Newspaper Page Text
THE HERALD AND ADVERTISER.
VOL. XXXIII.
NEWNAN. GA.,' FRIDAY, MARCH 11. 1808.
NO. 22
A MOTHER’S MEMORIES.
1 have no royal store of wealth :
My treasure tills lint one small client;
Vet when 1 lift its Imgerhm; liil
, My soul is then with sweetness hlost;
Foe there's a lock of silky hair
Shilling bright with ninny gleams—
More rich to me I Itfin nil I he gold
Thut lies in heels of Afrie's streams.
Anil there I see a single curl
That round my very heart entwines—
More precious than the dazzling Rems
'That sparkle from the dusky mines.
.And all around the tinv clothes
With color faint ain't faded lie:
Yet more to me than Orient stulfs
Or riches house from Syrian dye.
And underneath the broken toys.
Rereft of all their pristine bloom.
Hut value'll more than curio quaint
From antique shrine or rilled tomb.
For. O. those trilies are to me
Far more than any treasure's train:
Through them 1 waken memory
And have my children buck again.
A VAGRANT MAGICIAN.
ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1898.
H r>ms urrs A-i-i-r-s . ,, . _ _ , , His Performance Mystified an Attdleocc of
ERE WE ARE AGAIN, ASKING I HE PATRONAGE Prominent Men.
of our home people, who have supported us so liberally and VaVaMtue follow, with *uiow
used our fertilizers so extensively during the past ten vears ’From ! r n , ,plexion ; ci,, t; v ,1’ l,,ck hnl 5’?°T!
2,500 tons in 1887 to 12,000 tons in 1807 is a long step, and vet this l intHthe,n,fl ' etoftho ,ro<luo,Bat8:3 °
* 1*1 4.1 r 1 11^ * * 1 o’clock Iasi; night. Ho wan about 21
IS tnc TGCOl Q Which the nieilt Ol Olll ^OOCIS CtlciDJCS US to snow. JyeurB old, Hmoothe-nhavon, wore ft
We solicit your patronage again, because we furnish you the|2£j£ St £ J3KVS
highest grade fertilizer for less money (or less cotton, which is the 1 tlie Won - Cornelius coughiin, loader
same thing,) than any other reliable guano company will or can do. and smiled.
We manufacture the highest grade of goods sold for field crops in i ,pre ! t0 !” 1 Ba * d * ,n «-oftgnttu-
the bouth. Only the best quality of 1 ennessee phosphate rock is Coughlin's right, our.
used in making our Acid Phosphates, and the very best and richest : . .SKIT£
ige that can be bought enters into the manufacture of our i t0 „„
blood tankage-that can be bought enters into the manufacture of our, . „ ,
i*i 1 \\T 1 ° r| , ,, . "FrostoI” ho said again, nnd took
high-giacle guanos. Wc do not use tillers, or coloring matter of a dollar out of Frank l. Bupst’s nose,
any kind, and every pound of fertilizer bearing our brand is guar |
anteed to be just as represented. We have raised the guarantee of ln lemon and toased them ceiiinR-
i r , i*i’ ttt ... <7 ward and they never came back—at,
sevei a I ot oui biands tins season. v\ c. respectfully invite your at* j ' enB t> 1,0 otie saw them. tie held out
‘ention to our own guaranteed analyses, and then'to the analyses j“£&
made by the State Chemist from
been shipped.
We are offering this season, for the first time, a very high-grs
Potash Acid, which we guarantee 13 per cent, available and 4 \
cent, potash', under the brand of “13 AND 4
BONE AND POTASH.
You should investigate the merits of these goods,
ade
icr
DISSOLVED
BRAN D
o
AURORA AMMONIATED P HOSE HO
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF GEORGIA!
Georgia official analysis for 1894 and 1895
Georgia official analysis for 1895 1896
COWETA HIGH-GRADE FERTILIZER.
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF GEORGIA
Georgia oifici'a! analysis tor 1894 ;inf * 1895.. • •
Georgia official analysis for 1895 and 1896.. .
Georgia official analysis for 1896 and 1897
COWETA ANIMAL BONE
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE ;
Georgia official analysis tor 1894 and 1895
Georgia official analysis for 1895 and 1896.. . .
Georgia official analysis for 1896 and 1897
W. O. C., (A Pure Blood Guano.)
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF GEORGIA
Georgia official analysis for 1894 and 1895
Georgia official analysis for 1895 and 1895
Georgia official analysis for 1896 and 1897
A. A. P,, (Acid, Ammonia and Potash.)
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF GEORGIA
Georgia official analysis lor 1894 and 1895
Georgia official analysis for 1895 and 1896.
Georgia official analysis for 1896 and 1897
COWETA DISSOLVED BONE AND POTASH.
GUARANTEED ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF GEORGIA
Georgia official analysis for 1894 and j S95
samples drawn after goods have card9, Uos,iufil0d th0 nmlsf i uk *iy
1 . & with a fan shuffle.
“Look lit n card ns I shuffle,” ho
said to William H. Kineh. “Don't
toll mo whut It Is. You’ve thought?
There’s your card,” and he threw a
card, face downward, on the marble
top of I ho table.
Klnch looked at the card.
“Wrong,” he said, and threw (ho
card down again on its face. “That’s
the nine of diamonds. ' I looked and
thought of the five of clubs.”
“Pick up the card,” said (ho wiz
ard.
Klnch picked it up. It was the live
of clubs.
“Presto!” said the magician.
He handed the dock of cards to
James Kennedy, who was sitting bo-
sidn W. J. Conners.
“Look at a card,” he said.
Kennedy peeped at a card.
“Pass the deck on,” said the wiz
ard.
Kennedy handed it to Conners,
who peeped at a card and handed t.iie
deck to Bnpst, who peeped at a card,
and handed the deck to Coughlin,
who peeped at a card. They shuf
fled 'the dock and handed it to the
magiciun, who took off the top card
and handed it to Kennedy. Kennedy
looked at it.
“Wrong,” tie said, handing it to
Conners.
Wrong,” said Conners, and hand
ed it to Bapst.
Wrong.” said Bnpst, and handed
it to Coughlin.
“Wrong,” said Coughlin.
The card was the ace of spades.
“Look at the card again,” said the
wizard.
Coughlin looked. All saw it. The
card was the throe of clubs, the card
Coughlin had selected in his peep in
the deck. The wizard handed the
F GEORGIA
Georgia official analysis for 1895 and 1896 14-B7
Georgia official analysis for 1896 and 1897 15.50
“13 X 4” DISSOLVED BONE AND POTASH.
Guaranteed analysis for 1S9S
CO W ETA 111G H-G R A D f
ACID PHOSPHATE.
GEORGIA
GUARAN I ANALYSIS FOR STATE OF
Georgia official analysis for 1894 and 1895
Georgia ol'ii :ial analysis for 1895 an(d 1896
Georgia ofifi Gi analysis for 1896 and 1897
1
j Amrnoniated
Phos. Acid. ,
Ammonia.
I
I
jz !
C/3
Ol
£ |
8 GO
2.00
1.50
10.67
2.50
2.40
11 '35
2.21
2.77
1 11.46
1
2.24
2-59
1
10.00
2.00
|
2.00
10.07
2.87
2.84
10.65
2.80
2-59
11.23
2-59
2.29
10.00
2.00
2.00 |
11.60
2.65
3.80
11.76
2.45
2.61
11.78
2.46
2.69
10.00
•
2.50
2.00
10.38
3-42
4.42
10.90
3-38
2-33
11.60
3-4 1
3-07
9.00
1.00
1.50
12.13
1.83
2.03
12.22
1.74
1.61
**•35
2.20
2.10
,
r 2.00
....
2.00
12.36
2-37
14.87
1.78
*5-50
2 60
13.00
4.00
1 5.00
....
15.22
1 7.08
i
16.23
ALU—_
!
....
ard borrowed a knife from Kinch’s
loft enr and opened it.
“Presto!” he said, and scattered
the cards all over the table with the
point .of the blade.
Then one by one he picked out the
four cards the four men had looked at
and impaled them on the tip of the
knife. lie was blindfolded all the
while, and had not touched the dock
with his fingers. The spectators be
gan to feel creepy. The wizard re
moved the bandages front his eyes
and took up a collection. Ills hat
hold n number of. silver pieces. He
jingled them and turned the hut up
side down. There was nothing in it.
lie bought a drink. Tito glass seem
ed to vanish down his throat. He
turned and look it out of a drummer’s
hat. He laid 60 cents on the cash
ier’s desk, pointed at it and it vanish
ed.. He snapped his lingers and a
lemon lay on tho desk. He threw
the lemon up in tho air anti walked
out. The lemon vanished and the
wizard found it In a man’s hat in tho
lobby of the hotel.
He halted and tore a button off Mr.
Coughlin’s coat. All saw tho button
was off. He put it back and told Mr.
Coughlin to blow on it. Mr. Cough
lin blow and tho button was back in
place and bore no sign of having
been removed. He threw a card up
ten feet In tho air. It nailed back
and rested 011 bin open palm. Ho did
It again. Ho tossed tho card a third
time and it vanished. Then the wiz
ard vanished, leaving a lot of dazed
and creepy men behind him.
DanM Wasn’t Fitten.
“IT my son Dtin’l had lived ho’d bo
about 20 y’ars old now,” said the old
mountaineer, as wo sat smoking our
pipes after supper. “Pore Dan’ll lie
wasn’t lltten, and he knowod lie
wasn’t lltten, hut tie jest hung on 'till
lie died.”
“Then ho didn't die of sickness?”
I asked.
“No, sail — not exactly. It was
about six y’ars ago, snli. We was go-
in’ to hold tho county fair ovor at
Rodney, and they was golti’ to hov
hoBS-races, jumpin’ matches, and all
sorts of games. One of the amooso-
' monts was climbin’ a groaned pole.
! Ever li’ar of it?”
“Oh, yes.”
“It was a pole thirty feet high, and
greased ’till it was like glass. On top
i of it was a silver dollar, and whoever
dumb that pole could get the money.
! When my son Dnn’l heard of it he sez
to me:
| “ ‘Pop, I’m a dollar ahead.’
“ ‘An’ how?’ sez I.
“ ‘As to climbin' that pole. I’ll do
j it as snail’s yo’r lio’ni’
j “I told him he wasn’t iltten,” said
| the falhnr with a sigh. “lie was !
The Sentinel Fled From the Owls.
Ilarrodshurg (liy.) Democrat.
A few dnys ago several ex-Confed-
orutes, who happened to meet in an
Office Row room, wore discussing
Ool. Sears’ “Why the South Lost,”
published in the Courier-Journal of
a recent dale. Tliis led to vari
ous kinds of war talk, and ex-County
Attorney W. B. Allin (old this one:
He said that just before the battle of
Murfreesboro, a detachment of Mor
gan’s command was guarding a moun
tain puss a few miles from Bradyville,
Tcnn. A portion of tho valley lend
ing to the pass was densely weeded
and swampy. The marshy ground
abounded in bullfrogs of huge pro
portions, mid the trees afforded iny-
i rinds of owls of immense Rizo a roost-
1 ing-plneo. Among tho soldiers was n
I stripling from near Stanford, by the
name of Spooler. It was a gloomy,
j wild and windy night that Spooler
| was called upon to do guard duty.
Along about l o’clock, when the sky
was of 11 leaden hue and tlie wind
■sighed fitfully through tho trees, an
owl on a nearby limb booted:
“Who—who—who are you?”
“John Spooler,” excluimod tho sen
tinel, trembling in ids boots.
Just at that moment a bullfrog, in
deep biiRH tones, seemed to say:
“Sur—sur—surround him!”
“I'll be darned if you do,” ex
claimed Spooler, ns be fired his mus
ket and broke for camp, which lmd
been thrown into tlie wildest confu
sion by tlie alarm, it being thought
that, the enemy wan attacking the
outposts. When the true state of af
fairs was understood, the others made
life a burden for John until tlie bat
tle of Murfreesboro, when tlie Lin
coln county stripling was promoted
for conspicuous bravery. He was
afterward assigned to Bragg’s army,
and died like a hero at tho “battle
above tho clouds,” while in tho fore
front of the charge and trying to
spike an enemy’s cannon,
There are three little things which
do more work than any other three
little things created—they are the
ant, the hoe and DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers, the last being tlie famous lit
tle pills for stomach and liver trou
bles. G. R. Bradley.
A Southern man says the daisy wna
never known in tho South until after
the war. Now every part of the
South visited by tlie Union army is
covered with daisies. “Sherman
brought them to us,” he said,
“and Ills march to the sea can be fol
lowed in tlie summer time by keep
ing where l.lio daisies grow. The
seed seem to have been transported in
the hay that was brought along to
! feed tlie horses. This is the only ex
planation Hint has been made of it.”
—[Savannah Press.
bowed in the legs and his heels turned I
out, and no sieli critter is fitten to 1 Bucklen's Arnica Salve,
climb a pole. He was determined, * l,l ‘ Sat,via in the world for
though. He got a pole, greased i( up " ,H ’ Horc8 > Ulce™, Satt
and planted it out tliar by the stone , lr)m(1f() chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
Eruptions, and positively cures Pilot,
or no pay required. It in guaranteed
it was the jack of ciubs, Bapst’s
•d. The wizard handed it to Hon
rs, and lo! it was the queen of
ides, Conners’ card. The wizard
“Wrong,” said Kennedy. “My
ird was the three of diamonds.”
“That’s tlie three of diamonds,”
rid the wizar
All looked.
and begun to practice. He could git
up about ten feet, but no mo’. I
kept tollin’ him he wasn’t lltten, and
liis ma kept tollin’ liitn he wan't lltten,
but he wouldn’t give up. He was out
airly in the mnwiiin’, and lie was out
lulo at night, and tie hugged that
polo ’till the grease wuh ready to fry
out’n him. Ono evenin’ 1 begun to git
mad, hut Dnn’l speaks up in a lone
some voice and with tears in his eyes
sez:
“ ‘Pop, I’ll iiev one mo’ try at it.
If I git to tho top then I’m iltlen; if I
can’t do It, then I’m unlibten.’ ”
“And did he get there?”
“Of eo’se not—of co’so not. I told
you he had crooked legs and his heels
turned in. Couldn’t possibly git tliar.
I went out about midnight to look fur
him, end lie lay tliar dead. Ho felt
that he was unfltten, hut lie was
bound to climb up or bust, and bunc
hy lie busted. Jest lay thar, all bust
ed to squash, and shuck my hide if
wo could ever git grass to grow on
his grave fur the grease that was
oozin’ up through tho silo!”
We hav
HEWN AN—J. W. Bowers, J.
Arnall & Farmer Mdse. Co
Hunter,
MORELAND-
TURIN— Frei
the following representatives in Cov/eta county this year:
S. Anderson, SHARPSBURG—J. H. Wynn.
, Hardaway & SENOIA—J. F. Arnall.
W. T Gibson. GRANTVILLE—T. M Zellars.
POWELVILLE—J. M. Coggin.
SARGENT—A. H Arnall.
I desire to attest to the merits of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy as one
of the most valuable and efficient.
It was the three of | Preparations on tho market. It broke'
an exceedingly dangerous cough for
1 me in 24 hours, and in gratitude
therefor i desire to inform you that I
! will never be without if, and you
^should know of the nigh esteem in
, which your remodi -a are held by
people mi general, ft is one remedy
among ten thousand. Success to it.—
O. R. Dow;;j.v, Editor Democrat, Al
bion, Jnd. For sale by C. R. Bradley,
Newnan; H. A. & B, 'J'. Camp, Grant-
vilie; W. A. Brannon, Moreland.
By this time the cafe was crowded
itli people. Every one was jostling
ad eager to see what would happen
ext. The wizard plucked cards from
verywhere and sent them spinning
ito nowhere. He asked Corn mis-
oner Martin Maher to blindfold him.
hey not only tied a handkerchief
H. Russell,
-W. A. Brannon.
Hunter.
el over the handkerchief. Then,
blindfolded, the wizard had the four
; men select four cards without his
touching the deck. They put the
cards back in the deck, shuffled it.
out it into three piles and laid the
I piles on the marble table. The wiz-
riott t 'hilrnccu Spit i 1 ' <1 Smoke Vour l ito Airn)',
Tn ri:Ct-.l.-.-oo ito nilrl f :.!•<;< f.r. lie min'
to give perfect satisfaction, or money
refunded. Price 26 cents per box.
For sale by G. R, Bradley.
if a man would have an untarnish
ed name, ho shotdd keep bin door
plate well polished.
Free of Charge lo Sufferers.
Cut, (his out and take it to your
druggist tind get a sample bottle
free of Dr. icing’s New Discovery for
| Consumption, Coughs and Colds.
They do not ask you to buy before
| trying. This will show you the great
met its of tins truly wonderful remedy,
! and show you what can be accom
plished by the regular size bottle,
i This is no experiment, and would be
I disastrous to the proprietors, did they
l not know it would invariably cure.
Many of the best physicians are now
i using it in their practice with great
results, and are relying on it in most
I severe cases. It is guaranteed. Trial
! bottles free at Bradley’s Drug Store.
| Regular price 60e. and $J.
Hr:—“Are you sure that you love
; me, dearest?”
She—“Why, Reginald, I’d marry
i you if your name were Jake.”
The Corning Woman
who goes to the club while her hus
band tends (he baby, as well as the
good old-fashioned woman who looks
after her homo, will both at times get
run down in health. They will bo
troubled with loss of appetite, head-
nebe, sleeplessness, fainting or dizzy
.pills. The most wonderful remedy
for these women is Electrib Bitters. 1
Th .re amis of sufferers from Lame
La: :< and Weak Kidneys rise up and
call it blessed. It is the medicine for
•.voir.cn. Female complaints nnd Ner-
1 vons troubles of all kinds ure soon re-
iieved by the use of Electric Bitters.
Delicate women should keep this
> remedy on hand to build up the sya-
tern. Only 50c. per bottle.