About The sunny South. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1875-1907 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1887)
The Farmers’ Alliance, of Kobeson county, N. 0 , is arranging for a grand fanners’ mas* meeting in Ilia* county about the first of Sep tember next. Tbat it will be a success none can doubt who knows the people of that county. l)r. G. A. Foote, of Warrcnton, N. C., re ports a lot of clover that is five feet eleven inches high, and it is estimated will yield at least l-.iHSi poundsjper acre. Is there an acre of cotton in Warren county that will yield as much profit? Out of nineteen graduates at the commence ment of the Massachusetts Agricultural Col lege the other day, ten have already chosen farming in some of its forms as their business in life, and two will follow mechanical pursuits. There will be only one lawyer come out of that class, strange to say. Feed Liberabiy. It is not an uncommon error to suppose that animals that eat but little are the most profi table. So long as an animal is capable of di gesting and assimilating it, the greater the amount of food it consumes the more profitable are the returns; for the proportion of the food that toes to supply the waste of tissue, and run ill • animal machinery is less when a large than when a small amount is eaten. Wheat in Florida. l)r. lluchingson, of Lake City, has a hunch containing seventy-live heads from a single chance grain of wheat which came up among the peas, and half of which was plowed up. The heads are long and heavy, and are not bearded. Mr. Moodie has just harvested quite a crop of bearded wheat, which is very tine. It is evident that wheat will do well and pro duce protitably in that section. Canning Factory. Mr. I, C. Ileynes will shortly start in I.ex in'-ton, X. C., a factory for the purpose of can ning fruits, vegetables, etc. Mr. Heyr.es is one of Lexington’s most enterprising citizens, and we predict success for him in his business, With our splenpid native fruits and vegetables there is no reason why home institutions should not supply our home markets with these goods at an advantage to the retailer as well as to the canner—Charlotte Observer. Selecting a Stallion. When selecting a stallion look first carefully, at his head. The nostrils should be large; see that the eyes are full and bright, good breadth between the eyes, ears short and tapering, these indicate a gentle disposition. In a horse of this kind with proper training you can mould and bring every muscle under your con trol. The loin should be strong, tbe back well coupled, quarters long from point to point of hips. Jle should also be sound in wind and limb. A horse that is driven about and hur ried from place to place, perhaps over-heated and made to cover from four to six mares a day should be regarded as unsafe. The colt will lack vitality. I have often heard persons speak of tending a stallion as being a low busi ness. This i- a mistake, for the man who will give his time a;, i energy to '.lie self-sacr ficiD business of improving ilie stock of horses in any of its branches deserves the respect of the intelligent people. Tin re is no vocation in which man is engaged but what this animal is used to further his purpose.—.V. M. Alexan der, in Farm and Hume. 1 Farmers of the Future. Farming in the year 1>S7, and every year hereafter, will be depending for success more and more upon the kuo sledge, training and skill of the farmers. The child of the family, who is of the clear est mind, most ready to study, most given to observation of Cause and effect, quickest of apprehension, best adapted to the use of tools and machinery, who loves horses and cattle— this child should be trained for the farmer. The men, such as these children will make, are to be the successful farmers of the future. It is useless to expect the lazy, shirking, in different boy and man will do well on the farm, or make his mark in that direction. Such may make passable men in other pursuits, but the farmers hereafter must be wide awake, culti vated men, with a knowledge of the principles which lie at the foundation of thtir profes sion. It is on this account that the farmers of to day should take the necessary means to secure a thorough agricultural education for those who arc expected to take their places. They should take the measures necessary to make ihe colleges, established by the United States, practical agri cultural schools for their chi’dren. This depends wholly upon tile farmers them selves, who by a determined spirit can accom plish wonders in this direction. The failures in crops often resul, from the superficial knowledge of those who have, them in charge. They expect nature to supply all their own deficiencies, and wheu she does not, they lay their ill success upon the season. The farmer of the future must leave as little for nature to supply as possible, must be able to forestall all the deficiencies of tlie season. It can be done; but only when the farmer is a thoroughly educated, trained and capab'e man, iu his department of life.—New Farm. Training Tomatoes. The Agricultural College of 'Michigan made experiments last year with tomatoes. The methods in training were employed this year, and another method last year. All the exper imental tomatoes were tied to one, twoorthree stakes about four feet high. This method lias many disadvantages. It requires much labor to lie the plants, a labor which must be repeat ed at short intervals throughout the growing season. Tbe tomatoes do not ripen evenly and early and it requires extraordinary time and labor to pick them from the dense mass of stems and foliage. Although the outlay for the stakes is small, this method of training is the most cx- jiensive of the four. Last year we laid old hoards lengthwise tbe rows and close to the plan's, supporting them upon pieces of scants line or blocks laid upon the ground, and placed upon the boards. This method kept the tomatoes clean, but it appeared to increase tbe ro,. It certainly caused the lower ripe tomatoes to rot prema turely. In our market patch this year we adopt two sorts of racks. Tbe first was a separate rack for each plant. A stake was drived on either side of tbe plant, about fifteen inches from it, and learning so as to make an angle of about twenty degrees with tbe perpendicular. Upon these stakes three cross-slats were nail ed, in the manner of a ladder. The plant was allowed to lop upon the racks. It was found necessary to tie it, however, and even then branches slipped off or broke themselves over the slats. The second of these racks was con tinuous throughout the row. About every six or eight feet a stout stake was driven on either side of the row and fif teen inches from the plant, the stakes when firmly driven standing some over a foot high. A strip of old boards was nailed near the tops of the posts along either side of the row. . Then edgings were tacked across from one side to the other, four about each plant and a foot apart. The plant now found itself growing up between the horizontal edgings, and as it be gan to lop tbe rack held it above the ground. Upon this simple rack the tomatoes needed no tying nor training and they spread themselves freely to the sunlight. Circulation of the air under the racks was so free that there was no unusual danger from rot. This is decidedly the best rack which we have tried. We noticed, also, tbat the fruit ripened more uniformly here than on the plants which were tied to stakes. We shall try other methods of train ing next year. It appears advisable to try but a very few sorts each year in order that they can be tested upon a larger scale. <£5cm$f of Cfjougljt. The Texas Wool Clip. The receipts of wool at Colorado City at last accounts were !K)5,000 pounds—and it was es timated that the receipts at that point would reach 10,00,000 pounds. Colorado City is in Mitchell county, in the North-Western part of the State, and is a wool market. One firm marketed <i,K0O pounds there at 18 cents, and another wool grower marketed (10,000 pounds. Another marketed 05,000 pounds. Much rain has fallen there of late—there are ponds of wafer where none were known before, and the level ground was so Hooded that prairie dogs were drowned by the thousand. Texas wool is sold largely in Boston—210,000 pounds having been self there in one week—one sale of 0,500 of medium at 20 to 27 cents. Mrs. Crosson, one of largest wool growers in I’rcsidio county—about one hundred and fifty miles South-Fast of El Paso—writes: “Have hail good rains up here lately, and sheep are all fat. I saved about 4,000 lambs this year, which was 00 per cent., and parties generally in my vicinity have done well.” Another firm, owners of 1,000 ewes and 300 last year’s lambs, sheared 11,000 pounds of wool, averaging eight and one-half pounds. The wool was sold at nineteen aud one-half cents per pound. Ceorgia Agricultural Association. The annual convention of the above named Association will be held at Canton, on the 0th of August. It will meet in one of the most interesting sections of the State—a section which in the not distant future will exercise, through its numbers and wealth, a controlling* influence in the policy of the State. Railway and other enterprises projected and being built, and which will be pushed to comp’etic n and successful operation at an early day, will stimulate immigration, encourage investment and 'enter;iri.se and promote development. Every county should be represented at the coming Convention, and the Marietta & North Georgia railway would serve its own interest and at the same time do the State a great ser vice by giving low rates. The subjects to bo discussed and the speak ers have been selected as follows: Dr. L. C Mattox, Clinch county, “The Im provement of Worn Out Soils;” Maj. C. II. Smith, (Bill Arp), of Cartersville, “Farm and Fireside;” 11 .1 Guinn, Conyers, and Hon. 11. | L. Berner, Forsyth, subjects not announced; lion. W. C. Glenn. Dalton, “Law in its Hala tions to Progrtss;” Dr. W. I.. Jones, Athens, “Experiments on the University Farm;” Dr. .1. A. Cook, Veterinary Surgeon, Atlanta, “Diseases Destructive to Domestic Animals;” Gov. Gordon and Senator Brown will both be present, but decline to promise to deliver ad dresses. Jersey Cattle and Their Crades. Not long ago we transferred to our columns a brief statement made by Mr. Richard Peters iu regard to improving herds of cattle, con taining his advice to beginners to introduce bulls of tbe best strains and breed upwatds from scrub stock. Subjoined we are glad to present a practical illustration of the sound ness of that advice, supplied by a correspon dent of the (Albany, N. Y.) Country Gentle man. We earnestly commend it to the con sideration of our agricultural friends: “At first I filled up with grades, which were afterwards replaced with full-bioods. In 1883 I bought Prim Maid 10,021 from the Houghton farm herd. These are the only females I ever bought. Have changed bulls occasionally to prevent close breeding, always buying as good as my means would permit. In changing from natives to grades anil thoroughbreds 1 had to let heifers take the place of mature cows, but when I got a majority of them in the dairy the hatter product began to increase, and has con tinued to increase ever since. I time them so as to have part of the cows fresh in the spring, and part in the fall or ear ly winter. For the last three years I have sold over 20(1 pounds of butter per cow. In 1830 the dairy consisted of an average of nine cows (two of which were heifers), which pro diced 2205 pounds of butter, an average yield of 251 2pounds per cow. Tho amount sold was 2055 pounds, or 228 pounds per cow. The net income per cow for butter sold was 851.78.” The Wheat of the World. The Department of Agriculture, in its March report, contains some valuable tables. Among these are the products of the wheat-producing countries of the world, reduced to bushels. The countries not included in the table arc for the most part those in which wheat holds a very subordinate position among the staple food products and which have no appreciable influence upon the general wheat trade of the world. The fact that the wheat product of the world varies comparatively little, one year with another, will render ti e table given below valuable for reference. It is as follows: Countries. America: United States .... Canada - Arscutiue Republic and Chill - Europe: Austria-Hungary - Belgium Denmark - France G-rmany .... Great Britain and Ireland Greece - Italy ------ Netherlands - I’aitugal - Koumahii - Kussta (including Poland) Servta - Spain ------ Sweden and Norway - Swliz >rlaud .... Turkey AisFalasli - Inc la ------ Egypt Algeria Total ....... 2 031,322 283 —Farm, Field and Stockman. Indusuy has annexed thereto the fairest fruits and the richest rewards.—Barrow. There never was any heart truly great and generous that was not also tender and compas sionate.—South. Government mitigates the inequality of pow er, and makes an innocent man, though of the lowest rank, a match for the mightiest of his fellow subjects.—Addison. Folly consists in the drawing of false con clusions from just principles, by which it is distinguished from madness, which draws just conclusions from false principles.—Locke. I have no more pleasure in hearing a man atteuipting wit, and failing, than ill seeing a man trying to leap over a ditch, and tumbling into it .—Johnson. Tbo responsibility of tolerance lies with those who have the wider vision.—George Eliot. Perpetual pushing and assurance put a dif ficulty out of countenance, and make a seem ing impossibility give way.—Jercnnj Collier. Kings wish to be absolute, and they are sometimes told that their best way to become so is to make themselves beloved by the people. This maxim is doubtless a very admirable one, and in some respects true; but unhappily it is laughed at in court.—Itousscau. There is no slight danger from general igno rance; and the only choice which Providence has graciously left to a vicious government is either to fall by the people, if they are suffered to become enlightened, or with them, if they are kept enslaved and ignorant.—Coleridge. Should any one ask me, What is the first thing in religion? I would reply, the first, sec ond and third thing therein, nay, all, is humil ity.—,S’f. Augustine. Never contract a friendship with a man that is not better than t' yse'.i.—Confucius. It was not till after the terrible passage of the bridge of Lodi that the idea entered my mind that I might become a decisive actor in the political arena. Then arose for the first time the spark of great ambition.—Napoleon. We should render thanks to God for having produced this temporal light, which is the smile of heaven and joy of the world, spreading it like a cloth of gold over the faco of the air and earth, and lighting it as a torch, by which we might behold his works.—Caussin. If Wealth come, bewaro of him, the smooth, false friend! There is treachery in his proffered hand; his tongue is eloquent to tempt; lust of many harms is lurking in his eye; he hath a Hollow heart; use him cautiously.—Tapper. We neither know nor judge ourselves; oth ers may judge, but cannot know us; God alone judges, and knows too.— Wilkie Collins. In anal} zing the character of heroes it is liaidiy possible to separate altogether the share of Fortune from their ov/u.—IIallum. Curious' fttctjf. Bushels. 457 215,000 37,219 231 - 28.810,025 143.C01 488 - 18 514 488 4 731,531 - 299 107 020 82 (910,190 - 05 284.353 4 927 540 129,442 133 4 932.259 - 8 228 750 22 019,063 213 907 984 4 523 813 131 060 000 2 408 025 - 1.645 750 41 143.730 - 22 238 146 238 317 032 - 16 4 57,M10 32,915 000 Profitable Tomato Culture. G. D. Younglove & Sons, of Gainesville, Florida, have shipped a total of over 4,000 crates of tomatoes the past season. The aver age selling price is something over $1 00 per crate, leaving a net profit of about-51 perorate. Mauy tomato shippers have not been so suc cessful as the Messrs. Younglove, but their success is wholly due to the fact that they gave their business their own time and attention. Of course they made big money out of their to matoes, but any person who will go at the us- iness in tbe proper manner can bj equally suc cessful. F'lorida vegetable farmers can, with proper care, make a financial success of the business. The Way Tennessee Spends the Money lion. B. M. Ilord, Commissioner of Agricul ture for Tennessee, seems to be working to make the department pay the farmers of tbat State. He has issued a circular in which he calls on the farmers of the State to organize by counties and to boll local fairs annually. He proposes, ss an inducement, to pay premiums to the exhibitors out of the funds of the de partment. East Tennessee Wheat Crop. Heliable reports to the Chattanooga Times, from a large number of counties in East Ten nessee, indicate that the wheat crop this sea son is the largest raised for twenty years. The grain is of fine quality. There will be no leap year between 1896 and 1(104. By a new process of steaming white wood and submitting it to pressure it can be made so tough as to require a cold chisel to split it. To rcinovo kereosene from carpets lay blot ters of soft brown paper over the spot and press with a warm iron. Hepeat with fresh papers and the spot will be removed. A peculiar black paper, made from the bark of certain trees, serves the purpose of slates in Siam and Burmali, the writing being erased by means of betel leaves instead of with a sponge. It has been predicted that the amazing popu larity in which celluloid is held will one day get a set-back by a serious explosion in some store or private dwelling in which there is a quantity of the stuff. Among the many curious and interesting works of the largest library in the world, at I’aris, is a Chinese chart of the heavens, made about (100 B. C. In this chart 1100 stars are correctly inserted, as corroborated by the ob servations of modern astronomers. The death rate of England is decreasing, and 150 people are added yearly to each 10,1810. At the present rate of increase, according to Dr. M. Tidy, Hie country’s population 2,000 gener ations hence will be 27,200,000,000, or enough to till twenty earths with the present density of population. Oswaldus Xothingerus is saaJ to haye made comp ete in every part, yet so thin ami slender that all of them were included at once in a cup turned out of a pepper corn of the common siz’. They were so small as to ha almost in visible to the eye. They were presented to Hope l’au! V. A ennous geological phenomenon exists in the vicinity of Behring’s Strait. At Elephant Point,. Kotzbue Sound, a ridge two miles wide anil 250 feet high seems to be a vast mass of ice, thinly covered with clay and vegetable mould. In this soil birches, aiders and berry- bearing plants grow luxuriantly, with the stra tum of perpetual ice as the underlying rock within less than a fool from their roots. A balloon of colossal dimensions, and said to be capable ot being guided at will, lias been for some lime in course of construction in Berlin. The balloon is 500 feet in length and 60 feet in diameter. The total weight is about 40,000 pounds, the envelope and netting aiotie weigh ing 10,000 pounds. The propelling machinery consists of two steam engines of 50-horse pow er each, and the entire cast is estimated at -£5,000. A safe, portable and convenient electric rail way reading lamp was shown at a recent meet ing of the British Association. A cubical box of about four inches, and containing four cells, weighs six pounds and will burn twelve hours; another form of battery one-third Ibis width and half the weight is not more cumbrous than a book; the little lamp is fastened by a hook to the waist-coat. The one exhibited had star tled many a fellow-passenger of the exhibitor and had done good service for a fortnight. historical. The power loom was invented by the Hev. Dr. Carrwright in 1787. Galen, who almost perfected medicine as we now have it, was a native Pergaoius, and died, about 200 A. 1 >. Cairo in Egypt was founded in 070 by the first of the Faiimite caliphs. Saladin sur rounded it with strong walls and magnificent gates. The celebrated porcelain pagoda, or Temple of Gratitude, at Nanking, China, was begun in 140:1, ami finished in 1112. It cost 2,485,434 ounces of silver. Six thousand houses were thrown down, 00,000 inhabitants killed, and a conflagration kindled, which spread still wider destruction, by the terrible earthquake in Lisbon iu 1755. Quarantine, a place for the detention of in fected individuals or vessels, and the practice of thus taking steps for averting Urn introduc tion, and spread of contagion, originated with the Venetians in 1470. Martin Behem is credited with having dis covered America prior to Columbus. Ia a first voyage of discovery in 1 400, he visited Fayal and the Azores, and afterwards viBited Brazil, sailing as far North as the Straits of Magellan in 1484, six years before Columbus set sail for the West. Previous to the printing of newspapers, Lon don had its letter writers, who sent written news for a subscription of 0.C or 4 C. L'Est- range’s Intelligencer, the first London paper, commenced to be issued once a week in 1663, and in 1005 the Lotidou Gazelle, a semi-weekly, made its first appeasance. Id 1515 and 1578, nearly all the sheep in France perished by a disease resembling "the smallpox, and in 1500 tbe Venetian Govern ment, to stop a fated disease among the people, prohibited the sale of meat, butte'-or cheese upon the pain of death, ns the disease was known to have been communicated by these animal products. llaroun al Kaschid, in 802, sent to Charle magne, among other presents fiom Bagdad, a clock of curious workmanship. The first clock with a balance was made by Da Vick in 1304, and the first with a pendulum in 1641. Watches with springs were first made at Nuremberg, about 1477, but the first successful application of a spring to watches was Dr. Hooke, in 1658. “Work, Work, Work!” How many women there are working to-day in various branches of industry—to say noth ing of the thousand of patient housewives whose lives are an unceasing rqpnd of toil— who are martyrs to those complaints to which the weaker sex is liable. Their tasks are ren dered doubly hard and irksome and their lives shortened, yet hard necessity compels them to keep on. To such Dr. l’ierce’s “Favorite Pre scription” offers a sure means of relief. For all female weaknesses it is a certain cure. All druggists. Pulpit TALMAGE’S SERMON. Preached at The Hamptons. Tim Hami-toss, July 10.—The Brooklyn tabernacle being closed for enlargement, the Hev. T. DeWittTalmage, D. D., pastor, spends his first Sabbath away from his flock the pres ent season, at this summer home. Ilis sub ject for to-day was,“From Dungeon to Palace,” and his text: “The time of my departure is at hand”—2 Timothy, iv., 6. The way out of this world is so blocked up with coffin and hearse, aud undertaker’s spade aud screwdriver, that the Christian can hardly think as he ought of the most cheerful passage in all its history. We hang black instead of white over the place where tbe good man gets his last victory. We stand weeping over a heap of chains which the freed soul hail sha ken off, and we say, “poor man, what a pity it was he had to come to this.” Come to what? By the time the people have assembled at the obsequies, that man has been three days so happy that all the joy of earth accumulated would he wietchedness beside it, and he might better weep over you because he has to go. It is a fortunate thing that a good man does not have to wait to see his own obsequies, they would be so discordant, with his own experi ence. If the Israelites should go back to Egypt and mourn over the brick kilns they once left, they would not be any more silly than that Christian who should forsake heaven ami come down and mourn because he had to leave this world. < >ur ideas of the Christian’s death are morbid and sickly. We look upon it as a dark hole in in which a man stumbles when his breath gives out. This whole subject is odorous with varnish and disinfectants, in stead of being sweet with mignonette. Paul, in my text, takes that great clod of a vord “death" ami throws it away, and speaks of his “departure”—a beautiful, bright, suggestive word, descriptive of every Christian’s release. Now, departure implies a starting place and a place of destination. When Paul left this worl 1, what was the startiug point? It was a scene of great physical distress. It was the Tullianum, the lower dungeon of the Mamer- tine prison. The top dungeon was bad enough —it having no means of ingress or egress but through an opening in the top. Through tbat the prisoner was lowered, ami through that came all the food and air and light received. It was a terrible piace, that upper dungeon; but the Tullianum was the lower dungeon, ami that was still more wretched, tiie only light and the only air coining through the roof, and that roof the floor of the upper dungeon. That was Paul’s last earthly residence. It was a dungeon just six feet and a half high. It was a doleful place. It had the chill of long centu ries of dampness. It was filthy with the long incarcerations of miserable wretches. It was there that Paul spent, his last days on earth, and it is there that I see him to-day, in the fearful dungeon, shivering, blue with the cold, waiting for that old overcoat which he had sent tor up to I'roas, and which they had not yet sent down, notwithstanding he had written for it. If some skillful surgeon should go into that dungeon where i’aul is incarcerated, we might find out what are the prospects of Paul’s living through the rough imprisonment. In the first place, he is at- old man, only two years short ■■■d so -v« V*V' ”*? tijoe. whec- bo most needs ihe waliuth and the sunlight and the fresh air, he is shut out from the sun. What are those scii s on his ankles? Why those were goticu when he was fast,, his feet in the slocks. Every time he turned, the flesh on his ankles started. What are those scars on his back? You know he was whipped five times, each time gatling thirty-nine strokes—one hun dred and ninety-five bruises on the back (count them) made by the Jews with rods of elmwood, e»eh one of the one hundred and ninety-live strokes bringing the blood. Look at, Paul's face and look at his arms. Where did he get those bruises? I think it was when he was struggling ashore amidst the shivered timbers of the shipwreck. i see a gtsh in Paul's side. tVliere did he get that? 1 think lie got that in the tussle with highwaymen, for lie had been in peril of robbers, and he had money of his own. He was a mechanic as well as an apostle, and I think the tents he made were as good as his sermons. There is a wanness about Paul’s looks. What makes that? I think a part of that came from Hie fact that he was for twenty-four hours on a plank in the Mediterranean sea, suffering ter ribly, before he was rescued; for he says posi tively: “I was a night and a day in the deep.” oh, worn-out, emaciated old man! surely you must be melancholy; no constitution could en dure this and he cheerful. But I press my way through the prison until I come up close to where he is, and by the faint light that streams through the opening I see on his face a supernatural joy, and I bow before him, and say: “Aged man, how can you keep cheerful amidst all this gloom?” His voice startles the darkness of the place as he cried out: “I am now ready to ba offered, and tho time of my departure is at hand.” Hark! what is that shuttling of feet in the upper dungeon? Why, Paul has an invitation to a banquet, aud he is going to dine tc-day with the king. Those shuffling feet are the feet of tho executioners They come, and they cry down through the hole of the dungeon: “Hurry up, old man. Come now; get yourself ready.” Why, Paul was ready- He had l othing to pack up. lie had no baggage to take. He had been ready a good while. I see him raising up, and straight ening out his stiffened limbs, and pushing back his white hair from his creviced forehead, and seel::.’.', looking up through the hole iri the roof of the dungeon into the face of his execu tioner, and hear him say: “I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand.” '1 hen they lift him out of the dun geon, and they start W'tli him to the place of execution. They say: “Hurry along old man, or you will feol the weight, of yourspoar. Hur ry along.” “IIow far is it,” said Paul,“we have to travel?” “Three miles.” Three miles is a goml way for au old man to travel after he has been whipped and crippled with maltreatment. But they soon get to tbe place of execution— Acqua Salvia—and he is fastened to the pillar of martyrdom. It does not take any strength to tie him fast, lie makes no resistance. < 1, Paul! why not strike tor your life? You have a great many friends here. With that wither ed hand, just launch the thunder-bolt of the people upon those infamous soldiers. No! Paul was not going to interfere with his own coronation, lie was too glad to go. I see him looking up in he face of his executioner, aud, as the grim official draws tbe sword, Paul calmly says: “I am now ready to be offered, and tbe time of my departure is at baud.” But I put my hand over my eyes. 1 want not to see that last struggle. One sharp, keen stroke, and Paul docs go to the banquet, and Paul does dine with the King. What a transition it was! From the ma’aria of Rome to the finest climate in the universe— tho zone of eternal beauty and health. His ashes were put in the catacombs of Home, but in one moment the air of heaven bathed from his sou' the last ache. From shipwreck, from dungeon, from the biting pain of tbe elmwood rods; from the sharp sword of the headsman, he goes into the most brilliant assemblage of heaven, a king among kmgs, multitudes ot tbe sainthood rushing out and stretching forth hands of welcome; for I do really think that as on the right band of God is Christ, so on the right hand of Christ is Paul, the sec mi great iu heaven. He changed kings likewise. Before the hour of death, and up to the last moment, he was under Nero, the thick necked, the cruel eved, the filthy lipped; the aculptnred features of that man bringing down to us to this very day the horrible possibilities of his nature— seated as he was amidst pictured marbles of Egypt, under a roof adorned with mother-of- pearl, in a dining room, which by machinery was kept whirling day and night with most bewitching magnificence; his horses standing in stalls of solid gold, and the grounds aronnd his palace lighted at night by its victims, who had been daubed with tar and pitch and then set on lire to illuminate the darkness. That was Paul’s king, but tbe next moment he goes into the realm of Him whose reign is love, and whose courts are paved with love, and whose throne is set on pillars of love, and whose sceptre is adorned with jewels of love, and whose palace is lighted with love, and whose lifetime is an eternity of love. When Paul was leaving so much on this side the pillar of martyrdom to gain so much on the other side, do you wonder at the cheerful valedictory ofthetexi: “The time of my departure is at hand!” Now, why cannot all tlie old people of this congregation have the same holy glee as that aged man bad? Charles I., when he was combing his head, found a gray hair, and he sent it to the queen as a great joke; but old age is really no joke at all. For tbe last forty years you have been dreading that which ought to have been an exhilaration. You say you moBt dread the struggle at the moment the soul and body part. But nations have endured that moment, and why not we as well? They got through with it, and so can we. Besides this, all medical men agreo in saying that there is probably no struggle at all at the last moment— not so much pain aR tbe prick of a pin, the seeming signs ol distress being altogether in voluntary. But you say,. “It is the uncer tainty of the future.” Now, child of God, do not play the infidel. After God has tilled the Bible till it can hold no more with stories of the g3od things ahead, better not talk about uncertainties. But you say, “I cannot bear to think of parting from friends here.” If you are old, you have more friends iu Heaven than here. Just take the census. Take some large sheet of paper and begin to record the names of those who have emigrated to the other shore— the companions of your school days, your early business associates, the friends of middle life, and those who more recently went away. Can it be that they have been gone so long you do not care any more about them, and you do not want their society? Oh! no. There have been days when you have felt that you could not endure it another moment away from their blessed companionship. They have gone. You say you would not like to bring them back to this world of trouble, even if you had the power. ‘It would not do to trust you. God would not give you resurrection power. Be fore to-morrow morning you would be rattling at the gates of the cemetery, crying to the de parted : “Come back to the cradle where you slept! Come back to the hall where you used to play! Comeback to tbe table where you used to sit 1” ’ And there would be a great bur glary in Heaven. No, no! God will not trust you with resurrection power. But he compro mises the matter aud says: “You cannot bring them where you are, but you can go where they are ” They are more lovely now than ever. Were they beautiful here, they are more beautiful there. Beside that, it is more healthy there fur you than here, aged man; better climate there than these hot summers and cold winters and late springs; betler hearing; better eye sight; more perfume iu the bloom; more sweetness in the song. Do you not feel, aged man, sometimes, as though you would like to get your arm amt foot free? Do you not feel as though you like to throw away spectacles and canes and crutches? Would you not like to feel the spring and elasticity and mirth of au eternal boyhood? When the point at which you start from this world is old age, and the point to which you go is eternal juvenescence, aged man, clap your hands at the anticipation and say, in perfect rapture of soul, “The lime of luy departure is at hand.” I remark again, all those ought to feel this joy of the text who have a holy curiosity to know what is beyond this earthly terminus. And who has not any curiosity about it? Paul, I suppose, had the most satisfactory view of Heaven, and he says, “I doth not yet ap pear what we shall he.” I*, is like looking through a broken telescope. “Now we see through a glass darkly.” Can you tell me anything about that Heavenly plac e! You ask me a thousand questions about it tbat 1 cannot answer. I ask you a thousand questions about it that you cannot answer. And do you won der that Paul was so glad when martyrdom gave him a chance to go over and make dis coveries in that blessed country? I hope some day, by the grace of God, to go over and see for myself; but not now. No well man, no prospered man, 1 think, wants to go now. But the lime will come, I think, when I shall go over. I want to see what they d} there, and I want to see how they do it. 1 do not want to be looking through the gates ajar for ever. I want them to swing wide open. There are ten thousand things P want explained— about you, about myself, about the govern ment of this world, about God, about every thing. Wo start in a plain path of what we know, and in a minute come up against a high wal! of what we do not know. I wonder how lt looks over there. Somebody tells mo it is like a paved city— paved with gold; and another man tells me it is like a fountain, and it is like a tree, and it is like a triumphal procession; and the next iuru I meet tells me it is all figurative. I really want to know, after tlie body is resnrected, what they wear and what they eat; and l have an immeasurable curiosity to know what it is, and how it is, and where it is. Columbus risked bis life to find this continent, aud shall we shudder to go out on a voyage of aiscovery which shall reveal a vaster and more brilliant country? John Franklin risked his life to find a passage between icebergs, and shall we dread to find a passage to e ernal summer? Men in Switzerland travel iqi the heights of the Mat terhorn with alpenstock ami guides, and rock ets and ropes, and getting half way up, stum ble and fall down in a horrible massacre. They just want to say that they havo been on the tops of those high peaks. And shall we fear to go out for the ascent of the eternal hills which start a thousand miles beyond where stop the highest peaks of tlie Alps, and when in that ascent there is no peril? A man doom ed to die stepped on the scaffaid, and said in joy: “Now, in ten minutes I will know the great secret.” One minute after the vital func tions ceaseJ, the little child thai died last night in Montague street knew more than Jona than Edwards, or St. Paul himself, before he died. Friends, the exit fr 3m this world, or death, if you please to call it, to the Christian is glorious explanation. It is demonstration. It is illumination. It is sunburst. It is the opening of all the windows. It is shutting up the catechism of doubt, and ttc unrolling of all the scrolls of positive and accurate informa tion. Instead of standing at the foot of the ladder and looking up, il is standing at the top of the ladder and looking down. Is is the last mystery taken out of botany, and geology, and astronomy, and theology. (), will it not be grand to have all questions answered? The perpetually recurring interrogation point changed for the mark of exclamation. All rid dles solved. Wiio will fear to go out on that discovery, when all tho questions are to be de cided which we have been discussing all our lives? Who shall not clap bis hands in the an ticipation of tbat blessed country, if it be no better than through holy curiosity, crying: “The time of my departure is at hand?" 1 remark, again, we ought to have the joy of the text, because, leaving this world, wo move into the best society of the universe. You see a great crowd of people in some street, and you say: “Who is passing there? What general, what prince is going up there?” Well, I sea a great throng in heaven. Isay: “Who is the focus of all that admiration? Who is the center of that glitteriDg company?” It is Jesus, the champion of all worlds, the fa vorite of all ages. Do you know what is the first question the soul will ask when it comes through the gates of heaven? I think the first question will be: “Where is Jesus, the Sa vior that pardoned my sin; that carried my sorrows; that fought my battles; that won my victories?” O radiant One! how I would like to see Thee! Thou of the manger, but without its humiliation. Thou of the cross, but with out its pangs; Thou of the grave, but without its darkness. The Bible estimates that we will talk with Jesus in heaven just as a brother talks with a brother. Now, what will you ask Him first? I do not know. I can think what I would ask I'aul first, if I saw him in heaven. I think I would like to hear him describe the storm that came upon the ship where there were two hun dred and seventy-five souls on the vessel, 1‘aul being the only man on board cool enough to describe the storm. There is a fascination about a ship and the sea that I shall never get over, and 1 think I would like to hear him talk about that first. But wheu I meet my Lord Jesus Christ, of what shall I first delight to hear Him speak? Now I think what it is. I shall first want to hear the tragedy of His last hours; and then Luke’s account of the cruci fixion, and Mark’s account of the crucifixion, and John’s account of the crucifixion will be nothing, while from the living lips of Christ the story shall be told of the gl tom that fell, and the devils that arose, and the fact that upon His endurance depended the rescue of a race; and there was darkness in the sky, and there was datkness in the soul, and the pain became more sharp and the burdens became more heavy, until the mob began to swim away from the dying vision of Christ, and the curs ing of the mob came to his ear more faintly, and his hands were fastened to the horizontal Dr spiers CREAM RAKING pOWDE* V MOSTPERF|CTMME ntiiramI1 „„„ of the Departments of tho PRICE IIAK1 NG POWDER COMPANY'S MANUFACTORY THE LARGEST IN THE WORLD. h Cream Dak in-4 Powder. piece of the cross, and his feet were fastened to the perpendicular piece of the cross, and his head fell forward in a swoon as he uttered the last moan and cried: “It is finished! 11 All heaven will stop to listen until the story is done, and every harp will be put down, and every lip closed, and all eyes fixed upon the divine narrator, until the story is done; and then, at the tap of the baton, the eternal or chestra will rouse up; finger on string of harp, and lips to the mouth of trumpet, there shall roll forth the oratorio of the Messiah: “Wor thy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive bles sing, and riches, and honor, and glory, and power, world without end!” “What He endured, oh, who can tell, To save our souls from death and hell!” When there was between Paul and tbat mag nificent personage only the thinness of the sharp edge of the sword of the executioner, do you wonder that he wanted to go? (>, my Lord Jesus let one wave of that glory roll over this auditory! Ilark! I hear the wedding bells of heaven ringing now. The marriage of the Lamb has come, and the bride hath made herself ready. I F YOU INTEND TO TRAVEL WRITE TJ JOB W. Wane, Traveling Passenger Agent lijorgta Railroad, for lowest rates, best scheduie-t and quickest time. Prompt attention to all comm mica- lions. T HE GEORGIA RAILROAD. OEOUOIA RAILROAD COMPANY, Office General Manager. Augusta, Ga., May. 8. lb.-7 (nmimencing Sunday, 9 b iustant, the fom wing l»H8heriger schedule will be operated' Trains run by 90th meridian time. NO. 27 WEST-DAILY. L’vo Augusta 7 45am L’ve Washington .7 20am “ Athens ..—.7 45am “ Gainesville. 5 55am Ar. Atlanta ....—.1 00pm DAY PASSEN NO. 2 EAST-DAILY. L’ve Atlanta ...8 00am Ar. GaineevilJe....8 25pm “ Athens .....5 35pm “ Washington....2 20pm ** Milledgevi]le...4 13pm “ Macon 6 OOnm “ Augusta 3 35pm FAST LINE. fiailroati.8 RAILROAD TIME TABLE LAST TENNE SEE, VIRGIN ARRIVE. •I)^y Express from Snv’h iSt Fla. No. 14. 7 40 am ;; "mc-Erp-?.-:* from North •Cin. & Men . Ex. from North, No. 11. 4 10 a in Day Express from North No. 13 3 20 p m ♦Day Ex. from Savannah and Brunswick, No. 16 7 45 p m •From New York, liuox- vnleand Alabama points No. 15 1015 pm v Georgia, r r. DEPART. •Day Express North, E. and West No 14,12 20 am •Fr R’U”. K.ioxvtUe, N-w Vo or,Cincinnati arc M“mphis, N12.. 7 35 am ♦Ea»t Express South t n S'vh&Fla. No. 13. C01 pu. •For Savan'h, Brunswick and Jacksonville No 15 5 05 am ♦New York Lira. N. Y. Phila. etc No. 16 CBNTKA L KAlLROAD. From Savannah* 7 30 am | To Savannah*.... 8 50 uni ** Barn sv'llf 7 45 am I To Macon*.... MM . S3Pam “ Bar’3v’it L* 9 45 am | To ll*pevlll€ff...l2 00 m “ Macon*.. . 9 '0 pm I To Macon*. 2 00pm “ Hripevilief.. 1 40 pro | To Savannah* ... 6 50 pm “ Macon* 1 65 pm I To Barnesvnlei.. 3 0 »pm “ Savannah*.. 530 p- I To Barnesvllltf.. 5 23 pm WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RaILROADT Chata’ga* 2 23 am I To Chattanooga* 7 50 am NO. 28 EAST-DAILY. L’ve Atlanta 45pm “ Gainesville...5 56am Ar. Athens. 7 23pm Ar. Washington.. 7 20cm “ Augusta ~...8 16pm GER TRAINS. NO. 1 WEST-DAILY. L’ve Augusta 10 45am “ Macon 7 10am “ Milledgoville.9 38am ** Washington. 11 20am ** Athens.. . ~~ 9 00am Ar. Gainesville... 8 25pm “ Atlanta 5 45pm NIGHT EXPRESS AND MAIL. NO. 4 EAST-DAILY. | NO. 3 WEST-DAILY. I.’ve Atlanta 7 30pm | L’ve Augusta....^. .9 40pm i Ar. Augusta 5 00am I Ar. Atlanta 6 4lam C<>VINGTON ACCOMMODATION. L’ve Atlanta.—..6 10pm J L’ve Covington 5 40am D*'cutur 6 46pm I “ Decatur ...~~..7 25am ! Ar. Covington....8 30pm | Ar. Atlanta 7 55am DECATUR TRAIN. (Daily except Sunday.) I ve Atlanta 9 00am L’ve Decatur. —— & 4^«m Ar. Decatur 9 30am * Ar. Atlanta —10 l^tm CLAKKSTON TRAIN. . L’ve Atlanta 12 10pm | L’ve Ciarkston 1 25pm , “ Decatur ....12 42pm I “ Decatur...—« 1 48pm Ar. Ciarkston 12 57pm . Ar. Atlanta .... 2 20pm MACON NIGHT KYFRESS (DAILY). NO 15—WESTWARD j NO. 16-EASTWARD. Leave Can. ak 12 50 am J Leave Macon e 30 pm Arrive Macon ... o 40 nm I Arrive Camak....ll 00 pm Trains Nos. 2, 1, 4 and 3 will, if signaled, stop at ai y :uL Tn hcheduie thu* atatinn. mnecfion tor trameeville No. 27 will stop at and rf To Chattanooga* 1 40ptr To Rome 3 45 pm To Marietta. 4 4 j pir To Chattanooga* 5 50pir To Chattanooga* 11 03 pm “ Marietta... 8 0o " Rome 1103a ** Chata’go*.. 6 30 a “ Chaca’ga*.. 1 44 p ** Chata’ga*.. 6 35 p ATLANTA AND WEST 1*01 NT RAILROAD. From M’tgo’ery* 6 JO am | To Montgo’ery* 1 20 pm “ M’tgo’ery* 123am I To M'mtgo’exy* 10 00pm Laararige* 8 45 am | To Lhgnir.go*.... 5 05 pm GEORGIA RAILROAD. From Augusta* 6 40 am I To Augusta*.... 8 00 an “ Covington* 7 55 arn | To Decatur 9 CO am “ Decatur... 10 15 am j To Ciarkston.... 12 10 pm “ Augusta*.. 1 Oilpiu | To Augusta*... 2 45pm •* Ciarkston.. 2 20pm I To Covington... 6 10pm “ Augusta.*.. 5 45 pm I To Augusta* 7 30??r RICHMOND AND DaNVILLL RAILROAD From Lula ........ 825 un I To Charlotte*... 7 4u am “ Charlotte* 12 20pm To Lula —.. 4 30pm “ Charlotte* 9 40 pin | To Charlotte*.., 6 00om Georgia pacific railway^ From Bir g’m*.. 6 50ain j To Birming’m*. 550 pm Tallay of*n 9u0 a:n j To Tallapoosa.. 5 00 pm S * 5 43 mr. | T > Sf+rkvdle* . 8 15 arn j.day « and from the following stations only:Gr6vetown,Har- iem, Hearing. Thomson, Norwood. Barnett, Crawf ord- v:ile, Union Point, Greenes boro, Madison, Rutledge Social Circle. Covington, Conjera, Lithonia, St -ore Mountain and Decat ur. Train No. 28 will stop at and receive pau?e..gdra to and from the following stations oniy:Grovetown.iiar- I iu. Dearing,Thomson,Norwood, Harrett,Crawford- ville, Union Point, Grtwnesboro, Madison, Rutledge, I Social Circle, Covington, Conyers, Lithonia, Spue | Mountain and Decatur. ! No. 28 stops at Harleir I. W. GREEN, Gen’l Manager. _ JOE W WHITE, Traveling Faeaenger Agent, Augusta, Ga. I ^TLAXTA & NEW ORLEANS SflORT LINE. | VICKSBURG AND SHREVEPORT, VIA MONTGOMERY. Only line operating douole dally trains aud Pull- ! man Buffet Sleeping Cars between Atlauta&nd New i Orleans without change. Takes eff-er Munnay. Anril 3d, 1887. 1 for supper. E. 14. DORSEY. . Gen’l Pass. Agent Daily. Leave Atlanta 1 20 pra Arrive Fair! arn 2 08 pm “ Palmetto 2 20 pm “ Newnan 2 47 pm “ Grantvllle 3 13 ora “ LaGrange 3 52 pin " We9t Point 4 20 pm " Opelika 5 04 pm Dally. 10 00 pm 11 07 pm 11 26 pm 12 08 am 12 50 am 1 55 am 2 42 am 3 4* am No. 2. Dally. 5 05 pm 6 14 pro 6 26 pm 6 53 pm 7 20 pm 8 00 pm JpiEDMONT AIR-LINE ROUTE. Richmond & Danville e. r co. CONDENSED SCIXEDCLL IN EFFECT MAY 29, 1887. Northbound. DAILY. No. 51. No. 53. Lcava Atlanta 7 00 pm 8 40 am Arrive Gainesville - 9 12 pm 10 2G am “ Lula 9 37 pm 11 o<> am •• Toccoa 10 40 pm 1212 n’c “ Seneca 11 38 pm 12 56 pm “ Easley -------- -12 37 am 2 10 pra “ Greenville I 04 am 2 32 pm “ Spartanburg 2 lo am 3 46 pm Leave SDartauburg 2 40 am Arrive Tyron 4 07 am •* Saluda 4 57 am “ Fiat Rick 5 37 »m “ Hundersouvilie - - - - 5 53 am “ Asheville ------- 7 < 0 am “ Hot Springs 9 00 am Leave Spartanburg 2 19 am 3 46 pm Arrive Gaffney 3 06 am 4 35 ora “ Gastonia 4 20 am 5 42 pm “ Charlotte - - 5 05 am 6 25 pin “ Salisbury - -- -- -- 6 4 s am 8 M pm “ Raleigh 2 11 pm • 6 30 am “ Goldsooro’ 4 30 urn 11 20 am “ Greensboro* ----- 8 2S am 9 40 pm “ Danville - - 10 10 am 11 29 pm “ Richmond 3 50 pm 6 15 am “ Lvnchburg * - 115 pm 200 am “ Charlottesville - - - - 3 46 pm 4 10 am “ Washington 8 23 pm 8 10 am “ Baltimore 11 25 pm 10 03 am “ Fnliadtdphla 3 00 am 12 35 pm “ New York 620 am 3 20 pm Southbound. N9.5o DAILr No.ts2 Leave Nsw York 4t5ain ,30 um “ FbHadelphla 7 30 am 6 57 pm “ Baltimore 9 45 am 9 49 pu, “ Washington 11 74 am 11 00 pm “ Charlottesville - -- - 3 35pm 300am “ Lynchburg 5 60 pui 515 am “ KichinouU 3 00 pm 2 30am “ Danville - -- -- -- - 850 poi 8 05 am “ Greensboro’ 10 44 pm 9 48 am “ Goldsboro’ - -- -- -12 30 am t 8 to pm “ Katelgh - - 530 pm t 1 00 am 11 Salisbury - - ----- 12 39 am 11 23 am “ Charlotte 2 25 am 100 pm “ Gastohia — 3 24 am 1 42 pm “ Gaffney’s - 4 fio am 2 51 pm Arrive Spartanburg 5 38am 334pm Leave Hot Springs 7 011 pm *• Asheville - - 9 49 am Hrnd»*rsonAtlle - ... It 117 pm “ Flat lt .ck 1123 pm Saluda 11 53 pm “ Tyrou 12 39am Arrive Spartanburg 210 am Leave Spartanburg 6 30 am •• Greenville 6M am 4 48 pm “ Easley - 7 15 am 514 pm “ Seneca 8 40 am 612 did “ Toccoa 9 46 am 7 08 pm Lula - - - 11 04 am 8 22 pm 8 46 pm 10 40 pm Ar. Pensacola 5 oo am Ar. Mobile 2 13 am Ar. New Orleans 7 10 am 7 20 nm NORTH HOUND. No 51. No 53. No J. Lv. New Orleans I.teily. 8 10 pm Dally. Dally Mobile 1 oo ara “ Pensacola io 20 pm i 05 pm “ oelnm 9 45 am “ Montgomery 7 45 am “ Colninbus 8 05 am Dv. CpHiFa 9 46 am Ar. West Pifiut 10 27 am “ La Grange io 58 am 7 oo am M “ Hm;;u>sviile U 23 am “ Grantvlile 11 37 am 7 50 am ■ I > “ Newnau 12 i >:i pm “ Palmetto 12 29 pm 8 56 skin ■ “ Foirbura 12 41 pm 9 11 arn ■ “ AGnnta 1 25 pm 6 io am 10 00 am | TO 6ELMA, VICKSJU’KO AND SUKKV.-J’UiiX ■ . (Via Akron.) N*» 12. No 5. No 1 Je *' ; Lv. Montgomery 8 15 am S 30 i m ■ ciji Ar, Selma 12 05 pin 5 50 l 111 1 of *‘ Marion “ Akiou 9 10 pm 1 “ a “ Meridian “ \icksbiir« 7 30 am | “ ShreveD^rt 6 43 rm | j THROUGH CAR SEKVIi^S, * Dally except Saturday. t Daily except Sunday. SLEEPING-CAB SEBVICE. Ou trains 50 and 51 Pullman Buffet Sleeper be tween New York sod Atlanta. Pullman Sleeper he. tween npartanburg and Hot Sprirgs. On trains 52 and S3 Pullman Buffet Sleeper be- tween Washington and Montgomery; Waihthetoh and Augusta. Pullman Sleeper between Grmna. boro’ and Richmond; Greensboro’ and Raleigh Through tickets on sate at principal stations to all points. For rates and information aoulv to in. agents of the Company, or to *PS»J to any 80L.HAA8. JAS L. TAYLOR. Trafflo Manager, Gm. Pam *T>, WASHINGTON. D. C. k ’ Pullman Buffet Sleeping car, N-:.” A"**^?* New Orleans. No. 52, Pullman Buffet Sleeping car, Wa^hlngum tn Mout zomery, and Putiui u Parlor car, idouigom- erv to New Orleans. No. i»l, Pullman Buffer Sleeping cars Now O-'esus to Atlanta, ard at Atlanta to New York. No. 63 Pulirnau Parlor car, New Orleans ;o Mont gomery, and Pullman Ballet Sloeola;; car M-jut- gomery to (V'aotitngton. CROIL GABBETT, CHA3. H. CKOMWKLL. Genera^ Man *ger. Gen. FAHsenver Ageot. a * Alabama.' A. J. ORME, G*u. Agt. O. W. CHEARS, G. F. A Atlanta, Georgia. TEACHERS WANTED. Teachers wanted.-September Se^sioa. 10 Presi dents cf Colleges. 20 Principals of H’el* SchiH’ls, 15 Teachers of Mnaic. 8 Art Touchers. 10 Tracht rs of i0 Assistants In IMsrar* Dc- pariment of H#»hor»is j*nd Oolipp^s. 12 Governesses. o <, R^T7, n S u UT f ,ERN TEACHERS agency, p. O. Box 410, Birmingham, Ala. IQO'HMjmM Einlorzi^a.-^ ST Natchca Sum, n.w Ovulwita. P AIPPUIPO THUS. P. SIMPSON, Washington rAilifllb«S; - I>. C. No pay asked for patents un til obtained. Write for Inventor’s 69913t Guide. O PIUM, CHLORAL AND WHISKEY HABITS 8 ta CC t** fu Uy treated without pain or detention iroin daily business. HO RK8TB1CTIOHS OH DOT* . , aji communications strictly confidential- BY A. 8. WOOLLEY, M. D., SSLHA. ALA. ’he A TLA NT A MARBLE WORKS, WALSH A PA? • zl tumor, rhorunoia. Importer, mnd Dmhm in ITALIAN AND AMERICAN MARBLES. Sootch andArumioan Granitaa. No. 77 Wavaciy Piaoa, Atlanta. Ga. fflUmilU 8gl , BRUSHES, BELTS, Etc. No risk, quick sales. Territory given, satlsfacuongiur- an toed. Dr. ScwU’s M3 ■ roadway, M. T 9,90 26t COW