Christian index and South-western Baptist. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1866-1871, April 07, 1870, Page 56, Image 4
56 BY fHB FBOFBIETOB. An Old Ballad. „J^ e .. N « w Jfl* Ohwrvtr re produce the following old ballad, wVch may or may not bo applicable to the •Wd time cjnnpzr when oar women take to politic stud ont-duor generally r r j DABBT AHD JOAH. Whii Darby saw the setting ana, He Iwung Ins acyl he and home bo- ran, Satd»wo, drank off his quart, and said, * ifr wort is done. I’ll go to bed." ~ f rfJ ** done I’ ” retorted Joan, ■d hi ?r K '* douel ' jmii- constant tone; Biit helpless women ne'er can ear vt l* rk 18 a n d e > MU Judgment Day. y/.a men nan sleep all night, but we Jluat toil. <• Whose fault is that ?” quoth he. ••Hnt Z y ° aT meanin *” replieu, I ’ my U ’?* ae * hall not be tied; I wdl go on, and let you know VW* Z°lu P ' >or women bar* to do: a. b ? m, ’, though we feel yL flf! dr . u,,k ’* rds when they reel ir^rr°\P™» iD back or bead J,uu men *> bed- W» P ; A h 7 b ' J ush - w « the broom, We air the beds and right the room; The cows must next be milk’d-and then I ”* ‘he breakfast for the men. AnVkl 8 '.*l d i ,ne ’ w, ‘h whimpering criee Ad bristly hair, the children rise; lheso must be dreas’d and dos’d with rue, And fed-and all beoause of you. —here Darby wretched his head And stole off grumbling to his bed; o£ and on jJ ß, *' d ’ *« on the run. Zounds I woman’s clack is nerer done.” diwn> er ® Fhoebus rose, Old Joan resumed her tale of woes; When Darby thug-“l’|| end the etrife, Be you the man and I the wife; y ,°, U thtt ®°J*he. »nd mow, while l W,H all your boasted cares supply.” Thun "k • fo * n » “K>re me my etiut om rP 7 bjr dld - ,lQd «•>» she went. ?' a nd . D .7 b T,r' g ® and 80 *' d ‘he broom, w d „T h ' rl and lb ® dlr * »b*>ut the room : n tl ‘ ch h “ done, he scarce knew how, 5® V d *j» “Uk ‘he brindled cow. 1 he brindled oow whisk’d n.u id her tad In Darby a eyes, and kicked the pail; 1 he clown, perplex’d with grief and pain, bwore he and Ue er try to milk again: VVn«.ii turning round, in sr.d amuse. He saw his cottage in a blase - For us he chanc’d to brush the room ll'careless haste, be fired the broom. The fire at last subdu’d, he swore The broom and he should meet no morn. Dress and by misfortune and perplex’d. Darby prepared for breakfast next; But what to get he scarcely knew The bread was speut, the butter too. Bis bauds bedaub'd with paste and flour, Old Darby labor’d full an hour: But, luckless wight! thou couldstnot make J.he bread take form of loaf or cake. As every door wide open atood, In push and the sow in quest of food; And. atumbi ng onwards, with her snout O erset the churn —the cream ran out. As Darby turned the aow to beat, The slipp ry cream betray’d hia feet; He c night the bread trough in his fait, £u and Cllrae Darby, trough and all. The children, waken’d by the clatter. Start up and cry, “Oh I what’s the matters" Oldl Jowler barked, and Tabby mew’d. And hapless Darby bawl’d aloud, ‘ Retaro, in.v Joan, a> heretofore, Id play the housewife’s part no more j Since now, by sad experience taught, Compar'd to thine, my work is naught. Henceforth, as business calls, i’ll take, Content, the plough, the scythe, the rake. And never more tr.tnsgresa the line Our fates have mark’d, wh-ls thou art mine. Then Joan, return ; as heretofore, I’ll vex your honest soul no more: Let each our proper task attend— Forgive the past, and strive to meud.” The Proper Treatment of Dogs. ( Translated from Ms French.) The dog, who, in all JSistern nations, even under the Old Testament dispensation, was reresented and treated &9 an outcast—the emblem of all that was unclean—has, through the Gentile Western nations, been admitted wi hm the pale of human fellowship. T a fat etic scene in the greatest of hea then poets, where the returning hero is first known by the faithful hound, who, on behold icg his master, dies with a sudden fullness ol joy, is the first dawn of a better epooh for the whole canine race. Then we have the scene in sacred story, where the Jewish youth, when he leaves his father’s house, is followed by hia devoted dog. To this we add the parable descriptive of the sympathy of the dogs, who show to the de serted and neglected Lazarus the eompassion which the thoughtless rTctilnan refused. Further still, we may gather from out the well-known stories of all modern Christen dom, the many instances iu which these faith ful creatures have died in behalf of their master’s children, fought for their master’s life and property, watched over their mas ter’s corpse, or sought out the lost traveller in the Alpine snows; themselves putting “on a generosity and a courage,” whenever they found themselves sustained by a man, such as, without the confidence of a better nature than their own, they could never have attained. Truly, if man has thus, as it were, infused a soul into the dumb, lawless animals, what a community of feeling, what a tenderness of treatment should it require from him in deal iug with them. He must never forget that he is bound to feel for their welfare—their hunger and thirst, and their pains and ills, which they share with him, and whioh he, as the controller of their destinyj ought to seek to alleviate by the same means which our advancing civilization enables ua to use for ourselves. Not only dogs, but all dumb creatures which 6how any capacity for improvement and docility, have been cherished,and strength ened, and harmonized, by their intercourse with humane men. And he who puts forth his hand to save from ill treatment, or to add to the happiness and comfort of any dumb creature, has opened his heart to that divine eompassion which our Heavenly Father has shown to the whole universe of created things from the crawling worm to the human being whom He made in His own image. And to all who read these few sentences, in which a simple act of justice is sought to be done to one of our truest and most valued dumb com panions, 1 would say, iu concluding, You’ve each one got a heart, Ae well us human features; So join me, while I take the part Os all God'a poor dumb creatures. FbOESKCS LviTBOS. t SAW to-day, In the Indbx, Problem 89, under the head of “ Profit and Loss” in Prof. S. P. SattfiirdYAnalytical Arithmetic, giving more work for a Bouly County Boy; but I suppose you will allow the same privilege to a Got don County Boy. 3n, here is the solu tion. The MoMl® merchant gave 1105.00, and gained 30per cent.=*3l,so+los 0<W136 50. The Boston merchant gave $84.00 and gained 25 per cent.asSl 00+84.00a: 105.00. The Liverpool merchant gave $70.00 and gained 20 per cetit.ansH 00-f70.00=*84.00. The Paris dealer sells for *70.00 and gains 16| per ceat.MslO.oo, which which makes the original cost, $70.00 —10 00=60.00. Gokdoh Countt Boy. Sugar Volley, Hatch ISM, IS7O. Geology .Reconsidered. If there is one theory which geologists have thought more justly founded than all others, it is the view that the various strata of the earth were formed at different times. A chalk district, for example, lying side by side with a sandstone district, has been re ferred to a totally different era. Whether the chalk was formed first, or whether the sandstone existed before the erustaceous stra turn, might be-the question. But no doubt existed in .the minds of geologists that each formation belongs to a distinct period. Now, however, Dr. Carpenter an j professor Thomp son may fairly say, “We have changed sit this.” It has been found that at points of the sea bottom only eight or ten miles apart, there may be* in progress the formation of a crusiaceous deposit and of a sandstone region, each with its own proper fauna. “ Wfiere ever similar conditions are found upon* the dry land of the present day,” remarks Dr. THE CHRISTIAN INDEX AND SOUTH-WESTERN BAPTIST: ATLANTA, GA., THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1870. Carpenter, “it has been supposed that the formation of chalk and the formation of sand stone must have been separated from each othef'by long periods, and the discovery that they may actually ooexsist upon adjacent sur faces has done no less than strike at the very root of the customary assumptions with re gard togeologioal time.” Fanners* Wives and Daughters. Will you allow one who has learned by ex perience and observation the lesson he would teach, to speak a word to husbands, broth ers, and sons, of the over-worked women of our American farm houses 1 Ido not speak of those who “ toil not, neither do they spiD,” but for those who wash and elean, cook and mend, knit and sew—in a word, those who “keep house,” and do both the thinking and working inoident thereto. I believe that nine out of ten of our farmers’ wives and daugh ters have far more amibitinn than strength. Their love of neatness and a desire to please, lead them to undertake many things which exhaust their strength before the task is com pleted. I need not particulize. The history of these things is written where we can read it in sunken oheeks and languid eyes, in forms prematurely shrunken and bowed, on tomb stones where the record tells of years sadly short of three score and ten. Are we of the sterner sex at all responsible for these effects? Can we help remove the oauses 1 1 think we oan. How? Where there's a will there s a way. Don’t think you must have a harves ter but that your wife can get along without a sewing machine. Don’t think a grain drill or sulky rake necessary for the farm, while washers and wringers are for those, who have more money than you: If you have an in convenient duelling, especially the kitchen, don’t wait until your barn 9 are made larger, and horses and cattle are provided with the most comfortable stables bet‘>re you consid er how you can improve the place where your wives and daughters spend most of their waking hours. You believe in driving your own work; see to it that, if necessary, a few days’ extra help for sewing or cleaning is pro vided at the proper time. You need not cook, but you can try to be satisfied with what you get, and praise where it is called for. You can be within call, ready to lend a helping hand on extra occasions, where strength as well as skill is required. All this will require some time and money, but it will pay, even iu dollars and cents. It costs fai more tor doctors’ bills than for extra help and conveniences, and often the skill of the inedi cal iimn comes too late, and then you will find that you must needs go more miles for domestics than you ever did in taking your wife to see her friends —that you will see enough wasted and destroyed to have pur chased many things to make home pleasant. Very likely you will find your domestics harder to please than ever vour wife, or sister was, and worst of all, your home is not and eartnot be to you what it was, and you child ren will feel, if not say, “ What is home with out a mother?” There are, however, far higher considerations which should weigh with every true man. Duty and pleasure both point the same way. Love arid kind ness beget the same. Holy Writ assures us that “faith without works is dead,” and the same might truly be said of love. I would say to every man, help your wife, mothers, or sister, a< youhave opportunity ; and if no other good result oarne, you would be better pre pared to appreciate their labors. The writer probably spent more time household employ ments than the most of men, and many of the pleasant recollections of life are hours passed in this way, while some of the keen est regrets are for opportunities unimproved, and which can never return.--* Country Gen tleman. * Verbal Ambiguities. The ambiguity of words and phrases is the occasion of numerous misapprehensions, puzzles and absurdities in current literature, t few examples of which may be entertain ing. Referring first to puzzles, we may mention the case of the man who had six children, and had never seen one of them. The mind is misled here, by supposing that “one of them” means any of them, and if it had been said, ne never saw a single one of them, it would have been still more likely to be misunder stood. The answer to this puzzle is, that one of them had been born while the man was on on a journey, and he had not seen it There is a puzzle well known to the rising generation, wtiich runs nearly in this fashion; “There was a poor blind beggar who had a brother; the brother died, but the man who had died had no brother. What relation was thq beggar to the man who died ?” Here we are misled by taking it for granted tnat the beggar must have been a man, but the clew being given that the beggar was a girl, it becomes quite plain that the beggar was a sister of the man who died. There are a number of these riddles on the subject of relationships. We are told of two men. who met at an inn, and greeted each other affeotionately. The innkeeper ask ed one of them if the other was kin of his, and received the following enigmatioal re ply: “ Brother nor sister have I none, Yet this man’s father was my father’s son<’ k Now this is a perfectly plain proposition,” and yet I have known a company delve at it for an hour, and finally give it up, only to marvel at their own stupidity in not seeing that this form of words was but an ambigu ous way of saying that “this man” was the speker’s son. Again, two brothers weie walk down the street, and one stopped at a door, remarking: “ 1 have a niece who is ill.” “Thank Heaven,” said the other, “I have no niece.” How couid that be ? The only dis ficulty in guessing this is the tendency of the mind to move in a rut. Having got the idea of niece fix-d, the mind refuses to think of any thing else but different kinds of nieces, and never once looks to one side sufficiently to see that the sick girl was the daughter of the man who said he had no nieoe. it is very true that the expression “Thank Heaven I” seems somewhat uncalled for wht n the trua fact ap pears, but a riddle must not be made too ea *sy. There is something quite fasoinatlug to the juvenile mind in that peculiar effect in words which is oatled a catch. Thus the youngster with a serious face enters the room with a piece of news. “ Beecher,” says he, “got 'hot to-day.” “Is that so i” says one; and, “ Where ?” asks another. “He got shot iu a hardware store down towu,” says the young ster. “He was going -bunting.” In the same way, with a falsification of accent and the omission of the hyphen, he s-iys. that he has seen a horse fly, a garden walk, a kettle drum, a hat box, etc. He is delighted to an noy the company with the question, “ How many hairs are there iu a dog*s tail?” and to assure them with much nonchalance at last that there are none, the hairs being all on the outside. In the same spirit a man indorsed his com panion who wanted to get trust for a bottle of wine, with the remark, “If he refuses to pay for it, 1 will.” The man refused to pay for it and so did his friend, as he said he would. For such a person I have no sympa thy, but 1 must admit a lurking admiration of that dilapidated"istudent of theau >tle distinc tions -of words, who, when trying to effect a free entrance to the theatre, was roughly told t>y the doorkeeper, “ Here, I can't pass you,” and who replied with dignity as he walked in, “ You need not pass me, my dear sir. Just you stand where you are, and & will pass you.” What is known as the white lie U rendered possible by the uncertainty in language of which I aft) speaking. Thus when the sheriff asked the wire of a Quaker, against whom he bad a writ, if her husband was at home, she re plied, “ Yes, he will see thee in a moment.” j The sheriff waited some time, and then sug- ! gested to the lady that she had promised that j he might see her husband. “ No, friend,” re fffted the Quakeress, “1 only promised that he would see thee. He has seen thee. He dia not like thy looks; therefore he avoided thee, and has left the house 3>y another path.”— Appleton'* Journal. •top Mr Paper, 1 don’t want to know any more about what is going on in the Christian world -—stop my paper. I am interested in the things that are seen and temporal, and not in the things which are unseen and eternal -stop my paper. I don’t want to hear of any more revivals .of religion stop my paper. 1 am tired of hearing about education and missionary operations, about theological sein inaries and colleges stop my paper. I don’t want to know what churches are or ganized, who is licensed or ordained to preach the Gospel, what churches have called pastors, or who the pastors elect are stop my pa per. I don’t care a fig for all the proceedings of Associations and Conventions stop mv paper. 1 don’t vvant to read the obituary notices ,of ministers and other Christians, telling how they lived and died. I don’t trouble mysell about dying —stop my paper. 1 am tired of being urged to attend pray er meeting*, and have family worship, and sup port the preachers, and grow in grace, an.i train my children in the tear and nurture of the Lord stop my paper. 1 am disgusted with so much ado about Sabbath-breaking, and drunkenness, and ries, and card-playing, and profane swearing stop tny paper. I take no interest in columns filled with op position to Popery, and Infidelity, and grog selling, and Sunday travel stop my paper. I prefer to give my whole attention and the whole attention of my family to the que-t tion: “What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we to be cloth edl” stop my paper. I would like to accommodate my wife. She thinks the paper very interesting, and likes to read it to the children ; but i have’nl seen much in it that I cared about, except the market article—— stop my paper.—Preeby t*r. The Story of a Dime. Said an old and well worn dime to a lot of new ones who were jingling about it and ory ing out for a story :—“ I can well remember the time of my birth, for like yourselves I was born with my full faculties, and have been never since as bright as l was at that time. 1 had been burned, and rolled, and flattened, when suddenly there came upon me such a squeeze a«I never can forget till my dying day. I‘ me almost get up on my end and roll over as I think of it now. After that they called me good coin, and 1 have been circulating about from that day to this. I cannot tels you all the strange things I have seen, but will tell you some that affected ine the most. . “ I was lying in a -little boy’s hand with some other coin. He had been counting us. The hand seemed to me to be growing cold. “‘You will give it all to the poor heathen children, will you, mother?’ “‘Yes, dear Willie,’ said a low, and tender and broken voice. ‘“That is all, mother. Kiss me now. Good bye, mother.’ He fell back upon the pillow, oast his eyes up and said, ‘Yes, dear Jesus, l am coming.’ We fell from the little hand, but the mother gathered us up, and the tears rained fast upon us. “ ‘ You swear by all that*9 sacred to give your vote for acquittal,’ said an eager voice in my hearing. ‘ I do,’ was the reply. I was passed with a mass of coin from the one speaker to the other. Next day, when the jury retired, all said ‘Guilty’ but my owner. He said ‘ Not Guilty,’ but he trembled while he said it. They argued and plead the case, but he clutched us tight within his pocket, and answered only, ‘I say, Not Guilty.’ ‘Then a scoundrel and a villain is released from the hands of justice,’ I heard one of the jurors mutter to himseif. “My owner tossed that night on a sleep less couch. It was his first bribe, but not his last. “‘I came to pay my rent,’ said the poor woman to the old miser. ‘ Well, how much is it?’ said he; so he turned over his books to see. She qouuted out coin after coin. ‘There is half a dollar wanting here,’ he cried : we raised it that much last month.’ ‘That takes every cent in the world,’ said she, ‘and we have no bread.’ He held out his hand firmly, almost fiercely. * It’s not my place to give you bread ; give me my money.’ Her face flushed first with pride, then she groaned as if in pain, but she passed us to his hand, and he clutched us as if we were friends. Tnat night, as I lay on the shelf, I heard one read ing from -jTbbok Jft-the next house,'par tition this night thy souj shall~ke requi reiof| whose be which thodJkist provided K-vJji thenSviddle of thetjight some men broke qafetly the office. .Thfr'-old man slept heavily. One held him -by) the throat with one hand, and a pistol at his head with the other. An accomplice robbed the place of every thing that was valuable—notes, bonds, gold and silver. The old man looked on in horror, but dared not speak. Soon a quiver passed through his body ; he turned ashy pale. With a great oath the robber cried, ‘Jim, he’s dyiug !’ Nay, he was dead. They fled and left him alone in the dark, still night. No, John, don’t take another drink.’ It was a woman’s voice—his wife’s voice. Her arm was tightly clutching his, and her face looked up lovingly into his. ‘| will, said he; ‘ I wilt, if I sell my soul for it. Give me an other drink ;’ and he flung me down on the oounter. The poof wifejairned away ; there was no use trying longer. He was crazy now. He drank and walked uncertainly to his seat; drank again. High words rose between him and the barkeeper. Intoxicated: both, they wrestled together. He lifted a heavy bottle to sti fe.o the other. A carving knife on the table was seixed-and plunged ! n to his heart. Four men carried him out in his blood to lay him at the feet of his wife. “ O, if men would but think what a power they hold for good or evil when they hold us, poor little coins as wears! lam old, and sick of the world’s iniquity; but I would be willing to live a good deal longer if could only go on errands such as the dear boy sent me. The best thing I oan wish you, little dimes, is gOod masters, who will use you for good purpose, as God meant you to be used.” — Presbyterian. ThkOnlt Safety —How often do moderate drinkers take refuge, when remonstrated with, in the assertion, “1 never drink to excess; I can take a drink, and let it alone. I know when 1 get enough.” We have heard this from the lips of more than one person addict ed to the habit of taking an “ occasional glass,” and as we have followed them through life, we have seen them taking the “occasion al” more and more frequently; the custom growing stronger aud stronger, the temptation greater and greater, until they have finally succupabed to these almost irresistible influ ences. Reader, your only safety is in total and unqualified abstinence. Wise 4^l— Otherwise* Go-AHBAILjjfxyaNBSS —Cornelius O’Dywd says, in BlucKbood, that in England he meets a marvellous energy and “go” that he finds nowhere else! “I, of course, except Ameri ca,” he adds, ‘ for with us we work life at high boiler pressure, but the Yankees do more —they sit on the valves.” Clbar Whbs You Sax it.— Archbishop W a large dinner party by asking, “ Why do white sheep eat more than black ones?” After many fruitless guesses it was jjiven up, when his grace re plied. “ Because there are more of them. At a Loss Foe a Text. —A Boston min ister chose as the text of a recent sermon the word, “sand,” (Matt, vii; 26 ) Os oourse the sermon contained at lea-t a grain of truth, and would sߣm to have been characterized by clear grit. It reminds us, however, of a story which used to be told of the then Uni tarian minister of No'-th Andover, who, once moving .AH TJi Ufodox neighbor, remarked that he was greatly troubled to think up proper subjects for his sermons. “Why,” said he, “ 1 preached about lobsters, last Sun day, and what under the sun I shall do for the next, unless I exchange. I don’t know.” YodtliFoTl Dollies.—Whitefield squinted, and had his full share of self-complacency. Dr. James Waddell once ventured to remind him of somejdimgs in his earlier years whioh had grieved some of his most judicious friends when the great man pleasantly said ; “ Ah yes, the vouittrWhitefield s tid and diJ many things that Sierra W hitetield is ashamed of.” ReYhesh&Snts Plentt.— A correspond ent of the .Veto York World, writing from Rome, ihece are three hundred thou sand bottles of bordeaux and champagne stored in the Pope’s wine vault for the e.-pe ciat purpus+ot treating the bishops attend ing the Ecumenical Council. Pastoral Discontent.— An Illinois cler gyman, wh > was di-satisfied with his par s mage, gave out this notice one Sunday morning: “Taere will be a Mite Society on Tnursday evening next at the parsonage. The parsonage is a little, old, tumbling down building on street.” In the evening he repeatedit thus modified: “On the corner of the street near my residence, is a well. Said well is covered over an 1 clapboarded. It is unpa nted and weatherworn, but I wish ty describe it so that none of you may make a mistake, and take the well tor the parsonage. The Mite Society will be held iu the parson age and not iu tne well.” One’s Tr\jr Standing.—A writer in the N. Y. Mail gives utteiauoe to this thought, whioh is worth noting: We often hear the question asked of such and such a one— * Wnat is his standing in society ?” or “ What is his stan liug iu the church, or among busi ness men?” But we never think of asking before we take him into our confidence— •‘How does he stand at home?’’ And yet, the man who can make reply u> this question with an untroubled heart and a clear con science, is a-hero not so often met with, but that he is worth looking after and closely cul tivating. Not Vert Sanguine.— 'Second Adventists believe that Christ is coming in person again, and very soon. A Michigan exchange says that a newly organized suou ty of this denom ination, in Meridian, Ingham county, has re fused the donation ot a site for their meeting house, beoause the donator restricted the lim its of the deed to ninety-nine years. PoLiTBN«as. —Dr. Guthrie, in a recent speech in Scotland afirfer a tour on the Conti uynt, contt (Anting the,..inferiority of “the in »s sns” of peculation to foreign in po liteuess, Sii£l: But the blame in this country is not with lower classes. Tne blame in this country »is wi til the upper .classes, and the reason why* in this country, the lower cl tsses are not polite is beause the upper classes are not polite.” * Sentiment and Greed. —Two of the four surviving passenger of the steamer Ltxiwj•* ton, burned about thirty years ago on the Sound, were saved upon a bale of cotton. The bale was carefully preserved iu Providence, until iu war-time the rise iu cotton was too much for the owner’s sentiments, when the precious life-preserver was sold. Origin oe an Old Sating. —The saying “Nine tailors make a man,” is explained by G. F. Grahun in “A Book about Words” to have arisen from a perversion of the phrase “Nine tellers.” In the olden time the strokes of the passing bell were called “ tellers,” and nine strokes indicated the death of a man, while three announced that of child, and six that ofqp woman. How to eb Beautiyul.— The Hartford Courant, speaking of beauty, says: “The Ser mon on the Mount is the best recipe for per sonal beauty, and the woman who practices the golden rule for forty years is certain to look handsomer than she who practices at the mirror for the same period. But it does take time. A good resolution will mak» no body handsome.” The Manatee, or Human Fish. To bell vers in the Darwin theory it will be of interest Lb know that in the quiet bays and rivers i>>n the eastern ooast of Central and South America, there lives an animal which might he rightfully cunsidered as the connecting link between man and fish. It is the manatee* the water siren, the sea calf or sea cow, as strange animal is sometimes called. It belongs to the order of the Cetacea, and is altogether herbivorous; living on grass which grows under water, or on herbs whioh it seeks on shore. The body is pisciform, and measures some fourteen feet'in length ; the skin being very thick, without hair, and of a dirk color. The upper part of the body, especially of the fe males, much ,Ves-*mbies that of a woman, the breasts being of the same form. In plaoe of the fins of an ordm iry fish, the manatee has a short arm .of only one joint, which termin teas in a sort of hund, on which the nails are distinctly visible, and which the animal uses with much dexterity in moving about when on land, and in carrying its young. This limb his OAUsed th'n aninl to be ualied man atee, from “maous,” the hand. The writer, who for several years resided in those oournffTes w lore th -se anini ils abound, has seen the animal, and has been told re peatedly by ti.-? natives the female holds her i-ub to suokle as the mother does her babe. Tne Sail of am matee is shaped like an open fan, and tKfcljt?)* obserrer will perceive ten divisions, whiph mark the ten toes. Manatees by the help of this broad tail, whioh moves up and down, and not from right to left, like that of a fish. This limb, which at first,sight appeirs to be a mere fin or nerve, incite almost entirely into butter when fried in a pan, and is highly prized by the natives for oiutmeuts and for other medi cinal purposes. Tne animal weighs from 1,000 to 1,500 pounds, amj: the yieat is ounsided a groat rel ish. It looks and tastes a good deal like pork, and needs .a good deal of cooking. It is a strange fact thaD the flesh keeps longer from decay than any other, and is therefore salted and preserved’like pork. They are caught with harpoons by the In dians, who know their haunts and customs, and it seems a*-.if they were becoming more scarce every year. Much has been fabled about these water si rens that needs Corroboration from scientific men, who seem tip have taken but little inter est in these strange animals. Some have ,asr sured me that tht ir voice resembles the bel lowing of an ox, others that it was perfect music. lam induced to believe the latter, as they are well known under the name of “si renia,” or “sirens,” which appellative they could only derive from their charming voice. Wheiher this be so or not remains yet to be confirmed, like the harmonious song of the dying swan. —Scientific American. Agricultural Brevities. Rolling a corn-field crosswise the rows is said to destroy the out worms. A hen in Elizabeth has succeeded in hatch ing seventeen chickens from fifteen egs. An exchange says that one or two gera nium leaves, bruised and applied on linen to a cut or bruise, will have excellent effect. The Country Gentleman thinks manure spread on clover seed in the fall is the best preparation of ground for corn the following spring. Veterinary art is in high repute in France, and its charactered professors enjoy superior incomes to the great majority of M. D.’s. The total crop of t’.e country is estimated at some 1,400,000,000 bushels of Jgrain, of which wheat is 350,000,000, and corn 800, 000,000. According to a Liverpool circular, the beet sugar production of Europe in 1869 was 735, 000 tons, 100,000 more than during the pre year. Be it a maxim, says a writer in Blackwood's Magazine, seldom lend your horse to a sail or, never to a Frenchman, and as little as you can to any one at all. From 1842 to 1847 England imported (mostly from France) 73 000.000 of eggs; during the next five years, 103'000,000, on an average; in the following year, 147,0D0, 000, and in 1866, 430,878,880; value, £l, 007, 197. This country wants less in pasture, more in woods, larger stables, bigger manure heaps, fewer inside fences. Our cows travel too far. Horse mu-cle is far cheaper than oow muscle. Stall feeding makes thorough weeding. Anew French invention is a portable fresh butter churn, to be used at each meal. It is made of crystal and mounted on silver feet. A silver rod revolves quickly in the cream, and presents a pat of butter every three min utes. Dr. Cameron, of Dublin, found straw, af ter many careful analyses, to contain about half as much digestible matter per ton as oil meal, and to supply carbonaceous or heat and fat-forming matter, at a cost of only oae-sixih that of oil-meal. To cure cow’s caked bag, add two ounces of sal ammoniac to one pint of vinegar, and ap ply quite warm. Rub the bag thouroughly with it twtoe a day. keep the cow from fresh feed, Cas’or oH is said to be better than any oth er oil for smooth tunning axles For waggons and carts, tallow is equally good. (foimnerrial and ( d(iu;maal. CORRtfCTKU WK.KKT.Y. Groceries and Provisions—Wnoieaaie. BACON—Canvassed Liams lb S3 @ 86 Plain Liams $ ft 21 @ 22 Clear titles. *«> n*@ IT}* Clear Uib sides $Dk 17 @ IT* Shoulders %i lb 18X@ lUft BULK MKA'l’o—Clear sides ft 16 (0 lo* Clear Bib %i ft @ 16 bhouldors ’it lb 12 @ Uatna ft lb U (] BLACK PKPPKK ft @ 87X BLUhSIVNfi IB lb 14 @ la BEANS V oushel 1 SO @2 00 BBOOMS V d«a 8 6u (»6UO BUCKETS |* do* 8 00 @8 60 CAN DV—Asserted V> ft 26 @ 27 Stick - v «ft 21 @ 22 CANDLES —Paraffine. sft 88 @ 40 Star lb 11 M 18 Tallow « B) 12 CHEESE mH> 16 <9 22X UIOA..S m 18 00 @OO 00 Havana %i in 80 00 @l6ouo OOFPKK—Java $ lb 40 @ 46 UlO sft 28 @ 26 COPPERAS %} ft 4 © 6 COTTON O A EDS ft doe 800 @8 60 COT ION THREAD bunob @2 00 KEATHERi lb 75 @ 60 FLOUR—Family bbl 7 80 @ 8 00 Fancy V bbl 8 25 @ 850 Exti a y bbl 6 50 @ 7 50 Superfine bbl 6 76 @ 626 GRAIN—Omn $ bush 12' @ 1 28 Oats 26 bush 88 @ 85 Wheat V hush 1 40 @ 1 75 HERRINGS %t box 20 @ INDIGO, sp ft 1 60 ©175 LARD—In 13bis %i ft 20 @ in Kegs and Cans <§l ft 19 @ 21 LEAD %1 ib 9 @ 11 LEATHER—SoIe %t ft 80 @ 40 Northern tanned sft 82 @ 40 Upper IB ft 60 @ 70 Call Skins dm 40 00 @7O 00 Freaoh V dos 70 00 @76 00 LIMB W bushel 60 @ 60 HYDRAULIC CEMENT %4 bbl 600 @ MACKEREL $) bbl 17 00 @26 00 Do %) kit 8 00 @8 50 MADDER Vlb 16 @ 17 MQLASSES $ eallon 55 @ 60 Sorghum $ vallon 65 @ 60 New Orleans, tji gallon 85 @ 95 NAILS V ft @6 00 OlL—Kerosene $ gallon @ 60 Linseed, raw %l xailon 1 45 @ 150 Machine W gallon 1 00 @ 1 75 Tanner’s %t Kailua & 76 ONIONS » bbl 4 00 @ 6 00 RICE Vft BX@ 9* ROPE—Hemp SB B> 8 @ 10 Cotton ft 85 @ 40 RAISINS « box 8 00 @ SALT—Virginia SB wok 9 26 Liverpool sack <3 2 80 SHOT « sack 8 50 @ 8 76 SOAP—Northern Vlb 7X@ 12x SODA ft 9 @ 9 SNUFF V> lb 86 @ 100 STARCH V » lb @ 11* SUGAR—Brown Vft 14 @ 17 Coffee <*l ft 16 @ 18 Crushed sft 19 @ 20 SARDINES—X box « dot 275 @8 00 X box 9 80s 0 00 @ TEAS—Gunpowder $ lb 0 00 @ 000 Green ft 1 75 @ 400 Black « 1b 1 50 @ * 00 TOBACCO —Common 18 lb 60 @ 65 Medium Vlb 70 @ 80 Prim# kft lb l 00 ffl 125 . WlNS—Wrapping yt lb 80 @ 60 VINEGAR—Cider ft trallnn 80 @ 60 Country Produoe. APPLBS—Green ft bbl. $4 00 @ 600 Dried ft Bt> 7 @ 8 BUTTER ft B> 80 @ 40 BEESWAX ft » 86 g 18 CORN -Shelled, old ft bushel 1 80 @ 185 Ear, new ft bushel 1 80 @ CHICKENS ft dm 8 00 @8 50 EGGS ft dot 80 @ 40 FODDER ft owt 900 @ HlDES—Green ft » @lO Dry ft » 14 @ 18 HAY ft cwk 1 9d @2 nO MEAL ft bushel 1 40 @ 140 OATS ft busuel & eO PEACHES—PeaIed ft tb ?2 @ 18 Uupealed ft tb 6 @ 7 PEAS ft bushel @ Table ft bushel & ITS PEANUTS ft bushel 900 @9 25 POTA TOES—Bweet ft bushel 100 @llO Yams ft bushel 1 50 @1 76 Western Bating, Irish ft bbl. 8 25 @8 50 N. Planting ft bbl. 600 <® 6 50 TA-LoW ft lb H @ 12* .VHKAT—White ft bnehel 160 @ 1 85 Red ft bushel 1 40 @l6O Cotton Goods. 4-4 Sheeting, ft yd 14*ai6 7- whirling, ft yd 12*.<18 8- “ W yd (0* 7-8 Prill* ft yd 15* Finanoial. EXCHANGE ON NEW YORK—Buying at par; Bell, log at * prem. GOLD.—Buying at 11, selling at 16. SILVER —Buying at 10, selling at 16. LLD BULuION. Buying at $1 25@1.80 ft pennyweight GOLD DUST.—Buying at sLlO@l 16 ft pennyweight. The following are the rates paid by our brokers during the week for Georgia and Alabama bank bills: utEORQIA. Bajrlai ue :rgia R. R. A B. Oo. t ¥9 Marino Bank of Georgia 93 Bank o H'orton Si JaiJ o. Empire State 9 X t.usta Ins. A B. 00. 0 City Bank of Augusta 10 .Uaau.aoturora U’k of Macon 0 North-Western Bank 0 Merchants ami Planters 0 Planters Bank. 6 Bank of Ooluinbas U Central K. it. Bank 98 Bank of Middle Georgia 75 Bank o’ Athens lo Bank ot Augusta Jnfon Bonk of Augusta 0 Augusta Savings Bank 6 Timber Cutters Bank 0 Bank of Savannah • 10 Bank of the Scate 10 Bank of Commerce 0 Mechanics hank 0 ALABAMA, , Banket .Mobile 96 Eastern Bonk of Alabama 64 Bank (if Selma 00 Commercial Bank 6 Bank of Montgomery Mu Heavy Oanaburgs, 20@?2% Light ” ft yu 17 stripes, ft >d 16 Checks, ft yd 18 auyiar Central Bank 1 Northern Bank 80 Southern Bank 95 SOUTH CAROLINA. Union Bank 95 Bank of Chester ]6 Hank of tue State, old 80 Bank ot Charleston 76 Exchange Bank 6 Merchants (Cheraw) 4 Bank of Georgetown 10 Planters Bank 5 Planters and Mechanics 85 Peoples Bank 86 Bank of Newberry 76 Bank ot Hamburg 6 South-Western R. R. Bank 71 Farmers and Exchange 0 Bank us Camden 80 Bank of .South Carolina 12 State Bank 2 Commercial Bank 1 NORTH CAROLINA Bon k of Cape Fear 26 Bank of Wilmington 17 Bank of the State 4 All other N. Oarollri Bank' 66 to 97 per cent, discount. BUSINESS CABDS. O RDERS! SEND ORDERS!! JOB PRINTING! BY STEAM. Fonr Power Presses! EVERY DESCRIPTION OF LETTER--PBESS PRINTING EXECUTED AT THE FRANKLIN STEAM mm HOUSE JOB ROOMS,. BROAD STREET. WORK EXECUTED PROMPLY AND NEATLY. I TV» work to please, and please to work. MERCANTILE, SCHOOL AND INSURANCE WORK, RAILROAD WORK, LEGAL BLANKS, CATALOGUES, POSTERS, of ell Sixea, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, CHECKS, CARDS, ENVELOPS; and LABELS OF ALL KINDS. Order* from the Country Promptly At tended To. Franklin Steam Printing House, Book-Bindery, and Olfiee Index and BaptiM, J. J. TOON, Proprietor. Aihuitn. (la. QEORGIA PRACTICAL BIMNESt CULLEUE, MAG OS, GEORGIA. B. B. EU-TO.V, Principal Pen in msliip Depftrtmerr, late ot D >lbeur and J. W. Uluckmuu’a Collcgee, New Orleans, La. UEO. It. LEVI3ON, Principal Bonk Keeping end Telegraph Department*, lute of Eustman College, New York. JOHN T. MoOINTY, A.M , Graduate of Mercer Uni vera.ty, Principal English and Maliiunialio.il Depart ments. With Competent A«s>iUmU. Terms or Toinox—PaTabi.k in Advance—Time Un limited. Business Penmanship, *ls ; Ornamontal, S2O ; Bnai ness and Ornamental combined, $8"; Pen Drawing, S2O; B lOk-Keeping, adapted to all depirtments nl trude, $25; Commercial Calculations, $23; Higher Mathematics, s3n; Civil Engineering, $100; Tele graphy, S3O. English Language, embracing Grammar, Composition and Rhetoric, per annu n, SSO. College Hours, trum 9 a.m. to 1 p.g.; 3to 6 and 7to 9 P.u. No vacations. Rveuencks,— Geo S Obear, Mayor; Hon E A Nisbet, Dr J R Boon, Jos Clisby, Esq, Ed Tel and Mo senger; Hon Washington Poe, C A Nutting, Pres. City Bunking Cos.; Hon Jas Jackson, Rev E W VVuiren, Pastor First Baptist church ; Rev J W Burke, Rev David Wills, U.D., Elder S Bovkiu. For further particulars, address “ Secretary,” Box 15, Macon, Ga. 2431—2493 lB6 QEO. W. GUNN, Attorney at Law and Sulidtor in Chancery, TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA, Will practice in the Courts of Macon, Tallapoosa. Chambers, Lee and Russell. The Supreme Court 0/ the Stale, and the District Court of the Unilt-d Slate-, al Montgomery. 2475— 9'j. JOSEPH A. ANSLE\ A TTORNEY AT LAW, Americus, Georgia. Will attend promptly to professional bus ness, ~ the Courts of South-Western Georgia, and ir. tru United States Courts at Savannah. 2161—24a5-2-' J. CLARKE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Atlanta, Georgia. Will practice in the Courts of the Atlanta Circuit, and in the United Stales District Court for the North era District of Georgia. OrvioE over Ga. National Bank, Ala. Street. 2454 -2504. rjO COTTON PLANTERS. 1,000 bushels the genuine HUNT COTTON SEED, Best Short Staple and mo‘t Prolific in the country. For sale by J. J. PEARCE. BUTLER 5c CD., 2473 -63-11 Cotloii Factors, Augusta, Ga. DRUGS, MEDICINES, ETC. DR |SIMMS] LIVER REGULATOR MEDICINE, for Dyspepsia, Headache,Jaundice. Costiveness, Camp Dysentery, Sick Headache. Chronic Diarrhoea, Affections ol the Bladder and Kidneys, Fever, Nervousness, Chills Diseases ol the skin, Impurity ol the Blood, Melan choly or depression ol Spirits. Most of tho ailments here enumerated have their origin in a diseased liver, which is the most prevalent affection in this country, and as in many cases the paueni is not within the reach of a physician, it re quires that some remedy should be provided that would not in the least impair the constitution, and yel be active and sate. That such is the character ot Hie SIMMONS REGULATOR there can be no doubt, which the testimony of hundreds will establish. SYMPTOMS OF A DISEASED in the side. Sometimes the ITlipn Ipam is felt under the shoulder blade: llif T H 118I 18 * ol, ieiiiues mistaken tor rheuma- Ills Ull Itism in the arm. Tne stomach is af- with loss of appetite and sick ness, bowels 111 general are costive, sometimes alter nating with lax ; the head is troubled with pain, ac companied with a dull, heavy sensation. There is generally a considerable loss of memory, accompa nied with a painful sensation of having left undent something which ougnt to have been done. A slighi, dry cough is sometimes an attendant. The patient complains of weariness and debility ; he is rasn\ startled, bis feet are cold or burning, and he cub - plains of a prickly sensation of the skin; Ins spirits are low ; and although sanslied that enereise would be beneficial to him, yet he can scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it. In fact, he distrust ever) remedy. Several ol the above symptoms attend ihe disease, but cases have occurred when few ot them existed, yet examination of the body after death has shown the Liver to have been extensively deranged. It should be ustd by all persons, old and young, whenever any of the foregoing symptoms appear. Tl is a purely vegetable compound, is 1101 injurious to tht most delicate constitutions, and will keep the liver in healthy action if used properly. Persons living in unhealthy localities may avoid ai billious attacks by taking a dose occasionally to keep the liver in healthy acliou. For children complaining of colic |Q I 4 fheadache, or sick stomach, a tea- EnP[r!lminrri ,oo,,,ul or moro w,l ‘ s |ve fo!iei. IIIUILUIUIUI A as well as adults, eat some- too much supper, or eat some thing winch does not digest well, producing sour stomach, heart-burn, or restlessness; a good dose will give relief. This applies to persons of all ages. Many persons, from eating 100 much, are restless at night, or in day time are fidgety, wool-gathering, can’t understand wbat they read, can’t keep their thoughts on any one subject so as to reason well, or become fretful. One or two tablespoonsful will give relief. Jaundice. —Take enough Regulator after eating each meal to produce one full acliou from the bowels' every day. Pregnant ladies will find sure relief from their head ache, costiveness, swimming in the bead, colic, sour stomach, restlessness, etc,, etc. Prepared only by J. H. ZKILIX & CO., Druggists, Macon, Gt. Price $1: by mail $1,25. For sale by J. F. Henry, New York j J, D. Park, Cincinnati; J. Fleming, New Orleans. Tl6l -i 2511 5Q t . TRAVELER’S GUIDE. - ..it" 1 '.I : 1:.. .:a:su.atra , : , j.- Georgla Railroad. E. W. Colb, Superintendent. Day Train. flight 2'rain Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Atlanta 5.00 a. in. 8.80 11. in. 5.40 p.m. 7.40 a.ni Augusta.. 7.00u.m. 3.45 p.m. 8.45 p.m. 6.20 a.m Day Passenger Train* will not run on Sundays. P* sengers for Muledgeville, V\ ushingioti, and Athens, Ga must take day passenger trains. Id order to make close connection with second Train 011 the South Carolina Railroad, and better con nections with I rains 011 tlic Branch Hoads, the Train on the Georgia Railroad will run as tollowa j DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. {Sun day a etceepted.) Leave Augusta at ..7.00 a.u Leave Atlanta at V. 6.00 a. 11 Arrive at Augusta P Arrive at Atlanta y.n 1 NIGHT PASSENGER AND MAIL TRAIN. Leave Augusta at .. b. 45 e.»i Leave Atlanta at 6.40 r.at Aruve at Augusta 3.00 a.w Arrive at Atlanta 7.40 a.m BERZELIA PASSENGER TR^IN. Leave Augusta at 4.15 r.»i Leave Berttelia at -7.00 a.m Arrive at Augusta . ibAO a.m Arrive at Reraeita p.m Passengers tor Milledgeville, Washington and Alb ens, Ga., must take Hay Passenger Tram truiu An gusta and Atlanta. Passengers tor West Point, Montgomery, Selma Mobile, and New Orleans, must leave Augusta on Night Passenger Tram at 10 p.m., to make close coh u actions. Passengers for Nashville, Corinth, Grand Junction Memphis, Louisville and St. Louis, cnu lake eitbe Irui 11, u„d make clone connections. 1 brougb tickets, aud baggage checked through to the above places. Pullman's Palace Sleeping Cars on all Night Pas seuger Trains. Mo change 01 ears ou Night Passen uuu Mail Trains between Aug it*, tu uud Wea Po,nl - E. W. COLL, Gcu’i Sup :. Atlanta amt West-Point Railroad. L. P. GRANT, Superintendent. Day Train. Night Train 4 , Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Atlanta.... 7.58 a.m. 12.2tip.iu. 8 nop.in. 11.05 a.m vVestPoint.l2.6ttp.ua. 6.U6 p.m. S.uop.in. lo.uo p.n Western and Atlantic (State) Railroad. POSTER BLODGETT Superintendent. Day Train. Night Train. Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Atlanta 8.15u.m. 8. i7 p.m. 7.00 p.m. 4.H a.m Chattanooga.7.no a.m. 4.10 p.m. 7.60 p.m. Ito a.m Dalton Accommodation Train. Leave. Arrive. I \ tl * ntft 4.15 p.m. 11 00 a.m t ' lon 12.44 a.m No day trains on Sunday, The 7.00 p.m. train Irom Vtlautu arrives ut Dalton ut 1.20 a.m., oounucUng with trains on the Last Teuuusseu and Georgia Kuilnmd Ini tvnuxville, Lynchburg, Washington, it o. Passengers ,or Home will take the 7.00 ii.ih. train from Allan m vud the 7.10 p.m train from Chattanooga. Western and Atlantic and VirgUla aud Tennessee Rail ways to the North and East. Going North—Leave Cuming South—Leave Vtlanta 7.25 p.m New York .. . 7.80 p.m Dal tun 2.30 a.m. Philadelphia.... 11.00 p.m. Knoxville 11.17 a.m. Baltimore 8.5 u a.m Bristol 7.18 p.m Washington 6.8 b a.m. Lynchburg 9.00 a.m. Lynchburg 5.26 p.m. Washington 7.00 pm. Bristol 7.1n u.m Baltimore 8.56 p.m. Knoxville 2.66 p.m. Philadelphia 1.22 a.m. Dalton 2.06 p.m Arrive New York 5.20 a.m. Arrive Atlanta.. 8.36 a.m Time between Atlanta aud New York 67 hours. South-Westers Railroad. Viroil Powitaa, Engineer and Superintendent. , OoWmbue Train—Daily. Leuve. Arrive. U *'’ D 7.62 a.m. 6.06 p.tn Columbus 12.25 p.m. 11.22 a.m hujaula Train—Daily. Leave. Arrive Nlaoun B.ob a.m. 4.50 p.m Lulaula 7,20 a..n. 5.8 U p.m Connecting to UK Albany Train at Smith ville. , ... Leave. • Arrive Sjnithville « 1.48 p.m. 11.00 a.m ' lbun .V .... Si.B6 a.m. 8.11 p.o Connecting with fbrt Gaines Train at Cuthbert. ■ _ .. Leave. Arrive. Cuthbert 8.57 p.m. 9.05 a m fort Gaines 7.05u.m. 6.40-p.m. Connecting with Central Railroad and Macon A Western Railroad trains at Mucon, at and Montgomery A West Poiut Railroad trains at Columbus. Rome Railroad. Leave. Arrive. otn « 6.80 p.m. 12.80 p.m. Kingston 11.00 p.m. 8.00 p.m. Connects at Rome with Stages to Selma Road, and Steamboats to Uudsden and Greeusport, Ala., Tutrday and Saturday mornings. Alsu at Kingston with night trains on Western and Atlantic Railroad, up and down Montgomery and WmLPoint Railroad. Daw’j.. H. Vb.au, Engineer and Svp't. Leave. Arrive. West Point 18.45 p.m. 18.u0 tn. Montgomery 6.46 p.m. 6.00 u.m Opelika Branch. Trains leuve Opelika lor Columbus at 10.80 a.m., and 2.20 p.m.; leave Columbus for Opeliku at B.On and 11.8 t a.m. Connects at Columbus with Muscogee Railroad Louisville and Nashville Railroad. For the North and H’est. No. 1. No. 2. Leave Atlanta 8.15 a.m. 7.00 p.ui. Arrive at Chattanooga . 4.20 p.m. 8.80 u.m. Leave Chattanooga 8:0'' p.m, 4.46 a.tr Arrive ut Nashville 6.00 a.m. 8.00 p ni Leave Nashville 5.00 a.m. 3 0(1 > , ni Arrive at Louisville 1.00 p.m. 11.00 !/„, Leuve Louisville 1.15 p.m. 11.) r> Arrive ut iudianHpolis 6.40 p.m. A .45 tl . n , Arrive at St. Louis B.<'o a.m. 'B.OO a m Arrive at Chicago 8.40 u.m. To.4n pin Arrive at Cincinnati 12.10u.ux. 6/20 a.m For the South. Leave Louisville ... 1.03 e.m. 800 uin Arrive at Nashville SM*,» u.m. 6.00 p.m. Leuve Nashville «.0o p.m. 9.00 a.m Arrive at Chattanooga 4.80 u.m. CBO p.m Leave Chattanooga 7.00 a.m. 7.50 p . DI Arrive at Atlanta 4.i4p.m 8.17 a. n Macon and Western Railroad. A. J. W«iti, President. Day Train. Night Train. Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Maoon 7.45 a.m. 1.80 p.m. 8.40 p.m. 2.:0a.m. Atlanta 7.66 a.m. 2.00 pm. 6.30 p.m. 4.10 u.m Central Uailroad. Wm. M. Wadlbt, Utnrral Superintendent. Day Train . Mg hi Train. Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Savannah.,.B.oo a.in. 6.16 p.m. 7.6 u p.m. 6.10 a.m. Augusta... .8.46 p.m. 6.fid p.m. 10.10 p.m. 8.60 a.m. Macon 7.06 a.m. 7.80 p.m. 6.00 p.m. 0.66 a.m. Both trains from Augusta make close connection al Miilen, and change cars for Savannah and Muoon. Pas sengers for Milledgeville and iiutoutou will take lbs day train at Augusta. Macon and Aagnst* Uailroad. E. W. Cole, Gtn’l Hup't. . Leave. Arrive. Camak, day, 2.40 p tBI . 8 . 66 „ m Miiledgevillo, daily 6.50 u 6 8(l pni Kay trains from Augusta or Atlanta on the Georgia Uailroad, make close Ouuueotion al Cuuoik lor interme diate points on the atoVe road; also lor Mao,in etc Puseeugers leuving Miludgevi.le at 6.80 a.m , reach Augusta and Atlanta aame day. South Carolina Uailroad. H. T. Peake, Gt rural UrtparinUndirtt, Leave Augusta Central Joint Depot, at 8 10am Arrive at Augusta Central Joint Depot «t „ ni Ihe 8.10 u.ui. train goes through to Wilmington,' N 0., without change ol cars. Passengers lor Charles ton, Columbia, etc., will take the 6.60 a.m. or Coo n m trains. * Montgomery and Mobile Uailroad. „ . Leave. Arrive. Montgomery 8.10 p.m. 6.50 ani Mobile 8.00 p.m. 10.ktia.tr. Montgomery and Eufouln Uailroad. ~ . Leave. Arrive. Montgomery..,.. S.ou p.m, 04u a m Mathews., 7.80 am. 610 p.m. Thi» train connects at terminus with stage for Uuiou Springs on Alvuday, Wednesday and Friday of cucb week. Nashville and Chattanooga Uailroad. Jno. W. Thomas, Sup*rint*ndtnt. Day Train. Mg At Train, . Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive Chattanooga.4.4o a.m. 6.80 p.m. 8.00 p.m. 4 3n*m Nashville...9.oo a.m. 2.00 p.in. 6.00 p.m 6.00 a!m Connects with Sbelbvville Branch aud with McMion ville A Manchester Railroad. LonlETille and Nashville Uailroad. Day Train. Might Train. « v ... Leave. Arrive. Leave. Arrive. Nashville....6.lo a.m. 1.10 p.m. 6.80 p.m. 4.00 a m Louisville .8.80 a.m. 6.80 p.m. 6.10 p.m. 8.66 a.m’ Frtvnklin ( Ky .) AccomvH*lation,. ' . , Leave. Arrive. JtashvilU.,. V........ 680 p.m. 11.66 4^l Franklin,. A ..6.60 a.m. lo.ft;. p <Bl BONDS FOB TITLES.—For sale at the FRANKLIN PRNITING HOUHX