Newspaper Page Text
try it
Women suffer
ing from female
foUar. troubles and
Jaw-"' _ weakness, and
iFak.lV from irregular
§ jgfcffh Ei . jpi or painful men
ses ought not
II > \J^S t 0 * ose hope if
7. /V cannot
t 1C ; , 3helpthem. Phy-
\ //{ / S sicians are so
//JBKygLj busy with other
W*'•' diseases that
**..•/ they do not un
/ / %/*■ derstand fully
* ments and the
delicate organism of woman. What
the sufferer ought to do is to give
a fair trial to
BRA@£ZELB’S
FemszZs RogiaSator
* which is the true cure provided
by Nature for all female troubles. It
is the formula of a physician of the
highest standing, who devoted his
whole life to the study of the dis
tinct ailments peculiar to our moth
ers, wives and daughters. It is made
of soothing, healing, strengthening
herbs and vegetables, which have
been provided by a kindly Nature to
cure irregularity in the menses, Leu
corrhoea. Falling of the Womb, Nerv
y ousness. Headache and Backache.
v In fairness to herself and to Brad*
’Jeld’s Female Regulator, every
suffering woman ought to give it a
trial. A large $1 bottle will do a
wonderful amount of good. • Sold by
druggists.
Srnd for a nicely illustrated free hook on the subject.
■pie Bradfield Regulatcv O, Atlanta. Ga-
E. it. K.OFAI<ii
Taking Etied Jau, 13,1901.
tfo 1 Passenger —W No 2 I-assengeti—E.-
DAILY. DAILY.
Lv OartorsvUle 10.15 am. Lv TelPCity 9 80 .i.
“ Stilesboro.. 10.89 “ “ Coal City 10.15 "
Tayl’rsv'le. 10.52 •• “ Katrluad 11.1" '
!• “ Roc km art 11.18 “ “ Duke's 12 15
Qrady 11.33 “ “ Piedmont.... 202 ••
“Cedartown.. 12,15 otn " Wanier’s 2.89 "
“Warner’s ,12 45pm •* Cedartown.. 3.25"
“ Piedmont... 1.29 • •• Grady 3.43 "
" Duke's.. 8.15 “ “ Rockmart... 404 ’
“ Rairland. .. 4.23 •• •• Tayl’rsv’le.. 4.30 •
“ Coal City.... 5,10“ “ Stilesboro... 445
irPellCitv 5.35 •• Ar.Oartersville.. 5.15 • •
Nos Passenger—West No 4 Passenger— Ea--
DAILY EX. SUNDAY. DAILY EX. SUNDAY
LvCartersYllle.. 555 prti Lv Cedartown...7 50 t,"
“ Stilesboro... 6.19 •• •• Grady 8.08
" Tavlorsville 6.32 •* “ Rockmart.. ..s 29 •
“ Rockmart... 6.57 •• “ Taylorsville. .B 53 "
I Grady 7.17 “ “ Stilesboro 9.06 "
ir Cedartown... 735 “ |Ar atCartersville 93"
No. 35 Passenger—W No. 34 Passenger—>
SUNDAY ONLY. SUNDAY ONLY
Lv Cartersvllle..l.ls pin Lv Cedartown 11.26 o
“ 5ti1e5b0r0....1.37 “ “ Grady 11.83
" Tavlorsville 1.47 “ ” R0ckmart....11.53“
" R0ckmart....2.07 “ “ Tavlorsville 12.13 pn
" Grady ...2.27 “ " 5ti1e5b0r0....12.23 “
Ir Cedartown...2.4o •• Ar Cartsj<-5v111e..12.40
New Shipment
Of “Rogers Bros. Famous
1847 Knives and Forks
ju>t received. Will sell un
till this lot is gone at
$4.30 for 6 Knives and
6 Forks. Remember there
is but one qualitv of Rog
ers Bros. 1847 Knives and
Forks made in the round
handle, no matter what you
bay be told to the contra
ry. I guarantee everything
I sell to be exactly as rep
resented. Better secure a
set this week.
F. GRESHAM, Jeweler.
DR? WILUAM L. CASON,
DENTIST-
Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug Store.
CARTERSVILLE. CA.
Every Ksma*
is Interested and should know
# eiavVAJlm about tbe wondci r
?’ MARVEL NVhirlintj
The new' Hvri#i>. .
\ lion and Snrti.,n. Hoc---.
■ 7. Ssv Mon r...
4*kyonr irugirUr f-r I|. V. •'
L* ' :' nnot rnpiiiy the \. • *
■ARVKI., aq'-eptno •
Otiwr. lHii.iMt warn:, for 11. V
haiiated book—-raied.lt gives % //
Kh.W ‘‘"’a** •'<• * i • ,*.-t a m* m- /
jaiuali'r •, ones ’:.utvw,,•!>.. W
Hoots, ftil - ... -\xrU, ;
S'."':' Thadu r. mi’s
COFYFiIGO-.TS Ac
Anyone sending a sketch nnd description nia*
VJjckly ascertain our opinion free whetheram
invention is probably patentable. CommtiniCH
tiou3 Strictly confidential. Handbook on Paten tf
ent free. Oldest agency' for seen ring patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Cos. rec'3.ve
n>ecial notice , without charge, tu the
' Scientific jftaeriean.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ctr
dilation of any sf-ieutitio Journal. Terms, *> a
year; four months, sl. Bold by all newsdealers.
MUH £ Oo. 3S * Croadwa? Kcv/ TcrK
1 I fT gt.. Washington. 1* C
MU CHICHESTER’3 ENGLISH
PeHNYROYAS. Pi LIS
OrtgmiJ and t*n|T Pennine.
- /UNSAFE. Atwsy*rvlUMe fStflr - 1 ‘
ov CHKiHKSTEIPS FaNGLISK
in KEl> au l t*icl tuetallic boxen
with bin** ribbon. Tnkr no other.
k I>*jff*ron* hulwtltuUonii uml lnU
fjy tionM. Buy o' T#r lUruggi-t. or 4c.
Bt&mp" f'r FurtlcDiTriH •
Wb aod “Reftei fhr tudlfu.'’ m uu+r t>J rv
P Stull. l'LOi O i f*’ ‘
• %1\ Drutjiii-*. Chic ienter i..iAiuisfcl *- -
UiU paper. .Kitdlnub 'ar*. 9 l'-.-^
iS. FtLi 1 ON
PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
Before the Georgia Legislature in
Joint Session-
COMPULSORY ATTENDANCE.
And Better Schools, or Stop the
Tax Which Supports Them—
An Interesting Address.
Atlanta Constitution
Mrs. \V. H. Felton, of Carters
ville, delivered a strong and point
ed address yesterday at noon be
fore the general assembly in joint
session.
She spoke on the subject of Geor
gia’s educational system, especially
the rural schools, and her cry was,
make the schools what they ought
to be and make tho>e for whom
they are established attend them,
or cut off the laxaticn by which
they are supported. She illustrat
ed her points with interes ing an
ecdote and applicable incident,
and held the closest attention
of her hearers throughout.
The gallery of the house began
to fill long before the hour for the
joint session. Several hundred
ladies oceup ed seats there, and
many of the audience who could
not find seats stood tnroughout the
entire address. The house also
was crowded,many gathering there
besides the members of the house
and senate.
The joint session began a tew
minutes after 12 o’clock. The res
olution convening the joint session
was read and a committee compos
ed of Messrs. Reid of Campbell.
Brown of Decatur, and Senator
McAfee of the thirty-second, was
appointed to notify Mrs. Felion
that the joint session had convened
and to escort her into the hall.
“Perhaps there would be a great
difference of opinion if the ques
tion were asked as to who is the
brightest and most eminent man in
Georgia, said Pr< si-lent Howell in
trodneing Mrs. Felton,“b it there is
no difference of opinion as to who
is Georgia’s most distinguished
woman —the gifted lady who will
address you today.”
MRS. FELTON'S ADDRESS.
“How ; ml to make a fitting re
ply to that eautiiful compliment?”
Mrs. Felton asked. “But old age
has its c mpensations and I can
just take u.e taffy a id swallow it
just so ”
Mrs Felton begr.n by referring
to the important needs of the rural
school to which tbe legislature
could and shod minister. She
spoke of n individual case, an ap
par ntly intelligent young white
gir : vho lived in a co intry with
thiffy-nine schools, yet who had
never received one day’s benefit
from those institutions.
“I promised my.-elf w len I saw
tl at young girl that I snould ask
>ou, gentlemen, why it was wbtli
thirty-nine teachers in a county
this p or girl did not reeeeive the
benefit of the schools.”
The poor children of the moun
tains and the pine p ai s are not
receiving the benefit' of the public
school system today, Mrs. Belton
said:
“There is a college for negro
pirls in Atlanta.” Mrs. Felton said,
“that is better equipped for teach
ing negro girls than any college
for white girls in the state is for
the 1. It could almost buy and
oth r colleges for girls in the
sta:e.”
Something should be done for
th -se poor white girls, Mrs. Felton
Slid, or the legislature should stop
taxing the people to pay for this
work. Appeals for more money
have been made year after year,
aid year after year the school fund
has been swelled until millions
have been sunk. Yet the crimi
nals in Georgia’s penitentiary have
increased until now the number is
about 3,000.
RURAL SYSTEM IS BAD. q
Mrs Felton said there Was
“something wrong about the rural
<-c,ii ol system. With an attend
ance of less than 40 per
cent <f the children it is time
’bat S' methikg should be dene.
The pec pie of Georgia are cilled
upon to pay heavy taxes for a
school svstem that is far from what
it f ught to be. The school com
,, issirner has said so: the governor
1 as declared that the rural system
r eeds correction. In Bartow coun
tv the taxpayer must pay sls on
fi/oo Much of this is to support
•le school system. Why should
tl e taxpayer be compelled to pay
ibis tax to support a school system
v hen ihe parents will not send their
children?”
Mrs Felton said 75 per cent of’
’1 ose in the peritentiary get in
there from little forgeri s an 1
. ther little things, all of whic
goes to show that a little learning
is dangerous,
Mrs. Felton declared that the
farmers had been getting less and
less labor every year, so there
could not be much in the cry that
compulsory aiteudan-'e would cut
down the supply of labor. There
is something else that has been
doing it.
“The commissioner tells you that
the burning question i-. to appro
priate more money for schools. It
is the burning question,gentlemen
It is burning up the patience of
tffe people. Your governor says
so. and the humblest woman in
Georgia says so.
“In many places,” Mrs. Felton
declared, “taxation has become so
severe that it is cheaper to lent
land than to own it.
"This rural system is barren of
results,” Mrs. Felton asserted.
“Where will Georgia wind up if
she continues to spend millions for
these schools, and yet 60 per cent
of the children in the rural dis
tricts have never seen the inside of
them.
“Bartow was bound to hang a
free school product a few days ago.
There was trouble to get him to
the gallows; there was danger ol
the fagot.”
Mrs. Felton said a white woman
was hardly safe 011 any of the
country roads of the state. The
better class of negroes is rapidly
dying out; they were the class
that was trained by hard work
with tree school education left out.
Mrs. Felton said the sciiuiars
should be gotten together before a
teacher is supplied.
“The state has been hallooing
for wild pigs long enough; pen the
slioats, gentlemen, before you
shell out tue corn.”
HAVE NOT REDUCED CRIME.
Mrs. Felton declared that these
fiee schools had not reduced crime.
Since Georgia had spent $20,000,-
000 in thirty years for education,
ihe expenses of the courts had in
creased and the number of the
criminals in penitentiary and chain
gang had grown year after year.
Mrs. Felton urged that some
thing be done for these poor white
girls. “I beg of you to correct this
evil,” she said, “Hither do that or
lock the strong box of Georgia
and throw the key away,”
At the conclusion of her address
Mrs. Felton was warmly applaud
ed and a resolution thanking her
for it. by Mr. Hardin, of Wilkes,
was unauiously adopted by a rising
vote.
To put the brake on the wagon
going down the hill is a help to
the horse, when the wagon is heav
ily loaded But what driver would
think of applying the brake to a
loaded wagon going uphill? If he
did, his sensible horses would prob
ably balk. Many a man is in the
c mdition of pulling a load up hill
with the brake set against him.
When his stomach is out of order,
and the allied organs of digestion
and nutrition impaired in the r
functions,a friction is set up which
has to be overcome in addition to
the performance of daily duties.
Afoul Stomach makes a foggy
brain, and tie man with a di or
dered stomach has often to gripe
his way through the day’s business
like a man m a fog. He forgets his
appointment. Problems seems
presented to his mind “wrong end
to.” This condition is entirely
remedied by the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery. It puts
the stomach and digestive and
nutritive system into a condition of
perfect health, and gives a clear
brain, a steady hand and a light
step for the day’s duties. When
constipation clogs the channels of
thi ! ody. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant
Pelle s will work an effectual cure
ol that disastrous disease.
D- B- HILL FOR PRESIDENT-
Republicans Discuss Probabilities
of His Nomination in 1904.
Chicago. 111., Nov. 5. —With the
election of Seth Low as mayor of
New York and the consequent des
truction of the of Tammany
Hall, local politicians are begin
ning to discuss the possibility of
David B. Hill being the democrat
ic nominee for President in 1904.
The suggestion that the election
of Low means the nomination of
Hill fur President comes from the
republican ranks.
William Lorimer, chairman of
the Republican Central Committee,
made this prediction:
“There is but one significant
eature in ihe election,” he said.
“It means that Hill will be the
Democratic nominee tor President
in 1 o The election of Low puts
Tan,many Hall out of business for
ihe next four years. With the
p, w rof Croker and Tammany
de.-tioytd, Dayid B Hill is the
le?d“’ n New York State. Its
delegat on will go into the next
Democratic National ConveutiQn
solid fi r Hill, and, I believe, will
secure his nomination. Party lines
were not drawn in New Yorx.City,
M.L
Wine of Cnnlui is the guardian
of a woman’s health and happi
ness from youth to old ago. It
helps her safely into womanhood.
It sustains her during the trials
of pregnancy, childbirth and
motherhood, making labor easy
and preventing Hooding and mis
carriage. It gently leads her |
througii the dangerous period
known as the change of life.
cures loucorrhrtia, falling of the
womb, and menstrual irregularity '
in even- form. It is valuable in
every trying period of a woman’s
life. It iviiiforco.s the nervous
system, acts directly on tlie g na
tal organs and is the finest tonic I
for women known. Ask your I
druggist for a SI.OO bottle of
M ine of Cardui. I
Batesviilo, Ala., July jt 1900. .
I am nslnt; Wine of Cardui and Thed- 1
ford’s Blaok-Draupht and I feel like a
different woman already. Beveral la- I
dies here keep the medicines In their
homes all the time. I have three girls
and they are using it with me.
Mrs. KATE BROWDER.
For advice and literature, address, giving
symptoms, "The Indies' Advisory Keimrt
ment”. The Chattanooga Medicine Company, I
Chattanooga, Tenn.
hence the impossibility of placing
any other national significance
upon the election.”
Loss of appetite is an ailment
that indicates others, which me
worse—Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures
them all.
By Bribing the Nerves
with opium a cough may be sfo: -
ped temporarily, but the inflamma
tion of which the cough is a symp
tom goes from bad to worse. Do
not waste time and monev on de
lusive “cough mixtures.” Remem
her that Allen’s Luug Balsam 'ues
not merely put the nerves tosle ’p.
It gets right down to the root o
the trouble and so cures even and eD
seated affection of the throat an
lungs.
Mod-' n surg p.is-o>d
“Whi’e suffering fro i abt and a ise
of piles 1 c iiibuucu a physician
who advised me to try a box of
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve,”
says G. F. Carter, Atlanta, Ga.
“I procured a box and was entire
ly ci red. DeWitt’s Wit :h Hazel
Salve io a splendid cuie for pi’es.
giving relief instantly,and I hearti
ly rec mmend it to all sufferers.”
Surgery i unnecessary to cure
piles. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
' : alve will cure any case. Cuts,
burns, bruises and all other
wounds are also quickly cured by
it. Beware of counterfeits.
The Surest Prescription for 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.
CASTOR IA
FOl Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature at
A Physician Testifies.
“I have taken Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure and have never used any
thing in my life that did tr.e the
good that it did,’’says County Phy
sician Geo. W. Scroggs of Hall
County, Ga. “Being a physician
I have prescribed it and found 'it
to give the best results.” If the
food you eat remains undigested
in your stomach it decays there
and poisons the svstem. You can
prevent this by dieting but that
means starvation. Kodol Dvspep
sia Cure digests vvl a: you eat.
You need suffer from neither dys
pepsia nor starvation. The wors
cases qiickly cured.Naaer fails.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes.
One s’/.e smsller nfter u*imr Allen’s
Foot Ease, a powder to he sis ken. ipio
rhe shoes. 11 makes t i jy h, or n°w shot *>
fee! eav; jiiv.-s in-tant relief to corns
and bunions It’s the (freatest comfort
-lisooverv of the-we. Cures and nr*-
Vet-ts sv ollen ’e“t. 1-listers, callous and
so re so-’t a, Alt-n's Foot-Kase is a cer
tain cure for H.vestinir. hot. aeiiiiur feet.
At al flrusfsrists -n-l shoe stores, 2.V-
Trial pHckaire Free 1>- mail. Address,,
Allen S. Olmsted. ),e Roy. N. Y.
Money to 'oan.
A D'rnifpd sum of money
can be borrower! on farm
ing' land-. Am ly to
Jno. H Wikij-:, Att’y.
1 ~ Cafe Car
-■/~ s Arr _J£n(Route to Texes.
J§, '' H \ f ■! l n g°' n g to Texas, via
s==gpgz| lil'l QNsI ‘I you can ride
w U lall day in a Cotton Belt
it \Ai - i’j VThcJ\ \ !parlor Cafe Car for
Ij|C i m m y cents extra *
This car is furnished with
\Jlf) .Y : large ~ easy chairs, has an
I ,Jjrt : ’Fobservation smoking room,
• ’ •- a ladies> l oun g' n g room and
r\L//// \\/ xT> /,' a Cafe, where meals are
AV/FL: served on the European plan
/f reasonable prices.
\ 'rSTTyT.'.'." Besides a Parlor Cafe Car, Cotton Belt
\ YLv\ \\* .- jV trains carry Pullman Sleepers at night and
I \ *’ \\ . -f l iji% Free Chair Cars both day and night.
I V j\ l\ I\V / £ rwj . V&jjg Write and tell us where you are going
1\ // \V- •• and when you will leave, add we will tell
■r\ \ fi \ \you the exact cost of a ticket and send
/ /,rTT? fill \ i 1 you an interesting little book, “A Trip to Texas.
—7./Si a
/ pjl }V% S.V j 0 o j?o %i> • H. H. SUTTON, T. ?. A., ChatUnooga, Torn.
fi V 4“ '} tW. ÜBLAUME, (j. P. and T. L, SL Louis, Ma
Ik! I \ \ Q fi 9 ri IJ ?n:b 7? y ■
V? ESTtErlw fisr
AND
Mifi.lMaiil&ayaisilf.
SHORTEST ROUTE and QUICKEST TIPEE
■ T3
ST. LOUIS AIMEScTME WEST.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO ST. LOUIS
WITHOUT CHANGE.
CHiCAQO AMD the NORTHWEST.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO CHICAGO
WITHOUT CHANGE.
HEW TRAIN to LOUISVILLE and &F§fMri
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO LOUISVILLE AND
. CINCINNATI WITHOUT CHANGE.
Oheap Rates to Arkansas asd Isas
ALL-RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES TO
NEW YORK AND THE EA3T.
TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS.
For Schedules, Rates, Maps or any P.ailroad information, call upon br write to
I. W. THOMAS, Jr., H. F. SMITH, CHAS. E. HARMAN,
General Manager, Traffic Manager, General Pass. Agent,
Nashville, Tenn. Nashville. Tann. Atlanta. Ga.
4 FULL QUARTS $4 jg
8 SI8 R PUR*E RYE vO
■ ■■!■ |ABm pi K a EXPRESS
111 prepa,d
--■ TVniOIVL I a^w*^
11 iiil 1 A °^ er 1* pure eight-year-old whiskey of superb quality
lAi It is distilled in Kentucky upon the old fashioned plan,
;i| f* ; I WW which has never been improved upori. The grain is eare
■ ■ fully selected and mashed by hand in small tnbg;
we single and double in copper stills, over slow open tin*.
jUjKli TO The result is quality, not quantity. The whiskey in then' stored
in steam-heated Government warehouses, where it remains in
JMlLjfiJI bond for eight years before being offered for sale r
mwjjm DIRECT TO CONSUMER.
cut out profits of jobber and retailer, and insure yourget
ting a pure unman ipulated whiskey for family and medicinal use.
Test It; if you are not satisfied, return
at our expense and we will refund $3.15.
References: Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, or any
Express < ompany. Send money by poet-offioe or expreu*
SSPrf
LF 1 IlyUnlffiji Ail<!ress all orders to
Southern Oisfrlbutir Warehou*-
•'IIVM c* DST|LLEES
W. M. ELSBERRY,
*
Saw and Planing Mil),
BRASWELL, OA.
Can supply rough or kiln dried dressed Lumber of any dimensions, on short,
notice. Ship from either Stilesboro. on E. <ft W. Railroad, or Brasw ell, on South
ern Kail way.
HEART FLOORING A SPECIALTY.
Mills located six miles south of Stilesboro. Orders solicited.
Citation for Dismission
(4EOßGl A, Bartow- County.
\ liereas. John P. Stegall and R. B.
Stegall, expositors of-Ktnsl y St+srall,
fe;iiesent to the court in their neti
tioi dnl'v fil- d/tU ,t tfies-have fullv ad
■mti i-dered Fmlev ’ .StegsU’s estate
TI sS is-.l h^>-e(ere fo.cjie at! jiersons eon-:
uefM' and. kti str-; 1 f* f-'d erediiors, to sI.'OYV
VI--ihe' eati. vvl r ;■
.•ters il fsr 'H'Trpm
T juJfreVf eiitbrSKip'. ’V^t>HV 1 ‘ -*Ctt- ur
o- and s,nisei.-I, r<n th- first M->n;!ay in
la-im-vr IW2 T i* Oct. ft, lIHII.
t. \S . HENDRICKS, Ordinary,
U rests with you whether yop continue
n.-rr.-Ki ha* J liat.it. hi o- I'U-ltAVflB )'<
rrmi.Te., tl: t ' .loeirr lor u bao ••. w 11
out Dervouaaistreaß. nicoygfifU A B |
tiue, purifies the blood, re- r <4f <*i g k -
stores lost ft W 4 B boxcan
makes you I tjj f 400-000
in hcaitf., \ buy
un.l pocket. <s v > SO TO-BAC from
book. TC 'i w own drugyitt. who
' f vouch for ns. TaLe :-t with.
~ E a win. *ntlj,peinlßTenllv Ca®
:*?-*• •* ; ' 'C “ ' - •’ - .V ? nre,'. f 50,
. - . *•- -* • •• • • y-.-r'-pid inmicy.
*- " v ' -' • <
x r ■ v .. —v—
r I'P J9L’ IS *X t *3*. X A.. .
Bears the ' _/> You Havs Always Bought