The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, July 20, 1886, Image 1

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The Newnan Herald. PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY. A. B. CATES, Editor and Publisher. tkkhs of subscription: One copy one year, in advance $1.50 If not paid in advance, the terms are $2.00 a year. A club of six allowed an extra copy. Fifty-two nuinberscomplete the volume. THE NEWNAN HERALD. wmk Our lives are albums, written throug With good or ill, with false or true? PAUL HAMILTON HAYXE. * It may be that Shelley’s genius was little affected by the fact that he was the son of a Sir Timothy, who prided himself on a descent from a long line of British squires; and perhaps it had little to do with Byron’s success as a poet that he was norik in the purple of the Eng lish aristocracy;yet we can believi that gentle blood in a poet’s veins lends to him a truer love for and a keener appreciation of nature, and * a deeper feeling for the finer impuls es ofhumanity than might other wise be his. Good birth, as a gener al thing, argues good breeding re finement, education, fixed and high social position, and a wide I margin of getlerous leisure; ail of which have much to do with the outcome of a poet’s life. Tennyson laboring for his daily bread would be far different from Tennyson pro ducing poems at his “unhasting ease.” The beautiful spontaniety of his work would be gone. It is, therefore, to the advantage of Paul Hamilton Hayne as a poet that he had ancestors—“ancestors by descent, not by purchase”—as one of Gilbert’s characters says. True, our poet, in most unrepubli can fashion, wishes that these self same ancestors had been content to stay in their (our-hundrcd-years-old Shropshire manor house, that they and he might tiave beeq spared tlie questionable benefits of our-land of business before poetry: “Cloud-girded land, brave laud beyond ‘the sea! Land of my fathers' love! imwoft I veam Toward thy famed ancestral shores to turn, Roaming thy glorious shores in liber- . ty.” The Haynes were, early in colo nial days, immigrants to Charles- * ton, South Carolina, and from the first were important in the affairs of the young'Statc. They furnished • noble patriots, who shed their blood to obtain liberty for the country of t heir adoption. The strongest of this partrician family was the poet’s un cle, Robert Y. Hayne, Governor, and later United States Senator, whose memorable controversy with Daniel Webster fixed his own fame and evoked irom t lie New England statesman what his latest biogra pher calls his“greatest and most re nowned oratoricaleffort” It is . glory enough to have been crushed by such a reply. And, by the way, these two truly great men, as the story books would say, “lived happily ever after” that wonderful argument, so far as their affection ate personal relations were con cerned. Hayne himself once said, ■<A man who can make such speech es as that ought never to die.” But to our poet : Paul H. Hayne was born in Charleston on the first day of the year. He was the only child of Lieutenant Hayne,a naval officer, who died at sea when his son was an infant; his mother, who died about five years ago, was a Soiith Carolina lady, of good English and Scotch descent. The son was gradua ted from Charleston College. The world was before him, and with the prestige of a noble name, high posi tion and sufficient amount of wealth he was free to choose his path. His ) fondness for letters, especially poe try, was pronounced, and there was everything to fesfer liis love. * The Charleston of forty years ago was a very different place from the Charleston of to-day. The old Hugenot- ele .lent, with its aristo cratic names and associations, w ith the large admixture of good Eng lish blood, tended to make it somewhat exclusive. “Boston her self.” says one writer, ‘did not gath er the mantle of her self-ini' portanee in a more queenly man- - IU , r about her than did this city by the sea. There was a decided iit- esftfy element, too, among its high- 9 er classes. Legare’s wit and schol arship brightened its social circle; Calhoun’s deep shadow loomed over it from his plantation at Fort Hill- Gilmore Simms’ genial cul ture’ broadened its sympathies.” •’•The latter gathered about him a I band of brilliant youths in literary suppers at his home and here it was that-the love for Elizabethan lore o K i English classics, which is one •I Hayne’s characteristics, received its best stimulants. On graduating from college Hayne stuffed law and was admitted ti the bar, though he never practiced- As to Longfollew, Lowell aud Bry- W00TTEN & CATES, Proprietors. WISDOM, JUSTICE AND MODERATION. TERMS:*-It- . per year in Adraaeo. VOLUME XXI. NEWNAN, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1886. NUMBER 40. The Newnan Herald. PUBLISHED EYEBY TUESDAY. One inch one year, $10; a cofuin oa* year, $100; less time than three *1.00 per inch for first insertion. auO oO cents additional for caen suusequeut in ^Notices in local column, ten ine for each insertion. Liberal arrange ments will be made with those adverns- lg by the quarter or year. h All transient advertisements must b paid for when handed in. Announcing candidates, <xc-, strictly in advance. Address all communications to A. B. CATES, Newnan* a- ant, literature seemed fairer than law, and zephyrs from Parnassus persistently blew in through the fice window. The year after he attained his majority, the youug lawyer was married to Miss Mary Middiet, n Michel, of Charleston, the only- daughter of Dr. William Micnet Shad beeu one of the distin- out guisued surgeons in the army of Napoleon the First. Of her it is but the scantest justice to say that she has been the inspiration, the stay, thejoy of the poet’s life. As Mar garet J. Preston well says, “no poet was ever more blessed in a wife, and she it is who, by her self-renun ciation, her exquisite sympathy, her positive material help, her bright hopefulness, has made endurable the losses and trials that havi crowded Mr. Hayne’s life. Those who know how to read between the lines can see everywhere the inliu- ence of this irradiating and stimu lating presence.” Then came the disasters of war. Hayne, though from childhood del icate it. health, became a member Gf Gov. Pickens’s staff. During the bombardment of his native city his ' euutiftil home,with his magnificen* library, was utterly destroyed, the greater part of iiis movable proper ty, plate, jewels, etc., were saved only to he lost in the famous* march to the sea.” His health compelled him to withdraw from military af- uirs. There was nothing left foi the homeless, ruined man hut an exile among the “Pine Barrens” o' Georgia. There, a few miles from the city of Augusta, he settled ii. utter seclusion in a small cabin of unseasoned lumber, behind whose screen of vines, surrounded by the melons, berries and peaches of his own raising,he has fought—is fight ing—the battle of life with uncorn plaining bravery, persisting through all in being happy. There at “Copse Hill” he has lived for fifteen y’ears, content with Iitile of th s world’s goods, happy in doing what of his chosen work his frail health will permit, living in manly independ ence. The little house itself shows that romance has entirely died out of the world, and that all poets do not house themselves in brick walls or behind brown-stone fronts. Its interior is cheery; for it has been patiently decorated in a fashion at once homelike and artistic by the iiand of' Airs. Hayne. The walls arc papered with engravings, care fully selected from the current pe riodicals. Air. Hayne’s study lined with pictures of eminent men views of noted places and scenes of public interest, so arrange-,i as to leave no break in the wltT.b. His desk, at which ha always stands while writing, is made out of the two ends of the work-bench used in building the cottage. Airs. Hayne has contrived to transform it into an antique bit of furniture. The little book-cases near by are made of box es, fancifully decorated t - suit the room. Taken as a whole, the po et’s study—and indeed, his entire house, for that matter—is fairly en titled to he described hv that much abused and long suffering adjective unique In porson Hayne is a slight fig ure and medium heigJ.th, lj^vin piercing eyes, dark lips and a dark complection. His skin is as fresh as that of a hoy of sixteen. It must he the subtle alchemy of a pure gen ius which is a wonderful preserva tive; or is it the deep love for tht life, the constant communion wife nature in the undying freshness <>l her youth which seems to koiq this man ever young? A word as to Haynv' 1 publish ed' works. His first volume of poems was published in Boston 1855,when he was twenty-five years old, his second in 1S57 and his third in 186*1 and then came the famou war lyrics, “Aiy Alotherland,” “The Substitute,” “Beyond the Potomac and many others. The last named was singled out for praise by Dr. Holmes on the poetry of the war “Legends and Lyrics,” the poets fourth and best collection of poems appeared in 1ST? and a fifiti volume appeared in 1S76. Air. Hayne’s edition of the poems ot his friend Henry Timrod, is well known tor the pathetic memoir which prelac- es it. Havne’s position in the liter ature of the time may justly be called the greatest living Southern poet. In his work there is a tine reeling and a daiu’eness of expres sion which greater poets have mis led. His sonnets delighted Leigh Hunt. Jean Ingelow,, Long fellow, Holmes. V> bittier, How Joe Brown Eats Pie. I was going to say a word about the silent South, and I hope I may deal fairly with this question, tor it is one that is very important and that every true American citizen should try to understand. I got to thinking it over the other day while looking down over the Senate of the United States. While doing so, an elderly Senator, with the air of a hungry man, ordered lunch. I wanted to see a live Sena tor attack his food, and what his or der was, so I took a large, expen sive opera-glass, which I always carry with me, and watched the venerable gentleman. He secured a pot of tea,half a pumpkin pie, and a small plate of butter. He then, with an air of great reluctance, re moved a large, oblong butternut- eoiored wad of some foreign sub. stance from the interior of his cheek, laid it down gently where he could recover it at once in case of fire or accident, poured out his tea in the saucer to cool, and began to butter his pie. He spread the en tire mass over the sorrel surface this delicacy, and then cut it into sections about one and a half or two inches each way, and then he ran his knife under the bottom of each one, raised it gently to a level with the base of his nose, ran his long red flexible, scholarly tongue out in, a horizontal manner under the knife, so a to prevent any possiole, accident, gathered in the rectangu lar wad of pie,grappled andgurgled with it for a moment, and then, with a quick, sinuous movement of the neck, a low metallic rattle of the (esophagus, a wild, choked hunted look in the eye, and a sigh oi unutterable relief, he was ready for the next. Slowly but certainly the venerable Senator inserted this buttered half of a large pumpkin pie into himself in this manner, without once drawing blood blood in the corners of his mouth with the keen and tren chant blade of his knile and then he turned to peruse his tea. I asked a friend if he would tel me the name of this venerable Sen ator, and he said it was Senator Brown, of Georgia. Just then Senator Brown, of Georgia, saturated the first two joints of lus thumb in his saucer of tea, raised the beverage to his clear- cut mouth, looked across the amber surface, closed his eyes in dolorous for,- ^ilness, and turned that tea i is true inwardness with a si ud a rumble, and last long fa 1 gurgle, that jarred the glass in the wiudows and sounded as though he had torn his diaphragm in two. I heard men drink tea from a saucer in a high falsetto tone of voice, but never before heard a man absorb this beverage in such clarion tones as Senator Brown, of Georgia. And yet that region has been called “the silent South.” Bill Nye. A BRIDAL’S COUPLE’S TOUR. Their Behavior on a Train aud the In dignation they Created. Love And Coal Bills. The Bev. Henry Ward Beecher •t,s: “The deepest emotion that ni in knows is love,” but little the cruel father thinks of this when he comes down stairs at midnight with a club in his hand and fire in his eye and drives into the inclemency of a midwinter night the fond youth ,vho with self-sacrificing devotion, has been assisting his daughter to test the stability of a rocking chair. Does such a father ever stop to con sider that love is the deepest emo tion that man knows? Ah! no Careless is he about outraging the tenderest feeling of the human heart. His mind filled only with sordid thoughts, he bursts in on the nappy pair, exclaiming: “I want you to understand that I pay the coal bills for this house.” »Tis thus that “Love’s young dream” is so frequently transformed into a nightmare.—Boston Courier Whipple and Richard' Grant White, were equal lv pleased with his - r '->phles” in 4 fronds and Lyrics." “The wife of Rriunny” also deserves special '"iiis style is, generally speaking, subdued and reflective. He inter prets uature with the clear insight oi one who loves her. He has made the melancholy meanings of his Georgia pines sob through his vers- But it would be superfluous to enter upon a criticism of the work of Havne’s genius. That can be don. oulv by the reader, who, as Alaiga- ret J Preston has said, “if he can not of himself, find therein the aromatic ireshness of the woods- the swaving incense of the cathe dral-like aisles of pines-the sough of dying summer winds among the . , f i,e <dint of lonely pools, and P^br^ioS "otesof theTeaf hid- mocking birds—would not he discern them however care- able to fully the critic might point them Ah! sad and dreary must be the heart to which that word “some time” brings no joyful anticipa tion. To the most of us it is a sweet song, murmuring to and fro among the topmost boughs of hope, filliu the whole air with such joy and gladness as do the songs of the birds when the summer morning comes out of the darkness, and X day is born again to the world. It is a possession of the future. There is the soft music, and the sweet, fragrant flowers which our hands would fain grasp, while now we can only catch the faint per fume. and hear the melody of a far- off strain. To one this possession is a home stead over whose roof no shadow falls, over whose threshold no voice of sorrow is ever heard; to another it is a palace built upon eternal hills, proud in grandeur of spires and pinnacles; again, to the arorn and weary, it is a season of complete rest, and to all it is an untiring enjoyment. It is a most fit subject for the most fervent petition, to pray to be de livered from the despair which comes when hope in the fntnre, in the “sweet sometime,” is lost. Detroit Free Press. Now, what’s the use of it ? When a couple get married and go off on a bridal tour why so misbehave themselves as to be “spotted” by every man, woman and child on the train for “fresh fish ?” How silly the thing must appear to them when they look back after a period of six months! Are we fools whei in love, and are we idiots when we marry? The couple I have in mind had ; seat in the middle of the car. She was his’n and he was hers. All the tomfoolery of courtship days was over. The preacher had made them one, anil her father would no longer set the dog on him or place torpe does around the gate. She didn’t show the least disposition to jum| out of the car window, but all of a sudden he grabbed her by the paw. She grabbed hack. Then he leaned over at an angle of 45 deg’s,and she fell toward him. It was a very un comfortable position, but they main tained it with scarcely any change for hours. Her hat got skewed around almost hindside before, but she would not release her clutch for fear he’d go through the roof. His collar wilted and his necktie worked around under bis ear, but if he’d let go her paw she’d think he was mad. “Darling!” said he in a bullfrog .vhisper, “doesn’t it seem funny? “I can’t realize it,” she answered, as she raked one of her black hair pins across his nose. “Ail mine?” “Yes, lovey.” “Never get mad ?” “Never, sweety.” The man on the seat behind them folded up the paper, picked up his grip and changed to a seat across the aisle. As he sat down a moth erly looking woman inquired: “Are they married?” “I think,so, madam.” “And can nothing be done to stop it?” “I think not.” For two or three minutes the newly wedded were silent. “Darling!” she suddenly sighed. “What is it, my angel?” “Darling!” “What Is it? If any base hyena has dared to cause you a rnomen unhappiness I’ll murder him. Point out the animal!” “It isn’t that." “Then what?” ‘Tin—I’m afraid you’ll be—be mad.” “No, I won’t. How could I be mad at you? What is it, Dolly ?” “Why, I wish you’d wipe the sweat out of that left ear. Now, you love me just the same, don’t you ?” “Of course.” “And you ain’t mad?” “Why, no. There now—who cares who’s looking?” It’s nobody’s busi ness anyhow!” There was another interval of si lence, during which she tried to re member whether they were en gaged the week before her father gave Henry the boot or whether it was the next Sunday after. “Henwy?” “What, angel?” ‘Aie we really married “Yes, love.” “And you love me ?” “With all my heart.” “And you ain’t mad?” “No, dearest.” Then I’m so happy! squeeze my hand.” “He squoze. We held a n indig nation meeting and appointed committee to see if something could not be done; but he squoze the harder. Three or four women got together and passed a resolution to the ef fect that if a railroad company could not protect its passengers the Legislature shoul dbe appealed to but that couple had a death-grip on each other and wouldn’t let go. The baggageman came in when sent for, but he said he was helpless He knew just how we must feel hut the road wasn’t to blame. The con ductor came back to the car aud asked us not to lay it up against him. He was a poor man, had been out of a job several months, and this was his first run. Well, the long and short of the matter was that eighteen or twenty of us rode 150 miles with that jisno- rama, but such a thing will never happen again—never. We shook hands on that, and agreed we’d walk first. Yew W' od Preservatives. Im mersing the lower ends of fence posts in hot coal tar will preserve the outside lor years, but it very frequently happens that in usinj small trees from four to eight inch in diameter the heart wood is the first to decay. This often occurs with chestnut posts that are set be fore they are thoroughly .teasoned. To prevent this decay at the center, as well as of ail that part of the post placed below ground, by the use cf wood preserving solutions, my friend and neighbor, J. J. Suckert, Pti. D., suggests a system which strikes metis being not only novel, but exceedingly’valuable as well. It is to have a hole in thecenterof the post, from the bottom upward, to a point that shall he above the ground when the post is in a position. Then bore another hole in the side of the post with a slight inclination down ward, making ail opening in the center hole, which will allow iree passage. A wooden plung, two or three inches long, should be driven snugly into the hole at the bottom of the post, in order to prevent the escape of any liquid that may be used in the operation. Now when the posts are set in an upright posi tion, a preservative solution may be introduced into the hole in the side and the center one filled with it, af ter which a cork or plug of some kind should be inserted in the side hole to prevent evaporation, as well as to kee out dust and insects. The solu’u“ .■thus introduced will grad ual^ absorbed by the surround ing wood, until all parts along the entire length of the central cavity must become completely 7 saturated. When the solutions used have been taken up by the surrounding wood, it will only be necessary 7 to with draw the cork, or plug, and apply more, it it is thought desirable. A common watering pot with a slen der spout will be a handy vessel to use in distributing the solutions. Petroleum, creosote, corrosive sublimate, or any 7 other of the well- known wood preservatives may he used in this way. Telegraph posts might he prepared in the same way, and if the central reservoir were kept filled with petroleum, they would last a hundred years or more. Where a large number of posts are tube prepared, it would he cheaper to have the holes bored by steam or horse power than by hand. With very open and porous wood it is quite probable that a hole bored in the side of the post and above the ground, and deep enough to hold a half pint or more of creosote or some similar solution, would answer, hut I think a central cavity reaching to the bottom would be best. Will the readers of the American Agricul turist who give this plan a trial, re port the result? —A. S. Fuller in American Agriculturist. Beer Drinking and Heart Disease. es tor Medals, Bad_ .and Summer Goods. GENERAL NEWS- Tennessee is at work,and natural ly Tennessee is reaping a goor harvest of settlers. Tennessee, iiki North Carolina, lias a commission er who works U r immigration. Gustavus J. Orr, State school com missioner, and superintendent ol the Peatiody Institute, lias issued invitations to the teachers through out the State to attend the exercisee of the Peabody 7 Institute, which will begin Alonday, August 2nd, at Atlanta, and continue for four weeks. Board for visitors $3.50 per week. The ’cycles of the South are to haw a meeting at Columbus. The Fanev Stationary, itc.. will be kept lip to the times in Styles and meeting will cover three days, July Henry “Yes,” said Miss Richladie, “my daughter graduates.next week.” “I understand she is at the head of the class.” “No,” she said with some sadness, “she will not be the valetudinarian, but she will take the salutary, and that’s nearly as high.” “The commencement exercises are to be very interesting?” “Oh yes. The Rev. Dr. Grace will preach the bacchanalian sermon, the Rev. Dr. Mortimer will deliver the dilemmas, and there will be other detractions too. numerous to mention.”—Washington Critic. The habitual consumption of beer excessive quantities tends to hypertrophy by the direct action of alcohol upon the heart, by the enormous amount of fluid introduc ed into the body, and by the easily assimilated nutritive constituent of the beer itself. Furthermore, such nabits are often associated with great bodily activity and at least relatively 7 luxrious manner of life. The average weight of the normal heart In men is relatively greater in Alunich than elsewhere, a fact, without doubt, dependent upon the excessive consumption of beer in that city 7 . The characteristic chang es in the form of hypertrophy- under consideration consists in the participation of both sides of the heart and in an enormous increase in the volume of the primitive mus cular elements, with enlargement of the nuclei. 'Vnether or not ac tual numerical increase in the muscular fibres takes place cannot he known. Alany individuals ad dicted to such excesses attain an advanced age notwithstanding cardiac hypertrophy, by reason ot constitutional peculiaries, an active open air life,or an enforced moder ation, but the greater number per ish alter a brief illness with symp toms of cardiac failure. At the post mortem examination are discover ed moderate dropsy, pulmonary oedema, brown induration of the iungs, bronchitis, congestion of the lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys and other organs. Fatty degeneration of the muscular wall of the heart is absent in most of these cases, and death must in the absence of ade quate anatomical lesions le looked upon as due to paralysis of the cardiac nerves and ganglia. The condition of such subjects not rarely amounts to a true plethora of the most typical kind, such as is seen among the drivers of beer wagons and workers in beweries in this country. The excesses in beer com mon in some parts of Germany are rare in the new world, but that such excesses are attended by a direct and grave danger, hitherto but little suspected, should be generally understood.—Medical Sews. 1 15, and 17, and the event promises, in all respects, to he a most notable one. The three days will be devoted to racing, fancy riding and hlll- climbing. The programe has been arranged by the Columbus club. The races are not merely local races for the Columbus riders, but the whole South will be represented. Alost of the clubs in Georgia and Alabama will attend in a body, and the ar rangements are so m..(le that even novices on the wheel will have an opportunity to win a prize, while experts will contend for a cham pionship prize. After the races there is to be a series of tours through the country round about Columbus. A judge at Dallas, Texas, 1ms granted an injunction prohibiting the Antioch Baptist church (col ored) from making unnecessary noise during religious services. Elaborate arguments were offered upon both sides, the subject of relig ious, liberty being g> ne into in ail its details. His honor seemed very iiiuch concerned over the conuu drum, and wrote an elaborate opi ion, the gist of which was that ti country 7 grants right to sleep undi (urbed. When these two light conflict, the conscience of the worshiper must be set aside in or der that the slumherer may slun her on. The decision of the directors of the Roane Iron Company of Chatt: nooga, to establish a Bessemer rail mill, marks a very important step in the development of the South The Roane Iron Works closed dow in 1882, owing to the unprofitable nessoi making iron rails which had been superseded by steel rails, Since then these extensive work that at that time employed 600 hands, have been idle. After thorough investigation of the possi bility of making Bessemer steel rails at a profit, the directors have decided to establish a Bessemer mill to turn out 150 tons of rails day. North Carolina, progressive usual, proposes to hold a convention of Northern settlers—men who have located there and are so well pleased that they want to let the world know of the attractions of their new country 7 . The North Carolina commissioner of immigra tion has over 9,000 names on iiis books of people who have written to him that they desire to locate in the State. Some of them are men of wealth seeking good openings for investments, some are farmers, some manufacturers and some mechanics. It is proposed to send out invitations to these 9,000 people asking them to meet the Northern settlers at their convention, that they may personally examine into the reasourees and attractions of that good old State. Every farmer’s family 7 should have a bed of asparagus. It is a de licious and healthful vegetable, bed once set and properly cared for will last for years, a«d grow better with time. Roots can be procured so cheaply that it is not worth while in making the first- bed to grow plants from seed. Farmers, espec ially, snould not make the mistake of planting too closely. Rows four feet apart are better than narrower and plants two feet apart in the row. With rich soil, as an aspara gus bed should always have, the plants will goon occupy 7 the entire room and produce finer.shoots than if crowded. THE TIME HAS COME 1 hey can be Maiiulactured in Newn; u W. E. Avery &Co We have found our business increasing even*at this time ot year and have added another workman to our force and hope to be more prompt in the execution ot all Watch, Clock and Jewelry repairing Our stock of Watches. Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Spectacles, Prices. W. E, AVERY & CO W S. Winters ESTABLISHED 1873., G, W. Nelson Winter sand Nelson -DEALERS IN- of(GgYj\T£ -A'N D One reason why 7 so many potato crops arc failures is because the vi tality of the seed has been impaired tbefore planting. Potatoes left in large bins in dark cellars will quick ly grow long white sprouts as soon as warm weather comes, All the sub stance in these i-hoots must come from the potato, and i‘< true ts from the nourishment ati.red for ihe young plant when it begins to grow. Secondary sprouts will start from che base alter the first are broken off, but they are never as strong a- the first. As soon as the buds be gin to push on seed potatoes they should be got from c :llar or pit and spread thinly in a light room viier” the temperature until plar.t- i.u will not he more than 40 or 50 deg. Buds will start from potatoes thus treated, but they will be green and with care in planting will he sc much start for the crop. In this way early potatoes may be advan ced a week or ten days overt host planted with seed as taken fr .m e potato bin. -OF EVERYs'DESCRIPTION.- Taken in Exchange for New Ones. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. NTEWNTA-NT I MARBLE AND GRANITE’ WORKS. JOHN A. ROYETON DEALER TN MARBLE&GRANITE. MONUMENTS, TOMB & HEADSTONES, TABLETS CURBING, ETC. Special Designs "and Estimates for any desired work, ’iurnished on application. g-52. NEWNAN, GEORGIA THOMPSON BROS. Bedroom, Parlor and Dining Room Furniture. Big Stock and Low Prices. PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGANS WOOD AND METALLIC BURIAL CASES! "/B^Orders (attended^to at any hour day or night THOMPSON BROS, Hcrnian. (k. BRING YOUR JOB WORK TO THIS FFICE - And (let it Done in The Latest SHes. We Guarantee-Satisfaction. HALE SEMINARY! NEW XA X, GEORGIA. *1885- THE SPRING- TERM 1886* BEGINS 11, Special inducements offer a;! to pupils desiring board . Number of pupils during the year 1885 ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE. Address th9 Principal for catalogue. C. L. MOSES, Principal. A. C. WILLCOXGN,) A88181- MRS. C. L. anU. L JTHERSVILT E, GEORGIAJ John E. Pexi;ejio;;ast Prim Id t . ** SPRING TERM Opens Jnnuary 6, 1886. Tuition per Month ?. r» 'io£Tif) Board per Month y>.o<J to *;o.. C Board per Month Jfom Moi*- flgday to Friday * ff. One hundred and nine pupils enr*[ during 1885. £3TSend for catalogue. n .%•. J7. Alexander House. BY MBS. a. M. HANVEY 1 Agt. .Oppo.it* Moore ud Mtnb, Atlanta. Ga. First alu. Table ud Good Hoe in*. Pile, of Board Modorata.4