Newspaper Page Text
hubch DIRECTORY.
jbsbytbhia* church.
.» N t„*,et. Pastor. Services-
" lr ' 1 'Pniy.I? WeVneiVlay
B.Vl'TIST church.
, nirliinW. l>. Pa.tor.-Ser
L . fi .v ut il o’clock a. in. and
> .Schoolat m- H" 1 '-
ni ux-lay evening at i :3».
fllally invlte.1 to attend all these
what I mean by the senses and
thought resting each other: After
writing in the morning you have
spelling. Borlr these studies are
purely sensual, and by the time the
pupil has finished these lessons, the
senses need a rest. If gramhntr or
arithmetic or some other, thought
This q estion, I assume, refers to study is now had the senses are rest-
uiravt
WHICH
WHICH NTUttltTiyUESTBUIT THK FORK
nOON AND WHICH THK ATT EHNOUN
HOUHs?
PLANT SYSTEM.
Florida and Cuba:
Double Daily Passenger Service.
TO
Montgomery. Troy, Ozark, Dothan, Elba, Bainbridge,
Thonansvilltf, Valdosta, Way cross,
the preparation rather than to the ed and will take up their work SAVANNAH, CHARLESTON, BRUNSWICK, JACKSONVILLE
fmMt.At.ioii. And inioii Miir ahaiimotion . urruatlv rufuualtud Then geography
M K cHUKCH, SOUTH . . . , # . , ,
smith, enst’ir.—breaching recitation, and upon tills assumption - greatly refreshed,
tit. and 7*30 p.
: any har«1 and fast classification, say
sig NnsshHum. s. K. urii\»on. ! i t )g whioh subject should be taught
|IjKN & COMPANY. jbere and which there, whioh best
ID2UPI$B MEATS' .;--forenoon and which the af
JID3E,
GEORGIA.
L K( ,01.1811 YOUNG MEN.
-r • t . scnuui aiiu wile imruuii ouaui auii
PoDoell and Thomas Light-
' winndft are lhe P u P ll > make something like;
lefftKO y intelligent arrangement. Butin no
it Tallahassee on a serious b s
„ ,, . other way esn it be done, and none
The Tallahasseean savs. . .. . .
1 . . of our prominent educators have at-
wuv they came into the pos- ‘ „ ,
wa " 3 ,, , . tempted it, (or at least to my know-
f ft letter addressed to Mr. r . \
_ ... ledge have not.)
hu ell of Ancilla, Ga., which■ * . '
°" u ’ , ’ . . I never have had the same ar-
„ miotake had been sent to . ,
- nl 91 . , .1 rangement in two schools, nor m
, Ha., in whu. was a ra j t | ie 8auxtf euhoola two terms; m faet,
ksonville ban or 8 '™ ; I often find it best to change the ar-
ii ml red dollars. Having the - _ , “
. " n 1 , rangemeut during a single term,
bhinir seemed easier to them. f . ,, ,
P lnin S We should not continually be re
get the mojiey. • So they
draft to thfe fii
Lf this place for collection,
[g the money to be sent by
to “Mr. J. II. Smith,” at
Lllo. The bank here, not
[ng anything wrong, sent the
bit ufortunatelv discover-
lof
’’'.‘V'lfwUne^ay^veHing- Sab' I shall proceed. J spelling or some other seusuul studies,
I 11,8 ullerlv lm I' 0B8ible to make | perhaps another thought study and
noon.
Afternoon reading, history and
arithmetic, with some brisk sensual
work thrown hi, to rest the thought,
powers.
This must be left to the individual But it is perfectly legitimate to
teacher who can, after weighing his
environments, the convenience of the
school and the mental ooaditiou of
and
all
FLORIDA POINTS.
change places, a forenoon sensual
study for an afternoou or an after-
noonthought study for a forenoon.
But to cut the discussion short, we
will epitomize il: So arrange the
studies with reference to the child’s
weutal condition that difficult and
easy, sensual and thought studies
shall alternate, giving precedence to
sensual studies in the forenoon aud
thought in thp afternoon.
EDUCATION am. pm>i»n tto.v
Through. Pullman Care trains,and ift„
YOR&, BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, WASHINGTON,
Richmond and all Points East, in connection with
80UTHERH RAILWAY AUD ATLAHTIC COAST USE.
To St. Louie, CLc.ci.nxAa.ti. l.ovu.W'rill*,
GAioago, Kanaaa City, 8i*aaiagH*m.
XTrhHwUIo, X7aw Crlaaaw
tad ail point* Was* and ^Torthwva.
Leave Buinbridge going East—2:05 a. ui., 12:30 p. m.
Leave Bain bridge going Wogt_2:05 a. iu„ 12:20 p. tu.
Connections at Savannah with Ocean Steamship Line and M. <fc M. T Co.,
for New York, Boston and Baltimore.
For further information, call on nearest Tioket Ageut, or address
BWWrenn. R L TODD.
Pass. Traffic Manager, Division Pass. Agent,
Savannah. Ga.. Montgomery, Ala.
Luuycjr. „„ 'I adjusting but when occasion de
the first nationa l ma|) ^ 8 we B i l0ll id think out a bet
ter plan and adopt it.
In arranging periods for study, I
am a slave to only two branches,
arithmatio and writing. To writiug
I give the first period, to arithmatio
, the last, but one. Writing first,
all was not right in time to k eoaH()e the nerv0HS system is quieter,
delivery of the pac a S e * | ^.jj e observation keerer and tlie bumis
i.Mr. .1. H. Smith” called tor
kftge at the express office, of
there was no package tor
d the “.I. H. Smith” was spot-
ins identity discovered. Not
fttisfied* to take warning to
the young men made further
to obtain the money with
iult that they were both fully
ed and arrested.
KIKKM VVS CLOSE CALL.
,:k to my engiue, although every
bed mid every nerve was racked
n.” writes C. W. Bellamy, a lo-
e fir, man, cf Burlington. Iowa,
veakand pale, without any ap-
ud all run down. A s I was about 1
ip. 1 got a bottle ot Electric Bit-
, after taking it, 1 felt as well as
i,l in my life.” Weak, sickly
n people always gain uew life,
I and vigor fio u their use. Try
patisf-c ion guaranteed by H. L.
Price 50 re its.
|t m ix ciichch cellars,
- York Tribune.
I iy years ago,” writes a New
hire clergyman in the Boston
“it was the,custom to store
i in the church cellars in Bos-
pot all of them, but many of
As late as 1850, and prob-
Iter, the cellar of the stone
Bowdoin sq tare was used
Trail distillery near by (Pitts
f I am right) tor the ripening
‘heads of New England rum
>ue found a hymn book in a
id copied iu there the follow
ers:
stints above and spirts below;
fna of love aud the Hpirita of woe.
hove are the spirta of love;
low are the woe,
Jit above in the »plrit divine-
Jit below are the spirits «f wine.
|ave myself frequently watch
ien putting hogshead of rum
cellars or taking them out,
|*l Ys HE WAS TORTURED.
• tin rest for those tireless little
-Dr. King’s New Life Pills,
are always busy, curing Torpid
mndice, Billiousness, Fever aud
I hey banish Sick Headache
n malaria. Neyer gripe or
Small, ta^te nice, work won-
ry them. 25c at K. L- Hicks’
probably made the snake
mad, only be didn’t let ou,
img him she knew he bad a
leart, even though he preteii
Me such a cynic.
1 cleaner than at any other time;
arithmatio the last, but one, because
pupils have more time, the mind is
uot burdened with futilre lessons,
and last, but not least, the mind
need refreshment and rest after
arithmatio. You may reverse this
order, many prominent educators do
I shull not fiud fault with you for
that. Perhaps your plan is but for
your school.
Any branch may be taught at any
time du-iug the day, but at the same
lime il bears a relation to the whole,
and any adjustment of one branch
will necessarily affect all others in
that grade.
Although wo cannot deal with the
subjects siugly aud say when each
should be studied, we can classify the
subjects psyobologioaly. Then with
a knowledge of the child mind aud
its daily evolution, it would seem
that we could intelligently say of
this class of subjects, teach it in
the forenoon, of that, teach it in the
atterr.oou, But this highly inflated
theory is punctured by the hard, dry
fact that the child mind is soou
wearied by the same class of matter.
After one theory is punctured by
this fact, and the “gas” has escaped
we have the soilid matter left. It is
with the remains of this punctured
theory and this puncturing fact the
teacher is to deal.
The senses of the child being rest
ed by repose and sleep are more
alert in the forenoon than the after
noon. By noon they becomo fa ,
tigued and have to be coaxed or
driven to their work, unless particu
lar care has been taken to give them
resting spells iu the afternoon.
Nat re has so constructed the
child mind that when the senses be
come tired thought powers become
active—imagination and memor.,
give the senses a resting spell. So
each afternoon we fiud thought
more allert.
Let the teacher so plan that
thought, though having its principal
work to do in the afterneon, shall
rest the ponses in the forenoon and
then in the afternoon the senses
will be able to assist the thoaght
giving rest when needed,
Thought is easily dulled and can
be sharpened only by the senses.
I Pert aps it will be well to explain
Prom the Nashville Haulier.
In an article in the University of
Tennessee Index entitled- “A World-
Wide Law,” Dr. Charles W. Dabney
asserts that the relations between ed
ucation and productivity arl so well
understood that yo.t can measure the
wealth producing power of a people
by the school .privileges which they
enjoyed. “Statistics,’’ he further
claims, “show that the power ot the
people of different states to earn
money is in direct proportion to the
length of the period that the average
citizen of each state lias attended
sahool.”
In support of this claim Dr. Dab
ney gives data relative to Massachu
setts, to the United States at large
and to Tennessee. The average
school period iu 1898-99 to each in
habitant of the United States was
4.4 years; of Massachusetts, 7 years;
of Tennessee, a bttle less thau 3
years. The production of Massachu
setts in 1899 was $260 for each man,
woman and child, or 85 cents a day.
In the entire United States it was
$170 a year, or 55 cents a day. 'The
most favorable figures make the to
tal annual proluction of the people
of Tennessee in 1899 less thau $116
a year, or 38 cents a day, The pro
portion betweeu the productive ca
pacity of each person in Massachu
setts, in the whole United States and
Tennessee is shown tu these formu
lae: “Education is as 14 in Massa
chusetts to 8.8 in United States to 6
in Tennessee. Production is as 13
in Massachusetts to 8.5 in United
States to 5.8 iu Tennessee.”
“Another way to express it,” Dr.
Dabney says, “is to say that the av
erage family of five in Tennessee
must live on $580 a year, counting
everything produced on the farm and
in the home, as well as sales and
money wages, while the same family
in Massachusetts has $1,300 a year
to spennd aud the average family of
the United States haw $850.” The
doctor also sustains his argument by
the increase in the productive capac
ity of the country with the increase
iu education. The annual produc
tion per capita of the people of the
United Slates in the year 1800 was
less than $30 a year, or 10 cents a
•lay; by 1850 the production bad in
creased to nearly $92 a year, or 30
cents a day, an<i in 1899 it was about
$170 a year, or 55 cents a day.
The important facts adduced 1ty
thes« figures are some respect outoide
r .1. a m, xmxx •• no t 1. VolllG A ?
GEORGIA PINE RAILWAY CO.
Throxx&teeska River Rout©.”
.Schedule effective June 24, 1000.
/
VIRT»| Btys
SOUTH BOUND.
S 00 p 111
s a> p m
111 00 |l III
Ik..10 a ill
H 10 u 111
k 12 a in
H IA a in
S 20 ii in
H 48 ft m
S M a in
1) IS a in
0 00 a m
10 (XI a in
10 lo a in
11 :<o a in
12 to p ill
2 SI p 111
7 IS p in
1 .74 p in
7 on p in
l oo p III
7 7.1 p III
W 2.1 I) III
No. 7.
l)Hily
except
Sunday,
h OB il in
s oo ft m
Il oo a u,
2 IS pm
II TO p in
7 7A pin
7 00 p in
7 07 |l III
7 2* pill :
7 40 pm i
X AS p ... ;
4 IS p in j
4 40 p m !
No. 1.
Smutoy 1
only,
noth MorictiHii«
(Control Time ) j
ft Oft p til
1
3ii vault it h
s JJU 1> 111
1
Jacksonville
: 10 0(1 |) III
1
\\ uycross
; 1*2 oo a m
1
Thou.uHVllU* :
i h lo u m
1
: 2 12 a m
l
West lliiliibrlilge i
• H 1ft it ni
2
Hu In brill go 1
j 8 20 a ui
2
West Uainbllilgn
: S 4.1 ft in
2
Klllpl ell (to
s fto u m
2
Boykin !
: 0 18 a m
2
UniqnHt
| » :*« a m
2
ban.in-cun j
! 10 on a m
2
Ai llngrnti
10 10 ft III
8
Arlington , j
11 8.t HTll
i
Albany
12 40 p in
H
Stiilt.il vl fl«i
i :n v (>i
5
SluUhvHla
7 4ft p Hi
H
Montgomery
1 *.44 p IU
8
Amorims
8 00 p HI
3
tort Valley
4 00 p ui
7
Ms ron
7 7.1 ll III
3
Atlanta
' H l 2. r » p ill
4
SAvanmth
No. 2.
Sunday
only.
No. 4.
Dully
except
Nando y.
Ill ft) ii lii
, s yo a in
H IS II III { Il IS ll III
7 2.1 a III
7 40 p m
2 07 p in
H 70 p III
H 20 a .0
40 p in
2 07 il in
0 70 p in
ii 20 p ui j o 2fl p iii
•I ‘ 0 p III
0 OO p in ;
0 78 p in I
0 Ifl p ni :
4 00 p III I
4 On pin
7 27 p ni
12 00 p ni ;
s lo p m
I oo p m I
12 24 pin
II ‘20 a in
7 00 n til
0 OO p in
0 OO pin
0 38 p II,
0 p III
4 OO j. pi
4 OO |> III
7 17 p in
2 80 p in
I 00 p in
12 24 p III
II 20 a III
7 IK! a III
No
Daily
except
Smic'uy
Tv: ft m
12 III p in
10 30 p li,
7 OO p in
11 20 ft III
0 30 H m
12 10 pin
12 10 p m
II 41. ll in
II 27 a m
11 17 a in
10 40 a in
10 2<i a in
-IMniit Systeinl
•I—iieurgln A Alabama
■2-iycorgla l’lne Itiillway
*—Central of Georglii h'y.
Train* A I, I, and 3 and 4 imike clone connect inn at Arlington with Centrnl of Uvoikih
for and from Albany, Macon, Atlanta and nil points Bum anil Wenl thereof.
Trains 3, and 09 make clone connection at Went tlnlnbrldKe with tlie I’lant Hv»t«ni
for and from .Savannah, Montgomery, and all point* Kind mid West tlierrof.
u u t vii ru a M n i o
iy f ni-41 111 | it/i it i n i.cmi iiiiu n t:ni uifrrOI.
R. B. UOLKMAN, General •Superintendent.
KSTAHL1SHKD 1H85.
THE STAR
Shaving Saloon:
West Broughton St., Bainbridgc,Ga
EstHblwhed bv a home boy.
First-class material and oolite and at
tentive Barbers.
Will F Thornton.
PROPRIETOR.
PLANT STEAMSHIP LINE
3 SAILINGS EACH WEEK
BETWEEN
Port Tampa and Havana*
Via Key West.
Plant Ny-item trains run direct to ship
side connecting with Steamers leaving
Port Taiupaft:00 P. M. Mondays.Thurs
days and Saturdays
For aoy info mationas to rates, sched
ules. and reservations address
B. W. Wkenn.
Pass. Traffic Manage!.-
R. L. Todd, Savannah, Ga.
Division Pass. Agt.
Montgomery. Ala.
HENRY VAUGHN
Practical Blacksmith and Wocd-
workmafl.
Always ready to serve, (.owest prims
for best work.
SSfirShop on West street, nesr old
Towneecd Warehouse.
BAINBRIDGE, GEORGIA.
NOTICE.
Get your work done at the o.d re-
, . liable stand of
A. GUY,
Boot and ShoeMaker.
On Water Street.
THb
NEW YORK WORLD,
THRICE A WEEK EDITIOH. - *
The best paper at the lowest Price
\ YEU
156 Papers
FOR ONE
IH LL A R
of the controversy as to the value o
university education, but they leave
no doubt as to the practical dollar-
and-cente value of education in gen*
eral. Dollars aud cents make a nar
row standard by which to measure
the valne of education, but greater
productive capacity is only one of
The phases of the greater general ele
vation which comes with the greater
enlightenment that education gives
A I..TOWNIKNI).
(L Y. W'KbTHORXLANI)
TOWM) & WRKTMOREMKD.
Attorneys- at-Law,
Bainbndge, . Geor
HOB’ L. Z. BRIDGES.
Practicing Physician,
BH1NSOX. - - GEORGIA
All calls promptly attended. . .
Dressed and dried boards at Reid
A Soli’s, near depot.
As ood as a daily at the price
iff a Weekly.
During the American-Spanish nut
The Thkiob-a-Webk World proved its
great value I y the in-omiitne**. thorough
ness and accuracy of it* reports from ill
the scenen of important event)-. It, w;>*
as useful as k daily to the reader, and it
will be of equal value in reporting tin*
great and complicated question* which
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It prints the news of all the world
having Special correspondence from all
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markets, departments for the household
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partments of unusual interest
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gether one ear for ©1.80-
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