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GEORGIA AND FLORIDA.
NEWS OF THIS TWO BTATB3 TOLD
IN PARAGRAPHS.
A Probability that Col. Wiley will Ac
cept the Command of the Troops at
• the Columbus Exposition—A New
Factory to be Built at Summerville
A Groat Deal of Fever in Clarke
County.
GEORGIA.
W. R. Cochran is the new mayor of
Cochran.
J. M. Stone of Smyrna is announced for
ordinary of Cobb county.
Most of the cotton being brought into
Washington now is low grade.'
There are 40,001f brick iu the new vault
of the bank of Southwestern Georgia at
Amerious.
Mrs. Embry, b-tter known as Mrs. Dixie
Haygood, the. electric wonder, has filed a
suit at Macon for a divorce from her hus
band.
Col. Larry Gantt lias purchased a com
plete newspaper outfit, and will shortly
publish a weoklp at Kibertoa to be called
the Star.
The late Supt. Bass of the America-,
Preston and Lumpkin railroad, had his life
insured in various companies to the amount
of $25,000.
Congressman Carlton has rendered him
self exceedingly popular in his district bv
getting his people a large number of new
postoffices.
There is a great competition among the
steam gins in Clarke county, and many of
them are now ginning for the fortieth.
This is a losing business.
The stock of the alliance warehouse, at
HawkinsvUie, which was placed at $3,00.),
or 400 shares at $5 each, has about ail bee i
taken by members of the alliance.
The granite stone with the inscription
“Mary Willis Library, 18S8,” has been
mounted to its position over the entrance
to Washington’s new library now, in course
of erection.
John Cook of Covington, of the firm of
Morris & Cook, merchants and public gin
ners, hail the misfortune Wednesday to
have his hand severed from his body while
attending to the gin.
At Washington recently a negro was
riding his mule, and that animal did not go
to suit his master, who became enraged,
jumped off the animal’s back and cut his
tail off about six inches from the starting
point.
Something over 15,000 pounds of grapes
have been shipped from Senoia this season.
The shippers expected to realize handsome
profits, fut up to last accounts they had
heard nothing from their shipments nor re
ceived any money!
There is a strong prospect of a small
steamer being placed on th* Oconee river,
to ply between the Georgia railroad bridge
and Scull shoals, now that congress has
made an appropriation to clean out this
portion of the river.
Athens promises to have one of the
quietest elections this fall ever held. While
there are two candidates for mayor and
there will he rival tickets in every ward,
there is no excitement whatever, and but
little work is beiug done.
There is now a great deal of fever
throughout Clarke couuty. In some neigh
borhoods whole families are down, but the
disease is not of a very fatal nature. This
epidemic of sickness is supposed to be
caused by so much wet weather.
Mr. Everett, a farmar living about seven
miles out in the western part of Newton
county, committed suicide Wednesday by
shooting himself in the breast with a shot
gun. No cause is known for the rash act.
Mr. Everett was a peacable and ouiet
gentleman.
A negro woman was lving at the point of
death in a negro man’s house at Washing
ton, where she had been visiting. The ne
fro man, against the doctor’s orders, made
er friend* move her out of the house. Her
friends started to the country with her on a
mattress iu a wagon, and she died on the
road.
Thomas M. Brumby has sold his interest
in the furniture factory in Chattanooga and
has bought the entire interest of Jamee K.
Brumby in the Bruinby chair factory at
Marietta, and becomes president of the com
pany in place of James Brumby, whose fail
ing health rendered tho disposal of his in
terest necessary.
Athens has a prophet la William Barber,
the Chronicle *avs. His father before him
was a prophet of tho weather. He says
that in exactly three months from the time
the first katydid is heard there will be fro*!:,
aud that the first one this year was heard
on July 7, and, a* a matter of course, en
OoL 7 there will be a killing frost, which
will reach to Jacksonville.
Marietta is becoming, probably, the
greatest chicken shipping point in North
Georgia, counting the poultry actually
handled there by dealers and that brought
through Marietta and transferred from the
Marietta and North Georgia railroad to
the H eetern and Atlantic at that point,
Sometimes there is as much as a carload a
day forwarded from Marietta to Atlanta.
Washington Gazette: We were talking
with an experienced miller yesterday, when
he alluded to the popular fallacy that
water-ground meal ii better than that
which is steam-ground. He says it is
strange that seruuble people should get such
an idea into their heads; that it could not
possibly make any difference with the meal
a9 to what {lower was used to grind up the
oorn.
When the command of the troops to be
gathered in Columbus during tho holding
of the Chattaho,>clioe exp isition was ten
dered Col. C. M. Wiiey of Macon, he found
that he could not accept, and so informed
Mr. Chappell, who had extended the invita
tion. Another letter was received asking
him to reconsider his action. Now that
the exposition ha* been postpoued to a later
date, it is probable thut the colonel can
acoept.
Mrs. 8. P. Thurmond of Athens received
the following telegram Tuesday, dat**d Man
Antonio, Tox., Sept. 25: “Mrs. 8. P. Thur
mond—Mot iter killed Saturday night in
railroad accident. Ed fatally hurt. Ap
prise Arthur and Genie. J. H Barton.”
Mr. Barton is the son-in-law of Mrs. C. W.
Long, and Ed Long, spoken of in the tele
gram, lived at Athens for ma ty years. He
is the oldest son of the late Dr. C. W. Long.
Mrs. Long and lyl had been living in Man
Antonio, Tex., for several year*. Dr. Ar
thur Long and Mis* Genia Long now reside
in Athens.
On Sunday morning Joe Leo, the colored
train hand who run* on the pamnnrer
train between Albany and Thomasville,
niscovered a rooster on the truck* of one of
the through passenger coaches from Savan
nah. Joe think* that the chicken loafed
around the train yards in Bavannah and
that he went to roost oil too trucks before
the train started out from Savannah, on
Haturday evening. At any rate Joe i* quite
certain that the rooster rode into Thomas
ville on the trucks, where he was found,
and that he either came from Bavannah or
some point beyond Thomasvi lie.
Hummerville News: Tuesday, at a full
meeting ot tlie stockholders of Triou Manu
facturing Company, held at Trion, it was
unanimously decided to build at onco a
$200,000 factory, to be located near the
present one. At this meettng no dividend
was declared, as it 1* tho intention to u-e
the funds in erecting tjie new factory, but
a most favorable showing was ma le for tho
poet year. There Is n surplus of $844,000
on hand, and this, with the earnings of the
present factory for the next year, will, it is
thought, be sufficient to build tho new fac
tory without assessing the stockholders.
At Bowman Wednesday, Ernersm David,
a 7-year-old *on of W. A. David, depot agent,
w ,“ playing with sme other little boys at the
gin of W. M. Detiey & Cos. It being in mo
tion, he was caught by some of the shafting
and was horribly ma gied before the ma
chinery couid be stotqivd. He wa* a very
bright child. It is thought that it will be
impossible for him to recover. About two
hours later D. W. Gloer, son of J. I). Gloer,
went down to the gin to see how little Em
ers n was caught, and he got caught by
the same shafting and at the same place,
his hand and arm being caught, and his
arm broken in three places. It it feared
his arm may have to be amputated. Mr.
Gloer is about 30 years old and weighs 235
pounds.
It is reported at Scotland that a warrant
lias been issued for John W. Adams, a
young w hite man, for tho attempted assas
sins'ion of John Daniels (colored) near
Stueky, a day or two ago. The evidence
upon which the warrant is based is that he
and the negro, a few days previous to the
-hcsitiug, quarreled about soma transaction
that had passed between them, and in the
c >nrse of some angry remarks Adams
pulled 50 cents from his vest pocket and
sa.d; “Here is the money that will buy the
shot that will send you to your grave.”
Subsequently the negro had another diffi
culty with another white man named
Georgs Cooper, whose oxen were getting
into bis fi-dds aud occasionally heiug shot.
Evidently the tnan who did the shooting in
tended to do the work well, for 127 promis
cuous shots, from some scittering gun,
showed terrible work on the yard fence, the
negro and the wall of the houso.
FLORIDA.
A fierce fire was raging in the woods on
Anastasia island Tues iay.
The land office at Gainesville has been
closed by order of the commissioner until
further notice.
The oranges in Alachua county are split
ting and rotting ou the trees, caused proba
bly by the recent wet woat.ier.
The Thomas building, on the north si le
of the square, at Gainesville, has been t irn
down by order of the health authorities.
A sail boat, containing refugees from
Jacksonville, was stopped in tho river Sun
day night, opposite Palatka, and prevented
from landing.
AV. 11. Carter of Jacksonville will not go
to Rome, On , as announced, but will in the
course of a very few da vs resume the pub
lication of the Metropol is.
The deputy sheriff at Hawthorn went to
the city limits of Gainesville Monday after
noon te deliver some prisoners he had cap
tured. He refused to enser the city.
It is said that thore is a Harrison and
Morton club in St. Augustine composed of
100 white members, who hold secret ses
sions. The story is considered very im
probable.
Saturday night the inspectors of the St.
Augustine guard found but one man sleep
ing on his post. He was promptly dis
charged, with another guard who had been
neglecting his duty.
N. C. Motley of Orlando has followed the
example of Mr. LeMoyno and instructed hi *
agent, W. T. Hull, at Bartow, to collect
“from end after Sept. 1 only one-half rents”
until the present depression in business is
passed. Messrs. Hughes, Stntham and Hud
dleston are the tenants thus benefited.
The gale which has made things howl in
the Ancient City for the past three days is
the annual northeaster. Tides have risen
at least 2 feet above their average higjit,
and sportsmen have been having great fun
shooting marsh hens on the creeks and
borders of the rivers. The galo is some
what earlier than last year, and the weather
much cooler.
One of St. Augustine’s old boatmen, the
other day, inspeakimr on the prospects of
the weather, said: "There will be an earlier
winter this year than we huve bad in a
score of years.” His reasons were these:
“The fig trees and many other trees are
shedding their leaves and preparing for
autumn. At night, if you listen, you can
bear the plaintive note of the kildee as it
files south to the warm sun. The kildee
generally comes about three weeks hence.
There are mauy other signs which emphati
cally forecast an early winter.’’
St. Augustine News: Saturday afternoon
the coin with the spike in it was driven in
the sidewalk opposite Joseph’s store. Sev
eral parties came along and tried to pocket
the coin wits but little suceep?. When
down the street there came an old white
haired gentleman leisurely sauntering
along, saw the shining coin on tho sidewalk,
st'Xjped slowly down and caressed it with
his fingers, but it wouldn't go with him.
The old gentleman got up, and such a look
as ho gave the oulookes, by group and
singly, was enough to freeze one into a
lump of ice.
Green, the old carpenter who died in a
stable at Palatka Saturday, iinte ul ot be
ing poor, Was a miser, aud owned consider
able property, and ud to the time of his
sickness was earning $1! a day. He refused
to tako medicine, and would not have assist
ance of any kino. Not long since he sold a
valuable piece of property for quite a sum.
What he did with his money is not
known. It is ‘said by those who
know, that he has morft money thin
most men in Palatka, but led a beg.
gar’s life. The undertaker who took charge
of his body, says he was the filthiest object
he ever saw, his under shirt being in rags,
and it almost dropped to pieces when the
outer garments wore removed. Everything
was done for his comfort, but it was of no
avail. E. R. Farrar, who buried tho miser,
could not get back into the city, because be
had no health certificate. Not wishing to
lie outdone, he showed Green’s burial per
mit aud was allowed to outer.
A mooting of the physicians of Jackson
ville was held Tue day. Vice President
McQuaid addressed them upon tho alleged
wholesale abus -s which have crept into the
system of providing delicacies and so forth
for the sick upon physicians’ orders. The
doctors in turn expressed their views, and a
general discussion of the whole matter was
bad. Certain strict rules will hereafter
govern tills system of relief, but physi
cians will be held accountable for
all orders over their signatures,
lu the course of the discussion one in
nocent-looking practitioner related that he
recently signed an order for several articles
for a patie it, but. trusting in the general
honesty of mankind, had left some space
between the last line and the signature.
Into this space tho following was subse
quently inserted by some party or parties
to tho deponent unknown: “One case
Mumm’s quarts." Another order for "one
chicken” had been adroitly raised to
“twelve chickens” by the insertion of a
on n
Blue Ribbon From Savannah.
FYnm the Dublin \Ou. ) Post.
The prohibitionists of Laurens county are
ittdobted to Messrs. Einstein & Lehman of
Bavannah, for six blocks of blue ribbon
out of which 250 badge* were rnado. These
gentlemen have show t not onlv a generous
disposition, but also that they are in
sympathy with the temporauen cause.
There are a good litany prohibitionists in
loturens, and they are beginning to do like
the whisky men, that is, tuny are going to
patronize each other. Whenever any of
them go to Bavannah Einstein & Lehman
will receive a call from them.
Befuddled by the Girls.
From the T r ienna (C/a.) Vindicator.
Several of our young men went out to
Bose Swearing in’s to a social lost Wednes
dly night. \\ bile crossing the creek at the
catup ground the water tan into their bug
gies and wet them considerably. But this
was all forgotten when they reached their
destination and began to mingle with some
of Dooly’s fairest daughters. They reporta
jolly good time, and you know thoy had it,
as they were so full of exuberance that thoy
hitchod up to tlie wrong buggy aud had to
be run dewn by the owuer before he couid
recover his property.
A Good Appetite
I* essential to good health; but at this sea
ion it is often loat, owing to the poverty or
impurity of the blood, derangement of the
digestive organs, and the weakening effect
of the changing season. Hood's Barsapa-
I rilla is a wonderful medicine for creating
art appetite, touiug the digestion, and giv
ing strength to the whole system. Now is
j the time to take it. Be sure to get Hood’s
Sarsaparilla,
THE MORNING NEWS: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1888.
BECRBT3 OF THE SANCTUM.
A Funny Man Throws Light on the
Joys and Sorrows of Life.
From the Smithx'ille (Go.) Nexus.
An exchange says tliat the next thing we
know there will be a newspaper trust.
Why, the country editors started that long
ago, anti it’s going on even unto this hour.
Now is the time to subscribe.
A ceataiu editor writes a long poem and
then announces that he is no poet. Now, if
some enterprising subscriber wants to get a
: free notice let him tell the editor that the
[ information was altogether unnecessary.
There is no doubt about it, Sndthville
! must have a bank; the express on our money
is entirely too heavy. Think of a man
walking around loose with $6 in his pocket
—think of it 1
At this hour, 10 p. m., a great festival is
going oti in town. The music is borne to us
from afar; the rattle of the knives and forks
is borne to us from afar. Click, click! goes
the tyjo in the stick, nnd we look wistfully
at the can our din er came in and put a
period to this melancholy paragraph.
A correspondent wants us to publish the
stock law again. We have already pub
lished it twice, and as we have lost all our
cattle we have no more interest in it.
Our office parrot is no more. He departed
this place exactly at 7 o’clock on Monday
morning. He left a beautiful poem on the
Smith villa band and expressed great regret
that he could"not remain over aud attend
the festival.
We are in receipt of a communication
from a colored man which we can neither
read, spell nor divine. We have decided,
however, that it is an African song, the
burden of which is, “Bawley, ba.vley li
cam be, cabugiiinner!’’
When the editor gets at a loss for an'item
ho generally goes to the window and stares
out at the street. Suddenly a dog comes
tearing round the corner with a can tied te
him. Then the editor laughs gleefully,
until he recognises the can as his own and
sees the office liov behind the dog, and then
—oh, well, we close the doors of the Smith
ville News upon the tragedy.
An editor announces that ho uses a patent
inside. We wonder if it is altogether ad
justable to the fare that some editors sub
sist on t
“If wo could Only kn >w what was in
store for us I” cries a despondent editor.
Stop t hat, broth r; we haven’t paid onr
grocery bill in six months, and we don’t
want to look that way.
ELI GETS THERE.
He Puts in Some Telling Points About
Truth Telling.
From the Indianapolis Journal.
Eli Perkins departed from his set lecture
last night, delivered before the Y. M. C.
A., and a srowded house, and made some
wise remarks about truth in general:
Now, my friends, there has been a good
deal said about lying in this country lately—
Mark Twain and Baron Munchausen have
been called liars—and I confess that I have
been called a great liar myself. Iu fact the
lyre has been struck a great many times.
(Laughter.) You remember that Henry
Wutter-on said publicly at Saratoga, lust
summer, that he *as,person d!y aoquain oil
with three of tue biggest liars—Clift biggest,
livbg liars in the world, awl when they
asked him who they were he said:
“George Alfred Townsend is one and Eli
Perkins is the oilier two! (Great laughter.)
Now, my friends, con iuufd Mr. Perkins,
seriously, I maintain that all groat wits are
great liars, and that the funniest men have
always been the biggest liars —Id > not say
vice veras that al great liars are great e its.
If this were the case, then the lawyers
would be tho funnis-t met iu tha world.
[Laughter.] Toe wite magnify or minify
the truth. They distort it. The humorist,
cm the contrary, tells the absolute truth.
He sticks close to nature. Diokens was a
pure hjimrist; his characters all existed;
Dumber, Bill Skye* a,id Nancy actually
lived, and Dick ms described them as he
found them. Munchausen aud all tne satir
ists and ridicule s are wits, exaggerators,
liars. Tne ridicule.' exaggerates truth, aud
the satirist exa 'gerates error. They make
error ridiculous. It was so with the satires
of the Don Quixote, “Giux's Baby,” Juve
nal and Deau Swift. If the wits all tell the
truth then the “Tale of a Tub” is a true
story. GuUiver’s Travels ureas true as
Moody’s sermons, Thackeray's “Yellow
Piush Paper-” are Nuylay school t acts,
and Baront Munchausen’s four hundred i
gantic lies are a- true ai Macaulay's “His
tory of England.” Almost alt fun is exag
geration aad all exaggeration i> lying.
The parable. in the Bible are humor.
They couid happen, Runyan was a humor
ist, for the Christian lias experienced the
same feelings he describes. Artemus
Ward was all exaggeration—iunocent exag
geration. He did aot write satire, irony,
humor er ridicule. He simply exaggerated
for pure fun, as does the Detroit Free I ress
man and Max Adler. Nasby nas a pure
satirist ; he didn’t produce laughter; he con
vinced posple by exaggerating error. Mark
Twain is both a humorist and a wit. Tom
Sawyer is pure humor —true to nature. The
bust of Columbus and tomb of Adam are all
in the imagination. They are wittv concep
tions. Tue humorist is a photographer.
He is true in spirit and in letter. 11s
gives the dial -ct and the facts. The histo
rian only gives facts without dialect. Bo
the hum inst is truer than the historian.
(Bensati n.) Dickens is really truer than
Macaulay.
Laughter cannot bv produced without
acting, painting or writing and exaggern
tion—in t han English, without acting, patnt
iug or writing ait innocent lie. The hum
orist artist, the caricaturistliko John Leve l
and Cruikshank had no other element tut
tho lie to draw upon to produce laughter.
They have to maku a long nose, a big ear,
a crooked leg, or a cockeye. No one ever
laughed at a true picture. If a live tnan
ready looked as Cruikshank or John Leech
painted him, we would shed tears at his
mournful condition, if a real man acted
like Don Quixote, we would weep at his
misfortunes. Sometimes people laugn at a
great truth, for truth t* often stranger
(sounds like a bigger lie) than fiction. Tut*
ha* always been my great trouble, [laugh
ter.] I , live generally told such great,
strange truths, that the people would laugh
because they thought they were lie*. 8> 1
have got the reputation of being a worldly
minded wit, when, in fact, 1 asn a great
truth-teller. To illustrate: Ono night I
wa* toiling about the big tree* in California.
I said I rode into a tree, a big hollow tre4,
on horseback, and then trotted out through
the knot boles. [Laughter.] The people
laughed because they thought it was a lit,
when, in fact, it was the truth. The tret*
are thirty-live feet, in diameter, and tile
hole through them is t welve feet in diame
ter—as wide through as a barn door. fo
illustrate what I moant by an inuocfttt
Baron Munchausen story: My uncle Will
iam got caught iu a fearful rain stonn one
night, when no was on his way 1 1 atteisi a
prayer meeting at New London, Conn. He
started for New I/Ondon, on horseback, hut
when he got about half-way there, ttore
arose a fearful storm. The wind blew a
hurricane, tlie rain poured in torrents, the
lightning gleamed through the sky, and my
uncle got iu behind a large barn, lint ill
a moment the lightnlug struck that barn
and knocked it into a thousand splinters,
and "out his horso whirling over into a
neighboring corn-patch.
"What did you do, then, Uncle Williami"
“Wall," said he, “I didn't hardly know
what to do. I was very much discouraged,
but to tell the honest truth—the honest
Connecticut truth, Ell—l went right into
the cornOeld, I took off tltt coat, humped
up my bare back, and took eleven stroke*
el lightning right on my bars backbone,drew
the nglituing all out ot the sky, and then
got onto my horse and got tuto New
Loudon in time to lead at the evening
prayer meeting.” [Uproarious laughter.]
Lewi*' iMM Whisky, Imported Brandy, choice
Cigar* vail the favorite brand* of Rottlad Deer
for sale by J. 8. F. BxnnorM,*
* New Houston aad Barnard street*,
MRS. LANGTRY’S DRESSES.
Her Slender Wardrobe in the Early
Days of Her Popularity.
From the Chicago News.
The fash'enable women wbohavestaid on
this side al: summer are beginning to use
“language” three lust two weeks because
they haven’t seen Paris in the twelvemonth.
This is the way of it: Tho stay-at-homes
had their v ardrobei made in the spring,
and these gowns they have been wearing ail
summer a: Newport an i Bar Harbor and
the Pier. The wise virgins who spent their
season in Loudo and visped Paris just be
fore they came back to the autumn gayeties
of Lenox and Tuxedo, appear in all t e
fresh, unworn splendors of the very latest
modes, making the toilets of tho stay-at
homes, worn all summer, look beyond
measure shabby aud passe. Mrs. Langtry,
for one, stood it as 10. gas she could, and
then she packed her dressing case and t ok
ship unto Tarsus —otherwise Paris.
Her clothes are superb. Other actresses
nray rival her in stage costumes, but not a
mother’s daughter of them wears such
frocks every Cay in the week. And that
reminds me of a story I once heard old Mrs.
Paran Stevens tell. She said:
“I saw Langtry when sha was in the first
flush of her reputatiou as a beauty, and a
beauty she truly was. It was at a tea given
by tho Life Guards at the Tower. Every
body was talking of the Lily from Jersey,
whose portrait Millais had painted, and who
had promised to be thore that afternoon.
The interest was so great that when the
whistier passed around that she had arrived
people stood on chairs and struggled to get
a glimpse of her, as if .he had been the
queen herseif. Mho looked lo rely. She
was slim and girlish then, with blue eyes,
chestnut hair, and a skin of cream and
roses. On her head was a wide black hat,
heavy with plumes, aud she wore a simple
little black siik frock, with a small square
cut out of the front of it. showing her
milky throat. There, was a great deal of
gossip going about 'concerning that same
little black gown. She was very poor then,
and that was l he only dress sho had, or very
nearly the only one. There were three
waists to it—one high for- the street, one
square for teas, ami a low necked one for
evening. Everywhere >ln went sue wore it.
The wild Eit 1 Dudley went quite ma 1 over
her, aud insisted the countess should
ask her to dinner. Now as everybody
knows, the coirnte s is a great beauty her
self, and she didn’t like all this talk about
Laugtl-jvi aud her hu-iond's infatuation.
They -ay she has always si. pt ii black silk
sheets because she is sa,£ua!*;:tly fair, but
when she gave the invitation to
dinner sha said, very i rusquely:
‘I hope you won’t v.uar that black
gown one always sees you in. Dudley hates
black. 1
“Langtry laughed very sweetly and said:
‘Well, I’m sorry. It's tli* only gown I have,
and 1 will have ti wear it or say at home.’
“Now she lias one for every day iu the
year."
AMBITIOUS AUCTIONEERS.
They Want to Start a School cf Oratory
to Train Themsslves.
From the .Vow York (frachic.
It is rumored that an a.-sociation is to be
formed by several oft! e auctioneers, the
puipo-eot a inch is to one nirago the flow
of oratory and descriptive power among
t ese slqjigh'orei s of goods, w ires and
mereliandi o, public ad private. It :s felt
that something must be done a > that bust
ne.-.s hmy be more equally distributed
among this brotherhood. N:> name has yoj.
been decidel upon for the assoc*, tin ,
though it is rumored i' has been suggests t
that it should be called the Aucdo iee.i-T
School of Ora'cry. A meeting, it is aito
rumored, was Lei-i inst evening at which va
rious plans of organization were considered,
tlie matter being finally left in the ham is of
a committee io prepare and subtn t a con
stitution and by-laws at a future meat i g,
to be called at an oarly date in order to be
prepared firt, e fall season. Some of tho
ideas promulgate;! were lutersdiug, ail
snowed that many cf tho autioncers are
anxious to rid tlie erait of the mono tium
system of se ling now commonly in vo s ut.
It was shown that in conducting a sale even
ondiirary articles of bousihot.l farm: ure
might hav6 ihcir vulu* enhanced consid
erably by being melliflaously described,
and thus investor with an interest that
would divest tho e pro-er.t of their capital.
One very silvery-rouiuod dweller on the
rostrum s iid that, in selling a fancy rock
ing chair, it should te described as a ser
nio i in leather; a c'noval glass as the joe se
production of a Scandinavian artisan; a
c .uch as a dream in plush, on which to
sock and find repose; a parlor set as having
caught the rays of a vanishing i a nbovv:
another, . s entrancing a- the g cam of the
stars or the splendor which dies with the
moon; a parlor set possessing a placid yet
tepid aspect; a dining room in antique oak,
a perfect gush of voluminous euphony; an
easy chair, a caprics in raw silk; a daven
p rt, beauteous but mingled with a sweet
half sadness, and an ordinary refrigerator,
as a symphony of Siberi luatrigiillty. These
suggestions were greeted wish cheers, it is
niinored. A query as to whe'ber the tax
of 1 per cent I .' would come up for discussion
was anhwerod by the statement (that, as pur
chasers paid it, no action would be talren.
The meeting then adjourned, subject to the
call of tire president.
MEDICAL.
GijJEUil
BILIOUSKFSS, BIOS
Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint,
Heart burn, Indigestion, Jaundio*.
BY USING THE GENUINE
D„. C. SV1 C LAME’S
CELEBRATEO
SLIVER PILLS!
PREPARED ONLY BY
FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh,ft.
twtlawurs ot OorsTKxr HTP mints la St, Lout*.
NURSERY.
RIESLING’S NURSERY
White Bluff Hoad.
-PLANTS, BOUQUETS, DEBIUNB, CUT
-1 FLOWERS furnished to order. Lear* or
ders at DA via BROS.’, comer Rail and York
street*. Telephone oak IRQ.
Sil l PHI NO.
Compagnie Generale Transatlantique
—French Line to Havre.
BETWEEN New York and Havre, from pier
No. 43, N R, foot of Morton street Trav
elers by this line avoid both transit by English
railway and the discomfort of crooning the
Channel iu a small boat. Special train leaving
the Company’s dock at Havre direct for l’ari*
on arrival of steamers, Baggage checked at
New York through to Pari*.
LA CHAMPAGNE, Bovttn, SATURDAY,
Bent. W. 11 a m.
LA OABCOQSR, Sxjrrxnu, SATURDAY,
Oct. 8. A A. M
LA NORMANDIE, dk Kbrsabibo, SATUR
DAY. OCt. 13. NOON.
PRICK OF PASSAGE (including wine):
To HAVRE - First Cabin, sl*), SIOO and $80;
Second Cabin. $(k); Slesrage from New York to
Havre, S3B: Steerage from New York to Paris,
$811; including wine, beddlug and utensils.
LOUIS DE HEHIa.n. Agent,Bßowling Green,
foot of Broadway, New York,
Or R W. HUNT, Esq., *>BuU street. Mkssr*
WILDER A 00 , tko Bay street Savannah
Agent*.
BHTPPTNO.
OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY
FOR
New York, Boston and Philadelphia.
PASSAGE TO NEW YORK.
CABIN S2O 00
EXCURSION as 00
STEERAGE 10 00
PASSAGE TO BOSTON.
CABIN S3O 00
EXCURSION 33 00
STEERAGE 10 00
PASSAGE TO PHILADELPHIA
(Via Saw Yoke.)
CABIN $32 50
EXCURSION 88 00
STEERAuE 12 60
THE inagpifleent steamships of these lines
are appointed to sail as follows—standard
time*
TO NEW YORK.
CITY OF SAVANNAH. Capt. F. Smith, FRI
DAY, Seyt. SW, at 11:30 a. m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. J. W. Catharine,
SUNDAY. September 30. at 1 p. m.
TALLAHASSEE. Capt. W. H. Fisher,
TUESDAY, October 2, at 3 p. at.
CHATTAHOOCHEE, Capt. 11. C. Daggett,
FRIDAY. Oct. 5. at 5:00 p. m.
NACOOCHEE, Capt. Theodore Catharine,
SUNDAY, October ?. at 7 a. m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA, Capt. J. W. Catharine,
TUESDAY, October 9, at 8:30 a. m.
TALLAHASSEE, Capt. \v. H. Fisher,
THURSDAY, October 11, at 10:30 a. m
TO BOSTON.
CITY OF MACON, Capt. H. C. Lewis, THURS
DAY', October 4. at 4:30 p. m.
GATE CITY. Capt. N. F. Howes, WEDNES
DAY, October 10. at 9 A. m.
CITY OF SAVANNAH, Cart. F. Smith, SUN
DAY, October 14, at 1:30 p. m.
TO PHILADELPHIA.
Iron frbioht only.]
JUNIATA. Capt. E. CnmsTY, SATURDAY
September 29, 12 M.
DESSOUG. Capt. S. L. Askins, SATURDAY,
October 6. at 0 a. m.
Through bills of lading given tp Eastern and
Northwestern points and to ports of the United
Kingdom and the Continent.
For freight or passage apply to
0. G. ANDERSON, Agent.
City Exchange Building.
Merchants’ and Miners’ Transportation Coa’y.
For Baltimore.
CABIN sl2 50
i,SECOND CABIN 10 00
''pilE STE AMSHIPS of this Company are ap
-1 pointed to sail from Savannah for Balti
more as follows—city time:
WM. CRANE, Capt. Billups, TUESDAY,
Oct. 2, at 4 p a.
JOHNS HOPKINS, Capt. Foster MONDAY,
Oct. 8, at 8:30 A. si
WM. CRANE. Capt. Billups, SATURDAY.
Oct. 13, at 1 p. M.
JOHNS HOPKINS. Capt. Foster, THURSDAY,
Oct. 18 at 5 p. m.
And from Baltimore on the above named days
at 3 p. m.
Through hills lading given to all points West,
all the manufacturing towns in New England,
and to ports of the United Kingdom and the
Continent.
JAB. B. WEST * CO.. Agents,
114 Bay street.
SEA ISLAND It oU 'l’ HI .
Jj
STEAMER ST. NICHOLAS,
Capt. !tf. P. USINA.
COMMENCING TUESDAY, Sept. 4. will leave
V Savannah from wharf foot of Lincoln street
for DOBOY, DARIEN and BRUNSWICK every
TUEBDAY and FRIDAY at 5 p. m.. ooniwtinx
at Havannah with N**w York, Philadelphia,
Bouton and Baltimore steamer*, and at Bruns
wick with stsflinr for Katilla river.
Freight reoeivod till 4:30 p. as., on days of fail
Ink
Tickets to bo had at (taz&ns Store, in
Pulaski Houho. and on board the hoar.
C. WILLI AMS, Afc^nt.
For Augusta and Way Landings.
STEAMER KATIE,
Capt. J. 8. BEVILL.
YX7TLL leave EVERY WEDNESDAY at 10
VV o'clock a. M. (city time) for Augusta and
way landings.
All freights payable by shippers.
JOHN LAWTON,
Manager.
SUBURBAN RAILWAYS.
City and Suburban Railway.
Savannah. 0A..-Sept. 1. 1833.
ON and after TUESDAY, Sept. 4th inst., the
following schedule will be run on the OUT
SIDE LIKE:
lravs AltaiVa UiV) isls lbavc
city. errr. or flop*, unarsosesv
10:35 a. m. 8:48 a.m. 8:1? a. m "TSTaYrT"
*8:35 p. m. 2:00 p.m. 1:85 p.m. 1:10 p. in.
t?:00 p. in B*o p. nl. **s:sß p. m •• 30 p. m/
•Every Monday morning there will he a train
for Montgomery at 0.50 a. in.
'This train leave* half hour later on Saturday
evening, and will be omitted ou Sunday even
ing.
••This train leaves half an hour later on Sun
day evening
J. H. JOHNSTON. President.
Coast Line Railroad.
STEAM CAI(S.
CATHEDRAL CEMETERY. BONAVKNTURE
AND THUNDERBOLT,
cprr tins.
The following suburtiaD schedule will bs ob
served on and after MONDAY, March 30,
week day* (See sneolal schedule for Sunday )
leave Savannah 7:10. 10:18, A*. 3:00, 4:90,
5:00. *0:40 P M.
Leave Thunderbolt, 5:80, 8:00 A M.. 11:30. 3:10.
4:30, 0:20 P. M.
I/tave Hontventure, 6.00, 8:08 am„ 12:35,
3:85, 4-85, * 26 p. a. 1
•Saturday night last car leave* city 7:18, In
stead of 8 44
Take Broiighton street car* 25 minute* before
departure of Suburban train*
R. E. COBB, Sup*.
— '--w ■ 1 ■ ::■ ■ 111 -
MERCHANTS, manufacturer*, meofiaol o
corporation*, *nd ail others in need of
printing, lithographing, and blank book* can
have their order* promptly filled, at modem
prices, at lhe MORN'INO NEWS PRINTING
HOUBK, 8 Whitakar skreeu
RAILROADS.
CENTRAL RAILROAD
OP GEORGIA.
QUICKEST, BESTTND ONLY LINE
Running Solid Trains
SAVANNAH
TO
MACON AND ATLANTA.
Schedule in Effect Sept. 6th, 1888.
(STyVISTTOAIiTJ TIME.)
TO MACON, AUGUSTA AND ATLANTA.
Lv Savannah. 7:10 ain 8:20 p m
Ar Slaoon 1:40 pin 8:60 ara
Ar Augusta 11:50 arn C:3sara
Ar Atlanta 5:40 pin 6:40 am
Through sleepers on night trains.
TO ( OLUMBItfS AND BIRMINGHAM.
Leave Savannah 8 20 p m
Ar Columbus 7:80 a m
Ar Birmingham. 3:30 p m
TO MONTGOMERY. MOBILE AND NEW
ORLEANS VIA ATLANTA
Lv Savannah 7:10 a m
Ar Atlanta 5:40 p m
Ar Montgomery 8:45 a m
Ar Mobile Jjjs p ni
Ar New Orleans '.!!!.!! 7 :20 p m
TO MONTGOMERY, MOBILE AND NEW OR
LEANS VIA MACON. SMITHVILLE
AND EUFAULA.
Lv Savannah 7:10 am 8:90 pin
Ar Macon 1:10 p m 8:50 ain
Lv Macon 0:90 pin 10:15 ain
Ar Eufaula 4:58 a m 8:47 i> in
Ar Montgomery 7:30 am 6:40 p m
Ar Mobile 1 : 5p in 3:io a m
Ar New Orleans.. _. _ 7:90 pni 7:55 a m
TO ROME AND CHATTANOOGA VIA
ATLANTA.
Lv Savannah 7:loam B:2opm
Ar Atlanta 5:40 p m 6:40 a m
Lv Atlanta 5:55 pin 7:50 a m
Arßome 11:35am
Ar Chattanooga.: 11:40 pm 1:00p m
TO ROME AND CHATTANOOGA VIA CAR.
ROLLTON.
Lv Savannah 7:10 a m 8:20 p m
Ar Griffin 4:olpm s:llam
Ar Carrollton s:3oam
Arßome 11:05am
Ar Chattanooga 8:10 pm
Solid train Savannah to Griffin, Griffin to
Chattanooga, connecting at CLattanooga with
lines diverging for Nashville. Louisville, Cincin
rati, S. Louis, Chicago and points in the north
and northwest.
LOCAL TRAINS.
Guyton dinner train leave* Savannah 2:00 p.
m.; arrives Guyton 2:55 p. ill. Returning leaves
Guyton at 6:25 p. m.; arrives Savannah
4:00 p. m.
Milieu ‘ Shoo Fly" leaves Savannah 5:40p. m.;
arrives Guyton 0:4 )p. in,. Milieu 8:25 p. m. Re
turning leaves Milieu !:00 a. in., leaves Guyton
arrive* Savannah 8:00 a. in
NOTICE TO PASSENGERS.
Train leaving Savannah at 8:20 p. m will stop
regularly at Guyton to put ©ft" passengers.
Passengers for Sy vaunt, Wrightsvllle, Mii
ledeevliio and Eatontou should take 7 lo a m
train.
passengers for Newnan, Carrollton. Fort
Gain *, Talbotton, Buena Vista, Blakely and
Clayton should take the 8:00 p. m . train.
Tickets for all points end sleeping oar berths
on sale at City Office. No. 11l bull street, and
at Union Depot, V% eat Broad street. For further
jifor r i*ati n ;inn’v to
ROBERT W. HUNT, CLYDE BOSTICK.
Ticket Agent, Trav. Pas*. Agent.
E. T CHARLTON, Gen. Pass. Agent,
Savannah, Gn.
East Tennessee, Virginia 4 Georgia \i II
GEORGIA DIVISION
The Shortest Line
BETWEEN
Savannah & Atlanta.
Commencing sept. 2. issl ta* following
Schedule will be m effect:
EASTERN LINE
SAVANNAH TO BRUNSWICK.
Lv Savannah 7:o6am 5:4" pin 1 l:i7 p m
Ar Jeeup 8:38a m 0:10 p m 2:32 pm
Lvjenup B:4oam 2:15 pm
Ar Brunswick 10:52 a in 4:55 pm
TO ATLANTA, CHATTANOOGA AND THE
WEST.
Lv Savannah 7:00a m 3: C. pm
LvJesup 11-10 l m 6:ijdpm
Ar Macon 5:85 >in 2:05 am
Ar Atlanta 9:15 Dm 6:40a in 12:55 p m
Arßome I:3oam 9:55am 3:55pm
Ar Dalton 2:58 a m 11:27 a m s:4opm
ArCbattanooga. ra 12:55 pm 6:50 pm
Lv Chattanooga.. 9:ooam 7:lopm - 7:Top m
ArCinchiaatl. 6:42 p m 6:4oam 6:45am
Lv Chattanooga.. 6:60a m 7:00p ua 7:00 pm
Ar Memphis , 5:30p in 6:loam C:loam
Lv Chattanooga... Ai46a B I:4C pin 'll Mpm
ArNashv.lie 7:iK)pm 7:ooam
TO KNOXVILLE, HOT SPRINGS, ASIIE
vn.i.E. th k viaoi m -vsa nd ti i r bast.
Lt St*v.uman 7:uJ am 3:45pm
Lv Atlanta 10:15pm 1:03 am 12 55 pm
Arßome 1:30 ain #:6S a m 8:55 pm
Ar Dalton 2:03 a m 11:27 am 6:90 dui
Ar Chattanooga .._s:4u a iu 12:36 p m p m
Lv Chattanooga .. ~~ TthSO p m
Ar Cleveland 4:loam 12 05 pm 11:06pm
Ar Knoxville 7:lsam 3:00 p m 1:50a m
Lv Knoxville 7:50 am 8:06 am 7.50 a m
Ar Morristown.... 9:10 am 4: Opm :iOam
Ar Hot Springs...ll:ooam 6:30 pm li.uOam
Ar Asheville 12;Jt>uoou 9:00 p m 12:l(luoon
Ar Bristol 8:00 pp, r, ;l >o ain
Ar Roanoke 2: i a in 18:30noon
Ar Lynchburg 8:45 am 2:25 pm
Ar Charlottesville 6:40 a ni p m
Ar Washington 11:13 a m 9:40 p w
Ar Baltimore 12:40 p in 11:35 p m
Ar Philadelphia... 3:10 pro 3:00a in
Ar New York 5:50 pin 6:91a m
Lv Roanoke 2110 am 18:45 p m
Ar Natural Bridge 8:16 am 2:2lpm
Ar Waynesboro 5:36am 4 13 pin
Ar Luray 7:4oam 6:sipm
ArShenando'J'n 10:43am 9:o'pm
Ar Hagerstown 11: W n m 10:10 p m
Ar Harrisburg . 8:00 p m 12:50|> m
Ar Philadelphia 6:50 pm 4:25 am
Ar Now York 9:35 p m i:irt ain
Lv Lynchburg 7:ouam 2:44pm
Ar IlurkvUle 8:24 ain 6:17 p m
Ar Petersburg 11:14am 7:oopm
Ar Norfolk 2:27p m 9:55 pin
Pullman sleeping ears leave n* follows: Jesup
*t:3on. m for Home; Atlanta at 1o::5d. m. for
Chattanooga: open fur pann-ngers ui h p m
Koine at 9:55 a. in for Washington via Lynch
burg; Chattanooga at 10:60 a. m. for New York
via Shenandoah Valley. and at 10: 0
p m. for Washington via Lynchburg; Chatta
nooga at 3:50 a. m and 7:10 p. m. for Memphis.
Company's sleeping cars (no upper births)
leave Macon dailv a* 5:45 p. m for Knoi.-rille
B. W. WRKNN, G. P. * T. A.,
Knoxville, Tonn.
L. J. E 1.1.15, A. O P. A., Atlanta.
Charleston k Savannah Railway.
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT MAY 16th, 1881
TRAINS leave and arrive at Savannah , y
Standard Time, whlab is 33 miuute* slower
than city lUno.
NORTHWARD.
No. #B.* No ll.* No. 71 •
Lv Savannah 6:46 am 12:44 pm 8:10 pm
Ar Beaufort 10:17a in 6:oopm
Ar Allendale 10:35 ara 7:35 pm
Ar Augusta 12:40 pin
A r Charleston .. 12:00uvon 6:20 pm 1:26 ain
SOUTHWARD
No. 38 * No 85.* No. 97. •
Lv Charleston.... 7:U)e w 8,15 pin 4:dos .
Lv Augusta 12 AS p in .
Lv Allendale...... s:loam 2:4opm ........
Lv Beaufort 7:28a m 8:43 p m
Ar Savauuah ... 10:44 a m 7:Uoptn 6:41a in
•Daily.
Train No. 14 slope only at Yeinassee and
Green Pond.
Train No. 78 stops only at Montelth, Hardeo
vtlls. Ridge land, Cooeauhatchle, Yemaesoe,
Green Pool and Kaveueh
For tiokets, Pullman ear resort slioni and
other Information, apply to WM. BREN, Ticket
Agent, 22 Bull street, and at depot.
B. P.MnSWTNT-V, Gten Pass. Agsufc
C. S. GADSDEN, RperlsUndent.
RAILROADB.
savannah m\n k'mM
RAILWA Y.
Way cross Short Lina.
Time Card in Effect June 17 fBCft'
CORRECTED TO SEPT. 22d. j
•\ LL* TRAINB of this road are run by
/V Standard Time. Passenger trains will l,?
and arrive daily as follows: *“*
SOUTH DOL'NTI. f
WEST INDIA FAST MA TT
Leave Savauuah .. !•
Leave Jesup LS 1 * 1 !
Leave Way cross iyrtasj
Leave Callahan 11 * ®
Arrivo Jacksonville... ii. iI M
•••! no a
PLANT STEAMSHIP LINE 4
Steamer Mascotte of ab ive line win 1 . f
I ort Tampa Monday and Thursday at in „**’*
Arrive at Key West Tu-s<iay arul Friday lP i 01 *
in., and Havana Wednesday and Saturday A
a. m. lieturning, leave Havana Wed'CJul
and Saturday a: ! p. m.; leave Key
Wednesday and Saturday at 10 p. m a,,?*}
1 ore Tampa Thursday and Sunday at * **
connecting there wltn trains for the north.
NEW ORLEANS EXPRESS
Leave Savannah - is
Leave Jesup
Leave Waycross ‘ a
Leave Dupont , ,;yj a J
Arrive Live Oak f.j.v?* 6
Arrive Lake City P I
Arrive Gainesville
Arrive Thomasvllle ’• ;:!£P<
Arrive Balnbridge ' „' i;:r 91
Arrive Chattahoochee... JVTJPI
Iveave Cnattahoochee 1,1;': * f t
Leave Bainbridge | la.'n i
Leave Thomasviile .S;.':
Leave Gainesville 7 :1 Pb
Leave Lake City ~*■ 9 h
Leave Live Oak ,
lave Dupont iiV? UJ
lwsaveWaycross
Arrive Jesup '. ”* " ;‘ ? 9A
Arrive Sttvaunah
7:45 o (
Train leaving Savannah at 7:06 a m iwC
close connection with F. R. and N. Cos atiß
Oak for Monticello, Madison and Talhihas g.AT
EAST FLORIDA \
Leave Savauuah '2-kt m3
Jesup... a.aj*3
Arrive Waycross . 4 ii) l!3
Lea*) Wayci-oss 4-25 83
Leave Jesup . eJm
Arrive Savannah 7-1 Is-9
Train leaving Savannah 12:35 p.' m. couAfl
at Jesup for Brunswick.
ALBANY EXPRESS. ~ <
Leave Savannah 8-Rnn*
I*save Jesup ...!!! 10- 45 fin
Arrive Waycross G-inl n
Leave tVaycross ? 2
Leave Dupont W""
Arrive Thomasville
Arrive Albany
Albany // j.aq r J
Leave ThomaHville r j
I.eavo Dupont ni
Leave Waycross., . ..” ijul
Leave Jesup ’]* 4*d()a 3
Arrive Savannah ..”[*** |” * * fill, A S
ft ™
JESUP EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah . 3-45pn
Arrive Jesup 6:10b3
Leave Jesup s-j-.JS
Arrive Savannah ””
Stops at uR regular and flag stations.
LOCAL CONNECTIONS,
via jesup.
Brunswick, Macon, Atlanta, Chattanooga and
Cincinnati.
Loave Savannah 7:06 a nT^riSTm
Arrive Jesup 8:38 am 6:10 U
Arrive Bruuswick 10:45 a in
Arrive Macon 5:30 pm 2:05 am
Arrive Atlanta 9:15 pm 6:40 ant
Arrive Chattanooga 5:40 am 1:00 p m
Arrive Cincinnati 6:42 p m 6.40 am
LOCAL CONNECTIONS.
VIA WAYCROSS. j
Brunswick, Albany, Montgomery, Nashville an 4
Cincinnati.
Leave Savanuah ] 7:06 a m B:JS ji'nj
Arrive Waycross I 9:45 a ml 1:15 am
Arrivo Brtmswick 12:60 pm! .. i
Arrive Albany 8:00 pmltl:4o 6n
Arrive Montgomery 6:10 pm
Arrive Nashville I 5:10 a m
Arrivo Louisville !.. 11:82 a 3
Arrive Cinclnaati | 4:ospnf
SLEEPING CAR SERVICE.
Train leaving Waycross 4:85 p. ro. has TMJII
man aleepiug car to Jesup. Thence via
express to At anta.
Train leaving Savannah at 12:35 p. m. eons
neotsat Waycros* with sleeper for Macon an 4
Atlanta.
Tnrough Sleeping Cars between WaycrO*
and ,7e s>y City, via the Atlantic Coast I.lnaj
Through tickets sold to all point* by rail nhs
steanistdp connections, and baggage oheclcsj
through. Also Sleeping Oar Berths and Heot! ia*
secured *t Paastmger Station, and Bren's Tiotal
Office, 22 Bull strest.
R. G FLEMING, WM. P. HARDEE, f
Super!ntendant. Gen. Pas*. Asdt
IHIGNG.
Plant Steamship Line.-<
A
SEUI-WEEKLY. 8
Tampa, Key West anti llavans.
SOUTH BOUND.
Lv Port Tampa Mondays and Thursdays 10: JB
p. a J
Ar Key West Tuesdays and Fridays 4 pm. J
Ar Havana Wwlnesdavs arid Saturdays 6 a. M
NORTH-BOUND.
Lv Havana Wetlnasday* and Saturdays 1 r Sg
Lv Key West Wednesdays and Saturday s 9 p. SB
Ar Port Tampa Thursdays and Sundays 3:84
P M. J
Connecting at Port Tampa with West In itif
Fast Train to and from Northern and EasterO:
dries. For stateroom accommodations, ay-sty!
to City Ticket Offio*. 8., F A W. R’y, Jack* •'
ville, or Agent Plant Steamship Line. Tamp% J
C. D. OWF..NB, Traffic Manager. (
11. S. HAINES, General Manager. *
—r j.i 22? C
RAILROADS.
Miimran
ON AND AFTER MAY 14, 1883, trains depart
from Jacksonville passenger station, foot
of Hogan street, as follows:
7:30 a. m.—New On leaks Fast Mail, dally,
for Lake City, Live Oak, Marianna. Madi
son, Monticello, Tallahassee, Quincy, De-
Fkiniak, Pensacola. Mobile, Now Orleans,
Texas, lenver, Nashville, at. Louis, Cincin
nati, ("hioago, etc. Arrive* iu Jacksoa
viile at 0:4& p. m
8:30 a. m.—For Fernandina and Ooeaa
Beach, Bunday only. Btnps at all stations.
Arrives Jacksonville at 0:45 p. in.
0:30 a. m.—Fon F'ehnandixa Daily, except
Sunday. Connects with Cumberland Rout*
for Brunswick, Macon, Atla.ita, Chatta
nooga, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago and
all points North. Arrives at JacksonviGs
3:05 p. m.
11:40 a. m. -South Floriiu Mail aji> I*-
PHEss, dally, for Gainesville, Cedar Ky.
Sliver Springs, Ocala, Wildwood, Plant Oil y,
Igteshurg. Tavares. Orlando, South Florin*.
Arrives Jaoknonvllie 1:45 p. n>.
3:45 p. in.--Bt/ahsr Eeprsas, Bunday only
Oonneot* with Bunday steamers Clyde Is*
for Charleston and Now York. Also wits
Cumberland Route steamers for Brunswick,
Macon, Atlanta, Cincinnati, Chicago and ale
point* North. Arrives at Jacksonville
12:10 p. m. J
3:00 p. m. West Fi/uiiua Express, dally.)
for all points In IVest Florida, Peussoola.l
Montgomery, Nashville and ah points Norths'
Arrives Jacksonville 12:46p. m.
4:30 p m.—Fehkanoika Mail and Expaßsa.
daily, except Bunday. conuects Tuesday and,
Friday with Savannah steamer, Thursdisf
with Mallory hue. Arrive* Jaoksouvlli*
8:45 a.m. 2
7:46 v m.-Sotmt Figmins Nioht FxraxsA>
dally, except Bunday, for all points In flout*
Florida, lias through Bleeping Oar twi
Orlando. Berths only Si. Arrives Jaoksoiw
ville 0:25 a. m.
For local time card*, folders, rasps, rates, ana;
any other information, call at (Xty Ttokeß
Office, 86 West Bay street, corner Hogan. J
A. O. MaoDONEI.L, G. P. A
D. E. MAXWELL. Gen. Bupt., JacksonviUs, Fla
BARRELS.
EMPTY BARRELS.
EMPTY SYRUP BARRELS FOR.
SALE BY
C. M. GILBERT & CO., 1
8. E, Corner Bay and West Broad stres**.