The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, August 05, 1887, Image 7

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5hc Herat(t amt ^telisei;. Newnan, Ga., Friday, August 5t':i, 15-years of nge. Her son was bom tx> and Dr. Hallivcll of the I dice fore his mother readied hpr lGtl: ve:ir. Board. The operation consis- *3 ted in laving open the cavity j woman, superbly handsome. Her s the ab domen and exposing j Mrs. Pickett is still a verv young look- 1887. ''in --is a dark, voluptuous style of beauty. , , . ~ i The Sea. Silica* the war she has persistently avoid- the Stomach and DOW CIS. \\ on The temperature of the sea is the ***<*Y- Her appearance at Cettvs-; this had been done an examin- same. varying only a trifle from the ice 1 1,ur ~ was tl,e first she has made 111 P ub * ation of the organs was made, of the pole to the burning sun of the j ^ or * ea ^ but to be- of the the horror and dismay i doctors there was no, to be found. The pa- ! a distance of ten miles. It has,, pres- t j ent not j iav e a cancer. equator. A mile down, the water has a | n,, . -i 1 , - , .. ’ There is a little railroad running pressure ot over a ton to tne square i . TTM1 , , r , t „ ., ;n . , • ! , , , ... , tween Hillsboro and ChapelIlill A. cancer inch. If a box six feet deep were filled ^ ... . , ,, , i a distance of ten miles. It has . pres- t , with sea water, and allowed to e vapor-1 ., , ,, . LICI1L u ate under the sun, there would he two ! A; £ ‘ When too late the medical men . , r , an auditor, a general- traffic maniger, a . , , inches of salt left on the bottom. 1 ak- j ml tk . k( . tag(Mlt , a purchasing agent, discovered that they had made j ing the average depth of the ocean ’ < ‘ . L superintendent of motive poryer and a terrible mistake; but they! be three miles, there would be a layer j an assistant general manager-thirteen ! d of pure salt 230 feet thick on the bed 0 fl} c „ rs j n a p sevcu of the Atlantic. The water b CLOCKS! Buy a Clock from me With a guarantee That insures your Clock Against a stop. • I live in your town, Where I may be found ’Most every dav, Doing what I say. (This is not spring poetry-1 yer the bed colder at the bottom than at the surface. In the many bavs ui the coast of Norway Hie Child. the parts together and j dressed the wound that they J had made, but the poor woman | The I.ife of Mr W. L. Fain, a luree commission j san j- f rom exhaustion and died water often fn\ /t*s at the bottom be- j merchant, says lie owes the lire ot Iip ore it does above. "Waves are very de- hive. To look at them in a storm would think the water traveled. The water .stays in the same place, but the motion goes on. Sometimes in- storms these waves are forty feet high, and travel fifty miles an hour, more than twice as fast as the swiftest steam er. The distance from valley to valley is generally fifteen times flu* height, hence a wave live feet high will extend over seventy-five feet of water. Evap oration is a wonderful power in draw ing the water from the sea. Every . year a layer of the entire sea, fourteen feet thick, is taken up into the clouds. The wind bears their burden into the land, and the water conies down in rain upon the fields to flow back at last through rivers. The depth of the -sea presents an interesting problem. If the Atlantic were lowered 6,564 feet, the distance from shore to shore would be half as great, or 1,500 miles. If low ered a little more than three miles, say 10,680 feet, there would be a road of dry land from Newfoundland to Ireland. This is the place on whic K pie Great :■ Atlantic cables were laid. The Medi- / -terranean is comparatively shallow. A . drying up of 660 feet would leave three •f ylistinct seas, and Africa would be join- rf’d with Italy. The British Channel is more like a pond, which accounts for its choppy waves. child to I)r. loggers’ Huckleberry Cor dial. It always gradually checks the bowels and does not constipate as many do. in a few hours. How sad it! must be for the husband of this j A printer up in Canada is said one hundred anti three years old poor woman to know that his to be i wife died from the effects of a has made so many ty during his career that die. (graphical error he is afraid to surgical operation that ought; One of the Smith’s. Are you Owen Smith? “Oh, yes, I must he, I am owin’ everybody !” But I owe more to Dr. Biggers’ Huckleber ry Cordial for curing me of the chole ra morbus and dysentery. 1/ *^he Southern Volunteer. Mr .11. Kyd Douglas, of Hagerstown, in a recent lecture said: “The South ern soldier received no price for his pa- Aioti^in. No bounty, worthless pay, kittle or no hope of pension—they were driven to enlist by patriotism, conscrip tion or the pressure at home, which drove them to the camp. “For the last half of the war the Confederates fought without pay. 'When I paid $1,500 for a modest uni form that was not worth more than $50 ’■! in gold, and was offered $7,S00 for a horse worth $100—fair samples of prices kit that time—the Southern soldier Vi'in ranks was serving the country for less than forty cents a month in gold. Those were desperate and reckless days and I was once witness to a game of poker, after a night supper, where one officer lost $40,000 in a few hours, and paid it in uncut sheets of Confed- rate notes. ( “It was about that time that a Con- \ A federate cavalryman gave such emplia- < f sis to our condition when he was of- ■ fered $5,000 for his ,sorry steed. ‘Five ithousand dollars for this • horse!’ he Answered, as lie proudly reined up his pony Bucephalus, ‘why I gave $1,000 this morning for currying him!’ “Pay-day, irregular as it was, was a sarcasm and a jest, for when evening came crowds of restless soldiers would gather around the camp-fires, and the night would he filled with laughter, as the accumulated pay of months passed by the hazard of cards from hand to hand. “There was no money for the soldier to send home to his wife and children, and none worth keeping for them, for the soldier knew that it would be a worthless as Continental scrip. The treasury notes were beautiful to look upon, but there was nothing they would buy. They were only good to gamble with.” ‘ How often is. it necessary to bathe: This depends both on the individual and the nature of the bath. Some peo ple, who perspire freely, find itneeessa ry to bathe daily, others require a bath only three or four times a week. Taken indiscriminately the Turkish and Bus sian baths are unsafe, and may in cer tain conditions be positively dangerous. In cases of heart disease, a tendency to . -apoplexv or congestion of the brain, fjlftussian'or Turkish baths are exceed ingly unsafe,^ and as a general rule- it Kray be stated that this class of baths jhould never he indulged in without the ulvice of a physician. The tub bath suits most of us, but the temperature m aV ery case should be high enough to prevent chills; and tus remark applies also to sponge baths, which are the saf est, and may, with advantage, be taken every day. . In 1880 the South had ISO cotton mills, while it now has 353. In 18S0 there were 34,502 manufactories in the >outh producing $315,924,704, against ol,4l9 now, producing $505,802,000. In 13SO tlie South mined 6,000,000 tons of coal *1 i n 1SS0 over 13,000,000, while during the same period $000,000 have been spent in building new railroads and un loving old oxres, the present mneage i the Southern States Deni* •», )igainst 20,642 in 1880. - flT ^ \lfrs Pickett, widow of General Geo. ll LPickett, was married when sue A writer in a medical paper says that in all his experiences in Colorado and lie Utah never saw an Indian with a cold. He concludes that it is our hot rooms that gives us colds. "Worth Knowing. Mr. AW II. Morgan, merchant, Lake Citv, Fla., was taken with a severe Cold, attended with a distressing Cough and running into Consumption in its first stages. lie tried many so-called pop ular cough remedies and grew steadily worse. Was reduced in flesh, had dif ficulty’ in breathing and was unable to sleep. Finally’ tried Dr. King’s New Discovery for'Consumption and found immediate relief, and after rising about a half dozen bottles found himself well and has had no return of the disease. No other remedy’can show so grand a record of cures as Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption. Guaran teed to do just what is claimed for it. Trial bottle free at A. J. Lyndon’s Drug Store. Although they’ have been brought to a high degree of perfection, it will be many years before the telephone and phonograph will succeed the woman with a sun bonnet, who lives in the cen tre of the village and inquires daily over the backyard fence what the news is. Renews Her YoutH. Mrs. Plnebe Chesley, Peterson, Clay Co., tells the following remarkable sto ry, the truth of which is vouched for by the residents of the town : “I am 73 years old; have been troubled with kidney complaint and lameness for many years; could not dress my’self without help. Now I am free from all pain and soreness, and am able to do all rnv own housework. I owe my thanks to Electric Bitters for having renewed my youth, and removed com pletely’ all disease and pain.” Try a bottle, 50c. and $1, at A. J. Lyndon’s Drug Store. cheapest S lV/Wl never to have been performed.j If this woman had taken the • proper remedy for Dyspepsia and Nervous Prostration (for this was what the disease really was,) she would have been liv ing to-day. Shaker Extract of Roots, or Seigel’s Cura tive Syrup, a remedy made ex pressly for Dyspepsia or Indi gestion, has restored many such ; _ cases to perfect health after all j " Y' other kinds of treatment have u are ‘ e ' failed. The evidence of its ef ficacy in curing this' class of cases is too voluminous to be published here; but those who read the published evidence in favor of this dyspeptic* remedy do not question its convincing nature, and the article has an extensive sale. J. B. MOUNT PROPRIETOR OF THE EMPIRE STORE, And selling the best and Watches, Clocks, Spectacles, Silver ware, etc., to be found in this section. Call and see me for anything in my line. Respectfully, W. E. AVERY. OFT IN THE A TERRIBLE SURGICAL OPERATION! A FATAL MISTAKE. The Cleveland (Ohio) Press, of February 23d, 1883, pub lished an account of a fatal surgical operation which caused a great commotion among med ical men throughout the whole country, Dr. Thayer, the most eminent surgeon in Cleveland, pronouncing it scandalous. It appears that a Mrs. King had been suffering for many years from some disease of the stom ach, which had resisted the treatment of all the physicians in attendance. The disease commenced with a slight de rangement of the digestion, with a poor appetite, followed by a peculiar, indescribable dis tress in the stomach, a feeling that has been described as a faint “all gone” sensation, a sticky slime collecting about the teeth, causing a disagree able taste. This sensation was Next week for New York, Baltimore and Boston, whither he goes to purchase his annual stock of FALL AND WINTER GOODS. f* INEVEW’-hSIhi funs em wtMiE affljEom Chicago - 30 UNION SQUARE,NX- DALLAS. ILL. n-r-f GA TEX. ST, LOOtS, MO. ’SANFP.ANCICCOiCn J. R. SEWELL, Newman,'Ga. STILLY NIGHT WHEN YOT7K CHILD IS TEETHING Are you awakened with the piteous cries of the little one, who is gradually wasting away by the drainage upon its system from the ef fects of teething. THE BUSINESS MAN, Wearied from the labors of the day, on goin home finds that he cannot have the desired and necessary rest, for the little darling is still suffering, and slowly and pitifully wastin away by the drainage upon its system lrc.-m the effects of teething. If he would think to use DR. BIG'-KRRS’ HUCKLEBERRY CORDIAL, the Great Southern Remedy, loss of sleep and bowel complaints wou'd be un known in that home. It will cure Diarrhoea. Dysentery, and all Bowel Disorders. For sale by all Druggists. 50c. a bottle. THE WALTER A. TAYLOR CO., ATLANTA, GA. BEAST* Mexican Mustang Liniment CURBS Scratches, Sprains, Strains, Stitche3, Stiff Joints, Backache, Galls, Sores, Spavin Cracks. Contracted Unsdes, Eruptions, Hoof Ail, Screw Worms, Swinney, Saddle Galls, Piles. Sciatica, Lumbago, Rheumatism, not removed by food, but, on j the contrary, it was increased, j stings, After a while the hands and i JiXe* feet became cold and sticky— Bunions, a cold perspiration. There : cooo ou) STAND . BY was a COlIStailt tllCQ ann ian- accomplishes for everybody^exactly^what isclaimed on jd feelino- Then followed forit. One of the reasons for the great popularity ot t? ’ • , the Mustang Liniment Is found In Its universal a dreadful nervousness, with applicability. Everybody needs such a medicine. r\ -vm t- fnr^Lnriincrc; Finnllv The Lumberman needs It In case of accident. gloom} lOreDOQingS. riiuill} TheHon8ewi feneedsltforgeneralfainllynse. fiin natient was unable to re- The Canaler needs It for his teams and his men. tii pu. , ; The mechanic needs it always on his work tain any food whatever, and be nch . i.L arp rnnetflut nqin -ir) tkp : The Miner needs It In case of emergency. there was constant pain in ine, ,j,| ie p| 0neernee dsit—can’tgetaiongwithoutit. abdomen. All prescribed rem- The Farmer needs it in his house, his stable, edies failing to give reliel, a The Steamboat man or the Boatman needs consultation was held, when iti““ was decided that the patient ' frlmdand safest reliance. . , . „ I The Stock-grower needs It—it will save him had a cancer in tnc Stomacn, ^ thousands of dollars and a w orld of trouble. onH in order to save the Da- The Railroad rim needs It andwm need It so ana m oruci LU LUC pci j tengashisUfe isaroundof accidents and dangers. tient’s life an operation was jus- The Backwoodsman needs It. There Is noth- . . , • , , , lag like it as an antidote for the dangers to life, tillable. Accordingly, on trie limb and comfort which surround the pioneer. n r pphrnarv i,Q8n the on- The Merchant needs It about his store among 2 2d ot r eDrUary, rne °p- hl3 Accidents wUl happen, and when eratiofl W r as performed bv Dr. these come the Mustang Liniment Is wanted at once. , r t-v Keep a Bottle in the House. Tls the best of \ ance m the presence of Dr. j ^0^. Tnrl-enmn Dr Perrier Dr Keep a Bottle in the Factory. Itaimmedlato i UC Kerman, LJl. rcmci, ^ 1 • -5,-5,, in WEe of accident saves pain and loss of wages. Arms, Dr. Gordon, Dr. Capner Keep a Bottle Alwmyatn the Stable f«r ! see when wasted* ^ — Catar rH cream balm ■ i ^2>®lfifs c0 'S1 C,iea, “ e ' S ihe HecuL Allays Ivflamma- r mamm \lion. Heals the Sores,.Restores the Senses of Taste, \Sinell, Hearing | .4 Quick Relief. FEVE A Positive Cure. A. particle is applied into each noslril and is acreeable. Pi-ice 50 cents at Druggists: Is mail, registered. 60 cents. ELY BROS., New Y’ork office,' 235 Greenwich street. HAY FEVER is an inflamed condition of the lining mem brane of the nostrils, tear duets and throat, afiecting the lungs. An acrid mucus is secre ted, the discharge is accompanied with a burning sensation. There are severe spasms of sneezing, frequent attacks of headache, wa- terv and inflamed eyes. Ely’s Cream Balm is a remedy that can be depended upon to relieve at once and cure. BRADFIELD’S An infallible specific for all the diseases peculiar to women, such as painful or suppressed Menstration Falling of the Womb.Len- corrhoea or Whites, etc. FEMALE CHANGE OF LIFE. If taken during this crit ical period, great suffering and danger can be entire ly avoided. REGULATOR! Send'for our took containing valuable in formation forewomen. It will be mailed free to applicants. Bkadfixld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Sa. WILL LEAVE He goes thus early in order that he may not be hurried in making his selections and will remain until the 1st of Sep- o tember. HE PROMISES To show the largest and most carefully selected stock of Fall and Winter DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, BOOTS, SHOES, NOTIONS, CARPETS, ETC., Ever brought to Newnan, and by his LOW PRICES will demonstrate the advantages of purchasing at first hands advantages that are shared equally by the merchant and his customers. Be pamnt until he returns and your reward shall be great.