Newspaper Page Text
■■--vr er • : v -■ / ■ ■■ ^-
Sfitq ijcnild and ^dcijrtisqr.
Newnan, Ga„ Friday, May 18, 1888.
15' cents for the benzine. The retail
druggist pays 70 cents for a pound of
bromide, lienee 10 cents for the usual
dose—three groins—means more than
1,000 per cent, profit for the druggist,
New York, New Jersey and Connec
ticut.
Philadelphia Record.
It is a favorite contention of Demo
cratic protectionists that the Demo
crats cannot carry New York, New
Jersey and Connecticut if they declare
in their national platform against a sugar-coated and generally of a grain
of the heart; the vision becomes im
paired, with spots before the eyes;
there is feeling of great prostration
and weakness. All of these symptoms
“Not biggor’n Crestline, O., is it ?”
asked the passenger with an amused
expression.
“I’ve seen four trains at once at
Crestline, waiting to start off. Is Chi-
the cost to the latter for three grains cago a place where the trains stop for i are j n turn present. It is thought that
being not quite 1.28 part of a cent. j dinner V’ ,. , . ,
The sober men's stomach may “get “Nan," said the disgusted drummer, j uearly one-third of our populate has
out of gear” as well as the toper’s. He “Chicago is a place where the passen-j ^is disease in some of its varied forms.
is apt to call for a quinine pill or two ; gers stop for dinner.’’ J It has been found that physicians
These pills are usually purchased ; Of course, that. & what I meant, |
ready-made by the druggist. They are explained the red-haird man gently. ; have mistaken the cause of this disease.
, sugar-coated and generally of a grain “Fact is,’’ he went on with confidential | gome haye treated 5t for a liver c om-
protective tariff and in favor of a tariff jt] ( icce. The retail druggist would pay frankness, “I ve traveled so much and j
for revenue only. But there is no ba- about 75c! per ounce for quinine; tlm been in so many different places in my | plaint, others for kidney disease, etc
sis of fact upon which to rest such a
conclusion. In 1876 the Democratic
party was unequivocal in its advocacy
of a tariff for revenue only. The votes
in these States in that year were as
follows:
Tilden. Hayes.
521,919 4S'i.2l>7
115,962 193.517
61 934 59.034
651,758
New York
New Jersey.
Connecticut.
699,845
Democratic majority, 4K.087.
Four years afterwards, in the cam
paign of 1880, the Democratic platform
favored a revenue tariff, but the Dem
ocratic candidate was induced to repu
diate the platform in that particular.
The vote, with the platform looking
one way, and the candidate the other,
was as follows :
Hancock. Garfield.
New York 534,511 555,544
New.Ter«ey 120,565 120,555
Connecticut 64,415 67,071
721,091 743.170
Republican majority, 21,079.
In the campaign of 1884 the protec
tionists managed to get a Democratic
national platform in which the tariff
plank was so constructed that it might
be construed according to the taste of
the reader. The Republican platform
also declared for ambiguous tariff revis
ion. In this condition of uncertainty
the vote was as follows :
pci
wholesale manufacturer has it for
about half that price. The pills retail
at the rate of lc. apiece, but many
druggists charge twice that amount;
average dose is three grains, for which
10c. is charged. Five grains wouldn’t
cost anj' more, but many people hesi
tate to take that much “at a lick.”
Now, 10c. for three grains means near
ly 500 per cent. Verily, t lie plumber
could learn from the druggist.
Cleveland.
Blaine
New York
563,154
502,006
New Jersey
127,798
123,440
Connecticut
67,199
65,923
758,151
751,308
Democratic majority, 6,783.
It will be observed from a perusal of
the figures here presented that with a
revenue tariff candidate on a revenue
tariff platform, the Democrats carried
New York in 1876 by over 32,000 major
ity, New Jersey by over 12,000 majori
ty, and Connecticut by nearly 3,000 ma
jority.
In 1880, with a revenue tariff plat
form and a candidate leaning to pro
tection, New York and Connecticut
were carried by the Republicans, and
the Democratic majority in NewJersey
was reduced from 12,000 to 2,000.
If 1884, with a tariff reform candidate
and both parties committed to tariff
revision, but with a halting declara
tion of principle on the part of the
Democracy, Grover Cleveland carried
all three States by narrow majorities
against the most popular Republican
in the country.
The lesson of these figures is perfect
ly plain. The Democratic party is m
favor of a tariff for revenue, and not for
protection It fights its best battle
when it carries its own flag and stands
by its principles.
The Druggist’s Profits.
Chicago Hcralil.
“Five grains of tanic acid in four
ounces of distilled water,’ demanded
one of the Herald readers of a corner
druggist the other day. The custo
mer, who had occasion to use the as
tringent wash called for, had brought
his own bottle along.
“How much?” he asked after the so
lution had been put up.
“Twenty-five cents,” said the drug
gist, unblushingly. The customer
stood dumbfounded for a moment, then
he paid, went out and took his lunch
at a dairy shop instead of Charlie
Kern’s place. This was necessary lie-
cause his wife keeps tab on his pocket
money and Liebotshaner beer is 10
cents a glass.
Retail druggists pay 30 cents per
ounce for tanic acid and 40 cents per
gallon for distilled water, as they don’t
make the latter themselves. Hence
the ingredients asked for cost ihe soda-
fountain man 1 5-16 cents—1 cent for
Western Farm Mortgages.
Philadelphia Record.
The Farmers' Jleview will in its next
issue publish the following summary of
reports from correspondents on the
subject of farm mortgages. As only a
part of the reports are based on an ex-
ainination of county records, the bal
ance being the estimates of correspond
ents based on their knowledge of gen
eral conditions in the respective coun
ties, only approximate correctness is
claimed for the figures given. Summa
rized by States the figures are: Ohio,
45 counties report an average of 23 per
cent, of farms under mortgages; 16
counties report farm mortgages on the
increase and 24 counties that they are
decreasing. Indiana, 37 counties report
26 per cent, of farms mortgaged; 18
counties report 26 per cent, of farms
mortgaged; 18 counties report mort
gages increasing and 14 decreasing. Il
linois, 75 counties report 27 per cent, of
farms mortgaged; 37 counties oil the in
crease and 32 on the decrease. Iowa,
69 counties report an average of 44 per
cent, of farms mortgaged; 14 counties
report an increase and 10 a decrease
Nebraska, 30 counties give an average
of 51 per cent, of farms mortgaged; 12
report farm mortgages on the increase
and 17 on the decrease. Wisconsin, 25
counties report 32 per cent, of the
farms mortgaged; in 8, mortgages are
increasing and in 17 decreasing. Mich
igan, 26 counties report an average of
50 per cent, of farms mortgaged; 11 re
port mortgages on the increase and 9
on the decrease. Kentucky, 18 coun
ties report an average of 23 per cent, of
farms mortgaged; 8 report farm mort
gages on the increase and 10 on the de
crease. Dakota, 27 counties report 59
percent, of farms mortgaged; \o re
port them on the increase and 12 cn
the decrease.
life that I don’t pretend to remember
more’n a quarter of ’em. IV hat s the
name of the hotel in Chicago ?”
“There ain’t any,” said the drummer,
gloomily.
Then he walked forward to the filter,
filled his mouth full of water, gargled
his throat, whooshed the liquid on the
tloor, and hung his leg over the corner
of the coal box.
Who is that evil-eyed, pink-haired,
lumpy-legged, prairie-eared microbe at
the other end of the car?” he ased of
the conductor, who was passin $ through
the train.
Do you mean that gentleman look
out of the window ?”
“Ya’as.”
“He’s a fish merchant from St.
Louis.”
“It is nothing to me,” spoke up a
gray-liaired man with a grizzly beard.
‘I have thought about death until I
have made myself something of a phil
osopher. To die is just as natural as
to be born; why should a man worry
about anything ? Life is so short that
it makes no difference whether we en
joy it or not, whether we are sick or
well, whether we succed or fail. W hen
I have done my best I am satisfied,
though the result may be the very op
posite of what I expected. Wealth
and success are trifles. To-morrow,
perhaps, I shall stand side by side with
the greatest millionaire and the great
est ruler of the times, and there will be
no difference between us. What fools,
then, men are to w-ork and distress
themselves to obtain wealth and pow
er, when they must soon be the equals
of their pauper neighbors and their
servants or slaves.”
About Slate Pencils.
In t he northwestern part of the town
of Castle ton, Rutland county, Vcr
mont, is the only manufactory of slate
pencils in the United States. The
slate rock, as it comes from the quarry,
is first sawed into blocks as wide as the
slate pencil is long. These blocks are
easily split into slabs a little thicker
than finished pencils, which is about
five-sixteenths of an inch. These are
passed through a planing machine and
| over an emery belt, which makes them
I even and smooth. Next they are push-
j ed through the jaws of a machine called
! ;l “crocodile,” which consists of a pair
I of steel plates, in the under one of
| which are six rows of curved knives,
j each, being set so as to cut a little deep-
j er than the proceeding one. These
plow out parallel grooves half way
through the slab, which is then turned
and laid on a steel plate having ridges
which just fits these grooves. This
slides back under six rows of teeth of
another “crocodile, which cuts the
grooves on the other side and leaves
the square pencils side by side.
Tli« 1 ' are then rounded and pointed
by holding
one man can thus sharpen about 800 a
day.
This factory makes 3.000 pencils dai- j pecially in the
Its Use for Kidneys.
Jesup, Ga., May 26,18S7.
I have been suffering from kidney di
sease for a month past, and the pain in
my back was very severe. My occu
pation requires a good deal of writing
at night and I suffered all the time. 1
saw one man who said he was cured by
I’^in 0- Botanic Blood Balm, (B. B. B.)
and I commenced using it, and the pam
is a great deal less. 1 have used two
bottles and believe it will effect a cure
by the use of a few more bottles.
Yours respectfully, J. E. Coleman.
Pure Blood is of Priceless Value.
The Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.:
My Dear Sir—1 have, for some time
past, used B. B. B. as a purifier of the
blood and to build up the system gen
eraily,and consider it without exception
the finest remedy of the kind in the
market. Yours with best wishes,
Arthur G. Lewis,
Editor Southern Society.
Fred Douglass having stated ^ that
the condition of the negro in the South
is worse now than at any time since tiie
war, IVilliam Smalley (colored), in a
letter to the Augusta Chronicle, denies
the statement, and reminds Douglass
that- lie has said a good deal about pol
itics in trying to prove 1 is asst rti< n,
but nothing about the increase of
wealth and the
tidn on the r
wants Dougl
talk and show his interest by coming
South to try and establish manufacto
ries where the negro will be given em
ployment. The point- is well made,
but it will have no effect upon Repub
lican politicians who talk about the
negroes for political elfect.
etc., but none of these kinds of treat
ment have been attended with success;
for it is really constipation and dyspep
sia. It is also found that Shaker Ex
tract of Roots, or Mother Seigel’s Cu
rative Syrup, when properly prepared
will remove this disease in all its stages.
Care must be taken, however, to secure
the genuine article.
IT WILL SELL BETTER THAN COTTON.
Mr. John C. Hemptinstall, of Chula-
firmee, Cleburn county, Ala., writes:
“Wy wife has been so much benefited
by Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel’s
Syrup that she says she would rather
be without food than without the med
icine. It has done her more good than
the doctors and all other medicines put
together. I would ride twenty miles to
get it into the hands of any sufferer if
he can get it in no other way. I be
lieve it will soon sell in this State bet
ter than cotton.”
TESTIMONY FROM TEXAS.
Mrs. S. E. Barton, of Varner, Ripley
county, Mo., writes that she had been
long afflicted with dyspepsia and disease
of the urinary organs and was cured
by Shaker Extract of Roots. Rev. J. J.
McGuire, merchant, of the same place,
who sold Mrs. Barton the medicine,
says lie has sold it for four years and
never knew it to fail.
SHE WAS ALMOST DEAD.
I was so low with dyspepsia that
there was not a physician to be found
who could do anything with me. 1 had
fluttering of the heart and swimming
of tlie head. One day I road your
pamphlet called “Life A mong the Shak
ers," which described my disease bet
ter than myself. I tried the Shaker
Extract of Roots and kept on with.it
until to-day I rejoice in good health,
Mrs. M. E. Tinsley, Bevier, Hulilen
burg county, Ky.
For sale by all Druggists, or address
the proprietor, A. J. White, Limited,
54 Warren Street, New York.
<£5ucattonal,
1888.
PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL,
PALMETTO, GA.
SPRING TERM WILL BEGIN THE FIRST
WEDNESDAY IN JANUARY, 1SSS.
Intelligent people,healthy location.experi
enced and conscientious teachers. Due atten
tion paid to the primary grades.
TUITION.
Primary grades, per month $1 20
Intermediate gndes per month 00
High school and collegiate grades, per mo ., on
Bo«rd, per month. 00 to $10 00
For particulars, address or consult
THUS. H. MEACHAM, Principal,
Palmetto, Gu.
WALKER HIGH SCHOOL,
1888.
THe Spring Session Opens on the Second
Tuesday in January.
THE COURSE OF STUDY
is such as to prepare for the higher classes in
College, or for practical lift*: and its comple
tion enables the studeut to take charge of the
advanced schoolsot the country.
Girls are boarded by the Principal. They
study at night under bis supervision, and thus
not infrequently are doubly benefited.
REGISTER FOR 1887.
First session, 105 pupils. Second session,
122 pupils. For the year, 162 pupils.
As public schools will go into operation next
vear, our number must necessarily 1m* limited.
The entire school will be taught by the Prin
cipal. .
RATES OF TUITION.
From $2 50 to $4 00 per month. Board and
tuition, $13 per scholastic month.
No room for loafers.
DANIEL WALKER, Principal.
Professional <£art>s.
WWWWVf* »NA O-VVV.> AW a .’WVAWA.VVV' •* \,VNW
W. H. BINGHAM,
*■ Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over Newnan National Bank.)
Prompt attention to all business en
trusted to his care. Special attention to col
lections.
Thomas C. Carleton. Hewlette A. Hail.
G’ARLETON & HALL,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts, both State
and Federal, giving special attention to t.«e
manual ment ol cstat- s and litigated causes,
i qlice No. 2, Cole building.
L. P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew & Co.’s.
PAYSON S. WIIATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice in all Ihe Courts and give
prompt attention to all business placed in hi*
hands. Examination of titles, writing deeds,
mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe-
cial attention. Office over Askew’s store.
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Will practice in all the Courts of Coweta
Circuit. All Justice Courts attended.
Money to loan on real estate at 8 per
cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of the
year.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
n A T A D DU Sample TreatmentUD DI7
fin 1 AKhll We mail enough F l\CjEi
:o convince B. S. Lauderbach & Co.,
Broad St-., Newark, N. J.
A GENTS WANTED.
ass to hold up with bis \\> want a few more ENERGETIC,
STEADY MEN TO SELL NURSERY
STOCK ON SALARY OR COMMISSION.
To the right men—good wages and constant
employment guaranteed. For our special
terms ap'olv at one- to
C A R RUT HERS & PATTESON,
Richmond, Virginia
THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
OF THE
CITY OF NEWNAN
Will be opened for white pupils the second
Monday, and for colored pupils the third Mon
day, in January, 18S8, with the following corps
of teachers:
superintendent:
LYMAN H. FORD.
teachers:
JOHN E. PENDERORAST,
MISS ANNIE ANDERSON,
MRS. D. P. WOODROOF,
MRS. W. P. NIMMONS,
MRS. J. E. ROBINSON,
MISS CONNIE HA RTS FI ELD,
MISS CORA KELLER.
COLORED teachers:
C. V. SMITH,
G. J. BURCH.
SUPERNUMERARI ES:
SADIE K. BEACH,
FANNIE L. CARRINGTON.
One-fifth of the matriculation fee will be
required every two months, in advance.
Tuition for non-residents will be, in the
Grammar Schools. $15 00 per annum; in the
High Schools, $25 00 per annum-one-fifth to
iie paid every two months, in advance.
.T. I». BREWSTER,
Sec’y Board of Education.
P. s. Willcoxon. W. C. Wright.
WILLCOXON & WEIGHT,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, G».
Will practice in all the Courts of the Dis
ks and Circuit. All Justice Courts atteu-
trie
ded. Office in Willcoxon buildin
E. Summers’
over E.
GEO. A. CARTER,
Attorney at Law,
Grantville, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of tlie Cir-
uit, and elsewhere by special agreement.
J. C. NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice in tlie Superior and Justice
Courts of tlie county and circuit, and elet-
wlicre by special agreement.
W. A. TURNER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, G*.
Pract ices in all the State and Federal Courts.
Office No. 4 Opera House Building.
W. Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all Courts or this and
adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
G. W. REDDY, M. D..
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, 3a.
(Office over W. K. Avery’s Jewelry Store.)
Offers his services to the people of Newnan
and surrounding country,
promptly.
All calls answered
S„ G. & N. A.
'M-r !l p-ses
Mo. 1—
Leave Carrollton 5 45 a id
ArriveAtkinson.T.0 6 00 am
“ Banning 6 35 a n.
Whitesburg 6 20 an
“ Sargent’s 6 50 a n
“ Newnan 7 14 a k
“ Sbarpsbnrg 8 05 si ji .
“ Turin 8 12 a a
<* Senoia 8 32 a n
« Brooks 9 05 a ir
“ Vaughns 9 27 an
“ Griffin 9 50 a r-.
No. 2—
Leave Griffin
Arrive at Vaughns
“ Brooks
“ Senoia
“ Turin
“ Sharpsburg
"ewnnn
T. B. DAVIS, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, Ga.
Offers his professional services to tlie citi-
7Atof N< \v:mn and vicinity.
DR. THUS.
COLE,
Dentist,
Newnan, G».
Depot Street.
Sargent’s
Whitesburg
Banning
Atkinson, T. O.
Carrollton
...12 01 u n
...12 18 pn
...12 38 p r,
... 1 10 p :
... 1 35 pi.:
... 1 50 p l.
... 2 28 p j:■
3 25 pm
3 48 p i,
4 00 pm
4 23 p i .
4 50 p m
M. S. Belknap, Gen’l Manager.
What is this DLsee.se «??.* is C
Among Us?
Like a thief at night it steals i
us unawares. The patients have
above the elv-s! and shies, and
them on an emery belt, and j times in the back.
sleepy; the mmi-h
W ALTER’S. PATENT c >eptk»n u t h a e n L e s>
1 est applied. Ab-
METAL SHINGLES! ,
Wind, Ram and
FIRE PROOF !
up ! : DURABLE AND ORNAMENTAL.
>V.m -il-:-'. :;t 'd enlalogueand price list free.
1 N ATI- NA r SHE FT META I ROOFING CO.
• r ;2 Eus; 20tii St., New York City.
mie-
v feed did! at
the water and the balance for the con
stituent part of the solution. In ehavg- j ly, and employs twenty-five hands. We | ^^i-y
ing 25 cents the druggist- made a frac- wonder where so many pencils go, but ; ^
when we consider that there are one or j The app.
t-w o million school boys and girls, find j ing lik<?
many of them rather careless, and that j '^
slate pencils are easily broken, we will, 11
have no doubt that the factory will j the pit ci
m
item
•rth
mace a frac
tion over 1,900 per cent, profit, which
beats the plumber. The chances are
that if the customer had presented a
physician's subscription instead of the
verbal order he would have been charg
ed 50 cents, 25 per cent, of which would
have gone to the prescribing doctor at
the monthly settlement.
This little incident explains why
down-lev, u druggists can afford to pay
such exorbitant rents as are asked for
locations like those on tho corners of
Madison and State and Madison and
Clark streets. The latter stand, up
a lease now about expired, cost 812.
the form. r -! .nd—a room 20x16 ft •„ i
not less than >18,000.
There’are many remedies asken .
by suffering humanity and paid b"‘ •
a rate that would make a pawn 1 r
with his paltry 120 per cent, rate
terest, turn green with envy. 1
cals are sold at apothecaries’ w«.., .
one pound of twelve ounces, the > ...
to eight drachms; the drachm to t mvo
scruples, and a scruple to twenty
grains. Hence there are 5,760 gran
a pound. Tlie reader is perhaps av, .ore
of the beneficial effects of brotr.i! • '
potassium. He is apt to call at his
druggist’s the morning after a “ses
sion” for a dose of bromide “in his’n.”
He is charged 25 cents-by the way,
there seems to be nothing cheaper than before,
a quarter in a drugstore of
c B - : -
is pb .
:• till
H.SL
mV
r.
W
or
k PARKER’S
’ KMR B&LSAM
' ( -:s and beautifies the hair.
; } t :s a ; : i • rant growth.
g : .u f.‘ - Fairs 4o Restore Gray
.: j 1 . .r to Youthful Cofor.
' Cureo scalp diseasesand hair falling
50c. at Druggists.
r ?*b'¥.&GQ&n&n
• ~t cr T ' ;t ?ure f y r Corns. Bunions, -to.
Ensures comfort to the f* T. Never
uuii at. Unirrtfsts* Hi^vox Co., K. Y.
WALTER E. AVERY,
iDinalion.
uacn wiU'-i
ey- sare si
•Li
Oil it
have its “hands full” to supply the de- j npt sat ;,.r v T p.
maud. ’ j .
The old way of making pencils was j hand.- ana Lei, i>eco.ac
to saw them out square from the slab : U1 y Aft raw’.;
one by one. They were then boxed j p ^ ,
and distributed among poor families, : iirtl 1
who whittled them round by hand for att
a half a dollar a thousand.
made from slate much
ie dates upon which they
. nd very nice pencils are
from soapstone.
ED VITALITY
c,..;a-
Ir, at
idea ••• .
j peetor.V: w.
! the wlidc, :.
afford any r<
After a time be be-
7*EK S-.. :X’?B OF LIFE, the
- 5: .it *•: Ural Work of the
ccfflHr. a j, Nfrrroua acd
. ..ysiual j_g biiity, Premature
Dce.mc, 2* : : - 6i cillu
hr.* • • •-rfe?consequent ig'S’r-" \
S VO, 123 3
t mr.a, s ■’ ’ Illustrative sample free to allyour.g
rr 1 • • luen. Sen: now. The Gol-lanl
Je U3 axvarded^o the snftor by the Na.-
”■ ' at Association. AuUress E. O. k.x
- - . or Ur. V. 77. v ' - ---- .-- I-
’ rro-Hir.lCoficsc.-r.y,-.-. -.ru-..w
Tb -<1. , . , ..
fcri. 'wt. 1 b--.T’ r M’-. \
B btgZ "
A flfnr’5’ r^ppfipo .
This well known Tonic and Nrrrfne is^aiidn?
great renutf'dionns n.cure for I>cbility, riy* 5 !
sia, and S ' ll VOT’ » dl*orden. It relieves Pti
languid and dobilftatcMl conditions of thu sys
tem ; strenpth‘»n3 the intellect, and bodily fnnet.on?;
builds up worn out Verves : aids fliires; nr-
stores impaired or lost Vitiility, and brm?3 oc.c>'
youthful strength and vioror. It is pleasant to t»n
taste, and u^d retrularly brace3the_System agailii*
the depressing infinence of Hlalaria.
* Prior—'*1 .OO per IJotilc of 24 ounces.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
The Drummer Was Crushed. an p • •
troit Post. j <T - . ,
V Chicago drummer balanced his j =
:■ on the edge of the seat in front of . in the h
d pas
fin and tiekh d a sandy hair
.-enger’s ear with the remark:
"You’ve been in Chicago, of course?” (
“Where ?”
“Chicago.”
An uncertain look came into the san- j
dy haired man’s eyes.
"Let me see,” he mused retrospec
tive’;,; “’pears to me I must have pass
ed t hrough there. I’ve traveled a good
deal. I know I’ve heard of the name
What line of road is it on ?”
_ ^ which, “Line of road. Why, it’s the biggest
amount 10 cents is for"the bromide and . railroad center on earth.”
The bow, U !>,v -m
dry and hot at tinu
thick and stagnant
eyes became tinged with yellow; the
urine is scanty and high colored, de
positing a sediment after standing.
There is frequently a spitting up of the
food, sometimes with a sour taste and
sometimes with a sweetish taste; this
A - RYELOUS
Hi /TAnv
JEWELER,
NEWNAN, GA.
Watches, Clocks, ‘Jewelry,
Silverware, Spectacles,
and IMu-glasses.
Our work lie,;;-.:: ■ - is as complete as a;
in the SO.- W, . verything nece.-
to do any job. from a spectacle screw to a
chroaoiiicu r. M. ’.uJges, etc., ma-e.
order. Ju.-t rec< lew clocks. Con
and hear them tick. Bigirest lot of watch 01 ' :
have ever had. <- ■. i 1. >ve you call ana :
us, whether you want anythin?: or not.
Respectful’y, W. E. A3 ER s .
Wh°n I say Curk I do not mean merely to
F ••• them for a time, and then have them rc~
tuTi again. I Mr.,* x A RADICAL CUKE.
I have made the disease ol
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKICESS,
A ' i:e long sturtv. I wabraxt my r'-medyto
rrttn th° worst Because others have
f?:k*di-::iO reason for not aow receiving a cure.
5e:. a ,. > tre :i • andaFRi:,. Bottlx
of mv Ink tj i v. Rf.medy. Give Express
a;.-; It-oo'.’3 you notldag lor a
trial e will cure you. Address
61T. r.1. C., *30PEAttST., #EWY0«
% :r TTTzzzgrm.
> A
W'i
IN
rnn
iING!
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems.
Any book learned in one reading.
Order to P?- fo ct Ser/ice.
GEORGIA—Cowf.ta f’orxTY:
i Annie Lee Morris, Libel for Divorce, in
. Co.' ,i superior Court.
| A.P.Jinn’!-. ' '• larch Term,
j It beintr shown to the Court that the ile-
Classes of 1087 at Baltiniore, 1GG5 •-* p e * i ctnintv.’and *' a! be d. « not reside with’ -
troit. 1500 at Philadelphia, large cp— s o. .s,tate; It is ordewd that service be per-
Columbia Law students, at Vale, W elles^ey, f . , . ..... this order in T ;
Oberhn, University of Penn., Mnviif ; T ni- jj .. • •
verslty, Chautanqua, <tc., Ac. Endorsed by 1
Eichabu Pkoctob, the ScieaCst, Hon'. \\
W. astob, Judah P. BeNjami", Judge j
Gibson, Dr. Brown, E. H. Coon, Principal
N. Y. State Normal College, v.c. The -:ys;_in
V offers his services to tie
A . ..hi* and Coweta county as •
xperienced painter, and respect
| their patronage. House-paint
. Ity, either by contract <•;- by tb*
furniture, cyans, pianos, etc.
oainted and revarnished. Add res-
fi nan, Ga. ALLEN LONG.
’
BF.ADLES’ LINIMENT!
FSAJ.D AND Advektiser. apllblic gazett. ' '
this State, published at Newnan, twice a , '' '
month for two months. S. W. IT ARRIS 1
t: Headache, Neuralgia
,: ’’ ' -of Nerves and Bon*--
: tioii. It cures Colic, Cb«
* ; ns and Painsof the Bov
-. l.v ta xit.g fr..m‘ 5 to 10 drops internally
h v. E. J. BEADLES,
p<•<»•>*•• -tor n- ’ Patentee, Newnan. Ga.
On sate at J. I. Scroggin’s, west side Pubis
dtlut
_ A true extract from the minutes of Coweta
j is thoroughly taught by correspondence. Pros- Superior Court, March Term, 1S88. This
is frequently attended with palpitation j pec rftot\ loisett!e?237 Finn Av... x. T. j M i-re! fefififij-uuii2ui. DA! ' IEI - yw ('ieri;. j t-Vi.n.~.Ay;*A!E—
J. s. 0. c. c. I PAINLESS chhdbirte
Hi )W *'■('. . i'i l VHET). Every !'-dy nhonl-l know.
B-i.i-T ;.n*iER REM. CO-BoxlMBniTa!o,S.Y.
Epsi i.N BLOOM, Sej*. OcnrlerlonB5*n-
fc' 3 'title- >...;n ftursaBd BlamiahEradicator known.