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SEVENTH year
r Mthe fnod pure,
u liolesome und dellc!ou.«
I
JfOYM I
I 1
I w*
I fowler
Ai>-o!utcly Pure
I
StCBNI DAV
OF Tfl E ( • KO KOIA FE 3E RA
TION GF WOMEN'S CI.UBS.
FINE PROGRAM TODAY
Entertain went at Shorter Col
lege Tonight.
The following is the program of
today of the Georgia Federation
of Women’s Clubs :
NOVEMBER I—THURSDA1 —THURSDAY —9:30 A M
Superior Court-room.
Election of officers.
Report of badge committee.
Report of chairman of standing
committees.
The Press Mrs Beulah Moseley
Ref,rm Mrs. N. P. Black .
Reciprocity Mrs. Heber Reed.
Law Mrs. Halsted Smith.
State Chairman )
ofCorrespondence ' Miss Woodbury
G F W. C. )
Household Economies in Geor
gia, Mrs W. P, Pa til 10.
Vice-President N. A. of II E.
N VEMBER I — THURSDAY —S'36 P M
“It if, after all, not the few great
libraries, but the thousand small
ones, that may do most for the
people.”
I. Report of Library Committee,
Mrs. Eugene Heard, Chairman.
II Relation of the Library to the
Educational Work of Georgia,
Mrs. W. H. Fe'ton.
111. Traveling Libraries, a new aid
to education,
General discussion, led by Mrs.
John Printup.
Installation of officers.
Alt meetings of Convention will
beheld in Superior court room.
Al Shorter College tonight a
•Hie program has been arranged for
the visiting delegates.
Mesdames Gertrude Manley
nes, Ella Lewis Martin, Lillie
" hite D,'nt< n, Grace Gardner Mc
* : <my. Misses Sylvia Thomas,
‘Vary Ruth Allen, Agues Morris,
i'io White, Nell Gordon Manly,
T'lon, Lizzie Denton and Alva
11 Neill of (he “Loe Che . lub, of
bd'on, are attending the Federa
tion.
THE CARLISTS.
— — -
biPREs-ivE Measures May Be
Adopted By Spain,
■Vidrid, Nov. -1 —Owing to the
111 ' bmt the Carlists are known to
iuiportiog arms into Spam,
po'inier, Senor Sagasta, and
11 mniish r for war, Gen. Correa,
ll ""msidering the adoption of re
piTwive measures.
Il is reported that General
ZCai| "g'l, w | )o Buccee( j e( j Ijjj
1,1,1 * Nilovas del Castillo : s pre-
11, 1 r Vis decided, to retire from
)l,!l 'ieal hfe.
II AS DISAPPEARED.
i "as troubled with rheuma-
111 mJ back woich was so se
r l itit it was painful for me
I 1 '!' ever. I began taking
■* Sarsipaiilia and in a shoit
*beumatism disappeared.
" entirely free from it and
[j' H ‘ al, h.' H. Eugene Fant,
-, Andersofi S >uth Carolina.
H 1 K11) > I> 1 1 I j .
ILLS are purely veg
"'■l do r.ot purge, pain or
Vll druggie ts 25c.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME.
W A LANOSUBF
j I’ll OU (HI HYNNAAND GOR
MAN DON’T THINK SO
i NEW YORK BIG FIGURES
* * • • •>••••■!■ I .
Fighting Joe Blackburn For
The Senate.
Cii.cinn'i, Nov. 4.—Both sides
claim the legislature. Th? demo
crat!! claim a margin of four and
the republicans say they have a
majority on joint ballot of three .
So ihe semi tors') ip is in dispute
and only the official count will
•ettle it.
Gorman Is Sanguine.
Batimoie, Nov. 4,—Senator
German's hope nf re-election to
the United S ates senate is anch r
■ ed in the next house of delegates
(of the Maryland general assem
bly. Tonight do one can say that
the hope is a forlorn one, nor on
the other hand can it be stated
that the Lero of the force bill will
again represent the old common
wealth of Maryland in the hall of
national legislation.
The democrats are sanguine,
the republicans and the tgoldbugs
are t ghting every inch of the
ground and the great battle will
be begun on New Year’s Day at
Annapolis, the ancient , city on
the Severne.
It ii. certain that the republi
cans will have a majority in the
general assembly or joint ballot
senate and house of de'egates
assembled to elect a United States
senator, and it is equally certain
that the democrats will have a
majority in the house of delegates,
Blackburn Jubilant.
Lomsville, Ky., Nev. 4—ls
there is a happier man in Ken
tucky over the democratic land
slide than ex Senator Joe C. S,
Blackburn he has not been found.
Colonel Blackburn is happy not
only because the state has been
redeemed, but because his course
has been indorsed in no uncertain
terms in the crippling of the
republican citadel under a glacier
slide of votes.
At least this is the way the
blue grass stateman construes the
brilliant v ctory won by Sinuel J.
Shackelford in the appellate
clerk’s race.
With former senator’s announce
ment of his pleasure over the de
feat of republicanism came the
statement today that he is a can
didate for United States Senator
to succeed Senator William L.
Lindsay, national democrat. To
a few voters this news will come
as a surprise, but to the rank and
ftie of the demociatic party it is
no more than had been expected.
New "York Solid
New York, Nov. 4—Returns
from the state and ci'y elections
received to-day do net] change
the reeults announced by the As
smiated Press early last night
Returns from all the countiis
in the state indicate a plurality
of more than 58.000 for Alton B.
Parker, democratic candidate f»r
chief judge of the court of appeals.
His plurality in greater New Yoik
is 133,058.
Van Wvck, Tammany candidate
for mayor of New York, has 81,-
548 p'.ura iiy over Seth Low and
118 401 < ver General Tracy .
The s'ate legislature remains
republican. The senators hold
ever, and the new house of as
sembly stands 95 republican to 68
demociats.
In the present senate the repub
lican majority is 30, in the house
78. • • • . |
The special election in the third
congressional district, Brookin,
resulted in a victory for Edmund
11. Driggs, dem >crat, over AN iliiam
A Prendergast.
Mr O. M Scroggins, a prom
inent merchant ani tanner, of
II nnlet, ie in the city on business
today.
ROME GEORGIA. THURSDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 4
FROM NEBRASKA
—' 1 ■■ I > WUB
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN
THE NEXT PRESIDENT
EXPRESSES HIS OPINION
—<- ■■
I Pon Tuesday’s Election, Its
Results And
Lincoln, Neb. .Nov .4. Returns
during the day and early evening
simp’y c mfirmed what was evident
at midnight last night, that the
fusion state ticket had been
Hlected by a plurality fully as large
as that given Bryan last year, if
not larger. Early in the afternoon
it was generally admitted at Re
publican headquarters that the
state was lost and Secretary Sizer,
of the Republican state committee
concedes Sullivan's election for
supreme judge by five to ten
thousand.
Chairman Ed Misten, of the
fusion committee, said he had no .
reason to change his estimats of
twenty thousand for the entire I
fusion ticket.
Mr. Bryau today gave out the
following statement:
“To the Associated Press
returns are so incomplete that it
is impossible to discuss the elect- I
ions in detail. The Republcians
everywhere indorsed the Repub
lican adminstration, and in view
of the losses sustained by them\
in almost every state it would i
seem that. Republican politics are!
not being endorsed at the polls.
“The results, in favor of the
Chicago platform show a healthy
groth througout the country.
Perhaps our opponents will now
admit that silver is not dead.
The attempt to secure interna
ticoal bimetallism has proved a
failure, and it is now mote ap
parent then ever that the people
of the United States must legis
lature fur themselves o.i the fin
ancial quertion.
Free and unlimited coinage at
16 to 1 is nearer now then tt was
a year ago. High tariff upon a
gold basis has disappointmed
those Republicans who look to it
for relief. Taken as a whole, the
returns are very encouraging.
“I think I voice the sentiments
of Democrats, Populists and sil.
ver Republicans wnen I say the
fight will be continued with even
more earnestness until the gold
monoponly is broken and the !
money trust is oveithrown. The [
fusion forces increase their per- j
centage in Nebraska and probably
their actual majority.
“ W- J. Bryan.
i
Judge Spences R. Atkinson, the
new Railroad Commissioner, is'
from Brunswick, He is a man ofi
ability and will sustain Governor
Atkinson’s reputation for appoint
ing the right men to the right
places .
| Consumption!
I Will SCOTTS EMULSION |
w cure consumption ? Yes and
J no. Will it cure every case ?
£ No. What cases will it cure
A then ? Those in their earlier g
| stages, especially in young
| people. We make no exag- £
# gerated claims, but we have
p positive evidence that the
early use of £
1 Sco-t’s Emulsion 0
S ~ ~ ~ ' v
£ of Cod-liver oil with Hypo- |
phosphites of Lime and Soda .7
in these cases results in a
| positive cure to a large num
£ ber. In advanced cases, how- &
$ ever, where a cur« is impossi- v
$ ble, this well-known remedy &
! should be relied upon to pro
long life surprisingly.
£ 50c. »nd SI.OO, ill druggists. y
X SCOTT & BOWNE, Ch»mi«t» > N»w York. •
, A COWHIDING
COSTS, AND BRINGS IMPRIS
ONMENT AND STRIPES.
! MRS. KNIGHT IN JAIL,
And her Husband Must Serve in
The Chaingang .
For the Cowhidii g that was ad
ministered old man A. B. Flowm
several months ago while the lat
ter was walking down Pino street,
I
a woman must go to jail forth ee
months and pay a flue of SSO and
‘ I I
I her husband must serve a term of
three months in the county chain
gang and pay a fine cf a similar |
amou t to that imposed upou his
wife, hijs this morning's Atlanta
! Constitution.
When Mr. and Mrs. T. M.
Knight were placed on trial yes
i terday afternoon in the criminal
court charged with an assault and
i battery, they both declared they
' were not guilty and claimed that
what had been done was done as
the result of an act of Mr. Flow
' ere. They were represented by Mr.
Gordon Mitchell, whose position
was that Mr. and Mrs. Knight, if
| guilty at all, could be excused un
der the law.
At the beginning of the trial,
Judge Candler notified Mr. Mitch
ell that nothing that had occurred
previous to the alleged assault
cou'd be introduc'd as witness. He
explained that if Mr. Flowers had
insulted one of the defendants
prior to the meeting on the street
on the morning of the assault, that
.the conversation or insult could
not pcs ibly figure in the case un
der a recent dec sion of the su.
preme court.
“To make an assault justifia
ble,” explained Judge Candler,
“the insult or opprobious words
must be resented iustanter. Any
thing that is said one day or one
hour, cannot be resented the next
day or the next hour.”
O d man Flowers swore he was
seventy-four years of age. He said
somebody told him that a family
was about to move to Nashville
land that he was wanted to fix a
lock on their trunk. On ti e way
to the supposed residence of the
family, he was assaulted by Mrs.
Knighc, who was assisted by her
husband. Ho said Mrs. Knight
plied the whip furiously, leaving
[him stunned, bleeding and humil
iated. He said he did not lay his I
| band upon her in any way, as she
j was a woman an 1 he did not fight
women and children.
Mrs. Knight swore that Flowers
cursed her ai d caj’td her a lie,
and that be almost shoved her off
| the side walk when she approached
him. She said he was tryirg to
I stick a file in her face when she
began to belabor bun with the
whip which her husband had pur
chased for the c iwhiditig. Her
statement to the jury was lingthy
and her climax was quite dra
matic. Holding her hand above
her head she declared that asG"d
was her helper, she was telling
I the truth, adding that she did not
believe t at any juror who had a
wile or a daughter would send her
to the penitentiary.
The jury returned a verdict in a
short while alter it retired and
Judge Candler imposed the
sentence of the court . They are
i both to pay a fine of ifso ai d the
wife must remain in jail three
months, while her husband works
in the county cha ingang the same
length of time.
I'ENNSYLNANIA VOTE.
Philadelphia, Nnv. 4.—The
i complete vote of Pennsylvania is
| as follow:
Four states treasurer, Beacon,
republican, 364 597 • Brow n demo
crat. 240,2'6. Swallow, proh.bit
i onist. 116,153: Thompson inde
pendent, 13,183 Beacon’s plural
! ity, 153,381.
[ Col. J. C. Shumate, of Dalton,
( is in the city on business today
H.KAKL&CO
HAVE
THOUSANDS
OF BARGAINS TO
BARGAIN
We anticipated the Fall Trade
* and more, we made our calcula-
MA,
w tions against six cant cotton, and,
while our buyer was in market,
bought our entire new Fall and
*
Winter stock on that basis lit
W rook work, it took money, it took
time and it took a man who knew
* how. That we have generously
W succeeded in preparing,to meet
W the exigencies Gs the times and
jW the conditions that now face the
w people, we most cordially invite
you to call and see for yourself
We know that we can satisfacto
rily convince you.
We flatter ourselves tnat we
have already built an unassaila
ble bie reputation for handling only
W the very best grades of staples.
We are here to grow up with the
W city and we propose to make ev-
W erysale add to the we
W boast.
■ Q As to the more changeable or
fashionable patterns, weavesand
W stylish goods, we pride ourselves
*£ thit vni/Ki)Ti>}>c),7n v .ly
selected stock ever brought to
this market, Gooas. that are a
w feast to the artistic eye andgoods
that wear like iron and yet are a
joy forever
* —~ *
1 J. KANE& CO
10 CENTS AWEEK