Newspaper Page Text
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THE SUNNY SOUTH. ATLANTA. GA* SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 23, 1888,
oWW
5°^
June Distribution Postponed.
Owing to the scarcity of money in the coun
try the June Distribution has been postponed
till the 1-i.h of October next.
Closing Exercises,
At the Sunny South Seminary.
June li prolific of commencements, and academic
honors rail thick as leaves in Vallambrosa. The
schools and colleges are demonstrating by Interest
ing exhibit their thoroughness of training during the
past scholastic year. By none has this been more
clearly shown thin In the highly Interesting series
of entertainments given by the Sunny South Semi
nary. which, though bat of two years standing, has
already made for Itself a most enviable reputation.
On' Monday night the Juniors acquitted them
selves In a most creditable manner. Oo Tuesday
night the contest for the medal. In elocution, took
place at the Opera House. While each contestant
gave evidence of superior training, the rendition of
two or three pieces was beyond all praise. Miss
Hackney, In “L'fe at a Fashionable Hotel,” was
charmlDg. The grace and naivete of M ss Homesly
lo “>'»n, the lOd-for-N ,thing,” and the piquancy
of the songJ'Over the8iile,”.were simply delightful.
The crowning success of the evening was m.ss Por
ter's recitation. In faultless costume, of “The Coun
tess.” No professional artist could have rendered
It with more ease and gr tee.
Mr. Turnbull, In a crisp, pointed speech, pre
sented the medal for elocution to Miss Hackney.
Hat we heard murmurs ot dissent from bis position,
from many fair Ups.
Cillsthentcs was a striking and beautiful feature
of tbe evening. The skillful way In which tbe Jolly
Walters entangled their Captain was but an earnest
of tbe way In which they will wind themselves about
some fortnoate Captain in the sweet by and-by.
There was something weird and uncanny about tne
Emotions. In view of the piteous pleading of those
upraised arms, one could Imagine himself taking a
glimpse of the "Shadowy Styx.”
Wednesday evening fulfilled Its promise of a treat.
The eff act was magical as the curtain rose on the
“Knsebud Carden ol Girls.” 'Twas something like
a rift In the clouds of sbowtng Beulah beyond.
Tbe essays were well written and gracefully de
livered. and were perfectly audible when not antag
onized by the conversation of people wbo should
have remained at home.
Miss l.ny McAIee, the fair valedictorian, took a
tender farewell of her class. Her rich voice faltered
with suppressed feeling as, with upturned glance
and significant motion, she spoke the final adieu.
Mr. Hooper Alexander’s address was at once
pnintd and elegant. Tracing causes to their final
effect In Anglo Saxon character, be demonstrated
that Its dominant phase, love of home, was tbe bul
wark of society; that woman’s mission was to guard
that home against the demorallz ng Isms of the day;
as she neglected this, she sowed to the wind and
would reap tbe whirlwind.
Thursday evening was the musical climax. The
pleasure ol the evenings previous bad been height-
ened by vocal and Instrumental successes, but It
was reserved for this last evening, dedicated to
Kuterpe. to bear off the palm. The performance of
the pupils of Madame Von aer Hoya and Prof. W.
F. Seals bore testimony to faithful effort and entire
competency. The vocal solo of Miss Little, and the
vocal duet by Misses Little ana Holmesly, were
particularly good
John H. Seals, Elltor Sunny South, In a brief
but taking speech, presented the leruunedals to the
following young ladles:
General Excellence, Miss L McAfqe.-
Excellence In It-cltatlon. Miss Flyrit.
Composition, Misses Wright and ivy.
Penmanship, Miss Williams.
Deportment, Miss E. Green.
Arithmetic. Miss Thornton.
Vocal Music, Miss Little,
instrumental Music, Miss EulaDuncan.
Medal, by Mme. Siolzs, Special Medal for greatest
Improvement In Vocal Music, Miss N. It->1<1.
Medal by Prof. W. F Seals, fur Instrumental Music,
Misses Willingham and Holmesly.
Art Medal, Miss Harper.
Special Medal (cr greatest Improvement In one
month In music, Miss Wallace.
The entire exercises of the Seminary were pro
nounced extraordinary In their scope and excel
lence. and added largely to tbe fame and popnlarttr
of this young and favorite Institution. It Is de
stined to become one of the most popular schools In
the South, and will open the next scholastic year
under the most auspicious circumstances.
Atlanta, Ga.
Tbls morning about 10 o'clock a close carriage
stopped In front of tbe Catholic Cburcb aud out step
ped a gentleman and lady wbo, It was afterwards
ascertained, were Francis Jones, of Covington, aDd
Miss Mary w Mdenger, of 8'. Louis, wbo were on tbe
point of being married. The couple mounted the
steps of the edifice and entering the church were
united in marriage by Father Kenney. The bride
came to Atlanta Tuesday night from St Louis and
was met there by Mr Jones After tbe ceremony
they drove to a photograph establishment on White
hall street, where pictures were taken of them, rep
resenting each as tbey stood before the altar and
uttered their marriage vows.
June 14.
Pensacola, Fla,
Mr O T Robertson and daughter, of Ewing, Ind,
are the guests of sr John McBrlre.
Master Louis and Earnest PfutT or, sons of Mrs Eva
M. and J Jbn M PluBer, respectively, of this city, are
at home again after a course at a business academy
in New Orleans, La.
W A Whitney, who has filled tbe position as Big
nal 8srvlce observer here for some time past, has
been transferred to Louisville, Ky. Mr Whitney
carries with blm to bis new home the best wishes of
the community. His friends here are many, both In
business and our best social circles.
Mr James Crawford of Lexington, Ky., who has
for a good while past been stationed at New Or
leans, will llil the position vacated by jit Whitney; It
is to be hoped tnat he will prove himself as satisfac
tory to onr community and make as many friends as
has r.i - Whitney.
Mr Max Lee and Miss Bertha, son and daughter of
sir Lewis Bear, arrived home on Sunday. 3 d Inst.,
from Staunton, Va., where they have been attending
school. Tbev were accompanied by M ss Julia, tbe
daughter ol Mr Simon Fjrcbelmer, wno bas lately
located In 1’ensac la. and engaged In the brokerage
business. Mtss Forchelmer win spend her vacation
with Miss Bear. The young lades have been attend
ing the Augusta Female Seminary, and Mr Max the
Staunton Military Academy.
A Dramatic and Musical entertainment, which was
given a’ Sullivan's Opera House on Thursday even
ing the 7 h Inst., by tbe pupils of tbe Convent school,
was a grand sue tess and very entertaining Indeed.
Tbe center of attraction, however, were the three
young lady graduates-Miss Rich, m ss Mooney and
>i ss Tobin, who sustained themselves splendidly,
rerl -ctlug much credit on the management of this
splendid and charitable Institution.
Rev Father Baasen, Immediately before the clos
ing ol the entertainment, presented the diplomas
to the three young and beautiful graduates, accom-
pan’ed by a gold medal for each; and, also, a beau
tiful gold medal to x ss Tobin, for music. We did
not learn the net receipts or the entertainment, but
we sincerely hope that It was a large sum. for such a
charitable eutertalnment should be well patronized.
The death of m ss R.glna, the youngest daughter
of sirs Annette Knowles, which occurred on Friday
morning the 8 h Inst., was an event which cast a
gloom over the circle In which she moved. Miss
i llie prime ol womanhood, much
loved, respected and admired by all wbo knew her:
a comfort to her dear old mother in her hours of
sadness; the light of her beautiful home—the fairest
In the domestic garden of daughter, and a
belle In tbe elite of our society.
Miss Halite Cusbmao, Miss Mary Turner. Miss
imveAhS™ Misses Mary and O.a McDaniel,
°° evening, tbe 6.D Inst.,
from the Tuscaioosa (Ala.). Female Academv thev
Mr W J HutcunsnnthenexVevem
School at the same place. All^the' wpM*
and n speak ln high «&« fhe Tu&M* S
Miss Bessie Jordan, much to th« r»ar.*t
m MiL l- ,e ne , vr <lUl '' 8 ’ C * wtUl 'SPb^ leter her
an^ Kwmpa,bed 0 young* e ?i* a 'a DK
the ll.h Inst., to visit fronds'in^bue.Tla ay
. „ H. D.R.
A Floridian Gets Harried
lnetoafll'l^ot rec*nt tlate* •«* 8tar.otw tth .
cSa,: a weal thy cut* z**n of Ind^Tve^ M
vertlsed ln a newspaper for a wife Mtsi
Ciarke, an estimable young ladv of n chmnmi^v 4
answered the advertisement. P.cturM and i«f\ d *’
were exchanged, and the result was a
garment, and the day was set ram v a . r J laf?e en_
& ll cnmond one day pre“ous to Slut flxed*tor !h^
Little Bock. Ark.
Julge andMrse c Waters entertained the Tha
ta h0:10r 0( '“sir nlecet!
*"«• 01 Camden, who has been v.slttne
their daugbter-M ss Hattie. Tnose In attendance
were Misses Georgia Lincoln, May stark KauTn™
ley, Lillian Hughes, Vest. W.Iharn, Duel
Miry o Connell, Szranp Blocher, Lillie Reeves x™
A A Dewey, Isabel Upturn, Hattie waterJm^m!
Charley Lincoln. Jim Lawson. Pbll Price, George
R seers. Frank DesUon. Louis Vickers, Sterling Sto
wed, Fred Davidson, w 11 Walker. Eugene Jabtne,
Charlie Savage. Harry Baird, George Dow aes, Ber
nle Esystem, Simeon Reed, waiter Tucker. John
Witherspoon, Thode Leland, Tnomas Jones, Charles
waters.
Prof Ham Z Churchill arrived from tbe south last
night.
Mr Henrv w sod returned yesterday from St Lon Is.
Fred Marshall Is home from school.
Miss Emily Farrow of Ft Smith. Is visiting ber sis
ter, M'S A P R-lff In this city, oa Ninth street, be
tween Cross and Rmgo streets.
Miss D-nnte Smith, tbe charming and lovely
daughter ot Judge w w Smith, bas gone to Colorado
Springs, Colorado, to spend tbe snmmer.
Mrs Julia Cand er has arrived from Los Ange’os,
Cal, and Is stopping with her daughter—Mrs E P
Schaer, corner ot Slate and water streets.
A Dotable wedding will take place at 9 o’clock
this evening at the quarters of Lieut and Mrs Slone,
at the United Slates Arsenal. Thepar.Ies are M".
Junes Blocher. cashier of the State Treasurer’s
<fl:te, and mI*s Laura R daughter of the late air. R
S Gantt, ot Prairie county, both well known and
highly respected society people.
Ml«s Laura E Brown, tbe accomplished editor ot
the I.ife, In Ibis city, has gone to 3u Louis on avislt.
Llbwdkac.
Q^amagcj?.
OlfRPllLPIT
TALMAGE’S SERMON.
Francis .1 nes and Miss Mary waldinger, ln At
lanta, Ga., 14
Burton Smith and Miss Fannie Gordon, Atlanta,
Ga, June 19
George w walker and Miss Sue Goodrich, Augus
ta, Ga, Jnne 7
Dr. John B Moorman and Miss Susie Sayers
ln Wythev.lle, Va, J une 7.
Henry Smith aud Miss NellaKing, ln Hawklns-
vllle, Ga, June ic
DrJ J Butts andM-SM G O.lphant, In Columbus
Ga, Junes
WEI: leney and Miss Cora Boone, by Rsv Dr E J
Miynarule, ln Port Royal, SC, June 5.
Jno If Gantt and si ss Annie C Powell, by Rev E V
Baldy, in Macon, Ga, June 13.
Walter Black and Miss Hattle Neal, by R G water,
bouse, In Knoxville, Tenn, June 6
M J Lane and alias Belle J McPike, by Ilav S S
Weatherly, ln E.tUlvllle, Ga, Jane 7.
M A Timothy and Miss Jennie Buford, by Father
Walsh, to Nashville, lean, Jane 12.
F w Allen and m'ss Sarah ucCIanahan, by Rev w
C Campbell, In R oanoke, Va, J une 12.
P w si til ugh and Miss M'.nrie Brown, by Father
Savage, In Montgomery, Ala, Jane 11.
Captain Frank c Scruggs and Miss Janet withers,
ln Lynchburg, Va, J une 7.
Sampson si Fugette aDd Miss Iada warder, In
Chattanooga, Tenn, June 7.
J Alonz a Cdeman and Miss si ary Garland Wilson
ln CUatbaro, Va, Jnne 5.
W E Taylor and Miss Fannie Price, ln MlUedge-
vllle, Ga, June c.
N J Gooding and Miss Fannie Rose, In Kearney,
Mo, June 1.
Christian Hodman and m ss Sophia Myers, by Rav
Father Dempsy, Fulton, sto, May 31,
IN Box and ailss Naoma Ranshaw, ln Clarks
burg, si i, M ay 30.
I) avis C Cooper and Miss Annie Constantine, ln
Oxanna, Ala, June c.
James H Jones and stiss Katie LaZtlla Barbee, In
Luray, Va, J une 7.
ltev Joseph Jones and stiss Bossie Farrow, In
Spartanburg, S C, June 7.
N si Brownand m'.S9 Annte F Lomax, lo Grenada
miss, June 4
J obnson Eaton and m ss m try Richardson, In Jeff
erson county, Ga, June 3.
Hon Tom Eason and Miss Sallie Smith, ln Telfair
conuty, Ga, J one 5.
W S Nelson and stiss L7d!a nafner, In Eatonton,
Ga, June fi.
Prot Charles C Cox and Miss atunle Bacon ln
Cotnmbus, Miss, June 4.
Manly Morrison Caldwell and stiss willle Brown,
by Rav B It Preston, ln w/tbevllle, Va, June 13.
SDcatfjje?.
Dr £ F Olds, in Atlanta, Ga„ Jane 14.
Mrs Mary Crow, In Atlanta, Ga., Jnne 13.
Col W F Forbes, Secretary ol tne Sub-Tropical
Exposition, ln Jacksonville, Fla., Jane 15
Mrs Mary Ann Baker, ln Buena Vista, Ga. Jnne IS.
John M Coffee, near Carnesville, Ga,, June It.
Dr John G Faneloth, In BranchvlUe, Ga., June 10.
Mrs Israel Maples, ln Camilla, Ga., June 11.
Mrs Ellen Rackley, in Dalton, Ga., Jane G.
John Mitcham, in Lynchburg, Va., June 13.
Mrs E E Barksdale, near Stony Point, Va, Jane 11.
Webb Paschal, ln Nashville, Tenn., June 12.
George P Evans, ln Charlottesville, Va., June 7.
Mrs Tbos C Miller, ln Lynchburg. Va., June 5.
Franklin Siearns, ln Rlcbmond, Va , Jane 10.
Gsn Jas W Harrison, ln Walballa, S C, Jane 11.
Mrs John A Duncan, ln Ralelgb N C, June 3.
For the Scnxy South.
THE SUICIDE.
BY MARGABITE.
If suiciding as a rule,
Be ’ prompted by some crazy passion,”
Parisian heads are not so cool.
Leading ln the tolls ot fashion:
The quiet Swede more wisely tanght,
Clings to life ln sweet contentment;
Lives among bis lake9 at ease,
Free from rashness and resentment.
I know a short way out of trouble,
Said a suicide to-day—
Grieving over vanished rlcbes,
Never pausing once to pray.
Bat did tbe rash man end bis angnisb,
When be rent life’s trial term—
Let tbe butterfly reprove him,
When It wings Its patient germ!
Life was dark, bat Hope stood waiting;
Ere the trail man cursed his birth
Myriad angels would nave cheered blm
When his patience proved his worth.
'Tis nobler far to meet life’s trials,
And Us burdening ills to bear,
Than to shun the cross that leads to glory,
Jesns blest with bis dying prayer.
May, 1838.
Advice to Students.
Sit tip to the table when you read; easy chairs
aboliBh memory. Do not read the same book
too long at one sitting. If you are really weary
of one subject change it for another, Read
steadily three hours a day for five days in the
week; the use of wet towels and strong coffee
betrays ignorance of how to read. Test the
accuracy of your work as soon as you have
finished it. Put your facts in order as you
have learned them. Never read after mid
night. Do not go to bed straight from your
books. Never let your reading interfere with
your exercise for digestion. Keep a clear
head, a good appetite, and a cheerful heart.—
Medical Examiner.
Brookly\, N. Y., June 17.—At the service
in the tabernacle this morning the Rev. T. Do-
Witt Talmage, I). D., took for the subject of
his discourse, “Pulpit and press Slade allies.”
His text was Luke xvi, v. 8; “Tne children
of this world are i n their generation wiser than
tbe children of light.” He said:
Sacred stupidity aud solemn incompetency
and sanctified laziness are here rebuked by
Christ. He says worldlings are wider awake
for opportunities than are Cnristians. Men of
the world grab occasions while Christian peo
ple let the most valuable occasions drift by un
improved. That is the meaning of onr Lord
when he says: “The children of this world
are in their generation wiser than the children
of light.”
A marked illustration of the truth of that
maxim is in the slowness of the Christian re
ligion to take possession of the secular printing
press. The opportunity is open and has for
some time been opeD, bat the ecclesiastical
courts and the churches and ministers of relig
ion are for the most part allowing the golden
opportunity to pass unimproved. That the
opportunity is open I declare from the fact that
all the secular newspapers are glad of any re
ligions facts or statistics that you present
them. Any animated and stirriDg article re
lating to religions themes they would gladly
print. They thank you for any information in
regard to churches. If a wrong has been done
to any Christian church or Christian institu
tion you could gj into any newspaper of the
land and have the real trnth stated. Dedica
tion services, ministerial ordinations and pas
toral installations, corner-stone laying of a
church, anniversary of a charitable society,
will have reasonable space in any secular jour
nal if it have previous notice given. If 1 had
some great injustice done me, there is not an
editorial or a reportorial room into which I
could not go and get myself set right, and that
is true of any well-known Christian man. Al
ready the daily secular press during the course
of each week publishes as much religious infor
mation and high moral sentiment as does the
weekly religious press. Why then does not
onr glorious Christianity embrace these mag
nificent opportunities? I have before me a
subject of first and last importance: How
shall we secure the secular press as a mightier
reinforcement to religion and tbe puipit?
Tbe first thing toward this result is cessa
tion of indiscriminate hostility against news-
paperdom. Yon might as well denonnee the
legal profession because of the shysters, or the
medical profession because of the quacks, or
merchandise because of the swindling bargain
makers, as to slam-bang newspapers because
there are recreant editors and unfair reporters
and unclean columns. Gotten berg, the inven
tor of the art of printing, was about to destroy
his types and extinguish the art because it was
suggested to him that printing might be sub
orned into the service of tbe devil; but after
ward he bethought himself that the right use
of the art might more than over-come the evil
use of it and so he spared the type and the in
telligence of all following ages. But there are
many today in the depressed mood of Gutten-
berg with uplifted hammer wanting to pound
to pieces the type, who have not reached his
belter mood in which he saw the art of print
ing to be the rising sun of the world’s illumi
nation. If, instead of fighting newspapers, we
spend the same length of time and the same
vehemence in marshalling thejr help in relig
ious directions, we would be as much wiser aJ
the man who gets consent of the railroad su
perintendent to fasten a car to the end cf a
rail-train, shows better sense than he who
runs his wheelbarrow up the track to meet and
drive back the Chicago limited express. The
silliest thing that a man ever does is to fight a
newspaper, for yon may have the floortor ut
terance perhaps one day in the week, while
the newspaper bas the floor every day in the
week. Napoleon though a mighty man had many
weaknesses, and |oo:e of the weakest things
he ever did was to threaten that if the English
newspapers did not stop their adverse criti
cism of himself he would, with four hundred
thousand bayonets, cross the channel for their
chastisement.
Again, if you would secure the secular press
as a mightier reinforcement of religion and the
pulpit, extend widest and highest Christian
courtesies to the represetatives of journalism.
Give them easy chairs and plenty of room
when they come to report occasions. For the
most part they are gentlemen of education and
refinement, graduates of colleges, with families
to support by their literary craft, many of
them weary with the push of a business that
is precarious and fluctuating, each one of them
the avenue of information to thousands of
readers, their impression of the services to be
the impression adopted by multitudes. Tney
are connecting links between a sermon or a
Bong or a prayer and this great population that
tramp up and down the streets day by day and
year by year with their sorrows uncomforted
and their sins unpardoned. More than eight
hundred thousand people in Brooklyn and less
than seventy.five thousand in ctmrches, so
that our cities are not so much preached to by
ministers of religion as by reporters. Put all
journalists inti onr prayers and sermons. Of
all the hundred thousand sermons preached
to-day, there will not be three preached to
j ournalists, and probably not one. Of all the
prayers offered for classes of men innumer
able, the prayers offered for this moat poten
tial class wiil be so few and rare that they will
be thought a preacher’s idiosyncrasy. Tms
world will never be brought to God until some
revival of religion sweeps over the land and
takes into the kingdom of God editors and
reporters, compositors, pressmen and newB-
boys. And if yon have not faith enough to
pray for that and toil for that, you had better
get out of our ranks and join the other side,
for you are the unbelievers who make the
wheels of the Lord’s chariot drag heavily.
The great final battle between truth and error,
the Armageddon, I think, will not be fought
with swords and shells and guns, but with
pens, quill pens, steel pens, gold pens, foun
tain pens, and before that, the pens must be
converted. The most divinely honored wea
pon of the past has been the pen and the most
divinely honored weapon of the future will be
the pen; prophet’s pen and evangelist’s pen
and apostle's pen followed by editor’s pen and
reporter's pen and author’s pen. God save
the pen! The wing of the Apocalyptic angel
will be the printed page. The printing press
will roll ahead of Christ’s chariot to clear the
way.
I have been articled with catarrh for 20
years. It became chronic and there was a
constant dropping of mucous matter. It ex
tended to my throat, causing hoarseness and
great difli culty in speaking, indeed for years I
was not able to speak more than'thiity min
utes, and often this with great difficulty,
also, to a great extent, lost the sense of hear
ing in the left ear, and of taste. By the nse of
Ely’s Cream 15 Aim all droppings of mneons
has ceased and my voice and hearing has
greatly improved.—Jas. W. Davidson, Attor
ney at Law, Monmouth, 111.
Will Carleton, the poet of the farm and fire
side, was taken by one of tbe attendants at
the Vatican to see the Pope’s j ubilee presents.
He says that besides all tbe gold, silver and
jewels, there are enough slippers to have shod
every pope that ever lived, more top-boots than
a regiment could use, sofa pillows and clocks
galora, while hundreds of new church bells are
stacked in gardens, waiting steeples from which
to send forth their silvery chimes.
Consumption Surely Cured.
To the Editor:—
Please inform your readers that I have a
jositive remedy for the above named disease.
3y its timely use thousands of hopeless cases
have been permanently cured. I shall be glad
to send two bottles of my remedy free to any
of your readers who have consumption if they
will send me their Express and P. O. address.
Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C.
181 Pearl St., New York.
An industrial and physical prodigy has bsen
discovered at Parks Ferry, Saratoga county,
New York. His name is Wallace Parks, Jr.,
and though only 4 years of age he chops the
wood for his family. He is as large and strong
as a boy 10 years o’der. Hie great grandfa
ther was Solomon Parks, the original settler at
Parks Ferry. A bay of 4 who chops wood is
as remarkable in his way as a boy of 10 who
composes music.
0 Solid roll gold rings, 25 cts. One solid
O gold ring (my own make), §150. Sent
anywhere. B.ne, 97 and 99 Peachtree street,
Atlanta, Ga. 653-tf
Don’t fight newspapers. Attack provokes
attack. Belter wait till the excitement blows
over and then go in and get justice, for get it
you will if you have patience and common
sense and equipoise of disposition. It ought
to be a mighty sedative that there is an enor
mous amount of common sense in the world,
and yon will eventually be taken for what yon
are really worth, and you cannot be puffed up
and yon cannot be written down, and if yon
are tbe enemy of good society that fact will
come out, and if you are the friend of good
society that fact will be established. I know
what lam talking about, for lean draw on
my own experience. All the respec table news
papers, as far as I know, are my friends now.
But many of you remember the time when I
was the most continuously and meanly at
tacked man in this country. God gave me
grace not to answer back, and I kept silence
for ten years, and much grace is required.
What I said was perverted and twisted
into just the opposite of what I did say. My
person was maligned and I was presented
as a gorgon, and I was maliciously de
scribed by persons who had never seen me as a
monstrosity in body, mind and soul. There
were millions of people who believed that
there was a large sofa in this pnlpit, although
we never had anything but a chair, and that
during the singing by tbe congregation I was
accustomed to lie down on that sofa and dan
gle my feet over tbe end. Lying New York
correspondents for ten years misrepresented
our church services, but we waited and people
from every neighborhood of Christendom came
to find the magnitude of the falsehoods con
cerning the church and concerning myself. A
reaction set in and now we have justice, full
justice, more than justice, and &3 much over
praise as ones we had under appreciation, and
no man that ever lived was so much indebted
to the newspaper pie is fo: opportunity to
preach the gospel as I am. Young men in the
ministry, young men in all professions and
occupations, wait Y ou can affsrd to wait.
Take rough misrepresentation as a Turkish
towell to start np your languid circulation, or a
system of massage or Swedish movement whose
pokes and pulls and twists and thrusts are
salutary treatment. There is only one person
yon need to manage and that is yourself. Keep
your disposition sweet by communion with the
Cnrist, who answered not again, the society of
genial people, and walk out in the sunshine
with your hat off and you will come ont all
right. And don’t join the crowd of people in
our day who spend much of their time damn
ing newspapers.
Again, in this effort to secure the secular
press as a mightier reinforcement of religion
and the pulpit, let us make it the avenue of re
ligious information. If you put the facts of
churches and denominations of Christians only
into the colamn of religious papers, which do
not in this country have and average of more
than ten thousand subscribers, wuat have you
done as compared with what you da if you
put these facts through the daily papers which
have hundreds of thousands of readers. Every
little denomination must have its little organ
supported at great expense, when with one-
half the outlay a column or half a column of
room might be rented in same semi-omnipo
tent secular publication and so the re.igious
information would be sent round and round
tbe world: The week old is stale. Give us all
the great church facts and all the revival tid
ings the next morning or the same evening My
advice, often given to friends who propose^ to
starts new paper, is: “Don’t! Don’t! Em
ploy the papers already started. ’ The biggest
financial hole ever dug in this American con
tinent is the hole in which people throw their
money when they start a newspaper. It is al
most as good and as quick a way of getting rid
of money as buying stock in a gold mme in
Colorado. Not more printing presses but tie
right us s of those already established
—iIvanovo all th*ir steam Dower, all
All
their cylinders, all their steam power, ajl their
pods all their editorial chairs and reportorial
rooms are available if you would engage them
in behalf of civilization and Christianity.
“Bat,” some one might ask, “would you
make the Sunday newspaper also a reinforce
ment?” Yes, I would. I have learned to
take things as they are. I would like to see
the much scoffed at old Puritan Sabbaths come
back again. I do not think the modern Sun
day will turn out any better men and women
than were yonr grandfathers and grandmoth
ers under the old-fashioned Sunday. To say
nothing of other results, Sunday newspapers
are killing editors reporters, compositors and
pressmen. Every man, woman and child is
entitled to twenty-four hours of nothing to do.
If the newspapers pnt on another set of
hands that does not relieve the editorial and
reportorial room of its cares and responsi
bilities. Our literary men die fast enough
without killing them with Sunday work.
Bat tbe Sanday newspaper bas come to
stay. It will stay 'a good deal longer than
any of us stay. What then shall we do? Im
plore all those who have anything to do with
issuing it to fill it with moral and religious in
formation, live sermons and facts elevating.
Urge them all that divorce cases be dropped,
and instead thereof have good advice as lo how
husbands and wives ought to live lovingly to
gether. Pnt in small type the behavior of the
swindling church member and in large type the
contribution of some Christian man toward an
a8ylnm for feeble minded children or a seaside
sanitarium. Urge all managing editors to pnt
meanness and impurity in type, pearl or agate,
and charity and fidelity and Christian consis
tency in brevier or bourgeois. If we cannot
drive ont the Sanday newspaper, let us
have the Sunday newspaper converted.
Tbe fact is that tbe modem Sunday newspa
per is a great improvement on the old Sunday
newspaper. What a beastly thing was the
Sanday newspaper thirty years ago! It was
enough to destroy a man’s respectability to
leave the tip end of it sticking out of his coat
pocket. What editorials! What advertise
ments! What pictures! The modem San
day newspaper is as much an improvement on
the old time Sanday newspaper as one hun
dred is more than i-v: l'y-five percent improve
ment. Who knoj.'e uiat by prayer and kindiy
consultation with our literary friends we may
have it lifted into a .positively religious sheet
printed on Saturday night and only distributed,
like the American Messenger, or the Missipit-
ary Journal, or the Stlndhy Schoftl -irdvuCwje,
on Sabbath mornings / All things sre possible
with God and my faith, is up until nothing in
the way of religious victory would surprise
me. All the newspaper printing presses of
the earth are going to be the Lord’s, and tele
graph and telephone and type wiil yet an-
nonnee nations bora in a day. The first book
ever printed was the Bible by Faust and his
Bou-iu-law Schoeffsr in 1400, and that conse
cration of typo to the Holy Scriptnres was a
prophecy ot the great, mission of printing for
the evangelization of all the nations. The fa
ther of the American printing press was a cler
gyman, Rev. Jesse Glover, and that was a
prophecy of the religious use that the gospel
ministry in this country were to make of the
types.
Again: we shall secure the secular press as a
mightier re-inforcement of religion and the pul
pit by making our religious utterances more
interesting anj spirited, and then the press
will reproduce them, tin the way to church
some fifteen years ago, a journalist said a thing
that has kept me thinking: “Are yon goiDg
to give us any points to-day?” “What, do you
mean?” I asked. lie said: “I mean by that
anything that will bs striking enough to be re
membered.” Then I said to myself: What
right have we in our pulpits and Sunday
scfiools to take the time of the people if we have
nothing to say that is memorable. David did
not have any difficulty in remembering Na
than’s thrust: “Thou art the maD;” nor Felix
in remembering Paul's point blank utterance
on righteousness, temperance and judgment to
come; nor the English king any difficulty in
remembering what the court preacher said,
when, daring the sermon against sin, tbe
preacher threw his bandkerchief into the king’:
pew to indicate wham he meant. Tha tenden
cy of criticism in tha theological seminaries is
to file off from onr young men all the sharp
points and make them too smooth for any kind
of execution. What we want, all of ns, i3 more
point, less humdrum. If we say the right
thing in the right way the press will be glad to
echo and re-echo it. Sabbath-school teachers
refarmers, young men and old men in the min
istry, what we all want, if we are to make the
printing press an ally in Christian work, is that
which the reporter spoken of suggested—points,
sharp points, memorable points. But if the
thing be dead when uttered by living voice, it
will be a hundred fold more dead when it is
laid out in cold type.
Now, as you all have something to do with
the newspaper press either in issuing a paper
or reading it, either as producers or patrons,
either as sellers or purchasers of the printed
sheet, I propose on this Sabbath morning, J une
17, 1888, a treaty to be signed between the
church and the printing press, a treaty to be
ratified by millions of good people if we rightly
fashion it, a treaty promising that we wiil help
each other in our work of trying to illumine
and felicitate the world, we by voice, you by
pen, we by speaking only that which is worth
printing, you by printing only that which is fit
to speak. You help ns and we will help you.
Side by side be these two potent agencies nntil
the judgment day, when we must both beecru-
tinizid for onr work, healthful or blasting. The
two worst off men in that day wiil be the min
ister of religion and tbe editor if they wasted
their opportunity. Both of us are the engineer
of long express trains of influence, and we wiil
run them into a depot of light, or tumble them
off the embankment.
What a useful life and a glorious departure
was that of tbe most famous of all American
printers, Benjamin Franklin, whom infidels in
the penury of their lesources have often fraud
ulently claimed for th»ir own, but the printer
who moved that the Philadelphia convention
be opened with prayer, the resolution loat be
cause a majority thought prayer unnecessary,
and who wrote at tbe time he was viciously at
tacked, “My rale is to go straight forward in
doing what appears to me to be right, leaving
tences to Providence,” and who
redemption, is suggested by the fact that Paul
and Christ took a reporter along with them
and he reported their addressee and reported
their acta. Luke was a reporter, and he wrote
not only the book of Luke, but the Acts of the
Apostles, and without that reporter’s work we
would have known nothing of the Pentecost,
and nothing of Stephen’s martyrdom, and
n3thing of Tabitha’s resurrection, and nothing
of the jailing and unjailing of Paul and Silas,
and nothing of the shipwreck at Melita. Strike
out the reporter’s work from the Bible and
you kill a large part of the New Testament.
It makes me think that in the future of the
kingdom of God the reporters are to bear a
mighty part.
About thirteen years ago, a representative
of an important newspaper took his seat in
this church one Sabbath night, about live pews
from the front of this pulpit. He took out
pencil and reporter’s pad, resolved to carica
ture the whole scene. When the music began
he began, and with his pencil he derided that,
and then derided the prayer, and then derided
the reading of the Scriptures, and then began
to deride the sermon. But, he says, for some
reason, his hand began to tremble, and he, ral
lying himself, sharpened his pencil and started
again, but broke down again, and then put
pencil and paper in his pocket and his bead
down on the front of the pew and began to
pray.
At the close of the service he came up and
asked for the prayers of others and gave hia
heart to God; and, though still engaged in
newspaper work he is an evangelist, and hires
a hall at his own expense, and every Sabbath
afternoon preaches Jesus Christ to the people.
And the men of that profession are going to
come in a body throughout the country. I
know hundreds of them and a more genial or
highly educated class of men it would be hard
to find, and, though the tendency of their pro
fession may be towards skepticism, an organ
ized, common-sense, gospel invitation would
fetch them to the front of all Christian en
deavor. Men of the pencil and pen, in all de
partments, yon need the help of the Christian
religion. In the day when people want to get
their newspapers at three cents are hoping for
the time when they can get any of them at one
cent, and, as a consequence, the attaches of the
printing press are by tbe thousands ground
under the cylinders, you want God to take
care of yon and yonr families. S ime of yonr
best work is as mnch unappreciated as was
Milton’s Paradise I.ost, for which the author
received §25; and the immortal poem, “Hohen-
linden,” of Thomas Campbell, when be first
offered it for publication, and in the called
“Notices to Correspondents," appeared the
words: “To T. C.—The lines commencing
'On Linden when the sun was low,’ are not np
to our etandard. Poetry is not T. C.’s forte.”
O men of tbe pencil and pen, amid your un
appreciated work you need encourage ment and
you can have it. Printers of all Christendom,
editors, reporters, compositors, pressmen, pub
lishers and readers of tha’. which is printed,
resolve that you will not write, set up, edit, is
sue or read anything tha’ -t bases body, mind
or soul. In tbe name of (5 >d, by the laying on
of the hands of faith in prayer, ordain the
printing press for righteousness and liberty and
Balvation. All of us with some influence that
will help in the right direction, let us put our
hands to the work imploring God to hasten the
consummation. A ship with hundreds of pas
sengers approaching tbe South American
coast, the man on the lookont neglected his
work, and in a few minutes the ship would
have been dashed to ruin on the rocks. But a
cricket on board the vessel that had made no
sound all the voyage set up a shrill call at the
smell of land, and the captain knowing that
habit of the insect, the vessel was stopped in
time to avoid an awful wreck. And so insig
nificant means now may do wqnders and the
scratch of a pen may save the shipwreck of a
soul.
Are you ready for the signing of their contract
the league, tbe solemn treaty proposed between
journalism? and evangelism? Aye, let it be a
Christian marriage of the pulpit,'and the printing
press. The ordination of the former on my
head, the pen of the latter in my hand it is
appropriate that I publish the banns of sneb a
marriage. Let them from this day be one in
the magnificent work of the world’s redemp
tion.
“Let thrones and powers and kingdoms be
O jedlent, mighty God to Thee, -
And over land and stream and main,
Now waTe the sceptre of Tny reign.
O. let that glorious anthem swell.
Let host to host tbe triumph tell,
TUI not one rebel heart remains,
But over all the Saviour reigns.” *
CatarhH
CRM BALM
Cleanses the Nasal
Passages, Allay Pain
and Inflamation, Heals
the Sores, Restores the
Senses of Tastes and
Smell- Try the Cure- HAY-FEVER
A particle Is applied Into each nostril and H
agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists: by mall,
The Questions
ANSWERED.
In offering this remedy to the public we place It
entirely on its own merits, as established by those
wbo have used It.
We ask yon to read the following testimonials,
and If not satisfactory write to the parties.
Read this from a prominent dentist ot Atlanta:
Canadian Catarrh Ci'rk Co.: Gentlemen—
My wife and little boy having suffered greatly from
catarrh for several years, I determined to try “Ca
nadian Catarrh Cure.” and I am happy to say that
one bottle has relieved my wife entirely, and Im
proved my little boy so much that I am sure betore
the second bottle Is empty he will be cared.
I cheerfully recommend It to anyone suffering
from this dreadful disease. Tours, etc.
John S. Tnosirao.v, D. D. 8.
Dr. J. W. Oslen & Son, druggists, ol Gainesville,
Ga., on September 16, 1887, writes: “Send by ex
press one dozen Catarrh Cure. Two bottles cured
a case ol fllty years standing.” It will restore the
smell.
If your druggist does not keep it, order direct
from Canadian Catarrh Cure Co., 14 E. Hunter
street. Atlanta, Ga. Large size $1; small 50c.
Send lor our book or Information.
It you will send 25 cents ln stamps, we will send
you a trial bottle Mention this paper.
640 6m
The Great Kennesaw Route.
W, & A. R. E.
ZS^The folloiolng time card in effect Sunday,
May 20,1888.
i/rince Alexander, it is stated, has been in
formed semj-ofiicially that he can resame his
courtship officially with the Princess Victoria,
with the approval of the German court just as
soon as he famishes the latter with satisfac
tory proofs that he renounces the Bulgarian
throne forever. Otherwise, Bismarck will
continue to regret that Victoria can never be
anything more than a sister to him.
the consequences
wrote this quaint epitaph, showing his hope of
resurrection, an epitaph that I, hundreds of
times, read while living in Philadelphia:
The Body
of
BeDjamin Franklin, Printer,
(Like the cover of an old book,
Its contents tom out,
And Btript of its lettering and gilding)
Lies here food for worms.
Yet the work itself shall not be lost,
For it will (os he believed) appear once more
In a new
And more beautiful edition,
Corrected and amended,
By
The Author.
That Providence intends the profession of
reporters to have a mighty share in the world’s
GRAND EXCURSION
Arkansas and Texas,
JULY 24, 25, and 26,
FBOM THE SOUTH-EAST,
ThB Memphis andLittle Roct R. R.
TICKETS GOOD FOR 30 DAYS.
_Stop-over Privileges Allnwnri
For County map of Arkansas and Texas, and
New Western Railway Guide, a 16-page illus
trated monthly paper devoted to the develop
ment of the South West and further informa
tion regarding rates, etc., Mailed Free write
to R. A. WILLIAMS, S. E. T. P. A.
Atlanta, Ga.;
S. W. TUCKER, A. G. P. A.,
Little Rock, Ark.;
W. M. SCOH & CO.,
City, Mineral & Farm
PROPERTIES,
Mall Him, Atlanta, Ga.
NORTH BOUND-NO. 3 EXPRESS—DAILY — At
lanta, 7 50 a m; arrive Dilton. 11 40 a m; erriv^ Chat-
tan«»«Ka, 1 CO p m; stops at all important etatio- »
NO. 1 express—daily.—Leave Atlanta 1 25 pm;
arrive Ddlton, 5 11 p n>; arrive Chattanooga. G 43 p m
NO. 14 Rome express—Daily except Sunday.—
Leave Atlanta. 3 45 p in; arrive Rome, 6 59 p m; stops
at all way etationa and by signals.
NO 17 Marietta EtPitKss —Daily except 8nnday.
—Leave Atlanta. 4 40 pm; arrive Marietta, 5 39 p m;
store at all way 6ta f ions and by signals.
NO 11 express-daily—Leave Atlanta, 1115 pm;
arrive Chattanooga 4 37 a m.
NO 19 KENNESAW express -DAILY.—Leave Atlanta,
5 55 p in; arrive Dalton, 10 0; p m; arrive Chattanooga,
11 40 p m; stops at all important stations when sig
naled.
no- 21 dalton accommodation—Daily except
Sunday.—Leave Dalton, 6 25 am; arrive Chrttanooga,
8CO am.
THROUGH OAR ARRANGEMENTS.
No. 3 has first-class coach, daily, Waco, Texas, to
Atlanta withont change.
No, 1 has either Maun Boudoir Buffet or Pullman
Palace Buffet and sleeping cars, daily. Jacksonville
to Cincinnati without change, and hret-c'r’-s coach,
daily. Jacksonville to Chattanooga withou change
a! d without extra charge.
No. 14 runs solid to Borne.
No. 11 has Pullman Palace sleeping cars A tlanta to
Chattanooga, open for passengers at 9 00 p ni
No. 19 has Pullman sleeper Atlanta to Nashville
without change, and first-class coach Atlanta to Lit
tle Bock without change.
southbound—NO 4 express.—Leave Chananooga.
8 05am; leave Dalton, 9 47 a m; arrive Aiim.ta, 145
p m; stops at all important way stations.
NO. 2 express-daily—Leave Chattanooga 1 15
p m; arrive Atlanta 6 87 p m.
no. 20 express—daily—LeaveChattanooga, 120
a m; arrive Atlsnta, 6 32 a m.
No. 17 marie ita ex press—Diily except Sunday.—
Leave Marietta, 735 a m; arrive Atlanta, 8 35 a m.
NO 14 home express—Daily except Sunday—Leave
Borne, 7 55 am; arrive Atlanta, 11 05 a m; stops at all
way stations and by signals.
NO 22-DALTON ACCOM tfODATiON—D tily except Sun
day.—Leave Chattanooga, dl'O p m; arrive Dalton,^ 30
p m.
THROUGH CAR ARRANGEMINTS.
No 2 has tirst claes coach, daily, Waco, Texas, to
At'anta withoat change.
No. 4 has either Mann Boudoir Buffet or Pullman n
Palace Buffet and sleeping cars daily, Cincinnati to yenta solid
Jacksonville withont change, and first-class coach, '
daily, Chattanooga to Jacksonville withont change
I am frequently asked by the readers of the
Sunny South the lowest possible cash price
of different articles of Jewelry advertised;
also, am often requested to send Catalogues.
Now, as I publish no Catalogue, I have de
cided to publish a Price List of the cheapest
articles that are most sought after. This will
appear but a few times, so take advantage of
it at once. The price of these goods are con
stantly fluctuating and wiil not remain at this
low figure long.
THE PRICE asked for the goods named
means Spot Cash, money with order.
NO ATTENTION will be paid to communi
cations unless a :2 cent stamp is enclosed. No
goods sent C. O. D. Send the money with
order. If goods are not satisfactory, I will re
fund the money, less the necessary expense of
shipment.
Rememhek this list is of the very cheapest
goods. If you want better, send along the
amount of money you want to invest, and rest
assured you will get valre received for every
dollarsent.
Hoping to hear from you all soon, I remain
Your Friend and Banefactor,
E. W. BLUE,
97 & 99, Peachtree St.,
Atlanta, Ga.
THE LIST.
Three roll gold heart rings
One solid gold ring (my own make) -
Koll gold plate cameo, gold stone or
onyx or rhine stone set rings
Two roll gold plate collar buttons
Ladies solid gold “. “
Gents “ “ “ 1 .
Ladies " “ ouff “
Gents . “• . “
Ladies solid gold vest chains
“ roll “ “ “ -
/-
and without extra chargeV ,,
" “ ‘ ~ " ityaee slaeping car, daily, Lames roll gold necklace, wear 20 yrs.
No. 20 has Pullman .
Nashville to Atlanta without change, first-class coach
daily. Little Bock, Aik , to Atlau a without change,
ard Pullman Palace sleeping cars, Chattanooga to
Atlanta open for paseongers at 9 03 p m.
B. A. ANDEBSON, Snp t.
J. M. BROWN, Gen. Pass. Agent.
ALTON ANGIER,
Assistant Gen. Pass. Agt.
100,000
Acres of Land for Sa'e. in bodies, from 160
acres to 2,000, at from §3.00 to §15 00 per acre.
Improved and unimproved. Address,
J. B. Pkice & Co.,
Weatherford, Tex.,
Parker county.
BRUCE & MORGAN,
ARCHITECTS,
ATLANTA,
- - - - GEOBuIA.
PLANS, SPECIFICATIONS
AND DETAIL DRAWINGS
PREPARED FOR CITY AND
SUBURBAN RESIDENCES
A T A N Y COST DESIRED.
SS^Southem architecture a specialty.
639-6mo8.
THE LEXINGTON
Spoke and Wheel Comp'y,
TO BUY, WRITE US.—TO SUCH AS HAVE
MINERAL PROPERTIES TO SELL,
We will, if the owners will send us by Ex-
1'iess—expressage prepaid—or by mail sam
ites, gite free full information as to what may
Le the value etc., of such mineral.
We want Kaolin, Copper and Corundum
properties.
We have the most experienced mineral
ogist in the Sonth.
W. M. SCOTT &;co.
644 3m
MANUFACTURERS OF :
SPOKES
and all kind of
WHEELS.
LEXINGTON, -
roll
KY.
(833-6m)
MONTGOMERY
FEMALE COLLEGE,
Christiansburg, Virginia. 1
rcasat "£Z3-Siaa-
Chartered in 1857.'
The annual session beuins September, 17tb".
1888.
For Collegiate ConrBe, including Latin, with
boarding, §200. Ample provision also for in
struction in French, German, Music, Voice
Culture, Elocution, Art and Ornamental
branches. The Bible a daily text-book. On
minister’s bills, 25 per cent, deducted. For
Catalogue and particulars, address, Mrs E.
T. Baird, Principal, Caristainsbarg, Va. -553m
The BUYERS’ GUIDE is
issued March and Sept.,
i each year. It is an ency’.
Iclopedia of useful inlor.
' mation for all who pur
chase the luxuries or the
necessities of life. We
can clothe you and furnish you with
*.U the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church)
or stay at homo, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
vhat is required to do all these things
tOMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS'
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
receipt* of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, ILL
642-3m
PEERLESS DYES
BOLD Toac » nlIw>t *»oniean4 mak<
<IWI than at anrrhinr in thUHBH
Iff outfit FREE. Term* >kxe. Adtlreaa, TltC
• at work for oa
orid. Either >ex; all agrs. Coat-
Augusta, Maine.
DR0PSV
TREATED FREE. ■
Hst. trssted Drop.? sad it. compaction. Kith th.
post wonderful micce..; u.e Teget.ble remedied on*
...... ... ■.. yu. . ruui vac urei uo.e Ln.
.ymptome r,ri :lr die.pp.mr, mod in ton dmja .t Uui
t^o-tarrd. o: .11 ermptoms .re remo.ed.
Some m.r err bumbug without knowing .nxtblng
i?°i, Remember ft doe. notcomt rou anything to
realize tbe merit of our treatment for yourself VV.
»re comt.ntly curing cue. of long Handing—ce.
that bare been Upped a number of time, and the pa
tient declared unable to lire a week. Gire a full hla-
tory or ca^. name, age, .ex, how long afflicted, io.
nae d H, f ^. r . fr “* Pamphlet, containing testimonial.,
lea daes treatment furnished FREE by mail. If
Jon order trial Mild lo cent, in stamp, to pay Doit-
H. H. GREEN 4 BOXS, M. D’..
Sola klarietta St., itum, a.
,, “ “ “ bracelets “ 10
“ silver bangle " per pair
“ solid gold “ « “
“ “ “ ear drops “ “
“ “ “ • pins each
“ “ “ front pins each
“ “ “ “ ear drops
Childrens gold “
Solid gold baby rings - -
“ “ “ pins -
“ “ front baby pins ...
" “ “ “ ear rings
Ladies roll gold or silver hair pins
Masonic, Red-Men’s, Odd Fellows’,
Eagle, K. of L., and B. of L. E , and
B. ofL. F., solid gold badges
BADGES MADE TO ORDER A SI’ECIALTT
Ladies’ solid gold double-case stem wind
watches, Elgin works - - - §;
Ladies’ double-case Btem wind and set
silver watches (beauties),
Boys’ silver watebes -
“ open-face nickle-silver watches S. W.
Ladies’ “ “ “ << .
“ " “ solid gold stem wind
diamond hands, chataiaino - - 1
Gents' solid gold double case stem wind
and set Elgin or Waltham works,
watch guaranteed five years - - 2
Gents double case gold filled watch,
warranted to wear for 21 years.
Works same as above - - - 1
Open face, same as above, screw back
and front dust proof 1
Gents open face solid coin silver stem
wind and pendant set watch, Elgin,
Waltham, Hlinois, Hampton or Seth
§00.25
1.50
1.00
1.25
300
5 00-
10 00
2.00
25 00
• 3.00
500
500
2.50
15 00
200
200
1 00
1.25
1 50
1.00
100
.50
1.00
8 00
850
4.75
3.75
Thomas works, heavy case
-
12.00
Doable case, same as above
12.00
Gold points, §1 extra
- -
13.00
AH guaranteed for five years.
Gents “Florrine” open face
watch
with same works as above
- -
900
Key wind, Illinois works -
- -
7.50
Gents open face stem wind nickle
watch, “Victor,” Swiss movement
500
Key wind ...
- -
4.00
Write plainly your name and how you want
goods shipped.
S’nd money in any safe way. I refer to any
body you want to ask about me that knows
me. I don't care wbo UU. If you want an er-
! rand done, outside of my line in the city, I
will take pleasure in doing it for yon and not
consider it any bother. “Try me once.”
E. W. BLUE,
97 & 99 Peachtree Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
Patented September 16, 1884.
Piles, protruding, bleedmg, etc., positively
cured by our patent water closet seat. No
examination. No detention from business.
No cure no pay. Indispensable for ladies
during confinement. Address Ciiamiilklain
Seat Co , No. .318 Pearl St., Baliimore, Md.
.[0-34 Ojj]
14