Newspaper Page Text
| w'ino of Chrdui is the guardian tt
I of a woman’s healtli ayid happi- g
I ness from youth to old age. It B
1 helps her safely into womanhood. B
I it sustains her during the trials £
lof pregnancy, childbirth and ■
■ motherhood, making labor easy B
lam! preventing Hooding and mis- §
I through the dangerous period
■ known as the change of life,
■ cures leueorrho'a t fading of the w
I womb, and menstrual
S| n every form. It is valuable in j|
■ every trying period of a woman’s jjjj
I life. It reinforces the nervous 3
I system, acts .directly on the goni- §
■ tal organs and is the finest tonic I
I for women known.. Ask your jjfi
I druggist for a SI.OO bottle of 0
■ Vt'ine of Cardiff.
Batesvilie, Ala., July 11,1900. &
1 iam rrir s Win.e f Cavdui p.nd Thod- B
f ford s Blai’k-Draufrht and 1 ieel like a S
I different woman already. Several la- g
■ (j-- es ; ie re keep the medicines ia their H
| ho.’ues r.’.l the time- I have three girls J?
I and they are using it with me. m
I Mrs. KATE BROWDER. 6!
■ For advtre and llt“ratnre, address, giving fij
M Q Trn pto:iis. "The Indies’ Advisory Depart- B
■ . Tin' Chattanooga Medicine Company, B
I Chattanooga, Tenn. S
K.&W. E.K.OFALA
Taking Effect Jan, 13,1901.
10 1 PASSENGER—\V NO 2 l ASSENGEIt—U AS-I
DAILY. DAILY.
Lt Cartersville 10.15 <im. Lv Felicity it 30 an
“ Stllesboro.. 10.3 V “ Coal City 10.1.> ‘‘
•• Tavl’rsv’le. 10.52 “ " Ragland Uni
" Rockmart .11 1 " ” Duke’s 12.15 pr
" Grad.v 11.33 “ •• Piedmont.... 2.02
■Cedartown.. 12,15 pin “ Warner's 2-53 “
" Warner’s . 12.45 pin “ Cediirtown.. 3,25
• Piedmont,.. 1.29 “ “ Grady 3.43 '
'• Duke’s 3.15 “ " Kook mart... 4.04
*• -Ragland. 4.23“ “ Tayl’rsv’le.. 4.30 “
■■ Coal City.... 5.10 " “ Stllesboro... 44a
4r Pell Oitv .. 5.85 ** * I Ar.Cartersvllle.. 5.19 *
So3 Passenger— W est No 4 Passenger-F.as".
DAILY EX. SUNDAY. DAILY EX. SUNDAY
Lv Cartersvlllc.. 5.55 pm Lv Cedartown...7 50 an
*' Stllesboro... 0.19 “ “ Grady s."S “
•• Taylorsville 8.32 “ “ Rockmart.. .. 29 •
•• Rockmart... fi.57 •• “ Taylorevlllo..B 53
Grady 7.17 “ “ Stllesboro -0 “
Ar Cedartown... 735 “ |Ar atCartersville 930 •
So. 35 Passenger—W No. 34 Passenger—E
SUNDAY ONLY. SUNDAY ONLY
Lv Cartersvllle..l.ls pm Lv Cedartown 11.20 D
•' 5t11e5b0r0....1.37 “ ’’ Grady 11.83
• Taylorsville 1.47 " Rockmart....ll.sß"
“ R0ckmart....2.07 “ " Taylorsville 12.13 [,n
“Grady 2.27 •• " 5t11e5b0r0....12.23 “
Ar Cedartown...2.4o " Ar Cartersville.. 12.45*
Southern Railway
6888 Miles mm
One Management.
l-PENRTRATING
EIGHT SOUTHERN STATES.
Solid Yestibuled Trains,
Unexcelled Equipment
Fast Schedules.
DINING CARS
Are operated on Southern Railway
Trains
OBSERVATION CARS,
On Washington and Southwestern
Vestibuled Limited, and Washington
and Chattanooga Limited via Lynch
burg-
Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars
Of the latest pattern on all through
trains,
J, H. CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, Gen. Passenger Agent,
Washington. P. r .
*• A. BENSCOTKR, Aee’t Gtn. I’BssfEgei Agt
Chattanooga, Tenn.
BE 1 dim 1 11 1 ~
hair balsa™
UwSSSßrKjHCleanse* and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth. '
Fails t J Restore Gray
-jjß' Hur to its Youthful Color, j
Cures sealp diseases & hair le. -‘V I
Hkcls Sam t$ the-*
WORLDS G SEfIT PWEIS
AHGUiNG THE IWWSPtfRBU SUPOMORtTY OF
■ SHwj *** ■<* \BA. * pf
BRADLEY. GRIFFIN & CO.
SALES AGENTS.
ENGINE BURSTS
OBW._4HIUL !
Pulling Passenger Train Near River
at Bolton-
FIREMAN INSTANTLY KILLED-
Engine Blown to Pieces and Mail
Car Badly Wrecked —Passengers
Severely Jarred.
Atlanta Evening News.
By the explosion of the boiler of,
passenger engine No. 2, of- the j
Western and Atlantic railroad, at 1
-Bolton, near the Chattahoochee j
river, at .$135 o’clock this morning, I
Fireman John L, Aenchbacher was
killed and Engineer Dan Bell but
miraculously escaped death, sus
taining, however, painful bruises.
The engine, which was literally
torn to pieces, was pulling passen
ger train No. 2, which lett Atlanta
for Chattanooga at 8:15 this morn
ing.
The train was filled with pass
engers, who were thrown into a
panic by the din and confusion of
the exploding* locomotive.
The mail car, coupled to the en
gine tender, was wrecked and Mail
Clerk J, W. Brown,of 7 St. Charles
avenue, was cut on the arm.
The passenger train pulled out
of the union depot this morning on
| time.
Among the crowd of passengers
aboard were many women and
children.
Engine No. 102, a substitute for
the regular engine, was pulling the
train. Engineer Bell was at the
throttle and Fireman Aenchbacher
was feeding the fires in the hert
of the throbbing machine.
Ak the plant of the Collins Brick
company Engineer Bell cut off his
steam to comply with the orders to
slow down at the bridge. He was
within a few hundred yards of the
river and could see the long bridge
which a few workmen were busy
repairing.
THEN CAME EXPLOSION.
Then, as he shut off the steam,
came a sudden rumble, and then
a burst of smoke from beneath the
engine, and a deafening roar, echo
ing and re-echoing among the hills.
Fully twenty feet into the air
was the great engine thrown, and
out into the dust and steam were
the two men—firemen and engi
neer— hurled.
The tender whirled under the
engine as it went up into the air.
Then it too was whirled like a great
football across the tracks further
on.
The ponderous engine fell to the
ground in pieces.
By it fell the two men who had
been on it. On one, Fireman
Aenchbacher, fell heavy pieces of
iron and timbers.
Two or three feet from him fell
the engineer. None of this debris
struck him.
The mail coach, whirling by its
own momentum, rushed upon the
engine, but the force of the explos
ion threw it on its side, tore off the
wheels and wrecked it.
The air brakes of the cars be
hind worked automatically and the
train came to a stop almost on the
remnants of the engine
Women screamed and men pour
ed out of car doors. The passen
gers were in an uproar. Men from
the brick plant came running
down.
Fireman and engineer were found
lying in the midst of the smoking
ruins of the engine. On the fire
man’s body lay heavy pieces of the
engine.
VICTIMS SIDE BV SIDE.
Tender hands picked up the two
men and carried them up on the
bank to the shade. Both of Fire
man Aenchbachei’s fe.t were torn
off and his limbs were broken and
mangled.
Engineer Bell was bruised,bleed
ing and dazed.
The fireman was dying. As
they laid him on a stretcher on the
embankment he seemed to strug
gle to rouse himselr. An eager
look came into the eyes, so soon
to see death.
“Laura!” he cried brokenly;
“Laura!”
It was for his wife he was calling
.—the mother of his little ones lef
fatherless in an hour.
Dr. W. C. Fisher, of Bolton,
whose home was in sight of the
wreck, was one of the first on the
scene. He dressed the wounds of
the two men.
The dying fireman wascirried
back to the little depot platform
and the engineer taken to Dr.
Fisher’s porch.
About forty minutes after the
Wreck F reman Aenclibacher quiet
ly passed away.
the engineer’s story.
“The whole thing occupied but
(imRAM B ixasElaj
an instant of time and came so sud
denly I can’t tell much about it.”
said Engineer Bell to a Daily News
reportor. “The first thing I knew
was the crash and then I went
away up in the air in the midst of
a lot of debris. The next second
I was down on the ground again.
My fireman fell by me.
‘‘l saw a great piece of iron
strike him and seejn to bounce off.
Then some timbers struck him.
‘‘Seemingly, immediately after
this, some one picked me up. I
didn’t know what had happened
until they told me.”
When asked how he accounted
for the explosion he said:
‘‘l cannot give any explanation.
Engines will blow up at times and
I don’t know what caused this.”
There is little doubt, however,
that the boiler had rusted and was
defectiye and unable to stand the
pressure of the steam required to
run a passenger engine.
THOUGHT THEY WERE IN.
Two of the three clerks on the
mail car though*, when the water
from the tender poured into their
car, that the train had fallen
through the bridge into the river.
"When all that water and steam
poured into our car and the water
from our cooler was dashed over
us we tho’ught thetrain was in the
river sure,” say th'ese two —G. S.
Cobb and R. L. Stover, both of
Cartersville, Ga., “We knew they
were repairing the bridge and our
first thought was that it had given
way.”
Clerk J. W. Brown, who was
cut in the wrist, says:
“Simultaneously with the re
port our car was hurled to one side
very roughly. I sought to grab
hold of the railing along the side
of the car, but missed it. The
iolting threw me into one of the
front corners of the car and the
water cooler and other things hit
me.
JARRED THE WHOI.E TRAIN.
Ed T. Reed, an experienced rail
road man, who lives at Marietta
and was a passenger on one of the
first cars, says of the wreck:
“It was a terrific jar to the train.
The report of the explosion was
terrific, and the jar threw me and
many others off the seats. Women
screamed and children cried.
Other passengers, those in the
rear cars, say:
“The report sounded muffled,
but the jar was terrible.”
What a Bachelor Says-
New York Press.
The older women get, the less
they remind you of angels.
Probably the old tombstones get
so worn by ghosts trying to butt
out their own inscriptions.
It’s your brainy women who fall
in love with fools and it's your
fools who fall in love with brainy
women.
Men may be wicked villains but
after all they don’t go home and
sit right down and copy each oth
er’s bonnets.
Probably at her wedding the wo
man feels almost as important as
the man did the first time he ever
traveled on a railroad pass.
Women never consider them
selves really intimate with one an
other until they have told each
other how they first met their hus
bands.
CURE ALL YOUR PH IRS WITH
Pain-Killer.
A Medicine Ches! in Itself.
SIMPLE. SAFE AND QUICK CURE FOR
Cramps, Diarrhoea, Colds,
Coughs, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism.
25 and 50 rent Bottles.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
—. BVV QSiLtf THE GifcMUiHf.
PERRY DAVIS'
SOLD BY YOUNG BEOS.. DRUGGISTS.
A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL!
Jpf fftwm lion Toffee
/-4 "i / JV \ > I, \J \ \t * )
£ iH’if a t {[ jyf l rhk f\ is always the same.
l Wll [ \ l 1 1 || rJ ij One package is just like another.
r Vyi V \\ , j 11 J fij It is uniform in every respect.
IT NEVER VARIKS.4M
Watch our next advertisement. ~ If you like one package you will like all
MOUNT COFFEE.
LION COFFEE is not glazed or coated with egg mixtures and chemicals, but is
an absolutely pure coffee, full of strength and flavor.
■" ■ " a • ' 1 ■
In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated arid descriptive list. 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.
DON’T LET THEM SUFFER
Often children are tortured with
itching and burning eczema and
other skin diseases but Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve heals the raw’ sores,
expels inflamation, leaves the skin
without a scar. Clean, fragrant,
cheap, there’s no salve on earth
as good. Try it. Cure guaranteed.
Only 25c at Young Bros, drug
store.
It Saved His 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. IT. Doak, of Williams, Ore
gon. lam happy to say it gave
immediate relief and a complete
cure. For sale by Hall and Greene
Druggists.
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’ief, so discharged 1
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 bloodv 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 another dose in fifteen or
twenty min ites if he did not find j
relief, but he took no more and
\yas entirely cured.. I think it the
best medicine I have ever tried.”
For sale by Hall and Greene.
To Hang Pickpockets-
Fort Sill, O. TANARUS., July 23.—A law
and order league has been formed
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, pickpockets,
thieves and crooks who are caught
plving tlieir 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 a dot. Thev are easy
to take and pleasant in effect. For
sale by Hall and Greene.
D .H. J. Williams, ot Social Circle,
writes that it gives him pleasure to add
his endorsement and praise for Kidd’s
Konstipation Kure, (K, K. K. Pills.)
CASTOHXA.
Be are the Kifid Yw Haw Always Boiigla
T*
Farm Loans Negotiated.
miLNER & miLNBR,
Attorneys at LaWj
CARTERSVILLE. GA
Commercial and Corporation Practice
and Collections.
Offices with Judge T. W. Milner over
Bank of Cartersville.
DR. WILLIAM L. CASON,
DENTIST. 11
Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug Store.
cartersville. ca.
DR. CLARK H. GRIFFIS,
DENTIST.
—OFFICE :
Up Stairs, Opposite Word’s Urn* Stere,
CARTERSVILLE,GA.
Citation for Dismission.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
Chas. A . Davis, executor of the last will and
testament of Martha E. Jackson, decea-ed. hav
ing filed his petition for discharge from said esc
editorship, this is therefore to cite all persons
concerned, to show cause against the gran ing of
said discharge, if anv they can, at the regslar
term of the Court of Ordinary for said county to
ire held on the first Monday in September, 1901,
else the same will be granted as applied for. This
June 3, 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Citation tor Dismission.
Estate J. I). Bowdoin.
GEOEGIA. Bartow County.
Where is. E. C. Bowdoin. administra ri.x of J.
I) Bowdoin, represents to the court in her peti
tion duly filed, that she has fully administered J.
I) Bowdoin’s • state. This is therefore to cite all
persons concerned, kindred and cnditors.to show
cause it any they can, why said administration
and receive letters of dismission on the first Mon
day in October next. This July Ist, igci
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
\ isj ow ? y
\ Filithebottles with HIRES. /
\ Drink it now. Every glass- f
\ ful contributes to good /
\ health. Purifies /
\ the blood, clears j ,
\ the complexion, /
\ makes rory /
\ checks. Make /
\ it at tome. / _
S pullers V / Charles
26 cents. Vi / E Hires
Deal-rs. Ap. Gempany,
writ, f, r £_ Tfegr \ Malvern,
big ofler. j P 4
jlfireft
i
i > anything you i.vent or improve: also sretl*
;! CAVEAT.TMBE-MARK, COPYRIGHT or OESiGN <!
> PROTECTION. Send model, sketch, or photo. >
€ for free examination and advice. 1 >
I BOOK ON PATENTS fee before patent f
C.A.SNQW& CO . |
! Patent Lawyers. WASHINGTON, D.C. %
CASTO n I A.,
Bear* the s9 iw Kind You Haw Always Bought