The Newnan weekly news. (Newnan, Ga.) 189?-1906, November 17, 1905, Image 6

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USEFUL HOMEMADE GIFTS. Our Word About Maryland. Presents Made of Brocade How Bur*.*** L*n*th» Msy Be Utilized For Bookstand*. Envelop**., Wzzle P.pii Holder*, Addreee Book.. Etc. ItV- Of T HOSE fnactiintlng H<|tinr< I•i-ii(-ii<I<‘ tinnuiMk ninl ti*y which one hopm on tlio bargain tables of tin- shops nt very ainiill price* may Im> used to make any mi in I mt of pretty and uai'ful things for tlio Iioiihi'. 1)1*1 hits Of brocade Matin which have done fluty In an evening g nvii and are about to be relegated to tin rat; l>ng may iiIho be utilized In making vnrlmiN article* for Christmas present*. For small plec*** of tapeHtry and tiro cade diimiiMk there are other uk*'M and niiioIik them nothing more attraetlve than the book rack, non mo popular an mlilltl*in to library or bedroom ftirDlBh- IllgS. This consists of a fairly high back liter** mill two side pieces cut from hi out cardboard, the length depending on tin' number of books the stand may be usually r*s|ulrcd foil while the bot tom piece Is compos*'d of a pleoo of thin wo*si. nlil'li material could also Ik* used for tin* back anil sides. nmul Work Al**«r« Appreciated. Presents Made of Linen and Hllk. For Christman gifts there's nothin* In the world more appreciated than hand work. It can’t be got up In a hur ry—a careless Inst, minute gift. The hroderle anglalse collar lllustrate*l Is a charming gift easily made at homo. Sneh a collar Is a dainty and becoming finish to a bodice, but Is too txpenslve when purchased for most of ns to In dulge In. Yet the design which makes It beautiful Ih readily worked, and the material only a bit of handkerchief linen exquisite In quality, hut too Cl a piece tern that repeat! to speak. You of brocade with a put- Itself In "groups," so will then he nlde to With the wrangle of The Atlanta Constitution and The Atlanta Journal over candidates for gov ernor and other matters, The News has nothing to do. Hut in the matter of the .Mary land election there are some things which stand out too clearly to lie statute law muddled by any partisan preju dice or by any personal interest that may seek to becloud it. The disfranchisement of the negro in Maryland lias been de feated. One United States senator and a number of leading Demo crats who followed him, voting against Arthur (iorman and the bulk of the Democratic party, ami .joining their forces to the Hcpub- licans and to the large negro vote itself, defeated the Hoc amendment which would have given Mary land the protection enjoyed by so many of the Southern states. There are two parties in Mary land; Republicans and Democrats. Ami henceforward, the negro stands distinctly as the balance ol power oetween them. IIIWMIACK BOOKSTAND. httve one whole design lit the middle of the back. Cover (It** three cardboard pieces oh ls)th aides and fluialt off nt the edgon with a fairly thick gold or silk roll braid. The side pieces nre sewed firmly to the hack and the Joins hidden by the lirnlil. The wooden bot tom must t>e also covered with broende and glued strongly Into the cardboard. Hour little gilt knobs stuck underneath serve to raise the stand from the table on which It reste. Bookstands suitable for mlnature vol umes of poems and plays, so fashion able nowadays, can be contrived from small pieces of brocade covered card board. These measure about five Inches anil a half high and have curved back and side pieces. Here again the leugth la determined by the number of hooka Intended for the stand. These little stands art* charm ing when made iih shown In the sketch and fixed two together, back to hack. Book blocks are most useful. These consist of heavy shaped pieces gif wood covered with brocade, and they Hre quite Indispensable In keeping any number of books together on the tattle. They coat very little to make, und If the brocade Is well stretched over the wood and ualled down with tiny up holsterer's tacks there la no danger of the material wrinkling and apolllng the effect. Tapestry Is just as pretty a covering as la brocade for tin's** Ixsik racks Small brocade "envelopes” are most handsome ap|H*ndngea for the writing table anil are made In enrdlKiard cov ered with brocade und lined with satin, silk or sarcenet. The hack and wallet shaped flap piece nre cut In one piece und the front separately. When the two plecea have been covered and lined. Insert a piece of satin ribbon about two Inches wide Inside round the aides and bottom. This will allow the brocade envelope to expand and hold a fair quantity of envelopea or lo*>se paper. Tin* brocade Is finished with an edging of flat gold braid, which secures the flai» In the middle. These Untidy en velope holders can he made In all the shapes und siren of the envelopes most llltODKltli: AMH.AIHK COLLAIi. small to he an Item of much expense. The collar may lx* made for $1, and your (rut* needlewoinnn revels In plac ing each perfect stitch. The design Is a French one curried out In hroderle anglalsi* and all over embroidery. It Is *'Ut In three sections. A design of morning glories Is drawn In each sec tion and workisl with mercerized white cotton In satin stitch. Between this flower pattern are hunches of berries done In eyelet work. The entire collar threatening fact. Is buttonholed nrouitd. Chemisettes and collar and cuff sets, with ciift's deeper than ever, are be ing made now for Christmas giving. Richelieu work, which Is Just button holing and cutting out for a design with the too open spaces held tlrin by buttonholed threads, Is very popular for ornamenting these sets. Another pretty collnr and cuff set Is made of several linos of punched out i tioil, and Maryland must fact* the change existing conditions, in the interests of tnen or measures whom its majority may favor, and the white primaries will become the shuttle-cock of vantage, shifted from one side to the other of the loom which makes the web and woof of Georgia’s democracy. Establish the white primary in that it cannot be changed. Or follow tiie lead of the Caro- linas, and Alabama, and Louisiana and Mississippi in the more perm anent policy of removing forever the shadow and threat of a black balance of power from the coun cils of the state. This is what the people of Geor gia want and what the people of (ieorgia demand. And it is what the people of Georgia intend to do—if all the Marylands in America should com bine their Northern and negro votes to defeat the doctrine of a safe, sound and a definite white supremacy.—Atlanta News. Croup. \ reliable medicine nnd one that No amount of explanation, no should always be kept in the home fori amount of special pleading can COOKING OIL SALAD OIL Pure Deodorized Cotton Seed Oil Is a wholesome vegetable product. When properly • used is better than butter at one-fourth the cost. For cooking either bread or meats is far superior to lard at one-half tiie cost. If used for salads is equal to olive oil and only costs half as much. This store sells WESSON COOKING and SALAD OILS, manufactured by the Southern Oottton Oil Oo. These refined products of cotton seed are all that is claimed for them by the manufacturers. They have been tested by thousands of housekeepers and have never failed to meet all requirements and expectations. The housewives of Newnan and Coweta County should test these clean, wholesome culinary products. They are economical, and effect a saving of money for all users C. P. STEPHENS S CO. The Prompt Service Grocers. hide or becloud that ominous and Moreover, it will be difficult if not impossible for the Democrats ever again to remove the shadow and threat of a negro balance of | power from the polities of this half : Southern state. The opportunity I has been lost by division, by fac- mmedinte use is Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It will prevent the attack if , given as soon as the child becomes 1 Imarse. nr even after the croupy cough apjtears. F sale by Dr. Paul Puniston, Newnan, G holes urraiiged In Indian tile. In table linen Hedehro work center pieces, napkins and the mnnll table covers that are hardly more than large centerpieces are newest. Tbla work Is a cross between Hicbelleu and lace work. The effect la gained by but tonholing around bits shaped like old Jewel work designs and la then cut out carefully and the openings filled In with the prettiest lace atttches. Be tween the scallops of the edge runs I tiny buttonholing, made lace fashion by casting stitches across Uie back and working over them for foundation. Among the little things that are hard ly more than a Christmas card are pin future as ltc,st she can. The negro vote with all its venality, with all its ignorance, with all its prejudice and with all its corruption is there to Htay and to menace political life in Maryland for an indefinite num ber of years. The only possible lesson which the Maryland election can I tear to Georgia is the warning to do in time what is necessary to l>e done | in this vital matter. Maryland is half Northern and half Southern, und therefore, half of Maryland does not feel or care altout this negro problem as we do in Georgia. For Georgia is almost exclusively Southern. The few Northern peo ple who live in our state are an honor to it and are as. strong or stronger than any Southerner in their demand and insistency for white supremacy. Hut one of two things stands out crystal clear in this emergency. Either we must get rid of this shadow of a black balance of pow er or we must make into a statute law the precaution of a free white primary to protect the people of the state. PRESENT MODES. Contract and Color Enllvi*a Fash ion’* Picture. The piquancy of contrast enlivens tli** new nutuniu fashions. Modes as far apart as the poles fltnl place In the schemes of the gown builders. The Louis XV. style, with Its long, sharply pointed bodices, flowing skirts and lace ruffles, Is to march side I* side In fa vor with the princess robe, and by way of further variety there Is the tailor costume, which Is to It:** * It all Its own way for outdoor wearVvlth the long basqued, tight fitting coats, though the short French coat also obtains a cer tain amount of favor with those whom It suits. The long redlngote, forming a double tunic, appears to be among favorite fancies for the present season. The bo lero will evidently not soon disappear. Shall We Convince You? nANDKBUOHIBP CASK, cases. Those with heads silhouetted In black water color paints on a back ground of colored linen, with black ; headed pins stuck around the edges, | muke mighty useful and acceptable gifts. A bureau basket fashioned like one of the collupslhle wastebaskets In min iature Is a pretty trifle. It Is not moro than three Inches high, and tsith sides nnd base Hre made of silk finished sep arately and Joined with narrow rib- 0l ,„ thu other of these two twins. The basket ts left entirely empty , , , , or Is partly tilled with tape measure, things must be done. Division is scissors, thimble nnd emery. On one already here; and with division side outside ts n pocket gathered on comoB alreutlv the coquetting with an elastic. On another Is a fat plu- It is hard sometimes to make a merchant believe that somebody else can collect money from people whom he looks upon as deadbeats, yet we are in a position to con vince the most skeptical that we can do that very thing. During the past twelve years we have collected over a million accounts from people who had been dunned in every conceivable way; people whose creditors never ex pected to recover a dollar. We guarantee to collect five times as much as our fee amounts to, and we expect no percentage on the collec tions until we succeed; after we succeed we ask only six per cent. If you will write us we will introduce you to a new method of bringing dead beats to book, a method that very seldom fails. THE NATIONAL COLLECTION AGENCY, Washington, D. C. Atlanta & West Point Railroad Co. The Western Railway of Alabama. Direct Lines Between North, East, South and Southwest. U. S. Fast Mail Route. Through Palace Sleeping Cars. Dining Cars. Tourist Sleepers to California. cushion and n third has a ueedlebook. The fourth Is plain so that the basket may be set flat against the hack of bu reau or dressing table. The handkerchief case seen In one of the cuts Is n dainty affair evolved from a cardboard box covered with embroidered strlpH finished top nnd bottom with n putting of silk. Across the lid diagonally Is Htretchod a piece of wide satin rlhlion with a pretty bow , on each end. AUTUMN GOWNS. It Is now occupying the attention of those who originate models In l’nris , . . and has been proclaimed In favor again, significant and suspicious rp, le louave rounds the line of the fig ure nnd Is slngulnrly becoming to -the slight form. A pretty example seen In PHOTOGRAPH RACK. An KNVKLOI'H OP SILK UHlH'ADK. In general use, nnd, needless perhaps to say, must he made quite half an Inch larger than the actual size of the jtaper envelope. A pretty waste paper holder can be made from u piece of cardboard mens uriug nine Inches high, with a diame ter of nine Inches The cardboard Is covered with brocade and lined with dark sarcenet, afterward Joined and sowed luto a bottom piece of round cardboard covered with silk only. Top and bottom are Antalied off with thick rolled braid, anil care muat Ik* taken to render the Join In the cardboard cylinder as imperceptible as possible. Engagement atul address books use up odd scraps of brocade. They can he bought quite cheap aud the origi nal covers replaced with dainty bro cade ones. Trinket boxes, blotting books, veil and glove cases, all can be made and, luatly, stands to hold cards. These ure particularly pretty when the pattern on the brocade la outlined In tinsel thread and the brocade after ward pasted on to the Inner side of the cardlKMird oases sold with playing cards, narrow silk braid sewed round the nature of the white primary ami the consideration for the franchise of the negro. Georgia has felt the shadow of this spirit before. In an election not many years behind us the negro vote was solicited by both sides, and the negro became a bone of contention and an object of more than healthful considera tion by both factions of Democratic Georgia. What the past has shadowed the future may solidify into a deep and permanent danger. All the men running for governor in Goor- a princess fashioned skirt of cham pagne colored cloth. The bolero was made of flgured plush somewhat like n tiger skin. It formed short, loose plaits both nt the hack nnd In the front, while the sleeves were wide and short, finish ing Into n turnback cuff. This sack bolero was worn over the bodice of lace, which terminated In the corselet or princess skirt. the hack as If nil In one. A broad j cars, observation an baud of the same plush decorated the hem of the full skirt. The effect of the severity of the skirt wns softened by the deep flounce of lace crossing the corsage and falling from a small point RKAI) DOWN SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23, 1905. READ UP No 40 No 84 No 8*1 No 38 Leave Arrive N o 85 No 87 No 97 No 88 8 15p 12 8Pa ] 9 26a 1 25 p 8 16p 12 40a Lv New Orleans Ar Lv.- .Mobile Ar 8 18p 4 12p 7 15n 2 55a 11 15tt 7 37a 11 U6p 5 OOH 12 16p 11 05p Lv ... -.Pensacola ......... Ar 4 OOp 5 00a 4 OOp 6 00a Lv .... ... -..Selma Ar 11 80p 10 85a — 9 !fm 10 06a 10 H0»i 1 80p 2 27p 2 52 p 8 Hip 8 80 p 7 14p " 32p 8 ftp tt 65a *7 68a Lv Montgomery. ...... Ar 10 55m 10 05m 9 44m 9 10m 9 20p 8 2 Op 7 4flp 8 17a 8 20p 5 23p 5 01 p 4 27p Ar Mllstead Ar Ar.. Ohehaw Ar Ar ......Auburn.- ... ..Ar 12 a r *|i 9 25p 12 86p Ar Columbus Ar 1 85p 9 25p 11 25h 12 IXIp 8 46p 4 80p 8 26p 9 02p 8 87a 9 12h Ar Opelika \r Ar West Point Ar *8 87m 7 55a 7 :?4p 0 58p 1 45p 1 10a 4 15p 3 80p 12 67 p 2 00 p 2 42p 8 OOP 8 20p 4 57p Il00|- 8!Wp 7 05 p 7 80p 9 .top 10 27 p 9 87ll 10 85n Ar LaGrange - Ar Ar - Newnan Ar Ar Fairburn Ar Ar ....East point - Ar 7 80m J\ 81 t 0 04m «28p 5 82p 12 51a 12 11a 3 06p 2 OOp 1 28p 1 06p 12 45n 11 H5p 11 40a Ar ....Atlanta Lv 5 80m 4 20p 11 lop 9 45a 10 52a 12 541 0 31 9 80p 11 I7| 2 86 p 5 48a 6 42n 7 *>•>.! Ar.. —Washington— - L% Ar _ _ Hnlt.lmnri* L\ U 15a 8 12a 3 85a 1210a 111 Iftp 9 15p 8 50p 4 25| 1 lBp 8 Olp j — — li) llalAr Philadelphia —Lv 1 OOp] Ar New York L\ straight and diagonally, and fastening Attractive Christmas Present Kaslly Made at Home. A rnok for holding special favorites among the photographs of personal friends Is an excellent present for Christmas. It Is quite easy to make one out of a strong piece of cardboard (*ia; all tlu* men running for United ed yoke of leaf green velvet, while the eut In fan shape atul covered with Stato8 Senate in Georgia and all | < ?lo8e ttttll, K cuff of the lace puffed lluen or silk of a good art shade. Then .. sleeve passed below the short, wide a network of ribbon should be made, the men who are running toi all J pi us i, mnuehe. The loose plaited bole going across and across, both on the the other offices put together are ro of plush terminated equally with the not to be weighed, in their per sonal merits ami relations. Iteside tremendous dangers involved in this issue. We implore the people of Geor gia to let no partisan clamor, no personal affiliation, nor any blind, time-serving policies prevent them looking this question fairly aud squarely in the face. -Meals Above trains dally. Connections at New Orleans for Texas, Mexico, California. At Chehaw (orTuskegee, Mllstead for Tallahassee. I.aGrange accommodation leaves Atlanta dally, except Sunday at 5:30 p. m. Returning leaves LaGrange nt 5:50 a. in. arrives Atlnuia 8:15 a. m. Trains 85 and;i*i Pullman sleepers New York and New Orleans. Through coaches Washing- r.iflt(**iptl at ! oa and New Orleans, iueroueinsieueu.il Trains 87 and 88 Washington and Southwestern Limited. Pullman sleepers, compartment 9. observation and dining ears. Complete service New York and New Orleans Train 97 United States fast mail. Through day coaches Atlanta aud New Orleans. Write for mans, schedules and Information. K. M. THOMPSON, J- P. BILLUPS, T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. G. P. A., Atlanta Ga. CHAS. A. WICKKRSHAM, Pres, and Gen. Mgr.. Atlanta, Ga To Publishers and Printers. lace on the corsage, falling in folds __^ above the close fitting cloth skirt. Of the costumes Illustrated one Is in soft gray frieze checked with white, i We have an entirely new process, on which patents are pend- trlmmed with puttes of gray cloth held j n _ w h ere by we can reface old Brass Column and Head Rules, 4 pt. down with small sliver buttons, vest , ,, , , ... . and revers of white cloth worked with I and thicker and make them fully as good as new and without any violet silk embroidery. It has a belt, unsightly knobs or feet on the bottom, collar and cuffs of violet velvet. PRICES. FAN PHOTOGRAPH HACK. the ribbons to the cardboard wherever Uiey croaa each other with brass draw ing pins or strong paper fastener*. If the latter are used, It will be necessary to pierce hole* for them with a small stiletto or sharp peuknlfe. The photographs are slipped through between the ribbon* which hold them In place, and about forty or fifty can be disposed of tn thl* manner. The rack forma an attractive feature In a man’s The other coatume ts of beige cloth, with collar and pocket flaps of velvet applique. The front fasten* over at the waist with a large single button. J. VERNON WA.LDER. The white primary a.s it stands may 1m? changed in a moment—in Bilious Attack Quickly Cured, the twinkling of an eye—as the a few weeks ago I had a hilions at- state committee may determine, tack that was so severe I was not able to • Granting that the present state go to the office for two days. Failing . , to get relief from niv family physician's committee is the essence of pat- trentmPllt t took three ot Chamber- riotism and the essence of iinpai- stomach and Liver Tablets and tial consideration for all classes in the next dav I feb like a uew man —H. afterward hiding the raw edge* and room when hung on the wall, or It may ! (Georgia Yet the time may come C Bailey. Editor of the News. Chapin, two piece* of ribbon at either *lde of be used to conceal the back of a piano I when sonu . othe ,. committee less S C These tablets are for sale by Dr. j the box to keep the card, in poeltlon. and be draped round with pongee eilk. j patriotk> und mure partisail may ^ Pematon. Newnan, Ga. | Refacing Column and Head Rules, regular lengths, 20cts each. “ L. S. “ and “ Rules, lengths 2in. and over 40cts. per lb. A sample of refaced Rule with full particulars, will be cheer fully sent on application. Philadelphia Printers’ Supply Co. MANUFACTURERS OF Type anil High Grade Prilling Material, 39 N. NINTH ST.. PHILADELPHIA, PA