKS, Ordinary.
Citation for Dismission
Estate ]. 1). Bowdoin.
GEOEGIA, Bartow Countv.
Whereis, E C. Bowdoin. administrate < of J.
I) Bowdoin, represents to the court in her ;eti
tion duly filed, that she has fully admiru-rered J.
I) Bowdoin’s- state. This is therefore to cite all
persons concerned, kindred and cr.-ditcrs to ,now
cause if any they can. why said admin,s'.ration
and rec=- ve letters of dismission on the first Mon
day in October next. This July Ist, Mol
G W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
il Now? y
\ Fill the bottles with HIRES. /
1 \ Drink it note. Every glass- !
\ ful contributes to good /
\ health. Purifies /
\ the blood, clears /
\ the complexion, /
\ makes rosy /
\ checks. Make /
6 gallons \; a Charles
25 cents. J E.Hire*
Dealers, AfL _r jf Conpsnv,
write f.:r Waiver,-.,
biC offer, p 3
P&€i>ci;lgeeF]
et> get 5
:SIGN
how. % •
.tent, f
0.1
LC. *
VMS*
CAS TOHI A.
Bears the v) 8 int * *iayS Bfluotit