The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, February 05, 1898, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

■ • Morning Call. GRIFFIN, GA., FIB. 5,1888. ’ .7 : .j.- _ Offleeorer Davis’ hardware Store TELEPHONE NO. M. J P. 4 8. B. BAWTILL, I< * Editor* and Proprtotoff. Tas Moming Call will be published dally-Monday exoepu»d-*t a«m. SAW for six month., M** atonia*, or 10 cento per week. J* liTered by carrier, at any point In the city. The Middlb Gsomia Farmzb, pub lished every Tharsd y at 50cto 15c for six month*, l&o for three The above paper* seat to any addrew, Gnomu Fammw will ever bethebeat advertising mediums for thia entire section of the Stale. Advertiaing rate, furnished on applies- Official Paper ot the Ordinary of Spalding county and the City got 6rtffia., z A mao stepped on the corns of a girl in Weal Virginia the other day and she promptly shot him. It Dot do to monkey with the new wo man. ________ Thomas Carlyle once said that the logic of a woman waa onh of those things which an inscrutable God had placed beyond the ability of man to • fathom. It is eatimafodlbrtin Paris one in eighteen of the population, or 150,000. live on charity, with a tendency to ward crime. In London this class is one in thirty. ' -------■——— Secretary Gage believes that there is a great need for a larger amount of fractional coins and he suggests that he be authorised to nee the bullies ailvar in the treasury vaults lor such subsidiary coins- If half of the farm lands of the South were allowed to grow up in weeds and bushes and the other half brought to its highest point of cultivation, the farmers of the South would reap dou* b!e the profits they now get from farming. As an evidence of advancing civili sation io Japan a correspondent says the people are getting used to glass. The first glass used in a railway carri age, it is aaid, bad to be ameared with paint to keep passengers from pushing their beads through it. Freesing will not injure a newly patented water pipe, which has a yielding oore in the center, strong enough to withstand the force of the water under natural pressure, but which collapses as the ice expands, and prevents bursting, the core en larging again as soon as the water thaws and the pressure is recovered. The Nashville American calls atten tion to the fact that Georgia is estab lishing a SIO,OOO textile school to teach her citizens how to operate cot ton and woolen machinery of various kinds, and warns Tennesseeans that they will be left in the struggle for the cotton factories no# being moved to p the south unless they imitate the ex ample of Bev J G. Patton, pastor of the De catur Presbyterian church, and bis brother, Bev. J. H. Patton, of the Ma rietta Presbyterian church, left Tues day for New York. They will sail Feb 5 for the Holy Land and a lour through the Orient. The circumstances under which they go are very inter esting and unusual. Several years ago Bev. J. G- Patton was pastor of a church at Henderson, Ky. One of the most devoted members of bis congre gation was a lady who had an invalid , daughter, who was also a member of the church. The girl died after a ' short time and her last request was : that her mother give Mr. Patton and 1 bis brother enough funds to pay their ( expenses for a lour through these ' countries. The request was kept a se- 1 cret by the girl’s mother for a long t time, but when Mr. Patton announced ‘ that he would give up the charge for , another in Decatur, the mother told < him of her daughter’s wiab, and re- * quested that be accept it. Mr. Patton c consented to do so when he could leave hie present charge long enough lor the trip, and will go uow to fulfill the wish 1 of the dying girl. The congregation £ has granted him a vacation of three o molbs. His brother has the same time c from his charge in Marietta. Won't Tobacco Spit and Smete Tear Life Away. c To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full ot Ute, nerre and vigor, take No-To- fa Bae. the wonder-walker, that makes weak men strong. Ail druggists, 60c or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address , Sterling Remedy Co . Chicago or New York. He Made IS Plain. The wise speaker knows that no illus trations are ho cffectlre as those which have to do with familiar, everyday object*. In thia respect tho Great Teacher set an example for all who should come after him. Hew on itinerant preacher in the Tennessee mountain* profited by this ex ample is narrated in The American Mis sionary: A group ot young men were assembled •no Sunday in a grove to hear the preacher when one of them said: “Seo here, John, why didn’t you bring up my rille when you come to preaching?" “Well, Sam, I ’lowed ’twan’t right to bring it up on Sabbath. I mought see a varmint on the road and git a-shooting and forgit it was Sabbath." “Huh! There’s no use being so particu lar os all that I think it’s all right to do little turns ot a Sabbath. Even a little shooting won’t |pirt if you happen to see game.” The discussion was joined in on either side by those around, and it was finally decided to leave the question to the preach er. He was called and the case stated. “Look yer, boys,” said he. “S’posin a man comes along hero with seven hand some gray horses, a-ridin one and the oth ers n-follerin. You all like a pretty beast, and you look ’em all over. You can’t see that one is better than another. They are all as pretty critters as ever were seen among these mountains, though there will be differences in horses, boys. When you come to know ’em, no two is alike. Well, that man says, ‘Here, boys, I’ll jest give you six of these beasts for your own, ’ and he gits on the other and rides off. I s’pose now you’d mount your horses and ride after him and make him give you the other horse, or at least let you keep it till your craps was all in." “No. We ain’t so ornery mean as all that, preacher.” “Well, fnar, can’t you let the lord’s day alone?" , . A blank look at the preacherand at each other. Then Sam spoke out: “You’ve treed us, preacher. John, I’m right glad you didn’t bring that gun." Mr. and Mrs. Dillon. I made a hasty excursion to France to see John Dillon and his family, who had made a visit to Europe and came as near the mother country as the English author ities permitted him. “ Dillon, v says my diary, “looks vigorous and tranquil. He preserves the sweet serenity that distin guished him of old.” I cannot pause on this visit except tonoto two lessons I got —one against prejudice, one teaching magnanimity. On Sunday morning Grey and I strolled to the local church without waiting for Dillon. After wo came out we compared notes, and agreed that French women had an unrivaled art of dressing. One petite dame, who knelt before us, was, wo agreed, the best dressed woman we had seen for a decade, showing that only the French, etc,. When sho walked out of the church, we discovered that the belle damo was our country woman, Mrs. Dillon. The example of magnanimity was fur nished by Dillon himself. We told him what was being done in Ireland—not only, above tho surface, but, as we understood, beneath the surface. “Wo ought to con sider, ’’ says Dillon, “that what we call England is tho only country in Europe where the personal liberty of men is se cure. Here we are living under a perpetual spy system. Wo don’t know that our serv ants are not spies, and it is little better in Germany and Italy. It goes against my conscience to see anything done in the pur suance of our just quarrel which is not done in broad day." When we consider that tho exile was shut out of his own country by the power he was judging so generously, this was surely finely mag nanimous.—Sir Charles Gavan Duffy in Contemporary Review. The Old Attic. I do not believe that tho modern child knows anything about an attic. The fin do slcclo attic is a respectable place, where boxes are solemnly piled and where moth camphor sheds its fragrance abroad. Our attic was a long, low room, with mysteri ously dark corners, into whose depths we did not penetrate. There was an old hair trunk in one corner that held some of grandmother’s muslin dresses. It was opened only on rare occasions, and I was allowed but a glimpse of the faded beauty within. There was an old spinning wheel where spiders hung fantastic wreaths, and there was a guitar with broken, moldered strings. But tho corner where the books were piled was the spot I liked the best. An old fashioned, tiny paned window let an occasional sunbeam stray across Tha Ladies’ Repositories and “ Saints’ Rests. ” There was a fine old elm tree that tapped against the window and sometimes a robin sent a thrill of song into the dusty corners. Just beneath the window seat I used to sit, a small crouched form, bending over a musty volume. But when I wished to read under the most blissful conditions I fortified myself with half a dozen russet apples, whoso juice would have given fla vor to a treatise on Hebrew grammar. Now I never see a russet apple without seeing also tho dim old attic and an utter ly contented child, and I am sure the mar ket women misunderstand my wistful glance, for they draw closer to their bas kets and look at me in suspicious fashion. —Erin Graham in Lippincott's. Drove Oxen After He Wa* Paralyzed. I have heard of many cases of fortitude, but that of "Duke” Joyner excels them all. Charles J. Joyner, during his life time, lived near the head of Crooked Fork valley, in Morgan county. Ho was a man of powerful physical development—brave, fearless and of wonderful endurance. Ho fought on the Union side in the civil strife, and then after the contention was over he married and went to farming. In some way when a boy the title of “duke” was given to him, which ever afterward he was known by. “Duke” Joyner was a hard worker and a good farmer. Ono day while building an underdrain, assisted by two small sons, he had a stroke of paralysis and was un able to move, but could talk. “Duke” concluded that he would superintend the operation of taking his half dead body home. He had the two boys put a log chain around his body. Then he had them jut down a couple of planks. Next they iltched the chain to the ox chain and the oxen drew his body up in the wagon. ' While lying in the wagon the “duke," by the use of his voice, drove the oxen to his house. He survived and lived a number 1 of years after.—Knoxville (Tenn.) Trib- < une. ' The Remmaat. Mr. A.—l presume you carry a memento of some sort in that locket of yours? Mrs. B.—Precisely. It is a lock of my husband’s hair “But your husband is still alive!*' “Yes, sir, but hi* hair is all gone."- J [jondon Fun. ] -'ili ‘ " a LIGHTHOUSE IMPROVEMENT Chaag** That Have Been Mode la Light* , and Lonzes. An article about lighthouse*, entitled "The Light* That Guide In the Night,” la contributed by Lieutenant John M. Ellicott to St Nicholas. After telling of the growth in the number of light houses Lieutenant Ellicott says: Meantime the means of lighting were being steadily improved. The open fire gave place to the oil Tamp, then a curved mirror, called a parabolic mir ror, was placed behind the lamp to bring the rays together; next, many lamps with mirrors were grouped about a central spindle, and acme such lights are still in operation. The greatest stride came when an arrangement of lenses, known as the Fresnel lens, in front of a lamp replaced the mirror be hind it This lens waa rapidly improved for lighthouse purposes, until now a cylindrical glass house surrounds the lamp flame. This house has lens shaped walls, which bend all the rays to form a horizontal zone of strong light which pierces the darkness to a great distance. The rapid increase in the number of lighthouses has made it necessary to have some means of telling one from another, or, as it is termed, of giving to each light its * ‘characteristic. ’’ Col oring the glass made the light dimmer, but as red comes most nearly to white light in brightness some lights have red lenses. The latest and best plan, how ever, is to set upright prisms at inter vals in a circular framework around the lens and to revolve this frame by clockwork. Thus the light is made to flash every time a prism passes between it and an observer. By changing the number and places of the prisms or the speed of the clockwork the flashes for any one light can be made to occur at intervals of so many seconds for that light Putting in red prisms gives still other changes. Thus each light has its “characteristic/* and this is written down in signs on the charts and fully stated in the light lists carried by ves sels. Thus, on a chart you may note that the light you want to sight is marked “F. W., v. W. FL, 10 sec.," which means that it is “fixed white varied by white flashes every ten sec onds. ” When a light is sighted, you see if those are its characteristics, and if so you have found the right one. MOTHER GOOSE. The Iconoclast Throw* a Big Stone at Boston’s Famous Personage. Iconoclastic Boston has decided that if there ever was a Mother Goose with poetical talents—which isn’t likely— she was not the Mother Goose buried in that city and whose grave has for years * been haunted by sentimental, patriotic and more or less literary visitors from all parts of the country. It seems that the respectable Mrs. Elizabeth Goose, whom legend credits with the composi tion of all those sprightly lyrics in which, for no very good reason, chil dren are supposed to .take such delight, had no more right to a place among America’s eminent women than Jack the Giant Killer has to be included among oqr famous generals. She lived and she died, and that, except the names of her parents and the fact that she had some children, is absolutely all which is known about her. The story that she wrote, or at least collected, the famous poems is a myth invented by one of the presumably good lady’s descendants. “Mere I’Oye” waa from time out of mind a character in French fairy tales. The name first ap peared in English in 1729, when the prose "Contes de ma mere I’oye” were translated as * ‘Tales of Passed Times by Mother Goose. ’’ This book became the property of John Newbery of Lon don, the famous publisher of little books for children, and about 1765 he utilized the trade name by printing as a companion book “Mother Goose’s Melodies.” Tho latter was merely a collection of old English nursery rhymes. From England it came to America and was reprinted by Isaiah Thomas of Worcester, Mass., about 1787, then by Munroe & Francis of Boston about 1825, and now by every one. The fiction about Mrs. Elizabeth Goose of Boston was started by John Flint Eliot about 1860, utterly without proof or probabil ity, and has since been repeated, gain ing imaginary details at every stage.- New York Times. The Queen of Greece. It is said by a lady who recently vis ited Greece and had the honor of meet ing the royal family that perfect har mony exists between them, and the king and queen are devoted to their children. The queen is still a very beautiful wom an and the only lady admiral in the world. She holds this rank in the Rus sian army, an honorary appointment conferred on her by the late czar because her father held the rank of high ad miral and for the reason that she is a very capable yachtswoman. The king has a very remarkable memory, an in teresting personality, and is a brilliant conversationalist. He goes about the streets of Athens without any attend ants and talks with any friend he chances to meet Prince George is very attractive, and his feats of strength, shown often in the cause of chivalry, are a continuous subject of conversation among the people. A Telling Look. “lean tell a man I like the first time I look at him.” vYes,’’rejoinedthe ether girl, “youi eyes are certainly very expressive. ” Os course, the poet was on the right track, but it is woman’s inhumanity to woman that really stimulates the crape market.—Detroit Journal The first ingredient in conversation is truth, the next good sense, the third good humor and the fourth wit—Sir William Temple. There are several “giant bells” in Moscow, the lurgest, “the King of Bells,” weighing 432,000 pound*. on® enjoys Both the 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 m 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. SAM FRANCISCO, CAL. UHMWIUE. KT. NESI FORK. Mi, . giiairfWMßlSg; 1 4Wiißi & teei? you eire reeidy To us 1o make b, few suggestions do youilike; A NICEIBEDROOM SET* in antique oak, or birdseye maple? If so we can give you the finest bedroom sets made, which wo are offering this week at low prices for those who are economically inclined. They are the best value for the money we have ever sold, and will fit up a room to look neatly, while they are as useful and comfortable as the more ex pensive sets. CHILDS & GODDARD. H.P.EADY&CO. IN HILL BUILDING,’ Buggies, Wagons and Harness. We give good prices for your old Buggy and Harness in exchange for new ones. All kind of repair work promptly done. H. P. EADY 4 CO. Blood po isom borne for same price under same guaran ty. If you prefer to come here we will con. tract to pay railroad fareand hotel bills.and noenaree. ifwe fall to cure. If you have token mer cury, iodide potash, and still have aches and pains. Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat. Pimple*. Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on any port of the Body, Hair or Eyebrow* falling out, it is this Secondary BLOOD POISON we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti- I Date cases and challenge the world for a ■ case we eannot cure. This disease has alwnvZ baffled the skUTof the most eminent physl* - elans, capital behind our uncondi. 349 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, M.O.BOWDOIN Renting Agent, No. 31 Hill street, - - Griffin, Ga candy K CATHARTIC VXUcaieVj CONSTIPATION & au. DRUGGISTS Griffin Telephone Exchange BRANCH OF THB BOUTHEIUC BELL TELE PHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. INO. D. EABTBRLIN, Supt. • , W. T. GENTRY, Assistant SupC 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. 40 Bishop, J. W., Market. 80 Blakely, B. R, Grocer. 81 Boyd, J. D., warehouse, 2 rings. 81 Boyd, J. D., residence, 8 rings. 87 Boyd Manufacturing Co. 43 Brewer & Hanleiter, wholesale grocers 4 Burr’s Sons, H. C., Hardware, 2 calls. 4 Burr, H. C., res. 8 calls. 88 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. 17 Drake, Mrs. RA, residence. 82 Elder, J. J., & Son. 85 Earn hart, W. C., residence. 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. 8 Griggs, Bob, livery stable. 36 Howard, W. K., residence. 8 Jones, Geo. I, 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 andlumb’r 5 Newton Coal and Lumber Co. 29 Osborn & Wolcott, office. 20 Oxford, D. A. market and restaurant. 22 Sawtell, J. P., residency, 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. & Co. 41 Thurman & Barrow, livery stabie. 1 42 Western Union Telegraph Co. 1 59 Wood, Geo. W., Sunny Side, 3 rings. MISS WE WORTHINGTON, Manager. I I G.,?-A 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 124 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 12jc pound. Mixed Nuts 10c pound. Fresh Prnnes 10c pound. Fresh Dates 10c Dound. Fresh Currents 10c pound. Fresh Codfish 8c pound.J Tomato Catsup 10c London Layers Raisins 10c." Mince Meat 10c pound. Backet Jelly 8c pound. Fresh Can Mackerel 15c can. Shreded Cocoanut sc. Fancy Candy for cakes 25c pound. I 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 Advertisement, fl STATE OF GEORGIA, I Spalding County I To all whom it may concern: WhaL. ® A. J. Walker, Administrator of the --v* B of Miss Lavonia Walker, deceased, due form applied to me for leave to that part of lot ot land No. 11, i n district, Spalding county, Ga,, bounded » ■ follows: North bylandsofThos. Throws® east by land of J. A. Beeks, south by W of John Freeman, and west by landg B A. J. Phennazee, containing one | and twenty acres, more or less. Buld I the purpose of paying debts and divisu. f among the heirs of said deceased. Thigh ' to cite all persons interested to show caul I before me, on first Monday in FebrugZ I next, why said order should not be gnC,t ed, at which time said application will be I heard and passed upon. Jan. 3,1898. I J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. ' I STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalding County. To all whom it may concern : J. M Millg | manager Newton Coal and Lumber Co’ I of said State, having in proper form an' I plied to me as a creditor of Mrs. R. g-i Scandrett for permanent letters of admfa/ 1 istration on the estate of Mrs. H C. Scat I drett. Thss is to cite all and singular the I creditors and heirs of Mrs. H. C Scandrett fe to be and appear at my office on first Mon. I day in February next of said court ot I Ordinary of said county, and show cause, I if any they can, why permanent letters# I administration should not be granted to J. I M. Mills, Manager Newton Coal and 1 ber Co., on Mrs. H. C. Scandrett’s estate. J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. I Jan. 3,1898. | IDISSOLUTION NOTICE. I The firm of Brewer & Hanleiter is this I day dissolved by mutual consent. W. H. Brewer assumes all debts due by Brewa & Hanleiter and all debts due to Brewer & Hanleiter to be paid to W. H. Brewer. W. H. BREWER, W. R HANLEITER Griffin, Ga., Dec. 17,1897. I will continue the wholesale grocery business on my own account. Thanking all for their liberal patronage to the firm of Brewer & Hanleiter, I hope to merit and continue to receive the same patra. age for myself My ambition is* to make. Griffin a regular jobbing city where the surrounding country can get their supplies as cheap as any market in the state or elsewhere. W. H. BREWER 60 YEARS’ MblJ J y k ■ -SR w /i ■ ■ j . ■ link! r* j Trade Marks Designs f FFTH • Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch *ad jSeeeriytton may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention Is probably patentable, vommunlca tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for aecarmgnatents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive epeetai aoMce, without charge, la the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. largest th- Southern Railway. Shortest and quickest route with double daily service between Columbus and Atlanta, connecting in the Union Passenger station, Atlanta, with Vestibuled Limited trains; alee United States Fast Mail trains to and from Washington, New York and all Eastern point* Also promptly connecting for and from Chat tanooga, Louisville, Cincinnati and the North west and through Pullman Vestibuled Bleep ing Cars to Kansas City and the West. Schedule in effect January 16, 1898. Centra) standard time except at pointe east of Atlanta, „ . No. 87 No. Z 9 Northbound. D(UJy Lv. Columbus 605 am 525 pm “ Waverly Hall 6 53am P» “ Oak Mountain 702 am 622 p m ** Warm Springs 782 am 652 pm “ Woodbury 750 am 7lSpa s “ Concord . 815 am 73opm “ Williamson 882 am “ G-riffin 849 am SOSpm “ McDonough '9BO am 845 pm Ar. Atlanta 10 20 am 045 p m Lv. Atlanta 12 00 n’n. 11 50 p m Ar. Washington 642 am 085 pm “ New York 12 48 p m 623 *■ Lv. Atlanta 220 pm 530 am Ar. Chattanooga 720 pm 950 am Ar. Louisville 727 am 780 pl* Ar. St. Louis 620 p m 712 am Ar. Cincinnati 720 am 730 psis ' a No. 30 No. «S Southbound. lxaß y. | Lv. Cincinnati 830 a m 800 pm Lv. St. Louis 9 15 p m 7 M *M Lv. Louisville 745 a m 745 p m “ Chattanooga 610 pm 800 am Ar. Atlanta. 10 40 pm 110 P * Lv. New York. 1215 am 430 pm “ Washington 1115 am 10 48 pm Ar. Atlanta. 510 am 855 pm Lv. Atlanta 530 am 440 pm “ McDonough 620 am 5 35pm “ Griffin 652 am 610 pm “ Williamson 706 am 6 25pm “ Concord. 724 am 641 pm “ Woodbury 750 am 710 pm “ Warm Springs 800 am 745 pm “ Oak Mountain 837 am 814 pm “ Waverly Hall 846 am 822 pm Ar- Columbus 935 am 910 Pm TO MACON, • |j Dally. No. 27. No. 29 | Lv. Columbus, South’h Ry. 605 am 525 pm Ar. Woodbury, South’n Ry. 750 am 710 pm Macon, M.&B. R.R.... 1100 am Ar. LaGrange, M. & B. R.R 8 25 p m Daily. No. 30 No. 28- Lv. LaGrange, M. &B.R.R. 630 am Lv. Macon, M. *B. R ......... 415 p m Ar. Woodbury,M.*B R.R. 747 am 710 pm Ar. Cqlnmbns, South’n Ry. 9C5 a m 910 p m F? 8. GANNON, J. M. CULP," Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Traf. Manager, Washington, D. C. Washington, D. G W. A. TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK. Gen. Pas. Agent, A. Gen. Pa*. Agent, Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ge. F. K- PEABODY, Passenger A Ticket Agent, Columbus, Ga. j ' • WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR.. Counsellor at Law, GRIFFIN, GA. GENERAL PRACTICE.