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INSTRUCTED THE JUDGE.
Who Wa* So Well Pleased That He <*•*•
Him Seven Month*.
“Nathaniel Patrick Henry Schofield
Berry!” called the police court clerk in
stentorian tones, and a hearty laugh was
heard from the lawyers, bailiffs and
general hangers on around the room.
A very black negro of about 40 step
ped to the bar the remark, “Yea
**h, dat’s my cognomen title. ”
“Well, Nat, what have you got to say
about this charge of—of—what’s the
name of that thing anyhow, Mr.
Bailiff?”
“Shootin craps, your honor. ”
“Shootin craps, ”• repeated the judge.
“Now look "here! I have sent enough of
you fellows down on this charge, but I
confess I know nothing about the game,
if such it might be called. I’ve listened
to the pigeon English of Chinamen in
telling of their fantan arrangement,
and now you, Nat, there, tell me what
this game of craps is like?”
"Well, judge, it’s just like dis:
You see you take de bones”—
“The what?”
"W’y, de bones, yo’ honah. Them’s
de things you throw.”
“The dice,” suggested the police offi
cer making the complaint.
“Oh, I see,” answered bis honor.
“It’s played with dice, eh?”
“You take de bones,” continued Na
thaniel Berry, looking with supreme
contempt on the surrounding crowd
anxious to learn the ins and outs of a
famous but badly misunderstood game.
“De first man he t’rows de bones out
like dis and pops his fingers. ’Come
seven-eleven,’ ‘got you faded,’ ‘cut his
throat eleven, * ‘railroad, ’ ‘nat’ral crap, ’
‘gimme de bones,’‘baby’s got to hav'
dem noo shoes,’ ‘take my gal to Balti
more,’ ‘Big- Dick’s my point,’ ‘all de
way from Boston, ’ ‘come on, Joe, you
must be mine’ ”
“Hold on there!” shouted the judge
before the enthusiastic Nathaniel could
be headed in his enthusiastic disserta
tion. “I’m still in the dark about that
game, but from what I have heard you
get seven months. ”
"Thankee, judge, ” said Nat, as he
was led grinning from the bar of jus
tice.—Washington Post.
A CLEVER FIRE HORSE.
The Clear Headed Animal That Chief
Webber if Boston Used to Drive.
The rule in the Boston department is
io reach the fire as soon as it can be
done with safety. When an alarm comes
in, the firemen have that rule in mind.
They are not thinking about posing for
the public, but what they are likely to
find at the end of their ride, and when
accidents occur in nine cases out of ten
they are more likely to be due to the
carelessness or fright of the public than
to the recklessness of the firemen them
selves. There are approximately 2,000
alarms a year in this city, to each of
which from one to eight pieces respond.
Compare the activity and momentum
thus let loose, but skillfully controlled,
with the total resulting casualties of a
year, and the showing will justify the
department as a whole every time.
The horses themselves share not only
the spirit but the knowledge of the sit
uation, and to their training and intel
ligence is due to no small degree the
comparative exemption from serious
accidents which the department enjoys.
A few years ago Chief Webber drove as
his fire horse an animal which well ex
emplified these characteristics. He bad
a head like a wedge, and he could run
for a deer. His fire gait was a run. Ho
was famous for economizing his oppor
tunities. Even in a thickly crowded
street, if he saw a hundred feet clear in
front of him, he made it on the run. If
an obstruction suddenly appeared, he
would brace himself and skate over the
pavement until his momentum was
overcome. Then with the next opening I
the feat was repeated, while ho writhed
in and out like a snake among inter
cepting teams and usually was among
the first arrivals at the scene of the fire.
On one occasion he took himself and
the buggy to a fire some distance from
quarters without a driver and arrived
safely and at the right box. The un
initiated who saw his movements might
have called them reckless, but during
his five or six years of service he at
tended more fires than any other horse
in the department, and no serious acci
dent to himself or others resulted.
Boston Transcript.
A Sermon on Money.
A colored exhorter said recently, in
the course of a sermon on “Money, the
Great Evil:”
“My brotherin, money cause mo’
trouble in dis worl’ dan anyt’ing I
knows on. Fac’ is, de devil is in de dol
lar. When I see a man wid a pocket full
er money, I say ter myself, ‘Dar’s a
man what needs a guardeen, ’ an I feels
des like takin him home an lockin up
dat money ter him. Es any er you in de
bearin er my voice is got money on yo’
pusson, bring it right heah, an lay it
on de altar an go yo’ ways an lemmo
pray over it till a blessin come ter it.
Doan wait ter count it; des come for
ward an unload!”—Atlanta Constitu
tion.
Insect Steeds Ridden by Insects.
At a recent meeting of the Entomo
logical society of Washington some
specimens of phrysopa, a species of
golden eyed fly, which had been collect
ed in the White mountains, were exhib
ited as curiosities, because each carried
on its back one or more minute cecido
myiid flies. The opinion was expressed
that • this was a true case of smaller
species of insect using a larger species
for the purposes of locomotion from
place to place.—Youth’s Companion.
The greater part of the cast off uni
forms of British soldiers find their way
into the shops of dealers in secondhand
clothing. The coats are then either cut
up, sold to theatrical managers or ex
ported to Africa and elsewhere for trad
ing purposes with the Kaffirs and other
tncivilized people.
A BACHELOR’S QUARTERS.
Jt■ - ■
Nothing Homelike About Them, Accord
ing to the Married Man’s Story.
They hadn’t met since the old college
days, ten years before, and of course the
benedict insisted that the bachelor
should come home to dinner with him.
“Married the year after I left col
lege, ” he said, “and I have the nicest
little home and the finest lot of young
sters that you ever saw. I want you to
come out and see how nicely I’m fixed.
I tell you a man doesn’t know what
life is until he’s married.”
‘ No?”
“Well, I should say not.”
.. And so it happened that the bachelor
went with the benedict and met the
latter’s wife and played with his chil
dren and made himself generally useful
and popular until they were all' seated
at the dinner table.
It was over the coffee and cigars, aft
er the benedict’s wife had left the table,
that the benedict finally suggested:
“Pretty comfortably fixed, ain’t I, old
man? Children, why don’t you go into
the other room?”
, "Very nicely, indeed,” answered the
bachelor, replying to tho first question
and ignoring the second.
“Oh, there’s nothing like home life,”
went on the “Willie, stop
trying to climb on Mr. Brown’s knee.
He wants to smoke. Do you know, old
man, I langh when I think of my fool
ish idea that I knew in those old days
what happiness was. Why, a man
doesn’t begin to live until— Maggie,
put that nutpick back on the table.
You’ll jab it in your eye the first thing
you know. Yes, sir. I actually have
to laugh when I think of it. Our idea of
contentment in those days was to get a
pipe and a book and a bottle of Scotch
and lock the door and lie down and—
Would you mind moving your coffee
cup a little farther back on the table,
old man? Tommie’s trying to reach it,
and my wife would raise my scalp if I
should let him break one of her very
best cups. That’s it. Thank you. As I
was saying, we didn’t know what ease
and contentment was in those days. No
single man does. A man has to have a
big armchair and his slippers all ready
for him and everything sort of restful
and quiet before— Now, don’t cry, Ma
bel. If you didn’t want to get hurt,
why did you grab the end of my cigar?
Tommie, take her in to her mother.
There, Willie, I told you you’d stick
that nutpick into your hand if you
didn’t look out.. Run into the other
room and ask your mother to put a
bandage on it. Let’s see, where was I,
old man? Oh, yes, I remember now. I
was about to say that there’s nothing
homelike about a bachelor’s quarters’ ’ —
“No, ” interrupted the bachelor, with
considerable emphasis/“there isn’t.”
The benedict couldn’t quite see the
reason for such an emphatic assertion,
but he wisely changed the subject, just
the same.—Chicago Post.
Feeding * Baby Elephant.
In St Nicholas F. Fitz Roy Dixon
tells of a baby elephant that was cap
tured by friends of his in Ceylon, after
the death of its mother. Mr. Dixon says:
When Sidney was first brought over,
virtually in order that she might be
fed, the question naturally arose as to
how she would take her nourishment.
Os course the proper way for an adult
elephant to take in water is by means
of the trunk, which is furnished with
two tubes running its whole length.
But when a bowl of milk was placed
before the baby elephant she did not
know what to do with it. She dipped
the tip of her trunk into it-, and the
lookers on thought that there would be
no difficulty about her drinking at all,
since she recognized the scent of the
nourishment she had been accustomed
to. But she was quite at a loss and set
up a roar which seemed quite natural
under the circumstances. Then some
one suggested pouring it down her
throat from a bottle, and this was ac
cordingly tried, and after one or two in
effectual attempts she understood.
She was half starved when this was
done, for she had had nothing to eat
since the death of her mother, and her
delight at being fed was most amusing.
Tho only trouble was that it was diffi
cult to satisfy her, and it was feared
that the change of diet would disagree
with her, but fortunately it had no ill
effect.
Orange*.
The very sweetest ojango and richest
is the black or rusty coated fruit. Pick
out the dingiest oranges in the box, and
you will get the best. Another way to
choose oranges is by weight. The heav
iest are the best, because they have the
thinnest skin and more weight of juice.
Thick skinned oranges are apt to be dry.
They either weigh less because of hav
ing so much skin or because of the pov
erty of the juice in these particular
specimens. A slight freezing on the
tree causes this condition in otherwise
fine fruit. The “kid glove” oranges are
the two varieties of small fruit grown
in Florida from stocks respectively
brought from China and from Tangier.
They are called mandarin and tanger
ine. They, may be eaten without soiling
a kid glove, because the skin is loose
and the little “gores, ” or pockets of
juice, come apart very cleanly and with
out breaking. All the above applies to
Florida oranges. The Jamaica and Ha
vana oranges are much paler yellow,
and their juice is usually of more acid
quality than the home grown oranges.
The Rascal Won.
“What’s tho price of these gloves?”
she asked.
“A dollar and seventy-five cents,”
said the clerk; “but I’m afraid we
haven’t any small enough for yon. We
can order an extra small size, however. ”
“Oh, these will do. I’ll take three
pairs. ” —Chicago News.
Two Useful
Half a lemon makaa very good sub
stitute for a bar of toilet soap, and an
orange, cut in half and rubbed on a
sooty kettle, makes very good shoe
blacking, which takes a fine polish.
RARE WEST INDIAN SEALS*.
Ito Interesting Specimen* Now nt th*
Waahlngton Zoo.
Os the many hundred visitors to tbs
Zoological park who were entertained last
Sunday by the antics of tho new pair of
seals, probably very few were aware that
they viewed an animal of unusual interest.
A large card at the front of their tank
bore the following legend:
“West Indian seal, Monachus tropi
calls; gray; habitat, gulf of.Mexico and
Caribbean sea, from the Bahama islands
to the coast of Yucatan and Honduras."
Tho label did not say, as it might have
done, that this seal was the first large ani
mal of the American continent that was
known by Europeans. During Columbus'
voyage to the West Indies in 1494, he
anchored off the southern coast of His
paniola, near a little island which he called
Alta Vein. Several seamen were ordered
to climb to the top of the island, and on
their return they killed eight “sea wolves,”
which were sleeping on the sands. At
that time the seals must have been very
abundant in all the region between tho
Bahama islands and tho Central Ameri
can coast, for Dampier, writing in 1675 of
the Alacran islands near Yucatan, says:
“Hero are many seals. They come up to
sun themselves only on two or three of tho
islands."
In 1707 Sir Hans Sloane, writing on the
natural history of Jamaica, says: “The
Bahama islands aro filled with Seals;
sometimes Fishers will catch 100 in a
night. They try or melt them, and bring
off their Oyl for Lamps to the Islands.”
This oil industry seems to have nearly
exterminated the seal, for the animal has
been almost unknown since that time.
The single individuals secured at long in
tervals have been among the most prized
treasures of the great musoums, and it
was not until very recently that a com
plete specimen could be obtained upon
Which to base a scientific description of
the animal. ■ This Specimen was received
at the National museum from Professor
Felipe Poey of Havana and wus described
by Professors True ami Lucas of that in
stitution.
The only places now known to bo in
habitated by these seals are a few little
coral islands off tho north coast of Yuca
tan. Here, free from molestation, lives a
little remnant which survived tho first
fierce persecution. Now the oil is no
longer wanted/ and as their coats are
valueless wan has no incentive to hunt
them down. Fishermen go to these islands
but rarely, and then only out of curiosity.
It is to one of these visits that the Zoo
logical park owes its pair of seals. The
fishermen who obtained them report the
animals as utterly devoid of fear, not
moving when approached and allowing
themselves to be handled with no sign of
alarm.
The park is fortunate in having secured
both male and female of this rare species.
Tho two animals are of about equal size,
5 feet long or a little less, and would
weigh in the neighborhood of 150 pounds.
Both are of a dark, leaden brown above,
with underparts somewhat lighter. The
male has a conspicuous white muzzle and
breast, which at once distinguish him
from his mate. Both sexes when adult are
said to attain a length of from 7 to 8 feet
and a weight of 400 or 500 pounds. When
out of the water, they progress by a series
of quick hitches, making no use of the
flippers. This is evidently a serious exer
tion, as they will go but a few feet before
stopping to rest. In the water, however,
they are models of ease and agility, glid
ing back and forth, diving and rolling or
standing with head and shoulders out of
the water to look about. The valvelike
nostrils aro tightly shut as the animal goes
under and open with a puff as It comes to
the surface. The female has a penchant
for swimming on her back and in circling
the tank invariably makes the return in
that manner to her starting point.
For animals that have been In captivity
but a few days they aro surprisingly tame,
and they certainly bear out the character
given them by the fishermen. They come
up promptly to inspect a fish that is held
out to them, but refuse it until dropped
into the water. Then It is seized and put
through a long process of biting and shak
ing through the water till fairly macerat
ed before it is finally eaten. Altogether
these seals are most interesting animals,
and tho Zoological park is fortunate in se
curing the first specimens ever exhibited
in a zoological garden.—Washington Star.
Mount Washington Forest.
The recent transfer of forest properties
in tho White mountain region, by which
the trustees under the will of David Pin
gree parted with the possession of the
Presidential peaks, which they have held
for 30 years, does not, as we understand
the situation, entail any tbreat-of denud
ing the forests in that particular locality.
If we are correctly informed —and our in
formation comes from the parties to the
transaction—the new owners of the prop
erty have no intention of destroying the
forests for which they have paid so much
money. It is their intention to institute a
system of forest management there by
means of which they will be enabled to se
cure a constant revenue from their forest
lands and at the same time perpetuate the
growth of trees for timber. In other
words, the new owners of the Mount
Washington forests intend to apply volun
tarily and for their own permanent finan
cial benefit tho restrictions which the for
estry commission wished tho legislature
to impose, for the public benefit upon ev
ery landowner.—Concord Monitor.
The Oldest Graduate*.
Dartmouth's oldest living graduate is
Mark Wentworth Fletcher of Wayne, Ills.,
class of '25. Emilius Kite hell Sayre of
Monticello, Mo., whois in feeble health
in his eighty-eighth year, is Amherst's
oldest. He was in the class of '2B, of
which he is tho sole survivor. The oldest
Williams graduates of the class of '2B
are Joseph Lyman Partridge of Brook
lyn, 93 years old, and the Rev. Kbenezer
Harrison Stratton of Branch port, N. Y.
The oldest for Bowdoin college is Freder
ick Waite Burke of New York city, 91
years old, of the class of '24. Wesleyan’s
oldest, and indeed her very first graduate,
is Daniel H. Chase, who lives in Middle
town. Mellen Fitch of West Newton and
the class of ’26, now 92 years old, heads
the list for the University of Vermont.
Lawyer Albert Ware Paine of Bangor, Me.,
is the oldest graduate of Colby university
at Waterville, Me. Dr. Benjamin D. Still
man of Brooklyn bolds the seniority for
Yale.—Boston Journal.
Q' Wall Paper.
A plain wall paper is far from a long
enduring thing of beauty, lovely as it of
ten is at tho first. There is nothing much
more hopeless in the list of housekeeping
endeavors than the effort to remove from
it the marks that are left by fingers or by
a bream. Even dry applications usually
wake things worse rather than better.
TURKISH CUSTOM HOUSE.
Tho Trouble* Traveler* Have, Especially
With Book* and Map*.
Many amusing stories are told of the
trouble American travelers have had
with the custom house authorities in
Turkey, especially with books and
maps. lu the old days one’s baggage
would be dumped down on the landing
place at Constantinople, and a turbaned
old Turk, tchibouk in hand, would go
through a pantomime of examining
one’s effects, which would be abruptly
brought to an end by the application of
an appropriate coin to the palm of his
hand. But the political troubles that
began some years ago in the Ottoman
empire caused the government to insti
tute a more stringent system, and theFo
is now at Constantinople a custom
house more after the American style,
where a number of effendis, in fezes
and Stambouli coats of the regular offi
cial cut, pry into one’s luggage with
particular care in search of papers and
books and maps of a revolutionary tend
ency or in which words forbidden to
be printed in Turkey may be found.
During the height of the Armenian
agitation especially close search was al
ways made for anything with the word
“Armenia” in it, and whatever it was
found i% was summarily confiscated.
On the occasion of my last visit to Con
stantinople I happened to have a map
of Asia Minor among my papers, the
discovery of which greatly agitated the
examining effendi, who spoke in a lan
guage he thought was French. “Ah,
Azeea Meenoor!” he exclaimed as he
spread it out, continuing in his Turko-
Freneh, “Show me Erzerum.” Having
pointed out to him the spot where that
city was to be found, he began running
his finger over the map until he struck
upon the letter A. This seemed almost
to take his breath away, but when a
short distance to the right of it he
found the letter R he fairly gasped.
The detection of the letter M following
it was like an electrio shock, and a
bomb explosion could not have startled
him more than the discovery of the let
ter E. By the time he had deoiphered
the remaining letters, NIA, I saw that
the game was up, and as he folded up
my precious map and in stern and
measured syllables announced to me
that it was “de-fon-dew, con-fls-kay,”
I knew that it was lost to me forever.
A Review with an article alludiftg to
the disturbed condition of affairs in the
Turkish empire followed the map, along
with some foreign newspapers.—Har
per’s Round Table.
A SMALL MAN’S REVENGE.
Be Raffles the Dignity of Two Women In
a Cable Car.
The small sized, unobtrusive man
gets revenge now and then, as wks ex
emplified yesterday in a Broadway
cable car bound down town. He got on
at Twenty-third street and saw only
one vacant seat. Other passengers who
stood up were clinging to the straps in
a semihypnotic condition and did not
observe the vacant place. Two women,
strangers to each other, richly clad and
wearing diamond earrings, were the
guardians of the vacant space, which
was hardly wide enough to even admit
the small man to a comfortable seat *
Either of the women, by moving a lit
tle, could have made a larger space,
but they chose to sit as impassive as
statues while the diminutive man
crowded into the place. He exhibited
all the signs of being uncomfortable,
but these implacable cosmopolitans
moved not At Tenth street a large
woman, weighing about 200 pounds,
boarded the car. With the air of a
Chesterfield the small man lifted his
hat and said:
“Pray, take my seat.”
“Thank you, sir,” she replied as she
started to sit down. Consternation was
depicted upon the faces of the two rich
ly clad women as they tried to edge
away to make the space wider. It was
too late, for the heavy woman crushed
into the seat and came in contact with
the other women. There were the noise
of crumpling cloth and the swish of
skirts as the two women tried to move
from the weight pinning part of their
dresses down. It was a scramble to give
the heavy woman enough room, and all
dignity was lost. The passengers smiled,
apd none more so than the small man,
who had had his revenge.—New York
Commercial.
Marie Antoinette** Hooka.
The unhappy Queen Marie Antoinette
possessed an important library of 4,712
volumes, consisting of plays and ro
mances, little books a la mode, the
Works of Pascal, Bogsuet, Fenelon,
Bourdaloue, Massillon, Boileau, Cous
seau, Corneille, Moliere, Voltaire and
many others. She loved music passion
ately and had a large collection of
operas in 89 numbers. The bindings
were by Blaiiot and were uniform in
red morpcco, with the arms of France
and Austria stamped upon them. The
execution of the work was poor, and
the decadence in the art of binding evi
dent. The glories of the art of Padeloup
and the Deromes had passed away, and
the revolution effectually killed what
ever knowledge remained of the ancient
skill of the bookbinders. Half a century
later saw its revival in France, and the
art has since flourished both there and on
English soil.—Gentleman’s Magazine-
Couldn’t FooloMamma.
Mrs. Younglove—Oh, I am sure that
my husband has never told me a lie in
his life.
Her Mother—My poor child! You
are married to a hypnotist.—Cleveland
Leader.
The air is so clear in the arctic re
gions that conversation can be carried
on easily by persons two miles apart. It
has also begn asserted on good authori
ty that at Gibraltar the human voice
has been distinctly beard at a distance
of ten miles..
Cleverness is serviceable for every
thing, sufficient for nothing.— AmieL
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS. . ’
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD ” Q ASTORIA,” AMD
“ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADE MARK.
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, qf Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” tAe same
that has borne and does now on evcry
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original * PITCHER’S CASTORIA, ’ which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
mr&msgQaZrfass; X'
per. Ho one has author&y*Jwm£w dse W/
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher, is
President. a
March 8,1897.
Do Not Bo Deceived.
Do riot endanger the life ehHd by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer yo”
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he docs not know.
< “The Kind You Have Always Bought"
\ BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE CF
r.i.u
/'"‘of
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Jailed I oil
CCNT4M4M •MWUBV* FT MVMAV fTMMT. aHTW
-2JfiL!..»9B±gSg»4 . I.IAI?. urn J •
—GET YOUH —
_ -.LAUa*
JOB PRINTING
DONE _
The Morning CaD Office.
We have just supplied oar Job Office with a complete ling ol Kutioner*
’ O’-JF AA A A ife «► LmA A
kinds and can get up, on abort notice, anything wanted in the way 01
LETTER HEADS, BILL BRA OH.
&
STATEMENTS, IRCULARS,
ENVELOPES, NOTES, /
MORTGAGES, * PROGRAMS, ’ J.
CARDS, ■ PORTERS'
’ - -
DODGERS, FTP., ETC
41 fl'i I v f A’
We c'-rry tue »«t iue of FNVEIZIFES vw jT'svc * thia trade.
: - q J • fi i
J .. i * 4 I ..- £
An ailracdvc FOSTER cf axy size can be issued on short notice
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare fkvorably with those obtained rag —
• * ' t i W
!•
any office In the state. When you want job printing o!*sny t»ve
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
ALL WORK DONE '
With Neatness and Dispatch.
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention
J. P. & S B. Sawtell.
- ■■■■ ■ i i—*.*h. i !■■■ ■! i i
H OF GEORGIA HAILWW CO.
Schedule in Effect Jan. 9, 1898.
'No. 4“ No? iz " Nb’.Y ———————— ———————Sq j - K.TrTSoTi'
Daily. D*Uy. Dolly. nxnoM. Dolly. Dolly. DeUy.
Tsopw 488 pin 7Warn Dr Atlanta Ar Taspm U9m J 4
Sinpm 447 pm BNam Lv Jonesboro. Ar fUpmlOWam *{**■*
815 pm 680 pm 812 am Lv Grtfln •essrsos*. •#••••• Ar| lUim, 8«Baa»
845 pm 8 06pm 945 am Ar BarnesvilleLv 8 42pm 9f2sm >47am
t7 40pm turepm Ar.... —Thomaston.Lv t>a*pm flßßam
1015 pm 881 pm 10Uam ArForaythLv 814 m 8 88am
1110 pm IMpnllMiaAr Macon Lv 4Upm 860 am «»«■
1319 am 810 pm 1388 pm ArGurdonLv BMpm floats >Maai
48 60 pm tl U pm ArMlßedgvvilleLv fSSOam
130 am 117 pm ArTennille•• •... .Lv IMpm
BUam ISjpmAr MDlan. Lv 1134 am 4 s*“
<Mam ImpairAugustaLv 8 20am
oyam I 800 pm Ar Savannah Lv BM*m
——..- ■ " 1
•Daily, t.xoept Sunday,
' Train for Mewnan and CamUtota laaveaGrifln at ijsa m. and-1 st pat_dany axqe»t
Sunday. Baturnln*. arrives In Grißa >3O p m and 13 40 p m daily except Sunday.
funber information apply to
K. 11. HINTON, TraWe Manager. Savannah, Ga. ,