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“AN EVERYDAY HEROINE. \
The Country Malden, the Wicked BCace
Ctrmynjr BBd the Tailor Mxle Girl*
Four reckless persons had clambered
into the stage, an old man, h middle
aged woman, a young man and a tailor
made girl. At Fiftieth street a dress
maker’s little girl struggled in with a
huge box. Town life was evidently new
to her Her rosy cheeks announced
ormntry air to the least observing. She
held her money in her hand.
Looking dubiously about, she finally
spied the money box and dropped in the
coin. After this she waited expectantly.
Nothing occurred, however, and she
began flushing and paling with nervous
indecision. At last she resolutely stood
up, attracted the driver’s attention and
called to him:
“How do I get my change? I put a
quarter in the box, ” she asked.
“Yese oughter a-handed it up,” said
the man. “Yese can’t git it now. ”
“But it’s all I have,” protested the
girL
- “Git it off the new passengers, " yell
ed the driver and turned away.
It was all the money she had, but
how could she “get it off the new pas
sengers?” Every one in the stage had
become interested, but no one volun
teered any advice. Two tears rolled
down the rosy cheeks
The stage stopped, and an old lady
scrambled in. As she took out her rpon
ey, a 5 cent piece, the tailor made girl
leaned over to her.
“Willyou give me that for this little
girl?’’ she asked. “She dropped in a
quarter by mistake, and the driver said
the new passengers might make it up to
■ her.”
The old lady beamingly handed over
the nickel. She felt that the stage com
pany was being rigidly but justly dealt
with at last
Then a man got in. This was harder
for the tailor made girl, but she made
the request again and handed a second
fare to the grateful young person from
the country. The whole stageful was
now interested watching for a new pas
senger as a spider watches for a fly. A
woman waved desperately from down a
hide street for the stage to wait for her,
but the driver passed on unheeding and
exclamations of disgust arose. Another
corner, and another smartly dressed girl
got in. The new arrival did not seem at
first to understand the request, and,
flushing, the tailor made girl repeated
it and secured one more of the precious
5 cent pieces.
The little girl had reached her desti
nation.
‘‘lam so much obliged, ’she murmur
ed to the heroic maiden who had been
taking up fares in her behalf. “I ought
to get out here, so I guess I’ll let tho
other go. ”
“No, no, you must not, ” said the fair
conductor, opening her purse. “Take
this and I can get it from Jhe next one
who gets in. ”
“Yqu are awfully good,” murmured
the unsuspicious little one with new
tears in her eyes, and one of the men
took the big box and handed it down to
her when she had stepped out
The stage rattled on and the tailor
made girl looked unconcernedly out of
the window. The next passenger was
allowed to drop his fare unmolested
into the box, unconscious of the little
comedy that had brought the others to
gether in a common interest for a mo
ment, and the stage company was still
ahead of the game.—New York Sun.
AN EVENING WITH DICKENS.
How the Great Author and His People
Can Be Studied by Literary Club*.
“For an evening with Dickens, ” ad-.
vises Fannie Mack Lothrop, writing of
“Evenings For Literary Clubs” in The
Ladies’ Home Journal, “one of the
items of the programme might be a
sketch of his life condensed into about
200 words. The Dickens drawings by
Charles Dana Gibson might be cut from
The Journal and hung up before the au
dience and the story of each character
and incident illustrated told. The trial
from ‘Pickwick’ could be arranged for
individual reading or for a number to
take part in it, A bright paper may be
written on ‘The People of Dickens’
World.’ Iff Dickens’ works there are
1,550 separate characters, enough to peo
ple a whole
“Some of Dickens’ poems have been
set to music—notably ‘The Ivy Green’
■ —and would make a pleasant feature.
Anecdotes of Dickens might be given by
ten or » dozen members, each giving
one. These might be interspersed
through the programme. A member
with any cleverness in photography
might make a series of Dickens’ lantern
slides from pictures in standard editions
of the novelist’s works and give a magic
lantern entertainment The death of
Paul Dombey would make a pathetic
reading from ‘Dombey and Son.' Mrs.
Jarley’s waxworks, as described in ‘The
Old Curiosity Shop,' could be given
. with some .of the members grouped as
characters in the famous show and des
ignated, as Little Nell did, with a
pointer. “
The “Gallery Gode."
The frequenters of the lofty gallery
of any theater have a good deal to do
with the making or marring of any new
play Yet that is not how they acquire
their title of “gods. ” As a matter of
fact, the origin of the expression is this:
Years ago Drury Lane theater had its
ceiling painted to resemble a blue sky
with clouds, among which white Cupids
were flying in every direction. This
ceiling extended over the gallery, whose
occupants thus appeared to be very near
heaven. Hence the expression arose of
“gallery gods. ” —London Answers.
All Quiet There.
“I’m glad to know, ” remarked Miss
Cayenne, “that Mr. and Mrs. Jinkies
are living far more happily than they
were formerly."
“Indeed?”
“Yes. lam informed that they have
not spoken to each other for weeks.
London Tit-Bits.
■V. ■
. . - - - -OWb--
A WINTER’S TALE.
Ab Individual Who-I* No* a Klondike*
, Telia a Story.
“I’ve been bearing a great deal about
I the oold weather that will drop down on
, Klondike mighty soon now,” remarked a
western editor tn Washington on business
of his own, “and I am sure they are going
to have a dreadful time of it, some of
‘ them, before the spring freshets, but lam
’ Sure not a man among them will have a
I sadder experience with the cold than I did
> in the winter of 1870. I was a printer in
St. Louis in tho spring of that year, with
, a little experience in editing a paper, and
there was a chance _for me to go to a new
1 mining town that started up about 60
miles from Denver and start a paper, or,
rather, keep tbe one going that had been
started there by the chap who wanted me
to oome out and join him.
“Thero was adventure in it, and I was
younger then than lam now. So it was
that in May I was the editor in chief of
The Blue Guloh Gazette, a weekly journal
of civilization, as we proudly announced
in our motto line. We did nicely all that
summer, and I enjoyed it, though I was
told it wasn’t so pleasant climatically in
winter. One of the attractions of tbe
office was a ‘devil’ that we hdd got from
the newsboy gang in St. Louis, and he
was the sharpest and brightest little cuss
in the state of Colorado. He was about 14
years old, and be wouldn’t weigh over 50
pounds, but he was all nerve and muscle.
“Well, the first snowfall jvas in October
early, and tbe weather whacked around to
all points of tbe compass for the next six
weeks. Then it settled steady, and the
week before Christmas it looked as if we
were going to have a nice holiday week,
but we were doomed to disappointment, for
three nights before the day the snow be
gan falling and a terrific blizzard swept
up through the high walled valley in
which our town was located. Thirty-six
hours later, when we got up in the morn
ing, the town was snowed under, and
there was no getting around at all. I sent
Snips out to see if be could bore through,
and he came back in half an hour with
something hot for us to eat, Snips and I
occupying a back room in the office and
boarding around. He told me he had seen
1 two or three people at the restaurant who
had burrowed through a block or two, as
tbe snow was light, but how deep it was
i none of them knew, as it was above the
roofs of the two story houses, the highest
we bad.
“Then a brilliant idea came to Snips.
“ ‘There’s our smokestack, major,’ he
said. ‘lt’s 47 feet by the measure and just
about the size for me to pull myself up
through by them wires inside of it, just
like I did when we fixed that guy. Let
mo swarm up to the top of it and see
where the snow comes to. I can do it
easy. ’
“Well, gents," concluded the western
editor, “I let him go, and he never came
back. I guess be must have fallen off of
the top some way and got smothered in
the snow or frozen to death or something.
Anyway, when the snow thawed down in
a rain that followed in a couple of weeks,
we found the poor little fellow in the pure
white snow and as black as the ace of
spades from the soot that he had got on
himself climbing up in that smokestack."
—Washington Star.
Turkish Artillery.
Artillery, which was very numerous,
was excellently horsed and gunned, but
poorly trained. Six cannon, 80 men and
60 horses were the complement of a bat
tery. The guns were 7% centimeters (3
inch) Krupp-Mantel!, all in first class con
dition, cased and clean, the limbers and
gun carriages of the ordinary pattern.
The shell weighed 12 and tbe shrapnel 14
pounds, fired by time or percussion fuses.
The horses were Tor the most part from
Russia or Hungary and ran bigger than
those of the cavalry. The men, recruited
from ail parts of the empire, did the man
ual part of their work well, but there was '
very little technical skill, and a battery
had rarely more than one trained artillery
officer. Three batteries of horse artillery
armed with nine pounders were attached
to the cavalry division. These, however,
were short of spare horses, so the gunners
sat on the limbers and carriages. Accord
ingly the speed Was not very great. There
were also three batteries of mountain guns
on first class weapons, but the gun
ners very slow. Eighteen howitzers came
up to Scrfije, but were never brought any
farther, as tjiere was no need for them.
Taking it all round, tbe artillery, un
like the cavalry, was a very strong arm,
but like the cavalry it was never made
sufficient use of—the best work being done
by the corps artillery, which acted unde®
the orders of Rlza Pasha, who frequently
used to borrow divisional batteries when
he bad need of them.—“ With the Turkish
Army In Thessaly, n by Clive Bigham.
Charles A. Dana.
Charles A. Dana, the editor of the New
York Sun, is on the high road to complete
recovery from his recent severe illness,
which was the result of overwork on hit
return from Russia. He is now 78, and
his father lived to tbe age of 87. All hit
life Mr. Dana has taken intelligent care of
his health, exercising and living well, but
on plain and wholesome food. When he
lived in New York, over 20 years ago, he
used to visit an up town riding academy at
very early hours, even before daylight in
winter time, when he could have the arena
altogether to himself, and ride furiously
until he had tired three or four horses in
succession. He would jump off a horse
going at full speed, run alongside and leap
into the saddle again like a circus per
former, and could even stand upon tbe
raddle while going at a gallop, and at that
time be must have been at least 50 years
old.—San Francisco Argonaut.
His Answer.
A New Orleans man who wanted to be
a policeman and made preparation for the
civil service examination found that he
bad studied along the wrong lines. He
determined to make use of his newly ac
quired knowledge, however, when he
came to a question that struck him as
absurd. The question was, “If a bullet is
dropped in a well and it takes five seconds
for it to strike tbe water, how far is it
fi om the top of tbe well to the surface of
the water?” The candidate answered:
• “Heathen mythology says that when Jupi
ter kicked Vulcan out of heaven it took
him 47 days and 9 nights to fall. It so,
how far is heaven from Kosciusko, Miss.?”
—Exchange.
A Sensible Policeman.
A St. Louis policeman, who had a War
rant of arrest against a woman for alleged
assault and battery, refused to imprison
her when he found it was directed against
a lady in the eighty-sixth year of her age.
He took her to a friend's bouse and secured
ball for her, and tbe prosecuting attorney,
when told that she was too old and feeble
to assault anj body, said be would revoke
the warrant.- -Exchange.
THE CZAR’S CURIOSITY.
He Destroyed Hto Daughter** DoU to See
How the Mechanism Worked.
The heavy burden of autocracy has not
destroyed all the boyish Instincts in Nich
olas Il’s disposition, as the following an
ecdote, hoard at a dinner party given in
honor of a gentleman of M. Faure's escort
in his late journey, proves: The president,
after having searched all the best Parisian
shops to find some toys worthy of the two
little grand duchesse*' acceptance, and,
having bought the everlasting golden rattle
for Miss Tatiana, was in despair for some
thing out of the common to give Mies
Olga He at last chose two wonderful
dolls, one got up as an elegant lady, the
other as an overdressed little girl, and,
after much difficulty a most complicated
piece of machinery was inserted, thanks
to which, when wound up, the lady and
her daughter begin a ludicrous bit of con
versation, which is finished by the little
girl crying because she is not allowed to
ride a donkey on account of her gauze
dress.
Tho baby grand duchess was delighted,
but not more so than her father, who, tt
appears, spent an hour on the floor with
the child listening to the squeaky dia
logue between the dolls. But tho thne
came when the princess had to go to bed,
which she did very reluctantly. As for
the emperor, he remained an instant in
the boudoir after her departure with the
two clever artificial ladies who had takfcn
his fancy, while the empress, M. Faure
and some ladies and gentlemen of the
court were talking in the next room. Sud
denly a strange noise like that of an infer
nal machine was heard, followed by a loud
cry of dismay, and everybody rushed to
see what it was.
There was tho emperor safe nnd sound,
but with a dismal face, looking at the
dolls, which he had partly undressed to
find out the secret hidden in their bosoms,
while tbe dolls were chattering away as if
they would never stop. The empress, un
able to restrain her temper, snatched up
tho carpeted board on which were stand
ing and shaking the ttvo proclous ladles,
and after having crushed her husband
with a withering eye she said to a gentle
man near her: “Please send this away.
It is too bad indeed. Tho emperor spoils
everything he touches." But Nicholas
looked so penltent.and the mishap was so
funny that she could not help laughing.—
Philadelphia Times.
When Was the Bible Completed?
Scholars differ in opinion os to the date
at which the books now found in the New
Testament were completed, but it is prob
able that this was accomplished not later
than 130. Many centuries had passed in
the formation of tho Old Testament, but
the New was all written within a single 100
years. The decision as to which books
should be received into the new canon was
not so quickly reached, for the earliest fa
thers of the church frequently quote from
other gospels, such as one “according to
the Egyptians,” or “according to the He
brews, ” and the Syrian church accepted
some books not received by that of north
Africa or the western church and vice
versa. There is a legend that at tho first
ecumencial council of Nicsea, 825, copies
of all the Christian literature then current
were laid beneath the altar and the gen
uine books leaped out of the mass and
ranged themselves on the altar. It prob
ably contains a germ of the truth—that at
this convocation it was decided that tho
books now received were apostolic or writ-*
ten under apostolic direction, and tho oth
ers were spurious. Be this as it may, the
judgment of several generations of Chris
tians certainly decided upon the value of
these books as distinguished from many
others written at about that time or later,
and the council of Carthage (897) is said
to have fixed the canon. Tho word “can
on” was first used by Athanasius, in the
fourth century, in the sense of “accepted"
or “authorized,” and Jerome and Augus
tine held the present Now Testament as
canonical.—Clifton Harby Lovy in Ameri
can Monthly Review of Roviews.
The Evil of Trade Unionism.
We are not disputing hero the right of
workmen to combine for the advancement
and protection of their craft. Nor is it to
be denied that such right carries with it
the right for each trade union to make
such rules and regulations as it deems fit
for Its own members. Where the mischief
begins is when trade unions seek to make
rules which fetter other -orkmen and
which tie the hands of employers. And
where trade unionism begins to be abso
lutely destructive in Its effects on industry
Is where, on the one hand, it endeavors to
make a close corporation by limiting the
number and restricting the employment of
apprentices, and where, on the other hand,
it restricts the labor of the moat competent
to the capacity of the most idle and least
efficient.
AU this trade unionism does. Overtime
is objected to because, it is alleged, It di
minishes the number that may be employ
ed. But if overtime is not worked orders
cannot be executed within tbe time in
which they are required. Therefore, the
orders will cease to come, and because Bill
was not allowed to work extra hours Jack,
Tom and Jim will not bo able to get work
at all.—Benjamin Taylor In Gassier’s
Magazine.
Rothschild’* Error.
It may require as much imagination to
draw pleasun out of an unspent dollar as
It does to get it from an unsmelled flower,
oh an unkissed love, or any of the unoxist-
Ing realities that poets deal in.
Many a laborious and ascetic financier
must live in a world of imagination, a
commercial dream, as little tangible as
that of the poet. “My food and lodging
are all I get for my wealth,” said tbe elder
Rothschild. He was mistaken; he forgot
his dream of wealth. He, too, was one of
the poets of a financial age. Nor, lastly,
can it be that tbe delight of giving one
self up to an impassioned thought, of
which one is as sure as death and for
which one is willing to die, is not still,
as it always has been, the ktonest pleas
ure of a human soul.—H. G. Chapman in
Atlantic.
St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Fifteen years ago Chicago was the great
central wheat market of the west. Even a*
late as four years ago its wheat receipts
were over 50,000,000 bushels, but in 1896
they had declined to 19,101,152 bushels,
while tbe wheat receipts of Minneapolis
were 69,568,870 bushels and those of Du
luth and Superior 56,607,397 —the total of
the two cities being 126,176,267 bushels, or
six times and a half the Chicago receipts.
These figures tell their own story of tho
shifting of the trade currents of tbe north
west to their natural channels and go far
to explain the ro tuar hable growth of St-
Paul and Minneapolis from a population
of 83,000 in 1870 to more than ten thnes
that number in 1897.—“ The New North
west,’* by J. A. Wheelock, in Harper’s
Magazine.
~ Il • FW'
The Classic* anil bcianoee.
It U ca-y t>r thoso w fao huve never had
a true university training, who have had
their ideas of culture shaped by the oom
mercial fashion of this jmrticular country
end the whirl of turmoil in which our peo
ple ore carried along, to persuade them
selves that wo are now quite beyond tho
need of Latin and Greek; that tho place*
of tho classic languages can be and ought
to be supplied by the more practical study
of French and German. Th!* demand for
practical and useful things is just as
erroneous as the one previously mention
ed. It loses sight of tho fundamental
principle tn education—viz, that the solo
purpose of education is discipline in think
ing and the cultivation t>f attachment to
the noble and the ideal. That tbe classic
languages afford a better discipline to tho
mind than any other is generally conceded
by tho best authorities and proved by tho
experience of every ago.
In our own time we find the most einl
Dent savans of Germany of this opinion,
and in England Lord Kelvin, tho ox-pres
ident of the Royal society, who for 50
years has engaged in physical research and
is easily the greatest man of science since
Laplace, comes out squarely against the
making of Greek optional in the Universi
ty of Cambridge, and tho proposition is
voted down in tho senate by an over
whelming majority. Is it likely that on
tills great question such mature and intel
ligent judgment can be wrong and that
of the inexperienced and the unclassio
teacher right? Training In tho classic
languages affords the desired mental dis
cipline and stimulates a careful and ac
curate use of language and of thought,
which, as has been said liefore, is tWb es
sential condition of scientific progress.
I advocate therefore a return to th6
study of the classics as the best and safest
basis for the advancement of science; be
sides, tho ideals and the philosophy and
the poetry of the ancients, far removed
from the corrupting clamors at our time,
exert tho most noble influence upon the
mind, and from that point of view alone
Latin aud Greek should bo maintained os
tbe basis of linguistic study.—Dr. T. J. J.
Lee in Popular Astronomy.
Tactic* That Won.
“I’ll never forget when we hade old
Bluntly at the head of our campaign com
mittee,” said the ex-congressman who re
cently retired from politics, “All we put
him there for was os a figurehead. He
was honest, straightforward and univer
sally trusted by tho people. We simply
wanted the benefit of his reputation, In
tending to make the fight without any of
his help.
“But tho old chap fooled us. He took
the thing In deadly earnest and watched
things with the care of a locomotive en
gineer hauling a fast passenger train. He
believed in doing everything aboveboard
and was a bonanza to reporters. When a
man of some prominence on the other side
pretended to be converted to ours and
made a dramatic demonstration at a big
mass meeting of his change of heart,
Bluntly gave it out that the fellow had
been hired to play the part and was a rank
hypocrite. When we had made terms with
a lot of repeaters to come in and help us
out, Bluntly exposed the scheme and call
ed the attention of the authorities to it in
away they could not Ignore. When we
bought ui) the leaders of a certain organi
sation, promising so much for each vote
delivered from that source, Bluntly called
attention to the conspiracy and declared
that he would prosecute bribers and bribed
if it were carried out.”
‘ ‘ Whew! Did the fellows on your ticket
know they were running?"
“Did they? We swept tho board. Not
an office got away. Bluntly’s honesty was
so novel and refreshing that the people
were tickled beyond expression. They
couldn’t believe that a man of his nerve
and integrity could be indorsing the
wrong ticket, and it went with a whoop.”
—Detroit Free Bess.
It Made All the Difference.
“Oh!” exclaimed Mrs. Midgon. She
had been shopping and visiting and had
just arrived home when a thought struck
her. She clasped her hands together in
dismay, and in her agitation sat fiat down
on the cat. “Whatever shall I do?”
“I expect you will get over it.” said
Mr. Mldgen testily. He was waiting for
his tea. “What is it?”
“I took my diary out with me instead
of that little pricebook, and if I haven’t
been and left it somewhere! Suppose
somebody should get hold of it and read
it?”
“Ha, ha!” laughed her husband. “That
will be fine sport. How I should like to
seo them reading all tho rubbish you hnvo
written in it! What's tbe good of going
back? You’ll nover got it. ”
“Oh, I remember now!” suddenly cried
Mrs. Midgen. “It is my old one. So it
doesn't matter at all. I fool quite re
lieved.”
“What was in it?” said he, feeling dis
appointed.
“I used to amuse myself by copying
your love letters in it, and I imitated your
signature at the bottom of them.”
“What?” yelled Midgen, jumping to his
feet and grabbing at his hair. “Do you
want people to know what an idiot I am
and make mo tho laughing stock of the
parish just when I’m putting up for tho
vestry? Go and look for it, quick! And
offer £lO reward for it I”
And if it hadn’t been found in Mrs.
Midgen’s bag at that very moment there
is no telling what would have happened
to that household.—Pearson's Weekly.
What Is Public Opinion?
It Is obvious that there are two kinds of
public opinion. One is tho popular belief
in tho fitness or rightness of something,
which Mr. Balfour calls “climate,” a be
lief that certain lines of conduct should
be followed or a certain belief held by
good citizens or right thinking persons.
Such tpbelief does not impose any duty on
anybody beyond outward conformity to
the received standards. The one I am now
talking of is the public opinion, or con
sensus of opinion among large bodies of
persons, which acts as a political force,
Imposing on those in authority certain en
actments or certain lines of • policy. The
first of these does not change and is not
seriously modified in much less than 50
years. The second 'is being Incessantly
modified by tho events of the day.—E. L.
Godkin in Atlantic.
Episcopal Church Statistic*.
Whittaker’s “Protestant Episcopal Al
manac” for 1898, which is out, is a care
ful and comprehensive digest of Episcopal
church statistics and growth. There are
at present in that church 4,776 clergymen,
an increase of 58 over the previous year;
6,882 churches, an increase of 46; 664,088
communicants, an Increase of 22,938, and
433,600 Sunday school scholars, an in
crease of 12,077, Its contributions for all
purposes daring the last year were 812,-
696,813.06, being an increase of fU|,M3.M
over tbe previous year.
.-
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA” AND
“PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” as our trade mark.
7, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, qf Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator qf “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now or *
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTO RIA,’ 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
the hind you have always bought jT" on
and has the signature of wrap-
per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President. j
March 8,1897. &v****-**.».
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer yo”
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in.
gradients of which even he docs not know. ;
“The Kind You Have Always Bought” -■
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE C~
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed ton.
VMS •SWVAVM SMWMIV* TV MUffiffiAV •VMEET, NSW VMM* JtfTV.
—GET YOUH —
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Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention
J. P.&S B. SawtelL
CEBTRIL OF GEORGIA RHILWAf CO.
; ip..*.
Schedule in Effect Jan. 9, 1898.
)
. NoT is Vo. s ’ No.l JL.JI
Dally. Dally. Daily. rrxnom. . DaUy. Daily. Daily.
TsOpm 4 06pm TMara Lv Atlanta 186 pm Mass !<*•■>
885 pm 447 pm SSSam hr Jonesboro Ar SUpm .flSim
• 15pm 530 pm •ISamfLv Griffin Ar 6Upm • i 4an> 6Mam
• 45pm 606 pm •Mam Ar Barnesville. Lv S4Bpm SO am
t7 40|Mn tlffUpm Ar.... - Thomaston. Lv tstepen rtSSam .
SUB iiis gX *
UlSam 810 pm IS OB pm Ar Gordon Lv SUtpm ?JU*m BMam
; 00»am 060 pm dr Savaaaah.. Lv 846 am
i •Dally, texoept Sunday.