Newspaper Page Text
Th£ Heraldland Advertise! 1
*The Herald and Advertiser” office is upstairs
•Jn the Carpenter BvNding, 7 l * Greenville street,
phone 6.
Professional Cords.
w. l. woodrcucm-,
physician and surgeon.
Ofltev 11'.' Greenville street. Residence 9 Perry
street. Office 'phone 401: residence 'phone 461.
D. A. HANeV
physician andsurceon.
Offerp. hiB professional service tc the peoiile of
Kewnsn, nnd will answer all calls town or coup-
Office over First National Bnnk.
> THOS. J. JO-NE-g.
physician ano surgeon.
Officoon E. Broad street, near ,{mblic square.
Residence next door to VirtnniA Haase.
T. B. DAVJS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office- Banitorlum hulldinir. Office 'phone 6—1
rail; residence 'phone 6—2 calls.
. W. A. TURNER,
PHYSICIAN AND SUAGfEON.
Special attention Riven to Burtrery and diseases
of women. lOfllce litfe Spring street 'Phone 230
F. I. WELCH,,
physician and surgeon.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite public
school building. ’Phone 234.
TWOS. G. FARMER, AT!.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Will give careful and prompt attention to all.
tegal busines entrusted to me. Money to loan
Office iixtourt-house.
VENT ABLISHED 1*7*
THE
II
Capital and SurpluB, $300,000.
GOULD BUILDING
10 Decatur Street 9 Edprewoed Avenue
Farm Loans
Negotiated throughout the State on
improved farm, lands in sums of. $1,000
to $100,000. oni five years’ time at
reasoable rates.
Our sources Of money are,practically
inexhaustible. .'AVe have a strong line
of customers among individual,investors
and Savings Banks and Trust: Compa
nies in the 'North, East and Middle
West, and we number among our cus
tomers the
John Haneofek',Mutual Life 1 Irts Co.
with assets of more than a hundred
million dollars.
For informationrail on or .,vw*e to
A. H. ^Freeman
Newnan, Ga.
0
1
1 »1 1
r i
1 1
1 l
i 1
1 1
i " ~i
r" n
1 1
r—i
[=r-
ELDER’S MILL
ready mnmsmsss
Have installed a new Leftdl
Turbin Water\Wheel, togeth
er with steel ;flume, which;
more than doubles the, power,
and can now irun both wheat
and corn mill ,at the same
time. The wheat mill has
had the following work done
on it: The sifter h*s new
cloths throughout; the puri
fier also has new cloths; the
bran duster and two cleaners
have been thoroughly .over
hauled, and Mr. .Steed says
“No mill is in better shape
than ELDER’S MILL:”
dive Vs a Trial and' We
Will Show You,
Atlanta and West Point
BALURQAD COMPANY
ARRIVAL AMD DEPARTURE
OFTRAINS ATNEWNAN, GA.
EFFECTIVE ivAN . 19. 1914.
Bubjeot,To change and typographical
errors.
No. 35...
go. 19. ’ ”
No is.
go 33 ."**
go. 39
Ne iJO
«
JJo 3S..„
Nc 4a
?.°- n... "
No. 4i.
No. 37
No.
Rfn!L train8 (lai, y' Odd number*,
bound° UnU ’ eren number8 ‘ oorth-
Court Calendar.
„ u . COWETA CIRCUIT.
•icitor-C — BeR ^ aIJ, Ju dge; J* Render Terrell, So*
M . - en eral.
A ^URt Vether ~~ Thirtl MoD(1 ays February and
.Coweta First Mondays in March andSeptem.
^Heard—Third Mondays in March and Septem-
Troutl!riu lrM Mondays in April and October
y r trst Mondays in Fehmary and Aug
I W A CITY C0U KT OF NEWNAN.
jt< T 1 Rost, Judge; W. L. Stallings. Sollc.
In An^V-V^ third Mondays in Jaoiu-
I * ‘ April « July and October.
Parlors
Final Summer Clearance Sale
Of Stylish, Seasonable
M 7
r i
r T
III
i* <4
i=S^ a
-
1
M
Hit order to make room for our advance stocks of
Ml merchandise, wezie offering SUMMER HATS
AT PRICES WHICH WILL ENABLE ANYONE TO
iBU'Y—^evenfor the few remaining weeks fin which
they can! be worn.
We have on hand some late summer styles, which
are admirably adapted for
EARLY FALL WEAR
consisting of the newest effects in corduroy, crash
and duck. The ideal hat for Between Seasons.
A special offering of Trimmed Hats at the ridiculously low prices of
50c up to $2
PARLORS
MISS KATE KIRBY ,IN CHARGE
19 <i li HEX V I 1..1.K STREET - OPPOSITE POSTOPFICK
DC
ir
IDE
J
DC
li ir
CURE FOR OLD M
Easy and Pleasant and Casts flat
whittle tfiiTfy-.It
Ik GOOD WAY TO (QHEAT DEATH.
vKhe Pre»ori*>‘ion Is *o iiM-ix Op*’" Ate
■and a Hobby, Shake Wp,l| and Take.w
iMany Hours a Day «r .Night as P.os-
*it>le—The C.vre In Real'J-ifo.
: 4>ld age eaoi .be,cured. U:*o.pre^crjP'
lion is a sinaple„one. MS* qpe» air aud
a hubby, slicke avell and tulbe ns many
bow: a,.day as possible. No .one .be
gins ,to age until itie is iscaeti, and the
first gray hair to roes \vtu j u a iroan sud
denly ifhiuks io tupase’-f. “What's the
use?'’ UTieu is ibetUroe wiieu ai hobby
.makes life interesting again.
There was an oflifljal on one .0? o\ir
great raLtec.mls wlxo. was retired «t sev
enty. “He’ll die now,” said his fideuds
Jrindly. But he didn’t. Instead, be .be
eame .interested in the- wild flowers,
a*d now he,1s too busyjn looking ifor
the ram’s head orehld and trying (to
find.a new station for tieihart's tongue
fern.and trampsing around ivn then'oods
and fields in all .kinds of weather even
to think.of dying. Anyway, he would
not hfcve time until he’s finished bin
monograph on the .willows of the Unit
ed States.
There ie a woman .In .Baltimene. sev
enty-two years old. who years ago
sought to forget a great sorrow by
learning the butterflies. "Her city home
has become a rendezvous for entomolo
gists all over the world .and houses .a
famous collection. While hor contem
poraries are dozing their lives away 1c
caps and easy chairs she spends her
summers in the mountains and her
winters in Florida with a butterfly net.
Twenty-one new species to Identify
are her contribution to the lepidoptera,
and she plans to live until the last
goal of an entomologist Is reached—
the using of her single Initial spades.
An octet of men In Philadelphia, all
well past their threescore years, some
lr. business and some foot loose, be
long to the same ornithological socie
ty. They are afield every day of the
year, rain or shine, to watch the ever
changing bird life. In the spring each
prepares migrant sheets showing the
arrivals of the hundred odd migrants
that pass through every place every
year. There is great rivalry as to who
shall score the most warblers or iden
tify the largest number of birds lri one
day. At present writing the oldest of
the eight holds a record of seventy-
five different kinds of birds seen or
heard In one day between dawn and
dark—one for each year of his age and
i>n» t/i irrtiw nn.
uL man in XNortln Gaaolina by fbeisud-
den death .of -two. of’up Is family was
left alone nvllli but'little money, ,no
frkvids and'llie-cheering dictum from
hlsitloctor t'lmtihe had only a year ito
live. To wltlle.fiwa.V' the few mcnrtsbs
still'ieft to hilm act well as to help out
dlls household expenses: lie took up the
study of edible mushrooms. At the
end:(T? a year In :Nje open he notified
shis indignant physician tiiat he had
lioeeome too much :Interested In his
fhohbyito confirm 'his,diagnosis. In ten
■yearsihe has discovered, classified and
■ tented HO kinds of .edible mushrooms
and Ims published a book which is one
of ithe standard authorities tor mush
room eaters of the world 1 ..
Afcother-eppUmgeniiiilni). attributes hts
long life .-to I he stars. Coirflme<l to
‘busbv'SS ilii’ iiig the day. he sought the
.»ipen mir* nr night aud iliegan t/> study
the (dntnglng consteltatlons uml tjie per
plexing planets. Then lie found that
with am opeui glass he uonild detect
thair calors and reveled In the i blue
light ■of fl'egn. (lie green glare .of-SiriuH.
Ihe j-ose red of Aldebamn, the flame
color of Hetelg'iese and the atrange
shadioi of other gleaming sky kings.
Finally he bought n small telescope.
Now, at seventy, lie has jmbliHhed a
monograph on the double stars, besides
a quaint little star guide that, has In
terested thousands ki Ills hobby.
None of the uaunxi studies reimines
inuph money or time. A cheap Ulus
itratgd guidebook, an opera glass and,
it possible, some walks and talks with
Mi expert, and you will learn almost
jaamediately to idx'j/lify a score or more
of -flowers, or birds, or constellations,
or mushrooms, and you wiU have found
a hobby on which you may ride away
from Heath.
Try it. young men. b-st you grow old.
Try It. old men. before you grow tired.
Escape into the open from these nar
row Indoor,days and learn the way to
where the wild folk dwell. In their
land you will find the help of the hills
and hope wide as the world, mid
strength, and youth, mid liapplneae.
Try It.—Sumueil-Scovllle, Jr., in Uppta
coifs.
AcrtfSs tlr.e Atlantic.
The narrowest part of the Atlantic Is
between Brazil and Guinea, where the
ocean is only about 1,800 miles wide.
From Newfoundland to Ireland, the
narrowest breadth north of the equa
tor, Is nearly twice as far. From New
fork to the nearest point of France Is
o/Mirly three tiroes us far.
ifiu*klnro*i Traveling.
■To any person who has all Jils senses
ubout hins, a quiet walk, over not
more than ten or twelve miles of road
Uiday, Is the most agnuslng of all trav
eling; and nil traveling becomes dull
in enact proportion to its rapidity. Go
ing i\y railroad U do not consider us
traveling at pH; It in merely ‘‘being
sent'' to a .place, and very little differ
ent from becoming a parcel.—
iRuskln
Shattered.
He was a Hollander, just arrived in
fKtiis country to neck his foi une, ojid
he had nuieh difficulty In regulutiug
hid pponiMiclatlon. and at times his
wwrds were almont nnJnUllliglhle to
hts host's small boy, who sat in a oor-
ner of the room, Bomewhat mystified,
at ia«l. the Hollander departed, and the
smalt boy said to his father; "Daddy,
is he a broken Englishman?”
1
Merchant Gets Protection
/
Hear, Hear.
Mr. TlrnMns—“You ought to have
seen our cat last night- He went out
In the pantry In the dark and caught a
mouse. Stood up .on his hind logs and
drove the mouse out from behind a
(baking soda <oau :ln one of the cup
boards." Mr. Buttejibelni:—“Well, why
■ don’t yon keep youy iitnloe ,lp a wore
.con* enlent. place?/'
Carlyle and Ceremony.
’HhoainH C arlyle and bis wile .were
m wedtJIng-frightened that It is sad
to think of it. Replying to a letter
of tols describing his fantastic lemurs,
she wrote “For heaven’* sake get
Into more benignant huioor, or the
Incident will not only wear a very
orlglnai aspect, but likewise a very
heart breaking one. I see not bow 1
am to go (through with It.”
T
S this the Spencer National Ban k ? This
is Goodwin & Company, of Springfield,
Mr. Goodwin talking. A stranger has
| just offered a check on your bank for $30
j % jn payment for some goods. Says his name
fjE ' is John Doe. Has he an account and is he
\ ,good for that amount?.”
By telephoning to the bank, the mer
chant can always protect himself from loss
by worthless checks.
\
When you telephone—smile
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
The Lesser Evil.
"ft's Mr. Boreleitfh. 1 think I'U send
him word I’m out.”
“Won't the still, smell voice reproach
you V*
“Oh, yes. but I’d rattier listen to th®
still, small voice than to Mr. Boro-
lelgh’s.”—Boston Transcript.
A word to the wife is sufficient—to
start something.
The Reason.
“J just cai/'.t HoeiB to keep a dining
room girl!" '■‘J have often wondered
why you never can keep any help. I
U4;ver have any such trouble.“ *T
know, but my husband Jjust won't flirt
with them."
Signs of Wealth.
Crawford—"Is ho really so rich?”
Crabshaw- "There's no doubt of it.
When he sued his wife for divorce the
papers in Ihe case were withheld from
public scrutiny, and when there was a
suicide in the family the coroner's
office decided It was an accident.*'—
Puck.
May Cultivate Teak Timber.
Forestry experts have demonstrat
ed that teak timber that is as strong
as that from natural forests can be
raised on plantations.
Citation to Heirs-at-Law.
7. F. HhwIh. afhninlHtralor of I Bill for direction.
•W. O. McCombu, (iecwHu*!. I etc.. In Coweta
i Superior Court.
Mm. Mutt kj BenverH. I 8 ♦* p t. term.
Mm. France* K. Cutler, et. al. I 1914.
TojMrH. Mattie Beaver*, Mr*. France a K. Cutler.
Mrn. Annie Meartiarn. Mra. L. A. HukKina, John
H. WalHt/>n. Y. B. Walafon. W. 1>. WalHtnn. Jenae
Adarnp, Mrn. Sarah Walker Salodo. Carrie B.
Wull, Mra, M. A. Chandler. J. It. Brookh. Mra.
Anna Carroll, Mra. Mi'lie Younfcblo»Mj. Mrn. Joe
Pryor, Min. Lucinda Barron. Mra. Sue Dunn.
Mra. Lila Griffjihn, Mra. Nancy Dulton, Mra. Alice
T. Holland. Mra. T. S. Kail, Mr«. A nice K. Taylor,
Mr*. A. A. Moore. Mrn. B. V. Moore, Mrn. Id, 4
Jeffery, Mrn. Kliy.a Smith. aruJ all of the lieira at
law of W. O. McOanbH. late of Coweta county.
Ga,. dereaned:
You and each of you are hereby commanded am!
required, peraorially or by attorney, to be ami ap
pear at tf»e next term of aaid Superior Court of
Maid Coweta county, (2a., U> Ihj held in and for fluid
county, at the City of Newnan, Georgia, on the
firHt Monday In September, at 10 o'clock a. in..
then and there to ariMwer the complaint in Hair]
action, beiflira bill for direction, etc. Am in de
fault of Much presence mu id court will proceed
thereon a« to juMtfce may appertain.
WitnoHM the Honorable R. W. Freeman. Judge
of aaid Court, thin the 9th day of June. 1914.
L. TURNER.
Clerk Superior Court of Coweta county, Ga.
All kinds of job work done
with neatness and dispatch at
this office.
Are You t
The Women
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG6ISTS
P4
FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS
GH HHLUUA1 ISM KIDNEYBANC OLAOOCM