The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, September 21, 1888, Image 7

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. ——-----—~.—- wr— ’ 4 HUMANITY STARVE? Stall the Inoreatln; Population of World lie Fed?—Ad Illustration. ie troubles at the leading centers of itton, the agitation of question* :h are closely connected with wage iin£, are all barometric indications of is ahead. What shall he done with. Rapidly increasing population of the Id and how it shall be provided for so reduc e the friction of bread winning the minimum, are grave problem.* Ich may enlist with profit the leading JM civilized countries, p. Edward Atkinson, in The Forum. Its into a consideration of the doc- |( of Malthus and Ricardo. If their ejits are to be received as demonstra- (■ of science, what good, he asks, will ult from the efforts to ameliorate the of mankind, to prevent war. to i frutfine and to save life from diseases? ’.nan passions and human nature to a disproportion of population in *fi Vhe means of subsistence, or if find of man applied as a factor to .’.ction cannot provide for this ten- y of population to increase, without jrt cither to violent or to purely arti- 8CENES OF SENSUOUS BEAUTY. Intemtlni People Whe Loiter Their Hours Away In West Indian Tropics. Hindoos, coolies; men, women and children—standing, waiting or sitting in the 6un. under the shadowing of the palms. Men squatting, with hands clasped over their black knees, steadily observe you from under their white tur bans—very steadily, with a slight scowL All these Indian faces have the same set, stem expression, the same kritting of the brows, and the keen, strong gaze is not altogether pleasant. Jt borders upon hostility; it is the look of measurement —measurement physical and moral. In thp mighty swarmings of India these have learned the full meaning and force of life's law as we Occidentals rarely learn it. Under the dark forehead with its fixed frown the eye glitters like a serpent’s. Nearly all wear the same Indian dress, the thickly folded turban, usually white, white drawers reaching but half way down the thigh, leaving the knees and the legs bare, anti white jacket. A few don long blue robps and wear a colored head dress. These are bubagees, priests. GOOD-BY, SWEETHEART. €egal notices. Good-by. sweetheart! The thought >s«r grieves in my breast b bi* an arrow winging swift and frea That take* not life away. but. breaking all Its rest. Must separate us ever—me and thee: i wonder doth It grieve thy soul, as mine, to part? ; tate are required to make immediate pay ' ment. This August 2-C ISSN Prs. fee. $3 Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—C 'Weta County: All persons having demands against the estate of Gilbert Weaver, late of Coweta coun ty deceased, are hereby notified to render in their demands to the undersigned according to law: and all persons indebted to said es- B methods of checking it, we might \ All the men look tail; they are lithe. ’ -11 “eat, drink and be merry, for to- •w we die,” without taking any lit for the future of the race. i th these jtessimistic doctrines Mr. isort takes issue. He thinks they based up6:i very narrow observation, i alt Irus or Ricardo had conceived that bin a short period, says Mr. Atkin- ironstone would be converted into very slendei, small boned, but the limbs are well turned. They are grave, talk iff low tones and seldom smile. Those you see with very heavy, full Iwards are probably Mussulmans; they have their mosques and the cry of the muezzin sounds thrice daily over the vast cane fields. Some shave—Buddhists or fol lowers of Ilindooism—but the children To say good-by. sweetheart Good-by. sweetheart a a summer leaves her restful calm on earth— Fler breathless silence, like a dream of peace, Ev‘n 60 I would that in thy path some gentle birth Of sacred recollections, when shall cease The music of today, may aught of bliss import, To comfort thee, sweetheart. Good-by. sweetheart] 1 hear the vesper voices call— But yot thy soul's dear grace I cannot lose— We view our paths which lie apart; the tears must fall. We can but pray, our ways we rnay not chooee, ’ But heaven waits for both beyond, where thoo and 1 i Need never say good-by! Sweetheart, good-by' ! Before us fall such strange, strange mists Where once there was but sunshine and fair skies. I reach my hands to thee In vain—for Fate insists Love's links must be uncl&psed: so close thine eyes While on thy brow 1 lay my last and tender touch , and sigh To breathe, sweetheart, good-by' —Lida Lewis Watson in New York Mercury. JOHN M. TIDWELL. Adm’r of Gilbert Weaver, dec’d. Application for Year’s Support. GEORGIA—Coweta County: The return of the appraisers setting apart twelve months’support to the family oi W. F Siblev, deceased, having been filed in my office, all persons concerned are cited to show cause by the first day of October 1888, why said application for twelve months’ support should not be granted. This August 31, 1SS8. \\ • xi• r l.R '*0^1 S, Pr. fee, $3.00. • Ordinary. Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Daniel Swint, administrator of D. W. Dial, 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 cerned are required to show cause in said court by the first Monday in October next, if anv they can, why said application should not be granted. This^ngistm^^^ Prs. fee, 13.00. Ordinary. DRUGS 1 OCOCSOO © o © © © © DR. J. T. KEESE. © © © HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, CHEMICALS. PAINTS, OILS, BRUSHES, PUTTY, WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES! MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, NOTIONS, GA If DEN SEEDS, VIOLIN & GUITAR STRINGS, ! for man and beast, by grinding into i of Islam never. \ ery comely some of 1 the women are in their close clinging, soft, brief robes and tantalizing veils, a costume leaving shoulders, arms and ankles bare. The dark arm is always tapered and rounded; the silver circled ankle always elegantly knit to the light, straight foot. Many of these slim girls, whether standing or walking or in re pose, present perpetually studies of grace; their attilude when erect always sug gests lightness and suppleness, like the poise of a perfect dancer. A coolie mother passes, carrying at her hip a very pretty naked baby. It has exquisite delicacy of limb; its tiny ankles are circled by thin bright silver rings; it lopks like a little bronze statuette, a statue of Kama, the Indian Eros. The mother’s arms are covered from elbow to wrist with silver bracelets, some fiat and dec orated, others coarse, round, smooth, with ends hammered into the form of viper heads. She has large flowers of gold in her ears, a small gold flower in her very delicate little nose. This nose ornament does not seem absurd; on these dark skins the effect is, on the contrary, pleasing, although bizarre. All this jewelry is pure metal; it is thus the coolies carry their savings; they do not learn to trust the banks until they become rich. There is a woman going to market, a very odd little woman; is she a Cliino- blanco—a coolie or a Malay half breed? I do not know. She represents a type I have never seen before. She wears one loose soft white garment, leaving arms, ankles and part of hack and bosom ex posed, like a low cut sleeveless chemise, hut less long. Her whole figure is rounded, compact, admirably knit, and her walk is indescribably light, supple, graceful. But her face is queer; it is an Oriental ’ grotesque, a Chinese dream, oblique eyes and blue black brow's and hair, very high and broad cheek bones. Singular as it is, tliis face has the verit able beaute du diable; it is a very young and very fresh face, and the uncom monly long, black, silky lashes give her gaze a very pleasing, velvety expression. Still, the most remarkable peculiarity she has is her color, clear and strange, almost exactly the color of a fine ripe ilemon.—Lafcadio Hearn in Harper’s Magazine. df^ the phosphoric slag, which is the e product of the iron furnace, or r would have ventured to present J hypotheses. Malthus held that the Jlation of the world would increase I er thaiffmeans of subsistence could lie ,’nd for the additional number. Ri- IJo’s theory was that a given area of 1 of high fertility when cultivated for "ies of years in a certain manner 1 yield diminishing returns in pro- | l to the amount of labor and capi- icnded upon it. Atkinson reviews these hypotheses daborately, and finally concludes lows: “The mind of man when ap- to the direction of natural forces is "incipal agent in material produc- « fact, the controlling element, who claim that labor is the source nroduction aro utterly misled, bo- Jliey do not admit this fundamen- rinciple. May it not, therefore, be consistent with the concepts of an itoned faith of any type in which is recognized in the universe to , it an hypothesis that as the mental ies of a man aro more developed qore intelligently applied to the sion of the forces of nature into rail products, the general struggle :j will become less and not greater? ’ . Atkinson takes the right view. It ^timistic, but at the same time is based the experience of oriental nations. *;p6il is the great reservoir of man’s ; istence. It is the foundation upon hi all other industries are based. If arth were rocky, and so sterile as to bsohlfcely unproductive, man himself d not exist. He lives virtually on soil. There could be no animal life lout the soil. For even the curnivor- i animals indirectly draw their sus- ance from mother earth. The soil Vhports those animals on which the meat -s live. uting that the soil is the basis of all hat is the proportion of danger that \eories of Malthus and Ricardo will be realized? It seems to be very . Man is yet in the adolescent period intellectuality. He will in the fut- ow much more about the forces of sind how to govern and to prac- pply them than he does now. All owiedge will be turned into useful el«. We will understand bow to ’.o and cultivate tho soil so that it over be exhausted and will produce laximum. So long as the soil is ictive so long will there be no fear .umanity cannot lie supported, e, as an illustration, the case of The area is not more than one- the size of the United States. It rts, however, six times as many as we have in this country. It ,;u*e of the increase without any dty. The most careful system of zation is observed,*and tiie farmer bestows as much care on his farm, is more in the nature of a garden a farm, as the flower gardener in Tnited States bestows on his exotics. Germany, as sterile as it is in many cau supply millions more people t docs now. The director of the an statistical bureau has recently itted some very interesting figures lis subject. His conclusions, which ised on the statistics gathered, are vithout any effort Germany will be > care for its increase in population time so long in the future that it is ;ed from the realm of human spec- H. ik of the unoccupied lands in Asia, |tk and South America, in Africa. be centuries anti centuries before bands are even all partially titled, fit is tilled there can be no limit to fdustries which will K' supported by tiie people which will find in these ies their employment and happi- Detroit Free Press. Evils of Chewing Gum. A physician tells nae that chewing gum is a practice in which grown people should not indulge and which parents should not tolerate in children. “Is it worse than chewing tobacco?” I asked. “A thou sand times,” was the reply. “A girl will do enough chewing on a cent’s worth of gum to masticate her food for a wh^le week. The hinges of the jaw are j made for the ordinary work of an ordi nary life and they won’t stand any more. Chewing gum is something like drinking whisky—one nip calls for another and one craunch begets another. It excites the nerves which lie about the jaws to a kind of perpetual motion, which doesn’t cease until their strength is exhausted. We haven't been chewing quite long enough to see its ill effect, 'Tint our jaws are made like the jaws of other peo ple, and we might learn a true and use ful lesson from history.”—Chicago Tri bune. Beautifying the Tenement House*. One of the pleasant things in the pro gress of New York city is the steady im provement in the condition of Mulberry, Baxter and other streets in the densely populated part of the east side tenement, district. They are bad enough yet, in all conscience, but compared with what they were a few years ago they are really beautiful. The board of health annually cleans out entirely some of the worst of the rookeries, and those that remain have to be kept liberally dosed with white wash and repaired and overhauled fre quently, in order to pass muster with the inspectors. It is astonishing how much better a house looks after hallways that reeked with a damp ooze have had a heavy coat of whitewash, and how fresh pine boards will brighten up walls and ceilings formerly covered with dirty, broken plastering. Factories and store houses, also, are encroaching upon the old domains of dirt, vice and disease, and driving the inhabitants out into parts of the city where at least there is more fresh air, better light and cleaner streets. —New York Sun. A Hard Working Novelist. A gentleman who has recently visited Wilkie Collins at his home in YVimpole street, London, says that thomovelist is looking old, and that his hard work has left its mark on him. He is thin and stoops very much, but his eyes, though near sighted, are bright and sparkling. Mr. Coilins is a hard worker, and when busy with a novel usually works night and day until it is finished. It is quite common for him to work fifteen hours at a stretch, eating scarcely anything and drinking only a little champagne during that time. He gets very much excited ovef, his stories, and walks about the room reciting the speeches of his charac ters in a most dramatic manner.—Har per’s Bazar. Polar Ice Caps of Mars. Flammarion has pointed out to the French Academy of Sciences that the varying state of the polar ice caps of Mars has long been carefully observed by Maedler, Schiaparelli and others, the inference being that this planet is not yet, like our moon, permanently frozen up. On the contrary, its temperature is equal to, if not higher than, that of the earth, and its polar snows melt periodi cally to a far greater extent than on our globe. This disposes of the theory that the canals are glacial rifts.—Boston Budget. Weakness of the Blackguard. The truth is that the fury which is sup posed to imply force is the conclusive p^oof of weakness. The familiar advice, “If you have no evidence, abuse the plaintiff’s attorney, ’’ contains by impli cation tho whole philosophy of what is called the manliness and force of the blackguard. He has no reason, therefore he sneers. He has no argument, there fore he 6wears. He will get the laugh upon his adversary if he can, forgetting that those who laugh at the clown may also despise him.—Harper’s Magazine. 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 tlie first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This August 31.18SS. 6 W.H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, |3.0t». Ordinary. Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: M. L. Carter, administrator of the estate of Am v Thompson, having appiied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the land and one-fourth interest in city lot in the city of Newnan, belonging to said de ceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in sai < Court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This Au gust 31,1888. W. H. PERSON.-, Pr. fee, $3 00. Ordinary. 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 next, if any they can, why said appli cation should not be granted. This August 31, 1888. W.H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Jennie Smith liavingapplied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for permanent let ters of administration on the estateof Mulberry S. Smith, late of said county, deceased, all per sons concerned are required to show cause in said court bv tiie first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This August 31, 1888. W. H. PERSONS. Prs. fee, $3.00. • Ordinary. CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. LAMPS & CHIMNEYS, £^~Kerosene by the barrel, shipped either from Newnan or Atlanta. SPECTACLES, IN GREAT ^VARIETY! SODA WATER FROM THE BEST MATERIALS. Professional Car5s. W. H. BLNGHAMr Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga (Office over Newnan National Bank.) Prompt attention to all business ea- trusted to his care. Special attention toew- lectfcons. L. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, ti* Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew A- Co.’s. PAYSON S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Will practice in all the Courts and give prompt attention to all business placed in hi* hands. Examination of titles, writing deed*, mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe cial attention. Ofllce over Askew’s store. L. M. FARMER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G». (Office over First National Bank.) Will practice in all the Courts of Coweta Circuit. All Justice'Courts attended. GEO. A. CARTER, Attorney at Law, Grantville, Gjl Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement. Prescriptions put up with great care, and from the best and purest drugs. We handle the best goods and sell at. reasonable prices. Call to see us and be convinced. GREENVILLE STREET Newnan, Ga. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED — IN CAR LOAD LOTS J. C. NEWMAN, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Georgia. Will practice in the Superior and Justioa Courts of tiie county and circuit, and else where by special agreement. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Practices in all theStateand Federal Court* Office No. 4 Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in all Courts of this and | adjoining counties and tiie Supreme Court. G. W. PEDDY, M. D- Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga. (Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.. Offers his services to tiie people of Newnan aud surrounding country. All calls answered promptly. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA-Coweta County: T. C- Nall having applied totheCourtof Or dinary of said county for permanent lettersof administration on the estate of w. P. Carter, late of said county, deceased, all persons con cerned 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 August. 31. 1888. Prs. fee, $3.00. H. PERSONS, Ordinary. Letters or Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Joseph E. Dent, executor of W. W. Stegall, late of said county, deceased,havingapplied.to the Court of Ordinary of said county for let ters of dismission from his said trust, all per sons concerned are required to show cause in said Court bv the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This July 0,1888. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $5JX). Ordinary. To Wtiom it-May Concern. GEORGIA—Coweta County: The estate of W. S. Barnes, late of said county, deceased, being unrepresented aud not likely to be represented: all persons con cerned are required to show cause in the Court of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday in October next, why such adminis tration should not be vested in the County Administrator. This August 31, 1888. W. H. PERSONS, Ordinary, Prs. fee, $3.00. and ex-officio Clerk C. O. The Oiltmit of Our Mines. a verv imposing showing t ■::;t ihe production of metals in the ykvs kM Canadian “Sea Cucumber.” e waters surrounding the Atlantic Ijurian, pentads fron- aeger, \. ry similar to the trepans abv r.:ri Chinese coasts, is found abundance. It is called by our n the "sea cucumber” or “sea A few experiments have ade on it as an article of food. been pronounced good, with t of lobster meat. Trepang, in is prepared by dipping the live icumber” for two minutes in water, then cutting open, then into a second caldron of boil- and mimosa bark. It is finally the sun and pressed for stowage, ket value has been quoted at o to six dollars per hundred and the fisheries are consid- industrial importance. Will e of our ingenious fishermen or ere make a thorough test of our kter It i bureau< report oi me j United States for 1SS7.* The aggregate ! value of the output of our mines is t down at £.->33.056,345—figures wm-se j significance can only be’fuily grasped by comparing them with values in other ue- : partments of production. It is uiiiicult to estimate the amount of labor that went to the making of this enormous j total. The census of 1SS0 ranked as 1 miners some Q34,‘~SS persons, not includ ing 7.340 oil well operators, and not counting at all those engaged in the care of mining machinery. It would prob- ; ably be safe to put at 350.000 the number of those who are now directly engaged in all departments of mining industry, and such a calculation may at least serve as a basis for determining the productive i value of the army of laborers thus em- | ployed.—The Epoch. How Senatorial Speeches Are Timed. President pro'tem. Ingalls uses the old • fashioned time glass to measure the five j : minute speeches of the senators. When 1 the senator begins the glass is inverted, Oldest Statue in the World. There is a curious wooden statue in the Museum of Antiquities at Boolak, Egypt, which is said to be G.000 years old'. It is tltat of a man, apparently a civilized man, the figure full of life, standing erect holding a staff. The pose expresses vigor, action, pride, and the head indicates a man of intellect. It was discovered k by Marietta Bey, the French Egyptologist at Memphis, but nothing is known of its history.—C. Wilmot in Magazine of American His tory. r Why Birds Eat Berries* Pans of water placed in fruit and berry patches will keep birds from eating the fruit. An English naturalist claims that the reasou birds eat cherries and straw- . berries is because in the blazing heat they get dreadfully thirsty. If the birds can easily get at water they soon leave off taking the fruit.—Chicago Herald. . Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order from the Court of Or dinary of Coweta county, I will sell before the court-house door in the city of Newnan, between the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in October, 1888, the following lands belonging to the estate of Mrs. K. J. Puckett, deceased, o-wit: Fifty acres of land, more o- less, off of southeast corner of lot No. 202, lying, being, and situated in Grantville dis trict <if sab: county, and bounded -north by D. L. Puckett, Basil‘Smith, and J. M. Hinds- man, east by J. L. Morris, south by I M. , Shaddix and D. L. Puckett, and west by R. I. O’Kelly and Matlie T. Smith. Said land to i be sold'for cash, and for distrioution among the heirs of said deceased. This August 30. 1888. D. L. PUCKETT, $4.8>—paid. Administrator. FOOS’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univer sal satisfaction. T. B. DAVIS, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, • Newnan, Ga. Offers his professional services to the clti- zens of Newnan and vicinity. WINSHIP’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.) DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot Street. „ Dr. HENLEY'S M F&lFtl A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic Nervine Is gaining great reputation as a cure for Debility, IVyspep- 8in, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves all languid and debilitated conditions ofthesya- tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily fonettona, builds up worn out Nerves : aids stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings t»ck youthful strength and vigor. Itis pleaMiiit to tH* taste, and used reffularly braces the System agauMl the depressing influence of Malanii. Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces. FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden- 1 AILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use ‘ i time. Sold by druggists. CURES WHERE sers. SKINNER Engines. From 4 to Horse-Power. Iceit> Cibr>erttsemcnts. PUNIC REVOLVERS, send stamp for UU HO, price list to JOHNSTON A SON, Pittsburgh. Penn. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray Hair tn its Youthful Color. Prevents Pandruff and hair falling 5uc. and $1.00 at Druggists. £lf“Full line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS;! 1 in ware-rooms. Try us before you purchase. Sales made for CASH or on TIME. Wild Turkeys In Austria. Wild turkeys have lately lieen accli matized in Austr-ia, though such a thing has hitherto been considered almost im possible. From four hen turkeys and three cocks, brought from the American prairies, tiie colony lias increased to about 5S0 individuals.—-Arkansaw Trav eler. Fef Does Not Apply. The law allowing three days’ grace on a note does not apply to musicians; they must take up the notes at sight as they and when the sand has all run out he is j come due, or the whole will go to pro- stopped promptly. The other day a test.—Dansville Breeze, senator who thought- liis five minutes en- ‘ tirely too short demurred when the presi- , i d en t pro tem. told him his time was up. | “The chair is guided entirely by this j glass,” said Ingalls firmly, holding up the twin bulbs with the sand all in the sea cucumber.” and settle the j ower one> ^ t he president pro tem. is whether there is to be any Cana- ^ absolute as a baseball umpire, nng or not?—Educational Ke- uot ^ n g more was said. As Ingalls re marked afterward to another western tree to | senator, “Ittsiessandtomnthewnato." have teen one™* 1 to Dsnmart. , —Philadelphia Record. EXHAUSTED VITALITY THE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the -*■ great Medical W ori of the age on Manhood, Nervous ami I r .ysical D. bilitT, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 300 pages Svo, 125 prescriptions for all diseases.. Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00. by" mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young and middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1335. Boston. Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, gr-d- uateof Harvard Medical College,23years'i ract.ee la Eoston, who may be Consuls- i conf.dentially. Specialty, Diseases Man. Off:.; No. 4 ButEr.ch st. MARVELOUS MEMORY ' DISCOVERY. Any book learned in one reading. Mind wandering- cured. Speaking without notes. Wholly unlike artificial systems. Piracy condemned l>y Supreme Court. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes. Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A 1 Hammond, the world-renowned .Specialist in The first advertising agency in Amer- i Mind diseases, Daniel Greenleaf Thon pfon, icawas established by Orlando Bourne j the?rea. P^choiogisLand^o^ers.^post in 182 237 Fifth Avenue. New Yoik. No. I— Leave Carrollton By a system of dry cold storage straw berries can be kept for several months with unimpaired freshness and solidity. Banning 4 50 a m 1 “ YVhitesburg 4 55 an: Sargent’s 5 20 a m ; Newnan 6 Ml a w Sharpsburg 6 35 a m Turin 6 40 a it Henoia 7 <Xi am Brooks 7 25 am Vaughns 7 45 arc Griffin 8 18 a in No. 2— Leave Griffir. 12 10 p m Arrive at Vaughns 12 40 p m «* Brooks 1 00 p m “ Senoia 1 25 p in Turin 1 45 p m Sharosburg 1 50 p no Newnan 3 10 p m 14 Sargent’s 3 30 p m 44 YVhltesbnrg 4 mi pm 44 Banning 4 05 p m * 4 Atkinson. T. O . .. 4 :Hi p m 44 Carrollton 4 50 pm M. S. Belknap, Gen’l Manager. DR. THOMAS J. JONES. CONSUMPTION I believe Piso’s-Cure for Consumption saved my life.—A. H. Dowell, Editor Enquirer. Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. PISO The best Cough Medi cine is Piso's Cure for Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. Vi j PI SO’S " CU R Z FOR ro CURES WHERE ALL ELSE rAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. CONSUMPTION The Original Wins. C. F. Simmor.s, St. Louis, Prop’r M. A.Simmojis Liver Medicine, Est*d 1S40, in the U. S Court defeats J H. Zeilin, Prop*r A. Q. Simmons Liv er Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin 1S68. M. cured ''in ICbuhts • Kegul M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years Indigestion, Biliousness, Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost Aptetite, Sour Stomach, Etc. Rev. T 15. Reams, Pastor M. E. Church, Adams, Term., writes: “1 think I should have been dead but tor your Genuine M. A. Sim mons Liver Medicine. I have sometimes had to substitute “Zeilir.’s stuff” for your Medi cine, but it don’t answer th. purpose.” , Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor Th* F'jftizi, Memphis, Tenn. says: I received a package of your Liver Medicine, and have used half of it. It works !:kc a charm. I want no better Liver Regulator and cer tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture. Thfe latest English word in Paris is “struggforlifer,” meaning one who has to struggle to get a living. Respectfully otters his services to the people in Newnan and vicinity. Office on Depoi street, R. H. Barnes’ old jewelry office. Res idence on Depot street, third building ea*t ot A. <v W. P. depot. Of Interest to ladies. We will send a FREE SAMPLE of our wonderful rjjecific for femal*- complaint* to an7lady who wishes to test its eScacy before purchasing. Send stamp for postage. oAJUS fiUicSY Cfi.,Eoxl04, Buffalo. N.Y. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Jeanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Grn Hair to its Youthful Color. acaip diseases and hair falling PARKER’S C1NGERTONIC tivsiXatwc tor Uocgttt. LiwsrqFhuu. Exhauster.