Newspaper Page Text
Childrens’ Corner.
For Tub Christian Index.
' THERE SHALL BENO NIGHT THERE."
BY MISS SUSIE J. COLE.
See the seaman gazing wildly
O’er thedark and stormy main,
With a brow so pale and anxious,
And a face convulsed with pain,
Longing, yearning for some brightness
To dispel the cheerless night;
Sometimes for a moment thinking
He has caught a raj- of light;
Turning back with quick despair—
" Only darkness ! everywhere”—
And the tempest grows yet wilder,
Lashing high the angry tide
Till it beats with mad'ning fury,
On that struggling vessel’s side,
Suddenly across the waters
Comes a glimmer from afar,
Like a faint and dim reflection
From some long forgotten star ;
But it greets bls raptured sight,
Promise sweet of coming light.
See a mother standing sadly
By her suffering, dying cnlld,
As she clasps her little Angers
With an exclamation wild:
“Mother, when will It be morning ?
Give me but a raj- of light,
Lift the shadow from your darling,
End the long and bitter night.”
Hear the tender word of love,
“Hush, my child, ’tls light above.”
To the prls’ner pacing slowly
Up and down his narrow cel),
Dreaming, ever sadly dreaming,
Os the home he loved so well;
Oh ! how dark the world and dreary,
And how little it contains
To alleviate the anguish
Os these ever galling chains.
To his friends a stranger grown,
Grieving, pining there alone:
But the old man sitting lonely,
All bls loved ones passed from earth;
Every chair about him vacant,
Near the cold deserted hearth ;
Thinksagain of happy faces
That have lighted up that room;
Thinks of forms so young and tender,
Sleeping In the silent tomb;
Smooths the shadow from his brow.
Murmuring, “they are happy now,”
Yes; we alt hard times of struggling,
Through this dim uncertain night,
Praying for the coming morrow.
For a single ray of light.
But our feet have strangely wandered
From life's onlj- guiding star,
And upon our dreary pathway
Gleams no radiance from afar;
Darkness, with its sable wing,
Broodeth over everything.
Suddenly there comes a shining,
("And our faith Is strong and brave.”)
Lighting up with magte beauty,
E’en the borders of the grave;
Thrilling with a strange sweet music
Lips that were unused to song;
Raising up the saddened spirit,
Burdened with Its grief so long ;
Lost forever In that light—
All the shadows of the night.
For there is no night In Heaven-
Naught to dim that happy land.
We shall know the loved ones gathered .
On the bright and golden strand—
Hear the words and Joyous welcome
As they strike their harps anew.
Feel a thrill of purest rapture
as they break upon our view.
All life’s sorrows over, come
Safe at last In Heaven, our Home.
Galveston, Texas. 1879.
GOLDEN WORDS TO' YOUNG
HEN.
Never complain that you employers
are selfish. Not that they are other
wise, but it will not help matters to
growl about it. They are selfish.
Their employers, when they were
young, were no doubt selfish, and from
them they learned the lesso i. You,
too, will learn it, and when you become
employers you’ll be selfish too. It is
from selfish motives that men engage
in tfade, and selfishness rules their ac
tions. Os course it would be better and
wiser, and all that, if they were not
selfish, but they are. Now what are
you going to do about it? Why, make
it for their selfish interest to do better
by you, and they will. Respect your
selves, and you’ll make them respect
you. Remember that you are at a dis
advantage, that there are a hundred
ready to climb into your place if you
do not fill it, and that those who em
ploy you are fully aware of the fact,
and ready to make the most they can
out of it. Remember that if you are
getting SI,OOO this year and want
$1,500 next year, you have got to earn
the $1,500 this year. You’ve got to
pay for promotion, often an exhorbi
tant price, and as you have no other
means to pay with, you’ve got to pay
in work. Os course it is unjust, of
course it seems hard that your em
ployer should keep and spend money
that you have justly earned, but it
won’t pay to fret about it. Never be
satisfied with having “earned your
money.” Earn more than your mon
ey, and then, in a manly straightfor
ward, business-like way, ask for more
pay. Ten chances to one you’ll get it.
If you don’t, look about, and as soon
as you’ve found a better place, dis
charge your employer. The hard
work that you have done, the record
of it, and the reputation you will have
established for hard work, will make
the task of finding new employment
comparatively easy. Your capacity
for work is your only capital. Invest
heavily and you are sure towin.
Christian “Giving Up.”—lt is a
pitiful thing to see a young disciple
going about and asking everybody how
much he must “give up” in order to bo
a Christian. Unfortunately, )■ <■ >■
those who take it upon them.-- ... • ’..
instruct him give him the s ” ■ op
pression of Christian discipleship— •
it consists chiefly of giving up i . ic .-
that one likes and finds plei.-u: n>.
But a man in solitary conil.i< i:« ut
might as well talk about what Lu mu.-t
"give up” if he is pardoned out of
The Christian Index and South-western Baptist: Thursday, December 18, 1879.
prison, or a patient in consumption
about what he must “give up” in order
to get well. The prisoner must give
up his fetters, and the invalid his pains
and his weakness—these are the main
things to be sacrificed. It is true that
the one has the privilege of living with
out work, and the other the privilege
of lying abed all day ; these are privi
leges that must be relinquished, no !
doubt. And so there are certain sacri
fices to be made by him who enters
upon the Christian life, but they are
“not worthy to be compared” with the
liberty and dignity and joy into which
the Christian life introduces us; and to
put the emphasis upon this negative
side of the Christian experience, as so
many are inclined to do, is a great mis
take.— Sunday Afternoon.
The Sister.—No household is com
plete without a sister. She gives the
finish to the family. A sister’s love, a
sister’s influence—what can be more
hallowed? A sister’s watchful care—
can anything be more tender? A sis
ter’s kindness—does the world show us
anything more pure? Who would
live without a sister? A sister—that
is a sister in fidelity, in heart and love—
is a sort of guardian angel in the home
circle. Her presence condemns vice.
She is the quickener of good resolu
tions, the sunshine in the path-way of
home. To every brother she is a light
and life. Her heart is the treasury
■ house of confidence. In her he finds a
fast friend ; a charitable, forgiving, ten
der, though often severe, friend. In
her he finds a ready companion. Her
sympathy is as open as day, and sweet
as the fragrance of flowers. We pity
the brother who has no sister, no sister’s
love. We feel sorry for the home
which is not enlivened by a sister’s
presence. A sister’s office is a noble
and gentle one. It is hers to persuade
to virtue, to win to wisdom’s ways;
gently to lead where duty calls; to
guard the citadel of home with
the sleepless vigilance of virtue; to
gather graces an,l strew flowers around
the home altar. To be a sister is to
hold a sweet place in the heart of
home. It is to minister in holy office.
—S'. IF. Presbyterian.
“Patience.”—“Mother,” said Mary,
“I can’t make Henry put his figures as
I tell him.”
“Be patient, my dear, and do not
speak so sharply.”
“But he won’t let me tell him how to
put the figures, and he does not know
how to do it himself,” said Mary, very
pettishly.
“Well, my dear, if Henry won’t learn
a lesson in figures, suppose you try to
teach him one in patience. This is
hard to teach, and harder to learn than
any lesson in figures; and perhaps,
when you have learned this, the other
will be easier to both.”
Mary hung her head, for she felt
that it was a shame to any little girl to
be fretted by- such a little thing, or in
deed, by anything; and she began to
think that perhaps she deserved to be
blamed as well as Henry.
A fretful, impatient child makes
himself and all about him very unhap
py. Will you try to learn a lesson of
patience?
A wooden doll which William Tenn
brought over from England as a present
1 to one of his daughters, is still cherished
i by a Washington family. It is known
as Letitia Penn, the name of the great
Quaker’s daughter, and is a faded
beauty, twelve inches high, without a
joint in its body.
From the Rev. Wm. A. Harris, D. D.,
, President of the Wesleyan Female Institute,
Staunton, Virginia : I regard the "Story of
the Bible,” in this age of skepticism and free
, thinking, as just the book for our schools.
It meets a want long and deeply felt in our
schools and seminaries. The Bible, the
book of all books, should not be confined as
the fountain of all truth and learning, to
the chapel and sacked desk. “The Story
of the Bible” imparts directly, by daily re
citation, and in a most attractive form, the
great and saving truths of a Divine Revela
tion. It blings the youthful mind, in its
formative period, directly under the daily
influence and power of Bible truth; and in
this way the book becomes, in our schools,
an inestimable blessing in the religious in
struction and training of the rising genera
tion. We hope it may be introduced into
every school and college in the land, for no
school which values Biblical learning as
paramount to all other learning, can afford
to do without such a book.
The Index, one year, and the “Story of
the Bible” fors36o.
Don’t forget to try Herrings Salve,tor piles,
tetter, itch, neuralgia, sores and ulcers, aches
and pains, it will cure every time.
decl 1.3 m
THE STORY OF THE BIBLE
FROM
GENESIS TO REVELATION,
TOLD
IN SIMPLE LANGUAGE
FOR THE YOUNG.
HIGHLY ILLUSTRATED.
FOR SALE BY
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Price, 41 50. /SB* Will send copy to any
one sending us a Club of three new names,
wfO. fl-P *■ “0
DIPHTHERIA!
JokniM'i Anodyne Idnlmont will poak
tlvoly prevent Ibis terrible dlieaee, and will positively
Hire nine cave In ten. Information that wtlleave many
liven, aent free by mall. Don’t delay a moment. Pro
veuuon l» better than cure. Hold Everywhere.
1. ■. JOH.MO.X du CO., Reiter, Maine.
I jy» ly
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
avery plo ws tr si ’ mpi i axt ! !
AT GEORGIA AND ALABAMA* FAIRS.
AWARDED
NORTH GEORGIA STOCK 18-F. AVERY & SONS.
and ELEVEN PREMIUMS.
UATD A CCHCT A TIAN’ 1. Best One-horse Plow, light soil Silver Medal
I /AIIx AoO' 7V-1 n 1 ILJ IN , 2. Best Onehorse Plow, heavy 50i1... Silver Medal
3. Best Two-horse Plow, light soil,. Silver Medal
4. Best Two-horse Plow, heavy soil . Silver Medal
HELD IN NOVEMBER, 5. Best Suit-soil Flow Silver Medal
6. Best Hillside Plow Silver Medal
. . ~. 7. Best Plow Stock Silver Medal
Al ATLANTA, GEORGIA. 8. Best Riding Plow Silver Medal
9. Best Colton Scraper Silver Medal
10. Best Cotton Sweep Silver Medal
11. Geueral Display Silver Medal
AWARDED
GEORGIA STATE PAIR, F- AVERY & SONS.
EIGHT'PREMIUMS.
HELD IN NOVEMBER,
1. Best One-horse Plows 5 00 and Diploma
2, Best Two horse Plow S 00 and Diploma
AT MACON, GEORGIA. ?■ seß!5 eB ! ?,'!}! E, !ow ?SS 8,, 2 ™, p ' oma
4 Best Hillside Plow 5 00 and Diploma
5. Best Hiding Plow 15 00 and Diploma
6. Best Cotton Sweep 2 00 and Diploma
7. Best Plow Stock 2 00 and Diploma
8. Best Display Fine Silver Meo al
AWARDED
ALABAMA STATE FAIR, R A y ER y &
HELD IN NOVEMBER, FIVE PREMIUMS. .
1. Best One-horse Plow Gold Medal
A-p ItovTomtl'liv 2 - Best Two-horse Plow Gold Medal
A 1 MOJN ItrUMKKY. 8 . Best Riding Plow Gold Medal
4. Best Walking Cultivator Gold Medal
5. Best Displays of Plows Gold Medal
A
This Cut represents the Gold Medal awarded B F. AVERY 490 NS, for best display of Plows and
Agricultural Implements at Alabama State Fair. The premiums were awarded after actual field trials,
in which were represented all prominent Plows sold in the South.
TRAYNHAM, GEISE & RAY,
MANUFACTURERS OF
IDOOIECS,
SA.SJE3I JkMX)
BTjIJSTJDS-
/ j <—. <
J* -.. t>v>4
HAVING PURCHASED THE LATEST IMPROVED MACHINERY, WE DO NOT HESITATE
TO SAY THAT OUR FACILITIES FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, FRAMES,
MOULDINGS, BALUSTERS, NEWELS
CAN NOT BE EXCELLED IN THESOUTH. WE USE ONLY THE BEST MATERIAL. EMPLOY
ONLY SKILLFUL WORKMEN. SEND TO US FOR PRICES B FORE PURCHASING.
GEISE AR AY,
declß 3m NO. 68 DECATUR STREET, ATLANTA, GA.
ngnaJUUMfli
IRON BITTERS,
■ ■■VI, VIII I.IIV, easesrequ|rin<*cert«ln
A Great Tonic, and efficient TOJVjrcq
eapeclally in IneHuev-
IRON BITTERS, R : .
A Sure Appetizer. "/
Energy, etc. Iten
mAtl niTTFAo riches the blood,
RON BITTFR.X strengthens the mus-
IIIUIv Ul I I LnOy cles, and gives new life
A Conplet* Strenrtheaer. to the nerves. To the
aged, ladies, and chil
dren requiring reenper-
IDnU DITTCDO ation, this valuable
inun du itnoa can not »»«too
a a- highly recommended.
A valuable Medicine. Iffivln like a charm
on the digestive organs,
ifi/aai teaspoonful before
IRON BITTERS, ? y Xti" l e yTp?
Not Sold m a Boerne. TRY IT.
IRON BITTERS, tbebrownchetoalco.
lor D.h«.te BALTIMORE, Md.
dt-clB eowtf
GEORGIA BAPTIST SEMINARY,
TOR YOVNG LATHES,
Gainesville, Hall County, Georgia.
The full term will open September Im, 1879.
The Kucceaa of thia Seminary Is a fixed fact.
The reeeni annual Examination ami Com
mencement have not been stirpiixM-d In Geor
gia, and equalled by lew. Every depaatment
of Literature, Science. Mnalc and Ait Infilled
by able, ex perl eneed and popular Proft-aaora
tintl Teacher*. Board anti Tuition are nt very
low figure. Board and Tuition In College
one year, J 125; Mualc included, (165 ; InAcn
tlt-mlc C’hi.Hca,s’>s to SI 1-5, Pitator'a daughter*,
board and tuition, IKXHt year; each aenatoriiil
Dlatricl may have one free acltolaiahlp Board
18 to $lO per month. For further information
and a Catalogue, tuldi'eaa,
Kkv. 1). E. HI’TLER. Preahlent H'd Truateea.or
Kkv. W. (’. WILKES, Prealdcnt Faculty.or
Rkv. T. P. CLEVELAND, Secretatv I'ncully.
dec!9 ly
I XCELSIOR ACADEMY,
SENOIA. GA.
Htudvnta prepare 1 for coll'go and pniclleal
life. Voice ■ ulture a apecialty. Elocution.
Oratory and Song. Semi lor piirticulara.
deell.tf A. 8. JONES, Principal.
CHURCH POLITY.
PART I.
By REV. P. H. MELL, D.D., LL.D.,
Chancellor State University.
price, 25 cents.
Or sent as a Premium to new subscribers to
This Christian Index.
JAS. I’. HARRISON & CO.,
nov'lO.tf JAtlanta, Ga.
AGENTS 11 '” *** e F ,c ' orial Commentator.
■Mvwwwama-1-018 Page". 475 UluittrationiMul Maps.
u/AUTrntl"' ni'.st cotiqihae an<l eomprebenatre
rtHPI I tUCoiuDi.utary on the entire Sunpturea (in
-wmnnMati'n- vol.) over published. Price, 53.75.
M M.GAtcnitr»oakCo.,3oS.Collegeßl.,MMhiiUe, Tenn.
oetlKly
Pioneer Paper Manufacturing Co.,
MANUFACTUKKRg OP
NEWS AND WRAPPING PAPER.
Joh< W. Nicholson, Agent.
Athens, Ga.
For specimen of news, see this paper.
dec!3-tf
MUSM BEST PRESS £ . ,
or Mor—. Haudo owei *•
MS» Uslvsrsai Swr • 1 P:. . n.t
tos Fqw u, except * ■•. woik u . JI3.GC
Bosttoratuadirf. r r«:Co..
h Cl UISQ, J(is3.
aug7 6m
BELL FOUNDRY
B lilt-ll- <>t Pure CopjM-r and Tin l«.r Chtirrhee.
* File A'aims, Furnis, etc. FULL*
WARRANTED. ( HiHlowuf n.-ni Fr«e»
VANDUZEN K TIFT. Cincinnati, O.
apnll-ly
ACADEMY OF NEWARK,
Neieark, Delawnve.
Prepare* boys for business or Col lege. Jx>-
cntioli perlectly healthy.
Tei ms exceptloni’lly low.
KEV. J. L. POLK, Principal.
ocl9 Btn
OeM I
Any worker can make sl2 a day at home
Costly outfit free. Addtess Tkvk A Co.,
Augusta, Maine. snßO.ly
Five lo Twcnly Oolliar*.
Per tla.v at home. Samples work, $5 free
Address Stinson <fc Co.. Portland, M*.ine.
i jne3o-i
CNf? a DAY to Agents canvassing for the
hD 4 Fireside Visitor. Terms and outfit
. free. Address P. O. VitKXßy. Augusta,
J Maine. ap2o.lv
a week in your own town. Terma arc
rtjQr) l.i out# Adtlrena H. Hallkt i o.
I Portland, Maine :i,y27.1y
. ----YP VERTIBEMEN ? 8 -
Fire on the Hearth
STOVES AND FI RE PLACE HEATERS.
VENTILATION OF A FIRE-PLACE, CIRCU
LATION OF A FURNACE, RESERVE POW-
ER OF A CLOSE STOVE,
i
Ifhw,
rww'
■ Wm ’ i
*
1 <i
~ _
I
I Medals Awarded—U. S. Centennial, 1878,
I Paris Exposition, 1878.!
“For all rooms requiring independent
warmers THE FIRE ON THE HEARTH is the
greatest improvement ol modern times.”—
Dr. Bell in Sanitarian, September, 1875,
N. B.—Warming and Ventilating School
and Lecture Rooms a Specialty.
Inquire of your dealer, or send for prices
and description to the
OPEN STOVE VENTILATING 00.,
78 Beekman Street, N. Y.
Tils Index has one of the above beautiful
stoves, which cost 810, and will award it to
any- church, Sunday-school, or individual,
that will send us a club of 40 NEW subscrib
ers, at s2.6oper year. nov6.tf
GULLETT
G-IHST
Branch Factory at Augusta, Ga.
4 O. M. STONE & CO.
i, GENERAL AGENTS.
, We make the improved Gullett Gin, Gin 1
Feeders and Condensers.
GINS PROMPTLY REPAIRED
. by skilled workmen. We sell the celebrated
BIGELOW PLANTATION ENGINES.
Every style, mounted or stationary.
Economiser Engines, Cotton Presses,
Grist Mills, Saw Mills,
BUFFALO SCALES, Etc.
We have certificates from a large number
1 of Cotton Buyers and Cotton Factors of Au- 1
j gusta, and other cities and towns in the .
State, showing the superiority of Gullett 1
■ Ginned Cotton over any other.
Circulars and price list furnished on ap
plication. Address
O. M. STONE * CO.,
jy3 6m Augusta, Ga.
1 [ THE MARKS
\
Improved Adjustable Chair.
Superior to al
ithers, and com
blnlng in one a
Parlor, Library,
Smoking or in
, gZ? agBSIBMWw valid’s Chair,
Lounge. Bed or
Child’s Crib.
I Easily Adjus-
ted to any Posl
tion Desired lor
i Ease or Commit. ,
Universally acknowledged to be the most
desirable and complete article of furniture
ever produced. Fully warranted as represen
ted, aud satisfaction guaranteed. Call and
examine, or send stamp for illustrated Cata-
I lo,ue to
MARKS A. F. CHAIR CO., Limited,
850 Broadway, New York,
j Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers.
I deell.tf
I
DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES.
I Lll-flraff krTto..
CHICAGO SCALE COMPANY.
' 68 and 70 West Monroe Street, Chicago, 111. j
HAVE reduced the prices of all kinds of j
SCALES. 4-ton Hay, Stock or Cotton ]
Scale —$60, former Price $l6O.
All other sizes at a great reduction. Every i
’ scale Fully Warranted. All orders I
promptly filled. Circulars, Price List and I
i Testimonials sent upon application.
BUY THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
ts
irnßßm
Every mother sending her address will
receive"Mother’sMEDlCALHAND-BOOK” j
FREE.
Written by a most successful physician
, among children, and is invaluable to a
j mother in caring for her child and herself.
J 100.000 copies to be given away 1
| BURTIS & CO.. Proprietors,
I 0ct30.3m 103 Maiden Lane, N. Y.
KwI«CURES
II U M P H R E VS’
HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS
In use twenty years. The most safe, alniple, eco
nominal and emelent medicine known. l>r. Huni-
Jhreyn’ Book on Disease and Its (TirefHl pp.lulso
lluatrated t’alalogne sent free.
Humphreys’ Homeopathic Medicine ( 0..
lOtl Fulton Htrect, New York.
novl3.tf
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
I Parties who have given contribution notes
I for the endowment of Mercer University are
e i hereby notified that they arc under my'con
• trol for collection, and that the necessities of
i. the Institution make the payment of ~aid
notes of the first importance.
G. R. M. CALL, Treasuer.
Hawkinsville, Ga., Aug. 21, 1J79.
aug2B ts
ADVERTISEMENTS.
DR. S. G. HOLLAND,
DENTIST.
24 Whitehall St., Cor. Alabama.
FILLINGS.
Small fillings, other than Golds 50
Large, other than Gold• 1 00
Small Gold fillings 1 qo
Ordinary size Gold fillings 2 00
Large size Gold fillingsJ. . . 300
Contour fillings, charge according to case, til
ing Nervecavity to end of root 1 00
EXTRACTING.
Simple extraction 50
Difficult extraction 1 00
Administering Gas 1 50
Administering Ether or Chloroform 3 00
PLATE WORK.
' Sets of Teeth, partial Plates without Gums.... 5 00
, Sets of Teeth, partial Plates with Gums 10 00
Sets of Teeth, lull Plates without Gums 10 00
I Sets of Teeth, full Plates with Gums 15 00
' Sets of Teeth, full Plates with Gums, finest.. 20 00
TREATING.
Irregularities of the Teeth, Abscess Teeth, Di«-
; eased Gums, Tumors Diseases of the Palate, as well
as all other diseases of the mouth, charge according
| to case.
REMARKS.
Would he pleased to do your Dentistry In
case you have no preference for another Operator.
I promise my best services in all cases, and the
same First-Class operating as when I was charging
‘ three times the above price?. Twenty ;earsin
successful practice authorizes me to Guaranteeßafc
| isfactlon.
TERMS.
I expect payment in all cases when the operation
is completed.
Rkferkncb My Patrons. feb2o ts
ESTA.BLISHPJD 1816.
CHARLES SIMON & SONS.
G 8 N. Howoard St., Baltimore, Md.
DEALERS IN
Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
Would call special attention to their exten
sive stock of dress goods, L inen and cotton
goods, embroideries, laces, goods for men’s
and boy’s wear, corsets, ladies ready-made
underwear, etc., etc. Samples sent free.
Also to their
Dress-Making Department.
Cloaks, dresses, etc., made to order promptly
in superior manner, and in the latest styles
at moderate rates. Orders solicited. Rules
| 'or self-measurement and samples of matfe
| rials, with estimate of cost, sent upon appli
cation.
Terms Cash.
All orders amounting to S2O, or over will
be sent free of freight charges by Express.
Parties having their goods sent C. O. D. must
1 pay for return of money, and if strangers to
| us, must remit at least one-third of the
amount with the order. feb26-tf
H. J. BAKER & BRO.,
215 PEARL STREET, NEW YORK.
Prime Agricultural Chemicals
FOR MAKING
HOME-MADE MANURES.
The cheapest source of Fertilizers and
most reliable for the planter. Manufact
urers of
Forrester’s Complete Manures,
under formula of Geo. B. Forrester.
Send for circulars and prices.
decl9-ly We sell prime goods only.
NEW & BEAUTIFUL
REWARD CARDS
j For Sunday and Day Schools and Kinder-
I gartens. Over 1,000 kinds and designs.
| Prices to suit the times. Elegant new and
appropriate designs of
SCHOOL DIPLOMAS.
; Price listsand samples of educational cards
; free to any teachers or agents sending us
■ their address.
j J. H. Raiford’s Sons, Manufacturing Pub
lishers, 141 Franklin St.. Boston, Mass. Es
tabli. bed 1830. 0ct30.3m
T.l? e Merck Truss Co.,
MI-2Wklte',allsi.. Aii.r",’
EV BL- 4 Ga-offer you the best. ti.<
f| IWlx L/ most comfortable and <l'
o,e Truss on the market-.
' do not do yourself the In:
\ tice to buy any other till vox
77 have examined into Ita Du r
C-X « //vS Send for Clrc«’*- i w
'A // Price List.
jnes
W. H. Pakhin, A. C. Bkvob,
Atlanta, Ga. Late of Knoxville
Tenn.
PARKINS & BRUCE,
Architects and
ATLANTA, GA.
PLANS, Detail Drawings and Specifica
tions lor BuiltLngs of every description
furnishe at reasonable rates on short notice.
GUARANTEED.
I Court Houses, Colleges, Churches and
Southern Villas a specialty. jan3o.ly
>24 Self-aHjusting: arm.
chair-disks &book
n for the mil-
lion. Os greatpracliidl
j advantage— amaeinglu
( handy and (y>nnentent.
toJ.A. PAllk A CO., L»n»in K ,
nyMiM H for Rainplu, prepaid to »*n y part •»’’
8 ' Good for Agfa, til'd
UlO XcJankfl/ZBpqijph’tforttainp. 09*>lvDli0U tbil papar
jan3o-ly
HENRY H. TUCKER, Jr.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
| Office over the Bank of the State of Georgia,
on Marietta street, corner Peachtree.
Refers to tire Editor of The Chribtiah
Index. feb!3-tf
M Lowest prices crop known
OUR SHOT-GUN
at greatly reduced price.
Hand stamp for our New
Illustrated Catalogue.
I I’. I*OWELL & SON, 93S Alain Street, CINCINNATI,O.
M-pl 26t
TRUSSES! TRUSSES
DR. 8. C. KRAM.
N. W. corner Sth and Elm Sts.. Cincinnati.
Ohio. Manufactures the “Sure Cure Truss,”
also the Elastic Truss. The best made. Tes
timonials at office oi “Complete Cures'’ in
three months’ time. Send stamp, for circu
lar. augß-ly
BEATTY » >!
N hwOhuanb $3 SV>pa, 8 ■•tUol'hin Tuuguo He* G» bci f. W
Knee ttwalh, Walnut Case, wamt'4 O y. arn, Ht«>«»l A IHok
I New Plano*, ftl-aXB to •£“ Newquip'*''*’ it Free.
Addre»» Daniel F. Beatty,
I octlO.ly
JUST PUBLISHED—SENT FREE.
COMPLETE History of Wall Street Fi
nance, containing valuable informa
tion for investors. Address Baxter a Co.. Pu
blishers, 17 Wall street, New York. 0ct27.1y
Agents wanted everywhere. Bu»
lk'Jsl|llllne.>»etilctly li-gi.'uiele.l’»rtl<-nl»r»fre«
Ufev V V Addriisr J.woaru *C n *•- Louu. Ma
septS,ly
A WEEK. sl2 s dsy st home e.slly
i / /. made. Costly outfit free. Address Tubs
I Co., Augusta, Maine. my27.ly
3