Newspaper Page Text
Vienna News.
Published Semi-Weekly.
VIENNA, - -
GEORGIA.
Reputations cannot be safely baaed
on statistics. Statistics show that
Chicago contains eleven hundred
churches.
The total Increase of population In
the Dominion of Canada, including the
gain by immigration as well as by nat
ural increase, has fallen from 830,000
in tho decade ending 1880 to 506,000 in
that ending 1901.
Of the 3,000,000 square miles, more or
less, within the limits of the United
States, excluding Alaska and the
islands, about 1,300,000, or 43 percent
are not naturally supplied with rain
fall sufficient during the summer sea
son to keep up agriculture with any
success.
American shoes are now securely in
troduced in Berlin, and notwithstand
ing the great progress made in the
German shoe manufacture by Ameri
can methods, are displayed an sold, not
only by one largo handsome American
shoe store, but by many pronilnent
retailers throughout the city.
Senator Vest of Missouri, who ended
his eulogy of the late Wade Hampton
in the United States senate by quoting
from Tennyson, 1b said to outrank even
8enator Hoar of Massachusetts in his
familiarity with the poetry of England
. and America. It 1b said that his com
mand of quotations Is astounding, that
ho has one at his tongue’s tip for any
case that may arise. He is a good
classical scholar also, and is always
happy to debate a matter of accents.
The light over the famous Fair es
tate of San Francisco,lasted over seven
years, and cost the heirs, in round
numbers, a million of dollars for court
and legal expenses alone. Besides
this, $500,000 was spent in settling the
claims of various relatives. When
Senator Fair died his wealth was esti
mated at $14,000,000, und this, despite
the great outlay in conncctton,with the
suits, Is satd to havo increased to $17,-
000,000.
America's place in the scientific
world is tho subject of an interesting
discussion in Popular Science Monthly.
This journal points out that, while we
have produced great Inventors and
are, perhnps, contributing more than
a share to practical engineering, man
ufactures and agriculture, wc. do not
stand equally high in the domain of
pure science. If tho pure sciences were
divided into nine groups—that Is to
*say, mathematics, astronomy, physics,
botany, chemistry, geology, zoology,
physiology and anthropology-psychol
ogy—and the United States excelled in
one branch, it would be sufficient It
Is, however, admitted wc nro inferior
to several ■ nations In mathematics,
physics, chemistry and physiology,
and we are inferior in reputation,
though obviously not so in perfor
mance, In soology, botany and anthro-’
poiogy-psychology, but wo are proba
by doing work of greater volume and
value than any other nation In astron
omy and In geology.
DE. CHATHAM'S SEKH0N
A SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
PASTOR-EVANGELIST.
One morning recently eight men
launched a surf-boat iu the teeth of a
northeast gale to rescue a crew of
wreckers from a barge stranded on the
southern side of Cape Cod. Tho men
were members of the life-saving ser
vice from the station at Monomby
Point They fought their way to the
barge, took off the imperiled wreckers
and turned shoreward again. Then
panic seised the rescued men. By
their etragglcs the boat was capsized,
cud of tho 13 souls on board but one
escaped. It Is a simple story—one that
is repeated, with variations, every year
at one.point or another along the coast
states the Youth's Companion. They
were plain, every-day men. these We
avers,' living simply and lovingly
with their little families on their
meagre pay. ready day or night to risk
their lives for a brother in distress.
Six wives are widows, fourteen chil
dren are fatherless, and the men bad
r.o pensions. .But the world does not
see such deeds u theirs unmoved. The
heart of Boston and of Massachusetts
has provided for these whom they left
dependent, or.d the whole nation will
| cherish their memory.
Subject: From Bethel to Bethel—Thirty
Yemn of Tima IJef ween the Two—Var
ied Experiences or Jacob—Where Wee
Tour HetUelf—Fray as Ton Used To.
New Yoke Citt.—The Rev. Dr. .T. Wit
bur Chapman, the popular pastor-evangel-
iat, who la now preaching to overflowing
congregations in thia city, haa furnished
the following eloquent sermon • to the
press. It was preached. from the text
"Let us arise and go up to Bethel.", Gene
sis 33: 3.
I doubt not you have frequently seen the
sky when throughout a long day it li««
been overcast with clouds, only now and
then the sun would break forth hut for a
moment and then the curtain would he
drawn together once more and only the
clouds were to he seen. To me this is an
illustration of the life of Jacob. The sun
breaks through at Bethel, and while this
seems to be a mixing of figures, for the
hour of the vision was in the night, yet the
glory of heaven was upon him brighter
than the shining of tho sun. It pushes
its way through at Penie!, once more
appears in his nathetie love for .Toaeph.
and later in his dignified appearance in the
presence of Phitraob. hut for the most
part his was a life with a cloudy sky, and.
vet there are few stories more interesting.
What Peter is to the New Testament
Jacob is to the Old. The Bible would
hardly be complete without the accounts
of these two remarkable men. When we
read of the "Saviour of Peter” we are
comforted, for we, find ourselves saving,
"If Jesus can save such a man as Peter,
transforming him from the fisherman to
the preacher, from the profane man to the
writer of Epistles, there is hope for every
one of us." Wo read about the "God of
Jacob" and arc inspired, for there are few
of us to-day whose lives are so deceitful,
whose characters are ao questionable as
Jacob’s, and yet be became, Israel the
Prince. Is anything too hard for the
Lord?
From Bethel to Bethel is a oood subject
growing out of such a text. Thirty years
of time stretch out between the two ex
periences, and yet in these thirty years
Jacob passes through much that is beyond
ordinary interest, as, for example, his ex
periences with Laban, when he toiled four
teen years for his beloved Rachel, the pros
perity which came to him both bv fair
means and foul, his struggling with the
angel at Jabbok’a Ford, and his tarrying
at fihechem- contrary to the command of
God. for in it all ho was never satisfied,
for I hold it-true that if one has once been
to Bethel nothing else can satisfy, and if
we have ever had n vision of heaven the
earth ever afterward seems dull and unin
teresting.
After all this varied experience Jacob is
at Bethel once again. It is not much in
itself,' just a long range of hills running
north and south, the eastern slope de
scending to the Jordan and the western
slope stretching away toward the more
thickly ponulated part of the country.
Through the valley before us iilustrous
travelers in all the history of the Holy
Land have made their journey, and np the
rough mountain road neopie have climbed
with great delight. There is no house in
sight and no animals are to be seen ex
cepting now nnd then an eagle or a wild
mountain goat, but to Jacob it was a sa
cred place. There the first nisht of his
flight from Esau he saw the ladder which
linked earth to heaven, the ladder which
was thronged with angels performing their
heavenly ministry, and he heard the voice
of God. There nre some words we cannot
speak without arousing the tenderest emo
tions nnd the holiest memories. Mother
is such an one. I well remember preach
ing to a crowd of rough miners in the
mountains, holding their interest passably
well until I spoke this matchless name,
when all faces were softened nnd tears
Were seeu in many eyes. Home is another
such word. You doubtless remember the
soldiers nt Sebastopol, brave men -who
were ready to die, many of whom did die,
bursting into tears pa they heard the
hand of musicians playing “Home, Sweet
Home,” nnd Bethel was such a word to
Jacob. It stirred the best that was in him,
nnd was the summons of God bidding ill's
better nature to atouse itself.
We have all of ua had our Bethels. Some
of ua are separated from them by the
dreary lapse of time, and between those
happy dnys and our present unsatisfactory
experience days, weeks, months and even
year* stretch out, wc say it to our shame.
For aorno of us an active busincas life haa
separated us from Bethel, and yet thia ia
positively unnecessary. “Not slothful in
business, fervent in spirit, serving the
Lord,” and if there ia anything in vour
business that dampens your spiritual ar
dor, or blinds your vision of Christ, either
your business ia wrong or you arc wrong
yourself.
With some a foreign residence lies be
tween us and Bethel. Back in the old
country we were most faithful and devoted
to Christ and constantly serving the
church, but in this free land we hare for
gotten our vows, wc have made the fatal
mistake of leaving God out of onr calcula
tions. and somehow seem to forget tho
words of the Psalmist, “If I take the wings
of the morning and dwell in the uttermost
parts of the earth and the sea Thou art
there.” We might have been in fellowship
with God all these days if we would.
Witii some of us it ia worldliness that
haa dimmed our vision and robbed ua of
power, and that ia the sad part of the
■tory. Obligations once taken upon ua
have been overlaid and bGried with the
lapse of years, and I would like if I might
to touch the harp of memory and bring
back those hapny days once more when
our vision of Christ was unclouded, onr
appropriation of the spirit of God com
plete and our joy inexpressible, so there
fore 1 say. “Let us arise and go to Bethel.”
I would like to carry you back perhaps a
quarter of a century when yon left your
home like Jacob and you said. “If God
will I will.” All these years He has been
near to you pouring out upon you His best
blessings. I ask you. have you kept your
vow? Many Chrutians suffer from spirit
ual declension; they scarcely realize it. the
■tupor has come on so gradually, and it is
only on a day like this when they compare
what they are with what they once were
that they realize their dangerous position.
We do not come to be like Judas in a day
or even like Peter, but we leave our Lord
bv inchea, some little sin creeps in at
which we smile to-day. but which defeats
ns to-morrow, and are are out of tune, we
have lost our power, we are not what we
want to be ourselves, and if onr heart con
demn ua God is greater than our heart
and knoarctb all things. We need, there
fore. to go back to Bethel.
Where was your Bethel? Perhaps in
some little church where on a terrain oc
casion yon forgot the minister and the one
sitting by yonr aide and had a vision of
glory, or in tome home where poverty
abounded, hut you were utterly unmindful
of it. The house was filled with heaven,
and down to every pillow was sent the lad
der, up npd down which angels of God
made their way. Or it may have been in
some other land where you had a vision
of God, and while we may not make the
journey back to these places in the flesh
we can go back in thought and meet Him.
$hall we not do ao? A« many aa God
loves He reminds constantly of neglected
duties, sometimes using conscience, some
times His providences; to-day in the iota of
property He speaks, to-morrow in the de-
M -e of health, again in the death of a
. It would be a good thing if we
should stop and listen to Hia warning and
then arise and go to Bethel.
1.
Some preliminary steps. Before we may
ever expect to go back to the place of
bleating it will be necessary for us to ob
serve fne instructions which Jacob gave
to hia household.
First, “Put away the strange gods.” that
is. literally, “the God of the strangers.”
They have been living with the enemies of
God’s people, and little by little the gods
of these people bad gotten possession of
them. 'They were taken into their tents
and then into their hearts, and they were
out of fellowship with God. Wherever
there ia a fungus growth in the forests
there ia corruption and decay, wherever
there is an idol in the heart there is a
fresh indication of weakness, aqd we can
not hide our idols; they refuse to be hid
den. When we least expect it there is a
resurrection.
What is an idol? It may be a very little
thing. That which tends to usurp an un
due place in our affections, which gives us
more pleasure than the thought of God. is
an idol. The thing in our life which makes
us sacrifice nearness to God, which may
hot necessarily be sinful, only questionable,
is an idol. That which make us indiffer
ent to spiritual advantages and indifferent
to Bethel is an idol. Your reputation
your fortune, that nnworthv friend upon
whom you lavish your affection, these may
be idols, for “no man can serve two mas
ters, for either he will hate’the one and
love the other, or will cleave to the one
and depart from the other.” Therefore
put away the strange cods, and if we really
want to he near to God how easy it will
be to find out the thing that hinders us.
and yet as a matter of fact who enn put
away his idols? I cannot, I am sure, hut
there is a deliverance. Do you remember
the story of David and Nathan, when Da
vid forgets that he is a king and a father
and sins, and Nathan is the messenger of
God who comes to rebuke him with the
touching story of the ewe lamb. When
David acknowledges his sin Nathan imme
diately responds. “The Lord also hath put
away thy sin.” and there is in this expres
sion n reference to the" scapegoat of the
O'd Testament on the dnv of Atonement,
when the priest confessed the sins of the
people, and the goat was represented as
staggering away under the load of Israel’s
sins, down through the valley, up the
mountain yonder until he is lost to sight,
and then finnlly, according to tradition is
pushed over into the abyss where no man
is. He enn out away onr sins on whom
the Lord hath.laid our iniquity.
Second, he clean. This refers to inner
clearness, which is only brought about h.v
the-indwelling of Christ. God puts away
our sins, it is true, when He forgives us,
but it is one thing to he set right concern
ing the guilt of sin and onite another thing
to he set free from the pollution of sin. This
second privilege is ours when Christ comes
in to dwell with 11s. We arc very much
afraid of the word “holiness,” in preach
ing and teaching, yet we have as much of
holiness aa we have of ChrisP, no more or
no less. Let us be clean in heart. This is
possible bv the word of God which is
cleansing in its very touch. Let us he
clean in what wc say, making a covenant
with Christ ,to guard our lips, asking Him
to keep our eyes. Let us not do the things
that will grieve the .spirit, remembering
that God can onlv use that which is clean.
Third, let us change our garments. This
must refer to the outward practices of onr
life; in other words, our habits. What is
the garment we are wearing to-day? With
some of us it is a robe of our own w-eaving,
the robe of aclfishnesa and pride, nnd mark
you this, whore self comes into a life Christ
passes out. There is another robe which
we may wear to-day woven in the loom of
heaven hearing the red mark of tbe blood
of Christ.
I traveled the other day with a mission
ary from Wisconsin, who told me how ho
hnd reached a drunken man in the woods
of Wisconsin, told him the story of Christ
nnd won him. nnd later had the joy of re
ceiving the man und the six members of
his household into the fellowship of the
rhurch. When Noah entered the ark his
family went with him. Let ua arise and
go up’ to Bethel. ^
Results. In the !>th verse we read that
the people were afraid of Jacob and ins
company, for the terror of the Lord was
upon them. Matthew Henry has said that
when sin was in Jacob’s house he was
afraid of his neighbors, but when the
idols were put nway his neighbors were
afraid oi him. When shall we learn the
lesson that wc have power over men by
the way of God. The world does not fear
a worlilly Christian, nor does the devil,
and we need expect no triumph over men
until we have prevailed with God first.
Second. God appeared and talked with
Jacob. This we read in verses nine and
ten. Of course no man can see God n« He
is and live. Moses asked this of God and
He said. “I will put thee In the cleft of
the rock and cover thee with My hand
while I pass by,” and he saw the glory of
the garments of God and His face did
ahine. bnt we can see Christ, and when we
behold Him in Hia tenderness with little
children and Hia ministering to the sick
ind suffering everywhere we hear Him
sav. ‘He that hath seen Me hath seen M*
Father also.” God still speaks to us; it
we did hut have our ear* open we ihould
find Him sneaking in nature. I can remem
ber as a boy out in the country putting
my ears up against the telegraph pole and
listening to what I was told was the
whirr of the messages flashing: from city to
city, and I used to wonder if it might he
possible for some one to hear what might
even then bypassing through the air. and
row to-day we have accomnlished this in
the wirelen* telegraphv. and if we did hut
have our eat* open I am sure that with
every rising sun. with every running
stream, with every tinging bird, with every
thine in nature we should hear God sneak.
Ard He speak* to ua in the Bible, hut the
difficulty with u* i* that we have not
faith. It ha* long been my desire to own
one of the large old-fashioned dock* used
by onr forefather*, and recently it became
possible for me to rain possession of one.
The work* are perfect, the nendidnm ia
nerfect. and the whole clock ia a thing of
bea-itr. and T started it. hut th» pendulum
would swine for a moment nnd then ston,
end I thou-ht I had made a noor bargain
l">the purchsse of my clock, hnt at last I
discovered there was a little catch br
meant of which the pendulum are* united
to the work*, and I started the clock once
more, and it is keening perfect time. H*re
it thia Old Book truer than ever, if that
were possible, certainly more precious than
ever. We have called it uninteresting: we
have let it alone when we might have heen
listening to its heaven born messages, none
other than the voice of God, if we had hut
had faith. God said to Jacob. “I am God
Alraigbtv.” and thixfc wa* enough for Hun
to *av7 “I will walk with thee.” “If God
be for ns who can he against u«r
Third, in thiy 35th chapter of Genesis are
four burials. There i* the burial of the
idols, the burial of Deborah, the burial ol
Rachel and the burial of Isaac. Tt is a
chapter of sorrow, but what a difference
Bethel must have made in the way that
sorrow was endpred. I itood pot long
ago in the home of a man whose child was
dead, and T heard him any. although he
had once been a Christian, that he all but
hated God. and I recall another experience
where a woman with a breaking heart aaid
with the tears flowing down her fare that
was shining. “The Lord gave and He hath
taken away.” and ahe was dwelling at
Bethel. It it a beautiful thing to knori
that over'the body of Isaac, Esau and
Jacob clasped hands nnd were united once
more. If we did hut live at Bethel old dif
ference! would be put away, trying expe
riences would be easily met. Come, let ui
arise and go to Bethel. We have all of us
had Bethel experiences, so let us go hack
and prav as we used to nray, work as we
used to work and preach as we used to
preach, and the heavens will be opened
above ua.
NEWSY GLEANNINGS.
Great Britain Is strengthening her
fleet In Asiatic waters.
Ohio has a trolley line which has In
troduced sleeping-cars or its long run.
Tbe British remount station at Lath-
rop, Mo., Is to be transferred to To
ronto, Canada.
A provisional, government, with M.
Boisrond Canal as President, has been
formed in Haiti.
New England’s only fishing steamer,
Ihe Jacobs, is to install a wireless tele
graph system on board.
Tests by German experts nre said to
show that borax is Injurious In Its ef
fects on human beings.
Tlie Lutheran Ministerium of Penn
sylvania lias decided against the use of
individual communion cups.
Korea, as well ns Chinn, Is going to
have her army reorganized, and a Brit
ish officer has already arrived at Seoul
for that purpose.
About 300,000 poods of Russian pe
troleum hare been shipped to Christia
nia, Norway, where American oil has
monopolized the market.
Tenders hare been invited for the Im
mediate construction of a deep wharf
In Quebec Harbor, in anticipation of
the establishment of a fast transatlan
tic line of steamers.
The limit of the session of the Louis
iana Legislature which met on May 12
Is sixty days, and this unusual selec
tion of n -lay of meeting recalls (he
fact that there arc now only five other
State Legislatures which do not begin
their sessions in January.
In New Hampshire delegates to a
Constitutional Convention aw to bo
elected In November, 1002, and the
convention will meet In December. Tbe
net for the election of delegates pro
vides that amendments determined .on
by the convention shall be submitted
to the people for l-atiflcntion. The
present Constitution of Ne>v Hamp
shire was minuted In 1702.
AMicOlriiMl
Time Table Effective May 25, 1902.'
WAYCROSS TO CORDELE.
No. 1.
"No. 3.
Dally.
Dally.
Lv. Waycross ...
. 8:00 am
4:00 pra
Lv Beach .......
. 8:47 am
4:47 pm
Lr. Sessoms
. 9:00 am
5:00 pm
Lv. Nlcbolls .....
. 9:12 am
5:08 pm.
Lv. Douglas ....
. 9:-rl am
5:38 pm
Lv. Ambrose ...
.10:03 am
6:01 pm
Lv. Wray ..
.10:09 am
6:10 pm
Lv. Fitzgerald ..
.10:37 am
6:37 pm
Lv. Isaac
.11:04 am
7:04 pm
Lv. Rebecca ...
.11:21 am
7:21 pm
Lv. Double Run
.11:36 am
7:36 pm
Ar. Cordele
.12:20 pm
8:20 i>m
CORDELE TO WAYCROSS.
No. 2.
No. 4.
Dally.
Daily.
Lv. Cordele ....
. 6:00 am
4:06 pm
Lv. Double Run
. 6:44 am
4:44 pm
Lv. Rebecca ...
. 6:59 am
4:59 pm
Lv. Isaac
. 7:16 am
5:16 pm
Lv. Fitzgerald ..
. 7:43 am
5:43 pm
Lv. Wray
. 8:11 am
6:10 pm
Lv. Ambrose ...
. 8:18 am
6:17 pm
Lv. Douglas ....
. 8:42 am
6:42 pm
Lv. Nicholls ...
. 9:12 am
7:12 pm
Lv. Sessoms ...
. 9120 am
7:20 pm
Lv. Beach
7:33 pm
Ar. Waycross ..
.10:20 am
8:20 pm
THROUGH SCHEDULES.
Lv. Waycross ..
'. 8:00 am
4:00 pm
Lv. Douglas ....
. 9:41 am
5:38 pm
Lv. Fitzgerald ..
.10:37 am
6:37 pm
Ar. Cordele ....
.12:20 pm
8:20 .pm
Ar. Americus ..
. 3:12 pm
10:22 am
Ar. Columbus ..
. 5:20 pm
Ar. Macon
3:55 am
Ar. Atlanta ....
. 7:45 pm
7:25 am
Ar. Chattanooga
. 1:00 am
1:00 pm
Ar. Louisville ..
.12:45 pm
2:30 am
Ar. Cincinnati ..
. 4:20 pm
7:20 am
Lv. Cordele ....
. 0:00 am
4:00 pm
Lv. Fitzgerald .
. 7:43 am
5:43 pm
Lv. Douglas ....
. 8:42 am
6:42 pm
Ar. Waycross ..
.10:20 am
8:20 pm
Ar. Jacksonville
.12:60 pm
.3:30 am
Ar. Brunswick .
.. 7:30 pm
10:00 am
Ar. Savannah ..
..12:45 pm
12:20 am
Ar. Columbia ..
. 6:05 pm
6:00 am
Ar. Charleston .
. 5:10 pm
6:40 am
Ar. Washington
.. 7:35 am
9:00 pm
Ar. New York .
...1:43 pm
6:13 am
GEORGE DOLE WADLEY,
LABOR WORLD.
The strike of woodworkers nt Balti
more, Md.,' lias been compromised.
The machinists on the entire Texas
Pacific system have struck for shorter
hours.
The strike of carriage workers in
Wusliington, D. C„ lias.heen compro
mised.
Fifteen hundred garment workers
hnve struck nt Syracuse, N. Y., for n
nine-hour day.
’Wagon men employed by tlie big
express companies nt Chicago have or
ganized a union. *
The strike In the building trades at
St. Paul, Minn., 1$ over, because of 11
raise in wages, but without rccognl-
tieu of tlie unions.
The threatened strike of the coat
miners Ui Cape Breton, Can., Is off.
The coal companies have granted the
ten per eeut. increase demanded.'
The large emigration of contract
laborers from Norway to Canada has
caused the authorities to prohibit for
eigners from hiring laborers for ex
port.
The ending -of the strike in Belgium
has been tbe signal for a general re
vival in the iron nnd steel industry,
nnd the mills and forges are again In
full activity.
The Indianapolis, Ind., union of
plumbers Is regutnrly sending contri
butions of money to fifteen unions of
the organization now engaged in
strikes throughout the country.
8enrc!ty of laborers threaten to bring
many improvements in Chicago to a
standstill. Thousands of men arc in
demand there, and a large increase in
wages is offered, but workmen cannot
be found.
Exaggerated statements of the need
of Kansas for harvest hands, recently
published, having caused n flood of
letters on the subject, T. B. L. Gcrow,
State Employment Agent, authorizes a
dental of the statements.
REVOLUTION IN GUAYRA.
Dispatch of German Warships to Vene
zuela is Explained.
A Berlin special states that the Ger
man cruisers Gazelle and Falke have
been sent to La Guayra, Venezuela, at
the special request of the German
charge d'affaires at Caracas, In conte-
queace cf a revolution.having broken
out in the suburbs of La Quayra, lead
ing to the bombardment of the town
by the forts and Venezuelan war ships.
Vice President & Gen. Manager.
H. C. McFADDEN,
Gen. Freight and Pass. Agent.
ALEX BONNYMAN, Superintendent.
J. G. KNAPP, *
Trav. Freight and Pass. Agent.
A. B. DEMONT MOULIN, ...
Agent, Cordele, Ga.
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN
fr FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
.01 IWANU MaWS-
wuniu.. in Effect May 4, 1002.
SOUTHBOUND.
Stat.'ons.
Quick
Step
A M
Lv. Me con
11 25
Kathleen . ..
12 19
Grovanla . ...
12 38
Unndllla . ...
12 56
Vienna
1 19
Cordele
1 55
Arabl
2 15
Ashburn
228
Ar. Tifton
3 29
Lv. Tilton
3 25
Sparks
V 02
Ade!
Reurtplne . .
t 07
4 13
Ar. Valdosta ....
4 65
Lv. Valdosta ....
5 00
Lake Park ..
6 25
Jennings . ...
5 33
Jasper . ......
White Spr....
6 01
6 32
Lake City ....
665
Lake Butler .
7 35
Samp. City ..
8 00
Hampton . ...
8 14
Flornhome . .
8 51
Ar. Patatka
9 30
2 07
2 32
2 SO
» 26
4 00
4 00
4 33
4 38
4 44
6 25
5 X
5 59
6 13
6 33
7 06
7 30
8 20
8 46
9 O)
9 45
10 25
P M
4 20
6 31
6 57
6 20
6 51
7 15
7 38
8 n
9 00
9 05
9 49
9 56
10 03
11 00
P M
P M
S 46
9 41
10 02
10 20
10 43
11 03
11 25
11 <8
12 23
12 30
1 05
1 iq
1 16
2 00
PM
NORTHBOUND.
.
Stations.
Quick DlxlelShoo IValda
8tep|Flyer| FlyjExps.
AM
PM-
Lv. Patatka
625
6 10
Florahome . .
6 57
6 <3
Hair-pton . ..
7 40
726
Samp., City ..
7 55
7 40
Lake Butler .
8 20
§06
Lake City ...
90S
8 55
White Spr. ...
9 23
9 21
Jasper
1000
10 22
056
10 IS
Lake Park ..
10 36
10 13
Ar. Valdosta ....
1100
11 00
A M
P M
Lv. Valdosta
11 05
11 15
4 45
1 45
Heartplne . .
11 45
11 56
6 37
2 81
Adel
11 61
12 02
6 43
2 37
Sparks
Ar. Tlflon
11 57
J2 08
5 49
2 43
12 30
li 45
6 3>
315
Lv. Tifton
12 30
12 45
6 40
3 £5
Ashburn . ...
1 OS
1 22
7 27
4 €7
Arabl
1 29
7 52
4 31
Corde)e
208
1 53
8 20
4 53
Vltr.na
2 25
2 13
8 41
5 12
Uncdllla . ...
2 48
2 35
9 12
6 3?*
Grcvanla . ...
304
9 35
5 57
Kathleen . ...
in
10 00
6 16
Ar. Macon
4 10
PM
355
AM
11 06
AM
7 15
PM
"Dixie Flyer" has through coach and
Pullman aleeper between Macon and 1
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
coach and local sleeper Detween Macon
and Patatka.. I-ocal aleeper open In Ma
con Urlon Depot 9:00 p. m.. and remain*
la Union Depot on return until 7-.» a.
m.. and can be occupied until that time.
"Quick Step” is solid train between Ma
con and Patatka.
WM. CHECKLEY SHAW.
Vice-President. C. B. RHODES.
General Passingcr Agt,
Macon. Ga.
DAVE G. HALL. T. P. A..
Room 211 Equitable Bids.,
Atlanta. Ga. ,
HARRY BURNS. F. P. A..
J 231 W. Bay 8t„
231 W. Bay St.,
Jacksonville. Fig,