The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, May 04, 1888, Image 3
gihq gcraltl and ^(tt'crfeer.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, May 4 1888.
Sights in Bangkok.
Bangkok is entirely different from all
Other eastern cities I have seen. Else
where the houses are compacted together
so as to cover as little space as ]K>ssible,
and the people massed as in hives. This
city, however, with it* 350,000 people,
covers more ground than Canton, with
its 1.000,000. There an* hut few streets,
but they are quite broad. The canals run
in every direction, and, are so numerous
that the Siamese are proud to call their
capital the Venice of the east. Houses
project over these canals, with open bal
conies, and both sides of the river for six
or more miles are lined with floating
houses, used not only for residences, but
for business.
People do their shopping in boats, and
while a woman sells to her customer in
open view—for all houses have open
fronts—her lazy husband fishes, sitting
upon a box of goods, and his children
bathe and swim around the house. In
rowing or being rowed about there was
never a moment that I could not see
somewhere a bather; and just at sun
down all the common world seemed am
phibious. The panoong is retained on
when in the water, and is then either
exchanged for a dry one or left on to
•dry. Rivers and canals are always filled
by freight boats, forty to sixty feet long;
by small peddler boats; by canoes of ail
6izes, from ten feet, barely holding a
man. up to 100 or more feet, with fifty or
more paddlers moving in state with some
high official. I saw one long canoe with
nearly 100 rowers. Each one would dip
his paddle and then lilt it on high—a
curious sight thus to see nearly 100 pad
dles in air at the same time. There are
quite a large number of small steam
barges in the city. These dart about very
rapidly. In fact, all boats seem to do so,
for the tide runs very swiftly, and boats
going with its current move in the chan
nel, while those going against it stick to
the eddies. This makes the river a very
lively one, especially toward the cool of
the day.
Trees abound throughout the town,
along the streets, along the canals and
about the bouses—many of them of good
forest size. Looking down from a high
pagoda one can scarcely realize oneself in
if - 1 4 F 4 rtifv TVwa nrfUnfll’V
The Editor’s Helpmeet.
G. Baker Hanscom is editor and pro
prietor of a bright little weekly news
paper in the rural districts of the "YV est.
He was lately married to a pretty little
woman, who is filled with a laudable fj mee) Cleburn county, Ala., writes:
desire to help Baker along all she can. j w jf e has been so much benefited
“Type-setting looks so easy, she |
cooed the other day, “I know I could j by Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel’s
Poor Rtndfnti it Tele.
The favorite method of paying for
board is to organize an eating club. The
process is simple. At the beginning of a
year a man goes around among liis class
mates and secures eight or ten who agree
to take their meals together. He then
goe.s to some landlady and agrees to fur
nish her with an eating club of students.
He agrees furthermore to relieve her
from all pecuniary responsibility by col- do it just as well as anything
lecting at the end of each week from the
men the money for their board and hand
ing it over to her. In return for this she
agrees to furnish him with his board. It
is beneficial to the student, because the
members of the club, knowing that he is
in straightened circumstances, are always
willing to help him by paying regularly
and promptly.
Every class has in it four or five mon
itors, whose duty it is to record the ab-
I sence or tardiness of students at recita-
1 tions or morning prayers. A monitor
i receives $35 a year from the faculty.
The same amount is paid each year to
the man who rings the college bell. Of
late years the college press has been a
fruitful source of revenue to its editors.
Tiie Literary Magazine pays to each ed- TSS1 s, n | 10 j ac knos to miTS
itor from $140 to $150 a year, ihe na-Rt.u? the eersmGy—was $ef-
Care must be taken, however, to secure
the genuine article.
IT WHi SELL BETTER THAN COTTON.
Mr. John C. Heniptinstall, of Chula-
Let me
help.”
Although Ilanscom is liis own com
positor he didn’t accept this offer at
once. His wife had “learned the cases”
as she called it, and that, she thought,
was the graduation degree in the type-
1 setting profession. She was in the of
fice alone the other day when a wed
ding notice was brought in.
i Syrup that she says she would rather
be without food than without the med
icine. It has done her more good than
1 the doctors and all other medicines put
j together. I would ride twenty miles to
get it into the hands of any sufferer if
i lie can get it in no other way. I be-
“Oh,” she said, gleefully, “I’ll just ]j eve it will soon sell in this State bet-
set this up and slip it in the form, and
won’t Baker be surprised when lie sees
it m print.
It therefore appeared as follows in
the next issue of the paper:
maRIED: at Tqe RespencE Of Tqe
BriDes Pa SentiS on wenday eveng
ter than cotton.”
TESTIMONY FROM TEXAS.
Mrs. S. E. Barton, of Varner. Ripley
(Ebucattanal.
^1888?
PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL,
PALMETTO, GA.
SPRING TERM WILL BEGIN THE FIRST
WEDNESDAY IN JANUARY, 1888.
Intelligent people, healthy location,experi
enced and conscientious teachers. Due atten
tion paid to the primary grades.
TUITION.
Primary grades, per month #* 20
Intermediate errade» f month . 2 00
High school and collegiate grades, per mo 3 t>0
Board, per mont h SS W to $10 00
For particulars, address or consult
THUS. II. MKACHAM, Principal,
Palmetto, Ga.
\V. H. BlJfGHAM,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over Newnan National Bank.)
Prompt attention to all business en
trusted to his care. Special attention to col
lections.
WALKER HIGH SCHOOL,
1888.
THe Spring Session Opens on the Second
Tuesday in January.
Thom»s C. Carleton. Hewlette A. Hall.
CARLETON & HALL,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts, both State
and Federal, giving special “ V V. i c iuses
management of estates and litigated causes.
Office No. 2, Cole building.
L. P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, G»
Office up-stairs ovei B. S. Askew & C°-’ 8 -
THE COURSE OF STUDY
financial editor receives from $180 to
$190. The News pays to each senior ed
itor from $250 to $275, and the financial
editor receives from $325 to $350. The
Record and Courant ought to pay to each
senior editor $150 yearly, but often,
through poor management, barely covers
expenses. The Yale Banner clears to the
publisher from $200 to $250, and The
Rot Pourri somewhat less than this sum.
—New Haven News.
troni by llevy; mil Deen Inn the it-.—
ence oF a jarfle number of EBeidson of
the gnuerv couple & was a bey llvy
joyful Occasino. Mr. unD mrss will
Be at Hnem to their fri, s at 775s bath
St aitr acto 100.
Of course Baker was surprised. So
were John Jackson and his wife, who
didn’t think thev had received a full
equivalent- for the $5 they had paid .for
“a good send-off.”
They
tlio heart of a great city. The ordinary
house is almost entirely lost in the mass
of green. Here and there one peeps out,
looking cool and shaded. But the lofty,
Snow white pagodas, the tall, steep roofed
temples—roofed in tiles of many colors,
many of them in gilt—the beautiful kiosk
turrets of the palaces, the gilded royal
wat and cenotaph, and the white palaces
themselves, make the city from an emi
nence look like a vast royal garden, with
princely palaces and oriental temples
nestled among ornamental tropical trees.
The wat is a sort of monastery, with
its temple and kiosk and lodging house
of the priest within a single inc-losure.
There are a great many of these in the
•city, and many of them of wonderful
richness. Some of the temples and pa
godas are made up entirely of gilt and
glass mosaic, in small pieces inlaid in
cement walls and flashing in the sun
light like mountains of gold and dia
monds. The royal wat makes the looker
on feel that Aladdin's lamp is close by,
revealing to him scenes of fairy wonder
rather than scenes of actual reality. It
is within and without—its several temple
buildings and its five or six lofty, round
pointed pagodas—made up of gold and
gems. The gold is of burned gilded pot
tery in small squares of an inch, bril
liantly glazed; the gems of glass of dif
ferent colors and set like rose faced dia
monds, sapphires and rubies. Looking
upon the pile of these buildings, covering
several acres, just as the sun goes down,
with a gentle breeze causing the thou
sand tiny bells which hang to cornice,
frieze, and projecting point to tinkle, I
almost felt as if I had been carried off by
some flying genie and gently dropped
upon a scene of oriental fable.
Unfortunately all of the temples, pago
das 'and kiosks ai'e of brick, stuccoed
with Portland cement, and the gems and
gold planted into it will last only for a
short time. Many thousands of dollars
arc required each year to keep the entire
fabrics of beauty from tumbling into
decay. A change of dynasty will bring
quickly the glory of Siam s capital into
a heap of debris.—Carter Harrison in
Chicago Mail.
Origin of the Lockjaw.
Science is gradually alienating us from
the animals who had been our friends.
: M. Pasteur's theories, exceedingly inter-
I esting and valuable, nevertheless created
a line of cleavage between man and dog,
and now M. Verneuil is trying to do the
: same thing between man and horse. M.
Verneuil is a firm believer in the microbe
theory, and if you show him the disease
he will do his best to show you the mi-
i crobe. Latterly lie has taken up lockjaw
I as a subject, and what he has to say upon
; it will strike the unlearned with surprise
I certainly, jterhaps also with consterna
tion. It seems the disease is at once
virulent and contagious, and that it
comes to man almost entirely from horses.
M. Verneuil has his facts and his statis
tics to hand. Coachmen and stable boys,
grooms and helpers—these are the classes
among whom the disease is most com
mon. A bite of a horse is a very general
cause, but something less than a bite will
give lockjaw to a likely subject. Among
horses themselves it rages like an epi
demic. All horse proprietors who have
in their stables a patient from tetanus are
warned to isolate him from man and
beast, and if lie dies to bury him with
scrupulous care. If only the microbe
could be discovered, M. Verneuil would
stamp out the disease. He lias not found
it yet, but lie is full of hope and full of
enthusiasm.—Pall Mall Budget.
Its Use for Kidneys.
Jesup, Ga., May 26,
, . . , is such as to prepare for the higher classes in
countv. Mo., writes that she had Been • Colltge> or for practical ffsv: ami its comple
tion enables the student to take charge of the
long afflicted with dyspepsia and disease
of the urinary organs and was cured
by Shaker Extract of Roots. Rev. J. J.
McGuire, merchant, of the same place,
who sold Mrs. Barton the medicine,
says he has sold it for four years and
never knew it to fail.
she was almost dead.
1 was so low with dyspepsia that
PAYSOX S. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice in nil the Courts and give
prompt attention to all business placed in his
minds. Examination of titles, writing deeds,
mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe
cial situ ntion. Office over Askew’s store.
JESUP. GA., MAY iffi, ISSl. i , . . , . *
I have been suffering from kidney ill- j there was not a physician to be found
j who could do anything with me. I had
fluttering of the heart and swimming
of the head. One day I read your
sease for a month past, and the pain in
my back was very severe. My occu
pation requires a good deal of writing
at night and I suffered all the time. 1
saw one man who said he was cured by | n, ,.
using Botanic Blood Balm, (B. B. B.) j pamphlet called “Life Among the blink
ers,” which described my disease bet-
Military Education in Germany.
Military education is very thorough.
There are nine military schools in the em
pire, at Potsdam, Kulm, . Wahlstadt,
Bensberg, Ploen, Oranienstein, Lichter-
feld, Dresden and Munich. Seven, it will
be seen, are in Prussia, Six of these re
ceive pupils at 10 to 15 years of age, who
terminate their studies at the last three.
Their experience after examination is
varied according to their standing. The
best are admitted to the corps of officers
without further formality. The rest have
to pursue their studies further, and
finally have to be examined by the offi
cers of the regiment as to character,
social position, etc. There is a higher
school at Berlin, called the War academy,
to which are admitted only lieutenants
and captains who have served three years.
There are other schools for artillery,
marksmanship (rifle and artillery), rid
ing, gymnastics, medicine and surgery as
relates to war, and veterinary practices.
Railroads and railroad stations are in
charge of commissions, which are ex
pected to keep them in condition for
mobilization at any moment.—Berlin Cor.
San Francisco Chronicle.
and I commenced using it, and the pain
is a great deal less. 1 have used two
bottles and believe it will effect a cure
bv the use of a few more bottles.
Yours respectfully, J. E. Coleman.
Pure Blood is of Priceless Value.
The Blood Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga.:
Mv Dear Sin—I have, for some tune
past, used B. B. B. as a purifier of the
blood and to build up the system gen
erally,and consider it without exception
the finest remedy of the kind in the
market. Y'ours with best wishes,
Arthur G. Lewis,
Editor Southern Society.
Miss Kip, who was married in New
York last week, is said to have stood at
the altar with $75,000 worth of clothes
and jewelry on her person, “and you
ought to see her trousseau and the eas
es of silver at home,” added the gos
sips. Such items as this have a tenden
cy to bear the matrimonial market.
Acker's Blood Elixir is the only Blood
Remedy guaranteed. It is a positive
cure for (deers, Eruptions or Syphili
tic Poisoning. It purifies the whole
system, and banishes all Rheumatic
and Neuraligic pains. We guarantee
it. Sold bv W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga.
ter than myself. 1 tried the Shaker
Extract of Roots and kept on with it
until to-day I rejoice in good health.
Mrs. M. E. Tinsley, Bevier, Iluhlen-
burg county, Ky.
For sale by all Druggists, or address
the proprietor, A. J. White, Limited,
54 Warren Street, New York.
advanced schoolsot the country.
Giris are boarded by the Principal.
study at niirlit under bis supervision, and thus
not infrequently are doubly benefited.
REGISTER FOR 1887.
First session, 105 pupils. Second session,
122 pupils. For the year, 162 pupils.
As pubi'c schools will go into operation next j —
year, our number must-necessarily be limited, p y. Wllicoxon.
The entire school will be taught by the l’riu- j vvrT.T.POXOTi
cipal.
RATES OF TUITION.
From $2 50 to $4 00 per month. Board and
tuition, $13 per scholastic month.
No room for loafers.
DANIEL WALKER, Principal.
NEW ADVERTISEM ENTS.
Russia's Permit to Live.
Every citizen must have a permit to
live in the country. Those permits are
issued annually upon the payment of a
fee. If he wants to leave the country or
go from one to another ho must notify
the police, for that branch of the govern
ment must know where each inhabitant
>f the vast empire sleeps every night. In
the provinces the rigid surveilance is re
laxed, but at St. Pe'iersburg and Moscow
and other places visited by tourists there
is a constant contact between the sover
eign and the subject that is disagreeable
to"both. The police grant permission to
go and conSe readily. T here is no inter
ference with travel nor who trade.^ Sub
mission! submission! that is ail. No one
can got a ticket at a railway station nor
Du a steamboat without showing a permit
to leave; no hotel will entertain a guest
fill he shows his passport, One cannot
go anvwhere or do anything without t. e
jonsent of the authorities, but it is easily
jbtained, and costs forty copecks for the
stamp that appears on the decununt—
about fifteen «. cuts.— Cor. Chicago Times.
A Monkey with Yellow Fever.
During the epidemic of yellow fever
that prevailed some time ago in Caracas,
the medical profession had an opportu
nity to see, in one of the public b uses of
benevolence, a monkey afflicted ei.n
that disease. The principal symptoms
were found to manifest themselves in a
manner so marked that there remained
not the least doubt on the pat t of the
plivsicians who observed them tnat it
was an undoubted case of yellow fever;
there was injection of the eyes, a certain
state of stupor, sharp thirst, nausea.
City Patrons of the Oculist.
Into an oculist’s shop on Union square
a score or more of prominent men are
sometimes seen to enter on a single
morning. Preachers, lawyers, doctors
and writers make up by far the larger
proportion of the number. Few of them
reach 50 without feeling the need of arti
ficial eves. Actors preserve their sight
remarkably well. Leading men are
rarely seen to wear eyeglasses. Merchants
whose bookkeeping is done for them by
employes get along well enough to 50
and GO years of age with their own eyes.
The bookkeepers buy the spectacles. The
oculist says it is the haste of modern life,
worry, disease and carelessness that build
up and maintain his trade. W hen from
any of these reasons the human eye fails
to accommodate itself to distances, its
focus has to be lengthened or shortened,
like that of an opera glass.—New York
World.
Anonymous "Writers of Verse.
Until a young writer has got xised to
the novelty of seeing his thoughts in
print, and can judge their value more
reasonably than a beginner ever can
judge the value of his first printed essay,
he will do best to keep his authorship
from the knowledge of the public, and
lot people attribute his verses to Holmes
or Tennyson, and his prose to Black or
Howells, if they will. W hen he has
gained some confidence and some expe
rience. and can liok upon lib writing
simpiv as a matter of business, then it is
time enough for him to fix upon his sig
nature. anil publish it. at the beginning
or the end of his immortal essays, to an
eager and expectant world.—k\ illiarn H.
Hilis in file Writer.
CATARRH u”?'t,J r "‘o”SFREE
to convince. 15. S. Lauderbach Co., 7<o
Broad St., Newark, N. J.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Curesscalp diseases and hair falling
nl>c-at Druggists.
HINDERCORNS.
The safest, surest and best cure forComs, Bunions, ire.
Stops all rain. Ensures comfort to tho feet. Never fails
to cure. locenteutffruESista, XIiscox &■ Co., X. «.
THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
OF THE
CITY OF NEWNAN
Will be opened for white pupils tlie second
Mondav.and for colored pupils t lie third Mon
day, in January, 1SSS, with the following corps
of teachers:
superintendent:
LYMAN H. FORD.
teachers:
JOHN K. PENDERGRAST,
MISS ANNIE ANDERSON,
MRS. D. P. WOODUOOF,
MRS. W. P. NIM MON'S,
MRS. J. E. ROBINSON,
MISS CONNIE HARTS FIELD,
MISS CORA KELLER.
COLORED teachers:
c. V. SMITH,
G. J. BURCH.
SUPERK l T M ERA RIES:
SADIE E. BEACH,
FANNIE L. CARRINGTON.
One-fifth of the matriculation fee will be
required every two months, in advance.
Tuition for non-residents will be, in tin'
Grammar Schools. $1,5 00 per annum; in tli
; Ugh Schools, $25 00 per annum—one-lifth to
he paid every two months, ‘j 1 , “^AysTFR
~Sec’v Board of Education.
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Wilt practice in alt the Courts of Coweta
Circuit. All Justice Courts attended.
/fir-Mdiiey to loan on real estate at 8 per
cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of the
year.
W. C. Writ lit.
WILLCOXON & WRIGHT,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Dis
trict and Circuit. All Justice Courts atten
ded. Office in Willcoxon building, over iv
E. Summers’.
What is this Disease that is Coming
Among Us?
Like a thief at night it steals in upon
us unawares. The patients have pains
above the chest and sides, and some
times in the back. They feel dull and
sleepy; the mouth has a bad taste, es
pecially in the morning. A sort of
sticky slime collects about the teeth.
The appetite is poor. There is a feel
ing like heavy lead on the stomach;
sometimes a faint, all gone sensation at
the pit of the stomach which food does
not satisfy. The eyes are-sunken, the
hands and feet become cold and clam
my. After a while a cough sets in, at
first dry, but after a few months it is
attended with a greenish-colored ex
pectoration. The patient feels tired all
the tvhile, and sleep does not seem to
afford any rest. After a time he be
comes nervous, irritable and gloomy,
and lias evil forebodings. There is a
giddiness, a sort of whirling sensation
in the head when rising up suddenly.
The bowels become costive; the skin is
dry and hot at times; the blood becomes
thick and stagnant; the whites of the
eyes become tinged with yellow; the
urine is scanty and high colored, de
positing a sediment after standing.
There is frequently a spitting up of the
food, sometimes with a sour taste and
sometimes with a sweetish taste; this
is frequently attended with palpitation
of the heart; the vision becomes im
paired, with spots before the eyes;
there is feeling of great prostration
and weakness. All of these symptoms
are in turn present. It is thought that
nearly one-third of our population has
thi- disease in some of its varied forms.
It has been found that physicians
have mistaken the cause of this disease.
Thackeray ami liis Manuscript. i Some have treated it for a liver coru-
Tliackeray took up his manuscript time j others for kidney
disease, etc.,
after time to touch and retouch till ms . *
LIEBIG COMPANY’S
EXTRACT OF MEAT
INVALUABLE FOR DYSPEPSIA.
An EtTecient Tonic for Invalids.
Instantaneous Beef Tea.
Also, for flavoring Soups, Sauces and Made
Dishes.
PKNUISE only with Huron Llobis’s SIGNATURE
in BLUE INK across label.
Sold by all Storekeepers, Grocers and Drug
gists.
GEO. A. CARTER,
•Attorney at Law,
Grantville, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir
cuit, anil elsewhere by special agreement.
J. c NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice in the Superior and Jus lice
Courts of tlie county and circuit, and else
where by special agreement.
MEMORY
-MAKES-
SUCCESS
\\ liolly unlike artificial systems.
Any hook learned in one reading.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at De
troit, 15QO at Philadelphia, large classes of
Columbia Law students, at Yale, Wellesley,
Oberlin, University of Penn., Michigan Uni
versity, Chautauqua, &c., &c. Endorsed by
Richard Proctor, tlie Scientist, Hons. W.
W. Astor, Judah P. Benjamin, Judge
Gibson, Dr. Brown, E. H. Cook. Principal
N. Y. State Normal College, Ac. The system
is thoroughly taught by correspondence. Pros
pectus POST FREE from
PROF. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., N. Y.
W. A. TURNER,
Attorney at Law,
Netvnan, Ga.
Practices in all the State and Federal Courts.
Office No. 4 Opera House Building.
W. Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
xvill practice in all Courts of this aud
adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
G. W. REDDY, M. D~
Physician and Surgeon, *
Newnan, 3a.
Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store.;
Oilers ills services to the people of Newnan
.uni suit, .iinUiug country. .-VII calls answeroil
promptly.
T. B. DAVIS, M. I).,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, Ga.
Offers his professional services to the citi
zens of Newman and vicinity.
DR. TRIOS. COLE,
Dentist,
Newnan, Ga.
Depot Street.
No. i—
Leave Carrollton
Arrive At kin son, T. O.
“ Banning
“ Whites burg 0 20 a in
“ Sargeut’s 6 50 an
“ Newnan
“ Sharpsburg.. ..
“ Turin
“ Senoia
“ Brooks
“ Vaughns
“ Grifiln
No. 2—
Leave Griffin
Arrive at Vaughns
“ Brooks "...
“ Senoia
“ Turin
“ Sharpsburg
“ Newnan
“ Sargent’s
“ Wdltesburg....
“ Banning
“ Atkinson, T. O.
“ Carrollton.
14 a m>
8 05 a m
8 12 a in
8 32 a li:
9 05 am
9 27 a id
9 50 a n
12 01 pm
12 18 p n
12 36 p ro
1 10 r m
1 35 pm
1 50 p ip
2 2Rpm
3 25 p m
3 48 p m
4 on p m
\. 4 23 p in
4 50 p m
„ Dr. HEWLEY ; S
Extract
TALITY
fTHE SCIENCE OF 3-IFE, the
great Kcdical Work of the*
age on Manhood, Nervous and 4
Physical Debility, Premature
Decline, Errors of Youth, and
the untold miseries conbCiiuent
thereon. 3LA) pages Sv.»,
prescriptions for all diseases.
Cloth, full gilt, only £1.00, bj *
mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young
and middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na
tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box
1593, Boston, Mas-., or Dr. TT. IT. PARKER, grad
uate of Harvard Medical College,25years*practice
in Boston, who may be consulted confidentially.
Specialty,Di-eases of O.V: • N*».4 Bui *.:xchst.
M. s. Bf.lkxap, Geii’1 Manager.
WALTER E. AVERY,
fastidious taste was satisfied. After his
death liis menus found some sheets of
etc., but none of these kinds of treat
ment have been attended with success;
for it is really constipation and dyspep-
davs the poor
Kid condition, each day growing worse,
until the fourth day, when the case
terminated fatally.—Public Opinion.
De Brazza, tho African •: ’ r '>.\ say;
the upper Congo teeuia wit.i i. cry.
MASON & HAMLIN
/AUi n i TVTO The cabinet organ was I
1 i K I T J\ \1 's introduced in its present
JL V vJ TY 1 l • form byMason & Hamlin
i«-23 to 8900. in 1861. Other makers I
followed iu :he manufacture of these instru
ments, but the Mason & Hamlin Organs have
always maintained their supremacy as the
best in llie world.
Mason & Hamlin offer, as demonstration of
the unequaled excellence of their < rgans, the
fact that nr all the world’s Exhibitions, since
that of Paris, 1S67. in competition with the
best makers of all countries, they have inva
riably taken the highest honors. Illustrated
catalogues free.
TAT 1 IVTUVO Mason & Hamlin do not
K A ql I'n hesitate to make the extra-
J- A -TY X t \J Kjmordinary claim for their
Grand & Upright 1 pianos, t'nat.they are su
perior to all others. They recognize the high
excellence achieved by other leading makers
in the art of piano building, but still claim
superiority. This they attribute solely to the
remarkable improvement introduced by them
in the vear 1882, and now known as the “Ma
son A Hamlin Piano Stringer, by the use
of which is secured the greatest possible pur
ity and refinement of lone, together with
greatly increased capacity for standing in
tune, and other important advantages.
‘ ‘ testimonials front
A Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nervine Is gaining
great reputation as a cure for Debility, Dyspep
sia, and NISKVOFS disorders. It relieves ail
languid and debilitated conditions of the sys
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily function?;
builds up worn out Nerves : aids digestion ; re
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings occx
youthful strength and vitror. It is pleasant to the
taste, and used regularly braces the System agaui3t
the depressiug influence of Malaria.
Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
When I say Cure I do not mean merely to
stop them for a time, and tiien have them re
turn again. I jjean A RADICAL CURE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS,
A life long study. T warrant my remedy to
Cure the worst cases. Because others have
failed is no reason fn-not now receiving a cure.
Send at once for a treatiso andaFKEK Bottle
of mv Inkar.uiELE Remedy. Give Express
and Post Offic-o. It costs you nothing lor a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H.C. ROOT. F&c C., I83Pearl3t.,NewYork
J El WEL E R,
NEWNAN. GA.
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry,
Silverware, Spectacles,
and Eye-glasses.
Our work department is as complete as any ;
in the State. W. have every tiling necessary |
to do any job. from a spectacle screw to a
chronometer. Medals, badges, etc., made to ; _ ___
order. Just received 50 new clocks. Come in i ; n g a specialty, either by contract or b"y t'n
and hear them tick. Biggest lo' of watches i day. Old furniture, organs, pianos, etc
have ever had. Glad to have youeail and see cleaned, painted and revamished. Addres
us. whether von want anything or not. me at Newnan, Ga. ALLEN' LONG.
Respectfully, W. K. AVER i.
PAINTING!
The undersigned offers his services to Un
people of N'ewnan and Coweta county as a
-killful and experienced painter, and respect
fully solicits their patronage. House-paint
, A circular, containing
It is also found that Shaker Ex- three hundred purchasers, musicians, and
tuners, sent, together with descriptive caia-
writers appear to think, and appreciates
care and finish. As a rule, the work , . * i5 nf . t5 nr -\fnthov ■kotool's r u J logue, to any applicant.
that lives deserves to live. The slapdash : Trai - t: 01 Boot-, Ol AlOtnei eei^t - j Pianos and Organs sold for cash or easy
1 . . 0 , . i payments; also rented,
i rative Syrup, when properly prepared ! cam vuimttm r
st vie may last for a tune, through the
wonderful art of puffing, but it soon dies
out.—London Society.
MASON & HAMLIN, ORGAN & PIANO CO.
j will remove this disease in all its stages^! new york. boston, chicaoo,
Notice or Indenture.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
It being known to me by the petition of .7.
W. Andersl.n, lmt Alexander and l^eander
Brown, o; th 7.»5to district G. M. of said coun
tv, are minors, t:.e profits of whose estate are
insufficKiil for their support and mainten
ance, and that the mother of sail minors br-
ing dead and the lather residing out of said
countv, all per-ons interested are required to
show cause before meat my office at 10 o’clock
on the 7th day of May. 1858, why said minors
should not be bound out in the terms of the
statute in such cases made and provided, at
which time and place I will pass upon the
same. This April 6th. 1833. Prs. fee *4.02.
W. H. PERSON'S, Ordinary.
BEADLES’ LINIMENT!
Fures Toothache, Headache, Neuralgic
Rheumatism, all pains of Nerves and Bone-
bv external application. It cures Colic, Che
iera Morbus, Cramps and Pains of the Bov,
els, by takiug from 5 to 10 drops internally
diluted with water. E. J. BEADLES,
Proprietor and Patentee, Newnan, Ga.
On sale at J. 1. Scroggin’s, west side Pabii'
Square.
PAINLESS CHEDBIRTE
HOW ACCOMPLISHED. Every lady should know
Send stamp. BAKER REM. CO..Box 104 Buffalo,N ,Y.
P ERSIAN BLOOM, Best CenrlsxicsBeaa-
tifier. Skin Cure and Blemish F-radicator knows.
Send iumf tor trial package. Addree* m tbora,