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“THE STORE O’ QUALITY”
Grocery and Bakery
Did it ever occur to you that we carry a
nice line of Fancy Groceries? Also a lot of good
things in the Bakery department? Give us a
chance at your business and see how well we
will treat you.
<L
CHARLIE COLE
TELEPHONE 31
Sickness is
Unnecessary
to demonstrate the
value of the telephone
in the farm home. In
any emergency the tele-
phone performs a func
tion which no other agency
can equal. The doctor can be
called quicker than the horse can
be hitched up. Neighbors can be summoned
instantly. It is invaluable for the convenience and
protection of the housewife.
For information and booklet
about the Bell plan write
to nearest Bell telephone
manager or to i
I
farmers’ Line Department
Southern Bell Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
South Pryor Street
ATLANTA
GEORGIA
AT PUBLIC OUTCRY ON
Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1909,
The Property of the
Newnan Market & Ice Co.
Consisting of lot on which ice plant is located, at junc
tion of Atlanta & West Point and Central of Ga. R. R.,
containing about one acre; one 5-ton and one 15-ton ice
machine, Columbus Iron Works Co. make; one 125-h. p.
boiler, Cole make, practically new; and all other accesso
ries. Abundant water supply. Sold for The purpose of
liquidation. Owners reserve the right to make private sale
of property. For further particulars write
Secretary NEWNAN MARKET & ICE CO., Newnan.
WHEN IN NEED OF
LUMBER AND PLANING
MILL STUFF
Of all kinds—Brackets, Mouldings, Columns, etc.—you will
find it to your interest to give us a call.
HOUSE BILLS A SPEC!A LT Y
Vulcanite R o o f in g
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., NEWNAN, GA.. ’Phone 14.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO. I
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
ARRIVE FROM
Griffin 11:10a.m. 7:1? p.m.
Chattanooga 1 :W p. m.
Codartown, ex. Sun 6:39 A. M.
Cedartown, Sun-on >■ 7:27 a. m.
Columbus 0:05 A. M. 6:35 p.m.
depart for
Griftin 1:40 p.m.
< irittin, ex. Sunday 6:39 a. m.
Griffin, Sunday only 7:27 a. m.
Chattanooga 11:;0a. m.
Cedartown 7:17 p.m.
Columbus 7:40 a. m. 5:16 pm
Tale of Two Panics.
Now York World.
Without impugning the accuracy of
the Bureau of Labor's relative prices
of commodities, the figures cannot
measure the actual rise in the cost of
living from 1897 to 1908. An increase
of 37 per cent, in the price of commodi
ties does not begin to state the actual
situation of the consumer.
In 1893 we had a panic. Prices had
begun to fall in 1891, when it was fore
seen. By 1894 the statistical average
of prices was 14.8 “points,” or say
fifteen per cent, below the boom year
1890. Prices remained low for five
years, showing at the bottom a decline
of more than one-quarter. The panic
was cured by natural means. People
who needed money sold their goods
cheap, and purchases were stimulated.
At least, men out of work for a time
could live cheaply.
How different the course of the panic
of 1907! In the interval the trusts had
grown to giant size and the law of sup
ply and demand had, we were told,
given place to benevolent industrial
dictatorship. The steel trust for
months held up prices to its own loss
and the general disadvantage. The big
glass makers held the little ones in
line. Lumber could not decline much,
because under high tariffs we have cut
nearly all our trees. Food and clothing
rose in cost. And the stated prices of
all commodifies averaged ten points
higher in 1908, in the profound depres
sion after the panic, than they were in
the boom year 1890.
Twenty years of progress and in
vention had gone for nought. Pro
cesses were cheaper, but prices were
higher. It was costing much more to
live in 1908, when a vast army of
honest and industrious men were out
of work, than in 1890, when all were
employed. And all that we had to
compensate us for this manifest lower
ing of the conditions of general pros
perity was a sheaf of vast and sudden
fortunes whose vulgar and prolligate
display amazed the world.
McLendon Case to the Courts.
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 24.—Three former
Supreme Court Justices, friends for
many years of S. Guyt McLendon, the
ousted chairman of the Railroad Com
mission, have outlined the quo war
ranto proceedings which they will bring
in an effort to restore Mr. McLendon’s
position to him.
The former Supreme Court Justices,
who will act as advisers with Candler,
Thompson & Hirsch, are Judge Joseph
Lamar of Augusta, Judge Andrew J.
Cobb of Athens, and Judge William
Augustus Little of Columbus.
These eminent lawyers and jurists, it
is understood, will accept no fees for
their services.
The proceedings will be brought in
Fulton Superior Court. They will not
be brought, however, until Jos. F.
Gray, of Savannah, whom Gov. Brown
appointed to Mr. McLendon’s place,
has taken his oath of office. It is
pointed out that it must be part of the
allegations that a successor to Mr. Mc
Lendon has been appointed, and such
appointments do not become legal until
the oath of office has been taken. The
lawyers are ready for the fight, and
are only waiting on this formality. At
a conference the whole legal battle was
outlined, and every detail was worked
out and approved.
Quo warranto means literally, “by
what right,” and under this general
head specific allegations will be made.
What these allegations are will not he
outlined in advance of their present
ation. One will be that the proper
course, if any, would have been to in
stitute impeachment proceedings
against Mr. McLendon. The claim will
be made that Mr. McLendon was de
prived of his office without due process
of law, a man having a property right
in his office.
It will be one of the most interesting
cases ever fought in a State court, and
it has been indicated that counsel for
Mr. McLendon, in the event of losing
in the lower court, will appeal to the
Federal courts.
Vaccination For Typhoid.
The question of vaccination for
typhoid is at present deeply interesting
the medical world, and military authori
ties have taken the matter up in earn
est. While foreign troops are being
inoculat d on a wholesale scale, in the
United States the treatment has not
as yet been made compulsory. Accord
ing to Col. Russell, who is in charge of
the Army Medical School, typhoid fever
attacks about half a million people in
this country annually, and kills 50,000.
Very little typhoid, in his opinion, is
conveyed to-day by water, owing to
the care exercised in protecting the
drinking supply from infection in near
ly all communities. The house fly is a
much more important agent for spread
ing the disease.
Typhoid in the Franco-Prussian war
attacked 73,390 men, and caused 8,789
deaths among the German troops
alone. In the Boer war it sickened
31,000 soldiers and killed 5,877 on the
British side. During our brief war
with Spain there were 20,730 eases and
1,580 deaths among 20,000 men —the
bulk of the mischief being undoubtedly
due to flies.
The new preventive treatment by
inoculation with dead typhoid germs
produces headache and malaise—some
times even a bit of fever. But these
symptoms soon pass, and are followed
by a feeling of unusual vigor and
health. The stuff is simply a “cult
ure” of typhoid germs in beef soup,
the microbes being killed by heat.
Two doses, given with a hypodermic
syringe, are supposed to render any
body immune to the disease —putting
him, that is to say, in exactly the
condition for resisting attack that he
would enjoy if he had really had ty
phoid fever and hud recovered from
it. That the discovery will enormous
ly diminish mortality from typhoid in
future wars^here can he no doubt.
Every Woman Will Be Interested.
If you have pains in the back, Urina
ry, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and
want a certain, pleasant herb cure for
woman’s ills, trv Mother Grav’s Aus-
tralian-Leaf. It is a safe and never-
failine regulator. At druggists or by
mail 50c. Sample package FRRE. Ad
dress. The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy,
N. Y.
That no matter how much of a start
Art has, a girl always hands over her
heart when tne l ight man comes along.
If we didn’t heve to work there
would oe n-y fun in loafing.
Senoia Notes.
Sonoin Enterprlae-Giwotto, 20th InM.
It will be a source of regret to her
many friends to learn that Mrs. J. C.
Hardy remains quite sick.
Mr. Sterling Elder is putting in a
new ginning outfit at his mill. It is an
excellent outfit., and will get a good
patronage.
Dr. J. D. L. Tench has decided to
move to his old home at Gainesville,
Fla., and will leave Senoia not later
than Sept. 10.
Mr. G. S. Hardy and family, who
have resided at Brooks Station for the
past two years, will move to Turin to
make their home.
Dr. E. L. Merrill and family moved
Tuesday to Turin, where the former
has a good position in the drug store.
We regret to give them up.
Dr. A. Roy Hogg, of Haralson, was
married Tuesday to Miss Gertrude Al
len, of Atlanta. They were guests of
the former’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. J.
W. Hogg, Tuesday night.
Dr. Long and Mr. Etheredge, who
have been examining the rock on the
A.. B. & A. railroad near Senoia. witli
a view to putting in machinery and
working up the rock into fine monu
mental and building stone, are entirely
satisfied, and within the next fortnight
will have a force of hands at work on
the rock. Should the marble polish up
as nicely as these gentlemen believe it
will, they intend to put in a sidetrack,
build houses, and install some of the
finest rock machinery in the South.
They carried two fine samples of the
blue stone with them to Atlanta Tues
day evening. Contracts have been
closed for about twenty acres of land
from Messrs. T. J. Entreken and M.
H. Couch, ard it is a certainty that the
work will be pushed at once, and on a
large scale in the near future.
The passenger train stopped at a
small station about noon one day, and
the conductor announced that a stop of
15 minutes would be observed for the
passengers to get dinner. Among the
passengers to take advantage of the
opportunity of procuring a lunch was
an Irishman. 1’at ate heartily and the
fifteen minutes passed more quickly
than he thought, and it was the pulling
of the departing train which aroused
Pat from his meal. Seeing the trnin
was leaving him behind he grabbed his
satchel and rushed out of the restau
rant, wildly exclaiming:
“Hold on! Faith, and yfez have a
passenger on board which ye was leav
ing !”
Co to the ant, thou sluggard; al
though she doesn’t make any noise in
the world, she isn’t buried at the ex
pense of the county.
Speechless amazement is one of the
things that go without saying.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A torpid liver deranges the whole
system, and produces
G2CK KEADACHt, —.
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
There Is na better remedy lor these
common disenses than UP. TUTT’S
LIVER PILLS, ns a trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.
NOTICE OF BOND ELECTION.
GEORGIA—Coweta County, *
City of Senoia. t
In accoidance with a resolution paHwed by the
Mayor and Councilman of the City of Senoia, Ga.,
on the 6th day of August, 1909, notice is hereby
ffiven to ih i qualified voters of said City of Se
noia, Ga., that on the 11th day of September, 1909.
an election will be held in said city, at the usual
place of holding elections in said city, as provided
for in Chapter H. Sections 'Ml, 378, .'*79 and .'180 of
Vol. 1 of the Code of Georaia of 1895, to determine
whether bonds shall be issued by said city for and
in the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars, said
bonds to be known ns
“ELECTRIC LIGHT BONDS,”
and the funds arising therefrom to be used for the
purpose of purchasing, and installing, and equip
ping, and maintaining an Elected: Liuht Plant
in and for said city. The amount of bonds to be
issued is Ten Thousand Dollars. Said bonds are
to hear interest at the rate of five per cent, per
annum, payable annually. The principal of said
hoods is to be paid as follows:
$1,000 in 1912 $1,000 in 1922
$1,000 in 1914 $1,000 in 1924
$1,000 in 1916 $1,000 in 1926
$1,000 in 1918 $1,000 in 1928
$1,000 in 1920 $1,000 in 192,0
The interest on said bonds to he paid as follows:
$500 in 1910 $250 in 1920
$500 in 1911 $250 in 1921
$450 in 1912 $200 in 1922
$450 in 1918 $200 in 1928
$400 in 1914 $150 in 1924
£400 in 1915 $150 in 1925
$.'150 in 1916 $100 in 1926
$250 in 1917 $100 in 1927
mi in 1918 $ 50 ip 1928
$.'100 in 1919 $50 in 1929
Those who are in favor of issuing said bonds
shall have printed upon their ballots a 1 used in
said election Foil Bonds, and t hose opposing the
issuance of said bonds shall have printed upon
their ballots as used in said election Against
Bonds.
'1 his the 6th day of August, 1909.
R. L. ARNALL, Mayor,
J. D. HUNTER. Councilman,
W. B. BAGGARLY, Councilman.
G. P. IlODNETT, Councilman,
VINDEX HAND. Councilman.
CUT OUT
this advertisement, bring it to
us and we will give \ou
u demonstration oi
Be up-to-date “Soul Kiss”
Perfume is the sensation of the
hour.
John R. Cates Drug Co.,
All Clean In No
Time with No Work
Not half clean,
with a filmy coating of
soap or left-over odor—but all
clean, sweet and bright, and in half
the time it now takes. 22
AV
Lavadura
“It Softens the Water**
cleans up the china, polishes the glassware, loosens the
grease and removes all odors from cooking utensils.
Best of all, it saves your hands from getting red and rough
and chapped. Fine on washdays, too. Woolens won’t
shrink, nothing fades, delicate fabrics are preserved.
A»k for it at Grocer«’ and Druggiete.
In Sc and IOc Package».
Always put a little Lavadura in bath water.
Makes you feel fine I
LAVADURA CHEMICAL CO.,
NEWNAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Fall T erm Begins Monday, Sepl.
13, 1909.
In the Primary and Intermediate grades thorough instruc
tion is given in Reading, Writing, Spelling, Grammar, U. S. His
tory and Arithmetic.
In the High School is ottered a full course in Higher Math
ematics, Latin, Physics, History and English. Pupils receiving
diplomas from our High School are admitted to any college in the
State without examination.
Resident and non-resident pupils are admitted on the same
terms.
On Thursday and Friday, Supt. !) and 10, at 9 a. m., teach
ers will be in their respective class-rooms for the purpose of class
ifying new pupils, and for examining pupils who failed to be pro
moted last June.
Catalogue sent on application.
C. K. HENDERSON, JR., Sup’t.
J. J. GOODRUM, Sec’y.
FIRE LIFE
!
HEALTH
H. C. FISHER &
SONS
INSURANCE
OLDEST, STRONGEST
!
AND
MOST RELIABLE COMPANIES |
ACCIDENT LIABILITY
TORNADO
1
DISPLAYS AND EX
HIBITS WANTED
The Fourth District A. & M.
School Fair Association desire all
persons who contemplate making
exhibits at the Fair to be held at
the A. & M. School on Oct. 5, *i,
'7 and 8 to communicate the fact
to the Secretary. Exhibits of all
kinds of Vegetables, Fruits, Feed-
stulls, Animals, Minerals, etc.,
wanted.
For premium list and further
information address
B. B. THOMASSON,
Secretary,
CARROLLTON, - - - GA.
Executors’ Sale.
J GEORGIA—Cowkta County:
! By virtue of the authority vested in u». the un-
I dt.THinni-d. hy the will of Mm ioirr t Latimer, late
I Pf <Irrwetr, eonely, <ln., we v\ PI 'i'll to the hiyheHt
bidder, lor caah, within the IckuI hourK of sale, on
I the firat Tuenley in Soptomlvr. lSOt), beforo the
i court-house /loot- of suld county, in the city of
I Ncwn.ui. tie* following property, lo-wit:
I North half of lot of lantl numh.-r llfty-one in
I the dialrict of Coweta county, (3a., con-
1 taininifooe hundred one anil om-fourth acres,
| more or lea*..; und alao thirty acre*, more or jean!
! of the Mouth ode of lot number fifty, In suid tiin-
triet and county, beintr that part of vaid lot which
I lies Hcith of Bu/./.ard'a branch and Crooked creek,
j ar.d boiif drd partly on the east by lot number
| forty-four, and on the west partly by landa of
| Carter Kuid lands beinpr part of what is known
uh the Colbert place, in said county.
i To be sold for the purpose of makinj? distribu
tion umonpHt the legatees under said will. This
j Auk. 9, 1909. Prs. fee. $6.12.
W. J. MURPHEY.
C. S. REID,
1 Executor «ho will o«‘ Margaret Latimer, dec’d.
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office.
PINEULSS for the Kidneys
30 D A V5’ TREATMENT FOR SI.OO *