Newspaper Page Text
f? Morning* Call.
GRIFFIN, GA., FEB. 98, 18M.
at. L 1 ’■’■L". .. ... -.-rr=:
Offleeorer Davit* hardware Store
TELEPHONE NO. 29.
« II IIIWWWI t'-lgi
Editor* and Proprietor*.
/ Tn Mouas Call will be published
daily -Monday excepted-at SBOO per an
num, $2.50 for elx months, |IMS so r three
months, or 10 cents per week. Delivered
by carriers at any point in the city.
The middlb Gbobgia Fabmib, pub-
Hatred every Thursd y at 50 eta per year
95c for six months, lifo for three months.
The above papers sent to any address,
postage paid, at prices named
.X" Th« Morning Call and the Middlb
flr Gbobgia Fabmbb will ever be the best
■ advertising mediums for this entire section
of the State.
Advertising rates furnished on applica
tion
Official Paper of the Ordinary
of Spalding county and the City
People should not blame Spencer
Atkinson too severely lor his name.
He would, no doubt, be glad enough
to change it to suit the occasion if be
’ could
, , -• J L JJIL-Wi'JL-ei.
An exchange very wisely compli
ments the young business woman who
has too much sense to give up a S6O
job for a S4O young man. The girl is
exaetly right in this instance.
u im!-ii=™
A man who was being tried out in
Missouri last week for bigamy, plead
that wile No. 2 had hypnotized him
and made him marry her. Wife Nu.
1 has hypnotized many a man, too.
Tom Langford, the Pike county
murderer, will be tried at Zebulon at
the March term of court. He will be
represented by Hon. Thos. E. Watson
and Col. Woodward of Barnesville.
Solicitor General Bloodworth will be
assisted by Hun. J. F. Redding and
001. Dupree.
The Maine, her armament and stores
coal tho government, all told, not less
than $6,000,000. She was destroyed,
according to the advices, in less .than
five miuutes. Sinking money al the
rate of a million dollars a minute is
something which not even our respect
ed Uncle Sam could aland for a great
while.
A Georgia editor writes as follows:
“Many people io the country want to
move to town ; many people in town
would like to live in the country. As
a rule man’s a fool; when it is hot he
wante it cool; when it's cool he wants
it hot; always wanting what is not,
never pleased with what he’s got; as a
rule man’s a fool.”
The campaign bumb thrown by Col.
Candler in that famous second letter,
fluebed 'nearly all the supporters of
Gov. Atkinson, in bis two campaigns,
but they are learning that that brick
was thrown only at the tricksters and
ring leaders, and being honestly in
favor of pure and honest methods, in
primaries, are now settling into the
Candler ranks and propose to squelch
out all traders and tricksters in future.
Bob Berner put one plank in his
platform that will be a "sinker” to bis
canvas. Georgia is seeking to move
up a pace in the matter of encourag
ing manufactories. Bob opposes such
advances. That plank and bis oppo
sition tg all corporations, banks, rail
roads, etc., smacks more of the dema
gogu* than is generally beard from a
man aspiring to the responsible posi
tion .of Governor of Georgia. The.
populists should be allowed the exclu
sive use of such methods to secure
votes. Berner will learn that a “whoo
pee” crusade against Georgia’s interests
and advancement will not count for
much eave in tbe mountaiu or alliga
tor diatricts of the State, and they do
not count for much in making Gov
ernors.
It Is tbe common belief in Chicago,
now that Joseph Leiter has got his
fingers upon the May wheat pile, that
the price of grain will go very much
higher before a permanent downward
turn lakes place. Mr. Armour is
quoted as saying ibat if Mr. Leiter is
pleased to do so he can send tbe price
up to $l 5O per bushel, and that to
achieve that end it will be necessary
for Mr Leiter to do nothing at all ex
cept to keep still and watch the figures
go up. It is now being predicted that
the "Young Napoleon” will sell a great
part of bis bolding for $1.25 or more.
Mr. Leiter, by tbe way, is regarded
with esteem in the wheat sections of
tbe Northwest. A member of the
lowa Legislature tbe other day intro
duced a bill to make hie birthday a
legal holiday, io commemoration of
what >e bad done for the wheat grow
ers of that state.
PHOTOGRAPHY.
A Crftle Who Bays That II Baa Lowered
tho Standard of Art.
Has photography accomplished any
thing? Yes; it has cheapened art great
ly. It has lowered the standard with a
public that instinctively prefers the
sham and the machine wade and the
microscopic. It has reduced the artist
to a demoralizing struggle with the
amateur simply to get his bread and
butter. In the beginning of the century
England was celebrated for its beauti
fully Illustrated books, in which the
greatest artists, engravers and printers
collaborated to produce a perfect
whole. Today tbe place of these books
has been taken by The Strand Magazine
and The Sketch, thanks to the services
of photography. In the making of books,
however, the tendency has always been
toward the survival of the cheapest, and
the cheapest—usually the newest —has
always interested artists for awhile,
though for other reasons than its cheap
ness.
Steel engravings succumbed before
wood engraving and lithography, and
they, in turn, have succumbed to the
cheapness of the process man. In many
ways until lately process was a great
advance upon any other form of repro
duction. Now process block makers are
mostly photographers, wi}o are killing
each other in the race for cheapness. I
do not want any one to think I would
imply that photography is not useful to
the artist. On the contrary, it is, and
especially in illustration, since it pre
serves the illustrator’s original design
for him. It enables the architect to get,
at small expense and without the trou
ble of going to see and draw them, bits
of detail in foreign lands, though this is
a questionable advantage. The world’s
greatest architects managed very well
Without it. One critic has said that If
photographers would turn their atten
tion to the recording of historic events,
like the Jubilee; or of vanishing build
ings they could do an immense service
to art In one way this is true, in an
other it is not.
Surely this critic would be the last to
suggest that the cinematographic “pic
tures”—the whole 22,000 of them,
shown at the Empire, I think—are equal
to one picture of a procession by Carpac
cio, painted centuries before we had any
photographs. No doubt 22,000 artists
would be required to secure as many
views of the jubilee procession as wore
obtained by the cinematograph, and
their employment might have been too
much of a good thing. But if, say, half
a dozen accomplished artists had been
commissioned and allowed to do what
they wanted, might we not have had a
record of some artistic importance? As
to tbe photographing of old buildings,
which would the architect rather have
—an etching by Piranesi or a photo
graph by one of the most revolutionary
Os the Salon photographers? Joseph
Pennell in Contemporary ReviewT
Why They Cheered.
Dr. Whewell, master of Trinity col
lege, Cambridge, was a great but un
popular man. When he entered the sen
ate house, it was the ill mannered prac
tice of the undergraduates to begin a
loud and continuous whistle.
“How this originated I do not know, ”
writes Dean Farrar in his book “Men I
Have Known.” “There were two leg
ends about it. One was that it intimat
ed that the master would have to whis
tle for a bishopric; the other—equally
absurd —was that when some one had
asked him how to pronounce his name
he hajl said, ‘You must shape your
mouth as if you were going to whistle. ’ ”
But under the rough manners of the
students there was genuine goodness of
heart. Dr. Whewell’s wife died. He
had been tenderly devoted to her, and
when he attended chapel after her death
the undergraduates were touched by an
“old man’s anguish and a strong man’s
tears.”
“When next he entered the senate
house, ” writes Dean Farrar, “there was
dead silence. For the first time for I
know not how many years not a whis
tle was heard, and then a moment after
ward as by spontaneous impulse the
Whole crowded mass of undergraduates
in the gallery burst into a loud and
long continued cheer. It was not aston
ishing that such a proof of sympathy
should move the of the great mas
ter or that the tears should run down
his cheeks. Ido not think that he was
ever whistled at again.”
A Great Awakening.
“Richard, why do you wish to stay
at home this evening? You promised
that when we were married you would
go to church with me every Sunday
evening.”
“Well, my dear, I have been keeping
my word.”
“But this is only the third Sunday.
I think you ought to tell me frankly
why you do not wish to go. Is it that
you have ceased to love me so soon?”
“No, Susan, it isn’t that at all. The
fact' is, 1 can’t stand your favorite
preacher; he is too dull for ma”
“Too dull, Richard? Why, the rev
erend gentleman is regarded as a great
revivalist 1”
“H’m, yes, I have noticed that there
is always a great awakening after his
sermon I”
Then she began to cry, and he bad to
go to pacify her. —Pearson’s Weekly.
Why the Blind Do Not Smoke.
A peculiarity about blind people is
thut therd is seldom one of them who
smokes. Soldiers and sailors accustomed
to smoking and who have lost their sight
in action continue to smoke for a short
time, but soon give up the habit. They
say it gives them no pleasure when they
cannot see the smoke, and some have
said that they cannot taste the smoke
unless they see it.—New York Ledger.
Coptic Superstition.
The Coptic Christiana believe that on
Christmas eve the nature of every sav
age beast is tamed; that children may
play with a lion, and that all venomous
reptiles lose their power to harm.
, a~ -.a —t- Ac
A BTORY OF SLAVERY DAYS
Throe White Mon Whipped All tho Ne
groes at an Indignation Masting.
“In the days of slavery,” said an old
soldier, “the wont trouble we used to have
was in keeping the negroes at homo. You
know in those days a negro was not allow
ed to leave his master’s plantalion with
out a written pass. When this rule was
violated, tho offender was liable to the
most severe punishment. This punish
ment was administered with a long whip
on the slave’s bare back. Fifty lashes was
the regulation punishment for a slave’s
running away.
“There is one incident that I will never
forget. I was Jiving near Pendleton, in
this state, and the slaves around there
were thick. Near the village was Samuel
Maverick’s largo plantation. Late ond
afternoon I heard that about 10 negroes
had congregated near Mr. Maverick’s, in
a dense wood, to bold some kind of Indig
nation meeting. Gatherings of the kind
In those days were not frequent, from the
fact that the slave* hgd some idea of the
punishment that would’ accrue when they
wore discovered.' In the wood of which I
speak was a small qua room cabin. Ths
rumor was that the negroes were to meet
at the cabin.
“My purpose was to get two men to
join me, surround the cabin and whip the
slaves. Two friends willingly went with
me, and wo arrived near the edge of the
Wood about dark. Our horses were fas
tened in a dump of bushes, and wo crept
toward tho cabin. All tho negroes were
in the house. They never took the precau
tion to place a guard on duty, because they
did not believe they could ever be found.
Wo easily surrounded the house. One
man was sent to watch the lono window,
while the other and I wont to the door.
“The negroes were having a high old
time. They were discussing a recent whip
ping when one of their friends received a
terrible flogging from a hard taskmaster
for a very light offense. Just as the In
dignation proceeding was at its highest I
shoved open the door and slipped in. My
friend followed to prevent any of the men
escaping. Our presence had the effect of
stampeding the entire bunch of blacks.
An angel could not have surprised them
more. One big buck danced up to me, but
I gave him a swing with a heavy stick,
and he fell to the fiber paralzyod. No oth
er attempt was made to raise trouble.
“I told the crowd that I had to whip ev
ery man. It caused a storm, but the men
had to submit. While my friend stood at
the door with a pistol I took the slaves out
one at a time and gave each 50 lashes on
the bare back. Tho woods echoed with the
cries of pain, though it made little differ
ence. I was tired out with my part, and
after a spell turned the lash over to the
man at tho door to act as executioner.
Finally the last man was pulled from the
cabin, and when he was whipped we start
ed home. The negroes fled as fast as they
got their punishment, collecting in groups
later to march home. We could still hear
their cries as they stung under the effects
of the leather. The whipping had its good
result, however, and that was the last in
dignation meeting In that part of the
country.
“Only one man escaped the whipping,
as I thought. He was the old fellow, Jack
Burt, who used to play the fiddle at the
dances, and for that reason I did not want
to hurt him. On making an investigation
I found 'that he had brought his violin
along and had it carefully hidden near the
cabin. I ordered him to get It and play
while I whipped. This he at first refused
to do, but I told him 800 lashes would re
sult if he refused. Os course Jack had to
play. He drew his bow through a chunk
of rosin and made his violin hum while
the voices of the crying darkies kept time
weirdly. Every man who was whipped
cursed the fiddler, though the fiddler pat
ted his foot on the grass and seemed deaf
to the groans. It was about the most pe
culiar combination that a man ever saw,
but it pleased Jack and my two friends.
“Twenty years later I was driving along
the road near home one day when I was
overtaken by a negro on a mule. Recalled
me byname and asked if I remembered
him. I told him that I could not place
his dusky face. I did not say anything
about the song you hear now about all
coons looking alike, for it was not known
then. The negro told me that he was in
the cabin that night and that I did not
whip him. ' < T could not believe this. He
explained the matter, however, by saying
that he ‘olum up de chimney,’ and I guess
he told the truth. Anyway I was glad of
It 20 years later. ’ ’ —Charleston Letter in
New York Sun.
Seventeenth Century Dress.
A friend who is making a tour of the
old libraries of Europe In search of some
thing or other that is altogether too deep
for me came across a quaint old volume on
dress, and he was thoughftul enough to
secure a copy of the book for me. It is one
of Blanche’s, and we who have made a
study of dress put Blanche where the
schoolboy puts Bancroft. Blanche has
studied the history of dress closely and
more Intelligently than almost any other
costume historian.
I find In this book, which is a history of
British costume, that stiff collars were
first worn during the reign of James I,
which, I think, covered the early part, or,
I should say, the first quarter, of the seven
teenth century, lacking two or three years.
It was not until 1560 that starch was
used, and then Queen Elizabeth had to
get a Dutchwoman to come over to Lon
don to stiffen up her ruffs. This Dutch
woman and her husband taught the Eng
lish how to make and use starch at the
rate of £5 for the course. Blanche is also
responsible for the statement that tbe most
expensive and the most artistic dress worn
by men was that In vogue during the
reign of Charles 1—1625 to 1648.
In relation to women’s costume, it seems
that the nineteenth century girl is not the
pioneer of the mannish mode. It was way
back in 1700 that women first wore gar
ments that were modeled after those worn
by men. The 1700 woman did not wear
bloomers or short skirts, but she did wear
coats and waistcoats.—Vogue.
,i‘ —
Testy Tennyson,
Tennyson was once dining at the house
of his brother-in-law, Professor Lushlng
ton, and among tho guests happened to be
an inoffensive stranger who, never having
had the honor of being in Mr. Tennyson’s
company before, every now and then stole
a glance of curiosity at the illustrious poet.
Suddenly, however, those present were
startled by Mr. Tennyson, who had been
rather quiet for some time, looking up
from the tablecloth and glaring wrathfully
round the table. He fixed the young man
with his glittering eye and said, loud
enough to be heard by all present, “You
are looking at ma I tell you.” The col
lapse of the young gentleman was, of
course, complete and instantaneous, the
lesson enforced in his mind being that
while a cat may look at a king it is some
times at the cat’s peril.—New York Trib*
uno.
L-...
jb 111®
COPY Rif _
♦* 4,
GETTING THE GRIP
is easier than getting rid of It unless you
use our Grippe Pills. Your grip on good
health is best preserved by keeping the
body in good condition, and your vitality
strong, by the us 6 of Grippe Pills, which
prevents sudden chills, and enables you to
resist disease. Try it. and you will
weather the winter without illness from
colds.
N. B. DREWRY * SON,
28 Hill Street.
J
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the partner,
ship heretofore existing under the firm
name nf WHITE & WOLCOTT has been
dissolved. The business will be continued
by Thos. J. White, to whom all indebted
ness must be paid. Thos J. White hereby
assumes all liabilities of said firm of
White & Wolcott.
THOS. J. WHITE.
CHAS- F. WOLCOTT.
ill I
i/ / ®'Jill > fiili InlWv
a 3lv w'i ii ?1 nnwW tx
e \ wWLi
WE ARE BUSY
Selling,goods at the following prices:
Best imported Macaroni 10c.
3>b. can Grated Pine Apple 10c can. X.-
81b. can fine Peaches 10c can.
31b. can Table Peaches 12ic pound.
21b. can New Crop Corn 10c can.
Imperial Brand Salmon 15c can.£
8 cans Torratoes 25c.
California Dried Peaches 12|c pound. £
Evaporated Apricots 12|c
Mixed Nuts 10c pound.
Fresh Prunes 10c pound.
Fresh Dates 10c pound. : _
Fresh Currents 10c pound.
Fresh Codfish 8c pound.}
Tomato Catsup 10c
London Layers Raisins 10c. “
Mince Meat 10c pound.
Backet Jelly 8c pound.
Fresh Can Mackerel 15s 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.
H.P.EAOY&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 i CO.
Blood poison
A
tiary BLOOD POISON permanently
cured in 16 toßs days. You can be treated at
home for same price under same guaran
ty. If yon prefer to come here wo will con
tract to pay railroad f areand hotel bills .and
noObarge, if we fail to cure. If you have taken mer
cury, iodide potash, and still have aches and
pains, Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat,
pimples. Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on
any part of the body. Hair or Eyebrows falling
out, it Io this Secondary BLOOD POISON
wo guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti
nate cases and challenge the world for a
case we cannot cure. This disease has al ways
baffled the skill of the most eminent physi
cians. 9500,000 capital behind our uncondh
tlonal guaranty. Absolute proofs sent seaMd on
application. Address COOK REMEDY CO*.
MG Masonic Temple, CHICAGO,
CATHARTIC A
it nW
CURE CONSTIPATION
,Oc all
25c 50c DRUGGISTS
Ordinary's Advertisements.
*• ' . > ~—
■flEsf i £ Kli'
Administrator’s Sale.
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
O SPALDING COUNTY.
By virtue of an order granted by the
Court of Ordinary of Spalding county, Ga
at the February term, 1898,0 f said court,l
will sell to the highest bidder before the
court house doorm Spalding county, Ga.,
on the first Tneaday In March, 1898, be
tween the usual hours of sale, the follow
ing property, to-wit: All that part of lot
No. 11, in Akins district, Spalding county,
Ga., bounded'as follows: On the north
by lands of Thomas Thrower, on tbe east
by lands of J. A. Beeks, deceased, on the
south by lands of John Freeman, and on
the west by lands of A. J. Phennazee: part
of lot No. 11 containing one hundred and
twenty acres, more or less. Terms cash.
A. J. WALKER,
Adm’r. of Miss Lavonia Walker, deceased.
Feb. 7,1896. '
TATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
To all whom it may concern: 8. Grant
land having in proper form applied to me
for Permanent Letters of Administration
on the estate of Mrs. Susan M. Bailey, late
of said county, this Is to cite all ana sin
gular, the creditors and next of kin of Mrs.
Susan M. Bailey, to be and appear at my
office in Griffin, Ga., on the first Monday
in March, 1898, by ten o’clock, a. m., and
to show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not be
granted to S. Grantland on Mrs. Susan M.
Bailey’s estate. Witnees my hand and
official signature this 7th day of Feb. 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
TATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
To all whom it may concern: Whereas
Mrs. Nancy M and W. F. Elder, Admin
istrators of David P. Elder, represents to
tbe court in their petition, duly filed and
entered on record, that they have fully
administered David P. Elder’s eetata This
is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, txJ show cause, if
any they can, why said administrators
should not be discharged from their ad
ministration and receive letters of dismis
sion on the first Monday in May, 1898. «
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
Feb. 7,1898.
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
To all whom it may concern:
J. C. Gilmore having, in proper form,
applied to me ior permanent letters of ad
ministration on the estate of Clark Gil
more, late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular the creditors and next of kin
of Clark Gilmore, to be and appear at my
office in Griffin, Ga., on tbe first Monday
in'March, 1898, by ten o’clock a. m., and
to show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not be
granted to J. C. Gilmore on Clark Gil
more’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signature,
this 7th day of February, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
Whereas, 8. M. Wayman, executor of
last will and testament of 8. F. Gray, rep
resents to the court, in his petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that he has
fully administered 8 F. Gray’s estate.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why said executor
should not be discharged from his admin
istration and receive letters of dismission,
by 10 o’clock a. m., on the first Monday in
May, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
February 7th, 1898.
TATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
To all whom it may concern:
B. F. Beall having in proper form ap
plied to me for permanent letters of ad
ministration on the estate of 8. R. Dor
ough, late of said oonnty, this is to cite all
and singular, tbe creditors and next of kin
of S. R. Dorough, to be and appear at my
office in Griffin, Ga., on the first Monday
in March, 1898, by ten o’clock a. m., and
to show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not be
granted to B. F. Beall on 8. R. Dorough’s
estate.
Witness my hand and official signature,
this 7th day of February, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
TATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
To all whom it may concern:
Whereas, 8. M. Wayman, executor on
the estate of S F. Gray, having represent
ed to the court by his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has con
verted said estate into cash, and that he
desires an accounting and settlement of
the same with all the heirs of said estate,
and creditors thereof; this is, therefore, to
cite all persons, of kindred and creditors,
to appear at the next March term, 1898, by
10 o’clock a. m., of the Ordinary’s Court
in and ior said county, to participate in
the accounting and settlement of said es
tate. J. A. DREWRY,
February 7th, 1898. Ordinary.
| Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
[ GEORGlA—Spalding County.
All persons having claims and demands
against the estate of Melvina Couch, de
ceased, will present the same to me in
terms of the law. All persons indebted to
the said deceased are hereby required to
make immediate payment.
B. R. BLAKELY,
Administrator Melvina Couch.
WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR.,
Counsellor at Law,
GRIFFIN, GA.
GENERAL PRACTICE.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA— Spalding County,
All persons having claims and damanda
th* !—tare nt D. H. Johnson, de
pegged, will present tho same to me in
terms of tbe law. All persons indebted to
the said diseased are hereby required to
make
Administrator D. H. Johnson.
Notice to Debtore eod Gredltors.
GEORGIA- Spalding County.
All persons having claims against the
estate of E L. Hammett will present the
same to me in terms of the law. All per
sons indebted to said deceased are hereby
required to make immediate srttiement;
ROBT. T. DANIEL,
Administrator E. L. Hammett
IN WASHINGTON’S TIME
Furniture was as stiff and straight as the
manners were formal. The furniture of
today, of which there are exquisite sam
ples in our superb stock, have all the vir
tues, without any of the lumbersome,
ungainly features of Colonial styles. We
are making a special feature Just now of
Oak and Mahogany, which are the beet
value for the money we have ever offered,
CHILDS & GODDARD,
60 YEARS”
Trade Marks
Designs
9 Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention Is probably patentable. Communioa
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patanta
sent free. Oldest agency for securtnrpatents.
Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest dr
culatton of any scientific IqurnaL Terms. $3 a
year; four months, fl. Sold by all newsdealers.
Mg te Jort
Something New!
Eveiy 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. _ ■
. Southern Railway.
Shortest and quickest routa with donbla
daily service between Columbus and Atlanta,
connecting in the union Passenger station,
Atlanta, with Vestlbnlcd Limited trains; also
■United States' Fast Mail trains to and from
Washington, New York and all Eastern points.
Also promptly connecting for and from Chav
tanooga, LdUisville. Cincinnati, St. Louis, and
the Northwest and through Pullman Vesti
bmed Sleeping Cars to Kansas City and the
West.
Schedule in effect February 18,1838. Central
standard time except at points east of Atlanr - *.
Northbound. Daily. Dally.
tv. Columbus ?. 685 am
“ Waverly Hall 726 am
“ Oak Mountain 780 am
" Warm Springs 809 am *4# P “
“ Woodbury..." 827 am JgP“
•* Williamson ' 910 am
“ McDonough 1008 am 845 p m
Ar. Atlanta.. ... _H 10 • 46 > m
Lv. Atlanta 12 00 n’n. U 50 p m
Ar. Washington 642 am JWP®
" 'New York r>... 12 48 p m 8— **
Lv. Atlanta. 2 20pm 5 30am
Ar. St. Louis. ft 20 p m 712 a m
Ar. cSncimxati 720 a m 780 p m
No. so No. aa
Southbound. Daily.
Lv. Cincinnati. 830 a m 800 p
tiV. St. Louis 915 p m 7 • P
Lv. Louisville . 745 a m 745 P m
“ Chattanooga 610 pm ?00am
Ar. Atlanta 10 40 pm 110 P m
Lv. New York ~ 1215 n’n. 480 pm.
“ Washington 1115 am 1043 p M
Ar. Atlanta. 510 a m 856 p m
Lv. Atlanta 580 am 420 p m
“ MoDonough. 615 am 525 pm
* Griffin.. _ 660 am 608 pm
“ Wllliamwm. 707 am «19 P “
S :::::::::::::: 15i5 ISIS
“ Warm Springs 800 am 7«0 p ■
“ Mountain 387 am 805 pm
" Waverly Hall 8«7 am 814 pm
Ar. ............. 985 a m *2? P ™
TO MAOON. ’
Daily. No. 91. No. 00
Lv. Columbus, Sonth’n Ry. 685 am 525 pm
Ar. Woodbury,South’nßy. 827 am 7OTP®
“ Macon, K 0118.8... 1100 am
Ar. LaGrangs.M. AB. R.R.| B«pR
Daily. No. 30 No.
Lv. LaGrange, M. &B. B.R. 630 am
Lv. Macon, M. *B. E 4 15 p m
Ar. Woodbury,M.Aß.B.B. 747 am 710 pm
Ar. Qolumbus, South’n Ry. 086 am 865 pm
».V GAGNON. J. M. CULf>.
Third V-P. A &en. Mgr., Trat Manager.
Gen. Pas. Agent. A. Gen- Pas. Agent,