Newspaper Page Text
THE WEEKLY BANNER-TYATCH3LAN, ATHENS, GEORGIA FEBRUARY o, 1.^80.
Tug »aji.y Baa „> kb-’
*j v carriers In the city or mailed 'postage tree at
**c-a week, 60c. per month, $i.25for three month
«r «k.oo a year.
Tk^8undayor Weekly B anxkr-WaTch-
■r.ur is delivered In the city or mailed postage
4tree for *1.00 a year
OuiranzBUTiONs of News solicited from all
sponsible sources Address,
MARK COOPER POPE, PKoriuE M.n,
' Athens, <la.
JlhlGERSOLL BLACKBALLED.
f GoL "B&Tj Ingersoll; who, it scows
Gtaa ‘JLsarished like a green bay tree’
milder the abuse of the pulpit, has re
<ceiveda. stroke of ostracism that will
<do mooe to tie up his blasphemous
:ftongj*e than a volume of personal de
::<uncu5tton. He has been blackballed
iljy <3ie Players’ Clnb, of New York.
*04. Ingersoll winces under this casti
gation, aud expresses his chagrin in
fthese very regretful words:
-“I am really very sorry that my
•jj>riY*Se opinions, which I have never
inf&sbed on anybody, should have
!»een used to cast a personal slur on
uneJ”
This language has a touch of re.
ipentan^e about it, and it is hoped that
?th.e brilliant but defaming tongue of
l£ke orator will be used to better pur
pose than the most flagrant derision
tlie God to whom all nations are
becoming subject. Col. Ingersoll has
suever lost an opportunity to mock and
Hiold up to derision the most sacred
^things, and it ' is strange that he
^should claim that he has never inflict-
his private opinions on anyone.
'The orator has never used as beauti-
t£ul English or turned as perfect
Qieriods as when defaming holy things
-Otr holding up to ridicule Jehovah’s
/name.
Augustin Daly, the great theatri-
t«£al manager, who led the opposition
.-against Col. Iugersoll in the Players’
CSlub, deserves the praise of all
^thoughtful men. Many a mother in
-America will praise his manliness and
“3ii8 respect for the name she teaches
iier child to love and reverence: By
•Allis we mean to lay no barrier on the
{freedom of speech, but insist that all
mien who have the welfare of the race
-at heart should join in censure of a
-aiian whose highest aim is to teach
iShe young disrespect and to rot the
cjU d their consolation in the faith of
•Jesus,without whose teachings and ex
ample the world would be a ponde-
. aiiomara aud its inhabitants barba-
aiacs.
ilt as reassuring and inspiring to
know, however, that despite the ridi-
•cuic and defamation of the most elo
quent tongues the ‘still smell voice’ is
yet heard and the precepts and life
of oar martyr Savior are elevating
the race and attracting all mankind
^heavenward.
—
—
Politics would no longer be j FATHER AND SON.
cumbrous machine it is, and His Honor Judge N. L. Hutchens
would be cleaner in its operation. I now sits on the bench occupied by his
Bribery and excessive expenditure j father more than a quarter of a cen-
would disappear. Intelligence ai d tury ago. By the way Judge N. L.
patriotism would be made strong to j Hutcheus, Sr., was an able man and
deaP fearlessly and ad.isedly with, his mantle has fallen on worthy
ignorance and treason without being J shoulders. The first case the present
handicapped by such a weight as par- J udge Hutchens tried, after his elec
tion to the Superior bench, was one
which his father had tried in Jackson
Superior Court twenty-five years be
lt had been continued during
that time.
• r~‘""* —-
A FINE BIBLE FOR
ty-interest imposes upon it.”
THE SENATE AMENDMENT-
The committee on Ways ami Means ’ f„ r e
of the House have submitted the Sen
ate amendment to the Mills tariff
b 11 to the Treasury Department,
requesting an estimate of the probable
effect ou the revenue. The increased
duties may reduce importation of
certain articles but will not of others,
aud it is a" matter of doubt as to
whether the Senate amendment will
reduce the revenue.
For instance the duty is largely
increased on tin-plate, and while no
tin-plate is manufactured iu this
country a great deal is used in the
manufacture of tin ware, so the in
creased tariff will doubtless increase
the revenue arising from this article.
So the increased duty on wool will
probably increase the revenue. For
eign wools will continue to be im
ported and the amount will probably
not Be diminished.
Mr. John Houston, President of the
Hartford Carpet Company, a stauch
Republican protectionist, censures
this feature of the Senate amendment
in these terms :
“If we continue in business,” said
he, “we must import the raw mate
rial. It is not produced here, and in
my opinion never will be, and all the
duties in the world will not make it
different. They may be eight cents
or a hundacd cents, but the domestic
products will not be forthcoming this
side of the crack of doom.”
With these and other articles the
increased duty will probably increase
rather than reduce the custom reve
nue. The effect throughout can only
be determined by actual test. No
matter what effect, however, the
Senate amendment may have on the
revenue one thing is quite certain,and
that is it will increase the taxes on
the people and pour a rich stream into
the coffers of a few favored manufac
turers. It is class legislation of the
deepest dye.
ALEXANDRE CABANEL.
MR. HARRISON-
The Tippecanoe club of Indianapolis
has presented the President-elect with
a magnificent copy of the Bible. It
is a work of art and comprises over
1,500 pages, and is bound in seal
leather, twelve by fourteen inches. It
is an imperial quarto, &reat primer
type, and it is expected that it will
occupy a conspicuous place in the
White House during Gen. Harrison's
administration. Under a recent ad
ministration % subordinate at the
White House has reported that a
copy of the scripture was not to be
found there, and we believe that Gen.
Butler found it necessary to furnish
the executive department at the State
House with a Bible wheq he was Gov
ernor.—Boston Herald.
The farmers seem to be buying
more cautiously than ever before.
Strict economy will go far toward im
proving their condition. A system
of buying for cash once established
will prove of inestimable value to
merchant arn^ farmer.
("EDUCATIONAL QUALIFICATION-
' The press throughout the country is
swivocating an -educational qualifica
tion to the right of suffrage- in view
of the immense power of corruption
••and bribery in our elections. This
.will continue so long as a large pro
jj>Oi‘ f ien of voters are absolutely with
out intelligence or self-respect, and
jisimuly tools in the hands of corrup-
Ktionisrts. The following by a writer
•in the News and Courier will be in-
r Lereating. Writing from Washington
<Cityke says:
"Universal promiscuous, suffrage
! 3ias become as unwieldy as it is ob
.noxious. All (he interests of good
♦order, thrift, economy and self-respect
require that the elective privilege
^lull-bo restricted within managea.
5de hounds. Not a great many y£irs
“hence the population of the United
^States will be-doubled. It is quite
•^possible for the country to harbor
t.wice twelve millions of voters, good,
had and indifferent, with all 'the riff-
•acaff and Aati-Ameriean odds aud
<euds of foreign illiteracy and Old
World philosophy entering into, its
composition, but the halls of Congress
cannot accommodate twice four hun
dred Representatives, aud tho people
trauld hardly consent to pay their ex
penses if they could. Therefore,since
restriction must inevitably eome, some
iime, it would seem as if there were
mo opportunity like the present.
When the masses preponderate, they
ora at vote to disfranchise themselves.
By cartailing the blaek vote is the
•7$ oath, and the ubiquitous foreign vote
3Jorth, and the ignorant nndirrespon
THE COST OF MILITARY SYSTEMS-
An English statistician has compil
ed some interesting figures showing
the military systems of Europe.
“Ta-iug in the expense of support
ing the armies and navies, building
fortifications, new ships and obtaining
war supplies of all kinds, besides
paying the interest upou war debts
incurred during the last quarter of a
century, he finds that the annual
outgo is equivalent to $>i.,750,000 ? -
000.”
If we add to this the loss of produc
tive labor of the men in arms the
annual expense amounts to $2,150,-
000,000. Similar estimates show that
the annual expense of the standing
armies in 1860 was but $550,000,000.
Iu thirty years’time the expense
has therefore increased more than
three fold. During the same time
the productive power of the countries,
sustaining these military systems, has
increased rapidly but not in the same
ratio as the expeuse of the systems.
The ingenuity of the race and the
productive power of nature is there
fore taxed to keep pace with the war
like disposition of contending nations
The situation is snch as to cause
profound concern among well
wishers of the race. The advance that
nations are making, in what is called
civilization, is not much to their credit
while the greater proportion of it is
consumed in hostile arms.
Xbe Great Fren:li Painter Who Decently
Died—Bis Memories.
Not long before the death, which oc
curred recent!}’, of Alexandre Cabanel,
one of France’s greatest painters, be
penned a short autobiography of him
self, which is characterized by singular^
simplicity and facility of phrase. ‘The
marked admiration with which lie was
wont to regard Americans and every
thing American endeared him to many
of the most notable persons of the new
world, and he was one of the most pop
ular of the French artists, some of
whom, alisurdly enough, consider mo
roseness a most enviable characteristic.
In writing of his boyhood and youth.
Cabanel says:
“I was boro in the city of Montpellier.
My father died when 1 was only 2 year?
old, and ray widowed mother had much
difficulty in rearing me. as I was a child
of exceedingly fragile health. From my
earliest years my great delight was in
drawing. 1. made sketches of every
thing about the house, and l was only
happy when so employed. At the age
of 11 1 became a pupil of the drawing
school of Mont
pellier, and two
years later 1 was
olfered the post of
drawing teacher
at the seminary
of Si Pons. I
was to give les
sons for five hours
a week, and in
exchange 1 was
to receive a thor-
ALEXANDRE CASaNEU OU gj, education.
The offer was a tempting one, and. above
all, a flattering one for a boy of 13.
But, wishing to consecrate my early
years to the study of (tainting, anil feel
ing that it was for me to continue to
take lessons in art anil not to give them,
1 returned a refusal. From that time,
and till 1 grew- to manhood, 1 gave my
life to the study of painting. I was
passionately fond of music and played
at one time passably on the violin, but
I relinquished my music lessons so that
nothing should interfere with my art.
Life is" not long enough to divide be
tween two such rivals as painting and
music.”
After paying a generous tribute to the
famous artist, Deveria., who was his
first instructor, he continues:
It was due probably to his counsels
and instruction that 1 carried off the
prize offered by tlu* city of Montpellier
of a jiensioii for a young art student to
enable the winner to go to study in Paris.
I was 15 years old when 1 was named
tho successful competitor. I started a
few months later for Paris, accompanied
by my elder brother, and 1 entered there
the studio of the painter Picot, then
esteemed as one of the first professors of
painting of the day. 1 also became a
pupil of the Ecole des Beaux-Arta, aid
after four years of hard study and con
stant work, 1 sent in my first contribu
tion to tire Salon. This was in the year
1843, and 1 was not quite 18. This
picture, the subject of which was chosen
with the usual audacity of a very young
man who fears nothing and has no
doubts about anything represented, was
Christ on the Mount of Olives. It was
bought by the authorities of my native
city for the church of St, Koch. In
these later years 1 have often tried to
purchase it as an interesting landmark
for myself of my career, hut always in
vain. In 1S4G I won the “Prize of Rente,”
to my great delight. It had always
been one of the dreams of my life to go
to study in the Eternal City and to visit
its marvels of art and architecture.”
Cabanel considers the time he spent at
Rome the happiest of his whole life. He
there formed the friendship pf Victor
Masse, the composer of “Paul and Vir
ginia,” a tie which continued unbroken
until Masses death. He also met in
Rome the great actress, Fannie Ifemble,
and her talented sister; Mrs. Adelaide
Kemble Sartoris, the celebrated prima
donna. v
‘I retnained in Rome foT five years.
« if* 3 n I During that time I painted a number of
WV MW Y OLS jf 3 0@|| pictures and several portraits. Among
* these ws
Editor Atwood, formerly of the
Atlanta Capitol, is to wash his sins
away under one pulpit, and to make
his confession before another. Is
editor Atwood preparing to join the
sensational clergy? It looks that
way.
The length of the Mississippi river
lias always been placed at 4,100 miles,
but civil engineers familiar with the
stream say that it has shortened itself
over -100 miles in twenty years, and
will do\as well in the twenty to come.
The people of Rhode Island are.
anxious to vote prohibition out of
their constitution. They think it
has injured their busiuess without in
creasing the morality of the people.
It is amusing to note with what
alacrity some editors are proposing a
war with Germany, with anybody.
Editors are exempt from military
duty, you know.
Our merchants should give the
farmers a.chance to raise their sup
plies and not insist on “all cotton.” In
the end, it would, piove of advantage
to both
For every 100 marriage licenses is
sued ill Atlanta last year there were
15 divorce suits. Atlanta is rivalling
Chicago.
THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVEN-
' TION.
The Southern Baptist Convention
meets in NashvUle in May. They
form a distinguished body of men and
already the citizens of Memphis are
making preparations for their recep
tion. ■ The meeting this year will be
of especial interest as the question of
a change in the basis of representa
tion will be discussed. The ablest
divines of the denomination will be
present. A president of the conven
tion will also be chosen to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of Dr
James P. Boyce. Two presidents Of
the convention have died during the
past twelve months, Dr. Mell and Dr.
and they were two of the
gest men in the denomination.
iSfesfelfo;..
So weak aud exhausted is because your
blood is impure. As well expect tlie
sanitary condition of a city to be per
fect witli detiled water and defective
sewerage, as to expect such a compli
cated piece of mechanism as the human
frame to be in good order with impure
blood circulating even to its minutest
veins. Do you know that every drop
of your two or three gallons of blood
passes through tlie heart- and lungs in
about two and a half minutes, and that,
on its way, it makes bone and muscle,
brain and nerve, and all other solids
and fluids of the body? The blood is
the great nourisher, or, as the Bible
terms it,
“The Life of the Body.”
Is it any wonder, then, that if the blood
be not pure aud perfect in its consti
tuents, you suffer so many indescribable
symptoms?
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla stands " head and
shoulders” above every other Alter
ative and Blood Medicine. As proof,
read these reliable testimonies:
G. C. Brock, of Lowell, Mass., says:
“For the past 25 years I have sold
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. In my opinion,
tlie best remedial agencies for the cure
of all tlie diseases arising from impuri
ties of the blood are contained in this
medicine.”
Eugene I. Hill, M. D., 381 Sixth Ave.,
New York, saj*3: “ As a blood-purifier
and general byihler-up of the system, I
have never found anything to equal
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. It gives perfect
satisfaction.”
Ayer's Sarsaparilla proves eqnally
efficacious in all forms of Scrofula,
Boils, Carbuncles, Eczema, Humors,
Lumbago, Catarrh, &c.; and is, there
fore, the very best
Spring and Family Medicine
in use. “ It beats all,” says Mr. Cutler,
of Cutler Brothers & Co., Boston, “ how
does sell.” Prepared by
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Prica 91; sir bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle.
THE CRUCIAL TEST.
The severe analytical tests to winch the various bakii^
powders have from time to time been placed have demon. I
strated clearly to the public the relative merits of th 6
different brands from a scientific point of view. The Gov,
eminent chemists, for instance, have found in their official
tests that the Royal Baking Powder gave off the larg^
amount of leavening gas, and. therefore was the most
economical for general use. They also found the Royal to
be absolutely pure, and the only baking powder that did
not contain either lime, alum, or bone or rock phosphate,
For these reasons they recommended it for Government
uses, and it is now nsed in the War, Navy and Indian
departments.
But the crucial test of the kitchen is, after all, the
most satisfactory to the housekeeper. A baking powder
that never fails to make light, sweet, wholesome, and palat.
able bread, biscuit, cake, etc., is the one that will be
selected by the practical housekeeper and received into her
kitchen for continuous use. This test the Royal Baking
Powder has stood for over twenty years without a failure,
aud hence its reputation as tlie best baking powder made
has spread from house to house, until its use has become
as universal as its merits are unrivaled.
(i
The Gladstone”
Is tUa finest tamp in tho
world. It gives a purr,
soft, brilliant wliitd
lteht of S3 candle
power, — a mo rvelous
light from ordinary
oil! Nobody ever sup
posed sncli a Itglit was
.possible from kerosene
oil; yet it la there, an
Seeing is Belit 7in&
A “ wonderful lamp”
it is in all respects.
It never needs trim
ming, never smokes
nor breaks chimneys,
never '* smells of - tlie
oil;" no gumming up,
no leaks, no sputter
ing, no climbing of the
Same, no annoyance
of auy kind, aud cn u-
not explode. And
then, beside all there
advantages, think of a lamp giving a clenr, white
light, 10 to 20 times the sue and brilliancy of
any ordinaru house lamp /
“The Gladstone ” Is made of high-grade,
hard rolled metal (all parts Interchangeable!,
and In elegant designs for Dining or Parlor Table,
the Study, Drawing-room, Hall or Chamber. Fin
ished tn either Gold bronze, Nickel or Antique
bronze. Every home ahontri liave It.
Illustrated price list will be seut yon on receipt
of a postal card. Slugle lamps at wholesale price,
with or without porcelain shade, carefully boxed
and sent by express to
any part ofthe country.
tarSee our prices aud
then order. “ Seeing is he-.
lieuing." Address
GlndHtone Lump Oo.,i
10 East 14th St., New
York City. A live Agent
wanted In every town to
■ell these lamps.
2 KKW ARTICLES FOB TIES PUKE OF \
*" To introduce car ■» and ftst-cellins ooroi.
Cm,-, will, for 9) dijioolj, wl, port-gOAtho
OranrudthaSao-
■nos Hook Ha**
Back tor 50c. Tb©
Printing Outfit la
BEST
STEEL
. WIRE I
fcWire RopeSeW
800 TO $2 PER ROD.
All sizes and widths. Gateato match. Soldbytuor
* ‘ FR MIGHT PAID. Infom&Uo
i FENCE Ci
it., Chicago, DL]
Georgia Railroad Compai).
SIGH K MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
CFF'CKGKNKRaX. MANAGER.
Augusta. Ga., Set t, 28d.
Coro, sm ng Sunday 2<d ins turn, the loi
lng. KAbjl DIN it.
' HWhotJc 10»..Tfct Hxl, H EOc^ »tl.
as a likeness of my dear friend
Victor Masse, and also one of Mrs. Ade
laide Kemble Sartoris. One of the most
important of my historical paintings of
this epoch, ‘The Death of Moses,’ is now,
1 believe, in a gallery in Washington.”
(It is in the Corcoran art gallery, and is
one of the finest paintings in that insti
tution.) .
When he returned to Paris he received
many flattering commissions, and rapidly
rose to the first rank in his profession.
It was not long after this that he was
chosen as one of the instructors at the
Beaux Arts in Paris, and he writes enter
tainingly of several of his pupils, who
have since become famous. In writing
of the talent exhibited by his pupils of
various nationalities, he says:
“I have had many American pupils,
and several of them of great talent. But
they Iiaveall.one defect—they will not
consent to study long enough. They try
to leap at once to the top of the ladder of
fame; they will not patiently climb it
step by 6tep.”
There is no trace of egotism in his con
cluding sentence: ‘
“My art life has been a long and a very
busy one. I liave been an indefatigable
worker, and a complete list of my pro
ductions would fill, 1 think, nearly as
much space as 1 have consecrated to these
random recollections, it lias always been
my theory that an artist should never
suffer a year .to pass Without making
progress in hia art. He should remain a
student to tlie last, always aiming at the
highest ideal—at absolute perfection. It
is a point to which he can never attain,
but it is none the less his duty to try to
reach it. As a professor my sole theories
are comprised in the - inculcation of the
serious and solid principles of art and in
the counseling of sincere and conscien
tious endeavor.”
100$3, OutfitKo. r.OJtaj*. WO«M>XFU.Co n lS3 Susan Sb.S.lf.
The Paper
ON WHICH THIS IS
F R I N T E D
WAS MADE BY THE.
Pioneer Paper
MANUFACTURING CO.,
ATHENS. - GEORGIA
It Has Never Failed.
-Nr wmi-iiiv,
! t t “t ■
L ve Augusta 7:45 a m
L’veWaah’gtn I0;10a. m
t "veW sh'»«n 7:20 a m
A ve Athens. 11:40 a, m
L’ve Athens 8:30 a m
Ar’ve Wra’v’e « 47 a m
“ Lexington.. 9 (X> a.m
“ Antioch... 9:z2 a.m
“ Maxeys.... 0:29a.m
“ WoodviUe. 9:46 a.m
“ Un. Pt 9:55 a.m
Arr've Atlanta l.oow in
Leave Atlanta
Arr’vo Athens 71( fl
Leave Athens S : fi*
Arr’e Winte’u i OiR
“ Lexingt’n.. 4d.|
*• Antioch... kfffl
“ Maxejs ... 4:0■
“ WoodviUe. 5:(fM
•• Un. PI 5:Ul
A’vo Wash’gtn 7:dfi
L’ve Wash’etn 4.27;B
Ar’ve Aueu’ta 3.1 P
NO l.WEST DAILY.
So 1 iSas.ilaitjB
Leave Augusta. .10:45am
“ Washi’g’n. 11:20 a.m
“ Athens.... 8:85 a-m
" Winterv’e 9:22 &.m
“ Lox’gt’n.. 10:18 a.m
“Antioch.. 10:55 a,m
“ Mnxeys .. 11:42 a.m
••WoodviUe 11:55 p.m
A’ve U’n Pt.. 11:65 a.m
“ Atlanta. 5:45 p.m
Lv. Atlanta... 8.0019
“ Un. P't....2:15;fi
“ Woodvilie 2:33:1
•• Max.-ys... 3:8)11
*• Antioch... SAW
“ Lexington 4:0) ■
“ Winter've, I III
*r’ve Athens..
“ Wach’gt’n. 2:21 ;■
“ Augusta... 3:!i|H
NO. 3 WF8T DALY .
NO. 4.R VKT rulHB
L’ve Augusta 11:00 p m
A’re Macon 7:50 a m
A’ve Atlanta. 6:80 a.m-
L’ e Atlanta... 11 lifl
“ Macon... 6:30fl
Ar’o Aucurfs 6 4iiJ
Botanic Blood Balm, (B. B. B.) uas cured nun-
tired of cases of Scrofula, Eczema and other conta
gious blood diseases, after other treatment had been
tried and failed. You do yourself and family great
injustice unless you give this excellent remedy a
trial Send to Blood Balm Co„ Atlanta, Ga., for
illustrated “ Book of Wonders” filled with letters
from persons cured by B. B.B.
Mr. M. J. Rossman, Greensboro, Ga^ writes:
* I have a lady friend who has been entirely cured
^PRflFHI A ° f Sn Us,y scrofulous breaking
out of the skin, and the use of two
bottles of B. B. B. effected an entire cure. I know
of several cases of blood diseases cured speedily by
theqseof B.B. B.
E.G. Tinsley writes: My mother and sister
nsed B. B. B. for scrofula and ulceratedsore throat
SORE THROAT and received more benefi t
remedies they ever used.
Accommodation Trains, Daily E*
1 -' Sunday.
.6:16 p m Leave Athens Arrive 9:4
i 6:44p m Leave Winters Arrive 0;Hij
‘ 6:51 p mLeave Dunlap Arrive8:3o«
i 7:24 p m Leave Lexinton Arrive S-'OO*
J 7:50 p m Leave Antioch Arrive 7;U«|
8:02 p m Leave Maxeys Arrive r *"
8:30 p m Leave Woodv’le Arrive 6:lli|
8:45 p m Arrive Union Pt Leave 5:45j
Train number 27 will stop a. __ , .
senders to and from the following slaioni t
Grovetown, Harlem, Bearing, Thomso; J
wood, Barnet Crawfordville, Union Polnyi
esboro, Madison, Rutledge, Social
Covington, Conyers, Lithonla, Wot® .
tain and Decatur. Train No. 28 w ill
and receive passengers to and -to® r
following stations only: Groveu>wn,?J
Dcarina Thompson, Norwood, Barnett
fordville, Union Point, Greensboro,
Rutledge, Social Circle, Covington,
Lithonla. Stone Mountain and Decatur.
Train So. M on Athens Branch gi Te .*V
gem for No 28 on main line, lSminouH
snppor at Harlem.
Trains to and from Athens connect 1
trains X and 2.
B. R. DORSEY, Gen. Passenger
J W GREEN. Gen’l Manager
JOE W. WHITE,Gen’I Travelled 1~
Augusta R «
from its use than all other
Richmond: and: Ganviile:
Northeastern Division, |
CONDENSED SCHEDULE
IN EFFECT JUNE 24TH,1f
Trains run by 75th Meridian time-
BETWEEN ATHENS AND ATLANlt}
NJ. al DAILY ! 51JM1
Leave Athens 7.40 a. m
Ar’ve Atlanta 12 noon
N»> 41 EX. SU'DA .
Leave Atlanta 5 30 p. in.
Ar’ve Athens 10 2> p, m
BETWEEN AThInS AND THE EAST]
No. 53—Daily No 57
Xeae Athens 7;40 ». m -
Ar. Wash’eton 7 o > a m.
*»•. New York i 20 p m
" Pullman Palace Buffet sleeping can
Lula to Washington and New York*
Solid trains Lula to Washington.
BETWtEN ATHENS AND
Southbound.
2 2J52 50
1X3!
a -q "m
O'lm 35
30,8 55
00 9 r
37 9 31
5 9 51
s Sar;
A cat crawled into a muzzle of a can
non in tho British barracks at Capo
Colony a short time ago. When tho
evening salute was fired she was thrown
a distance of £00 feet, but, strange to
say, lived for two hours after her invol
untary flight.
A. H. Nichols, 110 Gray St, Atlanta, Ga., writes:
“ MY wife for several years has'been suffering with
what physicians term Eczema, affecting her whole
body, limbs and scalp. Itappeared that her whole
skin would shed off in scales about vice a week,
leaving the surface red and tender, and sometimes
cracked open. Her general health failed, and for a
while it was thought she would die, as several doc
tors and numerous patent medicines iail-d to -ive
FP.7FFM l n ^ re,ief -. brother-in-law, Mr. J.
LUALl'i.i B. Cummings, was selling the B B B
and insisted that I should try it on my wife. I did
so, and to cur utter astonishment she commenced
Improving at once, and three bottles, costing only
f3, effected an entire cure. It is wonderfully Quick L - L - McCLESKEY,
inaction.” - &v . H .Div. Pass. Act.
STATIONS.
AR-
D. M. McRae, Waynesboro, Mi ss ., writes: “My
!L$ with Ofils which sadly
impaired her health, and she lost flesh
and strength each day. OnebottleofB 13 B acted
like magic and produced a complete cure ” ' (9)
MILV
1030 Lula
1050 GillsviUe
1107 Maysville
11251 Harmony Grove
ill45 JJicholson
30 1001112 00 Center
0 00 102 -12 201 Athens
AM] P M|PM| \R LV
Trains Mo,50and.73 will :uu OailT^' 0 ’^
and 22 will run daily except SuedaV-
Trains run by 75ch Meridian time- 0118
faster than 90th Meridian I
. J AS.L.TA ■ ,’.s,
Gen. Paf I
E RKRKLEY. Snporintpndaf'-.
1
iteem-eos-djer
out pain. 1 , yS
ISSS tlcularsBCtUgf.l
u. M.wqo$y
' <a.w effloj wrfi