Newspaper Page Text
i GEORGIA NEW^
mmnnM..n.n 1 mi'
IpUorJzed Items of Interest
Gathered at Random,
■ ' Books Show Larger Shortage.
, Further inrestigatlon of the books
■of Miss Dora Campbell, ex-postmls-
tresj at Maysvllle, show a shortage of
$774. Ttte first report showed a Short
age of $650. No adjustment of bond
baa been made as yet.
Fort Baines Votes 8chool Bonds.
The election for school bonds In Fbrt
s was a decisive victory for the
advocates. For the Issue 155
:es were cast, white only two were
«ast against It. This means that Fort
Balnea is to have a first-class school.
W-Centennlal a Great Event.
Tbe bl-centcnary celebration of the
> tdrth of John Wesley by Savannah
Methodists, assisted by distinguished
visitors of that denomination the past
week was the most elaborate and im
pressive function ever witnessed In the
Forest City,
penitentiary at that place, has been
tendered the position of warden lit At
lanta, Indicating that Warden Hawk
would toon be removed train office
The tender et Warden Hawk
'6Qco to Warden Murphy Is said tc
have been made by Attorney General
■ Knox. Warden Murphy, It Is *&ld, de
dined to accept the position, though
he was offered, a salary ot li.heu a VPai
and practically a ItfiMlfflo job.
Warden It&Vfk says he Is In perfec
IghOthhce as to anyone elso havinj
been appointed to succeed him. H<
has heard nothing'from thd.attorn«)
' general or any other of Washing
ton officials and khbws of no dissatis
faction With the conduct of the prison
that could lead to his being removed
from office, , ,
. . « .-I 1 - 1 -;
'John Perry Doomed to Gallows.
John Perry, the Dalton murderer,
whose case has been pending in the
courts for so long a time, must Bow
Ihang. A day or two ago the- state su
preme court handed down a decision
refusing to grant Perry a new trial on
the ground of newly discovered evi
dence, and Oils means that Perry will
"be rescntttr.ced to hand by Judge A. W.
Fite wJO’.ln the next few days.
Thanks Given by Galnotvllle.
The people of Gainesville met In a
special thanksgiving service at the au
ditorium fktnday afternoon to formally
close up the relief work nnd to render
PraiBO to the Almighty for Ills mer
cies, and to evert, body who ,iad in any
way contributed to the relief and suf
fering of the storm stricken district.
A large number of people were pres
ent, and the occasion wa3 a most Inter
esting and Impressive one.
S.-.ya Broughton Should Show Hand.
tn his weekly letter in The Atlanta
Journal, Rev. Sam Jones, referring to
the charge of Pastor Broughton, of At
lanta, against the Technological
School, says:
"I hope Dr. Broughton will come
forth Immediately with absolute proof
of every charge he made or with a
manly retracion of the charges. Un
less he does one or tne other, he has
hurt himself ar.J damaged what we be
lieve a most splendid institution. So
give us tbas proof Brother Broughton,
or give us a manly retraction. 1 '
Teachers Elect New Officers.
The election of officers for the Geor
gia Educational Association at Cum
berland Island resulted as follows:
President, N. E. Ware, Hawklns-
vllle; first vice president. G. F. 011-
phant, Barnesvillo; second vice presi
dent, Miss I.aura Coleman, Griffin;
treasurer, J. N. Rogers. Dahlonega;
secretary, E. B. Mell, Athens.
Resolutions were passed thanking
Professor Ware and bis pupils of the
Hawklnsvillc public schools for the ex
cellent music nnd other Interesting fea-
, lures which they Introduced during the
Cession.
A resolution was passed endorsing
the now educational Journal, which has
been stsned in Atlanta.
Georgia Banks In Good-Shape.
An abstract of the reports of the
condition of the national banks of
Georgia, exclusive of the reserve city
of Savannah, at the close of business
on June 9, was prepared In the office
of tbo comptroller of the currency at
Washington last Saturday. The num
ber of banks reporting was 40, an In
crease of 7 over the number In exist
ence on July 1G last year and one less
than on April 9 this year. Their com
bined capital stock was $4,998,000,
against $5,245,940 on April 9, and $4,-
221,000 on July 1G last year. The ab
stract shows that the banks of the
state are on the whole In excellent con.
dltlon, though their percentages to de
posits or cash on hand, In the redemp
tion fupd and due from reserve
agents and their percentages of legal
reserves to deposits are both some
what lower than on April 9 or on July
16 last year.
Commissioner Stevens' fttp&rt,
Commissioner bt AfSflMllUi're O. B,
Stevens has AftfeltiUted bis annual re
port to Governor Terrell showing the
Vvbrk done by the department since Oc
tober when the last report was made.
The report contains no recommenda
tions this year and In (Ml Willed in
fers from other W&orts. The state
ment of I hS financial condition of the
dbftttlment ts a splendid showing. This
Vear $62,543.79 was received from the
sale of fertilizer tags while last year
only $51,812 was paid into tfeo treasury,
In addition to these amounts the de
partment has paid $4,000 Into the
treasury from tbe annual Appropria
tion of $10,000 which was made at the
last general assembly.
The reports of General Oil Inspector
Bryant, State Chemist McCandless and
State Entomologist Scott are Incorpo
rated In this report. Mr. Bryant re
ports 4,840,239 gallons Of oil Inspected
since October. Alogether the report
makes an excellent shoWifig for the
department
Gflffin Extends Royst Welcome.
Governor and Mrs. J. M. Terrell
members of the governor's staff and
the members of the Georgia legislature
were given a royal welcome and de
lightful entertainment by the hospita
ble people of Griffin Saturday.
Governor and Mrs. Terroll, the gov
ernor's staff and Colonel Price, Majors
French and Newton and Captain Ben
nett, who accompanied the part ( y from
Port McPherson, wero tendered a re
ception in the morning by Mr. and Mrs
W. J. Kincaid and Dr. and Mrs. Joseph
M. Thomas. Delightful refreshments
were served, and following the recep
tion the governor, his party and mem
bers of the legislature attended the
barbecuo prepared for them by the peo
ple of Griffin.
At 3:30 o'clock In the afternoon the
governor, his staff and the other visit
ing military officers went out to Camp
Northen, where they reviewed the
troops.
To Investigate Convict Camp.
The county commissioners of Ogle
thorpe county have been ordered to
show canse before the Georgia prison
commission why the misdemeanor con
vict camp operated In that county by
Broach Bros, should not be abolished,
on account of alleged abuses to the
convicts.
Complaints of the manner in which
the convicts have been treated at the
comp have been made to the commis
sion from time to time and a few days
aggr It was determined to hold an In
vestigation.
NO SABBATH DE8ECRATION.
Grand Jury at Atlanta Returns a No
Bill in Rossman Case.
The grand jury ol Fulton county.
Ga„ did not find sufficient cause to In
dict President James G. Rossman,
charged with doing other than neces
sary work cn the Sabbath day in
keeping open shows at Ponce tie I.eon
Springs In Atlanta on Sunday, and re
turned a no bill against him.
This action of the grand Jury dis
misses the case as the matter had al
ready been up In tbe city court.
JUDGE ANN0UNCE3 CANDIDACY.
No Bar to Horse Racing.
The decision of the supreme court
In' the case of Thrower vs. the state
does not affect horse racing at fairs or
other places in Georgia, according to
Solicitor Charles Hill, of the Fulton
county superior court. It affects, It ap
pears, only tbe turf exchanges and
does so by puting them in the same
class as gaming houses.
There was much concern among the
directors and stockholders of the
Southern Interstate Fair Association,
which annually holds fairs in Atlanta,
and among those who are Interested
fn the approaching state fair at Macon,
when It was stated that the decision of
tbs supreme court would prevent pool
selling on horse races at these fairs.
It Is well known that It Is almost im
possible to obtain the i;tter class of
hqrses for racing If pool selling is not
allowed, and as these fair associations
count upon racing as one of their draw
ing cards, It appeared that the Iocs to
them would be considerable.
Will Wardfti Hawk Ba Deposed
-The itory comas from Jouat, J1U..
flat WirttB B, l Murphy, of the state
Associate Justice Fish, of Georgia Su
preme Court, Wanta Another Term.
Assoclato Justice William H. Fish, of
the Georgia supreme court, bos an
nounced his candidacy for re-election
to the position he now holds, and Is
now sending out letters to, his friends
In the state containing a copy of his
announcement.
The letter was brought forth by the
candidacy of Judge Beverly Evans,
who has announced for Judge Fish's
position.
PEONAGE CA8E DISPOSED OF.
Three Young Men Plead Guilty and
ara Fined by Judge Speer.
A Macon, Ga., dispatch says: Sbj,
Glawson and Turner, tbe three young
men who were arrested recently charg
ed with hold a negro named Waters in
a "condition of slavery," were arraign
ed before Judge Speer In the United
States court Wednesday morning, and
o the charge entered a plea of guilty.
The young men were ordered to pay
1100 each and one-third tbu coat of
-rosecutlon
ALL 18 CALM IN RICHMOND.
Presence of Soldiers Puts Decided
Quietus on Strike Disorders.
Monday was tbe most peaceful day
In Richmond since the street railway
strike began. Absolutely po disorder
was reported from any quarter. Cars
were run regularly on all tbe city
IIdh. The numbly of mlUtM guards on
the out art btlBg dlmuiihid and the
paiiracar tram u dnididlr paster,
A SERMON FOR SUNDAY
A Brilliant historical discourse
on the reformation.
rk« Aiv, ,t, is Wilma Talk* fiutratfcimiv
of *h*t Period tvh.rl ttl« rtfadditldni
tit talicl-
btTrtt* AllljrioSi iniUrtH tVlrl 1
kf4*l»g tlu ill, -
llnd tfrom Thrnlttlam.
t>lA W In* Roto,lualiuh. The text w*»
Acts v.,,38 and 39: "Anil now Isay unto
you, Refrain from these men, and let them
alone; for if this counsel or this work he
of men, it will came to naught, but if it be
of God. ya cannot overthrow III Test hunltf
sit to tight egal.nl Cl-Jd:”
known ae the Reformation are n
iS SiitshMl&t tiie
WMt M
all
ma tion was a great tidal wave which swept
oyer Europe in the sixteenth century, out
of the vast and troubled sea of the centur-
les whose waters were greatly agitated by
the struggle for religious liberty,, - It was
the culmmivtlon bf that struggle. It assert*
. fundamental principles npon which
it had proceeded, and succeeded in laying
broad and secure foundations upon which
true religious liberty could be built, but it
left some of the higher standards and liner
ideals unattained. In that respect there is
much yet to be desired. , ,
Iff View Of ♦hb fact that the Reformation
Split Europe into two great warring relig
ious camps, it is necessary to remind our
selves that up to that time there had been
but one Christian church in Western Eu
rope. And the stnigglc for religious liberty
went on within that church and not out
side of it, nor against it, after the first
three centuries, whatever gloyy and what'
atever gloiy and .tvhat*
ever shamQ Attaches to thrtt ehiifrbli during
be first nftceri Centuries .is shared bquiWly
iy Us AlL PrdtesUrtts and Roman fcritnrilie
uke. The Rcfdrmation itself, originated
nthtfi the Romap Uatholic ChiircTij am]
the first fiftceri bt
hv^ils AJk Pr&testi
withifi
was led by 'men bred L
Roisters. We should also remember that
the Rom&n Catholic Church of the fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries is not the Roman
Catholic Church of the twentieth century
and in the United States.
From a very early age religions differ
ences have engendered strife and stirred
the most violent passions of men. Although
the Jews tasted the bitterness of persecu
tion, that did not prevent them from
pressing the. same cup to the rip* 6f the
early Christians and, with thfc. aid of the
Romans, Making theni drink it to its dregs.
Then were written the first pages in the
most sanguinary and thrilling story—a
story of unutterable suffering and grim en
durance for conscience sake—which his
tory * pages record. It can scarcely be
called a struggle. It was as impossible for
the obscure and defenseless sufferers to re
sist their enemies ns for a fly to resist tho
hand that crushes it: Judged frohi appenr-
ances, it .was A remorseless massacre, which
crushed its victims into the earth. Rut the
real forces that were working out the prob
lem were not on tho surface. The odds
against which the early Christians were
matched drove them to seek refuge in the
mountain fastnesses nnd in the subterra
nean caverns, known as catacombs. Here
they cherished their faith and worship
ti of one man, unparalleled in history,
took place among ell classes of people.
KiitM rlilu peasants,- priests *fld liwyerf,
merchants oaaMtiK#** jrete' ewoptby the
Mae mighty impulse end flfia of the seme
teal, ivhifch for the time burned eiike in
bverjr breist add siifcnferged calculations
and self-interest. All dTikfl Mtp ttored to
Venture life and fortune in the holy cense#
. DutiDg the space of 200 years seven up-
nedy/tld of tbe ,nofp\ilation took piece known
is tile Crusade^/ fiii' 6i..fWent proorgiotfe
and two of them only ffllkU.vtflf leaser# elf
of them mighty. Before tnefrensy kin
dled by Peter the Hermit died out im
mense treasure was squandered, multitudes
of fives Were sacrificed and apparently
id; total end disastrous
But here again we IN Mistaken :f we
judge by appearance*, for alt bough the
Cruiader, whitened the plane f 1 Aeia Mi
nor with their bone* and dyed the praaa
ol Northern Africa with their blood with-
5tit Scliitvfili*"i'njf /pi'ruiunent re.ult. in
,, ok Africa, their exodn. Irom
feithcr Asia, ui: -j—-
Europe and their return to their ionner
*elc dttirideq by cdnsMUince* m
Europe lai* gNMtef <H4n wdula r-avc been
tiie conquest of all the East Slid ^be reaoue
of the rcliae of all the sainta. W Ibe nral
place they lllid broken the power-of the
Saracens by succesm-G- ^npa^t* u P on -hem,
by prolonged conflict withuie*»i:
ThMrKUl
fanaticism
d HUH fought, Ike with lire.. lreli*^" 1 '
icisni was fnatcHfitl.dAtflwt ^hfioni
fanaticism, and it inflicted slit'll imnisK-
ment upon the rapacious and cruel Mtu .
man that he has never been able to rally
from it. Although he reached the chores
of Europe later on. he was exhausted with
the struggle, and has continued m a state
Of MtiRUfehiiig ,Impotcney. ever .since. Jn
the second place the Crusiiflw h*d n
marked and lasting effect upon the Criy
snders themselves, and in spite of their
suffering and losses the gain was greater
than the loss, for it brought them into di
rect and immediate contact with tho
East, at that time the cultivated and re
fined portion of the world, t.'onstantino-
pic .111(1 Antiueh, the two great storehouses
of ancieqt art juiu ICafHmg* Arid ^he^cem
ties Of tiie wenfth and culture of till* Edstj
Ai
had become familiar, to them. Antioch
for a time jn their hands. The sp'en
did bullilingd: fine fabrics, beautiful
tly g^i
ues, c-rts tly gf-ib«, ilhre H feveljition to the
(>u«aders, and served ns object lessons,
while the elegant refinement*, splendid
courtesy, magnificent manners and ancient
learning of the East were not without their
effect upon the course, nude nnd untamed
birharians of the West. Those who sur
vived the conflict returned with new ideas
of 1 lie character of the world in which they
lived, of the meaning of civilization, of the
til the violence of their enemies abated.
After two centuries they came forth from
their hiding places, disciplined by hard*
*d to * ‘ * • • •
the"peril in whicK they had lived and with
‘iclent
a compact and efficient Organization. Their
leadere had improved their long seclusion
to cultivate letters and arts, nnd soon took
lending place* among scholars nnd men ni
affairs; *0 that when Constantine succeed
ed to the undivided possession of supreme
power in the Roman Empire prudence, it
not preference, moved him to an alliance
with them.
Then began a new phase in the struggle
for religious liberty. The despised and
persecuted Christians, now risen to places
of power and possessing the throne in the
person of the Emperor, did not abuse their
:rust. Such was the spirit of sweet rea
sonableness which animated them that the
first Christian Emperor issued nn edict of
religious toleration, known as the edict of
Milnn, which granted religious liberty with
in the empire, on the basis of the sacred
rights of conscience: only those religious
rites were prohibited which involved im
morality, magic or sorcery. Not until the
fatal passion for power had been aroused in
them by its possession did the Christians
resort to persecution. The organization of
the Christian church kept pace with its
spread in Europe. From Rome ss a centre
the missionaries penetrated to nil parts of
Europe. They carried with them the love
of the mother church from which they
went and bound the churches which they
planted to her in gratitude and Christian
ellowship. The confidence and affection
which she won by her generosity and self-
sacrifice in the gospel, she soon came to de-
nand as her right, and when at length the
Bishop of Rome secured the political pow-
of his city he aspired to make the tradi-
capital nlso, then, with the policy of mili
tary Rome the Christian church adopted,
also, the ambitious and relentless spirit of
the Caesars. Ecclesiastical Rome usurped
the rights of mankind nnd perverted their
lilprties as ruthlessly ns did political Rome,
Through successive stages the church
mounted to the throne of its power until
it was more absolute than the empire had
ever essayed to be. Men like Gregory the
Great. T#co III. and Hildebrand made the
most astonishing claims, nnd absolute su
premacy in all human nffairs. and treated
with the utmost severity all who withstood
their claims. Unavailing protests to their
••founding pretensions were raized by men
like John Scotus, Ahelard Arnold, of Bi
cia and Wickliff. and in the humbler walk*
•ects as the Alhigenses and the Wnldenses,
neither of which desired to separate them
selves from the Catholic Church, but both
of them desired that its pretensions should
be moderated and its abuses reformed ac
cording to the scriptural requirement* of
apostolic simplicity and purity. These men
were simple minded and their live* were
pure, but they were subjected to the most
remorseless persecution. Their heroic en
durance and unfaltering faith has covered
their memory with a halo of glory like unto
that which surrounds the early Christian
martyrs. During the massacre of the Albi-
genses was born the order of the Domini
cans, into whose hands was intrusted the
institution known as the Inquisition, the
most diabolical engine of intolerance and
persecution that human ingenuity ever de
vised.
It is the fate of all despotisms to work
their own destruction by a fatal disregard
of the limit* of human endurance, and
when the papacy added the horrors of the
Inquisition to the usurpatian of the most
saered of human rights, and aggravated her
offenses by the flagrant immorality of the
clergy, she transcended her limit* and in
voked tbe long slumbering and accumu
lated wrath of centuries, which burst forth
in the Reformation, disrupted her m/rnl
empire, and caused her the Ios-» of two-
thirds of her spiritual children.
Two great movements in the Middle Age«
contributed to hasten the triumph of re
l.MatM. 4-L * -1* I _ - . I
. in i.un iiH-Hiiuix L'lTiiiwiwwm
no^ibllitit* of humanity, and of the de
fects. fif.Eul-tfpe. . TtieV hrtd beon to scliooj
and )i«(1 traveled. Their view fit life had
been broadened and their minds enriched
by contact with annerior conditions of nfe.
and a great mental nnd moral revo.ntion
lad been wrought in them.
But the Crusades had also an immediate
nnd lasting effect upon Europe itself. For
by enlisting in the Crusade* the serf bought
his freedom from the soil. The debtor was
freed frttui His ht-editor. He that \y*nt out
a slave came nack a free man with gold
coin in his pocket and some new ideas of
the world in h.s head. Serfdom, villainage
and slavery were practically abolished in
Europe. The cities also had been able, by
immense sums ot money pair! to tne nerca-
itary princes, who held lordship over them,
to buy their freedom and secure charters
for themselves which made them independ
ent in the control of pettv rulers, and by
the long absence pf tbe nobles in the East,
the middle classes had lenrned to adminis
ter their own nffairs. and so the backbone
of the feudal system was broken nnd the
period of freedom and 4 enlightenment came
in. Modem Industrialism was inaugurated.
New idea* sprang up and a redistribution
of wealth, and privileges took place, to
gether with n new sense Of their own place
in the world nnd new wants and ambi
tions in the common people. The imme
diate results to Europe of the Crusades
were incalculable. A new spirit of human
ity nnd of enterprise, of hope and of am-
L -' ! “ had sprung up. and the death war*
bi..— „ j-
rant was signed of the ancient regime ol
ignorance, siqierstition and terror which
hud reigned for a thousand years.
The second great, movement that hast
ened the final conflict for religious liberty
was the Renaissance or revival of learning
in Europe which followed noon the taking
„r n : u.. lino
of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453.
That was a momentous event for Western
Europe. It sent hundreds of Greek schol
ar* and literatti to find refuge in the West.
The learning nnd the MSS, which they
brought with them created a great stir.
Schools, academies and universities sprang
up everywhere, nnd the church ceased to
lie the sole custodian of knowledge. It
was ns a part of that, movement that the
Universitv of Wittenberg was established
hv the Elector of Saxonv. to which one
Martin Uuther came in 1508 as preacher
and professor of theology. A spirit of in
quiry was awakenrd, investigations were
instituted, and historical nnd scientific
studies were taken up in real earnest. The
cold nnd lifeless formalism that had char
acterized the logic of the school men dis
appeared. The study of the Greek and Ro
man classics became a passion. Prince*
and potentates vied with each other in se
curing eminent scholars and elegant liter
atti to adorn their court*, and the rich
and the great became the profuse patrons
of learning, and snared no pains nnd no
expense in collecting MSS. and creating
libraries and schools of learning. The
minds of men nlrcndv liberated from their
ancient thralldom bv the Crusades were
quickened and enlightened by the new
learning which soon spread among all
classes of the people.
In addition to these great, movement*
and perhaps as a consequence oi them wan
the spirit of adventure which now broke
out simultaneously in Italy and Spain,
France and England. Germany and Hol
land. Inspired by Co’umbns, a native of
Genoa. Italy, hundreds of adventurer*
braved the perils of the untreversed pea*
in search of new lands, or new passage* to
the East. New continents were discovered
nd the plobe was circumnavigated. In-
ention also was nuickened. printing by
novable types and *he manufacture of
paper from rags had hut recently been in
vented. The mariner's comps«s rsn-e fn»o
general use in navigation. Tho ti»V,«onpo
was invented and the heaven* explored lor
**ew worlds, as the sens for new lcrd«.
The whole ‘period was one of unproved* nt-
ed mental activity and ferment, (’operni-
ms, by his new system of astronomy, and
Kepler, by bis laws, were soon revolution-
■*.inf astronomy. All of these thine* had
their effects upon the minds of men. The
discovery of the size andshaoe of the earth,
of it* relation to other bodies in space: of
the immense distances in the heavens and
the vast systems of worlds in space: tbe
hanges of men's ideas as to the centre of
_ tades and the Renaissance. The relig
ious enthusiasm of Europe, dormant for
centuries, was kindled by the fiery elo
quence of Peter the Hermit, a* he preached
a crusade against the “infidel Turks." for
the purpose of rescuing the Ho y Sepulcher
from their hands. It was an when a door
is suddenly opened into a house where n
ire has been long smoldering, smothered
in ita own smoke, tbe whole hmiding i*
Id In A au;!den conflagration; or as
. a roicino long extinct buret* into
tn MtlTtlp a ipmtinttut uprinni. ^
the universe and the revelation that it was
not the earth, but that the earth was only
an insignificant member of a system whose
centre was the stin: all served to teach
men the uncertainty and instability of
things they had been accustomed to regard
ss established beyond the peradventure of
doubt, and led them to expect and pre
pared them to receive changes in other
sphere* of thought and realms of life. A
spirit of skepticism became general and in
vaded even the church, and everything
teemed to converge upon and conspire to
ward a single point, until nothing could
withstand the conjunction of forces which
worked to free the human mind from bond
age and the human spirit from thraildotn.
Beginning with the struggle for religious
liberty, it ran on to compass the liberty of
the»wbole man and was destined not tn
stop until he was every whit free. Jt has
already secured for u* the liberty of com
science, tbe right of private judgment, po
litical and personal freedom. But the cml
is not yet, and what it shall be no man
b. But ft* great and good m*n a*
t in Any cauie fight still la thfte
— jjj liuz'mixuot.
A. E. JORDAN & GO.
VIENNA, GA„
REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
iJS
"
If yon want to bar LAIS see no!
II yon want to sell LAIS see nsi
We make a specialty of Farm Lands, Timber,
Etc. We will buy for you a farm or sell it for you.
Anything from 50 acres to 5,0oo acres.
“TTyou want FIRE or LIFE INSURANCE here is
the place to get it. Old line Fire^nd Life Insurance
companies represented.
THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Th« Cml Highway of TRADt and TRAVEL
THROUGH THE SOUTHERN STATES.
Excellent Service
Quick Time
Convenient Schedules
Any Trip la » Pleasure Trip to those who
Travel vie THE SOUTHERN.RAILWAY.
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For detailed Information as to Tickets, Rates and Sleeping-Car reset—
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ATLANTA, OA.
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Traveling Freight nnd Pasaonger Agont^ Mayny Qa,
Georgia Southern
& Florida "Ry.
LOCAL TIME TABLE
EFFECTIVE MAY 24, 1903.
READ
DOWN.
READ UP.
6
n £
3 i
•a 5
II
Of *
STATION'S.
*
1" A
P
at 8
»
k
P.M.
A.M.IA.M
P.M
A.M.
A.M.
4 HO li 45
11 20 l.v Macon
Ar
4 10
3 40
It 3-5
6 46
12 1
“ Kathleen
L>
3 21
1021
(i 01
12 32
“ Grovanla
3 03
060
I.JJ0
2 0.
12 50
“ llniidiiia
2 45
!I3!»
fi 57
2 25
1 13
•• Vienna
.... ,.., ”
2:3
D Iff
7 1M
2 42
1 48
“ ' f'ordfclo
"
201
1 45
8 60
7 40
2 (17
“ Arab!
......... *t
1 20
8 29
7 50
2 22
“ Worth
1 16
8 14
3 10
2 29
•' Ashburn
......... **
109
8 OR
3 50
" Tlfton
12 33
12 3/
7 so
4 10
3 31
'• Lenox
"
12 12
12 18
7114
4 21
3 44
“ Sparks
1200
12 01
0 63
0 43
4 25
3 4*.'
•* Adel
, „ "
list
11 67
fi 46
9 60
4 30
3 5.
“ Heartpino
“
1149
It 62
6 40
10 4<
5 06
4 3f Ar Valdosta
*'
11 10 11 1*
<i 00
P.M.
5 10
4 45 Lv Valdosta
Ar
11 CO
I! 06
A.M.
5 47
5 21
•• Hay low
Lv
10 *Ji
C 29
0 03
“ Fargo
9 46
9 09
7 20
7 01
8 49
8 44
7 41
71:1
“ ('rnwford
“
8 32
8 27
8 20
7 65
Ar Jnckhouvillo
8 00
7 56
A.M.
I'.M.l
A.M.
r.M.
A M.
P.M.
|A.M.
I’.M.
5 1 j
4 45 Lv Valdo^la
Ar 10 6t
In 50
5 42
5 11
“ Lake Park
"
10 29
10 ”2
5 67
6 28
“ Jennings
...... .. "
10 4
10 07
5 53
“ Jasper
"
9 51
9 43
0 55
6 29
" White Springs
. „ “
9 18
9 08
7 25
700
“ ....♦ Lake city
8 13
7 52
“ Lake Butler
“
"i»
7 52
8 57
8 10
•' Hampton City
7 50
7 2
h ro
rt 50
“ Lampion
7 35
7 08
9 34
9 H
" Flora homo
*...«•
6 48
0 21
10 15
9 51
\r Pa’iitka
6 15
5 50
A.M.
• M.
I A.M.
P.M.
Schedule of the All-Year-Round “Dixie Flyer” Sleepers.
7 65 pm]l.v
..'.Jacksonville, G. ti. fc*F. BY.... ....
.. .Ar
8 20 am
II 15 pml *•
Valdosta, “
fi O' am
12 35 an. “
... Tlfton, “
.. "
3 fiO nm
I 45 anil "
.. .Cordele, “
.. “
•2 42 am
3 40 ami Ar
Macon, “
.. Lv
)2 45 11m
....Atlanta, C. of O. lt\
9 00 pin
1 00 pm *'
...Chattanooga, N.C.ASF. I.. RY
3 60 pm
6 6.5 f nil “
...Nashville, “
9 30 am
11 40 pin) “ ..
...Martin, '*
5 45 am
« 5Jam "
...St. Lotiift, ILL. CKNT. lt.lt
10 30 pin 1
“Dixie Flyer” is solid train with through <-oa. i h»is nnd Parlor slem crs between Mn-
con ami Jacksonville, mid carries Pullman lm(T»it drawing room sleeper 1 etween Ma
con and Ja'-ksonvllle. euroiite to and from SI. I.ouis. Mo., via Atlanta, (.’hntlunoogn,
Nashville. Marlin and Ciilro.
“Quickstep” is solid train between Moon and Palatkn, nnd carries through coach
between Mn* r>n nnd Jacksonville.
Round Trip'1 Icket* now on sale to Summer Tourist point 1 1 kd to Atlantic Bench
and White Springs, Fla.
Wn.i.iAM Oiikcki.ktShaw, Vice President, Ma^n, (in.
C. II Rhoukh, General Passenger Agent, Mn«-on, Oh.
.1. H. ltAFFTKnv, 1), P. A , Jacksonville, Fla. 4
Lejx A. IJr.LL, Atlanta. Go. A
»
-jagd
is, «wb am coMtanfly lucrejnog In
bin, Is pirn ind is Miflatnui.
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