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CULTURAL.
Gja
£ W&
. The polimi 1
find fertili:
grain. Iff
rfhe silk fa
to be inip:
corn fails
cob hem
_ qiicully-see:
ITS CULTIVATION'.
a#*4-' ~
issels fills'npon
It anil f
ness or other
Generi
“in evi
by the pollen the
r or develop on the
t rows, so fre-
he cob.
examination of the stalk
or the commencement of
(■joint that has a groove.
GILT edge butter.
The tepiptaxion to use coloring mat
ter of some kind in butter making da
ring the winter months, when bfiiter is
liable to be off-colored, is great pud
inuch of this article which grains pur-
s ]. chasers at liberal prices, with its golden
es right
Jevelop-
meDt? I.have contended for several
years, that every such organization
would develop, on every grooved joint
'l were proper attention "to selecting and
sowing seed; to proper culture and
proper plant-food.
Like all other cereals, com has so
deteriuted by bad treatment that it has
not health enough to mature even one
good ear to the stalk. With ordinary
treatment all other grasses develop their
heads or ears to iTomO; extent, and why
should notLCOrn do the same? For sev
eral years I have been, giving com
./and wheat some attention. I find com
susceptible of much greater improve
ment than most farmers are willing to
to admit-. It is not in. the province of
this article to give the results of exper
iments. I will, however, give pne to
prove that there is mush room for im
provemeht of coni. Several years ago I
commenced . selecting my seed com in
(lie field, taking only those stalks that
ripened earliest and" that lind not less
• two good'ears.- These were cut up as
soon as' tlie husk was brown and the ear
well glazed, and Shocked in the field to
cure. After standing. for a month or
more the (w ears only were savtd for
seed.
Great care should be laken in selec
ting not only those stalks that have the
greatest number of ears, but those that
look most like corn—nice, trim, uni
form^ vigorous and healthy; - Large
over-grewn .stalks are too gross and too
s ' .sterile—they cannot be made prolific.
The resnlt of this- method' of saving
ieej,'together with propel culture, has
increased myyieldon the sam^six acres,
in six years, from 20 to 75 bushels per
acre.
Before treating of the soil, I will
give.an account of the actual loss most
"farmers sustain in “pulling fodder,”
“cutting tops,” aud letting their covfl
dry up in the fiejd |>efore.it is gathered.
Fodder pulling injures the grain nearly
IS per cent., cutting tops 9 per cent.,
and by letting the‘ whole crop dry up
ik the'ifeld, it loses" 20 per cent, of its
* ogn weight. • So you.see, by this slip
shod way of treating the best and sur
est crop we have, we lose nearly 50 per
cent, ofit all. 1 How shall we save it
then? you ask. In a very simple way.
.When fodder pulling time comes and
the ears well glazed, instead of takin
the. blades .off,’‘cut the stalks up close
' up to the ground, and shocked imme
diately in bunches the wind cannot
twist or blow down. In this way the
" fodder is all saved, and the stalks too.
The husk is mneh'-better and the corn
. loses nothing, but makes much food,
much better feed, much better seed and
much-mere; money. “But,” you say,
“it will shrivel and become loose on the
cob;’’ Not • a bit of it I All the sub
stance of the'stalk at the time of cut
.■ ting is absorbed by the car, and it is
matured in the same way. that wheat is
- when cut in the dough state. This
method insures full weight, saves the 20
per cent, loss by the old plan
Another item,
husk ; cured in this way are’• worth at
. least-three dollars per tog to any far-
"mer; whereas, if left to die' in the field,
they will not amount, from' a hundred
acres, to a day’s wages.
Any soli han.be made to produce
corn, provided it is not too wet. Soils
differ so materially on the same farm
that the farmer, to produce, good crops,
has to make them a real study. Once
. knowing them, aud what they need and
demand, ha very easily' increases the
yield. For corn land should be plowed,
turnine ;tlie sod only as deep as the
grass roots extend, at the same time
subsoiling with a heavy subsoiler and a
strong team. The best fertilizer a far
mer of . limited means can use
for his corn crop can be
made behind his cows. Straw, chafl,
leaves, muck, surface soil, barn yard
serapiDgs, refuse of every description,
well tempered with the dropping and
manure water of the cow stalls make as
good a compost as the farmer needs.
His compost heaps must be kept under
cover, and should be turned over at
least oneo a month. The straw, chaff
and leaves should no* be thrown upon
the heap until tha cattle have well wet
them.
In conclusion, I must urge upon my
brother farmers the importance of put
ting iu less laud and preparing it better.
With good seed oiie acre well cultivated
will yield 50 bushels; which gives in
finitely more satisfaction and is done
with much less labor and expense than
the skimming over of ten acres wih the
same result;' Almost any of our up
land soils can be made to produce 50
bushels by a little scientific culture.and
saving of seed;—A; E. Blunt in Rural
New Yorker.
s-o-s
The Japanese Persimmon.—Per
sons, who cultivate it in California, re
port the Japanese Persimmon as iank-
Well may they.say that', if it really ex
ceeds in the taste andmerits, the com
mon persimmon of our section as much
as it is described io do. We hay^al-
ways deemed the former, when/.^nlly
ripe a delicious fruit. Our nursery
men can doubtless procure seeds or
plants for those who may desire to cul
tivate the Japan variety. It is said
will flourish* wherever the eom-
kiud are ‘found.
■ ’•
complexion varying from the pale straw
hue, preferred by some, to the deep
prime yellow, favored by others, owes
its success to a dose of annatlo, tumer
ic, saffron,, marigold or other similar
substance. Less and less white butter
finds its ways into the market not be
cause less is made than formerly, but be
cause itfTias been colored. Its makers
argue that as it is in all respects safe
to color equally good with summer or
grass-made butter there is no objection
to adding the coloring, which improves
its appearance and thereby enhances its
market value without otherwise affect
ing the article.
That -butter coloring, whem judi
ciously prepared and employed, does
not change the flavor of the butter, has
been proven over again, no one testing
samples of colored and uncolored but
ter from the same churning being able
to detect any difference excepting that
of hue. But that colored butter is
equal iu excellence to butter which has
received its desirable color from proper
management of milk, from good cows
well fed, is quite another matter. It
stands to reason that cream which in
winter nearest approaches that from
grass-fed cows produces in every re
spect a better class of butter than white
butter can possibly be, high colored ar
tificially. Managers of butter factories
understand this as do the dairy-maids
of only a few cows, who churn and
work butter with old time appliances.
Hence while many butter makers use
coloring matter they are generally re
luctant to confess it; all prefer, when
circumstances will admit of it, to obtain
gilt-edged butter by possessing, first,
only such cows as incline to yield rich
milk, by feeding these animals well,
and last, but by no means least, by
getting cream up as quickly as possible
after the milk is drawn. When, as will
sometimes occur, pale butter comes, all
exertions to the contrary notwithstand
ing, a little coloring is employed, but
os tbe exception, not the rule. In the
artificial coloring of butter nothing has
perhaps given as much satisfaction as
annul toine or the dry extract of an-
natto, which having been prepared in
liquid form is added to the cream at the
beginning of the churning.-.Farmer's
World, ' '
—: UO-< '•
To Keep Skippers out op Meat.—We
have given several receipts' for this.
We give another that never fails. As
soon as the rmoking process is over,
wrap it in "fine cloth, or place it in heavy
paper sacks. If this is done before
flies can. liaye access to the meat to de
posit their eggs, it will never be troub
led by skippers. The two important
objects to effect is to secure the meat
against the flics aud the air and moist
ure.
A Deodorized extract of Petroleum,
The Only Article tliat Will Re
store Hair on Bald Heads.
What the World has been
Wanting for Centuries.
£
The greatest discovery of our day, so far as a
large portion of humanity is concorued, is CAR-
BOLINE, an article prepared from petroleum, and
which effects a complete and radical cure in case of
baldness, or where the hair, owing to diseases of
the scalp, has become thin and tends to fall out
It is also a speedy restorative, and while its use se
cures a Invariant growth of hair,' it also brings back
the natural color, and gives the mOBt complete sat
isfaction in the using. cWhe falling ont of the hair,
the accumulatiofis of dandruff, arid the premature
change in color are all evidences of a diseased con
dition of the scalp and the glimds which nonrish the
hair. To arrest these causes the article used must
possess medical as well as chemical virtues, and the
change must begin under the scalp to be of perma-.
nent and lasting benefit. Such an article is CAR-
' BOLINS, and, like many other wonderful discov
eries, it is found to consist of elements almost in
their natural Btate. Petroleum oil is the article
which is made to work such extraordinary results;
bnt it is after it has been chemically treated and
Completely deodorized that it is in proper condition
for the toilet. It was in far-off Russia that the
effect of petroleum upon the hair was first observed,
•l.o ol,l , T7 T U .... , , a Government officer having noticed that n partially.
Be old plan. An English paper publishes the results bala . hcadea servant of his, when trimming the
The .stalk, fpdd'er-l&HE ^obtained by the analysis;of-|ome, twenty- ^ lam had a taWt of , ng „„ oil-besmeared
. -t-B.<- * iv - ■ one hair restorers or hair dyes, fourteen J bands v locks, and -the «««*
of which were found to be practically iden- nf w
The comiDg reunion of Texas veterans
will seem more like a funeral than a fes
tival to , many. Moses Aiitiii Bryan,
SeCivt-try of the veterans’ Association,
estimates that not more than twenty-
five of the three hundred men who
stormed San Antonio under Milan are
living; and of the seven hundred and
eighty-three men reported by General
Houston as engaged iu tlie battle of
San Jacinto, not more than seventy
can answer to the roll-call to-day.
STANDARD WEIGHTS.
Ah Act to fix by law tbe standard
weight of a bushel of tbe articles and
commodities hereinafter mentioned,
Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Gene
ral Assembly of the State of Georgia,
that the legal weight of the follow
ing articles and commodities per bushel
shall be as follows:
Wheat 60 lbs.
Slielledcorn 56
Corn in ear..... 70
Peas .GO
Bye 56
Oats. ...•« • • •* .32
Barley . 47
Irish potatoes y 60
Sweet potatoes............ 1.. .55
White beans 60
Clover seed.. 60
Timothy seed......... .....56
Flax seed 56
Hemp Seed. 44
Buckwheat 52
Bine glass seed.. - .14
Dried peaches (unpeeled) 33
Dried peaches (peeled) 38
Dried apples 24
Onions 57
Stone coal so
Unslaked lime 80
Turntos 55
Ccm meal 43
Wheat bran 20
CottoD seed 30
Ground pea3 • • • • 25
Plastering hair g
Sec. 2. Bepeals all conflicting law
Approved February 20th, 1875.
irons .
GREAT DEMOCRATIC PAPER
OF THE
so utu-east.
HEAD’S
FRIEND.
IXTITH THE OEFNI^GHtf another political cana-
V V paign and business season, m desire to pre
sent the claims of the v ; ‘ ~
DAILYMORJSINe HEWS
to the patronage of the public.
The features that have rendered the Morning
News so popular will be maintained, and the am
ple facilities os the establishment devoted ■ to ma
king it, if possible. stHL more worthy- o f the confi
dence and patronage of the people of Georgia and
Florida.
The editorial deparment will be conducted, as
heretofore, with'dignified moderation, but, at the
aame time, with vigorous and earnest devotion to
the interests of onr section, and tha principles of
the Natio lal Democratic Party. Its State, General
and Telegraphic news departments, and its T ocal
and Commercial columns will be kept up to their
old s'andard of completeness and reliablility, and
improvements made whenever they may suggest
themselves. In a word, the M»ming News wiU
comprise every feature that renders the nows
of to-day attractive, and its patrons may coni
ly look to its columns for the latest information in
regard tocurrent events. Yielding to no riva.ry in
its own proper field, it will ollow no competitor to
outstrip it in journalistic enterprise.
Besides the weU known
DAILY MORNING NEWS
we publish a mammoth eight-page,
THE WEEKLY NEWS,
the largest paper in the Southern Ststes. ThiB pa
per contains a careful compiiotion of the general
news from the daily issues of the week. Telegraph
ic Dispatches and Market Reports, carefully edited
Agricultural and Military Departments, with choice
Literary and Mifcellaneous reading, and as a dis
tinctive feature
ORIGINAB SERIAL STORIES,
written expressly for its pages by popular authors;
thus constituting it a comprehensive, entertaining
and instructive family newspaper.
We also issue a lively Snnday paper,
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAM,
which contains the Local and Telegraphic news of
Saturday night.
'0—
Subscription, (Prepaid.)
Daily, six months, $5 00; twelve months, $1 00.
Tri-weekly, sixmonths, $3 oO; twelve months, $600.
The Weekly, six months, $100; twelve inontha,
$2 00.
Sunday Telegram, six months, $150; twelvo
months, $2 50.
Money can be sent to my address by registered
letter, cr P. O. order at my risk.
J. H. ESTILL,
No. 3 Whitaker street, Savannah, Ga.
HAIR PTES.
How the Public are Imposed upon.
0 practically iden
tical in their nature. They contained sul
phur, in suspension, and also lead in vary
ing, but always considerable quantity.
Three of these preparations had American
labels,' the rest English. All of them con
tained lead sufficient to cause disease of
the brain, lunacy, &c., while some of them .
contained sufficient mineral poison to de-
strov life. Had the English chemist tried
his hand on the great American hair re
storer, Carboline, a deodorized extract of
petroleum, he would have no report about
sulphur, lead, and like poisonous sub
stances. He will find, if able to analyze the
mysterious properties of this wonderful
product of Nature, a hair dye and a hair
invigorator that is not only free from de
leterious qualities, but possessed of heal
ing virtues beyond any.article ever yet ap
plied to the human scalp, and would hand
in his report of analysis with the following
resnlt: Carboline is prepared from the oil
as it flows from nature's great chemical
laboratory, the earth, and is now presented
to the public without fear of contradiction,
as the best restorative and beautifier of the
Hair the. world has ever produced. It
performs what others only claim for their
preparations. It is an elegant dressing,
removes dandruff, cleans Use scalp, pre
vents tbe hair from falling out, restores tbe
hair on bald heads, restores it to its orig
inal color, makes it grow rapidly, will not
stain the skin, contains not a' particle of
lead, silver, sulphur, or other deleterious
drugs. It is a natural product of the
earth’.contaimng the elements required by j M tisfieffVta misapplication will convince them
resnlt was in n‘
few months a much finer head of black, glossy hair
than he ever had before. The oil was tried on
horses and cattle that had lost their hair from the
cattle plague, and the resnlts were as rapid aa they
were marvelous. The manea and area the tails of
horses, which had fallen oat, were completely re
stored in a few weeks. These experiments were
heralded to the world, bnt'the knowledge was prac
tically useless to the prematurely bald and gray, es
- no one in civilized society conld tolerate the nee of
refined petroleum as a dressing for the hair. Bnt tha
jskiU of one of onr chemists has overcome the diffi
culty, and by a process known only to himself, he
has, after very elaborate and costly experiments, suc
ceeded in deodorizing refined petroleum, which
renders it susceptible of being handled as daintily
as tlie famous eau de cologne. The experiments with
the deodorized liquid on the human hair were at
tended with the most astonishing resnits.JA few
applications, where the hair was thin and falling,
gave remarkable tone and vigor to the scalp and
hair. Every particle of dandruff disappears on
the first or second dressing, and the liquid so search
ing in its nature, seems to penetrate to the roots at
once, and set np a radical change from the start. It
is well known that the most beautiful colors are
made from petroleum, and, by some mysterious
operation of nature, the nse of this article gradu
ally imparts a beautiful light-brown color to the
hair which by continued nse, deepens to a black.
The color remains permanent for an indefiniteiength
of time, and the change is so gradual that the most
intimate friends can scarcely detect its progress.'
In a word, it is the most wonderful discovery of
the age. and well calculated to make the prema
tnrely bald and gray rejoice.
THE SAVANNAH
MORNING-
ST. NICHOLAS,
Scribncrs’s Illustrated Magazine.
For Boys and Girls.
Messrs. Scribner & Co., in 1873 began tlie publi
cation of St. Nicholas, an Illustrated Magazine for
1 oys and Girls, with M*»ry Mapcs Dodge as editor
Five years have passed since the first number was
issued, and the magazine has won the highest po
sition. It has a monthly circulation of
OYER 50,000 COPIES.
It is published simultaneously in London and
New York, aud the transatlantic recognition is al
most as general and hearty as the American, Al
though the progress of the Magazine has been a
steady advance, it has not reached its editor’s ideas
ofbo6t, because her ideal continually outruns it,
and the magazine switty follows after. To-day
St, Nicholas stands alone in
THE WORLD OF BOOKS,
The New York Tribune has said ofit: "St. Nicho
las lias reached a higher platform, and command,
for Its service wider resources in art and letters,
han any of its predecessors or conlemporarinies
Tbe London Literary World says: “There is not
magazino for the young that eau he said to eq ua
this choice production of Scribners’ Press."
Good Things i'or 1878-9.
The arrangements for literary and art contribn
tions for the new volume—the sixth—are completo
drawing from already favorite sources as well a
from promising new ones. Mr. Frank R. Stock
ton's new serial story for boys,
“AJ0LLY FELLOWSHIP,”
Will run through twelve monthly parts—beginning
with the number for Novcmhar, If 78.' ’the firet
volume,- aud will he illustrated by James E.
Kelly. The Btory is one OJ travel and adventure
in Florida and the Bahamas. For the gi :1s, a con-
tinned fairy-talo,
“HALF A DOZEN HOUSEKEEPERS
By Katharine D. Smith, with illuptratioDS by Fred
erick Deilman, begins in the same numbe; and a
fresh serial by Susan Coolidgo, entitled “Eyo.
bright,” with plenty of pictures, will be commenc
ed early in the volume. There will also be a con
tinued fairy-tal e, called
“BUMPTY DUDGET’S TOWER.”
Written by Julian Hawthorne, and illustrated by-
Alfred Fredericks. About the other familiar fea
tures of St. Nicholas, the editor preserves a good-*
humored silence, content, perhaps, to let her five
volumes already issued, prophesy concerning the
sixth, in respect to short stories, pictures, poems,
humor* instructive sketches, and the lure and the
lore- of **Jack-in-the-Pulpit,” the “Very Little
Folks” Department, and the “Letter Box” and the
‘Biddle Box.”
Terms, $3,00 a year; 35 cents a number.
Subscriptions received by the publisher of this
paper, and by all booksellers and postmasters, Per
sons wishing to snbscrib e direct with tbe publish
ers should write name, post-office, county, and
state, in full, and send with remittance check or P.
O. money order, or registered leiter,
SCBIBNEB & CO.,
743, Broadway, New York,
iiaoaaw
BEING
THE LARGEST AND BEST, THEY HAVE EVER HAj^
INCLUDING e*^au<I
• ' ■ • - ■ “* *iU*H >C S
Dry Goods, Boots *JPE$!
.t f‘-r 1 cnoteq »sw r<!OG|C‘m mIT* M £ .. . v wduUoS
Crockery, Class-Ware, etc.;, etc,
fsiraconftj'r 'SSSaBUl .N.
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[ImTe^aL^Mfficdgeville...^...^........ *44
ALSO WILL KEEP A COMPLETE STOCK OF
PROVISIONS,
Marc, 27{lyr.
PLANTATION SUPPLIES, ETC.
MOORE & TUTTLE,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
u wag.:
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umbns, Enfaula and Albanyi-daily, makiTf. <■)..
‘ !r ^ufa)iia fraia cminefliUt ¥ort' Talley f or fnrr
dapy except Sunday, and.at •lnthh.it t n y c ’ r (
NOW OPENING
AT
JE3M gSZOITIE 35 OJ2LX- 8 -A.'^ r -A.'Sr ? S
AN EXTENSIVE STOCK OF
OLOTHIMG and HATS,
For Men, Boys and Children, for Spring and Summer,
OUR GOODS ARE C HOICE, .
And all our prices low.
WINSHIP ■’& CALLAWAY, .
I 50 SECOND STREET,
MACON, - - -
April Iff—1m.
R. H. MAY & CO.:;
98 Cherry Street, Macon, G ; a-
Manufacturers and Dealers iu . .
WAGONS,
BUGGIES,
CAE1IA@ES;
HARNESS, SADDLES, WHSPS, BRIDLES, COLLARS AND
NAMES, TRUNKS, TRAVELLING SACS, LEATHER,
CHILDRENS CARRIAGES.
Call and exvoiine our stock before purchasing.
2C8 Broad atreet, Augusta.
Depositories—98 Cherry Street, Macon; and
* sep 6—78
BLACKWELL’S
DURHAM
TOBACCO
Watches $3 to $7. Revolvers.
*2.50. Over 100 latestNovelties.
As'ti ranted. SoriapplyCo.XuhTiUe.Tenn.
BOOKS;?; MILLION
A complete Guide to Wedlock,
Huiband, *nd Wife, Celek«er°anci
Matrimony compared. Impedimenta
We advise our readers to give it a trial, feeling
Tcmof
, «-» . _ * . - , PUUPUCU l tun out wuimiw iuv«u ui
the hair to teed upon. A few applications its wonderful qZhc:*.—Pittsburgh Commercial of
will show its restorative qualities. Does 0-1 ,c ~
not require months of continued nse be
fore you perceive any result It is cool
ing, cleanly, and too much praise can not
be bestowed upoa it Sold by druggists.
The Home Jo urnal,
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE.
One Copy One Year $2.00
•* “ ■ Six Months 1.00
“ •* Three Months. ;.- 50
Clubs of Ten One Year 15.00
•« “ Six “ •' 1G.G0
No Extra Charge for Postage.
<zu
Local Notices 10 cents per line each insertion.
Regular business advertisements first In sertio
$1.00 per inch.—each-subsequent insertion 5U cents
per inch. . .
CONTRACT ADVERTISING.
Space. | .Imo. | 3 mo. | 6 mo. [ 12 mo.
Four inches^
Qnar. Gol. .'
Half Col. ;
One Col. ' ’
. 2.50 I 5.no
4.00 8,00
6.00 | 32.00
- .7.00 • 15.uu
12.00 1 25.00
18.00 40.00 -
8.0C
12.00
18.00
ss
00.00
12.00 ..
18.00
27.00
40.00
60.00
100.0(1
All suberixtioa and advertising bills arc uavable
a advance, unless by special contract.
s by special contract.
■
Oct. 22,1817.
The article is telling its own story tn the hands at
thousands who are using it with the most gratifying
and encouraging resnlts:
W. H. Brill & Co., Fifth Avenue Pharmacy, says.
"We have sold preparations for the hair for upward
of twenty years, but have never had one to sell as
well or give each universal satisfaction. We there
fore recommend it with confidence to our friends
and the general public.”
Mr. Gustavos F. Hall, of the Oates Opera
Troupe, writes: “ After six weeks’ use 1 on con
vinced, as are also my comrades, that your * Carbo-
liae’ has and is producing a wonderful growth of
hair where i had none for years.”
C. 1L Smith, of the Jennie Might Combination,
writes: “ After using your * Carboline’ three weeks
1 am convinced that bald heads can be * re-haired.’
It’s simply wonderful in my case.”
B. F. Arthur, chemist, Holyoke, Mass., writes:
“ Yonr ‘ Carboline’ has restored my hair after ereiy-
ttiin. else had failed.’’
Joseph E. Fond, attorney-at-law, No. Attleboro,
Mass., writes: For more.than 20 years a portion of
my head has been as smooth and free from hair as a
billiard ball, bnt-some eight weeks ago I was in
duced to try your Carboline, and the effect 'ha*
been simply wonderful. Where no hair has Bear
seen for years there now appears a thick growth,
and I am convinced that by continuing its nse I shall
have as good a head of hair as I ever had. It is
growing now nearly as rapidly as hair does after
ft is cut.
CABBOIINE
Is now presented to the public without fear of con
tradiction as the best Restorative and Bean tiller of
the Ilair the world has ever produced.
Price, OSE DOLL A It per bottle.
Sold by all Sragstnts. .
KENNEDY & CoTpItTSBURG. PA.,
Sole Agents for the United States, the Canada* and
Great L’ritaia-.
WOMAN
MARRIAGE
1 to Marmge, Congugsl duties, Science
oi -Reproduction, Law of Marriage, Lair of Divorce, Legal
rights of married women, etc. also on Diseases of Women,
their one and Cure. A Confidential work of 320
pages,^ith full Plate Engravings, sent for 60 cents. “The
Private Medical Adviser*** on the remits of im
pure associations, &c^ also on the secret habits of youth
and their effects on after file, causing Varicocele, Seminal
Emissions, Nerrous debility. Loss of Srxual Poorer, etc.
— . — —nis; or all t
They contain 600 pages and otct 100 Illustrations, em
bracing everything on the generative system that is worth
knowingjondmuch that Is not published In any other work.
Sentm angle volumes, or complete in one. ibr Price In
Stomps, Silver or Currency. (The author invites consulta
tion, and letters are promptly answered without charge.)
Address: Dr. Butt*’ Dispensary* So. 12Eoxth8thSt~
St. Lotus, Mo. (Estabtished 1847.)
U to send sue their names and address, they
^something to their advantage.—Jgat a Trass. 9
DR. RICE,
37 Court EacSy LOUISVILLE, KY^
I Mi, Ssfitel Bmlnlon% 3tamo. ofS^hl. Bgg jfca-1
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of300 poem, sent to any address, sccar
m cents. Should be read hr alL
OfiMlunttnaS JU X. *>7P. H.
■
. _ halitcmreff.
PRESdUPTIO.lT FREE!
For the speedy Care oFSeminal TYcakness. Los:
Manhooa and ail disorders brought on by indis
cretion or excess. Any Drncgist has the ingre
dients. AlMras, Dr. W. JAfiOJE* A CO.,
130 «*»( SiUlh Street, CjHCjamfii, <t.
.TIIE1
N ew England
' CABINET ^OROAHS.:’
Pronoucced bj the PBES3, DEALERS, MUSICAL PBOFESSOKS, nud tlie
Public Gc-nernlly
PARAGON’S OF PERFECTION, and the CHAMPION
CABINET ORGAN for 1879.
No Organs Equal - them in Melody of Tones.
No, Organs - Equal them in Variety of Combinations. .
No Organa Equal them in Original Inventions,
No Organs Equal them in Musical Mechanism.
No Organs Equal them in Singing Qualities.
No Organs Equal them as Companionr to the Voice.
No Organs Eqnal them in Sublime Vohime. 1
No Organs Equal them in Concord and Sweetness.
No Organs Equal them in Sympathetic Expression.
No Organs Eqnal tnam in Splendid Beauty.
No Organs ..Equal them in Convenience of Cases.
No Organs Equal them in Durability.
No Organs Excel them in Qualify of Materials.
No Organs Equal them in Bapiditv of Sales.
No Organs Equal them in Present Celebrity.
No Organs Eqnal them in Becent Triumphs.
No Organs Equal them for Church and Home Use.
No Organs Equal them in any Particular.’
No Organs ever before won two gold medals at one exhibition over all compet
itors. No Organs are subjected tp such rigid tests. No First-Class Organs are
at snch moderate rates. “None bat themselves can he their • parallel. ” They
are the most charming in all respects, and.they give the most lasting satisfaction.
Tbe interesting and instructive illustrated and descriptive catalogues prove these
facts, and are sent free to all who apply for them.
THE HEW ENGLAND DUGAN COMPANY,
1299 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
April 17—6m.
""Train on' Blakely 'Eitinsioa *]»t«s Alhuy
Mondays, Tuesday*, Thursdays.an^ Fridays.
COMING SOUTH AND £ AST.
Arrives at Macon from Eufaula and Albany 4:47, *
Leave* Columbus ;....11:0*,,
Arrives^Maqo^Jrom. Columbus.......j : o{,,
; ,.-5u5l 5
Leaves AngnsS. 2:4*r*
Arrives at Savannah: ,7:15m
’ ’Mating connection at Savannah with AtiaiU,
and ofulf Bailroad for all points in-Florida.
Passengers-for MilledcovUle fud ICateptoa will
take train Ho.- 2 from Savannah and train XV. 1 frs»|
d “ lT
General Snpt. Central ltmilroad. Savannah.
.>W, G. KAOUL,
Snpt, Southwestern Railroad, Bass,.
DOUBLE DAILY
TO AFP FROM
FLORIDA
•Macon & Brunswick R. R,
>-VSi .»**•**
0S and
traflieoir tfii* road'will run ss-follcr
^yuMBSutt Aito ttbtiKB- via ‘ ■ bkcriwick
NIGHT PASSEKGER SO. 1. itODTH, d«lj.
Leave Macdn.*/..'.iv.i::i. .-;’:.7d0ri«
’Arrive at Cochran...... l:Slrs
Arrive at Eastman V... -.......10 r u
Arrive at Jeanp ~
Arrive at Brunswick .4:45 a x
Leave Brunswick per steamer 7:0S in
Arrive Femandina;... *..... ll:Ha u
ArriTe Jacksonville..-.; ..2:15 r M
NIGHT PASSENGKB NOl % NOKTII—f)AILT
Lcrve .JacksonAillc....
Leave Fernandina pet steamer-. .
Arrive Brunswick.
Leav
ave Brunswick.
Leave Jesup.
Eastman
. .10:1) x K
»;!C r is
S:Ma)C
. 4;«5aR
t ZSx X
Leave
Leave Cochran...
Arrive at Macon..
Close connection at Macon for all )>oiBtX ifertk
East and Westvia Atlanta and Auguata. ,
PAY ACCOMMODATION No. 3. SOV^B,
Tin Jesup and Live Oak—Daily, except fitnisy.
7;3t*H
UMx M
11:57* St
- 1:51 ru
»q5s»
'Leave Macon
'Arrive Cochran:...... ;
Arriv, .Eastman
Arriire 3diup.'..-... : .........
Arrive Jacksonville.
nov 4-.' north—daily except Sunday*
Leave Jarksonvillo...........;. .V...... v.
Leave..Jesup. ; 1 II
Leavo Easftnajf. A .7. 12:0 r «
Leave Cochran 3:»*r«
Arrive St -Macon. ...... i. •...’.’»:1 •»«
HAWKINSYILLE ACCOltUOpAXUUt'
Daily except Sunday. ...
Leavo Macon —..r.VJ:4fi rU
ArriTe S
X.esve
Arrive Macon..X
GEO. W. AD.
W. J. J ARTIS,
.....tN5*S
rimMiR
Atlantic and' Gulf It. B.
O
Gexbbai. uPBRnixBimrarr'* Om«i 1
Atuaxtio ARB GCIJf Raixeoab, 1
SaVARHAK, May 6th, 1373. )
,N’ AND ASTER THIS DATE, Ptsisst"
Trains on this Road will ran as (aliens. :
night'
Arrivo Ji
Arrive at
rSfnhridge
Leave Savannah: daily at..'..,........:.4:20 P.S
r. *
’8:10 a. a
. 9 JO a. *
— 3:30 A. k
20**,*
9:25 A. R
IMS-*
2:40 r.*
9:40 T. *
,...A:IST. *
.„5:45 a. a
Arrive at Albany
Arrive at Live Oak
Arrive at Tallahassee
Arrive at Jacksonville
-Leave- Tallahassee 1
Leave Jacksonville
Leave Lfve Oak ’'
Leave AIB'sny'
■
•Arriveat Savamjah ■ ’ .....
Ip change of cars between
Onr new Organ, expressly designed for Sunday
Chapels* etc*, is proring a
G-nMAT stroosrss,
Be sure to send for full descriptive Catalogue before,
purchasing any other. s
IHE LARGEST WORKS (OF THE ID) OH IHE GLOBE.
■ - S V Illustrated Catalogue sent free. •
Passengers leaving-Ms
(except Sunday) connect a
^ 3* *
. -Passengers fromllraiiOTjck arrive iatfiavannak.
it 8:40 a. m. . - ,. , V’ ,
No change of cars between Montgomery aa*
J MtSInri'eepiig cars run through t<rand-fr«a
Savannah and lake City and Montgomery And J«*
sonvilleon this train. > ...
Connect at Albany daily, with Passenger train*
ith ways on Southwertern > Railrosd t.?_atfd “•*
a, Montgomery, New Orliansreto.
rleiTf« Bail*bridge for J pal.veraico.*
for CoJambus evcrY'Wed
... — -
at Jacksonville daily (?und*f»
J ^?n^^»Rd ifW d Ieavh
west, Monday. Wednesday,and. Friday at
•sststt —
ACCOMMODATION TRAINS—BESTBRN
DIVISION.
sebia j .-rmt'Seq , * r ‘
STL*
n. ' EbL
WESTERN DIVISION,
gta. ISO—BacisYisw. t/tili&rmbti
..Vs 3 aii m
arrive st Blackshsar
A ST e_at Dupont
5 “ “ “
i u* Lj.g--.bu-