The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, March 02, 1898, Image 2
Morning Cali.
aymit, ea, mabob a i»w.
Office over Darla’ hardware Store
TELEPHONE NO. M
J. P.<B. B.BAWTELL,
K Taa Mobbing Call will be published
Jelly —Monday excepted—at $5.00 per sn-
I asm, $2,50 for elx months, tJJiO for thrw
months, or 10 oento per week. Delivered
by carriere al any point la the dty.
t The Middlb GnoaoxA Fabmbb, pnb-
The shore papers ecnttoany addrem,
P T?S’and the Middlii
a^M P^ W
Adverting ratae tarnished on applies-
Offidil Paper of the Ortlnan
of SpaWtec ceaatyead tte CMy
tl Griffin.
The only portion of Sjulh Geor
gia that Judge Atkinson seems to be
carrying in hie pants pocket in Glynn
ooaaty. '
If you belong to the “rank and fils”
of the democratic parly Allen Cand
ler's letter did not hit you.—Rome
Georgian. -
Georgia is going to elect Candler
both as an object leeeon to the politi
cal ringsten and for the sake ot good
government also.—Fort Valley Leader.
Lei's have a man for governor ibis
lime who is not bound head and loot
to a few politicians. In the person of
Hon. Allen D. Candler, we will have
just each a man.—Vienna Progress.
Judge atkineon is a good man, a
| dean man, a South Georgia—be is
home folk—he is a man we would like
the best in the world to support, but,
then, the political atmosphere that
surrounds him is bad, very bid —Ly*
one Courier.
1 - "■
Eg| It is now feared, according to re
ports, that Mr. Gladstone|wi!l have to
undergo a surgical operation for ne
croaia of the bone of the noee, fnm
which h% is suffering. There is said
to be danger of cancer, if indeed it has
not already developed.
The governor of Virginia has vetoed
a bill to allow women to serve as no
taries, on constitutional grounds. II a
woman may be a colonol, and serve
upon the staff of a governor, why
should she not be a notary public if
she wants toT If we are not mistaken
there is a colonel in skirts in Virginia.
r
Ex Governor 8t John of Kansas has
been turned out of the executive com
mittee of the “Liberal party,** the
name of the Prohibition parly in Kau
nas Whether this action was taken
because be recently signed a petition
for tbe granting of a liquor license, or
becauae be has indorsed Bryan and
• free silver for 1900, is a mooted ques
tion. At any rate tbe people who
once elected him to the governorship
have now turned their backs upon
• him. ■
Dr Makuen of the Philadelphia Po
lyclinic, io a lecture tbe other day, as
serted that defects of speech were
more injurious to the health than
straining the eye. Speech strains, he
said, affect tbe nervous system .far
more than tbe eye etraioe. Speech
defects have a deleterious effect upon
tbe general health of tbe sufferer, and
•specially upon tbe mental condition
of the patient. Speech may be regard
ed as tbe mind's most efficient too)
the thing with which tbe mind does
its work. Tbe mind is consequently
deprived of an important stimulus to
activity when it is difficult for it to
employ its chief working instrument.
It is estimated that there are not
lees than 50,000 self supporting women
io tbe city of New York—art students,
trained nurses, stenographers, medical
students, journalists, etc. Some capi
talists have formed a company to build
a great hotel for tbe especial accom
modation of such women. It io pro
posed that the hotel aball be modeled
somewhat upon the general system of
the new Milla Hoose, which takes care
of men at a remarkably reaeooable
rate. The woman's hotel is to contain '
82b rooms, and the cost of board and '
lodging will average about $6 per
week. Such an establishment would
be a boon to the honest, hard-working,
energetic young women who now have
to'gel along as best they can in sec
ond-rate boarding bouses
Aate- _zr _ I
A REVOLUTIONARY RELIC.
5 Tarleton's Sword That Was Loo* a* U*a
Battle <rf Cowpens.
A priceless relic of Revolutionary days
: has just been placed In the statehouse at
) Colombia, 8. 0., for safe keeping. It to
tbe sword which Tarleton used in leading
the British troopers at the battle of Oow
. pens, that state, against the patriots un
der Morgan, Pickens, Sumter and Marion.
The sword is tbe property of Colonel T.
E. Dickson, and baa been placed with the
I sword of Marton and other revolutionary
, relfca in tbe poeesmlon of tbe state.
1 Tarleton lost the sword at the battle of
• Cowpens, where tho patriots won such a
* signal victory, a victory which put fresh
1 heart in their brethren throughout the
colonise and hastened the coming of tbe
triumphant end of the Whr at Yorktown
Colonel William Washington, the gallant
leader of tbe American cavalry, pressed
' Tarleton so closely in hia fight as to be
able to have ono exchange of saber blows
with tbe British leader. Washington’s
Sword cut Tarleton’s Angers and the Brit
ish colonel dropped his steel, spurred hia
steed and obtained safety by flight.
William Scott, the father of Colonel
Dickson's mother, was an American sol
dier in tbe battle of Cowpena He saw the
fight between Washington and Tarleton
' and picked up tbe latter’s sword when he
dropped it. The sword has ever since been
, preserved in the family as a priceless trophy
of ancestral prowess in the Revolutionary
war.
Tho sword or saber, for the blade curves
back so as to give greater force to its
. blows, is long and heavy. The blade is a
yard In length, while the hilt is slightly
over 6 Inches long, with an iron guard.
, There iaalong scratch on the guard and a
cut in the iron knob at tbe end of tbe hilt,
which are believed to have tpen made by
tbe blow of Washington’s sword which
forced Tarleton to drop his weapon or
' which knocked it out Os hia hand.
Tho iron shank of the hili is eased in
' wood, which was covered with leather,
i much of which has been worn away.
Upon the blade, close to the lillt, is en
graved the word “ Potter, ” probably the
name of Its maker.
There are many notches in the blade,
and some rust upon it, possibly made by
tbe blood of patriots who had felt its edga
In this connection it will not be amiss
■ to repeat two anecdotes about Tarleton
and Washington.
Tbe patriot ladles of the Revolutionary
times had keen wits. On one occasion
’ Tarleton in a bragging mood was telling
a patriot lady how he wished he could
i meet “their boasted Colonol Washington.’’
Her prompt reply was, “If you had looked
behind you when running away from
Cowpens, your wish would have been
gratified. ’’
On another occasion Tarleton was speak
ing contemptuously of Colonel William
Washington to a patriot lady. “Why,”
Said Tarleton, “they tell mo he is so igno
rant that he cannot even write bis name. ”
With a meaning glance at Tarleton's right
hand, which Washingtpn had wounded,
the lady replied, “But nobody is better
aware than you, Colonel Tarleton, that
Colonel Washington knows how to make
his mark-” —Washington Star.
Doga and Hounds.
In the Roman period not only were
right hounds and scent bounds fully dif
ferentiated, but there wore also various
kinds of lapdogs and house dogs, although
none quite like our modern breeds. Even
as far back as about 8000 B. C. Egpytian
frescoes show not only greyhoundlike
breeds, but one with drooping ears like a
bound and a third which has been com
pared to the modern turnspit, while house
dogs and lapdogs came In soon afterward.
Whether any of these are tbe direct ances
tors of modern breeds or whether all such
have been produced by subsequent cross
ing is a very difficult question to answer,
more especially when we recollect that if
an ancient Egyptian artist had to draw
the portrait of a modern dog it would be
very doubtful whether it would be recog
nised by its master or mistress.
But the record of the antiquity of the
domesticated dogs does not even stop with
the earliest known Egyptian monuments.
Not only were such breeds known in Eu
rope during the iron and bronze ages,
but also during the antecedent neolithic or
polished stone period. These have been de
scribed by Professors Ruttimeyer and
Woldrich, and those who are acquainted
with the difficulty of distinguishing be
tween some of tho living species by tbe
skulls alone will understand the laborious
nature of the task. Still these authorities
appear to have made out that the Swiss
neolithic dog (Gania palustris) had certain
cranial resemblances to both hounds and
spaniels, and thus indicate an advanced
type, which is considered to have been de
rived from neither wolves nor jackals, but
from some species now extinct. Two oth
er breeds have also been recognized from
the superficial deposits of the continent,
and if. as la very likely to be the case, any
or all of these races are the forerunners of
some of the modern breeds It will readily
be understood how complex is the origin
of the mixed group which we now call
Cauls familiarta —Knowledge.
Medieval Students.
We find a Paris scholar complaining of
the disorders of tbe schools and expressing
fear of personal violence, and a student at
Toulouse writes that a certain P., against
whom be had been warned before leaving
hia home in Narbonne, bad taken forcible
possession of his room and so disturbed
him In his work that he would like per
mission to go home at Easter. At Orleans
a young man pleads for help from his fa
ther because, having quarreled with a cer
tain youth, as the devil would have it, he
struck him on the head with a stick, so
that he is now in prison and must pay 60
livres for his release, while his enemy is
healed of his wounds and goes free.
That tbe pranks of students were not al
ways severely judged we may perhaps in
fer from tbe letter of a professor of law at
Orleans to a father at Beaancon in which
it is said that, while no doubt tbe man’s
•on G. was one of a crowd that bad sung a
ribald song on an organ, the matter was
at no importance, as the young man’s
general record was good and he was mak
ing excellent progress In law. Naturally,
too, the examples of parental reproof have
something to say of the evils of the time,
particularly gambling and riotous living,
but tn general the formularies reflect the
more virtuous side of student life, and for
a more adequate portrayal of its vice and
violence we must turn to tbe records cf
courts, tbe Goliardlc literature and tbe
vigorous denunciations of contemporary
preachers.—American Historical Review.
Aboat Indiana.
The various tribes excelled in different
manufactures. .The Iroquois made the
best bark lodges, tbe Algonquins the best
skin tents, the Dakotas the best stone
pipes, the Pacific tribes tbe best baskets.
ONCE THEY WERE MEDIUMS.
Mew They Htptato Their Stas by ToMlng
Halls of Bine Biro,
Close by the Northwestern tracks at
Leavitt street is tbe home of the “ jug
gling sistara.” They were twin presti
digitators in ibeir days of life, so runs
tho tradition, and now they toss balls
of blue fire about as the juggler does
eggs, cannon balls and the like. Their
pet amusement is to stand on their
head* and toss the balls as if they were
standing afoot. The force of gravity
seems to be reversed for their benefit,
for they “toss” the balls of fire down,
and the little flames “fall*’ up. All this
la set down-just as James Mao Courtney,
tbe oldest settler in the neighborhood,
tells it Ho said tbe other day:
“Them broad windys over there on
the north side of the old building is tho
place where the . sisters comes to show
tbeiraelves. The year of tbe World's
fair I counted up their performances, an
they come every 50 days. The reason
ter that is somethin I could never guess,
but some smart young chap here fig
gored out that it was always in the
dark of the moon. I’ve noticed since
that there never was no moonlight when
they got up there in the windys.
“What’s the cause of their hauntin
the old place? Why, sir, the story’s so
old there can’t no truth nor lie be made
out on it. There’s no man in these dig
gin’sJonger’u I be, an I ken the story
1 only by hearsay, so to speak. I heerd it
from my granddaddy, an he said he heerd
it when he was a young man comin
here. That mus’ 'a' ben in tbe thirties.
Onnyways he sed that the two sisters
was persdiditatirs. It seems like they
give a performance in the house, which
was new then in course, an the pair of
them agreed ter be locked up in a box
thet was to be sealed an fastened, an
then they was to get out without break
in tbe seals. Well, they was locked up,
but they couldn’t get out, an party soon
they foun theirselves so short of breath
they couldn’t holler loud enough to be
heerd. In course they was in a room
away from the other people, so’s the
common folk couldn’t see how the trick
was turned. When they couldn’t holler,
they tried rappin, an the others only
thought they was a-workin out of the
box an so didn’t pay attention. After
an hour or so the other peoples got nerv
ous an went in an opened the box, an
there was the two sisters, cold dead.
They buried ’em together in the box in
the yard back of the house, an that’s
why they juggles the fire balls upside
down like.” —Chicago Chronicle.
MAKING ARTIFICIAL ICE.
How the Plants Arc Constructed and Op
erated In Philadelphia.
Artificial cold or ice may be most
readily produced by the evaporation of
a more or less volatile liquid. In the
first machines constructed this liquid
was water. One-tenth of the amount of
water used was converted into ice, but
as it was necessary to maintain a vac
uum in tjie apparatus its perfect work
ing was a difficult problem. A more
readily volatile liquid, therefore, bad
to be substituted, such as liquefied sul
phurous acid and liquefied ammonia.
Being gaseous at ordinary temperatures,
they are very suitable substances for
this purpose. The ammonia ice machine
is the one in most general use—in fact,
it finds exclusive application in this
city. This liquefied ammonia is allowed
to expand in coils of pipes which are
placed in tanks filled with brine. The
temperature of the brine is thus reduced
to a point below the freezing point of
water—that is, to 14-18 degrees F.
In this refrigerated brine are placed
galvanized iron tanks having the shape
of the large cakes of ice which one is
accustomed to see in the wagons that
pass through our city streets. After a
period of 48-50 hours this can of water
is converted into solid ice. The can is
hoisted out of the brine, warmed with
hot water, which allows the cake to
slip out upon a shoot that runs into the
storage rooms. Tbe gaseous ammonia
in the pipes can be used over and over
again, a large compression engine being
a part of the plant, which reduces the
expense of the process. From this de
scription it should be plain that there
can be no taint of ammonia to give a
taste to tho ice.
The plants usually employ distilled
or artesian water, so that the ice is of
tbe best quality. Whatever impurities
the water contains are collected in the
white streak found in the center of each
cake. The pure water separates from
the impure and freezes first. Even ten
years ago the demand for ice was sup
plied from natural sources, the har
vests from our own Pennsylvania riv
ers, which were stored every winter in
great houses on the shores of the streams,
being supplemented by shipments
throughout the summer from Maine.
There are now in Philadelphia 16 ice-’
making plants, some of which yield
over 100 tons per day each, and the arti
ficial product for several years has been
a serious competitor of the natural arti
cle.—Manufacturer.
No Negro In South Africa.
The word “negro” is not heard in
South Africa excepting as a term of op
probrium. Over and over again have
Afrikander Englishmen stopped me
when speaking of Zulus, Basu t os, Mata
bele and eo on as negroes. “ You in
America only know the blacks who
come over as slaves. Our blacks are not
to be confused with the material found
on the Guinea coast.”—“White Man’s
Africa,” fay Poultney Bigelow.
A Boston newspaper complains that
the famous Bunker Hill monument,
Which when first erected was the tallest
creation of man in this country, has
now become quite insignificant in
height, it is 220 fee* high, or 327 feet
shorter than city hall tower in Phila
delphia.
Greater Glasgow, with * population
of 853,000, has only 494 medical men,
or one doctor to 1,726 of the population.
It must be a healthy place.
Executive Committee.
The member* ol tbe state democratic c
executive cdmmi’tee sre reqoe*tdd to <
meet at tho Kimball bouse, March 17,
1898, •» 11 o’clock ju m. t to fix the
• nor hir lioldiog the elate convention
and to fix tbe time and provide the
manner for bolding primary electione
to nominate governor and state house
officer* and for other purpose* I »ill i
thank the newspapers of the stale to *
copy this notice. i
A. 8. Clay. Chairman. ’
< J !
x j.kUahjTil t
■V'zry i
Me wss\io e v «icfrnw?,
TID-BITSIFOR MA .HONEY!
and tender little juicelets for the children, i
are all right, but papa and “the boy*” want 1
a good, big juicy steak, roast or chop when j
business or school duties are over, and we (
can cater to them all. Our stock of prime i
meats is unexcelled for quality, and we
send them home in fine shape.
J. R. SHEDD.
• e
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and until 6p. b.
Sundays, good returning until Monday
noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a busi
ness or pleasnre 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 ria 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 & WOLCOTT has been
dissolved. The business will be continued
by Thos. J. White, to whom all indebted
nesa jnust be paid. Thos. J. White hereby
assumes all liabilities of said firm of
White & Wolcott. ■*
THOS. J. WHITE.
. CHAS. F. WOLCOTT.
S IBP POISON
SPFtn Al
BLOOD^FOl«OM darrort * P ‘
to IfitoSS dagra. Yon caa be twated 4
foraamioiMUßdaraeaiauwMM
yoa prefer to conebere wewUleoo
opavtailroadtoreyd hOMWUn. ,n<i
nc*—tpe,K y fail Io eiue. If you have taken mer.
canty, iodide potatet, and atfll have acbea and
paten. M uooua Fatcheain mouth. So re Throat,
out. It la thia Seeondaiy BLOOD POISOfi
venoranteetocure. We eoheit tbe moat abaci
ante easea and challenge tha world fora
CANDY
# CATHARTIC
CURE CONSTIPATION
ioc
~ ™ druggists
-* '*AfcOb »■!>■ b Jfc tii ■ ■*— a -->■
Ordinary'B Advertisemeiitß. I
OTATE OF GEORGIA, <
o Spalding Coumty. 1
To all whom it may concern: 8. Grant*
land having in proper form applied to me
br Permanent Letters of Administration
on the estate of Mrs. Susan M. Bailev, late
nf raid county, this Is to cite all and «in
ralar, the creditors and next oi 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 p«- <
manent administration should not be
granted to 8. Grantland on Mrs. Susan M. <
Bailey’s estate. Witness my band and
official signature this 7th day of Feb. 1898.
J. A. DREWRY .Ordinary. ’
STATE OF GEORGIA, I
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 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 tbe 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 >or permanent letters of ad
ministration on the estate of Clark Gil
more, late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular tbe creditors and next of kin
of Clark Gilmore, to be and appear at my
office in Grifhn, 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
folly 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 S. R. Dor
ougb, late of said county, this is to cite all
ana singular, tbe creditors and next of kin
of 8. 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 cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration shonld not be
granted to B. F. Beall on 8. R. Borough'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, 8. M. Wayman, execu’or 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 eaid 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. DREWrtY,
February 7th, 1898. Ordinary.
——o—————Oß—te
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA - Spalding County.
All persons having claims and demands
against the estate of Melvina Couch, de
ceased, will present tbe 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.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGlA—Spalding County,
All persons having claims and demands
against the estate ot D. H. Johnson, 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 D. H. Johnson.
' Notice to Debtors a and Creditors.
GEORGIA— Spalding County.
All persons having claims against the
estate of E L. Hammett will present the
same to me in terms of tbe law. All per
sons indebted to said deceased are hereby
required to make immediate settlement.;
ROBT. T. DANIEL,
Administrator E. L. Hammett.
WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR.,
Counsellor at Law,
GRIFFIN, GA.
GENERAL PRACTICE.
Briffln Telephone Exchange
■BANOBOr THN BOUTHKBN BXI4.TXLX
FHONB AMD TKLKGRAPHCO.
fNO. D. EASTERLY, Bupt
W. T. GENTRY, Assistant Bupt.l
Atlanta, Ga.
16 Anthony, Dr. E. R., residence, 2 rings
10 Anthony Drag Co.
I Bailey, D. J., Jr., residence.
J 6 Bailey, Mrs. 8. M., residence.
19 Bishop, J. W., Market.
» Blakely, B. R., Grocer.
11 Boyd, J. D., warehouse, 2 rings.
II Boyd, J. D., residence, 8 rings.
37 Boyd Manntactunng Co.
AS Brewer A Hanleiter, wholesale grocers
4 Burr’s Sons, H. C., Hardware, 2 rails
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. A., residence.
82 Elder, J. J., <fc Son.
85 Eimhart, W. C., residance.
44 Fire department.
9 Grantland, Seaton, residence.
46 Georgia Experiment station.
6 Griffin, Mfg. Co.
19 Griffin Mfg. Co.
14 Grigjn 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. L, residence.
18 Kelley & Mhomas, physicians, 2 rings
18 Melly, Dr. J. M., residence, 8 rings.
27 Kincaid, W. J., residence.
7 Kincaid Mfg. Co. (mills.)
21 Leach & Co., J. M„ grocers.
2 Mills. T. R., office, 2 rings. z
2 Mills, T. R., residence, 8 rings.
47 Moore, Dr. J. L., residence.
22 Mobbing Call office, 2 rings,
34 Newton &Co., W. H., coal and lumb’r
5 Newton Coal and Lumber Co.
29 Osborn & Wolcott, office.
20 Oxford. D. A. market and restaurant.
22 Sawtell, J. P.,residencr, 3 rings.
18 Sears, J. M., grocer.
33 Shedd, J. R., market.
24 Southern Railroad.
13 Southern Express Company.
23 Spalding County Farm.
12 Stewart, Dr. J. F., residence,
11 Strickland, R. F. & Co.
41 Thurman & Barrow, livery atabie.
42 Western Union Telegraph Co.
59 Wood, Geo. W., Sunny Side, 3 rings.
MISS VVE WORTHINGTON,
Manager.
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.
Southern Railway.
Bhortevt Mid quickest route with double
daily service between Columbus and Atlanta,
connecting in the Union Passenger station,
Atlanta, with Veatibuled Limited trains; also
United States Fast Mail trains to and from
Washington, New York and all Eastern points.
Also promptly connecting for and from Chat
tanooga, IzSiisrille. Cincinnati, St Louis, and
the Northwest and through Pullman Vesti
buied Sleeping Cara to Kansas City and the
West.
Schedule in effect February 13,1898. Central
standard time except at points east of Atlmto.
Northbound. Dally ,
Lv. Columbus 635 a m 526 p m
- Waverly Hall 728 am
“ Oak Mountain 730 am ®»P n ‘
* Warm Springs . 809 am
- Woodbury 827 am 7«P m
“ Concord 852 am 788 pm
“ Williamson 910 am iMpm
« Griffin 921 am 807 pm
“ McDonough ,10 08 am * P m
Ar. Atlanta 1110 am 9*6 Pm
Lv. Atlanta. 1200 n’n. 11 50 p m
Ar. Washington 6*2 am ®BS p m
“ New York 12 *8 p m *23am
Lv. Atlanta. 2 20pm 680 am
Ar. Chattanooga fW pm 950 am
Ar. Louisville 7 27 am TBO p m
Ar. St. Louis .. fl 20 p m 712 a m
Ar. Cincinnati 7fo am 780 pm
Southbound. n 3 ®
Lv. Cincinnati 830 aip 800 p m
Lv. St. Louia~ 9 15pm 762 am
Lv. Louisville . 7*5 a m 7*spm
“ Chattanooga 610 pm 800 am
Ar. Atlanta. 10 *0 p m 110 p m
Lv. New York. 1215 n’n.l *BO pm
“ Waahington ill 15 ain 10 *8 p m
Ar. Atlanta. | 510 am 856 pm
Lv. Atlanta 680 am *2O pm
•• McDonough 616 am 625 pm
" griffin *6O am 903 pm
" Williamson 707 am 618 Pm
" Concord. 728 an 937 pm
“ woodbhry 7*7 am tOTpn
■ Warm Springe 808 am T«opm
" Oak Mountala 887 am 806 pm
“ Waverly Hall B*7 am 81* pm
Ar. Columbus 985 aro aWnm
TO MA CON
Dally. No. *7. No. 99
Lv. Columbus, Soath’n Ry 885 am 625 pm
»saazmY”: ,?g;;
Ar.Laardaw,M.»B.H.R, 8S nm
rtaily. Nik 30 No. 93
Dr- LaGrange, M. *b. 8.8. •30 a
Dr. Macon, M. AB. B. «15 p m
Ar. Woodbury,M. AB.BA 767 am 710 pm
Ar. Odhnabua, Soutt’n By. 985 am 855 p m
» S j m - CULP,
ThirdV-P. A Gen. Mgr- Traf. Manager,
_ Waahington, D. Wariangton. G
W. A. TURK, K H. HARDWICK.
Gro. Paa. Agent, A. Gem. Paa. Agent,
Washington. D. a Atlanta, Ga.
IL PEABODY,Paaaenger ATiotatAgant.
Oohunbua, Ga. _____