The Newnan weekly news. (Newnan, Ga.) 189?-1906, May 26, 1905, Image 2
$5,000. and cooling the strean.s, and It is just opposite life insurance, feeding us with delicious, whole- In life insurance you pay ali the some fruits and fish, time and draw once, and that "Ho who plants a tree, after you arc dead. In pecan . Thnlford'* Hlack-Drnupht comm nearer regulating the entire ry«tein and keeping thebody in health Ilian any other medicine made. It is always ready in any emergency to treat ailments that aro frequent in any family, such ns indigestion, biliousness, colds, iliorrhiea, and | gtotmu h aches. Tlndford's Black-Draught is the standard, never-foiling remedy for stomaeh, bowel, liver and kidney troubles. It is a cure for the domes tic ills which no frequently summon tiie d »tor. Itiw ns giaxl for children i as it is for grown persons. A dose of this medicine every day will soon cure the most obstinate ease of dys- p-ia or constipation, and when en os directed brings quick relief, imrmii, ti.t.., law. w, iwn. Thodforrt’i Jllack-Dratiirht ha* born our fan.i » -I'M ior for Hvo >«arn anil w« want no nt In*i. When any of u*i fool ImwI: y wo tiikr it *«• nnil nrn nil rljrhl In twelvo Im.uik Wf lmvii fipont loin «.f inanity for (ktrvir »' * hut jiot alODtf Junt ns well with Hlii. k I»rnu«!»t. | UA u, UAOKII* i Ark your dealer for n park ago of I Thedford'N Black*Draught anil If )»o | <|ni i tint k«*« p it Hi nd T* . to Tho Gliatta- J nooKu MedicitiaCo.,Chattanooga, Ten n. and a pat kugo will bo mailed to you. a A Creeping Death Blood poison creeps up towards the heart, pausing death. .T. K. Stearns, of Belle Plaine, Minn., writes that a friend dreadfully injured Ids hand, which swelled up like blood poisoning. Buck- lull's Arnica Salve drew out the poison, healed the wound, and saved Ins life. Best m the world for burns and sores. 25c at J. T. Reese’s and Dr. Paul Penis- ton's Drug Store. THE BIG FURNITURE STORE Plants love. , , ,, Tints of coolness spreading out, culture you pay once and draw all Above lovf . d 0Iies may not live the time and that while you live, to see. and when you are gone your de- Gifts that grow are best, scendants will continue to draw Hands that bless are blest, ever afterwards. Pla, 'V Life ,l( ™ tl,e , , . , , _ . . .... . , , Heaven ana earth helps nun who Twenty or thirty millions of dol- plants a tree". Miss Stella Hogg, of Senoia, is lars leave tne South every year for The tendency of mankind has expected to spend commencement life insurance. An equal amount been just the opposite; to cut them with relatives here.—West Point invested in pecan culture would down . Arc wc j nnocent ? The News. soon make us independent of in- re d and barren hills, the 'large gul- — — surance for all time. Many peo- |j es ,the muddy and shallow streams, Terriffic Race With Death pie cannot get life insurance on ac- t h c a | jsence of the lusty,flourishing "Dentil was fast approaching.” writes count of age or disability—but fjnny tribe from our once glassy Ralph F. Fernandez, of Tampa, Fla., everyone, young or old, sick or lakes and limpid streams; the tre- describing his fatal race with death, "as well, may own a pecan grove, on men dous spring freshets’, the burn- « «sult of liver trouble and heart disease, | llf i t i, m . ^ „i.. e it y\r\r\r\ i which hart robbed roe of sleep aud of all which they can rely foi support mg summer droughts—all caused iuteres t in life. I had tried several dif- against the discomforts and uncet- f rom Die absence of the forests, to ferent doctors and several medicines,but tainties of life. hold t be raging water ’till needed, trot no benefit, until I began to use Klectrio Bitters. So wonderful was their effect, that in three dnys I felt like a new man, and today I am cured of all my troubles. Guaranteed at We have secured large additional space to accommodate our big stock of furniture and house fur nishings. We are now able to ' display the goods to better advan- 4 tage and can show the public that this store has the most complete stock of this kind in Ncwnan, Come and see. DEPOT ST. E. O. REESE, NEWNAN. 6A. If the county pauper farms were | Joes not a |j t hj s indicate that we set in pecan trees, they would soon too are ea ting the forbidden fruit, BLACK DRAUGHT support the inmates, and a reform atory and the principal outlay would be buying the trees. Or they would support a central graded hoarding school for country chil dren, which is now so much needed. The pecan tree is the child of the South as well as the cotton and barring the gate of Paradise agaist us and our children forever? ,T. T. Reese’s ami Dr.‘.Paul Peniston’s When I look over the desolation Drug Store; price 50c. caused by clean cotton culture f am ——-— reminded of the plagues described in Revelation, which burned up one third of the earth and one third of the rivers, etc. If we plant Newnan Marble Works J. E. ZACHARY, Proprietor. -Manufacturer and Dealer in- The Pecan Industry. BY PROF. A. H. .ItINKS. As an investment to lay up for a rainy day, for accidents, for old age or for children, there is noth ing more promising than a pecan grove. The following extract from an address delivered by the late l)r J. H. Hunnicutt, editor o! the Southern Cultivator, at the Nut Growers’ Convention, Macon, (la., 1902, is in point: "Hut some may say our figures are too large; that we have nothing to hack them up. We know of one tree in Oglethorpe County, Geor gia, from which was sold 64 pecks as a single crop, They were sold m Athens, Ga., for $1.00 per peck, bringing $64.00 cash for one crop from one tree. So we do not think our figures are too high. We know ol a grove of 1 2 an acre that firings the owner, annually, more than a two horse fnrm and he is a pretty good farmer. "The dream of every father is to lay up something that his children may enjoy after he is gone. A pecan glove is better than stocks ami bonds." This is true, We should heed it. Recause the pecan is long lived, a sure hearer, attacked in this lati tude by comparatively no diseases or insects; produces tho finest of all nuts for which there is univer sal demand; a good keeper, a sure shipper, and a sum seller in all parts of the world. What similar outlay would yield more than 100 trees described by Dr. Hunnicutt, which would he 6,400.00 with an investment of less than $200. Many are investing in life insur ance for their families. That is right. Hut there is no safer life insurance than a pecan grove. After the investments are made there are no premiums to he paid, no lapses and you do not have to die to reap the benefits. \ 011 can "live and win”. The following from the Semi- Weekly Journal, of August 24th, 1900, is worth reading: "The premium on a life insur ance policy of • which is about $200, "invested in pecan grove, will soon earn annually the face of the policy with annual in crease, l’arents and guardians ot children will find in this industry, safety, and security ot annual in crease throughout life, which can be reached by no other investments, investigation will furnish proof of all we have said of this valuable in dustry, the value of which is be yond the figures we have yet stat ed in the public prints," This is a remarkable statemei t, hut it comes from good authority; from a paper that has won its rep utation as authority lor correct statements. The Journal means that if you put $200 worth of pe can trees on your land and attend to them properly that they will soon bring an annual income of plant. We have slighted the pe- more trees in winter, we will need can tree, the greatest of all plants, ] css prayerfor ram in summer, for the foreign cotton plant. Are , (To bc continued. ] we not punished for this partialily? | Kevcy section of the United States is making greater increases than the South, so reports the last census. It may he because we arc too late to I urn loose or two slow COUCH NOLAN. Mr.and Mrs.Matthew I lenderson Couch, of Senoia, announce the to catch on. We wait for some I engagement of their daughter, Mai other part of the world to start and j belle,to ' r0 ^- George K. Nolan,the then wait 20 years to see it. I hope I am wrong here. Hut the fact remains that our income South is too small for our efforts. The average cotton planter does wedding to occur at the Raptist church at Senoia, on the evening of June 28th. Miss Couch is one of the most popular young women of the State. LESSLESSNESS. Now thnt they have got horseless rips Prum here to Kalamazoo An’ telegraph that's wireless An* smokeless powder, too, There ought to be more lesslefis things, It sort o’ sterns to me. Why can't wo have a stingless wasp, Also a stingless bee? Why can’t we have sum schoolless towns, An’ workless work to do, An’ spankin’* that are slipperless, An’ (logics* orchards, too, An’ acheless stomach aches as well, An' wet less hair, so w’en We go down to the swimmin’ hole Mu won't know where we’ve b’en? An’ w’en we get these lossless things 'Twill fill our hearts with Joy, An' then you’ll never see again A hapless, Joyless boy. —New York Pres*. All Kinds Marble and Granite Georgia Marble a Specialty. ■■ — ■ v All work guaranteed to be First Class in every particular, f’arties 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, Residence ’Phone 5-three calls DR. W. A. TURNER, Residence 'Phone not realize three per cent, on his * las a VCI T ' a, £° circle ot investment, outside of his labor. | friends * to whom she has endeared ; Those who are making more, gen- ; orally have someone between them 1 and the plow. Many a cotton planter would live better if his investments were put out at 6 pci herself by her many graces of heart and mind. In her very 'charming home she has been 11 lovely object of devoted admira tion, and in her city and section cut interest, anil he sought some s hc has, by right of an attractive other employment. We have over- personality and highly cultured done the cotton business. Try pc- reigned a social queen. She cans- it's no experiment. is the daughter of one of the lead- It does not cost one fourth as * n ft and wealthiest citizens of Cow- much to raise pecans as cotton. | eta bounty, and is prominently Pecans are just as easily kept, are connected in the State. Professor Nolan is a young edu cator who has already attained unusual success. He is principal of the high school at Marietta, In I872 William Prince sold 8 wherc he cn i°y s univcrsal popular- pecan trees in England for 10I 11 * lhs proverbial good na- guineas each" -Nut Culture in U.S ! * ure am * s pl ent 'id character have by U. S. 1 )cpt. Agriculture. Hut! won tor him at once the esteem and as easily sold at much better profit. Why not get out of the old ruts and plant pecans and English walnuts The Man- Why don’t you run homo and wash your face? The Kid Hoy, fellers! Here’s a old guy wot thinks it’s Saturday!—New York World. New UaiiKcra. New perils loom large I11 the new • • o , • 1 , • r n . * . . psychology. Young man fell Into a they would not grow there. France fru-mlsnip ot all who know him. p SV ,.|,| ( , trance, and when he came to was perfectly surprised at the His, ability is recognized through- himself ho had live wives. Doctors world’s fair in Paris to find that out the State, the Governor having should (I< > R04nothln « t0 head H|T thls we had such nuts and not shipping reccn 0y designated him as one of the visitors to the University at its approaching commencement, I them to Europe. It’s the best and most salable of all nuts, and yet we are importing about £100,000 t * 1 ' s ' )e ‘ n K ^e second time the malady before It Is too late.—Judge. high honor has been tendered him. Sunday’s Atlanta Constitution. ‘Hon. Frank M. Potts’ of other kind of nuts from France alone; and paying from 3 to 5c lb. !duty on them besides freight and commissions. II France could raise our pecans, she would soon be . ■ shipping millions of them here as “lion. Frank M. Potts, who lias she is doing with English walnuts, been desperately ill at his home on which we should raise. But she East Fifth street, is improving to can’t graw our pecan —the great the satisfaction of his family, Americat nut. friends and physicians. Mr. Potts In the mad rush for wealth we ' s a ^° t0 move about the house should mix a little happiness with and to ventuic upon the verandas i it. Paradise of old was a delight- when the weather is pleasant. His ful place The preachers are trying oar b’ recovery is anticipated by to get it into our hearts and souls, ^ 10se about him. —Atlanta Con- All ( hnnffed. “How about Miss Sneering?” Inquir ed the returned traveler. “I suppose you ure still friends?” "No, Indeed!” replied Snarley. “Why, we’ve been married over a year.”— Boston Herald. 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 ai and all sorts of repairing wo: on carriages, buggies, run bouts, surreys, delivery waj. ons and trucks. We wor quickly, yet do not stint can fulness or thoroughnes Wheels, body, gear, tops—a have our best attention. Gla to have your orders for an sort of vehicle repairing. UGGY BUILDERS A SaNpIplona Circamatnnce. First Sportsman — I’m afraid our guide doesn’t know Ids business. Second Sportsman That's what 1 think. I began to doubt him when be said be didn't drink. New Y’ork Press, Z. Greene, D. D. S., CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY. | In Effect May, lilO-l. I Office on Second Floor of Flack Bros. Co.’s Building Can we not help them by get ting some of it into our old,ragged, st it tit ion. We would be pleased to know what Frank Potts has done to en- gullied fields and scattering it around our homes by planting the a ' m t0 be s P°ken of in a luscious vine and the shady fruit 8 rea t newspaper like the Constitu- bearing grove. The Garden of I' 011 as Honorable. Eden was an example of how we Honorable is a title bestowed upon should live—in the leafy groves ^ 10se w b° hold or have held high with the least amount of I nibtic offices » especiaUy governors, labor. While he labored he plucked .imigts, congressmen, senators anil bright fruit from hanging boughs, ma >' ors - with plenty of time for recreation, ^ Prank lotts is entitled to this ample opportunity to learn of God, distinction, the word at once be- his companion, friend and teach- comes as c °mmon as the word er, who walked with him and open- P r °tessoi, which is in these latter ed up the mysterious secrets of '■'ays applicable to every sort of a nature and taught him to harness tc acher, white or black. Gwin- thetn into useful activity. Then ne ft Journal, living was a pleasure, occupation a “““““™““““ delight. This is not gone forever. While n bilious nttack is decidedly Much of it can be redeemed. We a, , u lf ls ‘i uicklv over wheu can assist much in restoring Para- ,„ ts im . nsed- For Sftle by Ho lt& Cates, dise by replacing the native forests druggists, Newnan, Ga. and the barren fields with fruit- —— bearing forests, purifying the air Read The News and keep posted Young Men.. Semi for our catalog. It. tolls about a trade you can learn in a few months and which will pay you from $40 to $50 a month to start on. Southern School of Telegraphy, Newnan, - Georgia. Box 214. L. M. Farmer, LAWYER. Office on Second Floor of the Arnnll Merchandise Co.’s Building It has come to pass that there is a vast difference between appeal ing .to law and appealing to justice. West Hound DAILY East Bound No. H No. 1 No. 2 No ]|J I’M AM I’M AM r> .”5 10 00 Kv Griffin Ai ,,r 8 80 5 5« 10 10 “Vaughan ....” 8 11 2 4*1 8 01 •i 20 10 «I* ” Sunoift “ 7 88 7 02 11 11 “ Newnan “ 2 08 « f*5 < 11 ”...\\ liitoshurg 1 44 0 20 7 12 05 —Carrollton.. •' 1 in 0 00 1 00 ” Bremen ....“ 12 48 k 10 ('ufliirtown...“ 11 27 — 2 58 — ..Rome • 1 10 41 . — -- n in H 5* •' Holland 10 02 ...... “ Lverl v '.1 50 1 05 — Riiecoon .... 1* 40 4 18 Summerville..“ 0 82 4 28 “ Trion “ U 22 ...... 4 48 “—..bn Fayette.... 11 8 55 — 5 10 “-.Chic*kamaugft..“ H 23 5 55 r m A r—Chattanooga.. Lv 7 45 A M 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 and consumption. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy has won its great popularity by its prompt cures of this most common ailment. It aids expectoration, re- I lieves the lungs and opens the secretions, effecting a speedy and permanent cure. It counteracts any tendency toward pneumonia. ^Price 25c, Large Size 50c. For Information as to Rates, etc., address- C FHKARS, F. J. ROBINSON. biv. Pass. Agent. Asst. M. P. A., „ ' nattanooga, Tenn. Savannah, (j D. A. NOLAN, J. HAILL. Agent, Ucnl. Pass Acer Newnan, Ga. Savannah, i | TAKE YOUR CLOTHING TO | IS. C. CARTER S C0„ 1 i in OPPOSITE HOTEL PINSON, | p] when you want them J] g: cleaned, pressed, repaired Jj | or dyed in the best manner 1 If] and at the most reasona- | ij ble prices. f pjj _ | 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.