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THE SUNNY SOUTH, ATLANTA, GA„ SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, l**?
Farmers in Convention.
The'IIncidents and Accidents ol the
farm.
BT TOM DOOGINB.
The Farmers’ Inter-State Convention, held
in Atlanta from the 16th to 19th inclusive, was
a notable assembly.
We talked three days and two nights; and if
we did not say as many wise things as Job and
his friends in their remarkable conclave, we
did not hold on as long. But we said enough
to convince the world, beyond a doubt, that
farmers think silence is silver and speech is
golden.
We addressed and essayed, wh<-reased and
wherefortd, resoluted and resolved a plenty
and enough to straighten out the kinks of a
contrary, cranky, cross-grained world if it
would only go as we said.
Some thought that the great remedy for poor
farming wae new legislation, more money and
cheaper money, less tariff and less taxes, while
a few admitted that individual effort had much
to do with success.
We were there from Virginia to Mexico.
Some said it was good to be there, and wished
to spend the summer; others said nay, folks
are curious—tell bad tales about farming, the
unexpjcted happened, and they would like to
get away, while the Atlanta people would be
happy if we would whoop up a big crowd for
the Piedmont Exposition in October. They
are wrestling with the “how to raise the wind”
and the buildiDgs to hold the show; and a big
show it will be with Cleveland as a central at
traction. He will draw stronger than Jumbo.
What did we do? Well, we talked. That’s
what we went for, as the fellow said about
marrying the girl. We orated and we norated;
some told of i heir success in farming, which oth
era called bragging; some opened bags of misery
and trouble that many laughed at. While the
best talkers and prettiest speakers did the least
in the way of farming, it was called a Farmers’
Convention—variegated farmers. We aired
our opinions and our grievances, and there was
attrition and friction of ideas and notions.
We shook up and brought down the house;
sent word to our Uucle Sam that he must do
better, and more of it for us boys; that we were
the big end of the voters and he must listen at
our racket; and then we went out and washed
down our sentiments with lemonade and sweet
ened wind (soda water), for be it known to ail
the world, and especially Texas, that Atlanta
is a dry town (except in spots), and a stranger
from a damp State must carry his liquor ra
tions with him. Our stay was short and—hot.
If the States had only been willing to have
paid the expenses of the delegates, we wouid
not have been in such a hurry —we might have
staid as long as the Georgia Legislature, and
then adjourned in time to go to the Piedmont
Exhibition. We did not get half through talk
ing, the limited programme and a five minute
rule to govern debate, were too short to allow
that free and glorious flow of speech that we
Americans delight in; as a sample ol what
might have been said at that convention if
there had been an opportunity given, listen:
In discussing matters that relate to the farm,
many things could claim our time and atten
tion, whether we should plant cotton or cu
cumbers, raise millet, cut grass for forage, or
pull fodder; whether wheat top-dressed with
salt, will prevent rust, or make the biscuit
salty; shall we continue to wrap the cotton
bales in bemp and jute or in coarse, heavy cot
ton bagging and thereby utilize the surplus
production of the staple; must we gee the mule
by the command “right wheel,” or haw him
around by “left oblique;” is it best to fertilize
land, or move away to Texas, or is it good
luck to stir soap with a sassafras stick 1 All
these things might be debated with interest,
but the more we entered into details, the more
we would antagonize each other; as those who
have opinions and occupy any space will jostle
others, at the conclusion of the discussion it
might be in order to ask, have we locked
shields, or locked horns? Matters of greater
interest weigh upon our hearts; how to prevent
befog crushed by Kansas coin cribs, or slaugh
tered by Chicago packing houses; how to
wring the shekels from the aliens for our mon
ey crops and escape financial cyclones in pri
vate circles: we will be able to plow around
bankruptcy, so long as we remember the tra
ditions of the elders and stick to the pioneers
bill of fare of coons and collards, goats and
gophers, ’possums and potatoes, rabbits and
roaoting ears, terrapin and turnips.
What is farming? The syllabub farmer
would say it was “tickling mother earth to
make her laugh wiih a harvest;” the kid glove
agriculturist would answer, it is the annual op
eration of extracting the products of nature,
but the ordinary individual would call it dig
ging a living out of the ground.
How it is to be done has engaged the atten
tion of the Solons of every ag“—except Solon
himself; the wisest men of all nations have
written, sung and orated about the business—
and worked at it as little as possible; they
have bad great admiration for the plow, but
none for the handles, sung grandly ol weeding
out the fields and bringing in the sheaves, but
always preferred to “lay down the shovel
and the hoe.” Over the gymnasiums
are grandiloquent mottoes in Latin that
sound minds are to be found in sound
bodies, b it no such hyferluiin phrases are to
be found on farm gates and hoe-handles, but
strictly business is written by the straight or
winding fu*rows of the fields, where health
and exercise are more abuudant anl beneficial
than are trapeze or parallel bars. Gates and
bars to the average tenderfoot, are made to
swing on, and meet the girls in the twinkling
star-light and sh mmering moonlight, not car
ing for the fields of usefulness which they
open, where the farmer boys—
“Brushing with hasty steps the dews away.
To meet the sun upon the grassy cotton patch.”
As a sample of how sweetly the bards, who
were not farmers, sung about them, and see
how far they missed the mark, listen at Gray:
“Far from the crowd’s Ignoble strife,
rnelr sober wishes never learned to stray;
Al -ng the cool seqiest’r’d vale ol life
They kept the noiseless tenor of their way.”
Did you ever hear such taffy?
Where is the farmer that does not raise a
rumpus sometimes, go to all the barbecues,
"gatherings,” political pow-wows and “whoop-
ups” to be had? If he staid in the cool shady
places all the time, the grass ran away with
the crops.
. JEsthetic farming is found with a “pretty
little wife and a big plantation,” a long cotton
row and a short grocery bill, abundance of
prwer and diligence in business, then there
will be peace, piety and plenty.
The hopeful, buoyant boy-man is happy in
anticipation who starts out in life with a
lovely lassie, forty acres and a mule, and who,
as he drives his team afield, sings gaily:
ly cotton and his subjects have a time similar
to the preachers monkey and parrot, “sashay
ing” between the frying pan and the fire, “be
twixt the devil and deep sea:” then piety takes a
back-seat, “sweatin’ and swearin,’ ” hpld the
front and he who “plods the plowman’s weary
way,” is forced to exclaim, land of little rest
and much tribulation 1 will the sun never set
on a clean cotton crop and a clear cash ac
count?
Cotton planting must be the most profitable
business on earth, to stand the tariff piled upon
it by capital advanced to carry it on, and the
disasters to which the crop is subject: the poor
thing sits bald-headed in the field and takes
everything that comes, from the frost of one
spring, to the freeze of the next winter, floods,
drouth, worms and “cold pizen.” The busi
ness is the most comical cycloid, with the ups
and downs of vicissitude, and parenthetical
paradox, bulging with great expectations in
the middle of the year, and coming out the
little end of the horn at the close; it runs par
allel with poverty and perpendicular to pros
perity with unsung thousands; it has been the
necropilis of the unsophisticated and '.he Geth-
semane of the unteachable: if cotton is king, it
pays more tribute than any other crowned
head.
We read of the success of Dickson, Furman
and Richardson, with cotton; of Gould, Van
derbilt and Sage with stocks—but who chroni
cles the wails and lamentations of unnum
bered lambs, who are torn by the bears of cot
ton and stock market, and left as wrecks on
the hill-sides and curb-stones? To all such
the world offers the chilly consolation, that the
“survival of the fittest,’’ is the rule that gov
erns in business, while money-bags announces,
“you pay your money, you take your choice’’
—in the meantime the thrif y, when crops are
laid by, will sit in the -shade, eat a watermelon
and listen to the ‘ short and simple annals 1 '
neighborhood chat.
[ CONCLUDED NEXT WEEK.]
Of
One of the best commercial fertilizers is
ground bone.
Honey made from the blooms of the palmet
to and mangrove is considered the purest in the
world.
The actual weight of a big pumpkin at the
office of the Indian River Real Estate Agency
in Titusville, Fia., is 136 pounds, and measures
7 feet and 2 inches in circumference.
Where The Horses Grow.
Russia produces well toward half of all the
hones of the world. The United States one-
sixth cl all the horses of the world, and, with
those produced in Canada, nearly one-fourth
of those of the world.
Patent Rice Beater.
W. H. Shelter, of Oxford, patentee for a
rice beating and cleaning machine, has just
sold the patent-right to his said machine in
and to three-fourths of the territory of the
United States for a consideration of 15,000.
About Trees.
Next to our families, says Mr. Graham, of
the Kans is Agricultural College, I hold trees
as God’s pleasantest gift to man. It costs next
to nothing to grow them, and it is a great
deal easier to cut out the surplus than to grow
others.
How’s Your Milkmaid.
A doctor who had been attending a dairy
man’s hired girl called at the house the
other day. “How’s your milkmaid?’’ he
asked of the farmer when he came to the
door.
“It’s none of your business how our milk is
made,” was the indig tant response, and the
door slammed most emphatically.
AlSuccessful Poulterer.
A successful poultry raiser feeds wheat in
the morning, barley at noon and wheat in the
evening. In addition to the barley he gives
the slops and refuse from the kitchen after
boiling it The wheat gives a rich color to
the yolks which is so much desired in the city
where eggs are sold in retail markets. He says
one great mistake many chicken raisers make
is in feeding chickens too much, and this ac
counts for their becoming diseased.
Old and Thin Sheep.
A sheep that has had no lamb ought at this
season to be fat. If not, it is probably so old
that its teeth are poor and digestion is impair
ed. It requires careful management to get
such an animal in good feeding condition. A
very few oats given daily and increased very
gradually is the best grain feed. Their bulki
ness distends the stomach, and thus prevents
the cloying sure to result from feeding corn.
Old sheep should be fattened aud sold without
loss of time. It will be d fficult to make them
live through the Winter, and if they do they
will not be worth as much next Spring as they
are now.
Cheese from Beans.
Cheese made from beans is Urgely used in
China For fertiliiy of expedient the almond
eyed Celestial can double discount the most in
genious Yankee. While such cheese would not
seem to be very palatable or nutritious, yet it
is said to be quite salable and profitable to the
manufacturers. Introducing it into the Eng
lish market is talked of. Owing to its low-price
it will probably encroach io some extent upon
the product of the old reliable cow. Poor peo
ple will buy any thing cheap that is good to eat-.
Their pecuniary condition compels them to do
so, so this substitute will probably find a large
sale. At all events it is extracted from a harm
less substance.—Market Journal.
“We’ll have a little farm, a pig and a cow-
You’ll mind the dairy and I’ll mind the plow,”
But if in the rolling years aud increasing re
spensibilities, there is no increase of worldly
goods, there is strong probability that there
will be an over-worked woman and a disap
pointed man. The day-dream of “love in a
cottage,” in the morning of life, should have a
symposium at the meridian, that realizes the
“Out of the old house Nancy moved up Into the
new.”
Along with the aesthetics come the disgrun-
tlements of farming, when a cold, sloppy win
ter will persist in holding spring in his lap till
she is half grown before she is weaned, then
the rains of summer that make the grass
writhe and twist around the crops, like the
serpents around Laocoon and his sons; mules
dying, hoe-hands demand a dollar a day,
laborers run away, holding daily councils of
war with hoes and plows, while General Green
seems determined to make a hay-meadow of
the blazing sunny south; his highness the king-
What Ceneral Miles Said.
General Miles in his speech in Atlanta be
fore the Inter-state Farmers’ Convention talk
ed tariff in an intelligent manner. The custom
of the farmer who is unsuccessful—tracing all
bis evils to the tariff of the dav, General Miles
treats in a serious manner. He tells the far
mer that the cry that the protective tariff is
ruining him is nonsense. He shows that the
tariff paid every year by the farmer on their
bog meat and mule flesh is ten thousand times
more than the tax imposed on - them by the
tariff. General Miles is a sensible, practical
farmer, and his words should carry weight.
He sees little hope for the farmer who sits him
self idly down and talks tariff all day instead of
puttiog his shoulder to the wheel and taking
such advantage of circumstances and conditions
as any sensible man would do.
Maintaining the Milk Flow.
In estimating the value of extra feeding dur
ing hot weather it is only fair that a large ad
ditional allowance be made over the immediate
gain, for if the yield of milk is allowed to de
crease now it can never be fully recovered,
though better weather and better feed are com
bined afterward. Taking this view of the mat
ter, scarcely any pains or expense will be con
sidered too great to keep up a uniform flow
from a really good milker. A diminution now
may mean two, three or four quarts less every
day for months, and. the destruction of much of
the cow’s value as a milker. The evil probably
goes still further than this, for, if a cow is al
lowed to prematurely dry off through poor feed
ing, the calf she is carrying at the time is also
affected, and, if a heifer, has less milking ca
pacity than it otherwise would have. When a
cow suddenly falls off in her milk yield through
poor feed or insufficient water, the owner takes
alarm and begins to feed better. But the evil
already done is largely irreparable. Heavier
feeding for a partly dried-off cow means only
an increased tendency to accumulate fat both
in the cow and her off-spring. These are dan
gers which require careful management to avoid.
Hence it is not enough that a cow should have
a good pedigree. Her owner and the owner o#
the dam by which she is bred have quite as
much to do with her value as a milker. It re
quires care and painstaking as well as good
original stock to breed valuable animals of any
kind.
<0em0 of €f)ougt)t.
Let age,; not -envy, draw wripkk* on thy
cheeks; be content to be envied, but envy not.
v-Jsrrd Bacon.
Be not diverted from your duty by any idle
reflections the silly world may make upon you,
for their censures are not in your power, and
consequently should not be any part of your
concern.—Epictetus.
Economy is the parent of integrity, of liberty
and of ease, and the beauteous sister of tem
perance, of cheerfulness, and health.—Dr.
Johnson.
There have been periods when the country
heard with dismay that “The soldier was
abroad.” That is not the case now. Let the
soldier be abroad; in the present age he can
do nothing. There is another person abroad,
a less important person, in the eyes of some,
an insignificant person, whose tabors have
tended to produce this state of things. The
schoolmaster is abroad.—Lord Brougham.
The wise prove, and the foolish confess by
their conduct, that a life of employment is the
only life worth living.—Paley.
Upon laying a weight in one of the scales
inscribed eternity, though I threw in that of
time, prosperity, affliction, wealth, and pov
erty, which seemed very ponderous, they were
not able to stir the opposite balanoe.—Addi
son.
Fortune has been considered the guardian
divinity of fools, and, on this score, she has
been accused of blindness; but it should rather
be adduced as a proof of her sagacity, when
she helps those who certainly cannot help
themselves.—Colton.
A good dee-1 is never lost; he who sows cour
tesy, reaps iriendship, and he who plants kind
ness gathers love.—Basil.
A man’s own good breeding is the best secu
rity against other people's ill manners.—Lord
Chesterfield.
Look over the whole creation, and you shall
see that the band, or cement, that holds to
gether all the parts of this great and glorious
fabric is gratitude.—South.
In the great majority of things, habit is a
greater plague than ever afflicted Egypt; in
religious character it is a grand felicity.— John
Foster.
Curious frtctg.
A Houston, Tex., woman has a pet alligator
that wags his tail when his name is called.
In seven years a Michigan farmer has had
seven horses killed by lightning.
During the recent Indian raid in Arizona the
Apaches traveled fifteen miles on tiptoe to hide
their trail.
Of the 6,400,000 foreign emigrants who have
come to this country within the last fourteen
years, 2,697,400 had no calling or trade.
Several hundred clusters of grapes were bag
ged by a Vineland fruit grower about a week
previous to blooming as an experiment to as
certain whether the fruit would properly set
and develop. The success of the method has
been demonstrated, as the clusters thus treated
are in fine condition, free from the rot that is
prevailing, and having escaped the rose-bug
plague. '
The earth’s internal host is now being used
in a practical way at Festh, where the deepest
artesian well in the world is being sunk to sup
ply hot water for public baths and other pur
poses A depth of 3,120 feet has already been
reached, and the well supplies daily 176,000
gallons of water, heated to 150 degrees F.
In treating a negro in Leipsic for an ulcer
ous affection, it was found necessary to replace
portions of the skin with pieces taken from one
or two white persons. These latter pieces
Gradually grew darker in color, and finally as
flack as the patient’s 6wn skin. This singular
fait led to an experiment being made of trans
posing portions of black skin on a white pa
tient, and it was found that after a few weeks
these began to grow pale. In less than four
teen weeks they had, in fact, grown so white
as not to be distinguishable from the patient’s
natural skin.
The fact is noted that—in climates having a
difference of 70 degrees iu temperature between
the hot aud cold seasons—a railroad track of
the length of 400 miles is Borne 338 yards longer
in summer than in winter; that is—though of
course the length of road remains the same—
expansion forces the metal closer together,
making an aggregate closing up of space be
tween the rails of nearly a yard >n each mile.
$i£toricaI.
James I. licensed Shakespeare's company to
play at The Globe, London, in 1603.
The oldest of the Oxford colleges connected
with the university of that name was founded
in 1172.
The Alhambra, at Granada, that beautiful
monument of Moorish architecture in Spain,
was built in 1360.
Poor Richard’s Almanac” was started at
Philadelphia, by Franklin, in 1732, and contin
ued in existence for a quarter of a century.
The population of the American colonies a*
the beginning of French and Indian War, in
1754, Mr. Bancroft estimates as 1,166,000
whites, 260,000 colored.
John Hawkins, an English navigator, in 1662,
brought a cargo of African slaves to the Wes
tern Hemisphere. Ten years before a few neg
roes had been sold in England.
The Great phalanx consisted of 8000 men in
a square battalion, with shields joined and
spears crossing each other. The Macedonian
phalanx was sixty-one deep, with shields join
ed.
The first English dukes were Edward, the
Black Priuce. as Duke of Cornwall, and John
of Gaunt, as Duke of Lancaster. The title was
extinct in England during the reign of Eliza
beth and until James I. made Villiers Duke of
Buckingham,
The first General Assembly, Rhode Island,
met at Portsmouth, May 19, 164-5, established
a code of laws, and erected an institution of
civil government. Those taking part in this
meeting were the colie itive freemen of the
several plantations of the colony.
Ivan, an infant, succeeded legitimately to the
throne of the Russians in 1740; but Elizabeth,
daughter of Peter the Great, usurped tue crown
11741, and imprisoned, during her life, Ivan,
his father and mother and family. Ivan was
kept in a dark room and finally murdered by
his guards.
For the Sunny South.
TO MR. ANDMRS W_C., OF CANADA.
Jute, amid Cananaa bower-1
June, with all Its wealto ot fl >wers!—
June, to Heaven most allleu;
June—sweet nature's blustuue brldel—
At! ’tis meet tnat June not May.
Stiouia celebrate your bridal day I
When alt the golden-hearted fliwera
That nestle to fond nature’s uowers.
And all til- m-rry brooks of June
Are singing Just tbe se-f-saroe tnne—
Yes. Ms meet rnat Jane not Hay.
Sooald celebrate you: wedding day I
From this sunny-hearted clime.
Where sweet na’u « langbs attimel
Where the languid z-pbyrs keep
Vigil while the flowers sleep.
And nature seems tae most in tnne—
’Neath cloudless skies of leafy jane—
F‘Om these southern sunlit bowers,
11 watt a spray of friendship’s flowers;
A tlnv spray for thee, and mine;
An off:ring for “anld lang syne;”
For too’ my harp Is ont of mne,
I’d celebrate that day in June _
Mrs Maby Wash.
Birmingham, Ala., Jane 2B 1887.
El Faso, Texas.
[Special to The Times-DemocraL ]
El Paso, Aug, 15.—B. F. Scott, of Lake
Valley, N. M., a mining man in prosperous cir
cumstances, took it into his head to get mar
ried, and a short time ago advertised for a wife.
Very soon he received a letter dated at Deni
son, Tex , signed by Miss Annie Walker. They
exchanged photographs, and the result was an
agreement to meet in El Paso and have the cer-
mony performed. They buh arrived here to
day—Mr. Scott from Lake Valley, aud Mias
Walker from Denison. The former went to
the depot and met the lady, whom h9 imme
diately recognized from the photograph. They
jumped into a hack and drove to the office of
Judge Falvey, who joined them in wedlock.
The bride has been teaching school at Denison
and ik about twenty-eight years old, and to
night told the ladies at the hotel that she found
Mr. Scott, who is about forty-five, all that her
faLcy had painted him, and was happy.
About as sure a way as any to abolish pover
ty is to deposit earnings in the savings bank in
stead of the saloon.
The “Favorite Prescription’’ of Dr. Pierce
cures “female weakness” and kindred affec
tions. By druggists.
TALMAGE’S SERMON.
The Hamptons, August 28.—"Woman’s Op
portunity” was the subject of discourse by the
Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D-, to-day, and
his text, “So God created man in His own im
age, the image of God created He him; male
and female created He them—Genesis i:27
Following is the sermon in foil:
In other words, God, who can make no mis.
take, made man and woman for a specific
work, and to move in particular spheres—man
to be regnant in his realm; woman to be dom
inant in hers. Tbe boundary line between
Italy and Switzerland, between England and
Scotland, is not more thoroughly marked than
this distinction between the empire masculine
and the empire feminine. So entirely dissimi
lar are the fields to which God called them,
that you can no more compare them than you
can oxygen and hydrogen, water and grass,
trees and stars. All this talk about the supe
riority of one sex to the other sex is ait ever
lasting waste of ick and speech. A jeweler
may have a scale so delicate that he can weigh
the dust of diamond?; but where are the scales
so delicate that you can weigh in them affec
tion against affection, sentiment against senti
ment, thought against thought, soul against
soul, a man’s world against a woman’s world?
Yon come out with yonr stereotyped remark,
the man is superior to woman in intellect; and
then I open on my desk the swarthy, iron-
typed, thunderbo.tad writings of Harriet Mar-
tineau, and Elizabeth Browning, and George
Eliot You come on with your stereotyped
remark about woman’s superiority to man in
the item of affection; but I ask you where was
there more capacity to love than in John, the
disciple; and Robert McCheyne, the Scotch
man; and John Summerfiald, the Methodist;
and Henry Martin, the missionary ? The heart
of those men wae so large, that after you had
rolled into it two hemispheres, there was room
still left to marshal the hosts of heaven, and
set up the throne of the eternal Jehovah. I
deny to man the throne intellectual. I deny
to woman the throne affectional. No human
phraseology will ever define the spheres, while
there is an intuition by which we know when
a man is in his realm, and when a woman is
in her realm, and when either of them is out of
it. No bungling legislature ought to attempt
to make a definition or to say: “This is the
line apd that is the line.” My theory is that
if a woman wants to vote, she ought to vote,
aud that if a man wants to embroider and keep
house, he ought to be allowed to embroider
and keep house. There are masculine women
and there are effeminate men. My theory is
that you have no right to interfere with any
one’s doing anything that is righteous. Albany
and Washington might as well decree by legis
lation how high a brown-thrasher should fly,
or how deep a trout should plunge, as to try to
seek out the height or the depth of woman’s
duty. The question of capacity will settle
finally the whole question, the whole subject.
When a woman is prepared to preach, she will
preach, and neither conference nor presbytery
can hinder her. When a woman is prepared
to move in highest commercial spheres, she
will have great influence on the exchange, and
no boards of trade can hinder ber. I want
woman to understand that heart and brain can
overfly any barrier that politicians may set up,
and that nothing can keep her back or keep
her down but the question of incapacity.
There are women, I know, of most undesira
ble nature, wander pp and down the country—
having no homes AT their own, or forsaking
their own homes—talking about their rights;
and we know very^weli that they themselves
are fit neither to vote; nor fit to keep bouse.
Their mission seems to be to humiliate the
two sexes at the thought of what any one of us
might become. No one would want to live
under the laws that such women would enact,
or to have cast upon society the children that
such women would raise. But I shall show
you this morning that the best rights that wo
men can own, she already has in her posses
sion, that her position in this country at this
time is not one of commiseration, but one of
congratulation; that the grandeur and power
of her realm have never yet been appreciated;
that she sits to-day on a hrone so high that all
the thrones of earth piltd on top of each other
would not make for her a footstool. Here is
the platform on which she staoda. Away
down below it are the ballot-box and the con
gressional assemblage and the legislative hall.
Woman has always voted and always will vote.
Our great graLid-fathers thought they were by
their votes putting Washington into the presi
dential chair. No. His mother, by the prin
ciples she taught him, and by habits she incul
cated, made him president. It was a Chris
tian mother’s hand dropping the ballot when
Lord Bacon wrote, and Newton philosophized,
and Alfred the Great governed, and Jonathan
Edwards thundered of judgment to come.
How many men there have been in high polit
ical station, who would have been insufficient
to stand the test to which their moral princi
ple was put, had it not been for a wife’s voice
that encouraged them to do right, aud a wife’s
prayer that sounded loader than the clamor of
partisanship! Why, my friends, the right of
suffrage, as we men.exercise it, seems to be a
feeble thing. You, a Christian man, come up
to the ballot-box, and you drop your vote.
R ght after you comes a libertine, or a sot, the
off-.couring of the street, and he drops bis vote;
and his vote counteracts yours. But if, in the
quiet of home life, a daughter by her Christian
demeanor, a wife by her industry, a mother
by her faithfulness, casts a vote in the right
direction, then nothing can resist it, and the
influence of that vote will throb through the
eternities.
My chief anxiety then is, not that women
have other rights accorded her; but that she,
by the grace of G id,, rise up to the apprecia
tion of the glorious rights sue already posses
ses. This morniDg I shall only have time to
speak of the grand and all-absorbing right that
every woman has, and that is to make home
happv. That realm no one has ever disputed
with her. Men may come home at noon or
at night, and they tarry a comparative
ly little while; but she ail day long, governs
it, beautifies it, sanctifies it. It is within
her power to make it the most attractive
place on earth. It is the only calm harbor
in this world. You know as well as I do,
that this outside world and the business
world, is a long scene of jostle and conten
tion. The man whb has a dollar struggles
to keep it; the man who has it not struggles
to get it Prices up. Prices down. Losses.
Gains. Misrepresentations. Gougings. Un
derselling. Bayers depreciating; salesmen ex
aggerating. Tenants seeking less rent; land
lords demanding more. Gold fidgetty. Strug
gles about office. Men who are in trying to
keep in; men out trying to get in. Slips, Tum
bles, Defalcations, Panics, Catastrophes. O,
woman I thank God you have a home, and that
you may be queen in it Better be there than
wear Victoria’s coronet Better be there than
carry the purse of a princess. Your abode
may be humble, but you can, by your faith in
God, and yow cheerfulness of demeanor, gild
it with splendors, such as an npholster’s hand
never yet kindled. There, are abodes in the
city—humble, two-stories;. low plain,, unpa
pered rooms; undesirable neighborhood; and
yet there is a man here this morning who
would die on that threshold rather than sur
render it Why? If is home. Whenever he
thinks of it, he sees angels of God hovering
around it The ladders of heaven are let
down to that house. Over the child’s rough
crib there are the chantings of angels as those
that broke over Bethlehem. It is home.
These children may come up after awhile, and
they may win high position, and they may
have an affluent residence; but they will not
until their dying day forget that humble roof,
under which their father rested, and their
mother sang, and their sisters played. O, if
you would gather up all tender memories, all
the lights and shades of the heart, all banquet-
ings and re-unions, all filial, fraternal, pater
nal and conjugal affections, and yon had only
just four letters with which to spell out that
height and depth, and length, and breadth and
magnitude, and eternity of meaning, you
would, with streaming eyes and trembling
voice, and agitated hand, write it out in those
four living capitals, HOME.
What right does woman want that is grander
than to be queen in suchaNirtlm? Why, the
ebfelee Of heaved cannot fly across that domin
ion. Horses, panting and with laffcored flanks,
are not swift enough to run to tits' outpost of
that realm. They say that the sun never sets
upon the English empire; but I have to tell
you that on this realm of woman’s influence
eternity never marks any bound. Isarelia fled
from tbe Spanish throne pursued by the na
tron’s anathema; but she who is queen in a
home will never lose her throne, and death it
self will only be the annexation of heavenly
principalities. ,
When you want to get your grandest idea of
a queen, you do not think of Catherine of Rus
sia, or of Anne of England, or Marie Theresa
of Germany; but when you want to get your
grandest idea of n queen, you think of the
plain woman who sat opposite your father at
the table or walked with him arm-in-arm down
fife’s pathway; sometimes to the thanksgiving
banquet, sometimes to the grave, but always
together—soothing your petty griefs, correct
ing your childish waywardness, . joining _ in
your infantile sports, listening to your evening
prayers, toiling for you with needle or at the
spinning wheel, and on cold nights wrapping
you up nnn g and warm. And then at last
on that day when she lay in the back
room dying, and you saw her take those
thin hamla with which she toiled for you so
long, and put them together in a dying
prayer that commended you to the God whom
she had taught you to trust. O, she was the
queenl The chariots of God came down to
fetch her, and as she went in all Heaven rose
up. You cannot think of her now without a
rush of tenderness that stirs the deep founda
tions of your soul, aud you feel as much a child
again as when you cried on her lap; and if you
could bring ber back again, to speak just once
more your name as tenderly as she used to
speak it, you would be willing to throw your
self en the ground and kiss the sod that covers
her, crying “Mother! mother!” Ah, she was
the queen—she was the queen. Now, can you
tell me how many thousand miles a wo nan like
that would have to travel down before she got
to the ballot-box? Compared with this work
of training kings and queens for God and eter
nity, how insignificant seems all this work of
voting for aldermen, and common councilmen,
aLd sheriffs, and constables, and mayors, and
presidents. To make one such grand woman
as I have described, how many thousands
would you want of those people who go in tho
round of godlessness and fashion and dissipa
tion, distorting their body until in their mon
strosities they seem to ontdo the dromedary
and hippopotamus, going as far toward dis
graceful apparel as they dare go so as not to
be arrested of the police—their behavior a sor
row to tbe good and a caricature of the vicious,
and an insult to that God who male them wo
men and not gorgons, and i ramping on down
through a frivolous and dissipated life to tern-
poral and eternal damnation?
O, woman, with the lightniDg of yonr sonl
strike dead at your feet all these allnrements
to dissipation and to fashion! Your immortal
soul cannot be fed upon such garbage. God
calls you up to umpire and dominion. Will
you have it? O, give to God your heart; give
to God your best energies; give to God all your
culture; give to God all -your refinement; give
yourself to Him, for this world and the next.
Soon all these bright eyes will be quenched
and these voices will be hushed. For the last
time you wifi look upon this fair earth. Fath
er’s hand, mother’s hand, sister’s hand, child’s
hand will be no more in yours. It will be
night, and there will come np a cold wind from
the Jordan, and you must start. Will it be a
lone woman on a trackless moor? Ah, no.
Jesus will come up in that hoar and offer His
hand, and He will say, “You stood by me when
you were well—now I will not deser: you when
you are sick.” One wave of His hand and the
storm will drop; and another wave of His baud
and midnight shall break into midnoon; and
another wave of His hand and the chamber
lains of God will come down from the treasure-
house of Heaven with robes lustrous, blood-
washed and Heaven-glinted, in which you will
array yourself for the marriage supper of tbe
Lamb. And then with Miriam, who struck
the timbrel of the Red Sea, and with Deborah,
who led the Lord’s host into the fight, and with
Hannah, who gave her Samuel to tbe Lord,
and with Mary, who rocked Jesus to sleep
while there were angels ei :g ng in the air, and
with Florence Nightingale, who bound up the
battle-wouids of the Crimea, you will, from
the chalice of God, drink to the soul’s eternal
rescue.
Oue twilight, after I had been playing with
the children for some time, I laid down on the
lounge to rest. The children said, play more.
Children always want to play more. And, half
asleep and half awake, I seemed to dream this
dream: It seemed to me that I was in a far-
distant land—not Persia, although more than
Oriental luxuriance crowned the cities; nor the
tropics—although more than tropical fruitful
ness filled the gardens; nor Italy—aithongh
more than Italian softness filled the air. ALd
I wandered around, looking for thorns and
nettles, but I found none of them grew there.
And I walked forth and I saw the sun rise, and
I said: " When will it set again? ’’ aud the euu
sank not. And I saw all the people in holiday
apparel, and I said: “When will they pul on
working-man’s garb again, and delve in the
mine, and swelter at the forge?” but neither
the garments nor the robes did they put off.
And I wandered in the suburbs, and I said:
“Where do they bury the dead of this great
city?” and I looked along by tbe hills where it
would be most beautiful for the dead to sleep,
and 1 saw castles, and towers, and battlements;
but not a mausoleum, nor monument, nor
white slab could I see. And I went into the
great chapel of the town, and I said: “Where
do the poor worship? Where are the benches
on which they sit?” And a voice answered:
“We have no poor in this great city.” And I
wandered out seeking to find the place where
were tbe hovels of the destitute; and I found
mansions of amber, and ivory, and gold, but
no tear did I see or sigh hear. 1 was bewil
dered; and I sat under the shadow of a great
tree, and I said: “What am I, and whence
comes all this?” And at that moment there
came from among the leaves, skipping np tbe
flowery piths and across tbe spaikling waters,
a very bright and sparkling group; aud when I
saw their step I knew it, and when I beard
their voices I thought I knew them; but their
apDarel was so different from anything I had
ever seen I bowed, a stranger to strangers.
But after awhile, when they clapped their
hands, aid shouted: “Welcome! welcome!”
the mystery was solved, and I saw that time
had passed, and that eternitv had come, and
that God htd gathered us up into a higher
hom$ and I said, “Are we all here?” and the
voices of innumerable generations answered:
“All here!” and while tears of gladness were
raining down her cheeks, aud >he branches of
the Lebanon cedars were clapping their bands,
and the towers cf the great city were chiming
their welcome, we began to laugh, and sing,
and leap, and shout: “Home! hum 1 ! home!”
Then I feit a chi ! d's hand ju my face, and it
woke me. The children wanttd to play more.
Children always want to p.ay more.
Four hundred convicts have voluntarily ap
pealed to the people of Tennessee for the
adoption of the prohibition amendment They
know what contributed most toward bringing
them to the criminal acts that resu.ted in their
incarceration.
Hailroab#.
RAimO^TlMi: TABLE
Showioig the arrival igi^djvariiu* of'all.traina from
BAST TKNNK.-8EK, VIRGlNIx* GEORGIA BE.
ARRIVE.
•Day.Express from Say’ll
ttFla.No 14. 7 40 am
BoineBx press tromNortn
•Cin. A Ho.?. Ex from
North.No. 11. 410am
Bar Express from North
No. 13 3 20pm
•Day Bx. from 8svaunah
and Brunswick, No.
10..— 7 40pm
*From New York, knox-
vuin ana Alabama points
No.16. 10 IB pm
DEPART
•Day Express North, E.
and West No 14, UK am
•For B,u>h, KmxviUe,
N iw tork,CtneuiMati ana
M‘inputs, No. 12..735 am
•East Express ttonth to*
8 vhttFla. No. 13. 60J pn
•For Sayau’h, Brunswick
ana Jacksonville No IB
BOB am
•New York lam. Nora
N. Y. Phils, ate. No. It
— 410 pe
CENTRAL BAILKUaD.
From Savannah* 7 30 am | To Savannah*.... <00 as.
“ Bamsv’Ut 7 48 a.t I To Macon* ...„ 830 am
“ Bar’av’u* . 9 43 am I To H .pevllle. ...12 00 m
“ Macon* 9.0 pm I To Maoon* 2 00 pm
“ Hapevtlief.. 140pm | To Savannah* ... 6 B0pit
** Maoon* 1 OB pm I To Barnesvulet.. 3 OOps
“ Savannah*. 830 p I To Mar-msvi'let B2B pm
WESTERN AND ATLANTIC MAILBOAD.
From Chata’sa* - 2 23 am
“ Marietta... 8 Ou am
“ Borne...— 116B am
“ Chata'go*.. 6 30 am
’’ Chata’ga*.. 144 pm
*' Chata'im*.. 0 38 0“'
To Chattanooga* 7 60 am
To Chattanooga* 140ps
To Borne ..... 340pm
To Marietta. . 4 41, pa
To Chattanooga* BfiOpm
To Chattanooga* 11 00 on
ATLANTA AND WEST FOiNT RAILROAD.
From M’tgo’ary* 610 am I To Montgo’ery* 1 20 pm
*’ M'tgo’ery* 123 am I To Montjp’eiy* 10 00 pa
“ Lae range* 8 43 an I To Lagrange*.— B 06 pm
GEORGIA KAILROaD.
From Angneta* 640am | To Augusts*.... 800a
’* Covington* 7 66 am I To Decatur—„ 9 00 am
“ Decatur... 101C am I To Clarita ton..- 1210 ps
“ Augusta*.. 100pm I To Augusta*... 24Bpm
Clarks ton.. 2 20pm I To Covington... 610pm
“ Angneta*- B 48 pm I To Augusta* .. 7 30pm
RICHMOND AND DANV1LLL RAILROAD
From Lola ....... 8 28 pm | To.Charlotte*... 7 4u am
“ Charlotte* 12 20pm I To Lola —... 430pn
“ Charlotte* 0 40 pm I To Charlotte*... 6 00 pi
Georgia pacific K-ulwax.
From Bir’g’m*.. < B0am | To Blrming’m*. 680 pit
“ Tallapoosa 9 uO am I To Tanapoosa.. 6 00 pm
“ S isrkvlllt* B 43 nm I T H-.rUviMe* . 8 IS am
•Daily—fDany exuept 0Luua>—{Sa. uay omy. Ali
I E FDD INTEND iU TRAVEL WElIE XU JUT
W. Waite, Traveling Passenger Agent Georgi,
ttaffioaa, for lowest rates, beet seneauies anr
quickest time. PrompcatienUun to all communion
lions.
T HE GEORGIA RAILROAD.
GEORGIA BATLBOAD COMPART,
Office General Manager. •
Augusta, Ga., May. 8.1887.
Commencing Sunday, 9.h instant, the following
passenger schedule will be operated:
Trains ran by 90th meridian time.
FAST LINE.
NO. 27 WEST-DAILY. I NO. 28 EAST-DAILY.
L’ve Augusta 7 45am I L’ve Atlanta —2 48pn
L’ve Washington.7 20am I “ Gainesville. ,J> BBan
Athena — 7 46am j Ar. Athena 7 2)pn
Gainesville B 66am I Ar. Washington.. 7 20i>m
Ar. Atlanta ....1 00pm I “ Augusta,.—.6 lBpn
DAY PASSENGER TRAINS.
NO. 2 EAST-DAILY.
L’ve Atlanta -.8 00am
Ar. Gainesville..»8 26pm
“ Athens B 36pm
“ Washington.. .J2 20pm
“ Milledgeville.. 4 13pm
“ Maoon .6 00. m
“ Augusta ...— 3 36pm I
NO. 1 WEST-DAILY.
Lv’e Augusta ... .10 43sc
“ Macon 7 lOen
“ Miliedgeville.9 38&n
“ Washington. 11 20ah
“ Athens . _ 9 OOan
Ar. Gainesville . 8 26pn
“ Atlanta —B 46pn
NIGHT EXPRESS AND MAH
NO. 4 EAST-DAILY. I NO. 8 WEST-DAILY.
L’ve Atlanta 7 30pm I L’ve Augusta...—0 40pt
Ar. Augusta —B 00am I Ar. Atlanta —6 4Jan
COVINGTON ACCOMMODATION.
L’ve Atlanta.—.6 10pm l L’ve Covington .. —6 40an
Decatur A 46pm I “ Decatur——.7 26aa
Ar. Covington—8 30pm | Ar. Atlanta..- 7 66ac
DECATUR TRAIN.
(Daily except Sunday.)
L’ve Atlanta.—.9 00am i L’ve Decatur.—9 46an
Ar. Decatur 9 30am I Ar. Atlanta...—.10 lBac
CLABKSTON TRAIN.
L’vs Atlanta 12 10pm I L’ve Ctarkaton—.1 28pn
“ Decatur ... 12 42pm | “ Decatur 1 48pn
Ar. Ctarkaton .. 12 57pm I Ar. Atlanta ..——2 20pn
MACON NIGHT BYPKESS (DAILY).
NO 16—WESTWARD | NO. 16-EASTWABD.
Leave Ca_. ak..—12 60 am I Leave Macon 6 30 pn
Arrive Macon..,. 6 40 am I Arrive Camak—U 00 pm
Trains Nos. 2,1, 4 and > will, if signaled, stop at any
regular schedule flag station.
No connection for GaineeviUe on 8 an days.
Train No. 27 will stop at and receive passengers b
and from the following stations only :Grovetown,Har
lem, Dearing, Thomson, Norwood, Barnett, Crawford
ville, Union Point, Greeneeboro, Madison, Bntiadge
Social Circlet Covington, Conyers, Lithonta, Stone
Mosntain and Decatur.
Train No. 28 will atop at and reoeive passengers t.
and from the following stations only: Grovetown. Har
lem, Dearing, Thomson, Norwood, Barnett, Crawford
viile, Union Point, Greenesboro, Madison, Butiedge,
Social Ciiole, Covington, Conyers, Lithonta, Stoie
Mountain and Decatur.
No. 28 stops at Harlem for snpper.
I. W. GREEN, E. R. DORSEY,
Gen’i Manager. Gen’l Pass. Agent.
JOE W WHITE,
Traveling Passenger Agent,
» \lD“!Bta. <4».
JpiKDMONI AIRLINE ROU TE.
bichmond tt danville r r co.
CONDENSED 8CHEDULL IN EFFECT AUG 14,1887.
Trains run by 76.n Meridian time—Ore hour fasts’
ban 90'h M
Northbound.
Leave Atlanta ■
For the Sunny South.
MIZPAH.
TO “OPHELIA.”
Abl darling, many and many a day.
With «oa and shadow, cl' ud and shine,
Shall deck the fleids with fl iweref* gay
And robe the earth with light divine,
Bre ever we again mv Sweet,
A* in the olden time may met t.
And many a ran ohsll rise and set,
And many a soft and starry night,
O’ r grass with sparkling oew-orops wet,
Shall spread ttsgeut e shyer light,
Bre that sweet morn or eve can be
Tost gives thee,darling, back tome.
Bat till again wlthlr my own
1 hold that little trembling band,
And aide ty ride at eve alone,
A* in tbe olden time, we stand,
M» own unceasing prayrr shall b*:
THi Lord God match ’tuixt me and thee
Clarksville, Ttx. —“B. B."
N”. 61.
■ *6 oo pm
Arrive Gainesville - -- -- - 912 pm
Lula - 9 37 pm
Toccoa - -- -- -- -- io ao pm
Seneca - - - 1137 pm
Easley ......... 1236am
“ Greenville 1 01 am
“ Saartanbnrg 2 13 im
Leave Spartanburg ...... 2 40 am
Arrive Tyron 4 u7 am
•• Saluaa 4 67 am
“ Fiat Bask .... 6 37 >m
“ Hunaersonyilie B S3 am
“ Asheville - - 7 to am
“ Hot Springs 9 00am
Leave Spartanburg 213 am
Arrive Gaffney - -- -- ---- 3 on am
“ Gaswnta - -- -- -- - 417am
“ Caariotte 506am
“ Salisbury ------- 648am
“ Baleign - 2 10pm
“ GoldSDoro, . ..... 430 pm
“ Greensboro’ - -- -- 8 28am
“ Danville -----1010 am
“ Bichmond 3 45 pm
“ L> nchbnrg 115 pm
“ Charlottesville - - - - 3 40 pm
“ Washington - -- -- - 8 23 pm
“ BlitUnorr - -- -- --11 26pm
“ Pniladelphta - -- -- 300am
“ New York------- 620 am
Southbound.
No. 60.
Leave New York 4 46 am
Philadelphia
Baltimore -
Washington
7 20 am
' 9 45 am
1124 am
Charlottesville 3 36 pm
Lvnchburg - - - - - - 5 60 pm
“ B enmond ------- 3 to pm
“ Danville 8 50 pm
“ Gieengboro’ - -- -- -10 44 pm
“ Goldsboro’ 5 30am
“ Rilelgh - - 530 pm
“ Salisbury-- ----- 12 39am
“ Charlotte ------- 2 26am
“ Gastoola - - 3 21 am
“ Gaffney’s - ----- - 4 40 am
Arrive Spartanburg 6 28 am
Leave Hot Springs - 7 On pm
•’ Asheville 9 49 am
“ HandersonAtlle - - - - 11 07 pm
“ Fiat B ;ct 11 23 pm
“ Saluda 11 53 pm
“ Tyron - -- -- -- -- - 12 39 am
Arrive Spartanburg 2 10 am
Leave Spartanburg 6‘,8 am
“ Greenville 6 43 am
“ Easley - - 7<8am
“ Seneca - -- -- -- -- 8 24 am
“ Toccoa 9a9!»m
“ Lula - --------- in 31 am
“ Gainesville 11 V4 am
ATlve s’lanta - 120 -on
Nu. 68.
7 40 am
10 36 an
11 o3 am
12 05 n’D
103 pm
211 pm
2 34 pm
8 46 pm
3 50 pro
6 o7 pm
7 uo pm
7 4- pm
817 pm
0 49 pm
8 46 pu>
4 31 pm
6 42 pm
6 26 pm
8 01 pm
t 6 30am
t 11 20 am
9 40 pm
1129 pm
6 16 am
2 00 am
410 am
8 10 am
10 03 am
12 36 pm
3 20 pm
LY.
No. 62.
4 30 pm
6 67 pm
9 42 pm
11 00 pm
3 00 am
5 15 am
2 30 am
8 06 am
9 48 am
t 810 pm
t 1 00 am
11 23 am
1 00 pm
142 pm
2 51 pm
3 34 pm
7 40 am
9 23 m
0 43 am
10 20 am
1 23 am
1 4n pm
3 34 pin
4 48 pu
C 14 pm
6 12 pm
7 08 pm
8 22 pm
8 46 pm
10 40 om
SHBaVXFOBT.
Useful wad Hsrital Medicines. ■
There Is a certain class of remedies for
constipation absolutely useless. These are
boluses and potions made in great part of
podophyllin, aloes, rhubarb, gamboge, and
other worthless ingredients. ' The damage
(bey do to the stomachs of those who nss
them is incalculable. They evacuate the
bowels, it is true, but always do so violently
and profusely, and besides, gripe the bowels.
Their effect is to weaken both them and the
Btomach. Better far to use the agreeable and
salutary aperient, Hostetteris Stomach Bit
ters, the laxative effect of which is never pre
ceded by pain, or accompanied by a convul
sive, violent action of tbe bowels. .’On thaw
contrary, it invigorates those organs, the
stomach and the entire system. As a means
of curing and preventing malar.'al fevers, no
medicine can compare with it and it reme
dies nervous debility, rheumatism, kidney
and bladder inactivity, and other inorganic
ailments.
•Citi Time. t Dalij txo pi Sunday.
t Mondays, Wednesdays aid Faldays.
SLEEPING-CAB SEBVICE.
On trains 50 aud 61 Pullman B .He' 8 -eper be.
tween Nsw Y >rk ana A Unta. Pullman Sleeper be
tween 4eh°v'lle and Atlanta via Spartanburg.
On trains 52 and 63 Pulmac BjUsi Steeper be
tween Washington and Mmtgoinery; Washlbgto
and Angnsta. Pullman Sleeper between Greens-
boro’ and Bichmond; Greensboro’ and Baleigh.
Through resets on sale at principal stations, fr
ail points. For rates and Information apaly to any
agents of the Company, or to
SOL. HA 48, JAS. L. T AYLOB,
Traffic Manager, 6 a. Pass. Ag’t,
WASstNOTON. J> O.
L. L. McCLEfKHY Dv Pass. Agent,
ATLANTA. GA.
^TLANTA ft NEW OBLKAN8 8HOBT LiNB
V1CKSBUBG AND SHREVEPORT, VIA MONTGOMERY
Only line operating doable dally trains and Pol:
man Ballet Sleeping Cara between Atlanta and Nev
Orleans without change.
Tskes effect Sunday. Apr'! 81, 1887.
south bound
No. 60.
Dally.
Leave Atlanta 120 pm
Arrive Fairborn 2 06 pm
“ Palmetto 2 20 pm
“ Newnan 2 47 pm
** GrmntvUie 3 13 pm
“ LaGrange 8 62 pm
“ West Point 4 20 pm
“ Opelika 6 04 pm
Ar. Colombo*. Gao 34 pm
Ar. Montgomery 715 pm
Ar. Pensacola 6 00 am
Ar. Mobile 215 am
Ar. New Or'eaae 710 am
No. 62.
Dally.
10 00 pm
11 07 pm
1126 pm
12 08 am
12 60 am
1 66 am
242 am
3 48 am
11 01 am
7 05 am
2 00 pm
160 pm
7 20 um
No. 2
Dally
6 06pn
6 14 pn
6 26 pir
6 63 ptr
7 20 pc
8 00 pn
KOBTH BOUND -
No 61.
No 53.
No a
Lally.
Dally.
Dali;.
Lv. New Orleans
8 10 pm
806 am
“ MobUe
1 00 am
1 25 pm
“ Pensacola
10 20 pm
105 pm
“ Selma
9 46 am
2 35 pm
“ Montgomery
7 45 am
810 pm
“ Columbus
806 am
Lv. Opelika
9 46 am
1202 am
Ar. West Point
10 27 am
113 am
“ La Graage
10 56 am
1 56 am
7 00 an
“ HogansvUlc
11 23 am
250 am
7 33 an
“ GraotvUle
1137 am
3 13 am
7 60 an
“ Newnan
12 03 pm
356 am
8 23 ao
“ Palmetto
1220 pm
4 45 am
866 an
“ Folrborn
12 41 pm
6 00 am
Ilian
“ Atlanta
126 pm
610 am
10 00 an
Lv. Montgomery
Ar. Selma
* Meridian
“ Vicksburg
“ Shreveport
N -12.
815 am
12 06 pm
2 60,pm
0 36 pm.
N‘. 6.
No 6A
830 pm
660 pm
7 22 pm
oiopm
iss
6 46 pm
THBOUGH CAB 8KB Vi OK.
Pullman Buffet Steeping ear. No. 60. Atlanta to
N«w Orleans.
No 62, Pullman Bnflet Sleeping car, Wuhlngtoi
to Montgomery, and Pnllnun Parlor ear, Montgom
ery to New Orleans.
No. 61, Pullman Buffet Sleeping ears New Orleans
to Atlanta, and at Atlanta to New York
No. 63 Pullman Parlor ear. New Orleans to Mont
gomery, and Pnllman Buffet Sleeping ear Mont
gomery to Washington.
CECIL GABBBTT, OHAfl. H. CROMWELL.
General Manager. Gen. Passenger Agent.
Montgomery, Alabama.
A. J. OBMK, Gen. AgL O. W. CHRARS, ». F. A.
Atlanta. Gcarja-
\wcc s
Tbs Original
Aoasaxvt L ITTLE
WfeuVvo LIVER
Q\\Q\S PILLS.
BEWARE OE IMITATIONS. ALWAYS
ASK TOR BE. PIERCE’S PELLETS, OR
LITTLE SUGAR-COATED PILLS.
Being entirely vegetable, they op
erate without disturbance to the system, diet,
or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermeti
cally sealed. Always fresn and reliable. As
a laxative, alterative, or purgative,
these little Pelleta give the moot perfect
satisfaction.
SM HEME,
Billons Headache,
Dizziness, Constipa
tion, Indigestion,
Billons Attacks,and all
derangements of the stom
ach and bowels, are prompt
ly relieved and permanently
cured by the uso of Dr. '
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
In explanation of the remedial power of these
Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it
may truthfully be said that their action upon
the system is universal, not a gland or tissue
escaping their sanative influence. Sold by
druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the
Chemical Laboratory of World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
$500!™
is offered by the manufactur
ers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Bemedy, for a case of
Chronic Nasal Catarrh which
they cannot cure.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH.—Dull,
heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal
passages, discharges falling from the head
Into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery,
and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are
weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing
in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to
clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
matter, together with scabs from ulcers; tho
voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the
breath is offensive: smell and taste are im
paired ; there is a sensation of dizziness, with
mental depression, a hacking cough and gen
eral debility. Only a few of the above-named
symptoms are likely to be present in any one
case. Thousands of cases annually, without
manifesting half of the above symptoms, re
sult in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and
dangerous, or less understood by physicians.
By its mild, soothing, and healing properties.
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures the worst
cases or Catarrb- “cold in the head,”
Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.
Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents.
“Untold Agony from Catarrh.”
Prof. W. Hausner, the famous mesmerist,
of Ithaca, N. Y., writes: “ Some ten years ago
I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal
catarrh. My family physician gave me up as
incurable, and said I must die. My case was
such a bad one, that every day, towards sun
set, my voice would become so hoarse I could
barely speak above a whisper. In the morning
my coughing and clearing of my throat would
almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well
man, and the cure has been permanent.”
“Constantly Hawking and Spitting.”
Thomas J. Rushino, Esq., rsos ptnc Street,
St. Louis, Mo., writes: “ I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking
and spitting, and for the last eight months
could not breathe through the nostrils. I
thought nothing could be done for me. Luck
ily, I was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy, and I am now a well man. I believe
it to be tho only sure remedy for catarrh now
manufactured, and one has only to give it a
fair trial to experience astounding results and
a permanent cure.”
Three Bottle* Cure Catarrh.
Eli Robbins, Runpan P. O., Columbia Co-
Pa., says: “My daughter had catarrh when
she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro
cured a bottle for her, aud soon saw that it
helped her; a third bottle effected a perma
nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and
sound and hearty.”
BEAST!
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
Sciatica,
Lumbago,
Rheumatism,
Barns,
Scalds,
Stings,
Bites.
Braises,
Banian^
Corns,
CUHE!
Scratches,
Sprains,
Strains,
Stitches,
Stiff Joints,
Backache,
Galls,
Sore^
Spavin
Cracks.
Contracted
Muscle^
Eruptions,
Hoof Ail,
Screw
Worms,
Swinney,
Saddle Gall^
Piles.
THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY
accomplishes for everybody exactly what Is claime4
for iu One of the reasons for the great popularity of
the Mustang Liniment is found in its universal
applicability* Everybody needs such a medicine.
The Lumberman needs It in case of accident.
The Housewife needs it for general family use.
The Cannier needs it for his teams and his men.
The mechanic needs it always on his work
bench.
The miner needs it in case of emergency.
Tbe Pieneer needs it—can’t get along without Ifu
The Farmer needs It in his house, his stabl*
and his stock yard.
The Steamboat man or the Boatman needs
It in liberal supply afloat and ashore.
The Horse-fancier needs it—It is his beat
friend and safest reliance.
The Stock-grower needs It—it will save him
thousands of dollars and a world of trouble.
The Railroad man needs It and will need it m
long as his life is a round of accidents and dangers.
The Backwoodsman needs 1L There is noth,
leglike It as an antidote for the dangers to lif^
limb and comfort which surround the pioneer.
The Merchant needs it about his store «mosg
his employees. Accidents will happen, and when
these come the Mustang Liniment is wanted atone*
Keep a Bottle In the House* TIs the best of
eoonomy.
Keep a Bottle In the Factory* Its immediate
use la of accident saves pain and loss of wage*
Keep a Bottle Always la the Stable for
■•e when wanted*
7-lyr
A POCKET KNIFE FREE!
The beautiful Pocket Knife shown in the above illn«tratio]
two bladea which are guaranteed to be of the finest ooal
Enslish cast-steel. The handle la of fine, polished whit#
lined and riveted with brass. It is of handy aize for the n<
and is suitable for either lady or gentleman. It is a thoroi
good kniie, well made, substantial, and folly ^
urn rere.rew.aaap. re o |.uuiii,u A SO f. Ticket OB
jiaesriu, a lance 16-pnre, »4-colunm Illustrated Literar
Family paper, filled with the choicest reading matter fi
family circle, and being desirous of increasing fts alread.
circulation to 100.000. we now male* fc.tt__.__ a 7
vrra.c. UO two ueuru JOT BIT Month.
to every subscriber we will also send, Free andoost^
t“"^«?*,P**krt K.ir. abac, eJii35l
C ““L r , oa , ““‘"‘■■Si “ •• *!*«“ frets, mere
BIX •abrcrip'u™, and b'x* m'to fen* to?
«**■*•* free. j. 8.8RIFFUlBT>u2E2. elSU*"’