Newspaper Page Text
2!hc Jerald and ^ducrtifjci;.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, Nov. 11, 1887.
READING MATTKU OX KVKKY PAGE.
IMPULSE TO THOUGHT.
Friend, you must die'. Perchance the thought
Comes o'er you lilce a lightning's flash;
You realize thut Life is can-lit
As in a vise, between the clash
Of Soul and Body, and the strife
But turns and twists the captured Life.
All is turmoil, and Man a slave
That cringes to a mortal breath
Whose short possession brings the grave;
Whose only certainty is death.
Perhaps, from out this earthly gloom
You seek bright paths beyond the to/nb?
ORIGINALITY OF THE ENGLISH.
Perhaps, beside some dear dead face
You watched the long and weary night;
You missed the sweet departed grace,
Tiie smile, the voice, the loving light
That Tilled those glazed and half shut eyes.
In deep distress, your tearful cries
Re-echoed through the solemn air;
You strove in vain to raise the dead;
The pale lips smiled at your despair,
Your hot tears wet the peaceful head.
Perhaps, alsive that gentle clod.
Vain sorrow turned to steps to God?
This is the highest end of fear.
Yet savor of tiie cudgeled hound
To crouch affrighted, by tiie bier,
Be lashed to heaven at a bound.
Nor seems it yet a brave man’s place
To weep a passage into grace!
There is a power, to all innate,
A force unshackled, high and free;
As firm in mortal as his fate,
That often wields this high decree.
Let us, together, hand in hand.
Through love religion understand.
—William Wallace Cook.
AN INTERESTING CHARACTER.
Tlio Gauclio of the Pampas and IJis Pecu
liarities—Courteous and Cruel.
The Gaucho (gowclio) of the pampas
is the most interesting character on the
continent. He is the descendant of the
aristocratic Spanish don and the women
of the Guarani race, a species unknown
to any other part of the world, whose
nearest likeness is the Redouin of Arabia.
He is at once the most indolent and the
most active of human beings, for when
he is not in the saddle, devouring srace
on the back of a tireless bronco, lie is
sleeping in apathetic indolence among
his mistresses or gambling with his
chums. Half savage and half courtier,
the Gaucho is as courteous as he is cruel,
and will thrum an air on the native
mandolin with the same ease and non
chalance as he will murder a fellow
being or slaughter a steer. He recog
nizes no law hut his own will and the
unwritten code of the cattle range, and
all violations of this code are punished
by banishment or death. Whoever of
fends him must light or fly, and his ven
geance is as enduring as it is vigilant.
He never shoots, or strikes with his fist,
and his only weapons are the short knife
•which is never absent from his hand or
his belt, the lasso, and the “bolas,” im
plements of his trade, offensive and de
fensive.
A light between Gauclios is always to
the death, and it is the duty of him who
kills .to see that his victim is decently
buried, and the widow and orphans cared
for. The widow, if she pleases him, be
comes his mistress, and the orphans grow
up to be Gauclios under his tutelage. As
superstitious as a Hindoo, peaceable
when sober, but regardless of God and
man wh n drunk, as brave as a lion, as
active as a panther, with an endurance
equal to any test, faithful to his friends,
as implacable as fate to any one who of
fends him, he has exercised a powerful
influence upon the destiny of the Argen
tine Republic, and retarded civilization
until overcome by an increased immigra
tion of foreigners.
The Argentines oyce had a Gaucho
dictator. Don Manuel Rosas, “The Eter
nal," so he called himself, who ruled
with a despotism of iron and blood for
twenty-two years—from 1830 to 1853.
He was the son of a wealthy Gauc.ho of
the same name, and commanded a regi
ment of his kind in the war for indepen
dence. So powerful did he become that
it was an easy step from the chieftain
ship of the Gauclios to the presidency of
the republic, and tinallv to the head of an
absolute despotism, which existed for
nearly a quarter of a century, in deliauee
of the constitution and the laws.
The day of the Gaucho is passing. Immi
gration and civilization have driven him
to the extreme frontier. Like the North
American Indian, he decays when do
mesticated, and a tamo Gaucho is always
n drunkard, a loafer and a thief.—Will
iam Elerov Curtis in Harper’s Magazine.
\ Rare Winch Produces Men of Marked
Independence anil Executive Ability.
The English race is marked by the
power of producing independent and ex
ecutive characters in every plane of men
tal activity. There i3 no lack of great
mathematicians, great philosophers, great
poets, great naturalists, great generals,
who are distinctively great Englishmen.
But the nation possesses, in addition, the
unique power of producing men who are
to a great extent detached from social
un'oundings; who are not the product
<»f the race nor of the day, or any theory
of heredity, or transmission, or environ
ment that is in accordance with the
usual color of national or social phenom
ena. The average level of the English
race is commonplace, unidcalistic. rever
ent of the pa.-t. unicon ^elastic. They are
slow to receive abstractions, to transmute
new general -conceptions into rules of
conduct—certainly* more so than the
French, possibly more so than the Ger
mans; hut in the power of producing
from time to time eccentric, unclassified
individuals of marked originality and in
dependence they are distinguished from
any of the other nations which consti
tute what is called European civilization.
A great German rises from his fellows
in possession of a German genius; he is a
Goethe or a-Bismarck or a Helmholtz.
The only unconventional great German
man of letters that I can recall at present
is Heine, and Heine is not a German, hut
a Jew of genius trying to be a Greek.
The great Frenchmen are also great in
the narrow limitations of French great
ness. Powerful and original as is the
genius of Victor Hugo, it cannot unmoor
him from his anchorage in Parisian
thought. But are there any manifesta
tion of race development on the con
tinent tiiat are parallel to the occult spirit
ual force which produced in England men
of the type of Marlowe and Coleridge and
Shelley? Burns and Milton and Dryden
and Cow per are legitimate race develop
ments; hut from what obscure regions,
from wliat hidden fountains of Norse or
Celtic or Teutonic ancestry were drawn
the germs around which were built such
minds as those of Shelley and Coleridge,
minds not only un-English, hut in a cer
tain sense unearthly! They are flowers;
but not like the blossoms of the century
plant, for whose color and bloom the
juices have been slowly segregated by
natural laws—whose formative cell could
be discerned by the botanist’s microscope
long before it was unfolded in the crown
ing bud. They are rather what the bot
anist calls sports—abnormal develop
ments from a seed, warning us that
nature holds in restraint creative powers
for which evolution cannot account.
The explanation of this power of the
English people may lie deep in the in
scrutable laws which govern the result
of race fusion. Tiie islands, occupied
originally by British Celts, have been in
vaded by Angles, Danes and Norman
Franks in succession. Ail of these were
races of marked individuality—of indi
vidual force and contrasted features.
Perhaps we can say broadly that the
Celts were, as a race, imaginative, ex
pressive. fond of color: the Angles—the
prevailing element—phlegmatic, stub
born, silent, slow, hilt holding firmly to
the Teutonic conception of freedom for
the landholder, and tenacious of indi
vidual right; the Danes, self reliant, en
terprising, capable of high enthusiasm—
sons of the sea: the Norman-Franks, ad
ministrators. men of affairs and polity,
men of the world at home in the world
of men, and inclined to social display and
elegance.—Temple Bar.
Educated to a Trade.
Trade schools, as institutions where th-.i
industrial arts are sjiecially taught are
called, are rapidly gaming a foothold in
this country. The apprentice system
never can lie revived in this country to
such an extent as will enable the hun
dreds of young men who desire to learn a
trade to do so. The master workmen in
the various trades have neither the time
nor disposition to teach young men the
secrets of their business. Even if they
had, the rules of the various unions limit
the number of apprentices, and an ap
prenticeship is about as hard to obtain as
a scholarship in the army or naval schools
of the government. The establishment
of trade schools is, therefore, a practical
educational movement that meets with
encouragement from the associations of
master workmen in the various trades.
These schools, if they do not turn out
thoroughly skilled workmen, do furnish
young men with a ground work which,
with practical experience, will very
quickly convert them into skilled artisans.
This fact is shown by the experience
of the hundreds of young men. be
tween 17 and 21 years of age, who
have laid the foundation of their
knowledge of their trades in New York
trade schools during the past six years.
The instructors there are skilled workmen,
and the personal attention by them to
each individual student results in the
very rapid acquirement by the scholar of
I the necessary rudiments of his trade. In
j a busy workshop such personal and con-
. stant attention and the immediate cor-
! rection of false methods or errors of
judgment are not possible. It is no
wonder, then, that young men seeking
. to learn a trade make such very rapid
j and seemingly phenomenal progress as
they do at the New York trade schools.
Their faults are corrected immediately on
being made, and they are taught how to
correct and avoid them.—New York
Times.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
Telegraphic Cipher Coiles.
Telegraphic cipher codes, the use of
which was, up to within a few years,
confined to a comparative few, are now
prepared for almost every kind of busi
ness which patronizes the wires to any
extent. Each commercial line lias its
specially constructed code. Several of
these are Chicago inventions, including
one or two designed for cable telegraph
ing. The copyright of a popular code is
a valuable property. The one used most
by grain speculators netted its owner a
competence. Not many mercantile con
cerns own exclusive codes. Probably the
most elaborate commercial code in the
world is published in New York, and it is
xeally a model of ingenuity. It contains
100,000 words, drawing upon every lan
guage in Europe. It is arranged in tables
in such a manner that a Chicago mer
chant may communicate tlirough it with
twenty or thirty European correspond
ents, using prticticaUy a different cipher
for each. Half a dozen kinds of business,
with their peculiar phrases and expres
sions, are covered by this book, which is
sold at $50 a copy. The military cipher
used bv the army during the rebellion.
‘ which eluded all'attempts by the Conted-
cratos to latliom its secrets, was for many
years after the war used by a well known
detective agency’.—Chicago News.
Love of Brothers aiul Sisters.
A girl is generally very unselfish toiler
brother. You don’t often hear of a young
fellow giving up liis pocket money to his
sister; he usually growls if she wants him
to take her to the theatre. But if a boy’s
in a little trouble his sister will stand by
him like a brick. She'll not only give up
her pocket money, but she'll go and
wheedle some more out of her father to
give it to him. She'll fib, she’ll prevari
cate. she’ll beg. He’ll hang about out-
side until she gets it and comes and gives
it to him. Then he willgrab his hat and
bolt out of the house. And she does not
mind if he does not thank her particular
ly. He’s her brother.and—well—a woman
always looks at a kindness done to a man
as its own reward. A hoy can generally
wheedle money out of his mother. But
i if she can’t give it to him out of the
household cash or her own pocket she lias
a tendency to spoil all by telling Jus
father what she wants the money for. A
girl cannot succeed with her mother very
often, but she does not often fail with the
old man. And she's always more inge
nious in inventing necessities for it. A
girl, with all the more limited acknowl
edged needs of womankind for money,
will find at any time a more reasonable
excuse for requiring it tlian a man with
innumerable natural wants. God bless
the sisters, anyway. Any one of them is
worth a whole family of brothers.—San
Francisco Chronicle.
.Javanese Princess at Her Toilet.
In stature Mattah-Djarri was some
what above the ordinary Javanese
woman, who cannot he called tall; but
in symmetry and delicacy of figure and
grace of limb she had no compeer. Both
were full and exquisitely rounded, as
those of her countrywomen are in gen
eral, which is imputed to the suppressed
action of the water in bathing twice
daily, by pouring or throwing it on top
of the head in the eastern fashion, from
whence it flows down in trickling streams
all over the body, and as the years go on,
gradually causing the limbs and skin to
become round, firm, smooth and polished.
In Mattah-Djarri’s case this effect was
doubtless aided in no small degree by
long friction with delicate oils, and the
palms of Djoolo’s hands. The faithful
babu had bathed her every morning and
evening since she was born, in soft, per
fumed water; after which she annointed
her body and limbs with the highly
scented lang-a-chandana (oil of sandal
wood), rubbing it into the pores of the
skin till the latter was smooth and dry,
then polishing it with the light and deli
cate bore kuning, a yellow, perfumed
rice powder, used by people of rank.
Every motion of the beautiful girl was
thesexpression of grace and harmony, to
which was added a tranquil ease and dig
nity, that impressed every one with a
sense of her extreme loveliness of char
acter and person, combined with the
pure priental beauty of her face, to gain
for her, among her own people, the rare
honor of being likened to the Widadaris
(children of heaven).—“A Princess of
Java.”
STEAM ENGINES.
AYE HAVE ON HAND SOME SPECIAL BARGAINS IN STEAM ENGINES. ALSO, SPECIAL GIN
NERY OUTFITS, WHICH WILL REPAY PROMPT INQUIRIES.
A VERY" LARGE STOCK OF DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS ON HAND AT LOW PRICES.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO., Newnan, Ga.
TO COUNTRY PRINTERS!
A Trick of Oriental Servants.
A lady in Brooklyn has just had a
singular experience. She engaged a
Japanese servant to do up stairs work.
He appeared in the afternoon, was all
bows and smiles, and at dinner that
evening waited on the table in excellent
style. The lady thought she had a
jewel of a servant. After dinner lie re
quested to he allowed to go to New York
to see about some clothes. He went, and
that was the last seen of Jap No. 1. She
tried another, with the same result. A
third was tried. He stayed two days,
! and then left early one morning before
breakfast. The lady was nonplused
over the matter. She told a friend who
| had been in San Francisco the circum
stances. This friend said that liouse-
j keepers there had found ' that when a
Chinese servant left a place he didn't
like he would put some mark, usually of
a character so slight as not to be noticed,
oiq the kitchen wall. The next one, of
course, would see it, and thus learn what
his predecessor thought of the place and
act accordingly. The first servant the
lady employed didn't like the situation
for some reason, and so left the place and
probably his mark. The others saw it
! and left" on account of it. The lady says
| she is through with oriental servants.—
; New York Evening Sun.
Complete. NeAVspaper Outfit
For Sale!
We have for s.-de a quantity of first-class
priii ting material, compri-ing the entire out
fit formerly used in printing the Newnan
Herald, as well as type, stones, chases, and
numerous other appurtenances belonging to
the old Herald Job < ifric-. Most of the mate
rial is in excel lent condition and will tie sold
from 50 to 7.i per cent, below foundry prices.
The following list contains the leading ar
ticles:
i Campbell Press, in good
repair.
250 lbs. Brevier.
150 lbs. Minion,
50 lbs. Pica.
50 lbs. English.
50 fonts NeAvspaper Display
Type-
25 select fonts Job Type.
8 fonts Combination Border,
Flourishes, etc.
Imposing Stones, Chases,
Type Stands and Racks.
Tiie Campbell Press here offered is the same
upon which The Herald.asd Advertis
er is now printed and has been recently over
hauled ami put ir. good repair. It is sold sim
ply to make 100m for a larger and fasterpress.
Address NEWNAN PUBLISHING CO.
Newnan,'Ga.
A. P. JONES. J. E. TOOLE.
JONES & TOOLE,
CARRIAGE BUILDERS
Jvailroab Scbebules.
ATLANTA & WEST POINT R. R.
SH0W3ECASES
(i 50 a m
II it a m
AXD DEALERS IX
HARDWARE,
Lagrange, ga.
Nunios in Boston IMr<?ct-orj*
Some of the peculiarities of the Boston
directory come to light in the colums ol
The Globe of that city. Of course there
are plentv of Beans in Boston, one Egge.
eight Pyes. a number of Onions and one
Crumb. Besides these there are three
Bones, also Salt and Jelly. Seven Been
are found, and Coffee, Milk and Teas.
There is one Chicken to three Goslings
jyjd a Hawk. Boston also lias a pail oi
Stockings, ons Sock, one Cravatt; a pail
of Mittens and four Collars. Three Haiti
and one Wigg completes the outfit.—New
York World.
Tlmd. Stevens’ Kindness to a Widow.
Mr. McPherson relates an incident il
lustrative of Stevens' kindness and con
sideration. An old friend of his dying,
left a widow in destitute circumstances.
Stevens bought the property at sheriff’s
sale and continued the widow in posses
sion. To kecj* off grasping creditors he
had himself appointed trustee for the old
lady, and on the back of the deed she at
tested the fact that lie was her trustee to
the full value of the property. There is.
however, not a scrap of paper throwing
light on this transaction, unless it maybe
a letter from Stevens, which descendants
of the old lady, who is long since dead,
allege they have, but which Mr. McPher
son thus far has vainly tried to see. The
property is worth from $800 to $1,000,
and is the veritable stone house in which
Gen. Lee had his headquarters when the
hattle of Gettysburg was fought.—Lan
caster Inquirer.
Great Place to Spank a Baby.
She stood in the pressroom of a country
daily, where the agile “fly” of the press
was slapping down the papers with ad
mirable precision. She was a motherly
looking creature, with a blue cotton um
brella.
“That ‘fly’ delivers the papers at the
rate of 1,500 an hour,” modestly re-
; marked the proud proprietor.
“Fifteen hundred an hour!” she ex-
! claimed. “Mercy on us! You don’t
; mean it!” And then, moved by motherly
instinct, she added: “Wliat a place to
spank a baby!”—Somerville Journal.
Manufacture all kinds of
Carriages, Buggies, Carts and
Wagons. Repairing neatly
and promptly done at reason
able prices. We sell the Peer
less Engine and Machinery.
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES,
K0
Home, Sweet Home, In Dakota.
Wonderful Advantages of California.
California, with its 160.000 square
miles of territory, its S00 miles of sea
coast, its grand Yosemite valley, its stu
pendous water falls, its grand trees, its
towering mountains, presents within the
limits of a single state all the climates
known to the universe, all the differences
of surface, from snow clad peaks to val-
leys which lie hundreds of feet below the
sea level, all the fruits between the equa
tor and the pole, all vhe minerals known
to geology.—Chicago Herald.
j A gentleman hunting for land in Da-
i kota came across a boarded up claim
■ shanty with half a dozen boards across |
I the doOr. upon which were the following
! touching inscriptions: “Four miles from :
a nayber. Sixty miles from a postofis. j
i Twenty-five miles from a raleroad. A
I hundred and atety from timber. 250
j feet from water. God bless our lvomc.
; M e have gone east to spend the winter
with my wife’s folks.” — New York
I Graphic.
MORE
WEAK
EYES!
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
SORE. WEAK AMD INFLAMED EYES-
Sept. Itli, 1887.
Up Day Passenger Train—East.
Leave Selma ... ... .5 20 a in
Leave Montgomery 7 52 a in
“ Grantville 11 45 a m
“ Puckett’s 11 57 a in
“ Newnan 12 OS p m
“ Palmetto 12 32 pm
Arrive at Atlanta 1 25 p m
Down Day Passenger Train—'West,
Leave Atlanta 1 20 p m
“ Palmetto 2 17pm
“ Newnan 2 15 pm
“ Puckett’s 3 t.O p ro
“ Grantville 3 12 pm
Arrive at Montgomery 7 15 p m
Arrive Selma 10 CO p in
Up Night Passenger Train—East,
Leave Selma 3 30 p m
Leave Montgomery 8 15 pm
“ Grantville 3 13 a m
“ Puckett’s 3 37 a m
“ Newnan 3 58 am
“ Palmetto 4 45 a m
Arrive at Atlanta 6 10 a m
Down Night Passenger Train—West.
Leave Atlanta 10 00 p m
“ Palmetto 11 - ( | l> m
it Newnan 12 OS a m
“ rocket Us 12 32 a m
“ Grantville 12 .jO a m
Arrive at Montgomery
Arrive atfchdma
Accommodation Train (da!LY,—
Leave LaOrange .. 6 15 a m
Arrive Grantville 7 02 a m
“ Puckett’s 7 20am
“ Newnan 7 33am
“ Powell’s 7 62 a m
“ Palmetto 8 10am
“ Atlanta 9 15 a m
accommodation Train (daily)—West.
Leave A tlan la. 4 55 p in
Arrive Palmetto 6 09 pm
’* FoWeli’a 0 27pm
“ Newnan 6 42pm
Puckett’s... 7 00pm
“ Grantville 7 13 p m
“ LaGrange 8 00 p ni
CoLUJir.vs and Atlanta Express', (daily)
GOING SOUTH.
Leave Atlanta 6 50 a m
Arrive at NeWiiati x off am!
“ LaGrange. 8 55a m
“ Opelika .* 9 58am
“ Columbus H07.ini
“ Montgomery . 1210 am
“ Senna. 4 0$ p m
GOING NORTH.
Leave Selma 10 if 3 Til
“ Montgomery 12 30 p m
“ Columbus 1 25 p in
“ LaGrange 3 34pm
“ Newnan 4 30 p in
Arrive at Atlanta. 5 45 p m
C'HAS. H. CROMWELL,
Cecil Gabbktt, j| Gen’l Pass. Agent.
Gvn’l Manager.
OFFICE & B.I5K Fill HIRE & FIXTURES.
Ask for Illustrated Pamphlet.
TERRY SHOW CASE CO., Nashville, Tens
PIANOS
S'
T/
ORGANS
Of all makes direct t
customers from heiii
quarters, at wholesu.’
prices. All goods gm>
anteed No money aske
till instruments are i<
celved and fully testes
Write us before pui
chasing. An investment of 2 cents may buy
you from $50.00 to $100.00. Addre
JESSE FRENCH,
NASHVILLE, - TENNESSEt
i Wholesale Distributing Dep’t for the South.
'REEMAK & CrANkshaW
| importer:-
AND
MANUFACTL
RERS OF
FINE JEWELRY.
LARGEST STOCK! v
FIX EST ASSORTMENT !
LOWEST PRICES
31 WiiiteHal! St., Atlanta, Ga.
S., G. & N. A. R. R.
No. 1—
Leave Carrollton 5 45 a m
ArriveAtkinson.T. O 6 00 a m
“ Banning 6 15 a m
“ Whitesburg fl 20 a m
“ Sargent’s 6 50 a m
“ Newnan 7 14 am
“ Sharpsburg 8 05 a m
“ Turin 8 12 am
“ Senoia 8 32 a m
“ Brooks 9 05 a m
“ Vaughns 9 27 am
“ Griffin 9 50 am
No. 2—
Leave Griffir. 12 01 pm
Arrive at Vaughns 12 18 pm
“ Brooks 12 36 p m
M Senoia 1 lo p m
“ Turin 1 35 pm
“ Sharpsburg 1 50 p ns
“ Newnan ... 228 pm
“ Sargent’s 3 25 p m
“ Whitesburg 3 48 pm
“ Banning 4 00 pm
“ Atkinson. T. 0 4 25 p in
“ Carrollton . 4 50 p m
M. S. Belknap, Gen’l Manager.
Produces Long-Sightedness, and Restores
the Sight of the Old.
X EW ADVERTISEMEXTS.
At a Chicago Lunch Counter.
Missourian (to companion)—Whut’a
them fellers doin' over thar:
C o mpanion—Ea ting.
Missourian—Wall, I'll be blamed, ef I
didn t think they wuz a-sliuckin' co'n.—
Arkansaw Traveler.
CURES TEAR DROPS, GRANULATION, STYLE
TUMORS. RED EYES, MATTED EYE LASH
ES. AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
Also, equally efficacious when used in other
maladies, such as Ulcers. Fever Sores, Tu
mors, Salt ltheum. Burns. Piles, or wherever
inflammation exists. MITCHELL’S SALVE
may b- used to advantage. Sold by all Drug
gists at 25 cents.
\jk J ANTED - LADIES for our Pall and
V * 1 iii 'mas Trade, to take light, pleasant
work at thcirowij homes, ii topper day can
be qnietiv made. Work sent by mail any dis
tance. Particulars free. No canvassing. Ad
dress at one-. CRESCENT ART CO., H7 MJJk
st., Boston. Mass. Box 5170.
LUMBER.
I HAVE A LARGE LOT JD?
LUMBER FOR SALE. DIFFER
EXT QUALITIES AXD PRICE?
BUT PRICES ALL LOW.
W. B. BERRY.
Newnan, Ga., March 4th, 1887.
ARBUCKLES’
name on a package of COFFEE Is -r
guarantee of excellence.
ARIOSA
COFFEE is kept in all
stores from the Atlantic to the Pacific
COFFEE
is never good when exposed to the air
Always buy this brand in hermeticalf
sealed ONE POUND PACKAGES.
.SETTLE UP!
IMPORTANT NOTICE!
It is stated that the height of the Eng
lish aristocracy has considerably increased
within the last 500 veans.
If you arc indebtpd to us. cither for Fu-ni-
ture or Coffins, come up promptly and pay the
account. We need the money now.
THOMPSON BROS.
INTENDING ADVERTISERS should p.d- ; All parties indebted to D. J. Folds & Co. '
i dress 1 blacksmithingmid buggy and wagon rep
GEO. p. ROWELL A CO., i work are notified that t heir accounts are «•
v ' due and must lie paid. We are obliged
jo i-'PRUCE st.. New York Citt, . have money to run our business, and tb*
FOR svr FCT r TSTfiV iwmvpwao i oroc ■ indebted to'us will confer a favor by setty
xOti StLr.ll LIST. Or 1000 N EM SPAPER.S aJ once . D. J. FOLDS & CO-
Will be sent fp.re, on application. | Newnan, Ga., Sept. 30th.
Mia t