Newspaper Page Text
COLDS FROM
EXPOSURE
to all kinds of inclement
Weather are of such com
mon occurrence that they
are not generally consid
ered dangerous. This is
a great mistake. Serious
illness often follows in the
wake of a neglected cold.
DR. D. JAYNE'S
Expectorant
has been successful for Beventy-
eigbt yearB in curing Colds,
Coughs, Bronchitis, and Pleu
risy. It is also a standard
remedy for Croup, Whooping-
Cough, Inflammation of tha
Lungs or Chest and Asthma.
dure your cold now—go to
your druggist’s and get a bottlo
of Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant.'
Three sizes, $1.00, 50c. and 25c. I
Dr. D. Jayne's Tonic Vermlfuio
will build you up splendidly if run
down" from a severe cold.''
Professional Cards.
THOS. J. JONES,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office on Hancock Btreet. near publio aquaro.
Residence next door to Virginia House.
T. B. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office—Sanatorium building. Office 'phone 6 1
call; residence ’phone 5—2 calls.
W. A. TURNER,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Special attention given to surgery dnd diseases
of women. Office 19V6 Spring street. 'Phone 280
F. I. WELCH,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue opposite public
Bchool building. 'Phone 284.
E. SHEFFIELD, M. D.,
RAYMOND, GA.
j
day or nig]
General practitioner. Calls attended promptly
Iff lit.
K. W. STARR,
DENTIST.
All kinds of dental work. Patronage of the pub
lic solicited. Office over H. C. Arnull Mdse. Co.'s
store. Residence 'phone 142.
THOS. G. FARMER, JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Will give careful and prompt attention to all
legal business entrusted to me. Money to loan.
Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.'s.
Atlanta and West Pnint
RAILROAD COMPANY
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEW NAN, QA.
Subject to change and typographical
0:45 a. m.
7:36 a. in.
.. 9:03 a. m.
..10:48 a. m.
.... 8:17p.m.
.... fl:40 p. in.
.... 5:32p. m.
.... 0:45 a.m.
8:27 a. m.
9:33 a. m.
1:03 p. in.
.... 5:12 p. m.
. 7:10 p.m.
. 0:23 p. m.
.10:18 p. m.
Is the Most Solid Foundation
A Business Can Be Built On
That’s why you’ll find hero the beat,
and only the best.
We carry the fineat goods we can
secure* because we know it pays.
Our customers have learned they
can depend on what we sell find on
what we say.
A reputation for reliability, coupled
with prompt service and a square
deal, has made our store the favorite
trading place of the most particular
people in town.
One of our specialties that is con
tinually making new triends for us. is
coffee. We recommend especially
ELECTA COFFEE
the highest grade possible to produce
— a selected, cup-tested coffee of
incomparable richness and delicacy.
The superior flavor is the result of
slow*curing, dry-cooking and quick-
sealing while still hot, so that none
of the volatile coffee essense is lost.
Packing in sealed cans also pre
serves it from dust or handling.
Order some today. A revelation in
coffee awaits you.
T. L. Cj m ', Newnan, Ga
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office.
g
DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
O O
g Pi after qf g
O ^ .
o
O 0
O 0
O Marietta Finally Under- 5
O stood the Latoton Case 0
O 0
o — 0
2 By JOANNA SINGLE.
O 0
o — O
g Copyright. 1000, by Associated Lit. 2
q oiary Press. g
oooooooooooooooocoo
Frank Worthing frowned its tie look
ed up from the code ut Ids partner,
William Butler, who. with his straw
hat pushed bnek on his rumpled fair-
hair, wns still Insisting that lie leave
the office for the rest of the day,
“Confound you, Billy, heat or no
heat, August or December, a follow
that’s going to got on In the law sim
ply must do some studying. Cau't you
get It through your thick head when I
say I am uut going that I mean It?
Tnko the girls by yourself If they are
silly enough to like your company.
Cau’t see what anything bigger than a
child sees In a vaudeville park nny-
how. Now, Hilly, get out of here, do!
Your everlasting grin gives me a tem
perature, and the heat is bm} enough
this nfternoou ns It Is.”
Butler surveyed his friend with elab
orate pity, "Poor boy!" lie commented
rumlnatlngly, “He hasn’t been himself
since he won the big case last mouth.
Turns down Ids friends, flocks by him
self. Must have overworked or else
he’s in love. Must he love. Perhaps
the fair Alice will capitulate after all.
She ought to after you snved her for
tune from u greedy stepmother. Go
after It, sou. Well, by-b.v. Mo to Grace
aud Marietta and the despised park."
Alice Lawton, Indeed, thought Worth*
lag. Well, that klen wns better In But
ler’s shallow pale than the real truth—
namely, that Marietta's sudden fond
ness for his pnrtner wns eating his
henrt out. It wns always Marietta and
Billy Butler everywhere, and he used
to think It wns Grace for whom Billy
longed. Worthing Imd known no Inner
pence since Marietta had come Inst
winter to live with her cousin, Grace
Hunter. Front the first meeting the
girl’s dark, little, serious face, sweet
eyes, gay laughter, had not left his
consciousness. And she had certainly
seemed to like him. even to prefer
hint, to let him monopolize her some
what and even to be demurely glad
when they were left alone together.
Gloomily reflecting, he began to won
der what had changed her. June had
been a Joy time. If lie had spoken
then all might have been well, but that
Lawton Inheritance case entile to him.
He recognized the professional oppor
tunity, worked on It like n slave day
nud night all through July and won,
feeling that,he had now a little better
basis for offering Ills henrt to the girl
he loved. He was also delighted he-
enuse he had done a service to Alice,
his lifelong friend. But tvhnt had
changed Marietta?
Finding himself ttnahle to study.
Worthing phoned for his ear and clos
ed the office. He would go for Alice
and take her fer a spin and have din
ner nt the golf dul) mid then ride
again till the moon came up. Perhaps
thpy might go through the park them
selves, and—no, he would let Marietta
alone! He recognize,d that he longed to
see her.
But Allee was not at home, and, bit
terly lonely, he motored out Into .the
country. As the sun set nod the cool
of evening cume’on his troubled henrt
grew more culm. He would reason
with himself, try to see what he had
done or left undone, why Marietta
when he went hack to her. flushed and
Joyous with his victory, had received
him with the frozen sweetness of a
dish of lee creutti and thereafter man
aged never to be with hint alone for n
single moment. The first time he had
noticed It wns once when, with Alice,
whom he was taking to his office, he
met her on the street Just In front of
the building. Her greeting had been
very cool.
Worthing drew up henenth a great
tree and. taking a little photo 0 f the
girl front his pocket, looked, at It with
loving Inquiry. He recalled that an
other time that she had been cool to
hint was when he was telling her how
much It mennt to Alice to get her legul
rights aud how glud he was to have
been uble to help her. That whs at
the golf club dance, and lifter that she
had been unable to find a dance for
him. He sat thinking.
Suddeuly It came to him—the ridicu
lous little key to the solution. He
started the machine, headed again'for
the city, driving like one In a sort of
happy insanity. He would go straight
to Hie park, find her and see her long
enough to ask her If he was right If
be hud to loss Hilly into the lake to he
rkl of hlin. Of course a fellow couldn't
ask a girl directly wliut he Intended to,
know, hut be was lawyer enough to
extract from her Indirectly all he de
sired. He could uot wait to see her—It
was all so foolishly simple.
It was nearly dusk when, With hope
and fear mingling In his heart, he
reached the park and, Impatiently obe
dient to the rules aud the watchful
police, crawled slo\yly along the drives
looking for a group In which he might
distinguish Marietta's slim little figure
and crowu of dark hulr. Yfbere la the
world could they be? He stopiwd on a
wrong clew several times und nt Inst
went slowly to a remote corner where
there wns a great old fashioned swing.
It would be like thut Idiot Butler to
take her off lo chatter to her unhinder
ed nod perbups to swing ber. for she
loved to risk her little life, and Worth
ing bad always bnd n deadly fear that
the chains or something might break.
He bad seen one sucb accident Now
btbegnn to be sure Butler was not fit
ttlouk after her.
surmise had been right. He saw
tall und big utld blond, stand-
wutehlug that consummate Idiot
’Silly, as he pushed MifHetta—his Mari
etta—high aud yet higher Into the air.
He Jumped from Ills, car, motioning
Butler, whp did uot see him, to atop,
ubt during to call lust lie frighten her.
He wns.sure the swing was not safe.
He came running up. tuning the girl,
who, as she receded to be pushed for
ward aguln by Butler, saw him mid
gnvo a Ultle cry. Out she came toward
Idm, far out. His heart stopped us a
sudden warning creak from the chains
made him look up. The clmlu had
broken.
Without an Instant’s hesitation ho
held up his arms for her ami shouted,
“Jump. Marietta, Jump!" such com-
mnnd, such conviction, rang In his
voice that the girl obeyed ns It her
owu mind had prompted her. While
a horribly frightened silence fell on the
others and some people close by cams
running up she fell safely Into Ills
arms, where he stood holding her, tell
ing her and the rest, telling himself,
that she wns uot hurt. And, indeed,
she had miraculously escaped without
harm, for Butler had caught the chain
so the swing could not strike ber ns
she fell.
It seemed ages to Frank Worthing
before he made everybody go away
before It dawned ou Butler, who was
strangely willing, that lie was to take
Grace home und leave him (Worthing)
to bring Marietta when nud how he
chose. She was very silent nud queer,
and ho had felt her cling to him as ho
held her In his arms ns If she would
never leuve that shelter,
They did not go straight home, be it
said, but out to the country. Aud they
suw the moon rise, and many things
were snld, especially by Worthing,
whose usual slowness of speech melted
away under his greut need. So pres
ently they were very much engaged,
nud he stopped the ear, the better to
hold her hand, a proceeding of much
greater importance than reaching
home, where he would have 10 let her
out of his sight till the next day. Then
she demanded what had brought him
to the purk. It gave him the desired
opening.
“You." ho answered, with succinct
promptitude. “I was goiug to loss
Billy into the lake while 1 asked .volt
what 1 had done or left undone that 1
should be driven out of paradise. U
duwned on me that I might have
uegledted you during that Lawton
case, because, you gee, Alice"— He
felt his beloved stiffeu.
"I’m sure nobody ever thought of
hindering your devotion to Miss Law
ton. I”— But he shamelessly inter
rupted.
"But. Marietta, deurest. you surely
knew it was a legul necessity for me
to see her—to"—
“To take her—alone—to your office—
I saw you. Frank—to he with her eon
stuutly, to have time for—nobody else.'
“Her aunt was waiting for her In
my office thut time. I had to he with
her. It was a matter of business. You
surely see that. Marietta? And surely
you know It is you thut I love?" Ills
heart sang to think that lie had been
right, that she hud been Jealous, thill
she cured enough for him lo lie Jeul
ous. Thut was the .wonder. Most of
all his heart snug to know that In the
moonlight she lifted her luce to give
him u kiss of forgiveness for the of
fense he had never committed. He re
flected thut he was not the first man
probably to Joyfully accept pardon for
what be had uot done; that she was
not the first woman to whom a mail
had vainly explained 11 matter of bus!
ness.
"Of course," she said suddenly,
drawing buck to look ut him. "you
know I was not jealous. She Is not
the Bort of gild I could bo jealous of—
so very—unattractive." WortUtng'H
laughter was silent, a thing of the In
ner man. Alice Lawton, his old
friend, an accepted beauty, unattrac
tive! Blit he was wise, aud his dis
loyalty was very loverllke.
"Muriettu. did you suppose I could
think you were jealous? And ns for
Allee, well, you know I- cau't see oth
er women. 1 am bllud."
Rare and Peculiar Drugs.
PhtUdalphla Record.
A writer in Wessen fuer Alle throws
Borne interesting light on rare and pe
culiar drugs. Saffron, he points out,
would strike an ordinary observer as
decidedly expensive at $13 a pound (to
change marks into our coinage) until
told that it is composed of the central
Bmall portions only of the flowers of
the crocuB, 70,000 of which it takes to
make a pound. Attar of roses sells nt
$112 per pound, und ic takes 10,000
pounds, or nearly five tons, of roses to
obtain one pound of the oil.
Aconite, extracted from the root of
monkshood, is said to be the very
strongest poison extant, the dose being
one-Bix-hundredth of a grain. It is gold
at the rate of $108 per ounce.
Turning from the vegetable to the
animal world in search of rare drugs,
the writer refers to the musk of the
Asiatic deer, which at $24 to $30 an
ounce must be a prize to the wily hunt
er. In some of the tropical seas a
floating, Bweet-smelling masB of am
bergris is met with worth at present $30
per ounce, or. $480 per pound in the
market. The ambergris is said to be
the diseased biliary duct of the whale.
Another peculiar product in use as a
drug is a solution of the pure venom of
the rattlesnake, given occasionally in
malignant scarlet fever; while less
strong, if perhaps hardly less repulsive,
is powdered cockroach, which, in six-
grain doses, has been prescribed with
good effect, it is said, for dropsy.
■< A St. Louis business man while re
cently in an Arkansas town found him
self badly in need of a hair-cut. After
various and complicated instructions
from the clerk of the hotel as to the
whereabouts of the barber shop, the
man managed to find the place.
When he entered the shop, the only
person to be seen was an elderly man
leisurely reading a newspaper. To his
look of inquiry the St. Louis man an
nounced the purpose of Wb visit.
“Hair-cut?” asked the barber. “Cer-
t’ny, sir! Here, Johnny,” he yelled to
a boy on the step outside, “run over to
Mr. Blank an’ ask him ef he’s done ed
iting the paper to send overjmy shears!^
Foley’s Kidney Remedy will cure any
case of kidney or bladder trouble that
is not beyond the reach of medicine.
It invigorates the entire Bystem and
strengthens the kidneys so they elim
inate the impurities from the blood.
Backache, rheumatism, kidney and
bladder troubles are all cured by this
great medicine. Sold by all druggists.
He was excessively fond of dancing,
also he was very clumsy, and, like a
good many other people, he was fond
est of doing the thing he did the worst.
She, too, was excessively fond of
dancing, with the difference that she
waq the personification of grace. But
now she was suffering. Already he had
torn her train With his ungovernable
feet, and her dainty slippers bore the
marks of his shoes. At last she could
stand it no longer.
“Let us sit out the rest of this dance, ’ ’
she suggested. “I am tired.”
He wsb reluctant. “I thought you
said you could die waltzing,” he said.
“So I could,” she replied, “but there
are pleasanter ways of dying than be
ing trampled to death.”
Even a man with the gout can con
vince himself it was just his bad luck.
ft mc an fag
H Thu
Ttiere is
Very Narrow Esoape.
A queer remlnlseential gleam crept
Into the eyes of tile Imrber with the
long, low. rakish forehead ns be sud
denly rested his razor while sliuvlog
the Adam’s apple of the lean, nervous
looking man in the chair.
"I was King Louis XIV. of France
lnBt night." said the barber suddenly,
the razor still poised about half an
Inch above the lean customer’s Adam's
apple.
The customer blinked and breathed
bard, the shaved side of his face !>e-
lng nearly us white ns the still lather
ed other side.
"Walt a minute," he Hold, placing a
shaking band on the barber's sharing
arm.
He sat up straight In the chair with
n wild look and then made a bolt for
the door.
"Whew!" he yelled as be went.
"What nn escape! King Louis XIV.!
Bughouse! He wouldn't have done a
thing to me! And, with a towel
streaming In the breeze and one side
of his face still lathered, he loped
down the street.
“Well. I’ll he dadhlnged!” muttered
the barber. "Now. what kind of cogs
has that fellow got In his conk? liras
only trying to tell him tty it I was King
Louis XIV. at the barbers' masquerade
ball last night, and look at him going
after the mile record!"—Detroit Free
Press.
The Friend.
’’Every man. In my theory, will get
Just wbat be deserves in the long
run.”
“Heaven pity you, old chap!"—
Cleveland Leader.
The mere mixing of
materials to obtain analy
sis requires no special
knowledge. The value
of a fertilizer lies in the
source from which the
plant food is obtained.
Each ingredient in
Royster goods is selected
with a view of supplying
the plant from sprouting
until harvest. The plant
is not overfed at one
time and starved at an
other. Twenty-five
years experience goes with
every bag.
TRADE MARK
Sold by reliable dealers throughout
the South.
F. S. Royster Guano Co.
NORFOLK, VA.
E20CSM
A FACT
ABOUT THE “BLUES”
What is known as the ••Blues’’
is seldom occasioned by actual exist
ing external conditions, but in the
great majority of cases by a dis
ordered LIVER. ■
THIS IS A FACT
which may be demonstra
ted by trying a course of
WsPills
They controlandregulate the LIVER.
They brlnghopeandbouyancy to the
mind. They bring health and elastic
ity to the body.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
SELECT
NOTES
ON THE
INTERNAL
Sunday-School
LESSONS
FOR
19 10
Murrays Book Store
Newnan Hardware Co.
Long-handled Strapped ferrule
Harm re Forks
4-tine Forks, 60c.
6-tino Forks, 60c.
6-tine Forks, 70c.
Long-handled round-point Shovels, 50c., 75c. and $1.
DisBton’s Hand Saws, $1.66 and up.
Lanterns, 60c. nnd up—the best made.
Hunting Coats, $1.60 and up.
Our line of Cooking Stoves and Ranges can’t be b"at anywhere. We
guarantee every stove we sell. All we want is a triul order.
We carry Heating Stoves from $2.26 up to as hipii ns you want them.
Our line of Pocket and Table Cutlery is complete.
Cohie to see us.
Newnan Hardware Co.,
GREENVILLE STREET,
Telephone 148.
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
Farmers’ Supplies
As we are the farmer’s best friends during the sprin
and summer months, so we are his friends in the fall an*
winter months, when Ihe crops have been made and
gathered. We keep at all times a full und complete! stock
of Staple Merchandise—Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats, etc.—as
well as a large stock of Groceries, Tobacco, Bagging, Ties,
and everything that the farmer needs. We can make
special prices on Flour, Sugar and Coffee, big consignments
of which have just been received.
Make our store your headquarters when in town.
We shall be glad to see you, whether you wish to trade or
not. Very truly yours,
M. C. FARMER & CQ.
folevs kidney puls foleysOrinoIaxmve
' foa Bachachx Kici-nANO Biaooah ' | row SrpHACn.Tiiouata and Cowsh,atk>ia