The Christian index. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1892-current, July 28, 1892, Page 7, Image 7

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t FOR Z/ MOSQUITO BITES, < 1 SV/1-BURH SORE X € FEET. JLJ J* LAnEHESS from OVER” f/A EXERTION. CHAFING. To Bathe € FACE and HANDS Z when heated etc. 7 DON’T FORGET- when iTartin<> on vacafion ToTahe g with you. tov are .sure To need it*; perhaps VERY HVCM fe££S| •4 » IS -EXTRACT COFj indeed \ _ REFUSE SUBSTITUTES probably v/ofthless Accept POND'S EXTRACT only. Pond's Extract Co., ./lew Ybrk and London. . "your” PAINT R °° FS DIXON’S SILICA GRAPHITE PAINT, water will run Horn it pure and clean. It covers double the surface of any other paint, and willl last four or five times longer. Equal ly usseful for any iron work. Send for circu lars. Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City N. J< smay26ts DEAFNESS, ITS CAUSES AND CURE, Scientificically treated by an aurist of world wide reputation. Deafness eradicated and en tirely cured, of from 20 to 30 years’ standing, after all other treatments have failed. How the difficulty is reached and the cause remov ed, fully explained in circulars, with affida vits and testimonials of cures from prominent people, mailed free. Dr. A. Fontaine, Taco ma. Wash. Sinayly Dll rft Remedy Free. Instant Relief Uli L \ Final cure in 10 days. Never re I 11 turns; no purge; no salve; no • ■ suppository. A victim tried in vain ever remedy has discovered a simple cure, which he will mail free to his fellow suffer ers. Address J. H. REEVES, Box 3290, New York City, N. Y. If You Are Going West And Want Low Rates. To Arkansas Texas, Missouri, Colorado, Oregon and Cali fornia, or any point WEST or NORTHWEST— IT WILL PAY YOU To write to me, FRED. D. BUSH, D. P. A., L. & N. R. R. 24 Wall St. Atlanta, Ga. THE LATEST INVENTION IN Swiss Music Boxes. They are the sweetest, must complete, tone sustaining, durable and perfect Music Boxes made (warrented in every respect), and any number of tunes can be obtained for them, any airs made to order. (Patented in Switzerland and United States.) We manufacture especially for direct family trade, and we guarantee our instruments far superior to the Music Boxes ususally made for the wholesale trade an 9* sold by general nier cnandlse, dry goods or music stores. Headquar tersonly. Salesrooms for the celbrated Gem and concert Roller Organs. Price (c,and sl2 Extra Rollers only 20c. each. Lowest prices Old Music Boxes carefully Repaired and Improved. H. GAUTSCHI & SONS, M’f’rs. Salesrooms, 1030 Chestnut St., Phil’a. 7 apr ts FOR SALE. - TERMS: One-fourth cash, balance In one, two and three years. One farm of four hundred acres ; 200 enclos ed with cedar posts and steel wire, 40 acres in cultivation. Price 12.000. One farm of spur hundred and fifty acres; all enclosed with cedar post and steel wire One hundred acres in cultivation. Good house well, barn, sheep-shed. Price 55.000. Both these farms in Central Texas, in the black land belt, in Bosque county. Address A. T. SPALDING, Atlanta, Ga. juneistf .V SECRET; Is our new discovery, which cures BAD SMELLING FEET, imparts to the skin a vel vety smoothness and transparence uneoualed. Renews Youthful Beauty; neats Chafed Skin: and Sores betwet n the toes; removes disagree able odor from under the arms; is fragrant, lasting, and healing. For Face, Flesh and Foot. Quickly cures the little one of Prickly Heat and Nettle Rash, making it the best Baby Powder. Send 50 cents for one box of Daisy Anti friction Powder with terms and particu lars. Lady Agents wanted. Address NATIONAL MUTUAL MEDICINE CO. PROPRIETORS, No. 2, 8. Pryor Street, - • ATLANTA, GA. eFAST TIME. WASHINGTON & CHATTANOOGA • LIMITED, • IN AUGUR A TED JUL Yl7. 1892. SOUTH BOUND. Leave Washing on . . 11:15 P. M. Arrive Shenandoah Junction , . 12:40A.M. Leave Shenandoah Junction 12:45 A.M. Arrive Bristol (Eastern Time) . V . 12:20 Noon leave Bristol (Central Time) . 11:25 A M. Arrive Chattanooga . . , 645 p. M. EAST BOUND. , Leave Chattanooga . . . $ 12:05 Noon Arrive Bristol (Central Time) , , 7:25 P.M. Leave Bristol (Eastern Time) 8:30 P.M. Arrive Shenandoah Junction ,» . 7.55 A.M. Leave Shenandoah Junction . 8 00 A M. Arrive WMhington . . . 2:3u A. M. TRAINS CONSISTS OF One Combination Coach A-- m Baggage Car. Three Pull-1 EteaSIILLIESTIBIILEII U oshlngton, Nashville d- i Washington. J © • CONNECTIONS. Leave New York, B. AO. . • ?. M. Arrive Washington » • ■ W4AP. M. Leave*’Washington . • • M* Arrive New York .... J;00 I. M; NO EXTRA FARE. B. W. WKENN, General Paaeenger Agent. ' CHURCHI Established 1827. ORGANS Correspondence Invited. HOOK A HASTINGS, Boston, Mass, joneldeowiot STUDY LAW awn AT HOME. Takk a Comu.it IM run a£ CORRESPONDENCE liAid OF LAW. (Incorporated.) Sen t ten cent* (ttampe)for particulars to J. Corr.cn, Jn . Src-v. Detroit, mich. jjJ whitniv ULocK.MIHBVTHaiHL ©Xntitaxncsu AYECOCK—Mrs. J. E. Aye cock, the subject of this notice, a daughter of Deacon Jessie Swain, of blessed memory, was born on De cember 23, 1827, and was married to Jas. M. Ayecock, in 1847. Years gone by she chose Christ as her por tion and publicly professed His name and faith in baptism, at old Ocaloga church, Gordon county. Elder John Crawford performing the rite. Some years later she joined Salem church, Gordon county, on the day of its constitution, some 20 odd years ago. She continued a consistent mem ber of this church to the day of her death, which occurred on 23d June, 1892. Enjoying in early life pious training, she developed a Christian character of high order. For many years before her death she was con fined to her room by a complication of paralysis and rheumatism. This was greatly aggravated the last few months of her life. Under all this suffering, which was continuous, and often acute, she opened not her mouth in complaint. God gave her kind sisters, loving brothers, faithful sons and an untiring and devoted daughter and thoughtful neighbors to largely compensate for the bodily chastening which He saw fit to lay upon her, “but for a sea son.” “The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to bp compared with the glory which shall be re vealed.” At last she was meet for Heaven and God took her. It was a privi lege to know such a devoted Chris tian. Her pastor never had a more thoughtful and considerately sympa thetic member in any of his varied charges. He misses her though she was never present in the public Sanctuary. Her memory will ever be fragrant with the immortelles of her holy religion. In the cemetery at Old Oothcaloga, her body lies, awaiting the resurrection. “For this corruptible must put- on incor ruption and this mortal must put on immortality. Then “we shall be like Him.” J. J. S. Callaway. Calhoun, Ga., July 14, 1892. LADIES Heeding atonic, or children who want build ing up, should take BROWN’S IRON BiTTFRS. It 11 pleasant to take, euros Malaria, Indi teatloD, El.lousness and Liver Complaint*. Written for The Index. FROM FLORIDA. THE RESURRECTION AT NAIN. “Have you heard that the young man who died a few days ago is alive again? Well, they say it is really true ; that he was seen on our streets but a day or two since, not only alive but perfectly well.” Such, no doubt, was the startling announcement that passed from lip to lip among the inhabitants of Nain more than eighteen hundred years ago with reference to the resurrec tion of a certain young man who was “the only son of his mother, and she was a widow.” The resurrection at Nain suggests to our mind an illustration of three important truths: 1. The young man was dead. This is precisely the case with an un regenerate world. The Bible de scribes the sinner as being “dead in trespasses and in sins, without God and without hope in the world.” Most of us have heard of the im practical D. D. who, desiring to prune his shade tree, ascended, hatchet in hand, to the first limb, seating himself astride it, promptly chopped it off, between himself and the-trunk ; and both he and the limb fell together. And Adam anxl Eve, our illustrious progenitors, did some thing much like that. With the hatchet of sin they cut themselves loose from God and fell; and falling, died. They died for the same rea. son that the limb dies when cut loose from its trunk. The tree is the source of the vital fluid that circu lates through the limb and keeps it alive and healthful. So God is the great and only source of spiritual life; and when Adam, by his own ruthless hand, severed the connec tion between himself and God, he died. God had forewarned him, “In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.” But he ventured to disbelieve and disobey his Creator and fell; anxl falling he died; and his posterity, though all of whom were as yet unborn, died with him. “In Adam all die,” declares the apostle. Again : “By one man, sin entered into the world and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men.” The fountain of human life was poisoned, and the stream became impure. His posterity in conse quence of his spiritual death, have all come upon the theater of life dead ; THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY, JULY 28. 1892. entirely destitute of spiritual life; born dead, and with their back to wards God and holiness and heaven and eternal life. This young man, however, was not only dead, but was on his way to the grave-yard, the natural abiding place of the physi cally dead. And so the unregener ate posterity of Adam, like this young man, are not only dead, but on their way to the graveyard, I do not mean to Hollywood, Greenwood or Elm wood, but to Perditon, the great spir itual cemetery of the Universe—the natural and eternal abiding place of dead souls. The spectacle before us is a dead world in funeral procession wending its solemn way to perdition, the spiritual cemetery of the Uni verse. ■ 2. Life could come to this young man only from above. If his phy sicians, or his friends, or his mother, could have brought him back to life, they would have done so. The fact that they did not is proof that they could not. There is only ono being in the world who could impart life to him, and that being came from above. So spiritual life can come to a world of dead souls only from above. Men have an idea that a germ of spiritual life is by nature implanted in every heart; and that in order to reach •en the maximum of spirit ual life, all they have to do is by some sort of moral exercises to de velop that germ. In other words, they have only to blow the spark and the fire is kindled. But the germ theory is false. The sinner is dead. There is not even a germ of life in his dead soul. And it is just as impossible for him to generate life therein as it is for the fertilizer that I place around my trees to quicken itself and develop oranges. The fertilizer and the orange tree belong to different kingdoms in na ture, the organic and the inorganic; and the latter can be made alive only as the plants of the former reach down into the dead world of inorganic matter and quicken it. And so it is only as God, who is life, bends down to this world of dead souls and touches them with the fin ger of life can they be quickened. There is no such thing as spontan eous generation of life. Only from life can life coine. This we know to be true of both the vegetable and animal kingdoms; and the Bible de clares it to be true of the spiritual kingdom also. “Except a man be born again (born from above) he can not enter into the kingdom of God.” Not “will not,” or “shall not,” hut “can not.” “That which is born of flesh is flesh.” It has such faculties only as are natural to the flesh ; and hence in the very nature of the case, except a man be quickened from the kingdom above, he can not enter or enjoy that kingdom. This is no less self-evident than that except the in organic kingdom above it, it cannot enter or become part of that king dom. The popular idea is that men, by their own efforts, lopping off a bad habit here and there, can grad ually grow better and better until they become so good that they reach “that quality known as spiritual life?” Then would we have the specta cle of a dead man quickening him self! Sooner might we expect the Ethiopian to change his skin, or the leopard his spots, or the stream to rise above its source, or the man to" lift himself by the straps of his boots. Life can come only from antecedent life and as “God only hath (inherent) immortality,” or eternal life, it fol lows with the force of a demonstra tion that from God only can dead souls receive life. “But cannot parents to whom God has imparted spiritual life impart that life to their offspring? They do impart certain physical, mental, and even moral characteristics to their children; why then can they not im part to them spiritual life.” Our an swer is this: Parents can transmit to their children such faculties only as they themselves have by nature. We have seen parents who had a glass eye or a cork leg, but their children did not have them, for the reason that people do not have glass eyes and cork legs by nature. Neither do they have spiritual life by nature. By nature they are dead, and they receive spiritual life only as a direct and supernatural gift from God, and hence they cannot trans mit it to their posterity. The race of mankind, then, is a dead race and can receive life only from above. 3. As soon as the young man re ceived life, he manifested that life— he sat up and talked. And bo we believed that they to whom God im parts spiritual life will manifest that life. Like the young man, they will manifest it in their speech and ac- tions. By words and by deeds will they declare themselves to be dead to the world, but alive to God and holiness. “A good tree bringeth forth good fruit.” It is true that even physical life is sometimes less manifest than at other times—as for instance in sleep. But an investiga tion will discover the manifestations of life in the throbbing of the pulse and the heaving of the chest. So spiritual life is sometimes less mani fest than at other times. Spiritual drowsiness sometimes seizes the fac ulties of the soul, and the man ap pears to be dead. But the heart of the regenerated man always goes out in longings after God and a holier life, even when his spiritual facul ties have been overpowered by the stupor of the world. The heart beats and the chest heaves, and out of his stony griefs he cries: “Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” Let us see to it that we who claim to have life, be diligent to manifest that life, remembering that our Sav ior has said, “By their fruits ye shall know them.” Though we are not saved on account of our works, we are, nevertheless, to be judged by our works, the fruit we bear being the evidence as to what manner ot men and women we are. L. D. Geiger. THE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED. Can You Find the Word? There is a 3-inch display adver tisement in this paper, this week, which has no two words alike ex cept one word- The same is true of each new one appearing each week, from the Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you >[oofl of Beautiful Lithographs or Samples Free. ly It will soon be time to sow turnips. Those who wish to get the best pro duct from a given amount of land will sow in drills, and cultivate thor oughly as long as the tops will per mit. Rotation of crops, although it will retard the depletion of the soil, will not itself prevent land from contin ually growing poorer. Crops take out of the land certain qualties, which, if not supplied in some way, will infallibly leave the farm and the farmer poorer. The United States expends upon its Agricultural Department and for the support of agricultural colleges and experiment stations about $2,- 000,000 per annum. Germany expends nearly $3,000,000 for the same pur pose. France, in 1886, appropriat ed 18,000,000, and Austria, during the same year, more than $4,000,000. The Garden and Forest, which is unimpeachable authority, announces that the white pine of the Northwest is so nearly exhausted that there is only about two years’ supply of stand ing timber in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The evidence accu malates that we have reached a point where timber culture holds out a fair promise of profit. The increased demand for wheat for homo consumption has increased about 70,000,000 bushels since 1880. Only twice since then has our wheat crop been larger than it was in that year, and there is no indication of a greatly enlarged wheat area in the near the future. The probabilities are that shall soon have better prices for this great staple. The cost of transportation of farm products has declined remarka bly within a few years. In 1872 the average rate on corn from Chica go to New York was 32.66 cents per bushel. In 1889 it was 12.82 cents. The rate on wheat has declin ed in the same time from 34.99 cents to 15 cents. The rate for grain from New York to Liverpool has also de clined in the same time from 21.12 cents to 5.34 cents. Under the best of conditions it is a costly business to winter stock. If any stock is carried it should be such as pays as it goes—dairy cows or young animals that can be fed so as to make rapid gain at the least ex pense. Most farmers will find it to their pecuniary advantage to feed off their hogs before very cold weath er and cany through the winter as small a quantity of breeding stock as will suflicc for their needs. UAUC ITUHIMO FILM known by mol.tur. n/i Vr, 11*. peraplratioa, u.u.o Inton., itching when warm. Thl. form and BLIND, YR!I BLMDIWO or PROTRUDING PU.Mti lull YtatD AT OKCK TO flflT OR- 80-SAN KO’S PILE REMEDY, ' IjU 1 whir’ll «ota directly on p.rt. afield. ” 7 * _ abaorba tumor., all«».ltohlni,eff»oting P I rp • prrmanenloure. Frtoa »Oe. Druaglau lILC. O O' malt Dr. Boaaitko, Philadelphia, fa An exchange comes to us with a column article telling how a crop of onions, worth S2OO per acre, was grown by their correspondent, with no more labor than is usually spent on corn. Onions not infrqeuently yield that return, hut the best grow ers consider the cost of growing an acre at about sloo—rather more than is expended even upon the most elaborate corn culture. Such reck less and misleading statements as the foregoing do positive harm to the cause of agriculture. The profits in feeding any stock consist in what the animal appropri ates to flesh after sustaining life. When only enough food is given to support life there can be no profit, as that only comes from what is con sumed and appropriated above the life sustaining point. Care, handling and exercise have much to do with the growth and welfare of and ani mal. To animal will thrive without kind treatment, good air and proper exercise'. At the finishing off but little exercise is needed. This should be voluntary, with little effort on the part of the animal to get its food. Among the new industries that have sprung up in California is that of the manufacture of grape syrup. It gives great promise of being a profitable one to the grape grower and very acceptable to the consum er of the product. The syrup is made by evaporating the freshly expressed juice of the grape until it becomes about the consistency of molasses. In view of the fact that in California there are hundreds of thousands of acres planted to the varieties of viiiit isvinifera, which are very rich in su gar, and that the price of wine, into which they have heretofore largely been made, is very low, it would seem that the manufacture of grape syrup is a good way to utilize the crop. It is claimed that the syrup can be produced at a cost not ex ceeding 50 cents per gallon, and, if this is true, there is no reason why it may not become a staple article of food, as the means of production are practically without limit. Nut culture is assuming more im portance as an industry in this coun try than formerly. Among the na tive Rut-bearing trees none are of more importance than the chesnut. It grows naturally over a large part of the United States, beginning with Kentuckey and Ohio, and reach ing northeast to the boundary, and eastward to the Atlantic. The wild nut is very rich in flavor, and very sweet. In these respects it is super ior to the European or the Asiatic strains, but in the size of nuts the latter have the advantage. A num. ber of varieties of our American species are now propagated by bud ding and grafting, and show a decid ed improvement as compared with the ondinary kinds found in the for est. Large tracts of land in the dis trict above outlined, now yielding small, if any, returns, might be pro fitable if planted to chestnuts. Many worn-out fields might thus be turned to good account. The timber would be commercially valuable, but the nuts would bring much larger returns. Once started and cultivated for a few years until the trees begin to shade the ground, they would require little further attention,except to thin them out. As an article of the food the chestnut is valuable, and present prices are very high. Even the com mon nuts from ungrafted trees would repay the use of land, but it would be much better to plant only the choice varieties. Kennedy’s Medical Discoveiy Takes hold in this order: Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skinj Driving everything before it tha ought to be out. You know whether you need it or not. Sold by every druggist, and manufac tured by DONALD KENNEDY ROXBURY, MASS. CONSUMPTION. I have a pomtlve remedy for the above by its use thousands of cases of tho worst kind and of long standing havo been cured. Indeed fw> st runs is my faith in itsefljescy. that 1 will (tendTWO hotti.kh mcc with a VALUABLE TRFATJbK uq this disease to any suf. furor whew ill send ma their EsprosH and P, O. address, T. Blocuji. M. <’.« 183 Pearl Bt.* N. Y. CHEW mid SMOKE uiitnxed NATURAL LEAF TOBACCO. roll LOW PRICIM WKITK TO MERIWETHER & CO’, Clarksville, Tenn I’.'iiiuySin & , , , .IRON c-ENCE T . SIXT - ' IIV .i ■' roi; + { CEMEI ERY A I AWN I CAIALOGUE FREE W A-L.‘ J. W. RICE.ATLANTA.UA. AYilk Men fl and G V L Milk Maids must have their tin cans, tin pans, I P ' and everything else faultlessly I II clean, and there is nothing j] half so good for such clean ing as tt" A v I Gold oust rr washing Powder., b Housekeepers too have much to T( M I_< clean, and they can’t afford to do \ I ) : \ tJiX VTr\ without Gold Dust Washing I| A j Uv. U| 'll \ Powder, which makes things | 1 I l/\A clean in half the time, and keeps \ A?' \ I // them clean for half the money. K AA // Gold Dust Washing Powder ilfl 1 is sold by all grocers. Less Mr ONE HALFMjpe price of afters. N. K. FAIRBANK\<CO., Sole Manufacturers,! CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK. PHILADELPHIA, BOSTON, BALTIMORE, NEW ORLEANS, SAN FRANCISCO, PORTLAND, ME., PORTLAND, ORE., PITTSBURGH AND MILWAUKEE. • ATLANTA MEDICAL COLLEGE C?’ For Catalogue and in formation, apply to W. S. KE A DRICK. M. I>., Secretary, 9june3m Atlanta, Ga. > dresw UpMlltwi 818 W« sell the best makes of Pianos and Organs v. J at the lowest possible price, for cash or easy I payments. Full line of Sheet Music. Write as jJxA. I for catalogues and prices before buying. JL J !■ J aOIKWM WIN SHIP MACHINE CO., GA. Colton Gins anil Cotton Presses. a I Up-Packing, Down-Packing, Self-Packing. • Steel Screws, 4 inches and 5 inches in diameten J OUR COTTON GIN WITH NEW PATENT REVOLVING CARD, i |l Straightens the Fibre and Improves the Samploi Bff | SO that it commands the Highest Market Price. J ALL THE LATEST IMPKOVEMENTS. / —X GINS FURNISHED with revolving Ls VI HEADS, WHEN WANTED. LSI Any “WRITE FOR CIRCULARS AND PRICES. Atlanta and Florida BAILROAD co. Time Table No. 14, taking effect April 21ts 1993, 6:45 p. m. .IE-* Ijjri s§SB!?32 :g :§ : » 6 n-ioi . ;c. Ico: co • > jr, IH ZJ I • I * ; —J g Sjj ;s«?>2S5 ;88§73l2~“ x fc, .° -* <J W ’■' £} 22 S3;OO>Q• oc r- O’ > h"1 ; : p “’•?! S -rto< :«§ - | <7is o4 00 : 05 00 i t ’ • •<-<©«o • > :: :c :• •« j&j :• • o K^r^ z s=„-£ = » i s-i ; a “ = il'*? :::: ;• :§ :| j; • . I •? «o ;?42i0 p? >; p **€>£ I _ CO’T «C lO •IQ ■ Cfi I- •t-L-iCi hJ | „1_ o Ta.* 0 Ipi J :8U858& :%%% £ pj : X 3S22SJ ©v i s “ I al- ’ y " !" ':” No. 5 will run Mondavß, WedneMiiys and Fri days. No. 6 will run Tn<“<lavß, Thursday* and Saturday*. Nos. 7 and ts will run daily except Sunday. I Stop for meals. K. 11. PLANT. T. \V. GARRETT. Receiver. Superintendent. Marietta andnoiuii gi.okula rul WAV COM PAN V. Time Table No. LHectivo June 24th, 1891. “NORTH. ~ SOUTH.“~ [ No. 3. No. 1. No. 2. |No A p.iu. a. m. p. m- I a. m. 3«fi 750 Lv...Atlanta...Ar oWI ~il"w Bin 915 L»..Marietta ..Ar p i 93; 61 960 Lv. Woodstock. Ar 44 ss; 663 10 zl Lv.. Canton.. .Ar 413 81,. l 8 10 63 Lv Bad GroundAr 84, 7it 641 11 11 Lv.... TstO ....Ar 82; 724 601 12 Ji | lillijny... Ar 21. Bij Ar J.’ 3d Lv White Path Ar 2 0 Lv 1 i‘.i Lr Bluoitldiru Ar 1 u I z 2 Lv I' 11. nd.Ville. Ar 820 63> Lv.. Louisville.. Ar 803 Mum-iu diwn. Jf±!2 —’ p. in. . p. ui. 1 »■■■■ I ■ ■■— 'I ■■ -—"I ■>■■■!■ - , , ...... 2 2 -v..n* 41 11 it 0 £22 Lv.... NollsAr 105 3B> Ar..Murpby , s .Lv ic. 0 I’aror c.ir on No. 1 and 2 between 11.uo Ridge and Marietta. No. 1 and 2. and 9 and 10 daily. No. 3 and 4 ( dally except Sunday. Saturday attornooni No. a will run to Whito Rath Spriri ii arriviux nt BJO. reCuring North will leave White Path Monday morning. Sih Tlfni.t Thomi-rox, the mod noted physician of Eng- Y\ land, luiya that more than | di.M UM xcoiue from 1 erront In diet. xylafA-. l ' ®<3l or I' rcc Sample of < nr^ 31° W®st I Street, Now York City. I fiARFIELD TEA™ BH oflm.l eiillng;. ur.a Nlrk ■l>-n<lit< li>.> rc.ior.»<;diui>l«>xlou;ciuv.Cou.t ipuliun. ..— 1—.... 7 /• GEORGIA MIDLAND AND GULF R. R ’ ‘ The only line running Double Daily Trains and Through Coach between Atlanta and Cd* lunibus via Griffin. NORTHBOUND DAILY. No. 51. No. 53. Lv Thomasville, S. F. & A. 7 45 a nv Ar Albany, “ 10 40 “ ' “ Dawson, C. S. Ry 1152 “ J “ Columbus " 2 530 1®: Lv " GM Ry...., 60Qam 55Q~J Ar Warm Springs “ 757 am 524 , " 'Williamson “ 924 “ 533 " ' “ Griffin 948 “ 550 “ . “ Atlanta, C. RR. 1130“ 735 “ SOUTH BOUND DAILY, N». 50. No. 52. : Lv. Atlanta,C. RR 720 am 4iQplit Ar. Griilin “ §2O “ cob ‘‘7 " Williamson, G. M. Ry.. 924 “ 834 *• | “ Warm .Springs “ .... 1027 “ 801 '• j “ Columbus “ .... 1155 *’ 968 *’ 1 “ Dawson C. S. Ry 2 17pm ,»l “ Albany, “ 305 “ “ Thomasville. S. P. &W. 610 “ 1 Through Concn on trains Nos. 50 and 53 be* tween Columbus and Atlanta. Ask tot tickets to Columbus and point® South over Georgia .Midland and Gulf R. RL _ T JL E. Gray, Supt. ! Clifton James, Gen. Pass. Agent. Macon and Birmingham? K aXILROAD. Schedule in Effect June 22, 1892. Read Downj’ ' i Read UfJ 1 I It 00am Lv.- Macon.... Ar. 12 10 pm rjiripm “ ...801k«e....Lv. 1120 am 1240 pm •' . Lizella.... •• 10 43 am loop in '* .Montpelier. “ 10 25 am 145 pm “ ...Culloden... “ 940 am 220 pm “ ’Yatesville..." 925 am 3 15 p nt " Thomaston,. “ 8 15 a iu 4 00 P 111 “ Tli’er Springs 7 2u a m 4 45 pm " WooiDniry... “ 7 00 a m 5 15pm Harris City.. " 6 25 am 540 pm “ . Odessa .., “ 565 am 5 56pm " Mountville.. " 5 35 a in 6 .101> mAr. LaGrange Lv., 500 a m Connection in Union Depot, Macon. Go., will, <l. S. A F. R. R. for Valdosta, Icikq City, Palatka, St. Augustine and points in Florula; C. R. It., for Savannah, Milledgeville amt Eatonton; S. W. R. K. for Americus, Al bany ami Eufaula; M. A N. R. R. for Madison. \tliens anil Lula, and points beyoua Georgia Railroad lor Sparta, Milledgeville and Augu»- ta, and all points beyond. At Yatesville with A. A I'. R. R. for stationson that line, and at LaGrango with A. AW. P. R. R. for Mont ginnery and beyond and intermediate sta, lions. For further information ajpply to W. P. BROOKS. Ticket Agt. LaGrango. ~ IL BURNS. Traveling Passenger Agent, Macon, A. C. KNAPP. Traffic Manager. Kendy July Ist. Oowpel IVojs. f> £vn.d <> Combined 13R Pieces, many of which cun bo found in no ot her book. Music, si'i> p<’r 100: 70c. ca. by Mall. Words, »20 per 100; 22c. ca. by Mail, THE I THE John Church Co.' Biglow & Main Go, 71 W. 4tli St., < 'in'li. I 7<’. E, l)th Bt~y, Y. MQMgmQoinßu.Vi« a *e-.00 iMprvve* Oiffertt Bla<*r BkLjVvJKj ***“ H,w,n « M*ohl««i pvrttnt varkinc, rrltHM. JM T7 Bi'shod, g4apK<i »• hgbt M a feMvy work. m L A> AAA ’*’ h • »•« O ftkkUteftlaprnvalAMMbßMW M fPI I • narwatwd far » yran . n v n JdbTrdXj *”"•» fr,,n ' ♦»*•» rnwutv. and nr« <| M | (ra ~4 h rK "« CUI>L<WWI. Mantlon paper. G T ’OXFUUU IkU ta. b. B U M. CMIUttSuE TEACHERS ——■—l »—mwwmw l«'l Southwest. Vtcancia* 7