Newspaper Page Text
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Vienna News.Icbahhah’s sehjion
1 ' /'h
Published 8emi-Weekly.
“ qeorqIaI
VIENNA, -
The scientists have recently been try
ing the experiment ?f feeding.young
chickens' on sterilized ToM, from the
time they are latched’. The result Is
that they dfe-*whlclT shotrs <that"the
much discussed bacteria and microbes
are essential to life.
What does “more or 'Jess’* mean?
The United States SuprCm&Coutt tioldi
that where a lumbering coricorn con
tracted to Cut 2,700,000 feet dt 'dead
timber “more or less’’ on the Chippewa
Indian reservation in Minnesota, and
they cut, 17,000,000 feet instead, this
was too great an Increase to come
Within the phrase “more or less.”
M. Flnot gives, a rule by which you
can tell very closely to what age you
are likely to (Ire—provided, of course,
accident, does not; Intervene. Simply
add togethor..the ages of your father
and mother and your two grandfathers
and two grtAdmothers, and divide the
whole by six. This does not tell bow
long you . will actually live, but only
your theoretical prospect of life.
The American Consul Miller at
Nluohwang, Chino, says that trade be
tween the Uiiitcd States and Man
churia Is destined to Increase vastly
within tjbd next few yjeaysi The Bus-
slans have matters largely In their
own bands, and be recommends young
Americans to learn the Russian lan
guage, as there >: a great demand for
employes who, can rpenk-Uoth Bussiau
and English; . , '
' According to the Philadelphia Becord
a vexed problem in South 'Jersey Is
“What has become of the gay and fes
tive strawberry festival?”' No one
seems to bold the answer, bin the festi
val has vanished. Time was, and not
so long ago, either, when strawberry
festivals began wlth tho first bluebirds
and kept merrily on till frost flew
again, but.not oven strawberries were
essential to tbelr financial success. It
may be that with the luscious fruit so
prevalent In their midst the good
church ladles have dedded.that the fes
tival may be cut out % ,Aj yll swots It
AY blStpURSEBY THE NO-/eJ>
PASTOR-EVANCELfST.
htjnt: A Navel Race—Self the Greatest
Suny of Meet Uen—Two Wars Into
Heaven—Wealth -and Fewer Will Not
Avail the Sinner an Judgment Day.
New^Vobk City/—The Eev. J. Wilbur
Chapmen, the popular pastor of the Fourth
Presbyterian Church, whose reputation as
in. evangelist is second to none, has pre
fee”
•from
i way which seemeth right unto a man,
but tbs end thereof are the waya of
ieath."[, ,|j j -
Some time during last summer the llev.
Joseph Parker, the: pastor of the City :
Temple in Boston, was asked' to take the
!ditor*s. chair of the London Sun, He waa
liven /all liberty to print just what be
wished ifl the papir or to keep out of the
loiumas what in bis judgment was not
jondortve to make an ideal paper. One day
in'the place of the racing news which the
readers of Abe Son had been accustomed
to peruse he printed under the caption of
“A"Novel Race Becord” a description of
the race of life, and for each point made
emphatic in the lives of those who. fre
quent the race course and follow racing as
a business he presented a passage of Serip-'
tore. This was. to say the least, startling.
New York 7 **
apostle raid, “When I would do good evil
is present with me.” I do not for a mo
ment imagine that we are guilty, any of
us, of great sins, hut the existence of Tittle
sins will prove the existence of a sinful
nature.
A famous ruby .wad;, offered .for sale to
the English Government. The report of
the crown • jeweler was that it was the
finest he bad ever seen or heard of, but
that-one-of-the/ifac«ts,”'ooe of the Tittle
cuttings of the faoe, waa slightly fractured.
The result waa that that almost invisible
flaw reduced its ‘valde- by- thousafals o
pounds, and. it waa rejected from the re
galia of England. Again, when Conova
One of our
quoting
S'.
m
has good’ in
» The trust fevdi* 8tf broken out in far
away Japan, SlSf 6r seven of the larg
est" silk bouses hove agreed, after long
'consideration of' the /matter, to "pool
tbelr Interests.” That our example has
not sooner beon’follbWed there Is due,
no doubt, to tub Tsciirclty of factories
where* capital to any great amount Is
employed. There nro many factories,
but they are small.with more skill In
Individual manuthctuifefs Than there Is
capital. It 1b said that capital, as wo
speak of It, Is not understood there at
ull. And yet a few of the more “West
ernized" houses have made the break,
and It Is likely that others will follow.
1 The output of the mineral products
of the United States In 1000 showed a
largo Increase over that of any pre
vious year, and with a grand total of
$1,070,108,800, according to tho Geolog
ical Survey report, wo are one of tho
most Important countries of the worm,
both as to mineral resources and to.
the variety obtained/ * The Increase in
precious metals and stones was most
noticeable because of the discovery
of new fields for operation. While
never recognised as a country rich In
diamonds and other precious stones,
tho United States has yielded some
precious stones of considerable value.
Henry Labouchere suggests in the
London Truth that Cecil Rhodes should
have added to each of bis scholarships
already worth $1500 a year for three
years apiece, a proportionable life an
nuity, in order to enable the American
scholars, spoiled for business by an
Oxford education, to live decently and
honestly. He asserts that an Oxford
education Is primarily Intended to en
able tho young men acquiring It to
enter-the class of amateurs and Idlers.
He thinks that Mr. Rhodes would have
done fief tec to found scholarships for
English youths to study in the United
papers,
ttom his uttering! in the London Snn,
printed the following:
A NOVEL RACE RECORD.
London.—The Rev. Joseph Parker prints
In the Sun to-day in place of the usual rac
ing column what he calls « corrected race
record, as follows:
The Eternity Stakes. ; '*>
The Start—Bom in ain, etc. Psalm LI.: 5.
The Race—All gone out of the way, etc.
Romans III.: 12.
The Finiah—After death the judgment,
etc. Hebrews IX.: 27.
The Weighing Room—Thou are weighed
l the balance* and art found wanting,
laniel V.: 27.
Settling Day—For what shall it profit a
man if he shall gain the whole world and
lose his own soitl. Mark VIII.: 36.
This outline for a sermon has been in
my mind since fitot my eyes lighted upon
it, and to the great London preacher I
am indebted for the suggestions of this
sermon, and yet I am quite free to confess
that the only reason I have chosen the,
ontline, and indeed the only reason I
8 reach the sermon is that I have a great
esire that those of you who are running
the raco of life should lay hold upon eter
nal life. It is a great mistake for men to
preach withoqt giving their hearers an op
portunity to confess Christ. When Mr.
Moody first began his public ministry in
Chicago he weht through a course of ser
mons on the life of Christ, and came at
last to the crucifixion, when the most pro
found impression had been made. He felt
as If he ought to give an invitation-, but
neglected to do so. The audience was di»
*»■» never to come together again, for
that night the great conflagration in Chi
cago was upon the city, and many of his
hearers were quickly ushered into eternity,
and so while I present thie novel race rec
ord I present It only that you may run the
raeo with Chriat. , >
If I had the lime in this connection I
might say some words concerning the book ■
in which the text is found. It has been
said by some one that there is no part of -
the Bible which more thoroughly proves; is to danger of the judgment, for God has
the inspiration of the Scriptures, for no distinctly said concerning the saved,
mire man could have written these wise '“There is therefore now no judgment to
another has . suggested that the them that are in Christ Jesus.” This is a
block that at infinite cost had been
fetched from Paroi, and he refused to lay
:hiael upon it. Once more, in the story of
the early struggles of the elder Hersebel,
while he was working out' the problem of
aui
got one to satisfy him. A scratch like a
spider thread caused one to be rejected,
ilthough it had cost him weeks of toil.
.. n.
The race. Romans 3: 12, “They are all
gone out of the Way, they are together be-
some unprofitable; there is none that doeth
good, no, not one.” we object to the
first statement, which, nevertheless,. ex
perience proves to he true, we certainly
cannot rotof the power of the second
statement, for the apostle writes that we
have all gone'away from God. When
there came a. time in our lives when it was
possible for ue to choose either the right
or the wrong‘'we well remember that the
tendency all along has been to choose the
wrong, or at least to permit it, and when
we remember that it is the wrong in His
judgment that we are responsible for the
message is a-sotemn one that we have to do
with, who taught the commandments and
made the look Of lust idolatry, and the
feeling of murder against a brother mur
der. There are two ways in wliieh men
might get inti) heaven; one ia the Way that
is marked with blood, “And though your
sins be as scarlet they shall be a* white as
snow,” and the other is the keeping of the
whole law. If we could do that God will
accept us, but we cannot, and we certainly
know wo have not. “He that-offends in
one point is guilty of all,” not that he has
broken all, but in the single offense he has
broken, away from God. But from the
standpoint of the unregenerate man at
least this statement is true, and I speak
now in thC language of the unregenerate.
You are not lost because of Adam’s sin,
or gn inherited tendency to evil, hut’
rather because you have rejected Christ
for yourself. Let us imagine a case. You.
have consumption, and it has come to you
from a long line of ancestry, and I went to
you and know a cure for consumption,
and if you will but take it ydu may bo
whole (gain, and I recite to ydn' the in
stances of hundreds of people who have
been sick and now are well, but you re
fuse the cure and die, not because you were
a consumptive with an inherited tendency
this disease, but because- you have re
jected the cure, and men are lost because
they have rejected Christ.
■ ‘ HI.
The finish. Hebrews 9: 27, “And as it
is appointed unto men once to die, but af
ter this the judgment.” -
I never speak the Word judgment that I
»m not startled, hot for myself, and when
I say that I do not mean to exhibit the
spirit that I am holier than thou, hut
startled because of the unsaved man who
«rto_ .
hlrty-oue chapters in the book contain a
lesson for eaon day of the mouth; and no
man would find himself failing to frequent
ly it he should imbibe tho wisdom of these
savings. Indeed, thereto fiol a condition
of lifo that is not met by the wisdom of th? ,
writer of this book. I might also suggest
the different figures which are used in the
with its dtyi of balm and nights of stonui l
S* south winds blowing, deceitfully against
us, - and telling of prosperity that never
cornea and its hurricane which almost
drives us against the rocks and to death,
hut ono of the best figures is that of a race
for no man walks when he races, bnt runs.
He must bo desperately in earnest, and no
one really makes a success of his life with-
•at this same thing ia true-of him. There
ft little place for the laggard to
Hfo to-day.
human
We must run if we would
«. fimsrstwtm
we start there are three contestants which
strive earnestly to defeat ns. The first it
self—tho greatest eneity that the most of
us have u self. Other men fight hattlec
and rest when the victory is wod, but no-
man his ever yet been able to wet in,the
struggle with himself. The Bible is true,
‘Greater is he tbit ruleth his spirit than
he that taketh a city,” and many a man
hae been ,a hero in the battlefield and
made a miserable failure with his struggle
with himself. The world is generally
sgainst us. "Woe be unto you when all
men speak well of you, and if no one op
poses you it is well to stop and see where
in yon may be wrong, but possibly the
greatest adversary of all ia the devil, the
No one can appear in
judgment for Us. We must stand there for
ourselves, and the thought of the judg
ment will make us think when everything
; elae has been banished from our minds.
"All I know of the future judgment.
Or whatsoever it may be,
That to standalone with my conscience,
v\ ill be judgment enough for me."
And he will meet his record. It will not
bb necewary that the book shall be
opened. The book of one’* own record
will condemn; that ain of last night which
no one knows.but you.and God is against
you; that sin fa London which no one
dreams of but yourself and your Maker
has made its record, and the things that
we have forgotten are standing against us.
God pity us if we do not make ready for
tost day, and we cannot make ready ex
cept by faith in Christ and we can meet
God. We have sinned against Him, we
have trampled His love under our feet,
we have rejected His Son, and to that day
wo shall meet Him and who shall be able
to stand?
IV.
The weighing room. Daniel S: 27, “Thou
nrt weighed to the balances, and art found
wanting."
There is a machine to the Bank of Eng
land that in a very wonderful way sifts
the sovereigns. You could hardly believe
it. There is a whole case of sovereign*
there by'-the man, who, like-an ordinary
SteUMftSff ±iss ft’s?
have tumbled the one over the other to get
hold of. and he puts them in his machine.
He feed* his mill the same way aa the old
l 1*22.® threshjug machine, and it
takes hold ofthe eohwaSd teats them- It
weighs and poises each, throwing the light
inns fn avia ■!/)« ..J —11— r .1 it •
with pride,,“All-thioqs mine, Mr. Mooi
and then took him to the cupola of
house and showed him the extent of
possessions. He pointed out the#3i
fence in the distance, and the lake in an- 1
other direction, and the grove in still an
other, direction, and said, "All this lie ■
mow direction, and said, "All
mine,” and MrbMoody said, “It is „ „
farm, but how much have you up yon
der? pointing heavenward. “Alas," said vw,
the man, "I have been so busy here, that I ”kycrosa .... »:uu am a:uu pm
suits made no provisBu for the country M BfidSIr
there.”
> In ob „ m ,
tration of that part of Russia where it is •
story a Russian peasant can Lv. "Douglas .
In one of TdlsfotVbook* there is an iflas-
ation of tf~r™-- • • -
add fa th*
tove all the territory ,he can measure ou
from sunrise to eunset,'add Tolstoi tells
to mark out his possessions. He sees the
waving trees in the distance and deter-
mlnea they shall be bis, and the lake be
yond hi
and'the
to, and
is beyond ...
every energy to reach the starting point,
and just as the sun goes down, he reaches
it, fall* upon bis face from sheer weakness,
power.. What shall it all profit in that
great day
States, because there, in addition to
class room work, they would learn to
feel ashamed to loaf around, or to de
pend on their fathers for positions.
. ■ - '-'a-'jysyfc ■"
J* * way which seemeth rigid onto a man.
but the end thereof are the waya of
death.’ 1 “There is a way that seemeth
right. I take it that none of u* have (to
termined deliberately to be lost. Our
mother* memory is too sacred and our
father, example too powerful to permit us
deliberately to ehooee death instead of life.
We are merely procrastinating. We have
chosen a little more of the world’s pleas
ure, falsely so-called, and determine to
have * little more of the world’s honor,
and the tray eeemeth right, far some day
we may he saved, and yet no one has a
certain prospect of salvation if he neglects
Christ to-day, for he has made no provi
sion for the morrow. The end hades de
scription. There ii weeping and wailing
sarsfag afjigSrcsf $s
we cannot afford to run the race alone.
The atari. Psalm fcl: ''S, “Behold, I was
shapen in iniquity, and to sin did my
mother conceive me."
This is a Bible statement, but experience
proves the truth oMt and hiatoty empha-
of that, uererthelesa, this ire know* to be
gnat i.
p»y to this experience, for eves the peat
“*we,_when # the toad, small and
mat, shall stand before God. You
better put it right. The Spirit sajrs you
are a happy man if you realize your short-
comings in time and get it covered.
When that day comes Ho shall weigh
our motives. It it not what we have done,
but the motive that prompted the doing,
and He Shall test our scts. lt U not the
good to others which we have accom-
pluhed that-shall count for us, but thnt
which has been for His fe.ory; and He
shall seek out our thoughts, and woo be
I'oto that .uim whfljp motives sn<T acts
and thoughts are against Hun. “Weighed
and found wanting.” ' That was a solemn
scene m the Book of .Daniel
ahaezer and hit guests forgot
of the room m which they
wail, “Weighed ana found- wanting,” and
a more atriking »Mi| than that sfali be
our experience If vriTneglect Chriat.
NEWSY CLEANINGS.
The toad area of Hawaii is 4,000,000
acres.
Texas has a permanent school land
amounting to nearly $8,000,000.
Dogs are being trained for ambn
brace service in the Prussian Army,
The number of lepers in tht Philip
pine Islands is estimated at about 12,
ooo:
Owing to the prevalence of rats and
mlco In the Yukon region cats bring
JJ25 apiece.
Three thousand Mormon missionaries
secured 20,000 converts to that faith
dnrlng the Inat year.
The French Government has decided
to Install the wireless telegraph on all
submarines In Its navy.
American breeders and trainers now
practically control the royal stable nud
stock farms of Russia.
Bayreuth Is trying to raise a fund
to maintain its opera after the copy
right of Parsifal expires.
The populatlon of Belgian: is 6.093,-
000. There is an excess of about 40,
000 in the female population over the
male. - -
The Mahchurian- Railway Admin
istration Is constructing at Charblh a
hotel which will cost over 2,000,000
rubles.
So many lovers have committed sul
clde together of late In Italy, that ihe
authorities now indict the survivor of
any such tragedy for murder.
An aerial race track, with anchored
balloons to mark It, is suggested for
those who are to pace In the sky at the
St. Louis Exhibition in 1004.
’ Southern California has a retail gro
cers’ organization, formed for the pur-
pose of assisting each other In tracing
“deadbeats” and in collecting old bills.
Three hundred million feet of logs
were cut on 'the Penobscot River last
season. This Is the biggest harvest
ever known and nearly half of it Is for
the manufacture of paper.
LABOR WORLD.
The settling day. Mark 3: 33, “ ..
shall it profit - a man if he shall nm the
whole world and Jose his own soul." It is
"For what
MrwTa^&^th”. KS l£B%*5g LTAt th 4
and alio that if we were to me*k han**tiv j its music and its art
we would say that from thePrSy firat it t^'ita tnSdt^hnt'whft^hiSut «“ d Sf n “
hat been easier for us to do wrong than to a iSLIui’' but what shaU it proSt us.
do ri$ht. Wc hare been in a great com-
Iron workers In Belgium are well em
ployed at present.
Masaos, Sweden, has a woman’s fire
department, 150 strong.
Only union labor will hereafter be
employed on brick sewer work at
Omaha, Neb,
Miners at Fernle, B. C., have again
gone on strike. They have been work
ing barely a month since the tost
strike. i
Boston (Mass.V bookbinders bare
struck for the purpose of accomplish
ing n uniform scale bf wages and ap-
prentice By stem.
South Wales coal owners have a case
against the miners’ nssleintions nnd
federations for damages, arising out of
the stop-days some time ago.'
Union Iron moulders at Council
Bluffs, Iowa, hare returned to work.
Tbefr demands for an Increase of pay
from $2.75 to $3.25 a day were met.
The most serious dispute of the Eng
lish carpenters at present is at Brad
ford, where some 300 members are ei
strike against a reduction to wages.
In Germany the working day In most
trades Is still much longer than In
England and the United Sintra. Nev
ertheless, progress to this line Is no
ticeable.
Buffalo, N. Y., labor leaders arc
elated over the fact that to all the
strikes there during the spring there
has not been a single disturbance of
any kind.
There are 1000 hoot and shoe fac
tories in the United States, employing
143,000 men, using $170,000,000 worth
of materials a year and turning out
products worth at wholesale $201,-
000,000. f 'iff! ,-t
The threatened strike of the iron
moulders -at - Montreal, Canada, has
been averted by the men accepting n
compromise rate of $2.40 a day. -Be
tween 300 and 400 men are affected.
They originally wanted $2.50 a day.
1
Time Table Effectlve May 25,1902.
. W/\YCRO$S TO CORDELE.
NoTE No737
Ik _ Dally. Daily
No. L
Dally.
8:00 am 4:00 pm
9:00* am • 5:00 pm
....' J|: ia^sor 5:08 jraf
... 9:*1 am 5:38 pm
...10:03 am 6:0): pm
...10:09 am 6:10 pm
...10:37 am 6:37 pm
...11:04 am 7:04 pm
.11:21 am \-.2X pm.
•V. Wr
Lv. Bit
Lv. Isaac
Lv/'
'LYjitpO'ubW'Riln. .11:3'| ant '7:36 9m
Ar. Cordele .i,. r i.12:20 pm 8:20.-pm
CORDELE TO WAYCROSS.
No727
Daily.
Lv. Cordele
.. 6:00 am
4:00. pm
Lv. Double Bun
.. 6:44 am
4:44 pm.
Lv. Rebecca ...
. 6:59 am
4:59 pm.
Lv. Isaac
. 7:16 am
6:16 pmi
Lv. Fitzgerald .;
. 7:43 am
‘5:43 pmi
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. Nlcholls ...
. 9:12 am
7:12 pm
Lv. Sespoms ...
. 9120 am
7:20 pm
Lv. Beach
. 9:33 am
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 pin
Ar. Americas ..
. 3:12 pm
10:22 am
Ar. Columbus ...
. 5:20 pm
•Ar. Macon
. 4:10 pm
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
. 6:00 am
4:00 pm
Lv. Fitzgerald ..
. 7:43 am
6:43 pm
Lv. Douglas
. 8:42 am
6:42 pm
Ar. Waycross ...
.10:20 am
8:20 pm
Ar. JacksonviKe
.12:50 pm
8:30 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,
Vice President & Gen. Manager.
H. C. McFADDEN,
Gen. BYelght and Pass. Agent.
ALEX BONNYMAN, Superintendent.
J. G. KNAPP,
Trav. Freight and Pass. AgenL
A. B. DEMONT MOLLIN,
Agent, Cordele, Ga.
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN
& FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
hucuuu in Effect May 4, ISOS.
SOUTHBOUND.
Stations.
IQulckl Dixie! ShoolValdo-
I Step! Flyer! Fly|Expg.
Lv. Mtcon . ..
Kathleen .
Grovanla .
Unadtlla .
Vienna ....
Cordele . .
Arabl . ...
Aahburn . .
Ar. Tifion ...
Lv. Tilton ...
Sparks . ..
AOel .
Reartplne
Ar. Valdosta .
Lv. Valdosta .
Lake Park
Jennlnsa .
Jasper
White Spr....
Lake City ..
Lake Butler
Samp. City
Hampton . .
Florabome .
Ar. Palatka ...
AM
AM
PM
1135
12 45
4 20
32
5 31
6 57
6 20
MSS
207
1 19
2 32
.,8 61
1 55
250
YlS
J M.
7 0S
I SS
3 26
8 11
IM
400
1%
325
4 00
402
4 33
9 49
n
428
9 56
4 44
10 03
465
, 525
11 00
6 00
535
PM
6 25
5 69
539
6 12
6 01
635
6 33
7 06
653
7 30
7 33
8 20
8 00
8 46
Sit
900
9 45
930
io a
PM
8 46
9 41
10 02
10 20
10 42
1101
u ts
11 48
12 20
12 20
1 05
I 10
1 IS
2 00 -
PM
Stations.
IQulckl DlxlelShoo IValda -
j Step! Flyer! FlylExps.
WON’T ACKNOWKDGE DEFEAT.
At a mass meeting of the council of
the United Textile Workers of Amer
ica at New Bedford. Mass., Tuesday,
called especially to hear a report from
Secretory HIbbm-L who has Just ar
rived from a slx/weeUs’ stay in Augus
ta. Ga., the secretory stated that the
strike of the operatives was as bitter
as ever.
Lv. Palatka ....
Florahome .
Hampton . .
Samp. City .
Lake Butler
Lake City ..
W-hito Spr. ..
Jasper
Lake Pari
Ar. Valdosta ....
Lv. Valdosta
Heartplne
Adel . ....
Sparks .
r. Tlfton ...
Lv. Tiftou .
Aahburn .
Arabl . ..
Cordele .
Vienna . .
Untdilla .
Ortvanla .
Kathleen .
Ar. Macon ..
AM
PM
6 23
6 10
667
6 43
740
7 25
765
7 40
IS
-805
8 63
9 21
10 00
055
10 18
10.22
10 36
10 33
1100
11 00
A M
11 05
11 15
4 45
U 45
11 56
6 37
11 61;
12 0!
G 43
11 57
.12 08
5 49
12 30
12 45
6 3>
12 30
12 45
0 40
108
ia
7 27
i a
7 53
202
1 ss
820
2 25
212
8 41
2 48
235
9 12
304
935
3 21
10 00
4 10
365
11 06
PIT
AM
AM
PM
1 45
2 21
227
243
IS
2m
4 07
4 31
453
5 12
6 St
5 57
8 18
7 IS
PM
••Dial# Flyer” baa through coach and t
Pultman sleeper Between Mseon and •
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
..... . , , .. ... coach and local sleeper Detween Macon
s»swra#a»,!Lifc
In Union Depot on return' until 7r*o a.
m.. and can be occupied until thht time.
/ Q“* C * eo’-to train between Ma- -
con and Falatka.
TO. CHECKLET SHAW.
Vice-President C. B. RHODES.
*. Q ro n m' ra cto M * enzer A,t ’
DAVE Q. HALL. T. P. A.,
Room 21T Equitable Bide.,
_ Atlanta. Ga.
„ HARRY BURNS. F. P. A..
® - 291 W. Bay St..
Jacksonville. Fia..