Newspaper Page Text
bdller is balked again
HIS EFFORT TO RELIEVE LADYSMITH DOOMED
TO DISMAL FAILURE.
London Admits Correctness of Boer Re
port, Telling of British Defeat
London accepts as true the Boer
statement that General Buller has
once again failed to succor the be
leagured inhabitants of Ladysmith.
These statements were passed by the
British censor at Aden and are read in
the light of Mr. Balfour’s announce
ment in the commons that General
Buller is not pressing his advance.
Mr. Winston Churchill wires that
Vaalkrantz was impracticable, for the
guns which were needed to support a
further advance. His cablegram leaves
General Buller on Tuesday night send
ing a fresh brigade to relieve the tired
soldiers of Vaalkrantz.
The descriptive writers with Gen
eral Buller were allowed a rather free
band again in explaining the ugly po
sition which the British held and the
natural obstacles which had to be
overcome. So it is easier to infer that
with Boer riflemen and artillery de
fending them, these hills, ravines and
jungles have not been overcome and
thns the public is prepared in advance
for bad news.
Heliograms from Ladysmith dated
Monday describe the effect General
Buller’s cannonade had on the worn
garrison. Hope ran high that the long
period of inactivity and tedium was
drawing to a close. The crash of guns
was almost continuous for ten hours
and at times it seemed as though as
many as twenty shells burst in a min
ute.
BBITOKS WERE OUTFLANKED.
A dispatch dated Frere Camp Feb.
8, probably written with the advanced
lines, says: both
“The forces of the enemy our on
our flanks and continue to render our
position extremely difficult to main
tain.”
This makes evident that General
Buller after devoting Wednesday to
bringing more artillery and troops
across the Tugela, was badly in need
of re-enforcements. It is more patent
that it is impossible for him to advance
until the artillery has been enabled to
take up forward positions for the pur
pose of subduing the Boer guns on
both flanks.
Almost all the critics now point ont
that the mere pushing through to
Ladysmith without securing a decisive
victory on the way there would only
add danger to what is already a criti
cal situation.
Another Frere camp dispatch says a
Boer prisoner asserts that the burgh
ers expected General Buller to cross
at Skiets drift and that thousands of
Boers were being posted at Doom
kloof to oppose such a passage, while
on the'-captnred hill there were only a
few hundred Johannesburghers, This
tends to increase the anxiety of those
who believe that General Buller has
scarcely begun the serious part of his
advance.
RETIRE FROM KOPJE.
The British who were iu possession
of the kopje at Melons drift abandoned
it after a bombardment by Boer can
nou Thursday morning and retired
across the Tugela river to their former
position.
BATTLE GROUND SELECTED.
Corbett and Jeffries Will Meet In San
Francisco.
The twenty-five round battle be
tween James J. Corbett and James
J. Jeffries for the world’s heavyweight
championship will take place before San
the National Athletic club of
Francisco on or about April 1 next,
William A. Brady and George Con
sidine, the respective managers of the
two principals, met in New York for
the purpose of selecting a location for
a battle ground, and after a brief con
ference, decided to accept the offer of
the Calforinia organization, which is
75 per cent of the gross receipts.
JONES INTRODUCES^ BILL
As a Free Coinage Substitute For
Financial Measure.
Senator Jones, of Arkansas, has in
Sfr tute tor d ?, the fre0 pending 8il T. er COinage currency snh i bill. 3 t
The substitute provides that “from
and after the passage of this act the
mints of the United States shall be
°pen to the coinage of silver and there
shall be coined dollars of the weight
of 412* grains, troy, of standard silver
9-10 tineas provided by the act of
January 18, 1837, and upon the same
terms and subject to the limitations
and provisions of law regulating the
coinage aud legal tender quality of
gold.”
WRECK KILLS THREE.
-
Two Engineers and a Brakeman Were
the Victims.
Three persons were killed and three
seriously injured in a head-end collis
ion Rm un, Thursday i , between . , fast , freight , ■ . ,
trains on the Bereh creek division of
the New York Central railroad at Gor
don Heights, Pa.
Both engines were demolished and
thirty-seven cars were wrecked. The
trains were running at highest speed,
LAWTON BURIED.
With Imposing Ceremonies Body
Is Laid to Rest In His
toric Arlington.
A Washington special says: Major
Henry W. Lawton was buried Friday
in the National cemetery at Arlington
The services at the grave were pre
ceded by those at the Church of the
Covenent in tho city, where President
H. M. Stryker, of Hamilton college,
delivered a funeral oration that has
seldom been equaled in beauty of ex
pression, nor could it have been in
more perfect accord with the spirit of
the solemn occasion that called it
forth.
Never in the history of the capital
has there been a more representative
gathering of the nation's official life to
pay a last tribute to tbe nation’s hon
ored dead. No mark of military pomp
and ceremony that the regulations
could provide was wanting to render
the occasion solemn and impressive.
Nearly all tbe available troops of the
regular military remaining in this
country were called out. Three thou
sand men, infantry, cavalry and artil
lery, followed the flag-draped caisson
to the grave.
Lawton was to the people the ideal
American soldier whose exploits in
three wars made his name a household
word and who being a soldier, first and
only, died in the line of duty, leaving
nothing to his children but the herit
age of an honored name.
It was in tribute to this soldier’s
ideal that American generosity for
weeks past had swelled the “Lawton
Fund” beyond all expectations of its
originators, and in further tribute Fri
day that the great ourpouring of peo
ple filled the streets long before the
hour when the services at the Church
of the Covenant were to commence.
But mere official formulae were
dwaifed beside the deep popular demon
stration that the burial of the dead sol
dier called forth. Every department
of the government paid its official
tribute. Flags hung at half mast.
The president aud his cabinet, rep
resentatives of the supreme court, of
the house and senate, and of tbe army
and navy, all combined to fill the
darkened church to its utmost. But
these official representatives of
people were lost in the great crowds
that surrounded the church and lined
the streets along which the procession
passed. McKinley the
President was among
early comers, accompanied by the
secretary of war. They came to the
church with Adjutant General Corbin,
who, assisted by Colonel John Bing
ham, had charge of the official arrange
ments. The secretary of the navy,
the secretary of the interior, the at
torney general and secretary of agri
culture were also there.
The supreme court was represented
by Chief Justice Fuller and several of
the associate justices. Admiral Dewey
was absent from Washington, but was
represented by Captain A. S. Barker.
Ex-Secretary Alger was also present
by proxy, having sent from Michigan
Mr. Victor Mason, his secretary while
in the war department, -who brought a
great wreath of flowers for the already
overladen casket.
The Presbyterian burial service was
read by Rev. Hamlin, pastor of the
church, and President Stryker then
arose to deliver the oration.
After the oration the casket, light
ened of part of its burden of flowers,
was lifted to the shoulders of troopers,
borne down the aisle to the street,
past the great crowd outside and
raised ‘to the caisson waiting at the
door.
The waiting ranks of the cavalry
moved forward and closed about it as
a guard of honor and formed into line.
Then with a ramble of wheels and a
clash of trace chains, field and siege
batteries joined the procession, and
the hero of three wars moved on his
last march to his final resting place on
the Virginia hillside beyond the Po
tomac.
ALMOST A CONFESSION.
A p r j SO ner Throws Some Light on
the Goebel Assassination.
Two men suspected of complicity in
the murder of Governor Goebel were
boarding house „ ,
arrested „ . , a 'ran
in a
fort Friday Their names are Silas
Jones, of Whitley county, and Gotts
chalk, of Nelson coun y.
The authorities expect to obtain im
portant evidence from Jones, who has
already made a partial confession. He
declares that he personally knows
nothing of the crime, but says that
Harlan Whittaker who was arrested
immediately after-the. shooting knows
a great deal about the crime.
Cotton Mill For Knoxville.
Col. C. M. McGhee and Col. L. D.
Tyson, of Knoxville, Tenn., will begin
at once the erection of a cotton mill at
an expense of $300,000.
A Reciprocity Arrangement.
Minister Carson, for . toe ,, TT United ., ,
States, and Baron Fava, Italian am
liassador for his government, at tho
state department at Vi ashiingtou sign
ed a reciprocity arrangement under
the third section of tho Dingley act.
BILL ARP'S LETTER
Bartow Man Talks at Length of
the Higher Criticism.
DIFURS WITH REV. LYMAN ABBOTT
In Recent Remarks of tlie Prelate Regard
ing the Authenticity of the
Holy Rible.
A great lawyer whose chief business
was to defend criminals was asked the
secret of his success, and he replied:
“It is to deny everything and call for
the proof.” New England agnosti
cism and higher criticism of the script
tires seem to have a like maxim. The
deeper a man goes into science the
more inclined is he to call for the
proof; especially if he has more learn
ing than brains, anti has to strain his
mind to solve the mysteries of life and
*
nature.
I was ruminating about this,for Iliad
jnsfc read the press dispatches that Rev.
Lyman Abbott, who succeeded Henry
Waril Beecher, had in a public address
in Boston declared that the book of
Genesis was a myth—a legend written
before the flood by some unknown
prophet—and that it was impossible
for Moses to have known of the things
that transpired 2,000 years before lie
was born, and he asks, “What were
his re-ources if they were not legends
and myths?”
I know that it does not become me to
teach theology or the infallibility of
the scriptures, but it occurs to me that
if Mr. Abbott car undermine the Book
of Genesis he will overthrow the
whole structure of Biblical authority
that has withstood the wear and tear
of time for all these centuries. The
Bible is the standard of the ages—the
headlignt of the nations, aud it must
stand as a whole or fall as a whole.
The reverend gentlemen professes to
believe in the new testament and part
of the old, but if he is really a Chris
tian he must believe as much of the
Old Testament as the Savior aud His
apostles did. It was Christ who said
in the parable of Dives and Lazarus,
“If they will not believe Moses and
the phophets, neitherjwill they believe,
though one rose from the dead.”
This is that Moses who predicted
the coming of the Savior when he was
giving the laws to the children of
Israel—that Moses to whom God in
trusted the tables of stone that con
tained the commandments, and who
wrote the most beautiful song in the
Psalms of David—that Moses who ap
peared in glory on the mount while
the Savior 'was transfigured-that
Moses of whom Paul said he Was f$ith
ful as a testimony of those things
which were to come after. References
are too numerous to quote—all show
ing that Moses was the vice-gerent of
the Almighty, and was a prophet in
spired by Him. uphold the
N., Mr. Abbott cannot
New Testament and pull down the Old.
He must sustain or demolish all. It is
the same old at ack of science upon
miracles because they cannot be ex
plained upon any hypothesis of human Mr.
reason; when the truth is that
Abbott himself is a stupendous mira
cle, and cannot tell how be thinks or
where the power of thought or the
faculty of memory is located, nor how
he can at will raise his hand or close
his eye; nor how he took form and
shape in bis mother’s womb. All
nature is a miracle; the leaves of the
trees, the color of the flowers, the
flight of birds, the infinite smallness
of matter and germs, the infinite mag
nitude and boundless extent of the
heavens and of space, and in all
tion there is nothing that has pride,
vanity and self-conceit save man—an
agnostic or skeptic or an infidel—“The
fool (only) has said in his heart, there
is no God.”
Well, now, leaving out the inspira
tion that guided Moses when he wrote
the Book of Genesis, let us come down
to human reason and see whether
Moses had resources or not.
Mr. Abbott is now sixty-five years
old. He is the son of Rev. Jacob Ab
bott, who was born in 1803, and Jacob
was the son of a revolutionary sire,
Mr. Lyman Abbott has children and
perhaps grandchildren. That would
make five generations from his grand
sire. This Mr. Abbott lived in commun
ion with his father forty-four years,and
probably was a young man when his
grandfather died. Now, if his grand
sire and his sire were good, truthful,
Christian men. and no doubt they
were, how easy it was for Lyman to
get a true account of the revolutionary
war so far as relates to all the inci
dents that his grandfather knew of or
took part in. And how easy for Ly
man to hand it down correctly to his
children and grandchildren.
No inspiration is ueeded—nothing
but truth aud a good memory. This
is precisely the case with Moses—only
six persons were needed to transmit
the account of the creation from Adam
down to Moses. True there were
twenty-seven generations during that
long period of years, but tliev lapped
over each other surprisingly, and it
sterns to have been a dispensation of
providence that they should. The
chronology of the Mosaic account is as
clear as a bell, and figures do not lie.
Adam lapped over onto Lamech and
lived with him fifty-six years, and
Lamech was Noah’s father. Surely
Lamech told Noah all about the crea
tion, for he got it direct from Adam,
aud he lived with his son Noah 595
years—had plenty of time didn’t he?
Noah had a son named Sbem, who
went into the ark with him, and I
reckon during the long rainfall the old
gentleman didn’t have much else to
talk about to his cbildreu besides the
creation and Cain and Abel and Seth
and Enoch, and so Sbem knew it all
about as well ns h*i fatber.
Now, Sbem was another long-lived
patriarch, for he lived 502 yenrs Arphaxad, after
the flood.’ He lived to see
Siilab, Eber, Peleg, lieu, Serug, Na
bor, Terah, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
—eleven generations. Yes, he lived
and communed with Jacob for fifty
years, and old Noah himself, the
preacher of righteousness, lived until
Abraham was sixty years old. Well,
of course old Father Noah told Father
Abraham everything that Lameck had
told him. and Shem told it. too. and
nlso had fifty years’ tnlk with Jacob
about it.
Is there any trouble about keeping
6* e account straight this far, and this
!VIo8ui ° rec0rd f ° r aboUt
’ Now.Tacob ha d a son named Levi,
and this same Levi—the father of the
priesthood—was the grandfather of
Amram, who was the father of Moses,
How easy it was for Levi to transmit
to Amram, his grandson, all that he
learned from Jacob. Then the reeortl
would road: Adam told Lamech, La
uieeh told Noah, Noah told Abraham,
Abraham told Jacob (and Shem told
^im, too), ar >d Jacob told Levi and
Levi told Amram.
Lamech, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Levi
and Amram. The 27 generations are
educed to six men ami those six were
ab ? UGW favored of God and in the line
!“* fleecer t to David and Jesus Christ,
Besides these men there were godly
women not a few. Old Mother Eve
" as t bere > the last and best part of the
election, and probably lived with Adam
until his death. Don t you know she
loved to meet with her descendants
and bow sba 8ft t * n the corner with her
knitt'ng and talked to old Mother
Enoch aud Mother Methusaleh and
Mother Lamech, who was her g-g-g
£'§'o'£'f? ral, ddaugliter, and how she
we Pt with them over that apple busi
ness?
Resources indeed! Could a historian
. bav ® au y better or more truthful. God
f 8ar ing men and women to learn from?
Young men, beware how yon become
infatuated or infected with this mod
er n idea of higher criticism. .
For 2,500 years the authenticity of
* be ^ d Testament Las been stirdied
tbe most learned men of the ages,
Paal I* 0 ? 9 - “Unto the Jews were corn
nutted the oracles of God. What if
do believe: shall their unbe
beI “ a * 6 ‘ he / al ‘ h of God ^Hhout ef
feet. God forbid; 1 yea, let God be
true, but every “an a liar.’ I wo
b “ nd « d and eighty-five years before
Ghnst 8e * ent J Earned men compiled
* bo 8acred cnaon and \\ bas remained
* 16 8am ? ^changed till this day. But
ever and anon some carping and cyni
ca mi “ d strains itself to find a flaw
calls it higher criticism. Just
bke Seward and Giddings and other
fanatics did when they armed old John
r ° wn and declared that there was a
higher law than the constitution.
oting man, stand by the faith ^ of
ages, the faith of your fathers and
be not W19e own conceit, for
Solomon , saith “There is more hope
0 a /°° tban °* bl1 ?'
.} T bav8 recently visited , the . good old ,
C1 .* J Uolumbus and received its hos
l ntaht J a «d benedictions. It is just
a 8 e > and through all these years
bas move*! steadily and surely forward,
manufacturing with serenity and dig
ni f be character its cultured men
•* nd women gave it in the beginning,
How broadly beautiful it was laid out;
bow bountiful is its shade; how green
he ^ ra88 lts P"™ 1 ® ?™ und8 ;
\«w beautiful the river . tuat girdles it.
< ot for a 8in e le 7®" bas thero been
* n Y retrograde in the manners or
“ ora ' s of lts f eo P le - Considering its
cIl “ ate « 80Cle ** and Prosperity, I do
oot k r ‘ 0W a that I had rather live
in , ' P T 18 alread J l a W CDOa « b loT
f 10 ™ 1 8afet D for Jefferson spoke a
trutb wbe - n be 8ald tba f Ga -cities
wer ® P^stGentxal , . to good health and
good morals.
Of course, we favor the increase of
an industrial population that keep the
wheels aud spindles turning and the
?'° lf fr ° m th ® d °° r ,he beK ?, r
irom the greets, and if every c.ty
° ar ed l , f or lt8 . operatives in the mills as
Columbus , l does, there would be no ob
ject lessons of misery to be carried be
fore tbe legislature. I visited the
young men’s club rooms of the Eagle
and Fnenix mills, les, club rooms
for factory boys, where they can
spend their evenings and read and
write and bathe and exercise instead
of going to tho saloons.
The beautiful library has 2,000 vol
umes of standard books and the read
ing tables are furnished with the best
newspaper and magazine literature.
tho ,, pleasant . . and .
_ J cauu ot t enumerate ,
attractive features of these rooms,
JT*ey are all free or nearly so to the
factory boys who become members,
Colonel Gunby Jordan is ie ng
hearted promoter of this attachment
^, tbe “ dl8 aIld the ml11 owner 8
Lill T) Arp, 4 .
ab tba expenses. m
lanta Constitution.
Keep abreast of these stirring times
by svb*crU>4ng for yowr home paper.
The pries is little, and you cannot
afford to be wUb oe d it.
GAS PIPE LEAKED.
Result Was Death of Man, Wife and
Infant Son.
Martin Jordan, an engineer, his
wife, Mary, and their five months’ old
boy, were asphyxiated by gas last Sat
urday night in their home in Chicago.
A leak in a gas pipe in the base
ment deluged the house with gas aud
when found by other members of the
family had been dead for several hoiirs.
Conflagration In San Salvador.
A cablegram from San Salvador,
Central America, states that the city
bas been visited by a serious fire. The
total loss is estimated at $1,000,009.
GEORGIA – ALA B AMA RAILWAY
PASSENGER SCHEDULES,
Effective Dec 24, 1805).
No. 10* No. n* MAIN LINE. No. 18* No. 20*
6 30 p m 7 25 a m Ly Savannah. A r 8 25 p m 8 40 a m
7 10 p m 8 05) a ni Ar . Cuyler .. at 7 43 p m 7 57 a m
8 4(1 p m 5) 45 a m A r .Collins... Ar 0 0!) pm 0 36 a m
10 p m 11 45 a in Ar .Helena... A r 4 06 p rn 4 40 util
12 30 p m Ar, .Abbeville ■ Lv 3 15 P m
No 15* No. 10*
8 00 am 12 30 p mi Lv... .......Abbeville. r>r> r 3 15 p m 7 05 p m
5) 00 00 am ||1 112 40 10 p mj Ar Lv ) ........Cordele j v || ||1 2 40 10 p m 0 0 05 05 p m
!> am p m 1 . r p ni p m
10 02 a mj 3 10 jjjrij Ar... ......Americas. v 12 34 j) in 5 00 p m
3 10p m Lv... .......Americus.. a i 12 34 pm
4 04 p rn j Ar... ........Richland. Ar 1135am
5 58 p m Ar... ....... Hurtsboro A r 5) 37 a m
7 55 p in IA r... .....Mon tgom ery.........Lv 7 45 a m
_______
No. 3.t No. 1.* Columbus and Albany Division. No. 2.* No. 4. t
4 30 anijlOOO a in v..... .....Columbus..... 5 20 p m 6 00 p m
7 40 a m i 1 25 a in r..... .....Richland..... 4 04 pm 3 50 pm
!) 20 am 12 34 p in r..... .....Dawson...... 2 5(5 pm 1 30 pm
10 30 a m 1 25 p ro * 2 15 pm 12 01 p til
any through coaches between At uta and Albany in
connection with Southern Railway.
No. 11 .* No. 7.t Fitzgerald Branch No. 8. t No. 12.*
7 10 *3 = 8 00 a m Lv Abbeville Ar 2 55 p m 7 55 a m
8 03 *0 ss 10 20 a m Ar Fitzgerald Lv 12 55 p m 7 03 a m
8 25 tJ 11 00 am Ar.. Ocilla... Lv 11 30 am 6 40 a. m
* Dally. t Daily, except Sunday. \ Sunday only. || Meal Station.
CONNECTIONS.
At Savannah with Florida Central and Peninsular railroad and Plant Sys
tem for Washington, Baltimore, New York , also for other points in Florida.
With steamship lines for Baltimore, New York and Boston.
At Cuyler with Savannah and Statesboro railroad for Wood
burn and Statesboro.
At Collins with Stillmore Air Line for Stillmore and Swainsboro, also with
Collins and Reidsville railroad for Reidsville.
At Helena with Southern Railway for Brunswick, Macon, Atlanta and
points AtCbrdele beyond. and Florida Railway Macon, Valdos
with Georgia Southern for
ta, Lake City, Palatka and points beyond. With Albany and Northern Rail
way for Albany.
At Americus with Central of Georgia Railway. and Soutlie. Railway.
At Columbus with Central Central of Georgia Georgia Railway n
At Dawson with of Railway.
At Albany vith Central of Georgia Railway and Plant System.
At Hurtsboro with Central of Geory ia Railway. railroad Mobile. New C
At Montgomery with Louisville and Nashville for
leans, Birmingham, Nashville, Cincinnati, Evansville, St. Louis and beyond.
With Mobile aud Ohio railroad forColumbus, Corinth. Cairo, St. Louis and
points oeyond. With Western Railway of Alabama for Selma and beyond. and
Elegant Buffet l’arlur Cars on Trains Nos. 17 anti IS between Savannah
Montgomery: CECIL GAHBETT. Vlee-l’res’t and Qen’l Mgr.
A. I'OPE, General Passenger Agent.
Albany – Northern Railway.
To Take Effect 5 A. M. Monday, June 19, 1899.
Central Time Standard,
Between Albany and Cordele.
South Sound North Bound
First Class First Class
21 11 17 Stations. 18 12 I 22
Dally Sun- Sun- Dally
exc’pt day Dally Dally day Exc-r !
Suiid’y only. Only Sunc Mxo '
Mxd. Pas. Pas. Pas. Pas.
4 M. A. M. . M. Arrive Leave P. M. . M. P. M
Oi SO 9 40 co 30 . Albany . 12 05 00 4 45
CO 58 9 19 Co 10 . . Beloit . 12 20 ^ 21 5 J7
00 40 9 04 to 56 . Philema 12 41 5 85.
X 27 8 56 to 49 . OakfinJd '■■'I 2 40 44 5" 48 .
OO 07 8 46 to 38 Warwick 59 ^ 6 08
N 43 8 34 uo 28 . Raines . 1 11 6 32
N 15 8 15 to 10 Lv .Cordele Ar 1 30 m 7 00
J. S. CREWS, Qen’l. Manager.
Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Co.
Time Tables—In Effect January 22d, 1899.
S-u/fcJoct to CliQ.a.E’© ‘W5.tlic-u.t XTotlco.
NO. 5 NO. 3 NO. 1 SOUTHBOUND NO. 2 NO. 4 NO. 0
J
-3—1 25 p m 1:20 a m 3 l.r .Cordele.. Ar pm 2:08 a m 2 £ a m :<)5
47 “ ^ M . Arabi... u . 1:5C 44
OC a t; i. Asbburn. i. 1:30 »i 1 gss'ig'iirg'i ii JO
U JC j; U . Tilton . u “ 12:55 u 15
^ 42 “ CO it , Sparks .. a a m 11:54 a j.) a >2
w It —- dk “ .... Valdosta .... “ “ I 1 :< 5 p n l 11 u 10
^ ...... Jasper ti ii 1-4 :0i> ..
n “ .White Springs.. “ it ‘C : 2 :> ii 0
.
Ct c; “ J.uke City. il ii •-T :00 .t 9
....
—-1 x ,i .. Hampton. it it 7:15 ti
ZC ■— “......I’uliitka..... •• Ohio tt 0
Connects at Palatka with Florida Fast Coast Railway, J. T. – lv. NV., and Plant
System, and with Sr. Johns and Ooklawaha Itiver si earners.
NO. (J NO. 4 ^ c us NORTHBOUND NO. 1 NO. 3 NO. 6
8:25 a m 2:20 am tc *3 Cm 3 Lv.... Cordele.... A r p ni 1:30 a rn 1:20 pm" :08
8:45 “ 2:34 “ tc "rJ ” .... Vienna .... ” “ 1:12 1:02 “ 0:49
9:04 “ tc CO ” ... I’inehurst... ” “ 12:57 “ 0.32
9:15 “ 2:50 “ u ” ... Unadilla.... ” “ 12:49 2 12:42 “ (i;22
.
9:40 “ t; C ” ...Grovania.... ” “ 12:31 - “ 6:02
.
10:44) “ 3 : 35 ”.....Sofkee .... ” am 11:41 t> rn 11:45 *• 4:58
11:05 “ 4:15 - — Ar, Macon Lv “ 11:20 “ 11:25 “ 4:30
(:35 I. SSSg 7:50 12:05
8:30 p m J'Jlp i., am 7 :8b p rn Ar. .. .Atlanta .... v a nr p m p rn
m 1 :()<) a ui ” ..Chattanooga.. ” n ” 2:56
0 55 ’’ 6:40 ’’ ” ...Nashville. p m a m 9:10
7:16 a rn 7:32 p m ” .... St Louis.... ” >t ” 8:40
Trains 1 anrt 2. and trains 3 and 4 carry Pullman Buffet sleeping cars between
St. Louis and Jacksonville, Kin. Trains 3 and 4 also carry local sleeper between
Macon and Palatka. Trains 5 and 6 are shoo-fly trains.
Full information from tho undersigned. C. RHODES, Gen. Puss. Agt, Macon, Ga.
D. G. HAM.. T. P. A. B.
8 Kimball House, Atlanta, fia
HARRY BUNNS, K. P. A . Jacksonville, Fla.
WILMAil CUKUKLEY SHAW, Vice-President, Macon, Ga.
Every flan
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
By J. ■Hamilton Ayers, M. *D.
A 600-page Illustrated Book, containing valuable information per
taining to diseases of the human system, showing how to treat" and
cure with simplest of medicines. The book contains analysis of
courtship and marriage; rearing and management of children, besides
valuable prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a full complement of facts in
materia medica that everyone should know.
This most indispensable adjunct to every well regulated household
will be mailed, postpaid, to any address on receipt of price, SIXTY
CENTS.
Address,
Atlanta Publishing House,
110-118 LOYD STREET, ATLANTA, GA.