Newspaper Page Text
COURANT-AMERICAN.
Entered in the Posto ffice at Cartersville, Oa.
as second class matter .
FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1887.
To Our Delinquent**.
. A few ww'kn aaro we sent out a collector
/ after you. but at the end of three days
i called him in, he having collected
t hardly enough to defray expenses,
f We have arranged to have the following
getlemen receipt yon for snb*cription*:
All those getting this paper at Adalrsvllle, will
find Mr. J. A. Bailey at that place to make out
receipts.
At Pine Log Mr. A. C. Hhelton will have a list
f our subscribers getting papers from the Pine
Log postoffice.
Mr. It. Milam, ai Stilesboro, has the Stiles
boro and Enharlee lists,
Those getting their papers at Cassville and
< ass Station will find their accounts with Mr. It.
B. Smith, the postmaster at Cassville.
W. W. Stokes, at Folsom, has the Folsom and
Gum Spring lists.
Mr. W. Y. Bailey, at Kingston, has our King
ston list.
We hope to have an agent at Kingston in a
few days.
NOTICE Yoi'K DATE—By reference to
the date printed opposite your name 1
you will see to what time you have /
paid up to. /
Very respectfully, /
JWIKLE & WILLINGHAM.
Henry .VI. Flagler, the Standard Oil
millionaire, has been spending a fortune
in building Florida hotels. He says he
does this for amusement.
Ex-Mayor Cramer, the Hackettstown
defaulter, relieved the monotony of his
stay in that quiet town by getting en
gaged to fifteen women. It is needless
to say that he will not return to Hack
ettstown.
A hen owened by Mr. Flynn, of Russia
ville, Ind., recently laid an egg on which
the words, “In God We Trust,” were
plainly imprinted. This might be all
right if the bird had been an eagle, but
it seems rather bad form in a hen.
Mu. Blaib’s bill will probably pass
the Senate, but, reaching the House, it
is likely to encounter serious opposition
u the Committee on Education, to
which it will be referred. There is
Mmall probability that it will become a
Jaw during the Fiftieth Congress
The Canadian Pacific railroad encour
ages matrimony among the voung men
in the Northwest Territory by offering
those who go back to Ontario to marry,
matrimonial tickets. They are sold at
the usual rates, and when a return couple
and a marriage certificate are presented
the bride goes free
Cartersville as an Iron Manufacturing
Centre.
Bartow county, the richest of all the
counties of Georgia in mineral wealth, is
just now attracting the attention of the
public. The immense wealth of ores that
lay hidden in the mountains and hills
around Cartersville will some day supply
large blast furnaces located right here.
We have all the gifts that nature could
bestow and it now remains for the hand
of limn to utilize them.
A few days ago an Atlanta Constitu
tion reporter met up with Mr. Thomas P.
Stovall, of London, Eng., and inquired
about Cartersville. This is what he said:
“Cartersville? Yes; the place has plenty
of iron .ore and manganese around it.
Boom? No: the gentlemen interested up
there don't want any boom. Booms are
bad. They hurt towns, you know.*’
Mr. Stovall is right. He told a great
deal of truth in a very few words.
Yes, Cartersville has plenty of iron ore
and manganese around it, and big for
tunes await those who will develop them.
As for a boom, one is not wanted, for the
history of the spurts of other towns of
the South show they are damaging to
any place.
The Kennesaw Gazette also has a few
words on Cartersville as an iron manu
facturing centre. While there is nothing
in it that all who have made any inquiry
about it did not know, the publication
will prove vastly beneficial among the
thousands of readers of the Gazette in
the North and the West. The following
is the article from the Gazette:
“Cartersville. without question, is des
tined to be the iron centre of Georgia.
The beds of iron ores which surround the
city on all sides are of the finest quality
and are practically inexhaustible. Neith
er this generation nor the tenth, genera
tion after it*vill see the end of them.
“The location, of the city is one which
combines all the requirements for health,
and with deposits of iron and manga
nese ore, lime-rock and sand-stone with
in close proximity of each other, Carters
ville affords to the capitalist* a combina
tion which simply has no equal in the
South, if in America. We are surprised
that these advantages have not been
seized upon sooner by great capitalists,
and we predict that when they do avail
themselves of them they will be surprised
at the profits which they will reap.
“They will find that not only have they
all the facilities for the manufacture of
iron and steel, but that over the Western
and Atlantic railroad they can reach all
the Eastern markets at a rate as cheap
or cheaper that can pe made from Chat
tanooga or Birmingham, and that the
rates to the West can be made at all
| times as cheap as those from Birming-
F ham and Anniston.”
The Cost of Iron Production in the
South.
The possibilities of the South in the
line of iron production are scarcely
known. That it is to become the iron
producing center of this country, is but a
question of time. This, of course, will Is?
confined principally to the mineral sec
tions of Alabama, Tennessee and Geor
gia, where the ores and fuel are contig
uous and in great abundance. With
these natural advantages in her favor,
the South will not only be the legitimate
home of King Cotton, but of that com
modity next in commercial greatness and
power, King Iron.
It has taken our Northern friends a
long time to acknowledge our sujierior
advantages in producing iron at the
least possible cost, butrecent demonstra
tions have forced this acknowledgment
from them. The Iron Age, which has al
ways appeared a little prejudiced to
wards the South and her miueral re
sources, but which is standard authority
upon all questions touching the manu
facture of iron, makes sorqe very strong
concessions in its favor. Its recent con
clusions are the result of a careful inves
tigation and study of the iron industry
of the South, In discussing the cost of
iirs production in the last issue of that
paper, it says:
‘‘A few years since the cost was estima
ted above sl2 per ton.* We have every
reason to believe from data submitted
that today the cost has been considera
bly lowered, and that, according to the
circumstances favoring the one or the
other producer, it is within the limit of
$10.50 and $11.50, including fair allow
ances for interest on plant, a moderate
roy<y charge on ore and coal for ex
haustion of lands and a safe margin for
ordinary repairs, taxes and
cost of water. Accepting the higher fig
ure, and making allowances for freights,
commissions, insurance, we find that the
furnaoemen of the Birmingham district
can lay down their iron for the average
of the grades without suffering any press
ure at $15.75 to $lO at New York, at
$lO to $10.50 at New England points,
and at $15.50 to $lO at Cincinnati.
Some of them can do it more cheaply;
but at the figures named, with plants
run fairly well, and producing about
2;000 to 2,200 tons a month, as the ma
jority of them do, the makers in the dis
trict would meet the market without suf
fering. In other words, when standard
irons are selling at tidewater at $15.50,
$10.50 aid $17.50 respectively, for gray
forge No. 2 and No. 1, Southern irons
could still hold their own. This means
that producers in the Lehigh Valley
should be in a position- to make their
product at sls to $15.50 to hold their
own. Those acquainted with the district
know that under ordinary conditions of
ore and luel supply a large percentage of
the iron produced for the open market in
the Lehigh V alley is made at Jess than
that figure. On the other hand, nearly
all the smaller companies, who depend
upon the open market for their hematite
and magnetic ores, aud who are so loca
ted as to be at the mercy of the coal
roads, cannot touch so low a cost. The
smaller furnaces on the Hudson river are
unquestionably*better placed. The high
er cost to a considerable number of the
furnaces tributary to tidewater and New
Lugland markets is due to a variety of
causes. One of them is the relatively
high cost of fuel, and in the case of some
plants the policy ot the railroad compa
ny upon which they happen to be depend
ent of loading the furnace owner down
with all the freight charges his business
is supposed capable of bearing. Another
cause is the fact that local hematite ores
are growing leaner and scarcer, aud that
growing depth is telling on the cost of
mining in some of the magnetic ore dis
tricts, notably New Jersey. There, with
a few exceptions, in which the plants
take rank with the best in the country,
the furnaces of the Lehigh Valley /and
other districts tributary to tidewater
markets have remained far behind in the
march of progress. Fuel consumption is
high, product low in quantity, with all
that that implies. And yet we know of
small furnaces, using their owu ores,
whose monthly cost sheets at times run
as low as $9.50. How far modern plants
located at points favorable to the -pur
chase of cheap'eoal, in easy reach of an
ore supply and in proximity to the lar
gest markets, could reduce costs, is a
problem toward the solution of which we
have no data beyond the indications fur
nished by the work of some of the latest
plants. These, indeed, are encouraging
to those who might desire to embark in
the business. But dealing with the in
dustry as it exists today a candid sur
vey of the situation lend to the admis
sion that if it should come to a struggle
between the furnaces in Eastern Penn
sylvania, New Jersey and New York
which produce chiefly foundry brands for
the open market, and the makers of the
South, no inconsiderable number of the
former would be unable to survive very
long.
In a Spanish newspaper printed at Ma
tanzas, Cuba, appears the following ad
vertisement:“Photographs of the most
beautiful woman in the world,Sra. Fran
ces Folsom de Cleveland, the Lady of the
white House, the idol of sixty millions
of people, the wife of the President of the
United State. Call for the ‘EI Rayo
Verde’ cigarettes.”
W. Wilson Guizot, a son of the great
historian, is lecturing in Paris on Ed
mund Burke and Milton.
A Happy New Year.
Though the progress of human life, all
along the line, is marked by disappoint
ment,, disaster and disagreeable circum
stances, yet it is equally true that it em
braces a great deal that should make us
joyous, grateful and happy. This may
be truthfully said of the people of our
own land and country, and especially
those of our immediate section. While
there could have been experienced great
er prosperity, a more rapid development
of our material resources, and we would
have changed and removed many obsta
cles that have hindered, still, we think
the year that just closed has been one of
unusually propitious circumstances. Per
haps, not in a quarter of a century, have
our people had so many things for which
to be thankful; and we feel sure they
have never entered upon anew year sur
rounded by so many of the comforts of
life, or better equipped to encounter the
vicissitudes incident to the future.
While not all of life,yet the material pros
perity of a community is the basis upon
which all else that pertains to the tem
poral welfare and pleasures of its people
are lounded, then our measure has been
great. Indeed, throughout the eutire
country, with the exception of a few ill
advised strikes, 1887 was an era of al
most universal prosiierity and a harmo
nious working together. Wages have
been good, work plenty, business brisk,
and the temperate, careful and indus
trious mail, was enabled to lay aside
something for a nest-egg, or the prover
bial “rainy day.” With our immediate
people and section, there has been infused
anew life and greater energy, and there
has been, we might say, a wonderful
stride toward the opening up and devel
oping our magnificent resources. We ap
preciate more fully our wealth in this
line, and one great advantage, the out"
side world knows it with us. With this
most favorable condition of affairs, our
people prosperous, harmonious and uni
ted upon all questions of public enter
prise, the outlook is far brighter than
even the reality of the past year. There
is every assurance that the year 1888
will be golden in the annals of Carters
ville, and in fact, a happy new year.
Standing upon the threshold of the
new year, and taking a retrospective and
a prospective view, we see everytljjng to
make a people happy. We look back
upon a season prosperous materially,
and a progressive and elevating one
morally; looking out to the future, we
see a continued prosperity, a live, ener
getic, enterprising, prosperous and cul
tured people, who have joined hands for
a common purpose. We see, as a result,
a progressive section, new industries, de
veloped resources, and growth of every
thing that tends to make a community
great materially, intellectually and mor
ally. In view of all these encouraging
prospects, the Co crant- A meiucan is in a
happy frame of mind, and earnestly
wishes all its friends and readers, as well
as the rest of mankind, a happy New
Year.
Secretary of State N. C. Barnett
issued a charter to the Georgia Terminal
Railroad company Tuesday. The in
corporators are Messrs. E. P. Howell,
Samuel Inman, Henry Jackson, Alfred
Sully, Thomas Smith, Isac L. Rice, John
A. Rutherford, Emanuel Selman, Calvin
S. Brice, Samuel Thomas, John H.
Inman, George S. Scott, T. M. Logan,
Pope Barrow and James White. The
capital stock is $1,000,000. The road
will run from Atlanta to such points as
the company shall select on the East
Tennessee, \ irginia and Georgia road,
the Atlaiia and Charlotte Air-Line road
and the Georgia Central railroad.
Old Man (calling down the stairs to
daughter)—“Clara!“
Daughter—“Yes,papa. “
Old Man—“ Ask that young man in the
parlor which he prefers for breakfast,
milk rolls or Vienna bread.“—New York
Sun.
A Boston paper asserts that a newly
rich New York woman got from a dis"
honest sexton possession of an old tomb
stone sacred to the memory of some
one of the same name as herself that
was in. an English graveyard and now
has it set in her library wall, with a
fictitious pedigree, as ,a voucher for hei 4
aristocracy.
A Galena grocer named Scott offered to
let a woman named Raylor strike him
with a codfish for twenty-five cents. It
was all a joke, you know, but she paid
the. money, gave the codfish a whirl or
two, and when it hit Grocer Scott it broke
his jaw and* tore off part of his ear
It is an interesting fact that although
the appoiutment of Postmaster-General
Vilas to the Secretaryship of the Interior
is considered a promotion, it causes Mrs.
Vilas to move down one place in the
ine of cabinet ladies at the White House
receptions.
’Tis i ow the festive skater
Doth cut the figure 2.
And limpeth homeward, later,
S iff-limbed and black and blue.
—New Haven News
♦ O ♦
Cure for Piles
JL- Itching Piles are known by moisture
like perspiration, producing a very disa
greeab'e itching atter getting warm
This form as well as Blind, Bleeding, and
protruding Piles,yeild at once to the ap
plication of Dr Bosanko’s Pile Reme y,
which acts directly upon the parts affect
ed, absorbing the tumors, allaying the in
tense itching and effecting a permanent
cure. 50 cents Address The Dr Bosan
ko Medicine Cos., Piqua, O. Sold by
\N ikle & Cos. mch3
SOUTHERN BOOMERS.
A Convention Asking the Railroad* for a
On* Cent Rate to All Point* South.
A convention, composed of more than
one hundred delegates from the leading
cities of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi,
North # Carolia, South Carolina, Florida
and Tennessee assembled in Chattanooga
Tuesday, to take action for the purpose
ot securing cheap rates on all southern
railroads for excursionists from the
north who desire to take up their resi
dence in the south or to visit this part of
the country to make investments. Most
of the delegates were appointed by the
boards of trade in the various cities.
The following committee was appoint
ed to confer with the railroads and see
what can be done: Edward Scott, Chat
tanooga, committeeman-at-large; A. W.
Holden, of Alabama; W. K. Schuyer, of
Louisiana; John T. Graves, editor Trib
une of Rome, Ga.; J. W. Rekford, of Mis
sissippi; T. A. Frierson, of Tennessee; W.
B. Gwinn, of North Carolina; R. M. An
derson, of South Carolina.
A resolution was adopted approving
the object of the convention which will be
held at Decatur, Ala., on the 17th, to
ask congress to appropriate money for
the completion of the work on the Muscle
Shoals canal. This *is the first conven
tion of the kind ever held in the South,
aud was called by the Chattanooga
Chamber of Commerce. It has been a
great success.
DR. J. G. GREENE.
having located in Cartersville for the purpose of
practicing medicine und surgery, otfers his pro
fessional services to the public. Calls promptly
answered. Office up-stairs over Mays A Moon's
store; residence on the corner of Market and
Stonewall streets. junl3-*m
Notice to I>e. tors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
All persons having demands against the estate
of Isham Alley, dec’d, are hereby notified to pre
sent the same properly made out and verified ac
cording to law. And all persons indebted to said
isham Alley are hereby notified to come forward
and make payment in full. This January 9, 1888.
Isham W. Alley and Elizabeth Al ey as Adm’r
and Adm’rx of Isham Alley, dec’d. janlfltf
FOB. RENT.
Oue Hundred Acres
ETOWAH RIVER LAND,
for rent on the Hardin farm to par ies having
stock. Apply on the place at Hardin’s bridge.
jaul3ttf
Adjournment ol‘ Court.
Calhoun, Ga., January 9th, 1888. —Whereas,
the undersigned Judge ot the Superior Court oi
the Cherokee Circuit, from sickness of himself is
uuable to attend aud hold the regular term of
Bartow Superior Court, which is appointed by
law to convene this day. It is therefore order, and
that the Clerk of said Superior Court, after con
vening the same, adjourn the Court to next Mon
day, the liith iust., which will then convene ut
ten o’clock a. ni. It is further ordered that the
Clerk of said Court publish this order oi ad
journment at the Court House oi Bartow county,
and oue time in the Cartersville Couiant-Aiueii
c&ii, a newspaper published at Cartersvdlle, as
provided in Section 3243 oi the Code of Deo gia.
The Grand Jury summoned to appear and at
tend this week will attend and serve next wee'. .
The Traverse Jury tor the present week will at
tend and serve the first week in February next,
as will hereafter appear by order.
j. c. fain# J. s. c. <. c.
Addenda : Some criminal business will be called
first (next week) and then the civil business will
f>o in the order a.reftdy indicted. g c <,
* true extract from tll | e ,.'“l“ uubHA-U. 01er k .
TAXES FREE.
MAMUFACTURERS, LOOK!!
Ordinance
Be it ordained by the mayor and alder
men of the city of Cartersville, Ga., that
any party of parties who shall in future
invest in property in said city for the
purpose of conducting any manufactur
ing enterprise, and shall actually operate
the same, shall be exempt from all city
taxes upon such property and all machin
ery and improvements thereon of every
character, for the term of five years from
the purchase of such property.
Approved Nov. Ist, 1887, Cartersville,
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few years
was supposed to be incurable. For a
great many years Doctors pronounced it
a local disease, and prescribed local rem
edies, and by constantly failing to cure
with local treatment pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven Catarrh to
be a constitutional disease, and therefore
requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.
J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio, is the only
constitutional cure now on the market.
It is taken internally in doses from 10
drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly
upon the blood and mucus surfaces of
the system. They offer one hundred dol
lars for any case it fails to cure. Send
for circular and testimonials. Address,
F. J. Cheney A Cos., Toledo, O.
by Druggists, 75 cts. dlo-lm
The Pine Log High School will begin
first Monday in Jan. The patronage of
the entire community is earnestly solici
ted. With your help the school will be
a success. Efficient asssistants will be
employed in literary and music depart
ments. Good board including washing,
lights, etc., $7 per month. Tuition:
SI.OO $1.50 $2.00 per month.
• Address,
Rev. W. T. Hamby,
decls-lm. Principal.
BARTOW LEARE,
INSURANCE.
Loan & Real Estate Agent.
Money Loans made on the most reasonable
terms. P. O. BOX, 123,
july2l-ly Cartersville, Ga.
BARTOW HOUSE,
Mrs. S. C. MAJORS, Prop.
Terms. #1 Per Day.
MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
The house is desirably located being
convenient to the railroad and business
of the town.
Special rates to regular boarders.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is a peculiar medicine, and is carefully pre
pared by competent pharmacists. The com
bination and proportion of Sarsaparilla, Dan
delion, Mandrake, Yellow Dock, and other
remedial agents is exclusively peculiar to
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, giving it strength and
curative power superior to other prepa
rations. A trial will convince you of its
great medicinal value. Hood's Sarsaparilla
Purifies the Blood
creates and sharpens the appetite, stimulates
the digestion, and gives strength to every
organ of the body. It cures the most severe
cases of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Roils, Pimples,
and all other affections caused by impure
blood, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Headache,
Kidney and Liver Complaints, Catarrh, Rheu
matism, and that extreme tired feeling.
“Hood's Sarsaparilla has helped me more
tor catarrh and impure blood than anything
else I ever used.” A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y.
Creates an Appetite
" I used Hood’s Sarsaparilla to cleanse my
blood and tone up my system. It gave me a
good appetite and seemed to build me over.”
£. M. Hale, Lima, Ohio.
“I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla for cancerous
humor, and it began to act unlike anything
else. It cured the humor, and seemed to
tone up the whole body and give me new
life.” J. F. Nixox, Cambridgeport, Mass.
Bend for book giving statements of cures.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. J* 1; six for ?.V Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Masa.
100 Doses One Dollar
C^.Rines
elery
impound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
eThe Aged
Nervous Prostration,Nervous Head
iche,Neuralgia, NervousWeakneas,
Stomach and Liver Diseases, and all
affections of the Kidneys.
AS A NERVE TONIC v It Strengthens
and Quiets the Nerves.
AS AN ALTERATIVE, It Purifies and
Enriches the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but
surely, on the Bowels.
AS A DIURETIC, It Regulates the Kid
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by professional and businessmen.
Price SI.OO. Sold by druggists. Send for circulars.
WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors,
* BURLINGTON, VT.
(INCORPORATED.)
PHILADELPHIA
PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO.
915, Arch Street.
Relief Plate Engraving for all Advertising and
Illustrative Purposes.
jan6-ly
Notice This As You Pass By.
W. A. BRADLEY
WEST MAIN STREET,
CARTERSVILLE, GEO.,
Carriages, Buggies | Wagons,
And do all kinds of
Repairing in Wood and Iron,
Making new pieces when necessary. He is also
prepared to do all kinds of blacksmithing. None
but the best workmen employed who can make
anything that is made of wood or iron. All
work warranted to give satisfaction. Terms
reasonable. Work done promptly. Give him a
trial and be convinced.
~ A. M TOMLINSON,
PHOTOGRAPHER,
*
On vacant lot north St. James Hotel, is pre
pared to do tirst-class work at most reasonable
prices, and guarantee satisfaction.
Also keep in stock Picture Frames, framing re
quisite and Albums. Give a call, either in fair or
bad weather. novl7-lin
G. H. AUBREY. ' CHAS. McEWEN
Aubrey A MoEwen,
Dealers in %
Coal and Insurance Agents.
The public patronage respectfully solicited.
Money to Loan on desirable security..
June 16, ’B7,
Notice your date.
Our county subscribers have the time to which
hey have paid up to printed opposite their ad
dress. We do this for their convenience, so they
can tell when their subscription expires. We are
next to the Postoffiee, and when in town and is
convenient it is requested that they drop in and
s#ttle their subscriptions. Remember our terms
are cash in advance.
h * \
name on * • .
guarantor oi (j
--* I* •:. P *r. --- v /--*
COFT’TT’i! is kept in rv.l f. —
stores uoni tiie Allan lie t.. *
COFFEE
is never good when exposed to the air.
Always buy this brand in hermetically
sealed ONE POUNIfcPACHAG-E.A
%
STILESBORO_TO_THE FRONT!
W. E Pucket, Dealer, in Gen
eral Mereliaudi.se,
Wishes to announce to his many friends and
customers that he will be In the field for l*ss with
increased facilities for handling a big business.
COTTON m CB? PRODUCT,
He handles nothing but the best goods at the
cheapest prices and gives nothing but the best
prices and all kinds of country produce.
Guanos and Fertilizers.
I will handle the best grades of Guanos and
will be enabled to give the farmers ol this section
the very best terms.
Thanking the people for their past patronage
and hoping for a* continuance of the same, 1 ain.
Yours to command,
W. E. PUCKETT.
The Merchant and Cotto Buyer of Stilesboro.
dee22-l v
CASSVILIE ACADEMY
Will open regular scholastic year Monday. JAN
UARY 9th. 1888. Rates tuition: Primary de
partment, $1.50, Intermediate, $2.00. Academic.
$2.50. Public school fund applied during winter
months. The sehool, with its surroundings and
thoroughness of Instruction, offers many advan
tages which those) having children to educate
would do well to consider. Board can be had at
very moderate rates with the best of families
close by, Ac. For information address
PROF. MATTHEW MARSHALL, Principal.
dec22 Cass Station, Ga.
FARMERS, ATTENTON.
We have accept
ed the sole agency
at Cartersville for
the Genuine Oli
ver Chilled Plows
and Repairs, and
have them now in
stock. When in
need of same will
be glad to furnish
you at the lowest
prices.
A. Knight
& Son.
Oct. 27, ’B7.
oct 27-tf
SAM JONEA
BR.MON
In the Principal Cities, with History of His Life;
and Sermons by Sam Small, his Co-laborer.
Only Illustrated Edition.
Most remarkable and intensely interesting and
amusing engravings ever seen in a book.
Only Full and AUTHt JVTIO EDITION.
The first complete reports ever printed. Grem
est'book sensation of the day. Tremendous de
mand. "No book ever before like it. AGENTS
WANTED. Popular low-down prices Writ
jor terms; or, to secure agency quick, send 75ct
in stamps for full outfit.
Time for payments allowed agents short of
funds. SCAMMEL & CO., PHILADELPHIA, Pa.
aug2B-6m
CHEAPEST LOAN AGENCY IN
THE COUNTRY.
Money to Loan.— -First mortgage loans nego
tiated upon improved farm properties for a term
of years, repayable in installments, interest at
eight (8) per cent, and a small commission.
SHATTUCK & HOFFMAN,
New Orleans.
For particulars apply to Joe M. Moon, Attor
ney at Law, Cartersville, Ga* n9-6m
R. W. Murphey. G. H. Aubrey. Chas. McEwen.
G. H. Aubrey Cos.
REAL E STATE
Bought and sold on commission. Desirable
Town, Counta.y and Mineral Property ftfr sale.
ul6
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, for
children teething, is the prescription of
one of the best female nurses and physi
cians in the United States, and has been
used for forty years with never-failing
success by iryllions of mothers for their
children. During the process of teeth
ing, its value is incalculable. It relieves
the child from pain, cures dysentery and
diarrhoea, griping in the bowels, and
wind-colic. By giving health to the
child it rests the motlier. Brice 25c. a
bottle. tf
FRESH AND NICE GROCERIES!
SAM. ARNOLD*,
at the
—Old Exchange Hotel Building.—
Has opened up anew and select stock oi
staple and fancy groceries, to which he
invites the attention of the people ol
Cartersville and surrounding countr..
The freshest goods that will be ruslnul
off at the closest figures will be the plan
upon which he proposes to do business.
thus guaranteeing satisfactory results.
For fresh and nice goods, at the lowest
prices, go to Sain. Arnolds, at the Lx-
Exchauge Hotel building, east side of the
public square. septß-tja.ii
Delicate Children, Nursing
Mothers, Overworked Men, and for all
diseases where the tissues are wasting
away Irom the ability to digest ordinary
food, or from overwork of the brain or
body, all such should take Scott s Eniul
sion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypo
phosphites. “I used the Emulsion on
a lady who was delicate, and threatened
with Bronchitis. It put her in ein •*
good health and flesh that I mustsa.v
it is the best Emulsion I ever used. * •
P. Waddell, M. D., Hugh’s Mills, S. ( .
“I hav r e used Scott’s. Emulsion, and must
say it is the best preparation of the kind
1 have ever used, and I have found it the
very thing for children that have maras
mus. —Dr. J. E. Layton, Brewer P. 0..
Missouri. and 15-lni
Notice.
I collect claims by or without suit for less than
any cheap lawyer in town.
F. C. Watkins, L. i •
K E. Cason. Resident Dentist, Cariersvil •
Georgia,
Has had just twenty (20) years of experience ex
clusively in the practice of his profession, and he
is thorough in every operation. His prices are
down to suit the times, and the most economical.
Call on him to have your dental work done and
save much valuable time, money and trouble.
He has done more work in one year than any of
his predecessors did in live years.