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CUBES
• SKIN DISEASES
The skin is composed of two distinct layers. One
Is known ns the epidermis, or outer skin, which lias no
fibres, and serves principally as a covering to the body,
and a protection from outward dangers to the delicate
flesh beneath. The other laj’er is known as the derma,
or true skin, and is composed of elastic fibres, fat tissue,
glands, lymphatics, nerves, etc. The thousands of tiny
veins and arteries with which it is interlaced constantly
supply every fibre and tissue with healthful properties
from the circulation to keep the skin smooth and perfect.
This is changed, however, when the blood becomes
infected with humors, acids or impurities. Instead of
constantly supplying rich, nutritive properties to the
skin, the circulation deposits the acrid impurity with
which it is contaminated, into the sensitive fibres and
tissues. This causes irritation and inflammation, which splits or breaks
the thin outer cuticle, while the tissues beneath ulcerate and discharge upon
the surface in the form of Eczema, Salt Rheum, Tetter, etc. There is like
wise a dry form of skin diseases, such as Acne, Psoriasis, etc. In these varie
ties the humor in the blood diseases and inflames the glands, hair follicles,
etc., causing them to swell and protrude
to the outer surface. Pimples, rashes,
eruptions and like troubles, are all de
pendent on imperfect blood, and no one
can have a good complexion, free from
humiliating blemishes, unless the skin
is kept 1( althy by good blood.
S.S.S. cures Skin Diseases of every
kind by neutralizing the acids and
removing the humors from the blood.
It cools the acid-heated circulation,
builds it up to normal strength, multi
plies, its rich, nutritious corpuscles,
and adds to its purity in every way.
Then the skin, instead of being irri
tated, inflamed and diseased by acrid
.purities or fiery humors, is nourished, soothed and softened by a cooi
ng, healthy stream of blood. S. S. S. is the greatest of all blood purifiers,
id therein lies its ability to cure skin diseases.i Book on Skin Diseases and
edical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA
S.S.S. CURED HER.
Some time ago I was troubled
with a severe Bkin affection oalled
Acne. Small pimples would ap
pear on my face and neck which
would in time fester and become
inflamed. My complexion was
muddy and sallow and most un
sightly. I chanced to read about
S.S.S., and oonoluded to give it a
trial; the result was entirely sat
isfactory, my oomplexion -soon
highly reoommend S. S. S. to any
ho are likewise afflicted.
MRS.LTTOY GOODING
Pollock, La.
■ V
t
50 lbs. best Flour in town, without exception - - - $2.00
50 ITjs. “Woodroof’s Leader,” and good enough
for anybody - -- -- -- -- -- -- 1,75
50 lbs. good Patent Flour - -- -- -- -- - 1.60
18 Bis. best standard Granulated Sugar ----- 1,00
7 lbs. good Roasted Coffee, (fresh,) ------ 1.00
Three 2-11). cans Tomatoes - -- -- -- -- - .25
2- lb. can best Elberta Peaches - -- -- -- -- .10
3- It). can best Elberta Peaches 15c., or two cans - - .25
Fresh brown ShortB for stock, per cwt. - -- -- -1.75
Fresh white Shorts for cakes or bread - ----- 2.10
' Everything in the wffy. of Hay, Corn, Oats, Meal,
Meat, Canned Goodsand Crackers; Boots and Shoes: heavy
Checks and Cottonades; Sheetings and Shirtings of the best;
Grass Blades and Snathes, and all kinds of Farmers’ Hard-
wan.
No trouble to show goods or make prices. Come and
see us.
W00DR00F SUPPLY COMPANY
Of*
.it
Newnan Hardware Co.
Long-handled Strapped Ferrule
Tlanure Forks
4-tine Forks, 50c.
6-tine Forks, 60c.
6-tine Forks, 75c.
Long-handled round-point Shovels, 50c., 75c. and $1.
Disston’s Hand Saws, $1.65 and bp.
Lanterns, 50c. and up—the best made.
Hunting Coats, $1.50 and up.
Our line of Cooking Stoves and Ranges can’t be beat anywhere. We
guarantee every stove we sell. All we want is a trial order.
We carry Heating Stoves from $2.25 up to as high as you want them.
Our line of Pocket and Table Cutlery is complete.
>' Come to Bee us.
Newnan Hardware Co.,
GREENVILLE STREET,
Telephone 148.
1
WHEN IN NEED OF
SPARED THE CHIEF.
Jackson Admired the Bravery of the
Famous Indian.
Andrew Jackson was magnanimous
in Ids treatment of Wentliersford, the
famous Creek chieftain, when that
warrior surrendered. Wentliersford
tind done all in Ills power to prevent
the horrible massacre at Fort Mims,
but most of the frontiersmen were bit
ter against him, and Jackson himself
lmd sworn to put him to death If he
were taken.
One day after the power of Ills peo
ple had been utterly broken Wentliers
ford came riding Into Jackson's enmp
on his famous gray horse and stopped
In front of the general’s tent.
IIow dare you ride up to my tent
after having murdered the women and
children at Fort Minis)” demnnded
Jackson in astonishment.
The chief denied the truth of the
charge, but said he: "You nmy kill me
if you will. I come to gut aid for the
women and little children who are
starving in the woods. If I could tight
you nny longer I would do bo, but my
warriors are all dead. Send for the
women nud little children. They never
did you nny harm. But kill me If the
white people want It done,”
The troops, crowding about, began
to cry menacingly: “Kill him! Kill
him!”
Silence!" ordered Old Hickory stern
ly. “Any one who would kill ns brave
a mnn ns tills would rob tbo dead.”
The general treated the chief kindly
and even gave him permission If he
desired to depart nnd continue the
war. The chief nfterwnrd settled on a
plnntntton, where ho resided for many
years, honored alike by white men nnd
rod.—Chicago Tribune.
It Sailed Him.
The late Patrick F. Sheedy, the well-
known gambler, always cautioned young
men against gaming, though he had
been successful at it.
"Never gamble,’’ he said, one winter
day in his art shop, to a New York re
porter. "A gambler, in his despair,
will stake his life and his honor to win
a dollar or two.
"The desperate gambler is, in fact,
like that poor fellow who rented a
steam-heated flat one very cold winter
in Eight Hundred and Ninety-seventh
street,
* ‘As this man sat reading in his over
coat ami gloves one evening a little
group of firemen burst in on him.
‘ ‘Quick!’ they cried. -’Stir yourself.
The house is afire!’
‘ ‘Very good, ’ the man replied, turn
ing a page culmly nnd selecting a fresh
cigar. ‘Very good, indeed. It will be
the first time this fiat’s been warm this
winter.’ ”
SOLVING A PROBLEM.
The Green Country Brakeman Who In
troduced the “Saw By."
Many years ago a green country boy
applied to the superintendent of a
western ruilwny for work and, some
what ngnlnst the superintendent's
wish, on account of the dnuger to life
nnd limb attendant,upon such occupa
tion, was given a place as brakeman
of a freight train.
On one of his first trips It happened
that his train met another freight
trnin nt a station where the sidetrack
was not long enough to accommodate
eit.be>’ of them. The conductors were
debating which train should back up
to a point where they could pass when
the new hand ventured to suggest that
neither should back; that they could
pass each other by means of tho short
sidetrack If file thing was managed
right.
The idea excited a good deal of
laughter on the part of the old train
men, hut the boy stood his ground.
"Well, how would you go about it?'
asked one of the conductors, confident
that tile lad would soon find himself
against n stump.
Tho boy took up a stick and traced
in the sand a dlngram to Illustrate his
plan.
"Good gracious!” snld the conductor.
“I believe that will do it!”
And it did do It. Today every train-
mun in America probably knows how
to “snw by" two long trains on a short
sidetrack, but it is not so generally
known thnt the thing was never done
until an inexperienced country boy
who became the manager of a great
railway line worked out the problem
for himself.
This bit of brightness is said to have
cropped out in a conversation between
two little misses not old enough to go
to school: ,
"What makes a horse naughty when
he sees an auto?”
“It is this way: HorseB is used to
seein’ other horses pull wagons, an
they don’t know what to think of ’em
goin’ along without a horse. Guess if
you saw a pair of pants walkin’ down
the street without a man in ’em you'd
be scared, too, wouldn’t you?”
His ignorance of history recently
shocked one of the women friends of a
young Carrollton society man. It was
after a dinner party at his house and
she was telling him , what she had
learned in her private history class.
One thing led to another and all the
time he was getting into deeper water.
At last she surprised him by inquiring:
“Now, tell me, Mr. , what are the
Knights of Bath?”
He stammered for a while and finally
blurted out:
“Why, Saturday nights, I suppose.”
They had been engaged for exactly
forty-seven seconds by the cuckoo
clock.
“Clara, dear,” queried the happy
youth, who had a streak of romance
running up and down hiB person, “will
you promise to love me forever?"
“I’d like to, George,” replied the
practical maid, “but I really don't ex
pect to live so long.”
“How do you like my biscuit, hubby?
I got the recipe out of a paper.”
“WjBll, my dear, I found a button in
one and a feather in another. Maybe
you got the cooking receipt mixed with
the fashion hints.”
Ths White Shark.
The shark of sharks, the real "man
eater” and the one most dreaded, is
the white shark. This variety reaches
a length of ■ thirty-five feet and a
weight of 2,000 pounds. Its head Is
long find flat, uud tho snout far over
hangs the mouth. Its six rows of teeth
are sharp ns lancets and notched like
saws. Its mouth is vety large, so that
oue hns been known to cut u man’s
JiGdy completely in (ivo at a single
snap of its cruel jaws aud another to
swallow one at a gulp. Near Calcutta
one of these sharks was seen to swul-
low n bullock's head, horns aud nil.
From the stomach of another a bull’s
bide was taken entire, and tho suilor
who made tho discovery insisted thnt
the bull had bemi swallowed whole
and all except the hide had been di
gested. ‘ From the stomach of another
wus taken a lady’s workbox filled with
the usual contents, scissors and all. It
Is commonly tho white shark which
follows tho vessel at sea day after dny
and week after week.
^Lumber and planing
MILL STUFF
1? Of all kinds—Brackets, Mouldings, Columns, etc.—you will
find itito your interest to give us a call.
/ HOUSE' BILLS A SPECIALTY
Vulcanite R oo fin g
R. D.CoIe ManufacturingCo
T 49-54 E. Broad St., NEWNAN, GA.. ’Phone 14.] “
The Retort Courteous.
"Camp Meeting” John Allen was a
famous Methodist preacher and reviv
alist of the old days down In Maine,
aud, like most successful pulpit ora
tors, UIb sense of humor was equal to
Ills gift of speech.
It Is recalled by the Boston Journal
that on one occasion the old gentle
man’s wife was getting into a carriage,
und he neglected to usslst her.
"You are not as gallant, John, ns
when you were a boy!” she exclaimed
In gentle rebuke.
“No,” was his ready response, "and
you are not as buoyant as when you
were a gal!”
In His Father’s Footsteps.
Blnks—Did Smith’s father leave him
anything? Jinks — Only his debts.
Blnks—How Is Smith getting along?
Jinks—Well, he has greatly Increased
his inheritance.—Baltimore American
Tho Ono Way Out.
She—Why did lie marry her at all If
he Intended getting a divorce so speed
ily? lie—Because lie didn’t think It
would be honorable to break their en
gagement.—Kunsas City Journal.
Let rnr man presume to give advice
to others who lias not first given good
counsel to himself.—Scucca.
For
Sprains
Sloan’s Liniment is the best
remedy for sprains nnd bruises.
It quiets the pain at once, and
can be applied to the tcndcrest
part without hurting because it
doesn’t need to be rubbed — all
you have to do is to lay it on
lightly. It is a powerful prepa
ration and penetrates instantly —
relieves any inflammation and con
gestion, and reduces the swelling.
Here’s the Propf.
Mr. L. Roland, Bishop of Scran
ton, Pa. says:—“On the 7th of
this present month, as I was leaving
the building at noon for lunch, I
slipped and fell, spraining my wrist.
1 returned in the afternoon, and at
four o’clock I could not hold a pen
cil in my hand. I returned home
later and purchased a bottle of
Sloaris
Liniment
and used it five or six times before
I went to bed, and the next day I
was able to go to work and use my
hand as usual.”
Sloan’s Liniment
is an excellent anti
septic and germ
killer— heals cuts,
burns, wounds and
contusions, and will
draw the poison
from sting of poi
sonous insects.
2Go., GOo. and $1.00
Sloan’s book on
horses, cattle, sheep
nnd iiou I tr y. sent
free* Address «
Sr. Earl S. Sloan,
Boston, Kae*., U.S.A.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Notice Ih hereby riven to all creditors of the es
tate of Margaret Gonnally Murray, late of art!d
county, dpceasod. to render in an account of their
demanda to mo within the time prescribed by law
properly made out, and all persons indebted to said
deceased, are hereiy required to make immediate
rayment to the undersigned. Thin Fob. 18, 1910,
Prr. fee. 13.75, T. F. RAWLS.
Afiminiatratorof Margaret Connelly Murray, doc 1
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch
at this office.
CONVINCING PROOF «
OF THE VIRTUE OF
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
What is the use of procrastinating in the face of such
evidence as the following letters represent? If you are a
sick woman or know one who is, what sensible reason have
you for not giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound a trial ? For 30 years we have been publishing such
testimonial letters as these—thousands of them —they are
genuine and honest, too, every one of them
Mrs. 8. J. Barber says:
”1 think Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound
is tho best medi
cine in tho world
for women—and
I feel It my duty
to let others
know tho good it
has done lor mo.
Three years ago
11 had a tumor
I which tho doctor
I said would havo
to be removed by an operation or L
could not live more than a year,
or two, at most. I wrote Mrs, 1’iulc-
ham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice, and
took 14 bottles of Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and to
day tho tumor is gone and I am n
perfectly well woman. I hope my
testimonial will bo of benoflt to oth
ers.” — Mrs. 8. J. Harder, Scott,
N.Y.
Mrs. E. F. Hayes says:
“I was under tbo
doctor’s treat
ment for a fibroid
tumor. I suffered
with pain, sore
ness, bloating,
and could not
walk or stand on
my foot an
length of time,
wroto to Mrs.
Pinlchnm for ad.
vice,followed her
directions nnd
took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. To-day I am a well
woman, tho tumor was expollod and
my whole system strengthened. I
advise all women who are inflicted
with tumors or femalo troubles to
try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.” — Mrs. E. P. Hayes,
1800 Washington St., Boston, Mass.
Mrs. George May Bays t
“No one knows
what I have suf
fered from fe
malo troubles,
neuralgia pninB,
and backache.
My doctor said
lie could not give
mo anything to
cure it. Through
the advice of a
friend I began
to use Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound, and tho pain soon
disappeared. 1 continued its use
and am now in perfect health.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound ling boon a God-send to mo
as I believe I should have been in
my gravo if it lmd not been for Mrs.
Pinkham’s advice and Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”
—Mrs. George May, 80 4th Ave.,
Paterson, N. J.
Mrs. W. K. Housh says:
I havebeen
completely cured
of a severe fe
malo trouble by
Lydia E. Pink-
Imm’B Vegetable
Compound, and
want to recom
mend it to all suf
fering women. ”
-Mrs. W. K.
IIo us it, 7 East-
. view Ave., ,Cin-
SJcinnati, Ohio,
Hecauso your caso is a diillcult
one, doctors having done you no
good, do not continue to suffer with
out giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound a trial. It surely
lias cured many cases of femalo ills,
such us inflammation, ulceration,dis
placements, llbrold tumors, irregu
larities, periodic pains,backache,etc.
For 30 years Lydia F. Pinkham’s X egetablo
Compound has been the standard remedy' for
female ills. No sick woman docs Justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs* and
has thousands of cures to its credit.
Mrs. Plnltham Invites all sick women
aJWfif 1 to write her for advice. She lias
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mrs. Pihkham, Lynn. Mass.
There Is more
to a Fertiliser
U than Analyses
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
REGISTERED
Sold by reliable dealers throughout
the South.
F. S. Royster Guano Co.
NORFOLK, VA.
FOR SALE BY
I. N. Orr Co.,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA
toleys kidney pills foleysorino laxative
Fog B.ckacwc KioM*rj/u<o Bun)oca foa Stomach Tboublc and CowsnfATioii