Newspaper Page Text
RUBBER-GATHERING ON THE
AMAZON.
The following account of a most in
teresting industry occurs in the second
paper in tbc Scribner series on Brazil
by Herbert H, Smith, who writes from
personal experience:
The rubber swamps are all around,
but land traveling is out of the ques
tion. So au Indian canoe-man is en
gaged,—a good nutnred fellow, and an
adept in wood craft. He sets us across
the liver at a half-ruined hut, where
bright vines clamber over the broken
thatch and hang in long festoons in
front of the low door-way; but within,
the floor is sodden black clay, and dark
molds hang on the sides, and the air
is like a sepnlchre. The single slovenly
mamduca woman who inhabits the place
complains bitterly of the ague which
tortures her; yet yearafter year, until
the house falls to pieces, she will go on
dying here, because, forsooth, it is her
own and the rubber-tress are near.
THE REVIVING SEA ISLANDS.
The short time recently spent amidst
the everglades and savannas of onr
coast, only tended to renew five-fold
the conviction your correspondent has
ever entertained concerning the future
of our sea islands. On every side are
signs of a hew life, renewed energies,
and of perseverance that will in time
overcome all diihcnlties. Stout hearts
have put willing hands to the plow,
and they will, by Zealand energj, reap
Jthe rich harvest that nature always be
stows on willing laborers.
The last few years, with their many
unprecedented misfortunes, have at
last forced into the hearts of the plan
ter a feeling of self-reliance, which he
has always needed. Bora m the lap of
luxury, the planter has ever entertained
feelings of infinite trust and charity,
never alive to the sharp practices of his
fellow man, so much so that casting
aside all trouble, he has always pnt im
plicit reliance in the overseer of the
STANDARD WEIGHTS.
An Act to fix by law the standard
weight of a Bushel of the articles and
commodities hereinafter mentioned,
Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Gene-
TiHE
GREAT DEMOCRATIC PAPER
SO CPPH-EAST.
She will not even repair the Btrncture. ) alaTC8 ’ an<i far be i4 from me to say
Ton can see sky through the roof, bnt
if rain drives in she will f.wing her ham
mock in another corner, and shiver on
'through the night as best she may; for
to-morrow there are rubber-trees to be
tapped, and a fresh harvest of the pre
cious milk to be brought home,—and
wiiat will you have? One must expect
discomfort in a swamp.
Back of the house the rubber-trees
are scattered through marshy forest,
where we clamber over logs, and sink
into pools of mud, and leap the pud
dies; where the mosquitos are blood
thirsty, and nature is damp, and dark
and threatening; where the silence is un
broken by beast or bird,—a silence that
can be felt; it is like a tomb in which
w,o are buried, away from the sunshine,
away from brute or man, alone with
rotting death. The very heavily of our
forest tomb makes ns slindder by it3 in
tenseness.
In early morning, men and women
come with baskets of clay cups on their
backs, and little hatchets to gash the
trees. Where .the white milk drips
• down from the gash they stick their
enps on the trunk with daubs of clay,
molded so as to catch the whole flow
If-, the tree is a large one, four or five
gashes, may be cut in a circle around
the trunk. On the next day other
gashes are made^a little below these,
and so on until the rows reach the
ground. ^By eleven o’clock the flow of
milk has ceased, and the scringueiros
come to collect the contents of the cups
in calabash jugs. A gill or so io the ut
most yield from each tree, and a single
gatherer may attend to a hundred and
twenty trees or more by wading always
through these dark marshes, and pay
ing dearly for his profit ia fever and
weakness.
Onr mameluca hostess has brought in
a day’s gathering—a calabash full of the-
white liquid, in appearance precisely
milk. If left in this condition it coag
lates after a while and forms an inferi
or whitish gum. To make the black
rubber of commerce :he milk must go
through a peculiar process of prepar
ing. Over a smoldering fire, fed with
the hard nnts of the lucuma palm, he
places a kind of clay chimney, like a
wide-mouthed, bottomless jug; through
this boiao the thick smoke pours in con
stant streams. Now lie takes kis mold,
—in this case a wooden one, like
round bladed paddle,—washes it with
milk and holds it over the smoke until
the liquid coagulates. Then
another coat is added, only now, as the
wood is heated, the milk coagulates fas
ter. It may take the gatherings of two
or three days to cover the mold thickly
enough. Then the rubber is still dull
white, bnt,in a short time it turns brown
and finally alinost black, as it is sent to
market. The mass is cut from the pad-
dlo and sold to traders in the village.
Bottles are made by molding tha rob
ber- over a day ball, which is then bro
ken up and removed. Old fashion rubber
shoes used to bo made in this way.
Tomatoes.—Tomatoes will not do
well on very very rich ground. Many
persons make the beds as rich ns they
can he made by stable and other ma
nure, creating an extraordinary growth
of vines and obtaining but little if any
fruit. The best ground for them is a
_ looso sandy, loam of moderate fertility.
Use a little manure in the hills to give
the plants a good start but add no other
fertilizing materials during the season.
It is well to have three plantings,
early, medium and late, and thus an
abundance of fruit may be obtained
until the vines are destroyed by heavy
frosts. The vines should be supported
by stakes, or straw may be placed un
der them to prevent the contact of the
earth.—This keeps it clean and prevents
the rot. Stiller land will make very
good tomatoes but delays their ripen
ing.
Hungary and the regions, of the mid
dle Danube are not yet free from floods.
The great river is as destructive in its
higher stages as the Mississippi. At
Belgrade the Danube at present covers
the ground for twenty miles in width,
and from Pesth nearly to the Iron Gates
most of the villages are partly inunda
ted.
if the trust has been misplaced. Ev
erywhere the feeling is becoming deep
rooted, that the only road out of their
troubles is to make their planta
tions as far as possible self-
suppoiting: a fact that is clearly appa
rent even to a casual observer, inas
much as fifty per cent, of the acreage
under enltivation this year is in provis
ions, showing that they have at last
overcome the foolish idea that provis
ions can be bought for. less than they
can be raised, and think that one bush
el raised is worth two bought, being
on the spot, and giving a feeling of
independence and confidence he could
not otherwise have.
Gradually the idle lands and waste
places are being fenced in, and cattle,
once plentiful, are to be seen wander
ing over the fields, and the old
familiar bleating of sheep as they graze
brings to the mind something of the
past, a remembrancer of the homes and
hearts that never can be forgotten.
Another great blessing that the plant
ing of provisions will eventually be-
btow on the planter is that a decrease
in acreage of cotton will prevent the
market from becoming glutted, and do
away, to a great extent, with the indif
ference, amounting to almost contempt,
with which the buyer looks on the fruit
of the planter’s labor, p.nd, in time, make
them, as in the past, applicants, not
dictators. Why ship ten thousand
bags of cotton where one-third has to
be turned into provisions, thereby
cheapening the other six? a question
that is being pondered, and, acted on,
will bear its fruit in time.—Coi-respon-
dence Charleston News and Courier.
ral Assembly of the State of Georgia,
that the legal weight of the
follow-
ing articles and commodities per bushel
shall be as follows:
Wheat
.60 lbs.
Shelled corn
.56
Corn in ear
.70
Peas
.60
Rye
.56
Oats...
.32
Barley .- V
.47
Irish potatoes
.60
Sweet potatoes
.55
White beans
.60
Clover seed
Timothy seed
.56
Flax seed
.56
Hemp Seed
.44
Back wheat
.52
Blue glass seed
.14
Dried peaches (unpeeled)
.33
Dried peaches (peeled)
.38
Dried apples
Onions
Stone coal
Unslaked lime
Turnins
Com meal
Wheat bran
90
Cotton seed
Ground peas
.25
Plastering hair
THE SAVANNAH
MORNING- NEWS!
paign and business season, we desire to pre
sent the nlftima of the
DAILY MORNING NEWS
Sec. 2. Repeals all conflicting law
Approved Februrary 20th, 1875.
KEEP SWELLINGS DRY.
Says the Artizan: “A warm and dry
atmosphere is not unwholesome, but
when cloudy or rainy weather brings a
sultry air which dampens everything
around us, the atmosphere may be load
ed with germs .of disease and fire is need
ed to destroy them. The walls the
ceilings and floors of apartments should
never be allowed to become damp.—
Sometimes, when the warmth
of the air is oppressive, a fire
more necessary to preserve health than
it is nt another 6eason to protect ns
from the cold of winter; and the rooms
of a dwelling should never be left with
out the means of warming and drying.
Investigations have shown that many of
the most fatal diseases are caused by
the germs of vegetable and animal lifej
and that a humid atmosphere is most
favorable for their propagation. It is
therefore, neglecting to avail ourselves
of the great discoveries of the age. and
failure to protect ourselves from the
scourges which so fearfully afflict fami
lies, when we ignore the dangers which
surround us. Apartments exposed to
the lull action of the san may be less
comfortable in hot weather than those
from which the rays of the sun are ex
cluded, but they are more wholesome,
and when contagions diseases prevail in
closely-bnilt cities, it is found that in
mates of houses on that side of the
treet exposed to the sun are less liable
to attack; while the greatest number of
iek are always found where there is
least exposure to that great disinfector
the sun.
A Deodorized extract of Petroleum,
The Only Article that Will lie-
store Hair on Bald Heads.
Georgia, Delaware and South Caro
lina are the only States that are wholly
represented by native born Congress
men.
MYTHOLOGY.
Satyrs.
The Satyrs were part of the retinue of
fling Bacchus. They were supposed to be
bald_, with short sprouting horns, likethose
of kids, and goat-footed. They were of a
lively, frolicsome disposition, bnt not very
wise, else they wonld have cured their
baldness by using Carboline, the perfection
of the chemist’s art, prepared from natural
crude petroleum, thoroughly deodorized,
and nicely perfumed. Every man, woman
and child should nse it as a dressing. It
gives that peculiarly soft and silky texture
so desirable. It will not soil the finest of
linen. Is cooling and cleanly, and can
not be praised too highly. Sold by all
dealers iu drugs and medicines
What tli© World has been
Wanting for Centuries.
The greatest discovery of onr day, so far as >
large portion of humanity is concerned, is CAB
BOLINE, an article prepared from petroleum, and
which effects a complete and radical cure in case of
baldness, or where the hair, owing to diseases of
the scalp, has become thin and tends to fall out.
It is also a speedy restorative, and while its use se
cures a luxuriant growth of hair, it also brings back
the natural color, and gives the most complete sat
isfactiou iu the using. r^The falling out of the hair,
the accumulations of dandruff, and the premature
change in color are all evidences of n diseased con
dition of the scalp and the glands which nourish the
hair. To arrc6t these causes the article used musl
possess medical as well as chemical virtues, and the
change must begin under the scalp to he of perma
nent and lasting benefit. Such an article is CAR-
BOLINE, and, like many other wonderful discov
eries, it is found to consist of elements almost in
their natural state. Petroleum oil is the article
which is made to work such extraordinary results
bnt it is after it has been chemically treated and
completely deodorized that it is in proper condition
for the toilet. It was in far-off Russia that the
effect of petroleum upon tliehairwns first observed,
a Government officer having noticed that a partially
bald-headed servant of his, when trimming the
lamps, had a habit of wiping his oil-besmeared
hands in his scanty locks, and the result was in a
few months a much finer head of black, glossy hair
than he ever had before. The oil was triodon
horses and cattle that had lost their hair from the
cattle plague, and the results wore as rapid: as they
wore marvelous. Tho manes and even the tails of
horses, which had fallen out, were completely re
stored in a few weeks. These experiments were
heralded to the world, but the knowledge was prac
tically useless to the prematurely bald and gray, as
no one in civilized-society could tolerate the use of
refined petroleum as a dressing for the hair. Bnt tho
skill of one of onr chemists has overcome the diffi
culty. and by a process known only to himself, he
his. after very elaborate and costly experiments, suc
ceeded in deodorizing refined petroleum, which
renders it susceptible of being handled as daintily
as the famous eaude cologne. The experiments with
the deodorized liquid on the human hair were at
tended with the most astonishing results. J A few
applications, where the hair was thin and falling,
gave remarkable tone and vigor to the scalp and
hair. Every particle of dandruff disappears on
the first or second dressing, and thcliqnid so search
ing in its nature, seems to penetrate to the roots at
once, and set np a radical change from the start. It
is well known that the most beautiful colors arc
made from petroleum, and, by some mysterious
operation of nature, the use of this article gradn
ally imparts a beautifnl light-brown color to the
hair which by continued use, deepens to a black.
The color remains permanent for an indefinite length
of time, and the change is so gradual that the mos;
intimate friends can. scarcely detect its progress
In a word, it is the most wonderful discovery o!
the age. and well calculated to make the prema
turely bald and gray rejoice.
We advise onr readers to give it a trial, feeling
■ " it of
The Home Jo liuval.
satisfied that one application will convince them
its wonderf-.il effects.—Pittsburgh Commercial oj
Oct. 22,1877.
The article is telling its own story in the hands of
thousands who arc using it with the most gratifying
and cnconragiugresnlts :
IV. n. Bbii.l £ Co., Fifth Avenne Pharmacy, says.
“We have sold preparations for the hair for upward
of twenty years, but have never had one to sell as
well orgi’ve sarh universal satisfaction. We there
fore recummend it with confidence to our friends
and the genera! public.”
The ice mouutain below the American
falls of Niagara has been lessened but
liitle by the bet weather, and still
looms np some seventy feet in the air.
It is quite an effort to climb to the
summit, and last week two foolhardy
young ladies, fearing to trust their
shoes on the ioo deliberately took off
their shoes and stockings and scaled
the mountain in their bare feet.
The confession forced from Blaine
that he was too cowardly to shoulder a
musket in ihe civil war himself, and,
therefore, hired u democrat as a substi
tute, is said to have tortured his sensi
tive nature even more than did his
abasement at the feet of the witness
Mulligan. His friends are said .to be in
serious apprehension of another sun
stroke.
Atr. Gustatcs F. Hall, of the Ontes Opera
rroupe, writes: “After fix weeks’ nselamcon-
SUBSCR1PTION PRICE.
Troupe,
vinced, as are also my comrades, that your * Carbo-
Ons Copy One Tear. $2.00
“ ?•; Six Months 1.00
•! *• Three Months. 50
Clubs or Ten'Ohe Year 15.00
;4 “Si* *• g 10.00
No Extra Charge for Postage.
hair wjftrcl had none for years.'
C. H. Surra, of the Jennie Hijht Combination,
writes: -• After using your - Carboline’ three weeks
1 am convinc'd that csld' heads can be ‘rc-haired.’
It's simply wonderful in my case.”
B. F. Airmen, c/umist, Holyoke, Mass., writes:
' my hair after cvery-
ADVERTiSINC RATES.
Local Notices 10 cents per line each insertion.
Regular business advertisements first imertio
$1.(i0 per inch.—each subsequent insertion feo cents
per inch.' __
-
CONTRACT ADVERTISING.
Your • Carboline’ has restored my'
thing else had failed.”
Josrrn E. Pond, attorney-at-law. No. Attleboro,
Mass., writes : For more than 20 years a portion of
my head has been as smooth and free from hair as a
billiard ball, but some eight weeks ago 1 was in-
duced to try your Carboline, and the effect has
been simply wonderful. Where no hair has been
seen for years there now appears a thick growth,
and I am'coiivinced that by continuing its use I shall
have as good a head of hair as I ever had. It is
growing now nearly as rapidly as hair dues after
it is cut.
to the patronage of the public.
The features that have rendered the Moaning
News so popular wiU be maintained, and the am
ple facilities os the establishment devoted to ma
king it, if possible, stUlmore worthy of the confi
dence and patronage of the people of Georgia and
Florida.
The editorial deparment will be conducted, as
heretofore, with dignified moderation, but, at the
same time; with vigorous and aarneet devotion to
the interests of onr section, anc the principles of
the Natio ia! Democratic Party. Its State, General
and Telegraphic news departments, and its Local
and Commercial columns will be kept up to their
old standard of completeness and reliablility, and
improvements made whenever they may suggest
themselves. In a word, the M»ming News will
comprise every feature that renders the newspaper
of to-day attractive, and its patrons may confident
ly look to its columns for the latest information in
regard to current eveuts. Yielding to no riva-ry in
ita own proper field, it will ollow no competitor to
outstrip it in journalistic enterprise.
Besides the well known
DAILY MORNING NEWS
we publish a mammoth eight-page,
THE WEEKLY NEWS,
the largest paper in the Southern Ststes. This pa
per contains a careful compilotion of the general
news from the daily issues of the week, Telegraph
ic Dispatches and Market Reports, carefully edited
Agricultural and Military Departments, with choice
MOORS & TUTTLE,
A~R~R RECEIVING THEIR
SPRING STOCK FOR 1879.
BEING
THE LARGEST AND BEST THEY HAVE EVER HAD.
INCLUDING
Dry
Goods, Notions, Clothing, Hats, Boots, Shoes
Crockery, Glass-Ware, etc., etc,
ALSO -WILL KEEP A COMPLETE STOCK OF
PROVISIONS,
ETC.
PLANTATION SUPPLIES,
MOOSE & TUTTLE,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
Marc, 27jlyr.
Literary and Mifceilaneous reading, and as a dis
tinctive feature
OBIGINAB SERIAL STOBIES,
written expressly for its pages by popular authors;
thus constituting it a comprehensive, entertaining
and instructive family newspaper.
We also issue a lively Snnday paper,
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAM,
which contains the Local and Telegraphic news of
Saturday night.
SUBSCBIPTION, (PltEPAED.)
Daily, six months, $5 00; twelve months, $1 00.
Tri-weekly, six months, $3 o0: twelve months, $600.
The Weekly, six months, $100; twelve months.
$2 00.
Sunday Telegram, six months, $150; twelve
months, $2 50.
Money can be sent to my address by registered
letter, cr P. O. order at hit risk.
J. H. ESTILL,
No. 3 Whitaker street, Savannah, Ga.
ST. NICHOLAS,
Scribncrs’s Illustrated Magazine.
For Boys and Girls.
Messrs. Scribner & Co., in 1873 began the publi
cation of St. Nicholas, an Illustrated Magazine l'or
1 oysand Girls, with Mary Mapes Dodge as editor
. ^ have.passed since the first number was
issued, and the magazine has won the highest po-
Kition. Itnas a monthly circulation of
OVER 50,000 COPIES.
It is published simultaneously in London and
New lork, and the transatlantic recognition is al
most as general and hearty as the American, Al-
though the progress of the Magazine has been a
steady advance, it has not reached its editor’s ideas
0 j 0 ! 2 ?' because her ideal co itinually outruns it,
and the magazine switty follows after. To-day
St, Nicholas stands alone in
THE WORLD OF BOOKS,
pie New York Tribune has said of it: “St. Nicho-
las 1ms reached a higher platform, and command,
lor its service wider resources in art and letters,
han any of its predecessors or contemporarinies
The London Literary World says: “There is not
magazine for the young that can be said to equa
this choice production of Scribners’ Press.”
NOW OPENING
AT
Central and Southwest^
Railroads. 4
AN EXTENSIVE STOCK OF
For Men, Boys and Children, for Spring and Summer.
OUR GOODS ARE CHOICE,
AND ALL OUR PRICES LOW.
WINS HIP Sr CALLAWAY,
50 SECOND STREET,
MACON, - - - ~ GEORGIA.
April 10—1m.
R. H. MAY & CO.,
98 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga.
Manufacturers and Dealers iu
WAGONS,
Good Tilings for 1878-9
Tho arrangements for literary and art contribu
tious for the new volume—the sixth—arc complete
drawing from already favorite sonreos as well a
from promising new ones. Mr. Frank B. Stock
ton s new serial story for boys,
“AJOLLY FELLOWSHIP,’
Will run through twelve monthly parts—beginning
with the number for November, 1578. the first
volume,- and will bo illustrated by James E.
Kelly. The story is one oj travel and adventure
in Florida and the Bahamas. Forth© gi *ls, a con
tinued fairy-tale, -
“HALF A DOZEN HOUSEKEEPERS
Space.
lmo.
| 3 mo.
| Cmo.
12 mo.
One Inch'
2.50
I 5.00
I S.0C
1-2.60
Two Inches
4.00
•son
12.00
is.00
Four inches
0.00
1 12.00
18.00
27.00
Quar. Ool.
7.00
15.00
25.00
40.00
Half Col.
12.00
25.00
40.00
00.00
One Col.
IS .60
40.00
60.00
100.00
OA1BOIIIE
I? now presented to the pnblic without fear of con
tradiction r.s the best Restorative and Bcautifier of
the Hair the work! has ever produced.
Price, ONE BOLLAli per bottle.
Sold by all Drnggists.
I.ance, unless by speclri contract.
-
are payable
KENNEDY & CO., PITTSBURG, PA,,
SuU A-jeul? hr United Stales, the Canadas and
- Great Britzuu*
Katharine D Smith, with illustrations by Fred
erick Deilman, -©gins in the same number and :
fresh serial by Susan Coolidge, entitled “Eje-
bright,” with plenty of picturas, will be commenc
ed early in the volume. There will also be a con
tinued fairy-lal c, called
“RUMPTY DUDGET’S TOWER. *
Written by Julian Hawthorne, and illustrated by
Alfred Fredericks. About the other familiar fea
tures of St. Nicholas, the editor preserves a good-’
humored silence, content, perhaps, to let her lire
volumes already issued, prophesy concerning the
sixth, in respect to short stories, pictures, poems,
'Biddle Box.
Terms, $3.00 a year; 35 cents a number.
Subscriptions received by the publisher of this
paper, and by all booksellers and postmasters, Per
sons wishing to subscribe direct with the publish
ers should write name, post-office, county, and
state, in full, and send with remittance check or F
O. money order, or registered letter,
SCRIBNER & CO.,
743, Broadway, New York.
TOBACCO
. Watclies $3 to 57. Revolve.
$2.50. Over 100 latest Novelties.*
Ag'ta wanted. So.Supp]yGo.XashYiUe.Tenn.
BOOKSSa
..MILLION
A complete Guide to Wedlock,
with Chapters on, A competent Wom
anhood, Evidences otVireinity. Steri
lity in women, Ad rice to Bridegroom
Husband, and Wife, Celebs cr anu
Matrimony compared, Impediments
to Marriage, Conguga! duties. Science
_ -- -. Law of Marriage, Law of Divorce, Legal
Tights of married women, etc. also on Diseases oi Women,
their cause and Cure. A Confidential work of 820
Private mouivai MUHOOt «• • vu uu results O
P ^." 5 ?S^L 0I1 *»*£'» a £ 0 on “ e teae * habits6f>wuui
and their enacts on after Hie, causing Varicocele. Seminal
fey °* Src?*! Power, etc.
; same tize. over
I raniestly ssk perton j rtScrinj; fiom I
I to send me their names and
^something to their e ~
DR. RICE,
SMtB%LOSSvi!£iCr,
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of 30C pnges, asnt to any adfc€£s, securely K»Ud,ferfliiri,
05) cents. Should he read hr aS. Address as shora.
COM iKWM frotn 9 A. J,'. w 7 P. K. Snndsys,
szn 1 Morphine haWtenred.
Original ooionlralsoluto
a CUBS. Sendnama {orbeohon
1 Opine, Sating, lo W. B. S,air£
I Worthington, Greene Co* ite.
PRESCRIPTION FREE!.
For the speedy Cure ofSeminal TYeakr.e—
Manhood and all disorders brought on by indis
cretion or excess. Any Druggist has the ingre
dients. Adrims, Dr. W. J iql l.S ,V
( * fter Sunday, June 9th, 137,
trams on the Central and SouthV«iS? , “t*t
roads and branches will run as follows-
TRAIN NO. 1.—GOING NOBXH Att)
Leave Savannah . ....
Leave Angusta 'Jin
Arrive at Acgnsta "* ***•
Arrive at Macon .* c1***
Leaves Macon for Atlanta J
Arrive at Atlanta
Making closo connection at Atbmta'wia'i**
era and Atlantic snd Atlanta and ChsrnS.”***-
Line for all points North and West. 10tt,
COMING SOUTH AND EAST
Leaves Atlanta ' „
Arrives at Macon...’.
Leaves Macon
Arrives at Milledgeville ‘J* 1 *
Arrives at Eitonton.. ',,?***
Arrives at Angusta... 7” 1 S
Arrives at Savannah * i;*?**
Leaves Augusts.. *
Making connection at Angustafn^Val'‘w—
East and at Savannah with the Atlantia ^
Railroad for all points in Florida. ***•*#
TRAIN NO. 2.—GOING NORTH AND van
Leaves Savannah.... .7~“
Arrives at Angnsta... "J? 1 *
Leaves Augusta
Arrives at Milledgeville
Arrives at Eatonton jiff*
Arrives at Macon .' iff* 1 *
Learns Macon for Atlanta ,7.**
Arrives at Atlanta *
Leaves Macon for Albany and Eofania’a.w*
Arrivos at Eufaula "Ji 1 *
Arriv3s at Albany S®**
Leaves Macon for Colnmbns..""." 77?
J rrives at Colnmbns jjj *
Trains on this schedule for Macon AtW.
umbos, Eufaula and Albany daily’ m«ki^ 5'!
connection at Atlanta with Western and»»i
and Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line. At raf*®
with Montgomery and Eufaula Railroad-
umbus with Western and Mobile and Shari aS
Eufaula train connects at Fort Yalltr for »
daily except Sunday, and at • iuthbeit for v 7
Gaines Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridlr. ,
returning leave Fort Baines Tuesdavs rCnll,
and Saturdays at 4:47 a. m. J ' ““fill
Train on Blakely Extension leaves lit.
Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Friday* “ 7
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Leaves Atlanta „
Arrives at Macon from AUante..
Leaves Albany , * *
Leaves Eufaula .i®**
Arrives at Macon from Eufaula and Alban r 4 •« t *
Leaves Columbus 11 io *
Arrives at Macon from Columbus V... 1 *
Leaves Macon
Arrives at Augusta
Loaves Augusta.
Arrives at Savannah 7-lsl*
Making connection at Savannah' with Hu.
and Gulf Railroad for all points in Fiends
tSBHS.SSaSSSS4&Jf57j!
WILLIAM ROGf rj
General Snpt. Central Railroad. SsroPMk
_ W, G. KA01L
Snpt, Southwestern Railroad, li**.#*.
DOUBLE DAILY
TO AND FBOX
FLORIDA
Macon & Brunswick R. R.
Gexeiul Sur ekixtocdext’s Omu,)
Macon, Ga., May 2f, 1171. J
fYN and after Snnday, the 26th instaat, pamine
Vs trains on this road will run an follow., *
BUGGIES,
HARNESS, SADDLES, WHIPS, BRIDLES, COLLARS AND
NAMES, TRUNKS, TRAVELLING BAGS, LEATHER,
■ CHILDREN’S CARRIAGES.
#SF" Call and extwiine our stock before purchasing.
208 Broad street, Augusta.
Repositories—08 Cherry Street, Macon, and
sep 6—78
THE
Pronounced by the PRESS, DEALERS, MUSICAL PROFESSORS, and the
Public Generally
PARAGONS OF PERFECTION, and the CHAMPION
CABINET ORGAN for 1879.
Organs Equal them in Melody of Tones.
Equal them in Variety of Combinations.
Equal them in Original Inventions,
Equal them iu Musical Mechanism.
in Singing Qualities,
ss 'Companions, to the Yoiee. .
in Sublime Volume.
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
Organs
No Organs
Equal
Equal
Equal
Equal
Equal
Equal
Eqnal
Equal
Excel
Equal
Equal
them
them
them
them
them
iftem
them
them
them
them
them
Concord and Sweetness.
Sympathetic Expression.
Splendid Beauty.
Convenience of Cases.
Durability.
Quality of Materials.
Rapidity of Sales.
Present Celebrity.
No Organs Equal them in Recent Triumphs.
No- Organs Equal them for Church and Home Use.
-” 0 Organs Eqnal them in any Particular.,
No Organs ever before won two gold medals at one exhibition over all eompefc-
ltors. No Organs are subjected to snch rigid tests. No First-Class Organs are
at such moderate rates. ‘-None bnt themselves can bo their parallel.” They
are the most charming in all respects, and,they give the most lasting satisfaction.
The interesting and instructive illustrated and descriptive catalogues prove
facts, and are sent free to all who apply for them.
April 17—6m.
1299 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
J. ESTEf S'
trains on this road will run ss follow*:"
CUMBERLAND BOURE via BKVX1WICX
NIGHT PASSENGER NO. 1. MOUTH, daily.
Leayo Macon IMtx
t-MTU
Arrive at Cochran..... >xr ,
Arrive at Eastman '.'.".'Z'.'.MSl r a
Arrive at Jesup 3.55 A K
Arrive at Brnnawick a k
Leave Brunswick per steamer... 7:M ax
Arrive Feniandin». ....II-Xa x
Arrive Jacksonville 2*45 r x
NIGHT PASSENGKB NO, 2. NORTH—DAILT
Lerve JacksonAille. 16:33ax
Leave Fernaudiua per steamer .2:4#r x
Arrive Brunswick * 6:Um
Leave Brunswick 7;»frK
Leave Jesup 9:*lrx
Leave Eastman 3*02as*
Leave Cochran 4:MaX
Arrive at Macon 1:35 a h
Close connection at Macon for all points Xorth
East and West via Atlanta and Augnata.
HAY ACCOMMODATION No. 3. SOOTH,
Via Jesup and Live Oak—Daily, except 81 mitj.
Leave Macon
Arrive Cochran
Arrive Eastman.....
Arrive Jesup
Arrive Jacksonville.
7;3# a X
10:23 a X
11:57 ax
5:31 rx
9:25 a X
no. i. north—daily except Sunday.
Leave Jacksonvjllo
Leave Jesup l:Uis
Leave Eastman l-:<5 r H
Leave Cochran :Hrs
Arrive at Macon. 4:1* r x
HAWKTNSYILLE ACCOMMODATION.
Daily except Sunday.
Leave Macon >:Mrtt
Arrive HawldnstUle.... ; T:19*M
Ltsve Hawkinsville
Arrive Macon 1:4* sK
GEO. W. ADAMS, General tipriiMiat
W. J. JARVIS, Master Transport*tic*.
Atlantic and Gulf R. 8*
GEHEKAL CPEBISTEOTEjrr'g OPTIC*
Atlantic AMD aonr BaiusoaD,
Savashah, Key 5ih, 1*7*.
FAN AND AFTER THIS DATS, Passe****
vJ Trams on this Road will run is foUsif*.
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at.... tH t.H
Arrive Jessup ,r. *
Arrive at Bninbridge g:10 a. *
Arrive at Albany »:5d a. *
Arrive at Live Oak 1:30 a. *
Arrive at Tallahassee 3:30 A, X
Arrive arotacksonville 9:25 a. X
Leave Tlllahassee 1:00 r. X
Leave Ja-ksonville 3:45 T. X
Leave Live Oak 9:40 T. X
Leave Albany 2:30 r.«
Leave Bainbridge 3:15 T. X
Leave Jesnp 5:45 A. X
Arrive at Savannah %-M a. »
No change of care between 8aT*nnah snd Jack
sonville or Albany.
Passengers from Savannah to Fetnandina. Gains*,
ville and Cedar Keys take this train.
Passengers leaving Macon , at 8:30 a. Jf.. daily
i except Snnday) connect al Jesnp with this train for
.Florida.
Passengers from Florida by this train cenncetit
Jesnp with train arriving in Macon at 5:10 r. *■>
daily except Snnday,
Passengers from ravannah for Brunswick and
Dar.en take this train, arriving at Brunswick at
':45 a.m.'
Passengers from Brunswick airive at Savannah
st 8:40 a. m.
No change of cars between Montgomery and
Jacksonville.
Pullman sleeping cars run through to and from
Savannah and lAke City and Montgomery and Jack
sonvilleon this train.
Connect at Albany daily with Passenger trains
both ways on Bouthwertem Railroad to and from
Macon, Eufnla, Montgomery, New Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leivea Lain bride© for A palaehicol*
everv Snnday afternoon; for Colnmbns evexy-Wed
nesday morning.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sunday*
excepted) for St. AngJstine, Palatia and Enterprise.
Green Cove Springs, ana all landings on the fi fc
John’s Diver.
Trains onB. and A. B. R. leave junction,
west, Monday. Wednesday and Friday at ua4A-X
For Brunswick, Tuesday, Thursday and 8*t«t
day at 4:43 r. ir.
N-
Ko> 160—Front View.
hire
As f/iloi
So. 160—Back Yisw. .=3,
0RO, VT,
ftfcltilt .irsr-Hi
ACCOMMODATION
DIVISION.
Leave Savannah, Sundays excepted, at VMX. X
Arrive at McIntosh >• » 10;W>A.X
Arrive at Jesup “ * 12:1* r- 31
Arrive at Blackahear “ '* 3:15 r-N
Arrive at Dupont “ *• 7d» r.X
L-aveDapo
Loire Blacl
LeaveJ
;r “ .... - - —
•« •• 7d9 r.x
.. .. SU5A.X
9:32 A-X
»« i;10 r.X
3:0* r.a
SJ5ra
*
IM Wc*l Sixth Street, Cincinnati, O.
Onr new Organ, expressly designed for Sunday Schools,
Chapels, etc., is proving a T<oa '
GREAT SUCCESS.
Be sure to send for fall descriptive Catalogue
purchasing any other. •
THE LARGEST WORKS (OF THE KIND) OH THE
* Illustrated Catalogue sect free. -