Newspaper Page Text
I
gocal Jttatters.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, Mat 24, i8?9-
ATLANTA CONDENSED.
The Telephone is becoming quite popular in At
lanta.
“Seven picnic parties sought Atlanta pleasure
grounds on Saturday last.
A grand excursion has been inaugurated in Atlan-
t to visit La Gr» on July 1 ith.
Mr. L. W. ScoviH" of the Kimball House, accom
panied by his wife and daughter, left for Virginia
this week.
Judge James Jackson having resigned, Mr. W.
A. Moore has been elected a school commissioner.
This is a good selection.
The Constitution thinks there is more building
going on now in Atlanta than there has been at any
one time in years past.
■The Southern’Presbyterian General Assembly re
cently in session in Louisville, sustained the action
of thehsynod of Georgia in tbe| Block-Leftwich
The Piedmont Air-Line Road now runs double
daily passenger trains. They leave Atlanta at 7:00
A. m.. and 3:30, p. h. ; arjive at Atlanta at 11:3°,
m. and 10:30 p. H.
The business men of Atlanta have held a meeting
for the purpose or taking into consideration aiding
in opening up the Chattahoochee river fromlceville
to West Point.
The next important ^gathering of a legislative
body in Atlanta will' be the State Legislature. We
suppose speeches on all important questions are al
ready prepared.*
On Sunday last, Mr. Alexander H. Baker,a work
man in the employ of Messrs. Longley & Robinson,
whilel seated in a chair at his residence on Butler
street, fell to the floor a corpse. Heart dis< ase.
President W. R. Brown, of the Young Men’s
Christian Association, has appointed Prof. W. W-
Lumpkin, of Athens, as a delegate to the Young
Men’s Christian Association, which meets in Balti-
The Commencement of Emory College which be-
gir s July 6th, Atlanta will have two speakers. Mr.
H ward Van Epps will address the societies and
Mr. F. H. Richardson will deliver the Sophomore
prizes.
Oa Tuesday night last, Rev. Dr. J. R. Groves de
livered his lecture at De Gives’ Opera House on
Modern Spiritualism. Tw o hours were consumed
in its delivery, but all were delighted from begin
ning to end.
Atlanta has an archery club, the Hiawatha, com
posed of young ladies and gentlemen who meet to
practice with the clsssic bow, and think of inviting
Maurice Thompson to lecture in the capital city on
the delights of the amusement he has brought in
vogue.
Savannah and Atlanta yie with each other in
pecnics this month. Nearly every day a merry
company crowds into the cars with baskets, para
sols, beaux, dogs and babies and are off for some
picturesque point on the road, to return rumpled,
and sunburnt but happy.
The Atlanta riding club is enjoying itself tnes-e
bright days. Some of the riders are early birds and
may be seen sweeping along while the dew is on the
grass. The ladies refuse to wear the high Derby
riding hat, for all the w-orld like a man’s stove pipe,
and very wisely toe, andare graceful in low hats
and floating plumes.
There are j et two murder cases on the criminal
docket of Fulton Superior Court, both of which will
soon come^up for a hearing. It is expected that
the case of the"State vs. Sam H. Hill, for the killing
of John R. Simmons, will be heard on Monday.
The Tye-Sparks case will also be heard before the
adjournment of court.
Kingston, Ga., was on the 23rd inst. the scene of
a terribly fatal rencounter between the town mar
shall, Mr. Burroughs and two brothers, named Mor
ris, from Ackworth (one of them the mayor of Ack-
worth) who were in Kingston with a Sundaj'-school
picnic party from their resident town. The Morris
brothers were drinking and quarreled with Bur.
roughs for his having collected a dollar from them
for violating a city ordnance. They struck Bur
roughs and drew their pistols upon him, and he re
torted by an appeal to the hip pocket, and a regu~
lor fusilade ensued which terminated in the killing
of both of the Morris brothers. Burroughs was un‘
hurt.
Gov. Colquitt made a speech in Brooklyn, N. J - ,
on Thursday night, 21st. inst., before the semi-cen
tennial Sunday School Union. From a special dis
patch to the Constitution we extract the following
in reference thereto:
The governor never had a grander occasion than
the one offered to-night, and he was equal to it. He
never made a more impressive or masterly speech 1
His unusually handsome figure and his noble ap
pearance won the hearts of his audience before he
had said a word. His speech was well-timed, and
fitted to the occasion, and yet it was an earnest and
able appeal against the prejudices that bad men are
trying to arouse anew. The speech will do great
good, and excited the most enthusiastic applause,
A prominent gentleman said to me, “If that
speech could be delivered by Governor Colquitt in
every city in the north, it would do more to set
things right between the sections than anything I
can conceive of. It is not so much what is said as
the sincere appearance of the man and his manner
of saying it.”
The case of the State vs. John Jones Treasurer,
Which has been on the court docket for several
years and has been occupying the time of the court
for more than a week past has at last been decided
adversely to Jones. Yesterday the jury brought
in a verdict against him and showed his indebted
ness to the State, according to their way of figur
ing, to be $92,195 as follows:
1. That Jones is liable for the $21,500 of Smith-
Angier bonds redeemed by the Fourth national
bank of New York and which were brought back
to the treasury bv Alton Angier and left in the
vault when it and its contents were turned over to
Joties, and which said bonds reappeared among
vouchers for which Jones subsequently obtained a
warrant and took credit. They also found $0,743,22
as interest on the same to date.
2. That Jones is liable for the $27,500 of like
bonds redeemed by the Fourth national bank after
closing the accounts of Angier and before the open
ing of the account with Jones, and which were
sdnt to Jones for file as required by law, and which
afterwards appeared among the vouchers for which
he obtained warrant and credit. Also $8,406 in
terest on the same to date.
3. That Jones is liable for the $40,145 of gold cou
pons, redeemed by the Fourth national bank, sent
out to Jones for file and afterwar Js used bj- him to
obtain warrant and credit. Also, $12,501 interest
on the same to date.
THE LATE COL. ROBERT A. ALSTON.
So many calls have been made for the issue of the Sunny South which con
tained Col. Alstons picture we take pleasure in reproducing the engraving.
LEADVILLEJOMANCE.
A Grass Widow’s Adventures in the New -Town.
Leadville is now passing through its most ro
mantic period, and irom now until we settle in
to a city of a 100,000 to 1 abitants, snch incidents
as we are about to rehue will be of not unfre
quent occurrence. The circumstances came to balcony affections, and utterly disenchanted,
the knowledge of a reporter at the dinner table
this afternoon, and acting on the hint, the cine
was followed np until at last one of those life
histories, which occur now and then, and in
spire new faith in human nature, was revealed.
Five years ago, a young man, whom we shall
call Smith, because that is not his name, was
married to a beautiful girl in one of the interior
towns of Iowa. Smith was then only twenty-
two years old, and, though intelligent, well ed
ucated and active, was only a clerk in a dry-
goods store, depending upon a meager salary
for subsistence. Common prudence should
have dictated to the young couple tbe propriety
of waiting, but they loved each other and laugh
ed at the future. The father ef the young lady
was one of the pioneers of the town,rich,haugh-
ty and purse proud. He was enraged at tbe
match, and coarsely told the delicate young girl
that she had made a bard bed for herself and
must lie on it. With an amount of money re-
diculously small, considering his wealth, he
dismissed her finally. The couple went to house
keeping, bat with all their love and economy,
failed to make both ends meet. The money
which the yenng wife had brought was expend
ed during the first year, and love which ‘langh-w
od at locksmiths ’ flew put, nf the window when
poverty came in at the door.
Misunderstandings, bickerings and quarrels
followed each other in rapid succession, and
finally it seemed to the unhappy pair that it was
impossible for them to live together, and after a
somewhat more violent scene than usual, Mrs.
Smith took her babe and went to her father’s
house only to have the door shat in her face.
Returning to her own home she found that her
husband had left a note Btating that she would
never see him again. In a fit of desperation,
she sold the stook of furniture, placed her babe
in the charge of her husband's parents, with
enough money to make it comfortable for a year,
aDd started for a large city to make a living.
This was only a little more than a year ago. The
old story of a young, refined and unprotected
female in a large city was re-enacted in her case.
She fell, and in three months had become reck
less. Always finding admirers, she drifted from
oity to city, occasionally sending a little money
for the oare of her babe, which she loved with
passionate tenderness. During all this time,
however, she never forgot her husband, having
learned that her love had been clouded, not ex
tinguished. Last week she arrived in Lmd-
vilie. As she descended from the coach she no
ticed in the throng of bronzed faces one that
seemed strangely familliar,though covered with
an enormous beard. It disappeared, and she
went to her lodgings with a s .range feeling oi
unrest and isolation. The next day, in walking
about town, she again encountered that face and
met a glance that caused her to tremble. In an
other instant both her hands were seized and
she knew that her husband, whom she had nev
er ceased to love, stood before her. He had
come to Leadville immediately after their sep
aration, had prospered, and supposing that she
was still at her father’s, was about starting home
with sufficient means to establish himself in
business in their native town. She told him
all; he forgave all, and the next day the strange
ly reunited oonple left to begin a new and hap
pier life.
fled.
QUEER EPIDEMIC CRAZES.
The Mewing, Biting and Dancing Manias. Whole
Communities Infected by Them.
Love Making in South Italy.
Love-making by signs is very general. The
method has many recommendations, for, as the
lovers are not seen together, and don't write,
they are net easily found out. Every window
opens down to the floor and has a balcony, so
that the neighbors have great facilities for the
pastime. The language of love is very simple;
it is always the same, and always interesting
and new. The gentleman beginB by taking out
his handkerchief, which he passes over his face,
looking all the time at the lady, and throwing
into his face and eyes expressions of admiration
for her, at the same time he compliments her on
her beanty by passing his haud over his mouth
and ohin. The lady’s answer is a biush, hiding
her face, except the eyes, behind ner fan u d
pointing to the rear to indicate that mamma is
coming, and retreats. Next lime the same p..,.7
on the gentleman's side, followed by po-> - bly a
glance, not of discouragement, from uo ia .
whereupon he hugs his left side, to xpr^’84 tuat
he loved her to destraotion; and th- la y flees
to return the next day, and observe the gentle
man, of course, to her great astonishment and
displeasure, repeat the previous gestures, end
ing by showing her the palms of his bands, and
looking entreaty, which ar:y young lady, even
unacquainted with tbe particular language in
question, would underniand to mean: ‘1 vow by
etc., that I love you more than, etc. Do you
love me ?' The answer to which, of course, de
pends on circ .instances; and thus the ancient
comedy proeeeds. it is understood to be ex
tremely interesting to tbe dramatis person to.
Love-making, short of the ‘ask papa* part, is
frequently oarried on in South Italy in this wav’;
and it not seldom happens that when papa is
inexorable, or the lady in a convent, the whole
Zerffi relates that an English physician war
once consulted by the mistress of a ladies' school
where many girls had become liable to fits oi
hysterics. He tried several remedies, but in
vain. At last, jnstly regarding the epidemic as
arising from the influence of imagination on the
weaker girls (one hysterical girl having infect
ed the others) he determined to exert a stronger
antagonistic influence on the weak minds ot
his patients. He therefore remarked casually
to the mistress of the school, in the hearing of
the girls, that he bad now tried all methods but
one, which hs would try, as a last resource,
when next he called - ‘the application of a red-
hot iron to the spine of the patients so as to
quiet their nervously excited systems.’
-i red-hot iron was never applied, for the
*: '-tacks ceased as if by me.,oii.
in anoint a uiennioneU by Zerm. a revival
mania in a large school near Cologne was sim
ilarly brought to an abrupt end. The Govern
ment sent an inspector. He found that the
boys had visions of Christ, the Virgin and de
parted saints. He threatened to close the school
if these visions continued, and thus to exclude
the students from all the prospects which their
studies afforded them. ‘The effect was as mag
ical as the red-hot iron remedy—the revivals
ceased as if by magic.’
A nun in a very large convent in France, be
gan to mew like a cat. At last ail the nuns be
gan to mew together every day at a certain time,
and continued mewing for several Lours to
gether. This daily oat-concert continued until
the nuns were informed that a company of sol
diers was placed by the polioe betoi’6 the en
trance of tbe convent, and that the soldiers
w- re provided with rods.with which they would
whip the nuns until they promised not to mew
any more.' • . • ‘In the fifteenth
century a nun in a German convent fell to bit
ing her companions. In the course of a short
time all the nuns of this convent fell to biting
each other. Tin- news of this infatuation among
the nuns soon spreaded and excited the stme
elsewhere; the biting mania passing from oon-
vent to convent through a great part of Germa
ny. It afterwards visited the nunneries of Hol
land, and even spread as far as Rome.'
The dancing mania which spread through a
large pact of Europe in the fourteenth and fif
teenth centuries, although it eventually attack
ed persona who were seemingly in robust health,
yet had its origin in disease. Dr. Hecker, who
has given a most complete account we have ot
this strange mania, in his ‘Epidemics of the
Middle Ages,’ says that when the disease was
completely developed the attack commeced
with epileptic convulsions. ‘Those affVcted fell
to the ground senseless, panting and laboring
for breath. They foamed at the month, and
suddenly springing up began their dance amid
strange contortions. They formed circles hand
in hand, and appearing to have lost all control
over the ; r senses continued to dance, regardless
of the bystanders, for toms together, in wild
delirium, until at length they felt to the ground
in a state of exhaustion. They then complain
ed of extreme oppression, and groaned as if in
the agonies of death, until they were swathed
in clothes bound tightly round their waists; up
on which they again recovered, and remained
free from complaint until the next attack.
While dancing they neither saw nor heard,
being insensible to all external impressions
through the senses; but they were haunted by
visions, their fancies ooDjuring up spirits, whose
names they shrieked out; and some of them af
terwards asserted that they felt as if they had
been im 1 eraed in a stream of blood, which
obliged t cm to leap so high. Others daring
tbe parexj stn saw the heavens open and the
Savior enthroned with the Virgin Mary, accord
ing as the religious notions of the age were
strangely and variously - reflected in their im
aginations.
Their 1 and extravagance of demeanor so
completely deprived them of their senses that
many of tutim dashed out their brains against
the v. alls and corners of buildings, or rushed
headlong into rapid rivers, where they found a
watery grave. Roaring and foaming as they
were, the bystanders could only succeed in re
straining them by placiug benches and chairs
in their way, so that by the high leaps they
W6re tempted to lake, their strength might be
exhausted. As soon as this was the case they
fell, as it were, lileless to the ground, and by
very slow degrees recovered their strength.
Letter from Lexington, Va,
Among many of the nice things in the last num
ber of t he Sunny South I noticed a wood cut and
condensed biography of that large hearted gentle
man, Mr. W. W. Corcoran. The cut is true to life
if I may be allowed to judge from its close likeness
to a lull length oil painting of Mk. Corcoran which
hangs in the Washington and Lee University chap
el and which is said to be an excellent portrait of
the original.
Lexington has now a new paper, the Rockbridge
Enterprise. It is to be conducted in the interest of
the ‘•Readjusting” party in this state.
Col - McDonald, professor in the Va. Military In
st tute, has conclusively demonstrated the success
of his newly invented fish ladder. He has built one
in North River (which sk rts our city) and fish are
passing over in sboais.
CLUB RATES.
PREMIUMS ! PREMIUMS !!
WORK AND PAY FOR ALL.
We make the following liberal propositions and
everybody can secure a handsome prize.
For 3 subscribers at $2.50 each, we will send a copy
of any of the standard poets bound in geld. Or for
$3» 2 5 we will send the Volume and Sunny South
to any address.
For 4 subscibers, a beautiful photograph or auto-
‘S SI i2W£*b23 i “I*«•*■» 1»P» -1 *»— to *3.50; or
to perfect this simple and inexpensive necessity. j we w **l send Jennie June’s Cook-book and
The one in opeia'ion here is in a dam five feet high ; Sunny South one year for $3.50.
‘The
affair, including agreement and preparations to
run away, is transacted solely by gesture—apro
pos of which it is on record that on an occasion
of this sort, all being prepared, and the gentle
man in the street, waiting at the lady’s door
with a carriage intended to carry off the happy
couple, an awful gruff voice was heard asking:
‘Are you there?’ Tbe lover looked toward the
voice, saw that it came from the object of his
and the ladder manipulates the water so that the
eleven mile current is reduced to one of about two
miles an hour, the fish shooting the dam at an angle
of 1 hirt.y degrees. It is well known that fish easily
swim against a current of six miles an hour. Col.
McDonald’s ladder of this size cost him about seven
ty* five dollars. A ladder in the Susquehanna river
at a dam of the same height as this one cost fifty-
two thousand dollare.
The farmers are rejoicing on account of the fine
rain which has just fallen- This will be of great
benefit to the corn and clover but the wheat crop
in this section is a failure beyond remedy.
The inevitable Pinafore has at last made its ap
pearance here. The performance was for the bene
fit of the Lee Mausoleum. M.
Lexikgtojv, May 19, 1879.
EVIL SPEAKING.
Many a man despises another, with whom he
never hail dealings, or to whom he scarcely ever
spoke. Some person has whisperad a slander in his
ear. He believes tbe ill report and thus shuns and
despises his neighbor. A slander stops not here.
This man has intimate friends to whom he opens
his heart, and who catch his feelings and also be
come prejudiced against one, who perhaps may be
one of the best men in the community. “Behold
how great a tire little sparks kindleth,” says the
apostle. A man who breathes a word against an
other, is little aware of the great injury he pro
duces. He cannot recall that word if he would. It
has gone forth and is repeated and believed by
scores. Men are not careful when they speak, and
the slander is added to, until the character of one
comparatively pure, is made black and offensive in
the extreme. Stop, man! Do not speak at ran
dom. Utter no falsehood, no matter what may be
your feelings towards another. Evil speaking is a
sin of which hundreds are guilty, who are not sen
sible of the injury they are producing. They im
agine that language dies, when it falls from their
lips. Not so; it Jives and is ever active for good or
for evil. Be careful then when you speak and how
you speak. Misrepresent nobody. It is a good rule
to observe—if you cannot speak well of another,
not to speak ill. A little care will save a deal of
trouble an i prevent the-e animosities and hatreds
For 4 subscribers a fine chromo 24X30 inch wal
nut and gilt frame; or chromo and paper for $3.50.
For 18 subscribers we will send Websters Una
bridged Dictionary; or dictionary and paper for $ 12.
For 4 subscribers a heavy filled gold ring; or ring
and paper for 3.50.
For 2 subscribers, a solid silver thimble; or thim
ble and paper for $3.00.
For 8 subscribers, a set of heaviest plated tea
spoons; or spoons and paper for $5.00. For table
spoons or forks add four subscribers or $1.50 to this
offer.
• For 18 subscribers, a solid silver hunting case
watch; or watch and paper for $12.00.
For 36 subscribers, a gold watch, open face.
For 10 subscribers, a good clock or clock and pa
per for $5.50.
For 4 subscribers a stereoscope and 12 views or
same with paper for $3.50.
For 50 subscribers, a new $57 Wheeler and Wil
son sewing machine with tucker and ruffler, or a
new White sewing machine, former price, $75.00
Clubbing Willi Other Papers.
this side of the grave. Will you speak evil of an-
slander? Will you lie? If so, we
01 her? Will you
never desire j'our acquaintance. We are sure if
there is a God, he wiil present his coldest frown to
those who backbite, and defame, and labor to cov
er with infamy a name that is above reproach.
Let every one avail himself of the
following remarkable propositions and
secure his reading matter for the next
twelve months. Such inducements have
never before been offered to the public.
Any paper or magazine may be secured
in connection with the Sunny South at
very nearly the price of one, and spe
cial attention is invited to the unparal
leled offer. Other publications will be
added to this list. The amounts oppo-
posite the papers mentioned will secure
both for one year, postage prepaid.
'• When Dom Pedro beheld the last invention of
steam engine at the Centennial, and was told that
it would make more revolutious in a minute than
any other ever produced, he wisely remarked that
the inspired inventor must have been a South Amer
ican, where revolutious were the staple products of
republics.
Answers to Correspondents.
L
•Why,’ asked a governess of her little charge,
do you pray to God to give us our daily bread ?
Why don t we ask for four days, or five days, or
a week?’ ‘Because we want it fresh,' replied
the ingeDioas child.
‘"What is the game of Polo?” arks George W. S.
of Macon, Ga. “Is it anything like base ball?” It
is more like the tourney, being played on horse
back, or rather pony back, for the English rule for
polo demands that the animal ridden should not ex
ceed fourteen hands. There is a ball in it, however.
It is thrown up by a man, .who advances midway*
between the two lines of mounted polo players, who
at once charge for the ball as soon as it is thrown
up, bl andishing their mallets to strike it towards
the goal, a space marked by poles bearing white
flags. Polo bid* fair to take the place of base ball
as a fashionable game, and polo clubs will be estab
lished in all the large cities.
F. H. A. Chattanooga says: Can you tell me who
are generally conceded by scholars to be the great
est poeisafter Ho.ner, Shakspereand Milton? Goethe
and Dante are usually placed beside the great trio
you have named, and if you give the word poet,
the mediaval meaning of creator, Scott should have
his seat little if any lower than these. The Genius
of the Island Wizard with its universal sympathies,
irs broad success across the ages, comprehending the
life of each, and its strong vitality make it worthy
almost to rank with Shakspere’s.
Mississippian, Talladega, Ala., says: Please settle
a disputed point. A lady of my acquaintance on
whom I cai led last night, disparaging the Mississip
pi river said the Amazon was seven miles wide. I
told her she was certainly mistaken; and that I
thought four miles was its greatest width. How is
it? The lady is right, there are some portions of the
Amazon river, where the main channel is seven and
even eight miles wide, but there are others where
it is narrowed into hardly a mile. It is very varia
ble in breadth, like the St. John’s in Florida, but
five miles is the greatest average width of the main
channel.
Callie, Colquitt co., Ga., writes: I am seventeen
years old and have a brother two years older. Our
father is a farmer, who manages to make both ends
meet and that is all. He wishes us to stay at home
and do house and farm work, but we are both exceed
ingly anxious to do something better. It is so dull
here, no chance for improvement, or risiDg in the
world. We are both pretty good accountants,
don’t you think we could get a place in a store in
some city? Do you really think, Callie, that
“place in a store” to stand behind a counter and
wait on anybodj- that calls for your services, is bet
ter than to stay at your own home and help with
the housework ! We do not. Nor do we think
measuring calico, or weighing bacon and flour in
somebody’s store i» better for your brother than
raising the bacon and flour on his own farm. The
towns are full of young men and women on the
wild hunt for places. They are helping to retard
the progress of the country, consuming when they
should be producing. Pity they were not all at
work in the country, raising corn or chickens; at
least all who have homes however humble. The
country is “dull” we know, and the people, many
of them, ere behind the times, and need polishing
and brightening up sadly. But the dullness of the
country is not worse than the worry of the town,
the struggle to keep up with fashion and society)
the fretting over slights and over the knowledge of
being “looked down upou,” ine temptations, the
heat, dust, headaches aud a thousand and one little
worries and discomforts. Best stay at home and
try to lesson the dullness by calling out the re
sources within j r ourselves. Take one or two good
periodicals, talk about what they tell of the world’s
thought and work; try to get j’our neighbors to
read, form a little social club to meet at stated
times for improving and entertaining conversa
tions and readings. And tiy to cultivate that best
of accomplishments a contented spirit. *
Sunny South and Lippencott’s Magazine,
and Cricket on the Hearth,
and Hall's Journal of Health,
and Fireside Companion,
and New York World,
and “ “ Home Journal,
and Saturday Journal,
and The Nation,
and Spirit of the times,
and New York Independent,
and Christian Union,
and Scribner’s monthly,
and Philadelphia times,
and Phronological Journal,
ani Appleton’s Journal,
and Popular Sc’“no» Monthly,
and North American Review,
and Scientific Farmer,
and New York Herald,
and Household Companion,
and American Cultivator,
and National Police Gazette,
and New York Graphic,
and “ “ Daily Graphic, 11 25.
and N. Y. Sunday Times, 3 25.
and N. Y. San, 3 25.
and N. Y. Times, 3 25.
and N. Y. 111. Christian Weekly 4 25.
$ 9 25.
3 65
3 0C
4 25.
3 25.
3 75.
4 25.
9 90
6 75.
4 75.
4 75.
5 45.
•3 5 0 .
3 76.
4 50-
6 00.
6 00.
2 95.
3 15.
2 25.
3 76-
5 25.
4 00.
and Boston Traveler,
and Waverly Magazine,
and Leslie’s 111. Newspaper
and
and
and
and
and
’and
and
and
and
and
3 25.
6 95.
5 25.
5 25.
5 25,
5 25.
Chimney Corner,
Ladies Journal
Illus. Times,
Boys & Girls W’kly 4 00.
Lady’s Magazine, 5 00.
Sunday “
Popular Monthly,
Pleasant Hours,
Budget of Fun,
Dcmorest Mag.
and Wide Awake,
and Saturday Night,
and Atlantic Monthly,
and American Agriculturist,
and Littell’s Living Age,
and Youth’s Companion,
and Watchman (Boston),
and Eclectic,
and Scientific American,
aud Wesleyan Christian Ato.,
H Hazel’s Yankee Blade,
Sunny South aud Boys and Girls of the
South, one year for
4 50.
4 50.
3 25.
3 25.
4 75.
3 25.
4 75.
5 45.
3 25.
9 00.
3 50.
4 20.
6 25.
4 75.
4 75.
3 75*
$ 3 50
Artucvtiscmcut.
M0NLYJ0 LOAN.
THE UNITED STATES HOME AND DOWER ASSO
CIATION, OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Incorporated 1871. Charter Perpetnal.
CAPITAL $1,000,000.
PAID CAPITAL 400,000.
Receives deposits for accumulations, issues certificates
of deposit for annuity and dowry, grant* long term loans
on city, town, farm and church property, at from 8 to 6
per cent, per annum.
fcS^Oflice Gull'Department, Atlanta, Ga.
E. A. WHITCOMB, Manager.
Sunday School Books $3.60 per Doz.
(Single copy post paid 35 cents).
The Good Life, Welcome Tidings, Heavenly Carols,
Heavenward, Gospel Hymns, 1. 2, 3, Gospel Songs.
Brightest & Best Pure Gold, Pure Diamonds,
T1 e Gem, The Amarlnth, Every Sabbath,
Freeh Laurels, or any of the Singing Books used for Choir
o r Sunday School. Write for everything waDtod from a
fi rst-class Music Emporium. Prompt Attention. Low
est prices, AddreBs Phillips A Crew.
Nos. 8 4 10 Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga.
THE LARGEST PIANO, ORGAN? and MUSIC
STORE ROOMS IN GEORGIA.
MESSRS. PHILLIPS & CREW give the entire atten
tion of competent musicians and salesmen to this one
important part of their LARGE STORE ROOMS.
Guitars.—Maple Peg-head, $4.50; Patent Head 86,
$6.50, $8.
Guitars.—Imitation Rosewood, Patent Heaa, $9 $10,
$12.
Guitars.—Rosewood Patent Head, Inlaid, $12, $13.50,
$15, $20.
Guitars.- hosewood, Patent Head, Richly Inlaid $20
to $50.
Gnitars.—“The Martin,” ‘‘Bruno” and “Foote,"
special prices—careful selections made.
Twelve cents, (tour .'c. postage stamps), will secure,
postpaid, one of ( ur three- eng»h Ital.au Violin Treble or
s as mpie. V
Guitar E strings as *: mpie. Vio iu Strings 40 to 70c, per
set. Guitar Strings 90c. to $1.50per set.
Send your orders to
Phillips & Crew,
199-4t ATLANTA, GA
Cl
V /