The Christian index. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1892-current, October 20, 1892, Page 7, Image 7
Efficient
[■jealth Qfficer
ALWAYS READY FOR DUTY
is
POND'S EXTRACT
Wherever inflammation exists
POND’S EXTRACT will find
and will allay it. It is in
valuable for CATARRH,
PILES, COLDS, SORE
EYES, SORE THROAT,
HOARSENESS, RHEU
MATISM, WOUNDS,
BRUISES, SPRAINS,
ail HEMORRHAGES and
INFLAMMATIONS.
NEVER HARMFUL.
ALWAYS BENEFICIAL.
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Genuine goods manufactured
only by Pond’s Extract Co., 76
Fifth Avenue, New York.
WIRERAILING AND ORNAMENTAL OKS
DUFUR & CO. 1
3 & 115 N. Howard St.,
A LTI MO RE, M D. (
Manufacture Wire Railing for Cemeteries. Bal
conies. etc,. Stoves, Fenders, cages. Sana and
Coal Screns, Woven Wire, etc. Also. Iron
Bedsteads. Chairs, Settees, etc., etc. 25febiy
M ■ aw ■ KUSB YOUR
PAINT RO ,2 FS
DIXON’S SILICA GRAPHITE PAINT,
water will run from it pure and clean. It
covers double the surface of any other paint,
and will! last four or rive times longer. Equal
ly usseful for any iron work. Send for circu
lars. Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City
NJ J, smay26ts
DEAFNESS,
ITS CAUSES AND CURE,
Scientiticically treated by an aurist of world
wide reputation. Deafness eradicated and en
tirely cured, of from 20 to .10 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
>Hna. Wash. ftmayly
fill 1“ A Remedy Free. Instant Relief
■PH L V Final cure in 10 days. Never re
’ I 1J turns; no purge; no salve; no
* .■ suppository. A victim tried in
vain ever repiedy has discovered a simple cure,
which he will mall free to his fellow suffer
?'*. Address J. H. REEVES, Box 3290, New
ork City, N. Y.
If You Are Going West
And Want Low Rates.
' ... . To Arkansas
Texas. Missouri, Colorado, Oregon and Cali
fornia, or any point TV EST or NORTHWEST—
IT WILL PAY YOU
To write to me.
FRED. D. BUSH,
D. P. A., L. &N. R. R.
T 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 (warranted in every respect), and any
number of tunes can be obtained forthem, any
airs made to order. (Patented in Switzerland
an<l United ,'*mt< , .“.)
We manufacture especially fordirect family
trade, and we guarantee our instruments far
superior to the Music Boxes ususally juade for
the wholesale trade an V sold by general iner
chandise, dry goods or music stores. Headquar
ter* only. Salesrooms for the celbrated Gem
and concert Roller Organs. Price $C and sli
Extra Rollers only 25c. each. Lowest prices
Old Susie Boxes carefully Repaired and Improved.
H. GALTSCHI A SONS, M’f’rs.
Salesrooms, 1030 Chestnut St., Phil’a.
7 apr ts
~ FOR SALE.
TERMS: One-fourth cash, balance i
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 J 2,000.
Ono farm of four hundred and fifty acres;
all enclosed with cedar post and steel wire
One hundred acres in cultivation. Good house
well, barn, sheep shed. Price *5,000.
Both these farms in Central Texas, in the
black land belt, in Bosque county. Address
A. T. SPALDING, Atlanta, Ga.
junelGtf
BLUE RIDGE & ATLANTIC R. R
1 No. 50. | No. 52.
| DAILY. I DAILY.
Tallulah Falls tv 7:35a mT.v 6:50p m
Turnersville | ‘ 7:50 " | “ 7:05 "
Ananda Io | “ H:O6 “ •' 7:17 ••
Clarksville ' 8:20 “ “ 7:35 “
Demorest ’ “ 7:35 "
Cornelia 'Ar 8:45 lAr 7:50 **
No. 53. No. 51.
DAILY. DAILY,
tornelia Lv 10:5", am.Lv 9:50 p m
Demorest " 11:10” I " 10:03“
Clarksville “ 11:2.3” I " 10:14“
Anndfcle ’’ 11:33" I “ 10:23"
Turnersville “ 11:45" “ 10:37“
Ta llujah Fall* Ar 11:57“ lAr 10:50“
W. B. THOMAS,
President and General Manager.
D. G.
ARCHITECT, CHARLESTON, S. C.
Plans ami Specifications furnished for all
classes of Buildings. Correspondence cheer
fully replied to. Remodelling of existing
Structures a specialty, 2junely
. diWES
(tv I' I’® 3 - -V oAa CHURCH
Tank PEw3
| 'iL jiff UlriT, >‘
PUt'Wtf IWJjffir <£“'"3*l CHAU'S.
> r -Ji Mir-W. ir. Axl J send reg
MTALOGUt’C.
■THE HOLMAN Pronojucin
TEACHERS’ RI BL I:
ThoonlyouZcrf the kind In the work
la NOW READY.
AGENT* WANTED-Full poi
tk-uiara on applies’ion.
jk. J”. Ac CO
i PUILADELFBIA. FA
As an indication of the growth of
our beef export trade, it may be men
tioned that the amount of American
fresh beef received, into Liverpool
during the first six months of the
present year amounted to more than
66,000,000 pounds, or about 40 per
cent- in excesss of the quantity for
the corresponding period of 1886.
Mixed grasses are better for stock
than a single variety. No matter how
valuable any particular grass crop
may be, or how large the yield, the
stock will thrive better when fed on
a variety. The individual prefer
ences of cattle differ, and they will
at all times accept a change of food,
which promotes appetite and thrift.
The investigations of the South
Carolina Station upon the composi
tion of fodders has determined that
for a nitrogenous crop the cow pea
vines are almost without a rival. The
crop will probably produce more di
gestible food than any other, and the.
manure which results from the feed
ing is of the highest value. These
excellent results are due to the fact
that the cow pea derives a large pro
portion of its nitrogen from the at
mosphere.
G. B. Greer says that he has found
J the key to the successful manage
, tnent of a large flock of poultry. It
[ : consists of a house six feet square
• and six feet high for each 15 to 25
j fowls; yards 50 by 125 feet to each
1 house, with a sub-yard 10 feet square
in which to confine them close to the
house when desired ; lath fences only
four feet high between the yards,
t and clipped wings to prevent flying
: over. This plan, he says, brought
p both healthy fowls and eggs.
While the tide of immigration
within ourselves will tend Southward,
that from foreign lands will in the
near furture look toward Canada for
* its agricultural opportunities. The
l t New England Magazine, in a recent
•- number, says that “Canada is clearly
r on the eve of a notable new era * *
e in the opening up of he almost limit
n less areas and resources to the world,
r- which has been, and is for the most
part,so remarkably ignorant of them.”
(The present year of fine crops in the
Dominion, the best, says the Rural
Canadian, that have ever been har
vested there, will be an additional in
a . , ...
i ccntive to the prospecting immigrant
j to choose his home there.
There is no question of health, of
politics nor of sectional discrimination
- in the Pure Lard bill, but an effort
to stop manufacturers from gaining
an illicit profit from the compound
• ing of a cheaper article with a more
j exjiensive one, and selling it all as
J the higher-priced products. This
'• may have a temporarily depressing
J effect upon the manufacture of cot
’J ton seed oil, but that product is find-
J ing its legitimate way into so many
1 avenues of trade and manufacture
that it can not be long in sunnount
• ing this difficulty. The oil is a val
uable product, and manufacturers de
serve the thanks and the aid of South
ern farmers for thus opening one
more channel for utilizing a by-pro
duct of their great crop. However
if the bill should depress the oil in
. dnstry, the farmers could have their
' I revenge by feeding the seed to hogs,
I and thus making more lard and pork,
which it is expected will gain what
• ever advantage the oil may lose by
- the bill.
I
The Missouri Station has been ex
perimenting with vaccination as a
preventive for black leg. Bulletin
• No. 12 describes the process and
publishes two colored plates. Re
garding the disease, it says: “Black
leg is due to a specific infectious bac
terium, which exists particularly in
- lowlands, and when in the body of
young cattle grows principally in the
1 tissue between the skin and the flesh,
causing bloody dark, gaseous tumors.
Its progress is very rapid. In the
morning an animal will be found
dead, the body already swelled to
. enormous proportions, and there
seems to be no clue to such rapid de
struction. Other animals may indi
-1 cate the presence of the disease by
r lameness, soon to be followed by
i swelling and death, for most cases
prove fatal, and treatment is hardly
practicable. Preventive measures
are the only ones of importance. Up
on the outbreak of black leg remove
all the healthy animals, and these on
ly, to a distance, and inoculate each
subject twice at eight days’ interval.
hjij i lA
MJ? cufts Ajlk lirttStHllLS.
UR Bret Cough Hyrop. Good. lIM Wl
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1892.
There is little doubt that the next
I
(and last, by reason of the exhaus
tion of cheap, cultivable lands) gen
eral movement of agricultural home
seekers that we shall witness within
the present boundaries of the United
States will be toward the South.
During the past few years there has
been a large emigration toward that
region, but largely in the line of com
merce and manufactures. There has
been but a slight augmenting of the
agricultural population, and a com
paratively slight increase in produc
tion, except the great staple—cotton.
Lands are yet cheap there. The de
velopment of manufactures has creat
ed new markets. Railways have
been built so that the shipment of
, products has been facilitated. The
soil responds readily to cultivation,
and the husbandman may make choice
among a vast number of industries,
any of which ho may find profitable
in following. It is not well to oulti-
• vate a restless spirit, nor to be con
! tinually seeking a change; but, if you
are looking-for new fields to conquer,
1 take advantage of some of the many
cheap railway excursions that are
now running to the South, and look
‘ the land over for your self. It does
no harm to go away from home once
in a while, any way. It sometimes
serves to make one more contented
with his present lot.
SIOOREWARD. SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages
■ and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
i Cure is the only positive cure now
known to the medical fraternity.
Catarrh being a constitutional disease
; requires a constitutional treatment.
, Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern
ally, acting, directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system
thereby destroying the foundation
, of the disease and giving the patient
( strength by building up the consti
tution and assisting nature in doing
its work. The proprietors have so
! much faith in its power, that they
t offer One Hundred Dollars for any
- case that it fails to cure. Send for
c list of Testimonials.
Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., To
ledo, O.
’ JJgr'Sold by Druggists' 75c.
t
i I saw a piece in the issue of Sept.
, 29th, written by F. R. 8,, I). D. on
1 the resurrection of Christ or the time
of bis resurrection. Christ said : “I
will rise the third day.” He did not
t rise sooner or later. As to the time
I have nothing more to say. It is
enough for us to know that Christ
f rose for our justification. As to the
i time it does not matter. Christ has
t said the third day, for there is no
; justification in the time but there
- is justification in the resurrection.
5 Why should we dispute about the
s time, when there is no salvation in
1 the time but in the resurrection.
r Brethren, there is no comfort in the
• time. God has said, “comfort ye
■ my people, speak unto them edifica
r cation, exhortation and comfort.
1 One of old says, “the spirit of the
- Lord God is upon me because the
Lord God has anointed me to preach
good tidings to the meek, he hath
sent me to bind up the broken-heart
> ed to preach liberty to the captives,
. and the opening of the prison to
them that are bound, to proclaim
the acceptable year of the Lord,”
and the day of vengeance of our
( God, to comfort all that mourn*
, Blessed be God, even
. the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
the father of mercies and the God of
all comfort, who comforteth us in all
of our tribulations that we may be
able to comfort them which are in
any trouble by the comfort where
with we ourselves are comforted of
God. For if we believe that Jesus
died and rose again, even so them
also which sleep in Jesus will God
bring with him.
We which are alive and remain
shall be caught up together with
them in the clouds to meet the Lord
in the air and so shall we ev’er be
with the Lord, wherefore comfort
one another with these words:
comfort the feeble minded
support the weak. There is no
comfort in the time but that Christ
did rise. Comfort ye my pcoplei
saith your God, speak ye comforta
ble to Jerusalem and cry unto her
that her warfare is accomplished,
that her iniquity is pardoned for she
hath received of the Lord’s hand
double for all of her sins. Christ rose
the third <ftiy, ascended to the right
hand of the father, there to make
intcr-ccssions for us. It does not
matter when he arose, morning
noon or at cockcrowing, he died for
our offenses and rose for our justifi
cation. And I thank God, brethren,
when I was in darkness and pressed
down with a load of sin and con
demnation, he spoke peace to me,
•
then I could rejoice in the death
and resurrection of Christ and not
in the time he was resurrected. I
thank God I still rejoice in him who
sits at the right hand of of the ma
jesty on high to grant repentance to
Israel. T. P. G.
Signs of Sin.
When I look for the signs of sin, I see
it in the spirit of contempt, in the spirit
of inhumanity, the spirit that does not
recognize the bond of a common brother
hood or the existence of a common
nature, the spirit that divides mankind
into cliques and classes, the spirit that
perverts motives, misinterprets actions,
puts false constructions upon character,
delights in gossip, the spirit of unkind
ness and injustice, sometimes of bitter
ness, sometimes of malignity, the spirit
that loves to paint the world worse than
it is, men as degraded, women as vile,
and chooses to believe that a devil is at
the bottom of all goodness—that spirit
is the one stubborn sign of sin.—O. B.
Frothingham.
The King's Country.
A friend of Mr. Spurgeon was sick.
The great preacher sympathized with
him in his affliction, to which a loving
and appreciative reply was made. Mr.
Spurgeon was so impressed by the spirit
and beautiful utterances es the letter
that ho said his friend “must have gone
far into the King's country, and been
much in the light of the King’s counte
nance.”
The King's country! Blessed country!
Accessible to all the King's sons and
daughters. Happy those who have an
inheritance in the land, and happier
those who have gone far into the coun
try and are basking in the light of the
King’s countenance.—Christian Herald.
Short Sermons.
I find that doing the will of God leaves
me no time for disputing about his
plans.—George Macdonald.
Do well the little things now, so shall
great things come to thee by and by
asking to be done.—Persian Proverb.
1 have never found a thorough, per
vading, enduring morality but in those
that feared God.—Joubert.
The virtue of a man ought to be meas
ured not by extraordinary exertions,
but by his everyday conduct.—Pascal.
Religion is a chain of gold which at
taches humanity to the throne or rather
to the heart of God.—Fournier.
H. B. Randolph, Brunswick Ga.
writes: “I was under the care
of nine different doctors but not one
did me the good that Botanic Blood
Balm has done me.”
Value of a Pure
There is nothing on earth for which
one ought to be more thankful than for
having been brought up in the atmos
phere of a pure home. Such a home
may be narrow, and even hard. It may
be deficient in material comforts and
utterly lack the graceful amenities that
lend a charm to human life, but it has
in it the forces on which great charac
ters are nurtured. One of our best
1 friends—a man as sturdy as a forest oak
i —once said to me: “I was the sou of
poor parents, and from my youth up
was inured to self denial and hardship.
" But Ido not remember ever to have
j heard a word from the lips of either my
father or my mother that was not as
chaste as the driven snow.” Better such
-a recollection as that than an inherit
s ance of millions of money.—Central
Presbyterian.
' THE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED.
Cau You Find the Word ?
There is a 8-inch display adver
-1 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.
1 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
jjoofj of Beautiful Lithographs or
Samples Free. ly
i *
“Mothers’
• z Friend’’
MIKES CHUD BIRTH HSV,
Colvin, La., Dec. 2,1880.—My v !r o used
, MOTHER’B FRIEND beforo her third
confinement, and aaya she would not be
without it for hundreds of dollars.
DOCK MILLS.
Sent by express on receipt of price, fl .50 per bot
tie. Book “To Mothers” mailed free.
B/fADFICLO REGULATOR CO.,
FOR SALK BY AUDRUaai«T». ATLANTA, GA
h’A BAILEY’S A ?
rX lUI UXvohfrmnaiiahMprßAdlngStt. 7/iilW
» Oornigated Glaa« <
* I-iANte Churches
BAIUtT .niIWrCTORCO f
Habits Cured without physical or mental injury.
Treatment identical with that of Dr. Keeley, at
Dwight, Illinois. For particulars, address
THE KEELEY INSTITUTE,
Edgewood Avo. and Ivy St., ATLANTA, GA
yIRON FENCE
Tt ♦ T SlXT’f fiTV.ES rot:
T 1 CEMETERY A I AWN
I CATALOGUE FREE
J. W. RICE. ATLANTA, GA
AGENTS WANTED 1 p
. i . ■ «■'' ■*'•*■— Eclectic Famil,
Physician. Good seller. Largo profit*
Address J. K. Scunmiß, Box 115,Cincin
nati, Ohio, Publisher,
MENTION THIS PAPER.
BUCKEYES?. 0
want an Agent In your Place.
We will sell you a BICYCLE at manufacturers’
prices if you will try to sell our goods. I'lcuzo
write for Catalogue and full information.
••■EVERY WHEEL WARRANTEO."*«
W nlufiL I sga'ilis:
■ ■ ■■MWIII.M. WOOLLEY,M D.
■ ■ Atlanta, Ga. Office 104 Ii Whitehall oL
A\ilk Maids
must have their tin cans, tin pans,
and everything else faultlessly y I I
clean, and there is nothing i Li i
half so good for such clean- (7 m LlSoioiSl
cold dusPnwsM it bLt i
washing Powder., b V/ '
Housekeepers too have much to TJM >. 1-I VCnt
clean, and they can’t afford to’do \ I HI Yll \
without Gold Dust Washinq I\ 2 1 Uv. | 1 /./ \
Powder, which makes things I 1\ \ 'mN I / //W
clean in half the time, and keeps \/ A \ 1 J // \
Ahem clean for half the money. JvA ll
Gold Dust Washing Powder if 6
is sold by all grocers.
Less iljai] ONEMlFffie price of oihers. '
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. •
M niLT,’SCHLOR.IDEOFGOrDTabIet«
EwjSpHw ® " J ctTr w ST B ■ " ill completely destroy the desire for Tobacco
i® mm W At wL 9 ,n an - v forru in fro,u 3 *° 5 da y 3. Perfectly
■H thmiV An vgdr liurinlesM, cuuhh no .sickness, and may bo
J .‘ n n mb DGWSMk E! ffiFWCTg given in a cup of tea or coffee, without the
bhft! i’, H .ri JB N ■ knowledge of the patient, who will voluntarily
MM w L* H 6tO P Poking or <’hewing In a few days.
Sa lIHDh i EASILY
For nnle ny nil ffi’Mt-clnwM driigaiMs, or sent by mall nn re« ■ a IBBflh. HEMO
cetpt of SI.OO. AsK lor 111 LIPS Tablet*) and take no others. ■ I
Particulars five) THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO., U. x* R 9 M
by maiL AddiubS) 51, 53, and 55 Opera Block, LUI A, O. | ft
EDUCATIONAL.
MERCER UNIVERSITY
The Fall Term opened September 21st, 1892. Tuition free. Bedroom
free—(Students wishing tq occupy bed rooms in the College buildings
should bring towels and bed covering). Day board with good families
SB.OO to SIO.OO per month. Board and lodging with private families $13.00
to SIB.OO per month. Annual College fees $20.00, payable on entrance.
Ministerial students will be aided by the Executive Committee. For Cata
logues and further information, address
G. A. NUNNALLY, President,
Macon, Georgia.
P. S.—The 'Mercer Law School offers superior inducements to young
men who desire to enter the profession of law. For particulars in this De
partment address C. P. Steed, Esq., Macon, Ga.
SOUTHERN
BJFs® 19 0B H 11 MAIN rtniDINCS-COX coi.lbcb.
wf mSliB
/ Faculty of Twenty-one. Liberal, Fine, and Practical Arts.
/ M WmBW >H Library, Museum, Observatory, extensive modern equipment.
I /' I LJLJ Eclectic, Regular, Full Courses. Modern Languages spoken.
/i' ' Hl 8 Languages, ix Sciences, Il branches of Music taught.
/IF 5 P r ’ vate^us * c^wo a* l s^* oß ’
I Hi I Boarders from Canada, the States, Cuba, I. T., and Mexico,
I I 11 W wvMkuP Healthful and homelike. Early application is necessary. <
VI Send for Illustrated Souvenir, History, and Catalogue. Session \
resumes September 28th, 1892. , ■■ ■
Tho Full 6raduate Costume. CHAS. C. COX, Pras’t. LsGRAKSE, SJk
A Fine Upright Piano lor $125
Paid Now, $125 Twelve Months Without Interest.
A new handsome ebonizod case, 7 1-3 octaves, 3 strings, ivory keys. Fill-
lv warrant 'd for live years. Freight paid. Rich silk velvet stool, plush scarf. Bjg XU* SfW
Book and popular music all free.
T& ’ Remember: All Freight Paid. Complete Outfit Free. Our Exchange
Privilege, Easy Installment Plans, Fair Business .Methods.
PHILLIPS & CREW COMPANY,
37 Peachtree St., ATLANTA, GA.
We are general agents South for Knabe, Fisher. Ivehs &• Pond, Kimb h.l and Piedmont
Pianos, Farrand & Voti y Pipe ami Reed Organs. Kimball and Great Western <lrgans. Send
for catalogues, name instrument wanted. P. &C. Co. refer to any bankin Georgia, the Mayor
' of Atlanta, or Govenor of Georgia.
KIMBALL -- PIANOS I
KA'TTI CUNDORSKS THGJM.
HIGH GRADE AT LOWEST PRICES.
«Send for. Prices utnd Catalogues. Prominent men and women all
over Georgia. Alabama and Forida have bought and endorse the
KIMBALL PIANO.
■5275, t3tx>, 5350 and $425 Free of Freight sent on approval. All ap
pointments included. You can pay part now and balance twelve
months off without interest. Address
PHILLIPS & CREW COMPANY
ATIvAISTA, CLA.
Established IRC.-,, over 9<W Pianos and Organs sold from this house
Reference any prominent Hank or Preacher in Georgia.
Mention The Christian Index when you write,
Robert H. Smith. Late of Smith & Mallary’ Chas H Hall Jk.
SMITH & HALL,
DEALERS "
Steam Engines, |
I3< >ll 1C I<»,
Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Belting, Lubricating
Oile, E3tc.
■'P -: ■ i , \. -• •: t- f • I • i!. i:. -’."1..: M• • I 1•.• r v
Address
SMITH & HALL, Macon, Ga.
■»i Will Sot
■ l l tU?J *1 tf*l iVff 11N Mnfel f • ni
Tipped TbrouaL.
Nee “EVEII HEADY” on Back of Each Ntajr. >
Acknowledged the BEST DRESS STAY On the Market
Made with Oattn Percha on both al<tr« of *U»cl urn! warranted wntrr-proof. All other atays are
node differently and will rust. Beware of Imltntloas. Take none but r bo ••Ever Rrady.*’
Manufactured by the YPSILANTI DRESS STAY MFC. CO., Ypsilanti, MlOh.J
FOR NAI.E BY AI.I. .lOHBt'.RS AXD RETAILLHS. >•
SPECIAL 1 MODEL DRESS STEEL CO., 74 Grand St., Now York. /
DEPOTS. I BROWN A METZNBT-435 Market Street. San Francisco. /
Th. GLASCO LACE THREAD CO , (ll.un,Conn., will r™ ' ; iji inn.
distribute In Premium. M 2.000. Gold (Join, for tn«biwt Won't 1 Or. Inrßtmpl. Spool
.pmilinniin of fonry work, to bo modaonlr from th. wtuoo Twilled Thrrnd.
0O YOU Zero I'Arood. Open to nil reoldonlo of tho U. n. &(10 Y ttr d a .
(CRQCHET]S2OOO 00 G in Premiums.
W O am inlll i|| l|g , Onchrt Book*.
W > Ank your dnslnr for Oirouhrn aivinff full Infririniition. If Has. 1,2, nr 8. !<><% each.
X not to !><• bad of him. write uh. DO NOT DELAY, vi j| r a Mnrcad -A Tidy
® Thoroughly MtiMfwtwnronfti of ottr reliability furninhed. paltrrna. 5 «•<•. •arh/
GLaSuO LACE THREAD CO.. GLABGO. CONN. 1 aurrM.jxtawH H.
[ ——
Central R.R. of Georgia
H. M. COMER, Receiver.
Savannah. Ga., July 3d. 1892.
ATLANTA TO FLORIDA' '
No.2 No. 4 No. 12.
Leave Atlanta 720 am 7 10pmT10pni
Arrive Griffin....... 844 am S42pm 6oopm
Ar. Macon Junction. 10 40am 10 45 pm 8 00pm
t „ 10 55 am 10 55 pm Bto pm
Leas e Macon 10 35 am 8 25 pm
Leave Macon June.. 10 45 am 8 33pm
A !.’ A ’>a»y 255 am 12 40am
lliomasville 6 10 am
Waycross, 5 25 am
.. Brunswick 7 30 aw
Jacksonville g 25 am
JACKSONVILLE TO ATLANTA. ‘
No. 1. No. 3. No. 11.
Ly Jacksonville 6 30pm
Brunswick 7 30 pm
Waycross.. 9 45pm
Ihoinasville 7 50 am
Ar. Albany 10 40 am 157 am
’ Macon 405 pm 715 am
Lv. Macon 340 pm 405 am 740 am
Ar. Griffin 600 pm 613 am 9 5.3 am
Atlanta 7.35 pm 745am11 30 am
ATLANTA,SAVANNAH & JACKSONVILLE
SOUTHWARD. I NORTHWARD.
No, 2 | No. 4 j No. 1 No.
720 am! 7 lOpmjLv Atl'taAr 735 am 745 am
844 ami 842 pm “ Griffin " 6 00am 613 am
11 warn 1115 pm; “ Macon ” 220 pm 3 45am
6 00pml i> 00 pmJAr Sav’h Lv 710 am 845 pm
825pni!12 00pnil **J’ksv’le” 6 30pm 145 pm
Palace sleeping cars on Nos. .3 and 4 between
Atlanta and Savannah; Pullman, Savannah,
and Jacksonville.
Atlanta to Columbus via Griffin.
No. 2. No. 12
Leave Atlanta 720 am 410 pm
Arrive Griffin 844 am 600 pm
l eave Griffin 9 17 am 6 15 pm
Arrive Columbus 12 15 pm 915 pm
Through coach between Atlanta and Colum
bus on Nos. 1 and 12,
Suburban Trains—Daily Except Sunday.
_ , am am pm pm pm pm
Leave Atlanta ...6 40 825 12 01 230 420 610
—returning—
_ _ am •am am pm pm pm
Leave Hapeville.coo 745 905 125 330 530
1 Sunday Schedule.
’ Leave Atlantta 115 pm 915 pm
1 —returning—
-1 Leave Hapeville 950 am 645 pm
All trains above run daily.
' GEO. DOLE WADLEY jW. F. SHELLMAN,
Gen’l Supt. | Traffic Manager,
J. C. HAILE, Gen’l Pass. Agt., .Savannah, Ga.
SAM. B. WEBB. T. P. A„ Atlanta. Ga.
Atlanta and Florida kailroad co<
Time Table No. 14, taking effect April 21tl
1 1992, 5:45 p. m.
• 2 jg ©
A c >
z; z K'® t : : :
! ' ——— ■ ——- —■■■ ——... .. IM
§ 3“ * ;BSg
S T*? a:-? :2®e«
H M
■ —■ ■
£ ® >. taJ .So? 1 ! ’’S to •» •<* .co .
K ;OOW ;t- ;fc- -t-coua
: i i = : : :* H :si j j j
’“a®! :rf ;
=S : : :
Hi H i ig H i
K kifi ftH : :<- ■_
o ■aZ" g«l :aSSs c
S Otad -5 = foswu .i:
E i_2.ZZ2.Z_i i.
o 12-Z lap : 5§ : s : s
00 jaL o . :Cl Ira I M
lai*’ : - 1 -
No. C will run Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri
days. No. 6 will run Tuesdays, Thursdays and
. Saturdays. Nos. 7 and 8 will run daily except
Sunday.
t Stop for meals.
T. W. GARRETT,
H. M. COTTINGHAM. Receiver.
Gen. Pass. & Fgt. Agt.
R f ARIETTA AND NQKTH GEORGIA BAIL
I>l WAY COMPANY. Time Tabla No.
Effective Jane 24tli. 1891.
~N01Tir~" ■■ ■■’ TT ‘ SoUtA“
No. 8. l\o.l. ; ”• No. 3. | No, 1
p.rua turn. p. m, | i. nt
I (ts 150 Lv...Atlanta. ..Ar t u nqu
440 915 Lv. .Marietta ..Ar c a 07
1 17 950 Lv.Woodstock.Ar 443 855
553 10 24 Lv...Canton.. .Ar 413 gjS.
’’ 6.U to 62 Lv Ball Ground Ar a4i 744
I *44 11 11 Lv.... Tare ....Ar 32, 72*
r *Ol 12 21 Ellijay. ..Ar 2H su
Ar 12 38 Lv White Fata Ar 2uO Lv
2r9 Lv Jellico JuncAr 95* ......
*3) Lv..LouiSville..Ar 803
._ 717 Ar..Knoxville..Lv 726
murphy div’n. So ' lo
p. m. p.m.
£22 Lv....Notla Ar 10*4 ......
....y. 3»»_ iow>
Paror c«r on No. - 1 and 2 bets6en~Blu»
Ridge and Marietta. ?
No. 1 and 2. and 9 and 10 dally. N 0.3 and*:
dally except Sunday.
Saturday afternoons No. 3 will run White
Path Springs arriving at 8:20. rtturlng KorUS
•ill leave White I‘atn Monday morning.
• FAST TIME.
WABHIN6TON aCHATTMOOSI
• LIMITED, y •
INAUGURATED JULY 17, 18D2-.
SOUTH BOUND, f '■ I
I.Mve Washington . • .* 11:15 P. Me
Arrive Shenandoah Junction •.*t'r4o
Leave Shenandoah Junction 13:46 A.M.
Arrive Bristol (Eastern Time) • 12:20 Now>
Leave Bristol (Central Time) H 25 A.M.
Arrive Chattanooga . . 6:46 P. M.
EAST BOUND.
Lo.ive Chattanooga . . • 12:05 Noon
Arrive Bristol (Central Time) * 4>«f\ 7:25 P.M.
Leave Bristol i Eastern Time) A • 8:30 P. M.
Arrive Shenandoah Junction 7iASA.M.
Leave sShepandoab JunctiQtt
Arrive Washington . . • 0:30 A.M.
TRAINS CONSISTS OF
One Combination Coach A i - -
Buggaxv i iir. Three I*llll. w
ALLnSTIBULW
ll’iißhlUKton. Nash vine Al J
Waablngton. f C ■ -r
CONNECTIONS.
Leave New York, B. 40, . . 5:00 P. M.
Arrive Watfringtqn , 10 46 y
waßhiDgtbn • -t i- • 1600 a. m.
Arrive New York . . , ’Y‘ 4 * ‘ • 3:00 P. Mu
O NO EXTRA FARE.* 4
8. W. WBENN, Gsusrol Passenger Agent, p
CARNERED GEMS
-By H. R. PALMBR.- *
A Rnperb collection of now and standard Sunday
School Honea and Hymn*, representing nearly Mt
Hymn Writers and 100 Compoeere. Con tai ns the
celebrated saered songs that have made Mr. Palmer •
name fsmons wherever tho English language ia apok
■ an. H 2 pag<»a of choice words and music, clearly and
kitlbly printed, and handsomely bound in boards.
Price 35 coals postpaid.
LITTLE SACRED SONBSI
A new and most appropriate collection of songa for
the Primary Depart mont of the Sunday S< hool New
and iitandard worda and muaic. The Editor baa the
happy faculty of writing souga that please the child
r'«n, and shows to the beat advantage in this,his latest
work in that direction. 160 pp. bound in boards.
, Price 36 cen to poet raid. .
CHOIR LEADERS: Send 10 eta. for sample of Mu
sical viiutor, containing new anthems each month.
—PUBLISHKD SY—
THE JOHN CHURCH CO., Cincinnati, 0.
Be«t A fk»as Music O*.. I The Jaha Church Co,
, b sm Wabash Ave., ChiLSgo. | L. »«h m.. New Yeos
7