Newspaper Page Text
$49.22
For this beautiful
Top Buggy, manu
factured by us here
in Atlanta’Georgia.
A Southern Buggy
for Southern trade,
has a fine Leather Quarter Top, has genuine
Leather, Spriug Bottom Cushion, and Leather
Back, is elegantly painted and fully guaranteed.
Regular retail price $05.00 to $75.00.'
90 For this fine Collar and Hame,
nickel mounted Harness, sold with
every GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY, regular retail
price f 12.50 to $15.00.
Catalog and full description sent on request.
UOLDEX EAGLE BUGGY CO.
IBS-160 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
BABY BLANKET.
With the Exchanges
Rees-Adamson.
There’s No Difference
between my plumbing and that for
which some men charge twice as
much as 1 do. Well, the proof of
the plumbing is in the wearing.
Give Me an Order
and you’ll see how qniekly it is
Idled and how small the bill. That
will prove one part of my claim
anyway. Time will prove the oth
er beyond all question.
W. L. Sexton,
The Newnan Plumber.
Insurance
Master Bill Joe Nunnally, of
Newnan, is visiting Master Casper
Lehmann.—LaGrange Reporter.
Mrs. A. P. Brewster, of New
nan, who has been visiting her
daughter, Mrs. T. E. Patterson,re
turned home yesterday.—Griffin
News and Sun.
Miss Martha Askew, of New
nan, is spending the holidays with
Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Askew,
at 92 Angier avenue.—Sunday’s
Atlanta Journal.
Mr. Willie Prather, of Newnan,
spent Christmas day with home
folks. He has many friends here
who are always delighted with his
visits.—Hogansville News.
Mrs. A. G. Hendricks, of New
nan, accompanied by her daugh
ters,Misses Emmie Sue and Grace,
spent several days this week with
Mrs. W. J
News.
Talmage Moses, of Turin, Rich
Rev. and Mrs. Henry Smith
Rees announce the engagement of
their daughter, Annie Louise, to
Mr. Ralph Winfred Adamson, of
Carrollton, the marriage to be
solemnized on January 24th, at
their home near Turin.
A Dainty Affair, Durable, Warm and
Easily Malle.
tf the saying is true that as a stool
can stand on three legs so anything is
bound to be a sueeess that has three
qualities to recommend it, the baby’s
| blanket illustrated Is certainly worthy
| of consideration, for It combines the
three practical qualities of being easy
to make, durable and warm, as well as
having the dainty beauty so necessary
to u baby's belongings.
To make it, knit on medium sized
wooden or rubber needles in plain gar
ter stitch two pieces nearly a yard
square, one blue, one white, using
Shetland tloss.
When the squares are completed put
a sheet of \wol wadding between them
and tack, as you would a comfortable,
with blue ribbon, having the tiny bows
come on the blue side of the blanket.
With the blue Wool join the edges
with single crochet; then crochet a bor
der In knot stitch. This Is done by
pulling a loop 011 the needle up until It
Is about ail inch long. Through this
<3
i
The bride is a charming and ac- >°op pull another loop, this time very
close, as it is the tirst loop of a single
complished young woman. crochet. Take tin* second loop of the
Mr. Adamson is a prominent at- single errehet through the lirst long
I torney at the Carrollton bar—a »°°1> Um l’ n
j J , two slitchrs on the needle. 1 Mill the
i man of extensive travel, nigh edu- woo j through both, mid (ho single ero-
Announcement
We bog to announce to our customers and friends
that wo arc now in our commodious now store,
with a full stock of General Merchandise, and have
recently added to this a complete line of furniture,
burial eases, etc. Also wagons, buggies and har
ness, mules and horses; all of which will lie sold
at the lowest prices, either for cash or on time.
We also carry a complete line of Fertilizers, \\ hicli
we mix to suit any and all of our customers. W e
also pay the highest prices for cotton and cotton
seed, and give the lowest rates on storage and in
suranee, and make liberal advances on all cotton
stored witli ns. Thanking you for your patronage
in the past, we respectfully solicit a continuance
(/ the same.
cation, and wide popularity, hav
ing spent considerable time in the
departments at Washington and
four years a government contrac
tor of education in the Philippines.
He is nephew of Congressman
Adamson and a brother of Mr.
John R. Adamson, of Carrollton.
Fire,
Life,
Dangers of a Cold and How to Avoid
Them.
More fatalities have their origin in or
result from a cold than from any other
cause. This faot alone should make
people inoro careful as there is no dan
ger whatever from a cold when it ip
Hogan.—Hogansville j properly treated in the beginning. For
many years Chamberlain’s Cough Rem-
ody has been reoognizud as the most
prompt and effectual medicine in use
ard Ingram, of Sharpsburg, auditor this disease. It nets on nature’s
loosens the cough, relieves the
lungs, opens the secretions and aids na
ture in restoring the system to a healthy
condition. Sold by Dr. Paul Ponistou,
chet In finished. Then draw the hunt
on lh(< needle out about an Inch; pul! a
short loop through It. .Make a single
crochet Into tin' fourth or lifth stitch
on the edge of the bladkct and repeat
Dr. Fred Spencer, of Atlanta, whV
have been the guests of Miss May
Woodward for several days, have
returned homc.-
Sun.
-Griffin News and’Newnan, Ga.
t
Accident,
Burglary,
Tornado,
For any disease of the skin there is .
nothing better than Chamberlain’s
Salve. It relieves the itching and burn- j
ing sensation instantly nnd soon effects !
a cure. Sold by Dr. Paul Peuiston, I
Newnan, Ga.
Atlanta & West Point R. R.
Co., the Western Ry. of
Alabama.
Italians Displace f egroes
on West Point Railroad.
h. W. CAMP CO.
MORELAND,
GEORGIA...
Atlanta & West Point Railroad Co.
The Western Railway of Alabama.
KNITTED IIIjANKBT.
from the first long loop nil around the
edge. The next row is made the snme,
using the knots of the preceding row
for foundation stitches. Repeat these 1 No ii)|n<> hi
rows three times and finish with a row | ——1
of Hhell stitch.
The materials required are three
skeins of blue Shetland floss, one skein
of white Shetland floss, two sheets of
Wool wadding, a piece of blue ribbon,
Direct Lines Between North, East, South and Southwest. U. S. Fast
• Mail Route. Through Palace Sleeping Cars. Dining
Cars. Tourist Sleepers to California.
KKAl) DOWN
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23, 1906.
KRAI) UP
It ufip
r> min
Policies
MRS. W. Y. ATKINSON & CO.
Newnan, Ca.
'
T. M. MARTIN
[g Does all
IH kinds of
| Tin Work, Roofing
Plumbing and
Repairing.
Expert work and low
E] prices win. Shop op-
jjj posite Pinson Hotel.
gtasasasasssEisssaessasasEsasssi
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
The 5-cent packet is enouph for usual occasions
Theffamily bottle (60 cents) contains a supply
for a year.All druggists sell them.
esssssasBSssasia
I TAKE YOUR CLOTHING TO |
*1 J S. C. CARTER S CO., J
i i OPPOSITE HOTEL PINSON,
f | when you’^ want them |
H cleaned, pressed, repaired aj
1 or dyed in the best manner |
| and at the most reasona- jj
lj ble prices. |
Declaring negro labor unsatis
factory the Atlanta and West
Point railway is installing Italians
in its roadway department. The
Italians are being used as section
hands and are being distributed
along the different sections of the
line between Atlanta and Mont
gomery.
The northern and eastern rail
roads have been using immigrant
m ! labor as section hands for many
{§] j years, and have found them very
|j | satisfactory. The Southern roads
!f] have relied on negroes for this
11 class of labor, but the negroes
Lg have become unsatisfactory and the
!|]j southern lines are gradually fall-
^ 1 ing into the custom of the great
j railway systems of the north and
east,
i Something over 35 Italian im
migrants have reported for duty to
the Atlanta and West Point dur-
I ing the past few days, and others
i will arrive until all the places
! along the road are filled,
Other lines are expected to
adopt Italian labor along their
roadways, and irt a short while
; negro section hands will be scarce.
The labor problem over the en
tire south has become very acute
and many of the states are en
deavoring to secure a good class of
immigrants as laborers. The
farming interests of the south are
becoming very dissatisfied with
the negro as a farm laborer, and
would welcome the advent of a
desirable class of foreigners.—At
lanta Journal.
Very low rates to New Orleans,
La. and return, account General
Convention Southern Cotton As
sociation, January 11-1H, 190(1.
Tickets on sale .January Dili and
10th; limited to midnight, January
15th, 1900.
For further information and
sleeping ear reservations, apply to
nearest Agent, or write
J. !’. Billups,
General Passenger Agent.
F. M. Thompson,
Traveling Passenger Agent.
Atlanfci, Ga.
No. lVi; two medium sized rubber nee- inarm
dies and a medium sized bone crochet 1111 1,1
hook.
The color scheme In a blanket like
the one shown may he changed to suit
each Individual taste. A very pretty
effect may be obtained by knitting
both sides of (lie blanket with white
wool, putting in narrow bands of color
at each end and making at least 0110
I row in the border with the colored Shet
land floss.—Designer.
1 lint
9 9T|)
2 Mi
Jl III |
A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the super
intendent of Cart Service at Kingston,
Jamaica, West Indies Islands, says that
she has for some years used Chamber
lain’s Cough Retnedyifor coughs, croup
and whooping cough and has found it
very beneficial. She lias implicit con
fidence in it and would not be without a
bottle of it, in her home. Sold by Dr.
Paul Ponistou, Newnan, Ga.
DtM'oi'iiHiiK For a Hum Dniicc*.
For those fortunate folk who stay In
the country until the bright autumn
days are over It Is the season now for
harvest home festivals, barn dances
and tty.? like. A big, roomy barn la
the Ideal place for tills sort: of festivity,
but the harvest home effect can be ob
tained even In a city home by a Judi
cious commingling of ingenuity and
irape paper. At a big barn dance at
Newport rows on rows of shocks of
corn represented an autumn cornfield,
and no one not in Ihe secret suspected
that every one of tlios" cornstalks
was made of erupe paper. Another fes
tivity given early In the season In the
Thousand islands had abundant deco
rations of autumn foliage, and the
guests were mystified to know where
It all came from.
i- trip
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Mi x Iro, (In 11 torn 111.
-Men Ik
Almve I rains dally. Connect Ioiik ill New Orleans for T<
for TiiKkogee, '.1 IlKtemi for 'I iilliilciKHpe.
biilinniKo ueeoiniiioiliitlon lenviiH Atlanta dully, except Hominy lit field p. in
leaves I.nlirnnge at :.Vi a. m. arrives Altunin H:I5 a. in.
Trains tin mol SO I’nllinnn sleepers New York amt New Orleans. TIiioiikIi eonelii
on mill New Orleans.
Trains 117 nml IIS Washington unit Southwestern l.lnilteil I’nllniiin sleeper*, n
ears. oliKcrvutlnn mat .lining ears. Cnmplcle service New York nml New Orleans
Train 117 I'nltcil Slab - fie I mall. Through day conches Atlanta nml New Orleme
Wrlie for limns, selpi'lnles mol Informallon.
K. M. THOM I’SO.N, J, I'. BIM.t'I’H,
T. I’. A., Atlanta, On. o. I'. A., Atlanta Ua
Oil AH. A. WK'KKKSIIAM,
I’res. ami den. Mgr., Atlmilii. On
At Olielmw
Kctii ruing
- Washing
nipmlmei l
An Apple DcNucrt.
Peel nnd halve tart apples; make u
sirup of granulated sugar and water
and put the apples in It; let them cook
until they can be pierced with a straw;
arrange the apples on the platter they
are to be served In; boll the sirup down
and pour over the apples; when cold,
heap Irregularly with a meringue of
the whites of four eggs, four heaping
tahlespoonfuls of pulverized sugar and
for the Cable Piano «> e -* u ' ce , of ■ Iemo 1 n: “Pf to “ e wlth
chopped almonds and set In the oven
and sell the “Chicago , on H board and brown quickly; serve
Mason & Hamlin and I very cold, with u rich custard,
of standard
Pianos and Organs.
I ai£ agent
Company an
Cottage,”
other organs of standard makes.
These instruments are warranted
to give satisfaction in quality and
price. Don’t buy an instrument
without consulting me.
W. H. Reynolds,
tf Newnan, Ga,
The Crip.
' “Before we can sympathize with otli-
! ers, we must have suffered ourselves.”
i No one can realize the suffering atteud-
| ant upon ail attack of the grip, unless lie
has bad the actual experience. There is
| probably no disease that causes so much
i physical and mental agony, or which so
: successfully defies medical aid. All
Wnlntila and Ilatternnta.
The city boy on a visit to the country
Is often puzzled In trying to distinguish
black walnuts nnd butternuts In the
green state. The leaves are almost
alike, being compound nnd having a
variable number of leaflets arranged on
a long stem. The butternut stem has
from nine to seventeen leaflets, anil the
black walnut from fifteen to twenty-
three. The teeth on the latter are larger
and sharper than those on the butternut
and lack the fuzzy stern, but the real
distinguishing feature Is the odor. Hav
ing once smelled the crushed leaves of
a butternut and a black walnut, a per
son can never fail to know them there
after.—St. Nicholas.
His Own Half.
There Is a time tn every man's edu
cation when he arrives at the convlc-
. by the prompt
Do you want to subscribe for any ! lai,1 ’ s Con » h Remedy. Among the tens
newspaper or magazine published in i thousands who have used this rem-
uewspapei , T , edy, not one case has ever been reported
the United States.’' if so, your sun-| i las resulted in pneumonia or that
scription will be received at the News j has not recovered. For sale by Dr.
office tf 1 Paul Peuiston, Newnan, Ga.
, , , , i tion that envy Is ignorance; that 1ml-
danger from the grip, however, may be , , f. . . . . ,
e ,, , 1 ' tation Is suicide; that he must take
avoided by the prompt use of Chamber- fr , r
vxr nran au Vila
himself for better, for worse, as his
portion; that, though the wide uni
verse is full of good, no kernel of
nourishing com can come to him but
through his toil bestowed on that plot
of ground which is given to him to till.
To CI«a^f Sweetbreads.
Carefully pull off all the rough anil
fibrous skin. Place them In a dish of
cold wnter for ten minutes or mors.
They are then ready to be boiled. They
must always be boiled twenty minutes,
no matter what the mode of cooking
Is to be.
Fashion’* Echoed.
The long coat Is to be extremely
fashionable.
Embroidered shirt waists are to be
worn all through the winter, but the
material will be white hr tinted flan
nels and thin wools.
Jackets of plain cloth, with skirts of
plain or fancy woo! und perhaps a
waistcoat to match the skirt, are an
English Idea In tailor mades.
Fashions for children of from five to
eight still lay great stress on the long
tvnlsteil dress.
Tailor suits of fancy lainage as seen
in Parts are strictly practical, though,
strangely enough, fancy wools, even
when trimmed, tire considered less
dressy and better suited for the mid-
season than cloth suits.
Smart little cloth capes trimmed with
velvet tabs have found their way back
to fashion’s realm.
Take up almost, any evening dress
and examine it carefully, und it. will
be found, if not of the draped or prin
cess order, to consist of a baby waist
cleverly disguised by the scheme of
decoration and a full circular, sun
plaited or thirteen gored skirt.
You too would have to build
"bigger burns It you would
ouly listen to rcasonnnd “In
crease your yields per aero”
by enriching your soil und feeding!
your pluute with tliut wonder-worker,
Virgiali-Carolint Fertilizer.
It has been the tremendous success
of many furmers all over the South,
who started life with only a few acres
undaono-horHu plow. Now, after using
these fertilizers lor many yours, those
farmers are neb. iteud what they Buy In
Ouralmuiiuo. Auk your dealer for It, or
•end do. in stamps to puy cost of wrup-
Iping and postage on a copy. Uo porn
anil ask for Vlrginia-CarolfnA iei tili-
zers, and accept no substitute. „
Vlrginia-Carollna Chemical Co.,
Richmond. Vu. Atlanta, Oa.
Norfolk, Vo. Bavunnuh. Ga.
Durham, N. 0. Montgomery, A la.
Charleston, 8. O. Memphis, Term.
Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La.
IncreaseYoat
Yield* Per Acre
Z. Greene, D. D. 8.,
Officii on .Second Floor of
Black Bros, (lo.’s Building
L. M. Fanner,
LAWYER.
Office on Second Floor of the Arnall
MoroliundlHe Co.’s Building
Dr. C. A. Smith,
VETERINARIAN.
Trents all diseases of domestic animals.
Calls answered day or night. Office
at Goarreld’s Liverv Stable.
New Postmaster at McCol
lum.
Charles Park has been appointed
Postmaster at McCollum, this
county. He succeeds S. S. -Mc
Collum, who resigned the position.
Wood’s Seod Book
FOR 1906
iB one of the handsomeHt and
most valuable publications of
the kind issued. The useful
and practical hints contained
in the annual issues of Wood's
Seed Book make it a most
valuuble help to all Farmers
and Gardeners and it has long
been recognized as au up-to-
date authority on ail
/
Excursion Rates via Central
of Georgia Railway.
To New Orbans, Lt., anti re
turn, account Gem ral Convention
Southern Cotton Ass> ciition, Jan
uary 11-13, 1906. one fare plus 25
cents round trip Tick-ts on sale
Jan. 9th and 10th, final limit J?n
15, 19C6.
Garden and Farm Seeds,
particularly for southern planting.
Wood’s Seed Book mailed
free to Farmers and Gardeners
upon request. Write for It.
T.W. Wood & Sons, Seedsmen,
RICHMOND. • VIRGINIA.
We solicit your orders direot, for both
VEGETABLE and FARM SEEDS,
If your merchant does not sell
WOOD'S SEEDS.
For further information apply
to nearest Ticket Agent.