Newspaper Page Text
Vienna News. D VI AP :
Published Semi-Weekly.
I
VIENNA,
- GEORGIA.
The hope that the autdmobll* will
strike a happy medium between exces
sive speed and absolute Inertia Is Still
cherished. S ‘ j
»N
kt‘ r
K SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
h 1 \ f Ajf 0R,£«ANC|U6T. #t.
•me census, of X8V0 snowed tnat snore
were then but four ice: manufacturing
planta in the country, all of them in
the south. In 1890 the number bad
increased to 787, not including firms
that made ice for themselves; and not
more Ulan half of them were In the
south.
The land of Carventes is taking' a
new lease of life since the reign of the
young king waa begun. A Spanish loan
amounting to some 167,000,000 In Amer
ican money has been subscribed for al
most ten times over. It is plain, then,
that financiers and capitalists have not
lost faith in the future of Spain.
It was estimated last year that in
American cities of more than 60,000
population there were 2,360 parko and
squares with a total area of 69,717
acres, valued at $631,671,947. More
than $f,600,000 bad been spent on these
parks for construction purposes and
nearly $6,000,000 was expended during
the year on park maintenance.
Snbjecfc Halibonl—The Death of Christ a
Halp to AU, Tor by It He Takes Away
From Vs All the Sting and From the
Grave Its Victory;
New.Yobk Citt. —The following, im
pressive' sermon has been prepared for
1st, the Rev.
The subject of the discourse is “Rabboni,
and it waa preached from the text, "Jesus
saith unto har, Muryl She turned herself,
and saith unto Him, Rabboai! which is to
say. Master!” John 20: 18.
The burial of Christ lies between Hie
humiliation and His exhaltation; it is one
of the resting points in His history, and
Him aa to us all was the gate
New Mexico gives an object lesson
sf the value of irrigation that cannot
well be ignored. A census bulletin
shows tbht the value of farm property
In that territory increased more than
three-fold in the census docado and
between 1889 and 1899 the irrigated
area waa expanded from 91,746 to 203,-
193 acres, irrigated lands on Indian res
ervations not included.
A Hat of the number of students at
the largest universities In the United
States has recently been completed by
in officer of Columbia university, New
York city, and the leading ten make
the following showing: Harvard, &,-
176; Columbia 4,422; Michigan, 3,812;
Chicago, 3,727; California, 3,640; Min
nesota, 3,636; Cornell, 3,216; Wiscon
sin, 2,812; Yale, 2,680; Pennsylvania,
2,620. Total, 36,841.
Dr. Javel, of tho French Academy of
Medicine, who is sightless, denies that
Nature compensates blindness in ln-
treaslng sensibility of touch and hear
ing, but contends that when a person
is blind an extra development takes
place in a sixth sense, which is latent
In all persons. This sense, which has
been called the senao of obstacles, acts
by the perception of certain warm and
Indefinite vibrations. The scat of the
sense is believed to be placed in the
forehead.
the -wave to
of life. He passed through it into His
g lorious resurrection. If the crucifixion
e represented ss one mountain and the
ascension as another then the burial of
Christ is like a valley, and since it is true
that in every valley mentioned in the
Scriptures there it a well of water or a
spring, so strange as it may seem in this
volley which seems to be filled only with
shadows one sloops to drink at the well of
comfort, for the death of Christ is the
very greatest possible comfort and help tu
os, for in Ilis death He takes away from
ns all the sting and from the grave its vic
tory, for the tomb of the Christian in all
the years this side of the burial of Chriat
has been tenanted with angels, but we
have not so much to do with His burial
as with His resurreotion. John gives no
narrative of the resurrection itself, but
rather an account of the manner in which
he himself was convinced that the resur
rection had taken place. It is not so
much an argument, although on the basis
of it the strongest arguments have been
presented; it is rather a beautiful teatl-
mony and a thrilling story. When Mary
brought tiie startling intelligence that the
tomb was empty Peter and John made
for the spot at the top of their speed.
John outruns Peter, but naturally rever
ence keeps him from entering the tomb.
He looks in, however, to convince himself
that the body has not been removed by
the enemies of Christ, for the linen
clothes in which He had been wrapped
were carefully taken off and left behind.
When Peter comes up they two enter the
tomb together, and their inferences are
reached after they have carefully studied
the surroundings. This simple narrative
will be to many minds more convincing
than a great argument. It is told clearly
by an eye witness of all the events. We
see Mary breathlessly giving out the
startling newa, and' we watch the hasty
springing up of the two men and their
rapid racing alorig the streets out through
the gates to the garden. We behold John
standing panting'at the rock hewn sep
ulcher and we catch a vision of Peter
toiling up behind but not hesitating a mo
ment. We see him entering and gazing'at
this and that, till the articles in the
tomb have told their story and the two
men leave the sepulcher together awed
and convinced, and the eve witness who
thus beautifully relates what he knew of
that wonderful morning adds, “He saw
and believed."
Mary came after that as quickly as the
could, hut exhausted with her rapid car
rying of the news to Peter and John waa
not able to keep pace with them as they
ran to the tomb, and before the arrived
they were gone. She may have misted
them in the streets as she came out of
the city. At any rate, finding the tomb
X*r, 16ve made her honor the lakt place
where His precious body had been seen
by mortal-ejqi, and her love Raped' a
rich reward. She was the first to see Her
Lord.after He rose from the dead; the
first to hear Hit voice and the first to
hold conversation with' Him. All believ
ers haye nol the same degree
NFiFiMwWP 9 Cpufuge, (rfintfMj
but ft is certainly true that those who
love Christ most fervently and cleave to
Him most closely will always enjoy the
most communion with Him.
First—Notice the instruction given te
us in this story concerning love in its dif
ferent phases and elements.. In Peter it
is subjection, in John it is objection. The
reply ( pf Peter, to the Lord was “I love
Speaking of the microbes as causes
of so many diseases, Health makes the
assertion; “Fear causes more diseases
than do mtcrobea, more deaths than
fkmlne, more disasters than panics; It
costs more than war, Is always a fail
ure and Is never necessary. Fear
weakens the heart’s action, induces
congestion, invites indigestion, pro
duces poison, through decomposing
foods, and Is thus the mother of auto-
polsontng. which either directly causes
or greatly aids in the production of
quite 90 percent of all our diseases.’’
still empty, and no one present to ex-
'stands there
plain the reason of it, she
heart-broken and pours out her distress
in tears. Tho grave being empty the
whole earth is empty to her; the dead
Christ was more to her than a living
world. She can but stand and lay her
head upon the stone and let her tears
flow as from a broken heart. So absorb
ing is her grief that the vision of angels
does not astonish her; she had but the
one thought, “They have taken away my
Lord. She aupposed. too, that all about
her must know her loss and understand
what she is seeking, so that when ahe
seya the gardener as she supposes she
cries out. “If thou have borne Him
hence. She does not even mention His
name, for she cannot imagine that any
one is thinking of any other than He who
fills her whole mind and heart. (John
20: 11-13). “But Mary stood without at
the sepulcher weeping, and as she wept
she stooped down and looked into the sep-
ulcher, and' secth two angels in white sit
ting. the one at the head and the other
at the feet, where the body of Jesus 'had
lain. And they say unto her, Woman,
why wcenest thou! She saith unto them,
Because they have taken away my Lord,
and I know not where they have laid
Him. Aa Maty answers the angels she
heard a step behind her and the door ol
the tomb is darkened by a shadow, anil
on turning discerns dimly through her
tears a figure which naturally enough she
supposes tb be the gardener, because he
was the likeliest person to be going about
the garden at that early hour. (John 20:
14-10). "And when she hsd thus said she
turned herself back and saw Jesus stand-
mg and knew not that it was Jesus.
I
’ Those persons who delight to visit
New Orleans, maintaining that the re
gion presents all the glories of south
ern France, combined with Italian love
liness, will be glad to learn the mo
squito is soon to cease to play the part
of the fly in the ointment there. A
league of women has been formed In
New Orleans whose motto is: “The
mosquito must go.” When the forma
tion of the league was proposed, some
one attempted to advance the theory
that the moaqnito to. in fact, beneficial,
and that hl^ bU* to a necessary surg-
kau operation, required to take from
the blood k poison which otherwise
would do great harm. But the Anti-.
Mosquito League was formed just the
same. The opponents of the plsn ar
gued that the best that could be said
lor the mosquito to tbit he is a quack
doctor; his services are given with
out solicitation, whjph to decidedly un
professional, and moreover, they pre
ferred the regularly authorized practi
tioners in case of need. Thus does the
mosquito fall farther and farther back
ward before the march of progress.
Jeaui Mith unto her, Woman, why weep-
eat thou? Whom acekeat thou!) She,
auppcaing Him to be the gardener, saith
unto Him, Sir. if Thou have borne Hinl
hence, tell me where Thou hast laid Him,
* n r . W, M take Him away. Jesus aaitli
unto her, Mary! She turned herself and
“•tb unto Him, ltabboni! which is to
•ay. Master!”
' The utterance of her name waa enough
to tell her it was some one who know her
that waa there. The voice seemed again
to command a calm within her, for once
before that voice had banished from her
astute the evil spirits that had taken poa-
“•'to. 0 ',her, but now again she steps
out of darkness into light, and from being
broken-hearted she become* the happiest
creature in the world. Undoubtedly
there u vsrr much more to the ministry
of angels than we imagine. Their at-
tradinm miAn u At »
tendance upon Jesus’ birth, their con
stant presence during all His life, and
even the guarding of His dead body is
but an example of their eervice to each
of us. All the providential dealings of
Uod are administered by angels, and in
{he next dispensation we do not know
but that this may be our own miniitrv,
Hebrew* 2: 6, “For unto the angels hath
He not put in subjection the world to
come, whereof we speak.” There are
R me special thoughts which ought to be
awn this morning from s story so beau
tiful, at the nutting of Mary with her
Lord in the garden.
We must surely be impressed with the
thought that those who love Christ most
diligent.y and persevcringly are those
who receive the most privileges from
Christ s band. It is worthy of note that
Manr Magdalene would not leave the sep-
*>!*•«*'■ when Peter and John went away
to their hornet. Loro to her Matter
1 I Time Table Effective May 25, 1!
loiTed and
Time Table Effective May Z5, 1902.
WAYCR088 TO CORDELE.
_im, Master,
t, and have i
.at Thy word
The disciples art.
it they have toilbi
_,ut the Master roA« »
--nj-M, as a result of whith
they gather in ao many fish that their
net brake and their partner* “me to
« a ssrz?. ..
b s— •!* “
1
No. 1.
Daily.
8;0Q am
8:47 am
noysnee in the Lomu but what might be|f.y, Nlchollz 9.12 am
right if He were in control: there it no p 0U giag
No. “37
Daily.
4; 00 pm
4:47 pm
5:00 pm
6:08 pm
5:38 pm
6:01,pm
6:10 pm
Tfiee," while John’s Constant description
of himself Was, “The disciple whom Jeans
loved.” May we not learn, therefore, of
the apprehension of Jesus’ love for us in
stead of being occupied with oat poor, fit
ful, flickering life, foe He is that which
will give greatest joy to the soul. The
exhortation of the Scriptures is "Keep
yourself in the love of God." In Mary wo
discover these elements properly com
bined. Tracing her history we find that
Jesus had delivered her from an awful
bondage. “Now when Jesus was risen
early the first dav of the, week He ap
peared first to Mary Magdalene, out of
whom He had cast seven devils.” Mark
16: 9. Truly she might realize the words
of Hezekiah. Jsaiah 38: 17, “Behold for
peace I had great bitterness,- but Thou
haat in love to my soul delivered it from
the pit of corruption: for Thou hast cast
all my sins behind Thy back.” Marginal
reading. "Thou hast loved up my soul
from the pit of corruption.” Therefore
being so much forgiven she loved much.
That' is, Jesus’ love was the source and
her love was the inevitable result. There
are some elements of Mary’s love which
ought to be studied here.
fa) The vision of angels did not terrify
her. In Matthew’s gospel the angels re
assured the woman by saying “Fear not,”
as they were afraid, hut with Mary she
was too completely filled with thoughts
of Christ to be any waya afraid of the
sight of angels. Undoubtedly she was ab-
lolutelv forgetful of her physical weakness,
for she said to Him whom she supposed to
be the gardener, “Sir. if Thou hove home
Him hence, tell me where Thou hast laid
Him. and I will take Him away.” How
would it' have been possible for her to
handle the body ot one who was dead,
md yet doubtless she would have found a
wav. It is certainly true that intense de
votion to the Lord takes away every
:hought of the burden of service, and those
who have an absorbing love for Christ
may perform deeds which would he im-
onssible under ordinary circumstances
There are three people whom we may re
member as representing the three graces,
faith, hope and love; Mary, of Rethany
who believed that He was to be crucified
md buried, anointed His body for the bft-
rial, showing her faith; the penitent thief
upon the cross expected that Christ
would come in His kjngdnm, revealing
His hope, but this Mary Magdalene it a
beautiful representation of lore. >
We find again in this atory an illustra
tion of the fact that fear* and sorrows of
believers are often quite needless. We
are told that. Mary stood at. the sepulcher
weeping as if nothing could comfort her.
The aneela spoke to her and still she
wept. The Lord Himself addressed her
laying. "Why weepest thou?” and the
burden of her complnint was always the
lame. “They have taken away my Lord
and I know not where they have lnfd
Him.” and yet. all this time her risen
Master was close to her. Her tears,
therefore, were needless, and her sorrow
was groundless. Doubtless Mary failed to
recognize Jesus.
First—Because ahe was not expecting
Him. and so we often miss our choicest
blessings for want of looking for them,
and have doubtless mistaken them when
right before us, but doubtless, also, she
failed to recognize Him because of the
fact that it was hardly light in the morn
ing. and she saw Him but dimly. Thus
again she is nn illustration of ourselves
as we behold Him. not so much face to
’ace as we realize His presence with the
leart. “Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they shall ice God,” and yet what
thoughtful Christian can fail to see. that
wc have a picture «,f many a believer’*
experience. How often we nre anxious
when there is no cause for anxiety. How
frequently wc mourn about thd absence
of things which are really within our
(raan. Two-thirds of the things we fear
in life never happen at all, and many of
the tears we shed arc shed in vain. If
Mary had found the seal of the tomb un
broken ahe might well have wept. The
very absence of the body which made her
weep waa a token for good and a cause of
joy for herself and for all mankind.
II.
“Jesus saith unto her, Marv! She
turned herself and aaith unto Him. Bah-
boni! which it to say, Matter!" The way
in which Mary addresses her Lord is most
significant. It is a term often applied to
Him and alwavs wisely. In Matthew 23:
8. we read. “For one is your Master, even
Christ.” ft will be a • happy'day■ for the
church when we yield to the mastery of
Jesus Christ. It is true that men are fre
quently indifferent to this claim, as, for
example, in Matthew 28: 25, "Then Ju
das. which betrayed Him, answered and
•aid. Master, it it 1? He said unto him.
Thou hast said.” Many a man hat claimed
to yield to the mastery of Christ and yet
hat betrayed Him by an inconsistent life,
or again in Matthew 26: 49, when Judas
MVt Vet acain “Wail \faat»r! and
UU »* TIiom
.- . | * I ) aV, yUUKIBO s • • • • ^ ftDl
«sa % BTbRjfMtf <& y- **** „
seat of power in olir hyes; there w no |Lv. Wray • • ••;#•. 1<K 0& am
ffiawKfKsrgiw. «•=« - *»
very hairs of our head are numbered. I Lv. Rebecca .....lit21 am 7.21 pm
and not a sparrow falls to the ground U. Doub]e R un ..ll:36 am 7:36 pm
without God’s care, then we may rest ns- lo-oh nm «-2h'nm
eured that He wilf turn to us ivith com-1 Ar. Cordele .12.20 pm 8.20 pm
plete deliverance If He only be recog- | „„ nnc ,
nized as blaster.
Third—He is the Master of the liome
Lv. Cordele ....
Lv. Double Run
particularly, and is the secret of victory
in every tune of difficulty or trial. John
11: 28, “And when she had so said, sht
went, her way and called Mary, her sis
ter, secretly, saying, the Master is come ,
and calleth for thee.” There is no home Lv. Rebecca
more beautiful in all the world than the l v Isaac
home of Mary and Martha atid Lazarus, T
only because the chief guest of that home ’ “
was Jesus, and the one controlling their I Lv. Wray
every movement was the Son of God. Lv. Ambrose
Again in Luke 0: 38, we read, “And be- T nono-lnE
hold a man of the company cried out say- , *
ing, Master, I beseech Thee, look upon Lv. NIcholls
my son; for he is mine only child.” It I Lv. Sesgoms
will be a happy time when we have
CORDELE TO WAYCROS8.
r No. 2.
learned to bring our children to Him, to
loved ones in His care, in
Lv. Beach ...
Ar. Waycross
place our .... , ...
word, to recognize Him aa the Master of
us all.
A_ very dear friend of mine, one of
family of seven sons, told me that his old
Scotch mother almost broke her heart in
the old land because one of her seven
sons was a profligate. There came into
her home one dny an aged neighbor who
said, "Why do.yon sorrow so; you have | »- Amorims
six sons saved; let John go.’ / And my 1 Ar ’ Amerlcus
mother, said my friend, rose tremblingly,
Daily.
6:00 am
6:44 am
6:59 am
, 7:16 am
7:43 am
, 8:11 am
. 8:18 am
. 8:42 am
. 9:12 am
. 9': 20 am
. 9:33 am
.10:20 am
No. 4.
Daily.
4:00 pm
4:44 pm
4:59 pm
5:16 pm
6:43 pm
6:10 pm
6:17 pm
6:42 pm
7:12 pm
7:20 pm
7:33 pm
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
3:12 pm 10:22 am
Ar. Columbus ..
leaning' upon the chair' heavily and aaid) I Ar. Macon
“I will never let him go. I gave him to Ar. Atlanta ....
v , J ! ‘ J *■’- Ar Chattanooga
God before he was born. I carried him
into the kirk as soon as I could walk, and , . , _ .
he ie God’s child, and He will have him if Ar - Louisville
He turns the world over to get him,” and Ar. Cincinnati
ahe lived long enough, said my friend, to r v nnrHplp
•ee him a Christian, a Judge of the high-
ust courts in America and an officer in
the church.
Fourth—But of all the expressions the
one used by Mary in the text is the most
. 5:20 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
striking. "Rabboni,” which is to say.
“My Master!” Since He- has redeemed
us and God has given us to Him, and wc
have ourselves in a way yielded’ to Him.
would it not be well for us to let Him be
our Master in ^ict as well as in name,
and makn this sort of a covenant with
Him on this day:
First—I wilt let Him rule in my mind,
and will think only of those things that
are pure add good and true and shall tend
to hiake me like Him.
Second—I will let Him dwell in my
heart, remembering that out of the full
ness of the heart the" mouth speaketh,
and remembering also that the heart is a
fountain sending forth streams either bit
ter or sweet according as either Chriat or
His great enemy be in control.
Third—He snail be the Master of my
hands. I will lay hold of no thing that
would be against Him, and I will remem
ber that I am in.this world in His stead
to minister ns He would minister and help
as He would help.
Fourth—He shall have absolute control
of my feet. I will strive to go on errands
of merev at He would go, to do the
things that I feel sure would have the
seal of His approval. In a word, I will
give Him control of my whole being,
spirit, soul and body shall be under the
sweep of His influence. As a matter of
I act He does now control in our spirits.
He came there the day of regeneration,
and the Spirit in the body of a man is like
the holy of holies in the plAn of the Tab-
Lv. Fitzgerald
Lv. Douglas ..
Ar. Waycross ....10:20 am
Ar. Jacksonville ..12:60 pm
Ar. Brunswick .
Ar. Savabnah .
Ar. Columbia ..
Ar. Charleston
Ar. Washington.
Ar. New York
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
fi:30 am
. 7:30 pm 10:00 am
.12:45 pm 12:20 am
. 6:05 pm 6:00 am
. 5:10 pm 6:40 am
. 7:35 am 9:00 pm
..1:43 pm 6:13 am
GEORGE DOLE WADLEY,
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 MOLLIN,
Agent, Cordele, Ga.
eified the veil of the temple was rent in
twain, so now I make a covenant that I
will fay hold upon Him as my Master,
counting myself to have been crucified
Milt. 1T l ...liV Y 8 M.EAM Ma.lft.
Hail. Matter! and kissed
Him.” There can be no baser betrayal
than that which comes from the heart of a
friend, who claims to be a Christian and
not to be sneh. To eay that you belong
te Chriat and yet to deny Him with your
life it an awful thing, and shall merit one
day the severest condemnation of Christ
Himself. There are many places in the
New Testament where. I find that He it
called Master, in addition to the one in
the text, but three of them I should like
specially to emphasise.
First—Luke 17: 13. "And they lifted up
their voices and said, Jesus, Master, have
mercy on us.” This is a picture of the
lepers as Jesus pisses through the midst
of Samaria aj-1 Galilee, and is an illus
tration for an who would be freed from
their bondage. They are hopeless and
helpless, dead, according to the law and
cast out from the presence of men accord
ing to the 8criptnres. Luke 17: 14. “And
when He saw them He said unto them.
Go show yourselves unto the-prstots. And
it camt to pass, that, as they went, thev
were cleansed." Let it ever be remembered
that si they went they were cleansed.
God never gives us more light than we nee,
nor more freedom than are‘will practice.
One has onto to' walk towxrd the light and
to Set his face toward Christ to be seen
rejoicing in all the glorious liberty of the
eons of God. In Jesus leprosy has met its
conqueror, and that for which leprosy
stands, namely, sin, its mightiest foe.
Second—Luke 5: 9, "And Simon answer-
ernaele. for just as whan Christ was cru-
' nil of '
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN
& FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
kStkUM in Effect May 4, lOOii.
SOUTHBOUND.
with Him, buried with Him, risen with
Him and seated with Him, believing that
He will thus infuse . my whole being,
breaking down any barriers between my
nature and making me to be aa He would
Save me be.
Stations.
IQulekl Dixie! ShooJValdo
I StepIMytrl Fly|Exps.
LABOR WORLD.
Lv. Mccon . .
Kathleen
Qrovanla ,
Unadtlla .
Vienna . .
Cordele .
Arab! . .
Ashburn .
Since January the Order of Rnllrond
Telegraphers has enrolled 4723 new
members.
The International Order of Railway
Conductors is very strongly opposed to
sympathetic strikes.
Philadelphia blacksmiths have won
their strike for a nine-hour day with
out reduction of wages.
Fiffy new unions.-with .over 10,000
members, have been organized in Chi
cago the past six weeks.
New and stringent regulation ot
child labor is about to be enforced by
the German Government.
Abont 7000 cigarmnkcrs of -Manila
have gone on strike. They demand a
material increase In wages.
The saleswomen of San Francisco
have organized a large and enthusias
tic union and elected officers.
Beginning with July, all employes of
the city parks at Omaha, Neb., will
receive an Increase in wages.
Riots in the coal fields are laid'to a
secret society of foreigners within tho
United Mine Workers’ organization.
The Coacbdriver*' Union at Trenton
has forbidden Sunday funerals, wed
dings and christenings after Septem
ber 7. \
A gravediggers’ union nt Chicago
held ffp the burial of the dead in one
of the public cemeteries pending the
settlement of a wage question.
The serious industrial unrest which
has for a long time been manifest lp
Russia has already led to dangerous
and disastrons - dfettftbancos In the
southern part of that empire, and also
to some riots In the northern provinces.
The strike of the cotton mill opera
tives at Augusta. Ga.f which was
looked upon as a test of the strength
of the United Textile Workers of
America In the South, was declared off
by the Executive Committee of that
body. The mills secured so much help
that It was Impossible for the strikers
to win.
t. Tltton
Sparks .
Heartptne .
Ar. Valdosta ..
Lv. Valdoata ..
Lake Park
Jennings . .
Jasper . ....
Lake City ...
Lake Butler
Bump. City .
Hampton . ..
Floratiome .
Ar. Palatka ....
A M
AM
11 25
12 45
12 19
12 33
13 5G
207
1 19
2 32
1 55
2 50
2 15
2 38
3 26
320
4 00
3 25
4 00
4 02
4 23
4 07
4 38
4 13
4 44
4 55
6 25
6 00
6 S3
6 25
3 09
5 39
6 13
< 01
6 35
5 32
7 06
865
7 30
7 33
8 20
8 00
8 46
8 14
9 00
8 61
9 45
9 30
10 25
P M
4 20
5 31
f> 57
6 20
< (1
7 15
7 3*
8 11
9 00
9 05
I 49
9 SC
10 (B
11 00
P M
PM
6 45
9 41
10 02
10 20
10 43
11 05
11 25
11 48
12 K
12 39
1 06
1 10
1 18
2 00
P M
NORTHBOUND.
IQulekl DlxlelShoo IVaido
I Step)Flyer) FlylExpa
AM 1 PM
Lv. Pnlatka
( 26
6 10
Florahome . .
6 67
6 43
Hampton . ..
7 40
7 25
Samp. City ..
7 65
7 40
. Lake Butler .
8 20
805
' Lake City ...
9 06
8 53
White Spr. ...
t IS
9 21
Jnsper
10 0»
916
Jennings . ...
Like Park ..
10 22
10 18
MM
10 33
Ar. Valdosta ....
USO
11 00
a si
PM
Lv. Valdosta ....
11 06
1116
4 45
1 46
Heartpine . .
1143
11 66
5 37
\»
Adel
11 61
12 02
6 43
Sparks
Ar. Tirton
1167
It W
12 M
12 46
5 49
626
243
3 26
Lv. Tifton
12 20
12 45
(40
1*
Ashburn . ...
1 01
1 22
7 27
4OT
Arsbl
1 29
753
4 31
Cordele
200
1 58
820
4 S3
Vienna
IK
2 12
8 41
6 12
Uncdllla . ...
2 48
2 33
9 12
6 27
Orevanla . ...
304
9 35
6 67
Kathleen . ...
321
10 00
6 16
Ar. Macon
4 10
IK
U 06
7 W
PM
AM
AM
PM
“Dixie Flyer” has through coach and
Pullman sleeper between Macon and
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
Between Macon
Ldcal sleeper open In Ma-
. Depot on return until 7:18 a.
m.. and can be occupied until that time.
“Quick Stop” la solid train between Ma
con and Palatka.
WMl CHECKLEY BHAW,
Vice-President C. B. RHODES.
General Passenger 1 Agt..
Macon. Ga.
DAVE O. HALL. T. P. A.,
Room Ml Eoultable Bldg.,
Atlanta. Ga.
HARRY BURNS. F. P. A..
201 W. Bay St..
Ml W. Bar St..
Jacksonville. Fla.