The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, October 31, 1901, Image 7

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iL. r • • I v *1 i \ .1 \j I V -/ ju | 9 ~Tf\ \ t Hm I Housswoim Too much housework wrecks wo men’s nerves. And the constant oare of children, day and night, is often too trying for even a strong woman . A haggard face tells the story of the overworked housewife and mother. Deranged ruecses, leucorrkcoa and falling of the womb result from overwork. | Every housewife needs a remedy Ito regulate her menses and to [keep her sensitive female organs [in perfect condition. WIKE° f CARDUI [is doing this for thousands of I American women to-day. it cured I Mrs. Jones and that is why she I writes this frank letter: I Glendeane, Ky., Peb. 10,1901. | i ft m so glad that your Wine of Caidul lls helping me. lam feeling better than II have f ‘lt for years. I am doing my ■ OWB work without any help, and I B W ashed last week and was not one bit I tired. That show's that the Wine is B doing me good. I am getting fleshier I than I ever was before, and sleep good I and eat hearty. Before I began taking f Wine of Cardui, I used to have to lay | down five or six times every day, but now I do not think of lying down through the day. Mas. Richard Junks. 81.00 AT JEIIGISTS. i jr ar advice and literature, address, giving syrniv terns, “ The Ladies’Advisory Department ”, The < h-r-tanooga Chattanooga, Teen. E.&W. K. R. OF ALA Taking Effect Jan, 13,1901. do 1 PABSBNOEB —W NO 2 PASSENGER —EAST DAILY. DAILY. LvCartersville 10.15 am. Lv felicity 9.30 am <• Stilesboro.. 10.39 “ “Coal City 10.15“ Tayl'rsv’le. 10.52 “ “ Ragland 11.10" “ Rockmart.il.lo “ “Duke’s 12.15 pa a r ady 11.33 “ “ Piedmont.... 2.02 “ “Cedartowu..l2,ls pm “ Warner's 2.39 “ “Warner's ,12.45 pm “ Cedartown.. 3.25" “ Piedmont,.. 1.29 “ “ Orady .. 3.43 “ Duke’s 3.15 “ “ Rock mart... 4.04 “ •• Ragland.... 4.23 “ “ Tayl’rsv’le.. 4.30 “ “Coal City.... 5,10 “ “ Stilesboro... 445 “ Ar Pell City 5.35 “ Ar.Cartersvtlle.. 5.15“ No 3 Passenger—WestiNo 4 Passenger—East DAILY EX. StTNDA Y. DAILY EX. SUNDAY LvCartersville.. 5.55 pm Lv Cedartowu...7.so air “ Stilesboro... 6.19 “ “ Orauy 3.08 " “ Taylorsville 6.32 “ “ Roekmart.. ..8.29 “ “ Roekmart... 6.57 “ “ Taylornvllle..B 53 “ • Grady 7.17 “ “ Stilesboro 9.06 " Ar Cedartown... 7,35 “ |Ar atCartersvllle 930 • No. 85 Passenger—W No. 34 Passenger—E SUNDAY ONLY. SUNDAY ONLY LvCartersvtlle..l.ls pm Lv Cedartown 11.20 r “ 5ti1e5b0r0....1.37 “ “ Orady .....11.33 “ Taylorsville 1.47 “ “ R0ekmart,...11,53 " ' “ R0ekmart....2.07 “ “ Taylorsville 12.13 pna “Grady 2.27 “ “ Stilesboro... .12.23 “ Ar Cedartown...2.4o " Ar Cartersvllle..l2.4s' Soutnernßailway 6888 Miles One Management. PENETRATING EIGHT SOUTHERN STATES. Solid Vestibuled Trains, Unexcelled Equipment Fast Schedules. DINING CARS Are operated on Southern Railway Trains OBSERVATION CARS, On Washington and Southwestern Vestibuled Limited, and Washington suit Chattanooga Limited via Cynen burg. Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars Of the latest pattern on all through trains, J, H. CULP, Traffic Manager, Washington, I>. C. W. A. TURK, Gen. Passenger Agent, Washington. D. e. C. A. BENSCOTER, Ass'* 'n. I estfi pci Agt Chattanooga. Tenn. jgSk Every Woman is interested and should kndw 4 'yg'lii'\m about the wonderful [' s.(il MARVEL Whirling Spray V-'" XvSv'lvl The new Vaginal SyrU**. Jnjec '■V pCL ihL tion and auction. Best-Saf- eat-Most Convenient. 1% ** Ueanstm Instantly, AkV your Jr.ijrrlst for It. \Jr,, pvwf* " ,I P' ,l y the uihar K "*" ara-eptno ? .rt r, , h ? tM ‘ n< l stamp for 11- 'ya lulf^S 1 i'ook—aealcd.lt ftivea tV, / '.J directions in- o w>/ fm . :l,,| eio ladies. M.tRVKLCO., M< K > lltlKb UdK...tiC Vorh. Anyone eeVtdlng a sketch and description may dalcklv ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent# sent free. Oldest attaocy for securing patents. Patents taken throneh Horn A Cos. reoelTt special notice, without charge. In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, f" a year; fonr months, f L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Cos" ad >- New York Branch Office. 635 F St, Washington, Li. C. A WOMAN S DARING FEAT. Mrs- Taylor, 50 Years Old, Goes Over Niagara Falls IN BARREL AND SURVIVES- She Was Only Slightly Injured— This Feat Never Before Ac complished. Niagara Falls, N. Y., Oct. 24. Mrs. Annie Edson Taylor,s3 years old, went over Niagara Falls on the Canadian side this afternoon and survived, a feat never before accomplished and never attempted except in the deliberate commiss ion of suicide. She made the trip in a barrel. Not only did she sur vive, but escaped without a broken bone, her only appjreut injury be ing a scalp wound one and a half inches long, a slight, concussion of the brain, some shock to her ner vous system and bruises about the body. She was conscious when taken out of the barrel. The doctors in attendance upon her to night said that though she was somewhat hysterical, her condition is not at all serious and that she probably will be out of bed in a few days. Mrs. Taylor’s trip covered a mile ride through the Canadian rapids before she reached the briuk of the precipice. Her barrel, staunch as a barrel could be made, was twirled and buffeted through those delir ious waters, but escaped serious contact with rocks. As it passea throughjjthe smoother, swifter wa ters that rushed over into the abyss, it rode in an almost perpendicular position with its upper half out of the water. . As it passed over the brink it rode at an angle of about 45 de grees on the outer surface of the deluge and descended gracefully to the white foaming waters 158 feet below. True to her calculations, the an vil fastened to the bottom of the barrel kept it foot downward and so it lauded. Had it turned over and landed on its head, Mrs. Tay lor’s head must have been crushed in and her neck broken. The ride through the rapids occupied eigh teen minutes. It was 4.23 o’clock when the barrel took its leap. It could not be seen as it struck the water below, because of the spray, but in less than half a minute af ter it passed over the brink it was seen on the surface of the scum covered water below the falls It was carried swiftly down to the green water beyond the scum; then half way to the Maid of the Mist eddy and held there until it floated so close to the shore that it was reached by means of a pole and hook and drawn in upon the rocks at 4:40 o’clock, seventeen minutes after it shot over th'e cataract. The woman was lifted from the barrel and half an hour later she lay on a cot at her boarding place, in Ni agara Falls, on the American side. She said she would never do it again, but that she was not sorry she did it “if it could help her fin ancially.” She said she had pray ed all during the trip, except dur ing “a few moments” ot uncon sciousness just after her descent. The barrel in which Mrs. Tay lor made the journey is four and one-half feet high and about three feet in diameter. A leather har ness and cushions inside protected her body. Air was secured through a rubber tube connected with a small opening near the top of the barrel. Mrs. Taylor is a school teacher and recently came here from Bay City, Mich. Voice Culture In the November number of the Woman’s Home Companion Irma T. Jones makes a strong plea for a more careful cultivation of that delicate instrument, the human voice. She talks as follows: “That so little effort is directed to the improvement of the quality of the speaking voice is an unsolved enigma. The average parent or educator rarely considers the value of voice culture or the relation of the tones in daily use to the child’s moral, physical and material wel fare. “No gift of the Creator is so uni versally ignored as that instrument of most exquisite and delieate mechanism, the voic organ cf human beings. Ignorance of the unlimited possibilities of its correct use is everywhere manifest. "Suitable training will render (many indifferent voices pleasing, even musical, in their intonation. Professor Corson makes it very clear that the education of the soul is a part of tha education necessary for the perfection of the voice. It is this subtle quality of spiritual development that fs- the effectual quality of all work. “The school should share with the home the responsibility of securing better habits of speaking. The whining drawl sometimes tolerated in recitation proclaims a teacher’s shortcomings as well as her pupil’s indolence. Educators should do the world great service by inaugurating a movement against . faults of the speaking voice, and for the correct use of this sadly neglected instrument. The open-mouthed children of today would soon be taught to guard their throats from dust and germ-poisoned air by breathing only through noses. Purer air would be supplied overcrowded school-rooms. Simple, health keep ing rulesof personal hygiene would be inculcated daily. Exercises in vocalization, giving exactness and flexibility of enunciation, would become a part of school routine never to be omitted. All this would surely result in healthier, happier, more useful lives for the rising generation, and the voice beautiful no longer be so rarely heard in the land.” “City Crop” Cut Off. The farmer’s roundlap bale doesn’t have to be sampled every time it is sold. Qne of the fore most cotton authorities in this country estimates that square bales lose an average of five pounds of lint per bale, thanks to sampling, theft, and other losses in cotton yards, at compresses, and on rail road and warehouse platforms. This means a yearly loss of 100,000 five hundred pound bales, worth, at 7 cents a pound, $3,500,000; ev ery dollar of which comes out of the farmer. Attractive Women. All women sensibly desire to be attractive. Beauty is the stamp of health because it is the outward manifestation of inner purity. A healthy woman is always attract ive, bright and happy. When ev ery drop of blood in the veins is pure a beauteous flush is on the cheek. But when the blood is im pure, moroseness, bad temper and a sallow complexion tells the tale of sickness, all tco plainly. And women today know there is no beauty without health. Wine of Cardui crowns women with beauty and attractiveness by mak : strong and healthy those . which make her a woman. y Wine of Cardui, and in an *v*h yourfrien4s will hardly know, vet l>r. Hull’s Pills for Ifiver lbs. One pill a dose. Box, 50 pills, 10 cts. Cure Constipation, Liver Troubles, Biliousness, Impure Blood, Dyspepsia, Female Com plaints. Stomach and Bowel Dis orders, Dr. Bull’s Pills never gripe. OASTOHIA. Bears the /j The Kind You Have Always Bought T* Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup for Teething Babies. Price, ic cts. Cures YVind-Colic, Diarrhoea,Dys entery, Griping Pains, Sour Stom ach, Fever, Cholera Infantum. Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup promotes the digestion and soothes the baby. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not a mere stimulant to tired nature. It affords the stomach complete and absolute rest by digesting the food you eat. You don’t have to diet but can enjoy all the good food you want. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure instantly relieves that distressed feeling after eating, giving vou new life and vigor. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Mothers everywhere praise One Minute Cough Cure for the suffer ings it has relieyed and the lives of their little ones it has saved. Strikes at the root of the trouble and draws out the inflammation. The children’s favorite Cough Cure. The Surest Prescription lor Ma laria. Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure —no pay. Price 50c. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers never disappoint. They are safe, prompt, gentle, effective in re moving all impurities from the liver and bowels. Small and easy to take. Never gripe or distress. A WoAlwftil DUcOTdry. The iut quarter of a century record* many wonderful discoveries in medicine, but none that have aecompliahed more for humanity than that sterling old household remedy, Browns’lron Bitters. It seems to contain the very elements of good health, and neither man, woman or child can take it without dsririijH the greatest benefit. Browns’ I roe Bitter* is sold by all dealers. Ilf a Woman wants to put out a fire she doesn’t heap on oil and wood. She throws on water,knowing that water quenches fire. When a woman wants to get well from diseases peculiar to her sex, I she should not add fuel to the fire already burning her life away. She should not take worthless drugs and potions composed ot harmful narcot ics and opiates. They do not check the disease —they do not cure it —they simply add fuel to the fire. iken by every woman EyXja the cause. It does not drug It stops fallingof the womb, ■■ leucorrhea, inflammation UHfi and periodical suffering, ir- HHIScn regular, scanty or painful all this drives away the hundred and one‘aches and pains which drain health and t> eaut y, happiness and K ood temper from many * (BSp■'y.li woman's life. It is the one HBaHwH remedy above all others &V&Ojf|jjnLa which every woman should KWHRSwas! know about and U3e. * at any drug store. Regulated the “Regulators.” Knoxville, Tenn., Oct. 23. —A Bristol, Tenn., special to the Jour nal and Tribune says that news has been received therefrom Dick inson county, Virginia, of how a father and son drove back about fifty “regulators,” who had warned the man of their visit. Having laid in a stock of ammunition, the man and boy stationed themselves in the garret of the house. When the “regulators” opened fire they returned it with deadly aim. Ar rington and Roberts, two members of the party, were instantly killed. The regulators fled, leaving their dead behind. The names of the parties attacked have not yet been learned. Setting a Prisoner Free. A man with rheumatism is a prisoner. Ilis fetters are none the ’ess galling because they are in - isible. To him Perry Davis’ c : inkiller comes as a liberator. 7-l> bbed well into the swollen, stif :ei;_d joints it not merely drives away the pain, it makes the mus cles pliable so that the prisoner be comes a free man. There is but one Painkiller, Perry Davis. 25 and 50 cents. 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 9tore. Lewis Ockerman, Goshen, Ind: “DeWitt’s Little Earlv Risers never bend me do ible like other pills, but do their work thorough ly and make me feel like a boy.” Certain thorough, gentle. CASTOniA. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought Salvation Oil the best liniment Price, 15 cts; large bottle, 25 cts. Greatest, cure on earth for Rheu matism. Neuralgia, Soreness, Sprains, Backache,Stiffness. Cuts, Bruises, Wounds, Swellings,Burns and Frost Bites. Salvation Oil kills all pain. Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” CASTOR IA For Infaats and Children. The Kind Ym Have Always Bought s “I had lang suffered from indi gestion,” writes G. A. LeDeis, Cedar City, Ho. “Like others I tried many preparations but never found anything that did me good until I took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. One bottle cured me. A friend who had suffered similarly I put on the use of Kodol Dyspep sia Cure. He is gaining fast and will soon be able f o work. Before he used Kodol Dyspepsia Cure in gestion had made him a total reck. Route to Texas. I I n going to Texas, via SS3 r “*lll I iV /]! Memphis, you can ride I day in a Cotton Belt 'f’dt-l 11 v 'V a(|w\? ?’■Parlor Cafe Car for "/Oj l il|C~ plnly fifty cents extra. T ” : ~~"' ; Ttiis car is furnished with r' : ';:;'.TTarge~easy chairs, has an -JmX smo ki n g room, a ,adies ’ lounging room and -y f a where meals are / •;• 'served on the European plan /( Irfj;-: ; at reasonable prices. s '."•' Besides Parlor Cafe Car, Cotton Belt \ \ —XI-r J 1 • trains carry Pullman Sleepers at night and \ r l\ \ YHr ?- f ’ fihlWqffiP Free Chair Cars both day and night. A) l\ I\V(V / f Wjp!*d3lw Write and tell us where you are going I \ J \V-■ *" and when v ou wi " '” ve * and we Wlll tdl V \ \;iS ' you the exact cost of p ticket and send A "■ J - ?, you a complete schedule for the trtp. We will also send jjj ~ 'X 1 I il ' ‘% 6 .' you an interesting little book, “A Trip to Texas. H, H. iUTIOIf, I. P. A., Quttdnooga, Tam. n '*■ ÜBLUlMt,(LP.andT.i.SLtouls,la and Naslie, Cliatlaußflp&Sl. Louis Sy. SHORTEST ROUTE and QUICKEST TiME ST. LOUIS AND%THE WEST. PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO ST. LOUIS WITHOUT CHANGE. CHICAGO and the NORTHWEST. PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO CHICAGO WITHOUT CHANGE. NEW TRAIN is LOUISVILLE and CINCINNATI PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO LOUISVILLE AND CINCINNATI WITHOUT CHANGE. Cheap Rates to Arkansas and Texas ALL-RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES TO NEW YORK AND THE EAST. TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS. For Schedules, Rates, Maps or any Railroad information, call upon or write to J. W. THOMAS, Jr., H. F. SMITH, CHAS. E. HARMAN, General Manager, Traffic Manager, General Pass. Agent, Nashville. Tenn. , Nashville. Tenn. Atlanta. Ga. rONLY ONE NIGHT OUT New Orleans to g BUFFALO AND NIAGARA FALLS I I! Double Daily Train Service Low Rates and Through Pullman Sleepers ' VIA ™E i QOEEti fCRESCENT W* Jpj|r AND CONNECTING LINES. I frajfckjJPK Through Sleeper daily without change Icavts New Orleans 7.30 pm. | UeITEW 03LEAKS, 9 10am 7 30nm I Lv.BrRMINGHAIC. 6 50pm 5 451 m I Lve CHATTANOOGA, 10 4Cpm 1C 00am IWfflßTOKafeifS Arriving BUFFALO (Big 4 IBIHSSPr 1 •"f Route and Lake Shore) B H | next day at , . 7 30pm 10 30am iM ki DOUBLE DAY train service New | ii PiOrleans, Birmingham, Macon, Chatta- g 1 nooga and other points South to Cincin- R 8 . nati. Close connection at Cincinnati with B | ail lines to Buffalo and other jioints North, j E f’j! l Inforantioa as to SchedaVs, Hotel; 1 , Rate,. & ’^ v iX/- r ■ 3 ■>,, i- J fi A.. let 0. L. Mitchell, Dlv Fass'pr im IV. M U-af-. (Read Koca.*Zlocl>. Claltaoeoga. at I H WA idj# - ;?.i. £' •' '■ t ca ticket agcstri f ■ fig’-r *>--■+- w.j. h'jrphy, v.c.e.mcar'O*, \ n ■'•‘ v rT _ -' '■ - < "2 cim'l hamaccw, cca'i. pasOcd aoeht, | W. M. ELSBERRY, Saw and Planing Mill, BRASWELL, QA. Can supply rough or kiln dried dressed Lumber of any dimensions, on short notice. Ship from either Stilesboro. on E. AW. Railroad, or Braswell, on South ern Railway. HEART FLOORING A SPECIALTY. Mills located six miles south oi Stilesboro. Orders solicited.