The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, November 16, 1888, Image 2

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■ J Pq jijrald ami g>[lcertir.er.| Newnan, Ga., Friday, November 16, 1838. GRAMMAR’S BROKEN LAWS. Fof lies of Speech In Refined Social Cir cles—A Brief List- Til e strangest of all tho curious cir cumstances attendant upon the habitual disregard of grammatical laws is the un consciousness of the olTender. Our self made man and the wife he has tinkered into “a match article.” court, as orna ments to their drawing room, eminent scholars and literary lights, domestic and foreign; admire intensely in them the facile propriety of (expression in which tiiey are themselves deficient, and never suspect the effect of the contrast they offer. Does the inability to discern the difference lie in the ear or the intellect? I have called this insensibility the most Life of a Hindoo Wife. Not only is our bride thus turned into a drudge, often unmercifully overworked, but from the day sue gives up her cliiidliood to the day of her death—it may be for sixty years— she is secluded, and sees nothing of the world outside the walls of her fam ily inclosure. It should always, there fore, be borne in mind, when trying to realize Indian female life, what a very' important thing the domestic economy is to a woman; how largely the petty a Hairs of the household loom upon her horizon. Her happi ness or misery, indeed, entirely nepend on the manner in which the a Iran's ol the family are conducted. x,ow, con sidering that the female mind has for centuries been mainly directed to tins all important matter, it is not aston ishing to find that such questions as the proper method of eating and drmk- . ing, and of domestic propriety gener- singular oi the paradoxes connected with i —the intercourse, that is, which is our subject. May 1 retract the state- j permissible and right between the vari- menl lbjc and •mg, exhibits substitute the anomaly of people, !>orn well and bred well, educated according to the most approved methods, and moving in refined social circles, whose foibles of speech approach in num ber and rival i:i heinousness the direct lingual faults of illiteracy? People who drop the final g from par ticiples, and other words ending in with the constancy the cockney in misplacing h. People who say ‘die don t like it,’ without a suspicion that the conjoined abbreviation stands for “lie do not like it." People who inquire “you ready?” “you going?” and sometimes “where you been?” People who never by any chance say “between you and me, ’ but with the steadfastness of a holy purpose, you and I!” People who prido themselves upon the elegant accuracy of every sentence formed by their iips, and (ell you in cul tivated euphoniousness of accent, “I have traveled some in” England, Russia, iur- key, or Australia, and “I have not coughed any all night.” Peopls who have been on intimate terms with Lindley Murray and his col leagues for forty years, and not learned ous members of the household, male ■ and female—have long been regulated i with the utmost minuteness. To us who roam the world at will, ! and-whose interests arc often fixed far i niore outside than inside our homes, it i may seem remarkable tnulsueh in.ini tesimal restrictions and numberless : customs as arc found in full swing in ; an orthodox Hindoo household snould ! he remembered and carried out with the exactitude demanded _ of the womankind; but >f we consider Pint these make up their whole liie, and that they are called upon .to pay atten- j tion to nothing else, their capacity for recollecting when to veil and unveil, whom to address and avoid, when they’ must run away’, and when they may speak, ceases to be extraordinary , between 1 Qapt. R. C. Temple in Journal of the Society’ of Arts. The Cemeteries of China. But as soon as China was reached the silent cities of the dead came again to the fore, with greater prominence than over. One stands on the walls of Canton, near the Five Storied Pa goda, and sees the hills to tlio north all covered with graves. It is the same near any Chinese city. The living sailors Not Often Overworked. Perhaps here it would be well to say a few words about sailors and contrar diet some of the romance and false sentiment that is connected with them by people and writers who know abso lutely nothing about them. We had anSextraordinaril.y fine crew, which I studied closely all the way, and came to this conclusion; First, that Jack is not really vicious at heart, but at the same time lie is a {Perfect child and easily influenced by any character of strong will that he conies in contact with, so that one man who so desires can spoil and make discontented a whole crew, no matter how well they mav be treated by the oilicers. 13ec- ou.d, they are so much like children that they even have to be told when to go to bed and when to get up. The least little thing will upset them, and 1 have known of a whole crew coming forward crying and complaining be cause the cook had spoiled their soup. Third, that they do not have to work as hard, and that as a rule they are much better sed than the class of com mon laborers. It is all nonsense to imagine that a sailor is an overworked man, for he is not. Jack’s day is divided into watches of four hours each, four on and four off. Nor does this mean that they are ail, especially in pleasant weather, obliged to keep awake during the hours at night when on watch, only that they must be dressed and around. They generally have one or two men, chosen by lot, who keep awake and instantly arouse the others if any order is given. Then they’ are so trained by’ ! habit that they wake up instantly | whenever an order is given, and then ! go to sleep the minute it is executed. | Of course, in stormy weather this is i different, but in storms—and I have seen some pretty severe ones, includ ing a cyclone in the Pacific—there is not nearly so much to do as one would imagine.—Samuel F. Farrar in Chi cago Journal. that ain’t is not tolerated by any of them, OCCU py the city and the level ground, being an un-parsable word. . j t p e dead the hills. No corpse is al- People who consider the fact that they i owe( ] ^ be buried within the walls of were born south of Mason’s and Dixson's a Chinese city, and without the vast line warrant for ignoring the dictum, I ceme teries cover the hills, with no “After the words like and unlike, the f ence or other limitation about them, preposition to or unto is understood, ” j T q e Chinese family which can afford and crucify our ears by telling us on all 1 ^ builds a “horseshoe grave ” possible occasions “I feel like I should do,” so-and-so, and “He looked like he meant it.” Who as musically and audaciously say, “Iamaheao better,” or “a heap worse.” I heard a D.D. F. F. V. say in a ser mon, “It does seem like the Lord has some great and gracious purpose to fulfill in,” etc. And a few minutes thereafter, “I expect that this is the j proper interpretation of this passage.” There are people, on the other hand, j who, born and brought up in the shadow j of Yale, roll the phrase; “I want that! you should,” like a savory and insoluble j morsel under their tongues, and not a few, who, as Mr. Howells’ Minister Sowell regrets, will—albeit they are Harvard \ graduates—say, to the close of well spent lives, “I don’t know as.” People—this final count is written with groanings unutterable—who, with the best intentions conceivable (benevolent and syntaxieal). never let slip an oppor tunity of using the pronoun “they” when the antecedent noun is in the singular numlier. “If a person thinks they can do that.” “If anybody has lost any thing, they can apply at the desk.” “I was talking with someone the other day, and they said,” etc., etc. None of tlio phrases cited as foibles of speech'trench upon the debatable ground 1 of language. One and all, they are glaring defects, flaws in gems which lessen their value irretrievably. The critical inspector instantly discounts the intelligence or conscientiousness of him who tenders them. That those who are guilty of lapses of this sort know better, does not exculpate them or relieve the listener who respects his noble vernacular too truly to condone the unseemly familiarities that approxi mate insult. When the delinquents are those who assume to instruct others, the foible liecomes guilt. A distinguished author, at a reception given in honor of her visit to a certain town, pressed the hand of a sister writer w1k> was introduced to her, with the cor dial—“You and I had ought to have met before.” An eminent lecturer upon scientific subjects remarked at a dinner party, “The hall was not sufficiently bet to day. ” The principal of a collegiate institute announced during the commencement exercises that the presentation to liimself of a memorial from the pupils was a “change in the programme made en tiroly unbeknownest to himself.” He was taken by surprise by the tes timonial, and tire luckless phrase escaped him when off his guard. It should have been impossible for him to make use of it in any circumstances. If ho had never said it before he would not have said it then'.—Marion llarland in Once a Meek. bricked vault on the hillside, with the end built up in the horseshoe form. Poorer people stick their dead in shal low graves, on which a small tablet of wood or stone is put. In some dis tricts of Quang-tung, near the head waters of the Pe-Kiang river, the cemeteries consist of big jars set j in niches of the rocky cliff of the Mac-ling mountains. As you pass along the foot trails you see the steep rocks above thickly studded with these big car them jars, in each of which is a human body in a sitting position. In the rich alluvial plains, where no | uncultivable hills are available for burying the dead, a graveyard re sembles much a white ant village in Africa. The graves are sugar loaf mounds, thickly clustered together. While John Chinaman pays great re spect to the dead, he takes care that they do not appropriate much ground that is of value to the living. The cemetery of a Chinese village among the rich rice fields covers little ground in proportion to the number of graves. It seemed to me that bodies must havo been placed ono on top of another or ; stood upright, so thick were the taperr ing mounds.—Thomas Stevens in Chi cago Tribune. Reaching to Remote Antiquity. A few weeks since we alluded to the very interesting discovery of several thousand small tablets used by the Babylonian school children about 4,000 years ago. A more important study has recently been made among the ruins of an ancient city in upper Egypt, on the banks of the Nile. This discovery consists of a large number of tablets which gives us what cer tainly seems to be an authentic history of Egypt, or of some parts of it, from a date much earlier than that at which its present authenticated history be- ' wheat, gins, and which indicate an active f 1,r correspondence between the most re mote nations of the civilized cast at least 1,200 years before the Exodus, a discovery which leads Professor Sayce, the distinguished English ar chaeologist, to express the opinion Yhat there may yet be similar “finds” in Palestine. Are There Unknown Senses? Sound is the sensation produced on us when the vibrations of tlio air strike on the drum of our ear. When they are few, the sound is deep; as they in crease in number it becomes shriller and shriller, but when they reach forty thousand in a second they cease to be audible. Light is the effect pro duced on us when waves of light strike on the eye. When four hun dred millions of millions of vibrations of ether strike the retina in a second, they produce red, and' as the number increases the color passes into orange, then yellow, green, blue and violet. But between forty thousand vibrations in a second and four hundred millions of millions we have no organ of sense capable of receiving the impression. Yet between these limits any number of sensations may exist. We have five senses, and sometimes fancy that uo others are possible. But it is ob vious that we can not measure the in finite by our own narrow limitations. Moreover, looking at the question from the other side, we find in animals complex organs of sense, richly sup plied with nerves, but the function of which we are as vet powerless to ex plain. There may be fifty other senses as different from ours as sound is from sio-fit, and even within the boundaries of our own senses there may be end less sounds which we cannot hear and colors aS-different as red from green of which we have no conception. These and a thousand other questions remain for solution. Tito familial' world which surrounds us may be a totally different place to other ani mals. To them it may be full of music which we cannot hear, of color which we cannot sec, of sensations which we cannot conceive.—Sir John Luboock in Popular Science Monthly. The Treatment of Sleeplessness. Recipes for sleeplessness continue to [ present themselves. A correspondent of j The Lancet has found the following to be an effectual remedy in his own case: After taking a deep inspiration he holds his breath till discomfort is felt, then re peats the process a second and a third time. As a rule this is enough to pro cure sleep. A slight degree of asphyxia is thus relied on as a soporific agent, but the theoretical correctness of this method is somewhat open to question. Cer tainly there ia proof to show that the daily expenditure of oxygen is most act ive during the waking period, and that nightly sleep appears to coincide with a period of deficient tissue oxygenation. It is at least as probable, however, that other influences are associated with the production and timely recurrence of sleep besides that just referred to. This plan, moreover, however effectual aiid bene ficial in the case of its author, is not without its disadvantages. The tendency of deficient oxygenation is to increase blood pressure and slow the heart’s ac tion. With a normal organ, as an occa sional occurrence, this might not be of much consequence. If, however, the i impeded heart should also be enfeebled by ’• disease, the experiment might be re peated once too often. Another combatant in the struggle with insomnia lays down a series of rules, for tlio most part very sensible, to which lie pins his faith. Considering that the chief causes of sleeplessness are worrv and the want of a due amount of exercise and fresh air, he advises his fel low sufferers to observe the ordinary rules of hygiene relating to such matters, to take food and drink in moderation and to avoid of an evening the use of tea, coffee and tobacco. In dealing with severe nervous irritation from mental or physical work, he has found a daily rest an almost essential prelude to sleep at night. Thus he treats of sleeplessness rather as a tendency requiring constitu tional remedies than a symptom of mer brain excitation. There is much to be said for his theory and means of treatment.— Therapeutic Gazette. publications. * ONLY $3.1° FOB the HERALP& ADVERT- AND BemorestY Monthly Maga® 19 - , A W ONPERgUb^JBLI CAT10N ' Many suppose DEM® jTria great mistake, to bl l fashion magazine. Thisosz S^ ASBW!i D e- \t undoubtedly contains th<* JJg Hshed , but th» is partment of any n e T at enterprise and ex- the case from the fact d te department is perience are shown, - 01 ‘ , f In Deforest s yon equal to a magazine in_it- • and f( , cn re amuse- get a dozen magazines i }’ lo!e family. R c ™i' ment and instruction for 1 t “ < H r Literary attractions, tains Stories, Pocm^a'id h- ] leaseholdmatters, including Artistic, Screntrori"® steel Engravings, and is illustrated with or. ^ f Woodcuts, Photogravures, Water c. * ^ 0F America. making it the Mouel E * RN q b deb entitling Each copy C0!lt ?' r of the Msgazin<and in ant the holder to the selection of Any Pattern illustrated in any nun^ ^ over 53.00 worth of P aL er OF THE SIZES per year, free. the selection of ANY Pattern ‘ " of, ceuts , or over b manufactured, each valued at from 20 cents to 30 cent , .... vou fan get ten times the value,, of Sxfnffirffirn Order) 20 cents Published by W. JENNINGS DEM OR p HM0BE sT’s Monthly at a The above combination is a splendid chance to get our paper an Wheat as a Food. Dr. Calvin Cutter, the physiologist, who has made a careful study of this matter, says: “The history of the Roman empire in the time of* Julius Ctcsar shows that wheat as an article of food, combined with fresh outdoor air life, is capable of producing ana sustaining the highest type of physical manhood the world ever saw. The empire was built up and maintained by soldiers whose main article of food was There is every probability that the present prevalence of late erupting and easily decaying teeth is due, for one cause, to the use of Hour (wlnto) as food. In 8S0 of the school children in Woburn, Lexington and Bedford, Mass., in 1S74, under 12 years of age, two-thirds had decayed teeth. (See Reports State Health Board of Massa- 5lACt , no , chusctts, 1875.) There is every proba mat county patiently awaits the spade of tho excavator, and he thinks it quite probable that under the ruins : like Tyre and Byblos. the old J< Ulourning Costume of Coreaus. Mourning in Corea is a most burden some duty. When a father dies, for in stance,, the sons must dress themselves in a suit of sackcloth, with a rope girdle about the waist. On the head is worn on enormous hat, about the size of a rain umbrella, and made of basket work. This hides tho whole upper jiortion of the body, and for further protection against obtrusion the mourner carries a large fan before his face. It was in this disguise that the Jesuits were enabled to enter the country and carry on their worlx They have but recently laid it aside. Even the pipe is wrapped with white paper and white shoes are worn. The mourner is not expected to do any work, but at stated times lie has duties to perform at his ancestor’s tomb. All this is very hard for some to bear, as tho whole re sources of a fairly prosperous family may thus be exhausted. In the case of useful officials whom the king cannot spare from duty, the period of mourning may be shortened by royal decree.—Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. Laundry men in France clean Lm« without soap by rubbing it with boucs liuUitues. . '- of cities like Gibul of the Jews (Ez. xxvii, 9), and Kirjathseplier (the City of Letters), there may yet be found archaeological treasures in the form of books on clay, giving as an authentic history, supple menting, if not ante-dating what we at present possess. Whether the re cent discovery is to affect Old Testa ment criticism remains to be seen.— The Evangelist. ness is partly due to the present elusive and universal use of white Hour.” Then the doctor proceeds to give scientific reasons why this is the case. Rev. J. F. Clymer, Auburn, N. Y., thinks that one reason why children fed eilieily on white bread are so oiten hungry, and demand so much food be tween meals, is because their bodies are insufficiently nourished. “Their bones and nerves do not receive the nitrates and phosphates they need and are suf- Various Hints Concerning Diet. Children, especially young girls, are rarely properly dieted. There is almost universally a repugnance to meat and a hysterical liking for sweets or acids, that is unhealthy. When nerves cry for food, they are given a stone, and rebel in con sequence. A plentiful supply of meat should be eaten at least once daily, and this at breakfast, when the body needs bolstering for tho day’s work, and when the digestive tract is empty. Taken- then, with moderate exercise, such food is promptly assimilated and goes where it does most good, directly into the blood. I-heartily approve of late suppers, and am convinced that the . human animal, like others, sleeps best upon a stomach filled with light, digestible food. Of course there are idiosyncrasies; there are many kinds of people, and the kind of food proper for one would not suit another; yet there need be no departure from tho rule. An elderly lady came to me not long ago and said that it was no manner of use; she could not sleep if she ate anything before she went to bed. “What had you for supper last night, madam?” I asked. “Oatmeal porridge, doctor.” “Well, vou could not have had any thing better calculated to keep you awake. In the first place, oatmeal, no matter how prepared, is devoid of nutri tion to any one save the very strongest and hardest working of men It de mands for conversion into chyle an amount of nerve power that no invalid owns and few well people can give; in every other instance remaining un changed in the bowels until ejected as a foreign substance. Do not touch it again. Try instead a broiled bird or lamb chop, with a bit of toast. ’ And the change was all she needed to make her sleep peaceful.—William F. Hutchinson, M. D., in American Maga zine. The Recall of the Hawks. The recall was interesting and forms one of the most wonderful features in hawking. It was achieved by the' fal coner calling out several times with a loud, far reaching cry, “coomabee! coom- abee!”an evident corruption of “come (or coome) my bird.” The falconers voice at once arrested attention as being, from long practice, what authorities de clare it ought to be, “full, clear and loud if not “tremulous;” whence he was des ignated ns “the sonorous falconer.” These qualities were more than once re quired that day when the hawk flev, afar; but Peter’s voice never failed to reach her and secure her return. The cry varied with different men and in different places, being with some a long drawn “ho! ho!” and with others “hoo! ha-ha-ha!” all, however, being known as the “hollowing” of the fal coner. In this first encounter the recall was quite successful, for, in spite of her disappointment and hovering watchfully for the reappearance of the lost quarry, the hawk at ouce obediently returned to falconer’s wrist. She was then 44«rjr * i • . ir^ifjves its readers literature of last mg in- Cj jg-est and value, it is fully and beautifully 02 mrnm illustrated and has already ® ™ than national circulation exceeding* ~ copies monthly. ^ si* *\. & *<* ^ \1-PR1CE 25 CENTS'A NUMBER- YEAR! SPEClAEaARRAHGE^EHTS with Messrs. Chariles5cribncrtJbns'the Publishers enable us jo offer SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE with J The Herald and Advertiser at the low combination rate I $^.90. Send your order now. Subscriptions may begin at ai time. 1889—EXCELS ALL OTHERS-1889 LITERATURE, ART, AND FASHIO It gives more for the money and comb THE BEST AND CHEAPEST of tho ladv’s-books. greater merits than any other. Such popular authors as Rebacca Hardiner Davis. M'ss M G. Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper, m. McClelland. Miss Alice Bowmr Edgar Fawcett .Frank Lee Bened let. Howard Seely -» host of others * for ** Peterson,” and their names a r e a guarantee of the excellence of then stones. THE Mlfl VZIN E will bo profnselr illustrated with e’egnnt steel and other engrav and pretty FANCY AND WORK-TABLE PATTERNS, printed in colors. THE FASHION DEPARTMENT will present the MOTORED FASHH for outdoor and house wear, and will have, each month, A HANDSOS j PLATE, printed from steel. _ „ ,, TTrtT T« Contributions on HEALTH. THE TOILET, COOKERY. THE GARDEN, aiy^ HOtL HOLD MATTERS generally will be given in each nnmber, making a book invaluable to eve y if ELEGANT PREMIUMS FOR GETTING UP CLUBS! TERMS, ALWAYS IN ADVANCE, #2.00 A YEAR. With the elegant book, “Buds and Blossoms,” or a large engrav “Tho Morning Greeting,” ns a premium for getting up the club. With an extra copy of the Magazine for 1889, as a premium, tq, pereon getting up the club. With both an extra copv of the Magazine for 1889 and tlio largo eng ing or the book “Buds and Blossoms” to the person getting up the club. For Larger Clubs, a set of Dickens’s Works or a Sewing-Machine Address, PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, i ^■Specimens sent gratis, to gei up clubs with. S06 Chestnut St., Philadelphia,. 2 Copies lor 3 A Copies for 6 " “ 5 Copies for 7 “ 53.50 4.50 S6.40 9.00 S8.00 10.50 STAGG’S Getting Something for Nothing. It is always impossible to get some- i tiling for nothing honestly. It is al ways impossible to give something for nothing beneficently. This is as true in other realms as in the commercial, j It is violated by other methods than those of the gambler. The man who gives a dime or a dollar to a beggar for nothing does nothing to alleviate poverty. Ho increases it. This is the lesson * which the laggard brained world lias been so long in learning. But vie have learned it at lasL This lazv hind of charity, is not charity at all' This careless benevolence is not benevolence at all. He who makes the lx?ggar earn the dime or the dollar, before or after, by service first ren dered or by industry to be awakened and set in motion, docs a charity. But he who gives and neither demands a compensating energy before nor arouses a compensating energy after gives nothing. He has only helped a man to violate the universal and inex orable moral law against all effort, however disguiesd, to get something ij: nothing. —Chg^-jaaa Ucscm fering from hunger.”—Susanna Dodds, M. D., in Demorest’s Monthly. iin^aboos of the Orient. In China, to be brief, and to quote a ghost (who ought to know what ho is speaking about), “supernaturals are to be found everywhere.” This is the fact that makes life so puzzling and terrible to a child of a believing and trustful character. These Oriental bugaboos do not appear in the dure alone, or only in haunted houses, or at cross roads, or in gloomy woods; they arc everywhere. Every man has his own ghost, every place has its pe culiar haunting fiend, every natural phenomenon has its informing^ spirit; j every quality, as hunger, greed, envy; r malice, has an embodied visible shape j prowling about seeking what it may j devour. Where our science, for ex ample. sees (or rather smells) sev.er ptls. the Japanese behold a slimy, meager, insatiate wraith, crawling to devour the lives. of men. W here we ; see a storm of snow, their livelier fancy beholds a comic snow ghost, a queer, grinning old man under a vast umbrella. Genioresl s .uontbl^. the smartlv hooded and set upon tno cage, for both the falconer and the laird suc cessfully achieved this rather uifficult feat. There she took her place in silence, and apparently without discomposure, among her fellows, who had betrayed not the slightest excitement during this clamorous passage of arms. — Good W ords. A Novel Photographic Apparatus. Photogranhers are interested just now j, over a newlv patented camera. Detect- ives as well as photographers are inter- j csted in the invention, for no doubt it j j will prove a very effective weapon m the , hands of a person who may want at some j time to obtain an instantaneous photo of some face or scene. The new invention. NO MERCURY, NO Pui*on, Or any other Mineral Poison. It is N'ntnrc’s Her.ic.'lv, made exclusively from SRo.i.s ami lierbs. is perfectly harmless. It is the nn:» remrtly known to fiie world Mint has tv. r yet Cured contu'jio'ns JJIomI Poison in a:l c/.» n /at,*: . It cures IWrrr.rial Ttlienmniism. Cancer, Scro- a id i>;!s*.- hi.i.id diseases heretofore consid- i red incurable, li c iri-sany disease caused tr in i;',ii,are bv.od. it is now 'prescribed by tlmn- saiidsof me best puyBieiaus in the United SUUc«s. as a l on.:. We bii'c n ixyik trivin? n history of tills won derrul remedy, and tis «-ssrc«, from :.!l over the world, which witl convince you'tiiat nil we say is •".a- mid which wo w.il mail free on application. No family Simnid he wi h-'ut it. We have nn- o»h< r on. Contagious Blood Poison, sent ou same terms . , . \, i ,te us n liistorv of vour case, and our physi- ci.in mu. advi-o vimi jou by letter, in strictest confidence. We will not deceive you knowingly. For sale by all druggists. The SvrrrT Specific Co., Drawers, Atlanta,Ga. jC~w York. Tati llfoadway. London Eng., 35 Snow IL’.L the gel atilt o bromide sensitive plates, on , which impressions can be readily mace ! instantaneously. As to weight, this novel apparatus i weighs less than two pounds and is only i six and one-half inches long and three : and three-quarter inches high. It can be I earned conveniently in an overcoat pocket | as well as in a valise, and anctuer Lung i in its favor is that it is ready for use at i anv time. The plates of tno apparat-^ are in a continuous roll, admiring, o* a hundred negatives.—New Tcrx \v Oxld. Dr. C. McLane^ Celebrated LIVER FILLS! WILL CURE PAT. COFFEE PCT, MANUFACTURED BY T. E. FELL & CO. i Directions.—Remove F-- strainer, fill the pot with ho boiling water above first r from the bottom, leaving funnel in the pot with spout opposite the hani Replace the strainer, put the necessary amount of c fee, place on the stove, aq let water pour through W spout about ten minutes, • coffee will be ready for If the water flows too fr draw the pot to a cooler pi on the stove. The strei • can be easily replaced by anv'' housekeeper at trifling pht. By taking out the funnelandi using oniy tne strainer voxi/\ have the “Bo s” or “Oieeiv, % Coffee Pot. .and and Stock for S;le. sickness. Price only 25 cents at anv druq store. Be sure and see that Dr. C. McLANE’8 CELE-I liBRATED LIVER PILLS, FLEM- NG BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., is j on the box. None other is Genuine, j jUse IVORY POLISH for the Teeth,) Perfumes the Breath, jjjp’BitiNO your Job Work to Me. Clendon & Go., Newnan, Ga. I otter for sale ifiO aeres °f land, witiin d- mil.* of Puckett’s Station, well impr<?ed;ff ac.-rs m original woods, well waterd, gU orchard, well improved. Also 50 acre will Uuee miles oi Puckett's Station aid thri Point °p£[r md -'■’ ° n the : Allailt; ’ 1 wtf p -i.it Ka.Irond, JO acres in originn good orchard and good tenant house. I vvih also sell -lOti acres ol' land n Met] vtelher county Ga., within six ni’es l Lu.herv'lie and two miles east, ot Itocll hr°Hi nt -'i f us ! ul p is well improvedand e ) br- divided up into small farms. Prrfer s* - ing the whole farm in Meriwether.b j sel to suit purchasers. ’ t I " i‘l also sell lo ad of good vsuiil | harness horses ^ ^ ne K o r p;, l ;:^oEi ,, lo , ' , , , * :i,ion apply at my 1 h.,.L.i v '■ station, or to \v Hi