Newspaper Page Text
Rockdale Register.
W Uh Down to Sle’|>.
Wo lay ua down to sleep
And trust to Goo the rest ;
Whether to wake or woep.
Or wake no n ore be beet.
Wliy vex oar Route with core P
The grave ie 000 l and low,
llave we found life so f** r
Thiit we ihouid dread to go P
We’ve kissed love’* woet. rod lips
And left thnnj sweet and red j
The io*e the wild boe *ip
Blooms on when he is dbad.
• Some faithful fri< nds we’ve found,
Hut thoee who love ur best,
, When we are under ground,
Will laugh on with the rent.
No taoik have we began
But other hands can take ;
No work beneath the sun
For which we need to wake.
Then hold ns fast, swoet Death,
If so it seometh best
To him who gave us breath
That we should go to rest.
We l*y ns down to Bleep. •
Our weary eyes we close j
Whether to wake and weep.
Or wake no more—lie knows.
■ '?-■
Skim-Milk Month.
HOTEL ON THE MONTH OK APIHI,—BKAI>
AND HKKLKCT,
April is a skim-milk month.
When feebly does the pulse stir ;
’Taint warm enough for a calico coat.
And yon feel like a fool in an U inter.
In April a straight out do 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 ph ce of
aap on the bolloiu stair lor a man to
step on.
In April the girls buy smaller shoes
and prepare for croquet.
In April Sunday School children and
bands begin to iliink of picnics, tubs ot
emonade, ridir.g on locomotive cow
catchers, burning holes in their clothes,
and getting grass stains on their knees.
In April hale and hearty men tail like
{caves in Autumn, stricken with the
dreadful base hall fever.
In April politician* are unhappy ; some
of them set up wine, buy new hats, and
few pay pay iheir Beta
In April bankers, railroad conductors,
steamboat captains' and other men of
wealth eat asparagus, and the rest of t lie
people pretend to be happy on such
,Sprint; fruits as boiled beans, fish balls
saner kraut.
In April the good citizen takes his
semi-aiftiual bath, removes his flannel,
takes cold and nearly “passes in Ins
checks’ with pmmmonip.
In April the children must have fiesli
coed eggs, so they can (nearly) die hap
I'7-
In. April the farmers sow—sew docs
the seamstress. “Jes^so. 1
In April the tramp refuses bread and
blitter, turns up his nose at the wood
pile, and steals chickens for “political
effect.’
In April the festive pio plant pie makes
your face assume si triangular shape and
your mouth inclined to cuss.
In April the house fly seeks the milk
pitoher and soup dish, and proves again
that he is not a second Paul Boynton.
In “April showers bring May flowers.’
Mary Ftoweis is welcome to Little ttook.
It gene-ally rains every other day, the
showers having a falling engagement the
rest of the month.
(In April a man takes Ids old clothes
’to the renovator, with hard times stamp
ed on his lace. 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 are cracked, lit truth, it is
a skim-unlk mouth.
To<CUcau a Hasty Plow.
Take a quirt of water and pour sloiv
ly into a bait pint of sulphuric acid.
The mixture will become quite warm |
from client oal action, and ibis is the i
Teason why the acid should be poured 1
slowly into the water, rattier 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 oilier oil, and
let it he till Spring. When you go to
plowing, take a hotMe of the acil to the
field with you and apply it every bout to
every spot of rust that may remain.
The acid and the scouring of the earth
will soon make it perfectly bright and
smooth. It all irou will ho washed of!
with petroleum as soon as we put our
tools, implements, and machines aside
for the winter, it will keep them from
rusting, and save a gre%l deal of troub
le and aunoyauce, to say nothing of de
preciation and loss.
RKKLFCTIONB IV VV ESTMINISTKR Ab-
BKt. —When I look ii(K>n the tombs ol
the great, everye motion of .envy dies in
me; when I read the epitaphs ol the
.beautiful, every inordinate desire goes
* out-, when l meet with the grief ol
parents upon a tombstone, my hear;
melts with compassion ; whan I see the
i.tomb of the parents themselves, I con
sider the vanity of grieving for those
whom we must quickly toilow. When 1
see kings lying by those who deposed
them, when I consider rival wiU p aced
’ side by side, or the holy men that di
vided the world with their contests and
disputes, I reflect with sorrow' and as
tonishment on the little comu’elions, tac
tions and debates ol mankind. When I
read the several dates ot the tombs, ol
some that died yesterday, and rorae six
hundred years ago, I consider that great
day when we shall ail of us be contem
poraries, and make oar appearance to
gether.—[The Spectator.
“ Why did Herod kill the boy babies
<*f the Hebrews and not the girls” asks
a Sunday School teacher. “ Please, sir ;
wasn't it because he objected to the He
brews and not the Shebrrws?"
Her C’wko wish till Douicli.
Fifty year* old if a day, and her name was
Klir. Vex. She lives on National u venue, and
*h made a trip to the eastern portion of the
city to get a recipe for making cake. She got
the recipe, got wane beer, and got in the sts
ticn, and *he waan't half an anxious about her
nun a* some of tliu audience. She alowly fol
lowed Bijah out tunning:
“Cm about r pint of flour, put in a chunk
of butter about us large " a walnut, and .
break in ”
“ Now, then,” interrupted hi* honor, thiß j
looks bad see a woman of your age here.”
•• Well, I had some beer,” she softly replied,
“ and break in four egg*, grate in yoor lemon
peel, stir well, and bake in a hot oven.
” What have you tc say about this case?”
asked the Court.
•• Nothing. You can do all the talking—
quart of ttonr— four eggs—lemon-peel—nut
meg—hot oven.”
“ You were never hero before?"
“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 cake haa
baked for fifteen minuted remove from tho
oven and put on your frosting.”
“ Do yon want to go to the House of Cor
rection, queried the Court.
“ No, sir, I don't. What do I want to go
tramping way up there for ?”
“ But you wore so sadly intoxicated that the
officer had to hire an express wagon to bring
you down here.”
"Ih that so ? Then I came hero by express,
did I ? Was I packed in a box ?”
“ Yon must be very careful in future. It’s
a bail thing for a woman to get dinnk.”
*• No worse than ’ti fo: the matt, and after
the frosting in on wit the eako back in tho oVeil
for three or four minutes.”
■< Yea, I’ll promiie !” ehe angrily exclaimed,
“ but I wish yon wouldn't talk so much—you
put me all out.”
Hlie stood off and glnred nt hi* hon-u- and
then, t ipping hur finger on the railing, contin
ued :
You take a limit a quart of flour—about a
quart. You put in a hunk of butter about (is
big as a walnut, and you break in three •**■
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, anil as *lio stepped aflt She i*u< hoard
muttering :
“ Quar. of flour —four eggs —five minutes !”
Valuable Hints.
Linen can be glazed by adding a spoonful of
salt and one of finely scraped white senp to a
pound of starch.
Preserve egg* by a quick dipping in b iling
water, and packing with fresh salt, small end
down.
Ink stains may lie removed from books by
wetting tho spot with a solution of oxalic acid
1 oz., water half a pint.
In dealing with furniture remember lo keep
water away from everything soluble therein,
oil from everything porous, alcohol from var
n,sh, and acids from marble.
Saturate sponges with water and stand thorn
on plates among and around the window plants.
The object is to supply moisture to neutralize
the effect of any furnace or grate h ;at.
To prevent tin rusting rub fresh lard on
every part of ttia dish, aud then put iu a hot
oven and heat it thoroughly. Tims treated,
any tin ware may b 6 used i: w er constantly
and remain bright and free from rust indefi
nitely.
If possible, buy an oil-cloth which has been
made for several years, as the longer it has
lain unwashed the longer it will weir, the
paint being harder. Nevei scinb. Sweep
with a soft airbrush, and wash with a soft
cloth dipped in milk and water. Don’t rue
soap. Hub dry with a handful of rags,
\. T. Stewart’s Halation with
-
Stewart’s relations with Grant will, someday
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, which make so much of Grant’s history
at Washington. Sbewa’t in 1868 was a warm
partisan of Grant, aud not only subscribed
far ely to the various gift enterprises then
and previously on foot, but probably paid
1100,090 toward the eleotinu expenses of the
campaign against Seymour and Diair. 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 oh wore constanly on 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.
Hut when Grant offered him somo appoint
ment lor a friend, and when Stewart selected
an inconspicious place for one of his young
friends, and had been piomised it without re
-661 ve, it was bitter affront to his pride, some
months later, to find that Grant lmd broken
his pledge and given tlft appointment to an
[ other. There was an apology for this after
, wards, and Stewart was made the confidant of
the Grants in that mysterious gold apecnla-
I tion with Abel Corbin, Jay Gould and Jim
I Kisk, out of which Mrs. Grant got $25,000,
j and the country got the “ Black Friday” of
1869. The testimony of Fisk in regard to
Coibiu and the Grant family was mainly true.
and the facts, such as the} were, soon became
known (to Stewart, though the great merchant
never speculated in gold, oven at other men's
risk, as the Washington custom is. In the
can paign of 1872, I believe Stewart wits hos
tile to Grant, whose character ho had come to
understand fully, long before that time. No
! responsibility rests upon him for those satur
i nalia of whiskey, felony, bribery and in :om
! pete nee, which the Grant family and their ro
; tainors, Babcock. Murphy. JogaJl*. Bolkinip,
Shepherd, Harrington, etc., have been keeping
■ up for yearn, when the sudden disgrace of Bel
knap Jet daylight iu among the gang, aud dis
closed their true character to the country.
Stewart knew it well enough before, and had
he b* en Secretary of the 'Treasury, he would
not have winked at corruption as Boutwoll
and Richardson did. but would have stamped
it out, as Bristow is now doing.—fNew York
Correspondence of the Springfield Republi
can.
The India’ opolis 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 dm could, she turned to the boy and said :
“ 1 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 three-fourths of a cap, ho bow
ed very low until his face became lost in a
smile, and answeied : “ You can hev my par
ding, and welcome miss; and yer may run
agin me and knock*me clean down, an 1 won t
say tv word.” After the young lady passed on
he turned to a comrade and said, half apolo
getically ■ “ I never had any one to ask iny
parding, and it kind o’ took mo off my feet.
Potatoes.— To succeed in making a good
crop the ground must be deeply ploughed,
well .fertilized, light and mellow. The use ot
green manures is 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 m&iiv prefer drills, believing larger
yields are ofctaiued- 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 vinsc ap
pear above the ground to run a light harrow
jver the field, thus breaking-t'l ! crust aud de
stroying the small weeds just starting to
otow. It is an advantage to plant early ; but
there would bp no temptation to do this at the
ytpense of proper preparation.
T ♦ ~~
. Subscribe for Thu Register.
| (loon Tkmkxe --The great moral lubricator
I which makes everihing ir human life run
i without fri. tion, is a good temper. As soon
this is exhaustible, the journals of the hu
man machine liegins to heat *nd wear, and the
entire mechanism becomes noisy atld ruinous
ly wasteful of power.
•• xhs hoi se that frets is the homo that
suets," is an old Raying of horsemen, and It
is just, a* true of men us horse*. The man
that allow* himself to got irritated at every
little thing that goes amiss in his business or
in the ordinary affairs of life is the man that
us a rule, will accomplish little and wear out
early. He i< the man for whom life and dis
ease have a particular f< lidness, and for whom
children have a particular aversion. He is a
man with a perpetual thorn in his flesh which
pricks and wound* at *he slightest movements;
a man for whom life has little pleasuie, and
the future little hope.
The highest inhabited spot in the world is
the Buddhist cloister of Hanlei In Thibet
where tw.nty-onc priests live at altitude cl
16,500 feet. The brothers Scglagintweit
when they explored the glacier* of the Ibi
flarnin in the same countiy, encamped at 21,-
000 feet, the highest altitude at which a Eu
ropean ever passed a night. Even at tho top
of Mount Hlano, Professor Tyndall’s guldi s
found it very unpleasant to do this, though
the professor himself did not confess to feel
ing so bad as they. The liighei t mountain in
the world is Mount Everest (Himalaya), 2H,.
000 feet, and the condor has been seen “ wing
ing the blue ail” fiOO feet higher. The air,
by the by, is not “ blue," or else, as De Saus
sure pointed out, “ the distant mountains,
which live covered witn snow, would appear
blue also,” its apparent color being due to the
reflection of light.”
Tttero U a man In Taunton, Mass., to whom
life lias been pretty much like going through
a threshing machine. He line been ship
wrecked, was shot in the nook at Gettysburg,
narrowly eseapi and being burned to death in a
railroad acoi lent, was donflnpd in Libby pris
on, fell over board from a whaler and had two
fingers bitten ( if by a dial k before he waR res
end, was twice drafted into the Army, had his
light arm broken In two places, bad a halter
around his neck and came near bell g hanged
in Alabama at the beginning of tho war, was
crtlibad by n falling building in California and
had nothing to eat or drink in fifty hoars, and
once evmo very near being lynched through
mistake. If that man Isn’t a little careful
he'll got-hilrt yet lief ore be is dant) with it.
A mnfl 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 of penitence. lie
was very sorry lie had permitted his anger
mastery over him, and to suffer him to
do sueh an net, 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
nevtr replace it.
An inebriated Irishman on being
kindly questioned in a very narrow lane,
across which he was reeling, as lo the
length ot the road he had traveled, re*
plied: “Faith, it’s not so much the
length of it as the breadth of it that
tires me.’
The bull frog Was the first circulating
greenback, arid the entire breed have
been notorious inflationists ever since
the flood [New York Evening Mail.
“Hatton parties' are popular in the
West. We don’t know whence they de
rive their name, unless it is because
they’re always sure to come off.
II.MVe cciUinq'O enough to review your
own Conduct, to condemn it where you 1
detect faults, to amend it to the best <>t
> t ability, to make good resolves Ijv
gtnimiw, and bei‘|> them.
llow to Succeed.
Young men who are ambitious to suc
ceed in fite sliould understand very early
in their ca-eer, that, no trade or profess
i m can be well learned without thorough
app'itial’on—sleepless industry and high
resolve. Site toriunes are not amassed
in a day, nor is professional excellency'
achieved in a r hour. The lives of great
or useful, or successful men, all teach
that patient industry, steadiness of pur
pose and sterling ambition, are the or.ly
keys with wh’ch to unlock the heavy
doors of fortune and fame. Young men
should learn 'hese truths in the morning
of life and keep them always in mind as
they struggle up the rngg 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
ooal when won. The man who bums
the midnight lamp, that reads ands ores
away Both in season and out of 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, qnd to
leave upon the shore of time footprints
that cannot be washed away.
Benjamin Franklin’s Adventure.
S mob >dy has brought out the follow
ing‘'interesting 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 lie
had swallowed- somo acephalous mol
lusks the old man was much alarmed,
and suddenly seizing him, called loudly
for help. Mrs. Franklin came with
warm water, and the lined man rushed
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 hun, while the aid
man said: “If we don't get them things
cult of Benny he will be pizened, sure.”
When they were out, and Benjao in ex
plained that the articles alluded to wore
oysters, his father foud’ed him lor an
hour with a trunk strap for scaring the
family. Ever afterward Frank tin’* lan
guage was marvelously simple and ex
plicit.”
Not unusual—to see a plank walk,
paper stand, and a stepping stone.
Open to conviction—the prisoner at
the bar.
He that sips of uiauy arts, drinks of
none.—[Fuller.
The monitor Dictator has been ia Port Poy
al Harbor one year.
The farmers of Morgan county will nse
about $60,000 T rth of Commercial fertili
zers this season
Traces of burglars are still to be seen around
Albany.
Dr. Kedfield, of the Cincinnati Commercial,
will attend the Radical State Convention to be
hi-ld in Atlanta on the 3rd of May. He will
be accompanied by his eloquent saddle bags.
J , BIS. WtL.%ol* t Mm
ATLANTA, GEORGIA*
Scttd for Circr’aiH'
MILBUIiN dc STUDEBAKEri WAGONS; A VERY & SONS &
WATTS’ STEEL and CAST PLOWS; IMPRVKD FIELD and
GARDEN SEEDS; INCLUDING SEED WHEATS, RUsT
PItOOF OATS. BARLEY, RYE and the GRASS
ES. GENERAL AGENTS FOR
woobi TABER & MORSE tar STEAM ENGINES.*• •
Send for Circular?.
I I RAVENS” Cotton Gin Feeder. Send for circulars of description and pr/eos.
I J |yfae Zavhry 4' Overbay represent us at Conyers, Georgia. uoll-tf
TIIE GREAT ESTAY OPi GAN!
| TJIh," MOSl* EXTENSIVE ORGAN ’ MAN UFACTOR Y inth j WORDI
1000 ORGANS M.VDE ERERY MONTH OF THE MOST ELABORATE STYLE®
MPROVED TONE AND SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION.
THE MOST t’EBKECT REEL) OBGAN EVER MADE. 11IE FINEST ME
CIIANJOS and INVENTORS OF THE.AGE EMPLOYED.
The only organ manufacturers who give written warrantees. Special discounts to Churces
and So'' ' Reliable Agent* Wanted in Georgia, ARba-.ua, Florida, South Carolma and
Eust Tennes so.
and ior illustrated ataloguis to *} Pv Guilford, South m Agent
. SS-YVhiteh.vi/l Streej,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
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ooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooonooc.ooooooooooooooouoooooooooo
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Capital SI.OOOCOO !
SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO
AN I*
COMPOUND ACID PIIOSFHAIE, COMPOUND ACID PHOSPHATE,
FOIt
COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED.
THE CHEAPEST AND BEST FERTILIZERS IN USE.
INTRODUCED IN 186 (5.
Prices in Augusta, Georgia.
Soluble Pacific Guano Cash 0®
Soluble Pacific Guano, Time, Cotton Option, 15c 50 00
Compound acid phosphate cash 36 00
Compound acid phosphate, Time, cotton option, 15c 4 - 00
Freight Iroin Augusta to Conyers $2.40 per Ton.
• .„
DELIVERED AT ANY DEPOT IN THE CITY FREE OF CHARGE.
Time sales payable Ist of NOVEMBER, 1876, without interest, with ootion of paying
it Middling cotton at 15c, delivered at your railroad depot.
J, O .MAI 1 IJ cj \Y ovJ> iV: tU..
Gknkual Agents, Augusta, Geougia.
STEWART & McCALLA, Agents, Conyers, Ga.
The Western and Atlantic JFLailroad,
A N 1> ITS CONSt’TIOXS.
] UOlTirr '
The following Schedule takes effect May 23d, 1875:
N O 11T HWAIt D.
No 1 No 3 No, 11,
Leave Atlanta 4.10 P M 7.00 AM 3.3 ; PM.
Arrive Oartersville 6-14 “ ... . 0'22 “ <l9
Arrive Kingston 6.42 “ y - 5 6 “ ii 'iu
Arrive Dalton 8.24 “ 154 “ IMS
Airive Chattanooga 10.25 “ 1.50 I.M.
SOUT H WAR KD.
No 12 No 4
Leave Chattanooga 4.00 P. M .5.00 A. M.
Arrive Dalton. ~5.41 “ i.Ol '* 1.00 Asl
Arrive Kingston 7.38 l< ~,9.0- . “ 4.19 “
Arrive Oartersville 8.12 “ 9.42 “ 5.18 “
Arrive Atlanta 10.15 “ 12. 06 Noon 9.30 “
Pullman Palace Cars run on Nos. 1 and 2, between New Orleans and Baltimore.
Pullman Palace ears run on Nos. 1 and 4, between Atlanta and Nashville.
Pullman Palace ears run ou Nos. 3 and 2, between Leuisville and Atlanta.
Bgy No change ot ears between New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta
and Baltimore, and only one change to New Fork.
Passengers leaving Atlanta at 4.10 P M arrive m New York the second after
noon thereafter ai 4.00 P. M, ,
Excursion Tickets to the Virginia Springs and various Summer Resorts will be
on sale in New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Columbus, Macon Savannah Augusta
and Atlania, at greatly reduced rates Ist ot June. _ _ .
Parties desiring a whole car through to the Virgiuia Springs or to J aitimcre,
should address the undersigned.
Parties contemplating traveling shjuldsend for a copy of Kenhesaw Route
Gazette, containing schedules, etc.
Af Ask for Tickets via ‘Kennesaw Route.
Bi W• WK£ri j
Gen’l Passenger and Ticket Agent, Atlanta Ga.
general dealers in
Send for Circular?.
NEEDLE Jfc GULLETT’S IMPROVED OOTTON GTNSt; COOK’S
Patient sugar and syrup evaporating
PAXS; VICTOR .CANE MILL; SWEEP
STAKE THRESHER and SEPARA
TOR; CARDWELL’S THRESfi
. ER and SEPARA TOIl;
; “ BUCKEYE” and- CHAMpii >N” MOWERS and REAPEE • f "
0 ' ******* ’**
Send for Circulars.
Thecreat nmiTATiost
which Dr. Psuiberfctn. 4 fldld extract of
stfUhigia, (or Queen'S deli ’ht) has attaint m
all sections of the country e a
G REAT AND GOO . ME DI 01N B,
and the large number of xstlmenlals which
are constantly lining receiv odfroiv. persons ivhd
have been cured by its use, is
of its great merits. t
OO 00
OOOOOtIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC 0000000
o The great health restorer o
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00 , 00
is a positive specific and cum for , dyspepsia,
liver crtmplaints, const nation, headache, diz
zinoSß, pains in the bae kidney eompiainta,
jaundice, femfile yreakneoe, Ifimbago, genural
debility, tffafel,gout, sciofula, cancerous hu.
mor, erympelas, salt-rlieum, ringworm, pi .
pies ard Humors on the face, old ulcers, rhea.
mat huff; mercurial and syphilitifc affections.
It r,-'motes all mercurial of other poisoi.j
frefill tile blood, and soon restores the Systemyy
perfect health’ flßd purity. That pSle, yellow,
sickly locking skin is soon ohAnged tb one of
beauty, ftediineSs nd health. It wiU curotmy
chronic or lotfg-standing diseased, whose rtal
or direct cfluse Is had blood. A trial \till prove
it. Thdusdiids haye been snatched as it were
fYim the grftve fey 1(6 miraculous powei, who
cow enjoy health ahd happiness, where Once all
was misery.
It invig^n-ates aikl strengthens the* wh6lo
system, a; -ts upfhi the secretive organs, allays
inflammation, elites tlifleration. r.nd regulates
tho bOivols.
DR. I’EMMRTtrNS STILttNGIA
OR QUEENS DELIGHT GIVES
Ilfi/\LTH, STRENGTH AND Al\
PtliTlTE,
It
vigdrfffes the whole system, Its medical prop,
erties ai-e (fltergtive, tottic, sSlvefit, and diu
retic. ....
Foi testimonials ftf wAhderful cures, send to'
the Troprietoh, or citll 6n youf Druggist. Tho
‘“KTs.'ftMiiM,
Chemist, Atlanta, GaV
For sale by all first-class druggists.
Office of G W Adair, Wall stf-ftt,
Atlanta, Ga., July 16, 1875.
| Dr. J. S. Pemberton —Dkak Srti: I hare
j used yoi r extract of Stillingiafor a chion
ic skin at 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 ca sof scrofula, secondary, syphilictic
diseases hcun.atism, kidney and liver affect
ions, wi great success. In fact, I have nev
known i o fail in the nrst desperate cases. I
consido J the greatest blocd purifier known.
Yours truly,. J C EVANS.
‘-ale by Jones & Carswell, Con
yers, Georgia.
COLONISTS, EMIGRANTS, AND
t* travelers westward.
For map c.irc alars, condensed time tables
and general informntion in regard to transport
trttion facilities to oil Jioints in Tennessee, Ai>
Jlissouii, Minnesota, Colorado, Kan
sas, Texas', Itfwft, Mexico, Utah and Cali
fornia, apply to Or dddtess Albert B Wrenn,
(xeneral Railroad Agenf,- Office Atlanta, Ga
• Ntforie should go West without first getting
in communication with the General Railroad
Agent, awl become informed as tq -superior
advantages, cheap and quick transportation of
families, feusehoid gocnls, stock and farming
• m piement# gerier&lly • All. inf orniatioij cheer-
W L DANLRY,
G p A t a.-
CiiIUITIAN mil
A largo eight page weekly.
Organ of the Baptist Denomination.
Should be in every Baptist Fnhily in the Land.-
It is the paper our children ought to read.
It is the paper for all who would krlbw
the truth as it is in Jesls.
Subscribe for it at once—lnduce your Friends
and Neighbors to do Likewise .
If you h.ivn’t the money, subscribe
anyhow Your pastor will make the arrange
ment for you.
a--
Send for specimen copies.
The price of “The In and t if’ if s3' a yecr.
Address all orders to
JAS. P. HARRISON & Cos.
Box 24, Atlanta, Ga
in connection with the Index we have,
perhaps, the largest and most complete book
and job printing office in the South, known as
the I ranklin steam printing house, at which
every variety cf book, mercantile, legal and
railway printing is executed. In excellency
of manner, promptness and cheapness, we
defy competition.
Our Blank Book Manufactory is, likewise,
well sppointed. 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 materisl, 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,
and everything that can be printed. Try he
Franklin.
Address all communications to
JAS. P. HARRISON & Cos.
P. O. Drawer, 24, Atlanta,
WHERE VER IT HAS BEEN TRIED
.j UR ÜBS BA
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-. but, by stimulating
the secretive organs. -Y and gradually re
moves all impurities nd regulates the entire
system
IT IS NOT A DOCTORED BITTERS, hut
is a
VEGETABLE TONIC
which assists digestion, and thus stimulates,
the appetite for food necessary to invigorate
the weakened and inactive organs, and gives
strength to all the vita) forges.
IT CARRIESITS OWN RECOMMENDA
TION, as the large andrapidly increasing sales
gistify. ,
seFrice : One Dollar a bottle. Ask your dun?'
t tfor it. JOHNSON, HOLLO WAY &CO
Wholesale Agents,Phila.,
Dyspepsia
Dyspepsia is the most discouraging and dis
tressing d’sease man is heir to. Americans aro
particularly subject to this disease and us e
fects; such as sour stomach, sick headache, ha
bitual costiveness, heartburn water-brash,
gnawing and burning pains in the pit, ot tna
stomach, coming up of the food, coated tongue,
disagreeable taste In the mouth, impure blooa
and all diseases of the Stomach and Diver.—
Two doses of Greek’s August Feower will re
lieve yon at once, and there positively is not a
case in the United States it will not cure. ■*
youdpubt this go to your Druggwt, Dr W.
Lee & Son, and get a sample bottle for 10 cents
and try it. Regular size- 75 cents.
Janl4-ly