Newspaper Page Text
i •
in Atlanta, Georgia.
A Southern Bii^ey
for Southern trade,
has a fine Leather Quarter Top, has genuine
Leather, Spring Bottom Cushion, and Leather
Hack, is elegaiitlv painted and fullv guaranteed.
Regular retail price $0.** 00 to f 75.U0.*
90 For tl ’* s fine Collar ami TTnme,
v) r.*"'* nickel mounted Harness, sold with
ev ery CiOLhF N F M.I.1>HUGC. Y, regular retail
price $12.50 to $15.00
Catal. g ami full description sent on request.
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO.
158-160 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Land of Promise
(Continued from pnge 8.1
Greek Manuscript of the entire
Bible of the fourth century; Jer
ome’s Version of the llible, the
original Magna Charta and con
temporaries.
After the Museum came IIol-
borne, Old Stayle Inn, the Pru
dential Inn, the Prudential Assur-
RBOCKER FOUNTAIN BRUSH •
The above Illustration, drawn from
■ Hie, shows a Knickerbocker Fountain
Brush In use. The brush is made of fine-
velvety India Rubber and is so perfectly
Viable as to easily fit every curve of the
hiunan figure. It can be instantly at
tached to any water faucet, and but the
turn of a faucet Is needed to regulate the
temperature of the water to please the
bather. The water flows out through
^695 tiny pliable rubber teeth to the bath
er's Infinite delight and perfect satisfac
tion. It is a happy Invention, vastly
superior to all other bathing devices, and
fs ' indorsed by Physicians, Ministers,
Physical Directors, Health and Beauty
Spaclali^s, and people In all walks of
Ufa. Every brush Is fully guaranteed.
For wile by
gjw. Ij. sexton.
The New nan Plumber.
New Arnull Building, Phone 151)
Insurance
ceived the captive kings, David of
Scotland and John of France,
Here Cromwell was installed Corel
Protector. Here the coronation
banquets have been held for 8oo ™ c , e
years.” The nominal ruler of the
British Empire is IIis Majesty,
King Edward Vi I , and there are
and our hotel; after tea we went
with a carefully selected company
to the Whitechapel District by
seats for King and Queen in the bus, visiting Tynet.erry Hall Sc.-
,, , , , , entitle School, and the Salvation
House of Lords. Parliament was ’
Army Post where the famous Gen
eral William Booth, author of “In
, , . , Darkest England and the Way
Within the last several years has ^ h , , ,, ’
, , . i . • . . Out -dealing with the problem ol
been erected a large bronze stat ! 6 „ 1
c ,, r . “Submerged lenth; commenced
ure of Oliver Cromwell, the Great 0
not in session at the time of
visit, much to our regret.
F ire,
Life,
Accident,
Bunrlary,
| Protector, representing him with
Hible in left hand and sword in
right, “the greatest prince that
has ever ruled England,” a sincere
and godly man and a true patriot,
as well as the greatest man of ac
tion that has ever lived in Eng
land,” however grossly misrepre
sented by prejudiced royalist writ
ers and however grave the indig-
| nities visited upon his remains
(that reposed with other members
of his family in the extreme east
ern end of Westminster Abbey ) at
the time of the Restoration and
since, Cromwell is coming to his
own again, as recent biographies
.show; it is time justice were done
! to him by those nearest home to
the man, however tardy.
We passed St. Margaret’s
Church with its magnificent old
his great work for the help of the
submerged tenth of the English
people. In this Salvation Army
Post alone about 2 .0 of London’s
poor are housed at night, at an ex
pence of only two pence each. On
the next day, Sabbath, at Black-
friaisa free lunch was served in
ed, majestic. His life was a self-
denied life, susceptible, as Burke
to the attractions of historical
prescription, of royalty, of chival
ry, of an ancient church, installed
in cathedrals and illustrated by old
martyidoms, he threw himself, the
flower of elegance, on the side of
reeking conventicls—the side ot
humanity, unlearned and unadoni
ed. It was a life of labour and
toil; labour and toil unrewarded
save by the.secret sunshine of his
own breast, filled with the consci
ousness of Divine approbation, and
hearing from afar the voice of
universal future fame. It was a
life of purity. . . He was temper
ate. . . It was a life not perfect—
acerbities of temper, harshness of
language, peculiarities of opiaioi,
which proved him human anu
grappled him with difficulty to
earth, like a vast balloon ere it
takes its llight upward. It was
the life of a patriot. It was, above
all, the life of a Christian; it was
the lite of prayer, ot faith, of meek
dependence, of perpetu il com
munion with heaven. . . In fine,
we tell not our readers to mutate
Milton's genius; that may be too
high a thing tor them; but to nu
tate his lift—the patriotism, the
sinceiity, the manliness,the [unity,
and the piety of his character.”
(Gillillan). **
lu the language of flic poet
Wordsworth:
! Announcement
&
Wo beg to iitiiiomice to our customers and friends
lliiii we are now in our eoinuiodioiis new store,
w ith si lull stock of (ieneral Merchandise, and lime
recently added to this a complete line of furniture,
burial eases, etc.. Also wagons, buggies and liar
ness, mules and horses; till of which will he sold
at the lowest prices, either for cash or on time.
We also carry a complete line of Fertilizers, which
we mix to suit any mid till of our customers. We
also pay the highest prices for cotton and cotton
seed, and give the lowest rates on storage and in
siirnnec, and make liberal aihanccs on all cotton
stored with us. Thanking you for your patronage
in the ]iast. we respectfully solicit a continuance
c r l he same.
h. w. camp co. KT:
ft
r
%
Milton: 11ion sIhiuIiIhI he living nt Huh
connection with a preaching ser- j Kl J t 3 lllltll nood of Mwe . 8h0 in a tea
vice to about 400-700 poor people ot Htugnunt. wuturH. NVe me kcUImIi mull,
by these devoted Christian mem o, raise us up! Return to us again.
bers of the Salvation Army. The
“East End” ot London is a section
few but philanthropists and soci
ologists care to go into. It is tull
of sin and misery, a vertable “hell
without the fire.” The slums of
London are a sad sight to a stran
ger; what must they be to resident
observers, one can judge from
Thy houI wits like u star, unit dwelt
ttinirt;
Pure us the nuked licuvoim,majestic free.
So didst thou travel on life's common
way,
lu cheerful goodlincssjumt yet thy heart
The lowliest duties on itself did lay.”
“To study Milton's poetry is not
merely the delight of every accom
plished mind, but it is a duty.”
Atlanta & West Point Hailroad Co.
The Western Railway of Alabama.
Direct Lines Between North, East, South and Southwest. U. S. Fast
Mail Route. Through l’alace Sleeping Cars. Dining
Cars. Tourist Sleepers to California.
UK All IHlWN
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23. 1905.
Tornado,
Policies
MRS. W. Y. ATKINSON £, CO.
Newnan, Ca.
Charles Dickens’ pathetic account,
or from Prof. Huxley (some time I (Sir Egerton Hrydges). 1'or “the
president of the Royal Society;: (, ne great moral which reigns in
English window of the crucifixion, 1 (<I huve „ evera , lime8 travc | e( [ Milton is, in short, this: That
where are the quaint tombs ot Mil ! a.rouncl the globe, visiting, as I obedience to the will of God
tons wife, Cromwells mother, j ournc y ec j ( the m0 gt savage.de- makes men happy, and that dis-
Wrn. Caxton, and under the altar I graded peoples in barbarous lands; obedience makes them miserable,
of which lies Sii Waltei Raleigh, b ut j b ave never seen anywhere He is indebted to scripture inlin-
and many handsome memorials are | guch degradation aild misery as I itely more than to Homer and V11
to he seen in the vicinity. YVe: have seen in the cast end of my gd and all other books whatever.”
took in their turn Cromwell’s own cily » London’s present | (Rev. J. R. Boyd;,
statue, Parliament Square, White-1 greatest problem is -Work for the
hall and Government Ofiices, the j hoBts of the unemployed,” not to
Horse Guards < the headquarters sa y anything else. It would seem
of the Army, opposite Whitehall,). t0 an outsic [ cr that the mass of the
the Admiralty, Old Scotland Yard I peopk are not lo be matL . ria | ly
(famous in police annals, once the ^ benefitted until some radical * clefeat of the Sp.misn Arm;ida;an<l
property of the Scottish Kings and changes are made in tlie iniquitous John Fox, the devoted martyrolo-
later the home of Wren, .Milton, | ;i u ( l-Liws ol the Kingdom. Colo- gist of the Church of K gland,and
and Inigo Jones,) the ancient e- n jy, a tion is not enough. a loyal defender of the faith, “who
mm in «mifNinn. questrian statue of Chailosl.atj Another Lord's Day came with presented the M irian martyrs, like
ti a55iciBE3se£?S3S5S3Ea!aSEasc!£ri!!!aSEaaaa Charing Cross (where is a modern j j tg nuCf jj U j res ^ ai)( ] worship. In Phoenixes, alive from their ashes,
aj [|j copy of a cross erected near its site | tbe morning, while Mr. Cairoll chiefly to fulfill every duty of filial
T 5^5 R f 11 b > Edward I. in 1201, and at which vvendcu his way lo Blackfriars and affection. The life of mortal life
I. If!. 171 n n I 111 s Dr. Johnson said “the full tide of c 1.. .u ... ti... .1 m.. ” 1
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Iu the Church of St. Giles also
are buried with memorial tablets
Sir Martin Frobisher, the great
navigator and explorer, noted for
the prominent part he took in the
<-111ffor 11 i 11. At rhehnw
5:110 i*. m. Ui'timilhK
ln> Wn^hhiR'-
MpiiIh
AlxiVt* Irilln * (11111 > * 'OlllirH inn- III N**U Ol IfiiliM fill■ TrXnMi-xlr
for TiisIii'kit, M11 st <n * I for TuIIhIi'm*. »•,
l.nt • nitiK»' iii'imu moilnlIon l« nvm Afluilt 11 »lnll v, .m . pf Huiifltiy i f .. MO
)cii\i' LnOriiiii.o of * :.H» 11. in. n rrl v**h Allitinii H 15 n. in.
'I'mins MM iiihI I'll 1111111 m HlcnjuTh Now York nml Now (frli'iiliN. 'I IitoiirIi
on niitl Now 1 )ri«‘iuo>.
TrniiiH 117 hikI MS NViiMliln^toti iiihI soutliwi t* rn I«l in 11 I iMillimtn *■!« i |mtp com |*ii rt in «■ t t
run . oIimtvh! l**n mnl 'lining cnr k Ooiii|»l*-f* • rvl<’* ' • Yoil. p *.<| Ni w Orlnur
T in ill 07 I n 11**1 - fnt' • I *• 1 in nil. Tin ontrli *lny .i*«'li* • At Inn In m.il \*w Oi 'ninx.
NVrltr for inn ' li- I'll* * nu*l Informal Ion
F. M I IIO.M I'SON, IV IH l.l I |»K
T. I*. A., AI Inn 111 ( (in. o. IV A., A l In n I #1 <>n.
CIIAH. A. W H'K KKHIIA M.
I*r« ,k *. mill Urn Mm,, Allnotn. On
Oooks Catalogued at Carne
gie Liurnry.
Does
kintlf
nil
of
IS]
Hj Dr. Johnson said “the full tide
p 1 * * * existence is.”; YVe lunched at
Covent Garden Hotel.
tiff
TifJtr ^ork, Roofing
Plumbing and
Repairing.
% At 2 p. m. we went to visit beau-
i tiful Trafalgar Square (which is to | married in 1620, and in which 1 ho
London almost what the Place de imm ortal Milton rests from his
jtl la Concorde is to Paris,) the gr<:at j earthly toil, which was so unceas
I Nelson Column, the church of St i j ng as to cause his eyes 10 fail
Spurgeon’s Tabernacle, the writer is the hope of immortal life.” (So
walked to the Church ot St. Giles in part reads the inscription g
in Cripple-gate without the walls, At 11 a. m we heard a splendid
the church in which Cromwell was sermon (on 2 Kgs. 6:17, “Vision
Martin in the Helds (in whose from over study at about 47 yeais and sides and
by Symbol”; with some exception
al parts from Rev. R-'ginald J.
Campbell (Joseph Parker’s suc-
ssor), about 3200 people- at from
Expert work and low
prices win. Shop op-
posite Pinson Hotel.
p yard lie Nell Gwynne Farquhar
4] and Roubiliac, and with fine Greek
t front 1, the National Portrait Ga
ll] lerv, ( haring Cross Road, Shakes
j2 bury Avenue, Regent Street, (core
-
figU3glt)SgsSSS5gSS5SSSSSs!<SS!S5BaSB!S5SfS taining the finest shop
don j, Oxford Sueet, a way of
.on
fine
of age. Just outside the chance 1, choir at
in the floor on the k-fl e»f the cen- present,
tre is a while marble panel bear
ing the words—“Near this sp< 1
was buried John M lton, author
‘Paradise Last;’ born 1608. died
1674.” YYhy should not mention
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabuies
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
Tlie- S-cent parke-t is e-nouph for usueil orr-nsions
The-ffamily bottle- 00 <-e-m- contieint' e» Hupply
fejr B year.All driKBle*t“ -ell thi-m.
shops and displays of statuary; have been made of his “Paiaoi-..
the Wallace Collection, a special
ly fine museum and gallery of art
with treasures, which we greatly
enjoyed; Cavendish Square, Re
gent Circus, and the British Muse
um. The British Museum is in
deed one of the sigt ts not only of j
ti-
"" |
1
TAKE YOUR CLOTHING TO
S. C. CARTER S CO
Hi
OPPOSITE HOTEL PINSON,
when you want them
cleaned, pressed, repaired a
| or dyed in the best manner jjO
I ar.d at the most reasona- f
| ble prices. |
VftJi/iruGinlEnn: jl~Gi?J?rSCrxl?; -1 ^y trKs/LZr;
Regained” as well. Just inside Iriniiy” from R
the lirst door on the right ol en
trance at the side in the wail is a
bust and tablet to his memory and
his father’s. A memorial table in
Bread St. where he was born may
now be sean (as by us;; also a
London, but one ot the greatest J memorial window to Milton in St.
collections in the world, with its j Margaret’s Church, Westminster,
immense array of monuments from placed there by Geo. W. Childs, of
Philadelphia, Feb. 18, 1888, and to
Milton’s second wife and child.
Dryden is but just in the meed
of praise he bestowed on “Paradise
Lost” in saying—
“Three poets 111 three distant nires horn,
large uniformed
back ol speaker being
After a good afternoon’s
rest and Scripture study, a - 7 p.
rn. with a few friends we worship
ped at S* P mi’s * 1 hureli < K
•nd; in Port man Sq ia <, t xt
Kev, 1:4 5, hearing a clear-cut and
heart-touching sermon on "The
v. W. H. Griffith
I horn is, (< we 1 known at tin
Nnrthfield Conference of Christian
Workers in Arnei
(To be nontinip-d).
Greece, Rome, Egypt, Babylon,
Nineveh, Nimroud, rare bronzes,
flints, jewels, manuscripts, etc. It
would take many days, yea, years,
to appreciate its worth. Hence on
a brief visit like ours one must
nocessarily be selective. Among Greece, Italy and England did adorn
the objects of special interest we Tlie first in loftiness of thought surpass
saw the famous Tel-el-Amarna
. . , . „ .. c 1 .. Tlie next, iii majesty; in both tlie lust
tablets, a “quantity of letters on ... . , , , , ,
n . 1 J.lie book of nature could no furtlier «o;
clay tab.ets in cumform, being To make a third, she joined the othei
practically the P'oreign Office cor- two.”
itOtZ!? Z T sn D yoar d 8 nb- respondence of the Egyptian King Furthermore Milton “acted as
Amen-heptep IV.’s reign,” the Co- well as wrote an epic complete in
dex Alexandrums, an original ail its parts—high, grave, sustain
Do you want to subscribe for any
newspaper
tlie United States
scription will be received, at tlie News
office. tf
Common Colds are the Cause of
Many Serious Diseases.
Physicians who have Ruined a nation
al reputation as analysts of the cause of
various diseases, claim that if catching
cold could he avoided, a lonir list ot
dangerous ailments would never be
heard of. 17very one knows that pueu-
mo im and consumption originate from
a cold, and chronic cutarrh. bronchitis,
and all throat and lung trouble are ag
gravated and rendered more serious bv
each fresh attack Do not risk your life
or take chances when von have 11 cold
(/'Immberlnin’s Cough Remedy vwll cure
it before these diseases develop. t Ihh
remedy contains no opium, morphine 01-
other harmful drug ami has thirty years
of reputation buck nfii. g.dned I.y its
cures under every eoiicitioji. For sub
tly Dr. Paul Pcniston. Newnan, <ia.
IIIOOKAI'IIY.
TtiomaH II. Benton Roosevelt
1 Theodore j.
E’harles Sumner Storey Moore
Held.
Tims. Jefl'ersou, Benj. l’ranklin,
Alii'iiluun l/incoln (“ vol--), John
*,). Ydaiin- J. I’. Morse, Jr.
Daniel Webster. Alexander
I luinilt.on, * Jen. W a- hinglon
\ ols ; ! Iiuiry < almt Lodge.
Janies Monroe 1 )ani< l * . * ill
man.
John Randolph Henry \dune.
.)<>h 11 Miii Jiall Allan B.Magru-
der.
Jobn < . < ilhonn 11. Von 1 !nkt.
\ ndrew Jack - on W. ' >. S11 m
ner.
Samuel Adams J. K. llosmer.
Patrick Ifenry- Moses * 'oil
Tyler.
.Fanies Madison Sidney II. Gay.
Governenr Morris Theodore
Roosevelt.
Martin Van IJuren E. M.
Shepard.
Albert Gallatin —J. A. Stevens.
Geo. Washington IM vols;- < ail
Sell 11 rz.
Lewis ('ass—A. ('. .McLaughlin.
.John Jay—George Fellow.
I’okmk.—Coleridge, A r n o I d,
•Swinburne, Rossetti, Shelley (2
vols), Homans, Kipling, Steven
son.
Chemistry Mineralogy-- Bal
lard. M Its. I). B. WoomtooK,
Librarian.
lL'i
To litty or exeliimgi* < ■' roc-
crios lor onc-liall and oiic-
gaIfm .lugs. Also wo soli
cliotiji:
2*) Lbs. Sugar lor
LI Bars Laundry Soap
I < ial. I’est *Li. < am Sy rnp
I Found * hew ii I’obaceo
fvlany other good things elieap.
< all and get. om price-,. We will
serve you right and give prompt,
delivery and appreciate your pat
ronage.
i.s?c. r i7.!r^ca:ss
a
1.09
30c
The Gunsmith.
W est Side I onrl House, Oppoaite
Library <'oi lier.
Lame Back.
This ailment is iiHtiully cauBeil by
rheumatism of the muscles mid may l e
cured by apply mg ('hiimhi-rliiin V Pain
Balm two nr three times n day, and rub
bing the parlH vignmiiHly at each it]>idi-
ciitiou. ii this di ch not ali'urd rebel
bind on 11 piece of flannel slightly danip-
1 cried with Pain Biilin, and quick relief
■ ik almost sure to fellow. For Hale by
i Dr. Paul Pcuistoii, Newnan, Ga.
For Sale to Merchants Only.
Some men are to be congratulat
ed on never becoming acquainted
with themselves.
Y'oii’ll be [ileasol with the prices
and terms of the Southern Furni
ture Go. Store in Reese opera
house building, Newnan, Ga. tf
(Jut of town merchants will find
; it very convenient to call on us for
kerosene oil. We take your bar
rels in exchange. Cat load of oil
! just received.
D. T. Mangel & Co.,
tf Newnan, Ga.