Newspaper Page Text
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ELECTROPOISE
firman’#
MISS MARY E, RIGHT, ; • Editress
WEEK OF PRAYER.
woman’s WORK IN SOUTH GEORGIA.
CHRISTMAS OFFERING,
. -
Dear Sisters :—ln accordance
with a resolution which prevailed at
the annual meeting of the Woman’s
Baptist Mssionary Union held in La-
Grange last April, the Central com
niittee at the last meeting, (29th
ult) decided that the week of prayer
should be held during the first week
of the new yeqp beginning Sunday
t Ist January. It is hoped that all
the sisterhood of Georgia will, at
home, or assembled at some place of
worship, observe this week of pray
er.
Thb Prayer Calendar for 1893 so
beautifiully arranged by our dear
sister, Miss. M. E. Wright, contains
a programme well suited for each
day. The subjects are these
i Sunday, Ist. Prayer for the com
ing of His Kingdom in the earth.
Monday, 2nd. That we may be
ambitious that whether at home or
absent we may be well pleasing to
Him.
Tuesday, 3rd. Lord may I bo
the instrument in Thy hand, of win
ning one soul for Thee this year.
Wednesday, 4th. That the out
going missionaries be endued with
the power of the Holy Spirit and
thus qualified for blessed service.
Thursday, sth. That Theologi
cal students may realize the dignity
of Foreign Mission service.
Friday, 6th. This year, when the
eyeg of all the nations are turned
totvard us, may we prove to them
that we are a people whose God is
the Lord.
Saturday 7th. Consecration of
bouL body and spirit.
Every Christian worker, should
have this Prayer Calendar. Send
27 cents to Miss M. E. Wright, Au
gusta, Ga., or to my address if you
find it more convenient, and get a
copy. You will enjoy it and it will
be a nice Christmas or New Year’s
present for loved ones.
At the last meeting of the Central
Committee, at the earnest request of
the workers in the 4th district, Miss
Loula Morgan, of Vienna was unan
imouly appointed missionary organi
izer of missionary societies, and mis
sion Boards in that district, which is
composed of eighteen associations.
Miss Morgan has the highest com
mendations from those of her section
and her two months of successful
work in February and March of this
year, is a sufficient guarantee of
what wo may confidently expect from
her efforts.
Providential hindrances have pre
vented our beloved sister, Miss
Wright from doing this work to
which she was appointed by the
Central Committee last May. Let
the entire sisterhood now rally to
the support of Sister Loula Morgan,
until there is a division demanded
by the appointment of a missionary
in the Ist, 2nd and 3rd districts of
the state. Our work is one and
South Georgia claims that special
effort is demanded in that (wire
grass) region. But we predict with
the blessing of God on the earnest
efforts being made by such conse
crated women as Sisters Lewis, Ra
gan, Willis, Pate, Ashburn, Brown,
Arnett, Fitzgerald, Parker, Olive,
Morgan ami a host of others and
the brethren who have so kindly fa
vored the work, South Georgia will
lead the other districts in the mis
sion work of the state.
CHRISTMAS LITERATURE.
I have this week sent to all the
Societies and Mission Bands of the
state the Christmas literature con
sisting of programs and envelopes
for the meetings of Woman’s Mission
ary Societies, Mission Bands and
Sunday-schools for the ingathering
of the Christmas offering for the sup-
DSPRICE'S
®SSTe?
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes— -40 Vears the' Standard*
port of missions in Japan. Let every
Baptist woman and child give some
thing to this good work. Let this
birthday offering to our Saviour be
larger than ever before, and let it
come from every one, however small.
The Lord bless this one effort to His
glory and the promotion of His work
Lovingly,
Mrs. Stainback Wilson.
MONTHLY REPORT
OF GEORGIA BAPTIST ORPHANS’ HOME
FOR NOV. 1892.
A largo number gathered in our
reception room at the Home and with
thankful hearts the meeting was open
ed with the old hymn “Praise God
from whom all blessings flow.” Our
hearts were most too full for utter
ance.
Major Kiser a member of our Ad
visary Board had made us the mag.
nificent gift of 810.000, $5,000 in
cash to be used for the purchase of a
site and erection of buildings: and
$5,000 to go towards paying the ex
penses of the Home, payable SSOO,
it year for the next ten years. This
magnificent gift coming unsolicited,
at this time, has inspired us with new
hope, and with grateful and prayer
ful hearts we begin anew with fresh
courage the work of caring for the
Orphans, and trust that this may be
the beginning of many more liberal
and voluntary contributions to our
Home. It was decided to hold a
“Doll Bazar” on the 9th of Dec. and
also sell refreshments, candy and ice
cream and cakes—The ladies entered
into it, with a determination to make
it a success, and as this is written
after the Bazar, we desire to acknowl.
edge and thank the ladies of the fol
lowing cities who aided us so mater
ially in making it a success. 1 Box
of Dolls, from Augusta,per Miss Mary
E. Wright, 1 box dolls, Macon, per
Mrs. Alexander Proudfit, 1 box dolls
Macon, per Mrs. R. M. Seymore
and Mrs. Wm. Orpio, 1 box dolls,
Thomasville, per Mrs. Smith, 1 box
dolls, Americus, pet; —
Our thanks Are due Mr. Norman,
one of our legislatnrs, who came over
and purchased each of the children a
doll, and also to merchants of Atlan
ta,and the ladies and children who do
nated dressed dblls amd there time
in contributing to it. We congratu
late the entertainment committee up
on the happy manner in which every
thing passed off. It was all done
decently and in order.
In the midst of our joy over our
gift and success, came news that
brought grief to all oiir hearts, little
Mary Harris Lewis, the first child
adopted out the Home is dead. Her
adopted parents write, “The blow is a
crushing ofie, little Mary, ‘my little
lamb,’ I called her passed away from
earth into the bosom of her Saviour
Dec. sth, at 7a. m. I enclose SI.OO
made by her oWjt little hands for
the Home.” This is the second dollar
she has sent us since she left us for
her adopted parents, to whom she
was devoted add they to her. May
this death, the first in our number, be
sanctified to the good of her adopted
parents, and all the inimates of the
Home, and those who knew and
loved her.
It is impossible to print all the
names who send money from churches
andsocietics, in our Treasuer’s Report
hereafter we will only give amount
from churches and societies.
treasurer’s report.
Ist Baptist ch, per Mrs. W. B. Burkeß 8 75
2d ‘ “ " L J Laird 27 75
Through Dr J G Gibson 11.3 96
W M s, Brunswick.Ga J oo
“ Plains, “ 300
“ Millon. “ 100
" Barnesville, “ 180
“ Crawford, “ r, 50
“ Bartow, “ 300
Rev Lewis Tebeau. Savannah 5 Oo
Mrs M W Collier, Vienna 200
“ W H Strickland 1 00
Fancy Work J 125
Willing Workers. Lumpkin 1 00
MrsGns Long
" L M Hitchcock 100
" G McD Nathen 50
“ HM Abbott 50
Bothel ch, Sparta, Ga 1055
R' v M R Little, Mosely, Ga i oo
MO wP Beall 100
I»r Lansing Burrows 1 oo
Mr E H Callaway .< 1 oo
AJMJoiddn 100
W G Salmen 100
TX Cranberry 1 oo
New Ebonenor Association o oo
Bethel ■ “ 2150
Mr S Z Pauline and wife 2 oo
Totals2sosC
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY DECEMBER 22.1892.
Is the greatest effort of modern science for the relief and cure
of suffering humanity. It is not a patent medicine; not a
mysterious or miraculous cure; not a battery or belt. Simply
a SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENT FOR SUPPLYING the
SYSTEM WITH THAT LIFE-GIVING ELEMENT OF
NATURE—OXYGEN. If you are a sufferer from some
disease that has baffled the skill of physicians, change of
Quite a list of donationshave been
received from the State which we
have not space to itemize. They
are thankfully received and will be
acknowledged by card.
BOXES FOR FRONTIER MISSIONA
RIES.
Dear Sisters:-! have several letter
srom frontier missionaries who are
much in need of clothing, and other
necessaries. Some of these brethrens
have to travel hundreds of miles
through the cold with insufficient
clothing to keep them warm. Do let
us heed the call and gladden their
hearts by giving them the much
needed help 1 Our blessed Savior
says “In as much as ye have done
it unto one of the least of these my
brethren, ye have done it unto me.”
Who of us would not make any sac
ritiqp to feed and clothe the dear Sa
vior were he on earth?
Mrs. Stainback Wilson.
THE CHINESE.
The Chinese do everything back
ward. Their compass points to the
south instead of the north. The
men wear skirts and the women trou
sers; while the men wear their hair
long, the women coil theirs in a
knot. The dressmakers are men; the
women carry burdens. The spoken
language is not written and the writ,
ten language is not spoken. Books are
read backward, and any notes are in
serted at top. White is used for mourn
ing,and the bridesmaids wear black—
instead of being maidens those func
tionaries are old women. The Chi
nese surname comes first, and they
shake their own hands instead of the
hands of one whom they wougreet.
Vessels are launched sideways, and
horses are mounted from the off side
They commence their dinnerwith des
ert,and end up with soup aud fish. In
shaving, the barber operates on the
head, cutting the hair upward, then
downward, and then polishes it off
with a small knife, which is passed
over the eyesbrows and into the
nose to remove any superfluous hairs
and the performance is completed
by removing he twax from the ears
with a bit of cotton, wool on a
wire.-New York Trues.
WORDS OF WISDOM,
“Emotion is but the flame, of
which love is the fire.”-Dr. Kerfoot.
“Sheer simplicity is the truest tact
in most cascs.”-Dr. Broadus.
Dr. W. M. Pratt, the venerable
Kentucky minister,describes baptism
as “the outward profession of an in
ward possession.”
“You never find anything in the
world except that which you bring
eyes to see.”—Dr. Whitsitt.
“Lovo is like the diamond in that
though it is white, it gathers itito it
self and reflects all the other virtues.
—Dr. Kerfoot.
“A man ought to praise his good
memory for forgetting things which
do nol pertain to his subject. His
memory |is better than his judge
ment.”—Dr. Broadus.
ARE YOII SQUIRMINGI
And is it pain that causes you to
squirm? Rheumatism will make any
one wince. Counteract it, as you can
readily do, at tSio outset with Hos
tetter’s Stomach Bitters, which ex
pels the rheumatic virus from the
blood and promptly relieves the tor
tures that it produces. The evidence
in its be halj on this point is ample
and conclusive,and embraces the deli,
berate affirmations of many medical
practitioners. Like all standard per
parations, the Bitters deserves r
persistent trial,which if it receives, th
happiest and most thorough results
may be confidently anticipated. For
malarial,kidney and liver complaints,
neuralgia,* nervousness, indigestion
and loss of flesh and appetite it is a
world-famous remedy. Convalescence
after debilitating ailments is much
facilitated by it.
Ocean hill church, Brooklyn.
Dr. O. C. Pope supplied the pulpit
of the Ocean Hill church last Sun
day, and is engaged to supply them
again next Sunday, while the pastor,
Rev. W. J. Mosier, is absent in the
the South for his health. Ho is spend
ing a few weeks at Harriman, Tenn.
This church is just in the current of
population settling up town in
Brooklyn, and Certainly has a hope
ful future. A few years ago it was
a mission station of worship, and is
sei £-su sta i n ing.— fix.
Subscribe for The Index.
©lxildven’* (Burner.
BRAINS AND INCHES,
“Exceeding tall men have ever
very empty heads,” writes Lord Ba
con. Thomas Fuller says more
wearily, “Often the cockloft is emp
ty in those whom haturo hath built
many storeys high”—a metaphor
seemingly borrowed' from Bacon’s
“Nature did never put her pre
cious jewels into a garret four sto
ries high.” Compare Fuller’s mode
rate “often” with Bacon’s sweeping
“ever” which surely smack of some
personal ill will. Can it be that the
“wisest, brightest, meanest of man
kind” was dealing a side thrust at
Elizabeth’s tall favorite, my Lord of
Leicester? Meanwhile there needs
no ghost to tell us that both Bacon
and Fuller were men of middle
height. But now Balzac steps for
ward in cap and bells to give us the
same “old dog in a new doublet”—
“Tons les grands hommee ont etde
petits,l’ says he, and wo defy all
England to translate that phrase—•.it
bears too many meanings. It may
mean that the tallest of the tall once
wore long clothes; or that the great
est of great men was once small
enough for a cradle.
Socrates was stumpy, also St.
Paul and Alexander the Great,great
only as a warrior. In stature, both
he and his far more intellectual fath
er, Philip of Macedon,scarce reached
middle height. In this regard;
we may rank them with the
famous Spartan general, Agesilaus
with Attila, the “Scourge of God”
—broad shouldered, thickset,sinewy,
short; with Theodorio IL, King of
the Goths, of whom Cassiodorus
writes, “He is rather short than tall,
somewhat stout, with shapely limbs
alike lithe and strong.” Aetius, too,
commander-in-chief of the Roman
troops, and prop of the tottering Ro
man Empire in the days of Valen
tinian, was a man of low stature;
therein resembling Timour ihe Tar
tar, self-described as a “puny, lame,
decrepit little wight though Lord of
Asia und Terror of the World;” al
so the great Conde, and his pigmy
contemporary Marshal Luxembourg,
nicknamed “the Little” by those who
admired him for making Louis the
14th Louis the Great;who,by the l>ye>
less his high-heeled shoes and tower
ing wig, dwindles to about five feet
six. But even thus pared down to
oho inches nature gave him, he was
a giant compared with Sir Francis
Drake and with Admiral Keppel—
“little Keppel” as every sailor iu the
fleet fondly dubbed him from pure
love and admiration. Whereby a
tale, if but to break the jog-trot of
this catalogue. When, then, Keppel
.—a commodore at twenty-four was
sent to demand an apology from the
Dey of Algiers for an insult to the
British flag, he took so high a tone
that the Dey exclaimed against the
the insolence of the British king for
charging a “beardless boy”with such
a message to him. Replied the beard
less boy: “Were my master to take
length of beard for a test of wisdom
he’d have sent your Deyship a he
gQat.”
Oliver Cromwell, Clavcrhouse and
Mehemct Ali must be content to take
it out in brains, for they all lacked
inches. Two of these great names
naturally suggest that of another fa
mous soldier and usurper, Napoleon
Bonaparte. Le petit Corporal, as his
men lovingly called him,stood about
five feet (French) in his stockings,
say five feet one and three-quarters
English. In stature,the Iron Duke boa
him by about six inches , while the
five feet four of Nelson place him
midway, or thereabouts,between the
victor and victim of Waterloo. Sij
Chirstopher Wren resembled the
smallest of Britsh birds not in name
only. Staying with Charles 11. at
that monarch’s Newmarket hunting
lodge, Sir Christopher heard him
complain that the rooms lacked
height. “Pardon me. Sire.’ he broke
in, “to mojthey seem high enough.”
«Ay‘ and to me, too, now,” replied
the Merry Monarch, crouching till
buttocks nearly touched the floor.
For this king who “never said a fool
ish thing ami never did a wise one,”
would have made two Sir Christo,
phor Wrens. Byron stood five feet
eight in his stockings-a liberal allow
ance of inches for a poet. But his
friend Tom Moore redresses this dis
turbance of the average. Moore nev
er reachoil five feet, save iu his ver
ses, the first of which, by the bye,
climate and scene—everything, it will pay you to investigate
the Electropoise. Our information costs you nothing but to
ask for it. We mail a fifty page book free to any address. ■
Atlantic Electropoise Co.,
Washington, D. C., and Atlanta, Ga.
THE WORKER.
Rev. C. R. BLACKALL, Editor.
A large page illustrated paper, with brief, pithy, helpful articles along the lines of Christian ex
perience and development, and missionary activity.
The Worker is well illustrated with tine engravings representing scenes at home and abroad, his
torical events, portraits of eminent men and women, maps of mission fields, etc.
The Worker makes mention of Christian beneficence shown by individuals and societies. ’
The Worker presents gleanings from mission fields all over the world.
The Worker lias items of universal interest from here and there amid the activities of life.
The Worker is a great aid to Christians, young or old, and a means of development to churches.
The Worker is the cheapest paper published.
Terms : Single, 10 cents a year ; in packages of five or more, to one address, only 6 cents a copy
per year.
AMERICAN BAPTIST PUBLICATION SOCIETY.
PHILADELPHIA: 1420 Chestnut Street;
BOSTON : 250 Washington Street; ST. LOUIS : 1100 Olive Street/?
NEW YORK : Times Building; ATLANTA : 60 1-2 Whitehall Street;
CHICAGO : 122 Wabash Avenue; DALLAS : 345 Main Street.
he published under the pen name,
‘‘Thomas Little.” And when at len
gth he doged the mask, some impu
dent wag hailed the change with the
udeniable assertion, “Moore was Lit
tle, and little is Moore.” We trust
that Mr Swinburne, the nightingale
of our nineteenth century “singing
birds,” will forgive us for branding
him as every inch a poet, even to
the fewness of his inches.—Gentle
man’s Magazine.
‘.TRICKY BOYS’’
Sometimes you hear one boy say
to another/ 1 You’d better look out so
Fred Wilson, he is a tricky boy.” In
quiring into the matter you find that
“trioky”in Fred Wilson’s case means
getting the best of the bargain in
trades, by respresenting things to be
better than they really are; making
certain promises that are never ful
filled. He is a boy who is not relia
ble, and nobody could depend upon
him. Yet Fred is a fine talker; the
boy said he could “get around” any
body if he tried to. Some boys who
thought themselves quite clever had
been “taken in” by him. Now,boys
do you know what kind of man Fred
Wilson will make? Unless he changes
very much, he will be a dishonest,
unjust unreliable man. There are
certainly too many such men in the
world already. What we need are
true, square, honest men. The boys
who are growing up to tpke positions
of trust and responsibiity in life
shouldbegih now, to be straight in
all their transactions with each other
To recover the tone of the vocal
organs (after continued speaking),
gargle with Pond’s Extract. Any
incipient inflammation will thus be
reduced, the vocal cords will streng
thened, slightly stimulated, and
brought into normal condition, and
the voice will become much stronger
so that many a Hoarseness or Sore
Throat that might result will be pre
vented. Also invaluable for the cure
of any sore throat or for catarrh of
the air passages,pharyngitis bronchits
or laryngitis. Pond’s Extract is un
equaled for all inflamations of the
mucous membrane. Avoid substitutes
ANECDOTES OF ELEHANTS.
Elephants are fond of brandy an d
other strong drink. In Travancore,
a keeper used to give his elephant a
little spirits every day; but one day
to punish him, drank it all himself.
The elephant became very angry
and killed the man ou the spot.
In the history of Tennevqlly
Mission is the following story: I n
building a chapelthe missionaries
borrowed a • trained elephant
for drawing the heavy tim
ber. One of the ladies daily saw
him fed,lest feed his should be stolen
One day she thought the elephant
had too little rice, and charged the
keeper with stealing it. Raising his
hands to heaven, the keeper loudly
said:
“Do you think, madam, that I
would do such a thing? No never
no more than I would deprive my
own children of their daily food.”
While he was speaking and gesti
culating, the intelligent creature,sly
ly extending his trunk, unfastened
the man waistcloth, thereby spilling
out the missing rice, which had been
concealed in a corner of the cloth,
and exposing his dishonesty.
A PRETTY INCIDENT
A newsboy took the Sixth avenue
elevated railroad cars at Park Place,
New York, at noon on Thanksgiving
day,and sliding into one of the cross
sects fell asleap. At Grand street two
young women got on and took scats
opposite to the lad. His feet were
bare and his hat fallen off. Presently
the young girl leaned over and plac
ed her muff under the little follow’s
dirty cheek 1 An old gentleman in
the next seat smiled at the act, and
without saying anything held out a
quarter with a nod toward the boy.
The girl heitated a moment,and then
reached for it. The next man jusb
as silently offered a dime, a woman
across the aisles held out some pen
nies, and before she knew it the girl,
with flaming cheeks had taken mon
ey from every passenger in'that end
of the car.lShe quietly slid the amount
into the sleeping boy’s pocket, re
moved ner muff gently from under
his head without rousing him, and
got off at Twentythird street,includ
ing all the passengers in a pretty
little inclination of the head that
seemed full of thanks and a common
secret. This rebukes Ingersoll’s
sneers that if he had been God he
would have made good things catch
ing. They are catching, and God
made them so.-—The Parish News.
‘IT IS MY BOY.~
Through Rochester, N. Y., runs
Genessee river, between steep and
rocky banks. There are falls in the
river and dark recesses. A gentle
man who lived in the city had just
arrived on the train from a journey.
He was anxious to go home and
meet his wife and children. He was
hurrying along the street with a
bright vision of home in his mind,
when he saw on the bank of the
river a lot of excited men.
“What is the matter?” he shouted.
They replied, “A boy in the water
“Why don’t you save him?” he
asked.
In a moment, throwing down his
carpet bag and pulling off his coat,
be jumped into the stream, grasped
the boy in his arms and struggled
with him to the shore, and, as he
wiped the water from bis dripping
face, and brushed back the hair, lie
exclaimed, “O, God, it is my boy!”
He plunged in for the boy of soiu
body else, and saved his own.—Se
lected.
HOW A LITTLE ALLIGATOR “GOT
EVEN WITH A LITTLE SNAKE.
I once saw a very funny combat
between a baby alligator and a tiny
snake- Quite a number of both
were in a glass tank provided with
a small pond, rocks, and growing
plants. You would have thought
t a perfect nursery for the babies to
grow and be happy in.
But while this thought was passing
through my mind I saw an alligator
make a sudden snap as a little snake
was slipping over him, and in a mo
ment the poor little thing found his
head held tight between the needle,
ike teeth of the alligator. Wriggle
nd twist as he might, he could not
get away In vain he tried to choke
his enemy by closely enerircling his
his neck; the alligator held his head
perfectly rigid, and tinulluy shut his
eyes with an air of self-satisfaction,
as if it were a most ordinary thing
for him to have a snake tying doub
le bow-knots around his neck.
After a long time, either because
he forgot his prize and yielded to a
desire to yawn,or because he thought
the snake in crawling over him had
been sufficiently punished, the baby
alligator opened his jaws, and away
went the snake, seemingly none the
worse for his adventure.-November
St. Nicholas.
MONEY SAVED IS MONDY MADE
Dr. Wm. Self, of Webster, N. C.
an old practitioner of medicine
tells us that after many years expe
rienco in medicine he finds it money
saved to his patients to use Taylor’s
Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein for coughs, colds and
consumption.
• -■>. —7l ■ v
x-
I wS£ I'Mi t i /
“Atmospheric Oxygen by Absorption.’
The Hanson Place church,
Brooklyn.-— Two hundred and fifty
new members have entered the fel
lowship of this church, most of them
by baptism, since Rev. A, C. Dixon
became its pastor two years ago
The present membership is more
than eight hundred. In order to
avoid over crowding the building
on the Lord’s day, the ordinance of
Baptism is now administered at the
Friday evening prayer-meetings,and
these meetings arc held in the main
audience-room, the lecture room be
ing too small.—Exchange.
ffimußiALßS
“About ten years ago I con-
tracted a severe case of blood poi-““"“"““
son. Leading physicians prescribed medicine
after medicine, which I took without any relief.
I also tried mercurial and potash remedies,
with unsuccessful results, but which brought
on an attack of mercurial rheumatism that
RHEUMATISM
four years I gave up all remedies aud began
using S. S. S. After taking several bottles I
was entirely cured and able to resume work.
Is tl *o greatest medicine for blood
poisoning to-day on the market.”
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Unlike tiif Dulcf Process -
No Alkalies
Mr j or—
dgSi Other Chewiicals
Vfca&i PbQfe are used in the
preparation Os
W. BAKER & CO.’S
I wßreakfastCocoa
in absolutely
Ima ! I t-it'•* 1 pure aiid soluble.
iTO I / Hl* has more th an three times
nW I W i r n the strength of Cocoa mixed
MWith Starch, Arrowroot or
and is far pore eco
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, uourishlng, aud easily
DIGESTED. L
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & Cd., Dorchester, Mass.
GEORGIA RAIJLROAD CO
Stone Mountain Route.
Augusta. Ga., January U. 1892.
The following passenger schedule will oper
atu on this road.
Trains run by Kith Meridian time.
I 1
STATIONS- Day [Fast Fast
| Mail, j Mail Train
Lv Atlanta SdOanrlUSpni 2 45p in
Ar Decatur 819 "111.36 “ 13 00 "
“ StoneMouut’n[ 842 “ 11201 als “
" Lithonia[ UO3 “ |1223 “ [3 29 “
“ Conyers » 17 “ 12 39 “ [3 40 “
“ Covington 942 “ 107 “ 359 “
Lv Social Circleloos “ 136 “ 4 19 “
ArKuthledge'lo2,3 “ 154 "'4 an “
"Madison[lo 46 “ 218 “14 46 “
"Greensboro 11.30 “ .3 12 “15 20 “
Lv Union Pointll2olpm 3.30 “ [5 30 “
Ar Athensl 5|5 “ 700 " :
“ Crawfordville 12123 " .3 07 “ 5 50 “
Lv Barnettl24l “ 112 "[6 00 “
Ar Washington 230 " 7<W " [
"Norwood 12 56 “ 428 “[6 17 ”■
Lv Camak 117 " 439 “ 620 “
Ar Macon 440 “
Thomson 138 " 501 “ 621 „
" Dearing 158 " 520 " .6 58 „
’ Barium 209 “ 533 “[7 09 "
“ Gtocetown 2.12 “ 5.56 “ 7 28 “
Ar Augusta 315 “ 6.36 “Isoo " ,
All trains daily. Sleepers Affanta toQharlea
tou on night express. Pullnlau bullets parlor
car Atlanta to Augusta on fast mail.
~ ACCOM MDATION TRAINS.
Lv Atlanta., ;sssa m'l2 top m ::25pm uEOp m
Ar.Ducatur. i'J2B “ 112 40 “ 349" 655 “
"Clarkson. 12 57“ [4 05 “ 711 “
Covington 1111835 "
UNIONPOINT AND WHITE I’LAIN.-ik R.
Leave Union Point ‘Hi 10a i7TU*5"4b pin
ArriveLiloam 1035 " 605 "
" White Plains 11 10 " <l4O “
Leave WhitePlain3 *8 00 " *330 “
" Siloam 835 “ 405 “
Arrive Union Point SOO " 430 "
•Except Sunday.
J. W. GREEN, Gon’l Manager,
E. K. DORSEY. Gen’l Pa3s. Agt.
JOE. \V. WilliE, Trav. Pass. Agt.
General Offices Augusta. Ga.
BEST LICHT! BEST LAMP!
BEST TO BUYI
fit liuh a double centre draught
giving perfect combustion and
the Brightest light
HANDSOME DESIGNS.
GREATEST VARIETY.
ease TUB £9 A CJ ou lucg
STAHI* VC " IXHr.
Send for our Uttlo book. It will
Interest you.
Fu ulso manufacture a large line of
GAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES
nnd Art Metal Goods.
BRADLEY & HUBBARD MFG. CO;
NEW YORK. BOSTON. CHICAGO,
FACTO KI Ed, . MKKIDKN, CONN.
Colobrated for their Pure Tone, F.leganl
Dosigne, Superior Workmanship, and
Great Durability. Sold on cany term.. Old
Instruments taken In exchange. Write for
catalogue and full Intonnation.
170 Tremont St.. Boston. Nloee.,
5