Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, July 04, 1886, Image 2

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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUX : COLUMBrS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING JULY 4, 1X86. Daisy Greenleaf Finds That She HasMuc Company. What 11 in Item llonc Toniinl llrfi'HllMK tli Sr lie mm nf Snimlliini tiitcriUcr. l ''iiaw tIon «« tn Silk Cultii"i* Innlhrr Millin' Viitu In n Plea for Ihc Mltlr One. linn n IVi in ii n Cuts on llnr Ilonni-I Female Fani-lea, FI. >-'nr the Knqiitrcr-fiun. Hkai.k, Ala., July 1. When 1 wrote m. letter telling of the way in which I hm lost my dollar, my only object was to lei every lady who chanced In read it know just what these advertisements meant- money for the authors of them, and los- and disappointment for all simpletons lik myself who should put their faith in suel promises. The men, of course, are much >or> wise to need any warning. Well, I never expected to have so much i vompany in my misery, but it seems that I ) am not the only victim of these wicked I ■swindlers, for besides the instances given liy “Earnest Worker’’ and “Amanda,” I have since learned that among my ac quaintance here there are several ladies who are now mourning the loss of good money which went the same way mine 4lid. I suppose we can never know how much money this company has made by fliiB iniquitous business, for I do believe "that the “Home Manufacturing Co.,” the “Crescent Art Co.,” and others engaged jn this business, are one and the same firm. 1 am glad now Unit I told on them, even if in doing so I did expose my own simplicity, and if 1 have been the means of preventing any other woman from throwing away good money on these swindlers I shall almost bo reconciled to the loss of my own. That so many ladies are eager to avail themselves of any fair means of earning a MUJe money just shows how many there aura who, while they are not Compelled to supply themselves with the necessaries of life, are yet dependent on their own efforts for nearly or all the comforts they have. Many, too, must clothe themselves (by their own labor. This is a sad state of af fairs, 1 think, and 1 do not know how it is lo be remedied. There are almost as many teachers as there are children to be taught, more clerks than are wanted, and more women who sew. Then there are many women too delicate to engage in any one of these occupations, and who would gladly do any light, profitable work, hut what can they do? This ques tion puzzles me. I do not know, indeed, unless they ongage in silk culture. This, I have been told, has been successfully car ried oil in many places. Why should it fail here? There are difficulties to he over come, of course; but we are willing to try. In u!) thenrtieles which I have read on the ■subject the beginner is told to plant the seed of the white mulberry. What is t lie white mulberry? i am sure 1 don’t know. In my yard and garden there are growing lour varieties of the mulberry tree. The ever-bearing, which is now full of fruit; the common rough-leaved shade Itree; the wild shruli which bears clusters of small pinkish berries and is called the French mulberry, and one young tree of the moris niulticaulis. Silk worms, I know, feed uj>- on the leaves of this last named tree, but is it the white mulberry? Are the leaves •of any of the other varieties mentioned cultivated for food for the worms? 1 am really interested in this, and would be very glad if somebody would answer ■ these questions through the IlNqilKER- . Sun. Several weeks ago 1 saw a short no tice in woman’s department to the effect that a lady near Columbus had a small co coonery and was encouraged by her suc cess. Now if she would kindly give us tile benelit of her experience it would tie a real favor, to me at least. The papers, of course, are full of flaming notices of books on silk culture, holding •out dazzling inducements to people wtio want to make money to engage in the busi ness, and promising to send, for n certain amount of cash, all necessary information, llut my late experience with yaukee ad vertisers is still fresh in my memory, and l -shall not waste as much as a stamp on any of them again. No, indeed. I shall seek information nearer home. Very respectfully, Daisy Urkunleak. till,liter l’leil fur tile Little Ones. F-'or the Enquirer-Sun. Co iambi's, CiA., July 2. I read the let ter signed “A Mother” in last Sunday’s ENQl'lKKR-SrN with a good deal of pleas ure. 1 know not who the author is, but 1 <lo know she is a good woman and ought often to contribute to this column of your paper, it is to the press we must look for the great reforms that are to come in every respect. The opinions of thoughtful people go a long way in assisting in this •direction. Then keep up the good work which has been begun, and a world of good may be accomplished. You may not sec and appreciate it. but seeds arc sown that will spring up and bear fruit, even in t ie distant future. There is one feature that 1 desire to im p-ess in regard to children, and which the article last Sunday didn't touch, it lias seemed to me that the sayings of Solomon had done more to inflict misery on little children than almost anything else. There are doubtless many who, taking Solomon •as tlieir pattern, say, “Spare the rod and spoil the child." Isay, "Destroy the rod and save the child,” that obedience from love is far stronger than from fear, and whilst it may be more trouble to raise your child to obey you from love and not from fear, and the older he gets the more influence you will have with him thus raised, and this influence will rule him af ter you are gone; teach your child to obey from love and not from fear. The Saviour and not Solomon, who had so many wives, is my type of a father, and he has told.us that any person, parent or any one else, who did even so small a tiling as to give a child a cup of cold water in his name should not lose his reward. He says of such is tlie kingdom of heaven. He told his apostles not to stop .them from coming io Him. No, he said, they don’t worry me; I love them; let them come; and lie took them up in hisarms and blessed them and said their angels do always behold the we of my fnthor, who is in heaven, aiv. hut it were better for a person to have a lillstone hung about his neck and drown- d in the depths of the sea than to offend ne of these little ones who believe in lod. It Is our duty by law to protect the irlpless children against the brutality of mnatural parents and rescue them from '.runken wretches who are unflt to raise hem, and the press, with the aid of the olograph and tlie Christians churches. \s fast building up a humane sentiment hat will enact itself into laws that wi), irotect the weak, helpless members of so ciety from the deviltries of those they are lot able to resist. In my heart I thank llod for the glorious aid the press is ■aid I, dreading Anat might follow if ■ncouraged toe least insubordination i •egard to spri g bonnets—those ruuc Abused monuments of women’s rights an .nen’s wrongs. Besides, it is a part of in; religion to defend spring bonnets, anv ;iow. “When a n n dons his headpiece h> merely claps the cover over his brows with as little consideration as one wouli drop an extinguisher over a candle. H, dmply puts bis hat on, and that is a. there is in the operation. Light or darl is nil the same to him.” “I don’t believe it.” was my ungraciou c imment. “Men are just as vain and con , cited a-s women are, and they try just a aard to look well, too.” “Of course they are. Different men liavi different ways of putting on n hat. On man seize# his castor by t lie front of th brim und slaps it on his head with a quid. \ SouthernizedYankee isssssssssssss Vho Has Eight Pounds and a Half c Alien Flesh. s s For Fifty Tears the great Remedy for Blood Poison ana Skin Diseases. nduring in buttling flown crime and in- | turn of the wrist, in mucL t ie n an er u d turning a flapjack; an u. her ta :es hoid jf his hat one hand to the fore and th humanity by giving to the world the names of the wicked and inhumane for disgrace as cruel, brutal, sinful wretches, who abuse lidple is children, and the inhu inanities of drunken fathers against both wife und children, it will not be long tie- fore these crimes against civilization can not be perpetrated. Under proper laws requiring ttie police in all cities and the constables in the country to report these cases of inhumanity and providing a rem edy, they could not occur or the little suf ferers would soon be relieved from their wicked tormentors. Let the press all over I he land continue to give names and cir- other aft, and pulls it down with all hi- might, as though his plug hat were whu it looks like, n clam’s head, and he wen removing the dingy nightcap from it pre paratory to eating the clam. A third lay? hold of'his hat by the gunwales, starboard and port, und carefully adjusts it in an ex act line with the horizo: a so* e ' vo.ablj angle, as the case may be. In either in stance the operation is done mechanically and requires no looking glass or other ad ventitious aid. There is no art in it. The act is a mere mult .r of dub rou hie.” It i no good to a e a the wall and pretend that I was not interested. He was bent on saying something, and he continued . , i'' A r,.« Koini ouu I “With a woman how different. When cunistances and ory aloud for the helpless | she ts on her bonnet a poem is created, J “ ' picture is called into being, music is Interesting Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free to all who apply. It should be carefully read by everybody. Address THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. S S S S S S - ! SSSSSSSSSSSSS little ones und we shall; soon build upa Christian publics entiment that will pro tect them. Another Mother. SOME THEORIES ON THE KISS. Thi' Kiiqulrer-Nim I'nilrrliikPH to (iralifyn Yuluetl Ymmir Friend The Kiss in History und the Kiss ttint Most Interests‘Mfliiktnd—And There Shall he Kisses und Kisses. Editoh Enquiheb-Scn; Why is it that public journals, which are supposed to keep their read ers an courant of every phase of passing events, give so little attention to things that concern the larger number? Now everybody likes to know what everybody else thinks and has to say of kissing. You have told us about a greatmanyotherthings and now I would like to have you tell us about the kiss, for the truth is I am fond of a kiss now and then, and must confess I enjoy a stolen kiss best of all. This note comes from a valued young j friend of the Enquirer-Sun, and is a frank letter for a young fellow to write. | Most young fellows, while fond of kissing, not only go aboutiit in a guilty sort of way, but rarely like to acknowledge that there apologetically that her hair isn’t fixed is a charm in it. The kiss is indeed a | She feels that it is her duty to exhibit that tin me worthy the best powers of the jour- j bonnet in the most favorable manner. She ■ 1 ,, | has no excuses to make for its shortcom ings; it lias nolle. It is herself alone, and brought back to earth and the atmosphere is saturated with sweet sounds.” tie had u quizzical look on his face, and there was a suspicious smile about his mouth. I wonder if he knew I had on a new bonnet? “She brings forth a band-box (her plump arms cun scarcely clasp its alderntanic waist), sets it upon a chair or table, re moves the lid, and with a sweet smile reaches down in the cavernous interior of that box, and draws forth very tenderly a little, insignificant, heterogenous affair that courtesy calls a bonnet. To the male eye it has neither beauty nor comeli ness.” I knew he was going to say it. Aren’t men hateful? “But wait a bit,” he continued reckless ly. “Now site advances toward the mir ror, holding the delicate trifle before her, after the manner in which a careful house wife carries a pan full to the brim of hot fat. Arrived at the looking-glass, she re leases one ear of the bonnet, and with the disengaged hand deftly brushes her front hair. Then her hand resumes hold of the bonnet, and the fellow-hand in turn pays attention to the clustering locks on its side of the house. Now both hands have the bonnet in their gentle grasp. The fair creature looks into the glass and remarks i j a ]' |. 1 1 ■ocation. While I have not what is nned a delicate constitution. 1 am by SHERIDAN. This gentleman, the senior in.-inli>-r u llie (inn of Sherid ill llro-., fresco artist.- ami decorators, of Atlanta, < hi., i-a gen ■ line yaukee by I -ir. h, but a si nit licrner Id choice ami adoption. ii e’n in the pun- tan city of Providence. Ii. I ..hi years ago at an early age in; turned hi- attention t> art. lie in by nature an artist, and hi- years of study and tuition in eastern cities have developed him into one of the tore- most young decorators of his time. Some years ago ho came south to decorate the interior of the Cmirch of the 1 maculate Conception, at Atlanta, and, liking the people und climate, determined to locate south of Mason and Dixon’s line. Since then he has been joined by his brothers. F. It. and (lem-go, and churches and tine dweilingsin every principal city of the south attest their’abilitv, energy and en terprise. “My system." said Air. Sheridan during a recent conversation, “had been for some time GRAIir.W.LY nrXXINO DOWN, "1 was not sick, in a general sense oi the word, hut my physical strength was feeling tin- severe strain I had been for -ars putting upon it in the active uten sil ry in the pursuit of my nnlist or poet. As a matter of history, it ! is the poet who monopolizes the dainty ! theme. Take Shakespeare,lor Milton, or Dante, or Tennyson, and it will be seen that this innocent pleasure is developed | and defined in infinite form and variety. | It is true, ns our sagacious correspondent j says, that the kiss plays an important part i in daily life. From the cradle to the grave j the kiss is a joy both constant anil real; it I is the first rapturous token of a mother’s I Joy at birth; it is the last melancholy sat- i isfaction as the coffin closes. THE KISS IN HISTORY | has played’the most piquantly potent part j lit the destinies of the race. It was by a kiss that the dark browed Judas gave the . preordained sign; it was by a kiss that King Ahasuerus signified to the trembling - Esther that her fortunes were no longer at I the caprice of tne mercurial Hainan. A ! kiss dismissed the hapless Essex to that : melancholy death which the whimsical love of tlie ferocious Elizabeth made a ; dagger in her life forever after. It was a kiss that lulled the victims of Lucretia Borgia’s innumerable intrigues to the noi- i some dungeons of the castle d’Estes. A kiss was tlie sign that the perfidious queen Katherine do Medici made the token of . . ... , , the weak king's assent to the massacre of 1 Pendent spirit are daily beeonn Saint Bartholomew. Brutus made his I frequent, lhcre are dressmaker! always her hair that is responsible for any thing short of perfection when the nup tial knot shall be tied under her chin and the bonnet and herself shall be one glory.” “And still she hasn’t it on her head yet?" said I, not wholly mollified. “Ah, no; she raises the airy nothing aloft; her chin protrudes; her hand oscil lates; she cranes her neck and hunches her shoulders while she adjusts the bonnet astride her pug and settles it down care fully upon its hair sub-couch. It is now exactly as it should be. There is no guess workl about it. Square, level and plumb could not be more precise in its results. Up goes her rounded chin; the strings are tied without the slightest wrinkling of the ribbons; the ends are brushed out with a delicate sleight-of-hand; the bows are picked out flat and square—not too flat nor no means a rniutsl fellow, ami have what might in' called the 'New England mold,’ physically. For some time j'U~t I hail been losing vigor, wlu-n uiv attention was called to 1 Iunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure as a Ionic and strengthener ul' the sys tem. I began using it about four weeks ago and since that time have gained eight and a half pounds in weight. My blood is as pure as spring water and my entire system revitalized. 1 have no hesitancy in saying that it is the best general tonic upon the market to-day.” ■Il'lXiB THOMAS 1TU.U.M, now in his three score and ten years, and one of the most prominent men in Geor gia, horn and raised near Union Springs, Ala., where he amassed quite a fortune bv strict integrity and honostv, and in Fashion Holds Them. The American women always wish to be be equal to the occasion,and there improb ably no country in the* world where fash ion Yields tlie majority of women in strong er fetters than this, but it must be admit ted that the manifestations of an inde coming more rs nov : treachery to his benefactor more odious by a miscreant kiss at the very moment his j dagger was uncovered for tne slaughter of his adopted father. William the Con queror saluted his confiding kinsman Har old on both cheeks at the moment he med- ; itated wresting his kingdom from him. j The kiss is quite os often the sign of infi delity Jis it is of the amenities of love. The | kiss m its worst and most intolerable form, j however, is when it i3 a mere perfunctory observance, I THE KISS THAT MOST INTERESTS MAN KIND. ; is that indefinable meeting of the lips 1 which tells two fond hearts more than can : be put in words. No boy ever finds it nee- I essnrv to be taught the theory of the kiss. I No girl ever tails to comprehend thede- 1 votion of a moustached lip! Lovers have j been known to carry on volumes of elo- ! quent devotion by the mere meeting of the I lips. A rose kissed by a young man is i sometimes said to be a sovereign remedy | for an aching heart. It is true that most young, folks are not I part ial to the | vica rious kiss. The tongue is the agent of the brain, but the lips are the electric chords j that take their impulse from the heart. This explains the wonders that sometimes | follow a tete-a-tete where the on-looker I suspects nothing less than love-making. So potent is a kiss that many of the most j illustrious lovers have carried off appa- ; rently reluctant beauty by the MAGIC OF THE LIPS. I There isn’t a schoolboy who doesn’t recall j the wonderful result brought about by j William, Duke of Normandy—known as | William the Conqueror first of the Nor- | man kings of England, by a kiss raped , lrom the lips of the haughty Princess Ala- j tilda. Having plead his suit in vain for > months, the enterprising prince waylaid the scornful beauty, dragged her from her horse, slumped her in a convenient mud ! puddle, then as he drew her out half faint- j mg impressed a long drawn passionate kiss j on her lips. Within a month she was his wife. Crook-back ltichard gained the in dignant and tearful widow of the murder ■ ed Edward in almost the same Spartan ! fashion. Porphyro faced the murderous ! wrath of Madeline's family to snatch a j kiss from that sleeping beauty on St. Ag nes’ Eve, because the legend rail that the ! lips that first touched the maiden’s should ! call her bride. The kiss is THE BLARNEY-STONE OF LOVE. Their lips once sanctified by this expressi- hie chrism two lovers are subtly of a mind. ! the future a mirage with the world in de licious topsy -turvy. Poets are fond of ouch conceits as represent the sun enamored j and kissing the earth, or the gay and in constant moon pressing pale-lipped night, or tlie stars, after singing together of a night, touching the rosy lips of morn, as the day, with its sandals dipped iu dew, holds the torch for the flying feet of night. The kiss is as frequent an apparition in history as the word “I” in the speeches of the statesmen in vogue. too square—and a long, slender pin is^Huter years connected with the wholesale thrust remorselessly through the bow, the ! drug house of Pemberton, Pullmn ec (jo., point, naked and unguarded, protruding , ,,f Atlanta, Ga., and now a citizen of that from the thither side-a warning to all t ,-itv. said a few davs ago in the pre.-tmei- whom it. may concern that no trespassers i ; . are allowed upon the premises.” ’ , , , Mv wile nail neon lor many years a | constant sufferer from rheumatism. Hm I joints were swollen and distorted, great knots had formed upon her hand. Shi ! could only with great difficulty and pain j manage to walk, and was a constant sui- lerer from this dreadful disease. YVc tried everything we could read or lieai of. and took advice of eminent practi tioners without any benefit in the way oi permanent relief. I was induced to try ilunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure a short tinn ago, I Al.Tllotoll 1 It A I) Lost FAITH in ul! patent medicines and nostrums and. j considered Iter ease incurable. I “The effect was magical; the pains havi i entirely vanished; tin 1 swelling and dis- I tortinn of her joints lias disappeared, and j the disease lias been, 1 verily believe, eradicated from her system. Sin- is still j using the medicine as a precautionary I measure, and her general good health is ' being restored by it. 1 can honestly and j fearlessly recommend Himnieutt’s Rheu- i inatic Cure as the best medicine for rheu- i mutism and the blood upon tlie market.” I For sale by wholesale and retail drug gists everywhere. Price, $1 a bottle send to us or your druggist for treatise and history of tlie White Tiger. J. M. lluimieutt iY Co., proprietors, Atlanta. Gu. jeddw HuauBERfBf dySehteky be tounil who are designers, who have the courage of intelligent convictions and will make a graceful dress of cheap material, yet so well cut and combined that it does not look cheap. One of the most original of these recently made a charming even ing dress for a young girl—finding tlie ma terial—for fifteen dollars. It seemed in credible, the effect was so good. It con sisted of Madras muslin, ecru and pale blue cheese cloth. It was made with short, gathered waist and straight skirt, with a iiig bow of tlie cheese cloth at the back. Tlie same artist took a golden-brown “shadow silk”—an American production— and made it up ou the wrong side, tIn tones being darker and so much richer; combining it with a golden-brown velou- tine in order to gi t tlie depth of tone re quired and which could not be obtained front a surah. Hiseuses from I'imples 1o Sci-olnlii Ciiri'tl l>> Cntii'iira, 11 -.mcii-L-ds of lelli-i-s in our possession, copies of which may be luul by return of mail, repeat thi- story: I have been a terrible sufferer for years from Diseases of tile skin ami Blood University of Virginia, nom i'lvuH’M'i uu’^liiu iinii moon; n:ivi neon ! ,u\nn.'D t \ a\’ r • ,, . obliged to slum pulU.ie places by reason ofmv clis- bfCURIi* (nine weekly! be- figuring humors: have bad the best physicians- | 8™ 8tn July. 188b; and end 8th September * t 1 ’ * •' Have proved of signal use--1st have spent hundreds of dollar until 1 got {f.mkdiks, which lli and blood as pure n (OVKHIil) WITH SAI/i itlli l H. (T'tutiia Hi:mi:di::.s are the greatest medieinu oa earth. Had thelw orst caselof Salt Rheum ii this country. My mother had* it twenty year- and in fact died from it. I Relieve (’utictk. would have saved her life. My arms, breast nip head were covered for three years, winch noth!''.; relieved or cured until l used the Cftktka Up solvent internally, and CT’tktra and Cun cthvSoai* externally. J. W. ADAMS. Ni.wak k.O. nr.Ait, fact: ami iio.hv raw. 1 commenced to use your Cvtici ha Rkmkdii: last July. My head and lace and some nurt* ,, my body were almost raw. with scabs and sores, and 1 ful. I had tried everythin; East and West. My case \ had one. I have now not , . . ...... students who design to pursue tneirstudiesat this or other Law School; 2d, to those who propose to read private ly; and 3d. to practitioners who have not had the advantage of systematic instruction. For’circu lar apply tP. O. University of Va.; to John B. Minor, Prof. Com. and Stat. Law. my9 eod&wlm 13L CHILDREN TEETHING WESTERN RAILROAD OF ALABAMA The First-Class Direct Route to all Eastern Cities—308 Miles Shorter to New York than via Louisville. Close connection made with Piedmont Air Line, Atlantic Coast Line, and Cincinnati Southern. Only 37 hours and 20 minutes from Montgomery to New York, and only 36 hours and 10 minutes from New York to Montgomery. No. 53 | No. 51 Leare Akron “ Greensboro... “ Marion “ Selma Arrive Montgomery. Leave Montgomery. Arrive Cowles “ Chehaw “ Notasulga “ Loachapoka.. “ Auburn “ Opelika “ West Point... “ LaG range “ Newnan.. “ Atlanta 8 30 a m 9 32 am 1 ; 11 03 a m; 2 00 p m; 5 15 p m 8 45 p m 10 21 p ill 10 50 p m 11 17 p in 11 34 p m 11 56 p ill 12 15 a m 1 50 a m 2 40 a m 4 08 a m 5 50 a m 8 20 a m'. 9 18 a in . 9 39 a ill , 9 53 a in . 10 01 a m . 10 17 a m . 10 30 a in , 11 17 a m . 11 50 am, 12 57 p m , 2 30 ]) m . \Y Decatur, Mich. My lu ad was c >v._ iv< >y suffering wk tea! I had heard of in th as considered a ver .particle of Skin Ik is considered woniff i ics. s. E. WHIPPLE, SEASON ISSti. ocuxee imiTiTsi mini mm 'ILL be open for the reception of guests June 1 it li ui der competent management Resident physician and Western-Union telegraph office in the hotel. Forterms address, OCONEE WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS CO. Bowdre P. O.. Hall County, Georgia. el,fri,sun 2m ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. H.V F. M. It nonius A Co.. V iicl ionceis. ; BV \ ’ RTl 1 of an order b^iic-d by the Court of lIoiilgoiiKr yn i if I 4 < nun ilms Tliroiijiti B'ruiglu ami AccoimuiMlat ion. I No. 11 I “1 | Lea ve Mont go me ry Arrive Opelika Arrive Columbus Via the Piedmont Air Line to New York and East. Leave Atlanta Arrive Charlotte “ Richmond “ Washington “ Baltimore ’ “ Philadelphia 3 30 p m 8 05 p ill 10 05 j> m 6 25 |»in 7 00 a in 8 00 it ill 9 35 a in \ 00 p m 4 05 a m 3 37 p m 8 30 l) m 11 25 pm 8 '*0 a m 6 20 a ni i:r/s:vi v i Hon (i r Jn tiles Havre Ifirklc. Jci- TO FEES', "uJliiinn Fnlii Leave Atlanta. “ Opelika fills on Train .13. Monk* South Bound Trains. <«* YVii«tliiiigl,iii Vt iiiioiii t'liaiife No. 5U I No. 52 -I.,- i f l> unu iit it i ri i:ih r.s I reY sliabl goods del Gigiilg l ) tile , -t used. Terms cu-li. The .‘ale u lrom day to day until the .stock i J. Ct. BURRUS, i Temp. AdmT Est. P. McArdle dis 1 15 p m 5 42 p m 6 28 p i 7 30 p l . ■. . . M 'ium tuiir.u I'lU b i .M ■ V. Ii i, M 1 \ l. L .... Uoston. j S 1,850 Senff for "How to Cure Skin Diseases.” I XA /'n D m i m n (JU1 RS rimplc. Skin Blemishes, and Wl11 Nearly New 4-RoOtTl L J Baby Humors, cured by CfTicf- House, in Perfect Repair, Waterworks. Kitch- ; en in Yard. Corner Lot First Avenue and Sixth She Puts Ho “Did you ever notice how a woman puts on a bonnet?” asked an irreverent friend of mine not long ago. “No? Then you have missed the enjoy- j elegant and infallible, antidote .to pain and in- ment of a most interesting performance. ” i “How about men and tlieir headpieces? Veiling Hacks. Weak Hacks* Pain. Weakness and Inflammation of the Kidneys, Shooting Pains through the ,Loins. Hip and Side Pains, Lack of Strength and Activity relieved in one .... minute and speedily cured by the C’UTI- CURA ANTI-PAIN PLASTER, a new, original ‘ . and in $1.00 ; or - - - I rOTTEK UKC(i AND CHEMICAL Cc ostou, Mass. se wed&w Now rented to Good Tenant at $17 per NO mi AN. Street month JOHNSTON j e 16 w ed, f l i, su u, 2 \v OPIUM and \\ hiikry Hab it* cured at home with* out pain. Book of par ticulars sent FREE. B. M. WOOLLEY, M. a Atlanta, (fa. Office 65> a Whitehall Street. Meiidan Vicksburg... Shreveport. <‘olimnl)H* ami YlinitaoiiKiy Til roll till ll-i'itilH Mini A,<„i,iii, m |„l if,7,7 I No. 12 I Leave Columbus Leave Opelika Arrive Montgomery , ...V. ".!.. * No. 50 Pullman Palace Buffet Car attached Atlanta to CECILOABBETT 11 Chehaw witllTusk egee Railroad, dtf General Manager. 10 50 p m ! ! 1 05 a m 1 515 a m 1 New Orleans without change. Train CHAS. H. CROMWELL, General Passenger Agent.