Newspaper Page Text
The J ournal.
J. I. HOYL & U. L. WESTON,
ee m to R s.
Agricultural and Horticullural
Items and Valuable lteceipts.
To Corn Beef. —Add two pounds
of brown sugar to eight gallons of water;
also one quart of molasses, four ounces
of nitre, and fine salt till it will float
nn egg. This is enough for two quar
ters of beef. Corn a less quantity, use
the ingredients in less and proportion
ate quantities.
To Remove Ink Spots. —Simply
rinse the part so stained in fresh milk,
changing the milk as often as necessary
until the stain disappears. Asa finale,
wash out the milk in pure rain water.
Perhaps pure water that has been boiled
will do as well as rain water.
To Whiten Linen. —Stains occa
sioned by fruit, iron rust and similar
causes may be removed by applying to
the injured parts a weak solution of the
chloride of lime—the cloth having been
previously well washed—or of soda,
oxalic acid or salts of lemon, in warm
water. The parts subjected to this op
eration should bo subsequently well
rinsed in soft, clear warm water, with
out soap, and bo immediately dried in
the sun.
Use for Waste Paper —lt is not
generally known that newspaper is the
best article for cleaning windows, look
ing glasses, &c. Wet a piece of news
paper thoroughly, wash off the glass
with it, and then polish with a dry
piece of paper. No soaps, whiting, or
cloth is necessary. As newspapers are,
or ought to be, abundant in every
house, this is an easy, expeditious and
economical mode of accomplishing a te
dious business. Newspaper is prefera
ble to cloth, and equal to buck skin, in
polishing silver, brass, knives, Ac.
To Pickle Artichokes. —Gather
them when small (they arc much more
delicate than large ones) and throw
them into boiling brine to remain in it
about two minutes; then drain them
and when cold and dry put them into
jars and cover them with vinegar pre
pared as follows: Put in a quantity of
vinegar (enough to cover the quantity of
artichokes) some ginger, mace, and nut
meg ; heat it to the boiling point and,
without additional boiling, pour it over
the artichokes in the j.rs. The pickles
can be used in a day or two but will
continue to get better. Cover well so
as to exclude the air as much as possi
ble.
Mulched Strawberries. —ln De
cember, or January, a strawberry bed
should be covered with leaves, straw or
ohaff. and burned off. This being done
it should have a suitable quantity of
manure well forked in and be mulched
with clean nice straw three or four
inches thick. The young plants will
come through this and have a nice bed
to rest upon, and will be free from sand
and dirt. This is a good time to set
out young plants for a now bed if the
old one is giving out. Wc have seen a
pretty good crop gathered the following
season from plants set out in October.
Pickling in the Simplest way.—
Put the strongest and best vinegar cold
in a jar, then drop in it, until it is full,
any articles you wish to pickle no mat
ter how great the number, small cu
cumbers, gnap beans, very small arti
chokes, button onions small radishes,
garlic, shallots small gherkins, cabbage
cut fine, red or white pepper, melons,
mangoes, j'oung walnuts, small beets,
small green tomatoes, peppers, indeed
every kind of desired vegetable. This
makes a kind of pickled melange that
is very palatable. It is impossible to
have all of these articles at once for
they come at least some of them at dif
ferent periods of the year. Jars of
pickles could thus be put up at several
different periods, in which all articles
then ready could be put together.—
When made in this way the vinegar is
not heated at all, nor are the vegeta
bles put in a preparatory brine. Some
spice or spices could be added if desir
ed. We Lave partaken of delightful
pickles made in this way. The jars
should be cerked or tied down tight
with bladder, or foldings of close white
or brown paper, to exclude the ait .
Artichokes.—We commend this
article to all our readers who rear swine.
We have seen that the swine hre< ders
association of Indiana, have had the
matter before them. . The President
commended the Brazilian artichoke to
the meeting. He said nothing better
for bogs could be so cheaply raised, and
that they kept them in good flesh and
condition, especially when m xcd with
corn. He added that one acre would
yield enough for fifty hogs. Thb i.-
high authority, for it comes
from a groat hog-breeding sec-.
tion. We know nothing of the Brazil
ian artichoke, but wc do know that
hogs are remarkably fond of our com
mon artichoke commonly called, we i
believe, the Jerusalem artichoke. We j
planted a quarter of an acre in them
years ago, and turned a lot of hogs upon
them and they rooted up every inch of
the lot in search of them. The experi
ment was not such as to decide the
question of their nutritive value for
the swine, but their eagerness to get
them showed that they were exceeding
ly fond of them. Most of our readers
know how prolific they are. Perhaps a
given piece of land will yield nothing
more abundantly, and it is probable
that our common kind are as valuable
for swine as the Brazilian. Let our
farmers procure the tubers and try them.
How to Make Rich Burn-yard
Manure.
I)r. J. B. Lawes, of Ilothamsted,
England, whose experiments in agri
culture, dating back some thirty years,
are being continually brought before
the fanning public, prepared a table
giving the amount of nitrogen, phos
phoric acid and potash confined in
different foods, with the value in dol
lars and cents of the manure produced
from feeding this food. This table,
published in the United States as
early as 1860, not only gave rise to
considerable discussion, but has done
much, in conjunction with similar
statistics, and stated results of relia
ble chemists and scientists, to open
the eyes of a large class of farmers
to the fact that the value of barn
yard manure depends largely on the
food given to the animal, as well as
upon its after care, treatment and ap
plication.
Every progressive farmer now un
derstands that the real chemical value
of manure, other things being equal ,
is in proportion to the nitrogen, phos
phoric acid and potash that the man-'
ure contains, and not in the water, j
sand or silica or woody fibre or car
bonaceous matter that may abound
in it; and most of them agree with
Mr. Lawes and other practical scien
tists in believing that the quantity of
these essential elements in manure is
determined by the quantity ..f nitro
gen, phosphoric acid and potash con
tained in the food consumed by the
animals making the manure.
Of all vegetable substances employ
ed in feeding cattle decorticated cot
ton seed cake ranks first for making
a valuable manure, as it is richest in
nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash.
According to Mr. Lawes’s estimate,
the manure from a ton of this feed is
worth upwards of $27 in gold
Rape cake, which in the beginning
of Mr Lawes’s experiments was ein
ployed, finel ground, as manure for
turnips and wheat on many of the
farms in England, s now considered
much more profitable, both abroad
and at home, when used first as feed
to sheep an cattle and when after,
wards for manure. It comes next in
the value a ong foods for making
rich manure, the manure produc
from the consumption of a ton
rape cake being estimated at s2l.
iuseed-oil cake, without whicn
the English farmer would hardly
think he could raise calves, lambs
y
cattle and sheep, follows fast after
rape-seed cake, though in this country
it is not yet so extensively fed except
by the breeders of improved stock.—
One reason, perhaps, of its restricted
use here is the fact that it is too often
put on the market adulterated. When
fed pure the manure from a ton of
linseed cake is valued by the authori
ty already quoted at sl9 and upwards.
The same tabic sets down the value
of manure from the consumption of a
ton of malt-dust at something over $lB,
thereby making it stand next on the
list. Tares or vetches, lentils, linseed
flaxseed, beans, wheat, bran, middlings,
fine millfced, undecorticated cotton
seed cake, peas and cotton seed follow,
their value for manure ranging from §l3
to §l(s per ton.
Then comes early cut cover-hay,
which contains more nitrogen and there
fore is worth a little more for manure
than when allowed to stand until it is
neariy or quite out of flower. Follow
ing clover-hay on the list are the cereal
gains, valued at from 86 to §8 per ton i
for manure. Meadow hay, i. c., the j
hay from permanent meadows, is not .
valued so high as the clover-hav, being!
set down at something like §3 less per !
ton.
Pea straw is estimated at §3.74 per 1
ton, and taking the grain aiul straw to
gether the pen crop is an unusually I
valuable one for the pitrjxisc of making!
rich manure. The straw of oats. wheat I
and Barley is valued still less than pea*
straw, oat straw being richer than that!
of wheat, and barley straw the poorest 1
<yf a!!. Potatoes arc counted as worth i
about .) cents per bushel for manure,
a nd the nianural value of roots varies j
fj-om 80 '-onper ton for carrots to §1 I
ft,r marigel-wuuzol and §1.14 for pars-j
bP- i
Stronger than any Yeast cr Baking V cwder
in the World, and Perfectly Pure.
SEA F6AM
Is warranted to make better, lighter,
healthier, sweeter, more toothsome,
more digestible, more nutritious
BREAD, BISCUITS, CAKES,
PUDDINGS, Etc.
THAN CAN EE MADE IN ANY
OTIIEtI WAY.
SEA FOAM is an entirely new inven
tion, without any of the bu i qualities ot yeast
or baiting powders, or saleratus.
SEA FOAM contains no ingredient or
element which can produce an injurious effe t,
but on the contrary lias in itself a tendein y to
sustain and nouri h the human system, it is
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Not infrequently the bc-t of flour gets all the
blame, when in reality the dark color and poor
taste are both caused by the use of interior
raising powder. Many baking powders now
highly recommended by grocers, and lienco
largely sold, are made of old bones ground up,
and by a chemical process mixed with other
ingredients. Before lending their influence to
increase the sale of any baking powder, grocers
would do well to ascertain the reputation and
standing of its manufacturers. They would
thus avoid becoming instrumental in perpe
trating a fraud on their customers, and would
in the long run makj- rnoiv nu r. Of com e
lio honest man v, - ovinglv lend himself
to such a fraud upon liis customers, and it is
very poor policy for any grocer to attempt to
palm off inferior goods when the best aro
asked for. lie may by so doing make ali i
money at the nme, but he surely will ai -• • •
time, if the fraud is -a
best customers, anu with him a score of 0.1
who might otherwise have dealt with 1. in.
A merchant’s wisest policy is to secure t. ;* l t
customers, and they are ju t t' e '• -o
want the best goods. SEA f( 5
WITHOUT AH mi L
It is prepared from the purest and best mat' di
als only, and is never under any circum
stances adulterated. There is no longer any
excuse for sour, heavy, or-sodden bread, bis
cuit, or pastry. Every housewife in the land
should make herself acquaint* and with the facts
we have stated, which are indi putable, and
she will soon ascertain that l w.-t of the yeast
preparations now being sold are anything
else but what they profess to be, and tlfut
this is the main reason why s > ! :ge a propor
tion of the bread consum- • by liic masses of
the community is unheUfh: 1. !>> dids toe
especially interested in this q • l of yet t,
and ought to I. •pc >u t Itl im
portant fact that th rt. ’* at •.:*
times be the I t iff <•
favoral "
regain
the !. , • •
obtain* •’ - ■ : *•
the u v ' f : ■
proport, u - <--■ *
otherv. < -
SEA i ■■'by.-fmai!
that is all v. > r
Noonehav > • and . will ever u e y
other preparation in the g powder line,
but will at once and fl rev; t banish from the
house the various crude mixtures and bogus
preparations in the f veast that have t-o
long and so persm y u .-led to destroy
health by imperfectly *r,- : die require
ments they professt t hi.
SEA I OAK rm.- iis in all their excel
lence the nutritious p,. •san i natural
taste of the various i • • of food,
while in bre 1 o m ; - ry raea* i
there is very 4 .t v r ' t ‘ ‘ their
toothsome v ‘ •
Of all be j -t p aut
is beyiuu r
D& riv^S!
L ive :t a , ' dc-.> •.v that wo
have offered > i the means to make poor
fl.iur much better than when u&cd under
ordinary conditions, w hile gu< 1 flour will be
immcas'ijl:ly increa.' and in sweetness, rich
new, K! and all his<w} q udities which combine to
render jpeod bread tasbeiitifcily the s*aff of life.
SEA FOAM is now used by.the lending
hotels and rwtxurants in New lork city and
throughout the country. One eating-house in
New Vork lies become famous for its SEA
FOA ‘f hhi .t. and during the dinner hours
thine ere always dozens of people waiting
their turn to be seated.
Ark your grocer to get it for you, if lie has
not already placed it in his stool;, and if an
obliging man he wul do so; or send for
Circular and prico-li. t to
QANTZ, J9NES & CO.
SOLE MANUFACTURERS,
176 Duane Street, New York.
DR. RICE,
37 Court Place, LOUISVILLE, KY.,
A rfenlarly educatedyand legally qualified phgilcian and the
dost successful, a hla practice will prove. Cures allform#
•f private, chronic and sexual diseases, gpQunifitor
rhea and Impotenoy. w*theresulto r seif
abuse in youth, sexual '“excesses in maturer years, or other
oauses. and producing some of the following enacts: Net voua-
Besa, .Seminal Emissions, Dimness of Sight, Defective Mem
ery Physical Decay, Pimples oa Fscc, Aversion to Society of
Females, Confusion of Ideas, I.oss of Soxua 1 Power, c. f
re during marriage improper or unhappy, wethorougßiy
and permanently cured. SYPHILIS
cured aad entirely eradicated f r -irn the system; CjrlyJW^
ORKHEA, GIPPt, Strict..™, PiK.and otlwr prt
vale diseases quickly cured. Patients treated by mail or ex*
press. CoasultHtion free and invited, charges
and correeixmdeuoe strictly confidential.
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of MO page*, sent to any address, sec urely sealed, for thirty
f0) cents. Should be read by aIL Address as above,
vaoe hours from y A. Al. to IP. M. Sundays, IW4F.IL
The White
-IS
THE EASIEST SELLING,
THE BEST SATISFYING
SeilMacli
Its Introduction and World-renowned
reputation was the death-blow to high
priced machines.
THERE ARE NO SECOND-HAND
WHITE MACHINES IN THE MARKET.
Thl* Is a very important matter, as It Is a well
known and undisputed fact tnat many of the so
called first-class machines which are ottered so
cheap now-a-days are those that have been re
possessed (that Is. taken back trom customers
alter use) and rebuilt and put upon the market
as new.
THE WHITE IS THE PEER OF ANT SEWING
MACHINE NOW UPON THE MARKET.
IT IS MUCH LARGER THAN IHE FAMILY MA
CHINES OF THE SINGER, HOWE AND WEED
MAKE.
IT COSTS MORE TO MANUFACTURE THAN
EITHER OF THE AFORESAID MACHINES.
ITS CONSTRUCTION IS SIMPLE. POSITIVE ANO
DURABLE.
ITS WORKMANSHIP IS UNSURPASSED.
Do not Buy any other before try
ing the WHITE.
Prices and Terms Made Satisfactory.
AGENTS ‘WANTED }
White Sewing Machine Cos.,
CLEVELAND, 0.
TBB WM@l
IS MANUFACTURED BY
fish; BIROS. <2c CO.,
TRAOI’NTE, wis.
WE MAKE EVERY VARIETY OF
FARM FREIGHT AND SPRING WAGONS,
And by confining ouiselves strictly to our class of work; by employing none but the
BEST OP WORKMEN,
Using nothing but
FIRSr-CLAS IMPROVED IMCIIINERT aird I lie
VEKY HUNT Of' SELECTED TI.UBFK.
And by a THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE of the business, we hare justly earned the reputa
tion of making
“TIIK IP ST OH WHEELS.”
We give the following warranty with each wagon:
IVe Hereby Warrant the FISH BRO-. WAGON No to be well made
in * eery oarticular and of good muerial, and that the strength of the same is sufficient
for II wo k with fair usage. Souhl any breakage occur within one year from this date by
• 'asnr, of defective material or workmanship, repairs for tpe same will • e furnisned at
Ol sale, free of charge, or the price of said repairs, as per agent's price list, will be
•'dd m cash by the purchaser produeng a sample of the broken or defective parts as evi—
dene*. I Titus G. Fish, )
Radius Win., Jan. 1, 1878 J Edwin B. Fish, {■ FISH BROS. A {'.
( Jno. 0. Hxtqqin J
K • a r.g wi* can suit von, we solicit, patronage from every section of the United
.States St . and for Prices and Terms, ar and for a copy of our .Agricultural paper to
FIsII BROS. Ac CO.. Radius Wis.
THE GJiE^T
(BU OMUIA SUAIKB IPAIiUi
1878,
At i!a* on, €*a., from Ocf. 28tli to Nov. 2d.
159,000 111 noHEY PREfllUns !
An iniPiestin,' Racing Programme each day, for premiums covering over $2500
r •; 1 ' ■k"*d, most commodious and must beautiful Fair G ounds, and the best
M ,b - • b.i th. Liberal Premiums for evert dei artment of Husbandry, A/anu
a tu'-e. Jf.ebiucry nd Works of Art. Sfeud for Catalogue of comp'ete list of Premiums,
11 u K < f lons, which will be mailed, postage paid, oo apDlication to the Secretar).
< purity Eremiumbs
Ton- - which (through the Societies o: Clubs) shall furnish the largest and finest
•tf!-.y. < m ' n >, m v of produets mid esulf of Home Industries, (excep’ Stock,
xchided) !• raised o, yttiduced il the County sx<>o 00
s “ f> emiura 15000
THOMAS HARDEMAN, Jr., Pres.
' MALCOLM JOHNSTON, Sec’y.
M J HATCHER, General Sl.p’t.
X KLSON p\ TIFT,
DEALER IN
Sasli, Blinds,
j * Builders Supplies,
Doors, Mantels,
| -A-IkTID LUMBER,
ALBANY GEORGIA.
! ..... ~ -- , - ..
X Tom B. Artope,
■& ■ 1 q 1
7 ‘ DEALER IN
I
4':< A MARBLE & GRANITE WORK.
1
, Hi. lit snt.i f s.
Eox lonibs, Vases, Iron Railing,
COPINGS, BUILDING WORK, Et<-
C’t °ner Second and PobU 3t., opposite J. W. Burke* o.\ rexe of R & Colemans
MACON. - GEORGTA
Orders solicited A. J. BA LDWIN Agent at Dawson.
| -/Vi'b You Groing’ > Paint P
THEN USE MILLER BROS
Chemical Paint.
R F WhII ' n T b i te "d rr one hundred dlffe-ent colors, made of strictly cure
and cheaper Ind tol" eeaTlonu
U R l in a tt^ , - 1,16 °f wianVtlioufiand'of 1 tho^'pest^ho™!!-
Clevelaod, 0 Obion”. Sample ctd^ent’ l'ee. ' BIWTHERS > 29 > 31 &33 & Clair Street.
FREE A VALUABLE invention;
fit Si li-• SI. SSI THE WORLD RENOWNED
WILSON SEWING MACHINE
in workmanship is equal to a Chronometer Watch, and
as elegantly finished as a first-class Piano. It received
the highest awards at the Vienna and CentenrMa? Expo
sitions. IT SEWS ONE-FOURTH FASTER
W?LSON S MACmN P #s i,y Z unlirni,cd - There are more
riS S O S f °Ll, The o.h'ire'^T^ £K
WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO!
C-* J XiZWJZz
h <' "If First-CTm* Drrtrrf,
Crampton’s Imperial Soap
\
IS THE BEST!
Crampton'e Imperial Soap is the Best.
Craropton'B Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Beat.
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Best
Crampton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
THIS SOAP is manufactured from pure
materials; and as it contains a large per
centage of Vegetine Oil, is warranted fully
equal to the imported Castile Soap, and at
the same time contains all the washing and
cleusing properties of the celebrated German
and
French
Laundry Soaps.
It is therefore recom
mended for use in the
Laundry, Kitchen & Bath Boom,
and for general household purposes;
also for Printers, Painters, Engineers,
and Machinists, as it will remove spots of ink
Grease, Tar, Oil, Paint, etc., from the hands.
The Huntingdon Monitor of April sth,
1877, pronounces this Soap the best in the
market, as follows:
Reader, we don't want you to suppose
that this is an advertisement, and pass it
over unheeded. Bead >t. We want to direct
your attention to the advertisement of
“Crampton's Imperial Soap." Having used
it in cur office for the past year, we can re
commend it as the best quality of soap in
use. It is a rare thing to get* a Soap that will
thoroughly dense printing ink from the
hands, as also from linen; but Crampton's
alundrv soap will do it, and we know where
of we tpeak. It is especially adapted for
printers, painters, engineers and machinists,
as it will remove grease f all descriptions
from the hands as well as clothes, with little
labor. For general household purposes it
cannot be excelled.
Manufactured only by
CRAMPTQN BROTHERS,
Nos. 2,4, 6,8, and 10, Rutgers Place, and
No. 38 and 86 Jefferson Street, New York.
For sale by
J. It CRIiTI,
aug 23, tf Dawson, Ga
THE
GREAT DEMOCRATIC PAPER
—OF THE —
SOUTH-EAST.
THE SAVANNAH -
Morning News*
UMTEI THE OPENING of another po
litical campaign and business season,
we desire to piesent 'he claims of the
daily-moring news
to the patronage of the public.
The features that have rendered the Mor
ning New- s*i popular will be maintained,
and 'he mple facilities of th ■ “Siabliahment,
devoted in t> -k't■ it if possible, still mot-e
worii'i of i e cni fideoce ant: pa'ronage of
the reopl *t t ll' • and Ft -r.d.t.
The edi 1 men wii.be conduct
ed, a i ' ,wi dignified moderation,
■ u', ■■ in :>i with vigorous and
earnest v 1 to lein'-ies a o' our see
tion, h. o 'id pies of the National
D-mo , lie State, Generil and
Tele' w-departments, and its Lo
rd a ■ i” .1 columns will be kept up
to ti indeed of completeness and
r!■ it , and tin; rov. ments made where
as -uggest themselves Iu a
MORNING NEWS will comprise
vi ■ \ hat reuders the newspaper of
•o-dav . vr, audits patrons may eon
hdee v . kto its pages tor the latest Infor
mu ion in on. dto current events. Yieid
ng o a v ilrv iu its own proper field, it
j* no competitor to outs.rip it in
o ii- ic enterprise,
li s’ es he well known
daily morning news
We ptibish a mammoth eight-page,
THE WE KEY NEWS,
the largest paper in the Southern States-
This paper conlau s a careful compilatiou of
'he general news from the daily issues of
the week, Telegraphio Dispatches and Mark
et Reports, caret-lly edited Agricultural and
j Mill ary Departments, with cnoice Literary
and Miscellaneous reading, and as a distinct
feature.
ORIGINAL SERIAL STORIES,
written expressly for its pages by popular
I authors; thus constituting it a comprehen
[ sive entertaining and instructive lamdv
newspaper. We also issue a lively Sunday
paper.
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAM,
which contains the l.ocal and Telegraphic
news of Saturday night.
_o
SUBSCRIPTION, (PREPAID.)
Daily, six mouths, $500; twelve months’
$lO 00. Tri-we. klv, six months, $3 00 *
twelve months, $6 0".
The Weekly, six months, $1 00; twelve
months, $2 00.
Sunday Telegram, six months, $1 50; twelve
months, $2 60.
Money can be sent to mv address, by reg
istered letter, or P O. order at mv risk
J. 11. EkTILL,
8 Whiiaktr St., Savannah Ga.
GHMHiIDR. butts
Blftl jfrjj No. 12 N. Eighth St.
S 1 0 .i h "ub*e.sns 5? Si
in the We.t, i,, thV-.'.'w? 11 £T a< i than “>/ phy.ici.n
%*" J h! *' -^ju*Vubi^ n 4-aSr“ ,UJ
The PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIaCp
The PRIVATE MEDICAL ADVISER
Book§th*taren*l]y fJuidp, ant | BHf I matron a • „
ten ptrtaming to llanhoott xml wi. „n all mat
want long felt: They arebe.JtTmi?. m od * * nd supply
teaS^gsagali
3^®ssft3ssiS3E£rS®s
KKsSE'-S'rSsa
s4j^^Ssw,4rassJß
#sts^sianafi
vf price in money or ctnnip*. n B_UB_JBLi?B
BAIL R 0A D- GU ID.
Uluuid and cinif R 9i ,
GF.NE.IAt. SUI.F,UNTFN DENT “<} J™ 3 * *
Atlantic am, ,ulf Railßoad .
aval.nab, Ga., February 14. i B 7 B . [
() N "’ d l ‘ fuM ' Su day, the 17th i ast _
Uset’ger Trams °- thi9 Road will
IGHT EXPRESS.
, Leave >-a\ ...nuh daily at 4:10 p. m ■ A
rive a Je-'H 7:10 p. m; Arrive aT
bridge b:li) m; Arrive at Albany 9-50
m; Arrive . L:v Oak 8:30a. m; Arri Te
Ja k.-onvi -9:26 a. m; Arrive a'T-lUn
see 9:30 a :I, ave Ta.Lh.^V,SJ
l.eavi .lack- -IHe 8-45 nm-
Oak 940 p ~ Leave Albany 2:30
Le.ve Ba, hr,..-. 3:15 p. m;L ave J e ,*’
6.45 am; A at Savannah 8:40 a. m
Pullman si, „ R oarß run , hr , -
Jacksonville from Savannah and from Lot.
isville, Kv., via Montgomery, A’a and At
bany and Thcnnsville, Ga/’No Cge f
Albanv tWeen annHh “ Dd dacksonvUle or
Cornelltat Albany daily with Passenge,
trains both wavs on Southwestern Raiffi
leans?em. m ‘ ‘‘ ula ’ M '> n 'R°tr*cry, New Or
Man S earner leaves Bainbridge for An
lacbicola every Snnday afiernoSn, for C
umbU' every We 1
(Sundays eeemed)fo? GrM?£“e gjjjg
Pula,ka ' Mel,onville -®
Trains or, B k A R R leave junction
ing west, Monday. Wednesday and FHdao
** Brunswick TuX'
Thursday and S i tu''day at,4;40 p m
ACCOMMODATION TRaINh EASTFnM
DIVISION. ,ul
Leave Savannah. Sunday excapted at v.no
a. m; A, rive at Mclntosh 9:fo, a m- ftrr i™
at Jesup 12;15 am; arrive at’
S;4O pm; arrive at Dupont 7:10 pm. Leave
Dupont 6;00 am; leave Blacksliear 9] 5 If
leave Jesup 12;35 p m; leave Mclntosh 2- 47
p m; arrivo at Savannah 6;80 p in.
WESTERN DIVISION.
Leave Dupont at 6;S, am; arrive at Vai.
dosta 8:20 am; arrive at Quitman at 10-28 a
m; arrive at Th. raasvilie at ];10 a m- ar
rive at Albany 6:40, p m. .Leave Albany at
5:00, am; Leave Thomasviile ]]-oo am .
Leave Quitman at 1;86, p m; Leave Valdosta
at 3:22 pm; arrive at Dupont atf';lsn m
J. S. Tison, Master ot Transportation
H. S. HAINES, Geo. Supt.
Time Card—Eufaula Line.
T Cl
toliifliille, Cijicipti, jfeW Y(;k,
A.VII A/. f, POI.VTS
EAST AND WIST.
Leave Dawson, 1:14, p. v; Leave Cutbberf,
2.23, p, m; Leave Euf ula, 4:05, p. ; Arrive
at Montgomery, 7;55, p, m; Arrive at Nash
ville, 8:00, p. ni; Arrive at Lsuiaville, 2:20,
p. m; Arrive at New York, 7:00, p. m.
Entire train through from Montgomery In
Louisville. No Sunday delays. Trains run
daily. Passengers leaving on Westbound
trains via Eufaula , from DAWSON, or any
point in South West Georgia, take breaklast
in Nashville or New Orleans and dinner in
Louisville oext dav, and save 12 to 24 hours
time. No other line can make it.
Through Sleeping Cars for Virginia Springs
connect with all trains via Eufaula Line
Excursion tickets on ssle via this route only.
H. IB' >I! V 11, Ftipt'i-intcdcilt-
T P. WELLS, Gen‘l Ticket Agent,
Montgomery, Ala.
JOHN W McDANIEL, Passenger Agent,
Montgomery, Ala.
REAU CAMPBELL, Gen‘l Pass't Agent,
Montgomery, Ala.
July 28, 1877, tf
TO IDS PLANTERS
OF
SOUTn WESTERN QBTRGIA
OWING to the decline : n the price of lfoß
we have reduced the P r ' ce ol
SUGIR JMFf S,
Mi F. TILES,
and GM' G f ,IH
as well as other work in our line- , Te
continue o sell at the low P ricc „j|)
establishe until iron advances, or
receive! rders for future delivery.
We manufacture several kinds ot.
|
COTTON SCREWS*
SEASONED, PLANED
AND
ROUGH LUMBER
always on hand. Q Q NEIi ?ON, 0 N,
Pres- Dawson Mfg ( -" 0,
Dawson, Ga. July 30. tL