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fieraifl ana fldpcrtiser.
“The Herald and Advertiser” office is upstairs
over the Newnan Banking Co. ’Phone 6.
A Lazy Liver
May bi- only a tired liver, or a starved
liver. It would bo a stupid as well as
savage thing to boat a weary or starved
man because ho lagged in his work. So
In treating tlio lagging, torpid liver it is
a grout mistake to lash it with strong
drastic drugs. A torpid liver is but an
Indication of an Ill-nourished, enfeebled
body whoso organs are weary with over
work. Start with the stomach and allied
organs of digestion and nutrition. Put
them in working order and see how
quickly your liver will become active.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
has made many marvelous cures of "liver
trouble” by its wonderful control of the
organs of digestion and nutrition. It re
stores the normal activity of the stomach
Increases the secretions of the blood-mak
ing glands, cleanses the system from poi
sonous accumulations, and so relieves the
liver of the burdens imposed upon it by
the defection of other organs.
If you have bltteror bad taste In the morn
ing. poor or (Callable appetite, coated tongue,
foul breath, constipated or Irregular bowels,
feel weak, easlljt tired, Respondent, freuuent
headaches, pain Ar dlstresVjn "small of back."
gnawing or dlsfiesjed teeVg In stomach,
perhaps nauseaP'iJPwJsSN^o^"risings" In
throat after eating, and klnSrat symptoms
of weak stomach and torpid livs\ ijg_medl-
clne will relieve you more promptly or cure
you mora.permanently limn Doctor Pierre"!
Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps only
• part of the above symptoms will be present
at one time and yet point to torpid liver or
biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all
hot bread and biscuits, griddle cakes and
other indigestible food and take the "Golden
Medical Discovery ” regularly and stick to Its
use until you are vigorous and strong.
The "Discovery” is non-secret, non-alco
holic, Is a glyceric extract of nativo medici
nal roots with a full list of Its Ingredients
printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested
under oath. Its Ingredients are endorsed
and extolled by the most eminent medical
writers of the age and are recommended to
cure the diseases for which It Is advised.
Don’t accept a substitute of unknown
composition for this non-secret medicine
OF KNOWN COMPOSITION.
RESOLUTIONS
The Simple Life
has for its basis PERFECT HEALTH.
The clear brain, the healthy stomach, the
bodily organs exercising in harmony, are
the first essentials of a Simple Life—
A LIFE OF PEACE AND SATISFACTION.
No one can know the pure delight of
simple living whose nervous system is
kept in a state of tension by Constipa
tion, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness
and other diseases due to inaction of the
liver.
The Simple Way to seek the Simple
Life is to seek the remedy for these con
ditions. This remedy has been found in
our great product—•
ST. JOSEPH’S
Liver Regulator
(In Both Liquid and Powder Form.)
It has made life brighter and happiness
peace possible when all was dark
and^vstressed. 11 reaches the centers of
life ancWp'riiies them. It encourages the
liver, stoma ,h and bowels to a freer and
more natural 'activity.
It is the Sim^lfLe Way to a Simple Life
of Health, Peat. Contentment.
Many persons &t»st this f act who have
realized its truth bySjctual experience.
St. Joseph's Liqui<j\ Llver Regulator
is prompt in actim.. .\dingly palatable
i ml pleasant I . tlnst-. •• f ' isi'dil by drug-
lists and dealers ut SUo-ut i bottle.
St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator in pow
der form isput up in tightt.u boxes ami re
tails at 25 ecu l a i'i x, live txixe-H tor u dollar.
Itmay betaken dry or made Nito a tea or
Litters. Full directions accompany every
Lottie and box.
Gerstle Medicine Co.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
New Advertisements
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Upon the Death of Capt. Henry A.
North by Wheeler’s Confederate
Cavalry, Atlanta, Ga.
It was with deep regret that Camp
j A, Wheeler’s Confederate Cavalry, U.
C. V., learned of the death of our old
comrade and friend, Capt. Henry A.
North, of the county of Coweta, which
occurred on the afternoon of Feb, 17,
1909. Capt. North was the last but
one of the gallant captains of the First
Regiment of Georgia Cavalry, Volun
teers, in the Civil War. He joined the
regiment in April, 18(52, as captain of
Co. K, remaining its commander until
the close of hostilities in April, 1S65.
His company was raised in Coweta,
and was composed of as brave and
faithful a band of young men as could
be found in the State. In the selection
of officers the choice for captain nat
urally fell to Capt. North. In him ev
ery soldier felt that he had a kind as
well as a brave and competent leader.
It would require a book to tell of the
great service he rendered his country
while a soldier in its army. Besides
many skirmishes, he participated in
the following battles:
In 1862—Powell’s River, Tenn., Mur
freesboro, Tenn., under Gen. Forrest;
Pikesville, Tenn., London, Ky., Big
Hill, Richmond, Ky.', under Gen. Kir
by Smith; Munsfordville, Ky., Crab
Orchard, Ky., Somerset, Ky., Mur
freesboro, Tenn., under Gen. Bragg,
In 1863—Chickamauga, Ga., Phila
delphia, Tenn., Knoxville, Tenn., Dan
ville, Tenn., Strawberry Plains, Tenn.,
Mossy Creek, Tenn., Dandridge, Tenn.
In 1864 —Resaca, Ga., under Gen.
Jos. E. Johnston; Adairsville, New
Hope Church, Kennesaw Mountain,
Peachtree Creek, under Gen. Hood;
Atlanta and Decatur, Ga.
He was at the battle of Sunshine
church, in Jones county, Ga., when
Maj.-Gen. Stoneman, of the Federal
army, was captured by Brig.-Gen. Al
fred Iverson’s command. He was with
Gen. Wheeler when the latter rode en
tirely around Sherman’s army and on
into Tennessee and up to the city of
Nashville, doing great damage to the
communications of tKe Federal army
and their supplies. Returning to Geor
gia with Gen. Wheeler, he pressed upon
the flank and rear of Sherman’s army
in its march through Georgia; was
in the battle at Aiken. S. C., and pur
sued Sherman through South Carolina
and on into the State of North Caro-
ina. He reported ready for duty and
for further service with his company
at Greensboro, N. C., on the morning
of the surrender, April 26, 1866.
It would be a task to tell of the
thousands of miles rode on horseback
by Capt. North during his four years
of service as captain of his company.
His regiment was the first to enter
Frankfort. Ky., in 1862, and thence
marched and fought its way to within
three miles of the city of Louisville.
The whole regiment knew and loved
Capt. North for his genial, kindly dis
position. The same warmth of heart
and gladsome stnile that won him
friends in the Confederate army, he
carried to his home when peace was re
stored. and thus attached to himself a
host of warm friends throughout his
native county. At all times it seemed
to give Capt. North more pleasure to
serve his friends than to receive a ben
efit.
Capt. Henry A. North was 79 years
old at the time of his death. He was
the son of Anthony North and his wife,
Mary North. Both of his parents came
from good old colonial stock, who had
come to America in the early settle
ment of the country. His father was a
soldier in the War of 1812. The older
citizens of his county well remember
the handsome old colonial home which
Col. Anthony North maintained upon
his extensive plantation east of New-
nan, where, with his devoted wife, he
dispensed a liberal hospitality and
raised his large family of boys and
girls. Capt. North’s mother was a wo
man of many lovable traits of charac
ter. She had many warm friends
throughout her section, and lived to
the advanced age of 105 years, strong
and active to the day of her last ill
ness. Therefore, be it resolved—
1. That Camp A, Wheeler’s Confed
erate Cavalry, Veterans, sends condo
lence and sympathy Ur the relatives
and friends of Capt. Henry A. North
in their recent bereavement.
2. That in the death of Capt. North
our State has lost a most excellent cit
izen and this camp a gallant old com
rade and friend.
3. That we will remember while life
lasts the example set by Capt. North
as a soldier, brave in bnttle, strong in
endurance, and gentle in command.
4. That a page upon our minutes be
inscribed to the memory of Capt. Hen
ry A. North, and copies of these reso
lutions be transmitted to his family
and printed in the newspapers of Ful
ton and Coweta counties.
Adopted March 5, 1909.
Lavender R. Ray,
Jos. L. Cobb,
Geo. A. Webster,
Committee.
She — “Men and women can’t be
judged by the same standards. For in
stance, a man is known by the compa
ny he keeps.
He—“And a woman by the servants
she can’t keep.’’
Farmer Jones (to amateur hunter) —
“There wasn’t a better water dawg
livin’ until you shootin’ gents took to
borrowin’ ’im. Now ’is ’ide’s that full
of shots he’d sink to the bottom like a
brick.”
The recording angel probably doesn’t
pay any attention to the lies a man
tells when he is in love.
Occasionally a woman goes to church
for the purpose of ascertaining how
many of her neighbors don’t.
THE
BEST
REMEDY
For Women-Lydia E. Pink-
ham’sVegetable Compound
Noah, Ky. — “I was passing through
the Change of Life and suffered from
headaches, nervous
prostration, and
hemorrhages.
“Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound madeine
well and strong, so
that lean do all my
housework, and at
tend to the store
and post-ollice, and
I feel much younger
than 1 realty am.
“Lydia I 1 '. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound is the most
successful remedy for all kinds of
female troubles, and I feel that 1 can
never praise it enough.” — Mbs. Lizzie
Holland, Noah, Ky.
TheChangeof Life is tliemostcritlcal
period of a woman’s existence, and
neglect of health at this time invites
disease and pain.
Womene very where should remember
that there is no other remedy known to
medicine that will so successfully carry
women through this trying period as
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roots and
herbs.
For .80 years it has been curing
women from the worst forms of female
ills—inflammation, ulceration, dis
placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari
ties, periodic pains, backache, and
nervous prostration.
If you would like special advice
about your ease write a confiden
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkhain, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
MAKES RAPID HEADWAY.
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office.
Add This Fact to Your Store of
Knowledge.
Kidney disease advances so rapidly
that many a person is firmly in its grasp
before aware of its progress. Prompt
attention should be given the slightest
symptom of kidney disorder. If there
is a dull pain in the back, headache,
dizzy spells or a tired, worn-out feeling,
or if the urine is dark, foul-smelling, ir
regular and attended with pain, procure
a good kidney remedy at once.
Your townspeople recommend Doan’s
Kidney Pills. Read the statement of
this Newnan citizen:
C. L. Baker, 112 Jackson St., New
nan, Ga., says: “Riding over rough
roads has been a severe strain • on my
kidneys, and as a result I suffered off
and on for years frtm a dull aching in
my hack. The kidney secretions were
also disordered and from this I realized
that my kidneys were in an unhealthy
condition. A short time ago I learned
about Doan’s Kidney Pills and procur
ing a box at Peniston’s drug store I
began their use. They relieved me
promptly and I am sure it will not be
long before every symptom of kidney
trouble w : ll be banished from my sys
tem.”'.
For sdd® k v all dealers. Price 50
cents. 1 ostt.-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States. \
Remember the name —Doan’B—and
take no other.
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
To the Honorable Philip Cook, Secretary of
State : The petition of John W. Daniel, Hope H.
Lane, Ben H. Tompkins, It. B. Mooty, It. M. Lip-
ford, J. W. Ray. Robert G. Crain. James It. Dan
iel, W. D. Taylor, W. T. Goodson, A. W. Powers,
Frank S. Loftin, P. T. MeCutchen, Roe Hearn, G.
A. Adams and D. B. Whitaker, of Franklin, Heard
county, Ga., W. D. Itidley and L. F. Davis, of Rid
ley, Heard county, Ga., W. A. Brannon, of More
land, Coweta county, Ga., and B. T. Thompson, I.
N. Orr, sr., Charles C. Parrott, H. C. Arnall, sr..
I. P. Bradley, J. J. Keith and W. C. Wright, of
Newnan, Coweta county, Ga., respectfully shows—
That they desire to form a corporation to be
known as the
WESTERN OF GEORGIA RAILWAY,
for the purpose of constructing, equipping, oper
ating and maintaining a railroad, and to operate
the same by steam or electricity. The length of
said road to be about sixty miles; the general di
rection of said road to be easterly and westerly,
and to run through the counties of Fayette, Cow
eta and Heard, in said State, and to extend from a
point of connection with the Atlanta, Birming
ham and Atlantic railroad at or near Aberdeen, in
said Fayette county, westwardly to and through
the city of Newnan. in said Coweta county, and
Htill westwardly from said city to the city of
Franklin, in said Heard county, and from said
city of Franklin in a westerly or northwesterly
direction to the State line between the States of
Georgia and Alabama, and the above designated
points being the principal places from which and
to which said road is to he constructed.
The amount of the proposed capital stock to lx?
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS, all
of which is to be common stock, and divided into
shares of One Hundred Dollars each. The time
for which petitioners desire to he thus incorpora
ted is one hundred and one years, with the privi
lege of renewal at the expiration of said time; the
principal office to be located in said city of New
nan. Petitioners do intend in good faith to go for
ward without delay to secure subscriptions to the
capital stock, to construct, equip, maintain and
operate said railroad; and the petitioners request
to be incorporated under the laws of said State.
They show they have given four weeks’ notice of
their intention to apply for said charter by the
publication of this petition in each of the newspa
pers in which the Sheriff’s advertisements arc
published in each of the counties through which
said proposed road will probably run. once a week
for four weeks before the filing of this petition-
said newspapers being the Fayetteville News,
published in Fayetteville, in said Fayette county;
The Herald and Advertiser, published in said city
of Newnan. Coweta county; and The News and
Banner, published in the said city of Franklin,
Heard county.
Whekefoki:, petitioners pray that, they he duly
incorporated as prayed for, ar.d that the proper
certificate or charter he i-sued as provided by law.
JOHN W. DAN ILL,
HORE il. LANK,
BLN II. TOMRKINS,
R. B. MOOTY,
R. M. LIFFORD.
J. W. RAY,
ROBERT (i. CRAIN,
JAMLS R. DAN ILL,
W. D. TAYLOR.
W. T. GOODSON,
A. W. ROWERS,
FRANK S. LOFTIN,
R. T. McCUTCHEN,
ROE HEARN,
G. A. ADAMS.
D. B. WHITAKER.
W. y. RIDLEY,
J.. F. DAVIS.
Of Heard county, Georgia.
A RECORD OF NINE
TEEN WEARS.
Tested Year Atter Year With
Most Successful Results.
The Farmers of Coweta and Adjoining Counties Are So Well Ac
quainted With the Old Reliable Brands of
Guano Made By the
Coweta Fertilizer Co.
That no introduction or commendation is needed at our hands. We merely
wish to call attention to the fact that we are again handling these goods, and
that we have no hesitancy in offering them upon their merits in competition with
any grade or brand of fertilizer manufactured in the United States. Repeated
tests during the past, nineteen years, under all conditions, have demonstrated
their superiority as a soil stimulant, and their unquestioned efficacy as a plant
food. We furnish the BEST GOODS for the LEAST MONEY.
This season we are offering the following well-known brands, viz :
“Pope Brown’s Special Formula for Cotton” 9. 2. 3.
Regarded by many as the best Cotton Grower on the market.
Sea Bird Special Fertilizer 10. 3. 3.
Extra high-grade. More plant food, at less cost.
W. O. C., a Pure Blood Guano 10. 2. 2.
Always gives satisfaction.
Coweta High-Grade Fertilizer 10.2.2.
Never known to fail. Good for all crops.
Aurora Ammoniated Phospho 9. 2. 1.
A Pure Cotton Seed Meal Compound—r, liable, tried, and never found wanting.
A. A. P., (Acid Phosphate, with Ammonia and Potash) ...10. 1. 1.
Good where you do not need much Ammonia and Potash.
Our Brands of Dissolved Bone and Potash are as follows :
Sea Bird Dissolved Bone and Potash 15 & 3.
Coweta Dissolved Bone and Potash . .13 & 4.
Coweta Dissolved Bone and Potash 10 & 4.
Coweta Dissolved Bone and Potash 8 & 4.
Coweta Dissolved Bone and Potash 12 & 2.
Coweta Dissolved Bone and Potash 10 & 2.
Pure Acid Phosphates--
Coweta High-Grade Acid Phosphate 14 per cent.
Coweta Standard Acid Phosphate 12 per cent.
We appreciate the patronage given us by our friends in the past, and ask
a continuance of the same. We guarantee fair treatment and as reasonable
terms as can be offered by any dealer in Georgia.
ANDERSON & BOWERS,
AGENTS COWETA FERTILIZER CO.,
Newnan, Georgia.
wm
W. A. II KAN NON.
It. T. I IIOMPHON,
I. N. OKU, S|{..
CHAHLLS C. I'AKROTT,
M. C. ARNALL. HR ,
I. J'. ISHADLLY,
J. J. KEITH.
W. C. WRIGHT.
Of Coweta county, Georgia.
GEORGIA—Coweta Countv :
Notice la hereby ftiven that after the expiration
of four week»’ publication of the foregoing peti
tion and thl« notice once a week for four week.,
tin. undersigned will apply to the Honorable
Philip Cook, Secretary of State, for a ch
the Webtekn ok Geokcia Railway.
JOHN W. DAN ILL,
HOPE II. LANL,
HLN II. TOMPKINS,
It. H. MOOTY,
It. M. LIPI OKD,
J. W. HAY.
ROHKKT G. CHAIN,
JAMLS It. DAN ILL,
W. D. TAYLOH,
W. T. GOODSON.
A. W. POWERS,
PRANK S. LOFTIN,
P. T. McCUTCHEN.