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Thursday Afternoon.
The News-Herald.
l'wice a Week
Mfltci I Organ Gwinnett County.
sssi -r— * - ■■■—— "" "" - - •
$. a Year in Advance.
r-ar— — -
.awrcnccvlll* Publishing Co., Proprietor*.
=t! *—*= —
Entered a- »econrt*elft»s matter July 7
I9DH, sir tu • > >sf. >H-s ti Ijitwroii cevl le. G«t,
under thn Act of Mmvh S. IK7P.
c.:m. morcock,
Lessee! and Publisher.
SCOTT’S
EMULSION
is the only emulsion imi
tated. The reason is plain —
it’s the best. Insist upon
having Scott*s —it’s .the
world’s standard flesh and
strength builder.
ALL DRUGGISTS
Senator Aldrich is evidently a
little tirtd of the came, “Who s
got the spot light?”
Newfoundland would like to
trade overcoats with some of the
southern states for straw hats.
It begins to look as if there were
really some foundation for the
news of King Menelik’s demise.
That strange silence you heard
in Washington was the woman
suffragists and the D. A. R. not
in ssssion.
Miss Democracy has been a wall
flower so long, it is hoped this
' sudden popularity will n >t turn
her head.
Not only is the backbone of
winter broken, but we are also
suffering from a serious disloca
tion of spring.
In the 9ad straits into which the
republican party has fallen, the
only hope of rescue appears to be
in the African hunter.
In his ambition to be re-elected,
Governor Patterson, of Tennessee,
has the undivided support of the
Coopers, father and son.
You can't expect the senate to
get excited over the railroad bill
when there is a baseball game go
ing on in the same town.
'Old Joe Cannon must know he
is slated for the ax, ebe he would
not be so daring in his attacks
upon insurgents, all and singular.
An Indiana novelist’s father has
taken to literature. Indiana may
add to its achievements by show
ing that heredity works both ways.
No use trying to get the census
man to tell you all about your
neighbors’s business, however.
That is not a part of the game, at
all.
Napoleon’s tomb and the Sor
boune have, in the opinion of
many, succeeded in adding new
luster to glories that seemed un
surpassable.
The craze spreads. The gover
nor of Tennessee has pardoned
several murderers, and now the
governor of Minnesota has even
pardoned a poet.
“Pardon me, "governor,” began
the interviewer, “I ” “Cer
tainly, certainly, replied the
Tennessee executive, reaching for
a blank, “What are you guilty
of?”
rev.j. h.McConnell.
In this issue of the News-Her
ald appears the announcement of
Rev. J. P. McConnell for re-elec
tion to the legislature.
Mr. MeCouuell has had one
term in the house and is asking
that he be returned, as has been
the custom heretofore. He is
standing on the record which he
made as a representative.
I his card Mr. McConnell says
he did not vote for the dog law
and promises to use his influence
to secure its repeal.
Mr. McConnell informs" us that
later his platform will be given
to the public through the news
papers.
"AND VE VISITED ME."
“Men, wo have hern coming
here every Sunday morning for
five years to hold services, and I
want to tell you we don t do it
or our benefit, but tor yours.
“We have found a great Friend,
and we want to tell about Him.
Now we’re going to sing some of
the old songs, and I want to tell
you if you want to be happy and
forget your troubles, jnat join
right in. If there’s any song you
want sung, just snout it right out.
Now, out of respect for this ser
vice, I’m going to ask you to re
move your hats and stop smoking.
Thank you, boys, thank you!”
What they had done to deserve
thanks was not immediately ap
parent; for if any one removed
his hat, the fact was not visible
through the bars of the prison
cells,and a little volley of derisive
applause was the only response to
the appeal. Yet as he marehed
back and forth in front of the
cells, one by one the hats came
off, the smoking nearly ceased and
sileuce settled on the corridor.
It was in the central police sta
tion of one of the great cities, and
the service was such as has been
held there by an unpaid layman
every Sunday morning fora period
of years.
Sometimes he was insulted;
once he was spat upon; but the
men who insulted him were usually
ashamed before the service was
over, aud the man who spat upon
him sent for him the next morn
ing, and with tears asked his for
giveness.
“It was a straight-arm, parry
and-thrust sort of sermon ” said
a visitor, “with such oratory as a
man achieves after five years of
haranguing a brick wall. But it
landed. It was about ‘my Friend
and your friend,’ who had taken
the speaker «ut of the gutter, and
was able to save even unto the
police station.”
When the short sermon ended,
and the leader asked the men to
pray with him, every man of the
sixteen in the cells went down on
his knees, and th'e prayer was
heard in perfect silence, broken
oply by an occasional sob.
Then the short service was re
peated in the corridor where the
“drunks” were assembled. They
were a wild lot; but the organ
started a well-known hymn, ar.d
although there was too much re
sponse from some of the cells, the
service calmed dowp and grew
tender, and at length brought
every man to his knees, except
one who was too drunk to kneel.
Then they moved upstairs, where
twenty-seven young girls were con
fined, all of them for the first
time. It was a sad service, but it
brought hope to more than one
S£ CURES
MALARIA
Malaria is a species of blood poverty known as anae-l
mia. It is a condition in which the circulation is so
weak and impure that it is unable to supply the system
with sufficient nourishment and strength to preserve
ordinary liealth.
The medical profession is divided in opinion as
to the manner in which malarial poison gets into the
blood. Some take the position that it is an atmospheric
poison, the specific gergis of which are breathed into the
lungs and thus transmitted to the circulation. Others
advance theopinion that persons become inoculated with
the poison through the bites of mosquitos. All however
agree that MALARIA is a blood affection, and any treat
ment to successfully overcome it must not only purify
this vital fluid, but at the same time add the necessary
qualities of richness and strength to the circulation.
The malarial poison destroys large numbers of the rich, red corpuscles
of the circulation, and the peculiar paleness of anaemic persons is due to this
A PHYSICAL WRECK.
Daring 1900 I was running a
farm on th« Mississippi River,
and became so impregnated with
malaria that far a year afterwards
I was a physical wreck. I took a
number of medicines recommend
ed as blood purifiers, chill oures
and malaria eradicators, but noth
ing did me any good until I began
to use 8.5.8., which I did about a
year age. The reeult was that
after taking several bottles of the
large siee I was as well and strong
as lever wae, and have never had
a chill since. I expect to take
5.6.5. every year as a preventive,
and weald advise everybody else
to follow my example.
8. R. COWLEY,
Amorr, Mies.
the ca9e. We will send free our book on the blood and at the same time our
physicians will give you some medical advice that will be of great service to
you in curing yourself with S. S. S. No charge for the book or advice.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, 3 A.
despairing young woman
“I came away,” Baid the visitor,
“thanking God for a religion that
is as good in the prison as in the
cathedral, and which can tell its
story in plaiu, simple words ;hat
go to the heart in its sin and need.
“In the presence of what I had
seen, theological discussions grew
petty. Why should men ask
whether mighty works were done
in the cities of old when these
mightier works are done in the
midst of us? And why should
scholars stand and shout that they
failed to find God in a test-tube
when these men are finding Him
in the depths of their need?”—
Youth’s Companion.
A St. Louis alderman complains
bitterly that somebody tried to
bribe him with SSO. Evidently
they are not all as cheap as the
Pittsburg variety.
Major Hemphill is said to be
engaged in an effort to convince
Atlanta that she is not the only
city on the map. If he succeeds
he should receive the champion
ship belt as the greatest American
educator.
MADE
WELLAND
STRONG
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Jefferson, lowa. — “When my baby
- . was j ust two months
AKafewtai old I was com
ruwit' r> 1 eto 1 v run down
, and my internal or
•" 7; pms were in terri
'Qbs ble shape. I began
Lydia E.
\ T‘ .: Pinkham’s Vegeta
; \ / ble Compound, and
j • - mother wrote and
j told you just how I
was. I began to gain
/ / if ''if, at once and now I
1 ! . ’ --lorn real well.”
IJrs. W. 11. Bithger, 700 Cherry St.,
Jefferson, lowa.
Another Woman Cured.
Glemvood, lowa. “ About three
years ago I had falling and other fe
male troubles, and 1 was nothing but
sldn and bones. I was so sick I could
not do my own work. Within six
months I was made sound and well by
Lydia E. Pinkkam’s Vegetable Com
pound. I will always tell my friend :
that your remc dies cured mo, and you
can publish my letter.”—Mrs. C. W.
Drxx, Glemvood, lowa.
If you belong to that countless army
of women who suffer from some form
of female ills, just try Lydia E. Pink
hanfs Vegetable Compound.
For thirty years this famous remedy
has been the standard for all forms of
female ills, and has cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
such ailments as displacements, fibroid
tumors, ulceration, inflammation, ir
regularities, backache, etc.
If you want special advice write
for it to Mrs. Pinkhani, Lynn,Mass.
It is free and always helpful.
How some people do like M.ner
tise the few virtues they possess!
fact. In the first stages of Malaria there
is a bilious condition of the system,
constant bodily weakness, poor appe
tite, and a “ no account, ” tired feeling.
S. S. S. searches out and destroys
every particle of malarial infection and
builds the blood up to a healthy, nour
ishing condition. Then the system re
ceives its required nutriment, the bright
red corpuscles begin to multiply in the
circulation, sallow complexions grow
ruddy and flushed with health, the liver
and digestion are righted, the appetite
improved, aud the system vitalized and
refreshed in every way. S.S.B. is a safe
and pleasant remedy as well as an effi
cient one. If you have Malaria we wull
be glad to have you write us describing
THR NFWS-HFRALD.
A Good Example
"I am a good example,” writes Mrx. R.'LT'Bell, of
McAlester, Okla., "of what Cardui will de for suffering
women.
“I suffered with my head and back, ftx vror eix years,
and although I tried everything, I never could get any
thing t® do me any good, until I began to take Cardui.
“Cardui has surely helped me and bu/k me up and 1
am so thankful that 1 have found something that will do
me good. I fed so much stronger and better than I have
in a long time.”
It is well to make up your mind before you are sick
what medicine you wiil take when you are sick.
CARDUI
The Womans Tonic
You will be glad to take it when you are tired, mis
erable and when life seems a weary grind. It will put
new thoughts into your head, fresh courage into your mind.
If not sick now, at least burn Cardui on to the pages
of your memory, so that when you are sick you will ask
for it without thinking.
If sick or weak, get a bottle today. At all druggists.
Write to: Ladle*’ Advisory Dept. Chattanoo*a Medlcin* Chattonnoo**, Tena,
(or Special hutructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women," sent free.
Coffee! Coffee! Coffee!
Diamond A 20c Old* Reliable 25c Sledge B '" ls 15c
Diamond B 25c Moca & Java 35c Arbuckles
Green Coffee 15c Luzianne
Sboop’s Health Coffee
„ Chocolates
Postum
\
Cereals * and Cocoas
AT
R. L. Robinson’s
G. B. CLACK,
General Merchandise.
I am located in the E. S. Brooks store, next door to the
Cornett hotel, and I cordially solicit the patronage of every
body. I carry in stock a nice line of
MEN’S and BOY’S CLOTHING, HATS, SHOES,
SKIRTS and UNDERWEAR.
A nice line of Dry Goods & Notions.
A nice fresh line of Fancy and Heavy Groceries, a full
line of Feed Stuff, Grain, Hay, Seed Oats, all kinds, which
1 will sell as cheap as possible.
Yours to please,
G. B. Clack.
Special Summer Rates
Write for full information TODAY. Big new catalogue
free by mail. 37 colleges in 16 states; SIOO,OOO in equip
ment; model office department; actual businsss training; earn
t
while you learn; positions guaranteed; expert specialists; in
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postal card and write me TODAY.
Arthur C. Minter, General Manager,
DRAUGHON’S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE,
Atlanta, Macon, Montgomery, Knoxville, Greenville, S. C.
Send Us Your Job Work
LOW ROUND TRIP RATES
VIA ,
Southern Railway
FROM ATLANTA
WASHINGTON, D. C„ $23.25
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Tickets on sale May Bth, 9th and
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29th. *
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Atlanta, Ga.
S EABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
SOUTHBOUND.
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XXKJANVILLE BRANCN
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Libel for Divorce.
Georgia, Gwinnett County: W. A. GoDer
vs. Mary E. Gober. Complaint for
divorce. To Mary E. Gober, Greeting:
You are hereby required to be and appear
at the June term, 1910,0 f Gwinnett Superior
Court to answer to petitioner’s complaint,
witness the Honorable C. H. Brand, judge
of said court. This April 6, 1910.
R. N. HOr/T. C. S. C..
Gwinnett Co., Ga.
TheSimpleLife
ha* for Its basis PERFECT HEALTH.
The clear brain, tho healthy stomach, the
bodily organiPfcxercising in harmony, arc
the first essentials of a Simple Life —
A LIFE OF PEACE ANB SATISFACTION.
No one can know the pure delight of
simple living whose nervous system is
kept in a state of tension by Constipa
tion, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness
and other diseases due to inaction of the
liver.
The Simple Way to seek the Simple
Life ia to seek the remedy for these con
ditions, This remedy has been found in
our great product—
ST. JOSEPH’S
Liverßegulaf or
• (In Both Liquid and Powder Form.)
» * .
It has made life brighter and happiness
and peace possible when all was dark
and distressed. It reaches the centers of
life and purifies them. It encourages the
liver, stomach and bowels to a freer and
more natural activity.
It is the Simple Way to a Simple Life
of Health, Peace, Contentment.
Many persons attest this fact who have
realized its truth by actual experience.
St. Joseph’s Liquid Liver Regulator
is prompt in action, exceedingly palatable
ana pleasant to the taste. It is sold by drug
gists aud dealers at 50 cents a bottle.
St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator in pow
der form is put up in tight tin boxes and re
tails at 25 cents a box, five boxes for a dollar.
It may be taken dry or made into a tea or
bitters. Full directions accompany every
bottle and box.
L Gerstle Medicine Co.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
FOLEYSHON)cY™T4R
stops the and heals lun|g
MAY 12 1910