The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, August 17, 1888, Image 7

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®ht lerald: and Cegal Zlotices. do so. I can joke ■ mouth, looking on to see how it is com- have a real good j ing out. Good luck is a man of pluck, j Letters Of DismiSSiOQ. “ j time, but I do not wish to inspire in with his sleeves rolled up and working | ^oRGIA—Coweta County: Newman, Ga„ Friday. Aumisl 17,1888. i any breast hop „ wWch may bo lasted, to make it come out right. ?SS-J28!Z£Jt &*Zi applied for letters of dismission from his said DAYS OF MY YOUTH. Days of my jouth, Ye have glided away; Hnirs of my youth, Ye are frosted mid gray; Kyesofmr youtli, Your keen sight i« no more; Cheeks of my youtli, v e are furrowed all o’er; SStrenith ot my youth, All yoflr vigor Is gone; Thought- of my youth. Your gay visions are flown. Days of my youth, I wish not your recall; Hairs of my youth, I’m content ye shpuld fall; Eyes of my youth, You much evil nave seen; Cheeks of my youth, Bathed lri tears have you been; Thoughts of my youth, You have led me astray; Strength of my youth, Why lament your decay? Days of my age, Ye will shortly be passed ; Pains of my age. Yet awhile you can last, Joys of my age. In true wisdom delight; Eyes of my age, Be religion your light; Thoughts of my age. Dread ye not the cold sod; Hopes of my age, Bo ye fixed upon God. ! ah, alas! too soon. ! It was not long before I discovered a | beautiful blonde of the female sex at the farther end of the room beneath ; the chandelier. Her skin seemed to be litiess in the evening or sweats at night, , . .. . ,, . • all or any of these are the first stages .f a delicate sea-shell color, and her hair f consumption. Acker’s English Cough DRUGS! f’mifrh in the iiioroin ,r hurried or dif- , show’cause in said Court by the first Monday ; 21' _ __ —T'" ■ult- breathing, raising phlegm, tight- ^pp,*^Su^houidnot f be J Emm«| an Thi'^Jane f)D T T RfFSF sss in the chest, quickened pulse, cbil- i;{sss. w. h. persons, JL/lV. U. .1 • L i IjLi U L. Terr ble Forewarning'S. trust, all persons concerned are required to j = = <= = Prs. fee, $5.00. Ordinary. was corn-colored. Her clothes also were entirely new, I should judge, and made especially for her. On her finger she wore a diamond ring with perfect ease. She knew-just how to work that finger to get the most possible glitter out of her diamond. Every little while I Remedy will cure these fearful symp toms, and is sold under a positive guar antee by W. P. Broom. Newnan Ga. In order to carve out a fortune one must be sharp. Parents Criminally Liable. More tiian Half of all deaths occur would look over there and revel in her ; before six vears-of age. An army of beauty, and I thought she was not en-1 innocent, lovely children are swept tirely insensible to my charms. All that evening she was in my mind. 1 dreamed that night that I swooped : down upon her and carried her away to the remotest boundaries of the world in a special car. The next morn ing I awoke hungry, for I didn’t eat rniH'li supper the night before. 1 went down to breakfast, waiting and fooling Ismail boy’ away my time, hoping that -he would 1 kmfe - come while I was in the breakfast-room, and 1 would (ill myself up with the beautiful vision and a cup of coffee. are needlessly away each year. Parents are criminally responsible lor this. I lie death-rate of children in England is less than half this. Acker’s English Baby Soother has done more to bring this about than all otiier causes com bined. You cannot afford to be with out it. For sale by W . P. Broom, Xfcv:- nan, Ga. A hew-and-cry usually follow the acquisition of a pocket- Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County : Joseph E. Dent, executor of W. \V. Stegall, late of said county. deceased.luivingapplied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for let ters of dismission from his said trust, all per sons concerned are required to show cause in ! said Court by the first Monday Jn October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This Julv 1S8S. W. H. PERSONS. Prs. fee, $5.<X). Ordinary. | Letters or Administration. GEORGIA—Coweta County: j. L. Bean having applied to the Court oi Ordinary of said county for permanent letters | of administration on the estate of Alexander j Bean, late of said county deceased, all persons ! concerned are required to stow cause in said court by the first Monday in September next. ,f anv they can, why said application should not be granted. This August J, 1S8S. W. H. PERSONS. Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, CHEMICALS. PAINTS. OILS, BRUSHES. PUTTY. WINDOW GLASS. PERFUMERY AND professional Carte. W. II. BINGHAM, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga (Office over Newnan National Bank.) Prompt attention to all husineso eo trusted to his care. Special attention to lections. L. P. BARNES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Office up-stairs ovet B. S. Askew A Co.’s. PAY SUN S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Will practice In all the Courts and giv« prompt attention to all business placed in hi’ hands. Examination of titles, writing deeds mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe eial attention. Office over Askew's store. TOILET ARTICLES! l. M. farmer, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga (Office over First National Bank.) Will practice in all the Courts of Coweb Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. 311 'SIC. IL INS TIi U3IEX TS, NOTIONS, GARDEN SEEDS, VIOLIN A GUITAR STRINGS, Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Marv Argo, administratrix on the estate of Elizabeth S. Little, late of said county, de ceased, having applied to the Court of Ordi- narv for leave to sell a certain town lot and Anon she came. Sh •.ailed into the room with calm disdain, and an air of hauteur, and such tilings as that. 1 lie head waiter waved his hand like a self- acting dude in a theatre, and gave her a seat at my table. A thrill passed up through me, and I laid down the vul gar sausage with which I was about to feed myself when she dawned upon Consumption Surely Cured. * To the Editor—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy j ian<! belonging thsreto, in the city of Newnan, i T>,. : + „ ! whereon said deceased lived at the time of her fertile above named disease. i>y It. j death, all persons concerned are required to timely use thousands of hopeless cases , show cause in said court by- the first Monday inn - i i T i ii in .September next, if any they can, why said have been permanently cured. 1 snail application should not be granted. This Au be glad to send two-bottles of my remc-j ~ ust 3.1888. w. H. perso> s, of your readers who CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. c;E0 A .~carteR, LAMPS & CHIMNEYS, 1 Attorney at Law, jT^Txerosene by the barrel, shipped either from Newnan or Atlanta. Grantville, Ga Will practice In all the Courts of the Cl/ cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement. J. c. dy free to any have consumption if they will send me their express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C„ 181 Pearl street. New York. Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. SPECTACLES, IN GREAT VARIETY! SODA WATER FROM THE BEST MATERIALS. The Sweet Girl Graduate. Now is the time, the sweet summer time, when throughout all the land the happy state of the gnl graduate is more m j' ventured t0 look acr0s8 the table! than she can stand. There is nothing! in the full gIare ot the „ e »--bom „ _ „ ill life, with its joys and stnte, like get-, -. . j (]isscovere( iA Remarkable Showing For B. B. tint? a thin" quite done, and the girl day ‘ The first thing that J uiscotereu Against Other Remedies ting a tmn„ quire m, „ wag ^ dMn>t put her yellow wig ; Putnam Co., April 29, 1887. on straight. It was a little higher oir I have been suffering for most thirty The man who sets up to be the archi tect of his own fortune has often to al ter the plans and specifications. B. But V ,i one ear than on the other, which gave J years with an itching and burning all ereisnt, m sooth, j, * h . anoearanceof a youn-man whoover my face and body I took eigh- all, and this pore, I liei Lhe ‘ 1 p ‘ . °. V1 ' teen bottles of one blood medicine and over-monkeyed with the now ing howl. ; jt did me no good, i commenced last This showed to the casual spectator a i January touse B. B. B., and after us- ulimpse of her own moth-eaten, sage-1 ing five bottles I felt better and stout- brush hair, pepping out like the faded I frjfe Ltter a!!d I weigh mote’ than tail of an old Buffalo robe. ; [ ever did. The itching is nearly ceas- Then I knew we could he nothing to 1 e d, and I am confident that a few more and the girl who goes through is not likely to rue the years of her school day’s fun to tell the truth, there ,so much of it after pore, pore over ancient love, in time lie- gins to pall. So the girls are glad, and they don’t feel sad, that examination’s past; and they welcome the day when they all can say that they know’enough at last. To study a book till your necks get a crook and you’re sick with a hope deferred; to sit still and stuff is quite had enough, hut is w r orse when you can’t speak a word. To know’ that you’re hound to make no sound and never to think of a beau, hut to study and wait to the sweet graduate is, in fact, quite decidedly slow. And she welcomes with glee the time when she’s free and can chatter and dance all night; when before the next hop she ctin go out and shop from dewy morn till night; when, in fact, she is “out” and can llutter about, and do what she’s dreamed of so much, and perhaps make a catch, if young Cupid will stretch his bow at her maidenly touch. In all seriousness is there any one happier on all this broad earth than the “sweet girl graduate?” And is there anything prettier, sweet er, more entrancing in all creation? Not if the writer knows anything about it. She comes forth to the world like a butterfly from its chrysalis—radiant, ' glittering,delicate as the J une roses she wears on her breast. She has crowded her head with facts and figures. She has plucked some fruit from all the branches of knowledge, and stands up on the threshold of life, looking for ward with the untrained eye of youth to the future. During the last two weeks in June bevies of innocent young creatures stand in snowy garments and kid slip pers on the platforms of female institu tions of learning. From the village high school, with its graduating class of half a dozen, to the pretentious Yassar, which is called a college, and where fe male teachers are called “professors,” * there rises a pleasant murmur. llow delightfully the girls talk in their essays of the exalted nature of the duties in the life before them; with sweet inflections and occasional gesture, raising an arm from which a lace sleeve falls away and reveals its rounduess and whiteness. What a shower of pretty j conceptions of “womanhood,” of wo- ' man’s duty to her neighbor, to the poor. ' to education, to the cultivation of all that is true and noble in herself and those about her. And the sweet girls’ teachers sit by, and nod and approve and look wise when ponderous thoughts : come forth, or smile approvingly when a jest is thrown in—just to liven it up— each other hut friends. Her nose was ! red also, and she had not been proper- i ly kalsomined. In the hurry of dress- I ing she had missed her nose with the powder-rag, and that organ—meaning, of course, the nose, not the powder- rag—loomed up robust and purple in the ghastly waste of cheek-bones and other osseous formations. Ah, what a pain it gave me to see my beautiful vision fade thus before my eyes! Then I thought how I had smil ed upon her the evening before, and how, perhaps, a new hope had sprung up in her heart, and I feared when she knew it was all over between us, the shock, at her time of life, might kill her. 1 left my hot pancakes, with the maple syrup all over them, and fled. Out into the din, the hurry, and the tireless rush of the mad, mad world, trying to stifle the memory of that broken heart. . Should she see these lines I hope she will not think bitter ly of me. I still admire her as a well- preserved ruin, hut love in such a case would he a hollow mockery. bottles of B. B. B. will cure me entire ly. I am sixty-two years old and can how do a good day’s work in my field. I consider it the best medicine I have ever seen, for it certainly did me more good than all the medicine I have ever taken. I had, in all, nearly a hundred risings on my-.face, neck and body. James Pinkerton. Do Not Suffer Any Longer. Knowing that a cough can be checked in a day, and the first stages of con sumption broken in a week, we hereby guarantee Acker’s English Cough Rem edy, and will refund the money to all wlio buy, take it as per directions, and do not find our statement correct. Fox- sale by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. ZTeu? Ctteertisements. DYSPEPTICS REJOICE In tha Speedy Belief OBTAINED BY USING Tarrant’s Seltxer Aperient. Sold by Tarrant 4 Co., N.Y., and Druggists everywhere. In the Silvery Path. Detroit Free Press. There were a hundred of u$ out at the extreme end of the great ocean pier watching for the moon to rise from its cavern in the sea. The tide was going out, and the undertow could be felt as it pulled at the strong supports of the pier. Off in the west a bank of clouds ! yjjg was creeping up, and at intervals a flash j of lightning showed the ragged edges of the clouds and turned the waves to blood red. The waves came rolling in from the gi’eat expanse t‘o the east, each created with froth and foam- each roaring a menace—each flinging itself on the beach in a sullen fury. | There was a hush as we waited and I watched and listened. By and by a j sweet voice suddenly broke into song.! It was that dear old melody. "Sitting: on my Dear old Mother s Knee,” and! the singer was a girl not more than IS] years old. No one seemed to know | her. but a? her voice took up the melo dy and every word reached our ears all hopt forward with bated breath. There was a quaver—a sadness—a >orue-! thing in her voice that called for pity. As she sang the great white moon rose [ in her majesty out of the black waste of waters—up—up inch by inch, and; T is located at SEWANEE, TENN., upon the Cumberland Plateau, 2,000 leet above the sea level. This school, urder the special pat ronage of the Bishops of the Protestant Epis copal church in the South and Southwest, of fers the healthiest residence and the best ad vantages, both moral and educational, in its Grammar School and in its Collegiate and Theological departments. For the special claims of this University for pat ronage, apply for documents to the Rev. TELFAIR HODG SON, Vice-Chancellor, Sewanee, Tenn. Application for New Road. GEORGIA—Coweta County: D. H. Brown and others have made applica tion for a second class public road, leading from the corporate limits of Sharpsburg to the Burnt Village road, near the residence of J. D. Arnold, which has been marked out by the commissioners and a report thereof made on oatli by them. All persons are notified that said new road will, on and after the first Wednesday in September next, be finally granted by the Commissioners of Roads and Revenue of said county, if ro nov cause be shown to the contrary. August 1st, 1888. R. W. FREEMAN, Clerk County Commissioners. Tax Assessment for 1838. Court of Commissioners of Roads and Reve nue of Coweta County, August Term, 1S8S: Ordered, That there be collected by the Tax Collector of said county for county pur poses, for the year 1S88, the lollowing: 1. To repair court-house, jail, bridges, and other public improvements according to con tract, six and one-half cents on the hundred dollars'; 2. To pay Sheriff, Jailer, City Court J udge, commissions of Tax Receiver and > 'ol)ector, County Treasurer, Coroner, and other officers entitled, five and one-quarter cents on the hundred dollars; •3. To pay expenses of bailiffs at court, non resident witnesses in criminal cases, fuel, servants’ hire, stationery, and the like, three- quarters of a cent on the hundred dollars; 4. To pay jurors’ fees in the Superior and City Courts, six cents on ttie hundred dollars; 5. Foi the support of the poor, four and three-quarter cents on the hundred dollars; 6. To pay all oilier lawful charges against the count 3’. one.and three-quarters of a cent on the hundred dollars; Making in the aggregate twenty-five cents on lhe hundred dollars, which is hereby lev. ied for the purposes aforesaid on all the taxa ble property of said county for the year 1888. This August 1st, 1888. J. A. HUNTER, Chm’u. J. N. SEWELL, J. D. SIMMS, P. O. COLLINSWORTH, H. L. FREEMAN. Commissioners of Roads and Revenue. Prescriptions put up with great care, and from the best and purest drugs. We handle the best goods and sell at reasonable prices. Call to see us and be convinced. GREENVILLE STREET. Newnan, Ga. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED — IN— CAR LOAD LOTS NEWMAN, Attorney fit Law, Newnan, Georgia Will practice in the Superior and Justio- Courts of the county anil circuit, and else where by special agreement. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Pract ices in all the State and Federal Court* Office No. 4 Opera House Building. W. Y. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Gs Will practice in all Courts of this an- adjoining counties anil tlie Supreme Court. WALKER HIGH SCHOOL, 1888. Fall Session Opens on the First Monday in September. , ! Students prepared for the Senior class til ■’ college. , * Front fifty to one hundred dollars per an num can lie saved by patronizing this school instead of sending pupils to enter the lower college classes; and equal proficiency is guar anteed. , Girls are boarded by the Principal and study at night under his supervision. Board and Tuition $13 (XI per scholastic month. DANIEL WALKER, Prin. Application for Ciiarter. GEORGIA—Coweta County: To the Superior Court of said county: Tin- petition of James A. Parks, W. G. Arnold and John S. Ware, all of said county, show that they have associated themselves together lor the purpose of carrying on the business oi buying, manufacturing, repairing and selling buggies, carriages, wagons and other vehicles, harness, agricultural and other implements, and of running a general wood and black smith businessand repair shop, forgain; with their principal place of business at Newnan, in said county. The capital to be em ployed by them will be twenty-five thousand dollars, ten percent, of which has already been paid in. Petitioners pray that they, their associates and successors, may be incorporated for the term of twenty years, with the privilege of renewal, under the name of “NEW NAN BUGGY COMPANY,” for the objects and purposes aforesaid, and with the privilege of increasing their capital stock to not over one hundred thousand dol lars. That the capital stock of said companj’ shall be divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, and that at the corporate meet ing of shareholders each shareholder shall be entitled to as many votes as he owns shares aDDearingon the books ot the company in his name. MCCLENDON & FREEMAN, Fetitioners’ Attorneys. ily 26,1888. , DANtEL 8WINT, Clerk. A j/ae extract from the minutes of Coweta Superior Court. This July 26,1888. . . Daniel SWINT, Clerk; o&2u>' Ctbreriisements. pride in haviug prepared the ''creatuxe for the field before her, sweet and proud when the twentieth bouquet a!? >dl S er reached the last tex’se the pr basket of flowers is handed up to one ! sHver rays settled upon her head and of the favorites, and feel a conscious i made * ier a rro " 11 ?lor>. When she had finished she rose up. slowly walked foward to the low railing and looking out up the silvery path across the waters she sang the last verse again. Then, while the tears yet blinded some, and while the melody yet lingered k* the ears of all, she sprang over the rail into the seething, It will not be a field of roses to all the sweet girl graduates; some will find life a oattle in very truth, and not a ;"few, the school days now closed, and which were perhaps often irksome, will linger many years in the memory like a beautiful dream of plashing water and i /aging waters * twenty fefet green trees and birds and riowers-the ! ^ low ’ „ :So 11 mo \ ed for a moment, one sweet memory in a life of disap- Tho , n a11 "led cmt m horror txnd rushed 'pointments and bitter tears. i to Tl \ e raiL , ^ was floating out to But on commencement day there j ^ ands cla f pe ?. a !? P™Jf-o ut ^ should be no gloomy forebodings-time i the Sllvery * iath , ' vhlch led to death and enough for gloomy thoughts when the we were Powerless Never a shriek, cares of life become heavy. i n , or cr - v ’ n , or stn p le ’ heras she was heaved upon the crest of a Bill Nye’s Dream. | great wave, and then she was gone Night before last, after I had regis-1 forever. | tered at the hotel and had been assign- Foorchild! She had sinned, but she v ed the “last room in the house,”—I use j had repented. Never a one but hoped .the language of the hotel clerk—I went the dear old mother was waiting for her *into the dining room to tea. It is not on the other shore, and that God in his my custom in traveling to- smile on one mercy would not judge her too harshly. in whose heart a hope might spring up 1 to be dashed to earth by my departure. i Bad luck is simply a man with his I'lf I have caused pain iu^ that way, 1 j lumds-in- his -pockets and prtie in his THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF THE CITY OF NEWNAN Will be opened for white pimils the first I Monday, and for colored pupils the first ! Monday, in September,1888, with the following j corps of teachers: superintendent: LYMAN H. FORD. ] teachers: JOHN E. PENDERGRAST, MISS ANNIE ANDERSON, MRS. D. P. WOODROOF, MRS. W. P. NXMMONS, MRS. J. E. ROBINSON, MISS CONNIE HARTSFIELD, MISS CORA KELLER. colored teachers: C. V. SMITH, G. J. BURCH. supernumeraries: SADIE E. BEACH, FANNIE L. CARRINGTON. One-fifth of the matriculation fee will be required every two months, in advance. Tuition fop non-residents will be, in the Grammar Schools. $15 00 per annum; in the High Schools, $25 00 per annum—one-fifth to be paid every two months, in advanee. J. P. BREWSTER, Sec’v Board of Education. • PTJMC REVOLVERS. Send stamp for uudo, price list to JOHNSTON * PittsbuTgh, Penn. 50N, consumptive: Have too Co«h, Bronchitis. Asthma, Indigestion ! U*- PARKER’8 dlNOCR TONIO without delay. II has curea many of the worst oases and lathe best reniedy for all affeetiosg of the throat and lungs, and diseases , arising from insure blood and exhaustion. The feeble tnd sick, struggling against disease, and slowly drifting j to the grave, wIHia many eases recover their health by t the timely use ef Parker’s Ginger Tonic, but delay is dan- ous. Take U in time. It & invaluable for all paina FOOS’ FEED AND COTTON SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univer sal satisfaction. G. W. PEDDY, M. D.. Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, 3a (Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry IS tore Offers his services to the people of Hewnsi and surrounding country. All calls answer*-, promptly. T. B. DAVIS, M. D„ Physician aud Surgeon, Newnan, Ga Offers his professional services to, the cit* zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, j Dentist, Depot Street; Newnan, G*. „ DR. HENLEY'S A (xtfact^bi WINSHIP’S: Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. VAN WINKLE’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S GINS. (Improvement on Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers. ‘ SKINNER Engines. From 4 to 250 Horse-Power. F&lFt A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic and Nervine iB S«inln’ great reputations* acure for Debility, Diwpni sia, and NERVOUS disorders. It languid and debilitated conditions of tem; strengthens lhe intellect, and bodily fnnetlans builds up worn oat Nerves : aids digest low, re storm impaired or lost Vitality, and briniP bse* youthful strength and vigor. It la pleasant ta **" taste, and used regularly braces tbe ofMet the depressing influence of Malaria. X'rlce—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 on FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. A GREAT YEAR In the history of the United States liMfW[ us. Every person of intelligence desires to A**T pace with tne course of its events. There agn* uetter way to do so tUau to subscribe tor The Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities are unsurpassed by any pape in the South. In addition to the fullest Aanwci ated Press dispatches, it has special correspond 6DC6 by wire End letter from ell importHD points fn Georgia and the neighboring States During the present session of Congress Wash iuztoo will be the most important and most m Infecting news centre in the country. Tb. Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph »► correspondent furnishes thelates ^ICgnJW Cor ^ {uU dijpatch?g Frequen news ami L om Hon. Amos J. Cummings special letters ♦rom New York, Frank C member of Congress . •-uffut, three of the be» Carpenter, and W. A. i . 4he capital, xlis known newspaper writers a. issues of th:. cuss the livest and most importa- dav. , _ ,„*'^efoTr The Telegraph is a Democratic Tariff -siir- paper. It is thoroughly in line with the p . of President Cleveland and the Democrat ; party. In the coming national campaign tb- Trv US before VOU Durchase Telegraph will not only give all the news, kn „ 1 J puicnasc. will s dig H cugg a ii public issues from the stand >5ales made for CASH or on! p° int 0{ geauiae Democratic faith. 8ubscnh TIME. :atonce • £iPFull line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, in ware-rooms. gerous. Tact is lodOsortaraoSi W. W. MORGAN, WITH MUSIC & 0’REAR, WHOLESALE & RETAIL GROCERS, 33 West Mitcnel SL r Atlanta, Ga. Will be-pleased to have his Coweta friends soli (kwach and bowels. fiOo. at iiruggistab EXHAUSTED VITALITY rrss SCIENCE or LIFE, the -*■ great Medical Work of the ae^oa Manhood, Nervous and! Physical Dt-billty, Premature Declare, Errors of Youth, and the uritoSi miseries consequent thereon, oU6 pages 8vo, 125 prescriptions for ail diseases.. Cloth, fuH gilt, oniy $1.00, byl mall, sealed. Illustrative scruple free to an young and middle-aged men. Send now. The Sold and Jewelled Medal awarded to (he author by the Na tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1S95, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W, K. PARKER, grad uate of Harvard Medical College.® years’practice In 3oston, who may be consulted confidentially. Specialty, Diseases of Man. ©CfiocHo.iButfinch st. r • * mt * IN .7* 1* No. 1— Leave Carrollton 4 15 am ArriveAtkinson,-T. O 4 30 a m BIG MONEY!! Ten Million \ oters with the Lives of- 5,000 Agents wanted at once to supply j official Banning 4 50 a ILl Whitesburg 4 bb a m Sargent’s 5 20 a ID Newnan 8 1X1 a HI Sharpsburg 8 35 a m Turin 8 40 a m Senoia tw a m Brooks 7 25 a m Vaughns Griffin i Griffin 7 46 a LB 9 Vi a ID 9 45 a ID at Vaughns 10 15> a m Brooks 10 30 a DQ : Daily, ®ne year, Daily, six months, : Daily, three months, Dally, one month, Weekly, one year, - Terms: Cash in advance. Address THE TELEGRAPH, Macon, Geo&sha. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM leanses and beautifies the romotes a luxuriant growth. Fails to Restore Hair to ita Youthful Color. scalp diseases and hair S«c. at Druggists. n. -4 ;rt ”4 only CLEVELAND THURMAN, Senoia Turin 11 10 am Sharpsburg 11 15 a m Newnan ...12 05 pm Sargent’s 12 30 p m Whitesburg 12 55 pm Banning 100pm Atkiason, T. 0 1 3) pm Carrollton 1 45 pm M. S. Belknap, Gen’l Manager. PARKER’S CINGERTOIUP tnvaruame tor Coccus. Colds .nwara Pains. Exhonsttr - PAINTING! The undersigned.offers his services to il» people of Newnan and Coweta county m » skillful and experienced painter, and respect fully solicits their patronage. House-palm 10 55 a m } ing a specialty, either by contract or by tb- day. Old furniture, organs, pianos, et* cleaned, painted and revarnished. Addrea me at Newnad, Ga. aLLEJN LONS. DR. TH0MAS_ J. JONES. Respectfully otiers his services to the people in Newnan and vicinity. Office on Depot street, R. H. Barnes’ old jewelry office. Res- idence on Depot street, third building east of A. A W. P. depot. by Eon. W. U. Hensel, also Life of Mrs. Cleveland, exquisite steel engravings; Voters’ Cartridge Box, Free Trade Policy, Ac., com plete. ci,000 agents at work report immense success. For best work, best terms, apply Of Interest to ladies. BEADLES’ LINIMENT! Cures Toothache, Headache, Neuralgic Rheumatism, all pains of Nerves and Bojm-- by external application. It cures Colic, Che lera Morbus, Cramps and Pains of the Boa els, by taking from 5 to 10 drops internals diluted with water. E. J. BEADLES, Proprietor and Patentee, New nan, 43a. On sale at J. I. Scroggin’s, west side PaMv Square. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Creditors of the estate of W. W. Hanfj deceased, are hereby notified to render to at Senoia, Ga., an account of their demand- as required by law; and all persons indebt ed to said estate are required to make inuav- We will send a FREE SAMPLE of onr wonderful , ejweific for GmaletMuiplninV* tijany lady who wlakea I diate payment. June 23, 1888. totRhtitsffncacyjKijr*purchwina. stamp f*>f f g L. HARDY Ailm’r W. W. ktajuy, PCkric- £AKU££MtSroL.2e*lM,Bulfck.ir.Y. - ,, — Tni«antfn : i r iahh