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PRICE, $1.50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE.
Published Every Thursday Homing.?
Jno.H. HODGES, Editor and Publisher
H
Perry, Thursday September 8.
Editorial Opinions.
A vote cast against Cleveland is
a vote for Harrison.—Cordelian.
Let all democsats poll together,
but let them be careful what they
pull. Hair pulling from now on is
out of order.—Valdosta Times.
PUNISHMENT OP CRIMINALS!
CURIOUS FACTS.
The worst enemy of the farmer
is the pestiferous little office seek
er, who is constantly stirring up
strife between the city and coun
try people.—Augusta Chronicle.
There is more good work going
on now for the democracy than has
been done in many years. The
third party may yet prove a bless
ing in disguise.—Oglethorpe Echo.
Labor troubles and strikes have
been characteristic of Harrison’s
administration. The Democratic
party is the true friend of the la
boring classes.—Milledgeville Un
ion-Recorder.
The third party may carry Geor
gia for Peek during the months of
August and September, but the
democrats will elect Northern in
October by a great majority.—Ma
con Telegraph.
Congressman Watson had a per
fect right to deluge his constitu
ents with collard seeds, of course,
but he need not expect them to ac
cept a cabbage head for a congress
man.—Atlanta Journal.
Gov. Northen is the Gazette’s
ideal democrat; he is a vote-win
ning democrat. His like should be
scattered all over Georgia in this
era of attempted democratic dis
ruption.—Tifton Gazette.
The Eev. Dr. George Hedges,
an Episcopal clergyman of a Pitts
burg suburb, has some practical
views touching the punishment of
criminals.
“I am not in favor of capital
punishment,” says he, “no matter
in what manner executions are
conducted. Iam no more in favor
of long imprisonment than I am of
hanging. A criminal becomes ac
customed to imprisonment after a
time, and many of them manage
to pass a livable if not a comforta
ble time. American prisons are
filled with men and women, too,
who are serving a second term,and
some of them a third, fourth and
fifth term. To the person.of easy
temperament, or of no ambition,
who is content to exist for the
mere existence, caring little or
nothing for the better things of
life, a term in prison is. not diffi
cult to bear, and many persons of
fend the law simply to return to
prison.
“Hard labor is a sentence that
prevents to a certain extent many
great crimes, but the fault I have
to find with that is that such a sen
tence is seldom passed. Punish
ment of criminals should be of a
remedial character, and there is
nothing, in my estimation, so ef
fective upon the criminal mind to
wards the provention of crime as
the fear of physical suffering,
“I am in favor of corporal pun
ishment, or, to put it more direct,I
am in'favor of the whipping post.
I think a series of whipping ad-
ministered at various or regular
times would have such a terroriz-
ing effect upon the average crimi
nal that the number of crimes
would be much •smaller than it is
at present.
“Abolish the scaffold, abolish
barbarous hanging, punisli crimi
nals by inflicting pain, and you
will find criminal history much
shorter than it is st present.”
first
The New Testament was
printed in Irish in 1602.
Jewelers report that gold dollars
are extremely scarce.
The only fruit which appears not
to flourish in California is the ap
ple.
An expert says there are now
1977 temperance drinks that are
rivals in popularity.
The third party leaders advise
their followers not to listen to
democratic orators or read demo
cratic literature. The truth is the
demagogues worst enemy, and th.-.t
he well knows.—Macon News.
An army without competent gen
erals, no matter how enthusiastic
the army may be, must meet de
feat. A political party without
competent leaders is in the same
condition.—Cuthbert Liberal-En
terprise.
Paragraphic Pick-ups.
Professor Douglass has succeed
ed in manufacturing miniature cy
clones and tornadoes by means of
electricity, thus proving the elec
trical character of the “prairie, ter
In his record as Chief Executive
of this Commonwealth, Governor
Northen has nothing to fear from
the people, and he is going in and
out among them, talking and ad
vising with them freely and frank
ly, and all the time preaching the
true democratic faith.—Columbus
Enquirer-Sun.
Watson’s alleged apprehension
that the democrats are scheming
to “bottle him up” in the Tenth
district, to prevent his going down
into the Third, to demolish Crisp,
iB the very funniest thing in Amer-
can politics. • He would sooner
meet a bear robbed of her cub;
than meet Crisp in joint debate.
Sparta Ighmaelite.
The Hon. Tom Watson, of Geor
gia, who declared that Congress
was such a drunken crowd, is male
ing a tremendous effort to con tin
ue his m'embersbip in that body
Watson doubtless feels that if he
were to associate with Congress
awhile longer, he wouldn’t mind
the little things that used to worry
him.—New York Press.
If the MicKinley law is not re
sponsible for strikes, neither is it
to be credited with averting them
- Ever since the law went.into oper
ation there have been continuous
strikes in protected industries;
And inasmuch as the law is made
for the protection of labor,the peo
ple who are paying the expense of
it are quite right in asking what
is wrong with it.—-Toledo Blade.
The attempt to pass the force
bill, and the threat in. the republi
can platform to persist in the ef
fort until it is accomplished,should
be enough to hold southern demo
crats together until all danger of
federal interference with elections
is passed. We have no doubt that
as the campaign advances the dif
ferences that have sprung from lo
cal causes will be forgotten in the
desire to give the national party
another triumph and to establish
its policy in the government of the
country.—New York Times.
Eor many years Mr.B.F. Thomp
son, of Des Moines, Iowa, was se
verely afflicted with. chronic diar
rhoea. He says: “At times it was
very severe; so much so, that I
feared it would end my life. About
seven yeafs -ago I chanced to pro-
pure a bottle of Chamberlain’s Col
ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy."
It gave me. prompt relief, and I
believe cured me permanently, as
I now eat or drink without harm
anything I please. I have also used
i tin my family with the best results.’
Eor sale by HoltzcJaw & Gilbert,
Druggists, Perry, Ga.
fiipans Tabules cure scrofula.
The evidence obtained from the
enumerations of 1872, ’81 and ’92
tends to show that the hill and for
est tribes of India are gradnlly be
ing incorporated into Hinduism
John McDarby of Salmon Falls,
Mass., has doable teeth all around,
and .a stomach which doesn’t rebel
when he chews and swallows glass,
stones and other indigestible*;.
The United States manufactures
65,000 hats every day, while Eng
land manufactures about 40,000.
The largest hat manufactory in the
world is the Brussels, which turns
out 10,000 hats a day. ,
The Laplander sleeps in a big
reindeer skin to keep him warm,
The East Indian also sleeps in a
bag, bat it is not air tight, and is
only 3 intended to protect him from
mosquitoes.
Guaranteed Gure.
We authorize our advertised drug
gists to sell Dr. filing’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colds, upon this condition. If
you are afflicted with a Cough,
Cold, or any Lung,Throat or Chest
trouble, and will nse this remedy
as directed, giving, it a fair trial,
and experience no benefit,you may
return the bottle and have your
money refunded. VYe could not
make this offer did we not know
that Dr. King’s New Discovery
could be relied on. It never dis
appoints. Trial bottles free at
Holtzclaw. & Gilbert’s Drug Store.
Large size 50c. and §1.
Erau Probsti, who eujpyed the
distinction of being the heaviest
woman in Europe, has just died at
Tranbiug, in Bavaria, at the age of
forty-one- At her death she weigh
ed over 550pounds.
It is predicted that in the course
of time northern Thibet will be
come a second California, perhaps
even richer than the first in pre-
cions metals lying in the soil over
the vast surface of those desert
-lands.
Africrn- travelers tell ns that the
white rhinoceros- frequently dies
from eating poisonous plants,
which have no effect upon the
black ones,probably because the
fine scent of the latter tells him it
is dangerous.
Nature should be
assisted to throw
off impurities of the
blood. Nothing
does it so well, so
promptly, or so
safely as Swift’s
Specific.
, A Russian can plead infancy for
a long time, as he does not come of
age until he is 26 years old.
In South America there is a race
of cats to which “meowing” is an
unlearned accomplishment.
Mrs. Mary Lease says that the
prairies of Kansas are dotted with
the graves of women who died of
•‘mortgage on the farm.”
One of the fine jewels in the pos
session of the Shah of Persia is a
pearl for which one of his ances
tors paid 8685,000.
The first wheat raised in the new
world was sown on the Island of
Isabella in January, 1494, and on
March 30th the crop was gathered.
Though the next total solar
eclipse does not occur until April
15, 1893, astronomers are already
astir making’plans for’observingit.
A camel of largest size has been
known to drink from forty to fifty
gallons of water, and then travel
without any more for twenty days.
It is strange,though true, that in
Asia and Africa,where grass will
not grow, the most beautiful flow
ers and shrubs flourish perfectly.
A dwarf residing at Skigaken,
Osaka, 36 years old is but 17 inch
es high. He is well educated, and
earns a livelihood by teaching
penmanship.
The condor goal’s higher than any
other bird, spending nine-tenths of
its time floating in the rarified at
mosphere three miles above the
sea level.
Cranes, storks and wild geese
fly fast enough to make the trip
from northern Europe to Africa in
a week, but most of them rest just
north of the Mediterranean.
In 1774Maskelyne, the aslronc-
mer royal of Englad, first calcu
lated the weight of the earth. The
weight, as estimated in an ency
clopedia, is 6,000,000,000,000,000,-
000,000 tons.
Corot, the French landscape ar
tist, painted only 700 sketches; bat
12,000 “Corots” have been sold in
the Hotel Drouot auctions.
The British general elections are
never held on one or the same day,
because an elector has the right to
cast a-ballot in every district in
which he owns property.
Albazen, an Arabian, born in
the year 1000 A. D., first taught
the present theory of vision, and
explained the reason why we see
bat one picture of an object with
our two eyes.
CHEAP MEDICIEES—SAVE MONEY
All buy medicines, and you want
them cheap —at retail at wholesale
rates. Jacobs’ Pharmacy, the
largest | Southern “cutters” of
prices, has an advertisement in to
day’s paper containing a few prices.
a.11 other articles are sold at simi
lar low rates. No matter what you
want that is usually kept in a large
drug store send to them. They
will sell it at astonishing low rates.
Express charges for packages un
der five pounds, twenty-five cents
Watch these advertisements and
prices. Send for a number of
things at once. Is a word to the
wise sufficient?
Bill Nye’s definition of a news
paper is as follows: It is a library.
It is an encyclopaedia, a poem, a
history, a dictionary, a romance, a
guide to political resume, a ground
plan of the civilized world, a low
priced multum in parvo. It is a
sermon, a circus, an obituary, a
shipwreck, a symphony in solid
brevier,a medley of life and death,
a grand aggregation of man’s glory
and his shame." It is, in short, a
bird’s eye view of all the magna
nimity and meanness, the joys and
sorrows, births and deaths, . the
pride and poverty of all the worid,
for a few cents.
Capt. W A Abbett, who has long
been with Messrs. Percival & Hat
ton, Real Estate and Insnrance
Brokers, Des Moines, Iowa, and is
one of the best known and most re
spectable business men in that
city, says: “I can testify to the
pod qualities of Chamberlain’s
lough Remedy. Having used, it
in my family for the past eight
years, I can safely say it has no
equal for either colds or croup.” 50
cent hcttles for sale by Holtzclaw
& Gilbert, Druggists, Perry, Ga.
Melvin Atwood, the San Fran
cisco mineralogist, one of the dis
coverers of the great Comstock
ledge, believes the chances are ex
celled for finding in California
one or more of the volcanic pipes
containing diamonds, as at Kim
berly, DuToispan and Bultfoutein.
UFE HAD NO CHARMS.
For three years I was troubled with mala-
and?was greatly reduced in flesh, and life
lost all its. charms. I tried mercurial and
potash remedies-, but to no effect. I could
getno relief. I then decided to try IghHgSsiJ!
A few bottles of .'this wonderful
medicine made a complete and permanent
cure, and I now enjoy better health than ever.-
J. A. Rice, Ottawa, Kan.
•Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free. >
Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Bipans Tabules are always ready.
BUCKLER'S ARNICA SALVE.
The Best Salve in the world
for Cuts, 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
perfect satisfaction, or money re
funded. Price 25 cents per box.
For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert. •
The pension agency in Topeka
is the largest in the country. It
pays out annually 815,000,000 to
the veterans of Kansas, Missonri
and Colorado.
LADIES
Heeding atonic, or children who wontbuM-
BROT ^
It ia pleasant to take, enxea Malaria, Indi
gestion, Biliousness and Liver Complaints.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
It takes five-years to tan an ele
phant’s skin.
.-r■'
A woman in‘Nebraska has a nose
3§ inches long.
One Minneapolis mill alone makes
15,300 barrels of floor a day.
The centenary of the French re
public is to be kept on Pept. 22.
A Holyoke confectioner is pat
ting in a cough drop machine- that
will cough out oue ton of drops a
day.
It is seriously proposed to puri
fy the Thames by importing a
school of crocodiles to act as river
scavengers.
Iu Chinese the letter “I” has
145 ways of being pronounced, and
each pronunciation has a differ
ent meaning.
When a child dips in Greenland
the native pnrents bury a living
dog with it, the dog to be used by
the child as a guide to the other
world.
MENSTRUATION
! with a woman of vigorous health passes
! off in due time without pain or dis-
; comfort; but when she approaches this
; crisis MONTHLY with a frail constitu-
i tion and feeble health she endangers
1 both her physical and mental powers.
BRADFIELD’S
^8 FEMALE 8^
REGULATOR
if taken a few days before the monthly
sickness sets in and continued untill
nature performs her functions, has no
equal as a SPECIFIC for Painful, Pro
fuse, Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular
MENSTRUATION
Book to “ WOMAN " mailed free.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
Sold by all JtrugglotM.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
Marietta & Peachtree Streets,
F. O. Box 357.
A FEW SAMPLE PRICES:
; B. B. B 67c. *
Hunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure 66c.
' Radway's Ready Relief. 33c*
Cheney's Expectorant 15 and 35c.
' Teethina 18 and 35c.
Pond’s Extract . . . .34 and 75c.
Lemon Elixir .35 and 75c.
Tutt’s Hair Dye 68c.
St. Jacob's Oil 3S C *
Allcock's Plasters
Benson's Capsine Plasters 15c.
Dr. J. A. Magili’s Orange Blossom . . . 67c.
Bradycrotine 33 c *
Horsford's Acid Phosphate ... .34 and 75c.
White Rose Soap 47x1 [3 cakes in a box]
per box 45 c -
| Colgate's Cashmere Bouquet Soap, cake 2xc.
( Cuticura Soap, cake *5 C -
Hagan's Magnolia Balm 5 oc -
Bay Rum, St. Thomas .... 14, 34 and 28c.
( Hop Bitters * 68c.
, Hostetter’s Bitters 75 C -
f Brown's Bronchial Troches, box 18c.
, All Worm Candies, per box i5 c *
, Sage’s Catarrh Cure 35 c .
Everything usually sold in a first-class
drug store, retailed at wholesale prices. Make
up your orders, send to us aud save money.
1 k Express charges are usually 25 cents /
1 c per package under 5 lbs. /
fyoutli. Dyspepsia*
uiuj K estlon, thattireafeel-
ingabsolutely eradicated.
Mind brightened, brain
power Increased,
bones, nerves, mus
cles, receive new force.
j
Zm a safe, speedy cure. Returns
a cheeks, beautifies Complexion.
Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear
“Crescent. ” Send us 2 cent stamp for 32-page
OB. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Loul*. i
Humphreys’
Db. Humphreys’ Specifics are scientifically and
practice with success,andfor over
__ l by the people. Every single Spe
cific is a special-cure for the disease named.
These Specifics cure without drugging, purg
ing or reducing the system, and are la faet and
deed the sovereign remedies of the World.
3 Worms, Worm Fcrer, Worm Colic., .til
5 Dysentery, Griping, Bilious Collc~..
G Cholera Morbus, vomiting
7 Coughs," Cold, Bronchitis
8 Nouralgia, Toothache. Faceache....
9 Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo
10 Dyspepsia, Bilious Stomach
11 Suppressed or Painful Periods.
12 Whitt “ ‘ -
iftes, too Profuse Periods
y urou “ " If
c Salt
• Rhet ,
i Fever and Ague, Chills, Malaria.
27 Kidney Disease .50
28 Nervous Debility 1.00
30 Uriuary Weakness, Wetting Bed. .50
32 Diseases of theHeart^Palpltatlonl.OO
Sold by Drusjrlsts, or tent postpaid on receipt of price.
II cm m bey s’ Manual, (144 pages) richly bound in doth
and gold, mailed fxee. •
HUMPHREYS' HKD. CO., 111*113 WIlUiS St., XewYork.
Specifics
TT
Or Falling Sickness can
do cured. Our remedy
after all others
85! 8
000 <* o e o o c
That you maytryit
without expense we
wflisend youonebot-
tie free. All CHAH688PEB-
rii.D.Give Age, Post
Office and State. Atom
Hall Chemical Co.,
; WEST PHTT. A „ pa.
O C O S Q Q.Q oust
“JLXAKESIS ” gives Instant
relief and is an infallible
Cur, for Pile*. PriceSl. By
Druggists or mail. Samples
frw.Addres8“A5AKESI8,”
Box SU6.New.York City,
BOYS SEE GIRLS
Have You Seen
Southern Sunbeams
That beautiful magazine for Southern
Boys and Girls. It is the handsomest
Young People’s Magazine in America. It
has become a welcome visitor to thous
ands of Southern Homes. No pains or
expense is spared tojnake it attractive
Each number contains a volume of inter
esting reading for young folks. Short and
continued stories, out-door sports, new
games, and in fact everything to interest
boys and girls. Twenty-eight pages and
cover, each page is handsomely illustra
ted. Tt is “The Queen of the South,”
“The Pet of every Home Circle,” and no
boy or gitl can afford to be without it.
To see it is to want it, and to have it
for six months or a year is a continual
enjoyment for all the family. We want
every boy and girl who has not seen this
charming magazine to send ns seven one-
cent stamps at once for a sample copy;
or, better still, if you will send us One
DoiiiiAB we will send yon “Southern
Sunbeams” for one year and make yon a
present of “Cooper’s Leather Stocking
Tales.” Five great works in one large
volume free of all cost.
—ADDBESS—
SOUTHERN SUNBEAMS,
Box 363, - Atlanta, Ga.
THE TELEGRAPH
A SOUND OEJViOC: AT1C
NEWSPAPER
Fob News from Middle, Sooth.
WEST, SOOTHEAST AND SOOTH
Georgia it is Unex
celled.
Bipans Tabules: pleasant laxative.
The Telegraph carries the largest and
most expensive press reports of any pa
per in Georgia. Supplemented as these
reports are by specials from hundreds of
correspondents, it offers a news service
second to none.
I gives the full reports and decisions of
the Supreme Court of Georgia by special
contract with the Supreme Court report
ers, and fully covers all important trials
in the state. /
For nearly three-fourths of a century
h e elegrapb has ga trial and protect
ed the interests of Georgians, and it pro
poses to continue the good work. It is
Democratic to the core, and can always
be relied upon to uphold an honest gov
ernment, whether local, state or national.
Subscribe tor your home paper; then,
if yon want a good, newsy daily or week
ly, send for The Telegraph.
Daily and Sunday, one year— .. .§7.00
Daily,without Sunday, one year 6.00
Sunday, one year 2.00
Weekly, one year.'. 1.00
Invariably in advance.
Address THE TELEGRAPH
Macon, Ga.
The Press
(new YORK)
ie©2,
Has a larger Daily circulation than any
other Republican Newspaper in
America.
DAILY. SUNDAY. WEEKLY.
The Aggressive Republican Journal
of the Metropolis.
A NEWSPAPER FOE THE MASSES.
Founded December 1st, 1887.
Circulation over 100,000 copies'
ddaily.
The Press is the organ of no faction;
pulls no wires; has no animosities to
avenge.
The most remarkable newspaper suc
cess in New Ycrk. The Press is a na
tional newspaper. Cheap news, vulgar
sensations and trash find no place in the
colums of The Press. The Press has the
brightest editorial page in New York. It
sparkles with points.
The Press Sunday edition is a splen
did twenty-page paper, covering every
current topic of interest. The Press
Weekly edition contains all the good
things of the Daily and Sunday edi
tions. For those who cannot afford the
Daily, or are prevented by distance from
early receiving it,The Weekly is a splen
did substitute.
AS AN ADVERTISING.MEDIUM
The Press has no superior in New York.
■F£CB PRESS
Within the reach of all. The best and
cheapest newspaper in America. .
Mallary IJros. % (3o„
Macon, - Georgia.
PK'as.1 Write us for Prices Before Buying
Engines, - Boilers, - Cotton - Gins,
Cotton Presses, Saw and Grist Mills,
MOWERS,
-OR
Any - Kind - ot - M«±-
cliinery.
We Can Save You Money on
First-Class Goods.
Mallary IJros. & Go.,
MACON, - GEORGIA.
AST Mention This Paper.
If Yon Want to Know
.ABOUT
HOUSTON COUNTY.
—_ri_ 3XT T3 . -
The Local JS ews of Every District,
L-CUJ3CPII333 AT OTJCE POH
THE HOUSTON HOME JOURNA
NIlMwt'' IfrfWj flwiifj
AT PERRY, GEORGIA,
the ccnrrismr seat.
SubsciptionPrice $1-50 in Advance,
Jno. if- HODGES, Editor and Prop’r.
JerLtraJ. ISa.llroa.cl G-of eoigla..
Ik Wmtikww*
TIME TABLE IX EFFECT JULY 3rd, 1892.
(Southwestern Division.)
(Standard Time, 90th Meridian.)
PETWEEN MACON AND FORT VALLEY.
.No. 5
Daily and Sunday, one year,.
« “ 6 months,
« “ one' “
Daily only, one year,.
“ four months
Sunday, one year,
Weekly Press, one year,
Send for The Press circular,
amples free. Agents wanted every
where. Liberal commissions.
Address, TS PRESS,
38 Park Row, New York*
.85.C0
. 2.50
. .45
. 3.00
. 1.00
. 2.00
. 1.00
W E obtain patents for protection, not
for ornament. Send for our valua
ble pamphlet. DuBois & DuBois, In
ventive Age Building, Washington,!). C.
Mention this paper.
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Wiso Airive | 3:47 I
Rutland . rrlve | 3:43
Waldeu Arr.ve J 3:37
.Leave Byron Arrive 3r21
Leave Powersvilie Arrive 1 3:12
Arrive Fort Valle y Leave] 2:55
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I F YOU WANT
TO BUILD A HOUSE
—ox—
33a.S3r ,Terms,
—OR—
FIRST-CLASS INVESTIWSKT
—ON—
The Installment Plan,
TAKE STOCK
THE INTEIi-STATE
Bnild-ing and J^oan
ASSOCIATION,
Columbus, Ga.
For vartieulras, apply to
JOHN II. HODGES, Agt.,
Perry, Georgia.
Georgia Southern & Florida R. R.
SuwLnee River Route.
Schedule m Effect July 3rd, 1S92.
GOING south.
1
" India
Fast Mail
Leave Macon
11 IH. H 111
**. Cordele
3 15 p m
“ Tilton
3 47 “
Arrive Brunswick
*’ Jacksonville
“ Valdosta
5 30 -
Jasper
a 48 -
** \\ bite Springs
7 28 •
“ Lake City
8 10
“ Hampton
9 37 -
” Palatka
10 55 “
7 25
8 25
4 Vf»
6 55
8 2*2
10 00
Xo. 1 leaves Macon after arrival of inconiiv»
morning trains on Central. Touthwesteru <: eor gia.
East Tennessee. Virflnla and Georgir, \faon ami
Northern and Macon and Eatontou railroads
No. 3 leaves Macon a r ter arrival oi incoming af
ternoon trams .on the Central, Southwestern.
conaud Northern aod Georgia railroads, and con
nects at riftou with Brunswick aud Western for
Brunswick aud Jacksonville via Brunswick aud
Western and Savannah. Florida and Western; at
Palatka for St Augustine and ail points in East and
South Florida, and with the St. Johns aud Ockla.
waha river steamers.
GOING NORTH. \ Wlndia
, Fast Mail
Leave Palatkv
” Hampton
*’ Lake City
” White Springs
" Jasper
” Valdosta
” Tifton
” Jacksonville
” Brunswick
” Cordele..
Arrive Macon
No 2 leaves Palatka aftor arrival of fast West In
dia mail from Tampa, and connects at Macon with
all outgoing p m trains on C K K, S W it it, 31 & N
K K, Ga R K, E T V Sc G It It, and 3racou and Nor-
then railroad.
No 4 leaves Palatka after arrival of trains from
St Augustine and points pa East and Sohtli Florida,
and connects at 1 if ton with Brunswick ami West-
om from Bmnswick. Ga., and• Jacksonville, Fla.
Close connection at Macon for Nashville. Louis
ville, Cincinnati, Evansville. St Louis and Chica
go. Short 1 fine to World's I air via G S k F, *
tral R B of Georgia, Western and Atlantic. .m -
ville. Chattanooga and St- Louis ami i nmsvilie
and Nashville, ami Macon with ail out-^i.jng m.
I'iiioii ij«j on.
trains on C. d. It.
All trains arrive and depaut
Macon and Palatka.
Elegant Steeping cars will be run >.u trains N*.
and No 4.
For further information apply to agents s
junction points, or to
E. K, EEIFFEIi,
Ticket Agent, Palatka, Ha.
J.xS MENZIEs,
lsh Agt Ms con; Cenl Agt Jacksonville;
A C KNAPP, Taaffle Manager.
H BUIt>S
BETWEEN FORT TALLEY AND PERRY.
3.30 p. m.j 11.45 a.m. I Leave FortYalley Arrive I 5.50 a. m 2.35 p. m.
i. | * Arrive Perry Leave ! 4.45 a. m * —
4.35 p. m.| 12.55 a. m.
1.30 p. m.
BETWEEN FOKT VALLEY AND COLUMBUS.
Scientific American
Mmf§ r &
CAVEATS,
TRADE MARKS,
DESICN PATENTS
COPYRIGHTS, etc.
MUHXSCO-
Oldest bureau for securing patents In America.
Every patent taken out by ns is brought before
the pubifcbyanotice given free of charge In the
Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the
world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent
man ahonld be without it. Weekly. 83.00 a
year; $L50 six months. Address MU2«N & CO M
Publishers, 3d Broadway. New York.
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat*
ent business conducted for moderate Fees.
Our Ornccis opposrrru.s. PatewtOftjce
, and we can.seeure patent in less ume than those
remote from Washington. • * >
Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip
tion. We advise, ff patentable or not, free of
- " not due till patent is secured.
‘How to ObtaimPatehts,'’ with
charge. Our fee not
A Pamphlet, “He
, cost of same m the
sent free.
C. A. SNOW & CO.
OPP. Patent Office. Washington,p. C
No. 3 |
a m
| No. 4
1 pm
8.25
Lv
Fort Valley
Ar
7.00
8.38
Everett’s
“
6.47
8.49
Kevnolds
"
6.35
9.05
Butler
•*
6.20
9.18
Scotts
“
6.07
9.32
“
Howard
5.53
9.45
Bostick
“
5.40
9.56
Geneva
“
5.29
10.05
**
Juniper
“
5.20
10.12
“
Box Spring
“
5.12
10.28
Upatoi
4.57
10.52
u
Schatnlga
•*
4.a r .
1I.II
u
Mnscogee
U
4.17
11.18
Ar
Columbus
Lv
4.10
I r >
For further pal-tieiilnrFrelative to ticket rates, schedules, best routes,etc , writ*
to or call upon E. M. FULLER. Agent, Perry,Ga.
GEO. POI.K v-.D! J Y. General Superintendent; J. C. HAILE, General Passenger Agent;
W. F. SLKU.1I N, ’liaif.c Mauagt-r, Savannah, Georgia.
JOL WORK.
SUBSCRIBE ADVERTISE
FOR. IN
Til E HOM E JOUBN AL
We Have a C omplete Stock and
Pull Assortment of Commercial
Stationery, and duplicate Macon or
Atlanta pnees in this class’of w ork
Satisfaction guaranteed.
GIVE US J 1RIAL ORDER " ,
Macon and Birmingham Railroad
Schedule in effect July 3d, 1892
BEAD
11:00
12:00
12:40
1:00
1:45
2:20
3:t 5
4:00
4:45
5:15
5:4.1
5:56
6:3U
DOWN.
>. M.
Lv
“ Lizella *«
“ Montpelier “
“ Cullodeu •*
“ Yates ville “ .
“ Thomaston *• |
“Tkun'er'g |
*• W.HKlbnr\ *• j
“ Uarri. ■ uj •• |
•* Odet-se •*
** Monutville *♦ 1
Ar La G;ange L\|
10:43 “
10:25 "
9:4U «*
Connections in Uniun Dei oj, Macon, c-a..
GS & FEB for VnldoMa, Lake City. I aLitkr
Augustine and other point* iu FI« rida; C J: J
Savannah, Milledgeville and 1 atci.toi.; S \\
for Americus, Albany and hr.raula: M k N Ii 2
Madison, Athensai.d i.n!a. ai.d m-inttlx vond
Yatesviile with A Sc V 111; for stciiiu* ou t! i*t
and at I .a Grange with A k \\ j I; K for Mont*
eay arid beyond ai d iirc.im diate stations.
•r fmther inncmsuonari *v to
W l\ BLOCKS
Ticket .gent Lai.ian-
H l.Ul:NS, Traveling 1 mm-ngcr Agent. Macon;
A C EN.\i 1\ Ticffie A*u* ag.
Passenger
enucuie
ATLANTA AND FLORIDA RAILRf
(Xu eff et Jan. 27th, 1H91
SOUTH BOUND.
Leave Atlanta
“ E. T. & V. & G. June
Arrive Fayetteville
“ Williamson
“ Cnlloden
*, .Knoxville
“ Fort Valley
Ho. 2.
N >. (i.
3.00 pm
3.13 pm
4.13 p m
5.03 pm
6.20 pm
6.53 p rn
7.30 pm
8.00 am
10.27 .-• in
12.27 ;,m
3.12 pm
4.17m
5.40 p m
NORTH BOUND.
No. 1.
N.. 5.
Leave Fort Valley....
Arrive Knoxville.
“ Cnlloden
“ Williamson
“ Fayetteville
“ E-T.V.&G.Jnn
“ Atlanta
5.45 a m
6.24 am
6.45 am
8.15 a m
9.05 am
10.05 am
10.20am
8.31) a in
10.37 a j..
11.47 a m
2.25 p i„
4.13 p rn
6.05 pm
Nos. 1 and 2 daily, and make connec
tion with C. B. E. at Fort.Valley for
points in southwest Georgia Departs
ana arrives at E. T. V. & G. passenger
depot in Atlanta.
Nos. 5 and 6 daily, except Sunday. Pas
sengers arrive and depart from E'. T. V.
& G. Junction at end of Pryor street
dummy line.
T. W. G abbett, Geo. P. H owaed,
Snperintendant, Gen’l.Pis3. Ag’t.
Atlanta, Ga.
Bipans Tabules: a family remedy.