Newspaper Page Text
B. B.-fcE.P.Hinton
Attorneys at Low-
Practice in State and Fedend courts.
r?r llawkina Building Amcncos, Ga.
R R HOLLIS,
Attorney at Law.
AMEItlCUS, ox.
, Mice, Foisyth Street '.n N»tioM> »»«
minding.
E. G. SIMMONS.
Attorney at Law*
amemcos oa.
s’ building^
~]a"r.6tf
%, t. €.1 SAVED HIS LIFE, tspt DAUGHTER
(Old Indian Cure) , ^.- Jcas> v-ai«i,«a .
Stands Peerless in the list of BLOOD RE!III hJi^flSn^SS 1 di>d *with*tlMLt 0 drt-*<^ <11«";'
' DIES for diseases doe to IMPURE I (except bis balf-tootber), hi* death was rcranl-
won. It b u “old. tried and true” I ^,“SSS£,%S^i.^S^tSl.lS
Made strictly by the*‘old original’ ‘recelpe I Jeted Vike*ntaste- He r£{iMd^en>o D <i( It
Itbout the slightest ehange. | f.* some tone, and has broa fa"
It is a vegetable preparation, containing I health. SofarMlcoolddUootrt
» mercary or other mineral poison. romptlon. and Brmr • inn*Bc.to
An excellent tonic and appetiser, end- ^.auotwwA
5 old office
J. M. R. Westbrook, M- D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Amor Ic«a,Gn.
Otflce in Ilr. Eldrtita’, Din;Store. Ho
iilence on Church Street, next door to Wm
A Phyalcion's Testimony.
called to see Mr. John Pearvm. i
Barnes vllle.Ca.
B. H. WILKINSON,
•lilorncif at Law>
AniorlouN, (*u.
All business entrusted to him will receive
],ron.j.t and careful attention. Money col-
I)r. J. A. FORT,
Physician and Surgeon
ta'lolmd'«l"rJ»'SiT« fto T.jimih.,ua
Calls wiil receive prompt attention.
Edgerton House,
MACON, GEORGIA.
3. E. 3:pwn £ Son, Proprietors.
Rate* f3.f*>~rer Day.
Dr D r HOLLOWAY.
S)entisT.
America.. - - Oeorgia
Troatssucoos.'fullyall dlwaaesofthe Den
7 j^^sswgsgsl
SKIN DISEASE arising from blood Kas taken wit h r^ reV«lnIn her *We.
taint, be It I vraa sooa followed hr ht morrtaccs *
Myphlll- lit any Stan., ISIMtSf,fe
riorofulo, Ulcerm, I rednr-cd to a living skeleton. pw st____ -
llhcnmatiNm. I fu»ed to main any food, and the vhyslcli
Catarrh I *houBht one of her .Inrun Was entirely cor
Cntnrrn, I At a final coiwnltatW.n of tVM physicians, h
Totter, I case mu pronounced hopeless. I tried Brewn -
Uloeratorl I !■*»« Wow by adTjce ofanaorfthe physP
Throat, wwte s!^t",i:araih , msasgsS8r'‘
, Pimplcw orKrnp-l In excellent health,
tiou«. | fciinsl®
INDORSED BY PRACTICING |
PHYSICIANS. "
ill cate for nijr child? You
will not let my little one suffer?”
My old friend and college chnm, John
llarmon said this as ho wrung onjr hand
hard. 1 repeated/ my promise that in
my own homenest, where there was a
nursery full of little ones, Susie Ilar-
mou should hold a daughter’s place.
We were standing upon the yharf
waiting lor the signal that it was time
for my friend to step aboard an out
going California steamer. lie hadloet
his wife within the year, and soon after
was beggared by a lire that totally de
stroyed the cotton mills in which he
had held the position of superintendent
for ten years. With his home desolate,
| his parse empty, he resolved, as many
| a man had done before him, to seek his
w fortune in the modern El Dorado, and
Lory I dig for gold in her mines.
under Susie’s dainty fingers, and
the spirit of perfect love kept it ever
bright. Having been brother and eis-
ter for so many yeurs, Albert and Su
sie thoroughly understood each other’s
dispositions and I have never knot—
domestic happiness more perfe-’ ,l *
BEXJ. V. TTEARNDON.
iff, at first doubtingly; I
ultimately, with Implicit confidence in its]
‘ rirtues. I know whereof I speak. I
lisr with the medical properties of |
component parts, it Is profound-1
ve, tonic, diuretic, diaphoretic |
and emmenagogue. In a word, I
). I. c. IS A PERFECT BLOOD |
purifier.
It purges the liver and all Its tributary
,nd branches, and is a specific, an Inf all
Fiied A. Toomeh,
A. li.. A. M., and M. D
ire fair samples of hi
ials we can produce:
,t pleasure in saj lug I ui
es of O. I. O. for a sev-
(eight years standing, i
i to health. I cheerfully |
mfrnn from bl ' 1
8. W. i
Office of Flanders Bros., Macon, Oa.
-1 have known
ow recall, was a caseof fljrgS&jiM
nnal observation. Hie victim had tried |
imost every known remedy and nr"*' *
I visits to llot Springs without
H. O’Prt.
ofO? 1*1
PRICE f 1.5
et to meet with the first failure of O. 1.
i <lo all that is claimed '
EH BOTTLE.
THE O. I
PERRY, -
c. co.|
- GA.
From Macon.
In A^nO. mo.
r^beun^hel<«e.^I rewd her rc>to!w^loii as
'■ I.mtg Reatarcr la si ym^ely
jMtXSrtcrtwonderfulcure*.
LAMAR, RANKIN, & LAMAR,
MACON, GA.
TUTTS
PILLS
25 YEARS IN USE,
The Orvstvft Medical Triumph of the Age!
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER;.
IrrUaMlIty •rtawaer, Lew iflrlia "Ilk
a feeling ef having neglected seme daty,
Wearlneee, Dluineee, Flattering at tne
Heart. Beta fcefere thn eycn. Heady he
'The only drawback to this scheme
was the difficulty of taking hia three-
year-old daughter, who had been in the
care of hired nuraeii since her mother
died. I, who shared every thought of
John’s mind, talked with my wife,and
found her eagerly willing to take ci
of the little one.
“I am sure I loved Mary as well
you loved John,” she said, “and there
is no one who can have a stronger claim
upon the child than we have.”
So, sure of her cordial welcomo in oc
nursery, I made John the ofler of
home for his little one, and it was a<
cepted as lovingly as it was offered
This care removed, my friend hastened
his preparations for departure, and Is'
com pained him to New York and s:
him off.
The next morning I returned hoi
to find Susie almost inconsolable, cry
ing perpetually for “papa
than
Susie’s first child named lor her fa
ther, John Harmod, was two years old
old, when the mail brought me a letter
an unknown hand from
jpened it, and upon a large sheet of
paper found written, in a scrawling,
uneven hand, three lines;
Dear Sir: Will you come to
M street without letting
; IIasxo:
;. John had
writtten a bold, clerk-like hand, clea:
print. This was a scrawl, strug-
„-ing all over the paper, uneven i
first penmanship of a little child.
Bntthe more I pondered ovi
matter the more 1 was inclined to obey
So pleading bui *
saying nothing of the lettei
” left home bjr the wght trr
einnati.
No. 67 M street I found to he a
boarding house for the poorest classes,
shabby room, half furnishod.I
found an aged, worn man, perfectly
blind, who rose to greet me, sobbing.
Fred, I knew yon would come.”
Why,old friend,” I said, when sur
prise and emotion would let me speak,
wonder-
PATENTS
the right ««j J
^CONSTIPATION.,
T®TT» mx» are etpecjaUr adapted
ihnnroWSnUn p m to astonish tba gnfftfer.
, iiSSEwg&SSESS
HOW SUCCESS SUCCEED ajagg-asSB^^iS
Eldridge.
cus, Ga., by Dr.
John. E. Ball.
My wife was distracted at
o comfort this childish sorr
>wn three children looked <
“Naughty Susie,who cried and cried,
ter mama told her to be quiet.”
Fortunately, Susie was accustomed
> see me, to snuggle in my arms when
11 talked with John, to associate
j with her father, and she allowed)
orafort her. In time this violent
f wore away, and the child becam<
I very happy in our care. My business,
that of a hardware merchant, being
] very prosperous, we did not feel the ad-
| ditional expense of the child’s support
i burden; and as the years
WU littl
Patent Offi-e and before the Corn
ly and caretnU^r attended^to.^ ^
CHARGE UNLESS PATENT IS SECUR-
J.R. fclTVKM
Near U. S, Pat
monroeTemau to I lege
FORSYTH, GA.
lids institution U fast ragaining its lorm-
cr prestige and popularity. The policy has
l>eon to place .tlie best teaching talent at the
head of each department and over the whole
to extend a kind, yet firm discipline. The
ageandconstant ffrowtfi in public confident
and favor. The Spring session will begti
Monday January lit
whose purpose Is to
the high aims and di
ellortin the pastliav
nivinf* v.iic.bie contrlliution to the society of
5 respectfully
IHALL’SI
a£B WOODEN
IHM U STORE]
SPREADS.
TUTTS HAIR h DY!t
SSfT
^.•sras^s.sVw yo,w.
HOSTETTER’s
Albert and I releaaed 8naie. who
quickly.
Some finer instinct than we possess
ed guided her, for abe returned with
Johnnie, and whispering him to be
very good and kiss grandpapa, she pot
him in her father’s arms. In a second
itement was gone, and be fond
led the cnrly bead, while Johnnie
obediently pressed his lips upon t
ithered cheek. So, in a little tin
they fell aaleep, Johnnie nestled in l
feeble arms, and the withered ft
drooping upon the golden curls. We
watched them silently, till we saw a
shadow pass over John’s face, and a
change settle there that comes but once
in life.
Gently Albert lifted the sleeping
child, and carried him to the nursery,
while Susie and I sat beside the arm
chair.
“Uncle Fred,” she whispered, “Al
bert will go for a doctor. But may 1
waken him ? Let him speak
i as she spoke John opened his
eyes. All the wild look was gone from
them as he groped a moment till 8nsie
her hands in his. Then a heavenly
. le came upon the wasted lipa, and
he said softly, tenderly:
“Susie, my own little child, Susie.”
And with the name on his lips John’
spirit want to seek an eternal asylum,
which there will be no more poverty,
A.’RWiUCi been treated in the times that are past, laay, let them come. You have not
Take the Sixteenth ward of Brooklyn. I been to Tex*a, you have not been to
In that Sixteenth wwd, aix churches, I Oregon, if you are afraid. If youhava
TABERNACLE SERM0N8. two public acbool..fire brewerfe., three anyideaoftha v«t reeourcenof thi.
1 hundred and twenty-three liquor sa-1 country ret unoccupied, you ace willing
BY REV T. DeWITT TALMAGE. loons. Out of three huadred aad twear I they ahall come, and the more that
ty-three liquor saloon* in the Sixteenth I come the better; Bnt^among those
Abolition or Sunday. ward, how many observe the Sabbath I people who will come there is a din*
Verily my Sabbaths ye shall keep.’’—Ex- law? One! and^three hundred fca
how is this? We thought you
dead.”
“Does Susie think so?”
“Yes. We all gave you op.”
“Do not undeceive her, Fred,
eant to come home to her rich, able
. gratffy every desire to her girlish
sart. Do not let her know tlia
blind,sick wrech is left for her
father. Tell me of her, Fred. Is she
well? Is she happy?”
She is both, John—a happy wife
and mother.”
'Married ! My little Susie?”
■Married to Albert, my soi
whom yon may judge when I tell you
folks say bt is his father over again.”
“I would ask no more for my child,’
;aid John.
Then, in answer to my anxious quos-
ions, he told me the story of the years
of silence. He was preparing to pay
GI11LS IN LOW OUT GOWNS,
SHOULD BK DRAWN,
»pla<
i his promised v
whet
ir for the time, and swept
of buildings uninsured,
in which John had invested all his
savings. Worst of all, in trying
’ ’ ’ ” i.John i
,nd lay for months' in a hospitable.
When he so far recovered as to be dis-
charged, his mind was stHl impaired.
LIUKRAL, FAIR, HONEST DEALING |
WILL TEI.!
, good i
ipply
Janati U. T. ASBURT, President- I UAS BEEN - cRAMrED
John E. Hall Eg|fff
ktimrn vOU DOOM A I ®
But she understood always that she
was not our child, hat had a dear fath
er who loved her fondly, and was away
from her only to make a fortune for her.
soon as she was old enough she had health was too feeble for manual labor,
father’s letters read to her, and her ,.j htrQg gi e d f or daily bread alone,
| first efforts at penmanship were letters I p^d,” he told me, "aud when I re-
► “Papa.” Iceived yonr loving letters, and deal
John wrote often for ten years, I Sasie’s, 1 would not write, hoping t
I counting his varying success, »0“®*| Mn d better tidings if I waited for
| times sending money to boy presents 1 torn of f ortune '„ wheel. It never cam
i for Susie. He was winning fortune I PreJ j left California three year
slowly not at the mines, where *i s I ago, and came Here, wlior© I was prom-
health broke down, hut in the employ I t ^ e pi 8CC Q f foreman in a great
of a San Francisco merchant, and some 1 p^-packing house. I saved a littl-
speculations in real, estate. I mo ney and was hoping for better times
was not a rich man, he wrote af-1 when my health failed again, and chis
absence of ten years, but P ros * I time with it my eye-sight. I hoped
I pering, when he purposed paying ns a I aga ; nlt hope, spending my saving to
I visit. He wrote hopefully of seeing his I haye the h e8 t advice, and not until I
J child, perhaps of taking her home with I >8 p ro nonnced incurable would I
I him, setting no definite time, but lea*l-1 wan t you to take me to an asylum,
I ing us to expect soon to see him. Thenlp^j. anJj „ j raust h 0 a pauper
I his letters ceased, and he did come. 11 patient, 1 must go to my own town.
1 wrote again and again. Susie wrote. I ^* ou wi jj ta h e me, Fred ?”
I No answers came to either one or the I „j w jjj ta h e yoa to an asylnm,
I other. We did not know the name o f l ,J 0 bn,” I promised.
I his employer, and after nearly two years I 9 You will keep my
I more passed we sadly thought he must 1 You will not disturb Susie’i
1 be dead. jhappii
s heated discussions have tak-
of late,” says Jennie Jnne’i
Fashion Letter “in regard to what
ititutss foil dress. It is undoubted
ly true that the custom of wearing low
bodices is extending and increasing in
a direction that is least desirable among
young girls. Nojv, there is no par
ticular barm in the wearing of low, de
cently cut bodices. Forty or fifty years
ago children and young women wop
them universally; but there is harm ii
the wide difference between basques
high to the threat and bodices
which form a mere strap about the
aist; there is immodesty in stripping
.. young girl so that the charm ot hei
fresh young womanhood is forever des
troyed and her sense of what is right
and proper forever blunted. Dress
makers are more at fault in the matter
than mothers and could do
fashion from proving a snare.
They tell girls that it is prndish and
old maidish to object to a cat which
the bust exposed, and that fash-1 comotm
odus xxxi., I
twenty-two ate this i
very severe circumstances, but the I that the goods his men manufactured
arm which they exercise is, in spite I in the early part of the week and right
of the drawbacks of an ignorant caprice I after the Sabbath rest were always bet-
whicli calls itself fashion, and aided by | ter than the goods manufactured
it. There
“I will n
I ness,” 1 said.
trouble
happi-
DR. CARLISE’S.
L. &c S.
Will cure Rheumatism, Cramp Colic. I
Cholera Morbus, Neuralgia, Inflamntion of
the Kidneys,Whitlow orFelon.Sore Throat,
DlptherLC Sprains, Bruises. Contracted]
Cords and Muscles. Ntlff Joints, Croup,
Caked Breast, Sore Nipples, Bilious Fevers
Sores, Old Sores, Cuts, Wounds of any de-1
soription, Catarrh, llay Fever, &c.. Bite, I
or Stings of Insects, reptiles or Dof *'~
CarliMo has used this remedy in h
;ople
ties, who" have betjn
-pressed M<
lany certificates f
i and Tay*
il l.y the u
ibove, buy |
Upson and Taylor
, > - - -- e<
iuffering
£o™MS ANDlSNOWtSLAK- “f 1 VS »t. did for » fatW OnOT 1 u.taiow» to I Yet an hour Uler I ... w.
u m ? m rnitMFR SIZE ST t5?IS |su!lipen»ia. Hostetter’e Stomach Blttor, I her in reality but ehe was a Ky 1 cf and I delayed our d.
UAS BEEV CA'StD BY I.UmJVw-edoate.P.mteelk,n by loc,.ym;|„ oit seasit... feeling., w.tka telte, f[ „ m Cincinnati till an an,we
INCREASING l'KADE lovi “K he,rt '*” J ’f e , h *' 1 f l "* y ‘ • k t|‘ It was tke answer I eapected f,
■^IFA vreR^TGCK S I efUwRwr stomsc^ and bowehc fiorcoeer I her father’s name before her, 8 - r, y n -1 tender, loving heart, bnt I said nothing
UEAVBRSTDCK Ir eradicates malarial complaints ot an <*-1,0 win him aplace in her fondest alTec- o(i ,
sUnam type, end stands alone unequalled I tioo That we had succeeded only too Caring tenderly for his comfoi
“m'S'e'S uU Umeglsunnp Ilenlers well was shown by her sorrow, whenK k him on Wa w „ homeward.
>i- week after week passed, and there w * 8 | WRi evening when we reached the rail-
no good news from Califoraia. 1 WAJ dapot G f onr own town, and as we
When we had really lost all hope, it I j ia(l i OD g cra mped in the car-scats,
became Susie’s great pleasure to sit be-1 j ., ro p 05 e to walk home,
side me and ask me again and again for I *.«i 8 j t not too far off ?” John asked
the stories I remembered of her father’s I thought the asylum was a long way
And All Sundries!
generally.
J-fZTOnlcrs Solicited.
jupuuuhoitntitapwa. it. What a state of things that it for I breaken. The law-abiding people, we
In preaching this sermon I remem- the City of Ohorehas! All thoMl waat them*? «xm t The law-break-
ber that I am discoursing in a brief se- moa ths of hell this moment open, I ere, we do not want them. We do not
ties upon what the evangelical church- breathing death and desolation upoa I want th* monkrehiee of Earope. We
es believe, and I remember also that I this city of Brooklyn. I *ay it is um«|do not-want the Parisian Sunday. We
am to join in the protest against -that f or a n good citizens, whether they are [do not want the Bruaaellian Sunday, or
movement which would throw open all temperance men or not, it ia time for I the Dreadenlan Son day. We want to
the liquor shops of Brooklyn on the all honest citiseas, and ell men 4h® | keep the quiet of fur Ohristiaa Sab-
Sabbath day. Both premises I shall have a pride in their homes, to rise 1 np I hath. I was awakened in Pena bT a
keep. While the evangelical denomi- a n( | p n t down thie infamous business, I greet ratketfn the ItrAt, and I rushed
nations put especial emphasis upon »t least one day of the week. Certain-1 to the wisdow tons what was the
' 9 sanctity ot the Sabbath, I am glad ] y j t they hare fall awing Monday, I matter. I said to aome one, “What ia
know that the wisdom of resting Tuesday, Wednesday, Thuraday, Fri-1 the matter?” “Ohr they replied, “it
,_e day in the seven is almost univer- Jay and Saturday, they ought to g£te|is Sunday.” Sunday 1 All the vehi-
lally acknowledged. Men have foand q B at least one day of rest from this Idee ruahwg hitheswed thither. People
out that they can do more work in six awfnl evil which is abroad amid the I talking at the height of their voices
days than they can in seven. The nations. Oh, to many of our citizens I and in tbo moat boisterdui manier.
world has found out that the fifty-two the best day ia the worst day. They | The Champa Elyscts one great mass,
days of rest arc not a subtraction hut | ge t their salaries and they gat their I one greet m6b. jgf pleasure-seekers,
addition. It hss been Jemonstrat- W ages ou Saturday night, end then IBaBooea Aping; parrots chattering;
in all departments. Lord Castle- there are inveigled into (hose pieces, I footballs rolung;Panch anil Judy shows
reagh thought he could work his brain and that which ought to have gone for | in scores of places, each with e shont-
3C5 days in the year, and he broke the livelihood of the family goes for I ing audience; hand organs and cymbals
down and committed suicide, and Wil- their own destruction. Who ere yon, | and all styles of racket, unmusical,
berforco said in regard to him: “Poor the men who deal in cloth and hosiery | Sunday! Sunday! And then es the
Castlereagh! this comes from nou-ob- and hardware and grocerie*. who are | day passed on toward night I stood
servance of the Sabbath.” A promi- you w ho sell bread and-shoes, that you I and sew the excuraioniata come homo,
nent merchant of New York said: “I should bow down to the liquor traffic? | fagged oat men r wocsec end children, e
should long ago have been a maniac * ** * * * ’ ‘ —”
bnt for the observance of the Sabbath. m w
The nerves, the brain, the muscles, the your hat to them? Is their business | Fonrth of July instead of a Christian
bones, the entire physical, mental and better than youra? Why should the | Sunday. How would you lika to have
moral constitution cry out for Sab- law give especial privilege to thoael such a Sunday sa that in this country,
bstio rest. What is true of man is men who are trafficking in the bodies I Compare it with the Christian Sab-
true of beaSt. Travellers have fonnd and souls of men? If e baker should | hath in one of onr beat cities. At day
that they come sooner to their destina- M 11 bread ht would bo very apt to be | dawn a holy ailenoo cornea down. Tbo
tion if they stop one day in the seven, arrested. It is not sale to have loaves 1 business man tarries longer on the pil-
What is the matter with some of these Q f breed going through the streets on I low because there axe no store doom to
horses attached to the street cars as Sunday. If a man should sell shoes I open, no hard work to be engaged in.
the poor creatures go stumbling and and boots it would bo a very danger-1 The family tarry longer around
staggering on? They are robbed of 0 ns thing; ho might bo ameted. Bnt I the table. There is no rushing off to
the Sabbatic rest. In tho ^ays of old, all these plaoee open on the Sabbath. I bnsinees. After a while tboe i-
when the sheep and the cattle were It the front door is not open, the back [song sung. After a while there is a
driven frJm the far West to the sea- door is open. Now, I tell you, fellow-1 prayer offered, and after awhile there ia
cost, it was fonnd out by positive test citizens, there is something awfully I a pnyer offered, and after awhile about
that those drovers got sooner to the wrong in thie town when such things 110 o’clock, there is a long procession
seaboard who stopped one day in sev- ara allowed. I churchward and there they praiao God
en on the way. They came sooner to Then there is an effort being made | for His goodness and they contribute
the seaboard than those who drove by secular amusement to destroy oar [to the poor, the suffering and the wan-
In many of the cities, all, I dering. Which Sunday do you like
. , »11, the places of theatric and the best? I will tell yon iu which
the matter, and. they find that they operatic entertainment are opea. Thera | boat it will go ont. The Sabbath eamo
catch more fish in the year when they are thousands of pens busy trying to I to this country in the Mayflower, and
observe the Sabbath than in the year write down the Christian 8aobath,and [ if it ever leaves, it the Sabbath ever
when they do not observe the Sabbath, it is a question whether we are goi*g I leaves thie country, it will go in tho
When I asked a Rocky Mountain lo- to have pluck and grit and consecra-1 ark that floats above a delnge of a dee-
comotive engineer, as l wae riding with t j on enough to baud down to our cbil-1 trored nation. If you have ever been
Why do you switch off your lo- dna the Sabbath wo got from onr an-1 in Brussels or ia Paris, on the Sab-
i n ve on a side track and take an- castors. I am opposed to all these in-1 bath day, it requires no great parsna-
ionaVle'leaders and authorities wear I other?” as I saw he was about to do; V asionsofthe Sabbath becauao they | aion for mo on my part to get you to
them bo, and so the mother may utter “it seems to be a straight route,’ he mn against the divine enactment. God I pkay morning, noon and night that
her protest; she vory often does; but I replied: “Oh, we have to let the loco- Ba y g; ««If thou turn away thy fo0t j such a Sabbath may
»hc is powerless before the combined motive stop and cool off or the maclnn- from doing thy pleasure on my holy this country,
influence of the modiste and the desire 1 ery would very soon break down, day, thou shalt walk upon the plaoM.”| Then, itis auch an outrage on em-
of the girl, iust entering life, to repres- The manufacturers of salt were told it What does he mean by “doing thy ployes. Where do these bartandera
. . . . , A 1 tt.a ,11av«1 tluir W(1m 1 - ... — . ■ ’ ° *--• n ‘ *’ *
ent the latest style and show her pret- they allowed their kettles to cool one p i e a 9nre ?” Ha meant secular amuse-1 get their Sunday? Do they get any
tv person to advantage. Yet it not day in seven they would have immense mentB> a man was telling me how he I more wages? No. The breaking
unfrequently happens that such exbi- repairs to make; but the experiment WM affrighted when during the time of I down of Sunday, what does it mean?
bitions are not only suggestively in- was made and the contrast came, and an earthquake he heari the bellowing I It means that a few men who toil eball
decent, but very unbecoming. [ it_was found that those manufacturers D f the cattle in the field, and
make; but the experiment
made and the contrast came, and
as fonnd that those manufacturers 0 f t h 0 cattle in tho field, and oven the! toil seven days and get no more than
It has been the fashion "oflate to I of salt who allowed the kettles to cool barnyard fowls aewamed in horror. -I | they get for «ix. Then there are all
leave tbo edge ot the low bodice on the once a week had less repairs to make te u you that it was in time of earth- the employee of the opera houses and
neck quite plain and bare, with noth- than those who kept the furnaces in qn ake and when the mountains were | the theatree, the soeno-ahiftere, the
soften the line of velvet or satin full blast and the kettles always hot. f u n of fire that God sent forth the el-1 ballet dancers, the call boys, th# sne
contact with the skin no matter What does all this mean? It means actment, “Remember the 8abbath day I pernnmerarioe, making up thousands
what the color, whether white or dus-1 that intellectual man aud dumb beast t0 keep it holy,” the agonies of nature 1 and thousands in this country. Where
tyred. Tho softness of youth and the atfd dead machinery cry out (or the r i — ax *—- *—
grace of American beauty triumph ov-1 Lord’s day. A manufacturer declared
iphasizing the divine injunction. I are they going to get their Sunday?—
“Oh,” says some one, “we ought to I Y’oueee them on the stage with tho
have as they have in other cities. We tinsel and the tassel and the halberds,
ought to have tboee grand sacred con-1 or you see them in gauee whirling in
certs.” I saw a man who bad seen one | ganse whirling in the toe tortures, and
of these grand sacred ooncerts. Hethey seem queens or fairies; bnt after
K. CARLISLE.
Thomaston,Ua.
irldffe.
sugr-wly.
SEED!
THE FIELDS IRE WHITE)
WITH COTTON.
HARD TIMES NEARLY OVER
And Planters Goods.
H© has in store an Immense Stoclc of all the
Best Varieties of Seeds that he will sell
I Wholesale or Retail!'
A glorious harvest is at hand, and pros I
A ? LOW AS ASyHOUSElME
Groans for many long years will BUY THIS STATE. SOME RARE Y ARI
YEAR. Anticipating the demand, we have ppplES OF CHOICE SOUTH-
BlMTOMETSiMM . “\SlsSI”
nd laid in an immense stock.ot £UFSRb| WHERE
pltatmn.
BLOOD F0&IF1EB.
For Scrofula and Blood Taints.
BRAIN TONIC,
the flail and the axe and the yardstick having their rights, but has not I public until she qnits her roystering
0 have not been able to destroy the Sab- ^ any rights? You govern I Sabbaths and recognizes God and »s-
tho Exposition, liberally contributed to j bath, and the vast majority of people, your f tm il y , and the governor rulea I cred things. Abolish the Sabbath and
the audience present at th# 177th Grand I f rom unitary reason, have about con- tlie y t ate, and the President rules the I then you have the commune in
it I had Monthly Drawing of The Louisiana I eluded it is best to rest on the Sabbath, I Umred States. De vou really think I America. Abolish the Sabbath, and
For Dlanhoea, Dysentery, &c.
Mwrofactured at 55 South Broad St. At-1 debut,
lanta, Ga., and sold by d I would take
NSTRU MENTS FROM TEN LEADING
JIAKEHlA.-hte^w. L^tSSMnRokSLt will S
i buy now, and I a long way. Catl at the
usual easy Installment
qohsjmption
e those who wish t
Sl*EUIAL C OFFER TO Fi&NO AND OB-11
GAN BUYERS.
During tie months of Septem
ber and October, 1884, ve will
sed Pianos and Orgatts at our
Ijowest Pock Bottom Cash
Prices, requiring only
$25 CASH DOWN ON A PIANO.
$10 CASH DOWN ON A ORGAN.
A nd allowing three months time .
onthe balance. Without Interest
: or adranee qf price.
AIMS,
Practical Gun and Locksmith. To *“
Those who buy under this plan, and find
themselves unable to complete payment
after the three months, will be given further
AMKRIOU8, GA.
(Saeccesor to Thos. M. Eden.)
1 amprepared to do all ktadaeCGun aud
Breech LoaSeremademd
notice, I guarantee good subetantbdwort in
every case. Prioes reasonable. Give mo a
time, by agree int^to pay our rtgulw Install-
SllmentTermsof^psnBo'nt? bbmild'thqr
payone half the amount due at thee months,
or makea large eash payment, aa equitable
price for the instrument will arranged. All
rienooslbUitp. Instruments will be
lonW5o.l«l<»ii d.7*
references are given. aepw.
LUDDEN & BATES
SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE,
SavaxuuUi. Go.
^rieneed, to merit the patronage hereto
'StaSS 4 ™*' THOMAS M.EDEN.
a green grocery, aad hope nr friends will
feh57-lw-w-sw
. . | right. But you, John, ask
Spring had come, when one evening I from Susie tne happiness of kno 1
I Albert came into my library, wbeie I | a father’s love, thejsweet dnty of
■ books
I CUBE FITS1I
^SL , tir‘rri.‘ l Lii!wT*■^Yalurd | ngU al qryet manner and finally said: 11
r | “Father, you have often said Susiels I,
^ I ** dear to yon as one ot your own ehi\-1 (
WILL PAY S2.50 PERIDAY
> all who work for me at borne. Tomany
* — afford to pay nr— 1
emrsTtV •BVPTJT7VYW ‘ Liirht “Will yon make her your daughter He turned his sightless eyes toward _ , - w
STEADY ^EaPLOYlCBirr. I iu fact bygiving her to me for a wife?' | me, his whole face working convul- ne xt, of which M. A. Dauphin, New | Because he know* there
* I ^ • , i fti. ,l:.l i l.j lo.. I ««1> « 1 - - * - — n ~—
vllle, Ky.
it of Local News
Rowell & Co., 10 Spruce*
a blind.
OTy.
.. Orleons, La., will give all information I thousand liquor dealers in Brooklyn'
“Where is she, Fred? You would Q n application. 1 who have their eyes on him and they
4 U1 „ ul _jt talk so if you did not know'my ^ — I will remember it at the next election,
"J?*? I as much astonished as if Albert had child stillloves her &tWr>V , Looks so Untidy. Now, whst wo want is, on the othei
I fallen in love with Joanns. . “I nm here; falher,” 8usio saBJ and Nothing looks more untidy than tho hand, to have ten thousand good, hon
I mnn found when Satie’s 11 stole softly away, as John clasped preMn ce of scurf and danruff in the I eet, upright citizens banded together
t.ln.VJni fare was hidden upon rev his child in his arms. Albert was in hair ami on the clothing. One bottle i n some excise league,, demanding the
blushing face “J the dining-room with Johnnie, and I 0 f Parker’s Hair Balsam mill heal the I execution of the law. so when a justice
WhLrt^aJd’lw Monlr* ^ wSK was ohatting still with him. when I acalp and free it from this nuuance.lof the peace with the criminal before
iLiU^hatJro stra^W win tile I heard John calling: Stops falling of the hair, prmnotee new him re£mheretbme are three thojrn-
pleased ^ get | j Pui!” growth and makes It aoft, glossy and and liquor sellers who want him to d»s-
find him iflky. Bea^ of dieeaing. . Delicionaly *
A Clear Skin ,
may have It; at least, what I having old-fashioned ideas “I want my child 1” he cried, delin-
Iooks like iL Magnolia j about such matters, and believing it ia 1 0 naly, “you promised me my child l”
looks like iu magnolia I about such matters, ana oeiwviug u 1 0 niiy, “you promised me my enua i
Balm both freshens and batter far young married people to live j aaw at a gUoca that the agitation
beautiEes. h>r tbenuelvee and assume bousekeep- ^ e „ nios ha d brought back the
* in ¥henew home was « gem of nest- wandering mind, of which ho had told
•kins so per-1 the latter part of the week and when B aid interspersed amid the muaio they 112 o’clock at night see them going
feet iu coIot and texture that tha rise his men were tired. Tho Sabbath had a dance and a tight-rope walk and along the street in faded dreaa, shiver-
of the neck and throat seems only the I comes and it soothes the nerves, and a trapeze performance. I enppoee it | ing and cold and hnngir to their gar-
continuation of the fine, firm body of it puts out the fires of anxiety which wag a holy dance «nd a consecrated rets or their cellars. It meant that
the fabric. Bnt these are so rare as to have burned all the week. The fact t jgbt-rope. I do not know nbont that, | those people shall have no rwt far the
claim and receive exceptionable honors I is wo are sevenday clocks and we have but j am certain it was a “grand sao-1 body and no rest for the soul. When
and privileges. The majority require to be wound up once a week or we will ro d concert.” Oh, will a man rob I you talk about opening places of secu-
a gentlemen medium to soften lines and run down into the grave. The Sab- Qod? Y es, he wUl, and every plaoe lar amusement on the 8abbatb, while
establish friendly relations between any bath is a savings bank into which we of aecolar amusement that is open oolthere may be people ontaide of suek oe-
ivielding fabric and the shrinking, gather up our resources of physical Sabbath in any city is grand larceny] tablishmenta who are wantiag tb«n
osnsitive, delicate skin, particularly and mentalstrength to draw on all the gainst the Lord God Almighty. The there are many of these employee who
when the force of color is added to that week. That man gives a inortgsge .ailor was right. The captain dia- are practically prayiag: “Oh, God,
of texture. disease and death who wot ks on the c h arg *d all his crew because they would [ let the crushiag juggernaut stop
That exaggerations are not needed is Sabbath, and at the most unexpected not wor k on the Sabbath when they | day in seven!” It la a swindling .
evident by the presence at every ball, moment the mortgage will be foreclos- weTe in p^. The eaptain went ont I oese upon employes. IUa a piopoei-
at every evening entertainment, of [ed and the sool ejected from the prem- to get another crew. He said to one [tion to give no 8ahbath to tbouaandi
dresses cot low, yet in a perfectly nn-|ises. Every gland, every cell, every man> -I should like to have you on and thonsaads of people in this oountry.
objectionable manner. They may be | globule, every finger nail cnes out: my ship.” The man said: I should lika I Then, all these movements are« wai
round, or square or pointed, but they | “Remember the babbath day to keep to be employed.” “Will you work on I upon our political inaUtutwas. Where
modest and womanly. Low bodi-lit holy!” A London banker says: “I Sunday?” “No.” “Why not?”[the Sabbath goes down tbo republic
are not neoessarily objectionable— I came to London thirty years ago, and ••Beeanse a man that will rob God Al* | goes down. Dissoluteness is inconsis
all high ones objectionable. The 11 have had a great deal of observation, a j g hty will cheat me ont of my wagee. | tent with self-government. Sabbath-
latter may he cut squaw or heart shap-1 and I have noticed that tho hankers Oh, have you ever looked at the Bream- breaking is dissoluteness. What is
ed and left open so low in front that who went to their places of business t h« desecration of the Sabbath? I the matter with republicanism m Italy
almost any^ov^ bodice wonld be rai-1 on the Sabb^V, and attended to afTairs, 8appoae we „ a poor man and and in Spain? No Sabbath. What
ment for a vestal compared with it. 1 and settled np their accounts, faded, w# J,tto a drygoods merchant, and you is the matter with republican!!— ■"
irua.i.n«rt.ili»vi more than one I and without one exception. A Bos- ■ -- " * w —*
option.” A Bos- begged for some articles of slothing, I Franco? France got a republic, but
•I have observed and ^ should eay to you, “I will give | one day tbo modera^Napoleon rode
_ ... . ^ France has a republic again,
i>ectenough among women to draw’thelSunday, and af work from noon until .UpinWhind tho counter andstealan-|hut how often it quakes from end to
line and not permit any imaginary au-1 night on the sacred day—I noticed all ^er yard. That is what every man end, aad one of the commune haa only
thority to interfere to the discredit of [those merchants came to nothing and doea when he breeke the 8nbbath. just to plaster an insurgent advertire-
There ts nearly always more than one | and without i
way of attaining an object, and if an I ton merchant says: . . . —. — _ ,
exhibition of that kind is an object an a long while, and I have noticea when u now ,[ x yard , 0 f doth,” and while through the Champs Elyseee, tho re-
edict against low bodices would not out onthe Long Wharf merchants h 0 goe , 0 ff at one end of the counter to | public went down under the clattering
-*> j-j » 1#— I kent their men bnsv loadinir vessels on p **
until .
iuvi... « interfere to the discredit of | those merchants came t
their own judgment and sense of pro- their children came to nothing. Gen- Qod giveB „ ^ d* y . and we want to ment against a stonewal
I tlemen,” said a merchant, although he Btaa i tb* other. “Ob.” eay same, | Is aqnake and in fear of revolution that
} ' m | is a man of tbo world,‘-Gentlemen, it
What They do ^ New Orleans J don’t pay to work on Sunday.” While
Tho great crowds in New Orlerns,
j boyhood and.youth, his college life,our | f roTO bere
| manv excursions, and, above all, of his I „Qb, the whole place is changed
' ige and the gentle wife and moth- from the Uule village yon left!” ’
— early called to heaven. answered; “We have a n hei
, She dearly loved those talks, ana no| now> an j yonr asylum is not very fi
memories were more precious thfo my I f rom here-”
1 description of her father s pain in part-1 j et me j 0 ad him then, willingly
, ing from her, and his desire to w * n I enonK h t a nd we were not long in reach-
COMPRISES FOUR FREPARATlONb. I money j n California only for her. | ing Susie’s home. She ’
i H E’D nr IDT AND KIDNEY TONIC, | Time softeQed Susie’s grief, and at I the cheerful sitting-room
LIVER, HEART AND KlUiir. 1 L ighteen , bo was one of the ^^f^lbut obeyed my motion for silence, as I
For torpid Ll,e j; i “ d Jp dnej 9 Rn, ‘ F 1 | most winning girls I ever saw. W ith-1 placed J 0 hn in a great ami-chair, after
out being a wonder of erudition, •hej{^ mov i n g his hat and coat. Helooked
was well educated, had a fair mnsical I WTe tchedly old and worn,and his clothes
talent and a sweet, well-cultivated I ghabby, yet Susie’s soft eyes,
voice. She was tall and graceful, and I m j at _ tears, had only love in their
when she was introduced to aociety I ^pjession as she waited permission
with Joanna, my handsome, brunette I B pc a k.
For EpUeptic Fltl and other Convulsions. [ daughter, both became popular. j «*John,” I said to him, - - -—
ifiTTiiRP I Albert and Will., my bo^s, were ol- [ fonnd yon in a pleasant home, happy State Lottery,
DIARRHOEA MIXTURe*, I der than the girls; Albert in business I prOB pcrous, and I had known that The son of $2 . _
with me, and Will at college, the win-1 8a|ifl wag pooi . > gfok an d blind, would ^ by the hand of fortune where it" will | B h 0 ps and" on the other aide by secular
when Joanna and Sosie made their I have been a kindly act for me to hide p ro bable do the most good. As sam- J amusements. We have a law in this
. , [ her misfortune from you, and passing p i e bricks, how the goddess treats her | State most positively forbidding tho
qrnte too |png to I • yonr home, to have placed her In votaries, we note that Ticket No. 28,-1 sale of intoxicating drinks on the Sab-
tell of the pleasures of the yoong Iotas I tbfl caw of charitable strangers ?” 600 drew the First Capital Priae of bath day. That law is every Sabbath
dnringthiswinter.bat Joanna wap won 1 ..p^d, you wonld never have done $75,000, and was told as a whole to a I broken. Some say, “Let it be repeal-
from ns by a Caban gentleman, 1 tbB t!” he seid, much agitated. resident of San Froncisco, Cal., and | ed—a law on the statute book
Susie became, if possible, dearer tbsn| **jJever!” 1 anawered. “You are collected through tha Nevada Bank of| C uted—better drive out the la-
that city. - - — *
* " na capuai rnw oi **»,wu, ■ to col
r .. . sold to a party in New Or-1 mean to have it executed. There
was plodding over a book, having woik-1 ; Bg for a father’s affliction.” leans, La., visiting the Exposition | three thonsand liquor dealers in Brook
ed busily all day. He fnsaed about the | -No, no, Fred, I only ask you to pro bahly. Ticket No. 1,780 drew the h rn banded together to put down this
nervous way.quite unlike hie | p Q t no harden upon her young life, to Third Capital Prise of $10,000, and jlaw, and they are‘moving upon the
* ** ” ’ throw no cloud over her happiness. I waB BO U in fifths, one to Renben Joel, | State Legislature, and they propose *
am old and feeble; I shall trouble no 62 Munroe 8t., Lynn, Mas*.; another | have that* law broken down and r
one long.” 1 . collected through first National Bank 1 0 ut from the statute book. When.
aSo^tMrnris!l|Sre^«k. | dren.”' " | “And whin you die, yon would de- of Biminghvm, Pittsburgh Pa. Noe.| 0 fourTeformersoomesupbefore ajae-
I looked up amazed at this opeaiag I pH ve your only child of the satisfaction 70,929 and 88,476 drew each $6,000 j tics of the peace and reports some.of
jch. | of ministering to your wants—take and were held in New Orleans and Cin-1 these Sabbath—breakers, the justice
Well?” I asked. | from her father’s blessiug.” einnati, O., Ac., lie. The whole thing 1 0 f the peace looks over and in almost
- - * * ■ 1 - - ’ .... .-1 .— a—n iiti. I * *i Why?
Plsmnt Yrfk ~ I in net Dy gi»mg oerw "*»• ime, uis wnnio i»w WM, “* nsn. oi woics n. a. ai«ur»iu, ai«w i dmson no suowi “*"•« •« three
Smd rcul Cud to W. W.Rldoot, Lool*| Durl de»t! To think 1 hod b«n | lively.
France will never have
“haven’t yon any regard for the peo-| is to come. France will i
pie’s rights?” Yea. I believe in the any quiet, happy and pen
people having their rights, but haa not public until abe quits her
'• | United States. De you really uuux America. Aocusntne oaDoain, an«
Tuesday, Feb 10th. | there is an attempt to destroy the the Almighty who made the heav-1 then yon have revolution, and then you
of $265,500 wae fairly plae- j Lord’s day, on one side by the grog- eQB and the earth haa a right to rule I have the sua ot prosperity going down
“ * '* ”* " ’ ’ - theuniverre? Had he a right tomake[ in darkness and in blood. May tbe
the enactment, “Remember tbe Sab- J Lerd God of Lexington and Banker
bath day to keep it holy?” There ie J Hill and Gettysburg uveit the catas-
no higher court than that. I declare tropbe. Oh, men and women who be-
it now in presence of nil tbe people, | lieve in Christian things, Ob, men and
whether it b, A popol»r or aa onpopo-1 worn., in fanr aI popular liberlj.
lar thing to eay, the people have oo I stand m solid phalanx in tbia Tber-
rights except those which the Lord I mopylss of onr national history, for as
God Almighty givee them. certainly as I stand here and yon sit
lam opposed to all these infractions I there, tbetrinmph or overthrow •<! re-
of the Sabbath because they are at- publican restitutions in this country
tempting to introduce in this oountry I will be decided in this 8abbsiic con-
the Parisian Sunday. 8nppoae now, test. Rally yonr voices, your pens,
while I am epeeking, you should hear vour printing presses and all yonr
tb. gnn of» foreiga a hip coming op iofloeoco i« tho Ufd’. »ftilUt7
tho bsrbor. Sop^oM > bemboUll | oorp, --
. behalf ot the Christian Sab-
should be thrown "from a foreign fri- bath. Decree before high heaven that
sate into this city. How soon the tbe Sabbath which you received from
a.. . ... , —j —» —ahull go <*
would ho .11 rood, for tho comuot. ud ^od to jour childr.1
where there was a gun it would be die battling in this
ana receive free, a costly box
, _ot goods which will help all,
■cither sex, to more money
• right away than anything else
d. Fortunes await the workers
Co. Augusta, Maine.
address Thus 4
charge the criminal, be will haves
vivid remembrance at the tame time of
the ten thousand honest citizens who
demand the execution of the law; and
these reformera who have been roughly
jostled and caricatured and kicked out
will be differently treated in times that
are to'come from the way they have
Tabernacle would be cleared and we your ancestors shall go down und»m-
——*— | jd ’' ehildren. W»r those that
contest we will
are they
ships in the navy yard would beawung I who came out of great tribulation ami
from their anchorage, sw* we would 1 had their robes washed and made while
all be ready to confront such • foreign I in tbe blood of the Lamb.”But for that
enemy. Now they are trying to in- man who proves recreant to tbo cauae
trodnee into this country the Parisian I of God and bis country iu a crisis like
Sabbath. ~H«w do jpa likeh?. this there ahall be no honorable epitaph,
■ Ye who were bom under the ahad- he ahall Jiot be worthy of eny tn-
» of rim Adirondacks or the Gatakills, rial pUee in all tbia Uad. but perhaps
jewfco were born ,.u lb, haul. J th, wnu «»m tug .« und.ip ht m.j t.k.
T«uuwe«ortheRu.»nnah, howwould him out und drop him iu th. ... whci.
jou Uku to h»™ the Pumiun Sundiv thu U*lc,. wind, .h.ch ohugiru
introducud Into tbit countrj? V* Sunday muj_g.llop over 1 h.
say tq all who ©
. from other lands;
I’ would have' *11 the
gates of the continent swing open. I
would have the gates or San Francieco
■wing oppn toward Asia, and the gatea
of the Atlantic swing open town 1 ”
rope. If next year there shall
800,000 from foreign lands, 1 wonld
him who in life an-1 death proved him-
self * traitor to the csuh> of God aud
American institutions. Long live ih«-
Christian Sabbath! Perish forever all
attempts to overthrow ii!
Fine assortment of Brushos,Combs
Toilet Articles, Perfumery, etc., nt
Dr. EMridge’s Drug f