Newspaper Page Text
OPENED BY
IDE IC.
The British Parliament Convenes
With Great Display-
SORRY THE WAR IS NOT OVER
Nothing Noteworthy About His Ad
dress— Salisbury Says No
Peace Overtures.
London. Jan. 16.—King Edward
opened parliament today with a
ceremonial in all essential respects
similar to that of February last.
The procession to the house of
lords was of the same character as
that witnessed on the occasion of
the opening of the first parliament
of King Edward’s reign, while
within the upper housj were seen
the same state pageantry, the same
historic dresses and the same revi
val of ancient forms.
After robing, King Edward and
Queen Alexandra entered the hcuse
of peers and occupied their thrones,
beneath a canopy with the prince
and princess of Wales on either
side of them. The other members
of the royal family were seated on
chairs at the foot of the steps lead
ing to the throne. The gentleman
usher of the black rod, Gen. Sir
Michael Biddulpi, having sum
n;o ted the speaker and the mem
bers of the house of commons, his
majesty read the speech from the
throne.
The speech was not an impor
tant utterance. His majesty ex
pressed regret at the fact that the
war iti South Africa was not con
cluded; said he trusted the decision
of the sugar conference would lead
to the abandonment of bounties
and noted the conclusion of the
isthmian canal treaty. . ...
THE KING'S ADDRESS.
The speech opened with a refer
ence to the tour of the prince and
princess of Wales,
“They were everywhere,” said
the king, “received vvith demon
strations of the liveliest affection,
and I am convinced their presences
served to rivet mo e closely the
bonds of mutual regard auu loyalty
by which the vigor of the empire
is maintained.”
Referring to Great Britain's rela
tion with foreign countries, the
king said:
“,Vfy relation with the other
powers continue to be of a friendly
character.”
Contrary to expectations the
king’s reference to the war was
just as indefinite as the statements
on the subject made in the last half
dozen messages from the throne.
“I regret,” said his majesty,
“that the war in South Africa is
not yet concluded, though the
course operations have been favor
able to our arms, the area of war
largely reduced, and industries arc
being resumed in my new colonies.
In spite of the tedious character of
the campaign, my soldiers through
out have displayed a cheerfulness
in the endurance of the hardships
incident to guerrilla warfare, and a
humanity, even to their own detri
ment, in their treatment of the
enemy, which are deserving of the
highest praise. The necessity for
relieving those of my troops who
have most felt the strain of war
has afforded me the opportunity of
again availing myself of the loyal
and patriotic offers of my colonies,
and further contingents will snortlv
reach South Africa from the Do
minion of Canada, the common
wealth of Australia and New Zeal
and.”
In regard to the sugar confer
ence the speech says:
“I trust its decision may lead to
the abandonment of the system by
Which the sugar producing colon
ies and home manufacturers of
sugar have not been fairly’ weighed
jn the prosecution of this important
industry.”
The canal treaty mentioned.
Then came the following impor
tant clause:
Sour Siomac!)
f* After K wna ln<luced Io try I’ASI’A
*P.TS, I will never he without them in the house.
4 7 ioer was In a very bad shape, and my head
and 1 I, ad stomach trouble. Now, since tak
f Cascarets. 1 feel line. My wife has also used
tue:n with benebcial results for sour stomach.”
JOS. Kusulinq, 1321 CouKress St., St. Louis, Mo.
/'it c AN DV
G r.n nnt - Paiatabie. Potent. Taste Good, lie
wo, Never Sicken. \V oaken, or Gripe. 10c. toe.MJc
CURE CON ST IP ATI CM. ...
Pfiing iL iupdT Coapnnr, Ftilcnfro, Mmtfrpal. Jlcw Aork.
Sold and indlra:uedd by nil drug
■u giata to cfcjLiis: Tobacco Habit.
If 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 d.seases peculiar to her sex,
she should not add fuel to the fire
already burning her life away. She
should not take worthless drugs and
potions composed of harmful narcot
ics and opiates. They do not check
the disease—they do not cure it —they
simply add fuel to the fire.
f the cause. It does not drug
it stops falling of the womb,
leucorrhea, inflammation
and periodical suffering, ir
regular, scanty or painful
menstruation; and by doing
all this drives away the
hundred and one aches and
pains which drain health
and beauty, happiness and
good temper from many t
woman’s life. It is the one
remedy above all others
which every woman should
at any drug store.
9 o®©®oee©©®©©
"I have concluded with the
president of the United States a
treaty, the provision of which will
facilitate the construction of an
interoceanic canal under guaran
tees that its neutrality will be main
tained, and that it will be open to
the commerce and shipping of all
nations.”
Next follows references to the
Anglo Brazilian treaty, to the re
ferring of the British Guiana-Bra
zil boundary question to the arbit
ration of the king of Italy, to the
death of the ameer, ‘‘whose son,
Habib Ullah, has expressed an
earnest desire to maintain the
friendly lelations of Afghanistan
with my India.i empire.”
After announcing that the esti
mates have been framed “as econ
omically as due regard for their
efficiency renders possible in the
special circumstances of the pres
ent exigency.” the speech conclud
ed with mentioning proposed leg
islation of solely domestic interest
witn the exception of a bill to facil
itate the sale and purchase of land
in Ireland.
THEIR MAJESTIES RETIRE.
Their majesties then retired
amid a fanfaronade of trumpets
and attended by the same regal
ceromonv as accompanied their
entry into the house.
DEATH AT GUM SPRING-
Mr. Wesley Dooley Succumbs to
Pneumonia on the 6th,
One of the. saddest deaths that
has occurred at Gum Spring for a
long time was that of Mr. Wesley
Dooly 7 , on the 6th instant. He was
taken with pneumonia on the ist,
when his family, friends and three
physicians, had done all they could
for him and when all had failed to
stop his sufferings, he quietly pass
ed away 7.
His remains were carried to the
Lynn graveyard, about one mile
from his residence.
He leaves a loving and devoted
wife and four children to mourn
his loss. Mr. Dooly’s children
were all at his bedside during his
illness. They were, M. Dooly, of
near Fairmount; Messrs. Harrison
and Henry Dooly, of Gum Spring;
Mrs. Mary 7 Moore.
He was born in Habersham coun
ty in 1832, and with his parents,
moved to Forsyth county when a
small boy, and that was his home
till 1891, when he bought the Bell
farm, and removed to it, and has
since been a welcome citizen of Bar
tow 7 county 7 .
He was married to Miss Cleapary
Phillips February 22d, 1855. He
professed religion u’hile in the ser
vice of his country in the civil war
and joined the Baptist church at
Concord in September, 1882, and
has since been willing to give God
the praise.
We are glad to claim him as a
citizen. He was a successful far
mer, a truly’ beloved gentleman
and well spoken of by his neigh
bors and all who knew him. He
was always ready to help his fel
-1 jwman in time of need. He was
a true husband, a kind and loving
father.
He has been a mason for thirty
or thirty-five years, and an Odd
Fellow for eighteen or twenty
years
“We lenmv not what change wait us,
•Hut \ e know uurmiglKv guide,
Safety t-us: ing in his keeping.
H -"py when lie wa ks beside,
In H ■> tender hands entrusting.
- .cry 'ink in loves might chain;
’T 1 a bless.-d h >■■<.; that whispers,
■Surely wesba : meet again,”
Isham Edwards.
RATHBONE
IS EXCUSED.
He Concludes His Evidence in the
Havana Trial-
EXPENSES FOR HIS HOME-
Thought He Had the Right to Fur.
nlsh his Official Residence Inas
much as Others Had Done It..
Havana, Jan. 16.—At the trial
of the charges growing out of the
Cuban postoffice frauds coday, the
| examination of Estes G. Rathbone,
' tx-director-general of posts of
I Cuba, \Vhs concluded. Rathbone
i was questioned further relative to
the furnishing of his residence in
! El Cerro, Havana, fiom the postal
funds. He said he could not have
heen expected to furnish his official
residence from private funds; that
he had not known how long ne was
going to remain in Ctlba and that
Gen. John R. Brooke, ex-military
governor of Cuba, and Gen. Wil
liam Ludlow, ex-military governor
of the city of Havana, had furnish
ed their official residences with gov
ernment funds.
Rathbone said his superiors knew
of his expenditures in this respect
and had not made objection thereto
and that these bills Were only for
moneys spent for house furnishing
and not on his private account.
The examination of a bill from a
New York department store showed
that fifty pairs ’of hose which it
was alleged Rathbone bought for
his private use, read fifty feet of
hose.
The examination of Rathbone
did not bring out any strong points
for the government, the matters
touched upon involving only small
amounts compared with the large
amount of embezzlement alleged
and believed to be out of propor
tion to the sentence asked for by
the fiscal. In most of the incidents
taken up during Rathbone’s exam
ination it was only a question of
whether he had been authorized to
make the expenditures in question
and there was a lack of evidence
showing criminal intent.
Tne matter of the expenses of
the witnesses who have been
brought here from the United
States to testify in these cases is
now worrying the postoffice offi
cials. The clerk of a New York
hotel, one of the witnesses, who
was brought here to show that
Rathbone bad lived extravagantly
while at his hotel, has put in a bill
to the government of S4O a day for
expenses, while the extras charged
bring the total for two weeks to
about SI,OOO.
IT DAZZLES THE WORLD.
No Discovery in medicine has
ever created one quarter of the ex
citement that has beer, caused by
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption. It’s severest tests
have been on hopless victims of
Consumption, Pneumonia, Hem
orrhage, Pleurisy and Bronchetis,
thousands of whom it has restored
to perfect health. For Coughs,
Colds, Asthma, Croup, Hay Fe
ver, Hoarseness and Whooping
Cough it is the quickest, surest
cure in the world. It is sold by
Young Bros.’ who guarantee satis
faction or refund money. Large
bottles 50c. and SI.OO. Trial bot
tles free
Wo-Id’s Great Fever Medicine
Johnson’s Tonic does in a day what
slow Quinine cannot do in ten days.
Its splendid cures are in striking con
trast with the feeble cures made bv qui
nine.
If you are utterly wretched, take a
thorough dose of Johnson’s Tonic and
and 1 ive out every trace of malarial poi
soning The wise insure their lives and
the wiser insure their lie-uth bv using
Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic It
costs 50 cents il' it cures; not one cent if
it does not
“Better out than in” —that hu
mor that you notice. To be sure
it’s out and all out, take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup l ures.
a cough or cold at once. Con
quers croud, whooping cough and
measles’ couarh without fail. Best
for bronchitis, hoarseness, grippe,
pheumonia, consumption and lung
affections. Quick, sure results.
Price 25c.
Tutt’s Pills
stimulate the TORPID LIVER,
strengthen the digestive organs,
regulate the bowels, and are un*
equaled as an
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE,.
In malarial districts their virtues are
widely recognized, as they possess
peculiar properties in freeing the
system from that poison. Elegantly
sugar coated.
Take No Substitute.
ON A WHEEL E he sider5 ider meets with disaster. Avery
a* * * . . handy and efneient doctor to havfi with vou
an aeeiaent happens is a bottle of Mexican Mustang Liniment.
Ulcers or
Runni meg 1 Sores
need not become a fixture upon your
body. If they do it is your fault, for
MEXICAN
MUSTANG LINIMENT
will thoroughly, quickly and perma
nently cure these afflictions. There
is no guess work about it; if this lin
iment is used a cure will follow.
Yftll nflN’T KNOW quickly a burn cr scald can be cured
ivu uvil I itliUfß until you have treated it with Mexican
Mustang Liniment. Asa flesh healer it stands at the very top.
KEEP IN TOUCH WITH
St. Louis and the Work of Preparation for the
Great World’s Fair of 1903.
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[ — -- T y T' r\ r T~rr"*> - Air* -mtJZGK-j
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.
Buy and Try a Box Tonight.
While you think of it, go buy and
try a box of Cascarets Candy Ca
thartic, ideal laxative, tonight. You’ll
never regret it. Genuine tablets
stamped C. C. C. Never sold in
bulk.. All druggists, 10c.
Bartow Sheriff's Sales.
"ill he sold bef-o-t -no cou t house
door in the .own of Cartersvillj. Bartow
county, Oh., within u, egal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in February,
1902, the following property, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land situa
ted, lying and Ijemg in the sixteenth
lfitn district and third section of Bartow
county, Georgia, the same being parts
ot lots numhrrone hundred and seven
ty-eiglit (178),0ne hundred and seventy
nine (179) and one hundred and eighty -
two (182) in said district and section, be
ginning at what was .1. H. Ford’s south
east corner of lot ot lnd No. 178. runt
ning south 27 degre swest to the south
west coiner of said lot No. 17.8 to a pos-
In a heap of stones; thence south on the
east line of lot No. 182; tilt- -seven poles
and sixteen links to a post and B. I.
corner, thence west eigiitv-three poles
and eleven links to a po.,t, thence north
on a dividing line one hundred and
eighty poles and sixteen links to a post
at, what was Ford’s South west corner,
thence east with Fords South line one
hundred and ten poles to start! .ig point,
said tract of land containing sixty acres,
more or less.
Said property levied on and ill be
sold as the property of J. H. Ford, to
satisfy lour executions issued from the
justice court of the 951 disi riet G. M ol
said county in favor of Chas. W. Mor
ris. adnunistratorof J. A. Bale against
said J. H. Ford for the purchase money
for said land. Deed to detendant fileci
and recorded in the clerk of superior
court’s office ot said county as required
by law in such cases.
R L. GRIFFIN, Sheriff.
W. S, BRADLEY, Dep’tv Sheriff,
N. M. ADAMS, Dep’ty Sheriff.
January 9, 1902.
Administrator’s Sale.
Pursuant .o an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Polk county, Ga., will be
sold be I re the eourt house door, in the
city of Cartersville, Bar ow eountv, Ga.,
between the legal hours of sale, on the
first Tuesday 111 February, 1902, the fol
lowing property, to-wit:
Six shares of the capital stock of the
Bank of Cartersville,Ga.,of the par value
of SIOO each ; also one vacant lot in the
city of Cartersville. Ga., containingone
lialf acre, more or less, bounded on the
north by an alley, on the south bv lands
belonging to Roberts <fe Collins in 1889,
on the east and west by SJ M. Rhea, near
Tennessee street; also, one vacant 1< t in
the city of Cartorsvil ft, located on Bar
low street, bound, and north apd west by
property of J ’tt.’Wlkie, east bv Bartow
stieet, south t. property o).H. E. Young
and Rowland (reel, containing one
acre, more or le All of the above de
scribed propert' belonging to the es
tate of C, W. H ris, deceased, and
sold for the purpo <Ol paying the debts
of said deceased. ernis of sale, cash.
This January 4,19 ft.
H. K YOUNG and
J. r. HARRIS.
Administrators Estate of C W. Harris,
Citation for Dismiaiiion
(JEOßGlA, Bartow County.
hcress. Joseph Slihw, executor ol
H. C. Hood, represent to the court in
his petition duly died, that he has lully
administered 8. C. Hood’s estate. This
is therefore to cite all persons concern
ed, kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why said exec
utor should not be discharged from
his executorship, and receive letters
01 dismission on the first Monday in
April, 1902. This Jan 8,1902.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary,
Citation for Dismission.
GKORGIA. B irtow County.
Whereas, VV, W Roberts, adminis
trator ol Mrs A. N Roberts, represents
to the court in his petition, dulv filed
and entered on record, that he has fully
administered Mrs. A. N. Roberts’ es
tate. This is theretore to cite all per
sons c mcerned, kindred and creditors,
to show cause, if any they can, why
said administrator should "not oe dis
charged fiotr his administration and re
ceive letters of dismission on the first
Monday in March, 15402. This Decem
ber 9th, 1901.
<J V. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Citation for Dismiscli n*
GEORGI \, Bartow County.
Whereas, James Uren, administrator
of Timothy Marsh, (Colored) represents
to the court in his petition, dulv filed
and entered on record, that he has fully
administered Timothy Marsn’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why said admin
istrator should not be discharged from
his administration and receive letters of
dismission on the first Monday in
March, 1902. Decernbsr th, 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Citation for Diamiaaion-
GKORiha, Bartow County,
Whereas. S. G. H. Barton, adminis
trator, with will annexed, of Jamas
Barton, represents to tne court in his
petition duly tiled, that he has fully ad
ministered James Barton’s estate. This
is therefore loeiteall persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to sho'.' cause,
if any they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his ad
ministration, and receive letters of dis
mission on the first Monday in March,
1902. This Decen her 9th, I‘MU *
<i. vv. PEN CRICKS. Ordinary.
S.<feW. ILK. O. ALA
Taking Ettect Jan. 5,1902.
do 1 Passenger— W INO2 1 ahsknheh— Raw
DAILY. DAILY
Lv Cartersvillelo.lsani. Lv Cell City.... f .'to a a
•• Stllesboro.-10.-u “ " Coal City.... 10 15 ••
“ Tayrrsv’lo, 10.5’J “ “ Hanlaml II P' “
*• Kockmart 11.p> “ " lluke’s 12 ’."> pr
“ Grady 11. SS “ “ Piedmont.... 2.0a "
“ Cedartown..t'2,ls pin “ Warner’s 2.tit *•
“ Warner’s .12 Pip m ** Cednrtown.. 2.25“
“ Piedmont, 1.29“ “ Grady 3.13“
■* Iluke’s .. 3.J5 “ “ Kock id art ... 4(4 “
“ Rairland. .. 4.23“ “ rnyl’rsv’le.. 4 :11 “
“ Coal City.... 5.111 “ “ Stllesboro.. 445 “
Ar Pell Cl tv 5.35“ i Ar.Cartereville 5.15 * *
No3 Passenger—WestNo4 Pahsenukk—kass
DAILY EX. SUNDAY DAILY EX. SUNDAY
Lv Cartersvllle.. 5 55 pin Lv Cedartown.. 7.00 eur
" Stllesboro... 6.19 “ “ Grady 7 20 “
“ Taylorsville 6.32 “ “ Boebmnrt.. .742 “
“ Rockmart... 657 “ “ TaylorsvllK .S (4
Grady 7.17 “ “ Stllesboro.. . *.17
yrCedartown... 735 “ lAr at( arterevllb 5.40 •
No. 35 Passengeh—W No. 31 Passenger —&
SUNDAY ONLY. SUNDAY ONLY
Lv jirterßVllle..l.ls pin Lv Cedartown 11.20 and
“ Stllesboro ...1.37 “ “ Urady 11.33
“ Taylorsville 1.47 ” “ Rockmart.. 53“
“ R0ckmart....2.07 “ “ Tavlorsvl pn.
“ Grady 2.27 “ “ 5t11e5b0r0....12.23 ••
ir Cedartown.. 2.40 ” * r ’artersville.. 12.45'
Patents!
SSI
■ptpTl- U S. PATCH 1 OFFICE J,
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