Newspaper Page Text
•ME
Morning Cali. -
GRIFFIN, GA, JAN. 14, 1808.
Office over Davis* hardware Store
TELEPHONE NO. M.
—*—
L P. A 8. B. BAWTELL,
Editors uid Propriaton.
—... 1 Maggaeaaseggse
Taa Morkixo Call will be published
Jelly— Monday excepted—at |S.OO per an
num, $9.50 for six months, sl3sfor time
months, or 10 cents per week. Delivered
by carriers at any point in the city.
The MrnDLB Gnonora Fabmbb, pub
lished every Thured y atOOcU per year
Sic for six months, 15c for three months.
The above papers sent to any
Gboboia Fabmbb will ever be the best
advertising mediums for tills entire section
of the State. '
Advertising rates furnished on applica
ion
Offlclal Paper of the Ordinary
dSpalffitwatjaoilltoClty
al Brtfflii.
More marriages would b» successful
“ if fewer men and women were failures
Cate, unlike politicians, give voice
to most decided utterances while on
the fence.
. <jfeujujiteißg. m.iji.iiiiW
Some one suggests that if you want
to live forever you should get on the
' pension roll.
Now is a good time to plant out fruit
trees and grapevines. There is no
better climate and soil for the culture
of fruits than in old Spalding.
=
It is noted that the cotton mills of
New England declared an extra divi
dend of ten per cent, on their profile
just before making that reduction of
eleven per cent, in the wages of 300,-
000 operatives.
Mint Director Preston estimates the
gold production of the world iu 1897
at $234,000,000, an increase over last
year of $30,000,000 The United Slates
will lead the column with $60,000,000,
an increase of 14 per cent.
The gubernatorial campaign prom
ises to open early in Georgia. Your
“Uncle Allee" Candler has already
pinned bis faith to a rabbit foot, while
Attorney Terrell is relying upon the
virtuesola 'possum ear—trophy of
the recent supper.
The Washington correspondent of
the Chicago Record 'says: “It would
be quite a coincidence if a Wellington
and a jßonapcrte should sit by side io
the senate of the United States, but
stranger things have happened. Well
ington is there already, and Charles
Jerome Bonaparte, a grandson of Na
poleon’s brother, is trying to get there
- from Maryland There may be a Wa
terloo in store for this Napoleon ”
We state for the benefit of judges,
justices of the p ace, ministers and
others engaged in performing marriage
ceremonies, that the law, as amended
by the last legislature, requires the re
taroof the marriage license to the
ordinary j>f the county from
which it was issued within thirty
days from the performance of the cere
mony and fixes a penalty for failure to
comply upon the part of those per
forming the ceremony. A failure to
return the same within the time prc«
scribed the delinquent to a
fine of twenty-five dollars.
Senator Mason has introduced a bill
fixing a special tax upon the manu
facture of mixed flour, manufacturers
being required to pay SIOO. Mixed
flour is defined by the bill to be food
product made from wheat and mixed
ground corn or other foreign sub
stances. A fine of SI,OOO is imposed
for the manufacture of this product
without paying the tax, and like
heavy fines are provided for other vio
lations. An intprnal revenue tax of 4
cents for each 100-pound package in
addition to the customs duty, is im
posed upon imported mixed flour.
DcS’t Tobacco Spit sad Smoke Toor Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be map
netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Dae. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, sOo or Si. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co. Chicago or New York.
Public School Notice for 1898.
Public schools will be continued the
present year six and one half scholas
tic mouths, or 130 days. The first
term embraces the months of January
February, March and April, and closes
ou ra*6th of May. The summer term
will begin July 11th and continue two
months 1
A temporary examination will be
held Saturday, Jah. 15th.
By order of the board:
J. O. A. MILLER, C. 8. O.
EDMUND BURKE. .
? / ~ s -—' —
An Able and Versatile StaUoman Who
Never Attained High once.
Though Burke never attained high
office his abilities w< ro so versatile as to
qualify him for niry post which a cabi
net minister could fill. His practical
wlvdoni was as conspicuous as his power
of generalization. No one had a clearer
comprehension or a firmer grasp of great
prluciplecof universal application; at
the same time hie policy in every de
partment of English politics rested on
a wide and solid Lams of information
and experience. Ho was steeped in th a
history of the past, yet penetrated
through and through the reality of
the present had ever and always mind
ful of that future in which the specula
tions and measures of the day were to
foe tested and finally approved or con
demned. His prodigious activity in pub
lic affairs sprang not from an intellec
tual source alone, nor from his imperial
patriotism. It was constantly fed from
tn inexhaustible store of moral energy.
He Was animated by a detestation, of all
forms of oppression, whether by kings
or governors, parliaments or peoples,
which was iu him a consuming passion,
from which his noble nature could only
obtain relief by denunciation of the op
pressor and the destruction of his power.
I cannot help thinking that Burke
must have been stimulated, too, and
sustained by delight in his studies and
his work. It is impossible, without
counting this as on additional incentive,
to" understand the amazing industry
Which he devoted to the elucidation of
all the great questions dealt with in his
speeches and writings. How his method
reproves the habit, too common in our
day, as in other days, of debating sub
jects affecting the fate of millions of our
fellow creatures as if they could be de
posed of by echoing the chatter of igno
rance, or prejudiep, or vanity, or self in
terest! When we read Burke’s speech on
Fox’s East India bill, we say, “What a
great groconsul he would have made!’’
When we read his speech on concilia
tion with America, we feel that the
greatest of colonial ministers was lost
in him, and when we read his speech on
economical reform we exclaim, "Here is
an ideal chancellor of the exchequer!”—
J. O’Connor Power in North American
Review. -
SMOKED CANARY BIRDS.
Do Clouds From a Pipe Develop a Rich
Color In Their Plumage?
A little old shoemaker who has a
busy, old style cobbling shop on the east
side is a bird fancier, and he has pe
culiar ideas about canaries. One night
he was sitting on his leather covered
bench, smoking an extremely odorous
quality of tobacco in a black pipe. A
customer was waiting for him to finish
straightening up a worn heel, and he
made several remarks concerning the
birds which hung about the cobbler’s
shop. They were fancy birds, ahd he
could not help noticing it Finally he
asked the shoemaker how he got such
richly colored birds.
"It’s part iu the breeding and part in
the atmosphere,” said the cobbler.
"You raise birds in a shop where two
or throe men are constantly smoking,
and in time you will get the darkest
orange color if you use a little judg
ment in mating and they don’t run to
green. ’ ’
"I should think that tobacco smoke
would be unwholesome for tho birds,”
said the visitor.
“On the contrary, it makes them
hardy and seems to be good for them
every way. Women who have canaries
would do well to put them where they
can get a little tobacco smoke once in
awhile, although I don’t think cigarette
smoke would do them much good. What
they need is strong tobacco smoke from
an old pipe like this or the smoke from
a black cigar. I’ve raised my best birds
when I had two jours working in this
little shop with me and all of us smok
ing pretty nearly all the time. ’ ’
Then the old man sighed and said:
"That was before they half soled and
heeled shoes while yon wait —before
machines were used for cobbling. No
two or three jours and an apprentice for
me now. I sit hero alone, with my birds,
pegging away and keeping them well
smoked. ” —New York Sun.
Road and River.
The brave Pierre Stuppa, the Swiss
general, having been deputed by the 18
cantons to solicit the arrears of pay
which had been owing for a long time
to the Swiss officers in the French serv
ice, M. de Louvois, the war minister,
who was present, said to the king,
Louis XIV:
“Sire, those Swiss are very importu
nate. If your majesty had all the money
that your royal predecessors have given
to that people, it would form a road
from Paris to Basel. ”
"That may be,” observed Stuppa
with an air of firmness, "but at the
same time if your majesty had all the
blood that the Swiss have shed in the
service of France it would form a river
from Paris to Basel. ’ ’
Tho king was so struck with the ob
servation that he ordered M. de Louvois
to pay the whole of the money without
delay.—Nuggets.
He Was Cruel.
Mrs. Nubbons—My husband is a per
fect brute.
Friend —You amaze me.
Mrs. Nubbons—Since the baby began
teething nothing would quiet the little
angel but pulling his papa’s beard, and
yesterday he went and had his beard
shaved off.—London Tit-Bits.
Chinese cannot be telegraphed. Fig
ures have to be used corresponding to
certain words. Only one-eighth of the
words in the language are in this code,
but this has been found sufficient for
practical purposes.
For the burdens which God lays on
us there will always be grace enough.
The burdens which we make for our
selves we must carry alone.—A. W.
Thorold, D. D.
A FAMOUS PHOTOGRAPHER.
Mrs. Caasaron. Who W«» a Friend of
Herschel and Tennyean.
In The -Century V. C. Scott O’Con
nor has an article on "Mrs. Cameron,
Her Friends and Her Photographs.”
Mr. O’Connor says:
A feature of her personality which lay
nt the root of her great success as a
photographer was her love of all that
was beautiful. "She was always took by
a face, ” as an old woman in Freshwater
who remembers her put it to mo.
Charles Turner said tho same thing in
poet’s language when he told her, in the
sonnet he addressed to her on leaving
tho isle of Wight after a visit, that she
"loved all loveliness." In obedience to
this impulse she invariably stopped and
spoke to any one, however unknown,
whether in a great London thoroughfare
or a village lane, whoso beauty attracted
her. "lam Mrs. Cameron,” she would
say. “Perhaps you have heard of me.
You would oblige me very much if you
would let me photograph you. Will you
let me do soi” And by such bold and
unconventional means she prevailed on
many, absolute strangers though they
were, to sit to her.
One of her models captured in this
way was a yohng lady conle as a sum
mer visitor to Freshwater. Mrs. Camer
on, engrossed at that time in some re
markably fine studies illustrative of the
"Idylls of the King, ” was at a loss for
a model for Queen Guinevere. But the
advent of the fair stranger settled all
her doubts. Here was a beauty suited to
her purpose, and within the hour she
had carried her off to lunch and subse
quent photography.
Tho lady proved a most kind and in
defatigable model. The village postman
had already been secured for King Ar
thur, and Mrs. Cameron’s picture of
him in this character is one of the best
things in the collection. A friend, going
one day to Dimbola, found the young
lady looking rather fatigued.
“Oh,” she said, with an expressive
gesture, “I am sb tired.”
Supposing her fatigue was the result
of a long walk on a midsummer day,
my friend made some suitable reference
to the matter, but the young lady an
swered with a smile:
“Oh, no. I have not been for a walk.
I have been lying on tho floor for tho
last two hours, clutching tho postman’s
ankle. ”
Mrs. Cameron, ever kind and un
selfish, possessed tho faculty of bringing
out such qualities in others. In 1879
sho died, a few months after her last re
turn to Ceylon.
“As tho day died, ” her sons wrote to
*Lord Tennyson, “as the day died on
Sunday, January the 20th, the sweet,
tender, gracious spirit of our beloved
mother passed away in peace.” No
death could have been more calm, more
beautiful, than hers
Lincoln's •‘Selfishness.’’
Mr. Lincoln once remarked to a fellow
passenger on tho old time mud wagon
coach on the corduroy road which ante
dated railroads that all men were
prompted by- selfishness in doing good
or evil. His fellow passenger was an
tagonizing his position, when they were
passing over a corduroy bridge that
fanned a slough. As they crossed this
bridge and the mtid wagon was shaking
like a Sucker with chills, they espied
an old razorbacked sow on the bank of
the slough, making a terrible noise be
cause her pigs had got into the slough
and were unable to get cut and in dan
ger of drowning. As the old coach be
gan to climb the hillside Mr. Lincoln
called out, “Driver, can’t you stop just
a moment?” Tho driver replied, “If the
other feller don’t object.” The “other
feller” —who was no less a personage
than at that time Colonel E. D. Baker,
the gallant general who give his life in
defense of Old Glory at Ball’s Bluff—did
not “object, ” when Mr. Lincoln jumped
out, ran Lack to the slough and began
to lift the little pigs out of the mud and
water and place them on the bank.
When ho returned, Colonel Baker re
marked, “Now, Abe, where does selfish
ness come in on this little episode?”
“Why, bless you soul, Ed, that was the
very essence of selfishness. I would
have had no peace of mind all day had
I gone on and left that suffering old sow
worrying over tho®) pigs. I did it to get
peace of mind, don’t you see?” —Spring-
field (Dis.) Monitor.
Paying the Cook.
In old times to dine with a nobleman
cost more in tips to tho servants than a
club dinner. James Payn relates thht
Lord Poor, a well named Irish peer, ex
cused himself from dining with the
Duke of Ormond upon tho ground that
he could not afford it. “If you will
give me the guinea I have to pay your
cook (fancy!), I will come as often as
you choose to ask me, ” which was ac
cordingly done. The duke, however, had
not the pluck to stop tho practice. Lord
Taafe, a general officer in the Austrian
service, did what ho could. He always
attended his guests to the door. When
they put their hands into their pockets,
ho said: “Na If you do give it, give it
to me, for it was I who paid for your
dinner. ” To Sir Timothy Waldo must
be given the credit of putting an end to
tho monstrous practice. After dinner
with the Duke of Newcastle he put a
crown into the cook’s hand. It was re
jected. “I do not take silver, sir.”
“Very good, and I do not give gold. ”
This courageous rejoinder “caught on, ”
and the day of vails to cooks was over.
A Shrewd Cyclist.
An eminent queen’s counsel is said
to take his bicyqle exercise in the fol
lowing fashion: He goes out every
night, but he always rides before the
wind, and consequently the direction of
his ride depends upon the wind. He al
ways comes back by train.—London
Telegraph.
Early Training.
“It seems strange that they should
make such a vulgar display of their
wealth."
"Oh. I don’t know—he started as a
window dresser. ” —Chicago Journal?
SffiPtflGS
ONE BNJOYffi
Both tho method and results when
Syrup of Figs is 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.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, Hl.
WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR.,
Counsellor -at Law,
GRIFFIN, IGA.
GENERAL PRACTICE.
A
ZE SCHOOL
El supplies
SCHOOL OPENS JAN. lOth,l
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.
~ 4 '
§ *.ju au. vagraM* l hv4 ggg
•< ~i * y*
- filial *
CORVRIGMT *’&**’>
CHRISTMAS COMES
BUT ONCE A YEAR,
but we are always prepared tor it with the
daintiest and choicest articles as gifts for
those whom you would remember. We
have a handsome display of holiday gifts
in bottles of perfumery, boxes of fine toi
let soaps, shaving sets, cut glass atomizers,
edmbs and brushes, lamps, etc.
N. B. DREWRY* SON,
28 Hill Street.
B- {sm®
‘A SPECIALTYSEXg?
tiary £>LOOZ> POISON permanently
cured in 15 t 035 days. You can be treated at
home foFasme price under warnc grua ran
ty. If you prefer tocome hero we will con.
tractto pay railroad fsreaud hotel bi’Js.anAj
DOWiarpe.tr we fail to cure. If you have taken incr*
cu i r y»Jj ,< li Q ° potash, and etill have aches and
painafoXneous Patches in njouth. Sore Throat,
Pimples. Copper Colored Spots. Ulcers on
nny part ot tne bc-dy, It-jsr or Eyebrows falling
out. It la this Secondary BLOOM POISON
we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti
nate cases an<t chaliensto the world for a
T!jiß has always
batiled thesj>cili of the most eminent ph vsi
behind our uneondi-
Ucnal guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed on
application. Address COOK REMEDY CC»
34a Maaomc Temple, CHICAGO,
*
CANDY
CATHARTIC
CURE CONSTIPATION
25c. 50c ALL
. DRUGGISTS
Griffin Telephone Exchange
BBANCn OF THE BOUTHEBN BXiL TELE,
PHbNB AND TELEGRAPH CO.
JNO. D. EABTERIJN, Supt.
W. T. GENTRY, Assistant Supt.’
Atlanta, Ga.
16 Anthony, Dr. E. R., residence, 2 rings
40 Anthony Drug Co.
1 Bailey, D. J., Jr., residence.
26 Bailey, Mrs. 8. 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. C., res. 3 calls. '
88 Carlisle & Ward, druggists.
45 Central R. R. depot.
28 Clark, A. 8., groceries.
89 Clak & Son, G. W., grocers.
16 Collier, T. J., residence.
56 Crocker, C. A., Pomona, 2 rings.
15 Drake, R. H., grocries.
17 Drake, Mrs. R. w, residence.
32 Elder, J. J., & Son.
85 Earnhart, W. C., residance.
44 Fire department.
9 Grantland, Seaton, residence.
46 Georgia Experiment station.
6 Griffin, Mfg. Co.
19 Griffin Mfg. Co.
14 Griqjn 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 Jones, Geo. 1., residence.
18 Kelley & Mliomas, 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.,residence, 3 rings.
18 Sears, J. M., grocer.
33 Shedd, J. R., market.
24 Southern Railroad.
13 Southern
23 Spalding County Farm.
12 Stewart, Dr. J. F., residence,
11 Strickland, R. F. & Co.
41 Thurman & Barrow, livery stabie.
42 Western Union Telegraph Co.
59 Wood, Geo. W., Sunny Side, 3 rings.
MISS VVE WORTHINGTON,
Manager.
tfeißß
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 12|c pound.
21b. can New Crop Corn 10c can.
Imperial Brand Salmon 15c can."
4 cans Tomatoes 25c.
California Dried Peaches 12fC pound.
Evaporated Apricots 12Ac pound.
Mixed Nuts 10c pound.
Fresh Prunes 10c pound.
Fresh Dates 10c pound.
Fresh Currents 10c pound.
Fresh Codfish 8c pounds
Tomato Catsup lOc
London Layers Raisins 10c.
Mince Meat 10c pound.
Bucket 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
Choicest Fresh Meat.
J. R. SHEDD.
Something New!
Every housekeeper needs Spoons and
Forks for daily use. A cheap plated arti
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.
No. 18 Hill Street.
Ordinary's Advertisements.
' ’' 1'
Administrator’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA, < |
Spalding County.
By virtue Oi an order granted by th»
Court of Ordinary of Spalding County,
Georgia, at the December tern, 1897, O s
said court, I will sell to the highest bidder
before the courthouse door in Spalding M
county, Ga., on the first Tuesday in Feb- *
ruary, 1898, between the usual hours of
sa'e the following property, to-wit:
Five shares of the capital stock of the
Southwestern Railway. Sold as the prop.
erty of Mrs. Martha T. Trammell, late of
said county, deceased, for the purpose of
paying the debts and division among the
heirs of said deceased. Terns cash
ROBT. WHEATON,
Administrator of Estate of Mrs. Martha T.
Trammell. i
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
To all-whom it may concern: Whereas,
A. J. Walker, Administrator of the estate
of Miss Lavonia Walker, deceased, has in
due form applied to me for leave to sell all
that part of lot ot land No. 11, in Akins
district, Spalding county, Ga., bounded as
follows: North by lands of Tlios. Thrower,
east by land of J. A. Beeks, south by lands
of John Freeman, and west by lands of
A. J. Phennazee, containing one (hundred
and twenty acres, more or less. Sold for
the purpose of paying debts and division
among the heirs of said deceased. This is
to cite all perrons inte.ested to show cause
before me, on first Monday in February
next, why said order should not be grant,
ed, at which time said application will be ’
heard and passed upon. Jan. 8,1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
.—i .. ....
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County. i
To all whom it may concern: J. M. Mills,
manager Newton Coal and Lumber Co.,
of said State, having in proper form ap
plied to me as a creditor of Mrs. H. C.
Scandrett for permanent letters of admin
istration on the estate of Mrs. H. C. Scan
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 oi said court of
Ordinary of said county, and show cause,
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.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
Jan. 3,1898.
- - 50 YEARS*
K v J J k ■
■>dKg / i w S J i ■ BLjw
-qjMI 1 ■ T k ■ 1 w J
Trade marks
Designs
* ’ Copyrights Ac.
Anvone sending a sketch and description maj
quickly ascertain onr opinion free whether ap
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly confldentlal. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency fo r
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
spretal notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American..
A handsomely iUustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific journal. Terms..W a
year: four months, f L Sold by all
MUNN BCo. 3e,B '—”’Wew tert
Bt., Washington, D. C.
Southern Railway.
Shortest and quickest route with double
daily service between Columbus and Atlanta,
connecting in the Union Passenger station,
Atlanta, with Limited trains; also
United States Fast Mail trains to and from
Washington, New York and all Eastern points.
Also promptly connecting for and from Can.t
tanooga. Louisville, Cincinnati and the North
west and through Pullman Vestibuled Sleep
ing Cars to Kansas City and the West.
Schedule in effect Deceml.*er 5. 1897. Central
standard time except nt points east of Atlanta.
I No. 27 No. 29
N<..niboun<l. I Dally.
Lv? Columbusl a m p - m
Waverly Hall 6 bd am P M
“ Onk Mountain | 7 am o yj; PP*
“ Warm .Springs- 7 <l2 a m t> o- piu
“ Woodbury 7to a m < U* P JB
” Concord.—. bl 5 a m 7*15 P m
“ Williamson.. 832 am 753'pm
" Griffinß -W a iu. 8 W p m
“ McDonough PliOain 845 pai
Ar. Atlanta..JO 20 am V 45 pm
Lv. Atlantal2oo n’n. 11 to p ni
Ar. Washington.... 642 am 02jpn>
“ New York... 12 43 p m 623 am
Lv. Atlanta 230 p m 500 a m
Ar. Chattanooga '7 80 pm 030 am
Ar. Louisville 7 27 »*.m 7 30 pm
Ar. Cincinnati.* 720 am i p m
« Ko - 30 N ”- SS
bouthbound. OaUy
Lv. Cincinnati.. . 830 ain BiX) p m
Lv. Louisville 748 a m , 45 pm
“ Chattanooga■■ 650 pm, 80J am
Ar. Atlanta. 10 40 p i 10 a m
Lv. New York.l2 15 am' 4 30 pm
“ Washington. 1115 am 10 43 pm
Ar. Atlanta 5 10 a mi 855 pm
Lv. Atlanta .. ’ 520 ami 440 p1»
“ McDonough. 615 am 5 85pm
“ Griffin 6oi ain 6 W p m
“ Williamson 706 ain 625 p m
“ Concord 724 am 6 41pm
“ Woodbury7 50 am| 710 P m
“ Warm Springs. 8 Oil am! • 45 pm
“ Oak Mountain 837 ajnj 814 p»
“ Waverly Hall 8.46 ami 82i V 111
Ar. Columbus 0 35 anr 9JO pm
TO_MACON,
Daily. N<». 27. No. 2”
Lv. Columbus, South’n Ky 605 am 525 pm
Ar. Woodbury, South'll Kv. 7toa iu 19 P m
“ Macon, M. &8.8. K. '. 110 J an,
Ar. LaGrange,M. &B. R.B. . 1_25 p_m
Daily. No. 30 I No. 28
Lv. LaGrange, M. &B. R.R. 6J5 am
Lv. Macon, M. &B. R. .! 415 p m
Ar. Woodbury, M. &B. R.R. 7to a m 710 p m
Ar. Columbus, South’n Ry. 935a ni 910 P m
Daily. No. 29 I
Lv. Columbus, South’n Ry.. 52/pm
Ar. McDonough, '* •’ 8 45ppi !
* Brunswick, “ “ 785 a m
Dally. No. 30 I
Lv. Brunswick, South’ll Ry. 830 pm!
Ar. McDonough, “ “ 6K am!
** Columbus, ” *'• 985 ami. ■■■•2
Nos. 29 and to—Bullm:in sleeping cars b*
tween McDonough and Brunswick.
W. H. GREEN, J. M. CULP,
Gen. Superintendent, Traf. Manager,
Washington, D. Q. Washington, D- G-
W. A. TURK, . S. H. HARDWICK,
Gen. Pas. Agent, A. Gen. Pas. Agent.
Washington. D. C. Atlanta, Ga-
T. K. PEABODY, Passenger & Ticket Agent
Columbus, Ga.