Newspaper Page Text
Herald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN. CA„ FRIDAY, MAY 19.
Entered at the l’ost Ollier, Newnan, (in., ns
second-class mail matter.
THE SONGS UNSUNG
k«sk»t m ■ u rn.
Sweet t tie songs of t he 11
irudi at dawning.
When the grass 1
IPS \u
■i with pnngled
dew,
trunk's low whin-
Sweet the sound of
the »
per
’Mid reeds nm
1 ru
-lies wandering
through;
u w ind’s mariner
Clear and pure is ll
ip we?
That croons in tli
ip branelip* all tiny Imig,
But the mug* unsung
are the sweetest
music,
And the dreams
that d
lie are the soul of
song.
The fairest hope is
llm n
lie which faded,
The brightest lea
f is 11
to leaf which fell.
The song“ that leaped
frdm the lips of
sirens
a shell:
Died away in an
old se
Far to the heights
Of vie
wless tauey
The soul's swift
High
t like a swallow
goes,
h the bird’s best
For the note titdu
■urd i
carol,
And the Imd tinh
low 11
is the reddest rose.
1 teepesl thoughts :
ire tie
5 ones u-spoken,
That only the
heart
-sense, listening,
the basis of some of our most endur
ing literature, and they have their
proper place in the local columns of a
country weekly. The homely twang;
the fAmiliar, but not impertinent, re
ference; the expression of thanks for
a present received; the friendly an-
nouncinent of an addition to a sub
scriber’s family; the hilarious con
gratulations when twins become a
part of the local population—all these
things bring the country editor closer
to his subscribers than the editor of a
daily can ever get, and give him the
influence and power which friendship
ever confers upon its objects.
Dr. Hepworth is a very keen ob
server. indeod. While the facts that
I ho haH discovered about the country
( editors in Georgia are plain enougli to
those to the manner born, they do
not rudely present themselves to the ! tu ^ e consequences,
! repeated the offense.
Merely Wished to Show How it
Worked.
I.ouisville Times.
Society is laughing itself sick over
an amusing incident which occurred at
a certain fashionable residence not
many days ago. A well-known young
lawyer was the victim.
He was calling on a local belle, and J
during the course of the evening took j
advantage of an opportunity and im- j
printed a kiss on the fair cheek of his
hostess, much to her surprise and in- I
dignation.
“Sir, how dare you!” she exclaim
ed, or words to that effect. “If you
ever presume to do a thing like that
again I’ll till my father!”
But the young lawyer either
thought that it was a blurt, or else j
liked it so well that he was willing to i
Anyhow, he !
eve of the ordinary traveler or visi - ! repeated me onei.se. He was not 1
tor. It may be that all country edi- very much surprised to see her jump
tors do not live up Lo their opportu- j U P a,lc * ' eave r0om a ^ ue a * r
of offended dignity.
hears:
The great joys bring a lout'll of silence,
Greatest grief is In unshed tears.
What we hear is the fleetest echo,
A song tiles mil, hut a dream lives on;
The rose red tints of lie rarest morning
A re lingering yet In a distant (law n.
Homewhere dim in the days to follow,
And far iiwi.y In the life to lie,
Passing sweet is a song of gladness,
The spirit clmnl of the soul set free:
Chord" untouched arc the ones we wait
for,
Thai never rise from the Imrp unstrung.
We turn our steps
And listen still f,
years le-yond it .
song- im
THE COUNTRY WEEKLIES.
A t tuntII ('ollMtit lit ion.
Dr. Geo. II. Hepworth, of the New
York Herald, who line been Investi
gating the lynching question In the
•South, has been very much struck
with the power and Inlluence of the
country editor iu Georgia. “There
seomB to he a paper at every point
where there ean he an excuse for its
•existence,” unys Dr. Hepworth. “The
editor is the main man at public func
tion*. He is the elder mourner at all
funerulH, the happiest man at all
weddings, and the proudest man,
.next to the father, at all christenings.
He is really a wonderful creation.”
All this Ih true In a larger sense in
Georgia than Dr. Hepworth has Indi
cated in hid genial summing up.
There iB probably not a State in the
Union where the country editor lutH
greater intlpence, or where the coun
try weekly has achieved a larger de
gree of prosperity In proportion to
population. For many years there
litis boon a sort of competition among
Georgia weeklies in rogard to the
character and extent of their local
and county nows service. This, in
turn, has aroused friendly rivalry
among neighborhoods and settle
ments, and the result has been to
make the county paper a sort of do
mestic institution, an indispensable
member of the family circle.
The editor nnd his county corres
pondents are friends nnd acquain
tances of their subscribers, so that
the country weekly is in the truest
nnd highest Bense a family newspa
per. The editor comes iu contact
with the majority of his subscribers,
nnd is never at a loss to know what
the public opinion of his county is on
any question of importance—being
more fortunnte in that respect than
the editor of the city dally.
Nevertheless, this knowledge does
not prevent the country editor from
following his owu convictions. He is
apt, indeed, to agree with the public
opiulon of his county, for the conclu
sions of a rural population are always
founded on reason, common sense and
a stern desire to see justice done; but
should his own convictions not lie
parallel to those of his subscribers,
the country editor Is free to advocate
them with such arguments and illus
trations as he ean muster. In that
respect he is both fearless and inde
pendent. He knows that his views
will receive a fair and patient hear
ing, and is assured that his indepen
dence will involve no loss of patron
age.
Some years ago there were some
country editors who had an Idea that
the weekly newspapers issued by the
city dailies were rivals calculated to
do them an injury. This idea, we
think, is no longer held in Georgia, j
Experience has shown that while the j
weekly edition of a daily newspaper
never drives a country weekly from a
family, it is frequently the means of
introducing it. Take the case of The
Weekly Constitution, which lias the
largest circulation ever achieved by
the weekly edition of any daily news
paper in America. We venture to
say that every family which receives
this paper also subscribes for the local
weekly if one is published iu the
county. The two sustain and support
each other. A family that gets the
general and miscellaneous news to be
found in The Weekly Constitution is
sure to crave the neighborhood news
printed in the county weekly.
It is the fashion of newspapers that
put on metropolitan airs to poke fun
at some of the methods of the country
weekly, bat we trust it will be long
before these methods cease to be na
tive-and provincial. These notes are
ve up
nities; but in Georgia, (luring the past
twenty-11 vo years, tint most of the
weeklies have fallen into the hands of
enthusiastic and ambitious young
j men, and, in pressing toward their
; own ideals of country journalism,
j they have done a great work tor
Georgia. They have elevated the
tone nnd character of the rural press,
and have been indispensable aids to
every movement looking to the pro
gress and prosperity of the people.
How He Prayed for a Robber.
Philadelphia Post.
The senior Senator from Colorado,
with lito exception of tho period he
served as Secretary of the Interior in
President Arthur’s cabinet, bus rep
resented his State iu the Senate since
her admission to the Union in the
centennial year. He is one of the
most dignified members of that body,
a man with whom It is difficult to con
nect a romantic episode, nnd yet in
the early dayB when he was a pioneer
in Gilpin county, Colorado, at the
time of the silver excitement there,
he was a participator iu many thrill
ing incidents. No one was more for
ward In insisting that the lnw should
be observed, and he was frequently
called upon to help in the execution
of justice.
it is told of him that on one occa
sion he took part in the lynching of a
Mexican who was caught robbing the
sluice-boxes. It was not the first of
fense, and the man had again nnd
again been warned, but to no pur
pose. The trial was conducted with
all order nnd propriety by tho miners
about there, and it was decided that
the culprit must hang. Senator Teller
took u prominent part in tho debnte,
and while he regretted the necessity,
he still advocated tho hanging ns Im
portant In maintaining law and or
der.
Tho preparations were made, the
rope fixed around the prisoner’s
neck, nnd everything wna ready for
his execution; nt this moment Sena
tor Teller, who is a deeply religious
man, asked for a stay in the proceed
ings, and suggested that a chance be
given the Mexican to pray—n privi
lege the poor wretch declined.' But
Teller, determined he should not
swing Into eternity without a prayer
being offered up In Ills behalf, bowed
his owu head and earnestly besought
the Almighty that the offe’nding
brother should not be punished iu the
next world for the cringe for which
they were sending him out of this
one. After the hanging Tom Bowen,
who subsequently served in the Up*
per House with Teller, camo up and
•aid I
“Old man, that was a great prayer
you put up. That Mexican ought to
have felt flattered, aud would If he
had understood you. I couldn’t help
but think, however, that there was a
certain amount of sarcasm in it. It
struck me that you displayed a fash
ion of insolent effrontery in urging
the admission to heaven of a Mexican
whom you had already condemned as
not good enough for Gilpin county,
Colorado. However, it was a great
petition, nnd ought to go a long way
toward getting the Mexican through
the great white gate.”
Don’t think you can cure that slight
attack of Dyspepsia by dieting, or that
it will cure" itself. Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure will cure it; it “digests what
you eat”"aud restores the digestive
organs to health. G. R. Bradley.
i Robert Cranford tells this story iu
South American Sketches: “A pavo
del monte, a bird of Uruguay uot un
like the turkey, had been winged by
n hunter. It fell to the ground, but
! was at once on its feet, and ran away.
Throwing his gun hastily asidQ, the
hunter started in pursuit, nnd a game
< of hide and seek ensued. Iu nnd out |
of the brushwood the pavo ran, and .
the man followed. In one of its |
doublings and turnings the bird passed j
over the gun, which was lying on the :
; ground, nnd its foot chanced to strike .
ngainst the trigger of the undis
charged barrel, the hammer of which, j
j in the hurry of the moment, had been I
j left at Jull cock. .There was a loud j
i report, followed by an exclamation of ■
pain from the man. The bird es- j
j caped, and the luckless hunter bad an j
j ugly wound in the fleshy part of his !
; leg to remind him for weeks after- I
ward of the adventure.” i
“That's all a bluff,” thought l\e.
“She will go upstairs and get a hand
kerchief and then come down and
scold me.” He was still in this frame
of ntiud when he heard the parlor
door behind him open. “There Hite
Ih,” thoug'ht tie. And then lie said
aloud: “Well, did you tell him?”
A moment later his blood froze in
horror as a deep voice replied : “Yes,
Mr. , my daughter told me”—
But there was no need to sny more.
At the sound of the unfamiliar voice
the young lawyer had looked around.
When lie saw the father with a long,
modern rifle iu his hands he waited
no longer.
With one bound he had reached
the window, and he went through it,
sash aud all, leaving his hat behind
him.
Whnt lie did not know was that the
j'oung lady’s anger had melted by the
time she had reached her father’s
room, but she decided lo play a joke
on him.
“Father,” said she, “Mr. is
downstairs. He is a great hunter and
a perfect ernnk on the subject of
rifles. I have been trying to explain
your new Winchester repeater to
him, but I can’t make him under
stand. Won’t you take It down and
show it to hint?”
Derangements of Menstrual Func
tions produce Miscarriage. Simmons
Squuw Vine Wine or Tablets correct
the derangements.
The Prayer of a Devout Parrot.
A resident of Pittsburg, who spent
part of last summer in England, tells
in an exchange an incident which
sadly disturbed the religious peace of
a parish in Penzance.
A maiden lady Of that town owned
a parrot which somehow acquired the
disagreeable habit of observing at
frequent intervals: “I wish the old
lady would die.”
Tills annoyed the bird’s owner, who.
spoke to her curate about it. “I think
we can rectify the matter,” replied
the good man. “I also have a parrot,
and he is a righteous bird, having
been brought up in the way he should
go. I will lend you my parrot, and I
trust his influence will reform that
depraved bird of yours.”
The curate’s parrot was placed in
the same room with the wicked one,
and as soon as the two had become
accustomed to each other the bad
bird remarked, “I wish the old lady
would die.” Whereupon the clergy
man’s bird rolled up its eyes and in
solemn accents said: “We beseech
Thee to hear na, good Lord!”
The story got out in the parish, and
for several Sundays it was necessary
to omit the litany at the church ser
vices.
Pneumonia, la grippe, coughs, colds,
croup and whooping cough readily
yield to One Minute Cough Cure. Use
this remedy in time and save a doc
tor’s bill—or the undertaker’s. G. R
Bradley. .
, The Troy Times tells of a visitor at
a public school who, being requested
to address the pupils, spoke of the
necessity of obeying their teacher and
growing up to be useful, loyal and pa
triotic citizens. To emphasize his re
marks, he pointed to a large Nation
al flag that almost covered one end
of the room, and said, “Now, boys,
who can tell me what that flag is there
for?” One little fellow, who under
stood the condition of the room bet
ter than the speaker, replied:
“I know, sir. It’s to bide the dirt.”
Wait and Take a Load.
Detroit Free Press.
One soldier boy, whose reputation
for veracity has never been ques
tioned, tells the following Btory of a
hospital experience during his stay in
Cuba:
‘/You see,” he said, “I was lying
on a cot, with the chills running up
and down my back so fast yon couldn’t
count them. Well, I was beginning to
bet with myself that I could have
more chills in two seconds than any
other man in the institution, when
some fellows walked in and stood
next to my cot. I was feeling pretty
tough, but turned over to hear what
they said.
“What are you going to do?” asked
an officer in a gruff voice, as three
men walked pdst, with a stretcher
containing dead bodies.
“ ‘Going to bury these poor fellows
on the hill,’ answered one of the trio.
“ ‘How many have you there?’
asked the officer.
“ ‘Two,’ answered the private.
“ ‘What! What time is it?’ cried
the officer.
“ ‘Four o’clock, sir,’ answered the
private.
“ ‘Well,’ snapped the officer, as he
walked away, ‘don’t be in a hurry.
Wait till 6 o’clock and take a load.’
“Say,” concluded the soldier boy,
USE
PRICKLY
ASH
BITTERS
roc KIIHfY DISEASE. STOMACH TtOUUE. i
mWCCSTIOH, LIVED DISORDER OR
CONSTIPATION.
IT CURES.
it. Brmu.ky, Special Agent, Newnan,Da.
The Evils of Flirtation.
I,adies’ Home Journal.
“In flirtation there is the same dis
sipated element of excitement so be
guiling in gambling—uncertainty; in
fact, we might add to the dictionary
definition a still later one': ‘To flirt,
gambling in hearts,’ ” writes Frances
Evans, “About Men.” “The flirt,
like the gambler, feeds Upon the in
toxication of his passions. In a few
years he becomes incapable of stead
fast, enduring love—that feeling
which in civilized man is separated
from the love of the barbarian by the
elemont of ideality, of spiritual sym
pathy as distinct front merely the at
traction of brute nature. The open-
P
jLANT LIFE, to be vig
orous and healthy, must
have
, minded, open-souled, manly man is
“it didn’t take me many hours to get t10 e8B hira8e if in abrupt praise
well and get out of that place.” | Qf what he likeHi but the ttirt knoW8
RoYal
Baking Powder
Made from pure
cream of tartar.
Safeguards the food
against alum.
Alum taking powder, arc the greatest
mcnaccn to health of the present day.
sorsi. .Musa swots CO., MEW toss.
There is no ease of biliousness, con
stipation, indigestion, “heart-burn,”
or any of the rest of the night-mnre
breeding brood, that Dr. Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets will not cure.
Woman's Noblest Vocation,
Ladies' Home Journal.
Good housekeeping is easy house
keeping, and if a woman wears her
self into shreds and tatters keeping
house the case is proven ngainst her.
It is precisely in her ability to ‘guard
against this contingency that the house
wife shows herself not only a good ex
ecutive officer but as well a woman
with ideals and a sense of proportion
—one who does not forget that house
keeping is a means to home-making,
not an end in itself—that the most
perfect administration of domestic
matters will not make a family happy
inVhom the love and spirit of home
do not dwell. Home—not only a
place to eat and sleep and work in,
but a place to be happy in, a place to
rest in and to be soothed, a place in
which to love and be loved, a place
for confidences, and counsel, and
strengthening words, and hope, and
heartening. It is a good thing, and a
noble thing, and a satisfying thing to
be a good housekeeper; there is no
profession of which and in which a
woman can be so proud, and when so
blessed in bead and heart and band
as to be able to make and keep one
of those real homes which is a “little
sunny spot of green in the grent des
ert of the world”—if there is any
thing better than this in fife I have
not found it.
If “Out of Sorts,” Cross and Pee
vish, take Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver
Medicine. Cheerfulness will return
and life acquires new zest.
An old darky mammy of my ac
quaintance once asked a woman
friend of mine if she was married.
“No,” replied the lady. “An’ is you
contented?” pursued the darky. “Oh,
quite,” returned the woman with a
smile. “Well,” said the old woman,
thoughtfully, “I believe old maids is
de happiest dey is—after dey quits
struggling.” I often think the same
way about age. It is the happiest
and sereneBt time there is after we
face the facts and give up trying to
color our hair and reconcile ourselves
to a comfortable waist measure, and
quit struggling. There isn’t any
manner of doubt that we should avoid
making ourselves ridiculous if we had
the courage to sooner accept this and
take a good, honest look.in our mir
rors. Then we should be spared the
elderly ladies, we see dressed up like
young girls, with rouge on their faded
old cheeks, false hair over their gray
locks, who are simpering and oggling
and buildibg up castles of romance iu
their weak brains.
Prickly Ash Bitters cares the
kidneys, regulates the liver, tones up
the stomach and purifies the blood.
Sold by G. R. Bradley.
A clergyman who had been greatly
annoyed by the continued interrup
tions to which he had been subjected
by the whispering that went on dur
ing the delivery of his sermon,
stopped abruptly, and, looking round
at the congregation, said: “Some
time ago, while delivering my ser-
i mon, I was frequently interrupted by
a gentleman sitting in front of me
; who gesticulated, moved about and
whispered to his neighbors, and at
; last I addressed to him a sharp re-
! primand for his unseemly conduct.
! When the service was over my clerk,
! iu the vestry, mentioned the matter
| to me, and asked if I was ignorant of
' the fact that person addressed was an
; idiot! I have since then always hesi-
1 tated to reprimand any of my congre
gation for interrupting me, in the fear
that I may be addressing an idiot,
wbo is not responsible for bis ac
tions.” Silence reigned throughout
the delivery of the remainder of his
sermon.
better than to take the edge off of a
compliment by giving it publicity.
The flirt is invariably confidential in
his manner. A flirt becomes un
scrupulous in his relations with wo
men, no matter how high a code of
honor he may abide by in other mat
ters. His conscience is calloused on
one side beyond remedy. There is no
germ which develops more rapidly
than the flirtatious bacteria. Given
a yonng man or woman whose pride
is wounded more deeply than his or
her love by a member of the opposite
sex, then, if there be a slight flirta
tious tendency to begin with, it will
be but over night before the weed has
grown to surprising proportions,
choking out conscience and kindness
while it supports and strengthens
vanity, which stands close by wound
ed affections in the human heart.”
Everlasting Itching
And Burning of the Skin on Face
Cured by CUTICURA.'
For tho last three months I have been troubled
with au everlasting itching and burning ol the
akin on my face, and did not know what to do
to cure it. I was prevailed upon to try CtITi.
cub* Remedies. The result was simply won.
derfut. In one week after using the Cuticura
go*p and Cuticura Resolvent I tone entirely
rid ofit % and my skin is in a healthy condition.
D.I1. VAN QLAHN.Tll Stocktonst., San Fran. Cal.
CUTICURA RESOLVENT begins with theblood
and ends with the skin and scalp. That Is to ssy
It pur.ties the blood and circulating fluids of
HUMOR GERMS, and thus removes Ute caute
while warm baths with CUTICURA SOAP, and
gentle anointings with CUTICURA (ointment),
greatest ol emollient skin cures, cleanse the skin
and scalp of crusts and scales, allay Itching, burn
ing, and Inflammation, soothe and heal. Thus are
apeedily, permanently, a^d economically cured
the most torturing, disfiguring humors of the
akin, ecalp, and blood, with lose of hair, when the
best physicians and all other remedies fell.
Potash
Phosphoric Acid and Nitrogen.
These essential elements are
to plants, what bread, meat and
water are to man.
Crops flourish on soils well
.supplied with Potash.
Our pamphlets tell how to buy and apply
fertilizers, and are free to all.
OCRHAN KALI WORKS,
03 Nassau St., New York.
New Advertisements.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanaea aud beautifies the hair.
Promote! a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Bcotore Gray
Hair to Its Youthful Color.
Curca acalp disease! St hair tuUiiur.
^^^Oc^amlj^OOt^DruggUt*^^
Cblcheeter** Enfllah THanAOnd llmnd.
Pennyroyal pills
■ Original and Only Genuine. a
aarc, always reliable, ladies ask
Druggist for Chlchuier'B Knglith Dia l8\\
mond Brand in Had and Gold metalUa\\fty
boxea, sealed.with blue ribbon. Take Vy
lao other. Btfuto dangerov* $ubttitu- v
’timuand imitationa. At Druggista, oraend 4<*
In stamp! for particulars, testimonials an I
•* Relief IWr I-adlea," in IeMtr, by retarn
Mali. 10.000 Testimonials. Nimo'Poptr.
. 'ChleheaterCaaaUialCanMadlion Place,
Sold by ail Local Drugglau. . FHILADA.. PA.
Skin Diseases,
For the speedy and permanent cure o!
tetter, salt rheum and eczema, Cham
berlain’s Eye and Skin Ointment i
without an equal. It relieves the itch
ing and smarting almost instantly an I
its continued use effects a perm'aneni
cure. It also cures itch, barber's itch,
scald head, sore nippies, itching piles,
chapped hands, chronic sore eyes ani
granulated lids.
I)r. Cady’s Condition Powders foi
horses are the best tonic, blood purifiei
and vermifuge Price, 25 cents. Soldb)
HOLT’S DRUG STORE.
J. D. Bridge, editor and proprietor
of the Democrat, Lancaster, N. H. r
says: “I would not be without One
Minute Cough Cure for my boy, when
troubled with a cough or cold. It is
the best remedy for cronp I ever
need.” G. R. Bradley.
He Didn't Forget It.
A yonng married lady one morning
gave her husband a sealed letter,
which he was to read when he got to
his office. He did so, and the letter
ran as follows:
“I am obliged to tell you something
that may give you pain, but there is
no help for it. You shall know ev
erything, whatever be the conse
quences. For the last week I have
felt like it must come to this, but I
have waited until the last extremity,
and can remain silent no longer. Do
not overwhelm me with bitter re
proaches, for you will have to put up
with yonr share of the trouble as well
as myself.”
Cold perspiration stood in thick
drops on the brow of the husband,
who was prepared for the worst.
Trembling he read on:
“Our coal is all gone. Please order
a ton to be sent this afternoon. I
thought you might forget it for the
tenth time, and therefore wrote you
this letter.”
But he didn’t forget it that time!
If you have piles, cuke them. No
use undergoing horrible operations
that simply remove the results of the
disease without disturbing the dis
ease itself. Place your confidence in
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It has
never failed to cure others; it will
not fail to cure you. G. R. Bradley.
Manitoba is suffering from a “girl
famine.” Servants, apparently, can
not be hired. The young woman who
acts as general servant in a private
family can easily command $16 a
month at Winnipeg; the parlor maid,
$18; the cook, $25, and the laundress,
$15 to $20. A number of Scotch las
sies were brought to the province
last spring, and already over 50 per
cent, of them are married.
F.C. CORSETS
MAKE
American Beauties.
c.
LATEST
MODELS.
On lack Box, >
Kalamazoo Corset Col
SOLE MANUFACTURERS.
SOLD BY
JOHN ASKEW, Newnan, Ca.
There is more power in kindness
than there is in dynamite, but it takes
longer to find it out.
RED R0U6H HAND8
made Soft and White bji
CCTICUBA So A F.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays., and nntil 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning nntil Mon
day noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a bus
iness or pleasure trip to the East
should Investigate and consider tbs
advantages offered via Savannah and
steamer lines. The rates generally
are considerably cheaper by this
route, and, in addition to this, pas
sengers save sleeping car fare and the
expense of meals en route, as tickets
include meals and berths aboard ship.
We take pleasure in commending 1t>
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Hallway to Savannah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to New York and Bos
ton, and the Merchants and Miners
line to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling public
Is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
| handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangements. The
tables are supplied witli all the deli
cacies of the Eastern aud southern
i markets. All the luxury and comforts
I of a modern hotel while on board ship,
! affording every opportunity for rest,
! recreat Ion or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
| look especially after ladies and chil-
i dren traveling alone.
For information as to rates and
sailing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations, apply to nearest ticket
ageut of this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, (Jen. Pass. Agt.,
E. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, It*.
Itch 'on human cured in 30 minutes ty
Wool ford’s Sanitary Lotion. This never
fails. Sold by J. T. Reese, Druggist, New-
nan, Ga.