Newspaper Page Text
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
COMPANY.
BCHJiDULE LN ISFKECT DEC. riO, ’Of!
NO. 3
| NO. 1
NO. 2 |
NO. 4
9 Of p n
H 46 n m ;
Lv .Sivannah
Ar C 40 p m
6 00 a a
B 40 p m
ft 30 a m
Lv IngaKta
j Ai 5 65 p m
fi 35 a n
11 48 p m
11 34 p m 1
Lv Millet.
| A r 3 63 am
3 16 a n
1 62 a
1 62 p m ]
Ar Tennille
Ar 1 40 p in
1 28 a a
3 66 a m
.'l I i p in |
Ar Macon
| I.i 11 65 a ra
JI 38 p u
7 45 a m
7 31 p m *
Ar Atlanta
| Lv 8 20 a m
7 60 p n,
Extra
Sunday Train,
Augusta.
No 3
No. 1 j
8 20 » m | Lv
No. 2
No. 4
8 40 p m
Sun. \n«tisli Ex.
■Sun. j Ar 6 55 p tn
i 6 36 a m
t Daily eicept Sunday
Sleeping purs on nil m k - • traina between .Havaru.ab, M con, Atlanta and Angnata.
Passengera for Milled. wiilo should lake train No I at J enntlle at 1 62 p. m.
Passenger* fur Thom*«ton, Carrollton, Fort Gaines, Talbotton and all Soothwesten
. poinla ahoald Is s train No. 3 passing Tennilla at 1 62 a m.
^W*P»r farther in, ;nation relative loaoh-dule*. r •.!««. etc., apply to
„ , E. F. bRONHO.v, Agent, Tennilla, Oa.
THEO. I). REIN’/., ti' ioral Kog rir.t<n lent.
W. F. HllELLM t N. Traffic Matiap r.
J. C. HAILE, General Passenger Agt
KavanDab, Georgia.
DO
NOT BUY
MOWERS,
OR
HAKES
Till You Gret Oar Prices,
We can Save you Money.
Mallary Bos. & Co.
Mr icon. - Oeorg'ia,-
Machinery of Every Description.
co rsrsiirrcR
TAIN FACTS
' I ON K HAY IS 1C l)KCKIYL\ti
PI
PRICK
Apparent cheapness does not make a real saving of money"
QUALITY And
PRICE MUST
DECIDE.
awre.-
8f|,
vJjXW
C>
/
m
The BEST is
always the
CHEAPEST.
Y V I.I'M for Ha price, is real and only cbrapDtSP.
^ I'l i ^ it • hir pricfcH in tLo nu! und only fconorny.
sen tbo
II 1C M l
■IIOII
Till* "litOJVIKMl 14 basalw
best m a chine
H '! m . 1 I,,m ’ , 1!eut l . or lll,! 1 to »H it gives him the most profit lot
1* ‘ ' purchasers because il elves the most satisfautinp In uso, A|{<‘llfli
llwmeailc iiiiil Imperil l> M| M r ■•iitlerna. Send I
IMUI KM I II; si;« I.M; nuillNE ( »,,
lllcliniond,
n every sens
east trouble.
Mantel,
Address
lor catalogue
Tn.
HALL’S EXCELSIOR SAFES.
toe.
No. 105.
OUTSIDE MEASURE.
26'A inches high.
Inches wide.
17 inches deep.
No. 106.
OUTSIDE MEASURE.
30 Inches high.
24 inches wide.
‘22 inches deep.
No. 107.
OUTSIDE MEASURt.
II inches high.
30 Inches wide.
24 Inches deep.
Tliese Safes are especially designed for Merchants, Doctor*.
Farmers, etc. J hey are made upon the same general plan as
?e r . c 5 1 e brated Standard Safes. We are selling them at prices
that defy competition. Terms to suit customers,
Second-hand Safes constantly on hand.
Write for catalogue und prices.
SAFES REPAIRED.
Hall'S Safe Lock Works
a t. pullen, } M * NA0EI,S ' CINCINNATI, O.
salesrooms:
NewYork, Philadelphia, Cleveland,
‘‘ L^V lc ',S hic “?°v, L’lty, I.ouisviile, San Francisco, Omib,.
Milwaukee, St. Paul, Miuncunoli*, Portland, Ore., Portlauci Me
J'.vauaville, Iud., Atlauta, Gu. f J<ichmuud, Va. *
Glenn Springs Hotel g aw Win
Glenn 0prinns, 0. €.
The Queen of Summer Resorts.
New hotel witli large. i.,,.,| piiizz,*. Klee
trie belle. Water Works, ha li tin -1 a coin
plete system o/ » w. r ge. r.ood roads (.»•
driving. Large )t‘a |. Khuded li> native ni'lo.
Telegraphic com,eciirni and i«. it ..nd . x-
press ill the hotel. Railroad < p ,t ,'iu0 >,ir >.
from hotel.
And the Rest Minoral Water on the
'Continent,
For rules of hoard appy to Simpson &
Simpson. For water apply to Fan! SiiupHOQ
O U K Kates
Improved
variable
belt ,feed
.[jkArs A LL i HE FRICTION
EED SAW MILLS OI7T abta *?, ,Bt0 ugnoulture, Which is proverbi
UU1 AN 1); glly honest, but n -da to be rectified,
is sold for caypime pepper, ami it wiri
shake ont the pras-ian bine from ( <
tea leaves, and it will sift from
flour plaster of paris and boim dust :
soapstone, and It will by chemical anai-
ysis separate the one qnart of w.t. r
from the few honest drops of cow ,
milk, and it will throw ont the live
animalcules from the brown sugar.
There has been so much adulti ration
of urticles of food that it is nn amaze
merit to me that there is a healthy mat.
or woman in America Heart u only
knows what they put into the spices and
into the sugars ami into the butter and
into the apothecary drug. But chemical
analysis and the microscope have made
wonderful revelations. The board of
health in Massachuvtts analyzed
great amount of what was called pure
coffee and found in it not ouu particle
of coffee. In England there is a law
that forbids the putting of alum in
bread. The public authorities examined
61 packages of bread and found them
all guilty. The honest physician, writ
ing a prescription, does not know hut
that It may bring death instead of
health to his patient, because there may
be one of the drugs weakened by a
cheajter article, and another drug may
be in full force, and so the prescription
may have just the opposite effect in
tended. Oil of wormwood warranted
pure from Boston was found to have 41
per cent of rosin and ulcohol and chloro
form. Scammony is one of the most val
uable medical drugs. It is very rare,
very precious. It is the sap or the gum
of a tree or a bush in Syria. The root
of the tree is exposed, an incision is
made into the root, and then shells ar»
placed at this incision to catch the sap
or the gum as it exudes. It is very pre
cious, this scammony. But the peasant
mixes it with a cheaper material; then
it is taken to Aleppo, and the merchunt
there mixes it with a cheaper material;
then it comes on to the wliolesule drug
gist in London or New York, and he
mixes It with a cheaper material; then
it comes to the retuil druggist, and he
mixes it with u cheaper material, and
by the time the poor sick man gets it
into iiis bottle it is ashes ami chalk ami
sand, and some of what has been called
pure scammony after analysis has been
found to he no scammony at all.
8|ipcnlatluD and Religion.
Now, practical religion will yet rec
tify all ttiis. It will go to thoso hypo
critical professors of religion who got
"corner” in corn and wheat in Chi
cago aud New York, sending prices up
and up until they wore beyond the
reach of the poor, keeping these bread-
stuffs in their own hands, or control
ling them until the prices going up and
up and up, they were, after awhilo,
ready to sell, aud they sold out, making
themselves millionaires in one or two
years, tryiDg to fix the matter up with
the Lord by building a church or a
university or a hospital, deluding them
selves with the idea that the Lord
would be so pleased with the gift ho
would forgot tbeawiudle. Now, as such
a man may not have any liturgy in
which to say his pruyers, I will com
pose for him one which ho practically
is muking: "O Lord, we, by getting
‘corner’ in breadstuffs, swindled the
people of the United States out of $10,-
000,000 and made suffering ull np und
down the land, aud we would like to
compromise this matter with thee I
Thou kuoweBt it was a scaly job, but
then it was smart. Now, hero we com
promise it Take 1 per cent of the prof
its, and with that 1 per cent you can
build nu asylum for these poor misoru-
blo ragumufflns of the street, aud I will
take a yacht and go to Europo, forever
and ever. Amen.”
Ah, my friends, if a mun hath gotten
his estate wrongfully and be build a
line of hospitals and universities from
hero to Alaska, ho cannot atone for it.
After awhile this man who has been
getting a ‘‘ooruer” in wheat dies, and
then satan gets a "corner” in him. He
goes into a great, long Black Friday.
There is a "break” in the market. Ac
cording to Wall street parlance, ho
wiped others out, uml now ho is him
self wiped out. No collaterals on wbioh
to make a spiritual louu. Eternal def
alcation.
But this practical religion will not
only rectify all merchandise, it will
also rectify all mechanism und all toil.
A time will como when a man will
work as faithfully by tbo job as he does
by the day. You say when a thing is
slightingly done, “Oh, that was done by
the job!” You can tell by the swiftness
or slowness with which a huckmau
drives whether ho is hired by the hour
or by the excursion. Jf ho iH hired by
the hour, he drives very slowly, so us to
make as many hours us possible. If ho
is hired by the excursion, he whips up
the horses so us to get around aud get
another customer. All stylos of work
have to lie inspected—ships inspected,
horses inspected, machinery inspected,
boss to watch the journeyman; capital
ist coining down unexpectedly to watch
the boss, conductor of a oity oar sound
ing the punch bell to prove Iris honesty
us u passenger hands to him a clipped
nickel. All things must he watched and
inspected. Imperfections in the wood
covered with putty, garments warranted
to last until you put them on tbo third
time, shoddy in all kinds of clothing,
chromes, pinchbeck, diamonds for $1.60,
bookbindery that holds on until you
read the third chapter; spavined horses,
by skillful dose of jockeys, for several
days made to look spry; wagon tires
poorly put on, horses poorly shod, plas
tering that cracks without any provoca
tion und falls off, plumbing that needs
to be plumbed, imperfect ear wheel that
halts the whole truin with a hot box—
so little practical religion in the mech
anism of tho world. I tell you, my
friends, the law of mun will never roc
tify thoso things. It will ho the all por-
yadjug influence of the practical religion
pf JesuH Christ that will make the
phuugo for tho better.
It Will Go In Many ChAnnelg.
Yea, tiiik practical religion will also
go into agriculture, wh
S :
T>T A Organs $35.00 up.,
J. A All VviJ Sign painters wanted,
Catalog uo free. Address Duuiiel F. Beatty
Washington, N. J. 1
nces Very Low.
W ‘' ,,|KO Large Block
SAWS, TEETH, BELTS
Oil Cups and Fittings
JKn^ines,
Loilers and nter
Wheels,
iHAMING, PULLEY HANGERS, BOXES
Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co
GEO. R. LOMBARD,
Atii?nstft, Ga.
pud it will keep;:.
Jug to tho oity market
young to kill, and when the farmer
farms on shares it wiil keep the man
, who does the work from making Iris
half three-foorths, and it wili keep the
farmer from building his post aud rail
fence on bis neighbor's premises, and it
will make him shelter his cattle in the
Winter storm, and it will keep the old
elder from working on Snnday aft
noon in the new ground where nobody
sees him. And this practical religion
I will hover over the bouse, aud over the
barn, and over the field, and over the
orchard.
Yes, this practical religion of which
I speak will come into the learned pro
fessinus. The lawyer will feel his re
sponsibility in defending innocence and
arraigning evil and expounding the
law, and it will keep him from ebarg
ing for briefs he never wrote, and for
pleas he Devrr made, and for percent
ages he never earned, aud from robbing
widow and orphan because they are de
fenseless. Yes, this practical religion
will come into the physician's life, aud
he will feel hi* responsibility as the
conservator of the publio health, a pro
fession honored by the fact that Christ
himself was a physician. Aud it will
make him honest, and when he does
not understand a case he will say so,
not trying to cover up lack of diagnosis
with ponderous technicalities, or send
the patient to a reckless drug store be
cause the apothecary happens to pay a
percentage on the prescriptions sent.
And this practical religion will conic
to the schoolteacher, making her feel
her responsibility in preparing our
youth for usefulness and for happiness
and for honor, and will keep her from
giving a sly box to a dull head, chastis
ing him for what he cannot help und
sending discouragement ull through the
after years of a lifetime.
This practical religion will also come
to the newspaper men, and it will help
them in the gathering of the news, and
it will help them in setting forth the
best interests of nociety, and it will keep
them from patting the sins of the world
in larger type than its virtues, aud its
mistakes than its achievements, und it
will keep them from misrepresenting
interviews with publio men, and from
starting suspicion* that never can bo
allayed, and wUl make them stanch
friends of the oppressed instead of tbo
oppressor.
Yes, this religion, this practical re
ligion, will com* and put its hand on
what is onlled good society, elevated so-
oioty, successful society, so thut people
will have their expenditures within
their inoome, and they wili exchuugo
the hypocritical "not at home” for tho
honest explanation “too tired” or “too
busy to see you” aud will keep innocent
reception from becoming intoxicated
conviviality.
Yea, there is great opportunity for
missionary work in what are oalled the
successful clusses of sooiety. In some of
the cities it is uo rare thing new to see
a fashionable woman intoxicated in the
street, or the rail car, or the restunrant.
The number of fine ladieawbo drink too
rnuob is increasing. Perhaps you may
find her at the reception in meat exalted
company, but she ha* mad* too many
visits to the wineroom, and now her
eye is glassy, aud after awhile her cheek
is unnaturally flushed, aad then she
fulls into fits of eicruoiating laughter
about nothing, and then she offers sick
ening flatteries, telling some homely
man how well he looks, and then she is
helped into tho aarriage, and by tho
timo the ourriage gate to her home it
takes tho husband and the coaohman to
got her up tho stair*.' The report is sho
was taken suddenly 111 at a german.
Ah, no) She took too much ohumpagno
und mixed liquors and got drnnk. That
wus all.
In Marriage Relations,
Yea, this practical religion will have
to come in and fix up the marriage re
lation in Awerioa. There are members
of uhurches who have too many wives
and too muuy hosbamjg. Society needs
to he oxpurgated and washed und fu-
ipigHtod and Christianized, We want
this practical religion not only to take
hold of wlmt are called the lower class
es, but to take hold of whut are called
the higher clusses. Tho trouble is thut
people have uu idea they can do all
their religion on Sunday with hymn-
book und prayer book und liturgy, und
some of them sit in church rolling up
their oyee us though they wore ready
for translation, when their Sabbath is
bouudod on all sides by an inconsistent
life, and while yon ure expecting to
como out from under their arms the
wings of au angel there come out from
their forehead the horns of a beast.
There has got to be a new departure
in religiou I do not say a new religion.
Oh, no, hut tho old religion brought to
new appliances. In our timo we bavo
had the daguerreotype and tho umbro-
type and tbo photograph, but It is the
same old situ, and these arts are only
new appliances of the old sunlight. So
this glorious gospel is jpst what we
want to photograph the image of God
on one soul and daguerreotype it on un-
other soul. Not a new gospel, hut the
old gospel put to new work. In our
time we have had the telegraphic in
vention, and tho teleph.uio invention,
und tho electric light invention, but
they are all children of old electricity,
uu element that tho philosophers have u
long while known much about. So this
oleotrio gospel needs to flush its light
on tho eyes and eurs und souls of men
and to hooomn a telephonic medium to
make tho deaf hear, a telegraphic me
dium tu dart invitation and warning to
all nations, an electric light to illu
mine the eastern and western hemi
spheres. Not a new gospel, but the old
gospel doing a new work.
Now you say, "That is a very beau
tiful theory, but is it possible to take
one’s religiou into all the avooutlous
and businesses of life?” Yes, and I will
give you Homo specimens. Medioul doc
tors who took thoir religion into every
day life: Dr. John Abercrombie of Ab
erdeen, tho greatest Scottish physician
of his day, his book on “Diseases of tho
Bruin aud Spinul Cord” no more won
derful than his book on “The Philoso
phy of tho Moral Feeling*,” aud often
Why not bo your
own Middlo-man?
kneeling at the brdridc of his patient*
to commend them t > God in prayer ; Dr.
John Brown of Edinburgh, ininn vtal a-
an author, dying under the benediction
of the sick o! Edinburgh, mv- If re
membering him a« he s.ri in hi« Htidy
in Edinburgh talking to me about
Christ aud his hope < f heav. n. and a
eoore of Christian family phy-i. iaua in
Washington just a« >• - ■ ,i-- th< v xvrro
Lawyers who c.ui i t . ir "r< ligion
Into their profession: Lord Cairns, the
queen's adviser for many years tlio
highest legal authority in Great Brit
ain Lord Cairns, every summer in his
vacation preaching as nn evangelist
among the poor count)?;
McLean, judge of the supr. in " crurt of of Lod-liver Oil and hypopnospnites, checks the downward
' " course. It causes a halt; then turns your face about, toward
a runaway train
Sometimes, through accident or neglect, control of a
train is lost aud it speeds down the grade. It is so easy to
go down hill; but the journey back is slow and hard. He.ve
you been climbing up in strength, accumulating force? Of
have you been going the other way, losing ground ?
Sectts &nvulsidu
■S ' *P
11 r Tu]
ty pro
ud oth-
.: tu E.
res Ji.
^8, Pc
Scores
on into
minute
nrounn
America
the United States aud prt -idcut of the'
American Sunday Sclmol uni u, f- cling
more satisfaction in the latt. r oft be
than in the former, and scores of Chris
tian lawyers as eminent in tho church
of God as they are eminent at the bar.
A Case In Point.
Merchants who took their religion! ^ Frit licecl a Better appC
into everyday life: Arthur Tappau, dc-Jhave hard work ahead :
rided iu his day because he established
that system by which we come to find
out tbo commercial standing of business
men, starting that entire system, de
rided for it then, himself, 'ns 1 knew
him well, iu moral character Al. Mon
day mornings inviting to a room in tho
top of his storehouse the clerks iff his
establishment, asking them about th< ir
wordly interests und their spiritual in
terests, then giving out a hymn, 1 ,..ing
in prayer, giving them a f w words of
good advice, asking them what church
they attended on the - ■!■! nth, w! ' tho
text was, whether they htul a
cial troubles rf their own. Ar
pau. I never heard hi < r.;
non need. 1 pronounce it ia .
er merchants just us g • \y.
Dodge in the iron l,u■ • , ;
Grinnell in the ship; bu.-iu
ter Cooper in tho glue Im . ,
of men just r.s good a- tin y wa •
Farmers who taki tii r ri! g
their occupation: Why, this
their horses and wagons stai, 1
all the meeting hou-
Tbey begun this day by a prayer to God,
and when they get homo at noou, after
they have put their Iran- s up, will offer
u prayer to God at the table, s-. king a
blessing, und next summer there will
be iu their fields not one dishonest head
of rye, not one dishonest ear of corn,
not ouo dishonest upple. Worshiping
God today away up among the Berk
shire hills, or nwiiy down amid the la
goons of Florida, or away out amid tho
mines of Colorado, or along the banks
of tho Potomuo und tho liaritau, where
I knew them better because I went to
school with them.
Mechanics who took their religion in
to their occupations: James Brindley,
tbo famous millwright; Nathanie l Ik .tv-
ditch, the famous ship chundler;*Elihu
Burritt, the famous blacksmith, and
hundreds und thousands of strung arms
which have made the hammer, and the
saw, and the ndz, aud tho drill, uml
the ax sound in the grand march of our
national industries.
Good Work*.
Give your heart to God anrl then fill
your life with good works. Consecrate
to him yonr store, your shop, your bank
ing house, your factory and your home.
They say no one will hear it. God will
hear it. That is enough. You lianily
know of any one else than Wellington
as connected with the victory at Water
loo, hut ho did not do the hard fighting.
Tho hard lighting was done by the
Somerset cavalry, and the Byland regi
ments, and Kemp's infantry, and the
Scotch grays, and tho Life guards. Who
cares, if only the day was won?
In tho lutter part of tho last century
a girl in England became a kitchen
maid iu a farmhouse. Sho had many
styles of work und much hard work.
Timo rolled on, and sho married tho
son of a weaver of Halifax. They were
industrious; they saved money enough
after awhile to build them a home. On
tho morning of tbo day when they were
to enter that home tho young wife arose
at 4 o’clock, entered tho front duoryurd,
knelt down, consecrat'd tho place to
God, and there made this solemn vow:
O Lord, if thou wilt bless mo in
this place, tho poor shall have a share
of it.” Timo rolled on and u fortune
rolled in. Children grow np around
them, and they all became affluent. One,
member of parliament, iu a yiublio
place declared that his success came
from that prayer of his mother in the
dooryard. All of them were affluent,
Four thousand hands iu the factories.
They built dwelling houses for laborers
at cheap rents, nnd where they were in
valid and could not pay they had the
houses for nothing. Ono of these sons
came to this country, admired our
parks, went baok, bought land, opened
a great publio park aud made it a pres
ent to the city of Halifax,' England,
They endowed an orphanago; they en
dowed two almshouses. All England
has hoard of tho generosity aud the good
works of the Crossloys. Moral: Couse-
erato to God your small means und your
humble surroundings, and you will
have larger means and grander surround
ings. “Godliness is profitub’e unto all
things, having promise of the life that
now is and of that which is to come.”
“Huvo faith iu God by all menus, but
remember that faith without works is
dead. ’ ’
ood
ave
the top of the kill. You cannot do anything without
blood: Scott’s Emulsion makes it. Your tissues must
the right kind of food: Scott’s Emulsion furnishes it. Your
nervous system needs a tonic: Scott’s Emulsion supplies it
You need a better appetite : Scott’s Emulsion gives it. You
Scott’* Emulsion prepares you for it
so cts. and $t a botU*. SCOTT A BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
Georgia Southern and Florida R. B
Suwanee River Route to Florida.
TIMETABLE No. 00.
Spain’s Royal Iloade.
The present king of Spain is Alfonso
XIII, who ascended or rather was lifted
up to tho throne in the year of his birth,
1880, his mother being declared queen
regent. Between 714 und 766 Spain was
govoruod by emirs. Pelayo, a descend
ant of tho Gothio kings, was tho first
distinctively Spanish sovereign, whosp
rule was acknowledged ovor a portion
of tho north ubout 7l‘J. From that time
to tho acoession of tho present sovereign
Spain lias had about 180 kings. This
extraordinary number for that length of
time is explained by tho eircumstunco
that, up to tho union of Ferdinand and
Isabella, Spain was divided into two
und sometimes more independent mon
archies, owing allogiauoe to different
inonurchg.
NEW HIGH ARM
Shoo fly
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Lv Atlanta Ar
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Lv Macon Ar
Ar flordele Lv
Ar Tilton Lv
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Ar Quitman Lv
Ar Thom’villeLv
Ar Br.inb'ge Lv
Ar JaHper Lv
Ar Luke City Lv
Ar Pnlatlm Lv
Central.
O 8 A F
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G 8 A F
M<nt S)H
Plant Sys
Plant 8ys
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Plant hys
Plant Kya
plant Hys
5 4b ,»m
611 j m
0 45 hid
8 00 ttm
7 01 am
0 15 am
10 24 pm
8 35 pm
3 40 pm
4 20 pm
7 00 hD)
■S 35 it m
Lv Tilton Ar
Ar pi zgor„]dLv
T. A N. K,
T. A N E.
(i 3o pm
5 00 pui
11 00 am
9 30 am
Operates Pullman Buffet Weepers llie year room! between Nashville, Todd., and J*
sonville, Fla., via Macon and Tilton.
Operates Pullman Sleepers between Atlanta and Brunswick, via Macon nnd TifU
making direct connectum with boats to and from Cumberland and St. Simons.
Operates its own Sleepers between Maoon and Palatka via G. 8. A F. dlreot,
Direct line to Fitzgernlt. Soldier Colony via Tilton.
Slioo Fly Traiu runs daily except Sunday, and will make every looal stop.
D.G. HALL, T. P. A., W. H LUOAH, F. P. A.,
12 Kimball, Atlanta, Ga. 7 Hogan street, Jacksonville, FIs
C. Iff RHODES, Soliciting Passenger Agent. Maoan, Ga
J. LANE, G. A. MACDONALD,
General Superintendent. General Passenger Agent
Wrightsville & Tennille R. R. C
G. W. Perkins, Frest & Sapt. F. H. Roberson, Geu Prt & Pass A|
General Olllces—Tennille, Ga.
READ DOWN | | READ UP
No 5
No. 3 |
No. 1
November 29, 1890,
1
No. 2 |
No. 4 |
No. 0
Second
First
Find
First
First
Seoon t
Class
Claes
dawn
STATION*.
Class
Clnss
Claw
D. E S.
Dully
Daily
Daily
Daily
D. E.l
A. M.
P. M.
A M
A. M
P. M
P. 11
8 00
2 3d
7 30
Lv .
. ... Tennille
Ar
11 50
7 00
6 10
8 35
2 55
7 52
Lv .
Lv
11 26
6 35
30
8 47
3 05
8 01
Lv .
.... Dopoviiu
Lv
11 15
6 26
4 10
9 17
3 15
8 10
Lv .
Lv
11 05
0 15
3 66
Ar .
.. Meadows
Lv
10 50
0 02
3 30
9 35
3 30
8 25
Lv .
Ar
9 55
3 38
8 30
Lv .
... Lovett
Lv
10 40
5 52
3 00
10 07
3 44
8 20
Lv .
.. Donaldson . ...
Lv
10 34
5 47
2 45
10 28
3 50
8 43
Lv .
Brutoi.
I.v
10 28
5 89
Ar .
.... Condor
Lv
10 15
5 29
10 38
4 05
8 55
Lv .
.... Condor
Ar
11 00
4 20
9 10
Ar .
. . . Dnblin
Lv
10 00
5 15
7 27
11 45
Empire
7 33
3 16
8 00
12 30
PawkiuHvillo
7 00
2 30
Truins 1 and 4 are
Daily.
Trains 2, 3, 5 aud
Run Daily exec
. Sud
day.
^ Direct Daily connections and quick time to and from Hawkinsvilll
Empire, Southern Ry Stations North or South, Stations on the Oconee i
Western Railroad aud from Dublin and Stations on the Wrightsville an
Tenniile with the Central Railroad of Georgia via Tennille for all point
North, South, East und West.
Tickets sold and Baggage Checked through to nnd from principa
points.
(Note Changes in Trains 1, 4 tttid 8, nnd (’■. If. R. Connections.)
*0,000 Sold
Last Year.
r
r
Light Rusning
and Noiselesi
A-n&0&UT13L,Y TUB BJ3ST?
The Result of 20 Years of Sewing Machine Building’.
HIGHEST FINISH, LOWEST PRICE.
I tuckeii.
I RUFFLER.
« HEMMERS.
I BIMDEK,
I BRAIDER,
I THREAD CUTTER.
AUTOMATIC
B0BB.V) WINDED
SEIF-THKEA9MQ
8Hum.es.
We GUARANTEE
MACHINES 10 YMtt.
In writing.
1 Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all I’m- 1
:nt business conducted for Moderate fees. 1
,0u ," OmcE is Opposite U. s. Patent Office*
am) "0 run secure pateuim less time than those!
remote from Washington. !
Send model, drawing or photo., with dcscrin-t
(ion. Wo Advise, if patentable or uotr, {rep ofj
A P.
coat
sent free.
?c. uijr lee not due till tu
PAMPHLET, ‘‘ How to Obtain Patents.” with?
of bume jn the U. S, am' ' '
and foreign countries^
Address,
C.A.SNOW&CO.j
*Af new ML
0dfO Favorite
C 5 'ii
vf'/yji
Pay but ono profit between maker »»A
user and that a small just one*
Our Big 700 Page Catalogue and Buyer*
Guide proves that it’s possible. Weighs
2!4 pounds, 12,000Illustrations, describes
and tel Is the one-profit price of over 40,00(1
articles,overytblng you use. VVoscndH
for IB centq; that's npt for IhP book, hut ** ss ' ! ?’ . , T , , , w ,
to pay part of the postage or expressage, *aent is asked. Buy direct from the Manufac-
and keep off idlers. You can't get It too lo r e r » and save agents’ profits besides getting
1 certificates of warrantee for five years. Send
for testimonials to Co-operative Sewing
LOW ARM, $20,CO
Drop leaf, fancy cover, two
large drawers, nicl.el rii. s,
and a full set of Attachments,
equal to any Singer Machin;
sold from $40 to $60 by Can-
A triaMn your home before pay.
quick.
MONTOOMERV WARD ft QQ„
..A T 4!?it!? re PfAHt(i.fS#H* L |f«eblM <?«., 20 S. Ilth St., Phils., Pa.
ifi-nd Michigan Ave., Chicago. «wi pay rjUGUT.-u
„ n e™ 11 ’ Wil,nut °‘ Ant ^« ° ak Woodwork, in eight style*.
BBTISFHTrmH GUMSD. shipped on sodavs approval
K Iu LI ABLE AGENTS WANTED ir. unoccupied territory.
vVrite for Catalogue.
Chicago Sewing Machine Co.
LAKE AND HA LOT ED AND FULTON STS. CHICAGO
Burial Oases fjcMtji’ffflvnansS
tfiilft.O” "P
Metalie Oases, Oasketo and Oof
bus, of any Quality and Grade, al
ways on hand. A large stock of)
thest goods will he found at the store
Tabbutton a Duggan.
O R(t A N S u Pion& $225.00.
vy JAVA As.) lo fcugu painters vvuutod,
drt-H3 or coll. Dunic l
N't w Jersey.
waDted 4d-
utt\, Washington.
r Aduress Daniel F. ifeatly
Washington, New Jersey. -^ouuy
tTAA AA BEATY 8 Organs $800
fJ\Jq\Jnp. Sign painter wanted
Address or call, Daniel F. Beaty Wellington
New Jersey.
l.bny or barter for obickens & EjM* t* 01 ®
country produce.
H. X. EolMBte