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BILL ARP’S LETTER
Bartow Man Has a Roast For
Chauncey Depew.
EXPLAINS A SENSATIONAL WAR STORY
Home V>r*iiN of the I.ate Poet Whit
tier Are Dissected and
Criticised.
Whittier is dead, but his poetic li
couse and slanders still live. He was as
much a fanatic as old John Brown, and
no doubt old John imbibed from him
bis first lessons in hatred of the south
and slavery. Whittier’s poems are
before me aud thirty-seven of them
are wailings for the slave and malig
nant stings against the southern states
men, including Calhoun, and the
southern people. He was an intense
secessionist and when Texas was ad
mitted he prayed in verse for a yawn
ing gulf to open and separate the
north from tho south. When Daniel
Webster made his last and greatest
speech at Capon Springs, in which he
defended the south and declared that
we had the right to withdraw from the
Union when we believed the Federal
compact had been broken, Whittier
flew to his inkstand aud wrote this of
“So fallen! So lost! The light withdrawn
Which once ho woro;
Tho glory from his gray hairs gone
For ovonnore.
Lot not the laud once proud of him
Insult him now,
Nor brand with deeper shame his dim,
Dishonored brow.
Ail else is gone-, from those great eyes
The soul is fled,
When faith is lost and honor dies,
Tho man is dead.
Then pay the reverence of ojd days
To his dead fame;
Walk backward, with averted gaze
Ami hide his shame.”
That is part of the tribute he paid
to the immortal Webster, the grandest
. figure iu New England .history.
But I was not troubling myself
about tbe gifted old fanatic. I was
ruminating about Chauncey Depow,
who is not dead and who every little
while bobs up sereuely to get n little
.more fame as a humorist. It seems
that when General Early passed
through Frederick City, iu Maryland,
he paused long enough to exact from
the good people the sum of $ 200,000
for army purposes, for as Whittier
wrote of them, they were “a famished
horde,” and now that city has applied
to congress for a refunding of that
money and ono reason they give is
that an old woman in her ninety-sixth
year waved the Union iiag at the reb
els aud Stonewall Jackson ordered his
men to fire at her aud they fired and
broke the window glass and riddled
tho flag and knocked it out of her
baud aud she picked it up and waved
it again.
That’s tho poetic yarn that Whittier
told about Barbara Freitcbie and a
committee from Frederick City has
been before congress aud said it was
wo. Chauncey Depew beard it all and
said it was worth $ 200,000 to have the
truth of the story established and he
nodded his head approvingly and said
that“old Barbara was one of tbe idols of
his childhood, and when he played
around his mother’s knees his heart
throbbed with sympathy for the gray
liaired old wom.au whose patriotism
defied the enemies of his country.”
The old Rip Vau Winkle! I reckon
lhat is one of his latest jokes, for he
was born in 1834, and was twenty
eight years old when our army was iu
Frederick City, aud he. was then play
jug around his mother’s kuees in the
New York legislature.
Dr. ,T. William Jones of Richmond,
the highest authority on Confederate
history, has published in the March
number of The Confederate Veteran
another exposure of this wanton, Freitcbie, ma
liguaut myth about Barbara
and does so only because the poem has
gotteu into sorno southern schoolbooks
aud he wishes to brand with falsehood
this vile slauder on Stonewall Jack
son. The whole miserable thing was
investigated, not. at Washington, but
ou the spot, at Frederick City, and
it was established years ago that no
Confederate troops passed in sight of
the old woman's house; that no flag
was waved; that Stonewall Jackson
was not then with bis troops, aud that
old Barbara was bed-ridden and par
alyzed aud could not have waved a
The daiue’s nephew, Valerius Ebert,
has published his certificate that tho
fiag story is all a myth without the
slightest foundation, and that his old
aunt was at that time bed-ridden and
had lost the power of locomotion.
, Ebert was there at tbe time, and was
the administrator on her estate when
she died aud never heard of any flag,
aud yet one of the'rascals who is after
that money testified that he had the
flag at home at his house. The very
last curse in the Bible is against him
who maketh or loveth a lie, aud it
makes no difference whether he is a
poet, priest or souator, be will find
biniseU in awful baU company in the
world to come.
A oars ago this myth was exploded
iuThe New York Sun while Daua was
living, but now that be :s dead it bas
come to light again in its columns.
That paper’s motto used to be, “If you
see it in The Suu it's so,” but now if
you see it in ’lhe Sun its not so,
would fit it better. I wish that every
' ,'oufederate soldier and their children
aud grandchildren would subscribe
ior lhe Veteran and keep up with the
oest memories of the Lost- i ause—a
cause for which we are still proud—for
it gets brighter aud purer as the years
roll on. Home mouths ago Dr. An
drews, the great educator, declared
and published that every principle the
south fought for had since been be
fore the supreme court of the nation
and decided it its favor—and recontly
a notable New England minister has
declared that, negro suffrage was a mis
erable) blunder, and that the fifteenth
and sixteenth amendments to the con
stitution should he repealed.
Well, time is a good doctor, and the
south is on the upgrade. The Repub
lican party may bo re-elected, but tho
south cannot be worsted. The day will
come when pensions and back-pay
will be given our old soldiers and our
Confederate widows, and our northern
slanderers will take off their hats and
apologize. We are trying hard at my
house to he reconciled—to forget aud
forgive, and he culm aud serene when
holding social intercourse with those
who fit on the other side, and we gat
along pretty well as long as they meet
us on the half-way ground, but as for
these vile slanderers who keep on ly
ing and rubbing it in, we are very
much like my lamented friend, George
Adair, said about a preacher in whom
he had no confidence: “Well, ho may
get to heaven, for the .'race ot God is
very great, but if I get there I’ll not
hunt him up to say howdy—I dou’t
want to live on tho same street with
him.”—B ill Abp iu the Atlanta Con
stitution.
FREE BLOOD CUBE.
Am Offer Proving Faith to Sufferer* From
l»)ood ami SIcin Trouble*.
Ulcers, Onncers, Eating Sores,
Painful Swelhngs,Effects of Blood
Poison, Persistent. Eruptions, that
refuse to heal under ordinary
treatment are quickly cured by
B. B. Ji. (Botanic Blood Balm),
the most wonderful Blood Purifier
of the ago, mode especially deep-seated to cure
all terrible, obstinate,
Blood and Skin troubles. Is your
blood thin ? Are you pale ? All
run down ? Have you Eczema ?
Pimples ? Blotches and Bumps ?
3kin or Scalp Humors ? Boils ?
Eruptions ? Skin Itches and
Swollen ? Aching Bones ? Rheu
matism ? Scrofula ? Catarrh ?
Then you need B. B. B. (Botanic
Hood Balm), because it drains
from the blood and entire system
all the poisons and humors which
cause all of these troubles, and
the cause being removed, a per
manent cure follows. B. B. B.
thoroughly tested for thirty years,
and thousands cured after doctors
and patent medicines had failed.
For sale by druggists at $1 per
large bottle, or 6 large bottles (full
treatment) $5. To prove our faith
in B. B. B. we will send a trial
bottle Free and prepaid to suffer
ers, so they map test the remedy
At our expense.' Address Blood
Balm Co., Mitchell Street, Atlan
ta. Ga. [3-1-ly.
DISCUSSED CHANGE OF VENUE.
Five Defendents In Goebel Assassina
tion Case Arraigned In Court.
Five of the defendants, charged with
complicity or as accessories in the mur
der of William Goebel, were arruigued
at Frankfort Monday afternoon before
Judge Cautrill. They were Repnbli
cun Secretary of State Caleb Powers,
Captain John W. Davis, liar land Whit
taker, W. Culton and Richard Combs,
colored. All of them entered pleas of
not gulty. who had
Henry E. Youtspy, pre
viously beeu arraigned and pleaded
not guilty, was also iu court aud his
attorney asked for a change of veuue,
the prosecution waiving notice and
allowing the motion to come up along
with a similar motion, filed in the
cases of Powers, Davis, Whittaker aud
Combs. heard the
Three witnesses were on
side of the prosecution iu regard to the
change of venue.
They gave it as their opinion that
there is no sentiment in the county
that would prevent a fair trial. The
court adjourned at 5 o’clock.
HEALTH FOLK INVITED
To Meeting Which Will Be Held By a
Senate Committee.
The senate committee on public
health and national quarantine held a
protracted session Saturday, having
under consideration Senator Vest’s
bill amending the act granting addi
tional powers to the marine hospital
service.
Deeuiiug it- undesirable to act on
the measure without expert testimouy
upon the subject, the committee de
cided to extend invitations to appear
before it next Friday to Surgeon Gen
eral Wyman and the health officers of
the ports of New York, Boston, Phila
delphia, New Orleans, Mobile Charles
ton. S. C.. and Jacksonville. Fla.
SCOUTING PARTY CAUGHT.
Filipinos Surround Americans, Killing
Four and Wounding Sixteen.
A dispatch received in Manila Thurs
day from Iloilo reports that a desperate
light, took place at Leambanao, in the
center of the island of Pauay. It ap
pears that* a reconuoitering party of
,h e Twenty-sixth infantry was sur
rounded ami that four of the Ameri
cans wert) killed and that sixteen
others severely wounded were left on
the field. The remainder of the sol
diers had a narrow escape. The dis
patc k adds that re-enforcements were
. 8ent from H 0 ii 0 as sooa as news of
^ (he affair was received, whereupon
tbe Filipinos retreated to mountains.
GEORGIA NEWS ITEMS
Brief Summary of Interesting
Happenings Culled at Rand cm.
Dublin To Hav« Two Depot*.
The town of Dublin is to have two
new depots at the end of sixty days.
The railroad commission a few days
ago directed the Macon, Dnblin aud
Savannah railroad to prepare plans for
a stutiou to be erected at Dublin, giv
ing the roud ten days in which to com- for
ply with this order. The plans
the station were submitted to the
commission and were approved. Work
on the station will begin at puce. The
second road entering Dublin was di
rected some weeks since to build an
entirely new structure, and that work
is also under way.
Seed For Farmnru.
ITie state department of agriculture
has secured from the United States
botanist at Washington a supply of
sesame plant seed, a plant very little
grown in tjie United States, but .one
of more than ordinary value to the
farmer. The sesame seed has been
examined fully by the state chemist,
who is satisfied that the plant can be
produced with success in Georgia.
The principal product is the oil taken the
from the seed. This is known in
market as sesame oil, used largely in
cooking and for pharmaceutical pur
poses.
The United States botanical, depart
ment has placed at the disposal of the
state chemist, John M. McCandless,
forty pint packages of the seed re
cently imported from Russian Turkes
tan, and already a number of requests
have been made for samples. It has
been found that the sesame plant can
not grow well north of Virginia, but
in the warm soil of the south, and par
ticularly of Georgia, it will thrive.
The time remaining for planting the
seed is short, and for that reason all
who wish to receive samples should
apply at the state department of agri
culture at once.
Teacher Stabbed.
News has been received of the se
vere stabbing of Prof. W. J, Wynn, in
Mariana, Fia. Prof. Wynn is a native
of Eatonton. A few days ago, accord
ing to the information, be punished
one of his pupils, a twelve-year-old
son of ex-Governor W. Y. Atkinson.
The boy had a knife concealed in his
sleeve and struck the teacher with it.
The blade eutered near tbe heart, pro
ducing a painful wound. The physi
cian says the escape from fatal results
was a narrow one. •
Must Use t'Offlcial” Ballot.
In a notice directed to the chairman
of every county Democratic committee
in Georgia, Vice Chairruaj* E. T.
Brown, of the state committed, ^ who is
acting in tbe absence of Chairman
duBignon, calls attention finally to
the rules and regulations of that body
governing the ballot to be used in the
primary of the 15th.
Every ballot to be used in the pri
mary is expected to conform to the
“official” arrangement of the ticket
made by the sub-committee of the
state committee appointed for that
purpose at the last session.
The attention of the Democratic
committee has been called to the ac
tiou of several counties that have al
ready not conformed to the general
regulation, aud the reminder of the
state committee’s rule has been given
in order that no misunderstanding
may exist, or no claim of such misun
derstanding be filed after the ballots
are cast on May 15th.
Copies of the model ballot prepar
ed by the sub-committee were sent
several days ago to officers in each
county so that by this time all are
aware of the arrangement of the ticket.
Vice Chairman Brown stated that the
only object of the state eommitteo in
providing for an official ballot bad
been to avoid unnecessary frietiop and
insure justice to every man who is a
candidate for office.
It is understood that some of the
county committees, acting possibly
before tbe rule of the state committee
had become generally known, have
prepared their ballots iu various man
ners, aud consequently are beyond tbe
pale of the coutrolling committee’s
rule on the subject.
What action the state convention will
take wheu it meets in June regarding
auy couutv that voted an irregular
ballot at the primary is not even a
matter of conjecture at this time, since
it is presumed that evory county will
follow the direction of the committee.
Stata Sunday School Convention.
The state Sunday school convention
at Augusta the past week was declared
to be the best yet beld in Georgia.
Tbe time aud place of holding the
next convention will be selected dur
ing the year by the executive commit
tee.
ICalns Delay Cotton Planting.
In his monthly talk to the farmers of
Georgia, issued last Saturday, Commis
sioner of Agriculture O. B. SteveDs
gives the growers sound advice on the
mauagemeut of tbe general crops dur
ing May, The article is one of the
best compiled by the state commis
sioner, for it deals with subjects that
cannot fail to be of interest and im
portance to the agricultural classes,
subjects on the soil and its cultivation
iu order that the greatest amount of
plant food may be at the control of
planters.
Farmers are particularly warned not
to allow the May grasses to remain un
disturbed, aud by clearing off the
grass at the very start the grower can
remain tbe master of the situation for
the rest of the season.
The monthly publication contains
in addition a valuable treatise by the
state chemist on the production of
beef, butter and milk and the import
ance of the production of these sta
ples. EntoiUolopst Scott gives at.
State
length his remedy for curling peach
leaves, as the result of experiments on
a large orchard in Cobb.
Cotton Growers’ Convention.
The Cotton Growers’ convention to
be held in Macon, beginning May 12,
has become a matter of national im
portance and prominent men from dis
tant states will be in attendance.
Some of the largest cotton bouses in
New York will send representatives
and have telegraphed friends in Macon
to engage rooms for next Saturday.
The cotton growers have invited bank
ers, merchants and business men to
meet with them and a number will be
there.
The farmers are taking a great in
terest in the meeting and many coun
ties have elected delegates. Thirty
counties heard from directly or indi
rectly will send about 300 delegates.
After carefully going over the reports
from different counties. Hon. U. M.
Jordan, of Monticelio, and Mr. N. R.
Hutchinson, of LaGrange, Ga., who
are acting as a committee of arrange
ments, estimated that the convention
would have something like 1,000 dele
gates.
Editors Will Visit Athens.
President W. S. Coleman, of the
Georgia Weekly Press Association,
has accepted in behalf of the associa
tion the invitation of the University of
Georgia, the State Normal school and
Athenaeum Club to spend the after
noon and evening of July 16th in
Athens previous to attending the an
nual convention at Elberton the next
day. The press delega'es will be
shown over the university and State
Normal school during the afternoon,
and at night will be bauqnetted by the
Athenaeum.
*
Pat Kearney Pardoned.
A day or two ago Goveruor Candler
signed a pardon which gives liberty
once more to Patrick Kearney, the Sa
vannah citizen who shot and killed J.
W.Wyr.ess in that city, in April, 1896.
Pat Kearney was convicted of mur
der in the first degree and sentenced
to the penitentiary for life. The •sen
sational trial which endefl in the con
viction of Kearney was eclipsed, so far
as human interest is concerned, by the
subsequent proceedings in which an
entirely different jury determining the
suit of J. W. Wyness’ widow for the
payment of her husband’s insurance
policy, declaring that the killing was
not murder, but the result of accident.
Thus two juries passed on the facts in
the ease. Under the verdiot of the
first jury Kearney was sentenced to
the penitentiary for life, while the ver
dict of the second jury held the shoot
ing lo be accidental.
The policy for $5,000 taken out by
Wyness recited at length that if the
holder should meet his death at the
hands of a murderer, the the policy should
be void. When jury of the superior
court of Chatham declared ^Kearney
guilty of murder, the insurance com
pany refused to pay the policy, and a
suit was begun by the widow to force
the company to meet its obligation.
The facts of the shooting were gone
over agiin at length, with the result
that the jury declared Wyness had
not been murdered, and the insurance
company was liable for the payment
which it was forced to make.
The application for tho pardon of
Pat Kearney was argued before the
pardon board by his Savannah counsel
some days ago.
Embalmed To Meet.
It is expected that there will be
fully two hundred embalmers in Ma
con on June 6 tli to appear before the
state board of examiners, which meets
on that date. The visitors will be
given a reception while in the city.
Under a law passed at the last leg
lature this board was created and the
governor given the power to make the
appointments.
It will be necessary for every, em
balmer in the state to appear before
this board, pass the examination and
secure a license before they will be al
lowed to practice the profession. T he
law makes it a misdemeanor for any
one to practice after July 1st without
a license.
It is expected that there will be em
balmers present from every city and
town in the state and fully two hund
red in all. The examinations will be
in writing, but it has not yet been de
termined what average will be required.
Getting: Heady For tlic Fair.
Preliminary steps are being taken
to put Exposition park in Atlanta in
proper shape for the comiug southern
industrial fair. In about a week the
board of directors will have acted on
reports as to what changes are needed
and men will begin work at the park.
. * *
Mills Eor Woodstock.
Arrangements are about completed
for building a cotton seed oil mill and
a rope factory at Woodstock, This
mill and factory will be built by the
citizens of the community. There is
a rope factory in three miles of the
place, which has paid so well and the
demands for rope being too great for
it to fill, it has been decided to build
another at once.
Denmark Won’t Sell.
The Copenhagen correspondent of
the London Times says: “The project
of selling the Danish West Indies to
the United States has been abandon
ed. There is strong opposition to the
idea and the king himself is against
it.”
GEORGIA – ALABAMA RAILWa! 1
PASSENGER SCHEDULES,
Effective Dec. 24. 1899.
No. 19* No. 11* MAIN LINE. No. 18* So.
C *0 o 3 7 25 a m Lv Savannah. Ar 8 25 pm
4—* o 3 8 00 a m Ar .Collins... . Cuyler... -tr 7 43 p ua
4–4. Ci 3 9 45 a ni Ar Ar 6 09 p m
a B 11 45 a m Ar .Helena... Ar 4 05 p m
12 3C pm Ar. .Abbeville ■ .Lv 315pm.
No 15* No.
8 00 am 12 30 p m L < . .Abbeville • • r 3 15 p m 7 05 ? n
9 00 am 1)1 40 p m A } .COUDKLE J v 2 10 p m e os ^
9 00 am |]2 10 p m L < t r II 1 40 p ni tioij P
10 02 a m 3 1 0 pm A -s . Americus. j_-__ v 1 2 34 p ni 5 oo P
3 10 p m Lv Americas.. .. Ar 12 34 pm
4 04 p iin Ar, .Richland. ..Ar 1135 am
5 58 p m Ar, Hurtsboro .. Ar 9 37 a m
7 55 p in 1 Ar Montgomery.........Lv 7 45 a m
__
No. 3.f No. L* Columbus and Albany Division. No. 2.* No. A
4 30 am 10 00 a m Lv Columbus Ar 5 20 pm O*0MO o>
7 40 am 11 25 a m Ar Richland, Lv 4 04 pm <=>
9 20 am 12 34 p m Ar...........Dawson............Lv 2 56 pm <=> W
10 30 a m 1 25 p m Ar .Albany Lv 215 pm D
Trains Nos. 1 and 2 carry through coaches between Atlanta and~AlbaM u }
connection with Southern Railway.
No. 11* No. 7.t Fitzgerald Branch No. 8. t No. 12
oc«~i WO ^ 5 8 00 a m Lv Abbeville Ar 2 55 p m a
^ S 10 20 am Ar Fitzgerald Lv 1255 pm
oo cS ^ S 11 00 a n i Ar.. Ocilla... Lv 11 30 am a
* Daily. t Daily, except Sunday. \ Sunday only. II McaTStatioi
CONNECTIONS. S-l j
At Savannah with Florida Central and Peninsular railroad and Plant Ploriij
tern for Washington, Baltimore, New York , also for other pointsm
With steamship lines for Baltimore, New York and Boston.
At Cuyler with Savannah and Statesboro railroad for Wool
burn and Statesboro. alsowitj
At Collins with Stillmore Air Line for Stillmore and Swainsboro,
Collins and Reidsville railroad for Reidsville. an]
At Helena with Southern Railway lor Brunswick, Macon, Atlanta
points At Cordele beyond. with Georgia Southern and Florida Railway for Macon, ValdoJ
ta, Lake City, Palatka and points beyond. With Albany and Northern Rad
way for Albany.
At Americas with Central of Georgia Georgia Railway.
At Columbus with Central of Railway and Soutlie. n Railway.
At Dawson with Central of Georgia Railway.
At Albany with Central of Georgia Railway and Plant System.
At Hurtsboro with Central of Georgia Railway.
At Montgomery with Louisville and Nashville railroad for Mobile, New Or
leans, Birmingham, Nashville, Cincinnati, Evansville, St. Louis and beyond
With Mobile and Ohio railroad for Columbus, Corinth. Cairo, St. Louis ant
points oeyond. With Western Railway of Alabama for Selma andbeyo>d.
Elegant Buffet Parlor Cars on Trains Nos. 11 audi 18 between Savaiinah stt
Montgomery: CECIL GABBETT,
Vice-lTes’t and GenT Mgr.
A. TOPE, General Passenger Agent.
Albany – Northern Railway,
To Take Effect 5 A. M. Monday, June 19, 1899.
Central Time Standard.
Between Albany and Cordele.
South Bound North Bound
First Class First Cld3:
21 11 17 Stations. 18 12 | 221
Daily Sun- Sun- ;Daily I
Sund’y exe’pt day Daily Daily day Kxc-j J
Mxd. Pas. only. Pas. Only Sunc : ; ]
Pas. Pas. Mxcti
A. M. A. M. . M. Arrive Leave ’ M. . M. P.M
9 80 9 40 CO 30 . Albany . Gtt 05 ^ 00 ^
8 58 9 19 CO 10 .. Beloit . O* 26 4^- 21 or
8 40 9 04 to 56 .Philema CM 41 36 O*
8 27 8 56 to 49 . Oakfield A CM 49 ^ Or
8 07 8 46 to 38 Warwick 'M 59 ^ 54 Ci
7 43 8 34 u> 28 . Raines . H 11 CJt 06 Ci
7 15 8 15 to 10 Lv . .Cordele Ar H 30 CI 25 —-t
J. S. CREWS, Gen’l. Manager.
Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Co.
Time Tables—In Effect January 22d, 1899.
S-u-tJect to Clia.-i.gr© "Wltla.c-u.t 3SrotS.ee.
NO. 5 NO. 3 NO. 1 SOUTHBOUND NO. 2 NO. 4 NO. 6
m 1:20 a id r-4 m Lv.....Cordele.....Ar p m gslisl–gaill am 2:20 a m 8:05
is 44 .. Arabi.... 4V 44 «• 7:4i
4t (7-4 44. 44 Asbburn .. 4. 44 * 4 1:36 “ 7:2<T
41 2:30 “ CC 44 44 ..Tifton......“ k4 4* 1:00 “ 6:3a
9: 44 3:21 “ CC 44 44 ,Sparks, »4 a ra 44 i I “ 5:52
4:05 “ ^ 44 44 Valdosta 44 44 p m M “ 5:00
5:00 “ (. >< . Jasper. it tt .. O
5:43 “ *0 it “ ..White Springs.. “ tt tt CS :4J
6:05 ” ZZ tt .. Lake City. u it tt CO :18
.
7:40 “ 7C t» tt .Hampton. tt tt 7 tt -1 :52
4 » Ci t. “ ......Palatka.. tt tt C 35
Connects at Palatka with Florida East Coast Bail way, J. T. – K. W., and Plant
System, and with St. Johns and Ocklawaba lilver steamers.
NO. 6 NO. 4 NO. 2 NORTHBOUND NO. 1 NO. 3 NO. 5
8:25 a m 2:20 a m \Z> 9 >s p m Lv.. Cordele.. Ar pm 1:30 am 1:20 3
. UK'4
8:45 “ 2:34 “ ii :25 “ Vienna.. ” “ 1:12 “ 1:02 44
....
0:04 “ 10 ) t. Pine hurst. » “ 12:57 • t
...
9:15 “ 2:55 “ to it t > Unadilla. » “ 12:49 “ 12:42 ci
.
9:40 “ M :05 ” tirovnnia.. ff “ 12:31 cc it
.. :
10:40 “ 3:55 W :53 “ w Sot' kee » am II :41 pm 11:45 t#
..
11:05 “ 4:15 “ It*- :15 l> Ar, Macou.., ,Ly “ 11:20 “ 11:25 tt
1 :«3 12:04
3:30 p m 7:35 p ra Ar.... Atlanta ... .Lv a m 7:50 p m 7:50 p m
,. -5 p m 1:00 a m ” ..Chattanooga.. ” ” 3:05 ” 2:55
J 55 *» 6:40 ” ” .Nashville.... ” p m 9:30 a ra 9:10
..
7:10 a m 7:32 p m ’’ ... .StLouis....” ” 8:55 ” 8:46
Trains l and 2. and trains 3 and 4 carry Pullman Buffet Sleeping cars between
St. Louis and Jacksonville, Fla. Trains 3 and 4 also carry local sleeper between
Macon and Palatka. Trains 5 and 6 are shoo-tty trains.
Full information from the undersigned G»
D. G. HALL, T. P. A. C. B. RHODES, Gen. Tass.Agt, Macon,
8 Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga.
HARRY BUNNS, F. P. A.. .Jacksonville, Fla.
WILLIAM CHKCKLKY SHAW, Vice-President, Macon, Ga.
Every Han
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
By J. ■Hamilton Ayers, M. D.
* A 600-page Illustrated Book, containing valuable information p« r *
taining to diseases of the human system, showing how to treat ana
cure with simplest of medicines. The book contains analysis besides o
courtship and marriage; rearing and management of children,
Valuable prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a full complement of faots in
# materia medica that everyone should know. household } .
0 This most indispensable adjunct to every well regulated S3A 1
* will be mailed, postpaid, to any address on receipt of price,
0 CENTS.
Address,
Atlanta Publishing House,
116-118 LOYD STREET, ATLANTA, GIL