Newspaper Page Text
Herald and Advertiser.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1 A YEAR.
8. W. MURRAY, Business Mnninree.
Those tin
tions, piiiiiful boil-, annoying piip-
ples att< 1 other affections, which it(>-
pear.so •Generally at this season, utnko
the vise of, that grand Spring Mmli-
cine, Hotel's Sarsaparilla, a necessity.
The acetnnuluted impurities in the
blood cause very, different symptoms
with some people. The kidneys,
liver and bowels arc overmatched in
■their efforts to relieve the clogged
system. Dizzy headaches, bilious
attacks, failure of appetite, coated
tongue, lame hack, indigestion and
that tired feeling arc some results.
From the same cause may also cotno
scrofula, neuralgia, sciatica or rheu
matism.
All these troubles and more may prop
erly bo called Spring Humors,”
and just, ns there is one cause, a cure
is found-in just, one remedy, and
that is Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla purities the impure
blood, enriches blood which is weak
and thin, vitalizes blood which lacks
vitality. Thus it roaches every part
of the human system.
For vour Spring Medicine — to pre
vent, or cure Spring Humors, tuko
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
One True Blood Purifier. Get only Hood’s.
mm 1, r^*n are tho only pills to take
rlOOu S FillS with Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
professional Curbs.
W. J. HPKAIUM. A. M. 11AK1S.VIKM).
S PE Al.US it HARTS FI ELI),
Attoknkyh at Law,
Atlanta, Ga.
Will .practice in nil the Courts. OtUce
810 Fit ten Building, .8. E. corntv Broad
and Marietta Ht«. ,
J :R. DYKES,
• PlEYHIUVAN AND SUROEOW,
Newnan, Ga.
OlTers his professional services to the
people of Newnan and surrounding; coun
try. Residence, Commercial Hduse. Of
fice, ’WtLtaoxon building.
iNDIVtoiBLfc.
A moroee.t face to face they stood;*
While «onl met soul in honest ovot
That trembling glowed through unshed j
tears,
Born of a love that never dies.
They mot to speak the saddest word
That e’er on 1 umnu lips can dwell.
But, oh, the mockery to dream
That such ns those could take farewell!
tfor ns two roseate clouds unite
In wake of tho departed sun,
Their kindred essence pure and sweet, j
These twuin had aoflly merged in one.
They might bo severed polo from ynla,
Might live through till the jours apart.
Whai mat to rod time and space i\» them >
Whoso homo was in each other’s heart?
Ho craved a tress of that fine gold
Whose wavy wreaths her tow head graced
Bending to grant the boon, ho clasped
A fcone of pearl about her waist.
▲ moment more, and lie war, gone
From sight, naught else. High heart and
mind,
Stronghold of tenderness and truth,
Dolled tho hour and staid behind!
Tile season< !«olled l and ne’er ngavn
Thus faro to face ’twm theirs to stand.
Yet heart to lamrt they walked Uio world
On to the goal, the silent land.
Oh, gift of sifts, a noble soul
That wraps our own in full embrace
Till all mean things .n leve's great sea
Arc lost and seif hath no mere plneol
—.lane C. Simpson in Good Words.
A COLLEGE CALL.
maos. J. JONES,
PHYSICIAN A Nil SrWMDON,
Nhwnax, Ga.
Office mcarjiubllo square, Hancurlc street.
Residence opposite Methodist church,
Tacksou street.
J O. KING,
• Physician and 8rhobos,
Nkwnan, Ga.
Offers Ins services to the people of Xew-
nmi and surrounding country. Will an
swer culls during day from ollice up-stairs
over Newnan National Hank—ut night,
both from ollice and Virginia House.
T B. DAVIS,
• Physician and Shbuhos,
Nbwsan, Ga.
Ollice next to residence.
/ t W. PEDDV,
O • Physician and HcImjicon,
Newnan, Ga.
Office over <’. ('. Cole’s Jewelry Ntore.
Offers his services to the people of Newnan
and surrounding country. All calls an
swered promptly.
o
rlando McClendon,
.Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Practices in ail Courts. Gives prompt
laced in Ill's lianas.
attention to business p!
W. Y. ATKINSON. II. A. HALL.
A tkinson & ha ll,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all Courts of lids and
adjoining counties, and in the Supreme
Court.
\l A. TURNER,
• Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the
State, and elsewhere by special contract.
MURRAY’S
Circulating Library
5c, Per Week!
Has 400 Volumes In It!
School Books for all Schools! !
Bibles of Every De
scription !
Murray’s Bookstore
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
Tfcct U whet <t tvox cade lor.
“Tho stories printed about Smith col
lege lately appeal to me very strungely,"
said a Harvard umu. “Ainu is of so
small a part in it all. A senior year ex
perience of mine will illustrate.
“When I met tho girl, 1 didn’t know
she was a college gill. The front of her
waist was decorated with crazy shaped j
jewelry of various sorts, but 1 was not |
sufficiently enlightened at tliu time to I
know that they denoted the feminine ]
life academic. Sim was a mighty nice j
girl. Sho wasn't afraid to wet her buth-
ipg suit. Sno diil t nnud chasing around
•in tho mud after.her own fiddler crabs,
and, more wonderful still, she wouldn’t
evon shudder when they crunched us she
ran the book through them. Sho was no
etoi'n, analytical, cold'blooded thing
either. You ought to huvo heard her
yell when the fish hit; also, she knew
'enough when her hand was squeezed to
squeeze back. 1 had a very interesting
summer of it. In tho course of the sea-
sou I learned, of course, that she was a
Smith girl, just ns I learned where she
lived and who her folks were and what
her first name was uud that she wusn’j,
engaged to anybody (and never meant
to he).and all that sort of thing. The
Smith part didn't bother me at all. 1
began to feel that she was a typo. The
highor education was the thing woman
had needed nil those years to make her
a little more rather than a little loss
than the ungels.
“At the end of tho season my goose
was.oooked ull right, Lun 1 lucked sand.
I wanted time to think it over. I also
hud a sneaking idea that perhaps ulcer
wo had been separated for awhilo the
girl wouldn't he so ull fired indifferent
to personal considerations uud my pass
ing tentative expressions of interest in
our future existence. I asked her if i.
could oome up to Northampton to see
her and if I couldn’t take her to the
Yule-Harvard football game at Spring-
field. Sho fairly grabbed at the chance
to go to tho game. She had never been
to a Springfield game, she said, except
with tut Amherst man, and that, of
course, didn't count. It would ho too
awfully jolly for any use to go with a
Harvard man.
“I suggested that I would like to go
over to Northampton a week or two be
fore .the game. Of conrso she said I
must, .lust at the time of the game
there were so many men in tho chapel
every morning that there was no partic
ular glory in having ono there, lint
about two or three weeks before tho
game it would bo glorious to have a
real Harvard man in chapel all by his
lonesome.
“Somehow this sort of response was
not altogether satisfying, but 1 was too
enthusiastic to inquire too curiously, in
the fullness of elapsed timo I don't
mind telling yon that i had some protty
definite plans about that visit to North
ampton. In meditative moments i had
pleasing ideaH about certain confidences
I would make to the hoys before I ap
peared with tho girl at tho game.
“1 went to Northampton. I arrived
on a Thursday evening. I went to tho
cottage where she lived. 1 waited half
an hour before she came down. Then
she appeared with her hut on.
“ ‘I'm so glad you've conic, ’ she said,
‘and I’m so sorry tbut I have a voico
club meeting to attend tol The presi
dent is sick, and I'm the vice president,
so I really have to go. I’m really awful
ly late now. You may walk over with
mo if you like.'
“It was about three minutes’ walk.
She told me in that time how to oome
to chapel tho next morning.
.“I went back to tiio Norwood and re
tired to the little box in the basement
that they could call a cafe and con
templated things. After awhilo the
things contemplated became less
gloomy. I met two Amherst men down
there and told them my experience and
disappointment. They looked at each
other and laughed a good deal and said
that it was rather strange, considering
that I was not an Amherst man. They
were rather bitter about it and not alto
gether polite, and 1 went to bed.
“I went to chapel in the morning.
The girl was waiting for me in tbs
vestibule, i was looked over imperson
ally by 000 or more young women as
they came in, also when they wont out.
Theu I was told to hurry away like a
good boy and come back after dinner,
say, aboul 8 o'clock. I gently intimated
that 12 hours in Northampton was a
lonely prospect, She was awfully sorry,
of course, but there was an especially
important basket ball practice that aft
ernoon. H she staid away, she wouldn't
be allowed to phty in the match game
the next day. Might I come to watch
the practice? Good gracious, no! Men
were neter allowed except at match
games, and then taulv the very oldest
and marriedcst l.tt nibers of the faculty.
"I went owt to Amherst and saw
some fellows 1 knew over there. The
man 1 kuew host was going to have a
beautiful time in his rooms that night.
The window seat bulged with beer bot
tles. , Ho wanted me to stay, but 1 re
gretfully broke away and went buck to
Northampton. 1 reached tlu- < ottage at
DoS. Tho girl was in the reception
room waiting for me.
“ ‘Goodness, but you are late!' said
she. ‘I cnuui very near going without
waiting for yon. Astronomy leuturo this
morning was postponed until tonight,
eo that we could huvo the veal stars, j
you know. I'm sorry, hut of course it
isn't my fault. 1 know you don't want ;
to wander around town tonight, s. i i
have asked my roommate to cotno down I
and talk to yon. ’
“Sko wont up into the hull and called |
her roommate, who was short and pi"b |
ulnr aud wanted to discuss Kant in to i
lotion to the future of woman. :• hr I
wanted to know also what that dear |
Professor .lames of Harvard was li o j
and whether I had ever heard him ex- I
plain what he meant bye nuitfpassngcD j
in his 'blamed old textbook. Site went j
to her Toom and brought down tho It xt |
book to show exactly what she meant
After an hour aud a half 1 fled to the
cafe of tie Norwood.
“Next morning 1 went to chapel
again, at Intd been ordained by tint
evanescent young woiean before she
trotted away to look at the stars. Then
she wont away to the basket bull match
gnuio. Sho said that if 1 wanted to walk
down by tho gymnasium 1 could have
lots of fun hearing them cheer. J thank
ed her. Site told me to come around at
about 4 o'clock and we would go for a
trolley rido to Florence. I didn't go
down to tire gymnasium to hear tho
girls yell, hut my drooping spirits re
vived. I found that Florence wasn't
much of a town, only a settlement real
ly, and was five or six miles out in the
country.
“1 was at the cottage promptly at Ji
o’clock, also at 4 o’clock. She name
down very penitent at 4 : 15; said she
was awfully put out, but the board of
editors of nomu blamed magazine or
other lmd Imd » mooting, and she didn’t
daro to stay away n minute for fear
they would vote to print nn article hyn
girl she just simply hated. They had
been trying to get it printed against hor
will for two months, and slio didn't iu-
tend tha t they should tuko advantage of
the fact she had a man in town to slip
it iu, so there I
"Wo got on tho car. So did 18 girls
wno seemed most interested iu us. The
cur swung its rattling way out into tho
country. Wo talked about scenery. I
saw lots of groves ami shady lattes along
tho way. I spoke nbout them once or
twioo.
^" ‘It’a ever so much prettier near
Florence, ’ she said.
"Wo ran off on a siding, and the 18
girls climbed out and began seeking as
ters ami things beside the track.
“ ‘GoodnessI’ said the girl. ‘They tiro
getting their botuny specimens 1 had
forgotten all about niiuo. Won’t you
got some for mo? That’s a nice boy I’
“1 did. Tho ear started aud sailed
away while 1 was picking the lovely
things. 1 chased a quarter of a luilo.
Tho 18 young bulicB back near tho sid
ing were amused.
“‘Look ut your watch, please,’said
tho girl. I did no. Sho saw it and was
much perturb'd. 'I’m going to ho lute
for dinner, ’ she said, 'and it will ho tho
third time tliis year. ’
‘‘‘Why,'said I, ‘aren’t wo going to
get off?’
“Goodness, no! Wo are going bank
on this ear ns fast ns it can go.'
“‘But I haven’t seen Florence,’ I
wailed.
‘‘‘Silly goose,’ sho said, ‘tliis is
Florence I’
“We only stopped once on the way
hack. That once was ut tho siding, and
all the 18 girls piled on again. They
remembered me, I saw.
“ ‘Phi Kappa meets tonight,' said tho
girl as wo hurried into tho campus,
‘and of course 1 have to go. Chapel to
morrow’—
“Sho said a lot more, but X confess I
didn’t hear her. She was very much
surprised when 1 told her 1 couldn't
possibly stay over.
“ ‘Anyhow, perhaps it’s just as well,'
sho said, ‘because you couldn’t come to
tho house on Sunday. ’
“Yes, 1 took her to tho game. I be
lieve she had a good time. I have seen
hor onoo or twico sinco. But l don’t
think as much of the highor education
of women as I did. ”—New York Sun.
A teacher in one of the Boston
schools relnt.es this incident: A boy |
in nty room at school has been irrog- |
ular in his attendance during the j
year. At Thanksgiving I asked the
children to write me a letter telling
me some of the tilings for which they :
were thankful. His letter attracted |
my attention to his sufferings. Ho j
wrote: “We whonropoor feel thank- !
ful that God lots us live through the
cold winter at till.” I raitdo inqui- 1
ries and found that tho father, mother
nod three children dependent upon J
his earnings, had “boon out of work”
since Inst spring.
The mother, a frail woman, has
earned nil they have had.
The boy is nn unusually bright boy
and the poor, thin clothing ha wears :
is nlvvny clean.
The While Star Liner Britannic, a j
short time ago, arrived in Mersey j
from New York, after a passage oe- j
copying only seven days, eight hours,
despite her two.hundred and fiftieth ■
rpnitd voyage to hud from New York i
and her live hundredth passage across j
the ocean. This menus that she htvH \
traveled a clistance'of 250 times 0,200 j
nautical miles, or move than 1,700,000 ]
statute hiilos without, renewal of on- i
glues or boilers—a performance prob
ably without a parallel in tho history j
of steam navigation. She has carried j
570,000 saloon passengers and 105,- i
500 steerage passengers. Under
steam 114,000 hours aud 100,800 hours
under way, she Inis consumed 518,-
000 tons of coni, and her engines have
made 350,000,000 revolutions.
There are three little things which
do more work than any other three
little things created—they are tho
ant, the bee and DoWitt’s Little Early
Risers, the last being tho famous lit
tle pills for stomach and liver trou
bles. G. R. Bradley.
Richard Uroker, the Tammany boss,
is rigidly temporatn, and Ids private
life is purity itself. It is related of
him that on one ocoassion of n
“scratch” dinner, to which n dozen or
so of men had been invited, lie listen
ed with disgust while one of tho
guests related with glee the fiction ho
had sent over the telephone to his
wifo ns a reason for not dining at
home. Tho guest was a famous mem
ber of Tammany at the lime, but
Croker said of him: “That settles
him. The man who will lie to his
wife will lie to everybody.” Never
from that day would Croker have
anything to do with him, and the re-
later of fiction was soon cast out of
Tammany.
Are You Wcatl
Weakness man!rents itself in the Ions of
ambition ami aching hours. Tho blood is
victory; tho tissues nre wasting—the door is
being opened for disease. A bottle of Drowns’
Iron Bitters lalten in time will restore your
slrwnglh, soothe your nerves, make yonr
blood rich and red. Do you more good
than an exports! vr Rpceial course ofiiu-dicimr.
Browns’Iron Hitters is sold by all dealers.
“What is the trouble, Mnggio? You
look worried.” “Sure, an’ the trou
ble is with the twins, mum. One of
them is cryin’ because he swallowed
his rattle and the other is howlin’ out
of sympathy, and betwixt the two of
them bawlin’ I can’t tell which swal
lowed the rnttle.”
“Mamma I guess 1 know wiry Mr.
Bunsby sits in tho front row ut the
theater.”
“Why, my dear?”
“Ho everybody can see that he’s
got a little hair left behind.”
Old Nurse—“Well, how do you like
your new little sister?” Bertie—“Oh,
Nursie, aslc mamma not to name it/a
girl—name it a hoy, so I can have a
kid to play with.”—Truth.
It Comes to lh® Proper from Cv«r Study anil Brain Tira—It Camsi
to Any Person, too, wto Worriss and Frets.
From the Huron Tribune, Had Axe, Mich..
A "breaking down of the nervous system”
is a modern expression,—a modern comi-
plnint. It is induced by prolonged hi ruin
and lho overtaxing of the nervous system,
and is a prodncl of over hurry md liustlo.
It affects the preacher end Ihe lawyer—the
direct result of liriiin lire, ll nlfeeis people
in any walk of life, loo, who worry and Irel.
It mentis a depleting of the nerve forees.
It is rumble by eompli'le rest and change
of scene, also by ihe use of nerve restoratives
lie I nr-ve foods. As tho first method
meat nor vegetables. I dared not nllow my
Imre feet to as much as touch Ilia cold carpet
or floor, lossy iioildn.g of taking a cold foot
hath. If J diil I was immediately seized
with cramps. In tins condition f coin-
mcnccd to lake Dr. Williams’ l’ink Fills for
Pule People. I took one box and felt no
heller—in fact worse. I said f would (alto
no more, but my wife urged the matter, feel
ing my life depended upon the result, ns
every tiling else hud failed, and 1 was “used
I therefore continued to take them.
it!.in the roaeli of all, the latter olli-rs Since then, and It Ims been several months.
the
of treat he*
tormiaei I
lent that m.
no'irlshing
I.lilies. Tile
laiild-t up
'.rci -‘it. Tl
Dr. Wdli t t
and
In ",
A
the I'o
- which
'pr.pm
y only
worse
me.lie
i' to
lilt! tl’
p. I. ..a
is’ pi i
pddc"p'-'
Piet
ell and pr:i"t!eul method
mplaint. \\ lien it Is
.Heine Is lo he used,
contains the m et per
n pi
Do
not *.
nkc
norve
stim
ill lilt
and t
1 • 0 * r
onct ion
til!
m v
'll Wt
TO
hoforo.
no
that
is to
tho
norvos
the
hd'lv
—ono
tin
it hr it
IM'ffj
, nl«i>
in«T
nnaoi
s your
1 l, ■
M- for
llio
pur
poM* is
k V
'ills 1
or I'n
ilc
IVopIo,
V. i» ;
1. Ii i '
built
np »
»V aoliii
••»)(>!
nail
which
IM
known
1 in*
rv.,
i m<
in-i's ii
\ MlK'll
C|U»(
'3 ; read
• el 11 elec
jvinun
l)>{. Wiu
S-liem
T>’’sr Sir. In A;
less cm', n'vimr to a
of in
He Wouldn’t.
Fact and Fiction prints—under the
head of fact, wo iuuy assume—what
purports to bo tho application of a man
who wanted to bo an army chaplain
during tho administration of President
Lincoln:
Attached to it are a number of in
dorsements which are not only interest
ing in themselves, hut as disclosing the
characters of the two men whoso influ
ence largely molded tho policy of the
government in those turbulent times.
The indorsements read as follows:
Dear Stanton—Appoint this man
chaplain in the army.—A. Lincoln.
De'arMr. Lincoln—He is not a preach
er.—E. M. Stanton.
Tho following indorsements are dated
a few months later, but come just be
low:
Dear Stanton—He is now.—A. Lin
coln.
Dear Mr. Lincoln—Eut there is no
vacancy.—E. M. Stanton.
Dear Stanton—Appoint him chaplain
at large.—A. Lincoln.
Dear Mr. Lincoln—There is no war
rant of law for that.—E. M. Stanton.
Dear Stanton—Appoint him anyhow.
—A. Lincoln.
Dear Mr. Lincoln—I will not.—E.
M. Stanton.
The appointment was not made, but
the papers wore filed in tho war depart
ment, where they remain as evidence of
Lincoln's friendship aud Stanton's ob
stinate nerve.
Contagions L'ood Poison lias been ap
propriately called the curse of mankind.
It is the one disease that physicians can
not cure; their mercurial aud potash
remedies only bottle up the poison in
the system, to surely break fortli in a
more virulent form, resulting in a total
wreck of the system.
Mr. I-'rank B. Martin, a prominent
jeweler at 926 Peusylvania Ave., Wash
ington,D.C.,say v:
I was for a long
time under treat
tnent of two of
the best physi
cians of this city,
for a severe case
of blood poison,
but my condition
grew worse ail
tlie while, not
withstanding the
w/r/m lac1 that t,K ‘y
charged me three
fill ,tr 1 hundred dollars.
V$Y My mouth was
filled with eating sores; my tongue was
almost eaten av/ay, so that for three
months I was unable to taste any solid
food. My hair was coming out rapidly,
and I was in a horrible fix. I had tried
various treatments, and was nearly dis
couraged, when a friend recommended
S.S.S. After T had taken four bottles, X
began to get better, and when I had
finished eighteen bottles, I was cured
sound and well, my skin w.i3 without a
blemish, and I have had no return of
the disease. S.S.S.saved me from a life
of misery.” S.S.S. (guaranteed purely
vegetable) will cure any case of blood
poison. Books on thedisease
and its treat- /jgJv /g’te,
meat, mailed ta~m «r^ fiSr s «3
free by Swift
Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga,
I EH. Co.,
eelinlv, N. V.
I, item, I tvss a hope-
iiup'ele In-caking down
iiitviuis s.VR'em atel In a persistent
h linalile, I hml l"'en trented by it
ureal many physicians lull received 110 |i"r-
in mein benefit. I had been down four Ilni'H
-.v UT e-TV him pi-osi nil inn anil Uvico with
gastritis. These quacks would inline with
1.ueh vinlemm as in iiinnv me into span,ns.
The lime inline when physicians said I muni
Flop pieanhing or die. I would he so cx-
h'iii-:t":i after Ihe la. rvh-e on Sunday dial.
I could KourcFJy gell'roin the pulpit. Jinny
1 Ini no Invd In nil dmvn and r
I have laid hut ime slight attack and have
enjoyed life. Have preached all summer
and'held revival meeling'i for fillceii weeka.
During llial time my wife was sick seven
weeks, ,'n tb-ii my rest was much broken.
8n,m- niglns I did nol sleep at all. I have
had nn mmteiiliii' exercioo for years until re-
c'-nlly, wh"ii I have do!!" some work I11 my
gnpii'ii, and my muscles stand the test re-
nmrknhly well. I epn eat any thing I do
sin', and can now enjoy a cold hath daily.
I- very Salihalh I preaeh three times, and now
think.' I am good for number twenty years If
Ihe Lord wills. I am surprised at myself
and somollmeR Ihlnl; it catiitm ho possiblo
t fin I I have necomplhihed wlmt I have.
(Signed) “ ltHV. J. N. McCukmiY,
F.lktnn, Mich.”
Find ntlae.lvd. the affidavit of Mr. Me*
(’ready, mode before a notary puldio.
Statu ok Miciikian, |
Bounty ok Ti’hoola. I
.1. N. MoOreudy, being duly sworn, eavn
thul the above and foregoing piaiemmito
made by him are trim. Subscribed and
sworn to before me this fi.'lrd day of July,
18117. J. I), (i hook its, A'li/nn/ Fulilie.
All the eleuienlK usury to give new life
and richness In the blood and restore shattered
nerves arc 1-0111miii<wl, in a condensed form,
in Dr. Williams’Pink Pills for Pole People.
They nre for saie by all drnctHsts, or may lia
lmd hv moil from Dr. Williams’ Medicine
i e in’ 1 leave Urn church in order in (’empuny, SchciicHiuly. N. Y., for 60 cento
siremrlh. I could eat neither ' a box, or nIx boxes for $2.60.
THE LIVING AGE
FOUNDED BY E. LITTELL IN 1844.
Reproduces without abridgment the ablest articles from
184.4- t * ,e ' cat, * n ll British reviews, magazines and weekly literary
and political journals in every department of Literature;
also, TRANSLATIONS from the leading Continental sources.
IRQ8 U'M! APr.PD IL"III||M11(>II or 11 MONTHLY LITK.ltA Y SUV-
I '-A VJ L,n Li/-\ ‘ k VJ t-Lf l-l.l-.AI 1..NT, (lontoliiliiu Kniidlnu
IlM.ol tho ItnokN o! the Mom Ii;
ENCYCLOPEDIC IN SCOPI?,CHARACTER, COMPLETENESS,COMPREHENSIVE ESS.
Miijjru/.liH*M, HoimHmu (com New HooUh, i
rout i IUUIiir to imilui t ills poi loillrul
“AN EPOCH-MAKING STORY.’*
“WITH ALL HER HEART.” From (Ho Frei’di of M. Rone Bazin.
Arvaiigemeiitsliiivii been malic for III 11 8 Kl< I A I- IT II 1.1 <: AT IO N of 11 T It A NS I, AT ION.
ismle expressly fdl'TIIH MVINO •» I > 1C, of I ll G I'nmo'iH oof,-I. Tin lift I !l • t." tlllr.'l i
appears In tlie iiiniilier ol' Nov. (I, anil It will be niiiiUiiur'l weekly for several muntlia
am II rompleteil.
Tills novel, In Its it! prem
Itev 11E 11 kh Deux Moniieh, aroused the
greatest I hi most, at I rue! lug Hie ell mi I Ion of
llUeralenih I101I1 In Kr.inee 11 ml Knghiud. A
vivid portrayal o( I lie In a French linlnr, trial
town, It Is lnl.cn sling all lie ns n snelnl study,
end ns 11 renllstlc, yet Uni leal u story of modi rn
life,
nun CNN TIIK VKAI' oilier I raiDilnl ions from tho best writers will appear from’ tlniu lo
time, with Min lal or slirirl stories by I lie Lending IIi-IHhIi a ill hors,
PRBH To nil NEW^SUUSCKjBBRSTo The Living Age for ifigfi, will
la Ihe j Its Hlornrv and e'hleal qiiiillllr s are r.nAin-
lllllllll Hml fdCS ANNAI.HS LlTTKH AI II KH UT
I’oi ITIU'KH described it as ".in I’ooeh-
MalMng 'liny,"
Tho Lon no" Atuenamim charneterlzos It
ns "a work of line nml searching itnnltHls,
| full ol churn and redolent 111 a purfuino
1 which Is exquisite nml poHsr-HseHnodlsqnlot.-
! lug 1 -lenient.”
. he sent I kU.ld the LIGHT NUMBERS of 1897 containing the
~ first Installment of “WITH ALL HER HEART.”
t llOICLST UTI ItATIIKK AT Cl.lilt IMtlOI'J.N. FoY <41.00 Tiib Living Alls nml any
*1.(1') Magazine (or Harper’s Weekly or Huziirj sent for a year; or, for <8.0(1 Til i< Living Aon
and Kerlliner'M Magazine.
Published Weekly id *(1.00 a Year. Single Copies 15 cents.
THE LIVING AGE CO., P. O- Box 5206, Boston.
$2.50 Reward
Haggard Specific Co.
Will i<lvu thriiu boxBHof Iholr Hpool flu Tub-
lutw, worth $2.60, (o any ono who may huvo
used uh 111 ch /in ono box of t) clr tuhlulH
without fJcf.’hhd benefit. Wo huvo nnvor
heard of u hIukIo uhlo whore (lie hibletH huvo
fulled to give HUtlHfaclory results, and Iff hero
Ih ft pciHou to bo found who Iuim used them
without benefit wo want- lo know who ho Is
and win re to find hirn. They never full lo
euro klrlney and bladder troubles and nffeo-
tlons of tho «oultal organs, and overcome a.I
debility and weaknoHflln both men and wo*
men. They Improve the appetite, aid diges
tion and assimilate and overcome eonslipii*
tlon. They have a vllul f fleet on nil of the no-
eretory organs and estabib Ii a healthy condi
tion of the mucous and gland seereflons In
every part-of tho body; overcome all torpid
eondRIohsof Mio cuplllarlosand sucuro perfeel
elreulat-lon of tho blood, so that every organ
Is supplied and every fnneMon Is normal aud
healthy. Doing the only remedy over com
pounded that, fully meets the logical physio
logical conditions of the human system, It la
no wonder that they give results unknown to
medic/ I science. No matter If the doctors
and all remedies have failed, »ry tho tablets
andjboconvinced thatthey are superior to all
known remedies Their etleet on the noivo
centres Is a complete surprise to physicians
who have used them. Cases that have battled
the skill of the best physicians and no reme
dies seemed to benefit, have boon promptly
controlled and permanently cured by the
tablets. Cases where Inject'ons of morphine
have been resorted to us Ihe only means of
even temporary relief have been promptly
controlled by the tablets and the trouble
completely overcome by their use.
PitlCE.—One box, f 1.00. Three boxes 12 60.
This wonderful remedy Is for sale by the
druggists In Newnan, or will be suit on re
celpt of price by Haooaud Bpecific Co..
Atlanta, Ga
Atlanta and New Or
leans Short Line.
Atlanta and West Point
Railroad Co.
WALKER HIGH SCHOOL
1898.
Tire 8|irlnii Seuxloii Will Open on Mon-
liny, January 10th.
Buys and girls prepared for the higher
claHFes in college, for teaching, or for busi
ness.
It is the purpose of tliis school to save
for industrious pupils one or two years in
any course.
Inexperienced teachers will he greatly
benefited by attendance.
TERMS.
Board and tuition, per scholastic month,
$18.00.
Board from Monday morning till Friday
afternoon and tuition, tier scholastic
month, $10.00.
Books supplied at reduced rales.
Boarding pupils furnish sheets, pillow
cases, towels and spreads.
Pupils assemble in the school-room at
nighi arid study under tlie supervision of
the Principal.
Home supplies taken in exchange for
hoard and tuition.
Idlers neither invited nor desired.
DA KIEL WALKER, Principal.
The illri el. qiilcli, llu-migli II e via Mor
gomery lo 'iexiiH. Mexico mid Calllorri
I lie best mule In f-e inn, Pensiicolii, Motil
Mew Orleans, Col 11111 )Ji is, Troy ,TJ a Ion Hprlrn
Id 11 f 1111 In.
Thu Follow lag Soho
Idle In K
fleet Dei
20,1807,
SOUTH BOUND
Dally.
Dully
Dully.
No. 96,
No. 87.
No. 81.
Lv. Atlanta
6 26 nn
4 20 pm
1 pm
A r. Now min
6 JIM a ii
6 26 pm
2 15 pm
Ar. LiiGriiiige
A r. West 1’oliit ....
7 :i an.
0 28 pm
3 83 pm
K On 11 in
0 66 prn
l 07 pin
'• V. Opelika
s id am
7 86 pm
■1|iin
Ar. ('nlumhiiH
10 /Hi an-
1 (' hi' pm
I 1 00 pm
Ar. Montgomery..,
10 91 an,
11 2(1 inn
7 V, 1 r«
Ar. Fcliria
N .
11 3o pm
A r. I'i'Uhiicoiu
Ar. Moblb*
0 10 pm
•1 la pm
s 30 pm
K -16 11 ti.
5 'Mi am
3 06 m rn
7 10 am
10 M prn
Ar. New OrleariH...
Ar. HniiHton........
NORTH BOUND.
Dally
Dtilly.
Dally
No. 98.
No. M.
No. 40.
Lv. Houston
0 65 pm
7 10 am
Lv. New Orleans...
7 W nm
Lv. Mobile
12'-ii inn
12 20 pm
L,v. PeiiKiieolu
11 26 pm
12 ik) inn
Lv. S. Inin
7 (ii "rn
1) W ; m
Lv. Montgomery...
20 am
11 V) Kill
ll ‘JO pm
Lv. CoiurnbuK
30 nn.
1 30 pin
Ar. Opt Ilk a
: 10 am
2 60 pro
0 05 Mil
Ar. wi'Kf Point
H 56 am
3 31 prn
HV- prn
Ar. i.aOrange
If 25 am
1 i4 prn
0 12 pm
Ar. Newnan
10 27 am
0 20 pm
10 18 pm
Ar. Atlanta
11 10 a in
7 00 prn
11 :i pm
axo.ii/ unu .is veHiinuieu inun,r-ieeping
Dining Curs, New S'orli and New Orb uns
No. 81 and iki Knlld truins WinOiliuctoi
New Orlcunx bleeper New York, Now
leans.
GEO. C. SMITH, JNO. A. GEE
Pres't, and Gen’l Mgr. Gen. Pum.Ai
GEL). W. A F.LKN, Trnv. Pass. Agt.
12 Kimball House, Atlanta, C
Plill