The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904, May 06, 1893, Image 4

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PM May VVeathsr. Mr. Kicks predicfr'ihat May will OpQ,U with cq ;!, fair '-c'l t.T lit Uiosf parts, ejlii hvaia i»» nori.nerfl dihc-' tions. Auer a few days oft cooler, clear treatrn r, a5x»iii*e 7th it a ill , grow warmer in aud during ‘ tbe Stir to tlth ihu wnrujih will iu- CTiise »»« jta.iviMices <*»:_§]ward over the comment, resulting in many atoriuq about. 8ih, 9th, lOih. r " From t ho 18th to ihe 22d Jails a nmketl arorm period, the crisis ot Which -wiH nkuy be reached about the 22ud. A very warm wave will pass over the entire country duriug the period, and dangerous*. sli>r ms are ' liable to result. Cloud formations a *d other sVTtu indicatious should he P‘ udeuuy wutehed. After aurms piss, ii w lints C 'Kliuue troui souther* . ly 4*1 Juio, or uu* barometer sullenly reiuseh to i look fin a repetition of rain, wind aud U,uud<r, iu cycles ol twelve uud twenty-lour hour*, until winds shift j*vrr..-a neatly to westerly, and the barometer moves decidedly upward. About the 25th and 26th there will be another risj in tempera' ture. resulting in reactionary storm3. The last day of May is the center ot a regular storm period which runs into the opening days ol June. Full moon on the 30th will tend to hasten « developments, so that, a very warm wave will be well defined. The effects of the Venus cquinax will be felt in all the storms up to the middle of May, bene: there will be a marked tendency to hard hail storms, to ex cessive and sudden changes fiom very warm to very cool. Justice to All. The New York World is of the Opinion that Judge Speer decided most wisely in his recent decison in the railroad cases. It says : For once a labor organization gets even handed justice in the courts. It gets it bo'h ways, its boycott of the cars of an obnoxiou, road is raised by law, but the boycott of its member ship by employer.; is treated in pre cisely the same way. This rigid rule for master and man, for employer and employed, for masses of money on one side and masses ol men on the other, is the law of the land, the com mon law as well ns and it has been the immemorial. The roerce and the ant are but fresh ir.ilio principles as fami ancient and sacred. The Atlanta Jon says: Yesterday aftei Northen grant. «1 a Von Pollu'Mz tV. v. was to hang in Jlaii ot May This « s **•.»:, ii. C-ipi. y> st id ;> .»: li the case. B.une new rea.-,.. ilia had come .light, why the entcoca shoo’d be commuted to life impr.a uunent. The letters strongly recommend a com mutation from the Vntenca of death to life imprisonment The respite granted by the governor expires on June 2nd. aiute law, ly on hid way to get married when a Irom time deputy suer iff su. unions d him to late ccm- attend ourt as a juio •. He went enactments before tb o judge, ex plaint d the mat- cl le-al ter and asked t be ex eused. The »hev are jud«e r •fused. TJ e young juror served !iree days and then got oft- and vreii to tbe bur je of the young yesterday lady. B jt she w 3U ! d:.’ have* him; called hi ^ a villain and t ild him to Governor skip. 1 ,ic yov.ii^. U>r 1 as brought to J. K. suit a«j;ii jst tbo jut go IV r damages. dcrer, who lit! was. miconsritu i„iial y, detained .o the fitl) in Uis p-.i •wit, of llAJ —Nows. It is easy lor one to poison a person’s mind concerning another. There is measureless ruin wrought in this world by the slanderer. Characters are blackened; friendships destroyed; homes are torn up; j-a’ousies aroused, hearts are broken. Let us never take up an evil ' report and give it wing on breath of ours. Let us never whisper an evil thing of another. We know not where it may end, to what it may grow, what ruin it may work. Words once spoken can never be gotten back again. We had better learn to keep the. door of our lips locked and say no evil of any one. This is a silence we shall never regret.—Ex. This pension busihess-mj^t be lifted bodily out of politics. No min owgM ; to receive a pension bcciuse he is a democrat or refuse ar.e because he is Up : republican. The wounded soldier is a ward of the nation atd should have all that the public gratitude can safely grant, but the .grabber, the humbug who loafed in the rear while regiments were fighting at the front, must' be shown the door and told to make him self scarce. That is a hard task to perform but wo rather think Judge Lochren will be equal to it. This at titude is demanded for the good name ol the republic and ajp'o for the name of every brave fellow who helped * / to save it. —New York Herald. A company of confederate soldiers, bound for Chatanooga on the car, were indulging in some Munchausen stories of the war. One hud seen a man shot through the head and he lived; an other had seen a soldier whose arms and legs had been carried away, and he lived; a third had known a man to be shot in the side and through the head, and he lived; and the fourth had eeen a man Bhot clean through the body by a ten-pound cannon ball, and—“He lived?” asked liis listening comrades. ‘‘No,” quietly responded tbenarrator; “he died.” Chicago, April 25.—Except for a ffcw details everything is settled for tbe opening exerci-es of .the Colura bUu exposition oust M today.' The people w.iil be masked in front ot the Ad mi i, ration building -and lodged on the bridges of The lagoons when President Cleveland presses the but ton which will put the vast machinery io motion Then aV> thousands of fLg* oftveiy nation will bo thrown to the breeze all over the ground* and the fountains in the basin* will begin to piny. . . Frriich’ls figure.of “The Republic” at »he end of the basin will be uu- draped by IYfcidei.t Cleveland’s ac tion. A salute will he fired when the President reaches the grounds and another when ike machinery start?. JjN.lbiwing is the programme of the Ceremonies : Music—Chorus anil orchestra. Prayer—Itev. W. H. Milburu.-D. D. Poem—“The Prophesy”—W. A. Croffut, Miss Je3>ie Coutboui. Music —Chorus and orchestra. Address—Director General Davis. Address—President Grover Cleve land. Starting the machinery immediate ly after the exercises, Mr. Cleveland will go to the Manufacturers building and take a stand in the American section. Hero he wjll receive the commissioners of foreign nations. Tbe President will then be enter* tained at a luncheon by the directors, and then make his “official visit’ the principal buildings. Editor Grubb thus briefly alludes to tbe anniversary of his paper: ‘‘With this issue Tbe Darien Ga zette, formerly The Darien Timber Gazette, enters upon its twentieth year. We have no promises to make for the future. However, we will say just here that The Gazitte will con tinue to battle for the best interests of Darien, McIntosh county and Georgia. Now is tbe time to tub- scribe.” Here’s success and long life to the Darien Gazette and its clever editor. Long may both wave. An Indu eccut- trail. He M i apt-pi securing it ol a democratic postmaster at Bain bridge, his old home, but for some inexplicable rea son, tbe repubiicau glut down there refused to vacate. And now Mr. Rus sell has Called on Postmaster General Bi.-s-ll to be informed as to this thus- ness. He was assnrred, in the langu age ot President Cleveland, that the matter would be looked into.—Al bany Herald. Richmond, Va„ April 28 —Mrs. J. Taylor Ellison, chairman of the relic committee of ths Confederate Memorial and Literary Association has received from Chicago a proposi tion to purchase the Jeff Davis man sion which was recently given to the association by the city of Richm ond to bo used ss a museum in which to display relics of the confederacy. The offer i.3 a liberal one, but it is not likely to be entertained much less be accepted. Baxley, Ga., April 28.—For some time it has been advertised that the alliance of this congressional district would meet at this place ou April 26th for the purpose of dicta* ting liie future course of th^Ufance. The meeting made ja- complete “flash ’T Ui 1 ’ j—TTicre were only three counties . represented, there being three delegates from Johnson count}', one from Wayne and about ten from this. Nothing whatever was doue. Here s two items from JStanton’s There were sensational reports in' Washington on Friday about the prc3 ident having been seriously hurt ic New York, and about Mrs. Cleve land’s illness. A Washington city paper had tbe following in a special from New York: “His (the president's) hurt is not serious and it will not interfere with his trip to Chicago. It appears that while mounting into'his cat triage his foot slipped from the step and his temple came in contact with A sharp corner of tbe vehicle door. The wound bled profusely bat a surgeon soon (j»ad the sufferer all right. - Mrs. Cleveland, whose nerves were rather over-tested by the discharge ot bigguus, in New York harbor yes terday, was greatly disturbed by the report that the president was hurt, but subsequent telegrams reassured her„ The general feeling is she shou d not have gone to New “York jesier. day as her health is delicate.” That Kansas Lynching. The following story is told of a Georgia marshal who encountered a crowd of disorderly negroes: Marshal—“What is all of this row about?” Negro (with pistol, knife and club and war paint)—“Dat ar nigger dar said I was a consequence, an’ no black nigger can call me a conse quence, widout de penalty of ramify ing and dat to de mos* superfyin’ amphibiousness.” s “Good Lawd!” said one of the col ored sisters sitting near the scene of war, “dat am er edicated nigger fer show, blesj God!” Ahericus, April 28.—The Bank of Americas has again suepended payments. The officers claim that the embarrassment is only temporary, owing to a misunderstanding with their New York correspondent, but failure to pay call deposits to-day on demand has so caused great uneasiness on tbe pare of the public that it will bs hard to restore confidence in its solvency. The News says : “Candidates for the gubernatorial nomination in Georgia bid fair to be plentiiul loDg before tbe time for the nomination to be made comes around. No less than five gentlemen have been “mention ed” by their friends, and the conven tion is still more than a year away. It seems to be a foregone conclusion, by the way, that the wiregrass section is to be in the race with a candidate ” a rule when they occur in the south th« victims are negroes who have" committed nameless outrages up*»n white women. We do not remember in the history of each affairs in the couth that match* s a recent lyuching in. Kan- A negro in that state who had been sentenced to seven years impris onment lor cutting a Vhitu man with • # and who'war virtually on bis way to the penitentiary under guard, was taken frost the sheriff* by a mob and hanged to a telegraph pole. Now there is nothing to palliate such lawlessness. Seven years iu the penitentiary is sufficient punishment lor cutting a man, especially when we consider tbo fact that the person who was cut had previously struck the negro with a shovel. The prisons er was on his way to tbe penitentiary, and the excuse could not be pleaded by the mob that there bad been any failure of justice or that there was auy danger of his escape. We are saying nothing in justifica tion of southern lynching!*, but the burning of a white woman in Mich igan and the hanging of a negro by a mob in Port Jervis, New York, last year, shows that other sections cannot boast of a spotless record in this re sped.—Constitution. r - Mrs. Potter Pa'mtr yesterday gave the stroke of grace to the Women’s Building, at the World’s, fair when with a solid silver hhmmer she drove home the fi- al nail'of solid gold. It was the crowning act in the construc tion of a temple reared in honor of American womanhood. Yet tbe blows of the fair lady’s hammer were something more than finishing strokes. They were in fact but a part of a ritual celebration that proclaimed a deter mined purpose to push on the cause of woman’s advancement, and to make the past but a stepping stone to greater ac’nifcvments in the future.-Ex. An “exchange* says: “Very toon the organiz uion kuown as the Grand Army of the Republic will come to tbe parting ot the ways. It will then have to decide whether it shall continue to exist as an appauage of the pension claim agents, or shall stand fast for the good name and fame of ihe citi zen-soldiery in the civil war. Already there are sigus of revolt among the ■ genuine veterans against the existing pension system, which, they are deter mined, shall once again be made a roll of honor. The Jews are going back to Pales tine. Jerusalem is building up fast. Electric lights, telephones, factories, water works ami railroads The Jews are gettiug hold of the real estate and the country settlements are growing along the line ot railroad from Joppa to Jerusalem. Ancient prophecies may be fulfilled and the land of promise may soon be a oati< oi Jews—Ex. Many office seekers find themselves tackling soup, (they are in the soup) instead of munciug pie. Don’t get impatient, gentlemen, Boup is first on the bill of fare, pie comes last. Don’t growl at tbe cook, offend the head- waiter ot fall out with the waiter who brings you soup instead of pie. He is obeying orders. P. 8. If you don’t see what you want caU for it. Corner lots in Jerusalem may have a novel sound to real estate dealers’ ears but it looks as if they would yet hold a place in the speculative market. Land a mile out ot Jerusalem that thirty years ago sold for a dollar an acre has been bought by the company owning the new Jaffa and Jerusalem railway, a fifty-three mile line of road, for some $3,000 an acre. “certain” Georgia’cdilor indireot ly advertises for a wife. lie ought et her. I’ L a poor womau who cau’t support one Georgia newspaper. You don’t offer any inducements a editor iu this town?” “We don’t? Jerusalem! Why, we’ve buried six of ’em. an’ let their wid* ders pay for tlnjir funerals in installs meats!'’ The Barnesville Gazette warns tbe legislature against trading iu offices “The last legislature almost brought disgrace upon itself by its outrageous trading in the election of state officers, and it is sincerely hoped when it re assembles the members will act more with regard to the best interest of the state, with less desire to reward friends. It is an important duty.” These items from the Albany News and Advertiser: The Democrats have a president who hews to the jute of good govern ment, regardless of any wrong press ure that is brought to bear. He is a man every “inch” of him. The farmer who stays at home and works six days in the week is the farmer who doesn’t grow mortgages. Gutiirie, Ont„ April 28.—News continues to come in from different parts of the territory of the damage and death wrought by the fearful storm Tuesday night It is now known that there were seven separate and distinct cyclones, aud the number of killed is believed to exceed 75. Debt doesn’t constitute honesty. There’s many an honest man who can not pay bis debts and there’s many a dishonest man who pays promptly. What, then, is honesty, do you ask? Do unto others, in all things, just as you would have them do unto you.— Ex. Gwinnett Herald: This spirit of lawlessness that proposes to take vengence in a summary way for real or supposed grievances by mobs, whether in the form of ordinary riot ers or lynch law, must be suppressed if the entire power of the state is nec essary to do it A woman has turned highwayman, or rather highway woman, out in - i T Kansas. She held up & man in tho Mrs, Matchem—Why -didn’t you m03t approved fashion and made him turn his pockets. We are not sur prised at anything happening in the her? She is such a sensible girl. Hewman—Yes, that’s just the ' " '* trouble. land of Lease, Jerry Simpson & Co. J Stevens, now. Minister Stevens, the gentleman who declared an American protector ate over Hawaii has resigned^ It is intimated in Washington- that CoL Bloqnt may succeed him. Mr. Blount is a bigger rpan than Mr. Ail ly ceilings are bad ciough. but Soath, that is scented with flower My Love in tbe We$t. Sing with your mocking hints, bloom with your best Kose?,. sweet South! Waft your love and waft mine To uiy. love in tie West! Flame with your marigolds, South tilt yon light . All tl» W;»y V*th them, ai it iln-amiug hi.U W * , Tend* r ih -p-rndor • f lilies Hi' « bj»c To my juve'in the West! Reams of- you,. (•team’* of you, dm.!* vou sweet South oi my tinging! have glory gusssed; But drcuins will be sweet when you lit • a>y Lcart beat With uiy Love’s in the West. Frank L Siautun. MADkiD. Aprd .io — A*lvtc*ri fr« rn Havana j*r«s to the effect iha- the in gem.-* iu Eastern Cuba number 300. The governor will ask for funds for tbe campaign against them,. but not tor reinforcements. The Cuban deputies support the government, as does also the conservative party. Public opinon here censures the gov ernor tor having allowed the Cuban government to be surprised by an outbreak, and believe that should the revolt spread he will be superseded by Gen. Martinez Campos. At a meeting this evening the cabinet ap** proved the resolution authorizing the governor of Cuba to draw upon the royal treasury for any amount required tor military supplies. Warships and troops are held ready to be sent to Cuba at a moment’s notice. The Atlauta Herald is under the impression that the president is car- ryiug too big a load. It says: “A president who is worth bavin; —aud Grover Cleveland is one of that kind—-should be saved from the army of office hunters, and be left free to look after the incomparably more important matters that properly belong to tbe head ot tbe govern ment. A ^mntry postmaster bears about as much relation to the presi dency as a car greaser in Savannah does to the head of the Mexican National railroad. Change the law and give the president a chance. Dallas, Tbx,, April 30.—Further details of the disastrous cyclone which wiped out the town of Cisco Friday night have been received. Out of 400 residences in the town only one is uninjured, that of City Marshal Epplen. A freight train waiting at the depot lor orders was hurled com pletely from the track, and was totally wrecked, aud the engine, weighing over twenty tons, turned completely over. '1 he braktman was instantly killed. The conductor died this after noon from his injuries. Conservative estimates place the loss of property at $a,ooo,ooo. Immediately after the cyclone had passed flames were seen issuing from several frame bui’d- ings. Jt is thought that some of the missing, of which there are a sccre^ were cremated. An agricultural club in Burke county recently passed a number of excellent resolutions. Here is one of them : “Let every farmer stay at home for the months of May, June and July and push bis business with an eye single to an abundance of hog and hominy, and our word for it, he will get there. Corn and peas at 35 cents per bushel is far better than cotton at 15 cents per pound and not enough to pay credit accounts.” A western statesman of third party propensities announces that the whole country is on the verge of ruin. The question arises, how loDg can a count* try stay on “the verge of ruin” with out something happening? For the past two and a half years every third party orator in the l&cd has declared, whenever he could get a hearing, that “the whole country is on the verge of ruin.”—Ex. Here’s advice thrown away. The Shellman Graphic says: “Farmers may as well prepare themselves for 6 and 7 cent cotton next fall. It is coming. All indications point to a large crop. The only remedy is to live economically, and raise as much produce for home consumption as possible,” The president’s mail has now reach ed an average ot 800 letters a day, It takes the entire time of five clerks, besides secretary Thurber himself to dispose of it. Stamp collectors ought to stand in with Mr. Thurber. The 8. F. & W. railroad belongs to its owners and it is about tbe only railroad iu Georgia that does. The 8. F. & W. is building up the coun try through which it passes.—Way- cross Herald. The salaries paid to persons in the civil service of the United States amount to nearly $90,000,000 annu ally. This amount - pays the wages of 180,000 persons. The average is $500 a year. Brunswick makes a strong bid for the presence of the Georgia press this year. The Times says: That “large schooners pars over the bar” at that place. ^3™*™ " *"***■' Denver, Col., April 29 —A special to The Republican from Durango says that Lieutenant Plum mer has succeeded in inducing the Navajoes to surrender the murderers of Trader Welsh, which lessens the danger of tho Indian war, b.ut Caa tiano and his band aru preparing . to fight. Excitement at Durango high, and armed parties have started to the scene of the trouble, seventy miles away. The Indians ate so from the railroads that particulars cannot be learned aud facts become distorted, but the situation is critical and an outbreak is very much feared Stanton pays his respects to the press in the following: TUey’er going down to Cumberland, hundred fellers strong, Where the occah’s been a-■waitin’ an’ wishin’ ter ’em long; They've brushed their linen dusters— you’d better dear the j»atb ( For they’re goia’ down to Cumberland take their aaual bath. New York, May 1, 2 a. m.— El win Booth’s condition to-Digbt took a sudden decided chaDge for the worse and his death is now only a question of hours. At 1 o’clock a. m. Dr. St. Glair Smith abandoned all hopes of Mr. Booth's recovery. Tifton Gazette: Hon. Steve Cayj of Cobb, is being mentioned as a probable candidate for governor. The writer sees nothing the matter with Henry G. Turner, for thatfplace, if he could be spared from Washing- An exchange says: “A lady’s bicycle club has been formed at Goldsboro, N. C. The girls, some twenty in number, attract ad miring attention when they are out.” The Morning News in its new dress is a daisy. $10 per annum—iu ad vance. And it is worth every cent of the money. He—Did you tell her I would be there bright and early? She—I told her you would* be there early. ‘Are the Misses Dumahoe in?” he asked. “She are,” returned Bridget, “but the young ladies is out.”—-Life’s Calendar.. The 104th anniversary of the first inauguration of George Washington as president of the United States was duly celebrated in. New York on Sunday. I n-i seventy-ter n end h at least twenty year. i?y t!>e 1 ■LSwtft'i J^edfic. My ft ind let to my knee w?« two ye*rj, end physicians s - — _jred. .After taking fift cn sm .. •S.>. S. thm li rot a sore on my limhs. ami 1 51 and k* •miif Vjri'M? two ye»: ’.ild not be cured. ,/»!■ irots. YEARS OLD Ira F. Snu s. Palmer, Kans s City- I IS A WONDERFUL I REMEDY—«r.peciaU.* for 9 oil people. It builds itf I the geoenl health. Trrat r.URES ALL 5KIN AND BLOOD DI5EA5ES. will rtva axclasive nale to shoe deoteri and venernl merci Menu. Write for eatoloone. Ifaotfer Mle in vonr place eenddiri kuA olro and width wanted. Postage Free* W* L. Douglas, Bro SolcL ‘b'sr Cvurtxlg'is.t cSz 3Da.xs.iel. LXFPHAN ES03., Proprietors, Druggists, IJppman's Block, SAVAB3AH,GA. For sate by Roadurant, Peacock & Co. THOMPSON Iron Works JALKsOA STREET,: THOMASVILLE, - - - GA lam better prepuCd than ev( do any auil all -> of repair work iu iron-aud bra* . In addition to long years of experience, I am fully equip ped with tbe latest improved tools and can guarantee all work entrusted to me Shops iu rear of former resi dence, on lower Jackson street. Give me an apportunity to make an esti mate on your work. C. B. THOMPSON, Agt. d&w-t :hanta where I have a ,«<reet to Factory, statin Broclttou, Mass. Alabama Midland Railway Tla.oxxa.asville ZE5o-u.te to Florida SCHEDULE TAKING EFFECT JAN. 22. 1893, GOING EAST—HEAD DOWN, GOING WLST—READ UP. 8! 52 pi 8* 44 pi 85 03 pi 85 15 p X si 37 p I »5 I/O p i ftBjjap'i 87 18 p i 87 61 p i 88 13 p i 83 40 pi 83 63 p i 89 12 p i 89 45 p1 Leave Uni HO 37 a 110 55 a sll 12 a til 32 a 1147 a 1153 a ar . .Snowdonn.. ...Legrind.., ..Sprague June ..Grady . ....Kents.. .-..Shellhoi ....Troy — ... BrundrldKQ ...Tcuulle. ..Lililarda ..Ozark... ..Newton. l*lucRnrd Midland city • Dothan. • Cowarte “ Ashfort ..Iron City.... ..Rrineon .... ..lUinbridge . Train leaves Mcntgomary at four o'clock p, ght p. m. Leave Luverne tlx a. m. daily ext« Trains 78 and 27 carry Pullman Vestibule sic louiasville, Waycroaa and Jacksonville. Ttait tor Savannah, Ctmileston, Rich mono, 15 alt 1 in an sleeper from Waycross to New York withoi Close connections at Montgomery tor all wei W. M. i AVIDSON, G. P. A. Jacksonville, Fla. Bavannab, Florida and Western iialiway WAYCROSS SHORT LINE- Ti.Mil CARD Ik V SCHEDULE OF THROUGH TRAINS TO FLORIDA A GOING SOUTH-READ DOWN. :00 pm :30 — 12:55 l:4opm 1:65 pm 1:40 pm 1:02 pm 3:25 pm 2:38 pm 5:05 a r .Savannah A ..Waycrues.. Brunswick ..Albany.. Jacksonville.. — Sanford Tampa. ..Port Tampa.. .Live Oak ..Gainesville... ‘ lost* inasvillo.. .limns wick Albany r... Jackson’ . Tampa,. ....Li' a aldosta. ...Thomasril ... Monticello . . 15alnbridge... Lv . Chattahoochee.. Lv Macon Lv ...Columbus Lvi Ar Mobile. BLEEPING CAR SERVICE AND CONNECT!! N>. Trains Nos. 14 aud 27 have Pullman Sleeping Cars between New Port Tampa. No 73 has Pullman Sleepers between Jacksotn ilie ami a. w all regular stations between Jacksonville and Savannah wlieu j as •‘rgern Trains Nos. 14,6,27 and 5 connect a Jesup for ii.mow, At’.r Train No 16 connects at Waycross for Albany, Montgomery, New Orleans* Cincinnati apd 8t. Louis. Through Pullman Sieepers from 6 connect with Alabama-Midland railway at Rainbsidge for Tickets sold to all points and baggage ebeebw* '.hrougb secured at passenger stations. R.o.ri Superintendent ainbildge for Mj M. DA flDSON, Gi V. M. VAMiVli ind sections -Jit T. A. :er Agent. sum.nuit LXCDKSIO.V TICKET* Washington via S > mundoah Junction C- sale tsom May 15to Sept. 30. Limited to Oct. ' -^JUnd the B. O. It. . 1.. connecting with TO ALt. SI 31 ME It RESORTS * the “Royal IUv.o Full information relative to rates, hotels, etc., cheerfully LimiU-d ;zt:t :V til F.istrr* J&uh furnished. Evary tetter cf inquiry answered in detail. iWnrr a* Imit a« 5v "- atf^iV/iwCf * Jtgl 6, VV.WRF ANK M. JCLIA CHAS. N. RIGHT. . Georgia Southern and ‘Florida R. P. SITOEE HIVE ROUTE TO FLORIDA. VIA ATLANTA, Reri Down SaslTifiaesss, k Jn Gi. i 11 THE CINCINNATI AND FLORIDA LIMIT ED FROM THOMASVILLE, GA. Leave Tbomasville, S. F & Vf 12:31 noon Arrive Waycross, <{ 4:00 p m Leave Waycross, “ (limited)- 4:35 p m SOLID VESTIBULKD TRAINS FROM WAY- CROSS TO CINCINNATI. Arrive Jesnp, S. F. & W C.-00 p m Leave Jusup, E. T., V. & G 0:10 pm Arrive Macon “ -11:32 p m Arrive Atlanta, “ - 2:40 a m Leave Atlanta, “ - 2;55 am- Arrive Rome, “ - 5:35 a m Arrive Dalton, “ - 6:43 a m “ Chattanooga, *• 8:00 a m Leave Chattanooga Q. & C... 8:20 a m Arrive Cincinnati, 7*20 a m Pullman Cars Tbomasville to Waycross, and solid trains from Waycross to Cincin nati, via Macon, Atlauta and Chattanopga, B. W. WRENN, Gen, Pa*. * Ticket 4 gent. HERRING & WALKER, UNDERTAKERS. 168 BROAD STREET, THOMASVILLE GEORGIA. 12 18 12 44 1 47 2 10 if s ScnEDULD in Effect Ly.... Jacksonville. ■■ . ..LakeClty. .....Valdosta. Tltton Oordele ..Macon June .....Macon..... Lv ... Atlanta . Chattanooga Nashville . ...Evansville ....St. Louis........ ..Chicago.. . Rad Cp. A. M P, U Central R. It of Georgia ' IN; EFFECT JANUARY 8ru, 1833. Schedules from Thomasvl Arrive Albany, •* Atlan ilie, S. I 0. K. It. trains for tbo North a ntn with It. & D. Leave Thomasville, 8. F. h w.... Loavo Thomasvlllo, S Arrive Savannah, Leevo Savannah, J. a HAILE, Gen. Pass Agent. W. P. SHELLMAN, Trade Man: cah, da. kvanuah, Ga. Refilling Boiler Feeds, near machisb tcu sunv uicnn III Stock: Mill supplies and Plutnb- iog Goods, Finest grades of Babbet Metal, Valves and Garden Hcse; E. 0. THOMPSON, AT ARTESIAN WEItL. 4 im r di urn