Newspaper Page Text
CURES
STOMACH,
^j22jjbjS
nriTR body get* it* life from -
i food properl/ dlgartwt !
Healthy digestion moans pure
|,| ( ,„1 fur tho body, but stomach
tronbb'H arifrom careloMnowi
in eating and stomach disorders
uim< t tin* entire system. Improp
erly masticated food sours on tno
stomach, causing distressing
pains, belching and nausea.
When over-eating is persisted in
the stomach becomes weakened
nnd worn out and dyspepsia
claims Uio victim. I
Thedford’s Block-Draught |
cures dyspepsia. It frees the
stomach and Imwels of congested
matter and gives the stomach
new life. Tho stomach i« quickly
invigorated and tho natural
stimulation results in a good
appetite, with tho power to thor
oughly digest food.
You can build up your stomach
with this mild and natural
remedy, Try lhodford s Black-
Ihaugnt today. You can buy a
package from your dealer for
fcx.. If ho does not keep it, send
the money to ’lhc (.hattanrsiga
Medici no Co., Chattanooga,
Term., and a package will be
mailed you.
THEDFORD’S
[BLACKDMUGHTJ
EDUCATION IN THE SOUTH
this impression on the selfrespect-
ing Southern man is not rendered
more agreeable by the knowledge
that there are Nothern people ig
norant and light-hearted enough
to imagine that what intellectual
light there is in the South is due
to the Ogden influence and to
that prodigy of wisdom, Hooker
Washington.
The South has two races to cclu-
PRE8I0ENT J0HN80N ON THE COT- man would, for a moment, enter- |T|jp|*|scll VOUT llOtTlC
rnu n.mniw tain a thought of goine into anv- rUr,IWI 7 UUI MUI " C
TON OUTLOOK
tain a thought of going into any
thing managed by such a manage
ment.
The slanderous reports being
circulated by this unscrupulous
agent are utterly groundless and
cate and must educate them sepa- gatherings attended each of the
President M. L. Johnson, of the
Georgia division, Southern Cotton
Association, is receiving reports
from the county meetings held
throughout Georgia on the first absolutely false, and the man who \ 1
Tuesday in May. which indicate circulates them is unworthy of the 1 1
that the campaign in Georgia is confidence of any man
making good progress. Targe
rately. Its task is, therefore,
heavier than that which confronts
other sections and other countries.
Hut it has faced and is facing this
task with as much determination
and intelligence as coulci be dis
played by any section, country nr
people under the same circum
stances. If outside philanthropists
recognize the peculiar difficulties
and wish to give aid, their gener
osity will not fail to meet a grate
ful and gracious welcome. Hut
condescending advice delivered
with an air of superiority is another
matter.—Macon Telegraph.
The recent Ogden educational
conference at Columbia, S. C., is
very differently regarded by the
leading newspapers of that state.
On the one hand the Northern
“missionaries” were welcomed
with open arms, on the other their
coming, or at least the tone of
some ol their utterances, was look
ed upon as an affront. The Co
lumbia State led the paean of wel
come, the Charleston News and
Courier led the chorus of criticism.
Whether the latter he or be not
too much disposed to “think in
the past tense," as waH charged
in our opinion it rather “got the
better ol" the argument. The
News and Courier observes that
“the infatuation that the South is
a heathen land to be rescued from
darkness by Northern mission
aries, which seems to have seized
many Southern men, is for alien
ists to explain," and pointedly
adds:
Can the Sumter News imagine
a party of Southern capitalists and
educators traveling in a private
train of Pullmans, invading Con
necticut, and taking a leading and
distinct part as Southerners in a
Conference for Education in the
North, held in New Haven—the
home of Yale University. If not,
why not?
• Inspiring speeches" have been
made in Columbia, chiefly by
Southern teachers, men who have
given their lives to the cause of
education in the South. They
anil their comrades, thousands of
whom have never attended a
“Conference for Education,” have
accomplished in the past forty
years relatively even more than
Mr. Seth Lowe could claim for
New York, and, meanwhile, it does
not enter their heads to visit Mr.
Lowe’s town and sagely advise it
how to deal with the problem of
70,000 children appearing at school
each morning without having had
breakfast or enough breakfast.
Yet this is a more serious edu
cational problem than any that the
white people of South Carolina
have on their hands. South Caro
lina could advise New York in this
matter with about the same wis
dom that New Yorkers can advise
South Carolinians in others.
If the educational conference at
Columbia had been a national
gathering, with representatives
from all or most of the states come
together to discuss the educational
needs of the country in general,
IA Cood Suggestion.
Mr. O. 1$. Wainwrlght,of Lemon City,
Kin., Iiiih written the umnufacturern
that muoh hotter results tiro obtained
from thi! oho of Oluunherliiln'H Colic,
Olioloro nnd Diarrhoea Remedy in onHeH
of pniiiH in the Htonmcli, colic mid eliol-
eru morbus by taking it in water ns hot
oh can bo drank. That when taken in
tldH way the eifeotiH double in rapidity.
“It. HoeniH to got at the right spot, in-
Htantly," lie sayH. For Halo by JIolt&
Oates, druggists, Newiion Un.
LET A MAJORITY NOMINATE.
The Ishmaclitc is not a believer
in nominations by conventions. It
doesn’t believe in government by
conventions. Hcing a believer in
a government of the people, for
the people, by the people, it main
tains that nominations should be
made by the people, and that only
a majority vote should be effective.
The present primary system, by
means of which a majority candi
date may be declared the nominee
in a made-to-order and manipula
ted convention, is a farce and a
fraud, The Ishmaelite does not
believe it to be either right or
Democratic for a fearful and won
derfully made convention to have
the power to make good to any
candidate the majority which the
voters refuse to give him in the
primary. In 1902, the convention
gave a delegate-made majority of
42, representing the popular votes
of twenty-one of the smaller coun
ties, to a candidate, who lacked
more than twenty thousand votes
of a majority in the primaries.
It is natural that some candi
dates should favor that condition
of things. A candidate who fuels
himself well qualified to manipu
late conventions, through the
favor of local politicians, and who
is satisfied of his weakness before
the people, will not favor such
changes in the methods of nomi
nating as will make success de
pendent on securing a majority of
the votes cast in the primary. Of
all the candidates, known to be in
training for the next gubernatorial
race, only one has expressed a wil
lingness and a preference to stand
or fall by the popular majority as
expressed in the primaries! The
Ishmaelite has no hesitation in
going on record with the opinion
that no candidate, who thus fears
and distrusts the people, is worthy
of their confidence or support.
The people should abolish this
primary of the politician, in which
a minority nominates.—Sparta
Ishmaelite.
meetings, the speakers were lis
tened to with cIohc attention and
considerable enthusiasm was dis
played.
Although it is believed that
Georgia will do her part toward
reducing the acreage of 1905 and
holding the surplus crop of 1904,
President Johnson is urging the
officials in every county and the
individual meichant and cotton
grower, to still greater activity.
He believes there is no reason
why Georgia should not lead the
entire south in the good work and
is determined that this shall be the
case if hard work can bring it
about.
The situation has been put up
to the cotton grower in a clear and
straightforward manner. There
can be no mistaking the gravity of
the situation that confronts the
South. The farmer can work out
his own salvation and bring pros
perity and happiness to the entire
section. The Southern Cotton
Association is the medium through
which this can be done, and Presi
dent Johnson is making every ef
fort to put the matter before the
members of the Georgia division
in such a way that they cannot
fail to understand that their salva
tion depends upon each individual
member.
President Johnson has been
traveling through the State and on
every hand he has found that the
objects of the Southern Cotton
Association were the principal
subject of interest and discussion.
The fact that the outlook appears
bright has not caused him to be
less enthusiastic in his work. On
the contrary, he is working all the
harder and is urging upon all of
ficials of the Association the neces
sity of working with renewed vigor
and ot not losing sight for one
minute of the task before them.
All
Saved by Dynamite.
Sometimes a flaming oity is Raved by
dynamiting a place that the fire can’t
orosH. Sometimes, a cough hnngR on ro
long, you foci as if nothing hut dyna
mite would cure it. Z. T. Gray, of Cal
houn, Ua., writes: "My wife hud n
very uggrevating cough, which keeps
her awake at nights. Two physicians
could not help her; so she took Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs anil Colds, whioli eased her
cough, gave her Bleep, and finally cured
her.’’ Strictly scientific cure for bron
chitis nnd La Grippe. At .T. T. Reese’s
and Dr. Paul Peniston’s Drug Store,
price fiOo aud fl.OO; guaranteed. Trial
bottlo Free.
TO THE POLICY HOLDERS OF THE
COWETA BRANCH OF THE SOUTH
ERN MUTUAL LIFE IN8URANCE
ASSOCIATION.
The Southern Mutual docs busi
ness solely on its merit. It is no
“skin game” concern. It has met
promptly every loss that it has
sustained in the past and it has
ample means with which to meet
all that may occur in the future;
and it is the only Mutual Company 1
operating in Georgia which has on DEPOT 8T.
deposit in the State Treasury $40,-
000.00 of securities for the protec
tion of its policy holders. Every
officer of the Southern Mutual
who handles a dollar of its funds is
under an adequate bond guaran
teed by the Fidelity and Deposit
Company of Maryland, one of the
strongest surety companies in the
world. Can this disreputable
Agent truthfully say as much for
the company he represents? All
of the business of the Southern
Mutual is conducted on the same
business principles, and with the
same care and accuracy as a na
tional bank. Its officers and di
rectors are gentlemen of the high
est character for integrity and
business ability and who have
reputations to sustain. No Com
pany in America either "old line”
or mutual, offers a safer or a surer
policy. Its policies are as certain
ot payment as a United States
bond. Let no one holding a
policy in the Southern Mutual be
duped into exchanging it for that
of any company whose agent re
sorts to such low, nefarious meth
ods ot base slander, falsehood and
vituperation for the paltry com
mission he gets out of each dollar
that he gathers in by his nefarious
methods.
P. T. McCutchcn, Agent,
Thos. C. Candler, Secretary.
Read what a satisfied policy
holder has to say of the Southern
Mutual,of which ex-Governor Cand
ler is president:
Vienna, Ga., April 22nd, 1905.
Mr. Thos. C. Candler, Sect.
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Sir:
I herewith enclose you Post Of
fice Money Order for $1.50, in
payment of my Annual Dues on
Policy No. 10806 of the Hawkins-
ville Hranch of the Southern Mu
tual Life Insurance Association.
I take great pleasure in comply
ing with the terms of my Policy,
pecausel have found that your In
surance Company is all that it
claims, and is satisfactory in its
dealing with all its patrons. The
low cost at which you furnish in
surance, coupled with your prompt
ness and fairness in dealing with
your members, recommends your
company to all good citizens.
Very truly yours,
[Signed.] G. W. Sheppard.
At this store, and you’ll alway
be pleased. The most comforta
ble and attractive stock of furn
ture and house furnishings inNe -
nan is here to select from; with
quality and prices to fit all kinds of
pocket books. Come and see the
stock. It does its own talking.
You’ll be convinced and buy after
seeing the goods.
E. O. REESE,
NEWNAN, 6A.
Newnan Marble Works
J. E. ZACHARY, Proprietor.
Manufacturer and Dealer in-
Kinds Marble and
While a bilious attack is decidedly
unpleasant it is quickly over when
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab
lets are used. For sale by Holt & Cates,
Granite
Georgia Marble a Specialty.
All work guaranteed to be First Class in every particular.
Parties needing anything in our line are requested to call,
examine work, and get prices.
OFFICE AND WORKS NEAR R. R, JUNCT’N
NEWNAN, GA.
DR.T. B. DAVIS,
Residency Thone 6-threo calls.
DR. W. A. TURNER,
Residence ’Phone
Davis & Turner Sanatorium,
Corner College and Hancock Sts., Newnan, Ga.
High, central and quiet location.
All surgical and medical cases
taken, except contagious diseases.
Trained nurse constantly in at
tendance.
Rates $5 per day, $25 per week.
Private offices in building.
’Phone 5-two calls.
Davis & Turner Sanatorium.
Merck
& Dent,
READY FOR BUSINESS.
We are at your orders for any
and all sorts of repairing work
on carriages, buggies, runa
bouts, surreys, delivery wag
ons and trucks. We work
quickly, yet do not stint care
fulness or thoroughness.
Wheels, body, gear, tops—all
have our best attention. Glad
to have your orders for any
sort of vehicle repairing.
BUGGY BUILDERS
Information has reached us that
an Agent of another Insurance
Company has been going around
among the policy holders of the
Coweta Hranch of the southern
Mutual Life Insurance Associa
tion, circulating slanderous and
false reports, and begging them to 1 their effeot.
take the Policies of the Company
which he represents in exchange
for their policies in t'ne Southern Drug Store; price 50c.
Mutual; he charging them for his ■
policies less than one forth of JHE OVERLAND LIMITED TO
what the by-laws of his company
prescribe.
Terrlfflc Race With Death
“Death wns fast approaching.” writes
Ralph F. Fernandez, of Tampa, Fla.,
describing his fatal race with death, “as
a result of liver trouble and heart disease,
whioli had robbed me of sleep aud of all
iuterest in ltfe. I had tried several dif
ferent doctors nnd several medicines,but
got no benefit, until I began to use
Electric Bitters. So wonderful wns
that in three days I felt
like a new man, and today I am cured
of all my troubles. Guaranteed at
J. T. Reese's nnd Dr. ’Paul Peniston’s
CALIFORNIA
we have no doubt the .most uncorn- druggists, Nownou, Ga.
promising of Southern “Bourbons" ;
would have welcomed it and rec
ognized its usefulness. Hut there
is in this Ogden party that comee J
COMMENCEMENT AT SENOIA.
The Company or Agent who re- _ TI . n
, , b , , , , Leaves Union Passenger Station,
; sorts to such low, underhanded . .. _
, , , . ; Chicago, 6:05 p. m. daily, arrives
methods must be hard up for busi- ° . .. ... . •
, . ‘ San Prancisco the third dav in
ness, and I cannot bring myself to a dinner . Ro „ tc _ C hica.
bebeve that either the President or Milwauke< , & St , Pau , RaiUvay ,
9 -Commence- the General Manager of the co,.,- Unkl „ Paclfic and Southern Paei-
sell
Z. Greene, D. D. S.,
Office on Second Floor of
Black Bros. Co.’s Building
L. M. Farmer,
LAWYER.
Office ou Second Floor of the Arnall
Merchandise Co.’s Building
Read the News and be in the
swim, first, last and all the
time.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY.
In Effeot May, 1904.
PM
5 :i5
5 5«
« 20
7 0:
7
7 55
Senoia, May
South every spring a frank assump-j ment exercisis of Brantley Institute pany whose Agent has found it Lj nC( All ticket Agents
tion of a mission to carry light into will be held on the 5th and 6th of necessary to resort to methods so v j a thi S route. Ask them to do so.
the dark places which cannot fail June. Rev. W. P. Betterton, of j vile and despicable to secure busi- Handsome book, descriptive of
to affect unpleasantly every self- Griffin, will preach the baccalau- ness, have authorized the employ- (3 a ]j£ orn j a> sent for six cents post-
respecting Southern man who has i reate sermon on Sunday June 4th. ment ot such methods. It must e p a Miller, General Pas-
no desire to curry favor with any-: Hon. W. C. Adamson, congress- be that some unscrupulous agent j sencrer A^ent, Chicago, or W. S,
body and who knows moreover, man of the Fourth will deliver the of the company is alone responsi- gj Broadway, New York
that, in spite of extraordina- literary address on Tuesday morn- ble for it. It is to be hoped so at
ry handicaps, his section has really ing, June 6th. The graduating any rate, for no honorable compet-
done great things for the cause of exercises will be held Tuesday eve-1 itor would resort to means so lit-
education within its limits. And ning. tie and despicable, and no sensible
The sentiment nil over the state is
“Let the people elect the railroad com
missioners. ”—Washiugton Reporter.
’Colds'
It should be borne in mind that
every cold weakens the lungs, low
ers the vitality and prepares the
system for the more serious dis
eases, among which are the two
greatest, destroyers of human life,
pneumonia aud consumption.
Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy
has won its great popularity by its
prompt curcA of this most common
ailment. It aids expectoration, re
lieves the lungs aud opens the
secretions, effecting a speedy and
permanent cure. It counteracts
any tendency toward pneumonia.
Price 25c, Large Size 50c.
AM
10 00
10 lrt
10 89
11 11
11 80
12 06
1 00
•- 10
2 58
8 48
8 58
4 05
4 18
4 23
4 48
5 19
5 55
I* M
Lv Griffin Ai
.... Vaughan —“
Senoia...... 1 *
Newnan “
...Whitesburg...“
..-.Carrollton.. . “
Bremen ——"
.—Cedartown—
.... --Rome “
Holland “
Lyerlv
.... Raceoou ....
-- Summerville—“
Trion “
... .LaFayette....“
—Cbickamauga—“
Ar-.Chattanooga.-Lv
8 85
8 11
2 40
2 08
1 44
1 15
12 48
11 27
10 41
10 02
9 50
9 40
9 821
9 22j.
8 55 .
8 23 .
7 45
AM
6 66
0 29
0 00
For Information as to Rates, etc., address*
C J^* 0HEARS, F. J. ROBINSON.
Div. Pass. Agent. Asst. G. P. \
r Chattanooga, Tenn. Savannah, Ga.
D. A. NOLAN, J. C. HAILE.
Agent,_ Geul. Pass Agent,
Savannah, Ga
Newnan, Ga.
assiassasasss ssEsasssassiqB! a;
TAKE YOUR CLOTHING T0~ 1
S. C. CARTER S CO., j
OPPOSITE HOTEL PINSON, jj
when you want them [j
cleaned, pressed, repaired E
or dyed in the best manner P
and at the most reasona- fj
ble prices.
5 lUCrinlGTruGiKIGmlGinll^rlGil
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
The 5-cent packet is enough for usual occasions
The family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply
for.a.year.All druggists sell them.