Rockdale register. (Conyers, Ga.) 1874-1877, May 04, 1876, Image 4

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Rockdale Register. Wc Lay Us Down to Sleep. We lay us down to Wp And trust to Got) the ml j Whether to wake or weep. Or wake no c ore he beat. Wliy vox onr souls with care ? The grave is 000 l arid low, Hava we found life **> fair That wo should drew! to go f We’ve kissed love's sweet, rcl lips And left them sweet and red ; The rose the wild bee sips Blooms on when be is ifcad. Some faithful friends we've found. Hut those who love us best, When we are under ground. Will laugh on with the reit. No task haro we begun But ether hands can take ; No work beneath the sun For which we need to wake. Then hold ns fast, sweat Death, If to it seetneth best To him who gave us breath That we should go to rest. We lay us down to sleep. • Our weary eyes we close ; Whether to wake and weep. Or wake no more—He knows. Kktiii-Milk Month. MOTEL ON TIIE MONTH OK ArRIL—BEAD ANl> KKM.KCT. April La a .kirn-milk month. When feebly doe. the pulse .tir; . ’Taint warm enough (or a calico coat. And yon feel like a fool in an Ulater. In April a straight out tie is called a joke. In April you must buy your wife a new bonnet, or have a row. In April a woman hitches a towel to her head, snatches up ctr|>ets, wears out brooms, and always leaves a pi> ce of nap on the bottom stair lor a man to •tep on. In April the girls buy smaller shoes and prepare for croquet. In April Sunday School children and bands begin to think of picnics, tubs ot etnonade, riding on locomoiive cow catchers, burning holes in their clothes, and getting grass s' tins on their knees. In April hale ami hearty inert tail like leaves in Autumn, stricken with the dreadful base ball lever. In April politician! art unhappy ; some of them set up wine, buy new hats, and lew pay pay their Dels In April bankers, railroad conductors, steamboat captains' and other men of wealth eat asparagus, and the rest of Ihe people pretend to he happy on such Spring fruits as boiled beaus, fish balls saner kraut. In April the good citizen takes his semi-ainiual bath, removes his flannel, takes cold and nearly “passes in his checks' wiih pneumonia. In April thu children must have fiesli coed eggs, so they can (nearly) die Imp I>7- la April the farmers sow—sew docs the seamstress “Jes-so.’ In April the tramp refuses bread and blitter, turns up his nose at the wood pile, nud steals chickens for “political effect.’ In April the festive pie plant pie makes your face 1188111110 a triangular shape uiid your mouth inclined to cuss. In April the housefly seeks the milk pitcher and soup dish, and proves again that he is not a second l’aul Boynton. In “April showers bring May flowers.’ Mary Fioweis is welcome to Little Hock. It gene-ally rains every other day, the showers having a lulling engagement the rest of the mouth. In April a man takes Ids old clothes 'to the renovator, with hard times stamp ed ou his taoo. He genera'ly has no other stamps in April. in short,-April is not the festive sea* son it is cracked up to be, although many eggs are cracked, in truth, it is n skini'uiilk mouth. To'Clcau n Rusty Plow. Take a quart ot water and pour slow ly into a halt pint of sulphuric acid. The mixture will become quite warm Ironi chem cal action, and this is the nvason why the acid should be poured slowly into the water, rather than the water in the acid, and let it remain on the iron till it evaporates. Then wash it again. The object is to give the acid time to dissolve the rust. Then wash with water and you will perceive where •the worst spots are. Apply some acid, and rub on those spots with a brick. The acid and the scouring will remove most of the rust. Then wast the mould "board thoroughly with water to remove all the acid, and rub it dry. Brush it over with petroleum, or other oil, and let it be till Spiing. When you go to plowing, take a bot’.le of the aeil to the field with you and apply it every bout to every spot of rust that may remain. The acid and the scouring of ike earth will soon make it perfectly bright and smooth. It all irou will bo wa-lu and iff with petroleum as soon as we put our tools, implements, and machines aside for the winter, it will keep them trom rusting, and save a gu%t deal of troub le and annoyance, to say nothing ot de preciation aud loss. Rkklfctioks ik Westminister. Ab bkt. —When I look o|K>n the tombs oi the great, everye motion of .envy dies in me; u hen I read the epitaphs of tbe ■ beautiful, every inordinate desire goes ■ out-, when l meet with the grief of parents upon a tombstone, my hear; melts with compassion ; whsn I see the ■ tomb of the parents themselves, I con sider the vanity of grieving for those whom wc must quickly follow. When 1 see kings lying by those who deposed them, when I consider rival wits p aced side by side, or the holy men that di vided tbe world with their contests and disputes, I reflect with sorrow’ and as tonishment on the little oompelions, fac tions and debates of mankind. When I read the several dates of the tombs, of some that died yesterday, and some six hundred years ago, I consider that great day when we shall all of us be contem poraries, and make oar appearance to gether.—[The Spectator. “ Why did Herod kill the boy babies df the Hebrews and not the girls’” asks a Sunday School teacher. “ Please, sir ; w asn't it becauiie he objected to the He brews and not the Shebrrw*?" Her t'akc wins nil Dough. fifty years old if a day. and her name wss Klisa Fi x. She lives on National avenue, aud she made a trip to the eastern portion of the city to get a recipe for making cake. Bbe gut the recipe, got wane lawr. and gtd in the eto ticn, and she wasn't half a. anxious about her case as some of the audience. She slow ly fol lowed Bijah isit umsiug: •* Use about s pint of flour, put m s chunk of hut tor about as large ** * walnut, and; break in—-—" •• Sow, then,” interrupted bis honor, • this looks Imml to see s woman f your age here." •• Well, 1 bad some beer," she softly replied. “ and break in four egg*, grate in your hunvn pael, stir well, anil lako in a hot oven. *• What have you tc way about this case f asked the Court. •• Nothing. You can do all the talking— quart of nom—four eggs—lemon-peel—nut meg—-hot oven." *' You were never hero before f" ** I don't remember that I was. Will you take a recipe down for me before I forget it” *■ I’ve got a recipe for ending drunkennes,” replied his honor. I don’t wait it; and after the rake has Inked for fifteen minutes remove from the oven and put on your frosting." •* Do you want to go to the House of Cor* rectinn," queried the Court. •• No. air. I don’t. What do I want to go tramping way up there for ?" “ But you were so sadly intoxicated that the officer had to hire an express wagon to bring you down here.” •• la that so ? Then I came hero by express. Aid I ? Was I packed in a box ?” " Yon must he very careful in future. It’s a bod thing for a woman to get dinnk." No worse than 'tie fo' the matt, and after the frosting is on set the rake back in the oven for three or four minutes." “ Yea, I'll promise !” Bhe angrily exclaimed, “ bat I wish you wouldn’t talk so much—you put tne all out." She stood off and glared at his honor and then, t ipping her finger on the railing,contin ued : •• You take about a quart of flour—about a quart. You put in a hunk of butter about its big aa a walnut, and you break in three or four ” “ You may break out,” said the Court. “ Well, I will. I want to get somewhere where I can write down that recipe before I forget it.” She pushed her way through the crowd to the door, and as *lic stepped out she WO., heard muttering : “ Quar. of flour—four eggs—five minutes !” Valunble Hints. Linen can be glazed by adding a spoonful of salt and one of finely scraped white stap to a pound of starch. Preserve eggs by a quick dipping in b iling water, and packing with fresh salt, small end down. Ink stains may bo removed from books by wetting the spot, with a solution of ox;dic acid 1 o*., water half a pint. In dealing with furniture remember lo keep water away from eve’ything soluble therein, oil from everything porous, alcohol from var n.sh, and acids from marble. Saturate sponges with w iter and stand them on pliit. s among and around tho window plants. The object is to supply moisture to neutralize the effect of any furnace or grute h;at. To prevent tin rusting rub fresh lard on every part of the dish, uud then put in a hot oven and heat it thoroughly. Thus treated, any tin ware may b? used ii w er constantly Hint remain bright and froo troin rust indefi nitely. If possible, buy an oil-cloth which has been made for sovoral years, as the longer it has lain unwashed the longer it will weir, the paint being harder. Never sciub. Sweep with a soft uir brush, and wash with a soft doth dipped iu milk and water. Don’t ute soap. Hub dry with a handful of rags. T. Stewart’s Relation with • Grant. Stewart’s relations with Grant will, sonioday be made public, I suppose, and, and while th ’y will bring no discredit to the millionaire, the story will darken the sad detail of sordid purposes, mean entanglements, and broken faith, whi :h make so much of Grant’s history at Washington. Stows tin 186* was a warn! partisan of Grant, and not only subscribed lar ely to the various gift enterprises then and previously on foot, but probably paid sl<X),<)oo toward the eleotion expouses of the campaign against Seymour and lliair. Grant also esteemed Stewart highly, was much im pressed with his wealth, and, in a less degree, with his ability in managing such large af fairs as wei-o constanly ou his hands, lie therefore, did a very natural thing in select ing him Secretary of the Treasury. The cir cumstances attending the appointment and its withdrawal are well known, and did not. prob ably. do much to weaken Stewart’s confidence in Grant as a friend, though they may have impressed him with a sense of his incapacity. But when Grant offered him soino appoint ment lor a friend, and when Stewart selected an ineonßpicions place for one of his young friends, and had been pi caused it without re set ve, it was bitter affront to his pride, sorni months later, to find that Grant had broken his pledge and given tire appointment to an other. There was an apology for this after wards, and Stewart was marie the confidant of the Grants iu that mysterious gold specula tion with Abel Corbin, Jay Gonld and Jim Kisk, out of which Mrs. Grant got $25,000. and the couutry got the ” Black Friday” of 1869. The testimony of Fisk in regard to COl bin and the Grant family was mainly true, aud the facts, such as the) were, soon became known* Stewart, though the great merchant never speculated in gold, even at other men’s risk, as the Washington custom is. In the can ptugn of 1872, I hellers Stewart was hos tile t-o Grant, whose character he had come to understand fully, loag before that time. No responsibility rests upon him for those satur ua.i. of whiskey. f-Jeoy. bribery au l in om petenoe. which the Grant family and their re tainers, Babcock. Murphy. Ingalls, Belknap, Sbt pherd, Harrington, etc., have been keeping up tor years, when the sadden disgrace of Bel knapjel daylight is among the gang, and dis clueed Hear" trw characUr to the country. 8t -wart know it well enough before, and had he lx en Secretary of the Treasury, he would not have winked at corruption as lloutwell and Richardson did, but would have stamped : it out. as Hristow is now doing.—TNew York Correspon ience of the Springfield Republi can . The India-opo’.iH Herald says : “ The other evening a young lady abruptly turned the corner and very rudely ran against a boy who was ragged and freckled. Stopping as soon as file could, she turned to the boy and said : “ I beg your pardon. Indeed I am very sor ry. The small, ragged and freckled boy look ed up in amazement for an instant; then ta king off about fchreo-fourths of a cap, he low ed very low until his faeo became lost in a smile, and anßweied: “ You can hev my par ding, and welcome miss; and yer may run agm me aud knock-ine clean down, an 1 won t say a word.” After the young lady passed on ho turned to a comrade and said, half apolo getically : '* I never had any one to ask my parding, and it kind o’ took mo off my feet. Potatoes.— To succeed in making a good crop toe ground must be deeply ploughed, well -fertilised, light and mellow. ’ The use of fcrean manures ib to be avoided. Composts thoroughly broken down, bone dust, plaster, ashes and'salt are well adapted to these tubers. Culture in hills is the most convenient work ing ; but nutuT prefer drills, believing larger yields are obtaiued- Keep the ground loose and free from weeds. Make the hills broad and never allow the earth to become crusted over. It is a good plan before the vines ap pear above toe gvound to run a light harrow rver the field, thus breakingtY) crust aud de stroying the small weeds just starting to grow. It is an advantage to plant early ; but there would bp no temptation to do this at too -xpense of proper preparation. . Subscribe for Thu Register. | Goon Tswrua. —The great moral lubricator which makes evc-thing ir human life run without fri. tion, is a good temper. As soon is thi* is exhaustible, the journals of the hu man machine liegina to best snd wear, and the entire mechanism Irecoiues noisy and ruinous ly waste!ill of |*>wcr. <• Th hoise that fret" i the horse that I swets," ih an old saving of horsemen, and It !is just as true of men us horses. The man ! that allows himself to got irritated at every little thing that gi-es amiss in his busimraa or ! jo the ordinary affairs of life is the man that a* a rule, will accomplish little and wear out iwrly. He 1< the man for whom life and dis ease have a particular f. ndness. snd for whom ! children have a particular aversion. He is a ! man with a perpetual thorn in his flesh which pricks and wounds at the slightest movements; a man for whom life has little pleaauie, and the future little hope. The highest inhabited spot in the world is the Buddhist cloister of llaule, In Thibet where tw.nty-one priests live ut altitude cl 16,500 feet. The brothers Scglagintweit when they explored the glaciers of the Ibi Gamin in the same countiy, encamped at 21,* 000 feet, the highest altitude at which a Eu ropean ever passed a night. Even at the top of Mount Blano, Professor Tyndall's guid<s found it very unpleasant to do this, though the profes. or himself did not confess to feel ing so bad as they. The higheit mountain in the world is Mount Everest (Himalaya), 2H,. 000 feet, and the condor has been Been " wing ing the blue aii" 600 fi*et higher. The air, by the by, is not " blue,” or else, as Do Suus sure pointed out, " the distant mountains, w hich are covered witn snow, would appear blue also,” its apparent color being due to the reflection of light.” Tnere Is a msn In Taunton, Mass., to whom life has been pretty much like going through a threshing machine. He has lieen ship wrecked, was shot in the neck at Gettysburg, narrowly escapi and being burned to death in a railroad acci lent, was oonflnpd in Libby pris on, fell over board from a whaler and had two fingers bitten iff by n abai k before he was res cued, was twice drafted into the itrnly, hud his light arm broken In two places, hud a halter around bis neck and came near bell g hanged in Alabama at the beginning of the war, was crushed liy a fulling building in California and had nothing to eat or drink in fifty hours, and once oimo Very near being lynched through mistake. If that man jsn’t a little careful he’ll got.hurt yet Ixrfore be is done with it. A innn broke a chair over his wife’s head. When he got to jail, and the chaplain undertook to talk to him, he displayed a good deal ol penitence. lie was very sorry he had permitted his anger mastery over him, and to suffer him to do such an act, because it was a good ' chair, one of those good, old fashioned Windsor chairs, which was an heir loom in his family, and ne knew he could never replace it. An inebriated Irishman on betng kindly questioned in a very narrow lane, across which he was reeling, as lo the length o! Ihe road tie had traveled, re plied : “Faith, it‘s not so much the length of it as the breadth of it that tires me.’ Tlu; bull frog was the first circulating greenback, ami the entire breed have been notorious inflationists ever since the flood [New York Evening Mail. ♦ * “Button parties’ are popular in tlie West. We don’t know whence lliey de rive their name, unless it is because they‘re always sure to come off. Have courage enough to review your own Conduct, to condemn it where you 1 detect faults, to amend it to the best ot Y 'I- ability, to make good resolves for :utn.e giniance, and keep them. llovv to Succeed. Young men who are ambitious to suc ceed in fife should understand very early in their ca'eer, that no trade or protess im can be well learned without thorough app'ieat'on —sleepless industry and high reso ve. Sde fortunes are not amassed I in a day, nor is professional excellency achieved in a r hour. The lives of great or useful, or successful men, all teach that paiiont industry, steadiness of pur pose and sterling ambition, are the or.ly keys with vvh'ch to unlock the heavy doors ot fortune and fame. Young men should learn 'hese truths in the morning ~f life and keep them always in mind as they struggle up the ru-gg and way of human existence. The man who labors for fortune, who sweats that he may achieve, is very apt to hold fast to the goal when won. The uian who bums The midnight lamp, that reads ands ores away both in season and out ot season that climbs slowly, and with pains these grand heights where “fame’s proud temple shines afar," is more sure to make good use of his achievements, find to have upon the shore of time footprints that cannot be washed away. Benjamin Franklin's Adventure. S meb klv has brought out the follow ing inteiTsiing reminiscence : “When Benjamin Franklin was a lad he began to study philosophy, and soon became fond of applying technical names lo common objects. One e’ening, when he had mentioned to his father that he had swallowed- some acephalous niol lusks the old man was much alarmed, and suddenly seizing him, called loudly tor help. Mrs. Franklin came with warm water, and the lured man mshed in with the garden pump. They forced half gallon down Benjamin’s throat, then held him by the heels over the edge of the porch, and shook huu, while the old man said: “If we don't get them things out of Benr.y he will be pizened, sure.” When they were out, and Benjau in ex plained that the articles alluded to were oysters, his father fond'ed him fur au hour with a trunk strap tor scaring the family Ever afterward Franklin's lan guage was marvelously simple and ex plicit” Not unusual—to see a plank walk, paper Bland, and a stepping atone. Open to conviction —the prisoner at the bar. He that sips of mauy arts, drinks ot none.—[Fuller. The monitor Dictator has been in Port Poy al Harbor one year. The farmers of Morgan county will use about $60,000 worth of Commercial fertili zers this season. Traces of burglars are still to be seen around Albany. Dr. liedfield, of the Cincinnati Commercial, will attend tbe Radical State Convention to be held in Atlanta on the 3rd of May. He will b.- accompanied by his eloquent saddle bags. Je til* Wtkttn A Wot, ATLA NT a , O EO H<il A # Solid for Circr’am* •3 :: : 111 ■!*! xa© ■ • :: •£: :g: zi rr • s* • , v saw 'V • : w : <£>-? i*: =* -w : '-t ' jx c a a • <> -> r z •: *w: JTvJ M■ 5* -3 < : : :g: aaS a A) _ Ti 3 a s7SH :oj: ?j S 2 :w: W’/3 sti • MJ • •3 jr y. 9 ;H • •"m3 ! - 1 - T* *-* * A / /. Z.T • M • a ’? a .o'. r“ r- "O' 3Jo —* *• . , 13 • • • Send for Circulars. 33 i r-d H o . a 00 V o *> & r T3 0 ci C c . *43 .§ § c O §> 03 St OS O ◄ o M wo P © ce 5 5 t-> si O e Q V .-1 ® § s O .S ? 1 11 -*- o O 3 QC wfj a? S'- XIU GREAT ESTAY ORGAN! j TJlh MOSl* EXTENSIVE ORGAN ’ MAN UK ACTOR Y in tux WORD j -1000 ORGANS MADE EIIERY MONTH OF THE MOST ELABORATE STYLE 53 M-P.tOVED TONE AND SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION. THE MOST FKRKECT REED ORGAN EVER MADE. IHE FINEST ME CIIANICS and INVENTORS OK THE AGE EMPLOYED. The only orjjan who give written warrantees. Special discounts to Churces and S- A Reliable Agent* Wanted in Georgia, Alabama, Florida, South Carolina ami East Tennas 0. u ior illustrated fttnloguds to" 4r Pi Gflllltord, South rn Agent . 52 * Whitehall Streej,, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, o 000000 oooo> o 000 0000000000000000 000 o 000000 00000 o ooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooeooooooooooooooocooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooroi.oooooooooooooooooooooooo 000000 opoooo 00000000 PACIFIC GUANO COMPANY oooocooo 000000 000000 oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooor. 00000000000000000000000000 o 000000 00000 O 000 0000000000000000 000 o 000000 00000 o Capital 51,000,’.00 ! SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO ASl> COMPOUND ACID PIIOSPIIAT E, COMTOUND ACID PHOSPHATE, FOR COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED. THE CHEAPEST AND BEST FERTILIZERS IN USE. INTKODU CED IN 18G6. Frioes Im. Augusta, Georgia. Soluble Pacific Guano Cash sls 00 Soluble Pacific Guano, Time, Cotton Option, 15c 50 00 Compound acid phosphate cash 36 00 Compound acid phosphate, Time, cotton option, 100 42 00 Freight lioin Augusta to Conyers $2.40 per Toil. DELIVERED AT ANY DEPOT IN THE CITY FREE OF CHARGE. Time sales payable Ist of NOVEMBER, 1876, without interest, with ootiou of paying ir. Middling cotton at lac, delivered at your radroad General Agents, Augusta, Georgia. STEWART & McCALLA, Agents, Conyers, Ga. ■The ‘Western and Atlantic IFLailroad, ASI) ITS CONNCTIONS. I KiiiN.ViiSAW Kouii: The following Schedule takes effect May 23d, 1875: NOR T H W A 11 D. No 1 No 3 No, 11, Leavo Atlanta 4.10 PM 7.90 A M ih3> PM, Arrive Oartersville 6.14 “ ... . 9-22 “ 7.19 “ Arrive Kingston 6.42 “ 9.56 “ 8.21 “ Arrive Dallon 8.24 “ i154 “ IJ.IB Airive (Jhat’.auooga 10.25 “ 1.56 P. M. s SOUTH WAK It D. No ii No 4 Leave Chattanooga 4.00 P. M .e.OO A. At. Arrive Dalton 5.41 “ i.Ol ‘ 1.00 ASI Arrive Kingston 7.38 l£ ....9,07 , “ 4.19 “ Arrive Oartersville 8.12 “ 9.42 “ .. 5.18 “ Arrive Atlanta 10.15 “ 12. 06 Noon 9.30 “ Pullman Palace Cars run ou Nos. 1 and 2, between New Orleans and Baltimore. Pullman Palace cars run on Nos. 1 and 4, between Atlanta and Nashville. Pullman Palace ears ruu on Nos. 3 aud 2, between LeutsviHe and Atlanta. 86T No change ot cars between New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta aud Baltimore, aud only one change to New ¥ork. Passengers leaving Atlanta at 4.10 P M arrive m New York the second after noon thereafter a* 4.00 P. M, , Excursion Tickets to the Virginia Springs and various Summer Resorts will be on sale in New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, UolumO.us, Macon Savannah Augusta and Atlanta, at greatly reduced rates Ist of June. Parties desiring a whole car through to the Virginia Springs or to J aitimcre, should address the undersigned. Parties contemplating traveling should send for a copy of Iyennesa w Route Gazette, containing schedules, etc. t jfcST Ask for Tickets via ‘Kennesaw Route.’ , B. W. WREN A, Gen’l Passenger and Ticket Agent, Atlanta Ga. UENKRAL DEALERS IN Send fot Circular?. NEEDLE Jfc GWIXETfS IMPROVED COTTON f’AHtNT SUn Alt and SYtttP EVAI’ORATIN'S PAXS; VICTOTi -CANE MILL; SWEEP* STAKE THRESH EH nnd SEPARA TOR: CARDWELL'S THRESII . EB and SEPARA L’OR ; i .A- - BUCKEYE” and “CHAMPION” MOWEKS and REAPER; | Send for Circulars. I\K CHEAT BEFIITATIOJt which. Dr. l’euib9rt,Ou r fluid oxttaid ‘ 0 ( stfllmgia, (or Queen’! deli -ht) has aftalhc,r m all sections of the country as a GREAT AXDGOO . if EDI 0 1N g, and the large number of *Btlmenlals which are constantly lieing recei\ odfron. persona who have been cured by its use, is of ife great merits. , 00 00 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOO o The great health restorer o OOOOOCtOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 00 , 00. is a positive specific and cure for dyspepsia, liver complaints, const nation, headache, dix xinoSS. p.iins in the bac i, kidney complaints, jaundice, femftle weiißnens, lflmbago, general debility, gfutel, gout, scrofula, cancerous hu mor, erysipelas, salt-rheum, ringworm, pi . pies ar <1 Humors on the' face, old ulcers, rheu. mattsiri, mercurial and syphllitifc affections. It t'tfmotes all mercurial of other poisons frefm tile blood, and soon restores the Systemyd perfect healffi ftfid purity. That pale, yellow, sickly looking skin is soon ohknged.tb one of beautj, ffefilineSs nd health. It will euro any chronic ot loflg-standing disease!, whose rfcnl or direct cluse ’ 8 had blood. A trial vtijl prove it. ThtfusdCds haye been Bnatched as it were ffun the grftve fey ifS miraculous powei, who now enjoy health ahd happiness, where Once all was misery. It invigorates aild strengthens th’cf whO'.o system, a its updn the secretive organs, allays inflammation, elites Ulceration. r.nd regulates the bOwels. DR. REMiIfiRTfTNS STILIINGIA Oft QUEENS DELIGHT GIVES IIfiALTII, STRENGTH AND Al\ I’ETITE, ' - . It pMrlfies tfr§ f)k>6d, and renovates and in vigOrfffes trie whole system, Its medical prop erties Ore tflterrttive, tonic, sSlveftt, and diu retic. , - . Foi testimonials ftf wfthderful cures, send to the Proprietor or eSll 6n youf Druggist. Tho Chemist, Atlanta, Ga; For sale by all first-class druggists. Office of G W Adair, Wall stte'fc'r, Atlanta, Ga., July 16, i875. I Dr. J. S. Pemberton —Dkar SrH: I have i used yoi r.extract of Stillingiafor a chron ic skin al ection of many years standing,which made a c ire after all other remedies had fail ed. . I ha ve known your stillingia used in the worst ci is of scrofula, secondary, syphilictic diseases heun.atism, kidney and liver affect ions, wi great success. In fact, I have nev known i o fail in the nr st desperate cases. I conside i the greatest blocd purifier known. Yours truly,. J C EVANS. sale by Jones & Carswf.ll, Con yers, Georgia. /fgOLONISTS, EMIGRANTS, AND ti TRAVELERS WESTWARD. For map circulars, condensed time tables’ and general information in regard to transpor tation ffWdlities to all joints in Tennessee, Ar jliissouri, Minnesota. Colorado, Kan sas, I'exaS, ItfwS, Nw Mexico, Utah and Cali fornia, apply to Or dddress Albert B Wrenn, General Railroad Agent, Office Atlanta, Ga • NCfone should go West without first getting in communication with the General Railroad Agent, ami become informed as superior advantages, cheap and quick transportation of families, A’ousel'.oid goods, stock and farming implement* generally. All.information cheer fullygiven. W L DANLFY, ap A t CHUIITIAN INDEX.* A large eight page weekly. Organ of the Baptist Denomination. Should be in every Ilajitisi Frhlily in the Land.~ It is the paper our children ought to read. It is the paper 'or nil who would kribv the trull as it is in Jesus. Subscribe for it at once—lnduce your Friends and Neighbors to do Likewise. If you havn’t the money, subscribe' anyhow Your pastor will make the arrange ment for you. S-- • Send for specimen copies. The price of “The In dt*?’ i’ s.4' a veer. Address all orders to JAS. P. HARRISON & Cos. Box 24, Atlanta, Ga, In connection with the Index we have, perhaps, the largest and moßt complete hook and job printing office in the South, known as the I ratiklin steam printing house, at which every variety cf book, mercantile, legal and mil way printing is executed. In excellency of manner, promptness and cheapness, we defy competition. Our Blank Book Manufactory is, likewise, well appointed. Orders solicited for every grade of work in this pepartment. County officials will find it to their interest to con sult us as to legal form books, records, min utes, blanks, etc. This establishment has long been thor-' oughly refitted and refurnished, regardless of expense, with every variety of new book and job printing rnaterisl, together with a full complement of skilled workmen. Wedding cards of new and elegant design, rivaling the beautiful productions of the en graver ; bill and letter heads of the most ap proved styles; showbills, posters, programmes, minutes, catalogues, books, railroad tickets, aud everything that can be printed. Try he Franklin. Address all communications to JAS. P. HARRISON & Cos. P. O. Drawer, 24, Atlanta, WHEREVER IT HAS BEEN TRIED -JURUBSBA has established itself as a perfect regulator and sure remedy for disorders o’ the systenf arising from improper action of the Liver and Bowels. IT IS NOT A FHYS-. hut, by stimulating the secretive organs. .y and gradually re-, moves all impurities nd regulates the entire system _ IT IS NOT A DOCTORED BITTERS, hut VEGETABLE TONIC which assists digestion, aud thus stimulates, the appetite for food necessary to invigorate Ihe weakened and inactive organs, and gives strength to all the vital forges. IT CARRIESITS OWN RECOMMENDA TION, as the large and rapidly increasing sales gistify, _ seiMce : One Dollar a* bottle. Ask your drug t tfor it. JOHNSON, HOLLOWAY &CO Wholesale Agents.Phila., Dyspepsia Dyspepsia is the most discouraging and dis tressing d’seaso man is heir to. Americans are particularly subject to this disease and its ei feets; such as sour stomach, si :k headache, ha bitual costiveness, heartburn, water-brash, gnawing and burning pain* in tbe pit ot tne stomach, coming up of the food, coated tongue, disagreeable taste in the mouth, impure blood and all diseases of the Stomach and Lives:.— Two doses of Green’s August Flower will re lieve you at once, and there positively is not a case in the United States it will not cure. you doubt this go to your Druggist,.Dr. w- • Lee & Son, and get a sample bottle for 10 cen and try it. Regular size- 75 cents. Janl4-ly