Newspaper Page Text
lie Weekly Democrat.
: HEX E. RUSSELL, Editor and Pr«P’r
THURSDAY', DECEMBER 15. 1881,
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IJC
BY BEN. E. RUSSELL.
BAINBRIDGE, GA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15,1881.
| YOU 11.—NO. 11-
fSWES,S’ PROFESSIONAL.
Icrly
MEDICAL CARD.
E. I. Morgan
removed his office to the drug store,
occupied by Dr,
Harrell. Rest-
on West street, south of Shotwell,
oalls at night will reach him.
DENTISTRY.
Curry, D
D . S
be found daily at bis office on South
_ street, up stairs, in E. Johnson’s
img, where he is ready to attend to the
Is of the public at reasonable rates.
r dec-6-78
CHARLES C. BUSH,
torney at Law
COLQUITT, GA.
lompt attention given to all business en-
led to me.
L( M. o’nkap.
McGILL & O’NEAL.
Itorneys at Law.
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
lir office will bo found o?er the post of-
UONALSOK, BYKON Ji. BOWKR.
BOWER & D0NALS0N,
mays and CounsoMers at Law.
in tho court bouse. Will practice,
catnr and adjoining counties, and
bore by special contract. ft-25 7
|C T 0 R L. BATTLE,
Dentist.
over Hinds Store, West side
Ihouse. Has fine dental engine, and
lave everything to make his office
llass. Terms cash. Office hours 9
I to 4 p. m. jan,13tf
DR. L. H. PEACOCK,
ctfnlly tenders his professional serv-
the people of Bainbridge and vicini-
T.e over store of J. D. Harrell & Bro
Inco adjoining Baptist Church, where
be fonnd at night.
El G, 1881—6m.
H. F. SHARON,
orney at Law.
Office in Court House,
practice in all the courts of the
Circuit and Supremo Court of
In the Circuit and Supreme
j of Florida, and elsewhere by special
t.
bridge, Ca., April 23, 1881—ly.
—THE—
River Saw Mill
I Is now ready to Furnish
|u m B E R
hrgo, and at retail, for the Lowest
Market Price.
Ihango Lumber for Logs. Corres
pondence solicited.
IDOLPH M. COHEN, Pro.
re, Ga., July 7—3m.
Carriage of a Daughter.
JJT TUI LATE BIV. /AXES A. DCKCAX, D. S.
[Tlio following lines wero written by the
late lamented Rev. James A. Duncan, V. D.,
of Virginia, upon the marriage of his eldest
daughter, and Just before hit death:]
She is married and gone.
And the “Good-bye” is spoken (
She was wooed and won.
And the home eirele’s broken.
As S brooklet no more,
But a far-flowing river,
Sweeping on to the Sea,
But returning—no never I
No longer a bnd,
But a flower flull blown;
No longer a child,
But a woman full grown.
A fledgeling no more,
From the childhoods home,"
A bird on the wiug,
From the nestling she’s flown.
But, while this old heart
Is alive in my breast,
My birdie, my darling,
You’ve a perishleas nest.
Randolph, Macon College, Va.
A Lesson in Debt Paying.
A pretty good thing on debt paying
was got off by a minstrel company in
this city. One dollar is made to pay a
debt of §6, by the following manner :
End man No. 1 owes the middle man
82, but says he can pay him but 81,
and crossing the stage hands him a
dollar. The middle man owes end man
No. 2 $2, but as the dollar he has just
received from end man N. 1 is afl that
he has, he hands that to him. End
man No. 2 owes end man No. 1 82, and
hands the dollar he has just received to
him and pays the half he owes. Three
dollars in debts have been paid, and
end man No. 1 has his dollar back.
Then, as he owes the dollar to the
middle man, ha passes it over, and the
middleman in turn pays his dues to
end man No. 2, who in turn squares
himselfbypassing.it back to end man
No. 1. Thus a debt aggregating $6 is
paid off by 81, and the first man has
his money hack. There is a good les
son in thi3.— Crawforthvilie (lnd)
Jounal.
Photographer,
IS, -
GEORGIA.
li'jhest Premium at State
FAIR.
Sf Bainbridge and surrounding
t offer myself as a candidate to
bhotographs from now on, and
a! do my best to make you all
pne. I’ve done said it, and I’ll
the stars tumble. So don’t
ten you visit Columbus. My
bit to Rankin House. I am
[do all kinds of
fQ and ENLARGING!
nnected with my Establish-
class Miniature and Portrait
| my pictures are not sent off
Sh I make .all new styles—
I, Boudoirs, Promonades, Cab-
pic pictures, of many designs.
I see me. I am the same Rid-
[>>Xi Syne.”
'fiic i’o<xi to JV3»k:c Flesh.
In general >ve do not think health is
proportioned by ‘'taking thought’’ too
much about it. But on the other hand
there is no advantage in ignorance.
Here is a hint from the Toledo Blade ;
Sugar, syrup, fresh cheese, wbeafen
grUs, hominy and juicy meats are the
foods to make flesh. Almost any woman
will get plump on brown bread and
wheaten grits, or oatmeal twice a day,
with meat and plenty of vegetables at
breakfast and dinner, and a supper of
brown biscuits, cheese and cream, or
coffeo drank with plenty of sugar and
cream. It is not necessary to eat
largely if the appetite does not call for
it, but tho food must he tempting, and
if tho hunger is keen, any one who
would be plump and spirited must not
be afraid to indulge it. Unrelishing,
distasteful food, though it may be
considered healthy, will not nourish
and stimulate like what piquant and
savory, and, changed in variety day by
clay.
Ianrancc Laws—Georgia and
New York.
Several years ago the Legislature of
Georgia passed a law requiring all in
surance companies doing business in
Georgia to deposit $25,000 in State or
U. S. Bonds, with the Comptroller
General, for the security of policy hold
ers in this state. Nearly all the com
panies of any financial standing com
plied with the law, but a few undertook
to do business in the state without the
deposit, through the medium of brokers.
—The Legislature of Georgia then
passed a law calculated to stop this
practice by making it a misdemeanor
for any one, except the agent of a com
pany that had complied with deposit
law, to transact any insurance business
m this state, and such agent could only
do business for a company that had
Gomplied with the law.
The Legislature of New York has
passed a retaliatory law which places
any one who insures in a company that
has not complied with the deposit law
and established agencies in Georgia
completely at the mercy of the com
pany by refusing to allow the courts of
New York to entertain any suit brought
against any insurance company by a
oitizen of Georgia.
There is but one thing to do under
this, and that is for every man who
wants insurance, either on his life or
against fire, to see that the company
has a duly authorized agent in the
state and to do no business through
New York brokers-
Ben Mill IhterTlewefl.
Washington Cor. Maccm Telegraph.
In the evening, in company with a prom
inent Republican, I called upon Senator
Hid ard was cordially received. In an
swer to a question as to kia health, be re
plied :
*T was never in better health, never felt
more like work w better fitted for work.
1 weigh now 187 pounds, which brings me
within a pound of the heavieat weight I
ever attained.”
“And the mouth trouble?"
“That has apparently all disappeared,
It was purely only a local trouble, aud not
in the blood. The physicians tell me I am
permanently-cured. I certainly have not a
bit of pain about the tongue, and it has
healed entirely.”
“Do yon feel tho loss of the glands
much 1”
“I do not feel the need of them at all.
The entire floor of my mouth on one side,”
continued he, indicating the place with his
finger,‘‘has been removed; the sub-max
illary,-the Eubtingnal and one other gland
are missing. There i3 nothing now the
matter except that my tongue has healed
a little too far forward and makes mo lisp.
That can be remedied by a very slight
operation called 'clipping.’ Bat the only
thing between my tongue and the outside
world is a very thin piece of skin—"
“ And the Mahonitcs will find that a
very slim guard, I presume.”
“I should not be surprised if they heard
from me soon on that line—not at all sur
prised,” said the Senator, resting his band
on his knees and looking fixedly at the
questioner. “Mahone and the Republi
cans are now exactly where I expected to
place them. Mahone’s idea was to stand
between the two parties, and it was my
policy to drive him where ho belonged.
The result in Virginia did uot surprise me,
except that I expected a larger result for
Mahone."
“What effect will Virginia's action have
on the South generally?”
“It will make it more than evor solid.
There can be no such result in any other
Southern State, and, all apprehensions are
needless. Virginia is simply going through
what the other States South have endured.
The Virginia delegation that made an ar
rangement with Grant in about 1870, kept
the State free of negro rule at that time.
1 have oftoa had Virginians to boast of
their freedom from the evil. I told them
tea years ago that it had to come, just as
certain as the measles has got to roc
through a family vihen one of the children
catches it. • Virginia is just having the
measles now that is all; bat she is the
lust to hare them—not tho first. Tho
truth of the matter is, the Virginia trouble
was the best thing that could have hap
pened for the South. It not OBly made the
South stronger, but it will make tho Vir
ginia Democracy solid. The Mahone issue
was cot between the Republicans and
Democrats—it was a general State issue,
in which, by a union with the Republicans,
the Mahoneites were able to triumph.
There were thousands who voted with Ma
hone, also, who honestly did not believe
the debt should be paid, yet whom you
would insult by calling Republicans,
have no fear fer Virginia—none whatev
er. Bat the Republicans hav8 blundered
fatally. They have committed themselves
to repudiation. They Btand before the
country a3 indorsing repudiation. Had
they gone into the South ca another issue
they might have effected something. As
it is. they have made an attack where
nothing could be gained, aud bj the
sank hare made tho other States solid.
You will hear from ma soon upon the sub
ject. If the Republicans don’t find Ma
hone au ‘Old Man of the Sea,’ then I am
mistaked.”
“Do you not think the Republicans have
swallowed Mahone without winking T’
The Senator looked up quizzically. “No
sir. There aro plenty of them winking,
and more yet to wink. Prominent Re
publicans have admitted to me in conver
sation that they were heartily sick ol Ma
hone. They will be sicker yet before the
session is over."
I have endeavored to give the Senator's
ideas as nearly as he unfolded them. He
looks better than ever, and has only a
slight lisp to remind ns of his recent trou
ble. This will be good news to Georgians,
for Hill is bound to be his own successor
as long as he chooses to run and is able to
perform the duties of his office.
H. S. E.
A man’s opinions are controlled largely
by hi3 interest, and the expression of that
opinion he charge those who do not agree
with him, as wanting either in sense or
honesty. But the man whose opinions do
uot change with his interest is a jewel—a
rare specimen of humanity, possessed of a
clear head and a true heart.
The deep, devoted friendships com
pounded in sammer hotels generally go all
to pieces in the autumn. Intimacies, flir
tations and deadly enmities have a nice
way of sading into thin air when the season
is over and a change oemes o’er the spirit
of vmy e
— . ~—
A Cool Detective,
As a rule, highwaymen in the nin
ing states seldom operate upon a stage
coach with ‘U. S. M.’ on it. They know
that these initials stand for the United
States mail, and are a pledge that the
whole powder of the goTerment will be
ased t* eapimre them.
The deteetiree is tb» fnvinit
•ervieea are quiet uea, eomr^eoos ia
manner end gentle in speech Mr. Hayes
tells, in his kook os ‘Neif Colorado,
of one whom he met, who wore gold
spectacles, and looked like a German
professor. Yet this loan alone took
two mail robbers from the north to
Texas. At one place their friends
planned rescue. He quietly informed his
prisoners that while their frieuds could
undoubtedly kill hjm, they might be
sure that the first motion would send
both of them into eternity. Not a man
ia the crowd moved a finger.
On one occasion, a celebrated detective
was on a stage which was attacked by
two masked men, The firit he knew was
that two revolvers were threst in the
eoach's windows, with the command;
Hands up gentlemonl'
The highwaymen ‘had the drop’ on
the passengers, which, in their vooabu-
lary, meant the certainty of being able
to kill before being harmed themselves
To his disgust, the detective wa* com
pelled to give up his watch and tftoney.
As the robbers left he put his- hand
down ’in the boot,’ and to his delight it
touched p. carbine. Asking the driver to
go on a little farther and then stop
and wait for him’ he went back alone.
The two men; unsuspicious of danger,
wera ’divvying up the spoils in the mid
dle of the road. This was just what
the detective had calculated on.
Now, you scoundrels, it’s my turn,
he aheuted covering them with the re
peating carbine. Throw up your bauds,
or I'll shoot.
The robbers, at this command, step
ped one side holding up their hands,
while he picked up their revolvers. It
was not many minntos before the as
tonished passengers saw tba two high
waymen meekly walking down the road
with the detective following. They
wore taken in the coach, aud finally
lodged in jail.
The hero was General Charles Adams
who subsequently went alone among
the Utes and secured the relerse of wo
men captivos from the White River
agency.
Wliat Guitean will Do.
Washington agecial to Phtladslphiii Times,
Your correspondent visited the as-
sasiiia Ouiteau in his cell to-day. A
large erowd of ladies and gentlemen
gathered at the jail, hat few of
them were permitted to see the prison
er, During the morning about fifteen
experts on insanity were there to exam
ine him. In tho conversation which
followed Guiteau said the trial was
Compliment to the Officers of
the Central Railroad.
A sensational drama has recently
progressing satisfactorily to him ; that fbeen performed in the chief theatre at
he was certain of acquittal by the jury ;
that when he got on the witness stand
he wouldhoon eoavince them that he
removed the President under inspira
tion. Even the lawers, he said, were
friendly to him, and he mentioned
Colonel Corkhill and Mr. Davidge by
name as having no desire to convict
him. He was asked what he fehould
do supposing the jury said he must
hang. “I would go upon the scaffold
without fear,” said he, “If the Lord
wills it I will obey His commands with
out complaint. I will cheerfully go.
It may not bo in this generation, but
the odium attached to my name will be
removed. I will bo regarded as a pat
riot and the saving of the nation from
civil war. My name will go down in
history with Lincoln’s and Grant’s.’’
He was asked what he would do if
acquitted. “I will go into the lecture
field as coon as I am out. .1 would
make $50,000 the first year. I would
pay all my debts and board bills, and
start life again. I would go out to In
diana and marry that hundred-thous
and-dollar girl who recently advertised
for a husband.
We take the following from the Rail
way Gazette, of December 1: Mr,
Win. M. Wadley, the well known Presi
dent of the Central Railroad and
Banking Company, of Georgia, is a
remarkable illustration of the self-made
man. . When a very youag man he
worked at the anvil ia a Northers
State ea a blaekemith and there made
some of the muele which has sinee
served him a good purpose. Subse
quently he went to Georgia, and when
Gordoa was President of tho Central
Railroad he was making brick out ob
the line, and later, when- Culey was
President, he was serving faithfully one
of the company’s supervisors. He was
one of the company’s first book-keepers,
serving both ip this capacity and as
superintendent at tbe game time, car
rying his accounts in his hat when oat
on the line, and referring to that novel
receptacle when giving information
about the business of the road. Mr.
Wadley became President in 1866 or
1867, and has served »3 such over
since. He is physically and mentally a
giant, H an ind <tmtable worker, a
shtewd, clcaT headed, safe business man,
and possesses an amount of pluck
which, added to these other character
istics, eannot fail to bring success. Ia
fact, success has already resulted in an
eminent degree, both to himself and to
the great corporation over which he
presides. ’
Mr. W. G. Raoul, Vioo-President
and General Manager, began service
with that road ia 1870 as a contractor,
was made assistant roadmaster in 1873,
afterwards roadmaster, and in 1876
superinteniani or southwestern divis
ion. He was elected to hia present
position in June, 1880.
Mr. William Rogers, tho General
Superintendent of the road, began as
the company's book keeper in 1866,
aud was made General Superintendent
ia IS67- 51c has never been connected
with any other road.
Mr. George A. Whitehead, the Geu-
eral Freight and Passenger Agent, was
appointed to this pcs;.bn July, 1880.
at which time it earriad by General
Manager Raoul. He had been in the
company’s service several years as trav
eling agent at terminal points, &o.
Mr. Edward Molntyre, who is really
thd Secretary and Treasurer of the
oompany, although his tide is that of
book-keeper, began as an office boy,
and has worked his way up through
the various grades to bis present posi
tion.
Tho policy of this read has boea to
promote deserving employe* rather than
to call ia outsiders, sad the result ia a
most commendable degree of loyalty on
the part of everyone toward the com
pany and its interests.
FLTf,
It may be said of the girls of Lancing,
Michigan, as of the man in the “Deserted
Village,” that even their failings lean to
virtue’s side. They indulge in handker
chief flirtations on the streets, but it is
only to iveigle confiding young gentlemen
into a building where a temperance meet
ing is in progress.
“I go against my Will,” murmured she
sweetly, as she fondly leaned on William’s
ajib «gd tfcey qupsii&qi tP the&tfe-
Moscow, the crowning situation being a
combat ia a reeky pass between a lion
and aa Arab chief. The lion scrambles
up a steep ascent, and is about to spring
from its summit upon his foe, when the
man brings him down with a wcll-airu-
ed shot. The part of the lion has boea
sustained most successfully by a trained
gymnast named Alexeivitch until about
a fortnight ago, when that artist sud
denly fell ill, and the management was
compelled to intrust his role to aa ac
tive super, who undertook it at a few
hours notice. When the time arrived
for his debut, he bounded oa the stage
with admirable vigor, and scuttled up
the cliff in irreproachable style. But
when the Arab chief discharged his
musket, the lion utterly thrown off his
guard by the report, stood eroct on his
hinder paws, crossed himself devoutly,
and exclaiming, “Heaven help, ns I”
hurriedly descended the cliff tail fore
most, amid the jubilant shouts of the
audience.
Vanderbilt figurse up hia “portable prop
erty” at two hundred millions, and looks
down commiseratiDgly on Jay Gould, who
is probably not sorth a hundred and fifty
millions to save his sonl. Bat then, as
the darkey said, “Gould, he young yet.”
A conscientious Wkitebalier visited
New York last week. On his return he
was asked if he visited any fancy places of
amusement, “bh—sh!" said he placiog
hand beside his mouth, “don’t speak so
loud. I went to hear Beecher,”
Evil often stops short at itself, and dies
with Uf dpqr qfii.hu! good, nwcr.
It is a mean man who will fool flies by
having the wax figure of a bald-headed man
in his room te attract them from him.
A reporter of a California free fight says :
“Col. Baggss was shotonce in the left side,
once in the right shoulder, end once in the
drinking selooa adjacent."
Tbe girl wkb was locked be k«r lever's
areas for three long hoars, explains that h
wasn’t her faults. Che (biashe forget the
eombinaticn.
The elam has a larger mouth, in prpor-
tion to its size, than a human being, yet a
clam never tr.lke about its neighbor.
Chicago has a violinist who plays with
his feet. But noboddy but a resident of
Chicago would play with his feet before
company.
In "the world’s broad SeliJ of polo,
In the base bail game of strife,
Many shin is barked severely,
You can bet your precious life.
It 88Gms th3t competition has forced the
price of false teeth down so low that it isn’t
really worth a body’s time to eut the nat
ural ones.
Ia the good Old Testament days it was
considered a miracle for an ass to speak j
and now nothing short of a miracle will
keep one quiet.
Nothing in this world yiohls larger and
quicker returns on the amount invested
than poking a wasp with your finger to see
if he feels wolk-
Some men whsa they go to church cover
think of studying tbe freecoin ca the ceil
ing until the collection plate is being pass
ed around.
A very sweet breath is said to be an in
dication of blood poisoning. We fear that
blood poisoning is Dot epidemic in the
United States.
I remember a kiss she gave me
While leaning against tbo well;
Sbe glaod her lips to mine and said,
“Yam, yum,” and that was all.
A young lady jnBt returned from Faria,
oa being interrogated as to what time it
was, replied that it we-s “twenty minutes
au fait.”
A Deleware girl pats oa great airs bo-
enuse she bas been the cause of Are suicides
among tho young men in her neighbor
hood.
A young lady in Kansas, while chewing
gura recently, was struck with paralysis in
the jaw and rendered speechless. She im
mediately bad four proposals en the spot.
A western editor as’xa the following
question; “If a fellow has nothing when
he gets married, aud the girl has nothiug
is bar things hisson, or his things hern ?’’
We think they are.
“I shall awaken in heaven,” wrote a
Boston girl before she took arsenic. Bat
she took too much for a death dose, and
awoke with a stomach pump down her
throat.
Thirteen female physicians aro practic
ing in Clayton, Iowa, aud at a recent fire
there wero not well men onongb in town to
ran the eagise out. It ij one grand incor
porated hospital,
While an Idaho girl w»3 sitting under
nndor a tree, waiting fer her lover, a griz
zly bear came along and, approaching from
behind, began to hug her. Bat she thought
it was Tcm, and bo leaned back and en-
ioyod it heartily, and mannered “tighter, 1 *
and it broke the bear a!! op; acd he went
away and hid in the fer-j; fj,r three days
to get ever his abut*. *
Pearls ef Theuchl.
Tim# ia a wave which nonot m-rmnre,
bocas so tbore is no obstacle tc it* 1bw.
If tempera!'-c» prevails. tLs* education
can prevail; ii temperance Eaiis, then oda-
cation mast fail.
Man himself is crowning wonder of crea
tion ; the study of !::s nature lbs noblest
study tho world aStrds.
Words are ef'en s .-irywhere a* the mi-!
note hands of the soul, t.oie important!
than even the hour hands of action.
A maa has no more right to say an un
civil thing than to act one ; no more right
to say a rude thing to another than to !
knock bits down.
mm FLORIDA 4 WESTTRTp
! }
SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE
| Savannah, NOV. 6th, 1881,
O N AND AFTER SUNDAI, NOV, €th,
1881, Passenger Trains on this Road
will run as follows: • *• '
FA3T 31 AIL.
Leave Savannah daily at. 12:10UP- ni
Leave JeBnp daily at 2;47’p. m
Leave Waycross daily at 4 ; 05 pt.jn
Arrive at Callahan daily at 6.-13 p. m
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at..7:00p. 1 ’ra
Leave Jacksonville daily at 9:00 a.'in,
Leave Callahan daily at fl;45 a, ip.
Arrive at Waycross daily at 11:57 a in
Arrive at Jessup daily at........ 1:6i0-p m.
Arrive at'Savannah daily at 3:40 p m
Passengers from Savannah for Brunswick
take this train, arriving at Brunswick 5:00
p. m. ,
Passengers leave Brunswick 10;16a. m.,
arrive at Savannah 3:40 p. m.|
Passengers leaving Macon at 7.-30 a."m.
(daily) connect at Jesup with this train for
Florida.
Passengers from Florida by this train oos.
■act at Jwnp with train arriving in Maoot)
at 7;60p. m. daily
JACKSONVILLE EXPRESS.
Laava Savannah daily at 11;00 p B>
Leave Jessup daily at 2:45 p m
Leave Waycross daily at 4.-45 a m
Arrive at Callahan daily at 6:57 am
Arrive at Jacksonville at 8:00 |a n»
Arrive at Live Oak daily (except
Sunday)at II .-30 am
Leave Live Oak daily at 2.00 p. m.
Leave Jacksonville daily at 5 : 50 (< m
Leave Callahan daily at 7:07 pm "
Arrive at vVaycross daily at 9;'58 p m
Arrive at Jesup daily at 11:40 pm
Arrive at Savannah daily at 2:35‘a m
Palace Sleeping Cars on this train daily
between Savannah and Jacksonville, Charles
ton and Jacksonville and Macon Jacksonville
and Montgomery and Jacksonville.
No change of cars between Savannah and
Jacksonville and Macon and Jacksonville
Passengers leaving Macon 7:50 p m con-,
nect at Jesup with this train tor Florida
daily. -, >■
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train arriving at Macon
7am daily.
Passengers for Darien take'this train.
Passengers from Savannah for Brunswick
take this train arrive at Bruuswick 5:30 n.m.
Passengers leaving Brunswick 9:00,p in
arrive in Savannah at 2:35 a m.
Through Pullman Sleeping Cars between
Wahington and Jacksonville by this train.“4
Passeugers from Savannah for Gnincsvill,
Cedar Keys and Florida Transit Road take
this train.
Passengers from Savannah for Monticello,
Madison, Tallahassee and Quincy take this
train.
Passengers from Quincy, Tallahassee,
Monticello and Madison take this train,
meeting sleeping cars at Waycross' at9;39
p m.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leave at Savannah at 4:30 p. m.
Leave Jesup daily at 7:26 a. m.
Leave Tebeauville daily at 10:0 p m
Leave Dupont at 12.-25 a. m.
Arrive at Thomagville dailyat... .5:05 a. m
Arrive at Bainbridge daily at. ...8:15 a. m
Arrive at Albany daily at 8:45 a. m
Leave Albany daily at 4.-45 p. m
Leave Bainbridge daily at -5:00 p. m.
Leave Thomasville daily at 8:40 p. m.
Arrive at Dupont at 1;33 p. m.
Arrive at Tebeauville daily 4:00 a m
Arrive Jesup at 6:15 p. m.
Arrive atSavannah daily at..,. .9:05 a. in-
Connect at Albany daily with passengex
trains both ways on Southwestern Railroad,
tc and from Macon, Enfaula, Montgomery,
Mobile, New Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leaves Bainbridge for Apa
lachicola every Tuesday and Saturday oven-
ing; for Columbus every Tuesday and Sat
urday afternoon.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily
(Sundays excepted) for St. Augustine, Pa-
latka Enterprise, Green Cove Springs and
all landings on St. John’s river.
Trains on B. & A. R. R. leaves junctions
going west, at 11:37 a. m. daily, Sunday
excepted
Through tickets sold and sleeping car
berths and drawing room car accommoda
tions secured at BREN’S Ticket Office, No.
22 Bull street, and at the company’s depot^
foot of Liberty street
J. S. Tyson, Jas. L, Tayxob,
Master Trans. Gen. Pass, Agent.
R. G- Flemino, Supt,
*R0W|fe
IRON
BITTERS
r^ET^i
BROWN’S EBON BETTERS am
a certain core for all dlnmnrtl
requiring a complete tonic; espe*
dally Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite*
lioss of Strength, lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength*
ens the muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts m
charm [on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
.. . . . , ....... such as tasting the food. Belching,
tne gray hair unto men, a.-«l spotted life Heat theStomach, Heartburn^
Feoliugs ccmo and go like light troops !
following the vitto' j of the present; but i
principles, like troops ol the Uue. are cudis- j
Curbed and stand Lit. |
Hoto.ablerge Is eat that which standetli
ia length of time, r.or tus: .. nish is mens- :
ured bj number of years. But wisdom is
is old age.
CITATION,
GEORGIA—Dkcatcu County.
To all whom it may concern, whereas John
T. Wimbor'7 as administrator of the estate
of Mrs. C. ii- Donakion, deceased, has made
application to me for leave to sell the lands
and Eagle and Pheonix Factory Stock be
longing to said estate for tbe payment of
the indebtedness of said estate and for dis
tribution amongst the heirs, this is therefore
to cite all persons concerned to show cause'
if any. they can, on the first Monday in Janu
ary, 1882, why such leave should not be
granted as prayed for. Given under my
hand and official signature. This, Nov. 25,
1681— Mastos O’Seal,
Ordinary.
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth «r
give headache. Sold by all Drug*
gists at $1.00 a bottle. , :
BROWN CHEMICAL. CO. _ I
Baltimore, Md. '’
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
I