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Rocfc-a-Bye Baby
_ .re sweet words, bvt how much
nain and suffering they used ,o mean It’s
P*" n0 w Since Mother s Friend has
£ e kncwo expectant mothers have
much of the anguish of ch;!d-
Mother's friend is a liniment to be
b lnlied erernally. It is rubbed thoroughly
the muscles'of. the abdomen. It gives
asticty and strength, and wnen the final
strain comes they respond quickly and
Sy Sthout pain Mother’s Friend is
tZ e r taken internally. Internal remedies
Li this time do more harm than good. If a
woman is supplied with this splendid lini
ment she need never fear rising or swelling
breasts, morning sickness, or any of the
discomforts which usually accompany preg
nancy.
The proprietor of a large hotel in Tampa,
pia writes: “My wife had an Awful time
wit h her first child. During u~r second
pregnancy. Mother’s Friend was used and
the baby was born easily before the doctor
arrived. It’s certainly great.”
(Jet Mother’s Friend at the
drugstore. $1 per bottle.
the dradfield REGULATOR CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Write far our fre/* illustrated book, “ Before Baby
la Dorn."
E.&W. R. R. OFAIiA
Taking Etleet March 18,1900.
go 1 Pammknoek —W No 2 V ahmcnokb— Eam
DAILY. DAILY.
LcrterTlllel9.oeam. Ly felicity 40
pgtllMboro..lo.23 “ " Coal City 10.(3 •
ft. Twl’roY'lo. 10.84 “ " Kagland U.B* ••
V' Rockmart 10.57 “ ” Dulte’o 12 15 pc
ft.
■ cedartowa.. 12.05 pm “ Warner’*..... 2.39 ••
■'Warner'. .12 3!t p m •• Odartown.. 3.25”
■•Piedmont,.. 1.2* “ “ Grady 3.42 •
■viklke's 3.15 “ '• Rockmart... 4.04 •-
H 1 Rutland- . 4.23 •• Tayl’rev’le.. 4.2* “
■ Coal City.... 5.10 •• •• Sttleeboro... 4.35 ••
K PellCltr . 5.35 •* Ar.Oartersville.. 5.0* ••
Hgj Piß*3oßH—Wbat No 4 Pa*sknokii— Eak
;■ JULT BY. BUND AY. DAILT ■*. arMBAY
■ Mention)... 7.02 “ “ Grady 7.13 “
■ T.f lorsYtll* 7.12 “ “ Rockmart 7.30 ••
Mjockmart... 7.31 “ " Ta.Y10r.T111*..8.03 ••
Hi}rd.T 7.51 “ “ Stlieeboro B.l* ••
■Cedartown... 8,10 " lAr atCartereYllle 84* •
1.31 pAHeRSDER—W No. 34 PAKBSKOEB—B
s i IUSDAT OKLY. *tIBDAY OKLT
HcartraTl!le..l.ls pm Lv Odartown 11.10 v
■ Sttleeboro ...1.37 “ “ Orady 11.38
■ Taylorsville 1.47 " ** Rockmart....ll,sß ••
■ R0ckmart....2.07 ’’ “ Ta.vlorsYille 12.13 I-B.
■Grady 2.27 “ •• 5t11eb0r0....12.28"
■tledartown...2.4(l •• Ar Oarteraville.. 12.46'
loutnem Railway
*BBB Miles——.
One Management.
* PENETRATING
■GHT SOUTHERN STATES.
•lid Vestibuled Trains,
Unexcelled Equipment
Fst Schedules.
►INING CARS
ire operated on Southern Hail way
Traius
bservation cars,
)n ,.,^, as i l ii , Rt on and Southwestern
stibnled Limited, and Washington
l Chattanooga Limited via Lyneh-
M Pullman Sleeping Cars
latest pattern on all through
I J, H. CULP, Traffic Manager,
M Washington, D. C.
W • A. TURK, Gen. Passenger Agent,
M Washington. D. r .
■ RENSCOTER, Aee’t Gen. Paaeenirer Agt.
jf Chattanooga, Tenn.
■liix is the Presidential election year,
■ >ou can’t afford to be without a
■o> reliable newspaper,
I Try the
■ Chattanooga
I Weekly
I Times.
•ok fea,s a y ear ~less than one cent
■ln!.'/ 8 ,atest political news up to
ot ROirig to press. Has all the
■dV nali< ? na, local and neighlior
■ i SR Ws of the week condensed into
■ rxxii- •’'] Blt he paper von want tor
■ vfn ani , family Gtve’it a trial.
■ ] )r "’ , i‘ sp nd us four yearly sill
■ tii cents each, we will send
■ ne Weekly Times FREE This
■* ' cost you a cent,
■Vro t, 1 " 1 "°od live agents cvcrv
li. " represent ns. We give good
|-e n x 8 , üb A7^r 8 - vvriu
I Weekly Times,
B Chattanooga, Ter.n.
I Ca STORIA,
y/. *-£Uc6U/y£
GEORGIA SOWS
NOW IN SESSION.
Clark Howell is Elected President
ofthe Senate-
JOHN D- LITTLE. SPEAKER
Of the House—Other Officers Elec
ted-Synopsis ofthe Governor’s
Message
The state legislature met in At
lanta last Wednesday, and organ
ized py the election of the follow
ing officers:
SENATE.
President—Clark Howell, of Ful
ton.
President pro tem—Rowland El
lis, of Bibb.
Secretary of senate—Charles S.
Northen, of Fulton.
Messenger—Flyn Hargett.
Doorkeeper—R. E. wilson.
Chaplain—Rev. J. w. G. Watk
ins.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Speaker—John D. Little, of
Muscogee.
Speaker pro tem —N. A. Morris,
of Cobb.
Clerk—John T. Boifeuillet, of
Bibb.
Messenger—F. M. Durham, of
Bartow.
Doorkeeper—J. H. Williford, of
Fayette.
Speaker Little appointed Mrs. T.
R. R. Cobb postmistress of the
house.
EPITOME OF MESSAGE.
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 24. —The mes
sage of Governor Candler may be
thus briefly epitomized:
I recommend that an amendment
of the constitution be submitted to
the people to authorize the gov
ernor by executive ordet to change
the venue in all criminal cases
when, in his judgment, or that of
the judge of the superior court of
the county in which the crime is
alleged to have been committed, it
is necessary to protect the prisoner
from violence and secure the order
ly enforcement of the law.
I recommend that the law be so
amended as to fix tne state school
fund at $1,000,000 per annum, to
be distributed among the counties
as now provided by law, but that
the amount apportioned to no
county shall be available until that
county shall hi>ve raised, by taxa
tion, upon the taxable propertv
within its own borders, an amount
not less than 40 ner cent, of its
share of the state school fund.
I earnestly advise this general
assembly to enact some law which
will compel the tax dodger to bear
his just share of the burdens of
government.
The time has come when the
state should provide a home for
those old. decrepit and wornout
confederate soldiers who are home
less and friendless and unable to
work for themselves.
I earnestly recommend that the
governor be authorized to employ
at an annual salary of not exceed
ing $2,000, some fit and proper
person to compile and superintend
the publication of all unpublished
manuscripts books and papers yet
available, bearing on her colonial
and revolutionary period and on
her part in the war of seccession.
I recommend the passage of an
ac* - which will, independently of
instituting criminal proceedings,
secure the utmost good faith in the
making of pauper oaths. Such an
act should be so framed as to fully
protect those who are really poor,
and at the same time prevent per
jurers from litigating in the su
preme court at the expense of the
state, and in the trial courts at the
expense of their fellow citizens.
In the interest of good govern
ment and in the interest of the ne
gro race, I recommend an amend
ment to the constitution providing
for a qualification suffrage based
on an educational or a property
qualification, or both.
I recommend that no appropria-
A Strong Fortification.
Fortify the body against disease
by Tutt’s Liver Pills, an abso
lute cure for sick headache, dys
pepsia, sour stomach, malaria
constipation, jaundice, bilious
ness and all !• in deed troubles.
*Tfc >V • .-O ; >{t S Sfe”
S\ * b.' F. i* ■ > 1 k v.' j vd ii L’l A V
Dr.Tutt; Yo.-r Liver Fills are
the fly-wheel cflife. I shall ever
be grateful for the accident that
broughttliem to my notice. I feel
as if I had a r° T * lease* of life.
J. Fairleigh, Platte Caynon, Col.
Tutt’s L*ver Pi Us
tion be made for the military for
the year 1901, but that $20,000 be
appropriated for the year 1902.
STEVENSON’S ESTIMATE-
Situation Summed Up Two Weeks
Before National Election
Chicago, Oct. 21.— Adlai E. Ste
venson, who returned to Chicago
from his campaigning trip through
the eastern states, in an interview
today spoke enthusiastically of the
democratic activity in the state
through which he had passed. Mr.
Stevenson made the flat-footed dec
laration that the democrats would
carry Indiana, and added:
‘‘Ohio should be put down as
very likely to give its electoral
votes for Bryan. To my mind the
two great doubtful states which
lean more strongly to the democrat
ic than to the republican side in
this fight are New York and Ohio.”
Mr. Stevenson made the follow
ing estimate as it stands today:
for m’kinley.
California 9 Oregon . 4
Connecticut fi IVnubylvania 39
lowa 18 Rhode Island 4
Maine 6 Vermont 4
Nassachusetts 15 Wisconsin '9
Michigan 14 Wyoming 8
Minnesota y
New Hampshire 4 Total 188
North Dakota 3
FOR BRYAN.
Alabama 11 Montana 3
Arkansas 8 Nebraska 8
Colorado 4 Nevada 3
Florida 4 North ' arolina 11
Georgia 1.8 South Carolina 9
Idaho 3 Tennessee ..... >9
Indiana 15 Texas 15
Kentucky is Utah 8
Louisiana 8 Virginia 19
Maryland 8
Mississippi y Total 189
Missouri 17
DOUBTFUL.
Illinois 24 Washington 4
Kansas West Virginia 6
Nxw Jersey lo Delaware S
New York >
0hi0... . 93 Total 190
South Dakota 4
Mr. Stevenson left tonight for a
three days’ tour of Michigan.
The Companion for the Rest ofl9OC.
Every issue of The Youth’s
Companion for the nine weeks of
November and December will be
enlarged, and the Holiday Num
bers will be double the usual size,
with richly decocrated covers.
From now until the end cf the year
The Companion will be crowded
with articles and stories sufficiently
varied to please every taste in both
old and young—men and women,
boys and girls.
Among the contributions an
nounced for eariy issues are “How
I Acted the Missionary’’ by Sir
Henry Stanley; “With the Pretoria
Guard.” by Rider Haggard; “A
Historic Game of Football,” by
Walter Camp; “Horse Sense,” by
Frank R. Stockton; “Pulpit Elo
quence,” by Dean Farrar; “Days
of Long Ago,” by lan Maclaren;
and “A Baritone Among Famous
People,” by Victor Maurel; iu ad
dition to which there will be serial
and short stories by Margaret De
land, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
Ward, Bliss Perry, Charles W.
Chestnut and other writers of de
lightful fiction.
Those who subscribe now for
1901 vil receive The Companion
for the remaining weeks ot 1900
free from the time of subscription,
in addition to the “Puritan Girl”
calendar for 1901, lithographed in
12 colors from exquisite designs
painted expressly for The Com
panion.
Illustrated announcement of the
volume for 1901 will be sent free
to any address, with sample copies
of the paper.
The Youth’s Companion,
Boston, Mass.
A Thousand Tongues
Could not express the rapture of
Annie E. Sprin er, of 1125 Howard
St., Philadelphia, Pa., when she
found that Dr. King’s New Discov
ery for Consumption had complete
ly cured her of a hacking cough
that for many years had made life
a burden. Ail other remedies and
doctors could give her no help, but
she says of this Royal Cure- l ’it soon
removed the pain in my chest and
1 can now sleep soundly, something
I can scarcely remember before. I
feel like sounding its praises
throughout the Universe.” So will
every one who tries Dr. King’s N*w
Discovery for any trouble of the
Throat, Chest or Lungs. Price 50c.
and SI.OO. Trial bottles free at
Young Bros.’ Di ug Store; every hot
tie guaranteed.
Moscow-
The Saturday Ke-v.cw.
In Russia everything is large
and everything loud. Moscow is
like an immense village, and every
thing in it is built bro. and, not high,
because there is so much space to
cover. The public squares, tin
paved and suGrounded by a little
rim of cobb’es, are as big as mead
ows. The arcades and p issage,
w th their cellars below and shops
above, their glass roofs, are so
enormous that they could hold the
Passage des Panoramas, and the
Burlington Arcade, and the gal
leries at Milan, without filling more
than a corner of them. Colors
shriek and flame; the Muscovite
eye sees only by emphasis and by
contrast; red is completed either
§R|oon DAI^AIM
VLvvlr rVIsWIIo Mash
jc In some cases the external signs of Contagious Blood Poison are so slight that the KJ"
victim is l irmly within the grasp of the monster before the true nature of the disease lflslilV
\ IS ~O Wl‘ , Ir i ot^er the blood is quickly filled with this poisonous virus and the fevgc gtS-f g*.
swollen glands, mucus patches in the mouth, sores on scalp, ulcers on tongue, sore wa | S*!*JU V
, _ ~ throat, eruptions oti skill, copper colored splotches, and falling hair aud eyebrows ™ * VVlltyj
leave no room for doubt, as these are all unmistakable signs of Contagious Blood Poison. Pklgkt
. - 5,1. piescnbe mercury and jiotash as the only cure for Blood Poison. These poisonous min- jefgl ST IS
f r “r itW'.ea complete and permanent cure of Contagious Blood Poison. They drive the disease 1 VUI
? e s ', Bl * ,n > cov s r U P for a while, but it breaks out agein in worse form. These powerful minerals produce mercurial
mi:l nu . !” OKt offensive sores and ulcers, causing the joints to stiffen and finger nails to drop off. Mercury and
** Tee. v \ , ' or * Cß DOt cures, and those who have been dosed with these drugs are never after free from aches and pain.
, ’ Mt .' l,l Hn eu * lr **y different manner, Inting a purely vegetable remedy ;it forces the poison out of the system, and
* earing down, builds up and invigorates the general health. S. S. S. is the only antidote for this specific virus, aud
, e only cure for Contagious Blood Poison. No inaiter in what stage or how hopeless the case may appear, even
. " Ilounce <l incurable by the doctors, S. S. S. can be relied upon to make n rapid, permanent cure. S. S. S. is not a
tw. in ei remedy; an ex]>enence of neatly fifty yeurs has proven it a sure and unfailing cure lor this disease. It is the
only purely vegetable blood medicine known.
Spread afl ovcrravTolk nSJT* rk ' . N i L’ '* 1 A"**. 0 ® 01 *"! w . ith n terrible blood disease, which was in |>oU at first, but afterward*
* ______ * *) • T hcnc soon broke out Into Horen, and it js easy to imagine the suffering ! emluietl. Before I trecame convinced that the
few doctors could do me o pood I had spent a hundred dollars, which was really thrown away. I then
i tried Vf <nous patent medicine**, hut thev did not reach tiie disease When I had finished my first
bottle ut S. S. S. I was greatly improved, and was delighted with the result. The large, red splotches
on my cheat l>egan to jrrow pa 'er ami smaller and before long disappeared entirely. I regained my
; v;" ' lost weight, became stronger, aud my appetite improved. I was soon entirely well, aud my skin as
’I K, Send for our Home Treatment Book, which contains valuable information a! out
bdWA* this disca-M?, with complete directions for sell treatment. Our medical department is
a, & fejffiSßßSgy in charge of physicians who have made n life-time study of blood diseases. Don’t
hesitate to write for anv information or advice wanted. We make no charge what
ever for this. All correspondence is held in the most sacred confidence. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA.
by another red or by a bright blue.
There are no shades, no reticences,
no modulations. The restaurants
are filled with the din of vast me
chanical organs, with drums and
cymbalsja great bell clashes against
a chain on all the trams, to dear
the road; the music which one
hears is a ferocity of brass.
The masons who build the
houses build in top boots, red shirts
and pink trousers; the houses are
painted red or green or blfie; the
churches are like the temples of
savage idols, tortured into' every
unnatural shape and color, ever
glaring color. Bare feet, osier
sandals, and legs swathed in rags
pass to and fro among the middle
classes, the patent leather boots of
the upper classes, like the inner
savage of a race still so near bar
barism, made evident in that sur
vival of the footgear of primitive
races.
O A S TOniA .
B#m tk* /) The Kind You Haw Always Bought
T* <2*OBSsST
Rollh-<1 the Grave.
A startling incident, of which Mr.
John Oliver of Philndelphia, wm*
the subject, is narrate*! as follows:
“I was in a mostdreadful condition.
My skin was almost yellow, eyes
sunken, tongue coated, pain contin
ually in hack and sides, no appetite
—gradually grow ing weaker day by
day. Three physclans had given
me up. Fortunately, a friend ad
vised trying ‘Electric Bitters;’ and
to my great joy aud surprise, the
first bottle made a decided improve
ment. I chntThued their use for
three weeks, and am now a well
man. I know they saved my life
and robbed the grave of another
victim.” No one should fail to try
them. Only 50c., guaranteed, at
Young Bros. Drug Store.
McClure’s for November-
Perhaps the most timely article
in McClure’s Magazine for Novem
ber, is “A Woman’s Diary of the
siege of Pekin, by Mrs. E. K. Low
ry, one of the besieged missiona
ies in the legations last summer.
This vivid narative by an eye wit
ness of most of the events described
is sure to command attention at a
time when the eyes of all the world
are turned to the far east.
Another article that will awaken
general inteiest is that on The
First Flight of Count Zephelin’s
-Air Ship, by Eugene Wolt.
Interesting, suggestive, helpful
—that must be the verdict upon
William Allen White’s Character
Sketch of Hanna.
The fiction in this numl er is of
the usual high standard. A Tem
perance Campaign, by G. K. Tur
ner. Confusion of Goods, by Fred
eric Carrol Baldy is a football
story, and a good exciting story
too. Sheer grit and dogged perse
verance are the qualities most evi
dent in the little sheriff who claims
most of our attention in Charles
Warren’s story of “How the Law
Came to Jenkins Creek.” Little
Hallujah’s Convert, by Alvah Mil
ton Kerr, and “The Love that Glo
rifies, by Lilian True" Bryant, are
the other stories of this number.
The story of “The Crucifixion of
Messiah” in the Rev. John Watson’s
Life of the Master is a worthy con
tinuation of a notable work.
Beware of Oitments that Con
tain Mercury
iiK mercury will surley destroy the sense
of smell and completely derange the
whole system when entering it through
the mucous surfaces. Such articles
should never be used except on pre
scription** from reputable physicians,
as the damage they will do is tun fold
of the good 3’ou can poss’bly derive
from them, flail’s Catarrh Cure, man
utactured by F. .T. Cheney JfcCo, To
ledo, () , contains no mercury, and is
taken internally, acting directly upon
the blood and mucous arrfaces 01 the
system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cuie
be sure you get the genuine. It is taken
internally and made in "Toledo,Ohio, by
F. .1 Chenv A Cos. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggist, price 7> • p w nott’e.
Hall’s Family Pill* are the best. ,
TIME AND
A arc practically annihilated
g J M by the ocean cables and
/ It /S ' land telegraph systems
AL JL m 4 which now belt the cir
• cumferenceot Old Earth in
o many different directions. “Foreign parts” are no longer
foreign in the old meaning of the term. Europe, Africa, Asia,
are “next door” to ut. What happens there to-day we know
aE to-morrow —if we read THE CHICAGO RECORD, whose
Special Cable Correspondents are located in r-ny important
. city in the world outside of the United Suics. A'o other
® American newspaper ever attempted so extensive a service;
and it is supplemented by the regular foreign news service
of The Associated Press. For accurate intelligence of the
W. atirring events which are shaking the nations—of wars and
rumors of wars—of the threatening dissolution of old govern
* ments and the establishment of new—of the onward sweep of
the race in all parts of the world—the one medium of the
most satisfactory information is the enterprising, “up-to-date”
American newspaper, THE CHICAGO RECORD.
w-s W“S A large map of the world on Mereator’a Projection, about 2SHx!<
if |-4 Inches In size, beautifully printed In colors, with a large-scale mu
l 1j 1 j of Europe on the reverse side, will be mailed to any address free of
charge on receipt of request accompanied by two 2-cent stamps to
cover postage and wrapping. The maps illustrate clearly how comprehensively the
special ceoie aerfUe of T*s Chicago Raooß* cover* the eetira elvlilaed world. Ad
dress T*a Chicago Record, 181 Medison street, Chicago.
Ndsnvmt, vnuKuudoyu ii m. Louis Ry.
. . J I '
OWN RAILS, WITH THROUGH TRAIN SERVICE TO
RONE, CHATTANOOGA, NASHVILLE AMD MEMPHIS.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS AND FIRST- CLASS DAY COACH TO
Sim Louis and All Points Wosi*
QUICKEST SCHEDULES TO
CHICAGO NORTHWEST.
ExooHont Service to Louisville, Cincinnati
end Ohio, Indiana end Michigan Point*.
ALL RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINKS TO
NEW YORK BNP THE EAST.
TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS.
Cheap Emigrant Rates to Arkansas ani Texas*
Nr selrtiles, mm, or aig raHru4 la(naaflM, can ipsa ar write la
i. W. THOMAS, JR., H. P. SMITH, CHARLES E. HARMAN,
CENERAL MANAGER, TRAFFIC MANAGER, CEN. PAG*. AGENT,
NABHVIU - VRMwn 1 r TSWN ATLANTA, OA.
- ~ ,in uni* 01 m, ****• • . * __
V, _• . • *l . Y Ml. out and Mod to ua, 2nd ■—•*•*,
•? T , r .-..FtWBi I —Will send rou Ml* HIBM J) |I 50
fcADt tIOF CAIIMiT ÜB9iCt HWIKQ MACHINE *1 *• • • **•* • •!- ■ TWS I •**■
wmikmm. You (’An fiarcine it at jour nearust freight depot and If V rafter J a j
luurni perf*etly •*i>*fetrr, enunlj * repre*eit#d, WBJHpL IJL -A
l. in aeh .t * ether* Bell m hUrS m PflO.fH), aoS TH fl
fcRKA fits T BAiUHA IOL LTER HKxUD OF, pay year
'rei r M ar* rni Our Sp**CiOl C?*er Price £ls 50 jfyltaflE
and frsigLt 1 i.c me* Lint wnghs * HB§I ’HwH
andthr will !\rcrt?* T 5 cer.La for earh 500 rail©#. 101RP44SI
ClV£ ir THR££ MONTHS' rota. w**nr own ham* msui
we will return tout i15.:0 anj daj you ore not satisfied. W# all dif
rrraal -.kr (rradrs of Svwlaf luelilsaa at 98.50, 910.00, $ll.OO, ■ WdBM
ft \t. 00 •,.! up. all fal'y Is Osr Irtf Sawlaf >afalaa Catslsfras, \ ■ I ce|lX|i -
- • $15.50 fortki* CHOP D2SK CABINET BURDICK fll vD ■ •?
• the value ever offered pymnylioxioo. fll i ■ gKafaq | ,| S
e fware or imitations §4 111 wm rf
▼ertismousa, offering; s.*.hoti **hi.a undei* various names, with p i '•%
tv!"*i- {nd ’ceraents. Writs ©*♦ frissd Is Chitif* asd lean was art , ; S.
RrMAULa Wiio AKB KOt. MM 1 •
-V6JC T DllCniPir has 9TW r kodkrx niPROVKMKXT, MaM ■■
I! n??, FTERT onoo POirr OP KT9IT HIGH .
MFSCTS O? NU*. BAUr. i!Y THK BKBT MAKKii t:4 AMKRICA. 4mA Li
■■--*>. H.OM Till SEST MATKIiIAL
SC-LiD QUARTER SAWED OAK pr.cr - vs*
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