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ONLY
Only ten years of joys and tears—
It seems not very long-;
Only ten years of hopes and fears
That to my memory throng;
And as you are standing again at my side,
do fair and so young, my bonny bride,
Now breaks from my heart this song;
Only ten years of joys and tears.
Of merry and cloudy weather,
Have blended our lives together, my love,
Have welded our hearts together.
So we'll dream once again of the happy days
when
We timidly stood in the morning
With hearts full of love, with the blue sides
above.
And roses our garden adorning.
And now you are standing again at my side.
Bo fair and so young, my bonny bride.
With roses our pathway adorning.
Only ten years of joys and tears,
And the tears into pearls are turning;
Only ten years of hopes and fears.
And now a sweet incense is burning
On the altar of Love, whose diadem
Now shimmers and glistens with many a gem
Of sanctified sorrow and yearning.
Only ten years of joys and tears.
Of merry and cloudy weather.
Have blended our lives together, my love.
Have welded our hearts together.
Only ten years of hopes and fears!
Their passing was fleet,
But their living was sweet
In merry and cloudy weather, my love,
As we’ve journeyed along together.
—Boston Globe.
THE CLERK’S STORY.
In the fall of 1866 I was employed as a
clerk in a general store at a cross roads
in southern Indiana. The store, a church
and a blacksmith shop, with two resi
dences, made up the buildings, and the
families of the merchant and the black
smith were the only residents. The
country about was thickly settled, how
ever, and trade was always good. Be
fore the merchant engaged me he an
nounced that I would have to sleep in
the store o’ nights, and that unless I had
pluck enough to defend the place against
marauders he did not want me at any
price.
He showed me a shotgnn, a revolver
and a spring gun, which were used, or
on hand to be used, to defend the place,
and the windows were protected with
stout blinds and the doors by double
locks. The close of the war had drifted
a bad population into Indiana. The
highways were full of tramps, and there
were hundreds of men who had deter
mined to make a living by some other
means than labor. Several attempts
had been made to rob the store, and it
had come to that pass that no clerk
wanted to sleep there alone.
The merchant seemed satisfied with
answers I gave him, and on a certain
Monday morning I went to work. The
same night a store about four miles
away was broken into and robbed and
the clerk seriously wounded. Two
nights later three horses were stolen in
our neighborhood. At the end of a
week a farmer who was on his way
home from our store was robbed on the
highway.
If I had not been a light sleeper from
habit these occurrences would have
tended to prevent too lengthy dreams as
I lay in my little bedroom at the front
of the second story. The revolver was
always placed under my pillow, and the
shotgnn stood within reach. The spring
gun was set about midway of the lower
floor. It was a double barreled shotgun,
each barrel containing a big charge of
buckshot, and the man who kicked the
string and discharged the weapon would
never know what hurt him.
It did not seem possible that any one
conld break into the store without arous
ing me. There was no door to my room,
and after the people in the neighborhood
had gone to bed I conld hear the slight
est noise in the store. I had looked the
place over for a weak spot and had
failed to find it, but my own confidence
came near proving my destruction. I
should have told you in describing the
store that just over the spot where we
set the spring gun was an opening
through which we hoisted and lowered
such goods as were stored for a time on
the second floor. When not in use this
opening was covered by a trap door.
Toward evening on the tenth day of
my clerkship I hoisted up a lot of pails
and tubs, and had just finished when
trade became so brisk that I was called
to wait upon customers. Later on I saw
that I had left the trap door open, and I
6aid to myself that I would let it go un
til I went to bed. The store had the
only burglar proof safe for miles
around, and it was customary for the
farmer who had a hundred dollars or so
to leave it with us. He received an en
velope in which to enclose it, and he
conld take out or put in as he liked. On
this evening four or five farmers came
in to deposit, and as I afterward figured
up we had about $1,500 in the safe.
There were two strange faces in the
crowd that evening. One belonged to a
roughly dressed, evil eyed man, who an
nounced himself as a drover, and the
other as a professional tramp. I gave
the latter a piece of tobacco and some
crackers and cheese, and he soon went
away, and we were so busy up to 9
o’clock that I did not give the drover
much attention, ^yhen we came to shut
up the store he had gone from my mind
altogether. We counted up the cash,
made some charges in the day book, and
it was about 10 o’clock when the mer
chant left. I was tired, and I took a
candle and made the circuit of the store,
Bet the spring gun and went to bed. I
had to pass within six feet of the trap
door as I went to my room, bat I did not
see it. It was a rather chilly night in
October, and we had no fires yet, and as
I got under the blankets the warmth
was so grateful that I soon fell asleep.
It was the first night I had gone to bed
without thinking of robbers and won
dering how I should act in case they
came in. I did not know when I fell
asleep. I suddenly found myself half
upright in bed, and there was an echo in
the store, as if the fall of something had
aroused me. It was 1 o’clock, and I had
been asleep almost three hours. Leaning
on my elbow I strained my ears to catch
the slightest sound, and after a minute
I heard a movement down stairs. While
I conld not say what it was, a sort of in
stinct told me that it was made by some
human being.
Everything on the street was as silent
as the grave. My window curtain was
up, and I could see that the sky had
thickened and was very black. I did not
waii for the noise to be repeated. I was
just as sure that some one was in the
store as if I had already seen him, and I
crept softly out of bed, drew on my
trousers and moved out into the big
room, having the revolver in my hand.
There was no door at the head of the
stair. I intended to go there and listen
down the stairway.
As I was moving across the room,
which was then pretty clear of goods as
far as the trap door, I suddenly recol
lected this opening ana changed my
course to reach it. It was terribly dark
in the room, and one unfamiliar with
the place would not have dared to move
a foot. Half way to the trap I got down
on hands and knees, and as I reached the
opening I settled down on my stomach.
There was a dim light down stairs.
That settled the fact that some one was
in the store. After a minute I heard
whispers, then the movement of feet,
then a certain sound which located the
intruders to a foot. They were at the
safe in the front of the store.
I drew myself forward and looked
down the opening. I conld see a lighted
candle and two or three dark figures at
the safe, and I could hear the combina
tion being worked. My first thought
was to drop my hand down and open fire
in their direction, but I remembered that
we had so many articles hanging up that
no. bullfet had a chance of hitting the
men. I was wondering what to do, when
I heard one of the men whisper:
“It’s all d d nonsense. We might
work here a week and not hit it.”
“But I told yon to bring the tools and
yon wouldn’t,” protested another.
“Oh, dry up!” put in a third voice.
“What we want to do is to go up and
bring that counter hopper down, and
make him open the box.”
“Ill give the cussed thing a few more
trials,” said the first man, and I heard
him working away again. My eyes
could not have told me the number of
robbers, bnt my ears had. There were
three of them, and they were no doubt
desperate and determined men. They
spoke of bringing me down to open the
safe, as if no resistance was anticipated
or taken into account. Indeed, they
might well reason that they had me at
their mercy. The rain was now falling,
the night was very dark, and a pistol
shot in the store could not have been
heard in either of the dwellings.
If they had reflected that I might be
armed they would have offset it with
the fact that I was a boy of 18, with a
girl’s face and probably a girl’s nerve.
I don’t deny that I was a bit rattled, and
that my lip would quiver in spite of me,
but I was at the same time fully de
termined to protect the store if it cost
me my life. How to get at the fellows
was what bothered me, but that trouble
was soon solved.
“There,” whispered the man at the
combination as he let go of it, “I won’t
fool here another niinute. That kid
knows the combination, and we can
make him work it. Come on.”
They were coming up stairs. The best
place for me would be at the head of the
stairway. The stairs had a half turn in
them, and I would fire upon the first
man who came within range. I heard
the men coming back to the stairway
and my nerve gave way. It wasn’t from
cowardice, but the knowledge that I was
to kill a human being upset me. I de
cided to retreat to my room, and if they
persisted in coming that far I would
shoot. The trio had rubbers on theii
feet, bnt they came up stairs without
trying very hard to prevent making a
noise.
The one who came first had the candle,
and as he got to the head of the stairs I
saw a knife in his other hand. They
made no delay in approaching my room,
and with a great effort I braced myself
for what I saw must happen. They
could not see me until within three oi
four feet of the door, and their first inti
mation that I was out of bed was when
they heard me call out:
“Stop, or I’ll shoot!”
I had them covered with the weapon,
and for fifteen seconds there was a dead
silence. Then they got a plan. The
man with the candle dashed it on the
floor, and I suppose they meant to rush
in on me in the dark, but I checkmated
it by opening fire. They then either
meant to retreat down stairs or toward
the rear of the floor, for I saw the three
together moving off, and fired at their
dim figures. Three seconds, later there
was a great shout of horror, followed by
the tremendous report of the double bar
reled spring gun, and then there was ab
solute silence.
I think I stood in the door shaking like
a leaf for fully three minutes before the
silence was broken by a groan. Then it
came to me that the robbers had fallen
through the open door upon the cord
leading to the gun. I struck a match,
lighted my own candle, and going to
the opening saw three bodies lying be
low. Running back to the bedroom to
recharge my revolver, I then went down
stairs to investigate.
It was as I suspected. The three had
pitched down together. The top of one’s
head had been blown off by the shot, a
second had a hole in his chest as big as
your fist, while the third, who was re
sponsible for the groans, was severely-
wounded in both legs. It was three
months before he conld be put on trial,
and he then got four years in prison.
The whole thing was a put up job. The
“drover” was a Chicago burglar called
“Clawhammer Dick,” and he had hidden
himself iu the store that night, and then
let his pals in by the back door. They
had a horse and wagon in the rear of
the building, and the plan was to rob
the store of goods as well as to get at the
money in the safe. A bit of carelessness
on my part not only saved the store and
probably my life, bnt wiped out a very
desperate gang. — Boston Commercial
Bulletin.
The Ball Player.
Bobby—Do you like your new house?
Little Johnnie—Yes. It has a vacant
lot next door.—Epoch.
BROKER, REAL ASTAT E
INSURANCE AGENT."
LOI S FOR SALE.
46 by 147 Third avenue, south of Chappell Col
lege.
37 by 147 Fourth avenue, opposite Mrs. Black-
mar’s. •
42 by 147 Fifth avenue, South of M. & G. R. R.
37 by 147 Third avenue, north of Fifth street.
40 by 147 Sixth avenue, opposite Midland depot.
40 by 110 Third avenue, south of Mrs. Burts.
160 by 150 south Third avenue,4 dwellings.
37 by 90 Thirteenth street, opposite McPhail’s.
45 by 147 Fourth avenue, north of C. & W. R. R.
90 by 90 Corner Fourth avenue and Thirteenth
street.
147 by 147 Opposite Midland depot, two good
houses.
148 by 108 Sixth avenue, north of Willingham
shops.
70 by 120 Rose Hill, west of Hughes’ mansion.
50 by 100 Wynn ton, fronting the school house.
Two acres North Highlands, on C. &. R. R. K.
DWELLINGS I0B SALE.
3-8 acre with 4-room dwelling, Talbotton ave-
nne.
New 2-story dwelling corner Second avenne and
Ninth street, fronting Court House Park.
Splendid 5-room dwelling, Rose Hill, near the
Redd mane ion.
Dwelling and vacant lot First avenne, opposite
Second Baptist church. .
Dwelling and large lot near the Phillips resi
dence, Rose Hill.
Four dwellings Eighteenth street,-west of Ham
ilton avenue.
Dwelling and Vi acre Broad street, opposite
monument.
New 2-story dwelling Third avenne, between
Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets.
New 2-story dwelling, opposite Garrett’s Vi acre.
Dwelling and Vi acre on Fourth avenue, be
tween Twelfth and Thirteenth street.
Elegant cottage First avenue, north of Fif
teenth street. .
Store and dwelling. Broad street: running
throngh to Warren.
New dwelling, 407 Broad street.
New dwelling, 413 Broad street.
New dwelling, 503 Broad street.
New dwelling, corner First avenue and Fifth
street.
New dwelling Robinson street. Rose Hill.
Comfortable dwelling, 626 Second avenue.
New 2-story dwelling. Fourteenth street.
Two cottages at foot of Rose Hill.
Large lot with good improvements, 1331 Fourth
avenue.
DWELLINGS FOR RENT.
110 Seventh street, new 2-story dwelling, S26.50
1413 Fourth avenue, new 2-story dwelling, §37.50.
601 Front street, large duelling, corner lot §15.
New dwelling with 6-rooms, Hamilton avenue,
$14.
New 2-story dwelling on Rose Hill Park, §22.50,
Six 4-room cottages ou Robinson street, §10.
Springer farm, with 5-room dwelling, 100 acres
of land 2% miles from court house.
New dwelling ou Spear Grove, East Higli’ands
§15.
New dwelling near East Highlands church, §20.
New dwelling with 8 rooms back of city Park,
§15.
STORES FOR RENT.
Holt store, corner Sixth avenue and Fourteenth
street.
Brick store corner Thirteenth street and Tenth
avenue, back of City Park.
Store corner Sixth avenue and Sixth street,
elegantly tittei up for a barroom.
' INSURANCE.
Home Insurance Company of New York-Fire.
Guardian Assurance Company of London, Eng.
—Fire.
United States NIutual Accident Association.
The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of
Newark, N. J.
L. H. CHAPPELL.
Office iu Georgia Home Build
ing, next to Telegraph Office.
Telephone Wo. ~S.
IPIFLXCES-
The following goods we buy
in lots of from one to twelve car
loads each, and offer the trade
the benefit of the reduced prices
which we get:
Alaska Salmon.
Alaska Salmon.
Citumbia River Sa’mon.
Columbia River Salmon.
Starch.
Starch.
M itches.
Matches.
Crackers.
1
1
Crackers.
BROKER, REAL E TATE AND
INSURANCE AGENT.
FOR SALE.
Lot with dwelling uext to opera house, Pbenix
City, room for store. Can be improved to pay 15
per cent.
Cap . Little’s Wynnton place and 20 acres on
dummy line.
I will build you a house in East Highlands and
let you pay §50 cash, balance §15 a month. Lots
are close in.
New 3-room cottages next to Stone’s gin house,
on Rose Hill. You can pay for them §5 a month.
Brownville cottages on payments of §10 a
month.
Building lot 3 doors south of Columbus Female
College, 46 by 147 11.
147.10 by 147.10, corner lot. First avenue and
Fi th street.
Dwelling and vacant comer lot southeast cor
ner of Third avenue and Eighth street, §3,000 for
both house and lot. §500 cash, balance §300 a year.
Elegant Broad street home, 2-story, gas, bath
rom, water works, only §5,500. Lot is worth the
money.
Half acre corner lot, near Exposition grounds,
with 4 cottages, only §2,800 for whole.
Nos. 628 and 030 Second a.-enue, with 2 dwell
ings, onlv S-\3rtn. Now is the time to buy, when
money is scarce.
FOR RENT.
New 2-story dwelling east of Park, corner Tenth
avenue.
802 Third avenue, 4 rooms ami kitchen, §15.
808 Third avenue, 5 rooms and kitchen, §18.
726 Broad street, opposite the monument.
602 Front street, comer Sixth, 5 rooms, §15.
416 First avenue, 5 rooms, water works, §11.
110 Seventh street,new 2 story.
520 First avenue, 5 rooms, §15.
New 2-story, next south Mr. H. C. McKee.
309 Eleventh street, 2-story.
New dwellings on Rose Hill §10, §16 and §20.
New dwellings on East Highlands §20.
New dwelling east of Lockhart’s store, on
Tenth avenue, only §10, well located for railroad
men.
Mr. Tom Ingram’s East Highland house §15.
STOREN.
Holt store, comer Sixth avenue and Fourteenth
street.
Corner Ninth street and Sixth avenne.
Webster corner, formerly occupied by Carter
& Bradley.
Store next to Crane corner, formerly occupied
by Heller’s candy faciorv.
Store corner Thirteenth street and Tenth ave
nue.
Stores at Jaques’comer.
JOHN BLACKMAR,
No. 14 Eleventh Street.
Telephone 51. v
These are Specialties, hence their
enumeration. We solicit your business
and extend a cordial invitation to all
merchants, whether they wish to buy or
not, to call to see us
COLUMBUS.
CARTER &
Cotton Factafs and
when visiting
BRADLEY
Wholesale Giocers,
COLUMBtra C3-A..
Specimen Copies and Beautiful Calendar sent Free.
uQMtb i
every 1
Week 1
[Readin i
450.000 j
| Homes j
jTORIW |
BYTHE 1
|BESrAUTHORS|\
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AND NATURAL
dventure) history]
[Charming 1
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A YEAR. If
“ Vo other Weekly Paper gives so great a Variety of Entertaining and Instructive Reading at so low a price.'
THIS
SLIP
FREE TO JAN. I, 1891.
To any NEW SUBSCRIBER who will eat out and send ns this slip with name and
address and SI.75 (in Postal or Express Money Order or Registered Letter at our risk), we will send
THE \ OIJTH’S COMPANION FREE to JaDOary. 1891. and for a Full Year from that Date.
This offer includes the FIVE DOUBLE HOLIDAY NUMBERS for Thanksgiving, Christmas.
New Year’s, Easter and Fonrth-of-Jaly, and all the Illustrated Weekly Supplements,
g Address, THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, 41 Temple Place, 3oston, Mass.
WITH
$1.75
Real Estate for Sale.
§2.350. A new 5-room houses on Broad street, be
tween Fifth and Sixth streets,^lot 37 by 140
feet.
§2,200. A new 5-room house on Broad street,next
to corner of Fifth street, lot 37 by 140 feet.
§600. Vacant lots on lower Fourth avenue, be
tween Fourth and Fifth streets, 40 by 147 feet.
§700. Lots with 2-room houses on Third avenue,
between Fourth and Fifth streets, 40 by 147
feet.
§1,350. V. acre lot on Fourth avenne, between
Sixth and Seventh streets, west side,
A lot on Tenth street, 25 feet front, east of
Hirsch’s warehouse.
§500. Lots on East Highlands.
§600. Lots on East Highlands.
§350. Lots in the north annex, 50 by 120 feet.
§1,000. A very desirable corner lot on Rose Hill.
§1,100. A very desirable lot near Rose Hill park.
§3,200. A well improved lot, comer Tenth ave
nue, on Thirteenth street, will pay 10 per
cent net.
§500. Lots with 2-room houses on installments in
the annex, near Eigteenth street.
Farms for Sa'e.
§4,500. 335 acres, four miles east of Columbus
two-thirds bottom land.
$1,700. 160 acres, two miles from Columbus, in
Alabama with dwelling.
§1,350. 160 acres, two miles from Columbus, in
Alabama, a fine dairy farm.
Fine farming lands, two and a half miles south
east of the city, in lots to suit the purchaser,
§30 per acre.
W. 8. GREEN,
Real Estate Agt.
Telephone 268.
CENTRAL. PEOPLE’S
—AND—
Columbus & Gulf Navigation
LINES OF
S T IE -A- IMI EBS;
’Columbus, Ga., September 5,1890.*
On and after September 5, 1890, the local rate*
of freight on the Chattahoochee. Flint and Apa
lachicola rivers will be as follows:
Flour, per barrel § 2D
Cotton Seed Meal, per ton 1 26
Cotton, per bale 50
Guano, per ton 125
Other freight in proportion.
Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola, §6.00
Other points in proportion.
SCHEDULE.
Steamers leave Columbus as follows:
Steamer Fanny Feara Tuesdays at 8 a. m
Steamer Naiad Thursdays at 8 a. m.
Steamer Milton H. Smith Saturdays at 8 a. m. *
Above schedule will be run. river, etc., permit j
tiug. Schedule subject to change without notice,
Boat reserves the right of not landing at any
point when considered dangerons by the pilot.
Boat will not stop at any point not named Is
list of landings furnished shippers nnder date ol
December 15, 1889.
Our responsibility for freight ceases after it bss
b>en discharged at a landing where no penon il
there to receive it.
GEO. B. WHITESIDE,
See’y and Treas. Central Line of Boats
W. R. MOORE,
Agent People’s Lina
rl. JOSEPH,
Pr a.lrtent Columbus and Gulf Navigation nr,
YOU WEAK MAN!
NeedleHly weak! Debility, Atrophy, Impotency,
Fears, Evil Thoughts, Varicocele, Losses,
Slavery to unmanly practices, Nervousness,
Shrunken Organa,—all these are curable!
I Mian I tells the story. Mailed
OUR MEW BOOK I free for a short time.
CENTRAL RAILROAD OF GEORGIA.
Schedule in Effect Sunday, October 12,1890.
To Macon, Augusta, Savannah and Charleston.
Leave Columbns
Arrive Fort Valley
Arrive Macon
Arrive Augusta
Arrive Savannah
3 40 p m
6 35 p m
7 50 p m
6 25 a m
630a m
_J Methods
and win a Monopoly of Sueeaaa.
ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, Jf. T. You
CANT HOOK HEALTH!
DK?» S
mm me we/rio meee/s but o/te cime
pi HAHiES GOLDEN SPECIFIC
It can be given In a cap of coffee or tea, ar In arti
cle* of food, without the Knowledge of the patient, if
necessary. It is absolutely harmless and will effect a
permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a
moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT NEVER
1° dnietly and with tarn eer-
tainty that the patient undergoes no Inconvenience.
ere he is aware, his complete reformation la
effected. 48 page book of particulars free.
FOR SALE RY
Patterson & Thomas. Columbus
QPIUM
MMAtlanta, Ha Offi
and Whiskey Habit*
cured at home with
out pain. Book of par
ticulars sent FREE.
B.M.WOOLLEY,M.D.
Atlanta, 6a Office m%, Whitehall 8t
Arrive Charleston
12 16 p m
To Troy, Eufaula, Albany, Thomasville, Bruns
wick and Jacksonville via Union Springs.
3 30 p m
6 35 p m
7 20pm
2 40 pm
2 50 pm
130am
12 20 p m
8 30 a m
Arrive Jacksonville
Through sleeper from Union Springs to Way-
cross and Jacksonville on night train.
To Atlanta, Montgomery, Mobile and
leans via Opelika.
New Or-
Leave Columbus 10 50 p m
Arrive Opelika 112 08am
Arrive Atlanta i 6 50am
Arrive Montgomery. 3 45am
Arrive Mobile 8 10 a m
Arrive New Orleans. 112 40 p m
11 59 a m
1 00 p m
5 25 p m
3 40 p m
5 00 p m
7 25 p m
2 05 a m
7 00am
To Greenville.
Dally.
Leave Columbus
Arrive Greenville
2 46 p m
6 15 p m
To Montgomery, Mobile and New Orleans, via
Union Springs.
Leave Columbus ; 710 am' 3 30pm
Arrive Union Springs j 9 15 a mi 5 35pm
Arrive Montgomery ilOaOami 7 06pm
Arrive Mobile | | 2 06am
Arrive New Orleans | j 7 00 am
To Talladega, Anniston, Birmingham, Memphis,
Nashville, Louisville and Cincinnati.
Leave Columbus 1050pmlll39am 3 40pm
Arrive Opelika 12 08am: 100pm 5(*)pm
Arrive Roanoke | 8 00pm
Arrive Talladega 10 55 am!
Arrive Anniston
Arrive Birmingham.
Arrive Memphis
Arrive Nashville....
Arrive Louisville ...
Arrive Cincinnati...
11 43 a ml
6 00 a mj 6 25 p ml
5 10 p m| 6 30 a m|
7 30pmi 6 00 a ml
2 27 a m!l207 p m
6 52 am| 4 05pm!
Train leaving at 10 50 p. in. carries Pullman
sleeper for Birmingham.
To Savannah, Smithville, Albany, Thomasville,
Brunswick and Jacksonville via Americus.
Leave Columbus 117 05 a m *0 no a m
Arrive Americus 112 45 p m 9 00 a m
Arrive Savannah | 7 00 p m
Arrive Albany , 2 50 pin 2 50pm
Arrive Thomasville 15 40pm 5 40 pm
Arrive Waycross I I 5 15am
Arrive Brunswick j 12 05 p m
Arrive -Jacksonville | | 8 30am
5 45 a m train is solid Birmingham to Satan
nah with Pullman Buffet sleeper.
To Atlanta via Griffin.
Leave Columbus *1 00 p m -5 00 p m
Arrive Griffin 3 50pm 8 15 pm
Arrive Atlanta 5 40 p m 10 10 p m
Through day coach Columbus to Atlanta on
lpm train.
Arrivals of Traiiis at Columbus.
From Macon ill 30 am:
From Americus ! 30 p m ]
From Birmingham 3 25 p m
From Opelika | 3 25pm
From Montgomery:
and Troy 11 20 a m
From Greenville 110 25 a m
From Atlanta via
Griffin 1130 am
From Atlanta via
Opelika. ' 3 25 p m
10 03 pm,
5 45 a m|
1158am 5 45am
•Daily. tDaily except Sunday.
For further information relative to tickets, best routes etc. apDly to F. J. Robinson, Ticket
Agent. J. C. Haile, Agent, Columbus. Ga. D. H. Bythewood, D. P. A., Columbus, Ga. E. T.
Charlton, (i. P. A.. Savannah. O.
FRAZER & DOZIER,
Wholesale Hardware,
nov3dly
COXjTTMIIBTJS Q-A.