Newspaper Page Text
4
Dr. Hathaway & Co,,
SPECIALISTS.
(Regular Graduates Registered.)
Day
In which some good deed has not been done or
some word of cheer been spoken.
A LIFE HAS BEEN LOST
In many instances simply because the wrong
Inedicine has been used or the doctor did not
Understand the case. The astonishing success
Which has attended the use of Dr. Hathaway &
Co.’s treatment stamps them as the leading
specialists in their line in America.
AHDiseasesPeculiartoMeni Women.
SPECIAL ATTENTION to the following dis
eases: Syphilis, Diseased or Unnatural Dis
charges, Impotencv, Dost Manhood, Nervous
Debility, Night Losses, Strictures, Hydrocele,
Varicocele, Psoriasis, Eczema, Pimples, Ulcers,
Files, Catarrh and Diseases of Women.
Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for men.
Send for Symptom Blank No. 2, for women.
Send for Symptom Blank No. 3, for Skin Dis
eases.
All correspondence answered promptly. Busi
ness strictly confidential.
Entire treatment sent free from observation.
Refer to our patients, banks and business men.
Address or call on
Dr. Hathaway & Co.,
22 1-2 S. Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Office Houks:—9 to 12; 2 to 6 and 7to 9;
Bundays 10 to 1.
Bargains
—IN—
BUGGIES.
For the next Sixty Days we will
offer our entire stock of wheels at
greatly reduced prices to make room
for our
SPRING STOCK.
We are Headquarters.
Standard Wagon Co.
38 and 40 Walton Street
Years of marvel
ous success in the
treatment of
MEN and WOMEN.
Dr.W.W, Bowes
ATLANTA, CA.,
SPECIALIST IN
Chronic, Nervous, Blood
and Skin Diseases.
. VARICOCELE and Hydrocele permanent
ly cured in every case.
NERVOUS debility, seminal losses, de
spondency, effects of bad habits.
STERILITY. IMPOTENCE. -Those
desiring to marry, but are physically incapaci
tated, quickly restored.
Blood and Skin diseases, Syphilis and its effects,
Ulcers and Sores.
Urinary, Kidney and Bladder trouble.
Enlarged Prostate.
Uretnral Stricture permanently cured
•Without cutting or caustics, at home, with no
interruption of business.
■•Send 6c. in stamps for book and question list.
Best of business references furnished. Address
Dr.W.W. Bowes, 2| Marietta St.Atlanta,Ga.
Get Reynolds.
Reynolds is the Sign Painter.
29 E. Hunter Street.
COLORADO GOLD PENS.
ONE FINE NICKEL-PLATED HOLDER
and six indestructible Golden Pens. They
have given universal satisfaction, and will last
a lifetime. Sent for 10 cents. Address Staf'
FokD Seidell, 3y 2 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga-
bs ga ■■ ga Dr. Judd’s Electric Belt and
I |J L L Battery combined, sent to any
P |p one on trial, free. Price, $3, $6,
| 11 Li Li SW, sls if satisfied. Cures rheu
matism, Lame Back, Effects of La Grippe,
Weakness of either sex, other diseases. Head
ache relieved in one minute. Free medical ad
vice. Electric Trusses. Give size. Agents
wanted. DR. JUDD, Detroit, Mich.
21st Annual Announcement
3 . OF THE
M Georgia Agricultural Coll®
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Spring Term begins First Monday in Feb.
ruary. FaU Term begins First
x Monday in September.
Best school in the south, for students with
limited means. The military training ii
thorough, being under a U. 8. Army officer,
detailed by the Secretary of War.
BOTH SEXES HAVE EQUAL ADVAN
TAGES.
Students are prepared and licensed to teach
in the public schools, by Mt of the legislature.
Lectures, on Agriculture and the Sciences
by distinguished educators and scholars.
For health the climate is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2237 feet.
It lower rates. •-
Each senator and representative of the state
Is entitled and requested to appoint one pupil
from his district or county, without paying
matriculation fee, during his term.
For catalog or information, address Secre
tary or Trcssurer. Board of Trustees.
urns
Does your grass need
cutting? Buy a “Clip
per” Lawn Mower of
King Hardware Co.
$10.00! - $12,50 1- $15.00!
Glance at the Above Prices for IL ASLTKR SUITS.
SEE OUR 'WINDOW. IT’S WORTH OOMING MILES TO SEE. CHILDREN’S SUITS THIS WEEK SI.OO, $2.00, $3.00. 50 PATTERNS TO SELECT FROM.
THE ENTERPRISE CLOTHING COMPANY, 29 WHITEHALL ST.
GRAND CONCERT
By Madame Anita Lassen, Prima
Donna, and Mr. Emmanuel
Wad, Pianist.
Monday, at the Grand, two distinguished
European artists will give a superb con
cert,jone of the finest ever given in Atlanta.
Madame Anita Lassen was born and, ed
ucated in Denmark and finished her musi
cal education in Vienna and Paris. From
the beginning her magnificent voice
created a sensation and King Christian, of
Denmark, took the young artist under his
protection.
After her first success the roy. family
gave her a strong letter of recommendation
for the Princess of Wales, and she went to
London, where her talent and the patron
age of the popular princess soon made her
a favorite at court and in the musical
circles. Since that time Madame Lassen
has sung in every capital and large city of
Europe, and she has a volume of the most
flattering and enthusiastic notices from tbe
press of every one of these cities and from
the most prominent European musical
authorities, like Gounod, De Beriot and
others.
There are notices in English, in French,
in German, in Russian, in Dutch,in Finish,
in Swedish, in Danish, etc. Every one of
these represents the lady as a wonderful
singer, the future successor of Jenny Lind,
and they proclaim her a great artist. Her
voice is described as a phenomenal one, as
a pure, powerful and dramatic soprano,
admirably suited for the grandest musical
productions. Her talent, her voice and her
taste fitted her admirably for the grand
opera roles,but she could not bear the great
nervous strain imposed by that career, and
after awhile she abandoned the stage and
sang only in concerts.
After ten years of success, and in the
full development of her powers, Madame
Lassen decided to come to America, the
land of the dollars. The severity of the
northern winter soon prostrated her and a
long illness followed. When she recov
ered she was sent south by her physician
and she feels now herself again, ready to
resume her concerts.
The voice of Madame Lassen, besides its
purity, has what all artists call a phenom
enal range, reaching over three octaves,
from the lowest contralto to the highest
soprano. With such a range she is able to
sing any vocal music, and in opera she
could fill any role, from Fides, in the
“Prophet,” to Rosina in the “Barber.”
Mr- Wad is a first-class pianist; also born
in Denmark, a classmate and a rival of
Paderewsky. Our citizens will find him
a brilliant artist and a perfect interpreter
of the great masters—Lizzt, Beethoven,
Mendelssohn, etc.
s;uive knocking.
The advent of electricity as a motive
power has given rise to many queer ideas,
none of which perhaps is more amusing
than that which is entertained by not a few
intelligent women that their clothing be
comes charged with the electric fluid by
riding in the street cars.
But the most startling experience comes
from a cultured Back Bay woman, who
says that a few nights ago on returning
from a down town trip she took off a wool
en underskirt, and on giving it a shake was
startled to see it flash all over with a sheet
of blue flame. She was so alarmed that she
threw it across the room, and it fell behind
a trunk. When she was ready for bed, she
attempted to take up the charged garment,
and it flamed at her again. Then, dropping
it where she stood, she made a dash for the
bed and huddled herself under the covering.
Even here, however, she was not safe, for
her body was so electrified that its contact
with the sheets set up a violent snapping.
She jumped from the bed in fresh alarm,
and it was some time before she could find
a resting place free from the shocking mani
festations.
She explains the intensity of the phenome
non in. her case by the theory that the house
is crossed by many electric wires, by which
the whole premises are “charged.”—Boston
Herald. .
English Versus American Manners.
This may not be the right place to com
mend the remarks of a contributor to the
Contributors’ club of The Atlantic Month
ly, who discourses on certain small particu
lars wherein English manners differ from
American. The English gentleman, he
finds, never says “sir” to any except royal
persons. The American gentleman often
says “sir” to his elders, and commonly to
such of his equals as he desires to treat
with respect. So the ideal American gen
tleman aims to be courteous to his
as he regards them, and at least as civil to
his servants as they are to him. Whereas,
this contributor says, “The English serv
ant, or underling, likes to ba treated
brusquely and arrogantly, and the English
gentleman seldom fails to gratify him.”
Most of us who are good Americans be
lieve that American manners are based on
sound ideas and would far rather see our
cousins emulate our behavior than ourselves
swing at all into line with theirs. Only in
“the service” it is possible that American
manners may be less serviceable than else
where and English manners more desir
able. And if that is so it is a pity, and the
officers are entitled to our sympathy and an
increase of pay.—Harper’s Weekly.
There is more catarrh in this section of
the country than all other diseases put to
gether, and until the last few years was
supposed to be incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced it a local
disease, and prescribed local remedies, and
by constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to be a consti
tutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.
J. Cheney & Cn., Toledo, 0., is the only
constitutional cure on the market. It is
taken internally in doses from 10 drops to
a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
They offer one hundred dollars for any case
it fails to cure. Send for circulars and tes
timonials. Address,
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
eod.
Children’s “Fads.”
An interesting thing about children is a
way they have of taking up and dropping
what is called in people “fads.” A passion
ate inclination for doing some one thing
will seize them, and the fond parents are
often led thereby to construct upon this
flimsy basis future artists, poets and scien
tists, only to find themselves gazing in rue
ful astonishment upon an array of very
commonplace boys and girls later on.—
Washington Star.
An Entire Police Force Arrested.
Not a bad incident for a comic opera was
the arrest of the entire police force of a lit
tle Texas town on a charge of vagrancy.
This charge was preferred by the wives of
the two men who constituted the force,
doubtless with the consent of the culprits,
as it enabled the men to testify that they
had received only sl2 pay in five months
and could not support their families on
that.—New York Sun.
Db. Kilmer—Yours is surely the King
of all Headache Cures. Myself and daugh
ter have both tried it as well as other head
ache cures, and unhesitatingly pronounce
your Sure Headache Curb the very best. •
It will do what you claim for it everytime.
Jas. M. Freeman, Editor Headlight.
Waycross, Ga.
25 cents for 25 doses. For sale by the
leading druggists. '
THE HERALD, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1893.
LAST OPPORTUNITY!
This may be your last opportunity to buy
Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing,
Hats, Etc.
AT AND BELOW COST.
We are compelled to sell out this stock in some way; if
not at retail we will close out in bulk. We will try hard to
close out within the next two weeks at retail, so now is your
time to buy goods cheap. They are going fast, any way at
any price. We don’t care, just so they go.
NOTICE
Gros Grain Silks.
Faille Silks.
Crystal Silks.
China Silks.
India Silks.
All Silks at Cost.
Cashmeres.
Henriettas.
Dress Cheviots.
Ottomans.
Brilliantines.
Albatros.
All Woolen Goods at Cost.
Sheetings.
Shirtings.
Bleached Muslins.
All Domestics at Cost.
Ladies’ Hose.
Misses’ Hose.
Children’s Hose.
All these things and a thousand other things to go at
first cost. Not a single article in our house will be priced
to you above first cost.
We again take occasion to thank our friends for their
liberal patronage in the past. We hhve sought to merit it.
For the future we promise them a first class Shoe Store at
the stand we now occupy,
i 212 Marietta Street.
CLAY & MALONE,
Petition For Charter.
/GEORGIA, Fulton County—To the Supe
\T rior Court of said County: The petition
of Howard E. W. Pa'm?r, W. A. Halsted and
James K. Hines shows that they and such per
sons as may wish to become associated with
them, desire to be incorporated under the
name of the
SOUTHERN RAILWAY CAR ADVERTISING
COMPANY;
that the object of their association is pecun
iary gain; that the principal business which
thev propose to carry on is a general advertis
ing business, whereby they expect to advertise
t he business, callings and professions of others,
in horse, steam and electric street ctrs, rail
road trains, steamships, newspapers, posters,
daggers, pamphlets, and in and by any other
means by which advertisements can be accom
plished ; and in connection therewith own and
operate printing presses and such other ma
chinery and appliances as may be necessary to
do the printing and publishing incident to said
advertising business; that the amount of the
capital stock to be employed by us actually
paid in will be §3,000 with the privilege of in
cjetsing the same by a vote of the board of di
rectors of the said company to any amount not
exceeding $100,000; that they desire to be In
corporate for the period of twenty years, with
the right of renewal; and that their place of
doing’business is to be Atlanta, said State and
C Petitioners further show that they desire
said corporation to have the right to sue and be
sued, to have and use a common seal, to make
by-laws binding on their own members, not in
consistent with the laws of this State and of the
United States, to receive donations by gifts or
will, to purchase and hold such property, real
or personal, as is necessary to the purposes of
its organization; to borrow money and secure
the same in auy way it may deem proper, to
do a general adxertising as above specified, to
own and operate printing presses and such
other machinery and appliances as are neces
sary to do the printing and publishing neces
sary to said advertising business, and to do all
such other acts as are necessary for or incident
to the legitimate execution of the purposes
afopesaicC and such as a natural person might
do engaged in said business. ......
Wherefore petitioners pray that this court,
after this petition has been published as re
nuired by law, will pass an order declaring this
application granted, and petitioners and their
successors incorporated for and during the
term of twenty (20) years, with the privilege of
renewal. mN SH UBRICK & FELDER,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
Filed in office
Clerk Superior Court.
STATE OF GEORGIA, County of Fulton—
I G H Tanner, Clerk of Superior court of said
county, do hereby certify that the foregoing is
a true*copy, from tho tiles of this ofnee, ot the
original application for charter for the
“SOUTHERN RAILWAY CAR ADVERTISING COM
PANY.”
Witness my hand and the seal of said court,
this the 29th day of March, 1893.
G. H. Tanner,
Clerk Superior Court,
Fulton County Georgia.
Friday mar. 31-and apr. 7,14, 21.
Nervous Collapse In. Parliament.
Instances of nervous collapse in the house
of commons have been by no means scarce.
The late Lord Sherbrooke—then Mr. Rob
ert Lowe —completely broke down in the
course of a speech in the debate upon the
royal titles bill. Happening to confuse his
notes, he became bewildered and sat down
in the very middle of his speech. If I re
member correctly, he never addressed the
house again after this collapse. The cele
brated Lord Strangford—when Mr. Smythe
—on oi»e occasion stumbled over the pro
nunciation of an intricate word, and losing
his nerve was compelled to sit down.
Sir George Gray, who was home secretary
under Lord Palmerston, was a positive
martyr to nervousness, and he never ad
dressed the house, even upon the most un
important occasions, without betraying
evident signs of this affliction. Another in
stance is that of Mr. John Stuart Mill, who
upon a famous occasion utterly collapsed.
—London Truth.
Men’s Half-hose.
All Hosiery at Cost.
Shirts. . *?i
Drawers. ->:a <■
Ladies’ Vests. . ■
Gloves. h
Suspenders.
Collars.
Cuffs.
Lace.
Embroidery.
Ribbon. k
All Notions at Cost.
Men’s Suits.
Boys’ Suits.
Coats.
Vests.
Pa nt s.
All Clothing at Cost.
Ladies’ Hats.
Men’s Hats.
Boys’ Hats.
PROF. NOTT’S
Classes for Dancing at Zouave
Armory,
11£ Marietta street. The only dancing
school in Atlanta. For gentlemen—Mon
day and Wednesday, 8 to 10 p. m. For
ladies and Children —Tuesday and Thurs
day, 3 to 5 p. m.
Dixie Baking Powder.
Absolutely good enough.
Locked in the Safe.
Not long ago Paul Gore of the Grand
Pacific hotel in Chicago was locked in the
fireproof vault of the hotel for half an hour.
Late in the afternoon a telegram was re
ceived from Colonel Frank Barrett in Hel
ena, Mon., which requested that his mail
be forwarded and ending with these words:
“Thermometer 50 degrees below .zero here"
today.” There was a turning up of coat
collars and audible shivers from the people
who heard it. Paul Gore was standing near.
“I’ll just fix myself now for this cold
wave,” he said, and seizing a small gas
stove he carried it into the fireproof vault
and slammed the inside door behind him.
There was a click as the door swung shut.
A minufre later there was a pounding on
the steel door. A hotel clerk ran over to'
the vault, and he heard faintly, “For heav
en’s sake, get that door open and let me
out!”
He tried to open the door, but it was
locked securely. “Who has a key?” he
called through the door. “Colonel Parker
has one,” answered Gore. Half a dozen bell
boys went in different directions in. search
of the colonel, but one by one they returned
with word that he could not be found. Fi
nally the proprietor came strolling in, and
he was surprised at the warmth of his greet
ing. It was like getting back from a trans
atlantic voyage. The situation was ex
plained. He got out his bunch of keys, and
Paul Gore was restored to the arms of his
loving friends.
He Dies Regularly Once a Week. ; ;
An Italian, who cannot be other than a
most remarkable impostor, has been play
ing wonderful tricks upon the good, people
of Tiflis, in the Caucasus, Russia. His name
is Tagarelli, and while he cannot be’termed
an Italian in the strict sense of the word,
having been born in Russia of parents born
in the same country, it is"known that he is
of that extraction. He is known all over
the land of the czar as “The Dying Proph
et,” his ability to delude the public depend
ing on a queer faculty he has for dying aqd
returning to life once every week. A per
son who has viewed the situation on the
ground says: “The audacity of his preten
sions, the skill with which they are main
tained, and, above all, the profound effect
produced upon all who come in contact
with him, have no parallel in history. He
is a most extraordinary being, and, if he is
an impostor, then he is the most marvelous
impostor of the age.”
He dies to all appearances, and the ordi
nary death tests declare that life is extinct.
While in this conditition he declares that
his spirit visits “the other world,” but
which of the two he will not tell. All that
he will divulge in regard to his doings
while on these “trips” is that he pxamines
the Book of Life, and that he can tell the
spiritual standing of every person who cares
enough about it to make inquiries.—St.
Louis Republic.
Cooking Stoves, low
prices. King Hardware
Company.
WORD CONTEST.
This Contest Now Open Closes
Monday, April 3, 1893.
Last month we gave away a large quantity of
elegant jewelry and. a snug sum ,n cash to
readers of The Herald who joined in our
Missing Word Contest. Every one was well
pleased, because every one got more than they
expected, and as hundreds will consequently
join in the present contest where one joined
last month, we have prepared for it on a grander
and more magnificent scale.
The following sentence has been written com
plete, sealed in an envelope and locked up
until Monday, April 3, when it will be opened
in the presence of a number of gentlemen and
the big cash premium mentioned below divided
among all who have correctly supplied the miss
ing word represented by a dash in the following
paragraph:
She went into a grocery and naked for
a can of .
The missing word is known to but one person
and will not be divulged until this contest
closes, when It will be published in this paper
together with the names and addresses ot suc
cessful competitors. Will your name be there?
Special Offers.
Five thousand elegant, substantial and val
uable pieces of jewelry will be given away dur
ing this contest.
The jewelry consists of shirt studs, ladies
sets, rings with settings of diamond, ruby
emerald, etc., scarf pins, lock els, brooches, lace
pins, love charms, earrings, bracelets, neck
laces, watch chains, etc.
There is not a single shoddy piece in the en
tire collection. The smallest piece is a rolled
gold patent separable collar button worth 25
cenis. Many of tho pieces retail as high as $lO.
TIIOSO Who participated in our last contest
know we give lino jewelry. You will.be sur
prised at tho really elegant, substantial and
valuable pieces of jewelry that we give. We
want our goods and circulars in tbe homes of
all readers of this paper, and will place them
there if backbone and liberality can accomplish
" ‘it. A pleased customer is our best advertise
ment. We will please you. Try us. Each
piece of jewelry is numbered and all answers as
they coine in are similarly numbered before
opened, the ladies’ even and the gentlemen’s
dad, so that each sex gets suitable jewelry.
Preminnii Each Day.
To each of the first and last one hundred
persons answering this advertisement on the
conditions named below and to each of the first
ten and last ten in each city, town or village
doing likewise, and to each of the writers of tne
first fifty answers received each day during the
contest on the conditions specified below, we
will present, whether the missing word is cor
rectly supplied or not, a valuable piece of jew
elry. Parties receiving jewelry also get their
pro rata share of tho big cash premium for as
many times as they correctly supply the missing
Woid.
This centest is free to the world. The only
conditions for entering it, are, that competitors
shall with each attempt send 25 cents silver or
postnl note or 15 two cent stamps for any one
of the articles named below. With each 25
cenis supply the missing word twice. If 181 is
sent for all the goods supply the missing word
eight times.
The same word can be used repeatedly or
different words each time. One fourth of all
money received for goods will be divided when
the contest closes among all who have cor
rectly supplied the .missing word. It will foot
up a handsome sum
Pearl Dentifice absolutely pure, it arrests
decay, removes discolorations, beatifies and
preserves the teeth, leaves a delicious taste in
the mouth, cures stomatitis or retraction of the
gums. Specially recommended for all affections
of the mouth and gums. A tOiispooufUl in a
teacup of hot water makes a delicious mouth
wash. Sample 12, large size, 25 Cents,
Lilly White Pearl Water for the facial
skin. One ounce in a pint of hot water makes
a lotion equal to those retailed for J 2. In plain
wrappers. Sample 12, large size, 25 cents.
Gold Gloss. Cleans and polishes gold, silver,
plated ware, brass, copper, steel, tin or anything
requiring a brilliant lustre in a few seconds.
Positively the finest article of the kind on the
market. Perfumed. 25 cents.
Nictorene— Cures the cigarette and tobacco
habit (chewing or smoking) in two weeks. The
—-,y ’-able tobacco antidote. As pungent as
tobacco; as pleasant as pure. Sample 25 cents;
large size sl.
'Io fend silver by mail cut a hole in a thick
piece of card board, place the silver in it and
paste a piece of paper over it on both sides.
Remit in silver, postal note or money order. No
letters answered unless stamp is inclosed for
reply. Address,
THE ELECTROPOID PEOPLE,
> . Box 92 A. H., Portsmouth, Va.
N D
MONDAY, APRIL 3.
CONCERT
Os the two distinuished Danish Artists,
MADAME
ANITA LASSEN,
Prima Donna, and
MR. EMMANUEL WAD,
Pianist,
Supported by Local Talent,
, ■■ „ IN
A FINE PROGRAMME,
Selected among the finest and most difficult
pieces of vocal and instrumental music.
Prices—sl.oo, 75c, 50c, 25c. Reserved seats at
Miller’s.
lUperahdiise
2 Solid Weeks 2
Commencing MONDAY, MARCH 27. Mati
nees Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday.
Change of Play Each Performance.
PEARL MELVILLE
AND THE
Baldwin-Melville Co.
Under the personal management of Walter S.
Baldwin. Repertoire :
} Ten Nights in a Barroom
} “Falsely Accused.”
Wells-Fargo Messenger
Night Prices 10c, «Oc and 30c.
Matinee Prices BOc and 2Oc.
No extra charge for reserved seats. (Box
seats, matinee or night, 50c.)
Subscribe to stock in
the new series Hibernia
Building and Loan As
sociation. Organ ized
thirteen years. Peter
F. Clarke,Secretary and
Treasurer, 37 S. Pryor
street.
The Prettiest E-aster
Cards seen in the city this year are given
to everyone buying tea or coffee this week
from C. D. Kenny, 119 Whitehall street.
Dixie Baking" Powder,
Absolutely pure.
FOR EASTER NOVELTIES
VISIT
THE J. L. DM CO.,
POPULAR JEWELERS.
New Goods at Lowest Prices.
69 WHITEHALL STREET.
BABY CARRIAGES
—AT
F actory Prices.
ROLLLWEIf CO.,
128 Whitehall Street.
-- .... . ...
- JOHNSON’S r~\
COUGHS
7 y7
TRADE
Manufactured only at 59 East Alabama Street, Atlanta, Ga.,11. S. A.
J. <fc T. Cough Drops.
/<|LL persons troubled with Coughs, Cold or Hoarseness
will FIND IMMEDIATE RELIEF by using these
Cough Drops. Public speakers, singers, and all persons ex
posed to the weather are invited to try them. One or two of
these Drops taken on retiring will clear the throat and re
lieve the passage of phlegm, and the patient will enjoy a com
fortable night’s sleep.
H. L. Atwater, President. A. J. Orme, V ice-Presldant. Wm. C. Hale, Sec’y and Gen’l Manager.
Mm Ifctal Building N ta Aisooidiw.
21 N. Pryor, Corner Decatur St., Atlanta, Ca.
Capital Stock, $3,000,000.00- Assets Jan. 1,’93, $1,025,566.21.
LOANS MADE ON REAL ESTATE.
Our Installment Stock is a profitable and safe investment.
We issue a 7 per cent. Guaranteed Certificate, provided money is left one year,
Our paid-in Capital and Profits are larger than any Bank in the city.
W. S. McNEAL’S
FAINT AND GLASS STORES.
114 and 116 Whitehall Street.
Wholesale and Retail Paints and Oils,
GLASS, VARNISHES, BRUSHES,
Strictly Pure White and Tinted Leads, Lubricating Oils,
and Mortar Stains.
For Large Contracts Very Low Prices will be Made to Owners, Contractors« Builders.
Ladders, Stages and Sand Bellows always for sale.
THE TRIPOD PAINT COMP’Y,
56 AND 58 MARIETTA STREET.
MANUFACTUfcRRS
PURE READY-MIXED PAINTS, PIEDMONT WHITE LEAD.
Painters’ Supplies. Complete line Artists’ Materials. eod
y. |
EatabUjUed O SOUTHERN g Cd
fAWa ® R mH "-CM rM r, Eli l jnMsS N $a 57 ®* Broa< * Cta.
kJ IffiJir* ®| IN IS T^e l eadtn * Commercial College of the South. Short.
fl wll w' ® W lje»lOE.SO'* hand, BoOKKRitriNO, Trleghaphy, Dbawing, Commcr
' linwT * lll * lll iß -in,i Law, Grammar, Mathematics, Spelling, Typewrit
w ~ • Bing, and all Commercial Branches taught practically.
5 m .Im. mnthods Our graduates are tn demand at salaries from Sfioo to SI ,ROO a year; forty seven placed
»?'? « PRINCIPALS BESIDES ASSISTANTS. »OO flrmtaatesin Position, in this
Our Itudenii wemembwi of the X.M.C.A. without cost. Largo catalogue sent fcee.’Telophone 52«,
PROFESSION Al. CARD*.
Bishop & mowhorter,
Attorneys,
Cor. Wall and Loyd streets, Atlanta, Ga.
Attorneys Snow, Church & Co. i
WILLIAM J. ALBERT,
Lawyer.
Refers to Hardware Board of Trade, New
York, or Atlanta banks. 2% Marietta street,
Atlanta, GA r
YYTELLBORN >l. BRAY,
yy Attorney and Counselor at Law,
29% Marietta street, Atlanta, Ga. ’Phone 337.
Practices in all the Courts, State and United
States. ,
* RNOLD & ~
2V Attorneys at Law.
Offices removed to rooms 17, 21 and 22, GouVJ
Building.
Thomas r. r. cobb," ~
Attorney at Law,
Room 10, Grant Building. ’ „
J - A. CHAPPLE,
. Dentist,
Marietta and Broad,
Grant Building.
Take Elevator,
Broad street entrance.
WM. A. HAYGOOP, K. O. LOVETT, CHAS. M. PLYEB
Haygood, loVett & plyer,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Lavr,
11-17, ly Room 525, Equitable Building.
fY L. ———-
XJT. Architect,
Equitable Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Real Painless Dentist.
When others fail to make a fit, wa
succeed. We keep no book, no col-
no bad debts, which means
don’t make honest people pay
high prices for others’ bad debts.
We make the best rubber plates, $7-50; gold
filling, $1.50 up; amalgum, 75c; extracting, 25c;
improved gas, si)c. See the non-breakable plate.
Dr. SIMS, Manager, 5 and 6 Grant Building,
corner Broad and Marietta streets. Atlanta, Ga.
W. W. Goodrich & Co.,
Architects,
HEWPOBT HEWS, BOBFULK, AND AT
LANTA, SA.
ROYAL BARBER SHOP ~
AND
BATH ROOMS,
6 W. Aliibiiuin Street.
Schrayer Bros., Propr’s*
The only strictly first-class white tonsorial es
tablishment In the city.
Ladies’ bangs trimming and curling and chil
drens’ hair-cutting a specialty.
• AND MOST succo
ful School in tha
South. Thorough preps
aration for business in
Book-keeping, B a n Id
ing, Shorthand. Terms
reason ab le. Tima
short. Send for circu-
JAMES
Auction ami (Jeinsniaxiasi House,' 1
207 West Peters Street*
Horses, Mules and Harness, Household and'
goods of all kinds sold on commission. Storage
free. Correspondence solicited and prompt
turns guaranteed.
Public Sale by Trustees and
reivers of Talc Property"”
Near Murphy, N. C.
GEORGIA— Fulton County: The under
signed, William L. Peel and Willard H.
Nutting, as trustees under a certain trust deed
made by the Atlanta Talc and Soapstone Min
ing and Manufacturing company, duly recorded
in book “W,” pp. 412-5 by the Registrar of deeds
for Cherokee county, North Carolina, in pursu
ance of the power of sale therein con ained, and
the said William L. Peel and Willard H. Nut
ting also as receivers duly appointed by the
superior court of Fulton county, Ga., in a suit
between themselves and others as plaintiffs and
the said Atlanta Talc and Soapstone Mining and
Manufacturing Company and others defend
ants, in pursuance of an order passed during
the fall term, 1892, of said court and also in pur
suance of two certain judgments and decrees
rendered by the superior court of Cherokee
county, N. C., in a suit between said trustees as
plaintiffs and said Atlanta Talc &c. Co., and
others as defendants and which were rendered
at the spring term, 1891, and
tlie fall term, 1892, will sell
the property described below at public outcry
in the city of Atlanta, said Fulton county, Ga.,
before the court house door, to the highest and
best bidder for cash, on Thursday, the 18th
day of ?.l ay, 1893, at 11 o’clock a. m-, and will
make title'to the purchaser, under the approval
of the court, of the following described real es
tate, to.wit: all that tract or parcel of land sit
uate, lying and being in the county of Cherokee,
state of North Carolina, on the waters of the
Notla river, bounded and more particularly dos.
cribed as follows: Being tract 33 in Dis
trict No. 3 bounded as fojlows; be
ginning at a chestnut tree on the east bank of
taid river and running south 138 poles to a black
oak; thence west 136 poles to a hickory tree on
the bank of said river; thence down the said
river with its meanders to the beginning and
containing 135 acres, more or less; together
with all and singular the rights, ways, members
and appurtenances thereto being, belonging or
in anywise appertaining.
Witness the hands and seals of said trustsea
and receivers, this 10th day of March, 1893.
WILLIAM L. FEEL, (L.S.)
WILLARD 11. NUTTING, (L.S.)
Trustees and Receivers.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned will apply to council at ita
next regular meeting for beer license
at 269 West Peters street.
W. T. Rogers.
» ’ *
Stona Mountain Houts. •
Georgia Railroad Company,
Office General Manager, >
Augusta, Ga., Sept. 10, 1892.)
Commencing. Sunday, 11th inst.,ttie following
schedule will be operated:
AUGUSTA CITY TIME IS ONE HOUR FASTER
THAN TIME SCHEDULE GIVEN.
LvAugusta ... 7 45aui;Lv Atlanta.... 245 pm
A r Athenslo 40 am Ar Athens 7 05 pm
Ar Washingt’nlO 30 am Ar Wusliingt’n 7 10 pm
Ar Atlanta.... 1 00 pm Ar Augusta ... 8 15 pm
No. 1, West Daily. No. 4, East Daily
Lv Augusta .. .11 05 am Lv Atlanta ... 800 am
LvCaniack-...12 51 pm Lv Gainesville. 5 58 am
Ar Milledgevil 3 06 pm Lv Athens 8 40 am
Ar Macon 4 45 pm Lv Washingt’nll 00 am
Ar Washingt’n 2 30 pm Lv Macon 8 30 am
Ar Athens 5 15 pm Lv MilledgeviUO 16 am
Ar Gainesville 8 00pm Lv Camack.... 1 17 pm
Ar Atlanta.... 5 45 pm Ar Augusta ... 3 15 pm
No. 3, West Daily. No. 4, E a&t Daily.
Lv Augusta ... 11 00 pm Lv Atlanta.... 11 15 pm
Ar Camack.... 2 00am Lv Macon 8 33 pm
Ar Milledgevil. 4 50 am Lv Milledgevil. 10 21 pm
Ar Macon 7 15 am Lv Camack.... 4 3» am
Ar Atlanta 6 30 am Ar Augusta. .. 6 35 am
Harlem Accom’d’tion Daily Except Sunday
Lv Augusta. .. 4 30 pm Lv Harlem 7 00 am
Lv Harlem 545 pm Ar Augusta.. 820 am
'"UNION POINT AN D WHITE PLAINS R. R.
(Daily Except Sunday.)
Lv Union Point- liHio am 540 pm
Ar Siloam 10 35 am 605 pm
Ar White Plains 11 10 am 640 pm
Lv White Plains 800 am 315 pm
Lv Siloam 835 am 405 pm
Ar Union Point 900 am 430 pm
Sleeping cars to and from Augusta and Macon,
Atlanta and Charleston on trains Nos. 3 and 4.
Trains 27 and 28 stop at the following stations
only : Grovetown, Harlem, Dearing, Thomson,
Camack,Nor wood,Barnett ,Crawfordville, Union
Point, Greensboro, Madison, Buckhead, Uut
ledge. Social Circle, Covington, Conyers, Litho
nia, Stone Mountain and Decatur.
A. G. Jackson, Gen’l Pass. Agent,
J. W. Green, General Manager,
Joe W. Write, Irav. Pass. Agent.
739 Broad streak.