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Now is the Time!
E, "H< Unrip oiid Dysentery
Is Easily Cured by
4POREA CHOLERA CURE
We guarantee this medicine do just what is claim
ed for it or the money for it will gladly be refunded.
Try a Bottle, Only Cents.
YOUNo BROS..Druggists.
PRICES RIGHT NOW.
Columbia Bicycles SIOO to $125.
Other makes down to the cheapest terms on good paper.
Buggies front the very cheapest to the best. Wagons, harness and repairs at
HOW IS THIS FOR THE CASH?
Hover wheels painted, tired, bolted, and your boxes put in, $12.50, $15.00,
*l7 50 $20.00, $22.50.
*■ standard wheels, SIO.OO, $12.50, $15,00, $17.50.
Sew shafts finished $3.50 to $5.00.
. poles finished $o(Xl to $15.00,
Putin shaft, according to grade, SI.OO, $125, $1.50.
Shrinking tires when tnere are no bolts, 40c. Bolted tires nOc.
Painting $2.50 to $15.00 for buggies. Carriages, price according to size.
\U work done right. Come, we are the people. We can work oyer your
lii.iroy at or about your own price.
R. H. JONES & SONS M’F’G GO.
LOW PRICES
Given to all on Everything
Balance of the Month at
18. CUN YUS'
Furniture Store.
k
You can secure a Big
by buying your
Furniture of A. B. Cunyus.
CHEAP, MEDIUM,
AND
Fine Furniture
Ban be bought in Carters
viile at Prices that will
please all by call early on
fi. B. GUNYiiS.
Every Sale will be an ad
vertisement. Stock com
plete. Headquarters for
Everybody coming to Car
tersville. Respctfully,
A.B. CUNYUS
WHY IS IT
That yon will pay fancy prices for poor
whisky when you can buy good
Pure Old Corn
Whisky at $2.00 per gallon at Dave
Steinhe'iner’s. Fine old
SYS WHISKY
at $.300 per gallon. Send your orders to
the Old Reliable.
DAVE STEIMIEIMER,
40 Wall Street. - - Atlanta, Oa
NOTICE !
W. L. Bolt’s Jewelry Store
will he continued under the manage
ment of
AY. E. AELISOX,
who is a competent workman, and will
give satisfaction in all work entrusted
to him. Your patronage solicited, and
I highly recommend him to the public.
I am verv respectfully,
W. L, BOLT.
W.E. ALLISON, Proprietor,
Cartersville, Ga.
CITY AFFAIRS.
Horae News Carefully Collected
and Condensed.
LOCAL NOTES BY THE WAY
Various Happenings and Doings Briefly Fe
corded—Personal and Social Notes—
This, That and the Other
Where is the stovepipe hat,
The collar, tiie cravat,
Our fathers sported
When erst they courted
(In days of yore)
The maids who wore
The bustle and the hoop?
—All in the soup.
Just where the old fogy will be
who in this progressive day and
time attempts to do business with
out that commonly accepted prere
quisite to success, advertising.
The glorious fourth has come and
gone.
Col. John W. Akin went down to
the Gate City Monday.
Miss Leila Durham is on a visit
So relatives at Greensboro.
Rev. Sam P. Jones left last Mon
day on a trio to Kentucky.
Mrs. W. C. Griffin and children
are visiting relatives in Rome this
week.
Dr. W. C. Griffin went up to Re
saca in response to a professional
call yesterday.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Dobbs is now blessed by the pres
ence of anew hoy.
Miss Mary Henderson, of Ligon,
is visiting friends and relatives in
the city this week.
Our clever young friend Frank
Satterfield left the city Tuesday on
a trip to New York.
Mr. Edgar McAfee, of Atlanta,
was in the city Sunday, the guest
of the Misses Griffin.
The cotton crop has not suffered
from the drv weather, and now
looks in line condition.
Mrs. O. B. Jenkins went up to
Chattanooga on the fourth, where
she will spend a week.
Mr. Elam Christian, of Atlanta,
was in the city shaking hands with
old friends on the fourth.
Mr. Robert Pritchett, of Atlanta,
has been spending several days
with his mother in this city.
Miss Anna Mell Edmondson, of
LaGrange, Ga., is visiting the city,
the guest of Mrs. J. G. Greene.
Mr. Houston Hardwick, of the
First National bank, of Cedartown,
visited Cartersville yesterday.
Mrs. C. H. Smith went down to
Atlanta Monday, to see her brother,
Mr. Hutchins, who is very low.
There are too many people who
only listen to the sermon for their
neighbors when they go to church.
Miss Louis Munford returned
home Monday from a delightful trip
to Rome, Summerville and Gads
den.
Summer visitors trom the low
country are sprinkled around con
siderably in this section this sea
son.
Mrs. D. B. Freeman and son
Robert spends the last three days of
this week with relatives in Cal
houn.
Miss Minnie Lee Arnold from
Ford, in this county, has been
spending several days this week in
Cartersville. Miss Arnold is writ
ing some very fine verse these days
and bids fair to have her splendid
merits in this line find a broad re
eognetion. She is the guesf of the
Misses Griffin.
The many friends of Deputy
Sheriff A. M. Franklin will regret
to learn that his condition is no
better.
It is a great tiling in both public
and private affairs to have the habit
of looking on the bright side of
things.
Miss Sallie Heyward leaves this
week for Columbia, Term., where
she goes to spend the summer with
an uncle.
Col. Robert Swain returned Mon
day from Gordon county, where he
has been resting and recuperating
tor a week.
Mrs. G. S. Tumlin, of LaGrange,
who has been paying a visit to her
mother, Mrs. Gilreath, returned
home Tuesday.
Messrs. Gus Quillian, Tom Wal
ker and Frank Stover, of Atlanta’s
Cartersville contingent, spent Sun
day in the city.
Miss Leila Kendrick, of Ring
gold, who has been for some time
the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Gerald
Griffin, has returned home.
Mrs. G. H. Gilreath and Miss
Frankie Gilreath, of Cartersville,
were in the city a short while yes
terday.—Rome Tribune 3t)th.
Miss Myrtie Cason left Tuesday
morning for Atlanta, where she
goes to make a several weeks visit
to her sister, Mrs. R. P. Horton.
Misses Justine and Allie Erwin,
two beautiful and intelligent young
ladies of Atlanta, are the guests of
Mrs. J. W. Vaughan for awhile.
Miss Pittard, of Cartersville, and
Miss Wilson, of Atlanta, passed
through the city yesterday en route
for Summerville. —Rome Tribune
i 30th.
Mrs. Fain, of Atlanta, with her
children, is expected in the city the
latter part of the week, to visit her
sisters, Mrs, W. C. Baker and Mrs.
H. H. Hall.
Send us the names of your visi
tors, when they come and when
they go, and when you go and when
you return, and you will do the
editor a favor.
Miss Abbie Baker of Tampa, Fla.,
who has been visiting Mrs. M. V.
B. Ake, at Cedartown, on her re
turn this week, spent a day with
Mrs. 11. A. Chapman.
Rev. Thaddeus Pickett is still
continuing his meeting at the Bap
tist church. Good crowds continue
to attend the services and a great
deal of interest has been manifes
ted,
When you see a young man and
woman walking down the street,
leaning on each other like a pair of
badly-matched oxen, it is a pretty
good sign that they are bent on
consolidation.
Mr. Cooper Cobb is running in
the mail service on the East and
West Railroad, in the place of Mr.
Waiter Hampton, who has been
enjoying a short rest at his home
in Piedmont.
The announcement of Mr. W. B.
for tax collector will be
found in this issue. Mr. Brooksher
is a good citizen and competent to
fill the office and will doubtless re
ceive a good support.
Marshal A. B. Watkins on Mon
day .arrested the wife of John Sud
deth, living in the western suburbs,
for selling liquor. She implicated
a man from Stilesboro as the one
who furnished her with liquor.
If you would have your printing
done in a first class manner and at
low prices bring it to this office.
We guarantee satisfaction on every
job. Home pride, if nothing else,
should deter you from sending your
orders away.
Thursday and Friday last were
the hottest days of the year so far,
and in fact were hotter than known
here in several years past. The
thermometer registered 99 in the
shade, and there was scarcely a
breeze astir.
Messrs. Cobb Caldwell and St.
Julien Christian, two elegant young
gentlemen from Atlanta, came up
last Sunday and went out to the
home of Capt. and Mrs. T. J. Lyon,
where they were the guests tor the
day of Miss Cora Lyon.
Gentlemen who expect to become
candidates for office should not too
long delay making their announce
ments in our columns. The people
like to know as soon as possible all
the names between which they
must choose in casting their bal
lots.
Dr. Howard Felton a few days
since came home from Rome, where
lie has been practicing medicine tor
a year or more, and has hung out
his shingle in our city. Dr. Felton
possesses many friends in the com
munity who wish for him a lucra
tive practice.
Rev. E. I). McDougall returned a
few days ago from Brookhaven,
Miss., where he went on a visit to
relatives. He expresses himself as
having had an enjoyable trip, bar
ring the heat and dust which were
oppressive in the extreme some
days during his trip.
SCHEUER BROS.
Anything ancl Everything
At Actual
New York Cost.
Well, it is so, and if interested, it will pay you to look
through this stook.
We must reduce our stock.
Sales for the month of June were light and a heavy
July and August business is absolutely necessary to get
our stock in shape for another season.
No old styles but clean fresh merchandise are offered.
Nothing offered for a profit.
A getting rid of .stuff is what we are after.
Every dav is a grand bargain day. Come and see us.
XSCHEUER BROSF
J. U. TURNER,
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER,
I wish to say to my friends and the public generally, that I am now prepared
to turn out all work in my line in best possible manner. And after thanking you
for your liberal patronage and kind encouragement in the past, I shall with re
newed energy, heartily endeavor to merit your continued favors.
Yours respectfully,
J. h. TURNER,
With Turner & Son, ist door Below Howard’s Bank,
CARTERSVILLE, CA.
Miss Hattie Hix has gone to Sum
merville to visit relatives and
friends.
A small blaze on the west side of
town, which proved to be the well
house and woodshed of Mr. John
Crow, living at a place belonging to
Mr. John Stover, on Church street,
brought out the fire department on
yesterday morning. The blaze was
extinguished by the aid of buckets
before the firemen arrived.
An exchange says “the water
wheel can only keep the machinery
of the mill in operation as long as
the stream which turns it keeps
moving. So with advertising. If
you cease to advertise you take
away the power that drives busi
ness in your direction, and thus
like the wheel, it comes to a stand
still.”
Mr. John 11. Cobb announces his
name this week as a candidate for
county treasurer. Mr. Cobb is the
present incumbent, by appointment
made by the ordinary after his fath
er’s death. The appointment has
been generally accepted as a most
suitable one. Mr. Cobb has expe
rience, and this added to his hon
esty and fidelity to his duties,
makes him a most acceptable offi
cer.
Printer’s Ink makes this timely
suggestion: “The summer’s adver
tisingcan be made profitable if pro
per precaution and skill he exer
cised in conducting it. The people
are ready to avail themselves of of
fers which appear to present means
of economizing. And the merchant
who will advertise an article that is
really serviceable, at a price consis
tent with the times, will find that
he will get a good share of the
money that is spent. The man
who fails to advertise this summer
will find it a most dreary season.”
Miss Mary Foute, who has been
the guest of Miss Laura Roberts for
some time, returned to her home
in Atlanta Tuesday accompanied
by Miss Julia Roberts.
In our rounds for if#ns yesterday
we encountered Judge Hendricks
in an irritable mood. “These ad
ministrators and executors of es
tates vex me,” said tie, “and I can’t
get them to make their returns.
This is the most troublesome thing
connected with the ordinary’s
office. It is their solemn duty to
make these returns promptly as
required by law, and they ought to
do it,”’ and we left him refusing to
be comforted.
Purely vegetable—Dr. Pierce’e
Pleasant Pellets. They’re a com
pound of refined and concentrated
botanical extracts. These tiny,
sugar-coated pellets—the smallest
and the easiest to take—absolutely
and permanently cure Constipation.
Indigestion, Hick and Bilious Head
aches, Dizziness, Bilious Attacks,
and all derangements of the liver,
stomach and bowels.
, They cure permanently, because
they act naturally. They don’t
shock and weaken the system, like
the huge, old-fashioned pills. And
they’re more effected. One little
pellet for a corrective or laxative—
three for a cathartic.
Thoyre the cheapest pills you can
buy, for they’re guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or your money re
turned. You pay only for the good
you get.
When traveling.
Whet! eron pleasure or business, take
on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, !
as it acts most pleasantly and effectually 1
on the kidneys, liver and bowels, pre- j
venting levers, headaches and other ]
forms of sickness. For sale in 50e. and
$1 bottles by all leading druggists. Man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Cos. only.
Electric Cranes.
In building the big observatory
tower at Wembly park, near Lon
don, the contractor is Staking use of
four electric cranes. The general
form of this tower is much like that
of the Eiffel tower in Paris, and one
of the cranes is used at the top of
each of the inclined legs, which have
now reached the height of about one
hundred and fifty feet. Each crane
has a long boom or arm, from which
ropes reach down to the ground and
pick up the girders, sometimes
weighing over thirty tons. When
the girder, column or other piece of
the iron work is lifted to the top of
the leg the crane is swung around
and the boom raised or lowered un
til in the proper position. A*fter all
the pieces for anew story or “bay”
have been riveted together, a few
girders are placed in position, and
the ol atie pulls itself up to this floor,
and is ready for service again. The
great advantage of electricity in
, such an appliance is the saving of
i weight possible by using electric
motors in place of steam engines and
boilers, an important matter when
the cranes are working more than
one hundred feet above the ground.
The motor used on each crane is of
fourteen-horse power, and takes a
current of 120 amperes at 103 volts.
Cili John Slit
I will make you the fol
lowing - prices on goods by
the dollars worth :
22 lbs Gran'ted Sugar |i.oo
23 “ light brown “ 1.00
13 “ Bulk Meat - i.oo
18 *, Rice - 1.00
50 “ Grits - 1.00
5 “ Coffee - 1.00
4 “ Arbuckles Coffee 95c
1 bbl Veach’s P’t flour 3.50
2 !< Extra Family 3.20
1 bushel Meal 62c
Columbia river Salmon 13c
2lb can pealed Peaches lsc
4-stran Broom, best 23c
Fair Broom 10c
Beast Sviup, per gal. 38c
Best Raisons per lb 10c
Church’s Soda pr lb 7c
Best Apple Vinegar 22c
60c Tobacco pr lb only 33c
Stick Candy per lb 6}4c
Come and try me.
JOHN SMITH,
Cartersville, 6a.