The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, August 08, 1901, Image 5

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PURE DRAGS, Patent Medicines, fine stationery, And Druggists Sundries. Can be bought at lowest prices from HALL & GREENE. ■^DRUGGISTS.* „OGfIL NEWS JN BRIEF. A general rain fell throughout ;,j s section Monday night. There will be services at the •oiscopal church next Sunday. j> j Miss Amanda Smith has return- I ■d from a several ‘weeks visit to ,011th Georgia. Mr. Ryabs, ot Savannah, visited he family of the Rev. Sam P. ones this week. Dr. I. S. Hopkins, of St.jLouis, -reached at the Methodist church ast Sunday morning. Miss Lizzie Conyers, of Atlanta, s a guest at the home of her mi le Mr. J. B. Conyers. Mr. George G. Latta, of Hot V.-rings, Ark., is paying a visit to iis sister, Miss Mary Latta. The Kuharlee Farmers Club asks gher clubs, to, like themselves ilk out on the roundlap trust. Dr. J. S. Beasley & Son shipped heir first carload of peaches from heir farm at Stilesboro Tuesday. Several from the locality attend ;d the reunion of the ist and 6th Da. cavalry at Cedartown yester- Jay. Capt. and Mrs. J. C. Milam left last Friday for Dalton, where they will spend a few days with rela tives. Mrs. J. M. Purse and datigluer, Miss Louise, left last week for At lanta, where they will spend some time. Mrs. R. M. Patillo left last Mon day for Madison, Ga,, where she goes to spend awhile visiting rela tives. (Mrs. Cooper Cobb is expected home from Nashville, where sht has been on an extended visit, this week. Capt. Mike Singleton, of Chat tanoega, passed through the city Sunday *n his way home from Alabama. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Forrester, of Stilesburo, have returned from a visit of several weeks to relatives in Alabama. Mr, J. E. Mays came up from Atlanta ne day last week and spant a day with Mrs. Mays and the children. Mist? Nettie Rudisil, of Forsyth, Ga., arrived Tuesday evening, and will sp&nd some time with her sis ter Mrs. A W. Bealer. Misses Annie and Bessie Smith, of Cordele, Ga., and Miss Marsh, of Griffin, are the guests of Misses Rosa and Octavia Aubrey. Miss Lottie Anderson, of Car tersville, was a popular visitor of Mrs. John A, Crawford during the encampment. —Balton Citizen. Miss Julia Jones, of Cartersville, made a number of true friends during her short stay here, as the Shiest of Miss Alya O’Neill. —Dal- ton Citizen. Judge J. W. Harris was taken sick Saturday night, and for two or. three days his condition w 7 as quite critical, but he was reported as im proving yesterday, Miss Minnie Young, who is plea santly renumbered by many Car tersville friends, was married in Gedartown last Thursday to Col. Judsoti C. Chapman, of Atlanta. , Maj, J. M. Barnard, one of La- Grange’s most active and popular citizens, made a brief visit to the city the first of the week. Maj. Barnard has been president of the baGrange cotton mills for a num ber of years and has managed the enterprise with marvelous skill until it sold out recently to the D uck trust. H)hat are Humors? They are vitiated or morbid fluids cours ■p*-' the veins and affecting the tissues. Uey are commonly due to defective diges ‘ on **ut are sometimes inherited. How do they manifest themselves ? ‘ r ‘ roany forms of cutaneous eruption, falt r beum or eczema, pimples and bmls, an< * * n weakness, languor, general debility. How are they expelled ? Hood’s Sarsaparilla Jr "| l h a^B ° builds up the system that has suffered from them. is the best medicine for all humors. Mr. and Mrs. William Austell and Mrs. Lula T. Lyon were de lightfully entertained at an elegant dinner on Monday last by Mrs. | fjam P. Jones. | Mrs. George G. Smith and chil dren, of Tifton, Ga., arrived in the city a few days ago and wjll spend a month or more with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Patterson. Mr. T. W. John.sob of Atlanta, | accompanied by Miss Lizzie Motintcastle, from Chattanooga, returned home Monday after a visit to Cartersville relatives. Mr. C. F. Price, wha has been spending several weeks at home, left: last Thursday for Kentucky where he will purchose a carload of horses for the' South Georgia market. Mrs. Fannie D. Rogers, with her daughter, Miss Kate Rogers, and Miss Bailey, of Monticello, Fla., arrived in the city a few days ngn and will remain as visitors for a month or more, Miss Laura Dwelle, of Charlotte, N. C., arrived in the city last Sat ! urday, and is the guest of Miss Lottie Anderson. Miss Laura’s many friends are glad to welcome her to the city again. Canton recently voted on bonds for public schools. The result was 57 for and 19 against bonds out of a registration of 124, so the neces sary votes vueie not obtained and the schools were lost. Mr. W. S. Bradley who has been spending some time with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Brad ley, ieft last ‘week to resume his work as clerk on a boat'which runs between Albany and Bainbridge, Ga. Miss Rosa Belle Wise, of Selma, Ala., who is pleasantly remembered by a large circle of friends in Car tersville, arrived Tuesday niorii ng, and will spend several weeks with her aunt. Mrs. J. R. Ander son. Col. Chas. P, Ball, general man ager of the East and West railroad, left last Friday for Wamkeska Springs, Wisconsin. He went by Montgomery, Ala., where he was joined by Mrs. Ball who went with him. Mr. R. N. Cunyus and Mrs. Abel Skatmall, of Sligo, La., came up last week and will spend some time with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Brandon near Stiles boro, and other relatives in the county. Miss Emily Calloway, of La •sange, arrived last week and will spend a month or more in Car tersville. Miss Calloway spent a month or so in this city last summer and made many friends who welcome her return. Mr. Lucius Hannon is mal*trg a pleasant visit to his horse folks. He has been prominently connec ted with the Mrilner Lumber Cos. at Hub, Miss. Lutie has a large cir cle of friends here who are glad to welcome him back again. There will be a special musical service at the Episcopal church ou Sunday evening, August 18th. The choir is making arrangements for a double quartette, duets, vocal solos, and altogether it will be-a beautiful service. The public is cordially invited. Our citizens have been exhibit ing the very finest specimens of to matoes for a week, Moon eclipsed all with his 27 ounce spec imen. Mr. Gresham found a spec imen weighing 22 1-2 ounces while Mias Laura Roberts gathered a cluster of three that together weighed over 60 ounces. Mr. J. E. Jolly, a son of Mr. J. R. Jolly, of Stilesboro, committed suicide at Bremen, Ga., I uesday by shooting himself through the head. He was rail-road agent at Bremen, and no cause is assigned for the rash deed. He left a note to his wife and one to his clerk in the de pot. He was thirty four ye@rs old. The wrong date having in seme way been given to the camp, the .report of the action of P. M. B. Young camp as published last week contained an pwor in regard t® the time the reunion ®f the- 23d Georeia regiment will be held It will ocfPTTnnUtfTWwrTWrtfiP'-fitn ? 21st day of August, instead of on the 23d, as published. The Ladies Afternoon Musical club will meet with Mrs. Felton Jones at the Terrace on Friday af ternoon, August'9th, at five o’clock. A miscellaneous programme will be given and each member is re quested to render a number. The guests of the club upon this occas ion will be Misses Glover and Mc- Ghee, of Rome, and Miss Octavia Aubrey, and each has.been invited to give a selection. • The work of enlarging the res idence of Mr. J. P. Lewis on South avenue was begun last week and when completed Mr. Lewis will have one of the prettiest homes in in the city. An addition of six rooms will he made and the old part of the house will be made new. Mr. Eugene Smith has the contract for the work. What Shall we Fix for Dinner Today Tomorrow and so , on? Oh, this everlasting eating business, what a trouble particularly to the gocd wife. Well, you have to patronize the grocer, that s a certAinty, and we are in business to sfipplv ycu, and help you in evfefy way we can be of service to you. Herd’s some items we want to sell together with a few scores and hundreds?)! other things you are obliged to have sooner or later. Full cream sum mer cheese, by the single pound 20c. or 2 lbs. for 35 cts. Macaroni is regarded by some as n little out of season, but a hungry man can worry down some when mixed with a little cheese, butter, eggs etc. and properly prepared. Italian Macaroni 80. 2, 15 cts. 4 for 25 cts. guaranteed O. K. Fancy patent flour 24 lbs. 60 cts. Fresh Graham flour in this week. 24 lb sack for 65 cents. Best grits 8 lbs, 25 cts. 3 lb. cans pork and beans, or Boston beans with tomato catsup for 15c. Concentrated soups 10c per can. Fresh crackers and cakes every week. Try a pound package of our “cream lunch thin.” This is a nice brittle cracker, full pound package for 10 cts. cheap as the common sodas and much more de sirable in evyry way. Round can salmon, 25c grade, 20 cts'or 2 cans for 35GS. Heinz’s olives, 25 cent size for 20 cts. Lima beans, in cans, same as fresh from vines i2%c per can, cheaper than rais ing them. We have a few cans Libby’s plum pudding to close out at BJ4 per can that is 3 for 25 cts. You can prepare your dessert in two minutes. A little sauce will fix your pudding so you will not object to it. Here is a good receipt. A little hot water, butter, juice of lemon and a little thickening, Serve hot on pudding which cut in slices after heating-in can. Yours for something good to eat. MILLER 11. GILREATH [R. A woman’s curse,is constipation and her health is ruined by it. Kidd’s Konstipation Kure is a guaranteed cure, or your money refunded. Ask for K. K. K. Pills. Price 25c. castoria. Bears the _/) The Kind You Hav%Ahmays Bought B tr For Rent- Terrace Place on Main street, close in. Large house with fifteen rooms, makes an excellent board ing house, and can be kept full all the year. Large garden, city wa ter. Address Mrs. M. D. Freeman, 4t. Cartersville, Ga. “My Crippled." Rheumatism at its worst is a sort of living death. It man to a chair or binds him to a bed, and metes out to him a daily martyrdom. At the l^est Hi o 1 . tjgr <% Jt,* -i • -i15J21 'lllp 'WSF H ■■ A M * Cades, Williamsburg Cos.. S.C. "I was badly crippled. Tried many doc*or%apd twa.of them gave me up to die. , did me good. Tne pains in and legs (and at times iu my head), would nearly tall me. I My appetite was very bad. Everybody who saw me said I must die I took five bottles of the Golden Metrical ■ Discovery ’ and fonr yials of lfellets.*and to-day.ray health is good after suffering twelve years with rheumatism.” * ItattOK'RifffW**- Pleasant Pe-IM* are 1 .powerfid aids to the cleansinMof the Iclpgged system. By all dealers in TBemcine. rheumatism is a painful malady, in terfering alitJe with pleasure and busi ness. To cure rheuma tism it is necessary |to eliminate from the blood the acid Ipoisons which are j*the cause of the dis ease. Thisjis effect ually done by the use „of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis j coverv. It carries out of the blood the corrupt and poison ous accumulations which breed and feed disease. * It in creases the activity of the, blood-making glands and sends an increased supply of rich, pure blood through vein and artery to strengthen every organ of' the body. a I had been troubled with rheumatism fov tvflfive so bad at times I-coußl not leave my bed.” writes Sir. R. McKnight, of SGHEHER’S GRANDWINDUP IN THE WASH GOODS DEPARTMENT. All Sheer Muslins- Lawnsand Dimities Sacrificed. Three Great Lois for This and Next Week’s Selling. 15 pieces sheer lawns, dimities and batistes. The season’s best 10 and l2j4c. values. Your Choice at 7}4c. ‘ 10 pieces finest American dimities and swisses, never a yard sold under isc. Your Choice at ioc, i-o pieces imported wash fabrics, values up to a yard, Your Choice at 15c. Gnat Clearance Sale of Slippers. NOTE THESE PRICES. LOT NO. 1. All our ladies’ low quarter shoes worth 2.00 to 2,50 at 1.50. LOT NO. 2. All our ladies’ and Misses Oxford’s and Sandals worth 1.50 to 1,7s at 1.15. LOT NO. 3. All our ladies’, Misses’ and children Oxford’s and Sandals, worth 1.00 and 1.25, at 89c. LOT NO. 4. A lot of Odds and binds, some worth 100, some worth up to 2.00 at soc. NO GOODS WILL BE CHARGED AT THESE PRICES, SGHEUGR’S. New = = Pretty. ™ Ton haven’t seen anything: that will mere quickly impress you with fitness \ than our assortment of FURNITURE selected to meet the wants of the peo- pie of this community. LATEST DESIGNS, DURABILITY AND ECONOMY IN PRICE Have been prime considerations m the purchase of our stock of furni ture. We have the goods and we wan* to do the business, and we in vite you to call and inspect our assortment and prices, and we are sure you will be pleased. * At the Speer Building, East Side. CARTERSVILLE FURNITURE CO