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•E’O'Ek AVOID ALL IMITA-
JC TiONS. THEY MAY
BE DANGEROUS.
Sore Eyes
Catarrh
Lameness
Female
sSnb P u a rn ntS |i|
Soreness
_ , sac-simile of
xnroino bottle with BUFF
VUI dlllo WRAPPER.
Chafing tthti
Bruises Übu
K ds POND'S
Wounds EXTRACT
Insect DEMAND POND'S EX-
, TRACT. ACCEPT NO
K 11P Q SUBSTITUTE FOR IT
Stings SAagl
Sore Feet
INFLAMMATIONS
HEMORRHAGES
ALL
O A INI THIS IS The- ONLY
/\ I I\l RIGHT KIND. DONOT
I I I 1 TAKE ANY OTHER.
-T- yOUR
PAINT RO ° FS
DIXON’S SILICA GRAPHITE PAINT,
water will run from it pure and clean. It
covers double the surface of any other paint,
and willl last four or five times longer. Equal
ly usseful for any iron work. Send for circu
lars. Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City
N. J ( smay26ts
DEAFNESS,
ITS CAUSES AND CURE,
Scientificically treated by an aurist of world
wide reputation. Deafness eradicated and en
tirely cured, of from 20 to 30 years’ standing,
afterall other treatments have failed. How
the difficulty is reached and the cause remov
ed, fully explained in circulars, with affida
vits and testimonials of cures from prominent
people, mailed free. Dr. A. Fontaine, Taco
ma, Wash. • Sinayly
nil r O Remedy Free. Instant Relief
Ull L V Final cure in 10 days. Never re
r ■■turns: no purge; no salve; no
■ ■""“suppository. A victim tried in
vain ever remedy liastliscoveretl a simple cure,
which he will mail free to his fellow suffer
ers. Address J. H. KEEVES, Box 3220, New-
York City. N. Y.
If You Are Going West
And Want Low Rates.
To Arkansas
Texas, Missouri, Colorado Oregon and Cali
fornia, or any point WESTor NORTHWEST—
IT WILL PAY YOU
To write to me.
FRFI). I). BISH,
D. P. A., L. & N. R. R.
24 Wall St. Atlanta, Ga.
THE LATEST INVENTION IN
Swiss Music Boxes.
They are the sweetest, must complete, tone
sustaining, durable and perfect Music Boxes
made (warnnted in every resnect), and any
numbt r of tunes can be obtained for them, any
airs made to order. (Patented in Switzerland
and United States.)
We manufacture especially for direct family
trade, and we guarantee our instruments far
superior to the Music Boxes ususally made for
the w holesale trade an & sold by general mer
chamlise, dry goodsor music stores. Head qua r
ters only. Salesrooms for the cclbraled Gem
and concert Koller Organs. Price <6 and sl2.
Extra Rollers only 25c. each. Lowest prices.
Old Music Boies carefully Repaired and Improved.
H. G AUTSCH I & SONS, M’f’rs.
Salesrooms, 1030 Chestnut St., Phil’a.
7 apr ts
BREED AT ONCE:
A ABORTION,
LEUCORRHCER,
FAILURE
TO BREED,
NYMPHOMANIA,
QUICKLY
CURED.
ii>>~ PH EVO TIT to, $1.00; prevent. Abortion.
HABORIRI. $2.00; rnre. Leucorrhu-a and F»ll
uro to Breed. XYMA,SI.OO; cures Nymphomania.
EXHTJ-MiR, $1.00; remoreii Placenta. Meillca
tors2scta. Exprea.pald. 80-PagePamphlet Free.
WALLACE BABNES, Box 706 Coin*
Mb. Wallaor Barnes;
Sir—l gave your Prevortio a severe test, it
does the business. Please find enclosure for
another bottle, by return mail, and oblige,
Yours truly.
Geo. Dillon, Macon, Ga,
Mb. Wallace Babnes:
Dear Sir—Having tried your Haboriri last
spring with very satisfactory results. I here
with enclose $4.00 for which please, send me
two bottles of flaboriri. It has done all you
claimed for it.
Very respectfully.
W. J. McMichael, Courtney, P».
IflmaySt
FOR SALE.
TERMS: One-fourth cash, balance in
one, two and three years.
One farm of four hundred notes ; 200 enclos
cd w ith cedar posts and steel wire, 40 acres in
•ultivation. Price sa,ooo.
One farm of four hundred and fifty acres;
all enclosed with cedar post and steel wire
Onehii mired acres in cultivation. Good house
well, barn, sheep shed. Price 85.000.
Both these farms in Central Texas, in the
black land belt, in Bosque county. Address
A. T. SPALDING, Atlanta, Ga.
junelGtf
BROWN UNIVERSITY,
Providence, Rhode Island.
Founded in 1764. The oldest institution of
Jeanding in the world connected with the Bap
tist denomination.
Mend for catalogue to the Registrar of the
University. Providence. R. J. For particular
information, to the President. 2june3in
SOUTHERN
SHORTHAND
-—AND ■■■■
business voiaaccic
Atlanta, oa.
Best commercial College in the South,
Shorthand. Book keeping. Penmanship, Tele
graphy Drawing, Typewriting, Mathematics.
Spelling, etc., taught by practical and exper
ienced teachers. Hundreds of graduates in
lucrative positions. Send for large catalogue
and circulars which will be mailed free.
A. C. Briscoe, Manager.
L. AV. Arnold, Asst. Manager,
Miss Allci; Ti ller. Typist,
F. B. white,, Prin. Book-keeper.
rimllU Morphine Habit Cured In 10
Vi IUm DR. J.STEPHENS, Labunon,Ohio.
©bihutrUsu
JONES.—Bro. Thomas L. Jones
was born the 23rd day of December,
1855, in Webster county, Ga., and
died at his home in the same county,
December 27th, 1891, aged 36 years.
He joined the Baptist church in
June, 1880, was ordained a deacon
the following April and continued
to manifest the same spirit that
caused him, so early in his Christian
life to be selected to fill the office
he did, and worthily to the time of
his death.
He married Miss Etta Woodum
early in his young manhood who
has proven a helpmeet indeed. She
and two children are left to mourn
his loss. Bro. Jones evidenced in
his daily life that spirit by which
they that are Christ’s are to be
known. He was true to his convic
tions, “contending for the faith,’ but
always in a charitable spirit. The
poor always had a friend in him and
he was ever ready to visit the sick
and unfortunate. He was a good
citizen and the church, the commu
nity and his family have suffered
great loss. His pastor feels his loss
keenly but the Lord can compensate
and teach us how to bear these loss
es in a becoming spirit.
Pastor.
LUN SFORD.—James Sanders
Lunsford was born in Stewart coun
ty, in 1853, and removed to Web
ster county, where he spent his life
from early manhood to death. He
married Miss Fletcher, by whom he
had five children, the oldest of
which Janie liichardson, preceded
him two days to the spirit world.
He and the eldest child, joined the
the Baptist Church at Macedonia, in
August, 1889. The father, mother
and daughter were all baptized on a
beautiful Sabbath morning, at the
same time, and little did the writer
think that the father and daughter
were so shortly to enter upon rest.
Janie died on Friday, a calm, qui
et, peaceful death trusting in Him
who knoweth the sparrows fall; on
the following Sabbath, she was fol
lowed to the good land by the fath
er she loved so well. Bro. Lunsford
was a good man, faithful in all the
! relations of life; as a father, kind
and yet firm ; as a Christian, he evi
denced the spirit of his Master, by
his daily walk ;as a citizen, he en
joyed in an iminent degree the con
fidence of all classes, and bid fair to
be useful to his country in a public
capacity. We all expected to meet
him at the church where God was to
be honored by worship.
We miss him and Janie so much,
they sleep side by side near the
church they loved so well, and we
hope to greet them some time where
partings are unknown, ’til then we
will strive to emulate his virtues
and learn to say Thy will be done..
Pastor,
BELL.—Sister Elizabeth Bell de
parted this life, June 15th, in the
hope of a glorious resurrection. She
joined the Baptist Church at Bethes
da, in 1841, was baptized by Elder
C. C. Willis, and adorned herprofes-
I session by an orderly walk to the
I day of her death. She married Z.
B. Bell in 1836, reared a family of
several children, two of whom are
preachers of the Gospel of God,
While her church and friends mourn
her loss, yet not like those wh o have
no hope. She died trusting her
Savior and exhorting her children
and friends to meet her in the better
' land.
RAINEY.—Thomas L. Rainey,
was born in Jasper county in the
year 1817, and died at his home
in Schley county, March 10th
1892. He married Miss Mary Col
lins in 1847, a union blessed with a
large family of children, most of
them trusting for salvation in the
same God that ordered the steps of
the father to the end of life.
Bro. Rfriney joined the church of
Christ at Ebenezer in this county,
was a consistent member of the
church at Pond Town, now located
at Ellaville. He was a man of lib
eral views, was ever ready to aid his
brethren in every good word and
work, and to cooperate witlj his pas
tor by contributing liberally to his
temporal support and in other ways
making his labor more abundant.
He served his country acceptably in
several positions of honor and trust.
LITTLE.—Died at her home,
Milner, Ga., May 29th‘ 1892, Sitter
Lizzie Little, wife of deacon Janies
W. Little. Our sister was taken
from us in the midst of Christian
usefulness, while serving in her fam
ily as a faithful wife and loving
mother. She was baptized by Rev.
C. C. Oliver, her father into the mem-
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY, JUNE 30. 1892.
bership of Flint Hill Church', Pike
county, Ga. She leaves many
friends, a devoted husband and two
children to mourn their loss.
May God comfort and heal the
bruised hearts that are left behind.
J. W. L.
PERKINS.—It has pleased an
all-wise God to remove from our
midst, by death, a beloved sister and
member of Little Buck Head Church,
Mrs. Mittie A. Perkins, who died
on April 17th, 1892. Sister Perkins
was a devout Christian woman, and
faithful in all the relations of life.
Her character and conduct were for
cible illustrations of the cardinal
principles of religion, being ever
characterized by gentleness, patience,
and fidelity. In contemplating her
life we are instructed, and by her
death she gave assurance that she is
"Resting, sweetly resting I
Alter life’s long day,
Conies the cooling shadows,
Os the twilight gray.”
“Sleeping, sweetly sleeping I
Calm in peace and trust;
The beautiful earth temple
Crumbles into dust.”
"Soft as evening zephyrs,
In its accent low,
Passed the. pilgrim spirit
To the golden shore.”
W. E. Burke,
Mrs. Emma Windom,
Mrs. Mary Murrows.
Committee.
Millen, Ga., June 11th, 1891.
HUGHES.—Key. Peter A. Hughes
was born in the state of South Caro
lina in the year 1814. His father
was Rev. Alalachi Hughes and his
mother, who died when he was only
a few months old, was Marie Beau
thini, of French Huguenot
parentage. Bro. Hughes was one of
twins; his twin brother, Henry Lar
kin, being carried away by certain
parties, when only a few years old,
which was a lifetime separation and
sorrow to our brother. His father
who was a most devout man, and
ever held in loving memory by his
son, died when he was only sixteen
years old. Being thus left an orphan
he was not without that Friend that
sticketh closer than a brother for he
was converted to Christ early in life
and such was his zeal for his Mas
ter’s cause, that he began to preach
the Gospel in about his twenty-first
year, having married when about
twenty years old, at Charleston, S.
C., Miss Mary Grace Mims, who with
one son and two daughters survives
him. He was a man of great meek
ness, exceptional spiritual minded
ness and deep humility of heart and
child-like faith, and was characterized
by a quiet submission to God’s will
and life’s many cares, reverses, losses
and crosses which checkered his long
pilgrimage of almost four score
years. He had been preaching the
Gospel nearly sixty years. During
his last illness, he expressed himself
as realizing as never before what we
are by nature and what we must be
by Grace, if ever saved and having a
fresh insight into our relation, to our
Saviour' and praising God continual
ly for His unspeakable Gift. He died
without a struggle on the night of
the 2nd of Feb. 1892 in the city of
Atlanta, Ga., inthe 78u. year of his
age, in triumphant and blessed hope
of eternal rest.
Resolved 1. That a page of church
record be inscribed to his memory.
2. That a copy of the foregoing be
furnished the Christian Index with
inquest for publication,
3. That a copy of the same be
furnished the family of our brother.
W. 11. Bell,
< J. IL Harwell,
G. A. Duke,
Rev. A. W. Mitchell,
Committee.
BURST.—Little Thomas Colquit
Hurst, the subject of this notice,
died in Social Circle June 12th, 1892.
Age nine years seven months and
twenty-three days—died from heart
disease and dropsy of the whole sys
tem, suffered much for several
months, but bore his sickness patient
ly and often spoke of death, his love
for God, and desire for Heaven. He
hated sin and dissipation more than
most children, he was spritely intelli
gent, sympathetic, kind hearted and
very grateful for all kindness shown
him,either in sickness or health. This
dear sweet little boy, though young
as he was, has left his impress on the
minds and hearts, not only of his
parents and grand parents, but on all
the family and people of Social Cir
cle. He was a bright shining m.yk
for the sickle of death, and a sweet
bud of promise that gave his dear
parents great joy in his prospective
future, and while it is hard to give
up this sweet treasure of our earthly
ly love, may God, by his spirit, en
able his dear parents to bow in hum
ble submission to his will, and like
David say the child cannot come to
me but I can go to him.
Grand Father.
SljjricultuvitL
Feeding some grain even when
the cows are on full pasture will usu
ally pay. It certainly will if the cows
are stabled at night, well bedded
with absorbants and the best use
made of manure.
To the general farmer phosphoric
acid is the most valuable ingredient
contained in commercial fertilizers
that is, it will do him the most good;
hence its value should be determin
ed more by this than by the ammo
nia contained.
A pasture that will carry one cow
will carry from eight to ten sheep.
Knowing that, it is for the farmer to
determine whether the cow or the
sheep will give the largest return.
If it is a poor cow, and you can not
get a better one, make way for the
sheep by all means.
In feeding oil meal to milch cows
one should begin gradually with
one-half cornmeal and increase until
you reach two parts of the form
er to one of the latter. Watch
the results closely, and so determine
the amount that may be fed with
profit. The steam cooked linseed
is best.
One of the things which has brought
up the study of ensilage in Canada is
the discovery that winter-made fac
tory butter, from ensilage-fed cows,
brings the very highest price in the
British market. This is a fact which
ought to lead us to studying the pos
sibilities of getting into that market
ourselves.
The small and early varieties of
sweet corn are always the most ten
der and sweet, and best for table use.
For our own garden we have adopt
ed the plan of planting one of these
(early Minnesota is our pseference)
at regular intervals throughout the
spring and summer. By this means
we have excellent corn through the
season.
A few years ago there might have
been some excuse for a farmer saying
that he could not afford to have pure
bred cattle. Fancy prices though
aie no longer the rule, and any man
who can afford to grow stock at all
can afford to buy a pure blooded ani
mal to place at the head of his herd;
in fact,he can not afford to do other
wise.
The importfl -us -American cattle
and carcasses into the port of Liver
pool have increased by 10,000 ani
mals and 2,000 quarters of beef for
the first three months of the present
year over a similar period for 1891.
The more we produce of such cattle
as are wanted by the buyers for ex
port the more we shall reduce the
pressure upon our home markets.
If one wishes to go extensively in
to sheep raising he must have cheap
land and a wide range, but a small
fiock can be kept to advantage on
any farm, and the richer and more
valuable the land in such a case the
better it is. This indicates the two
branches of husbandry, and with
either of the two methods sheep may
be kept profitably almost anywhere
in our whole country.
Milk that has been thoroughly
aerated will keep several hours long
er than that which is not so treat
ed. Any device that breaks up the
milk and forces the air through it
will serve the purpose, even pour
ing from one bucket into another,
but an elevated strainer answers
much better. It should be aerated
as soon as drawn from the cow, be
fore the normal animal heat has had
time to pass off.
In answer to a correspondent as
to the comparative merits of blue
grass, we would say that it is twice
as nutritious as timothy, weight for
weight, but it will not yield so much
hay an acre, and requires a longer
time to become established. It is
even more nutritious than orchard
grass or redtop, and it will make a
better sod than either of these
three.
One of the most important things
in training a horse is to teach it to
stand at the word of command.
Adopt some single word to convey
your order,and never vary it. Then
compel the horse to obey it fully
every time it is used. Do not use
two different words to convey the.
same meaning, nor attach different
meanings to the game word if you
expect the horse to learn and obey
them, accurately.
PECULIAR.
It is very peculiar that when you
try Dr. Bigger’s Huckleberry Cordial
you will never suffer yourself to be
without it again? It never fails to re
lieve all bowel affections and child
ren teething.
While coal ashes are of no direct
manurial value, it will always pay
Well to apply them to stiff clay land
for their mechanical action alone.
They cut and mellow the clay, mak
ing it lighter and more easily culti
vable. Wood ashes are rich in pot
ash, and can always be applied to
the fruit and vegetable garden to ad
vantage. They should no more be
wasted than so much commmercial
fertilzer.
We occasionally yet hear some
thing said against the quality of en
silage butter, but not so much as
formly; but with tlie fact before us
that some of the very best hotels in
the country use ensilage butter by
preference, year after year, and pay
the very highest price for it, the
criticism does not seem *of much
force. The silo has become a main
dependence of the best dairymen,
the product which it enables them to
turn out is of the very highest quali
ty-
Correspondents of nearly all the
agricultural journals in the South
affirm that there will be a greater di
versity of crops in the cotton growing
States than has ever been known be
fore. The cottcn acreage may not
be very greatly reduced, because
there is presumably more land under
cultivation than formerly, but by
growing their own grain, meat and
vegetables, the farmers will be more
independent, even though the price
of cotton remains low.
THE EXCEEDING HOT WEATHER
Os the present summer is producing
and alarming fatality from diarrhoea,
cholera infantum, cholera morbus
and dysentery. Every family and
person ought to be provided with an
effective preventive and euro for
these diseases. Pe-ru-na never fails
when used in time to cure the fnost
severe cases of them. Thousands of
lives are saved by this unfailing re
medy in all acute diseases of the sto
mach and bowels. If you are not al
ready acquainted with the wonderful
virtues of Pe-ru-na in summer com
plaints, send for three lectures by
Dr. S. B. Hartman, of Columbus,
Ohio, on acute disease of the abdo
men, which contain a desorption of
the causes, symptoms, and cure of
these dangerous and prevalent dis
eases. The lectures sent free to any
address by the Pe-ru-na Drug Man
ufacturing Co., Columbus, O.
CATARRH Eor Over Two Years
iny little girl’s life was
nHDRPKf made miserable by a
mwnrdl case of Catarrh. The
discharge from the nose was large, con
stant and very offensive. Her eyes be
came intlamed, the lids swollen and very
painful. After trying various remedies,
I gave her 8. 8. 8. The first bottle
seemed to aggravate the disease, but the
symptoms soon abated, and in a short
time she was cured.
Dr. L. B. RITCHEY, Mackey, Ind.
WARREN’S -
Pgso«a
feM BIRO
LM FOOD.
P 'is * s <•<>;>!> AS ’1 UK HEST.
ly put up in qsl<.
B’*] ‘-LTew-cap glass bottles.
Highly recommended and to
JyANKwAEREjPfy J good demand everyv neie.
For Hale by Drnggieto auo
healer**
LYTRUE
ION
INIO
’ BLOOD, regulate
S, remove LIVER
»uild birength. renew
. restore heal th end
y'Yflth. Dyspeimlri.
■ Uon, that tired feel
l>solntcly eradicated,
nd bright cued, brain
>owcr in creased,
bones, nerves, hiur.
I IHILV « . receive new force.
I IlKfl If A fmfTerlng from complaints pe.
LKEJ 9IU citllir tothelrMCX, icing it, dnd
.n— a bate, speedy cure. Returns
rose bloom on checks,beautifles Complexion.
t Hold everywhere. All genuine goods bear
“( re rent.” Scud ÜB^ccut3tami> for 32-bago
pamphlet, °
DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, Mo.
h’*BAILEY’S* ?
l* /// 1 mUompoundlytht-iipreadlncA'it
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“XT f BAirtl KE/LECTOn CO
1 IOS r«a> a«». Hitobarafc, f k V
WASHBURN
JL? nA Guitars, Mandolins
“nd Zithers ,
rW.N In volume niui quality ul tone are
the Ho.t h> th. World. Fully
warranted. Sold by all leading deal
''i'. ifcaiitilully illustrated, des
rrlptlve catalogue with portraitsot
wy ' famous artists Mailed Free.
LYON i HEALY/CHICAGO.
ATLANTA MEDICAL COLLEGE
—dfli I?'-.'
O’ For Catalogue and information, apply to
W. S. KEJINDKICIC, M. T>.» Secretary,
9june3m Atlanta, Ga.
WINSHIP MACHINE CO7
G-uA..
/X, Cotton Gins anil Cotton Presses.
/H 1 ' » I Up-Packing, Down-Packing, Self-Packing.
L Steel Screws, 4 inches and 5 inches in diameter.
' O A OUR COTTON G!N WITH NEW PATENT
REVOLVING CARD,
k: Straightens the Fibre and Improves the Sample
fojf I so that it commands the Highest Market Price.
J ALL the latest improvements.
/ Z —X G,NS FURN,SHED WITH EVOLVING
[ J \ | HEADS, WHEN WANTED.
D@f“WIUTR FOR CIRCULARS AND PRICES.
I We sell the best makes of Pianos and Organs - jifti
I at the lowest possible price, for cash or easy 'v,
I payments. Full line of Sheet Music. Write us
I for catalogues and prices before buying. —V'
BeMEmi. ■■i ...
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Premiums For New Subscribers
TO THE
Christian Index
Premiums are given only to old subscribers for obtaining new ones.
To any old subscriber whose subscription is paid in advance sending us
the name of one new subscriber with 82.00 we will give any one of the fol
lowing books:
FOR ONE NEW SUBSCRIBER.
Spurgeon’s Life—by Geo. C. Lorimer D. D., (Postage paid.)
Spurgeon’sLife by Russell 11. Conwell, (Postage paid.)
Drummond’s Addresses, Cloth, (Postage paid)
' My 1 'oint of View.
The Gospel In Enoch—by Dr. IT. 11. Tuc'ncr (Postage paid.)
For 10 newsubscribers and 820 will send jhe works of Charles Dickens
-15 Volumes handsomely bound in dloth and gold. Address,
Index,
South Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Ga. SoullKni & M. R. R.
Suwanee River Route.
Schedule in effect June 22<1, 1892.
GOING SOUTH.
I ?•<>. 1 No. 3
STATIONS . W. India I h xpress
Fast Mail Mail
Leave Macon 11 O') a m 10 3' p m
“ Cordele• 2 i.-» pnr ; is a*n
Tift- n 3 47 “ 2 50 “
Arrive Brunswick 8 25 “ 7 “
“ Jacksonvillel 700 “ 825 “
“ V aidonta»...i b2O “ 4 g “
“ Jis tier I 6 28 “ 510 “
“ White Springs 700 “ 615 “
Lake Cityj 730 “ C4O “
“ II mpton| 8i) “ 803 “
Arrive Palatka 110 25 “ >9 40 “
No. 1 leaves Macon after arrival of incoming
morning trains on ( ••ntral, Southwcsiern.
Geoiyi t, East Tentn ssec, \ irginia ami Geor
gia Macon ami Northern ami .M t<on ami Ea
tonton railro i Is.
No. 3 leaves Macon after arrival of incoming
afternoon trains on the Centril. Southv.est
• rn, Macon and Northern ami Georgia rail
roads, and < onne< is at Tifton with Bi me k
and Western for Ihiinsu iek ami Jack.-t in ille
via r.runswH k and Western ami Savannah,
Florida ami Western at Palatka lor St. A nuns’
tine ami all points in EaM am! South Florida,
and with the St. Johns and Ocklawuha river
steamers.
going north;
I .7. EX 1 ’■ -• i N 1 ~
STATIONS M. iiidia Express
FaßtMnii Mail.
Leave Palatka[ 5 i" a m i;eop in
Hampton, <> '<<> ain 7 pin
“ LnkeCity’ 1 a<Ba in K.Mip in
" Widte Springsl 82S a in 1 ul3 pin
” Jasperl !> oo ain alsp nt
" Valdosta[lo ll ain to nop m
’’ Tiftonit2 oa ainl23a ain
“ Jacksonvillel sls pin i;:;op ni
" Hrunswiek t> 30 p m s Isn in
“ Cordele 1 nil pin 20la m
Arrive Macon| 4 to i> in -t,i tn
No. 2 h aves Palatka after arrival fast West
India mail from Tanipa mid connects at .Mu
mu with all outgoing p. in. trains K, U.. S.
W.K. K , (la. It. K., E. T.. V.& (1. K. K. ami
jlneoii ami Northern.
No. 4 leaves Palatka after arrival of trains
from Nt. Augustine and pidnts In East and
South Florida and connects nt Tifton with
jiriinsw i< k ami Western from Brunswick, (la.
mid Jacksonville, Ela. Close connection at
Macon, for Nashville. I.oni-.vill'-, Cincinnati,
Evansville, st. Louis ami Chicago, Short Line
to World's Fair via (1.. S. & l''.,C. It. K. of
Georgia. Western and Atlantic, Nashville,
Chattanooga and St Louis and Louisville
and Nashville, ami Macon with all out going
a. m. trains C. H. It. , , ,
All trains arrive and dejiart from I niou De
pols, Macon mi'l Palatka.
Elegant sleeping curs will ho rim on trains
No. a mid 4.
For further information apply to agents at
junction points or to
K. K. Kr.lr Ell,
Ticket Ag't Pahitku, Fla.
JAS. MENZIES,
< ien'l Ag’t Jacksonville.
11. Bl UNS. I rav. I'.iss. Agt. Mncon.
A. (,'. KNAPP, Traffic Malinger.
imPPine Ofoiis lor
TV IC .
A now Pipe Organ with 8 stops, swells, com.
Pedals, for sale on easy terms. Organs built
and repaired. •
No. 221 Magnolia Street,
AT JU AIS TA,« EORGI A.
/(GEORGIA MIDLAND AND GULF R. R.
' "'.l'li'- only line running Double Daily Trains
anil Through Coach between Atlanta, and Co
lumbus via Gritiin.
NORTHBOUND DAILY.
No. 51. No. 53.
Lv Thomasville, S. F. & A 7 45 a m
Ar Albany, “ 10 40 “
Dawson, C. S. Ry 1152 “
“ Columbus " 2 53pm
Lv " GM Ry coo am 550 “
Ar Warm Springs “ 757 am 524 “
” AVilliamson “ 0 24“ 533 “
“ Gritiin “ 1148 “ 550 “
“ Atlanta, C. RR 1130“ 735 “
SOUTHBOUND DAILY,
No. 50. No. 52.
Lv. Atlanta, C. RR 7 20a tn 4 10 p m
Ar Grillin “ 8 20a nt COO “
“ Williamson, G. M. Ry.. 1124 “ 1:34 “
“ Warm Springs “ ... 10 27 “ 801 “
“ Columbus “ .... 1155 “ 958 “
“ Ihi wson C. S. Ry 2 17 p m
“ Albany, “ 305 “
“ Thomasville, S. P. A - W. 6 10 “
Through Coach on trains Nos. 50 and 53 ba
twai n Columbus and Atlanta.
Ask tot tickets to Columbus and poinst
South over Georgia Midland and Gulf It. R.
M. E. Gray Supt.
Clifton James, Gen. Pass. Agent.
Hare, Pope A: Dewberry,
MANAGERS,
MONTGOMERY, - - - ALABAMA.
C [7” Both Schools and Teachers in constant
tl< ihiiikl. S< Ii«»o!s Furnished with Teachers
ITEF <»i’< <»S'J. T« ;ich<-is Aided in Securing
Schools al Small Cost. School Property Rent*
cd and Sold.
NOW IS THE TIME.
KiP'Send for circulars. apr7tt
Moo, llm Tailor.
SPRING ANNOUNCEMENT!
Ihnvo received avast assortment of hand
some PIECE GOODS for Spring and Summet
wear, and cordially invito my pa trona und the
public to call and inspect my line.
You Ci.ui Save,
Money jiixcl Get
3'lie
I gunrantce the quality of my goods, tho ma
terial used in making and the style and fit,
also a SAVING to each and every customer,
CP'Cull on Elston, the Tailor; See nil
goods and place your order lor a
NEW SPUING SUIT.
3 East Alabama St,,
ATLANTA, CA.
7