Newspaper Page Text
THE ALBANY NEWS.
OIjD SERIES-Vol. 37. >
'SFCEtZE-
ALBANY. GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 2f>. 1880.
^ NEW SERIES—Vol. 14, No. 30.
THAT I AM STTT*I«
HEABQiARTEBS
For the Splendid Light-running
nber, mIso, that I carry a splendid stock of
General Merchandise,
Fine Liquors, Tobaccos, Cigars, etc.
I Call andjtrice my goods before baying elsewhere.
Very respectfully.
K. S. STEPHENS.
January 22, iSSO-Csa
LAWYERS
Z. J. ODOM,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ALBAST, GA.
Collections, large or small, a specialty. Will at*
lend promptly to all business entrusted to bis care.
W. T- JONES, JESSE W. WALTERS.
JONES & WALTERS,
Attorneys at Law,
ALBANY. GA.
Ofice orcr Centra’ Railroad Bank.
P»IS-ly
Lott Warr en,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
;ALEANT. OA.
DOCTORS*
J.r. HOLMES. W. it. I'EMOSS
Dre. Holmes & DeMoss,
A LEANT,
iV. A. STROTHER, M. D.
ALBANY. GEORGIA.
Office oyer Gilbert's Drg Store.
AU orders left at the Drug Store will receive prompt
Dr. E. W. AIiFRIETJD,
* rious btSoAea o# bis profession, V* the ritixens
‘ arroundinga*
• Fine street.
M Albany and surrounding country. Ofice opposite
HOTELS
The Old Reliable
BARNES HOUSE,
rise SI., Albany, Ga„
THE JOHNSON HOUSE,
SMITHVILLE, OA.
Is the place to stop and get a GOOD,
SQUARE MEAL.
MARKET SQUARE,
MTAHHAB, GA.
Bates $1.30 to $2.00 per day, according
to location of rooms.
JOSEPH HERSGHBACH,
April 29,1880—ly. PROPRIETOR
J. W. JOINER,
WATCHMAKER and JEWELER
LOCATED AT
W. II. Gilbert, Ag’t, & Co.,
BROAD STREET.
A BIT OF LOGIC.
HY ROSA DKAIIAM.
Baby Berry sat at tlio table
On the great Thanksgiving day.
Oaring down upon the platter
When- the well browned turkey lay;
Berry’s first Thanksgiving dinner—
tVhat did all this wee beginner f
"Don’t you like it, deart” I said!
Baby Berry raised her bead.
Oped her blue eyes big and solemn,
"Does ’on dink,” the answer s|>ed,
"It was wight to kill the turkey?
Don't seem wiglit at all to me,
'Pause—” but our merry peals of laughter
Drowned Iter wonts; and slinniedly
This rare-hearted young beginner
l*ieked at her tadated dinner;
Sudden looked, in smiling mood.
Up fn>m her diminished food.
And said: "I dess ’twits wight to klil
him
Or lie wouldn’t baste so dond!”
Wide Awake.
AND JEWELRY’*
STOCK COMPLETE!
Repairing a Specialty !
i mlieit—1.
F.b Is, lAW-Ull B«< a
J. w. jojnkh-
Statc and General Nw*.
Miss Aildie Cox, of Savannah, is dead.
Atlanta is sure of 40,000 population.
Savannah's population it is thought
will reafli 37,000.
A railroad from Darien to Savannah is
being talked of.
Cotton and writ in Cherokee county
arc unusually tine.
The Coffee Comity Gazette favors Hon.
II. G. Turner for Congress.
The Savannah yacht club are having a
delightful cruise this week.
Hon. Titos. Ilanleman made a line
Speech in Newman last Saturday.
Jolly, the murderer of Victoria Norris,
is still in DeKalb jail.
Joe Donalson killed David Strickland
last week; both respected citizens of De
catur county.
The University of New York lias con
ferred the degree of L. L. D. upon lion.
Charles C. Jones, of Augusta.
A colored seliool teacher was knocked
down anil brutally assaulted by a tiegrp
man near Savannah the other day.
Savannah has had an exhibition of the
electric light. The Morning News build
ing was distinctly seen from Fort Jackson,
live miles down the river.
A negro nurse iu Augusta, who slap
ped a white child was sent to jail for
twenty days.
Atlanta will have a grand display of
tire-works, and a big time geiicrlly oil
the 4th.
It lias been predicted by some one in
Pennsylvania that the pine/orests w ill all
tiecn consumed iu twenty years. It
would take just about twenty times
twenty years to exhaust the pine licit in
Georgia.
Work was begun on the Way cross anil
Jacksonville Railroad on Monday lost.
It will lie completed on January 1st,
1880.
Mr. Bryan Norman, ofCo'quitt county,
lias sheared 4,000 head of sheep this sea
son, the wool averaging three pounds to
the sheep.
Gov. Colquitt spoke in Perry on the
19th. His speech was enthusiastically
received.
A DuPont man while out fishing the
other day in the Alapaha river saw a
snake ten inches iu diameter, twenty
feet long, with a head like a lion, short
■ars and long, bushy hair, hanging over
between liis eyes and extending back on
its neck. Strong whisky, that.
We regret to learn that Dr. II. II.
'arieton, editor of the Athens Banner, is
seriously ill with erysipelas. We liojie
soon to hear of his complete recovery.
Brunswick,s new hotel lias been com
menced. It will have fifty' apartments
cost $10,000, and lie an ornament to the
i-ity. Let Albany take similar steps, it
would redound infinitely to lier benefit.
The steamship city of Macon carried
from Savannah to New York on Satur
day 12,102 watermelons, 03 turtles and
1,089 boxes anil barrels of vegetables.
A train hand on the Macon and Mont
gomery railroad, found in the ears a
pocket book containing $4,120. He turn
ed it over to the authorities, and when
the owner. recovered it be ordered $100
paid to the honest finder.
“J. II. P.” writes to the Madison (Fla)
Recorder that there is a cotton stalk in
field on Lemons place in Madison county
which had three hundred boils, ten blos
soms and five open bolls on it on Wed
nesday morning last. The first blossoms
appeared on the 4tli day of March. He
may well ask: “Can this lie beat.
The Dade county Gazette complains
that favoritism is shown to some of the
convicts at the mines. It says: “We
understand that Ed Cox, the slayer of
Alston, lias not, up to this time, been
dressed in the garb of a convict, but is
still permitted to wear his usual dress.—
Why is this? Is lie to be allowed to go
scot-free while other convicts have to
wear the stripped suit? Two convicts
were sent to the camp at Cole eity but a
short time ago, anil on arriving one
compelled to submit to the striped suit,
while the other was not. We don’t
think this Is right, ns the State has, hy
law, provided a suit for convict*. We
think the principal keejieroftlie jiciiitcn-
tiary should see that each and every eon
viet is provided with the suit. We don’t
know who is,res|s>nsihle for this distinc
tion being made in the rase of Cox, hilt
we are satisfied that it is violation of the
law.
All Sorts
A journalistic fight—a paper mill.
Bowleil robbery—cheating lit ten
pins.
Can a black Greenhacker bo re
garded as liiinian ?
A man may smile and smile anil
continue to smile, and he n temper
ance orator.
"No, ma’iii,” said a grocer to an ap
plicant for credit, “I wouldn’t trust
my own feelings.”
You may try to beguile flics with
fly paper, but you’ll find that they’ll
stick to molasses.
Oh, pa I” cried a little fellow upon
seeing n trout for the first lime, "it’s
got the measles, hasn’t it?’’
A wag said of an egotistical writer,
“Somebody should take pity on his
readers anil put out his l’s.”
A St. Louis lady who was gradua
ted at Vassar tried to send it band
box bv telegraph the other day.
“I’tn not ilciiyiii’ that women arc
foolish; God Almighty made them
to match flic men.”—Adam liedc.
What is the worst thing about
riches?” asked the Sunday seliool su
perintendent, anil the new hoy an
swered and said: “Their scarcity.”
At a camp-meeting last summer a
venerable sister begnn the by mil:
‘•Jly soul be on thy guard;
Ten thousand foes arise.”
She began too high. “ I’cn thousand,"
she screeched, and stopped. “Start
tier at live thousand I” cried a con
verted stock broker present.
The people extracted some amuse
ment from the late Republican Con
vention, but the antics of the Green-
backers arc very much funnier.
The country will breathe easier
since Grant has expressed himself as
satisfied. Had he been dissatisfied
what would become of us all ?
A census enumerator got a terrible
whipping in Pittsburg because lie
pressed an Irish woman for an an
swer to the question, “Aro you white
or black ?”
The proprietor of a Louisville hone
factory announces that persons leav
ing their hones with him can have
them ground at short notice.
It is announced that the forthcom
ing volume of the “Encyclopa-dia
Iiriltanuicn” will extend from "Go”
to “lie.” It is a lively volume Unit
starts from the word “Go.”
Professor—“What is tlic fundamen
tal condition of existence?” Student
“Time.” Professor—“Ilow do you
explain that?” Student—“Very easi
ly. Ilow can a person exist if lie has
not time for it?”
“The men war ’cute enough to
count the corns in a bag o’ wheat wi’
only smelling at it. They can see
througli a barn door, they ran. Per
haps that’s the reason they can sec so
little o’ this side on’t.”—Adam Bede.
A woman hearing the sufferings of
our Pilgrim fathers, elaborately pop-
>ed up and inquired : “What of our
’ilgrim mothers? They had to bear
all this and the Pilgrim fathers be
sides.”
“Johnnie,” said a systematic anil in
dulgent father, “yon have greatly of
fended me, and 1 shall bn compelled
to pnnish you; but, as I never do
anything rashly, I will give you time
to prepare yourself. At what hour
will you be ready ?” “Well, gover
nor, answered the youth of much
classical development, “if you can
make it convenient to meet me at the
'ymimsimn at about 3 p. m., I think
" can give you an energetic inter
view.”
“No,” she said, as she sipped the
cream it would take bis last dime to
■ay for—“I never eat cake myself,
nit ina says she is getting awful
hungry for a piece of my wedding
cake.”
It was a bold, brash census man,
Approached a lady true;
“Ilow many kids?” said lie,
And she said,
“What is that to yon ?”
“It is my business,”
And she screamed,
“Come here a minute, Dan!”
And a burly person came and put
A head on the census man.
A sad-iooking young man went in
to a drug store. “Can you give me,”
lie asked, “something that will drive
from my mind the thoughts of sorrow
and biticr rccolcctions?” And the
druggist nodded, and put him up a
little dose of quinine and wormwood
and rhubarb and cpsom salts anil n
dash of castor oil and gave it to him,
and for six months the man couldn’t
think of anything in the world ex
cept new schemes for getting the
taste out of his mouth.
Don’t Know Garfield.—Very
few of the colored people know any
thing about Garfield, and are dispos
ed to regard his election over Grant
as a personal grievance. We heard
two colored men—prominent Repub
licans—say yesterday that if Seymour
was nominated by the Democrats they
would vote for him. The prospect is
that tlic Republican ticket will re
ceive a very light vote in the South
as the Republican party here is com
posed almost altogether of colored
men, and it will be impossible to
arouse much enthusiasm among them
for Garfield.—Augusta Chronicle.
Ned Shutter thus explains ids rea
sons for preferring to wear stockings
witli holes to having them darned :
“A bole,” said lie, “may be the acci
dent of a day, and, as such, will pass
on the best of gentlemen ; but a clam
is premeditated poverty.”
Uassi|i of tin; Stage.
American variety performer* are
becoming aluiiidaiii iu Europe.
Miss Rosa Rami will lie Joe Jeffer
son’s scolding Gretclieu next season.
Gus Mortimer will manage Fanny
Davenport’s '.'ombiiialiiin next sea
son.
Kelly and Leon have a prosperous
opera house ill Sydney, New South
Wales.
Itiibsou k Crane will begin their
next season at. the Standard in New
Yolk city, November 8tb.
Miss Ada Ilyas is reported among
tlic coming combination stars with a
new play by Jnai|tiiu Miller.
F. C. Bangs will travel with J. C.
Collier’s Banker’s Daughter combi
nation next season in place of Louis
James.
John Brougham was one of the
founders of the American Dnimntic
Fund Association, and was its first
secretary during 1813,181!) and 1850.
Miss Marian Mordaunt has a new
comedy-drama for next season : “Our
Biddy.” It is from the pen of Mrs.
Emma Favlor, daughter of the late
Laura Keene.
It is to be hoped this thing will be
settled some time. A cable from Ba
ris states that Sarah Berpliardt lias
accepted an engagement for one hun
dred nights in the United Stales to
begin next November.
Adelaide Neiison lias begun an en
gagement at San Francisco. She is
reported as saying, when asked wliat
site was going to wear, since she hud
sold her stage wardrobe by auction
in New York: “O, that was only a
lot of cast off duds.”
While George Riggnolil was late
ly displaying bis muscle on a pranc
ing while charger iu “ilcnry V,” at
the Queen's theatre, London', a trap
gave way ami horse and rider disap
peared in an instant, much to tiic as
tonishment of all present. George,
however, came before the curtain
shortly after, aud satisfied the au
dience that he at least was “bail
right.”
Theatrical matters in New York
city just now arc about ns dull|usthcy
can be, but tlio Evening Post report’s
tiiat Union Square swarms with ac
tors and managers making engage
ments and arranging dates for next
season. The date question calls for
no amazing amount of of diplomacy
and foresight owing to tlic extraor
dinary number of traveling combi
nations in process of formation.
Edgar Fawcett lias completed anew
play, of which the scene is laid in
Virginia at tlic time of the battle of
Antictani. It is reported to have
been submitted to the Union Square
Theatre management. lie lias also
a drama iu blank verse, entitled
“Arnold anil Andre,” dated, of course
at the Revolutionary period, and to
be intended for Mary Anderson, and
a farcical comedy, which may, it is
said, be offered to the Park Theatre.
JUNE.
THE MONTH WHICH SHOULD UK DKDICA'
TED TO MAKS.
June has been pre-eiiiinoullv
moiitli of battles, and not a few day*
in it seems to have been specially set
apart for hard lighting, two, and even
three great battles frequently occur
ring on (lie sumo day. On the 1st
Lord Howe defeated and almost de
stroyed the French fleet in 171)4, and
Napoleon left Paris to begin the fatal
. campaign of 1815. One of Admiral
Blake’s hardest sea fights with the
Van Tromp commenced on the 3rd,
and was prolonged during the whole
of the 4th, ending at length in the
complete triumph of the British flag.
The French capture of the Mamclon
earthworks at Sebastopol, one of the
most gallant exploits of the great
siege, was achieved on (lie 7tli. Tlio
10th gives to Russia Hie double hon
or of Napoleon’s defeat at lleilsburg
ill 1807, amt the capture of Khiva, in
1873. The 14lli lias the two-fold re
nown of Cromwell's final defeat of
Charles First at Ntischy, and Napo
leon’s equally decisive overthrow of
the Russian army at Fried land. On
the same day occurred the less im
portant, though hard fought battle of
Ranh, where Napoleon defenled the
Austrians in 180!). On the sixteenth
V ivhicli consequently witnessed l lie
outbreak of the war of l8I(i) Napole
on gained Die battle of Lignv over
Riuelicr, and Marshal Ney indecis
ively attacked tlic English' at Quatrc
Bras. The I7th has the far higher
glory ol Bunker Hill, Waterloo, Fred
erick the Great defealud hy the Aus
trians at Kolin and 1 he British re
pulse before llie Redan, at Sebastopol,
have immortalized tlic ISlh. On the
loth Italy joined the coalition of 18Wi
against Austria. The great victory
of Plasscv, by which Lord Clive, de
feating with 3.000 men a force of
more than 00,000, made England tlic
mistress of India, was gained on the
23il. Tlic 24th marks the passage of
llie Nicinan by Napoleon iulS12: the
25th, Hie Italian defeat nt Custozza in
lSfiti; tlic 2UHi, the commencement of
tlic famous “seven days before Rich
mond,” in 18C2, and the invasion ot
Denmark by the Prussians in 1874;
tlic 28th, the capture of Siilistria by
tlic Russians, alter a gallant resist
ance, in 182!). To this long list must
still be added tlic earlier tragedies of
tlic Indian mutiny, several of the
hardest battles of the Crimean war,
and more than one of those which
decided the fate of Northern Bulga
ria in 1877.
Laws of the Land
BILLS WHICH WENT TIIROUOH CONURESS
AT ITS RECENT SESSION.
To provide for holding an interna
tional exhibition at New York in
1883; Hie Carlisle internal revenue
bill; authorizing an allowance for
ioss hy leakage of spirits withdrawn
from distillery warehouses for ex
portation ; for the relief of settlers
on public lauds; abolishing tolls on
the Louisville ami Portland Canal;
for tlic construction of a marine hos
pital at Memphis; appropriating
$750,000 for a public building at Pitts
burg; appropriating $200,000 for
posts on the Rio Grande frontier; ap
propriating $50,000 to complete Hie
survey of tlic Gettysburg battle field;
to introduce cotton cordage iu tlic
navy ; to provide for Hie Yorktown
centennial; for negotiations witli cer
tain foreign governments relative to
the importation of tobacco; increas
ing tlic pensions of wholly disabled
soldiers and sailors; to raUfy tlic
agreement with tlic Utcs; to amend
the statutes in regard to the immedi
ate transportations of dutiable goods;
relating to timber trespasses com
mitted prior to March 1, 1879; to
amend Hie statutes concerning min
eral lands; for the payment of claims
of citizens of loyal States for stores
furnished tlio Government; for the
payment of the awards of tlic South
ern Claim Commission ; to carry into
effect the French claims treaty: for
the rc-paymcnt of fees paid on void
entries of public lands; laws for the
elief of parties who have made con
tracts to deliver cut hoop prior to a
certain date. The amount appropri
ated during the session aggregated
about $180,000,000.
Mr. Alfred Tennyson is mentioned
as receiving $1,500 for “Dc Proftin-
dis,” his poem of sixty-five lines re
cently published in tlic nineteenth
century.
Last year a jury gave Gibson his
freedom partly bccanso lie had been
a good soldier, and ostensibly on tlic
ground of temporary insanity. And
now Currie, after having committed
a cold-blooded, dastardly, brutal
murder, is turned Scot-free, with his
ungovernable “insanity,” to wreak
his crazy fury on some other innocent,
unsuspecting creature. Wc do most
sanguine!}* hope that the next victim
who fails beneath tlic blight of such
cursed ruffianism and brutality will
lie one who will strike home to tlio
jurors who found them “not guilty.”'
The Dark Horse.
Columbus Times.]
A subscriber wants to know the
origin of tlic term “a dark horse,”
when applied to a certain person who
is comparatively unknown, hut sub
sequently wins ill a contest.
“A dark horse” Is an expression
borrowed from the turf. It is ap-
qilieil to horses which have been
trained so jirivatcly that their capac
ity was unknown to the public, and
Hie secrets of the stable confined to
Hie owner and trainer until the day
of the race. The fast runs and trials
would he given iu the night, and the
reatest precautions taken that no
one had nu inkling of Ids real pow
ers. In England time is not recog
nized as giving an actual measure
ment. anil the “dark horse” is tried
with some well-known public per
former, and the adjustment of the
weigiits only known to those ill the
secret. This gives them the cue
without Hie jockey being aware of
the relative powers of tlic contest
ants. The object is to keep the ani
mal down in the betting, so that a
small investment may win a large
amount. Iu America the time in
which a certain distance is run in
with specific weights is held to he a
more reliable test, and extraordinary
pains arc taken hy the acute ones to
hide the powers of the animal should
they he such as to give a fair prospect
of success, and midnight trials, though
more frequently just before day
break, would he the time selected.—
Hence the horse’s powers were kept
iu the dark and Hie knowledge guar
ded until the actual race disclosed it.
A Gi rl on Boys.
Boys arc not like girls; they arc
different. A hoy likes to spin a lop,
fly a kite, or ride a horse, or go fish
ing; hut if von call it work, then
they won’t unless they are whipped.
I don’t think it would he fun to go
fishing and full in the creek and not
get out. and drown, and have your
mother say you had been in swim
ming, though I expect they can swim
as well as hoys, if they know how.—
A turtle can swim faster than a boy,
hut a dogfish can beat them both.—
Dogfishes arc not good to cat, but a
dog can bite better than a fish.
Boyslike to go with girls; when
they don’t go with them, it is because
they don’t want to, not because they
can’t. Boys like to kiss girls. One
kissed me once; I see lots of girls
here that would like to be kis9c<l, but
they must not all depend on—well, I
won’t say now. Somebody in this
town told me it was no fun to kiss a
girl when her mother was looking.—
I said: “Did you ever try it ?” Ho
said: “Yes.”
When hoys get ma.u-ied, they gen
erally marry a girl; though I have
known some old hoys who marry a
girl’s mother. I guess that was be
cause tlio mother was willing and the
girl wasn’t.
If 1 hadn’t been a girl, I guess I’d
been a hoy. If I was a hoy I would
like the girls. My ma calls me a
tomboy sometimes,hiiltomhoys don’t
like tlic girls. That's all I know
about hoys.
WILLIAMS & WATSON
GENERAL
126*, Bay Street,
SAVANNAH, GA.
April 29, 1880-ly.
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
GREEK m DRIED FRUITS.
‘/V)
^'An'UTS,
o# V&
VAhaisins, etc.\0
<&/ Vo
Is. B. REEDYV)
'GROCER AND IMPORTER,\
SAVACTSTAM, - •* fJA.
FOB SALE
OR
RENT!
LARGE TWO-ROOMED
STORE HOUSE
AT
Arlington, Georgia.
APPLY TO
A. W. TURNER,
LEARY, GA.
GENTLEMEN'S AND YOUTH’S
FASHIONS
—AT—
D. W. PRICE’S
TAILORING
EstaMisItment,
(Over Central Railroad Bank.)
Please call and examine Sam
pics, Plates and Patterns.
No Bogus Material!
Good, Honest Work!
D. W. PRICE,
Merchant Tailor.
Albtnr, August 28, 1879-tf
LIME! LIME 1
Lower Price than ever. SUM) per Barrel. Use It as
Disinfectant.
Bricklayers, Plasterer*, White washer*, etc., should
ill on me for the very beat article, either Ity lettc
r In person.
I. J. BRINSON,
Jul/l* Albany, Ga.
Savannah, Florida atid West
ern Railway.
Gimit KiXAon’fl Ornnc,
Savannah, May 23,1879
O N and after SUNDAY, May 23nl. Passenger
l'raina on this Road will run aa tollvwa:
NIG LIT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at u ... WMM ».. M ... 4:30 p m
ArrlveatJi
Arrive at Thotnaavllls
** Bainbridge
•* Albany
“ Live Oak
•• Tallahassee
*• Jacksonville
Leave Tallahassee
Leave Jacksonville
•* Live Oak
•• aI bany
•• Rain bridge
“ Tiiomasvifle
•• Jesup
Arrive at Savannah
............ 7 2d
....— 620 a a
- 9X0 -
—.1025 -
£00 -
7:00 -
750 -
...... 6:30 -
11:15 *
400 “
4** «
7 A0 -
6.30am
9.00 -
No change of can between Savannah and Jack
sonvllle and Savannah and Albany.
Pullman Palace Bleeping Can daily between Sa
vannah and Jacksonville.
Sleeping cars run through to aud from Savannah
and Albany.
The elegant Sleeping and Parlor Coaches of the
Eufaula line daily between Montgomery, Ala., and
Jacksonville, without change.
Passengers from Savannah for Fernandina
Gainesville and Cedar Keys take this train.
Paaeei-gerv for Darien take this train.
Passengers from Savannah for Brunswick take
thia train, arriving at Brunswick 6:00. a iu*
Passengers leave Brunswick at ftO0 p ui, arrive aft
Savannah 9:00 a tu.
Passengers leaving Macon at 7:15 a. n« (dall con
nect at Jesup with this train for Floilda-
Passengers from Florida by this train connect at
Jesup with train arriving in Macon at 625 p. m.
'daily), except Sunday.
Connect at Albany daily with Passenger trains both
ways on Southwestern Railroad to and from Eufaula
Macon, Montgomery Mobil*, Hew Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leaves Bain bridge for Apalachicola
-ivery Sunday aud Thursday evening; for Columbus
every Tuesday aud Saturday afternoon
dose connection at Jacksonville dally (Sundays
exreptcd) for Green Cove springs, St. Augustine,
Palatka, Enterprise, and all landings on 8t John's
river.
Trains on B A A leave junction, going west, at
11-37 a m, and for Brunswick 4:40 p tu, daily, except
Sunday.
Through Tickets sold and Sleeping Car Berths se
cured at Bren's Ticket Office, No. 22 Bull Street, and
at Savannah, Florida and Western Hallway Passen
ger lH.*pol.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN—EASTERN DIVIS
ION.
Leave Savannah, Sundays accepted, at 7.-00 a m
" *• 9:40 am
- r.-.su pm
4 305 pm
7:00 p m
Leave Blarkshear **
Arrive at Du)iont **
Leave Dupont H
l*eave Blackshear **
Leave Jesup H
Leave McIntosh **
Arrive at Savannah •'
WESTERN DIVISION.
M fcJO a m
•• 9A0 am
'* 1:00 pm
9:45 a m
12.-00 m
Leave Tbomasville Mondays. Wcdnerdays
and Fridays at .——— 2 30 p ns
Leave Camilla Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays 523 p m
Arrive at Albany Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays at 7:15 n m
Leave Albany Mondays, Wednesdays and
days aud Fridays at 1120 a a
Leave ThomasvIUe (Sundays excepted) ......1:45 p m
Leave Quitman M “ ..... 353 pm
Leave Valdosta M M ......3:15 p m
Arrive at Dupont “ “ .... .720 p m
J S Tyson, Master Transportation.
H.S HAINES,
General Manager.
Central & Southwestern R. R.
O N and after SUNDAY; Dec. 14th, 1879, paasen.
ger trains on the Central and Southwestern
Railroads will run aa follows:
. TRAIN NO I—GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leaves Savannah---—..—920 a m
Leaves Augusta —. . 930 a m
Arrives at Augusta,....—. «... 4:45 p m
Arrives at Macon— 6:45 p m
Leaves Macon for Atlanta.. 8:15 pm
Arrives at Atlanta 3:50 a m
Making < lose connection at Atlanta with Western
and Atlantic and Atlanta and Charlotte Air-Line
for all points West and North.
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Leaves Atlanta — 11:40 p m
Arrives at M>coo„..... MMNHHHn .......... m .. M 620 a m
Leaves Macon 7:00 a m
A rrircs at Mil ledge ville...........—— 9:44 a m
Arrives at Eaton ton.. 1120 a m
Arrives at Augusta...-.- ........................... 4:45 p m
. 3:45 pm
TRAIN NO. 2-GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leaves Savannah T ——. 720 p m
Arrives at Augusta.
Leaves Augusta ——
Arrives at MilledgevIUe
Arrives at Eatonton—
Arrives at Macon..
— 9:44 a m
11:30 a in
8:00 n tu
8:40 a
1:15 pm
Leaves Macon for Albany and Eufaula...— 835 « m
Arrives at Eufaula.—— ——— 3:42 p m
Arrives at Albany - 325 p m
Leaves Macon for Columbus.—— 9M a m
Arrives at Columbus— — 3.-00 p m
Trains on this schedule for Macon, Atlanta, Co
lumbus, Eufaula. Albany and Augusta daily, mak
ing close connection at Atlanta with Western and
Atlantic and Atlanta and Charlotte Air-Line At
Eulaula with Montgomery and Kufaala Railroad; at
daily (except Sunday), and at Cuthbert tor Fort
Gaines daily, (except Sunday.)
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Leaves Atlanta — 2:15 p m
Arrives at Maoon from Atlanta—— 6:5pm
Leaves Albany - li Nam
Leaves Eufaula -.1127 a m
Arrives at Macon from Eufaula A Albany-. 638 p m
Leaves Macon—,
Arrives at Savannah-——. — 7:15 am
Passengers for Milledgeville and Eatonton will
take train No. 2 from Savannah, and train No. 1
from Savannah, which trains connect daily, except
Monday, for these points.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars to Boston via Au
gusta, Columbia, Charlotte and Richmond, on 7.30
p. m. train.
Passengers from .Sonthwestern Georgia take sleep
er Macon to Augusta on 7:35 n. m., connecting with
Pullman Sleeper to Boston without change.
TRAINS ON BLAKELY EXTENSION.
Leave Albany Mondays, Tuesdays, Thurs
days ami Fridays——— 4 10 pm
Arrive at Arlington Mondays, Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Friday*-———— 621 p a
Leave Arlington Tuesdays, Wednesdays,
Fridays and Saturdays.—.—,— 7:40 n m
Arrive at Albany Tuesdays, Wednesdays,
Fridays and Saturdays—.— 10." 0am
E. H. Smith, WILLIAM ROGERS.
Gen. Ticket Agt., Gen. Supt. C- R. R, Savannah.
J. C. Shaw, W. G. RAOUL,
GenTrav. Agt. Sunt. S. W. R. R^ Macon
sept4-3m
0. J. FARRINGTON,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
Merdiant Tailoring EstalilislimeDt
In iruiingham.s Bulhllne, upstair*. Will cut and
make Coats, Pants aod Vests In first-class style and
heap as any house in the State.
made right away. Restwctfully,
O. J. FARRINGTON.