The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, October 19, 1888, Image 7

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Jerald and ^dtjertisqr. Newnan, Ga.. Friday, Oriober 19. 188R. THF . c °r°TFR > nw'.r a fr»»« (Imp down q, at▼ b^ort For a lor* that w»* dutnb mu4 An A \ "There. darkly buried and far apart It -aill rent in p«v,*." I mud: 1 laid it ft wav without fvto* or mn&rt And never tt u*ar I shod And now that I would in my heart enfold Another love fair a« the May. There has risen a ghost of the love r»f old. A specter weird and grav. And tny svwt young love with her hair's soft gold. Bbe sorrow' and turns away —Clinton Soollard in Horae Journal. The Perusal of a Hook. Select books that are informing, and eo far as in jour power equip yourselves with wide knowledge in all branches of history, literature and affairs. Are you deficient in any of these? Then seek the best authorities and bring yourself to the highest standard in that field without delay. Let your intellectual progress be marked with positive accumulations. When you read a book that is really worth the time you spend with it, do not cram your mind with others as a man in a hurry is apt to cram his gripsack, hut do a little earnest and profitable thinking before you take up its successor in your reading course. The perusal of a hook gives birth t<> ideas in no way connected with the subject of which it treats. All careful readers should, however, avoid dwelling too long upon one line of study or thought. Light and varied reading should he interspersed with the solid and useful. An extreme in either direction Ls to Ixj avoided.—Magazine of American History. Profits of Watch Repairing. There is more profit in the repairing department of watch making than there is in any other trade in the country, un less, possibly, it is plumbing. Take, for instance, the main spring of a watch. The general price for replacing one it anywhere from $1.50 to $2. Now, a main spring to a jeweler costs little more, all told and set, than 25 cents. Tln-n there is the extravagant price that is always demanded for cleaning a watch. Few jewelers ever charge less than $1.50 for such work. The time usually taken in doing this class of work is not more than from a half to three-quarters of an hour. The main spring itself costs on an average about Scents. Then there is an enormous profit made on watch crystals. The standard price for them is 25 cents each. The jeweler buys them by the gross or in lesser quantities for 20 cents per dozen.—Retired Jeweler in Globe- Democrat. W«'(l Farming in Japan. One might Kay that weed farming was u.genuine part of the Jajmnese agricul tural system, since the entire crop was utilized in some fashion, either for for ago, food, bedding, beauty, mulching or manure. Not a savage plant was al lowed to lead a useless life, or to devote its energies to the undoing of the farmer’s work. Though the harmless and pretty weeds were in some cases permitted tc flourish in the road gutters as well as the borders—and this is no joke—in suoh cases they were themselves sedulously weeded. It does not take deep or intense reflection to perceive that this thorough system of weed culture, so to speak, re lieves the farmers of one heavy tax on their industry, which their brethren in America abandon themselves to paying. —American Agriculturist. Manufacturing Unbreakable Clans. An unbreakable substitute for glass is made hv Mous. L. C. A. Margueric, of Paris, bv immersing wire gauze in a heated state in a thin paste formed of soluble glass, gelatine and glj'cerine, or glucose, in proportions varying accord ing to the use for wliich the material was designed. When nearly dry the sheets are dipped in a concentrated solu tion of chrome alum or bichromate of potash. Am" desired coloring matter may lie incorporated with the gelatine, ami copal or other protective varnish may be applied to the “vitreo-metallic” panes.—Arkansaw Traveler. Stuck for a IVnni. A Springfield teacher had given her dbss in geography some oral instruction about the middle states, mentioning among other things that the inhabitants were ‘ enterprising, wide awake and go ahead people.” The next day she was questioning the class on the subject, when a small hoy replied to a question alxmt the inhabitants that “they were enter prising. wideawake and”—here he was stuck for a word, but got it finally— "move on people.”—Springfield Union. Inherited Rental Deficiency. Dr. Crycr says, iu The Philadelphia rledieal times, that he has among his utients members of the same family, ©presenting five generations, each lack- ng the left lower lateral incisor tooth. Vn interesting feature of this remarkable ustanee of heredity is that one of t-lie nembers of the same family has a su- ternumerary lower incisor.—bcienc«x “Lay thy sweet hands in mine,” he ! , p , ... . j said, but she only remarked that she i ha*^risen Uke a, Phoenix j had neuralgia anti must hold her head. | ” He gave her Salvation Oil and now he j holds her sweet hands by the hour. THE froth tta ashes. The last Colombian revo lution, happily curtailed by Unde S3m. has left the town scathed hut still there. Aspinwall, or Colon, with a stress on the “oo,” is not a healthful plac*. Tle-re is a funeral train to Monkey Hill every day, Bomeiimes twice a da\\ It “NEWNAN - GIRL” It helps a razor to lay it aside for a j time. the | tg&ucaitonal. • WALKER HIGH SCHOOL, loos. From almost every section of is a hopital State come reports of a general iniprove- ^ limprt city, as well as a sea j>ort. and the tuen ! nit-nt of the health of our people, flue who have lieen inveigled into delving no doubt to the influence of Dr.^ null s | amid t!ie treacherous marshes of the Cough Syrup,'which costsonl> go ceiim. ; isthmus are filling coffins at the rate of. y nt over tW entv buffalo skins were' eight or ten perdiein. and one coffin doe* ^},jpj )ec j f rom the West to market last year. _________ i the duty for many. Men are cheap, hut the coffins are dear. As to the canal, all I can say is that there is more machinery ignobly rusting between Aspinwall atui Panama than would pierce a dozen forty mile canals. In exact proportion as the Panama train recedes from Aspinwall does the faith of the traveler vanish into airy nothing. For the first ten miles all is well. Then things begin to take on thdr natural shape. There are Americans, A Sound Legal Opinion. E. Bainbridge Munday, Esq., County Attorney, Clay county, Texas, says: “Uaveused Electric Bitters with most happy results. My brother aNo was very low with Malarial Fever and .Jaundice, but was cured by timely use of this medicine. Am satisfied Electric Bitters saved his life.” Mr. D. I. Wilcoxson. of Horse Cave, The Fall Sessiun opens on the First . Monday in September. Students prepared for the Senior class in college. From fifty to one uunumi itoilars per an- nuni can behaved by patronizing this school instead of sending pupiifl to enter the lower college classes, and equal proficiency is guar anteed. GUIs are boarded b> :r.e principal and study ftt night under his supervision. Board and Tuition *13 U0 per scholastic month. DANIEL WALKER, Prin. 188B. PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL, PALMETTO, GA. Ky., adds a like testimony, saying: II r. • . i positively believes he would have died, Europeans, Chinese, natives gazing at | ^ , . no \ 1>epn f( , r E1 , M . tric Hitters. j the cars as they pass town after town on | T|jis , rn , at n , 111(1( ] y wi i] W ard off, as \ the line, but the faces of all bear j we ll as cure all Malarial Diseases, and same impress. “All hope abandon, ye f or a jj Kidney, Liver and Stomach Dis- j CIGARS who enter here.” Every mail who goes to w'ork or starts a store on the isthmian canal route is a silent partner with King Death. It Ls a lottery out of which the adventurer hopes to emerge a winner. ( But the winners—-thej' crowded the de pot at Panama—and what were they? For tho most part hospital patients, or subjects for hospital treatment. Fever! It brooded over every inch of those forty- seven miles between Aspinwall and Panama. You breathed it in the air; you drank it in the water; you beheld it rank. jtestiferously potential in the sur orders stands unequaled. Price 50 cents and $1 at A. J. Lyndon’s. A horse committed suicide in Talbot county, Md., by walking into a river and delibeiately drowning himself. Don’t Experiment. You cannot afft rd to waste time in j experimenting when your lungs are in , danger. Consumption always seems, at first, only a cold. Do not permit any j dealer to impose upon you with some j cheap imitation of Dr. King’s New Dis-1 eoverv for .Consumption, Coughs and j ('olds', but he sure you get the genuine roundings of every palmleaf roofed hut. j Hecause he can make 'more profit lie every single story tenement, every may te n you he has something just as dwelling on the hills along that fated good, or just the same. Don’t be de- forly mile stretch.—Cor. San Francisco j reived, but insist upon getting Dr. Chronicle. | King’s New Discovery, which is guar- anteed to give relief in all Throat, Tho Hohenzoiicra “White Lady.” ! Lung ami Chest, affections. Trial bot- Take the lead over all compet itors, and will continue to do ^ so as long as tobacco is raised | in Havana. These cigars are j made by hand, right here at home, and are warranted to be pure Havana Filler. The: only strictly ioc. cigar manu factured in the State that is sold for FIVE CENTS. At wholesale and retail. M. S ALB IDE Factory No io. Newnan, Ga.! FALL TERM WILL BEGIN WEDNES DAY. SEPTEMBER IP. 1888. Intelligent people, healthy location, experi enced 8ml conscientious teachers. Due atten tion paid to the primary grades. TUITION. Primary grades, per mouth. $120 Intermediate grades. p< r month 2 UO High school iind collegiate grades, per month 8 00 Board, per month $8 (X) to $10 00 For particulars, address or consult . THUS. II. MKACKAM. Principal. Palmetto, Ga. DRS. STARKEY & PALEN’S TREATMENT BY INHALATION. TRADE MARK ^ REOPSTERClfc 1629 Arch Street. Philad'a. Pa- For Consumption, Asthma. Bronchitis, Dyspepsia. Catarrh, Hay Fever. Ileail- m-lie, Debility, Rheumatism, Neuralgia and all CHRONIC AND NERVOUS DISORDER*. St "The Compound Oxyg-n Triatment,” Drs, tnrkcy A Pulen. No. : >j i ,\:ch »i.. Philadel phia, lmvc been using for the last seventeei years, is a seier.tilic adjustment of the ele ments of Oxj g, n and Nitro-j. n magnetized, and the comp mini Is so condensed and minis portable ttiul it Is sent all over the world. FARMERS’ SUPPLY STORE! During the middle ages, a noble lady, ] 0‘‘S free at Lyndon s Drug .Stole, surpassingly beautiful, of the house of Large bottles si. Orlamunde, fell madly in love with ;i prince of the reigning house, and sent The Austrian Prime Minister’s tailor ecently had it printed in the newspa- him privately word of her love and an ! j, pr . s t lia t lie was not responsible for the offer of marriage. The prince, would j premier’s lack of style, gladly have married htjr. but for the fact • ~ that his parents would not consent. I Bucklin’s Arnica Salve. Social intercourse was somewhat strained in those days. lie was com pelled to dispaUth a i>ago to the lady with an ambiguous message, declining her offer on the ground that “four eyes” stood in their way. Tho young widow believed that he referred to her two chil dren, and promptly put them to death, notifying him that the obstacle was re moved. A terrible scene ensued between the prince and his murderess ladj- love, after which ho tied into solitude and she died of remorse. Since then her ghost is said to l>e condemned to haunt the hails of the Hohenzollerns. and her appearance is a warning of death to some members of the family. About llfeeon years ago, the terror of the inhabitants of Berlin, on account of some reported appearances The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kheum, Fe ver Sores, Tetter, Charmed Hands, ‘ all Ski " Ceqtil Zcotices. Notice to Debtors anti Creditors. GEORGIA—Cow fit a County : All persons having demands against tlie es- tale of Mulberry 8. Smith, late of said coun ty, deceased, are hereby notified to render in their demands to the undersigned according to law; and all persons indebted to said es tate ere required to make immediate pay ment. This lOtli day of October, 1888. Frs. fee, $3. .1ENNIE SMITH, Aiim’x M. S. Smith, dec’d. Drs. Starkey A Palen have the liberlv.to ra rer t.. the following named well-known per sons ubo have tried • I, ir treuiment: Hon. \\'ir. I). Kelly, Member of Congress, Philadelphia. Rev. Victor L. Conrad, Editor Lutheran Observer, I’hilmtc pliia. Rev. Charles W. Cushing, D. D , Rochester New York. Hon. Win. Penn Nixon, F.ditor Inter-Ocean, Chicago, III. W. 11 Worthington, Editor New South, Birmingham. A la. Judge I! P. Vroomnn. Quencmo, Kan. Mrs. Mary A. l.lvern ore. Melrose, Mass. Judge K. S. Voorhecs, New York City. Mr. E. C. Kiiicht, i’lillinielpliia. Mr. Frank Siddaii. Merchant. Philadelphia. Hon. W. \V. Skuyler. Easton. Pa. Edward L. Wilson, S>3 Broadway, N. Y. t Editor Pbila. l’hoto. Fidelia M. l.you, Wuimea, Hawaii, Sand wich island. Alexander Ritchie, Inverness, Scotland. Mrs. Manuel V. Ortego, Fresnlllo, Zacate cas. Mexico. Mrs. Emma Cooper, Utilla, Spanish Hon duras, C. A. J. Cobbs, Ex-ViceConsul, Cusubanca, Mo- J. I. & G. 0. SCROGGIN Application for Leave to Sell. Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Files, or no pay required.- It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refund ed. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. J. Lyndon. For sale, also, by J. L. Askew, Pal metto; G. W. Glower, Grantville. A fat girl at Ravenna, Ohio, reduced her weight 07 pounds by drinking viue- sar. How Doctors Conquer Death. Doctor Walker K. Hammond says: I “Alter a long experience I have come | to the conclusion that two-thirds of all deaths from coughs, pneumonia and ! consumption, might be avoided if Dr. Acker’s English Remedy for Consump- of the W lute Lady reached such a heigh | Hon were 0 ° !v car ef U llv used in time.” that the kaiser liad every one of tlio »00 j Thig wonderf * ul lvlue( i y i s sold under rooms in the Schloas thoroughly searched, ;i positive guarantee by W. P. Broom, m tho hope of finding some clew *o the j Newnan, Ga. mystery; hut had ho succeeded, I doubt ■ GEORG I A— Coweta County : John L. Bean, administrator of the estate of Alexander i5ean, late Of said county, deseased. having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for leave to sell the laud belong ing to said deceased, ail persons concerned are required to show cause in sai l Court by the first Monday in November next, it any they can, why said application should not he granted. This October 5, ISSS. W. H. PERSONS, Pr. fee, $3 00. Ordinary. Citation to Heir-at-Law. whether the people would have given up their pet sujiersuUon. Many are ready enough to testify to linving seen this pale, white robed apparition before the death of the late euqx-ror. and stories are current of her having shown herself once again since that time.—Lucy C. Lillie in The Cosmopolitan. He in ubperiisements. - - - - - - - - k'WVWWX.WV UTTMC KKVol.VICRN. St-nd stamp for uUiNO, price list to JOHNSTON & SON, Pittsbu rgli. Children of Kansas City. Pi'ofessor Stanley Hall published re cently the result of examinations made of very little folks in Boston schooLs. Professor Greenwood made similar in vestigations among ihe lowest grade of pupils in the Kansas City schools, and a table of comparisons is printed. The per cent, of children ignorant of common tilings is astonishingly less in Kansas City schools than in the Boston; even the colored children of the western city made a much better showing. Another subject of investigation is the ! alleged physical deterioration in this: country. Examinations were made of, hundreds of school children from the j age of 10 to 15, and comparisons taken with tho tables in MulhaU's Dictionary of j Statistics, London, 1S84. It turns out i that the Kansas City children are taller, i taking sex into account, than the average j English child at tlte ago of either 10 j or 15. weigh a friction Ws at 10, bu; j upward of four pounds more tit 15. while i the average Belgian boy and girl com ! pare favorably with American children j two vears younger. Tito tabulated statis- • tics show two facts, that the average! Kansas City child stands fully ae tali as | the tidiest, and that in weight he tips the beam against an older child on the other : side of the Atlantic. —Charles Dudley ! Warner in Harper’s Magazine. PARKER’S MA3R BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Ka li to Restore Gray Hair io its Yoafhful Color. Prevents PaJitiruir and hair falling 5Co. and $1.00 at PrnggivtH. HINDERCORN9. Tho on ly sure Cure for Coma. Stops a! 1 pai u. Ensn corn fort to the feet. 15c. at Druffffist* Hiscox A Co., N. Y. PARKER S 01NGEB.T0NIC GEORGl A—Coweta County: To Marie Wright, of Washington City, Dis trict of Columbia, heir-at-law of Mrs. Sa rah A. Robinson: Whi tens, 11. T. Thompson offers fl:-> will of Mrs. Surah A. Robinson, late of said county ofCowvta, deceased, for probate in solemn form: You are required to show cause, if any, before the Court of Ordinary of Coweta county. Georgia, by 10 o’clock a. m., on the first Monday in November, !SSS, why said pa per propounded should not be admitted to probat as- the last will and testament of Sa rah A. Robinson. This October 1, 1888. W. U VERSONS, Prs. fee. $3.»i. Ordinary. Administratrix’ Sale. On t lie 1st Tuesday in November, 1888, I as file adrninistrix on Ihe estate of Elizabeth S. Little, late of Coweta county, deceased, will sell to the highest bidder for cash between the legal hours of sale, before the Court-house door in the city of Newnan, said county, the dwelling house and lot whereon said deceased lived at tlie lime of her death, lying west of the Mineral Spring in said city, bounded on the east by Mineral Spring lot, south by land of Hardaway and Hunter, west by land of L. K. Ray, P. F. Cnttino and Mrs. Hollis, containing in the aggregate thirteen acres, more or less. Sold as the property of said deceased to pay debts and for distribution. MARY M. ARGO, Administratrix. i he best of all remedies tor Inward Pains, Colic, Indiges tion, Exhaustion and al! Stom ach and Bowel troubles. Also i the most effective cure fori j Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis and! : affections of the breathing] organs. It promotes refreshing I sleep, improves the appetite, ' overcomes nervous prostration, and gives new life and strength 'o the weak and aged. 50c. and (1.00, at Drgguists. EXHAUSTED VITALITY Administratrix’ Sale. GEORGIA—Cowkta County: | By virtue of an order from the Court of Or- ! ditiaryoi Coweta county, will be sold on the | first Tuesday in November, 1888, before tlie Court-house door in said county, between the I legal hours of sale, the following described i property, to-wit: 1 Two hundred and two and one-half (2112*4) acres of land, more or less, the same being all of lot number forty-three ($3;.lying in Panther Creek district of said county ol Coweta. Sold as thu property of E. Q. Hammond, late of said county, deceased, being the lot whereon flie said E* Q. Han mond resided at the time of his death. Sold for the purpose of distri bution and to pav debts. Terms cash. This October" 1888. JANE A. IIAMMOND, Prs. tee, $t.20. Administratrix. Have removed their stock to the store-room on Greenville street formerly occupied by W. P. Broom, and with new and attractive additions there to are better prepared than ever to serve their customers with anything that may be needed in the Dry Goods or Grocery line, and at the lowest living prices. Their groceries and other staple goods were mostly bought before the re cent rise in prices, and they propose to give their custo mers the full benefit of this advantage. They have the nicest and prettiest line of fall and winter Clothing in town, and respectfully invite an in spection of the same. They are also headquarters for fine Boots and Shoes, and can of fer inducements that will make it to your interest to see them before buying. Give them a trial. They will take pleasure in showing their goods, whether you wish to buy or not. M. V. Ashbrook, Red Bind", California. Jamas Moore, Siiji’t Police, Illandford, Dor setshire, England. Jacob iVard, Bowral, New South Wales. Am! thousands of others In every part of the United States. NEWNAN WAGON COMPANY. AT FOLDS OLD STAND, DEPOT ST., NEWNAN, GA, ri'HB SCIENCE OF LIFE, tl-.a -k p«M Medical Work of thu Administrator’s Sale. uge *>a Manhood, Nervous and 1 Fl.Tsical Debility, Premature Dvellno, Brrors of Youth, nud thunnsold raiseriesconseqaont sheroon, SU) pages S v.i, pruncriptions for all diseases. Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00. by* ■tull, sealed. Illustrative sunple free to ail young »d mlddio-ageil men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1S35, Boston, Mass., or Dr. TV. II. PARKER, grad uate of Harvard Medical College,25years’prac.ice In Boston, who may be consulted confidentially. Specialty, Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Balfineh st. A Novel Writer’s TborawghnejK. Mr. E. P. Roe was a believer in Ben ohnson’s saying: “Easy writing makes iard reading.” He carried his correc- jons even into the composing depart ment of his publisher, often taking the ioof reader's place and making clianges iJM before the tvpe was sent to the press 00m. —Cosmopolitan. Just Think of It. Some people will say things about ther people without thinking that other eople can say things about some people s big as beams compared with motes, hink of it.—Galveston News. Gold Dollars Scarce. Gold dollars are used for-bangles and trinkets to such ait extent that they have become source and command a premium «; tvrenr -live cents.—Chicago Hera!-.;. Sir E - win Arnold, the editor of T! Daily Tde-rraph,* wrote his •-Light 1 Jtoia” whli-.t traveling in tho raiiway earriag 10 and from Lis newspaper of fice. Opium for tho Yellow Fever. Our Chinese reporter asked Dr. Yong i Tvse Hing. of Pell street, about his ex- ' perience with yellow fwer in China. -In j Kwong Tung. Foo Kkn. and Kwong Si," ' he said, “there were a few cases of yellow fever several years ago. The fever was called by the natives *wun biun.’ It never became epidemic, owing to the people's habit of smoking opium. ” • Does the smoking of ophun prev-en; or cure yellow fever?” ‘•Certainly it does. Wherever opinn; is smoked it destroys yellow fever. ’ ••But is not the opium smoking habit as dangerous as the fever?” ••No; it takes at least a year of con-I stant smoking to acquire the habit, as ad old opium smokers will testify. There might be yellow fever all over the United States, hut the Chinese opium smokers would not be affected.” Dr. L; Shi Leon, of Mott street, said; ‘•Why. certainly opium smoking cures i vellow fever. I had two cousins hi Mem phis during that terrible yellow fever scourge in IS75. who simply smoked their pi’tes the moment they had caught t! • fever, and got well in less than :v-> -• hours. No. there is no danger cf gen :;g the opium lia; nit me patient . - . , - : - it is a hard tiling to learn how t 1, us C.j pijie. ’ ’—Won Chin Foo Iu New York San. MARVELOUS i GEORGIA—Coweta County: i By virtue of an order from the Court of Or- dinary of Coweta county, will be sold before the Court-house door in said county, on the I first Tuesday in November, 1888, between the j legal hours of sale, that tract or parcel of land in said countv whereon Gilbert Weaver re- I sided at the time of bis death, containing one j hundred acres, more or less, being the west j half of lot No. 267, originally In the First, now Haralson district. Also, one acre in the town of Senota, bounded as lollows: on the north j by lot No -J, section 17 of town survey; on the ! south by L. E. Key’s lot on the west by L. E. j Key and lot No. 3, section 17, town survey; on the east by J B. Hunnicutt. Also, in the ; town of r-enoia, lot No. 4, in section 17. town ; survey, said lot containing five-eighths of an acre, inore or less. Terms cash. This Octo- j ber 3, iKss. JOHN M. TIDWELL, Prs. fee. *o.52 Admr. of Gilbert Weaver. We are now prepared to do any kind of Wagon work, and in the best and most workman like manner. Nothing but se lect material is used in the con struction of our wagons, and every vehicle of our manufac ture is sold upon an absolute “Compound Oxygen—Its Mode of Action nnd Ms Results,” is tlie titleofn new hmehiic* of two bundled pages, published by Drs, Starkey & Pulen, which gives to all inquirers lull in format Ion as 10 this remarkable cura tive agent and a record of several hundred surprising cures in a wide range of chronRi cases—many of them after being abandoned In die by other physicians. Will he mailed free to a y address on application. Read the brochure. DKS STARKEY A PALEN, 1529 Arch St. Philadelphia, P». THE MACON TELEGRAPH. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE FOR IT. The Macon Tki.eisiiaj * 1 !! is. In all respecta, a Democratic journal, and laithiul to I principles of the Democratic t arty as set. forth at. St. Louis when that party endorsed and renominated GROVER CLEVELAND, AND ACCEPTED HIS TARIFF REPORT?! MESSAGE AS ITS PLATFORM. 11 supports Cleveland and Thurman with all its power, believing that tin: election of tlm^e patriots and statesmen is necessary to the continued prosperity of Ihe country. Tlie Teueurach is located at THE BEST NEWS CENTRE in the South, and lias unrivalled advantsgM for gathering and distributing the latest news in an urea of territory greater than that Of any of its contemporaries; and while it, as afl leading journals should, keep its readers ad vised on tlie political issues of the day, it maintains its well-earned reputation as a careful newsgathorer, and furnishes the LATEST NEWS FROM ALL PARTS of the world, at the same time preserving a pure and wholesome tone, so that it is a wel come visitor to 1 lie farnitly circle and farrp, as well as to the business house and work shop. * The Dait.v Telegraph Is delivered by carrier or sent by mail (postage free) every day in the year for $9 00: f- r six months for tl 5o; for three months for $2 25; and for one month for 75 cents. THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH. This popular Weekly contains the cream of tlie n*-ws carefully selected from the Daily, and is just the aper for the farmer, meehatt- ic or business man who is too much occupied to read the Daily. It is sent at tlie low price oi ft 25 a year. Sample copies of either edition sent on ap plication. Address* THE TELEGRAPH, MACON, GA. guarantee. MEMORY DISCOVERY. Any book learned in one reading. Mind wandering cured. Speaking without notes. Wholly unlike artificial systems, rirac-y condemned by Supreme Court. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes. Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Hammond, the world-renowned Sp< .-ialist in Mind diseases, Daniel Green leaf Tiion p-n n. tlie gr^at Psychologist, and others, sent post free by Prof. A. LOISETTE. 237 Fifth Avenue. New ^ 01 k. Sheriff’s Sale lor November. GEORGIA—Coweta county: Will lie sold before the Court-house door in Newnan, said county, within the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday In November next, the following propertv, to-wit: Northwest corner of lot of land No. 97, con sisting of fifty 50: acres, more or less, situate in the land district, but better known a<= Cedar Creek district, said county of Coweta, and bounded »s follows: On the north and west by lands of Jacobus Petty, on the east by lands of Jimmie •smith, end on the south by lands of James Rowland, being the place whereon Nathan Giles lived in 1881, and bough* fr m Marion Hyde by Mabala Gibson :n i860 Lev ied on as tfie prop-erty of Maliala G:b-on to -alls y a mortgage fi. fa. issued from O .vein Superior Court in favor of Broom A scro—in v s. the said Msiiala Gibson. Tenant in po sl« n ;• z:.notified. This October ■jlh. Isas. prs. ee, *5.25 GE >. H. CARMICAL, Sheriff. All kinds of WAGONS, (double or single,) DRAYS, CARTS, etc., made to order, with patent iron hub and axle or otherwise, as purchaser may desire. Special attention given to buggy, wagon and plantation repair work. Buggies over hauled and repainted. Horse shoeing a specialty. All work done by skilled workmen, under the supervis ion of an experienced superin tendent, and WARRANTED. Get our prices and give us an order; we guarantee satis faction. D. J. FOLDS, Supt. Cleveland and Victory THE DEMOCRATIC STANDARD FURLED TO THE BREEZE ! UN- The Contest of 1888 Openedl WITH THE CONSTITUTION BAT- j TLING IN THE FRONT BANKS. The triumphs of The Constitution in re« j porting The campaign of ls-q are well remein* he red! It whs th- first Southern paper to an* 1 u«,mice Cleveland’s election anil majority, I and Atlanta had celebrated lliat event before other Southern cities knew of it! The Con- j stjtution lead all Southern papers in 188A | Our arrangements for reporting THE CAMPAIGN OF 1888 | are fuller than ever befor-. We have estab* ! fished correspondents in Boston, New York, i (fincinnali, Chicago, St. Isniis and Son Fran- ; cisco—and men hers ot The Constitution staff will make jrequent trips through tb* doubtful States. Through special and excb sive arraugemew; with the Boston Herald, N< w York world, Chicago HeraUl and St. Lonis Globe-Demo crat, tlie progress of the campaign will be e'e ailed In Tn k Constitution as in no other Southern newspaper. Special letters will be printed weekly from the six hading correa- poroientA of the country. The Constitution stands, as it has al ways stood, high in the confidence Of Demo cratic leaders, and their views will be ex pressed through its columns. We pledge ou readers that the great campaign in 1888 will be Reponed Witn a Fullness GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPP’S COCOA Valuable Farm Lands For Sale COTTON SEED WAN TED. EREAKFAST. -•liv a thorough knowl.-dt:c of the itui.i: 1st s which govern the operations! if digestion . ntitrl ' ' ol w< :—leeted Cocoa. Mr. Epps has pr vid 1 nr break tables GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi nary of -.fid county, I v>:i -e'! for cash, at p ;blic outcry, before the Coort-bonse door in •; ■ • . ,,f NV•, an,-oui:ty, between Un it ral rs ol -ale. on the first Tuesday in N •. ;r i ext, a- the property of my In tes ta! t of land n in ber eighteen i» in the •'rig.: r.r.ii district o: said countv. couUfin- ■ • ball - -J'. j-r»*s, ,• kr. wn as tic- i.UNDIE I a AYER LOT. link I'rat runs it, I gn fine !:!• lliiiUi' O..C 721 E. a There are fewer sari Jer sights in t: is world than that of mates whom tao passage of years has mis-mated.—J. G. Holland. _ . _ . tontv -k wh< re' -r there a w-.»k . -■ ; V - ou;*-fives :iu-'’Iie<-1 it :i!o urcai fi, constitutes cue c f the :,:r-st u-itfii :<• - in the county. This lai.il v. ifi 1 i ng the he rs. Fhl JOHN \SKh W. ’.tfiifir J. M. Lundie. HomuL-opaihic v h-mi-;-. London, England. - - ..ka ;-jr -:»lc b;. McClendon J: Co., Newnan, Ga. I will pay the highest mar ket price 7 for an unlimited quantity of cotton seed, deliv ered at any station on the At- nd West Ft : i- : v : i- road. Will have parties at each station to receive, weigh any pay for the seed. I. A. SMITH. Newnan, Ga. I anil accnr cv never tx frre nttempteil by a , Southern newspaper. Subscribe now forthe t campaign. Tlie iiaiiv will be furnished for H.OO per l month, or*2.50 lor three monilis and *5.00 for I six months. The weekly, twelve pages, and , iuL of the campaign, 5o cents for six months, i or *1.10 a year. | This offer of fifty cents fur the Weekly Con- j stilulion for six months ought t<* put* every I Georgian who can read on • tir Met. Twelve 1 pages every week tor six months for 50cents. | Subsi-ribe ;:t oti je. Send fifty cents and get i tlie full cum pa sn news Address THE CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, Ga. L S ClgG hnsglven „..iver- '-‘ten in 1 Iu » Days, ■'j -.ire et cpo. .rps 'ad vG cir, I i vec* a anSmun » tri e it aad teelswiei - yrdodr t>/ :bs Zri-j CUxiul "a. limnoi.S Ohio. iend- arors. inc it to afi *A. J. TOSEB, 3.D., 0 ,131. tric: t: :o. iU.-ka inlii by Druggist! j A. J. LYNDON, Agent, New nan, Ga.