Newspaper Page Text
. VP *f§ ’.v*
-
, ■
___
jES the dangers and dia-
fienretnents of Blood Dis-
#aaee, the Bandog an ^ *tch-
Eruptions are among The
«so8t acute tortures.
system# aoon collapee
. d.r unch agonies.
„ n (Wppman’s Great
P * f, Remedy) la a safe
* * nd certain cure for
a
• 8 k i n Disease, whether tor-
*’g g disfiguring, humiliating,
burning, bleeding, acaly,
or blotchy—ih fact, from
to the most distressing
ad every humor of the
whefher simple, scrofulous
’
litary.
n Purifies the blood,
I * P * V builds up debilitated, the weak
• and
ivea strength to weakened
f'-iefTes I !«e health expels and diseases, happiness and where in-
8 despair shut
*«tthe jckness and once
light of life.
I gold by all Druggists. $i a
t-^tle • six bottles, $5.
lupPMAN Sole Proprietors, BROTHERS,
f iffTUAX ItLOCK, SAVANNAH, OA.
’
,
“Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved my life. Twelve years ago 1
had what doctors said was second stage of Consump¬
tion. Tried everything, without benefit. Was finally
persuaded to take Piso’s Cure. It helpett me, and
I continued its use until I was cured.”
Mrs. T. P. BARBER, Lake Ann, Mich., Dec. n, 1896 .
I
,
I end quickest rout* with double
Aerteit between Oolumbu* and Atlanta,
“ crrlre Union Passenger atatlon,
itlng ill the
with Vestlbuled Limited trains; also
fed States Fast Mail trains to and from
nUDUlflvu, gjon New York ami »U Basterh point*.
—tly connecting for and from Chat-
uisville, Cineinnuti and the North-
__through Pullman Drawing-Room
g Oars to a nd fr om AshevUle, N. O.
Ittaiianl Schedule tlmu tn except effect at July points 4, oast 18OT. of Atlanta. Osntral
Northbound. No. m Me. *»
Daily. (tally.
t—j amWs........ 60S a m 626 6 U pm
I. “ Waverly Hall (i&l a in p m
... U 22
Oak Mountain... 7 US a m p in
WaruiSpiingj... iH i>P am 0 7 o2 lit p pm in
Vwdbui-y.. & 7 Is a m 7 86 p in
8 a m 7 68
a.. 8 tut a in pm
* Oriltiu b t.* a m 8UU p ui
; * Rcpouough.. libU a m 8 46 P ui
dr. AiJautu..H to bn a m k 4a p in
Li. Atlanta.. litU n’u. 11 SO pm
Ar. Waalilngtoe- G 42 u HI U26 p in
“ Few lork 12 tit |> in 0 28 a in
I I Iff. Atlanta............. 2 00 p tv 10 00 p m
Alt Chat tanooga.......... ■ 7 60 p nv 4 18 a m
Ar. Lo uisville £ 55 a in 816 pm
Ar.Qncumaii..... 7 60 a in ~i 80 p n»
South buu nil. No. 30 No. M
Unity. (tally.
tr. Cine! m\»: I ..... 8» • m XdO~p’m
Lv. LouLvilit!........... 7 45 * ill
| If. ........... II) in p m
Alikutu......... ...... 5 UU » in
: !•?. $ew York............ 13 1$ » m 4 81) pm
“ WfcihinKluu.......... 1115a in HI 48 ll IU
Ar.Atluuto............... .. 5 10 a m 8 55 |un
{ Lr.ktluntu................ ' hrlXmoupli a 20 a m 4 40 pm
“ Grillin................. ............. 0 15 a m 6 86 pm
“ Vr'ithum»m............ (i 51 a in 6 It) p m
! gouuord......... # 7 06 a in (i 26 p m
* T ^4 a in 11 41 pm
* Woodbury............. WaimSpiingt.......... 7 50 a ui 7 10 p m
* (Mk # 00 a n> r 46 p mi
W*vttrly Moon.uiu ......... 8 .h a in 8 14 p m
Hull..... H 4 > a »i
0 35 a m
TO MA00N.
D.ily. 'Wo. *T. No. »•
It. Columbus, 8outh’a Ky 0 05 a in 625 pia
4t. JlitaHi.Id. Woodbury, bouthn KR.,^ R) 750 an 7 10 pm
&B. 1 UU an
iUfiUtuuge, M. & B. B.h
Daily. No. 80 No. 88.
tr§*Rruiie. M. A B. R.R. 036 am ••••••««(•
7 60 am
9 86 am
TOBKUNS^ riOK.
(tail/. Na. 89
U.OoIumbu,, South’ll By.. 6 26 pm * * *••••*•«
JBtOJdS j 8 46 p m
W J *. •• w 630 am
No. SO
8 16 pm
Columbus. 6 111 am
. ** m 986 am
•«••••Aten
oar* b*
». H. EUItDWIOK, A**i*4,
A. Gen. Pa*.
Atlanta, Ota.
--
SCSI*
“^hall I not take mine esse
hi mine inn 7”-Hjut*Y IV.
,
Elegant
Meals
The IivBt in the City. Prompt
Attention Airy and High, Cool,
for what Rooms. Yon p of only
you order.
Warner’s
Nonesuch
Lunch Rooms
for Hedies and Gentlemen.
Jetting '■-onvenience* Room end provided. Toilet
sre
> *st*t r«« sad Marietta Sts.
*'*••• ATLANTA, GA.
tan* elevator.
nrrHi
m
Music and Health.
Music, if we are to believe ancient
historians, has produced some very ex¬
traordinary effects. The fierceness of
Achilles was allayed by playing on the
harp; Damon, with the same instrn-
meut, quieted wild and drunken youths,
and Asclepiades in a similar manner
brought back seditions multitudes to
temper and reason;^ The eorybantos and
effeminate priests of Cybele were incit¬
ed by music to cut their own flesh. Pin¬
dar addressed his harp thus; “Thou
quenchest the raging thunder J” Mnsio
is also reported to have been efficacious
in removing dangerous diseases Miran
dola observes, in ^explanation of its be¬
ing appropriated to such an end, that
mnsio moves the spirits to act upon the
soul as medicine does the soul by the
body. Theophrastus, in his essay on
“Enthusiasm,” reports many cures up¬
on this principle. Tkd Thebans used
the pipe for the err of many disorders,
and ZenoOrates is said to have cored
several madmen. The bite of the taran¬
tula is said to have been cured by md&ic,
and the Phrygian pipe was recommend¬
ed by many of the ancient fathers as au
antidote to sciatica. We could enumer¬
ate many other instances of the estima¬
tion. amounting, as it would seem, to
palpable * superstition, in which music
was held among the ancients, bnt the
above may be considered sufficient
New York Ledger
ARE YOU 1
BANKRUPTinheallh,
constitution undermined by ex¬
travagance in eating, by disre¬
garding the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Tutt’s Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
WEAK MAN
CUKE YOURSELF.
Dr. Grady’s wonderful
Dish Invigorator, the
greatest Lost Manhood, remedy for
over¬
comes and prematureness all unnatural
stops losses.
drains and All
small, weak organs en¬
larged and strengthen¬
ed. Sufferers, by re¬
Old OK. GKAOV mitting containing #1 a sealed 0
Successs for SC package pills, carefully F
200.000 < (im¬
years. pounded, will be sent
Cured. by mall from our will labo¬ fur
ratory, with or we GUAR¬
nishsix packages for $5, refunded. a AJ1
ANTEE to cure or money goods with
letters confidential, and from observation sent !
full Instructions free
Address, CRYSTAL MED. CO., Mass.
Lowell,
*
Legal Notice.
GEORGIA— Spalding County.—C has.
D. Corbin, administrator of James W.
Corbin, deceased, and trustee for bis minor
clildren and Mattie P. Corbin, Mary M. S.
Corbin, and Laura Corbin Porter vs.
F. Morris, Sheriff of Spalding county, Wil¬
Mrs. Harriet W. Blackwell, Cyrus R.
son and J. H. Hall, defendants.
Petition In equity in the Superior Court
of said county. adjourned term,
Whereas, at the August November let fol¬
1897, of said court on
lowing, an order was obtained directing
that service be Blackwell, perfected by she publication being on
Harriet W. named. anon-
resident and one of the defendants
It is therefore ordered that the said Har¬
riet W. Blackwell be and appear, in person
or by attorney, at the Superior Court to be
held in and for said county on the third
Monday in January next to answer the
plaintiffs’ complaint, as in default thereof
the said- Court will proceed as to justice
shall appertain. the Hon. Marcos W. Beck,
Witness
sr •* -**
OOV9*^ftQl*9ni« LWTK,
THE m RICflW urn.
That Is thte Kihd For Your
Christmas Pudding.
IMPORTANT 0ALIF0HHIA INDUSTRY
fell* Work of (taking. Picking. Curing and
Packing Raisin* Pnrnlcbcc (employment
*■©» Many Handc-CaUfornla'k Advan¬
tage* Over the Spanish Vineyard*.
In spite of the fact that the raisin
crop of Fresno has been badly damaged
by recent heavy rains most of the plums
in your Christmas padding will un¬
doubtedly be native bom They may be
sold under a foreign name—a name
which smacks of sunny Spain—bnt the
chances are that they ripened on the
equally sunny slopes of southern Cali¬
fornia. If yoa look in the encyclopedias
of comparatively recent issue, you will
find under “raisin” the following
piece of exact misinformation •.
Raisins.—The dried fruit of the European
grapevines (Vitl* vunferu). None of our na¬
tive grapes has yet afforded raisins suitable
for commerce.
In view of the fact that the chief in¬
dustry of whole counties in California
is the raising, curing and packing of
raisins this is refreshing. Not only does
California supply a large portion of the
raisins nsed in the United States, bnt
the same vineyards have even produced
enough to ent some figure in the Euro¬
pean market during off years. As long
ago as 1888 the raisin crop of the Pacific
coast was noarly 20 , 000,000 pounds, and
it has been increasing ever since until
now it is almost three times that figure
Just now the raisin crop is being
peeked. In the vicinity of Fresno thou-
sands.of young women are making their
pretty fingers fly with all the speed
that skill and long training can produce
They are packiug the raisin crop of 1807
and from their deft fingers the fruit goes
to the grocer untouched and nuhandled.
It may be some satisfaction to know
that all of these young women raisin
packers are neat and wholesome to look
at. Many of them are pretty. The Fres¬
no girls especially are noted for immac¬
ulate'shirt waists and white dnek skirts.
If we were huntiug for a hint of ro¬
mance in the raisin industry, it would
be well to stop here, for with the raisin
packers all the romance of the business
ends. Perhaps you have imagined that
grape picking was a most idyllic sort of
work. Yon may have pictured langhing
peasants plucking the big purple bunches
of grapes and making love and mnsio
h
£
A PRKTTT GRAPE PICKER.
under shaded arbors- Perhaps that- is
the way it is done in Spain, Syria and
the ASgean isles, bnt in California the
raisin industry offers little for the in¬
spiration of the poet
In the first place, many of the pickers
are Mexicans or Chinese, both men and
women being employed. They are hired
because their labor may be purchased
cheaply, no special skill being required
in this branch of the work.
Then the bunches are not purple.
Several varieties of grapes are used in
raisin making, bnt none of them shows
the royal color. They are all a translu¬
cent greenish tint when ripe and do
not acquire that dark, amber appear¬
ance until after they have been cured.
There are the Muscats, the Gordo Blan¬
co, the Corinthsor “currants,” the Sul¬
tanas and other varietes. bnt they are
all white grapes and differ only in size
and shape. Purple grapes are raised in
California, bnt they are not fit for raisins
and are shipped east to be eaten fresh.
Neither is the California vineyard a
succession of shady arbors. In that sec¬
tion where the sun blazes down out of
a copper, cloudless sky from May to No¬
vember it is not necessary to train the
vines np'into the air so that the sun¬
light may strike the bunches. In that
fierce heat the biggest bunches and the
largest grapes grow best when shaded
by thick foliage, so the trank of the
vine is only allowed to grow a foot or
two from the ground and upon the lat¬
eral branches close to the earth the
finest fruit is produced. So a California
vineyard looks more like a garden fall
of currant bashes than anything else.
The bunches are cut rather than pick¬
ed With a sharp, curve bladed knife
the bunches are severed from the vina
Only the stem is touched, for to handle
the bunch would be to brush the bloom
from the fruit and injure its market
value. As they are cut off the bunches
are carefully placed on a redwood tray
about 2 feet wide and 3 feet long hold¬
ing about 25 pounds of grapes. When
the trays are full, they are simply laid
ou the ground and the sun is left to do
the work of curing. Fermentation be¬
gins almost immediately, and after two
weeks the bunches are turned over. This
is done by placing an empty tray over
the full ona. Two men hold the trays
tightly togther with their bands and
give them a qqick, dextrous flop. A few
loose grapes will roll oat daring this
process, but not many. _
If the weather is favorable, the dry¬
ing process occupies about three weeks,
but should ther e be a n y cloudy weather
We are sometimes so near a thing that
we cannot see it. This is especially true
in the matter of our suffering own physical from health. sick-
Many a woman is
hdadaches, and although relief is right at
her elbow, she does not see it. Let such a
woman ask her druggist for Ramon’s
Tonic Liver Pills (andtPellete), and take
them for a few days until completely
cured. The entire cost is but 25 cents—
trial dose free.__
You can’t cure consumption bnt you
can avojd it and cure every other form
of throat or lung trouble by the use of
One Minute Gough Cute. J. N. Hatri
Sc Son.
man time is required. When tbs rai¬
sins are nearly cared, the trays ara
piled one on the other in the field in or¬
der to delay the drying and give time fog
sorting. As the stacking progrosses the
largest and finest bunches arc picked out
and placed in sweat boxes: These boxes
are then put in the sweating room,
generally a separate building with walls
of adobe or brick. The object of this
room is to equalize the moisture of the
raisins aud make the steins less brittle.
The smaller bunches and 'the loose rai¬
sins ara put in sweatboxes for a short
time and then run through a separator.
PACKING FANCT RAISINS.
which reduces them to a variety known
as loose Muscatels. The smallest raisins
are screened out and sold as seedless
Muscatel*
Next comes the packing. In the early
days of California’s raisin industry eaoh
vineyardist packed his own raisins, bnt
it was soon found that the work oould
be done much better in a large and fully
equipped establishment, so that nowa¬
days the packing is a separate branch
of the business.
The standard California raisin box
contains 20 pounds net of raisins, bnt
some of the finer grades of table raisins
are packed in half and quarter size
boxes. Haven’t you often wondered how
the raisins could be packed in bunches
so that the top of. the box presented snch
a beautiful aud symmetrical appearance
when opened? It is one of the tricks of
the trade- Just as the growers of any
other kind of frnit pat the largest and
finest on top, so does the raisin
He calls it “facing” his boxes.
The raisins are not packed in the
boxes first, bnt are placed in a metal
frame which will just fit into the box.
Wbqn the frame is packed, it is subject¬
ed to heavy pressijia in a press, after
which the compact contents are dropped
into the box, which has been lined with
paper of fine quality. Next the label is
put on, the cover nailed down and the
reisinB are ready for the market.
The facing nsed to be done wholly by
hand, and it was An expensive process
The packer selected bunches of fine
large raisins and spread them out even¬
ly. Then |ie pressed each individual
raisin between bis thumb and forefinger.
In the concavity thus formed he plaoed
a smaller raisin and arranged the bunch
neatly. When the raisins were pressed,
those on top which had been “filled”
spread out and appeared mnch larger
and plumper than they really w<
Now, however, this filling and faoi
are done by means of a steel plate in
which are a number of depressions re¬
sembling thumb marks. Into these holes
are rolled the filling raisins and over
them are spread those used for facing.
With one of these devices an unskilled
workman can face a box of raisins much
better and far quicker than the most ex¬
pert Spanish packer who has worked at
nothing else all his life can do it by
hand. The fancy raisins which are used
for the table are mostly hand packed,
however, and it is at this work that the
Fresno girls are now busy. •
The Spanish still continue to raise
the largest raisins, but on an average
their frnit is no larger than the Califor¬
nia product They force the growth of
a few bunches by cutting off all bnt
two or three clusters on a vine, a proc¬
ess which California growers do not
believe in. Even the best vineyards in
the Malaga district of Spain bear no
more than ten ponnds to the vine or
five tons to the acre, while in Califor¬
nia few Mnscat vineyards bear any less.
Not a few produce more than ten tons
to the acre.
But the Spanish grower has many
advantages over the American vineyard-
SCENE IN A RAISIN VINEYARD.
1 st, and it has been only by pluck and
ingenuity that California has made the
raisin industry pay 'growers at alL In the first
place the foreign have the ben¬
efit of the cheapest of cheap labor. Then
their grapes ripen much earlier, and to
cap the climax they can send a box of
raisins from Spain to New York for
about 8 cent* while the California vine¬
yardist pays nearly 80 oents per box to
reach the same market. The greater
yield of the California vines, the inge¬
nuity at the grower and packer and the
new tariff law which protects our rai¬
sin crop to the extent of a duty of
omits per pound enable the California
vineyardists to undersell the Malaga
growers in the home market
jTtNNiK Moores.
_
J. M. Thirstwend, of Grosbeck, Tex,
says that when he ba* a spell of indi¬
gestion, and feels bad and sluggish he
takes DeWitt’s Little Early Risers at
night, and he is all right the next morn¬
ing. Many thousands of others do the
same thing. Do you? J. N. Harris A
Son.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
YVOman’s
are peculiar, And cannot be
discussed as we do thoee to
which all are subject. Men¬
struation sustains such
important health relations when to
her that
Suppressed, Painful, she becomes Irregular Ian-, or,
guid, the bloom leaves
her cheek and
complications arise
less regularity U
to these organs. .
BRADFEELiyS
FEMALE
REGULATOR laareceiptof.
noted physician of the South, where
Menstruate troubles prevail more ex¬
tensively fails than in any other section. It
never to restore health and
strength to the suffering woman.
Tms S**»ncLs rkuutm Co., Atlanta! Qa
SqM by ad Druggists At SL0O**r ItaUte.
December Sheriff Sales.
Will be sold before the court bouse door
In Georgia, the city between of Griffin, Spalding County, sale
the legal hours of
on the first Tuesday 1 ™ in December, 1897,
to the highest described
following ’ollowing descrit property, to-wit:
One hundred and fifty (160) asres of
land situated, lying sad being in the
county of Spalding hundred and and State fifty of Georgia,
to-wit; one (160) acres
of land In the Third ( 8 d) District of
tinguished Spalding County and known and dis¬
as the southwest corner of Lot
Number Thirteen (13) and the west part
of Lot Number Twelve (12) In said dis¬
trict and county, bounded north by J. A.
C. Logan and R. A. Thrower, east by R.
A. M. Dingier I’hrowor and and B. W. P. J. Blanton, Kincaid, and west known by J
as the Bates place in Akins District, and
containing one hundred and fifty (160)
acres more or lees. Levied on and sold as
i will be
originally tying and Henry, being In Spaldl
of now lots and couw mty, 4 1
known as parts
being one hundred aud thirty-six
acres off of lot No. 170 an l sixty-six aud
three-fourths (00%) acres off of lot No. 169,
the whole hundred being in one and body and and contain¬ three-
ing fourths two ( 202 %) two less, and
acres more or
bounded as follows: on the north by lands
of E. P. Maddox, J. A. Brooks and J. H.
Moore; on the east by lands of A. J. Hen¬
derson and VV. M. Barfield; on the south
by lauds of W. M. Barfield, J. M. Brooks
and VV. T. McGee; and on the west by
lands of Richard Price, N. E. Miller and J.
vi. Brooks. Levied on aud sold as the prop¬
erty of Jasper Touchstone to satisfy a fl fa
-is-iued County fromfthe in favor of City Harris, Court Henderson for .Spalding &
Moore vs. Jasper legally Touchstone. notified Tenant in
possession Also, the time and will be
at same place,
sold the following described the property, Griffin, to-
wlt; one vacant lot in city of
Spalding side of County, South Hill Ga.. street, situated said on the be¬
east lot
ing bounded on the north by Mrs. Allison,
oast by other lands of Henry W. Sparks,
south by Mrs H. P. HUI and west by Hill
street, said lot containing one acre in a
square. Levied on and sold as the prop¬
erty of Henry W. Sparks to satisfy a 11 la
issued from the Justice Court of the
lOUlst District G. M. of Spalding County
in favor of Bedgood Simmons L. Co. vs.
Henry W. Sparks. Levy made by A. J.
Cohron, L. C.. and turned over to me.
Tenant Also, in the possession time legally notified.
at same and place, will be
ly the Pike County line
the west by lands of Jesse M. Pitts.
Levied on and sold as the property of J,
A. Pitts to satisfy a fl fa issued from the
uo., Banning, vs. J endorser. . A. nils, Tenant matter, and Frank
in possession
legally notified.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
4 old the forty following (40) described of land property, to-
wit; acres in the north¬
east corner of Lot No. 109, twenty ( 00 )
acres of land in the southeast corner of
Lot No. 140, twenty (20) acres of land In
the southwest comer of Lot No. 149«
twenty (90) acres of land In the northwest
oomer of*Lot No. 160, all In the Third
bounded on the north by lands of Ed.
and Brown, Mrs. on Barfield, the east by the lands of Dr. by Starr
on sonth lands
of Irby Simmons and Dr. J, Stewart, and
on the west by lands of David Griffin.
Levied on and sold as the property of
Lucile S. Brown to satisfy of a fl fa lamed
from the City Court Macon, Bibb
County, in favor of the New England
Mortgage Security Company vs. Lucile S.
Brown. Tenant in possession legally
notified.
Also, the at following the same time and place, will
be sold property, to-wit: one
undivided ohe-half interest in fifty (50)
acres of land more or less In the county of
Spalding and State of Georgia, in Akins
District of said county, bounded on the
north E. by Walker, G. W. Clark & Son, on the east
lands by and B. on the sonth W. E. by Hardee
on the west by H. Searcy,
being part of land Lot Number Two Hun¬
dred and Levied Eight (208) and in sold the southeast cor¬
ner. on as the property
of Harry T. Johnson to satisfy a mortgage
fl fa issued from Spalding Superior Court
In favor of Smith & Simpson vs. Harry
T. Johnson. Tenant tn possession legally
notified. M. W. MORRIS.
Sheriff 8 . C.
J. M. Kelly. J. M. Thomas.
KELLY k THOMAS,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
628 E Solomon Street,
ERIE FIN, GA.
I have purchased three bottles of Dr. Drake’s German Croup
Remedy. I firmly believe it to be the beet remedy on the market.
I bave saved tbe lives to two of my children by its use. It is the
Ohfej beet of lieved, my medicine ebildren and in that five when minutes ever it was weot it black into was ip a sleeping bottle. tbe face soundly. I and saved tbe the first 1 would life does of one not re¬
DOS£ do without it even if it cost teo dollars a bottle.
CURES; • John A. Gugsman, Carey, Ohio.
. . . OUR GUARANTEE . . .
We guarantee every bottle to cure Croap in any of It* forma, and authorise every dealer to re¬
fund the money should it fail. We also guarantee it to be tbe best remedy lor Coughs,
Colds, Hoarseness, Whooping Cough and all diseases of tbe Throat and.Longs.
THE DRAKE MEDICINE CO..
Sole Proprietors, Findlay, Ohio.
tbe My three-year old daughter bad membraneous croup in its worst form. Our beet physicians gave
up case, sayiog she could not live, f was mounting my horse to ride tea miles for another doctor,
when a gentleman came io with a sample bottle of Dr. Drake's German Croup Remedy. With the con¬
sent of tae doctors, be gave one dose of tbe medicine. Tbs child began to improve at once, and inside
of thirty minutes ber breathing became natural. A second dose completely cared her. As seven ebildren
'had died from membraneous croup In oar Rule town witbin tbe ten days before, tbe marvelous cars by
hr. Drake’s German Crpup Remedy became tbe talk of tbe town. Dr. J. H. Ranain, D. D. °
*•“■11 druggist does not keep It, send 10 for sample bottle Bremen, THE Fairfield DRAKE Ooohtyyj f
Fiodfay, yonr cents a to
CO., Ohio.
For sale in Griffin by N. B. Drewry & Son, J. N. Harris A 3on, Anthony A Barr and Cer '
--- Wm
' 9
■
■DM
Avertable Preparation for As;
simOating Inigllxs Stomachs ihcToodandRegula- and Bowels of
Promotes rromoics and DigesHon.Cht*fful- uigesn
ness RretContains ResLCoo neither
Opnim.Morphine i nor Mineral.
Not Narco OTIC.
Ami* StrJ
tion. A perfect Remedy Stomach,Diarrhoea, forCorotipa-
Sow
Worms .Convulsions .feverish
ness a nd Loss of Sl eep.
Tar Simile Signature or
a
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY Of WRAPPER.
Georgia Southern and Florida Railway.
(Ht WANRtt RIVER ROUTE TO FLORIDA.)
Tiii,a Table Mo, 60.
3boo>ly 84 27j>m il.SiS lllOVm dfiBSaSEp Ar..Maoun....JLv Lv... Macon.. ..Ar G. G. S. S. * i: 4 7 45 16 a a m m 8 4 06 40 p p nt in shoo rvt ■
7 LU>_lu Ar.. Cordale ...Lv 4 06am 4 27 p HI 11 lOatu
38 50 £*•••. 0. S. 1 47 a m 2 16 pin 820am
lOSUpm p m 68 Tlftoa.. .Lv G. 8. 12 16am 12 55 pm 6 40 a n.
«4 . y.u> 4.46.a m Ar... Valdosta..Lv as. 10 00 am 1103 am 6 00am
11 69 pm Ar .Quitman ..Lv Plant Sys i * » • * •*•»•«« 8 86 a m
12 60 a n- Ar.Vhom’vtlle.Lv Plant Sys 2 48 am
38 lOan 6 Ar, Ar.. Bain bridge Lv Plant Sys 18bam
00 p id 5 60am .Jasper... .Lv G. S. 9 23pm 956am ****»*•*♦ *
• -
7 00 p nt 6 60am Ar.Lake City.Lv G. S. 806 pm b 58 a Hi
J )00 pn, 9 60am Ar Palatka ...Lv G. 8 . 5 80pm 600a to
8 5 60pm J* p m 5 8 f" 10 a a m WjLv....'frfton....Ar,Plant ^^■ Wayorejj*. Lvj Plant Sy»| Sys U 9 6 40 Vp mjlO m 13 45 46 p
7 46p m 7 40 a mlA r J axsonviHoLvIPlant Sys! 7 p ml a m
•••••> -»••• • . 00 p 82(0 a m
6 28 a in Lv.. .Jasper
.•••*•*•,.* * * 7 11 a in Ar..Live I —----- Oak. V'lSSfHI
.......***** ••**»*••*.....■ 1 46 pm Ar.. Ar..Lakeland...Lv Plant Sys; 9 46 s id
8 00pm m|Xr7r. Ar. •Tampa...Lv Plant Erri 8 00 a m
• •••• *« • a 8 20 p iu 7 IW a . Tlfton .
*»•## 420pm
-
LANE,
General Superintendent. General Passenger Agent.
CENTRAL OF G EORGIA RA ILWAY COMPANY.
Schedule in Efiect April 4, 1897
No. 4 No. 12 1 * 0 . 2 . No. i No. 11. Ho. 3
Daily. Dally. Daily. STATIONS Daily. Daily. Daily.
7 50 pm 4 06pm 6 20 am Lv..........Atlanta.........Ar 7 3b pro 11 20 am 7 45 am
8 86 pro 4 45pm 9 06am Lv........ J onrab’ro..........Ar 6 40 pro 1080 am 6 66 am
9 20 pro 6 28pm 9 50am Lv .*•••* ...,d riifiu • •****••*• • • •. Ar 6 09 pm 9 60 am 6 A 1fi IK aw &tu
9 50 pm 6 00 pm 10 20 am Ax...,.—B’naaville........Lv 6 37 pm 9 18 am 6 48 am
*7 25pm •lluOuui * A 85 pm *7 00 l
10 20 pro 6 28 pm 10 47am • ..... owythi (i »«•* a **.»•* 6 < 9 pm 8 60 am 6 12 am
11 18 pm 7 20pm 11 40am 4 lo pm 80) am 4 10 am
12 18 am 8 05pm 12 42 pm .o*o e#e 00.4*0• • Gordon........ • • • o • • 804 pa 7 10 am 3 10 am
*8 46pm ...........ufirdew............. *6 80 am
1 28 am 1 40pm »4 * # *•••»**•• • »T®oniUii , *.. 1 52 pm 62 am
8 IS am 8 53pm • *•**•*•• 44 411 . U 84 utr V40yl
6 6 85 00 am am 1 6 7 4o 43pm pm . ......oo»o.o ............Afinfch........... ,.A 3 jU*tft .«4 • a « op*..* ». 75) 845 ib am DOOMS
Trains marked * ran daily except Sunday.
Trains for Newoan, Cairollton and Cedsrtown l»*ve Grill a at 6 20 a. m. dally except
Sunday. For farther Ketaroing information arrives Onfln at 6 36 p. m., daily except Sunday.
apply to 8. WHITE, Ticket
O. 4gt., Griffin. On.
THKO D. KL1NK, Gen’I. Supt Savannah, Ga
J. O. MAILK, Passenger Agt ,‘Savannah, Ge,
'S’)ANDY *« » * #« < ... ...... \
CATHARTIC
10 *
»♦ so* ■
umobl y 6 _
■to«»d b ookle t fty Ad. A S. KTERUNG CTB RUNO REMEDY EntJI ( CO.. »« Chfawe. CMraeu. Montreal. Montreal. Cam, Con., er erNew New York. tort. m2
»» - -- - - — — -
I ..... "* " t
- T- M : >-:+■
Kind
I MB—; Bears the Pi
-T-
Signature
•w—~0jPai
ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVEBY
bottle;
THE KIHD
TOO HATE
[ALWAYS BOUGHT.