The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, September 28, 1888, Image 9

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BUYING PRECIOUS STONES fot I/onoon ano Paris Arp the Markets ' Sale—Tricks of tho Trnde. As no diamonds an; produced in North America, the supply must come from foreign markets. The temptation to smuggle would lx; great were it not that tho government lias wisely placed the THE FAMILY DOCTOR Gives the ITasty Eater * Scolding and a Bit of Good Advice. If there is any truth in the adage that the “way to a man’s heart is through his stomach,” in nine cases out of -ten it would lie a hard road to travel. When vou consider the enormous and varied duty on all cut and unset precious btones amount of material that strews its i>ath, at the nominal rate of 10 per cent. This low rate secures more income from this Ak>urce than a tarifT of 25 per cent, or more, as the incentive to smuggle is not sufficient to tempt any hut the most ava ricious or foolhardy among importers. To buy diamonds, and the same may bo said of all other precious stones and pearls, in Europe advantageously the buyer must be sufficiently well' informed | from long practice in buying in these ITjiarkels and from a special study of tho ■ nature of precious stones, to enable him “ to place correct values on parcels sub- I mitted for his inspection. The novice, or one having only the limited knowl edge of the subject of gems which is ac quired by occasionally handling them, f cannot possess the qualifications needed to deal successf ully with the “sharpest” and shrewdest lot of merchants and urokers in any line of trade, as the dia mond merchants and brokers of Ilatten Garden and Paris are admit ted to be. Amsterdam is the great workshop where most of the diamond cutting has been done for centuries. Antwerp, Haarlem, London and other places now exit large quantities of diamonds, while tlx in don has always led in the cutting and ■ jpolishing of the fine colored stones like I fthe ruby, sapphire and emerald. > ' Although Amsterdam cuts a largo per- jf centago of stones, the markets for their / sale are London and Paris. Not only , nro the largo stocks of cut and uncut * diamonds owned in these cities, but tho controlling interest in the mines is owned Vro also. On the discovery of *thc great •deposits of diamonds in Africa mining was done by claim owners, who were i known as “diggers.” are owned by several corporations hav ing headquarters in London and Paris, f ind these corporations regulate the pro- luction of the mines. Prices are thus Ci'pt at more uniform rates, and a break tho market Is prevented. If there 'iiould be a sharp demand in Paris stocks re sent over from London, and vice /orsa. Brokers are the mediums through which most transactions in precious stones are made. The craft is made up .from both sexes. The writer has recol lections of quito extensive transactions with a female diamond broker, who dis played as much shrewdness and business Intelligence as any of the male members the profession he has met. There are “tricks of tho trade” In- utuerable. One consists in showing :ie very lowest grade of stones first, so at when at last a rather inferioi grade reached by a crescendo process the uver becomes somewhat confused in his irts to fix in his eye the exact quality tier examination. For aid in selecting ry high grade diamonds a “test stone” known quality is invaluable. Diamonds of staple or medium qual ity. ranging from one grain to six grains, from one-half to one and one-half ■rats weight, may be purchased as ad- ntageously of the New York importers in the foreign market, but the larger d finer grades are found in London and ".ris in much greater quantities, giving wider choice for the judicious buyer. 1 these higher grades there are very ight fluctuations in prices from year to ear, anil therefore as an investment ley are tho better goods to buy, particu- ly when tlvev are well bought. Even in so large a market as London you at once encounter many unpleasant obstacles. The man who gets outside of hot soup, boiled ham, fried clams, pota toes, pickled cabbage, pastry, icecream, and tea in fifteen minutes, and then wonders why he feels so badly, is either an ass or an idiot—very likely a melange. Me cannot understand it, when he is so constantly taking those celebrated “after dinner pills,” a title that is simply a cover for wrong doing. True, he paid extra to have hi3 pills gelatine coated to retain their virtues the longer; but he j evidently did not know that the tannin in tile tea would convert that coating ! into a mass which the juices of the j stomach are powerless to affect, and so j no benefit is derived from the pills. He \ goes on. however, stuffing himself with j food—and tiie delusion that the more one ! cats the stouter he grows. It is not the quantity wo eat, but what is assimilated I —that is, what the system is capable of ! burning up as fuel to increase our vital | energies. If you smother your fire with : too much coal, out it goes. Now the | dyspeptic, the sufferer of that most com- i mon trouble, indigestion, may feel its J presence by a thousand different signs. I So numerous are they, that the mention of only a few must suffice here. For instance, he wakes with a stuffy headache, a bad taste in his mouth, bolt3 his breakfast, and rushes off to business. Ilis food “repeats,” as our English friends say, his taste becomes sour and hot, and so does his temper, and he is not altogether the most amiable of mortals. As the d;iv grows apace he has ill defined aches, and fancies his eye sight is failing, and his irritability increases. His clerks Now these claims j live on P ins 11,1(1 needles, and his friends say, “what a bore he is getting to be, so full of ills.” Thus it goes on from bad to worse. Think of that man as a judge, and now he might “make wretches hang that jurymen may dine.” No doubt many a verdict of today is largely influenced by poisonous butyric acid in tho circulation of one who has too hastily consumed his fodder. Ultimately, if he does not switch off, he falls a victim to nervous prostra tion and melancholia, a fit tenant for any asylum, which ho often cheates by draw ing a razor across his throat. All from dyspepsia. There is no hyptrbole in this picture; you will see many like it every day, if you but keep your eyes open. The remedy? Certainly not indiscrim inate drugging, a proceeding as foolish as to load yovtr dog with an elephant’s burden and expect him to carry it. If the stomach cannot take care of its na tural guests it will resent the intrusion of foreigners. The panacea is rest for the stomach by the use of light foods, and rest for the mind by anything which will draw at tention from the suffering organ. Few things accomplish this latter lietter than the diversion of hearing good music. You may think it strange, but there is an eminent physician abroad who writes out a prescription for music much as we would for calomel. It possesses a won derful sway over the lower orders of life, and you have often noticed the spirited action of a horse, the arched neck and proud canter, when hearing the strains of martial music. Music cheers the soldier on the long I march and renews his flagging energies. | So will it aid the dyspeptic. The instru ment is a matter of choice, the violin . - iy /•* IlH.ni/ lo ti IIUlLlt.1 Ui Liiuiv. tr, mo v luiin a*dealer wants a pair of unusually fine hardJv t<) ^ recommended unless handled Bins or a very line solitaire, it i3 not I ident to place an order with more than yio broker, for if two or more are started the hunt a process of bidding against tap another ensues and prices go up. he “still hunt” is the most profitable. Should a ruby of three carats and the biiest. quality be desired, the intending (Lrchaser would find it necessary to wait nrhaps for months before such a stone tukl lie found, and then at first hands jwould cost the price of a king’s ran- ii—sav about the ransom of a Sand- kh Island king—?10,000. — Edward J. litli in Detroit Free Press. | by a master, for no instrument is so I capable of distracting wailings, when in ■ the hands of a novice. The voice is, par I excellence, the best of musical remedies, i and four part songs are potent for good. ! 1 dare say, you who have been victims j of atrociously bad performances will not | agree with me. Eui give the best a trial. Just go to some of the near by resorts j that offer so many harmonious attrac tions and try the curative effect of a j “concord of sweet sounds.”—Richard i Guernsey, M. D., in Once a Week. Expensive Funerals anil Monuments. Is it not about time that the societies and other efforts put forth to reform funerals and reduce the expenses of burials, included the conceited display of monuments? People never heard of be yond their street have the resting places of their bodies marked bv stones that The World’s Highest Mountain, few years Ago the English gave the e of Mount Everest to that peak in eastern Himalayas which, as far as known, is tho highest mountain in world. ■ In May last they gave the e of Mount Godwin-Austen to the j anywhere from $1,000 to $20,000. in the Western Himalayas which is •phis cannot be the result of family affec- to be the second loltiest sum- t j on> t nit ^ moie fikelv to be family Most British geographers adhere j prkle There is but one 'possible advan- everv ta g e c f suc p display—that is the creation of showy and interesting cemeteries. But people of sound sense are, nowadays, ordering that they themselves lie buried without display and their graves marked in the simplest manner. Tiie amount of wealth already unnecessarily stored in our cemeteries is high among the tens of millions, or even hundreds of millions. The mausoleums of the dead were in as the pinnacles which lift their primitive times the earthly homes of the y heads a little above them. These S pi r j ts c f the departed; but we have no undiiig mountains entirely cut off j on g er this excuse for unlimited expense, cf the loftier summits from the _ajl 0 be-Democrat. it inhabited regions. Tho natives j given names to these satellites, but have never seen the higher sum- which have consequently been un- &ed* until foreign explorers revealed to the world.—New York Sun. pposed : [#the laudable rule to give to raphical object its true native name, lit here are the two highest mountains . the world bearing the names of two t fish men distinguished as surveyors, is, however, an excellent reason ese stupendous heights will never town by native names, eh of these mountains is surrounded everai satellite j>eaks time are nearly* igb tlies Sheep Shearing by Machinery. The process of sheep shearing by ma chinery is now performed in Australia by an ingenious kind of device, the results, as represented, being very satisfactory. The apparatus in question is a very simple one, being made on the same principle as the cutter of a mower or reaper, and the knives are worked by ese Has Our Longevity Decreased? i the longevity of the human race l? is a question which many phvsjcians seem inclined to an- means of rods within the handles, in the negative. Statistics an- ; n their turn being moved by a core Jy prove that within the first within a long flexible rube, which is kept vears epidemics have become less i n a rotary* shaft, ami wheels driven by a int and chronic diseases more cur- stationary engine. The comb is in the Our streets are getting wider and form of a segment of a circle, about r, our drinking water purer; our three inches in diameter, with eleven i habits are becoming far more conical shaped teeth. Each machine is lie, and centenarians more fre- worked by a shearer, and as the comb is forced along the ski* of the animal the fleece is cut. The machine can be run either with a steam or gas engine, or by ordinary horse power, and does not easily get out of order.—New York Sun. __ in North America at least, and in ivilized districts of western Europe. It Free Press. A Bank Plagiarist. inn (looking over copy of s)—What's the price of this mister! -Fiftv cents. Do you want a Very Peculiar Wedding Rings. Lieut, von Francois, the African ex plorer, has recently described a strange custom among the Bayanzi, who live for many miles along the Upper Congo. The custom would seem to make life a good deal of a burden to their married women. Brass rods, which are the favorite cur rency in the country, are welded into great rings around the necks of the wives. Many of these rings worn hy the women, whose husbands are well to do, weigh as much as thirty poimils. and thi3 burden must be carried around by the poor women as long as they live. “Frequently,” says Lieut, von Fran cois. “one sees a poor woman whose neck is raw and sore under the heavy weight, and in places the skin is rubbed off by the ring. This is a sure sign that the ring has been recently welded around her neck, for after a time the skin bo comes calloused, and then the strange ornament produces no abrasion. But the weight is an inconvenience; they never get used to it, and it is a perpetual tax upon their energies. In every crowd of women maybe seen a number who are supporting the ring with their hands, and thus for a time relieving their weary shoulders of the heavy burden. It may lie said that with every movement of their bodies the rings give them discom fort. 1 ‘A ring is never put around a wo man's neck until she is believed to have attained her full physical development. Once on. it is no easy matter to get it off. The natives have no such thing as a file, and, though they can hammer a lot of brass rods into one. it is very difficult for them to cut the thick mass of metal in two. Women who increase largely in ilesh after the rings have been fas tened on their necks are in danger of strangling to death, and instances of this sort have t>een known to occur. “Yet these women regard the cum brous ornament with pride, imagine that it enhances their importance and beauty, and wear the burden with light hearts. Brass is the money of the country, and by putting it around their wives’ necks the men are pretty certain that it won’t be stolen or foolishly expended. But it is an odd and cruel sort of a savings bank.”—New York Sun. fcgal ttoticcs. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County; All persons having demands against the estate of Gilbert Weaver, late of Coweta coun tv. deceased, are hereby notified to render 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 2d. 188*. Prs. fee. tit. JOHN* M. TIDWELL. Adm’r of Gilbert Weaver, dee’d. Application for Year's Support. G EORG1 A—Cow ETA Cou NT Y : The return of tiie appraisers setting apart twelve months’support to the family ot W. F. Sibley, deceased, having been filed in my office, all persons concerned am 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, 1888. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Application for Leave to Sell. G EO RGI A— Cow eta County : Daniel Swint, administrator of I>. W. Dial, deceased, having applied to the Court of Or- dinarv for leave to sell the lands belonging to tiie estate of said deceased, all persons con cerned are required to show cause in said court by the first Monday in October next, if env thev can, why said application should not be granted. This August 81, 1888. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. DRUGS! DR. .1. T. REESE. C 3 O c © © HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, PAINTS. OILS. BRUSHES, PUTTY', WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES! M l T,SICA L IXS TIi TIME NTS, NOTIONS, 6AND JEN SEEDS, VIOLIN & (rUlTA R STRINGS, Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: John M. Tidwell, administrator of tiie 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 1.1S8S. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: M. L. Carter, administrator of the estate of i Amy-Thompson, having applied to the Court i of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell tlie land and one-fourth interest in city lot in tiie city of Newnan, belonging to said de ceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in sat-' Court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This Au gust 31,18S8. W. H. PERSON.*, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. LAMPS & CHIMNEYS. i!!3F“Kerosene by the barrel, shipped either from Newnan or Atlanta. SPECTACLES, IN GREAT VARIETY! SODA WATER FROM TIIE BEST MATERIALS. Professional <Zavbs. ^ W.II.EINGUAM, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G*. (Office over Newnan National Bank.) (*, Prompt attention to ail business en trusted to his care. Special atteut ion to col lections. L. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, , Newnan, G» Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew A Co.’s. PAYSON S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G» Will practice in alt the Courts anil give prompt attention to ail busim >> placed in his hands. Examination of titles, writing deed*, 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 Bunk.) Will prac'ice in ali the Courts of Coweta Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. Russia's Domination in Asia. A great and motley throng of brown ish Hindoos, dusky Afghans, pallid Persians and yellow Chinamen, together with tho vari-hued complexions of the nomad tribes and minor nationalities of Central Asia, is preparing for the-pic turesque pomp and ceremonials of coro nation at Samarcand, the historical capi tal of Tamerlane, of the great white czar of Russia, who will henceforth become also emperor of Central Asia. This great forthcoming event, which the activity of the Nihilists three years ago postponed, is dwelt upon no less with interest by the impressionable and glamour seeking Orientals of Calcutta, Pekin, Cabul and Teheran than looked forward to with innate pride and gratifi cation by the chief jiersonage in the cor onation, who thus contemplates the re alization of a long cherished dream which has irradiated the slumbers and gilded the waking thoughts of the long line of Russian imperial rulers for generations. Now the completion of the Transcaspian railroad makes the project easy of execu tion, and all Central Asia is agitated with the coming event. At the corona tion of tho ncigning emperor in Moscow a few years ago special care was taken to insure the presence of powerful Asiatics, who were duly impressed with the tremendous military display which they witnessed, and returned to spread abroad the fame and dread of Russia. The same effect will be produced in a more marked degree at Samarcand. While in Turkestan this event will destroy the last vestiges of formidable opposition to Russia’s domination, it will also create uneasiness in England, and even Germany will view with disquietude this extension of Cossack domination into Central Asia.—Philadelphia In quirer. The Dig Rooster’s Indignation. A disappointed barn yard fowl is often as cross as if it could show its temper after the manner of human beings. The big dominique rooster was a very good natured fellow with hens and young chickens, and he seldom resented having kernels of corn, no matter how many, snatched out from under his beak, when it was done in a fair scramble. But if he had begun to crow, and a kernel was unexpectedly dropped where he certainly would have got it, had he not been so busy, it was too much to see his share taken away by any other fowl. He fre quently pecked the offender as soon as he could stop crowing and showed general ill temper for a few moments. His in dignation was so amusing that we fell into the habit of teasing him in this way. until, at last, the old fellow began to practice choking down the rest of his crow when com was thrown in front of him. Gradually he managed to stop more and more quickly, and in the end he would swallow his voice with a gulp, and snatch a bit of food as promptly as if he had not been crowing at all.—Ben jamin Karr in Popular Science Monthly. Application ror Leave 10 Sell. GEORG I A—Cow eta County : Jane A. Hammond, administratrix of Hie estate of E. ip Hammond, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the lands belonging to said deceased, ail 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 he granted. This August 31,1888. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. £JP“-Preseriptions 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. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Jennie Smith havingapplied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for permanent letters of administration on tiie 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 August 31,1S88. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA—Coweta County: * T. C. Nall having applied to the Court of 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, 18*8. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Joseph E. Dent, executor of W. W. Stegall, late of said county, deceased,having applied,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 t>, 1888. W. H. PERSONS, Prs. fee, $5.00. Ordinary. To Whom it May Concern. GEORGIA—Coweta County: The estate of W. S. Barnes, late of said county, deceased, being unrepresented and col likely to be represented: all persons con cerned are required to show cause in tiie Court of Ordinary of said county on tiie first Monday in October next, why such adminis tration should not be vested in the County Administrator. This August 31,1S88. W. H. PERSONS, Ordinary, Prs. fee, $3.00. and ex-officio Clerk C. O. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED IN CAR LOAD LOTS GEO. A. CARTER, Attorney at Law, Grantville, Ga. Will practice in nil the Courts of the Cir cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement. J. C. NEWMAN. Attorney :it Law, Newnan, Georgia. Will practice in the Superior and Justice Courts of the county and circuit, and else where by special agreement. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Practices in all the State and Federal Courts. Office No. 1 Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in all Courts of tins and adjoining counties and tiie Supreme Court. F00S’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univer sal satisfaction. G. W. PEDDY, NT D.. Physician anil Surgeon, Newnan, 3a. (Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.) Offers his services to the people of Newnan and surrounding country. All calls answered promptly. T. B. DAVIS, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga Offers tiis professional services to the citi 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. Administrator’s Sale. - GEORGIA—Coweta County: j By virtue of an order from tiie Court of Or- ! dinar j* of Coweta county. I will sell before i the court-house door in the city of Newnan, i bet ween the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in October, 1888, the following lands ! belonging to tiie estate of Mrs. s. J. Puckett, deceased, to-wit: Fifty acres of land, more o'- less, off of southeast corner of lot No. 202, ! lying, being, and situated in Grantville dis trict of saiu county. and bounded north by D. L. Puckett, Basil Smith, and J. M. Hiuds- ; man. east bv J. L. Morris, south 1>> F M. 1 Shaddix and D. L. Puekett, and west, by R. I. i O’Kelly and Mattie T. Smith. Said land to be sold* for cash, and for distribution among tiie heirs ol said deceased. This August 30. 1SSS. ■ D. L. PUCKETT, $4.65—paid. Administrator. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S GINS. (Improvement on Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers. DR. TITOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot Street. „ DR.HENLEY'S Extract-^®; p&mi A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic and Tferyine is gaining great renutationas acure for Debility, Dyspep sia, and NEBVOPS disorders. It relieves an languid and debilitated conditions of the sys tem ; strengthens the intellect, end bodily fpnctlonsi builds up worn out "Nerves ; aid3 digression ; re stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings bac* vouthful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to tw taste, and used regularly braces the System againal the depressing influence of IVIiilurui. Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. I SKINNER Engines. From 4 to 250 ! Horse-Power. to P I SO ’S’TiG U REf FQR CURES WHERE ALL tlbt rAlLb. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. Sold by dnictrists. GO N s u M-PT IQ M I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life.—A. H. Dowell, Editor Enquirer. Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. BROKEN WATCHES i fable Not Expressed Just Right. “I am so glad your sister enjoyed her visit to vis, Mr. Smith.” “Oh, well, you know, she is the sort limtrmmn—No; the feller what c f gi r l who can enjoy herself anywhere, ale it has stole most of his ideas from j you know. ”—Lite, newspapers. —The Epoch. j Economical Locomotive Engineers. “You have seen the cotton waste with wltigh engineers rub up their engines? Well, that isn't as valuable as gold dust, but every engineer is as careful of it as if it were. He has a bag in his cab to keep it in, and when he has used it he puts it back in the bag with as much pains as an old lady would use with her quilt pieces. Quite the natural thing for him to do, you say: but there's where you are wrong. Unless men are trained to be careful about these tilings the natural way seems to be to throw away or other- i wise lose more than they save. Now, suppose every engineer on the road saves 5 cents a day by an economical use of oil and waste, that amounts to a pretty j penny when you reckon on the thou sands of engines ran by the road. You see how system and discipline pay! There’s nothing like it!”—Philadelphia Times. Campaign Against Saccharine. ■ The French sugar makers have com menced a campaign against saccharine, extracted from coal tar. Experiments have shown that it is not noxious, but the Society of Agriculturists have peti- ' tioned the government to forbid its man- ; ui'acnire, as prejudicial to the beet root sugar trade.—New York Sun. _ REPAIRED .mpFull line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, in ware-rooms. Try us before you purchase. Sales made for CASH or on TIME. i WARRANTED BY WALTER E. AVERY, THE JEWELER. Any one wanting Watches or Jewelry 7 can secure a big bargain bv buvino- now. Mv prices are aRvays as low as any ’egitimate dealer, but during the dull summer months to keep trade moving and to get in some money I will offer cash customers great induce ments. W. E. AVERY, Newnan, Ga. Insure your houses against Tornadoes and Cyclones, ; with H.C. FISHER & CO., Ag’ts.,| Newnan, Ga. The safest Companies and lowest rates. MONEY FOR FAIL!ERS; I am prepared to negotiate loans on improved real estate | at a total commission of 11 per cent, with interest at 8 per cent, payable once a year, to- wit: oa December ist. L. M. FARMER. Newnan, Ga. The best Cough Medi cine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. i s o? e~ r ©r CURES V/HERE ALL ELSE rAILS. „ Best Couch Sj-rup. Tastes eofsi. Use in time. Sold by druggists. ■•MMfcwiaigaiHa The Original Wins. C. F. Simmons. St. Bcuis, Prop’r M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, list’d 1840, in the U. S. Coert tjekeats J H. Zeilin, Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv er Regulator, E.st’d by Zeilin ii63. M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years cured Indigestion, Biliousness, Dysf-etsia,Sick Headache,Lost Appetite, Sour Stomach, Etc. Rev. T B. Reams, Pastor ' !. E. Church, Adams, Term., writes; “1 j&ink I should have been dead but ior your Genuine M. A. Sim- m'.rs Liver Medicine. I have sometimes Fad to substitute “Zedin’s stuff’’for your Medi CCUfiT./ cine, but it don’t'answer the purpose.” jfOPi-1* Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor The Baptist, Memphis,Term, says: eceived a package of yourBiver Medi :ine, and have used half of it. It works like a charm. I want no bet*, r Liver Peculator and cer tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture. TIT’Bpjng your Job Work to Mc- Clexdox & Co., Xewxax, Ga. DR. TH0MAS_ J. JONES. Respectfully otters his services to the peopl- in Newntui and vicinity. Office on Depot street, R. H. Barnes'old jewelry office. Res idence on Derot street, third building east o' A. Ar VA . P. depot. Of Interest to Ladies. "SVowill a. 1 FREE SAMPLE of our wonderful pacific for . . to test its efficacy befor purciiasiaK- Sent! stamp Dr postage. &AKES SuMcU GC.,£u2. 104, Euaklo.It. Y. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM |CU.-aiLSe3 and beautified the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray Hair to it* Youthful Color, Cures scalp di-eases and hair falling ■*<' at nrucarists. PACKER’S GSNGERTONiC Pita. :aatc -or Coughs, Co.oe, Inward Pains, Exhaustion.