Newspaper Page Text
The Weokly Democrat,
Ben. S. Bussell,
B. X- Johnston,
Editor.
Associate
• THURSDAY, JUNE la. 1873.
The Bainbridge Sun is sore over the
election of Mr. Lowe as President of
tbe B. C. & C. Railroad.—Keep cool.
Mr. Sun. When Mr. Lowe shows that
hp is not the right man, then will be
thne enough to raise objections. Your
“friend and brother” had the first show
ing and foiled, and we believe the change
tfill prove a judicious, one. At least it
is so regarded in these parts.— Cuthhert
Appeal.
yte copy above, not for tbe purpose
pf raising a quarrel with our esteemed
Contemporary, but, as the friend of the
B. C. <k C. R. R-, for the purpose of
palling its attention to the impropriety
and great injustice of that part of its
article which is evidently intended as a
“fling” at the gentleman who has done
more for the road, except in the leap oj
breaking it do'm, than many, many others
have. We deprecated the article of the
“Sun” and replied to it in our last issuej
and deprecate thatpartof the“Appeal’s”
which we have referred to. Let’s have
no more such “stuff,” for we want the
road. But right here we say to the
“Sun” and'“Appeal” that our only hope
pf the construction of the B. C- & C.
R. R. is in harmony of action of the
people along its line—kick up the devil
and get everybody from Atlanta to
Bainbridge mad, and our word for it,
the whole “shebang” won’t be worth
pne year’s subscription to the Democrat.
Keep in a good humor and make friends
for t,hp road—then, we may hope to see
Bainbridge, Cuthbert and Columbus
United by rail
Concerning the Empty Buro Drawers-.
V- B. Lowe, the New President of
the Bainbridge, Cuthbert and Co
lumbus R. R.
We have always felt a sincere in
terest in the buildigg ol this road,
says the Atlanta Herald. All the
original projectors were our person-
al Iriendg. We also, know that they
would have succeeded, but for the
sudden breakiug down, of those they
depended on foi’-credit. Tdmlin and
HQJve and Atkins, and Bruton,*have
done all they could do, and if sue-
qess has not crowned their efforts
the fault was not theirs. Still, they
tyavq, n£ver lost fiuth and as
their first and great object was to
build the road, even if they could
qQt reap the honor, they have been
ready at aU times to, give way to
others whp might command- large
means and greater facilities.for car
rying out this purpose. In this spir
it the late President,- B, P. Bruton,
has retired: and the directors, and
stockholders unanimously elected W.
B. Lp.wc, of this city, to the Presi
dency. Thp fact that Mr. Lowjj has
decided-to.accept the office, gives
t,he highest assurance that the road
will be built- We now predict that
in less than three months from 1 he
day that this gentleman takes charge
and-,gets.fairly in harness that the
people along the line will hear the
whistle of the locomotive.
Mr. Lowe is. an eminently practi
cal and successful business man. He
has acquired a fortune by attending
to his.own business. While he, no
doubt, felt, gratified at the trust and
Confidence reposed in him by his be
ing selected, without his knowledge
or solicitation, to the Presidency, he
is a man of too much caution and
good senso to take hold of a - public
enterjtflse that wouM end in failure.
Captain Jack and Gen Grant, a la
Victor Hugo! Two chiefs of two dy
nasties. One the dynasty of progress,
t}ie other of tradition. One of an idea,
the othfr of a dream. One a hero on
a dissolving bubble, the other a toad on
the crest of a.pyramid; This dwarfing
his circumstances,by his individuality;
* that, .on the bosom of bis fortunes, re
sembling a monkey riding upon the
smokestack of a locomotive—Grant at
’ Long Branch and Jac.k in his lava beds.
Crowding superfluity into the fullness of
the pleasures of his life, the one buys
with a nation’s wealth; contesting
against forty millions people the naked
right to live as a rude savago, the other
has no exchange to offer the world for
its forbearance, and can only count upon
a right which the Maker of the world
gave him. Grant, the invader, presi
ded, over the slaughter of tens of thous-
• and* of men.upon their own patrimony;
Jack, the defender of his home., has
slaughtered one hundred men who en
deavored to despoil him. The Presi
dent of the United States; the defeat
ed, captured and executedsavage—preg
nant antithesis! Indeed,’tis.a regular
jackass antithesis, Jack being Jack and
a8s - The antipodes unite.
’Tio T. V • , , _
Tis done. Jack in beat dead, and G rant
jf dead-beat The world, is a force.
Coe the victim of circumstance, and
tne other not a circumstance to his vie-
Courier Journal.
De Buro of abandoned niggers and
stolen lands, according to the War De
partment, goes out in a blaze of glory
leaving claims for bounties to negro sol
diers unpaid to the amount of seven
hundred and thirty thousand dollars
for which we presume de buro held the
fund^ hesides a large amount of debts
claimed by and credited to them as paid
which prove never to have been paid at
all.
The Department of War wants to
know of the Department of Justice,
whether the saintly 0. 0. Howard can
be held responsible for this immense
vacuum in de buro funds, absolutely or
relatively! We should say not—deci
dedly not 1 Quite out of the question.
A man of such angelic pretentions—
such odorous sanctity—such nasal elo
quence—such uplifting of the hands
and upraising of the voice in psalmody,
is not to be mixed up in these earthly
matters of money.
The best way will be to close de hooks
ob de buro—jest shet ’em up,, and con
sider it closing the accounts—and send
them on. to New York and file them
away with the aeounts of the. “Book
Concern,” and get the Bishops to pray
over ’em.
Brother Howard is right. He knew
that if he paid over all that bounty
money to the darkies, they would have
spent it in sinful pleasures long ago,
and it was better to keep it for ’tin.
There never was a man born in Amer
ica so fond of the darkies as brother
Howard is. He loves every “indevid-
gle” hundred dollars of ’em, like
Squeers, so as nothing can equal it, and
he probably carries out this feeling by
retaining a /reep-sake out of the pock
ets of every darkey he ever came across.
Talk of responsibility to aim! Speak
rather of sensibility. Would you
wring his heart by doubt ? by distrust ?
by insisting on a cold, unfeeling bal
ance sheet in respect unto these sacred
deposits of philanthropy and affection ?
Is this the kind return to Howard? Are
these the thanks we owe ?
The career of the “Freedmen’s Buro
of abandoned niggers,” has been unex
ampled. As an institution tunning en
tirely outside the Constitution, for the
alleged benefit of ginger bread, colored
widows suddenly extemporized by free
dom and the Federal army, we never
heard; of any “national” organization
to be compared with it. either for spend
ing money, peeping school, preaching,
frolicking and mixing up things . gen
erally. The New England suspicion
that slavery was a legalized system of
concubinage, inspired al} the apostles
and heralds of freedom with a natural
curiosity to solve their doubts and mis
trust on its ruins, and they did it fully.
Consequently, de buro was the oldest
conglomerate of inconsistent facts and
incoherent doings that mind of man ev
er conceived—that the practice of man
ever pursued—or the laws of man ever
established. But at the bottom of ajl
was a solid substratum of gain, if not
godliness. Do buro was a mine of
wealth, as well as of pleasure; and if
the buro man neglected the fun, it would
be injustice to suppose he ever slighted
the profits. .
Thus perhaps, while the United Stafes
government might have been the great
est sufferer, and furnished the richest
and most exhaustless vein in the dig
ging, there were other places which
turned out abundant nuggets, large and
small. The “rebels” could be bled by
fine to their last hidden dollar on com
plaint of any nigger for “sass words,”
or unadjusted claims, and as de buro
was court as well as camp, proceedings
were summary—execution, issued in two
moments, and fines and costs poured in.
To interrupt a negro stealingyou^chici-.
ens in those days was a matter of five
hundred dollars. " •
But if the whi :es were worked for
de buro, so were the negroes. The nig
ger’s mite was never despised. All
helped along the great cause of “na
tional regeneration,” and swelled the
glories and gains of de buro.
At the head of this gorgeous concern
—supreme ac\ong negroes; terrible
among whites; drawing rivers of mon
ey from Washington and rivulets from
everybody; the embodiment of civil
and religious authority; Grand Panjan-
dum of school-room, kitchen, e.hureh.
parlor and harem; the centre of all au
thority in. all matters from a “sass word”
to the highest questions of property,
law or religion; Howard stood forth
resplendant. unapproachable; the head
alite’of church and State; the grand
embodiment of “an advanced civiliza
tion.” Will the War Department now
bring down such a njan to the cold and
belittling formality of a balance sheet
and squaring of accounts.? Shade of
the mighty Pecksniff, forbid it!—Tel. d-
Mess.
“Died a fighting Bill Jones,” was the
verdict ot a coroner’s juiy over an In
dian Territorv man.
Habits of New York Easiness Xen.
Notwithstanding the frauds, pecula
tions and dishonesties of men connect
ed with our financial institutions, the
criminal neglect of some Presidents
and Directors of banks, there is a long
line of officials who maintain the old
honesty and the old industry which
marked the business of New York a
quarter of a century ago. The sons of
rich and eminent business n*en ride
down to the street in the family coach
or cab. The old man walks down or
rides in an omnibus. The boys get
down about 12, stopping to breakfast at
Delmonico’s, remain on the street a
couple of hours, take a coaeh and go
up town for a drive on the road- The
old man gets down at 9, takes a hasty
lunch of crackers and cheese, and works
on till 4, when he walks up home or
takes the street cars. The sons of Wil
liam B. Astor- walk down regularly ev
ery day from the Prince street office to
Wall street. Watches can almost he
set by their coming.
The shoddy aristocracy are too weak
to walk a mite. Standing on the cor
ner of Wall street between* nine and
ten. the heavy merchants, brokers of a
quarter of a eentur’y standing, bank
presidents, and officials who have fame,
can. be seen turning into the stree and
going into their offices before business
begins. The Manhattan Bank is one of
the heaviest banks of the city. Mr.
Morrison, the Pfesident, is a Scotch
man and a devout Presbyterian. He
worked his way up from a boy in the
office to his high position. He turns
the corner of Wall street every morn
ing about nine o’clock. He comes on
foot and does'not leave his position till
the bank closes. No cashier speculates
with the funds of his bank. Stout, of
the Shoe and Leather Bank, stands at
the head of influential financier^. He
is an earnest Methodist. He is the
hardest working man in the State. He
has the eye of an eagle and the vigi
lance of a Napoleon. He is one of the
earliest in the bank, and long after
banking hours he sits in his office, see
ing the business of the day closed. He
began life poor enough; has been the
architect of his own fortune, his honor
and integrity befog business capital'.
Winston; of the Mutual- Life, took
his position when it was a question
whether the institution would live or
die. He worked more business hours,
probably, than, any other busines man
in New York. He- is in the institu
tion before his clerks; sees personally
to every department, and is the last to
leave at night. He is a devoted Epis ;
copalian, and is officially connected with
the great benevolent and religious move
ments of the age. Cte’ys comes down
at ap early hour, gives personal a'tten
tion.fco everything connected with his
business, Gives an audience to all coni
ers and seldom leaves*hisbanking house
till fivo-o’clock. He is an unmarried
man and has his home at the Union
League rooms. He is a, great favorite
with, all those who manage benevolent
societies, for he is. very open-handed
and-his gifts are liberal and constant.
The contrast between the old and the
new, in business, affords a sufficient so
lution to the question why rich men are
so seldom, in business, followed, by their
sons.—“Burleigh's” NewrYprk Letter.
The Three Richest Men in the United
States.
They are William B. Astor, Alex
ander T. Stewart, and Cornelius—or
“Commodore”—Vanderbilt—all re
siding in ifew York. Aston's wealth,
is mainly in real estate and its rev
enues; Yauderbilt’s mainly in rftil-
road stocks and their dividends;
Stewart's is in goods, houses, stores,
factories, lands, and stocks. The
aggregate wealth of each one of
them is supposed to~1be somewhere
between seventy-five and a hundred
millions, which looks rather heavy.
Nobody knows exactly; the couldn’t
tell themselves within a million or
two. Those who know most about
their affairs put their figures higest,
and say that the income tax returns
of a few years ago, which showed
each of them to be worth between
twenty and thirty millions, gave no
proper itfea of their real wealth. As
tor lives unostentatiously:' Vander
bilt lives in a three-story brick house
on a thhc^-class street; aud Stewart,
lives in a marble palaoa on Fifth
avenue more magnificent than any
other residence on the American
continent, and equaled by but few
in any of the great citfcs of Europe.
Astor and Vanderbilt are New York
ers by birth; Stewart is a native of
the north of Ireland. Astor is a
large, heavev man of seventy with
strong features and a rubiennd face,
indicative of high Hveng; Stewart is
a medium-sized man, rather slender
and tall,of seventy-three, with a lace
like a parchment, and gives the im
pression ol being hard ap>; Vander
bilt is a tall slim, handsome, proud-
looking man of nearly eigty, and
straight as an arrow; AAor has
heirs, to his. estate; Vanderbilt has
children to whom he- can leave his
fortune; but Stewart is childless.
Astor’s public benfaction are con
fined to something like a couple of
hundred thousand dollars, which he
gave t" the Astor Library, and the
two golden candle-sticks, nine feet
high, which ho recently gave to Trin
ity -Church. Vanderbilt has*lncver
made any public benefactions, ex
cepting. a steamship to, the Govern
ment during the wa.r, ;ill very recent
ly. when he gave a million of dollars
for educational purposes—one-half
of this sum to found a Universitv i
Gordon and Longsteet,
[From the Greensboro,(Ga.) Herald.}
The difference between^ firm ad
herence to principle, and a” blind
obedience to policy, in its time serv
ing sense, has seldom bee a more tor
cibly illust rated, than in'the case of
these two men.
Daring the war, they were both
shining lights in the galaxy of South
ern chivalry, and their names were
dear to both the soldiery and the
people. When Longstreet tell at the
Wilderness, mortally wdanded, as it
was supposed, a thrill of agony ran
through the whole army, and when
he returned every heart rejoiced in
the restoration of the veteran thvor-
ite. But the war closed, and we soon
found that Longstreet coulcl fawn,
and with mean servility kiss the hand
that smote him. We do not think
that it was his intention to betray
his country, but once led off by de
signing men, and the Sireru songs
policy, and induced as he was, to
commit himself to the re-construction
programme, from which his advisors
turned away as others have done,as
soon as they found that the honest
people could not be duped and mis
led, we find him running into all the
excesses of his party-—progressing
from bad to worse, until nothing is
too low for the onee honored Long-
street. He lias become a reproach
to his people, who look upon him
with unutterable scorn—and even
his Republican friends,though cheer
fully accepting his'degradation in
their behalf, have no»respect or re
gard for him, as is always the case
with traitors,.
Turning with shame and sorrow
from this picture, we see the noble
Gordon, in the darkest days ot our
trial, as eve? in tbe thickest of the
fight,*resisting with cool courage
and unfaltering determination, both
the threats of the oppressor and the
allurements Qf policy. Aud now that
the trial has, in. a measure post, we
see him reaping the rewards ot devo
tion t.o his people and fidelity to truth
He occupies tbe highest place that
his State can bestow upon him-—is
honored and beloved by every South
ern heart* admired by the whole
country, and respected by even, his
enemies.
What a contrast is presented by
the two pictures! And gladly do,we
SPLENDID
BARGAXIVS ! !!
Can now be made with
Simon A. Weil,
CORNER WATER AND WIST STREETS
BAINBRIDGE, -
GEORGIA,
In his
Very Full Stock
OF
SPRING
&
SUMMER
GOODS,
Consisting in part of
Latest Style Dress Goods*.
Calicoes, Grenadines,
Linen Lawns, Sheetings,
Linens, Fancy Goods,
Notion^, &c., &c.
A Fuji Stock of
Spring and Summer
W. C. Sabers
T10W TPTllotn iuLU
Is now replete with one of the ,
of goods in the line ever opened in lv i” 0 * 1 *
W e here enumerate a few of the
ticles in the v *lnable
JEWELRY AND
CLOTHING!
Hats, Boots and Shoes.
Also, an assortment of the very
choicest and BEST
SHA’Erw^rp
department. 1
Seal rings. Amethyst rines_„!„?
crusted withhold and diam^nd^ -" den -
rings, 18 carats from 2 to 8 dwt* t ? ol< *
gents' gold chains, from 18 to We:|ria ;
ics’ Nifison and Opera chain- *; !ad -
dwts.; new style collar, sleeve JV
tons of gold and pearl; * •'" ll| “-
key-stoucs in great rarity J 1 ' 18 N
jewelry (pins and ear-rln L tr- T ? ’
§40; gents’ silver and plated « v 7 ; *<*
from $1 to S18. ,c *
Silver-ware (quadruple ,
•tock of latest novelties [ ' ,. ! ‘ R! pl«e.
forks, tea setts, cake, fruit
pitchers, goblets, waiters, e’v
thimbles (warranted the bestl’anert i?®’
gold, silver-and steel frames'fL-’;'*!-.®
Sll.. Gold peas of the W maker?'""'ra
silver-ware (warranted
and-silver watches, inn 1 !■/« j W| '
calendar clocks for counting room."'’
CUTLERY DEPART,’,;; v/
_ The best and finest lot of er.iV,
city, consisting of pocket km •
ladies and boys,ami Iromthemosm’^"
makers, such as Rogers and \r j '
•Dinner, breakfast and tea i. , . -
table knives tllogevs’atail.ii. ; j
of ail kinds; razors. Ceil and
lery a special examinat,
MUSICAL LNSrUOiENTS
We invite particular attention to ■
paataient. Music boxes ; J
violins from S2.S0 tu :
accordeons, tambourines, : j , /
hand-organs, drums, tit'es. •:- . ..
strings 3 to 4 lengths-, best U&liar.
and cello strings in.great varirtv,
• FANCY GOODS, ETC
Tj. pj, 1
in
dust
ALWAYS ON HAND AT
At the Store of
Simon A. Weil
April 24, 1873—fim
in Teimesseu and, t,ha oi-hps .half to i hold theirj, up, :i,ud, point the youth of
another cduoatipiiaT institution, the land to tlie lessou,tt,.ught. ‘Thriit,
Stewart has always had the reputh, I may follow fawning” for a time, but.
tion ot being very cfose-fisted,;; but in the end disgrace aggi degradation
he must be credited with his million ; will ensue, while houest principle,
COFFINS!
Ladies’jet, penrt and tonoL'v
ear-rings and neck-laces. A largs issortmew
of beads; ladies’ writing desk-, work-hosts
port-folios, etc. Photograph- albums, hubim
and Atkinson's, handkerchief extracts Chins
and marble vases; China ornanemsand
toilet setts, Chjna cups and saucers. Chinn |
dinner, tea and. furniture sets for children
Croquets 3ets, apjuglassc-st.opera-glasses, etc
M a sides, doils and toys—largest stork ever I
in this markat. Walking canes, pipes and. j
smoking tobaccos, and thousands of other-
things- too numerous to mention.
A fine lot of Stationery always oh hand- |
best in the city. Call and see
W..C. SUfBERS,
Corner Broad and Broughton Stf„
ilniubrklge.Ga.
Wadailes, Jewelry and’Clheks repaired and! |
warranted. . octo-tf
Southwestern Georgia.
A learned observant aud philoso
phical friend, who has just returned
from, as extended tour through some
of the Southern and Southwestern
counties, gave in a verbal report of
the situation yesterday. His busi
ness took him off the railroads and
afforded him advantageous opportu
nities to mingle intimately with the
peopfe aud-learn their situation and
feelings. Previous to this tour he
had long been afflicted with the idea
that this part of the State would re
trograde, and the busipesaof Macon,
so far as it depended on the fortunes
of the Southwest, would sutler. He
has uow abandoned that idea finally.
The people of the Southern aud
Southwestern counties are now show
ing evidence of indomitable industry
and thrift. Their farms are in tine
repair—their crops in thp best con-,
dition—their tables are well supplied
from their owu farms—the are work
ing like bpavers and saving their
money. Even on the. railways there
is comparatively .little demand for
western corn. One merchant told
lain that not a, bushel was bought
this year where six were bought last.
Large crops of oats are being gath
ered and the corn promise is the best
hp has ever seen. Lower Georgia,
so far from being abandoned to ne
groes and thriftless whites, will soon
be the theatre of an industrious,
thriving, intelligent and wealthy
population. Everything is coming
cut right, and in a little time the
credit of that section will be com
pletely restored.
dollar “Home for 'Women,” which
will bp completed next, year. Astor
is a rigorous Episcopalian, Vamieiv
bilt is an independent Methodist,
and gtewart is said to be inclined to
think for himself. Stewart is a
scholarly man; Yanderbilt is not.
Aetor is an accomplished man of
the world.
Wit and Religion.
Our church-going bretheren-of the
North evidently have a keen relish
lor the ludicrous,and in their worship
in the house o^Godcombine devotion
al earnestness with a demonstrative
appreciation of the ban mots and.
side hits of their lively and entertain
ing partors. We read that on the
occasion of Rpv.. Henry YtardBeech
er’s sermon in Boston, where he
went for the purpose of. exchanging
pulp ts with Rev. W. H. H. Murray,
the crowd was so immense that the
police, like guardian angels,, had to
interfere, preserve order, ami pro
tect thp.innocent. We also read that
the eminent divjne was follf equal to
the occasion, and kept his hearers
not only in good humor, but, if the
reporters are to be believed, (and
who will deny them their, confi
dence?), threw, thpm into convulsive
giggles, of rapturous delight. The
verbatim^ report of the sermon.is in
terspersed as thickly, with parenthe
ses, denodng where the laugh came
in,as a plum pudding is with raisins.
This happy faculty, of sugar-seating
their sermons does not; seem to pos
sessed by our Southern, clergymen,,
who are decidedly behind the age.
They must be more progressive and
—funny. Let us combine the calling
of a mountebank, with the duties of
Gods minister. We must bavfc more
excitement,more laughter gad chei r-
fuiness. W’e are rapidly introduc
ing all the latest operas, and fatgsias
into our chu-ches; let us keep up
the march of iraprovejnent; and, ip
the footsteps of Beecher,bring in the
wit and humor bjf the age we live
in.
If we walk, on the popular side,
and expect to laugh and grow fat
each Sabbath, we must abandon the
pure and undefiled religion of the
Bible, and follow in the path where
such men as Beecher lead.—Sav.
Adv. & Rep.
bravely maintained, will sooner or
later bring a. reward of honor..
Vicuna Corrcspoad^nqe St. Loui&Denjpqsat.
The Women cf Vienna-
You can see crowds everywhere, and.
perhaps, as splendid, equipages, saddle
horses and eoi'pts in other places, but
no where else can you see the women
so tall, stately and. robust, mantled with
that richness of color and gladness of
expression which are the products.of. a
fine physical organization. They are,
for the most part, decided blondes or
decided brunettes—German or Mag
yars—but they ail seem to beca3tih,the.
same large mold, and invested with the
same magnificence. In the vitality and
affiuenae of their charms, and tha scale
of their ample stuciure, they seem to be
the very women that pray, smile or
dance on the warm and glowing canvass
of Rubens. This implies, ana is meant
to imply, that their beauty is not of the
finest order. • In that respect our o\yn.
fair country women.are, I honestly be
lieve, unrivaled; but, on theotfierhand,
they are inferior in physique to the Aus
trian dames. They may speak" purer.
German in Dresden and Hanover, and
the German cultus may have no unpol
luted shrine out of Berlin, but undoubt
edly it is in.Vienna that German wo
manhood attains the h.ighest physical
perfection.
fUetalifc antf Weed, ef all kinds,, at
. SO. J. HENDERSON’S
FHrnitureSloi e .
inch 13
E„ 3^ Padriek,
PRACTICAL
BUILDER & HOUSE CARPENTER
Solicits work, <jf nil kinds in his tine. J»bs ta-
k^u witliih Biiloe of this, place. All shop
work promptly atteeUed to..
Coffins made at all Hours, stay or
night,
as neat-,as.osn.be clone elsewhere. Shop at
the old stand; ift rear of Saarbom. Buildings
mchl3-]y
NOEL GAINEY & CO.,
Manufacturer* and Dealers In
Mr. Jcficrgon Dovig is-said to be
writing aTiistory of the war. Such
a. work from such a man would be
valuable.. He is reported as saying
that he feared the country was be
yond “the redeeming efficacy of
moral worth or elevated intelli
gence,” and the memories, of the
Credit Mobilier and Vienna scan
dais give a paintul point to the ob
servation. *As this demoralization
has been. entirely brought about by
the party that has controlled the gov-
ernment since the war, it is well that
the most capable ajid cunning hand
is to write a history of the pivotal
period where the decade of virtue'
and honesty ended and the decade
of corruption and dishonor com
menced, . If M;\ Davis will prepare
his work with skill and judgment,
as well as with the ability which all
acknowledge he possesses, lie may
walk down to posterity with it in his
hand.—Courier Journal. •
And GENTS’ GOODS,
Bowie. Block, Bquqhton St.,
janl-ly] BAINBRIDGE, GA..
E. J.Henderson,
DEALER IN
FURNITURE
COW-HIDES,.
BEES WAX; TALLOW, &u., &c.
WAIVTS,
5,000 CowDides !
For which Big Prices will be paid.
ATLANTIC Ai.0 2ULF BAiUiCAQ,
Change oS Sched^e.
General SirKuiSTKXi>r..vr’s 0>rrw |
Atlantic and Gclf Kailboas,
Savannah, May 3, ljf73.
dm and. aff«s>- Sundby, May 4.
Passenger.- tj;aiuM on this roiil run i
fijiiotv.* :
EXPRESS PASSENGER..
Leave- SavatiiMUl daify aL --
- 4:20 p
Arrive ati Live Oak - —
- 4:05 »e
Amre-at Thomasvjtln —
5:301 b
Arrive ati Bainiiiadge -
- if:15«ic
Arrive at Albany - -
- 9:50
Leave Albany -
- 4:45 p ic
Leave Bainbridge -
- G:*iO Et
Leave Thomasville
8:55 p*
Leave Liy* Oak — — - -
10:30 pi.
Arrive at Savannah' --
10:00 • a
g<3Y*’ Connect at Live Oak with tnii»|
onj., P, & M. Railroad lor and frum J«k-[
sonville, Tallahassee, etc.
Ii<> change of cars between Savannah “- j
Albany..
Close cqnceotici»iati Albany, vdlh trainao
Sonthwastarn Railroad.
Close connection.at Lavston far and h’ 1 !
Florida with Western Division. l’aa« a S w |
train.
. ACCOMMODATION TSAIS’.
WESTERN DJVJSft*.
Leave Lawton-, Sundays exceplcd,
Arrive <it Valdosta,.Sundays esc.,
Arrive at Quitman. Sundays
Arrjve-at.Thomasville, ‘
Arrive at-Albany,
Leave Albany. Su
Leave ThomasviiL, -j -
Leave “Quitman, Sundays ' firt
Leave Valdosta, Sundays “ c
Arrive at-Lawton. Sundays " •’ ”
Connneci-at.Albany v -tli r.iyHt
Southwestern railroad, lea :<■■■ Aj'f. 8 .- • I
day, Tuesday 1 , Tau.’sday
arriving at Albany Tr.esday. 11*
Friday and Saturday. • ..^ fnl m
i:2" i a
111:421«
12:40 p*
ft I* Pi
, < - V.; I’d, ''N 11 '
Mays'- W
Mailt Steamer leaves BainbrDf ^
Wednesday at f J:OOa. n. lor AP; 1 ”
II. 8. HA .>"£?.
Beware of 'Coun
JOB HOSES’
Are extensively OOtJXTXBFKXTKD.
ersdemw* ioJlltkteowmUrfeiutomaiuf^*"'
flUfMWM AOM IhS MM •/MJ2L
McJbxee. All. others mre g
oiwuiici is tk? 1
painful and dangerous diseaee* towvea ^
eonaiitotioc-ia subject. They-»***rjr
and cut all lopprewiotf of*toe ji a
•cSl
and cwraall suppre—ir>tf ^*7, j c
tar cold, .inflammation, or
Nervous and Spinal AfiecMa,
and Limbe, Kati^ne 00 alif^j.
of the Heart. HyiUnce and WhrtJJ
~rhen all other * r-ia
means
titutum!
Theoramuc Pillssrs w»M»**^*SSa**
be psrsosdsdto secepi *w «W2«s»*!Pi—■
..loses, It CorUuitStnet.S^’J^tt
at siprsss oSes st wfa.efa pjfl* «•*•
s«e,and »bottlsof ths^
aafelj packed in plain wrappers
RELIEF IN TEN MlNtH
:wAr*
Doors, Blinds,
BSTAIP8
Onrs Oocohs. Colds. Asnntfc
, asd ssl/
SASH,
Mouldings, Brackets, Stair Fixtures, Build j
era’ Furnishing Hardware, Drain Pipe, Fo< r
Tiles, W ire Guards, Terra Cotta Ware, Marble
cod Slate Maatle-Pieces..
bars no last# uissiinni —
s*s
Price 35 eeetn per tax JEr
Ur, IS Cast 1 ™ 4 * 1*— PA
THE GREAT, f.reecm
iiia
m
the
S*
'ajI
tee
iC
DELAMAltUF?* ^g355St«.
*z**n
riH*
1 ‘White Pine Lumher for Sale.”
8®“ Window-glass a specialty. Circulars
and price lists sent free, on application, by
P. P. TOALE,
20 Hayne and 33 Pinckney sts.,
oct3-lv Charleston, S. C.
icsl A
Sker rsmsdis. fait, and. ks»s bs^ msO*
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