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Costivaness, Ayer’* Pills here
relieved me from that trouble and also
bom Gout. If evety victim of this dis*
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Rheumatism. .
&GB3PHS taS & gS & f ' ?"
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Ayer’s
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the "weak «t' fferers
flagging «n lyslealoverwt
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Circulars of CHark’s Business
, College, Erie, Pa. Special
I SUM
THE GtORV Of MAN
STRENGTH VITALITY!
How UWPIIW WgMiwti
A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise
°^^icalDeWlS, on the Keron at YouttoPrematore Decline, ofthe’Blood. Nerrous
Imparities
Exhausted vitality
^Untold miseries
> the victim
d Relation.
work. Avoid It tmuLUirm contain* a netei 'SI®
dlsUnenlshed celvedths tratlra Prospectus GOLD Satis ] j viLix M
vox
acorpa
«
No. _______ 4 Bslflnch __ St., _ Boston. ...........> Mass., iNsrmms, to whom all
orders for books or tetters for sdyice should be
directed wabora
“.aWEre-SSiS™ W. L. DOUGLAS
SjiOE,
bhoeS.
FOR SALE BY
S0HEUE11MAN & WHITE,
_ GRIFFIN. _'
II OTEL V RTIS
3RIFFIN, GEORG U,
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL, Prop’r.
CHIL B ssSssMa
Sue!
and
■to | |
sStalk
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FOR GO TXIAHIS.
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC
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Also .
ayrcjfiriM,
l
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Mpend
- = 7
ri «««snm.
Briefly Recapitulated.
or -
EXCITING EVENTS OF 1780-1781.
tympatby Between Franco a»U Amortra.
Vlie City ot Paris Truly ftepresentatlve
of the Nation—Interesting Qualities of
the Gauls of Modern Times.
1 By JUTO HEBEI BfiOWFE.
B
(Copyright, 1889, by American Press Association.]
IL
The French Revolution la coupled with
American independence, not ally In point of
time, and In' fact Of generous aid rendered cur
by France, but In the identity of some of the
principal actors. and Lafayette, who, belonging left
to the oldest highest nobUlty, and an
orphan and heir to a large estate, came to our
shores at 10 to tender his services to our
cause la the faoe of every discouragement and
obstacle. Nothing but chivalry and Intense
love of freedom could have prompted tlw
youthful Frenchman to embark in so unprom¬
ising a cense. He was a captain of dragoons,
stationed with his regiment at Metz, when ho
first beard at dinner that the Americans had
declared their Independence. Before he had
left the table he had madauphis mind Paris to enlist
In our behalf, and ho set out for at once
05 execute his plan, This was the darkest
S 5 S'& 5 TS. 2 ya , ?«
York by the British, the loss of Fort Wash¬
ington, and the calamitous retreat of the colo¬
nial army through New. Jersey. The few
friends and the American commissioners to
whom Lafayette had communicated his de¬
sign urged him against Mb fulfillment The
more desperate our affairs looked, the greater
need, he said, of his as s i st an ce, and he would
not be dissnaded from his noble purppse.
After the acknowledgment of our inde¬
pendence, and after Lafayette had covered
himself with
laurels, he returned
home and did his
utmost to Improve
the political condi¬
tion of the French
Protestants, and to
further the aboli¬
tion of slavery in
the colonies. He
was a member of
the assembly of no¬
tables, which met
in Paris, 87 Feb. which 23,
1787, r and
may be considered the first token of a revo¬
lution. He immediately condemned the abuses
of the government, also private and unwar¬
ranted arreete, and demanded the convoca¬
tion of the states general, being in everything
the champion of the people. The Count
d’Artois, afterward Charles X, asked,- “Do
you demand the states generalr “Yes,” an¬
swered Lafayette, “and something better
still."
The states general soon became the constit¬
uent assembly, and in it he proposed a dec¬
laration of popular rights akin to our own
Declaration of Independence. He always
counseled moderation, humanity and consti¬
tutional liberty; he defended the freedom of
the king as earnestly and resolutely as the
freedom of the people. He labored in vain
against extreme measures. The Jacobins
feared and bated him, and he became power-
teas to stem the tide of sanguinary excite¬
ment. He saved his life only by flight, and
spent nearly six years as a political prisoner
In the citadel of Olmute. Efforts to secure his
release were futile until Napoleon demanded
It from Austria at the head of his victorious
army, i * « * i
There has never been a time when Paris has
so much absorbed France as during the Rev¬
olution. She was then, as she has virtually
been for two centuries, the nation. It is hard
tor strangers, notably for Americans, to
imagine Paris, during a period of peace and
prosperity .capable of turbulence and Insur¬
rection. The city seems so contented, so gay,
so full it of eould itself, that no foreigner would be¬
lieve be suddenly roused to deeds Of
desperation. But appearances of are nowhere
more deceitful. A salient trait the Paris¬
ian is to keep the best outside, to look what
he is not Another trait is a disposition to
go from (me extreme to another. He changes
like a cloud, from tenderness to ferocity,
from benevolence to savagery. He is literally
everything by turns, and nothing long.
Voltaire says that a Frenchman is half
monkey and half tiger. The monkeyishness displayed
is often visible; the it tigerishness is
wbBn he is angry; was rampant during the
Revolution, it could not be sated with blood;
the more it shed, the more it demanded.
Strolling along the boulevards, all shows fair
and joyous. One thinks that there can be no
danger, no violence fat that quarter, which is
veiled and gilded. But danger and violence
slumber there and everywhere in a great
capital, notably in the capital of France.
You can we them undisguised today in the
Faubourg St Antoine, and at Belleville.
There am the coarse, brutal, barbarous men,
the hideous looking, rapacious, murderous
women who tried to destroy Paris during the
Commune, the descendants of the demons that
grinned and shouted and roared themselves
purple in the faoe as fresh victims were
brought to the guillotine, and reveled in the
deloge of blood.
Material in abundance can al ways be found
along the Seise for new revolutions. The
beautiful city stands on a vast crater, which
may at any moment blaze forth in wide¬
spread destruction. It has supped full of
horror again and again; but its dreadful ap¬
petite is nnsated and in s a tiable. The Com¬
mune of 1871, many of Its originators sincere,
determined, patriotic, but joined by titou-
sands of i vagabonds, , adventurers, ad professional
villains, the froth and scum of a mighty cap-
would have repeated the terrible history
bad not the Versailles extinguished troops reso-
put them dowp and them
ily. The immense mob Of fcsentury
ago had no organised opposition, no army to
contend against, and for six interminable
years fettered fe will and action, and destroyed
life in tiie name of liberty, equality and
fraternity. The lawk® and worst elements
of a vast, crowded center learned then what
it can achieve in limitless horror, and the les¬
son is not likely to be forgotten for hundreds
of years in Stance. Wild beasts that have
tested blood are ever afterward athirsttherev
tort their thirst is nnslakahle. It was hor¬
ribly so in the first and greatest French
revolution. •
HUMANITY AND OTWfiPRlflTV’.
How was it that the people so overcame,
overawed, intimidated the proud nobles,
and equally proud aeeJestosttos, who bad
scorned, insulted, outraged them for unnum¬
bered years! The commons had, as we have
■sea, been ground into the dust from un¬
remembered time; they had been systema¬
tically flawed; they were starving; they bad
endured until ferocity bad followed despera¬
tion. Louis XVI was vacillating; some
Of his measures were reactionary. He
eould not pursue a steady course; he
eould not control the First and Second
Estates. The need was to concede wisely or
refuse strongly. He did neither. But the
chief defect of the ruling oiasses, so far ss
they were concerned, was the new sense of
humanity with which the Eighteenth cen¬
tury had endowed them. The Third Estate
gained after a white, though mot without
needles* exasperation, what it demanded.
The common people (canaille) became too sud¬
denly and Irresponsibly all 1 powerful, pa* and they
sanient lofidors.
The aristocrats bad been affected by the
writing* of Voltaire. Bouseeau, Diderot and
the res* The whole educated eowmmity
bad studied manners overfire*. Deport¬
ment was everything, as Taine has pointed
oat, and its influence was unfortunate for its
possessors. Children had been taught to dram.
to bow, to bear themselves HtwwrWer*. Ar
barously
They ey h had had
1
expression. The
final result was an
contact between
granite and clay;
asies
CONDOKOEX. The The peop! people are
more and more em¬
boldened, the aristocrats mere and more
disheartened, but uniformly gented and po-
Ute. Gentility and politeness era flas things,
though dreadfully out of place when human
tigers are springing at your throat.
The lords and gentlemen of France, what¬
ever their sins, were impeccable In external
behavior. They made no clamor; they con¬
formed to the law of good breeding on all oc¬
casions. When their carriage* were stopped
In the streets by beggars or ruffians, entirely
without warrant, and themselves ordered
under onset, they gave ap their swUrdasm*
tong went where familiarity they with were called. lattres de Perhaps cachet their had
rendered them instinctively obedient They
thought more of doing an net gracefully than
of considering its injustice. Veritably All were
they like lambs ted to the slaughter. over
the kingdom, notably in Peris, they protested
not against outrage. Learning what was ex¬
pected of them they simply oomplied. Al¬
though they might, in most cause, have driven
off their captors by display of the peeper
spirit, they deemed it best to submit without
a murmur. Submission seems to ham been
Jn the air; it was well nigh universal.
Imagine the effect of it on the miserable,
hungry, half mad wretches who thought
that every well
dressed person in
the realm had in¬
jured them beyond
redemption! Be¬
tides, the regular
soldiers were con¬
stitutionally averse
to taking harsh
measures with
French subjects or ,
French citizens. In
this way the suffer¬
ers from many
■fejr kings, were urged nr
continually re~ r , 5 , ,
curring circumstances to violate law, private
rights, common .humanity. They went from
discontent to resistance, to attack, to an¬
archy, to wholesale slaughter. Thus, booked
by generations of the foulest wrong, the
French Revolution became a dread reaHty.
MIRABEAU.
Mirabeau has been called the master spirit
of the Revolution, and be deserved the name.
What would have been its outcome, had be
lived to its close, no one m determine But
It is safe to say the cloee would have been
very different. Deprived of leader him at the
trying period, them was no to fill hk
place, His or with power enough picturesque to shape events.
career was strange and He
was full of passionate! genius, a man of bant¬
ing eloquence and supreme Of Italian energy, a man to
do and to command. extraction,
and a count, he is never thought of except as
i a great human force. Titles are lost in so i
potent an individuality. Bis father, the
Marquis de Mirabeau, was an odd character.
Styling himself a philanthropist, and the
friend of the people, he was a tyrant in faia
own family, and sought to conquer which his seal
by harsh and cruel measures, were of
small avail. The boy’s parents were ashamed
of him, he was so ugly. He had * twisted
foot, marked unaymmetrtcal by confluent smallpox. features, But and a face
as a set
off to these, he possessed physical strength,
indomitable will, rare mental gifts.
Alter a course by private tutor* ids cavalry stern
father placed him as a volunteer in a
regiment, where he gambled a little and sup-
planted hit
to the affections of
a girl Ha was
always with a favorite
woman, de-
evidences that,
whatever their own
intellectual short¬
coming*, steady they are
drawn to
D’ a ucmbebt. Hi r abeau^rmS.
marvelous conversationalist. HI* fiery tongue
could melt the hardest feminine heart to time,
and heusuaUyfound time for'its amatory
exercise. At 83 be was persuaded to marry
Ihe
nano ..............
his temper having a win); and and
couple quickly disagreed continually went apart,
his father, who persecuted him,
caused his confinement in * fortress on the
Ida of BA
The youth won the good will of the jailer,
paternal who spoke so kindly of him as to induce the tor
marquis to procure a commission
him, and he was sent to Corsica. Ha won
distinction to the army as well as the friend¬
ship of his fellow officers, and hi* uncle recon¬
ciled him to his father. Soon after bis mar¬
riage, the old marquis, angry at the financial
troubles to which he became involved again
made him aprisonsr in the renowned Ch&toau
d’lf at Marseilles, his and would not release him
at the entreaty of wife. But he soon pro¬
cured his removal to a fort to the Jura moan-
tains, where, being allowed to visit the ad¬
jacent town of Pontarlier, he met, and be¬
came enamored ot Sophie, the Matchtoness
de Monnier, the young and . clever wife of a
magistrate three time* her age. After a few
months he ran away with her to Switzerland,'
and then went to the Netherlands, himself trying to
Amsterdam to support by writfay.
unal ot Pontarlier to the gallows for seduction
and forcible abduction, and his mistress to
Imprisonment for Ufa They wars speedily
arrested, and conveyed to Pari*; he was tout
up at Vincennes, and she sent to a convent
at (Hen.
The eider Mirabeau resolved to keep his
son in the fortress for th® remainder « his
days, bat the aon was so miserable without
bis sweetheart that, he was only preventod
from suicide by permission to write to her.
HU love letters were considerable as impassioned, literary as ' fre¬ *
quent He did
too, notwithstanding that be had i
serious disorder*, and was t hr e atene d with
Utodneea. But the friend of the people, and
the acrimonious foe of hU son, merer retented
until the death of Ids little grandson ren¬
dered it advisable to perpetuate the had family, been
go Sophie’s lover was set free—he
imprisoned forty-two month*; they bad a
subsequent Interview, view, separated to anger,
and Hie finally destroyed herself. Be ba¬
came an idol of the French—hi* gifte, and
even his faults, particularly appealed to
where he printed several of his works.
For several year* be wandered over Europe
studying, writing, publishing, making poBttea love
and taking the deepest interest to
On the announce-
bei
he fay sums soir wunpn . •«#
understood his power a
just, thsarown to and g sggl
three days later spoke to his own behalf,
teblishing Us Innocence and regaining the
public admiration.
Betides asrrtog as a dapaty be published*
He hzd
himaetf, and nates* exacted pssmtty.
of the Terror been hindered. Onthelstedaff
*P0k*> NmHuS s' five times,
ha usted. When he saw the end
he mid to Us frisad
“I shall die today,
one tiling remains flowers,
fumed, crowned ___ with and uur„imjzii
with music, to ‘
<
that sleep *
tip ordfld ordered Ms bed to. be placed nsskth*
window that be might better see the ■“ glory of ‘
JiSlSt death lomea tod by the entire
i was coon-
try* No ~F*iffrf*****fTi* 1 i unlw thwt o{
Sun }JlA
were borne, a sUeam pageant, by tlx assem¬
bly aad the JfteSte to the ** CUjrch t ^ w of * r0 Sfc, r -
, , to the
boriaLfdate of criminate. How cotnpteteiy
and distinctly French!
But as Science turns wheel still taster,
And quacks and bights meet disaster,
To u* there comes a man
Hi* “Pleasant Purgative Feilete”
pi Dr. Pierce, though gentle in action,
atld constipation.
Pue#» Jewelry.
A mem called at the office the other day
with a handful ot what looked like dull, rad®
he. H 7o* win wfil never never gums, guess, nor m do I believe
titet* are many person* i Ite* tea f
When*! .
Itera
ice, I got a wholetot'<
wart thrown up and!
i pN as such. The
they art ruaSy
They
rather mii mmi-
fled, by the ab\ and i to ages ago to
trim the place of the natural eyes, eyes, which i the
last to tote cU-
Jewelry be t as a piece ot
you mast vesy cautious.7 centio
n to trimming then down must be-
ZS&ttgSSSiSSX
“An idler is a watch that lacks both hands;
As useless it It goes, as When it stands.”
hold Alas l .many children women, though their house¬
and need care, are
necessarily idle .becauBesufferingfrom
anch diseases Dr. ^cnliarto Pierce Favorite their Prescription sex. To all
sis a precious boon, speedily curing in¬
ternal inflamation, leucorrhea, dis¬
placement, periodical pains, ulceration, prolapsus, tormenting “bearing
ibloating, down” sensations, morning sickness,
weak stomach, nervous
prostration, and tendency to cance¬
rous disease. In all those ailments
called “female complaints,” it is the
cal most science. reliable sperific known to medi¬
No Urn, Dor trivially.
Mr. Jones—Alice, Malapropos lot the haze hall game;
Is* will jou i be mine!
Miss Jones (severely)—Mr Malapropos, with
tbs soore 1 to 0 against the home nine to the
Out ninth and fauinug, Bangtt the at tfae bases bat full, with two of our strikes men
bells two
and three against him, I am to doubt*
j aa to whether l am married or single. —Law¬
rence American.
Don’t Uk* Note Takers.
The editor or reporter who takes the mart
Dotes is generally the poorest writer to be
; found A man who can’t remember an ordi¬
nary occurrence without polling his note
book hasn’t brains enough to follow up his
oalUng. About nineteen year, of ulnerva¬
tion, on our part, fe very convincing -Mon¬
tezuma iGa. I Record
A Lovely Worn**
overheard one say 61 her, “By heav¬
en! she’s painted”! “Yes,” retorted
Ruddy she, indignantly,and health mantled by heaven her cheek, only”!
en¬
throned on ; the rose and lily. Yet
this beauti.ui dry, lady, hacking once thin congh, and
pale, night-sweats, with a and slight spitting of
blood, seemed destined to All a con¬
sumptive's grave. After spending
hundreds ol dollars she tried on Dr. physicians
without benefit, Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery; her im¬
provement was soon marked, plump and in
a few months she wac mid
rosy again, fhe picture of health and
strength. It is the druggists, only medicine of
itfl tiase, sold by under a
positive guarantee that.it will benefit
or core in all cases ol disease for
Which it i» recommended, or money
paid will be promptly refunded.
Shaken, Broiled and Drenched.
.
Them are three also participles tbe three of SMosatir* English gram¬
mar. ditions They undergone aro everyday, every other day, eon-
or every third day, by the unhappy wretch
hpediem enough to aflowleur and ague to
SfUSSS
or bilious remittent. For uearfer thirty-five
tealadeis, tropical and not only equatorial on onr land* own eojl, where but the in
aconrgv Is prevalent at a& seasons and in He
wroet forms. eounlaiat, BUlonsnem, dytpepda, rheuma¬ and de¬
tism, bility kidney also ailment* nervousness to tits complete
ale re¬
moval of which the Bitter* tong atom demon-
AFW. Valued by aJLady.
rn&mtMoSSSSSZ iWhatfishtamoetvjh^^ta^r?
eotie, and relieving it teething.
I
11 11 f | {
j ----- ------------------JT —J F
--—{ MANUFACTURERS OF }-
Sash, Blinds, Doors.
We are here, and here to stay and have on hand
a large stock of
BUMS, SUN AND BLINDS I
which we defy competition on. We have a large stock of “bone dry Jum
per/ of of Mouldings, the finest vuaflty Mantles, and Ballasterx, can guarantee etc., the very best goods. beat the In best the
way etc., wo can just
price you can get anywhere! And os for Window and Door Frames ours is
place to come. Ours is a “home enterprise,” and we are home foiks;
htand work to how the beet do the advantage. work. For We also employ and good other workmen, who under- might
to there many reasons we
liamo, we claim thank a right to patronage of the people.
We heartily the public generally for very liberal patronage, and
*allrita o(»iaikMM»of the same.
DON'T FORGET THAT WE WILL HAVE.
[pr the present Fruit Crop, 20 to 80 thousand CRATES, made m right here
iy oqr home labor, Keep the money here instead of going abroad, and
elp Office— boom Planters’ *ur twon Warehouse. and country. Factory, Don’t forget 18th the place.
Jth Str< Street, Griffin, Ga.
........................^ 1 ' KOLB VI. 1 II .' I BATS. UHM PI WDl D I IIII
| BWB WHAT OOMMlSaiONHR A«W*** At*,
Orrici OoMxisaioxia ot Ao*i«ci.tBw.
fir- r. HzWtek. PtetetoW (tewvzrezPrauzmsoCo-1........ n .. T , Tm . tT th* ftrmsr*
restive »*rl«ultori*t. Vw Umljr Jf*r«. It should be l* the hewe^e wCT te w
t
200,000 Headers 1 Eatabliehed 1848. Itesdln* in I860 f
be mm am m ran nm
The ■m___ reeocebed orsmt ef Southern terifriterei te A the Industrial profit*** *f the South, 1
jaCMinatnd tiw*te*te*te eveiy teteteta end f. esters State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
SEhaadlteiial oeraeafwritew
AfncuiiUTM DOOisiyi m pra«w«w **» *»»» most therouch sultuw, aid fate artities are
always instrueti v« te farsasrs. DR. DANIBL is uot only on# of tiwabUitasd««*ttem«'
ssss? AUttSUsrtS
thafiteteri Ororria, aawaUa# a* axpsHsasri
Alabama »tete
writer* laths 8
.
SMS
. .lli—tTHI NV®a, CCLTTT4K1*. .....
forth*farm,firesld* and oountiuc-wom. Subtwlption, tl psr year. atvortiiinfi MU*
* U ' ,U^rM, CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO.,
THE
Glto. W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
Managtsr. j Send for tamplo copy.
i l it. TIE TABLE 129 ,
> In effect June aard, 1880.
No. 15 —Daily, Except Sbniut.
Leave Griflln..................................5:45 a.m.
'Arrive Atlanta.................................8:00 “
No. 16 —Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave Atlanta................................6:05 p. m.
Arrive Griffin................................8:05 •'
No. 17 —Scnoat OHtr.
Leave Griffin.................. 7:40 a.m,
Arrive Atlanta...............................0:85 “
No. 18 —Sunday Only.
No. ff—D aily.
Leave Macon...............................-8:80 Griffin...................................5:25 a.m.
i Arrive “
“ l Atlanta ........................... "
No. 11 —Daily.
Leave Macon..................... 8:25 a. m.
Arrive Griffin....................... 10:48 “
Atlanta................ ......12:80 p.m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon.............. 1:40 p. in.
Arrive Griflln...................... 8:53 “
Leave “ .................................4:00 «
Arrive Atlanta...................... 5:45 “
No. 18 —Daily.
....................... 0:00 0:40p.m.
’•
........................
........................10:40 «
,
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.............................. 6:50 a. m.
Arr !’* “
No. 12 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta................................2:15 4:00 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.................. “
“ Vuvin ............. 6:15 “
No. 4 —-Daily.
Leave Atlanta............................. 7:05 p.m.
*■!." «&............................ ::,S :
No. 14 —Daily.
Lb*v» Atlanta.....................*WW Griffin................................10:« a>m.; “
Arrive 1:00
“ Macon............................... p.m.
No. 27 —Daily.
Leave Griffin______________________—..8:80 Newnan.............................10:20 a. “ n
“
Arrive Carrollton............... 11:85 "
No. 2 »—Daily.
Nraas r.—......... -ts’.--
Arrive Griffin...................................7:20 “
No. 20 —Daily, except Sunday.
Leare Griffin...................................l:*0P-“- Newnan................................4:30
Arrive ^
Arrive Carrollton...........................7:10 “
No. 80 —Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave CarroBton...................... .......BM a.m
ArriveNewsau........................**"" oak H
Arrive Griffin................................10:85 “
jg g rCBAKTOT, aa e a g a iagigs “w..
pw, %
t-e- “ta-x 'at*
.
H.
jffsiafte e ga 8.S.S. has
wm. ann teem**.
AaSsMs.lfirt.Dsc.fi*.
“SIS
BY FAR
fhiMssdGIttfffiihssQSBrBoBte
NEW YOKE 0B BOSTON
——18 VIAtr—•
SAVANNAH
-AND THN-
OCEAN j STEAMSHIP: lit#
—or TNH-
Centra! Railroad of
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on sale at reduced rates. Good to re¬
turn until October 81st, 1889.
Magnificent from Steamer and elegant li3d«it service
Free the heat and dust, tick tbe trip will to All- in¬
Rail Routes. H you are
vigorate and baud yon up.
Go East by Sea afld Yea'll not Regret It
Passengers, before purchasing tickets via
other routes, <A would do well to inquire first of
the merits the Route via Savannah. Fur¬
ther information may be hod fay applying t*
the Agent at your station or to
M. 8. BELKNAP, W. P. SHELLMAN, BOST^fe***
E. T.CHAELTO;.,---------- "luRLToSf* Genl CLIDE Trar. Pass. Agent. -
Pees. Agent.
Savannah Ga
HfijtAinr mims train*.
$75 to$250
profitably employed SpareMBO alao.
mentM may be and cities. B.
low vacancie* in tawns
JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Mato St.,
T and business experI
N B.—Pleas* mind state about age sending stMup Joi
nee. Never ap8wedf6m
•ply.
WANTED&““-~ ns on oollab, dol
will send you sample that t sells for three
that will pay
|S0S per month.
TmucmroKD pcBu^rao RICHMOND,
PAAMffiffi 1 *
HAIR BALSAM
i
taka place <
SL'SWi
FAMED T
lor Inlvgrily of Hi I
Prompt Payment
cohti^S sss&S'JS d Ji I
a i)raX
tbe same are conducted i
and to good faith towari
authorize the Company to
tfajsssKf-*’''
Wo the »—
our counters;
fSSi
OAURS
Gumd s ,
At the Academ
Tuesday
Capital Pr
100,000 W
Halves f 10
tietbe *1.
1 Phi** or (
1 Paiz* or
1 Paul or
1 Pbmk or
2 Fbubs or
.6 as Pwwr Paul
200 Pi
500 Ps
11 i: d“: v ml
nmtnui. i
*«> ««• ............
®0» do. 100 are..............
8,184 i
-.'one—Ticket* draw*—
hot entitled to 1
AfJFWnPfi''
turn mail deUvei
*n Envelop* 1
*
or U. A. DAUPHIN, W*
Msr
Address Rt
NSW <M
- REMEMBER, that the j
5 OO^NTEED BI
tiO htohMtt^ ,
0^E° r iCTrT
part or fraction of a
n red any Drawing. less than*] Ai
or
........-................■y w
br-ifi
ftifivo month* tore tes ^^7Arj.a;’ t
from tbs effects *f Swift’s
Jsn. 8,188fi. ”*"' 4
Books on Blood sad Skin J
■ ■ i s ms z, Bwtrzfirsmmt.
r
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fill* tef
< Iwvl. T
1*si #*’.♦;
i>if It *
us y
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