Newspaper Page Text
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in Vise for over 30 years, has home tlio signature of
» and has been made under his per
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow uo one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-ns-pood” are but
Experiments that tritto with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children--^Experience again*; Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Cnstorin is a harmless substitute for Cnstor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its r age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and naturul sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
frHC CtNTtUW OOM9KN*, 7T WU*T»AY 6TRCCT, NIWVQRR CITY.
Now is Your Time
To Buy Dry Goods Notions and Dress
Goods Cheap.
I have determined to close out this line of goods
and replace them with House Furnishing Goods, Toys,
Holiday Goods, etc.
If 1 do not save you from I to 3 cents per yard
on Dress Goods, 1 will give vou a dress. "This is no
joke”—1 mean what 1 say. These goods have got to
go, regardless of cost.
I have a few pieces of white and red Flannels
left, (all wool) which 1 will sell at a big'discount.
Several bolts of Standard Bleaching at less'than
factory price to-day.
Hats, Sun Bonnets, Dress Shirts and Working
Shirts, Collars, Ties—Hosiery, in fact, everything in
this line has got to go.
1 have a nobby line of Men’s and Boys’ Pants
from 33c. to $3.50 pair.
Don’t put off your visit; come now and get first
choice. This offer holds good until the last piece is
gone.
H. F. JARRELL,
NEWNAN. GEORGIA.
Fancies in Furniture!
Splendid New Stock, at Old-Time Prices!
Everything in Housefurnishing Goods!
Oak Suites, $12.
P’cplar Suites, $8 to $10.
Dining Chairs, six for $3. /
Large lot Arm Rockers, cobbler
seat and cane seat.
Wicker Rockers amf upholstered
Rockers. $ i .50 up to $7.
Nice selection of Center Tables
and Dining Tables. Baby Cribs
and Baby Chairs.
Full line Oak Bedsteads, and the
best bed springs you ever slept on—
noiseless, smootn, and will last a
life-time. Try one free.
Several good makes of organs,
$2C up to $125.
Best Stoves and Ranges on the
market, made for service and to do
the family cooking perfectly.
Best 8-day Clocks to be had in
Newnan. Will let you have one
cheap. See them.
Sewing Machines, $15 to $35.
Mattings, Rugs and Carpets.
Reese’s Furniture Store.
MORPHY
disease cured by TACK-A-POU-SHA
345942 cases in 17 years
The disease ie the national curse of Japan
and China. A remedy waa imperative and
the medical profession there accepted thia
aa the only permanent, painleae, private,
quick cure :;aown to science. A weekr
treatment FltEK OF CHARGE. Phy-
eiciane and all confidentially treated by matL
Core gnaranteed.
HOME TREATMENT CO. f
123 West 42<1 St., New Yopjt City.
Robert sims burch.
Robert SRns Burch was born in
Hancock county, Ga., August 23d,
1814. and died in Newnan, Ga., Oeto- !
her 27th, 1900.
Ho was educated In the schools of j
his native county, attending at one :
time the famous academy at Mt. Ziou, I
under Dr. Beetnan.
In early mnuhood he enlisted in the
Indian war of 1830-37. On his return j
from the war he was married Dec. 12th, i
1837, to Miss Martha Spear Reid. She
was a noble woman, exerting a re
markable influence over her husband
for life. They both joined the Baptist
church In Newnan in 1855. Her death
preceded his s ' x years.
Six children were born to them—
one dying in infancy, and another,
George Tilly, a bright and brave
young man, was killed In the Confed
erate war. Four children remain—
Mrs. Susan R. Hunter, Mrs Isora B.
Hardaway, Mrs. Isadore Robinson, all
of Newnan, and Mr. .fames R. Burch,
of Thomas county, Ga.
In early life Bro. Burch read law
under Hon. Alexander H. Stephens.
Subsequently he was a law partner
of Mr. Stephens for a number of
years. He was remarkably success
ful at the bar, winning the confldeuce
and esteem of such illustrious meu as ’
Stephens, Toombs. Crawford, Lump- .
kin, and others. He lived and prac-
ticed law In Crawfordville, Newnan, j
Marietta and Thomnsvllle.
Some men are subject to environ
ments; a few are independent of sur
roundings; some are the creatures of
adventitious conjunction; a few nre
the creators of conjunctions; some men
are the products of favoring fortune;
a few nre before there is any fortune.
Most men are made; a few are born,
Robert S. Burch was inherently,
structurally, constitutionally a matt.
He wrs not subject to any winds of
chance, Indeed, he “stood four
squares to all the winds, that blew.”
It may he truly said of him—
"The elements
So mix'd in him, that Nature might stand
Up
And'say to all ttie world. This was a man.”
He was a man morally; a man in
constitutional principles; a man in
character. The character is xvhat the
man f«—what he lain moral imake-up.
Just ns the material in the fabric—it
may be cotton, wool or sJfk—makes
the cloth, so men nre made by the
principles that enter into the forma
tion of character. Justice, mercy,
truth, are principles inherent in the
character of a moral man. The char
acter in the fallen man may be
wrecked, dislocated, it*i pillars lean
ing. even fallen, yet it is a moral
wreck, having still the splendor of its
divine origin, and henring still the
sceptre of Its ancient dominion—“ac
cusing or else excusing.”
Otrr 'brother, as a man of moral
■character, was distinguished by prin
ciples, ‘convictions and candor. He
was a man 1 Of principles. Not notions,
sentiments, impulses—but fixed, in
flexible principles ruled him. In warp
and woof he was wool; in foundation,
walls, turret, he was stone. Justice
and truth are generic in moral;?
These he had pre-eminently. They
made him a lion in opposition to all
wrongs and shams.
He was a man of convictions—nec
essarily, from the texture of his na
ture. He had opinions. He took a
position. He was never a fence-rider.
He was no go-between. Minds, like
’bodies, may he divided into the ver
tebrate and invertebrate—with or
without spina 1 ! column. His mind was
supported 'by a backbone as strong as
iron. When ills decision was made,
his judgment formed, he was invinci
ble. He would go down, but never
surrender his convictions. He would
die for the faith in him. He was of
the stem stuff of which martyrs are
made. The world needs more such
men.
He was a man of candor. There
was no reason for such a man to be
otherwise. In principles and convic
tions there is nothing to conceal. Ho
was open, frank, clear-natured—not
one thing outside and another inside.
You knew him when he spoke—knew
what and where he was. His face, his
lips, his words, were exact represen
tations of the man. He was incapa
ble of deceit—as innocent of duplici
ty as an infaut. You .could always
put your hand on him and say, here
he is, and here he will stand.
But above all he was a man, relig
iously. The grace of God engrafted
in such a moral Btock as was his gives
the finest specimen of a Christian,
He was not a popular specimen. He
was an Elijah, a John the Baptist in
rugged religious honesty;—they were
not popular. In his religion he was a
true and good man. How true he
was! True in all the relations and du
ties of life. He was pre-eminently
true—loyal as a Spartan in every re
flation of life—a fast friend, devoted
husband and father, faithful Christian.
One of his distinguishing religions
traits was reverence for God. He had
profound veneration for Him. Before
God, this courageous lion became a
lamb, this fierce disputant a teachable
child. When God spoke he bushed—
he obeyed.
He was a good man, easily touched
—tender-hearted as a child—ever re
sponsive to need and suffering. He
■has scattered benefactions all through
bis life. His was the purest goodness.
There is pare and there is selfish
goodness. He did good from a sense
of duty and right. He never thought
of recompense for it. To do good for
pay is mercenary—is the worst form
of selfishness. He did not favor and
help men to buy them. He kept no ac
count of his favors. Alas, that there
should be such a thing, especially in
the realm of religion, as barter in the
virtues, the duties of life;—such an
anomaly as the perversion of good
ness into pnrehase-money—making it
boodle hidden nnder the guise of fa-
CATARRH:
FORERUNNER OF
CONSUMPTION.
I-ew realize what a deep-seated, obstinate disease Catarrh is, regarding it as a simple inflammation,of
the no-e and throat, little or no attention is given it. Hut, lioweverdnsignificnnt it may seem at firstf it
is serious and far-reaching in its results.
The foul secretions entering the circulation poison tiro entire system. The stomach, kidneys — in
fact all ihc organs— feel the effect of this catarrhal poison, and when the lungs nre reached its progress
is rapid and destructive, and finally ends in consumption.
It frequently happens tlint the senses of hearing and smell are in part or entirely lort, the soft bones of
the nose eaten into and destroyed, causing intense suffering and greatly disfiguring the face. While spruys,
washes and salves may give temporary relief, no permanent benefit can be expected from such treatment.
CATARRH IS A CONSTITUTIONAL OR BLOOD DISEASE,
Rtul far beyond the reach of mere local remedies. Those who rely upon them for a cure lose valuable time, meet with disapr
pomtment and allow the disease to take firimr hold Only areal blood remedy can reach this troublesome and dangerous disease.
‘ . ~ v ^atru because it first cleanses and builds tin the blood, purifies it, makes it rich and healthy, stimulates and
puts new lue into the sluggish worn-out organs, and thus relieves the system of all poisououn accumulations.
Mr> Josephine Pol hill, of Due West. S. C.. writes : •• I hml Catarrh, which became so deep-
l iVir W wi ct ! l .f ,y \ m . on< ! ear * biside of my nose, including part of the hone,
j "IT Uhtn llu- thscuse luul gone tin* Ini the phvsldmi guv. me up ineurnhle I
S V lyl resort ami began to improve tu once. . It siUS.1log™ulthe
nent of the dmessr. and nfttr n tc\e weeks' treatment 1 was ntirelv cured, nml for more than
•even years have hud uo sign of the disease."
S. S. S. is made of roots, herbs and barks of wonderful topical and purifying
properties. It is the only vegetable blood purifier known, and a certain and safe
cure for all blood troubles. Send for our hook on Blood and Skin Diseases, and at
the same time write our physicians about your case. They will cheerfully give vou
ice wanted. We make no chnree "for this
>nv informal;
>r ad i
SWIFT SPFfTIFlO CO.. ATLANTA, GA.
vors to bind recipients, to debauch
unsuspecting beneficiaries 1 It is
against such hideous traffic that the
great Law-giver warns its, saying:
“Thou shalt take no gift ; for a gift
bllndeth the wise, nud perverteth Ihe
words of the righteous.” Our brother
carried no account hook In memory of
wnat he had done. He never “threw
up” favors to get payment. He “cast
Ills bread upon the waters.” He lost,
forgot the good done. This unselfish
goodness, that expects no recom
pense, characterizes true Christianity.
It is God-like, It is God-inspired, and
is the only kind sure to “be gathered
after many days.”
Let the loved ones remember nnd
imitate the example of this just nnd
godly man. J. H. H.
While repairing a temple, the Chi
nese cover up the eyes of the idols
in order that the deities may not be
offended at the sight of the disorder.
Rock=a=Bye Baby
These are sweet words, hut how much
pain and suffering they used to mean. It's
different now. Slice Motner's Friend has
become known expectant mothers have
been spared much of the anguish of child
birth. Mother's I rientl is n liniment to be
applied externally. Il Is rubbed thoroughly
Into the muscles of the abdomen. Il gives
elasticity and strength, and when the final
great strain comes tney re pond quickly and
easily without pain. Mother's Friend Is
never taken internally. Internal remedies
at this time do more harm than good. If a
. BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENT
To My Friends and Patrons:
I have purchased B. T. Camp’s entire stock of Dry Goods
and Groceries, and propose to sell you goods lower than any
merchant in Newnan.
To make room for a large stock of Groceries, I will sell
everything in the way of Dry Goods at aciuai cos/, consisting of
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Jeans, etc.
The following prices will convey some idea of the bargains
that are to be had at my store, to-wit:
Lot of Odd Pants. $1 to $3. ’
Best "School Boy” Jeans, 10c. per yard.
9-oz. Doeskin, 19c. per yard.
Lot of ladles' and misses' fine Shoes to go at actual cost, also.
To be convinced that I am selling lower than any dealer
in the city, call and price my goods.
J. W. GURLEY,
New Arnali Building, Depot Street.
woman is supplied with this splendid lini
ment she need never fear rising or swelling
breasts, morning sickness, or any of the
d.scomforts wnich usually accompany preg
nancy.
The proprietor of a large hotel in Tampa.
Fla., writes: "My wife had an awful time
with her first child. During her second
pregnancy. Mother’3 Friend was used and
the baby was born easily before the doctor
arrived.' It's certainly great."
(let Mother's Frlrnil ::t the
dru« store. SI per t.uule.
THE BRADFIEI.D REGULATOR
Atlanta, Ga.
Write for our tree lllio.tr':led bool., " llefoi
UJ.oni."
VALUE!
We wish to emphasize the word value, and define its
true meaning, as employed in this announcement. The prin
ciple upon which this business is built is value-giving.
The best quality and the greatest quality for the lowest
price consistent with modern merchandising—such has been
our method of winning the confidence of the public, and such
will always be 'our plan* of holding that confidence.
Note the Following Prices:
Yard-wide Sheeting, 5c.
Sea island Sheeting, 5c.
Domestic Checks, 5c.
Domestic Checks, (heavier) 6c.
French Long Cloth. 10 to 15 cents.
Calicoes, 5c.
Lovely line of Perpales. 8 to 12 1 -2c.
Worsteds, 10 to 25 cents.
All - Wool Dress Goods, 35c. to
$1,25.
Infants’ Shoes, 25c. to '75c.
Misses’ Shoes, 75c. to $1.
Ladles’ Shoes, $1 to $2.50.
Men’s Shoes, $1 to $3.50.
Bleached Domestic. 5 to 9 cents.
Clothing at prices below their rea
value. Big line Boys’ Suits and Knei
Pants.
The "F. C." Corset - a leader—
25c. to $1.50.
®6?" Improved White Sewing Machine-
market.
-the best n the
"i’ll it's Box*rna that makev your arm «• rsrf
• ml iUrhy Tala Wait’d Kcrivn , iiintHM-nt will
curr it It cures Tetfr, Ringworm und *11
sorts or skin oj .casns. and only (J Idt, 2•1 o-nt* •
Uix. All tli* drug ,-tnr-n s-ll It, » ol |„ts
people use it. The Taylor and Peak Drug Co .
In Macon, make ft. 1
The Macon Home of “T.AP. Stomach Tablet*"
the sovereign remedy that really aures dyspep-
ala. indigestion, stomach and liver troabla*.
They ara Indorsed by piyitctans anj fold by
all druggists. Only Arty cents a bix Get s
free sample from your druggist, or write us u
postal and we will send jou one.
TAYLOR & PEEK DRUG COHPANY,
MACON, OEOKU1A.
For sale by G. R. BRADLEY, Newnan, Ga
•John Askew,
West Side Public Square.
Bring Us Your Wheat
To the man who raises Wheat— ,
Flour! Flour! Flour!
That’s the question of the hour;
We make it that can’t be beat.
Have new Regrinders—improved Cleaners, taking out ev
ery particle of airt, giving you pure Flour and nothing but
Flour. We guarantee forty pounds of Flour and eleven pounds
of Bran for each bushel of good Wheat. ♦
Believe we can please you, and will appreciate your pat
ronage this season.
R* D. Cole Mfg. Co.,
' NEWNAN. GEORGIA.
THOMPSON & SCROGGIN,
Undertakers and Embalmers,
Newnan, Georgia.
Calls answered day or night by Mr. Scroggin
Vill be found during the day at J. C. Thompson’s
lurniture store ; at night, his residence.
Embalming at reasonable rate?.
Facilities unequalled.