Newspaper Page Text
A FAMILY .J VIC,
wvvhj<-|i H’jis Attended With IMcaw
ant Consequences.
"Brooklyn Union; A preminet lawyer am!
'politician who is now in the sere and yellow
'loaf of life, hut who is t till one of the “hoys,”
'was seated in a comfortably furnished office
■on Willoughby street, a few evenings since,
surrounded fy a parly of'friends. They
were for the most part lawyers, and they
■ had hern repeating reminiscences of their
•early years. A story had just been to'.d,
-and it was the politician’s turn, and as he
leaned hack in his chair and gave tliceuds ol
• his iron gray mustache a vigorous twirl, he
said: “Well, hoys, accidents, you know,
will happen in the best regulated families,
and occasionally cause a jar, hut it is to one
ol those family differences I owe my success
in life. It happened this way: I was a ve
ry young man when I married, in fact still
in my teens. 1 was a big, brawny follow,
while my wile was a little hit of a trick who
would scarcely lip the scales at 120 pounds.
I was never very fond of physical labor, and
so instead of learning a trad :, 1 went behind
a dry goods counter and worked about eigh
teen hours cut ol the twenty lour for $lO a
week/ My wife and myself wero living with
'»ny mother in-law in Sands street, which in
./huso days was the ‘crack* street of the city.
/When pay-day came 1 was in the habit ol
my weekly stipend over to my wife,
less what I considered absolutely nccesnry
to run mo through the week. Well, ray
•mother-in-law, bless her old heart, was a
rather peculiar uld lady, and she thought
a young and healthy man like myself could
pa. ily dispense with car fare. This caused
friction. My wife was guided by her moth
er’s counsel, and wc frequently had tifts on
-the subject. One Saturday, however, I met
some friends. 1 had just receiycd my sala
ry. They were doing the honors. I had
*niy $lO in my pocket and wanted to rccip
ro-'nto. 1 did, and before I parted from my
friends I was about three sheets in the wind,
•with the other flapping pretty hard against
'the mainmast. 1 made my way homo as
best 1 could, arriving at ray domicile about
la. m. 1 put my hands in my pocket and
felt, lonesome, as I leaned against the rail
iing. There wasn't; enough ot that $lO left
to cross the ferry with. Well, I put on the
best fneo I could, and inserting my latch
key, I gently opened the door. 'The precau
tion was needless. My wife was waiting
Jtor me, and so was her mother. 1 commenc
ed a profuse apology for keeping them up,
when I was cut short by my wife, who cried:
‘Your salary, sir.’ I suppose 1 looked ra
ther sheepish, as I went fumbling through
my clothes in a vain endeavor to find vvliat
T knew wasn’t there. My mother-in-law
■was eyeing me like a hawk, and then ad
dressing my wife, she said: ‘Minnie, smell
•his breath. Depend upon it he has been
drinking, and lias spent his last cent.’ 1
said nothing, but my looks convicted me.
My wifeSjeppcd over to me, locked her arm
in mine and gently but firmly escorted me
■into the parlor. Parlors in those days were
not furnished like they are now. They were
carpeted, aiul.had a marble top center table,
but the thousnniLand one knicknacks which
now strew the llootpvevc not the: c.
The old lady followed us in and closed the
door behind her. The two women removed
the table Irom the piiddle of the room, anil
-this done, tin: old said to her daughter,
who was a chip of llur.old block, ‘Now, Min
nie, give it to him,’ and, by Jove, Mmrie
did. I said before that she didn’t weigh
d‘2b pounds, but the way xho went at mo
•convinced uie that there is more truth than
poetry in the old saying, ‘The best goods
are done up in small parcels.' She had me
on my hack in the twinkling of an eye. She
grabbed me affectionately by the ears, and
utilized my cranium to drive a dot; otic nail
ito the Hour. Tiring of this, sho got np
danced on me, all the time keeping up a
running tiro of inveetiyes, such as ‘Yuu
wretch, you scoundrel, you will, will you?’
. to.; ®hilo her mother stood by with her
arms complacently folded, and smiling her
approval of the scene before her. How 1
ver managed to escape I don’t know, but 1 j
,li l, and while 1 made a bee line lor the door
v u might have played a game of chess on I
i.y coat tails, if 1 had had u coat. But 1 j
didn't, nor hut either. 1 never stopped run- j
wing until 1 reached the house of a friend. |
It was a pretty cold night, and I yanked at !
the door bell lor at least ten minutes before !
I managed to rouse him. lie let me in at i
List. My story was soon told, lie was a i
medical student, and my wounds, which 1
con-dated of 'fern fee a and scratches, were'
n dressed, and 1 retired with the firm de- ■
termination that on the morrow \ should s
counsel and eonunenoo proceedings for a di-1
vo: c. Well, 1 did the former, but not the
'at r. 1 called on a lawyer who is now no j
more, lie had been a stanch friend of my
!,it o-r’s. lie osked*how long l’d been mai
■ i i, took my address, he told ore -he was
v‘ ry busy, and asked roe to cull again in
■l,c course of an hour. Well, l was sort of
taken bock by bis cool reception, but went
■x at the appointed hoar. When l again
-r vented myself at his office I was a pitia
s'ghl to behold. 1 was covered with
•t plaster from car to ear. I hail bor
• w 'i my friend's coat, and as he was a
i deal smaller than I theic was a sort of
o tiuess a boat the coat which at once made
-areut that many moons had waxed
tried since it was made fur me. The
ct had sent for my wife, and she was
before me. When 1 entered the room
>ked at me in a pitiful sort of way.
g blue eyes filled w ith tears, and rost
-1 ■*• head ou my shoulder sire said, trem
‘lke, will you ever forgive me?’
•• d melted. The lawyer scut us home
•4' act, after giving us both some whole-
■wi" ir i ■■ I I n IN ' I. in ■ if "T
some advice; and, gentlemen, I’vc been
through the war, I’ve seen some pretty tough
times, but Inin that day to this I have nev
er tasted a drop of liquor, and never will.
1 afterwards entered the office of that law
yer as a student, and have climbed steadily
up tltc lii(J ever since,” and as the politician
concluded his story lie heayed a deep sigh
and nuid: “And so you see, -gentlemen,
when I remarked that a family jar made me,
•I wasn't far from the truth.”
The .Small Hoy’s First Cigar.
'Philadelphia Times: A lulf dozen mriutli
fuls of smoke usually brings the first drop
of perspiration on the surface, and about that
time there is also a hollow little cough which
seems to issue from the small boy’s heart.
•Something lias gone wrong—lie docs not
know exactly what, hut he thinks he has
swallowed one eighth of flic smoke—and'lie
takes the cigar cut of his mouth and regards
it with a suspicious gaze. The inspection
seems to assure him fir at the cigar i 3 not an
unurchia’s bomb or a socialist’s torpedo, and
he bravely begins again. This time he swal
lows seven eighths of the smoke, and tears
dim his youthful eyes ns lie frantically tries
to bring the smoke out of his ears; but he
doesn't falter yet, though he wonders what
is going to happen next as he returns to the
work he has himself laid out. It js later on
in the programme that the work Toys him
out, hut barring a little shiver or two there
has been no symptom bf such a disaster yet.
No small buy in his guileless unwisdom
ever begins his first cigar without previous
ly laying in an inexhaustibly store of match
es. This enables him to scorn asking ano
ther boy for a light, it also enables him to
get appropriately sick. As be returns to bis
cigar now be nonces that the smoke lias I
ceased curling fkun the lighted end, and j
finds after due yivcstigation, that it has 1
really gone out. Ale lights it, but the tasle j
seems to liaveydianged and grows bitter, and 1
lie begins to doubt the expediency of prose- j
euting life study any further. Then anotli- j
cr little Boy passes along, tagging valiantly i
:it another cigar and ho begins to take fresh j
hope. Tic has grave doubts by tiiis time of
the if men who insist that smoking j
is a'pleasure, but isn’t quite prepared for i
(lint-soon begins. Then there j
is a heaviness about the region of liis stotn
ach which bo docs' not understand, lie hears
the rumble of distant •thunder; the birds
cease their singing; the sky turns green ;
the grass seems blue, and a look of unutter
able anguish settles upon his face, if ho
be destined for future greatness bis immor
tal soul stays down.
The life of the small buy in filled with ex
citing incidents, but tliero* is no day so big
as that on which be smoke* bis first cigar. •
In time lie lias bis first affair of the heart; j
then he graduates from scliobl, and later on
gets married, and still later dies. Hut none
of these events affect him quite as the first
cigar. As be grows older the memory of
that event seems to lingoi by him, and i
though recollections of other -events fade,
this at least lie carries to tTic end. And
when in after years his own small boy comes
home reeking with the odor of bad tobacco,
nnd that same'look of anguish on bis filoe,
... f 1
it is with the consciousness of conviction
that ho assures the buy’s mother of the fu
tility ot cholera antidotes, and advises the
boy to go and lie down.
0»e among the many eminent ehuix\ dig
nitaries who have given their public endorse
ment to the wonderful efficacy of St. Jacobs
Oil, in case id rheumatism and ollie/painftrl
ailments, is the flight Reverend Bishop Gil
ufour, (JlerelufhJ, Ohio.
A schoolmniterJ-eoent'iy informed an anx
ious mother that her sons so thorough
ly disciplined that (hoy werlj as quiet and
orderly as the very chairs in tJfe school-room.
It was probably because tfiey wore eaiic
bottomed. '
V*
Most hvcollont.
J J. Atkins, yhiol -of Police, Knoxville,
Tenn., writes: *‘My family and 1 art ben
eficiaries ot you! must excellent medicine,
Dr. King’s New Jiscjwery lor consumption;
having found it to be all that you claim for
it, desire to terrify to ifcvirtue. My friends
to whom 1 have recommended it, praise it
at every opportunity,”
Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump
tion isAuarantecd -to- cure Coughs, Colds,
Broncntis, Asthma, JCroup and every af
teetioi*)f Throat, Cl At and Lungs. Trial
ilottli/ Free at the Ventral Drug Store.
Large Size SI.OO. ’
Consternation filled every breast in Shan
ty town when the left-fielder of the second
nine skoutALtrom the inolosure where tire
ball bad ‘beenthutod: “Yer’ll have to call
dvr game, follys; Yinucrty's pig lias swal
j lowed the ball!”
An Old tXi/.on Speaks.
j Mi. J. M. Noi vis, uiNid resident of Home,
. Si LV. s - that lie bad been badly troubled
with Kidney Complaint.for a great many
years and with Eczema fofvtliree years; at
limes could scarcely walk and had tried mu
ny remedies without benefit, until he began
i ttikmg hlectrie l>ittors and fuiointiiisr his
hands and feet with Bueklen’s Arnica Salve.
This treatment afforded him great relief and
he strongly rooummends Electric Bitters to '
i all who suffer with Kidney Complaints, or |
need a Blood Purifier. For sale at the Cen
tral Drug Store.
j “There is something in this little fylb.w 1
like,” said an appreciative uptown visitor of
a young hopeful be was trotting on bis knee.
“Mamma,” said the boy, "1 have swallowed
a nickel.”
A minister who hud received a number of
■calls, and could scarcely decide which was
the best, asked the advice of a faithful old
African servant, who replied: “Alassa, go
where the most deble is!”
•-■ - - -
A COAL OPERATOR,
With si Thousand Dollar Experi
ence.
MU. XV. P. JOHNSON,
Whose picture adorns the bead of this
column, is an extensive coal and wodd
dealer at No. 80 N. Broad St., Atlanta,
Ga.
lie said lately in the presence of a re
porter; “My business necessitates a good
deal of exposure upon me, and last winter,
owing to this fact, I was attacked with a
, very severe case -of inflammatory rheuma
tism.
“Wlmti suffered from this dread disease
cat: better be imagined than described.
“I did everything I could to care my
| self. I tried every means in my power
1 and every remedy left me as bad or worse
than I was before. I Could not raise my
hand to my head, and it looked as if, eveu
if T were lid of the disease, its effects
would CRIPPLE ME FOR LIFE.
“About four weeks figoi was persuaded
I to fry llunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure, and
my relief was almost instantaneous. I
am now on my fourth bottle, and I am as
1 sound a man as there is in Georgia.
“ ‘Have I any objection to the publica
-1 tion of these facts?* Not flic least in the
world, and I only hope they will meet the
eye of every person suffering as I was,
and that they will believe, try and becur
■od; nud 1 want to say right here that I
! would not, for one thousand dollars, be in
the condition I was when 1 begun using
the remedy which made me whole again
' -—llunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure.
“I also have been a great sufferer from
indigestion and stomach troubles—dys
pepsia, in fact—and since I began the use
of the Cure this has entirely left me, and
r I have as good and sound digestion and
appetite as I ever had.”
This wonderful remedy for the euro of
ail kinds of Rheumatism and all Blood
and Kidney'Diseases, is now sold at $1
a bottle by all druggists. Manufactured
by J. M. llunnicutt & Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Lippman Bros., Wholesale Druggists,
ff3uvatitit.li, Ga., Agents.
A Colored Man Routs tile “Whole
.Stock -Exchange (Totv d.
N. Y. Times: Things were dull on Wall
street yesterday when an aged colored man
in a long black coat climbed up up the steps
‘to'the stock exchange gallery. He bud the
look-ut an African parson on the outlook for
sermon illustrations. lie leaned over the
gallery railing and showed bis appreciation
of the burly burly scene below —brokers
wildly gesticulating and more wildly bowl
ing. "It Wasn’t long before the sight seer
was discovered, nor much longer before -a,
matinoee Was r.iVariged for his especial ben
efit. The average stock broker may be a
trifle wild sometimes, but when trying to
be funny nobody is left in doubt as to bis
intentions. And this was the ease yester
day.
A dozen of the deepest lunged songsters
of t|ic exchange strode forward to a -spot
iust beneath the gallery rails, fixed their
gaze on the old gentleman above, and began
to bo their funniest. They sang plantation
melodies and went through a lot of monkey
business, that to thorn and their fellows
seemed humorous beyond all measure. The
ancient observer gated down unmoved, evi
dently believing the circus a part of the reg
ular stock exchange routine. A hundred
brokers further down the room joined in the
choruses, and the visitor heard lots of tilings
about “poor black Joe,” the old cabin home,”
“the fiddle and the bow,” “the shovel and
the hoe,” and lots of things that ought to
lia've embarrassed him. Then, as a grand
and irresistible finale, one proud broker step
ped forward and danced a jig.
The colored gentleman watched this with
‘tui’flagging attention, too, and when the ar
tist’s heels finally rested on the floor be rais
ed his form from its reclining position on
the gallery rail, and withe most ror.tt-er of
fact air drove his forefingers into his waist
coat pocket. The audience watched -anil
bowled. Poor old darkey! fie was routed
now. So tb-ey bugged them stives;—in ('elu
sion. Out of bis pocket came his forefinger,
and with the forefinger came a nickel, and
with a smile that was almost a grin and a
bow that was whole souled, the visitor lifted
bis hat and tossed the f.iekel below in front
of the singers and their dancer.
Not poor darkey! Poor singers! Poor
jig man! Never such a roar was heard in
J Wall street before. That colored gentleman
j could have had Dehnonico’s whole bar if
he’d only waited to accept it.
Tiie only cough mixture before ihe people
j that contains no opiates or narcotics is Red
Star Cough Cure. Price* twenty-five cets.
I had given myself up as Tost because
of inherited scrofula. Tried everything
. for purifying the blood without benefit
until 1 used Parker s Tonic, and can truth
fully say that it has cured utc. I still use
it for its splendid effect on my general
' health. 11. K. Bytid. Chicago.
teal, Southwestern & Montgomery Si Mania 'Railroads.
All trains of this system are run by Central or 90th Meridian Time.
SAYANXAII, GA., Msthjb'lst, 1880.
On and after Sunday, March 1, 1880, Passenger tr: ins on these roads will run as
follows: .
&£"UKAD DOWN. J6SaS“ItFAD UP.
No. 15f No. 53*-' No. 51* Savannah and Atlantal No. 52*jNo. 5-4* No. lCf!
Acc. jPass’gr. Pass’gr. Divisions j Puss’gr.jPass'gr. Ace.
5 40pm! 8 10pm 8 40am Lv..,. Savannah—Ar] 407 pm 600 am 8 05am
725pnr.[ 950 pm 1025 am Ar .Oliver Lv 235 pm 4 14am 630 am
I 8 45pm; 11 03pm 11 40am Ar Millen Lv 130 pm 3 10ain G 22am
I 11 15pm 12 00 ni Lv Milieu Ar 1 13pn 3 00am :
No. 1* 233 am 327 pm Ar GordSn ...... Arj 10 19am 1135 pm No. 2*
Pass’gr. 320 am 4 20pm / r.......Mac0n Lvj 940 am 1050 pm Pnss’gr.
1 840 am; 3 35am 5 40pm Lv Macon .....Ar 9 30am 1040 pm G2spni
1020 am: 5 18am 700 pm Ar:...Harnesville...Lr 802 am 903 pm 453pni
10 20am 1 5 18am 700 pm Lv....Barne,sville... Ar 8 02am 9 03pm 4 53pni
II flam] 55Jam 719 pm Ar.....-..'Griffin Ar 73lam 829 pm 4 19pm
1240prri 732 am 935 pm Ar Atlanta T.v COOinn 0 50pm 245 pm
i I No. 19* No. 17* 0. K. R.—Augusta |N<>. Ib*! No. 20* "
jPas’u’r. Pas’n’r. Branch. j Pas’n’r.j Pass’gr.
j 3 10am 130 pm Lv Millen ArjlllSamj 100 am
| 0 15am 3 45pm|Ar Augusta Lv[ 9 30nrn| 930 pm
No. 23+ Milledgeyillc and Ea- No. 2? | " ' *
Pass’gr tonton PrStich. Pnss’gr.]
.'. 740 pm Ar Eatonton Lv 5 15am
No. 33’f Upson County Rail- No. 34f No. 30f
Pass’gr.j Pass. rbkd. Pass. Pass.
j 5 10pm 1030 am Lv....Barnesville....Ar 9 50am 435 pm
No. iff S., (L and N. A. Rail No. if ~
Pass. road. Pass.
I ' I 5 10pm Ar....Carrollton Lv 5 30am
~~ "No. 0* No. 51* No. 1* S. W and M. E. KyTNo. 2* N\)’l2*^Co. _ lo*
Acc. Acc. Pass. Main Litre. ; Pass. Acc. Acc.
lOOOam Lv Macon Ar 5 15pm
...y...v... 11 09am Ai\. .Fort Valley.,.-Ar 401 pm
1 14pm Ar Smith villc L\ 1 4 Ipm
1 13am 4-51 am 4 00pm Lv Eufaula -Ai ;10 50am; 851pm] 8 38pm
prgrfisr - r.—Pcn-y|N 7 r.r2sf"NT^fr"
Pass, j Pass. Branch. | Pass, j Puss, j
| No,B3*jNo. 53*]S. VV. 14. it.—Albany No. 54* No. 34*
Pass. | Pass. | ’SVaneh. Pass. Pass.
j 145pmj 1055 pm Lv Smithville.v.. Ar 2 40am 725 pm
] 3 55pmj 11 48pm|Ar ..Albany ...Lv 146 am 5 30pm
= No, ?sfjS. W. K. K.—tHakelylNV. 30f ~
Pass. Extension. | Pass.
0 53pm Ar Blakely Lv 8 15am
Noriivf y. j
Pass. Gaines Branch. | Pass. |
No. 29f|Eu!aula and Claytoi No. 30f
Pass. Railroad. Pass.
j Goopm|Ar Clavtor Lv 745 am —•••yyll;
No. 19*, = No. 5* S. W. ii.-R.—Co him No. 6* ,No. 20* '
Accom. ] Pass. bus Main Line. Pass. |Acc>m.
| 10 ISpuiJ 9 4ttem Lv Macon Ar 4 25pinj 5 20am
I 6 23am I 105 pm Ar Columbus Lv *ll 40pml 9 00pm
Elegant Local bleeping Cars on night trains as follows: Between Savannah and Air
gusta, trains Nos. 53 r.nd 54 ; between Savannah and Macon, Trains Nos. 53 and 54 ; he
tween Savannah and Atlanta, trains Nos. 53 and 54.
Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars between Cincinnati and Jacksonville, and through sitting
car between Chattanooga and Jacksonville, via Atlanta, Albany and Waycross. Through
palace sleeping car between Montgomery and Waycross.
Trains marked thus * run daily; trains marked tfrus'f rut? daily, except Sunday ; trains
marked J run daily, except Monday.
Tickets for all points and Sleeping Car Berths on sa’e at the city office, No 20 Bull
street, and at the Depot Ticket Office 30 minutes prior to the leaving time of all trains.
Wm. ROGERS, Gen’l Supt. Savannah. T. D. -KLTNE, Supt. SW II it, Macon. -
W. F. SfiELLMAN, Traffic Man’r, Savannah. G. A. WHITEHEAD, Gen’l Pass. Ag’t
JOHN A. DAVIS, Agent, Albany, Ga.
How Lost, Mow Restored!
Jtist published, a new euificn ofYsr. Culverwell’s
Celebrated Essay on the radical cure of Spermator
rhoea or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Seminal Loss
es, Impotency, Mental anil Physical Incapacity, Im
pediments to Marriage, etc.: also, Consumption, Epi
lepsy and Fits, induced by self-indulgence,‘or sexual
extravagance, &e,
The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clear
ly demonstrates frfcinli thirty years- successful prac
tice, that the alarming consequences of self-abuse may
be radically cured; pointing out a mode of cure at
once simple, certain, and. effectual, by means of which
-every sufferer, no matter what his condition hiay be,
may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically.
B'&“ This Lecture should bo in the hands of every
youth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, iu a plain envelope, to any address,
post-paid, on receipt of four cents or two postage
stamps. Address,
CULYERAYELL MEDICAL CO.,
41 Ann Street, New York, Post Office Box 430.
BROWN HOUSE,
Fort (failles, (5a.,
i S. BROWN, PROPRIETOR.
This hdtel is kept in first-elass stvle, ;in<3
the traveling public will find it to their in
terest to put up there.
These pill, were a wonderful discovery- No others like them in the world. Will positively cure
or relieve all manner of disease. The information around each box is worth ten times the cost of a
the mnrveions power of those pills, they would walk 100 miles to get a box if they could not he bad -
without. Sent by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Illustrated pamphlet free, postpaid, benaio ,
the information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., 22 Custom House Stree , • •
Make New Rich Blood!
STEAM GRIST MILL.
r piIE UNDERSIGNED has purchased and
i is now running the Steam Mill on
C-uthbert street formerly owned by Mr. A
Barksdale, where lie will keep on hand
for sale or exchange for corn. The mill is
m charge of Mr. J. W. Alexander, Sr., wlio
will take pleasure in waiting on his old cus
tomers, W. 11. STUCKEY.
Blakely, July Ist, 1884.
/'Vure Biliousness; Sick Headache In 4 hours.
\G) One dose relieves Neuralgia. They cure and
prevent Chills Fever. SourSloinach Boi/
Breath. (8-ear the Skin, Tone the Nerves, and give
Life and Vigor to the system. Dose: ONE
Try them once and you will never be without them.
Price, 25 cts per bottle. Sold by Druggists and
Medicine Dealers gene-ally. Sent on receipt ol
prict in stamps, postpaid, to any address.
VI. F. SMITH Si CO.,
Manufacturers and Sole Props., 6T. LOUIS, MO
1886.
Harper’s Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
Harper’s Bazar is the only paper ih
the world that combines the choicest litera
ture and the finest art illustrations with tho
latest fashions and methods of household
adornment. Its weekly illustrations and
descriptions of the newest Paris and New
York styles, with its useful pattern-sheet
supplements and cut patterns, by cnttbling
ladies to he their own dressmaker^,'save ma
ny times the cost of subscription. Its pa
pers on'cookirfg, the management of servants,
and housekeeping in its various details are
eminently practical. Much attention is giv
en to the interesting topic of social etiquette,
and its illustrations of art needle-work are
nft-novv! edged to be tinequalled. Its litera
ryTtferit is of the highest excellence, ahd
the unique character of its humorous pic
tures has won for it the name of the -Ameri
can Punch.
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44t h^YEAR.
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Periodical of the South.
ft embraces in its constituency the intelliirent,
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ways remhnerativC.
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Address, CULTIVATOR PUB. CO
P. O. Drawer 8. ATLANTA, GA
The Franklin Publishing Hous6
Is tlio Leading Book mi(l Job Printing,
Blank Book and Electrotypiug
House in the South.
CONSULT U 3 BEFORE PLACING ORDERS.
JAS. P. HARRISON & CO.,
’■fc&WE-1 M * sl
SEW YORK
OBSERVER,
OLDEST AND BEST
RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR
FAMILY NEWSPAPER.
NATIONAL AND EVANGELICAL.
All the news, vigorous editorials. A
trustworthy paper for business men. It lias
special departments for Farmers, Sunday-
School Teachers and Housekeepers.
THE SEW YORK OBSERYEU
FOlt 1880,
Sixty-Fourth Volume,
will contain a new and never before pub
lished series of Ikex.eus Letters; regular
eort-espondence from Great Britain, France,
Germany and Italy ; Lett* rs from Mission
Stations in India, Chinn, Japan, Africa and
Micronesia ; original articles from men of
influence and knowledge of affairs in differ
ent parts of this country, and selected arti
cles from the choicest literary and religious
publications, in poetry and prose.
A New Volume, containing a Second Se
ries of Irenmus Letters, a sketch of the au
thor, and a review of his life and work, has
been published.
We shall offer this year special and at
tractive inducements to subscribers and
friends. Sample copies free.
NEW YORK OBSERVER,
New York.
NEURALGIA.
7 acts & Figures.
There are three hundred Skin Diseases,
hence the innumerable host of Blood Reme
dies. But there is only one Neuralgia pain
Tki the nerve, and the fact is equally estab
lished that there is but one remedy, and
that is
Jordan’s Joyous Julep;
the experience of hundreds who have
been cured by the -Julep attest this fact. A
physician regards it a test for neuragia so
quick and surely does it remove pain. If
you suffer, get this remedy and take it.
Neuralgia is common; i’t is serious, liable to
attack any vital organ, and if not suddenly
carrying you off, leads to untold suffering
and misery. One bottle lias cured as many
as half a dofcen bases. Try it if you suffer.
It cannot be surpassed in remoying pain.
M. D.HOOD& CO,
COLUMBUS, GA.,
•"MI aiiTAfact"«.r er s.
out 22 ly