Newspaper Page Text
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CANCER OF THE WOMB.
My mother, Mrs. F at>-ers, lias had a cancer of the
womb for many Last winter the told us it was
cancer, and could no be cured. Five different physi
clans in private practice have snid the same thing. We
took her to the woman’s hospital of this city, and there
they repeated the same story. Dr. Emmett told us it
was cancer and she must die. M e then took her to the
New York College Hospital, and they told us the r ante
thing there —that she bad cancer and could live but a
very short time. She was then carried to my house,
where she awaited patiently the coming of death as het
only relief. We saw the advertisement of the Swift
Specific Co,, and as a “drowning man grasps at a
straw,” we went to the office of the company, and the
physicians told me to try it—that it could do her no pos
sible harm, and that it would cure her. She had lost
a great deal of flesh and strength, and it seemed folly to
give her medicine after what we had been told. How
ever, we commenced the S. S. S, and kept it up a
month before she began to see any improvemi nt. From
that time on her general health improved, and she was
soon raised from bed. The discharge increased so much
that it frightened us, but we kept on, and the cancer came
away in greatsloughs and lumps. For two months now
there has been no hemorrhage, no sign of a discharge.
Tha. k God, my mother is well.
Mrs. Rebecca Cramer, 275, 7th Ave.
New York, December 2,1885.
TERRIBLE CASE CURED.
In 18781 was poisoned by contact with poison aak.
My face and neck .swelled terribly, and the itching and
burning sensation was almost unbearable. I tried both
the homoeopathic and allopathic treatments, but both
failed of a cure. I went under treatment of one of the
most distinguished physicians of New York city, then to
Dr. Agnew, of Philadelphia, and these failed to effect a
cure. I tried Hot Springs, Ark., and Blount Springs, Ala.,
where I found temporary relief only. For two years I suf
fered on, and alternated between comparative relief and
suffferings that seemed beyond my power to bear: It
s*med, no matter what I did, as if it were impossible to
rid myself of the poison. In 1884, in October, when in
desperation, but having very little faith in it, I com
menced using Swift’s Specifl After I had taken a
number of bottles I felt that my digestion and general
health was improved, but so far as I could tell the poi
son was still in my system. After 1 had finished the sec
ond dozen bottles, I began to see a change for the better
Nearly every sign of my dread affliction had disappeared,
my skin was dear and in its normal condition, and
again I believed that 1 was forever free from this terri
ble affliction. I have now completed my forty-eighth
bottle, and I feel free again, with no sign of any eruption
but a few pimples, whieh I believe to be the last faint
signs of the-result ol my terrible blood poisoning. I
cannot say too much in praise of the S. S. S.
Mobile, Ala. J- K - SratMAN.
JEFFERSON DAVIS. ■
1
1
i
The Life of the Ei-Preaflent of tliß
DeaaSouthenConfeilcracy.
The Sole Chief Exeutive of a Colosal Na
tionality of 4 Years Existence.
A .CAREER MARKED BY SINGU
LAR PURITY AND
HEROISM.
The Isolated Head of the Grandest Lost Cause of
Human Annals.
Jefferson Davis was born on the 3d day of
1808, in that portion of Kentucky which is now
Todd county. His family removed to the then
territory of Mississippi, while he was a child of
tender years. He commenced his education at
the Transylvania University, Kentucky, but left
it for the West Point Academy, where he grad
uated in 1828.
AS A SOLDIER.
He followed the fortunes of a soldier until
1835. He was a cadet from 1824 to 1828; Sec
ond Lieutenant of Infantry from 1828 to 1833;
First Lieutenant of Dragoons from 1833 to 1835,
serving in various campaings against the In
dians; was Adjutant of Dragoons, and at differ
ent times served in the Quartermas
ter’s Department. His military lite
gave considerable promise of distinction.
To the surprise of his companion
Lieutenant Davis abrubtly quitted the service,
resigned his commission, and betook himself
to the widely removed occupation
of a cotton planter in Mississippi. A short I
while afterwards, it was known that he had
married the daughter of Colonel Zachery Tay- ;
lor after a romantic elopement, and that he had
founded a quiet borne in the neighborhood of |
Vicksburg, where for a long time he was with
drawn from the notice of his former friends and
associates.
IN RETIREMENT.
For eight years after his resignation from the
army, , Mr. flavis remained in the close retire
ment of private life, occupying himself ob
scurely with domestic and personal cares. He
was a successful planter, living in comfort
but averse to much society.
His retirement to which we have referred was
rather that of the scholar than of the planter.
He improved it by studies the most various; he
adorned his solitude with books; he undertook a
course of reading and of literary cultivation, of
which he never weaned, and evidences of which
strangely appeared in his subsequent memora
ble career.
MB. DAVIS ESTERS POLITICS.
In 1843, Mr. Davs emerged suddenly from
his seclusion, and with brilliant rapidtiy and a
becoming ease won the honors of public life.
He entered the arena of politics in the midst of
a great excitement and at a time auspicious for
an adventurous candidate for distinction. The
State of Mississippi was then unusually agita
ted bv a campaign for Governor, and parties
were also being organized for the Presidential,
THE EVENING CAJfTTOL: ATLANTA. GA. SATURDAY MAY 1, 1886.
Swift’s Specific!
THK
GREAT VESTABLE BLOOD PURIFiEEI!
Endorsed over the whole American Con
tinent !
jmij |IM g . -
Interesting Treaties on “ Blood and Skin
Diseases” mailed free to all applicants It
should be carefully by all.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga
contest of the next year. Mr. Davis was placed
as a Presidential elector on the Polk and Dallas
ticket, and so rapid had been his progress as a
popular speaker and so conspicuous bis part in
the critical Democratic Success of 1844 that the
next year he was sent to Congress, and in De
cember, 1845, took his seat in the House of
Representatives.
COL. DAVIS IN MEXICO.
Mr. Davis was sitting in. the House of Repre
sentatives when the war with Mexico was pro
claimed. It opened a new road to his ambition,
and one which led back to his first passion for
arms. He resigned his seat in Congress to
accept the command of the Mississippi Rifles—
a regiment of which he was unanimously elected
Colonel —overtook his men at New Orleans, en
route for the theatre of the war, and by mid
summer of 1846 reinforced General Taylor on
the Rio Grande. We have neither the space
nor design to admit here the details of his mili
tary career in Mexico.
He played an important part at Monterey,
where he charged, without bayonets, on Foil
Leneria; he led his command through the
streets to within a square of tbe Grand Plaza,
suffering a storm of musketry and grape; and
on the subsequent field of Buena Vista, he per
formed one of the most dramatic incidents of
of the war, receiving on a suddenly conceived
formation of his lines a charge of cavalry, and
with a plunging fire from right and left repelling
it, the last desperate effort of the Mexicans to
break the American line at the close of the day.
This was the famous V movement.
D. 8. SENATOB.
On bis return from the Mexican war, Mr. Da
vis quickly re-entered political life, this time
withan ascent to the Senate of the United
States. He was elected in 1847 to fill a vacancy;
but a few months before Ibe expiration of his
senatorial term, he returned to the field oflocal
politics in Mississippi, and was an unsuccessful
car.didnte for Governor in the campaign of
1850. From that contest he passed into the
Cabinet of President Pierce, ond for four years
discharged with uninterrupted sati«'action to
the army and to the country the duties of Sec
retary of War. In 185 , he returned to the
Senate, and his term would have continued
thereuntil tbe 3d of March, 1863, had not the
war translated him to that career wherein we
shall find the dominant interest of his life.
AS AN ORATOR IN THE SENATE.
The qualities of Mr. Davis as an orator were
of rare and cultivated type. His person real
ized all that the popular imagination pictured
for an orator. His thin, spare figure, his
almost sorrowful cast of countenance, com-1
posed, however, in an invariable expression of i
dignity, gave the idea of a body worn by the |
action of the mind, an intellect supporting in its
prison of flesh tbe pains of constitutional dis
ease, and triumphing over physical confinement
: and afflict on.
Observing him in a casual group of three of
I the then most distinguished public men of the
■ South, sitting in abstracted conversation in the
i Chamber of the Senate, a writer thus describes
him: “Davis sat erect and composed; Hunter,
listening, rested bis head on his hand; and
ToombS, inclining forward, was speaking ve
hemently.
Their respective attitudes were no bad illus
tration of their individuality. Davis impressed
the spectator, who observed the easy but au
thoritative bearing with which he put aside or
assented to Toombs’s suggestions, with the no
tion of some slight superiority, some hardly
acknowledged leadership; and Hunter’s atten
tiveness and impassibility were characteristic
of his nature, for his profundity of intellect
wears tbe guise of stolidity, and his continuous
industry that of inertia; while Toombs’s quick
utterance and restless head bespoke his nervous
temperament and activity of mind.’’
AN INCIDENT.
He recollects him in one of tbe passages of
the debate in the Senate on tbe famous Kansas
bill when be shone as tbe impersonation of de
fiant pride, and threw his haughty
challenge in the face of a political enemy. Mr.
Douglas, of Illinois, had twitted some of his
Democratic friends for what he declared their
alleged defection, and had promised certain
conditions to them when he was able to dictate
, their restoration to the party. Mr. Davis rose
suddenly to his feet, with erect and dilated
figure, and, striking his breas’, exclaimed
proudly and passionately. “I torn your quar
ter!”
HIS FAREWELL TO THE SENATE.
The farewell speqch of Mr. Davis in the Sen
ate was memorable. The State of Mississippi I
seceded from the Union on the 9th of January,
1861, but her Senators lingered at Washington
until the 21st before they withdrew. The lan
guage was very fine, the spirit of the address
dignified; and those who witnessed its delivery
by Mr. Davis, will rec llect how the Senate
hung on the slow and unimpassioned words, and
how tears even were shed when he walked
forth from the chamber, "released from obliga
tion, disencumbered of the memory of any in
jury he had received,” prepared for a new
career, the most important and dramatic of
modern times. In the close of his sveech he
showed an unbounded personal ge. erosity,
begged pardon of all whom he bad ever offended,
and, directing his attention to the Republican
Senators, declared that be carried away no hos
tile feeling, and sincerely apologized tor what
ever of personal displeasure had ever been occa
sioned in debate.
ELECTED PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT CONFEDERACY.
When elected Mr. Davis was at his home,
Brierfield, Warn-n county, Miss , to use his own
language, “repairing his fences!” Mr. Davis
rode from Brierfield to Montgomery in the blaze
of bonfires by night aud the acclamations of
multitudes by day. He bad one continued ova
tion and made twenty-five speeches en. route.
He was inaugurated at Montgomery Monday,
the 18th of March, 1871, on a lovely day amid
intense enthusiasm.
He said: “Experience in public stations of a
subordinate grade to this which your kindness
has conferred, has taught me that care and toil
and disappointments are the price of official ele
vation. You will see many errors to forgive,
many deficiencies to tolerate; but you shall not
find in me either want of zeal or fidelity to the
cause that is to me the highest in hope, and of
most enduring affection.”
AT RICHMOND.
Ob the 21st of May the Confederate gove’n
ment moved to Richmond. It came to Rich
mond in a storm of popular applause, and with
an exaltation of spirits almost indescribable.
President Davis travelled through scenes of
ovation. Everything wore for him now the
color of the rose.
HIS HEROISM AT MANASSAS.
The President galloped forward to learn the
state of the field. No one could tell him amid
; the roar and confusion. As he rode swiftly
' through a stream of strugglers, it seemed as
if he was in the midst of a retreat, breasting its
■ bad and dusty current. At that moment his
brother, Joseph Davis, gallopped to his side,
and said, “the day is lost; let us go no further.”
“No,” said the President grandly, “if the army
is defeated so much the greater season that I
should be with my brave men and share their
i fate.” They were the words of a personal
| courage which nothing in his life ever turned
or daunted:
MR. DAVIS AS PRESIDENT.
Mr. Davis was simple and democratic in big
habits. His figure, habitually clothed in Con
federate gray, was familiar on the streets, or
might be seen almost every evening mounted
on the horse on which he took -egular exercise.
He invited the approach and freedom of tbe
commonest men.
PERMANENT PRESIDENT.
On the 22d of February, 1862, Mr. Ravis was
inaugurated as permanent President for six
years, when disasters began to pour on the
young Confede’acy.
DAVIS’ COVBAGE.
In bis vis visit to Hoods Army in Georgia, Mr.
Davis as one illustration of his indomitable
spirit said:
“Those who see no hope now, who have lost
confidence, are to me like those of whose dis
torted vision it is said, they behold spots upon
the sun. Such are the croakers who seem to
forget the battles that have been won, and th*
men who have fought; who forget that in tbe
magnitude of those battles and tbe heroism of
those men, this struggle exceeds all that his
tory records. We commenced the fight witbou
Swift’s Sjecffic!
YE 3ETABLE
Blood Purifier!
CURES
Cancer, Catarrh, Scrofula, Eczema, Di
cers, Rheumatism, Blood Taint,
Hereditary or Otherwise,
Without the Use of Mer
cury or Potash.
INTERESTING TEXAS GIRL CASE.
The Swift Specific Co , Atlanta, Ga.—Gentlemen: In
answer to your inquiries as to the health of my little
girl, I state: Her health is good. For ten years she
has been afflicted with diseases of the hip joint, and al
though she has been rendered permanently lame, her
abscesses have he< led and her aealth is good. I have
every reason to believe that she owes her restoration to
the use of S. S. 8., by which her blood has been purified
and she invigorated. In all she has taken some fifteen
bottles, and is still keeping up its use. I charge noth
ing for saying that 1 have great faith in S. S. S., and to
its healing and blood purifying properties I attribute the
restoration of my little girl to perfect health.
Yours truly,
A. P. Boyd,
Editor North Texan, Paris, Texas.
January 20, 1886.
FATHER AND CHILD.
Two years ago I contracted blood poison, and after
nine months of treatment by physicians with no benefit,
I have been cured by Swift’s Specific. When I began
taking S. S. S. I had run down in flesh from 181 to 132
pounds. There were three large sloughing ulcers as
large as the palm of my hand on my leg and on my
head. Now they are all cured up, and 1 have regained
fifteen pounds of my lost flesh. lam feeling thoroughly
well and gaining every day. Swift’s Specific has also
cured a child of mine of “king’s evil” or scrofula after
two doctors said it must die. It had large swellings in
its neck, sore eyes, and a chronic discharge from one
•ar. It was the cure of the child which led me to take
it myself, and for the good of others I am only too glad
to have them referred to me, that I may tell what this
wonderful medicine has done for me and mine.
C. Van Hoesen, M. E.,
154 West Stieet.
New York, Dec. 26,1885.
an army, without a navy, without arsenals,
without mechanics, without money, and without
credit. Four years we have stemmed the tide
of invasion, and to-day are stronger than when
the war began.
It is not our purpose to trace the fortunes of
the Confederacy.
THE END.
When the historic scene of Appomatox Court
House came, with its memorable surrender of
the army of Virginia, and its consequent col
lapse of the Southern cause, it was Georgia’s
Gordon that divided with his great chieftain,
Lee, the sad celebrity of that heroic but irrepar
able conclusion of the grand drama.
On the 2d of April, 1865, Lee’s line at Peters
burg was broken, and Davis and bis cabinet left
Richmond and went to Danville. On the 9th of
April, Lee surrendered. On the 36th of April,
Johnston surrendered, and in swift succession
followed other surrenders up to the 25th of May,
when the great war was ended—forever.
The President and his cabinet, the small nu
cleus of the dead Confederate government, the
helpful representatives of its defunct authority,
<ere fugitives and uncaptured. The State of
Georgia was not to be balked of its curious fate
of a foremost agency in the revolution, even in
the final matter of being the arena of the last
order of Confederate power, and the theater of
the dissolution of its administration and capture
of ite President.
As soon as Richmond fell, Mr. Davis and his
cabinet went to Danville Remaining there a
few days, he proceeded to North Carolina.
When the armistice was arranged between
Sherman and Johnston, Mr. Davis determined
to go to Texas. A company of Dibrell’s brig
ade of cavalry was assigned as escort.
Mr. Davis arrived at Washington, Wilkes
county, Ga., the home of General Robert
Toombs, on the 4th day of May, 1865. General
Bragg, General J. M. St. Johns, commissary
general, General A. R. Lawton, quartermaster
genera), and a large number of Confederate of
ficers arrived there. The various heads of de
partments all had left Richmond together, and
they remained with Mr. Davis in W ashington,
Ga., until they all dispersed.
LAST OF THE CONFEDERACY ADMINISTRATION.
It was a singular coincidence that the Davis i
government should have finally dissolved in a
place having the same name as the seat of gov
ernment —Washington—the objective goal of
the war efforts of that administration. It was
a fitting conclusion of the young government
that, after four years of unequaled resistante to
a power that had been backed by the civilized
world, it marked its last act of authority by a
thoughtful loyalty to the comfort of its penni
less and starved defenders.
Ou this sth day of May, 1865, the Confederate
administration thus gathered at Washington,
Ga., and standing shorn of every vestige of au
thority, means, support and power, helplessly
fugitive, its long fought cause done forever,
dissolved and scattered, never more to meet.
General Breckenridge, the Confederate Secre
tary of War, went in one direction; General St.
John, tbe Commissary General, in another;
General Lawton, the Quartermaster-General, in
still another; while Mr. Davis and Mr. Reagan,
the Postmaster-General, fled leisurely at the
rate of about thirty miles a day into the interior
of Georgia.
mb. davis’s capture.
A Federal force of about two hundred caval
ry, under Lieutenant Colonel B. D. Pritchard,
of the Fourth and Second Michigan regiments,
finally captured Mr. Davis and his pariv near
; Irwinvilte, Georgia, at daylight en the morning
| of the 10th day of May, 1865. The Federal
■ caralrv was divided and ran upon one another
I unexpee'e ily, firing and killing several soldiers.
F< r a long time the Northern press circulated
’ the statement that Mr. Davie was capturedin
; woman’s clothes, but tbe statement was false,
■ and was undoubtedly fabricated to throw ridi
; cule npinhim and tbe cause he represented,
i Tbe report was an ungracious piece of malig
| nanev, as ungenerous as it was malicious.
With the capture of President Davis on Geor
, gia soil, the final blow was given to the Confed-
I erate government and the Southern cause that
lit represented. The first act of war bad been
i committed on Georgia territory, and the ulti
mate ending, by a providential fortune, came
From Alabama.
I have been afflicted with rheumatism over three
years. Two years of the time I could not walk a step—
could not even stand on my feet. My joints were all
swollen and*kome of them running sores. I commenced
taking S- S. S. and in six weeks was walking. I con
sider that I am cured of the worst case of rheumatism
that I ever heard of, ami Swift’s specific did the work,
Salem, Ala., Jan. 21, 'B6 Ikk Pruitt.
We know tte Above statement tc be true. We gave
him themed!, me S. S. S.) The day we gave it to him
he actually could not stand upon his feet—had no use of
his limbs whatever. We make this statement cheer
fu’ly, as the result of ou own observation
Adams Bros A Co.,
Dealers in General Merchandise.
Salem, Ala., Jan. 21,1886.
It is solid Facts the World wants- It is Truth
only that commands respect of mankind.
| S.S.S. I
These we give from the lips of living people.
You ask for Results. We give them. Read !
Ears Almost Eaten Off.
About eight months ago 1 contracted blood poison. I
was treated by a private phydeian on Thirty-first
street, and then for a month at the New York hospital.
Finding 1 did not improve, I began taking Swift’s Spe
cific. Up to this time I had a drowsy and sleepy feel
ing continually, with no appetite, and was losing flesh
rapidly. I was covered the ankles, arms, neck and face
with sores, and it seemed that my ears would be eaten
off. 1 have taken a seven bottles of S. S. S., and the
sores are all gone except a few on my forehead, and they
are nearly all out of sight; my < ars are entirely well, (
my appetite is splendid, and I have gained five pounds
in weight. I feel so perfectly well that I know in a
short tljne I will be soundly cured.
Frask K. Kkf.nk, 405 W. 71st St.
New York, Feb. 13,1886.
A Business Man’s Opinion.
Chicago, 111., November 1,1885.
Two years ago I took S. S. 8. for a case of rheuma
tism, which had been afflicting me for ten years. I have
waited this long before writing in order that I would be
sure that I was cured, and that there would be no re
turn of the disease I was laid up for two weeks, and
the disease seriously affected my feet. I never fall io
recommend Swift’s Specific on every occasion to those
who suffer as I did. I know 1 cannot say too much for
it.
One should always be proud of the bridge that takes
him over the stream. R. J. Gunning.
here too. The brilliant beginning and the ca
lamitous conclusion both belong to Georgia, and
with her other masterful instrumentality in the
mighty episode, weave together a story of he
roism, power and disaster, that will live in all
ages.
AT PORTRESS MONROE.
What he suffered, lying as a prisoner in a
casemate of Fortress Monroe for two years, and
for the first few weeks degraded by fetters, and
especially the manner of his suffering,displayed
him in an attitude so touching, and in conduct
so becoming and noble, that, when released on
bail in the month of May, 1866, he found
himself welcomed by every heart in the
South, and hailed with a • ride and tenderness.
Atjthe term of the Unileu States Circuit Court,
held in Richmond, December, 1868, a nolle
prosequi was entered in the case of Mr. Davis,
as on an indictment for treason, and the prose
cution on the charge, at least, was thus dis
missed. Since then Mr. Davis has lived a quiet
dignified uneventful life, true to his memories,
self-respectful, and bearing his isolation with
tbe genuine manhood that belongs to the man.
Ponce de Leon Spring;*.
A reporter went out lo tbe springs yesterday
and found everything in trim for the summer,
Mr. Starks was busy mending up the circular
railrway. Several stands are there for the ac
commodation of hungry, and the pool tables are
standing there to tempt the players, thus
when the people go out there everything will
look somewhat natural.
Grant’* Park.
It is the opinion of many that tbe way every
thing is going on at Grant’s park it will prove
detrimental to the visitors and the park. People
don’t like the idea of the policeman taking off
their bouquets as they enter the gates.
A reporter heard two young men, who aye
members of the I. 0. R. M. speaking about how
the officer out there wanting to relieve them of
their signal tassels which they had fastened to
their ceat breasts. They both became furious
ily angry, and why should they not? A reporter,
on Sunday, noticed how many ladies were forced
to throw away nice flowers in order to get inside
the park. Innocent people should not be treat
ed thus on account of those who did wrong.
Labor’* Haiti* Agralnat Labor.
Florida Times-Union.
The way to do a booming business isjto get
boycotted for maintaining your rights.
With a moral in it for Women.
Jersey City Journal.
At a recent theatrical entertainment s youns
, lady with a three-story hat immediately in frt>n
of a newspaper man. Noticing that her head
: gear obstructed the journalist’s view of th<
i ; stage she took it off and placed it in her lap
I The newspaper man was profuse in bis thanks
The next day he caught a severe cold, contract
ed pneumonia and died a week later. When hi
will was read it was discovered that be hai
added a codicil, giving the young lady who sa
in front of him in the theatre $2,047,468.
An A palling Conflict Cominf.
Brooklyn Eagle.
Senator Plumb, of Kansas, and Gen. Loga>
have declared war oa one another. It is going
to be a terrible conflict. If the English languagi
interferes in the affray it will be fatally injured
Since Gen. Logan announced that the country
was standing on the bringing of an abscess
i nothing more severe and startling hag been
uttered than hi* remark that Plumb was insati
ated to attack him by a man exterior to the
Senate.
Telegraphic Hew*.
Remember that The Capitol is the only
evening paper that hag regular press telegraph
ic news. We have a bona fide regular tele
i graphic service.
ITS BOOM I
Heard Everywhere.
Lung Trouble Relieved.
Three and a half years ago I gave up niy business on
account of consumption. 1 spent two seasons In Florida
and one In California. 1 have been under treatment of
physicians all the time, among them some of the most
prominent In this city, and I have kept growing worse
and worse. I got to be a mere shadow and could scarce
ly walk. On the 14lh of last September 1 kept my bed,
tor 1 was not able to got out of It, and the doct rs as
well as ray friends all expected-me nerer to come out of
It alive. I was having frequent and profuse hemor
rhages, and on three different occasions I bled until I
became Insensible. About six weeks ago I heard of S.
S. 8. and began taking It. Its effects have been won
derful. I have not had a hemorrhage since I began It.
I was soon able to sit up and even dress myself. My
appetite became good. I could eat and retain my food
and my osier returned. I gained flesh and strength
rapidly; and I am now walking about town wherever I
wish I o go. It is certainly a great surprise to nil and
everyone who knows me, Ixmg since’hoy have all ex
pected me to die. I am willing and wa it all who suffer
with lung disease to know of me and my case, and I
advise all such to take Swift's Specific and live. These
are not idle words, but absolute fao s, whlcn will with
pleasure be substantiated for any one who mag doubt.
Louis T. Clark,
346 West Twelfth Street.
New York, Feb. 9,1886.
i GRAND
I
Zouave Drill
AT
ATHLETIC PARK.
THE BUSCH
ZOUAVES,
OF
St. Louis,
Saturday Afternoon, May Ist,
AT 3:30
, To be followed by Exhibition Drill by
’ GATE CITY GUARD.
A day full of interest to all who can visit Atlanta, a»
well as to the citizens.
5 In the morning the ceremonies connected with the an*
vei Ing of the statue commemorative ot Senator B. H,
r Hill will be observed.
' In the afternoon the public will have an opportunity,
J of IriHpectlng the
; Zouav and Skirmish Dr ill
, By the finest Zouave company In the world.
Ilillllß
NERVOUS
DEBILITATED MEN.
BtavUdc Suspensory Appll.WM for
P- W» risk Is Incurred. IllusknS*! uwmphlat In rrnfrfl
t- iii jxt CO, MaxAall, Mtak,
is
id _ y.
H. L. Davis,.
. Wholesale Com. Lumber fieaier. •
re CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED
L OF ALL KINDS
Lumlier, Shingles ani Laths.
References:
The Entire Retail Lumber Trade of Atlaata.
Office 37 Marietta st.,
Atlanta, - ~ Ga.
3