The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, December 28, 1888, Image 7

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Sat THE ACTOR'S CHILD. tne autumn's even clow, auiibeain* gamboled to ami fro, f croup of children car the hours In pity away; young again. In Joyous ace. kith and kin. and mother's smiling, log to turn back childhood's pace laughter soft ami self l*-guiling. With lap of cold outshone the rest— Jccd purple from the glinting west. _ buds un<l butterflies that flew, tfilheeded sped Lite welkin blue; iflo o'er the merry scene beyond lazed loo!; of a fair tender mother, I wrapt, in love's cut wining bond. As each wee midget chased the other. 4; ‘‘I'll take my forfeit.” cried a one :n you. Queen Mabbie—don't you run!” A leap, a lurch, a squeeze, a kiss Repaid the price of happy bliss. Tb re was a pause. “Next: who's the next?” I Came from a doz'-n voices ringing. As one whore flaxen head. perplexed. Aloof. In tardiness, scelned clinging. . ?*Couic now, no idling, sir, ho swift! Tile prize is yours, bo take the gift!” Ho smiled for answer, nnd, as bold. Sprang fleet into the lap of gold: The puckered lips of ruby red. In childish glow of gr.ice the neatest A moment wavered, then they said: “Ill tiss my mamma, she's de sweetest I" —Monroe II Itoscnfeld in The Clipper. Russia's Great Novelist. Count Tolstoi is a man of HO, with ron frray hair, sunburned counte- with hair - *>•'„. WHoance, plentifully furnished gray heard and mustache. Hi is parted down the middle and is thick and full. His brow, furrowed with j the plowshare of thought, is broad .and massive; his eyes, small and piercing, gleam out beneath bushy Drows. His nose, large and promt- neut, has full and expressive nostrils n 10 charm of Femininity. The features are so strongly marked j ....... . , that once seen they cannot soon he’ The increasing disinclination of out;de- forgotler. He is rather above (he s,rabl( y om, « rn f n “J marr - v Y, orn< f fo ? d Method* of a “Guarantee Company.” I “We give our heaviest bonds for ad ministrators of estates. We have given them a« high a- $700,000 Here, how * ever, we absolutely secure ourselves The bond covers the money and securi ties belonging to the estate, ami these we lock into a drawer in some 6afe deposit comjiany’e vault. The drawer has three i keys, one of which is held by us, one by ! the administrator, and one by the safe I deposit company If it is necessary to take anything from the drawer, not less than two men—generally three— go from this company with the administrator and Ins lawyer. The securities are all taken out Ujion a table, and after the required i paper is found they are carefully put 1 back. ••We used to send but one of our men, but an unfortunate incident taught us the value of greater caution. One of our principal officers—1 will not say who, because lie is sore about it yet--went down to the safe deposit company with 1 the lawyer employed by an administra tor While they were there the lawyer stealthily attracted a package contain 1 ing $79,000 anti put it under his coat. He is now in Mexico, out of the way. I ami we have Bottled the account, which | cost us in the aggregate about $100,000. Since then we have taken the greatest possible care All money deposited in different companies is in the joint name of our president, vice president and treasurer, and their three signatures are necessary to get it out- We consider ourselves absolutely safe now In cases of bonds oxer $25,000 we reinsure in other companies here and in England. ” —New York Mail and Express. Ills Shell* In Mindanao. We got a promising view from our window into a yard below, where a dozen pairs of immense bivalve shells (Tridacnn gigns) lay in the sun. A careful meas urement of the largest pair showed three feet and five inches in length and two feet five inches across the valves. They must have weighed toward 200 pounds each, or 400 j>ounds for a single shell. We found a single valve made a gool load for two men. The Spanish naval officers, who seem, like other seafaring people, to be given tc telling'large yarns, tell of one off the south coast of Mindanao which has long been noted for its great size, and that the officers of the steam frigate Salamanca once planned to Lake it home as a present to Queen Isabella. They steamed down the coast until they found the 6heil, dropjiod their strongest hawser around it and put on all the steam, but after some time found m DRUGS! How Doctors Conquer Death. Doctor Walker K. Hammond says: “After a long experience I have come to the conclusion that two-thirds of all deaths from coughs, pneumonia and consumption, might be avoided if Dr. Acker’s English Remedy for Consump- ~ *=’ = ri>>n were only carefully used in time.” This wonderful remedy is sold under 1 | 13 J I U L V. L a positive guarantee by W. 1\ Broom, E/£\. U. 1 ■ I V J_j JL. <J i—< • Xewnan. Ga. An ostrich escaped from one of the California ostrich farms, swam a river, and gave the horsemen a run of twenty- seven miles before he was captured. Persons living in unhealthy localities may avoid all bilious attacks, by taking ; a dose of I.axador occasionally to keep the liver in a healthy action. Price only | 25 cents a package. At all druggists. . W. P. Red wine is to build a big tan- nery at Fayetteville and W. P. and M. F. Red wine will soon have their mer- that instead of raising the shell the j cantile stock in their new brick store, steamer was gradually sinking, being ; adjoining Blalock s. A Sad Story. average height, and his threescore years have not bowed his stature. But lie is no longer as robust as he was. lie looks somewhat shrunken and ■worn, as if time and the ever burning fire within were making inroads on "what was once a stout and stalwart form. Count Tolstoi dresses not a la moujik, but not as a count. He wears a coarse, dark blouse, buttoned up the breast and fastened round the waist with a leathern girdle. Collars, cull's and such frippery he eschews. His trou sers are jus those of other men. On Lis head he wears a soft, weather beaten brimless hat, and whenever he walks abroad he carries a stout staff. The costume of the disciple is like to that of his master. Simplicity in •dress is a distinctive note of the Tol stoion gospel—one among the many points in which it resembles the Quakers. — Cor. Louisville Courier- Journal. Editor Childs* Wedding Presents. Every week or oftener during the wedding season the announcement is found tacked on to the end of a mar riage notice: “Among the wedding presents was a beautiful silver service from George W. Chikls;” or perhaps it may read: “The many presents in cluded a clock and mantel ornaments from Mi*. Childs.” Few besides him self and the bookkeepers in large jow- elry emporiums know just how many wedding presents Mr. Childs makes in the course of a year, hut it certainly runs into the hundreds and involves an outlay running far into the thou sands. It is by no means confined to Philadelphia, but takes in brides all over tho country. Almost every one with the slightest claim to acquaint ance sends Mr. Childs a wedding invi ha j mammas with daughters on their hands, 1 and it is a problem which they have been unable to satisfactorily solve. The most popular reason given is that women are i extravagant, costly luxuries, in which ! the average man hesitates to indulge. In 1 some cases this may be true; but generally ; speaking this is rank nonsense. The men | of the period may think the “horsey” j girl jolly fun, out they do not want to ! marry her. Men of brains like a set to with a woman of opinions, hut they do ■ not want that lull of fare for breakfast, • dinner and sup|>er The student knows 1 well enough that algebra and isms are worthless tc keep household machinery in j good working order. No! Every one of them will pick out for a wife the clinging, modest, womanly ! woman, who will be content (or affect to • he) tc shine by reflected light. No man would willingly go on record as Mrs. So j and-so’s husband. Now we may as well j admit that young women are willing and j anxious to secure husbands, wherefore ! there’s no use in denying that it is worth I while foi the girls of the time to cultivate ! that otherwise definition less charm which | is understood by the word femininity.— Detroit Free Press. drawn under by the immense weight. .So they cut the hawser and left the shell in its bed. where they declare it may yet be seen. The smaller g|>ecies are found in the mud at low tide. Their toothed valves lie gaping apart, and must be traps ready set for any inquisite monkey : Broom, Xewnan, Ga. who may pass their way. The larger ones are found in deeper water, and there are stories of divers after pearl oys ters being caught in their immense jaws and held to their death.—American Nat uralist. HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, CHEMICALS. PAINTS. OILS, BRUSHES. PUTTY, WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES! MUSIC A L IXSTRUMEXTS, XOTIOXS, GARDEX SEEDS, VIOLIXA- GUITAR STRINGS, CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. & CHIMNEYS, Some Names That Mislead. The tuberose is no rose, but a species of | olyanth. Pompey’s pillar had no historical con- | nection with Poinpey in any way. \ Cleopatra’s needle was not erected by ! the Egyptian queen, nor in her honor. I Whalebone is not tone, and is said not to possess a single property of bone, j Turkish baths did not originate in | Turkey, and are not baths, only heated | chambers. • German silver was not invented in Ger- j many, and does not contain a particle of | silver. ! Black lead is not lead at all, but a com- tation, though, of course, he has to i )>OUIK i 0 f carton and a small quantity of draw the lino in sending presents. | iron The number of clocks lie has given away in ten or twenty years must be enormous. A lady who lias been mar ried a dozen years or more gave a tea last winter and incidentally a late brido admired her parlor clock. “Yes," she said, “a present from Mr. Chikls when I was married.” “Why, ho gave me a clock, too, ’ said the brido of a week, and with that there was a chorus of “and I,” ‘Tuul L ’ until it transpired that ten Childs bridal clocks were represented in that p l!; -g Dispatch, little social gathering.—Philadelphia Times. Brazilian grass never grew in Brazil,, and is not grass; it is nothing but 6trips of palm leaf. Burgundy pitch is not pitch, and does not come from Burgundy; the greater part of it is rosin and paim oil. Sealingwax dobs not contain a particle of wax, but is composed of Venice turpen tine, shellac and cinnabar. Cuttletone is not tone, but a kind of chalk once inclosed in the fossil remains of extinct specimens of cuttlefish.—Pitts- The Famous Traveler's Tree. One of the greatest wonders of Mada gascar. so famous for it3 luxuriant vege tation, is the traveler’s tree (Ravenala Madagascariensis). Its stem resembles that of the plantain, with which it is otherwise allied; but it sends out its wing like leaves only on two opposite sides, which resemble a large expanded fan. In an aged tree the lowest of these leaves will be from twenty to forty feet from the ground, .and on a vigorous trunk there will generally be, at least, a score of them with a bright emerald green oblong blade from four to six feet in length. The fruit grows in bunches, containing forty or fifty members, with three or four nuch bunches to a tree. Each fruit mem- The child coughed. The mother ran. Xo remedy was near. Before morn in * the poor little sufferer was dead. Mur- ill: Always keep Dr. Aeke.’s Engli h t \\rpc Remedy at hand. Sold by W. P. j Kerosene by the barrel, It is the only medicine I would give shipped either from Ncwnan my baby, a mother said, speaking of \ , r. Bull’s Baby Syrup. It is sale. At j or Atlanta. SPECTACLES. IN GREAT VARIETY! SODA WATER FROM THE BEST MATERIALS. ' to ! Dr all drug stores, 25 cents. Severe Cases of Blood. Poison. Thousands suffer'frem blood poison, who would ‘ e cured it they g-tvc B it It. tBoteinc Blood Ba 1 nu a trial. Send to the Blocd Balm Co., Atlanta,Ga.. for book of wonde. ful cu.es, that convince the molt skeptical. It is sent free. . ,, —— J. O. Gibson. Meridian. Mi's., writ 's: “Kir a number of years I suffered unto’d aso.de> from blood poison. Several pnim’nent phy sicians did .ne litt le if any good. I bega n to use E. I’.. II. with ve*y little faith, but, to ray m.ei surprise it has made me a we’l and uea.rty person.” Z. T. Hallertcn, Macon. Ga., writes: -‘I con tracted blood poison I first tried pliysicia.is, . and then w. nt to Hot Springs. I retarded ! home » rained man physically. Nothing I seemed to do me any good. My mother per suaded me to try B. B. B. To my utter as- I lonishment every ulcer quickly healed.” ! Bell) Morris, Atlanta, Ga., writes: “I Miffer- i ed years from svphilitie blood poison which I refused io be cured by all treatment. Pbysi- ! cians pronounced it a hopeless ca c e. I of 1 I no appetite. I had pains in hips and joints and | mv kidneys were diseased. My throat was ul- I cerateu and my breast a mass of running I sores. In this condition I commenced a me of B. B. B. It healed ove.y ulcer and sore a.>d tor contains a quantity of tho silkiest liber imaginable, of a purple tint enclos- I cureiTmc completely within two mouth.” ing thirty to thirty-five seeds. The leaves'' •ire used for roof thatching and the leaf stalks twirled together serve for the walls of tho islanders’ huts. But the most re-, markable property of this tree, and the one which gives it the distinctive appel lation ol Traveler’s tree, is its petioles, which, even in the di vest seasons, always contain water, and the wayfarer, if he be thirsty, has only to pierce the thick base of a leaf stock, to obtain fully a quart of a pure and refreshing liquid.—Hall’s Journal of Health. New Method of Engraving. Pyrogravure is a new method of en graving in black, reddish brown, bister, etc., by the use of a redhot metallic point. The engraving is done as easily as is drawing with a pen or pencil. A scraper and some gum servo to suppress or lighten the lines upon wood, just as upon paper. Mr. Perier obtained his first pyro- engraved drawings with redhot pokers and the conical cauteries used in surgery. These burners, which it was necessary to keep continually heating, were replaced by platinum burners heated by an elec tric current, and then by instruments based upon the principle of gas soldering irons. Art decoration on a large scale and industrial ornamentation have in pyro gravure a new means of utilizing the talent of the artist and the skill of the workman. By means of it we can just as well draw a portrait or a landscape as decorate a room, piece of furniture]) or any other object, or mark the handle of a tool. The Lines made by pyrogravure have not the sharpness of those given on wood by the graver or gouge. It in creases the decorative effect of marque- terie and of objects of wood or leather inlaid with metals, ivory, mother of pearl, etc.—Annales Industrielles. Advice to Everybody who has a diseased Liver is to at once take jirope’ means to cure it. The’function tho Liver is U. signed to perform, and on tho regular executic of which depends not only the general health of the body, but tiie powers of tho Stomach, itowcls, lira in, and the wliole nervous system, shows its vast and vital importance to human health. should run tho risk for a single day of neglect in_ this important organ, but should promptly get a box of Dr. C. MrLanv’s Celebrated Liver Pills, made by f LEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, I’a., and use according to directions they will cure yon promptly and permanently. Around each box is e wrapper giving full description >f the symptoms ol a diseased Liver. They cun be had of druggists. JKjpBcware of Counterfeits made in St. Louis.'tL FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa, IVORY POLISH f t°e r eT3. e Perfumes the Breath, Ask for it„ Bui do not use the dangerous alkaline and mercurial preparations which destroy your nervous system a* t! ruin the digestive power of the stomach. The vegetable king dom gives us the best red safest remedial agenis. Br. Sherman devoted the greater part of his life lo the ciseovery of this relia ble and safe remedy, anJ a!i its ingredients are vegetable. H; r.avo i: the name of Money Ssived by Sanitation. Medical men have long been familiar with the fact that sanitation has been a saving to the community at large in bills, in nursing and even in A Blind Boy’s Power. There is a totally blind young man in Pino Grove, Esmeralda county, -who has acquired powers that-in a j doctors’ leasure compensate him for his mis- \ days of labor to the industrial masses, fortune. Pine Grove is situated in a But it has been difficult to put results deep and narrow canyon, surrounded into figures, so as to impress the public hv high mountains, and there is not a mind. Mr. R udenell Carter attempted landmark within a radius of ten miles this in his inaugural address to the Col- tliat, if required to do so, this young lege of State Medicine. Every case of man’ could not walk up to. He works fever, he calculated, cost the community in'the mines as pick boy and general $10. The reduction in the annual death roustabout and at times runs a car. In that section every one is more or less familiar with the workings of the mines and knows that there arc many crosscuts, inclines, etc., in every mine. The blind bov, if ordered to any por tion of the mines to secure any tool. rate from fever to 4S4 per million from the 1S51 00 rate of 903 per million rep resented a total saving of $1,500,000. “but of this no one seemed conscious;” while the annual cost of scarlet fever at the present time was $2,000,000 a year. If. therefore, we could trace scarlet fever bovine disease o could adopt ouid save the coun- R, n - v . O' 2 J "' •T. «£ 9 Power oT “Gnaranteo Companies.” “The guarantee companies wield an enormous power. For instance, we bond j every man on the Gould system of rail roads. We bad to look up the record of j every one of them. Our investigation is very searching as to a man’s record and habits. We will not bond one who can be called a drinking man. It isn’t a question of total abstinence, but if a man is known to get under the influence of liquor he is toe bad a risk for us. If he has stolen in one place we will not bond him in another. Once a thief, always a thief is our principle, and though it seems a little severe we cannot escape it. ! The weeding out process was carried on with vigor, and a man whom we wouldn’t ! bond had to go. It was a great respon sibility, and sometimes no doubt we made mistakes. A man’s personal ene mies would sometimes traduce him and deceive us. When we found that such an injustice had been done we bestirred i ourselves in earnest, and you can be 6ure ; that the injured man got a place on the ’ road at least as good as the one he had i lost. Through this investigation the per- disease. It is increas- centage of stealing has been greatly re- aml o-ood si°Lt to aid them. From try every year somewhere about half as the center of the town to the house much money as the recent conversion of ■whoi'e most of tho men lodge it is stocks, besides much misery.’ Here is StsU^^uul mmn deprived by a ffigly ^vemS.tul'"a3 we reduce its j ducedA-New York Mail and Express, seemingly hard providence of so great virulence and range we save money, a blessing as sight, is depended upon Pail Mall Gazette, to <mide tho men safely home, which hoboes, notwithstanding that on each Tho Bahamas- Sponge Exchange. . , .. . side of the narrow trail mere are many The latest sponge exchange on this E W ebster & Co., gives the following prospect holes and old cellars.— Es- continent is not an inspiring sight to one 1 mter,asfin£r f-irr:a resmrdme Gen. Sbcn- Gen. Fhll Sherltlan’s Manuscript. S. L» Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, of the publishing firm of Charles ineralda (Nev.) News. None Claimed It. fresh from Wall street. It is merely a large shed without side walls, and open 1 ■ — ” Along the sides Au onviablo ouickne^ of — ! shown by a French actor when In «nu* k inilu the head of u goose was thrown upon the stage. Advancing to the foot lights, lie said: “Gentlemen, if any one among you has lost liis head 1 shall be glad to restore it at the con clusion of the piece. ”—Chicago Jour nal. protozoans strung _ The building is opened at 9 o'clock ii morning, the members of the exchange being promptly on hand. There are no tickers, no splendor of plug hats, no Ba bel of shrill voices, no excited groups. The brokers merely deposit bids with the clerk of the exchange, and at noon the interesting facts regarding Gen. Sheri dan’s Memoirs, soon to to given to the public: “Mr. Webster and I called on Gen. Sheridan at his office in the war de partment a couple of years ago and made a contract with him for his autobiog raphy, upon terms satisfactory to both parties. This was not long after we had published the second volume of Gen. Grant’s ‘Personal Memoirs.’ Gen Sheri dan was as reluctant to try tlie untried field of authorship as had been Gen. Grant before him, but the desire to se cure a comfortable provision for their families prevailed with both. Gen. Sher- B ii a name every or>o car. nraasnber, and is lha present day nothing has i-acn discovered that i» so benaficial fer the UlOOD, for the ! !VEi? 5 for the KrTiEYS and fer Hie STOMACH. This r?n:edy is now so we!! and favorably known by a!! who have used il that arguments as to its merits are use less, ar.d if others who regime a correct ive to the system would but give it a trial the heali’n cf inis country would be vastly improved. Remember 'he name—PRICKLY ASH BITTERS. Ask your druggist fer it. PRICKLY ASH SETTERS C3-. ST. LOUIS. MO. J TjJ/Jjr It is tho opinion of Tho Rochester hi ? host non, Express that -after a community tarn pnctlese of ! idan's piScdure, after he had coco made and feathers a man and puts a railroad , withstanding the prnruave provincialism V’ characteristic of him time table in his hand, it is the height ! of their methods, Na^u brokers are { «£ of impoliteness for him to linger longer | keen S Si u and never called a halt until it was fin- 111 Ul ° tOW !h i a^Wail street man’understands puts and fched. One can see by his manuscript It is all very well to pay as you go. 1 and they often bid within two- that he, like Gen. Grant, found author but if von have no baggage tFe hotel : or threepence of one another on chip easy after he once got smarted. An- proprietor would rather you would pay j nuiging in value from £$0 to thorship is always^ easy when one has when you arrive.—Pittsburg ('hrou- , £105.—Nassau Cor. New York Son. , aometbrng to 6ay. New York World, icle. 1 XTosn Dr, "vV. P, Harrison, Nashville. Tenn. May 2,1SS8—I have used Swift's Specilie in my family for some time, and believe it to be an excellent remedy for all impa rities of the bio >d. In my owa case. I believe that I have warded off a severe attack of rhea- mati-m in the shoulder hv a timely resort to this effleient remedy. In all cases where a per- mamnt relief is sonjht this medicine com mends itself for a constitutional treatment that thoroechlv eradicates the seeds of disease from the system. Lev. W. P. Haekisox. Waco, Texas, May 9, 1???. Gentlemen: The wife of one of my custo mers was terribly afflicted with a loathsome eitia disease, that covered her whole body. She was confined to her bed for several years by this affliction, and could not h r ip herself at all. She could not sleep from a violent itching and sting ing of the shin. *1 hs disease baffled the skiff of the physicians who treated it. Her husband began finally giving hts wife Swift's.Specific, and she coihmcneed to improve almost immediately, andina few weeks sbe was apparently well, the is now a heartv, fine-lookT.g i-tdv. with no trace of the affliction left. Your* very truly, J. E. Issars. Wholesale Druggist, Ar.-tia Avenue. Treatise on LV-od ar.d Skin Diseases m-.i'cd free. The Swift SrsriFic Go.. Drawer C, Atlanta, Ga. New York, Tab Broadway. £0- Prescriptions put up vvitli great care, ami from the best ami purest drugs. We handle the best goods and soil at reasonable prices. Call to see us and be convinced. GREENVILLE STREET Nkwxan, Ga. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED —IN CAR LOAD LOTS F00S’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univer sal satisfaction. WINSHIP’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. VAN Y/INKLE’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S o GINS. (Improvement on Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers. K INNER 4 to 250 S Engines. From Horse-Power. £2£TTull line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, in ware-rooms. Try us before you purchase. Sales made for CASH or on TIME. Professional £ari>s. W. II. BINGIIAM, ^ Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga (Office over New nan National Bank.) Prompt attention to all business en- trusted to bis care, special attention to col lections. L. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga 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 big bands. Examination of titles, writing deeds, mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe- ciai attention. Office over Askew's store. L. M. FARMER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. (Office over First National Bank.) Will prao'ice in all the Courts of Coweta Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. J. c. NEWMAN, Attorney at 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 Couit& Office No. J Opera House Buildiug. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in nil Courts of Uils and adjoining counties and the Supreme Court. G. W. PEDDY, M I).. Physician anil Surgeon, Newnan, 3a. (Office over \V. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.; Oilers ills services to the people of Newnan and surrounding country. All ca promptly. alls uuswered T. B. DAVIS, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga. Offers bis professional services to the citi zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot Street. „ Dr. HEN LE V'S ^ Extract^* p&mi A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic nnd Nervine 1bgaining great reputations ncure for Debility, Dyspep sia, nnd NERVOUS disorders. It relieves Ml languid and debilitated condition* of the cyih iem ; strengthens the intellect, nnd bodily functions; builds up worn out Nerves : aids diswtt ion ; stores impaired or lo*«t Vitality, aud brings Dac* youthful strength and visror. It is pleasant to the taste, and used regularly braces the System aglilies the depressing influence of IVtsiluria. Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. w ES CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Be3t Cough Syrup. Tnstea good. Ui Sold by druxorists. mm QNMSrUM £ Tri ON I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life.—A. H. Dowell, Editor Enquirer, Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. The best Cough Medi cine is Piso’s Cuke fob Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS., Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good, in time. Sold by druggists. ^msszEsmn Vuw dimertisements. TO A DVERTISERS A list of 1.000 newspapers divided into STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on application—FREE. io those who want their advertising to pay, we can offer no better medium for thorough and effective work than the various sections of our Select Local List. GEO. P. ROWELL Jfc CO.. Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce street, New York. OF PURE COD LIVER OIL ura HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Milk. 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 hypophos- phites is ranch more efficacious. Remarkable as a Mesh prodnrer. Perseus gain rapidly while taking it* SCOTT’S EMULSION is acknowledged by Physicians to be the Finest and Best prepa ration in the world for the relief and cord ot CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA. GENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, COLDS and CHRONIC COUCHS. The great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children. Said by ail Druggists. DR. THOMAS J. JONES. Respectfully tenders bis services to the peo ple of Newnan and vicinity. Office on Depot street, second door below the Coie building. Night calls will be answered from my resi dence on College street. THAT FIGHT The Original Wins. C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, l’rop’r M. A. Sim mons Liver Medicine, Est’d 1840, in the U. S. Court defeats J. H.Zeilin.Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv er Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin 1S6S. M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years cured Indigestion, Biliousness, DvsrEPsiA,SiCK Headache,Lost Appetite, Souk Stomach, Etc. Rev. T B. Reams, Pastor M. E. Church, Adams, Tcnn., writes: “1 think I should have been dead but lor your Genuine M. A. Sim mons Liver Medicine. I have sometimes had to substitute “Zeilin’s stuff” for your Medi cine, but it don’t answer the purpose." Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor The Baptiit, Memphis,Tenn. says: I received a package of yourLiver Medicine, and have used half of it. It works like a charm. I want no betLr Liver Regulator and cer tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture. C'TU ns Insure your houses against Tornadoes and Cyclones, with H. C. FISHER & CO., Agts., Newnan, Ga. The safest Companies and lowest rates. -ixsat’