Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, July 30, 1909, Image 6

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GRANTVILLE. TURIN. Dr. Mixon filled his appointment at j News of the death of Mrs. J. J. the Methodist church Sunday. Dunagan at Lawrenceville, (ia., has Mr. and Mrs J. H. Gilbert spent Sun- been received here with genuine re day night in Newnan. I gret. Previous to her marriage she Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Smith spent Sat- was Miss Nannie Davies, daughter of urday in Newnan. the late Rev. H. K. Davies, and for Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McDonald spent several years was the efficient de- Sunday with their sister, Mrs. 1. C. Lester. Mr. Edward Nall spent Sunday night in Hogansville. Mrs. Edwin Hanks is visiting friends and relatives in Atlanta this week. Mrs. C. P. Glower was in Atlanta Tuesday. Mrs. Glenn Arnold, Mrs. Harry Bax ter and Miss Lucile Arnold spent Tues day in LaGrange. Mr. Byron Fuller spent Sunday in Grantville. Mr. Roy Bohannon, of Newnan, spent Monday and Tuesday in Grantville. Mr. and Mrs. Burks Nall, of Lone Oak, spent Sunday with their daugh ter, Mrs. 1. G. Lester. Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Smith visited relatives at White Oak this week. Mrs. Anna Jeter and daughter, Wil lie, spent Sunday in Moreland. Mrs. Sallie Humphries and daughter, Miss Bessie, are visiting relatives at Garrollton this week. Mrs. Hugh Garter and little son, of Atlanta, are visiting at the home of Mr. H. A. Gamp. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hood, of Louise, spent Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Will Holloway. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. White have re turned to Savannah, after a week’s stay with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. White. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Lambert spent Tuesday and Wednesday in LaGrange. Miss Ruth Nall, ol Lone Oak, spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss John nie Lee Lester. Mr. T. R. Fuller has returned home, after a pleasant visit to friends and relatives in Alabama. Master Mercer Strickland has return ed to Senoia. after a pleasant visit to his uncle, Mr. Jim Gilbert. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bryant and children, of LaGrange, visited Mrs. L. P. Bryant Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Dr. Mixon has as her guests this week Miss Elizabeth Smith and Miss Mary Harper, of Elberton. Mrs. A. H. S. Bugg entertained the Parsonage Aid Society Wednesday afternoon. July 28th. A Night Rider’s Raid. The worst night riders are calomel, croton oil or aloes pills. They raid your bed to rob you of rest. Not so with Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They never dis tress or inconvenience, but always cleanse the system, curing Golds, Head ache, Gonstipation, Malaria. 25c. at all drug stores. PALMETTO. The ten-days’ revival meeting which has been in progress at the Mothodi t church closed Tuesday night. The pas tor, Rev. G. W. Gary, was assisted by Rev. W. '1'. Hamby, of Atlanta. The services were largely attended, and it is seldom that the people of our com munity have had the privilege of lis tening to such eloquent sermons as were preached during this series of meetings. Rev. Mr. Hamby’s work among us was faithful, true, and pro- _ ductive of much good, and we realize, i faiied, Bucklen’s Arnica Save cured through his discourses, that we have! me.” Infallible for Piles, Burns, Scalds, been "fed on the fruit of the wheat.” Cuts, Boils, Fever-Sores, Eczema, Salt Mrs. E. B. Cotton, ot Grantville, is! Rheum, Corns, 25c. Guaranteed by all visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. druggists. E. Culbrenth. Miss Ella Trimble, of East Point, was the recent guest of Miss Ella Griffith. Miss Daphne Doyle, the attractive guest of Mrs. 1). B. Bullard, will leave Monday for a two-weeks’ visit to rela tives in Atlanta, after which she will return to her home in Cincinnati. Miss Lucile Condor is visiting friends in Corinth. l)r. Skein, of Windsboro, Tex., who has been the guest of his kinsman, Dr. F. T. Mixon, has returned home. Mrs. L. T. Wilkins, of College Park, was the guest Thursday of her aunt, Mrs. Alice Cochran. Mrs. Cochran’s friends are glad to learn of her conva lescence, after an illness of several months. Mrs. Leila M. Swann and Miss Estelle Swann have returned home, after a very pleasant stay at Lithia Springs. Miss Marie Mixon and Master Forest M ixon, of Atlanta, are spending the week in Palmetto, the guests of Mrs. F. T. Mixon. The condition of Mrs. W. N. Edge, whose serious illness is causing much sorrow among her many friends, shows | no improvement at this writing, and her death is expected at any moment. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Batchelior an nounce the birth of a daughter on the 26th inst. Miss Lucile Smith is in Dalton, at tending a house party given by Mrs. Frank QuilMan. Mrs. Dean Stith has returned home, after a two-weeks’ visit to relatives in Talladega, Ala. July 28th. pot agent at Turin. She (licked up tel egraphy without the aid of an instruc tor, and became quite expert with the key. A more obliging agent never filled this or any other like position, and when she married a couple of years ago the community gave her up with much reluctance. Besides her husband she is survived by her aged mother, who is now childless. The annual meeting at the Methodist church is in progress this week. The pastor is being ably assisted by Rev. Mr. Parks, of Whitesburg, ami Rev. Mr. Carter, of LaGrange. The annual meeting at the Baptist church will be gin next Sunday, and continue one week. Mrs. H. S. Rees, sr., celebrated her 71st birthday last Monday, and without her knowledge her children prepared an elegant dinner in honor of the occa sion. Those present at the dining were Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Shell, jr., and children; Col. R. W. Adamson, of Carrollton; Mr. and Mrs. II. S. Rees, jr., and child, of East Point: Mrs. Elam Deracken, of Senoia; Miss Rebie Rees, C. W. Rees and A. A. Rees. Other members of the family were ab sent on account of conflicting engage ments. It was strictly a family affair, and one that warmed the heart and cheered the spirits of the devoted mother, while delighting those who prepared the dinner, reverencing at the same time the nativity of a pious and loving mother. Mrs. W. B. Callahan, of East Point, is visiting the family of Rev. H. S. Rees this week. Miss Lois Christian, of Senoia, is the guest of Miss Rebie Rees. The corn crop will he short in this section, owing to neglect at the proper working time. Where it has been cul tivated cotton is looking well. Miss Alina Alhright, of Lutherville, is the guest of Miss Lizzie Walker. Miss Margaret Gay entertained charmingly Tuesday in honor of Miss Alma Alhright, of Lutherville. The young people of Turin were also entertained Monday night by Miss Liz zie Walker, in honor of her guest, Miss Albright. Mrs. Stroud and little daughter, of Barnesville, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. 0. P. Lindsay. Little Miss Almeta Hutcheson, of Decatur, is with her aunt, Mrs. E. H. Powell. Mrs. E. North, from near Carrollton, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. 0. Bailey, Miss Bonnie Hunter and Miss Addilu Sams visited Mrs. G. P. Wilkinson in Newnan last week. Mrs. Wilkinson accompanied them home. Mrs. 11. I’. Thurman and little daugh ter, of Tifton, are visiting relatives here. Mrs. J. P. Hammett, of Corinth, has been the guest of Mrs. Ed Dominick. July 28th. Tortured on a Horse. “For ten years I couldn’t ride a horse without being in torture from piles,” writes L. S. Napier, of Rugless, Ky. When all doctors and other remedies Mr. Jesse Patterson, of Atlanta, is at home on his vacation. Mr. Heidt Pendergrast, of Green ville, spent Sunday with Prof. L. E. Bevis. Mr. Brooks, of Columbus, spent tie week-end with his family, who are vis iting Mrs. Natb Upshaw. Mr. Turner I.assetter, of Atlanta, is spending his vacation with homefolk*. Mr. Cicero Norris has returned from White Sulphur Springs. Messrs. Thornton and McAlpin, of Chatttanooga, Tenn., stopped over Sunday night en route to a house par ty at Raleigh. Quite a number from here attended the Hindsman reunion at St. Charles last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hurst spent Sunday with the family of Mr. Jas. K. Polk, near Moreland. Mr. Ode Garrett and family, of St. Charles, are visiting relatives here. Mr. Doc Turner, of Cedartown, spent a few days this week with Mr. Wesley Willingham. July 28th. DODSON. Elder F. B. Powell filled his regular appointment at Liberty last Saturday and Sunday. The Chattahoochee Musical Conven tion will meet at Macedonia on Thurs day, Friday and Saturday of this week. Dr. W. II. Tanner has purchased an automobile. Mrs. T. A. Sewell is spending sever al days with her mother, Mrs. John Dukes, near Newnan, who has been quite sick for several days. She is im proving now. Mr. J. T. Hixon, of Villa Rica, will teach a singing school at Macedonia, beginning next Monday. Let every body attend. Prof. Hixon is a fine singer. Mrs. Dolphin Cox died last Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Dukes. She had been sick for several weeks. Pellagra was the cause of her death. Her remains were laid to rest in the cemetery at Macedonia. Rev. F. J. Amis conducted the funeral. The farmers are busy “laying by” their crops. Dr. T. W. Sewell and family, of Newnan, visited relatives at Roscoe last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Pate, of Whites burg, visited Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Sew ell last Thursday. July 28th. Sees Mother Grow Young. “It would be hard to overstate the wonderful change in my mother since she began to use Electric Bitters,” writes Mrs. W. L. Gilpatrick of Dan- forth, Me. “Although past 70 she seems really to be growing young again. She suffered untold misery from dys pepsia for 20 years. At last she could neither eat, drink nor sleep. Doctors gave her up and all remedies failed till Electric Bitters worked such wonders for her health.” They invigorate all vital organs, cure Liver and Kidney troubles, induce sleep, impart strength and appetite. Only 50c. at all druggists. “Are his views sound?” “Principally that.” LUTHERVILLE. Protracted services began at the will con Life 100,000 Years Ago. Scientists have found in a cave in Switzerland bones of men who lived 100,000 years ago, when life was in con stant danger from wild beasts. To-day the danger, as shown by A. W. Brown of Alexander. Me., is largely from dead- j Carrollton, ly disease, “if it had not been for Dr. King's New Discovery, which cured me, 1 could not have lived,” he writes, “suf fering as I did from a severe lung trouble and stubborn cough.” To cure Sore Lungs, Colds, obstinate Coughs, and prevent Pneumonia, it’s the best med icine on earth. 5l)c and $1.00. Guaran teed by all druggists. Trial bottle free. services Baptist church Sunday, and tinue through this week. Dr. Arthur Glenn, of Birmingham, Ala., is visiting relatives here. Mr. Walter Glenn, of Manchester, is also in town. Mrs. Geesling and little son, of Ma con, have gone to Norwood. Mrs. Gus Williams and children have returned from Hampton, where they have been visiting relatives for the past month. Mr. Hump Braswell and family, of Moreland, spent Thursday with Mrs. B. F. Nall. Mr. Allan, of Manchester, spent Sunday in Lutherville. Mr. Jim Moreland, of Woodbury, is in town. Mrs. Virgil Moreland and children went to Woodbury last week. Mrs. Ed Whatley, of Grantville, snent last Thursday with Mrs. J. H. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Williams spent a few days in Greenville this week. Mrs. Raymond Sullivan, of Senoia, is visiting Miss Garrouehe Norris. Miss Jennilu Norris spent the latter part of last week with Mrs. J. W. Trammell. She is with Miss Gar- rouche Norris this week. Miss Lula Norris, of Zebulon, spent a few days last week with Miss Azile Norris. Miss Verr Lassetter is teaching a summer school at Duluth. Mr. Metus O’Kelley, of Eogansville, joined his wife here last week. They left Monday, after a pleasant visit to Lutherville relatives. Miss Ludie Upshaw, of East Point, is visiting Mrs. G. L. Colley. Miss Mattie Darden has returned from a pleasant visit to relatives at Consumption kills many more people in America during each four-year period than fell in the four years of the Civil War. The stamping out of the plague would be the greatest boon that could be bestowed upon humani.y. Mrs. Henry Alexander and little son, of Roopville, spent the week-end with Mrs. Jim Mathews. The Girls’ Sewing Club met with Miss Pallie Mai Fuller this week. She proved quite a charming hostess, and the girls report a good time. Dr. Hugh Taylor, of Grantville, spent Sunday with homefolks. Miss Waddell, of Woodbury, is visit ing Miss Clara Williams. Mr. Harry Hardaway, of Fillmore, is spending the week here. Miss Ruth Glazier, of Moreland, is spending a few days with Miss Ophelia Lambert. 25°i° Discount on all Wen's low-Cut Shoes Salei i. Hoy U.C'.i/MvU?2 c if 'u/jj. jUuU ..... ONE OF FOURTEEN STYLES. COTTON Why spend sleepless nights wondering what you shall get this fall for your cotton? To everyone buying a buggy of us during the month of August we will guarantee them TWELVE AND ONE-HALF CENTS per pound for suf ficient cotton to pay the purchase price of the vehicle. With this remarkable assurance, can you afford to delay buying? I. N. ORR COMPANY Excursion to Tybee and Savannah. Via Central of Georgia Railway. $5 round trip; limit five days. Trains will leave Newnan at 6:39 a. m. Aug. 23; arrive Savannah 6:30 p. m.; arrive Tybee 8 p. m. Coaches will be operated through to Savannah. Apply to G. T. Stocks, Ticket Agent at New nan, for additional information. Tybee, the greatest Southern coast resort. Tybee, where ocean breezes blow. Legal Notices. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA-Coweta County : All persons having: demands against the estate of Mrs. Athie E. Finley, late of said county, de ceased. are hereby notified to render in their de mands to the undersigned according to law; and all persons indebted to said estate are required to make immediate payment. This June 11, 1909. Prs. fee $3.75. SALLIE FINLEY, Executrix. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Notice is herebv given to all creditors of the es tate of John M. Brown, late of said county, de ceased, to render in an account of their demands to me within the time prescribed by law, properly made out; and all persons indebted to said de ceased are hereby requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. This July 1, 1909. Prs. fee. $3.76. J. B. BROWN. Administrator of J. M. Brown, deceased. Sargent. Ga., R. F. D. No. 1. Twelve Months' Support. GEORGIA-Coweta County: The return of the appraisers setting apart twelve months’ support to the family of J. M. Brown, deceased, having been filed in my office, all per sons concerned are cited to show cause by the first Monday in August, 1909, why said application for twelve months’ support should not be granted. This July 5. 1909. Prs. fee. $3. L. A. PERDUE. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA-Coweta County : Creecy Leigh, administratrix on the estate of Alonzo Leigh, deceased, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for letters of dis mission from her said trust, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in August next, if any they can. why said application should not be granted. This July 9, 1909. Prs. fee. $3. L. A. PERDUE. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA-Coweta County: T. F. Rawls, guardian of Myrtis Lee O’Neal, hav ing applied to the Court of Ordinary of said coun ty for letters of dismission from his said trust, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in August next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This July 5, 1909. Prs. fee. $3. L. A. PERDUE. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Cow'eta County: T. F. Rawls, administrator of Mary Sewell, de ceased, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for letters of dismission from his said trust, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court bv the first Monday in August next, if any they can. why said applica tion should not be granted. This July 5. 1909. Prs. fee. 1- A. PERDUE. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Mrs. Lilia H. Bridges, guardian of Verna M. Bridges Ingram, having appliel to the Court of Ordinary of said county for letters of dismission from her said trust, all persons concerned are re quired to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in August next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This July 5. 19C9. Prs. fee, $3. L. A. PERDUE, Ordinary. There Are Many Good Things In this store. The familiar staples in Fancy Groceries are all here and they are the very best money can buy. Our fancy goods cover everything to satisfy the most exacting taste. Vegetables of all kinds Olives and Pickles, (plain and mixed.) Preserves, Jellies, Fruits and a host of other good things. We take careful note of all orders, and de liver promptly. Fresh Bread and Cakes every day from our bakery. CHAS. P. COLE TELEPHONE 31 I <L <L Rochester Coffee Percolators C Will make good coffee regardless of the cook. Made of Nickel- Plated Copper 'c"a 1 1 pppl ipfil II Btgjj They are Very Easily Cleansed «. «. We have them in four sizes—to suit any family. C Johnson Hardware Co. ’Phone 81. Newnan, Ga. C.C.C.C*: «C.C.C.C, «L c c c