Newspaper Page Text
Heart ..... IMacaaea ~ General Do.
lty, Insomnia, Paralysis, nndln-
,»p*rill»- » purifie*. enrich#*, and
Yitaliios the Wood, and thus strengthen*
, rtT f function and faculty of the body.
«I here used Ayer’a Sarsaparilla, in
car family, for X years.. I have found it
tnraluabU aa •?> \
A Cure
tor Nenreni Debility caused by an in-
ac tire liver and a low state of the blood."
- Henry Bacon, Xenia, Ohio.
■•For some tirao I liaro been troubled
with heart disease. I never found any.
filing to help me until I began using
’ Ayer’s Saswaparllla. I have only tfaed
this medicine six months, but It has re¬
lieved mo from my trouble, and enabled
ine to resume work."—J. I*. Carzanctt,
Perry, 111.
"I have been a practicing physician
tor over half a contury, and during that
time I have never found so powerful
end reliable an alterative and blood-
purifier as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.’’—Dr.
M. Max*tart, Louisville, Ky.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
rWAlBD BT
Dr. <1. C. Ayer it Co., Lowell, Mass.
(Vise |11 lU bottles, SS. Worth $S a Mils.
Intelligent Bouden will notice that
TatTs Pills
are not "warranted to earn” nil classes
VdeU^ llv*?, a vU «“* ”* Ult
Vertigo, Headache, Costiveness, Dyspepsia, Bilious
“evers, Colic, Flatulence, etc.
fiSsSS^^^*M«2aaiss: fw tbeao they are not warranted (,»-
SOLD EVJEXiYWHEKE.
.Jew Advertisement*.
Circulars o! Clark’s Business
College, Offms mailed Brie, free. Pa. Special
HSKPERCORKS.
SSia ^■es a luxuriant growth. I
Fiil* Yoithful to Restore Color. Cr»yl I
to itl /aUlog-1
land to Vanirntt and hair
Sl.OOatDnmgtota.
THE GLORY OF MAN
STRENGTH VITALITY!
How Lost! How Regained,
end Physical Debility, Impurities of the'BIood.
ExhaustedVitality
❖Untold Miseries
diet! ■oawkfi. Parser, M. i)., re-
eolvi the GOLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL I
from the Wartnsel Medical Association tor
this PRIZE ESSAY »n NEKVOC8 and
Sentlall pH ywlCAL D y EBll^ c Y.^I^kerand y a eorgt
' - •
•rderi
directed as abov%
ri ■'
W. L. DOUGLAS
83 SHOE anttA.ni
•S 8HOf ' FOR LADIES.
'ion.
I 8Sl shoes.
teas?
Examine W. .L. Douglas $2.00 Shoes tor
»nt inmen and ladies.
POS SALE BY
SOH GUERMAN & WHITE,
CRIFFIM.
HOTEL CURTIS
9RIFFIN, GEORQ1A.
Under New Management.
K. G. DANIEL, Prop’r.
• T ■ tore meet all train*.
HINDERCORN 8 .
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC
The belt of el! reivediet f*r
Toward Peine. Colic, Indigefc
lMB. Exhaustion __________ and allijtom- Ston-
end Bowel trouble*. AUo fori 1
Coorhi, _ «o»t effective euro nndl
•Section! Coi.il, if the Bronchi'.i* br.,\tht,!{ 1
vrgxoa. It jremctesrefreehiug
•lap inpOnVee tbe op^otite,
overcome* i.arvoux proatration.
mssammsm
aESS, Masses
‘
* » «**•* AW
rSSImSK pmssss , t
American institute on the subject of
•'Flush l,r^ht Photography in Modi
cine and Kovjfbry." Dr. Roberts, •who a
is connccit <i with tho houpit&U _____oil
Rftiidiiils Raut'.iiH'h ixtiiiid bland »rui and with with tha the \ Wo¬
man's ami Ht. Klizubeth hospitals in
tills nil v has tier iaed aed some some very very valu- valu¬
raphy, able ttjrjTtmtus and used for r it flush to iJUuatrate light photog
hw
address.
I>r Rtiimrts said that tile utilisa¬
a tion work ol photography Hint is now attracting by physicians much is
attention The fundamental basis of
success in medicine and surgery is the
accumulation of accurate records and
the arrangement of data on which to
base opinions. Without more positive
records of cases than physicians’ de¬
scriptions ijpcord of disputes evidences are of endless. phenomenal Asa
deformities growth, abnormal and parasites developments and and
life, photography of especial value. germ
is
Words describing objects, however
accurate, do not convey to the mind
the actual condition of affairs. A
picture before must be presented in to the tnind
a person is a position to
judge this there of u jiartioular nothing case. For doing with
is to compare
photography- The ordinary form of photography,
which employs sunlight, requires spe¬
cially sician constructed to rooms. photograph If a phy¬
by attempts his in a the pa¬
tient ward ward ol of sunlight hospital hospital in the the result result office is is or unsatis- unsatis-
a
factory. The lights cannot be regu-
lated so as to produce a good picture.
Sunlight such is too inconstant variations aud that subject it
to great can
seldom bo used. The activity of the
ithe rays time of light of the varies day, in the strength with the
latitude and the amount of season, moisture
in the atmospnere. Ideal photography
for medical and surgical good purposes in¬
volves the making of pictures in
the homes of patients and in the offices
of ject physicians. be taken Many patients public galleries will ob¬
to to
tographed when they would consent to be pho¬
in a private room. Phy¬
sicians should be able to take photo¬ the
graphs day, when of a patient the work at is any most time of
conven¬
ient and the conditions are most suit¬
able. This renders it necessary that
all of the apparatus be portable and
tbe Artificial lights bo lights artificial. be divided into
kinds—those of may long and those of
two short
duration. Lights of long dura¬
tion the are electric the magnesium light, the oxy-hydrogen ribbon light,
— ii-u-—■> -;i i----- T ~i the
%
that is needed, therefore, is _ bright
a
light light of ordinary duration or the flash
The form of this light best adapted
for th< the use is of in photography the shape for powder. medical
purposes H broad of a
This the instar instant produces '* that a ” it is ignited, sheet J of ~ It Same is
1 es- -
sential that the exposure of the plate
in the camera and the ignition of the
powder occur at the same instant To
accomplish this considerable practice
is manipulating necessary. Certainty both the light of action and the in
shutter of the camera is test obtained
by The the apparatus use of an electric for doing current this is
simple A small attached very
the front of the magnet has lever to
camera a
connected with Us armature, which
holds the shutter in position. On clos¬
ing board the shutter, convenient by means distance, of a key¬ the
at a
shutter is released and the plate ex¬
posed. ignites The magnesium current at the same time
the powder. This
is placed in an elliptical trough in
front of a large concave mirror, which
serves the effect. to reflect The the mirror light is and attached increase
to
a movable tripod in such a manner
that it may be adjusted to reflect the
light in any direction. Short sections
of steel wire are placed in the trough,
being with the connected battery and by keyboard. insulated wires Tho
current heats these wires to incandes¬
cence, and thus ignites tho powder.
A size battery is sufficient of three cells of the ordinary light
to operate
and camera. The whole apparatus is
portable and may be set up in any or¬
dinary Photography l-oom in a has few heretofore minutes.
teen
used to reproduce the appearance of pa¬
tients afflicted with hunchback, of spinal the
curvaturo, club foot, diseases
joints and in skin photography diseases. and The the improve¬ of
ments use
flash light nearly will extend branch the of use medical of the
art to every
science. It will enable a physician
to merit, photograph during a treatment patient before and li-eat- after
treatment, disease, and thusshowing the effect of every the stage method of
a
of treatment followed. It will enable
the physician to obtain ovideuco that
everyone will accept as to tho sever¬
ity of the case and thesuecessof the
treatment. ployed during Photography surgical operations may be cm
to
and show his the assistants exact [jositioii during of tho important surgeon
operations. cision aud tbe Tlie parts direction exposed of the in¬ bo
shown, and in fact the whole may
of modern surgical operation process be
a by photography. This may will
reproduced be of value for the instruction
students great aud the information the
of of
medical fraternity. —New York Mail
aud Ex cress.
Deserve* • Monument.
A Washington lady who thauki us
for proposing statues for women as
well as for men informs us that she
has trained six different and desires servant know girls
within this year, to
if we do not think she deserves a mon¬
ument We certainly think shedoes.
Indeed, we are not each sure of but the she six ought
to have one for ser¬
vants. There is more real altruism in
training servants for other country people $18 to
enjoy than Washington in servinga Post at
$Iponth.—
The Burdens of Womanhood.
Thousands of women are simply silently be¬
suBnring untold misery,
cause they shrink from consulting a
physician in those numerous com¬
plaints arising from functional irreg¬
ularities and disorders. Many a mod¬
est girl and woman in prefers silence to rather bear
her heavy burden
than to go tbe family from physician this class for
advice. All sufferers
of disorders can, however,find prompt Favor¬
and sure relief in Dr. Pierce’s
ite Prescription. • It brightened is a specific the in
such cases, and has
lives of countless women by restoring
them to perfect health.
i ijp ri"
‘
steen of
he Michigan Agri-
station represent¬
atives of the Devon, Hereford, Jersey,
Galloway, Shorthorn and Holstein breeds
were tested for a period of three kept year* the
and an accurate aooount waa of
variety, quantity and cost ol the food
supplied, and the daily and yearly slaugh¬ gain
in weight until the animals were
tered. The following are some of the
conclusions resulting from the experi¬
ments:
1. The experiment seems differed^ toindicate
that there is but little in the
cost per pound of raising steers of condi¬ the
different breeds under the same
tions. Tito superiority of the beef breeds
rather lies in their early maturing feeder quali¬
ties, which enable the to torn
them off, well ripened, at two instead of
three years.
2. That calves brought wifi up on the tench pall
BIBB when properly fed >d make as
growth and be equally aa valuable for
feeding as it they were allowed to suckle
their dams.
& That prejudice resulting from a lack
of Information may be, too often is, the
basis of our estimates of the comparative
value of breeds.
4. That early maturing breeds may be
kept until overripe, thus lessening the
valueof the carcass for the oonsomer.
a The lesson is very emph a tica l l y
taught that average native steers weigh¬
ing from 1,100 to 1,800 pounds or less at
three years, cannot be raised and fed
with profit. Well bred steers weighing
from 600 to 800 pounds more at the same
age maybe. Hie valueof good blood
for beef production cannot, then, be
overestimated. and skillful It feeding, only can, in these with tones good
care
and with the present markets, bridge the
margin between loss and profit for the
grower and feeder.
6. That the quality of beef produced which
by a combined grain ration m
wheat bran, oats and some oil meal form
the principal part ration la preferable to that
produced by a com exclusively. taught
7. The lesson Is plainly that:
per pound of
production is greatly increased with each
succeeding year. Certainly under most
favorable conditions they should reach
the limit of profit at from twenty-four
to thirty months at latest This may be
modified in ordintfty feeding by the fact
that the yearling steer will need more
expensive food than older ones. The
latter will consume more rough fodder
profitehlv than the former.
Poison thefountain,and the stream
is impure; poison tbe blood, and its
taint is carried innumerable through the veins entire and
system—those and death in¬
arteries carry disease
stead of life and vitality. Ana result,
you have Headache, Scrofula, Com¬ Dys¬
pepsia, Kidney General Disease, Debility. Liver An ^in¬
plaint active Liver and poiso ned blood;
means
Kidney Constipation disorder means poisoned poisoned blood;
means
blood. The great antidote for im¬
pure blood is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery. Acting directly them upon
the affected organs, restores to
their normal condition. “A word to
the wise is sufficient.” The “Discov¬
ery” is guaranteed to cure mail cases
of diseases forwhich it is recommend:
ed, or money paid for it will be
promptly refunded.
What Others Say.
A new insecticide recommended by a
correspondent of Orchard and Garden
is simply a strong stream of water di¬
rected upon the foliage, applied every
evening. This is the neatest and most
efficacious remedy he has ever found for
slugs and rose bushes. It was also found
admirable for plant lice on currant
bushes and web worms on shade trees.
Feeding silage from the top, rather
than cutting it down from the sides, is
considered preferable by Professor Cook
and many other good authorities.
Vick pronounces the spirea one of our
best flowering shrubs, ranking next to
the hydrangea for general effect and ease
of culture.
Don’t Be Humbugged
with the foolish idea that Catarrh
cannot be cured 1 The world moves,
and medical science is progressive. Catarrh
The proprietors of Dr. Sage’s
Remedy of Nasal will Catarrh, pay $5U0 reward matter for how a
case no
bad or of how longstanding, Remedy sold which
they druggists, cannot cure. only by
at 50 cents.
Stable Buies.
Let yopr horse stand loose, if possible,
without being tied up to the manger.
Pain and weariness from a confined po¬
sition induce bad habits.
Never allow any one to tease your
horse in the stable. The animal only
feels the torment and does not under¬
stand thfi joke.
A Fish Valued by a Lady.
What fish is most valued by alady ?
Her-ring. Let her ring the glad news
of Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry of Cordial,
soying her child trom a case cramp
colic, and relieving it teethi ng.
ADVICB TO MOi’iiEBS.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,
or children teething, is the prescrip¬
tion of one of the beet female nurses
and physicians in the United States,
and has been used for forty years
with never-failing success by millions
of mothers for their children. Dur¬
ing the process of teething its value
is incalculable. It relieves the child
from pain, cures dysentery and diar¬
rhoea, griping in the bowels, and
wind-colic, (lie. By giving health to the
child it rests tl ;he moth< mother. Price 25c.
a bottle. aug2eod&wly
Hale and Hearty in Old Age-
Wbat is more beautiful than an aneient
tree clothed with an ample robe of verdure.
Apt is the comparison between such a growth
and an old man or woman infused with health
and vigor. The sine qna non, youth, the indispen¬
sable condition of vigorous robust
manhood and a virile old age, is sound diges¬
tion. Withoutthis life is shorn No of ths hearty benefi¬
test that ekould attend it. more
cent and agreeable contributor to the attain¬
ment of a hade old age, and efficient, means of
counteracting the infirmities that too often
attend life’s decline, can be found than Hoe-
tetter’s Stomach Bittern. Dyspeptic complaint, symp¬
toms, a tendency to kidney rheumatic nerv¬
ous inquietude and trouble M»
overcome by its use.* The effect of exposure
and overwork are nullified by it, sad it af¬
fords efficient protection to aD subjected to
malarial tnflsencee. Give it a thorough
BE OP ..... OOOiCHEEI.. ¥ : ~ %
'
To the honest truth, who,
troubled with Idle-
■ ease, seeks t
pletsly eradicate from his system every
germ of blood poison, that the ones he
loves—his wife and his children—may be
saved, the experience of others comes «*
a mighty revelation. Common sense tells
him actual results are the only sure proof
of curative virtue. Read the following
true testimony:
Twelve years ago I contracted a terri¬
tion ble esse truly of blood homble, poisoning. I nad My afflic¬
tite, did was sleep well at night, no diges¬ appe¬
not my
tion was impaired, my throat was fun of
ulcers, and in fact I was a total wreck.
1 had been under the treatment of several
of the leading physicians of Atlanta;
tried nearly every blood remedy adver¬
tised; mained went several to months, Hot Springs, receiving where I ben: re¬
whatever—the dreadtiisease no
efit still dung
to me.
Three years ago I was laid up with
rheumatism. My knees were drawn up
in such a position that I could not leave
my ted for months.
Last Its summer the disease seemed to re¬
new attack upon me with all the rav¬
ages of death. My fife was a lingering
tortur.’, ting writ and when I had friend despaired of mine of ever get¬
a recom¬
mended and B. find B. B. myself I began permanently to use cured. it at
once, I refer \o Rev. £ C Davis, Dr. John G.
Westmorland, aad Dr. others Knott, who Garrett know & of Bro.,
numerous my
case. l eiicer/uiiy recommend B. B. B.,
for for the I really blood tdieva in the It world. is the best medidne
Jas. L. Bosworth, Atlanta, Ga.
During' the month of February I bought
one bottle of B. B. B for my four-year old
boy, who had what doctors term heredi¬
tary blood poison, and to my utter aston¬
ishment one bottle cured him. In Feb¬
ruary my elder son, twelve years of age,
was his legs, literally and covered terrible with eruption ugly sores his on
a on
head. He was cured with two-bottles of
B- B.B. As a quick blood cleanser it has
no equal. James Hill, Atlanta, Ga.
resisted
physicians, and the use of the most noted
medicines.
I was covered with a copper-colored
eruption all over my body and limbs, with
loss of W
back, lty, aci
ttnat.a„v. H wuuig ui* w HI j Ii««, eu„
I became
B.B. B.
. and that
it did not requite a patient to use a gross
before Within he was curei, weeks’ I commenced felt its
use. 1 two time I im¬
proved. «al f-ci »-11 have and taken sprightly about ten bottles
as any man.
My appetite and strength have returned
and my hair does not fall out I do not
hesitate to say that B. B. B; has -no equal
as a general blood purifier, and any one
who will use only one bottle will be" con-
d keeps my systei
ditiou. You nave the liberty to direct any
sufferer tonne >a person. .
K. P. B. Joxsjl
Atlanta, Ga.
I had SArunnl ulcer* pn one leg, and
A I on believe the other, I a felt swallowed greatly prostrated, barrel of
medicine in aetuaay vain ~ sw: a die dis-
to cure
ease. With little seted on
the urgent advice I ^ .and got a
bottle of B. B. B. red a change
it d»-
sixteen tism, and bottles, other and horrors all the of ulcers, blood rheuma¬ poison
hare disappeared, and at last I am sound
and well again, of torture. after an experience of
twenty years A. P. Brunson, Atlanta, Ga.
B. Kennesaw, B. COmpany-yMt Ga, Sept Dear 11,1887. Sir:
B.
I trice great pleasure in acknowledging
tbe great benefit my wife has derived from
yonr great and wonderful medicine, B. B.
B. For tyro years she was a great suf¬
ferer from had Scrofula, dormant or some blood dis
ease which lain 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 rec6vering. Hermoutn was one
solid ulcer, and tor two months Or more
her body was was broken Droxen out out with with sores sores until untu
. 4 beautiful head of hair, also eyc-
lashes and eye-brows; in fact, she seemef
to Now be a complete jmplete the wreck. wreck. which
comes great secret i
want all tbe world to know: That three
bottle* of Blood Balm medicine has done
the work which would sound incredible to
any one who did not know it to be so.
To-day my wife is perfectly taint, healthy and and she
clear from any scrofulous
Guen-Alvmx Station, N. C. 1
February 13th, 1888.)
This Is h ears ago l
had nr four inches
below by blood poison
and bone affection, After it was ampu-
tated ___ of there It that came measured t A (waning 8# ulcer inches on thr
end one
, ... . • mher, and con-
every * day until die by a
ip to
I beard of
resolved to try
• time 1 com¬
menced B. B. B. three Waa bottles ISO pounds. 1 gained Whet 87
I had taken 1 had
pounds h. weight; when taken
twelve bottles I was sound and welL bu:
continued talking until I had taken fifteen
bottles. I now weigh ifiO .pounds and
measure five feet and three Inches I
^^Pfiffid ->£AUwMim# Cum. D*th U<W
I nuri fwmto' tertra, Urtiw wrerka
tfipvfi ml •<!**! valu*.
IOm PeraoBteMtklo.
tortllMMito tfilti/ m ffvenre eut (W«,
if torgf «mivnl-
uxklfi lift* «f IIoti.rHold
,>«isgtSEKfia Frffiffi, awl ffiAwr j-m ks»» kepi
I* b ** % wiMiriM ffiffid diffiwa tk«» *• tk«M
e».aw/l«ne
S.1 I Kamtllftf lkwr * r »H trwrcsfi, Rcfrkt, tre *4dr« *«or*fi«
.v k ft. ISrUnmri. i&iviffif
WHELESS STAMP
—PRESS CO-
jnu STREET, AUGUSTA, GA
Agents Wanted! Catalogue FREE I
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS,
STEEL STAMPS, &c.
Sole ManufectnreN of
Tho Whetess Printing SelMnktng Press- Rubber
Stamp
a iiiimumuiuiuiy, i
FACTURER8 OF J--—
Sash, Blinds, Doors.
-
We are here, and here to stay and have on hand
a large slock of
B0OftS, c * cu AMn niii
and how to do the work. For these and many reasons we might
name, we claim a right to patronage of the people
We heartily thunk the public generally for very literal putronugp, and
solicit a continence of the same.
DON'T FORGET THAT WE WILL HAVE.
jor the present Fruit Crop, 20 to 80 thousand CRATES, made made right rig here
by our home labor. Keep the money here instead of going abroad, nbrot and
help Office— boom Planters’ enr twon Waeebouae. and country. Factory, Don’t forget 13th the plate. Griffin,
Street, Ga,
BSS WHAT COMMISSION!® KOLB SAYS.
Orncr Cosuisnoass o» AonicoLTUns, Ac sets, Ala.
v . nAB*irox,6ic*STA»TC ultivator PususntjiaCo.t the farmers
Vo, - I ran and do most heartily recommend Ta* Smrrnsss Cultivaws to
r si * farm Journal of very superior merits. It should be In the home ef every pro-
{iMive agriculturist. Very truly fours, R. r. mole.
200,000 Readers I Established 1843. Leading in 18801
TBE WMM CDLWAfflE AND DUE FABMEB,
ATTaASTTA, O-EO^Ca-XA.,
ITo-w l3X it* S'orfcy-eeveaatJa. TTffiStx off ^retteXLeatlosa,.
The recognised organ of Southern agriculture sad the Industrial progress of the South, with
a guaranteed eireuistion la every Southern and Western Btste.
* ■* ■'•‘e'ii' * ......./ WRITERS.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF
The editorial ear** ef writers and contributors is unsurpassed, if equalled) kr dirt **
ikr publication in all the Union. HON. W. J. SORT HEN is tho President of the Georgia State
Agricultural Society, and a proetiral farmer of tie most thorough eulturc, and bis articles M*
always instructive to farmers. DR. DANIEh LEE I, not only one of the ablest and most learn-
ed fcfriealtur&i jour&alist in tbe eotmtrr. butht for four deorgia yeew rirtuelly State Univem CoamU»loiiJiri.t CfiL.
Washington, D. C., and later, Professor ol Agriculture at the y.
R. J. BEDDING it the able and thcroughiy equipped Assistant Commissioner of Apiculture Of
the Stats sf Georgia, at well as an experienced writer. Psot.J. 8. NEWMAN 1c In charge ef the
Alabama State Egperiment Station, aud etandc In the front rank of agricultural educator* and
writers in the South. With these eminent writer* are aciooiated a seore or more ef male and fe-
mnle i eontributorc—including sontrihutorc-ineludin* not not a a few few professional professional agricultural agricultural writers-whose writers-wnose monthly arti¬ •
cles ------ sever every department J -— ---* of *' form '*--------— management and 1 household work, making T TiisCcLTivi- “ Cctma*
renthe most complete, attractive and valueble agricultural Journal In the South, each iscue
being worth more than a whole year’c • ubccripticn to any farmer who reads and thinks In ee*-
nectioa with hit work. ' •▼♦rflowin* with mftt-
Iti Jlltt»tr»tS#n* »r# f»perb, *nd fiury dep»rtim«nt will be found fall io
tor to instruct, enlighten and entertaia. Eteh number is worth the ittm charged tot the you* s
* > No*fi.milr'ran afford to be without THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. twelve numbers Now is eesstitutta* the «m* to a
send in yonr subscriptions. Only One Dollar per annum, the
volume ot extensive Information useful to all classes. Ernie wed 6» Prat usd Pteptt*» a Journal
for the form, fireside and eounting-room. Subscription, ft! per year, for advertising sates,
Ate* • address PUBLISHING CO.,
THE CULTIVATOR
Geo. W. Harrison, ? Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
Manager, j & 'end for temple oopy*
(, 11 Til TABLE IS. 21),
In effect Juno 28rd, 1889.
No. 15—JUu/r, Except Husbav.
AriHreAWshte.,....... LeaveGriffin.....................5:45 a.m.
.. ......8:00 “
No. 16 —Daily, Except Sbkdav.
Leave Atlanta.................................6:05 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.................. .8:05 “
No. 17—Stmuar Oklv.
Leave Griffin...................... 7:40 a.m.
Arrive Atlanta.................... 9:35 “
No. 18 —Sundat Only.
Leave Atlanta..................8:00 p.m.
Arrive Griffin...,....................5:00> “•*
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon...................................3:30 a.m.
Arrive Griffin........................... .5:25 “
“ Atlanta...............,..,....,.,......7:00 "
No. 11 —Daily.
Leave Macon............................... 8:25 a. m.
Arrive Griffin.................................10:48 “
“ Atlanta..................... .12:80 p.m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon..................................l:40p. 8:53 “ m.
Arrive Griffin...................
Leave “ .... ..... 4:00 “
Arrive Atlanta.........f.i.....................5:45 “
No. 13 —Daily.
Leave Macon.:.................. 6:40 p.m.
Arrive Griffin............... 9:00 “
“ Atianta............. ..10:40 "
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta........................... 6:50 a. m.
Arrive Griffin.... ....;S..................... 8:17 “
“ Macon........... ,....10:30 “
No. 12 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta................................2:18 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.................... 4:00 “
“ Macon..................................6:15 *'
No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta....,......................... 7:05 p. m.
Arrive Griffin................................ 8:85 “
’• Macon......................,,.......11:00 '•
No. 14 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.............................. 9:05 a. m.
Arrive Griffin..,...................... 10:48 “
“ Macon................... 1:00 p. m.
No. 27 —Daily.
Leave Griffin.................... 8:80 a. a.
“ Newnan............................10:20 “
Arrive Carrollton.........................11:85 “
No. 28 —Dailt.
Leave Carrollton L .........................4:20 p. ra
“ Newnan............... 5:25 ,<•
Arrive Griffin..................................7:20 «
No. 29 —Daily, except Suxday.
Leave Griffin...............................—1:30 ..........4:30 p. m.
Arrive Newnan......... ............. 5:35
Leave “
Arrive Carrollton............ 7:10
No. 30 —Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave Carrollton.............................5:45 »s.*.„7j85 a. m
Arrive Newnan..................... .......8:05
Leave Newnan.................. 10:35
Arrive Griffin.............
V8~ For furtherpnformation relative to tick¬
et rates, test route*, schedule, Ac., write to
or call on JNO. L. BEID, Agt- Ga.
E. T. CHARLTON, G. P. A., Griffin,
Savannah, Ga.
fWl MMIB,
The world ought to know what 8.8.8. has
weuttohetrratetl,One|yJ hie by the phr»(<4in«^Wio lot CMawa. v.j i.eighborc whenl aeat
me S COPT of an a,!-, or- |JU ti« u.-ent in regard to
Mr*, tislnsnu-
A> Babte. Mich.. Dec. gS.'Jjj.
Send for hooks on Blood Dleerara sod Osaeer*.
asBed free. Tan swnw sraemc Co.
BY FAB
-TO- j t
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
-IS VIA-
SAVANNAH
--AND THE—
OCEAN : STEAMSHIP : LINE
—Of THE— v
Central Railroad of Georgia.
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on sale at reduced rate*. Good to re¬
turn until Qctob#r81*t, 1889.
Magnificent Steamer and elegant eervic*
Free from the heat and duet. Incident to All-
Rail Route*. If yon are aiek the trip will In¬
vigorate and build yon up.
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Regret It
Passengers, would before do purchasing Weil inquire ticket* first via of
other routes, to
the merits of the Route via Savannah. Fur¬
ther information may te had by applying f *
tbe Agent at your station or to
M. 8. BELKNAP, W. F. 8HELLMAN,
E. TCHARLTO^’ CLYDE^OS'nCK?^'
Gen’l Pass. Agent. Trav. Pass. Agent.
Savannah Ga.
Piuknim MAifitr smite.
*t rtNtaimtiia it. mum
^■siEsA^asaig^K sSaSIs
Wafia Ml Baec’fL. CiaclsiuiU,l
. PYRME umws,
I ASUREOlnCnjR j
ILARir
FOR 8 VLB BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
saw u5&»
a ^a » a gaMta w
_ HAIR SALBAM
S«rtWi »»•- toa-alBff'*0* laie.|
I Htir dray
I u* ••trn»Hi»gi.
--- - 2
::-aa
HIHOEROORHS.
tc wii f
W t
lor Prompt Ihlegt . ..
Poj
Attested rnsi
“We do 1
Annual Drawing* <
teiT Compswy, Drau s
control the
the name ureeomL
and In good frith t
it advertisemento."
will m* pay rilPri j
oureountora:
Ua——
Grand-: Monthly: .
'
Capital Frlne,
I Pm**
i Pw*» S fi¬
ll
“ jteSsr-*
8,18* toTE -'nckst* drawing dapitri
not ytltied t» tamtinfl JPrises. i
AGENTS W
attEuvriopebraring^onri IMPORTAV
Address .
or M. A. DAUPHIN, W*
Address Registered Letters
ins Currency ts
»»ir oiuMis ig—
pasKfsn''
whose chartered righte as* reeog
highest Courts; therefore beware
port or fraction of a
n any Drawing. A
red or less than a
25T?i..., Sate N.:
For by
■PH Stood BldnlHccesec free.
con sad mailed
*-».**». 8wm Sfocms Co,, Atlanta.Ga
»S&
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