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be 4 Li , V ■ III it I ! * \ j rarna I ; ?- : _ ;
VOL. W.
AFTER SCHOOL.
Always at four o'clock on rtnvs when tbe sun shines warm,
En sits in liis sheltered corner of tbe porch tit tne pcoriiouse farm—
Tbe schoolmaster, Hgod nnd feeble, unfriended trad long forgot,
In his atternoon dream revisits tbe plnces that know him not.
Once more be stands in tbe schoolroom, close by dismissed tbe open door,
To say good-bye to the children when school is at four;
tVlfcn they merrily troop before him—the little ones fair and sweet—
(How weary has been life’s journey for some ot those baby feet!)
Here’s tbe youth, pale-browed and ardent, fame's boro beloved to-day,
And tbe rollicking lad so early 'neatli daisies hidden away;
Here the idle, mischievous urchins—loveable, though so bad—
And the muster is glad of the floggings they missed, whteU they ought to have had.
Then the girls —oh, the dear girls—their dear faces tenderly slime for him stiff,
‘As he sits on his bench in the corner of tlie poorhonse under the hill.
Will the pauper no more remember these hitler and cruel fears’? years
Of cold neglect and sorrow, their lonlinoss and their
So, hesmiles in his peaceful dreaming, this day when the sun shines warm,
As they usher to him the stranger who aud visits the poor'iouse farm—
Who comes with a hurrla l footstep eagerly glancing ive,
Who kneels by the bench ia the corner, and calls ia a sohh.ag cry:
“Wake np, dear old prof., professor, it’s one ot your own boys—Halil
Ton haven’t forgotten me—Donald—the laziest lout of them all?
I’ve hunted and’the you up, professor, from now I’m yoar own soa Don;
My wife kids are crazy to see you, so just come on!”
But the schoolmaster gives no answer, the silver head downcast.
Gives never a sign or motion, though a strong man’s tears fell fast
O’er those shrunken bands, meek folded on his old staff, truly friend,
Alone of ail he had cherished, to stay with him to the end.
Yes, nil is over, hoy Donald, the love that has coma too lato
C m only carry him sadly out throim'i the paupers’ Rate.
So parsed the soul of the master to tho laud lour; gone before,
To the “home aud a hearty welcome,” in life -or ever nore.
—Janet L. Oiir, in Baltimore American.
Bob Mansell’s Lion
By Jack Austin.
This plain, straightforward account of an exciting adventure is written from the point
oi view of the ordinary person, and without “ heroics.”
OT weather had
set in and we
were trekking
with a span of
f/| oxen from the
LIC & Ba Transvaal Angola, and t o
1 had reached the
i ft & Okoranga
ft 41 River. Here
(i i our wagon had
81 ® broken down,
■* and whilst the
repairs were in
progress a lion
had caught one
if-.’ar' of our oxen.
One of our three Hottentot boys had
just brought the news to us. The sun
had barely topped the undujating hor
izon, and the clear-out outline was
fast emerging into the haze aud shim
iper which 4»«tokeuaA a stjtjioliiu^ clay,
We had finished our early coffee, »nd
were now preparing to revenge the
loss of our ox. As it was Bob’s sec
ond lion and my first, he, by virtue of
his experience, directed the process
of vengeance. “Come od,” he said.
“Don’t talk as if we were going to
catch a train,” I remarked. “Aren’t
yon going to take more cartridges?”
“I’ve got three, and there’s only
one lion,” answered Bob.
I felt that a Maxim gun would have
been a comfort; however, stittiug this
vain wish,I loaded myself with a dozen
cartridges and the heaviest rifle we
had, and announced myself ready,
We had not far to go. The Hottentot
had marked down the lion and its
prey, and we hoped to be in time to
spoil the enemy’s breakfast, or at
least to case some interruption there
to. We soon entered the “elephant"
bush, and cautiously followed our
guide. There was a strained intensity
about this walk, which my seem unac
countable to a good many, and ridicu
Ions to the rest; it may have been a
unique case and worth going into by
scientists, or it may have simply beeu
a case of fright disguised in a cloak of
absorbing earnestness and sinking de
termination. However, we presently
cama to a grassy open space, on the
edge of which the boy stopped aud
told us the lion was close.
“Shake him up,” said Bob.
I thought this extremely silly. We
were not driving partridges. I for
vently hoped the boy would not up
set or irritate the iion by shaking him
up. It was not my idea of lion hunt
ina at all, and I said in a low, impres
sive voice, “Don’t spoil sport, Bob;”
to which he replied, “Hot!” (He
often used that rude word to me. He
had been six weeks longer in the
country than I had.) “Look here,”
continued he, “you shall have first
shot.” • |
“We’ve got to find him first,” I
murmured.
Just then the Hotteufcot crept back
and told us he had located the lion
about thirty yards off; that it was feed
iug on our ox, and refused to be
shaken np. I thought it quite rat-and- proper
of the beast to object to this
terrier style of amusement; it seemed
to me so undignified in lion hunting,
Bnt Bob was not inclined to treat the
kin 0, of the forest with much courtesy,
‘“Lazy pig,” he muttered," and
straightway made for the spot indi
cated by tho boy. The grass was of!
knee deep, and formed a patch We
about half an acre in extent.
went on for a couple of minutes, aud i
I be^an to hear ominous rustlings all 1
round. Then the boy stopped aud
pointed to a spot iu advance of us.
We looked in that direction, aud
whilst we stood listening, a grating
kind of noise with a twang in it was
ilistiuctlv audible. Going on a few
steps we distinguished amid the grass
the hind Ws of an ox, hoofs upper- i
most waving in the air, and the half-a* |
flo 2 en paces farther disclosed situ
*tion entirely. There was our dead j
‘To thine own self be true.ai ’ollow, as night the day,. ,ns’t not then be false to any man. W 7
I.INCOLNTONi OA.. THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 181>!».
beast extended on its baek, and be¬
tween its hind legs lay the lion feed¬
ing on the vital parts of the poor an¬
imal.
At first we only saw tho lion’s
shoulders, on account of its head be¬
ing low down; but Bob shouted,
“Get up, you thieving villain.” I
thought Bob was mad. Slowly the
brute raised its head aud looked at us.
It was rot a taking face, nor was it
exactly a handsome one. It was reek¬
ing with blood, and from its jaws hung
portions of torn flesh, which it wa
trying to secure more effectually by
working its tongue round the outside
of its huge mouth. But it did not ex
hibit much surprise or curiosity about
us. A slight glitter in its eyes, and a
deep hum with a banjo discord iu it,
was all the brute thought necessary for
the occasion, and then down went its
gic;U lit;.. 1 iigitiu. I - cl 4, lira vanlq
and Bob said something about a lion’s
cheek taking tho cake, but I was be
yond modern proverbs now, and
looked upon this horrid animal as a
personal enemy,
It was very annoying to be made to
feel nnall by alionintraeka filthy con -
dition. We didn’t get a roar or half a
oue, nor had he taken the trouble to
lash liis tail; he had indeed barely
acknowledged our presence, and then
gone on with his meal like a company
promoter. It wasn’t lion-like—atieast,
not book lion-like. I could see Bob
was very much annoyed at being con
sidered such small fry. He said he’d
go round aud get a flank shot, nnd
told me to stay where I was and not
let him pass me; whilst the boy was
sent around to the other flank to
chucis a spear at him. So it looked
as though Mr. Lion was to be inter
rupted, and possibly annoyed too.
Meanwhile he continued his break
fast, making a nasty noise as he
did so. Bob aud the “Tottie”
departed, aud left me standing very
quiet, and trying to look amiable
in case the lion looked up and thought
of inquiring into my business. I kept
my rifle close to roy leg, too; iu fact,
I went out of my way to keep the sit
nation peaceful. In a minute or two
the iion did look up—aid at me. I
smiled; the liou returned the salnta
tion, somewhat grimly, it is true, but
it was a decided return all the same,
I felt a kind of modern Androcles.
It was somewhat trying to hang on
to one set smile, but kiudness costs
nothing in cases of this sort. As I
was considering whether it would be
safe or nice to speak pleasantly aud
give the smile a rest, a spear whizzed
just above the lion’s head,
the left hintl leg of the ox, and Stuck
there. That Hottentot had destroyed
the situation. Where was Bob and
his flank movement? The lion looked
at the quivering sphere, and the ex
pression on his face changed to oue of
annoyance, with a tinge of sadness,
I read his thoughts. He was disap
pointed with me. He connected me
with that spear, and put me down as a
humbug.
This was vexing because it was so
true; how„ever, sentiment on each side
bad gone, more particularly when a
second spear went through the lion’s
fore-paw. Up went his head, and a
snarl of such inteuse malignity came
from him, that almost before I knew
it I had sent a bullet at him, which
went through the loose skin at the
baek of his,neck. 1 aimed to hit just
behind the ear, and can’t to this day
determine why I did not kill that
lion. I forget what excuse I made af
ter words; it was a fairly good one, I
know. We were now in for it, and
no mistake. The wounded beast was
in a horrid temper about one thing
and another. It sprang out, so as to
get a clear, idea of the situation, and
seemed to gather impressions that I
was at the root of the wholo business,
1 wasn’t smiling now. caught
At this moment, however, it
*
tight of the Tottie, who wanted to get
hia spear out of the leg of the ox, and
who was dodging around in a highly
suspicious luauuer. His behavior
caused the lion to reverse his judg¬
ment of me; he, as it were, bound me
over to keep the peace for a few min¬
utes, whilst he attended to the Tot
tie’s affairs. That meant a lash of
the tail, a deep growl, a crouch, and a
spring. In mid-air, a bullet Lorn
Bob broke his fore-paw, or the nig¬
ger’s skull would have been smashed
in, hard as it was. Instead, however,
of this happening, the liou came full
bounce against the unfortunate man,
and crushed him to the grou nd.
’there they got mixed up in sl.
gle, which was too much too
sided.
Not a Round came from the black
chap, but the lion was humming a
nasty tuue. Bob and I fired; the
smoke hung low—we rushed to get
clear of it, aud saw the liou limping
off into the bush with the man in his
mouth. Ho had seized him by the
hip, aud every few seconds gave him
a vicious shake.
We followed as quickly as possible
—I thought this was really something
like lion hunting, quite iu accordance
with tho very best traditions of my
youth. In a minute or two the beast
stopped, dropped tho man, and
gripped him afresh by the upper part
of the left arm, gnawing it and suck¬
ing the blood. We heard the horrid
crunching of bone above the snarling
aud snuffling. Bob said, “I may hi'
the heathen, but he’d be killed anyway,
so, “Bang! A rattling good shot,
smashing its way into the lion’s skull.
It was ail over; the huge beast
lifted itself up, its mouth half opened,
and then the lifeless mass collapsed.
We pulled the body clear of the poor
Hottentot, and found him terribly
mauled. Bob took him in hand, and
managed, with odds and ends of gar¬
ments, to stop the bleeding, after
which we got him to the wagon. He
lived three clays, and spent most of
that time telling the other two how it
all happened. He seemed to feel no
pain, and Bob said he was doing nice¬
ly. But the next morning, when we
were at our coffee, we were told casu¬
ally that he was dead. It appeared
that he had somehow started the
bleeding again, nnd had refused to al¬
low us to be called; eo the poor fellow
lay there in the darkness and let his
life’s blood go from him till liis life
went too. Bob said he ~' : -««ld,. .have
br-oglvt hiaa through iff he had
called, hut I said I ciidn’c
possible, because the bones were so
crushed, and one couldn’t set crushed
hones. Bob, as usual, when I veu
tured an opinion, remarked, “Rot!”
And so ended the adventure.—Wide
World Magazine,
FACTS ABOUT SHOOTING STARS.
Question Whether or Not the Phenomenon
is Losir.g in Kicliness.
The present state of science does
not admit,yet of our knowing whether
the contact of the shooting stars aud
aerolites has had any effect at all on
the earth’s motion, says a writer iu
tbe Chautauquan.
But we can assume that in the pro¬
cess of time the amount of shooting
stars aud meteors will decrease. For
any given group of the former it is
most certain that it was ouce more
conspicuous than it is to-day, and that
it is growing less as the periodic re¬
turns pass on. Of couise in this as
sumption we must take into account
variations of density at different parts
of the steadily moving current, varia¬
tions which can produce showers
that are now more dense aud now
more sparse, For this reason the
constant enumeration of shooting
stars becomes quite important, since
this alone will teach us whether or
not the phenomenon i3 really losing in
richness, and if it is to what degree
and under the sway of what laws,
Wheu a shooting star breaks into
flame iu our atmosphere the residuum
of the combustion remains in the ait
and can be found in what is known as
atmospheric dust. The virgin snow
of the polar region was often seen to
be spotted with traces of dust which
contained particles of iron. Like
particles are found on church towers
and elsewhere. Among the
bodies that dance in the sun’s rays
there are certain particles of shooting
stars. The sands of the African
deserts when examined by a micro
scope present traces of very small iron
particles which seem to have been
subjected to a high temperature, and
the Challenger on its remarkable trip
in the Atlantic found at times in its
dragnet fragments of magnetic iron
which we have every reason to be
lieve fell from the sky. Sir William
Thompson (Lord Kelvin) and Richter
have even seen in the aerolites the
j disseminators of the germs of life
| throughout the universe,
j
> Keplaceil tlic Woman’* Scalp.
| The remarkable surgical operation
recently performed in Paris is slili be
ing much talked about. A laundress
had of the her neck scalp lo^^^^Rbrowa, tqM»g£j|from the by nape bet
hair was takenfla|^^^^ksais Tatchin^^^^Ht; belting. She
; where seeing
j sent f dHWHBK e obtained it
i offtfe' after *fg§y igKBpurs. fh antiseptics,
j amF JKag , ) } again. head..
m
TBUTH ABOUT TEE SOUTH
WHY IT 13 THE IDEAL PLACE TO
BUILD HOMES AND FORTUNES.
The Idea That it i* Afflicted With Fever*
i* mi Krvoneou* one—The ciimnte is
Delightful and Healthful the Tear
Hound—Uusliiess Methods,
The Atlanta Constitution recently
printed an article from the pen of Dr.
Stirling, a local physician, iu which
he asked why it was that the people
of the South did not make thpir ad¬
vantages known to the world at large.
H e drew attention to the fact that in
and in the Northern States of
the Union there was a widely prevalent
idea that the South was afflicted with
■fevers, which rendered it dangerous
for human life. The doctor went on
to suggest that if ouce this impression
should be removed, there could ba no
doubt i bat a vast stream of immigration
would invade our fields and our waste
places would thus be built up.
To corroborate what Dr. Stirling
said as to the impression held abroad
regarding the South, the Constitution
has received a letter from a gentleman
in Wisconsin, which reads as follows:
Editor Constitution—I am becoming
tjuite interested in the South, nnd would
litre to ask you a few questions regarding
business, etc.: of business well
1. Are nil branches
represented? compelled
2 Are business men to give
long credits? vicinity thrifty
3. Are tLie Tanners in your
and contented?
4. Are rents high? prevalent there
5. Are malarial diseases
to any extent?
I am familiar with drags, dry goods,
groceries, shoes* iurnishings, etc., nnd
would like to locate ia a good live town.
Would be prepared to invest from $5000 to
{6000 in busine.-s. heard it preached that to
6. Have always
go South was to become indolent, lazy, that a
victim of fevers, aud, in fact, all is
dreadful in the shape of diseases to which
human flesh is heir.
7. Would you think it advisable to come
South with a family in which thero are
small children?
I am tired of our long cold winters.
Ii. NlCKERSOF.
Wantonin, Wis,
This letter is reproduced iu ; full for
Ibe reasou that iteftmes as a confession
sf want of information from an. intelli
jent American, intelligenceofitspeople. lining in a State noted
for the When
sueh ideas iwhinted at by the ques
tions asked exist among the people of
rack a State as Wisconsin, it certainly
becomes time for the organs of public
opinion iu the South to set forth the
teats, so that henceforth no m/ ’ n
' fO
the The South, writer its of the resources above letter and its honestly future,
seeks information, and should be as
honestly met and answered, which the
Constitution proposes to do seriatim:
1. Throughout the South there are
metropolitan cities, of which Atlanta
is a fair sample, which rival any pf
the cities in the northwest for the
amount of business done, the field
covered the and the advantages the surrounding wbich*thd£
offer to people of
country for trade and commerce. IS
these cities there are reprt seated all
interests, classes and degrees of busi¬
ness, and iu them may be found pros¬
perous merchauts aud even million
zaires, who, starting at the very bot¬
tom, have built up until they have
reached the top scale,in commerce aud
society. The rivalry between business
interests is fully as keen aud alive to
the necessities of the day as can be
that in the city of Milwaukee, which
is the metropolis of the State from
which our friend writes.
2. As to business credits, it is not
likely that there can bo much differ¬
ence between the conditions iu Geor¬
gia, for instance^ ahet' in Wiscdusiu.
In the larger town aud cities cash, or
its equivalent, is t'ue rule, while the
opportunities for credit to those
are worthy of it are abundant. In
the smaller villages, owing to the al
most complete'devotion of our agri
cultural interests to cotton, Which is
a crop coming'iff but once a year, a
much larger margin of credit has to be
giveD. This is a condition, however,
out of which the people of the'South
have been emerging. Within the last
ten years there has been a remarkable
escape from the single crop idea, aud
during the prqpent year the rgyolt
against that idea and in favor of. di
verse interests has grown to aueh
proportions that the the time is eer
tainly in sight when Southern farmers
will have something to sell every day
in the year, which wilt bring them
money on delivery. In this connec
tion it is proper to state that the de
votion growth to a single crop is not an out
part of of nature, awantof because opportunity in almost on the
every section of the South everything
can be raised which is now peculiar to
the North, in addition to the great
money crop of cotton. The ideal goal
to which onr people are now aspiring
is the ability to supply all human
wants as the first work of the farm,
making the rasing of cotton the extra
or surplus work, which will thus be
come pure profit in the pockets of our
farmers.
3. As to the farmers in Georgia,
th aK are certainly contented aud un
deMk^^thvifty, to the line but of they diversified have much agri¬
•i.^^^^Bkhey eflBBBBb>harscter are people and the possessed will to
J "tiiL* kts ■ fels. they To-people are directed from iu
.
m ire - the rigor oi the oH
^ force attention to
-hthe psopte of the
South may appear to lag behind, but
the fact is that they have not felt the
necessity of much of the extra effort
which nature has forced upon those of
the snowbound regions. Blest with
genial skies, with the almost absence
of anything like winter, they possess
what not even the hard work of those
j n Northwest enu secure.
4. Bents are cheaper than they aro
in Iowa and Wisconsin, according to
character aud location of business.
5. Malarial diseases are not aa ranch
kn>wn iu the South, taken as a whole,
as they are in the Northwest. To make
it more explicit to our correspondent,
the malarial area iu (he State of
Georgia is less than it is in the State
of Wisconsin, When our friend hears
people talking about chills aud fever
in some river valley in the South, he
should think of the fever aud ague
which he meets in similar places tntho
Slate’ of Wisconsin. The difference
between the two States is this; that wo
of Georgia have permitted too much
parading of a few sporadic fever cases,
whereas in Wisconsin they have been
passed over as matters of no moment,
so long as the normal death rate was
not affected thereby. Even in the
small malarial belt in Georgia iho
death rate will bear comparison with
that of any similar area in tho Stale
of Wisconsin. To put this whole
question in a nutshell, there has been
a bugaboo kept up, no one knows how,
as to the existence of fevers in ike
South. If our friend will but look at
the man and see that the South ex¬
tends from Chesapeake Bay diagonally
down to El Paso, Texas, ho will find
that it covers much more thau 2000
miles. If, for instance, half a dozen
cases should occur in this vast area,
what cause would that, be for alarm?
Yet when these half dozen cases do
occur, they are heralded forth by tho
press, aud people abroad holdup their
hands nnd pity iho people of “the
poor South.” In the South as a
whole, there are no diseases which do
not come to every other seel ion of tho
country. There is not a day in the j
South when the whole bouse cannot .
be thrown open to the breezes, which
is the first requirement of saniiaiion,
while in Wisconsin there are weeks
and months when the house is kept as
tight as a hook, and there is no oppor*
tunity given for a breath of fresh air
to strike into the dark corners.'
6. If our correspondent could only
visit our section, ti§ere is fufnisL not a
in which it would not
witlfi. a...s jyproUjuxu cp ’’e of .centenarians, w Use
''A heal8»fa!-vCJidi
tioW-'inidei 1 which they have lived.
It is a daily matter for the Constitu¬
tion to receive news of the death of
people who have passed the century
mark, while the patriarchal that age. of
seventy-five is so common it ex¬
cites no comment whatever. The man
who would be lazy or indolent in At¬
lanta, for instance,tivould ‘(be equally
lazy in the city of Mjjwaiikeh. There
would be no cure for such a pne......The
air is bracing while not coifi, neither
inclining to tropical heat nor frigid in¬
tensity. It is that happy gojld medium
which keeps the blood iu circu¬
lation and inspires one to ternperafufe activity and
industry. The average is de¬
of Georgia the year round 76
grees above zero. The lowest tem¬
perature during the present year was
upon one occasion 20 degrees above
zero.* The highest temperature iuthe
month of July, taking the city of At¬
lanta as an example, scarcely ever
passes, for oue or two days, 94, wlii'e
85 degrees more nearly expresses.! it
ddriug the tlireo hot summer mo^tlisf absence
Added to this there is an
of undue: humidily, and there also
prevail p'easaut breezes to do away
with the intensity of such heat as wo
have, The nights are pleasant and
pool, generally csftlin&for some, cover.
7. From what berejidily,imaginedi'bat has ^already vbeen
ptated, it may the garden spot of
the South, being
the world, is cerlaiflly an ideal region
fe which to make a ’home. There are
schools everywhere. There is the op
portunity to make a living. There atip
good of refined neighbors, civilization; all of the freedoqi advnjptage| from
a
the rigors of the Northwest, as tveli a»
from undue Jieat. Oc course, as to*
the question of moving, business every man de
has certain matters of to
©rde in conmeeiion therewith, The
discovery of a suitable location in
winch to establish business is some
thing which, of course, must be a
matter of inquiry with each one.
Knowing the situation in Wisconsin as
the Constitution does, it would have
no hesitation in reeommelsgjing a re
moval to almost any part of Alt Georgia,
or of the adjoining States. of the
advantages of which we bare spoken
are common to each of them,
Fifteen Kiileil Her Life;
In thejCdurant of March Id, 178i,
j j we printed the following will pardon queer story, for
which our readers ns
; repeating. Some of them may have
1 forgotten it: "Hebron, Eebruary 15,
j 1784.—This day departed this lite,
Mrs. Lydia Peters, the wife of Colonel
John Peters and second daughter of
Joseph Phelps, Esq. She was war
ried at the age of fifteen, and lived
with her consort three times lin en
years and had fifteen living children,
thirteen now alive, and the youngest
fifteen years old. She hath had three
times fifteen grandchildren. died She 15th was
sick fifteen months and Ike
day of tbe month aged four times fif¬
teen years.’’—Hartford Oouraut.
NO. 45.
ENCOCltAGIXO. .
.
“Do you think yon have any chance
with ••Of her, ilegy V” do. She says herself , |
course 1
that I’m one of her chance acquaint¬
ances-’’
Vegetarians assert that one acre of
land vt ill comfortably support four
hersous of a vegetable diet.
5
u s
“I suffered Hie torturer, of die dnninc*
with protruding piles brought on by constipa¬
tion with which I was afflicted for twenty
years. I ran across your CASCARKTS in th*
town of Nowell. Ia. , and never found anythin* from m g
to equal them. To-day 1 am entirely free
piles and feel like a new man. ”
St., Sioux City, . la.
C. H. Keitz, 1411 Jones
W CANDY s
CATHARTIC
TRADE MARK REC.'STtREO
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ***** ...
Sterling Remedy Company, CMogo, S Hwlreal.
'
Ufl TA BB I n Sold and guaranteed by all dfMp
gists to
E VERY SUCCESSFUL
farmer who raises fruits,
vegetables, berries or
grain, knows by experience
the importance of having a
large percentage of
In his fertilizers. If the fer¬
tilizer is too low in Potash the
harvest is sure to be small, aadi
Aiii •
of inferior quality, pi.
Our books tell about the proper fertiffiers
for all crops;, mid we will gladly send them
free to any farmer.) ■ :
CCRMAN Nassau^ KALI jWORKS,
cc . New Yorlt
■
•J* -n*
Spalding*? J
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“Standard Means' fill
of Quality”
on Athletic Coocis .
InsistunonSnaTd *
Haudsome Catalogue -
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mail ira«, oil beta
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upon receipt of this no«
P pubtagt*. \Vh invite you r :
know whfJj:,vou otute try ? -»
inever get u -
bSSi: outthens’ b!.%te" „"4I
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join .*»•• '
mid Whiskey liouiefrith¬ Habit*
cured at 'Ofe-itfEpar¬
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ticulars OOJ.LKV, sent TKtjB. M.V. j I
tiger gaT u-Xh B. M.U Prjjft J*
Tnitmu.. Office M S.
GEORGIA RAILRM1
•«A D—
Connection!
For Information as to Route*. iBoIm
—uies and Rate*, Botbr*
Passenger and Freij
Write to either of the underaigl^
v ou will receive prompt reply
reliable information.
JOE. W. WHITE, A. G. JAOKE
T. P. A. G. P. A
# Augusta, Oa <
*8, W. WILKES, H. K. NICHOLSC
O. F. & P. A. G. Athene.^ A. j
Atlanta.
W. W. HARDWICK, S. E. MAGII
S. A. C. F. A. 1
Maenn. M
M. R. HUDSON, f. w. con
MUledgevills, S, F. A. Si Auguste. F. AP.j 1