Newspaper Page Text
fjjitm.
,Kd. AProp’r
r Annum. ..*5.00
. i.oo.
, Sept. 26, 1889.
of Spalding Go.
.
(MUM. ;™
tor sfe the tort
T in o kaa
ttepaidjorln tarertioiui for
advance.
* rewtirew^uaite
m 3' estate mao
f 85,000 afre
„>* company. The
negotiations was
lands win
>0th Geor-
Chattahoochee
a A < >
tween House and
the Western A Atlantic
the strongest kind of a
Some of the most m-
i best informed members
____es confidentially predict
• Senate men whose pdai-
F question can almost in-
accepted as an index to
ror failure o! the measure,
^ Opposed to the
a the House. £
7 inlhe world ever con-
vast a sum of money as
e Unlted States. The last
0 shows that there is in the
over 1600,000,000
I and silver coin and bullion,
heohi and hellion the amount
1,505,818; silver coin and bul-
______,.316,848,180. By the side of
this vnrtaceumulation the treasuries
of other countries and those record-
’ istory sink into insignificance.
MHAitBIi.
his charge to to the the Gtand
_ _ day,
London the other t
r pointod out, with panic
As, that although n hundred
thousand men had been on a strike
r nearly a month, not o single
Vof violence had been brought
I the court. He thought that
st Was probably unprecedented
in the.Watory of the world.
,„•< This statement is all the more re-
ZSZZZZZZZUi i
■Eaaafss:-
nation'of the latter, many of whom
tiOaMwrthw- reod nor write. Their
forbearance and orderliness were
not,, therefore, due toany supenor
intelligence on their part. Probably
their only chance of success was in
theirretainlng the sympathy of the
public and such min as Cardinal
Manning and the Lord Mayor of
London, and that would have been
forfeited by sets of lawlessness. But
while the leaders were able to realise
this, the men themselves certainly
did not do so. They obeyed orders
implicitly, however, and their discip-
- with the respect for the law so
among all classes of Eng*
did the work.
***** ost intelligent order of work
ingQien in the world is probably the
Brotherhood tif Locomotive Engin-
- ee», and Chief Arthur is one of the
/ ablest leaders a t the bead of snch an
organisation. But be never handled
the skilled engineers under him in
any protracted strike ns well as John
the Brotherhood has ever gone
through a long strike without a
single case of violence being report |
id. -»i*
But Burns’ skill is likely to be
tasted still more thoroughly. He is
going to Australia, it is said, and he
will probably take charge of a strike
there. If he succeeds as writ as he
did in London, he win have shown
himself the greatest of all labor lead¬
ers, but it is not likely he can repeat
The sum; remarkable nw Hood’s Sar
- repariUa it-4ow aceompiiabes peculiar are sufficient proof
thM possess wndw power*
Htavsof »r Ww, Ow or Toledo, |
at£E' ; 4fe&fi LuCAsCot'TY, M. & f
faun ' J. J. Chain Css»r wakes oath that he is
. ' a KEZ'
>r«a»n»t wBinre te-rewd hr the o» of
.Z35rK*A ____
to
invasion,
at
oar
to ft. Bat he
is a well informed man and what he
sajs is worthy of thought. *
The Savannah Morning News looks
at the matter eerkmaly and says that
It is not improbable that the anti-
ChiiMwe laws of this country will lead
to a great war, the beginning of
which may be Within the next quar.
terpf a Century, and the ending of
unless the United States is
well prepared to meet the first on-
ala light, no One can predict. The
Chinese, upon whom the rest of man¬
kind has been taught to look as a
very inferior rare, are in reality an
enterprising and ingenious race, and
as Gen. (Chinese) Gordon found out,
under proper leaders they makegood
soldiers They are slow to adopt
dviHred ideas, and until a few years
| when forced by superior arms
ways but they have eagerly seized
upon everything modern in the way
of weapons of warfare, and now have
improved arms, iron dad fleets, and
other material of war. Thousands
of Chinese who have lived in this
country have returned to their homes
in Ada, and have related wonderful
stories of the wealth of America, and
all over that immense territory, con-
1 400,000,000 people, the
ag
eountty across the Pacific is as the
lands of the Montezumas and the
Incas were to the Spaniards who
followed Cortez and Pizarro. It
would require bnt a word for the
Chinese to prepare quietly for an in¬
vasion of this country, and but an¬
other a tew yeare later for them to
start a fleet, such as the world never
saw before, and an army as numer¬
ous and as greedy as the locuste of
Egypt, to the unprotected shores of
America. The conquest of the Pacific
dope would furnish a base of opera¬
tions, and with an inexhaustible field
from which to recruit an army, the
result to our civilization might be at
least disastrous.
The possibility of a war with China
is not a freak of theimagination, but
it is based upon the reports of intelli¬
gent men who have recently returned
from that country, and who know
the feeling that has been engendered
by the exclusion of the Chinese from
this country, in violation of their
treaty rights. Every other nation
is allowed to pour its thousands into
America, and Chinese may not much
longer submit to the indignity which
they think has been put upon them.
It would be well if the pesple of the
north who virtually control the gov¬
ernment, would give this important
subject their attention, instead of
wasting their energies upon southern
matters Which the southern people
are abundantly able to manage. If
they do not prepare for the impend¬
ing crisis, they may have before an¬
other century a bayonet government
in the north, and the bayonet will be
in the hands of the Chinese.
It is the custom lor Governors to
pardon convicts who are in prison for
life if they get sick enough to make
death probable. The Governor of
Minnesota sees no reason why this
should be done. It was represented
to him that Bob Younger was dying
of consumption, and wanted to die
outside the prison. The Governor
replied that Younger had been sen¬
tenced to the penitentiary for life,
and that he could see no reason for
pardoning him, and lie refused to do
so. Few men have so strict an idea
of duty.
“A Word to the Wise Is Sufficient.”
Catarrh is not simply an inconven¬
ience, unpleasant to the sufferer and
•d-outpost disgusting toothers—it of approaching isanadvanc- disease of
worse ing; type. brings Do deadly not neglect evils in its its warn¬ train.
it
Before it is too late, use Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy. It reaches the seat
of the ailment, and is the only thing
that will. You may dose yourself
with quack medicines ’till it is too
late—’till the streamlet becomes a re-
sistlers torrent. It is the matured
invention of scientific physician. “A
word to the wise is sufficient.”
Mercurial Poison.
Mercury i* frequently injudiciously ubpiI by
quack doctor* in ranee of malaria and blood
poison. Its aftereffect is worse than the or-
%ial disease. B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm)
contains no mercury, but will eliminate mer¬
curial poigion from the system. Write to
Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga., for book of
convincing proof of its curative virtue.
A. F. Britton, Jackson, Tend., writes: “I
caught malaria in Louisiana, and when the
fever at last broke, my system was saturated
with poison, sad f had sores in my mouth
ad knots on my tongue. I got two bottles
. B. B,. which healed my tongue and mouth
sd make a new man of ms.»
wifecould Wm. Richmond, hardly Atlanta,0*.,writes: Doctors called “My
see. it syph¬
ilitic, iritis. Her eyre were in dreadful condi¬
tion. H« Her appetite --- failed. She had pain in
tor joints
which she need until her health vtre entirety
"PeV. joe Atlanta, o,, -es.; "l
at, and great nervousness. B. B
r system.! fine condition."
s *-
a
the
I fo the port-
; in order is to
WM > to dob mem-
1 v I
■
bership.
Are you troubled with a sluggish, Do
inactive liver? Are you bilious 7
suffer from *
you complexion
a
The bloml in its .
liver does not furnish
dition, which will produce eerious re¬
sults to your healtti, unless you take
Brown’s Iron Bitters at pifCff, jaundice, :^t wil
cure your biliousness and,
and inceite to healty action the slug¬
gish liver.
Awful tor Koraker.
Washington Port.
Mr. Lew Bernard, one of the active
politicians of Cincinnati and a Camp¬
bell man from away back, is in the
city, Mr. Bernard is not spreading
himself all over the State, but is will¬
ing to back his judgment so far as
Hamilton county is concerned. “It
will he awful for the Republicans in
Ohio,” said he, “if the remainder of
the
ular ires. there, Forakve and a he particularly will m be cut unpop¬ a on all
hands. I have offered to wager that
Fornker will poll the lowest vote of
any candidate on the Republican
State ticket, and that in Hamilton
connty Campbell’s majority will be
over 5,000.”
An Eminent Doctor’s Prescription.
Dr. C. P. Henry, Chicago, HU, who
has practiced medicine many years
says: Last Spring he used and pre¬
scribed Clarke’s Extract of Flax (Pa-
pillon) Skin Cure in 40 or 50 cases,
and never knew a case where it failed
to cure. “I know of no remedy I can
rely on so implicitly.” Positive cure
for all diseases Clarke’s of the Flax Skin. Soap Applied is the
exterally. for babies. Skin Cure fl.00.
best N. B. Drewry’s
Soap 25 cents. At Dr.
drugstore
The Barton Virtue of Fortitude.
Must be who possessed bear the in no ordinary of rheumat degre ism smaithr greajty with¬
those pangs beard I of such
out, complaint. We have never
ndividual. ~
mm awoeioue efficacy of which
ach Bitters, the as a preven¬ of
tive of the disease, as well as a means re¬
lieving it, is well established and amply at¬
tested, during tbe last thirty-five ltexpargatesfrom years, over
professional those signatures? acrid pnncipte# which beget
the blood characteristic
'til© pain and inflammation 01
Kii . ms of malarln mrt from Tl» the Htt.r.
also expels the vims sy^
Found to the Newspaper.
From tbeCreaco, Iowa,“Elaindeal- readers
cr.” “Wo have never, ao our
for nearly thirty years in this county
can testify, written a ‘puff’ well of any in¬
patent medicine. Duty depart as as from
clination impel us to
this stvdied silence, to say to our
readers and the public that, having
been completely distressing prostrated cold, with after a
violent and
three days fighting it with ordinary
remedies and getting no relief from
their use, we obtained a bottle of
Clarke’s Extract of Flax (Papillon) instant
Cough Cure, obtaining almost
relief and steady improvement under
its use.” Large bottle Soap. oniyfl.00, “Best
Ask for Clarke’s Flax
on earth.” 25 cents. Both the
above for sale by Dr. N. B. Drewry,
Druggist. - Ji-,
ADVK3E TO MOTrtKBS.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Syhpp,
for children teething, is female the prescrip¬
tion of one of the best 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-
a bottle. aug2eod&wly
I.IPPMAN.«B08., Wholesale Agents, Sft
vatmah Ga. !une25d&wly
tr tMwtSTam M. nwri
ok. IT ME'
.1 JfiS&J4Sas rmnpliite euro-----. , KTBsa«.< .
FOR MEN ONLY!
« POSITIVE ’ASlMSIga,
CURE
Ea^RKBSa&Eil
I re Cm 4
rzz&i
*
1VW
to cure Mama — tor the grere SOS
ares (it Rood*t sarsaparilla Is found In the
article itself. It ia merit that wins, and the
tot that Hood’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes what Is claimed for It, Is what
haa gtveu to this medicine a popularity and
■tie greater than that of any other saitapa-
Merit Wins &£.*£!££
id's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Balt
•an and aU Humors, Dyspepsia, Biek
aa. Bn1ir ™«re. overcomes That
Bred the Treitag, Herves creates builds an up App^lte, the Whole System.
•ns s^MipwvUlw all drui-
ffisb.T SKaed** tototeTtoiaredbyCl Is sold by
l h Hood
MBs-, Ap.inioariao, LowaU, Ham.
New MeeMeeM.
TO ADVERTISERS dfvWed into
A list ol 1000 newspaper*
STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on ap¬
plication—FREE. who waht their adventuring to pay
To those thorough
we can oiler no better medium lor
and effective work than the ▼ariou sections of
our Select UwoUArt. CQ
B()WELL
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
lO Spruce street, New York
.law Advertisement*.
SESSHU?
/) A ABl BUSHVKSS KDLCAriON
AT HOME. -For Circulars, ad-
C.OLLEGE, Erie, Pa.
HINDERCORNS.
WANTED
At ONCE—EVERYWHERE
Va^womIw Profitable Business
ltil December 25th. Give referei
R. H. WOODWARD &CO.,
Baltimore, Md.
^■unuiant ■ Rorior. growth. Gray
to Color.
p,?.£■&,= toitsYosthful
GHATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS’S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
“By ft thorough knowledge ge of the
laws which govern the o; rations of
and nutrition, ami by i careful aj ipiriication
ol the fine properties ol well-seleci ;ted Cocoa,
Mr. Epps has provided ur breakfast tables
with a delicately flavon doctor’s ’s erage bilis. bilis. which It It ii is may ‘ bj .
save ns many heavy of such articles of diet that
the constitution judicious use be gradually built
a may tendency up
until strong enough to (rfsubtle resist every maladies
to disease. Hundreds are
floating around us ready to attack wherever
shsft a weak by point. keeping *
_ r _.
fled wit
JAMES London, EPP8&CO., England.
Homoeopathic Chemists,
MASON & HAMLIN
Organ and Piano Co.
BOSTON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
NEW Contain safive octave, Nins
Stop Action, Ion, furnished 1 in q
MODEL large and Uinm ndsome case
solid black walnut, Price $99
ORGAN, cosh; also sold on the Easy
Hire System at $lt.8? per
STYLE quarter, for ten quarters;
when organ becomes proper¬
2244. ty oi person hiring.
The Mason * Hamlin
MASON “Stringer,” invented Hamlin and pat¬
ented by Mason & in
& 1882, is used in the Mason *
HAMLIN Hamlin markable pianos exclusively. of Bej
refinement tone
and phenomenal capacity to
PIANOS. stand in tnne characterize
these instruments.
POPULAR STYLES ORGANS at 822,
982.50, 800, 878, $96 AND CP,
Organ and Pianos sold for Cash, Easy-Pay-
ments, and Rented. Catalogues free.
THEGLGRYOFMAN
SiKEN&TH VITALITY!
How Lost I Mow*
dih KNOW
ExhaustedVitauty
Untold miseries
S USA
L- A m Valwed |»y a Lady.
What fish ia raoat valued by a lady t
‘ glad
1 news
floying her child trom a case of cramp f
rokaad raltevlug It teething
- 'j
A LONG FELT WAI
rwniStS '' brioreyodpoSn™'” 1 '
CARPETS, RUGS, OIL CLOTHS, DRAPERIES, ETC., ETi
Department never so well stocked amd prices made to sell.
gn vR WOOLENS, TABLE LINENS, HOSIERY, ETC
Ftfench Novelties In DRESS GOODS ore marvelously beantifnl and superbly grand in design and coi
Inf iRNTO^flMGSSES’. BOYS’ and CHILDREN’S SHOES.—Stock full and complete. i
CHAMBEHL 1 N, JOHNSON & CJi
66 and 68 Whitehall and 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 and 13 Hunter Sts., ATLANTA
_
......... --■-
October Sheriff’s Sales.
THE8
guoral
__ Griffin, Spald-
Court House, in the city of
»ug County^Georgio, the following described
Lras ol land in the Third District ot
by lot No. 25, lying and be¬
ing hi the southwest corner of said lot.
Levied on and sold by virtue of a fl fa issued
from Spalding Coun --Court in favor of B. P.
Martin, successor to B. P. Martin* Co. vs.
T. W. Bankston and B. Bankston. Tenant
in possession notified. I6.00. will be
Also, at the same time and place,
sold one Dexter Queen piano body buggy, and
painted white with border on body
stripes on gear, tr de by Jackson G. Smith,
Barnesville, Go; a to, one set harness; fore¬ one
bay horse, two hind feet white, star in
head, about nine years old 'named Sam.
Levied o» and sold by virtue ol a mortgage Pike
from the connty court rt of of
Roy County County 'Hu Hnguety. in in favor favor of of W. W. H. Sp< %’oo be
Also, at the sami le time and place, will
sold one house anu id lot iuu in m the cue city city oi u, Griffin, uuuiu,
Spalding Connty, Georgia, bounded on the
north by Slaton alley, east and byWm.E by George, W. E
south by Solomon street west
Drewry, containing one-half acre more or
iess. Levied on and sold by virtue oi three
fl fas issued from the Justice Court of the
1001st district, G. M., of said county, in fav¬
or of the Georgia Midland * Gulf Railroad
Company vs. Jno. notified. D. George. Tenant $0.00. m pos¬
session legally A C.
B. 8. CONNELL. Sheriff
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
tice is hereby of gf J D. late Eliedgn, of said ad
ministrator deceased,%os deceased,lias on. applied applied George, late forlea’ forleave or «a
eounty, mty, belonging to to me me the estate
to sell she wild lands to
of said deceased, at public or private sale,
lor the purpose of paying the debts of said
estate.
Let all persons concerned take notice and
appear at the court of Ordinary at my office
in Griffin, Ga., by ten o’clock a, m., on the
first Monday in October 1889, and show
should cause, if any they have, why such application
S6.00 not be granted. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
E.
{ hRDINARY’S hRDINARY’S OFFICE-SpjU.di.vb OFFICE-SpjU.di.vb Cous- Couv-
tt.Geoh u, July 2nd, 1889.—T. C. Mc-
L&nnrn, Executor of Mrs. Janett Bethune,
, applies to me for letters of Dismis-
aid estate.
Let ail persons j concerned show cause before
the leCon t of Ordinary, at my office, by ten
o'clock a. . m., m., on the first Monday in October
next, why snch letters of Dismission should
not 5e granted.
46.15. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S AngustSOth, OFFICE—Spaudivo 1889.—Notice Cousm
Geoboia. m
hereby given that A. M. Elledge, administra-
ot J. D. George, George, late late of of said i county, de*
applied to me ia • leave to sell all
the r eal estate of said J. D. George, late of
said said said connty, connty, connty, deceased, deceased, deceased, for for the tne purpose purpose of of
paying paying the the debts debts of of sai< said estate and for the
purpose purpose of of distribution distribution among among the t heirs.
Let all persons concerned I show show cause cans be*
fore the the Court of Ordinary, » at atmyoffice my ofi in
Griffin, on the first Mi Monday in October nex
why such application n should should not not be be granted, grants
$6.00, E. W. HAMMOND, ” Ordinary.
Executor’s Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by the
of Ordinary of Spalding connty, willbe
before the Conrt House door, on the
Tneeday of October next, during the legaf
hours of sale, the following described proper¬
ty belonging to the estate ol W. J. Keith,
late of said county deceased: One two story
brick store house on the west side of
Hill street, No. 23, now occupied by D. W.
Shaffer. Also, one two Tenth story frame and Solomon dwelling
house on corner of
streets, containing one acre more Solomon or
Also, one vaoant half acre lot on
street, bounded south by Solomon street,
north by an alley, east by E. I. Ison and west
by Keith children. Sold for the purpose of
distribution amongst the heirs and paying
the debts of said estate. Terms of sale; store
house one-third cash, one-third sjx House mouths
and one-third twelve months. and
lot one-half cash -nd one-half twelve months
with interest at 8 per cent,; bond for titles.
Vacant lot cusb. J. H. KEITH,
$6,00 Executor W. J. Keith.
Guardian’s Sale.
of By Ordinary virtue of of an Spalding order granted County by Georgia, theConrt t
, before
wiB sell to the highest in Griffin, bidder, the first Tues¬ the
court house door on
day in October next, the following described
property, Fifty for distribution, land land of of to-wit: the the northwest
acres of out out iwes
corner ot lot No. 101 and five acres adjoin¬ lioin
ing P&eC in lot Np, ’ ■—, *, |ji la tbe tbe Third Third District District of
. L. County, F. Farley, Georgia; orgia; south bounded Mrs. Green, on the east west
by J. T. by E. C.
V>y Baird, and north by Akins.
Terms of sale cash. J. W. WILLIS,
Gnardian of the minor children of Mary 3.
Willis. $6 00.
Notice,
Notice is herebo given thot application n will
be made to the legislature now m eessii to
pass office an act requiring and County the recording Commineioh- in . the
of Treasurer
IngCounty ere of all fine and forfeiture have orders in Spald-
made only by and to and forfeiture Payments order on ; < same
fine
Commissioners Commissior on a fine and forfeiture ac¬
count for kindred to be specially kept by Treasurer and
purposes.
Notice to Debtor* ami Creditors.
Notice is hereby given L. R. to all who are indebt
ed totheeetote ot Brewer,deoeased,to
call and settle at once. AD parties holding
claims against the estate ol said deceased are
notified to present tbssn than fjisA at at once once in in tool krai form fo
JNO. Ert^te^KBrewer. C. BREWER,
Executors
aug22w6.*$A70.
Y
THE FARMERS’ CO-OPERATIVE GINN
Ow'ted - TO**"-"* STSU&gSi Cotton delivered
Capacity ot Ginnery 70 bafeeper day. free to any
house in the city. Farmers who pick as much as a bale of eotton p
should drive immediately to the Ginnery, and sare time and labor, r
cius Johnson, Superintendent of the Gtnuety. was eteeted by the
themselves, and will see that every man gets fnH satisfaction.
AU Cotton Seed can be Disposed of, if Desired,
without moving them. Wagons unloaded the country, by elevators. both white We appeal to om , 1
town farmers as well as farmers from and colored,
to bring their cotton to the Farmers’ Ginnery. W. _ E. H. SEARCY, President, |
B!^^^k°in ffiime^andoil j
N1 tlte Mill Stock is readyfor canstill delivery. Notes due ’
should be met by premium. Oct. 1st, as Be promised. wise and act quickly. be bought; I
soon be worth a
(Prickly Ash, Poke Moot and PMm ^
-
-MAKES POSITIVE CURBS 07 ALL FORMS ADD -to” 1
Tbyslcfeia Mkkam 7. P. 7. as > # ' " ' ' ;
SM combination, and prescribe It with Waste of energy and all digrams resulting
great satisfaction for the cures of aU from A-—. CiL—:'j
MUM aod stages of Primary, Secondary the use of P. 7. P,
and Tertiary Syphilis. Syphilitic Bhcn- Ladies whose as eystemeareprifOMdto i ’
mattot. Scrofulous ton and fewf whose blood is ,b in an impure conditioadne
Glandnlar Swellings, Rheumatism, Kid¬ to menstrual fl W
nap Complaints, old Chronic Ulcer* that heh«*tod by the wonderful tonic sad
TtoBf i toto reaaaaaaarem
SYPHILIS -oblinUrULA
ha re resi st ed all treatment. Catarrh, S sof P. P.P,
Diseases. Boson* Chronic Female
Complaints, Mercurial Prison. Tetter,
Boaldbead, Me., etc. end
7. 7. 7. la a powerful tools aa
axoeUaot eptUUmr. building np the Wholesale Oa wt airra ,
system rapidly. If yon are weak and SATAffJrAH, 6A.
ftable, sad feel bedly try 7. P. 7- and
RHEUMATISM
*
vk'
-VIA-
BRUNSWICK. JESUP,MACON, ATLAN¬
TA, ROME and CHATTANOOGA.
ONLY LINE
Doable Daily Sleeping Car Service
Between
Cincinnati aad Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Chattanooga and Jacksonville,
Closely connecting with double trains
with Pullman Sleeping Cars
to and from
Memphis, Nashville, Kansas Cl y
and the West and
Knoxville, Washington, New York
and the East.
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville,
Atlanta and Savannah,;
Atlanta and Brunswick.
Atlanta and Macon,
Atlanta and Rome. 7
For rates, Time Cards and other
information apply to agents of the
East Tenn., Va. and Georgia- R. R
B. W. WRENN,
Gen. Pass. & Ticket Agt., Knoxville.
S. EL Hardwick.
Asst. Gen. Pass. Agfc.^Atfonta.
HY FAR
HuMuiltapBlFifflgaMi
—: TO—
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
—48 VIA—
savannah
OCEAN ; STEAMSHIP i LINE
—or raUr—
Central Railroad of Georgia.
SUMMER EXCURSION' TICKETS
Now. on sate at. reduced rates. Good to it ■
torn until OctoberSlrt, 1889.
Rail JiSsMMsaflBSS® Routes. If Biek the trip will in¬
you are
vigorate and build you up.
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Regret It
.Faanragere, before purchasing tiejtefs via
other route*, would do well to inquire first ol
the Agent at your station or to
MS T.JFHARLTO.V G^5^r
E.
Geu’l Pass. Agent
Georgia Midland & Golf RB,
Time fable, Taking Effect Aug 11, '81
No. 50.—Pasbenqeb, Sot tb, Daily Eicrrr
Bombay.
Arrive. Leave.
McDonough.................. Griffin..........................5:40 5:00a.«^ S-Afi “
a.m.
Warm Springs............ 7:09
Columbus.......... .........8:48 “
No. 51 .—Passenger, Nohtb. Daily.
Columbus..................... Spring................ LOS P- *•
Warm I 2:34 %
Griffin..........................3:50 p.m.
No. 52 .—Passbmueu, Sours. Daily.
Griffin---------------4^$.* Warm Springs. .i:2b
.............
Columbus......................7:00 p. m.
No. 53 —Pamekoe*, Noutb. Daily E*»
SCNK.VY.
olumtms................W? .!
Warm Springs...........
No. 54 .~Pas»kuoeb Sour*. ScunsT 0m
Griffin...........................8:10 McDonough.................. 8.15 I : ?S
a.m. :85
Warm Springs------------- »
Columbus..;...................«»!• “
No. 5A—PASSk.vaBR Noutb. Scxday 0»r
Columbus,...............—- W«™ Springs.............. Vj$ “■„*
McfcgK.:r:r.iwo - Exc*rt
JNo. 1 —Freioht North. Daily
SUUDAY. I
«SffCss== Griffin.................„,...,,...12:29p.i p.ni-
McDonough........... >..».J|:00 “ Exert* -
i No. 2.—Fbeioht South. Daily
SuwdaYj- '
■
i™ spring. ...... v#***
ColumbUs......................8:50 p.m.
For Sale or fill
V •? , —t^yv -4 $$» \
THE CHARLTON PROPERTY-
on house-large South Hill airy street. 4 acresitod, High. «**' *2g
rooms.
and beautiful view of suOWUlwm* diff«w» *
A No. 1 water and fruits of
on {dace. PLACE,
THE TAYLOR MORRIS
14tli street. 4 acres land, 5 room te**’
on
Branch running through the lot. .,
.jjaftgif BL ■
diotk irom cfHiir uni mivm.
J0SSEY MOUSE AN0 LOT-
“e&T&ZV oXTh^asd TSS ** 5 I
“ aad. land, for
tete
and to rent.
e.A.cc»5nreHA*,
il