The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, September 14, 1888, Image 7

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/ WEARERS OP GLASS EYES. ACTORS Working AND ACTRESSES. -Seamy Bow Artificial Eye* Are Made and Who I Working for Starvation Wage* Cnet Them—Facts of Interest. Side of Stage Life. Upward of 5,000 New Yorkers wear ! Under the supervision of Albert Ellery artificial eyes, and of this goodly number Ber S* the dramatic critic, a series of in- the majority are ladies, whose sole ambi- testing investigations have been made NOTIONS ABOUT THE SEA. tion to supemde the works of the Creator is centered in the hope of becoming at tractive. Artificial eyes may be classi fied into two. distinct kinds, viz., glass and composition. Until recently those who had the misfortune to lose an eye have provided themselves with artificial ones of glass to hide the deformitv. Eves are to a man what the. vestibule door is ■ to the hou.se—an indication of what is inside. The idealistic part of the giass eye contains without doubt more fact than fiction. Oculists and opticians say that thou- ; sands who make use of this valuable and important artifice show no evidence ex- j cept to an expert of any impaired sight.. The glass eyes which are manufactured | in this country are really made of glass. They have many defects, among which may be mentioned their liability to be broken, and the hard pressure of their edges upon the fleshy parts. A fall this summer of the condition of the mem bers of the theatrical profession. Tlie re sults of the work are extremely disap pointing toali lovers of the stage. It appears that during at least three months of each year three-fourths of tlie profes sion are either idle or gaining a bare sub sistence in other industries, and that the other fourth find employment in such huge spectacles as ‘•Nero” in Staten Island and “The Fall of Babylon''in Cincinnati; in “summer snaps" and in the numer ous low concert halls, dime museums and music gardens of the larger cities. Popular Proverb* and Sayings Concerning the Ocean—Maritime Expressions. Improvements in the vehicles, instrtf dents and modes of navigation have robbed the sea of much of its terrible character, but we shall, nevertheless, find existing among the peoples of both con tinents, as shown by their popular pro verbs and sayings, a wholesome fear of the sea, a recognition of its terrible power, as well as many curious notions about the watery element, its inhabitants and its characteristics. The saying of Dr. Johnson, “No mail "'ill be a sailor who has contrivance enough to get him self into a jail/’ is more than par alleled by proverbs current among European nations. An old French maxim Ccgal Hotices. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: All persons having demands against the estate of Gilbert Weaver, late of Coweta coun ty. deooiised. are hereby notified to rentier in their demands to the undersigned according to law: and all persons indebted to said es tate are required to make immediate pay ment. This August 24. 188*. I’rs. fee. $3. JOHN* M. TIDWELL. Adm’r of Gilbert Weaver, deed. DRUGSI DR. .1. T. REESE Professional (£arbs> WILBINGHAM, Attorney at Newiwm. (OfficGover Newnan National Bask.; Prompt attention to all bnsitstaw En trusted to his care. Special attention Bwwl - ' lectlons. Application for Year’s Support. GEORG I A—Cow eta County : The return of the appraisers setting apart twelve months’support to the family of W. F. Sibley, deceased, having been tiled in my office, all persons concerned are cited to show cause by the first day of October 18SS. why said application for t welve months' support should not be granted. Tins August Si, 1SSS. W. H. PER-ONK, Pr. fee, 13.00. Ordinary. — — = c* c o o e All of these classes were carefnllv in- " a - s: “He who trusts himself * n the sea Application for Leave to Sell. vestigated by Mr. Borg and his col leagues. Nearly every case presented the most pitiable features. A majority of the profession lived with, or rather upon, parents, relatives and friends. But few were content with the enforce'1* idleness, and tried to make a livelihood during the dull season. Among the vo blow will often break them, or they will ' cations temporarily pursued wore wait- Bometiraes crack spontaneously, and in ! n S ,n restaurants and saloons bartend- ‘ - * ; jng. horn* ca^ driving ana conauctoring, eyelids are frequently 1 timing privileges” at excursions, pic- the patient’s „ wounded. Thi3 accounts for the fact of i 6 ro ^ t ‘ 3 > baseball grounds and counti \ children being rarely provided with glass able eyes on account of them not Lein to handle them without danger. The composition eye, \yhtcn Ts made of , a substance resembling celluloid, is now j in universal demand. It is much worn by ladies and children, as it prevents a distortion of the face. After the human j eye is once impaired and total blindness ; sets in, the face will lx distorted if no j artificial eye is worn, bv the falling of the eyelids. The composition eyes are j imported from Germany, and have de- j stroyed the market of the glass specimens j which are exclusively manufactured in j this country. Some of these are remark - ! aide for close imitation, while others are j beautiful specimens of art. They are | generally worn by those who have an in jured eye extracted, hut the majority of . artificial eye wearers are recruited from j the ranks of the fair sex, who perchance are squinted or possessed of some other trifling ocular deformity. In certain diseases of the eye it be comes necessary to extract the orb so af fected. as the eyes are so intimately con nected through their nervous structures that one diseased eye will ultimately ruin the other by sympathetic ophthalmia. The operation of removal is known as “enucleation,’’ by which the muscles are left behind to assist in moving the arti ficial eyes. These are not round, as is popularly supposed, hut shaped like a shell, and cause little or no trouble in being intro- fairs, button covering, making ladies ’ underwear, “sweat tailoring,” barber business, news stands, canvassing, em broidering, laundering, dressmaking and housekeeping. Hardly one of these paid i more than enough to keep body and soul | together. In one case three actresses rooming together in a single large apart ment supported themselves ty making petticoats and chemises. Working twelve hours a day, the three combined made only $11 a week. Their room vent was $3 per week, and the remainder. $6, had to supply food, needles, thread, car fares and medicine. A number who support themselves by “sweat tailoring” during the summer made a slightly better report, earning on an average $3 a week. Waiter girls ic both restaurants and saloons do better-, receiving from $3 to $5,. as wages and at least as much move in the form of tips. Those .who obtain employment in dramatic work make a very bad showing. Of those employed in'“Nero” at Staten Island and “The Fall of Babylon” in-Cin cinnati, four-fifths have had more or less experience upon the boards. A few have held prominent places; tlrese include women whip have been unsuccessf ul stars, leading ladies in very hard luck,and young actresses xvlio have neglected or failed to save any money during the season, and who are too proud to beg or borrow and is either a fool, or he is poor, or he wants to die. ” One of the alternatives serves as a poor excuse to the Spaniard, who says: “Better walk poor than to sail rich.” In the same spirit is conceived the Italian proverb, “Praise the sea, hut stay on j shore.” “He who would learn to pray ' should go to sea,” fays a well known proverb, and “He who does not venture | "upon the sea, knows not what Godps,” replies that most hardy and adventure- • some of maritime nations, the Dutch. The Russians say, “When you walk, pray I once; when you go to sea, pray twice; 1 when you go to he married, pray three times.’’ These sayings outline in a general way the dangerous character of the sea, and its treacherous nature, its insatiability and its immensity, are pointed out by other proverbs and aphorisms. “The sea makes some rich, others poor,” is a general proposition enunci ated in a Provencal adage, but the Amer- can proverb, “Work with me and I will nourish you; -look out for me or I will drown you,” teaches the uncertain nature ■of the sea life, and we may be disposed to heed the warning embodied in the Turkish maxim, “Trust not*the discourse of the great, the duration of a calm at sea, the lucidity of the fleeting day, the vigor of thy horse, or the speech of woman. ” The gentle sex is classed with the treacherous element in other proverbs, ! current-among many nations. Woman, however, is often tlve greater sufferer j from the dangerous nature of the sailor’s i calling, and a Tamil proverb says, “The j wife of the shipmaster is in-a. lucky situa- ! tion so long as the ship is safe; if it is J lost, she must beg. “The sea has no j branches (to cling to|, therefore it is bet- 1 ter ta stay on shore,” said the German woodsman, and the French rustic agrees ’ with him: • “Admire the -sea as much as you will, but don’t stir from the cow •sheds. ” The Arab fears the sea today ! GEORGIA—Coweta County Dauiel Swint. administrator of D. W. Dial iiauin "Iia, miu iiuicuHiv. deceased, having applied to the Court of Or- dinary for leave to sell the lands belonging to the estate of said deceased, all persons con • i cerned are required to show cause in said court by the first Monday in October next, il ! any they can, why said application should ! not be granted. This August 31,18SS. \V. H. PERSONS, | Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS' and MEDICINES, CHEMICALS. PAINTS. OILS, BRUSHES. PUTTY. WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND L. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, N e w nan, Aria v.Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew Co.’s. PAYSOX S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law. N ewruvrx, G* Will practice in all the Courts sni prompt attention to all business placet! S» Hands. Examination of titles, writing -ktrOJt inortgages, contracts, etc., will recer-v cial attention, i mice over Askew’s st»>?»v TOILET ARTICLES! MUSIC. 11 IXS TR l MEXTS, X OTIOXS, GARB EX SEEDS, VIOLIXA- GUITAR STRIXGS, Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: John M. Tidwell, administrator of the es tate of Gilbert Weaver, late of said county, deceased, having applied to the Court of Or dinary of said county for leave to sell the lands belonging to said deceased. all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in October next, if ! any tliex' can, why said application should not be granted. This August :tl. isss. \V. H. PERSONS, , Pr. fee, $3-00. Ordinary. CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. LAMPS & CHIMNEYS, ^gFHverosene by the barrel, shipped either from Newnan L. M. FARMER. Attorney at Law, Newusa, *ith. (Office over First National Bank g- Will practice in all the Courts of Comete i Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. or Atlanta. SPECTACLES, IN GREAT VARIETY! Applicalion for Leave to Sell. | GEORGIA—Coweta County: ! M. L. Carter, administrator of the estate of I Amy Thompson, having applied to tire Court I of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell i the land and one-fourtli interest in city lot in 'the city ot Newnan, belonging to said de- ! ceased', all persons concerned are required to | show cause in sai • Court by-the tir.-t Monday ir October next, if any they can, why sa'al implication should not lie granted. This Au gust 31,1888. W. H.’ PERSON*, Pr. fee, $3 00. Ordinary. SODA WATER FROM THE REST MATERIALS. GEO. A. CARTER, Attorney at Law, GrantvilL?, £3t*. Will prneti'v in all the Courts of Its* Cw- cuit. and elsewher* by special agreeme-tiX J. C. NEWMAN, Attorney at Law, Newnan, GctH&m. Will practice in tie* superior and Jus-Hmt Courts of the county and circuit, uml eiw- where b\ special iu-reement. £W Prescript ions put up with great care, ana from the best and purest drugs. We handle the best goods and sell at reasonable prices. Call to see us and lie convinced. GREENVILLE STREET Newnan, Ga. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Practices in all t lie State and Federal Office No. 4 Opera Housi Building. Application for Leave to Sell. |GEORGIA—Coweta County: ! Jane A. Hammond, administratrix of the : estate of E. Q. Hammond, having applied to : the Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the lands belonging to said deceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in-said Court by the first Monday in October^iext, if any they can, why said appli cation should not be granted. This August 31,1888. W.H. PERSONS, Pr. foe, $3.00. 'Ordinary. an inceme. The great majority are chorus , . rp,, ,, i „•*. i girls, members of the ballet and women ducefo They arc generally removed at G 3 . . , n-,, „ . , „ , ; ° ,- , ,, A of one year s dramatic experience, iue night and the jiarts washed with water or lotion. They generally last three years, aster which they iose their polish and become unfit for wear. New ones are then introduced after the same fash ion, and when once accustomed to this routine the wearer'experiences very little inconvenience an -their adjustment. The composition eyes (possess the advantage of lightness, and the composition may be trimmed witluu. penknife or a file to too moral to use other means 'to obtain much as he did in the Fifteenth century, w hen he declared that tlie hand of Satan rose from the bosom of the ‘ ‘sea of dark ness” to seize his frail -bark. ‘ ’It is bet- Letters of Aclministratiea. j GEORGIA—Coweta County: I Jennie Smith havingapplied to the Court of ! Ordinary of said county for permanent letters i of administration ou the estate of Mulberry S. Smith, late of said county, deceased, all per sons concerned are required to show cause in Said-court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not -be granted. This A utrust 31, 3888. W. H. PERSONS, Pus. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. The general salary paid is $2 a week, average, $3.7-3. Of those who go out on what they term j a “summer snap,” but few do well enough to pay for board and transporta tion, much less have a clear “profit. To this class “walking railroad ties” is nc figure of speech, hut a horrible reality. Of thirty companies whioh left New York in July twenty-eight, numbering over 400 souls, were stranded -on the road adjust it accurately and comfortably to j penniless,’and begged or borrowed their the parts. No artificial eye is of perpet- It . 03 .. - aid duration, because bv its incessant movement it loses its smooth surface. One of the largest manufacturers of glass eyes in -this country said to the writer a few days ago: “It is surprising to think of the vast number of persons who wear glass eyes. The largest per centage, of course, are ladies, -who an nually expend largo sums in -the pur chase of thosertanslucent optics, and un less a person.’'thoroughly experienced in handling those-eyes no other could dis cover that they are imitations. Glass eyes cost all '.the way from $8 to $25 each, hut.-composition«eyes which are im ported cost extravagant sums, though some may be .purchased at comparatively low prices, depending, of course, on tike quality of the material. You know cattle also wear glass eyes, and thou sands of men find themselves the posses sors of horses and ether animals orna mented with those eyes which they pur chased ou the. supposition thatsthey were free from defects.” The insertion of artificial eyes requires great skill -on .the part of the operator, as the comfort and stability of the artifi cial orb to -the patierr; are dependent on tlio process of transformation. The eye is taken 'between .tlie forefinger and thumb of the right hand, while the other hand is placed on the forehead and its extremities used to-raise the upper eye lid. -It is then introduced under the up per eyelid, the lower one is drawn down by the disengaged fingers, and behind this the piece .at once places itself. In extracting a glass or comjKisition eye the easiest way is to catch 1k>1J of it between tl^e fingers and draw it outward. Should any difficulty be experienced the head of a pin-or some blunt instrument inserted under the heal at once.removes . the obstacle. This is where the folly of using glass eyes becomes apparent, for if The j generosity of kindly 6trangers. few concerns that succeed (if success can be applied to tlicir efforts) are those which play “commonwealth” (L e., are , co-opt rative in character) and make some town their headquarters where ; country barrel is cheap and where mo ! legitimate companies ever come. Ry j playing a night in this village and that, by “-assisting"’ churches, lodges and other societies in :benefits, they manage to pay their hoard and washing hills and get home in time for the regular season. Perhaps -the hardest lot of all is of those who play dinting the summer in concert halls and dime museums. Hardly a watering place exists upon the conti nent but what has its “free and easies.” “open air theatres” -’and free variety shows. Here the romance and pictur esqueness of stage life disappear and all the brutalizing features are multiplied and magnified. The performer is an adjunct to the bar; his or her art a spir itual free lunch to the drinker. In nearly every case they are expected to drink with patrons, to be introduced to any one who knows ;the proprietor or bartender, and to listen in silence to the reeking vulgarity which alcohol pours from human lips. The pay in these places ranges from $5 to $12 per week, and the ! performance runs from noon to mid- | night. The place being “open air,” the ■ strain upon the voice is far greater than in closed buildings, and finally ter,” says he, “to hear The belchings of ; tiie camel than the prayers of the fish.” ! and he declares-the obstinate and danger- i ous character of the-stormy sea in the adage, “The sea has a tender stomach, but a head hard as wood. ” * ‘In travel ling,” says an old French proverh, “take the sea, but creep to tbs shore,” and an older saying -frqpu a-facetious work a oentury old concludes thus: “The ship is a fool, for it moves oontinually; the sailor is a fool, for hef changes his mind with every breeze; the water is a fool, for it is never still; the wind is a fool, for it blows without i ceasing. Let us make an end at once of navigation.” Concerning the tides, waves and salt water, there have been many curious sayings as well as -strange supersti tions. “That which goes with the ebb comes back with the flood,” is an other way d? expressing a well known sailpr adage that * ‘What comes by star board goes lay larboard. - ” Another French proverb is expressive of extreme defiance of difficulties: “To brave dangers as the leeward tide does the wipd. ’’ What a beautiful idea is tliat conveyed by the Sanscrit sentence: “It is the poets and not the ordinary men who rejoice in beautiful poetical expressions; the influ ence of the-rays of the moon swells the sea, but not the brook. ” The use -of maritime expressions is much more common even among lands men far from the sound of the sea than it is usually supposed to be. The, Dutch are proverhially addicted to the use of sea language, their inheritance from the sea robbers <of the Sixteenth century, and Mr. Clark Russell :has shown that the English language borrows many of its most expressive phrases from the sailors. We say a couple are “spliced, ” a young man is the ‘■‘main stay” of the family, an interloper “puts his oar in,” the member from Podunfe ‘‘steers through,” a man is “hard up,”'we are frequently “taken aback/’ a toper- is “slewed,” a ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED — IN— CAR LOAD LOTS Letters of Administration. GEORGIA Coweta County: . C Nail having applied to the Court of Or dinary of said enmity tor permanent lettersof administration on tee estate of A . P. Carter, late of said county, deceased, all persons con cerned are required to show cause in said Court bv the first Monday in October next, if any they can. why said application should cot be granted. This August 31, 1838. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Joseph E. Dent, executor of \V. W. Stegall, itate of said county, deceased,having applied to j the Court of Ordinary of said county for iet- : ters of dismission from his said trust, all per- 1 ns concerned are required to show cause in i «tid Court by the first Monday in October itrext, if any they can, why said application I should not be granted. This J uly fi, 1888. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $5.00.. Ordinary. produces that liuskiness or joinfui iai- i loafer “spins a yarn,”-you must “try the setto so familiar to patrons of the circus : If the dime museums are better than tlx, j open air coneems so far as the behavior of the audience and the work of the vocal organs are concerned, they are more .de structive to the health of the performer. The performances are usually given each hour from 15. a. m. to ll p. m. The halls are close, poorly ventilated, hot ana other tack,” etc., etc., all sea expres sions beyond a doubt. “Under false colors” would be said of a ship, as well as of a traitor.—F. S. Basseft in Globe- Democrat. Herr Schoenweg's Discovery. Securite, the new fiameless explosive, _ is the invention of Herr Scboenweg, and not allowed to rest or fall on a hand her- dJrtv; the dressing rooms vile, and the j -has been used in Germany for two years conveniences for the actors nil. The wages paid are the same as those in the open air temples of amusement. Mr. Berg shows that the mutual lielp- - chief or some ■soft material they break, and their replacement at frequent inter vals costs a considerable amount. Glass eye making requires judgment in the selection of proper glass. This is fupQgcs an d generosity which so charac- composed of sand, soda, saltpeter, pot- .ash, lime and chloride of lead. All these ingredients are put into a melting pot for a period of twenty hours and sub jected to a heat of 1,800 degs. The sand and other chemicals then unite in form- terize the dramatic profession is an or ganic necessity, and that without it, under the circumstances above detailed, hundreds, if not more, of actors and ac tresses would be starved every summer , or farced into the almshaase. Even as ing<& liquid. The glass blower then uses - t ^ theii' condition during never less an iron pipe heated enough to make tha fll8n one quarter of the year verges upon glass stick to it. This is stirred in a eir- pauperism' Mr. Berg’s investigations ; cular direction until a ball is formed. d^n-ov the last vestige of the once t . H ' The pupils, which are made in the same p,^p 1 ,i., r belief that an actor’s life is a variably causes their explosion, the flame- I wMMiner. from class of different shades happy one.—New York Cor. Globe-Dem- I less “securite” did not ignite the gas or ocrat. . past. It is composed of a nitrated hydro carbon in combination with certain oxi dizing agents, which is rendered flameless by the addition of a certain proportion of an organic salt. Il emits a spark in ex ploding, but this spark is harmless, not possessing sufficient energy to explode inflammable gases or coal dust. By the action of the organic salt the spark is almost instantly extinguished. In the tests mentioned, the fiameless “securite” was exploded in vessels containing the most highly explosive mixture of gas and air, and, in some cases, this combined with coal dust, but while gunpowder in- manner, from glass of different and colors, are now inserted into this globular mass, and allowed to cool, after j which the congealed substance is paired I off in any form or manner required.— | Joseph W. Guran in New York Press. The Flayu.- of Milk. Milk is altered both in taste and ap- Antiqoity of Artesian STell*. The artesian well was known to the agriculturist ages ago. The Chinese, the Hindoos and the Egyptians must have : learned to develop • -blind springs, ” and from this beginning went on expwiisient- gas or the coal dust, and it was demonstrated to be safe, even under more severe tests and conditions than are ever present in mining operations.—Detroit Free Press. Deva la Gcafffak Three Yankee girls are here teaching school, and I’ll bet that some of our . A f Y,i ing with rude dug and piped welk, which « widowers will many them before the nee by the character .utjhejood ^ avorable ^ tious brougbt the water year closes. Away back before the war, to the surface. In the heart of the Sa- j when Yankee girls used to come south hara, in Asia Minor and in Persia, tzar- < and teach school, our widowers married elers find unmistakable evidence that them as fast as they came. They were flowing wells were obtained long before ; smart, self reliant and economical, and lied to the cows. I<W and saffron, scented by plants of I onion tribe, and changed in taste by articles as turnips. Certain food :give it medicinal properties, and thus medicated is proposed as a method of treating disease.— Arkansaw Traveler, To Wfiom it May Concern. GEORGIA—Coweta County: The estate of ,W. S. Barnes, late of said 'oounty, di-eeased, being unrepresented and irot likely to be represented: all persons con- -rerned are required to show cause in the 'Aourt of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday in October next, why such adminis- iration should not be vested in %lie County Administrator. This August 31, 1888. \V. H. PERSONS, Ordinary, Prs. fee, $3.08. and ex-officie Clerk C. O. Administrator’s Sale. •GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order from the Court of Or- -Sinary of Coweta county, I will sell before .-.he court-house door in the city of Newnan, tween the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in October, 1888, the following lands belonging to the estate of Mrs. S. J. Puckett, deceased, 'o-wit: Fifty acres of land, more -< r less, off of southeast corner of lot No. 202, •lying, being, and situated in Grantville dis root of saic county, and bounded north by D. u. Puckett, Basil Smith, and J. M. Hinds- iman, east by J. L. Morris, south bv F M. •Shaddix and D. L. Puckett, and west by R. I. O’ Kelly and Mattie T. Smith. Said land to be sold for cash, and for distribution among the heirs of said deceased. This August 30. 1888. D. L. PUCKETT, $4.65—paid. Administrator. Hero CZifoertisements. FTTMC REVOLVERS. •’Send stamp for lj U il price list to JOHNSTON & SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. FOGS’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univer sal satisfaction. WI NSH I P’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. VAN WINKLE’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S GINS. (Improvement on Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers. SKINNER W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Cfo. Will practice in all Courts of tbr» -jijid adjoining counties und the Supreme Co-'oci. G. W. PEDDY, M. D.. Physician anil Surgeon^ Newii*.*, 3m. (Office over W. K. Avery’s Jewelry Store.' le people and surrounding country. All calls aiY-rwesa*J promptly. T. B. DAVIS, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon-,. Newnstx^Qa. Offers his professional services to t5if- zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Kewnaa, €**. Depot Street. „ DR. HEN LEY'S ^ £xtract^hi F&m A Most Effective Combiaatm This well known Tonic and Nervine tecasing great reputation as a cure for Debility, ftia, and NERVOUS disorders. It reliefs aU languid and debilitated conditions of tbe as tern ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily fhn/AMsi*s^ builds up worn out NerveH ; aids digestion £ » stores impaired or lost Vitality, and bring* youthful strength and vigor. It Is pleasaufctt* war# taste, and used regularly braces the System ASUJMl the depressing influence of Malaria. Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 outmmhl FOE SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS* CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Taste3 good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. aggHSEiaHEB I believe Piso’s Cum for Consumption saved mv life.—A. H. Dowell, Editor Enquirer. Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. Engines. From 4 to 250 Horse-Power. HIPFull line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, in ware-rooms. n PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Mover Fail* to Rettore Gray H»ir to its Youthful Color. Prevents Dandruff and hair falling 50c. and tl .OO at Druggists. Try us before you purchase. Sales made for CASH or on TIME. S, G. & N. A. R. R. EXHAUSTED VITALITY runs SCIENCE OF LIFE, the great Medical Work of the age on Manhood, Xervoo, and I Physical Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, SCO pages 8 va 125 prescriptions for all diseases.. Cloth, full gilt, only $1^ ; by* mall, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young and middle aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded t«ahe author by the Na tional Jteilical Association. Address iP. O. box 1SD5, Boston, Mass., or Dr. XV. IL PARKER, grad uate of Harvard Medical College, 25y ears’ practice In Boston, who may l>e consulted confidentially. Speclalry^Diseases of Man. Office No. 4Bulfinch st. The best Cough Medi cine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Children, take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. iO’S C Best Cough Symp. Tastes good. XJ3e ■ in time. Bold by druggists. ■ THAT FIGHT No. I— ! Leave Carrollton 4 15 a in ArriveAtkinson.T. O 4 3o a re Banning 4 5u a m Whitesburg 4 55 a in Sargent’s 5 20 a nc Newnan 6 00 a an Sharpsburg 6 35 a m Turin 6 40 a m Senoia TOOam Brooks 7 25 a in Vaughns 7 45 a m Griffin 8 18 am MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. No. 2— Leave Griffin 12 10 p i Arrive at Vaughns. 12 4c p i Brooks 1 On pi Senoia 1 25 p i Turin 1 45 p i Sharpsburg 150 pi Newnan 3 10 p i Sargent’s 3 30 p i Whitesburg 1 0J p : Banning 1 05 p i Atkinson, T. O 4 30 p i Carrollton 4 50 p r M. S. 4 Belknap, Gen'I Manager. The Original.Wins. C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, M. A. Simmons Li ver Medicine, X*x'<31 1840, in the U. S. Court defxats H.Zeilin, Prop’r A. Q.Simmons Liv er Regulator, Lst’il by Zeilin 18GS- M". A. S. L. M. has for 47 yiawK cured Indioestion, BlLiotst*ss-ii.» Dyseepsia.Sick HsabachxJjovt Appetite, Sock Stomach, Etc. l Rev. T B. Reams, Pastor 14. W iChurch, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1 Ithink I should have been dead bar for your Genuine M. A. Sim mons Liver Medicine.. I hast sometimes had to substitute “Zeilir.’s stuff” for vnor Mica cine, but it don’t "answer purpose.” Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor 77ie - ^Buptrst, ilemphis, Tenn. sars:. I received a package of yonrl-iv ro lled.cine, and have used half ot it. It works like a charm. I wont «£» better Liver Regulator and c«r- tainly no more of Zeilin’s gaatme Any book learned in one reading. Minil wandering eared. Speaking without notes. Wholly unlike artificial systems.' Piracy condemned by Supreme Court. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes. the province of Artois gave Mb name that is the kind of a wife a widower *• Artesian" *.n rhese artificial welWraansfi. ’wants.—Bill Arp is Atlanta. Constitu- ■ Artesian" \o these artificial wel —Charles H. Shinn in Overland ga- ithly. wants.- tibh. Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Hammond, the world-renowned Specialist in Mind diseases. Daniel Greenleaf Thompson, the greai Psychologist, and others, sent post free by Prof. A. 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