Newspaper Page Text
fierald and fl<n>erti«r.
"The Herald and Advertiser’' office is upBtairs
over the Newnan Banking Co. ’Phone 6.
Health and
Strength that Last
ore not attained by tonics that
give artificial strength by stim
ulation and by supplying food
material. The effects of such
tonics arebut temporary and dis
appear as soon as you stop tak
ing the tonic. Ontheotherhand
DR. D. JAYNE’S
TONIC
VERMIFUGE
builds up permanent health
by acting directly on the diges
tive organs, toning them up so
that they properly digest the
food and supply the body with
its full share of nourishment.
Health and strength attained in
this way last.
Sold by all druggists In two
sizes, SOc and SSo
Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant is the
best known and most-reliable
remedy for Coughs snd Colds,
Croup and Whooping
Cough, Pleurisy and
slmllur kinds
of illness.
Professional Cards.
THOS. J. JONES ,
'PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON’.
Office on Hancook street, near public square,
Residence next door to Virginia House.
, v T. B. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office—Sanatorium building:. Office ’phone 6 1
call; residence ’phone 6—2 calls.
W. A. TURNER,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Special attention iriven to surjyery and diseases
of women. Office 19V6 Spring: street. ’Phone 230
F. I*. WELCH,
PHYSICIAN AND SUR'jEON.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue opposite public
echool building:. ’Phone 234.
K. W. STARR,
DENTIST.
All kinds of dental work. Patronage of the pub
lic solicited. Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s
store. Residence ’phono 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 Point
RAILROAD COMPANY
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN, GA.
Subject to change and typographical
errors. ^
No. 35 6:45 a. m.
No. 19 7:35 a. ra.
No. 18 9:63 a. m.
No, 33 10:43 a.m.
No. 30 3:17 p. m.
No. 20 6:40 p.m.
No. 34 5:32 p. m.
No. *42 0:45 a. m. i
No. t44 8:27 a. ra. j
No. 38 9:&3 a. ra. f
No. 40 1:03 p.m. V
No. 17 5:12p. ra.
No. 41 7:10 p. m. i
No. 37 0:23 p.m. \
No. 36 10:18 p.m. /
tSunday only. *Dnily except Sun
day. All other trains daily. Odd
numbers, southbound; even num
bers, northbound.
A Store Is Known
^ By the Goods
It Handles
^--2^ You will find here, at
o.l times, the freshest
stocks of the most carefully selected
brands the market offers,
Our reputation ia built on the qvml-
ity of our lines, backed by personal
care in filling all orders lnrge or small.
In addition courteous treatment and
t!:e promptest delivery service in
town, make this the most satisfactory*
t.uee to buy food supplies.
As an instance of cur policy In
f -arching out tho best guous wo
mention
ELECTA COFFEE
a superior brand that will warm tho
he. rt ot two most cliseriminuting
coffee d; inker.
An exclusive process of preparation
brings cut the true flavor or tho finest
highland grown coffee beans, and in
sures a drink of uniform excellence.
No coffee so go»*d as E'.ecra has
over b'"*n offered, because nothing
i j •. qua! it U produced.
Coiik-s in sealed tins, No hands
touch It until vour# do. *
Come m bad get a pound can
today.
T. L, Camp, Newnan, Ga.
Resolutions of Respects by Bharps-
burg Baptist Ohuroh.
“There is a reaper whose name is
Death. ” On the evening of June 19 he
entered the home of our beloved sister, *
Mrs. S. A. North, and gathered her
beautiful Bpirit for the “heavenly man
sions fair.” While we mourn her loss,
we know it is her eternal gain, and we
weep not as one without hope. Winters
had snowed her hair and made her rich
in faith and love for her Master. At
the age of 22 she became a Christian,
and as the soft-tinted rosebud fulfills its
promise in the full-blown rose, so she
grew in the Christian graces and blos
somed into a life rare and beautiful,
filled with deeds of charity and love.
None ever left her door uncomforted.
Faithful she was as wife and mother,
fulfilling the prophecy of her girlhood:
“Her children shall rise up and call her
blessed; her husband he praiseth her.”
During the latter years of her life afflic
tion’s hand was laid upon her, and she
was made to endure bodily pain; but even
during the hours of suffering, she ever
had a smile of welcome and warm words
of greeting for those who visited her
bedside. Her passing away was as the
gathering of the ripened grain, or the
full ear. Therefore, be it resolved—
1. That while we miss her from
among Us, we rejoice that she is now
where there is no more sorrow nor
pain.
2. That we extend to the bereaved
husband and children our heartfelt sym
pathy, asking the blessings of God upon
them. N. A. North,
J. S. Benton,
Mattie Ingram,
Committee.
Again the Death Angel has visited
our church and claimed for its own
Mrs. Em Cole. Sho was born Dec. 12,
1841, and on Dec. 19, 1873, was married
to Mr, J. C. Cole, who preceded her to
the grave several years ago. Two chil
dren blessed this union, both of whom
survive her. She was baptized into Mt.
Lebanon church in 1856 by Rev. Geo.
R. Moore, and departed this life Nov.
5, 1909. May God comfort the bereaved
children and grandchildren.
Resolved, That we extend to her sons,
grandchildren, sisters and brothers our
sincere sympathy, praying that God will
give them grace to help them in their
time of need. J. R. B. Stovall,
Mattie Ingram,
Nancy Johnson,
Committee.
Woman’s Home Companion for Feb
ruary
Has some striking features. Dr. Wil
liam Osier, the famous physician, con
tributes a splendid article on tubercu
losis, which is the first of an important
editorial aeries. Omaha, seen through
the same eyes that criticized Cincinnati
and Pittsburg, comes in for a stirring
article, which is bound to make a sen
sation.
The February number is in the main
a love story number, leading off with
the first part of “Tho House of Heal
ing,” by Juliet Wilbor Tompkins, a de
lightful and natural serial story. Short
er fiction comes from the pens of Anne
Warner, Zona Gale, Fannie Heaslip Lee,
Owen Oliver and others, and their
charming romances are enriched by il
lustrations from well-known artists
such as Arthur I. Keller, James Mont
gomery Flagg, Florence Scovel Shinn,
S. S. Potter, George Gibbs, etc.
Delightful pages are given over to
two songs by Ward-Stejphens, and the
most unique ideas for St. Valentine’s
Day.
“China-Painting for Beginners,” by
Elizabeth Mackenzie, and “Pulled
Rugs,” by Mabel Tuke Priestman, are
both practical articles on two subjects
of interest to women who like to have
their own handiwork around the house.
The usual well-stocked departments
are more than ordinarily, filled with ideas
fitted to winter housekeeping and win
ter play and winter lines of thought.
The cover, by Harrison Fisher,
pleasure in itself, and deserves a
of praise.
Notice to Compel Title.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
To the beirs-at-law of Jos. H. Wynn, deceased:
■ Take notice that J. S. Hammock, of said county.
h\aa applied to the Court of Ordinary for an order
tdt compel the administrator of Jos. H. Wynn.de,
ceased, to execute to him titles to land, on a bond
\title executed to him by said Jos. II. Wynn
3 his death, end I will pans upon the same on
t Monday in February. 19’,h. This Jan. 3,
. fee, $3. L. A, PERDUE. Ordinary.
And ex-oKlcio Clerk.
Scribner’s Magazine for February
Has as a frontispiece a striking picture
in colors of a modern locomotive rt
ning at great speed. It is one of sev
eral accompanying an article which de
scribes the life of a modern engineer,
by the artist, William Hamden Foster,
Theodore Roosevelt’s article shows
his remarkable capacity for observa
tion and for picturesque and vivid de
scription. It iB not a Haphazard record
of travel, but Mr. Roosevelt has car
ried out the project aB he saw it before
starting—to associate each species of
the large game with the region in which
it flourishes. He reproduces the pano
rama, of the life as he has seen it. The
g resent article pictures “A Buffalo
[unt by the Kamiti”—the buffalo be
ing one of the most dangerous of Afri
can wild animals. He describes the
ranch of 20,000 acres,.which was his
headquarters; the Kamiti, “a queer lit
tle stream,” runtiing through it; papy
rus swampB in which the buffalo live;
the small birds and beasts which abound,
with their strange habits, such as the
dancing-rings of one of the birds; and
\hm come descriptions of the chase af
ter the buffalo.
Mr. Hewlett’s serial, “Rest Har
row,” has caught the attention of read
ers from the very first, and the strange
drama of Sanchia and Senhouse is un
folded with the wonderful literary skill
which characterizes all of Mr. Hew
lett’s fiction.
“The Progressive Pacific Coast” ex
actly describes the subject of Henry T.
Finck’s notable article, which is the
tremendous development of that region
as it appears to-day to Mr. Finck, who
has been familiar with the Northwest
since early youth. Mr. Finck writes
with the rare enthusiasm of full knowl
edge and pictures the coast from Los
Angeles to Seattle in its present phe
nomenal development.
The article on “Frederic Remington:
A Painter of American Life,” by Royal
Cortissoz, was written before Mr. Rem
ington’s death, and indeed he assisted
in the selection of the pictures which
abundantly illustrate the article. Mr.
Cortissoz wrote of him as a man in the
midst of a progressive career, showing
his steady growth from an illustrator to
a painter with a great talent not only
for draftsmanship but for color. Rem
ington’s last paintings accompany the
article.
Edith Wharton had watched the po
etic development of George Cabot Lodge
from his early youth, and sho writes a
most sympathetic account of his person
ality and his poetry, and the bright
E romise of his career so recently ended
y death.
Walter Prichard Eaton writes of the
relations of “Great Acting and the Mod
ern Drama.” .
The Bhort stories are: “The Hermit
of Bubbling Water," by Frederic Pal
mer—another adventure of Danbur.V
Rodd, Aviator: “Hostages to Fortune,”
by Atkinson Kimball, and a humorous
story, “The Lamb in Sheep’s Clothing,”
by Nelson Lloyd.
The new Boston Art Museum is de
scribed by Philip L. Hale, in the Field
of Art.
It is a dangerous thing to take a
cough medicine containing opiates that
merely stifle your cough instead of cur
ing it. Foley’s Honey and Tar loosens
and cures the cough and expels the
poisonous germs, thus preventing pneu
monia and consumption. Refuse sub
stitutes and take only the genuine Fo
ley’s Honey and Tar m the yellow pack
age. Sold by all druggists.
“Why do you always go out on the
balcony when I begin to sing, John?
Can’t you b j ar to fi3’en to me? ’
“It isn’t that, but I don’t want the
neighbors to think that I am a wife-
- beater.”
is n
word
Man With a Memory.
Saturday Evening: Post.
The Senator was making a speech.
After he had finished there was a re
ception at one of the hotels. A little
man pushed eagerly forward.
“Hello, Senator,” he shouted.
“How do you do, sir?”
“Say, Senator, you remember me?
I’m Jones—Jones, of Springfield, you
know. I met you down there. Remem
ber how full we got together?”
“1 do not,” replied the Senator icily.
They pushed Jones away, but soon
he was back.
“Hello, Senator!” heshouted. “Don’t
you remember that time down in St.
Louis we went out and made a night of
it? Jones, of Springfield, you know.”
They shoved Jones away again, and
somebody standing near the Senator
asked, “Who’s your friend?”
“I don’t know who he is, but he
seems to be hell on reminiscences.”
If girls were educated to take care of
themselves they would not be so ready
to marry, and they would marry better,
and there would be less trouble and
fewer divorces. If they were brought
up to work they would know how to use
the broom, the duster and the rolling-
pin. There are certain qualities which
are just aB valuable in the housekeeper
and the mother as they are in the busi
ness man—skill, intelligence and good
sense. When those qualities are rated
a little higher in woman the domestic
machinery will run a good deal smooth
er, and children will be brought up to
fight their own battles and earn their
own bread. We all know what that will
mean—less crime, fewer paupers—the
press and the loom instead of the prison
—the altar instead of the scaffold.
A Beautiful Sentiment.
Do not keep the alabaster boxes of
your love and tenderness sealed up un
til your friends are dead. Fill their
lives with sweetness. Speak approving,
cheering words while their ears can hear
them, and while their hearts can be
thrilled and made happier by them; the
kind things you mean to say when they
are gone, say before they go.
The flowers you mean to send for
their coffins, send to brighten and
sweeten their homes before they leave
them. If my friends have alabaster
boxes laid away, full of fragrant per
fumes of sympathy and affection, which
they intend to break over my dead body
I would rather they would bring them
out in my weary and troubled hours,
and open them, that I may be refreshed
and cheered by them while I need
them.
I would rather have a plain coffin
without a flower, a funeral without an
eulogy, than a life without the sweet
ness of love and sympathy. Let us
learn to anoint our friendB beforehnnd
for their burial. Post-mortem kindness
does not cheer the troubled spirit.
Flowers on my coffin cast no fragrance
backward over life’s weary way.
Have you a weak throat? If so, you
cannot be too careful. You cannot be
gin treatment too early. Each cold
makes you more liable to another, and
the last is always the harder to cure. If
you .will take Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy at tho outset you will be saved
much trouble. Sold by all dealers.
A colored man died without medical
attendance, and the coroner went to
investigate. •
‘Did Samuel Williams live here?” he
asked the weeping woman who opened
the door.
“Yasauli, ” she replied between sobs,
“I want to see the remains.”
“I is de remains,” Bhe answered
proudly.
Mamma—“Lucile, dearie, you havo
been going to school now about a week.
How do you like it?”
Little Girl—“I like it all right, mam
ma. The recess is just fine. ”
Sometimes a man’s past takes a short
cut and heads off his future.
Don’t be cross and hateful because
everything in the world doesn’t move
to suit you. . Of course you are a great
deal smarter than anyone else, and are
justly entitled to more recognition.
While you are fully aware of ’.'your at
tainments, your neighbor, who is dull of
comprehension, has not found out that
you are more than an ordinary individ
ual. You have doubtless told him dif
ferently more than once, yet in his dull
ness he has failed to comprehend the
many brilliant points you know your
self to be possessed of. So do not kick
because you are not appreciated. The
best thing you can do is to get a divorce
from your big head, come down from
your high perch, and be a sensible, ev
ery-day American.
Every Woman Will be Interested.
There has recently been discovered
an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for wo
man’s ills, called Mother Gray’s Aus
tralian- Leaf. It is “he only certain reg
ulator. Cures female weaknesses and
Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary
troubles. At all druggists or by mail
50 cts. Sample free. Address, The
Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y.
The rector of St. George’s Episcopal
church in New York, of which J. Pier-
pont Morgan is a member, scolded his
congregation roundly Sunday.
“I want tt talk to you about a very
personal matter,” he said, as bis eyes
swept the pews. “I entered at one
minute of 11 o’clock, and not half this
church was filled. It is irreverent for
you not to be on time. You should re
member that at 11 o’clock on Sunday
morning you have an appointment with
God. I hope in the future you will bear
this in mind. This morning the first
half of the sermon was disturbed be
cause so many were late.”
The busiest and mightiest little thing
that ever was made is Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver Tablets. They do
the work whenever you require their
aid. These tablets change weakness
into strength, listlessness into energy,
gloominess ihto joyousneas. Their ac
tion is so gentle one doesn't realize they
have taken a purgative. Sold by ail
dealers.
“I w n't wash my face!” said Dolly,
defiantly.
"Naughty, naughty," reproved her
grandmother. “When I was a Tittle
girl I always washed my face.”
"Yes, and look at it! ’
A capital climax needs to be capped.
MORE
P1MHAI
CtMJ#
Added to the Long List ctae
to This Famous Remedy.
Oronogo, Mo.—“I was simply a ner
vous wreck. I could not walk across
tho floor without
my heart fluttering
and I could not even
receive a letter,
Every moifth I had
such a bearing down
sensation, as if the
lower parts would
full out. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound has
done iny nerves a
great deal of good
land h as also relieved
the hearing down. I recommended it
to some friends and two of them have
been greatly benefited by it.”—Mrs.
Majj McKnight, Oronogo, Mo.
Another Grateful woman.
St. Louis, Mo. — “I was bothered
terribly with a female weakness and
had backache, bearing down pains anil
pains in lower parts. I began taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound regularly and used the Sanative
Wash and now I havo no more troubles
that way.” —Mrs. Ail. Ilicnzoa, 0722
Prescott Avo., St. Louis, Mo.
Because your case is a difficult one,
doctors having done you no pood,
do not continue to suffer without
giving Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound a trial. It surely has cured
many cases of female,ills, such as in
flammation, ulceration, displacements,
fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic
pains, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner
vous prostration. It costs but a triflo
to try it, and the result is worth mil
lions to many suffering women.
iuneJIhi
W'bDOUGIAS
S.S35MM.SHOES
$2.og
THE LARGEST MAKER AND RETAILER
OF MEN'S FINE SHOES IN THE WORLD.
“SUPERIOR TO OTHER MAKERS’
I havo worn’W, L. Douglas shoes fop the
past six years, and always find they are far
superior to all other high grade shoe* In
style, comfort and durability.—W. Q. JONE8,
HQ Howard Ave., Utica, N.Y,
If 1 could take you Into my large fac
tories at Brockton y Mast., and show you
how carefully W, L. Douglas shoes are
made, you would realize why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, and
are of greater value than any other make.
that V.I*Donglas name and price
Is * tain per I on the bottom. T«k« No Muh»tltnte.
If your dealer cannot fit yon with W. L.Doaglai Mioes
wTheforMall Order Catalog, W.L,I>ouglaa, Brockton,
FOR SALE BY 1
P. F. CUTTING & CO.
For
Iheum&tic
Pains
As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the mus
cles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold
easier. Sloan’s Liniment quickens the blood, limbers
up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache
with astonishing promptness.
Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism.
Mrs. Daniel IT. Diehl, of Mann's Choice, H.F.D., No. i, Pa., writes:—
“ TTease send me a bottle of Sloan's Liniment for rheumatism and stiff joints.
It is the best remedy I ever know for I can’t do without it.”
Also for Stiff Joints.
Mr. Milton Wheeler, 2100 Morris Avo., Birmingham, Aid., writes:—
“ I am glad to say that Sloan’s Liniment has done me more good for stiff
joints than anything I have ever tried.”
S loan’s
Liniment
is the qickcst and best remedy for Rheuma
tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises
and Insect Stings.
Price 25c., 50o., and $1.00 at All Dealers.
Bond for Slonn’tf Froo Book on Horses, Address
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
Newnan Hardware Co.
Long-tiandled Strappe Ferrule
rianure Forks
4-tine Forks, 50c.
6-tine Forks, 00c.
6-tine Forks, 76c.
Long-handled round-point Shovels, 60c., 75c. and $1.
Disston’s Hand Saws, $1.65 and up.
Lanterns, 50c. and up—the boat mude.
Hunting Coats, $1.60 and up.
Our fine of Cooking Stoves and Ranges can’t be boat anywhero. We
guarantee every stove we sell. All we want is a trial order.
We carry Heating ‘Stoves from $2.26 up to as high os you want them.
Our lino of Pocket and Table Cutlery is complete.
Come to Bee us.
Newnan Hardware Co.,
GREENVILLE STREET,
Telephone 148.
A Workman of M and Experience
Knows exactly what to do to
properly repair a damaged car
riage, and therefore wastes no
time in experiments, for which
the owner of the vehicle has to
pay. That is why it costs least
for repairs at E. R. Dent’s.
Our workmen know their trade,
and in addition our patrons are
guaranteed that no carriage is
overhauled without our person
al supervision.
E. R. DENT
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 SPECIALTY
Vulcanite Roofing
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., NF.WNAN, GA., 'Phone 14.