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U Par«M!«
PARTING.
Come, let us shake hands and say good-by:
(There Ls no need to cry :
All the old wounds are hrale I. th- ■ are but scars.)
Let the meridians rise like iron bars
Twist the freed captive and In., pri:on cell
That he had almost learned to love too velL
‘Twill give his freedom zest;
I to the east will go. if you go tvest
THE PHANTOM TRAIN.
Through various scenes, in ‘torn
weather,
Wa've been together:
Yet now we are to part, and these things seein
The fragments of a dream
Which comes at dawn, vivid and warm, ar.d still.’
Setting the passionate pulses all athrill.
Such dreams tlie senses sate;
Let us awake before it is too late
We loved, or thought we loved. 'Tis all the tame -
There’s nobody to blame:
Our wasted tears but briny water were.
Our sight but empty air—
All was ns idle as a twice told talc.
And words of yours or mine cannot avail.
Or restitution make.
It was—it is -’twill still be a mistake.
—Clara D. Maclean in The Connoisseur
Tlie Lngireer’s Story of How Jack Ke-
ecived So- ice of His Heath.
“You ask if I have ever bad an ad
venture on the railroad that would be
interesting to the readers of The Age.
Well, you shall have it. although it is
something 1 would willingly forget;
.nd sunny ] JU { jt seems impossible. Fifteen years
ago I was running on the East Ten
nessee road, between Knoxville and
Chattanooga. The scenery between
Jlayuc Reid’s “Child Wife*”'
Mayne Reid's style and line of sub
jects are pretty well known, especially
to the readers of tales of adventure
written half a generation or so ago.
Indians and bears were apt to be the
theme, and the scene was usually in
the west or southwest, though he
ranged the world over in his thrilling’
stories of hair breadth escapes. He
was esscntiallv a writer for boys, and
we may frankly admit that, on the
whole, h.e was a* good writer. as his
Manv a
Salvation Oil routs and banishes all
bodily pain instantly, andi sosts only
twentv-five cents a bottle.
‘A bull in a china shoj
out of
these two points is errand in places, the . popularity amph te^tife .
mountains being in sight nearly the man 2 wrapped m the bus.
entire distance. I had left Knoxville
an hour late one afternoon in Novem
ber. and at London tlie telegraph oper
ator handed me an order to make up
the lost time, as there was a large
southern excursion on board who
wanted to make connection at Chatta
nooga for Atlanta. I had always been
ranked as one of the coolest men on
the road, as a man who never got ex
cited, and I once ran over a burning
trestle without a muscle changing.
Yet this afternoon 1 was strangely
nervous. For tlie first time iu my life
1 discovered I had nerves.
“‘Jack,’ I said to the fireman, ‘I
non
place, but a bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough ,
Syrup in the china closet is in place.
For croup, bronchitis, sore chests, and j
colds it is a prompt and efficacious reme-
dv.
DRUGS!
Professional (£arbs.
W. Eh BINGHAM,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over Newnan National Rank.)
gg'- ~ - o c = _ -yy- -y : r<*L_ I’rompt attention to all busliness en*
—- -M- -------—- trusted to his care. Special attention to co
DR. J. T. REESE. '"
Tho Old Ox Team.
An ox team on tlie streets of St.
Paul is said to be quite an unusual
sight, but the resident of Minneapolis
who cares to be reminded of his old
New England farm days with the ' am all in a tremor. I am not super
sight of a yoke of oxen doing yeoman stitious, but I feel as if something was
service in front of a wagon needs but going to happen.’
to go down in the vicinity of the city j “Jack burst into a loud guffaw,
market or over to the city hay yard on { ‘Why, cap'll, you nervous; that is too
good,” and he laughed again.
“I said nothing else, but the uncom
fortable feeling continued. 1 did not
know it at the time, but I have since
found out that even the iron nerves of
an engineer must break some time.
Jack, in the meantime, was piling up
coal in the furnace. ‘Cap'll, you are
cold,’ he remarked after a few min
utes’ intermission. ‘We’ll have a bet-
I.yndalo avenue and he will be pretty
sure to find one (hereon almost any
pleasant day. The farmers who drive
horned steers into the metropolis arc
usually of Ihc regulation down east
pattern, typical Yankees, who are
slow iii abandoning the customs of
their early days. Many of tlie
farmers and gardeners about the shores
of Minnetonka are old settlers from
way hack. For years after their ad
vent in the territory of Minnesota the
ox team was tho old stand by in all
the various details of farm labor, and
for many a year was even the favorite
inode of locomotion. Those old farm
ers in later days have become gar
deners as well, and either out of defer
ence to old traditions or because they
find him profitable, they still continue
to make use of the patient ox, and are
not to be deterred by any metropolitan
customs or hifalutin notions from
hauling their produce into the city be
hind their faithful ox teams.—St. Faul
Pioneer Press.
te ire and ;-7ll be in Chatt^ioo^ ! ^ -‘her for gettin
in a -jiff y ’ i such insipid and inherently bad
“The grim November twilight hung P an Y- But the Child ife h
Eighty-two mill Still Hus Every Tootli.
Mr. Alfred Daniel, of Douglas coun
ty, father of Mrs. J. C. Nelms, of
Newton county, is 82 years old, was
never sick a day in his life, was never
in bed at sun up, never lost a tooth,
has been to six log rollings this year,
lifts more than most men, often in
dulges in coon and ’possum hunting,
has been a deacon in tlie Primitive
Baptist church for fifty-eight years,
was never drunk in his life, and an
oath has never escaped his lips. He is
the father of twenty-six children, fif
teen now living, has seventy grand
children and a number of great-grand
children. Mrs. Nelms, his daughter,
has officiated at over 1,000 births, and
has never lost mother or child in a
single case.—Covington (Ga.) Enter
prise.
First Case Ever Known.
Sir.
the name of a pleasant gentleman who
is now making a short visit to this city.
To see him walk you would be led to
think that ono of his knees had been
slightly injured, but tho truth of the
matter is that both of air. Baker’s lower
limbs are artificial. His one limb was
amputated a short distance below the
knee and the other about four inches
below the hip joint. He can easily
ascend or descend a pair of stairs.
This is tlie first, case ever known in
which a man could walk with artificial
limbs when one leg was amputated
above the knee joint. His appearance
is changed but little and his misfor
tune would never be noticed.—Pitts
burg Dispatch.
over the earth like a pall. We had
passed Athens, and with only fifty-six
miles to go to reach our destination.
For the first time since 1 mounted an
engine I longed for the trip. I was
looking straight ahead, where the iron
bands far down the track seem to unite
into a single rail, when I was startled
by an exclamation from Jack. ‘Cap’ll,’
he screamed, ‘look there! my God,
look there!' pointing with tremblii
middle-age life, will recollect tlie rainy
afternoons and the long evenings spent
with Reid s “Rangers,” or “Hunters,”
or “Voyagers.” Not many stopped
then to think of his style, or, per
haps, even knew that there was such a
thing as literary stvle. Tlie plot was the
thing. In his “Child W ife, Capt. Reid
so departed from his customary line of
characters as to make us £eel_ that we
were reading another kind of fiction.
The ear marks of style, nevertheless,
are there in the objectiveness of the
story and its radical adventurism. In
this'talc, however, it is the society ad
venturers of New York and London
and tlie political adventurers of Eng
land and tlie continent in the awk
wardly insurrectionary times about
1850 that we see. He wrote with zest,
Hire a “Red Republican,” a revolution
ist. and wove in a number of histori
cal incidents in a quite unhistorieal
manner. Phases of English and
American social life of near forty
years ago (and we must remember that
this bock was first published in 1SGS)
are shown up severely. What with
the fortune hunter on one side and the
title huntress on the other, and their
follies, heartlessness and crimes, one
tg into
:1 com-
lierself
is an angel of innocent purity and
first love devotion. As we read
this story we are frequently led
to wonder just how far it is
autobiographical. The fictitious hero
of the tale, Capt. Maynard, is so
like the undoubtedly real author Capt.
Reid (not to speak of the similarity in
name) that the latter was evidently,
in many respects at least, portraying
himself in manuscript. Mrs. Reiu
How Doctors Conquer Death.
Doctor Walker K. Hammond says:
“After a long experience I have come |
to tlie conclusion that twckthirdsof all!
deaths from coughs, pneumonia and
Vires of consumption, might be avoided if Dr.
oJ fwTinv Acker's English Remedy for Consuiup- j
tion were only carefully used in time, i
This wonderful remedy is sold under |
a positive guarantee by W. P. Broom, •
Newnan, Ga. |
•Tames Russell Lowell returns to this i
country with health materially improv
ed.
A Sad St3ry.
The child coughed. The mother ran.
No remedy was"near^ Before morning
the poor little sufferer was dead. J/W- j
o.l: Always keep Dr_ Acker's English i
Remedy at hand. Sold by W. P.
Broom, Newnan, Ga.
hand to the east, where in the | says, in her preface to this edition, ^ __ - - ;
distance the mountains loomed uj, “tcidenls ZZe |££UE MftCZ tO ElleVfbOdf
the experience of the author. In the
grim and bare in their awfu
grandeur. The look of horror on
the poor fellow’s face was inde
scribable. But tho sight I witnessed
as I quickly turned my eyes to the
east was enough to freeze the warm
blood which courses through your
veins, for there, above the mountain
tops, with a terrible distinctness, sailed
a phantom engine drawing a phantom
train. The puffs of smoko came re
gularly from the engine. I could see
the glaring headlight, the lights in
the coaches, all as plain as if the train
was running on the side track by us.
I stood there watching the strange
sight, too amazed to utter a word, how
long I cannot say, but suddenly it dis
appeared, and I was recalled to myself
by several jerks at the boll rope made
by tlie conductor. I looked out and
saw that we were at Cleveland.
‘What’s the matter with you
Frank Howard, tie song writer, made j
$”,,000 in one year oat of “Only a Pans-v |
Blossom.”
Severe Cases af Blood Poison..
Thousands suffer from blood poison, who j
would he cured il lliey g-ive B. B. B. Botanic j
Blood Balm, a trial. .Send to the Blood Balm [
Co., Atlanta, Ga., for hook of wonderful cures, !
that, convince the most skeptical. It is. sent j
11 jt O. Gibson. Meridian. Miss., writesr “For !
a number of years I suffered untold agonies
from blood poison-. Several prominent phy
sicians did me little if any good. i began to
use B. B. B. with very little faith, but, to my
utter surprise it has made me a well and
hearty person.
Z T. Hallertcn, Macon. Ga., writes: “I con
tracted blood poison I first tried physicians,
and then went to Hot Springs. I returned
home a ruined man physically. Nothing
seemed to do me any good. My mother per
suaded me to try B. B. B. To my utter as
tonishment every ulcer quickly healed.”
Benj Morris, Atlanta,Ga., writes: “Isuffer-
ed years from syphilitic blood poison which
refused to be cured by all treatment. Physi
cians pronounced it a hopeless ea c e. 1 had
no appetite, I had pains in hips and joints and
my kidnevs were diseased. My throat was ul
cerated and my breast a mass of running
sores. In this condition I commenced a use
of B. B. B. It healed every ulcer and sore and
cured mo completely within two month.”
HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and
MEDICINES,
CHEMICALS,
PAINTS. OILS.
BRUSHES. PUTTY,
WINDOW GLASS,
PERFUMERY AND
TOILET ARTICLES!
XTSIC. t L IXS T RO/EXTS,
XOTIOXS, GARDEX SEEDS,
VIOLIX& QUOTA R STRINGS,
CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF.
LAMPS & CHIMNEYS,
1WKerosene by the barrel,
shipped either from Newnan
or Atlanta.
SPECTACLES, IN GREAT VARIETY!
SODA WATER
FROM THE BEST MATERIALS.
L. P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew & Co.’s.
Prescriptions put up with great care,
and from the best and purest drugs. We
handle the best goods and sell at reasonable
prices. Cats iio see us and be convinced.
GREENY3LLE STREET. Newxan, Ga.
ARNOLD,
BURDETT & CO.
HAVE JUST RECEIVED
—IN—
PAYSON S. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice in all tlie Courts and give
prompt attention to all business placed in hie
hands. Examination of titles, writing deeds,
mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe
cial attention. Office over Askew’s stole.
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Will practice in all the Courts of Coweta
Circuit. All .1 ustice Courts attended.
J. C. NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice in tlie 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 tlie State and Federal Couita
Office No. 1 Opera House Building.
W. Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
. Will practice in ail Courts of this and
adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
G. W. PEDDYLM D..
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, 3a.
(Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.
Offers Ills services to the poodle of Newnac
and surrounding country. Alf calls answered
promptly.
T. B. DAVIS, JVI. D-7
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, Ga.
Offers his professional services to the citi
zens of Newnan and vicinity.
CAR LOAD LOTS
wlio has a diseased Liver is to at once take propc-i
means to cure it. The function tho Liver is de
signed to perform, and on the regular execution
of which depends not only the general health of the
body, but the powers of tlie Stomach, Bowels,
Brain, and the whole nervous system, 3hows its
vast and vital importance to human health.
asked tho conductor, coining to the en-
Charles C. Baker, of Oil City, is f inc ' ,‘^ at 'J 0 y -,°HwL?
J - to run by Cleveland that way? Why,
man, you look as if you had seen a
! lie added after a moment, catch-
An Old Mossback.
Goodo Price came up from Leesburg
yesterday morning and told The Re
publican about the boss turtle catch
for the season. A negro living on his
plantation in Lee was fishing for suck
ers in Kincliafoonee creek Friday
evening, when all at once ho felt some
thing heavy tugging away at his hook.
He drew his line in slowly toward the
bank, and was surprised to see that an
immense turtle had swallowed the
bait. Ho was drawn slowly to the
bank, when a hoe was thrust under
him and ho was drawn out of the
water and killed. His turtleship was
as large as the top of an ordinary sized
trunk and weighed 1 J? pounds.—Amer-
icus (Ga.) Republican.
;pc
story Capt. Maynard was born in Ire
land in ISIS, and began his literary
career when about 30. He fought in
the Mexican war and was wounded
while storming Chapultepec, and in
1849 he set out to tight for the Hun
garian revolutionists. All this is true
of Maync Reid. Is it not also true that
Mrs. Reid, the widow of the author
since 1SS3, was the original of this 1 should run the risk for a s.ngi
lit ririld Wife?” Washington Public 1 this important organ, but should promptly get a box
vnna >v lief lYdMUU 0 luii x UU11U I of Hr. C. McLanc’s Celebrated Liver Pills,
Opinion.
single day of neglecting
ghos ,
mg a glimpse of my face. I looked at
my watch and saw that it was exactly
G o'clock. Wo had made up half an
hour, and we pulled into Chattanooga
an hour later, only a few minutes be
hind time. From the time of the ap
pearance of the apparition to the time
we pulled into the roundhouse at Chat
tanooga Jack had not spoken a word, |
but there was a fixed look on his face ;
I did not like. The affair was not dis-;
cussed between us. Jack was strangely j
taciturn, and, to tell tho truth, I did j
not feel inclined to talk about tho
strange sight seen in the clouds.
“There"is not a great deal more to |
tell. The run to Knoxville the next;
day was made without anything oc-!
curing worthy of comment, but on j
the return trip to Chattanooga Friday,
two days after we had seen the appar
ition. at 5:57 in the afternoon anil two
miles east of Cleveland, a wild freight
thundered into us. 1 saw it too late to
do any good, but I reversed my en
gine and then—jumped. I happened
to jump on the right side and escaped
with a broken finger. But Jack, poor
boy, had chosen the wrong side, and
the immense locomotive crushed him
to a jelly. I believe that the acci-
pent happened at the spot where Jack
first saw the phantom engine and at
tire minute, although two days later.
Poor J: ck, tlie disci vererofthat won
derful sight, the warning was evident-
lv
inter.
Now for Young T>usiness Men.
Paper safes are the latest invention
for young business men who are start
ing in the financial world without
much capital. The paper safe as now
constructed cannot be distinguished
by the eye from the genuine article.
It can be bought in any size, and as a
receptacle for lunch baskets and odds
and ends of the office it is unsurpassed.
While being cheap in price it possesses
an imposing appearance, and a chance
customer seeing the mighty safe in the
office is at once impressed with the
dignity and financial security of the
concern he is dealing with.—Philadel
phia Times.
Hi for
“I did not i
that fated line,
from
made
inm.
he another run on
asked to be excused
y i ending the investigation
officials into tlie accident,
and on the day the investigation was
concluded and I was exonerated from
Warn
c
The Juggler and the Scotchman.
One of his most surprising feats was
performed on one of our partv, a
Scotchman named McFarlane. Plac
ing in McFarlane’s hands three pice—
small copper coins equal to one farth
ing in value—he requested the Scotch
man to hold them as tightly as possi
ble and not to permit them to escape
him. McFarlane had a great deal of
confidence in himself and very little
in jugglers, and would have wa
gered a round sum that he could hold
three pice for tlie balance of the day.
But in a few moments the pice began
to swell, and McFarlane declared he
could feel them squirming. At last
he dropped them, and behold the
coins had changed to young cobra-di-
capellos, each about six inches lonm
and these disappeared from our sight
as mysteriously as they had appeared.
—Charles E. Romain 'in Tlie Cosmo
politan.
The Noiseless Powucr.
Tlie discovery of a new powder that
explodes noiselessly, and without
smoke, will make a revolution in the
movements of armies. There will
henceforth be no betrayal of the posi
tion of a.body of troops bv a cloud of
smoke. It will hardly "be possible
either for soldiers to march with the
same inspiration as when a roar of
guns accompanied their steps, and to
some extent they were blinded to the
havoc of death in their ranks. That
the powder can explode absolutely
without any noise is hardly possible.
The French guard the secret of the
new explosive and rifle very jealously,
but it must soon be known to other
nations. As war increases in terror it
decreases in its attractions. Tlie chief
charm of battle is its excitement. That
the Lebel riilo greatly diminishes.—
St Louis Globe-Democrat
made by PLUMING BItOS., Pittsburgh, Pa., and
use according to directions they will euro you
promptly and permanently. Around each box is a
wrapper giving full description of tho symptoms ci
a diseased Liver. They can be had of druggists.
JS3f*Beware of Counterfeits made in St. Ix>uis.“%.8
Pittsburgh, Pa,
FLEMING BR0S, ?
IVORY POLISH f t °e r e?S. e
Perfumes the Breath, Ask for it.
F
R1GKLY ASH
BITTERS
One of the most important organs of ihe
human body is the LIVER. When it fails to
properly perform ifs 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 ihe inaction
of a TORPID LIVER. This assistance so
necessary will be found in
Pnckijf- Hsli Biffirs!
It acts directly on the LIVER, STOMACH
and KIDNEYS, and by its mild and cathartic
effect and general tonic qualities restores
these organs to a sound, healthy condition,
and cure's aii diseases arising from these
causes, ft PURIFIES THE BLOOD, tones
up the system, and restores perfect health.
If your druggist does net keep it ask him to
order it for vou. Send Zc stamp for copy of
“THE HORSE TRAINER,” published by us.
PRICKLY ASS LITERS GO.,
Sole Proprietor?, ST. J.OTJIS, MO,
DR. THOS.
F00S’ FEED AND COTTON
SEED MILLS,
All sizes. The same that we
have sold in such quantities,
and which have given univer
sal satisfaction.
W INSHIP’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.
Depot Street.
COLE,
Dentist,
Newnan, G».
:p&mi
A Most Effective Combination.
Tbis well known Tonic and Nervine is gaining
great reputation as a cure for Debility, Dyspep
sia, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves all
languid and debilitated conditions of the sys
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions;
builds up worn out Nerves : aids digestion ; re
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings back
youthful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to the
taste, and used regularly braces the System against
the depressing influence of Malaria. ^
Vrice—$1.00 per Dottle of 24 ounces. 1
FOIi SALE BY ALL DKUGGI3T3.
RMFQR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Uso
in time. Sold by druggists.
mm
I befiovo Piso’s Caro
for Consumption saved
my life.—A, II, Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden-
ton, N. C., April 21, 1887.
SKINNER
Engines. From 4 to 250
Horse-Power.
*z§PFull line of best make
BUGGIES and HARNESS,
Ciu 1
L-t-
Uo-s- tho “Japs” Sleep.
A Yokohama letter in The Hartford
Courant says: “The Japanese bed is •
simply a futon spread upon the mat- j
ting. They lie upon this and spread ;
another futon over themselves and
rest their heads upon wooden pillows
and are happy. A futon is a thickly
m ware-rooms.
V
tmsggmigm
The bkst Cough Medi
cine is Piso’s Ctjuk I-of.
Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 25c,
Try us before you purchase.
Sales made for CASH or on
TIME.
j jg? r*< z5jgj vfol
f ... CURES '//HERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
;..i iu time. Sold by druggists.
FIUHT
name I, wanted imo t he superinten-1 v - at p3 et ] cotton quilt, exactly like our
lent s office find ssxed lor nv inac. comfortable, and a very nice arrange-
YOU necun i ICc. ffiu ..bout * ...L - i meli r> hpj E f.07- t'i-r* ]vo 1 -
Making Barrels by Machinery.
The cooper trade threatens to be a ! '■
lost art if modern science continues its r
inroads upon it A Philadelphia man
lias invented a machine that, with the
Iielp of six men, will turn out as many
barrels in a day as sixty men can make.
Tlie machine has been successfully
operated, and coopers are taking a go. J
deal of interest in it If it proves finan
cially successful it will probably rev-
accnlent. remarked the superintend- r T -
ent, kindly. , |
“ T don't.’ I replied, ‘hut my nerves
arc shattered and I want to change my ‘
location.’ I
“I saw a smile on the superintend
ent's face as I mentioned my ‘nerves,’
but he gave me my time without a
word. 1 spent five years in the Rock
ies in the vain attempt to drive that
picture from my mind. i*inally I
10 back east, but the photographic
camera could not fix an object, more :
firmly than did the phantom engine
in mountains of Tennessee fix itself in
mv memory. I am only -15 now, but
yon can see how grav I am. My hair
was not turned white ‘in a single
night.’ as the novelists tell, but in a
few mouths after the occurrence the
meut such a bed is for the housekeeper,
“he bed is easily made, and in the
morning the futon is folded and put
away in a closet, and the chamberwork
is done. They wear no night dresses,
but as every person, even in the poor
est and humblest station, takes a hot
bath ouce, anil in the majority of cases
twice a day. there is nothing uncleanly
in the wearing of the same dress at
night which is worn in the day.”
m MERCURY,
NO POTASH,
Or any cth:
r Mineral Poison.
made exclusively from
Queer Salutations.
The greeting of the Persian, ‘ ‘May
your shadow never gTow less,” has
sunk to the ignominy of a drinking
phrase in our own country, says The
San Francisco Call. Vv ith them it had
a significant meaning. An obese man
thev held in esteem, and, as in that
mauv succiMiui it \wu uruuauij 10- , v , T , ,. - sweltering climate obesity must be the
olutionize the cooper's trade—New change was effected, n_ I ued tothinK -| t f f„u larder and happy in do-
Si r Vhe'n i ^ lecce, naturally a manof imposing
Birmingham (Al,.> Agi. j * ““
In the feverish climate of Egypt the
A Boston man has. invented a new people regard the pores as the loop-
carpenter s rule, which can also bo holes of disease. Upon meeting one
used as a cockserew, a stove handle, a . another they solicitously inquire,
plumb, a bludgeon, a hammer, a nail “Hew goes the perspiration?” “Do
julier, a glass cutler and a glazing —
York Telegram.
°
‘
Argument will pull a wise man
down to the level of a fool, but it
never raises a fool up to the plane of a .
wise man.—Squire Hobbs.
The German military budget con
tains an 5ten. . A J for the breeding
and training of carrier pigeons. _
puller
knife.
*1: is Mat arc’s Tirmc-
Si • TSC’.d lit.-i.r.
T: is ’ :.c only remedy kn
1::.s ever tv: Cured conta
It cur ’ II eumai sm. Cancer, Scro-
cred incurable, it cures any disease caused from
ire d. It is 1 vr pr scr d f I
i- t nin liie L'nired Stales,
h? a tonic.
We h::\c. !:-■?->“ rivin? a history of this —on-
• il Fits ires, from ail over t.,e
- r. . v. v !. v.-:'! convince yc-u that ail tve say is
which we wdl mail free on application.
Xo . r an’.i:y !.e without it. We have an-
• vhv- ei: c oEtetnons Bio- d Poison, sent on same
terms.
W : 1>s a history of yonr case, and our physi
cian v . „dwith you hr letter, in strictest
confidence. We wi!! net deceive you knowingly.
For sule by ad druggists.
Tm: Stt-vt Specific Co., Drawers, Atlanta, Ga.
y.' -w Y'r’t. 7ZS Broadway. London Eng., 33
Snow n.il
you perspire profusely r'—Boston Her
ald. . .. i
TXetv Ctbuertisements.
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of l.OCn newspapers divided into
STATES Alt 11 SECiloN'S will be sent on
application—1’KEE.
To tho? who want their advertising to pay,
we can offer no better medium for thorough
and effective work than the various sections
of our Select T.ncai List.
GEO. I’. ItO " ELI. * CO.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
fc) Spruce street. Sew York.
OF PURE 000 LIVER OIL
aied HYPOPHOSPHITSS
Almost as PaiatablQ as tfr’k.
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. oT the oil with the hypoplioa-
phitej is much acre efficacious.
Eemarkabie as a fiesix producer.
Persons gaLu rapidly white taking it.
SCOTT’S EMULSION is acknowledged by
Physicians to be the Finest and Best prepa
ration in the world for the relief and cure of
COWSUHjPTJCMh
GENERA*. DEBH.5TY, WASTES
DISEASES, E*£AC!i?TION f
COLDS and CHRONIC COUCHS.
The great remedy for Gonsvmptian, and
Wasting in Children. Sold by all Druggists.
Pjl The Original Wins.
r~h C. F. Simmons. St. Bonis, Prop’r
fij M.A. Simmons Biver Medicine, list’d
P j 1840, in tue U. S. Court defeats J.
fi H. Zeilir, I’rop’r A. Q. Simmons Biv-
!; c! er Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin 1S68.
JaUpD M. A. S. B. M. has for 47 -.ears
ty c -, err d Indigestion, Biliousness,
b. f' .a, BvsrEr.iiA,Sick Headache,Bost
t- : \ Arrr.TtTr, Sour Stomach, Etc.
? A Ely. T. B. Beams, PastorM. E.
c n*Church, Adams, Term., writes: “1
" a!: I should have been dear! but
for your Ge: nine M. A. Sim
la-n .= Liver Medicine. I have
sometimes had to substitute
“Zeriin’s stuff” for your Medi
civ , but it don’t answer the
purpose.”
/ tMop’Ut Dr. J. JB Graves, Editor The
V:'.'. ', Memphis,Tenn. savs:
\ f received a package of your Liver
A Medicine, and have used half of it.
V It works like a charm. I want no
bef. r Liver Ite'vilator and cer
tainly no more of Zcilin’s mixture.
DR. THOMAS J. JONES.
Respectfully tender A::- - rv’<-
plf of Xownan and vlv-nily < ,p
street, second door b-: :w the <’■
Sight calf* wiii b-.- f:
dence on. College street.
buildinc.
:a toy resi-
Insure your houses against
Tornadoes and Cyclones,
with
H. C. FISHER & CO., Agts.,
Newnan, Ga.
The safest Companies and
lowest rates.