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TALMAGE IN HIS GLORY.
€ ,,le - v “K«*cciv«” Hint >vil|j ('0111111
V Kriini anil Sons: anil It!os-
soins into <iiorp>oii!$
Oratory.
! Mr. Talmagemet his congregation last night and
showed them that he had lost none of his supleness
ot Juno 01 language during his season abroad. Great
preparations for his reception at the Tabernacle had
been made by a committee headed by Major B R
Corwin. The church had been specially decorated
ana the platform was literally hanked up in flow*
ers. Ail along the edge ar e pots and gladioluses,
interspersed with hanging greenery. The organ
ist s stand was almost smothered in blossoms. At
each end of tlie platform the flowers rose up in a
wave, while on the small stand upon which Mr
la image performs a particularly large basket of
flowers had been set. Before the organ pipes
was a large crayon photograph of him, taken by
the instantaneous process, and representing him
with his lips pressed tightly together. It was
flanked on either side by the English and Ameris
can nags, while below it on a long tablet of flow-
ers was the word “Welcome.” Tickets enough
had been issued to fill the church twice over, and
all the ticket holders were expected to be seated
7 : 3°j when the ticketless public was to be admit-
te 1. Canopies had been spread across the sides
walk, and policemen stood ready to enforce the
carriage rules upon the four stages which arrived.
By 1 -3° the church was full, and when the doors
were thrown open to the general public there was
not room for much of a public.
In each pew copies of the “Song of Welcome”
had been laid. District-Attorney A. W. Tenney,
af master of ceremonies, came in from behind the
organ with the other gentlemen who were to oc
cupy seats on the platform, and just when the au
dience were leoking for Mr. Talmage to follow
them he came marching down the centre aisle with
H. A, Tucker and 8. H. Fr^nkenberg, of the re
ception committee. A “Talmage March,” written
for the occasion by G. W. Morgan, was played on
the organ by Mr. Morgrn, the organist, with a
coronet accompaniment. At the opening blast of
the cornet, in the mouth of a more vigorous blow
er even than Arbuckle, Dr. Talmage pricked up his
ears, which had been latent, gave a grin of recog
nition visible from three sides of the church and
looked about him jovially, and all the audience
stoop up and then tried to drown the organ and
comet in singing the ‘Song of Welcome,' but the
accompanists won bp several degrees of noise. The
Rev. Dr. Farley, of the Church of the Savior, made
an opening prayer which was listened to in respect
ful silence. Mrs. Evelyn Lyon Hegeman sang Thy
People shall be my people and thy God my God,’
and as an encore a variation of ‘Home, Sweet
Home’ adapted to the occasion, in which she said
‘The fairy land he longed to see was home, sweet
home.’ Mr. Tenney said he had many letters from
distinguished people, but he did notread them, and
introduced Bavnard Peters, who spoke of ‘Old
Probabilities, Marc Antony and the Presbytery.’
Mr. Talmage ‘had come back,’ Mr. Peters said, ‘to
a high and sublime resurrection in an armor of love
so strong and thick that no Presbytery or synod
can or shall stab him.’
The Rev. J. Lansing, of the Dutch Reformed
Church, said that Mr. Talmage had come back like
Grant (cheers) to reeieve the thankfulness of a peo
ple. He came back with the authority of him who
holds the wind in his fist and whom none would
care to rule out.
The Rev. Dr. Peck, of St. John's Methodist
church, said Mr. Talmage ‘was too big a man to be
pocketed by a little Presbytery. I welcome him,’
said Dr Peck, ‘as one who struck at gilded sin as
with tlie mailed hand of a knight.’ (Applause.)
The Rev. Dr. Ingersoll, of the Reformed Dutch
Church, said, “This is an ovation to an innovation.
I have watched Dr. Talmage, but be has never kept
still long enough for me to know what he was
about.’*
‘'Are you an American citizen yet?” asked Dr.
Ingersoll. “Yes, sir,” shouted back Dr. Talmage,
in a voice strong enough to wake the dead.
“Glad to hear it. Sometimes it does not take
four months to make an American citizen out of a
foreigner, and I was afraid it was < ne of those rules
that worke . both ways. I congratulate you on
vour appearant e—[laughter as Talmage looked over
Lis left shoulder behind his right ear and generally
surveyed himself]—and it reminds me of a story of
an old Scotch dominie who wished to become the
dominie of the laird. ‘Can ye preach inference
from a text?’ he was asked. Yes, e could do that.
‘And now what inference would ye draw from the
text, “The wild ass suuifleth up the east wind ?” ’
[Laughter.] ‘Ah,’ said the dominie, ‘I should infer
that he would snuffle it up a long time before he’d
get fat. ’ Now the point of this story is on the east
wind which has made our brother fat.”
The Rev. Dr. Sims, of the Washington Avenue
Methodist Episcopal Church, asked the connun-
drum, “Why should clergymen wear plaid vests at
tea; - ’ and answered it, “That they may have a
check on their stomachs.”
“Hold the Fort,” was played by Mr. Morgan, the
organist, and by the cornetist on his brass band,
while the audience remained standing. Then Miss
Grade Wattles, a pi etty little maiden from the
Sunday-school, presented Mr. Talmage with a bas
ket of flowers about as big as heaself, recited a brief
uoem of welcome and retired. Then Chairman
Tennv introduced Mr. Talmage as one “who, on his
recent visit had added new lustre to the American
knuckles ache, and then when he has you firm he
gives you an up-and- .own moti-n with the strength
of the walking beam of a steamboat and shakes his
good feelings into you- I could talk to you a week
on Eng’and, of the witchery of lace-work at Not
tingham, and of Sheffield where Rodgers cuts up
for knife-uandies the trunks of 400 elephants every
year—and if you lose your baggage on the way to
Sheffield you have a sympathy with those poor'ele
phants who have lost their "trunks. Then Brigh
ton. from w ich our coming queen of watering
places takes its name, and Torquay, where the rich
old fellows go to bathe away their rheumatism;
an 1 Rochdale to see the best friend of America in
England, gray-headed and big-hearted—trumpet
him aloud !—John Bright ! (Mr. Talmage trumpet
ed indeed.) I declare the bans of marriage between
England and America. There can be no division
between them. I declare the union and let no man
put asunder what God has joined ! When we got
back to S ndy Hook I saw the line of lights at Man
hattan Beach, but I looked further to the homes of
Brooklyn, where many hundreds of hearts were
waiting to receive us. We sailed up and saw Green
wood in the moonlight, where you and I expect to
lie down in cool slumber when the bother of this
life is over. Then when the Bothnia dropped her
anchor came the steamer with the officers. It
brought to us also the reporters. What a stupid
world this w ould be without the reporters. They
are alike fearless and fearful. They hover over us
by day and they watch our steps by night. (Laugh
ter.) In enterprise there is no press like our Amer
ican press. Monday' morning in London came, and
though there had been 000 powerful sermons the
day' before not one word was reported. The Lon
don papers do not understand the art of interview
ing. It is pure'y American. Scotch, Irish and En
glish reporters never go much nearer a speaker
than the reporter’s desk. Not so their American
brothers. They swarm around a man, cower him
with affability, cut him off when be gets prosy,
probe him for facts, squeeze him and drop him like
a lemon rind, draw him o it where he is too short,
double him and pat him down where he is too long.
Oh, blessed be the reporters ! (Laughter.)
‘Somebody sAd I was to remain in England be
cause I had a good time there. Would y«u go to a
man’s house to an entertainment and eat pickled
oysters and almonds and ice-cream, and finding ev
erything nice say to him, ‘Sir, I like your house
and I guess I’ll stay ?’ I come hack a full Demo
crat. Not to \ ote the Democratic ticket necessari
ly'—unless they put up good men. I have invited
a)l the English people to come over and visit me.
I invited them to my house, but I warned them
not to come all at once. We want them, and in fif
ty years the typical American will have the solid
brain of the German, the polishe t manner's of the
Frenchman, the artistic sense of the Italian, the
stanch heart of the English, the high-toned
piety of the Scotch, the lightning wit of the Irish.
Such is to be the American of the future—the man
next God in his image and his attributes.’
At ttie end of his talk Mr. Talmage strode to the
middle of the house and for a time was lost in a
cloud of ribbons and fluttering feathers.
JO Eg RYAN'S COLUMN,
GRAND OPENING
— OF —
2lews of the cuilccU.
THE BUSY WORLD,
Its Sunshine and its Shadows.
THE SOI TIIEICA STATES.
FALL AND WINTER
DRY GOODS, CARPETS ADD
SHOES,
At tlie Immense House
-OF-
JNO. RYAN
WHITEHALL STREET.
Atlanta, - - Georgia,
Will Open on To-morrow tlie
LARGEST
jBailvoatl (Oniric.
THE GEORGIA RAILROAD.
GEORGIA RAILROAD COMPANY, )
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE V
Avgusta, Ga.. Oct. 4;h, 1879
COMMENCING SUNDAY, 5th inst. the following Pas
senger Schedule will be operated :
No 1, WEST DAILY
Leave Augusta 9.35 a m
Leave Macon 6 05 a m
Leave Milledgevilie . 8 i:{ a m
Leave Camak n si a m
Leave Washington 10 45 a m
Leave Athens g 15 a m
Arrive Atlanta ' 5 00 p m
No. 2, EAST DAILY.
Leave Atlanta .7 45 a m
Arrive Athens 3 15 p m
Arrive Washington 2 00 p m
Arrive Camak 113 p m
Arrive Milledgevilie 4 30 p m
Arrive Macoa 6 30 p m
Arrive Augusta 3 23 p m
A o connection to or from Washington on Sundays.
COVINGTON ACCOMMODATION.
Daily—Except Sunday.
Leave Atlanta 5 05 pm
Arrive at Covington 7 05 p m
Leave Covington 540am
Arrive at Atlanta 7 40 am
DECATUR ACCOMMODATION.
Leave Atlanta 12 noon j Leave Decatur 12 35 pm
Arrive Decatur.. 12 25 p m I Arrive Atla j ta ... 1 to p in
No. 3, West Daily. .
Leave Augusta 5 30 pm
Arrive at Atlanta 5 00 am
No. 4, East Daily.
Leave Atlanta 6 20 pm
Arrive at AugUBta 6 20 am
Trains Nos. 2, 1. 4 and 3 will not stop at flag stations,
Connects at Augusta for all points East and Southeast.
Superb Improved Sleepers to Augusta,—Pullman
Sleepers Augusta to New York.
Only one Change from Atlanta to New York.
S. K. JOHNSON, Superintendent.
E. R. DORSEY, Gen. Pass. Ag’t.
Reduction of Passenger Fares.
| GEORGIA RAILROAD IS SELLING
] STRAIGHT A\l) EXCURSION TICKETS
i Betwoen a!! Station® on its Main Line and Branches
'■deluding the Macon and Augusta Railroad, at the
following
GREATLY REDUCED RATES;
Straight Tickets at 4 cents per mile
Excursion Tickets at 6 cents per mile,
(Good for Ten Days.)
Minimum for Straight Tickets, Ten Cents ; Exc-rsion
Tickets, Twenty Cents.
To secure the advantage of the Reduced Rates, tickets
must be purchased from the Station Agerts of the Com
pany. Conductors are not allowed to charge less than
the regular tariff rate of five (5) cents per mile.
Excursion Tickets will be good to Return Ten Days
from and including the date of issue. No lay-over priv
ilege attachesto these tickets, nor will any be granted
The company reserves the right to change, or entirely
abrogate these rates at pleasure and without notice.
E. K. DORSEY,
lov 9- Gen- Pass. Agen t.
STOCK OF
Silks,
• My good friends, said Mr. Talmage. after he
had for a space of five minutes stood twitching his
features at the audieuce, who rose up and waved
handkerchiefs and music sheets, and were on the
point of following some enthnsiast near the door
who proposed “three cheers for Dr. Talmage,”
“vou have made this the proudest moment of my
life. To my dving day I shall never forget this
scene The shout of farewell at Sandy Hook. May
“S as the two hips parted company, has had its
echo in this magnificent reception. I feel altogeth
er unworthv of it. It is only by extreme exertion
that I can master my emotion. IT hv this array of
eniif.enr clergy and professional men. Here are
ex-Mavors Hunter and Schroeder, and Juujre Neil-
son and Mavor Howell and Commissioner Nichol
son.’ 1 feel that never shall I be able were I ever
C-, much willing to erect a wall of sectarianism on
this platform. There would be Calvinsts pushing
it on one side and Armenians on the other; Episco
palians rocking it over one way and anti-ritualists
the other while the Baptists would come and pull
awav the floor and send my wail tumbling mt<5 the
water which is below us. I feel elimaeterated-(ap-
r.lanse — to-night. I ant glad to get home again and
more than ever I feel that this country is good
enough and big enough for any man who loves God
and does his level best.
‘Well, how have you been this summer V Mr
Talmage skipped and jumped to the other end of
the platform ‘I feel like Daniel O Connell when
he opened a speech to a Dublin audience by saying,
•How ar? vou. boys, and how are the women who
own vou At this there was a loud burst of.augh-
ter and it was renewed when Mr. Talmage followed
it up by what everybody took to be a big, big
«.;«]• **i briiifr vou,’ lie continued, a message
from everv one of your ancestors in England, Scot
land and 'Ireland. I bring you flowers from the
graves of vour sires. Ireland-oh : the beautiful
f„ “1 ' nex, to the gates of paradise for a glimpse of
heaven The land g of Emmet and Burke and Moore
With the silver necklace of KiDarney and the proud
crown of the Giant's Causeway on her brow, her
time i« indeed coming when she shall fulfil proph
ecy and become indeed the first flower of the earth
anti the first gem of the sea. Ob, how warm was
the welcome of her sons ! Why,, one of the first
men I met in Belfast says. ‘Renumber me to Pat
Campbell in America.' and there you are, Pat now’
S to the Chief of Police in the middle of
vi- l wants vou to write to him.
There wm a great roar of laughter for Mr. Camp
bell. and then Mr. Talmage continued:
.. Conriand she thinks nothing when she turns
out a ofdinarv citizens her Hugh Mdlers. her Sir
William Haimlor.s. Christopher Norths and John
U Hiturn -.. . t f e ir tha f I dare not turn over a
rtoneTn the Highlands lest I should bring to light
Roderick Dhu.* Mr-Talmageidrew out a supposi
tious broadsword. cut down a half dozen imaginary
foes Md stood at a ‘guard,’ while his audience
roared again. tH‘‘ r c ^ n e t i 1 come’' How a Scotsman
shakes hands with you : Just let ire illustrate. He
waces vour hand in his palm thus and brings his
finger over thus, and carries his thumb over from
th S other side and puts on the pressure until you;
GENERAL NEWS.
The first cotton factory in Maine was erected by
the Brunswick Manufacturing Company, which
was incorporated March 4,1809.
Item on the bill of fare at the White Sulphur
Springs Hotel, Virginia, “Engagement rings can
be had at the jewelry stores.’’
We are yet only at the beginning of tlie,era ol pro
longed good business times; wehope.it will not lead
people into vast speculations,
The general sentiment of the community, as it
regards the walking matches in New York, is one of
condemnation and disgust.
Wheat lias failed to ripen in England this year.
Continuous wet and low temperature have simply
ruined the British wheat crop.
Over $31,000,000 were imported into this country in
the regular course of trade in two months this sea
son, and it is still coming.
Thirty thousand school children assembled at
Woodward Gardens, San Francisco, the other day,
to welcome General Grant.
Another body of emigrants, this time from Russia,
are disgusted with Brazil, although they were well
treated while there.
ft cost a Boston West End druggist $5,208 for sell"
ing laudanum to 11 customer when sweet tincture
of rhubarb was ordered.
Our public debt was decreased during the month
of September $2,563,751. We like to record just such
paragraphs as that.
England’s hop crop is the lightest in many years,
and large importations from America are inevi
table.
Nail-making by machinery was originated in
Massachuset s in 1 10.
The Russian press predict “sooDer or later a war
of life or death with England.”
During the month of September there were re
ceived at Boston 22,859 barrels of apples.
The arrival ofimmigrarts at New Y'ork, during
the past week amounted to 3970.
Peppermint is the favorite perfume of the royal
family of the Sandwich Islands.
Thirty-five milk trains every morning find their
way to New Y'orkcity.
The receipts of the New Y’ork Custom House are
larger than for seven yeais past.
During the month of September there arrived in
Boston 310,009.
The wild pigeons have already begun their flight
southward, which would seem to be needlessly ear
ly.
GEORGIA.
Mr. John M. Darsey. of Liberty county, has invented
a rice-threshing machine.
As evidence of returning prosperity to the South,
we men ion that the Enterprise factory of Augusta,
Ga., has just received orders for 700 hales of goods;
equal to 'i of a year's production.
The Franklin Register says that one day last week a
lady by the name of Hines, living seven or eight miles
below town on the west side of the river, gave her little
child a match box to play with. The child was about
eighteen months old. and finding some water in a pan, fTYU Z Q linnCD PYYIYyI fYTTQ
the little fellow filled the matchbox with water from lllo llU UbC ClliJJIUj/ O
the pan and drank freely of it. In a short time the
mother noticed something wrong.with her child .and im-
mediatelysentfora physician, who did all he could to
combat the effects of the poison, but to no purpose, and
the unfortunate child died.
Americus Recorder; A gentleman in this county
a few days ago had four rooms of his house plas
tered, and by some unaccountable fortuitous combi
nation of circumstances a good many grains of corn
got mixed with the plastering, and now he has a
very promising late roasting ear patch growing all
over the walls of his house. Its location has one re- j
deeming feature--it is not likely to be effected by
early frosts.
i
Rome Tribuue: We learn'from reliable>ource that j
there exists a feeling of social equality among the [
negroes of this city, which is far ahead of anything j
we have ever before heard. The more educated mem- |
bers of the colored baptist church have determined j
to build a church of their own, and to close the door |
on all but the most aristocratic of their race. This j
is social ostracism with a vengeance, and is carried j
to an extent never thought of by the whites. 1
Dress Goods,
Hosiery,
Blankets,
Cloaks,
Dolmas,
Cassimeres,
Broadcloths,
Doeskins,
Flannels,
Shoes,
Carpets,
Window Shades and
Cornicing.
Ever exhibited in the
South,
Samples Sent on Ap
plication.
I4.fi i
ttliiij g>|ii “■
’§•^=2 ? H ®-3 ®*® , 5 S | © \ I .££ ®B 8^3
£ 3 a ® . §• £ Z i M ? UU1 Sg Is 18.5
g O?
oifiiiis
\S0****fKm P
kisj2
Eft. ~
fice .►^•2 9 s ^-5- « h 3
tv- -
tZt
kr
gas = g § =-=^fi
■■■ a £ o d o
over ninety men, and
runs through the en
tire Block from
Whitehall to Broad
Street,
Neuralgine.—This unfailing remedy for Neu
ralgia and Headache has won great favor among
the'afflicted. Neuralgine is not claimed to be good
for anything but Neuralgia and Headache. For
these troubles it is a specific.
Hutchinson & Bros., Proprietors,
14 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
AS DREW FEMALE COLLEGE.
Cl'THBERT. GA.
The Twenty-Seventh Scholastic year will open on Sep
tember 18th, proximo.
1. Faculty experienced and efficient.
2. Course of Study advanced and thorongh,
3. Building commodious and elegant.
4. Grounds the handsomest in the South.
5. Location unsurpassed for salubrity.
6. Society of Cuthbert refined and cultivated.
CHARGES :
Board and Tuition in all English and Classical Studies
for the year, everything included S188.00. Music (vocal
and instrumental!, French, German, Oil Painting, Pencil
Sketching, Fancy Needlework, and other extras, very
moderate.
Tuition free to all ministers of the Gospel in the regu
lar work.
^“College endorsed by the million.
A"o Special references needed.
For Catalogue and additional information address
Rev. A L. HAMILTON, D. D.,
President, Cuthbert, Ga.
N. B.—The celebrated Swedish system of Physical
Training for girls a specialty. Parents would do well to
investigate.
Note—Cuthbert is situated on the Southwestern Rail
road. the main line connecting Savaannah and Macon and
Montgomery, one hundred and eighteen miles south of
Macon, and twenty miles from Eufanla, hence accessible
from all points.
1.000 RILE TICKETS.
GEORGI— RAILROAD COMPANY, )
Office General Passenger Agent. /
Augusta, April 5th, 1879. )
C OMMENCING MONDAY, 7th inst.. this Company
will sell ONE THOUSAND MILE TICKETS, good
over main line and branches, at TWENTY FIVE DOL
LARS each. These tickets will be issued to individuals,
firms and families, but not to firms and families com
bined. E. R. DORSEY,
198-5t Gen. Pass. Agent.
Atlanta Female Institute.
SESSION OF 1779 AXD 1S80.
THE FALL TERM of this School will commence on
Monday, September 1st, with a full corps of compe
tent teachers. Music and French receive especial atten
tion. The Music Department is under the direction of
Prof. John Koerber, graduate of the Royal Conservatory
of Music, Munich, Bavaria, and formerly of the Augusta
Femal e Institute, Staunton, Ya.
For circular, apply to the Principal.
Mrs. J. W. BALLARD.
No. 173 Peachtree, St., Atlanta, Ga.
Just Behold and Read Attentively,
4 NY" ONE THAT HAS CANCER IN ANY OF ITS
-V- forms, Consnmption. Scrofn'a. Tetter, King's Evil,
and in fact all impurities of the blood, here is your place
to oe cured. My father was fortunate enough to buy
this wonderful receipt from one of the most eminent
physicians of Ireland, and has cured a very Bevere cancer
on" hi- lace and left no scar ; also cured a lady who (the
doctors said; had scrofula ; and one with Bronchitis, and
was reported had consumption. This medicine is taken
internally. All I ask is a trial. M. M. WILKES,
LaGrange, Ga., P. O. Box 110211-tf.
CINTRU SHORT LINE.
Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta
ltaili’ond Company.
From Augusta Only
33 HOURS TO NEW YORK-*
25 HOURS TO WASHINGTON!
ONLY OXE XIGilT OUT.
Only 27 Hours lo White Sulphur Springs.
NIGHT PASSENGER.
South,
DAY" PASSENGER.
North.
Leave Augusta—6:50a. m. I Lv Charlotte. . 12:45 a,m.
-^ rv Columbia — 10:4s a.m. Ar Columbia 5:30 a.m.
Lv Columbia 10:55 a.m. Lv Columbia 5.:35 a.m.
Ar Charlotte 4:00 p. m. | Ar Augusta 9:25 a.m.
Arrive at Washington via Danville and Lvnchburg, at
7:50 a. ill. next day. and at New Y'ork. by 'limited Ex
press from V asnington at 3:45 p. ra., or by mai[ train at
4:45 p. in., in time for Evening Boats and Trains for
SARATOGA, NEWPORT, BOSTON, ETC.,
And at Kiehmand at 6:30 a.m., connecting with James
River Boat at 7:15 a. in. on Tuesdays. Thursdays and
Saturdays for Old Point Comfort, to which point Round
Trip Tickets are on sale.
Through Pullman Palace and Sleeping Car from Au
gusta to Washington via Richmond.
Reclining Chair Car from Danville to Washington via
Lynchburg.
THEO. D. KLINE, Superintendent.
D. CARDWELL, Asst. G. P. A.
JOHN R. MACMURDO,
221-tf General Passenger Agent.
MARY SHARP COLLEGE,
located; AT
WINCHESTER,
TENNESSEE.
THE 30th Annual Session of this renowned institutic*
commenced oil the first Wednesday of September.
A full corps of nine experienced Professors; large and
commodious building.
Expenses :"S1S0 to $200 per year, including Literary
tuition, Board, Fuel, Washing and Lights.
A mountain town—pure air, never has been visited
by an epidemic. A refuge from Malaria, Yellow Fever,
Cholera and all diseases of lower latitudes.
For full information, Catalogues and Circulars will he
sent to any address, upon application to the president.
221-8t Z. C. GRAVES, LL. D.
nouejyinade by Advertising.
THLO. SHUTTLES & CO.,
3
fed
t*
W
►<
Wholesale Dealer in Supplies for
22 AUCTIONEERS, CANVASSING AGENTS,
g STREET MEN, GIFT ENTERPRISES,
M PEDDLERS, AND DEALERS IN
q GENERAL.
^ Catalogue mailed free to any address,
209 N. FOURTH STREET, ST. LOUIS.
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ICTORIAL
HISTORY of ««WORLD
I T contains 672 fine historical engravings and 1260
large double column pages, and is the most complete
History of the World ever published. It sells at sight.
Send for specimen pages and extra terms to Agents, and
see why it sells faster than any othtr book. Address
NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.,
Atlanta, Georgia.
lUff’State where advertisement was seen. 221-3m
REARING, ^LOCUTION,
AND DRAMATIC ART.
Miss Louise Clarke, formerly of Selma, Ala., will
take a class in Reading, Elocution and Dramatic
Art. Voice culture a specialty; stammering and
all impediments of speech permanently cured.
Round shoulders, badly developed chests,and weak
lungs, very much improved, and in all cases yjhere
tlie pupils will practice the exercises as instructed,
an entire cure is guaranteed.
For terms and particulars apply to the Johnson
House, 72. Marietta Street, Atlanta, Georgia.
References—B. M. YVooley, YV. M. A H. J. Low
ery, R. F. Maddox. Dr. YV. G. Owen, Chas. B. Wal
lace, Howard & YVood, W. M. Scott, W. W. Clayton,
J. H. Porter, C. M. Frazier, W. I). Luckey. 1m
Atlanta Medical College.
The Twenty-Second Annual Course of Lecture
will commence October loth, 1879, and close March
4th, 18S0.
Facuety—J. G. YVestmoreland, W. F. YVestmore-
land, YV. A. Love, V. H. Talialerro, Jno. Thad. John
son, A. W. Calhoun, J, H. Logan. J. T. Banks; Dem
onstrator, J. W, YVilliiams.
This well-established College affords opportunity
for thorough medical education.
It is in affiliation with, and its tickets and diplo
mas recognized by, every lending medical college
in the country.
Requirements for graduation as heretofore.
Send for Announcement, giving full information.
JNO. THAD. JOHNSON, M. D., Dean,
1m Atlanta, Ga
HAVE YOUR OLD PICTURES
Copied and enlarged by the
Southern Copying Co
ITLA.VTl,
GEORGIA.
Agents wanted in every town and county in the South.
Do you desire an agency? Send for terms to agent
If you cannot take an agency, but have pictures ofyour
ow you wish copied, and there are no agents of ours in
your vicinity, write for retail prices, and send picture
direct to us (either by mail or express), and thoy will re
ceive our best attention. Address SOUTHERN COFY’-
ING CO., No. 9 Marietta St., Atlanta. Ga.
YOUNG MEN
PREPARED
FOR BUSINESS
bv attending MOORE'S BUSINESS UNIVER
SITY. Atlanta,Ga., oneof thebest practical schools
in the country. Circulars mailed free.
HOP BITTERS.
(A Medicine, not a Drink,)
CONTAINS
HOPS, BUCHU, MANDRAKE,
DANDELION,
And tes Purest and Best Medical Qualities
OP ALL CTHER BlTTEBS.
THEY CURB
[All Diseases of the Stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver,
Jdneys. aad Urinary Organs, Nervousness, Sleep
lessness and es ecially Female Complaints.
S1000 IN GOLD.
ill be paid f cr a case they will not cure or help, oi
for anything Impure or injurious found in them.
Ask your druggist for Hop Bitters and try them
before you sleep. Take no other.
The Hop Pad for Stomach. Liver and Kidneys te
superior to all odll rs. Atk Druggists.