The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, September 05, 1901, Image 7

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'ww WOMANS RELIEF. A really healthy woman has lit tle pain or discomfort at tne menstrual period. No woman needs to have any. Wine of Cardui will quickly relieve those smarting menstrual pains and the dragging head, bock and side aches caused by falling of the womb and irregular menses. I has brought permanent relief to 1 1,000,000 women who suffered I every month. It makes the men- I strual organs strong and healthy, lit is the provision made by Na- Iture to give women relief from ! the terrible aches and pains which ■ blight so many homes. G-beeh-wood, La., Oct. 14, 1900. ' | I have boon very sick for some time. I X was taken with a severe pain in my , I side and c ui i not g-et any relief until B I tried a bet ■} of Wine of Cardui. Bo- j I fore- i had taker, all of it 1 was relieved. 1 I I feel it my duty to say that you have a I wonderful medicine. H Mbs. M. A. Yount. B For ad's i -e and literature, addraea, giving symp ■ tom?. “The i-adies’ A.msorv Department,'’ The I Chattanooga Medicine Cos., Chattanooga, Tenn. £.fcW. E.E.OFALA Taking Efleet Jan, 13,1901. , 1 W So 2 1 ASHENGEH— BAM DAILY. DAILY. i v Cartersville 1i'.15 am. Lv tell City 930 an ‘ stilesboro.. 10.3 W " "OoalClty 10.15“ “ TaylTuv’le. 10.52 “ " Kairland 11.10" " Rook mart -11 1 “ “ Dnke’s 12.15 pn Grady 11.53 “ " Piedmont.... 2.02 • - Cedartown..l2,ls pm " Warner's 2.30 “ " Warner’s .12.45 pm “ Cedartown.. 3.25 “ •• riedmont. 1.2# “ “ Grady 3.43 “ ■ Duke's . 3 15" " Rockmart... 4.04 " Rairland. 4.23 “ " Tayl'rsv’le.. 4.30 " •• Coal City.... 5,10 " “ Stilesboro... 445 “ Ir Pell City . 5.35 “ i Ar,Cartersville.. 0.10 So 3 I'assengek—WßSTjSO 4 PASSEKGEK— EASS BAILY LX. SUNDAY. DAILY EX. SUNDAY Lv Cartersville.. 5.55 pm Lv Cedartown...7.so an •• Stilesboro... *.l “ “ Grady 8.08 “ " Taylorsville 0.32 " " Rockmart.. ..8.29 " •• Rockmart.. 0.57 “ “ Taylorsville..# 53 " Grad.v 7.17 “ ' " Stilesboro 9.00 " Ar Cedartown... 785 “ !Ar atCartersville !• 30 ■ So. 35 Passenger—w So. 34 Passkngeb E SUNDAY OWLY. SUNDAY ONLY LvCartersville..l.ls v m Lv Cedartown 11.20 and ■ Stilesboro..-137 " " Grady 11.33 ' Taylorsville 1.47 " “ R0ckmart....11,53 - R0ckmart....2.07 “ “ Taylorsville 12.13 pm Grady 2.27 “ “ 5ti1e5b0r0....12.23 " Ar Cedartown...2.4o " Ar Cartersville-12.45' SoutHern Railway 5888 Miles One Management. PENETRATING EIGHT SOUTHERN STATES. Nolid Vestibuled Trains, TnaxcellFd Equipment Vast Schedules. DINING CARS Are operated on Southern Kailwa> Trains OBSERVATION CARS, On and Southwestern Vestnouled Limited, and Washington and Chattanooga Limited via Lyncn tmrg. Eieeant Pullman Sleeping Cars Of the latest pattern on all through trains, ,T, H. CI7LP, Traffic Manager, Washington, l>. C. W. A. TI’RK, Gen. Passentter Agent, Washington. D. C. C. A. EEKEC'f TEK,*Ass’t Gen. Passenger Agt Chattanooga, Tenn. ■ HAIR R BALSAM Cltnimet and beaatifie* Uie oair. Promote! luronant grow™- nsEssm JiUk Every Woman imSIeSWvJVV'V-\ is Interested and should know i\ about the wonderful fl iS*:V\©MARVEL Whirling Spray TOlSßkXOSjSf'yJsi The new Va*tl Bjrta*e. Jiaec- bon aK< * Suction. Best—Sat '' i7 lg- 1 est—Most Convenient. . I* Cieeaeee laaUntlft T r <lr Uw ut f or u. \ iIS^IMP O * supply the V fjfß?' ' W'J*r "■AKS EL, accept no Jim. - <**, batwmd stamp foril- "9k iustrated book—eeeied.n gives Y/h # ' '’df and directions in- o®/ ‘U'U'lies- Wi tEVKI. CO. &/ „ ***“> TiateeUdg., New York. PC . "Jr HAMIT tobacco spit UU N I and SMOKE Your Life away! cao t* cnwd °r any form of tobacco using _ U T. be made well, stroua, magnetic, full of " * ,if e and vigor try taking ffO-TO-BAC, makes weak men strong. Many gam Pounds in ten days. Over BOO,QUO "• All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book jfu •“ d advice FRBE. Address STERLING CO., Chicago or Mew York. 437 STATE W RATE $5.44. Higher Than for Several Years Past WILL STILL BE A BIG DEFICIT. In Spite of Fact That Rate Has Been Fixed at the Limit Allowed by Law-State Will be Short, The state tax rate for 1901 was fixed by Governor Candler and Comptroller General Wright. It will be $5.44 on the thousand. It had been generally anticipated that the rate would be $5.40 or something near that. The rate fixed is the highest limit allowed by the last appropria tion act of the general assembly, but with this rate and an increase of nearly $22,000,000 in taxable property values for the year there will be a deficit to be met in the treasury next year or $356,000, The iota' amount of taxable property in the state this year is $401,848,946. This includes real estate, 4 personalty and corporation property, At the rate of $5.44 this amount will yield to the state $2,202,378.26. Seven per cent, of this amount should be deducted for errors, fees of collectors and other expenses, leaving the state $2,048,211.80. The amount to be received from special taxes will be $275,097.12; the amount obtained from poll taxes will be $250,000, special tax from railroads is $27,000 and the amount from the rental of the state road is $400,000. Money which will be received from professional taxes and other sources will make the total income of the state for the year $3,566,494, while the total expenditures, if all obligations are met as they fail due, will be providing no further loans are made, $3,922,494. AERIAL GLOBE 700 FEET HIGH- Remarkable Attraction is Planned for the St. Louis Exposition, St Louis, Aug. 28. —One of the primary attractions of the St Louis world’s fair will be a marvelous aerial globe 700 feet high from stone base to roof. Beside it, if present plans are carried out, the Eiffel tower and the Ferris wheel are crude engineer feats. The big globe will be con structed by a company headed by C. F Blanke, with a capital of sl,- 500,000. At a height of no feet will be a spacious roof garden about r.OOO feet in circumference. This space will contain tworestau rants and two theaters. At an altitude of 265 feet will be located a huge coliseum, with walks around the globe, giving a complete view of the grounds. Be low will be seen two regular cir cus rings and a race track. Under neath the seats will be a menag erie, viewed from the circular walk. The graud music hall will be 420 feet up, with numerous novel musical attractions. At 450 feet will be an aerial palm garden. A complete view of the grounds may be had from there. six hundred feet up will be the observation tower, where the weather bureau and searchlight display will be lo cated. Above this will be a wheel house for sixteeen huge elevators, capable of carrying sixty persons each, which will carry the crowds through the big sphere. The Future of the Automobile- September Review of Reviews. The bicycle was at one time a novelty and a luxury, but the high price was not due to the fact that the manufacturers desired to make excessive profits. Special machin ery had to be purchased in order to make the machines at all, and the starting of an entirely new in dustry would have been impossible unless such prices were charged. It seems evident that the present prices of the antomobile are more reasonable than were the prices of the early bicycles. It is always possible to make a cheap automo bile. but this intention is not held by any reputable manufacturer of automobiles today. Cheap auto mobiles will not last, even in the hands of a person who knows how to give them proper attention. Ma o’ inery must be of the best to stand, not only the wear and tear caused by the rough roads, but the abuse which it is almost sure to receive when it gets into hands which will not operate it carefully or give it the necessary attention. It is hardly necessary to predict the future of the automobile, and the question as to whether it will supersede horses is by no means TI A HTATWh f Cur 8 IS GUARANTEED an important one. The automo bile is not a fad or plaything, al though probably a large percen tage of the present owners have merely taken it up on account of its novelty. There is 110 doubt that the bicycle was largely used at one time as a fad, but, it has now come to be the boon of mil lions of workingmen. It appears that the demand for bicycles is as strong as ever, only a different class of people are employing them. As time goes on, automobiles of all types will undoubtedly show material improvement, although radical changes are hardly to be expected. It must be remembered in this connection that although the automobile is novel, it merely consists of the application of well known and tried devices to a road carriage, the combination forming, indeed, a strict innovation. The first few years of the automobile industry in this country have shown a remarkable demand for motor vehicles. So far,the greater part of the machines have been for pleasure nurposes. This demand is not likely to decrease, for with tha improvement of the roads auto mobile touring will become even more popular than it has been. As to the commercial importance of the automobile, it can be said that it is already a boon to physi cians, and a necessity to many bus iness hous± a . Asa method of transporting passengers or freight, it has unlimited possibilities. Bears the j 4 Kind You Have Always Bought Farm Labor in the United States Washington, Aug. 28. —The de partment of agriculture is prepai ing to issue at an early day a bul letin concerning the wages of farm labor in the United States from 1866 to 1899. The statement shows that in the country at. large wages per month, by the year or season, both with board and without board, had their maximum in 1866, and their minimum in 1879. For wages per month without board, Mary land, Alabama, Mississippi, Louis iana, Arkansas, lowa and Cali tornia had highest wages in 1869; South Carolina and Oregon in 1876; Texas in 1882; Virginia in 1888. In Florida the rate of 1866 was reached in 1888 and the cul mination was in 1890. The mini mum for Alabama, Texas and Ohio was in 1894; for South Caro lina, Georgia. Mississippi, Louis iana, Arkansas, Michigan, Colo rado and Oregon and California in 1895. Wages per month, by the year or season, with board, sur passed those of 1866 in Maine in 1890. The culmination in Ver mont, New Jersey, Alabama, Ar kansas and Georgia was in 1869; South Carolina and Oregon, 1875: Louisiana and Texas, 1882; North Carolina, 1888; Florida, 1890; lowa, 1893. Wu. s per day for ordinary farm laoor, with board, were at a maximum in South Carolina in 1875. They were at a minimum in Arkansas, Tennessee (same in 1895) in 1894; in Alabama, Missis sippi, Louisiana, Texas, Kentucky (same as 1875) in 1895. Both without board and with board, in the country as a whole, the year 1893 shows higher rates than any preceding year reported since 1875. ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND 'PaitvKttkv There is no kind of pain of ache, interna! or exter nal, that Pain-Killer .will not relieve. LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS ANO SUB STITUTES THE GENUINE BOTTLE BEARS THE NAME, PERRY DAVIS A SON. SOLD BY YOUNG BROS., DRUGGISTS. UON COFFEE A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OR ALLI MAKE no mistake! See that my head Is on every package of LION COFFEE you buy. It guarantees its purity. No coffee is LION COFFEE unless It is in a I pound sealed packet with the head of a lion on the front. Then you get pure coffee —the highest grade for the money* Ifl wry of LION COFFEE TO* win find a fuff? iflurtrated and faatytht fist No housekeeper, in fact, no woman, man, hoy 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 pwj packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold). wooum eases ca, taunt ana How One Girl Helped the Church- Young women members of the Fpworth League connected with the First Methodist church of Ma ta wan, N. J., several weeks ago promised each to earn one dollar in some way and contribute it to ward the liquidation of the repair debt upon the chapel of the church in which the league holds its meet ings. Each told of her experience in earning the dollar last night. Some of the young women are among the smart set of the town. Miss Ida Lusk almost convulsed the audience when she stated that she was paid 50 cents for washing her father’s pet pet pig. She said: “I took a broom and a pail of water and soon had the pig as clean as a whistle. The animal seemed to enjoy the wash and I didn’t mind the experience. Then I earned most of the other half dollar kisses at 5 cents a piece. This part I did not mind, either.” Two other young women told of how they played organs about the streets. One ground out the mu sic while the other collected the money in a tin cup. Theirappeals fir aid ended, “May your path be s rewn with roses and your chil dren bear pug noses.” Some sold flowers from door to door, another stole vegetables from her grandfather’s garden and sold them, and pleaded that the fact that the vegetables were stolen for money that was used for the church was not to be considered wrong. WORKING 24 HOURS A DAY. There’s no rest for those tireless little workers Dr. King's New Life Pills. Millions are always busy, curing Torpid Liver, Jaun dice, Biliousness, Fever and Ague. They banish Sick Headache, drive out Malaria. Never gripe or weaken Small, taste nice, work wonders. Try theim 25c at Young Bros Don’t think less of your system than you do of your house. Give it a thorough cleansing, too. Take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. WatSn CUT Mil ElwmiHlWlt THE BUFFALO BILL. New Ten Dollar Note Being Put Into Circulation Washington, August 30. —The bureau of engraving and printing is now issuing the new $lO hill, which treasury department officials call the “Buffalo Bill.” The name is not because of an association with Colonel Cody, but because the principal feature of the en graving on the bill is a magnificent buffalo, head down, with matted mane sweeping the ground,and the animal apparently in full charge. This is the fourth of what is known as the “American series” of bills, in which the designs are purely emblematic of American things and of American characters. All of the new bills will have con siderable open space untouched by the green or dark inks of the prin ter. The object in this will be to allow the silk threads in the fiber of the paper to show through. This is considered one of the best safeguards against the counterfeit ing of the United States money. The bureau officials are now trying to determine suitable designs for the new twenty and fifty dollar bills, which will issue shortly. NIGHT WAS HER TERROR, “I would cough nearly all night long,” writes Mrs. Chas. Apple gate, of Alexandria, Ind!, “and could hardly get any sleep. I had consumption so bad that if I walked a block 1 wonld cough frightfully and spit blood, but, when all oth-r medicines failed, three SI.OO bottles of Dr. King’s New Disco/ery wholly cured me and I gained 58 pounds.” It’s ab solutely guaranteed to cure Coughs, Colds La Grippe, Bron chitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Price 50c and SI.OO. Trail bottles free at Young Bros, drug store. CANTORXA . Baart tie A TM Kidd YOU HaW AtwajS BOligtlt "7" Wh T hat LION COFFEE now become the feeder of all package coffees? And why is it used In millions of homes ? Because it does not sail under false colors. It is an absolutely clean, pure coffee. No glazing, no coating with cgv mixtures or chemicals in order to hide imper fections. Just try a package cl LISH COFFEE and you will under stand the reason at Its popularity. ,VNrow^ \ rill lh.bottle, with HIRES. / \ Drink itnw. Every |i4w- M A fftl contribute# to good m % health. Purl flee § \ the biooC cienm M , i % the eompienion, M 1 \ inekee roey i j % check*. Make J ttcente. J I Niw Heelers. J|L write for # ljs ofi'ar. \ Fg. /F&Vgfl _ c CAOTOILIJL. Bear* the _yf The Kind You Haw Always Bou^l Farm Loans Negotiated. miLNER & miLNER, Attorneys at Law, CARTERSVILLE. GA- Commercial and Corporation Practice and Collections. Offices with Judge T. W. Milner over Bank ot Cartersville. OR. WILLIAM L. CASON, DENTIST- Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug Store. CARTERSVILLE. CA. DR. CLARRhTcRIFFIN, DENTIST. —OFFICE: — Up Stairs in th* T. R. Jones Buffdln*. CARTERSYILLE.GA. Educate Tour Bowels With Caecareta. constl P*hon forever, iw, ato. If C. C. C. fill, druggists refund mo run