Newspaper Page Text
SSJtt Herald and ^drertisfr.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, Marcli 23,1888.
BELATED CORRESPONDENCE.
China drove.
Mr. Editor . —March has come wKli its
cold nights and unplesant weather.
The farmers anticipate muesli danger
in regard to the grain crop on account
of Jack Frost.
Misses Yeta and Mibnie Hunter, of
<?«r city, who have been visiting the
family of Cant. Alf 11 van ter, returned
home Monday,
Miss Juiia Harris visited Newnan last
week.
Mr. AV. B. Harris attended Court last
weelL Judging from appearances he
must have had a “continued case” for
each night on the suburbs of town.
Prof, Allen and Miss Myrtiee Harris,
of Roseoe, visited the latter’s parents
last week. Prof. Allen reports a flour
ishing school at Roseoe.
One of our sweet young ladies receiv
ed a box of nice oranges from Florida
last week.
A Measure ef Relief.
Philadelphia Record.
The tariff bill prepared by the Demo
cratic members of the Ways and Means
Committee will grow in public favor
day by day, as it shaS2 be more fully
discussed and better understood. The
roar and racket of the protectionist
press .wall deceive nobody who shall de
sire to make up an acoarate judgment
from awtudy of the facts bearing upon
the situation.
It mutfc be borne in mind that the ob
ject of the bill is to afford the largest
fashioned simple root and herb prepar
ations and careful nursing—the onfiy
reliances known to our ancestors.
These methods and reliances are ilhi«-
trsted to-day in a series of old-fashion
ed root and herb preparations recent-
ly given to the world by the well-knowas ;
proprietors of Warner’s safe cure— J
preparations made from formulae po^-!
sessed by many of osar oldest families. j
and rescued for popular use, and issued ,
under the happy designation of War- .
ner s Log Cabin Remedies.
“My son,” exclaimed a venerable
he was a
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
measure of relief to the people, not on- 1 woman to the writer when he ^ as
boy, “my son, you're yeller and pale
and weak-like lookin’', you’re needin' a
ly by re&ucing the amount of money
pouring daily into the Federal treasury
in excess of the necessities of the gov- goo
ernment, tout by cheapening the cost of
living at the expense of the monopolies,
trusts and combinations which are at
present sucking the marrow of the
consumer.
linking up with some sas’par'll’.”
A jag of spring sarsaparilla was just
as necessary in the “winter supplies”
of fifty years ago as was a barrel of
pork, and a famous medical authority
says that the very general prevalence
as Log
The bill proposes to revive the droop-j of t he cse of such a preparat ion
0 f tin*' Cabin Sarsaparilla explains the rugged
i«g manufacturing interests
country by discarding the rude, unsci
entific and unnecessary device of tax
ing botli the crude material and the
finished product, thus putting our in
dustries and our labor at a disadvant-
The Turin depot agent is more ac- ; age ^ compare d with competing indu
exunmodating than the passenger train.
As the China Grove young ladies re
turn from their visits lie gallants them
home “free of charge.”
Aunt Susie Hunter lias been quite
sick for the past few days.
Miss Bird Perkins, of College Temple,
visited her parents last Sunday.
Tom Johnson has been found, and
lias been rusticating in his old familiar
haunts for several days. Come again,
Tominie. The Elite.
March 14.
Tariff and War.
Mr. Editor:—In your issue of the
Oth inst., was an article over the now
deplume of C. Y. J., commencing thus:
“I see that Congress is trying to bluff
the President and his friends by crying
‘free trade’. And then our high tariff
Democrats, such as l n< lc j qoo,000 by conferring these general ad
tries and labor in all other parts of the j
world. No argument can break down
the fact that manufacturers could make
cheaper goods and pay better wages if
they could buy
Cheaper wool..
Cheaper dye-stuffs,
Cheaper lumber,
Cheaper jute, hemp and tlax,
Cheaper chemicals and other
material.
And no argument will avail to con
vince the laboring man that lie will La
in jured by
Cheaper food,
Cheaper clothing,
Cheaper shelter,
Cheaper earthenware,
Cheaper glass, and
Cheaper utensils.
If the taxes can he reduced $100,-
health of our ancestors.
While Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsapa
rilla is" an excellent remedy for all sea
sons of the year, it is particularly val
uable in (spring, when The system is full
of sluggish blood and requires a natur
al constitutional tonic and invigorator
to resist colds and pneumonia, and the
effects of a long winter. Philo M.
Parsons, clerk of the City Hotel of
j Hartford, Conn., was prostrated with a
: cold which, he says, “seemed to settle
i through my body. I neglected it and
! the result was my blood became im-
j poverished and poisoned, indicated by
crude i inflamed eyes. I was treated but my
i eyes grew worse. I was obliged to
| wear a shade over them. I feared that
11 would be obliged to give up work.” ^
“Under the operation of Warner’s
Log Cabin Sarsaparilla and Liver
j Pill*,” he says, “the sore and inflamed
1 eyes disappeared. My blood, I
w
H
ft
>
ft
%
Q
2
ft
Ul
Mr. Randall, Major Bacon,
ta Constitution, and some others, have
raised'the cry, ‘abolish the internal
revenue on whisky and tobacco , uig-
ing that all we poor Southern people
need is cheap whisky and tobacco.
Now, Mr. Editor, I wish to make
this proposition : If he wall show where
any of the parties mentioned, or any
other protectionist, ever urged that all
“we poor Southern people need is
cheap whisky and tobacco,” then I
will agree to vote with the free trade
faction of the Democratic party: al
though I am satisfied that it would
nearly take my life to give a vote that
would bankrupt our great country.
This cry of “free trade” has been going
on for sixty years,and until since the war
t he South has been getting poorer every
yea r. The cry was that we were pecu
liarly . an agricultural people,
ought not to manufacture
outfit to get England to manufacture
our cotton or she could not buy it, ami
the result has been that for over 100
vears the water, as it runs over shoals
in our beautiful Southern streams in
its long journey to its ocean home, has
been murmuring because it has n
been used in building up the wealth of
the South, and feeding and clothin,
and housing and educating hei pi op e.
Your correspondent goes on and says,
“that it was the tariff that caused the
revolution of 1770; and it was the stamp
act that caused the war of 131-2; and it
was the tariff that caused nullification
in 1833; and that it was the tariff that
was the prime cause of the war of 1. 0 ■
\s vour correspondent seems to be
, very familiar with history I would like
know,
i is in a healthier condition than it has
j been for years. I have much better
‘appetite. I shall take several more
! bottles for safety sake. Warner’s Log
, Cabin Sarsaparilla is a great blood puri-
; fier and I most heartily recommend it.”
I A few bottles of Warner’s Log Cabin
Sarsaparilla used in the family now will
vantages upon the industry ol the coun
try, and by the same stroke gathering
into the nockets of consumers another _ , . , .
$100,000,000 of unearned money from i save many a wee ~ ° sic'ness an nnuyy
the inordinate prices of materials which
and
that we
are necessaries .of life, is it not worth
while? This is the aim of the new tar
iff bill. This it will accomplish if it
shall become a law. For every dollar
of tax it may intercept on its way to the
treasury it will save to the people two
other dollars on the way to the maw of
Monopoly. Of course, the lobbj will
howl, and the subsidized press will
rage, and the “protected interests” will
protest; hut Tax Reduction and Tariff
Reform are near at hand.
a dollar of bills. Use no other. This
is the oldest, most thoroughly tested,
and the best, is put up in largest sarsa
parilla bottle on the market, contain
ing 120 doses. There is no other prep
aration of similar name that can equal
it. The name of its manufacturers is a
guarantee of its superior worth.
While the great doctors wrangle over
the technicalities of an advanced medi
cal science that can not cure disease,
such simple preparations yearly snatch
millions from untimely graves.
STEAM ENGINES^.
ALSO, SPECIAL GJN-
WE HAVE ON HAND SOME SPECIAL BARGAINS IN STEAM ENGINES
NERY OUTFITS, WHICH WILL REPAY PROMPT INQUIRIES.
A VERY LARGE STOCK OF DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS ON HAND AT LOW PRICES.
R. E). COLE MANUFACTURING CO., NEWNAN, GA.
J, H. Reynolds,
President.
Hamilton Yancey,
Secretary.
ROME
TO COUNTRY PRINTERS! SH8W “CASES
FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA.
CAPITAL STOCK, $103,400.
Complete Newspaper
For Sale!
Outfit
Where the Burden Lies.
In his recent speech, illustrating the
burden placed upon the farmer b> the
present tariff, Mr. Turner, of Georgia,
made use of the following plain state
ment of facts. He said:
“When the farmer rises from his bed
in the morning he puts on his common
flannel shirt, taxed 92 per cent; his
coat, taxed 57 per cent; hisshoes, taxed
35 per cent; his hat, taxed 92 per cent;
and washes his face and hands in a tin
bowl, taxed 34 per cent; dries them on
a cheap cotton .towel, taxed 45 per
cent. He sits down to his humble
meal and eats from a plate, taxed 50
per cent; with a knife and fork, taxed
35 per cent: drinks his coffee with
sugar, taxed 82 per cent; seasons his
food with salt, taxed 09 per cent; pep
per, taxed 61 per cent. He looks round
to his wife and children, all taxed the
same way; and even the sunlight from
into his dwelling
and! must come through* window glasses,
he thinks
? " history says tfiat the war heaven that pours
1 f Y70 was caused hv the tariff, and j must come throug
of 1 <70 was caus - s( . act taxed 58 per cent; and yet
where does he find that tl ^ t p ^ | ^ ^ ^ ^ government un*
was the cause of the war o , : ^ heaven. Then he starts to work;
** 7.h- STk puts bis bridle, taxed 35 per cent, on
nullification in 1838. If J not mi his ^ ha8
„„., s to Who «£ £« **-*• — >»
is the person who del „ .-.unification i being taxed 59 per cent, driven by a
streets that m the days of null^ ^ j ham ^ er taxed 10 per cent.-and hitches
he drilled three <1»Y “ ffidenf gol _ him t0 a plow taxed 45 per cent; chains
order that he might au ' ‘V‘‘ j _ | taxed 53 per cent; and after the day’s
dier to fight- General , ^ _ j labor is c i ose d and his family all
he should interpose iu ■ ^ on the I gathered around he reads a chapter
overt ait of t • - , li or, ner rent, anil
“The moon of Mahomet arose, and it'
shah set.” says Shelly; hut if you will
set a bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup
in some handy place you will have a
quick cure for croup, coughs, and colds.
The eighth wonder of the world. A
benighted man limping with rheuma
tism who had never heard of Salvation
Oil. Price 25 cents a bottle.
Mrs. Pollv Bryan, who was expelled
from the Salvation Army because she
wore a bustle, has organized an army of
her own and is banging the tambourine
and exhorting at Little Falls, N. Y. She
still wears that hustle.
• We are Told
That the leaves of the trees are to be
for the healing of the nation. A pro
phetic expression ol. the value of Tay
lor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein in curing coughs, colds and
consumption.
A woman of Burlington, Me., just pre
vious to her death, prayed earnestly that
her babe might accompany her on her
journey to the ot her world. The child,
who but an hour or two before was as
well as usual, playing about the room,
immediately after receiving a kiss from
its dying mother closed its eyes, and in
five minutes or less was dead.
Babies that are fretful, peevish, cross,
or troubled with Windy Colic. Teeth
ing Pains, or Stomach Disorders, can
txTrelieved at once by using Acker’s
Baby Soother. It contains no Opium or
Morphine, hence is safe. Price 25
cents. Sold by W. P. Broom, Newnan,
Gh.
A home company. Management conserv
ative, prudent, safe. Soliciting the patron
age of its home people and leading all com
petitors at Us home office. ,, „ „
Its directory composed of eminently suc
cessful business men; backed bj more than
one million dollars capital.
H C. FISHER & CQ., Agents, Newnan,
Ga.
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES,
NO
MORE
WEAK
EYES!
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe and F.ffective Remedy for
SORE, WEAK'AND INFLAMED EYES-
Produces Long-Sightedness, and Restores
the Sight of the Old.
CURES TEAR DROPS, GRANULATION, STYLE
tumors, red eyes, matted eye Josh
es. AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
■VI60, equally efficacious when used in other
maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu
mors, Salt Rheum. Burns. PUes, or whereyer
inflammation exists, MITCHELL S SALVE
may be used to advantage. Sold by all Drug
gists at 25 cents.
We have for sale a quantity of first-class
printing material, comprising the entire out
fit formerly used in printing the Newnan
Herald, as well as type, stones, chases, and
numerous other appurtenances belonging to
the old Herald Job Office. Most of the mate
rial is in excellent.condition and will be sold
from 50 to 75 per cent, below foundry prices.
The following list contains the leading ar
ticles:
i Campbell Press, in good
repair.
250 lbs. Brevier.
150 lbs. Minion,
50 lbs. Pica.
50 lbs. English.
50 fonts Newspaper Display
Type.
25 select fonts Job Type.
8 fonts Combination Border,
Flourishes, etc.
Imposing Stones, Chases
Type Stands and Racks.
The Campbell Press here offered is the same
upon which The Herald and Advektis
ek is now printed and has been recently over
hauled and put in good repair. It is sold sim-
plv to make room for a largerand fasterpress.
Address NEWKAN PUBLISHING CO.
Newnan, Ga
OFFICE & BASK FIJRS1TIIE & FUTURES.
Ask for Illustrated Pamphlet.
ERRY SHOW CASE CO., Nashville, Twin.
I,vent an ,
EUrtof South ^ ^ ^ Qn a humble carpet
' out that South Car
nullifying the Federal revenue
ml was proceeding to introduce
he city of Charleston foreign ;
without paying the duty: when,
enough, Jackson sent General
with a force to Charleston, and that
Nvas the last of the “three days a week
drilling” to tight the best government
^arth 1 suppose that some ot^ ,
' ; ried, “Rats, to ) meals are taxed
into
roods
sure
Seott
on et
Meadors took fright and 11
and that ended the nulli-
your holes
fieat-ion farce.
1 would also lik
got the idea that it
brought on the
to know where he
was the tariff that
war of 1801. In I84d
sed.
,-hen tih-y
and
Bui
the Robert J. AValkor tariff was pa
-and. with a few modifying amendments
1857. was the tariff law of tonv m
il. It was the law of the tree
•aders, and it soma- strange that they
should bring on a war to l ,
tariff of your own it., .aag-
had a majority in the (.overmnem
-could have chang< it any tune,
that the war of 1801 was brought
the free traders there is no it
*tlie great nullifying State
• Carolina led off in secession on Decem-
ber 20th, I860, several week*. 1 hehev >.
....y oilier State followed. Tho:v
'is^no disguising the fact vha. the free
traders have always U . n t*’.e eiieiuK'
ofihe Government, and join
SndLtmayl?;; riyM »iK.„ he
“the tariff will he ta
next war on tin;- - - , ,,
'^he knows.
from his Bible taxed 25 per cent.
a
law. 1 taxed 51 per cent; and then lie rests
! his weary limbs on a sheet, taxed 45
! per cent, and covers himself with a
1 blanket that has paid 104 per cent.
Xor do the grasping manufacturers stop
i here, but even the broom with which !
! his good wife sweeps the floor is taxed
35* per cent., ami the cooking \esseis
the i used in preparing her husband s tiugal j
42 per cent, and the
soda used to lighten his bread, taxed
59 per cent. Then she sits down to
her sewing with a needle taxed 2-> per .
cent., and a spool of thread, taxed <•>
per cent., to make a calico dress, taxed
58 ner cent: or if she wishes to kpit
v,-;ti".a socks to protect her husband ana
•hlldren from the hitter cold, she uses
yarn taxed 120 per cent: and thus daily
.'•ml hourly must the ha.nl earnings of
Lie laborer go to satisfy the manufact
urer.”
“John,” said a farmer’s wife, “afore
ive start for home I think I’d ought to
have that tooth pulled out. It's ached
the hull uav.” “I know, Mariar,” re
plied John, dubiously, “but by the time
we get the jug filled, and the plug ter-
backer. we liain’t going to have much
left to spend an luxuries.”
. Consumption Surely Cured.
To till Editor—Please inform your
readers that I have a positive remedy i
for the above named disease. By its.
timely use thousands of hopeless cases!
have been permanently* cured. I shall ;
be glad to send two bottles of my reme- j
dy free to any of your readers who j
have consumption if they will send me .
their express anil post office address. !
Respectfully, T. A. SLOCL M, M. C.. !
181 Pearl street. New York.
^COUGHS, CROUP
AND
CONSUMPTION
DC
USE
ib;.
at
and
outh
The Lessons, of “Unser Fritz” Case.
The greatest doctors in Europe- ilon’i
seem iq know what ails “l user onto.
Thus are the Garfield and Grant epi
sodes repeated, and public eo-iiuii ace
in "expert" medical knowledge is
again sliaken.
The effect i~a revulsion.
Since the fatal days of 1883.' many of
the doctrines of the schoolmen con
cerning extensive medication have been
cause of the abandoned, and all schools of practice
continent." 1 • ai v more and more relying upon old-;
1
?TEET- FISHT
The OriglnaJ Wins.
C. F. Simmons. St. Louis. Prop’r
M. .V. Sir-.mons Liver Medicine, Lsi’d
1S40, in the U. S. Court detsats j.
I Z ilin. Pro nbrA. Q Sin m ms Liv
er Regal ii< - I . y Ze On iSci.
M. A. S. L. M. h^s tor 47 veurs
cured Indigestion. Biliousness,
ysfups:a,S:c -; HcADACnK.T.csT
•TETITE, Sous STOVACH, ETC.
Rev. T i». Reams, Pastor ii. E.
ji .\Chnrch, .teams, lor -., writes: "1
think I should have been dead but
lor vour Genuine M. A. Sim-
rr.. : s Liver Medicine/ I have
sometimes had re substitute
“Zeilin ! s stnS” for your Modi
‘ClL'fi-e/ cine, hut it don't 'ar.rrer the
! eV-,-2 ' I purpose."
o £0PLVl Dr. J. R. Craves. E
—h.' Memphis,Te
I received a package
Medicine, and have -
Icvhotkshhe a charm. I want no
better Liver Regulator ar.d cci-
tairdy no more of Zeilin’s mixture.
AMERICAN BOYj
FOR 1888.
The Cheapest and Best Weekly Paper
For Young Men and Boys in
the United' States.
ONLY $2.00 PER YEAR.
A sixteen page paper, illustrated by the best
artists and containing stories and sketches
from the most popular writers.
A great «tory, “The Boy Reporter, or the
Adventures of a Y'oung Army Correspondent”
commenced in Vol. II No. I. Ready Januasy
The AMERICAN* BOY was published tor
one year as a monthly and its success was
so great as to compel its publication in
weekly form.
It will run in each number three great con
tinued stories, will constantly contain sketch
es of travel, curious customs of other coun
tries, adventures on land and sea, fun for the
boys, interesting experiments, useful articles
showing "how to do things,” and “how
PIANOS^
ORGANS
Of all makes direct to
customers from head
quarters, at wholesale
prices. All goods guar
anteed Nomoneyasked
till instruments are re
ceived and fully tested.
Write us before puD-
chasing. An investment of 2 cents may save
from $50.00 to $100.00. Address
JESSE FRENCH,
NASHVILLE, - TENNESSEE.
Wholesale Distributing Dep't for the Soutli.
FREEMAN & CRANKSHAW,
IMPORTERS
ANI>
MANUFACTU
RERS OF
FINE JEWELRY.
LARGEST STOCK!
FINEST ASSORTMENT!
LOWEST PRICES 1
31 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
CARRIAGE AND WAGON
REPAIR SHOP!
make things.
A !
jplendid amateur sporting
nage, with all the hews about baseball and
pictures of amateur players. • Exchange col
umn and answers to correspondents, the
AMERICAN BOY is not a paper of the
“blood and thunder order.” Farentscan safe-
lv trust it .in the hands of their boys. Re
member it is *1 CO cheaper than any other
boys’paper now published. Two copies will
be sent to any address for ?-°> 25. Sample cop
ies sent on application. It is sold at evejy
news stand through the United State- at 5c.
per copy. Address—
THE AMERICAN BOY CO..
No. 607 Saiisom Street,
Philadelphia.
ARBUCICLES’
name on. a package of GOFFSE is a
guarantee of excellence-
We are prepared to do any kind of woik in
the Carriage, Buggy or Wagon line that may
he desired and in the best and most work
manlike manner. We use nothing but the
best seasoned material, and guarantee ail
work done. Old Buggies and Wagons over
hauled and made new. New Buggies and
Wagons made to order. Prices reasonable.
Tires shrunk and wheels guaranteed. Give
us a trial. FOLDS & POTTS.
\*<‘trr.iin, F^hmavy 11.
TAX RECEIVER'S NOTICE.
ARIOSA
COFFEE is kert in all arst-clas;
stores from the Atlantic tc the Pacino
8WEL
. Li?tor The
Tone, says:
i vour Liver
8cl half of it.
GUP
^lULL^iN.
The sweet gum. 35 gathero-'.
. "nixing: alonsr the
CO!
^ ™
l
is ■"ever poc-d vnten exposed to the sir
Always.!, r.-thiscrand: ..h^-rpetica..y
sealed ONE POtFl ! CKASitS.
FIRST ROUND.
i : \;-;ii \,: at th- following places at. the times
1 I,. ' --'.- n..-!!: i--r ••;!, f<-r?he)inrposs ofreceivir.g
. r< .t(i>'i>vof STiitca"d county Taxes, to-wit:
Sharp>i>urg, Monday, April 2d, a. 21.
Turin. Monday, April 2d, f 31*
N--wriani Tuesday. April Rd
. :• -on. Wednesday, April 4tl».
.-. Thursday, April 5th*.
I 1 '. awi'ord s Aliil. I-riday, April Gtb.
!’ -... V Court Ground.. Saturday,April 7th.
3 ii'.ing's Tanyanl. Monday, Vr-ri 1 9th.
<:ran: * ! ur-sday, April iOib.
Kirby’s .- 1 '.1 ire. \Vdue-day, Apiiilltb.
j iian.'.y. TSiUnd.iy. April I2th. , .;
i .iinher t'reck Court GiGuaJ, Friday,*Apnl
'Wiii , . ..
, ii'.i ricunc Court Ground, Saturday, April
J. J. F ARMER,
Tax Receiver.
; Hh,
same nani
the South
Ofthe
,1 w. streams in
uDSS contains a stimulating er-
•’that loosens the^ihiegnipix.-
iv niovai
?nFHOK EEHMEm
r6" c’a an 3
presents
> SWEET G-I
u’rauialvs
-increnii
vr:tn Ibe
mullein
_ at i.oh's
_*sn Mit-
mptloa; ara so
THOMAS J. JONES.
Respectfully otters hie services to tue people
Newnan end vicu.uy. ‘‘line 00 Repot
strift, R. H. Barm --' oid jewelry ?. 1Jlce ; o
id«-ii‘‘e on Ticpot-street, third Viul.ding east of
A l- W. P. depot-
Ail kinds of Legal Blanks for sale by
McCtEXDOS * Co., N u nf.Tlj l-U.