Newspaper Page Text
Herald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, FEB. 25.
Entered at the I’oat Office, Newniin, tin., ns
secoml-cliiKH nmil nmtter.
BY THE PARS.
(The fnllnwimr lines irmy lx: read eltlie
up nr diiwn without altering the ki iihc:|
Tlie Htnrs were all aliirht,
The moon wan overhead;
1 named her ipieen of niaht,
Ah kIip my footateps led.
No wondroiiH fair wax she,
I aslo'd her to he mine,
Ah she tdanred up at me
I thrilled with love divine.
UcxIdt'H the meadow burn.
Ah we Htoo.l liiitrerliur there,
Her ey< H were like the (dura,
In r.nHanee WondroiiH fair,
“You're all the world to me."
Mu murmured sweet and xhy,
A thrill of rest ary
I felt at her reply.
I.ove led us all the way,
Ax we tin a d home iutnln ;
Our hear; ■ were litrlil and ifny,
The world war hllexful then.
TlmtiKh xlutdowx ■ ,e,l the >l<y,
No kIooiu our heart ' could lumtv ;
True iiIIhr'Ik ever nltrli
When heartk are Mended mi.
turned on the ‘lazy cock,’ which
causes water to flow Into the boiler.
The water kept rising and rising as
the engine went forward, and by the
time it reached the siding It had slop
ped over the dome into the dry j>ipe
and leaked down into the cylinders.
Then at the critical moment the cyl
inder-heads had blown off. Un
doubtedly that engineer saved not
only hiH engine, but also the lives of
the convicts, for they all would have
gone into the Hudson river together.
‘‘Locomotives foam not exactly at
the month, but Inside. It is caused
by oil being dropped into the boiler ,
by accident. Bolling water and oil is
soon converted Into suds, which in- |
torferes with the working of the on- j
gine. I onco knew a repalror who >
dropped his lamp into a locomotive I
boiler while it was being overhauled. |
He recovered his lamp, but mean- ;
while all of the oil had run out. The
' way that engine foamed was remark- I
I able. It hud to lie completely reno- [
vated. Foaming is very
I for it deceives the onp
I).inking there is more water in his
A Memory of Gettysburg.
Washington Star.
“A most pathetic, as well as one of
The Army as An Occupation.
Boston Transcript.
A contemporary, commenting on the
the most heroic incidents of the war j demand of the Secretaries of War and
of the rebellion occurred on the first i Navy for more men for warships and
batteries, remarks that while the la
bor market will not feel the drain
much, it is a fact that such employ
ment of able-bodied men Is just so
much subtracted from the productive
forcoH of the country. Considering*
that the number of men required can
not lie much in excess of 3,000, alto
gether, the drain will be hardly per
ceptible. Soldiers labor, and are the
cause of employment of others, for
armies must be fed and clothed as
well ax paid. Every year 50,000 men
offer tbHinselves for enlistment in the
and became engaged hotly. Each ! army, and recruiting oUlcers can pick j
side reinforced heavily, and the bat
tle ended with a decided advantage
on the part of the Confederates, who
held the field.
day of the battle of Gettysburg,” said
Judge Thomas J. Mackey, of South
Carolina, a few evenings ago.
‘‘Lee nover intended to give battle
at that point, while the Federate held
vantage ground, but was drawn into
the battle by a question of shoes.
This last point may seem strange, but
it is, nevertheless, true. Pettigrew’s
North Carolina division was bare
footed, and got permission to go into
the town of Gettysburg to got a sup
ply of shocH from the stores. The
soldiers there met a Federal force
and choose. The aspirants for enlist
ment include many bright young
Americans—no aliens will bo taken
now—to whom the military career is
‘‘As Gen. John B. Gordon’s brigade attractive,
was advancing, during the heat of
dangerous, battle, ho saw a Federal General lying of pay offered to be despised by
gineer Into wounded and apparently dying right ; bodied young men who would <
at*T III ills . i„ 111., fulfil Ui, rllomnnnluS anrl u'lun Ilf* pmnlr,ve,l In eivil l.'.hnl.
ANTICS OP ENGINES.
in Hie path. He dismounted, and,
Nor are the inducements in the way
able-
other
wise be employed in civil labor in the
Oddities Alxiui Locomotives Seldom Hoard
1 Outsido of Roundhouses.
Clilcugo inlcr Oeonn
An old railroad engineer Insisted
that IiIh engine is the most human
piece of mechanism on earth, and
when asked to make clear his mean
ing, inquired:
“Do you see those two big round
extensions on the top of that, locomo
tive, which look like the humps on a
camel's buck? They look alike, hut
they are used for very different pur
poses. One is the steam dome, the
other is the sand box. The latter in '
filled will) sund which is used to
sprluklo on the tracks when they bo-
como too slippery for the whoeln to
take hold of them. Thy sand allows
the driving wheels a good purchase I
on the rails ami the strain of pulling
n train is reduced. I
"But Lids very sand which so helps
the locomotive would hinder the
progress of the ear wheels, wiileli
should have as smooth a track as pos
sible. Ho a steam blower is placed
Just behind the driving wheels in or- ;
dor that the sand may bo blown to ’
one Hide. During locust or grass
hopper plagues in the West the in- j
seota lay ho thickly on the tracks that
the moisture from their crushed
bodies often stopped trains. A blower
was placed ill front of the locomotive
by the cow-catcher so us to clear the
tracks of the Inserts.
“Now the steam dome is an equally
interesting contrivance. You may
have noticed lit limes great puffs of
white vapor coming from the smoke
stack of u locomotive. That, was a
sign that she was currying too much
water In her boilers. The steam
which lies down near the water in a
holler Is very wet; in fact, it- is nl- ;
most water in consistency. The fur- ;
(her up you go from the surface of |
the boiling water the,more vaporized
docB the steam become, and conse- '
quently the better for use us a motive j
power.
“If, however, water rises too high
it is apt to slop over and run down
what is known us the dry pipe into
the cylinders. Then when the pislou
rods encounter the incompressible wa- i
ter instead of the very compressible
steam the heads of the cylinders are
apt. to be knocked out. This would
disable a train. A remarkable In
stance when such n condition once
saved the lives of sonic convicts hap
pened years ago near Slug Sing, N. i
Y.
“Several convicts escaped from the
penitentiary and waited on a near-by
bridge until a train came along. As
it passed under the bridge they drop
ped down from ubove and at the
point of a revolver compelled the en
gineer and fireman to leave the loco
motive and go into the ears. Then _
the convicts uncoupled the engine
from thu truin and the machine forged
•head.
“News of the theft of the engine
was sent to headqunrtera and the Su
perintendent. of the road immediately
telegraphed to a station master at a
point of the road past which the en
gine must go to ‘open west Bwitch
and throw first down train into the
river.’
“It was an extraordinary order, to
be sure, but a wild engine on a much
used line might, wreak irreparable
damage. The station master opened
the Hwitch which led to Hie river sid
ing and awaited events. Soon out of
the darkness appeared to bo ap
proaching a dense cloud of steam.
Not a vestige of the locomotive could
be seen. The steam entirely envel
oped her. She turned into the siding
and rushed down to the river, and
the station- master’s amazement at
the turn of events was completed
when, with a report and a jolt and
much spilling of water and hissing of
steam, she stopped almost on the
brink, while several men In striped
clothes rushed out of the rising vol
ume of vapor and made for the
woods.
“It seems that when the convicts
ordered the engineer out of the loco
motive cab he had surroptitiusly
I boiler than there really !h and mi ex- j raising the head of the wounded oftl- j lower grades of employment. While
tlie private soldier begins his servico
at. If 13 a month, his pay increases $1
for every year of faithful servico up
to the sixth, when it is $18. Sergeants
in the line get as high as $30 a month.
Engineers, ordinance and Hignul corps
pay runs at its highest, from $30 to
$50 a month. To the educated man
in the ranks there is the chance to
compute for a commission. The navy
pay for men before the mast and pet
ty officer^ is higher than that given
in the merchant service. When we
consider how much is supplied gratis
to the soldiers unci sailors in the way
of food, lodging and medical attend
ance, we can readily see that their
pay compares vory favorably, for sin
gle men at least, with the wages giv
en in at least tho lower grades of
mechanical employment.
Many soldiers and sailors, steady,
temperate, faithful men, lay up mon
ey enough during their servico to be
gin a business career with a consid
erable capital.' This is especially true
in the West, where thrifty privates
and “non-coihs” made good invest
ments in buying land cheap ahead of
n boom. Here in New England may
be found men prospering in civil em
ployment who a few years ngo were
in the ranks, and started a new ca
reer with an honorable discharge and
a few hundred dollars of savings.
Royal make* the food pure,
whole some and dellcloue.
&AKIH0
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
roya; baking powder co., new *
I “Rust,”
the dread of the cotton grower,
can be prevented. Trials at
Experiment Stations and the
experience cf leading growers
prove positively that
Kainit
i is the only remedy.
plosion is apt to result.
“Very curious objceLs sometimes
j work their way Into locomotives. I
1 Haw a chisel which lay in a locomo-
; tive for months before it was dlscov-
1 erod. It lmd boon dropped into the
steam chest by a careless workman,
anil the corroding action of tho steam
and{its constant movement backward
and forward with the throbbing of tho
| ongino finally reduced it in size and
slmpo until it, looked like an oyster
! knife. Why it did not'happen to jam
1 in between tho parts of the engine i-i
, hard to explain. The men bocomo
very practiced In these sounds, which
one not in tho business would never
notice, Htrange sounds are known
us ‘pounds.’ The thumping noises
I may be anywhere on the machine and
aro often hard to locate.
I “A locomotive naturally becomes
heated with ’its work and its lire.
Tho heat ox panels the metal, but iih
the engine ruslios forward tho wind
; created by Its motion cools off (he
front end of tho machine and con
tracts it. Thus tho front of tho loco
motive remains normal while the rear
end is always expanded. After years
of this tho expanded metal refuses to
contract when allowed to cool. It
has become, as we say, fatigued.
“Tills is, in a measure, a change
due to the influence of‘the climate or
stale of the atmosphere in which tho
engine is traveling. But there are
some climates which make railroading
a very queer business, indued. While
working in Manitoba I remember we
wore not allowed to blow the whistle
near a signal light. If wo did, every
light in the neighborhood would go
out. promptly. Tho mercury there
drops many degrees below zero, and
some proporty of tho very dry nir
causes this strange freak.
ccr, which lay in a hollow, placed a
knapsack beneath it. He then gave
hitn some water and whisky to revive
him. at lh« same time expressing
deep sympathy for him. He in
quired who lie was and wiih answered:
“ ‘1 am Gen. Francis Barlow, of
New York.’
“ ‘What, can I do for you, general?’
asked Gen. Gordon. ‘Have you any
last wiHli to entrust to mo?’
“ ‘Please take a package of letters
from tho breast pocket of my coat,’
said Barlow, in a wcakend voice.
“Gen. Gordon did so.
“ ‘Now,’ said Barlow, ‘I beg of you
to read one to me, for they are from
my wife, and I wish her words to be
the last l shall hear.’
“While tho shot and shall were
plowing up tho ground Gen. Gordon
read aloud the letter of a noble, pa
triotic woman to her dying husband.
When he had finished rending It,
Gen. Barlow requested him to tear
up all the letters, as he did not wish
them to be profaned by the eyes of
strangers.
“Then Gordon bade him good-bye
and hurried forward to overtake his
command. He then sent a ilag of
truce by messenger to Gen. Meade,
ut his headquarters. Tho messenger
was informed where Mrs. Barlow
might be found. On Receiving Gen.
Gordon’s note she hastened to tier hus
band on tho field of battle, under fire.
She found him, and, under her care
ful nursing, he recovered his health
and strength.
“Gen. Gordon and the brave officer
whom he succored on the field of
Gettysburg mot ngain about fifteen
years after the date of the incident I
have related. Gordon was then a
United States Senator from Georgia
i and Barlow was Attorney-General
“On tho other hand, 1 have worked tor ^j )e m a (, e n f New York. At a din-
in South America, where the air is so j ner gi ven by Mr. Potter, a Represen-
wiirm Unit I believe the engines j t.ntt V « In Congress from Now York, a
would work without any jacket to j gentleman was introduced to Gordon
I prevent radiation of bout. In Peru j 11H Gen . Barlow of New York city,
it was feared that it would be Impos
sible to make steam on the mountains
bocituse of the rarefied air. It is dif
ficult to boil water In an open kettle,
because of the nir. The kettle must
lie tightly covered. But there was
little difficulty experienced and the
engines go over the mountains very
1 easily.
“Perhaps, however, the most curi
ous thing of all is the manner in
which locomotive and their drivers
1 are treated in newspapers. Yon often
read of an engineer—in a eojlislou or
where a locomotive plunges into a
river—dying ill his post. Now, lu
such cases, the eugiueer, who can
j “Gordon scanned him closely and
I observed:
“ ‘Wiih Gen. Barlow, the bravo
soldier of the Union army, who was
killed at Gettysburg, related to you,
sir?’
“ ‘Though not with literal fidelity
to historic truth, yes, sir; very close
ly related,’ was the prompt reply. ‘I
am the Gen. Barlow who was killed
at Gettysburg, and 1 recognize in you
the Gen. Gordon whose soldiers killed
mo.’
“Upon that announcement they
Attractive Figures
come with good health. It is easily
seen when a woman lias perfect
health, her face and figure show it.
Tho painful disorders and diseases
that afflict womankind make them
selves seen as well as felt. Dull eyes,
blotched or sallow face, and a Wasted
form, follow them. This is the time
to turn to the right remedy. Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription builds
up and strengthens the system, and
regulates and promotes every proper
function. It’s a quieting, soothing ner
vine. It corrects and cures, safely and
surely, all those delicate derange-
| ments, weaknesses, irregularities and
diseases peculiar to the sex. For
1 young girls just entering womanhood;
! woman at the critical “change of
1 life;” and every woman who is “run-
! down” or overworked, its something
I to remember that there’s a medicine
| that will help you.
I “Prepare For The Worst, Sir!"
: Piissell’s Saturday Journal.
“Almost every big surgoon has liis
; own pet method of preparing a pa-
| tient for the news that, he will have to
! undergo an operation,” says a London
i specialist.
One great man I know always be-
What He Needed.
Cleveland lender.
“1 don’t know,” said Bertie Bus-
sington, “what can be the matter
with me. 1 httve not felt like myself
lately. I have had a feeling since I'
first looked into your eyes such as I
never experienced before.”
Mildred Farringford gazed at him
in her sweet, guileless way, and ask
ed:
“Have you taken anything for it?”
“No,” he replied, moving n little
closer to the beautiful girl. “I have
not dared to do so. I have longed to
take something for it, but whenever
an opportunity has presented itself I
have lacked the courage.”
He looked at her wistfully, and, as
Bbe made no answer, he moved still
nearer, and continued:
“But now I feel that the time has
come when I can bear up under this
affliction no longer. I must have the
tonic that will make a new man of
me, or I shall perish.”
“Where does the trouble seem to
be located?” she innocently inquired.
“Here,” he said, placing his hand
upon his breast'. “I cannot eat; I
cannot sleep. ‘Life seems to bo empty.
I walk about as one dazed. I cannot
think ns I go about my work. Ah,
Mildred, can you not guess the nature
of my affliction?”
There was a look of wonder in her
great soft eyes. Bertie Bussington
saw it, and hesitated no longer. Plac
ing his arms around her, lie asked:
“Can you not guess, darling, what
it is that has been pulling me down?”
“Yes,” she said, as Bhe deftly stuck
about three inches of hat-pin into
him, “you need more iron in your
system.”
And thus another Incident was
closed.
gave each other such cordial proofs {ring by a wholesale exaggeration of
of mutual esteem ns served to illus
trate that no hands clasp so warmly,
the case. If you were about to lose
one of your fingers he would proba-
otlierwise escape and does not do it j al least among Americans, as those ! b i y Htarl , by tolling you that the safe-
ls simply a fool, 1 lie men who have , tJuiL havo sheathed the sword, after
stuck to their posts have, iu most j hav ing drawn it in battle.
eases, been men who could not got
away. Inasmuch iih no engineer cun
help bis pnssengers in such cases, he
lmd better Jump if he could do so at
all. You rend of engineers who in
newspaper English 'instantly reversed
their lever.’
“No snuo euginoer would do such a
thing. He would first shut off steam
by closing tho throttle; next apply
the air brake; thirdly, open liis sand
box, and finally he would reverse his
lever so as to run in the opposite di
rection. Of course he would do it
all very quickly. But to ‘reverse his
lever instantly,' as the newspaper
man makes him do it, would blow out
his cylinder beads and render him
powerless to do anything at all.”
Mr. Ward L. Smith, of Frederlcks-
town, Mo., was troubled with chronic
diarrhoea for over thirty years. He
had become fully satisfied rlint it was
only a question oi a short time until
be would have to give up. He had been
treated by some of the best physi
cians in Europe and America, but got
no permanent relief. One day he pick
ed up a newspaper and chanced across
an advertisement of Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera apd Diarrhoea Rem
edy. He got u bottle of it nud the
first dose helped him, and its contin
ued use cured him. For sale by G. R.
Bradley, Newnan; H. A. & B. T.
Camp, Grantville; W. A. Brannon,
Moreland.
“This incident Berves to cmblaxon
the truth of Gen. Lannir’s utterance
in his speech upon the death of Sena
tor Charles Summer, delivered in tho
House of Representatives, when he
said: ‘Americans, know one anoth
er and you will love one another.’ ”
In Manitoba you can turn n furrow
100 miles long and not encounter a
stone ns large as your fist. The earth,
for n distance down from three to five
feet, is a rich, black loam, made by
centuries and centuries of decaying
vegetation.
Sl»*nivr Curk Trratmkv r Cor t-irturlng, disfig
uring, ticking, bunting. n.»«l «*c>«iv **kt - ami scalp
dbeavs with l<*« ot hair. - "'unu baths withCu-
TieritA s.>aj\ gentle applications of Cutiouba
(ointment), and full doses of Clmicuba Resol*
Y£2«t, greatest q» blood purifiers and ijumor cures
r to Curr (udtfoff FVtn Di»et
ty of your life demanded an amputa
tion of the whole arm. Gradually he
would get this down to the forearm,
then the hand; and by the time you
know it was only a finger, you would
be too much relieved to care a very
groat deal.
“ ‘Ah, we will soon set that right;
we’li give you a whiff of the chloro
form, just to insure you against feel
ing the least pain,’ is a very favorite
intimation of an operation. An Irish
surgeon lately prepared a very ner-
! vous lady patient, of his by assuring
1 her that <he could not treat her case
l until she got rid of a tooth which
! was causing her pain. He gave her
chloroform, under the pretext of ex-
! trading the tooth, and while she was ;
under its influence he performed an
operation which saved her life,”
Don’t annoy others by your cough- j
ing, and risk your life by neglecting a !
cold. One Minute Cough Cure cures
coughs, colds, croup, grippe and all ;
throat and lung troubles. G. R. Bradley. ■
“tiands up!” said the villian with ’
the low brow and the bulldog jaw. j
“All right, I’ll put up my hands,”
replied the man with a tali' forehead
and the pale countenance, “ but you
have evidently made a mistake, I am
a newspaper man.”
“Here,” said the footpad, tears of
pity springing into his eyes, “is a
quarter. Don’t let this ever become
known, or the gang'll put me back in
the amateur.class.”
We will be glad to send, free ,of charge,
interesting and useful pamphlets which treat
of the matter ii detail.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nns.au Si., New Yark.
ZTetu d&pertisomcnts.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM , I
nnd beautifies the half* I
Promotes a luxuriant growth. I
Kevor Palls to Restore Orsyl
Hair to Its youthful Color*. J
Cun.** scalp diBrnses k hair tailing, f
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MOST POPiSLnA |
tv. "x k LOWERS
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J ?<•’-> ”" y- i.V.'SET PEAS, one Pkt. of
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J m.fli: |1 IuL’IICOTT, an sixth So., mnannsoili, Mhn.
SENT FREE
Housekeepers—
Liebig COHPANY’S
Extract of Beef
COOK BOOK—
tolling how to prepnro many deli
cate nnd dell,.-Ions dishes.
Address, Liebig Go., P. O. Box 27IS, New York
We are anxious to do a little good
in this world, nnd can think of no
pleasanter or better way to do it than
by recommending One Minute Cough
Cure as a preventive of pneumonia,
consumption and other serious lung
troubles that follow neglected colds.
G. R. Bradley.
Chockful of Fun.
A clerical friend of mine, says
Chnuncoy M. Depew, told me a cap
ital story of a Yale man who was the
stroke our of his crew and the chief
athlete on the foot ball field. He
entered the missionary and spent
years in missionary labor in the far
We6i. Walking one day through the
frontier town, a cowboy stepped up
to him and said: “Parson you donJt
have enough fun. Take a drink.”
Tho minister declined. “Well” he
said, “parson you must have some
fun. Here’s a faro layout. Take a
hand in tiie game.” The minister
“Parson” said the cowboy, “you’ll
die if you don’t have some fun.”
And he knocked the parson’s hat off
his head and hit him a wbaek on the
ear.
The old athlete’s spirit arose; the
science which‘had been learned in the
college gymnasium and forgotten for
a quarter of a century was aroused,
and a blow landed on the jaw of that
cowboy that sent him sprawling
in the street. The parson walked
over him as if he had been a door-
rug, picked him up and dusted the
side of the house with him, mopped
up the sidewalk and, as the ambu
lance was carrying the cowboy off, be
raised up his head and feebly said:
“Parson, what did you fool me for?
You are chockful of fun.
The council of Conyers has fixed
the license on the sale of cigarettes at,
$1,000 a year. The Banner says this^
will 8top the sale in that place. :
Tetter, Salt-Klieum and Eczema.
Tho intense itching and smarting, inci
dent to these diseases, is instantly allayed
by applying Chamberlain's Eye and
Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases
have been permanently cured by it. It
is equally efficient for itching piles and
a favorite remedy for sore nipnles,
chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites
and chronic sore eyes 25 cts. per box.
Ur, Cntly’s Condition Powders, aro
just what a horse needs when in bad
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and
vermifuge. Thoy are not food but
medicine and the best in use to put a
horse in prime condition. Price 25
cents per package.
For mvle by G. R. Bnullny, Nownr.n; H. A
& B. T. Oiuiip, Gniutvlllu; W. A. Brannon A
Co., Moreland.
Buggy Painting !
The Fall and Winter months
is the best time for painting.
The atmospheric conditions
seem to facilitate more readily
the blending of paint and oil,
with the result that we get a
finer polish and a more dura
ble coat.
If you have a buggy or car
riage that needs repainting, I
advise you to put it in the shop
at once. I am prepared to dc
the very best class of work—
such work only as is possible
with the use of first-class ma
terials.
Remember, 1 give each job
sixteen coats of paint, and my
prices are righi.
' For the next few months will
paint your buggy and take corn and
fodder in part payment
Agent for the “Merck Truss."
C. A. MERCK,
At Dent's Shops.
Calendar Free.
THE ‘ATLANTA (GA.) JOURNAL.
DAILY AND WEEKLY.
a Year—Weekly 50 Cents
Year.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
DU
CREAM
BAKING
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A Pure drape Cream of Tartar Powder.
40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
The WEEKLY *OURN A I* is n large paper,
• containing ten pages of *cven column* each.
I It is filled with the LATKsr NEWS of the
day, both domestic nnd foielpn. Owning its
I own leased lelegrnphlu wires, which ar*- ustd
1 for no oilier i in.pose but to bring the latest
news to its editorial rooms. The -Iqvhnai. is
prepared to get all the news up to tlie latest
moment.
In addition to the news. It contains more
j spud l features than any other Southern
I weekly. Among other things it Iihb a v.reklj'
letter or sermon from Rev. Sam Jones, a
contribution from Hon. John Temple Gruvos.
: letter* of trav. I. biographies of distinguished
in n, and many other attractive f eattires.
The Wee i. Y Journal is he dutiful l.v ill us-
trated by itsown artist. In tact, neither en-
! ergy nor money spared rn make it tho
| GUEAT SOUTHEKN WEKKLY.
CALENDAR FREE,
! And the price is only FIFTY CENTS A
j YEAR. To every subscriber sending fifty
; cents for a year’s subscription and a two*
cent postage stamp extra (to pay postage) a
beautiful itbographed calender for 1808 will
I bo s nt free.
I specimen copies free.
Address
The journal,
Atlanta, (in.
DeWitt’s Little Early Riser*,
Tho famous tittle pills.