The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904, June 10, 1893, Image 4

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Ilf Mi- A Beautiful Prayer. The spirit *he devout Cbrwio the stkinhMrt the i rut* S-»wfi- eruer, breath** ii ihctollowipg prnMi delivered by Hr. H«g't m the »ea.x r • BM*>t of Air. l?«i *tr: 6, God. ;»tgh. nost h>»ly. nn ni merciful, »*•’• fewly rev**xvnr#» of spirit and wrb hearts s'lbd.i*-'*! by t;u hallowed m* sa-.riea «t the p «>t end tho tender ofic»-* «»f the h *«r, »ve in voke thy gfacirw presence a «i lien* - diction. Beneath tht*o quiet skits which bend over us like the hollow of tin sheltering hand, iu thy good provi dence we gather in this consecra t*d place. Around us rest all that is mortal of patriot sages aid 8 driers whose virtue pad valor gave Iiibto to our historic annuls and who at the • call of duty, haring consecrated lheir lives to the toils allotted to them died, committing their souls to God and their memories to us who survive them. By their help. Lord God of truth and justice, we wih bo laiiblul to our trust. We wil perpetual the story ot all who b) didut^rested ser vice and heroic sacrifice struggled to maintain the empire ot principle iu the world, and who with honor stain less and conscience inviolate iu fined their task. N»w numbered among the immor tal dead they frill live enanriiied in the souls ot thotv* woo love them all the more tor what they suffered nod who cherish ihair memories wito un dying devoti*? Accepi our thanks, gracious lather, that we have accomplished the sacr«d undertaking o! giving to our honored chief his appropriate resting plac among those who shared with him th * joys ot victory and the sadness ot defeat and who followed the banner, now forever furled, with a fortitude • which no reverse could shake and which no disaster could extinguish. Here, on this imperial hill, we have laid him down besides the river whose waters sing their perpetual requiem and amid the flowers which speak ot the resurrection of the just and of the land where death never withers the affections which bloom in fragrance and beauty evermore. We look up from tho open grave to the open heavens where thou dost live and reign and where all who have died in the true faith do live and ••eign with theo in glory everlasting. In thb the hour of their freshly* awakened sorrow, oh father, most ten der and loviog. in the plenitude of thy compassion remember and com fort thine hand-maiden and all dear to her. The husband of the widow and father of tbs fatherless be th< their strength their song and their salvation. Lord God of h.'8-s, we besevek to snstaiu and cheer the veteran vivors of the war, who with eve minishing numbers and with eve creasing burdens ot age and infi: await their final discharge and fi ial recompense. Almighty G».d, nuthur • f pe love of concord n • that the and desolation?. 1 «a- nave I The Baby tVh.il WI 1»1 i the not'd lie .t»» l d * wi loo* i» l..«- Tluj er* *hv . uo- tijt.*. f iud'1 i*i> -.1 h *m • . t.t c | r dc •>t tun »»• i- sud *h» p w• f rv« r; ! ouse- h» d where their cuDirjt s litiii). .. A L i-4pcr « fler.d a |»r Z • tor the b v d« fin'll hi o babv, and her.? i-rc »t • t v answt r< : in* l» ich-lor’., horror the nuuhei'* ireaur*. ^*.d de-p«*»*c i\r»nt of the mos> rep.itihcan household The m .rung c o| r. hooi. dsyct «w’- cr, midoijjhl bra* cr The o'.ty preci«-u< possession that never rxc'.ics envy. Tlie latest edition of hu-«i\ni«y f which «*verv cnipto think *l» p-»«ses- ihe finest copy A native of every country v ho speaks the language of none. About tweqtf-two l iches ot c and wiggles, writhe a .d scream 4i with suction and tsvmjt ip m tus for milk aid an ati'.onu alarm to regulate supply. A quaint litt’e craft CA :: ed (•iiioc>:i and laden with simplicity art! luv». A thing we are expected to fc:s-. : lo >k as if we enjoy it. A little stranger with a Inc pi* the heart’s affection. That which makes home hap-..- love stronger, patience greater, hv busier, nights longer, days sh- r purses lighter, civhas shabbier, past forg »' ten, the future br«gb»er A tiny leather from the win. love dropped ioio the sacred lap motherhood.—Womank nd. t he last defintdoii look the pr z •ha,.; I I If! m so many years sings of peace & ay nil 'he utii-nosiih-s be buried iu tkc grave, and may ail the inhabit&utc of mis great land, from North to Bouth ami from East to West, tears, moie and mure to cherish the relations which Unite them as children of one father and as citizens of one country. May mutual regard for each oile rs’ interests, happiacas ami rights !>■ owuie the noble law of national li'e. May freedom founded on justice and guard ed by constitutional law, with religion pure and nndefilcd, t-ecurc to our whole peop't a ptrpetual heritage ot unity, prosperity nml peace, and to God most high wiil we give ali honor and glory evermore. Ant* n. The New York World joins issue with ex-Senator Ingalls on the ques- . lion of sending thy negroes back to Africa. The Kansas man says they should be feat- back. The World says:^ 'Thus the tt5ic« has come when the negro has a real chance. At the north he Is still excluded by senseless preju dice from many avenues cf industry. He cannot woik trecly in the steel mills at Pittsburg, tor ex ituple, because the white workmen there object. But at Birmingham and Anniston there is no such exdusb;Little by little he will conquer the right to work a. uhat- eyer he has strength and skill to t and that is—for all practical purpos of his advancemcn—the most precio right that is now cnywhere denied to him. The negtt; :s a native Ameri can. There could be no more atrocious crime than his forcible deportation. As ior a voluntary exo dus to Africa i! is no more to be v thought of than a change of color. The rican negro lcves *hss native land 1 finds here, with ail his disabilities, _drer field and a larger and .surer for hts children than any other Iand 'nld Offer/ g_ r . ^ESSSUBO, June 1,—Ad- ^ces ^roi^auhcu, in Syrusa, Asiatic Kussia, show ^ cotton crop in tb« conotrr ibl i;a!K)Ula j 3 in splendid condition. Six > ^ ro j re d thousand pounds of Tuke^j cotton baa been bought b, l.ctoricj i. j j0 ] tZi an ex . tensire minabetuiiog t0WD ic I>0 . land. The Bsuks County G »Z:;te takes the reins off the third partyttes : Indications poini to a renewal of «he third party struggle next year, fhe rank and fi'e ot the party are satisfied to drop ihe fight and trust their f.rune with triumphant democracy, but ' the leaders are extremely sore and dis gruntled over their Waterloo defeat, and hope to stir the,fountain ot bitter ness to its very depths. Patriotic men everywhere will regret to engage in this useless and disagree able business agaio, but the cm k, like Banquo’s ghost, will not down. Like the old womaa they rej »ico in a row. Democrats should stand firm and reorganize the party in every bail iwick in time to meet the insiduous work of the enemy. They will not be caught napping this time. 1.00k out! there’ll be razora flying in the a r in about twelve months. There is nothing narrow or section al about the Philadelphia Record. Speaking of tho reinterment of Mr. Davis, it says: “Jefferson Davis* remains wire yes terday laid in their final re-ting place at Richmond, Va., amid the mani festation ot all tbe reverence mid af fection that the fixing can ix-stow upon the memory of the Head. The Southern nature, even more so than the Northern, is demons rati vc in its sentiments; and there would have appeared to be a lost chord in the harmony of the Southern character it an event go full of historical associa tions and of the sorrows of an oul- 1 gnwn era had failed lo arouse gome if a sensibility which, after a!i, oioonaut with loyalty -s it. creditable to humanity.” The Billville Banner. There has been a nigger lynched in Illinois. This shows, that, the sec- tfaos are rapidly coming together. We are all one'people, with one flag and one country. God blesa our homes, We start 00 our annual lecture tour ext week. What we don’t know about lecuirin', cur family doe*. Six large watermelons arrived in Utilville yesterday. They were met by the brass band, bat when ihe boys got through with them they had to loosen ihe band, and were unable to blow. This is the glorious month of June, Tne world is dressed in splendor and we’re living on credit till Christmas. While in Chicago recently, attend* mg the world’s fair, we were presented a box of collars; but they will not be of much service to us until we ca* find the man who stole our *hnt. We wou’d rather be a July watch man in. a Georgia waterm- lou patch than to dwell in the tents »*f the wi* kt d at Washington forever. / * P.trk Morrell thus refers to the con (i't:oi of the crops in this section : The weather m the southern couti nts has been very favorable for farm work and the growth of all crops. The fah and temperature appears to have beou about-nonml, and the con- offru't a .d grain has improved decidedly Shipments of watermelons II pr*ih.ib't begin in about two weeks id farmers predict satisfactory returns r this crop. Oa< harvesting is finish l in many p aces, and the yield was fully up to tbe average, it not better, han for lav year. Cotton has gener ally recovered from the effects of the unfavorable weather and appears in ;ood condition. The greater portion of the corn crop has been laid by. Peas, potatoes and garden truck are flour- s’ling and with a continuation of the present favorable weather, will give an excellent yield Here are a few Stantomsms : •‘When Jones left for Washington he had only one shirt to his back.” “And what’s he got now.’* -A warrant for the man who stole she shirt.” The Georgia editors all favor an in*» come tax; the trouble is to get it out of die delinquent subscribers. Now Jane, with rosc3 In her lap, Smile sweet by wave and willow; The fisherman—he takes a nap \ml makes the jag a pillow. Just when the Georgia editors were thinking of using the bicycle to run down the delinquent subscriber, up jumps a fellow and proposes a bicycle Oh. Pansy and Pint:, Speak softly, speak low! Says sweet Mignonette. Let nobody know Uy any faint sound Or any light breath , Oh, Bachelor's Batton . And Larkspur so bine. What could be bluer And fresher than you? In beautiful clothes. Rich garments we weave _ Down In this brown mold; Delicate Raiments We|ll all of ns rise! lint softly, speak low. Decatur. III., June 3 —Early this morning a mob attacked the bounty jail and lynched SamueV J. Bush, the negro who made a criminal assault on Mrs. William H. Vest in Mount Zion township last Tuesday. The above incident occurred, not in the south, but in the state of Illinois. Human nature, white human nature, is pretty much the same north and south. Some twi thousand citizens watched the lynchers as they broke dowu tbe jiii door, and dragged their victim out. They allowed him to pray for thirty minutes, then tney strung him up to a telegrap'i pole. Perhaiu of the Waycross Herald says The Times insists that Thotnasville is the Metropolis of South Georgia, We’ll let it go at that provided the Times concedes us the right to be known as the *‘ v agic City.” All right. Perham. If it is not a?< ready the “Magic City,” you will make it so. How to Prevent Cotton Dllsli BY B. V. It. Among the bulletins of tho southern experiment stations', cno of vain'* to the cotton planter has jvcvnOy In***» published by the Alabama station, treating-of‘Votioa • For tho purpose of devising m;uus to cure this much dreaded cisousc. elab orate experiments wore instituted by the station. A field of uniform soil was selected for the purpose, which was then divide* into plats equal in size. To some of these variou* fungicides were applied, among them kainit; the remainder we^e left Untreated to servo for comparison. Carefnl observations were made of the growth of the cotton and of the appearance of blight, and finally the cotton on each experiment plat was separately harvested and: weighed. The results are striking in demonstrat ing that by the use of kainit (about 400 pounds per acre) “cotton blight”.may be entirely prevented. At tbe same time the yield of cotton is largely increased. Tho illustrations of tho bulletiiL.add materially to its value. The cotton ilants presented In tho illustration are rom the experiment field, representing the plants as they appeared on An aver age. The large and vigorouly developed cotton stalk shows plainly tho offect of kainit, and forms a striking contrast • Treated Brown shabby in Wash- six times, and they gave one office.’’ Houbttul it* so thorough and at the same time so practical a tea: of the feasibility of using electricity f**r is household requirements has been made anywhere «s that instituted by a gentleman of Brook- 11, who is utilizing the subtile cur at for ail ot his heating, lighting id cooking need* 1 , with the result that coal and gas have been '-utirely disjiecs*. d with in his family. House wives will be particularly impressed with the statement that even the exigencies of wash day are fully met by the new agent, the watei being boiled by electrically generated beat, and even the flat irons beiug kept hot by an electric heater stored within them, which has the advantage of maintaining an invariable tempera ture.—Philadelphia Record. Ingills is disposed to treat the south fairly in the ma'ter of slaver^ He says: “ The people of the north are not justified in casting the first stone. They are not without sin. History does not warrant their assumption of superior morality, nor will it exempt them from equal responsibility for the presence of the African race and the existence of African slavery upon this continent. Tbe conscience- of the north was rot abnormally sensitive to iniquiiies ot slavery so long servile labor was profitable to New England, arid the system would still exist had its threatened extension not menaced its cupidity and its ambition.” — Richmond, Va., June 2.—Tbe r mains of Joseph, William Henry and Samuel Emory Davis, sons of tho late president of the confederacy, and of his grandson, Jefferson Davis Hayes, were reintered in tho Davis section at Hollywood this afternoon. Mrs. Davis and her immediate family, to gether with Mayor Ellyaon, president of the Jefferson Davis Monument Association, alone witnessed the con signment of the bodies to the graves. There was no fnnera* ceremony what ever. \ Referring to the demonatrations over the remains of ex-Prerident Davis, the New York World says The ceremonies are purely personal and 8t ntim«n:a!. They reprxsent no reinnan- of hostility to ti e govern ment nor anv disseut Irom the final .s*-tii*-ine!i;.-‘ *>f the war. Only the UMtbi .king <>r the nialiguaut will at tempt to give them h political com- plexiou. Mr. Davis, it is true, was a representative character. He was the leading advocate of a theory, the hoscu champion of a mighty move ment and the chief ol a brave heroic and self-sacriGciug people. But the theory was buried in 1865 and will know no iirmrrection. There are even of those who suffered most th»: it might live aud triumph who now regret it3 death. Di-xie, Ga , Juue 2 —G. W. Aus tin Cox, whose place is one mile north of town, has a 16 acre field of cotton in bloom. This is certaiuly early for cotton blooms. The field must have had extraordinary care aud at tention. A new religious sect calling them selves The Evening Lights have been organized in Kansas. They do not claim to perform any miracles but they teach that they can do anything the apostles did. Great is Kansas of the Americans. Osborne Dixon and Charity L^oyd, both colored, were fatally shocked by lightning iu Way cross yesterday while a bible agent, who was sitting between them escaped unhurt. Here’i a good text for the preachers. There are six hundred empty houses by actual couut in Findlay, Ohio. The boom has busted. Ihe gas wells have played out, and scores of manufacturing establishments sre leaving the dying town. Preparations are being made ii Washington to celebrate the centen* nial of laying the corner stone of the capitol one hundred years ago. It was laid with great pomp on the 8th of September, 1703. The Albany Ilera'd has it down fine when it tays: “If every man would roll up his sleeves and go to work, lully resolved to do the best he no matter whether we have pro tection or Irco trade, hi metallism or monometallism, free coinage or limit ed coinage of silver, the country would >n be the betttr for it ” This is a .all, bat a very sold chunk of wis dom. •Thank the Lord, the t«gg 8 j, disposed of. But theo, tUt case of S*<re Ryju»>ta * Dun and Bradstreet report trade a3 being dull. The banks are not ex tending credits very liberally, and exports are falling off, while gold con tinues to go qutofthe country. a)M Lady—I don’t believe this Sure Tonic is a-goiu’ to do me any good. Friend— It is highly spoken of in the papers. Old Lady—Yes, but I’ve taken forty-seven bottles, and I don’t feel a bit better. I tell you what it is, Sarah, l*m beginning to think these newspaper editors don’t know every thing. Miss L^urA—O, auntie! You re member Mr. Meeker, who went from ’here as a missionary ? I have just heard that those awful cannibals ate him. Aunt Sophronia—La, me! I do hope they cooked him with turnips. The poor dear man was so fond of turnips. —Tit Bits. It is now generally conceded that the crop of cotton, last year, will ap proximate 6,500,000 bales. Added to this, however, is the largo surplus brought over from last year’s big crop. Big crop, little price; little crop, big price. * That’s the philosophy of I he case in a nut shell. One of the prettiest wreaths- of flowers laid on Mr. Day is' coffin in Charlotte yesterday was by an ex- Lieutenant of the Federal army in the late war. - He is a Northern min, hut a patriotic and p?aco loving citizen.—Augusta Evening News. with the tiny, sickly-looking plants pr< daced upon, that part of the field o which kamit was omitted. The bulletin contains also a review of the history of kainit as a preventive against “cotton blight," which fully corroborates the results obtained by the station, and a quotation from a North Carolina planter is given, stating that “kainit is tf rust, what quinine is to chills—a specific,” The pamphlets, “Potash in Agricul ture” and “Potash and Paying Crops,” which give results of thousands of ex periments throughout the country, deserve the Carefnl stndy of every in telligent farmer who wishes to derive profit from tho use of fertilizers. They Gorman Kali works. Afraid of New.Fa* It is laughable," said Clerk Burney at the Arlington last night, “to observe wbat consternation a strange fuco create in a crowd of public men n days. 'You will sco several of tho lattei talking and joking, when suddenly some one not known to them will approach. A startled look flashes over their faces, and the newcomer receives a cold recep tion unless ho happens to be a newspaper man or a political power. 'What is the cause? Why, offico seek ing. Every senator and representative in tho city is approached 50 times a day by some man wanting his application in dorsed, and tho senators usually are pre sented with a letter of introduction, mak ing escape impossible. They must in dorse or make an enemy, and if they in dorse the application it means of their patronage gone from their friends. No wonder they look frightened at the sight of a strango face approach ing.”—Washington News. Faints at th« Mention of lllobd. The district court is somewhat unde cided as to what is the best course to pursne in the case of the State versus Edward Porter, charged with another colored man named Clark with a knife. Tho troublo arises over the fact that Juror Oswald is taken with a fit every time blood is mentioned, and tho case has to rest until ho recovers. The very mention of a wound or tho showing of a knife sends him into a fit of shivers, and tbe attorneys aro struggling along in an effort to conduct tho caso without tho nso of gory details. That is prac tically impossible. The court cannot ro leaso tho jury and try tho caso again un der tho rule that a man once in jeopardy is always in jeopardy and cannot be tried twice, except in case of a disagreement. The case is a peculiar one.—Minneapolis Cor. Chicago Herald. The people are not rushing to Chicago. The railroads are standing in their own light. The rates are too high. Let them give a round trip rate and the rush will be on. It would pay the roads to do it. K«t Up In American Geography. Tho congenital inability of the British mind to master tho trivial details of American geography was never more strikingly illustrated than in the London Lancet’s recent report upon the Chicago water supply. This was a long and very carefully prepared paper, whose main conclusions are donbtless as accurate human skill can inako them, yet in the opening paragraph wo are gravely ii formed that a portion of the sewogo “j pumped over a look into a canal, which carries it far south into the Missouri and eventually into tho Mississippi river.' Evidently The Lancet man is blissfnlly ignorant of the fact that tho Missonri t river larger than a hundred of the Thames, and '.raining a region upon which all Britain would bo bnt a patch, comes from tho other side of tho Missis sippi.—New York Recorder. Even Machine* 31 nut To the town council of Southport, England, belongs the honor of having reduced Sabbatarianism to an absurdity. Not content with decreeing that all shop keepers shall rest from tlicir labors oh Sunday, this delightful body lias decided that the same rule shall apply to auto matic machines. Six days these over worked automatons may labor, bnt on the seventh day they must disregard the pennies introduced into their interior on pain of lino or imprisonment.—Ex change. A Tear Old Leg. The old belief that an egg laid oh Hood Friday or Easter Sunday will not Spoil—simply dry up—has been seeming ly proved in a singlo instance at New- bern/N. C.. whero Moses Roberts made a test by keeping an egg laid on Easter day of last year to the present. On break ing the egg open a few days ago it claimed to have retailed every indie tion of a fresh laid egg.—Philadelphia Ledger. The Horrors In Its Train. Spelling contests aro fashionable again in Michigan. They seem to have come in along with crinoline. The roller skating crazo has broken out again among tho western Massachu setts girls. Hoopskirts give tho fair skaters plenty of leeway for striking boldly out.—Boston Globe. George M. Pullman will entertain King Humbert if Italy’s ruler should visit Chicago, and thus do something to requite Humbert for his intent of nobil ity by which tho title of marquis was conferred upon Mr. Pullman. William Ordway Partridge, tho Bos ton sculptor, gets $10,000 for his statue of Shakespearo and will receive $27,000 for liis equestrian statue of Garfield. He la 81years of ago. Switched Off by a llnrro. A peculiar accident happened tho other day on the Bakersfield and San Miguel railroad at Asphalto. Tho train was m&do up and ready to start for Bakers field, when a young burro was seen rub bing himself on tho switch. When tho train started, the shriek of the .locomo tive whistle frightened him, and lie jumped with such force against tho switch as to throw it open just as tho train arrived. As a result tho locomo tive and four of the cars were ditched.— Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. A Lone Distance Sneeze. A reporter had the pleasure on Snn- ■day of listening by telephono to part of a sermon delivered in St. Thomas’ church. Hamilton. Every word of tho preacher could be heard, and if deponent be not badly mistaken there was a sneezo at the dose of one of the eloquent periods that could have come from no other in dividual than John R. Cameron.— Guelph Herald. Glad to Meet the Prince. Albert E. Guelph, otherwise known as the Prince of Wales, will, it is said, visit Chicago and tho World’s fair. Glad to have him come. His sister, Mrs. Lou Lome, was in the same city and made tour of the country in 1884 and ws pleased with tho visit. All of Mrs. Gnelph’s children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, as well as tho old lady herself, will receive a good old fashioned American welcome if they will come over and see tho greatest country on earth.—Dayton Times. llr. Actor's Absenteeism. Mr. Astor seems quito to bo qualifying os on Englishman. Within the lost few months ho has acquired an English news paper, a fine London mansion and a Thames country seat. It may be won dered how tho Americans like all this. Talk of Irish absenteeism! Bnt what of the American millionaires who draw their house rents in New York and spend their money in England?—St. James Ga rotte. More Interesting Than the Fair. It is reported that Count Tolstoi, the Russian novelist, will visit the World’i fair. If ho comes, the greatest show or earth will present no object more inter esting than the man who has voluntarily pat luxury and ease behind him to bring himself in touch with the common peo ple and carry out the humanitarian idea laid down in the Christian system by the great exemplar.—Kansas City Star. The Discovery of America. Bishop William Stevens Perry of Iowa in a sermon at Buffalo a few days ago is reported to have said that we owo nothing to either Columbus or Spain for tho dis covery of America. The honor belonged to John Cabot, who sailed under tho pat ronage of Henry VH. To Baffle For Mammies. The mummies of tho high priests of Ammon, now in possession of tho Egyp tian government, ore soon to bo raffled off. They will bo divided into six lots and drawn for by the museums of Lon don,’Paris, Rome, Berlin, Vienna and St. Petersburg. Every member of President Cleve land's cabinet, including tho president and vice president, is married, with the exception of Hilary A. Herbert, secre tary of tho navy, who is a widower. About 20 yean ago there was a severe epidemic of smallpox in England and America. In recent months tho has been causing alarm in many porta of England and Scotland. pso Besrria Southern and Florida R. P. jmSIl CITES E8ETE 10 FLORIDA. VXA. AW.AOT.i. Rc id £owb jmjiiedpld ix Eiyk<jt Lv. . .,Tv»kcCIty... Tlftoi ..Macon June.. ... Atlanta . Chattanooso-- XasliTiUo.... . ...Evansville.. ....8t. Louis.... Bead Tp. SHORT UESTO WORLD’S FAIR. Sleeping Car Paiaika to Maccm. fBLLlAN 121*139 : CAB AILAXTA LOU WITHOUT CHANGE, Connects In Union Depot at Macon with M. X X\, Ga. B. K., C. U. It., and Southwestern B. K.. north and south, and In Union Depot at _ -- . .. jjaiaa from Points In Florida A. G. KNAPP, Falatka with ast, west ant H. BURNS, —«r. Pi , lUooa.aA and south. SB, Trav. Pass. Agt, A_ ZLsTIEiW ROUTE —BETWEEN— &EOE&IA, ■ AND Brunswick, ThomasYille and Jacksonville, —VIA E. T. V. & G., G. M. & G., O. 8., B. & \V., S. F. «& W. RY’8. SOUTH BOUND fT.VTIONS. Atlanta McDonough... Columbus lUchland ■i Uomasviilo.. Brunswick Jacksonville.. . 1 K. T. V. & G. M. & .! C. S. F. & W. ( | B. & W . 8. F. & W. I ! Dally, i Daily Except Close connect nday. ade in Union Depot, Atlanta, for CECIL GABBETT, Gon'l. Maog’r Hi It! fed 1 gfiSSS!::::: jjr jfacMk'"’' Ar Atlantic' !!!!!.!• Lv Atlanta Ar Chattanooga.. ArBurRin...^.!! Ar Cincinnati.. Lv Cincinnati Ar Chicago IK? 9 30p 11 lip 6 10a SSia lOOp 7 OOp • ?>P 3 22a 7 20a 5 20p Kasr^:::- Macon . . . . . . . . . Ar Atlanta Lv Atlanta Ar Chattanooga gfgpH 5§ 10 30a 4 35p! 440p Slop 5 45a 7 00a iso? BMP aoopl Ar Lomsvilie.*!..... . 1115a Ar Lotiisviiie...... 3 20p 7 25p Lv Chattanooga.... Ar Memphis io>5 At Memphis 8 O0p| tcksonville SuSSV:iz~tfxc Citsioit tic - sale from May ijto Sept. 30. Li.r. * TC ALE. SL-HMER II Fiffl information rcla ivc to rates, hotel: irnuhcil. Kv*rv letter of inquiry :s. folders, etc., apply •f 1 U*NK M.JOLLY. Dirt. Pass. Agt 's/w^t w VV }<>1N, G & T. A.. Knoxville. W & Cl!AS. N\ K1GIXT. BICYCLES ON INSTALLMENTS. AST STYLE AND MAKE. TIIOMASVILLF. GUN WORKS 105 Broad Street. JAMES GRIBBEN Contractor aud Bdildcr, THOAIASVILLE, .... GA> I will bo glad to make contracts for, or superintend all .classes of buud'.ngs, public or private, in either brick or wood. Will furnish plans and specifications if required. If you want any building done call on me and I will enbrnit estimates, whether con tract is awarded me or not. I will guaran tee satisfaction in all iny work. ( refer to the many buildings erected by me in Thomssville, and to all parties for whom t have worked. Shop on Fletcher street, 2nd door from Broad, nov ll 4-1 j*