Newspaper Page Text
Stlw Herald and ^dwrliscv.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, Nnv. 25, 1887.
FAIR TRADE DETECTIVES.
Explanation of the naninc** of n "Pricer."
A Floor Walker'll Ml "take.
Tlie other day two pretty young ladies,
both daintily dressed, entered one of our
large drygoods establishments, took the
elevator to the second floor and the fur
department. 1 loro a careful cxarnimP ion
of costly furs resulted in the selection of
a sealskin dolman. One of the ladies
opened her purse. At that moment the
floor walker stepped up. He was excited
and spoke harshly. ‘'Put that dolman
away, William,” he said; “and you.”
turning to the purchasers, “leave this
store at once.” Astonished and terrified,
they stared helplessly at t lie man. ‘ ‘Come,
get out, 1 tell you," lie continued, "or
I'll have you ‘bounced' in short order.”
The ladies were thought to lie “pricers.”
A detective and several salesmen assisted
in their removal to the street. That this
was a case of mistaken identity became
painfully apparent to the startled firm a
few days later. Suit was brought and
$.7,000 was required to settle, in order to
keep the case out of the pajiers. It trans
pired that the ladies were the daughters
of wealthy residents of the city. The in
cident serves to show to what lengths
•great firms go to detect these “pricers.”
The term “pricer” needs explanation.
Some of the most successful houses in
Philadelphia and New York keep a small
book entitled: “Purchasing account.”
The page# of this brass bound little vol
ume are scanned only by members of the
firm and by the confidential clerk, who
has exclusive control of this interesting
bit of trade policy. At the close of the
season the amounts which “balance” run
nearly into six figures. These represent
disbursements for purchasing, for sala
ries, carriage hire, luncheons, messenger
service and incidentals, and show credits
for goods purchased from rival houses,
ranging from laces, gloves, hosiery, silk»
and satins to imported costumes, furs, ! (| ie nationality of each every time,
mantlet), bric-a-brac, art embroideries, Globe-Democrat,
bronzes and other costly articles.
• Some of the names of ladies which ap
pear on these pages opposite heavy pur
chases also appear prominently in the
social world. The competition between
big houses is so keen that the only way
each can keep even with the other is to
employ professional people to go from
one to the other and inquire prices and
compare goods. For obvious reasons the
mission of these people is secret, while
their appearance must be unexception
able. it would not do for common look
ing people to he buying $700 sacques, $ I
silks-and $10 velvets every few days.
Really fashionable and wealthy people
are required for the delicate service, and
strange as it may seem are readily se
cured.—Philadelphia Times.
Prettiest Feet In the World.
“The Spanish,” continued Crispin,
“are generally supposed to have the pret
tiest feet in the world, but I do not think
so, although they are certainly the small
est. The foot is very slender and the in
step extraordinarily high, a result in a
large measure of the constitutional an
tipathy of the people to walking, as a
Spaniard will ride on horseback when he
has to beg for a living. The Germans
have strong, stocky, well developed feet,
inclined to be short, hut many of them
exceedingly shapely for ail that. The
French foot is smaller boned and rounder
in outline, a graceful, agile foot, not so
slender as the Spanish, but longer than
the German. It does not lack strength,
but is more remarkable for quickness and
agility. All the distinguishing qualities
of the nation are embodied in its make
up. It is no slouch of a foot. I tell you.
The Holland foot is very different from
either the Teutonic or Gallic. It is
longer than either and lower. I have
seen little thin Ib'lland women, hut four
feet high, with feet a foot long, as sure
as you live. They have the longest, low
est feet of any nation on the globe except,
perhaps, the negro, whose foot exceeds
the Holland in length of heel, although it
somewhat res' i.’il.'l' S it in general make
up. The Mexican foot is a modification
of the Spanish. It is a .trifle longer and
not quite so classical in outline, i he
Chinese have a pretty loot, short, small
boned and quite shapely.
“IIow about the American pedal ex
tremity?”
••Ah! that is to a certain extent in
formation, not fully crystallized into a
tvpe. It is a conipedte foot, lighter and
daintier than ihe English 4*r D a,
more nervous and longer than the I rent >,
stronger, and more developed than the
Spanish, fated to be the finest, most
shapely foot of the world, and partaking
somewhat of the good qualities of all.
Of course, sir, there are individual varia
tions upon all these types, but I would
j bet all 1 have got that if I had in a room
100 representatives of the leading na
tions and could only see their feet I could
A Society Lender Ernie * Crnre.
A pi - ant little 6tory is told of a for
me: V. 1 ecling lady, who removed to
Texas some time since. In the city in
which she resides dinner parties became
vcr» fashionable, and the society ladies
vied with each other in exhibiting the
finest chinaware until it became almost a
mania. The lady who gave the last din
ner attempted and generally succeeded in
outrivaling her preuecessor in the way of
fine china, and the former Wheeling lady
determined to outdo them all; so when
her dinner party was announced the
eocietv i:i that piace was all worked up -
in ant icipation of something grand.
The day came and the expected guests. :
The nsuzi chat and gossip preceded tin ;
e and then the guests were eseortec. !
t . me dining room. Of course they were
ad on the tiptoe of exjiectancy and all i
eves immediately turned to the table ;
when they entered the room. And what .
a sight met their gaze! Ye gods! Where 1
v.cie the previous e. iner parties? There
stood a table in all its grandeur. An l
ordinarv table covered with a torn and i
tattered" cloth, common wooden plates :
with newspaper cuts pasted in them in
mock imitation of hand painted china
Aa immense wooden towl stood in the
center of the table, put of which pro
truded a common tin ladle, and every
thing was of the most pristine character.
The break was too good, and the guests
were ail compelled to acknowledge that
they had all been outdone. But they sat
down, and-then they were served with
one of the most elegant, and elaborate
dinners it had ever been their good tor
ture to parrake of. But that completely
knocked out the’ fine china rage, and
a:: -. W.’s ] arlv was the talk ot the town
1, r many da vs. Bright idea, wasn t it?
—Wheeling Register.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
Fooling AVItli Nitro-Glycerlnc.
Nothing fills the small boy of the oil
regions with more glee than to find in
the woods a pile of empty nitro-glycerine
cans, which careless and negligent oil
well shooters persist in leaving in the
neighborhood or places where they have
l>een operating, although there is a severe
law forbidding this secreting of empty
nitro-glycerine cans. There is always
enough of the fluid left in the cans alter
being emptied into the torpedoes to pro
vide an explosion more or less violent,
and frequently enough to be exceedingly
destructive. These deadly caches are •
often found bv hunters passing through
the woods. Once a hunter near Warren
shot into a hunch of brush in which In-
had seen a lox take refuge. The shot
was followed by an explosion that tore
up the ground, and shattered trees ior
many feet around, and knocked the gun
ner senseless. Some one had placed
nitro-glycerine cans in the brush pile,
and the charge from the gun had ex
ploded them.
Boys are constantly searching for these
hidden cans to have Ihe sport of explod
ing them, although every year many
boys are made cripples for life by indul
gence in this sport, and not a few are
killed. When the dangerous playthings
are found they are set up, one at a time,
a rod or so away, against a st tie or tree,
and the bovswho have found them throw
stones at them until (lie force <>f a Idow
from one of the stones explodes a can.
The sport is in the loud report and the
way in which earth, stone;-, and every
thing within the range of the concussion
are hurled about and in t he air. There
is not an oil town from New York state
to the Washington field that i'.r.s not one
■or more crippled or sightless hoys, made
so by this reckless trifling with one-of the
most terrible explosives known.—New
York Sun.
Courting tin* Newsboys.
• The newsboy bids fair to become one
of the most pampered members of so
ciety. Newspaper publishers are begin
ning to appreciate the value of his influ
ence in building up circulations, and are
therefore making much of him. All the
| newsboys in New York were recently
| given a theatre party by a publisher who
j wished to gain their good will, an entire
j theatre being necessary to hold the
| guests. Not long ago another publisher
i gave the toys a picnic in the country,
| and the territory surrounding the scene
of’their festivities still looks as though it
had been devastated by an invading
! army. A Detroit publisher carried his
enterprise so far as to bring on a ball
; nine of newsboys from Chicago to play a
j “championship” game with a nine of
| Detroit boys. He provided a special
! sleeping car for the Chicago boys, boarded
“Who Struck Billy Patterson?"
Do you know the origin of the expres
sion, “V* ho struck Billy Patterson?
This is it: About forty years ago, at one
,,f the medical colleges of this country,
the students had a trick of hazing every
new mart who-entered the institution.
r fhey would secure him hand and foot,
carry him before a mock tribunal, and
there try him for some high crime with
which they charged him. He would he
convicted," of course, and sentenced to be
led to the block and decapitated. A
student named William Patterson came j
nifinri in time, and was put through trie j
court and sentenced in the Usual cole mil , TO COUNTRY PRINTERS!
and impressive manner. He was blind- j
folded and led to the block, and his neck •
placed in position. The executioner i
STEAM ENGIN
* *
K J a
AIX’, SPECIAL GIX-
WE HAVE ON HAND SOME SPECIAL BARGAINS IN STEAM ENGINES.
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.
iComplete Newspaper Outfit
For Sale!
Kailroab Sctjebulcs.
ATLANTA & WEST POINT R. R.
near Patterson’s head. 1 lie students
laughed when the trick was at an end,
but Patterson was dead. He had died
from what we medical men call shock.
All the students were put under arrest,
and the question arose, Vvho struck Pat
terson? On the trial it was shown that
nobody struck him, but the medical stu
dents retained the expression
We have for sale a quantity of first-class
pvintingniaterial, comprising the entire out
fit formerly us.fi in printing the Newnan
Herald, as well as type, stones, chases, anil
numerous oilier appurtenances belonging to
~ 'i T„ a 1 tlie olfi Herald Job < iffiee. Most of the mate
, a.IU U II.IS , j n f.xcellnit COIlli
thorn aL the best hotel, and gave each
newsboy in Detroit a certain number of
tickets to the game, to be sold for his
(the boy's) individual benefit. If the
compelii ion among the newspaper pub
lishers continues, we may expect to see
free excursions to Europe provided lor
newsboys, and find them selling tlicir
papers from coupes and indulging in
such other luxuries as may suggest them
selves to the minus of enterprising mana
gers anxious to secure their good will.
While the notion on the part of those
who provide these benefits for the hoys
! are not altogether philanthropic, the pub-
I He at large is doubtless quite willing to
! sea the generosity carried to any extent.
! believing that the life of the newsboy is
none too crowded with enjoyment.
- Hardship is his daily portion, and an oc
casional spree of a rational sort m:t) he
the means of spurring his ambition with
the desire to reach a plane of iii'e where
enjoyment is more frequent.—New York
! Commercial Advertiser.
,.aj is in excellent.condition and will be sold
come down through them to tlie present I from 50 to 75 per cent, below foundry prices.
,i ,y _p~ Sam ‘ -index-son in Globe- ! The following list contains the leading ar-
u “.’ • - i twi^s:
i Campbell Press, in good
Democrat.
A Negro l am,> N
At a negro camp m- u:
OUgh, Ills., the i day :
of realism that oavritv on
days of i he Pi
gave an eloquent. «" -coni
<r r.l son. During i s t.c' ;
darky a; rayed i t ! vinr.
colorei l tatter to . « •
son stood ::t a clamp > ;
for his cue. At i : 1 ■
shaj e of a ; < wt
when he rusheir >
arms of the old
the part of fat'....
brought forward •
been prc\ iously .
and every one lx at : .
in the days of old.
sounds s.'ini what : ■ • -
enacted 1 y the ci ■> ■ ' •
good faith and
flippancy.
at Iinisbcr-
icro was a Git
lack to the
The preacher
on (he pvodi-
.-rv a voiing
;e lUiii many
the prodigal
:fi:es waiting
■ came in the
e. .: \ \ i horn,
fill into the
wi.o v,. cted
sistt • *
t.i.k-h lad
si m enure
, ic-oii of
Devil 1'isU in Plenty.
There are a good many devil fish in tits
bav. and every few days some of the
fishermen bring in one or more of them.
Ik annuel Thomas, the fisherman, says he j
he has caught a great many, devil fish ,
this season.
••The biggest devil fish, or octopus, as j
some call it, that I have caught in this ;
bay.” said Mr. Thomas recently, “was, .
when its arms were stretched out, four- j
teen feet across—that is. its arms were I
seven feet long. Then 1 have caught a j
good many smaller ones on my lines,
l'hev are very ugly things to handle, and
when l take them out of the water 1 am
not, for a moment even, careless how i
1 handle them. They have a mouth just
j like a parrot. It is located just under the
' sack or body. The long arms are
1 ered on the under side with valve suckers,
which exert extraordinary power. When
they get hold of anything it is a rare in-
stance when they are not victorious.
; Thev are cunning, too. for when they
fasten their around a man they work
their arms so as to get the points into his
ils. If tl do he is a goner. They .
, can crush the life out of a man or an ani- j
msil in a moment. A 'hen they are at- i
tacked tin y throw out a black secret i-a j
wi ids clouds the water, confuses their ,
antagonist and enables them to escape, !
They are very hardy. They will live fer j
Three or four days after being taken out f
of the water. 1 am going to try and take •
the one I catch to the os. ;
Thev can be transported without much i
ittle (W .is!'
Maxims for Merchants.
In every line of business some man „
must lead. . . ; ; 1
Young- me n make positions; positions
rarely make (liem. I
Some men buy when they should sell j
and sell when they should buy.
Goods frequently changed upon the j
shelves give them a fresher look.
When the customer loses his temper, ;
that is the time that you should keep 1
yours. 1 _ !
A man who has a good trade or busi- !
ness, and brings to it brains and diligence, !
can afford to wait.
Wlmt men call luck or accident is often }
the fruit of years of careful study, pa- ;
tient endurance and devotion.
No past- popularity, no fame earned by ; • ,
a lifetime will avail if men do not keep j Flourishes, ctC.
to the front and keep up the stroke.
Business repute is better than stocks,
bonds or money. Revulsions can t shake.,
: robbers can’t steal, and the cyclones of
j trade can’t engulf it.
|* Advertise when business is brisk. Ad-
1 vortise when business is dull. Advertise
! constantly and lavishly, then will the
printer grow rich and his children rise
up and call you blessed.
SHOW-CASES
250 lbs. Brevier.
150 lbs. Minion,
50 lbs. Pica.
50 lbs. English.
50 fonts Newspaper Display
Type.
25 select fonts Job Type.
8 fonts Combination Border.
Imposing Stones, Chases,
Type Stands and Racks.
Tlie Campbell Press here offered is the same
-quill which T«B U ERA 1,1) AND AhVF.KTIS-
kr is now printed anil has been recently over-
h >ulcd and put it. good repair. It is sold sim
ple 10 make mom for a larger and faster press.
Address NEWNAN PUBLISHING CO.
Newnan, Ga.
A New Cheap Light in London.
London is exercised over a new and :
cheap light. A tank is placed in the roof j
of a dwelling and filled with oil. Con- j
neetion is made with the gas pipes, and j
the burner is capable of being turned on j
j or off. The light is white, soft and agree- I
able, and as brilliant as that supplied by j
electricity. The cost is about one-tliird ‘
that of gas. An exhibition was recently j
given in the presence of the representa- ;
tives of the press. The secret of the new i
cov- ! process is a machine, which is wound up
like clockwork and which separates the 1
hydrogen from the oxygen of the atmos- ]
piiere, and causes the latter to mix with
oil and give forth the excellent light,
which is the admiration of all beholders.
—Philadelphia Call.
j A. P. JONES.
JONES
&
J. E. TOOLE.
TOOLE,
CARRIAGE BUILDERS
AND DEALERS IN
HARDWARE,
LaGRANGE, ga.
Sept, (til, 1SS7.
IIP DAY PassengerTkain—East.
Leave Selma -5-20 am
Leave Montgomery ” b2 a 111
“ Grantville 11 15 a nj
“ Puckett's 11 77 a m
“ Newnan 12 OS pin
“ Palmetto 12 32 pm
Arrive at Atlanta I 2a pm
Down Day Passengek Train—West, j
Leave Atlanta 1 1’ 1,1 1
“ Palmetto - \J l ,ni j
“ Newnan 2 15 p m
<• Puckett’s 3 t o |> m i
“ Grantville 3 12 p m |
Arrive at Montgomery 7 15 p m |
Arrive Selma lump m j
Ue Night Passengek Train—East.
I.eave Selma 3 30 p in
Leave Montgomery s l.> p in
“ Grantville 13 a in
“ Puckett’s 3 37 a m
“ Newnan 3 r>S a m
“ Palmetto 1 l i a in
Arrive at Atlanta 0 10 a in
Down Night Passenger Tkain—West.
Leave Atlanta i ( > ,,rt 1> ,v
“ Palmetto Iimptn
“ Newnan •- :l
“ Puckett’s 12 32 am
“ Grantville . 12 nil a m
Arrive at Montgomery IL1O n 111
Arrive at Selma 1117 a m
. Accommodation Train (daily,—East
LaGrange *1 1*> a m
Gruntviile 7 02 a 111
Puckett’s 7 20 a m
“ Newnan.
“ PowHl’s
“ Palmetto. * F :l
“ Atlanta Olm
VCCOMMODATION TRAIN (DAILY)— \\ '“I.
Leave Atlanta •••
Arrive Palmetto
- “ Powell’s
“ Newnan
Puckett’s..
“ Grantville
“ LaGrange
Columbus and Atlanta Ex pki
GOING SOUTH.
Leave Atlanta
Arrive at Newnan
“ LaGrange,.
“ Opelika
“ rolumhus
“ Montgomery.
“ Spima
QOI
Leave Selma
“ Montev.rmry
“ Columbus
“ T.aGrange
“ Newnan
Arrive at Atlanta.
(HAS. K
OFFICE & B.WK FIMITIRE & FIXTURES,
Ask for Illustrated Pamphlet.
TERRY SHOW CASE CO., Naslivillc, Tenn.
Leave
A rri ve
7 33 a m I
.7 52 a m '
1/
ORGANS
Of all makes direct t<>
customers from head
quarters, at wholesale
prices. All goods gimr :
anteed No money asked
till instruments are re
ceived anil fully tested.
Write us before pur
chasing. An investment of 2 cents may save
you from S50.00 to $100.00. Address
JESSE FRENCH,
NASHVILLE, - TENNESSEE.
Wholesale Distributing Dcp’l for the tioutft.
FREEMAN & CRANKSHAW,
' ';[/ / IMPORTERS
AND
MANUFACTU
RERS OF
I
li ’j'' :i 111 '
S IK) )l III ;
h 5 » il !!1 |
y f\S si m j
11 07 it m
12 10 :t m
1 yti v 111 !
NOKTZX.
FINE JEWELRY.
L AUGUST STOCK!
1 • iN UST ASS(HITM UNT !
LOWEST 1’1 iicus
10 M a in
12 30 j, m
1 25 p m
3 34 pin
4 30 p m
545pm
CROMWELL,
New Yvivl.
So Soon Forgotten.
The funeral of Milo. Aimec showed
how very few friends an nctress can
coiuit upon surviving her. In spite of
the fact that her will gave a very large
amount to an orphan asylum fi r thecan-
dren of artists, and her well known gen
erosity during her active dremafic •
veryH'w (x-oole fotmd leisure logo mine
small church. The management o1 tja*
Varieties sent a crown of llowers. 1 ut Lie
company gave nothing, and yet during
the French war Aimeesent from America
5.000 francs to these very comrades. All
her fortune was bequeathed to charitable
institutions wiih the exception of a few
friendly souvenirs.—Paris Letter.
AH sorts of advertising circulars corn*
to"i*)oopK wlioae names are “always .11
the newspapers.
Xew York’s Chinese Women.
So far as known, there are only four-
»een Chinese women in New York city.
Of these nine are married, one is a
widow, one an unmarried girl, one a
nurse, and two anonyma. Although
r .-.idents of- the United States, they obey
to the very letter the strange system of
law and custom which obtains in tho
Flowery Kingdom, a system which
| strongly resembles the treatment of the
! queen bee in an apiary by her drones
and workers. Five of these little women
celebrated their marriage vows in China,
two in San Francisco, and two in New
York.—Nelly Blv in Cleveland Leader.
When the Pamphlets Hov.lfd.
A certain old lady down in Maine has
the genuine genius of Mrs. Partington,
and may'fiave let n the original of that
fr.m us" character, for all the Listener
knows. Not long ago she was telling of
the wild times in the woods down there
before the country was settled.
“YYhy," -afil she, "the folks used to
be wj k 1 up in the 1 ight by the howling
of the j nlets in the w
It is to be inferred that she meant
pth rs,” thoughno_doal?t there h av ®
bom such things as howling pamphlets.
—Boston Transcript.
Manufacture all kinds of
Carriages, Buggies, Carts and
Wagons. Repairing neatly
land promptly done at reason
able prices. We sell the Peer
less Engine and Machinery.
YTCl
iAU
NO
MORE EYE-GLASSES,
KOI E
WEAK
EYES
■ Another Superstition.
The latest “fad” is the interest at
tached to the finding of an old button
shoe. We were told, with great sincer
ity, that if a young girl on finding one
would count the buttons remaining on it
she would be able to tell exactly the num
ber of years which would elapse before
her marriage, each button jepresenting
one year. It is looked upon as a great
piece of misfortune (by the credulous) to
find a shoe minus buttons.—Chicago
1 News.
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE;
A. Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
I SORE, WEAK AND INFLAMED EYES- !
Produces Long-Sightednes’s. and IL -ton s
the isigM of the Old.
Carrollton
5 4.1
a n
Vtkinson.T. G
fi 00
a T:;
Bi • ig
c; io
ii
Whiteshnrg
t*. •>)
ii )i
Sargent's
6 5
N wnao
7
Sharpsburg
8 * 0
Turin
i-
Sr no; a
. . . . ’ F * »*2
a j t
Brooks
;i fc.
:■ r i
Vaughns
!f
:• !r
Gridin
9 i
a 11
Sriffir
12 M
p II
a? Vaughns.
12 IS
p II
Brooks .
1- Fi.
p Ii
Senoia
] ]f»
\ "
Turin
. 1
J‘ 1-
Sharpsburg
\ r •
f t*
Newnan
.. 2 2s
V !»
Sargent’s
8 25
p r: .
Wbitesburg
3 IS
P
Banning
4 INI
P
Atkinson, T. O
4 2 •
P 14
Ca rrolltOH
4 ro
: *
iKLKNAP, Gr-n’I MaiUf-.
X E \Y A l >YEK LI SUM EX 1
31 WliitehaH St., Atlanta, Ga.
uM
f HAVE A LARGFfe LOT
u;mBER FOR 8A1,E. DIFFEIl-
M' QUALITIES A ND FlilOESj
BUT I’BK’ES AI.U LOW.
W. B. BERRY
N. - ... March Jib, 1S8L
name on a pacha go cf COFFEE is a
guarantee ci excellence:-
COFFEE is kept in ail first-class
stores trom the Atlantic to th.e Pacific.
l’apier Mache for Small Work.
To make papier mache for fine, small i
work, toil clippings of brown and whita |
: ..per in wr.n \ strain end lx.*at theminto j
a . : a I- glue or gum and size, and 1
pi\ ss into molds.
Pennsylvania has more potofiices tliaa
any other state ui tlie U?!»>n. !.11G.
New York has 3.248.
CrSES TEAR DROPS, GRANULATION, STY 1.1
TUMORS. P.EP KYEP. MATTED EYE I. V-H-
Ert. AND PKODUCINGAtl’ICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
Also. iRjually elficacions when used in other
; maiiulies, such as I’lo-rs. rVver Sores. Tu
mors. Sait Rheum. Burns. Piles, or v. ' - rever
: infi-immationexists. MITCHRLfi’S SAIA K
: may l>p need to advantage. Sold by all Drug
gists at 25cents.
W A ^ KD
work at th>-ii
: be ipiif! lv
■ ; ;i . P <•
dr.-ss at hi . I
st . B* s ■ sias
IjADIliS tor 01 r I
COFFEE
wn lioim s
Work
It
KNT
*X -":I7
r-:yd.--
in*r Ad-
l M : !■:
is never goo ' v/h-ir. exposed to tho air.
Always b ay this brand inhermeticalfy
sealed ONE P ' I'KAGEf.
i>.
SETTLE UP!
Sugar doe? nofi as rniny sn t -jour, pro.
mote decay of the teeth.
IMPORTANT NOTICE!
If you are indebted to us, • her for FinL
ti.r or i.k.iUns, come up promptly i;i:l pny t ‘
account, ’.to need the money now.
fHOMPSON iiiiO.S.
fTENDING ADVERTISERS -‘10 .. a,i-
GLIi P. ROWELL A CO.,
D Shut! Sr.NnvY' ; ■ city,
li: SCI.E* T LIST' Fite' NS Y.";-:>a i’Ei.S
YVil! he sent t'e.ia:. on 1 application
AII pa
hlacksii
din dr-1 it'd to I*. J. folds it Co. lev
. s :.i> buggy and wagon repa-
• a-- no t!i«.-ii aecountsare now
:, 11. ; - paid. We are obliged re
• . .. our husin. fun’, (hose
* • • • as \.-.:i e.,; 'era l::' <>r t»v .VtlKlIg
i»..i. r»»i I'm j,- «■*.
New lain, Ga., Sept, .no: 1..