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Constipation
& Biliousness
Sick-headache,
Banco Pains in the back ’
vauou Sallow complexion.
Loss of appetite and
Exhaustion.
There is only one care, which is
RJ MON'S™
*NU
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One Pink Pill touches the liver and
removes the bile.
One Tonk Pellet nightly, acts as a
gentle laxative in keeping the bowels
open, restores the digestive organs, tones
ap the nervous system and makes new
rich blood. Complete treatment, two
medicines, one price, 25c.
Treatise and sample free at any store.
SHOWN UFO. CO.. New York.
EDUCATIONAL.
Below we give a few of the leading education
al institutions in the South.
Write them before entering elsewhere.
DRAUGHON’S PRACTICAL BUSINESS
COLLEGE, Nashville, Tenn. Bookkeeping,
Banking. Penmanship, Shorthand, Type
writing, Telegraphy, etc. Positions guaranteed
under certain conditions. Cheap Board. No
vacation. Our free Catalogue will explain all.
Send lor it.
TENNESSEE MILITARY ACADEMY, Nash
ville, Tenn. Everything new and first-class.
For particulars address Secretary, 135 North
.Spruce Street, Nashville, Tenn.
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE. Forty-fourth vear.
$175 pays 10 mouths. Address Prof. Holt,'Oak
Ridge, N. C.
PAY WITHOUT CASH for our quarterly Teachers’ and
Students' Journal one year by sending P. O. addresses of
2.*> Teachers. Address Normal Exponent, Box lift,
Troy, Ala.
EMORY AND HENRY COLLEGE, Emory, Ya. Opens
Sept. 12. Term charges, including board, Scholar
ship high. Heatnfuliiess unsurpassed.
SI LLIN6 FEMALE COLLEGE. Bristol, Va.-Tenn.
The new attraction. Mast accessible Virginia College.
Southern History and Literature, specialty.
HORNER MILITARY SCHOOL, Oxford, N. C. Fall term
begins Sept. 3. 1.595. Reputation for scholarship unsur
passed. Special attention to athletics.
MIL LEESBURG FEMALE COLLEGE. One of the best
high-grade Colleges in the South. Terms reasonable.
Management superb. Course thorough. Address Rev.
C. Pope, President, Millersburg, Ky.
FREE. Two scholarships IN MUSIC given to each county
in the Southern States by Mt. Arnoena Female Seminary,
Mt. Pleasant, N. C. Address
Rev. C. L. T. Fisher, A.M., Principal,
Sewing maciiiges.
The best of all kinds, direct from the
factories, at reduced rates, easy terms.
Also, Needles, Shuttles, Bands, Barts,
pure Oil, <fce. Come to our store or write
us for prices,
UNIOX SUPPLY CO.,
Cartersville, Ga.
Application for a Bank Charter.
To the Hon. Allen D. Candler, Secretary
of State, Atlanta, Ga.
Bear Sir: We, W. S. vVitham, At
lanta, Ga., J. W. Knight, Cartersville,
Ga., J. E. Field, Cartersville, Ga., Chas.
P. Ball, Cartersville, Ga., applicants as
incorporators under an Act ot the Gen
eral Assembly ol'Georgia, approved De
cember 20to, 1893, entitled “An Act to
carry into efleet paragraph eighteeen of
Section seven of Artie.e three of
the Constitution of 1877, asamend
ed, m relation to chartering of
banks, to provide lor the incorporation
of banking companies by the Secretary
of State, and for other purposes,” make
this our declaration, praying that we be
incorporated as a body corporate and
politic for the purpose of doing a gen
eral banking business, with all the
rights, powers, privileges and restric
tions of said act, underand by the name
and style of “Bank of Cartersville,”
amt that the principal office of said
company shall be located in the city ot
Cartersville, county of Bartow and
state of Georgia, with a capital of $50,-
000.00, divided into shares of SIOO.OO
each, and that the sum of tv enty-tive
thousand dollars ($25,000.00) of the capi
tal subscribed has actually been paid
by the subscribers and tnat the same
is in tact held, and is to be used solely
tor the business and purposes of the
corporation. W. S. VVITHAM,
J. W. KNIGHT,
J. E. FIELD,
CHAS. B. BALL.
The fee of fifty (*50.00) dollars is here
with enclosed as fee for eharter or cer
tificate of incorporation as required by
said Act.
Atlanta, Ga„ 13th day ot August, 1390.
Respectfully submitted,
W. S. WiTHAM,
E. STRICKLAND,
J. E. FIELD,
J W. KNIGHT,
J. S. LEAKE,
W. H. LUMPKIN,
OH AS. P. BALL,
Incorporators.
STATE OF GEORGIA—County ol
Bartow: Before me personalty ap
peared .las. W , Knight, J. E. Field and
Chas. P. Ball, the incorporators of the
“Bank of Cartersville,” located in the
citv of Cartersville, County of Bartow,
-and state of Georgia, who on oath de
poseth and saith that twenty-five thou
sand dollars (25,000.00) of the capital sub
scribed lots been actually paid by the
subscribers, and that the same is in
lact held, and is to be used solely for
the business and purposes ot the corpo
ration. x „
J. W. KNIGHT, Cartersville, Ga.
J E FIELD, Cartersville, Ga.
CHAS. P. BALL.Cartersville,Ga.,
Incorporators.
Sworn to and subscribed Define me
this 15th day of August, 1895.
~ G. W. HENDRICKS,
-'seal - Ordinary Bartow County.
{—)
STATE OF GEORGIA—Office of Sec
retary of State: 1, A. D. Candler, Sec
retary of State of the state of Georgia,
do hereby certify that the foregoing is a
true and correct copy of the application
-iius‘d* filed in-Hi’s, ofiw tor * charter
fi.r the Bank of Cartersville.
in testimony whereof, I have nereun
to set my hand and affixed the seal of
mv office, at the capitol, in the city ot
Atlanta, this, 13th day of August, in the
vearofour Lord One Thousand Eight
'Hundred and Ninety-Five and of the
Independence of the United States ot
America the One Hundred and I wen
ti,eth',. A LLEN D. C \ NDLER.
J sEA l l Secretary .ol State.
WITHOUT A HORSE
Carriages Run Successfully in
the Streets of Springfield.
INTERESTING DESCRIPTION OF
Th* Newest Vehicles Which Inventors Are
Confident Will be th* One Replac
ing All Others.
(St Louis Republic.)
What electricity is doing for
street ear traffic, railroad traffic ot
short hauls, and other locomotion
tor which steam supplied the motor
power, the gas motor is doing for
vehicles. The day is not far off
when horses wi!! have entirely dis
appeared from the streets of larger
cities, to become an article of luxu
ry only, and one of food.
On the streets of Springfield,
Mass., a horseless carriage may be
-een almost any day. It makes
long trips from one city to another,
and thereby shows that it is both
practicable and serviceable.
The inventors of the horseless ve
hicle are C. E. and J. F. Duryea.
The vehicle has the appearance
of a heavy side-bar buggy with a
top and a rounded dashboard mov
ing automatically along the streets
at a good rate of speed.
All that would denote presence
of machinery is the geared wheel
and chain. This projects below the
body, between the rear wheels, and
the movement of the gasoline en
gine, which lurnishes the motor
power, causes some slight noise.
A single lever running back from
the dashboard to the seat serves to
guide the carriage, and the veloci
ty can be increased from three to
twenty miles an hour. Backing,
stopping and turning is accomplish
ed by simple movements of the
lever, the horizontal movements
controlling the guiding, while the
vertical movements control the
speed.
The carriage weighs about 800
pounds, or half as much as some of
the carriages invented in Europe,
of similar type. The entire ma
chinery required for driving the
carriage occupies a space not more
than 3 feet long, 2 feet wide and 1
foot deep. It weighs 300 pounds,
and this weight is distributed be
tween the engines, flywheel and
gearing, all of which are stored be
neath the seat and in the covered
wagon box behind it. A tank hold
ing five gallons of gasoline placed
beneath the seat furnishes the fuel.
The two engines, separate and
distinct from each other, are of the
Otto type. The igniting spark is
furnished by electricity. The two
separate engines make it possible
to use one in case of an accident to
the other.
The “mixer” where the air and
gasoline combine, is especially rec
ommended by the inventors as the
point of vantage over all other sim
ilar inventions. A mixture less lia
ble to explode is obtained with a
much better combustion.
The steering gear and arrange
ments for the general management
of the machinery are much more
simple than in foreign carriages.
Iri the Duryea vehicle the change
of gears, by an ingenious arrange
ment of cams and levers, is effected
by a vertical movement of the
lever without an instant’s loss of
time, and the machine is still fur
ther controlled by a very strong
brake.
The steering heads in the Duryea
jarriage are placed as near as pos
sible to the wheels, yet they are so
angled that their their line strikes
the plane of the wheel at just the
point a stone would naturally be
encountered. This obviates any
leverage which wouid turn the
wheel by bringing the force along
the line of the head.
It took a very ingenious arrange-,
ment to accomplish this. Into the
axletrees, which are fixed to the
body of the wagon and divide at
the ends into vertical forks, are
fitted pieces that in shape look like
ordinary carriage hubs. These hold
the axles. The head bolts are run
through these pieces in the direc
tion of the contact ol the wheel
with the ground. A connectiag
rod *f iron, extending back ot the
axletree and joined at the center of
the wagon with the steering device
secures co-ordination of movement
in the separately swung wheels. A
Jour-horse power engine runs a sin
gle seated carnage, and the inven
tors sav that for a two-seated car
riage a six-horse power engine i3
needed, arm an 'eight-horse' power
for a three-seated vehicle. The
governor can he taken from the
machine by means of a button be
low the seat, and thereby the max
imum speed of 12 miles can be in
creased to nearly 20 miles. The av
erage consumption o f gasoline is
about half a gallon an hour, th
five-gallon tank giving a supply for
a ten hours’ run.
Two machines are now being
constructed for the motor vehicle
race, and these will have several
improvements. The weight is to
be decreased one-third, and divided
between the carriage itself and the
machinery. The reduction in the
weight will be brought about by re
ducing the number of gear wheels,
friction gearing being used instead
of cogwheels. The carriage will be
fitted with pneumatic tires and ball
bearings throughout.
The inventors are very confident
that before long their invention
will be bought up by capitalists,
and that horseless carriages will be
the coming vehicle, which will re
place all others.
OFFERED HIS WIFE-
After Agreeing that His Wife Might Marry,
the Husband Attempted Suicide.
(New York Herald.)
Jam“ O. Christiansen and Henry
Gable were friends in Denmark,
w’here they learned the baker’s
trade together. Gable emigrated to
this country about three years ago,
and eighteen months later Chriß
tiansen, who had been married six
years, came over with his wife.
When the Christiansens took a flat
at No. 428 West Seventeenth St.,
last summer, Gable went to board
with them.
Christiansen decided to give up
his trade, and after picking up a
few sleight-of-hand tricks obtained
an engagement in a Fourteenth
street dime museum. Gable had
an idea that the duties of a janitor
would be preferable to those of a
baker, and got a job taking care of
Brevet Hall, in?,East Fifty-third
street.
The husband and wife soon had
a disagreement. It is said Gable
was the cause of the trouble, Chris
tiansen found that the demand for
sleight-of-hand performers was not
great and was unable to get em
ployment in that line. He refused
to return to his trade.
The trouble between husband and
wife increased. Gable refused to
leave the house, and the feeling be
tween the men became very bitter.
All three moved last week to No.
160 East Fifty-third street. Chris
tiansen and his wife had a row last
Sunday night, and the husband left
the flat. Gable remained.
Persons living on the same floor
heard a sound in the hall at two
o’clock yesterday morning as if
somebody had fallen. On investi
gating they found Christiansen
lying in the hall unconscious. A
rope fastened to the banisters on
the floor above hung near his head.
Mrs. Christiansen and Gable joined
the other tenants in the hall and at
the sight of Christiansen’s condi
tion were greatly alarmed. A po
liceman called an ambulance and
Christiansen was taken to Bellevue
I fospital.
He was arraigned in the York
ville police court yesterday after
noon on the charge of attempting
to commit suicide.
He said ho had agreed that his
wife and Gable should be married
at once, as he could not be happy
with the woman. She had con
sented to the arrangement, but he
had afterward repented of his
promise and in his remorse had
tried to hang himself. He was held
for trial.
I saw Christiansen in his c°ll
later. He told me he had not
known until that day that it was a
crime for a woman whose husband
was living to be married to another
man without having been divorced.
He had known of a case in Den
mark where a woman had been
married three times without hav
ing been divorced from either of
the first two husbands, both of
whom were living. He had not
thought this might be a crime in
the United States. He added that
he was still willing that his wife
should marry Gable.
I found Mrs. Christiansen and
Gable at No. 160 East Fifty-third
street. The woman said she had
been obliged to support her hus
band for years. She and Gable ad
mitted that they had intended to
he married yesterday, but had dis
covered that the law did not per
mit it. Mrs. Christiansen said h#
had evidence which would enable
her to get a divorce.
Electric Bitters.
This remedy so well known and so
popular as to need no special mention.
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icine does not exist and it is guaranteed
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ter* will. <**• all diseases of the Liver
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Boils, KaM'Rheum and othy affections
caused by impose blood.—Will drive
Malaria from the sxyitem and prevent as
well as cure all Malarial fevers.—For
enre of Headache, Constipation and Ip
digestion try Electric Bitters—Entire
satisfaction guaranteed, or money re
funded.—Brice 50 cts. and SI.OO per bottle
t Young Bros. Drugstore.
jj
Superior To AH Sarsaparillas.
Down in Georgia, over fifty years ago, a marvelous medicine was discovered. It was what
is now known as P. P. P. t ( Lippman's Great Remedy ), and its fame and reputation has been
growing with the years.
For Rheumatism, Blood Poisoning, Pain in the side, wrists, shoulders, back and joints,
Dyspepsia, Malaria, Scrofula, and all Blood and Skin Diseases, it has never been equalled.
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r • P- P- * s . a wonderful tonic and strengthener. Weak women should always take
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the country, because we publish the formula on every bottle, and one trial will convince the
most skeptical that it is a genuine health restorer.
Read The Truth And Be Convinced.
A Wonderful Cure.
T was a martyr to muscular rheumatism for thirty
years; tried alt medicines and doctors with no per
manent relief. I was advised to take P. P. p., and
before I had finished two bottles my pain subsided
so I was able to work. I feel better than I have for
years, and am confident of a complete recovery.
J. S. DUPRISS, Newnanville, Fla.
Testimony from the Mayor.
I suffered with Rheumatism for fifteen years, tried
all the so-called specifics, but to no purpose. My
grandson got me a bottle of P. P. r., and I feel like a
new man.
W. H. WII.DER, Mayor of Albany.
From Two Well-known Physicians.
We are having a big sale for your P. P. P., and
we prescribe it in a greatmany cases, and find it an ex
The above letters are taken from many received by us. P. p. p. (Lippman's
Great Remedy,') is a medicine whose virtues are known from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
P. P. P. begins its work by purifying the blood, which is the source of all life]
and does not cease until a perfect and entire cure is effected.
The mortifying eruptions that disfigure the complexion, the tired feeling that pre
yents thorough accomplishments of the daily tasks, sleepless nights, loss of appetite,
irritability of disposition, all mean a derangement of the system consequent from
impure blood, which can and will be cured by ~p. p. p. 9
P. P. P. (Lippman's Great Remedy), is conceded by physicians and the people
to Jre the Greatest Blood Purifier of the Age. It positively and permanently
cures. For sale by all druggists or direct from us ; price $1 a bottle, six bottles lor $5,
LIPPMAN BROS., PM pXrs, Lippman Block, SAVANNAH, GA,
$500,000,000
Represents the net shrinkage in property value in the South and
West, according to the tax returns officially recorded, for 1894,as com
pared with 1893.
A decisive contest is to be fought betwoen now and the next Presidential election for
COINAGE^-
THE PEOPLE’S MONET— the coinage of both gold and silver, Without discrimination, which means the free coinag*
of Doth as opposed to the policy of contraction, which lias been dictated hv England and adopted in Washington, and which
levies tribute on every product of the farm, on valuations of all kids Mid on all compensations for labor.
THE GREAT ISSUE NOW is the double standard against the single standard— the use of both gold and silver as standard
money metals against keeping the currency of the country on the gold basis.
The ATLANTA WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
published at ATLANTA, GA., and having
A CIRCULATION OF MORE THAN 156,000, chiefly among the farmers of the country, and going to more homes than
any weekly newspaper published on the face of the earth, is
The Leading Champion of the People hi all the great contests in which they are engaged against the exactions of monopoly.
THE CONSTITUTION IS THE BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER published hi America,
covering the news of the world, having correspondents in every city in America, and in the capitals of Europe, and reporting
in lull the details of debates in Congress on ail questions of publ ! ’ interest. It is
THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, and as the exponent of Southern opinion and the purveyor of
Southern news it lias no equal on the continent.
An enlargement of 12 columns. To meet the demands upon its space for news, The Constitution
will increase its size during the summer to 12 pages, 7 columns, making 84 columns each week.
THE CONSTITUTION’S SPECIAL FEATURES F ,ound , in .*?
The Farm and Farmers’ Department, The Women’s Department, The Children’s Department,
are ail under able direction amt are specially wttr-ietivc to those to whom these departments are addressed.
Under the editorial management of ( I, A i; K HOWKU,, Its s| trial eentribut >rs are writers of such world-wide reputation as Mark Twain,
Beet Harte, Frnnk K. Stockton, .lim-i chandler llarri', Hamilton, ami hundreds <>f others, while it offers weekly service from such
writers as Hill Arp. <r(je rluiiketi, Wsliscr I’, hwd, I'rsnli I. mam n, and outers, wlio give its literary features a peculiar Southern Haro*
that oommemls it to every fireside frinn Virginia to Texas, Irosi Missouri to California,
During "ii whole delay and failure to brine ilip promised relief in financial matters T'i* Constitution has heralded, in season and out, th*
full news. It has given pi am editorial utterances upon th effect ol th uiiumiiigaud misguided pokey of wreckage and more bonds, which eventa
hare shown to L>e prophetic in their unerring directness.
STRAIGHT, CLEAN, UNTRAMMELLED,
THE CONSTITUTION Salutes the free people who insist that the servants of the people shall not liecome their masters.
’ uy special arrangement the iiaper pmblishing this announcement will be clubbed with THE CONSTITUTION at the remarkably low rati
announced elsewhere in this issue.
THE NEW YORK HERALD.
AMERICA’S FOREMOST NEWSPAPER.
Daily and Sunday.
A MAGAZINE FOR 5 CENTS.
THE SUNDAY fiiihAilt/ " inisrekabs in beauty and value wRb every issue. It
is a veritable magazine of contemporaneous literature of the best class' iron!
the pens of famous foreign and American authors. It contains each week a
special supplement of handsome pictures in colors, half tflne and black and
white. $2 a year.
THE DAILY HE RALD contains all the news ol the world gathered by its own
correspondents and reporters and forwarded by unequalled cable and tele
graphic facilities. $8 a year. Address
THE HERALD,
Herald Square, New York.
cellent thing. We handle about one dozen bottles a
week.
Drs. J. M. * M. T. RICHARDSON, Piedmont, S. C.
Hot Springs Surpassed.
A bottle of P. P. P., has done me more good than
three months’ treatment at the Hot Springs, Ark.
JAMES M. NBWTON, Aberdeen, Brown Cos., O.
Pimples, Sores and Eruptions Cured.
I take great pleasure in testifying to the efficient
qualities of the popular medicine Tor skin diseases
known as P. P. P. I suffered for several years with
an unsightly and disagreeable eruption on my face.
After taking three bottles in accordance with direc
tions, I am entirely cured.
Capt. J. D. JOHNSTON,
Savannah, Ga. of Johnston * Cos.
VlftCINiA COLLEGE
For Young Ladies, Roanoke, Ya.
Opens Lept. 12, 1895. One of the lead
ing Schools for Youn<? Ladies in the
South, Magnificent buildings, all mod
ern improvements. Campus ten acres.
Grand mountain scenerv in Valley of
Va., famed for health- European and
American teachers. Full course. Su
rcSsi<ji jn Art sn<?
Students irom tv States. For cat
alogues address the President.
W. A. HARRIS, D. P,, Roanoke, Va.
NOTICE. '
I wakt every man and woman in the United
State; interested in the Opium and Whisky
habita to have one of my books on these dis
eases. Address B. M. Woolley, 'Atlanta, 6a.
Box 382, and one win be sent you tree.