Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, November 05, 1909, Image 4
fitrald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 5.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
THE FIRST F A L FIRE.
When tbry commence to build the first fall firna
And the- leaf i* brown and Hf-r*-.
When the* fir«t Irof-t falls and the* Bob White r ails
From the* wheat held Kwori and clear.
Oh. then is the time we most admire,
When it’s cool enough for the firat fall fire!
When the wild prajx? hanjrs from its Blender vine
And the* miiRcadineft com** »n.
When the* re*d leaves Mow where- the squirrel' n
With wintry chatter and din-
Of autumn time we never tire*.
When it* time to tuild the first fall fire!
When Hummer is over and pa*t and »ron»*
And hearts are* won and 1* st.
When cool days come and we rather round
The* fire* to count the cost’
We Hoe* the- face of our h* :irtV desire-
In the glowinr coals of the first fall fire!
Osteopathy Says Natural Flow of
Blood is Life.
Osteopathy was discovered by A. T.
Still, of Baldwin, Kan., in 1P74. Dr.
Still reasoned that a "natural flow of
blood” is health, and disease is the ef
fect of local or general disturbance of
blood. That to excite the nerves causes
muscles to contract and compress the
venous flow of blood to the heart, and
that the bones of the body could be
used as levers to relieve this pressure
on nerves, veins and arteries.
Osteopathy is a system of treating
disease without drugs, by the use of
t he hands, to adjust all parts of the hu
man mechanism to perfect mechanical
relations. It is that science which
finds in disturbed mechanical relations
of anatomical parts this cause of dis
ease, and which is employed to cure dis
ease by applying technical knowledge
and nigh manual ski!) for the correc
tion of these disturbed relations.
The science is founded upon the prin
ciples of anatomy and physiology.
Clinical and laboratory tests have prov
en this theory to be correct.
The word, osteopathy, does not mean
the treatment of the bones, nor of bone
diseases, for other acute and chronic
i ilments are treated with marked re
sults. It was used as a name because
t he founder discovered the [importance
of disturbances in the body framework
as the cause of disease. He studied
the skeleton, as the foundation of anat
omy, upon which he founded his sys-
-ein. The meaning of the word applies
not only to derangement of the bony
parts, but ns well to disturbed rela-
1 ions of ligaments, blood vessels, mus
cles, nerves and of any hotly tissue.
Less than twenty years ago osteopa
thy, the new school of healing, fully
recognizing the healing power of na
ture, came into existence. To-day there
are over 5,000 osteopathic physicians
scattered through the different States
and in foreign lands, forty-four States
having passed laws recognizing the
truths embodied in osteopathic princi
ples.
These practitioners, while taking
into account other established causes
of disease, such as exposure, dietary
errors and abuse of 1 unction, have
learned that perversion of structure,
such as slight misplacement of bones
and other tissues, thickened ligaments
and contracted muscles, are fruitful
sources of Ixxlil.v ills by producing
pressure on adjacent structures.
Having this idea as the cause of dis
ease, it follows ns a natural conse
quence that osteopaths, in their treat
ment, seek to correct misplacements, to
remove the pressure and to get the
body in perfect adjustment so that na
ture may effect a cure.
Osteopathy is both a science und an
art. Osteopathic physicians first make
a careful physical examination to deter
mine just what is wrong, and then em
ploy the highest technical skill to cor
rect it. In domg*this. they neglect no
rational, sanitary, hygienic or dietetic
aid.
It was perhaps unavoidable that such
a radical departure from the regular
school would, in the infancy of the
science, be misunderstood and misin
terpreted. It has sometimes, generally
t>y the careless or thoughtless, been re
ferred to hk "‘massage” or "rubbing.”
We are quite sure no fair-minded per
son of average intelligence, who inves
tigates osteopathy, will ever confuse it
with an.v other manual system of ther
apy.
The misinformation concerning oste
opathy is being replaced by a more ac
curate knowledge. The late encyclope
bias contain proper definitions and de
scriptions of the science. The newspa
jpers and periodicals with increasing
frequency are placing the time story of
osteopathy before their readers.
Rut the most effective agency for the
dissemination of correct information
about the science is the profession it
self. who are daily demonstrating the
worth of osteopathy in the battle with
disease.
With all of these avenues of informa
tion open, the time is almost at hand
when it will be a reproach to anyone
not to understand something at least of
the theories of osteopathy, and when
such expressions concerning it as
••rubbing,” or -'massage,” will be at
tributed bv well-informed people either
to malice or inexcusable ignorance.
Many school children suffer from con
stipation, which is often the cause of
seeming stupidity at lessons. Chamber
lain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets are an
ideal medicine to give a child, for they
are mild and gentle in their effect, and
will cure even chronic constipation.
Isold by all dealers.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.
The following named patrons paid
their subscription dues to The Herald
and Advertiser during the month of
October, which we acknowledge with
thanks-
R. L. Pitts, ffl; Mrs. J. H. Davis,
[SI: Miss ldelia Bexley, 50e. ; J. W.
Plant, ffl; C. F. Parker. 50c.; Mrs.
Addie Hunt, 50c.; O. O. Bailey, $1 ; J.
D Johnson, ffl ; Norman Sharp, $1 ;
W. H. Holmes, $1; John Pitman, ffl ;
C. B. Moseley, SI ; .Mrs. M. A. Wiley,
ffl : Glenn Steed, SI ; Miss Sophie Lat
imer, $2; L. Ballard, SI; Mrs. B. W.
Cochran, $2; C. H. Atkinson, S2; Mrs.
F. G. Hill, SI; A. B. Hyde, SI; Jaco
bus Petty, 81; J. S. Gibson, SI; S. M.
Wortham, SI; C. J. Owens, SI; D. R.
Sewell, SI ; Richard Bridges, $1 ; Mrs.
J. D. Hall, $1 : W. B. Harris, SI ; W.
H. Hutchens, $1 ; Miss Hattie Daniel,
So; J. K. Gable, SI ; G. R. Black, S2;
T. F. Jones, ffl ; JV1. G. Royeton, SI:
W. C. Elder, $1; F. E. Jlindsman, SI ;
T. M. Sewell, $2: W M. Gammon, ffl;
A. P. Bowers, SI ; Mrs. G. P. Smith,
SI; J. D. Hindsman, $1; W. A. Smith,
SI ; Mrs. J. A. Jacobs, SI ; E. B. Win-
dom, SI : L. H. Fombv, SI; T. C. Wilson,
$1: Allen Chandler, S2; W. F. Nall, Slf
Mrs. C. S. Upshaw, $1; Paul M. Couch,
SI: Mrs. J. C. Wortham, $2; Mrs. Geo.
Colley, S2; .Mrs. M. C. Hindsman, SI;
L. D. Sewell, SI; K. J. Teagle.Sl; E. E.
Hopkins, SI; J. E. Culpepper, $1; H. J.
Haines, $2; J. H. Jones, SI; Senoia
Hardware Co., $1; W. R. McCrary, $5;
Elam Deracken, S4;C. C. McKnight, ?1;
L. P. Brandenburg, $1; J. E. Atkinson,
SI; C. F. Sasser, SI; H. M. Stewart, SI;
Mrs. M. Parks, $1; H. L. Ware, $1; J.
E. Sasser, $1; J. C. Hardy, SI; R. B.
Perkins, $2; G. 1. Wilson, $2; F. M.
Shaddix, $1; F. M. Shaddix, jr., SI; A.
G. Brock, $1; J. A. Camp, $1; R. F.
Brannon, $1; J. A. R, Camp, SI; Mrs.
H. W. Camp, $2; R. V. Webb, $1; E. C.
Cureton, sr.,$5; E. N. Camp, $1; Hugh
M. Camp, $1; I.. 1’. Gordon, SI; E. C.
Cureton, jr., $2; T. E. Zellars, $1; J. R.
Cotton, $1; C. P. Glower, $1; H. A.
Camp, SI; .1. F. Ferrell, $1;J. A. Evans,
$1; M. B. Lambert, SI; P. R. Wilkin
son. $2; Banks & Arnold, $1; W. A.
Post, $2; W. A. Bohannon, $1: W. J.
Fuller, SI; J. T. Shaddix, SI; Mrs. C.
A. Burks, SI; 1. B. Murphy, $1; W. G.
Scott, SI; J. D. Cotton, $1; R. T. Tram
mell, $3; T. H. Carmical, $1; John W.
Camp, $1; J. M. Park, S3; Mrs. J. H.
Fry, $5; Mrs. S. Martin, $1; Mrs. O.
E. Smith, SI; Mrs. Colley-Leigh. $1.05;
John Robertson, $2; R. B. Bailev, 50c:
W. H. Miller, Si; J. B. Ware. $1; W.
V. Reese, $1; H. B. Arnold, SI; Mrs.
Sue C. Hill, SI; S. A. North, SI; J. D.
Carmical, SI; R. F. Hunter, SI; M. L.
Stallings, $2; J. W. Jones, 50c; F. Si.
Beavers, jr., $2; A. B. McKoy, SI;
R. Y. Hunter, SI; Mrs. Lila C. Hunter,
SI; Miss Lena Hunt, 25c: J. Y. McDon
ald, $1.25; T. N. Smith, $1;J. C. Dodds,
$1; J. C. Harris, $1; T. <>. Bartlett, $1;
Wm. V. Smith, 78c; J. J. McElwaney,
SI; Mrs. R. W. Wingo, $1; L. S. Young.
SI; J. D. Land. $1; F. S. Cureton, SI;
H. G. Crain, $5; K. H. McDonald, 25c;
W. S. McDonald, SI; Mrs. S. M. Haines,
SI; J. S. Price, $1; J. R. Baronton, S2;
J. A. Lee, $1; 1,. S. Whittemore, $1;
J. F. Garner, $2: J. T. Brown, SI; L.
T. Wilkins, $1; Thos. Cameron, $1; Mrs.
A. E. Clarke, $1; L. K. Ray, $3; Dr. S.
B. Cousins, $1.
Scribner s Magazine for November.
No magazine feature for years has
met with such immediate and enthusi
astic appreciation as Theodore Roose
velt’s account of his African adven
tures in Scribner’s Magazine. The de
mand for the first article of the series
in the October number was so great
that the entire anil very large first edi
tion was called for within three days
after publication. The second article,
in the November number, gives the au
thor's impressions and experiences on
an East African ranch, which in many
ways reminded him of early days on
the plains of the great West, and the
account of his first successful lion hunt
on the Kapiti plains. His preliminary
comments upon the big game of Afri
ca. especially his conclusions regarding
those considered most dangerous to the
sportsman and the natives, will be read
with much interest. The story of the
lion hunt gives the reader a vivid idea
of the uncertainties, excitement and
dangers of following the great beasts
into the jungle and of the picturesque
rejoicing among the natives following
a sueeessfoul hunt. The illustrations
are from photographs by Kermit
Roosevelt and other members of the
expedition. President Woodrow Wilson
of Princeton asks and answers the
(itiestion. ’’What Is a College For?”
Its breadth of view, grasp ot the prac
tical and essential problems that con
front young men in these modern days,
make it an article of vital interest.
This fall the New York Zoo will cele
brate its practical completion and the
director, W. T. Hornaday, describes in
the November Scribner what has been
accomplished in ten years. “The New
York Plan for Zoological Parks” is one
that has developed the greatest and
best-equipped zoo in the world. W. C.
Brownell writes of Emerson another
of his critical papers on “American
Men of Letters.” It is an illuminative
and delightfully sympathetic and ap
preciative study of the life and work of
the famous New England Essayist and
Philosopher. Nelson Lloyd describes
the life, movement and irresistible fas
cination of New York to those who
have never dwelt within its walls in
"The Drum-Beat of the Town.”
George Wright’s Sketch-Books have
furnished the colored illustrations.
There is a poem by Dr. Henrv Van
Dyke. "The Ancestral Dwellings,”
with illutratiov bv Franklin Booth. ”A
Charmed Life” by Richard Harding
Davis is a love storv, one that will
appeal to and hold the interest from
the first paragraph, with a plot that
holds a surprise for most readers.
Thomas Nelson Page’s fine novel.
"John Marvel, Assistant,” is conclud
ed in the November Scribner, and will
be published in book form at once.
A Religious Author s Statement.
Rev. Joseph H. Fesperman, Salisbury,
N. C., who is the author of several
b*>oks, writes: "For several years I
was afflicted with kidney trouble and
last winter 1 was suddenly stricken with
a severe pain in my kidneys and was
confined to bed eight days, unable to
got up without assistance. My urine
contained a thick white sediment and I
passed same frequently day and night.
I commenced taking Foley's Kidney
Remedy, and the pain gradually abated
and finally ceased and my urine’ became
normal. 1 cheerfully reecommend
Foley’s Kidney Remedy. Sold bv all
druggists.
A PUBLIC BENEFIT.
Newnan People Greatly Interested
in the Generous Offer of The
Holt & Cates Company.
The people have already demonstrated
[ that they would rather trust a man who
is naturally honest than one who is hon
est only because he had to be.
The Holt & Cates Drug Co. have a
firmly established reputation for square
dealing and sterling honesty. When
they told the people that Rexall Reme
dies are the purest and most dependa
ble medicines that it is possible for mod
ern science to produce, and that they
would tell the public what each of these
300 or more remedies contained, and
that they sold Rexall Remedies on their
persona! guarantee that they would give
entire satisfaction or they would not cost
the user a cent, they were believed.
Ever since this announcement the
Holt <fc Cates Co. store has been largely
patronized by people buying Rexall
Remedies, all of which proves that this
store has the confidence of the people
and that honesty is the best policy.
There is no "cure-all” among the
Rexali Remedies. There are different
and separate medicines, each ODe de
vised for a., certain human ailment or a
class of ailments closely allied. For in
stance Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets are
recommended for the positive relief of
stomach irritation, indigestion, flatulen
cy and dyspepsia. They are rich in Bis
muth-Subnitrate, Pepsin and Carmina
tives. They are prepared by special
processes which perfect and enhance
the great remedial value of these well-
known medicinal agents. This remedy
sells for 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1.00
per package. Every one suffering from
stomach disorder should try Rexaii Dys
pepsia Tablets, inasmuch as they cost
nothing if they do not satisfy.
Remember, the Holt & Cates Co.
store is the only store in Newnan where
these Remedies may be obtained, and
every one in need of medicine is urged
to investigate and take advantage of
the frank and generous manner in which
they are sold.
Signs of Melancholy Days.
The leaves are beginning to fall, and
the melancholy days have come.
For the past several days has been
noticed an effort by a number of trees
to strip themselves of their summer
coat of green, assisted by the cool, gen
tle breezes blowing from the sea. The
chinaberry trees are perhaps the first
to surrender a part of their leaves in
order to enter on the sleep of the long
winter months.
It is particularly true that the falling
of the autumn leaves should cause a
feeling among humankind that a decided
transition is taking place, and that the
melancholy days are being gradually
ushered in thoughts of future cold, foot
ball, college and school, sweethearts,
mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters
at Christmas-tide, and divers other
things creep in.
Surely when the gentle zephyrs of
the summer change to the bracing
breezes of fall and the leaves begin to
flutter to the ground—
The melancholy days have come.
The saddest of the year.”
A Western editor has received the fol
lowing letter:
"Please send me a few copies of the
paper which had the obituary and
verses about the death of my child a
week ago. Also publish the inclosed
clipping about my niece's marriage.
And I wish you would mention in your
local columns, if it doesn’t cost any
thing, that I have a couple of bull calves
to sell. Send me a couple of extra
copies of the paper this week. As my
subscription is out, please stop my pa
per. Times are too hard to waste
money on a newspaper.”
The Gautemalan minister, as he was
leaving a recent reception in Washing
ton, said to the man who called the car
riages: "Call the carriage of the Gau
temalan minister. You understand, the
Gautemalan minister.” "Yes, sir; un
derstand perfectly, sir,” he replied, and
then shouted: "The carriage for the
watermelon minister!”
HOME INDORSEMENT.
Hundreds of Newnan Citizens Can
Tell You All About It.
Home endorsement, the public ex
pression of Newnan people^ should be
evidence beyond dispute for every New
nan reader. Surely the experience of
friends and neighbors, cheerfully given
by them, will carry more weight than
the utterances of strangers residing in
faraway places. Read the following;
W. D. Hill, 61 Murray street, New
nan, Ga., says : "Some years ago I re
ceived a severe fall, and, as a result,
my kidneys became affected. After
that 1 was a constant sufferer from
backache, the pains sometimes extend
ing into my shoulders, and even as far
as my neck. When I procured Doan’s
Kidney Pills at Lee Bros’, drug store
I was in quite a serious condition, and
placed all my hopes in their bringing
me relief. 1 was not disappointed, for,
after a short use, they entirely cured
me. I have not had the least sign of
kidney trouble since, and I willingly
give Doan’s Kidney Pills my indorse
ment."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Miiburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—and
take no other.
The first thing a girl learns to play
on the oiano is a few bars of a wed
ding march.
A Good Time.
Frank Stanton in Atlanta Constitution.
A good time isn’t strictly a success
unless it’s memories are pleasant.
There arc many innocent jamborees
which may be lreely indulged in, and
when you think of them, in later days,
you won’t grit your teeth. A man
may have a lot of real fun w ithout be
ing a milksop. But the kind of fun
that is born of long cold bottles is a
delusion. You feel pretty gay while
you are pouring fusil oil upon the
troubled waters of your interior, but
when the O-be-joyful mood passes af
ter a long sleep, you are really sur
prised to note how tough you can feel,
and how much you can hate yourself.
The glee didn’t last long, but the re
morse cleaves to you like a brother.
When you think of all the too! things
you said and did, you are half inclined
to take an axe and blow out your brains
with it, but of course that will do no
good. The worst of it is that you will
never be able to forget it. You ma.v
forget a lot of agreeable things, but
the disagreeable and humiliating things
stick to your memory like cockleburrs
to the hired man’s whiskers. And you
will never have as good opinion of
yourself again. Is that sort of a good
time worth while?
Steve Long is noted for attending to
his own business and saying very little
about it. One morning an inquisitive
neighbor met him returning from the
woods with his gun over his shoulder.
"Hello, Steve. Where ye been? A-
shootin’?”
"Yep. ”
"What ye been a-shootin’?’’
"Dog.”
"Yerdog? My! Was he mad?”
"Wall, he didn’t look so dang'ed well
pleased.”
When a woman has occasion to loaf
she calls it either shopping, visiting or
entertaining.
SAVED
FROM AN
OPERATION
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Louisville, Ky. — “Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound has cer
tainly done me a
world of good and
I cannot praise it
enough. .1 suffered
fromirregularities,
dizziness, nervous
ness, and a severe
female trouble.
LydiaK.Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound lias restored
me to perfect-
health and kept me
from the operating
table. I will never be without Ibis
medicine in the house.”—Mrs. Saw’l
Lkk, 3523 Fourth St., Louisville. Ky.
Another Operation Avoided.
Adrian, Ga. — “I suffered untold
misery from female troubles, and my
doctor said an operation was my only
chance, and I dreaded it almost as
much as death. Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound completely cured
me without an operation.” — Lkkx V.
Henry, R. F. 1). 3.
Thirty years of unparalleled suc
cess confirms the power of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to
cure female diseases. The great vol
ume of unsolicited testimony constant
ly pouring in proves conclusively that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ’Com
pound is a remarkable remedy for those
distressing feminine ills from which
bo many women suffer.
Professional Cards.
THOS. J. JONE8,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Offioe on Hancock afreet, near public square,
Residence next door to Virginia House.
T. B. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office—Sanatorium Wilding-. Office 'phone 6 1
call ; residence ’phone 5—2 calls.
W. A. TURNER,
PHYSICIAN AND SCRG I: Q N .
Special attention g+ven to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19^ Spring street. 'Phone 280
F. I. WELCH,
PHYSICIAN AND 8URGKOX.
T. E. SHEFFIELD, M. D.,
E A Y MOND, G A .
General practitioner. Calls attended promptly
day or uigrht.
K. W. STARR,
I) KXTI ST.
All kinds of dental work. Patronage of the pub
lic solicited. Office over H. C. A mail Mdse. Co.'s
store. Residence ’phone 142.
THOS. G. FARMER, JR.,
ATTORN EY A T LA W.
Will grive careful and prompt attention to all
leiral business entrusted to me. Collections a
specialty.
Olfioe over H. C. A mall Mdse. Co.’s.
New Advertisements
CURES
RHEUMATISM
Rheumatism is a specific blood fermentation, a souring
of the circulation from an excess of uric acid accumulating
in the blood stream. This uratie impurity comes usually as
a result of constipation, weak kidneys, indigestion and stom
ach disturbances. These systemic irregularities may not be
of marked severity or of long duration, but each lias a direct
effect on the eliminative members of tire body, which prevents
the proper removal of the waste products. This refuse re
mains in the stomach and bowels, and souring forms uric
acid, which the blood quickly absorbs.
Rheumatism is usually manifested in the joints and
muscles. It is here its sharpest twinges of pain are felt, and
stiffening of ligaments and tendons first commence. The
pain of Rheumatism is caused by tlie contact of the sensory
nerves with the gritty, acrid formation which uric acid causes
to accumulate in the corpuscles of the blood about the joints. The stiff
ening of muscles and joints is usually gradual. Constantly the blood
deposits the uric acid into the joints, and slowly the natural fluids are dried
up and destroyed. Then Rheumatism becomes chronic and serious. Rbeuma
tism is sometimes inherited, for like all
blood diseases it can be transmitted to
offspring. This explains why some
persons are afflicted with tire disease,
and suffer its pains, who have otherwise
been perfectly healthy.
S.S.S. cures Rheumatism and cures
it permanently. It goes into the circu
lation, and removes the uric acid,
purifies the Wood, and in this way
destroys the cause. S. S. S. changes
the blood from a sour, acid-steeped
stream to a rich, healthy fluid, which
quiets the excited nerves, eases the
throbbing muscles and painful joints, and filters out of the circulation the
irritating matter which causes e\ erv painful symptom of the disease. When
the blood has been purified and enriched by S.S.S.. it nourishes the different
members that have been weakened and starved because of imperfect blood.
Book ou Rheumatism and any medical advice free to ail who write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
RHEUMATISM FORTY YEARS.
I suffered with lumbago for a
long-,time, and speaking: of it to a
friend one day he told me to try
S. S. S. I did so. and soon found
it was helping me. I had rheuma
tism for more than forty years,
having contracted it in t he army,
but S. S. S cured me sound and
well, and have had no return of
the trouble. I think S.S.S. has no
equal for curing rheumatism.
THOS. POTTS.
Ill Main St., Johnston City.. Pa.
PARKERS
HAIR BALSAM
C1mb.»>*i Bi.«t beautifies the hair.
Promote* a hrrcri&rt grmrf':.
Never Falla to Restore Gray
Ti.’ur to l♦.« Youthful Color.
Uuv* * ulp & liair lulling.
ur PuiR-sts
PITTSBURG PERFECT
ELECTRIC WELDED
If you intend to build a fence, why
not build a good one? Vou can buy
the Pittsburg Perfect Wire Fence for
the same price the other fellow will
ask you for the “just as good” kind.
JOHNSON HARDWARE CO.
In Any
Emergency
The Telephone is the
quickest means of se
curing relief or calling
assistance. In rural
districts the doctor or
the neighbors can be sum
moned in less time than it takes
to hitch a horse
Connection with the Bell System puts you
in touch with the whole country. You need a
telephone in your home.
Write to nearest Bell
Telephone Manager for
pamphlet, or address
Farmers’ Line Department
Southern Bell Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
South Pryor Street
ATLANTA
GEORGIA
Tax Collector’s Notice.
SECOND ROUND.
I will be at places named, and at times specified
below, for the purpose of collecting .SUite und
county taxes for the year 1909:
McCollum, Wednesday. Nov. 3. 8 a. m. to 9 a. m.
Hall’s Store, Wednesday, Nov. 3, 10 a. m. to 11
a. rn.
Palmetto. Wednesday. Nov. 3, 12 m. to 3 p. in.
Roscoe, Thursday, Nov. 4. 8 a. m. to 10 a. m.
Happy Valley, Thursday, Nov. 4. 11 a. m. to 12
Grantville, Friday, Nov. 5, 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Moreland. Monday, Nov. 8, 8 u. m. to 12 in.
Sharpsburjr, Tuesday. Nov. 9. 8 a. m. to 11 a. m.
Turin. Tuesday, Nov. 9, 1 p. m. to 5 p. rn.
Senoia. Wednesday. Nov. 10. 8 a. rn. to 4 p. m.
Haralson. Thursday, Nov. 11. 9:30 a. m. to 3p. m.
Watts’ X Hoads, Friday, Nov. 12. 8 a. m. to 9 p.
n. to
I will have with me the registration books.
I will be in my office in Newnan each Saturday
ntil the books dose by law —Dec. 20.
W. S. HUBBARD.
Tax Collector.
foley 5 kidney Pius
Foq Backache Kidmcyianc Buooco
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else tails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist’s counter.
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office