The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904, July 29, 1893, Image 4

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Blood on The Edge of 1 he Moon. The. Wtvmoreland-RoUMtirt* rack et has cm r io the »r an i H gemlermn putiiirlud s»jny,_»a««l> »«• theCoo^iiumirf.' (Urd^ends, but, it yet, ny coff t—lor t»o. Paper pellets may, however, g-ve wa« to Itaieo ones. However, b»th partjes have been arrested a>;d w:!l probably be put under heavy bo'.ds to keep the peace/ Will they keep it? AUawa^ev'en without West End, is a pretty btg'town, btr it is hardly large enough to allow ihtse be.igtrmt gentlemen to piss each other '< n ihe streets. A street duel is not improba ble. With the usual wild shooting in affairs of this kird some look-.is on may get winged. Hire is Mr. R- un tree’s card: July 19, 1893—To the Public: A reporter of The Constitution called o< me at the Kunbail house to n»ght at 10 o’clock with a copy of the card ot W. F. Westmoreland, wt.icu Stated would appear in to-nit rrow’s Constitution, and ariud if 1 had any reply to make. If it appears, 1 have simply ilyis to say. , None of the publications have been of my seeking. I have been earnest in my endcav ors to avoid any semblance of vitup eration and to prevent, if pjssib!**, a personal difficulty. I have striven to protect .»»y g >cd name and have submitted to the pub- lie a statement covering the transac tion involved. So far as that transaction is con cerned I have nothing more - to tay. My statements can be easily verified by an examination of the court reccr is He has attempted to persecute and malign me. The animus is apparent. 1 loaned him money. He has paid it. I deem him unworthy of ti e defer ence due a gentleman. His owo acts prove him to be unprincipled scouodre I. He is not only a falsifi r atd 1 beller of honest men, but a drucken loafti who is capable of prostituting hi honorable profession as a means ( revenge. lam done with this conicmp ibl cur. Nothing further from h.m coald possibly provoke a reply from me. Daniel W. Rountree, They will keep on until vome genius invents a machine capable of wiping out au array in aWu a pair - , of .min utes M. Turpin, recently released from prison iu France after having been unjustly convicted - of * sellirg the secret of the manufacture of bin melinite, is reported to hive invented a new war maebiue of a very deadly character. It appears that it is a very light affair, can be served by fuor men aud drawn by tiro hones. It shoots four times in a quarter of an hour and each discharge throws 25,- 003 projectiles, which kill at 3,500 meters, scattering io every "direction and covering geometric tllj 22,000 square meter a; Ordinary c •mmercial vessels aud fishing boats can be armed with this electric machine without any important change io their equipment. It, is ex{»ccted to make any'one .of them nmre than a match - f »r the greatest biitlrship in existence. It is claimed that the projectiles of this machice cau pi* roe the heaviest armor as easily an a rifle ball through an ordinary plank. It the machine is any thing like wbat it is report!d to be, all forts mod fortificati ms will be rendered practi cally ureters. They can be reduced to a heap of roins in a lew jiours. Under the head of “Tillman Tack les a Tough Task,” the Philadelphia Record says: „ “Nothing e’se could have been pected than that Governor Tillman should meet with obstacles ir scheme of conducting the liquor traffic of South Carolina as a Suite busiue. The joining ol such imusua 1 service the ordinary functions of State Government, and ihe innovation of blending the duties of a Gov?ra« with those of a liquor dealer, Datura ly excite the disfavor of a conserva ive population. When to such a reason for dissatisfaction is added the sumption of State soveieignty limiting the public p.itatious there could scarcely be an other rem't thau the opposition of a people *vh-ee spirituous freedom has never been subjected to ihe restrictions of arbitra ry liquor la ws,and who have 'lever been accustomed to interference with their personal liberty iu regulating the in terval between drinks * Louisville, July 20 —Rates south of ihe Ohio river will probably be cut in the sa uu proportion with those is the territory north of the liver. General Passenger Agents Atmore of the L. and N, Edwards of the Queen and Crerceot and Hauson of the Il linois Central, hold a meeting at Chi-1 cago to-day for the purpose of con sidering rates. The Southern Pacific has cut the rales out of New Orleans aud smaller lines are doing the thing, tendiug passengers via St Louis. This will force the district lines, t-uch as the L. aud N. and Cin cinnati Southern, to give better rates than are now prevailing. The Louisville and Chicago lines are doing a rushing busiuess at the cut rate of $7 for the round trip. The Morion aud Pennsylvania had good crowds yea’erday aud to-day, aud if the lines smith of here would further reduce the rate travel would be much belter. The lines in all of the ai ciations are now considering the qi tion of reducing rates. Business does not seem to be glto- gethtr prostrated in the southern states. The ‘ Chattanooga Tradesman” in its weekly yumraaryof new enterprises in corporaied or established from July io to July 16 reports 57 manufacturing establishments, 7 enlargements of manuf-ic ones, and 14 important new buildings. The Phiio's Central Rail road Company is erecting a new gratu eKvator at New Orleans. The cheap labor cl the S rath and t»s unriYakd water poser available through out the year are very attractive inducements to industrial enterprises. The saving ctlecK'd more than compensates* lor additional freight charges and other disadvantages incident to locality. buck Nashville American; 'I hire h; been no money burned up, noi thrown into ihe :ea, we have all u gold and sib-tr >nd paptrthat we ha had, but we have not the o ie esscnii confidence When ibis prosptriiy to every imnrsi »il> conn band in hand w ilt 11. Los ct confi dence is ihe gri.al conl'actt r II every man who has mohey in s-ate- deposit boxes iu this cuy were to walk up tomorrow and deposit in the banks money would be caster than e* er was known before. The in.mt-y is abu t- dant but the confidence is scare-*. The Jackson Argus has this chunk of wisdom: If every negro in this land who keeps a worthies* dog— and* th y a^c all worthless in our judgement— would buy a pig and gi *e it the >an»e amount ot food the dog destroys they would soon barn that they c *u!d live much easier. Somehow, or somehow elee, the very ablest nun in this section of ihe - state have beeu handicapped, us it were. They have not been able n» getthtre. What’s the maitei ? Are they laboring under a geographical disability? Maybe that’s what’s the matter. Some writer fires this solid shot: The only thing that will bring prosperity to our people is to quit running after the rainbow schemes ol pyrotechnic orators and come down to square, solid business and stick to it like grim death to a nigger. Here is an item from the Constitu- tion*. "And old soldier in Kansas who draws a pension of 812 a month on the ground that he is totally disabled works In a cool mine and earns over •100 a month.” • - prominent young men ol SuderaviUe ibol each other dead on the street* ol that town the other day. Their deaths may properly be charged op to the'ready pocket pistol. Both were armed. The hip pocket append age should be made to go. wr~ Ftes Somj newspip.r ini« are terrible revar caiors. One lately wrote about cyc'one, saying it had uirnel a well up-ode d jwn in Mtssisnipp-; turned r inside out in Wi-c jhii ; moved v>» hue in Nevadi: blew all s out of a barrel m Iowa and Ufi the bunghoh*; changed ihe day of the in Ohio; killed a 1 honest Indian 1 hi the W»s ; b : ew *he hair off a bildhcaded-mu 111 l\xt ; blew »be • IT 1 rar: ilhr.a.l «i j he hide oft « bill 1 K Uisav; scared » Mxhigai ; hl-i K. -»<u:kv and nee ot a L iu s' . —Oja "al. u- N-w York Sub Treasury on Sat irday lav, h r the first lime in ten s. paid its debit ualan:e at the Cleanng II m.e, a butt $510,000, in c m ; 'i.e Traasuiy officials having fouiid tier legal tcmlei running lc wh.'e gold wa« p'mty U» real ze the ivpicit.it, maning t.i tin*, course it • ••ly ikc ssary 10 r fledt that a on h or mi jgo the go.cri ment was gir in bold on to all the gold it ii'J g»t —\tigus a E'emng Niw*. Fortfe Crops We have referred, several times ol late, .to the shortage of the forage crop, iu Eur >|«. .ml to the con«e- queut increased demand* lor tlieae productions in this country. Recent ly > number of, American ship, have been loaded with hay and sent to Europe where almost fabulous prioes are being paid for it. The South should produce aud ship roo-e of this .valu able crop.. Therm is no reavui why should not It would further diversify Jur industries and add large ly to her income. We pntduoetoo little, and hay too -much. That’s what’s been the matter with-too many Boutbera taxmen since the war. To give a still farther idea of the ■ttuation abruadwe ooppy the follow ing fromthe foreign dorrvpoodeut of the Saw York Herald: v Brno, July 2. 1893.—Io the Lower House ol the Pruseieu Diet yesterday HeN von H-ydeo, the Uinister of Agriculture, made an of Mai statement as to the altitude taken up by the government toward the existing scarcity of fodder. He •aidthat it was only in the western districts of Premia in whieh the dearth of fodder had -attained the di mensions oia real calamity, and that ooneeqaenlly the State did not intend at present to give peenninry aid, especially on account of the danger of demoralizing the people. It wee a duty of the individual districts first to do what the; could with the means at their disposal Iu ca-e, however, the exigencies oi the people became •till more pressing help in would be given, and he bad no doubt that the Diet would afterward make the outlay good. He had issued gene ral jnstructioni'to the presidents of the various provinces with reference to the throwing open of the foret's, and the agricultural associations in the distressed districts had been urged to contribute their share toward the relief of those in want As the year advances Iho critical ua u-« of the agricultural situUlion in England becomes daily more and mare apparent. Wo have already passed (he limo fur the hey harvest, and as thv results come to band it is apparent that over the greater |>ur tion of England and Wa es the crops cannot be more than one third of an average. This follows two bad yean for this crop. In the “official pro duce statistics” report issued early this year Major Craigie pointed out that the aggregate avai'able production of hay io the United Kingdom in 1892 Vis estimated at only about 11,500,000 tons, while even the bad crop oi 1891 exceeded 12,600,000 tons. Both ot these toUte are the lowest on recon], end stand in striking contrast to the crop ot 1889, when the estimate leached nearly 16,300.000 tons,' England is the country which is now suflering moat from the drought which has continued since the beginning of March, relieved once or twice by in adequate rains, and it is therefore well to note the crops of the past two yean, as compared with that of 1890, which was about an average one. AI1 these things have bad an effect on the situation this year, and make the result. *>f the drought of spring and summer more disastrous, so that at the present moment th. position of the owner of stock ie that he baa not the where withal to feed them. For since the beginning of March the country has been suffering from dr -ugbi; there has been little or noth iug to feed slock with, unless it is purchased food- flay is selling at lamiue prices and the stock to which it lias to be fed can hardly be giveo away. During the past two years there has been a deficiency in the EDglisb hay crop, as compared with an aver age year, of over 3,775.000 tons, whieb, at £4 per ton, means a money loos to grower, of over £15,000,000. Ati-vni’a Ju'y 21 —Marry Hill ap- .rod at ihe j id llv» m irmng and ■elf up t 1 Ihe jailer. He : a reporter and says the >!uotary. so is to get the swor-i out against him delivers, declined surrendi three wa since tie gavi h md no ihe indie men's. l)r. M'cs'.m Ireland wts tried J his r.-ning on a peace warrant and was p'aced under a $5,000 hood. He rays h; will nit try to give it and will go to jdl. Georgo Wrshingtou’a nearest Hying kin is Mrs. Philip Barton Key, of North Carolina, a great grand-niece of tho father of his country. She is a lineal descendaotof Mary, the mother oi Washington, through her youngest son, Charles Washington. She Is a handsome, m9jesUc lady, and in fea tures resembles the portraits oi her distingoihsed relative. —Angwsta Chronicle, While Dink Bolts and other Georgia colonels with euphonious name, have been beseiging the powers that be (nr office be it remembered, nay let it be not forgotten, that a Georgia colonel. Sock Pruett, of Athens, ha* actually declined an office. Send forth the news, let it be scattered broadcast all over the land,that Sock Pruett declines to accept au offioe. John B. fcordon. The Constitution or Tlnn-.i-iy ru> : General John B. Gordon Vpeut yea (erday at- a Confederate rein.ion. Speaking about the 1 xtra a,Bii„u ot congress, - be denied a current rumor that he intended to vote against the repeal-of the Sherman act. ‘I-vnll Tote for its unconditional repeal.’ was the statement he made.” It is fortu nate for the senator's political pros pects that the people can’t, get a whisek at him until 1806. If be wete a Candidate for .senator to day on that platform, he' would'ut 1 . get- enough votes to know that he was in the race'. —Timea-Recorder, Americus. Don’t worry, if GorJ in is liiiing in 1896ihe people will have u -shark him. 1 ’ It will - he the satue.fdd whack; they-will - just give Gordon anything bo nauisv TOatVihe kind of a whack the peopleAave iq-reserve for John B. Gordon in 1890 The peeriesa and chivalrous Gordon atanda to dayAB he has stood for years, nearer Ihe beaut, of the people of Georgia than any living man. Don’t lose any sleep. General, on account of th's threat; the people- srBI rally around you whenever you call for them. Sooth Carolina, be it said to hir shame, repudiated her Hamptou, hut Georgia will never repudiate John B. Gordon. • • ” ' A GOSSIPY LETTER. : • rffr .Vfi-esi m 1* if Cleveland'.* The war-like speech made by Gov. Waite, ol Colorado, 00 the silver question the other day recalls to ihe New York Press a prediction made by Horatio Seymour shortly betore his 1. -The next confi-ct io this country,” _said he, “will be between the east aud west. The inietests of the two sections are naturally antago nistic, and will grow more aad more so as the yean roll by.' The lime will come, very soon. In my judgement, when it will require very wise states manship to prevent an open roptnre of the east and the west. I am afraid that these two sections of our country are drifting further and further apart ever; year. On the other hand. New York, New England, Pennsylvania and Ohio are drasing closir to the late Confederate S ales. I can signs ot growing trouble in the west. The cloud is not very 1 rre now. hut it will bear watching. If we ever have another civil war it will be between the east andthe west. Mark the pre diction.” Jug Tavern! There’s something suggestive in the name. Anyhow it b a thrifty Georgia town, jug or no jng, taken or no tavern. . The jeo- p'e, however, want the name o£ their town changed, and they are going to apply to the next legislature In have the change made. They propose to call the place -Winder.” Why uot call it “Stem Winder” of tho Water bnry attachment pattern? Auyhow they are going to get rid of the jng attachment A’ a meeting of the managers southern railroads held in Chicago re cently it was decided to reduce the pres ent rate to the fair, $5. Fo it will now cost fire dollars less thin formerly -to go firom this section to the big fur. Tne redaction is only a slight conces sion to the popular demand for lower rates. Well, we shpuld, perhaps, be thankful for small favors. The Atlanta police raidod a Chinese den last Sunday. Twenty pigtails responded to the roll call next morn ing when the Recorder took his seat and sounded the docket. That official after hearing the evidence in grave doubt whether the oelretiats were.at prayer or playing poker. He gave them the benefit of the doubt The remaifider of the Bute Is attx- iously looking for the .Gubernatorial ramduhle who' will be trotte^ out by Bomb Georgia. There is no need to get impatieot. he will be cn the track in time. He will be r winner. Mark that—Enquirer Sun, Columbus. Otkcr Days, Other Ken: Past nnU Present. Speaking of the peach crop in the vicinity of Marshal vilh, the conespon- dent of the Telegraph say.*: Orchards of thrifty young trees on red or stiff lands produce much better peaches than on gray or sandy lands. Altogether there is mu:h disap p tint- meot to the growers in their net re* turns, bat then, considering the nat ure of the peaches, they are very grat ified at the glorious peach crop. It is the Coming crop of Georgia. The Le Conte pear trees are very full in this section, and daily large ship ments ore being made to eastern mar kets. The canning tacior/ has commenced operations and next week will be in full blast, turning out several thousand cans perday. Shipments of tomatoes are being made doily and at this late date are bringing satisfactory returns to the growers. A large acreage of tcroatoes has been planted in this section and will be sold to the canning factory at 25 cents a bushel. AuauSTA, Go., July 17, 1898/—If tho Qcorgian, Carolinian, Alabamian qr Tonnesaeeun, aged, say CO years, who reads this letter should chanco to recall even a portion of tho history of this state as received from father or mother in the days of his boyhood, his interest in Augusta would instantly bo intensi fied; for he \rould recollect that, accord ing to the statements of his parents, tMs city was tor a number ol years the great distributing point for tho states above indicated. Those were the day of wagon trAde, and the merchants of Augusta and the peoplel of those states were in dose touch. Between them ob tained the most perfect confidence. Railways have come in find disturbed somewhat tho old relationship, but to a limited extont only. From father to •on the kindly feeling has been trans mitted; and.. to-'day, everything that touches the old city's forward move ment exdtos enthusiastic sympathy anff commands zealous co-operation. Augnsta was never so beautiful as she is today. Broad street lias boon as phalted and is, perhaps, with the ex ception of Pennsylvania avenuo, the most beantifnl business thoroughfare in the United States., On every hand are unmistakable evidencos of a healthful growth. No boom, none wanted. The progress made is substantial—a result of patient, well directed effort The most casual observer among the visitors to the dty cannot fail to note tho fact that thoughtful plodding has prevailed. " _ It seldom occurs in this country that a community is itself surprised at the results achieved in a decade. So lost to the idea of “booming” wero the citizens of this place, so intent wore they on the subject of their double mission—a man ufacturing as well as a mercantile com munity—they were, more gratified at the census figures which write them at the head of the column. You sc j, if this had come after a tight with sister cities, which is sometimes indulged in, there would not have at tended it one-tenth the satisfaction now enjoyed. They hayebuilded on thoir own foundation; they can publish the facts to the world without exciting the an tipathy of any city or any citizen. Yon must concede that tho mission alluded to is'very difficult, almost im possible of achievement. Bnt pluck and plod do not yield to difficulties. The result is, the manufacturing estab lishments of the city have increased in number, in cotton consumed and goods manufactured. This fact possesses in terest for tho entire south; becauso it shows conclusively that tho proper place for the cotton mill is near the cot ton field. It is generally known that tho people of this city have arranged with the au thorities of the Georgia State Agricul tural society to make a joint exhibit of Georgia products this year, and, at the same time, afford to the citizens of other states the opportunity to bring products and machinery of all kinds to the attention of thousands who will be present at the exposition which opens hero October 17 nnd closes* Novem ber 17. The Anguvta exposition is a happy thought in the interest ol hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of people who cannot afford to get to the World's Fair at Chicago. The Augusta directory saw this op f Brcrc a t* I li>» Carli lc- * ;?h»«.ir, abzj .i ii y are not eb$ra*;> 3v* rtcogs^z d now they will be bcLr- iheir L-ur years are op. They are a-rai.kriiyun a'l sides, by the parti san r publican at the North, and ev?n by envious rdtnVri at the Suuil; but th y fiud plenty of dt fenders and are s, b e hold their own agunst all comer*. Hiry^ii along at ending to ba>.nws, huvtvir, while patriots N >r-h at d South applrud them and a big muj rliytjOf al h.»n journals drieud their actions. Alabama Midland Railway Xixozn.a.sxrille Eoute to E^loxid-a Buffalo* Wyo, July 23—For so t d rys at Fort McKinney ihe trrnjtrj'ere has- I e#»* iix°ii» stu.de. «. At Bufltio from tour to six c Yurts -while the murcury isVin H*e »u lands it 13 J 0 to 15«»°. This is the hottest wcatht r recorded lor efght yean. Not a drop oi rain has fallen for nine' wei ks. ai d ihe ranges are com* p'tily de*tr*>ytd. 1’ *e: s out that ihe lowtrng ol the rates 10 thcAVcrid's fair by ibe south- era roads don't amount to 'much. The rcduct ou ts‘ only $5, and the tickets is limited to 15 days without a^y stop over privih'gis. Many will prefer to pay the old rates. The ro <ds should adopt one fare and be done with it. It nrcutd satisfy the people and pry *h- roads. That was quite a surprise on Friday in Atlauta. with the 8ame idea, that be is safer i: jail thau on llm streets m Atlanta. discuss this matur lai North Georg : a friend*. Topeka, July 21.—The situation io the mining district his become serious and a bloody cooflct between the strikers and operators is imminent. Tue Major general of the Kansas Na tional Guard has beeu rent to Pitt .1 urg to be in readiness to take command of the mditia company in case their service, are required. Governor Waite’s crazy and cranky utterances about riding in blood up to the bits of bis. bridle, unless con gress adopted the views of Corolado on silver, are having their effect A dozen books closed ia Denver in one day. It will require a dozen years for Colorado to recover from the acts and doings of Waite. It is a little ear'y, gentlemen, for entries in the ‘-Free For All” race in 1894. As there are n-» entry fees charged, the chances are that there will be a field full .at the start Those who pass under the string first wil£be fearer in nnmbers Philadelphia, Ju’y 20—The last will and testament of Anthony J. Drexel was admitted to probate to day. It disposes of between twenty- five and thirty million dollars worth of property. Large sums ore devoted to charitable purposes. Columbia, 8. C., July 20.—A special to the State from Laurens says that Senator Irby and Congressman Shell met at the house of J. D. M. Shaw in the county, and ia an alter cation over the “Craddock” letter came f o blows. Atlanta's military, with' the exeep* tion of' one company, has withdrawn from the state troops. This is un patriotic, to say the least of it. The action will reduce the amount of kick ing which baa characterised Atlanta's military. bitrators iu the Bering !>ea dt decide adversely to the Uuiud States. Well, that is bitter than going to war over a few teals. Col. Candl r and Col. HuUty, both of the bloody 5 b, are whetting their knives for Livingston’s congressional scalp. “Lon” is a mighty bard one to down. fnrthor did a good thing in soenring the co-operation of President Waddell and his executive committee of the State its. There lifleation of a county’i __ tan a first-class county exhibit. Than such exhibit, there is no surer way of ► finer exem- possibiliti s directory have voted $*20,000 for ina prizes. .This, coupled in importance to tho Columbian at Chi cago. President Waddell is exerting him- y exhibits. The indications are that the contest will exceed in intorcst any had in this country. In live stock, a subject in which all our people feel the deepest intorcst, the exhibit promises to surpass all efforts that line in the past. Your correspondent cannot tell it in the amplifying language of the verbose man who writes the advertisements of ths boards or tho circus and hippo drome. I venture to say that' Mr. Sandy Cohen, who has a wonderful rec ord as a systematic and tireless worker, has exclusive charge of this interesting branch of Augusta’s grand exposition. Having said this, it would soem unnec essary to repeat for the amusement of your readers, the would-be language of the advertiser first named: “The di rectory has determined that nothing con be too grand or gorgei line of attractions, for this ions, for iheybe, 1 novel, so thrilling and so full blazonry, that from hundreds and hnn dreds of miles round the people will pour into Augnsta—coining in great position. companies.to see the exposition.” In other words, Buffalo Bill, ' drawing card of the World’s Fair, being sought after and may be here. The directory contemplate securing “the mammoth, magnificent, stupen dous. spectacular production” which 6eIMarat6l .lad ttanscenddut event of 1493. More anon. Quidnunc. The city fathers in Tallahasece have a big mad dog scare. They have passed an ordinance requiring every dog, of high or low degree, to be muzzled, during the months of June, July, August and September. Speak ing of the scare the Floridian says: This week mad dog rumors have been current on the streets and every negro (man and woman) in our neighborhood is armed with a fence roil, section of giu pipe or other im- plemenl of destruction on the watch fat demented canines. bonder what wUI turn up in At lanta after the Westmoreland-Roan* tree racket pssse3 away? You can daftly put if down that the Gate City will hot be Without some sort of a sensation very long. Notwithstandiog'the strained rela tions betrreen the health officers oi the two cities, it may be stated on good authority that the mayors of Savannah and Brunswick are 00 speak ing, terms aud perhaps even op drink? log tenns. , The excessive raios in some sections and drouths'in others have seriously injured the Texas cotton crop. Savannah and Bruaswick making mouths at each other and saying : “O, you dou’t know how to n a quarar tiLe s*a ion.” According 10 ihe Rome Tribune, Capt. BradWcll, the popular S'ate School Commissioner, is being spoken of as a candidate for governor. The tobacco crop of Connecticut sa^d to be badly irjured. The crop ill bo short. Q . SCHEDULE TAKING EFFECT JAN. 22,1893. GOING EAST—BEAD UK GOING WEST—NEAP DOWN. Train J No. 78. Dcrmlnd >iay at. Yard Dp' ..Upracno June. ..Grady.7.7.*.*.’.*.’ *»• .Dp; «7 am n m» tsusa ..Jfs in Mam' tft Warn 8ft NlllJn m'rt - ss 4o a Youngbloods SLv::::::.-;:::;::: Drund ridge... la .. Axkjeto ..Dillards tv 37 am biouud t1 Its: Man. DonalsoavUle..,.. ..Iron City........... .Brinson Bainbrldjta ....... ....Thomasrtlle p. 7.\*... .Jacksonville.717. >11 (Cam >12 IO pm 81345 pm sl SO pm si 40 pm ■* 10 pm SiJJP® 3Wp u Opes si 06pm 04 25 pu, S4 ST p m MMp.m ■ > O* p lit — as,a sc vspm\ st 52 p m 1 p7 Sip m - tTSSpat ■s Up eft 30 p sSMpn st 10 pm st 44pm S\ m v **»” Indicates train stops, “I"* indicates train stops on signal. Train leaves Montgomery for Lurernc at 4 00pm. dally except Sunday, arriving 1 uvemo at 8 45 a. so. Leave LurernOat i II a. m. dally'except Sunday, arriving at Mob mery 1040 am. , Traias TSaad 27 carry Pullman Vestibule Sleepers between Cine I Sleepers between Cincinnati and Tampa, Tla^ via Thomasvllle, Wayeross aad Jacksonville. Ttaln 78 connects at Tbomasvllle wltb 8. F. A W. train for Savannah, Chai lesion, Klcbmono, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, carrjlD* Pull ■n sleeper from Wayeross to New York without chance. Close connections at Montgomery tor aU western points man sleeper from Waycroes to New York without citanj ™~ve connections at Montgome W. M. DAVIDSON, Q. P. A. Jacksonville, Fla. Savannah, Florida and Western Railway W AYCBOBS SHORT LINfc- TIME CARD l> L> 1 U T JAN. 1, 1883. ■CBEDULF OF THROUGH TRAINS TO FLORIDA AM SOUTHEKN GEORGIA. GOING SOUTH—READ DOWN. GOING NORTH—READ UP, > 6 la 21 I 28 ! 14 78 6ft SEE imam 1^0 pm 3:t5pm LMpm 5:30 am 7s>7 am l.»im 6,20 am 8.03 am 9T5 am L<v... ..Savannah Ar Ar.....Waycrun* Lv loLi Sun ’fell ,115 10:40 am 7:Mam 2 A0 pm 1:10 am pm 2X5 am 2:25 pm 1121 am 2.25 pm lljWn'it 4.40 pm Mb pm Ar Albany Lv Ar... JacksuaviUe.. .Lv Ar Sanford Lv Ar...... Tampa Lv Ar....Port Tampa...Lv Ar Live Oak......Lv Ar....Gainesville— Lv Ar....Vsldoeta Lv Ar.i./niomsavlUe.. Lv Ar.... MontioeUo.... Lv Ar.. .Bainbridge... Lv Ar.. Chattahoochee.. Lv 7 Im am 6.55 pm 12:60pm c iiiss . 4:Wam c 6:23 am 1 925am 9;00am r 11:45 am SUB am 9:40 pm 3 AO pm 2.35 pm 11:23 am 1X2 pm 2:25 pat 2:38 pm 9.40 pm 3X0 pm 3 3ft pm 11.28 am 1.02 pm 3.25 pm 2.38 pm 7£Upm 2^7 P u ilWanl 12:&0am 3:00 pm 10:35 am -1 Ar....Columbus Lv 3 30 pm \ *• ;•-*;- Tdftam 2.00 pm 8 HO pm 3:00 am 8.40 pn 3.05 am |at Muutgomery....Lv lAr Mobile.. Lv 7 -Jfi pBl 7*00 ant 12:20 aiu l’AMi pm u 14 and ST have Pullman Sleeping Cars between Now York, No 7S has Pullman Sleepers between Jacksonville and N< w Yvrl tlona between Jacksonville and Savannah wbru par vn^ers are t Jarkfianvllle and SLEEPING CAR BKSV1CR AND CONNECTIONS. Trains Nos. 14 and ST h Port Tampa. " regular st* ... Trains Nos. 14, ft,27 sad S connect a Jesap for M-cou, Atlanta —ila No IS connects at Wayeross for Albany, Montgomery, Ne* Orleans, Nashville, zvansvuie, Cincinnati and St. Louis. Throngh Pullman 8ieepen> frotn Wajcro^j to St. Louis. Train* ft and; * ‘ Ildlanarallway atllalabetdgefor Montgomery andthe West. { * sleeping car bertna and aectlons \ F. M. VANDYKE, P. dt T. A. \ *L DA ?IDSON, General I aseenger Agent. \ Tickets sold.tosU Mdatpssssngers G. FLEMING, and baggage checks* "iirough also A. 3STEW ROUTE \ —BETWEEN— GEOEGIA, AND Brunswick, ThomasiiUe and Jacksonville, —via— E. T. V. & G., G. M. A G., C. B., B. & \V.. 05 pm . 45 pm 10 OR p 1107 p TTb Offer You a ItcmcdJ which Insure* Safety Ut Life of mother and Child. “MOTHER’S FRIEND” iloba Confinement of Ua rain, Horror and Risk. After untn^or-” bottleof ‘‘Mother's Prlead 1 l>am,an«l€U-lut*t« tsaiB Qi-or, Lamar, llo.. Jan. Hlh, USL by oxpresa, charges p:-paid, on receipt of rit.,4U>aptr l«tu&i}»t>kto;io(lMniatUnirna SUADF1GLD HEGULATOB CO., ATLANTA, GA. BOLD LY ALL 1 I’.UGQOTS. SKIN , _e*idea afltaseieee la /grTfe.A Household Remedy Cures * ALT rheum, ec- ZEMA, cv*Y farm ef (blood) ffSi VBALM/ oansSriqti...' ttitution, when impaired ^ from any came. H it a fine Tonic, and Ha almost supernatural healing properties justify us in guaranteeing a cere of all blood diseases, if directions ere fcllewed. Trice, fit per Dottle, er • Bottles lor (5. run SALIC BY DRUGGISTS. SENT FREE» 0 ^ 0 ^S2fSL252; BLOOD BALM CO.. ATLANTA. GA. For atle by Ro nlu‘:iit, P.flcock k Co. CURES ALL SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES. LIPPKA1T BEOS., Piopristei, C 43 pm 8S5 pm 10 00 pm S. F. & \V. RY’& OttTU BOUND Atlanta. McDonough.. Columbus.... Richland *l homosvllle.. Brunswick ...„ Jacksonville.. 8. F. & W. > B. k W. , 8. F. & W. t Dally, t Dally Except Sunday. Cloee connection made in Onion Depot, Atlanta, for all points, North. East and Wt CECIL GABBBTT, Gen’l. llang’r K..JGI, RAILWAY." SCHEDULES OF DAILY TRAINS IN £FFFCT JUNE 12th. 18C2. Lv Jacksonville.. I.y CaUatum*..... Lv Atlanta.. Ar Chattanooga.. Lv Chattanooga.. Lv Cincinnati Ar Chicago. At Louisville... £v Chattanooga.. Lv Jackson villi Lv Calhthan.. Lv Atianta.!! . . .! Ar Chattanooga- - Lv Chattanooga.. Ar Burgia * - Cincinnati Cincinnati— Chicago Lv Bur Ar Isoutsville Lv Chattanooga. utooga and Chattanooga |7Tj,,tji—tr tins can * ci * na **- t 'sli cpers C'iiattanoor llft^eberg. The O - ttanooga withoutchao^ : ^r. h]|itt ^_ n ,^ »lso c ‘•'IXI.l LXCI UMOX TICEBT9 '•NVaahington via b' - • . ist» W*. jo. Limited to Oct. 3B',^Jand theB. & U » SI xnen ltrsOZITS- the “Uoval n>. • ('SORTS* !l0 00p IVSOa ill 1 Ar New York • SOfta «00s v York vi .ruin frot cr joy, ** " a t Ie. Trna*»c W. L. DOUGLAS ®3 SHOE so'VWrv. WlMmtumttryspair, east In th. wsrld. MMiK^lHZSS Vy—mat a Im MESS SHOE mdi tnthslatMt • • ysvmts-sottaosM cssImi nsiasaSMtasS Jftj **'i PV SS bM,tryoi, tiSw, They ft ftqtal ts onto rntuwdU Ifyos wish to economize tn your footwsari dssft^rporchulng W. L DoegU* Shoes, RtatMi Mths hstas* 1 bmfcr It when ym toy. Curtrlght A Daniel, CnmlstA Llppmaa Jpx*. BA7SI1SB, BqW by B. U Hicks a 0», free of Charge in tks A CO- 1 Jteaa f _ aasw.’! Jiricutific ^lucricau Idf rest dmlatIon of any seienUflc paper in the tvaid. Splendidly lllnatntcU. No iatelUgi— Ml should be withoai it. Weekly, 02.01 ftUOsix months Addreoa MUViN A C 1 Uimsu 3(*1 Broadways New York City. BICYCLES' OS INSTALLMENTS. ANT STYLE AND HAKE. THOMASVILLE OTJST TytJRK^ ' 105 Broad Street. Mb ■