The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, February 03, 1888, Image 3

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Hhe gtrald awl gidctrlism. Newnan, Ga., Friday, Feb. 3, 1888. A nrnkrr'* First Fright. “I have frequently lxx-n caught short on the market and seenmyself within an ace of being ruined.’’-said a New street broker to a reporter;;-“but I was really scared oiily once in rmylifo, anti that was during my first day iti the street. \ My father got me a place in the office of an •old friend of his. wlitre l enjoyed the full-confidence of my employer. I had been working only a few hours when lie handed me ten crisp $100 bills and told me to deposit them hi an uptown bank. J put the bills in my coat pocket until 1 had finished writing up my looks and then took a car going up town. When I entered the bank and put my hand an my pocket the hills were gone. I cim't describe my feelings, for the simple reason that I hadn't any. I felt myself turned to stone. hSotli in inind and body I was stupefied. "When I had 'collected myself a little I weiit out of the hank with the expressed intention of throwing myself into the -river. I knew not where 1 went or what I was doing, hut I found that I had re turned to the ollice. The broker was out when I got hack. I was too numb to he agitated, and no •One noticed there was anything the mat ter with me as I put on my office coat and began jioring over the set of books. It was not until I saw the broker coming in the door that 1 began to fully realize my position. 1 ran my hand wildly through my hair in a vain attempt to calm myself, and then absent mindedly put it in my pocket. The first thing I felt was the roll of bills. I had changed my coat and forgotten all alxiut it. r lhe broker chided me for not going to the bank, hut he never knew why the money wasn’t deposited until the next day.”— New York Evening Sun, One W»y to Woo Slumber. "Who is there who has not at times car ried the excitement of composition too far info the quiet night, and then, when shy visitant? The momentum of his brain work cannot eafily be checked, tfie hUxjd which has keen, called there for thought making remains there, or niorfc truly? continued ffo flow thither. tl|e vaso motor nerves, whqse duty it is to regulate the blood current by expand ing or contracting the blood vessels, are too tired to work automatically, and they must be helped. Exercise Fhat will dis tribute the blood through the IkxIv and so relieve the brain, is now plainly indi cated. and it will surprise the brain weary and sleepless man the first time he tries the following exercise to see how quickly the coveted sleep comes to him. This is not a doctor's prescription, but only an example of a simple exercise ap plied to a definite end. "NN ith the clothes removed lio on the floor, hack down, placing the arms up with the hands clasped behind the neck, and fastening the feet down to the floor in any conve nient way, rise to a sitting posture and back, relating the motion a dozen times, but not in a hurried manner. If this is very easy, load your hands with a light dumbbell or other weight.—William T. Brigham in The Writer. HOW DO WE DIO OUR GRAVES? We must eat or we cannot live. This we all know. But do we all know prudence sent him to bed, found sloep a J.hat we (lie by eating? It is said we In Central California. Heretofore the eastern tourist has been accustomed to hear only ol southern Cali fornia and its so-called semi-tropical cli mate, while scarcely anything has been said of the merits of the climate in cen tral California. To such an extent has this pulling of one portion of the state to the detriment of another section been carried that many of the eastern tourists now visiting the counties adjacent to the hay seem to lx; surprised that fruits of many kinds are grown outdoors until Christmas. Particularly is this so in re gard to grapes. Some surprise has been expressed that the fine grapes on exhi bition at the rooms of the state board of trade should l>e found outside of Los Angeles and San Diego counties, whereas the fact is that the best grapes grown anywhere in California are produced out side of southern California, and those grown in Sonoma, Napa, Santa Clara and along the eastern foothills of the Sacra mento valley have never been surpassed anywhere. Another fact worthy of becoming known is that there ripen in Butte county, tfi lO miles north < f Los Angeles, and at Los Gatos, in the Santa Clara valley, some fifty miles south of San Francisco, the first orange crops of this season. They are of fine quality and nearly two months j earlier than the Riverside crops. In Santa 'Clara county some of the finest white ; Yerdel, Tokay and black Ferrara grapes .get ripe and ready for the table at ( lirist- jmas. In this same county strawberries j and raspberries can also be had up to the i holidays.—San Francisco Alta. Benjamin Franklin’s Bequest. In 1890 will end the term of 100 years during which the cities of Boston and Philadelphia have each enjoyed the reve nue from a bequest of $5,000 made by Benjamin Franklin. The money was to be loaned out to young married artificers, and the trust has been executed, although the lapse of the century requires a new disposition of the funds. It is significant that while in Boston the $5,000 has grown to nearly .$828,000, in Philadel phia the $5,000 has become only $70,000, and that in both cases the amount is less than Franklin estimated it should be. But, as the , natural philosophers of Franklin’s day generally fell short of the sage in ingenuity, so too the successive boards of trustees have been far from equal to him in business ability. It is in teresting to note, however, tliat the two funds still exist, and that part,of the Boston reserve goes in the purchase of a public recreation ground to be known as Franklin Park.—Electrical W odd. Something About Dyspepsia. Chronic dyspepsia is a functional, not an organic, disorder. If the eye could look within the stomach, in the latter j case, it would see no explanation of the i trouble, as in the case of organic diseases. j At least five kinds of fluids co-operate | in the digestive process; saliva, gastric juice, bile, pancreatic fluid and intestinal secretions. Indigestion, therefore, does not necessarily have its seat in the ; stomach. . I Two forms of it are specially recognized —gastric (that of the stomach) and in testinal. Each form has two prominent varieties: one in which the food is really digested, while tlio person has a great sense of discomfort; the other, in which the food is not duly digested, while the person has comparatively little suffering. In the first variety there is an abnorinal excitability of the nerves of sensation. This is known as nervous dyspepsia. The more common causes of dyspepsia are excesses in eating, neglect of physical exercise, protracted anxiety, change from an active to a sedentary life, insufficient sleep, luxurious living. No treatment can here be described suited to individual cases. The chief thing is to find out and remove the cause. An overworked stomach should lx> re lieved by giving it only the work which it can do easily, and by furnishing to it only that which is easily digested. Everything should be done to improve the general health. Change of locality and general surroundings is often a help. —Youth's Companion. The Sport of Seal Killing. A gentleman stood in front of a fur rier’s store contemplating the seal gar ments that filled the windows. “I never see a seal coat,” he said, “that I am not reminded of a heart breaking dav I passed among the seal killers.” Then he told of joining an expedition, when he was a young man, and going out for the sport of seal killing. They knocked the pretty creatures on the head. The seals are so tame, affectionate and fearless, that when the hunters landed and came among them they crowded round them like dogs, making their little, friendly bark and fawning upon the mur derous’ hands that proceeded to stretch them bloody corpses upon the beach. The man related how sick at heart he got; how he tried to get away from this massacre of the innocents, and to this day a sealskin coat recalled his wretched ex perience us a murdering criminal among the seals.—New York Cor. Chicago Herald. A Steam Catamaran. A novel craft is being built in Mon treal. It is a steam catamaran, each of i he cigar shaped hulls beiug of steel, sixty- five feet long, and built in two compart ments. one being for water ballast and the other for coal oil. which will be used lor fuel. Two vertical engines will fur nish the power to two propellers, which are so arranged that they will lift them selves out of the way when the hulls strike floating ice or other obstacles. The boat can be taken apart and packed on a ship, and is intended for whale and walrus hunting in the Artie regions. It will carry a gatling gun and a powerful lectric battery.—Cleveland Leader. . dig our graves with our teeth. How ! foolish tills sounds. Yet it is fearfully i true. We are terrified at the approach j of the cholera and yellow fever, yet there is a cUsease constantly at our J doors and in our houses far more dan- | gcrous and destructive. Most people | have in their own stomachs a poison, | more slow, but quite as fatal as the | genus of those maladies which sweep | men into eternity by thousands witli- I out warning in the times of great epi- ! demies. But it is a mercy that, if we j are watchful, we can tell we are threat ened. The following are among the symptoms, yet they do not always nec essarily appear in the came order, nor are they always the same in different cases. There is a dull and sleepy feel ing; a bad taste in the mouth, especial ly in the morning; the appetite is changeable, sometimes poor, and again it seems as though the patient could not eat enough, and occasionally no ap petite all; dullness and sluggishness of the mind; no ambition to study or work; more or less headache and hear iness on rising to the feet or moving suddenly; furred and coated tongue; a sense of a load on the stomach that nothing removes; hot and dry skin at times; yellow tinge in the eyes: scanty and high-colored urine; sour taste in the mouth,frequently attended by pal pitation of the heart: impaired vision, with spots that seem to be swimming in the air before the eyes;, a cough, with a greenish-colored expectoration; poor nights’ rest; a sticky slime about the teeth and gums; hands and feet cold and clammy; irritable temper and bow els bound up and costive. This disease has puzzled the physicians and still puzzles them. It is-the commonest of ailments aqd yet the most complicated and mysterious. Sometimes it is treat ed as consumption, sometimes as liver complaint, and then again as malaria and even heart disease. But its real j nature is that of constipation and dys pepsia. It arises in the digestive or gans and soon affects all the others through the corrupted and poisoned blood. Often the whole body—includ- the nervous system—is literally starved, even when there is no emacia tion to tell the sad story. Experience has shown that there is but one remedy that can certainly cure this disease in all its stages, namely. Shaker Extract of Roots or Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup. It never fails, but nevertheless, no time should be lost m trying other so-called remedies, for they will do no good. Get this great vegetable preparation, (discovered by a venerable nurse whose name is a house hold word in Germany) and be sure to get the genuine article. Publications. THE CENTURYMAGAZINE W ITH the November, 1387, iasue The Cbstcht commences its thirty-fifth volume with a regular circulation of almost 250,000. The War Papers and the Life of Lincoln increased monthly edition by 10U,- eyo. TLe latter history having recounted the events of Lincoln’s early year-*, and given the necessary survey of the political condition of the country, reaches a new period, with which his secretaries were most intimately acquai nted. V nder the caption LINCOLN IN THE WARr the writers now enter on the more important nartof their narrative, viz : the early years of i he War and President Lincoln's part therein. supplementary war papers, Publications. ~ ~ 1888. HARPER’S MAGAZINE. ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Magazine is an organ of pro gressive thought and movement j» every de partment of! life. Besides other attractions, it will contain, during the coming rear, im portant articles,superbly illustrated, on the Great Westarticles on American and for eign industry;.beautifully illustrated papers on Scotland. Norway, Switzerland. Algiers, and the West Indies; new novels by Wil LIAM Black and W. V. Howells; novel ettes, each complete in a single number, by Henry Jaxis. Lafcauio Hears, and Amelik Rivks;short stories by MissWool- al Sherman will write on “The Graod Strate gy of the War.” i KENNAN ON SIBERIA. Except the Life of Lincoln and rfre War Ar- , tides, no more important series lias ever been undertaken by The C'entuv.y than ttiis of Mr Kennait's. Wit h the previous prepar ations of four years’ travel and sYuty in Rus sia and Siberia, the author undertook a jour ney of 15,000 miles for the special investiga tion here required. An introductebnffrom the Russian Minister of the Interior udinilt- d him to the principal mines and p risons, where lie became acquainted with some three hun dred State exiles,—Liberals, ^Nihilists, and | others,—and the series will be a»sb<rtling as ] well as accurate revelation of Sie exile sys tem. The many illustrations by the artist and photographer, Mr. George A. Frost, wlm accompanied t lie author, will arid greatly to the value of the articles. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. PER YEAR: HARPER’S MAGAZINE 00 HARPER* WEEKLY I 0L HARPER’S BAZAR *<*> HARPERS YOUNG PEOPLE 2 00 Postage Free to ail subscribers in the United states, Canada. or Mexico. Professional <£arb*. Thomas c. Carleton. Hewlett© A. Hall. (TABLETOP & KALI* Attorney* at Law, Newnan, Wll practice in all the Court#, both Stab and Federal, giving »D#oiai afteatJon to j «. • management of est»U * «*d litigated cam! office No. 2, Cole building. L. P- BARNISy Attorn«y at Law, Newnan, Ga Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew & Co.’s. PAYSttN S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G« Will practice in all the Court# and givv prompt attention to all busines® placed in hL 1 uands. Examination of titles. WTitingdectat- mortgages, contracts,, etc., will roceiw cial attention. Office ever Askew’s store. A NOVEL BY EGGLIST0N with illustrations will run through the year. Shorter novels will follow by Cable and Stockton. Shorter fictions will appear every month. MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES will comprise several illustrated articles on Ireland, by Charles Oe Kay - papers touching the field of the Sunday-School Lessons, illus trated by E. L. Wilson; wild Western lit -, by i’heodore Roosevelt; the English Cathedrals, by Mrs. van Rensselaer, with ill-.Strattons by Pennell; Dr. Buckley’s 'valuable papers on !(reams, Spiritualism, and Clairvoyance; es says in criticism, art, trural, and biography; poems; cartoon; etc. By a special otter the numbers for the past year (containing the Lincoln history; may be secured with the year's subscription Irom November, ISS7. twenty-four issues in all, for <(j 00, or, with the last yeai’s numbers hand somely bound, $7.50. Published by The Phntuky Co. 33 East 17th Street, New York. ECLECTIC MAGAZINE OF Foreign Literature, Science and Art. The volumes or the Magazine begin with i the numbers tot June and December of each ! rear. When no time is specified, suhscrip- j lions will begin with the Number current at I time eg' receipt of order. j Bound Volumes of Harper's Magazine, for three years back, in neat cloth binding, I will be sent bv mail, post-paid, on receipt oi $3.0t>per volume. Cloth Cases, for.bindiug, 50 i cenlseach—by mail, post-paid. Index to Harper's Magazine, Ab-habet- icik)„Analytical„aiid Classified, for Volumes 1 to 7lt, inclusive, from June, 1850, to June 1S85, one vol, $a'o. Cloth, $1.00. Rfinit’anees should be made by Post-Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance oi loss. Newspapers a re not to copy this advertise ment without the express order of Harper fit Bboihebs. Address HARPER A BROS,, New York 1888. HARPER’S WEEKLY. ILLUSTRATED. ‘The Literature of the Wirfd.” 18SS—44tli YEAR. L. M. FARMER, Attorney *t Law, Newnan, Gfi (OSice over First National Bank.) Will yuae’lce in all the Courts of Coweta Circuit- All Just iev Courts attended. f#r ~ 111111 i to loan on real estate at R pei cent. r»e annum. Interest paid at end of tin year. p. w. Willcoxon. W. C. Wright. WIIA£©XON <k WRIGHT, Attorneys wt Law, Newnan, Gu Will practice in all the Court* of the Dis trict »a»l Circuit. All Justice t’ourts atteii* dcd. Office in Willcoxon building, over E E. Summers’. GEO.. A_ CARTER, Attorney at Law, Grantville, Ga. Will practice in all tho Courts of the Cir cuit,, and elsewhere by special agreement. Harper’s Wkekt.y has a well-established place as the leading illustrated newspaper in America. The fairness of its editorial coni ments on current politics has earned tor it , the respect and confidence ot all impartial f readers, and the variety and excellence of its literary contents, which include serial and short stories by the best aud most popular writers,fit it for the perusal of the people ot the widest range of tastes and pursuits. t?up- plements are fr« qnently provided, and no ex pense is spared to bring the highest order ol artistic ability to bear upon the illustration ot the changeful phases of home and toreign history. In all its features Harper’s Weekly is admirably adapted to be a wel come guest in every household. J. C- NEWMAN, Attorney »t- Law, Newnan, Georgia. 1YU1 practise in the Hnperior and Ju.-tic- Courts of the county and circuit, and els* - where by special agreement. W. A. TURNER, Attorney Law, N*wnaii, Ga. Practices in all the»tat»a«d Federal Courts Office No. J Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga. Will practice in all Courts of this an.l adjoining counties and tho Supreme Court. HARPER’S PERIODICALS. PER YEAR : HARPER’S WEEKLY M CO HARPER’S BAZAR HARPER’S Y’OUNG PEOPLE Coffee Not Injurious. “It is nonsense,” said a chemist-, “to ;ay that coffee is injurious on account of the calcine in it. Cafeine is an alkaloid, which, taken in larger doses, would pro duce nervous troubles and other serious .■onsequences, but is present in coffee in such infinitesimal quantities that it is [terfecily harmless; on the contrary, it is to cafeine that coffee owes its tonic prop erties. If coffee is injurious it works very slowlv, for thousands of people who use it to excess live to a good old age. They say Voltaire drank forty-eight glasses of it a day.”—Philadelphia Times. Color In Di-crs in Nevr York. YTlten we come to the question of color n dress, as it appears relatively to The lecorative tendencies of the New \ork street, we must look for its mainspring, a some degree, to American social coa litions. American women, as a rule, nake more display of magnificence in he street than the women of any ether aation. To them the street means a show, a parade, in which they play an important part. In adopting the modern English aesthetic idea of color in dress, American women have applied it exten sively to street costumes. The use of brilliant reds in street gowns and bat> having spread throughout Europe E now nationalized on American soil, and adds cheerfulness to life and landscape. The approaching change in the costumes of men is likely to result in a freer use of color. The English movement against the monotony of male attire is finding followers in this country, and already many men are beginning to appear in public in colors that were until recently tabooed.—The Art Review. European flower collectors have visited all the countries in South America in Search of rare orchids, and during six montlis of the present year $8,659 was paid for these curious plants in one town in Venezuela.—Glficago Time*. The T«mb of Byron. The church of Hucknal Torkard. Notts. England, in which is the tomb of Byron, is Ix'ing rebuilt, but it is said that not a stone of Byron’s tomb will be disturbed, and the block of marble sent for the pur pose by the king of Greece, and embel lished with a laurel wreath wrought in brass by Mr. Richard Belt, which marked the poet's grave, as well as the tablet to his memory, and the mural monument in memory of his daughter. Lady Love lace, will, after tho restoration, occupy the same positions relatively to the grave as now.—New York Sun. GIVEN UP BY SEVEN DOCTORS. Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel’s Syrup has raised me to good health af ter seven doctors had given me up to die with consumption. So writes R. F. Grace, Kirkmanville, Todd county, Ivy. HE HEARD OF IT JUST IN TIME. “I had been about given up to die with dyspepsia when T first saw the ad vertisement of Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel’s Syrup. After using four bottles I was able to attend to my bus iness as well as ever. T know of sev eral cases of chills and fever that have been cured by it.” So writes Mr. Tbos. Pullum, of Taylor, Geneva county, Ala. WORTH TEN DOLLARS A BOTTLE. Mr. Thomas P. Evans, of the firm of Evans & Bro., Merchants, Horntown, Accomack county, Va„ writes that he had been sick with digestive disorders for many years and had tried many physicians and medicines without bene fit. Roots or Seigel’s Syrup about the 1st of January, 1887, and was so much better | in three weeks that he considered him- ! self practically a well man. He adds: “1 have at this time one bottle on hand, and if I could not get any more I would not tulrc o. ten dollar bill for it." All druggists, or address A. J. "White, Limited, 54 TVarren St., X. Y. Tlie Foreign Magazines embody the best thoughtsDf the ablest writers of Europe. It is the aim of the Eclectic Magazine to se lect anil reprint these articles. The plan of the Eclectic includes Science, , Essays. Reviews. Biographical sketches. His- ; oriciil Papers, Art Criticism, Travels, Peetry ; and Short Stories. .... 1 its Editorial Departments comprise Litera- < :"V Notices, dealing with current, home books, f .. . RPER * S MAGAZINE Foreign Lite-ary Notes, Science and Art i -ummarizing briefly the new discoveries and j achievements in this field, and consisting ot choice extracts from new books and foreign journals. The following are the names of •onte of the leading authors whose articles may be expected to appear in the pages of the Eclectic for the coming year. —AUTHORS.— Ut. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Ai.fkkd Tennyson, Pkofessok Huxley, PltOFESSOK Ty NDALL, Rich. A. Pkoctek, B. A. J. Nokman Lockyer, F. It. S. 1)k. W. B. Carpenter, E. B. Tyler, Prof. Max Muller, Prof. Owen, Mathew Arnold, E. A. Freeman, D- C. L. James Anthony Froudk, . Thomas Hughes, Algernon C. Swinburne, William Black, Mrs. Oi.iphant, Cardinal Newman, Cardinal Manning, Miss Thackeray, Thomas Hardy, Robert Buchanan, etc., etc. The Eclectic enables the American read er to keep himself informed on the great questions of the day throughout the world, and no intelligent American can aftoru to be without it. STEEL ENGRAVINGS. Tho Eclectic comprises each year two large volumes of over 1,700 pages. Each of these volumes contains a fine steel engrav ing, which adds much to the attraction ot the magazine. -1 00 4 00 2 oo The Volumes of the Weekly begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no lime is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper’s Weekly, for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by ex press, free of expense (provided tlie treight does not exceed one dollar per volume,) tor $7.00 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of $1 00 each. Remittances should be made by Post-Oftice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertise ment without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address HARPER *t BROS., New \ ork. J. 8. POWELL, Attorney at Law, Newnau, Ga Collections made. G. W. PEDDY, M. D- Physician ami Burgeon, Newnan, 3a. (Office over \V. K. Avery’s Jewelry Store. Offers his services to the people of Newnau and surrounding country. All calls answereo promptly. T. B. DAVIS, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, Ga. Offers liis professional services to the citi zens of Newnan and vicinity. I)It. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot Street. ■ TERMS.—Single copies, 45 cents; one copy, - j one year, $5; five copies, $20. Trial subscrip- He began to use Shaker Extrac t of | uoj f«r Tl,c E. K. FELTON, Publisher, 25 Bond Street, New York. 1888. HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE. AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY. 1888. HARPER’S BAZAR ILLUSTRATED. „ DR. HE Extract SIBLEY’ ^TESTED Harper’s Young People interests all ! young readers by its carefully selected varie- I ty of themes and their well-considered treat- J nient. It contains the best serial and short ; i stories, valuable articles on scientific subjects | ; and travel, historical aud biograpical sketch- j I es. papers on athletic sports and games, stir- . ! ring poems, etc., contributed by the brightest . j ;i ud most famous writers. Its illustrations : i are numerous and excellent. Occasional The Volumes of tne bazar oe„ Supplements of especial interest to Piirents ; fi rs t Number for January of each year. I anti Teachers will i>ea feature of the forth- j When no time is mentioned, subscriptions j coming volume, which will comprise^fiRy- 1 - ■ ■ - —'“- “ - ' T Harper’s Bazar is a home journal. It combines choice literature and fine art illus trations with the latest intelligence regarding the fashions. Each number lias clever serial and short stories, practical and timely es- savs. bright, poems, humorous sketches, etc. its pattern-sheet and fashion-plate supple ments will alone help ladies to save many times the cost of the subscription, and papers on social etiquette, decorative art, house keeping in all its branches, cookery, etc., make it useful in every household, and a. true promoter of economy. Its editorials are marked by good sense, and not a line is ad mitted to its columns that could offend the most fastidious taste. HARPER’S PERIODICALS. PER YEAR: HARPER’S BAZAR HARPER’S MAGAZINE HARPER’S WEEKLY HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE Postage Free to all subscribers in the Uni ted States, Canada, or Mexico. The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic and Nervine 13 gaining great reputation as aeure for Debility, Dyspei - lia, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves a - languid and debilitated conditions of tue By te m ; strengthens the intellect, and ' builds up worn out Nerves: aids stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings ba-, youthful strength and vigor. It is taste, and used regularly braces the System agaUBt the depressing influence of Malaria. Price—$1.00 per Bottle of *4 ounce*. FOB SALE BY ALL.DRUGGISTS, < Writing Upon Glass. The new pencil introduced bv Faber for writing upon glass, porcelain and metals in red. white and blue are made by melting together spermaceti, four parts; tallow, three parts, and wax. two parts, and coloring the mixture with white lead, red lead or Prussian blue as desired. These pencils are convenient in the laboratory, and save the trouble of labeling.—Boston Transcript. SENr^nterii CATALOGUE Vegetable. Flower, Field O tCT Plants. Bulb*. Iinpleoi’rs. W »■» srj p* by mail on apslicatlon. li ffw Ea Don’t nugiect v. riling tor It- HIRAM SIBLEY k CO. ROCHESTER. N. Y. 3C2-325 3. Kill St. V* Ucil JlLi ill'- M X — -will begin with the Number current at time ol receipt of order. i Bound Volumes of Harper’s Bazar, for! three vears back, in neat Cloth binding, will I be senl by mall, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume,) for $7.00 per j volume. , Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for i ” weekly feast-of good things to the beys ’ binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on j and "iris fin every family which it visits.- \ receipt of $1.00 each. t-_.-—- ! R.-mittances should be made by Post-Office 1 1 three weekly numbers Every line in the pa- tv?r is subjected to the most rigid editorial scrutiny in order that nothing harmful may. enter its columns. i An epitome of everything that is attractive and desirable in juvenile literature.—(Boston 1 Courier. 'Brooklyn Union. . . Remittances snouict oe maue uy rusi-ytuct; ' j ( is wonderful in its wealth of pictures, in- j Money Order or Lira ft, to avoi-i chance of loss, formation, and interest.—[Christian Advo-I Newspapers are not, to copy this advertise- cate, N.Y. i mmit without the express order of Harper Hospital for Hair Di-.ea.se--. A London association is endeavoring to establish a hospital for the treatment of hair diseases, with a staff of trichologists and periodical lectures and demonstra tions. Bald heads, such as the coming j man is supposed to will be reme died as much as possible.—Chicago Times. | Fiiien Building. Atlanta. Ga. Most practi- • ; Ticai Husiness Collet* South. Bet! course at i l^ast cost.. Business men and bookkeepers ! commend its course of study »* being the best ever devised. Bend for catalogue. TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2.00 Per year, j Vol. IS. begins Nov. 1, 1887. Specimen Copy sent on receipt of a two- \ cent stamp. j Single Numbers, Five Cents each. Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Orderor Draft, to avoid chance of loss- j Newspapers are not to copy this advertise- ; mentwithont the express order of Harper: A Brothers. Address H ARPER A BROS., New York, j i mint without the express order Harper ' ,£ Brothers. Address HARPER <i BROS., New York. When I say Curb I do not mean merely to Itop them for a time, and then have them re turn again. I Mkax A RADICAL CURE. I have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALUENG SICKNESS, A life long study. T warrant my remedy to Cure the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason tor not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and *Fkf.k Bottl-- of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cur# you. Address H. C. ROOT. Ml. C.,!S3P£A2l5t., Be»Yo?.;: RECOGNIZED ts the leading Farm, Garden, Fruit, Stock md Family Weekly of America, the RURAL NEW-YORKER Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: All persons having demands against the c- tate of Henry Martin, Hr., late of said count; deceased, an- lit r< by notified to render i their demands to tlie undersigned, accord!n to law; and all persons indebted' to said »- tate are requireu to make immediate pay mr.li* This December S, 1887. Marble Turned t» Lime. The marble slabs which form the roof of Girard college, in Philadelphia, have turned into lime through the action of the sulphurous smoke of th® anthracite coal burned in the buikBug.—New York Evening World. PAINTING! POMONA NURSERIES, POMONA, GA. begs to say that it will mail without charge ; to all who an- interested in rural affairs a; copy of the Rural itself, together with five' copies of its series of powerful I-arm Cartoons, t printed on fine paper, and showing, as no other pictures have eve wrong side of fare gers. etc. The Hi than ar.v other ft It presen's 500 origi— - -- , year; the value of the work of its hxponment 'Farm is widely known and re«ojmized. The j Printer's fee, $3.00 SCKAN L. MARTIN, H. A. MARTIN. BEADLES’ Executors LINIMENT! Neurab paper, anu snowing, as no . (,- Hr es Toothache, Headache, ve ever shown, the ris'ht Jinn ! Rheumatism, all pains of Xerve* and Boflr :i life, its pleasures, its dan-t externa application. It cures Colic, Ch>- 'kal costs more to publish | icra Morbus, Cramps and Pain# of the Boy r nrm journal n tlie country. , els, bv taking from 5 to 10 drops internal: original illustrations every i -ifinted with wa?<-r. Jl. J. BBADLE8. r,or tic Ktm.rimmi ! Proprietor and Patentee. Newr.an. Gu On sale at J. I. Scroggin’#. we®t side Pub-: All kinds of Nurserv stock for stile cneap. ''^ l ■ Apple. Peach and Plum trees. $1" per hun- F :inn is widely Known arm recognize-, rue - On sal dreti. Grapevines, *400 pier hundred, standard ; jarm writers in the world—4)00 contribn- Square. The undersigned otters his services to the i varieties: soecial varieties cheap iu propor- - tors. Its Domestic Economy, Home, News i wLnteof Newnan -fnd^ Coweta countv as a tion c.n large orders. Prices furnishedIon ap- _ an<1 Market departments are unequaled. n . skU ffulaud‘•'xDerienced nairfter andresm4t- i plication. Address PHILLIP SMITH. The Rural addresses itseli to all good people fSnHweS- i octi4-3m* Pomona, ta. 1 who cnitlvate land, whetner it be a flower f u „ lj i plot or a thousand acres. Print $2 a year, -- • ’ tinted paper. YORKER, 34 ing'a specialty, either by contract or by t day. Old furniture, organs, pianes. cleaned, painted and revarnished. Address me at Newnan, Ga- ALLEN LONG Jjy the — — pjOI or rl lUUUSCMiU ivo. a * Lddrei ! 5S“ Bring YorR JoR WoHK TO Mc * j ISdj&to 1 * 1 mj&AL • ne* 7 -yc ONG. J C'LKNDON & Co., Newnan, Ga. i Park Row, New York. B 3* T nX? u' folly and eic«M, t«J" gissS: sssssa