The news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1901, March 13, 1901, Image 2

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nmmmhain Saved me from an Opteratfoit. ’* Hospitals in our great cities are sad places to visit. '* Three-fourths of the patients lying on those snow-white beds are women and girls. Why should this be the case ? Because they have neglected themselves. Every one of these patients in the hospital beds had plenty of warning in that bearing-down feeling, pain at the left or right of the womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back. All of these things are indications of an unhealthy condition of the ovaries or w omb. What a terrifying thought! these poor souls are lying there on those hospital beds awaiting a fearful operation. Do not drag along at home or in your place of employ ment until you are obliged to go to the hospital and submit to an examination and possible operation. Build up the female system, cure the derangements which have signified them selves by danger signals, and remember that Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of Women from the hospital. Read the letter here published with the full consent of the waiter, and see how she escaped the knife by a faithful reliance on Mrs. Pinkham's advice and the consistent treatment of her medicines. Mrs. Knapp tells of her Great Gratitude. „ !' Mrs - I’inkham I have received much benefit from using vour Vegetable t ompound and Sanative Wash. After my child was born, blood ■■ poison set in, which left me with granulated in- Bflammation of the womb and congested ovaries. I had suffered from suppressed and painful menstruation from a girl. The doctors toid me the ovaries would have to be removed. I took treatment two years to escape an operation, but still remained in miserable health in both body and mind, expecting to part with my reason with each coming month. After using one bottle of the Compound, I became entirely rid of the trouble in my head. I continued to use your remedies until cured. “ The last nine months have been passed in perfect good health. This, I know, I owe en tirely to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound. MRS. r M vmapd " M y is great indeed to the one to * * ‘■- ■ -J whom so many .women owe their health and .. . . .... . happiness.”— Mbs. F. M. Knapp, 1528 Kinnic klnnic Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. fS C Ilf Ann ° win K to the fact that some skeptical BL. 1 m ill H SO ant* W® Anil people have from time to time questioned KBi N4 I IB the genuinenessuf the testimonial letters “HSSlitllSSßsSi! .... we are constantly publishing, we have ■ lilllll deposited with the National City Bank, of I.ynn, Mass R= 000 SI BK Is 611 * hlch w . IU . be l ,aid to aay Person who will show that the above Iff TOW mil? tyhW testimonial is not genuine, or was published before obtaining the writer a special permission.—Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co’ Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften thegums. reduces inflamma tion, allays paiu, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and luring.—Wm. O. Ekdkley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1000. Head l’rof. S. A. "Weltmeb’s advertisement m this paper. It should be of interest to you. UNDER THE SNOW. Ghastly Truths Revealed on the Disap pearance ot Winter’s White Mantle. Deadly dangers lurk in the ground ! left bare by the departing snow. All Winter long there have been accumu- 1 lating deadly disease germs. These have been protected and kept alive by the covering of snow and now. with the first warm days, these death-bringing microbes are awakened by the rays of the sun, and as the ground dries they are carried to all corners of the community in the dust that is blown everywhere by the Spring winds. The human body at this time is par ticularly susceptible to these germs, especially the rerrrs ef fevers. The system has been depleted by the fore going Winter. The blcod is sluggish and filled with impurities. The nerves have not recovo- ed from the tension they have been under for the past months. The stomach, the bowels, the kidreys, the liver are all at their worst. It is, therefore, not strange that these germs c? disease find fertile ground in which to thrive, flourish and develop into deadly ills. . Spring Is the time of year when one should fear an attack of fever, espe cially when the system is depleted.one should dread anv severeillness. Th vitality is at a low ebb. 'There is less power of resistance to throw off di sease, and it is cn this account that fatalities are so much greater during the Spring" mon*'”, than at any other time of the year. There is but cn* way to ward off such dangers, and that is to fortify , Mention Ihic In writing to odrertitsrs The first fire bricks in the United States were manufactured in Baltimore in 1827. \ ICecqrit Of almost a century has proven that Crab (Irchard Water is a reliable specific for Hick Headache. Dyspepsia and Constipation. Give it a trial. the human body so that it will be come impregnable to the germs of in vading disease. To do this take Dr. Greene’s Ner vura blood and nerve remedy. It will build you up quickly. It will re-estab lish your waning appetite, it will give you restful nights of sleep. It will give, vim and vigor to the nerves, and it will dispel all existing poisons that have accumulated in the body besides counteracting the effects of others that may accumulate. Following is an instance that will illustrate the wonderful power of Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Sheriff Jonas T.* Stevens, who is sheriff of Hyde Park, Vt., says:—“l have used Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy especially as a blood purifier. I had a very severe humor on my arms, accompanied by a very bad itching, so severe that I could not sleep nights, causing me great incon venience by the loss of sleep by the itching. A friend advised me to take Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood ami nerve remedy, which I did with the most satisfactory results# for the trouble has entirely disappeared, and I can now rest comfortably nights and have none of my former misery from the burning, itching sensations.” Remember Dr. Greene’s advice will be given to any one desiring samfe ab solutely free if thev will write or call upon him at his office, 35 W. 14th St., New York City. .llHlTiiomason’s Eva Water THE WEEKLY NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA. "BRITISH GREED,” SAYS MORGAN Is Obstacle In the Way of Building Canal. PLAUDITS DISPLEASE TEDDY He Calls an Abrupt Halt to Gal lery Demonstrations In His Honor. In the senate Wednesday Senator Morgan, of Alabama, addressed that body on his resolution to abrogate the Clayton-Buhver treaty. “There cannot be anything more precious today to Great Britain,” said Mr. Morgan, “than to prevent the con struction of the Nicaragua canal. If Great Britain by her ‘golden’ silence j can prevent that, her profits will con- j tinue and the longer she can do that, j the greater will be her profits on the j Suez canal. She has remained as silent ' as the Sphinx which looks out upon j the Nile and upon the desert, and she ! seems to be looking out upon a desert of wasted American opportunities and, j sad to say, American honor. Great ! Britain is still silent. He called her silence “golden” be cause he asserted, Great Britain through Liverpool, which was the commercial center of the world, was being enriched because of the lack of the Nicaragua canal. With some feeling in referring to the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, the senator said: “We make no compromise with Great Britain on that subject. We will make no concession to Great Brit ain in relation to the treaty. What we shall do with it (and some of our peo ple are opposed even to that) is that we shall declare it abrogated. “If the vote on my resolution could be taken today it would inform the president of the United States that he has no two-thirds majority in the sen ate to adopt any compromise he may make with Great Britain. If it is the purpose of Great Britain to still look for delay she will not get it. If it be her determination to pick a quarrel with us about it, she will find the United States can muster at least half the number of men who voted for the president in the last election—fighting men. “And she will find, when that war terminates, that the steel band w'hich binds the throne in London with Australia and India and passes through Canada will have been rent in twain, and with its severance down will go the empire. She will find that her possessions in the Caribbean sea have lapsed. She will find that she has overtaxed our patience. She has start ed with anew king and upon a new* career that will break up the empire and reduce the king to the sovereignty of his ow n island. “Does uot Great Britain suppose she can escape from the terrors of the existence of the situation and the prospective situation everywhere aud that she can find a favorable opportu nity to display her military powers against the United States?” Mr. Morgan said he did not boast of the power of the United States in money, men or valor, but he was thoroughly conscious of them and gloried iu that consciousness, because he knew when the supreme moments should come and* aDy power in the world should undertake to bridle the United States by placing such re straints upon her sovereignty as were contained in the Clayton-Bulwer treaty the American people would re sist to the bitter end. “And that resistance,” he exclaimed j vehemently, “will mean the wiping out of any power on earth that under takes the job.” Without concluding his speech, Mr. Morgan yielded the floor, and at 2:45 o’clock, on motion of Mr. Warren, of Wyoming, the senate went into execu tive session, adjourning fifteen min utes later. ROOSEVELT SHOWS DISPLEASURE. When the senate convened the gal leries were packed with people, a ma jority of whom, as on recent days, were composed of visitors to the city. Promptly at noon Vice President Roorevelt entered the chamber. As he stepped forward to the desk to call the senate to order a burst of spontaneous applause rang through the galleries. With evident manifestations of his disapproval, the vice president seized his gavel and rapped sharply twice for order. Glancing sternly around the galleries he said, aud the words cut through the chamber like a knife: “If there is any applause or disor der the sergeant-at-arms*wi!l clear the galleries. ” The chaplain, in his invocation, re ferred w ith deep pathos to the sorrow which has fallen upon the junior sen ator from Alabama, Mr. Pettus. and his wife m the death of their only son. Inquiry from Mr, Teller brought out the fact that it was not the intention of Mr. Platt, of Connecticut, to press his cloture resolution duriug the pres ent session. CARNEGIE’S GiFi ACCEPTED. Montgomery City Council Provides Site For Public Library. Recently Mr. Andrew Carnegie of fered Montgomery, Ala., $50,000 fora public library building if the city would provide a site and 85,000 a year for support. The last legislature granted permission to the city to make an appropriation and the city council Thursday evening unanimously ac- PURI NA FEE D KEEP* *WL ES Pep Day. Jy St. Lou is. Mo. BARRED FROM FLOOR. Hawaiian Legislature Expells Ter ritorial Sccretiry and Agent Of Pre‘ident M ;Kin!ey. * Advices from Honolulu, via San Francisco, state that the first territo rial legislature of Hawaii began its sessions in Honolulu on February 20th and has been in session since. J. A. Akina, independent, a Haw aiian-Chinese member from the island ' of Kauaai, was elected speaker of the ; house and Dr. Nicholas Russell, of Hawaii, a white man, was chosen pre- ' sident of the senate. On the third day Secretary of the Territory Cooper was ordered out of the house apd escorted by the ser geant at arms. Acting umjrr the sec tion of the territorial act which pro vides that he “shall record and pre serve the laws and proceedings of the legislature,” Secretary Cooper took a place on the floor of the house with a stenographer to secure a record of the proceedings. Representative Beckley, independ ent, offered a resolution requiring him to leave. The resolution set forth that his presence on the floor was a violation of the rule that the three de partments of government—executive, judicial and legislative—must be kept separate, and it was urged in debate that Governor Dole had put Cooper where he was with a view to intimi dating members. Cooper was declared by Republi cans to be present as a representative of President McKinley, as he had been ordered to transmit a report to Washington, but even this plea did not deter the independents. After s long debate they passed the Bleckley resolution by a vote of 20 to 9—the nine beiDg all the Republicans in the house. • With both houses' iu control of the independent home rule party and con taining a majority of native Hawaii ans, the legislature has already been the scene of some remarkable proceed ings and the end of the session prom ises to see many very radical measures adopted, among those to which the controlling pariy is committed being a liquor dispensary law, a taxation sys tem that will be a combination of sin gle tax and income tax doctrines, au election law based on representation and a law excluding from the territory all persons who may arrive afflicted with consumption or leprosy. The question of languages is another source of trouble. The organic act says that all proceedings of the legis lature shall be conducted in English. Half of the members cannot speak En glish, and Hawaiian interpreters have been employed in both houses. It is the opinion of some lawyers that this will invalidate all proceedings and this matter will come before tue courts when some laws have been passed. Chief Justice Frear and Governor Dole, who were members of the com mission that adopted the rule in ques tion, have expressed the opinion that it intended to provide that no language but English should be spoken. The independents claim that laws and reso lutions, etc., shall be in English. Every measure and every speech is be ing given in both English and Ha waiian. FLORIDA CATTLE KING DEAD. Judge Ziba King Passes Away at His Home In Arcadia. Judge Ziba King died in Arcadia, Fla., Thursday afternoon of Bright’s disease after au illness of two months, aged sixty-four. He leaves a wife and eight children. He was the president of the First National Bank of Arcadia, vice president of the Exchange Na tional Bank, of Tampa, and director of the National Bank of the State of Florida, Jacksonville. He was an ex member of the state senate and house of representatives, and the largest cat tle owner in Florida. * MORE SYMPATHIZERS DEPORTED Gen. McArthur Getting Rid of ObjiC tionabie People In Philippines. General MacArthur has notified the war department by mail he has ordered the deportation of a number of per sons “whose overt acts have clearly revealed them as in aid of or in sym pathy with the insurrection and the irregular guerrilla warfare by which it is being maintained and whose con tinued residence in the Philippine islands is, in every essential regard, inimical to the pacification thereof.” HOT SENATE SESSION ► Roosevelt’s First Day of Business Develops Lively Debate Over Proposed Cloture Rule. A New York Dispatch says: John E. Searles, the well known financier and at present iu the general corpora tion and financial business, made an assignment Tuesday for the benefit of creditors to Edward F. Dwight. Mr. Searles is president and direc tor of the American Cotton Companv, American Type Founders Company and the Hyatt Roller Bearing Com pany, vice president and director of the Minneapolis and St. Louis Rail road Company, International Trust Company and Union Traction and Elec tric Company, chairman and director of the Baltimore, Chesapeake & Atlantic railway, secretary end derector of the Brooklyn Cooperage Company, di rector of the American Coffee Compa ny American Sugar Refining Compa ny, Preferred Accident Insurance Company, Western National Bank, Sprague Electric Company, Terminal Warehouse Company and Universal Lasting Company, trustee American Depost and Loan Company, American Surety Company, Brooklyn Institute of Arts aud Sciences, Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, People’s Trust Company of Brooklyn, Terminal lmprovemert Company and Mercantile Trust Company, member Lawyers’ Club and Down Town Asso ciation. Charles E. Hughes, of council for the assignee, said: “The assignment of Mr. Searles was made for the protection of his general creditors in order that the in terest of all might be fully protected. His assets are believed to be largely in excess of his liabilities, but include a considerable amount of unlisted se curities which were not readily con vertible into cash to meet obligations maturing at this time. The assign ment in no way affects the American Cotton company or any other corpora tion with which Mr. Searles is con nected.” The Journal of Commerce estimates Mr. Searles’ liabilities anywhere from 81,090,000 to §2,000,000. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought FINALE IN THE HOUSE. Closing Hours Occupied In Passing Congratulatory Resolutions. A Washington special says: The house closed its session at 11:45 o’clock Monday amid a demonstration from its members following the delivery of an impressive valedictory by Speaker Henderson. For an hour the body had been in the throes of dissolution, with little business to perform. The galleries were almost empty, for there were too many sights and scenes with out the building, and too many re strictions on admission to permit an overflowing assemblage. Shortly before the closing hour Mr. Richardson, of Tennessee, the minor ity leader, presented resolutions testi fying the high regard for the house for the able, impartial and dignified manner in which Speaker Henderson and administered the duties of presid ing officer. The resolution was un animously adopted by a rising vote. Then the speaker delivered his closing words to the house, thanking the members for their co-operation through a busy and eventful congress. He concluded at 11:45 and announced the sessions of the house for the fifty-sixth congress adjourned. Teething Then the baby is most like ly nervous, and fretful, and doesn’t gain in weight. Scott 9 s Emulsion is the best food and medicine for teething babies. They gain from the start. SenU fer a free sample. SCOTT & BOWSE, Chemists, 409-41S Pearl Street, New York. 50c. and $1.00; all druggists. DEBTS DOWN SEARLES Prominent New York Financier Makes Assignment to Protect His Creditors. A Washington specialsays: Tues day’s session of the senate was prac tically the first of the fifty-seventh congress, that of Monday being brief and routiue in character. Au im mense throng crowded the galleries. Vice President Roosevelt’s appear ance evoked a great waive of applause from the galleries. After the reading of the journal the vice president ad ministered the oath of office to Mr. Nelson, of Minnesota, and Mr. Me- Laurin, of Mississippi. (Senators Allison and Cockrell were named by Mr. Roosevelt as a cofhmit tee to notify the president that a quorum of the senate was in session aud ready to receive any messages. Mr. Platt, of Connectieutt, gave no tice of an amendment to the senate rules, which he proposed to offer, to “limit debate upon any bill or resolu tion to reasonable limits, iu order that the majority of the body may be able to do business in the senate.” Mr. Cockrell suggested, in a spirit of facetiousness, that the reasons for the adoption of the proposed rules bad ceased to exist in the se: ate, and, therefore, it was not necessary now to adopt it. “They will arise again,” remarked Mr. Platt. f Mr. Mason, of Illinois, who, since his advent to the senate, four years ago, has been insistent that the rules of the body be changed so as to enable the majority to transact business, gave notice of an amendment he proposed to offer to the amendment of Mr. Platt. He insisted that the time should be fixed in the rule for the limiting of debate. What is a “rea sonable time,” he declared, was a question that would be discussed for twelve months in the senate, which, he said, is the only legislative body in the world in which the majority is controlled by the minority. Referring to the defeat of the river aud harbor bill, in the closing hours of the session just expired, he declared that the ma jority was as helpless to prevent the defeat of the measure as was the leg islature of Kansas. The amendment ht would propose, he said, was a modification of the Reed rules of the house of representatives. He said his amendment would enable the opposition to any measure to have ample time for its discussion, but lim ited the time of debate to proper length. Mr. Bacon, of Georgia, utterly dis approved of the proposed change in the rules, and declared his purpose to do everything in his power to defeat the amendment, He warned the sen ate that if the proposed rule wlls adopted it soon would go to the whole length, and the spectacle would be presented of a congress in which not odlv the house, but the senate would be dominated by one or two men. Mr. Wellington, of Maryland, chal lenged the propriety of the presenta tion of such a proposition as that of Mr. Platt at the extraordinary session of the senate and declared his purpose later to raise against it a point of or der. Speaking of the defeat of the river aud harbor bill, to which he said he had contributed, he declared: “This proposed rule is offered as a means of revenge.” Mr. Platt, interrupting him, said: “I will say to the senator that I was not in favor of the passage of the river and harbor measure.” Mr. Wellington replied that he was delighted tc know the senato# (Mr. Platt) was not in the conspiracy to se cure the enactment of the bill. He declared that while he was arguing against it, in accordance with his right as a senator, he was threatened unless he ceased his opposition that a cloture rule would be presented aud its adopt ion insisted upon. “I desire to say, said he, “that I bow to no party and to no man when my conscience tells me that a measure is wrong.” After Mr. Morgan had offered a% resolution declaring the Clayton-Bul wer treaty between the United Staten and Great Britain abrogated, the senate, at 1:05 o’clock, on motion of Mr. Hoar, went into executive session and nt 1:45 p. m. adjourned. During the session the president sent in his list of renominated cabinet members which was promptly ratified. Rockefeller DonatesAo Vassar. John D. Rockefeller hns given SIIO,OOO to Yassar college for a new dormitory. <