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LIVER
TROUBLES
“IflndThedford’* Black-Dranght
* a pood medicine for liver disease.
" It cured my *on after he had spent ■
fIOO with doctors. It is all themed- %
icine I take.”—MßS. CAROLINE ■
MARTIN, Parkersburg, W. Va.
If your liver does not act reg- ■
u’arly go to your druggist and
secure a package of Thedford's K
Black-Draucrht and take a dose
tonight. This great family n
medicine frees the constipated H
bowels, stirs un the torpid liver
and causes a healthy secretion ■
of bile. f
Thedford's Black - Draught U
will cleanse the bowels of 1m- H
purities and strengthen the kid- jp
neys. A torpid liver invites B
colds, biliousness, chills and fl
fever and all manner of sick
ness and contagion. Weak kid- r
neys result in Bright’s disease ■
which claims as many victims ■"
as consumption. A 25-cent E
package of Thedford’s Black- E
Draught should always be kept E
in the house. ft
“I used Thedford’s Black- j
Draught for liver and kidney com
plaints and found nothing to excel
it.”—WILLIAM COFFMAN, Mar
blehead, 111.
THIDEFORD’S
BLACK
HRAIICHT
i mm aem w ms ■ a ■
DR. CLARK H. GRIFFIN,
DENTIST.
OFFICE :
Gilreath Building Up Scairs oyer
News and Courant Office.
t'ARTEFSVILLE. .GA
DR. A. B. GREENE,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office and sleeping room over H. T.
Bradley <fc Co’s.
OR. WILLIAM L CASON,
DENTIST.
Office: Over Young Bros. Drug Store.
rA RT LE. CA.
Dr. Howard E. Felton,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office: Gilreath big. up-stairs over
Orjsham’s, Main st. Telephone 207.
Residence: South ave., cor. Leake st.
Telephone 208.
Office hours: Bto 11a. in., 1 to 3 p. m.
5 to 6 p. in.
( ARTERS VILEE, GA.
FINLEY & TALBERT
Attorneys at Law.
OFFICE IN SAM JONES BUILDING,
Cartersville Ga.
Real Estate Insurance
G. H. AUBREY,
Attorney at Law.
Loans Negotiated.
Office in Sam Jones building
\nrti r ohtai a IT. S. aiTforelgri^
imcq Iji mm \
J isg
'' aW
Ims
f Send _.£oVe.; or plioio of invention lor r
r freerej.i. - , on pavmability. For free book, f
r Ho*vtoF*n g, ;tv; writer
* Petents a-u I I v. * ’ litAO to \
ip
||| • lygjj
; ' ®*B|]
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
,
Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist for
JHICBEsfKB’S ENULINH in Red and
metallic boxes, sealed with bl’’e ribbon.
Take no oilier. Hefiine danjferoun lubitl*
■ utioni* and imitations. Buy of your Druggist,
©r send 4e. in stamps for I*rtieular, Te*ti-
and “Relief for LadieN,”
oy return Yiail. 10,000 Testimonials. Bold by
ail Druggists.
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO.
fclOO Madison Square, I*III laA., PA
Mention Uli pspsr.
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUNC LADIES, Roanoke, Va.
Opens Sept. 21, 1903. One of the leading
bcnools tor Young Ladies in the South.
~! ew buildings, pianos and equipments.
' ampus ten acres Grand mountain
scenery in Valiev of Virginia, famed
' or health. European and American
Icache.s. Full course. Conservatory
S'lvantHges in Art, Music ami Elocu
tion. Certificates Wellesley. Students
iron 30 states. For catalogue address
MATTIE P. BARKIS. President,
_ ”'25 8t Itoanoke. Va.
OeWIWs BgJ Salve
For Piles, Burns, Sores.
ECHOES FROM
TIE MEETING
Ofthe Georgia Federation of Wo
men’s Clubs,
HELD LATtLY IN CARTERSVILLE-
High Praise from the “Southern
Woman.” Organ of State Fed
eration.
SEVENTH ANNUAL CONVENTION,
So many and so lingering are
the thanks that are offered the
Cherokee Club by one and all that
it would be superfluous for the
Southern Woman to add one addi
tional word. It is the consensus
of opinion that the last convention
was the best, that t,e program
committee is to be thanked for giv
ing such prominence to the club
reports, which are, to the minds of
many, the very life of the conven
tion. They as far as possible have
been given in this issue of the of
ficial organ. We wish space would
permit us to republish the fine ar
ticles by Marie Alice Phillips, of
the Atlanta Journal, on the Cass
Station Model School ; for surely
it was a rare day m the annals of
the Georgia Federation. The del
egates arrived in their special car
to find carriages waiting to conduct
them the short distance to the
school. On arrival the delighted
guests found the children all at
work in the different industries
taught. Just before luncheon there
were short talks by many of the
inspired visitors. After a repast
which might well be called a feast,
prepared by the ladies of Cass Sta
tion, Mrs. M. L. Johnson tapped
for order and delivered a beautiful
and heartfelt welcome.
Then Mrs. Granger announced
the Massachusetts club women sem
greetings and a check for S6OO to
aid the Georgia women in the work,
which announcement was greeted
with applause. The size of the
check, as much needed as money,
is being considered as of small
value in comparison to the loving,
fraternal thought which prompted
the gift. When the hour came to
depart all did so reluctantly, while
expressing only wonder and praise
for the chairman. Mrs. M. L. John
son, and the teachers that they
have accomplished so much in so
short a space of time. And did
these kind and appreciative visit
ors really know the work, real hard
work, done by that chairman and
the teachers, they would be even
more astonished and more profuse,
were it possible, iu their praise.
Only those who inaugurate an en
tirely new movement know thtf
cost of vital force before success is
attained.
A WORD OF LAST ADMINISTRATION
While all regret that Mrs. Gran
ger, our retiring president, wou’d
not permit us, by re-electing her,
to show the club world our appre
ciation of her unselfish work, yet
no one who knows the amount of
responsibility that falls on a state
president, but understands bow
much she needed rest.
And, indeed, there never has
been, and perhaps never will be,
the nervous strain upon a president
that there has been during the term
just closing.
Mrs. Granger went into office
while the burning question of the
entrance of negro clubs into the
general federation was at fever
heat.
Georgia had announced publicly
that the entrance of the negro clubs
would be the signal for her resig
nation
This position naturally forced
Georgia into the thick of the fight,
and left her to win or lose single
handed the battle lor the entire
south and many of the states north
and west-
To conquer and still maintain
the unity of the national organiza
tion was the problem which met
Mrs. Granger at the opening of
her administration. She solved
the problem, won the battle and
maintained the unity of the nation
al body while placing Georgia in
the first rank among the state fed
erations.
But this was not accomplished
without Georgia s president and
all who worked with her feeling
the great responsibility, and when
the strain was over the nervous
tension under which they bad
worked.
Hardly had rest been acquired
trom the above event before the
Georgia child labor problem loom
ed up, and oniy those who worked
beside Georgia’s* president, and
thechairmen interested, know what
a vast amount of correspondence
that question involved. To meet,
alas! after all with defeat.
While there is no one who re
grets more sincerely Mrs. Granger’s
ill-health, from friendship to her
self, than does the State editor, vet
no one understands better what
the responsibility has been| than
she who bore lesser ones of tue
same nature during former terms.
It is a source of gratification
that Mrs. Granger will serve as
General Federation secretary for
Georgia. Thus the federation will
not lose her active aid iu the many
new movements which will neces
sarily come up during the next ad
ministration.
. A Rural Financier
“l suppose you’d like to make
about 1,000 per cent, on a little in
vestment while you’re in the citv,”
remarked the confidence man, says
the Chicago Post.
“You bet I would,” replied the
financier from the farm.
“Well, how much can you put
into the deal?”
The farmer gave the matter
thoughtful consideration.
“Well,” he said at last, “if it’s a
sure thing there’s no use goin’ too
strong at the start. I’ll invest a
dime right now, and then I’ll in
vest the profit on that when I get
it, an’ so on up as long as it
works.”
A Good Name.
From personal experience I testify
that DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are
unequalled as a liver pill. They are
rightly named because they give
strength and energy and do their
work with ease.—W. T. Easton, Bo
erne, lexas. Thousands of people
are using these tiny little pills in
preference to all others, because they
are so pleasant and effectual. They
cure biliousness, torpid liver, jaun
dice, sick headache,constipation, etc.
They do not purge and weaken, but
cleanse and strengthen. Sold by M.
F. Word. Nov.
Chamberlain's Stomach and Livi i
Tablets are becoming a favorite for
stomach troubles and constipation.
For sale by J. H. Gilreath & Son.
Nov
There’s No Particular Secret
About making flour; and yet, given
the same mill same machinery and
same wheat, no two millers will make
flour exactly alike Besides the tech
nical skill, there’s a “knack” in
making flour, and Bransford’s uiller
has it to an exceptional degree.
That’s one reason why “Clifton”
proves so distressingly popular that,
w’herever it is sold, competitors are
obliged to recognize it as a standard
and offer their flour as “just as good.”
Stanford Brothcrs,
FosTeß & EAves.
Only Makes a Bad Matter Worse
Perhaps you have never thought of
it, but the fact must be apparent to
every one that constipation is caused
by a lack of water in the system, and
the use of drastic cathartics like the
old-fashioned pills only makes a bad
matter worse. Chamberlain’s Stom
ach and Liver Tablets are much more
mild and gentle in their effect, and
when the proper dose is taken their
action is so natural that one can
hardly realize it is the effect of a med
icine. Try a25 cent bottle of them.
For sale by J. H. Gilreat ■ & Son.
Nov
Mother Gray’® 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. They never fail.
At all duiggists, 25 cents. Sample
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le
Roy. N. Y.
Notice.
The books for collection of city
tax for the year 1903 will be
opened at the council chamber on
the 15th day of October, 1903.
Call early and pay same.
J. A. Henderson,
City Marshal.
The Best Wheat Oit'y Used.
A bull or bear market has nothing
to do with the selection of the wheat
from which Bransford’s ‘‘Clifton”
flour is made. It requires the best
wheat to keep the flour up to its
standard, and it is bought regardless
of the price. The reputation of
“Clifton” flour has been gained by
fifteen years of uniform excellence.
FosTeß & EAVes,
Stanford Brothcrs.
Wanted—Wood.
We want to contract with re
sponsible parties to furnish us
1500 to 2000 cords of wood, deliv
ered at our yard or on cars of w. &
A. Ry. for next season,
tf Cartersville Brick Cos.
lfajfcl.Ml.j.UUi;l.ldil
Ua LUKtS Y. HEKfc ALL ELSE FAILS. _ 83
Best CoukU Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by driuTtrists.
Half the one-way rate phis *2.00 will
take you to any point in the “Great
Southwest” via Rock Island System
When and exactly how much from Car
tersyille are questions S. L. Parrot-,
I'. P. A., Atlanta, Ga-, will take pleas
ure in answering. Nov 15
DON’T GUT THIN
get fat; get nice 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 colds 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.
n ic* s
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, ft pp//s on every
Seven Million boxes sold in post 12 months. This Signature, I>OX. 25c.
For S-immer
Complaints
of babies end children, there’s
no remedy so safe, prompt uutl
sure, as
Pitt’s
Carminative
For many years It has been
regarded by the medical pro
fession as well as the public
at large as the best medicine
for diarrhoea, cholera infan
tum, colic, etc-, and for teeth
ing children.
25 cts. at all Druggists
Cured of Piles At’er 40 Years.
Mr. C. Haney, of Geneva, ()., had
the piles for 40 years. Doctors and
dollars could do him no lasting good.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured
him permanently. Invaluable for
cuts, burns, bruises, sprains, lac
erations, eczema, tetter, salt rheum
and ah other skin diseases Look
for the name DeWitt on the package,
all others are cheap, worthless ooun
terfeits. Sold by M. F. Word. Nov
CASTORIA,
Bears th„ /} The Kind You Have Always Bought
Johnson’s Tonic does in a day wnai
slow Quinine cannot do in ten davs.
Its splendid mires aro in striking con
trast with the feeble cures made bv qui
nine.
If you are utterly wretched, take a
thorough dose of Johnson’s I’omc and
driye out every trace of malarial poi
soning The wise insure their lives and
the wiser insure their health by using
Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic. It
costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if
it does not
FROM SOUTH AFRICA.
Nfew Way of Usins Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy.
Mr. Arthur Chapman, writihg from
Durban, Natal, South Africa, says:
“Asa proof that Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy is a cure suitable for
old and young, I pen you the follow
ing: A neighbor of mine had a child
just over two months old. It had a
very bad cough, and the parents did
not know what to give it. I suggest
ed that if they would get a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and
put some upon the dummy teat, the
baby was sucking it woi Id no doubt
cure the child. This they did, and
brought about a quick relief and
cured the baby.” This remedy is for
sale by J. H. Gilreath & Son.
Bed-Waving ana atl Bladder and
Troubles
Quickly relieved and permanently cur
nd by Dr. Keener's •‘in-con-ti-nink.”
eamlpe tree. Address Dr. Kesner
Remedy Cos., Lock Box 466, Atlanta. Ga
56281
A Scientific Discovery.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does for the
stomach that which it is unable to
do for itself, even when but slightly
disordered or overloaded. Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure supplies the natural
juices of digestion and does the work
of the stomach, relaxing the nervous
tension, while the inflamed muscles
of that organ are allowed to rest and
heal. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digesta
what you eat, and enables the stom
ach and digestive organs to trans
form all food into rich, red blood.
Sold by M. F. word. Nov.
If troubled with a weak digestion
try Cliambei lain’s Stomach an
Liver Tablets. They will do yod
ood. For ale by J. H. Gilreath u
gon oct&
• JL A. •
Bears the The Kind Yon -iaß Ao/ays Bonjjß
Signature
tuc pdcbtcot nrrcD nr tuc vmm
iiiL c uiiLHiLoi’jrrLn ur iul ichiu
8/ie WEEKLY CONSTITU TION \ j|| fgjjj.
Circulation Over 150,000 I
ReSUNNY SOUTH, Weekly/ for
Circulation Over 100,000 l
/ Only
Ghomas E. Watson's
Life of THOMAS JEFFERSON lA B AJJ
And TWO Estimates at the CASH I _
SIO,OOO COTTON CONTEST /T w
TShe WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
Is the world’s greatest and most widely read week
ly newspaper—the farmer’s friend, the woman’s
companion, the children’s joy—one dollar a year
Xshe SUNNY SOUTH
Is the recognized standard Southern Literary week
ly—devoted to Fiction, Romance. Literature anc
Household reading especially adapted to the fireside
—fifty cents a year. . . .
f— :■■■■■ := = :v.: -.T.-r= *
LIFE and TIMES of THOMAS JEFFERSON
By Hon. Thomas E. Watson, written for The Weekly Constitution as the
first volume of Watson’s History of the United States, the greatest of all
of Watson’s great Histories. The Life of Jefferson was begun in The
Weekly Constitution In July—being published weekly and to be completed
between now and Christmas. All subscribers to The Weekly Constitution
at SI,OO, or to both The Weekly Constitution and The Sunny South at
51.25 for the tw’o, will be sent FREE, upon request made accompanying
r-ulnscription, a complete publication of all the back installments oi
this great history, which should be in every household. You thus get tw
invaluable weekly periodicals, one news, the other fiction ami literature—
and in addition, a publication of all back installments of this GREAT history
bringing yon to the date of your subscription—all for the trifle of $1.25.
$10,000.00 PORT RECEIPTS CONTEST
Is upon the total receipts op cotton at all U. S. Ports from 1 Sept., 1903, t<
12 January, 1904, both inclusive. It is offered only by the Constitution an.!
not iu connection with any newspaper syudicate, and hence Is limited to the
Cons'ltution’s Circulation.
The prizes are $3,000.00 for the exact or nearest to exact figures,
$1,500.00 for the next best, $500.00 for the next, $200.00 for next, and
$125.00 for the next best estimate, for five next nearest $50.00 each, 10
next $25.00 each, 20 next $15.00 each, 50 next $7.50 each and ion
next best estimates SI.OO eagh. Total of set prizes $7,000.00. IN AD
DITION $1,000.00 in five 9200.00 prizes for the best estimates in live
monthly sections of contest and $2,000 in two great consolation oilers foi
500 bales and 1,000 bales each way from exact figures.
Th* Statistics covering the contest for last few years aro i
Total port receipts September 1 to 12th
cotton ,f following Janaary, both iocluelT.:
1897-1898 - 0,070,773
I 898-1899 0,359,1 78
I 899-1 900 4,201,305
1900-1901 4,840,751
1901 -t 902 5,2 79,507
1902-1903 5,315,879
4 —~
WRITE BY THE NEXT MAIL if additional particulars wanted, or, whal
Is better, send subscription remittance, with estimates, direct by money order
or registered mall to THE CONSTITUTION. Atlanta. Ca.
"ass'* Early Risers
The famous little pills.
Itch on human cured in ;i<) minutes
by Woolfords Sanitary Lotion. This
never fails. Sold by Young Bros,,
druggists i yr .
sloo—Dr. E. Detchon’s Anti-Diure
tic may be worth to you more than
SIOO if you have a child who soils bed
ding from incontinence of water
during sleep. Cures old and young
alike. It arrests the trouble at once
sl. Sold by Young Bros ’ druggists.
Cartersvile, Ga i yr.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine
Tablets. All druggists refund the
money if it fails to cure. E. W.
Groves’ signature is on each box.
Price 25 cents.
KodoS Dyspepsia Oui j
Farming Implements for Sale.
One Superior Drill, two Disc Plows,
two Oliver Chilled Plows, two Smooth
ing Harrows, two Disc Harrows; tii'ty
Hogs,all sizes. All implements used
only t o seasons.
Appwat Stiles’ place, or write me at
Cartely lie. Will be sold cheap.
rsvi J. H. Hood
|
KttdoS Dyspepsia C^re
Oi'Aftst* w’iat von
Kellef In six Hours
Distressing Kidney and Bladdei
Disease relieved in six hours by “New
.Great South American Kidney Cure.”
,Itisag r eat surprise on account of
its exceeding promptne s in relieving
pain in bladder, kidneys and back, in
male or female Relieves retention
of water almost immediately. If you
wan* quick relief aud cure this is the
reinedv. Sold oy Young Bros’ drug
gists. Cartersville. Ga. 1 yr.
Some Reasons
Why You Should Insist on Having
EUREXS HARNESS OIL
Unequaled by any other.
Renders hard leather soft.
E-s]>ecially prepared.
Keeps oui water.
A heavy bodied oil.
Hn .*,?w~ ~x .-x
HiL fiviOb
An excellent preservative.
Reduces cost of you-- harness.
Mever burns the leather; its
Efficiency is increased.
Secures best service.
Stitches kept from breaking.
Oil
|s sold in all
Localities ~
MnMiif'v*tnre<! by
Standard Oil Company*