The Newnan news. (Newnan, Ga.) 1906-1915, July 13, 1906, Image 2

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CONTINUE Thoso who nr a Raining flesh and strength by regular treat ment with Scott’s Emulsion should continue the treatment In hot weather; smaller dose and a little cool milk with It will do away with any objection which Is attached to fatty pro ducts during the heated season. Send for free sample, SCOT! X HOWNK, Chemist*, I'rarl Street, New York. $oc and fi.oo; all druggist*. Russell’s claim cannot be substan- his repudiation with technical legal Pike’« Peak !■ summer. tiated, as Col. James M. Smith, the pleadings. He can not whiten Th'' first nart of the road to Tike’s ,, ° . peak is through a picturesque ravine Boss of Oglethorpe, is 2 native himself by splashing pitch on with a beautiful mountain torrent roar- Georgian. Col, Smith was born Hearst. Taggart is a hoodoo and hit? and leaping through it. This ra in Wilkes county. Hon. Hoke the time has come for him to ski- w _ n , lk l. n ” <1 . 0 " e f 0 . 08 Smith is a native of North Caro- doo!—Atlanta News. lina and it is currently reported that Hons. Clark Howell and J. H. Do Not Neglect Your Bowels. Kstill were born in South Caro- Many serious diseases arise from ne- lina. If this be true, Judge Rus- ^’ cr of ,1 "‘ howels - Chamberlain’s sell and Uncle deems are the only native Georgians in the guberna torial race. Stomach and Liver Tablets are a pleas ant and agreeable laxative. They in- rnany climbers who shoot their kodaks as tiie train passes, until one knows exactly how it feels to be a celebrity. As one goes on the climbers become gradually fewer, and after three or four miles they are left behind. Sud denly a new turn in the road shows that tiie first foothills have been sur mounted and that we are climbing the vigorato the liver and regulate the vast bRro side of tiie peak itself. Tiie bowels For sale by Dr. Paul Pent Newnan, Ga. POTTS AND PARKS Dry Goods, Dress Goods, No tions, Midsummer Specials. The Newnan News Issued Every Friday. J. T. FAIN, Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION RATE, $1.00 PER YEAR, OFFICIAL PAPER OF COWETA COUNTY, ’Phono No. 20. OFFICE UP STAIRS IN THE WILCOXON BLDG The Atlanta Constitution added great quantities of laurels to its ever mounting Ananias reputation by Its account of the Smith-How ell joint debate in Albany. The Atlanta Georgian and Albany Herald printed reasonable and un- colored accounts of the debate,and both agreed that Smith's followers predominated in the crowd of lour — ()r p ive thousand people and that Likewise these arc vacation days Smith was able to crawl from the iiditnrium after the discussion. The Music of the Rain. lor the esteemer Record. (longressional Give the News the News. Tel it, tel.-phone it, or write it ant hand it in or mail it. Professional politicians and ring slurs aie bobbing up all over the State and writing cards for the newspapers, in all of which Iloke Smith is villified and abused. It The ire man is authority for the is patent that this is a concerted information that we are in the effort on the part of the opposition midst of good old summer time. to draw Mr. Smith's attention from .ii, i the discussion of vital issues be- These Hoke Smith summer days “shore” are causing the other fellows to become warm and ex cited. Anyway we can all agree upon the proposition that Joehillhall is some potatoes in the Georgia Legislature. Already the .I une brides are find ing that life is real anti earnest. They are lace to face with the servant problem. It is reported that Senator Bev eridge is going to investigate the breweries. The man and the, opportunity "have met," it seems tore the people. II he can be in volved in a dirty carrl writing con test or induced to reply to these attacks in his speeches, the object o! the ringsters will be accomplish ed, Mr. Smith's attention will be diverted from his campaign and the force of his efforts weakened. But there is ampin evidence to prove that the scheme has already failed. Mr. Smith pursues the straight course he mapped out months ago, and the little card writers receive no attention what ever Irom ihe people’s candidate. Tom Taggart and the Tiger. Sweet. as *bc t< ucli of angels On the great harp's golden string. And soft as words of love, Is the drip, drip, drip of the ram. Incline mine ear to hearken, O, heart, cease from thy pain; And let me silently listen To the drip, drip, drip of the rain. i bear it softly dropping, dropping I ’pon the parched earth, I see il kiss tiie drooping flower-, Imparting to them now hirili; And 1 am taught this lesson Hy these refreshing showers, That we, too, may lift the falh-n As they <1 id the drooping flowers. Just u little kindness, Some word that we may say, May help a tired brother Upon the weary way. Just u willing, helping hand When the road is rough und steep; Just tn laugh with those w ho laugh And weep with those who weep; And w hen death shall hover o'et us We will not fear its pain, For having lived for others We will not have lived in vain. Newnan, (ia. Ruth Fimtkh. track stretches tobnggnn-llke far ahead. Great views unfold. One looks down on lonely wooded valleys, where blue lakes glisten, on the tops of the moun tains and over mountains to tiie plain that stretches away like the sea. It lias grown cold, and patches of snow begin to appear. The date Is Aug. 1, but In the snow heaps on the summit we Rlmll soon lie snowballing one an other— Four Track News. Umbrellas We now have the greatest value in la dies’ umbrellas to be fouml in any market. Good frames, nice covers, pretty handles. Come and see this arrortment at 1.00, J.7. r >, 2.00 and 2.50 each. Alnlinnui’n State Finite. Over tiie historic enpltol nt Mont gomery waves not tin* national flag, hut tiie Alabama flag, and not one Ala bamian in a thousand would recognize It If lie saw It elsewhere than on tiie capllol. The flag In question has no history woven into it, for it was not adopted until 1895. It presents a St. Andrew's cross In crimson on a white field. Such n cross Is shaped like a let ter X, und the hooks suggest (lint the apostle Andrew died on a cross of that design. Few if any other states in dulge in flags of their own. A flag Is file symbol of sovereignty, and state sovereignty is limited by the federal constitution. When we were a part of Georgia we granted to the federal gov ernment the executive power of pun ishing treason, and If any one becomes a traitor to the Alabama flag we might have to call In the federal government In order to punish him.—Birmingham Age-IIernld. Hand Bags Ribbons Leather or canvas hand bags going at 25c to 1.00. All kinds, shades and grades of ribbons from No. 1 for headings to 8-inch sash widths, priced from Jo to 75c per yard. Special new lot Swiss edges and insertings for white dresses, also extra value wide cambric edge for corset covers at 25c yard. Embroideries extra value wide cambric ei White Lawns It was an easily recognized blun der when the Alton B. Parker peo ple in 1904 put Hon. Tom Taggart, of Indiana, at the head of ttie Democratic National Committee, platform, but falls Mat. IJazle- ij e was given that high and ini- hurst News. I ® , . , , All who tackle this job have the same experience. The Griffin Daily Call tries to make something out of Russc If they can’t elect Clark they arc willing to try to elect Dick. I hat's the way the Howell men in Coweta county feel about it; and it seems Howell men throughout the State arc tailing into line with them. Now we notice in the Howoll- Russell-Lstill-Jim Smith papers that Hoke Smith and his cam paign were interred again in Al bany last Monday; but it seems, after all, that Iloke is one of those disagreeable fellows who refuse to two years ago portant honor as Ins reward for I running a series of snap conven tions m Indiana in order to seize the delegates of the state Demo cracy for Parker, and he succeeded in doing that by the most brutal political devices. The bad personal reputation of Taggart as a man associated with moral evils in Indianapolis, elected mayor of that city and kept in of fice to protect the vicious elements in it, were well known to those who exalted him as the active head of the national Democratic party. The evil reputation easily lost hundreds of thousands of votes of moral men to the party’s ticket An Oilillty In lln t til I ii k, ‘‘If you want to hoi- an oddity," an undertaker wild, "no to a eeineti-ry and note how In tin* erection of old fash ioned tombs they lower Into place the iimrhle Hlalis. These imil'hle slabs are not lowered by means of a derrick. They lire lowered hy hand. The work Is so delicate, you see, and It is so necessary not to chip the wines of the st nies. Hint only hit ml work answers. Von wonder, I suppose, how the men avoid pinching or crushing their lingers ns they lower a great slab of marble on to Its marble base. Well, they ac complish tills hy lowering the stone upon lumps uf sugar arranged in or- [ derly lines, and then they gradually j dissolve the sugar hy squirting water over It. All the huge, flat stones of old fashioned tombs or vaults are lowered I by linnd on to lumps of sugar.” The llriiutj of the Snoivflnke, The t III it snow now driving from the north and lodging on my coat consists of those henutlful star crystals, thin and partly transparent. They arc about -tenth of an Inch in diameter, per fect llltle wheels with six sp.ikes, with out n tire, or, rather, with six perfect little leaflets, fernlike, with a distinct, straight, slender tnldrlli raying from Ihe center. On each side of each mid rib there Is a transparent, thin blade with a eremite edge. IIow full of the creative genius Is the air In which these are generated! 1 should hardly admire more if real slurs fell and lodged on my coat. Nature Is full of genius, full of the divinity, so that not a snowflake escapes Its fashioning hand. Nothing Is cheap and course, neither (lewdrops nor snowflakes.—Henry 1). Thoreau. The Tongues of the Bnlknns. Too many languages are spoken In the Balkans. A traveler in that r<*glon writes of the babel: "Turkish. Bulga rian, Serbo-Croatian, Uoumanlan, Ar menian, Greek. Albanian, Kulzo-Wnl- Inchlnu, Ohlngeul, the language of tHe gypsies; Spunlole, the language of the Jews of Spanish or Portuguese descent, and the language spoken hy the Ger man, Austrian, Roumanian and Rus sian Jews. Add to this Arabic, Per sian and Syrian, largely spoken In Con stantinople; Italian, on the northeast coast of the Adrla; Russian, In the northeastern parts of Rottmanln; vari ous Austro-Hungarian Idioms spoken in Bosnia and Herzegovina atul the Cnuension languages of the Circassians nml Georgians." Not one of these lan guages is of common use. India lawns, 5c to ISc, extra values; Persian lawns, 10c to 25c, 112 to 45 inches wide; French lawns, 4(5 inches wide, 20c to 40c per yard; Wash < ’hilfons, 48 inches wide, 25c to 50c per yard. i T nppe We make closer prices on laces and carry the f cH-'Ca largest assortments in Newnan. See our’tattle containing 2.000 yards vals at 5c per yard. We also show more laces of all kinds than you find at any other store in this city. French vals, round-thread vals, Point de Paris. Normandy, Platt vals and oriental or nettop laces. In heav ier laces we show linen torchon and Smyrna laces, German and Hnglish torchons. Colored Lawns and Organdies New shipment opened today. Beautiful patterns, shades and qualities, and prices always right. WE SELL Gold Medal black goods, Krippendorf Ditt- mann Shoes, American Lady Corsets, Butter- ick patterns. The I.one 8tnr of Trxnn. The origin of the Lone Star flag of Hit* republic of Texas Is not entirely clear. The elnlm has been tnaile Hmt It was unfurled In the present territory of Louisiana in 1810, but other search ers cannot And earlier trace of It thnn the presentation of such a banner to Hie company of Captain Andrew Rob inson In May. 1835. Still another claim Is made for a flag unfurled nt Velasco Jnn. 8, 1830, und said to have been : POTTS & PARKS Phone 109 Bay Street Newnan, Ga. Atlanta & West Point Railroad Co. The Western Railway of Alabama. made by a Miss Troutman of Nashville. Direct Lines Between North, East. South and Southwest U S Fast 2L r”,rz sms, i Mail , u2* Cars. tourist Sleepers to California. Smith, for lack of a seal, used a brass button from Ids cont which bore a five pointed star.—St. Louis Republic. UK A l> DOWN SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23, 1905. stay dead. 1 he Chicago beef packers flail But aside from that, Taggart was one ot the greatest failures as a campaign manager that the party that they have lost twenty millions ^as cver had- His knowledge and since the publication of the Nei Reynolds report. And yet there are still a few people left who grasp ot national politics were notoriously crude; his incapacity to plan and handle a national cam- doubt if advertising pays, is the! P a *8 n was so immediately trans- observation of the Augusta parent as to take the courage out Chronicle. j of all the real fighters who had heretofore borne the foremost parts in the party’s battles. The 1 Love You. A Danish paper compares "1 love you" In many languages. Here tire sonic of them the Danish paper is our only authority for their correctness: The fhhmnuill says, "t'o ngal nl;" the Armenian, "Ge slrem ez hez;" the Aril Mil n. very shortly, "Nehabeeck;” the Egyptian, similarly. "Vnchkeb;" the Turk. "Sisi sevo.lorum,” ami the Hindoo, "Main tyin ko pljar karyn.” But overwhelming is the declaration of love of an Eskimo, who tries to win tla' chosen one hy the pleasing sound of the dainty little word: “I’nlvlflgs- saern till ulna let'll mn J in igaarslgu Jo k.” Tlir Word “Cnnslro.” Etymologists are driven to pure con jecture to explain the origin of the word “enpsize.” One of them suspects that It comes from the Spanish lan guage. as so many sailors’ words do, and may be connected with “cabe- cenr," to nod the head In sleep or to pitch ns a ship, and with “capuznr un baxel,” to sink n ship by the head— “cabezn” meaning head. Another guess —based on the fact that "capsize” Is an English dialect word for moving hogshead by turning it over alternate ly on to Its two heads—is that the word Is simply “cap,” a head, and “seize." Tho Clnvkfrhiiuni Town. Improvements, as st. Haul said of science, is often “falsely so called." If Hie real estate men would but forget Idea In laying out a in 1904 was absolutely foreseeable town ami would take a good land scape gardener into their confidence and the contour of the land into their consideration rtnd plant trees accord ingly suburbanites would rise up and call them blessed. -Country Life In America. The Darien Gazette says it „ proud to be a supporter ot Col. disaster which overtook the party tlm diockVrboim'l kstill, but its columns do not speak very loudly in support of from the moment Taggart took the this statement. Like many other rems ot lllu> democratic campaign, newspapers in the State, it is hard a,ui everv move he made as » a to determine whether the Gazette t * ona ' chairman only added to the is supporting Kstill, Howell, Rus- confusion aiul fatalities of tin- sell or Jim Smith. party. Taggart has neither the moral Kept Ip tiie IValliiiK. In Abyssinia it was on?0 the habit of complainants to stand before the door of tiie king's palace, loudly appealing to bis majesty for help. “So accus tomed Is the king,” wrote otto traveler, “to these querulous tones of sorrow that when the rains prevent such ns arc really distressed from repairing to the capital a set of vagrants Is pro vided whose object It is to raise the cry of artificial sorrow lest he should feel a lonely quietness.” No 40 No 34 No 33 No 38 Leave Arr h ir>|» 9 25n s 15)) I.v New Orleans 12 in'll 1 25), 12 40ft Lv Mobile 11 OT)). !* 1Sp 11 05|i Lv Penstieolft 5 0011 1 oop 5 00a Lv .. ... ...Soltiia 9 tfin 1 80)) 3 IlOp 3 55it Lv Montgonierv in iifrn 2 27p 7 14)> Ar Milsteml 10 HUa 2 ->2p ~ 32 p 7 53ft Ar . CIlellHtt — 3 31}. S 12|| Ar Vnburn 12 a-.), 9 2-"r)> 12 35 p Ar Coin mbit* 112r.11 :< -t5t> ■s 251 r 8 37a A r Opeilkn 12 :tiip 1 80 p 9 1211 Ar West Point I2 57p 4 7r7p 0 Blip 9 87a Ar La i« raiLf 2 00 p « 20} • 10 27p 10 35a Ar .. - '-ip il ;ts[i Ar Kairliiini HOop / o.»P Ar East l'oint 8 20p 7 =k»i- 11 35 p i 1 40 ft Ar Atlanta 9 l.'rn 9 30p 3 42m Ar Washington 10 52ft 11 17). 7 52a Ar Hntriniore 12 -Mi) 2 :u>p in 11a Ar Philadelphia 0 3p .• 43n 1 (Nip Ar New York H 10)1 I (Ml): 11 110|) II 20)1 S -20)1 7 -Id)* 0 28|i No 97 11 15a 10 :!5a II 17a 7 min a -wails :,t 0 84H. ft 2I!|> fi Ota 5 min 1 t sop n ir.n! ui-181) 0 l'-'a 9 15p 8H5a! it 50)1 12 Ilia t 25)i ii tor B20p 5 28 p 6 01 p 4 27 p 4 ISp 3 HUp 3 05p 2 Of Ip I 28 p 1 ofip 12 4 fin 1 J9p 8 01 p * Men Is Above trains dally, (’nnneetioi for Tuskegeo, Milstead for Talluhis LaG range nrcomniodntion leaves Atlanta daily, leaves LuClrange at 5;5o a. m. arrives Atlanta 8:15 a Tn V'xr SS " 11<1 :!l ’ |,ullmiui sleepers New York ami New Orleans at Now Orleans for Texas, Mexico, California. At Chehaw xr-ept Sunday at 5:80 p. m. Returning Through coaches Washing- on and New Orient) Trains 37 and US Washington and Southwestern Limited cars observation and dining , Mrs. Complete si rvioe New York and New OrVcnns Train 9, nitod states fast mail. Through duy e aches Atlanta and New Orleans w rite lor mans, schedules and informal ion. Orleans K. M. THOMPSON, , p K , ITnptt T. l*. A., Atlanta, Ga. J ' £ pV jU ^,' , . CHAS. A. WICKERSHAM, • A., Atlanta Ga. I'res. and Lien. Mgr.. Atlanta, Ga Dedication of Church. Col. W. A. Lumpkin has re tired from the race lor United States Senator in South Carolina in opposition to senator Benjamin R. 1 illman. Col Lumpkin ex hibited more wisdom than is be ing displayed by Georgia also-rans in the gubernatorial race, lie saw his finish early in the game. An Optimist Hotel Keeper. Hotel Keeper What did the strau- g«r t*ay when you gave him the billY nor niontal qualities that make a Walter—Such monstrous prices he uev- leader. lie is a small politician or - 8 “w. We were au abomlngble gang devoid ot logical thinking power, £ of short historical perspective, un- gende Blatter, teachablt Sai-retlneNM ot the Mantilla. Many attempts are being made in London and In Paris to adapt the Spanish mantilla 'to our use. To the Spanish women the mantilla stands for all Htat is national and characteristic, and so intimate a part of herself is Hie At Corinth Sunday occurred the mantilla deemed that it is even held dedication of the new M E sacred by law and cannot be seized for T \\7 ca -n- r debt.—Loudon Country Gentleman. church. Ke\ . J. VV, Ouilltan, of Newnan, delivered the dedicatory structive and incapable of con- leadership. He is the and unusually attractive one. The carpets, seats and other furniture are of the best. It was the inten tion of the people to erect a thoroughly good church; money A Clever wife v. was not spared, and now Corinth Friend—Didn’t your husband rave *? rmon tr.the morning to a crowd | people have one they may be when you showed him Hie dressmak- that taxed the capacity of the fine proud of.—Hogansville News er’s bill? Wife—Rather. Friend—And newedifice. In the afternoon the ■U'hy She Took Him. , , . , Mother—Why did you accept Charlie he became simplv speechless. crookedest man tor the post he rroi " among all the young men who have paid you attention? Daughter— H oca use lie was the only one that had Ihe good tasie to propose. how did you quiet him/ Mife-I show- nresidincr elder Rev R P Allen ed bhn the milliner's account, and then P ■? elcler - Kev - B. F. Allen, preached at 2:30 o clock. Arrangements were made for a Implicit TruKt. "Do you trust your husband Implicit ly in all things?" What a question! Of course I do— to a certain extent "-Stray Stories. Got Acquainted. Jones—I suppose you know more targe crowd on this occasion and about that horse you got of Deacon the people were there. The church rim ”22! “* de will seat over foor hundred, but the trade? Brown—Yes, and I know a lot more about Deacon Smith now not nearly all could find place in- than I did then. side. Dinner was served on the ! rhoea Remedy and believe'it "savedTis To him that has no employment life S round b y the members of the j We. I have been engaged for ten years Saved His Comrade’s Life. "While returning from the Grand Army Encampment at Washington City, a comrade from Elgin, Ill., was taken with cholera morbus and was in a critical condition,” says Mr, J. E. Houghlaud, of Eldor, Iowa. "I gave him Chamberlain s Colic, Cholera and Diar- holds that a sane, intelligent Democrat can imagine. The New \ ork \V orlil voiced a universal Democratic desire in demanding Hon. R. B. Russell, ot Russell, his resignation of the chairman- Jackson county, Georgia, who is a ship of the Democratic National candidate for the Democratic Committee. Taggart shows his --- nomination for Governor of Geor inentne«« hv I >r nit , j ~ _ in a little while will have no noveltv. church, and enough was provided 111 emigration work and conducted Georgia,, seeking this office, judge iries to excuse his reputation and ^ ^ “ ™" d ma " y P rese "'; jU s.cc.„lu„ r „„ 1 1 ‘ The church building is a targe jsold by Dr. Paul Penistou, Newnan,Ga.