Newspaper Page Text
Vienna News.
Published Semi-Weekly.
VIENNA. - - - QEOROIA.
Albany baa 134,000,000 worth of prop,
crty exempt from taxation, of which
$23,000,000 is State property. New
York City has nearly $6,000,000 of ex
empt State property; Buffalo, $2,800,-
000; Nlagura Falls (the Park reserva
tion), $1,000,000; Elmira and Bingham
ton, $1,500,000 each, and Auburn (the
State prison Included), $1,400,000. There
Is $30,000,000 worth of school property
in Now York State exempted from
taxation. *l ' <• •
DE. CHAPMAN’S SERMON
A SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
* PASTOR,EVANGELIST.
There is reason to think that the
horse will continue to be with us.
Thero will always be men who will
prefer a high-stepping thoroughbred
for their own use to any rattling, putt
ing automobile, asserts the Pblladel
phia Record. No improvement in road
locomotives can suppress the natural
affection of men for a good horse.
Perhaps for commercial purposes the
horse jnay cease to be used, to the de
light of all humane men whose hearts
have bled over the cruelties of brutal
drivers; but of One pleasure and racing
horses we shall probably always have
many.
And now a London publisher an*
ncunces that be has in his possession
the manuscript of a novel by John
Hilton', whose “Paradise Lost" was one
of the best selling books of tho day and
has gone into editions enough to fur
nish some very Imposing figures for ad
vertising purposes. Probably the story
deals with the period in which Milton
lived, and has been held back by gen
erations of shrewd publishers for the
physic moment when it could be sprung
as an historical novel, opines the Phil
adelphia Saturday Evening Post., Its
publication will serve one useful pur
pose, at least, for we shall learn from
it whether people really used to say
"S’deatbr when they were annoyed.
The automobile is a useful but some
what dangerous contrivance when in
the control of a careful man who un
derstands all Its cogs and evolutions;
but a speedy automoblllc, guided by a
daring and reckless man, is a terror
Uablo at any moment to become a
dangerous nuisance. When used in
cities these machines should be so
geared as to be incapable of a dan
gerous speed. If the percentage of
deaths and maiming already attained
In this country shall be maintained
as the automobile shall become of more
common use, tho life Insurance com
panies will have to recast their tables
and tho cemeteries enlarge their
grounds^ remarks the Philadelphia Rcc-
ord. '
{object, The Wagune Ale Comlng-The
Story of Jacob—A Lesson For ttio Peo
ple of To-Day—If We dire Ourselves to
God Unstinted Blessing Will De Ours;
New YoitK-ClTV.—The Rev. J. Wilbur
Chapman, the popular pastor of the Fourth
Presbyterian Church, who is remarkably
successful as un evangelist, has prepared
an interesting sermon, upon the subject of
"The Wagons Are Coming." It Is
preached from the text, "And when he
taw the wagons which Joseph bad sent to
carry him, the spirit of Jacob their father
revived." Geneiis 45: 27. , . ,
There Is a fascination about the land of
Egypt which cannot be described in words.
There are some particular features of this
tneient land which impress you. First of all
there is a peculiar haze over the country
which i* unlike anything to be seen in any
other part of the world. The sunset* are
indescribable, but the moat striking thing
about Egypt is the ruins; on every side of
you are these ruins telling of the splendors
of past day*. You pass up and down ave
nues that are lined with sphinx and with
obeVsk, the exquisite carvings of which re
veal the fact that there were giants' in
the days when these work* of art were
made. In the olden times the world s
pomp ana wealth seemed to have been
poured at the very feet of this capital of
Egypt, and here in all the days of its «p.en-
dor snd power stood Joseph, next to Pha
raoh in-power. There are some place* vis
ited by the traveler to-day which speak di
rectly of Joseph and hi* time*, a*, for ex
ample, the anciedt obelisk, at Helioapons.
where Joseph -got hi* bride, and the most
ancient sphinx standing near the pyramid*
beyond Cairo looking out to-day over the
waste of the desert ns it has been doing
for centuries, and if its lip* could move it
might sav truly, "Before Abraham was I
am.” The. story of the early life of
Joseph need not be told, for we are per
fectly familiar with it. We listened to
the recounting of it in our childhood s
days, and it was one of the fascinating sto
ries told us by our Christian mothers. The
account of his coat of many colors, the
bowing sheaves in the harvest field, the
anger of his brother, apd the grief of his
old father are facts too well known to
need telling here, except that it is well for
us to know that he is, to say the least. An
almost perfect illustration of our Saviour,
or as some one has said, “Our Joseph," for
the names of Josenh and Jesus are practi
cally the same. Joseph was loved by his
father, hated by his brethren, and was ex
alted to the place of power in the then
known greatest kingdom in the world. Our
Saviour was the beloved Bon of His Fath
er, was hated bv those, whom He came to
save, sold for thirty pieces of silver, cast
into the pit, is to become the Saviosr of
His brethren, and is exalted to-day at the
right hand of the Father in majesty and in
power. AH this is striking, to say the least,
and makes the text to be'of nfided interest
I.
The story of Jacob. We cannot appre
ciate this text without we have the story of
this remarkable Old Testament character.
He was a typical Jew, if we understand
him as we may understand Israel; a people
found in every country and belonging to
none. Some one has said that Abraham
was a hero, but Jacob a plain man dwelling
in tents. Abraham is above us. but Jacob
is one of ourselves, and the difference be
tween Abraham and Jacob in .the Old Tea-
different? betweft Pgyl a:
Within the-last two years American
cash to- the amount of $200,000,000
has been invested In rnlulug aud Indus
trial .enterprises of Northern Mexico,
according to the report of United States
Consul Hanna at Monterey. The Con-
sul reports that Investment money Is
•till coming over the border at the rate
of $100,000,000 a year. These an
nouncements will carry surprise with
them to those who have not closely fol
lowed the movements of American cap
ital in seeking newly profitable fields.
An effect upon Mexican prosperity of
tho incoming money and energy may
' undoubtedly be read In the Increase
of the export trade from $148,493,834 In
1880 to $158,247,033 In 1000-a growth
of nearly eight per cent ***
Tho eccentricities of English game
preservation laws are past all under
standing. Lately a gentleman was
fined $30 for selling salmon out of
season. It seems that he owned pri
vate fishing rights on the banks of tho
Tay and last January caught five sal
mon which he sent to London for
sale. It was not disputed that It was
legal to catch the fish with rod and
line at that time of year, but it Is
forbidden to sell salmon in England
between September 0 and February 1.
Had be eaten the salmon himself or
given them to friends be weald have
been within his proper rights, but ns
he sold them the salmon were con
fiscated by the Fishmongers’ Com
pany, and be was flied.
Peter inlbOiewTestamcnL tlieonS tow
ering above us like some mighty mountain
peak, and the other our brother and com
panion in temptation and failure. There
are several points in the history of Jacob
which we would do well to have in mind.
First, Bethel. It was a bleak, barren
place in the heart of Palestine, the traveler
sees on every side of him great rocks snd
nothing but rocks, and long years ago
when Jacob was fleeing away from hit
brother Esau the swift Eastern night comet
down upon him, and there was nothing for
him to do but to lie down, make a pillow
of stones for his head and try to sleep.
(a) The Ladder. Did this not teach in
the days of Jacob what we have learned
since the time of Christ that earth is not
the binding star, but is bound to heaven
not simply by a ladder in n man’s dream,
but by Him of whom the-ladder is an illus
tration, and who said, "No nun eometb
H&WaBfNAS*
rending it is an illustration of our prayers
rising to Ood, and when we behold them
descending it is an illustration of tho an
swers coming down. It is certainly a com
fort for uk all to know that we are as tmlv
united to God as in the night of Jacob's
dream he felt himself to lie.
(c) The Voice of Ood. He said to the
sleeping man, "I will be with thee, I will
keep thee, I will not leave tlfee," and th,s
dream wss an inspiration for many a long
dreary day.
Second, Jabbok. Jacob is on his way
hack home when suddcnlv he hear* that
Esau is ahead of him and he it afraid. He
sends his pronerty over the stream and
hen his children and finally his beloved
Rachel, and he 'himself It left Alone.
Around him the stillness of the midnight
tour, beside him the murmur of the brook
over the stones, above him the depths of
heaven, and while he was left alone the
thought of his past failure comes to him
and he is depressed, when suddenly be
inda himself in the grasp of the angel, and
lu struggles to free himself. Let it be
uoted that he is not wrestling with the an
gel, but the angel with him, and is this
not God seeking to take from Jacob’s life
that which haa hindered the development
of God’s life in him. There are three
things to be remembered here.
(a) The change of his nsme. His name
was Jaqgb, which means "a aupplanter and
cheat,” and the angel gave him the name
»f Israel, whieh means “a prince," because
he had prevailed.
them near to the oak and hurried on to
Bethel. Is this not a lesson for some of us
in these days, we have spiritually declined,
to have lost the peace that once we had,
the power that used to be ours, let us go
back to Bethel and pray as we used to
pray, read the Bible as we used to read it.
spend the Lord’s day as we uRed to spend
it, give ourselves to 3 Ood again. I doubt
not but that blessing will be ours without
measure. There are some other events
which we ought to keep in mind in.the life
of Jacob to appreciate Vbe text. One was
;he death of Rachel .as be came near to
Jethlehem. I have seCn the tomb in which
it is.said her body was placed, and this is
recorded in the 25th chapter of Genesis,
the 10th to the 19th verses, “And they
journeyed from Bethel; and there was but
a liti.e wuy to come to Eohralh;- and
Rachel travailed, and she had hard labor.
And It .citno to past as she was in Hard
labor, that the midwife said unto her. Fear
not: thou shalt have this son also. And it,
came to oass. as her soul was in depart-
'nff, for she died, that she called his name
Rcn-oni, hut his father called him Benja
min. And Rachel died, and was buried in
he wav to Ephrnth, which is Bethlehem.
The other \was his loss of Joseph. For
twenty years,he had mourned him. There
are some crieVthat.,are crashed out of his
heart which efiahlA us to see and under
stand his grief, as, for example. "I shall
go down to my grave mourning.” and
again. "Me ye have bereft of my children.
Joseph is not. 8imion is not and now you
will take Benjamin from me.”
n.
The meeting of Joseph and .Tacoh. We
are familiar with the story of Joseph’s rev
elation of peace'to his brethren and now
at Pharaoh’s suggestion the wagons were
eenC for the old man and all his loved ones,
that they might come, into the land ol
Egypt and dwell .there while the famine
raged in Canaan. I can hear the wagons
rumbling outside the palace door, and Pha
raoh stands at his palacA wi^h Joseph be
side him, the ring upon his hand and a
chain of authority about his neck. Wagon
after wagon passes away iadened with corn
and wheat and a change of raiment, and I
can see Jacob as he sits in front of his
home thinking of his absent sons and of
Joseph, 1 am sure, for whether our hoys
go out to the ends of the earth or heaven
they sever get away from us. Suddenly
he sees a cloud of dust in the distance, and
he know* that some one is coming. His
heart begins to heat rapidlv when he im
agines it to be his sons. When they are
near enough to cry' out to him- fhev tell
him. "Joseph is yet alive." At this the n’d ■
man fainted. "But when he saw the
wagons which Josenh had sent to carry
him the spirit of Jacob their father re
vived." And he said. "It is enough.
Josenh my son is yet nlive. I will go and
nee him before I die." From all of this
beautiful Old Testament incident I learn
these helpful lessons.
First, the wagons have come for us,
bringing us the best blessings of henven.
containing a change of raiment, so that we
need be clad no longer in the garmenta of
our own righteousness) but in the robes of
His righteousness. In this garment there
is the mark of -the Wood shed for our re
demption and the reflection of the glory of
the throne of Ood, bringing us food to
eat that the world cannot give, and which
if a man eat he shall live forever.
Second, bringing us good news. These
wagons shall come to us as they came to
Jacob. The best of the news was that
Joseph was yet alive. In the Old Testa
ment when the day of atonement came the
Driest took off his garment of glory and
beauty and dad in linen robes made hit
way into the presence of the Ark of the
\ L azd then the service jjver he
great Pharaoh and others who were bur
ied with him. These bodies were taken
out of the place of hiding, carried to the
Nile and floated off to Cairo, and it is
said as the procession moved along the cel-
ebrated river the Egyptians lined the bank
all the way to the city, threw dust into
the air, fell upon their faces and cried
aloud, ‘Pharaoh the great has come again!
Pharaoh the grpat has come again!' 7 It
must have been like this when Jacob was
taken back to Canaan, “Jacob, tha. great,
has.come again," but at last they reach
the cave of Macbpelah. and they place
him there to rest. Abraham is there with
Sarah and Isaac with Rebekslr and Jacob
with Leah, and there they shall wait until
the tomb u opened by the .coming of
Christ, and hand in hadd they shall go
forth to meet Him. May God speed, toe
day. - *
The Estimate of n Man.
If a man be gracious and courteous to
strangely, It shows tbit he is a citizen o£
the world ,and that his heart is no island,
cut off from other lands, but a continent
that joins to them. If he be compassion-
ate towards the afflictions of others, it
shows that his heart is like the noble tree
that is wounded itself whep it gives the
balm. If be easily pardons and remits
offenses, it shows that his mind is planted
above injuries, so that it cannot be shot.
If he be thankful for small benefits, it
shows that he weighs men’s minds, and
not their trash.—Catholic Mirror.
Atlantic k BirainEtiaiD E. R
Time Table Effective May 25, 1902.
WAYCROSS TO CORDELE.
Lv. Waycross
Lv Beach ....
Lv. 8essoms .
Lv. Nlcholls .
Ly. Douglas .
Lv. Ambrose
Ly. Wray
No. 1.
Daily.
.... 8:00 am
..... 8:47 am
.... 9:00 atn
.... 9:12 am
.... 9:«1 am
,...10:03 am
....10:09 am
Lv. Fitzgerald ....10:37 am
Lv. Ifeaac 11:04 am
Lv. Rebecca 11:21 am
Lv. Double Run.. 11:36 am
Ar. Cordele ......12:20 pm
No. 3.
Daily.
4:00 pm
4:47 pm
5:00 pm,
5:08 pm
6:38 pm
6:01 pm
6:10 pm ’
6:37 pm
7:04 pm
7:21 ptm
7:36 pnv
8:20 pm
CORDELE TO WAYCR08S.
'NoT2r
• *f
BATCH OF CONVICTS PARDONED.
Georgia Gov.*rnur Miows Mercy to a
l>o*,u Unfortunates.
Governor Candler, of Georgia, Fri-
day, granted 12 pardons to convicts.
It has been a long time since so many
pardons were granted at one time. ’
The fortunate ones were Fletcher
Sims, of Butts county, sent ui> for one
year for escape; Dave Burgess, of
Walker county, sentenced to life for
murder; Dan Shewake, of Burke coun
ty, sent up for. life for murder; Homer
Carter, of Dekalb, convicted of volun
tary manslaughter and sentenced to
20 years; Bowdre Hell, sent up for 10
years from' Walton county for Vol
untary manslaughter; Z. V. Carter,
sentenced to five years from Echols
county for manslaughter; Ozro Curtis,
of Habersham, sentenced to one yea'Or
for larceny; John Reynolds, of Fulton
county, sentenced to one year for as
sault and battery; W. B. Freeman, sen
tenced to one year In Montgomery
county for selling whisky Illegally; J.
W.-Griffin, convicted la Pike county
for selling whisky Illegally and sen
tenced to one year-; Robert Hunter,
convicted of burglary in Fulton county
and sentenced to 15 years. •
All of the pardons were granted-by
the governor on the recommendation
of the prison commission.
-(b) Power with God and with men, hut
let it be remembered that it it power with
God firet. So many of u„ are seeking for
power to move men; if we could but learn
that we can move men by the way of th<
throne of God if would be a lesson of un-
tpeakable value.
(e) The vision of God. Ever afterward
as Jacob remembered .Jabbok he mid, "I
bare teen God face to fare," and this was
the secret in part of the transformation oi
hi* chinrtcf.
Third, Bethel. It will he noticed thal
Jacob is at Betbel again. He has bad a
dreary experience of failure, and in the
15th chapter of Genesis God tells bint to
jo back to Bethel. In itself Bethel is not
pinch, it i* just a long range of barren
hills, but to Jacob it wss a memorable
ipot. for there he had seen God. It is aa
taey thing‘to understand how he might
nave been homesick for Bethel, for we
long to see the old home so filled with sa
wed memories and the old land where we
were born, the old church where first we
mme to Christ, and so God said to Jacob.
“Pat away your idols," and be buried
ItSi-VeKi i>av*e sue sviuvv jjsvs tax;
came out and put on again the garment of
glory And beauty, on the hem of the robe
of which there was a'golden bell, and a
pomegranate the whole length of the hem
round about, and as he moved around the
icople heard the ringing of the bells and
cnew that the priest was yet alive. Jacob
knew that Joseph was alive because he
saw the wagons, and we know that our
Joseph is,yet alive because of the bless
ings He is showering upon us and the
peace which passeth understanding filling
our souls, and Jacob heard that Joseph
himself would come to meet him, and ons
day our Joseph shall appear. We know
not when that day shall be, but the skies
■hall brighten with our coming Lord, and
when He comes we shall step into the cha
riot and be taken away from this earth to
leaven. Lord Jesus come quickly.
Third, the wagons took Jacob up to his
lost boy, and qne day the wagon will come
or us to take us up to our friends who
tavo gone from us. Jacob did not think
Of the Nile in Egypt, which he was to see,
but of Joseph, and that is what heaven
is to us, the presence of Jesus. If He is
not there, there will be no music; if He is
not there, there will be no glory; if He is
not there, there will be no joy. but thanks
be unto God these wagons shall take us
up to meet our loved ones to whom we
have said good-bye in this world, and that
will be joy unspeakable.
HI.
Horae at last. The end has come for
Jacob. His has been a great life, and his
great tight. We scarcely appreciate him
itil he -is going. We have looked upon
great buildings in process of construction
and said, "That is the greatest building
in the city," but never until the scaffold
ing is taken down do we appreciate the
work of the architect or the skill of the
men who. carried out his plans, and now
that the scaffolding is being taken down
from about Jadob we see hi* real manhood.
• I shall be gathered to my people," he
■aid to those who were about him, and
that settles for me the question at to
whether we shall know each other in the
other land.
"What is death, O what is death!
*Tis slumber to the weary,
*TU rest to the forlorn, 1
{Tit shelter to the dreary, *. j
{Tis peace amid the storm,
'Tit the entrance to our home.
*Tis the passage to that God
Who bids Hi* children come.
' When their weary conrse is trod.”
“Bury me with my fathers," he said,
Genesis 49: 2931. "And he charged them,
and said unto them, I am to be gathered
unto my people; bury me; with my fathers
in the cave that it in the field of Ephron,
the Hittite. In the cave that is m tha
held of Machpelah. which it before Marare,
in the land of Canaan, which Abraham
bought with the field of Ephron, the Hit
tite, for a possession of a bury-place.
There they buried. Abraham and Sarah,
!»* wJe;. there they buried Isaac and Re-
bekah. his wife, and there I buried Leab,”
and that must have been a great proces
sion which started from Egypt to Canaan.
I can think of another procession a little
•Ike it. In 1881, not far from Luxor, •
treat find was made of kings and queens
*t a p.ace called Del El Bahri. For a long
time the tourists had been picking up
jewelry and other valuables
which the scholars knew belonged to the
junga and queens of other ages, and at
last after much work it vras found that
a discovery had been made of the greatest
value, and when the representatives of the
Government made their way to Del El
Bahn they really found the mummy of the
TltACY SLEW COMRADE.
Notorious Fuglllvo - onvictTold Truth
About Murder.
A special from Chehallls, Wash.,
Eays: The body of David Merrill, who
escaped from the Oregon penitentiary
with Harry Tracy on June 9, has been
found. A bullet wound fn tho back
reveals tbe nature of bis death aud
substantiates the story told by Tracy
about the duel in the forest.
The remains were In a somewhat ad
vanced state of decomposition, but'
were still recognisable. Tbe last time
Merrill was seen in company of Tracy
was on June 26 in Tumwatsr canyon,
when both escaped their pursuers.
Later Tracy torathat he had killed bis
comrade unfairly in a duel.
Lv. Cordele
Lv. Double Run
Lv. Rebecca .
Lv. Isaac ....
Lv. Fitzgerald
Lv. Wray
Lv. Ambrose .
Lv. Douglas .
Lv. Nlcholls
Lv. Sesgoms
Lv. Beach ..
Ar. Waycross
THROUGH 8CHEDULE3.
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 12:2(1 pm 8:20 pm
Ar. Amerlcus '..
Ar. Columbus ..
Ar. Macon
Ar.-Atlanta ....
Ar. Chattanooga
Ar. Louisville ....12:45 pm
Ar. Cincinnati .... 4:20 pm
Lv. Cordele ..
Lv. Fitzgerald
Lv. Douglas ..
Ar. WaycroBs
Ar. Jacksonville ..12:50 pm
Ar. Brunswick
Ar. Savannah ,
Ar. Columbia .
Ar. Charleston
Ar. Washington
Ar. New York
3:12 pm 10:22 am
6:20 pm
3:55 am
7:25 am
1:00 pm
2:30 am
7:20 am
4:00 pm
5:43 pm
6:42 pm
8:20 pm
8:30 am
7:30 pm 10:00 am
12:45 pm 12:20 am
6:05 pm 6:00 am
4:10 pm
7:45 pm
1:00 am
,.. 6:00 am
... 7:43 am
... 8:42 am
...10:20 am
5:10 pm
7:35 am
1:43 pm
6:40 am
9:00 pm
6:13 am
GEORGE DOLE WADLEY,
Vice President & Oen. Manager.
H. C. McFADDEN, '
Oen. Freight and Pass. Agent,
ALEX BONNYMAN, Superintendent.
J. O. KNAPP,
?rav. Freight and Pass. Agent.
A. B. DEMONT MOLLIN,
Agent, Cordele, Ga.
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN
fir FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
in Effect May 4, 100’.'.
SOUTHBOUND.
Stat.’ons.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Emile Zola Is In Jerusalem collect
ing material for a novel.
Austin Dobson, tbe poet, bas received
the doctor’s degree from the University
of Edinburgh.
The King of Italy will shortly visit
the Czar and Emperor WiUiuin at their
respective capitals.
Rear-Admiral Walker is spoken of
ns likely to be made President of the
Panama Canal Commission.
Miss Ellen Stone, the missionary, and
her adventures with Turkish brigands
have been made the subject of a melo
drama.
Lady Curzon is about to visit tbe
United States for n change of air. It
will be her first visit to America since
her marriage.
John Alexander Dowle, of Chicago.'
wants to make enough money to buy
Jerusalem and take his people there
to await the Lord’s coming.
President Loubet, during bis visit to
St. -Petersburg, gave $20,000 for distri
bution among charitable institutious In
8t. Petersburg and PeterUof.
Senor Ojeda, the new Spaulsb Min
ister to the United States; Is Bald to
be a man of splendid character, among
bis numerous accomplishments being
bis ability to speak the Euglish lan
guage perfectly.
Major Pond, tho well known Amer
ican Impresario, bos just celebrated his
sixty-fourth year. He began life ns a
journeyman printer aud for three
months set typo with John Brown on
the Herald of Freedom.
J. Pierpont Morgan smokes large
cigars as a rule, but since bis visit to
Jekyl Island be bas added to bis pos
session a style of cigar that is at once
a novelty and a wonder. It bears his
Initials and Is eight inches long. . -■ • •'
Rear-Admiral Melville fs determined
to htfvc n burial place of which he cab
approve. He lias accordingly erected
at Arlington Cemetery a tomb and
epitaph to himself, leaving only a
blank for the date of his death.
Lv. Me con . .
Kathleen
Qrovanla .
UnaiMlIa .
. Vienna . .,
Cordele .
Arabl .
Ashburn .
Ar. Tlfton .,
tv. Tltton .,
Sparks .
Roartplne .
Ar. Valdosta ...
Lv. .Valdosta ...
Lake Park .
Jennings . ..
Jasper . .....
White Spr...
Lake City ...
Lake Butler
Samp. City .
Hampton . ..
Florahome .
Ar. Palatka ....
AM
n 25
12 »
12 28
12 56
1 19
1 56
215
228
3 20
8 25
IS?
4 13
4 55
600
6 25
5 39
6 01
632
665
7 35
300
8 14
854
>10
Dixie
Flyer
ShoolValdo
FlylExps.
AM
PM
PM
12 45
4 20
8 45
5 31
942
6 57
10 02
2 07
6 20
10 20
2 32
6 51
10 43
2 60
7 15
11 05
3 26
7 M
11 25
8 11
11 48
4 CO
9 00
12 25
4 00
9 03
12 30
4 33
9 49
1 X
4 38
9 56
1 10
1 18
4 44
10 03
6 25
11 00
2 00
6 S3
PM
PM
a od
6 IS
635
- - r r\ . .
7 06
| .
7 30
8 20
8 46
9 01
9 45
10 25
NORTHBOUND.
Stations.
(Quick] DlxlelBhno IVaUU
I Step! Flyer! Fly|Exps.
Lv. Palatka ....
Florahome .
Hampton .
Samp. City
Lake Butler
Lake City .
White Spr. .
Jasper
Jennings . ...
Like Park- a
Ar. Valdosta
Lv. Valdosta
Heartplne
Adel
Sparks . .
Ar. TIfton ...
Lv. Titton .
Ashburn .
Arabl .- ,,
Cordele .
Vienna . ,
Unndllla .
Orcvanla .
Kathleen .
Ar. Macon .
AM
626
6 57
7 40
756
820
106
028
10 00
10 22
i!B
11 66
1145
U 51
108
1 29
201
225
2 48
104
in
410
PM
PM
6 10
8 48
725
7 40
805
865
0 21-
056
10 18
10 81
11 00
11 15
11 68
11 02
12 08
Si!
122
"in
218
225
AM
4 46
537
542
5 49
!«»<
I 41
S 12
.981
10 00
1105
AM
PM
145
231
237
241
407
481
451
512
S' 3?
5 57 •
61«
7*13
PM
“Dixie Flyer" has through- coach and
Pullman sleeper between Macon and
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
coach and local deeper Detween Macon
jxESS^vi.'irs.': sa^ss.
In Union Depot on return until 7:20 a..
m.. and can be occupied until that time.
“Quick Step" la solid train between Ma
con and Palatka.
WM. CHECKLEY SHAW. ,
Vice-President. C. B. RHODES. -
General Passenger Agt,.
Macon. Ga.
DAVE O. HALL. T.*P. A.,
Room 211 Equitable Bldg.,.
Atlanta. Ga. ,
„ HARRY BURNS. P: P. A.,
• 361 W. Bay St.,
* ' *— Jacksonville. Fbu-