Newspaper Page Text
$49.22
For this beautiful
Top Bugev, manu
factured by us here
in Atlanta * Georgia.
A Southern Buggy
for Southern trade,
has a fine Leether Quarter Top, has genuine
Leather, Spring Bottom Cushion, and Leather
Back, is elegantly painted and fully guaranteed.
Regular retail price $05.00 to $75.00/
9Q For ^Is Collar and Hame,
nickel mounted Harness, sold with
every OOLPEN KAU.LU BUGGY, tegular retail
price $12.50 to $15.00
Catalog and full description sent on request.
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO.
1B8-160 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
From Last Week’s Senoia
Enterprise-ciazotte.
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 703.
Feeding Cattle in the South.
While down at Dublin, (la., we
talked with Mr. Cochran, who has
had several years’ experience in
feeding native cattle. He has al
ways been able to clear his ma
nure, but not any money. He
('apt. .1. E. Stallings, after
spending the summer most pleas
antly with friends and relatives
here, left Saturday for Moody,
Texas, to spend some time, and
says he will not return to Georgia
until barbecues get ripe again, lie
lias a host of friends in Coweta.
On the evening of Nov. 10th, in
the Institute Auditorium, Mrs.
\V. 11. Felton, one <>f Georgia's
most illustrious women, will give
a lecture for the benefit of the
school. Senoia has had the pleas
ure of hearing Mrs. Felton on a
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
Application for Charter.
t; KOl-i (; IA —Cow .m (’on ti t y
To (lie Superior Court of Said Count v:
The petition of W. M. Hutchinson, of
the county of Fulton, State of Georgia,
unit B. b. Redwine, of the county of
Coweta, State ot Goovgia, respectfully
shows to the oourt as follows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, sueeessors mat assigns,
to lie incorporated under the name and
style of the
MADRAS GINNING COMPANY
for a period ot twenty (20) years, with
the privilege of renewal at the expira
tion of that time.
2. That the object of gald corporation
WHEN AN
ILxpert
Plumber
1 s
N E E I) E I)
— Call —
L. Sexton,
This is a subject that has long
been of interest to us, and we have
known it demanded more con
sideration at the farmers’ hands,
j but we have never been upon a j guys if several farmers would feed
place where it was successfully I from ten to twenty and club to-
j carried on upon a large scale until j gather to ship to market, they
a few weeks ago. SeVeral weeks could come out all right. Often v roduots
j ago we went to spend the day with j you h a ve to hold several days for last Saturday to serve for lHOd. i L j' T™ t ™iu,' 0 apit«l stock of mid cor-
! Mr. W. J. Bridges, of Spalding m a r ket conditions to justify ship The church and pastor are welded j ponuioll „i m ll be four thousand <*■»,.
| County, and we want to tell youlphig. This would not inconven- closer together as the years go by. | ood.oo) dollars, divided into shares of one
ience;a farmer with only a few,
while it would lie quite expensive
to one with a large number. Then
similar occasion and we bespeak l in pconninry gnin to us shareholders,
for his cultured woman a large and I Tho l w,tionlnr Dismi ss of said cor-
appreciative audience.
Haralson Baptist church re
elected Pastor Davis unanimously
porntion to be the building and opern-
I (ion of cotton ginneries, the ginning nml
; haling of cotton and the buying and
selling of cotton, cotton seed and cotton
in simple and true words exactly
what he lnts done along this line,
1 in hopes that it may induce some
1 others to follow his example in
! this important industry. Mr.
I Bridges is an example of starting
at the bottom and building up, in
w.
The Newnan Plumber.
Shop and Wareroom on
Hancock Street, next
door to Dr. T. J.
Jones Building.
The Largest Stoek of
Supplies
... and ...
Fixtures
In Newnan at SEXTON'S.
the farmers could utilize all home-
raised provender to great advant
age, and would not have to buy so
much meal and hulls. We think
In the absence of Pastor I>avis last | hundred (f 100.00) dollars each, with the
Saturday Brother Jenkins, the be-! I* 1 **'** 8 of increasing the same to
. , , | i twenty-live thousand ($25,000) dollars
loved pastor ol Senoia, delighted , • , . ' . . , .. i . „ t
1 .. .. , by vote ot a majority of the shares ot |
the lloek with a strong, forceful HR i(l onpltnl stook, from time to time as _________________________
sermon on “What it takes to make i lb,, company may deem it desirable. |
a Christian.” He is very much The office and prinotpnl place of busi-
beloved in this community by all I neSR of ,lin Hnl( ' ‘'orporation shall be in
denominations. Pastor Davis came
I _AI, ii ,!.... ,.7.....". ,... I , ,i.. i,.. , iv . 1 '.:.." | the town of Madras, Oowotn oounty,
, . . ,, i . , , I Georgia, with tile right to establish of-
fattening a few native cows and | organization and co-operation in down on Sunday, accompanied by | |lll(1 unni ,„ ct bnsiness elsewhere,
steers for the local Griffin market. a ]j the ways farmers can practice
His lirst sale ol any amount was ^ It is good training and good
when he received a check for #3(10 business principles which we farm-
lor a bunch of natives. He Haiti ! ers need to practice more. The
the banker made the remark: , Northern cattle men feed eotton-
“You must have had a lot of cat
tle to receive so large a check.”
Since then Mr. Bridges has had
the pleasure of depositing them all
the way up to #12,000. When he
began to see that there was money
in the business, and a rich return
i aaAtiM
Peniston’s
Drug Store
Crane’s Spring Medicine.
Crane’s Kidney and Bncknche
Cure.
Crane’s Cough Cure.
Crane’s Headache Relief.
Crane’s Cholera and Diarrhoea
Mixture.
Crane’s Family Liniment.
Crane’s Eczema Cure.
Crane’s Liver Powders.
Crane’s Pile Salve.
Crane’s Liver Pills.
Crane’s Femnle Relief.
seed meal at #35. By exchange
for seed we can get it for #20. The
cottonseed mill man will become
ready to meet the farmers with
equitable terms, if the farmers will
get together quantities of seed for
exchange. It is all well for us to
in the lonn ol the manure to en- ■, a good price for our staple, but
rich his land, he began to buy the | we need also to study how to get
“beef type.” He put himself in more out of our seed, and in no growing rapidly. May God bless
communication with the dealers in ! wav cau Go this so well as by him in the grand work lie has
I Atlanta, and when any shipments | feeding the product thus exchan- espoused lor the salvation of souls,
reached the city that were not as ! gecl, to cattle, and saving the iua- —Haralson Letter,
fat as they should be, he bought ulu . ei —The Southern Cultivator. ■
the lot, buying as many as 180 at \ _____________
one time, lie built him a barn Cotton Sales Then and Now.
11x80, and a twenty-foot shed run- ———
ning on one side. Then he built A significant remark made by
him another smaller feed barn.! one of Dublin’s cotton buyers a than the sin concealed.
his lovely daughters, Annie and I „ithor within nr without the State of
Tercse, and delighted his audience Georgia.
with another strong doctrinal set- 5. Petitioners pray for authority to
moil taken from the language of 1,11 »" m ’ ,H 1111,1 thinga neeossary or in-
the thief upon the cross when he 0,dwut ,0 tlM : operation of nnhl
company, with the right to own, liny or
exclaimed “Lord when thou contest
into thy kingdom remember me.”
other wine acquire, improve, sell or lee no
or otherwise dispose of such real estate
Our Lord’s reply wus the sequal | and personal property as may he neons-
to the discourse. Me proved con
clusively, satisfactorily that when
our Lord finished Mis work upon
an Immortal soul it is complete.
The general opinion in this com
munity is that Pastor Davis is
jNo road is long that Jove walks.
It is easy for a mother to excuse.
The sin found out is no worse
These are Standard Prepara
tions and are Sold and Recom
mended at
Peniston’s
Drug Store.
He dehorns all cattle and can feed I few days since, expresses how the
a great many in a small space. Has! farmer viewed the cotton market a
rows of troughs running parallel few years ago and at the present
through the barn, with pine poles.time.
lixed above so they can not jump Then, when the market began to
into them or over them. Has wa- decline, the planter rushed his
ter furnished by a ram. He shreds cotton in and sold at any old price,
i all his corn and thus saves large j fearing the bottom would drop out
amount of stover. Buys cotton entirely and leave him with the
! seed, atlds his own, and exchanges
tuese for meal and hulls. Plows
bag to hold. Now, when the mar
ket begins to go down, the farmer
Announcement
R S. Paris, former proprietor of the
White Barber Shop, lins returned to
Newnan and is associated with C.
T. Bailey in the management of
this shop. The shop is now running
three chairs on full time and is the
best prepared and best equipped
shop in town. C. T. Bailey, R. n.
Paris and J. W. Hunt are all artists
in tlieir line, and are doing every
thing possible to give the public
first-class service and please all cus
tomers. They solicit and will ap
preciate the patronage of everybody
and cordially invite you-to call at
up all cotton stalks and lakes up shuts up like a clam, and the only
j all leaves on place for .bedding and i way to get his cotton is to pay the
thus makes 2,000 loads manure per price.
year. Last year he fed 150 head. | This is the result of a better un
sold all at one time to Armour & j derstanding on the
! Co. for #900.00. The cattle were farmer of the law of supply and
The man in the pulpit should
never be the model lor the man in
the pew.
There is nothing else so grouchy
as a man who thinks he is just
about half sick.
The smile that illuminates the
counting room will also make light
in the home.
It is rather difficult to have re
spect for a law when we can have
none for the men who made it.
Some men are proud of their
part'of the ahilil y 10 « ive ! other " ,en anj
thankful for an opportunity to
wary or advisable for the carrying oul
the purposes of tho corporation, or the
conduct of its business, to mnlie nil con-
tincts whatsoever that are neoossary to
carry out its purposes, with the privi-
logo of borrowing money and securing
the same by execution of mortgage,
deeds or otherwise.
Win:itnmnu, petitioners pray to he
■anile a body oorporate under said name
and style, with such other and further
rights, powers and privileges and im
munities as are incident to corporations
of similar character allowed by the laws
of this State.
1 EV1NS <& SPENCE,
Petitioners’ Attorneys.
Filed in office this fid day of October,
1006. L. TURNER,
Clerk Coweta Superior Court.
GEORGIA—Coweta County.
I, L. Turner, Clerk of the Superior
Court, of said oounty, do hereby oertify
that the foregoing is a true and correct
copy of the application for charter of
Madras Ginning Company as appears on
file in this office. Witness my hand and
seal of said court (his lid day of October,
11)06. L. TURNER,
Clerk Superior Court Coweta County.
fl0ZLEK>
Lemons as Medicine
The White Barber Shop
weighed on his own scales and
loaded on a side-track in front of
his home. He cleared #900.00 on
this lot and his manure. The year
before he fed 350 and sold to a Mr.
West, of Cincinnati, Ohio, who
paid him #12,000 for them, ship
ping all to Cincinnati, except two
i cars which went to Buffalo, X. Y.
Did you know any Georgia beef
i ever went to the North before!
These are the facts as to the beeves
s themselves; but the most interest
ing part is the manure as a factor
'in making cotton and enriching Dublin Times.
^' the land. We went out through j
the best piece of cotton we have
j seen thi8 year? aud we have seen
many. Mr. Bridges said:
are forty acres in this piece. J
made sixty bales on it last year.
demand and the influence of or-
ganization combined. The forma- Satan’s promises to pay are
tion of the Southern Cotton As- printed on line paper in artistic
sociation and the influence it has style, but they invariably go to
exerted in keeping its members protest,
from selling their cotton below an —
established minimum price, Jiasre- TRUE W AY TO MAKE. TEA.
suited in saving thousands of dol-
lars to the farmers of every corn -1
munity where an association has I
been formed and the principles ad
hered to.
Farmers, hold your cotton and
you are sure to get the price.—
T. M. MARTIN
Does all
kinds of
Tin Work, Roofing
Plumbing and
Repairing.
Expert work and low
prices win. Shop op
posite Pinson Hotel.
Chapped Hands.
Wash your hands with warm water,
“There dry with a towel and apply Chamber
lain's Salve just before going to bed,and
a speedy cure is certain. This salve is
also uneqnaled for skin diseases. For
rH If i get a rain soon I am counting H ale by Dr. Paul Peniston, Newnan, Ga. three stages of boiling.
jg on eighty bales this year. Five ■
| years ago I bought this land for An avowed and open Russell
I eight dollars an acre, and it did man in this county distributing
i not make over a bale to five acres, j Clark Howell campaign literature
A NHeace Wliluh Include* Many JWjn-
terl«?« In Hie lirew.
Luwuh, a poet, saw In the ten serv
ice the same harmony uud order which
reigned through all thing’s. In his cel
ebrated work, tlie “Chu-klng” ("The
Holy Scripture of Tea”), he formulated
the code of tea. He has since been
worshiped as the tutelary god of the
Chinese tea merchants.
In the fifth chapter Luwuh describes
the method of making tea. He dwells
on the much discussed question of the
choice of water and the degree of boil
ing It. According to him, the moun
tain sirring Is the best; the river water
and the spring water come next in
the order of excellence. There are
The first boll
Notice to Debtors and Cred
itors.
All persons holding claims against the
estate of Sylvanus G. Orr, late of Cow
eta county, deceased, are hereby notified
to present them to me for payment and
all persons owing said estate are hereby
notified to pay same.
Oct. f), 1906.
ANNIE F. ORR,
2f).(it Admix. Buid Estate.
Notice to Debtors and
Creditors.
GE<)RGIA—Coweta ('ounty.
All persons having demands against
the estate of D. L, Moore, late of Haid
county, deceased, are hereby notified to
render their claims according to law,
and all parties indebted to said deceased,
are requested to make immediate pay
ment. to the undersigned.
This Oct. 2nd, 1906.
F, B. CUKETQN
and E. O. GURKTON, Sr.,
Executors of D. L. Moore, Deceased,
Their Wonderful Effect
on the Liver, Stomach,
Bowels, Sidneys
and Blood.
Lemons nre largely used by The
Mo/.ley Lemon Elixir Company, in
compounding their Lemon Elixir,
a pleasant Lemon Laxative and
Tonic—n substitute for all Cathartic
ami Liver I’ills. Lemon Elixir posi
tively cures all Biliousness, Consti
pation, Indigestion or Dyspepsia,
Headache, Malaria, Kidney Disease,
Dizziness, Colds, Loss of Appetite,
Fevers, Chills, Blotches, Pimples,
all Impurities of the Blood, 1'iiin in
the Clu-st or Back, nml all oilier dis
eases caused by n disordered live r
and kidneys, the first Great
Cause »f all Fatal Diseases.
WOMEN, for all Female Irreg
ularities, will find Leman. Ell.''(~
a pleasant and thoroughly reliable
remedy, without the least dange:*of
possible harm to them in any condi
tion peculiur to themselves. 50c
and $1.00 per bottle at
ALL DRUG STOKES
“One r .Dose Convinces.”
Notice toDebtors and Creditors.
All parties having claims against the
of fishes swim on the surface. The
second boll Is when the bubbles arc
like crystal heads rolling In u fountain.
The third boll is when the billows
surge wildly In the kettle. The cake
tea is roasted before the fire until It
becomes soft like a baby’s arm and
Is shredded into powder between
pieces of fine paper. Salt Is put In
the first boll, the teu in the second. At
the third boil a dipperful of cold water
Is poured Into the kettle to settle the
tea and revive the “youth of the wa
ter.” Then the beverage was poured
i * I us an acre from which he gathered voted for Bill Atkinson; and it’s into cups and drunk. Oh, nectar! The
magE&ESSSHSEsasESSSBSSsaSBsasasBSE pounds at one picking last because the Constitution branded filin y leaflet hung like scaly clouds in
little
estate of Mrs. Mary A. Silly, deceased,
are hereby notified to render in the same
to the undersigned in due form ; aud all
Is when the little bubbles like the eyes | p erH0 „ B indebted to said Mary A. Bifly,
are hereby requested to make immediate
That
Proposition
To clean and press clothes
for #1 per month, cash in
advance, is worth consid
eration by every man and
boy in Newnan and the
surrounding country.
Think of it! All your
suits both cleaned and
pressed for #1 per month.
You’ve been paying that
to get your pressing done,
and pressing is by far the
smallest part of the job.
All clothes will be called
for and delivered. That’s
another advantage.
0. W. Bradley,
(Over Pope’s Store.)
NEWNAN, GA.
!g Now you can see what manure and looks a little strange to a man up a
lH deep plowing has done for it.” tree. But don’t say anything,
1 “How much guano did you use,” boys; just keep your eyes open and
lg I asked. “Only one hundred and do your own reading and thinking.
I fifty pounds per acre,” he replied, —Gwinnett Journal.
(f{ “and I thought it was totally un-1 -
3 necessary.” Mr. Bridges showed! Yes, the editor of this paper
settlement. O. J. Owens,
Executor of estate of Mary A. Billy, de
ceased. 88-61
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
, , ,. , , a serene sky or floated like water lilies
year. It made a little o\ei two our candidate a cinly haired on emerald stems.—International Quar-
bales. He says any one can make pup” that we have never liked the terly.
a success of feeding cattle who will politicos of that paper sine
go at it right;and buyers will come \ Gwinnett Journal,
and take them from his door, if he !
Herepta Vickery 1 Libel for Divorce
1 in Coweta Superior
vh. V Court, March term,
1906.
K. J. Vickery. J
To E. J. Vickery, defendant in the
above stated case:
You are hereby commanded to be and
appear at the March term, 1906, of said
court, to be held on the first Monday in
March next, to an.wer the plaintiff’s li-
bel for divorce; in default thereof tlie
: oourt proceed thereon as to justice rnuy
Z. Greene, D. D. S.,
Office on Second Floor of
Black Bros. Co.’s Building
L. M. Farmer,
LAWYER.
The 5-ceut pacxet is enough for usual occsMonf only has
The familv bottle (60 cents 1 contains h supply , ‘
for a year .All druggists sell them. ’
Elegant carving sets, reliable pocket appertain,
knives, keen razors,sure-cutting scissors Witness the Hon. R. W. Freeman,
" and shears will be found in G. R. Brad- Judge of said Court, this Sept. 80, 1905.
good ones and enough of Dr. Anderson, Dentist, Salbrde ^ rea t stock ot Ameucau-made. L. TURNER,
Building. tl guarantied t utleiy. i < Clerk.
Office on Second Floor of the Aruali
Merchandise Co.’s Building
Dr. C. A. Smith,
VETERINARIAN.
Treats all diseases of domestic animals.
Calls answered day or night. Office
at Gearreld’s Livery Stable.