Newspaper Page Text
ita
• i Pill* have
w*.- several ,,,,,,......
;rarE ms
prove » specnw ut au eases el incipient
Rheumatism.
i could hare^senred^no in
mkmm fcfiSMSi r»U#
them wSaa
^ nave
SSStasr
taken AyeVa~Fttto. 1U with rheumatism "years agd «hMk I Twos sra#
so do ------*- work. **—’-**■— I
dn»ble .. to - any took three
cited. toxea of Since AyartTffla that i and i was entirely
without a box of
Christensen,
^Ayer's .
0r*4 SOU
Wk
tit. wools St Sufftren frem
ssffiagi
EKE.
.tow Mventseffienfo.
.A ffissasssu. College, Eriefpa. Special - -
- ,n
Alt^SAI
i
THE GLORY OF MAN
STRENGTH. VITALITY!
How Hogalnod,
and Standard Popular Xedical Treatise
■s » et *a fM S>jBa s - y
AS
GBNTUMKNi
IfPVMI LADIES. .
9H
mimmunKA white,
" N,___
HOTEL CLBTIS
< TKiFm, oaunmg,
Uiifier New MttnagemeBt.
». G. MWiL, Prop'r.
** ■ 'tnpmtiihabt |r , || :
CHILDREMtelRRIUBlE,
eoa to
Mm, II. UbMHd by
rick the , __
muu. l>ul in matter of sa
amount of aiuureinent, recreation, edu
■Wifi'S iiyl W unhappy ««£.*.& unblraswl
tie or by
mx-timitj;
mvmi txri&won to put the mutter
to »1 practical test. a young student
'Win' t@U‘> g>, !'■ edit nil t.» wlmt Furope be with for just
for is rotidy tem-iit U> who got il
t«v irt .my nuty be
blessed with so moderate a sum, and
still ■ii' iutfii to r-■ broad for fear of
not “lojj enmi:.'lt for the money
J’hir> {iliil.vibp?Sjciil li-uyniersuys
>',t orer, intermediate liuston cabin
passage, fw3 from to Liver-
pool by one ,.J the tiin-M Ounani
steamers iTlic intermediate [wssage table
wji.s not c ;*iai to drat cabin in its
fare, but i i. al more fun in other ways.
• ”i.. M I reached Liverpool 1 went
to« V\» « *#** tl in * •
toc~tto*»v' no to the .ulebounl . and
gpe;.’ Hein tl,r> *aif, ituys ni'.d generally the city did- at and
. HI 1 very
niod <v.'e espefii'*’ the 11 went oil to
|jond«/i: . 'upping one day at the Duke
of Dayui.diire's estate, Chatsworth.
Oner e in I/jMtlmi I determined on one
of several ways ways of spending what
’ Hit ten minutes’
..wmimfmm tm onueh museum. I.had
a Btedeker’a guide book, and with its
help f mapped out a number of fa¬
mous places where I could go sight
seeing at very little expense. *
“While on lay tramps in the city 1
would go fora inuch into some roe
tauraut where meals wei-e served from
some joint, or into the nearest coffee
*ownA where 1 often obtained all I
5E? for eiglitpence. and sometimes
uum'iW to use the railways, 1
always went third class. This was not
•0 comfortable as second or first cla
m more interesting people in I many and way* tl
account of the met,
ways took a bus if I could. This was
a never failing source of amusement
to me. I saw more to remember from
the tog^of an English bus than from
source of instruction. The hansom cab
was an expensive vehicle, costing a
shilling, while the bus fares were
usually " ver very certain reasonable, hours of and the on day. some ab
, . _ distance.
“By y cheap selecting for the the right day and
hour for visiting many places of in¬
terest I succeeded in seeing them for
half price places or of for interest nr»'hing. in and There about are
' London many where on certain days of the
week admission is free. On contain
other days it is sixpence Bmdcker’ or a and shilling. plan¬
By consulting little ahead my I saved many small
ning items a in this
“I also way. do large
was content to a
amounlof walking. And indeed m
this way 1 not only saved riding fares,
but also saw curious and oven rare
sights him which I should have missed if I
been in tlie habit of riding to and
from points of interest.
“I spent seven weeks in London and
visited nearly Paul’s, all Westminster the large places abbey, of
note. St.
parliament buildiugs.Na National gallery,
the Tovrer, the Muse eum. w' where 1 went
almost daily; the Bank, r '< where I did
arly all
; and libraries, the Thames and
Chelsea, Lord's cricket grounds and
tiie Zoological gardens. In many of
these places I spent much time in spe¬
cial study, and went freauentiy, the church- espe¬
cially to tho museum ana
“lL 1
would know as gnuch about it. as pos-
Mbte
had “Getting enough.for back to Liverpool first class I cabin still
money York, aud paid
fare to New #10, or
$50, •'In for the my return I passage. abroad I and
time was saw
enjoyed $200 worth at least. My My board board
cost me about about $55. $55. My travelini traveling,
counting going and coming, was$115.
clothing, amusements, washing aud
keepsakes of the trip. But if any one
can get more out of $200 abroad 1 wish
they would write me, and let me know
how, Youth’s that Companion. I may try it again.”—
WhU Ihe Shah Sm Don* for Persia.
I do not propose to describe in this
paper the manner in which Persia is
governed, hut, in order to introduce
one of the greatest of the shah's re¬
forms, •titution would his majesty remark was that absolute by its mas¬ con
ter of the lives and goods of all his
subject*. Under the absolute king the
government is Carried on by govern¬
ors general and governors, and a de-
ed Bceudiiig In the chain administration of lesser of officials, justice aid¬ by
the priesthood. The Koran is practi¬
cally the peiml code as well os the Pi
ble ed the aisle.
In ISSd the shah published a procla¬
mation to tlie effect that from that
date by no one should be punished that except all his
operation of law, aud
subjects had full liberty os to Hfe and
properly tiuti A* it bail been represented
part annulled, till* proclamation it is ^superfluous lias been in to
explain that the subsequent proclama¬
tion of the tame year mortgaging merely prohibit¬ their
ed Persians from
jguds or hy pothecating their salaries
to foreigners. —Nineteenth Century.
... •MULt.".-
Bans ft on th» Wall.
The rich American who pays $100,-
money it. for, should also buy, to hang
near that cheap but excellent motto,
priuted in colors that will bring a
pang to his heart oft os he reads it,
Shaken, Broiled and Drenched.
ditiomi undergone .varyduy,every otherday,
?^mriatekupon Stomach Mm. Bitter* Nonotoo! wi n and ib^Doae. doee
Ho*tetteter » who who It from every
iii 55afifi refirrn thoee S‘iCT one nee
K^o?thSfc r S3S
not only v o® <« r own soft, l£d?n SS9S
it.
meneM. dyepejwia. ri>
■ m m
in fact, that the venom is not, after
all, a poison in the common sense,
and does of , ; tissue. |iot directly Its effect^ cause is simply any
change
Wpm, shorter period. nerv Hitherto all nut
have been administered on the theory
tlml tlie virus successful affected results the have blood, and
the most come
from the administration of alcohol,
which seemed to maintain until the strength
of the sufferer by the poison was
eliminated natural means.
Dr. Mueller's theory at (Irat that sight the is
at variance with tlie fact
blood in case of Snake bite does actu¬
ally change, but his explanation of
tills capillaries change through is that which the pulmonary the blood
corpureles pass whdii going to the
lung
of of
Tliey ing vs/s^'h the i,. tension rthe healthy ,
mvc
contracting power -to" the influence when
of the vaso-motor nerves; mid
the latter are pamlyml the corpuscles
lose thoir power, sob. speak, squeezing
and out by leaving the superfluous the . corpuscles mgMMk. carbonic free acid, take
to
up oxygon. the Thus lungs tlie unchanged, corpuscles pass
tln-ough ing back the heart blood fuU carry of
to as
and carbonic they acid themselves as they brought absolutely from die, ft,
bursting in consequence of this load of
carbonic acid. Dr. strychnia Mueller’s by remedy
• * injection of means
of the hypodermic h; syringe, the appli-
cation of __ ______ artificial heab and G» in¬
torference ice with with the tendency of the
patient rival to sleep. He thus sets up a
dynamic tho original force which poison, fights and it
out with
the antidote is applied in time gone)
ally with success. — I/nidon Hospital.
"at
rity ot ttie wood, derangement oirne atges-
wonderful medicine for and cresting giving an strength appetit.
toning the digestion, is the time t
the whole system. Now to tal
it. Be snreto get Hood’s Sareaparilla. (!)
Wutor u m Substitute far fcftoo*.
Sister Weymouth was one ot the
most notable women that ever lived
in the good old, Maine town of Blank-
mouth. She was notable for her pow¬
ers ns an exhorter, which shone in the
village prayer meeting licensed as brilliantly preacher
as those of any
whom the villagers heard, found and
for her quick wit, that
expression in many quaint and
pitny treasured speeches, this some day, of although which she are
to
and lias long mothers. been A gathered worthless to her fathers
nutned Frost fell in love young withBist-er man
melt Weymouth’s tho daughter. objections of Failing to
stern the young
woman’s mother In any other way, ho
pretended to be converted under arid lier
exhortations, joined tho church
was married the bad to blood his heart's in Frost’s desire. veins Very
soon a*
serted itself, and the rascal deserted
his wife ufter he had lived with her
but five or six months. Not long af¬
terward his child was bora. Whil*
the officiating person was giving the
infant a bath Bister Weymouth came
in.
“look i here!” c said she. * “Be sure *T*--
to hold i l ,, that . baby under _ the . water ■■
long enough to get all the Frost ©lit
“An idler is a watch that lacks both hands;
As useless if it goes, as when it stands.”
Alaa! many women, though house¬
hold and children need their care, are
*uch Dr. Pierce ierce Favorite Favorite Prescription Prescription
is a precious boon, speedily curing in¬
ternal inflamation, deucorrhea, dis¬
placement, ulceration, tormenting
bloating, weak stomach', nervous
prostration, disease. and tendency to cance¬
rous In all those ailments
called “female complaints,” it is the
most reliable specific known to medi¬
cal science,
Capturing » Tune,
It is probable that there is not a
man, woman---’' ,J ‘
never heard
tion Lover, ballad, Good-,,,. „ __ „ —
used by serenading parties
in the rural districts until it ha* be¬
come ing citizens tho midnight in reverie places of the During sleep¬
revival mauy in the Methodist church a
recent MiUedceviUe
at its tune was intro-
dueed to that sublime |tvuiri. ‘Tliere
is a Fountain Filled \Vitl» Ifimid,"
with a refrain, “By and Py \VeTl See
the inteiqiretation King.” Night after ni-;.: tv.is new
rang out fhv
dreds of thraote .that nt.t acj
services, causing a sini; i
who saw its couiit-al -ua. u nfin
its povelty wore oil. ; t.-i
established as a^fixture isi L
vice of the church, it is The*
and most popular that songs would of the eh o--til; -iv*,.
a tune h.ivigr; .-c. re¬
garded asa desecration of tiu-.i uoouili
a few weeks ago is now wlustiod on
Sundays in good taste Maeoa Tele-
N<? matter what the school ol ptiraic,
But as Science turn* wheel still faster,
And quacks and bigote meet disaster,
To ns there comes a man
Whose merit hath won countless zealots,
Who use and praise his “Pleasant Pellets;”
The “Pleasant Purgative Pellets”
biliousness, diseased or torpid liver,
and constipation.
To The IouUefc.
in terns are impure poisoned coaditlod aud whose from blood the ab¬ is
an
sorption menstrual of irregularities. imqnre matter, This due class (<to
are derful peculiarly tonic and benefit blood-cleansing ted by the won¬
Prickly Ash, Poke Root prop¬ and
erties of
Potassium—P. P. P.
Roses and bounding health take
color the place and of the the general sickly look, wreck the of lost the
system by the use of Prickly Asb,
Poke Root and Potassium, as hosts
J*. females will testi^anfi m
t* "
BE O! IEER.
To the honest 1 r after truth, who,
troubled with some contagious blood dis¬
ease, seeks a remedy which will com-
plcUiy eradicate from his system every
germ ©t blood poison, that the ones he
loves—-his wife and hia children—may be
saved, tlie experience of Others comes as
a mighty revelation. Common sense tells
him actual results are the only sure proof
of curative virtue. Read the following
true testimony:
Twelve years ago I contracted a terri¬
ble case of _ blood jmiiooing. ^ My ai»i.
:ep well at night,
I had been under the treatment oi several
tried of tlie nearly leading physicians bioodrer.ioiiy of Atlanta; adver¬
event
tised mained ; went several to months, Hot Springs, rceeiviu;; where I ben¬ re¬
no
efit whatever—the dread dbeasc still clung
to tnc.
Three years ago I was laid up with
rheumatism. My knees were drawn up
in such a position that I could not leave
n\y bed f->r months. disease
Last jtjattack sumnKr the seemed t'W to re-
new upon me'wilh all fav-
ages cf death. My life was a lingering
torture, torture, wifi and and when I I had had afr despaired > of ever get*
ting mended li. D. D. ’
RPP. I r'..v. JjLg ifully recommend ............ B. of B. n*jr B.,
c-ise.
for I re; J'y E-licve it is the best medicine
for thb blood in the world.
Jas. L, Bosworth, Atlanta, Ga.
During the month of February I bought
one bati& of B. B. B for ray four-year old.
boy,- who had what doctor* term heredi¬
tary blood poison, and to my utter aston¬
ishment one bottle cured him. In Feb-
, ruary my elder son, twelve years of age,
head. He was cured with twobottk* of
[ B. B.B. equal. Asaqi VT
no
re been sulk ring
ad poison, which
has resisted the treatment enf of Of oui our best
physicians, medicines. and the use of F the the most most noted
I was covered with a copper-colored
eruption all oyer my body and limbs, with
throat ..j., and mi ui my 1 hair, sore
Incredulous, great but bring nervousness. told that became B. B.
B.
wss a t sure enough blood purifier and that
it rh not require a patient to use a gross
before he was cured, I commenced its
us >.. Within two weeks’ time I felt im¬
proved, I have taken shout ten bottles
u.J f;;li.j will and sprightly a* any man.
My.appetite and strength have returned
and hesitate my hair does not fall out. has 1 c’o not
:o sav that 8, 8- B. r.o K.uul
as a general blood purifier, and any one
who vinced will use it only lias one bottle in will be con¬
that no equal thts-, pu ts
1 stiil co'ttinu-; Its use, as it is a spi- i.Jid
tonic and keeps my system in a fitw con¬
dition. You have the liberty to direct any
sufferer toime in person.
K. P. B, Jostes,
Atlanta, Ga.
lucuicine in vain euurus ro cure me uis-
easc. With little heme, of t Onriiy acted on i
the urgent advice a friend, a nd got a
bottle and of B, B, B, J experienced a change
pc'led. my despondency I kept using it wu until somewhat I had taken dis-
sixteen sixteen pc 1LCI« bottles, bottles, 1 snd and UulUg all all 1( the the UuvU ulcers, ulcers, 1 HdU vdKcli
other rhtur.is- rhcur.is-
tism, and horrors of blood poison
torture. “
twenty years of
A. P. Bruxson, Atlanta, Ga.
B. B. Kenxesaw, B. Company—-Mv Ga,, Sept Dear It, 1SS7- Sir
.
I take great pleasure in acknowledgin':-
the great benefit my wife has derived from
yonr B. For great aad wonderful she medicine, B. B.
two years was a great suf
fercr from Scrofula, or some blood dis
ease which had lain dormant all her life.
We had attention from some of the most
skillful physicians in the country, but all
to her no effect, until we had all despaired of
ever recovering. Her mouth was one
solid ulcer, and tor two months or more
her body was broken out with sores until
she lost a beautiful head of hair, also e?>
lashes and eye-brows; in fact, she seem < 1
to to Now, be be a a .■MOU complete comp] wredt.
want all iws That tore..-
bottles of Blood would Balm medicine med has done
the work which sound incredible to
any one who did not know it to be so.
To-day itty wife is perfectly healthy and
clear from any scrofulous taint, and she
now has atlfiree-month-old babe, also per¬
fectly healthy. Very respectfully H. L. Cassidy.
GfekN Aj-pike Station, N. C. j j
February 18th, 1888.
This is to certify that three years ago 1
had my left leg amputated four inches
below the knee, affection. caused After by blood poison
and bone it was ampu¬
tated there came a running ulcer on thi
end of it that measured 8# inches ora-
way and 4}i laches the other, and con
tinued growing worse I every ‘ day until a
short time ago. was
the best doctor* to
the wonderful vl>.U. .... . ...
**
I had taken three bottles I gained SI
pounds in weight; when I had take"
twelve bottles I was sound and well, bus
continued taking until I had taken fifteen
bottle* I now weigh 180 pounds and
measure five feet and medicine throe has inches high
I contend that your It no worked ccjua
as fige a a blood charm. purifier. (18) certainly J- R- \vi flLSON.
world, v»Hh »tt the attaihreents,
i will ate# msirrfp * roti.pM*
w*r Ik cosily *y>d wulunble that sn
•- Wfnito we ask yow
w* tend, tu those «lw
your home. a*>«l after «
•hail become ytmr ows
TWa |Wte iMriuM to
m MM
ns
WHELESS STAMP
_-PRESS STREET, AUGUSTA, CO-'- G/
748 REYNOLD
▲gent* Wonted) Cattagnt FREE I
Tho Whkte** Seif-Inking Rwbbm
StP.r.D Prir.tln* Pr©as
Apt
-I MANBF.CTIJHEK - #
Sash, Blinds. ’Boors.
We are here, and here to stay anti have pn hand
a large stock of
f SASH: AND B U MM I
which ter,’ of we the defy fiifest competition vuality and on. We have a large tiw triock test of l Tio2ilry )um
can gi.anintee very {roods, kr the
the plme plnee to to come. come. Ouvh Olive i i, »n a - In hi in¬ m* . i.teriiriee.” .terprieft,” anc one »«««* v eure Lome Lome folks: tolk«-
born and raised in Georgia, luullari a voted au* entire time and attention
to work working wpod nilvuntage. for tl« pasr m i t; y«,rr, . ml cktim to know bow to
to the test W< a o. .nploy under-
I.W* . M
Im&i
made right here
abroad, and
ian.dk.
trsa what oo: NRV
'
■;
(I« f-* ' . lliEuso*. _j EKC**TA»TCoi.mAToafyi and do moat boartUr iWin i ™ in
.r,vi- { e.D
. *:••*•*»• J-’j.mn a*rlesJtsri»t. at a f.ra Joarn.I ot rwy VwytiiylF •n»*rfrr »»«* n ■"nssc. -mmammjn
200,000 Baadani I i ww wn v
iffljpp mroipi m raw,
A.Tx^eri’A,
ITow In.
Tho Moocnisod oisna of .ns^ssssFi tfi. |>d—Wtal uw w m fttt Oontlu wkh
iCawMtowl sfawMion ia< '—tan State.
A BRILLIAUTCQ?PSOF writers
Tho oditortal oon* of wtRon isase
Iter publication in all tho Union. BOX. w. . MSS.
Agricultural Saciotr, sad a praotioal farmer ho moat ttmnA nllm, and hi* arttolo#
•Iwajri Initruotlro to farm art. DR. DAKI1
ed agricultural iuarnaliit la tho oouatry.hnti
W—hington, D. C-i and tator, Prof.uor of Agi
R. J. RKDDINO U tho abloaad thoroughly 041 (- Asiittiht (
tho State of GaorgU. a* w.ll a> aa .gportaa-d i |n
tho HPOra front rank ot i
mate contributor.—iacluAin* not alow " !**
clog ooror orery department of farm 1
TO* the molt eomploto, attracUro aad iteral tenrnal In. iliw.AWtt* WtaLltokk:
being worth with moro hi. work. than a wliolo jroarfi »to aw torn* IlfUTv
neetton ovoHtewte# wfth
t wUlho fonad Mflta .a-t-
'OT.-rrr.tM. U X*w ...a«. telh» «kM m» te a
mad in your *nb«crlptlon.. Only On. Dollar per annum, tka
volume ot axteniiva information uiafal to 1
for tho farm, Sraiide and oounUas-room.
THE CULTIVATOR
Gxo. W. Harrison, 1 Drawer 8, Atlanta* Oa. .
Managiw. iYltlllriii'W • \ 1 i>uol LjCilil for flfT tompU oopy.
g*™ wmwbbi gBgggsssigBggtte
U l worn m
In effect June 33rd, 1880.
No. 15 —Dau-y, Except Moxhat.
Leave Griffin...................................5:45 a.
Arrive Atlanta................................8:00 *
No. Id—Daisy, Except Ucndat.
Leave Atlanta................................ 0:05 p.m. |
Arrive Griffin.................. .....8:05 ‘
No. 17 —Sdmdat Oklt.
Leave Griffin...................... ..u.....
Arrive Atlanta............
}io, 18—Btranav 0 »lt.
Leave Atlanta.............. ..............8:00 ....8:00 p.Bi. I
Arrive Griffin.......................... .....5:00 “
No. 8—Dau-y.
...3:80 a.
.....7:00 ...5:2B “ “ f !
No, 11 —Daht,
Leave Arrive Macon,......................... Gnffin............................. ... 8:35a.m. t
...10:48 “
“ Atlanta........................ ...13:30 p.m.,
No. 1—Dailt.
Leave Macon............................
Arrive Griffin............................
Leave “ .... ............
Arri ve Atlanta............................
No. 18 —Daiot.
Leave Macon, Griffin..
rrtve
’’ Atlanta. .....10:40 ”
No. 3 —D*ilv.
Leave Atlanta..
Arrive Griffin.... Ziom
“ Macon...
No. 13 —Dailt.
I-eave Atlanta................. ":; 2 p "'
Arrive Griffin..............— 4too
“ Macon.................. ...6:16 -
No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta........................... 7:05 p.m.
Arrive Griffin...................... Macon:.,..,.........................11:00 8:8S » f
” -
No. 14 —Dau-t.
......
Arrive Griffin.,
“ Macon...., •• .............. 1
No. 37 —Daii.t.
IfCeve Griffin
“ Newnnn
Arrive Carrollton—.....-.......... 11:85
No. 38—D*u.T,
Leave Carrollton
Arrive Gri^^.'ZETEEEV.V.E'.'.......7:30
No. 30 —Daiev, except Sra bat.
Leave Griffin..................................1:80 p. m.
Arrive Newnan,,...................—.......4:30 “
I .rave ’’ 5:85 “
Arrive Carrollton...........................7:10 “
No. 80 —Daily, Except SranAT,
Leave Carrollton.............................5:45 a.m
Arrive Newnaa............................„..7ffi6 “
Leave Newnan................... .8:05 “
Arrive Griffin............... 10:85 “
EB'Por furtlier,information relative to tick¬
et rates, beet route*, echednle, kr... write to
E T^CHARI.TON, <L1? Ju ^^Gri^nToa.
Savannah, Ga.
SS s i
TO* world LS
J-Jfo^ book. CO Weed PI-o m-y g
'V »T FAB, Hi,
.-•■re4, f- • , “> ;
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
——18 ^fX ^ammma \ ^
'
SAVANNAH
t UNE
Railroad •f totogh.
SUMMER EXCURSION IfCXfilS
on sate at redo—d rat-. Good to ^ to-
turn until October*!—, 1888.
ytetap.
East by S«a and YmtWtrt Rofr«t tt
•m
S75to$250^gWr‘-4^ Lmdah hots* and jdv
who eaa a
N B.—Plea— atato age aad b wrin e— expert
Never mind about oemlin*; stomp loi
, ,_#p3w#46» vi | r . ?
sod *t—t job ia a fe
to! J8Q8 per mosth
RICHMOND FrWjW^MI CO.
..
2 or 25,000 W&mm
5 ‘fEEE 800 aro,.........
.-----, $6tee^lI!I. -nn,, !■——
ri-s of
d©; SOO
& «3Sr
- • \
Nors—Tiekata
not entitled to
on Envelope bearing j
m
in,’
byN.B.
mmiornm
* I
*,"'4
hi
Sao.8 Mk.
Jookg oo Blood »od Skin 1
fhnrt Sr wane Co.,
- ;*■- 'r-vr&Mmm*
CUeutr'^ 'M
•<**— 1 “
Mtor
—-—.
t 5'T'S
pXJf
*