The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, March 03, 1898, Image 2

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L. Morning Call. OBUHIt, OA, MARCH S.NK. - __ Offleeovftr Davis* hardware Store TELEPHONE NO. 22. J. P. A 8. B. BAWTILL, Editors and Proprietor!. Tan Mobmimg Call will be published tally-Monday num, $3.00 for six months, slMs‘hree tnontn*, or 10 cent* per week. Delivered by carrier! at any point in the city. The Middle Georgia Fahmbb, pub lished every Thursd yatOOote per year 85c tor six month!, tifc tor three montha. The above paper* lent to> any addreaa, PC Tw o fioßMrao aSiHind the Middle Gxomia Farmbb will ever be the beet advertising medium* tor thia entire section of the State. , , ; Advertising rate* on applica tion Official Paper of the Ordinary of Spalding county and the City of Griffin. The Douglass Breeze ssys that At* kineor. will carry every county io the eleventh congressional diatrict, which makes it quite apparent that the Breese don’t know anything abeul it. —mto— I ■■!■■■!■■■■ An Alabama goat the other day ate tbe speech of a populist politician. The goat ie atili in tact. The incident leads a contemporary to the conclusion that explosive* In tbe interior are not nee* easarily fatal, and that possibly tbe Maine was blown up from tbe outside, after all. ' Tbe government at Washington is steadily preparing for possible war. Spain ie doing tbe same thing We have a formidable fleet at rendezvous between Key West and tbe Tortuga*— eighty miles, as the crow flies from Havana. It ie within very easy strike ing distance A London reformer proposes to save the birds io a unique way. He would have men lefuse to marry women who wear birds on their hats, and women refute to marry men who “crunch birds at dinner,” The reformer is probably a dyspeptic who cannot en* joy **a bird and a small bottle.” Says tbe” Hawkinsville News and Dispatch : “Although we are opposed to Colonel Gaudier, we are frank enough to say that we believe he stand* the best chance now of any candidate ie the field and he may get there, unless some other strong man like Pope Brown comes out and cleans up the whole business.” Moscow has a hospital large enough to bold 7,000 persons. It was founded in 1764, and at present takes in chil dren at the rale of forty a day, or about 15,000 a year. There are 26 physicians and about 900 nurse*. Dur ing the first century of its existence tbe hospital received and brought up no fewer than 468,660 children. The senior editor’s clothes line was raided last Monday night and two suits of underclothes taken —Fitsgerald Loader. That’s too bad. A man or boy who will bang around and wait tor au editor to go to bed to have his clothes washed is 100 low down to go to congress. Lynching would be a paradise for him —Ashburn Advance. Tbe popular impression in Atlanta seems to be that the committee will order that delegates to the state con vention shall be elected by the prims* ry system io every county in the etale on the same day, and that June 15 wilt be named as the day when these primaries shall be held. None of tbe candidates express any preference as to the date when tbe primary should bo held; that io, they do not express them in public, or for publication. The Cuban debt amounts in round numbers to $600,000,000 Should Spain release Cuba, she would have to assume that debt, with only her own resources to draw upon to pay it. Should Spain reduce Cuba to submis sion, she would require tbe island to pay the debt, besides furnishing con siderable revenue for tbe borne gov ernment. That stack of bonds, there fore, is what is causing Spain to bold on with such a terrible grip. If Cuba were freed through her own efforts she would decline to pay a cent of tbe debt; if she were freed through Amer ican intervention it would give Spain in excuse to tell the Cuban bondhold ers that they must look elsewhere than » her for their money. Wvervlfody toys to. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most won ierful medical discovery of tbe age, pleas mt and refreshing to the taste, act gently ind positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, deansing tbe entire system, dis|»el colds, jure headache, fever, habitual constipation ind biliousness. Please buy and try a box THE SIAMESE GIRL. * ■ ! Bsr Garments Are Scanty, and She 1* aw Inveterate Smoker. From tbemoment of her birth a Si amese girl iq treated with less consider atlou than a boy. For several yeara aft er quitting the realms of “babylaud” she dresses very slightly indeed (I refer i more particularly to the lower classes, though the rule applies more or lees generally). Next she adopts the sarong, or waist cloth, and on top of this is placed a bright colored scarf of consid erable length and breadth, which Is cus tomarily crossed and recrossed over the breast and under the arms. These two garments constitute the whole of a Si amese girl’s wearing apparel unless she chance to wear a scanty vest of linen. Rings and bracelets are inevitable, pro vided she be of class enough to afford them, and tn a few cases the costume is finished off with a flimsy pair of slip pers, into which the stockingless feet are thrust. The average Siamese girl is an invet erate smoker of cigarettes from a very tender age. When quite a baby, too, she, in common with the rest of tbe I population, is taught to chew the leaf and nut of the betel palm—at least she does not require to be “taught” this unlovely but (if we may believe what we see) fascinating pastime. Since, however, she knows full well that she will be esteemed passee, not to say an cient, at the age of 80 she concentrates the whole of her intellect upon the seri ous business of either entering the pal ace or getting married. But ifSt be the latter, the marriage in Siamese middle and upper class life is the most elabo rate function that an English girl could imagine. The negotiation—what we should term tbe “courting”—is gener ally conducted in the first instance through an old beldame. It is this old woman’s business to discover among other things whether the “stars in their courses” are propitious toward she hap py event and whether the respective birthdays of the bride and bridegroom fall suitably to the date fixed for their nnion, for in all such matters the Si amese would appear to be even more su perstitious than their Buddhist belief might reasonably be expected to make them.—Gentleman’s Magazine. STARTERS OF RESTAURANTS ————— . A Business Operation by Which Some Men Make Considerable Money. “It may seem strange to say so, ’’ re marked a lawyer the other day, “but it is true, nevertheless, that there are men In the city who are getting rich by es tablishing restaurants that do not pay. This is the way they do it: A cheap shop is rented and fitted up as a restau rant at a cost, say, of $250. Food val ued at about 1100 is purchased, and some judicious advertising is Clone. More food is sold for the money then than customers can get anywhere else in the neighborhood. The result is a crowded restaurant, though the pro prietor ie losing money steadily. When he has a first class line of patrons and he appears to be doing a big business, he advertises the place for sale. 11l health or a desire to move south, east or west is one of the excuses. Custom ers appear promptly, and the proprietor usually sells his place for $1,200 or $1,600, half in cash. His investment has not been more than S4OO, so he clears from SBOO to SI,OOO. Os course the place proves a failure, and the pur chaser loses his money. The restaurant starter, however, moves to another por tion of the city and repeats his enter prise.’’ The lawyer said that he recalled one man in particular who had started no less than ten restaurants in the last six months, all of which he sold. With two exceptions the places did not pay, and the men who bought them were com pelled to clone them.—New York Com mercial Advertiser. The Schoolyard. To spend large sums of money on architectural beauties and stone carv ings of historic ornaments—which have but little attraction for children—to make a school building look like a pal ace and then to leave the schoolyard looking like a desert or the top of a bi tuminous lake, without a single attrac tive flower or one bit of beauty, are in consistencies which seem possible only in the modern system of education. Weather beaten houses in the country, log cabins on the frontiers, railroad sta tions in the Great American desert and all over our country have their beauti ful flower gardens, and it refreshes one’s soul to see them, but there is no such source of refreshment, inspiration and Instruction where children are be ing educated in the “essentials. ”—Hen ry Lincoln Clapp in Popular Science Monthly. Lessen Tour Wants. More of the true enjoyment of life lies in this maxim than is generally thought. We may indeed goto extremes and cut to the quick, like that cynio philosopher who threw away his wood en cup on seeing a vagrant boy drink from the hollow of his hand. But the truth is we create many of our own ne cessities, and with the growth of luxury new wants come In, not by opes, nor by tens, but by hundreds.—New York Ledger. The “Hedge” Doctor. A “hedge” doctor, a kind of quack in Ireland, was being examined at an in quest on his treatment of a patient who had died. “I gave him ipecacuanha,*’ he said. “ You might just as well have given him the aurora borealis, ’* said the coroner. “Indade, yer honor, and that’s just what I should have given him next if he hadn’t died.”—Hospital Gazette. Robert Morris’ Bank of North Amer ica, founded at Philadelphia at the end of the year 1781, was the first banking institution founded on the American continent. -T-l A i nr ■— The first envelope ever made is in the possession of the British museum. POISONS AND ANTIDOTES. Soma Direct Inns la “First Aid to the In jured” Courses. Even in tbe city cases of poisoning some times prove fatal because a physician can not be procured in time to administer tbe necessary remedies, and it would be a wise precaution for every household to have some general directions at hand for an emergency. The New York Society For Instruction in First Aid to thb Injured teaches Its classes the symptoms and rem edies for vsrlous poisons as follows: Among the poisons known as “irritant” are arsenic in its numerous forms, cor rosive sublimate, sugar of lead, white lead, tbe strong acids, such as sulphuric, or vitriol, muriatic, nitric, oxalic and car bolic ; the strong alkalise, such as soda, potash, lime and ammonia water. The symptoms of poisoning by an Irritant are severe pains in the stomach and abdomen, nausea, vomiting, purging, faintness nnd often feeble pulse and breathing. The treatment is first to MMe vomiting by giv ing a tumblerful of Warm (not hot) water with a tablespoonful of ground dry mus tard stirred in it, or by pushing the fore finger as far as possible down the throat. The forefinger Is the best possible emetic. After causing the patient to vomit freely, give large drafts of milk, or the whites of a couple of eggs, not beaten. It the poison were an acid, give also magnesia or cook ing soda to neutralize. If an alkali, give lemon juice or a tablespoonful of vinegar. The “systcuiio” poisons are opium, mor phia, laudanum, paregoric, belladonna, atropia, aconite, henbane, or hyoscyamus, stramonium, prussic acid, cyanide of po tassium, nux vomica, strychnia, alcohol, chloroform and ether. The symptoms differ with tbe different poisons, but as a rule there is gradually increasing sleepi ness, stupor, insensibility or perhaps de lirium and stertorous or “puffy” breath ing- /. ; In opium poisoning (which includes morphia, laudanum and paregoric) the pupils of tbe eyes are contracted to the size of small pinheads, breathing is very slow and the face often extremely pale. In strychnia poisoning there are convul sions almost like epilepsy, and the jaws are set firmly together. In belladonna, atropia, hyoscyamus and stramonium the pupils of the eye are dilated, the pulse rapid and tho appearance is that of fever. In aconite, chloral and tobacco poisoning there is great prostratlou, the pulse is feeble and tbe face pala Tho first thing to be done, as in the oth er poisons, is to cause repeated vomiting, using the same means. After the emetic has acted freely, give strong black coffee in frequent doses. If a case of opium poison ing, on no account allow the patient to go to sleep. Keep him walking up and down, slapping him on the back and chest with a wet towel, but be careful not to exhaust him. If symptoms of collapse appear, put hot applications on tbe abdomen and lege. The symptoms are feeble breathing, face pale, pinched about the nose and anxious, eyelids drooping, eyes dull, pulse feeble and skin cold. If the respiration becomes slower than five or six breaths in a minute, begin arti ficial respiration and continue until no longer necessary. Artificial respiration is produced I>y laying tbe patient on his back, with a roll of cloth under the shoulders. Draw the tongue well out and tie it against the lower teeth by laying the cen ter of a dry strip of cloth on it, crossing the cloth under the chin, carrying ends around the neck and tying at side of neck. Then kneel behind his head, grasp his arms half way between elbows and wrists, and draw them up and over his head until his hands touch the floor behind. Hold them there for fully two seconds, then carry them back until they rest against the sides of the chest and press them firm ly against the chest for two seconds. Re peat until natural respiration takes place. The method is tho same as lu cases of drowning. Permanganate of potassium is an anti dote to mdrphine, but coffee is valuable in all systemic poisons.—New York Tribune. The Convention’s Hard Task. It is related that in the later forties, on the eve of a Democratic state convention in Albany, Dean Richmond and Peter Cagger were in consultation. Something like this was the dialogue between the two bosses: “Whom shall we put up for governor J" asked Richmond. “Seymour will do. He is able, respecta ble, popular and will render the ticket invincible," answered Cagger. And Sey mour’s name went down. “Who for attorney general?” queried Richmond. “Oh, Tremaine. Ho is by far the best of the lot. Besides, we want the Van Buren Influence.” And down went Tre maine. "Who for secretary of state?’’ quoth Richmond. “Van Nees. He is capable and respect able, and we want the influence of the Knickerbockers anyhow." And down went Van Noss. And so it was until the ticket was completed, with the exception of superintendent of education. “Peter, whom shall we name for that? There are three or four candidates. I never heard of either of them before,” said Richmond. “Oh, d—n it,” returned Cagger, “let the convention nominate the candidate for superintendent of public education. ” And down that went too. The following day the convention put through the slate so constructed in less than two hours. It required more than two days to nominate the candidate for superintendent of education.—Louisville Courier Journal. Why RuMla Wants China. The intimacy of China and Russia has most profound causes. The Chinese have a very distinct feeling of their interests. , Between Russia and Chinese interests there is no opposition; there is similitude. England, the United States, Germany and France have only one object—to make of China an immense market for the product of their industry, to impose upon It, by force if need be, their merchandise. On the contrary, Russia and Japan seek to facilitate the exportation into Europe of Chinese products. Russia with its railroad, will be the middleman between producing China and consuming Europe. The Rus sian provinces produce nothing which China furnishes. They have every advan tage in being put in contact with the in numerable population of the Celestial em pire. The immense current of exchanges which will be established between China and Russia by the new railroad will carry life andprospority into the Siberian steppe. In exploiting China the Russians will with tho same stroke throw Siberia open to improvement They will rapidly make it one of the greatest centers of agricul tural production in the world. In the economic development of China, Russia baa nothing to lose and everything to gain. —Chautauquan. Executive Committee. The members of the state democratic executive commi’lee are requested to meet al the Kimball house, 1898, at 11 o’clock a. m., io fix the time for holding tbe state convention and to fix the time and provide the manner for bolding primary elections to nominate governor and state house officers and for other purposes. I will thank the newspapers of the state to copy this notice. A. 8. Clay, Chairman. TID-BITSjFOR MAJHONEY! and tender little Juicelets for the children, are all right, but papa and “the boya” want a good, big juicy steak, roast or chop when business or school duties are over, and we can cater to them all. Our stock of prime meats is unexcelled for quality, and we send them home in fine shape. J. R. SHEDD. Xgeorgu Excursion tickets at reduced rates between local points are on sale after 12 noon Saturdays, and until 6p. 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 ear (are,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. Tho 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 ladies and chil dren traveling alone. Steamers sail from Savannah for New York dally 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 Agt., 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 businef s 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. HLDDO POISOH ■■Tenuru A primary kL A ©PECiALT i B in 15t035 days. forsame price under same gnaran «3BsMty. If youprefertocomehero wswilleon- enry. lodide potash, and miu have achsinS.r pains, Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat. Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on any part of thelxxly. Hair or mt* Mltoc out, It to this Secondary we guarantee to cure. W 6 solicit tho most obstl- ’ nate ease* and cnullenqe the world for * candy : CATHARTIC A CONSTIPATION ,Oc 250 506 DRUGGISTS ""■mßeeaeManAaahmMMSMaMMm^*ssa**aem mmh - 4»*.e , i, ..ii i i sss am—tom ahr to Ordinary’s Advertisements. e . -*•— QTATE OF GEORGIA, O Spalding Courty. To all whom it may concern: S.Grent jand having in proper form applied to me for Permanent Letters of Administration on the estate of Mrs. Busan M. Bailer, late of said county, this is to cite all and sin gular, the creditors and next oi kin of Mrs. Susan M. Bailey,to be and appear M poj 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 man ant administration should not be granted to 8. Grantland on Mrs. Busan M. Bailey’s estate. Witness my hand and official signature this 7th day of Feb. 1898. J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. STATE 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 folly 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. O. Gilmore having, in proper form, applied to me lor 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. DREWRY, Ordinary. STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalding County. Whereas, 8. M. Wayman, executor of last will and testament of S. 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 8. R. Dor ough, late of said county, this is to cite all ana singular, the creditors and next of kin of 8. 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. STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalding County. To all whom it may concern: Whereas, 8. 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 ot 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 tbe next March term, 1898, by 10 o’clock a. m., of the Ordinary’s Court in and lor 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. 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 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 tbe law. All persons indebted to the said deceased are hereby required to make Immediate payment. B. R. BLAKELY, Administrator D. H. Johnson. 1 • - - mAm*—— | Notice to Debtorsjand Creditors. GEORGlA— 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 settlement.’ ROBT. T. DANIEL, • Administrator E. L. Hammett. WM. E. H. SEARCY, JR., ' Counsellor at Law, GRIFFIN, GA. GENERAL PRACTICE. '■ ta Griffin Telephone Exchange BRANCH OF THE SOUTHERN BELL TELE * PHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. JNO. D. EASTERLIN, Bupt. W. T. GENTRY, Assistant Bupt,, Atlanta, G*. 10 Anthony, Dr. E. R., residence, 2 rings 40 Anthony Drug Co. I Bailey, D. J., Jr., residence. 26 Bailey, Mrs. S. M., residence. 49 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. 48 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. 89 Clak & Son, G. W., grocers. 16 Collier, T. J., residence. 56 Crocker, O. A., Pomona, 2 rings. 15 Drake, R. H., grocries. 17 Drake, Mrs. R. A, residence. 82 Elder, J. J., <fc Son. 85 Earnhart, W. 0., 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. 86 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. 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 8 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, II Strickland, R. F. & Uo. 41 Thurman & Barrow, livery stable. 42 Western Union Telegraph Co- 59 Wood, Geo. W., Sunny Side, 8 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. Shortest and quickest route with doubla dally service between Columbus and Atlanta, connecting in the Union Passenger station, Atlanta, with Veatibuled Limited trains; atoo United States Fast Mail trains to and from Washington, New York and all Eastern points. Also promptly connecting for and from Chat tanooga, LdUisville. Cincinnati, St. Louis, and the Northwest and through Pullman Vestl buied Sleeping Car* to Kansas City and the West. Schedule in effect February 13,1808. Cents* l . standard time except at points east of Atlanta. Northbound. Dally. Dally Lv. Columbus Oig, am X® P™ “ Waverly Hall ./f TW ani “ Oak Mountain 730 am - Warm Springs 809 am J«P“ ” Woodbury.. 827 am “ Williamson 910 am 760 pm " Griffin 921 am 807 pm ” McDonough. 1008 am 845 pm Ar. Atlanta 1110 am 946 p m Lv. Atlanta 1200 n’n. U W p m Ar. Washington 642 am 985 pm “ New York 12 48 pm <2B am Lv. Atlanta. 2 20pm 680 a m Ar. Chattanooga 720 pm BS® am Ar. Louisville 727 am 7 80q>m Ar. St*.Louis.... 820 pm 712 am Ar. Cincinnati 720 am 730 p m _ .. . . No. 30 No. !• Boutbbound. jD.uy, Lv. Cincinnati 880 am 8W pm Lv. St. Louis 9 16 pm i Lv. LouiaviUe . 745 a m 745 pm “ Chattanooga 610 pm 800 am Ar. Atlanta. 10.40 p m 110 pm Lv. New York.... 1215 n’n. 480 p m “ Washington 1115 am 1043 p m Ar. Atlanta. 510 am 865 pm Lv?Atlanta. 5 80am|4 20pm “ McDonough. 615 am 5 25pm « Griffin...7 650 am 608 pm “ Williamson 707 am 619 pm “ Concord. 728 am 687 pm “ Woodbury 747 am 707 pm " WarmSprinjs 809 am 743 pm “ OakMountam 887 am 803 pm " Waverly Hall. 847 am 814 pm Ar. Columbus 935 a m 3 TO MAOON. , Dally. No. 27. No. SO Lv. Columbus, South'n By. 685 am 525 pm Ar. Woodbuinr,South’nßy. 827 am 707 p“ •• Maoon, M. AB. 8.8.. 1100 am Ar. LaGrange,M. ARB.B .. ,|8» pm Dally. No. SO No. S« Lv. LaGrange, M. 48, 8.8. 630 a m Lv. Macon, M. aB. B. 77T7T 416 P m Ar. Woodbury,M. A8. 8.8. 747 am 710 pm Washington, D. C. Atlanta. Ga. T. K. PEABODY, Passenger A Ticket Agent, Columtwis, Ga.