Newspaper Page Text
Small crops, unsalable veg
etables, result from want of
Potash.
Vegetables arc especially
fond of Potash. Write for
cur free pamphlets.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
OUR WEEKLY LETTER
FROM WASHINGTON
(From Our Ragular Correspondent.)
March 6th, 1902.
“If we don’t revise the tariff the
democrats will; and I am atraid
that a good many of the members
now in congress will not be here
to supervise the job,” remarked a
republican member of the house,
one day recently in my hearing,
and to the consternation of the re
publican leaders that sentiment is
growing daily. It is a well known
fact that Representative Babcock,
of Wisrdhsin made a v : gorous ef
fort to organize an effective oppo
sition to the rule which prevented
any amendment of the bill abolish
ing the war revenue taxis. At the
last moment the Michigan delega
tion, on which Mr. Batcock had
counted as an ally, declined to vote
with him and consequently he de
termined to abandon his project
for the time and has since devoted
himself to the organization of those
republicans who desire a revision
of the tariff at this session. Wheth
er the autocracy of the Reed rules
and the vigor of the party whip
will be sufficient to suppress the
“schism,” as it is called by gentle
men of the Henderson-Dalzell
school remains to be seen, but un
less the subject of reciprocity with
Cuba is soon disposed of it is safe
to say that they will not.
Cuba is another “thorn in the
flesh” of the leaders. The third
caucus on the subject, held Mon
day evening, was productive of no
results and another will be held
this evening. The president re
fuses to recede from his origi ai
position, that something must be
done for Cuba hud General Gros
venor of Ohio has become a warm
advocate of the ways and means
committee bill which grants 20 per
cent, reciprocal reduction on Cuban
imports Mr. Roosevelt is threat
ening to send a special message to
congiess on the subject although
if he does it will be against the ad
vice of his friends v\ ho fear that it
would have a tendency to make
the opposition even 11101 e obstinate
and might even injure his chances
for a renomination. Senator Raw
lins of Utah told me the otiier day
that while he had not investigated
the subject as he intended to be
fore the matter came u*> in the sen
ate, he was certainly auspicious of
the vigorous advocacy of Cuban
reciprocity which is being display
ed by newspapers which have al
ways heretofore been the friends
of the trusts and he was at a loss
to understand how the Cubans
themselves could have produced
the widespread sentimen; which
there seems to be in favor of con
cessious to the island.
iue senate has sent to the pres
ident the bill providing for a per
manent census bureau but Mr.
Roosevelt has expressed disap
proval of the section which in
cludes in the civil service all of the
clerks now employed by the bu
reau, not more than one-third of
which will be retaineo in the per
manent organization. He has so
far refused to sign the measure
and has even stated that he felt in
clined to veto it. although it is not
believed that hj \vill \ield to the
inclination.
On Monday Senator Fne com
menced his argument in favor of
the ship subsidy bill and the meas
ure is still under consideration.
Several democratic senators will
present the views that lead them to
oppose the measure but they will
not adopt obstructive tactics and
there is little doubt that it will
pass the upper chamber. The
senate has also passed the irriga
tion bill and has sent it over to the
house where it may not receive as
favorable consideration
Gotham —“I see the weather
man has struck it right in tonight’s
paper ” Church —"You don’t
mean it?” "Yes; he says the wea
ther a year ago today was clear." —
Yonkers Statesman.
Why He Pawned His Coat
“ Can I get a dollar on this? ’
asked a well dressed man as he
tendered a handsome fur lined over
coat to the pawnbroker, says the
Portland Express.
“Well, I should say so,” replied
the money loaner, “and more if jou
want it.”
“No; one dollar’s enough,” was
the man’s reply as he took the
ticket alter the usual preliminaries
had been gone through with
Eater in the day the owner of the
coat came back, paid the pawn
broker the dollar with the legal
charge of 3 cents, and took his
property back.
“Sav,’’ said the man of loans,
handing over the coat regretfully
"You’re a queer customer. Don’t
you knowyou might have left the,
garment here for a month and it
would only have cost you 3 cents,
just what you have paid for the
use of one day?”
“Oh, I didn’t need the dollar,”
answered the customer, and in
proof of his assertion pulled out a
roll of bills, “large enough to
choke a cow,” as a sporting man
would say.
“That beats me,” said the pawn
broker, now thoroughly interested.
“What did you pawn it for then?"
‘ Simply for safe-keeping,”c. oly
replied the customer. “You see,
it’s like this. “It’s a warm day
and I didn’t waut to lug the coat
around with me. I’m not stopping
at a hotel because I’m only in town
between trains. At the depot par
cel room the boy in charge wanted
10 cents for checking it, so I con
cluded to make 7 cents by letting
you take care ot it for me.”
A News Service Without Parallel-
There is ample justification for
the claim made by The Chicago
Record-Herald that its readers en
joy every day in the week,Sundays
included, a news service that i.->
without parallel in range and com
pleteness. The reason is obvious
—the combination of the varied
and extensive facilities of the two
great dailies, The Chicago Record
and The Chicago Times-Herald.
In addition to the independent
news facilities of both papers, The
Record-Herald receives the com
plete news service of the New
York Herald and the Associated
Press, and when it is considered
that its nevrs columns are supple
mented by all the special features
so popular in The Chicago Record
and The Chicago Times Herald, it
will be seen ttiat The Record-Her
ald holds a unique place among
the great newspapers of the Uni
ted States.
Life Guards,
The Life Guards are two regi
ments of cavalry forming part of
the British household troops They
are gallant soldiers, and every loy
al British heart is proud of them.
Not only the King's household,
but yc urs. ours, everybody’s should
have its life guards. The need of
them is especially great when the
greatest foes of life, diseases, find
allies in the very elements,as colds,
influenza, catarrh, the grip and
pneumonia do in the st'ormy month
of March. The best w r ay that we
know of to guard against these dis
eases is to strengthen the system
with Hood’s Sarsaparilla—the
greatest of all life guards. .It
removes the conditions in which
these diseases make their most suc
cessful attack, gives vigor and tone
to all the vital organs and func
tions, and imparts a genial warmth
to the blood. Remember the wea
ker the system the greater the ex
posure to disease. Hood’s Sarsap
arilla makes the system strong.
When the Chinnny*
is choked with soot, the fire lan
guishes and goes out. When the
bronchial tubes are clogged with
phlegm, the flame of life flickers.
Intelligent treatment with Allen’s
Lung Balsam brings up the phlegm,
allays inflammation, stops the
cough and pain in the chest'•aud,
in a word, overcoomes those terri
ble colds which is neglected soon
become consumption.
A drummer stopped over one
night at a middle Georgia hotel
and next morning wrote the fol
lowing on the room wall: “To the
proprietor of this beanery—please
read Isaah 28th chapter and 20th
verse.”
CURE ALL YIUR PURS WITH
Pain-Killer.
A Modicino Choat In lUott.
SIMPLE. SAFE AND QUICK CURE FOR
Cramps, Diarrhoea, Colds,
Coughs, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism.
25 and 50 cant Bottle*.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
BUY ONLY THE GENUINE
PERRY DAVIS’
-SaU tf* 'jttttr
wii llO'! “Gadzooks!” | 1
fell |T queth the king— ~ \r* ll
feii \Va “It’ s no J est to jITVI
m make a man hungry l
‘ ' IIAT,O,I,AL ■ IBCU,T COWPAMY
Pointed Paragraphs.
Chicago News.
A handful of common sense is
worth a bushel of book knowledge.
Fortune sometimes favors a man
for the purpose of destroying him.
People who are always behind
time should be fed on tomato ket
chup.
Nothing is better than a good
woman and nothing is worse than
a bad one.
Habits are like porons plasters—
easy to acquire but hard to get rid
of.
It is easier to criticise the faults
of another than it is to correct
your own.
Rest is the sweet sauce that is
dished up only in connection with
hard labor.
The logical deduction from many
socalled statements of facts is full
100 per cent.
The average man takes more in
terest in what he suspects than in
what he knows.
Milliner’s bills are the tax which
the male sex has to pay for—beau
ty of the females.
Many a girl’s distant manner
may be traced to the fact that she
had onions for dinner.
When you meet a man who is
thoroughly content you see one
whose ambition has gone to seed.
Be charitable. Every ton of
coal given to the poor in this
world will be so much fuel saved
from use in the next.
The usual order of things is re
versed in matrimonial warfare.
First comes the surrender, then
the engagement and last, but not
least, the call to arms.
A FIREMAN’S CLOSE CALL.
*‘l struck to my engine, although
every joint ached and every nerve
was racked with pain,” writes
C. W. Bellamy, a locomotive
fi/eman, of Burlington, lowa, "I
was weak and pale, without any
appetite and all run down. As I
was about to give up, I got a bottle
of Electric Bjtters and, after tak
ing it, I felt as well as I ever did
in my life.” Weak, sickly, run
down people always gain new life,
strength and vigor from their use.
Try them. Satisfaction guaranteed
by Young Bros. Price 50 cents.
The Seventh District.
Home I 1 ree Lance.
The Seventh District Masonic
Convention meets in Rome on May
7th and Bth.
Judge Max Meyerhardt, Grand
Master of Masons of Georgia, will
preside. The other officers of the
convention are S. PL Berry,of Dal
ton, Senior Warden, and C. W.
Keller, of Tallapoosa, Junior War
den.
Judge Meyerhardt has the happy
faculty of making these annual
conventions most attractive, inter
esting and delightful, artd the com
ing session promises to surpass any
heretofore held.
£ Rain and weat \ \ . \
U have liO effect on M y FT? tf?Kf ,Jf Hi
m harness treated f /f/ iT KB
I with Eureka liar- & V
■ ness Oil. It re- -* V
■ sists the damp, ww ' \
U keeps the leath- M * HfST'O'C* rfU
I K
■ do not break, v ' \ H
I No routine. \\A ffljff
& face to chafe \ f///A \ H
H and cut. g
(b aea-, but J- .
R.I wears twice j, Ay f b- y-w
ras long by the Ijttl ' i |
jw use of Fareka Vy— i
SisnAarj Oil /{ \ \tyj \
Cc-pany & ' \
vi.'iGINIA-CAROLINA
CHEMICAL COMPANY,
ATLANTA, GA. RICHMOND,- VA. CHARLESTON, S. C.
Largest Manufacturers of
FERTILIZERS
IN THE SOUTH.
Importers of
PURE GERMAN KAINIT, MURIATE OF POTASH,
NITRATE OF SODA, SULPHATE OF POTASH.
In buying fertilizers it is important, not only to secure goods of estab
lished reputation and high grade, but to buy where
YOUR WANTS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION CAN BE SUPPLIED’.
We are in position, with our unparalleled facilities and our many plants
located all over the territory, to furnish all classes of goods and in such
quantities as buyers desire. When you buy of us, "with our immense
capacity, you know you can get the goods, and all you want of them.
Soa our nearest agent to you, or write us direct.
Address VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
#9~Send lor the Vlrginla-Carolin* Almanac. Free for the asking.
tU ET* The intrepid Associated Press war correspondent, who
JH '<■ was tbuAfil ti. • durlßg the entire fixe
’ Ntim nionih* <*f the cair.paign. Illustrated with photographs Wm
M |• •"J-!|l;SfeAWSttS"'" kt “ by the Author during the light. M
B '</■■■ Tha fJasf £'&r;ssftonal M
SF; m Book or tbo Bap. 1
The tine ste.rv of the famous cruise of the Flying mm
H wS-rfy 'i : 4! •' i'i\£ ;, iadion under Commodore \Yin!ield Scott Fcldey, Includ
‘’ Fp ,/Ov NW ng the b'oekade ami destruction of the Spanish fleet, JW
ffi i OLI. Kbit I lIK llli>rmin. n
Hi i L.VA ) Contain. .11 autograph eminiwment and personal t*
W, ' " ~7 crouni . t the battle b> Uear-Adu.tra. Schley. 3
n bi ( ;l iii" f jfe'A' l ;. "iii --Tlm* fact* of the story of the movements H
ft- .•> . rtf ,ni <.!o-ruti.>itA <-f the (•‘lying Squadron m tIM H
m • .! tiiltot tell. 1 lieu, in this I arc correct.” M
Art hit. -ting narrativ,, ~f fart-, lopn’iin- the - S
l y ; Yri : '-‘Ft. jn aiicd- • vMovement-/’ tlie “Loop;” t)ie “Coaling IB
KS Nb: ;; . : If l*rollem.” and settles conclusively every ad verse ruling |H
of the Court of Inquiry.
fei g PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, when Governor V Tf*t NEW YOPK KERM.D says:—“Mr. 1 I
H 9 ol New York, said:—“Mr. Graham's story is a Graham, in the telfing of facts, leaves tb* 9 ■
* the best accennt I have heard or read of the y reader free to make the deduction that B K
■B I naval fijhtinj durin* the war. It needed just a several naval office s need a Court of In- I^9
a Bs mush courage to co about taking photo- M nuiry to re-estah isii their reputaiiona, if ■
■0 1 graphs as it did to work the |im " M they can be re-established." *
No subject has ever been before the public that has Interested every body as nS
Ml the manut-r In which Admiral Schley has been treated, and the American people H
H demand the full recognition of iho Hero of Sxntlcgo. This book tells
K everything just as it occurred and as the eyewitnesses saw it. book is selling
M like wildfire. Liberal cot -ssinns. Outfit and books now ready. Send sevett vR
U 3-eent stamps fo; cauvassic outfit.. ACT QUICK. Now Is the time to MAKE MONEY. |B
B Price $1.50, $ f .75, $2.2b, $2.75, according to style of binding desired. B
R AGENTS I W. B. OOtiitEY COMPANY
WANTED 1 Solo Publishers, ClllCAGO^^^^r
I‘UIL L m£> |R
8 5E^ R PUhc RYE
02 mmtv ex prepaio.
ffl VV n 101\ L I BpBBRr
l ipj I 1 A/ E T?^ er a? P'' re ,ejght-year-old whiskey of superb quality'
Uf It , 1 ? dtsttHed m Kentucky upon the old fashioned plan,
ff which has never been improved upon. The grain is care
* *. hilly selected and mashed by hand in small tubs-
JKlfi single and double in copper stills, over slow open fires."
MWfe. 1 t rhe result is quality, not quantity. The whiskey is then stored
W ~ r If ! n Government warehouses, where it remains
bond for ei S ht years before being offered for sale ,
„ T DIRECT TO CONSUMER.
.. 0 cut out profits of jobber and retailer, and insure vour eet
tmg a pureum W ini P ulate d whiskey for family and medicinal use.
Test It; if you are not satisfied, return
i rf®| at our expense and we will refund $3.15.
Eiiii&l References: Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, or anv
Express Company. Send money by post-office or express
money onler. <%?-*?. , Q
• I lir Adtfre** all orders to c/*
Southern Distributin' War hos S' | —: %
AIIAAT*. r*. DISTII CERS.
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains ail of the
digestants and digests all kinds of
food. It gives instant relief and never
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. The ’most sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed, ft
prevents format ion of gas on the stom
ach, relieving all distress after eating
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.’
It can’t help
hut do you good
s"repared only bv E. C. T)E W i tt & Cos., Oh icairn.
* sl. bottle contains 2% times the 50c. size/
¥ nowTI
\ Fill the bottles with HIRES. J
\ Drink It now. Every glass- /
\ ful contributes to good /
\ health. Purifies J
\ the blood, clears /
\ the completion, /
V mnkes rosy /
\ checks. Mate /
\ it at home. /
I gallons \; / Chari**
V. . nts. Yx J E. Hires
Dealers, fi Company*
write f, r Malvern,
b* viler, f — 1 Ps,
Ll
ggea
7 --er j
kata
it Jones
on east side
Public Square an elegant
stock of Staple ?nd Fancy
GBOSERIES
and invite the people oi
Carters-, llle and 3artow
county to call aaci see tnem.
You wilt be treated right
and our goods will -be sold
as cheap as you can buy
them anywhere.
DR. CLARK H. GRIFFIN,
DENTIST.
—OFFICE:—
Up Stairs in tha TANARUS, R. Jones Building
CARTEKSVILLE. .DA
Farm Loans Negotiated.
IIIILNER & IIIILNER.
Attorneys at Law,
CARTERSVILLE. GA-
Commercial and Corporation Practice
and Collections.
ORices with Judge T. W. Milner over
Ksnlr >’>f (lartersvil’le.
i< rests with you wuelfirr yon continue the
nerve-killing tobacco kaliit.
remove,* thedesirt (ortobaco, w
out nervou. i.iHres. expel.mco-rf t 8 IM
tine, purifies tt.e blood, A R & :'
etores lost manhood. Bfc B Poxes
f n ** kc 9,.? 0u ! ' lron *-S''ST, 111 *OO,OOO
in ii fc buy
f 1 own druggist) who
H P | vouch for us. Take IfcwrtU
wfH.patli ptlT. ocraistentlr Or.o
?? t>*x. tl, usually cures; 3 boxes, f? M*.
IHiirnntced to cm e, or we refund money.
Remedy Cos., Ctdeafo Baetnai. lew ~
PcmS^l
I—PAINT- 5 !
Remove* all Corns, Bunion* and Warts,
v.thou, pain, speedily and permanently
m All Drusrpists sell ABBOTT'S - '
. East Ixma* Cork Faixt.
LIPPMAtMMIOS.