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Ttie News and Gourant.
D. B. rKEKJUH,)
, > 'Mltnrn nd PblUhfr
H. CHAPMAN,)
A. M. WiLliiNMfi AH, Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION BATKS.
One Yeur I 9®
Six Month*
YtTu-ee Months ... ®
THURSDAY. JAN. SU IW2.
Let’s up and have a greater Car
ters ville.
“It’s too early yet’’ is the latest
®mart phrase to go the rounds.
And now some one remarks
what is wanted is wireless politics.
The people seem to be showing
Schley what they would have done
had it been them.
It is said by those who pretend
to know that Bryan has no notion
of again being a candidate,
China wants to hire foreigners to
reorganize her government. We
have in this country a lot of sui plus
statesmen that might be sent over.
England is finding the job of
thrashing out the Boers an expen
sive one. The estimated expenses
of prosecuting the war are $25,000,-
000 a month.
Ah! thou. Justice! long long, de
layed, will at last rise in they
majesty. A man was sent to jail
for five months at San Francisco
last week for stealing an umbrella.
The building in which Patrick
Henry delivered his famous speech
Rich mond is to be torn down to
make room for stores. Ought not
such a historical structure be
preserved ?
According to a table recently
published there are 5.546 million
aires in the United Statee. The
figures in the leading states are
as follows: New York, 994; Penn
sylvania, 369: Massachusetts, 313;
Illinois, 275: Ohio, 162; Missouri,
161. Among Missouri’s near
neighbors,lowa has 36 millianaires,
Kansas 10, Nebraska 16, Kentucky
19 and Arkansas 2. Texas reports
34, Colorado, 116. Georgia, Ala
bama and South Carolina have but
5 each, while Montana alone has
26. Of Missouri’s milt tuP-es,
129 are in St. Joseph. Two Mis
souri farmers are in the list, one
in Quitman and one in Neosho,
Missouri has one millionaire to each
19,206 people, and Ohio .one to
25-664. Indiana, with 30 million
aires. is low in the list, and behind
the District of Columbia, which
has 34.
a L *: i yTi <£& nr
/urn
3* i- J i;/ & Imf
Does your horse “feel hi:;
oals”? What a difference be
tween the grain-fed and the
crass-fed horse! The first
o
strong and full cf ginger, the
second flabby, weak and tiree
out before he begins. The
feeding makes the difference.
Children are not alike either.
. One is rosy, bright-eyed, full
of life and laughter, another i
pale, weak and dull. The feed
ing again is responsible.
Sickly children need special
feeding. They don’t “feci their
oats”. Scott’s Emulsion adds
just the right richness to their
diet. It is like grain to the
horse. The child gets new
appetite and strong digestion.
Scott’s Emulsion is more
than food. It is a strong
medicine. It rouses up dull
children, puts new flesh on thin
ones and red blood into pale
ones. It makes children grow.
Scott’s Emulsion makes ordi-
nary food do its
Rduty.
This picture represents
the Trade Mark of Scott’s
Emulsion and is on the
wrapper of every bottle.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE,
# #OO Pearl St., New York,
glgdy’.. P/, 50c and sl. all druggist*.
COUIVKIi J. H. KSftljli
The Savannah Press, which was
a wnrin advocate bf Hon. Henry
G. Turner -Until be decided not to
enter the race, has come out in
fa"6r of Colonel Estill, in the fol
lowing interesting editorial:
The gubernatorial campaign has
reopened singe the holidays and
the chances are that it will increase
in interest until the holding of the
primaries in June. Ihe Savannah
Press, anxious that south Georgia
should furnish the candidate for
the governorship, presented the
name of Hon. Henry G. Turner.
This suggestion was kindly re
ceived. The claims of south Geor
gia upon the democratic party
were recognized, but Captain I ur
ner declined to allow the use of his
name. This section of the state,
meantime, had advanced another
gentleman, who has made good
progress in the race, and around
whose standard Chatham and coun
ties in the southeastern part of the
state have rallied with much readi
ness. Allusion is made to Colonel
J. H. Estill, who has created a
strong impression upon the people
and who has conducted his cam
paign upon a high plane, making
no combinations, casting no slur
upon his opponents, and indulging
in iio violent criticism of men or
measures.
The city of Savannah has given
Colonel Estill assurances of sup
/
port. He is a business man and a
successful one. a man of public
spirit and a practical one. Colonel
EstiU has never been a candidate
for any office outside of his home.
And yet he fills a very large niche
in government. He has been a
member of the county commission
ers and has worked hard for the
best interests of Chatham county.
He ia a member of the board of
public education, and as chairman
of the finance committee has had a
great deal to do with the manage
ment of the schools. He is a
director in one of the largest banks
and president of one of the most
successful building associations,
which has been managed with
profit to the stockholders, at the
same time affording means for
many people to own their homes.
He lias taken an active part in the
industrial movements looking to
the building up of Savannah and
is a prominent factor in the fair
association, which has done so
much for the city and south Geor
gia. In those counties Colonel
Estill is no mere figurehead. He
is practical, resourceful, and always
ready to support these enterprises
with his purse. He has given
largely of his means to build up
Savannah. He has conducted to
a successful stage one of the larg
est and most influential papers in
die south. Pdssibly the best test
of a man’s fitness for public office
is the way in which he has man
aged his own affairs. The course
of events tor the past few years
hows that the state of Georgia
needs, above all else, a business
nan to conduct her affairs. The
state’s finances have suffered from
arge appropriations and inadequate
financiering. Not since Governor
McDaniel was in office has Geor
gia had a practical business man in
charge of public affairs. It would
-eem that the state needs the efforts
of just such a man as Colonel
Estill at this crisis.
If Georgia-could secure the ser
vices of a useful, practical man, it
.\ould be a fortunate thing for the
gate. Colonel Estill would do as
much for Georgia as lie has done
for Savannah, fcr he lias occupied
1 very large place in the manage
ment of local affairs. After all the
men who build up the state are not
the politicians, but the governors
like Pillsbury, of Minnesota, and
Flower, of New York. The guber
natorial office is an executive one.
The jurists and jurors are more
needed in ojher spheres.
Colonel Estill is a man of fine
character. Kis administration wil
be clean, free from political scandal
or mismanagement of any kind.
He would make a strong governor
and the indications are that he is
going to make an excellent race.
There is difference in men.
Schley was willingly kissed by
ladies in Chicago, and said he
would stay longer if they would
eep the thing up, but Brylin dis
sented when school girls of the city
requested similar oscillatory priv
ieges of*him, saying his wife read
:ke p-apers.
Over-Work Weakens
: Your Kidneys.
Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
—*
All the blood ln,your body passe* through
your kidneys once eveiy three minutes.
The kidneys are your
blood purifiers, they fil
ter out the waste o r
Impurities in the blood.
If they are sick or out
of order, they fail to.do
their work.
Pains, aches and rheu
matism come from ex
cess of uric acid in the
blood, due to neglected
kidney trouble.
Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady
heart beats, and makes one feel as though
they had heart trouble, because the heart is
over-working in pumping thick, kidney
poisoned blood through veins and arteries.
It used to be considered that only urinary
troubles were to be traced to the kidneys,
but now modern science proves that nearly
all constitutional diseases have their begin
ning in kidney trouble.
If you are sick you can make no mistake
by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild
and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is
soon realized. It stands the highest for its
wonderful cures of the most distressing cases
and is sold on its merits
by all druggists in fifty
cent and one-dollar siz- ftwigijjm
es. You may have a
Sample bottle by mail Home of Bw&mp- Hoot,
free, also pamphlet telling you how to find
out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer
& Cos. s Binghamton, N. Y,
The advancement of our material
interests would be a laudable task
for our people for this year 1902,
Social | Otherwise
BY L H. J.
“TAKE THOU THY WAY.”
The loss of love, and sweet things
love would say:
Take thou thy way
For love must know December, even
as May,
And not o'er ruined altars can he
pray.
Take thou thy way.
The death of dreams "’neath lovely
skies and gray
Take thou tny way,
Dreams are of light, and light those
dreams shall stay.
Even as December blights the bloom
of May:
Take thou thy way.
Thou in strange paths stern duty
must obey:
Take thou thy way.
In all life’s darkness do I ask one ray?
No song to sing you now and no
prayer to pray:
go take thy way.
Frank L. Stanton in Atlanta Con
stitution. #
THE “GRANDE DAME.”
There is a good deal of talk now
of the robe "grande dame,” and
much stress is laid on the sinipli
city and richness which a certain
coterie of well known French mon
daines have chosen as the distinc
tive features oi their toi.ets. Vel
vet, so universally worn this win
ter, lends itself to seveie lines, and
fur trimming adds distinction and
character.
The Comtesse Boni de Castel
lane is oue who has adopted, evi
dently, this idea of costume. She
is wearing velvet almost exclus
ively, and her elaborate aftrnoon
costumes have all been made in
long lines—lines suggestive of a
court costume. 'At the family wed
ding a few mouths appear
ed in a pink gown, with a court
mantle of the same falling from
her shoulders. At a wedding of
the last week she wore a gown of
pearl gray velvet trimmed with
chinchilla, made in the same
straight, flowing lines, while a
cloak of the same material hung
irom the shoulders. This was,
however, made on less severe lines,
for over the shoulders in front it
fell in long pleats. The revers of
fur were softened by falls of lace.
The young bride in the Castel
lane family, the Comtesse Jean de
Castellane. wore on the same oc
casion a gown of deep red velvet,
another example of the "grande
dame” mode. The velvet gown
appeared to be cut in princess
shape, with the close lines dis
guised by an empire scarf of vel
vet lined with ermine and with er
mine touches on choker and sleeves.
As the scarf hung free from the
shoulders, the ermine lining was
seen to good advantage.
At-this particular function there
seemed to be nothing but velvet
gowns. There was a handsome
gown (worn by a relative in mourn
ing for her husband) of black vel
vet trimmed with bands of white
satir embroidered with applications
cf gray velvet and black wool.
With this was carried a'large muff
of gray velvet trimmed with sable
tails.
Muffs- are always conspicuous,
whether made of costly fur or by
some coquettish arrangement of
mousseline de soie and flowers.
There are pretty muffs of white or
gray tulle ruffles eflged with bands
‘if velvet in the same coh r and
trimmed with violets. There are
m OCLDS AND
Peruna is a A Most Excellent
MR. HARRY M. STEVENS, MIDLAND BEACH, L. I.
Mr. Harry M. Stevens,Midland Beach,
L. 1., New York, proprietor of “The
Richmond” Hotel says of Peruna:
“it gives me pleasure to testify
to the value of Peruna, / have
used it for years and have found
it to be a most excellent family
remedy. For colds, catarrh and
similar ills, it is unsurpassed.”
Mrs. C. E. Long, box 214, Atwood,
Colorado, In a recent letter to Dr. Hart
man, says the following:
also pretty muffs entirely covered
with artificial flowers.
An original trimming shown on
a half mourning gown of white
silk consists of a design of grapes
in black tulle puffed out with
leaves of black lace. The coutu
riere responsible for this idea says
that she is using the same trim
ming on a long half loose cloak of
black silk ordered by the Empress
of Russia.
The same couDiriere, one of that
small but growing class of Paris
dressmakers who show no models
and profess to make every gown
individual, has shown a half dozen
of her creations, finished or about
to be finished and sent to their
owners. Oue was a gown in blue
cloth and velvet, the cloth of the
soft pastel styade. The. skirt was
laid in large box pleats, with dia
monds of velvet in a deeper shade
framed in lace at the bottom of ev
ery pleat. The habit was made
with a blouze front and position
back of the cloth, but trimmed
with velvet in the way of choker,
cuffs ‘and tabs closing the front.
These of the velvet were embroid
ered with a lace edge and white
silk braid. There was a belt of
white panne.—Paris Correspon
dence New York Tribune.
AFTERWARDS.
I thought I had forgotten—buried
deep —
Old joys, old memories and newer
pain,
I thought that I should never fall
again
Wild heart-throbs nor my startled
. pulses leap
To hear your step, not work from
hard won sleep
To knowledge of your look
voice as plain
As if tb*‘ hours they doled me loss
or gain
I thought love died when trust I
could not keep. '
But when onee more I chanced to st e
your face
1 knew 1 reckoned falsely; every
thing
That I bad thought done with hur
ried back to rout
Itching Skin
Distress by day and night—
That’s the complaint of those who
are so unfortunate as to be afflicted
with Eczema or Salt ltheum —and out
ward applications do not cure.
They can’t.
The source of the trouble is in the
blood —make that pure and this scal
ing, burning, itching ekin disease will
disappear.
“I was taken with an itching on my
arms which proved very disagreeable. I
concluded it was salt rheum and bought a
bottle of Hood s Sarsaparilla. In two' days
after I began taking it I felt better and it
was not long before I was cured. Have
never had any skin disease since.” Mas.
I Ida E. Ward, Cove Point, Md.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
av'f Pills
rid the blood of all impurities and cure
“We can never thank yon enongh for
the change yon have made in our little
one’s health. Before she began taking
your Peruna and rock candy she suf
fered everything in the way of coughs,
colds and croup, but now she has besn
taking your medicine a month, not quite
one bottle full, and she is as well and
strong as she has ever been In her life.
Has not had the croup once since she
began taking it, and when she has a
little cold a few doses of Peruna fixes
her out all right.”
Mrs Nellie Courter, 14 Center avenue,
My fancied peace. Ah, fate! are time
and space
And broken vows no barriers? must
I bring my very life to blot this
loving out?
—Charlotte Becker, February Smart
Set.
A READY ANSWER.
It was at a dinner pa r ty. The
bright young man found himself
privileged to sit next to the young
woman with beautiful arms and
neck. He thought himself the
most favored personage in the
room. Suddenly his fair compan
ion exhibited signs of nervousness.
Two of his very best jokes, saved
for a special occasion, passed bv
unnoticed. Her face wore a look
of alarm. Apprehensively the
young man gazed at her, and,
meeting the look, she said:
“I am in misery.”
"In misery?” echoed the man.
"Yes,” she replied. “I wasvac:
cinated the other day, and it has
taken beautifully. I could almost
scream, it hurts so.”
The young man looked at the
beautiful arms, and, seeing no
mark there, said.
“Why, where were you vacci
nated?”
“In Boston,” she replied, the
smile chasing away the look of
pain.—Boston Joural.
■ •
A FRAGMENT.
Pule beaus, still lands, and dim hair'
I had a beautiful friend,
And dreamed that the despair
Would end in love in the end;
She looked on my heart one day,
And saw your image there;
She has gone weeping away.
—Unidentified.
In the “Bowen-Merrill” an
nouncements I see that John Phil
lip Sousa, the well known compos
er, has essayed authorship. He
has written a story and Calls it
“The Fifth String.” His pub
lishers say that you will find it "an
unique romance, a story strong,
true, dramatic, filled with love and
musical enchantment.”
According to the Bookman, the
most .popular and best selling
novel of 1901 was “Alice of Old
Vincennes.” For eight consecu
tive mouths it was among the six
best selling novels reported to the
Bookman by the dealers from thir
ty-seven cities in the United States
and Canada. And from January
to July inclusive, it was at the
head of the list.
Miss Sara Simpson and Mr. Ed
Deane, of Rome, spent- Sunday in
Cartersville.
Miss Evelyn Jones left yester
day for Laurens, S. C.. where she
will spend several months as the
guest of her sister, Mrs. John G.
Simpson.
Miss Elinor Jones is in Coving
ton.
CATARRH
Norwalk, Conn., write*: “Pemna ba
dona vtondfor* *->r my boy. J cannot
praise it tmoaga. I think 1* it tt)
best medicine on earth ; let me te]]
yon why T think *o : My son ha
been afflicted with catarrh since hr
was a baby five months old, so that
for yearr I had to watch him all night
long, and keep his mouth open so hr
could breathe, as he could not breath*
through his nose. He has always been
▼ery delicate.
“Since he commenced taking the Pe
runa I can go to bed and sleep all night.
He can breathe through his nose any
way he. lies, and all that hawking and
spitting Is gone. My boy is as well
today as when he left off taking it,
and he only took one bottle.”
T. T. Lienallen, a prominent young
lawyer of Washington, D. C„ and broth-
er of W. G. Lien
alien, in the U. S.
document room,
has taken Peruna
for catarrh and
speake of its ef
ftoaey in the fol
lowing words.
Mr. Lienallen
says: “I am
happy to write
you that I am
cured of what I
thought, as well
a* my doctors, an everlasting case Ot
catarrh, and take pleasure in saying th at
Peruna has done it all.”
, Any one who wishes perfect
health must be entirely free from
catarrh. Catarrh is well-nigh uni
versal ; almost omnipresent. Pe
runa is the only absolute safe
guard known. A cold is the be
ginning of catarrh. To prevent
colds, to cure colds, is to cheat ca
tarrh out of its victims. Peruna
not only cures catarrh, but pre
vents it. Every household should
be supplied with this great rem
edy for coughs, colds, etc.
Address The Peruna Medicine Cos.,
Columbus, Ohio, for a free book on
, catarrh.
Mr. Hamilton Stiles will spend
part of next week in Cartersville.
Mr. L. N. Trammell, of Mari
etta, spent last Thursday in town.
• —-
I
Mr. Frank Shumate, of Dalton
was in tow n Friday night.
Mr. Moultrie Sessions, of Mari
etta, spent Friday as the guest of
friends in the city.
Misses Rosa and Oetavia Au
brey left Monday for Decatur,
where they will atttend the Agr.es
Scott Institute for the spring term.
Among the people from Car
tersville who went down on Wed
nesday to see Richard Mansfield in
“Monsieur Beaucairt” were Miss
Marian Smith, Mrs. Stella O.
Brumby and Mrs. John Akin,
Rev. and Mrs. Sam Jones enter
tained at luncheon*in honor of Du
pont Guerry, on last Thursday.
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re
ward lor any ease ot Catarrh that can
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure
F. J. CHENEY <fcCO ,Props., Toledo,O.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney lor the last 15 y ears, and Lx -
lieve hitn perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially
alee to carry oul any obligations made
by their firm.
West dt Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist-, Toledo, O. *
Waloing.K 1 nxax <X Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's C atari'll Cure is taken inle-nal
lv, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces ol the system. Price
75c per bottle. Mold by all druggists.
Testimonials free.
Hall’s Fa mm Pills are tba bf st ’
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 todav know 7 the e is no
beauty without health. Wine of
Cardui crowns women with beauty
and attractiveness by mak ; .g
strong and healthy those rg as
which make her a woman. ry
Wine of Cardui, and in an. nft
your friends will hardly_ know
I)r. Kul I's Fills For Liver Ills.
One pill a dose. Box, 50 pills,
10 cts. Cure constipation, liver
troubles, billiousness, impure
blood, dyspepsia, female com
plaints, stomach and bowel dis
orders. Dr. Bull’s Pills never
gripe.
A Certain Cure for Chilblains]
Shgke into your shoes Allen’s
Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures
Chilblains, F ostbites, Damp.
Sweating, Swollen feet. At all
Drue gists and Shoe Stores, 25c.
■fY
T. T. Lienallen.