Newspaper Page Text
throng eager to see if s
within. Nine o’clock
• REntC BKRVHARDT OFF.
Crowds tod Flowers at the Stenm-
fr-Some of Her Last Words—Her
Honey and Her Impressions.
N*w York Times.
Miss Sarah BcrnhanK tailed yes*
terdav morning for France by'the :
Trans-Atlantia steamer L’Amer- |
iqae. At an early hour a large num
ber of ladiea and gentlemen astern-
bled on the com|iany’a pier at the
foot of Morton itreet, determined to
cee once more the great aitreas. As
every carriage rolled in It was im
mediately surrounded by an excited
“ she was not
struck and
atUI she came not. The passengers
were all on board; numerous bon-
qncts and other floral designs for
her were carried down stairs and
placed r.n the Mloon table and in her
cabin, which was on the port side of
▼esael, and the crowd, which
•warmed all over the steamer and
the deck, became impatient. Mile.
Jennie, Sarah’s sister, Anally came
and stepped on deck witb several
friends, and about a quarter of an
hoar later a cheer was beard at the
entrance to the deck. She had ar
rived! As soon as the carriage
stopped at the foot of the
cabin, .passengers’ gangway and
Sarah stepped out, two hundred
hands were stretched out, each ready
to greet her. But as she did not
have the physical strength of a
President of the United States, and
as the time was pressing, it was im
possible to accommodate all, so, alter
shaking a score of hands, she kissed
her own hand to the others, and,
taking the arm of a member of her
company, she harried on board.
She was dressed in a long driving
u!»tor of a delicate light-brown hoc,
with n dainty hat, underneath
which her large bine eyes spsrkied
with vivacity and good humor. In
- her hand she earned an immense
boqnet of flowers. She was cheered
all along until sLe‘reached the sal
oon, where the beautiful floral gifts
elicited from her the exclamation,
“Oh, qfue c'e-tjoU.” She chatted for
a minute with Mr. Louis de Bebian,
agent of the Trans-Atlantic Com
pany’s line, who had himself came
on boartflfeo see that she and the
other passengers were comfortably
accommodated and should have no
cause for complaint,-and also with
several ladies and gentlemen. A
number of gentlemeu who had
wedged their way down atairs put
- their handa to their breast pockets,
and several ladiea fumbled in their
Side pockets as if to get card cases or
autograph albums. These move-
menu did not escape Miss
Sarah’s observation, and she asked
Mr. de Bebian to be taken to her
cabin. When ahe got there another
garden of flowera presented itself to
nor view.
A Times reporter was announced
and Miss Sarah directed that be be
‘ shown in. She herself appeared al
the door and welcomed him with
"Walk een, eef you please. I am
very glad to see you.” The reporter
replied to her salutation in French,
wnou ahe exclaimed with pleasant
surprise: "Tien* mais e'est char-
. mant, alors nous pouvoni nous com-
petulre.’’ And then she rattled on
at the rate of throe hundred words
a minute In Parisian French about
her health, her experiences in this
country,- and her intentions in the
1 future. The reporter asked her why
•he hid heraelf in her cabin ,and she
did not go on deck, where hun
dreds bad come to see her off. “Oh,
~ ~wet.”8gnfli ‘replied. “I hid myself on
-pmndsef they have come out of
curiosity, and to got mo to write
my autograph in their albums aud
pooket-books. Wherever I go every
Other parson asks mo for my auto
graph, and it la quite a bother to
'■- Map writing my name ovei and
'over again, ranch aa I like to please
them.’’ Bow do yon liko this coun
try, the was asked, and she replied:
“Oh, it is magnificent; it is so large
and oa twtatitlAil Thara nra emtio
THF COTTON TIE QUESTION.
The Cotton Planter* of the South
v«, the Northern Manufacturer*.
Rnrhii Hat Loom
been used by the Hot
ty of diseases. From
titioners the remedy 1
the r-.-ident English f
druggist.
St Lo.lt Bcpc btlcD.
" There are only six or seven man
ufacturers of iron cotton ties in this . .
country—two in Ohio aud the oth-1 u
era iu Pennsylvania, *hc largest
being in Pittsburg. Theao ties are
made of hoop-iron, but as they are
p special fabric with a peculiar fast
ening. aud are made, not iu the
usual form of hoop-iron, but in the
form or ties, the Treasury Depart
ment very properly distinguishes
between them and hoop-iron, and
decides that the duty on the latter
does n it apply to the former. It
makes the duty on ties 35 per cent,
advalorem, while the duty on
hoop-iron is cent* a pound, i —
The old method of tying cottou T-CQill
bales with hemp ropes has been dis
carded, and tha cheaper and better
iron ties are now employed exclu
sively, and St requireaabont 1,200,-
000 bundles of them a year to sup
ply the planters. The question
whether these ties shall lie subject
to a duty of 35 per cent, ad valorem
as a special fabric, or be classed aa
hoop-iron and made to pay 1% per
cent— twice as great a rate aa the
other—at issoe, next to all proper
construction of the law, is whether
the half dozen hoop-iron manufac
turers in Pennsylvania and Ohio
shall be allowed to extort this extra
amount of money from the cotton
raisers of the Sooth, or not. The
manufacturers pretend that the
Treasury ruling is a great injustice
to them, just as the New England
manufacturers of knit goods pre
tend that a similar ruling on these
goods, is very injurious to their vo
cation. But, suppose the Treasury
shall alter its ruling and decide that
cotton ties shall pay a duly of 1*^0.
a pound—about 80 per cent ad val
orem—would not this be a far
greater injustice to the cotton plant
ers, who boy and use these ties?
Theduty of’lj^c.a pound, which
the manufacturers who demand,
would cost the planters $000,000 a
year. It would be a prohibitory
duty; it would prevent ties from
being imported and give to the
half-dozen home manufacturers a
monopoly of the market with power
to make theirown prices. It would,
in short, deprive thn government of
tho revenue it i:ow receives oil im
ported tics and place the planters at
the mercy of tho half-dozen com
bined manufacturers in two Slates.
Yet these manufacturers have Iho ef
frontery to say that a ruling which
preveuts them from robbing cotton
planters of $900,000 a year is a
wrong to them and an injury to
American industry!
Admitting that borne manufactu
rers of this ought to bo protected at
somebody clsc'a expense, one wonld
think that tho 35 per cent, duty,
which tho Treasury allows, with
tbo ocean freight, insurance and
other expenses on imported ties ad-
ded, ought to be prolectiod enough.
And it is enough. If they do not
make ties with that degree of pro
tection, it is because they are (oo
busily arid profitably engaged iu
making plain hoop-iron and other
similar fabrics.
?ntots in a van* -
these mde prac-
•a? borrowed by
lish ami Dutch physi
cians, by whose recommendation it was
employed in Europe, ar.d has since
come into generalise. Combined with
Juniper and other desirable ii
Central & Southwestern E R
Sav A-N.N-aii, Ga., March 5,1SSI.
» uxl ifter .'UNDAY. tlh, 1»M, pu-
*-i (r: :n!s« on ibe Ctainl *aT So auwai- ■
iilp«diu)d briscbeivill ran ufdkivi: 1
preparation of R-nlrins Com*
pound Fluid Extract .of Buchu and
Juniper. it proves a most reliable reme
dy for Xonreiention or Incontinence of
Urine, irritation. Inriamation or Ulcer
ation of the Blader and Kidneys,
Stone in the Bladder, Gravel or Brick
Dost Deposit, Milky Discharges and all
diseases of Bladder or Kidneys and
Dropsical Swelling in man, woman or
Prepared only by Hunt, Rankin & i —
f - J t.J .11 I Al.
Ga., and sold by all
apr&matal'sat
JVtlu evtisemeuis.
SEE WHAT
HHP
CM WO WILL DO!
WATMESBOBO. i
Mr J. A. Pol bill. Wayn
Sir—I desire to <
FOSS and SCHNflDER,
Queen City
B B E E ,
289, 291, 293, 295 and 297 Freeman St-,
CINCINNATI.
Export Bottled Boer a Specialty*
pt
LV 7.33 p nj f
Ar 7: IS a m j
BAKER COUNTY
GEORGIA—Baker County.
JohnF.fcroU.etal, 1 Bill, He- In
- BOrtttn.ee a!. JVmJSSm
* Cowrt
4.0 p ii* At Augusta Ar Alta m ’
9 44am Ar Miitedgevllle Ar
1 !*• am Ar-,
Jt
or*ordered by tha Court Uul service of
ratSence A. Colley. Sarah A.
Blount by publication In the
Utb
Blount by publication In the Albray Newt and
Advertiser for the term of four months before
the next tarm of this Court.
G. J, WRIGHT, J.&C.A.C.
Nov.I.lMt.
A true extract from tbe mlnnfeoaf mid Court.
B. F. IIudsfetu, Clerk.
Nov. SO, 1830-dec 4-4m.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA— Baku County.
'HXXiXi’S
HEPAT1G PANACEA
§£? iSsSstSErSSf
mediate rAult. I hire btra tiring H. IL F.
I. J. BRINSON,
Contractor&Biiieri
dill!!
AND DEALER IN
has tuVy;
lluU, and . .
from *-M guitdli—blp. Thio to therefore to
notify all parttas latormtr* to b* aad sppa r at
tha Omit of Ordinary ta ha held la and for said
l»*Qutt
MITCHELL. COUNTY.
Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Mitchell County.
B Y virtue of an order from tha Court' of Ordi
nary of said crust*, will be ooli before tbe
Court House door la mid county. between tha le-
e hours of sale, oa tha ftrat Tuesday la Jure.
I, a one-ninth undivided rmslnder Interest la
lots of toad nutabers 271,272, and tost halfofJtt
In Ibe Mh utotrfcs of mid county. Bold for pur*
pose of rrtnveitm—t. Terms cash.
G. W. WILLIFORD,
Guardian of his minor children.
ad' to beautiful. There are tome
funny people here, bat, of course,
5 >u find them everywhere. The
ew Yorkers are very nice. I am
sorry I missed Ban Francisco, but
If I come back again, I shall go
there." She then aaid she was
learning English and intended to
master tha language. “When you
oome back, you most play as Juliet
in English,” remarked the reporter.
“Oh, certainly; I intcud to ao so,
and hope to be able to play, also, iu
English as Beatrice and Rosalind.”
Tho bell warning outsiders to return
ashore then began to ring, and tbe
reporter, after wishing Miss Sarah
a pleasant voyage, withdrew. Those
Who were not passengers began
streaming down the gangway, and
Miss Sarah, feeling heraelf safe from
)ho autograph fiend, appeared on
the hurricane deck, and immediate
ly became the centre of attraction.
A party of ladiea who were return
ing ashore did not express great ad
miration for Sarah. “Ain't ahe hor
rid looking,” remarked one to her
companions. “She’s a perfect fright,”
added another. “And how she is
‘painted up,” broke iu a third, on
whose owu fair face the bloom ofart
was radiant When all outsiders
were ashore and the gang-planks
had been drawn in’Miss Sarah came
down to the main deck. At 10:12
the huge propeller began to revolve
and the steamer went out into the
stream. A rath was made to the
front of the pier, and as soon as
Harsh was seen hundreds of hand
kerchiefs and h its were waved to
ward her. She replied first with
her handkerchief and then with
both handa and arms, returning the
greeting of the crowd with the
graceful gestures of a carefully
drilled nataral genius. As the
ataamer increased the distance the
figures on board became more and
more indistinct, and the people on
the dock slowly dispersed.
The Rigby Plan of Getting a Drink*
The Rigby plan is peculiar and
works smoothly. I have it from
one of the initiated. It U as follows:
When the devotee -feels the coming
on he starts out alone for a walk in
tome unfrequented part of a pine
grove, when he suddenly makes the
discovery of a bottle of moonshine
on the back side ofatree. He picks
itnp and walks solemnly away,
madtuting on spiritual things. Be
fore he has gone far a stranger ap
pears and says: “Beg pardon, sir;
I would liko to have you loan me a
dollar, and the stranger departs,
without disclosing hia name.
A vxbt Interesting experiment
with the molecular telephone in
vented by Robert M. Lockwood
and his son William, of New York,
was tried between that city and
Philadelphia over the ordinary tele
graph wires used by one of the
principal telephone companies.
The result was a surprise to all who
were present. Conversation even
to a whisper in Philadelphia was
heard with perfect distinctness of
articulation, such as is perfectly
practicable for commercial purpos
es. The principle claimed by the
inventors is that of molecular dis
turbance and the suppression of all
vibration.
Til.
'•Mr Dear
President and
Athm» banner interview witb Ben. Emory
Speer.
“The President is my personal
friend, and I have approached him
with perfect freedom to ask him to
appoint honest and capablo officers
in my State. I asked him to appoint
Gen. Lougstrecl, and believe that I
first suggested the appointment to
him. In that ( believe I did great
service to tbe State, for . 1 have a
very high opinion oi Longstrect as
it man. His whole future, and the
future of his children will be with
our people—his renown has been
won among our pw>ple and by tbeir
valor—aud I am very sure that it is
far bettor that he shall fill an office
which concerns them than that it
should be filled by a man from au-
otlicr section. I told the President
that his appointment wonld please
everybody, and I believe it has donv
so, except perhaps a very small
syndicate, who have the right to
differ with me,” said Mr. Speer,
with a amile, “if they choose to do
so.”
“Is itittrue,” said the Banner,
“Hist you have asked the President
to permit you to control patronage
for Georgia?*’
“No,” said Mr. Speer, “it if not
“There are a few of my friends in
office whom I askedViu not to turn
out, and perhaps I shall ask him to
put somo in who are still out; and
why shouldn't 1? I have a great
way of standing to my fricnce.
They have been very true to me,
and if I can, by reaching ont. my
hand, help a good fellow aloug in
life, and give him a lift, aa tbe. say
ing is, why shouldn’t I (lo it! lam
not one of those persons,” said Mr.
Speer, “who think there are no good
people who differ with me. It is
that spirit of intolerance which mv
independenlism always fights. It
is not to the disadvantage
of my district at all that
I havo l he confidence of the Presi
dent, aud if I am not mistaken he
will prove a tar better President
than somo of the hot heads imagine.
Yon ace,” said Mr. Spoer, 'the
President and I served in the House
together. When I made my speech
in the Forty-sixth Congress against
tho riders, the President wrote mo a
note, and sent it across the llonte to
me by a page, which was in these
words: ‘My dear Speer: This is a
proud day for you, aud I reach my
hand across the party lines to ex
tend yon try congratulations.’ I am
rather proud of that,” said Speer,
“especially so wLen I recollect that
Ben Hill wrote me a note the next
day which was even stronger than
the President’s, and that my people,
after I was assailed for that speech,
endorsed it by over 4^)00. majority.”
Mitchell Sheriff Sales.
W ILLbs soil be to. tbs Ont Bam «ssr. Is
lb* town of Camilla, oa tbalnt Toads?
in Jus* MXt, vUbls lbs l«(Sl born of ale, law
afULd numbers (US) t.a kudnd tad tow-
line Id Ibe (Mb) alatb District of mid couutr of
Mf.cbBL Levied oa is tbe property of Tho. p.
▲rime, under and by virtue of a mortgage ft fli
Itsoed from Mitchell Supertor Corn! In fcvor of
C.P. Hartwell. Prorerty pointed ont in ft fit.
Sad levy made by D. B. Davit, former abenfll on
February 23. U77.
Abo, at tho tame time and place. Iota of land
numbeis i 187) ooo hundred and thiri/tovan, and
(141) one hundred and forty-four, in the (10th)
District of tbe aaid eoanty of MitolmiL Let led on
and aold aa tbe property of John Weal, under and
by vtrine ofn fi^afoimeft from Mitchell Superior
Court In favor of Anna Jane West. Prcp-rty
pointed out by plaintiff! Written nolle* of levy
given John Weal, party in
DOUGHERTY COUNTY.
GEORGIA—Dougherty County.
W P. BURKS, guardian* 'of R. Q. Dickerson,
• having applied to the Court of Ordinary
of aaid county for a discharge from hla guardian-
■on. Umi
melt*
of aaid county
ahlp of K. Q. Dickerson.
all parmna coneernad to , C1 .
or-before th i firat Monday In May next, why the
aaid W. P. Burks should not hs dlsmiasad from
his guardianship • f R. Q. IHckeraoo, and receive
Given underni;
1st day of May,41
ly hai
831.
z. j. ouo:
il signati
Unary,
Syphilis
Good Reasons for the Doctor’s Faith.
Uessos, Oi„ Much ta 1S80.
We have for twelve months been prescribing
(•‘Swift** sypbi itlc Specific'*) In tbe treatment J
and Baby other disease* for which il Is
L and tbs results have been moat
tory. not having been disappointed In a
single intone*. We think, for all dtoeates It Is
n cum mended to sure it stands without a peer,
and that all tbe msdtosl profealon will, sooner or
later, be forced to aekaewlrdgi it la thrlremuneat
of ryphlUa, aa a afar gm nan.
N. L. Gaiaowat,MjD.
Atlanta, Ga., Ifoy 24, l 78.
One of our workmen bad a bad case of
Syphilis, of five years* standing, and was cured
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC OOKFAMT, Frepri.
ten, AtlaeU, ii*.
Sold breiti
(blltoe
Why He Stopped.
rind.
“No, gentleman, there’s nothing
the matter with me, but I’ve stop
ped. You know we had a pretty
hot canvass in Arkansas this sum
mer, and I went all over the State
stumping. Well, I saw the graves
of a good many good'fcilows who
began with me, and who are now
in the dark valley or the tight one,
whichever it may be. I saw the
wrecks of other meu who started
with me to be jolly good fellows.
Tho graves and the wrecks set me
thinking. From thinking I began lo
calculate. Well, on a rough calcula
tion, I found that I had already
drank about a barrel aud a half of
whisky more than 1 was entiilcd to.
Then I said to myself that if I drank
any more I should be drinking some
other fellow’s whiskv, and, as I
didn’t want to do that, I stopped. 1
There yon have the whole story.” I
Frank O. Herring, Esq., of the Cham- !
pion Safe Works, 251 and 252 Broad- ‘
way. New York, reports the nse of
St. Jacobs Oil for a stiffness and sore
ness of tbe 6bonlder, with most pleas-
ar.d efficacious effects.—LwitrilU Hone
and Fa-m,
th«t w. v It! p*7 lie sbor* nvmri to
t.amf back
ftteftwm Ar- *1 Us*y
Ai£ M»-lcdj
Kevi to_.A> v:44* m
ton Arll^cam
.Auguwti ...fir -4;*3pm
Ar 2:43 |S «u
233Am Ar ..(Mwtoi.
i:wim ar.
9:tnm Ar ,.Upuu .
7:iAnm Ar~
toll
238 a m Ar Columbia
l:Mk* Ar ...Altoni. ...
Ar-.—Ml!lo.|fv« „
.— Ar- hetun • a .
5:Alam Ar Aur»*
7:*Sim Ar.
> if
2:15pm Lv-.—-Eatontoo..
IftpH Lv Mtllcdgwlllff-
4:45 pm Ar-.- Macua
233 a m Ar Cbtumbu* —
4:03am Ar .......Albany
1:40am Ar.
430 n to Ar.
7:15mm Ar.
-Ar »:Hin
-Angwrta-
Pullman Palace Hloeplng CAra Savannah to 1 i*-
clanati via Macon, AttaMa aad Cincinnati South *
era Railway on 740 wto treln. -
— Can on all Night Trains be-
id Augusta, Augusta aal Ma
ma* Atlanta.
Eutaula train connects at Fort Valley for Perry
daily (except Sunday), and at Cuihbert lor Fort
Gaines dstl/, (except Sunday.)
Trains an Blakely Estsnsfoa runs daily (ex
cept Sunday) from Albany U Arlington, aai dai
ly (except Monday) from Arlington so Albany.
At navaanah with Savannah. Florida aad
Western Railway, at Augtnta w.tb all linn to
North and Lari, at Atlanta with Air Una aad
Kaaaeaaw Route* to all point* Norib, East aad
Wart.
Pullman Sleeper from Augusta to Washington
without chance.
Berths inetoepieg Cars can be secured at
SCHREINER'S. 127 inugiem street.
GBOl A. Whxtxxxad, WILLIAM ROGERS,
Gen. Peso. AgL, Uen. SupLU IL R, riavaanah
J. C Shaw, W. F. BHELLMaN.
Gon.Tr~.Agl . ttupt- d. W. R. IL* Mae*n
Gcxexal M an a OCX’s Omct, J
Satannaii, Ua n May 1st, 188L)
O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, MAY 1st,
Passenger trains on this Road will ran ne
follows:
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah Dally at 8;:o P M
Leave Jesafr - 530 PM
LeaveTebu uvlile “ ..434PM
Arrive at Callahan “ 9:2PM
Arrive it JackaonviFe •* lo:15 P M
Lea vu Jacksonville “ “MAM
Leave Callultun *• 8:33 AM
Arrite ttt Tebcauvillo 44 -....1136 AM
Arilro at Jcavp 44 1230 PM
Arrive at Savannah 44 23) P M
Passengers from Savannah for Brun.trv*ek
t tke this train, arriving at Brunswick at 7 45
A M.
Pnaaengera leave Brunswick at 930 A M-
arriving at Savannah 230 f. M.
Paaamigera for Darien take this train.
Passengers leaving M aeon at 9 At A*M«(daily
oonnuct at Jeanp witb rni- train for Florida.
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesttp with train arriving at Macon
7:43 P M. dauy.
Drawing Room Can on this train between
Savannah and Jacksonville,
JACKSONVILLE EXP.BESS.
Leave Savannah 0*11/ at 1130 p M
Leave Je np - 235 AM
— ** 43» A M
*:'« a M
.735 AM
.1130 AM
....2:15PM
...534PM
... 4:44PM
830 PM
..ildOPM
. 2:15 AM
Leave Teb-*au\ illc 44
Arrive at Callahan 44
Arrive at Jacksonville 44
Arrive at Live Oak daily (ex
cept Sundays) **
Leave Live Oak daily (except
'U:. day)
Leave Jacksonville 44
Leave Callahan 44
Leave Tebeauville 44
Arrive at Jesup 44
Arrive at Savannah 44
Palace Sleeping Cars oa (Ids fain .Jail v be
tween Savaaa ih and Jacksonville, Charleston
and Jacksonville and Macon ana Jackson
ville.
No change of care between Savannah and
Jacksonville and Macon ami Jacksonville.
I assengere leaving Macon 7: to 1*. IL con
nect at Jesup with this train for Florida daily.
Passenger* from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train striving at Macon
o:!5 A. M.dn ly. *
Passenger* from Savsnnsli for Gainesville.
Cedar Keyj tt*t Fforbla t ransit Road take
this train.
Passenger* from Savaamh for Madison,
Moa ice J to, Tallahassee anti tjuincy lake this
train.
hiom team Quincy, TalUhume. Boc-
Ucello and Murium, take this train, neetins
uleeplaa cun ut TebcuuTille at sou r. m.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leu re Suranukh, dallr at .A0P).
Leave Jesup “ 7 AS t*il
Le.ee Tebesurille “ S3)PM
Leure DuPont •• .... 11 ale tit
AnieeTboasnerilr “ 5SO a il
Arrlrc ltilubridgre '•
eura^n^OjjtoBj-e^ « .. . A?Sp2
A. E. MOBLEY.
FOR—SALE BY
GILBERT Sc OO.
BUILDER’S SUPPLIES,
ALBANY. GA.
Lumber, Brick, . Shingles
Lathes, Lime aud
Cement
■ uuMatljr-oa bud. unri errien promptly
tiled.
- t-vrEsttmsfm lurnlshM thrbulldlnfs sad
4 r Tr2?; .....
terprtooC tbU k‘n.1, uto ) am .leurmlneri to
;7gS2tfSB&ri to.1 ra.Ut.ct.on «irar-
,n STOFFICK: At‘S. StemeV Store
on Washington Street, • -
Albany. t:«-w«ta.».l»e.. U
If «muu J.Cuuit.- •. Si.*t,D. tsviu. Js
iLUld.uu .
| Usee IceueS ibe Wurrhu—e toUHriyuera^ by
Welch A Baraa, usd win rany «> u
| BTJSI3STESS.
Will (l» prue.pt uAl c am utntBra la sdii b—
Immenlrnsted lo their cs«e.
Albeny, (is . April 1.1481. dlwAwlm
. ( .U
'£d*J
,t< 4 -/ . (j .
i,n.id-v.:
niininfn i
F-a-TTISOIT’S •
- *■“ «- ^ n t ~ tel I
Iron Works! HHHHHHHHII
I . UdJO lOfDHliUIi. j
(EsUbliuhea 1867.) ! L
I mm
Fnators & Machinists, SPRINGr
ALBANY, GA.
Iron ant) Brass Castings of all De-
| scriptions.
Proprietor! Cl OK'S IMPROVED
Plow and Planter.
Made under Cool-V* rebut. I heart, <wr.rw*
fill «ed besltbfut. EttManira snemmd. t.ri.u
tbe cbn l> laid a quilled )»ri. . blrh ier.dri> i urlini
inipoedbte. Kcwaru «rf lufrbi;enwtili- A-« lot
Cooley's Corset end (tke lin Ml*r. 5.l.d lo u..
tbnxuh your druler for * Moq.Jc Cowct. non*"? Jn
prim from 75 cent* to tin. and year enter .111 be
ailed by return lull Mwatotired esly ly Ibe
Minetotario, tapa*. .
• BATES, SEES t. COOIZY,
343, 343 «rrd S47 J!rcm.‘i«y.
vcun". but cocra.
IUmthsT
The Best in.the Market.
iVuaw. JVWwf w4*iif ■imhiliil
S»V»ni.n-nnrmA4A\g.PBn.n. janl-Crow
Mrs. B. GOLINSKY
l
A STOCK WHICH FOR
Variety, Style and Elegance
STANDS
Without a Rival in Georgia!;
Our Various Departments are,rejjlute; with . t:
Choicest and Rarest Novelties!
1* NOW RECEIVING DULY FOR UEB
.Y and PERMANENTLY cur*
Lem* Bark, 8eto*tea, Gravel. Diabetes,
«M%C .... .
cdUriae,Fiia lathe Beck, S>de or Loiaa. Ner-
veu* Weaker**, aad la fort nil dtoerdme *f the
Bladder aad Urinary Organs whether contracted
• dUemeoroUtTrwbe. **
If yen are sufiirring from Female
Leeeorrfaoex. or aay dtoeaae of tbe
Kidney*, Moftfter or Urinary Or^na,
YOU CAN
Without swallowing *
Hz*
PROF. GUILMETTE’S
French Kidney Fad,
res by Absorption.
TESTWONI \LS FROM THE PEOPLE.
JadgsBochanaa.Lawyer,Tslsdo O.ujs
“Onj of ProLGuilmeuFs French Kidney Prda
coxed me of Lnabago in three wcekP time. My
wfts.’sassassspsr
3rigk:’« Dtoeue of the Kidaejt. For
"Fbr years JksT*l
my tflMto my bod,
wsnkaam I
PadianJ i
Leave Bainbrulxe
Leave Thomasvuie
Arrive at DuPont
Arrive Jesup
ArriT* Savannah
530 PM
..835 PM
- .... 1:45 AM
“ 4:»4A M
•* 930 A M
<huu aad Albany,*anS h JaeScavfflle Mil
Montgomery daily without change.
uori from Uoooo. Kufanlu, lloutnaery, Mo-
b : lc. Xcw Orlraus, etc.
MaiKteumerlraTcsBuubririnforAnalchi-
ooU uod Colutbu «tct7 Tocoduy uuri Satur-
duT.
Close oraMctioa at JucksoaTitle daily (Sur-
days excepted) for Unco Cot. Spiteu, £u
MSSEi&r-*-
Traintoa B. A A. BJt
wot. at 1137 A. YI„ and for
4 :W I‘. YL, tUUy, except Sunday.
Tbrou*h Ticket* mid and Sleeping Car I
Brattopud Drawing Boom Car arty—modn- !
tiorausearadas Bren's Ticket OOce, So.s
Ball street, awl at tbo company’s t epoc, i
Soot of Liberty Street. j
J. ^.Trsox.M;
JA8.T. TAYLOR,
General Passenger Agent.
.TOIIS BRESSAJi,Manager.
C2-.A..
FASHION E3IPORIUM
TBE FINEST ASSORTMENT OF
Buntings,-Plaid, Drcss&Trmmiiug.Silks,Satins,
French Lawns, Linen Lawns, Embroideries,
ItaCBS, (real and imitatio.) ever brot car to ttrir market.
Nun** Veiling, Grenadines. SWiand Lisle Thread Mlts
- 31 ' and Gloves.
UtoLrabura
MILLINERY ASSORTMENT
ibe sSyKu—lily sW pricsn, na I »ip sea tl tbe lowmt mtos tocas*—l/.
n—,—m,- MRS.B. OOLIMSKY.
AUGr F. FEANKLIN & CO.,
FEEa),
Storage ill Gommissiou Mercliauts,
BUSINESS SOLICITED.
FinSTHSTEY’S BTJIXjIDIlsra-,
Nothing Left Undone to 3Iake Shopping Pleasant to ]
those who Visit our Establishment.
[PEf Prices Low this Season.
Call and see us.. * '
Efl*
■VJ Ur ■
-J**
ici
— *.• 5-
* fo
ritoi:
** ! rr * # «* f 'O J- *
—__ • V--M
-• \<f£aq*c ift ■{,-fc .fmt%; , *h
filhea*.*, J tifia.-- ^>5, ,
v - - " :
‘1‘- v *. !tg, ;
•
v- ---p. v-.
•tco.,
•d* '41*05.*
-A*
..
"hdlfnl Yfct ifetra
rpHE Marsh ail How, with ita ca^acioua vesti-
A tok exteo?Ire and elegant Terandai, af-
^ ^ ■ , fordlor ladies a fins view of tbe pioji^itdc. airy
IL N-htera. Who-eait Greer, Hod.ajr, O. says *cd vdMullIal^ room*, and csxirxlod txsle, a
•*! suffered for 73 year* with taia* Lacx audio nmnwlU—““ A * 4 * — a
-?e week* was permanenlly cured by *-
of Prof. GaUmeuPa Kid nay 1 ad."
, F. Keealinj, M. D-, Drngrtot, Ln
Ted , when sending in an orderT>r Kidney Pads LEADING SAVANNAH HOTEL.
tionably the largest and
m we bad and I r*-
ihaa anjtblog I eTfr
' «uer i
wntet
-I wt re one of tbe frit
celred tnor** benefit fros i
used. In fact the r
lac ion than a: .
Kay A fc"ioeaiak
and are hrariug ut gjod rrsuft
day."
Prof. Gnilmettc's French Lircr Pad.
Will positirely core FeTer asd Ague, Dumb
Apir, AjTueCakw, Bili-iua Ferrr, Jauudice. Dya-
pep-ia, aod ill disfuts of the Liter, fclLUitb lod
tflood. Prior fiA0 br mail, .-cod for Prof Guil-
oelte'i T'.ciUm on ibe KiJneri and U^er free
by mat!. FRENCH PAD
mch5-«
feb!2-w6m
Bay Street, BRUNSWICK, GA.
THE BEST BY THE MARKET!
I rcapecifally refer tba trarelln* public to
tooe of their friends who bare been guests of the
Marshall H under toe presect toanage-
Th«* inmaaed patronage recelrcd by this
house haa neceasiuud tbe lease of what was
torrc«*r!y known aa tbe "florida House.'* aud i(
been supplied with e!egaot furniture, car
pets, etc., and forms a rraod combination under
one aiina^ruient which wul be appreciatai r*y
the traveling public.
lo to£^uSio.
i Sar., Dec.7,1880-tf.
JOHN BRESNAN.
Manager.
“EXCELSIOR”
COOK STOVES
LEADING FEATURES:
IVsnble Wood rV v 7Ts Wo<^d-Grata
Adjustable Iaaptr 6w.nr:nir H«a:*h-l'ute
Int*rrhsisswabie AStoMlk Sbelf
• • • ‘t -
•• ^ ‘. , . .
iu*.
•" -U,;. .
-4* .
■“* ‘ h; vi V.
11 of .
Sr t l-
l * ftr'./jwj*,. -■ * t f ,
JWlli ***•
'taniy Oa»-Bn:'nr L w
N::•»-.X*!'Double a
ru 1
Tt C ao
ry K-mr Curei
Ltdd IRuiLlrated Ik
Mi>rrACTCtr^> XT
ISAAC A SHEPPARD k CO., Batbmore. Md
rVXi And for a to by principal dealers.
March 14,1181-tf
8. MAYER A GLAUBER*
ItnPSTINCT PRINT