About The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1885)
The News as Herald. PUBLISHED EYEUY TUESDAY. A. B. CATES, Editor and Publisher. TERMS OF SL HS« R1PTIOA : One copy one year, In advance .. $U50 If not paid in advance, the terms are 12.00 a year. A Club of six allowed an extra copy. Fifty-two number* com pi etc the volume. THE NEWNAN HERALD. WOOTTEX * CATES, Proprietor*. WISDOM, JUSTICE AND MODERATION. TEKYS:--$I.50 per per year in Advance. VOLUME XX. NEWYAN, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18,1SS5. NUMBER 44. The Newsas Herald. PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY. KATES OF ADVKBTISI One inch one vear, $10; a column one vear, $100; Ion* time than three months, $1.00 per inch for first insertion, and 60 cents ad litional for each subsequent in sertion. Notices in local column, ten cents per line io.-1 ach insertion. Liberal arrange ments will be made with those advertis ing by the quarter or year. All transient advertisements must be paid for when handed in. Announcing candidates, Ac., $3.00 strictly in advance. Address all commnnications to A. R. CATES, Nownan, Ga. Our lives arealhnnis, written through tVithgood or ill, with false or true. BOTH IN ERROR. ‘‘Your fare, please?” The daintily uttired lady address cd glanced up in surprise to the fa miliar face, whose brown eyes had a mirthful gleam as they met her own. “Mr. Carroll ?” • “Conductor of No. 1, and very much at your service, Miss Hamil ton,” said the -young man doffing his cap with a bow that would have graced a drawing-room. “You are surely jesting?” There was something in this that roused the warm and hasty tem[>er of our hero. ‘•It isn’t likely to be much of a lest to me. What a pity it is that 1 should be reduced by the misfortune of a friend to such a necessity as this!” “That depends on how you look at it,” said the lady, icily; “you know :ny father’s position ” “Certainly, 1 ’’interrupted the young man; “and now that you know mine, our little romance, which was very pleasant while it lasted, will have to end, I suppose.” “Very well, let it he so.” The car, which had only a few in it when this conversation commenc ed, was now nearly full, and Arthur Carroll turned away to attend to tho duties of his office. Hut as ho passed around to collect his fare liis eyes rested more than once ou tlie partly averted face, which looked strangely pale in the dim twilight. A feeling of yeariug tenderness swept over him, and passing by tlie place where she sat he said, hurriedly: “Ida—Miss Hamilton, I fear 1 spoke too harshly. If you will suf fer me to explain ” “"There is no explanation,” said Ida, rising to her feet “I think 1 understand you fully. Please stop the ear; I get out here.” Arthur mechanically gave the signal. Tlie silken robe swept past him with a faint rustle, leaving upon ttie air the perfumeot the rose upon her breast. With a dazed, bewildered feeling tlie young man watched tho erect an 1 graceful figure, which never vouchsafed him a glance, until it disappeared. “Can it be possible for me to be so deceived in her?” he thought. “I would have staked my life on Ida’s love for me, and that it was for me alone. But what am I to think now? Before the dawning of anoth er day I will know.” As Arthur stood upon tlie steps of Mr. Hamilton's stately mansion he saw that there was no light from any part of it except the library. “I fear Ida is not at home,” he thought. But site was, so the servant said who answered tlie bell. He gave tlie mail his name and errand, who returned almost immediately, say- iug: “Miss Hamilton is busy and begs to lie excused.” “It. is bettor so,” muttered tlie young man, as he descended into the street, he scarcely know how. “Had l seen her, I might have been fool enough to let her know how baseless her apprehensions were.” Passing swiftly along, Arthur turned into a by-street where the houses were few and scattered, and, pausing in front of a wooden build- i ug, he went in. Ascending the stairs, he found himself in a plain, neatly furnished room, where a young man sat, about his own age, his arm in a sling and n plaster on one of his temples. “IIow do you find yourself to night, old fellow?” “So nearly recovered that I shall resume my duties to-morrow,” re sponded John Ainslie with a smile, “which I think you will be glad to learu.” ■ •‘Well, I don’t know, I’m glad to j have you well again, but I’ve en- : joyed the excitement and novelty, I especially the astonishment among [ such of my acquaintances as I s chanced to meet. It has certainly tgiveu me a revelation in one diree- f. tian, which, however unexpected p.atid painful, will prevent my mak- f lug a life-long mistake. I don’t [ want .you to do so until you are [ strong enough, but if you think you : are able to go back, I believe I will leave town for a few.weeks.” Arthur put his resolution into ef- |fect early in the following morning, siting no one of his design or desti nation. In fact, he scarcely knew br cared whither he went, his soh motive in going at ail being to es cape from the wounded and Hitter feeling at his heart, and which at [ times seemed more than he could ybear. He had been gone aliout two months when he received a letter I from John Ainslie, on the envelope j of which were various postmarks, [ obtain ed in following h's erratic i movement*. It was as follows: Friend Arthur:—I have been thinking a good deal lately aliout what you told me in regard to Miss Hamilton, and wondering if you knew of her father's failure, and which occurred, as I have learned since, the day I was hurt, and you so kindly took my place. It seems that Mr. Hamilton lost everything; even his house was attached, and all liis beautiful furniture sold by auction. His daughter, Ida, I am told, supports them both by teach ing, her father being a good deal broken in body and mind since his misfortune. She teaches in a school a few miles out, but was in town yesterday, and getting on my car in leaving the boat, t chanced to see her. She was dressed very plainly, and so altered that I should not have know:’, her but for her beautiful hair and eyes. It seems to be the general impression that you broke your engagement on ac count of her father’s lossof fortune; and knowing how far from the truth tliis is, and believing that you cere entirely ignorant of the fact it the time you left town, I thought I would write and tell of it. Your friend truly, John Ainslie. Arthur was not long in reaching town after reading this. He went lirectly to his rooms, finding on his desk a small package and a letter. “The letter came the day you left,” said the landlady, “and the package a few days after; but as you left no lirectious aliout sending anything, I kept them for you.” The package contained some let ters and a ring, whose costly dia- uond sparkled like a dew-drop as it fell upon the desk. How well he remembered placing t upon the small white hand, ami ill the glowing hopes that made his heart beat so high! By the date of the letter Arthur saw that it was written the morn ing after his attempt to see the writer. U ran as follows: Mr. Carroll:—Owing to an un fortunate blunder, the servant did lot give ine the . right name when you called last evening. I have been thinking that perhaps I was too hasty in the conclusions I Irew from what you said at our last nterview, and which occurrod at a time when I was feeling wounded ind humiliated by my altered cir- umstances, ami so more prone to take offense. I infer that you have also met with reverses, hut if you think any change in your outward surround ings couhf make any change in me you do ine a great wrong. - If there is anything to explain 1 shall lie glad to see or hear from you. Failing to do so, I will return your letters and the ring you gave me, glad to know, ere it was too late, how worthless is the love you professed to feel for Ida Hamilton. The writer of the above letter sat done in tlie rustic school-house to which she had been confined many weary months, with but brief seas- >ns for rest and relaxation. There had been a dull throbbing pain in her temples all day, making he shulllle of little feet on the bar< floor, the murmur of childish voices, dmost unendurable. But they had all vanished now, md she sat alone in the gathering twilight, alone with her troubled houghts and mournful recollec tions. Never had life seemed so void of all joy and brightness. The hardest thing to hear was the •onsciousnes* that, in spite of Ids in wort hi ness, her thoughts would turn with regretful tenderness to him who had obtained too strong a hold on her heart and life to be asily dislodged. “1 would never have forsaken him thus,” she murmured through her fast-falling tears. “When misfor tune came I would .have clung all the more closely to him.” Hearing a step upon the threshold, Ida raised her head, and the object of her thoughts stood before her. “Nay, do not turn away from me,” lie cried, as the bewildered girl shrank from that eagerly extended hand. “I have only just received the letter you wrote me so many weeks ago. Nor did I know until recently of your father’s failure, and the consequent change in your cir cumstances. “It was all occasioned by my own tupid blunder,” said Arthur, after the mutual explanations that fol lowed, and the two were sitting to gether in loving and happy con verse. “Oh, no,” smiled Ida; “I cannot let you take the blame. We were both in error. The Sunny South has had a cu rious experience in Lynchburg, Va A lady agent canvassing for that paper was arrested therefor and made to pay a fine of $5. The Sunny South has made the surprising incident the text of a strong and sensible editorial, in which it justly bewails the degen eracy of that great old State in chivalry and culture. It seems incredible that a modest young woman should be punished for attempting to spread Southern litoratur# ip * Southern city. NOT A GHOST. r had just returned from Toronto —whither I had gone to estimate the cost of a public work—with an amusing party of friends. The train was delayed a few hours near Vau- druil. When I left the tumble-down Bonaventure station the night was very late, the weather wet and windy; the streets, a long series of little puddles, flickering under the gas. Hurrying along, I crossed street corners diagonally, kicking up about the curb-stones heavy masses ot new-failen leaves. At the street door I stood for a few moments, fumbling with my latch-key. Were I impressible I might have thought, so strangely lid the wind act, that unseen fin ders clutched my garments, and that forms scarcely palpable inter- insed between me and the dark hall vithin! With some aid from a match I •it my way up two pairs of stairs aid stood within my room. Light- ig the gas, I looked around, 'hough nothing was unfamiliar or -hanged, a singular air of desertion pervaded the place. I shivered ■ lightly, being strangely chill, and or a moment thought of abandon- ng the intention to take a hath be- ore bed. But to turn in with that ;rimy feeling which comes from a long railway journey was out of the luestion. Nor was I sleepy. On lie contrary, my senses seemed preternaturally acute and my head lelightfully dear and capable. Go o bed! No. There were some in- iricate calculations of strains re- juired next day, and to which I de- ermined to devote myself after lathing. It was not that I did not visli to go to bed, but that I knew I could not sleep, and that I dread 'd the horrors of insomnia, from which I had once suffered. Down to the bath-room 1 went, ind, turning on the water, regained ny room. Certainly there was not ;he least unusual sound either in descending or ascending the stairs. Is 't possible to believe that my nervous condition can have chang ’d greatly, changed without cause, hiring the short time iffter going hack to my room, while I was un- Iressing? As all in the house had long been in lied there was no danger of meet ing any one on the stairs in my semi-nude condition, so I threw off ny coat, waistcoat, and white shirt, ;iut off iny boots end thrust my feet into slippers. Then I wound my watch, laid it under my pillow, brushed my teeth, and lead a page >r two of Lord Raleigh’s address be fore the British association. These particulars are mentioned that all may understand how perfectly I re member every occurrence of a night on which I was entirely calm md observant. With towels, matches, flesh-brush, ind sponge on arm or in 'hand I at om pted to open my door. For a noment it refused to open, being teld in some unexpected fashion; lien It came to ray hand with a ash. The gas-light violently bent nd swayed with a quick draft of ir to an t through the open wln- lows. Yet some forces acting in a •ontrary direction sharply closed lie door behind me. Groping to the head of the stair- vay, I paused in the absolute dark less. From the water falling in the •ath-room there was a faint, monot- mous roar. Suddenly a child’s mice broke on the gloom in a wild nut not loud tone of appeal: “You won’t be dead or go away, moth er?” The voice I knew well; it was that of my landlady’s second daugh ter, a little girl of 6 or 7, who slept in my flat. So clear a treble break ing so suddenly with an exclama tion so quaint on the deep stillness jf the night was weird and start ling. What had disturbed the child’s sleep? What had mysteri ously touched her? As yet no definable thing seem ing to indicate supernatural pres ence had occurred. But now, I stopped—my blood running heaviiy and cold, a tremor and thrill of skin over my whole body! What seemed a footstep had fallen behind me, close behind me! An unusual foot fall! Not the least shuttling sound, not a creak of leather,' not an im pact as a thing having weight, no suggestion of a human sound! It dropped lightly and stop|>ed. With intense strained hearing I listened for some further indication of move ment Nothing! Save for the pour and gurgle and roll of water into the bath the stillness was intense. I reasoned that the sound had been a delusion. The stair-stretch es had given with my weight! But I dared not turn my head. There was that sensation of mortal cold behind the ears. Hastily I took two more steps and now stood clutching the railing in extreme terror, shaking and trembling with the increasing mys tery. Distinctly had the thing fall en lightly behind me again—so close! It was as though some very light person, some almost jmpond- erabld My, b»djua»pf$ after tie with one foot a little in advance of the other. In this presumed action there was a suggestion of trickines: such as often goes with malignity. Now again began the conflict of reason against the horror that beset me--to account for the sound was impossible except on the assurap tion of a spiritual presence; to per suade myself that the sound was no sound but a mere imagining bred of darkness I could not. Turn back ? For what? It would be no less with me! And should I yield to thought I might be unable to avoid the fear. Again I went down—one—two— three—four—it had followed! Step ping gently in time with me, stop ping as I stopped, re-ting always on the step I had left! Mortal nerves were not made to endure a thiug so strange. Was that a breath on my cneek ? With the tension my power of sight seemed to increase and pierce the darkness. Faintly outlined were the doors of the flat I ap proached. The dim light through the curtained light of the front door let me see down the well-hole the forms of furniture in the hall. Ev erything was real, familiar, com monplace. All gave me the assur ance of reality in my experience; that the sound behind me was a real sound, and, by inference, that an in visible, impalpable, and sentient existence was haunting my foot steps. But was it impalpable ? I could at least ascertain that. Nervously, slirinkingly, fearing I know not what strange contact, I thrust my hand into the dark behind. Noth ing there but the void air. In des peration I turned to face the thing, toiook—nothing there but the black ness of darkness. With outstretch ed arms I felt space from ballusters to wall. Nothing! I nerved myself to take a step forward. Still noth ing! The mysterious feet did not re treat before me. Once more I turned down-stairs. Again! Keeping exact time, paus ing as I paused, it followed till, over come with terror, I leaned quailing against the wall, standing on the lowest step but one. Lighting a match, 1 looked fear fully around. There were the walls, familiar with a pattern I had seen a thousand times before, hut never till then in detail. In that brief fire-light were visible the keys of the doors, the panels, 'the brush- streaks of tjieir paint, a spiderweb the ceiling corner, minutest parts of old fashioned cornice and center-piece, the very threads of the worn carpets, some halfburned matches dropped by lodgers, a ger anium plant just out outside the door of the pretty girl! I could make a long catalogue of trifles, of marks always in that hall but never seen by me .till that short period of straining vision to perceive some hint or outline of the impalpable and invisible haunter. The match flickered, its flame died, I hold the glowing, friendly ember aloft till it expired, and again I was alone with the dreadful dark, and the thing which followed* once more. To the bath-room I turnod; it was still close behind me. But no long er a footfall—not now a sound as of alighting. Instead there was a very faint, low sound, as of a light weight being dragged. Instantly tne truth flashed on my mind, and reaching backward I clutched the lengthy suspenders which dragging and falling from step to step, had excit ed sensations that the most expe rienced ghost might have, been proud of producing. State Agricultural Society. The State Agricultural Society met in Marietta Tuesday. The body was fully attended. Mayor Sessions, of Marietta, gave the body a hearty welcome. He told them to take anything they wanted. Mr. Hugh Starnes, of the Cobb county society, told the mem bers tiiat the three farm problems were to stop soil washing, fertilize property and get good labor. Mr. W. L. Peek, of Rockdale, made a clever talk, eulogizing agri culture and Georgia. President Livingstone made a strong address, as he always does. He said the five obstacles to im proved agriculture were want of homes, debt, want of business knowledge, persevering activity and co-operation. Col. James Barrett, of Richmond county, offered resolutions favoring a plan of experimental farms. A committee consisting of Dr. W. G. Jones, Dr. Oemler, T. R. Bennett, J. C. Clements, J. H. Fannin, W. L. Peek, T. Fleteher, G. H. Waring, W. J. Northern and G. W. Jones to press the legislature to pass the ex perimental farm station bUl. The society urge the Legislature to continue the $2/500 annual ap propriation, suspended in IS79, and also the establishment of an immi gration bureau. Col. Thomas P. Stovall, the com missioner ot the American exhibi tion in Loudon in 18116, made a talk iMlvocaitBf Georgia fapwentatWR, OIK STATE'S ENTERPRISES. . Gainesville wants water-works. Newnan is to have a guano facto ry* A new academy is to be erected at Harlem. Considerable building is going on in Lumpkin. A new school building will he erected in Hartwell. A fertilizer company has started at Hogansville. Athens has a Ihdx factory run by Graber & Sons. Dablonega’s gold deposits are in creasing in value. A Catholic church will be erected at Bainbridge. Lexington is agitating the ques tion of water-works. The new ice factory at Athens is working like a charm. Daniel Lowry, Euharlee, is build ing a new grist mill. Our State now ships figs and peaches to Florida. A new fertilizer factory is being erected at Elberton. Lincolnton’s new flour mill is thing of the near future. Work is well under way on Cuth- bert’s new court house. A cotton seed oil mil! will soon be erected in Brooks county. The burnt district of Cochran, Ga. will be rebuilt with brick. Valdosta’s new brick opera house will be completed next week. Athenians have just completed two large cotton-seed oil mills. A new Christian church has just been completed at Sylvania. Dalton’s new cotton factory has a daily capacity of 10,000 yards. J. A. Lewis A Co. will establish a clothing factory in Columbus. J. F. Heggie, of Tunnel Hill, has paid $2,710 for some boiler works. The new Christian church at Ath ens will cost $5,000 when complet ed. Tlie Methodist church at Alapaha is undergoing extensive repairs. Grist mill owners will hold a con vention in this city on the 15th in stant. Towatiga has a new saw mill in owned by W. W. Grubbs. Brunswick recently shipped $18,- 000 worth of black walnut to Ger many. A narrow guage road is proposed between Chester, S. C., and Augus ta. A new building for the Spellman seminary, colored, is building at Atlanta. The building of an extensive grist and flour mill at Athens is an as sured fact. The Macon Armory knitting- mills will be enlarged and their ca pacity doubled. A wooden bridge will be built across the Ochlockonee river near Thomasville. Columbus is building a steam barge to ply on the Chattahoochee during low water. A twelve thousand gallon tank is in process of building by Mr. G. T. Gifford, Macon. Forty vessels, with an average of 375 tonnage each, arrived at Bruns wick last month. Painters have their hands full in Griffin. A large amount of building is going on there. The engines for the Americus, Preston & Lumpkin railroad have arrived at Americus. The Crown cotton mills, of Dalton, are running on full time with a month’s orders ahead. A cotton compress, will soon be in operation in Albany. It has been ordered from Cincinnati. New railroads are springing up all over the State. They employ vast numbers of workmen. Mr. G. N. Johnson is preparing to rebuild the corner-stone of the old Sewell building at Marietta. A fine marble quarry has been discovered in Floyd county. If is of the black and variegated varie ty. Nine thousand pounds of bulk meat were recently sold in one week by the Hawkinsville mer chants. The Flowery Branch cotton mills have purchased a new engine, and otherwise increased their capacity. G. T. Gifford, of Macon, is making a 40 horse power boiler, and is do ing a good deal of general repair work. The Gwinnett county court house is finished, and was turned over to the county at a total cost of only $23,000. A new hotel, modeled after the Pavillion House in Savannah, is nearing completion at Harmony Grove. The Crown cotton mills have sold 300 bales of cloth in Brazil. Seven ty-five days will be needed to weave it A largely increased amount of furnitare is being tarnedout by the Cherokee Manufacturing Company, of Dalton. The water power at the Cooper Iron-works in Bartow county will soon be put to practical use in run ning machinery. Two brick stores and thirty wood- pi) pottygps jutyp reeeoUy fcfn rectod at Dalton, and still the-good York goes on. The Macon & Dublin railroad has advertised for seal proposals for tin ^instruction of the first ten miles o he road. Hardwick Bros., Dalton, are man- •factoring large quantities of pokes, handles and rims. Timber s cheap in Dalton. The manufacture of fruit baskets * a new industry at Barnesville. Tamburger it Stafford inaugurate he movement. The necessary $2,000 to build the male academy of Mariett have been raised and work will com mence on the building. Canton has just completed a tasty and convcni-nMv arranged school house built of brick, wit i trimmings of Georgia marble. Owing to the lack of cotton in that vicinity the Griffin cotton mill shuts down every alternate week till the new crop comes in. Oconee has laid by the best crop she has had for years, and is prepar ing to build the new railroad from Athens to Madison, via Watkins- vilie. The Swift Cotton Manufacturing Company, of Columbus, have added to their building a room <>2x 1 > feet, and will add a hundred looms to their plant. Cotton seed oil mills are being erected aH over the State. A tre mendous amount of money is made out of these mills *vhen properly managed.—Atlantn Journal. His First Lobster. One day Colonel V vschi-r wan dered into a prom eat hotel in Louisville a i i observing with sur prise and pleasure that ‘boiled lob- iter was' one of the delicacies on she bill of fare, he ordered one. He had never seen lobsters, aud a rare treat seemed to lie in store for him. He breathed in what atmos phere there was in the dining-room and waited for his bird. At last it was brought in. Mr. Visscher took me-hasty look at the great scarlet massof voluptuous Limbs and ocean ic nippers, and sighed. The lobster was as large as a door-mat and had s very angry and inflamed appear ance. Visscher ordered in a pow erful cocktail to give him courage, and then he tried to carve off some of the beast. The lobster is hornary even in death. He is eccentric in trifling. Those who knew him best are the first evade and shun him. Vissch er had failed to straddle the wish bone witli his fork properly, and the talented biid of the deep, toiling sea had slipped out of the platter, waved itself across the horizon twice and buried itself in the bosom of the eminent and talented young inan. The eminent and taiented young man took it in his napkin, put it carefully on the table, and then he went away As he passed out the head waiter said to him: ‘Mr. Visscher, was there anything the matter with your lobster?’ Visscher is a full-blooded Ken tuckian, aud answered in the cour teous dialect of the blue grass coun try. ‘Anything the matter with my lobster, sah ? No, sah. The is very vigorous, sah. If you had asked how I was, sah, I should have answered you very differently, sah. I am not well at all, sah. If I were as ruddy and as active as that lobster sah, I would live forever, sah. Do you hear me, sah ? ‘Why, of course I am not familiar with the habits of the lobster, sail, and do not know how to kearve the bosom the bloomin’ peri of the sum mer sea, but that’s no reason why the inflamed reptile should get up on his hind feet and nestle up to me, sah, in that earnest and forth with manner, sah. •I love dumb beasts, sah, and they love me, sah, but when they are dead, sah, and I undertake to kearve them, sah, I desiah, sah, that they should remain as the undertaker left them, sah. You doubtless hear me, sah ?’—Bill Nye. Brief and to the Point. Been to Washington ? Yes. See Cleveland ? Yes. Did he ’point you ? Yes. What to? Door.—Ex. One of the most notable utterances regarding General Grant is likely to be that promised in the Sep tember Harper’s from the pen of Gen. Horace Porter. Gen. Porter was on Gen, Grant’s staff during most of the war, and was one of his private secretaries when he be came President. He knew the dead hero, therefore, under all varieties of circumstance; and his paper, it is will present a great Of personal reminiscences raillitary and political 11 be awaited with much A fine portrait, engraved by will acceptpany the arti cle. ^ v Arnall Bros <fc Co* Is the place to find the prettiest and largest line of DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, HOSIERY, Clothing, Hats and Shoes* ALSO A COMPLETE STOCK OF Family Groceries. THEY ALSO SUPPLY FAKMKRS AND GINNERS WITH BAGGING AND TIES. Having watched for onr chance and been very careful in the pur chase of our stock, we have BOUGHT CHEAPER THAN EVER BEFORE, thus being enabled to offer Bargains in all Kinds of Goods. V visit to our store, an examination of our goods and an inquiry of our prices is all that is necessary to convince you that ours is THE GREAT BARGAIN STORE ! ARNALL BRO’S & CO., Newnan, Ga, W. B. ORR <fc CO. \re receiving daily additions to til'dr stock ot GENERAL MER CHANDISE, which is varied and too numerous to itemize. Full iineof Ladies, Gents and Children’s Something extra in hand made, and every pair guaranteed. DRESS GOODS, Lawns, Organdies, Nuns Veiling, Cashmere, Berlin Cord, Checks, Nainsook, Swiss and Mull Muslin, a complete assortment of Cotton- ades, Checks, Bleached and Brown Shirting and Sheeting. READY HADE CLOTHING AND HATS, making a specialty of them, and they must am. We invite one and all to come to see us. Thanking you for past patronage wa solicit a continuance of the same. W. B. ORR A CO. THOMPSON BROS. Bedroom, Parlor and Dining Room Furniture. Big Stock and Low Prices. PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGANS. WOOD and METALLIC BURIAL CASES ^^Orders attended to at any hour day or night. sepl6- ly THOMPSON BROS., Newnan, Ga. $1 o o PREMIUM BUGGIES JAMES A. PARKS. I wish to call public attention to the fact that lam still in the Buggy Business, and have a greater variety in stick than ever before. T a Isa offer a premium valued at ONE H tJNDRED DOLLARS to be distril uted with every ten buggies, to be divided by the purchasers, as agrees, upon by themselves, when the tenth buggy has been sold. J. A. Paek i GLOBE SKATING RINK Open Three Days and Nights of Each Week. Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. adies will have the privilege of skating free of charge each "morning of the above named days. Gentlemen jgg “ "'""’will he excluded from the morning ex- ercises if the ladies desire "Afternoon, admission free, skates 10 cents; nights, ladies free, '^■gents 15 cents, skates 10 cents " Li. J. HURD, Manager. BRING IJS YOUR JOB WORK! An-I let it Done mTheJLatest Styles. ~~ytiMfefiHWw?