Newspaper Page Text
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l)li:i> IN SOUTH CAROLINA.
Vlr. Vi’yil Alexander Passes Away Thurs
day. September i.
Mrs. Alexander, wife of Mr.
Virgil Alexander, died at Wilson,
N. C . September i.
With her husband, she had gone
to Wilson last spring, before wl c
time and after they had left Car
tersville a yeai or so ago they had
been living in Atlanta.
The Wilson News has an account
of her death in which its say:
' The death of Mrs. V. M. Alex
ander, occurred at 5 o’clock Thurs
dav morning at her residence on
the corner of Lee street and Maple
wood avenue.
“Deceased had been sick for
about two weeks with fever and
was under the care of a Christian
Science lady physician of Asheville
She refused to have medical atten
tion though her husband insisted
on it.
“Wednesday Mrs Alexander
seemed much better, but about 4
o'clock Thursday morning her hus
band, who was sleeping in an ad
joining room with their two chil
uren heard her labored breathing,
and upon going to her,found that
death was already claiming her for
his own.
“Mr. and Mrs. Alexander came
here from Calhoun, Ga., more than
a >ear ago, the husband to take
charge of this branch of the ‘Geor
gia Aid and Industrial Associa
tion,’ made vacant by the tiagic
death of Percy Jones.
“By his quiet deportment and
attention to business Mr. Alexan
der made friends, while his wife,
the deceased, has won the esteem
of all who have come in contact
with her.
“The interment took place Friday
morning in Maplewook from the
late residence of the deceased at 10
o'clock, and the services were con
ducted by Rev. A. P. Tyler.
“Mrs, Alexander was 41 years
old and leaves a husband and two
children to moutn her departure
“Our sympathy to them in their
distress.”
A Tribute of Lve.
Death is truly sad at any time,
but when the young and pure are
cut off in the springtime of life,
while the horizou is yet radiant
with hope and promise, it is like
the beautiful bud nipped by an un
timely frost eie it had unfolded
into the full-blown flower, to shed
its fragrance on all around.
On July 6, 1904, the angel of
death visited the home of Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Williams, at Stilesbo
ro, Ga., and bore away their loved
daughter. Annie, to the “better
land,” a home where partings nev
er come and no more good-bys are
said. How heart-breaking was the
going away of this sweet young
girl to those left behind —child-
hood friends, fond parents, loving
brothers and sisters, and the dear
grandmother who so faithfully
ministered to her wants.
“Long did they watch beside her bed,
And smoothed the pillows oft.”
These shadows of sorrow and
suffering are mysteries to us now,
but we know that God doeth all
things well, and we feel that our
friend and loved one is safe in the
arms of Jesus, and if we are faith
ful we shall meet and greet her on
the fair, elysian shore some sweet
day.
Annie was a member of the
Presbyterian church, and for three
long years of suffering evinced so
much of Christian fortitude and
sweet resignation that we caunot
doubt her acceptance with God,
and feel sure she is now basking in
the sunlight of His presence. Oft
en earth’s brightest jewels are
earth’s greatest sufferers; but our
Heavenly Father has said, '‘Bless.
’ ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND 1
rPaiwKittev
? Ther** no kind of pain*
'or actie, internal or cxter- 1
that Pain-Killer will I
f not relievo. (
> I
_ look out FOR IMI t 'TIONS AND Sl'B
s~'tutes the genuine bot" 1 ir 1
I REARS The NAME. *
► PERRY OAVIC & SON. ]
el are they who endure, for they
shall receive a crown of life.” In
her long night of affliction, the
brightest stars of Christian graces
were made to appear like a beauti
ful crown encoding her brow, aud
were as sweet incense poured forth
on all around. Then weep not,
dear friends, but look away from
earth’s sorrows to that glad, happy
day when you will meet again your
loved and lost one.
‘Oh, no; she is not lost, the loved and
cherished,
Though slumheiing deep beneath the
churchyard sod;
Tis but the worthless casket lint has
perished,
While she has gone before us unto
God.
“She is not lost, for with a love undying
She gently ho era o'er the mends leli
here,
And toward the pe,ariv gate is ever
striving,
To draw 111-* wandering !eet of those
so dear.
“Oil, no; she is not lost-, the loved and
cherished;
She lives in heaven, to fade and die do
more;
And* when this tenement of clay has
perished
M v som shall greet her on tlie eternal
shore.”
Her friend,
Olue Yarhrough.
“Quick lunch” is one of the
commonest of citv signs. The
sign doesn’t say a healthy lunch
of good food—the character of the
food apparently is not considered,
just a quick lunch, —eat and get
away. Is it any wouder that the
stomach breaks down? Food is
thrown at it, sloppy, indigestible
and innutritious food, very often,
and .he stomach has to do the best
it can. Normally there should be
no need for medical assistance for
the stomach. But the average
method of life is abnormal and
while this continues there will al
ways be a demand for Dr. Pierce’s
Golden- Medicai Discovery, It is
the one medicine which can be
relied on to cure diseases ot the
stomach and other organs or diges
tion and nutrition. It is not a cure
all. It is a medicine designed for
the stomach, and to cure through
the stomach remote diseases which
have their cause in the derange
ment of the stomach aud digestive
and nutritive system. It cores
wheu all else fails.
The Ills That Flesh Is Heir To.
You cannot go many yards any
where in the civilized world with
out seeing plastered on wall or
rock the evidence of the inability
of the human animal to take care
of its health. For are not all these
advertisements ot medicines so
many advertisements of human
short-sightedness, stupidity, self
indulgence?
If in so simple a matter as mere
ly keeping alive there is such dif
ficulty, what wonder that more
complex matters are handled so
badly?—Saturday Evening Post.
THREE JURORS CURED
Of Cholera Morbus with O .e Small
Bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
Mr. ( i. W. Fowler of Hightower, Ala,
relates an experience he had while
serving on a petit jury in a murder
case at Kdwardsville, county seat of
Cleburn county, Alabama. He says:
“While there 1 ate some fresh meat
and some souse meat and it gave -me
cholera morbus in a very severe form.
1 was never more sick in my life and.
sent to the drug store for a certain
cholera mixture, but the druggist sent
me a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarhma Remedy instead,
saying that he had what 1 sent for,
but that this medicine was so much
better he would rather send it to me
in the fix I was in. 1 took one dose
of it and was better in five minutes.
The second dose cured me entirely.
Two fellow jurors were afflicted in
the same manner and one small bottle
cured the three of us.” For sale by
Creene Drug Cos. and M. F. Word.
A SH*talning Diet.
These are the enervating days
when, as somebody has said, men
drop by the sunstroke as if the Day
of fire had dawned. They are fraught
with danger to people whose systems
are poor y sustained; and this leads
us to say, in the interest of the less
robust of our readers, that the full
effeet of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is such
as to suggest the propriety of calling
this medicine something besides a
blood purifier and tonic—say. a sus
taining diet. It makes it much eas
ier to beai; the heat, assures refresh
ing sleep and will without any doubt
avert much sickness at this time of
year.
A Power foe flood.
The pills that are potent in their
action and pleasant in effect are De-
Witt’s Little Early Risers. W. S
Philpot. of Albany, (ia„ says: “Dur
ing a bilious attack I took one. Small
as it was, it did me more good than
calomel, blue mass or any other pill
I ever took, and at the same time ttie
effect was pleasant. Little Early Ris
ers are certainly an ideal pill.” " Sold
by Young Bros, sept
THE NEWS AND COURANT, CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 15, 1904:.
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK ?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everybody who reads the news
papers is sure to know of the wonderful
12 (• n cures made by Dr.
—G-i—rtPj? l j Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
I the great kidney, liver
it bladder remedy.
11 [ h is the great medl
-3*5 cal triumph of the nine
-1 VjJ\ [lj l teenth century; dis-
_____ W covered after years of
'uj Mil scientific research by
f") Dr. Kilmer, the emt
_ _j: Acl-T - * n nt kidney and blad
der specialist, and is
wonderfully successful in promptly curing
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou
bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec
ommended for everything but if you have kid
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found
just the remedy you need. It has beerftested
In so mar.y ways, in hospital work, in private
practice, among the helpless too poor to pur
chase relief and has proved so successful in
every case that a special arrangement has
been made by which all readers of this paper
who have not already tried it, may have e
sample bottle'sent free by mail, also a book
telling more about Swamp-Root and how to
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
When writing mention reading this generoua
offer Jn this paper and iF'T^m
send your address to affT.r.U.
Dr. Kilmer 8c Co..Bing-BferiiKlliiE! l"!.
hamton, N. Y. The
regular fifty cent arid Homo of swamp-Roo*.
dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists.
Aryan Blood in Jstpan,
I feel warranted in proposing
the hypothesis that in the veins of
the Japanese there is a considera
ble amount of Aryan blood. Ihe
process of evolution is indeed won
derful. Consider for a moment
the origins of European nations.
Starting from their birthplace, be
it Asia or Europe, one of the Aryan
“offshoots founded the Persian
kingdom; another built Athens
and Laeaedemon, and became the
Hel euic nation; a third went on to
Italy and reared the city of the
Seven Hills, which grew into Im
perial Rome. A distant colony of
the same race excavated the silver
ore of prehistoric Spain; and, when
we first catch sight of ancient En
gland, we see an Aryan settlement
fishing in wattle canoes and work
ing the tin mines in Cornwall.”
The hypothesis of an Aryan mi
gration into Japan israot mote won
derful. It is consonant with the
genius of the Aryan stock and
with tbe geographical configura
tion of tbe earth connecting India
and Japan. Both eastward and
westward the Aryans moved along
open water routes. — Modern Japan.
Pneumonia and La Grippe.
Itch on human cured in 80 minutes
by Woolforda Sanitary Lotion. This
never fails. Sold by Young Bros,
druggists. 1 yr
Healthy Mother*.
Mothers should always keep in
good bodily health. They owe it to
their Yet it is no uiausual
sight to see a mother, with babe in
arms, coughing violently ami ex
hibiting all tbe symptoms of a con
sumptive tendency. And why slhould
this dangerous condition exist r dan
gerous alike to mother and child,
'\hen Dr. Bosohee's German Syrup
would put a st|> to it at once* No
mother should be without this old
and tried remedy in the houst —for
its timely use will promptly cure any
lung, throat or bronchial trouhie in
herself or her children. The worst
cough or cold can be speedily eured
by German Syrmp; so can hoarseness
and Congestion ol the bronchial tabes.
It makes expectoration easy, and
gives instant relief and refreshing
rest to the cough- racked consumptive.
New trial bottles, 23c.; large size-. 75c,
At druggists D —eow
The surest ami safest remedy for
kidney and bladder diseases is Foley's
Kidney Cure. Greene Drug Cxx
Foley’s Kidney Cure makes kidneys
and bladder right. Don’t delay tak
ing Greene Drug Cos. sept
A Chattanooga Druggist’s Statement.
Robt. J. Miller, Proprietor of the
Read House Drug Store, of Chatta
nooga, Tenn., writes: “There is more
merit in Foley’s Hoigey and Tar than
in any other cough syrup. The calls
for it multiply wonderfully, and we
sell more of it than all other cough
syrups combined.” Greene Drug Cos.
sept
Chronic Bronchitis Cored.
“For ten years I had ehronie bron
chitis so bad that at times I could
not speak above a whisper.” writes
Mr. Joseph Coffman, of Montmoreuci,
Ind. “1 tried all remedies available,
but with no success. Fortunately my
employer suggested that I try Foley’s
Honey and Tar. Its effect was almost
miraculous, and I am now cured of
the disease. On my recommendation
many people have used Foley’s Hou
ey and Tar, and always with satis
action.” Greene Drug Cos. sept
What’s in a Jianiel
Everything is in the name when it
comes to Witch Haze! Salve. E. C.
DeWitt & Cos., of Chicago, di covered
some years ago how to make a salve
from Witch Hazel that is a specific
for Piles. For blind, itching, bleed
ing and protruding Piles, eczema,
cuts, bu. ns, bruises and all skin dis
eases, DeWitt's Salve has no equal.
Tins has given rise to numerous
worthless counterfeits. Ask for De-
Witt's—the genuine. Sold by Young
Bros. sept
Free Trip
TO ROME, GA.
AND RETURN.
Beginning at Once and Ending October 1st v 1904.
In order to give parties living wittiin a radius of 63 miles ot
Rome an opportunity of seeing our big stock of
Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Mattings,
And other goods, we will allow railroad fare both ways to parties
buying goods to the amount of $25.00 or more of us.
Our mammoth stock covers more than 30,000 feet of floor space,
embracing Furniture of every description including latest designs
in Carpets, Rugs, Mattings, Lace and Bobinet Curtains.
Correspondence Soliced. “We trust the people.
HIMM FIIBHITURE CO..
. ROME. GEORGIA.
DeWitt
DeWitt la th* name t took for when
yam go to buy Witch Hazel Salve.
DeWitt’* Witch Hazel Salve i* the
original and only genuine. In fact
DeWttt'sis tha only witch Hazel Salva
Hum is mada from the yadulterated
Witch-Hazel
Mothers are counterfeit* —base imi
tation*. cheap and worthlesa —evan
dangerous. DeWitt'a Witch Hazal Salya
is m specific for Piles; Blind. Bleeding,
Itching and Protruding Piles. Also Cuts.
Bums, Bruises. Sprains, Lacerations.
Contusions. Bolls. Carbuncle*. Eczema,
Tetter. Salt Rheum, and ail other Skin
Diseases.
SALVE
pair*bed it
E-C. DeWitt C Co^CUci|
ILLINOIS CENTRAL
RAILROAD
Direct Route to the
St. Louis Exposition
TWO TRAINS DAILY,
In Conneion with W. * A_R. It. kX.O. k St.l,. Rjr
from V 'da Tit a
l.v Cirtntrillc 10:17 a. Ar St. Louis 7:OS ala
•• 10:00 a., m. Ar St. Louia 7:30 p at
WITH THROUCHSLEEPINC CARS
RRUTE OF THE FAMOUS
"DIXIE FLYER”
Carrying the only morning sleeping car from
Atlanta to St. Lojfe. This car leaves Jackson
ville aally, 8:05 p. Atlanta a. m., giving
you the entire day in St. I.osts to get located.
For rates from .vour city. World's Fair Guide
Book and schedules. Sleeping Car reservations,
also for book showing Hotels and Boarding
hoasee. quoting their rates, write to
FRED D. MILLER,
Travelling Passenger Agent.
Wo. I M. Prvor St. Atlanta, Ca
rtrY KMT T OBACCO SPIT
LJwIN I *nd SMOKE
• ■ ■■■'" —— Your Lifeaway!
You can be cured of any form of tobacco usitip
easily, be made well, strong, magnetic, full o.
new life and vigor by taking HO-TO-OAC,
that makes weak men strong. Many gain
ten pounds in ten days. Over 300,000
cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book
let and advice FREE. Address STERLING
REMEIW CO Chicane or New York. 437
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
■%£*
*fe. Alwavs reliable. Ladles, ask Druggist tot
CHirHEMTEB'j* KNULISII in Red and
tic .and metallic boxes, sealed with blv.e ribbon.
Take no other. Refuse dangerous substi
tutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist,
or send 4e. in stamp., for Partieulara, Testl.
moulds and •• Relief for I.adies." ill Letter,
by return Mall. 10.000 Testimonials. Bold by
all Druggists.
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO,
8100 Madison tqaare. PHILA. Pi,
Msatlss this ssssr.
p
CHILDREN’S FRIEND MOTHER'S JOY
BRONCHODA
Por Throat and Lunffa
CURES
Googbs, Golds, Sore Tbroa? tnd Hoarseness
Absolutely free from Opiates. Narcotics, or other
in’urious substances.
EXPECTORANT ANTISEPTIC LAXATIVE
PLEASANT, HARMLESS, RELIABLE
By Druggists and Dealer* 25c. Per Bottle
SHERROUSE MEDICINE CO. New Orleans, La.
Atlantic Railra
AND
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Rail
To St. Louis and all points West and Northi
THREE SOLID TRAINS DAILY
With Pul|man Palace Sleeping Cars, Atli
to St. Louis without change.
Only through car service, Atlanta to Chi<
without change.
Close connections made at Atlanta with the !
board Air Line Railway, Central of .Georgia R'*’
and the Southern Railway trains.
For map, folders or other information write to!
C. E. HARMAN,
G. P. A. W. & A R. *
Atlanta, f
H. F. SMITH
Traffic Manager.