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fierald and Jldwrfiser.
“The Herald and Adv o
over the Newnan Bimkii;
COMMON SENSE
vXea^most intelligent pooplo to use only
nV/'flnes of known composition. There
fore Uls than Dr. Pierce’s medicines, tho
makef^of' which print every ingredient
enteringhuo them upon tho bottle wrap
pers and attest its correctness under oath,
are daily grbling in favor. The com
position of. Dr.JPierce’s medicines is open
to everybodyVDr. Pierce being desirous
of having the~arcli light of Investlgit^
tipi) turned fully tiptm hi< formula?, boitig
continent that the better the comuusinon
01 these. medicines is known the morel
IV111 tlmir great curative merits be recog
nized^ Heine whollv'made of the active
medicinal principles extracted!from na
tive forest roots, by exact processes
original with Dr. Pierce, and without tho
use of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and
chemically pure glycerine being used in
stead in extracting and preserving the
curative virtues residing in the roots
employed, these medicines are entirely
free from tho objection of doing harm
by creating an appetite for either al
coholic beverages or habit - forming
drugs. Examine tho formula on their
bottle wrappers—the same as sworn to by
Dr. Pierce, and you will find that his
"Golden Medical Discovery,” tho great,
blood-purifier, stomach tonic and bowel
regulator—tho medicine which, while not
recommended to cure consumption in its
advanced stages (no medicine will do that)
yet docs cure all those catarrhal condi
tions of head and throat, weak stomach,
torpid liver and bronchial troubles, weak
lungs and hang-on-coughs, which, if neg
lected or badly treated lead up to and
finally terminate in consumption.
Take tho "Golden Medical Discovery"
in time and it is not likely to disappoint
you if only you givo It a thorough and
fair trial. Don’t expect miracles. It
won’t do supernatural things. You must
exercise your patience and persevere in its
use for a reasonable length of time to get
its full benefits. The ingredients of which
Dr. Pierce’s medicines are composed have
the unqualified endorsement of scores of
medical leaders—better than anv amount
of lay, or non-professional, testimonials.
They are not given away to bo experi
mented with but are sold nv all dealers lu
medicines at reasonable prices.
ing
FALL and WINTER
ATHLETIC
GOODS
FOOT
BALLS
$1 to $5
MURRAY’S
Book Store.
27
■wr
NEWNAN i
STEAM
LAUNDRY
Solicits the patornage of the
people of Newnan and
surrounding towns.
Our Motto:
•SA TISFACTION. ”
Work called for
and deliuered....
UP TOWN AGENCY:
HOOD HOUSE.
k
290—TELEPHONE— 290
•tarn i
DR. M. S. ARCHER,
Luthersville, Ga.
All calls promptly filled, day or night. Diseases
of children a specialty.
DJf. F. I. WELCH,
Physician.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite public
school building. ’Phone 234.
DR. T. B. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Sanatorium building. Office ’phone 5
call; residence ’phone 5—2 cailB.
W. A. TURNER,
Physician and Surgeon.
Special attention given to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19Vj Spring- street. ’Phone 230
K. W. STARR,
Dentist.
All kinds of dental work. Patronage of the pub-
nc solicited. Offiec over Newnan Banking Co.
ManXmn Pile Remetty
K£U£VE* whem OTHERS FAUT
THE WITCH'S CURSE.
A Bucksport Legend of Colonial Days
In Maine.
Close by tlie rond on tile outskirts of
the old seaport town of Bucksport, on
the I’enobseot river, is a small family
cemetery. Within its lnclosure sleep
the Bucks, the blue blooded folk who
first settled the town and bequeathed
it their uaiue and a legend.
TLie largest and most conspicuous
monument iu the cemetery is a tall
granite shaft, which is In plain sight of
the highway. On one side is the in
scription: “Col. John Buck, the Founder
of Bucksport, A. I). 1702. Born in
Haverhill, Mass., 1718. Died March 18,
1705.”
On the other side is the single word
“Buck,” and also something not
wrought by the marble worker. On
the smooth surface of the pedestal is
a curious outline, which can bo easily
imagined to be a foot of normal size.
The people who say that it is a foot
believe iu the legend which has oft
been told in Bucksport.
The story Is that Colonel Jonathan
Buck was a very harsh man and the
leading spirit in ids day and genera
tion. lie was the highest in civil au
thority, nnd his word was law in the
community in which lie resided. He
was an out nud out Puritan, nnd to
him witchcraft was the incarnation of
blasphemy. Thus, so the story goes,
when a certain woman was accused of
witchcraft, at the first clnmoriugs of
the populace Colouel Buck ordered thnt
she be imprisoned, nud later she was
sentenced to be executed as a witch.
The execution day came, nnd the
woman went to the gallows, cursing
her judge with such terrible words
thnt the people shuddered, but the
magistrate stood unmoved. All was
ready, nnd the hnngman was nbout to
perform his duty, when the woman
turned to Colonel Buck, nnd, raising
one linnd toward heaven, she said:
“Jonathan Buck, listen to these
words, the last my tongue shall utter
It is the spirit of tho only living God
which bids mo speuk to you. You will
soon die, and over your grave they will
erect a stone, that all may know the
spot where your bones lie and crumble
to dust.
“Upon that stone the imprint of my
foot shall appear, nnd for all time, aft
er your accursed race has vanished
from the face of the earth, will the
people from far and near know that
you murdered a woman.”
She then turned to her executioners,
and another act transpired to make a
part of American colonial history. The
“witch curse” had been almost forgot
ten until the monument was erected to
the founder of Bucksport.
It had been in position hardly a
month when a faint outline was discov
ered on it. It grew more and more dis
tinct, until some person made the dis
covery that It was the outline of a
foot. The old legend was revived.
They said that the “Witch’s curse”
had been fulfilled. An attempt was
made to remove the stain, but every
effort only tended to make it plainer.
The Imprint of the foot is there today
as plain as ever. Amateur photogra
phers have taken pictures of it, nnd a
visit to tho Buck cemetery to seo •
witch’s foot” is one of (lie pastime.-
every summer visitor to the pretty lit
tle town.—New York World.
Encouraging the Boy.
“Son,” remarked Mr. Erastus Pink-
ley, “I done heard you talln’ ’bout bein’
a great hunter.”
“Dat’s what I said,” answered picka
ninny Jim. “I’s gwinter hunt lions.”
“An’ you mentioned bein’ er abtic
explorer.”
“Yassir.”
“Weil, jes’ by way of practice befo’
you tackles any lions iemme see If you
kin get de cow out’n pasture wifout
bein’ hooked, an’ den as de winter
comes along you kin trnin fob de
north pole by wadin’ out In de snow
to de wood pile twice a day. An’ don’
iemme hyah no mo’ ’bout not ineour-
agin’ yoh youthful ambitions.”—Wash
ington Star.
Tho Way to Hi* Vote.
Lord Beaconsfield’s skill in picking
up stray votes was well known. An
illustration of it is given In a book by
Henry W. Lucy.
At the time that the imperial titles
bill was pending there was a certain
pompous little Irishman, Dr. O’Leary,
who seemed manageable and was de-'
sirable. One evening in the lobby
Disraeli laid a hand familiarly on his
shoulder.
“Dear Dr. O’Leary, the resemblance
Is most striking,” he said. “I really
thought I saw again my old friend
Tom Moore.”
The vain little gentleman was cap
tured.
He Hits Back.
There had been a domestic spat at
breakfast.
“You monster!” snapped the matron,
who was always scolding. “You are
not like my two former husbands.
They were tender men.”
“I never doubted that they were
tender, Maria,” ventured the meek
man, “when you kept them in hot
water ail the time.” And he just
cleared the front porch two yards
ahead of the rolling pin. — Chicago
News.
Pat’s Services.
Clergyman—Pat, there’s a hole in
the roof of tire church, and I nm try
ing to collect money sufficient to re-
pnir it. Come, now, what will you
contribute? Pat—Me services, sor.
Clergyman—What do you mean, Pat?
You are no carpenter. Pat—No, but
H B rains next Sunday Oi’ll sit over
the hole.—Pearson’s.
How poor are they that have no pa
tience! What wound did ever heal
bat by degrees?—Shakespeare.
THE MISSING MISSIVE.
One Romance cf Llncle Sam's Dead
Letter Office.
Something like “iiiiii.OOO letters an
nually fall of delivery in the United
States owing to insufficient postage or
Incorrect addresses. The dead letter
office at Washington employs a large
force of clerks to handle those. The
packages that have been received at
the dead letter office have contained
false teeth, glass eyes, brass keys and
thousands of other things that one
would never expect to find in the
malls.
It. would he interesting to know how
many engagements have been broken,
bow many friends have been estrang
ed, how many foml hearts have not
been reunited, how many deals have
fallen through, how much money has
been lost and how many quarrels have
been prevented by letters that never
came.
A pretty romance was revealed at
the dead letter office tho other day
when a young woman called there to
see if a wrongfully addressed letter
had been received. It had, nnd she
was greatly relieved. "I heard thnt
Jack was untrue,” she said, “and
wrote him breaking our engagement.
The day after I wrote I found out that
I was wrong. My heart was almost
broken, but Jack kept right on coming
to see me nnd never mentioned the let
ter. I began to think I must have
misdirected it nnd find that I did. It
must have been fate. Now he will
never know.”—St. Paul Pioneer Press.
ALL THE WAY ROUND.
An Odd Sort of Dinner and the Rea
son of It.
Lord Polkemmet, a Scottish lord of
session, usually retired to his country
residence during the part of the year
when the court does no business.
John Hagnrt, the Scottish advocate,
equally idle from a similar cause,
went to shoot, and, happening to pass
Lord P.’s property, he met ills lord-
ship, who politely invited John to take,
or, ns he said, to tali’, a family dinner
with himself, his wife nnd daughter.
John accepted the Invitation, nnd
they nil assembled at the hour of din
ner. There wns a joint of roasted veal
at the head of the table nnd stewed
veal at the bottom, veal soup in tho
middle, cnlf’s head on one side of the
soup nnd veal cutlets on the other,
cnlf’s foot jelly between the soup nnd
roast venl and calf’s brains between
the stewed veal nnd the soup.
“Noo,” said his lordship in his own
lilunt way, “Mr. Hagnrt, you may very
likely think this an odd sort of dinner,
but ye’ll no wonder when you hear the
cause of It. We keep nae company,
Mr. Ilagart, nnd my daughter here en
ters for our table. The way we do is
just this: We kill a beast, Its it were,
today, nnd we just begin to cook it at
one side of the head, travel down that
side, turn the tail and just gang back
again by the other side to where we
began.”
The Year Without a Summer.
The year 1S1G lias a remarkable cold
weather record and is known as “the
year without a summer.” In that year
there was a sharp frost in every
month, nnd the people all over the
world began to believe that some great
and definite change lu the earth was
taking place. The farmers used to re
fer to It as "eighteen hundred nnd
starve to death.” Frost, ice and snow
were common iti June. Almost every
green thing was killed, and the fruit
was nearly all destroyed. During the
month snow fell to the depth of three
inches in New York nnd Massachu
setts and ten Inches in Maine. There
were frost and ice in July in New York,
New England and Pennsylvania, und
corn was nearly all destroyed In cer
tain sections. Ice half an Inch thick
formed In August. A cold north wind
prevailed all summer.
Taking a Mean Advantage.
Once a thrifty Scotch physician wns
called to a ense where n woman had
dislocated her jaw. He very soon put
her right. The woman asked how
much was to pay. The doctor named
his fee. The pntient thought it too
much. He, however, would not take
less, nnd ns the woman refused to give
him the fee he began to yawn.' Yawn
ing, ns every one knows, is Infectious.
The young woman in turn yawned.
Her jaw again went out of Joint, and
the doctor triumphantly said. “Now.
until you hand me over my fee your
Jaw can remain as it is.” Needless to
say. tho money was promptly paid.
HER MISTAKE.
Tho Way It Was Explained to Her by
the Clumsy Man.
Owing to the fact that the car lurch
ed suddenly as ln> was passing along
the aisle Bronson was deprived of
his balance, with the result that in
attempting to save liiniscif from fall
ing ho clutched one of the shoulders
of a handsome woman who lmd suc
ceeded in getting a seat. Moreover,
ho knocked her beautiful hat awry
and with great difficulty avoided step
ping on Iter toes. As lie succeeded in
recovering ills equilibrium the Indy
turned toward him and said:
“You contemptible pup! 1 wish you
to understand that I am not a lamp
post or a piece of furniture to be
clung to for support. You ought to
ride in a cattle trnin. You have no
right to crowd in where you can tear
other people to pieces with your big,
awkward hands. You pitiful clown!
You ought to lie thrown out into the
street. You are not fit to be allowed
to go where you are likely to Inter
fere with the comfort of refined peo
ple. You unmannerly bumpkin! You
deserve to be”—
"Excuse me, madam,” Bronson man
aged to say, “you have made a mis
take.”
“A mistake!” the lady demanded,
her eyes flashing with wrath. “Whnt
do you menn?”
“I nm not your husband.”—Chicago
Record-Herald.
THE CLERMONT.
First Passage by Steamboat From
New York to Albany.
In August, 1808—the exact day is a
matter of dispute—the steamboat Cler
mont made the first passage by steam
from New York to Albany. The dis
tance, somewhat, less than 150 miles,
was covered in thirty-two hours, a
record hailed as a triumph In speed,
for previously the passage between
the two cities averaged four days.
Robert Fulton had experimented
with steam several years, but the Cler
mont was tho first boat he constructed
on a large scale. As he could not get
the engine he wanted In this country
he ordered one from England. The
Clermont was so reconstructed In the
following winter thnt It gave more
commodious accommodations to trav
elers, nnd (lie year 1808, which was
the first year of regular travel by
steamboat, Fulton made It a point to
start Ids boat precisely on scheduled
time. Curiously enough, n portion of
the public complained of this. It was
not until well along in the summer
thnt travelers got accustomed to It.
Previously boats had been held for
two hours at the request of passen
gers who weren’t ready. Fulton’* per
severance won public approvnl before
the season closed.—Anaconda Stand
ard.
Cleared His Doubts.
A well known English gentleman
engaged a tall nnd powerful high
lander to act as gamekeeper on his es
tate. Having been a considerable time
nt Ills post and not having caught
any poachers, the gentleman suspect
ed his gamekeeper of carelessness.
So one dark night ho disguised him
self nnd wont out with a gun to poach
on his own ground. He had fired only
one or two shots when lie was sud
denly pounced upon from behind and
Ills gun wrenched away. Then kicks
and blows were showered upon him
until ho fell down half Insensible.
The highlander then walked away
quietly, and when the gentleman re
covered sufficiently lie crawled home
and took to his bed for two weeks.
He lias now no doubts as to whether
the man can perform his duty or not.
An Easy Pr>jL'em.
Prove that !) taken from C nnd 10
taken from 9 and 50 taken from 40
when all added together is only 6.
Easy when you know how. Take IX
(0) from SIX nnd you hove S left; take
X (10) from IX (0) and you have 1
left; take L (50) from XL (40) nnd you
have X left, and when you add S and
I and X together you have SIX,
haven’t you?—Pathfinder.
She Knew Them.
Miss Dubley— Sh<*was braggln’nbout
how successful her dinner party was.
She said it wound up “with great
eclaw.” What’s “eciaw” anyway?
Miss Mugley—Why, I guess that was
the dessert. Didn’t you never eat a
chocolate eclaw?—Catholic Standard.
ill Bred Scenery.
“Mamma, the scenery abroad must
be very ill bred.”
"Scenery ill bred, child! What do
you mean?”
“This book on Alpine climbing says,
‘A terrlbl* abyss yawned before
them !* ”
Thimbles made of lava are ased by
women In Naples,
Home, Sweet Home.
The old man sat on the park seat,
rivers of tenrs flooding his clothes. A
sympathetic passerby, noting the high
tide, stopped and asked if he were ill.
“Yes, sir,” said the sorrowing old
fellow. "I’ve jest ’nd bad news from
’ome. The ’ouse thnt ’as sheltered me
for years is to be torn down, and I
’aren’t a penny to my name to stop it.
Everybody will be turned out, and
goodness knows what’ll happen to’em!”
“Poor soul!” said the sympathetic
passerby, bestowing a penny on the
sad old man. “That isn’t much, but
you are welcome to it. And where is
tills old home of yours, my friend?”
“Up nt the Joll, sir,” replied the old
man. “It seems very hard. I’ve lived
there five and twenty years.”—London
Opinion.
How to Make a Cup of Cocoa.
Take a tabiespoonfiil of cocoa and
put it in a tin cup. Add one teaspoon-
ful of granulated sugar and one table-
spoonful of boiling water. Mix well,
so that there will not be any lumps of
cocoa. Pour n little less than one-
half pint of milk into a saucepan arid
cook it, stirring all the time, until
it is scalded—that is. until a film
forms on it and It begins to bubble a
little. Stir the cocoa mixture Into
this and cook until it boils up.—De
lineator.
Sir Leopold McClintock, the Arctic
explorer, who died recently, was once
giving an account of his experiences
amid the ice fields of the North.
‘‘Wo certainly would have traveled
much farther,” he explained, “had not
our clogs given out at a critical mo
ment.”
“But,” exclaimed a lady, who had
been listening very intently, “I thought
that the Eskimo dogs were perfectly
tireless creatures.”
Sir Leopold’s face wore a whimsically
gloomy expression as he replied, “I
—er—speak in a culinary sense, miss.”
Into a general store of a town in Ar
kansas there recently came a darkey
complaining that a ham which ho' had
purchased there was not good.
‘‘The ham’s all right, Zeph,” insist
ed the storekeeper.
‘‘No, it ain’t, boss,” insisted the ne
gro. ”Dat ham’s shore spilt.”
‘‘How can that be,”' continued the
storekeeper, ‘‘when it was cured only
last week?”
The darkey scratched his head reflec
tively, and finally suggested:' ‘‘Den
mebbe hit’s had a relapse.”
Although there was no sort of toy
which could be bought and for which
Harold had expressed a desire that was
not in his possession, he still had his
unsatisfied longings.
“I know what I wish I was, moth
er,” he said one day when his own big
brother had gone away nnd the little
boy across the street was ill.
‘‘Yes, dear,” said his mother. ‘‘Per
haps you can be it, Harold; mother
will help you. Is it to play soldier?”
‘‘No, indeed!” said Harold scornful
ly. ‘‘I just wish I was two little dogs,
so I could play together.”
To woman man is Mister, but to the
average man woman is a mys-tery.
“ Cherry-Blossom.”
THE JAPANESE QIVE QOOD EXAMPLE.
It is a proverb of Cherry Blossom
Land that a healthy stomach is tho
basis of nil strength. Good nature is
nlso recognized as of great importance.
The Japanese ns a people are remark
able for their health, endurance, pa
tience and skill.
The cherrv tree is the most highly
prized of nil in Japan, ft not only
gives forth a beautiful blossom but the
wild cherry tree furnishes a bark which
is most highly prized in medicine.
The United
Wild Cherry
(Prunus Virginiama).
Businesslike.
The Beloved One—You object to
Horace because he's not businesslike.
Stern Parent—Certainly; he's only aft
er you for your money. Beloved One
—Weil, pa, doesn’t that prove lie’s
businesslike?—Kansas City Independ
ent.
Not a Matter of Chance.
The Vicar—Is It true, Samuel, thnt
vour father allows games of chance to
ho played In your house? The Boy -
There ain't no chance about it, zur;
they all cheats!—London Opinion.
Where there Is much pretension
much has been boijowed; nature never
pretend*.—Mvs ter.
States Dis-
I’E nsato it Y,
which is an
authority on medicines, says of the
properties of this Black Olierrybark:
" Uniting witli a tonic power the
property of calming irritation and
diminishing nervous excitability.
Adapted to the treatment of diseases
in which there is debility of the stom
ach or of the system.’’ Another au
thority, Kind’s Amehioan Dispensa
tory says, “it gives tone and strength
to the Bystem, useful in fever, coii(jji,
and found excellent in consumption.”
This ingredient iB only one of several
very important native, medicinal roots
in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery. This is a remedy which Iihh en
joyed the public approval for nearly
forty years, nothing new or untried
about it, has cured thousands of people
of those chronic, weakening diseases
whicli are accompanied by a cough,
such as bronchitis and incipient con
sumption. More than that, by reason
of the other ingredients, Bloodroot,
Mandrake, Golden Seal, and Queen’s
root, all of the medicinal virtues of
which are scientifically extracted and
combined in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med
ical Discovery, remarkable cures of
dyspepsia nnd stomach disorders have
been accomplished.
Nearly forty years ago, Dr. Pierce
discovered that chemically pure glyc
erine of proper strength is a better
solvent and preservative of the active
medicinal principles residing in most of
our indigenous or native medicinal
plants than is alcohol. As its use is
entirely unobjectionable, while alcohol
is well known when used even in
small portions, for a protracted period,
to do lasting injury to the humun sys
tem, especially in the case of delicate
women and children, fie decided to
use chemically pure glycerine instead
of the usually employed alcohol in
the preparation of his medicines.
He found that the glycerine, besides
beiri£ entirely harmless, possesses in
trinsic medicinal properties of great
value. Its nutritive properties, Dr.
Pierce believes, far surpass those of
cod liver oil, entitling it to favorable
consideration in all cases of incipient
consumption and other wasting diseases.
It is an invigorating, tonic alterative
and owes its virtues to Nature’s vege
table garden. Dr. Pierce is only the
j . 7~Z 7. I scientific gar-
; Nature s Garden, den er who
* I knows how to
combine the plants given us by Nature
to cure our diseases. This prepara
tion is of pleasant, taste, agrees per
fectly with rebellious and sensitive
stomachs, and is extremely effective in
restoring tone and vigor to the entire
system. It cures inflammatory troubles
of the stomach as well as indigestion
arid dyspepsia arising from weak
stomach. One reason why it restores
the health of run-down, pale and ema
ciated people is because it first throws
out the poisons from the blood through
the liver and kidneys. It then begins
its reconstructive work in building up
flesh by first making good, rich, red
blood.
The "Golden Medical Discovery” is
made in a large laboratory, thoroughly
equipped with every scientific appliance,
at Buffalo, N. Y. Qualified chemists
are in charge of the laboratory, with
nearly a score of skilled physicians and
surgeons employed to scrutinize, deter
mine and prescribe these remedies and
otheqpneans of cure as seem best suited
to many thousands of cases of ciironic
diseases which come before them for
treatment each year. It costs you noth
ing to write to Dr. R. V. Pierce—the
head of this Institution, at Buffalo, N.
Y. and get an accurate medical opinion
in your special case and wholly without
charg«.
After enting, persons of a bilious habit
will derive great benefit by taking ono
of these pills. If you have been
DRINKING TOO MUCH,
they will promptly relieve the nausea,
SICK HEADACHE a
and nervousness which follows, restore
the appetite a n d remove gloomy feel
ings. Elegantly sugar coated.
Take No Substitute.
Legal Notices.
Notice to Change Court-ground.
After aixty days’ notice, in conformity with law,
I will change theplnooof holding: Justice Court
for tho (Wild district. G. M.. from Kirby's Store, in
tho Third district, to the Harnett. St. John & Co.'a
place, nt the junction of Newnan and Corinth road
and Newnan and Curoton Springs roads. Thin
Dec. 7. 1908. C. W. TALLEY.
J. P. 698d district, G. M.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
(TTTTTft; TA—Cow kta County :
Notice Ih hereby Riven to all creditors of the es
tate of Mrs. Fannie Campbell, late of said county*
deceased, to render in an account of their indebt
edness to me within the time prescribed by law,
properly made out; and all persons indebted to
said deceased are hereby requested to make im
mediate payment to the undersigned. This Dec.
7, 1008. Prs. fee $3.75.
MISS MAIE HILL CAMPBELL.
Adm’x with will annexed of Mrs. Fannie Camp
bell, 27 East Alexander street, Atlanta, Ga.
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Cowkta County:
To the Superior Court of said county: The peti
tion of N. O. Banks, Glenn Arnold, Mrs. Itura R.
Ijoigh and W. A. Post, all of said State and coun
ty, respectfully shows—
1. They desire for themselves, their associates,
successors and assigns, to be constituted a body
corporate under the name of
GRANTVILLE REAL ESTATE COMPANY,
and by that name to acquire, hold and enjoy all
the rights, powers and privileges incident to such
body corporate, or conferred upon it by the stat
utes of Haul State.
2. The object of the corporation is to he pecu
niary gain and profit to its stockholders, and tho
business to be carried on by it is dealing in real
estate; buying, owning, leasing and renting real
estate of whatever kind ami character; improving
and developing the same, and selling, leasing and
renting all kinds of real estate at public or private
sale, or both, for cash or on credit, or both, and
make nil due acquittances for the same; to act as
agent for others in the handling, buying, sidling,
leasing nnd renting real estate; to lend nnd l>orrow
money and secure the same, and generally to deal
in all kinds of real property for themselves and aa
agents for others, and to own such personal prop
erty as may be necessary for tho conduct of its
business.
8. The capital stock shall be TEN THOUSAND
DOLLARS, divided into shares of One Hundred
Dollars per share, and all of which has actually
been paid; but petitioners desire tho right to in
crease said capital stock to any amount, not ex
ceeding Fifty Thousand Dollars by a direct vote of
two-thirds of the stock, ut a special meeting called
for that purpose.
•I. The chief office and place of business shall bo
in the town of Grantville, said county; but they
desire the right to establish branch offices at oth
er places within or without said State. The busi
ness shall be managed by a board of directora
chosen from among its stockholders, and said
board shall elect from its members a president,
and a secretary and treasurer, and may make rules
and by-laws.
5. WHEREFORE. said petitioners pray an order
of said court declaring this application granted,
and themselves incorporated as aforesaid for and
during the term of twenty yours, with tho privi
lege of renewal. This Dec. 31, 1908.
W. A. POST,
Attorney for Petitioners.
Filed in office this Dec. 31, 1908.
• L. TURNER. Clerk S. C. C. C.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
I, Lynch Turner, Clerk of the Superior Court of
sai l county, do hereby certify that the above and
for egoing is a true and exact copy of the original
?>' tition for charter of the Grantville Beal Es
tate Company, of file and record in this office.
Witness my hand and the seal of said Court this
31st day of December, 1908. L. TURNER.
Clerk S. C. C. C.
Atlanta and West Point
RAILROAD COMPANY
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN, GA.
Subject to change nml typographical
errors.
No. .3(5 (1:45 a. in.
No. 19 7:38 u. m.
No. 18 9:03 a. in.
No. 33 10:40 a. in.
No. 39 3.-215 p. in.
No. 20 (> :40 p.m.
No. 34... (5:32 p. m.
No. *42... «:46a.m.
No. (44 8:27 a. in.
No. 38 9:33 a. in.
No. 40 12:28 ]>. in.
No. 17 6:12 p. in.
No. 41 7:10]). in.
No. 37 0:23 ]). m.
No. 30 10:40 p.m.
lay o
chiy. All other trains daily. Odd
numbers, southbound; even num
bers, northbound.
KILLthe cough
and CURE THE LUNGS
WITH
Dr. King’s
New Discovery
FOR C8U§s HS
PRICE
_ *0c & *1.00,
Trial Bottle Free
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
OR MONEY REFUNDED.
Court Calendar.
COWKTA CIRCUIT.
It. W. Freeman, Judge; J. Render Terrell,So
licitor-Ocnerul.
Meriwether—Third Mondays in February and
August.
Coweta-First Mondays in March andSeptcm
tier.
Heard—Third Mondays in March and Scptem
her.
Carroll—First Mondays in April and October
Troll])—First Mandays in May and November.
CITY COURT OP NEWNAN.
A. D. Freeman, Judge; W. L. Stallings, Sollo.
itor. h
quarterly term meets third Mondays in Janu
ary, April, July and October.
BANKRUPTCY COURT.
R. O. Jones, Newnan, Oa., Referee In Bank
ruptcy for counties of Coweta, Troup, Heard,
Meriwether, Carroll, Douglas and Haralson.
U. 8. COMMISSIONER’S COURT.
W. B, W. Dent, Newnan, Oa., Commissioner
AH kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office.