The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924, August 18, 1889, Image 3

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J*. _ lnsomntis Faraly»lg, and In- Chloral and Morphia augment <r il. Th* medicine best adapted permanent food i* Ayer’* Sar- 0». It purifies, enriches, and th« Wood, and thus strengthen* Jftty ’ {unction used and Ayer’* {acuity SariapariUa, ol the body. la j hare I have «r family, for year*. found It raluabl*** A Cure lor Nervous Debility earned by. an in- astlre Hvsr * ad • low °* blood. ” _Henry Bacon, Xenia, Ohio. ••for aom* time I have been troubled with heart di«eose. I never found any¬ thing to help in* until I began ualng jiyer’a Sarsaparilla. I have only used this medicine six months, but it has re¬ lieved mo from mj trouble, and enabled mo to resume work."—J. I*. Carzanett, Ferry, JU. "I have been a practicing physician (or over hall a century, arid during that time I have never found so powerful and reliable an alter%tive and blood- purifier as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”—Dr. M. jfaxstart, Louisville, Ky. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, FERrAXXD BT Dr. <1. 0. Ayer It Co., Lowell, Mats, ftis* #11 slf bottles, |S. Worth |S s bottle. Tltt’sPi I* •^a«a, regal.tStfhe anti-bilious medicine. •n &8SSSS malarial districts their virtues are i Sold Ihreryttfliere. Office, 44 Murray St., New York. ,fow Advertisement*. I Circulars College, of Erie, dark’s Pa. Business Spueur. Owns mailed free. I eaKAs.*S? 5 S ' -------- - ------ THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH VITALITY! HOW Lost I How Regained, ExhaustedVitality ^Untold Miseries from PHTS^tfbEBttI»y?lh^^nma®a(»T» the National Medical Association for of dentially. Assistant by Physicians mall In may p* consulted, at the confi¬ rtlBIw or lltEBIOAI, person, office of Me. THE 4 B uianektSt., Bssten, Mowi., INSTITUTE, to whom aU order, for books or letters for advice should b* greeted as abova W. L. DOUGLAS I- esaffWiHmaasasiKBS ExaminsW.L. Bougies |2.00 Shoes tor sntlemen and ladies. FOR SALE BT SCHEUERMA.N & WHITE, griffin . _ __ HOTEL CURTIS BRIPrar, GEORGIA. Under New Management. S. G. DANIEL, Prop'r. SSr~ t tf T, n.eet eri trains LIPPMAN BROS., Wholesale Agents, 8a t “ ° a - Iune25d*wly ^CONSUMPTIVE Uaea ■ ■ \ ttesu ol mm Old Prison. *£ TIIR MOMRNTOUS WORK OK I78». History nl the Ihutlla Retold—Noted Sian Coudm-I VVItltln Us Walls—Its Kim,I Uo. inolltlm. Duserllwcl—Louis XVJ Steadily i).|Si,wl of His Kingly Power. By JPTfflT S HEHBI BEOWHE I Copyright, 1888. by American Press A ssdc ta tton.1 IIL The real beginning of the first French Revo¬ lution is popularly supposed to be the taking of the Bastile (July U, 1780). Certainly one of the most impressive and memorable events of that horrible epoch, it has been naturally selected by many historians as the Immediate precursor of the six years’ bloodly struggle of the common people for what tboy considered to be tbeir rights. In their frantic efforts to gain what they hod never enjoyed, and could not appreciate, they destroyed law, order, liberty, life, and established in the land the wildest, the most hideous anarchy the world has over known.__ HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. The destruction of the Bastile was far from heroic; but It was signally historic. It will always be remembered us one of the most striking and furious uprisings of the op¬ pressed against their oppressors, though most of these bad passed away, leaving others be¬ hind to make substituted expiation. STORMING THE BASTILE. That grim fortress had for ages been iden¬ tified with despotfotjt, and had grown hateful to every Soul with uie slightest Instinct of justice or freedom. Originally the castle of Paris, it was built, during tho Fourteenth century, by order of Charles V, surnamed the Wise, by Hugo Aubriot, provost of that capital, at the gate 8t. Antoine Is a defense against the English. When employed long afterward as a state prison, it was provided with great bulwarks and ditches On each of its longer sides, it had four to were five stories high, above which ran a gallery armed with cannon. The prisons were situated partly in those towers, and partly below the level of the ground. Their inmates were so shut away from the world as often to be wholly forgot¬ ten, and, in some instances, all trace of them was lost as well as tho cause of their incar¬ ceration. The Bastile would hold seventy or eighty prisoners, who were authors, generally persons of distinction, noblemen, scholars, priests or publishers. They had Seldom com¬ mitted any crime; they were usually shut ftp for political or ecclesiastic reasons, from the caprice of tyrants or the hostility of private foes. . During the last century the prison had a governor, a royal totendant, a major, a major’s aid and a surgeon, with a garrison of a hundred men. The walls were thirty to forty feet at the base, and twelve feet thick above. Each cell had a narrow aperture In the wail, protected by thick iron gratings. The subterranean dungeons were five feet be¬ low the level of the ditch, which was twenty- five feet deep, and communicated by a small loophole therewith. The unhappy wretches confined there had little food, and that the coarsest, in consequence of the dishonesty of the governor, who was liberally paid by the State for their support They were infamously treated; they were locked up without accusa¬ tion or trial; they were allowed no communi- tion with their friends, a mere iettre do cachet serving for their arrest and detention any length of time. They weit), in a sense, buried aiivo. Early ia the Fifteenth century the populace, who had boon greatly abused into by tho princes of Armagnac, broke the place, where they had taken refuge, and put them to death. Thero died Charles de Gontaut, marshal of France, who had been guilty of treason against Henry IV. Bassompierre, the cour¬ tier and soldier, was shut up there eleven years; likewise, for a time, was Marshal Richelieu, the most licentious and worthless nobleman of his time; Voltaire, also, and Masers de Latude spent thirty years there for having offended Mmo. de Pompadour, the notorious mistress of Louis XV. There, too, the Man in the Iron Mask was impris¬ oned for five years, an object of Louis XIV’s Vengeance, dying at last in his vigilantly guarded cell To this day his identity has not been discovered. The existence of such a person has been repeatedly dented; but recent researches have left no doubt of it THE VEROOIOOB JACOBINS. - He was a prisoner of state; the record of the principal turnkey proves that he was com¬ mitted Sept. IS, 1C9S, having been removed from the’Island of Bte. Marguerite by St Mars, who was that year appointed governor of the Bastila He was borne in a close Utter, accompanied by a mounted guard, his face concealed with a black velvet mask fastened with steel springs, any attempt to remove which would result in his immediate ^npt.h He was allowed to speak to no one out his governor, who cxuistAntiy observed his movements, and had instructions to kill him if he should open his lips toanybody else. Wlien in tiie Bastile. he was attended at his meals, and while changing his elothea, by 8t Mars, who scrutinized his linen to see that he left no mark on it which might betray the secrets so zealously kept His guards bad or¬ ders to shoot him if at any time be tried to make himself known. After his death, every¬ thing he had worn or used was burned; be was almost as much alive then os he had been fra- years before. Voltaire was the first to furnish any connected or plausible day, account various of him, and, since that author's Iron Mask was the illegitimate an of the Duke of Buckingham and Anne of Austria, queen of Louis XIII ami mother of Louis XIV; ate»a twid brother of the latter king. W'iWl ZZM » .-d:M’VJ ■—- f THE OCCASION OF THE After the death of Louts XIV the lest its mystery and historic consequence, be¬ coming an ordinary prison. ’Die confine¬ ment tliere of Blaisot, Louis XVi’s librarian, disclosed Its infamies, and infiamed the pop¬ ular heart against it as a stronghold of ty¬ ranny. a inouumont of human wrongs. The dismissal of Jacques Seeker, Louis’ minister of flnanoe, was soiled upon as tbs occasion of the attack on tbs Bastile. Hav¬ ing made a fortune by banking, and having retired, he accepted, at SS, the position of minis¬ ter on condition that he should serve without salary. He introduced order and economy into hlsoffloe; regained the confidence of capitalists; cheoked; the extravagance of the court; di¬ minished the ex¬ penses of the ad- MARIE ANTOINETTE, ministration and greatly helped the country In many ways. By publishing an account of the finances of the state, he offended the courtiers, whose privileges and pensions he had curtailed, and also the prime minister, Maurepas. Anxious to justify his measures before the king, he demanded a seat in the royal ooun- cil, which had been withheld on account of his Protestantism. His demand was refused, and be resigned. His successors wefe such failures that he was recalled, some years later, amid general approval Such was the effect upon the funds that stocks advanced SO per cent In a single day. But something more than financial reform was required, ana he was net equal to the great political emer¬ gency. But as he was looked upon by the peoplo as their advocate and friend, as the savior of France, his dismissal aroused their anger to the utmost and produced a crisis. The news flew like the wind; the common! were on fire and rose in insurrection. Camille Desmoulins, a young enthusiast, who had printed two republican pamphlets, and was in the habit of haranguing the peo¬ ple, mounted a table in the Palais Royal the day after Xecker’s dismissal and summoned them to defend their liberties Ho defied the police with a pistol in each band, swearing be would not be taken alive. Be advised them to adopt a cockade, a green ribbon, and when it was locking, to take leaves from the trees to the garden. “To arms) to arms I" he cried with flashing eyes and streaming hair. MOB SCENE IN BARIS. They rifle the gun shops and the Hfitel des Invalides; they parade the streets; the crowd continually swells; they fill the air with threats and ominous alarms. The mob ls to foil force and rage; the government is cowed; the beginning of the end has come. CAPTURE OF THE ODIOUS FORTRESS. On the fateful Monday, July M, all Paris is in ferment. Women are sewing cockades, so longer green, but blue and red, and the workingmen brandish clubs, scythe blades, pikes, swords, pistols, muskets—whatever they can lay band upon. The streets and roads are obstructed with cannons, carts, carriages that have b&srt stopped to the peo¬ ple’s name—no more In the king’s—and ran¬ sacked and broken. Tho frenzy is for arms, arms, arms, clamored and hunted for on every side. Heaps of property and rubbish of many sorts are in the Place de Grfeve. The regular soldiers are joining the masses of Insurgents; the bells are pealing from every spiro; confusion, uproar, „ violence throughout the capital. Tho crowds surge toward the Bastile; blacken around that gray, grisly fortress, burning to level it to the ground. Surren¬ der is demanded of Delarnwy, the venerable go vernor ; but the king’s orders being against It, he will not. He has but eighty-two in¬ valids and thirty-two Swiss against tens of thousands of frantlo Parisians, tortured with the memory of oenturies of wrong. How un¬ equal the combat, though the small garrison is within stone walls I Far more than walls or fortifications or a thousand cannons is the resolution of the people, the force of public opinion. The besiegers again demand sur¬ render; again it is refused. Tho cannons pointed on the Faubourg St Antoine, which is steadily pouring forth its black browed, ferocious working men, are drawn back from tho embrasures as a concession to the bowl¬ ing host; but it does pot mollify them They howl ipor* madly, more menacingly than ever. The chains of the first drawbridge are out; it falls clanking down, and is covered with the besiegers. Fire answers fire. One of the garrison is slain, while a hundred and fifty of the populace faiL This makes them demoniac. A detachment of the king's troops, who had joined the insurgents, come upon the scene with with four field pieces, and are welcomed yells of rage. Delaunay, who had been pre¬ vented from blowing up the fortress, lowers a second urawornlge, ana rise people, raven¬ ous for slaughter, dash upon it and kill him and several of hts officers. Some of the in¬ valids are banged to lamp posts; heads are struck off and serve as Terror ghastly ornaments for pikes. Tho Reign of is foreshadowed on that woeful day. The famous clock of the Bastile goes on marking time as if the old time bad not passed and the new time, the time of humanity and progress and mod¬ ern ideas, had pot already begun. The olook strikes the hours, too, with its solemn peal, but they are not the ordinary hours; they are the hours of another era and of fata Late in the afternoon the fortress surren¬ ders, and all Paris is delirious with excite¬ ment The whole laboring class is at white heat with dev ilish glee and nameless expecta¬ tions The capi tal is a saturnalia of savage satisfaction. Only seven prisoners ore found within the hoary pile, four of them common forgers Of the other three, one is the Count de Solago, who had been shut up since his early boyhood. Another, Taver¬ nier, had spent thirty years there, and, when liber¬ ated, is bodily and mentally The a pitiful • wreck. day following the demo¬ lition of the build- tog begins amid the thunder of camion and the e chanting of thetliDsiiMn Damn. The , convulsion of the tv root. nation it at its height The tide of destiny is setting When strongly in. and lfowsTVesSouncea it Ha# never ebbed. The portentous to Louis lie exclaims with irritation- “Why, beyond way first ooatomntatoA flight the frontier; but he mind, for which be He was averse to ferae he could command, ha' rof extreme measures. Adopting which were fatal to this srzzrxLZ to the national assembly, Its member* for the first fist time. He nude speech, accepting the Revolution t he de- dared that that the the freedom freedom of that body should be preserved to face of the fact that he had previously summoned ‘the army to advance to Paris. Wavering was hla bane, the source of his undoing. Hi* words, however, brought back public confidence ; harmony seemed to be re-established between the crown and his subject* The Basils appeared to have capture of the been but a contradictory episode, since three days after it bad been attacked Louis, ac¬ companied by the national assembly, went from Versailles to Paris on an errand of con¬ ciliation. He passed through an armed mob of a hundred thousand to the Kfitel de Vflle, wearing the Tricolor, which had been adopt¬ ed as the symbol of the Revolution What hope could there be for him at such a Junc¬ ture, in such a temper of the people! The same day the royal princes, XVIII, excepting and the his brother, afterwards Louis principal noble* hurried from toe country, as well as the ministry, who had forfeited popular favor. That was called tha first emi¬ gration. Necker was recalled post haste, and, returning to triumph, was reinstated with ‘ How deoeptious was The Burdens of Womanhood. Thousands untold of women misery, are simply silently suffering be¬ cause they shrink from consulting a physician plaints arismjrfroBt in those functional numerous irreg¬ com¬ ularities and disorders. Many a mod- est girl and woman prefers to bear her heavy burden in silence rather than to go AJI the sufferers family from physician this class for advieu. Buch ____'rescriptioti. and has It brightened is a specific the in cases, lives of countless women by restoring them to perfect health. A Ghostly Happening. Tales of ghostly happenings, even although they bo but the veriest coincidences, are al¬ ways attractive. A lady who was a widow, and whoue hus¬ band bod been defrauded by his partner, came down to breakfast Her ewe husband's morning looking strangely disturbed. partner had been a man well known to Boston, but at this time he had given up his residence here and was living in toe state of Maine. It may be that his removal had been in part at least brought about by the public Indignation which was felt at his crooked dealings with Us late partner, and with the widow, whom be had defrauded in the most high handed fashion, although not in ways which made legal redress possible. On the morning in question the lady stated that she had passed a most troubled night. “All night,” she said, “I was pursued by X, who kept declaring that he wanted to make reparation to me for toe wrong he had done, and that hp could have no peace until he had done so.”' The family which made various complimentary comments upon toil, none of were X or to the tenderness of his conscience; the dream, if dream it were, was fixed their minds and made memorable when afternoon’s papers contained a telegram an¬ nouncing the death of X on tbe night be¬ fore.—Boston Courier. How to Go Up Stairs. “How do women go up stairs?” askfeMabel Jecness in one of her talks on physical cul¬ ture, and answers the question as follows: They beud forward, letting toe figure flop together. The chest is contracted and they can’t breathe. When toe reach the top th* heart is beating like a trip hammer. The effort would be reduced one-half simply by standing straight, keeping toe chest up and breat hing os one Ought to. Some Running Down. If a clock “rails down,” we wind it tip, and in a few seconds it is along ing—using in its steady time. rut, Bilt if the hu¬ up man system runs down we are in great trouble, days, weeks, months and eyen years are spent in vain at¬ tempts to set it Tight . About this time an appeal blood to P. P. P. the would great the vegetables corrector be sensible course to pursue, as it is the only really sure restorer of lost vitality. Scrofula, Syphilis For Rheumatism, Ulcerous Gout, and all diseases, P. P. P. is incomparable. It is a first-class tonicand never fails to cure. All druggists Pnckly sell it. The in¬ gredients, Ash, Poke Root of and Potassium, are a guarantee its natural medicinal paoperties. The I tail road Accidents Which occur every day with such wonderful loss to human life are ficient cause for a man to stop and reflect on the fate of scors of his low-men, but a greater cause for his reflection is any danger to his own health. If he suffers from poison he may stop and reflect on the cure. Westmoreland’s Tonic is warranted to uproot malaial poison, and when the has been purified it will leave the tem strengthened to repulse later. the tacks which may come wise investment of a dollar in a tle of this valuable medicine save a large doctor’s bill. Sold all druggists. For sale by E. R. Anthony. Hale and Hearty In Old Age. What ia more beautilnt than an tree clothed with an ample robe of Apt ie the compt •ison between such a and an old man or woman infused with age, is sound on. Without this life is ehorn of the heart; zest that st onld attend it. No more cent and agreeable contributertotbe ment of a hale old age, and efficient means counteracting the infirmities that too attend file’* decline, can be found than tetter’s Stomach Bitters. Dyspeptic complaint, toms, a tendency to kidney ous inquietude and rhenmatie trouble overcome by lt» nee. The effect of nnd overwork are n unified by hy.it, it, arid it ford* efficient protection to all subjected malarial infioenoes. Give it a trial. A Fish Valued by a Lady. What fish is most valued by a lady Her-ring. Let her ring the glad soying of Dr. Riggers’ her child Huckleberry of from a ease cobc, and relieving it teething. mtwmmgt S ’’ 353 ! --- { MANUFACTURERS OF }- Sash, Blinds, Doors. We are here, and here to stay and have on hand a large stock of Doans, sash and bunds t which we defy competition on. Wchnvea large stock of “bone dry lum ber,’of the finest vnality nml can ginmuitec the very beet goods. In the way of Mouldings, Mantle#, Ifoiiasttra, etc., etc., we can jwei beat the-best price the place you can get nnvwhere! Onrs I* And “home m for Window and nhd Door Frame* our* is to come. o s nlerprise,” we nro home folks; born and raised in Georgia, niuMm vc devoted aur entire time amt nttcnbton to working wood for tho pnst tw. nty iyenrl, Affifchfinrto kncMhow to work to the beet advantage. We also.employ good workmen, who under¬ stand how to do ^he work. For there and many other reasons we might name, we claim a right to pntror.ego of the people. solicit We heartily continance thunk the public generally for very liberal patronnge, and a o! tbe same. DON’T FORGET THAT WE WILL HAVE. 8213 WHAT COMMISSIONER KOLB SAYS. Omen Cownssiosx* or AamoctyraE, Acrvn, Aw. IUrmsok,B itcasTABTCciKViToaPtDtwnwoCo.! f (it- ■» . the farmers Pc.it Sr.-^-Iesnxnd d» moit WrtilJr rncomrii6n4 To* Bodthzes CcvriTATon to * xULitaa at a form journal of very superior merit*. It should ho In toe how* of every tr®- rrsniro agricuUarut. Very truly jowSi, R. X- HOLB. _ 200,000 Headers I Established 1843. Leading In 18821 M SOUfflM CULTIVATOR AND Dili FA1BB, JlTTjlAJSTTJL, ckeoirq-i-a.. 3fcTo*w lzx It* ap'oxty-swvasa.tii. "STear of nPna.’toLUa&tieraa,. The retorniied organ of Southern asrrleulture and the lndmtrlsl progress of tho Sooth, with a guaranteed oireulaUoa ia every Southern and Western State. A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS. The editorial oor*s of writers and eoptrlbntori D ansnrpaiied, If squalled, by that of anr»i»* iUr publication in ail the Union, HON. W. J. NORTHKN U too President of too Georri* Btete Agricultural Society, and a praetleal farmor of the most thorough culture, and his artiolos sre always Instructive to farmers. DR. DANIEL LEE is not only one of tho ablest and m»U team¬ ed agrieulturaUeurmaUst In the country, but he was for four years virtually CommiHionbr at Washington, D.C., radiator, Profesrorof ^gricultareat the Georgia State University. C0L. X J. REDDING Is th* able iad therourhly equipped Ar.iiUnt Commissioner of Agriculture of tbe 8Ute of Georgia, as walls* an experieaasd writer. Taos. J. S. NEWMAN is in charge eftbe Alabama State Experiment Station, and stands in the front rank of agricultural .dueaters and writers ia the South. With these eminent writers are associated a aeoro or nfore of male and fe¬ male eontriVutore—including not a few ptefeesional agrUiltural wrltors'-who** monthly ar i- eles cover every department of farm management and household work, making Tux CutTiri- tor to* most complete, attractive and valuable agricultural journal In the South, cash issue being worth more than a whole year’s subscription to any farmer who reads and thinks la eew Motion with bis work. with mat¬ Its illustrations are taperb, and every department will be found full to overflowing ter to instruct, enlighten and entertaia. Each number is worth th* sum oharged for to# yesrs * Nofo^Uymmafiordtob# without THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. number# Now is eosstitutmg the time te seed in your subscriptions. Only One Doilar per ahnam, the twelve a volume ot extensive information useful to all claim*. Endorsed bv Pt*m and PeapU as a journal fer the farm,fireside and counting-room. Subscription, D1 per year, For advertising tttss, THE CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO., Gxo. W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. Manager, j Send for sample oopy- (, #. l time nm i a, ;■ In affect June 23rd, 1880. No. 15 —Daily, Except Sunday. LeaveGriffin .....................'..............5:45 a. m. Arrive Atlanta............................... 8.00 “ No. 10 —Daily, Except Svntuv. Leave Arrive Atlanta.., Griffin : ........................,.6:05 .....8:05 p. •’ m. ...... .......... No. 17 —Sunday Only. , Leave Arrive Griffin.:...............__„7:iG>a.m. Atlanta....................... 0:35 “ No. 18 —Sunday Only. Leave Atlanta...... ...i^..,.j.v.8:®0 p.m Arrive Griffin.........................,...,...,.5:00 “ No. 3 —Daily. Leave Macon..................................,3:80a. in. Arrive Griffin............ ..5:25 “ “ Atla*ta.......^,i.....................7:00 “ No. ,11— Daily. Leave Macon................ ... 8:25 a.th. Arrive Griffin ............... ...10:48 “ G A fin nf’.n ...12:30 p.jjj. No. 1—Daily. ave Macon ......1:40p. m. rive Griffin ......3:53 )' Leave “ .... ..................... ......4:00 “ Arrive Atlanta.......................... ...;..5:45 “ No, 13—Daily. Leave Macon............................ ... <3:40p.m. Arrivo Griffin............................ .... 9:00 “ Atlanta........................ ..,.10:40 “ No. 2—Daily. Leave A Manta,........................ 6:50 a. m. Arrive Griffin.... ...................... ...8:17 “ “ Macon........................... '• 10:3 ° “ No. 12—Daily. DeoTe Atlanta...................— .....2:15 p. m. Arrive Griffin...............V............ .....4:00 “ “ Mo-on Macon .....6 :15 >•' . No. 4—Daily. Leave Atlanta.. ..... 7;05,p. 8:35 “ S3 Arrive Griffin.. .... *• Mnnnll Macon ..... 11:00 *• No. 14 —Daily. Leave Atlanta.......................... 9:05 a. m. Arrive Griffin.......................;.:.....10:43 “ “ Macon................. 1:00 p. m. No. 27 —Dah.y. Leave Griffin...................8:30 a. m. " Newnon.................. 10:20 “ Amve Carrollton.........................11-35 “ No. 28 —Daily. h . , Isfiiivc Carrollton ,.•»««• ..4:20 p. m- “ Newnan............................ ;:.:..;5:25 *■ Arrive Griffin...................................7:20 No. 29 —Daily, except Sunday. Leave Griffin..................................1:30 p. m. Arrive Newnan.............. .4:30 “ lA»ave Carrollton...........................7:10 , ftt .... ..... 5:85 “ ‘ A rrive No. 30 —Daily, Except Susdat. Leave Leave Carrollton...... Carroutoi 5:45 a.m Arrive Newnan... ..7:35 " Leave Newnan ...........—•—.,8:05 “ Arrive Griffin................................10:35 “ pfTFo\ et rate*; or call on j uo. P. l. Griffin, Ga, E. T. CHARLTON, Savannah, G. A., Ga. sss I. The nails came off hi* flap the fingers came off to tee tet For 3 years be suffered chief caaso of Ifis improvement the reeoft of toe saliva of a cstf coming in Send for book* on Blast Potoon.A Skin Disease, tee. __ Swift Srseme Co.. Atlanta, Ua. _| liir FAK . ; ■ <- —to— aVEW YORK OR -18 VIA- SAVANNAH “• THE— —AND PCEAN ! STEAMSHIP; LINE ——or TMR- Central Railroad of Georgia. SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS Now on sale until at reduced rates. Good to turn October 81st, 1889. Free Magnificent from the Steamer and dust, and elegant service heat incident to Rail Routes. If you are sick the trip will vigorate and build you op. Go East by Sea and Ypu^li not Regret other , routes, ......I„ ther information may lie hod by applying the Agent at yonr station ©rate M.8. z^ffistiSsr BELKNAP, W. F. 8HELLMAN, Gen’l Pete. Savannah Agent. Trsv. Ga Pass. U can be given in a 8i)n*ta^in^t;T«\^b*olut permanent and speedy ^y harmires cure, effect a SPEaltc 88 S«#*a» Cinclimstl, 9 umwN's PYpGE /\ SURE CUl^E FOR CHILLS RSWf 8vFtVtR DUMB RND lLARIA, FOR SALS BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Air-! U&L&AfZ \ cr |*Hssea*i9»^ *4 •• & - «■ Uw r^*. jbs»ir •: Com poptoarvqte, GRAND' huiumi /n take place on each of 1 t&szsus.i : AMfcD FOR lor Integrity of its Dm Prompt Payment of I Attested ask" “We do hereby certify to arrangements for all to* 1 Annual Drawings ol The" ( fimrifinv any] «|| | control the the Drawings onducted 1 with I name arc c and in good faith toward all j it advertisement*.’’ —- Wo too nmlonrigned „ our counter*; mi Grand : Monthly : Capital Prize, I 100,000 Ticket* at Twenty 1_______„ fti Halves #10; Quarters |5; Tenth* 3; 1 i-fSS^SSSS-— sdr : . I I HUE Of Otf,WW 1 Panu or 25,000 is........... 1 2 Prizes or 10.000 am.________ -5 5 Pw*w Prizes or 1,000 6,000 are.......... S or are...- S 100 , Prizes or 600 are...,..,... 1 Pants* or 300 are i 500 Prizes or 200 are.......... APPROXIMATION IB* 100 Prises of #500 an............... * do. 800 are............... 100 do. JOO are............... 90, TERMINAL FRIZES. SSI t: JSSS: >TK —Tickets drawing Capiti not entl entitled to terminai Prises. AG ENTS tt~ statin turn mail delivery an Envelope bearing your IMPORT Address i^edbyanl^; or M. A. DAUPHIN, Exchange, Draft or I'ostM Not*. — Address Registered Letters f---- ing ----- A - WMW MJtUUb i» -nEMEMBEB, GUARANTEED that BI toei f BANKS of New Orleans, and t signed by the President of a whose chartered right* are highest Court*; therefore! ONE DOLLAar 1* t part or fraction of a Ti n any Drawing. Am" rod or less than a V 2 STf _____ Tor Sale bjN. B.Drew^. Jaa.8.188#. iCWss Books on Blocd and Skin Dlsesss* matted free. jf , • , •• f 1 W?.... l"'jf ,* • a. ‘T . . i« 'l g. * u “ janSfidly 1-ef V y W % * S3 ■—v RDCI*pEX=. wiffis r •’ wiif