The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, January 12, 1898, Image 2

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.•-■ - - — — » Mornins; Call. GRIFFIN, GA., JAN. 11. H - Officeover Davis’ harirare Store TKLKPHONBNO.M • • —^—era ya*—— •"** J.J» A A,B.aAWTBLI# jfirtawMdPnyrtrtMS. . « ‘ »*«*•* CAM. will W P»Nitoed - * lhre ? Hwatea* «tw. Deliver*! tw MxxmvUl GaoMU Fibmbm, pub- The hbop paper* tent to any addreee, of the State. “ Advertising rate# tarnished on applica lon ■ i». 1. 11...1 . Official Paper ol the Ordinary of Spalding county and.the City fe; of Cry A bil> to limit the legal practice of hypnotism to licensed physicians is to bo introduced into the New York leg islature. -the lather of the bill is eaid *„ to have collected a mass ol evidence going to show that hypnotism is ex tensively practiced by a large number of persons for illegal and disreputable purposes, “io the danger of the welfare of the slate.” The medical profession, e it i* stated, will support the bill. Western Kansas isoverrun this year with coyotes. It was thought that they had been almost exterminated by the warfare made by the settlers of the new country, but reports from that section indicate that they are multi plying instead of diminishing. They have killed thousands of sheep, and even go into the farmers’ henhouses and kill their cbick'ens. Dogs ere no protection against their invasions, for one coyote, if cornered, will whip tiree ” ordinary doge. Il is reported that the stale of Vir ginia will lease a number of her con victs-—probably 200 of them —to be worked upon a sugar beet farm in the state. The scheme has much to re commend it. The success of sugar beet cultivation in Virginia by convicts || would probably have the effect of in« teresting the farmers in the suga- in dustry. Al the same time, the employ ment of convicts at such work wonld not conflict with free labor. The country now uses millions of dollars’ worth of sugar more than it raises or will raise in many years to come. Slate School Commissioner Glenn is busy with the blanks for the school census, work on which is to begin as soon as the stationery can be printed and distributed to the County School Commissioner. Tho matter is in the hands of the state printer and blanks will be ready in a few days, and the commissioner proposes to push the work so that the enumeration in all the counties will be complete and tab ulated by May 1. By the enumeration ~ of 1893 the school population of Geor gia was 604,000. Under the law a jew census has to be taken every five years, and one is due this spring There is much interest in the school census because they are the only courts be tween decades to show the growth of population. The number of children of school ago bears an almost uniform relation td the total population, and closely indicates the increase in the number of inhabitants. Commissioner Glenn expects a big increase, approxi mating 100,000, and in this he is not guessing, for the yearly reports of en rollment and actual attendance on the common schools have shown a remark ably progressive increase. The in crease in the total population of the stole as indicated by Commissioner Glenn’s estimate of 700,000 for school population wonld be something like 300,000 for five years. The census of 1890 gave Georgia a population of 1,837,000 and, in 1893 it was estimated at 1,947,000. A gain of 100,000 in school population since 1893 would in dicate a gain of 300,000 in the total population, and would indicate that Georgia has 2,237,000 inhabitants, which is a 22 per cent, increase in eight years. Still Leading A. K. Hawkes received the gold medal highest award from the great Exposition, superior lens-grinding and excellency m the manufacture of spectacles and eye glasses. This award was justly earned by Mr. Hawkes as the superiority of "his glasses over all others has made them .amouall over the country. They are now bel«g sold in over eight thousand cities and towns in the U. H. Prices are never reduced, earns to all. J. N. Harris A Son have-a tall assort ment of all the la tert stylee ——EWFr-.r15.-a7'. ga*. ' -fC-i sjrjfc:, ACr o'te.'ifir,-. ■ -» I. •• -- ■■■■ ' ■ V ■ ■' THE CZAR’S CURIOSITY. ato »-*«*»*« «** «*»»«“•’'» n»ii ‘o •«. i Hew tho M»ehMolH>i, Worked. , Tto> heavy bonlon <rf autocracy hns not I gmtinyw* all tho boyish instincts in Nioh- I etas li*e dWpooltlon. as U>o following an- < board at a dinner party given in i besnr erf a gvntloioan of M. Fauro'j escort_ .4 to fete late journey, proves: The I •tier having eoarehed all too beet Parlsia* ’ »to find sonio toys worthy of the two 1 grand duchwwca’ acceptance, and, 1 having bought too overliwti ng guidon rat tie 1 fto Miss Tntiana, was in tkmpoir for sonto- I thing out of the common to give Miss i Olga Ho at butt choso two wonderful ] dolls, one got np as- an elegant lady, the ’ other as an overdresaal little girl, ami, after much difficulty a most complicated 1 piece erf machinery WM inrertod, thanks to which, when wound up, the Indy and 1 her daughter begin a tadlcrous bit of con venation, which is finished by too little girl crying Iwcanso rho is not allowed to ride a donkey on account of her gauze dress. * The baby grand duchess was delighted, but not more so than her father, who, it < appears, spent an hour on the floor with tho child listening to the squeaky dia logue between tho dolls. But the time ; camo when the princess had to go to bed, i which she did very reluctantly. As for tho emperor, bo remained an instant in the boudoir after her departure with tho two clever artificial, ladies who bad taken his fancy, while the empress, M. Faure and some ladles and gentlemen of the court wore talking in the next room. Sud denly a strange noise like that of an infer nal machine was heard, fpUowed by a loud cry of dismay, and every body rushed to see what it was There was tho emperor safe and sound, but with a dismal face, looking at tho dolls, which he had partly undressed to find out tho secret hidden in their bosoms, while toe dolls wore chattering awuy as if they would never stop. The empress, un able to restrain her temper, snatched up the carpeted board on which were stand ing and shaking tho two precious ladles, and after having crushed her husband with a withering eye she said to a gentle man near It is too bad Indeed. Tho emperor spoils everything ho touches.” But Nicholas looked so penitent and the mishap was so funny that she could not help laughing.— Philadelphia Times. When Was the Uiblo Completed? Scholars differ in opinion as to tho date at which tho books now found in the Now Testament were completed, but it Is prob able that this was accomplished not later than 180. Many centuries had passed in the formation of tho Old Testament, but the Now was all written within a single 100 years. The decision as to which books should bo received into tho new canon was not so quickly reached, for the earliest fa thers of tho church frequently quote from other gospels, such as ono “according to the Egyptians,” or “according to the He brews, ” and the Syrian church accepted some books hot received by that of north Africa or the western church and vice versa. There is a legend that at tho first ecumencial council of Nictea, 325, copies of all the Christian literature then current wore laid beneath the altar and tho gen uine books leaped out of the mass and , ranged themselves on the altar. It prob- I ably contains a germ of the truth—that at this convocation it was decided that the books now received were apostolic or writ ten under apostolic direction, and tho oth ers were spurious. Bo this as it may, the judgment of several generations of Chris tiana certainly decided upon the value of these books as distinguished from many others written at about that time or later, and the council of Carthage (397) is said to have fixed the canon. The word “can on" was first used by Athanasius, in the fourth century, in the sense of “accepted” or “authorized,” and Jerome and Augus tine held tho present Now Testament as canonical.—Clifton Harby Levy in Ameri can Monthly Review of Reviews. The Kvll of Trade Unionism. Wo are not disputing here the right of workmen to combine for the advancement and protection of their craft. Nor is it to bo denied that such right carries with it the right for each trade union to make such rules and regulations as it deems fit for its own members. Where the mischief begins is when trade unions seek to make rules which fetter other workmen and which tie the hands of employers. And where trade unionism begins to bo abso lutely destructive In its effects on industry ts where, on the one hand, it endeavors to make n close corporation by limiting the number and restricting tho employment of apprentices, and where, on the other hand, it restricts the labor of the most cpmpetent to the capacity of tho roost idle and least efficient. All this trade unionism does. Overtime is objected to because, it is alleged, It di minishes the number that may be employ ed. But If overtime Is not worked orders cannot ba executed within the time in Which they are required. Therefore, the orderswill cease to come, and because Bill was not allowed to work extra hours Jack, Tom and Jim will not bo able to get work at all.—Benjamin Taylor In Cassler’s Magazine. Rothschild's Error. It may require as much imagination to draw pleasure out of an unspent dollar as it does to get it from an unsmelled flower, or an unkissed love, or any of the unexist ing realities that poets deal in. Many a laborious and ascetic financier must live in a wqrld of imagination, a commercial dream, as little tangible as that of tho poet. “My food and lodging are all I get for my wealth, ” said the elder Rothschild. He was mistaken; ho forgot his dream of wealth. He, too, was one of the poets of a financial age. Nor, lastly, can ft be that tho delight of giving one self up to an impassioned thought, of which one is as sure as death and for which one is willing to die, is not still, as it always has been, the keenest pleas ure of a human souk—lL G. Chapman in Atlantic. St. Paul and Minneapolis. Fifteen years ago Chicago was the great central wheat market of toe west Even as late as four years ago its wheat receipts were over 50,000,000 bushels, but in 1896 they had declined to 19,101,159 bushels, while the wheat receipts of Minneapolis were 69,568,870 bushels and those of Du luth and Superior 56,607,397 —the total of the two cities being 126,176,267 bushels, or six times and a half the Chicago receipts. These figures tell their own story of the shifting of the trade currents of the north west to their natural channels and go far to explain the remarkable growth of St Paul and Minneapolis from a population trf 88,000 in 1870 to more than ten times that number in 1897.— “ The New North west,’* by J. A. Wheelock, in Harper's Magazine. - . . . ~ _ _ . • - - II II I Illi '"I"* Mow unontal IscpuiUno*. A soldier stationed at a Kansas post got bls discharge from tlw service a few years ago by a steady display of monumental impudence that could be attributed only to insanity. Tho third day after this sol dier arrived at the Kansas post With a shipment of troops from a Nebraska gar riwfi EffWjM put on guard. He was walk ing No. 1 post In front of the guardhouse when the post chaplain, a very pompous man, enme along. The soldier gave him no rifle salute nor any other sort of recog nition. The chaplain turned and walked back past the sentry. He did not get so much as a look from the man pacing bls poet. The ohaplain strode up to the sentry with wrath in hie eye. “My man,” said ho, “do you know who I ami” “Naw,” said the sentry. “Who tho h—-1 are you anyhowf” The ohaplain looked aghast. “I am the ghaplain of this post,” he managed to utter. The soldier looked -him ovor critically from head to foot. “Well,” he said finally, “you’ve got a d—d good job, haven't yonf” Ten minutes later the sentry was re lieved of his gun and belt and was in the guardhouse. In the afternoon he was taken before the commanding officer. He looked at the commanding officer quiz zically. “You’re a blooming old fraud,” said he to one of the most stately colonels In the army. g Tho post surgeon was called In. He be gan questioning the soldier, wljo would answer no questions. “Ob, you’re toe sawbones, I see,” said be to tho surgeon finally. “And you don’t look as If you knewaiß much about surgery as mo aunt in Ireland/’ This soldier was outside of toe post gate with his discharge in his pocket two weeks later.—New York Sun. i Intorcsting Legal Possibilities. When the learned assistant corporation counsel, camo into court .the other day wearing “a gray skirt, narrow white leather belt, black and white check shirt waist, standing collar and black tie,” it was at onoe apparent to the chroniclers of tho proceedings that tho time for a depar turein the musty methods of setting down toe evolution of the law had arrived. The entrance of the learned assistant corporation counsel was, in fact, a kind of formal notification that the law Is even now in the process of being invested in shirt waists, gray skirts and th'e other mysteries of multifarious feminine habili ments, and that due regard must be paid to that fact hereafter in the literature of tho law. * The lawbooks will in time bo strewn with descriptive sentences of the sort used in reporting those present at the charity ball. Thus: “Opinion by Juggerson, Ch. J. (Black silk, cut high in tho neck, trimmed with jet.) . “Dissenting opinion by Pugsley, 'J. (Tailor made gown of blue cloth, full in the skirt, pearl ornaments.)” The journalistic account of the trial will ray: “Counsel for complainant then arose to reply, wearing a lovely satin dress trim med with lace. ” What a world of opportunity for crush ing repartee the new order will afford 1 'Thus, in the heat of forensic debate, shouts like this may be delivered, “I dis sent, your honors, from the position taken by counsel for the other side, whose hat, I may remark in passing, is not on straight. ” Or: “May it please the court, the prece dent which* opposing counsel has cited no more fits this case than her jacket fits her back. Her deductions, like her front hair, are false.”—Chicago News. A Town of Icelanders. The most Icelandic town in America is Minnesota, Minn. Even its mayor is an Ice lander. As most of these Icelandersjye Lu therans, they joined together a sets years ago and organized an independent synod. Until recently they have been greatly ham pered by the lack of a literature. This lack, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, bas been felt with much severity in their Sunday schools, where they had nothing to read or study printed in a language that either old or young could understand. To meet the want a firm of young Iceland ers has recently started the publication of a Sunday school paper containing the les sons. These Icelanders live, for the most part, in Minnesota, North Dakota and Manitoba. Two years ago the Manitobans suggest ed the foundation of a college. It met with instant approval, but the town of Crystal, N, D., which has in it some New England enterprise, got in the first inducement to locate In tbe shape of an offer of a bonus of 82,000 and six acres of land. Park River, N. D., almost immediately offered >4,000 and ten acres of land. This was all done before Winnipeg had waked up. The latter claimed that as the suggestion had come from it, it ought to have a chance to hold out an inducement to build the school in Winnipeg. Accordingly, to give the slow Englishmen up there time to decide whether or not to help their Ice landic neighbors, a decision concerning the location was postponed until the Ist of next January. On that date Park River, N. D., is to have toe Iceland college if it raises its bonus to 86,000, and if Winnipeg meanwhile is able to make no tempting offers. An Unsuspected Bribe. Justice Brewer of toe United States su preme court recently told the following anecdote: “Several years ago a cigar maker in Washington named Scott got up a brand of cigars which he called the ‘Supreme Court. * The labels on the inside of the boxes were pictures of the entire oourt, and tho cigar was a good one. I know this because one day each of the jus tices received two boxes of them, with the compliments of Mr. Scott. Nothing was thought of this fact at toe time, and it was taken as a slight courtesy in return for the use of our pictures, but several weeks later we learned that the cigars had been sent to soothe our anger. One of toe clerks had gone to Scott and told him that the members of the court were much pro voked at him and intended prosecuting him for taking suca liberties with their pictures. Scott was frightened, and he hit upon toe idea of bribing the justices, and I suppose thought he succeeded, for he was never prosecuted, nor had such a thing been thought of.” Chicago River. “The cost of widening the Chicago river ■ufficiently ta secure 800,000 cubic foet of water per minute for the Chicago drainage canals,” says toe Philadelphia Record, “is estimated to be 8375,000 bgr the committee of real estate experts appointed by the board of trustees. This committee divides the cost as follows: Real estate, 873,000; purchasing and docks, 825,000; dredging, <75,000; oonstruction of bv passes, 8200, UOO.” Sffcpp’fßGs OCT® KJVTOYS Both the method ana results when Syrup of Figais taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, 3M FKAHCISCO. CAL UMWIHE. KT. KEHf TQKK. M i WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR., Counsellor at Law, GRIFFIN, JGA. GENERAL PRACTICE. . ■ > •« i V rL 1.0 - sSf>7 / V- & t? ; "’-n? SCHOOL OPENS JAN. 10th,! , And the New Book and Music Store will • be ready to meet your wants in everything in this line, all at cut prices. J. H. HUFF, 24 HILL STREET. I , » t * ’ >* oe ’ 1 MgßmMgfagii " c> — 1 CHRISTMAS COMES ’ BUT ONCE A YEAR, j but we are always prepared tor it with the , daintiest a©.d choicest articles as gifts for j those whom you would remember. "We 3 have a handsome display of holiday gifts ’ in bottles of perfumery, boxes of fine toi ; let soaps, shaving sets, cut glass atomizers, I combs and brushes, lamps, etc. • N. B.DREWRY*SON, f 28 Hill Street. Bld do poison euredinlsto3s days. Toucan be treated at home for same price under same guaran ty. If you prefer to come here we will con tract to pay railroad fareand hotel bills,and r noehane, ifwe fail to cure. If you hare taken mer cury, iodide potash, and still have aches and • nalna. Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat. , Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Fleers on any jmrt of the body, Bair or Eyebrows fallinr ’ out, it is this Secondary BLOOD POISON ; we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti- Date cases and challenge the world for a , ease We cannot cure. This disease has always I baffled the skill of the most eminent physS I rtans- 9300,000 capital behind our uncondi. ttonal guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed on ) aoplteation. Address COOK KBMEDY Cos 6 349 Masonic Teaaple, CHICAUO, TX T- • 5 -Wttfr» -St» -- -• ~ ; CANDY jg CATHARTIC Ji rcujeaicU CONSTIPATION loe > 506 drucgcts ; ■ "' - - ■ t ■ Griffin Telephone Exchange branch of ths bouthebn bell tele, PHONE AND TELECnAPH CO. •* ' , , JNO. D. EABTERLIN, Supt. W. T. GENTRY, Assistant Supt’ < Atlanta, Ga. , 16 Anthony, Dr. E. R., residence, 2 rings ( 40 Co. 1 Bailey, D. J., Jr., reS»*ace. 26 Bailey, Mrs. S. M.,residence ; 49 Bishop, J. W., Market. 30 Blakely, B. R , Grocer. 31 Boyd, J. D., warehouse, 2 rings. 31 Boyd, J. D., residence, 3 rings. 37 Boyd Manufacturing Co. 43 Brewer & Hanleiter, wholesale grocers. 4 Burr’s Sons, H. C., Hardware, 2 calls. 4 Burr, H. 0., res. 3 calls. 38 Carlisle & Ward, druggists. 45 Central R. R. depot. 28 Clark, A. 8., groceries. 39 Clak & Son, G. W., grocers. 16 Collier, T. J., residence. 56 Crocker, C. A., Pomona, 2 rings. 15 Drake, R. H., grocries. Drake, Mrs. R. A, residence. 32 Elder, J. J.,& Son. 35 Earnhart, W. C., residance. 44 Fire department. 9 Grantland, Seaton, residence. 46 Georgia Experiment station. 6 Griffin, Mfg. Co. 19 Griffin Mfg. Co. 14 Gri®n Banking Co. 54 Griffin Compress. 50 Griffin Saving Bank. 25 Griffin Light and Water Works. 3 Griggs, Bob, livery stable. 36 Howard, W. K., residence. 8 Geo. 1., residence. 18 Kelley & Mhomas, physicians, 2 rings. 18 Melly, Dr. J. M., residence, 3 rings. 27 Kincaid, W. J., residence. 7 Kincaid Mfg. Co. (mills.) 21 Leach & Co., J. M„ grocers. 2 Mills. T. R., office, 2 rings. 2 Mills, T. R., residence, 3 rings. 47 Moore, Dr. J. L., residence. 22 Morning Call office, 2 rings, 34 Newton &Co., W. H., coal and lumb’r 5 Newton Coal and Lumber Co. 29 Osborn & Wolcott, office. 20 Oxford. D. A. market and restaurant. 22 Sawtell, J. P.,residencr, 3 rings. 18 Sears, J. M., grocer. 33 Shedd, J. R., market. 24 Southern Railroad. 13 Southern Express Company. 23 Spalding County Farm. 12 Stewart, Dr. J. F., residence, 11 Strickland, R. F. & Go. 41 Thurman & Barrow, livery stabie. 42 Western Union Telegraph Co. 59 Wood, Geo. W., Sunny Side, 3 rings. MISS VVE WORTHINGTON, Manager. > H rfSWWlirai WE ARE BUSY Selling goods at the following prices: Best imported Macaroni 10c. 31b. can Grated Pine Apple 10c can. 31b. can fine Peaches 10c can. 31b. can Table Peaches 121 c pound. 21b. can New Crop Corn 10c can. Imperial Brand Salmon 15c can.£ 4 cans Tomatoes 25c. California Dried Peaches 12jc pound. Evaporated Apricots 12|c pound. - Mixed Nuts 10c pound. Fresh Prunes 10c pound. Fresh Dates 10c pound. e Fresh Currents 10c pound. Fresh Codfish 8c pound.’ r Tomato Catsup 10c e London Layers Raisins 10c. s Mince Meat 10c pound. Backet Jelly 8c pound. Fresh Can Mackerel 15c can. ’» Shreded Cocoanut sc. Fancy Candy for cakes 25c pound. Bakers Chocolate 45c pound. Our market is always crowded with the J Choicest Fresh Meat. ■ J. R. SHEDD. Something New! * Every housekeeper needs Spoons and * Forks for daily use. A cheap plated arti i cle is poor economy when you can buy a ; first class article, of bright solid metal that , will always look bright, as there is no » plating to wear off, at 50 cents per pack } age. Splendid article for the kitchen, * picnicers, to send out meals, etc. Cheap } and always look well. ; A. LOWER. J No. 18 Hill Street. Ordinary’s Advertisements. c ' ■ -3t 1 Administrator’s Sale. STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalping County. By Virtue 0< an order granted by th,* Court of Ordinary of Spa ding County, ■ Georgia, at the December term, 1897, ot .■ said court, I will sell to the highest bidder A before the courthouse door in Spalding ■ county, Ga., on the first luesday in Feb ruary, 1898, between the usual hours of I ea’e the following property, to-wit: | Five shares of the capital stock of the Southwestern Railway. Sold as the prop. I erty of Mrs. Martha T. Trammell, late ci said county, deceased, for toe purpose of ■ S' ig the debts and division among the I Administrator of Estate of Mrs. Martha T. ■ Trammell. STATE OF GEORGIA, Sfauhkg County. ■ To all whom it may concern: Whereas, ( A J Walker, Administrator of the estate I of Miss Lavonia Walker, deceased, has in due form applied to me for leave to sell all I that part of lot ot land No. 11, m Akins ■ district, Spalding county, Ga., bounded as o follows: North by lands of Thos. Thrower, g east byland of J. A. Beeks, south by lands g> of John Freeman, and west by lands of * A. J. Phennazee, containing one thundred B and twenty acres, more or less. Bold for - purpose of paying debts and arv»m O among the heirs of said deceased. This is Js to cite all persons interested to show cause before me, on first Monday in February | next, why said order should not be grant- ■ ed, at which time said application wul be heard and passed upon. Jan. 3,1898. J? A. DREWRY, Ordinary. STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalping County. | To all whom it may concern: J. M. Mills, I manager Newton Coal and Lumber Co., I of said State, having in proper form ap- g, plied to me as a creditor of Mrs. H- G. Scandrett for permanent letters °* a ““ ln * istration on the estate of Mrs. H. C. ’• drett. Thss is to cite all and singular the ■ creditors and heirs of Mrs. H. C. Scandrett to be and appear at my office on first Mon- ■ day in February next of said court of Ordinary of said county, and show cause, I if any they can, why permanent letters of ■ administration should not be granted to J. M. Mills, Manager .Newton Coal and Lum ber Co., on Mrs. H. C. Scandrett’s estate. I J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. I Jan. 3,1898. tkAAMj, 50 YEARS* Jh M f L J J VL ra -«HI / A H ■ J L ■ PSTv I■k■ K * 1 Trade Marks • Designs | "vv" Copyrights Ac- I Anyone sending a sketch and descrtpUOTi may quickly ascertain onr opinion free whether an invention is probably tions strictly confldentlaL Handbook on PaUmta ta so^ rt r«s-y e special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lanrest rir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms. W a ■ year; four months, JL Sold by all newsdealers. Southern Railway. J ” Shortest and quickest route with double daily service between Columbus and Atlanta, connecting in the Union Passenger station, Atlanta, with Vestibuled Limited trains; also United States Fast Mail trains to and from WashingWn, New York and all Eastern points. Also promptly connecting sot and from Cliat tanooga, Louisville, Cincinnati and the North . I west and through PuJlman Vestibuled Sleep ing Cars to Kansas City and the West. Schedule in effect December 5, 1897. Central standard time except at points east of Atlanta. . No. 27 No. ' «»rthbound. Ua| , y Lv. Columbua. <> 05 am s~spm “ Waverly Hall ato am ’ “ Oak Mountain TU2 ain 6a2pm “ WhrmSprings 732 a m 652 pm “ Woodbury 7 50.a m 710 pm “ Concord 815 a m 735 p m “ Williamson 832 am 753 pm “ Griffin 8 4i) a m 80s) pm “ McDonoughl 080 a m 845 pm Ar. Atlanta[lo 20 a m 045 p m Lv. Atlantall2 00 n'n. 11 So p m Ar. Washingtoni 642 a m 925 pm “ New Yorkll2 43 pm 623 am Lv. Atlanta 280 pm 500 am Ar. Chattanooga 730 pm 930 am Ar. Ixmisviile 7 2,’ am; Til) pm Ar. Cincinnati. 7 20 am 7 20 p m « 4 J No. 30 X.V. 29 Southbound. D-|ly Lv. Cincinnati. . .. 830 am 800 p m Lv. Louisville. 745 am < 4a pm “ Chattanooga:. CSO p m BOJ a m Ar. Atlantalo 40pm ! It) ain i : —-- Lv. New Y0rk.1215 am’ 4 30p»> - “ Washingtonllls a milO 43 p m Ar. Atlanta 510 am 3jo pm Lv. Atlanta 5 2s> a mi 4 40 p m “ McDonough.,... 615 am 585 pm , “ Griffin 651 am 6N pm “ Williamson 703 am 625 pm “ Concord 724 a m 641 p m “ Woodbury 753 am 710 pm “ WafmSpnngs 809 am; 745 pm “ Oak Mountain 837 am 814 pin “ Waverly Hall 846 am: 822 pm 4r. Columbus 935 am■ 910 p m : TO MAOOH. ' i Daily. No. 37.: No. 29 Lv. Columbus, South’n Ry. 605 am 525 pm , Ar. Woodbury, South’n Ry. 75J a m 719 p»» i •* Macon, M. &B. R. R... UOO a n Ar. LaGrange, M. & R R.R 25 p m Daily. No. 30 No. 23 Lv. LaGrange, M. & R R.R. 685 a m'.. , Lv. Macon, M. & R R.I 415 p r-> Ar. Woodbury,M.&R R.R. 750 am 710 pm Ar. Columbus, Soath’n Ry. 935 am 910 pm TO BRUNSWICK. Dally. . No. 29 I Lv. Columbus, South’n Ry.. 525 pml Ar. McDonough, “ 8'45 pm’ ' * Brunswick. »t “ 725 am! Daily. No. 30 j Lv. Brunswick,South’nßy. 830 pm Ar. McDonough, “ •• 610 a m ♦ “ rtJolumbus, “ 935 am . . Nog. 29 and 80—Pullman sleeping cars Le- ' tween McDonough and Brunswick- W. H. GREEN, J. M. CULP, Traf. Manager, Waeiungton, D. C. Washington, D. C ▼.A. TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK, G«n. Pas. Agent, A. Gen. Pas. Agent Washington. D. a Atlanta, Ga. T. K. PEABODY, Passenger & Ticket Agent. Columbus, Ga.- * " & I