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This Year Thou Siial Die!
prophecy will certainly he fulfilled in the cases
JL of a number of men and women in Bartow county
before January i 1904.
YOU MAY BE ONE OF THEM.
Look back for one year and count the number who a year
ago had the promise of a long life, and who are now dead!
Have you any better promise now than they had then?
Are you insured? Have you made provision for those de
pendent on you, whose lives will be full of hardship if you neg
ect this provision? If not, delay no longer—attend to it at
011( . e _yOW! Don’t delay. Time passes rapid l y. Regrets for
lost opportunities will not recall them, and it will be too late
when your hour comes to grieve over your neglect and its
inevitable results. Get insured now while you are well.
Call on W. H. Howard, who will insure you in a strong,
reliable old line company that fulfills to the letter every prom
ise. He quick! Act now! Who knows what tomorrow lias in
store for you? But, be assured of this —fate has written for
some of you who read these lines the inexorable decree—
Tali Year Tim Shalt Die!
is 11 Whisper in Your Ear zJhh
I net our prices on Buggies, Surrles and Wagons. We are /j-'t
Brnwded for room and must sell for cash or credit. J
ft: You Kesd Aej of the Following Articles; acUS '
Bjagon, 500 Elberta trees, three two horse plows at cost, eight
Secondhand buegies, blacksmith outfit, regrinder, smelter,
■O-horse boiler, etc. ,
■ We want the privilege of showing you how cheap, for
Bash or credit, we will sell you a Top or Open Buggv, Run-
Bbout. Pony Phieton, Surry, Carriage, Farm Wagon or Harness, Lap Robes
Bud Whips
I if you have not seen the latest improved Farm Wagons, we invite you to call
Bnd examine them. A good note will buy one of them with every piece strictly
Kuannteed.
IRICHT NOW
• Tthe very time of the year to repair and repaint vour buggy oi carriage
Bve have the best force of hands in every department that the country aflords.
B us make you estimates on your work.
J ones Carriage Cos.
LOCAL NEWS
■GN BRIEF
Mr. H. M. Smith, of Rome, came
Dver to spend the day with IDs
ather, Maj. C. H. Smith, last
Sunday.
Mr. H. T. Bradley is at present
11 New York, having left last week
)u his semi-annual trip to market.
Mr. Bradley is a sagacious buyer
nd is now familiar with the
rants of the people of this section
and when purchases are in the big
touse of H. T. Badley & Cos. wiil
eem with bargains such as have
iot before been seen in Carters
rille.
The Home Mission society of the
Methodist church will meet at the
lome of Mrs. J. W. Knight, ou
Monday afternoon, March 9, at
L3O oclock. Scripture lesson:
Acts 6 to 12 chapters inclusive.
t Mr. James E. Price, of Atlanta,
spent Sunday in the city.
Mr. Geo. S. Crouch is making
some improvements on the interior
if his store, putting in new shelv
bg, etc.
Wanted— 1,000 to 1,500 cords of
rood —Cartersville Biick Cos. 2t.
Mr. C. F. Price paid a short visit
0 his family, last week.
Miss Hattie Price vent to Atlan
a Thursday and will spend some
pme with her aunt, Mrs. Alfred
■Truitt.
Mk to Buy Bust's Garden Seed Cheap,
YOONG BROS, Druggists.
can’t afford to wait until your crop matures to learn the quality of
" ! you have planted, therefore don’t waste work and money planting seed
doubtful quality. Buist’s Seeds have von prize medals for Superior
i"iaiity at World’s Fairs and Expositions for 50 years. They cost no more
nail the doubtful and inferior kind.
BEANS.
huproved Speckled Valentine . . 15 cents per quart
barge Yellow Six Weeks . . .15 “
Dwarf German Wax . . .15 “ “ “
i>warf Golden Wax . . . 15 “ “
PEAS.
' hampion of England . . . 15 “ “ “
Eugenia .... . 15 “ “ “
Karly May . . . . . 15 “ *• “
Premier Extra Early . . . 20 “ *•
Barly Morning Star . . . 20 “ “ “
CORN.
Holden Dent .... 5 cents per pint
Southern Snow Flake • ■. 5 “ “
. Extra Early . . . 5 “ “ “
ff '* snia D seed we recommend Buist’s Pictorial Brand. In this brand
- t more and better seed for the money.
YOUNG BROS., Druggists.
Mr. Geo. S. Crouch is spending
a few weeks in New York, pur
chasing his spring stock of dry
goods, and will give his customers
a nice line to select from when his
stock arrives.
Mr. M. H. Cotton, of Cedartown,
was in the city last week visiting
his sister, Mrs. Wm. Cotton.
As our supply of “Berry Big
Ball” and “Louisiana Favorite”
cotton seed is limited we are offer
ing only one bushel of each vari
ety to a customer. —J. E. Field &
Son.
The city court will convene next
Monday, and parties interested
will take due notice and attend the
session.
The numerous friends of the
family of Mr. G. H. Aubrey will
be glad to know that they will re
turn to Cartersville and occupy
their old home on Rowland street.
Misses Rosa and Marian came the
first of the week, and Mrs. Aubrey
and the two little children are ex
pected to return Friday or Satur
day. Cartersville will give them
a warm welcome.
Mr. W. W. Roberts has returned
from Nashville, Tenn., where he
purchased a car load of mules and
horses.
Mr. H. L. Smith and Miss Ella
Donalioo, two of Cartersville’s
well known young people were
married Sunday afternoon at two
o’clock at the home of Dr. W. H.
Felton, near the city. Their many
friends wish for them a long life of
happiness and prosperity.
The first quarterly meeting of
the Methodist church under the
administration of Presiding Elder
Mcßee was held Monday. Rev Mr.
Mcßee is an able preacher and his
discourse Sunday night was listen
ed to with great interest. This was
Mr. Mcßee’s first visit to Calhoun
and he made a most favorable im
pression ou all with whom he came
in contact. —Calhoun Times. *
We sell cotton seed hulls by the
hundred and not by the bale. Try
us and see how you like them that
way. Phone 74. They deliver
them. 2t.
Master J. E. Burt Price, of At
lanta, is spending a few days with
his grandfather, Mr. W. W. Cot
ton.
Our stock of feed stuff is im
mense. Give us orders for what
i you need in this line. —J. K. Field
| & Son.
Mr. C. N. Patterson, of Carters
ville, one of the jolliest salesmen
on the road, was in the city a short
while Tuesday. “Pat” as he famil
iarly known, always has a pleasant
word and hearty handshake for
his friends wherever he fneets
them. —Dallas New Era.
Miss Pearl Goodwin, a charming
young lady of Cartersville, has re
turned to her home after a brief
stay with her sister, Mrs. Mason
Randall. —Rockmart cor. Cedar
town Courier,
Mrs. John S. Leake has been
seriously ill at her home on the
Iron Bridge road for several days,
and her family and friends are
alarmed at her condition. Mr.
Leake’s sister, Mrs. Brandon, is
also quite sick with pneumonia at
the same place.
The stock of goods of S, Fine
will be sold by the trustee, Mr.
Thos. H. Milner, at public sale on
Wednesday, March nth, at the
store.
We do not make a business of
selling matches, but we have a
bargain and must sell them out at
once. Think of the celebrated
“Globe” match being sold at this
price, three gross to the case, 98
cents per gross. —J. E. Field &
Son.
Mr C. D. Smith, who has been
at Alliance Ohio, for several years,
came home for a few days last
week, and left on Sunday morning
for Depew, N. Y., where he has
accepted a position at the Gould
Iron Works.
Mrs. Oscar T. Peeples and
children, of Chattanooga, are visit
ing the family of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. L. S. Muuford.
Why not buy “Swift’s” or
“Armour’s’’ fertilizers from us and
get honest goods that you ca i
afford to pay for? J. E. Field &
Sou.
Judge John W. Akin, of Car
tersville, is receiving considerable
attention from the newspapers as a
probable candiddte for governor at
the end of Governor Terrell’s sec
ond term. —Calhoun Times.
Mr. John Ford, one of Carters
ville’s older residents, died at his
home on Tennessee street last
week, and was buried at Oak Hill
cemetery. He was about sixty
years old and a brother of Mayor
F. M. Ford. He served through
the civil war and made a gallant
and brave soldier. He leaves a
wife and three children.
Daughters of Confederacy will
meet at the lesidence of Mrs. L. S.
Munford, Friday afternoon at three
o’clock, March 6.
George White, one of the prison
ers who escaped jail about two
weeks ago, was captured last week
and tried on the charge of larceny
before Judge Foute. He was sen
tenced to twelve months in the
chain gang and sent to Sugar
Hill. He told Jailor Tinsley that
one of the prisoners who escaped
with him had a key that fit the
jail lock and with this they opened
the door.
March,
April , May
There is a best time for doing
everything—that is, a time when a
thing can be done to the best ad
vantage, most easily and most ef
fectively. Now is the best time
for purifying your blood. Why?
Because your system is now trying
to purity it—you know this by the
pimples and other eruptions that
have come on your face and body.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
and Pills
Are the medicines to take—they do
the work thoroughly and agreeably
and never fail to do it.
Hood’s are the medicines you
have always heard recommended.
‘*l cannot recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla
too highly as a spring medicine. When we
take it in the spring we all feel betterthrough
the summer.” Mbs. S. H. Nial, McCrays, Pa.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla promises to
cure and keeps the promise.
Over-Work Weakens
Your Kidneys.
Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
All the blood in your body passes through
your kidneys once every three minutes.
fThe kidneys are your
blood purifiers, they fil
ter out the waste o
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- SI
es. You may have a
sample bottle by mail Homo of Swamp-Root,
free, also pamphlet telling you how to find
out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer
& Cos., Binghamton. N. Y.
Judge G. W. Hendricks requests
us to say to the justices of the
peace and notaries public of the
county that he has received the
acts of the last legislature, and
would be glad if they would call
and get them. He also has the
acts of several legislatures past
which belong to some of the officers,
and those who have not received
the full set should call on him and
get them.
Mrs. J. B. Conyers and children
axe visiting relatives at Mad.son,
Ga.
A young white boy giving his
name as Walter Thomason, and
his home as Marietta, was arrested
yesterday morning, charged with
stealing a watch and some other
things at Tinsley’s stables. He
came to Cartersville Monday even
ing and spent the night at the
stable, and started out Tuesday
morning with the articles he had
stolen. He was arrested by Mar
shal Henderson, and carried before
Judge Foute. He plead guilty to
the charge, but on account of his
age Judge Foute suspended sen
tence until the boy could communi
cate with his friends at Marietta.
When the ground gets dry .call
at J. H. Gilreath & Sou’s for onion
sets, radish seed, tomato seed, and
any other seed you may want to
plant. The place to get genuine
eastern seed, fresh and no mis
take.
SIOO Keward SIOO.
The readers ot this paper will be
pleased to learn that. there is at least
one dreaded disease that science lias
been able to cure in all its stages and
that is Catarrh, Hall’s Catarrh Cure is
the onlv positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires a con
stitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
cure is taken'internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in do
ing its work. The proprietors have so
much faith in its curative powers, that
they ofler one Hundred Dollars tor any
case that it fails to cure. Send ior list
of testimonials. Addre-s
F. J. CHENEY * CO„ Toledo, O.
Sold by all druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Wliat’s In a Name?
Everything is i < the name v hen .t
comes to Witch Haze halve. E. C.
DeWitt & Cos, of Chica o discov
ert and. some years ago, 1 ow to mate a
salve from Witcc Hazel that is a spe
cific for Piles. For blind, bleeding,
itching and protri ding Piles, eczema,
cuts, burns, brui es and all skin is
eases, HeWitt’s Salve has no equal.
'J his has giv.n rise to numerous
worthle s counterfeits Ask for De
Witt's—the genuine.
Tragedy Averted.
“Just in the nick of time our little
boy was saved” writes Mrs. W. Wat
kins, of Pleasant City, Ohio. liPneu
monia had played sad havoc with
him and a terrible cough set in be
sides Doctors treated him but he
grew worse every day. At length we
tried Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, and our darling was
saved. He’s now sound, and well.”
Everybody ought to know, i's the
the only cure for Coughs, Cold and
all Lung diseases. Guaranteed by
Young Bros,, diuggists,
It Saved His Leg.
P. A D inforth, of LaGrange, Ga.,
suffered for six months with a fright
ful running sore on his leg; but writes
that Buckleu's Arnica Salve wholly
cured it in fiye days. For Ulcers,
Wounds Piles, it’s the best salve ii.
the world. Cure guaranteed. Only
25 cts. Sold by Y T oung Bros.’ drug
gists
POUNDEIIIENS.
FOR COMMISSIONER,
We are authorizes to announce the
name of R. R. Beazley as a candidate
for County Commissioner, to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of J. L.
Irick, at the election ordered for that
purpose.
gr ?. v . • v• - * m,r
■
jf;v . h L"..; • " ■ -- • - ’NI/
:**• Lvv'.'J 'i?JL $ 'K*
“ Swift’s Fertilizers. ”
Blood and Bone soil builders. Always reliable.
It Pays to Use Them.
70 cars—a double header train load sold by us
last season of this one brand If you trade
with us you will g:et good goods and pay your
guano bill cherfully.
WALTER WHITE WALTER WHITE
PRODUCE.
I make a specialty of fresh
country produce
Eggs' 12c cloven
WALTER WHITE WALTER WHITE
FOSTER & EAVES
Have Opened a
NEW GROCERY STORE
at the Hood Building on West Main street, and
will carry a full line of Staple and Fancy Gro
ceries, Supplies and Feed Stuffs.
Mr. J. B. Foster will have charge of the
business and invites his old friends and eus
tomers to call and see them.
" IIIM 1 " 11 1 " ..I U 8
Hobgood Furniture Cos.
~ Having- purchased the
stock ot the Cartersville Ft*r
1 I niture Cos. and moved it to
I I | the corner store of the Bar-
II j I tow House, we are prepar
rajg ? S ec * to urn^s h y° u r wants
Line at reasona t>le prices.
We have added largely to
the stock and have made the prices right. Come to
see us when you want
Furiitß, Carpets, is, Utii&t
Look at This!
J. H. Gilreath & Son, Druggists,
Are offering a complete line of Drugs and Drug: Sun
dries comprising Pharmaceuticals, Proprietary and
Patent Medicines, Stationery, Toilet Soaps, Perfumery,
Glass, Putty, Paints, Painters Oils, Combs, Brushes,
Lamps, Lamp Chimneys, L:mp Oil, Harness and
Lubricating: Oils. A fresh stock of
Buist and Ferry’s
Garden Seeds. All bought for Cash at Lowest
Figures. Can sell you at bottom prices. Call on us —
vve want your trade.
Prescriptions carefully fiilled day or night.
Phone 41.