Newspaper Page Text
rCBtisiritn wheklt ev*hv SATi'itOAY by
J. A. 'WELCH.
. r WOOTTKN,
AVOOTTEN& WELCH,
Pr opr ietors.
J.
c . WOOTTEN, * Editor.
terms of subscription •
On. copy om ?“ r : p*^ le ~ m ad ” n "’ $r '-“
fODT SIX months.... -
THE NEWNAN HERALD.
t |e Hciunan JJhA
J. A. WELCH,
- Publisher.
% Wall# la politics, SktMte* Couvwem, if.
One copj si— (
One copy three moa hs, ..
...1 00
A ®^awbei b *o»^ the" Volnme!)
Sinr ysTihs*
I .\>[ now offering at my old stand on Green
ville «trcct, a new ai»d 'well selected stock of
DRY GOODS, &.C.,
Consisting of
Calicoes. Worsteds, DeLnincs,
lied. It hire and Opera Flannels,
Carton <*.ud Salsbury . do
■Fen* uckv and N. Carolina Jeans,
\W«nen, Satinets, Jeans, Linscys
Pleached and Brown Shirtings, licking,
Iri4 Linens, Swiss and Jackonet Muslins,
Berates Ladies’ and Misses’ Skirts,
Ladies and Gents’ Handkerchiefs, Hosery
and Gloves,
Men and Boys’ Boots and Shoes,
Ladies, Misses find Childrens bhoesj
Hats and Caps,
Crockery and Glass M arc.
Painted and Cedar Water Buckets,
Weil Buckets, Tubs and Brooms,
Saddles, Snap and Blind Bridles,
Wagon and Buggy Collars,
Buggy Whips and Haines,
Umbrellas, Patent Cloth,
" Table and Pocket Cutlery,
And Irons ana Sad Irons,
Sausage Grinders,
Hooks and Hinges, Screws and Butts,
U.iiree Mills, Hives, Cotton Cards;
Pad Locks, Giles, Nails,
Collin’s Axes, Spades and HhdVcIs,
Blue Stone, Copperas, Indigo, Madder,
Spice, Pepper, Ginger.
Soda, Starch, Epsom Salts,
Maccoboy Snufr, Table Salt,
Cheese, Sugar, Syrup, Tobacco,
Powder, Gun C ips And Tubc3,
Cotton Yarns, and a great many Notions
anil 0 n„. r things too tedious to mention.
Spelling Books, Almanacks for 1807,
Paper. Tnk, Gillott's Steel Pens,
Cedar Pencils, Envelopes, kc.
\U of which will he sold low for CASH
&ml CASH UN L\.
Buy ami Sell Country Produce.
Receive and Sell any Goods on
Consignment.
Thankful to nil my old friends and custom
er* i',,r pint favors, ami hope to see them in
fljain, and receive a liberal patronage from all.
finch Corner Opposite H. J. Sargent’s,
Greenville Street, Newnan, Qa.
j. T. KIRBY.
R. L. HUNTER, Salesman,
Formerly with Johnson k Garrett.
November 10-12in
Dr. J. L. Mason & Co.’s
Great American
HOG CHOLERA CURE AND
PREVENTIVE.
VOL. Il.j NEWMAN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, NOV. 24, 1S6<3. [NO. 12.
Bates of Advertising.
Advertisements inserted nt $1.50 per squar*
(often lines or space equivalent,) for first inser
tion. and’75 cents for each subsequent in
sertion.
Mcfntbly or semf-tnpnthily advertisements
inserted at the same rafei as for new advertise
ments. each insertion.
Liberal arrongemC^IS < v?iil be made with
| those advertising by the (fn alter or year.
All transient advertismeati radst be paid
for when handed in.
' The money for advert iscing dee after the
first insertion.
W. B. W. DENT*
Cirocer and Commission
MEH.OH ANT,
West Side Greenville-St. Newnan, Sa.
SALT, SALT.
QCY SACKS Liverpool Salt, for sale bv
OU W B W DENT.
MACKEREL.
F)f\ KITS No. 1 Mackerel, fresh, for sale bv
W B W DENT.
SUGAR.
1 K BflLS. Sugar; (Yellow, ABC and Pow-
JL O acred), for sale by
W B W DENT:
(From the Louisville Courier !
The Rabbit on the Wall. , . . ,,
. ,.* j Ilie “setting of tne
The following, picture, drawn in beautiful as comoared with com
>sing U done by males.} The Pacific Railroad—Progress on the D. T. Banddll. W. B. Warren, fPnRRl/1 DAII RAAff
from $8 to $12 per week, j Sierra Nevada Slopes. Louisville. Kv. Louisville. Ky. j ILUnUln nAIL ntfnU*
ie tvpe is a simple process, i ir ’ —
- 1 • " ' . *•—- ~ ~ r. — * -«• ~ 1 E. W. COLE, Superintendent.
COFFEE.
G OOD lot Rio (all grades) just received
and for sale by W B \\ DENT.
CHEESE.
STATE, fresh, for sale by
W B W DENT.
N» Y. __
SYRUP.
QTEWART S Refined, for sale by
W B VV DENT.
Flour.
1 r\ BBLS. Favorita—10 Sacks R Y Brown’s
A U best, for sale by
W B W DENT.
c
CORN.
1HOICE Bread Gbriv, for sale
W B W DENT.
CROCKERY AND GLASS WARE.
A LL styles, large lot, for sale by
W B W DENT.
ARROW TIES.
' OT Arrow Ties for Cotton, 5(3 pcf Ceht.
j cheaper than rope, for sale by
\V B W DENT.
the Opo. The dressing
ilie best hands earn
The “ setting ” of the type Ls a simple process. , ,
as compared with compuaitition for newspapers j A Boston paper says : • Thoug.i t.iere is a
colors bv one who handles the ‘-pencil ofBo&te” or books. The letters are “ set up ” in bulk, heavier force of men and teams at work on
with a nvister hand will conhire nu.rr than : alphabetically, aiid not token from boxes, as the California end of the I anfic Railroad than
ltL a m.ister hand, will conjure up more than w *^ n - n ^ le 0 f compositors. The busi- on tins, the progress in distance is far slower;
one bnght memory of childhood s satiny hours ne& . is learned. for while here the distance lies along the abso-
in “ hearts aned with rare that heats lieneath
in “ hearts aged with care that heats beneath
locks whitened with the frosts of time. ’ ’ Who,
while reading it, cannot see the happy group,
feel like joining in the shouts of the delighted
little ones, and hissing, chirping, crowing
“Johnny ?”
The cottage work is over.
The evening meal is done :
Hark ! through the starlight stillness
You hear the river run.
Elite little children whisper,
Then speak out one and all :
Come, father, make for Johnny,
The rabbit on the wall.
He smilingly assenting,
They gather round his chair ;
“ Now, grandma, you hold Johnny—
Don’t let the candle flare.”
So speaking, from his fingers
He threw a shadow tall,
That seems, the moment after,
A rabbit on the wall.
Tlic children shout with laughter,
The uproar louder grows ;
Even grandma chuckles faintly;
And Johnny chirps and crows.
There ne’er was gilded paiuting,
Hung up in lordly hall,
Gave half the simple pleasure,
Of this rabbit on the wall.
book-bixdino, etc.
In tlib various departments connected with
this Vusifies^. a large number of girls find em
ployment. While the binding of books
lute plain, there it is up and over the grand
Sierra Nevada chain of mountains. About
12,000 Chinamen are at work on the road-bed
in California, and an additional 10.000 have
lillllllS SEWI
m im bay.
Quick Salesand Small Profits.
Dlovment. While the I'lnaing ot doors is ~ ’ . . . . „ . ,.
malnlv the province of Hie men: the folding,; be « contracted for to be put upon the I.ne
gathering, pasting ntnl stitching is the work ot ; "? st s P rin ?i " lie " ,hc contractors will be gr.i-
women &>me of the large publishing houses ding this slope of the terras and beginning
iplovment for fifty, and at busy sea- to stretch their labor out on the plains and
Here
the place to save 10
per cent.
Wages
f imish employment _ ...
sms for a hundred or n'.oivcirL each,
average S6 per week.
Ar.TiFiuciAt-nurr.
A limited number of women find employment from
at this tasteful branch of industry. Duly those
into the valleys of the Nevada. Now the
track is completed to within sixteen miles of
the summit of the mountains, and the follow- j
! ing table of statistics, distances and altitude-. •
inient r—^■ .... I ......I f t
B
I
200
BAGGING AND ROPE.
AGOING and Rope for sale by
W B W DENT.
IRON.
RON, Swedes and English, for sale by
W B DENT.
HOLLOW WARE.
PIECES Hoilow Ware* all sizes, for
sale by W B W DENT.
HARD WARE.
rpRACE Chains, Shovels, Spades, Fry Pans,
X etc., for sale by
W B W DENT.
P ROMPTED by a desire to benefit our coun-
trv, and also to establish an important
fuel in science, we have concluded to offer to
the pbllc the above named remedies for the
rare uiirf prevention of Hog Cholera, Medical
gentlemen of skill and experience began a se
ries of examinations when the cholera first
began in this country j after having performed
numerous post mortem examinations upon the
limlies of hogs which had died of cholera,
and after great research and investigation to
determine the nature of the disease, led by
the lights arising therefrom; they undertook
Qie cure of tiie complaint by various remedies.
They found several articles beneficial, but
success was not fully attained to until the
above named medicine was compounded. The
medicine was not sought out for the purpose
<of gale, but the great success attending its
use has induced them to form a company and
obtain a Patent. I\ e oiler it as being, under
the accompanying directions, fully capable of
arresting any epidemic of hog cholera, and
prompt in giving relief when properly admin
istered. \Ye confidently believe that the rem
edy is a specific; yet wc do not recommend it
us infallihle in all cases, though wc have ueyer
known it to fail, either as a cure or preventixe
ngainst the further spread of the disease when
used agreeably to the directions, notwith
standing those free from the disease have been
kept in close proximity with those diseased.
It is a great Tonic, and will successfully
rcutovc Mango, Sore Head and 5 ermlu, either
of which will affect the health of the hog, and
slop his growth and development. Nothing
will make hogs so thrifty as this remedy. Wc
ofler no patent remedy for the cure of man,
but we think that the public will esteem us as
benefactor? when they consider that wc lmVe*
tor rears, been investigating the diseases of
domestic animals, which form not only a part
of the wealth of the country, but afford ?us-
tonance to man. Allow us to add that hog
cholera is but a mild disease when taken in
its early stages with this remedy, which will
also remove w6rm3 from the bowels, and if
„ - month bv the directions,
-..ministered once » —- -
"ill forever prevent any Injuries from the J -
rhSpiralis, Which produce such alarming
symptoms iu persons who eat trichlnous P l, r .
Thousands of applications hate been made to
the Patent Office Department of the Unttea
States, in behalf of remedies to cure liog
Cholera, but we, alone, have been able to pre-
< up the unquestionable testimony neces^arx
; i procure the Patent now in our possession,
securing to us the right to compound and sell
this invaluable remedy.
Dr. 11. Marshall is having these remedies
prepared under his own supervision.
J. L. MASON k CO.
X. B.—All orders addressed to Dr. J. L. Ma
son & Co., Atlanta. Ga., will receive prompt
attention. OjSce — at Dr. Redwine’s Drug
Store, corner Alabama and W bitehall Streets.
WOODEN WARE.
B UCKETS, Tubs, etc., for sale by
W B W DENT.
COPPERAS AND MADDER.
C tOlTERAS and Madder for sale by
; W B W DENT.
TOBACCO.
rpOBACCO; Chexving and Smoking^foresale
by
W B W DENT.
CASH, CASlt.
TT t K SEL L for Cash or not at all.
W B W DENT.
BjS.86415
The undersigned, having entered into a per
marnnt business at the South-east corner of
the Public Square, invites the attention of the
public to an examination of bis stock before
buying elsewhere, as cheap bargains will be
given for CASH ONLY"—(no exceptions,)
He xrill keep constantly on hand a supply of
the following articles:
Sugar, Snuff,
Coffee, Tobacco;
Flour, Coperas;
Salt, Indigo;
Bacon; Madder;
Lard; Hardware,
Meal, Shoes,
Soda, Hats,
Pepper, Homespuns,
Vinegar, Books,
Candles, Stationery
Soap, Cutlery,
Worm Candy, kc., kc.,
Besides many articles usually kept iu the Dry
Goods line.
ESrfhe highest market price paid for
Drieff Fruit. W. 0. PERRY.
The Working Women of New York.
THE FUR BUSINESS.
Work upon furs, in the x-arious uses to
which they are devoted in this city, employs
from 1,200 to 1,500 women and girls. Among
the articles manufactured are collars, capes,
muffs, gloves, caps, mantillas, sleigh robes, etc.
'The vatious departments of this trade are sexv-
ing, finishing, quilting, and lining. Those who
devote all their time to the business earn from $5
to $10 a week, and some fexv exceed the latter.
A very fexv women, by long acquaintance with
the trade, have learned to cut turs—a branch
of the art usually monopolized by males. The
amount of liahd-labor upon a fur mantilla or
cloak, for instance, employs a girl from four
to five days, and all this time without reference
to the work upon the lining, which is often a
distinct branch of the business.
drugs AnU UA'rtM Medicins.
In connection with pilis, sirups, and medi
cines generally, women find much to do. Prob
ably not less than 1,500 to 2,000 girls are em
ployed in the various drug and patent medicine
establishments of the city. Girls are generally
paid by the gross—according to the character
of the work, and the price of the article made.
An active girl can earn from $0 to $7 per
week. Some who become overseers after years
of experience, of fcoutse get better wages, rang
ing from $8 to $12. The heavier portions of
the work connected with this business is done l>y
men. Pills, oitments, and bottled medicines
are matle in large quantities. Pills are made
in masses, rolled out and cut by machinery,
and then placed in some proper place'for drying
when the girls take them and put them in
small boxes. ’The bottled medicines are made
in casks of from 75 to 100 gallons. After stand
ing for a proper period, the liquor is drawn off
and put in bottles, when the girls take them
and label them, wrap them up, and affix to
each the proprietor}- stomps. Plasters are
placed by the girls in boxes, and stamps affixed
according to price.
dABfl-MAKIXG.
Tlie business of card-making is very much
diversified. Cards for the use of printers, how
ever, are the most sought after and of course
require the largest numlxer of employees.—
These are of a clear surface, and mainly xvliite
Fancy cards, playing cards, and amusement
cards, generally, constitute a separate business.
Girls usually work by the piece, and earn from
$6 to $8 pet week. Probably 500 persons com
prise the entire force employed in this city.
who excel succeed in receiving anything like
permanent employment: but wages are good,
f om $8 to $9 per week being paid.
artificial flowers.
This business, like that of bonnet frames, is
subject to extraordinary elevations and depres
sions. The trade, a few years since, was almost
exclusively foreign, but ex'ta l*fins is not able
to meet the demands of our home market;
large establishments exist in our city where
girls get good wages, ranging from $8 to $12
per week, according to capacity.
SHIRT-MAKERS.
Tills trade, in extent, falls below fexv others.
Machines have interfered xxith fingers, but still
fingers find x-ery much to do. Y\ Idle much of
the xvork is done in manufactories, a large }>or-
tion of the city trade is supplied from private
hands. AVomen take the xx’ork cut out tor
them to their homes, not by the dozen only,
but l>y the gross. Wages vary from $8 to $10
a week.
TAPER-BOX MAI'ERR-.
This is a light business, and easily acquired,
and gives employment to probably 2.000 girls,
at the rate of from five to sex'cn dollars per
week.
acramento on to the summit, shoxv
hoxv the iron pathway is mounting the great
hills of the Pacific slopes of the continent.—
At Cisco, which the completed road has now
reached, the locomotive screaxss on a spot as
j high as Mount Washington, the highest of our
j New England mountains:
DistAXCE. Elevation.
ilHAAS 5 OLD STAND,
1
j= s ®t
Sricrahiento
— miles....
.... 54 feet
Arcade
71
i 4
.... 7G 4i
Antelope
15
iC
.... ISO “
Junction.;....:.:
18
it
.... 189 “
9*2
u
.... 269 “
25
tl
.... 420 “
Newcastle
31
It
.... 980 “
Auburn
.... 36
li
.... 1.3S5 “
Clipper Gap
42
it
....1,785 “
Colfax
62
it
2,443 ,l
Gold Run
6LV
u
3.245 “
Dutch Flat
67
It
2,425 “
Alta
69
It
...;:3;62r> “
Cisco
93
tl ••
.:.;;5,911 “
Summit
105}
i(
7;042 11
J. HOLLIS,
Salesman.
Leave Augusta... ,'.„.7.o0 A.
Leave Atlanta 8.95 A. M.
Arrive at Angnsja 5320 P. M.
Arrive at Atlanta 6.00 P. M;
NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta ........12.30 A- M.
Leave Atlanta 8.00 I’. M.
Arrive at Augusta 0.15 P. M;
Arrive at Atlanta ...10.40 A. M.
Passengers for. Mayfield,.(trashington and
Athens, Ga., must take Day I’.is'serigor Train.
Passengers for West Point, Montgomery,
Mobile ami New Orleans, must 3ea*c Augusta
on XigfTvVassengcr Train, nt 12.8$ a. in., to
2. Jr I make close connections.
Passengers for Chattanooga, Knoxville. Nash
ville, Louisville and St. Louis, must leivye Au-
guflt x on Day Passenger Train, at 7.30 a. m.)
to make close connections;
jj^grThrorigh Tickets and Baggage checked
through to the above places.
£Qf"Slecping Cars on all Night Passenger
Train?.
To enumerate all the employments of fe
males would require a much larger space than
is here taken. There are vast numbers of
seamstresses, nurses, school-teachers, servats,
etc., etc., numbering at least 50,000 more.
[Express.
The First Gold Mine.
An exchange says the first piece of gold
found in the United States is said to have been
found in Cabarrus county, North Carolina, in
1799. It seems from the accounts furnished
Mr. Wheeler by Col. Burndandt that a box-
named Conrad Reed x\-ent with his sister and
younger brother to a Small stream near Meadoxv
Creek on a Sunday, and while engaged along
the banks of the stream shooting fish, he saw
a yelloxv substance shining in the xx-ater, xvhich
lie picked up and found to be met?.!. His fath
er carried it to Concord, and showed it to Wm.
Atkinson, the silxersmth of the village, who
xxos unable to tell xvhat it xvas. It was carried
home hv Mr. Reed, and being the size of a
smoothing iron it xvas used as a weight against
the door to keep it from shuttlrig. In 1802 lie
carried it to market at Fayetteville, where a
jeweler pronounced it to he gold, and melted
it, producing a bar six or seven inches long.
It was s< VI to the jexveler for $8 50, a “big
priefe. ” .Mr. Reed thought. Upon subsequent
examination gold xx-as found upon the surface
along Meadoxv Creek, and in 1808 pieces of
gold Were found x-arying from 15 pounds to the
smallest particles. The vein of this mine xx-as
discovered in 1831. The annual products of
gold mines of North Carolina are stated at
$500,000. The product of the Cabarrus mine
in 1840 is estimated at 36,000. This exhausts
the data before us.
» ^ i t
Who Pay®?—Tlici riexvspapers recently recor
ded the fact that a Masacusetts manufacturing
company had just declared a dividend of one
hundred per cent, on a year’s profits, after re
serving a surplus enough to enlarge and im
prove their mill. Another important fact,
bearing upon this point, is the announcement
of a xvoolen manufacturer in the same State,
that before the wav it cost llinl $3 oft to make
a tard of cloth which he sold at $4, and that
now he sells at $8, what only costs him $4
last sectiori of the road are grandly massive.
A California journal says one culvert, at the
crossing of Cannon Creek, is a noble piece of
solid masonry, txveuty-eigbt feet in height and
fifty-four feet in breadth. The forests of tow
ering pines—the towering mountain peaks and
yawning rifts and chasms, traversed by the
railroad between Alta and Cisco present a
sublime panorama, which is destined to be
favorite study for the art-loving tourist, not
onlv during our day, but one xvhich will be
contemplated with no less delight by unborn
generations;”
— *■ «• «• ♦ —
From the Nashville Union and American.
Cotton Manufacture in the South.
In many sections of the Southern country
the question of manufacturing our great sta
ple is attracting the attention of enterprising
men. We trust the interest in regard to it
will increase, and that before a great xvhilc
the whirr of the spindle may be heard on eve
ry hand.
A correspondent of the Jackson (Mississip
pi) Clarion thus speaks of the steps xvhich
the capitalits in Central Mississippi are taking
to build cotton factories at Carrollton, Jackson,
Wesson, Meridian and Woodville, will give
Mississippi a pretty good start in the way of
manufacturing its oxvn raw staple. The cor
respondent, xvriting from Louisvilfr; Winston
county, Mississippi, sarS:
“The capitalists of this county, like others
throughout the South, are turning their atten
tion to manufacturing at home our oxvn raw
staple, instead of sending it North to be man
ufactured by our bitterest enemies, and then
E^»The books and papers belonging to
tlie estate of King W. Ferry; demised, will be
found at this house, on application to
Sept. 15-61U. F. G. Ferry, Adm’r.
Wm. Clark, A. N. Wllaoa, C. C. Hardwick
HOOP SKIRTS.
Alxxut 5,000 girls earn a livelihood by working
upon tliis useful article. The xvages earned
will range from $5 to $10 a week, and some
fexv who are expelt at the business earn as
high as $15:
MAT-MAKERS.
In this city and Brooklyn not less than 10,-
000 girls are engaged in the hat trade; but the
introduction of machinery, abbreviates much
of the work formerly done by hand. For
“ xxhipping ” leathers for silk hats girls receix-e
from $2 50 to $3 per dozen. For trimming
they get from 16 to 18 cents. The binding is
done bv machinery. For trimming soft hats
8 to 10’ cents each' is paid. The average rate
of xvages is from S6 to $10 per week. As high
as $14 is paid to superior hands.
SHOE-FITTING.
, This business, formerly one of the most prof-
IJ table iu xvhich women vAfe engaged, has be-
> r -"21e much chabged in its character by the
introduction of the sewing-machine. Girls
used formerly to earn from $S to $10per xveek-
Xoxv these girls who hax-e the good fortune to
own’one of these labor savers can double
their former incomes, while those not so farm
ed fall behind. It is not possible to get at the
actual number employed, because a large por
tion of this work is now done m factories ,
xvhere hundreds of machines are kept constant
ly running. Many families also take the work
to their homes and work at the binding be
tween domestic labors.
account, in some measure, for the present ex
traordinary high prices of the fabrics used by
the masses. In the face of this state of th»ngS
the Radicals of Nexv England are loudly clamo
ring for more protection and want a higher
torriff solely as a means of increasing their
profits. The wants and necessities of the poor
er closes are unheeded by these cormorants,
and the actual cost of living is advanced to a
standard which calls for immediate reform.
How lolig will the people be satisfied xvith Rad
ical rule ?
'djnscom jo .Cji|Rnb
‘sooud ui joi(j;a piosjopun
sq oj jou pouimjojop ojk
Great Inducements & Bargains.
\Ye respectfully invite the attention of all
person? who desire to purchase Goods at prices
surpassingly low, to our Stock of
FALL & WINTER GOODS,
Dry Goods, Ladies Cloth Cloaks
Fancy Articles, Nubias,
Clothing, Shoxfels,
Boots & Shoes, Balmoral Skirts,
Groceries, Ribons,
Notions all kinds, Silks, Ac.,
And all Goods generally found in a mixed
Stock: all rif which wc will sell as low as any
house in Newnan.
Our assortment of
Is larger than enti Ve fritted this side of Atlanta
and xx-ii 1 be Sold loxv for Casa.
We respectfully invite yon to call and see
us and xve xvill do our best to please in atten
tion and prices.
RANDALL & CO.
Oct 20-7-tfi
CHEAP
ATLANTA and WEST POINT
UtAJGL HOAD.
Leave Atlanta....711 00 A M
Arrive at Newnan.
Arrive at YYcst l’oirit
Leave West Point ...
Arrive at Newnan....
Arrive at Atlanta
L.
4...1 24 P M
..4 05 P M
3 25 P M
00 P 51
:..7 23 P 51
P. GRANf,
Superintendant.
TIIOS. A. GRACE;
NEWNAN, GA.j: ,
Insurance Agent for the following Corrlpanies:
.•ETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Hartford; Connecticut.
KNICKERBOCKER LIFE INSURANCE CO;;
New Y'ork.
.ETNA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY',
Hartford, Connecticut.
UNDERWRITERS’ FIRE INSURANCE CO:,
New Y'ork;
SECURITY FIRE INSURANCE CGMFANY,
Uc.v Y'ork.
EUFAULA HOME FIRE INSURANCE CO.,
Eufaula, Ala.
JAMES RIVER FIRE INSURANCE CO.,
- IIowardsville, Va.
OGLETHORPE INSURANCE COiti^ANY;
Savannabj Georgia;
July 99-4?-lh
J. J. PINSON
Is back again at his old staud on the East
afactured bv our bitterest enemies, ana tneu D ... c - , r
returned to us at the most fabulous prices - slde of tl,e 1 u!>llc S ’P’ are > ln front of the
~ ... - ■> *—•— 1 v — Court House, with "
complete
STOCK OF GOODS*
Several planters of the neighborhood of New
Prospect, in this county, are concerned in the
nexx - company, xvhich is taking steps to rebuild
the Bankston(Miss.) Mills, burnt during the) , , ...
war; while Col. John W. Perkins, of Perkins- ! Phased exclusively for CASH and with
ville, v formerly Buck Horn) of this county, is j great cartf; xvith the view of defying competi-
now actively engaged in building the “Per- ; tion as to prices, quality and styles of goods,
kinsville Cotton Factory, which will be a mill i jjj g ercr y article in active
_ c nn/1 fiftr omnn 1P2—.vrfirktnnr i .
demand
JNO. C. WHITNER’S
General Insurance Agency.
Fire, Inland, Life & Accident,?
Insurance Effected and Losses Promptly Paid.-
Office at McCamy k Co s. Drug Store, Frauklirf
Buildings, Alabama Str’t., Atlanta, Ga;
Refers to Rev. Jambs S¥act, and J. J. Puf-
sdx, Esq.. Newnan, Oeorgia.-
Ang: ll-Sfr-ly.
of seven hundred and fifty spindles—workin:
some fifty hands. The buildings are up and
amply sufficient for three times the amount of
machinery already procured.' and three times
the present ifumber of hands. The location
is one of the finest in the State, on the Macon
and Louisville road, twelve and a half mites
from L 0, H s vi!le, and nineteen miles from Ma
con : at the latter place it is placed within
to produce. These manufactures make gowls ’ access 0 f Mobile and Memphis, by the
for the million, and all their enormous profits -
Mobile and Ohio railroad
“The mill is propelled by water power; the
saw arid grist mills and the wool csrd are
already in fall blast. Col. Perkins has secur
ed the services of an experienced cotton facto- Bu( . wh enlimenite< a3 everybody fenfixfs tvhat
rv man from Georgia, xvho xvill be the general - „
- . .=> ’ .... O Itm-L- nt C}r>nf?5 tie keens. Purcba-
irt nearly etrfy department of mer
chandise. He has
Cheap Calicoes,
Cheap Homespun,bleached and unbleached,
Cheap Flannels and Kerseys,
Cheap Goods for Pantaloons,
Cheap Dry Goods Generally,
Cheap Hats and Shoes,
Cheap Sugar and Coffee,
Cheap Bagging and Rope.
• o i ^
uperintendent of the establishment, which is
designed to be very extensive.”
New Y'ork and the Southern Trade.—A N<‘W
Y'ork letter of Saturday last says :
“ The dry goods merchants are doing a great
deal of grumbling just now. Trade, they sar, •
is seriously sloxv, and what is more, the letters
they reeeix-e from Southern customers to xx hoxn
they sold goods on credit early in the season
hold out but little hope that they will be able
to get their money xvithout an extension of
time. Meanwhile stocks of goods are accumu
lating here, and prices are looking down. This
morning one house fbld 200 cases Merriinac
pttntfc at about e cent reduction from tiie
listing rate. Foreign goods as well as domes-
tifc, participate in the depression.”
-ort of a stock of Goods he keeps. Purcha
sers, if they xvill tonsfilt fhCir interest, will
examine his stock bcTtfre pnrchasingelsewhere.
He is anxious to show his goods, xvhether he
sells them or not. lie intends to conduct his
business on the
It is xvith pleasure that I state the fact that
1 have used, xvith entire success. Dr. J. L. Ma
son & Co.'s Great American Hog Cholera Cure
and Preventive, and therefore recommend it
as one of the most important discoveries of
the age. JOHN MONTGOMERY,
Louisville, Ky., July 14th, 1866.
Newbury, Jefferson Co.. Kv., I
July 15th, 1866. J
This >s to certify that 1 have used Dr. J. L.
Mason k Co. s Great American Hog Cholera
Cure and Preventive xvith success and entire
satisfaction. My hogs xvere dying five or six
daily before and at the time I commenced gi\'-
ing the remedy. After using it as directed,
my l»«gs commenced improving-—only losing
one since that time—noxv my hogs are in good
CvSluition, healthy, thrifty, ac. 1 recommend
it to the public as a certaiu cure aud preven
tive. AMOS SEABOLT.
I have used, with entire satisfaction, the
Great American Hog Cholera Cure and Preven
tive. patented and oxvned by Dr. J. L. Mason
& Co. It is, without a doubt, the-greatest
'neuicme for hogs vet discovered.
' AARON FREEMAN,
Ang. H.6m. Louisville. Ky.. July. 1866.
Ga.
T. M. Jones, Newnan, Ga.
CLARK, JBS & CO.,
General Commission Merchants,
No 1 STODDARD’S LOWED. RANGE,
BAY street,
s&yakhah oa.
Sept. 22-o-3m.
Enormous Receipts from Internal Revenue.
—The receipts from the internal revenue sour
ces exclusively, up to the 18th. amounts to
$115 -500 000. xvhich is in excess of Sl.UUU.UW
per diem, from the beginning of the present
fiscal year, the 1st of Jmy- » «
the income from this source will reach nearly
dress-making. * t j ie ^pje figures as those of last year, wmen
This business is more in tlie hands of private ^ i lir£ r e ]v in access of the amount estima-
narties than any other branch of female labor. ^ alld req uired, leaving a heavy surplus to be
Hi shops the girls receive from $6t°^$8, _and apprciTia-tod to the liquidation of the national
debt.
The late Mr. John Y'an Buren was noted for
an • infinite jest. As au instance of hi.-> xxfi. it
See to it Yourself.—Important affairs must
be attended to in person. “ If yon want yonr
business well done.”. sttf3 ihe proverb, “go
and do it; if yon don’t want it done, send some
one else.” An indolent gentleman had a free
hold estate producing about five hundred a
year; Becortiing involved in debt; he soM L rinci , as to have all who favor him With
half the estate and let the remainder to an in- , 1 . 1 ’ ,
dnstrio ti, enterprising farmer' for ten years— j their patronage to say, if you xxant tne worth
About the end of the term, the farmer called j of your money buy goods of
“Live and Let Live”
JO*IIY RAY. LAVENDER R. RAY.
JOHN RAY & SON,
ATTORNEYS AT RAW/
NEWNAN, GA.,
Will practice in the Courts of
Fulton, Campbell, Fayette, Coweta,
Troup, Meriwether, Carroll,
Heard and Haralson.
Particular attention gitfcn to* tne collection
of ail Cialrri3 of every description.
j|)ggr“Office near Nexvnan Hotel. [june2-Gm.
Dr. A. B. CALHOUN.
H AYING resumed the Practice of Afedicine
respectfully tenders his professional ser
vices to the citizens of Coweta add surround
ing counties. . ■
Ilis whole attention wifr h'ltteaffer be giveit
to his profession in its various branches.
Office on Depot SW'3of/» few steps from jjft*
Public Square. [oan. 6-18-tf.
a dav- There are no standard prices tor “a- ...... . ^ au iliStaIlce of his xvu u t0 have brought it out in clearer ana stronger
king' dresses, that dependmg.upon the a * ‘ tha t fie xvas once angrily accosted j co ] or5 . The truer theory is, that there xvere
ot work that is needed to suit tne lamx of the ^ J whogecage he had overthrown, with j thoasan ds of rascals before the war, xvho bid
owner. I > > w.’ieve sir vou would take a fee from the . re . 1 i characters under the cloak of virtue.
to pav his rent, and asked the owner whether
he would sell the farm.
“YYill you buy it?” asked the owner, sur
prised.
“ Y'es, if we car. agree upon the price.”
“That is exceeding strange,” obserxed the
gentlemen; “ how happens it that, xxhile I
could not live upon twice as mach land, for
which 1 paid no rent, you are regularly paying
me two hundred a year for your farm, and are
able, in a few year3, to purchase it?
“The reason is plain,” was the reply. “ Y'ou
sat still and said jo; I got up and said come;
you laid in bed aud enjoyed your estate, I rose
in the morning and minded ruy business.
Some of our exchanges are deploring the
demoralization that followed the xvar. Ihe;
picture is not pleasing in whatever tight we fc
mav x-iew it; but we doubt the broad assump
tion that the war is responsible, any farther
than it served to dex'elop that which existed
before. We are nnwitilag to admit that virtue
could be crushed by a revolution that ought
to have brought it out in clearer and stronger
October G-2m.
J. J. PINSON.
FORCE’S SHOE HOUSE.
Wkite&afi, Si., Atlanta, Ga.
SIGN OF BIG BOOr:\g#
BR. JNO. W. PEARCE
O FFERS his professional services to the
citizens of Newnan and vicinity.
Tie may be found at all hojir3 in day time at
the Drug Store of Dr. J. S. Benrjv or RAKks
residence, brick botfse exist side of the Rail
road at night.
lYill give prompt attention to all patronage
entrusted to hi3 care. [jnne 2-39-tf.
J. W. SPENtTB-
P. TIIURMAN,
P. THURMAN & GO.
MANUFACTURERS
at the business.
Pkbixo Brows* V. Wzldman,
BROWN&WILDM AN
18
D ealers in bullion, coin, sourn-
era Securities and Bank not -. tQ
lar attention given to collections.^
National Park Bank, New Tors, and Bau^- -
, generally of fteorgia. ^ w0 i o .
| DY a suiwr Wii06C “ I uiuuwuu: v* —• .
\ i \ sir. you would take a fee from tue r t ^ e ; r ref% | characters under tne cloa.c Oa virtne
• ’ V—a ™ ^.r+h ’’ -Snfrlv. mv dear - oat cou ld not resist the temptation held out
bv the war to gratify ibeir evil passions. These
original rascals haTe been counted as so many
new recruits for the devil s army, xvhe-n, in
truth, tliev had been in his regular service all
their lives. We should not encourage the be.
lief that genuine virtue needs only the oppor
tunity to degenerate into riee. Such teach
ings are more demoralizing than xvar.
\_Eifau!a 3 ncs.
owner. . ueucvc. »u, >v/u ———
bonnet frames. I greatest scoundrel on earth . *botily, uiy
This k a branch of trade that is rapidly m- : Lah whispereti Van Ihiren. xvith wellaff^-
. .win r and in the busiest seasons girls <*.in te( j concern; * walk ^>ide with me,
ores! g. vroeos. As high a sum as $lo pie^.. Now, sir.’ presenting his ear to the
J^S is realiaed by thoseVho are expert Iuau , ‘tell me what you have bw ^^ lgc
TAII/XRE^ES.
The making of ovits. vests, and pants is one
of the Lamest occupations m the uty. w
as is done in shops a 5ta L 1 ^J e ^ h ^“ ma . fc lioxvs one of the strikin
dope in private tannh^ $6, Hebrew population :
to ™7a week is paid in shops. Someshop^work. | - Whoever saw a Hebrew begging bread r
find this paragraph in a Mobile pap>er
xvhieh. ;\s much anything we ever read.
peculiarities of cur
An enraged parent had jerked hi3 provoKing
son across his knee and was operating on the
H AT’D On hand the largest and best stock
of Boots and Shoes ever brought to this
market ami as they come direct from the —and—
eastern Manufactories will be offered to conn-; EgALE & EET AIL DEALERS
trv Merchants at Nexv York prices -freight t
added. e ^ \ —IN—
B. TV. Force, formerly of Charleston, S. C.,
will be pleaded to see bis tormer customers.
Ost 20-7- t*2m. i _ , „
e Depot Street, next Door to- Perry s Corner,
To Cotton Planters & Buyers. ; NEWNAN, GA.
| CANDY & CONFECTIONERIES,
W E Represent tLe House of Wilson, Cal-
laxvav k Co., No. 44, Broad Street, N.
Y'ork, and are prepared to make liberal advan
ces at the loxvest rates, on Cotton in the field
and that ready for shipment consigned to them-
We hax-e made the above arrangement with
ti.te boose because we know them personally
and can vouch for their responsibility <*nd
promptness in basmess.
1 ‘ OK-ME-4 FARRAR,
Cotton Brokers, Grocers k Com. Merchants.
Sep 22—Om. .Marietta St. Atlanta, Ga.
June 9—40—tf.
F OR SALE 200 Coils Greenleaf k Todd Mills
Rope 50 Bales heavv India Bagging,
Sep 22-3-3in. By ORME k FARRAR.
a xveek 15Data m sux.jjr. , -- n aut'ci „ .1,1 SOB atra» ois .lire . y “ . ,
-ar-oalled however, is very poorly There are none. We are lntormed oy on “ 1 ‘ exp05e< i portion of the urchin s person with
w^ten could not support themselves without ; TCsilienl __ one who has hved in Jloode;for fort> 1 Te bemeuee, when the young one ung
; official capacitv. that unm-ng the nmny xvno , YY
ttpe-foundkm. . - y, aTe applied for chanty, he has yet to see *-■ ; ^ ir*. vou bitlmr me for?’’ I v/
In the six or eight tx-pe-foundenes oi^h - ha PP^ • u>Rikun the necxssa- i
city al*°ut 350 ^ lYteir ^ „
duties are U»e ruW'tui, aia. ^ 3 r
HEAVY Stock of Groceries and Prcvis-
FARRAR.
\ ions on hand, and for sale
*”Scp 22-3-3m.. By ORME.
’ u. Biases r what are you biting me for?”
•• WcJL dad, you beglnued this he?e war!”
PDFItS and Ccnsignsocnts solicited.
Rv : OiLME k FARRAR.
22"Wb3u
Wilkinson, Wilson & Co.,
COTTON FACTORS
—A N D—
General Commission Merchants.
Agents for the purehase-and sale of all kinds o:
Cotton Dcsaaeartlca-
^Liberal Advaaces made on Coe*
signments.“©ff
Office Xo. 3 Stoddard’s Lower Range.
DAY STREET, SAVANNAH, C A.
U. B. Wh. kin sox, of Newnan, Ga.
B» J. Wilson, formerly of Cot
ton Mills, Ala.-
P. !I. Wo#d; of the Ihte 6ra ef J. YV. Ra
bun k Go., Savannah. Sept. 8-tf.