The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, December 02, 1887, Image 6

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/fo She gcratd aval ^ducriisa Fewnan, Ga., Friday, Dec. 2, 1887. NEW YORK’S LODGING HOUSES. I*«"opte Who ratroii izo Them and Get Accommodations at Trifling Expense. Not, Ion;: ago a reporter, curious to test tfie (.ruth of : ho old adage that “one-half the world knows not how the other half THE CREOLE PLANTER'S HOME. A Spacious* Mansion Iluilt far Comfort. Beauties of an Interior. The creole sugar planter built his house for summer comfort. He made it with spacious chambers and wide halls, many windowed and with -Treat doors, and A Mountain Climbing Fever. Not very long ago, a mild mountain climbing fever permeated certain society circles. There is a most convenient moun tain, Tamalpais, close at our doors, an easy mountain to scale, and a grand scenic reward awaiting those who reached Delay always induces ultimate trou- : hie, and especially is this true in its ap- j plication to the human system. Laxa- ! dor always saves time ami trouble by ! prompt use in thei beginning of sickness. If your baby is sick, suffering and | crying with pain of cutting teeth, I soothe it with Dr. Bull’s Baby .'syrup. THOMPSON BROS. NEWNAN, GA. the summit. Parties were equipped for It is safe. Price -5 cent then surrounded it with broad galleries the climb, and for a month or so it was | to ward off the summer sun. Although considered quite the thing to do Tainal- thc ■- plantation mansions may not have : pais, and write one’s name on the record ; any social architectural beauty, viewed ! book on top. Walking shoes were in de- a to,,,- of the ehenp lodging j TSAX ' »** "" CcytU Helices. FINE AND f'HF x £. S— G houses, which almost completely line tliatiiam street from the Brooklyn budge to E;ist Houston Street. As a mle the cheapest class of th-’se lodging liouses are patronized hv tramps who, during the day, have begged a nickel or dime of some benevolently inclined person, and by inveterate drunkards who, having no home to go to, have pledged whatever article the pawn br 1 r'-;s :ui< coniine I now an makes a These wit h Inx or: 1’(- and sw cot : :. tin potilir some Opt IK kers would accept. it: this class of lodging house the usual «•!large is five cents. Having paid the man in charge of the packing case like office one is entitled to a “bod.” This “bed is the bare floor of an outrage ously ventilated room, usually about t.v.enty feet square, and no covering is provided. In this room are nightly liud- r led together an;, v. hero from twenty-live to fifty men. The close atmosphere of ti:e room, tog;'l Is r with the breath of the slc- pers, renders the air sickening in the "Vtreme. No attempt is made at cleanli ness, and furth r, a man suffering with :mv contagious disease is as readily re ceived as one in perfect health. Only a few months ago a man suffering with i >y j.,., si nail pox was spotted in one of these j holes 1 iv the police, and after much delay removed to a ho ; The entrance to the lodging house is invariably through a narrow doorway off the street, and up a staircase, lighted only by a small oil lamp. Everywhere about the place ver min can he found. Rats and mice fairly overrun the place. It is the custom to (urn out all lodgers at (j a. m. for the avowed purpose of ventilating the place, blit ventilation is impossible unless the vile building ho tom down. '• no ten and fifteen cent houses are a little better than the “five,centers,” but not much. For ten cents one can get a cot bed in a small room with several others. Somet imes a mattress and sheet are provided the lodger, hut oftener he gets covering whatever. For fifteen eonf:-: the lodger gets a “private room,” wlfich is one of many. It is made by dividing a good sized room, by means of wood -n partitions, into a number oi -i rooms. In some of them one Find.' » chair ;is well as the cot. A weak i ho:, at cleanliness is made here. In a I aii iy large room near by soap, water ;uul towels are furnished, and all are ex- pccled to avail themselves of their use. j In I’ 1 'kiss ol lodging houses the patrons j kenod at 7 a. in., when a general : v up takes place and everything is ! n readiness for the next night’s : Hie next priced liouses cost j ■' twenty-five or thirty-five cents a ! aecortniKs, *° accommodations, j houses aro all that a reasonable j i i: - reduced circumstances can ex- i son of their size and dignity. Many of them are built around an open court, insuring plenty of light and air for each room. About an old house of this kind is an atmosphere of large comfort and easy £oing content. There is no sparing of ground in inclosing the yard; indeed, its dimensions are large- enough to war rant the name of park. Always the house is built far back in the yard, partly for privacy, partly to escape the tooth of the tawny lion that chafes and gnaws the levees that would im between their hanks. Every then the monster Missi.-sippi iMeous meal of some fair garden, touses are sure to be well shaded iri.itd foliage. Pecans and Im age and lemon tre.-s. crape myr- t, and a wild: mess of brill ; adorn the grounds. reat feat, men spurted up California street hill to get their muscles quite up to the mark. The deer hunter, lurking in the canyons or scrambling over the mountain spurs, was astonished at the gay parties that invaded his territory. There was a sense of wildness, ad venture. and endurance about the feat that gratified the lathes immensely. Then there came a frost, a chilling frost of indifference to mountain climbs, aud one could not organize a party of ladies and gentlemen to make the ascent, now for any consideration. The reason why this very healthful and very delightful amusement became unpopular was that : no one had courage enough to invest it Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORG I A-Cow i:va ( Au nty : All creditors oi the < of Martha "Wal den, decease,;,are hereby notified to AT ■tie.or in their demands to the undersigned, according to law;— and all persons ind, i-t-d to said es tate are required to maia- immediate pay ment. This October 2uMi. Nv Printer’s fee?3.G0. DANIEL sWINT. AdnPr of Martha Walden, dec'd. THAT CANNOT FURNITURE PRICES— BEAT IN THE STATE. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Si >RGI A—C*-v. k ra Poi.ni'v: A i! persons h: tale of Kesrin« county, deei -i der in !lieir dcu cording to law: said estate mv ’ payment. This iiu- ,1 i, Bio- stock of Chamber suits in Walnut, Antique Oak. and Cherry, and Imitation suites. French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00. Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward. Bed Lounges. ' 0.00 and upward. • Silk 1 in.- n arlor Suit s 1 rrhite I, e s: with ,-h:cl) ole .11; skirts. ro:; r • 1 tins .-ill It <1! fruit 1 l! not every vm flowers uis. the • love cots musical with if innumerable tinvi s. 1 mi!i led his house in started New Or! ;;ns ;tn ctur< th< re was The house stn the are av.: clean i; put in lodgers Th pel peck For ; wenty-tivo cents one is frequently given .-ingle room, hut at some places the 1- ■ :■ ;■ is quartered' with two or three other 1 1 :i, but in a separate bed. At- ta' h-'h to some of this class of houses are s-dFng moms, where far in the early mon : iy hours groups of men sit about- talkh. , «.r reading. Some liouses fur nish t••• patrons with a bath. The best cl.-i' ; nr cheat.) lodging- liouses charge fifty, cem , , v I rigid . These aro patronized chiefly ly poor mechanics and laboring men. Everything- is done to make tlieir 'paP’Oiis comfortable. The daily papers are kept on file, and games of chess and cheek; rs are permitted in the reading ro;>: ■. The entrances are large and wide, lighted by gas, and kept as clean as pos sible. Notwithstanding that every effort is mg ;e to keep these places well ven tilated, in the summer the heat is intoler able.—-New York World. lilfemiei l on the arched entrance gave admi-siou ( 1 porte eocliere. by which the interior was j reached. High walls defined the limit's of this territory, defying the scrutiny if | possible prying neighbors. The French I quarter abounds today in these <>ld I liouses, the outside giving no hint of i!ie j lx-apty of the interior. The dingy desert I of a flagged yard smiles and blossoms at I every few steps into oases of brilliant , . , , . . , j flowers and shrubs. Along the length of "y 'kA j the garden wall runs a raised bed of rich '' a> ' 1 ’ “ n< 1111 ! soil, and here riot and clamber a tangle ! of creeping vines that thrust myriad fin- , | gers into every crack and cranny, and • | each in rivalry of its neighbor racing ; j headlong to the top to wave triumphantly ! I aloft, in token of victory, long drooping ! I pennons of green. | Bubbling, sparkling fountains rise and I fail in thesuniight, and in sheltered nooks | one catches glimpses of great yellow I water jars big enough to hold the famous | Fort l j i water of the family—Mississippi water | that had been filtered, and which iho j creole preferred to rain water, j The balconies of such a, house are tyaiis- i formed into cool arbors bv vines which • lay then- long fingers upon everything ! : within reach. Behind the vines, in im- 1 | prevised beds, grow and blithely bloom ; { many bright hnefi flowers. Caged birds j trill and pipe and chirp and warble, ■ seeming to have lost all sense of having 1 j once been free wild things. The salons ! j which open upon these gallerivsr.are-lofty, spacious apartments, shut off from each j other by means of great mahogany fekl- j ing doors. The door knobs of quaint 1 ! design and curious tracery of surface axe ! I of pure silver. Much handsome wain- • I scot ing of rare woods is to bo seen, and I the beautiful floors of black cypress were ! the pride of the creole housekeeper, who i that picturesque cliaraotci woilld have established it in ihe mind. No one went in f< r mountain costume, iho very ri, the cunning hats and the ;;k i llad sorit- daring ]:ersu;i once this toilet for Tamalpais. the seamy sides of that grizzly sentinel would have borne idiuost daily the impress of iho female foot, and the gentle vex could enter into competition for the laurel crown to be awarded to the best mountain climber.— The Argonaut . -,r n; ( - ood T7. ., B'-TiiL (7Fat s \V il; log =• 1 1- -•lii! c-oiio ;y f. to s-iow CiUlS! day in .Tama —-;*!< 1 ;1 j)l'i il l! , Ictob (5. I Hat I Bliss Dario W Si rc i 50.00. t $4.50 per set. , CCIHS pci' foot. 25 cents to $25.00. urtain Foies ;il 50 cents, ies, on sp -'mg fixtures, ver band and made to order. >n [D 'i'lu- Kmj uinui,-.x MaU- as a I)iw1"<t. I well remember the first time 1 <:i v an Esquimaux house in process ».f erection. The men were enijdoyed in culling huge blocks of frozen snow, which ware labo riously carried by the women to where a foundation had already been laid, and where each block was laid over the other until a snow Iuit five feet in ht was Here the men’s labor the poor women, each armed j with a sort of wooden snow shovel, next proceeded to carefully chink the cracks and later to cover the entire habitation with loose snow, while thus employed 1 the women were without any covering ! whatever to their hands, and the. action i of the cold wind must have caused them . indescribable sufferings. The men, however, wore long mittens made of reindeer fur and reaching be yond the elbow, where they were firmly Low, tor c; Metallic dav. IS i! ( LiU! r on -. ins Wooden C( PARLOR -nil, OR( I men i ■'fins a dr at ail times. nitriF o i i\/f A1 - I. . w. if. pj-.k i BROS., NE'vVNAN, GA Letters of Dismission. GEORGi A—Covvkta i.'nr.vi v: J. 35. Sims, guardian oi’T. G. Kunks applied . having id eou ti- to lor letters of dismission C om his sail! trust. persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday iu Dr- cwalx-r next, if any they can. whv s iiil appli cation siiould not.he granted. Tiiis Xovetn- ber 1th, 1S87. " W. II. PERSON!*, Printer's fee, .<>3.00. Ordinary. -DEALERS IN- vaiei- jars nig enougn to noia tnc famous " , , 7 - forty of the “Arabian Nights.” These ! s ? cn ^ ed *° P$ event snow from reaching ars- were once used to hold tlie drinking ! , hnn,1 T S > whrn CU ! tni S an>1 Landling vater of the fiimilv—Mitwassmni w.-do,- : blocks . lve seen these mittens when frozen stiff given by a. husband to his wife or daughter to thaw out, tills result being accomplished by the poor creature placing the article inside the bosom of her dress and next to her hare skin, i With all the abuse and hardships endured by Esquimaux women they still appear 'o be always contented with iheir lot, and I cannot, now call to mind a single in- : stance occurring during my northern trip, anywhere complaint was made, even an act of cruelty, that in the United States Avoukl have resulted in the perpe trators being sentenced to imprisonment for life.>—Cor. Boston Commercial Bnlle- Tn WliGiii ii May Concern. GKOIt< 11A —Cow ::ta County : The estate of C-Mis J.fsrr-r. iaieofsaid comi ty, deceased, heinsr imreprescntcil and not i likely t<» he represented: all persons concern- • *:*d are required to show cause in the Court of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday ( fliei'tA in December next, why such administration < should not he vested In Ihe Comity A<lm!nis- i trator. This Xov^mhcr ith, IS'7. W. H. 1*!-. US* IN S. ‘Ordinary, Prs. fee. fS.uo. and ex-orlieio Clerk C. o. Stoves. Healing Stoves. Hall Stoves. Parlor Stoves. < Mice Stoves, Cooking Stoves for ev erybody, Ranges, Furnaces, Marbeli/.ei Iron and Slate Mantels, Maliog ()ak and .\^h my. Wain,it, .Manti s. Tile Farim. lira Ik seif Mencilug Insects a There recently appeared s;:uki Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA— Cowuta County : By virtue of nn order of the Court of Ordi- 1 nary of saiil county, I will sell for cash, to the highest anil be-t bidder, before the Court house door in the town of Xewntin, or. tin- first Tuesday in December next, between the ’ legal hours of s de, the following described propr-rfy, to-wit: The som hcast corner of lot of land No. i v-. in i lie Fourth district, of Coweta county, which is:* triarRiilar si.ai..-. and cut oil’ by , ihe Columbus road - bounded on t he ,-jtst by • Vj. Wor ham, on tin- .south by ■>. c. Gdisoii. | containin'; in -i!i 17 acres, m-u-o or less, ami , known as the Walden land. Sold us the prop- 1 art v of Martha W alden, d. - t-as.-d This X..- vember 2f.i!i, 1 ss7. i i a XI K!. s W i NT. j Adm’r of Mart ha Waidcn. d Heart Ii. '1’ile ;<i Vestibule Tile. Plain Urates, Enameled, Xjckel and Brass med Grates. Just received. Andirons, (s. Coal \'ases. Coal ilods and Tin Toilet Sets, that in qitan city, quality and designs cannot Trii n- a beautiful line of and Pendants, and Steam CJ< •k ;• I lose, •ks and Gauges. Tin Plate, -‘d. GKORG Agree; in the old days rarely used carpet preferred handsome mats and rugs rich, brilliant colors. The furniture these old houses was some, the most of it having been uu ported, as the owners held the American taste of that day in contempt. Some families vet retain their old furnishings, eueuuy appeareu a communica tion from Oliver White, secretary of ihe j n but i P eor E His., Scientific association, headed | before tl Mending Shakes, ” in whicli he re- >f breaking one of thesi- Ti,Tiles Administrator’s v— ('oVVKTA Cot'N iy to an order of i! id eonniy, will be a!e. passed in the city, Gas Fixtures, Chandeliers lumbers, filers, Supplies, Water Is, Bath Tubs, Pumps. Rubin Brass Goods, Steam Of uni Galvanized Sheet Iron, Wrought- Iron Pipe for steam. gas and water. Practical Plumbers Heaters and Gas Fitters uid Tin Rotifers. or Knowles’Steam Pumps, Dunning’s Boilers, Morris & Tasker’s Wrought Iron Pipe for steam, ga,s and water, Climax G; uid specifications furnished on appPcation. ( ai l and examine our stock or write for price list and circular, ire prompt attention and bottom prices. Iron Workei Agt s. Steam Architectural <otivaidz. d Tito-'P lulls s Machines. You will re- mm, ‘Self lates costly and hand- j j. n{ ° L? ces fr0J ? °\ ie *° t Y°. inc!, .V s ,0 “- having been im- from the arms to tnc tip of its tad-two- ,<■. Killing Beef for Hebrews. As is well known, the Israelities are 1 very particular as to the use of butchers’ : meat, which, in order to be kosher—1. e., ’ to comply with the ritual requirements— i ought only to be taken from animals that j arc killed not only in the presence of, hut by a person of the faith, specially ap pointed for the purpose. Complaints in this respect have been of frequent -occur- i rence, many butchers or dealers of game and fowl offering tlieir Jewish clients •‘unclean” meat. At a recent trial of I tiiis kind in Berlin the rabbi of the prin- thirds of the whole length of the way- then placing a cage over him. On return ing to the place twenty-four hours after ,, - , . ,, ., , the snake was there, sound und whole, in i but poverty has forced many to sell them, to ... , i Nowhere else in America are to be; u [ . lg .,. . , , . . . j found the spacious canopied beds. the!. A similar operaion is performed hythe vast armoires with mirrored doom, the mEGC ' kn ^ n as th ® earwl - ?" ( ‘ r f 11 *3 i quaint spindle legged dressing tables, the l 0 " a b + °, arc ' va f 1 c ’f r m a knife, | i massive * sideboards and carving tables, j the head half crawled away about ; ! the huge dining tables, the antique cabi- ? tnier tnaLmg a etieml. came i nets, rich with carving and dark with )ac ’ v lo tbe a1 ^ hutted against it, | age. mosaic tables and drawing roora j «nd was again united wu, when the sev- 1 suites of the time of Louis Quatorze, ‘ ered insect became whole-a perfect, hv- ’ are to Lie seen in some creole houses in n - mo ™8 object. Can you or any of town and country. These memorials arc , ' VOUr rca,lers ’ Mr ’ E ^or, give a scientific dear to their pos^essom. who cling to the ! ^ason for or an explanation o this most ,, , . A . , . i ii marvelous operation ot the self mending fashions ot their ancestors m a wholly ; , . R . „ . & . rr-, • i , „snake and the earwig? Are there any un-American wav. Their homes, handed j , . , . - down from one' generation to another, j ath f, re PWes or living objects with such changes as are onlv absolutely « iat % ih * sameF-Charles Marseilles m necessary to the inmates, are tlieir most ! S^entific American. Sacred possessions, about which cluster ! their fondest, memories arid hopes. Even Have \ou Ever Thought of This? ioI(l ;;t. auction, . ourt house door of said county, j thin tin- legal hours of sale, on The. first I Tuesday in iiecember next, the following j property, to- wit: Tneone Inn Hired and sixty- i ivvo acres of land, more or !;>ss, of lot of inn : j number one hnnd.iv i and eleven, in theorig- \ inal Eighth district- (present Cedar Greek dis- j i t riel), of s ud conn y. of which Join' Morgan i j died possessed,—except sixty acres in the ] j northwest corner of said tract, assigned to the ! | widow of said deceased as dower. Rol<J as tile * I property of said John Morgan, late of said ; Dp f) T\ IT j county, deceased. Terms cash. This Getober ! I Aril/ U 31st. !Rs7. K. W. MORGAN, j Printer's fee, Ifi 00. Administrator. ! HUNNICUTT & BELLING RATH. MICK ELBERRY & McCLENDON, WHOLESALE GROCERS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS NO. 15 SOUTH BROAD ST., ATLANTA, GA. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA- Cow eta County : 15v virtue ot an order from the honorable j Court of Ordinary of Coweta county. Georgia, j will be sold before the court-house door in j Xewnan, on t he first Tuesday in December I next, between the legal hours of sale, to t he | ! liighe.-t and best bidder, the following de- j I scribed property, to-wit: i One hundred and one and a quarter acres of I j land, more or less, being part of lot. number j ' two hundred and seventy-nine, in originally j First, n<>\v Haralson district. Sold as the pro- ! party of Regina YV. Brandenburg, late of said con lily, deceased, for the benefit, of the heirs and creditors. Terms cash. This November 1st. 1SS7. DANIEL SWINT. Printer’s fee, $4.90. Administrator. Hay, Oats, Corn, Meal, Bran, Stock Feed, Onions, Feathers, Cabbage, Irish Potatoes Dressed and Live Poultry, Meat, Flour, Lard, N. O. Syrup, Dried Beef, Cheese, FRUITS AND ALL KINDS OF PROVISIONS AND COUNTRY PRODUCE. Good, dry. rat-proof M*>r- cipul ByDci^oijiic w<is called upon tlio • croolo who lives in n rented liouso j A nstionni dmi^cr lurlcs in th© stand ancT testified as follows: “The ' merely makes the acquaintance of the j game of baseball. It is essentiallydan- •Mosaic law requires that the Jew butcher i mover’s cart, clinging with limpet like ' gerous to republics. All readers of an- be a person of good reputation and ! tenacity to its walls, sometimes even unto j cient history remember that the Greeks morals, and, after undergoing an ex- Die second generation. nearly lost their country b\ remaining animation by the rabbi, should only ex- The creoIeYiousekeeper drapes her win- at their games after Xerxes had crossed erciso bis particular function on the dows and doors with soft flowing curtains, the Hellespont, and that sacrificed Kin-' - strength of a certificate. One of the rarely using the stiff, hideous. Holland shades. She believes in portieres, and by means of these a large room can lx- run- in Coweta Superior Court, March Term, 1SS7. tests of his fitness for the place consists in promptly resharpening a knife which the rabbi has purposely blunted. Dur ing the act of butchering he has to say certain prayers; he must see that the blood falls upon the ashes of peat, and, above ail things, he must avoid being touched by any one while in the act, this in itself rendering the slaughtered animal unclean. Ho is required to put his seal upon the carcass, giving the date on which the animal is killed. No Israelite is permitted to eat fowl which has been killed more than three days before. ’ ’— Paris American Register. Leonidas and liis heroic band to tlieir selfish love of outdoor sport. Of course the Greeks did not play baseball, no liingly furnished with the most private Greek being bold enough to act as mn- littie nooks imaginable. She has not yet pire, but tlieir passion was similar tc been converted to the passion for brie-:> ours. History repeats itself so often that brae, and her walls are not• tattooed with j the American citizen may yet seethe the multitude of meaningless decorations ; American people of the Union deeply ab- tliat strain the* eye in the average modem sorbed in base-ball while a foreign in- drawing room. Harper's Bazar. j vader is landing its hosts on our unpro- • tected coasts. Let congress consider this matter and find some means of preveting Libel for Divorce. GEORGIA—Coweta County: John T. Ferrell vs. Martha D. Ferrell. It appearing to the Court, by the return ol the Sheriff in the above stated ease that the , defendant does not reside in said county, and j it further appearing that she does not reside I in this Ktatc: it is therefore ordered by the | Court, that service he perfected on the defend ant by the publication of this order once a ! mont h for four months he : ore the next term j of this Court in The He it aud and Auvki-.- I tisek. a newspaper published in Coweta | county, Georgia. Consignments solicited. Quick sales and prompt remittances, age. Excellent facilities for the care of perishable goods. Judge Tolleson Kirp.y, Traveling Salesman. gJF" References: Gate City National Bank, and merchants and bankers of Atlanta generally. NEWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS. LUTHER M. FARMER, Granted: Petitioner's Attorney S. \\h Harris, J. S. C. C. C. A true extract from the minutes of Coweta Superior Court, September Term, li DANIEL SWINT, Clerk Superior iinrr A Cure for Insomnia. If you arc troubled with insomnia tliesq sultry nights just, turn the faucet of cold water in your bath room for a minute or two upon your feet and then thoroughly dry them. Haul taut your musquito bar, let your head lie low, and. like the pious country blacksmith in his pew at church, close your eyes and think " ’’“'F!' i of nothing. The cold water drives the l > a ' u $ :n! , blood to the head and produces a sopor ific effect. One of the big Portuguese onions sliced and neatly seasoned and eaten with thin bread, in the form of One Peculiarity of ttie Tiuane. •‘One of the peculiar freaks of in sanity.” said Keeper Moose. «.!' the Erie county' almshouse, “is the seeming re versal of natural tendencies. For ex ample. we have in the male wards line collections of j* it tod plants and climbing vines, which grow so luxuriantly that they curtain the windows. The men tend these carefully, pluck away the dead leaves, stir up the dirt in the pots, prune the vines, keep them carefully watered and in divers other ways manifest tin* tentlerest waebfulness. Not so with the women. Every attempt to introduce i nn's as a feature of the fe male wards, save in ilie cottages, where so alarming a situation.—Fiatonia (Tex.) Argus. Rfiiietlic« on the Railroad. All the conductors on the Maine Cen tral railway have I seen provided by the management of the road with cases con- | tabling remedies to be usc-d in cases of j accident, such as linen and rubber ban : 1 dages. plaster, surgical instruments, medicines, liniments, etc., with books of directions. Every conductor will be his 1 own doctor. The occasions are frequent i also, in times of accident, when physfi i cians are passengers upon trains; but- they are often handicapped by lack of proper Executor’s Sale. | GKORG I A—flow eta County : i By virtue of an order from the hoiioi-abh; ! Court of Ordinary ol' Coweta county. Gt-orgia. ; I will soli, on the first Tuesday in December MONUMENTS, TOMBS AND HEADSTONES, TABLETS. CURBING. ETC. smuite, ; of Cow- * On the I oath byj the mildest cases are confined, lias proved t instruments. A further step in the right a fiat failure. The women pufi out the plants by the roots, tear down tin sandwiches, would be good. An ordin- j . . .,, ., . , United States onion will do if the ennrc!v :,t variance with the nature of great big fellows are out of the market. Onions are full of opium. Let business and all mental labor go out of your head. Keep the thoughts of maturing notes, in terest upon mortgages, the good looking chap that was attentive to your best and all such enemies to repos* outside of your musquito n York j lines. and manifest other destructive tendencies entirely at variance with the nature of the sex in general.”—Boston Transcript. direction would be to have all train vines i hands and employes instructed in “aids to the injured.”—Popular Science Hews. next, wiihin the lefn'.l hours of sal*-. h-?f. court-house door in the city of Newman t,w,n acres Of land, more or Ip • • i'-ing, an t being in the Fifth disirs eta county, and bounded "- foliov curt hv The old state road, on th» lands of YV. B- Berry, on The- west by rhe j rtoht-of-wuv of the Atlanta and -A*.-! Point ; Railroad Cnmwiny, and runnimr to si point ! .-■ortli—except two acres of lsind on the south j side ol the house lot and next to th" garden, j which was bequeathed to Curtis YY ood lev by j Peter Owen, deceased; and said two acres j will he sold, at the same time, if necessary to | -'SPECIAL DESIGN'S, AND ESTIMATES FOR ANY DESIRED WORK, FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. NEWNAN nn o -chard and all necessary outbuildings. A ■dore-house on the premises not included in the sale. Hold .-is the property of James Rus sell. deceased. Terms cash. This November 1-d Tk<7. O. A. RUSSELL, .T. P. RUSSELL, Printer’s fee, 44.45 Administrators. Administrator’s Sale. G EORGI A— Ci >W ft A COUNTY : By virtue of an order irorn the lionorahie pav the debts of the estate of said Fetor Owen. ; The said tract of land being tin -same on which .Libel Tor Divorce. Peter Owen, deceased, recently lived.■ j poriGT \—Cowk-ta County: land sold lor the benefit of creditors and leya- ; '- ,r - - M ''- tct-s Terms cash. This November 1st. issT. C. A. BOLTON, Executor of Peter Owen. Printer's fee, |fi.00. Scott Price vs. Sylvia P Li Administrators’ Sale. uu ih« Determination of Death. M. Poyrmul <:< >u iiL-v-- one of ihe befi. menus of deterininiug the (h ath of an in dividual t«> be eatiu-ri: at i-ii by Yieima pa>te. If (be eieliar forms s!-. wl ■' and is Among the melodious bells of Dews- | no.u th,- b.mon.i.le ! bury, m Yorkshire, is one called --Black Cf J n - rt «f ordinary of Coweta county, u ore:.!. Tom of Sotliill.” which was presented in ; will be sold before the court-hoim expiation of a murder. Its lugubr sound iieims out and breaks upon midnight silence of a Christmas eve, when i ~ r- . - % , , , . its solemn tolling is known as the ••uc •- . ,j". second district of said county..-uid ■ <.aiia- Iu Coweta Superior Court, ' . < September Term, 1SS7. ^vlvia l’ric^.) it ;u>]Yoarin£: to the Court by the return oi the Hheritfirithe above stated case that the defendant does uol reside in said county, and :r fur’ ; -.-r appearing that she does not reside it is therefore ordered by the i v.'-: • iqjiT ivice lx: perfected on thedefend- i.y'lu- publication of ibis order once a n.o’rib :<>;■ !<>ur months before the next term of this Court in Tin: HnKAtn axd Adver- Court of (>r*linavy of t'oweta county, Georgia. 1 will ! 1 before the court-house door in :ue cite ofNewnnn, within the legal hours of sale, on’the first Tuesday in December next. (h<- following described lands belonging to the es tate of J. .M. s. Smith, deceased. to-Yvit: Twelve and two-thirds (IgH) acres, more or less, of the southeast corner of lot numls-r two hundred and two (202), and eleven U acres, more or less, of the northeast corner of lot number two hundred and fifteen (215;, ly- in« in the original Second, now fivant-i-ilLr. Coweta . SMITH. Attorney. ■llltu iu ; ut ------- OI I U- ( oH r i ill nr.n.ann nhvioiis Newnan, on the first Tuesday in p -i enilx, . u .-j ap -r published 'l*® 0 . next, between the legal hours oi s:c . i" tie- \ 1 1 p. f. aon tii8 . highest and best bidder, the f«-,,.uv. mg «•- ’ j,‘ Petitioner’s C,when scribed property, to-wit: s . YV.'ii a i:i:is. J. s. C. i'. C. ! *\>'i ncres of land, moio t>t !• * - -J 1 i I , ■ . - . , e ‘ U6V_ the s-cond district of said eounty. u«d- , vtract from the minutes of C. *.f ;.«*lk»w color, or tran-p.-uMi . rflath I il’s knell. Signifying tliat when Chri-t .-i a-: folt.nvs: On,the nort.iemu;. -e-. mayhe positively declare*!, whiieif itbq j was born the devil died lith amd west by G. O. Semagin, j September 13th, 1887. 1 ^ m-r iorC Jart mL brown, or black life stiff exists. _ j Journal, r w. .L: :-.w.n uwvi.jug; ing in the original Second, now Grantviik district, Coweta county, Georgia, said lands adjoining and hounded as follows: On the north by widow’s dower, on the east hv lands ; of 1). L Puckett, on the south by lands ot l:. I. O’Kelly, and o:i the west bv lands of R. M. I Word. At the same lime and place will be sold tl«- estate or remainder interest, in the dower of Hie widow, containing twenty-one aud one- thirii (21 1 3 ) ncres o! lot number two hundred a .--.d too (202), and lying north of above tntci-. -Y il sold for the benefit of the heirs and cr '<J- Terms ensh. This November 1st, ifc*7. H. J. L YSSETTER Administratoc.of .1. M. s. Smith, dc-ca.. Printer’^ fee, f7-W. ? — mamm