The Newnan weekly news. (Newnan, Ga.) 189?-1906, June 16, 1905, Image 7
Young
Men..
Send for our catalog.
It tells 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.
SPECIALISM IN LAW.
THE POWER TO PLEASE.
a. Atm
Peniston’s
Drug Store
Crane’s Spring Medicine.
Crane's Kidney (and Backache
Cure.
Crane’s Cough Cure.
Crnne’s Headache Relief.
Crane’s Cholera and^Diarrhoeu
Mixture.
Crane’s Family Liniment.
Crane's Eczema Cure.
Crane’s Liver Powders.
Crane’s Pile Salvo.
Crnne’s Liver Pills.
Crane’s Female Relief.
These are Standard Prepara
tions and are Sold and Recom
mended at
Peniston’s j
Drug Store. \
4 \
*
£et a Shave
°f — =
AT
THf Solicitor and Ihr Barrister la
Our l.rmil I’rnctlce.
1 In this country nearly every student
admitted to the liar is under the itu-
, presslou that there is in him the more
than possibility of a great trial lawyer.
Having road accounts of brilliant cross
I examinations and successful addresses
1 to juries, be bus in mind that he Is tn-
tlrely competent nt the outset to try
the most complicated and difficult
cause. Fufortunntely as to many who
are not qualified for that work it is
1 ouly after very many years aud after
considerable experience at tbe expense
of litigants and the public, If nt all.
that they ascertain that fhe.v huve not
the peculiar aptitude necessary to the
successful trial lawyer, lu the mean-
i time not only have clients suffered, but
the business of the courts has been re
tarded to a very serious exteut by the
lack of adaptability on thtVpart of the
practitioner as well as by lack of ex
perience, sluce It Is Impossible that ev
ery man admitted to the bar shall have
tlie opportunity to try a sufficient num
ber of causes to give him the degree of
i experience requisite lit order to obtain
tbe best results.
Sootier or Inter In the Interest of the
\ clients aud to save the time and pa
tience of the courts there must be in
this country u natural division be
tween the labor of the solicitor and the
i duty of the barrister, not artltlcial or
conventional, but one which shall grow
up from the nature of ihe case. hy
which certain men who ure lies! quali
fied for the trial of causes will carry
on that work to the practical exclusion
of those without special adaptability
for that class of business. In this, ns
j In every other direction. Ihe specialist
must find his place, Green ltng.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
ItmMM nePARTHENT
, Supt.
, GA„ April 25 1005.
I'oar Sir:—Policy 184,003 was written for the undersigned by your Company in
1 MALIBRAN WAS A TEASE.
^ i l^attey’s B ar ^ er
l-A
I’lie (treat Prlmn lionua Was Full or
MUc-Iilt-r and Caprice.
No prnuu doitun was ever more de
lightfully capricious, more full of mis
chief, than the fatuous Mine. Mnllbruu.
At the rehearsals of “Romeo aud Ju
liet" she could never make up her
mind where she was to "die" at night.
It was important for Romeo to know,
but all he could gel was "not sure,”
"don’t know," "euu’t tell," or “It will
he just ns it happens, according to my
humor; sometimes in one place, some
times hi another." On one occasion
she chose to "die" close to the foot
lights, her companion, of course, being
compelled to "die” beside her, and
, thus, when the curtain fell, a couple of
footmen lmd to carry the pair utf. one
at a time, to the intense uuiuseiiient of
the audience.
John Templeton, the tine old Scottish
tenor, was probably never so miser
able as when he was cast to sing with
Miilibrtin. Very often she was dis
pleased with his performance, nnil one
evening she whispered to him. "You
are not acting properly; make love to
me belter," to which, so it Is said,
Templeton Innocently replied, "Don’t
you know 1 am a married luun?” Evi
dently the lady did not think there
was anything serious iu the circum
stance, for not long afterward, when
lu “Homuamhulu” she was on her
knees to Templeton as Elviuo, she suc
ceeded In making the tenor scream
with suppressed laughter when be
should have been singing by tickling
him vigorously under the nrms.
A Potent Knotor F«>r Success In Aur
Career Yon Mn> Adopt.
The power to please Is a tremendous
nRset. What cun tie more valuable
than a personality which always at
tracts. never repels? It Is not only
valuable lu business, but also lu every
field of life. It makes statesmen and
politicians; it brings clients to tbe law- , ■ t
yer and puRents to the physician; it Is J, |,
worth everything to the clergyman. No
matter wlint career you enter, you can
not overestimate the Importance of oul- 1
tivntlng thut charm of manner, those , _ . ... . .. .
personal qualities, which attract people All’. \V . A. iMilloiie, AgOllt,
to you. They will take the place of i
capital or Influence; they are often u Snvnnmth ( ’ o
substitute for a large amount of hard ' > • Ul 1, til.
work.
Rome men attract business, custom- :
ers, clients, patients, ns’naturally ns 1
magnets attract particles of steel. Ev- \
erytbing seems to poiut their way, fot • 1890, undtT the 20 pay, year plan. Distribution lir.st and second dividends exceeded
the same reason that the steel particles |
point townrd the magnet because they . .• . , ,, . r , . . . .
are attracted. the estimate by the agent. I have just received notice oi the third dividend amounting
Such men nre business magnets.
Business moves townrd them evenly flyoo.oO, which is left optional to lie either withdrawn or allowed to remain with the
when they do not apparently make half | ’ 1 ” ° 1 WMI1 1,1,1
so much effort to get It as the less suc
cessful. Their friends call them "lucky I Company. I was informed when the policy was first written that if t he dividends ae-
dogs,” Bill If we analyze these men
closely we find Hint, they have nttrnc- .
tive qualities. There is usually some 1 crui ng on this policy were left over with I lie Company that there would proba.blv In)
elmnu of personality about them that
" ills 11,1 1|( ‘ III|K - > chh. enough surplus to the credit of this policy to issue n paid-up policy at the end of the 14th
THE MAGICIAN’S THUMB.
year. The Company notified me promptly at the end of the I Ith year that 1 could get
II In IIIn W«»rait ICnemj In Hlelfflil of
Hnnd TrlrkN.
in every sort of magic the magician's a paid-up policy and discontinue payments if 1 desired to do so. 1 do not hesitate roe*
thumb Is Ills worst enemy, says Nina
Carter Mnrhoiirg in Leslie's Weekly. i- ., .. , , , , . . . , .. .
If he could strike off that thumb aud onimending the d'Ami Company to any person who may desire this kind of insurance, as
still have Its assistance when neces- ,
saty he would be a happy man. m ] } mve always, and still believe it to he one of the most economical I nsurancc (Companies
closing the hand the thumh usually ’ >
bends towiml the palm in advance of i
the fingers, in this way it many times i now doing htisiness, The results of several policies which I hold in your Company have
Is much in the way, and prnctlce is 1 '
necessary to get a magician's thmnli In I . . , .
perfect training. Rta when life has j been entirely satisfactory,
practiced In the school of magic for |
in your new undertaking,
some time the thumb becomes so flexi
ble that It will head nearly to the hack
of the hand.
Cards are Invariably the heginuitig
of a magician’s education, lu handling
cards the thumh Is especially in the
way, mill lids Is the reason why this
trickery with the pasteboards Is se
lected for the beginner. To change one
card for another in front of one's very
eyes and still to have made no percep
tible movement of the hand is a trick
that beginners learn to perform before
they huve been In the school for any
great length of time. This, as may he
Imagined, Is a difficult piece of work to
become proficient in. and here Is Just
the place where delermlnaUon plays u
great part iu success.
loping you succcs
g to remain,
Yours 1 ruly.
1 Signed | .1 T. JOHNSON.
F. M. BRYANT, District Manager,
Aetna Life Insurance Company
ltd you’ll continue to get slmved
L re. The same is true of hair-cuts,
poos, etc., Three white bar-
tV C.V* - ' r
bers are employed, and the service
is first-class. Drop into Bailey’s
White Barber Shop
A
Opera House Building,
Newnan, ... Georgia.
T. M. MARTIN I
1
Does all
kinds of
1
Tin Work, Roofing J
Plumbing and
Repairing.
(a I JINN WillltUW*.
Glass windows are known to have
existed at I’ompell aH curly as A. D.
79. In Ihe third century the windows
of royal houses throughout Europe
were glazed. Windows of colored glass
were placed In many French and Ital
ian churches lu 074, and the use of
glass became general In private houses
during the twelfth century. The panes,
however, were only three or four Inches
square, and the material was ho infe
rior that, while a room was lighted, it
was often a matter of some difficulty to
discern objects ou tbe outside through
the glass. For a long time windows in
England were a subject of taxation.
Barns and Fame.
It is amusing to leurn that Burns
when just emerging from obscurity
Jocularly anticipated that his birthday
would come to be noted among other
remarkable events. In a letter to his
early patron. Gavin Hamilton, iu 178ti
he says, "For my own affairs I nrn in a
fair way of becoming as eminent as
Thomas n Kempis or John Runyan,
and you tuny henceforth expect to see
my birthday inscribed among the won
derful events iu the Boor Robin and
Aberdeen Almanacks along with the
Black Monday and the battle of Roth-
well Bridge.”
BISMARCK CONSENTED.
lie Whs lli<- Filial Arbiter of tin ICnir-
IIkIi l.n \ e 1*1 a I oil.
When the third son of the Duke of
Arg.vle bestowed Ids affections upon
.in untitled woman lie foil hound to
n-'k tin 1 old gentleman's consent. The
duke answered that personally he had
no objections to the match, but in view
of the filet that Ills eldest son had es
pouse I a daughter of the queen he
tlimiglil it right to inquire her majes
ty's pleasure on Ihe subject before ex
pressing his formal approval.
Her majesty, thus appealed to, ob
served that since the death of the
prince consort she had been lu the
hublt of o.insulting the Duke of Suxe-
Coburg on all family affairs.
The matter was therefore referred to
Duke Ernest, who replied that sluce
the unification of Germany he had
made It u rule to ask the emperor’s
opinion ou all Important questions.
The* case now came before the kaiser,
who decided that, us a constitutional
sovereign, he was bound to uncertain
the views of his prime inlulster.
Happily for the now anxious pair of
lovers the "Iron Gliancellor," who was
then lu office, bail no wish to consult
anybody and decided that the marriage
might take p are, aud It did.
Newnan, Georgia.
Knife Blntles.
Pocketknlfe blades are very unevenly |
tempered. Even iu so called standard
cutlery some blades are bard and some
are soft. For the latter there Is no
remedy, but the temper of hard blades
can easily he drawn slightly. Take a
kitchen poker and heat it red hot, have
the blade that is to he drawn bright
and hold li on the poker for a moment.
When the color runs down to violet
blue, slick the blade Into a piece of tal
low or beef suet until cold.
E Expert work and low
Hi prices win. Shop op-
p] posite Pinson Hotel.
J. T. HOLMES,
Real Estate and
Renting Agent..
, If you desire to rent, buy
sell a home, vacant, lot or farm or
1 any other kind of real estate, call
or write.
Office in the store of J. W.
The Ileal Inane,
Stern Parent—Well, young man, I
know nothing against you, but I'm not
very well acquainted with you. Before
you marry my daughter I'd like to have
something In ihe nature of references
or— Suitor I can give references
from three clergymen, sir. Parent—
That's all very well, hut can you give
references from many bankers? —
Cleveland Leader.
A (linn(ir**.
Two neighbors were conversing the
other day when one said to the other:
"By the way. how is Mrs. Hogg, the
invalid, going on?"
"Oh.” replied the other, "they do not
call her Mrs. Hogg now.”
“Why. what do they call her?”
"Oh. they call her Mrs. Bacon now.
She's cured.”
Miss. Agnes Westley
816 Wells Street
Marinette.Wis.
81C Wells Street,
Makinkttk, Wib., Sept. 25, 1903.
1 was all run down from nervous
ness and overwork and had to resign
my position and take a rest. I
found that I was not gaining my
strength and health as fust as 1
could wish, and as your Wine of
Cardui was recommended as such &
good medicine for the ills of our
sex, I bought a bottle and began
using it. J was satisfied with the
results from the use of the first
bottle, and took three more and then
found I was restored to good health
and strength and able to take up
my work with renewed vigor. 1
consider it a fine tonic and excellent
for worn-out, nervous condition,
and am pleased to endorse it.
AGNES WESTLEY,
Boc'y, North Wlnnonsln Holland Socloty.
Secure a $1.00 bottle of Wine of
Cardui and a 25c. package of
Thedford’s Black-Draught today.
wineITcardui
Summer Excursion
Rates via Central of Georgia Railway
Summer excursion tickets at, greatly reduced
rates are now on sale at all coupon ticket oflicos,
to Mountain and seashore resorts in tin North,
East and South, via all-rail routes and via Sa
vannah and steamship lines.
For rates, schedules, routes, descriptive matter,
etc , apply to your nearest ticket agent.
J. C. HAILE,
CencraE Passenger Agent. • Savannah, Ca.
To the Point.
Dr. Gruff— Your husband, madam,
needs rest.
“I know that, doctor; but he won't
listen to me."
Dr. Gruff—If you would make It un
necessary for him to listen to you,
madam, I think that will he rest
enough—St. Louis Republic.
AliooNt Human.
Lady—Can that parrot talk? Dealer
—Talk? Why, say, lady, you'd t'ink he
tvuz brought up in a box at de opery.—
Tuck.
flow »o ExprPM It.
“I'm so sorry supper Isn't ready,”
said Mrs. Dinsntore to tier husband
when he came In. "I attended the
meeting of tlie sewing circle this after
noon, and I couldn't get away.”
"Hemmed in, were you?” asked her
husband.
What Irrltntea Hint.
Mother— Willie, you must stop asking
your father questions. Don't you see
they annoy him? Willie—No’m: it ain’t
my questions that annoy him. It's the
answers he can’t give that make hlrn
mad.—Philadelphia I,edgor.
The saying that beauty is but skin
deep is a skin deep saying.—Herbert
Spencer.
Vainglorious men are the scorn of
the wise, the admiration of fools, the
idol of parasites and the slaves of
their own vaunts—Bacon.
Cuban Diarrhoea.
U. S soldiers who served in Cuba
during the Spanish war know what, this
1 incase is, ami that ordinary remedies
have little more effect than so much
water. Cuban diarrhoea is almost as
severe ae.d dangerous as a mild attack
of cholera. There is one remedy, how
ever, that can always he depended upon
as will be seen by the following certifi
cate from Mrs. Minnie Jacobs, of Hous
ton, Texas: "I hereby certify 'that
Chamberlain’s Colic,, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy cured my husband of a
severe attack of Cuban diarrhoea,which
he brought borne from Cuba. We bail
several dixitors hot they did hint no
good. One bottle of this remedy cured
him, as our neighbors will testify. I
thank God for so valuable a medicine."
For sale by Holt & Catos, druggists,
Newnan, Ga.
Huge Task.
It was a huge task, to undertake the
cure of huHi a bud case of kidney dis
ease, as that of C. F. Collier, ol Chero
kee, la., hut, Electric Bitti r» did it. He
writes: “My kidneys were so far gone,
I could not sit ou a chair without a
cushion; and suffered from dreadful
backache, headache, and depression. In
Electric Bitters,however.I found a cure,
and by them was restored to perfect
health. I recommend this great tonic
medicine to all with weak kidneys, liver
or stomach. Guaranteed by J. T.
Reese and Dr. Paul Poniston, druggists.
Price 50c.
A Bad Scare.
Home day you will get a hail soar
when you feel a pain in your howeli
and tear appendicitis. Safety lies i
Dr. King’s New Life Pills, a sure con
for all bowel and stomach diseases, sue
jus headache, biliousness; costivouesi
ete. Guaranteed at ,/. T. Reese’s an
' Dr. Pan) Peniston’s drugstores. Oi l
25c. Try them.
Rev. Edward Cook, of Thornasville,
was in the city yesterday en route home
from attendance at commencement at
Oxford College and a visit to friends at
Newnan. Mr. Cook is well known in
this section, having been a member of
the North Georgia conference for a
number of years. He joined the South
Georgia conference some eighteen years
ago.—Griffin News and Sun.
It is better to make haste in be
ginning than to make haste to
finish up.
Real piety is never perfunctory.
Luxury seldom breeds heroic
hearts.
Found a Cure for Dyspepsia.
Mrs. S. Lindsay, of Fort Williams
Ontario, Canada, who lias suffered quite
a number of years from dyspepsia arm
great pains in the stomach, was advisee
by her druggist to tuke Chamberlain’i
Stomach and Liver Tablets. She did sc
aud says, “1 find that they have dom
me a great deal of good. I have tu-vei
had any suffering since I began u-iiq
them.” If troubled with dyspepsia o
indigestion why not take these Tablets
I get well and stay well? For stile b;
Holt & Cates, druggists, Newnan, Ga