The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, February 26, 1898, Image 2

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Morning Call. ■— owrrtfr, ga, fee a*, m - -1 ' ' '■-•== OifloooFer Dav fa’ hardware Store | > TELEPHONE SO. A ■. ... B,ggagßmsmßmhahMßgßßßßgß J. P A 8. B. BAWTELL, Editors sad Proprietor!. Taa Morning Call will be published tally —Monday excepted-Gt 00 per an- • by carriers at any point in tbo city. The Middlb Gxohgia Pashm, pab llsbed every Thared yet Mete per year 15c for six wmtto, »*» for three MA The store papers sent to say address, pottage paid* prioaa muned Tim Mosuraae Cam. sod the Middlb GnoaatA Fabmbb will ever be the beet Advertising mediums for this entire section of the State. a Advertising rates tarnished on applies- Pg 1 * 0 * • I Offictal Piper of th Ordinary if Spalding comity Md the City ofGrtffln. . •' —SB— — - 1 Would it not be proper and io order ' for Gov. Atkioaon to tender tbe ser vices of the Georgia Colonels—his ap* ' pointers—to tbe secretary of war to rar whip the Spaniards. The Georgia Colonel would be a power—behind a throne. * Sam Jones baa withdrawn from the gubernatorial race for Governor. Bia I withdrawal card is about as unique and Bam Jonesisb as was his announce ment. Many in Georgia will regret not having an opportunity of bearing him in joint debate on tbe stump. JosephJLeiter, the Chicago wheat king, i« forced to get along in life with just a plain '‘Mr.” in front of bis name. If ha will move t j Georgia, and do for ootton what he has done for wheal, he may lake his choice of ”Col“ Ma j “Geo.” or any other military title be may fancy. Atkinson's platform wss so “long in boroiu” that it was stole before any o body saw it, and il has created but little comment. Borne in this section who were originally for him, but are bow for Berner, have never read his platform • It fell fla’ here, and leaves Candler in the saddle. There is just no doubt about old Bpaiding county being foi Col. Can dler. The democracy of this secion | of the woods wan> to see a clean, fair honest expression at tbe polls, and will stand by tbe candidate who standi- L for eueb methods Tbe people are disgusted with mobkeying with vox populi, and will seek a change. The appropriation by congress ot 1200000 for the purpore of raising the I hull of tbe Maine and lowing it back to the United States and the contract with the wrecking company to do the work, sets on foot the most remarkable marine undertaking of the age, and tbe undertaking to do such a thing shows that there is no limit to Amer lean ingenuity and American energy. Tbe hull of the dead warship, stripped of all detachable parts, weighs five thousand tons It lays etnbeded in tbe mud of Havana harbor, and tbe task of Boating it is one which would appear well nigh impossible. Granting that the vessel could be floated, the . work is only begun, for powerful lugi most seise it and put out to sea with the immense dead body, braving the winds sod waves that may once again | send it to the bottom. Dreadful as is the lose of more than 250 lives on the Maine, this fatality ie not the worst in the naval annals ol the United States, says the New York Press By far the greatest loss of life from one American vessel, and prob ably unsurpassed in the history of the world, was when, al the close of the civil war, the Mississippi steamer Sul* tana blew up her boilers near Memphis and burled 1,500 Union soldiers to deatb. The Sultana plied between New Orleane and St. Louis. On April 25, 1865, she touched at Vicksburg,on her trip up tbe river, and look on board 1,900 Union soldiers, who bad been prisoners at Colombia, Libby, Andersonville and other Southern prisons, and who bad either been ex* changed or freeiTby the flight of their jailers. Tbe soldiers were from tbe West, and there were several cases of 100 or so belonging to one regiment. When eight miles above Memphis,, at 1 o'clock in tbe morning of the 27th, one of tbe Sultana’s boilers exploded, killing hundreds of the sleeping sol* diers and throwing hundreds more into tbe river. Tbe boat was laden heavily wben she left Memphis, and Efe the Soldier* were sleeping anywhere they could lie down, even on tbe tops of the cabins and pilot house. Occa sionally here and there in tbe North to-day can be found a survivor of that awful night. HUMAN BRAINS. Be* Betewce View* the UibSWti Betwasw Msa wad Wrote. The weightier brain would seem also to indicate, a priori, the greater intel lectual power, and this, too, is borne out by undoubted fact*. Women, it has often been said, have ye* to produce their Newton, their Dante, their Aris totle, their Pascal, their Goethe, The assertion is very feebly met by the con tention that women’s education has been for centuries neglected. It was not education which enabled Pascal as a child to aee his way through problems which not one man in I,COO can understand after prolonged mental drill It was not education which gave the race Its great men poets. “They lisped in numbers for the nambera came.” But where are their feminine equals? We will, however, take an art in which women have enjoyed far more training than men—the art of music. There are some excellent women pianists and vio linists, but where are the female Backs, Beethovens, Moearts and Wagners? Na ture only can explain the absence of great women composers as of the femi nine compeers of Titian and Raphael, tbe technique of whose art seems pecul iarly fitted to women. Nature tells ns that she cannot form the matrix out of which commanding intellectual geniuses of the female sex would proceed. Why this is so we may partly guess, but cannot wholly know. , We see that nature has divided the world into sexes for her own purposes, and that to each sex peculiar functions are assigned. We see that the physio logical functions of woman necessitate a different anatomy from that of man, and we infer that these functions and this structure preclude, speaking gener ally, the kind of effort which we call supreme genius, as also that kind of effort which we call sustained executive power. While women are not so far differentiated from men that they can not enter with pleasure into men’s works, and, often in a great measure, share in their production, it remains a fact that it is man’s particular organi zation which is alone capable either of the highest manifestations of Anins or the most sustained exhibition of energy. Whether it will always be so we do not □tow, for we cannot peer into the fu ture. It is sufficient that it not only is so now, but that it always has been so, and that science does give us some good grounds for believing that the fact is deeply rooted in the very structure of sex—London Spectator THE HEALTHY PALATE. It Doea Kot Crave Condi men ta, but the Food Must Possess Flavor. While a perfectly sound and healthy palate does not crave for condimepts, even prefers to do without them, yet the majority of digestions require to be humored and kept in order, and their peculiarities must be studied. Dr. Brun ton says: ‘■Savory food causes the digestive juices to be freely secreted. Well cooked and palatable food is therefore more di gestible than the unpalatabla If food lacks savor, a desire naturally arises to supply it by condiments, not always well selected or wholesome. ” As commerce brought them within reach of the people condiments, in sim ple or complicated forms, came greatly into favor, and foreign spices were add ed to the wild herbal growths of the fields and hedges In our early history the “spicery” was a special department of the court and had its proper officers. In the fourteenth century spices were both costly and rare, most of them com ing from the Levant Chaucer mentions many by name—canella, macys, clowes (cloves), grains of paradise, nutmegs, caraway and spikenard. The ancients, especially the Greeks and Romans in the luxurious period of their history, used condiments very freely. An old English historian, referring to the earlier Roman court, says, “The best magistrates of Rome allowed but the ninth day for the city and publick business, the rest for the country and the sallet garden. ” From this it would seem as though the education of taste was accounted of some consequence in those days.—Exchange. The misuse of the title “professor,” when it is applied indiscriminately to musicians in general, finds an amusing example in the following story, credited to*Bandmaster Sousa and printed in The Musical Age: Some years ago Sousa was leading a band at a small country festival The advent of the band had been awaited with intense interest by the audience, and when they arrived the bandsmen were quickly surrounded by a surging crowd which hemmed them in so that it was difficult for them to keep on playing. Sousa appealed to one of the commit tee to keep the crowd away and said that unless his men had more room they could not play. The committeeman shook his band warmly, and, turning to the asembled multitude, bawled out: “Gentlemen, step back and give the purfesser’spurfessers a chance to play!” Aggravation Balo* Stairs. Mrs. Greene—Really, I think that girls in domestic service have a pretty comfortable time of it One of Them—But we have our trials, mum. Just as like as not, when we have got a bonnet or a gown that is particularly becoming, first thing we know our mistress comes out with something exactly like it—Boston Transcript French billiard tables have six legs instead of four, as in America. There are no strings for marking; score is kept by chalking the figures on a slate set in the side of the table or on a me chanical reckoner inserted in the same place * ; , :* :* Nearly £500,000 worth of artificial flowers are sold in London yearly. FORMER,DUELB. ■MM eff tM» Tv ANMvs of Haaer of Mbs Past. General Benedict Arnold fought a dual near Kilburn Wells in 1791 with Iced L—derrisie, who, after Arnold mimed him. rafaaed either to fire or to t h-i t if the general was not satisfied he could keep on firing ■util be wan In 1804 the turbulent Lord Camelfard, the symmetrical ar rangement of whose whips and sticks over his chimneypiece is described by Byron, “From the thick bludgeon to the taper switch,” lost .bis life in a duel he owed to a vengeanoe de femme. Captain Best had caught a sharper named Symonds in the act of cheat ing and kicked his face tea pulp. Tbe man’s wife wrote Caaetfotd an anony mous letter to tell him his friend Best had slandered him. A duel was fought with pistols (they were the two best shots in England), a»d Camelford fell with a mortal wound. “You have killed me, Best,” said the dying man, “but the fault is wholly mine. I relieve you of all the blame. ” But men of mature years and establidbed reputation risked life as recklessly as the wildest young guardsmen or London rakes. Charles James FV>x fought a duel with a cabinet minister, Mr. Adam, in 1779. Four shots were exchanged. Adam missed. Fox fired in the air and apolo gized. “Sir,” said Adam, “you have behaved like a man of honor. ” In India, toward the end of the last century, a duel was fought between Warren Hast ings and Sir Philip Francis, the latter being dangerously wounded. Shortly afterward, in Bombay, Lord Macartney and Mr. Sadler quarreled at the council board, and in the duel Macartney re ceived a dangerous wound. The Earl of Talbot and John Wilkes, fighting a duel at night in the garden of the Red Lion inn, at Bagshot, and discussing the conditions of it beforehand in a private room over a chop, is a tableau de moeurs George Canning was seriously wound ed when he and Castlereagh met at Put ney in 1807 to exchange four shots. In the duel between Henry Grattan and Mr. Corry a bullet shattered the latter’s arm. As late as 1835 Mr. Roebuck fought a duel with Mr. Black of The Morning Chronicle, when two shots were exchanged without result. The fighting parson was then as well known as the fighting editor. The Rev. Henry Bate, editor of The Morning Post, was both. A dead shot, and with what his contemporaries call “a profligate tongue, ” he was most successful as a duelist He “pinked” “Fighting Fitz gerald, ” a Mr. Temple, a young barris ter who was his assistant editor, and several others, but met his match at last in Captain Stoney Robinson, who gave him a severe wound, but whom he also wounded.—Cornhill Magazine. The Number Thirteen. The superstition that 18 is unlucky, which is traced back to a sacred source, meets with as many contradictions as confirmations. The fact that the horri ble fire in the Paris bazaar started at booth 13 was telegraphed all around the world, whereas little notice is attracted by Nansen’s success with 18 men. At one time 2 was a dreaded number in England, owing to the dynastic disas ters to all monarchs second of their name from Ethelred II to George IL Yet Napoleon’s number through all his life was 2, and who could wish for better luck than came to Goody Two Shoes or than that which results at times from having two strings to your bow? Three, which since the days of Py thagoras has been the divine number, shows that it is not invariably fortu nate, for, though the fates are three, so also are the furies. The graces are three, but so also are the judges in hades and the heads of Cerberus. Then there are the records of three disloyal tribes in Welsh history; there are the three robbers in Orion’s belt; there were the three tyrants at Athens, and 3 in mythology is as unlucky as it is divine. Just so clearly as it has been Shown in time that the unlucky 3 can be lucky and that the pleasant 8 can be unpleasant the followers of the late Captain Fowler would show that the unlucky 13 can be the luckiest number there is. So we may as well regret his departure, while we wish success to his associates—. Boston Jour nal His Authority. Daniel Webster’s oratory was not al ways of the ponderous order. Occasion ally he would introduce a bit of humor very effectively, an instance of which The Green Bag gives as follows: Daniel Webster when in foil practice was employed to defend the will of Roger Perkins of Hopkinton. A physi cian made affidavit that thetestator was struck with death when he signed the will Webster subjected his testimony to a most thorough examination, show ing by quoting medical authorities that doctors disagree as to the precise mo ment when a dying man is struck with, death, some affirming that it is at tho commencement of the disease, others at its climax and others still affirm that we U)gin to die as soon as we are born. “I should like to know,” said the op posing counsel, “what doctor maintains that theory?” “Dr. Watts,” said Mr. Webster, with great dignity. “The moment we begin, to live we all begin to die. ” Kcligion Vercua Politics. Clerk—Man wants transportation to Chicago. Railroad Official—Confounded cler gyman, I suppose. Well, I hate to do it, but you may sell him a ticket at half fare. Clerk (a minute later)—-Man says he’s not a clergyman. He’s a member of the legislature. Railroad Official—Ah! Tell him we take pleasure in handing hi tn a free pass.—Brooklyn life. Smaller, bat More Active. The tongue of woman is small« tl>U* that of mam —£xc hange. JsWSSHb WE ARE BUSY Sellinujoods 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. 3 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. 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 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. Excursion tickets at reduced rates between local points are on sale after 12 noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. m. Sundays, good returning until Monday noon following date ot sale. Persons contemplating either a busi ness or pleasure trip to the East should investigate and consider the advantages offered via Savannah and Steamer lines. The rates generally are considerably cheaper by this route, and, in addition to this, passengers save sleeping car fare,and the expense of meals en route. We take pleasure in commending to the traveling public the route referred to, namely, via Central of Georgia Railway to Savannah, thence via the elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam ship Company to New York and Boston, and the Merchants and Miners line to Baltimore. The comfort of the traveling public is looked after in a manner that defies criticism. Electric lights and electric bells; handsomely furnished staterooms, modern sanitary arrangements. The tables are supplied with all the delica cies of the Eastern and Southern mar kets. All the luxury and comforts of a modern hotel while on board ship, affording every opportunity for rest, recreation or pleasure. Each steamer has a stewardess to look especially after ladles and chil dren traveling alone. Steamers sail from Savannah for New York daily except Thursdays and Sundays, and for Boston twice a week. For Information as to rates and sail ing dates of steamers and for berth reservations, apply to nearest ticket agent of this company, or to J. C. HAILE, Gen. Passenger AgL, E. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager, Savannah, Ga. DISSOLUTION NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the partner ship heretofore existing under the firm name of WHITE & WOLCO’I T has been dissolved. The businers 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,, s THOS, J. WHITE. CHAS. F. WOLCOTT. Htaßß POISON Ma SPEC!ALT Y» ffig Mtiary BLOOD POISON permanently You can bo treated at for sum ? pr;ee under same gnaran jf you prefer to come here we w,l!con tract to pay rai Iroari f areand hole 1 bl lie,and K> Charge, if we fail to cure. If you have taken mer «ory. lodide potash, and still have aches and filna. Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat, imples. Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on nay part of the body, H air or Eyebrows falling nut, it is this Secondary BLOOD POISON wo guarantee to cure. Wo solicit the most obsti nate cases and challenge the world for a case we eannotcure. This disease has always baffled the skill of the most eminent physi cians. 8500,000 capital behind our uncondl. tkmal gnaraucy. Absolute proofs sent sealed oa application. Address COOK REMEDY C&. 349 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, ILL. CANDY CATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION ,oc Sc 50c druggists Ordioary* • Advertisement*. . i «... —— Administrator’s Sale. STATE OF GEORGIA, ’ Bpalddiq County. By virtue of an order granted by tbe Court of Ordinary of Spalding county, Ga al tbe February term, 1898, ol said court, I will sell to the highest bidder before the court bouse door in Spalding county, Ga-, on the first Tuesday in March, 1898, be tween tbe usual boars of sale, the follow ing property, to-wit: All that part of lot No. 11, in Akina 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 tbe 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. 7,1898. . _ 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 tbe estate of Mrs. Susan M. Bailey, late of said county, this is to cite all ana sin gular, the creditors and next ol kin of Mrs. Susan M. Bailey, to be and appear at my office in Griffin, Ga., on tbe first Monday in March, 1898, by ten o’clock, am., and to show cause, if anv they can, why per manent administration should not be granted to 8. Grantland on Mrs. Susan M Bailey’s estate. Witness my hand and official signature this 7ih 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 the court in their petition, duly filed and entered on record, that they have fully administered David P. Elder’s estate. This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred and creditors, to 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: . - STATE OF GEORGIA, 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 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 J; C. Gilmore on Clark Gil more’s estate. Witness my hand and official signature, this 7th day of February, 1898. J. A. DREW RY, Ordinary. TATE OF GEORGIA, Ji 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. STATE 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 county, this is to cite all and singular, tbe creditors and next of kin of S. R. Dorougb, 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 causb, 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. STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalding County. To all whom it may concern: Whereas, t>. M. Wayman, executor on the estate of 8 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 for said county, to participate in Ithe accounting and settlement of said es tate. J. A. DRE WHY, February 7th, 1898. Ordinary. I Notice to Debtors and Creditors. I GEORGIA— 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 arc hereby required to make immediate payment. B. R. BLAKELY, Administrator Melvina Conch. WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR., CoLin.sellor at Law, GRIFFIN, GA. GENERAL PRACTICE. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Cocbty. AU persons having claims and demaods against tbe estate ot D. EL Johnaon, de. cured, will present the-YMJe to me in - terms of tbe law. All persona indeb ed tv the said deceased are hereby required to Administrator D. H. Johnson. BBtgggß!=s=eggggg=? ii^, ii | m ... Notice to Dobtera.aMl Creditors. GEORGIA- Spalding County. All persons having claims against tbe estate of E L. Hammett will present the same to me in terms of the law. AU per sons indebted to said deceased are 'hereby required to make immediate aettlemenU* ROBT. T. DANIEL, Administrator E. L. Hammett. to jsSg--j Iff 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 aU the vir tues, without any of the lumbenome, ungainly features of Colonial styles. We are making a special feature just now of Oak and Mahogany, which are the beat value for the money we have ever offered. CHILDS & GODDARD. 60 YEARS* Trade Marks Designs 'fvvvy~ Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and deecriptlon ma, quickly ascertain onr optalon free whether aa invention is probably nateetabte. Commnnlca. tions strictly conlldentiaL Handbook on Patanta sent free. Oldest agency for secoring patents. Patanta taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Sckntiflc JUnericaiL A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest rir culatlon of any scientific Journal. Twn, S 3 a year: four months, *L Sold by aU newsdealers. 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, pTcnicers, to send out meals, etc. Cheap and always look welL A. LOWER. No. 18 Hill Street. Southern Railway. Shortest and quickest route with donble daily service between Columbus and Atlanta, connecting in the Union Passenger station, Atlanta, with Veatibuled Limited trains; ano United States Fast Mail trains to and from Washington. New York and all Eastern point* Also promptly connecting for and from Chat tanooga, Lyiusville. Cincinnati, St. Louis, and the Northwest and through Pullman’ VeetF bn led Sleeping Cara to Kansas City and the West. Schedule in effect February 13, 1898. Central rtandard time except at points east of Atlnr „ ~ . . N«- I Ne. Northbound. DaUy I>>t , y Lv. Columbus 635 am 535 pm •• Waverly Hall 726 am •HP™ ** Oak Mountain. 780 am ” ~ P m “ Warm Springs 809 am “ Woodbury... 8 827 am i£P K “ Concord 852 am t®!” 11 “ Williamson 010 am JiOpn ■ Griffin 023 a m ■<W P ™ “ McDonough 1008 am 845 pm Ar. Atlanta 1110 amV MP » , Lv. Atlanta 12 00 n’n. 11 50 p m Ar. Washington 6 42 am “ New York 1248 pm 623 am Lv. Atlanta. 220 pm 530 » m Ar. Chattanooga 780 pm 0W • m Ar. Louisville . 727 a m 730 p m Ar. Bt. Louis . 620 p m 7 U am Ar. Cincinnati. . .. 720 a m "33 pm Southbound. Daily. Doily. Lv. Cincinnati 830 a m 800 p m 1 Lv. St. Louis 9 15pm 7M am LvTLouisville 745 am 745 pm •• Chattanooga 610 pm 600 am Ar. Atlanta 10 40 p m 1 10 p m Lv. New York. 1215 n’n. 430 p m “ Washington 1115 am 1043 p m Ar. Atlanta 510 am 856 pm Lv. Atlanta 5 30 a nJ 4 20 p m ** McDonough. 615 am 525 pm M Griffin. 650 am 6« pm “ WUliamson. 707 am 619 pm " Concord 728 am 6 37pm Woodbury 747 am 707 pm “ Warm Springs 800 am 740 pm “ Oak Mountain 887 am 806 pm “ Waverly Hall B<7 am 8 14pm Ar. Columbus 085 am < SI r m TO MACON. ~~ Dally. No. 27. No. 20 Lv. Columbus, South’n By 635 a m 525 p m Ar. Woodbnry,South’n ßy. 827 am 707 pm •• Macon, 14. 48. E.R., 1100 a m ■ ■ Ar- LaGrange,M. St B. R.R. 8M p Daily. No. 30 No. 2» Lv. LaGrange, M. St H. R.B. 680 a m Ar.Oolnmbus, Bouth'nßy 0.35 am 856 pm ». 8. GANNON, J. M-CULP. Third V-P. St G«n. Mgr.. TraL Manager, Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C. W G«.fS? Agent. 8 Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. T. K. PEABODY, Pagsengw St Tiokat A«mt,