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WHY HEJHJRES.
Tlip Orfatfit Sprdalitt of th Tina® Girt!
Kvtry Chm® His Pantonal Attention
Most doctors hsvo a corta.n number
uucwr 0 f remedies wlilch they uee iu
Hathaway's ail cases which seem at ail similar.
j This is not Dr. Hathaway's method,
memo a. Every case with him is most carefully
t*** ' ' ' tdiagnosed and the exact
tawitioo of the dlsea *e<i c< m
diiion determined. Thus
every case is treated separ
ately and medicines are td
ministered which ara
socially prepared under
Dr Hathaway's personal
supervision for each case.
is o t w o people a r aff acted
by a particu la r disease In the
same manner, consequent
ly no two people phoulii be
treated In the same way
even for same complaint
Dr. Hathaway is a special
ist In the best sense of the
word he treat* special dis
i eases inaspeclalmanrier of
ofhisown—a system studied out years aito while in
c „_„ e... college and tewpttel[practice and Ira
tvery vata proved and enlarged uponconstantly
Sneclaliv durlne the twenty years since--
v y twenty years of the roost eatensive
Treatea. practice enjoyed by any specialist in
thtscountry. Dr. Hathaway's great and uniform suc
cess Is due to this individual system of treatment
. ... In spite of hundreds of requests
Eyclustv® T<*arlv from doctors Inall parts of the
Treatment world, asking for the privilege of
uslngnr.Hathaway'smetljod of treatment,!!® believes
ttwiser to allow none beside himself the knowledge
of his remedies, a he is too well aware of the mis
chief which may be done by the unskillful use of any
, , system, nevermind how perfect
Blood and Skla Dr. Hathaway's treatment for
niisssss blood diseases In whatever stage
uisbshsi cures all forms of ulcers, sores,
blotches, ptmnlss, etc., and not only restores the skin
and scalp to their natural condition, but so puriflee
the blood that the disease Is permanently and com
pletely driven from the system and all this without
administering poisonous or dangerous drugs.
„ . . _ . His treatment of Varicocele
Varicocele ana and Stricture is a method exrlc-
St picture. brely his owu and iu WO per cent
Oiriiiiurv. 0 ( a |i cases results Inn perfect
and permanent cure. No operation Is required and
no pain or Inconvenience are experienced by the
patient. The expense of this treatment is much less
than that of any operation, or hospital or institute
treatment, and is both safe and sura, restoring tlie
organs to a condition of [>erfect, normal health.
, Py.Hathaway has Just prepared anew
Kidney teat question blank for those who hnve
Disease* reason to suspect Kidney trouble and
uitaaaes. this blank hawiU gtadjysend free to
everyone who sends him his name and address.
m . The demand for Dr Hathaway's new
Hew Hook tax* "Manliness, Vigor, Health''has
FREE. exhausted the first edition of
lOWttO but for a limited time a Sony of
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ttnnaultatinw P'S?®'
Vonaulftion Dp. Hatnesyay makes b£> charge
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VIVID PICTURE
BP DESOLATION.
Galveston Story by Hon. Jeff Mc-
Lemore, ofTexas-
SCENES BEGGAR DESCRIPTION
And Make One Speechless With
Awe—The Burning of Bodies—
Great Danker From Pestilence.
Special to Glohe-Bcmdcfat.
San Antonio, Tex., Sept. 12. —
Hon. Jeff McLeino.e, of Austin, a
well known journalist and ex
member of the legislature, has just
returned from Galveston, and gives
the following vivid description of
the horrors:
“We were five hours making the
trip from the mainland, and it was
not until 8 o’clock Monday even
ing that we reached the wharf.
When within two miles of the city
We discovered a number of human
bodies floating in the bay, and as
tie boat passed each it caused a
shudder of horror among the liv
ing. Soon after the sun went down
the moon came up in a cloudless
sky. The bay was as a large mir
ror, and the scene seemed so peace
ful and serepe that for a moment
it was hard to realise that we were
soon to gaze upon the saddfest,
darkest picture iu the book otiimG
A gentle breeze wafted our boat
lightly over the Smooth waters,and
&s we floated over the harbor and
neared the wharves formerly the
scene of busiest life a silence, deep
and awful, prevailed. No one on
board spoke a word, and the silt
ence whs only broken by the sound
of a rifle sending some robber oi
the dead into eternity.
“After landing we .made our way
over heaps of wreckage that were
piled almost mountain high and
emerged into an open spa 6e w onty
to be hailed by armed sentries who
were guarding the towti against
ghouls, vandals and looters. Af
ter explaining who we wefe the
seutries permitted us to pass and
directed us to tlie Tremont Hotels
the chief place of rendezvous of the
stricken people. As we made our
way to the hotel, a thing wc did
with difficulty, because of the
wreckage that covered the streets
we saw only desolation and ruin
on eyery hand. The pale of the
moon added weirdness to the chaos,
and, look where yye may, there
was nothing to gladden the search
ing eye. We passed several small
groups of men who spoke iu whis
per, n tl.o jwe addressed looked
at us strangely and wondered* what
we came for. At last the hotel
was reached and here most of us
found friends and acquaintances
who inquired after those we left
behind.
GHOULS’ work,
“The city, being under martial
law, most of our party after doing
all iu their power to relieve the
anxiety of anxious men and wo
men, dispersed themselves about
the hotel until morning, it being
unsafe to roam about the city at
night for fear of being mistaken
for yandals and ghouls that have
infested the city ever since the
storm. To some of us it seemed
that morning would never come,
but it did come at last, and it came
bright and fair. I then started out
to view the stricken city by day
light, and such a scene rs I wit
nessed is beyond the power of
words to tell. The wildest flight
of the imagination can never paint
the picture that lay before my
view, and, if none can imagine it,
then there is no wav to give even
a faint conception of it in words.
“The horror of the situation is
beyond the pale of exaggeration,
and the worst that may be said can
not even approach it. Acres and
acres of houses were scattered in
ruins over the earth, and beneath
the broken and shivered timbers
were the decay ii g bodies of human
beings who had suffe ed tortures
worse than death. Along the peb
bled beach, once the most beauti
ful in the world, and a scene of
wonted gayety now is all desola
tion and awe. Human bodies,
swollen and unrecognizable, were
mingled with those of dead anim
als, reptiles and birds, and the
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whole formed a scene so grewsome
and son i s' a en that the thought
pf it even sends a sickening thrill
coursing through one’s veins.
“To add to the horror of the sit
uation, human hyenas lUQvea steal
thily among the dead, seeking
treasure. These ghouls in human
guise are now meeting with just
retribution, for armed sentinels
have orders to shoot ..hem down as
they would mad dogs.
“If the situation along the coast
side was more horrible than that
along the west side, it was only
because more people dwelt there.
There were more houses to be de
stroyed. Along either beach de
struction held full sway, and each
wave seemed more cruel than that
which preceded it. Nor were the
waves alone in their cruelty, for
the winds seemed to vie with them
in spreading ruin and desolation.
LOSS OF LIFE.
“'"''he loss ot life at Galveston will j
never be known. The storm came •
first from the northwest, and hun-1
dreds, perhaps thousands, werej
carried far out to s*a, nevermore to i
return. At io o’clock at night the J
wind suddenly veered to the south-1
east and hundreds more v ere swept j
into the bay and caught by the cur-'
rent, and also carried to the seaj
before daylight Sunday morning. I
That is the opinion of old seaman !
with whom I conversed,a id if they J
do not know the actions of the!
ocean then no one does.
“Monday evening and Tuesday
morning I myself saw more than
a hundred bodies floating out to
sea. and these were scarcely i per
cent, of those who perished. Relia
ble men with whom I talked, and
who had been from one end of the
island to the other, estimated the
loss at from 5,000 to 10,000,and all
thought it would come nearer the
last-named figure than the first.
Day by day, as the debris is clear
ed, more bodies will be discovered.
“Every portion of the island was
submerged, and it seems a miracle
that the entire city was not swept
away. At least two-fifths of the
houses on the island have been
fazed to the ground. Of the re
maining three-fifths at least half
are damaged beyond repair, while
the others are all damaged to great
er or less extent No house es
caped without some damage. And,
to give some idea ot the cyclonic
nature of the storm, it will beonly
necessary to state that steel shut
ters on large business buildings
were twisted around as one twists
a small piece of paper. Large
splinters were whirled about in the
air like darts, and many found j
lodgment in human bodies, no
doubt producing instant death.
“Oh, the horror and terror of
that dismal night, with the wind
howling, the sea roaring and lash
ing, houses falling and crashing,
men, women and children scream
ing. Tuesday I passed a partially
wrecked home, in the door of which
stood a woman with a. young face
and snow’ white hair,
HER HAIR TURNED GRAY.
“ ‘Saturday morning,’ said the
man who accompanied me, ‘that
woman’s hair was dark brown.
Sunday morning it had turned to
snowy whiteness.’
“I did lint doubt him, for he told
me of the woman’s experience, and
how she had been saved as if by a
miracle.
“But the awful part of the ter
rible disaster has not been yet told.
Hundreds of human vultures^hard
m •' —i j g> #
I ly before the storm had abated, be
gan the vYork of pillaging and ioot
i mg- Dead bodies were robbed, and
•in some instances fingers were cut
; off to secure the rings thil were on
them. Most of these vultures were
j negroes, and they kept up their
| horrible work all day Sunday and
Sunday night. Monday morning
martial law was declared,and those
i placed on guard had strict orders to
'shoot all pilferers and looters.
Many met their just fate, and by
Tuesday morning the looting had
almost ceased.
“Sunday the negroes refused to
help bury the dead, for either love
or money. But when martial law
was declared they were forced out
at the point of the bayonet and
made to do their share of the work.
Up to Monday noon many of the
dead were identified, but after that
identification was impossible, be
cause of the swollen and decom
posed condition of the bodies.
Monday afternoon several hun
dred were loaded on barges and
carried far out into the gulf, where
they were thrown overboard, to
become the food of sharks and
fishes. Sunday and Monday morn
ing, many were buried down the
island in the shallow sand, but by
Tuesday morning these, as well as
other bodies gathered along the
beach, were piled on wood and
burned.
FIVE THOUSAND DEAD.
Galveston, Tex., Sept.
More than 2,000 dead bodies have
been identified and the estimate of
Mayor Jones that five thousand
souls perished in Saturday’s great
hurricane does not appear to be
magnified.
Decomposition being so rapid,
the further removal of bodies from
the devastated portion of tlm city
has been inhibited and the inter
ment ordered where found. After
accurate description of the body
and a memorandum of the effects
found thereon have been taken for
future identification the body is
buried. On Tuesday an ordinance
was passed authorizing rescuing
and burying parties to set fire to
wrecked buildings and burn them.
On these funeral pyres hundreds of
corpses were cremated. It was a
hard but necessary duty. The
men had it to perform.
COVERED WITH CORPSES.
Galyeston, Tex., Sept. 13. —Re-
ports received from nearby coast
and mainland towns this morning
is one of destruction and loss of
life. Parties arriving, say the coast
for miles inland is covered with
bodies. One gentleman aided in
burying 100 just a few miles north
of Virginia Point and burial par
ties were out in every direction en
gaged on the same duty. Charles
Patterson, connected with the Gulf
and Interstate railway, came in
| from Bolivar Point at noon today
, and reported that they had buried
' between 300 and 400 of Galveston’s
! dead and that on Bolivar peninsu
lar, from the point of East Height
and for twenty-one miles south, ev
erything was washed away and
seventy five people were drowned.
Horrible Story of Vandalism-
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 11. —A hor
rible story is told by a Dallas citi
zen who returned tonight from
Galveston. He declares that ne
groes and many white persons are
hourly committing the most atro
cious aebs of vandalism. J. N.
Grisu'old, division freight agent of
the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe
railroad, who was in the city dur
ing the storm, and had a narrow
escape from death said:
“Ears and fingers bearing dia
monds were hacked off with pocket
knives, and the members placed in
the pockets of vandals. The bod
ies of women who wore fine clothes
have stripped of the last
thread and left to fester in the sun.
The residences left standing have
been broken into and jewelry and
silver plate stolen. I saw a neg o
woman carrying a large basket of
silverware that was not her’s.
“At Texas City I saw an old
man considerably under the in
fluence of liqiSor. From his pock
et there protruded a roll of bills as
big as my arm which he claimed
to have found on the bay shore.
Upon all hands this horrible work
is going on. The offenders are
generally negroes, although there
are some white men who have
demonstrated that they are suffi
ciently devoid of honesty and man
hood to participate in these ghoul
ish deeds.
“As soon as the storm subsided
the negroes stole all they could and
proceeded with their campaign of
vandalism beastly drunk. Troops
are needed at once. If they are
not sent without delay, God help
the sui vivors in Galveston.”
This is confirmed by a dozen
men of the highest standing here.
Every one can master a grief but
he that has it. —Shakespeare.
No pleasure is comparable to the
standing upon the vantage ground
of truth. —Francis Bacon.
DEMOCRATIC
PROSPECTS
Regarded as Very Bright by Na
tional Chairman Jones-
STRONG HOPES OF THE WEST-
Believes the Party Will Carry Ohio,
Indiana and Illinois—On the
Pacific Coast.
New York, Sept. 12. —United
States Senator J. K. Jones, chair
man of the democratic national
execu'ive committee, arrived in
this city last night and held a brief
conference wit’nex-Governor Stone
of Missouri and Congressman
Richardson, minority leader in the
house of representatives.
In an interview he expressed
satisfaction with the result of the
election in Vermont and Maine.
He said he had made no estimates
as to what states the democrats
were likely to carry in the Novem
ber election in case the percentage
of the republican decrease and
democratic increase should be main
tained in the general election. He
added that he would not make any
predictions as to what states the
democrats expected to carry be
cause he could not tell haw a
vote the republicans expected to
get in states like Ohio, Indiana
and Illinois. He called attention
to the fact that four years ago the
vote in Ohio reached the unheard
of proposition 9/ one to three and a
fraction of the population of tha.
state. Heretofore, he explained,
if the vote averaged one to every
five of the population everybody
considered that a full vote had
been polled.
The new Ohio ratio of one to
every three and a fraction m and it
very difficult to estimate w iat
might happen in the states of tl e
middle west this year. However,
he hoped that the democrats woi 1.
carry Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
Asked whether the issue on ex
pansion would not prevent the
democrats from carrying any • f
tjhe Pacific states Mr. Jones said
that whiles it was true that some of
the shipping interests having a di
rect interest iu the trade in the orient
were in iavor of expansion on the
other hand the working men of the
far west were opposed to anything
looking to the admission of tl e
Filipinos into competition with
American labor.
The Indian Doctor.
National GeiffrAphic Magazine.
Avery interesting character fre
quently met with in the Andes is
the Callaguaya, or Indian doctor,
as he is familiarly known. You
find him everywhere—resting upon
the benches of the plazas in the
city, tramping over the mountain
trails, sunning himself against the
wall of a cabin by the railway sta
tion, drinking chica in the market
place, inspecting cattle in the cor
ral of the hacienda and curing the
sick persons in their mud huts.
You find him in the railway cars
and among the deck paosengers on
the* coast steamers where he pays
his way by practicing his profes
sion. With no wardrobe but the
clothes upon his back and a bright
colored poncho, he travels bare
footed from the isthmus of Pana
ma to Magellan strait, carrying a
pack filled with dried herbs done
up in neat paper packages, cheap
jewelry, pocket handkerchiefs and
ribbons, watches and other articles
for personal adornment, knives,
forks and spoons, scissors, small
mirrors, combs and brushes and
other small merchandise, which he
sells for cash or trades for eggs
and poultry, chocolate, beans and
cocoa, td be exchanged at the next
town for more portable property.
Footnotes-
Indianapolis Journal.
We spend money judiciously;
other people foolishly fritter it
away.
If you are not the iceman in hot
weather be glad you are not the
postman.
Plain living may conduce to
high thinking, high living con
duces to no thinking at all.
At a picnic a perfect lady always
keeps her gloves on aiid lets the
other women unpack the baskets.
While Sirius rages don’t hurry
unless you are sure the people in
whose behalf you hurry are good
pay.
The sun may be throwing on
extra volts this se son in the vain
hope that men will find it too hot
to fight.
People who take kodak pictures
on Sunday generally feel all right
if they snap a few picturesque
churches.
Get what you want as you go
1 along; many lost treasures in life
I are thejhings we have promised
ourselves to get as we come back.
City Government.
F M. Ford, Mayor,
il JE. Cary Treasurer,
o. Vv WjtMruD, Clerk
Finaiiee—T. R.Jf>nf n, •
Wortanl. W. T. Burton ’ C nr,f,tl > J.C.
j Zachary. TR. Jones' mnan , J. £
Oe it let err J. a. Mr.nf n „
J X. Wofford J. P. Andemm liairilla 'i,
roaSSWahST"* <**'*. J. 0.
A'' k Mort r ro'rt.'j H E A ZaeheVy Ci, ‘ i ‘ rUli,n ' J
man d rs.To^J R Za A cK;r n ’
\V ' H?Mnrterj <S k* l^man ’ J -
Public Building.—-J. p
Chainaan, T. K. Jones, J. A , Moan^° U ’‘
Fire Department.— W h
Chairman, Zachary, Harton. Uiller -
Sanitary,-—.!, A, Monfort pk,;
Cobb, Anderson. lOnlort <
Doctors J.G.M.BGieene
PHYSICIANS ISDRGEONS,
Office West Market Street
Cartersvllle, - - . _ Geo^,
at the office at night.
Farm Loans Negotiated
JUILNER S jniLHER, '
Attorneys at L aw
CARTERSVILLE, GA
Commercial and Corporation Practir*.
and Collections.
Offices with Judge T. W
Bank of CartersviTle. llner over
'
DR. WILLIAM L. CASON,
DENTIST-
Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug store.
CARTERSVILLE. CA.
DR. CLARK ffi CRIt'HN,
DENTIST.
OFFICE:—
lip Stair*. Opposite Word's lira; Store,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
I)R. GEO. COESTER,
Veterinary Surgeon,
Ofllee at Gas Works, Telephone 52,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
Mares and Cows attended in delivery.
W.P.& L. W.BURT
<x3DENTISTSI>o
Chamberlin Jt Johnson Building
ATLANTA, GA.
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