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fiirM and Advertiser,
“Tnv Hetaid and Advertiser” office is upstair*
over the New nan Banking C j. ’Photic b.
A. Most Valuable Agent.
T!:p glycerine employed in Dr. Pierce's
medicines greatly enhances the medicinal
properties which it extracts from native
medicinal routs and holds in solution
much 1 otter than alcohol would. It also
{>■ ssosses medicinal properties of its own,
being a valuable demulcent, nutritive,
antiseptic and antiferment. It adds
greatly to the (ilicacy of the lilack Cherry-
bark, Blood root. Golden Seal root. Stone
root and Queen’s root, contained In
"Golden Medical Discovery” In subduing
chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial,
throat and lung directions, for all of which
these agents are recommended by stand
ard medical authorities.
In all cases where there is a wasting
away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak
stoniaCTr. as In the early stages of con-
summibn, there can be no doubt that gly
cerine/acts us a valuable nutritive and
aids the Uplden Seal root. Stone root,
Queefds root and Black Cherrybark in
promoting digestion arid building up the
flesh anVfstrencth. controlling the cough
and bringing about a healthy condition
of the while system. Of course, it must
not be einfected to work miracles. It will
not curebfcinsumption except In its earlier
stages. It, will cur- vary yuvrre.
It Caine With the Reunion After
Both Had Suffered.
nute. hang-;
arm larFTTgT
•(Til. ei
C'JUgLij. bf\’ncliiiil
is. arid i.'hronic sore
with hoaiseness. Irfacutc couglis
liang-on coughs, or those of longstanding,
even when accompanied by bleeding fr< in
lungs, that it lias performed Us most
marvelous cures.
Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. I)., of Den
nett Med. College, Chicago, says of gly
cerine:
"In dyspepsia itserve« an excellent purpose.
Holding a lixed quantity of the peroxiue of
hydrogen in solution, it is one of the best
manufactured products of the present time in
its action upon enfeebled, disordered stom
achs, especially if there is ulceration or ca
tarrhal gastritis (catarrhal inflammation of
stomach), it is a most efficient preparation.
Glycerine will relieve many cases of pyrosis
(heartburn) and excessive gastric (stomach)
acidity.” . , ,
"Golden Medical Discovery” enriches and
purifies the blood curing blotches, pimples,
eruptions, scrofulous swellings and old sores,
or ulcers. ^
Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y..
for free booklet telling all about, the native
medicinal roots composing this wonderful
medicine. There no alcohol in it.
D P A L D I N G S
B A S E B A L L
OODS.
G
New Shipment
in.
lust
Write or call
for Spalding’s
1909 Catalog,
MURRAY'S
BOOK S T OR E
Atlanta and West Point
RAILROAD COMPANY
arrival and departure
OFTRAINS AT NEWNAN, GA.
Subject to change and typographical
errors.
35.
i :45 i
No. IS t):03 a.
No. 33’ ..10:40 a.
No. M.'.'.W..'.Y. 3:35]).
No. 20 «:40 p.
No. 34 5:32 ]).
N«i. -42 «,:45 a.
No. 144
No. 38
N<
40.
9:33 a. in.
.12:28 p. in.
. 5 :12 ]). m.
7 :1« ]>. in.
0:23 ]». in.
10 :4o ]*. m.
• Sunday only. 'Daily except Sun
day. All other trains daily. Odd
numbers, southbound; even num
ber.‘, northbound.
CREME ELCAYA
A
TOILET
CREAM
FOR
THE
COMPLEXION
Preserving It against the harsh
effects of wind and dust.
“Always ready.”
FR1CE 50 CENTS
By MARIE SYLVESTRE.
[Copyright, 1009, by Associated Literary
Press.]
Katherine 1 teuton was a not utt-
unusual product of a workaday great
city, yet was she an exception to Iter
sisters. In years site was twenty-two
when Dwight Sanlxtrn first knew her.
and, added to physical attractiveness,
was an indefinable something that re
minded you of Dresden china or dain
ty. delicate silks—something alien to a
strident. Jostling world of dollars and
duns.
Miss Denton was a stenographer In
the law office where young Sanborn
worked after graduation from the law
school and where he subsequently
earned a Junior partnership. In the
first days of apprenticeship to the law
he remembered more of Drowning
than of Blaekstone and quoted the
philosopher Kant to the neglect of the
legal Kent.
It was similarity In tastes that first
brought the young people closer than
stenographer and employer. Sanborn
was dictating a petition to be filed lit
an action for breach of promise, and
his levity evidenced his distaste of the
task.
Flippantly he quoted from Mrs.
Browning’s immortal sonnet, which
the incautious defendant had incorpo
rated In a letter destined to be an ex
hibit In the case:
"I love thee with a love 1 seemed to lose
With my lost saints. 1 love thee with the
breath. Smiles"—
The rest escaped him.
‘•Smiles!” he repeated, in nn effort to
remember, when Miss Denton inter
rupted:
"Smiles, tears of ail my fife, and If God
choose
1 filial but love thee better after death."
The repetition was impersonal, of
course, and the young lawyer let es
cape him the repressed tenseness of
the tones whi h told of sympathy with
the heart that gave the sentiment of
the world and tfinre than that for a
man who could Inspire it..
Sanborn laughed, thanked her for
completing the quotation and finished
outlining the petition. Afterward lie
remembered, and a day or two later
a daintily bound volume of the Por
tuguese sonnets reached Miss Denton's
desk with Sanborn's card. That was
the beginning.
Love came quickly to both of them,
and scarcely a year elapsed until Kath
erine Denton was Katherine Sanborn.
Courtship days were dreams of accom
plishment and development of higher
ideals they believed they wanted to
realize.
But. while the woman loved and
lived tied dreamed, the man deteriorat
ed to the typically masculine. He be
came brilliant in manipulation of the
lav's intricacies and was made a reg
ularly retained counsel to a number
of immense and important corpora
tions Tlis days at the office were
filled with the law. and the evenings
at heme felt the dominating influence
of ambition’s passion.
Instead of the dreams of sweetheart
days everything was subordinated to
the quest for legal success. And to
Katherine came the thought that even
in his profession ideals had been de
throned and new gods sot tip for adora
tion and devotion, for Sanborn was
at ills best when piloting a corporation
craft through mazes that baffled the
intent of the statutes.
“I’m losing tiie man I married.” she
cried to herself in the solitude of neg
lected wifehood. “He’s slipping, slip
ping. and I cannot prevent it, cannot
hold him.”
With disillusionment came unrest,
with unrest rebellion. To the woman
it seemed that ail that life held worth
while was being taken from tier. She
was envied as tho wife of a brilliant
man. one destined to acquire great
wehlth. but these were not desirable
to her.
“Sometimes—I’m not quite happy."
she told him faiteringly one nlclit
when he remarked her apparent Ill
ness.
"Nonsense, little girl! We're getting
ak>rg famously.’’ lie told tier.
“Y< u are." she answered dully.
"Well. It’s for us both.” was his re
ply. but it did not satisfy.
For three years she endured it. and
betause (here were only tlie two of
them life grew lonelier and lonelier
until itt a moment of desperate aber
ration she fled Itis house and left a
note bidding him not to seek her.
At first she was in doubt where to
j turn. Site had a little money and for
i sure she could secure a position as
stenographer and that a few weeks
would enable her to regain her old
time cleverness in the calling. Then
rhe reflected that Sanborn would nnt-
I ttrally seek tier in the field of her
former employment.
She thought of nursing, and It seemed
j a haven. To forget onfi’s own griefs
| in comforting others in distress ap
| pealed to her. A fortnight after her
• flight she was a student nurse in a
1 private sanitarium under the direction
m .. „ . i....... -..-I,,, l.nil
. "here
.'t you
ather'.ne.
go this time aright. But search was
unavailing.'
Then came the breakdown, complete,
miserable, and the physician lire-,. ,, ,, , r _
scribed the sanitarium where his wife >* done ’ ™ trie " d! °' ,ly * htt “ f ” r ’
was learning the rudiments of nurs-1 ther, and the road will have to end ! 1 he
ing. Sanborn was put in a room in a j shadows begin to lengthen, the evening
ixirt of the building where only the so6n will close, and it’s ho! for the Inn
graduate nurses were usually allowed;
consequently it was some days before
Katherine knew the roof that sheltered
her housed Dwight.
The physician installed her in a
room adjoining Sanborn's and ex
plained enough of tiie situation to the
nurse in charge to secure her as ally
in what he hoped to accomplish.
“llang your medicines! 1 want Katli
erine. Do you hear? (Sot her!” site
heard one morning in commanding
tones. She started, listened again to
his voice in deliritim, then peeked can
tiously through a half opened door.
He was hardly recognizable, this sal
low faced patient with sunken cheeks
and bulging eyes. With a qtti k little
cry of pity and l ive she ran to him.
"Dwight, Dwight," site s>
is Katherine! litre, dear!
know me?"
"(So away! You're not
Slie left me. ,1’vc lost her. and I waul
her. God, I want her!" And tears
came to ills eyes, as they did to iters.
The wise ||ld doctor permitted tier to
assist in tIn? nursing, but tie re were
times when she was rigidly excluded.
The exclusion hurt her. but tiie doctor
was inexorable, and obedience is the
first requirement In a resort of the
kind, so she had to obey.
It was the morning of tiie 1st of
June. Katherine was in the room ad
joining her husband when she heat'd
him call;
"Oh. Katherine!" And there was a
naturalness in the tones that Indicat
ed returned reason. Rhe dropped the
book she had to rush to him. and in
tiis eyes were remembrance and < lent'
understanding.
"Katherine, It was you, then. I—1
thought 1 dreamed it.”
“I'm sorry, Dwight, sorrier than I
can tel! you. It was all wrong, my
going away. 1—1 want, forgiveness,"
site whispered.
“Forgiveness? You? Rather I should
ask it. it has been hard. It seemed
cruel, but perhaps it was for our good,
sweetheart. The hoy you used to love
is coming, bo lt—coming back—coming
back, sweetheart.”
For a moment ho lay silent, his eyes
closed. Then he started.
"The birds, dearest, tiie birds?" he
asked.
"It’s the first day of .Tune.” site whis
pered.
“June. Katherine. June for us for al- j
ways." lie murmured sleepily as ho lift
The Sexton’s Inn.
Walt Whitman in Washington Humid:
Only a little longer, and the journey
of the Sexton, an inn where we'll all
repose. The inn has no bridal chamber,
no suites for the famed or great; the
guests, when they go to slumber, are
all of the same estate; the chambers
are small and narrow, the couches are
hard and cold, and the grinning, lieslt-
less landlord is not to be bribed with
gold. A sheet for the proud and haugh
ty, a sheet for the beggar guest; a
sheet for the blooming maiden — a
sheet for us all, and rest. No bells at
the dawn of morning, no rap at the
chamber door; but silence is there, and
slumber forever and ever more. Then
ho! for the Inn of the Sexton, the inn
where we all must sleep, when our
hands are done with their toiling and
our eyes have cessed to weep !
There’s a prominent Judge living in
the rural districts of Virginia, where
bath-tubs are not to he found in every
home, who was the proud possessor ol
such a luxury, which he permitted no
one else to use. One day he found that
some one had been using his tub, and,
reaching the conclusion that it could he
none other than Mary, his housemaid,
he summoned her to appear before him
and charged her with having trans
gressed his unwritten law. Mary con
fessed her fault, and the Judge, after
enjoining her to sin no more in this
manner, as freely forgave her. Observ
ing that the maid seemed somewhat
hurt at the “calling down’’ which he
had thus given her, the Judge, by way
of softening his rebuke, said ;
“It is not that 1 object to your using
my tub, Mary, hut 1 hate to think that
you would do anything behind my back
that you wouldn’t do before my face.”
“Defend me from the man who
‘chooses a wife’ instead of falling in
love with a woman,” says Winifred
Black. “1 wouldn’t thank any man to
choose me because he thought 1 would
be convenient to have around the house.
I’d rather marry a man who loves me
in spite of the way l dress and in spite
of the things I did, and take my
chances of having a few years of half
way happiness with him, than to mar
ry one of these good bargain sort of
persons who are trying to ‘do the |
ed the hand that lav in ids to Ids lips ; thing sensibly.’ ‘Sensibly!’ There is
and kissed 1t. And like n tired eVLl j no sense in love, never was, and never
ho slipped into sleep, sweet sleep, with | vv j]] [ 1e . that’s why it. makes the world
an awakening to happiness and love. j round.”
"My friends,” said a temperance lec
turer, lowering his voice to an impres
sive whisper, “if ail the saloons were
at the bottom of the sea, what would
be the result?”
And the answer came: “Lots of peo
ple would get drowned.”
An exchange remarks that, a man can
start out any dH.v. and inside of ari hour
and thirty minutes he can engage a wo
man to work for him ior life at noth
ing a week, while it will take two
weeks of solid search to get one to
work at fair wages ami hoard.
The Doctor and the Dog.
A family that live lu a detached I
house out In the suburbs telephoned J
for their doctor. The cull was urgent. ;
It was lute in the evening.
When the doctor arrived at the gate
the family dug was there ahead of
him. The dog did not like the look*of
a man with n triangle shaped hunch
of whiskers and black satchel.
The doctor started to brush by the
dog and go in. But the dog soon
showed him that he wasn't joking.
"Maybe they'll hear the dog and coil
him off." thought the doctor, and he
waited. But they didn't
There was just one thing for the doc-
3 te do, and that was to go to tiie
nearest telephone and cal. up the fam
ily. But he learned that it was no
easy Job to find a telephone. It was
then pretty late, and lie bad to go half
a dozen blocks back toward town lie-
fore be found n place where he could
got a phone.
“Dog!" repeated the man at the other ;
end. “We haven't any dog. You must
have stopped at the place next door
They have a dog. Now, hurry l.nrlt
here."—New York Press.
Clubs for men have added much to
tone comforts at home.
Tutt’sPills
stimulate the TORPID LIVER,
strengthen the digestive organs,
regulate the bowels, and are un-
equuled as an
ANTI-BEL10US MEDICINE,
In mularial districts their virtues
ore widely recognized, as they pos
sess peculiar properties In freeing
the system from that poison. Ele
gantly sugar coated.
Take No Substitute.
For sale, by Holt & Cates Co.
New Advertise me nis
1 of a kindly old physician who hnd
I known and loved the girl since her
earliest days In New York. Wisdom
! had come to him with years, and lie
knew that a few months of the se
elusion she sought would bring clearer
vision.
At the first shock Sanborn was nigh
to insanity. That his Katherine was
discontented he had not believed. Yet
in her note he saw what they had
missed because of his money madness.
Right—she was a million times right,
he told himself bitterly, and could be
Give us a trial order on job 1 finfl her a s ain they would begin to-
printing gether at the start and, please God,
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Clears and bPout*r.r.e the hnlr.
Promotes a Invariant growth.
17Tver Fails to Beatore Gray
K.-’.ir to its Youthful Color.
Cu:» f-"a:p Uifputi-; <s. hi/.r !;• I'.G 4.
T he modern,
progressive farmer
no longer drives
to market without first telephoning and learning
the prevailing prices. The Telephone saves these
unnecessary trips—saves wear and tear on stock
and equipment. By connecting with the Bell Sys
tem the farmer can talk from his home to distant
points. Under the Bell plan service can he secured
at low cost.
For information and booklet write to
nearest Bell telephone manager or to
Farmers’ Line Department
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO.
SOUTH PHYOH STREET, ATLANTA. GA.
First and Finest on the Line
Lavadura
“It Softens the Water
four hands won't gut red, rough and cracked
—and you'll need only half as much soap Same
when you put Lavadura in the dishwater everything ^
.s sweeter, cleaner, brighter—and it actually benefit!
vour hands.
I.nvadura can be used in hot or cold water with the same
wonderfully helpful results. Perfectly harmless. A Sc package
will show you how much it can accomplish for you.
Aik for it at Grocer, and Draggilti.
In Sc and IOc Packagn.
You can't really enjoy a bath in hard water. Soften it with
Lavadura and see how much better you feel Removes perspiration
odors, cures dandruff and preserves the hair.
LAVADURA CHEMICAL CO.
Worn Women
1 Women, worn and tired from overwork, neofl a
tonic. That feeling of weakness or helplessness will
not leave you of itself. You should take Wine of I
| Cardui, that effectual remedy for the ailments and
weaknesses of women. Thousands of women have
tried Cardui and write enthusiastically of tho great I
| benefit it has been to them. Try it—don’t experiment
-use this reliable, oft-tried medicine.
me URDU
The Woman’s Tonic
i»
I Mrs. Bena Hare, of Pierce, Fla., tried Cardui and nftftrwwTj
l wrote: “I was a sufferer from all sorts of female trouble, bad
I pain in my side and legs, could not sleep, had shortness of Groatsi.
“I suffered for years, until my husband insisted cm my tryiu^j
Cardui. The first bottle gave me relief and now l am almost sreiL
Try Cardui ’Twill help you.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
wkMwrvya
FIFE
LIFE
HEALTH
H. C. FISHER & SONS
INSURANCE
OLDEST, STRONGEST AND
MOST RELIABLE COMPANIES
ACCIDENT LIABILITY TORNADO
WHEN IN' NISEI) OF
LUMBER AND PLANING
MILL STUFF
Of all kinds—Brackets, Mouldings, Columns, etc.—you will
find it to \ our interest to give us a call.
HOUSE BILLS A SPECIALTY
Vulcanite Roofing
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., NMYNAN, GA. : ’Phone 14.