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4
THE MACON NEWS
.ESTABLISHED 1 534.
NEWS PRINTING COMPANY,
PUBLISHERS.
R. L. McKENNEY. Business Mngr
TOM W. LOYLESS, Erl or.
THE EVENING NEWS wM bedelivered
by carrier or mail, per year, 55.00; per
week, 10 cents. THE NEWS will be for
•aie on trains. Correspondence on live
subjects solicited. Real name of writer
should accompany same. Subscriptions
payable in advance. Failure to receive
pap'r should be reported to the business
office. Address ail communications to
THE NEWS.
Offices: 412 Cherry Street
/A, ;
<UN. O N LA 3 Lie
Now for the congressional election.
It is all a question of color now. Threw
them out. 9
Bruns ick. is in no danger of »>*- a t*i j
town.
Don't be afraid of bunting. Dutton is
cheap.
Thirty Chicago ice companies have con
solidated. They will probably freeze out
the other concerns.
It now looks as if Li Hurg Chang would
invt tc* put on that yellow jacket again be
fore jie has t me to get if washed.
Dublin Diispach: “Macon’s big Carnival
Ik gins next Tuesday. Dublin will no
doubt sec the Central City’s show in full
force.”
“la oratory a lost art?” asks the New
York World, and the Montgomery Adverti
er answers: “Yes. it has given place to
gab, politically.”
The government has decided to equip our
warships with still better guns than soma
<:l» those they are now carrying. What will
the Dons thirk of that?
Savannah Press: “Perhaps Croker migm
head off that free silver bolt by thq judi
cious tender of a few offices whose sala
ries are paid in gold standard currency.
It will be a good thing to have the Ore- j
gon an 1 lowa on the other side of the j
pond, for they may be needed to aid in
carving Turkey on or before Thauksgiv.ug.
Butler Herald: ‘The people of 'Macon are
spreading themselves to entertain a great
crowd during .the Carnival, and the people
of .thi* section are all preparing to be
there.”
Ilannaism has failed cf its purpose in
Georgia and the followers of the Repub
lican leader have lost cast, d hev have
promised the goods Du? they cannot deliver
them.
The Philadelphia Ledger thinks that if it
is shown that Theodore Roosevelt paid
taxes in both Washington and New York, 1
it should disqualify him on the ground
of insanity.
A Mississippi editor who is doing garri- 1
son duty at Santiago, writes his paper:
“The Almighty, when he made Cuba, did a
.pretty good job, but he turned it over to a
class of people that would cause hell itself
to deteriorate.”
The New Orleans Picayune asserts that
the worst presidents this country has ever
hud, leaving out Washington, were milita
ry men. “There were Jackson and Grant,
under whose administrations matters went
as badly as they could, while the untime
ly death of Harrison (first) saved the coun
try a great deal of trouble.”
Cotion is the lowest in fifty years, with
New York quotations at less than 3 1-5
cents a pound. Print cloths are quoted at
correspondingly low figures. 2 cents per
yard. The explanation is simple. Europe
and Asia are too poor to buy summer
el-oiks. They deem themselves fortunate to
be able to purchase food alone.
While Great Britain exported in the first
eight months of ISbS cotton cloth to the
amount of 3414 million yards, the T. nited
Slates exported only ISo milion yards, less
than one-eigateenth as much. Cotton cp.r
--u-tives in the United States are paid no
higher wages than in England, and there is
no valid reason why cotton from this coun
try destined for Asia, Africa and South
America should go to England to be made
into cloth.
The Newspaper Maker very pertinently
says: “Advertising is not.a theory, but a
fact. A business man does not need to be
told of its advantages. Advertising has
gone beyond the value of conjecture and
experiment. One may advertise injudi
ciously. He may place money in papers
which lack circulation or influence, or both,
and get nothing from the investment. This
is nothing against the value of advertising,
but it does tell against the judgment of the
man who lets himself be duped.”
The voting of the Democrats of Georgia
will not have for its sole purpose the elec
tion of the Democratic candidates. Its fur
ther purpose will be to scotch the snake of
fusion between the Republicans and Pop
ulists before it attains further growth.
What fusion means to the Southern state is
to be seen in the example of North Caroli
na. Georgians want no such state of af
fairs here. They will not have it if they
put the seal of their condemnation upon it
at the yolls today.—Savannah News.
There are various ways of eliminating a
dog besides choking him with butter, ac
cording to an old proverb, says the Sa
vannah News, and illustrates by pointing
cut that the Southern Railway is now illus
trating the po ; nt. According to a recent
law in South Carolina all trains aTe re
quired to be run with separate coaches for
the races. Vestibuled trains, however, are
excepted from the operations of the law.
The Southern is now running most of its
South Carolina trains vestibule-d, thus sav
ing the expense cf the extra coaches.
Yes'erday’s Election.
The result o' yesterday’s election is par
ticularly satisfactory to the Democrats of
this state. Notwithstanding the lack cf
any conies: for county offices in many of
the counties in the state and the acknowl
edged fact that the Populist state ticket
stood no chance of even approaching the
election of a single nominee the people cf
this state have given a majority of over
fifty thousand to Colonel Allen Candler.
It is perhaps the most complimentary vote
that has ever been cast for a gubernatorial
j candidate in Georgia, and in Governor
I Candler's popularity and acknowledged
superiority the rest cf the state ticket has
shar d. It has been a magnificent show
ing for the state and is a severe rebuke to
the fusionists who have been touring the
southern part of the state for the last few
wee: - in an effort, to enter a wedge
into Georgia that would open a yawning
abyss like to that which is pictured in
Ncrth Carolina. It is evident that instead
of securing the support of the Populists cf
this state the fusionists and Republicans
have driven tbfm back into the Demo
crat: ranks and if they had been possessed
of half the sense of donkeys they would
have known that this 'would be the result
Democracy is bound to be triumphant in
this state and in this country. It is the
party cf the people and represents all tha;
is purest and best for which men live. On
its principles the country was founded and
under its principles honest men prefer to
live. In the year 10U0 the people of this
country will tell the Republican politi
cians and boodle states what they think of
the record cf the last three years. The
whole country will speak as the state of
Georgia has spoken to the emmissaries of
Mark <Ka:\na, the boodler and the briber.
The city clerk has set the pace for the
decorators. You can’t beat him but you
can at least make it interesting. Get out
your bunting, boys, and go to work.
Miles on tne Volunteers.
As the guest of honor at a reception
given in Washington, General Miles said:
“The volunteer troops of the United
States in the war with Spain 'were as
brave and as patriotic a body of soldiers
as ever took the field in any campaign the
world has ever seen. The battles they
fought were won as gallantly as any re
corded in history.
“And yet the peril which our soldiers
had most cause to dread was not bulilets,
'but disease, which s\yept over_ our camps
and destroyed hundreds avhere bullets
killed one. Our soldiers entered into the
fever-stricken camps as they went up the
hill 'in the face of the enemy, with a cour
age and devotion that must open to them
the glorious pages of history.
“Those who say that these men sicken
ed and died because they wished tc; those
who blame the soldiers and officers of our
army for the disease and death that de
vastated the camps and thinned the ranks;
those who assert that our soldiers suffered
through.their own fauli insult a quarter of
a million of the bravest men that ever car
ried arms beneath the sun. •
“These men did not. suffer and diie be
cause they liked it, and whoever says they
did insults our whole army and the men
who officered it. I have nothing to say of
the blame for the death of those brave
men.”
Good morning Governor. The name of
Candler is good in the ears of honest Dem
ocrats and the recreant brethren want to
come back new that your Uncle Allen is
at the helm. Ringsters and bosses can
now take a rest.
Anglo-Saxon Courage.
There have been many definitions and
explanations cf Anglo-Saxon courage, but
the most unique is that of a Frenchman
as related by Walter (Besant. He says:
“Just after reading the latest accounts'
of the battle of Omdurman, I was turning
over the pages of a French traveler in
England. He allows the great courage of
the English nation: to this quality he pays
the just tribute cf admiration. But he ac
counts for it in a remarkable and unex
pected manner. You will be surprised,
dear reader, to learn that our fellow?
fought so well at Atbara and at Omdurman
because —unless the national character is
completely changed—they are possessed of
the English melancholy. We are so sad
that we care nothing about our lives. We
are ail like that soldier at Autigonus,
who was the admiration of the army for
his intrepidity. The king, observing that
he was of a pale and sickly appearance,
sent him to the physicians, who removed
a painful disorder. Alas! his valor ceased.
As soon as he could enjoy life, he desired
to prolong it. My traveler also informs
me that the Chevalier Bayard, the braves:
rs iris countrymen, was always ill; while
Richard Coeur de Lion, the renowned, be
came *be Hammer of Islam, while he was
suffering horribly and continually from a
quartan fever. Had he recovered and es
caped the arrow of Gourdon, that glorious
certain would p-erhafps have become a
poltroon. After this, it will not surprise
us. to hear that S-irdar's army was com
posed entirely of troops suffering from
meloncholia or toothache.”
Remember that there are but three more
working days left. It will take all of that
time to decorate.
Fever n Dawson City.
When geld was discovered in the Klon
dike field, on the upper Yukon river, the
explorers united in praising the salubrity
of the region. The men who went there
enjoyed excellent health. There is not a
large total population there yet. but a
good deal cf it is gathered in a small area
at Dcwson City. The vast majority of the
population consists of men in the prime of
life. There are very few women and chil
dren.
But typhoid fever is raging at Dawson
and more than it did in any of the army
camps of the South during the past sum
mer. Other forms of sickness also pre
vail. The death-rate is high.
The conditions there are much as they
are in our array camps. The unavoidable
aggregation of men in large numbers on a
comparatively small area breeds typhoid
and other diseases. From a most salu
brious mining camp. Dawson has within
a year became a most unhealthy city. The
attack of disease, whether there or in an
army camp, is inevitable. An area soon
becomes unwholesome when people are
massed upon it.
Brantley will show the" fledgling fusion
politicians how to rake in votes when the
contest is on in the Eleventh next month.
MACON NEWS THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 6 /o<**
*l^
&AKIK£
POWDER
Absolute!/ Pure
Bishop Coleman’s Tramp.
The Right Rc-v. Leighton Coleman.bish
op of Delaware, has just gone through nu
merous and extraordinary adventures on
country roads in the garb of a tramp. Al
together it's one of the most remarkable
experiences on record. Unknown and in
the c-carse apparel, he walked a distance
of 235 miles recently, in the mountains of
West Virginia, stopping where right over
took him. and frequently doing hard labor
for his food and lodging. Sometimes ne
went hungry and slept in barns or under
the friendly cover of some tree. Once, late
at right, having beer denied shelter in a
sparsely settled region, he climbed into the
window cf a deserted school house and
found his rest on the hard ficor. His home
is Bishopstcad, a fine old mansion at Wil
mington, Del.
‘ This raveling in old clothes is no raw
story with me,” he said. “I’ve done it for
years more or less. You see if they knew
me it would spoil it all. People are apt
to play a part in the presence of a clergy
man. They don't show you their heart?,
and I want to see them as they are. It’s
a help to me. There are three other good
re-asoiis why I travel incognito.
First—Most men I meet wouldn’t know
what a bishop was.
Second —If they did knew they'd think
I was lying.
Third—They wouldn’t have as good an
opinion of a bishop as they had before.
The Australian ballot worked like a
charm in Atlanta yesterday. The Gate
City has the best mayor she has ha.d for
many a day. Jim Woodward .will stand
right up to the rack and give them the
simon pure thing in the way of an honest
administration. He’s a man and is not
ashamed to dirty his hands at honest
laber.
Picked Un at San Juab.
A leather-bound noatebcok lay amid a
chaos of debris on the death-swept hill
side of 'San Juan, after our heroes had won
the murderous, world-famed charge which
decide the day. A soldier of the First Il
linois regiment chanced to see the note
book, and opening it discovered a photo
graph of two beatuiful girls. The two facts
are strikingly alike, showing that the orig
inals were sisters. It was a treas
ure such as a gallant lad might be proud to
carry next to his heart when facing the
Spanish fighting line. But it is hard to
say why the photographs and note-book
should have lain abandoned on that corpse
strewn hillside. Whether the dying owner
drew it forth for one last look and it fell
to the ground from his nerveless fingers,
or whether it dropped from the pocket of a
wounded soldier as he was borne to the
reara, there is no means of learning. There
Is but one faint clew to the owner and to
the identity of the girls whose fair faces
are portrayed there:; The card bears,
stamped clearly, the photographer’s name:
“Benton.”
Georgia will repudiate the dishonest men
and methods of the fusion party who
would foist on this state a condition of
things similar to that now existing ‘in
North Carolina. They tell us that the
negro question is a bug-a-lboo. If the word
means outrage, shame and everything that
is disreputable and abominable to decent
people then it is a bug-a-boo. The man who
says that the white supremacy of the state
is not threatened by such methods as are
advocated by the fusionists in the Eleventh
is dishonest with himself and with his
hearers. Either that or he is an idiot. ,
t
Southern Camps.
The Chattanooga News thinks* that the
war department is .‘wise not to keep troops
bound in barracks in the large cities cf the
country during the winter. The soldiers
that are to remaiin in this country during
the winter could not be better provided
for than to send them South where they
can practically live out of doors from new
until next spring. Not only will this in
sure them better health, but it will mean
better discipline and better training for
future campaigns than i? they were quar
tered in large buildings in the cities.
The climate of Middle Georgia and South
Carolina, where this military population
will be located, is mild enough to permit
entire comfort in tents throughout the
winter, unloss it be a few days of an ex
ceptional cold snap, and even then the
men can protect themselves by uaing extra
precautions against cold.
Yesterday's election was a rebuke to the
white men of Georgia who would break up
the Democratic party and for their own
political advancement give us Republican
ism and the negro. Their ridiculous claim
that they have no personal interests to
subserve is not true. The fact of the mat
ter is that their political preferment with
the national party will be the payment for
what they have done in Georgia to deliver
the state over to the Republican party.
They are ambitious and thought they had
strength. Boss Hanna has been leaning
on a broken reed.
The inventive genius of Americans is so
generally recognized all over the world,
that the government of far-away New Zea
land has sent a commissioner to the United
States to offer a prize of SIO,OOO for the in
vention of a new process, either mechani
cal or chemical, that will dress hemp fibre
better than the process now in use—that
is, a process that will improve the quality
and reduce the cost. The inventor of such
a process will receive the money offered as
a gift, and stiir retain the ownership cf his
invention, which, the commissioner de
clares, would make him a rich man in
short order.
Carnival signs by Lingo.
Leave orders at Powers’.
5.000 copies of The News' Carnival edi
tion will be sold in Macon next week. 100
boys wanted for this work. Bright, active
boys can‘make from $lO to $25 during the
carnival. • • •
Carnival banners at Powers’.
: Book Binding.
High class work. Prices
the lowest. Get our
estimates.
News Printing Co
Macon, Dublin
and Savannah R. R.
•4} 2dj I iaj T*
P.M.IP.M. ~ STATIONS. |A.M.)A.M.
4 00 j 2 So|Lv ...Macon ....Ar'[ 9 40jl0 15
4 15' 2 50,f ..Swift Creek ..f 92010 90
4 25( 3 00;f ..Dry Branch ..f 9 loj 950
4 351 3 10;f ..Pike’s Peak ..f 9 00} 940
4 45( 3 20 f ...Fitzpatrick ...f 8 50i 9 30
4 50 3 30jf Ripley f 8 40} 925
5 05! 3 50is ..Jeffersonville,. s 8 25! 9 J 5
515 4 00tf .... Gallimore.... f 8 905
5 25) 4 15;s ....Danville ....s 7 50) 85*
530 4 25!s ...Allentown... s 7 s'dl' 850
5 40 4 40;3 ....Montrose.... s 7 25! S 35
5 50) 5 00;s Dudley.,... s 7 101 8 25'
6 02; 5 gf.’s M00re.,,., s 6 55) 8 12
6 15) 5 40*Ar. ...Dublin ...Lv 6 30) 8 30
P.M. P.M.j 7 |A.M.iA.M.
•Passenger, Sunday,
d Mixed, Daily, except Sunday.
Iflaccn ana New York
Short Line.
Via Georgia Railroad and Atlantic Coast
Line. Through Pullman cars between
Macon and New York, effective August
4tb. 1898.
Lv Macon.... 9 00 am 4 20 pm 7 40 pm
Lv MiH'gey'le 10 10 am 5 24 pm 9 24 pm
Lv Camak.... 11 40 am G 47 pm 3 33 am
Lv Camak.... 11 40 am 6 47 pmjlO 31 pm
Ar Aug’taC.T.; 1 20 pm 8 25 pm) 5 15 pm
Lv Aug’taE.T. 2 30 pm!
Ar Florence.. 8 15 pm)
Lv Fayettev’le, 10 15 pm!
Ar Petersburg 3 14 aft)j
Ar Richmond. 4 00 ami
Ar Wash’ton.. 7 41 am!
Ar Baltimore.: 9 05 am)
Ar Phila’phia. )ll 25 ami
Ar New York; 2 03 pro)
Ar N Y, W 23d stj 2 15 pm) |
Trains arrive from Augusta and points j
on main line G:45 a. in. and 11:15 a. ru. ;
From Camak and way stations 5:30 p. m.
A. G. JACKSON.
General Passenger Agent. j
JOE W. WHITE, T. P. A.
W. W. HARDWICK, S. A., 454 Cherry St.
Macon. Ga.
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Each issue contains, among its rich variety of |
fashions, two gowns, for which cut paper patterns i j
are furnished. If you wish to \wear the latest 9
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or if you are seeking new designs, you will find |
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Schedules in Effect June 12,1598- Suudand Tin e
90th Meridian.
So. 5 1 No. 7 *1 No. I STa fIONS j No. 2 \ No. a•; 77®. t
11 20 am; 740 pm) 750 am Lv Macon .. .Arj 725 prr* 7 -yV am 3 50* par
12 24 pm 840 pm 850 am Ar ....Fort Vai3sy Lv 1 627 pm; G 32 am 242 pm
• *S® Phi, j 9 40 am,Ar. ... Perry Lvi! 4 45 pea)..............|!1i 30‘am
i ill 15 am,Ar. ..Coiuiu bus. . .Lv, 4uO pro, ;
I | I'd 30 pni|Ar. . ..Opelika. . .Lvj 2 45 pm* |
••••; i- -- * -1 559 pm,Ar. . .Baihair.. . .Lv! 930 am, !
1.2 pm; 957 pm j Ar.. Anasr icus -...Lv J SIS aoaj 107 pm
• 2 17 pm, 10 21 pm Ar.. .SaMt hville ..Lv,! j 455 anv-f 12 42 pm
327 pm, 11 05 pm, |Ar ....Albany ...Lv, | 4-15 am< 11 35 am
6 *.*o pin, j Ar .. Columbia .... Lv, j -) 8 55 am
3 S*i pm, ) ;Ar .. .Dawson ....Lv .. j..... J it 52 arc
3 AS pm j Ar ... nth bsrt ...Lvj.. ;.... I 11 11 an
sOn pai) | No 9 * jAr ...Fort Gaines . .Lvj No 10 • • 9 55 am
4 31 pmj j 7 45 am. A r ....Eufaula ....Lv, 7 30 pm, J. 10 20 am
a 14 pm. ; Ar Ozark .. ..Lv, j G 50 am
j 9 05 am)Ar ..Union Springs Lv-j 6 00 pmj... 305 am
7 25 pm; j |Ar Troy. . ..Lv , i 7 56 *a>
7 30 pmj | 10 35 am Ar.. Montgomery .-Lvj 4 20 pm,..— 1 7 40 am
No. 11.*; No. 3.*j No. IT*; i No. 2.*j No. 4.*j No. 12.*
800 Amj 4 25 aiaj 420 pmjLv .Macon. . ..Ar) 11 10 amj 11 10 pmj 7 20 pm
922 am| 5 40 arij 5 40 pm.Lv. . Borne sville . .Lv) i 45 r 9 45 pm; 605 pm
!12 00 in; 12 00 m 710 pai.Ar. Thom aatan. |. SlO am'...., \V. 300 pm
955 am, 6OS ami 613 pai.Ar. .. .Gritfis». .. ..Lvi 912 tm; 9ib pm; a3O pm
|! 100 pinj. jAr.. .-Carrollton. ..Lv.,, j.. 2 20 i.m
11 20_am| 7 35 amj 7 35 pm. Ar.. . Atlanta. . -.juv| 7 5o am, 7 bu pm) 4 oh pm
No. 8. !( No. 4 *| No. 2*i 7 Ne. 1. *( N-. 3. •, No. 5. )
7 30 pmj 11 38 pnaj 11 25 axalLv. .. .Ma con. . ..Ar| j 5 55
810 pmj 13 19 am; 12 08 pm ; Ar. . ..Gor don. .. .An) 400 pm; 2-10 am 710 am
850 pmj ,1! 115 pnpAr. .billed geville .Lv 300 pa;... 1 320 am
10 00 pmj }! 3 00 pm. Ar.. ..Eato utcu. . .L.'a!l2 50 pin . j 525 am
j j! 4 45 pm,Ar. . .Mac hen. . .Lv 'lO 55 am...... J
•11 25 am!*ll 38 pmj*ll 25 am Lv. .. .Macon . .. Ar,' 345 m * >am * 345 pat
117 pmj 130 aaijf 117 pm Lv. . .Ten niile Lvi 156 pm ( 152 am; 156 pm
2 30 pmj 2 25 amj 2 30 prn'Lv. . Wad ley. .. .Ly-l£l3 55 pm; IT 25 amj 12. 55 <>m
251 pmj 244 amj 251 pst.Lv. .. Mid ville. . Lv; 12 11 pm; 12.. 25 amj 12 11 pm
330 pm, 3 35 am; 4 00 ia Lv.. ..Milieu .. ..Lv 11 35 am; 1L 50 pm.-Al 30 am
a-,4 17 pm ; 442 amj 503 pm,Lv .Waynesboro. ..Lvj 10 lu am| 10 34 pm; .D 47 am
5530 pm G 35 am,! GSO pi, Ar.. ..Augusta .. .Lvi, ;$ 20 am’ 8* -to pmj 930 am
~ j 342 am; 350 pmjLv.. £2aeky For L. .Lv II 03 am, Ml 4 pm:
j 3 58 am,[ 4OS prnLv Dover. . ..Lv| 10 47 amj ID 57 am,—.
j G 00 am j 6 00 p\m Lv.. .Savannah. ..Lvi 8 45 amj 9 00 pin;
| ) No. 16. *) | No. 15. *| |
| | 7 50 ainjLv.. .. Macon.. .. Ar) 7 30 pmj |
| j 940 amjAr.. Montieello .. Lvi 545 pmj
j ! 10 05 amlAr. .. .Mac hen .. ..Lvj 5 27 pm!.. j
j -...! 12 00 Tb)Air .. .Hatoaton ... .Lv. ! >! 330 pm).. j...
j | 10 45 amjAr. -..Madison. .. Lvj 4 40 pmj j
1 | 12 20 pniiAr. ... Atnens .. ..Lvj 3 20 pra! t
• Daily. ! Daily except Sunday, f_e ai slaiion. » Sunday o'ily.
Solid trains are run to and! from Macon and Montgomery via Eufaula. Savan
nah and Atlanta via Macon., Macon and Albany via Smithvi'le, Macon and Birming
ham via Columbus. Elegant sleeping card on trains No. 3 and 4 betw-. :n MacoJi
ana Savannah and Aalaata and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are read.? for acc«
pane? in Macon depot at ikOO p. m. Pas-songers arriving in Macon on Ns. 3 and 8»
YHnnah on No. 4, are allowed to remain lusleeper until 7 a. m. Parlor cars oeuveeu
Macon and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and .2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for
Wrightsville, Dublin and SandersviLe take 11:25. Train arrives Fo?t Gaines
4:45 p. m., and leaves lOtYO a. m. Sundays. Fzc Ozark arrives 1:30 p. nx, and lsavoa
7:30 a. m. Far further information or sch eduieu to points bc-yend our lis’ea, addre*>
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macsa, Ga. K. P. BONNER, C. T. A.
ifi. H, HINTON, Traffic Manager c. HAiLxi, u. P. a.
THKO. D. KLIN'S. G«ri«r»! A«T'»*rtrst»no«*p\.
Coast Line to Mackinac
WBU . C TC -, >*—/ The Greatest Perfeo
pass!n|7b S lion yet attained In
BTBAMmS?
SPSED, ment, Artistic Fur*
COMFORT .7 nishing.Decoratlo*
and SAFETY ( andEfficientServic*
To Detroit, Mackinac, Georgian Bay, Petoskey, Chicaga
No other Line ofEers » Panorama of 460 miles of equal variety and interest.
Pour Trip* per Week Betweea P-ery Day and Day and Night Serrleo Between
, Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac cSSSST. OC T RO L T . A » P JP K C a I £ VE . LAN *
PBTOSOI, “THE SOO,” 9ARQPXTTE Put -In - Bay B.rih.’, To!.;?" Stateroom! SMS.
AND D t LL'XH. and Toledo. Conntsctiona are made at Cleveland with
LOW RATES to Pletnresqn# Haeklnae and Earli fe6 t Trains for all points East Sonth
Return, Including Meals and Berth*. Approx- Md Southwest, and at Detroitfor all pouM
I mate Cost from Clereland, |lJj from Toledo, North and Northwest.
414 j from Detroit, $13.60. - Sunday Trip, June, Jnly, Aufust,
- - September and October Only.
oeifoii ana Cleveland Navigation mm
fh Southern R’y.
£ Schedule in Kftect July 6, 1898
CENTRA L TIME
“ read d jwnT read up.
No. 7 | No. 15 j No. 9 i No. 13 | West. | No. 14 j No. 10 j No. 8 j No. 10
7 lOpmj 4 45pmj S 00amj 2 05am;Lv.. Ma con ..Ar| 2 05amj 8 20am 110 55am) 710 pm
9 45pm; 7 45pm110 4Gam) 4 15am,Ar.. Atlanta. Lvjll 55pfn, 5 20amj 8 10am) 4 20pm
7 50am,10 Oupmj 4 00pm) 4 20a.m.Lv.. Atlanta. Arj 11 50pm| 5 OOamj ,11 40am
10 20amj 100 am) 6 25praj G 30am Lv.. Ro me.. Lvj 0 40pmj 144 am) j 9 00am
11 30am, 2 34am| 7 34pmj 7 22am]Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pm;12 20amj { 7 oOam
100 pm) 4 15amj 8 50pm| 8 40amjAr Chat’nooga Lv| 7 SOpmjlO 00pm; j 8 00pm
710 pm) 710 pm) 7 40amj |Ar .Mtm phis . Lv; j 9 15amj | 8 00pm
4 30pmj | 5 OOamj jAr Lexington. Lvj jlO 50am| |lO 40pm
7 oOpmj j 7 50amj jAr Louisville. Lvj j 740 a m; j 745 pm
7 30pm| | 730 am).: JAr Cincinnati Lvj j 8 30amj j S OOam
9 25pmj I 7 25pm| jAr Anniston .. Lvj J 6 32pmj j 8 00am
11 45amj jlO OOpmj | Ar Birm’ham Lvj j 4 lopmj j G OOam
8 05am| J 1 lOamj 7 45pmjAr Knoxville. Lvj 700 am; 7 40pmj j 740 pm
| | No. 14 j No. hT] . South. [“No. 15. | No. 13 | |
J 7 lOpmj 2 10am| 8 35am;Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am! 2 OOamj j
| j 3 22am110 OoamjLv Cochran.. Lvj 3 20pmji2 55am, j
..| | [lO 4oam,Ar Hawk’ville Lvj 2 50pmj j |
j | 3 54amj 10 60amjLv. Eastman. Lvj 2 41pmjl2 25am| J
j j 4 29amjll 36amjLv.. Helena.. Lvj 2 03pm;ll 54pmj |
j j 6 45am| 2 33pmjLv.. Je*vp... Lvjll 22am| 9 43pmj |
| j 7 20am| 3 30pm;Lv Everrett.. LvjlO 45amj 9 05pmj j
{ | 8 30amj 4 30pm[Ar Brunswick. Lvj 9 30amj 6 50pmj j
| | 9 40amj~9~25amjAr Jack’vilie. Lv| 8 OOamj 6 50pmj |
j N 0.7 J No. 9 | No. 13 J Ea sc. | No. 16 | No. 19 | [77777777"
j 710 pm) 8 30amJ 2 05amjLv.. Ma con.. at\ 8 20amj 7 10pmj........(
| 9 45pmjll lOamj 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lvj 5 20am| 4 20pmj |
j 9 25amI 8 30pmj 6 10pmiLv Charlotte LvjlO 15amj 9 35amj j
[ i 30pm,12 OOn’tjll 25pm;Lv . Dan ville. Lvj 6 07pmj 5 50am| j
j 6 25pmj 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond Lv;l2 oin’njl2 10n,nj |
j 5 30pm | 7 35am|. JAr.. Norfolk. Lvj 9 30amjl0 OOpmj J
j 3 50J 1 53am| ,Lv. .Lynchburg Lv| 2 55pmj 3 40amj |
j 5 4Spmj 3 35amj ...ILv Charl’ville Lvj 2 15pmj 1 50pmj J
| 9 25pm| 6 42am| jAr Wash gton. Lvjll 15am;10 43pmj j
jll 2oamj S 00am| jAr Balti’more Lvj 6 17am| 9 20pm| |
j 3 OOamjlO 15amj jAr Philadlphia Lv 3 50am 6 55pmj j
j 6 20amjl2 45n ’nj JAr New York Lvjl2 15am ; 4 30pmj |
’ J 3 pmj 8 30pmj |Ar .. ..Boston Lvj 5 00pm,10 00am| j
THROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC.
Nos 13 and 14 Pullman Sleeping Car* between Chattanooga and JacksonrilU,
also* between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at
JML&con
Noe 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween Atlanta and Brunswick.
Nos. 9 and 10, elegant free ObservatioT cars, between Macon and Atlanta, also
Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot,
Atlanta, with “Southwestern Vestibuled Limited,” finest and fastest train in thv
S ° Ut Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. 8. Fast Mail Train” to and
from the East.
Nos. 7 and 6, Pullman sleeping cars between Macon and Asheville.
TRANK S. GANNON, 3d V. P. & G. M., J- M. CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washingon, D. C Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. P. A., S< H * HARDWICK, A. G. P. A*.
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
RAXTULT. CLIFTON, T. P. A.. BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon. Ga. jf*: 565 Mulberry St., Maoen, Ga.