Newspaper Page Text
Old a«WM—VoIm XXXlX,
New Sbrvkb—Voii XVI.
SANDERSVILLE. GEORGIA, APRIL
1886.
NO. 3T7i
|,ht llctald « Mtorgun,
WM. PARK, Ed. & Vrop’r.
oldest paper in this section op
GEORGIA.
ISMTAHMSIIUR IN 1841.
SOBSORIPTION PRICE.
One Copy Ono Yeav $1.50
i “ Six Months 75
Inbe of Ton One Year 12.60
. “ Six •' •< 7.50
If not paid in ndvonoo the price will be for
neyear $2 00
ROYAL MWUt
BUSIN ESS OA*RDS
D. EVANS. n. D. EVANS, JR
EVANS & EVANS,
Attorneys at Law,
SANDERSVILLE, GA.
flice in North-East corner of Court
House.
sept Hi 1884-Gm
~R. I. UARRIS,”
attorney at law,
\xi>i;it8viMii;, - • • «a,
TILL preotico in the Middlo Circuit, nud
in Uio oountiuH svirroundiug Wnshiuu-
tioecinl nttuution niven to commercial
, ' »pril8, 1880-ly
JOHN C- HARMAN,
TTORNEV AT LAW,
tekkimb:, ua.
i.11 business promptly attended to,
leu 7,1885-ly
W. H. Whitaker,
dentist
Sandersville, Ga.
TUBUS 4'AHII.
floe at his rosidenooon Harris Street
,7. 1885—tf
8. G. BAILIE & SONS.
ARPETINGS, MATS,
Rogs, Mattings, Druggets, etc.
mlow Cornices, 8hades, Lace Curtains,
Wall Papers, Dadoes and Borders.
PiisriNos, Steel Enoravinos AChromos.
714 broad Stroot, Augusta, Ga.
jarch 6, 1885—ly
dgerton House
MACON, - - GEORGIA, ...
OPPOSITE PASSENGER DEPOT.—
I per day.
ON, Proprietors.
HER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of purityi
strength and wholeaomencM. More economical than
the ordinary kinds, and cnimot bo sold In competi
tion with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum
phosphate powders. Hold only In cnm*.
KOYAL BAKING POWORK CO,, Now York.
of the mnrringo. This being the
case, and the marriage tie beiug in-
dissolvable, it is obvious that there
is no power on onrth which can dis
solve n Christian marriage.
Against such as infringe these
laws severe penalties are to bo en
forced. No legal divorce has the
slightest power before God to loose
the bond of marriage and make a
subsequent one valid. Even adul
tery, tnough it may justify separa
tion from bed and board, oannot
loose the marriage tie so that either
of the parties may marry again du
ring the life of the other, nor is a le
gal separation to be obtuiued with-
first conferring with tho ecclesiasti-
. 'cal authorities. Though the church
Another incendiary fire occurred jsometimes permits tho marriage of
i Mr. James A. Mullen’s place:a Catholic with a non-Catholic, Bhe
near Konn’s Bridge, Jeff rson coun- never does so without the deop98t
Tho Georgia State Medical Asso
ciation will meet iu Augusta on tho
21st inst.
Oglethorpe county’s last license
expired ou Tuesday, the proprietors,
R. S. Gilliam & Go., will move their
goods to Greensboro, it is said.
Hon. J. C. C. Blaok of Augusta
has consented to deliver the address
at thg unveiling of the Ben Hill stat
ue in Atlanta on the 1st of May.
Rales $2.00
E. E. BROWN * S'
117, 1883—tl
S WOOD & BR0.,
GENERAL
mmission Merchants
Savannah* Ga-, .
lorami'-sionH or other expenso* charged
on Consignments of Wool,
eat Mnrkot Price guarautood at time of
sip 1 Sale. ly
iHTRAL HOTEL
it-u-ta, dcorgla*
t centro of tho City, and of businesi
Rail Road, and Steamship Ticket office
tmida, wlioro all information will bo
is to tliearrival, and d^airtjire of trains
*3 Down With High Prices l
• 30 TO 70 PERCENT. 08F
OUE THOUSAND DIFFERbNT ARTICLES
Sold Direct to Consumers.
Tho “ Little Detective,” $3.00
I* D. Petal given Pontngo In CENT8,
Weigh* train H o*. to »lh>.
FAMILY S0ALE8,240 lbs,, $5.
Plotform Scales, $11 to $20.
Forjes and Blacksmiths’ Tools.
P Arm era* Fdrgr, 8*10.
Forge uml Kit of Tool*,
Fanners can do odd Jobs, mi vim; tluic
uud money. Anvils, Vises. Arc., die,
'WAGON SCALES.
Only maim fact urn a In America
,,ut lUr ,,0It (,f *•»!!«
SteuI for b«>Firings of nil Hcalof:
2-Ton fOx12' S40.
3-Ton 7x13)880.
4-Ton <8**14 >$00.
i a Beam Hot and Brans Beam with
lib ;*ar.bBenin. BUOothor varieties. Also,
> ; 1 rucks, W’n < Ih.'.rrmvH, Corn Shell-
- era. Feed Mills, Copy ]’mutes, Mon
ey Drawers, Clothes Wringers and
all Hardware bpcctaltlca.
SAFES OF ALL SIZES.
No. 4, weight 1,100 Ilia.; W0.
P SEWING MACHINES,
PRI0E8 REDUOED
FKOM TO SIS.
A beautiful Machine, per*
fcctly finished. Improvement
on the Singer pattern, Ulac.k
Walnut Furniture, contain"
liiK a full act of luteal Im
proved Atlaclnnrnii. War
ranted perfect. Save money.
Send for Circulars*
Chicago Scale Co.,
151 SJatcnuu SL,Ch (eajo.UL
Vocal Music.
Soience and literature of Manio, Physical
training as applied to vooal culturo and voiee
building.
The modern Singing School as illustrated
in tho most artistic and Huished methods of
class teaching.
Points directly to n higher plain
'To bill or valley—founluiu or fresh shade
Made vocal by uiy Song.”
Churches. Sabbath Schools, Singing Soci
etirs or Choirs, may address
MAT II. PERKINS,
Perkins' Junction, Uurke Co., Ga.
mar 18, 1880 -tf
100 ACRES.
Mrs
.7, 1885 -tf
WM.
THOMAS,
Proprietress.
TENNILLE LAND FOR SALE.
NOW IS YOUR TIME!
HAVE several very desirable lots for
dwellings.
,. JNO. O. VAN 8YCKI.E.
mpbell&VanSyckle-
(Successors to Oarhart it Co.
MACON GA.
Ul’OIUKKK AND DEALERS IN
ldware, Iron & Steel,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
iaqe Materials, Paints, Gils,
&c.
uts fur Massey’s Excelsior Cotton Gins,
o’* Circular Saws, and' Pairbank’s
ard Scales.
1885 -ly
10. M ARK W ALTER,
STEAM
’ble Sc Granite Works
B ST., NEAR LOWER MARKET
AUGUSTA, «A k
SUMENTS, TOMBSTONES
—AND—
tie Work Generally
made to order.
selection always on hand ready for
8'Mi(l delivery. 3 23-’85 ly.
onize Home Indus
try.
reka Mills,
vdersville, *G-a.
l, il' R are now making the best
JU «and MEAL of any mill la tho
„ Vet ? acoomraodation is provided
■ Mining in from a distance. Hon-,
e m charge, and E tuY Found of
L Flour and Bran
■' beat aud oorn will make is
; ANTer d to the Customers
‘J 1 ’ ! eR s the toll.
snn7°.? r wl ‘eut and oorn at the
1 thereby save going to mill
It. PRINGLE, Prop’r.
11886—«• 0> HOWARD, Miller.
X dwellings. Will sell ull together, or will
draw lines and out prices to suit the times.
I also have a surplus ol good young horses,
bnggios, buggy harness, spring hack, eto.,
that 1 will Bell Very low. 1 will also Bell my
Millinery Stock
Any one wishing n good business of the
kind will do well to como to see me at once
as I desire to sell within 30 dayB A change
of business desired. A. R ADAMS,
deo 4, '85-tf. Tennille, Ua.
Monroe Female College.
Forsyth, Ga.
This,' “ono ol the best institutions for
tho higher education of young ladies to be
found in the Smith," renews tho tender ol
its services to the public, it claims.
A healthful location.
An excellent Hoard of Instruction,
Reasonable Rates of Expense.
Favorable social and moral surroundings.
A successful Record in the past and
Utigl't Prospects for tho future.
Parties, io search of a desirable place for
residence, are referred to Forsyth, those
seeking for excellent edncutiouul advantages
ure invited . P „l, ^
or J. R. Bbanham, Seo’y. jun 7, ’80-ly
Marshall House,
Savannah, Ga.
First class iu every respect. Speoial bc
commodalioos for families. Rooms Single
or Eu Suite. Electric Bolls in every Room
Magnifloent Cuisine. Elegant Rooms.
ssirThe roHtaurunt at H. 8. <fe W. depot is
also under tho same management.
GEO. D. HODGES, Proprietor,
july 30, 1885—tf.
ty on Sunday night, 4th inst. His
cribs and barn together with a con
siderable amount of corn and fodder
were bnrnod.
Clay county went wet on the 8th
inst. by a majority of 44. The vote
was, for the sale, 609, against the
sale 4G6. a column of colored vo
ters from the river plantations it is
said, turned the scale it) favor of
whisky. The election passed off
quietly.
Morgan county is anxious to vote
on the liquor question, but is una
ble to do so on account of the conn
ty not being inoladed in the regis
tration bill, though named in the
head notes. The comptroller gen
eral deoides they innHt wait for leg
islative action.
New and grand railroad projects
aro now engrossing the attention
and arousing the enthusiasm of At
lanta and Augusta. The former has
suddenly awoke to the necessity of
having direot air line connection
with salt water. Though eight
roads converge at Atlanta, yet not
ono is owned and controlled by the
city, and she now feels that one out
let of her own to tho nearest deep
suit water is indispensable to the
compassing of the grand possibilities
that lie in her power. Two. lines
are marked out by the Constitution
to the sea, one by air-line to Hawk-
insville and thence by the Ookmul
gee to the Atlantic, and the other
via Waynesboro to the Savannah
river.
Augusta has for some time boon
agitating the gveat value of an air
line connection with Chattanooga;
aud now the movement is crystal- j COLQUITT ON PROHIBITION
izing and taking practical shape. In
addition to the great value of such
an air line to Augusta in quicker
transportation and in reduced
freights from tho West, the vast tim
ber regions opened up by this new
line.willprove an incalculable soarce
of wealth. Augusta is ulready great
ly elated over tho assured early com
pletion of her narrow gauge to New
berry and Spartanburgb.
These new railroad enterprises,
give unmistakable evidence of true
and healthy progress, and we trust
they will be successfully inaugura
ted at an early day.
regret nnd with the explicit under
standing that the children of those
parties must be brought up iu the
Catholic faith
Regarding tho instruction of the
Laity Council decrees that since ro-
ligiou can never be divorced from
our action, there is need of tho erec
tion everywhere of parish sohools
which may so temper religion with
science that tho two may go hand in
hand.. To effect this the council or
ders that with two years from the
promulgation of these decroos paro
chial schools must bo directed and
started near ouob church, unless the
bishop, fur grave reusous. should
defer for a time the building of mob
a school. Should the priest by bis
own negligence prevent the success
ful carrying ou of s.tch ohools, even
alter repeated warnings from his ec
clesiastical superiors, he is to be
judged worthy of removal from such
position.
All Catholic parents are bound to
send their childreu to these parochi
al schools, unless they send them to
other Catholic academies or aro law
fully exempted by those who have
charge of those affairs!
1'he 8 millions of colored people iu
this country are tho subject of a vig
orous plea for help from all those
who would | lace this important ele
merit of future iu its proper place to
act for tho weal of this republic
Another thing done by tiro couucil
is tho prohibition of pio-nics and
excursions by night, ou Sunday or
on other feast days or faming days.
This way of making money for
church purposes will bo hurafter for
bidden, and only allowed by the
bishop with uecossaiy prudence and
reserve.
The sale of intoxicating liquors
will not be allowed in any case
Fairs, also, aro not to b: hold here
after without Bpeciu! permit from
tho bishop, and not on Sundays, and
no intoxicating liquors can bo sold
by them. Suppers aud dinners, so
cial parties and balls given at night
for raisiug money, are prohibited.
Mr. Moody in Atlanta.
Atlanta Oocslitution 4th inst.
The interest in the Moody aud
San key meetings is unabated; at the
afternoon services yesterday, there
was a very large attendance. The
services were bognn by the singing
of "Gospel Bolls, how thnv Ring.
The next hymn runs "What can
Wash away roy Stain?" a number of
other hymns were sung, among them
“Sowing in the Morning," "Why do
you Wait dear Brother" "Soon shall
we see the Glorious Morning,’’
"Look ye Saints, the Light is Glori
ous” "We speak of tho Land of tho
Blest.”
Mr. Sankoy accompanied the con
gregation on the organ.
At the request of Mr. Moody tho
congregation sang "Savior, More
than Life to Mo."
THE SERMON.
Mr. Moody took no text, lie said
he would preach from the Bible it
self. A groat many Clnisliaus com
plain that thoy are cold aud luko-
warm, that a coldness comes over
their lives. Tho child of God can
not keep warm without word and
work. Those are the two words
that will make a healthy Christian
"word and work.” If wo neglect
word and work, it will be but a few
months before our religion will ooze
out uud bo gouc. It should not bo
all word and no work, nor nil work
and no word. Wo should get and
give. If you waut to keep healthy
keep feeding on tho word aud give
it to others—"the iiboral soul shall
bo made fat." I havo never soon a
Bible Christian feeding on tho word
and working that was not warm all
the time. The church should not
ho awake two months and asleep
n. There is utendenoy to disarm!
it some parts of the Biblo. It is
the fashionable thing A mansays
Two hundred million Bibles have
been issued in the Inst fifty years.
A little boy asked his mother wbut
the moon did when tho dog barked
at it. "My child,” wns tho reply
"it just keeps on shiniug.” Infidels
bark away at tho Biblo, but it keeps
ou shining. Church mcmberti
ought to study tho Biblo. You
ask a man:
"What is your forth?’*
"1 believe what my church be-
liovos.”
"What does your uhurch be
hove?’
"It believes what 1 believe."
"I believe what my church bo.
liuves and my church believes what
1 believe," and that is about ull you
can get out of him
Yon usk a man what church he
belongs to, nnd ho says: "I am a
Methodist,"
"What is tho faith?” you nsk him.
"I don’t know; hut my mother
was a Methodist uud I am uevor go
ing to leave that faith,’ but ho o’au t
tell you what that faith is. Church
tnembors should feed themselves
from the Bible. How proud my
children were, when the baby could
feed himself. Church members
have to be fed out of nu ecclesiasti
cal sppon, aud if they don’t gut it
from the pulpit they dont get nt nil.
A Christian forty yours old and enu’t
feed hitnsell! Take up the Biblo iu
subjects, 1 would almost us soou
road the dictionary through ns to
try to read the • Bible straight
through. Get a scriptural text book
and study it topically. Lots of poo-
ple don’t kuow what a gospel ser
mon is wheu they hour it. They
think it is gospel wheu it is not.
Take up assurance, faith, atouomeut,
tho, now birth, justification by faith,
repentance, eto. Learn tho law.
Tho ohurch of God should bo indoo-
well, yon know I believe tho Bible, ^ r * ua ^’ ^ ou R° into a Hubbiith
that is, I believe most of it. I do a^ 0 ! " U “ J y°« 0ftD t fantl a Bl
not believe all tho Old Testament
bore are some things I cannot he
lievo."
hie hardly Yon find the quarterly
ami iho question leaf. That is do
ing our childreu a groat harm. Chil-
What aro the)?’’ Tho very ( ]| wt ?, ou «V. t , to b g ba o
things that mou are caviling about ” *~
CATHOLIC PLENARY COUNCIL.
Arrival of Trains at No. 13, C. R. R
Jp Day Fasbenoeb Thais aban *s 200 p. m
|)OWN PAY 1-17avi
w ht : v, .. ii£tu
SANDERSVILLE & TENNILLE TRAIN.
Leave Sandersville • • £ £
W
& T. and I>. & W. «. Ronds
Schedules.
To luko effeoi Nov. 15tb, 1885.
Leave Bruton Crossing
Leave WrigUtsville
Arrive at Ten
.4:86 p. m
Abstract of the Decrees as Return
ed Approved by tlie Pope.
Baltimore, Maroh 24.—The de-
cress onacted by the Plenary Coun
cil, held in this city in November,
1884, which, wore sent to Rome for
approval and returned several
months ago, were given to a few fa
vored ones to-day in printed form.
They extend over four hundred pa
ges and are in Latin. The American
will io-morrow publish an extended
summary of them which was pre
pared by one of the translators con-
neot^j with the church in this
The decrees are contained under
eleven titles. Special Enactments
are made to meet all posable con
tingencies, and these wise and time
ly regulations will largely contribute
to place the dioceses on a sure foot
ing. Special attention is to be paid
to mnsio adopted in the churches to
add solemnity to the sacred services.
Worldly, irreligious hymns are pos
itively to be excluded from the
church exercises.
One of the most important decrees
is that coneerning matrimony. Sinco
marriage was rained in the new law
to tho diguity of a sacrament, it be-
htsville 9:30 a. in. 5:30 p. m K ^ tQ t(ie c hurch to whom
».“ nille • • ■ • .go *■ 2-30 & m'the administrati ou of the sacrament
to- pass» dgrnent on
“ d *
He Says Georgia Loses Nothing by
Driving Whisky Out.
Washington, April 6.—The fol
lowing letter from Senator Colquitt
is in answer to the question, wheth
er the effect of local option, which
has prevailed iu s-ouui portions of
Georgia for many years, and now
exists over almost the entire State,
has increased taxes there:
“W. W. Smith, Ashland, Va,—
Dear Sir: Very few words will do
in answer to your letter of iuquiry
as to the effect ou taxation and
property values in Georgia, as the
result of prohibition. The allega
tion that these have been affected
injuriously is simply a device ol tho
enemy. Thero has not been the
fruction of a mill added to tho tax
in Georgia by reason of prohibition
Now taking values iu Atlanta as an
index, has there been any falling off
in real estate prices?
"In my state as everywhere else
business is hultiug and dejected
but will any zealot for whisky aud
whisky civilization and aud proper
ty say that the one million of work
ingmen now out of employment iu
the United States me thus placed
because of the stoppage or reduc
tion of their whisky rations? I think
it is high time for men to tuke up
their slate pencils and figure out
what a boom in dollars and cents is
worth to any people that has to be
secared by the degradation and ru
in ol a large portion of our popula
tion who contribute to the ‘blood
money’ that enters into bank balan
ces. It the estimation of some of
latter-day eonomists, the redemp
tion of immortal souls from the
brutish enslavement to stroug drink
is entirely too dear if it is secured
by the sinking in trade quotations
of an inoonvenient hindrance to i
downward pluDge to perdition, tern
poral and eternal, by closing the
corner doggery.
“This is the stupid logio of sin—
defiant, hardened aud desperately
selfish. Wo must give up some
public spirit und p olitical economy
as this, or stand by and see our
Christian civilization thwarted and
igationa [disgraced.’’ A. H. Colquitt.
are the very thiugs God sot his seal
to A man says "I don't boliovo
the Btory of Noah." Christ said
as it was in tho days of Noah."
Tho man sajs, "I don't bolievo
ab ut Lot aud Sodom.” Christ
says, "As it wns in tho days of Lot,"
etc., and "remembor Lot’s wife "
Man says, "I don’t believo the three
million people were fed with rnunuu
from heaven." Christ says, “Your
fathers did oat manna iu tho desert
and thoy are dead. I am tho broad
that has come down from hoavou.’’
Many say: "I don’t believe tho sto
ry of tho brazen servant." Christ,
says,‘ As Moses lifted up the ser
pent in the wilueruess, even so must
tho bon of Man be lifted op." You
don’t believe tho story of Jonah
and the whale? Christ says "the
only sign shall be Jonah and the
whale.”
SCIENTIFIC MEN
say the whale could nut havo swal
lowed Jonah. Road the book: "God
prepared a groat fish to swallow.Jo
nah." God uould creato a fish large
enough to swallow this world. It is
ah one book interwoven. It is iin
possible to throw out one part with
out throwing out the other. When
I throw out oue part 1 will throw it
all away. Wheu a man gets to pick
ing the Bible to pieces, it only takes
him about five years to pick every
thiDg away except tho covers.
When a man brings me a passage
that I can’t explain, I don't try to
expluin it, for this is a supernatural
Bible; but I believe it although 1
cannot understand it You cauuot
understand tho winds. Would you
dare to say there aro uo winds? Do
you believe what was said of Chiist?
Death, di-ease aud devils obeyed
Him. Every day something super
natural took place. When Hu died
tho sun refused to look upon the
scene. Creation knew its God aud
recoguizod Him. Let us take tho
thiugs wo can oxplufu aud praise
God for that. You will havo uo
trouble with tho Bible if your heart
is right Man living iu siu always
has trouble with the Biblo, for it
coudeuius him. Christiaus should
not neglect auy of it. Thii.k how
the prophecies were fulfilled. Evo-
Jew is a wulkiug monument of
die the Bible. I was brought up ou
\ question book, nnd tho most i
knew about the Bible was that right
between the old testament and the
now tostamont was the family re-
ord. 1 used to go and seo whou i
was born. That wus tho
MOST INTERESTING THING
iu tho Bible to mo. When I was sev
enteen years old I did no know
whether John wus iu the old testa
ment or tho new. Away with your
quarterlies aud question leaves.
When you como into the church
take this Biblo—you will need it
when you go out to meet ske pticism.
Some people say they don’t believe
in sudden conversion. I suppouo if a
mau stole a thousand dollars last'
year and ho wanted religion you
would toil him to steal only five
hundred next year, two hundred und
fifty tho your after, a hundred the
next year, and if iu the meantime
his employers caught him he could
tell them he was getting converted
gradually. If a man gets drunk aud
boats his wifo every week, ho ought
to first get drunk and beat his wifo
only once iu two weoks, then ouce
iu a month,then once iu two months,
aud if iu tho meantime he did not
kill her, ho would get converted af
ter awhile, The ohurch wauts more
Biblo preaching It is getting tired
of spread-eugle oratory, whore the
preacher gives his llock a little geol-
opy, a little botuuy, a little meta
physics aud a little scienoe, und
wonders why tho people don’t feed
on tho Bible.
Mr. Moody closed his t-ermon
with a beautiful reference to tho vis
its of l’anl and Fetor to tho spots
where tho Savior had been during
lib- Bojouru ou earth. Mr. Moody
s lid hu hoped some day to go there
himself. After tho Hormon prayer
was offered by Rev Mr Dillard and
tho congregation was dismissed.
What are You Drinking ?
7 he /tule/'ol Effects of Impure Liquors
Very few of the liquors
at the present day, even iu first-hlasp .
bar rooms and«saloons, are free
from adultering nancies that Oper-
uto as slow but Ruro poisons, and tf
v ou are resolved Id end your days
by suicide, an overdose of morpbuip
or arsenic would enbject you to lese
odium, less suffering, and a chance
for human Sympathy to te elicited
in j our behalf would be far tnorb
possible tbau if ypur life bad I ecu
brutalized by bacchanalian exocNea
and debauchery.
THEPUR3UIT.
Bill Arp tells of a debating foiie-
ty iu his neighborhood. Their first
question wus, "Whioh wns the great
est evil, war or whisky ?" Bill fallii
to ruminating, and says ;
Of course the whisky men gained
tho case, but both sides are firm in
their conviction. I’ve noticed that
a man can argue on one aide nntil
ho believes iu it. When 1 was a
youth wo had up tho qnestidu,
“which gives us the greatest pleas
ure, the pursuit or tho possession of
an object ?" I was then pursuing n
maiden with great alaority and
pleasing prospects, and was intense
ly Imppy in that particular business,
and as I had been assigned to that
side of the question, I spread my
self like a green bay tree to sustain
my c&nBo. I dwelt upon the eager
and fascinating pleasure with which
a mau pursued fame and fprtune and
how vain und empty he fount) them
whou once in his possession. I quo
ted Nbakespoaro aud recited Cardi
nal Woolsey’s soliloquy, "If I had
served God as faithfully as I have
served my kiug," eto., and I sat
down with a modest oonteut, for the
eyes of tho maiden wore upon me
and I had won her smiles. Just
then one of these rolickiog boys who
never prepare! himself but just open
ed his mouth and let her talk, rose
forward and Raid : "Well, now eup.
pose, Mr. President, that Bro. Aip
were a pursuin’ a pretty girl that he
were iu love with just as hard as he
could, nnd were a longing for her
aud dyiug to get her, would be druth-
or keen on pursuin’ and pursuin’,
aud follerin’ aud folleriu’ to the lit
tle eund of ti nu, or would he druth-
or catoh up with her and hold; her in
hiH arms aud exclaim, ‘she’s mine,
I’vo get her at last and bless the
Lord I’m gwino toucep her forever
and over, nmoD. I say, Brother
Arp, upon honor, now which bad
you drnthor ?’’
—I.---—»
This space is re
served for
DR. E. BARRY’S GREAT
Southern Malarial
Antidote,
already favorably known
throughout the country.
God’s covenant with Abraham God
never broke his woid. There would
bc a jubiloce iu hell to day if it
could be found that God hud bio
ken his word. Christ said "heaven
aud earth shall pass away, but my
word shall not pass away." What
would a modern Freethinker havo
thought of such words falling from
tho lips of a Jewish peasant? Thero
were no shorthand Reporters then
to takedown his words uu I no priu
To those of our readers who are
iu the habit of imbibing a little of
tho cornmou run of liquors dealt out
iu theso degenerate days, wo would
say you turely do not know what
you ark driukiug, for iu ninety-Dine
times in a hundred they are odious
oompouuds, whioh are not only im
pairing your health, but whose in-
iltumce is so pernicious as to render
you liable to douth at any moment.
It has been estimated in a section
of country that bus the reputation
of manufacturing the purest liquors
that nine hundred gallons out of
every thousand sold as pure brandy
“Iaro made from a wretched oompound
tiug presses, and yet his words have °f spiiits and
been translated into three hundred olieu W ftl puwow; and that the much
and fifty different languages, and !«ouf>ht, pure old whisky is no purer
there have been more Bibles pointed J u lt3 There would be
in the last eight years, than in the ^ di ; uuka, '*\ d 1khe * aU k °« w
first 1800 wkat eutenH * into the composition
of the potations that exhilarate aud
INFIDELS TELL Us cheer as they are secretly aud sure-
the Biblo is going out of date. ly sowing tho seeds of ruin and
Thank God; it is just coming in. death.
•'*- V-I :iwf •!:# »*•;
*■ ■
“rttl-i