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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1889)
GEORGIA RAILROAD COMPART •tone Mountain Route. Office General Makagki? : Augusta, Ga March 2, isso /COMMENCING SUNDAY Jrd inst., \_ythe following passenger sol edules will Parlor cars on 27 and 28 between Au¬ gusta and Atlanta. Train No. 27 and 28 will stop and re¬ ceive passengers to and from the follow¬ ing points only: Grovetown, Harlem, Dearing, Thomson, Norwood, Barnett. Crawfordville, Union Point, Greensboro, Madison, Rutledge, Social Circle, Cov¬ ington, Conyers, Lithonia, Stone Moun tain and Decatur. 32. R. DORSEY, I. W. GREENE, Gen’l. Pass. Ag’t. Gen’l Manager. Joe W. While, General Traveling Passenger Agent. be operated: Trains run by 90 meridan time. No. 1 —W EST—Daily. Leave Augusta . . . Z> 45 5 r Macon .... -4 it 53232 r. > illedgevilie . . ‘-G 10 ^ Washington ... . 11 20 Arrive Crawfordville .... 1 22 . . Athena . . 5 15 : Gainesville.............. 8 25 65 s Atlanta 5 45 No. 2 —East—Daily. Leave Atlanta...... .... 8 00 ft ni ,, Gainesville.......... 6 55 a a Ath ens,...... 8 50 a m << Crawfordville... 12 42 p i» Arrive Washington..... 2 20 p n (4 Milledgeville....... 4 49 p ns n Macon 6 00 p k 44 Augusta........... 8 85 pm No. 3 —West—Daily. Leave Augusta..... . . . 11:00 7*rs see < 4 Crawfordville . . 1:34 Arrive Atlanta..... . . 6.30 Si No. 4 —Hast Daily. Leave A»Ianta . . . . . . . 11:15 p in Arrive Crawfordville .... . . 3:58 a in Hi Augusta ti/45 a m FAST LINE. No. 37 —Wk«t—Daily. Leave Augusta................. 7 45 ft nn Arrive Washington...... Washington......... 10 40 a m Leave 7 £2 a Arrive Crawfordville........ S 4> » m *4 Athens. . . . . 11 40 a m *4 Gainesville 8 25 p m 3 Atlanta... 1 00 p in No. 28— East—Daily. Leave Atlanta...... o t 45 p ra U Gainesville. Of 55 a m Arrive Athens , . . “Gl 00 p ra O rawfordvllle . . 5 54 p m (( Washington. 7 20 *\ • . . . p m Leave Washington..., 4 20 p m Arrive Augusta......... ... 8 15 p in iSTGUPERB IMPROVED Sleepers Augusta, Atlanta and Charleston. ij»? t wiiilc to the as • .A oust buyer Club convenient WCEK System as any iHI . ^ 3 m ti iffiHi iml instalment wholesal<: system, spot cash is Y ml ' i M a » • system to us . 1 he ibSkiil! co-operatioa members sells of the a»w\\ -i... ~—'/ wMM club U 3 ft SSl: 38 Y.-atches in each PH!U\. , i $33 Watch Club, and wertt Cash from i I Iga 9 g j i! the Club though for each each watch member before only it pays goes ilB;“ ffg; 1 j cut, week, TUia is why give gfcqj i I Hi? $1 a w tlian wc else you j JjfeSi ® g H mere for your money doing any the one largest wEfl IjScipifiLwatch ant * wo are llJionly business iu tiie world. ®>Ve our®™ sell I MrU l first about quality others goods, out for 11 .c-’Jpi prices are what get sec- | I ond quality.Our @10 bilvcrU’atcli rb,(r-« I ' 3 a i>abst: , Lti.dSilver (not imitation oj p.Tbigj . 1 (ni y kind) Stem-Wind American Lever | | 122*$ Watch—cither 3-i.j.iiO Watcliiba hunting case Steui-wirnl, or open. |fMK( I I'v^l Our jj"‘, 1 OpcaFace, first quality, stififeued Gold '•■ ? AmericaaLcverVv’atch D is fully ^guaranteed equal to , ■£ 1 ; ’ 1Liear 20y e :rSt to any t [P 'h 4 watch first-class sold for Stiffened £38 by Gold others. Case VVc much findyf |^G^i , v a IjZipji more satisfactor/ and serviceable than i ary Solid Gold Case that can be sold at I less than double the money, as weak, cheap B-jfe J solid cases are Kg® invariably worthless tilin, after W'j f ) ttSSU °l low quail and rA iff 1 short use. Our important $138 Watch patented contains im- f-p l ^ jprovements, numerous of vital importance to accu'-Di .. lute j timing —l which 'a tent DustprooJ\ control exclusively. Patent Stem 1 tegr 1 j IVind, Sr’s., we dura- 1 ; is fully equal for accuracy, ap[>carancc, ability j and service, to any Hip| $75 Watch, cither U/ ;..^' r Open Face or Hunting. especially ( constructed 43.00 Ra ii for - h*br' 13 road Watch is ; j i road the mostexactin:' Watch made, use, Open ond Face is the or lwr*t Hunting, Rail-pfc-;. if A ' I All these prices are either all cash or in >, % - ' $11.00 a WCC3c. A n Ajnx TTrffcA i / ha v lit'.or given free teith each Wctcli. mm ca o fejl {804 ® WAIMT 8T, PHIIASA. PA. %-^'i Agents Wanted. \ Ajax Watch Insulator, $1.00 SA ) W JS^tZ ^1 ! I v p.'rfeetprrttec’.ion ajainsr riiaKn**tlim. 4 ; s ^Z'.Vvbij ; Fit 101 /mach. Sen: by mail on receipt '-* *** fi f ; r'.' ' re ’ *'• ‘"'V 2 t f mrn "C>'d tuhtraggp ,'ij K S? >£' -tm nap ; SI<1 ^ ’’ Ha i>’* * fjr ■ ’A "pe mm ■- mps vo J , E3"i^7 , E3Xj. , S -LADIES and GENTS’ jDiMlM© £ ICE CREA.M Iso. S AY. Hunter St. 7 Atlanta. - Georgia. Meals at All Hours. P.epulars Dlnne from il:3o to 2 o’clock. Oysters in every *rtyie.^Gaine and Fish in season. >, —ABEOTTS — HEMQVEsy A> CORNS, ~Z7 0UNION5W wartS} 'Nmm&vm • y #lh3 Fors sale by P.. J, P.eid or Hammack.Lv. cua & Co. THE DEMOCRAT, CRAWFORDVILLE, GEORGIA. THE SEAL FISHEKS. IIOW THE ALASKA SEAL IS HUNTED AND KILLED. The Right to Catch Seals—The Breed¬ ing Grounds—-The Time for Killing Seals—Value of the Skins. Great Britain is quite as much inter¬ ested in the preservation of the seal fish¬ eries of Alaska as is the United States. Russia's interest is equal to that of eithei of them. All three of these nations de¬ rive a handsome revenue from the catch of the seal, that of the United States and Russia lying in a tax on tho catch itself, while England gets hers through the preparation of the skins for market. The Pribylov Islands belonging to the United States and the Commander Islands belonging to Russia are practi¬ cally the only seal fisheries in the world. They arc ad under the control of an American company, and supply more than ninety-five per cent, of the annual seal catch. All of these skins, the only valu • -* \V X —=1 : is far'. Sr"A -—'■ !'■ 0 0 / ABOUT SEALS. A. Ten-year-old Bull. B. Full grown Cow. C. Throe-year-old “Bachelor.” D. A Pup. able part of the seal, are shipped to London, where a very large percentage of them, virtually indeed the entire pro¬ duct, are first sold in the raw state and then dyed. This dyeing of seal skins is purely an English industry, and Eng¬ land's government always protects Eng¬ land’s industries. She realizes only too clearly that seal poaching can never be¬ come a source of profit to more than a handful of her citizens, and null there¬ fore interpose no objections to its sup¬ pression. whoso preservation The animal about so much has recently been said is properly more widely and at the same time less intimately known than any other of nature's creatures. Every woman who wears a sealskin coat kuows in a gen¬ eral way that the skins of which it ic made are scarce and hard to procure. Her husband or father knows in a specific way that they aro expensive. But how jaany of them kuing—just - why they are- scarce a id expensive? H \v many of them know, for instance, that there are two kinds of seal, the hair seal and the fur seal? That the skin of the hair seal is absolutely worthless when compared with that of the fur seal, and is never made into cloaks. It is coarse and rough, and is generally tanned and used for the manufacture of pocket-books, satchels, hand-bags, gloves and coach¬ man’s capes. The hair seal is found everywhere, while the fur seal aro prac¬ tically confined to the Behring Sea. Hundreds of thousands of hair seals are captured every year in the Northern At¬ lantic Ocean, while so far as is known the fur seal lias never been seen there. There was a time, however, when the fur soil was found almost everywhere else. Seals formerly abounded in the South¬ ern seas. Ships were laden to the water’s edge with the skhis only to bring nomi¬ nal prices in the glutted markets of the world, but for all that the butchery never stopped until the victims were virtually extermiuated, so far as the Southern seas ire concerned. Whether those perse jilted, helpless creatures were all killed eff, or whether they took refuge iu Beh¬ ring Sea, is not known. Certain it is, however, that Vitus Behring and his venturesome crew, having been ship¬ wrecked in 1741 on the then unknown Commander Islands, found there millions upon millions of seals. pf«f - - 33 ^=. 3 mmk -a j & ' -JV ■**•**"’ *>k DIUVIXG SEA.L3 TO THE KILLING GROUNDS. Compiiny after company was organ ized in Russia for the purpose of hunting over these new grounds as soon as the discovery was made known, No re strlctimi was placed upon their slaughter, with the result that i;i less than twenty seal was well niuh exterminated ader Islands. In 1785 the Pribvlov Island w-.re discovered. Their 1 : ;r, G'.-ai'in Pribylov, was the com r mder of a small oop named the eor jt‘, in which he ad searched for is for three weary years. He St. George, after his v< ;tl tr. I :r hi QT( toe J. The slaughter wei century until, in 1868, Islands became by virtue of the purcha c Russia. During this 8 IT been spasmodic attemp both at the Commander lav Islands, but it was cot until the Alaska Commercial Company was formed in 1870 that a system wa» adopted which , successful for the seems to have proved during breeding protection of the sol time It is to protect this system that the United States maintains that Behring Sea is a closed sea. In 1S73 Congress passed a law for the protection of the seal, and iu accordance with its provisions placed the islands un¬ der the control of the Alaska Commercial Company, the highest bidder for the privilege. By the provisions of the law the. Alaska Commercial'Company are for¬ bidden to kill more than 100,000 seals annually. These must be killed in June, July and September. For this privilege S2.6SJ the' Alaska Company pays a tax of on each skin, and an additional 1*50,000 per annum as rental. Their leases was aad will expire . Ma\, for twenty yearn in 1S90. By a recent act of Congress the new lease must be made at the rate of 63.50 per skin, the annual rental to be fixed by competition among the bidders for the lease. The present arrangements has been a profitable one for both the Government and the lessees. The Government has received during the period covered by the lease over 67,000,000 in taxes and rentals, while the Alaska Compauy has made fortunes for all of its mem¬ bers. The effect oil the seal has born beneficial in the extreme, there being three or four times as many on the Pribylov Islands now ns there were then. The natives, too, have profited by it. There nro less than 400 people on both islands, their only means of sup¬ port being the fisheries. They are paid fort} - cents for each skin and their aver¬ age wage is about $300 per annum, not bad when it is remembered that they are idle nine months in the year. The Alaska Commercial Company has also bought from tlie Russian Government the sole right to kill seals in the Commander Isl¬ ands. From this source they gather about 45,000 skins annually. Add to this number the 100,000 killed in tlui Pribylov group and you have practically the whole number of skins collected each year. It must not be supposed that the seats are at the Pribylov Islands during the entire year. They only come during the breeding season, which lasts from early in May until late in September. Where they come from no man knows, Tho first to make their appearance on tho breeding grounds are the bulls, ivho eomo both singly and in droves from about May 1 until the end of the season. They land with perfect confidence and without a show of fear. Upon their arrival tho bulls, which are then as fat as butter, •take up their position ns near tho water's edge as possible. If they prove strong enough to withstand the attacks of those of their fellows who come after them, they stay where they arc; if not they must move back—’take a back scat as it were. u I* U v m * WM I ( 5 s w •j A SKINNED RACUKI.On. With the advent of tho cows is pre¬ sented a strong contrast between the males and females, not only in size and shape, but in disposition. The cow is as dove like and amiable as the bull is saturnine and ferocious. The cow seal is much smaller and much more shapely in its proportions than is the bull. They are not more than one-fourth as large nor do they show any of that terrible emancia tion in the latter part of the season dis¬ played by the bulls. The reason for this lies in their going to sea every few days, leaving their young to take care of them¬ selves while they are gone for several days at a time in search of food, Their coat is much more beautiful than that of the bull, being of a rich steel and maltose gray luster on the back of the head and neck and along tfie spine, blending into almost a snow white on the chest and ab¬ domen. The head and eye of the female are exceedingly beautiful. Her exj i - sion is really attractive, gentle and intel¬ ligent, and as she perches upon a rock she is the perfect picture of benignity and satisfaction. The seal pup, when born is a little mite of a thing, but within a few minutes after its birth finds that it has a powerful voice which it uses in giving vent bleat. to a most pathetic and never ending They receive but little attention from the mother seal, who only approaches her offspring at twenty-four hour inter¬ vals. She cares but little for it allowing it to be removed or even killed under her very no3e without a protest. The pups, left to themselves, get together like a great swarm of bees arid spread out Oil the ground, in what the sealers call “pods,” keeping well away from the water at first, for a pup can swim no better than can a bar of lead. The killing completed, the task of spin¬ ning begins. The labor here involved is very severe demanding long practice be fore the muscles of the back are so de veloped as to permit a man to bend down to and finish well a fair day’s work. 1 he body of tlic seal preparatory to skinning is rolled, over and biJanced ^uarely • i its back. The nati ve tueri* make uie swift cut from the lower jau root of the tail. A. circular inc f ... : ) o '•'i o: ide t h I men cut® the c he y, lifting it as 16 g tiie body out of the sk as the oper in proceeds, good hand can trip a seal a minute. No kin is left ave a itch at the and tail. The are taken from the field to the where* they are laid oul one othe “hair to fat. with sa. y spre-l ufx»n the fleshy sides, 1 JU lie for two or three weeks, wne BY become This, pickled however, and are does rea>iy not for »n!J> meat. BB ■‘Ij begin until the last week of the season, when the skins are corded into packager of two each with the hair outside. These packages are in turn packed into skins, hogs¬ heads containing twenty to forty in which shape they are sent to London to be dyed. *| & >» ict KILLIKG AMI SKINNLXG (LANGS AT WORK. There is a popular but very erroneous idea that the skin of the seal has much the same appearance upon the back of its rightful owner that it lias upon that of the fair creature who eventually wears it. Nothing can be further from the truth. Fciv skins are less attractive than is the seal skin when first taken from the seal. The fur is not visible, but is concealed entirely by a coat of stiff overhair, dull gray brown and grizzled. The process of dyeing them is tedious and expensive, re¬ quiring a great amount of skill and ex¬ perience. The dye, too, is in the main a secret; which is possessed almost entirely by English houses, although there aro do two or three American concerns who splendid work. Their output, liowcvet, is so insignificant, that London may bo said to have a virtual monopoly of the trade. All sales of raw skins are now made in that city, which fact may have a great deal to do with Loudon s monop¬ oly. The average price of a raw skin in ' dressed Loudon is $10. After they aro the} will readily bring $25 each .—Mail and Etyress, TSE FOR THE TOTTRNrKK. “Gertrudo, wlioro in tho world is my hustle ?” “Why, sure, Master Eddie is a-wear in’ it.” “My little boy?” Ho took it when ho “Yes, ma’am. wont to his fencing lesson. Ho says he uses it for a mask.” =5 jYl. fy ! 1 ■ Ss ^M'i <?• 1 1 11 S ? o. I THE SHOW A FRAUD. \oung Deadhead--Quit yer foolin' Tom thorn s! l)is show U a <e> not):in-’ Ial K twoJrivnt big brown posts with cobblestones ot round ’em.—! Judce. What He Missed. r % a ! Pt) b pi pHr — . A Boston man came to New York, Of tho Hub’s gret»4 attractions to talk; On tho very next train He went right home again, and tlie pork H* missed so the beans I’eojdc. —Hamer's Yottnij “Taken From the German.” Tfrji |A [v t M w o <\ 4 \ 4 \t * v - /y — Life. Seeing Behind Them. Nature has oiiub od y/iu.a ani’; :.1 h U srie objeets behiinl them as well as in front without turning a irotind. Ti.i hare has this power in a 1 ked iie< Its eyes are large, |»r* •» III' nitund p ao d laterally. Its power notiei < III id the /ear is very coursing, for though 1 while running, the h.o t/> a nicety the exm-t ; u<l 1 t will \t<3 l»e f for it to do re another install* f-ary to W; ;<*n .ithout id 1 1 i driver even att* hand, and if tin work lie will at <. The girrdl'e, wjji« h in a mal, is appros ] !* ( It , on ftecc itfi :d that it in front. Win • approi criab it to direct will tn >id t torna of kic li t. PlfYBIt’AL i>/ Inquirer ff<*w docs vour meeting Parson prosper, j ar: m well. There’s Oh : very a gn»t awakening at tho close ol every sermon. Taxation in China. The system of taxation in China is ■uique. Taxes outside of Pekin tre paid on arable land only, the tax varying with the crop, producing quality of the soil. Inside the city of Pekin there is no tax on land, house or personal property. Goods brought to the city gates pay a lekiu tax, but are exempt from taxation afterward. The only tax on land and In u*es iu Pekin is on the sale of real t8 ta'e, ten per cent, being charged on sold. the price obtained lor the property There is also a t>x resembling license fee. Outside of Pekin, Chinese subjects are liable to be called on to perform cer¬ tain duties whenever the emperor passes through their districts, but this duty may be avoided by the payment of a small tax. All money spent on public account in Pekin comes from the imperial limited treas¬ to ury, and the expenditure is not funds raised by taxation within the city. The bulk of the people in Pekin pay no taxes whatever. The man who owns his house and lot and his implements of la¬ bor, enjoys his earnings without tax or deduction. On Pike’s Peak. A traveler who climbed the snow-cov¬ ered mountain one day in July, found the officer in charge of the Signal “Even Ser¬ in vice station melting snow, said, “there is tho hoat of summer,” ho always enough snow to furnish all the water needed.” "Does not life become weary and desolate here, so far from the world?” “So much so that I sometimes tear it will drive tne crazy. My duties are light; they require only an occasional inspection of tho instruments, The rest of the time 1 can only read, Too much leading becomes wearisome. Some¬ times I stand at tho window with my telescope. The wind without la keCn and cutting ns a knife, 1 can sco the IiouslS of Colorado Springs, in twenty their miles away, the visitors sitting shirt-sleeves, sipping iced drinks to keep eool, and ladies walking about in white summer robes. I lower the glass; the summer scene is gone. Green trees, an¬ imal life, men and women, fade away like creatures in a dream, and I am the only living thing in a world of eternal n e and snow and science.” ONE DOLLAR will pay for Wekkly Nkw OKi.KAN.-i Puiayonk for a year. It is a 16-page, 112colunm paper, filled with interesting and valuable matter for Southern)!*. Complete, reliable cotton and other market reports in each num¬ ber, and more Southern news than any rival paper. Issued Thursdays to reach subscribers for Sunday reading. No other wuy will |l yield such good splendid returns us securing 52 issues of this paper. With smokeless and noiseless powder, such as, it is claimed, has been invented in England, in the wavs of tho future that are to be, death will take on still more terrors. Tho first notice of the presence of an enemy will be iu the sud¬ den sinking down of men as tlioug t smitten by a pestilence. The sentry will die af his post and' give no sign.’ The sun will shine down serenely while the battle rages, and no canopy will ob f cure the butchery. No fiiro No I*«y. U Is a protly uovbro tent, of any doctor’s skill whon tho I’lMpirumt of IiIh fwiiw made condi¬ tional upon lii® curing his patient. Y» t a/tor having:, for many years, oliworvcd tho Uiou umiflw of iruirmous oiiroM utreoted In liver, 1 )Uh)U and limg dl»H‘tiH 0 H,by Dr. DieiroY. Golden Mvdleal D/ <y»vory, wol/inK itB mamifaotTircrH fuel warranted in it. tin they are now doJntf, oertiflento through all dm^fflnlH, tho world over, unde;’ a of fdinitiVK (/uarantee that ft will «dth«*r lasnollt or euro In every nine of dhctuie tnr which th< y roeoiTincteiid it, if taken In time and t/iven a fair trial, or money yahl for It will iou.iiieMH,” he pronj])tly re.furuled. blood, Torjml hUIh liver, or “IUI iiI* ©sand mi pure Nwellingfl, connuinptJun eruption®, (which aernf Uh o i« arTofula of the Junipo, all yield to UiIh won* dtsrful medicinn. It Ih Inith ionic or Btrerncth r h orln^f, and alteratlv • or h ood-eleanniug. Chronic Nasal Catarrh positively on red by Dr. Sfigohi Homedy. fiO cent h, by druggist©. ft In advHalilo lo put our hoarln into what - 4»v**r work wo may itav©Io perform, hut. it in wine to think well before woputour money in. Sarah Horn hard I.. incoming to A.m«ricft, «n<l ^reat will be the <-ntliiiiifaHiii iiiou®(«l uiriongsfc hor admiror®. But, v,< have our own bright star, Mary Auder ®on, who will oonUiiue to be ar off tlie palm in tha drsiinntic, a® dooa Lucy /Union in tho ni tobacco world. Amorlaa’® flnftMt -“Tariftlll’a Du rich” Clgnr. Sick Headache la Ik very (iluircmlnu afT< riU>u t «nnoraIly nvlnlnff from ■tormu^h triAiliInM, Mlhmmaxitt tuirt flynpopMia, and WO fr«M|uon11/ Hud iwviUH of tiotli ucxcjt aui>Jiy)t t/i periodic heftilacboM for wtdeh they can ftftcrlbft no (Jtrnct caiinc. Tint the he el ' he Im’u «ur»* Indication toot tljoro In Homc&iluK wrong wane whore, and whatever tho oatl»e Hood*® Samaparlliii 1« a roliahla remedy for hruAnchn, and for all trooblo» which #eem to ro^uiro a oorrcotlvc and regulator. It curcn dyip'-pfJa, MJloijaiu-MR, imihirl/4, ton 04 the a to roan h, creaK'H an and kIvcm ntnugth to tbonorvo®. N. Ii. IhMurotogot Hood’s SarsaparHIa fpdd hy all 41 ; tlx for S'. Prepared only by I. HOOD & CO., Apothce&rhm, ljownlL, Maaa. IOO Dosos On© Dollar HUGHES* TCH!C. ?££.' r ISTINATK CAHI.-i - nd I r - r, Jflliouii m p /• v rr.-t- 1 min atitntur. l>r In on l aving tMs tonic. nm ■ at HA Mr. Only (’eriMlu rorld. and Hr. Ui £ p 1110 ('I f! I. In 1 KTLl'II i.Nft, Isilf&nou, O hu tie, Hb**?p, llo^K, 1 for •»»!*■ ' ’'»/«/h/f/’i ft i*a. v’WU-.fri. Wi'Wirvvn'-rW M “fir who ♦: rr th» man ttr.cvico (not Aim utyloi In a garment h-irdest that tYiil Jump >■ **i a n os tpto 8k bb kb dry the i*tona. It ir 1 js B Cftilf-d * FLICKER." T OWE*'* yisfl huiiUar BRAND Of -trf ~ W vs *0 K-Tom M ra row-»K»y u name Ihelftiid. W'-th i h ml over 1 nt Fi « tld- un\y i»*-rl'en Wind and WMert»Tuot ^ 1 WfM W mu vSM m Coat H “ Diwer '* /ijih If Brand Ji M and 1 hK‘- t.<> <rl“ r. ruir utorekeet'ift - G-vrifd'vc I'.iLiiGrufc. A. J. 1 owt h,’J>> .-hinnnoT!*. St.. IS'wtoti. V|a«*, >J-* *2*v 4 * B 1 g m in j m f. V h STRATTON Business College 0S»vk IVri r. S\*-r /«» r l.uiutou hurt ttc and tints ,/1 fill! '/<*/#*(/ infon rut*tty, iutinn. LOUISVILLE. KY. W [2% GENTS WANTED CHEAT FOR THE, WAR BXOBT SURRY/*’ _ / Eagle's Rest —»T— John Esten Cooke., MB IfVlSwSm Vm pTvm historic) Thi* tbdfllng fttory. iLSL o»aC w h of t -°* print, 1 baH ben% and Trc&il ^ps^for lift* which becn 8uch there * great demand is I MW mm* rail now issued as a JW MB Hi BUBSCIUPTION KB fl BOOK, rpftgnifl- with; many cent iUustra tions. There has never been morn pop ul«r book throughout the Southern Staten than in "8 OUST or Kaolr's Nbht." Many y«are have jiassed ainco the thrilling scenes herein recounted ot thjtf floods of valor of the Confederate Bother. yet the interest, by thoso who fought with A*hb ;•! Btnnrt, Johnston. Beauregard, Jackson and Leev: In the cause for which they ao desperately Thi® and bravely battled, will never grow leas. thrilling story pictures notalono joy snd sorrow,, ami ft love aweoily told, but in between filled with the lilstorio 8outh incidents of the great conteet and the North. Hero is a book tor tho old Ex Oonfederate, to recall to him the vivid scenes of the greatest Civil War ever known, to call .back his otvn campaigns, and tell him of the mighty Chieftaine, dear to tho memory of every one who Wore the Gray, will . find welcome , «• Surny of Kaglo’s Nest M a in every Southern home. That it may bo within; the reach of every one, it is published at the I4pr mmor $J, though ft ijoioit. HAwnsona voiaj«, BJUiraruruLY nA-r«rnur»i) and jtLEcuNn-i doukd. SOtD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION. > As the demand fgi this odd wxvonnp book whir* ha* been out q f print so Iona, will bo large. and application# aota® tor Agants^hould agencies rafy write liijmMmtJi for term* vhedairire to ohoica® of territory*} and quiakly •eouiro Publishar. l ,G. W. DILLINGHAM. York. ■ 33 Wost 23d 8t.. N.w 4 ^' f ik An, -X Learn Telegraphy and Railroad Business AT THK — GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL Young man, thin •* % raro opportunity for you. If yotn want a •ituation that poyn woll, you oan until if you will learn telojrrftphy at our aohoal. Tin* bant equipp®<i and nnt.it popular uchool iu tint Sou U. KiuiotHod by ruilroad oiftcialH. .Hand for circular. COUCH & LUGENBEEL, So >r»ia, Georgia, ■=■8 CHILDREhPKvE^ EOtl ^ nujmcntito ritciM ^ * COLD In HEAD SNUFFLE8 on C A T A R R HffiKr-FEVEF? A paftlolo npplioil Into «aoU ij<k>tril and la afr^iwablM. KLY ervtn «rvcMTtr«r irvt > .35 I ! SMITH'S BILE BEANS *'•!•«» Uo) liver and tillu, i-l<uir Uia wunpiejiloa, curs lijlijiiiHMCM, all llv. r and Mrk ntoumdh lirndai’lie, (Um.rdur,. g.mUvconm, Tlj u;aW»rta au.t Ino.t convoniBJit tor ftldldrr/i rr *imdl aim H ra to tttlto. I'rlce of vary i, in all and <>u»y oil Inn .Ira Mo. nor l»/U .... A piuiaUlm "Klindus t>IIWTO-<lI{ A Villi K of tbeKbovn plrtnrn, aWrrop. Adorvo, n( 1 the 17- inakoro .0," (nolle. of ilia j eui roaolut of ' ^aot AuUr toll) HmOi.d> ■Ulll* Soarui " J. F. H.U1YII X CO.. Ml. l.oulo, Mo. Or. Lobb A/U;« AI.|. oth«*jr® full, connult S2BN.15thSt. 9 PHiLA., PA. Twenty ytM.ru' of oouttnuotl* tho lul aroctico in tile curly Lreat r?»«nt an<] ourf nn rffrri® ol vice, dwtrofluf ifoth mtod ftud lealciM and Ui-AUnoDt 1«-1 for from on* aiontfe, Klw© liollum, w.urnly m « oMcrvtttloa to unf adarexa. B«ok on Hpccial OiNfatija frte. S76 (Ul furulnh « BpAre horno riKifoent. wul til VI1 tjt«lr whole ih AX! Co tho tmklQma. ipty he profit* A few v»ttme(«jln h.wrui nod o| ftoN ft 00,, liy>» Mdiii St., Richmond, V*. _____ firms rss*aH?f MORE tSIiKat ffi-lfi-MfSA Jm thorou^hiy taught 4af pjr MaTL QurciUar® it*-. Ui yaut’ * €»U©k«» Mato UL. HotTalo. N. Y. 1 | >4 Scholarship 1. H’H lit and H. poaitioris, ( OLM UIK Philadelphia. Wntu orreukir. Pa. on PEERLESS DYES I pre»eribe and folly *u dome BIk O an the only Wr Cnrotto U\> eel fle for th 0 uartal n curt r\ TO 6 DAYSof thi ® iiTnitAifAM.M <Ua*ua<;. mom BirlCMif «■ ^ G. II. N. JD., Y. AmaterduMi. Rfdotif |> 7 U» W» have (told BI(f O for ! Ciaolna»ci faction. k Ohio. 1>. It. DYCHE Chlcftgo, k CO.. 111. I Tn4»'*<^HR flarvl* 1 .00. Sold by DragglfHb I .........- ........ . a. n. r;..... .............Thfrty-ni »©, ’H9. was « CURE . n h Medicine, Kccommtmdcd by Physicians. r* dl fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the CUiUlf' n take it without objection. By dru^^rists. & 1 4ft '5‘ i?