Newspaper Page Text
10
ENQUIRER - SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1890.
SPORTS IN SCOTLAND-
ENORMOUS SUMS PAID FOR HUNT
ING AND FISHING PRIVILEGES.
ish aristocracy are averaged. His regime
of entertainment would represent less out
lay than that of most shooting tenants.
At his lodge, little less than a palace, and
bat a mile distant from Tomich, are an
nually entertained snch people as Lord
and Lady Aberdeen and family; the Dow
ager Duchess of Marlborough, Lady Sa
rah Churchill, Lord and Lady Curzow,
Lord and Lady Ramsay, Lady Winbourne,
the Marquis and Lady Dufferin,
Lord Baring, the artist Gourley Steele and
[Coprighted for the Enqnirer-Sou.t Professor Drummond, Lord* Randolph
Tomich, Scotland, October 14, 1890.- |
On coming face to face with the fact of
the depopulation of rural Scotland, and
TBINCEI.Y RENTALS OF THE LODGES.
INTERESTING DESCRIPTIONS—A BAL
TIMORE MILLIONAIRE STRIKES
THE BRITISH SPORTSMAN
CRAZY WITH ENVY.
especially of the northern and western
Highlands, it is astounding that any sys
tem of land laws is permitted to exist
which will work such fatal results to a
country. There must be a practical rea
son for all this, yon feel. You dig and
delve for that reason, and you are still
store astounded. Inquire where you may
there is in effect but one answer: “High
landers are not worth to the great land
lords so many red deer. Crofters are of
lees account than partridges and rabbits.
Human beings in the form of Scottish
peasanty are less valuable than their weight
is pheasants or fish!”
HUNTING AND FISHING PRIVILEGES.
Not satisfied with assertions and
generalities, you delve and dig again. It
is easy enough to find proof of depopula
tion. But it is difficult for the average
American to realize how land proprietors
can find adequate compensation for the
loss of population and its labor which or
dinarily alone give to land the greatest
value possible for it to possess. Agents
and factors everwhere tell you that the in
come from hunting and fishing privileges
is more than repaying proprietors. This
seems so inexplicable that you delve and
dig again, as I did, and finally arrive at
some most astounding facts. The great
•verwhelming fact is that a greater area
•f land in Scotland is now devoted to the
exclusive purpose of game preserves than
is occupied by farmers for the exclusive
cultivation of the soil, and that nine
teenths of all land and of all rods of loch,
brook or river shores in the kingdom are
annually based in shooting and fishing
privileges to British sportsmen.
Naturally Scottish peasantry are in the
way of game and fish. But passing a dis
cussion of the effect of this land policy
upon the'sociologic and economic condi
tion of Scotland, we Americans have no
conception whatever of the stupendous
sums annually paid by British titled and
gentlemen sportsmen for their few weeks
delights with rod and gun. The amounts
received by single owners for single privi
leges are equally surprising. Mrs. Chis
holm, owner of the Chisholm estates
which border Strathglass here, must re
ceive £14,000. I find that for sixty-nine
shootings and fishings the Duke of Suth
erland receives rentals amounting to £23,-
990. As lie has more than one hundred
for lease, his income from this source
alone must reach £35.000 or £40,000. In
F orfarshire, on one estate belonging to the
“Tutors of the Earl of Dalhousie,” these
privileges whose rental prices I have been
able to secure reach £10,400; and of those
,cf the Count-ess Dowager of Seafield re
garding which information is available,
-fweXye ^bootings and fishings in Eglin-
tafrir? ghve fter £3,189; eight in Banffshire,
in Inverness-shire, £4,605;
or a total *’ i which is probably
■ot one third of «#» iSQPme from
tills source.
HEAVY BENTALS. J
The total of these known rentals, £46S,-
#12, exceeds $23,000,000. There are, alto
gether, 3,578 ‘shootings” and 656 “fish
ings.” The above sum represents only
the rentals paid on not quite one-fourth of
the entire 4,234 shootings and fishings; so
that a moderate estimate of the entire
J Sir Thomas Muaro, with their retinues of
servants; and I am informed that his an
nual outlay exclusively in entertainment
exceeds $40,000.
Aside from all these taxes upon the
wealthy sportsman, there is a large and
increasing outlay in the matter of litiga
tion. Sportsmen tenants become “land
crazy.” All manner of
DEVICES AND BECKLESS STRATAGEMS
are resorted to in order to break a neigh
boring sportsman’s lease and increase
holders’ territory. This leads to the
coarts, and a certain class of the shrewd
est lawyers in Great Britain are gaining
large fortunes fostering this character of
barratry. One tenant occupying shoot
ings in the shires of Inverness and Ross
is know to expend annually $50,000 in lit
igation alone. On the authority of those
possessing undeniable knowledge of the
entire subject, and after a mo-t earnest
investigation into the details of expendi
ture, I believe that an exceedingly con
servative estimate wonld place the annnai
rentals of Scottish shootings and flshings
at $10,000,000, and the expense of enjoy
ing their privileges at an equal or greater
sum. So that for hunting and fishing in
Scotland alone, British sportsmen annu
ally expend the enormous sum of $20,-
0C0,000.|
These Scottish shootings and fishings
comprise almost inconceivably vast
tracts as well as
RIDICULOUSLY INSIGNIFICANT AOUND8.
Among the shootings, areas of from five
to 250,000 acres are found; while the
heart of the London clerk thrills with ex
altation eleven months in the year as he
glowingly boasts of his fishing in Scot
land, which may comprise no more than
six rods of the shore of some gentle rivu
let injwhich he could not drown unless
held therein face downward. Many of the
Duke of Sutherland’s “fishings” are
let in stream spaces or lengths of no more
than six rods each. Some of the larger
deer forests of Scotland may be mentioned.
Carrichibah, in Argylshire, extends over
35.000 acres. In Aberdeen, the Forest of
Mar is fifteen miles long and eight wide.
Glengary Forest in Inverness-shire is
abotn seven miles long. Gaik comprises
nearl 11,00 acress; and Glenavon contains
22.000 acres. In Southerlandshire the
Dirre-Chatt forest is fifty miles long and
twenty wide, while Dirre-Moss forest is
more than half as large. The great
Glennartney forest, in Perthshire, made
famous by the genius of Scott, is said to
contain about 1,500 red deer. The glory
of Scotland to the sportsman, however, is
the magnificent forest of Athol, Blair-
Athol, which now contains nearly
8.000 deer at large. As it is solely occu
pied by its proprietor, the Duke of Athol,
who is a strict preserver of the breed, it
is the acme of social and hunting ambi
tion to be once admitted to the chase in
these noble grounds. The English sports
man who has killed one Athol deer, is al
most as great as a notficman in Great Brit
ain.
But the largest deer forest ill Scotland,
if not the largest in the world outside 0f
Russia, is tenanted by a gentleman claim
ing American citizenship; one who secured'
countless millions in profit out of railway
building and other transactions in Russia.
Thi3 gentleman is Mr. William L. Winans, j
formerly, or at present of Baltimore} and j
it is violating no confidence in Scotland to j
state that bis lordly absorption of shootings i
and deer forests, as well as his tendencies j
shire, with an area of 15,000 acres at a
rental of £1,000; Sliograph, another
Chisholm forest, costing £140; and quite
a number of smaller forests and divisions
of forests at an added outlay of about
£3,000. These form one unbroken forest
from near the city of Beauly on the east
coast, across the entire width of Scotland
through the vast wildernesses of Inverness
and Loss-shires.
THEY COVER FOUR RIVERS,
many majestic mountains, several ex
quisite lochs, and four of the grandest
glens and straths in Scotland. Their
rentals are at least $18,000. Certainly
£10,000 is a moderate estimate of the an
nual legitimate expenses in the care of -a
“shooting” of a quarter million acres in
area. And it is a matter of common re
port in the Highlands that ‘’the amateur
American millionaire sportsman” expends
yearly £10,000 more in litigation. It is cal
culated that his annual expenditure for the
pleasure of being the tenant-proprietor
of the largest deer forest in Scotland is
fully £40,000, or nearly g200,000. His
accoutrement, entertainment and retinues
are such as to awaken most unpleasant
emotions in the breasts of titled sports
men, and when he rides to the hounds he
is attended by more than one hundred
huntsmen and gillies. But
“THE GREAT AMERICAN^DEEB STALKER”
has whimsical notions of sporting. He
seems to enjoy possession rather than use.
For five years there kas not been heard
the crack of a rifle within his forests.
His red deer are as tame as sheep, and his
honnds voiceless, save in their kennel
bowlings, aDd when as their keepers give
them galloping “ponndings” along the
mountain roads, their yelps of restless
iensing and disquiet awaken strange
echoes among the straths and crags.
Edgar L. Wakkmax.
LKHON ELI X IK.
A Pleasant Lemon Drink.
For biliousness and constipation, take
Lemon Elixir.
For indigestion and fool stomach, take
Lemon Elixir.
For sick and nervous headaches, take
Lemon Elixir.
For sleeplessness and nervousness, take
Lemon Elixir.
For loss of appetite and debility, take
Lemon Elixir.
For fevers, chills and malaria, take
Lemon Elixir.
Dr. Mozlev’s Lemon Elixir will not fail
you in any of the above rimed diseases,
all of which arise from a torpid or diseased
liver, stimach, kidneys or bowells.
Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozlry, At
lanta, Ga.
50c and $1.00 per bottle, at druggist.
A Prominent Minister Writes.
After ten years of great suffering from
indigestion with great nervour prostration
biliousness, disordered kidneys and con
stipation. I have been cured by Dr. Moz-
ley’s Lemon Elixir and am now a well
man.
Rev. C. C. Davis, Eld. M. E. Church
South.No. 28 Tatnall St. Atlanta. Ga. j
Notice of Exemption
Copyright*
Send a message as a token
To some distant friend of mine,
Say my back was almost broken
And from pain was nearly blind.
Bat I found relief to be sure
By using Woolridge** Wonderful Cure.
So are many girls and women with broken down constitutions from necessary
physical labor, only awaiting the happy introduction of such a purely vegetable
r.ompound as _ \A/ . (U _ It is a boon to weakly females; cures Rheumatism
and Blood Poison in its worst forms.
i4 My wife suffered six years from Blood Poison; tried many specialists and several blood reme
dies with no effect; a few bottles of W. W. C. cured her. A. C. McGEHEE, Columbus. Ga.
For sale by all druggists. Manufactured by Woolridge’s Wonderful Cure Co.,
Columbus. G.
MUD I cm
THE SHORT LINE
ATLANTA, WASHINGTON,
NEW YORK, NASHVILLE
AND CINCINNATI.
Through Coach Between
Atlanta and Columbia*
Via Griffin. §
The only line •tuning DOUBLE DAILY tmzi
between Colmnbos and Atlanta, making close .
connections in Union Depot, Atlanta.
SCHEDULE IN KF FtCTVlNDAY, SEPT
7th, 1890.
NORTH BOUND—Daily
No. 51.
No. 56
Leave Columbns
Arrive Warm Springs
lljOpm
2 32 p m
500? s
37 p e
3 50 p m
4 00 p m
5 40pm
8 22 p so
8 32 p x,
10 16 p it
Leave Griffin, Central B. R....
Arrive Atlanta
Leave Griffin. G.M. & G. R-R.
Ar. McDonough, G. M. & G...
Ar. Atlanta, E. T., V. * G
- 8 35 p it
| 9 15 p ts
110 25 pm
south bound—Daily.
No. 56.
5e. f 2
Leave Atlanta via C. R. R
Arrive Griffin, C. R. B
7 00 a m
8 30 a m
215 p xi
400p K
Lv. Atlanta via E. T., V & G...
Lv. McDonough via G. M. & G.
Ar. Griffin via G. M. & G
5 45 a m
7 40am
8 20am
8 35 a m
9 57am
11 30 a mi
4 15 p m
5 25 p a
7 10 p m
Arrive Warm Springs
Arrive Columbus
WHOLESALE HOUSES OF COLUMBUS.
BUGGIES, WAGONS AND HARNESS.
Williams, Bullock & Co.
dies, etc.
! Wholesale and Retail dealers in Bug
les, Wagons. Koad Carts, Harness, Sad-
au8 Cm
DRY GOODS.
J |/1 o Sy g ^ || Established 1838. Wholesale Dry 6 xids. Notions, Jite.
• AV jf Jx7 %X> A. I". || faetnrers of Jeans Pants Overshirts, Etc.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
J. K. Orr & Co.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in Boots and Shoes.
GROCERIES.
h coach between Columbus and Atlan-,.
via Griffin on trains Nos. 51 and 52. Train ac
stops at Concord 20 minutes for supper.
Ask for tickets to Atlanta and ail points beyond
over the Georgia Midland Railroad. Tickets .re
sale at Union depot and at the office over Thri-c
National Bank. M. E. GRAY.
Superintendent
CLIFTON JONES, General Passenger Agent.
W. M. PARSLEY. General Traveling Agent.
SAM ROUTE,
Savannah Americas and Montjamerr £aiiws»
Time Card Taking Effect October 12, l**i.
No. 6 Daily:
Eastward. I
.No. 5 L-a.,y
! Westward.
11:35 p m Lv. Birmingham .Ala. Ar
5:45 a m Ar. Columbus, Ga. Lv
6:00 a m Lv. Columbus. Ga. Ar
9:00 a m Ar. Americas, Ga. Lv.
9:15 a m |Lv. Americas, Ga Ar.
10:45 am Ur. _ Cordele, Ga *
Bergan & Jo? nes.
Wholesale Groceries,
cos.
Cigars, Ping and Smoking Tobac-
S.A.&M.dep
10:45 a m Lv. Cordele, Ga. Ar.
1:17 p m Lv. Helena, Ga. Ar.
3:15 p m jAr. Lyons, Ga.
3:35 p m Lv. Lyons, Ga.
6:00 a m
10:50 p m
9:30 p m
6:40 p m
6:20 p m
4:55 p m
4:56 p m
2:17 p m
Lv.j 12: i© p is
Ar. 11:5s a mj
Lv. j
F. J. Koho.
Wholesale Fancy Groceries and Manufacturer of Candies, Ciders,
Vinegar, Etc., 1013 Broad street.
J. H. Gabriel.
Wholesale Grocer and Manufacturer of Pure Cider and Vinegar
Candies, Etc., 1017 Broad street.
DRUGS.
braanon Carson.!! Wholesale nruggi8t9 -
Having sold all stock heretofore held by each
of ns in the Eagle and Phenix Manufacturing
Company, of Columbus, Georgia, notice is hereby
given, under section 1496 ol the code, that we
claim exemption from all personal liability.
N. J. BUSSEY,
H. C. BUSSEY.
aprl oamSra
pins 1 ouhuI
FOR
Infants and Children.
FURNITURE.
':00 p m Ar. Savannah, Ga Lv.| 8:30 a ®
, The only line running solid trains an 1 Pullman
! Buffet Sleeping Cars bet veen Savannah and
j Birmingham. Connections at Birmingham, Sa
vannah and Columbus with lines diverging; xt
Americas with Central railroad; at Cordeiewita
j G. S. & F. railroad; at Helena with E. X., Y. <s
G. railway; at Lyons with Central railroad.
•Meal Station. No. 6 takes breakfast at BUa-
I ville.
' W. N. MARSHALL, E. S. GOODMAN.
Gen. Superintendent. Gen. Pass. Agent.
I J. M. CARULAN. S. E. Pass. Agt.,
Savannah, Ga. is. A. SMITH,
Western Pass. Agt., ot. Louis Mo,
A. G Rhodes & s 'o.
Wholesale and Retail Pureiture* Carpets and WaJ
Paper.
JEWELRY,
HARNESS, SADDLES, ETC.
M. A. Bradford. i I Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Harness, Saddle*, Etc.
RAILWAY CO.
OCCHEE f t
111
if»»
it.
to litigation in connection with the same i
-a a tremendous scale, have awakened *
sun) {jaid aiinualiy in. rentals aibiid would ] .
probably riot fill short of $l6-,00O,OOO.
This vast sum 4 actually annually secured
by Scottish landlords exclusive of all other
if-'ntals for grazing and agriculture which
their lands secure to them. But it is by
no means the principal expenditure by
titled and gentlemen British sportsmen.
It is of common report here that
their other expenses equal or exceed this
first cost of possession. An army of con
veyancers are employed making and re
newing leases and in modifying their term
and conditions. Nearly every shooting
and fishing has its factor or agent who
MULCTS THE ABSENT TENANT
with innumerable petty charges. Hunting
lodges with the appointments and accesso
ries of palaces must be kept in repair, oc
cupied and in order. Accoutrements for
the chase of the moor require large orig
inal investment and constant renewal and
addition, The average annual cost of the
support and care of a pack of twenty-five
couples of fox or deer hounds is $5,000.
A host of gamekeepers are supported the
year through, and, during the hunting sea
son, an average deer forest shooting will
employ, aside from a half dozen hunts
men, from thirty to fifty gillies or general
utility men. These gillies are recruited
from two classes, the hangers on of studs
and stables in the large English and
Scotch cities, and from latter-day crofters’
families; the latter causing a complete
change in the character of young High
landers. Just enough crofters are per.
mitteded to remain upon these great
northern estates to assist in furnishing a
SUBTLY OF THIS CLASS OF HUMAN CAT
TLE; ~~
-and the trifle of £15 or .£20 per year, for
a few weeks’ attendance, upon the sports
men lord, with the corruptions of kennel
and saddle rooms at the lod^eSf, and Utter
idleness for the remainder of the year, are
making a sad and unworthy lot of a class
thit in former times possessed many of
the highest qualit ies of the sturdy Scotch
Ta?<*.
The Rem of transportation of studs,
kenneis and innumerable forms of luggage
from the. English and Scotch capitals,
where now the greatest number of Bri
tish gentlemen sportsmen reside, has be
come one of such importance that all the
northern bound railways in the two king
doms not only annually employ large num
ber of ageuts to soiubit this particular traf
fic, but during August and September
they are sorely taxeril to supply adequate
!. /Ti
accommodations,
he expense of
F A BEVY OF LADIIS
GENTLEMEN •
ths at one of these
lodges is very great. To
Tweedmouth is proprie-
deer forest, which
om this village of To-
of weird Glen Affaric
and not a tenant, and a
quiet tastes, as the Brit-
FEELiNGS OfilElt AN THOSE OF ADMI-
BATION
among the titled sportsmen of Britain.
He has not been enjoying the sport of this
sort of acqusition ten years,bnt his energy,
money and lawyers have already given
him a red deer park nearly one-half as
large as the total area of Rhode Island. He
is now tenant of more than tWehly great
sporting estates, most of which are among
the vast properties of the Chisholms of
Erchless Castles Affaric forest, covering
almost the. whole of Glen Affaric, contains
nearly 15,000 acres, and the rental is £500.
Corriechallie, with Glengowrie in Ross-
shire, has 9,000 acres. Carrynnachouland
another Chisholm shootiDg costs £250.
Craskie Forest in Inverness-shire, com
prises 9,000 acres, and Mr. Winans pays
£1,350 for this. Over in Ross-shire, ad
joining his Inverness forests is the small
forest, of Durusduan, renced from Sir K.
J. Matheson, Bart, for but £200. It cov
ers nearly 10,000 acres;and he pays £550
for Glomach, with 8,000 acres, from the
same proprietor. The Fasnakyle Forest,
in which twenty or thirty stags and 250
brace of grouse may be annually shot,
which also covers some of the most mag
nificent scenery of grand Strathglass, is
secured for £970. Its area is 15,000 acres.
The southside of Glassletter, also Chis
holm property, is “shot over” by Mr. Wi
nans for £250.
Splendid scenery has been secured
throughout with these
IMMENSE SHOOTING ESTATES.
Glenconnich, opening to the northwest
front Strathglass, is covered by a succes
sion of weird tarns, and the mountain ac-
divides rise in unbroken and beautiful J
slopes. The Chisholms receive from Mr.
Winans for Glencannich £1,350. Beyond I
this to ;;e st tvnti ,'t>utb arc the vast j
foivsls of GlenslfatiifaraF and Cuiligan j
Deer Forest itt Inverness-shire, the proper-'
ty of Lord Lovat. They occupy an area
of 53,000 acres, and the rent is £5,700. ■
Glenstrathfarar opens north from Strath
glass at the little hamlet of Stray, sShd j
running for ten miles along the TOse of ;
the mountain Benev&chart forms one of !
the most exquisitely beautiful Valleys of
the Highlauds. Affaric Fftfest, in Glen _
Affaric, previously mentioned, is a mass j ”
of primeval pine, shflowed by the beet- |
ling crags of the gtaisl mountain. Mam j
Soil, from whose pesfc the German Ocean l
and the Atlantic are visible. FurtherI
still to the west aoe Sir K. J. Matin-son's >
deer forests of Killilan and Corryreach, j
in Ross-shire, which comprise 30,000!
acres, and for which Mr. Winans pays
about £1,000. Near these is Sir J. T.
Mackenzie’s celebrated forest of Kintail
with 17,000 acres, for which he pays an
equa),or a larger, rental. For the im
mense Chisholm forest of Knockftn, he
pays £2,200. Besides these Mr. Winans
has secured the Chisholm forest of Luib-
nadamph, which covers 9,000; the forests
of Riocham, Patt and Corryeach, in Koss-
An instant relief for eolic of infant*. It cure?
dysentery, diarrkcea, cholera infantum, or any de
rangement of the rtomach and bowel*. It sooth*
and heal* the mucous discharge from the head
stomach or bowels. It makes the critical per?Oil
of teething children safe and easy, and invigorate:
the system by it* tonic influence. Try it fo*
coughs and colds, nervous debility and sick head
ache. Recommended and used largely by phy
sicians and sold by druggist*.
WHOLESALE BY
Brannon & Carson, and Pa‘ter
son &l Thomas,
COLUMBUS. GA j
MAVERICK NATIONAL BASK j
BOSTON, MASS.
1 ft
cafwatl
SURPLUS
....’*400,000
... HOO.OOO
Accounts of Banks, Banker* and Corporation*
solicited.
Our facilities for COLLECTIONS are excellent,
and we re-discount for Banks when balance* war
rant it.
Boston is a Reserve City, and balances with us
from Banks (not located in other Reseiure Cities)
count as a reserve.
We draw our own Exchange on London and the
Continent, and make Cable transfers aud place
money by telegraph throughout the United State*
and Canada.
We have a market for prune first-class Invest
ment Securities, and invite proposals from States,
Counties and Cities whfn issuing bonds.
We do a general Banking Business, and invite
correspondence.
ANA P. POTTER, PresMeal.
JGS. W. WORK, « Mhler.
mavlTwed&aat 6ra
commeocini tab §.
r !« 1! !
Liiuiif
:UiVuiilhll] 1U
Columbus,
a.
Through daily train and quick time be
tween Albany and Griffin. Immediate
connection at Griffin for Atlanta, New
York, Washington, Cincinnati, Louisvil.t
and Nashville, and close connection at
Albany for ail points in Florida and South
ern Georgia.
NORTH BOUND.
Leave Albany 7 30 a.m. 1 59 p. m. 3 ©•' p.
Arrive Columbus.il 15 a. m. 9 50 p. in. 7 00 p. m.
SOUTH BOUND.
Leave Columbus...7 40 p. m. 9 30 a. m 8 00*. a-
Arrive Albany....11 25 p. m. ; 6 40 p. m 12 00a.
* Daily, t Daily except Sue-lay. ; ba. :?
only.
Through tickets to all points on 3ale bv av,-
aEd at General Passenger Office, Georgia Hurr
building.
Sashtbi. E. Par hoot.
W. D. Brown, General Manager
General Passenger Agent.
Western Itailway of Ala
bama.
Quickest and be^j, Three hundred shcrv»?
to New York thaftVv* Louisville. (.We eotiAt-
tion with Piedmont Air Line and Western ard
%
weerer swule.
0 ALE srKnBIj'WFERlW
' iODBi & BuTES.
Savamk an, C
This Exposition will be one of the most Complete and interesting ever held in
the South. Every Department wil! present a Fine Display.
LIBERAL FHB iMi M m II m 1H m
The Attractions for Visitors wiii htAuiGhious? and Varied.
Trotting and Running
J&iiis&ry * omtgms, -,.ad
Lverj K1rd f
AiiittH**? !>«•>•,
jker
DraiiimcIHy and
I»ed Men’s bay
RfiDum lntfpfiMs wi Ptfaftak Barb? ik
HE CUT i MILE RATES OVER 3LL UMS
Atlantic Railroad.
August 24,1890.
No. o6.
No. oo. No. 51.
Leave New Orleans..
Leave Mobile
Leave Selma
Leave Montgomery..
3 13pm
7 50 p m 12 40 am
4 30pmj 5 40an-
115am| 7 46*m
Arrive Columbus —
Leave Columbus
Leave Opelika
Arrive West Point..
Arrive LaGrange....
Arrive Newnan
Arrive Atlanta
11 40 a m
1 15 p m
2 03 pm
2 36 p m
3 46 p m
5 25 pm
4 15 a m 11 15 a ns
10 50 p m 10 50 p su
323am lOtfism
4GGam 10 53am
4 25am 1119 a a
5 24 a m 12 11 p to
6 50 a m| 130pa
Via W. and A. Rail read.
Leave Atlanta
Arrive Rome
Arrive Dalton
Arrive Chattanooga.
Arrive Cincinnati...
Arrive Nashville
7 50am 6 18 pm
11 35 a m
11 40 a m 10 15 p m
lOOpmlUCpB
6 40 a m i 3 50 p m
7 03pm! 515am
Via the Piedmont Air Line to New York and East.
7 10 a m 6 00 f ns
530pm 3 40am
5 15 am 330pm
653am 713pm
8 25 a m 11 35 p m
10 47 a m 3 00 a m
1 20pm! 6 20a jd
Arrive Charlotte
Arrive Richmond
Arrive Philadelphia
Arrive New York
^Tram’No. 51, Pullman Palace car Kew ur leans
to Atlanta and Atlanta to New York without
change.
Train No. 50 carries Pullman Bnifet SleejArg
ear between Atlanta and New Orleans.
Trains Nos. 52 and 53 carry Pullman BviSit
Sleeping car between New Orleans and Warh'^.;-
ton.
Everybody come and have a good time,
ther infermation, -catalogue, etc., address
C. B. GRIMES,
Colombo* will be in her glory. For fur-
J. J. 8? & W,
President.
Biliousness Sick Headache. Constipation.
Malaria. Liver Complaints, take the sale
and certain remedy. SMITH’S
BILE BEA^S
U.-.c the SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to the hot
tie). They are the most convenient: salt aliases
lhiee of either size, 25 cents per lx*u!e.
70:
: vjnravt
panel size ot* this picture for
cents (coppers or stamps).
,1. F. SMITH A CO..
Makers of “Bib? Bean-;.'' St. Louis. ?.lo.
FRAZER & DOZIER,
Wholesale Hardware,
norSdly
CKDtiCTMIBTJS GhA.
South Bound Train*. No. 54. No. 50. I No-Si.
7 30am 1 Ni pm 10 06 pH)
ilKam 530 am
I 3 40 pm 10 50 pm
, 5 14 pm 12 20.. m
d 07 p m 2 28 1 m
Leave Atlanta —
Arrive Columtra*..
Leave Columbus ..
Arrive Opelika —
Arrive Chehaw
Arrive Montgomery. ; 7'25pm ; 315am
9 20pm 930a at
Arrive S-* 1 ms
Arrive Mobile !
Arrive New Orleans. |
2 10 a m 8 ifl ?. ns
100 a m 1 tUpa
R E. T UT?,
Traffic Manajer.
EDMUND L. TYLEK,
General Mauafer.
A. CAMP, Pa?sender Agent,
'-'1 v J)-::c St.-re Oolumbu* \
MlUYr U OK SsTOijE.V
From Hartshorn, Ala., on night of 20th ini t
over medium blaek horse, litt’e sun-biuri
saddler, carries hit tail to one side, has litti
largemenl on leftknee. I will pay libera:!
any information eoncerning horse. Addres
oce26 lw
G. D. PASCHAL,
Hart: boro, Ai i