The Newnan news. (Newnan, Ga.) 1906-1915, August 10, 1906, Image 4
The Newnan News Issued Every Friday. J. T. FAIN, Editor and Publisher TIPS AND TIPPING. THE FACE ON THE CENT. SUBSCRIPTION RATE. $1.00 PER YEAR. OFFICIAL PAPER OF COWETA COUNTY. ’Phone No. 20. OFFICE UP-STAIRS IN THE WILCnvON BLDG See that hump! It’s mi tin* Gnweta county Howell crowd—but what's the use! The wind w ill be knocked out of the Russell bln IT of the Howell men in this county on August -2nd. .Same Slick Dick, same old speech, same old .jokes, same re sult- -Coweta still for Hoke Smith. Slogan of the ring campaign: Heaps abuse upon Hoke Smith and dismiss everything but the issues. And the Constitution can't hear the “comeback'' calls Howell sup porters in western Georgia are Hooding Dick Russell with. When that howling crowd, com posed of “General’’ Arrington, greeted Slick Dick at the depot last Wednesday morning, the for lorn candidate impiired in patliet ic t<mes, “Is this Newnan!” It was a killing frost all l ight — and it withered the expectations of j the Coweta Howell-Russell con 1 Liugent. The News alludes to that vast and enthusiastic reception tendered Slick Dick last Wcdiics du.\. There is plenty of time for Dick Russell to deliver ten more speeches in Coweta county I adore August 22d, and Dick's Howell supporters here w ill liml that more than ten will Is 1 necessary to change Coweta from lloke Smith to Slick I >ick. The call for Slick Dick torcturii tit Coweta was extremely urgent. I’iior Dick! It is sad tit view the spectacle of a candidate compelled to repeat ten times his rip snort ing, hair raising performance in one lone county- and then lose that county tti lloke Smith by ii vote of t wo to one. The ruKtomarr Kinrtlons on Itonrd tlir Atlnnlli- Llurru. Do not take fright lit wlmt von may hear about cxresalvo tips oil steamers unit in KUfope. They are numerous, lint need not la- large. To sea tier your money wildly in tips will mark you an n novice. All the servants will quickly spot you. pass the word around and lleeee you. Tips vary, of course. In accordance with the grade of steam ers, hotels and other accommodations. If you travel In a tally equipped floating palace you must expect to pay at least $25 fur steamer tips. On regu lar llrst class steamers, however, the following are customary and will tie ample: Stateroom steward, $2.50; state room stewardess, $2.flu; dining room steward, $2.50. These are obligatory. On the cheaper llrst class steamers they may he reduced to It each and tie entirely dignified. It all depends on the limit. My talking with other pus- sengers you con readily learn the cus tomary sente for your steamer. If you use the bathroom regularly, pay tlie bathroom steward $1; If Iiks frequently this might lie out to 2.'i cents n hath. If you rend hooks from the library, give tlie steward a tip varying from $1 down to 25 cents, according to grade of steamer and frequency of Ids service to you. The deck steward's gratuity Is n variable quantity; he lias opportunity for getting tips from so many people that lie fares bettor than inside stew ards, who are restricted to s certain number; lienee do not lie uneasy about him. (Jive Inin what you think lie lias earned III waiting on you, according to relative service with the other stew ards. A dollar Is the maximum expect ed on ordinary boats. Thus your total tips need not exceed flO ii voyage and may not lie more Ihun $5. Me reasonable In what you require of stewards, and If you should ask special service of them outside the line of their regular duties, pay them for It. Myra Kinmons In flood House keeping. EARTH’S LATENT POWER. Last Wednesday, after the ini tial pages of Tin* News hail been printed, the Western and Atlantic Itailroad committee of the I louse reported adversely on the McHen ry bill to lease the Stale’s road for a period of sixty years after the expiration of the present lease. This settles this great (piestion for the present; bat the people of Heorgin may Is* sure that the’Tuil- load monopoly” will soon return to the attack and make another ef fort to retain control of this prop orty. The Atlanta t'oustitnlion Inis' made valiant efforts to extract hi- la lily from its present gloomy and unpromising campaign by print ing what it terms “come Imck” ed itorials and cartoons. These are tired at Hoke Smith every time lie [ makes a second speech in a county previously visited. Now, why! doesn't the<'oustilulion shoot some “came lack” ammunition at Dick Russell! Is it liccausc Dick is one ' ol Howell's assistant candidates! Itusscll made his tenth speech in I Ooweta county Wednesday and j Itis third speech in Newnan. lie has H|>okeii ten or tiftfsm times in Heat'd county, twelve times in Harroll county, and is billed to make four more s|HHs*hos in Cm-, roll. The Constitution closes its] eyes to Plain Dick’s antics liccausc i he is making a monkey of himsclfl in Howell’s interest. The Jury Commissioners of Cow eta county completed their Inlors yesterday at noon. In the traverse jury U»x, since the revision, there are 700 nano's and in the grand jury 1k»x there are 240 names. Miss Mary Iahi Holmes has re turned to her home in Carrollton, after a delightful visit with friends and relatives in Newnan. All Nollil Suttsln nrr Mur VhiiInIi In ■ Moment of Time. Tile tali* Professor S. I*, l.angh'.v, nis-- retary of tin* Smithsonian Institution, speaking of earthquakea, said; "The eomthlerntlon of the unfamiliar powers certainly Intent In nature, such as belong to a little tremor of tho plan et's surface or such ns was shown In that scone I have described," referring to phenomena lie had witnessed when tho comparatively Inslgultleant efToet of ii few ions of dynamite was to make solid buildings unrealities, "may help us lo understand that the words of the great poet are but the possible expression of a physical fact; that ‘the cloud capped towers, the gorgeous pal aces, the solemn temples, and we with them, may Indeed some day Inconceiv ably vanish ns tin* airy tioihlng at the touch of I'rosporo's wand, and without the warning to us of a single Instant that the sis-urlty of our ordinary lives Is about to be broken.' "We concede this, however, In the present ease only as an abstract possi bility. for the advance of astronomical knowledge Is much more likely to show that the kernel of the comet In but the bigness of some large meteorite against which our air is nil clttclent shield, and tho chalice of evil Is most remote In any ease only such as may come In any hour of our lives from liny quarter, not alone from the earthquake, but from the pestilence that walketli In dark ness from the Intlnltoly little be low and within us as well as from tho Infinite powers of the universe without. “Something common to iiiaii ami the brute speaks at such times. If never before or again; something which Is not altogether physical apprehension, but mole like the moral dismay when the shock of an earthquake Is felt for tho llrst time, and we know that startling doubt superior to reason whether the valid frame of earth Is real, and not 'baseless as the fabric of a vision.'"— Washington Star. It Is Hot Thm of nn In,linn, but of n rri-tljr Little Girl. Mrs. Sarah Longa .-re Keen, who liv ed and died In Philadelphia, eatue nearer being tlie queen of the Ameri can mint than any woman who ever lived. With the exception of Queen Victoria, whose Image was engraved on every coin of the British and In dian empires, Mrs. Keen was llrst In the number of her metal photographs. Her face as a girl of twelve summers Is to he seen on every American cent Issued since 1830 from Uncle Sam’s coin factory. It Is usually assumed that the fuce on the head side of the copper Is that of an Indlnn, Imt a close look will rt- vch! a Saxon profile. Just borrow a cent and look at It The setting Is that of nn Indian. Between 1H28 and 1840 .lames Hnr- ton Longa ere was chief engraver In the United States mint In Philadelphia. In IK'15 a competition wns opened for sketches and engravings for the new copper cent that was to be Issued and which has since been In service. There were over a thousand designs offered. The prize was a good one. Ixingaere racked Ids brain for some original and singular design that would strike the Judges, but for months lie failed to satisfy himself. One morning a number of Indians, with their chief, who had Itecii to pay their respects to the great white chief In Washington, earne to the city and were shown through the mint. They were Introduced to the white chiefs picture maker, who was Jusi then showing his young daughter Sarah the great concern. The old chief was at tracted by the sweet faced maiden and her Interest In Ills feathers and paint. She childishly wondered bow she would look III the feathered headgear. This was told the chief, who solemnly divested himself of Ills feathers and had them placed on the girl’s head. Tlie effect wns so striking that the father t«s>k time to make a sketch of the picture, finishing It afterward for Ills own amusement. At the last moment of the |icrind given for sending In engravings he lie- thought himself of the possibility of the combination of Indian feathers and Saxon sweetness. He got It in. and much sport was made of tho child at the time III the city because of tlie Incident. The sketch passed through th<‘ seventh sifting and finally reached tlie last round. My one vote It won, and ever since Sarah Longaere's young fuce lias served for the humblest of coins, than which no single coin tn the world has such tremendous circula tion. Detroit News-Tribune. SAID ABOUT WOMEN. The Oldest House In Louisians. The oldest building In Louisiana, the ancient archbishopric on Chartres street. New Orleans, boasts of one of the handsomest courtyards. Tlie build ing was erected in 1727 and remains exactly as It was first erected. Vis itors ii III remark the ancient staircase of cypress, worn by the pnssitig of generations, in the courtyard Is seen one of tlie oldest mid liesi preserved sjieclniens of the "Spanish dagger." It dates linck, so those who claim to know aver, to the bulldtug of the pal ace, and Indeed Its height and dignity Indicate suythlng but youth.—Crafts man. Impertinent. Originally tlie word "lini*ertluent" signified merely "not tielongliig to." When Wycltffe said that there were many men In this world who were •impertinent to earthly lords" he did not menu that they were “cheeky,” but merely that they had no masters. Then, hs used by Shakesjieare, "Im pertinent" came to mean "Irrelevant." Just 200 years ago It was defined aa signifying "absurd, silly. Idle." A Haltered woman Is always iiidul genl. Chenier. The lest of civilization Is tho esti mate of women. Curtis. Provided a woman be well principled she has dowry enough.—Plautus. Beauty t« tho eye’s food and the soul's sorrow.—German Proverb. Divination seems heightened to Its highest power In woman. Bronson A I- colt. Tho more women have risked, the more they are willing to sacrifice.— Duclos, Women arc supernumerary when present and missed when absent.—Por tuguese Proverb. A termagant wife may In some re spects la* considered a tolerable bless ing. Washington Irving. Some cunning men choose fools for their wives, thinking to iiiniiiige them, but they always full. Johnson. TpIIIiik the Time. One of the accurate ways of telling the time Is to use your hand as an hour mark. Nothing simpler. All farmers not possessed of watches or clocks and who have some practical notions of common utilities not Invent ed by innn. but given to us by the Creator, know the rule. It Is necessary to keep In mind the hour of sunrise uud sunset and to hold the arm straight out from the shoulder, with the hand at right angles, bending from the wrist forward. If the sun sets at 7 o'clock anti Is still high in tlie Iichv- ens close one eye and make three meas ures of the width of the palm near the thumb. Each measure means oue hour. Throe measures meHii three hours, so that the time thus obtained Is 7 less 3, or 4 o’clock. With practice you can ls*ut the average watch.—New York Press. (Mitchell Wagons 1 i 1 1 | Tennessee Wagons nxn 1 Until August 1st we are making a Special Summer price that will pay you to buy wagons now; notwith standing the fact that wagons are from five to ten per cent, higher than last year. We do this to make room lor our fall shipments. i i i i i nr VISIT OUR BUGGY REPOSITORY <3* I I And see the New Styles Surreys, Buggies and Harness. 1 1 9 i Bradley & BanKs Palmetto. larirflnltr. "Darling, yours shall lie a sunny lot lu life.” "Now, look here, George, are yon talking of your behavior or of where we are going to build In the ouhurbs?" —Baltimore American. Horses nnd OH t’.kes. "Say. d’you kuow anything 'bout bosses, hey? D’ye know they'll eat jtork? Well, they will when It's fed 'em an’ they have to. The heaves stops subsequent, though they're an all fired sight wuss afterwards. Belle went right onto a meat diet, hog meat an' oil cakes. Yep, linseed oil—it’ll fat a rail fence. Belle took on weight amazin'. Cur'us thing 'bout oil cakes, though. Once a boss has tx-en fatted on 'em an' then grows plrkld ag'ln there ain't nothin' In the world'll put flesh onto him a second time. You cau try as much as you’re mind to; It ain’t no use."—American Magazine. One Vain Wish. The Wife—He told me that If 1 mar ried him my every wish would be grat ified. Tlie Mother Well. Is It not so? The Wife—No; 1 wish 1 hadn't •tarried hint.—Cleveland leader. Somnllotiuy. Talking tn sleep Is more common thau is genernllv supposed. Of 200 students between the ages of twenty and thirty 41 per cent of the men and 37 per cent of the women talked In their sleep, and most of them could an swer questions.—Harper's Weekly. The new stone chnreli, now in pro- t cess nf erection on the old Hamah church | lot, is ucariug completion, and will he ready for the Western Association, which j convenes with that church in Oct. Rev. Mr. Mouorief, President of Cox College, preached a most magnificent sermon lit the Second Baptist church on last Sunday. The house was well filled to hear the distinguished speaker. Judge Dick Russell spoke to a good crowd oil lust Wednesday at this place. The concensus of opinion is. that Hoke Smith will be the next governor of Geor gia; but tlie Howell and Kstell men claim lor tlieir candidates a good vote in this district. Miss Willie MoGanghey, of Atlanta, is the guest of Miss Fronie Brooks. Miss Annie Gene Culbrenth will be with friends in Fuirburn next week. Miss Fannie Langston spent last week in Atlantn. Mr. J. D. Frazer, who has been the guest Carl Brittain has returned home. Miss Angy Langston attended the fu neral services of Roy Wilkersou in Fnirbnrn last week. Miss Annie Beck, of Atlnnta. is visit ing Owen Steed’s fnmily. Miss Kiln Harris, of Eastman, is the guest of Miss Libbie Harris. Mrs. .Tames Stith and (laughter, Miss Birdie, are still in Asheville, N. C., where Mrs. Stith iH rapidly recovering tier health. Miss Katharine Reed returns from Milwaukee on the 15th hint, Miss Maty Johnson will not return from Chicago until September. Miss Stevie Timmons, of Atlanta, is j the gnestof her aunt, Mrs. S. M. Dean. Mrs. T. P. Zellars has returned from ! Newnan. Miss Ethel Reid was the hostess at an informal party on last Suturday night. The following young jteople composed the company: Misses Janie Hudson, An nie Gene Culbrenth nnd Kate Ellington, of Meridian, Miss.; Mr. Karl Brittain nnd J. D. Frazer,of Atlanta; Sam Sims, Freeman Ballard and Roy Brittain. Miss Maggie Cochran is visiting in ' College Park. (ICHAELB-STK* INK CLOTHINC 'MMMSILS.STISa»a . •Hmim. a. v General Meeting. The nobler the blood the prole. From the Pan loti True of Trouble. "He's out of a Job now. He had a good opportunity, but he didn’t take the trouble to Improve It." "Yes. It's a funny thing about trou bid. h»n’t It? If you don’t take It you’ll have It."—Philadelphia ledger. The General Meeting at New Lebanon church at Sargent begins on Friday before the third Sun day in August. It is expected to l»e a largely attended and profit able meeting. Subscribe for The News. Good Merchandise at Re> duced Prices. rhe greatest clothing opportunity of t lie summer is now here. It you have an eve-tn economy and want a swell sum mer suit you shouldn’t fail to take advantage of the phe nomenal values we are offering in Summer Goods. Don’t think tor a moment that tlie prices we are giving cox’er a cheap grade of goods. Every article offered is from our regular stuck. \\ e offer no cheap sale stuff. Why do we cut our prices? We must clear our store’ of all summer goods. YVe have made it a positive rule not to carry over stock from one season to the other, and would rather take a loss than do so. We have not space to give you prices, but notice our windows anp you will see a few of our cut prices. It s to your interest to call and examine these goods. BARNETT, ST. JOHN & CO. Greenville Street.