Newspaper Page Text
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BrTfi ~ ' - 7 B
■ of Cardui is the guardian S
oldage. It E
I ] : , n - -afelv into womanhood. 3
B t;t j n s her during the trials E
■ r -„. IKlU oy, childbirth and 8
■ethood, ’in ala tig labor easy J
BfPventing Hooding and mis- g
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■ ; . P ;> Hie dangerous period B
■ ... tlet change of life. 1
pg CF CARDU!|
I. leueorrhcea, falling of the 5
■th, aad menrinial irregularity I
Bwv i-nn- It is valuable in ■
B- tiring period of a woman's Jj
1 r It m inUnnavs the nervous B
■ „ directly on the geni- I
Br '.-m- ami is the finest tonic E
Nwoiii-u known. Ask your m
B , i,,i- a £I.OO bottle of I
■ of Canlui. fl
111 Bi.t<ssv;tle, Ala., July*ll, 1900. E
H. ... w .•* <.f Cardui and Tbed- ■
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M. , 4 n already. Several la- H
HV , , the luedieiues 1:1 their ■
■ * ••. time. 1 have three |(irla B
jKliev ar.mi?ing it with me. B
Jj Mrs. a ATM BROWDER. ■
■ ■ , e ladies' Adv.xory teurU ■
. Medicine t ..mi-any, ■
lenn. B
1W B. B. OF ALA
■taking Ktlect Jan, 13,19<)1.
NnS 1 Ml-E*M
DULY. DAILY.
■ ... ■ i-v felicity W
“ "Coal City 11115 ,1
■r.v'iK in.:,: ■* “ U.i<*
■mar' *ll.l*l “ " Puke'* 12.15 pn
■ ii.aj ■■ '*• Piedmont 2.02
■t0wn..12.15 pw ~ Warner * 2.35) “
■„r'* K 45pis “ Cedartown.. 3.26"
■non!. 1.2# •' ■“ Grady M 8 "
.... 3.15 flock mart... 4.04 “
■mil. 423 “ “ Ta.\Tr*v'le.. 4.*v
pity . 5.10 “ 1 Stile*t)oro ... 445 "
litvS.KS “ lAr.Oarterevllle.. 5.15 “
khkx:—W}>'’i'|\'o 4 PinlMOM-E4OT
V KX. SUNDAY. DAII.Y II 80JTDAT
ersvlllc.. T>.s£ pro L,r (Vilart 0wn...7.50 AW
sboro... 6.1 t) “ Grady 8.08
orsviße 0.32 " •• Rockmart.. ..S 2 ••
[mar . 0.57 *’ *• Taylor*Tlllo..B.sß ”
iy 7.17 “ •• tile*boro 9.W "
irtoirn... 7,85 “ lAr atCarter.vill* 9 30*
nmnnE—m No. *4 Piiiu-K
IJOWOtUiT. IBIIDAT 0411
i>rriilc lJr*m I.*Oedartown 11.20 B
wfcOTo... I.JTT “ “ Grady 11-**
lorsYlllc I.C “ “ Rockmart....ll.6B“
(mart.... 2.07 “ “ Taylorsville 12.1S |.n
It 2.27 ■* gtilMboro —12.2# “
rtown ..2.40 “ Ar (!nrt*rvill..V2.46'
itlrem Railway
• Miles—,
Ow Management.
—PKNIETKATING—
IT SOUTHERN STATES.
I Vestibule! Trains,
I nriiftHled Kquipmevt
ft Hi BrhHluli.
NING CARS
•'(■‘crated on Southern Kail way
Trains.
BEftVATIOM CARS,
Washington and Southwestern
Limited, ane Washington
'hatumooga Liniioed via Lyncb
mt Paliman Sleeping Cars
l)o latest pattern on all through
■I. H„ CULP, Trafflc Manager,
WaßhVn*ston, I>. C.
" A. TEAK. Sen. l’aesenjeer Agent,
WaehingtSMi. D.C.
'OK.Nsi ( ’1 !*{_ ahh'i Gen. l‘a*eoger Agt
Chattanooga, Tenn.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
and beaatifie* the **r
MT Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Fail* to Restore Gray
32 v : HXtr to its Youthful Coltt
!V f • RHBCure. r-.:p I>s:r l-4.rg
■BBjCe±_ijL3EiillS2-22ilSfii--
53k Every Woman
i .ill i Interested andatiould know
5* 2*. ill A . about the wonderful
MARVEL Whirling Spray
jniec
toon and Suelion. lle*t—Sat
an, Mcept no WiL
*to ,n - MY i
fMVPT TOBACCO SPIT
VI V l and SMOKE
tThe , Your Ljjfeawaptl
be 0, , ln T form of toStceo using
'!t and vf we lll,f tron *i mggnetic, full of
~U.es' wJST b * kta * mo-To-BAC.
* Ad-hi* p’v i_ Cure fitarantjpd Bo&P
Address *'ERLINg |
DEPARTED
SPANIARDSRETURN
Were Leaders of the Recent Strike
at Tampa Fla-
TURN UP AT KFY WEST-
Were Landod on an Island and Had
Many Hardships
They Say.
New York, Sept. 5,—A special
to the Herald from Key West, Fla.,
says:
“The thirteen abducted leadeis
of the striking cigar makers of
Tampa, Fla., have returned from
exile. The men who composed
the central committee of Resisten
cia union of Tampa, arrived here
on a small fruit schooner, the Ger
trude, of this port. Marooned on
a barren, uninhabited isle off the
coast of Honduras, they had, by
an unexpected turn of fortune, es
caped death from exposure and
starvation and made their way to
civilization and safety.
They 7 believed that it was the
intention of their captors that they
should never return from exile.
The authorities of Washington
have instructed the United States
district attorney at Jacksonville,
Fla., to make an instigation of
the matter. Sworn depositions of
the men taken before federal offi
cials have been mailed to Wash
ington.
The party consisted of six
Spaniards, six Cubans and one
Englishman. The Cubans and
Englishman, however are natural
ized American citizens. The men,
whose names are Francisco Rodri
guez, Raniou Pignero, Luis Bar
cia, Revina Prieto, Jose Fuego,
Pedro Carellas, Estanislaus Lanza,
Eustacio Veldaz, Badilio Parronda,
Joseph Belen Veldaz, Crecencio
Gonzales and Charles Kelly, all
hear evidence of the hardships en
countered during their forced exile
and present a pitiful appearance.
The stories they tell are substan
tially the same, differing only in
minor details as to the violence re
sorted to by their abductors.
Lucis Barcia, who was taken at
■midnight from the bedside of his
wife, whose aeconnchement had
taken place three days before, and
whose death has since been report
ed as a result of the shock incident
to her husband’s disappearance,
says he was forced into a closed
carriage and taken to the railroad
station, where he was put into an
electric car of which the lights
were out, the current haring been
shut off. Eight of hi& comrades,
who had been similarly captured,
were put with himself into the
rear compartment of the car and
takes to Ballast Point, a few miles
west of Tampa, on Hillsboro Bay.
Four other xnetnliers of Resisteucia
Union had previously been taken
through the woods in a wagon to
the same place where a tug with
steam up awaited them.
Several of the guards on the car,
the men say„ were prominent citi
zens of Tampa, and well known to
them.
After a brief conference at Bal
last Point the thirteen men were
dragged aboard the tug and the
start was made amid derisive fare
wells from the abductors on the
dock. The tag headed for the
schooner Marie Cooper, which was
riding at anchor an the stream with
all sails set. The men were trans
ferred to the schooner under a
a heavy guard.
This was on Tuesday night, Aug.
6.
A stiff breeze soon carried them
down the bay and out to sea. As
day followed day in dull monotony
without any indication that a land
ing was contemplated, the kidnap
ped rarn, who had been kept in ig
norance, not only of their fate, but
of their probable destination, be
came uneasy and requested to know
where they were being taken.
They were told they would be
landed on English soil, far enough
away to prevent return to the
United States for a long time.
On the seventh day land was
sighted, and the captives were in
formed that their destination had
been reached. Nearer approach
revealed a long, low stretch oi
sand beach without sign of human
habitation. The men were landed
at night, each one receiving $5. A
box of soda crackers, two small
hams, three cans of beef and about
a gallon of water were placed 011
the beach. The boats then re
turned to the schooner, which
immediately set sail and disappear
ed in the distance.
Four days the wandered along
the beach, husbanding their mea
gre supplies and without encoun
tering a human being or sighting
fiSSjj *'
' ■ fc *vv '* ijj§|
r Is duARANTEED
visions finally gave out, the water
supply was exhausted, the hands
and faces were burned by the trop
ical sun and their feet blistered by
long inarches. They began to de
spair of ever reaching home and
had almost given up the fight when
they were discovered by an Indian.
He brought aid, took them to the
mainland and guided them to the
plantation of a Mr. Bruno, where
they were well received. Their
immediate wants were supplied and
they procured a small boat to take
them to Truxillo. They were told
by Mr. Bruno that from the de
scription they gave of the island
they had evidently been landed
near the mouth of Plantation river.
At Truxillo they had the good
fortune to meet two Cubans, for
merly residents of Florida, and
now engaged in fruit culture there,
who supplied funds and hired a
schooner to take them to Bonacco,
where they were squally fortunate
to find the schooner Gertude seek
ing a cargo of fruit for this market.
They chartered her and sailed for
Key West.
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. They are easy
to take and pleasant in effect. For
sale by Hall and Greene.
Birth of a New Joke.
No policeman was in sight, of
course. That was because he was
wanted, says the Boston Journal.
“Hit him, Muggy!’’
“Soak him, Swipes!’’
"Now, youse got him!”
“Put it on the smeller!”
These and many other edifying
ejaculations were hurled at two
small bootblacks who were eai|
nestly engaged in spoiling each
other’s face with their fists, while
a big crowd stood in a circle about
them, in front of the postoffee.
It was going badly for the lar
ger of the two boys when a mem
ber of the Boston Peace society, or
one of its branches, stepped in and
separated the boys. For a wonder
both seemed willing to stop. The
peacemaker said:
“Well, what are you fighting
about?”
Then an amusing explanation
followed and anew idiotic joke
was started on its journey through
the town, for every man and boy in
the crowd that heard the explana
tion started off to “spring” the
joke on the first acquaintance he
should meet, and possibly to be a
participant in another fistic en
gagement. The boy said:
“This bloke comes up ter me
and sez, ‘Say, what’s ther next to
their last letter in ther alphybet?’
“ ‘Y,’ sez I.
“ ‘Cos I wants to know,’ sez he,
and he laughs and swipes me on
ther back, en ther others they all
laugh, too. I don’t see no joke in
it, so I hits him on the peeper.
Do youse see —”
He stopped short; a grin spread
all over his dirty and bruised face.
He looked sheepish and then laugh
ed out right.
‘‘Hully gee, I see it now. You're
all right, Muggy. Shake! Why,
Y, sure. It’s a good one and I’ll
spring it oh me brudder.”
They shook hands and went off
together. The crowd laughed and
each one hastened t. 9 spread the
plague—a new joke.
CURE ALL YOUR PAIRS WITH
Pain* Killer.
A Medicine Chet! In ttsetf.
SIMPLE, SAFE AND QUICK CURE FOR
Cramps, Diarrhoea, Colds,
Coughs, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism.
25 and SO cent Bodies
BEWARE PF IMITATIONS
BUY ONLY THE GENUINE,
PERRY DAVIS’
SOLD BY YOUNG BROS.. DRUGGISTS.
LION COFFEE
A LUXURY WITHItI THE REACH OP ALLI
nlf you went to buy a lion
whelp you would’nt accept a
kitten as a substitute, even if
the dealer urges you.
Now, don’t accept a eubeti-
LION COFFEE.
It is bound to turn out a com
mon yellow cat, with none of
the strength of the lion.
Watch tur next advertisement.
You want LION COFFEE became It b LION COFFEE.
If, on the other hand, you want a coffee which, in order to hide la "highly
with eggs and other preparations, then do not buy
* liIOJV COFFEE
r tf UON COPFEI were common, ordinary stuff, coffee drinkers would’nt insist on har
ing it. It is used in millions of homes because it is tkt btat Ctfftt la Ult WWrIE tot tha
price. It you doubt thia, take a single package home and try It. _ _
In every package of LION OOPPEE torn will find a folly (HustraWd and ftwfrtha
. No * ou * k *f** , 00 woman, man, boy or fir! will fail to find in the list mam article
which will contribute to their happmew, comfort and convenience, and which they may have by
amply out a certain number of Lion Heads from tha wrappers of out or* pound atalc 4
{packages (which ii the only ftosns in which this excellent coffee is told).
COTTON CROP CONDITIONS.
Majority of Stataa Fall Below Tan
Year Average
Washington, September 3. —
The monthly report of the statis
tician of the department shows
the average condition of cotton on
August 24 to have been 71.4 as
compared with 77.2 on the 25th of
the preceding month, 68.2 on Sep
tember 1. 1900: 68.5 cn Septem
ber 1, 1889, and a ten year average
of 74..0. There was an impair
ment of condition during August
amounting to 18 points in Texas,
10 in Oklahoma and 8 in Arkan
sas. On the other hand, there was
an improvement in Indian Terri
tory and Missouri of 1 and 4 points
respectively.
A condition below' the ten-year
average is reported in a majority
of the states. In Oklahoma the
condition is 10 points below the
average of the five years, in Mis
souri 6 points below the average of
the eight years, and in Indian Ter
ritory 1 point above the average
for five years,
The averages of condition in the
different states are reported as fol
lows: Virginia, 87 per cent.;
North Carolina, 72; South Caro
lina, 80 ; Georgia, 81 ; Florida, 78;
Alabama, 75 ; Mississippi, 88; Lou-;
isiana, 80 ; Texas, 56 ; Arkansas,
61 ; Tennessee, 73 ; Missouri, 75 ;
Oklahoma, 68 ; Indian Terri
tory, 76.
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.” Thev
always do. Try them. Only 25c at
Young Bros, drug store.
Don’t think less of your system {
than you do'of your house. Give
it a thorough cleansing, too.
SOLDIERS POISONED.
Nearly Three Hundred of the Men
at Fort McPhereon In Hospital.
Atlanta, Sept. 5. —Two hundred
and twenty-six enlisted men of tLe
Twenty-seventh infantry statio e
at Fort McPherson are in the quar
ters and the post hospital on ac
count of illness caused presumably
b: p oma'ne pDisoning, but which
has not yet been definitely deter
mined. Of the 416 men enrolled
in companies A, B, C and I), only
190 were on duty this morning.
The trouble was noticed Tues
day night soon after supper and
the cases were reported during the
night and yesterday. Several were
brought to the notice of surgeons
this morning, The physicians say
the sickness is caused by pto naine
poisoning in food served.
The cooks say nothing was pre
pared and left standing over night
for breakfast, as has been charged,
and place the trouble on the ice.
The cooks also claim that no can
ned goods have been used for six
months and nothing has been
cooked iu copper for five months.
Colonel French, post comman
der, has ordered a rigid investiga
tion.
A EEP MYSTERY.
It is a mystery why women endure
Backache, Heabache, Nervousness
Sleeplessness’* Melancholy, Fain
ting an‘d Dizzy Spell when thous
ands hav proved that Electric
Bitters will quickly cure such
troubles. “I suffered for years
with kidney trouble,” writes Mrs.
Pbebe Cherlsy, of Peterson. la.,
“and a lame back pained me so I
could not dress myself, dut Elec
tric Bitters wholly cured me, and,
although 73 years* old. I now am
able to do all my housework.” It
overcomes Constipation, improves
Appetite, gives perfect health.
Only 50c at Young Bros’. Drug
store.
OASVORZA .
Bear* the /) The Kind You Ham Always Bought
klgu&lure / . y / 2*-^^
\ Nowt y
\ nil the bottle* with ■IRES. /
\ Drlak it•<>>'. Ererytlae#- W
\ ful contributes to food 1
\ health. Furiflee j
\ the blood, else re /
\ the con. plea lon, §
\ mckei rccy i
V check*. Kuho M ... \
• naHeae m 2'.art*
■ cent*. 1 C. 4ire*
Deelrr*. “ C ':■)'•,
write for £ % Rrtare
fc* off*. **^Ga233Bsa^L
[tfirm l
1 Kaomeerl
" ■■ ■' ■■■■■ ■
CABTOHIA,
Bear* the _yf Tl Kind You Have Always Bougi
“T"
— - 1
Farm Loans Negotiated.
IIIILNER & JIIILNER.
Attorneys at Law,
CARTERSVILUE. GA
Commercial ami Corporation Practice
and Collections.
Offices with Judge T. W. Milner over
Bank of Cartersville.
DR. WILLIAM L. CASON,
DENTIST-
Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug Store.
CARTERSVILLE. CA.
DR. fIARR H CRIFfIN,
DENTIST.
• OFFICE: '
I T P Stairs in tha T. R. Jones Building.
CARTEHSVILLE.GA.
Educate Tour Bowel* With Caacareto.