The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, October 14, 1887, Image 7

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/ Jerald and ^tertisq. Newnan, Ga., Friday, Oct. 14, 1887. LITTLE OLD FASHIONED. As prim as a lily in some quiet nook. She sits by herself, with her slate or her book. And hears with an air patronizingly gay The voices of other sweet children at play. Demurely she Righs, by which you infer That such romping and merriment are not fot her; But some one’s heart whispers that she is her pearl. Her little home body, her old fashioned girl. She “plays tea” alone by a sofa or chair. Rocks baby to sleep with a matronly air. Then sews by the cradle. With glasses on, she A pocket edition of granny would be. When mother looks careworn, ahl quickly she Rees, And knows how a few soothing love words will please, Then in that dear lap lays each soft, shining curl; She's mother’s own comfort, her old fashioned girl. When twilight has mellowed the loud playtime din, , 8he quietly asks. “Are the children all in?” Or, watching the step, when a footstep comes near, She whispers, “That’s father; I’m so glad he’s here!” Tim youngest of shoulders, the oldest of heads! Does any one know a wee darling who sheds A joy and a sunshine, ’mid life's tireless whirl. Like mother’s home body, her old fashioned girl? —Harper's Young People. They tell a very good story on a dea con in a neighboring town. He thought he recognized a young lady friend lead ing a little boy up the street, and step ping to her side he asked: “Why, Ma ry, where did you get that child?” The professional Carbs. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew A Co.’s. scarlet face instantly turned to his was 1 PAYSON S. WHATLEY, that of an entire stranger, and her I Attorney at Law, quick reply fully satisfied him: “I came j Newnan, Ga. b\ it honestly, was all she said, and j practice in all the Courts and givv the good old man had something to ; prompt attention to all business placed ill his think about all the way home to din- j hands. Examination of titles, writing deeds, . ... j mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe- m 1 cial attention. Office over Askew's store. Tallest People Lazy. "Why are the tallest people the lazi- L. M. FARMER, t ? They are longer in bed than Attorney at Law, others, and if they neglect their coughs I ' Xewnan Ga or colds, they will be there still longer. ! * ’ Use Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gtim and Mullein. We have heard of swell- dinners with twelve kinds of wine, but are of the opinion that one kind of wine would' swell us so that we wouldn’t care about any dinner. i \ J F ) AN ACTOR’S LOVE LETTERS. And Other Mutters for the Hopper of the Secondhand Paper Stock Healer. “Love letters? oh, yes, we come across them quite often in our stock; but we have no time to read ’em. You see business, not sentiment, is my motto,” said a down town dealer in paper stock. “When people are leaving a house they have lived in a good many years they don’t care to be l>othered with old papers, and they just sell them to us at so much a pound, whether it is love letters, or magazines, or whatever it may be. “I did have rather a notable experience with a love letter once, though. I was sorting over a bundle- which had just ar rived from a house up town—lor we always sort over in case tliei'e should happen to be anything valuable—when a monogram on a letter met my eye. I knew that monogram, and I thought that perhaps it might be something that ought to be sent back. I glanced at the letter, and then I saw what it was. It was from a lady belonging to one of our first families, so called, to a well known actor, who made a furor in New York quite a number of years ago. The actor had stopped in that house awhile, and didn’t seem to have thought the letters worth taking with him, or perhaps he forgot them. At any rate they came down here in that bundle, an ocean of them, and some of them had not even been opened, which shows how little actors think of that kind of correspond- ence. The whole lot went for pajier stock. No, I didn’t keep one. It would not have been business like. 4 4 And we have old checks and old tele grams by the ton. All business houses get rid cf them as old paper after keep ing them for a certain length of time, and sometimes the price of the waste pa per is all they get out of a good many of the checks. It all comas into the hopper at from a cent to a cent and a quarter a pound, for pajter stock just now is very low; it has never lteen lower. “Those album covers? They come to us at a price a little above waste paper, and sometimes we get quite a good figure for them. You see, the wholesale houses that deal in albums send out only the covers as specimens, and when a cover is out of date it comes into the second hand deal er’s hopper. “At the new directory season we reap quite a crop of the last year’s directories, all as waste paper, and sell them for $1 apiece. A good many would just as soon have them as the new ones. “But aldermen and other politicians are among our best customers in old, or rather second hand books. May seem queer, but it’s a fact. They get heaps of books from Washington, besides state and city documents, and they just put them to one side until the heap gets in convenient, and then they pack them off to the paper stock dealer. In many in stances such books have not been even taken out of the packages. But it’s all the same to us. We paw a cent and a quarter for them.”—New York Sun. The Effect of Sleeping in Cars Is the contracting of cold, which often results seriously to the lungs. Never neglect a cold, but take in time Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein—nature’s great cough medi cine. A Pennsylvania man rose in prayer meeting recently and prayed for the absent “who were prostrated on beds of sickness and sofas of wellness.” Important to seven out of ten people. The moment constipation begins, that moment the blood begins to be impure and poor, and the system to demand the use of Laxador. A young man earnestly inquires how success is attained. Our opinion is that perhaps the best way to obtain success is to marry a rich wife. Mary Anderson says she could not love a man who did not possess the highest mental attainments. Oh, come now, Mary, stop hinting and propose. (Office over First National Bank.) Will prac’ice in al! the Courts of Coweta Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. Money to loan on real estate at 8 per cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of Ihe year. P. S. Willcoxon. W. C. Wright. WILLCOXON & WRIGHT, Attorneys at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in all the Courts of the Dis trict and Circuit. All Justice Courts atten ded. Office in Willcoxon building, over E. E. Summers’. GEO. A. CARTER, Attorney at Law, Grantville, Ga. Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement. J. C. NEWMAN, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Georgia. Will practice in the Superior and Justice Courts of tile county and circuit, and elst- where by special agreement. 'A. paid ten dollars for a horse at an auction sale. The horse was lame and bruised till over. A bottle ol" Salvation Oil costing 25 cents was used; he is now valued at two hundred dollars. • FAITH CURE FAIRLY BEATEN. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Practices In all the State and Federal Courts. Office No. 4 Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in all Courts of tins and adjoining counties and the Supreme Court. J. S. POWELL, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Disappointed Nimrod*. % Some days ago a number of sportsmen went across the lake on a hunting and fishing excursion. The party was com posed of a well known engraver, one of- the artists employed on a popular maga zine, a printer, a young literary jnan, and others of lesser note. The pro gramme, as laid down on the start, was, that deer, bear, elk and other game should be sliot by the hunters, sketched and engraved by the artist and engraver, and that a full account of the trip should be written by the literary man, set up by the printer, published after the party came back,- and . sold in monthly num bers, forty-eight in a set, at twenty-five" cents each. The pimrojs took ammuni tion, enough withthem to kill all the- game from New Brunswick.to Manitoba. - After a w&elc of tramping they succeeded in bagging a hedgehog and a clow, and £n capturing.two bass, “a great many of which would .weigh a pound." ’ It is un necessary to add that the apparatus for sketching, engraving .and type setting, which formed no inconsiderable portion of the baggage, was not unpacked. — Rochester Post-Express. Chaplain Hall Writes the Following Re markable Letter. Albany, N. Y., Express. For many years my wife had been the victim of nervous dyspepsia, of the chronic, distressing and apparently in curable type from which so many of her sex suffer, languish and die. It was all the worse because the tendency to it was inherited. She had been under the systematic treatment of many of tlie best physicians in New York and Brooklyn and elsewhere for twenty years with only temporary relief. In fact, there were few, if any, kinds of food that did not distress her, so dis eased, sensitive and torpid were all the organs of digestion. The usual symp toms of dyspepsia, with its comcomi- tant ailments, were all present—bad taste in the mouth, dull eyes, cold feet and hands, the sense of a load upon the stomach, tenderness on pressure, indi gestion, giddiness, great weakness and prostration, and fugitive pains in the sides, chest and back. I have often risen in the night and administered stimulants merely for the sake and transient relief they gave. Intermittent malarial fever set in, complicating the case and making every symptom more pronounced and in tense. By this time the pneumogastric nerves had become very seriously in volved, and she had chronic Gastritis, and also what I may he allowed to call chronic intermittent malarial fever all at once. For the latter the physicians prescribed the good, old-fashioned, sheet-anchor remedy, Quinine, gradual ly increasing the doses, until—incredi ble as it may seem—she actually took THIRTY GRAINS A DAY FOR DAYS IK succession. This could not last. The effect of the quinine was, if possible, almost as had as the two-fold disease which was wearing away her strength and her life. Quinine poisoning was painfully evident, but the fever was there still. Almost every day there came on the characteristic chill and racking "headache, followed by the usual weakness and collapse. About this .time I met. socially my friend Mr. Norton, a member , of the firm of Chauncey Titus & Company, brokers, of Albany, who, on hearing from me these facts, said: “Why, I hav thin cured _. „ kine,’ ? he said, “try it- for your wife. I had seen Kaskine advertised, but had no move faitlt in it than I had in saw dust, for such a case as hers. Mrs. Hall had ho higher opinion, yet on the strength of my friend’s- recommenda- Collections made. G. W. PEDDY, M. D~ Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, 3a. (Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.) Offers hts services to the people of Newnan and surrounding country. All calls answered promptly. a** BEAST! Mexican Mustang Liniment ouzuas Sciatica, Scratches. Contracted Lumbago, Sprain*, Kuaclee, RheumatUm. Strains, Eruptions, Burnsi Stitchee, Hoof Ail, Scalds, Stiff Joints, Screw e Stinga, Backache, Worms, Bites, Galls, Swinney, Bruises, Sores, Saddle Galls, Bunions, Spavin Piles. Corns, Cracks. THIS COOD OLD STAND-BY accomplishes for everybody exactly what Is claimed for It. One of the reasons for the great popularity of the Mustang Liniment Is found In Its universal applicability. Everybody needs such a medicine. Tlie Lumberman needs it In case of accident. The Housewife needs It for general family use. The Caualer needs It for his teams and his men. The Mechanic needs it always on his work bench. The Miner needs It In case of emergency. The Pioneer needs It—can’t get along without It. The Farmer needs It in his bouse, his stable, and his stock yard. The Steamboat nan or the Boatman needs It In liberal supply afloat and ashore. The Horse-fancier needs It—It is hts best friend and safest relianoe. The Stock-grower needs It—it will save him thousands of dollars and a world of trouble. The Railroad mna needs It and wQl need It so long as his life Is a round of accidents and dangers. Xke Backwoodsman needs it.' There Is noth ing like It as an antidote for the dangers to Ufa, limb and comfort which surround the pioneer. The Merchant needs it about his store among his employees. Accidents will happen, and when these come the Mustang Liniment Is wanted at once. Ivecp a Bottle iu the House* JTi&the best of economy. Keep a Bottle in the Factory. Its immediate use in case of accident saves pain and loss of wages. Keep a Bottle Always la the Stable for one when *w-anto*l- T. B. DAVIS, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga. Offers his professional services to the citi zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot. Street. Cbucational. 1837. 1888 PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL, (FOR MALES AND FEMALES,) PALMETTO, GA. JOHN E. PEN DEB GBA S T, Prm. FALL TERM WILL OPEN WEDNESDAY', SEPTEMBER 7, 1SS7. Healthy climate, pure water, ctood society, cheap boa’d and tuition, experienced teach ers, and special care to pirpils. Tuition, per month - - - Music, per month - - - Board per, month - - - •Send for Catalogue. - $1.60 to |4.00 - - - 3.00 - - 3.00 to 10.00 NORTH’S CHICKEN CHOLERA CURE [BKKOItK TAKING.j A SURE AFTKlt TAKING.] PREVENTIVE AND AN INFALLIBLE SPECIFIC roxQQO GH S,CROUP AND CONSUMPTION usz THE 36th SCHOLASTIC YEAR COLLEGE TEMPLE WILL BEGIN Mondav, August 29th, 1887. OF CHICKEN CHOLERA Has never failed to effect a cure when promptly admini • tered. Tried and endorsed by hundreds, who willingly testil to the sovereign virtues of the remedy. It is manufactured is fluid form and can be administered without difficulty. On bottle will save $50.00 worth of diseased poultry. PREPARED BY THE NORTH CHOLERA CURE CO, NEWNAN, GA., And sold by all druggists at FIFTY CENTS and ONi DOLLAR per bottle." Full directions with each package. THE NEWNAN VARIETY STORE! ’THE ONLY PLACE IN TOWN WHERE YOU CAN GET ANY AND EVERYTHING YOU WANT AND AT YOUIi OWN PE ICE ! I have now in stock and am constantly receiving the largest and most complt'- assortment of general merchandise ever offered or ever carried in Newnan, am can supply any want, however small or however great. An experience ot man years lias rendered me thoroughly familiar with the varied wants and necessity of tlie people of this section, and my stock has been added to front time to tun until it is now absolutely complete in every department. I can only make gen eral mention of the different classes and grades of merchandise kept tor sale 1 my establishment, which may be embraced under the following inclusive bean ings— READY-MADE CLOTHING, (a large stock,) DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS, (an infinite variety,). "WILLOW BASKETS, (all sizes, styles and grades. SCHOOL BASKETS, WORK BASKETS, CLOTHES BASKETS, TRUNKS, VALISES, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES JUGWARE, CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE, LADIES’ OUTER AND UNDERWEAR, JERSEY JACKETS, NECKWEAR AN IMMENSE LOT OF TOBACCO, AND THE BEST ASSORTED STOCK OF GROCERIF. IN NEWNAN, WITHOUT EXCEPTION. My prices are as low as the lowest, and on some articles I know I am cheapt tan mv competitors. Those wlio are familiar with m\ methods know that ponding figure'and still make as good profit as my competitors. It will pay ye to ponder these facts, and pay you still better to personallj inspect m> goods. J. G. SHANNON. West Side Public Square, NEWNAN, GA M C BRIDE’S muLLEifL rj-TTNA PALACE •eet guc'.. aa gathered from atreoof the X. J 1 B. M. A ^ _xTjL_ -A— -A. Th© sweat jtuih, MEftthprwl from 8 trw.of tlifl same name, growing alone the small streains in the Southern States, contains a ; g™ •U £*2*1*, fAi pectorantprinciple that loosens .he ph-eeni 're ducing the early-niomJne congji, ana stimulates the child to throwotftoolalsc membrane In cron jj and whoopi rig-conch- When combined iriUi the healingmuciljiginousprlnmple^ln^Uie^mull^in tion T’got a bottle and began its use as_ directed. .. . Now recall what I have already said' as to her then condition, atid flien read what- follows: Under the Kasldne treatment-all-the dyspeptic symptoms showed instant, improvement, and the daily fever grew less and .soon ceased altogether. Side by side these dis eases vanished, as side by side they had tortured- their victim for ten years—the dyspepsia alone having, as I have said, existed for twenty years. Her appetite- improved from week to "week until she could eat and digest the average food that any well person takes, without any suffering or inconvenience. With renewed assimilation of food came, of course, a steady increase iti flesh, until she now looks like her original self. ! She still takes Kaskine occasionally, ! but with no real need of it. for she is i well. 1 consider this result a scientific ! miracle, and the “New Quinine”, isen-. titled to the credit of it. for from the time she began with Kaskine she used no other medicine whatever. If you think a recital of these facts calculated to do good you are welcome nl&nt of the old - fields prc^w.~- — — CHEKOKKE REMEDY OE SWEET &PM AXOMCb- LEIX the iinest known remedy lor Coughs, Croup, Whooping-cough and consiiraptlon; und-O pale- table, any child is pleased to take lLAsk your AruStstforit. PriceSSc. and #1.OB. „ . WALTEU A.TA YLOK,Atla»ta,Go. Having recorded our" most successful 'yesir; we present the claims of able instructor^; high scholarship, mcjjlerate rates anil, health ful lofrllitv. "Fot uarfieuTafs. address,'" . . - M. P". KELLOGG, President, ^ Newnan Jja. • . = i ' "■ '-V WALKER HIGH SCHOOL, ; ~ 1887. ' Tlie Fall Session Begins August 30tb. . NORMAL FEATURE. In addition to other advantages offered by the school, we mention Unit of Normal in struction. Having prepared a great many for teaching, this school -offers special induce ments to Inexperienced teachers, and those expecting to follow that vocation. DANIEL WALKER. Principal. MRS. M J. NIMMONS, Assistant. . Newnan lift., Aug. oth-tf New Anchor for .Steamers. Experiments * have been made during the week in the-'harbor of Havre and on the Seine with a new cable anchor, which will brine to a standstill the largest , win ‘a . PTPitpst 'speed * to make them public, steamer going at the , .peea (Rev.) JAS. L. HALL. within a space of tenleet. Large Steau e s j ^ j a j n Albany. N. Y.. Penitentiary, were subjected to the experiment, wlncli .. • ' 5 - ; - in all cases proved successful* und the troverrunent commission present recoin- « _ 1 V..,. nca nn ' *S€MO FOR CIRCULARS. 29 PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA, GA. ' "We import direct from the largest factories of England. France and Ge many.e ^ arrv a G f the'genuine “H.&C’o.” (Ilayiland & Co.) CHINA, v White, Gold Band, and the various decorations. Carlsbad China Dinner Tea and Bed-Room Sets. -Joseph Rogers’ Ivory-Handled Knives. Rogers’ Best Plqted Spoons, Forks and Casters. Lamps," Chandeliers, Hall and Library Lamps. . ’ We buy iii large quantities, fit lowest net cash prices. We handle only ti* best goods and sell at -lowest prices.. .. Merchants will save.-freight, breakage, delays and hard stock by placing the. orders with us. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! We give careful attention to nil mail orders, and guarantee to fill them ='• lowest prices. Do not fail to call on us wlleu in our" city. M C BRIDE & CO. P mended the new anchor for use on > overnment ships. This new anchor i» described as a huge cloth parachute, anchor shaped, attached to the ship by cables, with a huge iron weight in the middle. This balloon shaped anchor re sists the onward movement of slaps with tremendous power, assuming very much the singular balloon or bucket snap.' of “old maid” flounders on the New Lng- lind coast, which, by so doing when hooked, generally succeed in breaking the line.—-Chicago Tribune. _ —Sometimes are published without authority, and if, . in this ease, any one is inclined to ques- J ! tion the genuineness of the above state-: uient I will cheerfully reply to any j communications addressed tome at the Penitentiary. Jas. L. Hall. Other letters of a similar character ; from nroniin-'ni individuals, which i stamp Kaskine as a remedy of undoubt-_ oil merit, will be sent on application. Price s 1.00, or six bottles tor *5.00. Sold by Druggists, or sent by mail on receipt of price. The Kaskine Company. 54 \\ arren • St.. New York, and 35 Farringdon! j Road, London. i letters of this kind ; HARNESS! HARNESS! new hoi soils mm wmm Chicago - 20 UNION SQUARE, N.Y> DALLAS.! Forced to sell at low prices 200 sets of Stage, Buggy and Wagon Harness. Also, a large lot Collars of all kinds. 100 dozen good Plantation Bridles at 50 cents each. Highest price paid for hides. T. G. BURPEE. ILL. STLCOIS.MO. ATLANTA-GA. .T. R. SEWELL, Newnan, Ga. FOR SALE OR RENT! Mv plare in Newnan, known as the r >,ii Thomas place, on I.sGr»hperOHd, jn-u beyond in.itje Biw-hauan's. Possession su any time. p,-i;-e" and teems wi'R be inr.de to salt. Apply either to J- T. Kirby or to iih* U )ygy-n^ ^ Bring your Job Work to this Office ANDREW J. MILLER & SON, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FURNITURE N CARPETS ! The largest and most complete stock in the South. W= will makelt decidedly to your interest to purchase goods fror us, d< th as regards securing the latest styles and lowest price? Our FURNITURE stock is very complete, embracing ev ervthing in that line. "One C ARPET DEPARTMENT is acknowledged to \> the best in the city, and we are sure if our goods and price are examined purchasers will not fail to leave their orders wit us. Our new illustrated Furniture catalogue is just out, an we will be glad to mail it to any intending buyer. Remember the place: -<[ 42 & 44 Peachtree Street.