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Ur ln_, r**«U i* % faarful iuorewo ai of 1
Th* • . ..
and llMrt Dismme* - Geaaral l>*.
bJlity, Infiotnnto, ParalyaU, and. In-
aanliy. Chloral and Morphia augment
the evil- The medicine good beet adapted
to do permaueat is Ayer’* Sar-
eaparilla. It purifies, enriches, and
ritalir.e» the blood, and thu* strengthens
erery function and faculty of the body.
" I hare used Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, in
my family, for years. I have found It
invaluable as
A Cure
lor Nervous Debility caused by an in-
sotiTe liver'and a low state of the blood.’*
— Henry Bacon, Xenia, Ohio. •
‘‘For sotn# time I have been troubled
with heart disease. I nover found any¬
thing to heip me until I began using
Ayer’* tnedjcino Souseparilla. I have only used
this six months, but it has re¬
lieved me from my trouble, and enabled
mo to resume work.”—J. I*. Garzanett,
perry. 111.
“ I have been a practicing physician
for over half a century, anid during that
time I hare never found so powerful
and reliable an alterative and blood-
purifier as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”—Dr,
M. Mazstart, Louisville, Ky.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED ST
On J. O. Aysr It Co., Lowell, Math
Price |1 i six bottles, SO. Wjrth »5 s total*.
Intell igent Headers will notice that
Ms Pills
are not “*arrant«d to eur»» all elasses
Vertigo, Headache, Costiveness, Dyspepsia, Bilious
"evers, Colic, Flatulence,
etc.
.jew Advertisements.
Circulars of Clark’s Business
College, mailed Erie, free. Pa. Spec
Offks
H1HDERCORN8,
CONSUMPTIVE
.‘saSst
PARKER'S I
.. HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautifies the hair. I I
es a luxuriant growth. Gray!
Fills io Restore I
to its Youthful Color. I
__ 'A Dandruff and hair falling
6O0. and tl.oo ** jB£ 588 SSwa *
THE GLORY OF MAN
STRENGTH VITALITY!
How Lest! How Regained,
ndsrd Popular Medical Treatise
ExhaustedVitality
^Untold Miseries
.,} Avoid Work, unskillful Business, pretenders. the Married or Possess 6
this 1
work. finding,emboa^ftUf^k It contains S00 pages, royal 8vo. Bean__
Pricejmly $1.00 bj
d th.Ofl _ _ _ _|L
PHYSICAL Assistant DEBIUTY.Dr.Parkerand acorpa
of Physicians may be consulted, confi-
.. _ - ■ the omci
or letters for advice should be
1 as above.
w UGLAS
S3 SHOE J i , FOR '
_ GENTLEMEN,
S3 SHOE FOll FC LADIES.
Examine W. L. Douglas $2.00 Shoes tor
♦ntleraen «hd ladfes.
t; '. F )Ii SALE BY
SCHEUERMAN & WHITE,
GRI FFIN.
__ ____
HOTEL CURTIS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Under New Management.
K. G. DANIEL, Prop’r.
1 1 lei* all twin*
n sM
HINDBRCORNS.
PARKERTGINGERTONIC
*rb tad Bowel trauhlM. AUo
the most cffeciiv* cure for
Cough*. Cclcts, UroncUiu« and
•flections of tits breathing,
y**°*». It pramote*refreshing
overcome* ffft. norvous prostration,
the, ?,Vt# strength
ip weak and aged. 50 c. arid $ 1 00 at Prgguist*. i
. ,
&4WaSRMSS® aB ^BS a&!\
In IJiulortuker's Pij| Ar*
an Shop.
“We are“ crowded with work just
now, tw ^brought this home to finish
“You have a trousseau on hand,
then! I suppose that fancy garment,
whatever it may be, is fora bride.”
The sewing girl opened wide her
eyes. “We don't make no trousseau,”
said she. “Did you think I workfed at
a dressmaker’s?’ .
“Yes? Aren’t you with Mme. X.?”
“Not much I 1 left there a month
ago. The madame gave me too much
sass and too little pay. I’m in Y-’s
undertaking establishment and am
earning half as much again as I did
at Mme. X-’s, who is the most
awful screw in this city. The season
ain’t is longer half the too, number though of course there
of girls employ¬
ed where I am now that there were at
madame’s. When I worked there I
was laid off reg’lar three months in
the year, while four weeks is the long¬
est that the girls at ,tho undertaker’s
are idle. When there is a full supply
ieh aroputtomak- of ’em
most
though, .— ----—, for tliat .. isn’t fussy work,' then-
matter, none of
work is half so fussy as what I had to
bother with when I sewed for live
people. used Miss B- have (she the is, "same our place fore¬
woman) to
at a dressmaker’s, and she says she
has grown ten yeai-s younger since
she went into the robe making busi¬
ness, because she has so much less
worry of mind. She sometimes used
to have to keep her girls up till 18
o’clock dress for Saturday rich night to and finish early a
Monday some morning customer, here would
come
the dress back again to be altered, and
a want sassy of message fit along there with ain’t it about its
ticular fit about Now, burial robe, any par¬
a as you
can see the by this; it Miss is made B—— only to it go is
over corpse. says
a great comfort to her to know-that
them as wears’em don’t make no com¬
coming, plaint, and which io the can’t main be they are live be¬
said of
dresses—I mean the dresses live peo¬
ple “To wear. them
see in their coffins you
Would think they were completely
dressed, but really all their finery is
on top. Even the men’s solid looking
black coals and smooth shirt fronts
can go on and off without removing
the corpse. What I am making is for
a young girl who died yesterday, and
will be buried to-morrow. She was to
have been married next month, u, and auu
her trousseau was begun at Mme.
X- —’s before I left there. She will
look just as sweet in this robe I am
making for her as she would have
done in her wedding dress.
“Afraid of the coffins? Not after
the first day. It would be a pity if
end we were, of the as loft our where sewing piles room is at piles the
them stowed upon talk,
of are away. We
and laugh, and sing, just as we did at
Mme. X--’s.and - s,ana Miss ~--... is an „„
awful lot nicer than the forewoman
we had there, because, as I have al¬
ready worried said, out she of her isn’t life being by fussy constantly ladies;
and, as it is piecework, she never She has
to scold the girls for loafing.
says tliat what she can’t get used to
is to have to go downstairs and take
orders for robes for folks that still
have breath in their bodies. Some
day at eating noontime, lunch, and the rest of girls us
were one of the
had her chair break down under her,
and as there was no other to be had,
what did she do but go out and drag
in a coffin to sit on! When we had
finished our lunch we took and laid
her out in it and covered her with a
robe; and then we began to cry, and
talk about the virtues of the deceased,
and were having a real jolly wake,
considering when in there the was boss. no We candles, didn't
come
know but we’d ail be fired out for med¬
dling with the coffins, but all he said
was that it would be money in his
pocket in if we lazy loafers were would all of
us him our coffins, better as our custom
pay than our work. The
girl cheeky—jumped in the coffin—she’s awfully him
up and told it
was play time, as it was not yet half
past 12, and then he said wliat was
run to us would be considered death
by most One folks, the and girls with that he he went
out of said was in a
good yellow humor fever because there was talk this of
tne but that coming wasn’t here Under¬
summer, takers ain’t so.
no more heartless than
other men, and when it comes to pay¬
skms ing their girls women.”—New they ain’t half York such
as some
Tribune.
Says He Choked a Bear to Death.
A man named Robert Brown, who
resides near Fox Hollow, is credited
with having killed a bear about five
miles from Edgeville, a Catskill
mountain hamlet. The animal was
no but larger it than fat and a Newfoundland Brown dog,
killed the was bear, but plump. used
he says he
neither firearm nor missile of any
kind. He choked it to death with Ins
brawny The animal right fist
berries when Brown was feeding first espied on some it
Taking off his coat, the hunter crept
stealthily distance, up to he within “throwing"
when covered the brute’s
head and face with the garment Be¬
fore bruin could free himself from the
unwelcome covering, Brown had got¬
ten close enough to the shaggy brute
to gets his fingers around its throat.
slowly He squeezed but mightily, succumbed and the bear the
killing surely and fell dead to the
pressure at
hunter’s pounds. feet Bear The steaks carcass weighed dis¬
UO around, were
tributed and "home folks"
and a score or more of early Catskill
mountain guests ate bear meat for the
first time in their lives.
Brown says he choked a wildcat to
death last winter. There are people
who doubt tins Samsonian story, but,
be that as it may, the steaks were a*
reality.—Kingston Freeman.
The Burdei « of Womanhood.
Thousands of women are intently
suffnring untold misery, simply be¬
cause they shrink from const
physician in those functional numerous com¬
plaints arising from Many irreg¬ mod¬
ularities and disorders. a
est girl and woman prefers silence to rather bear
her heavy burden in
than to go the family nhysician this class for
advice. All sufferers from
of disorders can, however,find prompt
and sure relief in Dr. Pierce’s Favor¬
ite Prescription. It is brightened a specific the in
such cases, and has
lives of countless women by restoring
them to perfect health
* WkKm y
.
■ __......
....... .. . ^
LaGrange is working for a public
school system.
The delegatee from South and
Central America so th* international
American congress at Washington
will probably visit the cotton fields
of Georgia.
At Columbus, Saturday, while
Thomas Webster, a negro employe
at the Columbus Iron Works, was
hoioting a big mould on a crane bis
hand was caught and his fingers liter¬
ally mashed into pulp. He was re¬
moved to the office of Dr. S. T. Jor¬
dan, where the fingers were amputa¬
ted.
-
Poison the fountain,and the stream
is taint impure; is carried poison through the blood, the and entire its
system—those innumerable veins and
arteries carry disease and death in¬
stead of life and vitality. Asa result,
you have Kidney, Headache, Scrofula, Liver Dys¬
pepsia, plaint and General Disease, Debility. An Com¬ .in¬
active Liver means poisoned blood;
Constipation Kidney disorder means poisoned poisoned Meod;
means
blood. The great antidote for im¬
pure blood is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery. Acting directly upon
the affected organs, restores them to
their normal condition. tf A word to
the wise is sufficient.” Tbe “Discov¬
ery” is guaranteed to enre in all cases
of diseases for which it is recommend
ed, or money paid for it will be
promptly refunded.
A colored excursion from Athens
to Macon Saturday had a tragic end¬
ing in the probable fatal wounding
of Weldon Price, of Farmington, by
Sam Harris, of WatkinsviUs, who
had taken passage on the excursion.
The men had been at outs all day,
on account of some trivial remarks
made by one to the other. Price
secured a pistol from some
one, and followed Harris to the rear
end of the coach, when Harris stop¬
ped and refused to move an inch
further. After seme quarreling
Price turned to leave, and was fol¬
lowed by Harris. When near the
door on his return Harris fired {on
him. Price then faced Harris and
was shot the second time. Price
then drew his revolver, and several
shots were exchanged. Price fell and
Harris made for the platform and
jumped off the train. The train was
stopped after it had run over a tres¬
tle, and the wounds of Price were ex¬
amined. He was found to be shot
about 3 inches under the right
nipple and once in the side, which
is very slight. He was able to walk
assisted by two friends. It is hoped
that he may recover.
Don’t Be Humbugged
with the foolish idea that Catarrh
cannot be cured! The world mores,
and medical science is progressive.
The proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy Nasal will pay f500 reward for a
cr.se of Catarrh, no matter how
bad or of how long standing, which
they cannot cure. Remedy sold by
druggists, at only 50 cents.
The grave of Rio, Mr. Stephena’
favorite dog, reminds one of the re¬
mark which he made to b ! e servants
on his departure for the governor’s
mansion: “If a dog passes heie
open the gate and give him a bone
instead of throwing a rock at him.”
The many sheds around the promis¬
ee recall his remark that he would
never own anything that hecouldn’t
cover. Under one of these sheds the
close carriage in which he made his
last campaign for congress still
stands, much the worse for wear. In
this carriage he was driven by faith¬
ful Harry, and pulled by the two
noted “flea-bitten grays,” and in it
he received ovations in every county
in the Eighth district. His open
carriage is still in good repair in
the ownership of Mrs. Sanford, and
wiii yet do valvable service. An in-
noeent old qua-fcer-witted darky
shows alike the liberality of Liberty
Hall of the past and the present. He
looks like Darwin’s missing link, and
is as useless as any creature that
crawls, In answer to any question
he says: “My name is Mr. Col. Lewis
Hakins. I was called dat by old
marster. lsealways boded at Liber¬
ty Hall,” and that is the extent of
his information.
AD VIC® TO MDEmKRS.
Mbs. Winblow’b Soothing Sybup,
or children teething, is the prescrip¬
tion of one of the nest female nurses
*vra iuivj
with never-failing success by mi
of mothers for their children,
ing is incalculable. the process of It teething relieves its the value child
from pain, cures dysentery and diar¬
rhoea, griping in the bowels, and
wind-colic. By giving health to the
child it rests the mother, Price 25c.
a bottle. aag2eod&wly
Hale and Hearty In Old Age-
What is more beautiful titan am ancient
tree clothed with an ample robe of verdure.
Apf ard is the comparison between such a growth
an old man or wtoaaminfaeed with health
and vigor. The sine qua non, the Indispen¬
sable condition of rigorous youth, robust
tanhood and avirile old age, U sound digee-
ion. Without this life is shorn of the T
xest that toonld attend it. No mors
ce meat it and o’ agreeable hale old eo tribntortothe, and efBcfent at
a age, mean*
cot iteractiag the infirmities that too often
a bend life’* decline, can be found than Hoa-
t -vter’s H tendency omach Bitters. kidney Dyspeptic complaint, eyi
toms, ousinqr'etude a and to rhenmatic n
trouble
overcome by Re nee. The effect of exposure
erd overr7o.'k are nullified by it, and it el-
Ionia urnrfmm* i' ' ' ‘ “ -
To the honest inquirer after trutA vh*
troubled with seme contagious Mood <U»
txse, seeks a remedy which will
pletely eradicate from his system every
germ ot blood poison, that the ones he
loves— his wife and hfs children—may others be
saved, the experience of comes ss
a mighty revelation. Common sense tells
him actual results are the only sure proof
of curative virtue. Read the following
trus testimony:
bJSrrsMRiar __________genife y* itraded My My s affile- afflic- torri-
tion tite, tion ulcers, I had did was was been and not truly impaired, under sic m faqt the ray I treatment was throat £M a total a of several wreck. __
of tried the nearly leading every physicians blood remedy of Atlanta; adver¬
tised; mained wentto several months, Hot' Springs, receiving where I re¬
dread disease no ben-
<. fit whatever—the still clung
to roe.
Three years ago 1 was laid up with
rheumatism. My knees were drawn up
in such a position that I could not leave
my bed for months.
La it summer the disease seemed to re¬
new its attack upon me with all the rav¬
ages Of death. My life was a lingering
torlur*, ting well and when I had friend despaired of mine of ever get¬
a recom¬
mended and IL find B, B. myself I began permanently to use it at
once, Dhvis, cured.
I refer to R*v. C- C. Dr. John G.
at.d Westmorland, Dr. Knott, who Garrett know & Bro,
numerous others of my
case. for I really 1 eWrfuBy believe it recommend is the best medicine R. B. B,
for the Wood in the world.
Jas. L. Bosworth, Atlanta, Ga.
utter astoc-
elder Im. In Feb-
ruary ruary my my elder son, soa, soa, twelve twelve twelve years y of age,
was literally Covered red :rrtl with ugly sores on
ut«u* B. B.R. ft* As*• 1 * wwo quick *. uiQCU blood _ cleanser it has
1
-no equal /James Hill, Atlanta, Ga.
For several years I have been, suffering
from a constitutional blood poison, which
has resisted the treatment of our beat
physicians, and the use of the most noted
medicines.
I was covered with a copper-colored
eruption all over my body and limbs, in with
loss of appetite, excruciating pains my
back, ity, emaciation, aching <M falling my joints, off of general hair, debil¬
throat and great my 1 became sore
nervousness.
incredulous, but being * told * that — B. B. B.
Was a sure en<-U( ” -
it did not requiri
before he was i
use. Within two weeks’time I felt im¬
proved. 1 h»ve taken about ten bottles
*.vl fc.-l *> rr.-.ll ahd sprightly as any man.
My appetite and strength have returned
and my hair does not fall out 1 do not
vinccd that it has no equal In these
1 still continue its use, as it is a sptenaia
tonic and keeps my system in a fine con¬
dition. You nave ffie liberty to direct any
*uffe -;r tonne in person. ,,
and
ited.
_ ____ _ 'efforts . ___ f _ ^ _ barrel of
medicine in vaiii to cure the dis¬
ease. With little hope, l finally acted oh
bottle the urgent of B, advice B. B, I of experienced a friend, and change got a
a
and my despondency wss somewhat dis¬
pelled. I kept using it until I had taken
sixteen tism, and bottles, other add all the of ulcers, rheuma¬
horrors blood poison
have disappeared, And at last 1 am sound
and well again, after an experience of
twenty years A. of torture. Brunsok,
P, Atlanta, Ga.
B. B. Kennesaw, B. Company—-Mv Ga» Sept Dear 11,1887. Sir:
I take great pleasure in acknowledging
the great benefit my wife has derived from
yonr great and wonderful medicine, B. B.
II. For two years she was a great suf¬
ferer from' Scrofula, or some blood dis¬
ease which had lain dormant all her life.
"We had attention from some of the most
skillful physicians In the country, but all
to no effect, until we had all despaired of
her ever reedvering. Her mouth was one
solid ulctr, and for two months or more
her body was broken out with sores until
she lost a beautiful head of hair, also eye¬
lashes be and complete eye-brows; wredc. in fact, she seemed
to a
Now comes the great secret which I
want all the world to know: That three
bottles of Blood Balm medicine has done
the work whieh would sound incredible to
any one who did sot know it to be so.
To-day my wife is perfectly healthy and
clear froto any scrofulous taint, and she
now has a tHree-month-old babe, also per¬
fectly healthy. Very respectfully H. L Cassidy.
Gux ALmt Station, N. C. )
February 13th, 1888.)
This is i *0 certify that three ye; ! srs ago l
had m left leg amputated for our inches
below bone the ie affection. knee, knee, caused caused After by by bloo blood it poison
and was ampu¬
tated there came a muffing ulcer on th*
end of It that measured 8# inches one
way #nd 4)4 inches the other, and con¬
tinued growing worse I every given day until die by a
short time ago. wss Charlotte- up to
the best doctor* in I heard of
the wonderful B. B- I resolved to try
that My weight at the time I com¬
menced If. B. B. Was 110 pounds. When
I had taken three bottles I gained 87
pounds h. weight; when I had taken
twelve bottles Fwas sound 1 and well, fifteen but
continued taking until had taken
bottles. ! now weigh 180 pounds and
measure five feet and three inches high.
like a charm. (12) j. R. Wilson.
BriblidW
skSEsxjsz ■ttee, whit wet ha
t An —t.r.
,v« 0, row Otma' K * I w Am
V,1 *tS3^‘ViTt-te-wiia. Ai»t»
ms
WHELESS STAMP
-PRESS CO.-
old STREET, AUGUSTA. G,
mM Wanted! Catalogue rXBKI
STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS.
STEEL STAMPS, Ac.
I
-- { MANUFACTURERS 01
Sash, Blinds, Doors. ,
--—)o(-— y*- 4 fit* ill
We ate here, and here tb stay and have on hand
a a laigc large stock DIUOIV Ul of j \ .
needs, sash ano blinds 1
which wo defy competition on. We have n large stock of "hone
ber,’ of Mouldings, the finest vuality Mantles, and Bailastei-H, can guarantee the very best j
way of etc., etc., we can jur
price you can get anywhere! And an for Window and Doof
the plnee to come. Oura te n “home enterprise,” and \v< n
born and raised in Geoi |B__________
to work working the wood best advantage. for 1 We ___.. under¬
stand to how do the work. For there tilao employ good other workmen, who might
to and many renrawm we
name, we claim a right to patronage of tiie people.
We heartily thank the public generally for very liberal patronage, nnd
solicit a continancc of the same.
DON’T FORGET THAT WE WILL HAVE.
made abroad, right here find
Factory, 13th Street, -Griffin, Ga.
BXB WHAT OOM1CB3IOM1BR KOLB 8AY&
OmcsCoasissiowsaov Aokwlwbs. Acasas, Ala.
«> * . IIarkisov, 8«c**T*av Ccltitato*Pvbusbiso Co. i •
. _
JM jt Sir i—l can and do most heartily raoommend Tbs Bourns#* CefcTlTXTOt to the flamers
< Alabama a* a farm Journal of vary lupeflor merit*. It should, be to the homo of evory pro-
srositT* aertauUnrUt. Very truly yoera, R. t. milM*
,
200,000 Headers I Established 184d. ■ [» Loading In I860!
11 SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR AND DIXIE FA!!,
q-eoirg-ia.,
£To ■vr' lzx it« S n ort 3 T-aiwV‘«at 2 aL "STwaLt at S^uLtoUea-tioxa..
..... ......... .. t .....
The re toes load organ of Southern agrienltore end the Indutrtol prognti of th* Sooth, with-
a nanntaed elronlation in erery Southern and Wejtern State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
Vht editorial oorea #f writers and eontrl'bntori U <uunrp*M*d,.If equalled, by tha\ ot ri»*
Bar publication In all th* Union. HON. W. 3. NORTIIEN1* the Prerident of the Georgia State
Agricultural Society, and a proctleal farmer of the moat thorough eulture, and hl« artiele* are
always Instructive to turnon. DR. DANIEL LEE is not only on* of fho ablest and meat l«*rn-
*d agricultural journaliit in the country, but he wu for four yeart virtually ComwtirieuM at
Washington, D, C., and later, Prefeuor o! Apiculture at th* Gedrgia Btato finlrerflty. 9»U.
R. 3. REDDING I. to* able sad thoroughly equipped Ai.Utant CommlMloner of Agricaltoroof
th*Stateef Georgia, as wellaa an experienced writer. P*o». 3. S. NEWMAN u In charge el the
* ’ahem* But* Experiment Station, and atondt in Aha front rank of ngrienltnral educators and
iter* in tot South. With thecu emlnunt writer* are accoaiated a too ro or mor* of m*l* **0 «-
da eontrikutora—Including not a few prefetiional agricultural wrlUra-whois month. T »rii-
clee cover every department of farm management and houiehold work, making Th# Cblti va-
to* the mbit eonpUU, »Ur»ctiT« and v»lu*.b!e agricultural journal in the South, ta«a usu*
Mag worth more than » whole jeer’i'iubioription to nny farmer who retd* nnd think* ia ee»-
neoUoa with hie work* I * with mat¬
Ite iilustretiens ere imperb, nnd erery department will be found full to eTordowlnf
ter to instntet* enlighten and enterteia. Kwh number U worth the enm oharged for the year s
' # No^famUy CULTITATOR. Now 1* the G»# to
nan adord to bo without THE SOUTHERN numbers eo*«tUuti#g
land in your (uhscriptioni. Only One Dollar per annum, th# twelve a
volume ot extensive information uisful to all elauto. Endontd 4p Prom and PtofU a* a iourwal
tor too form, fireside and counting-room. SubtcripUon, tt per year* For advertising rate*,
THE CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO.,
jSro. W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Ati,anta, Ga.
Manager, f Send for aamplo oopy .
(, L 8. mi TABLE 16. El,
In effect June 28rd, 1880.
No. 15 —Dailt, ExceptSunday.
LeaveGriffln...................................5:45a.m. Atlanta
Arrive ....................,.,...8:00 “
No. 16 —Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave Atlanta...,...........................6:05 p- m.
Arrive Griffin.................................8:05 “
No. 17 —SundAy Only. ** tea
Leave Griffln...................... ...........7:40 m.
Arrive Atlanta................ 9:35 “
No. 18 —Sunday Only.
Leave Atlanta .............................3:00 p. m.
Arrive Griffln....^..............................5:00 “
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon...,...............................3:80a. m.
l Griffln..................................5(25 “
Atlanta .......... ....,..,7:00
No. 11 —Daily.
Leave Macon................................. ..10:43 8;25 a. % m.
Arrive i Griffln............. Griffln..
Atlanta.............................,12:30 p.m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon..................................l:40p. Griffln..................................3:53 m.
Arrive *
Leave “ ..................... ..4:00 u
Arrive Atlanta....................5:46 “
No. 13 —Daily.
Leave Macon................................ 9:00 6:40p.m. !
Arrive Griffin...................... “
Atlanta..-............. 10:40 ‘f
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta................. .... 0:50 a. m.
Arrlts GrHBn.... ..i................ .... 8:17 •*<
“ Macon.. „„10^0 “
No. 12 — Daily.
Leare Atlanta.......................... .....2:15 p. w!
Arrive Griffln...........................- ......4:00 “
" Macon.....,..................... ......6:15
No. 4—Daily.
Leave Atlanta.......................... ... 7:05 p. m
Arrive Griffln............................ 8:35 “
*• Macon....,..,.— -----...... ... 11:00 '■
No. 14—Daily.
Leave Atlanta.......................... ...: 0:05 a. m
Arrive Griffin............................ ....10:43 “
“ Macon........................... .... 1:00 p. m.
No. 27 -Daily.
Leave Griffln 8:30 a.m.
" Newna an.... ... 10:20 “
Arrive Carrol ollton ...11:85 “
No. 28—Daily.
Leam Carrollton ...4:20 p. m-
“ Newnan------- Newnan........................„.... v 5:25 ..!•
Arrive Griffln...................................7:20
Arrive Carrollton..........................7:10 “
No. 30— Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave Carrollton.............................5:45 Newnan...........................!. a. m
Arrive Newnan................................8:05
Leave Griffin...............................10:35
Arrive
HI* For furtherjnformation relative to tick-
BY FAR
TtaMui CtapilbHipr Wa
-TO—
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
-IS VIA-
SAVANNAH
-ANDTHS--
OCEAN : STEAMSHIP: LINE
k - -------- or TW t , te — v *'
..
.
Central Railroad of Georgia.
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
*•* “js'jMastas .fa? - *
Free Magnificent the Steamer.and and dust. elegant Incident eervfc. All-
from heat to
Ilail Rontee. If you we sick th? trip will in¬
vigorate and build you up.
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Regret H
Pa8««ngers, before Durehasmar ticket® ria
other routes, would do well to inquire* first of
the ther merit* information of the Route be via had Savannah. by applying!• Fur¬
may
the Agent at your wtation or to.
Ml 8. BELKNAP;- W. F. SHEI.LMAN,
fi&ti'i&sir- cL-raM^fer'-
Gen’l P*m.£gent. Trav. Fa*. Agent.
^
v AiMivitmiis st. wunr ssiau i
IK
liclei I
»oa effect taking it;
parent aperm* ia
the a i
wreck. IT NEVI
aeon
SIS
“WsdoL-
same are®
We the undo .
!-sI CABLI 4r ‘
Grand :
At the,
Capital Prize, I
„ 100,000 Tickets at Tw
5 UST<
2 PMZEOor 10,0
BS9 25 pS or l|oOi iL
kPpmviu.not n —
X0O ir-s-Wtezr. do. 200 are.«••«*••**•*•••
TEBMJSAL PNip, J; | :
100 ure...,........ ..... V
'•“A<_
For Club Rates, or «
ot M. A. DAUPHIN, letter, Wa
rot
a™ •
Address Registered
t ' lug Cur
M ®W ORASAXI1
higheet Courts; "
39fi
*
improve. After awhile wsistr
past five meaths ngj
■fi Jit
Books on li