The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, December 07, 1888, Image 7

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RAIN •‘Into each life some rain mast ialL” ir this were all—Oh' i/ this were all. That into each life some min must falL There were fainter solw in the poet's rhymes. There were fewer wrecks on the shore of time. THE HEART DIPLOMA .' IC TOMMY. But tempests of woe pass over the soul— Such winds of anguish we cannot control; And shock after shock we are called to tear. Till the lips are white with the heart's desjiair The shores of time with wrecks are strewn. Unto tiie oar comes ever a moan; Wrecks of hope that set sail with glee. Wrecks of love, sinking silently Many are hid from the human eye. Only Ood Icnoweth how deep they lie; Only (rod heard when arose the cry, “Help me to hear, Oh, help me to die.” —Courier-Journal. Mainsprings of Watches. “1 wish you would correct an error that has been going the rounds of the press,” said a watch manufacturer to the -reporter. “The item I refer to states that the watch repairer is more rapacious than the plumber, and charges $1.50 for putting m a main spring that costs him 8cents and lakes him twenty minutes to insert. As a matter of fact, the mainsprings in or dinary use cost $1.50 per dozen and can be inserted in twenty minutes, providing the repairer meets witli no accident. But his profits cannot he judged in that way. The mainspring of a watch is of such delicate work manship that 1 have known a skilled hand to break as many as fifteen in putting one in a watch. This will show you that the repairer is often out of pocket through a job. A pe culiar thing about mainsprings is that they are very susceptible to atmos pheric changes. Except when they meet with an accident, most springs break during the months of March, April and May. No one can assign a reason for this, but it is a fact too well known to watchmakers to ho questioned.”—New York Evening Sun. IJe Induced His Sister to Attend the Foot ball Game- “No. Tommy.” said his sister, “I’ll not give yru 50 cents to pay to see the * football match; you have seen a num ber of baseball games during the. sum mer, and I think that is enough.” Tommy was dejected for a while and kept quiet, and his 23-year-old sister began to congratulate herself that she had silenced him for a time at least, and she would not be bothered by his i teasing. Suddenly Tommy s face brightened and he turned toward his sister, but she was busy witli some ! needlework, and was all unconscious f of the thoughts that were running through his mind. After a while he went over and stodil beside her and watched her lingers as they dexterously knitted the bright colored yarn into fancy mats and things without names for a church fair to be held in a short time. There was silence for a while, only broken by the far away notes of a harsh band organ as it ground out, in spasmodic time, the “Boulanger March,” in the next block. At last Tommy broke the silence and said softly; “Do you remember Mr. Nice- fellow, who used to talk to you so Living Off the Pretty F»cee. “There are now a number of men, remarked the head of a big printing house yesterday, “who actually make a living off the" society girls. Whether anything — _ , . source of profit all the same. To be gin with, there are the scurvy scrib blers of the society papers who sell their paragraphs about New York s pretty women at a cent a word, and who manage to eke a more or less twisted and unsatisfactory living out of the pastime. Then there are the lithographers and tobacco and soap box cTe-corators, who take the faces of Consumption Surely Cured. To the Editor—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases ave been permanently cured. I shall ‘ to send two bottles of my rem- ; to any of your readers who umption if they will send me their express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., 1S1 Pearl St., New York. DRUGS! W. H. BINGHAM, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Gw (Office over Newnan National Hank-) Prompt attention to all business en trust cil to his care. Special attention to col lections. COO There is no readier way for a man to briii"- his own worth into question than by endeavoring to detract from the ( CHEMICALS worth of other men. HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, j. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G* Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew A Co.’s. She is “Grateful.” I saved the life of my little girl by a PAINTS, OILS, BRUSHES, PUTTY, WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND PAYSON S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Will practice in all the Courts anti giv* prompt attention to all business placet! »n hands. Examination of titles, writing deeds, mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe cial attention. Office over Askew’s store. the country for the purpose of deco- Goom, Newnan, Ga. rating their wares. The instant one - ,. , . . of these girls becomes at all notorious, I Cautiously avoid talking of the doroes- liL-o tlm Duchess of Marlborough, i tic affairs either of.yourself or of other , , the Duel Pot-1 people. Yours are nothing to them but lAdy Randolph Churchill, Mrs. I | ^ gossip: theirs are nothing to ter or any one of the others who have ‘ ‘ ° 1 jumped into fame, the cigarette manu- j - ’ —— — — facturers send a counterfeit present- A Narrow Escape. TOILET ARTICLES! L. M. MUSICAL IXSTIi UMEXTS, XOTIOXS, GA I\I>EX SEEDS, YIOLIX& GUITAlt STIUXGS, CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. FARMER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. 'Office over First National Hank.) Will praeMce in all the Courts of t oweta Circuit. All .lust ice Courts at tended. Col. W. K. Nelson, of Brooklyn, came home one evenin ... tightness in the chest. Before retirin he tried to draw a long breath but feeling a peculiar! LAMPS & CHIMNEYS, 15?“Kerosene bv the barrel, much at tlu* bote “Yes, Tommy. “1 guess you 1 cently. have you “No, Tommy. in Saratoga? Why?” iven t seen him re- ment of their faces broadcast through the world Then there is the sale of their photographs by the shopkeepers along Broadway. A further illustra-1 “^dh'almost VmpossibTe. He suffer-1 shipped either from Newnan Lon of the profit is seen in our weekly ; ^ four days i r0 m pneumonia, and the j 1 \ ,, f papers, which devote a great deal of j gave him up. Dr. Ackers tn-j OF ^VUcinui. space and some mighty good engrav- j ulish Remedy for Consumption saved } ~--- _ iiigs to describing the beauties of x^ew i aiid lie is well to-day. Sold uy >\ . ' bPLL1 ALLLo, York, so that there is a good side after j p. Broom, Newnan, Ga J. C. NEWMAN, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Georgia. Justice Will practice in the Superior ant» Courts of the county and circuit, and else where by special agreement. IN GREAT VARIETY W last spring 1 believ^ he was in Europe, and I did not know his address, so did not send hint a card. W hat makes you ask the question?” “Oh, nothin’ much; only the last time I went to the Polo grounds to see the New Yorks beat the Chicagos he was there in the grand stand, and talked to me. lie said he attended nearly every game. He had a lady with him.” $ “A lady. Tommy?” “Yes; I guess it was his mother.” You say he talked When we moved j all to the society gossip of the Amen-; can press, since it puts bread into the mouths of so many hardworking and industrious dealers in personalities.’ —New York Sun. SODA FROM THE WATER BEST MATERIALS. “Oh! (relieved). “Everybody Borrows.” to yOU, Tommy?” Haggard is sensitive. lie has pub- “Yes; he said he thought I had licly denied having borrowed from grown a great deal since he saw me in Moore in writing “She,” and from a Saratoga, and wanted to know how Frenchman in writing “Mr. Meeson’s that good looking sister of mine was.’ Will.” lie is very sensitive, so that j “Goon, Tommy.” his friends have to coine to his defense. “And then lie said: ‘Let me see. This is not worth the while. Every- your sister is about 19 now, isn’t she? body borrows, either consciously or unconsciously. Ideas arc current coin; and lie only is original who can stamp his personality on a few. If lie havo no personality, ho never can he orig inal. When Longfellow was charged with having plagiarized, he answered nothing. Ilis publisher fretted, and Mr. Longfellow simply said: “Does our book sell well?” the publisher assur ed limit did. Coming in again, the publisher pressed it on him that some thing bo done. “Does the book sell well ?” repeated tho poet. It is all lie would say. He never entered on a line of self defense. It would have been folly if he had. The public does not continue to buy what it believes has been stolen.—St. Louis Globe-Dem ocrat. lie Prefers Experience. A writer who is a good observer, and has had considerable experience, thus defines the difference between the old and young. There is, he says, a wide gulf between youth and ripe old age, hence the proverb, “You can’t put an . old head on young shoulders.” This proverb was written by an old man; youth had nothing to do with it. Youth don’t believe the old man knows anything, and the old man expects con tinually that the young man will be along saying, “1 didn t know it was loaded.”" The wise young man will seek the counsel of those pipe in years And I said I guessed that was about you* age. ” “Well” (softly). “Then he turned to (he lady who was with him and asked her if she didn’t remember the lady who looked so pretty that night at the hop; the one, lie said, who had brown hair and wore a lovely pale biue silk dress, that became her so well, and made the Rogers girls so jealous—1 guess he said the Misses Rogers. And she said she remembered her quite well; and then she tun ed tome and said: ‘Are you the young lady’s brother?’ An’ I said I was, ant she said; ‘You ought to be proud of i aving such a nice sis ter,’ an’ I said t was, an’ it made me feel good when Isoe how all the young ladies in the block were jealous of her” “Tommy!” (severely). “Well, ‘l couldn’t help it, ’cause I know it’s so" “Tommy” (mildly). “An’ then Mr. Nicefcllow told the waiter to bring me a glass of soda water, an’ asked me if I didn’t want some peanuts, an’ 1 said 1 didn’t mind, an’ he bought nte some, an’ just then Buck Ewing made a home run, an’ Mr, Nicefcllow said he guessed the Chicagos couldn't play ball, and be d rather see a game of football any day, especially between the college elevens, an' he said he hoped 1 would be at the football games this fall, an wanted to Can Animals Count? Houzeau de la Haietellsof a pelican living in a fisherman’s family at Santo Domingo that was fed upon the refuse of the fish cleaning. Looking for its food, it went to the shore every day and waited for the boats to come back. The fishermen rested on Sunday, and the bird acquired so clear a notion of the return of that day, when it had to fast, that it would not stir from the tree on which it was accustomed to spend its time. It is not necessary to suppose that the pelican had learned to count the six days at the end of which its masters would not go fish ing; but. while it really estimated daily the time when it must make its excursion to the shore, it was informed of the return of Sunday by observation of what was going on in the house, as. tor in stance, by the fishermen putting on their Sunday clothes; in the same way as the dog knew when its master was going to hunt by seeing him with his gun and game bag. In such instances animals show that they have the fac ulty of associating ideas, of observing consecutive facts and establishing a correlative connection between them —things which have been proved by abundance of other evidence, and which demonstrate not less intelli gence than acquaintance with the ten signs exposing the first ten numbers, or the use of a system of numeration to express larger numbers.—Mme. Clemence Royer in Science Monthly. many seeming'v incurable instanci to tiie Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.. lor ! “Book of Wonders,” and be convinced. It Pimples, Sores, Aches and Pains. When a hundred bottles of sarsaparilla or other pretentious specifics fail to eradicate m- born scrolula or contagious blood poison, re- j member that H. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm ^^-Prescriptions put up with great care, lies «ained many thousand victories. In as alul f ron i the best and purest drugs. We e = instances. Send | handle the best goods and sell at reasonable prices. Call to see us and be convinced. the onlv tkuk itLOOi) purifier. . .. | GREENVILLE STREET. Nkwxa.x, Ga. G W Messrs, Howell’s X Roads, Ga., . — — — writes: "I was afflicted nine j ears with sores. \U tin- medicine I could take did me no good. , I then tried B. B. B., and 8 bottles cured me I S Mrs S. M. Wilson, Round Mountain, Texas, j writes: “A lady friend of mine was troubled | with bumps and pimples on her face and , neck. She took three bottles of B. B. !>., and her skin got soft and smooth, pimples disap peared, and her health improved greatly. i Jns L. Boswortli, Atlanta, Ga., writes: A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Practices innB the State and Federal Couito- Office No. -1 Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Will practice in all Courts of this autf adjoining counties and the Supreme Court. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. G. W.PEDDY, M I).. Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, 3* (Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store* Offers his services to the people of Newnan and surrounding country. ‘" ” promptly. All calls answered HAVE JUST RECEIVED rdly j — *— ■-— ,. , , times. Hot Springs gave me no relief, and lay life was one of torture until I gave B- B- B. a trial, and, surprising as it may seem, the use of five bottles cured me.” IN- CAR LOAD LOTS Advice to Everybody T. B. DAVIS, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga Offers his professional services to the citi zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. "Depot Street. and experience and avoid the mistakes know if you liked athletic spoils, an in life. But Young America will eon- I said 1 guessed you did, but you had tinue to figure in the divorce courts, so many other things to attend to, and compound his debts at ten cents visiting sick people an’ making things on the dollar. lie don’t want to be for the poor heathens in Africa, told that it is loaded; he prefers to lipd an’ ” out himself. He gets there, and \itC, the piper generally. AVI ion did you game was to be played, Tommy?” “On Saturday, an’ ’’ “Tommy (hesitatingly), would you like to take me to see the game if I buy the tickets?” , “Why, cert.’’ _ j Then "she kissed him and told him he . Racing on the Upper Mississippi. There is one phase of steamboating that it will be interesting to touch on briefly, and that is the racing. There was a good deal of this, and some of the contests were decidedly hot and exciting. Geoi’ge Hazzard says he has sawed wood like a steam mill by the hour to feed the furnaces of a steam boat in a race, and doubtless other steamboat men remember similar ex periences. There was a great race be tween the Itasca, from Prairie du Chien, and the Gray Eagle, from Du- buque, at the time the laying of tho | Atlantic cable was completed. Each ! boat was the bearer of dispatches re-j laling- to the matter, and the captain j of each was anxious to get the news ‘ sav the football ashore first. At the bend just below who has a diseased Liver is to at once take prop." incans to cure it. The function the Liver is d- signed to perform, and on the regular executio: of which depends not only the general health of th. body, but the powers of the Stomach, Bowels Brain, and the whole nervous system, shows if vast and vital Importance to human health. F00S’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS, ; All sizes. The same that we , have sold in such quantities, | and which have given univer sal satisfaction. agio Uhl 1 this important organ, but should promptly get a bo: of Dr. C. Mcban -’s Celebrated Liver Pills made by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., and use according to directions they will cure yc: promptly and permanently. Around each box is r wrapper giving full description A the symptoms o, :ed ] ving 1 . a diseased Liver. They can be had of uruggists. Z®*Beware of Counterfeits made in St. Louis.'L J WINSHIP’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. FLEMING BROS,, Pittsburgh, ?z, IVORY POLISH F 'pEETH. E Ferfumes the Breath. Ask for it. RICKLY ASH BITTERS VAN WINKLE'S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. „ DR. HENLEY'S tXTRACT^n F&lftl A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic and Nervineis gainiii* great reputation as a cure for Debility, Dysi»«l>- sia, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves languid and debilitated conditions of the tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily fnpctiooiU builds up worn out Nerves : aids digest ion stores impaired or lost Vitality, ana brings bar* youthful strength and vigor. It ,s PI taste, and used regularly braces the Sy&tem again® the depressing influence of Malaria. ^ Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Monkeys as Coin Testers. The Siamese ape is said to be in great request among Siamese merchants as a cashier in their counting houses. Vast quantities of base coin obtain , , . circulation in Siam, and the faculty of : »cedn t say anything about their go discrimination between good money m?. and iomm} mo\ed towmd the and bad would appear to be possessed j door. V* hen he trot outside lie c lew by these gifted monkeys in such an ex- j ;l king traordiuui'v degree of development e e-L mu I that no human being, however care fully trained, can compete with them. Tho cashier ape meditatively puts into his mouth each coin presented to him in business payments, and tests it with grave deliberation. Ilis method of testing is regarded in commercial cir cles as infallible; ami. as a matter of fact, liis decision is uniformly accepted by all parties interested in the trans action.—London Tid Bits. breath aud exclaimed to him self: ‘‘Gee! What a whopper! But it worked!”—New York Tribune. Keeping Close to the Schedule. England has a record for punctual ity of passenger trains that is worthy ol* emulation by some, il not all, American railway companies, chit of a total of 100,000 passenger trains on the Great Eastern road, h>r die first six mouths of this year, over 53 per cent, were absolutely punctual. 37 per cent, were less than five minutes late, 4 per cent, were over five anti less than ten minutes late, and 3 per cent, were over ten minutes late in arriving at their destination.—Chicago Herald. Fitting Them to lie Soldiers. France has now a National league for Ition, c soldiers. The programme which has been completed includes outdoor S ines throughout the land, for winch e local authorities will set apart a •green” whereon the children shall regularly “play.”—New York Sun. The Buzzard In a Shirt. Jerry Davis is the name of a little boy. luist week he found a dead sheep, around which a number of buz zards were holding high carnival. He determined upon catching one of the buzzards, and at once built a very large trap. He baited it with the dead sheep, and in a very short time he had capture'll a buzzard. He then took one of bis shirts and fitted it on to the buzzard, cuttingoff the sleeves aud putting the bird's wings through the arm holes. lie cut otF the front tail of the shirt and sewed the garment firmly to the buzzard’s body, after which lie liberated the biret The bird flapped bis wings and flew up into the air, the tail of the shirt fluttering behind him as he flew. About twenty-five crows followed after the strange looking object, and the buzzard was peeked and knocked about at a terrible rate. Three or four days afterward Jerry found the huzzarel a mile awav, hud- ~ ■ When eileel up against a tree, dead. the promotion of physical educa- wash clay came Jerry was called upon i designed to fit her citizens to be' , for his shirt, anu the s<.ory leaked cult. — ’ ■ ’ ’ His father was so much amused that he would not allow the boy s mother to whip him.—Atlanta Journal. »lit>ok Dice for a t otfue. the city the two boats were neck and neck, their engines groaning and their stacks belching forth clouels of smoke. They came up the river “a-fluking,” and there is still a question as to which landed first. It was probably one of the most exciting contests tliat ever occurred on the upper river.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. Exhumation Which Should Be Stopped. | Vienna is said to be undergoing a craze of exhumation. Lately vast pits of bodies of those shot in 1848 durin" the revolution have been opened, and the rotten masses have been removed j to other pits, to be honored with mon uments. This sort of business should be stopped, both on the small scale and the large scale. There is deathly j poison enough from our present sys tem of burying, without opening the graves and moving the contents. The one important matter for the living is to escape being slain by the dead. English clergymen are agitating the need of burying in light boxes, with out caskets, to hasten decomposition. In this country the contents of ceme teries are frequently moyed. It is a useless and detestable act. It is high time that eiyilized and Christian peo ples gave oVer reverence for bones. The description of affairs at Vienna is purely revolting. It is neither respect for the dead nor regard for the living that governs our treatment of decay- i ing corpses.—St Louis Globe-Demo- • crat. One of (he most important organs of the human body is the LIVER. When it fails to properly perform its functions the entire system becomes deranged. The BRAIN, KIDNEYS, STOMACH, BOWELS, all refuse to perform their work. DYSPEPSIA. CON STIPATION, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY DIS EASE, etc., are the results, unless some thing is done to assist Nature in throwing of? the impurities caused by the inaction of a TORPID LIVER. This assistance so necessary will be found in Prickly Ash Bitters! *|t acts directly on the LIVER. STOMACH and KIDNEYS, and by itsmild and cathartic effect and genera! tonic qualifies restores these organs to a sound, healthy condition, and cures all diseases arising from these causes. It PURIFIES THE BLOOD, tones up the system, and restores perfect health. If your druggist docs not keep it ask him td order it for you. Send 2c stamp for copy of “THE HORSE TRAINER.” published by us. PRICKLY m ENTERS CO., Bole Proprietor?, ST. LOUIS. MO. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S GINS. (Improvement on 1 Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers. PI sens- CURE FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE tAILS. Best Cous^h Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. Sold by drug^iBts. a.i;i--uiiiEHBni I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life.—A. II. Dowell, Editor Enquirer. Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. SKINNER Engines. From 4 to 25 IPISO Horse-Power. SSr'Full line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, in ware-rooms. Try us before you purchase. Sales made for CASH or on TIME. The best CoUgli Medi cine is Piso’s Cure for CoN’sUMPTrojx. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. waMuaranggi THAT FIGHT From T>r, W. P. Harrison. Nashviixe. Tenn. May 2,1388—I have used Swift’s snecitic in my family for some time, and believe it to be an excellent remedy for ail impu rities of ! lie bKxi. In my own case. I believe that I have warded oil a severe attack of rbeu- mati-m in the shoulder by a timely resort to this c": nt remedy. In all cases where a per manent relief "is sought this medicine com mends itseif fora constitutional treatment that thoroughly eradicates the seeds of disease from the svstem. Rev. W. P. IIaf.p.isos. EMULSION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL and HYPOPHOSPHXTES Waco. Texas, May 9, 1SS8. Gentlemen: The wife of one of my custo- Almost as Palatable as Milk. A gambler, dying of consumption, | shuffled into an undertaker's estab- Biact Hiiu Horses. : lishmcut at Stockton, Cal., and pro- Tho Black Hills country is making , posed to the proprietor to shake dice name for itself a* a horse growing for a coffin. The latter consented, the iuntrv, and it is predicted that within money was put up against a suitable ipreuic— v years it will be as famous for its j coffin, and the gambler won, chuck- :orse’s as the Blue Grass region. It ling over his luck as he ambled away, already boasts many fine horse's of the The passion for gambling is an iuhe- best breeds known in the world.— 1 pent trait of character, and the men New York Evening World. ! who have been humiliated by the set- . _ Y ; tlemeni of idiotic bets will not be any t year imported 02,000 i more loth to make the same bets on Chamois in the Alps. Wonderful tales are told of the amazing leaps which the startled chamois will make. From twenty to thirty feet are affirmed by the hunters to be uot an uncommon jump down- ward, the animal managing to break its fall by throwing itself forward diag onally, and striking its feet several times"against the side of the precipice before ianeling at the bottom, often on a spot a few feet square. Hence, to kill any number, even in the best stocked districts, it is necessary to hunt the animal by surrounding an area where they are known to be feeding by a circle of beaters. As the cor- Germanjv horses. : the nest occasion.—Chicago Herald. n'.e'r? was Terribly afil^ted wi:h aloath^'me skin disease, that covered her w :u :« body. She was confined to her l ed f >r several years by this affliction, aud conk! not h-1;> her-- : f a!!. She could ne.tfk.tp from sv: ant i: :nc nr.d stinr- in;j c-f the -xln. The dk-ca-e I.:" i i:ie skill of’:he physicians wh > tr- :i .1 it Ilcr husband bearan finally civile ids w .fe Swift's V;«e-dfic. and she commenced t > improve nim-'-t iminediattly. and s•: a few weeks she was npporentl v weil. She is co-.v a any, fiae-Iock-ng ’ ldv, v 'h no trues of the aiUictiJU f'. Y« ;lli very trr.ir ,T. E sears. Whoiesaie Drn^zist. An-ein nue. Treatise on Blood and sk a Ifi-e.i- - m:»: ! ed f:ee. TheSwirr SpecificCo.. Drawer 1, Atlanta, Ga. New York, 136 Broadws -. . So disguised that it .can be taken, digested, and assimilated by the most sensitive stomach, when the plain oil cannot be tolerated; and by the com bination of the oil with the hypophoe- phites is much more efficnciona. Remarkable as a flesh producer. The Original Wins. C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, Prop’r M. A. Simmons 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. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years ured Indigestion, Biliousness, Dyspi rsiA,SiCK Headache,Lost Appetite, Sour Stomach, Etc. l Rev. T 15. Reams, Pastor M. E. iChurch. Adams, Tenn., writes: “1 |think X should have been dead but for your Genuine M. A. Sim mons Liver Medicine. I have sometimes had to substitute “Zcilin’s stuff ” for your Medi cine, but it don’t answer the purpose.” Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor Tie . Memphis,Tenn. savs: I received a package of your Liver Medicine, and have useu half of it. It works like a charm. I want no better Liver Regulator and cer tainly no more ol Zcilin’s mixture. ItetD Ctbrcrtiscmcnts. TO ADVERTISERS led Persons gain rapidly while taking it. SCOTT’S EMULSION is acknowledged by ; Physicians to be the Finest and Best prepa- i ration in the world for the relief and cure ot CONSUMPTION. SCROFULA, ' insure CENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, COLDS and CHRONIC COUCHS. The _ great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children. Sold by all Druggists. A list of 1,000 newspapers divided into (TV O STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on j L/IY. don gradually tightens, the alarmed application—free. j •. • - *_ , To those who want their advertising to pay, 1 chamois, seeing danger to windward, j we can offer no better medium for thorough! fly in tue opposite direction, Wiiere the and eff.:-<-tive work than the various ;ec! ions Respectfully lenders hi sportsmen.are posted on the chmrce of j ofour ** le g^5®5». bSweee a co.. tting a. passing SllOt.—L&OUOII bum* : Newspaper Advertising Bureau. 10 Spruce street, New York. THOMAS J. JONES. \ services to the peo ple of Newnan and vicinity uflice on I>epot stre -t, second door b“low the Cole buildinsr. Night calls will be answered from my resi dence on College street. your houses againsi Tornadoes and Cyclones, with H. C. FISHER & CO., Agts., Newnan, Ga. The safest Companies an4 lowest rates. — - ■■