The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, September 07, 1888, Image 3

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SELECTED But Ufe shall on and upward go: Th’ eternal step of Progress beats To that great anthem, calm and slow. Which God repeats. —Whittier. Be still, sad heart! and cease repining: Behind the clouds is the sun still shining; rhy fate is the common fate of all; nto each life some rain must fall. Borne days be sad and dreary. •-Longfellow. Will be the final goal of all. To pangs of nature, sins of will. Defects of doubt and taints of blood; That nothing walks with aimless feet. That no one life shall be destroyed Or cast as rubbish to the void. —Tennyson. —I tue no fear that thou shouldst die, Albel ask no fairer fute than this— • •»•••• Whiirime and Peace with hands unlocked fly— Yet ce I not where In eternity We 1* and love, well knowing that there is Ko bKward step for those who feel the bliss A Lcwod la Grammar. Careless habits of speech are among the prominent faults of our voung people, even those young people who have ad vantages of schools and intelligent home surroundings. Recognizing this, the professor of English literature at Welles ley college has prepared a list of “words. phrases, and expressions to be avoided , of the guri, which grows in from which the young (and old) readers 1 ^ — «br> will receive many serviceable hints: that country DRUGS! CCCCCCOO oocco g,ve.. | ute are required to make immediate pay- T\T) T HT DT7T7CU Sunstan is thought to be denvedjrom Ilien t. This August 2L188*., P^tee^ jjft, J. 1. Ktillull. The Story of the Rose. The name rose comes directly from the Latin, and through the Latin from the Greek. In its first form it is sup posed to have h^°n derived from the color red. In its^.ifferent forms it has given its name to many lands. Syria or Notice to Debtees and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: •All persons having demands against the estate of Gilbert Weaver, late of Coweta coun ty, deceased, are hereby notified to render in their demands to the undersigned according to law: and all persons Indebted to said es- the name of a beautiful and delicate Of fm. —Lowell. A Hack Number. Ti truth of the old proverb, “Better lateian never.” appeals to have !>een illumted by a striking modern instance, accding to* an English exchange, which relai that ninety-seven years ago some pern, now unknown by name, posted in l*is a number of The GazctteUniver- gglldirecting it to “Monsieur X , in IitoiB, Switzerland,” but the newspa- pend not arrive at its destination until lastuonth. It seems that The Gazette, •win had l>een waiting for delivery ever tin January, 1791, had got mixed up wia bundle of other newspapers, and wffound, with its cover and address Btiintact. amidst a heap of rubbish in a (ret. The finder conscientiously sent it the Morges )>o&tmaster, by whom it was conscientiously forwarded to the ppnt representative of the X fam- ilitill living at Morges. “So unique a B imen of )>ostal integrity deserves to Exhibited in a postal museum, or vld not be out of place among the cu- yties in the newspaj>er museum at jlien.”—Chicago Herald. Various Personal Peculiarities. fen betray their real characters in a usand different ways. The professors the art of delineating dispositions do in various faslaona. One artist will lertake to describe character from tho imination of a photograph; another .ds indications of tastes and feelings in adwriting; nay, an American savant s recently announced that much may learned regarding a man by observing w ho wears his ixxita. Every one has me small |x?culiarities which to the ae rate observer may furnish a clew to 8 disunion. There have been mani- Id instances of strange and ineon- jnient resemblances between men lead- ,g to cases of “mistaken identity, ’ and 3t probably in every instance there was nne trifling and overlooked personal •ait which distinguished one from the ther. If alike in features they differed r dispositions.—London Standard. Origin of “Old Hickory.” The story of how Gen. Andrew Jack- ion pot the name of Old Hickory is again joing the rounds, and will lie new to ■some voung readers. During the Creek war he had a Ixul cold, and his soldiers made for him a shelter of hickory bark. Tho next morning a tipsy soldier, not knowing who was under the l>ark, kicked h over. As the general, speechless with rage, struggled out of the ruins, the sol dier yelled, “faello. Old Hickory 1 Come out of your bark and take a drink! "When the soldiers saw Jackson shaking the bark from his uniform they gave three cheers for “Old Hickory,” and tho name stuck.—New York Sun. recerve many Guess, for suppose or think. Fix, for arrange or prejiare. Ride and drive, in terchangeably. (Americanism.) Real, ’as an adverb, in expressions real good for • really or very good, etc. Some or any, j in an adverbial sense; e. g., “I have studied 6ome,” for somewhat. “I have not studied any,” for at all. Some ten davs, for about ten days. Not as 1 know, for not that I know. Storms, for it rams or snows moderately. Try an experiment, for make an experiment. Singular sub ject with contracted plural verb; e. g., “She don’t skate well.” Plural pronoun with singular antecedent: “Every man or woman should do their duty; or. “If vou look .any one straight in the face they will flinch.” Ex pect, for suspect. First rate as an ad verb. Nice, indiscriminately. (Real nice, mav be doubly faulty.) Had rather, for would rather. Had better, for would better. Right away, fur immediately. Party, for jterson. Promise, for assure. Posted, for informed. Post graduate, for graduate. Depot, for station. Stop ping, for ’staying. Try and do. for try to do. Try and go, for try to go. Cun ning, for small, dainty. Cute, for acute. Funny, for odd or unusual. Above, for foregoing, more than or beyond. Does it look good enough, for well enough. Somebody else’s for somebody’s else. Like I do, for as I do. Not as good as, for not so good as. Feel badly, for fee! bad. Feel good, for feel well. Between seven, for among seven. Seldom or ever, for seldom if ever, or seldom or never. Taste and smell of, when used transi tively. Illustration: We taste a dish which tastes of popper. More than you think for, for more than you think. .These kind, for this kind. Nicely, in re sponse to an inquiry for health. Healthy, for wholesome. Just as soon, for just as lief. Kind of, to indicate a moderate degree. The matter of, for the matter with.—Boston Transcript. Guhstan conies from the Persian name, gul. rose, and Rhodes, the Eland made so famous by the valiant de fense against the Turks by the Knights JOHN M. TIDWELL. Adm’rof Gilbert Weaver, dec’d. Application for Year’s Support. GEORGIA—Coweta County : The return of the appraisers setting apart twelve months’ support to the family- ol W. of fit John means the land or the place \ f. fiibiey, deceased, having been filed in ray ; CHEMICALS Ivum office, all persons concerned are cited to show of roses. The rose has popularly been j°‘ '■ - - - — supposed to be indigenous to oriental countries. “Born in the east, it has been j = W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and MEDICINES, Professional <£ar&s.^^ W. H BINtrHAM^ Attorney at Law, Newnan, Q» (Office oyer Newnan National Bank.) r^_ Prompt attention to all business frmued to his care. Special attention U»e*l lections. j. P BARGES, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Gta Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew A Co-’*. I cause by the first day ot October 1888, why , said application for twelve months’ support should not be granted. This Ausust 31, 1S8S. diffused like the sunlight all over the world.” ASsop told the gardener of his master Xanthus that “the earth is a step mother to those plants inroq .orated into her £oil, but a mother to those which are her own free product.” Where the wild rose flourishes, there all other roses will grow. And the wild rose, in spite of so much prating to the contrarv, seems to be indigenous to all the world, in the temix-rate zones, ex cept Australia and South America. These countries are among the youngest con- Application for Leave tO Sell, tinents of our earth geologically and the j GEORGIA—Coweta County: PAINTS. OILS, BRUSHES. PUTTY, WINDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY AND Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Daniel Swint, administrator of I>. W. Dial, j deceased, having applied to the Court of Or- | dinary for leave to sell the lands belonging to ; the estate of said deceased, all persons con-j cerned are required to show cause in said court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This August 31.1888. W. H. PERSONS. Prs. fee, $3.00. . Ordinary. TOILET ARTICLES! MUSICAL IXSTEl MEXTS, XOTIOXS, GA1U)EX SEEDS, VIOLIX& XI VITA li STEIXGS, Rosace® are the latest comers in time. It had not become rose time with them when man came. The Rosace® includes, Ix-sides rosea, most of the hardy fruit trees and plants, the apple, peach, pear, plum, raspberry, strawberry, blackberry, as well as manv ornamental shrubs.— Sophie B. Herrick in The Cosmopolitan. John M. Tidwell, administrator of the es tate of Gilbert Weaver, late of said county, deceased, having applied to the Court of Or dinary of said county for leave to sell the lands belonging to said deceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in October next, if any they caD, why said application should not be granted. This August 31.1SS8. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. Writing Through Stenographers. Letter writing through stenographers is now so common that even the ordi nary business man coming to New York from smaller centers of trade now uses the hotel typewriters for his correspon dence. Some of them let their letters ac cumulate for several days before they mil in a stenographer. It is noticeable that the successful old merchants of the old school shun typewriters as a pestilen tial innovation. The executive heads of leading corporations have all fallen into tho habit of writing letters through sten ographers, and generally take them about in their travels.—New York Tribune. A Scout in Active Service. The scout of the novel and the show Is very picturesque, kind fellow, thoroughly reckless, a dead shot, the proprietor of a varied selection of scalps, and showing in his moral character that combination of “half angel and half Lucifer” of which Joaquin Miller de lights to sing. Like Samson of old, his strength is in hair, and his long flowing locks are the admiration of frontier wo men and the envy of frontier men. He is always clad in buckskin, fringed and stamped with grotesque designs, while his flowing locks are surmounted with a sombrero that it would take three days to walk round the brim. Such is the eastern conception; now for southwestern reality. The United States scout in active service wears his haircut short, in soldier fashion-, because he -has to sleep on the ground for weeks at a time, and if he wore long and flowing locks they would give him considerably trouble by afford ing a clooice variety of insecis A refuge and a dwelling place. He has no col lection of scalps. In five ^years’ ex perience, during which I met nearly every scout of note in New Mexico and in Arizona, I never found one of them with a single scalp exoepfc his own. Then, again, outside of some town in which they wanted with a pardonable vanity to show off, I never saw one of them in a buckskin suit. It is too warm in sum mer and not warm enough in winter. The scout is a good shot, but that is a virtue he shades in common with nearly every man and boy on the frontier.— Con A. Mahony in Inter Ocean. Bravery of Benedict Arnold. Now, as Burgoyne retreated to the British “great redoubt,” leaving nearly all his cannon %n the field, Gen. Ten Broeck threw-3,0u0 fresh New York mili tia into the American advance line. Here the unrestrained ambition of Gen. Arnold showed itself in a series of daring achievements which touch the reader of history with admiration and pity. Re fused a command in the morning by Gen. Gates, he could no longer keep in the rear. Mounted on a fine, brown horse, he led first a brigade at the right and then one at the left in impetuous charges on the British position.^ “I’ll soon put an end to it,” he cried, and the soldiers followed him with en thusiasm. Riding up to Col. Latimer’s^ Connecticut regiment, he accosted them: “Ah! my old friends from New Lon don and Norwich! Come on, boys; if the day is long enough we will have them all in hell before night!” While charging over the rail breast works on the British right Arnold re ceived a wound in the same leg that had been struck at Quebec. As he fell under his horse, he shouted: “Go on, boys! They “went on,” capturing the key of. the English position and killing Coi, Breymann. The spot is now known as Burgoyne’s, or more properly Breymann’s hill. The irony of fate gave Gates, in the rear, the laurels of victory, and des tined Arnold, wounded, at the head of the American troops, to an infamous memory. Gates did not even mention Arnold in reporting the battle.—C. H. Crandall in American Magazine. Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: M. L. Carter, administrator of the estate of Amy Thompson, having applied to t.he Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the land and one-fourth Interest in city lot in the city of Newnan. belonging to said de ceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in sai-' Court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why sa,d application should not be granted. This Au gust 31, 18S8. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3 00. 1 Irdinary. Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Jane A. Hammond, administratrix of the estate of E. Q. Hammond, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the lands belonging to said deceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in October next, it any they can, why said appli- cation should not be granted. This August 31 1S8S. W. H. PERSONS, Pr fee, $3.00. Ordinary. CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF. LAMPS & CHIMNEYS, Kerosene by the barrel, shipped either from Newnan or Atlanta. SPECTACLES, IN GREAT VARIETY! yvw N. WVVVWWWVV WVWN.VWb'WbWVVVVVVVN.V SODA WATER FROM THE BEST MATERIALS. PAYSON S. WHATLEY, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Will practice in all. the Courts and gtv* prompt attention to all business placed In to* hands. Examination of titles, writing deed* mortgages, contracts, etc., will r f cel ,™ cial attention. Office over Askew s store. L. M. FARMER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, G» (Office over First National Bank.) Will practice in all the Courts of Circuit. All Justice Courts attended. GEO. A. CARTER, Attorney at Law, Grantville, Ga Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement. J. c. NEWMAN, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Georgia Will practice in the Superior and Just*®. Courts of the county and circuit, and else where by special agreement. gJg^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. Military Microphone in France. The military microphone is now being tried in France, not only to give warning of the passage of troops from afar, but to indicate the different brandies of the army in movement and to furnish an ap proximate idea of the numbers of men and horses on the advance. It consists of a sounding plate buried in the soil across and along any route, and con nected by a long wire conductor to the (receiving dftc of the apparatus in )>osi- tion, which has the necessary arrange^ anent for making the souuds louder and emore readily distinguishable.—St. Louis Republic.' Playing Through a Oannta. In Paris a man picks up a living by going about the streets playing on a clar ionet through a canula placed in a hole in his throat after the operation of tracheotomy. When he has finished a little tune he takes the canula out and exhibits it to the audience to show that there is no deception.—New York Sun. The Policeman of Mexico. While returning in the evening to my hotel I stopjoed at the beautiful park called tho Plaza de Zaragoza, which is spread out in almost tropical beauty be fore the new cathedral. It is filled with orange trees and pecan trees, and is sweet with the odor of pomegranates and aca cia blooms. There I found hosts of chil dren playing along the graveled walks. Their chief amusement seemed to consist in throwing twigs and pebbles slyly at the policeman, who, however, did not deign to notice them. The Mexican po liceman is usually dressed all in white, with a blue cap, and instead of an ugly club .lie carries a bright saber. He does not walk about at night from block to block, seeing that all is secure, as our policemen are supposed to do. hut after a certain hour of the night he seats him self fl.,t upon the pavement at a street corner, and with his saber drawn and ius lantern between his knees patiently v.-;.-:s the Mexican cry of “Watch!” which notifies him when he is needed. The Mexican j>oliceman is therefore a harm less, good natured man, and consequently a favorite with the children. — "li. M. \.” in St. Louis Republic. Cloaks on the Installment Plan. “You would he surprised,” said onqnf these enterprising and somewhat grasp ing merchants the other day, “at the variety of people who have dealings with us. We have sold to dry goods clerks Letters of Administration. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Jennie Smith having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for permanent letters of administration on the estate of Mai berry S. Smith, late of said county, deceased, all per sons concerned are required to show cause in said court by the first Monday in October next, if any they can, why said application should not he granted. This AueusiPERSONS, Prs. fee, $3.00. Ordinary. ARNOLD, BURDETT & CO. HAVE JUST RECEIVED —IN— CAR LOAD LOTS Letters of Administration. GEORGIA—Coweta County: T C. Nall having applied to the Court of Or dinary of said county for permanent letters of administration on the estate of w. P. Carter, late of said county, deceased, all persons con cerned are required to show cause m said Court bv the first Monday,in October next, if anv they can, why said application should not he granted. This Prs. fee, $3.00, Ordiutrj. W. A. TURNER, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Ga Practices In all the State and Federal Court* Office No. 4 Opera House Building. WfiY. ATKINSON, Attorney at Law, Newnan, Gm Will practice in all Courts of this an adjoining counties and the Supreme Court. G. W. PEDDY, M. D.. Physician and Surgeon, Newnan, 3* (Office over \V. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store. Oilers his services to the people of Newnaa and surrounding country. Allcalls answerer promptly. F00S’ FEED and cotton SEED MILLS. All sizes. The same that we have sold in such quantities, and which have given univeu sal satisfaction. WINSH I P’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. T. B. DAVIS, M. D., Physician and Surgeon* Newnan, Ga Offers his professional services to tl&e dll zens of Newnan and vicinity. DR. THOS. COLE, Dentist, Newnan, Ga. Depot Street. DR. HENLEY^S Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Joseph E. Dent, executor of W. W. Stegall, late of said county, deceased.havingapplied.to the Court ol' Ordinary of said county for let ters of dismission from his said trust, all per sons eoncerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday m October Prs. fee, $5.00. \V. H. PERSONS, Ordinary. who were working for $1,000 a year j Y miy t hey can, wlTF said implication sealskin cloaks for their wives which cost j s i 10U id I10 t be granted.^ This July 0^1888. them as high as $400. Sometimes it takes three years to pay for them, but they will have them. The women are extravagant, or one of the neighbors has a cloak, and the poor man has no peace at home until he gets one for his pretty but foolish and ambitious wife. Last winter we sold seventy-five sealskin sacks on the installment plan, and in a great many cases the wives made the purchases unknown to their husbands and saved the money to pay for them out of their allowance for household expenses. We have ladies come here for their fancy bonnets, and in many cases for their dresses, winch they never could get if they had to wait until they saved money to pay cash for them. We have a num ber of cases on our books where articles of dress are either worn out or have be come old style and the women are stiu paying the regular installments on their To Wiiom it May Concern. GEORGIA-Coweta County: The estate of W. S. Barnes, late of said countv, deceased, being unrepresented and not likely to be represented: all persons con cerned are required to show cause in the Court of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday in October next, why such adminis tration should not he vested in the C ounty Administrator. This August 31,1888. W. H. PERSONS. Ordinary, Prs. fee, $3.00. and ex-officie Clerk C. O. VAN WINKLE’S Gins, Feeders and Conden sers, and Cotton Presses. SMITH’S SONS & CO.’S GINS. (Improvement on Pratt’s celebrated Gins.) Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA-Coweta County: Bv virtue of an order from the Court of Or dinary of Coweta county, I will sell before the court-house door'ii the city of Newnan, between the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in October, 1888, the following lands belonging to the-estate of Mrs. K. J. Puckett, deceased, to-wit: .Fifty acres of land, more or less, off of southeast corner of lot No. 202, : lying, being, and situated iu Grantville dis trict of »aU COTOty. and bounded north by D. paying me reguiax m»«uuuaiw on | l Puckett Wll Smith, and J. M. Hlnds- cost. They must pay or they can t get , m ’ an east ,j y j Morris, south by F. M. anv more goods, and they know that, sbaddix and D. L. Puckett,and west by R. I. anil are accordingly very prompt and ; ^^^rcasii! and foi .TistH^.uUon among regular in their payments,”—Chicago tl;e !)e y- s Q f smu deceased. This August 30. Herald i 18SS - ^ PUCKETT, XieraJU ’ ! $3.65—paid. Administrator. BROWN’S Gins, Feeders and Conden- A Most Effective Combination. Sla, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieve* *« languid and debilitated condition" of tem ; strengthens the intellect, and Bocllly builds up worn out Nervea : aids dlKeidlon^w- stores impaired or lost Vitality, and Mn«b«k youthful strength and vigor. £ ta plMsaut taste, and used regularly braces the System the depressing influence of Iilaiaritt. Price $1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounce*. FOE SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. sers. A GREAT YEAR puce with the course of its events. There la better way to do bo than to subscribe for The Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities are unsurpassed by any pope- in theSouth in addition to the fullest Assoc, ated Press dispatches, it has special correspW enoe by wire and letter from all Importan points in Georgia and the neighboring States During the present session of Congress Mast lngton will be the most ^P^tantttd mostto t-resting news centre in TelelraDh i Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph the very best that can be had. Germs in Flour Barrels. Hero Ctbpcrtiscmcnts. The “Lady’s Horse.** Expert riders s&y there is do (“lady’s horse.” as any good horse is as much suited to a skillful female rider as Ho a man. Certain kinds of horses are beet suited to certain kinds of riders, cnen or women, that is ail.—New Or- IL-ana Times-Dcmoerat. Mechanical Art In Poetry. Poetry is a more mechanical art than most people*believe. Fred Latham, who i- a cousin of Lord Tennyson, has told me than when the laureate is writing a jvoem he constructs a rhyming dictionary of his own, thus: A, b, c, d, e, f, g. h, i, j, k. 1, m, n, o, p, q. r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z. Then he has written a line, say: Where Claribei low lieth— He starts down the alphabet hunting for a rhyme, getting “buyeth,” “erieth,” “dieth,” “lieth,”. “sigheth,” “rieth,” “tryeth.” “vieth,” and so on, out of which of course it is the easiest possible thing to get the line— The oak tree, thick leaved, ambro6iai si*heth, when the proper time comes to introduce that verse into the poem. Usually Lord Tennvson conceals the art by which he The total disregard of the public as to sanitary precautions regarding their food ^. .... _ , , Vlr is well illustrated by the indifference Q(JNS price?iTtoJOHN-STON a isON, with which they accept the guaranteed Pittsburgh. Penn. cleanliness of barrels in which flour is j —“ furnished. Perhaps they are unaware that fully two-thirds of the flour barrels have been bought up from all parts of the city and various surroundings. A bar- j rel may have been lying in a damp cellar , probably containing a pile of disease ; breeding rags, or molding in some musty 1 garret room or other unpleasant place, is bought up by the enterprising miller, and is again used as a receptacle for flour. The insufficient cleaning it receives is in- j adequate to destroy any germs it no PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails lo Restore Gray Hair lo its Youlhful Color. Prevents Dandruff and hnJr falling S'Jc. and 81.00 at Druggists. SKINNER Engines. From 4 to 250 Horse-Power. ' jkw« SSWSwS:«»» arMf rarpenter, aDd V\. A. Croffut, three of the bs I®”Ful] line of best make BUGGIES and HARNESS, ra w . P hi..iw«ocriUsM*iWo^ 1 n u*3re room q pAper. It is thoroughly in line with the polie ill WdlC lUUiilS. 1 6f President Cleveland and the Democrat • party In the coming national campaign th ’T’ru lie VipforP vrni rtlircllff^p ! Telegraph will not only give all the news, bn try US uciore you puicuu^c. | wjn s di ^ cuss all public issues from the Stan- Sales made for CASH or on point of genuine Democratic faith. Bubscrit TIME. I Daffy, one year, .... I #7 4 ft * «* S.. G. & N. A. R. R. doubt contains. A liberal use of the scraper is sufficient to give the outside a hrand new appearance.—J. J Ring in Globe-Democrat. Sheep of the World. The numbers of sheep kept by the prin cipal sheep raising nations of the world are almost past enumeration. It is com- j puted tliat in Russia there are at 'least j 50,000,000, in Germany 24,000.000, in France 23,000,000, while Spain has 22,- 000,000, Hungary 14,000,000. Turkey 10,000,000, and GreatBriiain 22,000,000. In Africa the Algerians raise 10,000,000, and Cape Colony produces 11,000,000. Uruguay, In South America, has over 80,000,000, while the Argentine Confed eration has more than 70.000,000. The »' once. Dally, one year, .... Daily, six months, ... Daily, three months, • Daily, one month, - * • Weekly, one year, .... Terms: Cash in advance. Address THJ5 TELEGRAPH, Macon, Geoegia 1 o. An Old Fhilosopher. Aristarchus of Samos maintained. 2s0 B. C., that the earth turned on its own axis and revolved about the sun. which - _ , tmuuu uw mwo uuui iv.wu.vw. x™ doctrine was held'by ltis contemporaries ^to Ins rhymes by putting the manu- numfaere Australia are various! v esti- as so absurd that the philosopher nearlj factored hne first £ , mated between 75,000,000 and 125,000,- iost his life.-Boston Transcript. one carry the real bmnten oftbe 000, and in the United'States there are at as any one who will read “Lockaley , , /. „ Hall” critically will see.—Hemy Does in j 16861 40)000,000.—Globe Democrat. For a Chow. . The English p*t-a-nickel-in-the-slot , Chicago Lews, machines have got so far that they now give a chew of tobacco to any one who drops in a penny. Memphis is the greatest inland cotton market in the world, receiving from 700,- 000 to 1,000,000 bales yearly. The NltJittngBto’a Song The nightingale, it is said, has sixteen different beginnings and doses, with many intermediate notes, while other birds have but four or five changes.—* Once a Week. Sham Battle Flan*. Sham battle flags, tattered and torn to represent the real article, are the latest product of French ingenuity, and are i said to have deceived large numbers of • curiosity hunters and patriots. —Chicago Herald. rrriE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the -*■ great Medical Work of the age oa Manhood, Nervoua and Physical Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 301 pages . S vo, 125 prescriptions for all diseases. Cloth, full gilt, only $1-00, by mail, scaled. Illustrative sample free to all young and middle-aged hien. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by tbs Na tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1595, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years’practice In Boston, who may be consulted confidentially. Specialty, Diseases of Man. OT.ce No. 4 Bulfinch st. MARVELOUS EMORY DISCOVERY. Any book learned in one reading. Blind wandering cured. Speaking without notes. Wholly uwllke artificial systems. Piracy condemned by Supreme Court. Great indmeements to Correspondence Classes. Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Hammond, the world-renowned Specialist in Mind diseases, Daniel Ureenleaf Thompson, the great -Psychologist, and others, sent post free by- Prof. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Avenue, New Yolk. No. 2— Leave Griffin 9 45 a no | Arrive at Vaughns. 10 15 am Brooks 10 30 am j Senoia 10 55 a m Turin 11 10am 1 PARKER’S KASR BALSAM Cleansra and beautifies the hair. 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Of Interest to ladies. w» wtll a FREE SAMPLE of onr wonderful •pacific for fenal •complaint* to anj lady who wishes to tact its efficacy before purchasing. Send stamp for Baku Ikiuov C«.,Sox1m, AAhi.T. BEADLES’ LINIMENT! Cures Toothache, Headache, Neuralgi Rheumatism, all pains of Nerves and Bon by external application. It cures Colic, Cto lera Morbus, Cramps and Pains of the B«r els, by taking from 5 to 10 drops internal! diluted with water. E. J. BEADLES, Proprietor and Patentee, Newnan, Ga On sale at J. I. Scroggin’s, west side Puhl Square. LOST! Lost from my coat- pocket, on the 22d » July, while going from Newnan to Hog** vllle, a railroad certificate for two shares » Georgia Railroad stock, belonging to my wit Mrs. M. M. Boozer. If the finder of the cm tlflcate will return the same he will be lihei ally rewarded. P. A. BC Hoganaville, Ga., Aug. 21,1888. JOOZEB.