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religious department.
Non-Sectarian—All Churches and all
Creeds.
Scotland has 48,000 Sunday-school teachers,
who teach 480,000 children.
In Ireland and Wales the Roman Catholics num
ber one-twentieth of the population.
For the first time in history a Protestant Theo
logical Seminary has been established in Paris.
.. J^. e O re gon Baptists employ a steamboat in their
Missionary labor among the new settlement on
Puget Sound.
There are about forty thousand German mem-
bers of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the
United States.
One hundred and four candidates presented
themselves for baptism at the Baptist Mission
Station, at Sawtow, China, on the 3d of Septem
ber last.
During the last ten years the Italian Govern
ment has confiscated and sold at public auction
5100,000,000 worth of church property.
There are in. the United States about three
thousand Scandinavian Baptists, who have one pe
riodical, and one teacher of students for the min
istry.
. Southern Presbyterian Churah was dedicated
in Matamoras, Mexico, Dec. 16. It was crowded
to overflowing during the service.
Rev. Lyman B. Peet, who went to China in
i839, as a missionary, and remained there until
five years ago, died at his home in West Haven,
Conn., Friday evening Jan. 11th, aged sixty-eight
years.
At present, the number of Baptist churches lo
cated in Germany, Denmark, Holland, Switzer
land, Poland, Russia, Turkey, and also amongst
the German colonists in Africa, is 100; the preach
ing stations in addition to the churches, are 1,230.
The Indian Mission Conference of the Method,
ist Episcopal Church South, among the Choctaws,
reported at the last session 850 baptisms, 40 Sun
day-schools and an increase of 200 members.
It is now several years since Dr. W. H. Thomp
son commenced a Sunday afternoon Bible class in
Association Hall, New York, and the attendance
has increased until the class is now a thousand
stronger.
The largest bell in the world is in the temple of
Clars, in Kioto, Japan. Unlike the great bells in
Pekin and Mosecow it is whole, and its tone is as
perfeet and as sweet as when first suspended.
Where and by whom it was cast is not known.
The Wesleyan Mission in the Madras Presiden*
cy has 2,000 boys and girls under instruction.
The latest news from the Americen Board’s
Austrian Mission is of a very hopeful character.
The Baptists of England have raised a fund of
£50,000, to be called a “Guarantee Fund,” to be
appropriated to the support of their aged and in
firm ministers.
Illinois Conference reports from those charges
118 conversions.
Three charges from Louisville, (Ky.) Confer
ence, report 146 conversions since last session of
the Conference, and the good work goes on.
The Presbyterians in England contemplate rais
ing at least a quarter of a u illion pounds sterling
to pay off existing debts, and push on the work of
Church extension To enable them to accomplish
this the aid of Presbyterians out of England is be
ing sought.
In the Cathedral at Brunswick, Germany, it
was recently determined to scour the walls and
pillars. As the dirt of ages came off, the vindica
tors of cleanliness were rewarded by the uncover
ing of old paintings of great merit that had been
entirely forgotton. Sketches are to be made of
them first, and they are then to be restored.
The oldest evangelical church between the Alle
ghenies and the Rocky Mountains is t :e Baptist
Church at Gilbert’s Creek, Lincoln county, Ky., a
few miles east of Lancaster. It emigrated from
Spottsylvania county, Va., in 1781, and is conse
quently now about ninety-six years old.
Mr. Spurgeon, whose health is still in a very
indifferent state, left London on Monday, in ac
cordance with his practice of the last few years,
with the object of escaping the trying weather
that we usually experience at this season of the
year. He will stop for a few days at Paris and
other places, and will then proceed to Mentone.
He is accompanied by his publisher, Mr. Pass-
more.—London Baptist, Jan. 18.
Bishop Cheney, of the Reformed Episcopal
Church, says that since the autumn of 1873, “ the
Reformed Episcopal Church has organized very
nearly one hundred parishes, almost every one of
which is absolutely self-sustaining. On the letter
files of the Bishops of the church there are some
■500 applications for admission to our ministry from
clergymen of every evangelical denomination.”
Bishop Foley, of Chicago, has received from the
priests of his diocese the gift of a carriage, horses
and harness, worth $3,000, and will be given
$3,000 to defray the expenses of a visit to Rome.
The Bresbyterians in England contemplate rais
ing at least a quarter of a million pounds sterling
to pay off existing debts, and push on the work of
church extension. To enable them to accomplish
this, the aid of Presbyterians out of England is
being sought.
An important decision of the Bishop of Worces
ter on certain points in the controversy between
the Dean and Chapter of Worcester and the Fes
tival Committee, has been published. The Bishop
orders that a certain prescribed form of service
should precede and close each morning’s sacred
music at the cathedral, and that admission should
be by cards, to be supplied to all subscribers to
the fund for defraying the expenses, according to
the amount subscribed. The Worcester Festi
val has been in abeyance since 1872, and this de
cision, it is presumed, will settle the dispute.
The North Carolina Conference of the M. E.
Church, South, reports: Whole number of local
preachers 134, decreas 2; white members 58,390,
increase 2,514; colored members 433, increase
78; total local preachers and members, 59,057.
Infants baptised, 2,339; adults baptised, 2,884.
Paid for supemnuated preachers, $4,212; for the
Bishops, $1,425; for missions, $5,946. The av
erage pay of Presiding Elders in this conference
is $1,050; of pastors, exclusive of missions, $749.
The average for each member is $40. We doubt
if any conference in the connection does better.
The Supreme Tribunal of Rome, notwithstand
ing the efforts of four clerical advocates, has con
demned the editor of the Osservatore Romano, an
Ultramontane organ, for defamation of the Free
Italian Church and its evangelists, to six months’
imprisonment with a fine and costs. Borgia the
author of the calumnies, has been sentenced to
one month’s imprisonment. The parties were
condemned in August, and appealed, but the sen
tence has been sustained by the Supreme tribu
nal.
-“’The Baptist Year book reports for the Baptists
of Amsrisa for 1867: Churches, about 24,000—
an increase of 1,000 over last year; ministers,
14,500—ac increase of about 600; baptisms, about
102.000—a decrease of perhaps 7,000; members
2,024,096—an increase of about 92,000.
The Baltimore Conference of the M. E. Church
South, will convene at St. Paul’s Church, Bald
more, on the first Wednesday in March, the sixth
of the month. Bishop McTyeire is to preside.
The annual income of the Church of England
$36,000,000. The church has 16,000 religious
edifices, including thirty cathedrals, 10,000 glebe
houses, thirty-one Episcopal palaces, and 1,000,
000 acres of land, much of it in good condition
for tillage.
One of the Bishops of the M. E. Church
abroad, visiting the churches in Asia and Europe,
Another is in Mexico, attending to church inter
ests there.
COEN MOSEY.
Last spring I gave each of the members of one
of my churches, who would agree to my plan, 36
grains of corn. The following was my plan : Those
receiving it were to plant, cultivate, gather when
ripe, and bring it up to the committee, who were
to receive and weigh it. The one making the most
from the amount planted, was to receive a pocket
Bible worth $1. This I gave to brother Miles
Floyd, who made 56 bushels from 36 grains
planted. The corn was all sold to the highest bid
der, and the proceeds were given to the church
If every pastor would propose a plan of this sort
to his churches, a great deal of money could be
raised to pay their salaries, also for home and for
eign missions. Our people need educating upon
this subject. This plan is a practical one, and is
a good one to give to those who should give. Sup
pose, brother preachers, that you make an effort
to get the country churches or brethren to take
this matter in hand. Try it, and learn what
great amount a little effort will make.
S. H. Bate.
Tunnel Hill, Dec. 19, 1877.
We are inclined to think, from reading the
above extract from the Baptist Reflector, that one
of our modern church finance plans has provoked
“ brother Floyd ” to falsehood. When we remem
ber that it takes one hundred full ears of corn to
make a bushel, and that it would take 5,600 ears
to make 56 bushels, we can’t exactly believe that
36 grains could produce the amount seated. As a
“ brother preacher,” we hope the brethren will
not “ take this matter in hand.”
CHURCH FAIRS AND WAYS TO RAISE MONEY.
Our proud age is productive of a great many
theories and plans on every conceivable subject
As to whether they are the result of “ much
study,” we do not know ; but we are quite certain
they are a “ weariness to the flesh.” No subject
has provoked a greater variety of relief expedients
than the finance question of the church. One
great man said that he who would devise some suc
cessful plan to meet the difficulties of the case
would immortalize himself, and every tinkerer
seems to be anxious to grab the glory.
Some advise to set apart “ missionary hens;”
others to consecrate a “ missionary cotton patch.”
These plans are rural ideas, and while they have
no value, have no direct evil tendency, morally.
The urban Christians(?) devise hot suppers, ice
cream, amateur operas and theatricals, and even
have the children to dance for Christ’s sake 1 These
are positively damaging and criminal. We utterly
repudiate them. St. Paul’s plan was this: “ Up
on the first day of the week let every one of you
lay by in store as God has prospered him.” There
are three distinct constituent elements of an evan
gelical system of finance set forth :
1. There was to be regular, repeated, stated,
systematic provision made for raising money. This
is implied by the clause, “ upon the first day of
the week.” How different from the intermittent
production of “ missionary hens ” and ‘* mission
ary cotton patches 1” How very far removed
from occasional “ hot suppers,” “oysters and ice
cream,” dances and theatricals !
2. The plan was based on giving and not on “rais
ing" money. Too many people live and act in this
matter as if Jesus had said, “ It is more blessed
to financier than to receive,” instead of “ It is more
blessed to give than to receive.” The ultimate
truth is, the “ hot supper ” folks want the church
to have the money, but they want sombody else to
give it. If the articles which they expose for sale
are worth the money which they ask for them,
then why not take that money at the very begin
ning, and give it ? If they are not worth the money,
somebody is cheated, and it ;is done in the
name and interest of the church ! We are thor
oughly tired of hearing the papers talk of the “ef
forts of the noble ladies,” and the preachers re
turning thanks to “ the dear sisters ” who origin
ate and engineer these schemes. We have neither
epithets of nobility nor votes of thanks for either
men or women who begin and run these plans,
which are unscriptural in nature, immoral in ten
dency, destructive to the grace of Christian giving,
and which always conduce to increase the difficul
ties which confront the church in the matter of
finance.
3. The plan measures the amount of our giving
and regulates its equity between the members.
This is implied in the clause “As God has pros
pered him.”
These modern expedients omit many of those
who ought to pay, or else make them pay less than
is commensurate with their prospering of the Lord,
and they impose upon others the burden of a griev
ous tax. How often have we pitied, at church
fairs, clerks, whose salaries were perhaps not over
$40 a month, and yet who were begged, beset, be
sought, “bulldozed” into expensiveness which
they were not able to bear, while a proud, money ed
king walked about, majestically self-conscious, and
enabled by his “ social status,” to refuse the im
portunities of the “noble ladies” and “dear
sisters.” Such things aie not only a delusion and
a snare, but a burning shame and a positive dis
grace.
Cicero—‘Usefulness and baseness ca nnot ex
ist in the same thing.’
Sallust—‘To the wicked the virtue of other
men is even formidable.’
Juvenal—‘We all live here in a state of os
tentatious poverty.’
Archimides—‘Eureka ! I have found if
Cicero—‘Fortune, not wisdom, governs hu
man life.’
‘Circles the earth with one continuous and
unbroken strain of the martial airs of England.'
Rufus Choate—‘Its constitution the glittering
and sounding generalities of natural right which
make up the Declaration of Independence.
. H.
1 QQKt
a K move*
Clem
SOLUTION TO PROBLEM NO 45.
[3 mate
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. KNOW
1 P B 4
1 K moves
PROBLEM NO. 47.
By O. F, Jentz.
"Challenge oat”—Inscribed to P. J. Boyle.
1 mm,
WHITE.
White to play and give mate in two moves.
CHESS IN AUSTRALIA.
We are indebted to the courtesy of T. P. Bull, of the
Free Press, lor the following game. This game was
played at the end of 1876, between Wm. H. Barrington, a
prominent member of the “Melbourne Chess Club,” and
the most rapid player in Australia, and Mr. Charlick.
The game was finished in one hour and fifteen minutes,
and was played in Adeliade, Mr. C.’s home, during a
visit of his opponent to that city.
(King's Bishop's Gambit.)
SCROLL SAWS.
Centennial and Twenty State Medals and Diplomas to the
FLEETWOOD AND DEXTER,
For great Accuracy, Rapidity, Durability and Low Price.
NO. I FLEETWOOD MACHINE,
Most beautifully finished and Nickel plated.
Prices $5.00 to $35.00.
TBTT IMI 3? BROTHERS,
Manufacturers, Wilmington, Delaware, or
RICE, BOR JST & C O . 7
New Orleans, Hardware Dealer generally.
Liberal discount to dealers. Send for Circular and
Illustrated List of Designs. 110
A new Medical Treatise, ‘‘The Sointo*
, Li / e ' oh Self-Preservation,” a
THYnM f 2F everybody. Prioe $1, sent by
V Ir 'r- l . * wail. Fifty original prescriptions, either
18 w ? r j h .^ el1 tiwes the price of the book.
Gold Medal awarded the anthor. The Boston Herald
says : The Science of Life is. beyond all comparison,
tu£ 111 OB i. ovlrunrfl inu w\r t»i •_» r . '
lished.”
free. Address DR. W. H.
No. 4 Bnlfincli Street, Boston, Mass. Tl I V/Or*i r*
137 ^ I HYotLr
An Illustrated Pampr.let sent c lt I**'
Parker, nLAL
WANTED - ?? maJce 8 permanent engagement
. . "V Jrijwth a cergymaii, or a Bible Reader, to
V n rlr?^!?. cc . In ■ F , U i i ? ON County. The CELEBRATED
NEWCentennial Edit;on of the HOL Y BIBLE For de
scription notice editorial in last week’s issne of this
paper. Address at once
n „ F - b. Horton At, Co.,
Publishers & Bookbinders, 60 E. Market St
toi-im Indianapolis, Ind.
Hygienic Institute & Turkish Bath,
Loyd street, opposite Markham House, Atlanta, Ga.
F OR the cure of Chronic Diseases, and prevention of AH
forms of Disease. Treatment embraces, besides the
Turkish Bath—the greatest luxury and curative of the age
—Medicated and Roman Baths, Electricity, Health Lift
Swedish and Machine movements, and all the Water-Cure
Processes, etc., etc.
Specialties: Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Paralysis, Dys
pepsia, Catarrh, Blood Poisoning, and diseases of Women
and Children.
Hygienic Board, Directions for Home Treatment
Do not despair without trying this wonderfully success
ful treatment.
For terms and prescriptions, address in full,
JNO - STAINBACK WILSON, M. D„
Physician in Charge.
Mr. C.
White.
1 P K 4
2 P KB 4
3 B B4 la)
4 KB
5 Q Kt B 3
6 P Q4(c)
7 Kt K B 3
8 OK
PKR4
Mr. B.
Black.
P K4
PXP
Q-f-(b)
P K Kt 4
Mr. C.
White.
23 P K B 4
24 P K 5
25 K B PXP
126 PQ 5
PQ B 3 ? ? 127 Q R K Kt
10 Q Kt K 2
11 KB2
12 PXB
13 PXP
14 Q K Kt
15 P Q B 3
16 B 02
17 QKR2
18 BX?
19 QxKt
20 QXQ
21 PXP
22 B Kt 3
P«S
QR4
B Kt 2
P K R 3
B Kt 5
BXKt
Kt K 2
QXKtP
BKB3
Kt Kt 3
Kt Q 2
PQ B4
KtXB
PXP
BXQ (<D
QSQB
B B 3
28 Kt B4
29 KtQ3
30 KtXKt
31 K B 3
32 P Q R 4
Kt 4
Mr. B.
Black.
Kt Kt 3
PXP
B Kt 4
Cas (e)
K Kt 2
Kt Q 2
Kt B4
RXKt
PQR4
PQ Kt4
PXQ
KRQKt
RXQ Kt P
RQ7
PB4+
33 R
34 RXQ UP
35 B OB 4
36 KK4
37 P Q 6
38 PXPe.p+ BXP
39 B K Kt+ B Kt 4
40 B Q 3 R Q 8 6
41 R K Kt 3 RQB4
42 P Q, 7 BXB
43 KXR R Q 4+
44 R Q 4 and Black resigns.
(a) Mr. Charlick is an fait in this opening. As he
usually wins all the games, he plays in the Bishop’s
Gambit on either side; it is true, however, that his op
ponents are generally just strong enough to allow him
to bring into use his most slender and brilliant wea
pons.
(b) The defense adopted is not satisfactory; P Q 4 is
now the customary continuation.
(c) Here White misses his opportunity to gain signal
advantage by P K 5 ! the correct reply to Black’s pre
cious weak move of P B 3: Joenish gives 6, Q K B 3, P Q
3; 7. P K Kt 3, Q K Kt 5; 8. P Q 3, etc., and regains the
Pawn with advantage.
(d) We prefer PXQ (e) This is weak, and uncalled
for. the King is not in danger; he should have played Kt
Q B 5; 27. BXKt, RXKt. etc. The whole game is a fine
specimen of Australian chess.
CHESS IN GERMAN Y.
Played in the “Masters" tourney of Andersen’s Ohess
Jubilee, at Leipzig, July 16, 1877.
(Four Knights' Game.,
L. Paulsen.
White.
1 P K 4
2 K Kt B 3
3 Kt B3
4 B Kt 5
5 Cas
6PQ4
7 K KtXP
8 K Kt B 5 (b) Cas
9 B K Kt 5 BXKt
10 PXB Kt Q 5
11 B Q 3 P Q4 (c)
12 BXK Kt PXB
13 Kt R 4 Q Q 3 (d;
Zuki-rtort.
Black.
P K 4
Q Kt B 3
Kt B3
B B 4
PQ3(a)
PXQ P
BQ2
L.’
White.
14 KtXB
15 Q Kt 4-f-
16 Q K R 4,
17 QXBP t-
18 P Q B 3
19 Q K K
20 R K 3
21 QXQ
22 K R
23 PB6
24 BXK R P
25 BXR
26 BXB P
Znkertort.
Black.
QXKt
K R
R K Kt
R Kt 2
Kt Q B 3
QRKKt
QQ3
BXP+
PXQ
Kt K 4
Kt Kt 5(e)
KtXR
Resigns.
O^^^^^n^wo^e^a^nak^$12 a day at home.
Ulf-IJl/ Costly outfit free. Address TRUE & CO., Au
gusta, Maine
FRUIT TREES
Apple. Pear, Peach, Plum, Quince, Crabs, etc.
STOCK GRAFT8, Apple. Cherry, Crab. Pear, etc.
EVERGREENS, Shade Trees, Shrubs, Fruit and Flower
Pllit68>
HEDGE PLANTS, Osage. Buckhorn, Honey Locust, etc.
GREEN HOUSE Plants, Splendid Novelties, Roses,
Verbenas. Carnations, etc. For NEW CATALOGUES of
the BLOOMINGTON (PHOENIX) NURSERY, post free,
address WM. F. BAIRD, (Trustee), Box I, BLOOMING
TON, ILLINOIS. 139-4t
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PARKER BRO’S
WEST MERIDEN,CT.
$1200
8ailary. Salesmen wanted to sell our
Staple Goods to dealers. No peddling.
Kxpennc* paid. Permanent employ
meat, address S. A. GRANT ft CO-
7,1, 6 4 b Home St, Cincinnati, (X
WAIEDWATCHES. Cheapest
Wh «mthe known world. Sample Watch Free to
\i^\0Agents. Address, A. Cocltbr & Co., Chicago.
X SANfORDS'S^.i/jV'’ 3
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J. BOWELS
BILIOUSNESS, j!
& DYSPEPSIA.
CLEARS TIE
^^aMKEXHM^
For Pamphlets address Dr. Sanford. New Yorlc.
139-tf
(a) To castle, is far more desirable, and should 6. Ktx
K P, R K! 1
<b> A good play; which ensures a lasting advantage.
(c) Forced; as a little examination will prove.
(d) He dares not move the Bishop; as White would
play Q Kt 4+
(e) For some time past all of Black’s moves have been
forced, and now he should have played 24 , KXB 25.
R R 3+, K Kt 3; 26. KXR.
[Schach Zeitunq.
THE HIPPOPOTAMUS OPENING.
Contributed by John A. Belcher, from his scrap-book.
Attack. Defense.'Attack. Defense.
PK4 PK4 j4 P K Kt, 3 Q K Kt 4
QKR5 5PQ4 KtXQP
Kt Q B 3 ;6 BxQ Kt K B 6 mate
K Kt K 2
Kt Q B 3
Wm. H. Seward—'It is an irrepressible con
flict between opposing and endnnng forces/
Voltaire—'Labor rids us of three great evils—
irksomeness, vice, and poverty.’
Seneca—‘That grief is light which can take
counsel/
Ovid—' In an easy cause any man may be el
oquent’
Robert Emmet—‘Let no man write my epitaph.’
John Adams—‘Swim or sink, live or die,snr-
vive or perish with my country, was my unal
terable determination.' Conversation with Jon
athan Sewall, 1774.
Daniel Webster—‘Sink or swim, live or die,
survive or perish I give my hand and my heart
to this vote.' Eulogy on John Adams and Thos.
Jefferson, August 2nd, 1826.
•On States dissevered, disoordant belliger
ent/
‘Let it rise, till it meet the eon in his oomine.
‘And the parting day linger and play on its
summit’
CHESS INTELLIGENCE.
The November and December number of “The Ameri
can Chess .Journal" at hand, somewhat smaller than
usnal. A plate of Adolf Andersen will be an agreeable
surprise to his many admirers, and should be in the pos
session of every lover of chess. With this number,
brother Hallook bids adieu to the fraterity, he having
sold the Magazine to Dr. C. C. Moore, No. 68 Courtlandt
street, New York, who will continue its publication and
fill unexpired subscriptions.
Messrs. Loyd and Mason will still be retained in their
_ epective departments, and with Moore at the helm, the
Journal wiil sustain its reputation and attain an excel
lence second to none in the world. The present location
of the Journal is a guarantee of success, there being
more and better players in our metropolis than else
where on the globe. Our best wishes go with the retir
ing editor, and also a heayty greeting to the incomers.
A translation of the present status of several openings
will be useful to those who do not care to wade through
the books, nor have time to keep up with current litera
ture. Loyd’s letter, and a full quota of problems, fill up
the Journal. We await the next number, and will keep
our readers posted.
All letters for this department should have “ Mathe
matics ” written in the corner of the ritvelope.
Solutions published two weeks aftef the problems.
Problems solicited in all branches of mathematics, pure
or applied.
Mr Editor I was very much interested in the clever
solution given by Erwin to problem No. 28. There was
one oversight in the solution: In giving the area of the
sector A O B C, he put 2 a R; it should be a R. This
correction would give the final equation^
y = 3 (2 a—R sin 2 a)X
' 2 3
8 R sin a
The problem admits of another solution: By making
the required curve tangent to the B «® i ° i ?® 1 ® ‘T®,*'
tex, itwill have two branches symmetrically arranged in
reference to a line drawn from the centre of the semi
circle perpendicular to the diameter. The two perpen
diculars at the extremities of the diameter will be asym-
tolea to the curve. I should be glad if Erwin would try
Ah. solution in accordance with these requirements. I
O UR best agents are clearing from $35 to $40 a week.
Agents wanted everywhere. Terms and particulars
sent free. Address Shuttles & Sons, Wholesale Jewelry
and Novelty Dealers, Atlanta, Ga. 97-ly.
T. H. ROBERTSON,
TTORNEY T LAW,
MURFREESBORO, TEHHFSSEE.
F oreign legal business promptly attended
to, and collections made in any part of Tennessee.
no!08-tf
SAXON A. ANDERSON, Agent,
Marietta Paper Manfg Co.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
BOOK, NEWS AND WRAPPING PAPER,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA.
The paper that The Sunny South is printed on is made
t this mill.
IT
IF
Van
1 Woolley's
Painless
AMERICAN
XUM
Cure or
ANTIDOTE.
1 The habit of using Mor
phine,Gum Opium, Laud
anum or Elixir of Opium
cured painlessly by thia
Improved remedy.
Manufactured at Atlanta,
Ga., at reduced prices.
Tested in hundreds of
cases. Guaranteed. Par
ticulars Fukk. Address B.
M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga.
Office No. 35, over Linen Store, entrance 33£
Whitehall street.
(BE per day at home. Samples worth $5 free.
to«PiW V Address Stinson & Co., Portland, Maine.
More than 2U.OOO teniw m*r ALREADY WEAR
HEAVY MOUSTACHE AND BEARD, haring used
~ “ >li—1. Certain
This preparation h«aii
139-9t;
1 to3 Pack'gs. Ne
fleet. Package #rnb di
t». L. L. SMITH AC
*iiy applied. (J ^
aV UL
the eolation in accordance
e i
D. SHAWAHAN,
feel satisfied he will solveH. .^^ngl
ivington, Va.
Eolations.
Frizz Piobuk No. 96.
■> a railway carriage being detached from a train is
■topped by the friction of the rails in half a *®
co-efficient of friction being .05 required the
the train in milee per hour, when the car became de-
**N(Tcorreot eolation having been eent in for thi* up to
the present time, we give the eolation below;
Le» w=the weight of the car, F=the force exerted by
friction to atop tee car; let f=the negative acceleration
of f, or in other words, the amount of motion in the car
that friction destroys in one ■•raid- _ ... . nf
Now, the force of gravity, DW, the weights
the car. acting on the car, would give it (if It were free
to move) an acceleration of 32.2 feet per second, and since
forces are proportional to the accelerations, they pro-
does,-wo most have
WIFI! 39.9 ! f hut F=.05 W hence
W t .05 W I 132211 f whence f—1.61 feet per i
rafore in 30 eeoonds friction wonld give it a
X M~***Y
Therefore in 30 eeoonds
motion of 1.81X30,
lent to 17SJI80 ~
second,
negative
second, which is equiva-
93 miles par hour.
Atlanta Branch
!»F* AY1B¥ & S0IS’
LOUISVILLE, KY.
PLOW WORKS.
We have opened a large Warehouse in Atlanta, Ga.,
tor the sale and diatribution of our
Plows,
Cultivators,
Stocks,
Blades, Etc.
In the States of North and South Carolina, Georgia-
Florida, and |Alabama. We shall sell our Plows in Ala
bama at Louisville Prices, free of Freight. We want a
live, responsible merchant in each place to represent us.
Send for catalogae.
B. F. AVERY A SONS,
ATLAHTA, GEOR
Of at Aj s week in yoar own town. Terms and $5 outfit free.
Address H. HALLETT & CO., Portland, Maine.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
Y RIOUS CAUSES—adv ancing years, care, sickness,
disappointment, and hereditary indisposition all
operate to turn the hair gray, and either of them inclines
it to shed prematurely. Ayer’s Hair Vigor will restore
faded or gray, light and red hair to a rich brown or deep
black, as may be desired. It softens and cleanses the
scalp, giving it a healthy action, and removes and cures
dandruff and humors. By its use falling hair is cheeked,
and a new growth will be produced in all cases where the
follicles are not destroyed or glands decayed. Its effects
are beautifully shown on brashy, weak or sickly hair, to
which a few applications will produce the gloss and fresh
ness of youth. Harmless and sure in its operation, it is
incomparable as a dressing, and is especially valued for
the soft lustre and richness of tone it imparts. It con
tains neither oil nor dye, and will not soil or color white
cambric; yet it lasts long on the hair, and keeps it fresh
and vigorous. For Salk by all Dealers. 98-ly
WIGS—TOUPEES.
Established 1S49,
Established 1849.
Practical Wig and Toupee Maker. Hairdresser, and Im
porter of Human Hair and Hairdressers’ Materials.
Wigs and Toupees for ladies and gentlemen a speciality.
All kinds of first-class Hair Work, Switches, Curls, In
visibles, Saratoga Waves, etc., on hand and made to
order.
44 East Twelfth Street, New York,
Between Broadway and University Place.
137—6m
$55 S $77
a Week to Agents. $10 outfit free.
P. O. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine.
'THE SUBSCRIBERS still continue to carry on 1
J: n e»»o/KNGRAVING ON WOOD in all it* b
the bust-
__ . _ ,,, —. .. vwav «ia hi 1(P branches
Their facilities ate such that they are enabled to execute
all orders promptly and in every style of the art, anon the
most reasonable terms
All kinds of boot illustrations, vieiM of builMnot mo-
graved in the most approved manner
XT. ORB <ft CO.
I 09 John Street,
New York
TEETH EXTRACTED
WSTMOWT F41H,
BEAUTIFUL SETS OF TEETH INSERTED.
DISEASED GUMS CURED.
TEETH FILLED.
137-lm By DR. HOLMES, Macon, Ga.
MONTE PICKENS,
PURCHASING AGENT
SUNNY SOOTH OFFICE,
Atlanta, Oeo.
For the convenience of those in the country, will nur-
chase from the very smallest article up—at 5 percent
under $100; 2 l-a per cent. over. Cash must accom
pany orders. Good facilities for purchasin', cheap.
49~Special attention given to the purchasing of music
musical instruments and strings, ’
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Washington, Georgia.
Will practice in all the counties of the Northern Circuit-
Bnsiness solicited.
Office Over Chraen Bros- Confectionery Store
-1^ < ^ ndtobu9inessinan ltP<*rfo/theStot«.