Newspaper Page Text
NEW DESIGNS FOB COINS.
Baltimore Sun.
Tbe director of the mint, Mr.
Edward 0. Leech,having been ask
ed to-day whether he intended ta
king any action under the recent
act of congress' providing for new
designs for onr coins, said:
“Yes, I intend'to take immedi
ate action. I have, with the ap
proval of the secretary of the treas
ury,.prepared a circular letter to
artists, which is now in the hands
of the printer,' asking them to sub
mit designs for both *the obverse
and reverse of the standard silyer
dollar, and separate designs for
the obverse, or face, of the half-
dollar, quarter-dollar and dime.
The reverse of the rnbsidiary coins
will not be changed.
“As the designs of our gold
coins are generally satisfactory,
and as our gold coins cut no con
siderable figure in the circulation
of the country, but remain, as a
rule, in vaults as reserves and the
basis of paper issue, "I shall not
recommend any change in the de/
signs of our gold coins, for the
present at least.
“The coins which I have decided
to change at present are the silver
dollar,, the half-dollar, quarter-
dollar and' dime, which are the
coins which perform^the active du
ty of a circulating medium in this
country. \ These coins cut no fig
ure in international exchanges,and
our own people are alone interest
ed in their designs.
“The mandatory coinage of the
silver dollar ceases July 1. After
that date will coin the trade dollar
bullion . into silver dollars at our
leisure. This will give an oppor
tunity to prepare dies according to
the new designs without interfer
ing with the present mandatory
coinage. Congress has given us
an appropriation of $150,000,avail
able July 1, for the re-coinage of
the subsidiary silver coins in the
treasury; that is,.to pay the loss of
metal iheident to re-coinage. "We
think that we will be able to re-
coin from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000
of the unavailable assets 6
000,000 in subsidiary coins in the
treasury with this appropriation
“I believe that new coins of im
proved designs will be peculiar,
and that there will be no trouble
in putting the full amount coined
into immediate - circulation in ex
change for legal-tender money,
which we can use in the redemp-
'tion of the per cent, bonds.
“The circular which will be sent
out will be addressed to artists
generally, but the designs will be
confined to models or medallions
in plaster. A reward of $500, in
the nature of compensation, will
be paid for each design, five in|all.
The designs • accepted will be
thrown open to public competition.
It is hoped that distinguished ar
tists will present designs.
“The motto, ‘In God We Trust,’
will be preserved on the coins.
This motto has a curious history.
From the foundation of the gov
ernment until 1864 .no religious
motto ever appeared upon our
ooin3. In 1861 a clergyman ad
dressed a letter to Mr. Chase, the
secretary of the treasury, suggest
ing a recognition of the deity on
the coins. This lettet was referred
to the director, with a favorable
indorsement by the secretary, but
it was found that, the mottoes:
could not be changed without au
thority of law. In December,
1863, the director sudmitted plans
fora new 3 cent, 2 cent and 1 cent
pieee, on which it was proposed
that one of the following mottoes
be inserted: ‘Our Country, Our
•God,’ ‘God Our Trim’ Mr. Chase
suggested in lieu of these mottoes,
tthe one ‘In God We Trust.’ It
was upon the 2 cent piece author
ized April 22,1864 (since abolish
ed), that the motto, ‘In God We.
Trust,’ first appeared. It is now
upon all the large coins.”
The designs for the new coins
sre to be submitted by the first of
June.
SOME GOOD ADVICE.
There was a young man in a
seat by himself who betrayed such
impatience every time the train
stopped, says the New York Sun,
that the old man in front of him fi
nally turned and inquired:
‘Anything special on yer mind
to make ye act so nervous? Heard
any bad news?”*
“No, sir.”
“Didn’t know but somebody was
dead.”
‘Noj sir. I’m to ‘be married at
5 o'clock this afternoon in Buffa
lo.” .
“Shoo! You don’t say so!”
“Yes, sir:”
“Audit makes'ye narvous?”
“Somewhat, I suppose.”
“Good looking gal?”
“Yes.”
“Lots o’ money?”
“No.”
“Then it’s a case o’ love?”
' “Yes, sir—pure and simple, as I
am proud to say.”
“In other words, you hain’tgot
nil thin’, she bain’t got nuthin’,'and
you don’t neither of you expect
nuthin’from nobody?”
“That’s it”
“Waal,/ young man, that’s the
way with lots o’ folks, and it cain’t
be helped. Started in that way
myself. It hain't none o’ my bus
iness, of course, and probably this
thing has gone too far to let yon
back out, but let me give ye advice.
I’ve tried both sorts. I fust mar
ried a gal fur love, and lived fur
five years on johnny cake and bar
ley coffee. She died, and I mar
ried a widow for forty acres of
land, six cows, three bosses,'(and
fifty-four sheep, and I’m highway
commissioner, postmaster at our
corners, school trustee and referee
of all jumpin’ matchesin the coun
ty. If it ain’t too late when you
get to Buffalo, just move that the
meeting do now adjourn, and then
peel yer eyes fur a widder with a
farm. Love hain’t nuthin’ but a
sort o’ mist, and it passes off soon
er or later, but when ye kin go out
and lay yer hand on land worth
$80 am acre, and hear the hosses,
cows and sheep cavortin’ o’er the
downy lea, you know you’ve got
sunthin’ solid back o’ ye in case
yer bo.aes ache with ager.”
A Home Made Chicken Brooder.
Here is the description of a sim
pie brooder which will accommo
date 100 chicks for a period of four
to six weeks:
Take four boards 12 s inches wide
and 3 or 3J feet Jong. Nail them
together so as to form a box with
out top or bottom. Cover the top
with sheet iron nailed down. Over
the sheet iron, and around the^out-
side, nail inch strips one and
half inches wide, leaving a space
an inch wide at each of the four
corners. Now put on another cov
er of boards, which will form the
floor of your brooder. In the cen
ter of this floor bore an ince or an
inch and a half hole, and insert a
tin tube four inches long.
Make a platform of boards (half
inch stuff will do) six or eight
inches shorter and narrower than
the floor of your brooder, and nail
a leg five inches long under each
corner; tack a slip-of flannel four
iiiches wide around the edge of
this platform, and slit it with the
shears every three or four inches
to allow the young chicks to run
through easily.^ •
That is all there is of it, except
cutting out a V'shaped (inverted)
hole in one of the sides of the box,
nine inches high and wide enough
at the bottom to slide a lamp in.
The lamp heats Jhe air between
the sheet iron top ^nd the floor of
the brooder, which, rising through
the tube in the cehtre, strikes
against the platform above and iV
diffused over the chicks. With a
little - experience one can soon tell
Nickel was first obtained as a
metal in Germany about 1751, but
the ore had been previously known
to miners, who called it kupfer-
nickle, or Old Nick’s copper, for
the reason that, though it looked
like copper ore, no copper ore
'Could be obtained from it.
Says the Philadelphia Record:
When William Penn laid out
Philadelphia, he didn’t lay out
that in the year 1890 Philadelphia
manufacturers woqld furnish loco
motives for a railway in the Holy
Land to draw trains from Jaffa to
Jerusalem. \
A Safe Investment.
Is one'which' is guaranteed to
bring you satisfactory results, or
in case of failure a return pur
chase prosa. On this safe plan you
can buy freai our advertised Drug
gist a bottle of Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption. It is
guaranteed to bring relief in every
case, when used for any affection
of Throat, Lungs or Chest, such as
Consumption, Inflammation of
Lungs, Brochitis, Asthaina,
Whooping Cough, Croup; etc,, can
always be depended upon. •'
Trial bottles free at Holtzclaw
& Gilbert’s Drugstore.
■J
how high to keep the flame of the
lamp so as not to make the floor
of the brooder too warm, which is
injurions. "With this brooder, and
proper feeding, ther6 need he no
trouble in raising at least 90 per
cent of all the healthy hatched
chicks.
A Cloud of Witnesses.
We know of no medicine that
has so many testimonials to its ef
ficiency as S, S. S., the great blood
purifier. Many of the best known
people in tbe country certify to
the marvellous results’ it hss
wrought in the various forms oj
disease lor which it is recommend
ed. These testimonials come not
alone frpm persons who have been
relieved-' from their, sufferings^ by
S. 3. S., but from people who have
witnessed the effects of the medi
cine. Practicing physicians, drug
gists, pharmacists—in fact, all who
have had an opportunity of ob
serving the cures brought about by
tills great blood remedy—bear wil
ling testimony to its efficacy.-' In
its field, which is a wide one, cov
ering some of the in os) serious ail
ments of numanity, S: S. S. bar no
rival.
Berlin, Germany, has refused to
grant any franchises for electric
street railways.
CURIOUS FABTS.
Colorado means muddy.
London has more Sc#tch than
Edinburgh.
Louisiana has the largest farm
in the world.
A Yankton, North Dakota, church
has electric lights.
Within the last decade 5,245,530
foreigners have come to our shores.
A sixteen-yaar-old teamster in a
Michigan town weighs 310 pounds.
The rails in the United States
would go aroopd the world twelve
times.
There are 15,000 brass bands in
this country, with 150,000 per
formers.
Seaweed is now made into a
tough paper, which takes the place
of window glass.
Previous to the time of Elizabeth
the only article to assist in eating
was the jack knife.
Football has been prohibited at
the Carlisle, Penn., Indian school,
as a “fiendish” game.
A handsome young girl, of Mil
waukee, Wis., has eloped with a
dime museum freak who has no
hands.
A Florida paper says that aliga-
tor meat, properly smoked, resem
bles halibut so closely that it can
not be told from that fish.
The people of the United States
consume 28 out of every 100 punds
of sugar made in the world, and
30 pounds of coffee in every 100.
The Bank of England was estab
lished in 1694, and is older than
any of the institutions of that class
in any other of the great nations,
The locomotive] engine is said to
have a maximum life of about 30
year. The annna! repairs is from
ten to fifteen per cent-f^of it first
cost.
The number of Indians in the
United States who can read English
is stated to be over 23,000; the num
her who can read Indian languages
is over 10,000.
A golden eagle weighing 35
pounds was killed a short time ago
on the Sisseton reservation, Mon
tana. The bird stood three and a
half feet bigb, and measured nine
feet from tip to tip.
In Switzerland every man is his
own assessor. After a man’s death
"the Government carefully investi
gates his estate, and if he has been
defrauding the treasury, it col
lects the back taxes with interest.
The royal standard of Persia is an
apron. Stout old Gao, the Persian
blacksmith, raised a revolt which
proved successful, and his leathern
apron covered with jeweis is still
bornes at the van of Persian amiies
The last executions for witch
craft, of which there is any record,
occurred in Poland, January 17tb,
1775, when nine old women were
burned at the stake. They were
accused of bewitching the land’and
rendering it unfruitful.
Siam, a country with 6,000,000
inhabitants, and an area nearly as
great as that of the vast empire-of
Texas, with Massachusetts and
Vermont added, broke ground last
January for its first railway,which
is to be 170 miles long.
Jacob’s well and the plat of
ground surrounding it has been
sold to the- Greek Church by the
Turkish government for $20,000.
The same company, headed by a
wealthy Greek, of Mosco«(, Russia,
is negotiating for the wreck of a
building in which it is said the pa
triarch Abraham .was Born.
A singular accident occurred in
San Francisco tbe other week. A
man was carrying a sack of pota
toes when fire suddenly appeared
on his right side, but was quickly
extinguished. An examination
showed that a little bottle of potash
tablets had been crushed, and the
blaze started from that source.
*—
Bucklcn s Arnica Salve.
. The Best Salve in the world
for Colds, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers,
Salt'Rheum, Fever .Sores, Tetter,
Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns
and all Skin Eruptions, and posi
tively cures Piles or no pay re
quired. It is guaranteed to give
derfect satisfaction or money re
funded. Price 25 cents per box
For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert.
Congressman John L. Mitchell,
of Milwaukee, will be the richest
man in the next Honse,his fortune
being estimated at $40,000,000..
aas»- ion tof. i’.tnoji.
''Weakness, ^laiaria, Indigestion and
Biliousness, take
BIt«!W.Vb 1RG?: ENTERS.
It cures ouick./. For t*nte by all dealers in
meuiciue/Got the t*.
WHOLESALE UKOOERS,
X/Es-C oij., - - ;
Tbe estimated, population of the
world is 1,450,090,000.
, AXSAti: • >=.!. rt.y.
g teach miy f*:riy -,>* rson of
Rssx.lviiO «h rm«l pnu write, and
1 slW ljutructiop, will
Pbo\r t» x
oily.
tbe situation or employment^! which rou ran earn that au:nunr.
learned. I desire bnt one worker from each district or counts \
* ’ ‘ * - and ptwidod w' - ‘
ilriag ovrgSCCQ^
Aucosta,
bare already taught and provided with era;
number, who are making error (3CC0 a rear each. IfiJTEW
and S50l«TI>. Full particulars Address at once,
E. C, ALLEY, Box 420, Au^ustn, Maine,
job woms:
NEATLY EXECUTED
AT THIS OFFICE
"Do the largest business of any House in Middle Georgia
who deal ' . • .
Having largely increased our uavital, we are determined
during the season of 1891, to sell on a closer margin and
do even more business/
BOTH FOR CASH'AND ON TIME,
Than we have ever done before.
Send your orders, and call to see us at_
-A-HIam.ee' 33:ead.q.‘ueatea:s;
420 and 422 ThirdJStreet, % - Macon, Ga.
•fheCeorsii Alliance Kecaiii.
A large 8-page weekly, devoted to al
liance news, agriculture, horticulture,,
stock-raising, literary and general news
Send for sample, copy.
Address the ALLIANCE RECORD,
Montezuma, Ga.
The Home Jodiomji and the Alliance
Recordwill-be sent to one address one
year for $2.30, strictly in advance.
MACO^. gmiTA STOEE
• IMPORTER AND DEALER IN.
GEORGIA'S PRIDE ~HE C-LD RELIABLE
The Press
D GKEO. •W. CASE, "
MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS
MON UMi J NTS, IRON FENCES, ETC.,
464 PLUM STREET, - - - - MACON, GA.
Manufacturer and Importer of the best grades of Italian and American Marble
and the following noted Granites:
BAb.EE, . CONCORD,
QUINCY, RED BEECH,
WESTERLY, BAY FUNDAY,
CLARK,S ISLAND, &DICE. v
Satisfaction guaranteed. No money till work is complete. Correspondence and
work prompt.- Don’t buy your monuments until you write me. I will save yon
money.
for Bnfants and Children-
“Castorlais so \rell adapted to cMdren that {
known to me.” H. A. Archer, M.D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y..
** Hie use of 1 Castoria ’ is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
.of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do cot keep Castoria
within easy reach.”
Carlos Martyn, I>. D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingaale Beformed Church.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
“ For several years I have recommended .
your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
results.” v
Edwin F. Pardee, M. D.,
“The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave.,
v * New York City.
The Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, New York.
(NEW-. YORKjpi
ZEOZEBIS©!,
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The Aggresssve Eopublican Journal
, gOf <fhe Metropolis
A NEWSPAPER _F0R THE MASSES.
Founded December 1st, 1887.
Circulation over 100,00c copies
DAILY.
The Pbess is the organ of no faction;
polls no wires; has no animosities to
avenge. . ^
The most remarkable Newspaper
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The Press is a national newspaper,
('heap news, vulgar sensations and
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The Press has the brightest Editorial
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points. '
The Press Sunday Edition is
splendid 20 page paper, covering every
current topic of interest.
The Press Weekly Edition contains
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dpy editions.
For those who cannot afford the Daily
or are prevented by distance from early
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THE PRESS,
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MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN
MANTELS. PAINTS, OIL/LIME,
vm
MACON,
GA-
W. J. ROSS & CO.,
Wholesale Manufacturing and Retail Dealers in
ROAD CARTS,
HARNESS, WHIPS, EOBES, BABY CAEEIAGES, ETC.
CORNEPl CQTTON AVENUE and CHEEEJ ST., MACON, GA
-Y. E. WALTON,
RYRON,
0. L. BATEMAN.
m
Ga.
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those renewing old subscriptions and to
those becoming subscribers for the first
time. No other paper in this country is
able so fhake subscribers this offer, THE
HOME JOURNAL haviag secured the
exclusive right to club with “Judge’s
Library” for this vicinity. “Judge’s Li
brary” is a monthly magazine of fun, the
subscription price of which alone is
81.00. It contains 32 pages of humorous
illustrations and reading matter, to all of
which “Judge’s” famous artists and wri
ters are contributors, end is neatly mint
ed |and bound in handsomely colored
covers. It is a condensation, iD fact,of
“Judge’s” brightest humor.
LOOK AT THE FIGURES!
The cash subscription price of THE
HOME JOURNAL is 81.50.
The cash, subscription price of“Judge’s
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We offer both publications to you for
$2.05.
, J8, Woodenware,
Table and Pocket Cutlery* Tamps,
CHANDELIERS, OIL STOVES,gTiNWARE,Etc
artistic Lottery,[housekeepers' novelties.
Sole agents "for City of Macon for the Celebrated Bnck’s Brilliant
Cooking Stoves and Ranges.
368 Second Street, 164 & 166 Cotton Avenue,
m
LOW
-J&. HZ- j£2^r
r8000.00 a year is being made by John K.
Good win,Troy ,N.Y.,nt work f..r us. Reader,
you may not make as murk, but we can
leacli y«u quickJyTiow to ram from f5 to
MO- day at .the start, mud Mora as you go
m. H«th *cici, all ages. In any jmrt of
\merira. you ran conimencqat borne, gfr-
ii-r all your tiu,r,ur spare momenta only to
lie work. All It urw. Great jiay SURE fur
»*ry worker. We start you, furnishing
«ierything. EASILY, SPEEDILY learned.
, J'A IM'ICl: LA ICS FREE. Address at once,
• ’ -.OJi Ji tO., 1-ORTLAXD, JJAlNfc.
The
THIS PAPER
- A NT'.-l
Southern Cultivator
—AND—
Dixie Farmer,
The Great Farm, Industrial and
'Live Stork Journal of
the South,
OneJY ear|<br|Onlj' k ?S.3S.
C4to 80 pages, finely illustiated and
superbly printed.
'Send for sample copy to
THElCffLTIVATOBIFTIBLISHINGiCO.,
1 j s v < rM Atlanta .G a.
Passengeij Schedule
ATLANTA AND FLORIDA RAILROAD’
Xu tff- ct Jan. 27tli, 1891,
•SOUTH BOUND. .
[Ra. 2.
No. 6.
Leave Atlanta
“ E. T. & V. & G. June
Arrive Fayetteville....
“ Williamson
“ Cnlloden
*, Knoxville
“ Fort Valley
3.00 pm
3.13 pm
4.13 pm
5.03 pm
6.20 p in
6.53 p m
7.30 p m
8.00 am
10.27 am
1227am
3.12 pm
4.17 pm
5.40 pm
NORTHBOUND.
7 " .
•; ' - • ;
No. 1.
No. 5.
Leave Port Valley....
Arrive' Knoxville.:
“ Cnlloden.......
“ , Williamson
“ Fayetteville.,..
“ E. T. V. & G. Jnn
“ Atlanta .....
5.45 am
6.24 am
6.45 a m
8.15 a m
9.05 am
10.05am
10.20 am
8.30 a m
10.37 am
11.47 am
2.25 pm
4.13 pm
6.05 pm
Nos. 1 and 2 doily, and make connec
tion with'O. R. R. at Fort Valley for
points in southwest Georgia. Departs
and arrives atSE-.T. V.-&G. passenger
depot in Atlanta.
Nos. 5 and 6 daily, except Sunday. Pas
sengers arrive and depart from E. T. Vr
& G. .Junction at end of Pryor street
dummy line. •
T. W. GiBKBTT, Geo. P, Howabd,
Suwerintendant,. Gen'i,Pass. Ag’ti
Atlanta, Ga. /
—$2.35 cash will secure the
Southern’Cultivator and th^Hoin:
Joubnal one year.
HHHHI
The jboejil News of Every District,
•■STJEECRIE3S Ai T OETCE yOR
THE HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL
. aEOKG-i^.,
latgest Circulation. Best Advertising Medium.
Subscription Price '$2 a Year,
TJnles^ Paid Strictly in Advance. jfi
Passenger Schedule
GEORGIA SOUMi FLORiDA RAILROAD
SUWANEE RIVER ROUTE TO FLORIDA.
Taking effect March 22d, 1891. Standard Time, 90th Meridian.
«OiNO SOUTH.
<i< INCi NORTH.
2:Jf. p. m.
0:15 p. in.
7:lH a. in.
10:45 a. m.
Leave ..
-Vrnive..
....Atlanta
... .iVIaccn
..Arrive
10:f.-0 p. m
. G:10p. im.
5:55 p. in.
10:5.i a. nt.
6:50 a. m.
G:3u p. m.
11:00 a. m-
Macon
. Arrive
9:(H p. m.
10^5 p. m.
12:08 a. at-
4:16 a. m
1:55 p.m.
3.*25p. m.
Arrive...
Arrive....
....Cor^ele......
..Arrive
3:23 p. m.
1:35 p. in.
12:01p.m.
9:55 a. mS
4:07 a.m.
2:15 a. m.
12:23 a. m.
9:17 D. in
4^4 p. Hi.
0:53 p: in.
Arrive
Arrive....
...Yaldoela
.... f^ike City....
.Arrive
. .Leavt-
9:15 p. m | Arrive...
. ..Taclisonville..
..Leave | 7:00 a.m. |
t*:i5 a. m.
10:05 a. m.
Ibritipin
.‘.rnve.:.
Arrive*...
i’idatka
St AugrfPtine.
..ixtave
..I.eave
l!:“:
U:25p. m.
2:30 p. w.
Trains arrive and depart frr.m union depots in i!aeon andPalatkaandF. C. 4P
depot in Jacksonville.
Pullman sleeping cars on night trains. x
Connection north bound and south bound s made in Macon with trains of Cen
tral and E. T. Y. & G. Railroads,
A. U.Kxapp, J. T. Hogs, L. J. Him.,
Traffic Manager. GeneialPassenger Agent- Ticket Anent.
Henby Bubns, C. T. & P. A. No. 516 Mulberry Street., Union Depot.
Macon, Ga. <
C. C.Rodes, Jb, Soliciting Agent, 6 Kimball Block, Atlanta, Ga.
L.C. Conova, R.T.Bichabd, ' W. P. Lawshb
C. P. A. Agent, Union' Depot. T. P. A.
. - Palatka, Eta. /
James Meszies, Southeastern Agent, 98/Wost street. Jacksonville, Pla.
OcbCl. OI
\ (Southwestern Division.) •
Schedule went into effect April 12th, 189L
(Standard Time, 90th Meridian.)
BETWEEN MACON AND FORT VALLEY.
3:23
3-30
3:43
8:52
4:10
No. 5 |
“1“ I
4:10
4:15
4a»
4^7
4:45
4:53
5:10
| 6:4P | it.riu I J^ave JJtffictiU. An-i‘ C| II
1 » 6;S7 | .30:12 .. I leave- Wi«d A j rive l '13:41
7;fc3 J It :47 ) i.rave Bntiaud rriveU 11:35
7:35 & j 10^3 {Leave Walden -Arr.ve p 11^9
7^8 | 31 :t | T eave llyron ' Arrive | H:15
7:87 | 11:17 | I.eave Rowersvillc Arrive | li;CG
7z5G | *71^8 j Arrive Fort Valley Leave { 10:50
■* p m
<
13:43
30.2V
10.^0
was
0:56
9:45
9Jr
am
BETWEEN FOET TALLEY AND PEBEY. '
595 p. m.j 11,35 a. m. ! Leave Fort Valley Arrive | 9.20 a. m 4J0 p. ’
6^0 p. rn.j--12.4Q a, m. | Arrive Perry Leavo ‘ 8.15 a. m 3.05 p. :
BETWEEN FOBT VALLEY AND COLUMBUS.
No. 3 | No. 11 •
am | pm |
-
[No. 4
pm
4.10 1 5.10 f Lv
Fort Valley
At
10.50.
4.25 ’ 5.25 | “
Everett’s •
1035
- .4.3S ! 5.38 | “
Reynolds
f
10.22
4.55 i 5.55 I <•
Butler
10.05
5.07 | 6.07 1' “
. Scotts
“
.9.53
5.18 | 6.17 1 “
Howard
9.40
5.30 | 6.28 ! “
Bostick
«*
V 9.28
5.42 J 6.55. ! “
. Geneva
<*
9.15
5.51 | .7.05 - ! “
Juniper
“
9.05
5.58 | 7.18 f “
Sox Spring.
8.57
6a2 1 728 i “
Upatoi
8.43
6.32 J 7.48 | “
&lvitnlga
8.22
G.47 1 8.05 i “
Muscogee
“
8.05
' 6.55 j 8.15 1 Ar
Columbus
Lu!
7255
i. m | i>m |
I
pm
9.30
9J4
9.02-
8.45
' 8.33
S.22
8.12
aoo
7.3k
7;30
7.18 .
7.07
0.47
6.40
. am' "-' •
Nos. 3 and4 willnot stop betweenMaqou and Fort Yally except at Powersvillc.
For further particulars relative to ticket rates, schedules, best routes, etc., writ*
to or call upon 'E. M. FULLER, Agent, Perry; J. C„McKENZIE, Supt. Sfflith-
v31e, Ga., E. T. CHARLTON, Gen’l. Pas. Agent, Savannah, G?,
No. 2.
a m
mu
■