Newspaper Page Text
The Crawfordvillo Advocate.
ft BUSHED RY
ATKINSON & FLURY.
k7i! r-lat •!.. Rust Office at Crawfor.l
it;*-, as 'Sf-rCIlii I 'll! •« Muller.
C. F.. ATKINSON, I'J.CliV, > Kditot s.
.1. A. >
t haw i -itDViid.i, Ga., May 111. 1895.
Hie first crate of Georgia peaches
for this year, wa, shipped from Fort
Valley on Monday ol this week.
A baby was lmni in Augu-la 'hi*
ek with u full set ol teeth, so tin
Augusta Tribune reports.
Waller l J. Gresham, Secretary of
State died in Washington, I*. on
, week.
Tuesday niortiing of lliis
The corn crop of Georgia has been
considerably iticteused ibis year ovet
la-t, and the cotton crop has to some
XtClll been lessen troin that of last
*
\ ear.
Jt is now intimated that Cleveland
will not call an extra session ot Con¬
gress to make prevision fer the £;i0,
pen irtid deficit, caused by setting aside
the income lax, but that he will issue
bonds regardless of f otigress.
There is evidently one very until
uduble step that " e notice the
tm and that
tanners tire taking tins year,
they are purchasing ouly those
m
urncles that arc really auccissity, and
another feature, they are keeping out
v'. debt as tar as possible.
There, are now 2.500 convicts in the
Georgia penitentiary camps, the largest
ever know . Of this HOT are burgling.
Fulton county has the largest repre¬
sentation, 227. Cliatham lias 2 lb,Hibli
hi, Dougherty ^
110, Floyd 07, Muscogee
44, Sumter 00, Glynn 42-
It is estimated that Spalding county
will ship this year, between the middle
<.)t June and the middle of August, one
hundred car hauls of tiuit- 1 here will
probably be fifty cars of grapes, forty
five curs of peaches, and live cars <>f
plums. The cash returns will be about
5*40,000.
Every cfTort is being made to down
the reform papers in Georgia. Demo¬
cratic merchants that have Heretofore
fiatrouiwd them, ato taking theit
^>at rouage ftom them and placing it
wUh DcuiOcrutic papers. Our people
should make a note of this, mid gi'*'
patronage to those merchants that are
v ^'ng to 1 tip sudu.u-youi paper.
It.« predicted that the recent rise
made in provisions will have n down¬
ward tendency in a very short while.—
The main object of the recent rise in
cotton was due to the fact, that the
gamblers of Wall street run the price
up just at this time, hoping to induce
tl>e funnels to put in a large cotton
cruri.
AY. 11. Harvey, who was challenged
to meet Roswell G. Horv, financial
editor of The New York Tribune, in a
discussion of the facts laid down in
“Loin's Financial School,” has accept¬
ed the iuvitutiou in order “to sustain
the facts sot forth in said book and de¬
fend it against the charges of falsehood
made by the gold standard press.
It is said that Cleveland lias his
heart set on a third term, and that he
doesn't care much whether he disrupts
the democratic party or not in order to
make himself available. His present
programme is to whip his party into
line with his financial views, if Hint is
possible, and then to secure the nomi¬
nation as the oulv man who can hold
them there.
It now seems that tlie ?; 10,000 appro¬
priated by the last Legislature, for old
soldiers, will not be sufficient to meet
the applications that have already been
made in the different counties through¬
out the Slate, lu Richmond county
alone, 115 applications have been tiled
with the ordinary of that county, and
ot this number 75 of these have been
completed and forwarded. From this
it is apparent that there will be con
siderably more applicants than was
originally estimated upon.
Here is wlmt the Roller Herald, a
democratic paper says ofCleveland and
what his policy has done for the
country:
“The president iti thus repudiating
the platform and principles of the party
which placed him in power, has inflict¬
ed upon the country greater pecuniary
loss >.hau the cost of the late war; has
brought untold suffering upon the
laboring clashes;paralyzed business and
brought upou hi* party the greatest dis¬
aster which has befallen it tor almost a
halt century past: i -)
A movement is on foot to ha\ ^ a
bill introduced at the next session of
the legislature providing for the
rise ol itie rizht of -jffl.i
women of this St?
OUR GOWNED CZARS.
Tin-eounlrv. our iitrht* and >.ur lib
e-tic-. tin iri ;he lard ol th< judges <>{
the Supietue Court fd 'he ' niled States
'iI*«*y an*, <>.art*. There is no cotn
]iiaii)i to lx* tu»«.!♦*. if the gowned gen
I IcdlCli a 1 e lip to date, reasonably well
versed in the law and so on. Wi
must have a Supreme Court, but it is
highly necessary that we should have
1 he right kind of one. 'j i (! .||. ahvav
has been a good deal of nonsense about
this staid old institution. ■flii, gown
silly, exifi uielv When Chief .Iuh
Fuller look his well kept nioiis
,„,io the l« n< h. he nearly upset
\\hole court. His was tile first
hair-lip ever seen in that place, Hm
he stuck to the moustache, and so lai
as his upper lip goes the Supreme
Court now looks very human, The
objection to the moustache was panic.
It, is not the lip, but the head and tin:
rl thnt ougli. to count on the su
pj- t . tll< . bench. Hut the silliest feature
of the whole business is the rule that
p- t | )( . ,. ()( | r ( once makes a decision, it
must never make another that will con
diet with it. That is the doctrine of
inedibility carried to an absurd ex¬
treme. it cannot he otherwise than
that these men sometimes make mis¬
takes. They are human. It must
happen sometimes that they reach
conclusions upon an erroneous pre¬
sentation of facts, a very (otnruoii
thing in court proceedings. Hence to
make its decisions irrevocable, is to
place the court in a positi ui of forti¬
fy inti gross error tit times, It is a
prettv serious thing when the Supreme
Court gets cianky and ulories iti it.—
Fanners’ Voice.
WHAT MR. CARLISLE HAS LOST.
The Chicago Tiines-IIerald has the
following:
Mr. Carlisle rarely goes on a railway
journey without losing an umbrella or
im overcoat or leaving a night shirt in
a sleeping car.
We can believe this, and there
is more to be said on the same line.—
Resides umbrellas, overcoats and
various articles of lingerie, the se.erc
tary litis recently lost many other
tilings, lie lias last bis reputation lor
consistency, and lie seems to have lost
his memory, He lms lost his place in
the affections of his people, lost his in¬
dependence, and lost Ins old frankness
and fearlessness.
Rut we do not care to catalogue
everything that Id- lias lost for tear that
some malicious paragrnpher might inti¬
mate that he has capped the climax by
losing his head.— Constitution.
Th<|Bauaer-Watchman of Reynolds,
Ua., »ptly aflff trntlifullj puts it tints:
“If #ver a criminal on earth deserved
the penalty of death, that criminal is
the modem democratic pjuty. If ever
a baud of marauders did openly, viei
on sly and criminally betray and rob a
people, that gang is the modern demo
cvatic party. It has played every (lick
that a devlish mind could suggest
against the people. Every democrat
knows raul secs these things, Yet, he
is willing to suffer anything, just for
the consolation of knowing the he is
helping to bring misery and distress to
others as well as himself.
It makes us thoroughly tired to hear
a professional bum and deadbeat sit
tiug around telling working people
that times are good, and that the only
reason that they don’t get along any
better is, that they don't work. You
hardly ever hear a sensible wan assert
that he knows more than everybody
else. But there are some who know
no better than to poke around and tell
people that they are ptosperous, and
the reason they don’t buy anything is
because they don’t need it; when every¬
body knows they are not prosperous,
and that they are in need of every¬
thing, but able to pay for nothing.—
Runner-Watchman
This is a year of political agitation
and education and the people are tukiug
advantage of it. and are studying the
questions of the hour in a more careful
manner than ever before.
The goldbug convention at Memphis
started a boomlet for John G. Carlisle
for president iu 1S90. The notoriety
1 will be.all ho, or any other
will get out of it. The people are for
I free silver as well as free gold: and the
people will rule. At the same time we
might add that they will not be fooled
again by democratic demagogues. It
will do that party no good to have a
free-silver plank in its platform. The
people remember well the record of
that party on silver when it had every¬
thing it desired—presideut. senate aud
j house—aud struck down silver,
Keen some of those who had moss
on their backs, are beginning to talk
right, and admit there is something
grievously wrong with the (manual
| condition of our goveruuieut. There
are some people who, if they would
lay aside their prejudice aud biased
i feelings, it would not take them long
to see the true condition of things that
ti . .: iute: sis of thejn o-
GEORGIA POPULISTS.
I
l.'nder No Circumstances Can They
he Absorbed By I)wnwr»i y.
The following letter lion. |
is a from
^ of this State. to the
American Nonconformist, giving the
true version of the fight that is now or/
in (leolgia:
Kditor Nonconformist:—Tit your is
of the Sttli inst , 1 notice the follow
ing quotations from the Cincinnati Kn
qtiirer, '•••i’hout comment from you,and
"hieh possibly would place i lie l’cpu
li-tn oi Georgia in a false light before
our wt stern brethren. The art el t»
dat- d Washington, 1). May 1st,and
headed as follows; “Fight On In
< leorgia. Free Silver Wing Think They
Will Absorb tin: Populists.” After
speaking of Mr. Smith and ex-Speaker
Crisp’s position on silver in Geoigia. it
further says:
“Southern politicians here say that
•Secretary Smith’s bold stand opens the
ball in the South, and that with ex
Sjie.iiker Crisp iind his backers on the
one side, and Secretary Smith and the
administration supporters on the o her.
the fight is now to he prosecuted with
relentli «s vigor for the control of the
democracy of Georgia.
“Free silver democrats entertain the
belief thiil Mr. Crisp will rally the
democrats to his support, and will draw
away from the I’opulists that elemen*
of the democracy which may have gone
wit h them on account of their free sil¬
ver ideas. It is claimed by those peo¬
ple that the Populist craze is done for
in Georgia upon general principles,and
that when tlie democrats who have
joined the Populists see prominent iiin-iii, ui<
of their own party such as t to-( wi
will stand with Mr. Crisp, advocating
free silver, they w ill then have no ex
etts’e for dallying further with the
Populists, and will flock to the old
standard.”
Now Mr. Smith’s following in Geor¬
gia is made up of subsidized papers,
bunkers, money lenders, stock, cotton
and wheat gamblers and paid emissaries
of free silver, and they will cut a con¬
siderable figure in the democratic eon
ventions to be held in this .State. As
for Speaker Crisp, it is not thought
that lie, with all of his late declara¬
tions, will do much for free and tin
limited coinage of silver, if we are te
judge the future by the past. Speakep
Crisp, of the fidrd congress, as maker
of the committee on rules, as chairman
of the committee On rules, who occu¬
pied the position of an autocrat as to
the business before congress, has cer¬
tainly failed to show himself the friend
of silver or that he lias any aspirations,
to become the leader of that party in.
the next cougMtw«i«->-i><v-
in Georgia he is popular tfith Ihe
manipulators but has few friends with
the rank and tile, and like his party lias
sinned away his day of grace regard¬
less of w hat the southern politicians at
Washington say or may say of him.—
Tht , statement that he, or any other
democrat, with his profession of
pioinise making and of promise break¬
ing, could influence the Populists of
Georgia to return to the folds of demo¬
cracy. so called, or the fragments of his
party wreck, is an insult to the intelli¬
gence ot the Populists,
Neither Mr. Crisp no any member of
congress from ibis Stale dare meet the
average Populist of Georgia on the
stump ou the motley question. 1 want
to soy there is no Populist craze in
Georgia, but a well organized party,
steady, strong and with vigorous
growth. For years before we planted
the tree of Populism in this State the
soil was dug deep, fertilized with the
love of country, pulverized with equal
rights to all and special privileges to
none; and she is bringing forth good
fruit. In IH'J‘ 2 . four months after our
organization, we numbered 70.000'by
the count of the old party. We polled
then 00,000 fair and square. lu 1S94,
we numbered above 90,000 by the count
of the old party. We polled over 125
000. Yet with all the intimidations,
methods and strategies of the dying old
parties and office holders, if Georgia
had her rights under fair count the
Populists would be holding the reins of
State to-day.
Sav to the Populists of the west that
they can count ou Georgia doing her
duty, for iu this light for industrial
freedom we know no east, no west, uo
uorth> u0 sou ih, but oue common
j 1 country,
I was born and reared in this State.
; ln 1M>2 I made speeches in eighty
counties, and in 1894 in thirty counties.
1 have canvassed the State from sea
board to the mountain toy. I
mixed til iu mingled with, and know
her people. No truer Populists live iu
j : America. They are broad-gauged,
liberal and full of patriotism. The rank
au-.l tile of the old parties are honest
I but tired and worn out ou
promises. No power can chain them
, to their traducers. They will find a
home with us.
Please assure your readers that the
Southern Populists will never dicker.
\Ve aae the only national party who are
i solid on the question of
Neither ex-Speaker Crisp, nor all the
combined leaders of democracy can iu-
ducc the Populists of Georgia to return
to its wallow. We have passed over.
aud like the »oul that has winged its
tvav to heaven, we cannot return t
them, hut they may come to us.
\V>[. L. PEEK.
Conyers, Ga.
Shamed the Duchess.
An English woman of r.-nk—a dueh
ess—was very apt to forget to pay her 1
hills. A milliner, whose, large hill had
been rppeatedlv ignortd hv the ditch
ess, at last determined to send her iit
tie girl, a pretty child of ten years, to
beg for the money which was so much
“He sure to say‘your grace
to the duchess,” said the anxious
mother, and the child gravely promised
to remember. When after long w att¬
ing she was ushered into the duchess
presence, the little girl dropped a low
courtesy and then, folding her hands
and dosing her dyes, she said softly:
“For what 1 a in about to receive may
the Lord make me truly thauful.” As
she opened her eyes anil turned her
wistful gaze on the duchess, that light¬
hearted person flushed very red, and
without delay made out a check for the
amount due to the millinet.—Argonaut
A Cleveland, Ohio, man died a hor¬
rible death the oilier day’, i he cause
will startle every one and will act as o
warning. The deceased had been
writing to his family telling them ot
the success!ul conclusion of some bus
iness negotiations, and in sealing the
envelope accidentaly cut his tongue on
the sharp edge. Thu mishap seemed
to be such a trifling one that he paid
nQ attention to it. In a few hours
|i 0 WCV er, his tongue began to swell.
The pain, which was at tirst confined
to the small ahratson of the metn
brane, spread and increased in inten¬
sity until the unfortunate man fattlv
writhed in agony. Flood poison had
set in and although the best medicai
talent was secured it had gone too far
in its fatal work. Within 24 hours he
was dead. His sufferings in the mean¬
time were terrible. Thoroughly con¬
scious, he was unable to speak owing
to the tearible swelling of the tongue.
It became so large it protruded front
his mouth.—Ex.
HERIFF’S SALE.
GEORGIA—Taliaferro County.
ITT I LB he sold in front of door of Court
W House of said county, on the first
Tuesday in June next, to the highest bid¬
der, for cash, within the legal hours of
Sale, all that tract, or lot of land containing
one hundred acres more qj. less, si uated,
lying and being <leorgia,wdfh in said county of [ Talia
and ferro, other State improveu’endctheflion, of Jpvollhig 'whereon house
defendant Leila A. Dunn resides,..hounded
on north lands by lands .1. of 1>. WHHnUP—fiffwell, on
cast by of Ham mack and lands
of estate >f ritevo Colcluugh, deceased : on
south by lands of William Parker and on'
west by other lands of Leila Dunn, riaid
land being in 008th Dist. G. M., said land
levied on as tlie property of said defendant
Leila A. Dunn to satisfy an execution is
sued from the Superior Court of said conn
ty in favor of Andrews Gee and eompany
against, said Leila A. Dunn. Said
tion was issued upon the foreclosure of
mortgage in favor of Andrews Gee
Comimny against said Leila A. Dunn.
May 3rd, 1895.
D. P. HENRY,
Sheriff, Taliaferro County
EXECUTOR’S SALE.
GEORGIA—Taliaferro County.
I W IT ILL he sold in front of door of
House iuTaliaferro county,within legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder, for
cash, on the first Tuesday in-June
all that tract of land lying in 802ml Dist.
G. M„ said county, containing JTwo Huu
dred acres more or less, hounded on north
by bv lands lands of of Boss J. T. Gunn; Aikens, Trustee south by : on lands east
on
of Mildred Rhodes and estate of John
Allen; T on west by trustee. lands of W, O. Holden
Said ;I- property Aikens, sold as property of estate
of George I*. Bristow-, deceased. Said
property diet and decree jold under rendered ami l»v at virtue August of term ver-
18114 of laliaferro Superior CiiurL
Said land is rented for 1,89.) for 1290
pounds middling lint cotton. Collection of
HOttmounds of said rent is waived till pay
cent is made of account of tenant, for his
supplies pur.-hased liy him during 1895.
Purchaser will be entitled to said rent sub
ject’to above E. RHODES. stated waiver. Executor of Estate
J.
George F. Bristow,
GEORGIA—Taliaferro County.
sy,,ts°to^>ie 4I71IEREAS, Edward Croake, Executor
court’liriiD
ti^rS
to cite all persons concerned, kindred and
creditors, to show cause, if any they can
why said Executor should not be d s
charged from his administration and re¬
ceive letters of dismission on the first
Monday in August 18115.
GEORGE H. MITCHELL,
Ordinary, Taliaferro County,
—
Noticfi.
All who are in arrears to the old
SH \y.C. Ufil £“
Chapman will receipt all who
wish to settle their accounts. We are
not asking any favors of our friends
who were behind with the paper while
we were in charge, sincerely but hope for what each is just
jy due; we one
will pay up as soon as possible.
Very respectfully, CHAS. L. SMITH.
OUK ,r> ULUBtSINlz , ttDPtwo t Lla lq’T l. 1
Beloiv will be found a list of papers
which we will club with this paper at
the following prices:
National Watchman, $1.-25
People’s Party Paper, 1.25
Express, 1.50
Constitution,
Southern Cultivator,
American Nonconformist, i.oo
k Burning Or
l Freezing.
Whether you’re scorched
with fever cr chilled with
e deep seated cold, the
same medicine will cure
you —
; T-v i/i. L.C. KOC $
•.
jevjON If A
f- \
-< 1 :
fj For The Liver ^
f and Kidneys. g
f Pleasant to the Taste. 'I
f It does not cause constipa- J
# tion, but breaks chills, prevents U
r fever, purifies and thickens the ,W
■4 blood, corrects the liver, clean- 7A
f ses the stomach and improves
■ digestion, creates an appetite ’I
and quiets the nerves. V|
At all druggisltand general stores. 3
CULLEN & NEWMAN, ¥
Sole Proprietors,
Knoxville, Tennessee. .1
r . D. !fv
GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDI J I L
OFFICE CtSKEHAL MASTJ-GSiSt.
.Augusta, Ga., Mwy 8th, 180?.
Coinvienciug May 8t.li, 189.1, tlie following schedules will lie operated, All ;rains
ran by the 90th Miamian Time. The schedules are .subject, to chaug- without notice to
the public.
READ DOWN. READ VW"
j No. 3 | No 1 j | No. 2 | No. i j |
TltAIX j | NIGHT | DAY j I TIIA3N | I STATIONS. TRAIN I j jiUtUMBB* DAI | n: it H la
No. 11 K.XCHliSS I MAIL. NO. 'Si NO. 28 I V
5 15 i mu 10 80 pm IX 10 pm 7 15 am Lv Augusta Ar 8 140 pm 1 On pm 5 15 aa H 7 7 4- .sa “
,7 48 “ 11 58 pm 12 91) pm........ Be lair ........ 12 80 pm 4 48., o : 14
1)09 “ 1109 pm 12 4ti Jim 7 45 “ Grovetown 8 00 “ 12 27 pm 4 "Cat 7 00
tl It) “ It 21pm 12 58 “ ........ Berzelia ...... 12 10 pm 4 25 am 0*7’
L\- 7 49 “ "•■'T
0 31 “ 11211pm 105“ 8 (H) “ llarlem 7 28 ‘ , 12 02 pm 4 1C am 0 35
Al¬
. 11 38 pm 1 14 : 8 00 “ Dealing 7 20 “ 12 00 n’n 4 07 am......
. 11 58 pm 1 M0 8 19 “ Thomson 7 05 “ 11 44 »m 3 50 am.....
. 12 08 am 1 42 Mese.na ....... 1199am OSSarfi .....
. 12 10 am 1 50 : 8 35 “ (Aimak 0 50 “ 11 20 am 3 28 am.....
. 12 25 am 1 57 8 40 “ Norwood 0 41 11 19 am 3 29 am . •
. 12 42 am 2 12 “ 8 53 “ Barnett. 0 28 It 05 a in 3 Of am ■
. 12 50 am 2 25 “ !) 04 “ Crawford ville 0 17 10 54 am 2 48 aui.....
Ar
122 am 2 49 “ 9 25 “ Union Point 5 55 “ 10 31 am 2 21 am
Lv
1 38 am 8 04 “ 9 38 “ Greenesboro 5 42 “ 10 21 am 2 04 am . .
. 2 05 am 3 29 “ 10 00 “ Buclchead 5 20 “ 10 00 am I "7 am
. 2 22 am 348 “ 10 12 “ Madison 5 00 “ 9 45 am 1 20 am.....
. 2 41 am 4 01 “ 10 28 “ Rutledge 4 50 “ 9 20 am 1 01 am.....
■ 2 50 am 4 10 “ 10 40 i‘ Social Circle 4 58 “ 0 iO am 12 45 am
. 3 19 am 4 40 “ 10 58 “ Covington 4 20 “ 8 40 am 12 22 am . ..
3 41 am 5 00 “ 11 15 “ Lithonia Conyers 4 02 “ 8 25 am 12 80ngt
3 54 am 5 12 “ 11 20 “ 3 52 “ S 43 din 11 45 pm
. 4 15 am 5 .30 “ It 42 “ Stone Mountain 3 8(i “ 7 54 am 11 24 pm
4 28 am 5 40 “ 11 51 (Sin’ll “ C Decatur lay n ston 3 3 28 20 “ “ 7 7 43 34 am 1111 11 tea
. 4 39 am am 12 a.- 00 pm
. 5 00 am ti'iO pmig 15 pm (Ar Atlanta Lv 3 05 pm 7 15 am
,__ Only mmmm iw ■ ■ - auw. ■”3 aSSb'
Ran i 1 1 -
1 51) 1 15 2 00 8 40 Lv Caniak Arj G 45 11 25 V ———.
P m am pm urn J-m an 2 ., P
1 , 59 131am 2 12 pm 8 47 “ War ran ton (122 “ II 17 am 12 03 an 6 41
> jg « 2 09 am 2 44 pm Mayfield 3 58 “ II 01 am 11 30 pm (> 23 “
7 ........
7 'J g-> « 2 30 am 3 04 pm ........ Cnlvertou 5 25“ 10 49 am 11 18,.m0 09“
5 J ,, -50 am 8 21 pm 9 22 “ Spa'rta 5 0i» “ 10 40 am II 10 62 j:: f*59 “ ’*
Vm (l t 3 22 am 4 00 nin ........ Devereux 4 50 “ 10 20 am 88 p: -5 42
“ 8 37 am 4 19 pm 9 43 “ Carrs 4 19“ 10 18 am 10 26 pn 5 :e> “
4 10 am 4 47 pm 10 00 “ Miiledgeville 3 39 “ 10 m- tyn 9 54 pm.. “
,i 4 48 am 5 10 jim........j Browns 3 17 9 40 am 9 JO pm 4 54 “
on “ 5 07 am 5 30 pm 10 ........I 2-1 “! Haddocks 3 03 9 37 am 9 14 pm 4 44 “
i 12 “ 5 28 ana 5 54 pm James 2 50 9 28 atn tl 00 pm 4 33“
445pm 630ain 0 45 pin -1100 “ Ar Macon Lv 2 10pm 0 00am 8 J* pro 4- •'in
........ 645pm 1108 am 2 Spin | Lv Barnett Arj 1 52pm 8 60 ant 6 25pm..
........ 0 55“ 1120 “ 2 27 “ Aharon ,130“ 8 37 a in 074pm..
........ 7 02 “ 11 30 “ 2 35 “ : Hillman Lvj j 1 27 “ 8 27 am 0 04 pm..
........ 7 30“ 12 03 am 3 05 pm|ArWashgt’n 1 (,t) pm 7 55 am 5 • , ir. .
0 15 pm 2 50pui LvCn’uI’niuiAr. 9 20 am . pm ...
G 27 “ 3 01 “ Wood ville I. 9 08 am 5 45 : .
• (i (> 32 45 “ “ 3 3 05 16 “ “ Baird Maxeys stow ii j. 9 8 Dt 53 am 5 5 40 27 “ “ ....
am
6 52 “ 3 23 “ Stephens I. 8 44 am 8 21 “ ....
7 05 “ 3 34 “ Crawford j. 8 1 am 5 OH “ ....
7 22 “ 3 50 “ ; Dunlap |. 8 12 r.-i J 51 “ ....
7 27 “ 3 54 “ I 'Vinters . 8 07 an 4 47 “
7 44 pm 4 10 jim Ar Athens Lv . . 7 50 am 4 30 “ ....
........ 10 45 am ..........iLvUniotiPnt Arj. .... 2 05 pin .
........1130 am - ,... 1 42 jim ...
........ 11 50 pm ....... ■■■jA r W bite Pis Lv . .... 1 20 pm ...
___ __
Eram All above which trains do run Daily, Sunday, except 11 and 12, on Main Line, and 3 1 at. 1115 oc .1 a
. h . not run on
No.'28 Supper at Harlem.
Sleeping Cars between Atlanta and Charleston, Augusta and Atlanta, Augusta* 1 .1
Macon, on Night. Express.
Sleeping o’clock Cars between Macon and Ne'.v York, on train 27, and train leaving Macon
, lt a. in.
x. - »U)U, 5mTT JOE W. WHITE, A. G. JACKSON,
i-ms.
General Manager, Traveling AUGUSTA, Passenger Agent, General Freight and Y-ss. Ag’t,
GA.
J. w. Kirkland, II. II. Hardwick,
Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. Passenger Agent, Macon, Ga.
Backbone and Bullion
Rules the marts of the land, those two hard to beat, mvigot^ t
tors has placed the Best Stock of Goods at the cheapest
Store in AuffUSta, ° tO ° "et VOUr J
S F R ING 0 U T F I T.
j Dollar will do the work of The goods at
One two. you want
Prices to Smt the Times.
j — :o:-
sss s&e* rou ” d '
<7 1-4 cent Fruit of Loom Bleach mg.
j ceuts < or ’‘°7’ s 1 ercale . Jnrt waists.
2 o cents for Ladies Percale waists.
Cottonades, Ginghams, Calicoes, Worsteds, bbirts, Drawers. Oil Goths,
Stockings, cheaper than you ever saw .efore.
GET YOUR SPRING OR EASTER DRESS NOW,
Silks from 2-3 a vard to <5 corns,
Worsteds 9 ceuts a yard to 25 centsdouble width.
^°^l^THreaclcSllar^be. KuitonsUktwllt _ 5 c,’
Towe ; t 5c> Napkins 3 c, aud everything at bottom prices at
I | P. D. H0RKAN & CO'S,
842 Broad Street 1 Augusta,
» fmMAN
jjti!! 9Cf$i’b ir isctdj
ycur 'Who f y doe> n )p*t!)y r>ot jiL
tadte interest**** <~ - ■ . —
• eoou^K ro
DITichenors Antiscptr: ‘
Ab/a/s [ts> Ijcdaeljoiej «v/rcs Cramp*,"■ (?lk j
»
K^pitin A, ajk,,''.'sr<ir i ;; ] i< l t V'~ I
tjjs Ijov'fta.. i' it tAMnb4Mh**%OTRkV< 9 r - otke*. ^ *
the
ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGE.
The Advanced Business School.
Book-keeping, Bunking, Shortbacd.
1 Penmanship, Mathmatics, Elocution,
and e.’l the Commercial and Eugliah
( Branches Taught by Practical, and Pro
| fessionallv Trained Teachers, Students
may enVr at any time.
For full information, and Catalogue
write to,
Atlanta Business College
Whitehall St, Atlanta UtL
; one- s
sm. Billets. CO
I j Ilf. fi-H. &
t i. ic
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