Newspaper Page Text
Woman’s Beauty
Some women retain their beauty to an advanced
age. But women, who regularly endure pain, age
rapidly, for suffering leaves its lasting marks on
them.
Xearly all women suffer more or less with some
form of female trouble. It should not be neglected.
Avoid the pain—treat yourself at home by taking
Cardui, as thousands of other women have done.
Begin at once and give Cardui a fair trial.
It Will Help You
tSTrs. Katie Burlison, Goreville, 111., tried Cardui and writes:
“1 suffered with female troubles, and was so sick I could not stand
on my feet. Finally I began to take Cardui, and soon began to
mend. Row lam able to do all my housework and am in much
better health than I was before.” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
Southern Railway
SCHEDULE
Showing the arrival and departure of passenger trains at
McDonough, Ga., for information only, and not guaranteed.
No. Arrives From A. M.
14 Cincinnati . , . b 12.20
13 Jacksonville . . b 4.30
30 Atlanta . . . , 6.10
16 Atlanta .... 8.46
7 Macon 9.38
21 Col. &Ft Yal. . . 10.00
P. M.
22 Atlanta .... 6.00
10 Atlanta .... 6.30
15 Brunswick . . . 6.55
29 Columbus J . . 9.30
b—Nos. 13 and 14 stop on signal to receive or discharge passengers to
or from points beyond Jesup and Chattanooga.
Nos. 7 and 10 handle through Pullman drawing-room
sleeper between Macon and New York.
Nos. 13 and 14 handle through Pullman drawing-room
sleepers between Jacksonville, Cincinnati and Chicago, and
between Brunswick and Colorado Springs.
Nos. 15 and 16 handle through sleeper between Macon
and Asheville, N. C.
G. R. PETTIT, T. P. A., Macon, Ga.
C. H. ACKERT, S. H. HARDWICK,
V.-P. and G. M. P. T. M.
Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C.
H. F. CARY, J. L. MEEK,
G. p. A. A.G. P. A.
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
S JOB PRINTING?.,
NORMAN BUGGIES.
Our motto for 14 years has been—not how cheap hut how good onr
Vehicles are built for the man who believes the best is the cheapest,
in the long run experience teaches that cheap buggies are the most
EXPENSIVE. If you agree with ns on this point ask your
dealer to show you a NORMAN. We believe today we build the best
buggy in Georgia, and want you to know it. Built en correct propor
tions of best material, beautifully designed and finely finished. Top
Buggies, Runabouts and Stanhopes. If your local dealer cannot sup
ply you, write direct to
NORMAN BUCCYCO., Inc., Crffin, Ga-
NEAT PRINTING
Creates a good impression among your corres
pondents and helps to give your business pres
tige. We do neat printing at reasonable prices.
No. Departs To A. M,
14 Jacksonville . . b 12.20
13 Cincinnati . . . b 4.30
30 Columbus . . . 6.10
16 Brunswick . . . 8.46
7 Atlanta .... 9.38
21 Atlanta .... 10.00
P. M.
22 Col. &FtVal. . . 6.00
10 Macon 6.30
15 Atlanta .... 6.55
29 Atlanta .... 9.30
LATE NEWS NOTES.
General.
As (he strains of “The Star-Spang
led Banner” played by a brass band
of forty Highlanders died away, the
Roman Catholic priest at .Aberdeen,
Scotland, read the marriage litany
uniting Mias Anita Stewart, daugh
ter of Mrs. James Henry Smith of
New York, to Miguel of Bragonza,
son of the pretender to the Portu
gese throne.
Denouncing the connecting of Mrs.
Horner's name with his as outrage
and charging that his wife's suit for
divorce has grown out of his persist
ent refusal to embrace Theosophy,
Major J. F. Hanson, president of the
Central ol Georgia railway, filed in
the Georgia superior court his answer
to his wife's petition for divorce. De
nying practically every charge
brought by his wife, Major Hanson
stamps some of these charges as be
ing "unqualifiedly and absolutely un
true,” while others he terms' “reck
lessly and absurdly untrue.” On the
whole he charges that Theosophy
broke up his home.
J. P. Morgan, Jr., was elected to
the late E. H. Hardmans place on
the board of directors of the National
City bank. Bv Wall street the elec
tion is regarded as one of the most
significant of the week s financial de
velopments, presumably indicating
that harmonious relations exist be
tween me Morgan and the Kuhn-
Loeb-Standard oil groups of finan
ciers. Added weight was given the
event because it followed so closely
upon the recent reports that the
Morgan interests were about to take
an active inteiest in the government
of the Harriman road 3 and that the
younger Morgan was siated as the ul
timate successor of Mr. Harriman in
the command of the Union and South
ern Pacific systems.
The Alaska-\ ukon-Pacific exposi
tion entered its last quarter w%th
every cent of its floating indebtedness
l jaid - - * .
An important archaelogical dis
covery was announced in Mexico City
by Professor Ramon Mena, who head
ed a government expedition to Otum
ba In the state of Mexico, which has
uncovered a buried city of great an
tiquity. A pyramid similar to that
uncovered at San Juan de Tootihacan
has been exposed. The pyramid is
sixty feet .in height and measures
two hundred feet square at the base.
The remains indicate that the city
was built and occupied in the time
of the Toltecs.
Captain Netherton, of the steamer
Comedk.n, reported three streams of
oil bubbling from the surface of the
Gulf of Mexico, one hundred and six
ty miles southeast of Galveston.
Soundings showed a depth of 5,400
feet. The spring comes from an ex
tension of the oil bearing strata of
the Beaumont field.
Miss Marjorie Palmer, millionaire
daughter of the late General William
J. Palmer, was married in Colorado
Springs to Dr. Henry C. Watts, who
restored her to health after hopes
had been abandoned for her recovery.
Washington.
John K. Early, the’ leper, so-called,
has been struck from the rolls of the
pension bureau, as he has been found
to be entirely free from any disease,
having recovered from the skin erup
tion which was declared by eminent
physicians to be leprosy. Early was
receiving $72 a month on account of
total disability.
The postoffice department purpos
es to give inventors an opportunity to
put to practical test some of their
ideas in regard to improved methods
of tiein© packages «f letters in the
mails. From the thousands of de
vices submitted the department has
selected eleven, asked the inventors
to furnish twelve thousand of each
and to begin an official tesX on Sep
tember 15. Each device will be test
ed for one week in a number of post
offices and in the railway mail ser
vice.
Fifteen companies mining coal in
the Coal Creek fields of Tennessee
filed a complaint with the interstate
commerce commission, charging that
the Southern Railway company dis
criminates against them in the rates
on coal as compared with those ac
corded operators in the Appalachia,
Tom’s Creek and Black Mountain dis
tricts of Virginia. It is urged that
the differential of 80 cents to Knox
ville given on the Coal Creek coal
should be maintained in shipments to
South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and
other southern points when passing
through Knoxville. To points in
North Carolina, South Carolina and
Georgia reached by both fields
through Morristown, Tenn., it is
claimed that the same rate should ap
ply beyond that junction, with a dif
ferential to that point of 40 cents in
stead of 25 cents, in favor of the Coal
Creek field. The rates to Nashvrfle
are also made the subject of com
plaint.
The coast and geodetic survey will
undertake to arbitrate the Peary-Cook
north pole controversy providing Dr.
Cook requests that it should do so.
In view of the fact that Peary has
been operating under the directions
of the survey it will become the duty
of that institution to compute his
notes without request from any one,
and Acting Superintendent Perkins
said that if Cook should so desire the
Eurvey would go over his papers also.
The International Esperanto con
gress has selected Washington, D. C.,
as the meeting place in 1910 and a
special steamer will be chartered to
carry the European delegates to the
United States. Edwin Reed, the
United Stales government delegate,
extended the invitation.
Ttoandi Have Kidney
Trouble and Never Suspect il
How To Find Out.
Fill a bottle or common glass with your
water and let it stand twenty-four hours;
Uij, i r _/r\, a brick dust sedi
ment, or settling,
A stringy or milky
luA \ y appearance often
V indicates an un
healthy eoncN
\ f hi l * on ** ie kid-
U/ fy-neys; too fre
quent desire to
pass it or pain in
the back are also symptoms that tell you
the kidneys and bladder are out of order
and need attention.
What To Do.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy,
fulfills almost every wish in correcting
rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys,
liver, bladder and every part of the urinary
passage. Corrects inability to hold water
and scalding pain in passing it, or bad
effects following use of liquor, wine or
beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne
cessity of being compelled to go often
through the day, and to get up many
times during the night. The mild anil
immediate effect of Swamp-Root is
soon realised. It stands the highest be
cause of its remarkable a ‘-4ft.
health restoring prop
cities. If you need a
medicine you should :^rrr:ri
have the best. Sold by
druggists in fiftv-cent
and one-dollar sizes.
You may have a sample bottle sent free
by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing
hamton, N. Y. Mention this paper and
remember the name, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root, and the address, Binghamton,
N. Y., on every bottle.
Engines
AND BOILERS
Saw, Lath and Shlnrle Mill*. Injsotors,
ramps and Fittings, Wood Saw*, Splittsrs,
■bafts, Pallsps, Baiting, Oasolins Inflats.
LOMBARD,
Emilj), Kathto ind hil« Work* mi Supply Star*
AUftySTA. BA.
Kennedy’s
Laxative
Cough Syrup
Relieves Colds by working them out
•f Ihe system through a copious and
healthy action of the bowels.
Relieves coughs by cleansing the
mucous membranes of the throat, chest
and bronchial tubes.
“As pleasant to the taste
as Maple Sugar"
Children Like It*
For BACKACHE-WEAK KIDNEYS Try
faftitt't Bladder Pills-Sure and Salk
Weak Kidneys
Backache, Lumbago
and Rheumatism
immediately relieved by
Pineules
i
Delays are dangerous. There
is no more common complaint
than Kidney complaint.
Nature always
gives due warn
inE and failure to
heed same may
1 * n Diabetes,
\ ■ <y Lumbago, Bright’s
J/ Disease, or some other
serious affection of the
1 1 f Kidneys. A trial will
11 Jh convince you they
Vt are unequaled. Pine
-1 ules are quickly ab
\ sorbed and readily
Wm£ J but naturally elimin
i M i ate P°l sons due to dis-
IFA I organed condition of
jJJ i Kidneys and Bladder.
They purify the blood
and are a tonic to the
entire system. Do not suffer from
Backache, Lumbago, Rheumatism
or Kidney and Bladder trouble
when you can get Pineules.
Two sizes, SI.OO and 50 cents. T-he dollar size
contains 2i times as much as the 50 cent size.
Pineule Medicine Company
Chicago, U. S. A.
Z. D. Waid. Stockbridge.
Horten Dio*; Co.
You can’t buy a good brand of pon
ularity at bargain rates.
With some people the past is ever
present.
CORPORATIONS LISTED
4,002 Foreign and Domestic
Firms Have Registered.
Charters Have Been litued to 115 New
Corporations During the Past
Year.
Atlanta, Ga. —Reports have been re
ceived at the secretary of states’ of
fice showing the number of corpora
tions, foriegn and domestic, now do
ing business in the state. There were
on June 24, 4,002 corporations regis
tered, 3.306 domestic and 696 foreign.
Since that time 115 new corporations
have received charters or been li
censed to do business.
So far 1,769 domestic corpora
have failed to register. The amount
due from corporations registered last
year, which have not paid this year,
is $884.50. The cost of registration is
$1 for the first year and fifty cents for
each renewal. The time for registra
tion expires November 1.
FAMOUS SON OF UFORGIA.
Captain Butt of Augusta Now a Na
tional Character.
Augusta, Ga.—One of the most con
spicuous figures and at the same time
one of the most popular members of
the presidents’ staff on the trip across
the continent, is a native Georgian,
a man who began his career in an
humble way in the Empire State of
the South, and who has won his offi
cial spurs, so to speak, by a com
manding presence and a will that
knew no such word as fail.
This man is Captain Archibald W.
Butt, who was once a newspaper re
porter in Augusta, Ga. He is now the
president’s military aide.
Captain Butt is now with President
Taft, and will visit Georgia with the
presidential party on the re
turn trip to Washington.
TO HARNESS TALLULAH FALLS.
An 18,000-Horsepower Development is
Planned for That Point.
Columbus, Ga.—The Georgia and
Alabama Industrial Index says, in its
regular weekly issue:
“The swift-descending water of Tal
lulah Falls, whose picturesque beauty
forms one of the greatest natural at
tractions in the state of Georgia, are
soon to enter upon another phase of
service to man, for in addition to de
lighting his eye with their loveliness,
they are, in the form of utilized and
directed power, to administer to his
wajits. The power rights at these
famous falls have been sold for SIOO,-
000, and an 18,000-horsepower devel
opment is planned for that point. The
power will be transmitted through the
mountains of northwest Georgia and
on copper wires will race down to
Atlanta as electric current, there to
turn the wheels of Industry.
NO RECEPTION MAILS TAFT.
Columbus Considers Proposed Stop
Near Visit. ,
Columbus, Ga. —Columbus is much
interested in the suggestion that in
traveling from Birmingham to Macon
early in November President Taft
change his criginal route and make
that section of his journey via At
lanta instead of this city.
Since the people here continue to
refuse to recognize a pass-through as
a viist or even a near visit, they
would not suffer any keen disappoint
ment if the president so Bhape his af
fairs that it will not be necessary for
him to pass through this city at all.
Such a suggestion would never, of
course, be made to President Taft.
It is probable that none of the city
officials will go to the station, al
though if the president does adhere
to his original routes and not travel
via Atlanta, but through Columbus, it
is presumed that h* will not lack for
a crowd at the station, as the color
ed Young Men's Christian Associa
tion, the Cbattanoochee Valley Eman
cipation Proclamation Association arid
the Sons and Daughters of Heaven,
and perhaps other negro organiza
tions, will be out in force to greet
him. > _ _
T 0 BUILD SUBURBAN LINES, i
Cities in Southern and Central Por
tion of State to Be Connected,
Macon, Ga. —Within the next week
developments in the interurban rail
way movement promise many good
things for the scores of business men
here and throughout the centra! and
southern portion of the state who have
been eager to gather assurances that
the lines will soon be in opeiation.
Those who are closely associated in
the business enterprises state that by
October 1 announcements from the
general offices here wifi be made that
will be received with a great deal of
satisfaction.
This will probably mean that the
union of interests between the local
street railway company, the iriterur
ban lines and the Central Georgia
Power Company is so well planned
that only the business formality of
passing the boards of directors and
the stockholders In each company will
be the only remaining duty to be ac
complished.
ADGOSTA GETS RAILROAD SHOPS.
Georgia and Florida Railway Shops
Will Be Moved from Douglas.
Douglas, Ga. —The offices of the
Georgia and Florida Railway will be
moved at once from this place to Au
gusta. This announcement was made
by General Manager J. M. Turner.
The shops of the road which have
just been completed at a cost of
$300,000 will remain here.