Newspaper Page Text
Vienna News.
VIENNA,
Published Semi-Weekly.
• - ‘ GEORGIA^
\ EMTOBttt "NOTESri
f /\ iWlA/LJ TAe^WW
It Is not too much to say that the
modern development of f advertising
was made possible by; electricity.^Wljtb-
ont the telephone and the telegraph
publicity would be for less profitable,
and therefore It could not bav.e reached
Its present Jilgh stage pf, development,
says Profitable Advertising. , i i
A correspondent of the London Acad
emy says: "Men, beyond doubt, are
mor( theatrical than women In their
novels, A great gift, In either sex, Is
alwayii fearless, but among the ‘selling
second-rate’ It will be found that wom
en- write honestly, If badly, what they
know;, and feel; whereas men of the
same . literary rank Indulge In stilted
diction, melodramatic effects, sham
sentiment, ■ false refinement, labored,
unreal emotionalism. ' The woman,
therefore, commands a larger public.
She It? more sincere, and the great good
sense of the common reader, heedless
of style, responds to her undisciplined
earnestness.*'
The sessions, of the Tuberculosis
'Congress have been beyond precedent
helpful In practical hints suitable to
the layman’a understanding. It Is well
to know that consumption is not prop
erly hereditary and not even easily
communicable to persons taking proper
precautions; that Its allies are intem
perance, insufficient clothing, damp
ness, filth, overcrowding, Improper
food; that its foes are fresh air, un
limited sunshine, good food, sanitary
surroundings. These tblngB are for
Individual consideration, states the
New York World. The appeal of vn-
„ tlous speakers for more parks and piny-
grounds, for better homes for the poor
DE. CHAPMAN’S SERMON
| jfx*
A SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY»THE NOTED
rut iiATi ipr *
PASTOR-EVANGELIST..
iit, the Rev, Dr. J. Wilbur Uhep-
I’lie subject of the discourse is “Two
1" fainting men,” ahd It was
d from the text, "Two hundred
k. aLIm#1 ...L : .L •a.AMA 1 HA frtint 4-l«,i4
Subject! Two JJtmdred Fainting Men—
Every Perron I* Called Into the Kin*,
doin of God Por a Purpore-We Shall
Be Mqdqtq,Account For Work Undone
fcrfy.—The following schdl-
mdy and readable sermon has been- pre
pared for the press by the popular pastor-
"«t, the Rev,, Dr. J. Wilbur Chap-
h4nft«r*
pleached , ,
ahiode behind, which were' so faint, that
they could not go over the Brook Besor.”
I. Samuel 30: 10.
■•In some respects we .are reminded in
this story of the celebrated charge of the
Light Brigade, possibly because there were
600 of David's soldiers, and perhaps be
cause they fought valiantly and won a
great Victory', While the. rank and file
would npb-compete with the men who
fought at Sebastapol or Inkerman, for
they had been a discontented lot in their
homes and in their service, yet there were
some really great soldiers among them, and
they wft-e as ready to die as were those 600
illustrious men who made the gallant
charge not many years ago.
At the time of the text DaVid was liv
ing at Ziklag, and he and his men had
been away-in battle. The battle haa been
Waged, the victory has been won and they
are homeward bound. They have camped
for the lost night, and to-morrow morning
they will be with their loved ones. The or
der is given to break camp and forward
march, and When they came to the hill
where before them they 'could naturally
see Ziklag the first man shades his eyes
with his hands and looks. His face grows
bale and- he begins to shudder, for Ziklag
Is in ashes, and as they come nearer their
wives and children and alt their property
have been carried away. .They are about
to turn upon David and stone him, but
when he agrees to go after the enemy they
turn away from the ruins of their homes
nnd start in hot pursuit. They reach the
Brook Besor, and then find that they have
in their oompany men who are not able to
6 o on, some because they are old,, others
ecausc they were crippled, and still oth
ers because they were ill. The number
comprised 200. Jn order that, they might
move more rapidly and battle more suc
cessfully all the heavy trappings were left
with the 200 at the Brook Besor, and 400
men pursued the enemy. They overtake
an Egyptian, who is left by the wayside
as good as dead, and when they give him
tome refreshments and promise nim that
they will not let him fall into the hands
of the enemy, neither will they put him to
dentb themselves, he tell* them the direc
tion that the enemy haa gone, and ftarsu-
ing after them they come suddenly upon
them. They have been intoxicated with
their great success, and although the bat
tle waa fierce for a little while victory be
longs to David and his men. Their wives
and children are theirs once more; most
valuable treasure also is taken, and thev
have turned their face* hack to the Brook
Besor. Suddenly soipo one in the company
begins to talk of the distribution of the
8 hinder, and they have about decided that
he 200 fainting men shall have nothing
when David, with all the kingliness that it
was possible for him to assume, declares
"as his part is that goes out to the battle
so shall his part be that tarries by the
stuffs. They shall share and share alike,”
i and then be turned to the Brook Besor
and tor hospitals where light cases
nrfh j - . ■ I ana men ne turned to me uroou jiesor
cdtt bo cured and hopeless ones pro-, and w hited his men. Every old soldier
vented from endangering tbo commu- ~ J ““ ‘ ,J11 "
nity should appeal to lawmakers aud
philanthropists.
' Harrington Emerson, writing In the
Engineering Magazine, Is authority for
the statement that of the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans the Pacific Is destined
to become.tbegreatcrtradeocean of tho
two. Not only do tho most dense and ca^dty. hftvi ' worked
Industrious populations of tire world ” ' *'
and every weak man received as much of
a reward os if he had been in the front of
the fight.
There is an impression abroad that the
rewards for the Christian are given to
those who hnve rendered conspicuous ser
vice; great preachers, great philanthro
pists. great martyrs. This is. not so ac
cording to tho text: neither is it true ac
cording to the teaching of the Bible. Be-
wards are not given for the amount of noise
'made in the world, nor for the amount of
good which we are supposed to have done,
' * ujh to
line the western shores of the great
ocean, but tho western coast of North
America In natural wealth far apr-
passes the eastern coast, with the ex
ception of coal; yet If the Crows Neal
cool mines ol' British Columbia, lying
on the west slope of the Itocky Mount
ains and but 600 mile* from the Pacific
be Included In Pacific coast resources,
then In coal also the West surpasses tho
East, for these measures, many hun
dred miles In area, contain, In fifteen
veins. 150 feet of solid coni, some of It
gas coal, some anthracite, and the soft
varieties of auper-excelleutcoklngeoal.”
Making wills Is serious bnslness lu
Minnesota, for the State courts make
short work of the foolish ones, ou the
theory that when a man Is dead fie Is
dead, and bis crotchets and notions die
.with him. There will be no lack of
You doubtless remember Pinto's fable
*f the apirits that returned to this world
each to choose a body for Its f.hcre of
work. One took the body of a king, an
other a poet, atill another of n philosopher,
and Ulysses came with great disappoint
ment because all that was worth having
was taken, when some one saidsthe best
Is left. You may choose., the body of a
common man and do a common work and
receive a common reward, and this be did,
I.
Every man is railed into the kingdom of
Cod for a purpose. There is no question
about'this.' .Tust as in tho making of a
great locomotive every piece must be con
structed by an exncrt and every bit of
work mult be marked with the name of
the worknmn, so that if the engine should
break in Jerusalem or China the failure
could be traced to the nroper source. Go<r
expects every man to do his duty, nnd for
every one in all the kingdom He has a plan
of course. We are not all expected to
perform the same mission. Paul has an
illustration of this in First Corinthians,
the 12th chapter, where he is describing
the body where he says, “Ye cannot say
to the hand, I have no need of thee, and
if the body were an eye where were the
hearing, etc.,” but each performs its own
mission, the uncomely parts receiving the
greatest attention from the heed. Bo every
one of us has a work to do. If we leave it
undone we shall be called to a strict ac-
sympathy with the court in the ^ ^ ^
Instance, at any rate. A man named in the story of these soldiery and the 200
Scott, living in Minnesota, grew up to SWSS
oate bis relatives as be waxed older, ! titude, the other is just tarrying by the
and be made a will leaving his prop- rewa”^ 1 ” ° £ the #nd
erty, all In Government bonds, to the j if.
county, to help out the taxpayers. But! How' often the field to which God calls
os he auvanced in years his hatreds The business man who has gone to bis
grew more and more far-reaching. I 0 ®“ »U this while, and goes through the
Ifrom confining them merely to bl .' *—“*•*' ^ ”■* *•
relative# bo began to bate bis neigh
bors; and finally all the* people who
were associated with him in any way.
Then be hit upon & scheme. He tore
np his first Wtifdnd constructed an
other, directing that the bonds be
burned, thus causing the value of them
to remain for ever In the United State*
Treasury. If he bad lived long though | to
this scheme, too, would doubtless have
seemed unsatisfactory, but lie .died
soon after. The court quickly disposed
of the will, and now the immediate
heirs are enjoying the property.
night, from one week’s end to another,
year in and year out, chaffing oft times be
cause he is doing so little and yet forget
ting that he can be “not slothful in busi
ness, fervent in spirit serving the Lord,"
and because he doe* complain so much is
missing his opportunity to do what the
preacher never could do. The ihvaKd upon
her couch racked with pain and filled with
complaint because her voice is never heard
in the congregations of the people, won-
■*—'— why she ever lived, and crying out
God because she has suffered so in-
thereby missing her opportunity
ive a testimony which fio one else
could give hut the invalid.
4fee«t BarMorsd administers s week
ago wik pranged wto Crest sorrow by the
news of the death of his son. He had died
by his own band. When the news was
others he cried aloud, "Though He stay me
yet will Intrust Him," and he never
is ministry preached a better
lother m her home bound
for. while the chain may be
_.J1 a' chair chaffing because
ke.her -influent* felt so little in
.. and yet forgets that she is
doing what every angel in the skies would
like to do, having an opportunity placed
in her bands Arnold'* soul fbf eternity in'
the direction of the lives of her boys. II
remember What he Said WhenheWritea to
the Pbilippiaps, “But I would ye should
understand, brethren, that the ' things
which happened .unto me have fallen out
rather unto the furtherance of the. gospel;
so that my bonds in Christ are manifest in
all the palace, and in all other places."
Philippians 1: 12-13. There are those who
say if I were only in a more enlarged
sphere I would be brave and true, but tbiS
is not at all certain if you are not brave
and true where you stand to-day.
‘Jnst where thou art lift up thy voice, ,
*nd sing the song that stirs thy heart;
Beach forth thy strong an<) eager hand
To lift, to save, just where'thou art.
Just where thou standest light thy lamp,
’Tis dark to others as to thee;
Their ways are hedged by unseen thorns.
Their burdens fret as thine fret thee.
"Out yonder, in the broad, full glare
Of many lamps thine own might pale -
And thy sweet song amid the gear
Of many voices slowly fail;
While these' thy kindred wandered on
Uncheered, unlighted, to the end.
Near to thy hand thy mission lies.
Wherever sad hearts need a friend."
First—Perhaps you are where you are
because you have not filled full that posi
tion, and God will never call you to a
higher place until you have overflowed
where you are. Mourning and fretting be
cause you are not where you want to be
does not make things better. The bonds
are only tightened by the fretfulnese. Two
birds in two cages in a room give an illus
tration. One dashing itself against the bars
because it is imprisoned, injuring itself
and s stopping its song: the other singing
as if it would outsing the fork in the mead
ows, and moving thereby its mistress to
open the cage and set it free. He who does
the best he can where God has placed him
has put his foot on the round of the ladder
that leads up to higher things.
Second—Usefulness is not the primary
object for the Christian. We say, "Oh,
that we might' be more useful," but first
rather let hs desire to be more holy, for
that is God’s will. There is nothing bet
ter for the most of us than sorrow or dis
appointment or trial because these things
shape character. There is little merit in
being good when everything about us
makes us good, and usefulness is the result
of character, is to character what the fra--
grapee 'is to the rose. The gardener does
not aim first for the fragrance, but
to make the rose perfect, and the fra
grance takes care of itself. If you study
the sermons of Whitfield, Wesley, Spur
geon and Moody you may wonder why
•these sermons produced such mighty ef
fects. It was because the power was in.
the messenger rather than in the message.
To be right with God, to be holy, to he
like Christ, is bur first duty, and through
the door of holiness we pass to usefulness.
In the early painting days of West,
Morse, the philosopher, entered his studio.
He was minting his masterpiece of “Christ
Rejected," when he said to his friend.
"Let me tie your bands and paint them in
the picture, and if you have ever seen
this picture you have teen the hands of
Morse painted in the stead of Christ. If
you are in bonds for Christ’s sake this very
thought will take from you. the sting of
living possibly out of sight and doing only
common things as you have done in other
days, yet the time will come when you
will be free.
Perhaps there are those here who are in
bondage because they have never yet be
come Christians. - In the old Water street
mission there came one day a man bowed
down with sin until he stood little more
than four feet high, like a veritable dwarf,
but when he bowed at the altar and
yielded himself to Christ he stood up at
straight as an athlete. PerhapB this is
what you need. Sighing for peace, you
have not found it, searching for pleasure it
has eluded its grasp. Oh, come to Christ
to-day, for He may act you free.
Then discipline may free us. Rawlins
White, the old martyr, was decrepit and
bowed with age. but when he stepped into
the fire suddenly these bonds were snapped
and his body was as straight as it had ever
been in the days of his youth, and it may
not he when sorrow came to you - and
your heart was almost breaking, when the
flames of affliction took hold upon you that
God was but seeking, to free you from
bondage and lead you out into a larger
field of service. The thing from which you
shrank away He meant for your edifica
tion.
A dear friend of mine with whom I trav
eled recently said, "I wns but an averngf
Christian untilone day God came unto my
home and took my daughter, and then in
the midst of my sorrow I yielded
myself to Him,, gnve Him my time and
my money and everything that I had, and
I stepped out into a life of blessing such as
I had never known, and I would not give
the last twelve veara for all mv life before
put together." 'And then, too,'we shall be
free when we see Him. For the man
whose sphere hat been most circumscribed
here will doubtless find when he stands in
the pretence of the King that he was but
in s preparation for s mission among the
saints at which the very angels might well
stand amazed.
m.
If ell these seem like hardships to us and
we have been without comfort, then let u»
wait until the day of reward shall come.
The mother who has had a hard time with
her children, just wait and do your best.
When Charles Wesley gomes to judgment,
and all the hosts that have been won tr
.Christ by His power of music come, it will
be a great day, end when John Wesley
comes to judgment with all the souls of
Methodism with him it will be a marvelous
sight, but higher than the throne of either
Charles Wesley or John will be throne of
Sumna Wesley, their mother.
The old preacher who has been discour
aged oft times because bis church wa: so
small and his work so apparently insignifi
cant, needs only to wait until that great
day, and when that eld minieter who
preached in Falkirk stands in His presence
■to ear possibly to Him, "Master, I had bnt
a lFtle field,” he will W HimAay, "But
yen led Robert Moffat to rue,*’ and as
Joseph Parker said the matt who added
Robert Moffat to the churph added a conti-
nent to tbe.kingdom. Aftd when the old
'English minister whose'field was verjf cu*
rum scribed, whose name ia not generall>
known, stands in Hit pretence to say,
,
When Henry VITf. and Anne Boleyn
came up the River Thames they had a
great entrance into the city of London.
1^‘fty barges followed the Lorn.Tfiayfr.
Officials'were dressed in scarlet. Miffsciane
chanted upon the banks of the river, and
she who was tfi be the queen cliWRn gar
ments of beauty, walking upon velvet, en
tered Westminster Abbey, and the service
. wa * J. great one, but itjs as nothing cpm-
■parcel ;t6 the end when the rewards are
?‘?en to those nffip, have simply been
taithfu), , v ' ■ / . r
I was sick. He will.say,-“and.ye visited
Me, and the young. Christian Endenvorer
w« say, "But. Master, when?" and He
will answer, if was when you walked
through the wards ef the hospital and gave
a flower to this one and a cup of cold
water to that one." “I was weak and ye
helped Me. and this business man will
say, “But, Master,when?” and He will an
swer, "It was the coin you gave to the man
m the crowded streets of the city yester
day, and who but for that coin would have
starved.” And to the mother who hai
cared for her children,' and the businesi
man who has faithfully performed the task
of his business, and the father who has
been true in his home He will say, "Inas
much, os ye did it unto the least of these
ye did it unto Me.”
So you see it is not at all a question
as to where we have labored or how small
our experience has been, but have we dons
«ur nest. If so, we shall receive a reward.
bra&i to tlTfallJ it « if K' “Master. I did the £st l cou.'d. but my
would fill, whra raddenlPr^emlirffig
the comfort which be had ever given tS -*° Chn * t *
7 :
laic & BiniilaiIK
Tirri« Table Effective May 25, 1902,
WAYCRpsS TO CORDELE.
“ NoTl No7'3.“
-'Daily. Daily.
Lv^ Waycross .... .8;00 am 4:0fi : pm
Lv Beach ........ 8:47 am 4:£7 pm
Lv. Sessoms 9:00 am • 5:00 pm ■
Lv. Nicholls ..... 9:12 am 5:08 pm
Lv. Douglas 9:*1 am 5:38 pm
Ly. 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 pra
Lv. .Rebecca 11:21 am 7:21 pm
Lv. Double Run.
LABOR WORLD.
Indiana farmers are'organizing trade
unions.
Sun Francisco (Cal.) salesladies have
organized.
The pay of the German soldiers is
only six cents a .day .
Boston (Mass.) lathers are about to
demand! an eight-hour day.
Law’s prohibiting labor unions were
passed In England in 1709.
The colliers of Cyfarthin, Wales,
have resolved to resume work.
Only 3.47 -per cent, of the strikes Id
this country are “sympathetic strikes.”
It is estimated that from 20,000 to
25,000 harvesters are required In Mani
toba.
In 1900 the number of workmen em
ployed in the mines of France was
178,894. - ,
The threatened strike of the tele
phone girls at San Diego, Cal., has been
averted.
The teachers’ societies of Mlrandoln,
Italy, have unanimously decided to
join trade unions.
The sum of $27,084,710 is expended
annually for wages of employes iu the
glass Industry in this country.
Wisconsin dairy industry employs
1700 hands at an annual cost for wages
of nearly $1,000,000.
Between 1775 and 1800 many trade
unions were formed In Germany,
France and England.
Seven thousand workmen are on
strike for higher wages and shorter
hours at Manila, Philippine Islands.
Eight hours a day nnd twenty-eight
cents an hour guaranteed 2500 laborers
at Boston. Mass., ore expected to keep
peace in the building trade for a year.
•Labor Is reported scarce in South
Africa. Natives made money out of
the war, and are back to their lands.
The mine malingers are anxiously
awaiting 70,000 or 80,000 natives, but
are unable to secure more than 4000
or 5000 a month. '
SPORTING BREVITIES.
A young woman In Belfast, Me., has
thrown the.baseball 185V4 feet.
Major Taylor will return to America
to fight for the sprinting championship
this season.
Frank Kramer nnd George Collett
lravc won a team cycle race at Vails-
burg, N. J., from n fast field.
Cycle racing will ho conducted at tho
Atlantic City (N. J.) Coliseum every
night during July and August.
Wholesale suspensions of unregis
tered nthletes have been made by the
A. A. U. Registration Committee. .
Molier, tlie American jockey, 1ms
won the $50,0C0 Eclipse Stakes on the
Duke of Devonshire’s horse Cheers at
Snndown Park, England.
Tennis tur.' courts are more favored
than ever this season. The English
play ou grass, and all of the big Amer
ican events are held on turf.
It Is reported from abroad that the
Automobile Club of Great Britain 1h
planning to have the next race for the
International cup held in England in
stead of France.
“Bobo'e” Wnlthour, the bicycle racer,
has competed In mop? tlmn twenty-five
paced races this season, aud has ac
quired another bunch of money to In
vest iu Atlanta (Ga.) real estate.
The American built schooner yacht,
the Lnsca, won the Hellgoland-Dover
race on time allowance. Emperor Will
iam's Meteor III. finished first, but
conceded three hours to the winner.
The automobilist should not turn
corners top fast; or go at too high
speed on slippery asphalt, day roads,
snow. Ice dr grass. He may "skid” un
'expectedly and have an experience
• that may be startling.
A' Long Island trotting circuit has
been formed, with six half-mile tracks
In It. The tracks are Parkway, Inter
state Park, at Queens; Glen Head
track, at Sea Cliff; Oyster Bay track,
at East Norwich; the Mineola track
and the Rtvcrhead track.
TO ASSIST DESERT ISO STUDENTS.
Southern Educators Contemplate Bs*
tsbllshlng u Loan Fund.
Southern educators whh are,attend
ing the summer school for the south
tMf W fiMSbO.' Mt
Tennessee. In Knoxville, have Inau
gurated a movement to establish an
educational, loan fund for worthy stu
dents who may attend the Unlversty
r,f T*' f **v , »«***i».
Ar. Cordeld . ;
.12:20 pm
8 :20 pm
CORDELE TO WAYCR088.
No. 2.
No. 4.
Dally.
Dally. ,
Lv. Cordele ....
. 6:00 am
4:00 pm
Lv. Double Run
. 6:44 am
4:’44 pm
Lv. Rebecca ...
. 6:59 am
4:59 pm
Lv. Isaac
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
. 9:33 am
7:33 pm
Ar. Waycross ..
.10:20 am
8:20 pm
THROUGH SCHEDULES.
Lv. Waycross ..
Lv. Douglas ....
Lv. Fitzgerald ..
Ar. Cordele ....
Ar. Americus ..
Ar. Columbus ..
Ar. Macon
Ar. Atlanta ....
Ar. Chattanooga
Ar. Louisville ..
Ar. Cincinnati ..
Lv. Cordele ....
Lv. Fitzgerald .
Lv. Douglas ....
Ar. Waycross ..
Ar. Jacksonville
Ar. Brunswick .
Ar. Savannah ..
Ar. Columbia ..
Ar. Charleston,.
Ar. Washington
Ar. New York .
. 8:00 am
. 9:41 am
.10:37 am
.12:20 pm
. 3:12 pm
. 6:20 pm
. 4:10 pm
. 7:45 pm
. 1:00 am
.12:45 pm
. 4:20 pm
. 6:00 am
. 7:43 am
. 8:42 am
.10:20 am
.12:60 pm
. 7:30 pm
.12:45 pm
. 6:05 pm
. 5:10 pm
. 7:35 am
,.1:43. pm
4:00 pm
5:38 pm
6:37 pm
8:20 pm
10:22 am
3:55 ai
7:25 ai
1:00 pi
2:30 ai
7:20 ai
4:00 pi
6:43 pi
6:42 pi
8:20 pi
8:30 ai
10:00 ai
12:20 ai
6:00 aj
6:40 ai
9:00 pi
6:13 »
GEORGE DOLE WADLEY,
Vice President & Gen. Manager.
H. C. McFADDEN,
Gen. Freight and Pass. Agent
ALEX BONNYMAN, Superintendent
G. KNAPP,
Trav. Freight and Pass. Agent
A. B. DEMONT MOLLIN,
Agent, Cordele, Ga. . r
•wav UOWN JFOM
•MIWMII nun*
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN
& FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
D-UU.U.
in Effect Mar 4, look.
SOUTHBOUND.
Stations.
QUtckl Dixie
Btep[ Flyer
Shoo|Va)do
FlyjExps.
AM
AM
PM
PM
Lv. Mccon
11 25
12 45
4 20
845
Kathleen . ..
12 19
5 31
l«
Grcvanla . ...
12 33
6 57.
10 03
UnadlUa . ...
12 66
2 07
6 20
10 2*
Vienna . t
1 19
232
6 61
10 43
Cordele
1 65
2 50
7 15
1105
Arcbl . ......
2 15
"3 26
7 33
11 3S
Askburn
233
8 11
11 it
Ar. Tiflon
3 20
4 00
9 00
12 S
Lv. Tilton
3 25
4,00
906
12 39
Sparks
4 03
433
9 49
166
Adel
Heartplnc . .
4 07
4 13
4 38
4 44
9 56
10 03
1 10
1 1C
Ar. Valdosta ....
4 65
5 25
11 00
2 00
Lv. Valdosta ....
500
6 25
5 35
P M
PM
Jennings . ...
5 39
6 13
jBKper . ......
White Spr....
6 01
6 32
6 35
7 06
Lake City ....
665
7 30
Lake .Butler .
7 35
8 30
Samp. City ..
8 00
8 46
Hampton . ...
8 14
9 01
8 54
9 45
Ar. Palatka
930
10 25
—
NORTHBOUND.
IQuIckl DlxtelShoo IVaMa
I Step! Flyer) FlyjExps.
Lv. Palatka ....
Florahome .
Hampton . .
Samp. City .
Lake Butler
Lake City .:
White Spr. /.
Jasper
Jennings .
Lake Park .
Ar. Valdosta ...
Lv. Valdoita ...
'Heertplne .
Adef
Sparks . ....
Ar. Tlfton ......
Lv. Tlfton ....
Azkburn . ..
Arobl . .....
Cordele . ...
Vienna j> ....
UnadlUa . ..
Grcvanla . ..
Kathleen,. ..
Ar. Macon .....
AM
6 25
6 67
7 40
7 SG
820
906
928
10 00
10 22
10 34
11 00
U 06
U 46
12 30
10S
1 29
208
2 25
Z4!
304
111
4 10
PM
PM
6 10
8 43
726
7 40
806
8 65
921
966
10 18
10 23
11 00
1116
U 56
S2S
12 45
12 46
112
"i'58
lit
2 IS
AM
446
637
6 41
643
IX
6 40
7X7
763
320
8 41
I 12
I IS
10 00
11 06
AM
PM
145
Itt
2 37
2 42,
226
3 16
407
431
463
6 IX
631
567
• »
7 K
PM
“Dixie Flyer” has' through coach and
Pullman sleeper between Macon and
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
coach Md local- steeper between Hawse
and Palatka. Local sleeper open In Ma
con Union Depot 9:00 p. m., and remains
In Union Depot- on return until 7JO *.
tm. and can be occupied until that time.
’■Quick StefT' u solid train between Ma
con and Palatka.
wr
Macon. Ga,
DAVE O. HALL. T. P. A..
Room 211 Equitable Bldg.,
Atlanta. Ga.
HARRY BURNS. F. P. A..
* ■sAsafh.