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LOVE TEIUMPHS.
Thnllim; Drama of Beal Life in the
Supreme Court.
Another act in the drama of real life in which
a young Irishman and his Jewish bride are the
principal actors was enacted yesterday in Su
preme Court, Chambers, before Judge Potter.
The case is one which has already attracted
much public attention, and the knowledge that
it was to assume a new phase in the courts yes
terday Berved to bring many curious spectators,
both Jew and Gentile, to the court room. Ev
erywhere the relations of Thomas F. Fallon and
his wife were the subject of conversation and
the eager discussion was indulged without re
gard to race or creed.
‘I am a Jew myself,’ said one, ‘but I think Fal
len ought to have his wife.’
•All the trouble comes from his having prom
ised to turn Jew,’ said another, *and then failing
to keep bis promise.’
•Turn Jew 1' interposed a big Milesian, scorn
fully. ‘Who ever heard of an Irishman iurning
Jew?’ . .
•Now, see here,’ interjected a very knowing
young fellow, ‘I know all about this case. Fal
lon and bis wife were all right and there would
have been no more trouble if he had not been
too confiding. When they left court before they
intended living together, but her father said,
‘Let Caroline come home till you get a place to
live,’ and he consented. When they once got
her under their influence they persuaded her
not to go back to him. There is a good deal of
money in the Cohen family and it was their in
tention to get a divorce if possible and marry
her to her cousin.’
It was clear that Fallon had been taken in in
some way, the paternal Cohen, like Baron Esk-
eles Flits in Miss Muhlbach's novel, had been too
shrewd for the Chistian who had stolen away
the heart ol a Jewish maiden. Happily for the
Christian in the present instance the courts of
New York are not so easily wrought upon as was
the impulsive Emperor of Austria. When Fal
lon after singing to himself in his honeymoon,
‘Ob, where shall I take my bride,’ found that
she was denied him, he at once turned to the
courts to give him back his wife. A writ of ha
beas corpus was sued out and the case came up
for consideration before Judge Potter, as already
indicated. It is at this point that the new act
in the drama properly begins, the curtain ris
ing on a scene that is seldom witnessed in a
court of justice. The first act, which was played
before Judge Van Brunt last Saturday, may be
epitomized as follows, mostly from the writings
of one Shakespeare:—
JEW AND GENTILE;
had been used, and suggested that the husband
and wife be allowed to confer together in pri
vate. Fallon jumped to his feet and smiled;
but Mr. Levy opposed the suggestion, saying
the young woman did not want to go with her
husband. Judge Potter, however, thought the
suggestion a good one, and Mrs. Fallon left the
court in the charge of Mr. James J. Nealis and
entered an anteroom, where she was joined by
her husband, and they were left in consulta
tion.
During the argument there were several fine
situations and dramatic incidents. While the
question of force in the performance of the mar-
riag was under discussion the following collo
quy took place:—
Mr. Stacom—I have been unable—
Mr. Levy (interrupting him)—May it please
Yonr Honor I will explain.
Mr. Stacom—One moment, sir—
Mr. Levy—I tell you one moment—
Mr. Stacom—Mr. Levy, will you have the
goodness to hold your tongue ? I am address
ing the Court and not you.
A few minutes after the young conple were
left together in the afternoon Mr. Levy hurried
into court and indignantly protested against the
clerk leaving them alone.
‘Do they object?’ asked Judge Potter. ‘If
they are bappy I am sure I am.’
The conference continued for more than an
hour, the corridors and adjoining rooms being
filled meanwhile with an anxious multitude
waiting to hear the result. Delay gave hope of
a reconciliation and the crowd was anxious that
the young husband and wife should be reunited.
At length at two o’clock they came into court
and sat down together. Judge Potter called the
young woman to the bench and privately ques
tioned her, after which he announced that she
had concluded to go and live with her husband,
adding, ‘and it is a very sensible resolution, I
think.’ The writ was then dismissed. To this
Mr. Stacom tried to object, but the Court in
sisted, saying, ‘I dismiss the writ without prej
udice, but no one must interfere with them
hereafter.’
A cheer broke from the crowd and the young
lovers departed. Mr. Cohen subsequently pre
sented his son-in-law with $100 and accompa
nied them to a hotel.
Thus ended the last act of the Blacksmith
and the Maiden.
All Tlie World Over.
Unable to afford a sea-serpent, Hudson, N.H.,
consoles itself with a frog who jumps eight feet
at a stride, lives on birds, and whips bull-dogs
in single combat.
A Mississippi judge was just saying that no
one but a coward would carry a pistol, when his
own fell from his pocket and was discharged,
and the bullet hit a lawyer in the leg.
OR.
THE FIVE POINTS MARRIAGE,
A Domestic Drama in Two Acte.
ACT I.
Scene.—Supreme Court, Chambers, New Court
House, Duke Vau Bruuton the bench. Lawyersand
newspaper reporters sitting in state within the bar.
Officers attending.
Three raps of the Judge's gavel are heard.
Officer—Silence in the Court.
(Enter Brabantio Cohen and Othello Fallon, fol
lowed by a great multitude of Celts and Jews.)
Duke Van Brunt— Why, what's the matter?
Brabantio Cohen—My daughter! Oh, my daughter!
Beporter iaside toli. C )—Dead?
Brabantio Cohen—Ay, tome.
She is abused, stolen from me and corrupted
By spells and medicines bought of mountebanks,
For nature so preposterously to err,
Being not deticient, blind or lame of sense,
Bans witchcraft, could not.
Duke Van Jtnait—Who e'er he be in this foul pro
ceeding
Hath thus beguiled youroaughler of herself
And you of her, the bloody book of law
You shall yourself read in the bitter letter
After its own sense.
,Brabantio Cohen— Most humbly I thank your
Grace,
Here is the man, this Celt.
Duke Van Brunt ijo C. F.)—What in your own part
can you say to this?
Othello Fallon— Most potent, grave and reverend
siguors,
My very noble and approved good masters,
That 1 have taken away this old man's daughter
It is most true; true 1 have married her.
The very head and front of my offending
Hath this extent, no more.
liuke Vau Brunt— To vouch this is no proof
Without more evidence and over test.
Did you by indirect and forced courses
Subdue and poison this young maid's affections
Or came it by request and such fair question
As soul to soul atfordeth ?
Othello Fallon— I do beseech you
Send for the lady.
Duke Van Brunt— Fetch Desdemona hither.
Othello Fallon—And till she come as truly as to
heaven
I do confess the vices of my blood.
So justly to your grave ears I'll present
How I did thrive in this fair lady's love.
[Enter Caroline Desdemona.]
Brabantio Cohen— I pray you hear her speak.
If she conless that she was half the wooer
Destruction on my head if the bail blame’
Light on the man. Come hither, gentle mistress,
Do you perceive in all i his noble company
Where you most owe obtdience?
Caroline Desdemona— My noble father.
I do perceive here a divided duty.
To you I am bound for life and education.
My life and education both do learn me
How to respect you; but here’s my husband
And so much duty as my mother showed
To you, preferring you before her father
So much I challenge that I may profess
Due to this Irishman, my blacksmith lord.
Brabantio Cohen—God be with you. I have done
Othello Fallon—I crave tit disposition for my wife’
Due reference of place and exhibition, ’
With such accommodation and besort
As levels with her breeding.
l' un e J iV' ni :~ if you please,
Be it at her lather s.
This pretty story, which Mr. Shakespeare ev
idently intended for all classes and every age,
in its second act unfortunately diverges far from
the Shakespearean model. The presence was
much the same, but Gthello Fallon was demand
ing of Brabantio Cohen the restoration of his
Desdemona. There were the same faces in the
chambers, both Jew and Gentile, the same law
yers and newspaper reporters and the same cry
cf ‘Silence in the court?' In obedience to the
writ the young wife entered with her mother,
coldly tnrning her back upon the young hus
band who had wooed and won her. Her face
was hidden beneath a dark blue veil when Mr.
Levy, her connsel, opened the proceedings by
annonneing that Caroline Cohen was present in
the oourt All eyes were thereupon turned upon
her and many a heart beat with sympathy for
the deserted Othello. Mr. Levy read an affida
vit made by Caroline's father, in which he de
clared that his daughter was living at his house,
but was not restrained of her liberty, and this
was supplemented by an affidavit by the young
wife, in which it was asserted that she is free to
live with Fallon or not, bnt that her marriage
with him bad been obtained by force and fraud;
that be bad promised to become a Jew, but had
deceived ber and trifled with her faith and she
wonld not consent to livs with him until he ful
fils his promise.
Mr. Stacom, of counsel for Fallon, read in re
ply the affidavit made by the girl in court last
Saturday, in which she declared that she freely
and voluntarily married her husband. The
counsel further said that Fallon had never
promised to become a Jew. A written promise
was then produced, but it turned out that it was
dated after the marriage. Mrs. Fallon was then
directed to come forward, and, lilting her veil,
showed a face of such remarkable pallor as to
still further excite the sympathies of the multi
tude. The situation was a very embarrassing
one for her, and Mr. Stacom. seizing the oppor
tunity, said it was evident that nndne influence
A special from Omaha says: ‘As far as known
four men perished in the flames at the burning
of the Grand Central Hotel. One injured fire
man has since died. Other men are missing;
their bodies are believed to be in the ruins.
A Pbecious Meteorite.—The San Bernardino
(Cal.) Argus says: ‘While on the desert Mr.
Sweet was the fortunate witness of the fall of an
aerolite. The rock contained mineral—gold,
silver and copper and weighed about 250
pounds.
The legislative assembly of Vancouver’s Island
has modified,the bill imposing a tax of fifty dol
lars on each Chinaman in the province, reduc
ing it to forty dollars. The anti-Chinees element
are rather disgusted at this evidence of weaken
ing at the outset.
The people of Brunswick, Ga., feel that their
city is prepared to suppoit a cotton factory, a
hotel of one hundred rooms, a paper factory, a
soap factory, a furniture factory, a broom fac
tory, a cotton-seed factory, a hub and spoke fac
tory, a sash and blind factory and a base ball
nine.
It is now stated that between six and seven
hundred were lost in the steamer Princess Alice,
that collided with the screw steamer in the
Thames. The majority of the estimates proving
the latter number. A diver says he felt corpses
packed four and five feet deep in the after cabin
of the Princess Alice.
Mr. Roberts, of Estell County, Ky., had a cow
that four months ago just before calving, got
frightened by a monkey that an organ grinder
was showing. The calf she soon afterwards
produced is very small and has a hump on its
back, and its movements, expression and for
mation of head and face are those of a monkey.
A man in N. Y. committed suicide because
Bob Ingersol the anti hell man went to Europe
and he was left behind ‘There’s no hope for
me. Ingersol has gone to Europe,’ said Mr. Trull.
‘I shall drift back now into believing in hell.’
So he blew out his brains and went to find out
how things were for himself.
Rev. Mr. Hayden, pastor of the Methodist
Church at South Madison, was arrested to-day
on a charge of murdering Mary E. Stanard, at
Rockland, in the county of Madison, and
brought before a magistrate and pleaded not
guilty. The hearing was postponed until Mon
day. The removal of the accused from his fam
ily occasioned a scene of exciting interest.
Died While Shouting.—The current number
of the Hartsville Sentinal says: ‘A death of a
peculiar nature occurred at the colored church
at Starling, on Sunday night last. While the ex
hortation was being made, Clarissa Wighte, col
ored, commenced shouting in the most excited,
hysterical way, and continued to shout until
she sank exhausted. She died on the spot.
A California Debut.—The San Francisco Chron
icle describes at great length a grand party giv
en by Senator Sharon, of Nevada, in celebration
of the ‘coming out’ of his second daughter. Flo
ra. The event took place on the evening of the
8th ult., at Belmont, formerly the home of the
millionaire, Ralston, and now occupied by Sen
ator Sharon. Two thousand invitations had been
issued, and the affair in all respects was on the
most elaborate and costly scale.
A small Greek vessel, loaded with powder,
lately approached Mandrnka,a village of Turkey
in Asia, in order to dispose of the article to the
Bedonins of the coast. Turkish sponge gather
ers at work in the neighborhood, left their ves
sels for the Greek cratt, and earnestly request
ed the captain not to sell powder to the Bedou
ins until their departure,or they would certain
ly be killed. The Captain refused to comply,
and a fight ensued. Either by accident or de
sign, the powder was lighted, and the vessel and
seventy-five men were blown into the air.
Another Kate Sothern.—One Georgia woman
has been encouraged to imitate Kate Sothern.
In the Valley Plain district of Harris county, a
Miss Julia Bryant shot a young widow, Mia.
Leaton, dangerously, if not mortally wounding
her, because she had reasons for thinking the
widow had rivaled her m the affections of her
lover. The young man,whose name is withheld,
had previously gone to Col ambus with Miss Ju
lia, and the couple had registered as man and
wife. The fair shootiat was arrested, but man
aged to escape and is now non est inventus. It is
supposed she left in company with her lover, as
he too is missing.
Hydrophobia.—Abel Ford,an engineer at Lea
gue Island, was bit by a pet Spitz dog, together
with two of his little children, in the early part
of last June. The wound was slight and was
immediately cauterized by a physician, and Mr.
Ford felt no alarm and no symptom of uneasi
ness until Sept 4th, when he felt an acute pain
in the hand that had been bitten, extending np
the arm. He immediately sent for a phvsioian,
bat remedies were of no avail. The nsnal symp
toms of hydrophobia oame on; the spasm of the
tLroat, the terror, the convulsions, and he im
plored his friends to pnt an end to his life. He
died after suffering great agony.
A Relic op Babbabism.—Anderson Brooks, a
small truck farmer living near Orange Court
House, Va., caught bis wife stealing a lot of his
clothing and selling them. He immediately ar
rested her and took her to the jail and preferred
charges against her. She was carried before
Squire Boutware and ordered to receive ten lash
es and have six days confinement in jail. When
the sheriff began to whip the woman and laid
only one lash on her back, the husband rushed
on the officer and felling him with a stick took
the cat of nine tails from him, saying as be did
so: ‘No man shall whip my wife bat me.’ He is
now in jail for assaulting the officer.
A curious Church quarrel is reported from
Kidderminster, England, where Rev. S. F.
Barber, one of the cnrate6 of Lower Mitton, is
quitting the ‘in consequence of the Viear taking
objection to the color of a pair of trousers which
he wore while officiating ou several occasions.’
Mr. Barber preached bis farewell sermon on the
previous Sunday, stating that his connection
with the society was terminating both abruptly
and unpleasantly, and he pointedly remarked
that be was sorry if he had offended any one in
word, deed or raiment Local feeling has been
strongly provoked by the affair, and a movement
is on foot to present the reverend gentleman
with a testimonial.
A Church Tragedy.—In Madison county, Va.,
at Ferryman’s Mill,a protracted meeting was be
ing held this week in the open air. The meet
ing was broken up by a row of a very serious
character. Just as the minister was about to
give out his sermon and bad announced the
hymn, two men, Nathan Cove and Lewis Tyman,
got into a dispute as to who should have a hymn
book whioh was near them. Cove jerked out a
pocket knife and Tyman advanced with a razor.
Despite the expostulations of the minister, the
two men pitched into each other. The females
screamed and rushed away in the bushes, and
the male members of the congregation got at a
safe distance. Tyman wounded Cove in the ab-
domin so seriously that he died. The murder
er has not yet been arrested.
A Double Suicide in Iowa.—Muscatine, la.,
September 7.—Between noon and 1 o’clock to
day the dead bodies of F. A. Zeak, a German,
aged twenty-six, and Carrie Myers, aged twenty-
two, were found near the corner of Oak and
Eighth streets. Zeak was from Kansas City and
the girl from Cherokee, Kan. They came here
last right. This morning they made some pur
chases of white slippers and crape, and when
found the slippers were on their feet and the
crape on their arms. It was undoubtedly a pre
meditated suicide. A small Smith & Wesson re
volver with two empty chambers and a small hole
in the foreheads of the victims told the tale. The
wonan's head rested on Zeak's shoulder and there
signs of a struggle or pain. Zeak had some
friends here, but the woman was a stranger.
Zeak left a letter to a Kansas City f.iend which
may throw some light on the matter.
A Woman's Suicidh.—Thursday afternoon at
four o’clock, Mrs. Catharine J. Buchanan, twen
ty-two years of age, and residing at No. 1502
Federal street.Philadelphia, while suffering from
insanity, placed a pistol to her right temple and
inflicted a wound that resulted in her death the
same evening. She was sunstioked during the
Centennial,and pirpe that time has been insane,
and became so *,o?ent at one time that she was
placed in an asylum and was released last spring,
her condition being thought to have so much
improved as to warrant it. But instead of im
proving she conti~!*va to get worse, and having
listened to a sermon, not long since, upon duty
of parents to their children, she imagined she
had neglected her own, and went home and at
tempted to cleave open the head of one with a
hatchet, and was only detected in time to pre
vent it.
A WOMAN REPORTED TO HAVE HANGED HERSELF
to escape sin. Dover, N. J., September 5.—The
Index reports that Mrs. Mary Luff, wife of Ed
ward Luff, committed suicide last Friday by
hanging herself from a tree near her home on
the borders of Lake Hopatcong, and close by the
Lake Chapel. Her body was discovered early
Saturday morning by her husband, who cut the
rope by which it was hanging and took it to his
house on a wheelbarrow. The neighbors did
not know of the death of Mrs. Luff until late in
the day. Mr. Luff watched the body by himself
Saturday night and the funeral took place on
Sunday. He did not notify his step-children,
who live in New York, of the death of their
mother, and they only heard of it through a
neighbor. Mrs. Thomas Thorp, of No. 77 Sec
ond Street, New York, a daughter of Mrs. Luff,
is stopping near here, making inquiries in re
gard to her mother’s death. It is said that there
were suspicious marks on the body. Luff says
she was insane about religion, and that she com
mitted suicide beesuse she feared she was not
leading a right life.
A Girl Shoots Herself With Her Lover's
Pistol Because Her Father Opposed Her Mar
riage.—A dispatch from Cleveland, Ohio, is as
follows: ‘A peculiar and highly sensational
case of suicide accurred in Middleburg Town
ship, in this county, this morning at seven
o’clock. Miss Hattie Gray was the daughter of
a highly respected farmer, named Morgan Gray.
Before breakfast and after the hired man had
gone after the cows, she asked her father’s con
sent to her marriage with the hired man, saying
that she loved him better than any one eke in
the world. Her father utterly refused his con
sent, saying that the man, Richens by name,
had no visible means of support. With this the
father went about his work. He had not pro
ceeded far with the milking of the cows, when
he heard a pistol shot,and running to the house
with the hired man, they passed through sev
eral rooms in searob ot Hattie, but did not find
any trace of her until the man’s bed-room was
reached, and there her lifeless form was found
stretched upon the floor. It seems that npon
her father’s departure for the barn,she had gone
to her lover’s bed-room and taken his revolver
from a bureau drawer and shot herself through
the heart. The ball entered her body just be
low the left nipple. The physician who was
called thought that death must have resulted
immediately. The lover and father are both
nearly destracted. Richens says, that on a hol
iday ride to Rocky river a few days ago, he ask
ed her to be his wife, and, after saying that she
feared that they could not live happily together,
she consented, but at the same time said that
he might attend her funeral before her wedding.
She was an intelligent and highly respected
girL’
Confesses to Killing Her Child.—A young
woman, neatly dressed, but with a very white,dis*
tressed faoe,appeared at the police headquarters*
in New York, last Monday, and announced that
she had come to give herself up. She had mur
dered her child and could not rest until Bhe had
had punishment inflicted upon her. She gave
the facts in a quiet, but heart-broken manner as
follows: The woman said her name was Mary
Phillips, and that she was thirty years old. She
looked younger. She lives at No 379 Second
street, JerseyTCity, with her husband’s relatives.
‘I had a little boy,Richard,’ she said,’five months
and twenty days old. My husband’s people and
I could not agree, and I determined to quit the
house and endeavor to make a living tor myself.
I went to New York and got a situation, but
could not take my baby with me. I left the
child with my sister-in-law, bnt when she heard
that I had got a place she said that she did not
propose taking care of any one’s child. Some
words followed and in despair I went ont and
bought some laudanum, half a teaspoonful of
whioh I gave to the baby, and the rest I took my
self. I had determined that neither the baby
nor I should be a harden to any one. The baby
went to sleep very soon after I gave him the
laudanum. This was on Wednesday. In the
evening he waked a little but fell off again and
abont 2 o’clock on Thursday morning he died.
He was buried at 4 o’clook the same day. I have
had no peace of mind since. I have not been
able to sleep, eat or drink. I am a murderess
and my conscience has been killing me by de
grees. I must do something to punish me for
my miserable crime, and I concluded to surren
der myself.’
The Champion Swimmer,
Swimming Midgets.
•That is Maggie Loftus,’ said Miss Kate Ben
nett to our reporter, ‘my champion six-year-old
swimmer. She is also quite a diver, having
dived from a height of thirty feet.’ The little
nymph referred to was dressed, ready to take
part in an exhibition at the Central Park Gar
den swimming school on Saturday last. In the
tank 20 ft. x 80 ft.), she swam abont in all ordi
nary and extraordinary attitudes, floated with
the right foot resting upon the left knee, the
right arm over her head and the left akimbo;
reversed the position of hands and feet without
turning over: folded her arms and laid her head
npon them as if asleep and propelled her body
thus by a graceful motion of the feet; sprang
backward from Miss Bennett’s shoulders, turn
ing a somerset in the water and diving head
foremost, swam nnder the water a distance of
forty feet. In consideration of her proficiency,
she was awarded the gold medal as ‘ champion
six-year-old swimmer.’ The medal is circular,
and represents a lanrel wreath, surrounding the
inscription, ‘Maggie Loftus, Champion Six-year-
old Swimmer.’ Cherry Froelich, aged four and
a half; Lena Windels, aged five; Katie Kelly
and Mary Dexter, each aged seven, and Flor
ence Wingendorf, aged nine, all acquitted them
selves with marked ability, and were awarded
silver medals. As we go to press, the Bennett
silver cup is being contested for by a class of
women, — World.
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duces clear, golden letters, by simply dipping in water.
Lasts for months. Unexcelled for card writing.
The above seven articles are shown in cut.*, and will be
sent in neat cabinet, po«t-pai<l. for 15 cts. At retail they
would costfl. We make this reduction to obtain n»w
names for our Fall Catalogues, i ostags stamps
same 03 cash. Address,
Eureka Trick and Novelty Co.,
P.O.Box 4C14. 39 Ann St., N. Y.
This advertisement will not appear again.
P
DE. M. W. CASE’S
LIVER REMEDT
AND
BLOOD PURIFIER.
TONIC & CORDIAL.
This is not a patent medicine, blit is prepared
under the direction of Dr. M. W. Case, from liis
favorite prescription, which in an extensive
practice of over 27 years, he has found most
effective in all cases of disordered liver or im
pure blood. It is
ANTI-BILIOUS.
It, acts directly npon the liver, restoring it,
when diseased, to its normal condition, and iii
regulating theactivity of this great gland every
other organ of the system is benefited, lb
Blood Diseases it has no equal as a purifier. It
improves digestion and assists nature to elimi
nate all impurities from the system, and while
it is the cheapest medicine in the market it i.s
also superior to all known remedies. While it
is more effectual than Blue Mass.it is mild and
perfectly safe, containing nothing that cun in
the slightest degree injure the system. It does
not sicken or give pain, neither does it weaken
the patient nor leave the system constipated,
as most other medicines do.*
T4» Liver Complaint, Dys-
JLb VUISS pepsio. Bilious Fever,
Headache, Nick Headache, Water.
Brash, Heart-Born, Sick Stomach,
Janndice, Colic, Vertigo, Neuralgia,
Palpitation of the Heart, Female Weak
ness and Irregularities, all Kkiu and
Blood Diseases, Worms, Fever A Ague,
and Constipation of the Bowels.
In small doses it is also a sure care
for Chronic Uiarrhiea.
T akentoo or three times a day It pre
vents Yellow Fever, Diphtheria, Scar
let Fever, Cholera and Nmall-Fox.
- .7—. Remedy and Blood
X OUR OWIvTnnlier, a pleasant
ionic, and Cordial,
J DOCTOR Anti-Bilious. It will
save vour doctor bills; only 25 cts. per bottle.
It is the most effective and valuable medicine
ever offered to the American people. As fast
as its nier’ts become known its use becomes
universal in every community. No family
will be without it after having once tested
its great value. It lias proved an inestima
ble blessing to thousands who have used it,
bringing hack health and strength to those
who were seemingly at death's door. Prepared
at the Laboratory of the
Home Medicine Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Price per Bottle, 25c. Extra Large Size, 75c.
A3” For sale by Druggists, A GENTS
General Stores, and Agents, jTlL "WANTED.
GET YOUR OLD PICTURES
Copied and enlarged by the
SOUTHERN COPYING CO., ATLANTA, GA.
Agents wanted in every town and county in the South.
Do yon desire an agency? Send for terms to agents.
If you cannot take an agency, but have pictures of 3-our
own yon wish eopiid, and there are no agents of ours in
your vicinity, write for retail prices, and send pictures
direct to us (either by mail or express), and they will re
ceive our best attention. Address SOUTHERN COPT-
ING CO.. No. 9 Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga. sepAoct
B U WaJU’o The habit of using Morphine,
' -**• " ""IRj * Gum Oj -'urn. Laudanum or Elixir
Painless of Opium cured o-inleesly by
A .MEItU’AX this Improved 1 emeu .
P|U |M Manufactured at At tan ra. Ga.,
■ r ," 7? * w * at reduced prices. Tested in
A-vrrii miTEi !hundreds of cases. Guaranteed
ANUDUIL. Particulars Free, address B.
M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga. Office No. 3a, over Linen
Store, entrance 33]..] Whitehall street.
YOUNG MEN FOR R BUsIn E E 0 SS i
by attending MOO HE’S BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,
Atlanta, Ga. One of the best practical schools in the
country. Circulars mailed free. sep!4-ly
0
NOTICE.
In compliance with law, notice is hereby given that ail
the stock owned by each of us in the Georgia Banking
aud Trust Company has been sold and transferred.
M. G. DOBBINS,
144-fim JNO. D. CUNNINGHAM.
TELEPHONES
S For Business Purposes, ours excel all others
» n Clearness and Volume of Tone.
^Illustrated Circular and testimonials for 3
cents. Andress J. R. IIOLCOMB, Mallet Creek, Ogio.
sept!4-4t
A rTITTTJ TTTQTr TJ A •PTT ln your own room
1 U JtUliOIl Jjii l £1 for 5 ceuts. This
is secured by a cheap apparatus recent (y patented, for the
production cf TURKISH anil VAPOR BATHS, at the
cost of the alcohol that supplies the heat. It has proved
more effective than the ordinary Turkish Bath House in
eradicating Rheumatism, Asthma, Catarrh, Skin Dis
eases, Dyspepsia, and all Nervous and Debilitating Mala
dies. Pamphlet free.
Lubin’s Portable Turkish Bath Co.,
augol-Gm 6S East 4th St., Cincinnati, O.
A SPECIAL OFFER
During July and August, 1878, and for no longer,
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sep21-lm
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