Newspaper Page Text
Sthe Jerald and ^duertisq.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, Feb. 10, 18887
Fashions in Teeth.
On a .steel ring about twice as big as a
key ring, which hangs on the wall in a
Twenty-third street dentist's offi<^, are
about ICO human teeth mounted on thin
steel swivels about two inches long. A
man who sat in the dentist’s office the
other day, holding with both hands a
tooth that lie thought was likely to jump'
out of his head, it ached so had, stared at
the ring and wondered if it held trophies
of the doctor’s art, and if the jumping
tooth would soon be added to the collec
tion. The dentist in the meantime was
holding an animated discussion with a
fair woman patient who sat in the big
chair of torture. Pretty soon lie took the
ring of teetli from the wall, and the man
with the jumping bi-cuspid saw him go
through a maneuver that he thought ex
ceedingly strange. He stood in front of
his patient and, selecting a toot h from the
ring, lie would hold it by the side of her
face, and then look at her as though he
were in some impossible way contemplat
ing the effect. Then he would take an
other and go through the same operation
Finally he made an entry of some kind in
a little book, told liis patient to come
Tuesday, and hung the ring up ca the
wall agfiin.
When the man with the bi-cuspid had
climbed out of the chair with the tierce
edge of his toothache dulled a little by a
big wad of savory creosote, lie asked tlie
dentist what his curious operation with
the castanet of teeth might mean.
“It was a very simple matter,” said the
•artist of the forceps and the nerve ex
tractor. “I was trying to find a tooth
that would suit her complexion. No, you
needn’t laugh. It isn’t a joke. It’s the
latest fad in dentistry, and when you
come to understand it, you will wonder
somebody* hasn’t thought of it before.
Haven’t you occasionally noticed that
somebody whom you have met has a set
of false teeth, and you know it perfectly
well, though you can’t tell why? There
is something about the appearance of the
teeth, you don’t know what it is, that
tells you, and in a vaguely unpleasant
sort of way, that they are false. You see
some otherwise good looking woman
laugh, for instance 1 -, and the first glimpse
you get of her teetli strikes you as disa
greeable, although they may be while,
pearly and even. Did you ever guess
what was the matter?
“The trouble was that the woman’s
false teeth, though excellent in every
other way, no doubt, and costing a sum
that probably made her husband winos,
were not of a tint to suit her complexion.
I know of scores ol’ women, and no doubt
there are thousands and thousands of
them in New York, who have uncon
sciously made perfect spectacles of them
selves that way. Now just think how a
woman with black hair and an olive com
plexion would look with perfectly white
teetli. The effect is the ghastliest thing
you ever saw, when you come to think of
it. Yet I’ll bet there are 10,000 black
haired women in New York who are
wearing false teetli as white as a sepul-
•ehre. Then wliat would you think of a
blonde with blue eyes and light hair and
yellow teeth like these? That would look
nice, wouldn’t it? Well, just notice how
many blonde women you sec disfigured in
just that way. Think of the spectacle a
rod headed woman makes when she opens
her mouth to laugh and shows the teeth
some blacksmith of a dentist made as yel
low as a South Brooklyn ague victim! It
is dreadful to all persons ot cultivated
sensibilities. Dark complexioned persons
should have teeth of about this shade,”
showing a yellowish tinted tooth on the
ring. “Bight complexioned persons should
have lighter tinted teeth, lied headed
persons look best with a sort ol gleaming
white that is not. just a dead white, but
is not at all yellow.
“It’s the same way about tlie ages of
people. An old man with a wrinkled
skin and gray hair looks hideous with
white teeth. It’s unnatural, and I think
that even the Fast river oysters must
know that such a man has false teeth,
and ill made false teeth at that. The
wav we do now is to notice the complex
ion" carefully, and then strike a tint
that agrees with it. These teeth that you
see on the ring nre made of porcelain.
They are of every shade and variety of
tint known to the profession. Each one
is numbered. As soon as we find out the
shade that is wanted for a customer we
send the number to the factory, and the
whole sot is made of that tint.
“That’s a considerable advance in the
dentists’ art, but it is small compared
with some other tilings that have been
accomplished since the days when false
teettt. plate and all, were all carved out
of a solid piece of ivory.”
“When was that?"
“About a century ago. There is such a
sot, or, rather, two such sets, one for the
upper and one for tlie lower jaw. that
were made for George ashington, in the
possession of a New York dentist. They
were carved" with almost infinite labor out
of solid ivory. On each side at the back
were little gold springs that kept pressing
the two sets apart. That prevented their
slipping out. but made them terribly tire
some to the unfortunate man who wore
them, and if he ever went to sleep witli
them in his mouth they pried his mouth
ooen and made him snore. They were
very clumsv teeth, we would think, and
only to be used on state occasions.”—New
York Commercial Advertiser.
Painters of Advertisements.
Pincc the laws prohibiting defacing
natural scenery were enacted the adver
tising companies have cut down their
regular staffs of painters to very small
proportions. Before
ployed gangs that were as
Convenience of Natural Gas-
Natural gas can be used in any coal or
wood stove, grate or furnace. In a base
burner, for instance, the fire pot pipe
empties its discharge into a hollow iron
casting, shaped like a cake or round loaf
of bread. The surface of this casting is
covered with small holes. After the cast
ing lias been adjusted it is covered with
pieces of pipe clay or brick, alighted match
is put into the stove, and the thumb screw
on the mixer turned. A flame at once
flies up, and if tlie full channel of tlie
mixer is oj>en tlie flame will attain a
height or twelve or fifteen inches. This
size of flame would melt a stove, and the
mixer is turned.to throw a flame of about
three inches. S"tich a blaze is blue and
steady. Its heat is very great, and the
fire clay is soon white hot, so that in look-
ing'into a stove where natural gas is used
the effect on the vision is that of a coal
tire—tlie stove simply being full of white
hot coals.
In furnaces the plan is virtually the
same. Tlie gas is distributed over tlie
surface of the fire pot, fire clay bricks dif
fuse the beat, and the temperature is reg
ulated bv the thumb screw on the mixer.
“Charles Egbert Craddock.”
Most persons who have seen Miss Mnr-
free have formed three distinct concep
tions of the author of the mountaineer
tales. Reading Craddock's stories before
the secret of the pseudonym has been
revealed the writer of them might have
been easily imagined as a thoughtful,
poetic natured man. A southerner with
tremendous possibilities and a tremendous
earnestness. A man who had lived face
to face with nature and the eternal
verities, to whom the brawls and strug
gles of urban existence were of less mean-
HOW DO WE DIO ODE GRAVES ?
We must eat or we cannot live.
This we all know. But do we all know
that we die by eating? It is said we
dig our graves with our teeth. How
foolish this sounds. Yet it is fearfully
true. We tire terrified at the approach
of the cholera and yellow fever, yet
! there is a disease constantly at our
doors and in our houses far more dan-
Xmlroab Scfye&uUs.
ATLANTA & WEST POINT R. R.
natural gas. There is no carrying of coal,
no aslies, no going out of fires, no dust
and no variation of temperature except at
the will of tlie fireman. The cleanliness
of it is one of its most popular features,
and it is always the occasion for demon
strations on the part of consumers. I
know a miller who carpeted his furnace
room with brussels, papered the walls
with entravagaut white tinted paper,
and dressed his fireman in broadcloth.
When all this had been done the fireman
brought down an easy chair, decorated
with the whitest of tidies which his ‘best
girl’ had made, and he sits there all day
long, dressed with the neatness of a
clergyman, reading light literature and
turning the thumb screw of his mixer as
an occasional glance at the gauges may
suggest.—Chicago Times. #
Extravagance at Funerals.
The worst part of the carriage extrava
gance or abuse prevails among the tene
ment population. Not long since I saw a
funeral in one of the poorest tenement
neighborhoods, and heard the boast that
there were not less than sixty carriages
behind the hearse. I was told, too, that
at a previous funeral in the same neigh
borhood the deceased had the honor of
being followed to the grave by eighty car
riage's, filled with mourning relatives and
friends. An old woman in one of tlie
shabbiest of the tenements informed me
that she liad lost her only daughter not
long before, “but,” she added, with a
touch of pride in her voice, “she had the
finest funeral ever seen in the First
ward.” Hiring a carriage fora funeral is
no small item to a tenement family of the
average kind. The cost is from to $8,
according to the distance, and there al
ways are some incidentals.
Now or $8 is a pretty large
sum in a tenement, and the outlay
of it for a carriage to attend a funeral is
in many cases simply the throwing away
of money that is needed at home. Too
otten when the landlord or agent calls for
his rent he is told: “I had to go to a
funeral, sir, and there isn't a dollar in
the house.” Very often, too, when the
grocer asks for his bill, be is also told
that the*money was spent at a funeral—
possibly of a mere acquaintance or some
distant"relative—and there’s nothing for
him. The funeral abuse is certainly a
serious one among tlie working people in
New York, but how it is to be cured I do
not see.—New York Cor. Detroit Free
Press.
Flowers for the Deatl.
T want to say a word with regard to tlie
offerings of flowers sent to adorn the coffin
of the dead. The idea of laying fresh
blossoms on tlie dead is a beautiful one,
but it is overdone. People in society
wince now as much at the notion of a
burial as at that of a bridal, for both
mean an outlay. The number of wreaths
that a fashionable personage with an ex
tensive circle lias to buy yearly is some
thing alarming. What slaves people are
to the decrees of society! Especially those
people on the borderland who are afraid
to drop them, ever so little, lest they
should appear outsiders. Yet far more
happy and respected are the outsiders of
similar rank, who live as they choose, and
do not fret themselves to death by en
deavoring to keep up in customs and tra
ditions with those fate has made higher
and richer than tliemselve^ dropping com
forts and pleasures within their means to
grasp after impossibilities. It is piteous
to see the coffin of a man smothered in
expensive exotics when it is known for a
fact that his whole income died with him
—that he has saved nothing for his fam
ily, and that henceforth his widow and
children are dependent for support on the
grudging allowance of relatives and
friends, who, perhaps, themselves need
every penny they can earn.—Clara Belle
in Cincinnati Enquirer.
January 15th, 1888.
Up Day Passenger Train—East.
Leave Montgomery 7 40 a m
“ Grantville 11 .17 a m
“ Puckett’s 11 <8 am
“ Newnan 12 00 p iij
“ Palmetto 12 27 p m
brown | more glow, but quite as fatal as tlie i A-rrlve at Atlanta iJ>pm
^ +) , , , I Down Day Passenger Train—West.
germs of those maladies which sweep ... m
e ........ , , , Leave Atlanta * WJ P 10
men into eternity by thousands with- ♦* Palmetto 2 5.1 pm
of iron. That was the ideal Charles out warning in the times of great epi- !! Puckett’s!.'— I 3«> p m
Egbert Craddock, who was so real to one s j ( j em ios. But it is a merev that, if we “ Grant vine
fanevthat when Miss Murfree revealed ; , . ,, ' . i Arrive at Montgomery
herself one couldn't quite concede that he i aIV U ’. ' e uan te are t ireat ’ i Up Night Passenger Train—East,
had no existence. j ened. 1 lie following are among the . Ijeave 5 15 p m
.Then with the advertisements of her j svinptoms, yet thev do not alwavs nec- Leave Montgomery , 8 7? ? ™
1 * . *, , ' “ Grantville 1 *» 111
Puckett’s 2 00 a m
Newnan - lj> a m
„ L U1UIA , ..p, . . Palmetto. 2 47 a ro
md a certain masculine force in her ! cases. 1 here is a dull and sleepy leel- Arrive at Atlanta :t no a m
Down Night Passenger Train—West.
10 50 p m
It 58 p m
12 St a m
.... ..12 54 a m
1 (>P a rr
li 30 a in
!* 30 u Ui
Accommodation Train (daily,—East.
gerous and destructive. Most people
and import than the loud chatter of i pave in their own stomachs a poison,
mountain brooks. A tall, lean, brown
Tennesseean probably, with that indolent
slonchiness of gait and carriage, under
which many a southerner conceals muscles
.Then with me acivenisemeius ol ho , sympiuuis, \ei xney ao not always nec-
books appeared a little wood cut of her. ii ! essar ily appear in the came order, nor *»
vivid faced woman with eyes and hair of ^ th * al tl sanu . in different “
intensest black, clear cut, vigorous feat- j _. : . . ;
Professional Carbs.
Thom** C. Carleton. Hewlette A. Sail.
CARLETON & HALL,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
. Will practice In all the Courts, both Stall
and Federal, giving special attention to lh<
I management or esta*s and litigated causes.
Office No. 2, Cole building.
L. P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Office up-stairs ovei B. f4. Askew A Cd.’s.
PAYSOX S. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
•«> p m ] will practice in all the Courts and giv-
3 10 p iri j prompt attention to all business placed in ni*-
20 p m nands. Examination of titles, writing deeds
mortgages, contracts, otc., will recei^ ape
cial attention. Office over Askew’s store.
ures,
There is* no fuel that is so luxurious as j aspect that accorded well with her bold, | ing: a bad taste in the mouth, especial-
tieave Atlanta
“ Palmetto
clear signature, and then at last one came | j,- } n the morning: the appetite is
to see ber m the flesh, fh^^/^lincks ’ changeable, sometimes poor, and again “ Newnan
was as unlike either of these Ciaddocks j 1 . , , “ Puckett’s
as they were unlike each other. Avery it seems as though the patient could - Grantville
small "woman: so lame she can scarcely | not eat enough, and occasionally no ap- : '^ive at Selma 0 ™* 0
cross the floor unaided. Slight and yet | petite all; dullness and sluggishness of | " m
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney ht! Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Will prac’ice in alt the Courts of CoweD-
Circuit. All Justice Courts attended.
. £y-Monpv to loan on leal estate at 8 pe:
cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of lh<
square in figure. A small white face, with
the withered whiteness of one whose health
had always been delicate. Pale, neutral
brown hair and eyes, and a formal prim
ness of manner like that of a shy, clever
v.oman who has lived much in retirement.
The only hint one gets of the great author
is in the impression she gives of seeing
and noting of everything: of weighing and
estimating every one about her, and hav
ing a marvelous strength and concentra-
is infi-
i the mind; no ambition to study or
I work; more or less headache and heav
iness on rising to the feet or moving
j suddenly; furred and coated tongue; a
I sense of a load on the stomach that
i 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-
tion of attention; but her reserve ..... t , , - • .
nite.-B. L. K. Dane in New Orleans ! pdation of the heart; impaired MMOn,
Ti’mes-Democrat.
A Jijf at a Funeral.
Old John Walton and wife—may they
sit side by side through all eternity as
cheery, radiant and loving as I always
find them at Russell street, Portland! He
is over DO years of age now, and it is a de
light to listen to his tales of the days and
ways when the century came in. Among
his earliest and strongest recollections
was a peculiar feature in the burial cere
monies of the hero of Tripoli, Commodore
Edward Preble, in Portland, 1807.
“They liad sent out all the country over,”
he relates, “for band music. No entire
organization could be got. But more
than 100 musicians came, sort of on their
own hook. When they got here it was
found that, while the town was overrun
with every manner of musician and mu-
sicai instrument, that there was not one
dirge or march they could all play to
gether, if they were to be hung for it.
The funeral obsequies in every other re
spect were more imposing than ever before
or since, known here; music must be had
whether or no; and it was finally discov
ered that the musicians could all play
just one composition. I don’t remember
the name of it, but anyhow, it was a rol
licking Irish jig; and the mournful cortege
actually moved up and down the streets
of Portland, and finally to the old Eastern
cemetery, to louder and livelier strains of
wild Irish music than ever crazed tlie
heads or bedeviled the toes of lads and
lassies at a Tipperary fair.”—Edgar L.
Wakeman’s Letter.
' The Bathln&T Buffalo.
Beef cattle are not indigenous to any
portion of jungle covered Malaysia, the
buffalo finding subsistence there. But the
buffalo is not used for dairy purposes, and
it is seldom eaten except by the poorest
classes, chiefly Chinese. The meat is
tough and has an unpleasant flavor. But
at heavy draught, plowing, log hauling
and sncii uses the buffalo is at home. He
is larger and stronger than the American
ox. He must have mud holes and creeks
in which he can wallow and bathe. The
natives make great use of him for culti
vating rice. But he must be unhitched
when he gets restive, for that is a sign he
wants to bathe. And if the desire isn't
gratified the buffalo straightway becomes
dangerous.
These buffalos,, the consul says, are
often, in size and weight, about half way
between n very large ox and an average
elephant. They have ponderous and pe
culiar horns, somewhat like those of the
American buffalo, only much longer.
They are mouse colored generally, have a
very thin coaling of hair, and sometimes
none at all except at the end of the tail,
on the ears and on the head.
This buffalo thrives best when he lias
access to a pond or sluggish creek. He
will take to this water, bury himself in it.
up to the neck, and remain there happy
and content for live or six hours a day.—
Globe-Democrat.
Turin
Sliarpsburg
Newnan
{Sargent’s
Wiiitesburg
Banning
Atkinson, T. O.
Ca r "ollton.
that time they eni-
emulous, reck
less and'irresponsible as the attaches of a
railwav advertising car. The risks they
took to daub their letters on some promi
nent but almost inaccessible crag made
thrilling stories when they gathered of
whiter nights to swap lies around the
blazing logs. It was a life of hardy ad
venture that was very attractive to enter
prising young fellows, and many took to
it for "that reason alone. Latterly, how
ever it has been reduced to a better sys
tem Nearl v .all prominent places have a
given value which must be paid ibe owner.
Local painters are engaged to do the wort,
and Bohemian jollity is a thing of the
past.—New York Graphic.
Not to Be Tempted.
Dr S Weir Mitchell, tlie neurologist,
who is also a novelist, recently refused
ftoOO offered him for an article o.i learn
ing that was intended to float a magazine
devoted to the advertisement of a pro
prietary medicine.—New York V orld.
Working the “Mind Care” Idea.
I know a lady who for years, during the
winter mouths, rose at night after lier
husband was asleep, and noiselessly opens
a window about two inches, top and bot
tom. If lie knew of it he would declare
it gave him cold; if he didjiot know of it
he was not affected, except that lie would
get up particularly bright and well and
frequently remark to his wife: "You see
it is all nonsense, your idea about opening
tlie windows such weather as this. 1
have no headache, never felt better in my
life, and if you would tell the truth you
would say the same.” His wife, who
always rose first, closed the window as
noiselessly as she opened it, and turned
on the register, had the self restraint to
say nothing, knowing that argument
could do no good.—Jenny June in St.
Louis Republican.
Pneumonia a Ptouse Disease.
Dr. Seibert, a German-Ameriean physi
cian in New York, a competent authority
ou the subject, holds that pneumonia is a
house disease and is infectious, but not
contagious. He says: “In the warm air
of the house the system is made sensitive
to the cold, but the cold is only the pro
ducing cause. It prepares the coddled
lungs" for the pneumonia poison, which
has its real origin in damp and dirty
rooms or cellars. What is the cure? Well,
the steps to the cure have unhappily ad
vanced but little. But the relief and the
prevention "are no medicine and plenty of
fresh air.—Public Opinion.
Russia’s Cold Climate.
This being such an extremely cold cli
mate. wood is the principal commodity,
and its production affords employment for
a large percentage of the people. For
miles along the rivers here and at St.
Petersburg are stacks of wood, and wood
barges are unloading during the entire
time the streams are open for navigation.
Wood is burned in the houses for heating
purposes during every month of the year.
I have worn a heavy overcoat during tlie
middle of tlie day at St. Petersburg in
August, and then was chilly. The great !
wonder is where vegetation gets sufficient |
warmth to propagate it. Occasionally j
there is a warm day, when the thermome
ter will go up to 75 degs. or SO degs., but I
it is rare.—Moscow Cor. Cleveland !
Leader.
Work for Women.
New ways of earning a livelihood are I
being thought of and engaged in by the in- j
ventive and enterprising in this city all
tlie time. One woman keeps a standing j
advertisement in one of the daily papers. I
announcing that she will do gentlemen’s !
mending in her own home. One who would i
do family mending anu go from house to |
house would liud her time fully occupied.
A lady gives regular weekly lectures to a
parlor full of fashion's butterflies. They
select whatever topic they wish to be in
structed upon a week ahead.—New York
Press “Everv Dav Talk.”
with spots that seem to be swimming in
tlie air before the eyes; a cough, with a
greenish-colored expectoration; poor
nights’ rest; a sticky slime about the
teetli and gums; bands 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 and 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
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
ing the nervous system—is literally 1 Arrive at Vaughns.
starred, even when there is no emacia-) «< senoin
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 he lost
in 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.
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, Ky.
IIE HEARD OF IT JUST IN TIME.
“I had been about given up to die!
with dyspepsia when I first saw the ad- !
vertisement of Shaker Extract of Roots 1
or Seigel’s Syrup. After using four
bottles I was able to attend to my bus-,
iness as well as ever. I know of sev
eral cases of chills and fever that have
been cured by it.” So writes Mr. Tlios. !
Pullum, of Taylor, Geneva county, Ala. j
WORTH TEN DOLLARS A BOTTLE. j
Mr. Thomas P. Evans, of the firm of
Evans & Bro., Merchants, Horntown, !
Accomack county, Va., writes that lie
had been sick with digestive disorders
for many years and had tried many
physicians and medicines without bene
fit. He began to use Shaker Extract of
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. lie adds: j
“I have at this time one bottle on ;
hand, and if I could not get any more j
J (could not take a ten dollar bill for it.'' i
All druggists, or address A. J. White,
Limited, 54 Warren Sr.. N. Y.
' Leave LaGranae 8 05 a in
Arrive Grantville 6 55am
; •• Puckett's 7 10am
“ Newnan 7 25 a m
“ Powell'S 7 40am
“ Palmetto. 8 00 am
Atlanta 0 15am
t accommodation Train (daily!—West.
Leave Atlanta. 4 45pm
Arrive Palmetto 5 57 pm
“ Powell’s 6 15 p m
“ Newnan 6 30pm
Puckett's 6 47 p m
“ Grantville 7 te p m
“ LnOrange 7 45 p in
CHAS. H. CROMWELL,
! Cecil Garrett, Gen'l Pass. Agent.
Gen’l Manager.
p. S. Willcoxon. W. C. Wright
WILLCOXON & WRIGHT,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Court* of the Dis
trict anil Circuit. All Justice Courts atten
ded. Office in Willcoxon building, over >.
K. Summers’.
GEO. A. CARTER,
Attorney at Law,
Grantville, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir
cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement.
J
S„ G. & N. A. R.
No. 1—
Leave Carrollton ...
Arrive Atkinson, T. O
“ Banning
“ Whitesburg
“ Sargent’s....
“ Newnan
“ Sharpsburg..
“ Turin
“ Keuoia
“ Brooks
“ Vaughns....
“ Griffin
No. 2—
Leave Griffir. 12 01 p m
12 1.8 p ni
12 36 p m
1 10 pm
C. NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice in the Superior and Justie*
Courts of the county and circuit, and else
where by special agreement.
W. A. TURNER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
. Practices in al' tlie State and Federal Courts
■ ft no a m Office No. 4 Opera House Building.
.7 6 15 a ni
W. Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
. Will practice in all Courts of this ami
0 05 a m I adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
. !* 27 a no j — ~77
. 9 50 a no J. S* POWELL,
ft 20 a m
6 50 a ni
7 14 am
8 05 a m
8 12 a m
8 32 a m
1 35 pm
1 50 pm
2 28 pm
3 25 pm
3 48 pm
4 00 p m
4 23 pm
4 50 p in
M. S. Bklknap, Gen’l Manager.
Attorney at Law,
Newnan,
Collections made.
Ga
G. W. PEDDY, M. H-
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, ola.
(Office over W. K. Avery’s Jewelry Store.
Offers his services to the people of Newnai.
and surrounding country. All calls answerer
promptly.
AND
SIBLEY'S
IMntEi CATALOGUE
SEND*:”?’ .....
Vegetable, Flower, Field jfc;
Plants. Bulbs. Implem'ts. w & Kb W
n C p* bv mall on application,
r RChi Don't neglect writing for It.
HIRAM SIBLEY & CO.
ROCHESTER, N. Y. CHICAGO, ILL.
32C-32S S. Hii; 3:. 12-14 1*. 3:.
The sweet gum, as gathered from a tree of the
same name, growing along the small streams in
the Southern States, contains a stimulating ex-
pectorant principle that loosens the phlegm pro
ducing the early morning cough, and stimulates
thechild to throwoff the false membrane ui croup
and whooping-cough. When combined with the
healing mucilaginous principle in tlie mullein
plant of the old fields, presents in Tai urns
Cherokee Remedy or 8w eet Gx m andMll-
i.ein the finest known remedy for Coughs, Croup,
Whooping-cough and consumption; and so pala
table. any child n pleased to take it. .Ask your
dnuzirist for it. Price 58s»c. and ISl.OO.
WALT LB A.TAYLOK, Atlan tu.Oa.
9 DO YOU WANT
AN - EXQUISITEI, Y
T. B. DAVIS, M. I).,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, G«.
Offers his professional services to the citi
zens of Newnan and vicinity.
DR. THOS. COLE,
Dentist,
Newnan, Ga.
Depot Street.
„ Dr. HENLEY ; S
tXTRACT
!F ftlRwin
A Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nervine is gaining
great reputation as a cure for Debility, Dyspep
sia, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves a!,
languid and debilitated conditions of the sys
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions;
builds up worn out Nerves: aids digestion re
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings back
voutbful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to tie
taste, and used regularly braces the System agalaM
the depressing influence of Malaria.
Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
A Child’s Vocabulary.
Recently I became interested in the vo
cabulary of my boy. 80 months old, and
for one day noted all words used by him.
oxcent proper names. Xo effort was
made to exhaust the child's stock of
words by questioning. He used 352
, words, of which 5-1 per cent, were nouus,
The census of 1880 gives these cities as jg p Cr cen t. verbs, and eleven adjectives,
nc 1 Tiomilous-in order: New \oik, I T r ;^ nmluili
Our Largest Cities
An Indian Superstition.
The Pawnees have a superstitious dread
of living scalped persons. They reason
that when the scalp is gone they ought to
be dead. They call such poor unfortunates
“kitclie-hoo-rooks" (ghosts), and they
never allow them in their villages there
after. Some. I was told, had l»een buried
alive by their friends with their own con
sent.—L. B. Platt in The Cosmopolitan.
Fit ton Building. Atlanta, Ga. Most practi- >
tical Business College South. Best course at j
leas! cost. Business men and bookkeepers'
commend its course of study »s being t he best
ever devised. Send for catalogue.
•‘An Elegant Novelty in Calendara.”
“A Touching Story Told in Colors.”
‘•Highly Original, and a Work of Art.”
TO PROCURE THIS CALENDAR
BUY A BOX 0? THE
Dr.C.McLANE’S Celab't’d LIVER PIUS
Tor 25 Cents from ycur Druggist, ar.d mail
the outside wrapper, with your address arid zeur
oentsinPostage Stamps to
FLEHffiS MOS., PittstorghPa.
(31ook out for Counterfeits made in St. Louis.|
most populous in orilej -
Philadelphia. Brooklyn, Chicago, Boston,
^t.. Louis, Baltimore. Cincinnati.
Francisco, New Orleans.
It. is probable that the child's entire vo-
The municipality of Vienna, after the
strictest investigation, declares that
Madeleine Pouka. of Vienna, has corn-
t-an
cabularv of dictionary words includes 40(1 pleted her 112th year, her birthday hav-
or more'.—Cor. Science. _ [ingbeen in the year 1775.
PAINTING!
Tlie undersigned offers his services to the ;
people of Newnan and Coweta county as a
skillful and experienced painter, and respect
fully solicits their patronage- House-paint- ;
ing a specialty, either by contract or by the
j day. Old furniture, organs, pianos, etc.. 1
i cleaned, painted and revarnished. Address j
I me at Newnan, Ga. ALLEN LONG, j
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Jleanscs and beautifie* the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
PARKERSCINCERTONIC
Invaluable for Coughs, Colds, Inward Pains, Exhaustion.
* I CURE
FITS!
When I say Curk I do not mean merely to
ttop them for a time, and then have them re
turn again. I mkax A RADICAL CUKE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS,
A life long study. T warrant m7 remedy to
Cure the worst cases. Because others have
failed is no reason fornot now receiving a cure.
Send at once for a treatise and a Fkk Bottle
of mv Infallible Remedy. Give Express
and Rost Office. It costs you nothing for a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H. C. ROOT. M. C., 183 Pearl St., NewYork
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
I GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All persons having demands against the es
tate of Henry Martin, Sr., late of said count \
deceased, are hereby notified to render n
tiieir demands to tlie undersigned, according
: to law; and all persons indebted to said e-
tate are required to make immediate pay
went. This December ft, 1867.
SUSAN L. MARTIN.
H. A. MARTIN,
Printer's fee, $3.00 Executors.
BEADLES’ LINIMENT!
Cures Toothache. Headache, Neuralgia
j Rheumatism, all pains of Nerves and Bom
by externa) application. It cures Colic, Cie-
lera Morbus, Cramps and Pains of the Bom
els. by taking from 5 to 10 drops internal!.'
diluted with water. E. -1- BBADLES,
Proprietor and Patentee. Newnan. Ga.
Ou sale at J. I. Seroggin’s. west side Fabi
Square.
PAINLESSCHILDBIRTi'
HOW ACCOMPLISHED. Every lady should snow
Send stamp. BAKER REM. CO-.Boxlftl Buffalo.N.\ -
P ERSIAN BLOOM, Belt Ceaplenon Seaa-
tifier Skin Cure and Blemish Eradicator known.
Send stamp for trial package. Address aa above.