The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, December 19, 1901, Image 9

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■*** 7 Jlllfw* iiri wOT^ A__ WOMANS RELSEF A really healthy woman has lit tle pain or discomfort at tue menstrual period. No woman need* to have any. Wine of Cardui will quickly relieve those jumrting menstrual pains and the dragging head, back and I side aches caused by falling of the womb and irregular menses. I WK9E"CAgmi, ha* brought permanent relief to' 1,000,000 women who suffered, every month. It makes the men- 1 strual organs strong and healthy. It Uthe provision made by Na-, ture to give women relief from the terrible aches and pains which blight so many homes. Okwoob, La., Oct. 14,1900. I here been very sick tor some time. I was taken with a severe pain in iny side snd could not get any relief until I tried a bcUle of Wine of Cardui. Be fore I had taken all of it I was relieved lUtl it my duty to say that jou have a wonderful medicine. Mrs. M. A. Yount. rnjTleand literature, address, (dvinrr Symp lons, 'The Ladies' Advisory I'e.iarti ioat,” Tue CWSwowga Medicine Cos., Chattanooga, Term. R. WILLIAM L. CASON, DENTIST- See: Over YopnK Bros.’ Drug Store. CARTERSVILLE. CA. fvwy Woman ovs , \ is iuittuled and ai oold know t\\ I'llm about tbe wonderful • Wll MARVEL W hirling Spray ’ \Ss\\ Tbe new Vaginal 8j ring* Jnjec lion and Auction. Best~Saf tat—Moat Convenient. V f ' /// y/X It tieannen Inkiantly, yoorarmnrUt f"r il. hcannot * pily the RVK|.. n< pt no . r, twu rend hi a ii i |i for il* /^P;W n*i biH>k—*-ai>i.lt Rives \'// m ,4 particular* mid directions in* Gv/ a /// able to ladies- II % KVKL CO. v&f i/jib Iff •it* Tliuem Hd*.,\ew Vork. ■ A46jU . 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE lITwiFH Trade Marks f Designs L Copyrights &c. A'.rone sending a .ketch and description roav ■Mil? ascertain our opinion free whether an Mention ts probably patentable. -Communica Bnmrictlf confidential. Handbook on Patent* Kt free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Cos. receive pul notice, without charge. In the Scientific American. ihundsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest ctr Hition of anv scientific journal. J erms, *3 s E; four months, $L Bold by all newsdealers. |UNN&Co. 36,Broadway N8W York ■ Branch Office. C 26 F St.. Washington. r>. C. ifc CMICHESYEH'R ENGLISH PENNYROYAL I'tas ■ Ortfinul imml tMijy Wchiium*. ■^' a Jl>\A.l r K. Aw*y rcliai l.- s.-U i i.'-'lf mA Bbik ter CHICHKS ! Elt’fS KNGLISU In HEI> *n*l Gotti metallic boxen, sealed ■bk with blue ribbon. Take no olher. Jfcefuc ■* wVi btngfrom f*nbfi*.ltufloii **! inlin ■/ iff ttvnm, Bwj fyr Druggie or vend 4c. ir ■ si&inps frr ••artlclhim. TmtlmonUlt ■W fir ud ** Relief for Ladle*'* > Uttmr, by ro- Ht ir lore Mali. HMMO Testimonial*. Hold b ■ v • all Druggies*. Uhiekenter Chemlel C*., thii paper. Mad!*••* **ark, I*UlLa., k' A- [For Sale. Implete Newspaper fend Job Office Outfit. ■he newspaper and job ■fit used in the publica of the News, consist* I of a Cottrell power Iss, Liberty and Gordon Ibers, paper cutter cases [ids, stones, type, etc. 1 engine, all in £ood con - 6n, for sale at great bar i- This is a good op tunity to buy an outfit ap, Apply to the AND C OUR A NT. I I't&PH HAIR BALSAM . j ; JH| itnd beiuitiLej tin* hair. * K Promote* a luxuriant pro’wlh. * ■* ' JHNever Fails to Bcstore Gray > Hair to its Youth!’: 1 Color. Curas ncalp disuse* *fc ha ;r i ■ and $ i.(ij t* Prt pMaMMOU':;'. •• * ■ Pop- Fizzf pam Sparine! I temperance \ ■ iHKB\ | Rootbeer |% Make it at home. Sold IK. •▼erywhere in 25c. pack- wft. ■ age*, which make fire gallon* each. ft* M* tHAItLKS K. HIKES Ct>. ■ ■ Malvern, Pa. IN Tit REALMS OF CAROLINA • Is Found Substance for Story and Song. LEGENDS AND TRADITIONS A Battle-ground of Movement In Many Lines— Both War and Peace Have Stirred the Peoole. It has been for many years an accepted theory among the peo ples of the colder portions of our common country that thrift, enterprise and originality in bus iness or otherwise, was largely pre-empted by themselves, that the inhabitants of the states bordering along the South Atlantic coast and I the Gulf of Mexico, was a rather happy-go-lucky, indolent set of folk who lived largely by the labors of others and were utterly j indisposed to any great enterprise of pith and moment. One of the effects of this exposi- i tion which is being held in Charles- 1 ton will be to dispel that idea, for a people with pluck and enterprise, and brain enough to conceive and carry such an achievement as this proves to be, are a people to be reckoned with as of the true strain of Anglo-Saxon grit, combined with all the Yankee’s adaptation of means to ends. It is true these people have builded much larger than they planned, that their en terprise has expanded under their hands far beyond their original conception, but they have proven themselves quite equal to all emer gencies and if the exposition were to perish tonight, they have every reason to be proud of their work. Another effect of the exposition will be the attraction of attention to South Carolina and some inquiry will be made into her history. She has been largely in the world’s eye on more than one accasion, in a public character, so to speak, and she has helped to make much his tory of various kinds. Of late she has followed the arts of peace, ex cept during the Spanish-American disturbance, when she did her full share of fighting of course, and as usual, the same spirit which has im pelled her into trouble on occasions not necessary to mention in the past must have an outlet some where and somehow, and when there are r.o wars to interest, she builds factories and railroads. It is a fact not generally appreciated, so swift has been the march of events, that the first railroad of any con sequence in the world to be opera ted by locomotive power, was built on South Carolina soil with Char leston capital. She had the first silk farm in America, and has today the only tea plantation in the whole United States. She leads all her southern sisters in the man ufacture of cotton, her people were among the very first to accept and put into practice Dr. Jenner’s the ories of inoculation as prevention, and within her borders occurred probably the first cremation of a dead body by will of the deceased, m -America. Although it occurred more than one hundred years ago, there are those but a short time dead who had the story from eye witnesses of the unusual and gruesome scene. They left the record for this gener ation, though it is remembered but bv a few. A slab of stone almost hidden in the grass, shadowed by the dense forest close by a lazy stream, the home of the moccasin and the heron, marks the spot where the funeral pyre was reared. It was then a part of an old rice planta tion with its multitude of slaves, its handsome mansion and its pop ulous “quarters.” All directions for the ceremony were minutely set forth in tbe will. The fuel was to be the “rich” pine knots of the surrounding forests which bum so fiercely. They were to be piled high at the appointed spot and the torch applied by his old body ser vant. Sorely against the inclina tions of the family it was done. The story is horrible if tiu>. that the head parted from the body and rolled away from the pile and was picked up and replaced by the old servant. The heart was last to resolveitselt into ashes, and finally they were gathered into an iron chest, which was taken away where no man knows, for all this happened in the long ago, I revive the story only to illustrate that here are people of originality of thought and action. That the old plantation is deserted except by a few negroes, the stately mansion fell before the torch of Sherman’s men. who were said to have been so “careless with fiie, but the stone slab is there and the wantering coon or possum hunter calls in his dogs and changes his ——HI 111 IMi ilium ECorn res from the soil quantities of )tash. te fertilizer ap rnust furnish ;h Potash, or the will lose its pro g power. carefully our books ops—sent free. IN KALI WORKS, ssau St., New York. course when he finds himself ap proaching that neighborhood. It is a lonely spot. Not far away resides a recluse, a courtly gentle man, suave and polite, refined in manner and language, dignified of bearing, clothed in homely garb, no one could mistake his identity. Dress him in silk and velvet, hang a rapier at his side, and you would j have before you the noble who stood i about the throne ot Louis le Grand. I He vyas one of Carolina’s best and | bravest, and came--up through; much tribulation. His fortune it was to be tied to a tree while his foes applied the torch to his ances tral home and he forced to watch it go in smoke carrying with it the priceless relics of twenty genera tions. It was a bitter trial and left its mark, years have passed, peace with all that it implies has smiled j upon our land for thirty years, but 1 this old man has lived far from the \ haunts of his fellows, wrapped in the memories of “other and better days.” Polite and hospitable he is to every way farer, be he whom he may, but not once since that awful day he has taken the hand of one who was on the otherside. He makes no complaint, “naught"fliets down in malice” but the hand of Douglas is his own, and never ; shall “in friendly clasp,” etc. He : has forgiven, but he cannot for- get. These old country sides are full * full of legend and history so closely , mingled that the dividing line is j almost imperceptible. We can see ; whence Simms drew his inspira tion, when we tread these long un usual paths, and near the old sto ries ftom men who were themselves actors or received the tale from those who were. There are tales .of love,of war and foray, of treason, strategem and spoils, for this has been a"seat of war since the days of Yemassee. SimS’ pen is long silica i rust “His bones are dust His soul is with the saints, we trust” but here is still, in this old corner of our lew world, an unworked mine of song and story. i Important to Mothers. The manufacturers of Castoria have been compelled to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to familiarize the public with tne sig nature of Chas. H. Fletchei. This has been necessitated by reason of pirates counterfeiting the Castoria Uade-mark. This counterfeiting is a crime not only against the pro prietors of Castoria, but against the growing generatien All persons should be careful to see that Cas toria bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, it they would guard the health of their children. Pa rents, and mothers in particular, ought to carefully examine Hie Castoria advertisements which have been appearing in this paper, and to remember that the wrapper of every bottle of genuine Castoria bears the fac-simiie signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, under whose supervision it has been manufac tured continuously for over thirty years. —Phila. Bulletin. The Christmas Dinner. In spite of the fact that the word dyspepsia means literally bad cook, it will not be fair for many to lav the blame on the cook if they begin the Christmas dinner with little appetite and end it with distress or nausea. It may neff be fair for any to do that—let us hope so for the sake of the cook! The disease dyspepsia indicates a bad stomach, that is, a weak stomach, rather than a bad cook, and for a weak stomach there is nethmg else equal to Hoods Sarsaparilla. It gives the stomach vigor and tons, cures dyspepsia, creates appetite, and makes eating the pleasure it should be. Six Million Boxes a Year. In 1895, none; in 1900, 6,000,000 boxes; that’s Cascarets Candy Ca thartic’s jump into popularity. The people have cast their verdict. Best medicine for the bowels in the world. All druggists, 10c. A SCHLEY Is the Report of Benham and Ram sey, of Court of Inquiry. ADMIRAL DEWEY DISSENTS- Ha S*y*Schly Was Senior Officer and Entitled to All Credit for the “Gleriowe Victory.” Washington, Dec. 13. —The re port of the Schley court of injury was promulgated by Secretary I ong tonight. There are two reports. Admiral Benham and Ramsey concur in the first, which is signed by Admiral Dewey also, aa a matter of form. Admiral Dewey makes a sep arate report, although he agiees with the finding of the facts sub scribed to by the others. The majority report condemns Admiral Schley on eleven points, while Admiral Dewey sustains him in most particulars. The ma* joritv opinion finds in brief that Admiral Schlay should have proceeded with tire utmost dispatch to Cieufuegos and maintained a close blockade; that he should have endeavored to have obtained infor mation of the Spanish squadron there; that ha should have proceed ed to Santiago with dispatch; that he should not have made the res trograde movement; that he should have obeyed the department’s or ders; that he should have endeav ored to capture the Spanish vessels in Santiago; that he did not do his utmost to destroy the Colon; that he caused the squadron to lose dis tance in the loop of the Brooklyn; and caused the Texas to back; that he did an injustice to Hodgsou;that his conduct in the campaign was characterized bv vacillation, dila toriness and lack of enterprise; that official reports on the coal sup ply were misleading, and inaccur ate; that his conduct during the battle was self possessed and that he encouraged in his own person his subordinate officers and men. Admiral Dewey, in his report, says that the passage cf Cienfuegos was made with all dispatch; that in view of his eoal supply the blockade of Cienfugos was effect ive; that he allowed the Adula to enter Cienfuegos to get inforraa tion; that his passage to Santiago was with as much dispatch as pos sible, keeping the squadron to gether; that the blockade of San tiago was effective, and finally, that he was the senior officer off Santiago, in absolute command, and entitled to the credit due for the glorious victory which re sulted in the total destruction of the Spanish ships. UUeumatism M. F. Ballantyne, of Ballantyne & McDonough’s Iron Foundry, Savannah, Ga , says that he has 1 suffered for years from Rheumatism and could get no relief from any source but ?. P. P., which cured him entirely. He extols the prop erties of P. P. P. on every occas ion. P. P. P. is the greatest known cure for Rheumatism; it eradicates the disease out Of the system quick ly and forever. P. P. P., Lippman’s Great Rem edy, cures Salt Rheum, with its itch and burning, Scald Head, Tetter, etc. P. P, P. Cures Boils, Pimples, and all eruptions due to the blood. P. P. P. Cures Rheumatism and all pains in the sides, back and shoulders, knees, hips, wrists and joints. P. P. P. Cures Blood Poison in all its various stages, Old Ulcers, Sores and Kidney Complaints. P. P. P. Cures Catarrh, Eczema, Erysipelas, and all skin and blood diseasesiiud Mercurial Poisoning. For s.ne by all Druggists. Oyster Supper at Euharlee Institute The young ladies of Euharlee Institute will give an oyster supper at the institute, on Friday night, December 20th. An effort is being made to pay off tbe remainder of the debt on the institute, and we take this means of inviting our friends to come out on that night and help along in a worthy cause. We promise you an enjoyable evening and a good time in general. Come one! come all! and bring your friends with you. Jambs J. Dblaney, 2t. Principal. Of Benefit to You, D. S. Mitchell, Fulford, Md.: “During a long illness I was trou bled with bed sores, was advised to try DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve and did so with wonderful results. 1 was perfectly c irc< . It is the best salve on th- n arket.” Sure cure fo i piles, • burns. Be ware of counterfeits. I Low Rafis fo Texas. I wjlfig \ frequent intervals dur \ing 1901, round trip | tickets will be sold via the tS option 'Belt Route, 'jfZgy Li :HpP m Cairo Vfh&TK JU PffcyMfemphis to pointy Arkansas, Louisrk. f\ ’ Texas, an d' il 'j 1 Hl’W nc *' an an d Okla r PlT■ Territories, i A Ot greatly reduced II / 1 il I: rates. 1 I / 1 L J,'' t• //// : ; i : \ | 1, fll/ 1 /./' •'.'////1 -T.II us inhere you want to go: also l U H 7 /when. you would like 10 leave, and we || j (" If W I y/\ j* will tell ycu when you can secure one |ff II ./I B 1 : '. pi the low-rale tickets and what It will Ilf IB V -j-M ; ; cost We W HI also send you a complete J [ / \ )' I : .’schedule for the trip and an interesling II K /9 \f /'■ ! ‘ : little tiook. "A Trip to Texas. ” iv\ j j 1 \/// // / / VT/73C/W V’77/ jH. SUTTON, T. P. A., Chattanooga, Ten#. /i // • f- W- laBtAUMf, G. P. and T. A.. St. Louis, Mo. TORTURE! BESIDES the dangers and dis figurements of Blood Dis eases, the Burning and Itch ing Skin Eruptions are among the most acute tortnrea. The strongest systems soon collapse under such agonies. P D TANARUS) (Lippman’s Great # JL # JL • Remedy) is a safe and certain care for every Skin Disease, whether tor turing, disfiguring, humiliating, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, pimply or blotchy—ln fact, from pimples to the most distressing ecsemas —and every humor of the blood, whether simple, scrofulous or hereditary. PP TANARUS) Purifies the blood, a IT. I. builds up the weak and debilitated, gives strength to weakened nerves, expels diseases, and In sures health and happiness where sickness and despair once shut out the light of life. Sold by all Druggists. $1 a bottle; six bottles, $5. LIPPMAN BROTHERS, , Sole Proprietor., Lxppman Block, SAVANNAH, QA. ■vf • .t AKD WasMle, ffliallanQop & Si. Louis Ry. SHORTEST ROUTE axd QUJffi€EST T2ME - TO ST. LOUIS ANDHE WEST ■ PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO ST. LOUIS WITHOUT CHANGE. CHIC AO O AND THE NORTHWEST. PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO CHICAGO WITHOUT CHANGE. NEW TRAIN to 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, Nnshyiiie. Tens. Nashville. Tenn. Atlanta. Ga. 4 FULL QUARTS mlh 8 SES R PURE RYE V OL= m UfUIQI/Ly ™ S|D H II MlulxL I ST* II /E offer a pure eight-year-old whiskey of superb quality IM/ It is distilled in Kentucky upon the old fashioned plan, ■Pf j ■■ which has never been improved upon. The grain is care -Be^ecte<! and mashed by hand in small tube; iMpHIr we B ’ n f^ e and double in copper stills, over slow open fires. 9| The is quality, not quantity. The whiskey is then stored ‘w ' ft'* ; | in steam-heated Government w arehouses, where it remains in luBLyQMn bond for eight years before being offered for sale mAWM DIRECT TO CONSUMER. W e cut out profits of jobber and retailer, and insure your get ting a pure unmanipulated whiskey forfamily and medicinal use. Test it; if you are not satisfied, return L R a * our ex P e nse and we will refund $3.15. iE§p~2SSSS22 Iteferenc.es: Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, or any lgg3%aßglssj Express Company. Send money by post-ofiice or express r ' O /’/ lit ’[Vat'< I'niitf Address all order* to /a-CCj'•.'C--C s>W--££>x:-C^Lb''C^f iouuigr.i £>uull)ut!n<j War- house ATLAK7A, CA. DISTILLERS. t'.-- ■ an