Newspaper Page Text
For this beautiful
Top Rugpy, manu
factured by us here
in Atlanta,'Georgia.
A Southern Bugcy
. for Southern trade,
nas a fine Leather Quarter Top, has genuine
Leather, Spriujr Bottom Cushion, and Leather
Buck, it* elegantly painted and fully guaranteed.
Regular retail price $65.00 to $75 00.
90 For tM" fine Collar and Hame,
4k ■ nickel mounted Harness, sold with
every GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY, regular retail
price 112.50 to $15.00.
Catalog and full description sent on request.
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO.
IBS-160 Edge wood Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
1——n!
1
L
m 1
Your Lovely Gown
stands un danger of nial-treatnient from
the use of my newest
Sanitary Open Work Plumbing
My “uow-a-dnys” wnsh stnnds are sci
entifically arranged and built. They
nre ornamental ns well as sanitary.
•Inst visit my plumbing shop and lalk
over the wash stand question and see if
I can’t arrange on one or more for your
home.
W. L. Sexton,
, The New nan Plumber.
Shop in new Arnnll Building.
Insurance
Fire,
Life,
Accident,
Burglary,
Tornado,
Policies
MRS. W. Y. ATKINSON & CO.
Newnan, Ca.
I
q] CnrDiyrF3 tTTTJ CrfrO PTrJ CrTfJ GTrJ tTTrJ CgrO CTr3 tTffJ PTf^3 gfrJ [TTl
T. M. MARTIN
Docb all
kinds of
Tin Work, Roofing
Plumbing and
Repairing.
Expert work and low
prices win. Shop op
posite Pinson Hotel.
fgjnltnHlInnlCmltnnlGtnllHrJPinlDinlCmKnflHjTnlCTnlCTillCiriJ
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
The 6-cent packet is enough for umial occasionr
Th«|family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply
for a year.All druggists sell them.
r ffirgplCinlPiftltnnJIof^tnnJCn ^ Pinf racial Pi nip)
TAKE YOUR CLOTHING TO |
IS. C. CARTER I CO., j
| OPPOSITE HOTEL PINSON,
j§] when you want them |j
cleaned, pressed, repaired aj
or dyed in the best manner |
and at the most reasona- igj
ble prices.
fjUnHHHfOtofJDiritnfdtofdPi rJ CnrD friru i/] rd lord Gj
Do you want to subscribe for any
newspaper or magazine published in
the United States? If so, your sub
scription will be received at the News
offloe. tf
Land of Promise
(Continued from pngo it.)
windows beautiful, its external
ornamentation most elaborate, its
multitude of carved figures on roof
marvellous, its view from tne
towers vast and bewildering on a
blight spring morning. Its pulpit
of Cardinal Richelieu is exquisite,
its columns massive. Much of
French history is associated with
this beautiful building, but time
forbids any details. Its Treasury
boasts fragments of the true
Cross (and a nail from the Cross)
and Crown of Thorns, etc. It will
hold easily 20,000 people, and has
had a very varied history.
The Morgue (or Dead House)
is just behind the Cathedral, and
on our visit Contained the un
claimed bodies of middle-aged
soldierly-looking man and an old
woman, as it were, in a bay win
dow within a corridor. Many were
coming and going as though seek
ing to find some lost one belong
ing to their homes. We were glad
to move on, and “let the dead
bury their dead.”
After this came the Hotel Dicu,
Hotel do Ville, Tour St. Jacques,
the Place du Chatelet, the Sainte
Chapelle of Louis IX (a most
beautiful specimen of Gothic ar
chitecture, built on the return
from the Crusade of 1265 A. D.,
with vety handsome doorway used
once upon a time as an entrance
of the Courts of Justice on asking
God’s blessing.
The Museums and Palace of the
Louvre next claimed attention,
with its imposing front, remark
able and exceedingly rich entrance.
Here one may spend days and
days looking at its miles upon
miles of pictures, etc. Among
many notable sights here we simp
ly mention a few of the chief treas
ures of art, such as the Venus de
Milo, Michael Angelo’s the Fet
tered Slaves, Leonardo da Vinci’s
Mona Lisa, and some of the choi
cest works of Raphael, Titian,
Veronese, Murillo, Guido Beni,
etc. Here also were the Moabite
Stone with the oldest extant He
brew inscription; Laocoon in
bronze; statues of Napoleon’s gen
erals and other noted Frenchmen.
Napoleon the F'irst’s sword (800,-
000 francs); the real crown of
Charlemagne; great steel doors
hammered by hand; Jacques
David’s Coronation of Napoleon I
(60,000 lbs.) Guido Reni’s Ecce
Home (20,000 lbs. j and Murillo’s
Immaculate Conception (750,000
francs), Ruben’s Crucifixion on
Calvary (20,000 lbs.), and Paolo
Veronese’s the Marriage at Cana
(60,000 guineas), the bath of Na
poleon, Heros (Gladiator), Eaun
de Vienne, Venus Acropie, Diane
(bronze covered with onyx),Wing
ed Victory (remains), Melhomme
and Roman mosaic, Caryatides,
and the Staircase of Honor, all
worthy of special examination. Op
posite the front of the Loure was
to be seen the Church of St. Ger
main 1’Auxerrois, from whose bell-
tower was sounded the signal for
1 the dreadful Massacre of St.
; Batholomew, and whence can be
1 seen on the other side of the Rue
;deRivoli the white marble statue
, to the most illustrious victim of
[that slaughter, Admiral Coligni.
At noon we lunched at the
! Palais Royal, with its famous gal
leries and attractive shops, pro
ceeding at 2 p. m. by the Boule
vard St. Germain (notable) and
j that of St. Michel, the Eostaine,
de l’Observatoire, the statue of
Marshal Ney (on the spot where
he was shot?) to the splendid Car
pet Manufactory of the Gobeline
Tapestries—ancient and modern—
the products of which are not sold,
ed by Louis XIV for the veterans
of the army, intended to accom
modate 5,000, but with only 500
inmates. The Church of the In-
validrs has a dome gilded in the
! time of Napoleon I that is visible
1 a long distance away, and beneath
it lies the remains of the Great I
General and Emperor, Napoleon
Bonaparte. On the Esplanade'
visitors see “the Triumphal Bat
tery"—mostly trophy guns used
tor firing salutes on great occa-
but employed as rare gifts from sions ’ The Artillery Museum was 1
the nations to great dignitaries on! f vcr -V interesting to us from the j
occasion. The workmen therein , fact lha * tbcre wo saw the vcr >’
must be designers and painters of blackfelt hat worn b y Na P okon 1
high rank, their work is done from 1,1 waM,me * represented in so 1
the rear of a design on which they , man >’ of h,s P ,cture ** als ° a l(,cl{ (,t
work, there are at least lO.ooo i hl . 8 ha,r ’ aml 'he brightly burnish-
, 1 , x .. ed metallic bier on which he was
hues and 12 shades employed by
them, and the work is done with I brou B ht from Helc,,a to lhe
nothing but a wooden peg in hand b,ench Cu P ital * and othur n,(,st j
and silk on .oilers. The shading ,ntcrest,n k r mementoes ot his ca-
and the work is ot the loveliest and reer ' , et a1 ’ Hence wo wallu:d
around to the opposite side ot the
Church of tne lnvalides from the
front, ascended stately steps, en
teretl a splendid marble ball with
railing ot marble in the centre
around a large circular space in
ed glass windows; the
(a small model of the Pantheon at
Rome, built on high ground and thc ra,:,n K “ ml 1,;anin « ll “ wn l 'l ,on .
it beheld—the tomb ol the great-
Announcement
costliest description imaginable.
It is owned and operated by the
French Government.
From thence we went to the
Church of St. Etienne (Stephen)
du Mont, with iis matchless stain-,
Pantheon P avcmellt i" st un, * cr Oie lovely
dome o’erhead, and on going up to ;
We beg to aniioiiiiee to our customers and friends
that we are now in our commodious new store,
with a full stock of General Merchandise, mid have
recently added to (his a complete line of furniture,
burial eases, etc. Also wagons, buggies and har
ness, mules and horses; all of which will be sold
at the lowest prices, either for cash or on time.
We also carry a complete line of Fertilizers, which
we mix to soil any and all of onr customers. \\ c
also pay the highest prices for cotton and cotton
seed, and give the lowest rates on storage and in
snruncc, and make liberal advances on all cotton
stored with ns. Thanking you lory our patronage
in the past, we respectfully solicit a continuance
o’’ the same.
*
l
H. W. CAMP CO. SK D :
in the form of a Greek cross, with
dome 272 feet high and finely dec
orated inside, on the spot where
Genevieve, the patron saint of
Paris, was buried in 512, having a
portico of 22 Corinthian columns
81 feet high, and a crypt beneath
with the tombs of Voltaire, Rous
seau, Cannes, Bougainville, et al.);!
thence to and through the Muse -|
urns and Galleries of the Luxem- j t l° vvn before it
bourg Palace (once a royal habita
tion, a prison house, a palace ol
the Dinctory and the Consulate,
and now the meeting-place of the
Senate ot the Republic), with its
many very fine and lovely sped- P' c 1 have so well loved,
mens of art on canvas and in stone,
| especially by artists like Rosa
Bonheur, Seules, Constance, Fred
erick* Moulet. From here we re
turned to the office by way of the
Egyptian Obelisk on the Place de
la Concorde, one of the finest
squares in the world “In the
centre is the Obelisk of Luxor,
estearthiy glmefal, Napoleon, The
sarcophagus containing his re
mains :s of red granite ot simple
but unique design and weighs 67
tons. Mr. L. F. J. Visconti,whose
design tor the structure was ac
cepted, designed it purposely, so
that ihe highest monarch ot earth
coming to see it will have to bow
And it is true,
Above the entrance to the crypt
aie inscribed words from the Em
peror’s last will: “1 desire that my
ashes may repose on the banks of
the Seine, among that French pen-
In the
alcoves on every side about the
sarcophagus are the battlo-flags of
long ago, battle-scarred. 11
are bas reliefs by Sun > 11, desi
with name.-, ol Napoleon’s colossal
victories by Prudior, and I
tomb’s dccoialiniis are oouible,
the same building are niunume
to Vauban and 1 uremic, while
T ^
Atlanta & 'Went Boiiifc Hailioad Co.
The Western Bailway 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.
HUAI) Don N
8CHEUULE IN EFFECT fll'll. 23. 13(15.
Pasha of Egypt. It is (a mono-' Jerome Bonaparte, and
lith of red granite) 76 feet high, j chapel to the right is the tomb of
and weighs 240 tons. On either j ’Joseph Bonaparte (once King of
side is a handsome fountain. Ar- Spain). One leaves the spot with
ranged about the Place are eight j regret. So
stone figures, representing the| olir brains,
chief towns of F'ranee, On the brunch people,
statue of Strasbourg the visitor I their love for him, as they should,
may generally observe a mourning 1 on uvery side one turns. Indeed
wreath. The Germans bivouack- from the time we entered Italy,
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Above trnlnx dully, Cmiiicctloiih uI New Orluiilin fur Tuxaa, Mexico, (Jiillforiilit. Al (.'liolmvr
(or TuHkcip-o, MllHtend for 'I'ul I nil ■ihhi-i-.
Ioiivch AIIiiiiIii dully, except Holiday al ft:K() p. in. Kctimilpir
Icuvch LnUniliKP al ft ilia a. la. arrlvea Atlanta H;lft a. in.
Tralna lift nial Uii I’nllninu alrcperH New York and New OrlentiH. Thraiisli ennehea Wmdilnir
... ,, , on mpI New Orb-ana.
much history Hoods Tntiiia 117 null IIH Wnahliiidoii mid HoutliwoHtern Limited- Pullman HleeporH. eonipartinei t
M,.., _ i,. t „„i n... I onra.i.liaeryiitlan and dining rara. Ooniplete aervlee Nnw York and New OrV
iNapolCun lOVCU tllC i I rain 117 United Hl.iiti a faat mail. Through day eomthux Atlania ami Now Orleans.
, . , Write for inaiiK,
and they show k.m.thomiwin,
T. I’. A., Atlanta
|od here in 1871. In 179299, three
; thousand people perished here on
the guillotine. Louis XVI, was
Switzerland and France until we
had departed we had not ceased
seeing his mighty works and hear-
liednleh and Itifnrmalton.
Ga.
(Ill AH. A. WICKICIIHIIAM,
I’rua. and (Ian. Mar.. Atlania, Un
I*. BILLUPS,
li. 1'. A., Atlanta (in.
executed near the central gate of "'ti his praises sounded by those
the Tuileries Garden.” What whom he had lived amongst and |
sights down in Egypt and up in
the French Capital has not this
majestic column been the silent
witness of! Quien sabe? And
“the Place of Peace” has some
'times been anything but what its
| name would indicate, as we have
shown. The Avenue de l’Opera
I closed the drive for the day.
The next day was taken up first
with seeing the New Opera House
the largest theatre in the world,
and the the Church of the Madele
ine (“the most beautiful edifice in
Paris, in the style of a Greek tern
pie, 330 feet long, 130 wide, and
too high, surrounded by Corinth-
j ian columns. In the colonnade
I are niches containing the figures
j of saints. Couture contributed to
the designs. The pediment, 120
: by 25, represents the Last Judg
ment. The bronze doors are sub
ruled over so ably despite all his
shortcomings.
We cannot forget either that it
was Napoleon who, when chained
by the English to the rock of St.
BURPEE’S
SEEDS GROW!
II you waul (lie
Best Seeds
llmt enu l>u grown, you bIiouIiI read The Thirtieth
Anniversary lidltlon of —
„ ,, . „ A BURPEE’S FARM ANNUAL FOR 1006,
sowell known ns the " Lending American Seed Catalogue." It Is mailed FREE to all
Better write TO-DAY. W. ATLEE BURPEE IB CO.. PHILADELPHIA. PA.
beyond all others difficult to satis- V IT! n/mw* |\ h Q
fy; He asks for that which a phil- > 1
osopher may often seek in vain at
Helena, and conversing as was his l he hands of his friends, or a fath-
wont about the great men of the j cr °f h‘ s children, or a brie e of
ancient world, and comparing him- her spouse, or a man of his broth-
sell with them, turned to Count er> L e afJ hk f° r Lhe human heart;
He will have it entirely to Him
self. He demands it uncondition-
Montholon with the enquiry, “Can
you tell me who Jesus Christ was?”
The question was declined, and shy; sod forthwith His demand is
Napoieon proceeded, “Well, then, j granted. Wonderful I In defiance
I will tell you. Alexander, Caesar, °f t,nie ar, d space, the soul of man,
Charlemagne, and I myself have with a11 its powers and faculties,
founded great empires; but upon becomes an annexation-to the em-
what did these creations of our P* re °f Christ. All who sincerely
genius depend? Upon force,Jesus believe in Him, experience that
alone founded liis empire upon remarkable supernatural love to-
Iove, and to this very day millions war ds Him. I his phenomenon is
would die for Him. ... I think I j unaccouutable; it is altogether be-
understand something ot human y°nd the scope of man’s creative
nature; and I tell you, all these powers. 1 ime, the great destroy-
jects from the Old Testament. On were men, and I am a man; none cr > ‘ s powerless to extinguish this
the Grand Altar is the Assumption | else is like Him; Jesus Christ was sa cred flame; time can neither ex-
>in white marble; and painting of I more than man. ... I have in- | haust its strength nor put a limit
| Magdalen at the feet of Christ.”) , spired multitudes with such an en-: 10 * ts ra, *gc. Ibis it is which
Thence, by the Palais de I’Elysees thusiasticdevotion that they would 1 strikes me most; I have often
| (with its facades on the F\uibourg have died tor me, . . but to do bought of it. fins it is which
St. Honore and the Champ Ely- this it was necessary that I should proves to me quite convincingly
sees, and fine old garden, now the be visibly present with the electric Divinity of Jesus Christ.'
residence ot the President of the j influence of my looks,of my words, Cet him who reads understand
P'rench Republic), and the two of my voice. When I saw men, fhis is “the common sense of hu-
Palaces of P'ine Arts (exterior), { spoke to them, I lighted up the
along the Champs-Elyseeu (the flame of self-devotion in their
world-famed promenade), to the hearts. . , . Christ alone has suc-
Palais du Trocadero with its splen-' ccoded in so raising the mind of
did auditorium and up into its man towards the Unseen, that it For any disease of the skin there is
nothing better titan Chamberlain's
Salve. It relieves the itching und barn-
... I , ... , iug sensation instantly and soon effeots
Mtlitarire but a short way we came of eighteen hundred years, Jesus : a oure . 8o i d by Dr Paul Peui8toni
to the Hotel des lnvalides, found-' Christ makes a demand which is ; Newnan, Ga.
tower for a view of the city. On I becomes insensible to the barriers
by the Eiffel Tower and Ecole of time and space. Across a chasm
maoity” and no figment of tne
imagination.
(To be continued.)
Office on Second Floor of
Hlsick Hros. Co.’s Building
L. M. Farmer,
LAWYER.
Office on Second Floor of the Arnall
Merchandise Co.’s Building
Dr. C. A. Smith,
VETERINARIAN.
Treats all diseases of domestic animals.
Calls answered day or night. Office
at Gearreld’s Livery Stuble.
Pianos and Organs.
I am agent for the Cable Piano
Company and sell the “Chicago
Cottage,” Mason & Hamlin and
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,
If Newnan, Ga.
How to Prevent Bilious Attacks.
One who is Hubjeot to bilious attacks
will uotice that fora day or more before
the attack he is not hungry at meal
times and feels dull.after eating. A
dose of Chamberlain's Stoinuoh and
Liver Tablets wheu these first symp
toms appear will ward off the attack.
They are for sale by Dr. Paul Peuistou,
Newnan, Ga.