Newspaper Page Text
I
mHHH
Hastings Seeds \
1921 Catalog Free 1
It’* ready now. 116 handsomely il
lustrated pages of worth while seed
and gafden uewB. This new catalog,
we believe, Is the moBt valuable seed
book ever published. It contain!
twenty full pages of the most populai
vegetables and flowers in their natu
ral c°l° rs > the fittest work of its kind
ever attempted.
With our photographic illustrations
and color pictures also from photo
arapbs. we show you Just what you
Jrow with Hastings’ Seeds even be
fore you order the. seeds. This cata
me makes garden and flower bed
SHOULD
WE USE FERTILIZE R
. THIS SEASON?
13. Davis iu l’rogressivo' Farmer,
1 don't think any of the calculations
offered to Induce the formers to use fer
tilizer, mid to use it abundantly, 'are
correct. They clnhn tlmt nil things be
ing equal the proper use of fertilisers
will very materially Increase the yield.
1 agree that this is eorreet, and no
one disputes it, lint let’s go further.
Let’s take cotton, for instance. They
claim that mi acre of hind that will of
itself produce 400 pounds of seed cot
ton. by the use of -100 pounds of 8-8-8
fertilizer will produce SOU pounds of
seed cotton. Now, wo will say that the
400 pounds of cotton produced without
the use of fertilizer, at I cents per
iub - . . . .. . . |pound, would bring $16. That, the SOU
planning easy and it should bo in ev- p 0un ,j 8 nt 4 cents tier pound will bo $22 i
ery single Southern home.- Write ut I ilcduct $10 for the fertilizer mid you
a postcard for it, giving your name I will have $22 against $16 for the acre
and address. It will come to without fertilizer—leaving n net, bulmiee
by return mall and you will be mighty ; u f uvm . 0 f m-fib with fertilizer of $6.
glad you've got it. They don’t figure the hauling, Imml-
Hastings' Seeds are the Standaro i; n ^ all ,l sowing tlio fertilizer, nor do
of the South and they have the larg- they fig uru picking tlio 400 ]iounds of
est mail order seed house In the worli oxtm cotton and handling that, nor the
back of them. They ve got to be the ,iiff orom . P in tlio price of a big crop of
best. Write now ■ for the 1921 cata cotton and a small crop.
log It Is absolutely free.
H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN,
ATLANTA, GA.
Professional Cards.
Now, I would tlguro It this way: Ad-
I mtttiiig tlmt the 400 pounds ol’ fertilizer
would double tlio yield, or produce 400
I pounds more of seed cotton, 1 don’t nil-
unit that when you double the crop it
wjll sell Cor tlio sumo price—not by any
means, if tlio 800 pounds of seed cotton
per nero witll tlio 400 pounds of fertil
izer repniscnt about a normal crop of
MEMORY OF MRS. SARAH
HALFACUE McGEE.
Mrs. Sarah MeOoe, nee Hnlfncre, Was
born in Meriwether county. On., May,
SUBSCRIPTION CONTESTS.
Belziiui (Miss.) Banner.
We note the Vicksburg Herald is ml
vertlsing the fact • tlmt, it is going to
A city
men, lint
them.
ran get along without some
it can't get ahead without
18118,. where on Feb. 10, ls.'s, she was give away three touring ears, on March
married to Mr.' tleo. Powell, removing 26th, to parties who turn into the office
to Coweta, and living for over sixty the greatest number of paid up subm-rlp
years nt Powell’s Station, (now Mad- tloiis. To save our life we cununt see
ns.) Her life of over fourscore years why reputable newspapers will enter into
embraced the most eventful period in such u contest ns this. It is nil right'to
tie- history of our republic. When the make an lioaestHo-gondness cumpnign
war cloud rose between the two sections I for subscribers, but when It comes to
of tlic Union, mid North mid South I limiting 11 man take a paper for n mini
stood face to face in arms, she was n her of years in order tlmt some sweet
young matron watching troop trains gir\, beautiful woman or some clmrlta
passing with nil the interest of one wlm bio organization nmy get 11 prize, we
loved her State mid its brave defenders, draw the line. Nn paper should force
She occupied 11 vantage position for over- its subscriptions upon anyone. A news
looking the mobilizing of troops on the paper’s subscription list should bo one
historic Atlanta & West Point railroad,'I that the paper merits. A young Indy
the direct Hue of travel between Mont- wants an unto and she finds the news-
colliery, the first capital of the Con- paper n ready Held to get one. Sim on-
federa’ey, and Richmond, the Inst. When tors the vace. She tackles idolin Smith
the storm of the world war burst, she for n subscription for 11 year; he sub
was still so interested 11s to do her bit, I scribes 11ml she gains n thousand or
visiting Camp Gordon and telling tlio more votes. The contest waxes warm,
soldier boys they must be brave when Him feels that she will lose out if her
they reached Trance, I friends do not conic to her relief. She
Mr. mid Mrs. Powell both wore loyal tackles >lolm Smith again and tells him
"members of the Presbyterian church ns her tnlo of woe, mid licgs mid beseeches
long ns they lived. Recently, when n him to subscribe for five years in ml
sum was being raised to buy the pastor | vnnee, Tim consequence is tlmt Smith
n manse, siie gladly gave $500—-only
Bumetimes It’s a good tiling when
troubles come together wo can get rid
of ’em so much Haulier.
Moncv t'-eh without question
if GuNV.t Helen foil, In the
tl-enMn-ni .if ITCH, ItCZHMA,
KIN a won;.!, TBTVEK nr
other Itching skin Cluuns-.v.
Try n 13 cent box c.t our rUU.
COWETA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY
LEE-KING DRUG COMPANY.
NO MORE
RATS
j. p. mcpubrson
Civil Engineer and Surveyor.
Sewerage systems, water systems, a bunt, 12,000,000 bales, then 4 cents per
• ■ - * mnnlnrr nnniiun fa I I f . .. t._..z .. H.. t.. .....I
topographical surveys, maping, accurate K,omul is about a fair price for it, mid
MYRON 11* FARMER, 91. 1L»
phyalcliui and Surgeon.
Office over T. G. Farmor & Sons Co.
Office 'phone 806; residence ’phone 72. |
L. E. MOORE <
Attoruey-nt-Lnw i
Will practice in all courts. Prompt
loans made on improved farms In Gow- 1
eta County. Over Cates Drug Store. /)
W. L. STALLINGS,
Attorney nnd Counsellor nt Law. |
W1U practloo ln all the Courts. Spe-
olul attention given to preparation of
wills and the administration of ostates
In the Court of Ordinary. i
OlHce in Court House, 'phono 414.
T. S. BAILEY.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office upstairs ln Kirby building, 11%
Greenville street. 'Phone 87. (office
and residence.)
JOE B. FENISTON, J
Physician and Surgeon.
Office hours 8 to 10 a. m.; 8 to 5 p. m.
Office with Dr. Paul Poniston. Office
and rcsldoqce 'phone 30. ' j
mi. j. e. marsh
Veterinary Surgeon
Office at W. A. Potts Stable, 11 E.
broad St. Office phone 105, Res. 370J.
A. SIDNEY CA9IP,
Attorney nnd Counselor at Law.
Office In Arnall .Bldg.. Court Square.
H. 11. MCDONALD,
Physician nnd Surgeon.
Office 3% East Broad Street, upstalrB.
Office hours 9 to 11 a ,m. and 3 to 6
p. m.
Office 'phone 65; residence 'phone 39J
W M . H . L Y D A Y ,
Physician and Surgeon. -
Office over Lee-King Drug Co. Res
idence 'phone 464. office 'phone 2ip.
► Office Hours—9 fo 11 a, m„ 2 to 4 ii,.
(a, and 7 to 8 p. m. Sunday—9 to 11
*Y m. and 2 to 4 p. m.
T. U. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Sanltorlum building. Office
phone 6—1 call; residence 'phone 5—
1 callB.
W. A. TURNER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Special attention given to surgery
and diseases of women. Office 19
Bprlng street 'Phone 230.
D. A. HANEY, •
Physician and Surgeon.
Special attention to eye, ear, nose
and throat, and diseases of chest.
XV. L. WOODROOF,
Physician and Snrgeon.
Office 11% Greenville street ’Phone
161. Special attention given to dis
eases of children.
J. LITTLETON JONES.
Attorncy-at-Law.
, Prompt attention to legal business
toons made on farmlands. Office over
& C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s.
THOS. G, FARMER, JIL,
Attsmer-at-Lanr.
Will give careful and prompt atten
tion to all legal business entrusted to
me. Money to loan. Offico in court
house
WILLIAM Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney-at-Law.
Office over Cuttlno’s store.
K. W. STARR,
Dentist.
Offlc* over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.'e
. Re»ldence h ’nh one*382-£5* eIolU8,Vely ’
| CENTRAL OF GEORGI/T
| RAILWAY CO.
| Effective Nov. 14, 1920.
or mleo, after you use HAT-SNAP. U’s
11 sure rodent killer. Try 11 Pltg. and
prove It. Huts killed with HAT-SNAP
leave no smell. Cats or dogs won’t
touch II. (Hmrantced.
!Wle. slse 11 cuke) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Cellnr. ,,
line, slxe (2 cnkt-NI for Chicken Molise,
coops, or small ImlblingH.
, .. . ,, . , , gl.gr, size (U dikes) enough for nil
, .... . .. . litis a newspaper tor six years tlmt lie farm ami oul-bulldlngs, storuge imlld
one generous member giving more. 8I10 never looks at, and the newspaper hits >"««. or factory buildings,
and her 1 first husband, knowing tlio I spent (lis money and nil t.lfe other money nn ' »“• •'
mornl and spiritual uplift of n church I In eommissions mid for the prizes, mid
to a community, nmgimniinotisly fenvo :l lifter nil the newspaper finds Hint its
building-lot to a Methodist, church, just I condition nt the last, 1b worse limn at
organized, on which Jones’ Chapel was the first. If The Banner ever gets nny
built—n church in whieli siie took deep subscribers by placing a contest it; will
interest, and mound whoso snored ill tor I bo when the present mmmgommit Ims
her heart was often warmed nnow.. IIuv-1 quit, or been laid beneath the sod. A
ing no children of lior
Sold and Guaranteed liy
LEE-KING DRUG COMPANY,
COWETA IIIUIG * IIOOK COMPANY.
tilizor at $10, hnuliug and handling nt
$1, picking and ’handling the extra 4110
pounds cotton nt $4—this gives its $15
iso on account of the fertilizer.
This from $22 leaves tls $17.
Wlmt about no fertilizer and 400
ninds seed cotton to tho here? Lot’s
see how wo start on this—we ’ll calculate
op tho somo basis. If the 800 pounds
per nero gave us a 12,000,000-bnlo crop,
then of courso 400 pounds per nero will
will hoU for tho"same price as a 12,000,-
000-bnle crop! I nin sure not. It will
bring three times ns much per pound.
But just to bo liberal,ovo will nsstime
that it will bring twice as much. Now
vie figured tho offer at 4 cents per pound
for the seed cotton, so wo will figure this
nt 8 cents per pouud for tho seed cotton.
This will give us $32 for this acre of 400
pounds and 110 fertilizer bill to pay, no
idee I fertilizer to haul and handle, and no ex
tra 400 pounds cotton to pick and handle,
and wo will get in cool onsh'Hio differ
ence between $17 and $82—which is $15
in favor of tho acre-with no fertilizer.
The fertilizer man is ready to say
tlmt this isn’t fnlr, and that the farmer
must not make more than ho lins a good
demand for, and that a fewer acres well
fertilized will yield the amount more
economically. Well, this might be true
in a measure, but the avorago farmer
figures tlmt tlio more lie mukes, the more
he ought, to get.
Citation to Helrx-nt-liim-,
In re estate of Hook Morolnml. Court
of Ordinary of Coweta comity, ail.
Petition for probato In solemn
form of will of Dock
Moreland.
... , she was I newspaper not-rend Is worthless, mid we I ilHOHai A—Coweta County:
He tint ran saint of tlio young people, hnil rather Imve 11 few hundred who vend To Wilson Moreland, heir-at-law: F.
opening her home ns n community eon- it. mid believe in it tlmn 8,600 wlm never Wor mdlluo’ In'sobL'n‘f.lyni “Vm
tor for them. unfold ittt paged and awonr uqoiiuho they will nml testament of Dock Morolnml.
Her second marriage was to Dr. L. wore forced into subscribing for it. If Mato of Bald* county, docoiiHod. you ns
M. McGee, u successful physlcipn find you think The Banner Is not worth $2.00 Atorolnnd^ni.d whoseTcs°di,nu(! Is Sn*
popular citizen. He was a faithful I a year wo nro pot going to get up 11 known, aro tooroby required to bo and
Method mt, but she could never glvo up contest to get you to subsuribc. appear at the Court of Ordinary for
4W ..tiAr nti.ni- ,1.1,1 i.n f wild county on the first Monday In
lieu o\>n uiuiui for any othor, ami lio March, 1921. when said application for
approved her loyalty. Later in life, THIS SCAMP SHOULD BE SPANKED probate will ho hoard, and show cause,
when mentality wos decking, she list-1 center, Neb.-Autlmritlcs are looking |^
FOll
oned to a begnillng voice, and made n 7 &nn£whS FhffVSm**"
sad mistake, of which she truly repent- , eft tho | olmm mity Inst night. I ' r - A - ». CAMP, Ordinary.
e.1, reinstating her volatives In her lonely It is nl)egml t i, ut Lnngdou, nngry
homo. Our micestois of the long ago, L r [ V al who escorted a young woman _
listened*^0 »i®th^eS& UoXlSX rX’i\°«Ol3 a, A~Cowota"6o’inty7
feli. Hence as her Inst years wore -so ^ ifi^n ’aWffi toYa^
fraught with sorrow and penitential window shut Whon tho voumr nno- corroot c°Py subjoined, will bo pro-
tetrs, she asked that this couplet bo XXtwImMmd hafoS Sleyb?"^
lucorpoiatcd in her memorial found tlmt. the door was tied from tho In tlio court-house at Nownnn, Coweta
for Katlo lilcdsae and Bcsrle Bled-
sou tRlnson.
QEOROIA—Coweta County:
To the Honorable C. E. Hoop, Judge of
Tliu Superior Court of Haul County:
The iiolltlon of Polly lHedsoo r,--
speCtfillly shows —
1. Tlmt shu Is tho gtmrfllnn of Katb-.
Bledsoe ami Bessie Hledsus Stinson,
heretofore duly unpointed us such guar
dian In said county.
-. Tlmt site desires to sell for rein
vestment at private,sale tho following
property bcloflitlng to the Cstnto of
said wards, lo-’wlt:
Two-ninths (oite.lt of snkl wards own
ing a one-ninth) mtdlvldod Interest In
remainder In and to the following
tt-nets or pareols of land, both In the
original Fifth bind district of said
Stale nml county, olio of said tracts
containing two (2) acres with the
house thereon and on land lot No. 87.
and more fully described as follows:
Beginning on land lino between lots
Nos. 87 and 88 at point 3B feet north
of the house and rim cUHt 70 yards
nml t lienee south HO yards; thence
west 70 yards to land lino hctwooti
ots Non. 87 and 88; thence north along
said lino 140 yards.
Also, a tract containing fifty (fiO>
acre* of land out of tho north part
of the south halt of lot of land No,
88 and a small part of the north-east
part of south half of lot No. 89, and
more fully dosorlbnd ns follows: Be
gin oi\ tho north Hide of Wahoo-
Creek and on tho east side of tho At
lanta road wlioro tho north shlo of
said creek touches tile east side of
said roml; tlicuae north along, the east
side of snld road to Innds owned In
1909 by J. W. T, Dlhsmi, 8.31 chains;
thence east along linen of J. W. T.
Olbsoit and Jack Powell to lands own
ed In 11109 by b. It. Powell; thonoo
south crossing llttlo Wnlino Creek 20
chains; thence northwesterly to be
ginning point—right-of-way through
tho above two tracts to tho Atlanta
road reserved,
'3. Petitioner shows that the undi
vided two-ninths remainder interest In
said land belonging to her siihl wards
yields no Income; that the othor own
ers of snld land havo contracted tr>
sell their Interest In said land nt an
advnntagonus price nml If petitioner
Is allowed sho onn soil her \v.ards’ In
terest to the samo purchaser at a good
and an advantageous price.
4, Pqtitlonor desires to Invest the
proceeds of such Rale In Liberty Bonds
of tho United Staton.
0. Petitioner shows that notice of her
Intention to mako this application hus
been published onoo a week for four
weeks In The Nownnn Herald, being
the newspaper In which county adve.--
tlHomonta aro usually published as ro-
pulrod by law. i her
POLLY X BLEDSOE.
HALL & JONES, mark,
Attorneys.
Sworn to nnd subscribed before mo,
this 11th tlay of January, 1921.
8. L, COOK,
Notary Public, Coweta County Go.
From which none ever wnko to tvoop. ’
against all of tho window blinds.
’ Eleven of the sovontaon girls present
Knowing her own heart nnd lil’u bet-1 promptly fainted. While the boys wore
tor tlinn nftyone else, nono can doubt I busy with them tho stove begun to pour
their truth, or the sultablonoBS of her so- forth volumes of smoko, following tho
lection. pliiolug of a honrd and several roukB
Sho passed ntvay Aug. .12, 1020, limit- on top of the chimney,
Attorneys for Polly UladHoo, Guardian
Try The Herald’s classi
fied column for results. . .
ing one less link in tlio frugilo elinln
that connects to that far away country,
tho Old Smith. N. L. 0.
IN
POTATO WAS FIRST KNOWN
U. S. IN 1621.
The tercentenary of tho planting of
the first potato in tho United States will
bo next December, according to Dr. Bor-
tliold Lnufcr, curator of anthropology of
the Field Museum, Chicago.
“The potato ontered this country,”
Dr. Lanfor said in an address before tho
America® Association for tho Advance
ment of Science, “not, ns .surmised by
Ade Candolle, through nn alleged band
of Spanish adventurers, but in a perfectly
respectable manner from Bermuda, w'hero
it had been introduced some , years pr6-
sly from England. It is a prank of
fortupe tlmt the potato, originally a den
izen of Chili and Pern, appears as a nat
uralized Englishman in the United
States. The" potato arrived in England
about 1586. For a long time tlio bollcf
was entertained by botanists that tlio
openauk, described among the wild roots
of Virginia by Thomas Hariot in 1588,
Phone | was to represent our potato. This spec
ulation is erroneous. Data from the his
tory of tile Bermudas now make it per
fectly clear that the potato was one of
tho plants which, at that time (that is,
1621,) Virginia did not have; .Tlio
history of tlio Bermudas reports that in
1612 the good ship “Elizabeth” brought
potatoes from England to Bermuda. ’ Tlio
history further states that on-the 2d of
December, 1621, Capt. Nathaniel Butler,
Cedartown
Columbus
Chattanooj
Carrollton
Raymond
Griffin .
ARRIVE FROM _
Geogres, in the- Summer Islands, to the
Georges, in the Summer Islands, to tho
two largo chests,’ wherein were fitted oil
| such kinds had sorts of tho country’s
.plants and fruits as Virginia at that
time and until then lmd not, as figs,
pomegranates, oranges, lemons, plantains,
| sugarcane, potatoes, casada roots, papes,
(papaya,) red pepper, the prickly penr,
land the like. In the following year a
| Virginia ship took from the Bermudas
2(r,000 weight of potatoes at the least.
The fnet that potatoes were actually
planted in Virgiuia at the very moment
of their first introduction is confirmed in
letters from Virginia in 1621, and pub
lished by Purejias.”
A novel exhibition was witnessed in
I the court-room at Paris, Ky., when thir
teen men with corkscrews extended in
their right hands rushed forward in re
sponse to a request form County Judge
George Batterton for a corkscrew to open
a bottle of whiskey offered ns evidence
in the hearing of n whiskey cate on trial.
The defendant was John Cain, who was
being tried on the charge of transporting
whiskey, nml the question whether the
bottle really contained whiskey wob
raised during the trial. Judge Batter-
toil displayed coolness and skill in open
ing the quart bottle, and, after deliber
ately smelling the contents, coolly re
placed the cork, prouonced the beverngo
‘whiskey” and ordered the trial to pro-
|coed.
n
“Women arc responsible for the pres-
ent-dav laxity of moraU and outrageous
attire,” declared Jlev. E. Royal! Car-
_ — .ter, rector of St. John’s Episcopal
8tpternt> a — Plrat Mondays in March and I church, Hampton, Va., in a sermon Sun-
Hearslm., . .. ... .day night. St. John’s is one of tho
^Member” rd Mo $* day8 ln March and oldest churches in America. The rector
Mondays in April and delivered a scathing (lennneiation of low-
_ ° er - necks and short skirts among women.
“The time has passed when you can
tell a respectable woman by the kind
of dress she wears,” the rector said.
“Tho women must set the standard if
they expect the men to try to live up
to it”
Lungdon is said to have told tlio girl |
| that If she went with the other follow
ho, would break up tho dance. And he I
1 did. /
The man who pays his debts nnd Ids
tuxes may be a blessing oi"’u curse to I In playing* slnckor, labor adds, onor-
tlio community. It depends on what moiisly to the oxcosBivo coats, of millions
else he does. In making this stfttoinoqt of people of small means. It exacts an
it is understood that by |ho word intolerable tribute from tlioso least able
debt” is meant the ordinary cash..ob- to pay, it is not high rents alono nor
ligations whieli a man incurs ill tho trims- graft in the building industry nor eon-
action of his business. There nro man ditions iii the lonu market tliqt have I
who appear to believe that so long ns brought about n housing situation tlmt)
they aro not Indebted to their neighbors hifs workod general hardship. It Is noc-
for goods purchased, or to tho munlci- ossdry to take into account the failure I
polity or the State for tho tax levy, they of labor, skilled nnd organized, to do its
have discharged their whole duty and part by 'gfcjng a reasonable liny's work I
nothing more can be asked of them, for the Tngh pay it commands.—New |
But in ronlity a man’s duty-to his I York World
neighbor is limited only by his powor — o-
to do hjs neighbor good, nnd his duty “Well, my dear,” said he, as he was I
to tho community by his ability to bo dressing, “I s’p’ose you wore right
of service to it. The community in whon you told me Inst night tlmt there
which tlio prevailing sentiment is ‘ ‘ Wlmt wore burglars bi the house. ’
do I get-out of it I” is one which does “Why)’
not and cunnqt prosper. I “Because, all tlio money tlmt was in ]
0 I my pockets when I went to bod is gone.' ’
An interesting tnlo of tlm extrnordl- ‘ 1 Well, if you’d boon brave and got
nary friendship existing between a gun- up and shot the wretch you’d have hud
dor and a blind ox on a farm near your money' this morning.”
Greensboro, Ain., is related by tho owhor. “PoBsilily—but then I should Imve
Ench day, a stately guilder with his boon a widower,
breast full of sympathy and his head | Sho guvo'him bock half ids money
full of- responsibility lends an undent
and totally blind ox to a nearby pond I Frederick wns sitting on the curb,
for water. The gander, walking juBt in I crying, when Billy came along nml asked
front of the ox, hisBcs and quacks now him wlmt. was tho matter,
and then in order that he muy bo fol- “OH, I feel so bad ’cause Major's
lowed by the sightless nnimai, and yylien ‘lead—fny nico old collie!” sobbed Fred-
tho pond is reached tho gander stands I orick.
guard while his protege drinks his fill. “NonsenseI” snid Billy. “My grnnil-
Frequently other cows try to attnek the I mother’s been dead a week, and you |
blind animal, when tho gander (lies nt don’t catch me crying.’’
them, biting nnd flapping his wings till Frederick, looking up ut Billy, sob-
ho puts them to rout. When tho xo bed - despairingly:'
has finished drinking the ganger leadB “Yes, but you dldn’a rniso your
him back to tho field. [ grandmother-' from a pup. ’
Their Medicine Chest For 20 Years
and docs moro Gnvu nny lwstlvo o;i U.o
murkob loony; Tao lUoimamJa of letters
from uuorb luiva convinced wo I wasi Hunt,
T is characteristic of
Colkn of Lor they pnsn tho allotted
‘•three nooro years and tun," lo lock
hook over tho days thul aro no:io
nnd thoushifully llvo them over.
. find myself, at oovonty-one, frequency
drifting hack nrfuarior ,r!u !'
I
, 1 too myself in I ho UUlo. draff boro Iowncd
nt Bolivar, Mo., making anil toLluff a
vegetable compound to my friends and
nustonirriHbwkr.t wns then knows only li
Dr. Lowlr Tlodlclzo for Uomaob, LlTir
end Bowel Complaints.
bsoauo convinced Cut their fJoIn fauR
was not that they dlitnet net on tho bowoln,
but that tliolr notion wns too violent and
droztio, uml npoot tho ryr.Wni of tlio usori
which woo duo to tho fact that they wero
not thorough enough in tholr action, soir.o
simply noting on tlio armor or cniaU intrx-
tlncs, while others would net only on the
lower or largo Intoitinos, rnd tfist they
almost invariably prodnood a habit re
quiring augmented doses.
I believed that a preparation to produce
the hoet effect must fir-t tout) tho liver,
thon act on tlio stomach and entire alimen
tary syntem. If this was oooompllshed, tho
medicine would,,(produce a mild, but
thorough elimination of the waetowithout
tho usual sickening sonsntlocc, and mako
the user feel hotter ut once.
After'^experimenting with hundreds of
different compounds, I at last perfected the
formula that Is now known as Nslare's
ly, which I truly believe goes further
and that thousor of tlslurs'e Hemrdy as a
family medicine, oven though ho may liavo
used it for l.vcnty-Hvo years, never baa
to increase tho dooo.
fwjtcffcjKthesA i "O to have greatlaUh in
flaine'e RuiBt’y from tho very trut
And cowr.s I Cad cyrelf nearing tho ago
v.hc-.lXr.'.n.', howto Uo Inevitable and in
to naoth rr Kfo.wy i-r-bcrt pleasure Is to
clt cac’.i i.-.y and roed (.10 Ictfqrsi t.iat eacli
nail brb't from peoplo AO Old or older
than J, v. no te’.l of having need ffstors’o
ker.rfy f:r ten, U'toon and
nnd hri7 t.:cy and t.:cir children ianil
grandcLilldrcn havo been benoatted by It.
It is a consoling thought, my frienda, for
a man at ry ago to leci that aildo from
his own success, onoGirS dc-no something
for his follow, man.' f ly greatest rutlsfac
tion, uiy greatest happiness today, is tho
knowlodgo that tonight raoro than one
million people will take a Hstar*’* MimCv
(NR Tablet) and wlllho bettor, healthier,
happier people foF it, I liopo you will
jio i no of thum.
A. H. LEWIS medioine cor,
8t. Louis. Mo.
COWETA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY.
Griffin ..
Columbus
Chattanooj
Raymond
Carrollton
Cedartown
. . 6.45 a. m.
.. . 9.40 a. m.
6.25 p. m.
a . 1.00 p. m.
. . 4.48 p. m.
• ■ . 5.22 p. m.
.. 11.18 a. m.
6.52 p. m.
DEPART FOB
1.00 p. m.
•. . 8.25 a. m.
5.22 p. m.
:a 11.18 a. m,
•. . 4,48 p. m.
. . 5.25 p. m.
■ . 6.52 p. m.
How many of you who road those
columns ovory week realizo. how much
this newspaper is a part of your town 1
If a town were to chock up its assets, | mo ' w * tl1 l *“"ws. ”
nl.inff* n A. 1. 1.1 1 tA I * * IlftW (lifl Vrtll
“Was your wife angry when you |
[ came homo last night? ” 1 .
“Not on your life! Sho overwhelmed ]
How did you got that black eye,
then?”
‘.‘Well, she forgot to tako tho flowers |
out of tho vase before she threw thum. ’ ‘
COURT CALENDAR.
, n Coweta Circuit.
Gjn.Raodor Terrell, Judge; Solicitor-
,. , • L. E. Hoop.
Piarv o e l h « r —Third Mondays in.Feb-
ry a nd August
* , ’d r Juiy~ Fourth Monda y» in January
L C, *X Court of Ncwnan.
Ricltor P ° 8t * Jnd E®I W. L. Stallings,
l» < jSi l nS!!!?' term meets, third Monday*
** uar y, April, July and October.
chief among them would be its news
paper. It is the one common possession.
No matter who owns tho stock of the
company, that publishes it, or who sits
in tho editorial chair, the newspaper be
longs to tho people. -Wljot, can a news
paper do for a - town? It can do more
than any one agency to insure unity
of purpose and advancement for the
town. "With it in thriving condition
ovory industrial, social and mornl move
ment is assured o£ effective leadership.
Minus a newspaper a town is siiont and
dead—for silence; however golden, is
lifeless—Henry County Weekly.
“I’ve hit upon a great scheme,” said
the editor of a small ioeni paper. “I
nearly doubled our circulation last I
week. ’ ’
“How’d you work it!”
“See that steel stamp? Well, I just
cut out a paragraph in -the society col
umn of the whole edition,”
“How’d that help the circulationVJ
“Why, eyery woman in town bought
an extra copy to see wlmt had boon
cut out.”—Fort Worth Star-Tologram.
A good old friend of ours groped his
way into the office yesterday, planked
himself down in our best chair, and
stared fixedly and monrnfully into space
for half an hour, then shoved his fist
into his pocket, drew out a sliining dol
lar, reverently kissed it, handed it to
us with averted eyes, dashed away the
blin ‘ lly trom the and mice—that’s HAT-SNAP, the old
Hnop. rjow lie only owes us for two I reliable rodent destroyer. Conner in
years.—Orwday (Col.) New Era. 1 oaken—no rn-lr.inj^ with other food.
TilTO-N&GHT-
k _ ^ Tomorrow Alright
Cot a 25>’ Box
Side and Back Hurt this building ms tor itsem
Jordan Stines, Va.—"I am making
this statement for the benefit of any
one sufforlng a* I
did. I 'had pain
ln ray side nnd
could scarcely eat
anything. My
back hurt all the
time and I was
very nervous. No
medicine did me
any good until I
took Dr, Pierce’s
1 Golden Medical
_ ,JDiscovery and bis
Favorite Prescription, together with
the Pleasant Pellets. After taking
four bottles of each I could be up all
day.”—MRS. SARAH R. TERRY.
All druggists, or seml i 10c to Dr.
Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel lu Buffalo,
N. Y„ for a trial package of toy ol
'ils remedies.
IN GARAGE RENT SAVED
RATS
“I wish,” said Trippo,
Who had the grippe—
“I wish ter Gawd I knowed
Some way to dpse
My doggone nose,
Or make the tiling, stay Mowed. ”
—Cothbert Liberal.
Your money back If It falls,
XV. slxe M cake) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Collar. /
OSe, mlzc (2 cokes) for Ghlokefl House,
coops, or small buildings.
$1.25 size <B rakes) enough for all
farm and out-buHdlngs, storage bullil-
Inga. or factory buildings.
| Sold and Guaranteed by
LEE-KING DRUG COIII'AW.
1 COWETA DRUG A BOOK COMPANY.
DO YOU realize how much garage rente—
constantly increasing—add to the "over,
head” in keeping a car? -
See US for FREE working plans and ac
curate cost estimates for this and other
moderate priced garages.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.
Newnan, Georgia.