Newspaper Page Text
GEORGIA, JULY 9, 889.
LITTLE.
®o littl ■ TnaA; me grid, for I was young;
■Flowers, & sunset, books, a friend or two,
Gray skies with scanty sunshine piercing
through—
Bow little made me glad when 1 was young.
-So little makes me happy, now I'm old;
Your hand in mine, dear heart, here by the‘fire,
The-children grown unto our hearts' desire—
How little keeps us happy when “we're old.
And yet, between the little then and now,
What worlds of life and thought, and feeling
keen] • >
What spiritual depths and heights unseen,
Ah mel between the little then and now.
For little things seem mighty when we're young;
Then we rush onward through the changing
years,
Testing the gamut of all smiles and tears,
Till mighty things seem little; we are old.
—Alice Wellington Rollins,
THEY CONFESS THE CRIME.
and hate from the sparer. Orders were given j
to drop our boats and board her, but at the i *
same moment her yawl dropped into the i No Excuse for the Bloody Deed Only ne
A Big
THE ARAB SLAVERS.
To this day there is an occasional cargo of
"blacks quietly picked up on the African coast
and run up the Red sea, while it is no secret
that hundreds of slaves are marched across
the Soudan country and openly sold on the
north coast. When every other nationality
had been forced to quit the nefarious traffic
in human flesh, the Arabs took hold and for
ten years they defied the power of the alli
ance. "When I was first sent ou£ to the east
coast as a midshipman on H. M. S. Rover,
every Christian nation was assisting to pre
vent the traffic, but it goes without dispute
that England was the only nation enter
ing heartily into the work. She has done
more on sea and land to break up ownership
in human flesh than all the rest of the world
combined. In only one or two instances on
our station did the Rover receive anything
like hearty support from the vessels of other
cations, and in half a score of cases the crews
of merchant vessels gavo us information cal
culated to assist our enemies.
The Arab craft were not always com
manded by Arabs. Renegade Americans,
Frenchmen, Spaniards, and men of other na
tionalities were interested, and it was these
men who gave us the most trouble. They
were old hands in the business, up to the
tricks and dodges, and they gave us many a
useless chose and played us many a sharp
game. The favorite slave craft was the
* dhow, of light draught, great spread of can
vas, easily managed, and a fast sailer in any
sort of a breeze, but various syndicates had
purchased brigs, schooners and small ships,
and they were flying all sorts of colors and
professing all sorts of occupations. They
came down the east coast from Juba to So-
fala, a distance of a thousand miles, measured
by the trend of the coast. For two years
England had only two slave catchers on this
long line, and it did not require much sharp
ness to get out a contraband cargo. .
The mouth of every river on that 9past has
from two to five outlets, and many of them
spray out into long inlets and false channels,
traversing miles of swamp or low land, and
twenty cruisers could not have kept the coast
tinder strict guard. The Rover was a fast
sailing brig, but she should have been a
steamer to carry out the programme laid
downforher.
One day just as we were ready to sail from
Masimba, after making some needed repairs,
on American merchantman came in with
three blacks aboard. They had beed picked
up off a raft at sea a hundred miles down the
coast. The Yankee captain brought them
aboard and turned them over with the obser
vation: “ SP
“I’m a-standing neutral on this blackbird
question, captain. It seems wrong to drag
these niggers off and make slaves of ’em, but
onr constitution permits slavery. I never
owned one and never shall, but we’ve got to
have slaves or we can’t have cotton and
sugar. These poor devils have no doubt got
a story to telL Maybe it will furnish a
pointer for you and maybe it won’t. I’m
a-standing neutral, os I said before. If you
can get anything out of them go ahead.”
We had two or three interpreters aboard,
and it wasn’t long before we learned that a
brig called the Lion had put in at the mouth
cf the Ziuga, seventy miles down the coast,
and was loading a cargo. The three men
had escaped from a barracoon three miles
from the coast, reached the water and built
a raft, and, although realizing that there
•was not one chance in a hundred for'their
lives if they drifted out to sea, they took it,
and bad been afloat two days and two nights
when piclfed up. The brig had not begun
load cargo when they escaped. Indeed, tbs
barracoon held only about eighty captives,
•while she wanted two hundred or over, and
it would be four or five days before her com
plement was ready..
The brig referred to professed to be a mer
chantman. We had overhauled and boarded
her twice without finding anything suspi
cious, but yet we had been told several times
that she was one of the luckiest crafts in the
slave trade. Here was a golden opportunity,
and the story of the blacks was hardly coin-
\ pleted before the Rover had made sail. We
\were in luck in carrying a fine breeze with
us for fifty miles dowu the coast, then we got
oat’s paws and calms, a squall or two, and it
was evening of the second day before we
roomded the point and looked into the bight,
at tme west 6ide of which was the mouth of
the &iga. This bight was .seven or eight
• fnilessng by a varying width, being shaped
likea^pr, with the large end toward the
sea. hi jitill had a light breeze to work un-
der, and^b 0 ^ was sent ahead to take sound
ings, and^fcmoved up the bight about two
miles. ThuBpo anchored to wait for another
day.
About 11 <Mock at night the tide began'to
run out, and it came a laqd breeze, but
the latter blewltoelf out in half an hour, and
just as two boa»mM been ordered down to
take their statioimfvhere they could intercept
and board the sla^r if she should come out.
She might have ^jnpleted her cargo and
might not, but having run in under our very
nose, as it were, henjerew would be anxious
to get the blacks aboard and bo off at the
. earliest moment. As tA wind died away the
boats were recalled, and\alf an hour later a
light fog settled down on the water and cir
cumscribed our vision to a'distance of fifty
feet. Order's were given iW strict silence
aboard, aud during the rest of the night a
D small boat might have pulled all around us
and beard nothing to indicate our presence.
When morning came the men were turned up
and with the least possible noise, and we wait
ed for the sun to disperse the fog before pip
ing to breakfast.
In that fog wa were a ghostly ship and a
ghostly crew, but after half an hour s wait
ing the fog began to bleak up into queer
shaped tougues aud rifts and drift ,away, and
all of a sudden it vanished and left us a clear
vision. A wild yell broke from every en
listed man aboard, for there, hardly musket
shot away, almost stationary on the dead
tide, was the Lion, the brig we were in
search of. She had left her moorings with
the wind and tide, but the former had failed
her, and the fog coming on had obliged her
to anchor for the night. She had been with
in a mile and a half of us all night, aud had
lifiTxl her anchor in the early morning to
drift down with the last of the tide and be
ready to make her offing with the first of the
land breeze.
The yell of surprise and satisfaction from
our decks was echoed by one of astonishment
i j
Liek Struck.
The two negroes, Will Jackson anil
Evans Sanders have acknowledged at
tempting to kill John Jones on Thurs
day night,” said Sheriff Weir to a Ban
ner man yesterday.
“Can you give me an interview
with the would-be murderers?”
“Certainly said” the Sheriff, soon we
off n fte e gm«n? U 'i ' vvere aboarfl the streetcar,accompanied
ihes m ner decks, j by Justice Evans, who went up to see
if they wanted waive a preleminary ex
amination and fix the bond.
Sheriff Wier has Will Jackson con
fined in one of the upper cells while
Evans Sanders is looking through the
hajs below. Will Stephens alias IV ill
Jackson, was brought down and the
reporter intended them together.
VI am the one that struck John
Jones,” said Evans Sanders, “and I
will tell it to you just as it happened. I
did not see him at the Fair Grounds,
nor did I know that he had any money.
Jim Lee brought John Jones to my
house, and when I returned home
I found him sitting at the corner of my
house. I said to my wife: •Hello, who
is that stranger? She said she did not
know, and said that if my little hoy had
not been at home she would have left.
She said that he bad done nothing hut
that she was scared. John Jones left
thehouse, and me and Will Stephens,
alias Will Jackson followed him. Can’t
dared go aloft, but they let fall or hoisted state persistently what time it was when
? 1 fl- rt l.Kn/vrr, niiw^lincA /in th/I * *
water, and captain (>/id crew tumbled into it
to escape us. There vas a little delay in get
ting away, one of Inn- men stopping behind
for a moment, but when the yawl headed up
the bight, it was at such a pace as to dis
courage us. We had two boats down, but it
was the other one which pursued the yawl,
■while I was ordered to board the slaver and
take possession. We pulled straght for her,
■but before we got alongside pandemonium
broke loose. The fellow who lingered behind
■had knocked.the fastenings^ off
which covered’the tito"hatches
and the blacks swarmed up and over the brig
like so many hornets.
Those dusky fellows were submissive enough
when overawed, but as they came on deck tc
find themselves in possession they got rid oj
their light chains, and menaced us from
every foot of the rail. They could not under
stand what had occurred, aud. all ships and
all crews were alike to them. They seized
whatever weapons they could get hold of,
put themselves under a couple of leaders wh<
had probably been chiefs, and dared us tc
board I pulled back to our craft for instruo
tions, and was ordered to take ono of the in
terpreters back with me and let him explain
the situatioit It was impossible for him tc
do so owing to the yells and shouts which
greeted iis. They could see him, and see that
he was not one of us, but when he stood up
and made signs the confusion was increased.
The other boat now returned from her vain
chase, but we had os yet formed no plan when
the land breeze sprang up and the blacks be
gan to make sail on the brig. There must
have been two or three among them who had
been aboard of a sailing craft, or they were
sharp enough to study out the rig and dis
cover which ropes to haul on. None of, them
PISTOLS AND COFFEE.
Sensation in Columbus \ es-
terday.
Special to The Banner.
Columbus, July 6.—5\ henG. Gunbj
Jordon, president of the Third Nation
al bank and of the Georgia Midland
Construction companys returned from
a visit to New York a few days agb he
learned that B. T. Hatelier, formerly of
Columbus, but now of Macon, had been
here during bis absence and stated that
Jordan had robbed hint in a business
transaction in connection with the con
struction company.
Jordan, accompanied by J. W. Mur-
phv, went to Macon Tuesday, and Jor
dan addressed Hatcher a communica
tion asking whether he was the author
af the language attributed.
Hatcher replied, saying that he had
no near personal friend in Macon that
he could trust with the matter,he would
come to Columbus on Friday, which he
did, and the correspondence then pro
ceed. In one of Hatcher’s notes he said:
“I did say, in speaking of the man-
Sheriffs To Meet.
Special to tlie Banner.
Atlanta, July G.—The Sheriffs con
vention will be opened on next Wed
nesday, the 10th, at 12 o’clock, and will
cantinue two days.
It is understood that Judge Wilson,
lieriiV of the city .court,, will open the
onvention with an address. Judge
Wilson was elected president of the
heriffs’ association at its last meeting
four yeas ago, and in that capacity will
be expected to open the convention.
After the opening, Governor Gordon
ill deliver an address to the sheriffs
of the State, which alone insures a
large attendance.
The remaining time on Wednesday
and on*Thursday will be employed by
the sheriffs themselves in a discussion
of the criminal laws, of the state, and
other matters of interest to them.
Til E COORlER-JOUKNALf
The Representative Newspaper of the South
west. Largest Circulation of any Dem
ocratic Newspaper in America.
It Is the paper for the fanner, the merchant
a<reinent of the Georgia Midland Con- and the family circle. Popular and cheap, it
® advocates a reform of the present high tariff
away until the breeze got a purchase on the
bunts and festoons, and then the jibs were run
np and trimmed down alqiost os well as sail
ors could have done it We sought to board
her while so many of the blacks were busy,
i we started to follow him but it was ear
ly in the night.”
“When we caught up with John,
Will said to him let us go baek. John
but there were enough left on guard to j said I am going over to town to catch
thwart our efforts. If we could have used
oup pistols and cutlasses we could have been
on her decks in two minutes, but our orders
were not to injure a man of them, our cap
tain hoping that offer their first spurt, was
over the interpreters might find opportunity
to explain.
What followed the coming of the breeze
has never been detailed except in official re
ports. The wind came up strong and gusty,
showing an atmospheric disturbance inland,
and the management of a vessel was some
thing that no one aboard understood. She
had got her nose pointed up the bight by the
time the breeze took her, and away 6he moved
as fast as we could pull our boat behind her,
yawing to starboard or port in such a way
that ter wake was like a rail fence. The
blacks evidently wantjed to return to land,
and as she moved that way their yelling was
tremendous. After a little practice at the
whbel the helmsman kept a better course, but
the breeze gusted up strong every few min
utes, and during these gusts he lost his nerve
and everything was in confusion. However,
the brig kept advancing up the bight all the
time, and our two boats followed behind.
She was holding tolerably fair for the mouth
of the river, and we had made up our minds
that she would certainly be beached when
she suddenly fell off, wabbled about, came up
into the wind again, and, after hanging for
a moment, paid off and turned almost on her
heel and headed for the ocean.
Things must have been at sixes and sevens
aboard, for tho whole crowd yelled in terror.
We did not know until later on what had
caused this erratic movement. The crew oi
the slaver, after pursuit had been given over,
rested on their pars to see the affair out.
When the brig headed up the bight they cut
across her bows to recapture her, not seeing
us in her wake. They probably attempted
to hook on to her fore chains, but in any
event they got in her course and were run
down and sent to the bottom as surely as ii
the blacks had planned it. Not a man es
caped.
When the brig headed for the sea th«
breeze helped her along faster, and the helms
man got back his nerve and managed to hold
her pretty even. Our own craft slipped hei
anchor and made sail as a matter of precau
tion, but the Lion passed her by a quarter oi
a mile aud held straight out. We had now
to pursue the foolish crowd, tfhich we did of
soon as our boats could be recalled. W«
hoped that the seas now getting up would dis
able the blacks, but few, if any, of their
seemed to mind it. We could sail five feel
to her one, and we ran as close as was pru
dent and made every effort to get them tc
understand that we were friends. They an
swered us with threat and menace. "Whet
we fired a gun, hoping to frighten them into
submission, it seemed to have ju£t the oppo
site effect. She was held straight out to sea,
and we followed, feeling that disaster must
soon happen. She was a good ten miles out
when we got the word to reef and dew for
an approaching squall, and we were hardly
ready for it when it came booming down aud
shut out sight of everything for ten minutes.
When it had passed the brig was bottom op
the train. Me and Will were walking
side by side and John had his hand
against his side and again remarked:
‘No by God I am not going hack,’
“I then struck him on the head with
a rock and he fell. After I knocked
him down me and Will ran oil'and went
home. After staying at home we went
back to see what had -become of him,
and when we reached the place we
could not find him.”
“Why did you go back to see him?”
asked the reporter.
“Will wanted to go back, as he had
never seen any one hit before, and
wanted to see if the blow was fatal. I
did not hit him but one lick; and did
not attemDt to drag hint off in the
woods; neither did we rob him.
Evans says that Will did not attempt
to hit the negro.
Both of the criminals are as hard look
ing as negroes can be. Evans Sanders
is smooth-faced*and N as black.as a stack
of black cats. Will Stephens alias Will
Jackson, has also a hard countenance,
and has lately been paid out of the
chain-gang for riot. He was raised in
this city, while Evans Sanders hails
from Montieello, but has lived in Ath
ens for the past five years.
“One breaks the glass and cuts his fingers;
But they ivho Truth and Wisdom lead,
Can gather honey from a weed.”
Those who are wise, and who love the
truth, will believe What we say when
we tell them that Dr. Price’s Favorite
Prescription has done more to relieve
the sufferings of women, than all other
medicines now known to science. It
cures all irregularities, internal inflam
mation snd ' ulceration, displacements
and kindrek troubles. It is the ^nly
medicine for women, sold by druggists,
under a positive guarantee from the
manufacturers, that it will give satis
faction in every case, or money will be
refunded. This guarantee has been
printed on the bottle-wrapper,and faith
fully carried out for many years.
. DR. NUNNALLY AS PRESIDENT
Of Mercer University—His Election Meet
With Universal Approval.
The.election of Dr. G. A. Xunnally
as President of Merger University
meets with unusual favor among the
denomination ^throughout Georgia ami
it is confidently predicted that.he will
infuse pew life and vigor into the col
lege.
Dr. Nunnally is not yet fifty, and is
in the fullest development of strength
of body and mind rarely surpassed. He
a mile away. She bad turned turtle, and not graduated from Franklin College in
1859Jwith distinguished honor, being a
classmate of ex-United State Senator
Pope Barrow. He shortly there-after
entered the ministry, and has filled sev
eral important charges with marked
ability and great favor. As a friend
remarked yesterday!
“Dr. Nunnally has done a great deal
and always does well; he is every inch
a man and his election as president of
Mercer was most fortunate.”
At the time of his election Dr. Nun
nally was stationed at Anniston, Ala.
where his congregation had just finished
a $50,000 church for him. He gave up
a fine salary, and the pleasantest asso
ciations to jreturn to his native state,
and assists in the work of the education
6f her sons. Dr. Nunnally was born in
IValton county, whence have come
many of our most distinguished sons.
a soul aboard of her escaped.—New York
Suu. ~ <
Almost Strangled for a Splinter.
Fremdenblatt tells of a machinist in Lu-
beck who got an iron splinter in his eye,
which could not be discovered by any of the
local eye doctors. He was informed that he
would have to prepare .to lose the injured
organ. The man went to Dr.. Binder and
told him his trouble.
“Ah, then,” said the popular doctor, “we
may try first some other remedy. Have you
a good sized handkerchief on you!”
“Yes, but it’s a colored one.”
“Oh, tho color makes no difference. Give
it here, my lad.”
Dr. Binder twisted the handkerchief into a
rope, which he coiled round bis patient’s
neck, tying it tightly till the man thought he
would suffocate, and his eyes started from
their sockets. Dr. Binder now examined the
sore eye, and detected the splinter in a por
tion of the ball which had hitherto i-emained
invisible. He proceeded to remove It and the
eye was saved.
“My conscience, I thought you’d have
choked me straight off 1” said the patient, as
soon as he bud recovered his breath.
“Pooh!” answered Binder; “don’t make a
fuss about such trifles.” „
struction Company, that I would rather
you had stopped me and robbed me on
the street than had you manage the
stock and company’s business as you
have, as then I could have defended
my purse; when, as it was, after falsely
obtaining my signature, £ could do
nothing. Now my opinion is un
changed, and I reiterate what I before
said, that you took advantage of the
confidence of your friends, and under
guise of commercial usage, robbed them
by manipulation of the stock, and de
pressing the .same by deferring the set
tlement of the construction company to
such time as best subserved your inter
est, and in a large measure freezing out
tlie first promoters and friends of the
railroad. But I am a fair man, and
would not knowingly wrong
you. If you can convince me
after a full examination of your hooks
and papers relating to all the transac
tions of the Georgia Midland Construc
tion company that I have wronged you
I will cheerfully make such amends as
may meet the case. But until that is
done, I will most emphatically believe
in my statement, that under the guise
of commercial usage, the shareholders
of Columbus, or a large part of them,
have'been robbed, and I among them.
Jordan then sent the usual request for
a retraction, which was refused.
Jordan requested Hatcher to name
the time and place out side of the State
for continuing correspondence.
Hatcher replied:
“If you mean" a challenge,say so. I am
prepared to name time, place and weap
ons. I shall pay no attention to the
rules of the code, or go outside of the
State to continue this correspondence.’
Jorden’s reply reminded Hatcher
that it was a felony to send a challenge
in this state, and stated that Murphy
was authorized to act for him and would
talk freely of the details. In the conver
sation between Murphy and Hatcher’s
friend, Rollin Jefferson, Jefterson would
agree to use nothing but bowie knives
with ten-inch blades, to be used in
ten foot ring, saying Hatcher was deaf
and could not hear commands. Murphy
refused to allow Jordon to fight in that
manner, but would accept any firearms
named—shotguns.rifles or pistols. This
ended the negotiations, and Jorden
published a card in this moiling -En
quirer denouncingIIatcher’s statement
as a base lie. Further trouble is hourly
expected. .
If you had taken two of Carter’s Little
Liver Pills before retiring you would not
have had that coated tongue or bad taste
in the mouth this morning. Keek, a
vial with you for cocasional use.
Killed on the Track.
The engineer on the Georgia train re
ports that a little four year old negro
child was killed yesterday by the Geor
gia train, near Barnett. The little
child was standing near the track, and
as the train come up jumped on
the track and was run over. The on
gineer did everything in his ]power ,to
stop hut too late.
anti wages vigorous war tin all subsides and
monopolies, it is emphatically the people’s pa
per, and its immense circulation throughout the
L/'nited states attests its power as the organ of
the people.
The Weekly Courier-Journal is thelargest
and best Democratic newspaper issued. It is an
8-paire paper of -8 columns to the page, and its
sixty-foilr columns eaeli week are filled with live
and'interesting matter. It is newsy, bright and
clean, and loads the .American newspapers of
the day. The regular subscription price is only
?1 a year, and tq clubs of eight yearly subscrib
ers at one time, with eight ilollais, an extra-
copv is sent one year to the address of the club-
rais'er, oa to any other address desired. In other
words, nine copies one year for eight doUars.
The CorKiKR-JorpNAi. is the one great news
paper, west of the Alleghenies, and south of the
i’ptomac and tlie Ohio, which has had the cour
age, the independence and ability to stand and
resist the flood-tide of monopoly sweeping over
the land and to make an upright and diainter-
ested defense of the toiling, taxpaying masses
of the peopla. Fighting all disliodest schemes,
the Coi T RiEii-.TorusAL is as a sentifiel on the
watch-tower, sleepless and vigilant.
K'&t- Subscribe to the Weekly Coi'hiek-
Joi hnal and learn the truth, and join in the
People’s Battle of Resistance.
Daily (except Sunday), one year, $10; Daily
)exccpt Sunday), one month, $1; Sundav, one
year, $2.
Sample copy "and premium supplement sent
free ot charge to any address. A variety of
useful and attractive premiums is offered with
the Weekly Coi kiek-Joi knal. Agent’s can
vassing outfit also provided free of cliarge. No
traveling agents are employed by the Courier-
Journal, but a good local agent is wanted in
everv community, to whom a liberal cash com
mission is allowed. Address,
W. N. Haldeman, President Courier-Journal Co.
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Good English Desired.
Pupil—Teacher, kin me an’ Bill go on* git
a pail o’ watorf
Arkansas Schoolmaster—There you go
again. How many times have I got to tall
you that it ain’t good grammar to say mo an"
Bill?
Pupil—What on I to sayf
Teacher—BUI an* me. Can’t I never learn
you nothing!—Harper's Bazar.
A Model Greeting to tlie PnWic.
Wo feel today like extending both hands
and feet to the public, and wo do so. For
those who have been warm friends and pa
trons of The Blizzard from its first issue hero
are our outstretched hands, and for those
who have bored us repeatedly from that date
until tha present hero are our feet—ono at a
time an-i then both at once.—Oil City Blizzard
On its Anniversary.
“Logic is Logic.
Now there was the case of our friend McKay:
He said to himself, in his resolute ws-y,
That a cough which was growing from bad to
worse.
Must be cured, in spite of a slender purse.
An ocean voyage was out of tlie question,
A Florida trip a useless suggestion ;
Yet die he wouldn't! His money lit-paid
For the ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery,” by Dr.
Fierce made;
And as sound as a nut is bis health to-day—
•‘Logic is logic, that’s all 1 say.”
“Golden Medical Discovery” is tlie
only medicine for the diseases it is re
commended to cure, sold bv
druggists, under a positive guarantee
from the manufacturers, that if it don’t
either benefit or cure in every case, the
money paid for it will be promptly re
funded.
All
persons
W arned.
arc hereby
warned not
to hire, harbor employ Andrew Cline.
He is my son and under age. Any one
employing him will!)
d-w-lt
State of Ohio, City ofTole do.
Lucas County'S. S.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is the senior partner of the film of F
J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
Crty of Toledo, County and State afor
esaid, and that said firm will pay the
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
for each and every case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by the use of Hall’
Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CH ENEY
Sworn to before me and .subscrib
ed in my presence, this 6tli day of De
ceihber, A. D. ’80
A. W. GLEASON.
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal
y and acts directly on the blood and
mucus surfaces of the system. Send for
testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY &
CO., Toledo, O. £^Sold by Drug
gists, 75c._ • *
Will You Read this for $500?
For many years the manufacturers of
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, who ar
abundantly responsible financially,
any one can easily ascertain by enquiry
have oftered, in good faith, a standiu
rewjjrd of $500 for a ease of nas
ciparrh, no matter how bad oi
how longstanding, which they cannot
cute. The lh-medy i? sold by druggist
at 50 cents.
prosecuted.
Jack Cline.
,Jw, rg>a Kailr,
stone MOl ;
»»a<l
0pp ICtG^ H'M-t
!*£
,v ,,. c . uens •...——m
.. JJ •nteivilie I
“ Maxeys .
* Woodville’ p
Ar Union Print!!]'"!* 5
Lv Union Boha! "
Ar Atlanta..
Ar Ganesyiiif!
SYStgH
“ Milledgeviiip"
Ham
lv Augustin
“ Macon
“ JpedgwiniV.!!"
"VVashlngton..
** tiainesvilie.]
Ar Union Brin/ -"•••
Lv Union PoiiriT^-s-
M oodville ...
Maxeys... *
“ Autioch...
Lexington
“ Dunlap
“ Winterville.!
Ar Athens
SLEEi'lNG-J^y
Aojos a H.4., ‘■SBl
ceive iMSsengMstifanrt 1? •
tiousonly:(Trove3 ftV
son, Norwood, Barnett
I pint, Greensboro, Mn<ihL!?* Ta<
Circle, Covington, ( „;!?*-
Mountain and Deciuur ^
27^28!l 8 n t nd # 2 ndfr0mAthe ««^J
« . Green,
Generals anager. f"
Joe vv. White Tr*v.
Richmond & Bandifcjl
Northeastern
Condensed fk-Wa'I
IN EFFECT JUNE f
Trains run by 75th Verih *
_between_athens
No. 53 Daily, f
Lv. Athens 7:40 a * .
Ar. Atlanta 12 noon*.
No. 41 Ex. Sundav
Lv. Atlanta 5:30 pin.
Ar. ■ Athens 10:25 p m
bblWEEN ATH£NS"ljiinjl
No. 53 Daily.
Lv. Athens 7:40 a m
Ar. Wash’iigtn(l:. r )3iim
Ar. New York 1:20 p m
Legal Advertisements. ^
A. Hunnicutt, et. aL vs the Class’c City
Street Railway Company, et. al.
Petition lor Equitable Relief, Receiver, etc., in
Clarke Superior Court, April term, 1889.
E Y virtue of an order of the Judge of tlie Su
perior Court of i Jarke county.we, the under
signed, the receivers appointed in die above
stated case,will sell before th- courthouse door
of 11-rke county in Athens,'-a., within tlie legal
lio«rs of sale on tlie 17th day of July,1889, to tbe
highest and best bidde’r, foroakh, tne following
property, to-wlt: All tlie property and assets
of all kinds now held or owned i>y the defend
ant, the < lass«c City Street Railway Company,
and consisting principally of the track of said
company, as now laid in said city, being about 2
miles long; and f-ur passenger cars and tlie
franchises of he said company as contained in
anactof General Assembly of Gcorgis »• pprov
ed September 3 tli, 1885. The sale shall be sub
ject to the approval of the Judge of the Supe
rior court of said county of« < larke, and if said
sale is so approved possession shall be given to
the purchaser <-n the first day of August, 1889.
Terms cash. James. White,
a. L. Hull.
Rceivers for the Classic CityRailway Co.
6ndeoa-w-d
Pullman Palace
Lula to Washington udXev
Solid train#Lula to Washing*
BETWEEN LULA AND tfj
Southbound
LUCY COBB INSTITUTE,
Aftens,‘6a.
A BOARDING SCHOOL for GIRLS.
. LADY TEACHERS.
All Denominations Represented,
BOARD .$15.00 A MONTH. ••JB
HO SECRET SOCIETIES.
HEALTH RECORD UNSURPASSED
Fall term commences Sept. 25,1S89
Miss PT. RUTHERFORD. .»
Or riie Liquor Habit:, Positively Cured
by uilininiat t-rinc Dr. Haines’
. , Grolden Specific.
It can be given m a cuu of coffee or tea, or in ar-
tlclesof food, without the knowledge of the patient:
It is absolutely harmless, and will effect a perma^
neot and speedy cure, whether the patient is a
njoaerate drinker or ran alcoholic wreck. IT
O yer 100.00® drunkards have
been made temperate men who have taken Golden
specific in their coffee without their knowledge,
and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own
ireo will. 4S page book of particulars ir»n.
AtlautA. Gu.
and "Whiskey Hub-
| Us cured at home with
out pain. Book of par-
| t.iculars sent FREE
B. M.WOOLLE Y, M.D.
Office 65& Whitehall St.
P
ICTTJR.E8, mirrors.
THE BEST Picture Frames of all kinds.
All the “Rogers’ Groups,” Card and Cabi
net sizes of frames, Choice Etchings and
Engravings, from one of the largest and
best selected stocks in the Country. Estab
lished 1831. . -T
JAMES S. EARLE & SONS.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
l^fc-Catalogue on receiptof stamps.
R.L. J. SMITH.
ATTORNEY AND COUNCELLOR AT LAW
DANIELS VILLE, GEORGIA.
WiH practice in Jackson, Banks, Franklin
Madison, and adjacent counties; also in the Su
preme ana Federal courts of the state. Will
give special attention to collections, and mnke
prompt returns.
Ladies
Do Your Own Dying at Home With
PEERLESS DYES
They will dye everything. They are sol
everywhere. Brice 10 cents a package—i col
or.-. 1 hey have no equal for strength, bright
lies.-, amount in packages, or for fastness of col
or, or. non-fading qualities. Tbev do not crook
or smut, tor sale by G. W. Rrsn Co.
L. D. SLEiKti:,
K. .s. Lyndon,
Druggist, Athens, G
83
Pas’ng’r
B V,
5 SI
AM
30
00
30
Ov)
30
00
8 35
AM
8 33 10 30
PM
8 55
9 11
9 31
9 51
1001
lt-25
PM
AM
X. E. R.B. j
STATI0XS.
10 50
11 05
11
11
12 00
12 20
PM
LV
-Lula..
Ciillsville 7
Maysrilie I ia
.. Harmony Oturt. 4IJ
Nicholson.,
.Center...,
Athens...
AR. <LU4
Trains No.50 and 53 will run diSf.t
and 22 will run daily except Maty |
Trains run by 75tn Menilia I
faster than 90tn Meridian time.
L. L. McCLKSKY, hs-H
Div. Pass. Agt.
E. BERKLEY, Supt
Covington & Macon
L OCAL SCHEDULE In effect S
14th, 1889:
NORTH BOUKD.
HR# 01*1
FastHafl’J
Daily
Lv Macon...
Massey’s Mill..
Van bureu
Roberts
Morion
Graysi -
Bradleys
Barrens.
Wayside
Round Oak. —
Hillsboro
Grassneld....
Mhineta •
Montieello ....
Machen
Marco
Godfrey
Lv Atlanta(Ga.r.r
Lv Augusta(Ga.rr
Madison
Florence
Farmington....
Gould........—
v atkinsville.
Sidney
Whitehall
Ar Athens...
7-0an •*?;
7lu am iJL
716am »9li:
722 am
7 33»tu
7 42 alfl
74? am
754 3 rn
757am ■
8 05am HI
8ioara;«l
8 27 am WSJ
8 4t a m i; J
919 a
I
•mam,
942amLi«.
816 al
715*1
S|
10 55 * B]
1121 *g*
J150 am 18
1159am
12 04 pm
1217 p »
i pi
SOUOH BOUND.
Lv Athens
Wiii ehall ...
Sidney
Watkinsville .
Gould -
Farmington ...
Florence —
Madison...
Fasti
Daily.
Toop»; *
118 p ty
Ar Augusta(Ga.rr
Ar Atlanta(Ga.rr
First Ct®
4
131 P ®
136 p m
145P»
155 P®
2 27 P®
300PJJ
815 p ®
5»P®
3 30 P
mil'll
338 P»|}5{J
349 p Sl6£ ,#
416 P® J- 2
a?4P®
424 p
438??
<s»!
Godfrey
Marco ...
Machen...
Montieello
Miuneta..,
Grassfleld ; 5m
Hillsboro. *2 5 m
Round Oak.-
Wayside
Barrons
Bradleys
Grays —
Morton
Roberts
VanBoren
Massey’s Mill.
A r Macon — —•
is
A ' G SrSs «' Bl
& ,5P „
513P®
521 P®j
528 P®
538 p® ‘
544 P —
551 P®
SSiiq
i
$
Tn less than twenty years the English
people have spent $25,000,000 on the
royal family. This does not include
the ullo-w time for the Queen.
Southern Mutual Insurance Co.
Y. L. G. 11 ab ms. President.
.Stkvkns Thomas, Secretary.
DIKECTORS.
I . G. Harris, I,. II. Charbonnier,
John II. Newton, Edward S. Lyndon
Mevens Thomas, Marcellns Stanley,
r erdmancl Phinizy, Unfits K. Reaves
John A. Hunnicutt, R. I. Hampton.
Oct-l-d-tf.
fRADE
25CTA'
m