Newspaper Page Text
M W7
••II &9\
O ■ \&k
s 1 have had occasion' to use your I
L lack- Draught Stock and Poultry Medi-1
cine and am pleased to say that ! never
used anything for stock that gave half as
and satisfaction. I heartily recom
mend it to ail owners of stock.
J. B. BucSiiEß, St. Louis, Mo.
Sick stock or poultry should not
eat cheap stock food any more than
persons should expect to be
~J fvd by food. When your stock
I :u!< | poultry are sick give themmed
i kDon’t stuff them withworth
i -s stock foods. Unload the bowels
.... l stir up the torpid liver and the
a! will he cured, if it be possi
to cure it. Black-Draught Stock
and Poultry Medicine unloads the
Vowels and stirs up the torpid liver.
!It cures every malady of stock if
! taken in lime. Secure a 25-cent can
, f iack-Draught Stock and Poultry
Medicine and it will pay for itself ten
Horses work better. Cows
rriv.- more milk. Hogs gain flesh:
And hens ky more eegs. It solves the
problem of making as much blood,
flesh, and energy as possible out of
the smallest amount of food con
i sinned- Buy a can from your dealer.
50 YEARS*
' >• ■ '
■ ' ■:•'■
7 ■ . Marks
*1 .V-r 1 Designs
rrppMr* Copyrights &c
An rone sencllng a sketch one' description mav
.nicV- ' " , i' on our opinion tree whether an
n probiihly patentable. Coromunica
■7- .e tldentlal. Handbook on Patents
i‘>ni free. oldest agency for securing patents.
V -h. taken 1 1. rough Munn & Cos. receive
IDfAjU notice , without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A hanrWomeiv illustrated weekly. Largest car
r < f at: v acientiOc journal. Terms, *8 o
year'- four months, sl. Soidbyall newsdealers-
HUNN Cos 361 Broadway, New York
liiduch Office. 025 F St.. Washington. D. C.
£. & W. sl. K. iLXaA
Taking Eftect April 13,1902.
l<o 1 PASSENGEB—W No 2 1 ABBESQEB—EAS
DAILY. DAILY.
CartersYllle 10.15 am. Lv pellCitj 9.00 Hr
sGlesboro..lo.3B “ " OoulGlty 9.25“
Tavi’rsY’le. 10.52 “ i “ R&Klana 11.00 "
Ro'ckmart. .11.16 “ ! “ Duke’a 12?18 pn
Grady 11.83 “ : “ Piedmont.... 2.14
<'-lart jwn.. 12.15 pm i “ Warner’s..... 2.52 “
Warner’s .12.42 pm “ Oedartown.. 3.17“
Piedmont,.. 1.20 “ j "Grady .... 3.47 “
Puke’s 3.00 “ I “ Kockmart... 4.00 “
Ragland. .. 4.06“ “ Tayl’rsv’te.. 4.30 “
i "Hi ( itv.... 4,59 “ ! “ Stiiesboro... 445 “ *
PeilCitv.. 5.25 “ iAr.Oartersvilie.. 5.15“
So 3 Passenger—WestiNo 4 Passenger— Easi
DAILY. | DAILY.
LvCartersvllle.. 5.00 pm Lv Cedartown...B.oo atr
"Stiiesboro... 6.13 “ “ Grady 8.19 “
" Taylorsville 6.23 “ I “ Rorkmart.. ..8.39 “
“ Roekmart... 0.42 “ ! “ Taylorsville..9.oo
" Grady 7.02 “ I “ Stiiesboro 9.10
irCedartown... 7,20 ‘y |Ar atCartersville BSO
'■ '8 promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign
J • -ief, - hor phowj ciinvention for
1 •> ! ' l-o.i on paientp.bili'.j. Star free book,
1 •'ecr.r/VL sr.g *ls|hvft write
Die li i” iwi niiwtl iii iiiMMiaiiilw'ilroriWr~i
I DR. CLARK 11. GRIFFIN,
IDENTIST.
I —OFFICE :
I kilreath Building Up Stairs oyer
■ Gresham’s.
I CARTEFSVILLE. ,GA
1 Pi "‘ysician and Surgeon.
■ e iUll ‘ sleeping room over 11. T.
■ Bradley & Co’s.
fL WILLIAM L. CASON,
I DENTIST-
B' <f ‘' LAver Young Bros.’ Drug Store.
■ C*RT£RSVILLE. ca.
I fOUSEQ^IGN
V and 'vj Painting
I Wall Tinting,
I Hanging,
■interior Decorations.
■ or< lers at N. A. Bradley*® Shop.
L W. DYER.
■ u °v.l33m 0 •
(Continued from Second Page.)
of his favorite residence. Sans Souci.
The king offered to buy it from its
owner that he might tear it away.
The owner said he would not sell
it. Pie was informed that the kiug
would order it pulled down. The
owner replied, “ The king may do
this,” and quietly folding his arms,
but there are laws in Prussia,” and
at once commenced suit against the
king, for in his anger had ordered
the old mill torn away. The result of
the case was a judgment in favor
of the owner against the king,
compelling the king to rebuild the
mill and pay all damages. The
king was moitiffed but had the no
bility of soul to say of the judgment
of the court, ‘‘l am glad to fi.id
that just laws and upright judges
exist in tny kingdom.”ln after years
when the king had died, and the
old miller too, and the kingdom as
well as the mill passed to other
hands by right of inheritance, the
son of the old dead miller becom
ing financially embarrassed offered
to sell the old mill to the; then,
king of Prussia that it might be
torn away, so that the view from
the palace would not be obstructed.
The king wrote a letter in reply,
saying: “My Dear Neighbor, I
cannot allow you to sell the mill,
it must remain in your possession
as long as one "member of your
family exists; for it belongs to the
history of Prussia. I lament, how
ever, to hear that you are in cir
cumstances of embarrassment, and
therefore send you one hundred
pounds sterling to arrange your af
fairs in the hope that this sum will
be sufficient for the purpose. Con
sider me always your affectionate
neighbor,
Frederick William.
Today, we enter these walls for
the first time, with oar briefs and
our clients.
W.e do not, we will not forget the
past and all its precious memories
but we appreciate the present
moment, and all that the dedica
tion of this magnificent temple of
justice augers for the future of our
grand old county.
To the c/iunty officers of Bartow
who planned and built this beauti
ful temple, you have honored the
men and women who as pioneers-of
our Christian civilization, laid so
well and so deep, the foundations
of the future for their children in
the erection •of this magnificent
court house. The day will come,
the age is already here, when their
children and children’s children
will honor you for your noble work.
Fellow citizens, these men have
been at work for the good of their
country. The result of their labor
is ready for our use and enjoyment.
They are entitled to our highest
honor. It was Bolingbroke who
said these words:'* Neither Mon
taigne in writing his essays nor
Descartes in building new worlds,
nor Burnet in framing an ante de
luvian earth, no, nor Newton in
discovering and establishing the
true laws of nature on experience
and a sublime geometry, felt more
intellectual joys than he feels who
is a real patriot, and bends all the
force of his understanding, and
directs all his thoughts aud actions
to the good of his country.”
In some measure these good men
who have planned and built for us,
surely feel this jov, and their con
stituents rejoice with them.
But I have talked over "my time.
I wish the audience could join me
in singing that grand old national
anthem.
“My county 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee, I sing.
Land where our fathers died.
Land of the Pilgrim’s ride
From every mountain side
Let freedom ring.
My native country, thee,
Land of the noble free
Thy name I love,
I love thv rocks and rills, ,
The woods and templed hills
My heart with rapture thrills
Like that above.
Let music swell the breeze.
And ring from all the trees,
Sweet freedoms sings:
Let mortal tongue awake,
Let all that breathe partake
Let rocks, their silence break,
The sou: and prolong.
Our father's God: to thee,
Author of liberty,
To thee we sing.
Long may our land be bright,
With feedom’s holy light,
Protect us by thy might
Our (tod, our king.
A FIREMAN’S CLOSE CALL.
“I struck to my engine, although
every joint ached and everv nerve
was racked with pain,” writes
C. W. Bellamy, a locomotive
fireman, of Burlington, lowa, ”1
was weak and pale, without any
appetite and all run down. As I
was about to give up, I got a bottle
of Electric Bitters 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.
KodoS Dyspepsia
Otecsth what you eat*
NIXON KILLED STRATON-
Governor Offers a Reward for the
M urderer.
Atlanta, Jan. B.—Gov. Terrell
to-day offered a reward of $l5O for
the arrest of Robert Nixon, who
last night at Varnell, in Whitfield
county, shot and killed W. D.
itraton, an engineer on the South
ern railroad.
Nixon was a brakeman on the
train, and when ordered to perform
a certain duty by the engineer, be
cajne surly and refused. As the
engineer started for him, Nixon
drew his pistol and killed him.
The negro made his escape into
Alabama.
At the request of a committee
from the Order of Railway Engin
eers, the governor this afternoon
offered the reward, The body of
the dead man was brought to At
lanta to-night and will be buried
to-morrow.
Don’t believe anybody who tells
ycu that you need drastic drugs
that purge and gripe when you are
slightly constipated or bilious
There is a medicine that is pleas
ant to take, easy and mild in act
ion, but absolutely thorough in
effect and a month’s treatment costs
a quarter. It is Ramon’s Liver
Pills and Tonic Pellets. All good
druggists sell it.
SAYS HE WAS TORTURED
“I suffered such pain from corns
1 could hardly walk,” writes H’
Robinson, Hillsborough, 111., “but
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve completely
cured them.” Acts like magic on
sprains, bruises, cuts, sores, scalds
burns, boils, ulcers. Perfect healer
of skin diseases and piles. Cure
guaranteed by Young Bros. 25c.
SVSonsy to loan.
1 am authorized to make
application for the loan of
money on real estate
through the Georgia Loan
& Trust Cos., of Macon, Ga.
Terms -reasonable.
T. C. MILNER,
■ Attorney at Law.
World’s fcrreat Fever Medicine
Tonic does in a day what
slow Quinine cannot do in ten days.
Its splendid eurcs are in striking con
trast with the feeble cures made by qui
nine.
If you are utterly wretched, tak9 a
thorough dose of Johnson’s Tonic and
drive out every trace of malarial poi
soning. The wise insure their lives and
the wiser insure their health bv using
Johnson’s Chill and JtVv.er Tonic, it
costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if
it does not.
Read the following from B. H.
Johnson, Many Springs, Mo.: “I
have used Ramon’s Liver Pills and
Tonic Pellets for biliousness, gen
eral dehility and pains in the back
aiid side, and they gave me speedy
and lasting relief.” The entir°
treatment, ten Liver Pills and fif
teen Tonic Pellets costs only 25
cents. One a dose, course a cure;
trial dose free.
The Guest’s Napkin Ring.
A pretty napkin ring for the use
of the “stranger within the gates” is
made of linen embroidered in any
pretty design and tied together with
ribbon matching the embroidered
flower in color. Take a piece of
heavy linen about 7 or 8 inches long
and 2 inches wide, have it stamped
or sketch a pretty spray of flowers
on it, embroider in colors and in
each end embroider two eyelets the
same shade as the buttonholed edge.
V A.
§m <*> y
JNiyf
FATHERS, DO YOU KNOW
the many so-called birth medicines, and
most remedies for women in the treatment
of her delicate organs, contain more 01
less opium, morphine and Strychnine?
Do You Know that in most countries
druggists are-not permitted to sell narcot
ics without labeling them poisons ?
Do You Know that you should not
take internally any medicine ior the
pain accompanying pregnancy.
Do You Know that Mother’s Friend
is applied externally only?
Do You Know that pother’s Friend
is a celebrated prescription, and that it
has been in use Over forty years, and that
each bottle of the genuine bears the name
of The liradfield Regulator Cos. ?
Do you know that when you use this
remedy during the period of gestation
that you will be free of pain and beai
healthy, heJrty and clever children ?
Well, these things are worth knowing.
They are facts. Of druggists at SI.OO.
Don’t be persuaded to try a substitute.
Our^ little book “Motherhood” free.
IHE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
A LITTLE NONSENSE.
Samantha Slabb’s Grateful Acknowl
edgment.
“I hadn’t expected this!” ex
claimed the elderly' spinster, with,
emotion. “I shall certainly have to
send her something in return.”
Sitting down to her little writing
desk, she impulsively dashed off the
following note to her distant rela
tive :
“Miss Jane Squallop—Madam:
You may have thought you had dis
guised your handwriting, but I rec
ognized it the moment I saw the en
velope, and I knew what it con
tained even before I opened it. A
woman that will wreak her spite
against another woman by sending
her a comic valentine is a despicable
person, and all the meaner for doing
it in such a sneaking, anonymous
way. I have the honor to be, madam,
yours with mighty little respect, Sa
mantha Slahb.
“P. S. —The scrawny old maid with
the corkscrew curls and long nose
whose picture you send me looks a
million times more like you than it
does like me. S. S. ' —Chicago Trib
une.
A CtrrJc’-i Tip. .
t Ur/.-, ~lKlpli!
; ‘P
it
lif.
He (eautiously)—What would you
say if I should ask you to he my
wife ?
She (more eautiously)—Why don’t
you ask me and find out ?
A Process of Reasoning.
“That was a great speech yon
made to the jury.”
“Yes,” replied the member of the
bar, “but they convicted my man.”
“One of the jurymen explained
that fact to me. He and liis col
leagues put their heads together and
concluded that there must be some
thing wrong about the prisoner or
he wouldn’t have felt it necessary to
hire so expensive a lawyer.”—Wash
ington Star.
Puzzled by the Discrimination.
“Mammy,” said Pickaninny Jim,
“kin Santy Claus see, in de dahk,
same as a eat ?”
“I dunno, chile,” answered his
mother. “What makes you ’spicion
dat he could ?”
“He nehber makes no mistake an’
gibs me none of dem rockin’ horses
an’ steam injines like what de white
chillum gits.”
A Wish.
“I wish,” said the rabbit who
found himself im the boa constric
tor’s cage, “that the Monroe doc
trine prevailed in this menagerie.”
“What do you mean ?” inquired
his snakeship.
“I wouldn’t mind getting a good
scare now and then if I could only
be guaranteed, against being swal
lowed alive.”
A Doubter.
“And do you never wish to experi
ence love’s young dream ?” asked the
romantic young married woman of
her bachelor brother.
“No, sir,” replied he, “for, you
know, dreams go by contraries.”—
Detroit Free Press.
Wonderful.
“szo! Miss Alary, dey tell me dat
you shall tell my gharaeter by my
handt.”
“Well, to begin with, you’re a
German” —
“Ach, it is vonderful!”—Tit-Bits.
Puzzled Him Too.
Mrs. Wayback—Such a man as
you don’t deserve to have a wife.
Air. Wayback—Exactly, M’ria.
I’ve wondered for years what I have
ever done to deserve this.—Leslie’s
Weekly.
The Brute’s Retort.
Mrs. Prissims—Oh, but I got tak
en in when I married you, you
wretch!
Mr. Prissims—Yes; out of the
cold. —Newark News.
Gems.
Mrs. Bondhold—Where do you
buv vour coal now ?
M rs. Gold rocks —Why, at the
jeweler’s, of course.—lndianapolis
News.
S.GROFULJ SUB
.I bequeath, to my children Scrofula with all its
attendant horrors, humiliation and suffering. This is a
strange legacy to leave to posterity ; a heavy burden to Wr jH
place upon the shoulders of the young. \V
This treacherous disease dwarfs the body and hinders [
the growth and development of the faculties, and the (2 „)Uy
child born of blood poison, or scrofula-tainted parentage, \1 ££
is poorly equipped for life’s duties. ’
Scrofula is a disease with numerous and varied Jj
symptoms; enlarged glands or tumors about the neck
and armpits, catarrh of the head, weak eyes and dreadful BSp!
skin eruptions upon different parts of the body show the
presence of tubercular or scrofulous matter in the blood. This dangerous
and stealthy disease entrenches itself securely in the system and attacks
the bones and tissues, destroys the red corpuscles of the blood, resulting in
white swelling, a pallid, waxy appearance of the skin, loss of strength and
a gradual wasting away of the body.
S. S. S. combines both purifying and tonic properties, and is guaran
tee‘l entirely vegetable, making it the ideal remedy in
(Qi fQi all scrofulous affections. It purifies the deteriorated
blood, makes it rich and strong and a complete and
permanent cure is soon effected. S. S. S. improves
Q ie digestion and assimilation of food, restores the
lost properties to the blood and quickens the circulation, bringing a healthy
color to the skin and vigor to the weak and emaciated body. *.
Write us about your case and our physicians will cheerfully advise and
help you in every possible way to regain your health. Book on blood and
ekiu diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
Jk tkvjW./ k:-f> . ' i ;i
IIW w/ • "Ar. V:]
a * . v fr v - - -y.; \
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|. ■- .2. * -■ ; '•-W 1
D. ■zsir-tgnr ■■.v' weer-’ ...u. -A
i&taiiii
SHORTEST RG&YC r.rs: COLA :I£T TSSME
TJ -
st. Lorn® Ai- n t west,
PULLMAN ■'SLEEPER'" ATLAL ’ \ \I ST LOT’IA
- 1 ttSVSWEGT*
PUT SLT-r.I'EP.3 ATLANTA TO CHICAGO
UEf’ TSUI~j immiUi rsd tmmm
PULLMAN SLEEP ERA ATLANTA 'I 6 J OUISVILLE AND
CINCIKNATI Vv'TTliOi’T CHANCE.
Oh@ap ilefes to fee: i; sna Texas
ALL-RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES TO
NEW YORK /.'LL A I,’Z LAST
TOURIST RATES V3 JUS. TX’.T'Si
For Schedules, Rates, Maps or any Railroad inform itLav, call upon'or write to
}. W. THOMAS, Jr., H. F. SMITH, LHAS. C. HARMAN,
General Manager, Trade Ear-.a-.% r.er.erc.l Pass. Agent,
Nashville. Tenn. f- • Atlanta. Ga
How Can I Keep Up with
the Times ?
IT is pretty hard to keep well informed on the
political news, the scientific news, the literary
news, the educational movements, the great
business developments, the hundreds of interesting
and valuable articles in the hundreds of excellent
magazines. About the only way it can be done by
the average busy man and woman is to read a
magazine like “ The Review of Reviews,” and, as
it is the only magazine of the sort, it is a good
thing to send $2.50 for a year’s subscription.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT says:
“ I know that through its columns views have been pre
se led to me that I could not otherwise have had access to;
be. use all earnest and thoughtful men, no matter how widely
their ideas diverge, are given free utterance in its columns.”
EX-PRESIDENT GROVER CLEVELAND says:
“ I consider it a very valuable addition to my library. **
The Review of Reviews Cos.
13 Astor Place, New York
Read The Review of Reviews
WORKING 24 HOURS A DAY.
There’s no rest for those tireless
little workers Dr. King’s New
Life Pills. Millions are always
busy, curing Torpid Liver, Jaun
dice, Biliousness, Fever and Ague.
They banish Sick Headache, drive
out Malaria. Never gripe or weaken
Small, taste nice, work wonders.
Try them. 25c at Young Bros.
CASTOR IA
For Infants aud Children.
Ilie Kind Yen Slava Always Bcnglrt
DON’T GET THIN
get fat; get'iiiee and plump, there is
safety in plumpness.
Summer has tried your foodworks;
winter is coming to try your breath
mill. Fall is the time to brace your
self.
But weather is tricky; lookout!
Lookout for cblds especially.
Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil is*’
the subtlest of helps. It is food, the
easiest food in the world; it is more
than food, it helps you digest your
food, and get more nutriment from it.
Don’t get thin, there is safety in
plumpness. Man. woman, and child.
Mother Gray’s Sweet.
Powders for Children,
Successfully used bv Mother Gray,
nurse in the Children’s Home in New
York, cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach,
Teething Disorders, move and regulate
the Bowels and destroy Worms. Over
30,000 testimonials. Th:v uerer fail, At
ail druggist, 25c. Sample FREE. Ad
dress Allen S. Olmsted Y.