Newspaper Page Text
'X
I
/y with.Lavadura to help you. Simply put a
0 tablespoonful in the tub when you soak the
clothes over night, then rinse in clear water
/$' and—your work is done.
#
‘It Softens the Water**
is unequaled for washing woolen blankets and
flannels so they will not shrink, or colored goods
so they will not fade. Doesn’t
injure the most delicate fabrics—
and saves your hands !
Used in dish-water instead of soap,
Lavadura cleans the china, glassware,
milk bottles, cans, pots and ‘pans as
they were never cleaned before. De
stroys odors and brightens everything
washed with it. Just try it.
Ash for it at Grocers and Druggists
In S cent and 10 cent Packages
It is harmful, you knc
to buthe in hard
water. Soften
Woman’s Beauty
Some women retain their beauty to an advanced
age. But women, who regularly endure pain, age
rapidly, for suffering leaves its lasting marks on
them.
Nearly all women suffer more or less with some
form of female trouble. It should not be neglected.
|!Avoid tlie pain—treat yourself at home by taking)
j Cardui, as thousands of other women have done.
I Begin at once and give Cardui a fair trial.
J 36 I
It Will Help You
(Mrs. 'Katie Burlison, Goreville, Ill., tided Cardui anti •writes:
“1 suffered with female troubles, and was so sick I could not stand
J on my feet. Finally I began to take Cardui, and soon began to
| mend. Now I am able to do all my housework and am. in much
better health than I was before.” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
Newnan Hardware Co.
Has a complete line of up-to-date
HARDWARE.
Stoves,Ranges, Farm and Garden Implements,Build
ers’ Hardware, Carpenters’ and Mechanics’
Tools, Paints and Varnishes, Paint Brushes,
Poultry Netting, Hog and Cattle Wire
Fencing, etc. In fact, we are head
quarters for everything in the
hardware line, and al
ways treat you right.
Newnan Hardware Co.,
GREENVILLE STREET,
Telephone [148.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.
ESTABLISHED 1354.
A Public Rest Room.
Some weeks ago a movement was
started by a few enterprising mer
chants of Newnan similar to that de
scribed in the article printed below,
but for some reason it was abandoned.
For their information, and as showing
what unity of action has accomplished
along the same line in a much smaller
town than Newnan, we invite a careful
reading of the article referred to—
“Travelers for commercial houses,
farmers and their families coming into
town to trade, and others while shop
ping would no doubt often appreciate
some place where they could rest and
talk over business matters or arrange
a deal. To supply this need an experi
ment has been tried and proved suc
cessful. It is regarded as a good busi
ness investment, and what Sunnyside,
Wash., a small town of about 1,200 in
the fertile Yakima valley, has done can
be at least attempted b.v other towns.
Yakima valley is settled quite thickly,
and, while there Rare many large
ranches, the majority are small ones
—twenty, forty or eighty acres—and
are tributary to Sunnyside, so a great
many people drive there to trade. If it
happens to be windy or dusty the vis
itors present a disheveled and almost
demoralized appearance, and would
like some convenient room where they
could retouch their toilet and restore
that harmonious and chic completeness
so dear to both men and women. The
necessity existed, and a few energetic
women saw it and determined to do
something, but they had not a penny to
start with. Anyway, they started. The
Public Rest Room club sprang into ex
istence. There are a president, secre
tary and treasurer and an executive
board. The president is a hustling, ca
pable woman. A room in the business
portion of Sunnyside was rented. The
first month’s rent was donated to offset
the expense of putting the room in or
der: it was papered and made as cozy
as possible. Tables, stoves, floor cov
erings. rockers and other chairs, couch
and other furniture and fixings w ere
donated or loaned, many of them not
entirely new. The telephone was also
donated. Bread, pies and cakes were
freely given for sale and a present of
about fifty potato sacks, which were
sold at 5c. each. So Sunnyside had a
place where men, women and children
could come in and enjoy a warm fire, a
rocking chair, papers, hooks and mag
azines. There is no charge for any of
these comforts, but a box for free-will
offerings stands on the table. Men
know where to find their wives when
they are through shopping. Friends
make appointments to meet each other
at the rest room. The club is not a
money-making scheme, as no one gets
a cent but the matron. There is also a
library of about 500 books, including
the latest and best. The merchants
contribute monthly 25 cents and up
ward, which more than pays the rent,
and any surplus is used to add another
comfort to the rooms. During the one
year of its life about 4,000 visits were
paid to the rest room, and the mer
chants look upon it as a good business
investment. The., new quarters have
four rooms — library, dining-room,
kitchen, and a room for ladies and ba
bies.”
—The Carroll grand jury recently
recommended the issuance of $50,000
of bonds for furthering the county’s
good roads movement. A county’s best
asset is its roads, and Carroll is mak
ing great progress along this line.
And good roads, like every other great
enterprise, takes money to start it.
Heard county would do well to issue
bonds for road building. It is the
most correct and best method for do
ing so. Heard has made a fine start
in the use of convicts, hut we can’t af
ford to stop there We should hurry
the building of first-class roads through
every section of the county, and when
this is done it will require only a nom
inal cost to maintain them, and low
taxes will pay off the bonds and inter
est without undue burden upon the.
people. We cannot expect low taxes
until we assume at once the expense
of anticipating and preventing high
taxes.—Franklin News and Banner.
The rich bachelor sighed and looked
at the beautiful girl fixedly. “Things
are at sixes and sevens with me. I feel
the great need of a woman in my home,
one who could straighten out my tan
gled affairs and make life worth living
again.”
Her glance spoke an interest which
approximated expectation.
“Yes?” she queried softly.
He blurted out: “Do you know of
any good, able-bodied woman whom I
could get to clean house?”
Excursion Fares via Central of Georgia
Railway Company.
To Warm Springs, Ga., and return—
Account Georgia Bar Association,
to be held June 3-4, 1909. Tickets
on sale from points in Georgia.
To Nashville, Tenn., and return—Ac-
court Annual Session Sunday-
school Congress and Young Peo
ple’s Chautauqua, to be held June
9-14, 1909.
To Nashville, Tenn., and return—Ac
count Peabody College Summer
School lor Teachers and Vander
bilt Biblical Institute, to be held
June 9-August 4, 1909.
To Thomasville, Ga., and return.—Ac
count Grand Lodge I. O. O. F., of
Georgia, to be held May 25-27,
1909. Tickets on sale from points
in Georgia.
Building material of every description, moderately
priced.
Engines, Boilers. Corn Mills and Saw Mills.
Tanks, Stand-pipes, Towers and Tanks—any shape
any capacity, for any purpose, erected anywhere.
Full and complete stock Mill Supplies and Belting.
Estimates cheerfully furnished. Inquiries solicited,
and will receive immediate attention.
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., Newnan, Ga. ’Phone 14.
To
Memphis, Tenn.
and
return.
-Ac-
count U. C. V.
Reunion, to be held
June 8-10, 1909.
To
Asheville, N. t
., and
return.
—Ac-
count Dramatic
Order
Knights of
Khorassan. biennial meeting,
to be
held July 12-20
1909.
To
Louisville, Ky
, and
return.
-Ac-
count Ancient
rabic Order, Nobles
of the Mystic
Shrine
to be
held
June 8-10, 1909
To
Savannah, Ga.
, and
return.
-Ac-
count General Assembly Presbyte
rian Church, to he held May 20-29,
1909.
To Athens, Ga., and return.—Account
summer school. University of
Georgia, to he held June 26-July
17, 1909.
To Knoxville, Tenn., and return. Ac
count Summer School of the South,
to be held June 22-July 30, 1909.
To Tuscaloosa, Ala., and return.—Ac
count Summer School, to be held
June 8-Julv 5, 1909.
For full information in regard to
rates, dates of sale, limits, schedules,
etc., apply to nearest ticket agent.
When a town does not support its lo
cal paper properly, you need not look
for any great progress in that locality.
Local newspapers are the signboards
that tell strangers who the people are,
and the class of business in which the
people are engaged. Take a business
man who never patronizes his local pa
per, and you can scrape enough moss
off his back to pad a sofa. His ideas
have more than enough room in a tea
cup, and ho cannot stay far enough
ahead of a funeral procession to keep
the corpse from running over him.
The Harpoon.
"Say, paw,” queried small Tommy
Smith, "what do they always put in a
scythe when they make a picture of
Father Time?”
“It is intended to represent the short
ness of life, my son,” answered his
father. “Time cuts people down, you
know. ”
“But, paw,” continued Tommy,
“when Time shall be no mower, he’ll
drop his scythe, won’t he?”
“Speaking of time, young man,”
said the father, “you go and tell your
mother it’s time to put you to bed.”
He—“And you don’t think my friend
is level-headed?”
She—“No.”
He—“Pray, why? He is a most sen
sible man.”
She—“Why, he was down to see me
the other evening, and in the course of
our conversation he remarked that he
could carry a bucket of water on his
head as easily as any negro he had ever
seen. When he tried it, he failed ut
terly.”
The fair young debutante was sur
rounded by an admiring crowd of offi
cers at the Colonel’s ball. Mamma was
standing near by, smiling complacent
ly at her daughter’s social success. The
discussion was over the quarrel of the
day before between two brother offi
cers.
“What was the casus-belli?” asked
the fair debutante.
“Maud!” exclaimed mamma, in a
shocked voice. “How often have 1 told
you to say stomach?”
“Tommy,” asked the visitor, “what
are you going to be when you grow up
to be a man?”
“I’m going to be an arctic explorer,”
responded the bright little boy, “and
now will you give me a quarter?”
“Gracious, Tommy! What do you
want with a quarter?”
“I want to get five ice cream sodas
and find out how much cold 1 can
stand.”
The foot of the mountain is a great
ways from its brow, but where is the
mountaineer?
Cover Old Shingles With
VULCANITE
It ip specially suitod to this purpoRo
because of the extra weight and quality of
the felt lined in its manufacture, and it
ta/ccs tha same insuranco eta metal or dale.
Furt2*#rr unanswerable proof of the
general all-round superiority of Vulcanite
Roofing, in the fact that it took first, prize
at the Georgia State Fair; at. tne Alabama
Agricultural Fair; at the Mississippi Agri
cultural Fair, and the Alabama State Fair.
Don’t use any other roofing until you
write uk. investigating the economy and
superiority of this roofing.
R. D. COLE MFG. CO,,
^ Newnan, Ga. ^
DR. M. S. ARCHER,
Luthersville, Ga.
All calls prrunptly filled, day or night. Disci
of children a specialty.
When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain
remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn’t
any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would
also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble ?
Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Red Ranks, Miss.—“Words are inadequate to express wliat
Lydia 10. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound lias done for me. I
suffered from a female disease and weakness which the doc-
tors said was caused by a fibroid tumor, and I commenced to
ill ink there was no help for me. Lydia 10. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound made me a well woman after all other means had
failed. My friends are all asking wliat has helped me so much,
and 1 gladly recommend Lydia 10. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound.”—Mrs. Willie lOdwards.
Hampstead, Maryland.—“ Before taking Lydia 10. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound I was weak and nervous, nud could not
he on my feet half a day without suffering. The doctors told
me I never would be well without an operation, tint Lydia 15.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound lias done more for me than all
the doctors, and I hope this valuable medicine may come into
the hands of many more suffering women.” — Mrs. Joseph H.
Dandy.
We will pay a handsome reward to any person who will
prove to us that these letters are not genuine and truthful
— or that either of these women were paid in any way for
their testimonials, or that the letters are published without
their permission, or that the original letter from each did
not come to us entirely unsolicited.
Wliat more proof can any one ask ?
For JO years Lydia 15. Pinkhnm’s Vegetable
Compound lias I the standard remedy for
female ills. No sick woman dues justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and
lias thousands of cures to its credit.
>1 rs. Pinkliam invites all sick women
to write her for advice. She lias
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mrs. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass.
THOS. J. JONES,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office on Hancock street., near public erjuare.
Iteeidenoe next door to Virginia House
DR. F. I. WELCH,
Physician.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite publit
school building. ’Phone 234,
DR. T. B. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Sanatorium building. Office ’phot
call; residence ’phone 5—2 callB.
W. A. TURNER,
Physician and Surgeon.
Special attention given to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19'.■ Spring r»-*-t. I’lionc 2.’iO
Orange, Amber
and Red Top
Sorghum Seed
WE HAVE RECEIVED LARGE
MENTS OF EACH VARIETY.
RECLEANED, WITHOUT TRASH.
SEE US BEFORE BUYING. ! WE’LL
SAVE YOU MONEY.5
A largo quantity of Unknown Peas for sale.
M. C. Farmer
& Company
SHIP-
NICE,
K. W. STARR,
Dentist.
All binds of dental work. Patronage of the pub
lic solicited. Office over Newnan Hanking Co.
FIRE
LIFE
HEALTH
Tax Sale.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Will be sold before t he Court-house door in New
nan, Coweta county, Ga.. on the first Toe. day in
June next, between, the 1. pal hour* of to the
highest and beat bidder, the following d* rribed
property, to-wit:
One lot situate iri the town of r ola, ." •xllO
feet, on the west side of Main . •ree», and known
UH lot No. 7, section 31. in the plan of nuid town
of Senoia. Levied on to satisfy a tax fi. fa. i • ued
by VV. S. Hubbard. Tax Collector, for State a- 1
county taxes for the years 1902, E*'G, 1901. JUG.
39Mi, 1907 and 3908, the same being now due and
unpaid. The owner of Haiti property is unknown.
Levy made by Lewis McCullough, L. and
turned over to me. This March t, 19"9.
Also, at the same time arid place, one lot situate
in the town of Senoia, 80x119 f' “t, on v.< -• side of
Main street, and known as lot No. 9. section 11, in
the plan of said town. Levied on to satisfy a tax
fi. fa. issued by W. S. Hubbard, Tax Collector, for
State and county taxes for the years 1902, lfiOfi,
1904, 1905, 1906, 1907 anti 1908, thw same being now
due and unpaid. The owner of said property is
unknown. Levy made by Lewis McCullough, I*
C., and turned over to me. This March 4. 1909.
J. D. BREWSTER, Sheriff.
H. C. FISHER & SONS
INSURANCE
OLDEST, STRONGEST AND
MOST RELIABLE COMPANIES
ACCIDENT LIABILITY TORNADO