Newspaper Page Text
LADIES’
READY-to-WEAR
This department is full of handsome
tailor made suits to fit any size in all the
new shadesand materials, prices very reason
able. Come and look through the lines of
Suits and Cloaks.
Made to fit fit to wear.
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Our Milliners are now filling
orders, but will take time to show you the
loveliest line of Ladies’ Hats it is possible to
secure. Everything that’s new and up to the
hour is here. We can please you in a hat.
Shoes wm Character
And that character so good that they please
all who wear them is the kind of shoes Bass
Bros. Co., are offering their trade. For
Ladies, the Red Cross, the Ultra and the Sel
by makes have been tried and always please
so well that it is no trouble to sell the second
pair. These well-known ladies’ shoes have
been sold by us for several years and need
no introduction to those who know. Our
line in the above makes are full up and can
furnish any size, style or cost wanted; price,
$2.00 to $5. Misses’ and Childrens’ Shoes,
just anything you want at old prices. We
can suit you in Children’s Shoes and please
you in prices.
Young man, you can’t find no better shoes
than the Florsheim for style, durability and
character. It has all the high qualities, but
low only in price, $4 to $6. Ralston Health
and Fellowcraft Shoes, $3.50 and $4.00. The
price is under value—they wear, they please.
.JI JI
Winter Water-Proof Shoes for Children,
$1 up. Let us fit your boy with a pair of
Walton School Boys’ Shoes and just watch
how long they will wear him. Good, heavy
winter Shoes at old prices.
Get your heavy Winter Underwear be
fore Jack Frost gets you. We have the as
sortment in which you will have no trouble
in getting what you want Come to see us
whether you want to buy or not
No trouble to show you through.
Bass Bros.£aft»
-
KIM OIL OUEEN,
Miss Kaessman, Who Operates a
Big Refinery.
IS IN FINANCIAL TROUBLE
Declares Rival Producers Are Trying
to Wrest Her Half Million Dollar
Company From Her—Does Not Blame
Standard.
Miss Herrunntt Kaessman. head of
the Sunflower State Relining company,
who has beeu fighting legal proceed
ings to have her company put in the
hands of a receiver, is known In Kan
sas ns "the woman queen of the oil
industry.”
She is the principal owner and con
ductor of the refinery at Niotaze. Kan ,
the largest In the mldcoutinent oil field
and the most complete Institution of
its kind west of the Mississippi river,
which has sucked the oil from under
the Kansas prairies and converted It
into a product of commerce and sent
it out to the people by the hundreds
of carloads.
It is a brown eyed, soft voiced, cul
tured gentlewoman of forty, from
Rochester. N. Y.. who has held her
hand to the helm of this big enterprise
and guided it to such great success
that, starting with a capital of $30.-
000, $14,000 in debts and $3 in the
treasury. It has grown to the propor
tions of an investment of more than
$500,000, with factory baildlngs cover
ing thirty-five acres of Kansas prairie,
with forty miles of pipe lines, owned
and operated by the company, reach
ing out into the oil fields of Chautau
qua county, seven miles of gas pipe
lines furnishing fuel from 2,000 acres
of Chautauqua county gas lauds to
keep the big refinery engines going and
fifty-nine tank cars, either owned or
leased by the company, to carry its
product into the hands of the ultimate
consumers of the middle west.
Began In Oil Business In 1903. ,
Miss Kaessman's connection with
the oil industry started back in Roch
ester, N. Y„ in 1903. The Kansas oil
fields were then in the earlier stages
of their development. Miss Hermann
Kaessman, a principal in the schools
Os -Rochester; -talked to-tho-teachers in
the Rochester schools and her women
friends in the social set in which she
moved of this new oil field in the
west. And as she talked they lis
tened, for before ever she set foot on
Kansas soil she had made, through
her savings and investments in to
bacco stocks, something in the neigh
borhood of a personal fortune; of
$200,000 and had demonstrated her
right to speak with authority on sub
jects touching finance.
Some of this money had come to her
through inheritance, but the great bulk
of it bad come to her because of
brains. And so these schoolteachers
—together with some widows and
some maidens, women of independent
means—invested in a concern, which
operated, as producers, in the Kansas
oil fields in the vicinity of Wayside,
in Chautauqua county.
This concern was known as the
Richardson-Mott company. It is now
the Sunflower State Refining company,
with Miss Kaessman at its bead.
Standard Not to Blame, She Saye.
Miss Kaessman declares that' her
company’s financial embarrassments
are only temporary and are due to cer
tain producers who, she says, are try
ing without warrant to create distrust
of her concern among the banks and
to destroy her credit. They are also
aiming at taking the company from
her. she says. She does not blame tbe
Standard Oil company. She says that
the Standard has shown her courte
sies. She admits it may be because
she is a woman, although she does
not believe it. Ou one occasion when
her storage capacity for fuel oil was
exhausted the Standard allowed cars
to be diverted from its own quota to
help her out of the difficulty. She has
not found them using with her the
methods which they are reputed to
apply to competing concerns.
It may be chivalry, she admits; or
it may be some new policy of the oil
trust, but certain she is that they have
treated her with unusual courtesy.
CRADLING THE SUBMARINES.
“Mother” Ship Puts Little Boat* to Bed
at Her Side.
Putting submarine boats to bed by
their "mother” ship interested specta
tors in New York the other day. The
vessel called the parent,of the under
water boats was the Castine. Each
submarine flotilla is now accompanied
■wherever it goes by a parent ship,
whicli is tilted with hooks, stanchions,
bits and bollards, to which the sub
marines. when the day’s or night's
work Is done, are made fast.
When the Castine came to anchor
those who were watching Iter ashore
were surprised to see four funny look
ing vessels slowly steaming up to her
from the south. As each submarine
came alongside lite crew came up out
of tlte shell, and in five minutes the
vessel was securely made fast to the
side of the mother ship. When it was
al! over the Castine was nestling two
on either side, the Plunger and Por
poise being on her starboard and the
Viper and Tarantula on her port.
Public School* For Blind Children.
The New York city board of educa
tion has opened its first classes or
schools for the Wind. The blind chil
dren are received in any one of five
buildings in Manhattan and Brooklyn
and study the Braille system of raised
letter reading and writing.
~ .X—, ■■■■
Iff • Tap Natch Deer.
Great deeds ‘compel regard. The
world crowns its doers. That's why
the American people have crowned
Dr. King’s New Discovery the king of
throat and lung remedies. Every atom
is a health force. It kills germs, and
colds and lagrlppe vanish, it heals
cough racked membranes and cough
ing stops. Bore, inflamed bronchial
tubes and lungs are cured and hem
orrhage* cease. Dr. Geo. More, Black
Jaek, N. C., wyltea: “It cared me of
lung trouble, pronounced hopeless by
all doctors. ” 6Oc. and SI.OO. Trial bot
tle free. Guaranteed by all draggist*
I The New !
I White House I
| Offices |
J. AAA AA AA
TvTTTTTTTVI V ▼ 1 -ww-w-w
117 11KN Presl -
■aM H T#,t **■
IffllSH! turnstoWash-
tagton from his
great •■swing
around the circle”
W he will find his of-
flees tn the west
llru wlug of the White
,»x Hoose largely ex-
tended, in fact, so
much space has
been utilized In making this change
that the famous tennis court which
supplied local color to all anecdotes of
the previous administration has beeu
wiped out of existence Where exult
aut cries of "Fifteen love!” "Thirty
love!” and ‘‘Forty love!” were cracked
by the teeth of the mighty hunter and
minor notes of "Love fifteen,” "Love
thirty” and "Ixtve forty” came pur
ringly from bis respectful antagonists
of the tennis cabinet there will here
after be heard only the quiet tones of
President Taft dictating state papers
and challenges to games of comforta
ble golf.
The new addition, whicli is to cost
in the neighborhood of $50,000, will
give the president aud his staff twice
the space of the original wing. The
old offices, which were designed by the ,
New York architects McKim. Mead &
White, cost about SOO,OOO. The three
forward walls of that old building are
utilized unchanged hi the new design
by the Washington architect Nathan
C. Wyeth, and that enables the dou
bled floor space with the remodeled in
terior to be secured at the compara
tively small cost already mentioned.
There will be eleven rooms in the
new offices as against the bare half
dozen flint served for Mr. Taft’s prede
cessors, and the furnishings and llx-
A SECTION OF THE UNCOMPLETED WHITE
HOUSE ADDITION.
tures, while far from luxurious in any
oriental sense, wifi be correspondingly
improved.
The greatest change effected by the
new plans is in the president's room.
Instead of the severe rectangular room,
with its bare walls and distressing at
tempt at an oil painting of Lincoln,
that formerly constituted the presi
dent's sanctum theca will now lie a
room in the form of an oval—an oval
that on the southern exposure fits
without a broken line into a deep bay
window, where the president’s desk
will stand.
With all its colonial simplicity, and
such simplicity was made necessary
by the predominating note in the rest
of the White House, it is evident that
this is the room on which Mr. Wyeth
has spent most time. The color scheme
will be green and white, with mahog
any furniture. At the end opposite the
bay window will lie a handsome fire
place of white marble, with a wide
hearth of the same material.
The cabinet room will have windows
bn two sides. Its tables and chairs
will be identical with those in use
since March 4. as there is a custom by
which the cabinet officer takes with
him on leaving office the chair he used
at the executive council. The room it-*
self will be In gold and yellow. The
tradition In regard to the furniture of
the cabinet room makes Impossible
any sentimental suggestions such as
obtain in the details of the president's
room. Thus Mr. Taft’s long service
in the Philippines is symbolized In the
coverings of carabao skin.
In, the old building* there was no
waiting room of any sort, and senators,
diplomats, representatives and,cabinet
officers were herded together in a very
ordinary lobby, in the new buildtag
this lobby will lie retained with prac
tically undiminished size, but In addi
tion there will be a general waltiifg
room, with the proper equipment of
scats and tables, while a congressional
waiting room will lx? set apart for con
gressmen and dignitaries of all sorts.
The White House is a federal de
partment, like the treasury or the de
partment of state, and in
a business way Is con
ducted on that sort of
basis. It employs a staff IlfflHßEiS
of about thirty clerks. vfflßgg'/
without counting mesaen
gers, watchmen, etc., and Xu/
requires a good deal of yM
space for J tie aceotnmoda
tion of its working force.
Mr. Roosevelt's notion 5f Jvk
the size of the building •
required for the purpose
was an underestimate, and the plans
adopted were not such as to make for
comfort -er convenience; hence the
changes now being made, which will
convert the structure into a very hand
some affair, though of only one story,
and provided with every imaginable
equipment appropriate to a modern
office build'""
Frightful Fate Averted
•‘I would have been a cripple for
lite, from a terrible cut on rny knee
cap,” writes Frank Dteberry, Kelli
her, Minn., “without Bucklen'a Ar
nica Salve, which soon cured me.”
Infallible for wounds, cuUaod bruises,
it soon cures burns, scalds, old sores,
boils, skin eruptions. World's best
remedy for piles. 25c. at ail druggist-*.
For a clear head, a stout heart and
strong mind, DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers, gentle, safe, easy, pleasant, lit
tleptlls. DeWitt’s C'arboHzed Witch
Hazel Salve is unequalled for anything
where a salve is needed, and te eape
ci* Uy good for pilre. Bold by all drug
gists.
DIVORCE RATE CHOWS
Fact Established by Government
Investigation. >
MORE DECREES IN THE WEST
Almost a Million Separation* In Twen
ty Years, an Inoreaee of Two Hun
dred Per Cent Over Number In Pre
ceding Two Decadss.
The ccusua bureau has published a
comprehensive report ou umrri.tgc aod
divorce. The investigation of the sub
ject was undertaken by direction of
congress and grew out of n conference
in Washington by reprewotatirea of
various religious denominations. The
investigation has extended over a pe
riod of nearly five years.
"Apparently the divorce rate, like the
velocity of a falling body, fit constant
ly increasing.” saya the report, "and It
is Impossible to determine statistically
from available data Just what the re
sults would be If the rate reached at
any particular time remained constant;
io other words, no statistics bearing on
this question of Ute duration of mar
riages terminated by divorce have
been obtained that accurately represent
present conditions or conditions at any
particular period, for the conditions are
not static, but dynamic.”
Statistic* For Twenty Years.
The statistics cover a period from
1887 to the end Os 1900. and the total
number of marriages recorded was 12,-
832,044. The investigation showed that
in the twenty years covered the num
ber of divorces granted was 943,625.
In tbe twenty years from 1867 to 1886
the number was about 328,710. hardly
more than one-third of the number re
corded in tiw second twenty years. The
report says that each successive five
year period since 1807 has witnessed
a marked increase in th? number of
divorces.
The report contends that It is a well
established fact that the marriage rate
is quickly responsive to changes lu
economic conditions. Increasing In pe
riods of prosperity and decreasing after
n commercial crisis or panic during
hard times, and that especially note
worthy is the small increase shown for
the year 1893 and the actual decrease
in the succeeding year.
More Divorce* In Western 'Stet**.
The report says that the percentage
of marriages is higher in the south
than in tbe north ttnd that outside the
south the highest [tercentnge prevails
in the middle west, in the south At
lantic group of states tlte rate was 350
marriages i>er 10.900 of adult unmar
ried population against 200” In tbe
north Atlantic states and 436 in the
Eouth central ns against 322 In the
north central nyd 273 per 10,000 ndult
unmarried population in the western
Ijroup of states.
in 1006 the highest divorce rate per
100.000 estimated population. 168. was
reported from tbe western division, a
rate which was more than four times
that reported from the north Atlantic
division. 41. and almost four times
that reported from the south Atlantic,
43. The rate for tbe north Central di
vision, 108. was almost two and two
third times that for the north Atlantic,
while that for tbe south central. 118,
was two and tbree-fourth times tha,t
for tbe south Atlantic. Broadly speak
ing. tbe dlyorce rate increases as one
goes westward.
JEWISH FARMERS’ FAIR.
Federation Hold* a Convention and
Give* Exhibition In Now York.
Much Interest lias been aroused
among the large Jewish population In
New York city by the first annual con
vention and fair of tbe Federation of
Jewish Farmers of America, held In
the Educational Alliance building. For
several years a well defined movement
to take the Jewish immigrant from the
sweatshop to tbe farm has been in
progress, and the fair was one evidence
of its success.
The Federation of Jewish Farmers
of America was organized last Janu
ary. The purpose of the federation Is
to improve the material and social con
ditions of Jewish farmers and. what Is
still more significant, to stimulate an
interest Jn farm life among the Jews
of the large cities. Tbe membership
of the federation is made up of Jewish
farmers from all parts of tbe country
ns far west as North Dakota. Most of
those farmers formerly lived in the
congested districts of New York city.
There are about 5.000 Jewish farmers.
In the United States. !
Corn, wheat, rye. alfalfa and sun
flowers from Massachusetts and Con
necticut; melons, squash, pumpkins,
peanuts, potatoes and cauliflower from
New York; eggplant and. asparagus
from New Jersey and linseed and mil-
Jet from North Dakota nnd Hercules
gourds from somewhere else were some
of the exhibits made by the farmers.
May Fly at Will.
The mall of Secreiary of State
Koenig of New York recently contain
ed a request for an aviator's license,
the first application of the sort which
is believed so have been made. There
fiTW law requiring aviators to be li
censed. and they may fly nt Will. The
application came from Herbert Stur
ges, a chauffeur, of New York,
All th* Rage In Pari*.
Miniature watches are all the rage In
France. A fashionable damsel m
Taris recently simultaneously carried
a watch suspended from her belt, a
I smaller one on her purse, a still small
er one on the third finger of'her glov
ed band and one as tbe bead of a hat
pin. ■
Neney Comes la Baachos
I To A. A. Chisholm, of Treadwell, N.
j X-, now. His reuoti is well worth
; reading: “For a long time 1 suffered
from indigestion, torpid.,liver, conotl
' potion, nervousness and genera! de
bility,” he writes. «J couldn’t sleep,
had noappetite, nor ambition, grew
weaker every day in spite of ail med
ical treatment Then used Elect no
Bitters. Twelve bottles restored Ml
noy oid Ume health and vigor. Now
I can attend to business every day.
It’a a wonderful medicine.” Infalli
ble tor stomach, liver, kidneys, blood
‘ and nenes, fibc. at all dracgMa.
Tax Levy, 1909.
B« it reMiirsd by the Board of ('«*>«<*
of Rrnds »n>i Itevvotioa of tqMldint;
Coauty, t ieorgia, »n«i it is herrby rcao]v«d
by mid authority that there be levied and
oolleet <1 on *ll prupeitr located and ahnatoi
within mid aoualv on tn* 31»t day of March,
IW, whether tala property be real, perwn a),
or mlxmi, th* tollowing rute» of tai a
tirni for th* piirpowra her tin named,
nod that the *a<Be l<e collected by
the tax evdlwtor of mid epuuty al th* <*<ue
tint* sad in lite «tne taaaner a* the tax levied
by lit* Blate aCGeurgot it <tdl»ded, and that
when col levied flw *am« xball be depodhd
by mW tax collector with th* trrewnrer ot
bl»lditig county and that mid lreiwnr«r’»
AHcml receipt be taken therefor:
Find. To p*y the leg*! iwlebtedore* of the
cwnnty due or to lienxite dnedaringth* year,
or past due. Mfflltrf tl) one per eentmii.
Beeond. Io Intild or repair court haunt or
j*il, bridge* ot lerrire, or other public build
tag* or improveutrnte according to contract,
SS-KSttrf (f) one per cento in.
Third. To |wjr abertlf*, jailor* or other offi
cer* foe* that they may he leg -By eutitiod to
out of tbe county, aIW of(I) on* per centum.
Fourth. To p»v tbeexpense* of the county,
for Itatlitf* at court*, non rerident wilnre-e*
in criminal cure*, fuel, *ervant*' hire. »ta
tlonery and the like, 8-lUt) ofll joue p*.
eentuin.
Fifth. To pay juror* a per diern compen
sation, 3-100 of (1) per centum.
Sixth I'o p»y eiMnoe* incurred in >up
porting the poor of the county and a* other
wi** ptrecribed by the code, of (1) one
per centum.
Seventh. To uißiutain and operate a chain
gang for the working, grading and repair
ing of the public road* and bridge* of said
county, 3>-U»of<l) one pereentum.
Eighth. To pay any other lawful charge
against the county, .3-ttM ot (I) ofie per
centum.
A total tax to be levied and collected a*
aliove orderea of W-tetiof (1) one per centum
on all property in the county ot Spalding and
State of Georgia, whether it ba real, personal
or mixed, provided only '*‘*l it be not •*-
empteil from taxation by th* laws'of Georgia.
Rcwolved. further, Thai this order beapremi
upon the minute* of th» board and that the
wme be*dverti«'d and posted io accordance
w ith cwt ion 4Wi, Vol. 1, of l ode of Georgia,
(ISM.)
ROSWELL H. DRAKE.
N. G. BARFIELD,
C. M. HAMMOND.
CommiMiotw r» Road* arid Revenues,
Spalding County, Georgia.
Guardian’s Sale.
By Virtue of ah order granted by the Court
oft trditiary ofSpnlding county, at the Octoter
term of mi ill cout, will lx- sold before
the court housedoor in Griffin, tin., between
the legal hours of *alr. on the tiret Tuewiay in
Nove.nber next, th* following deser.bsd prop
erly belonging to Mm. Ida <I. Wooten: All
that tract or parcel of Jami in the city ot
Griffin ai d county of Spalding", In said State,
iruiitlng one hundred and five (185) fe t on.
Holomon street and one hundred and fifty
eight feet on Second avenue or sfreet, and
located iu the northwest corner of upisri' forty
nine, boo tided north by Solomon street, east
by Geo. Seymore’s laud, south by premises of
.Jennie Wragg. west by Second street. Terms
of sale cash. ' W it. -
Guardian Mr* Jiiafi. Wooten.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
O EORGI A—Spa i.diku Cou sty.
Notice i« hereby given to all creditar* of
the esta eof Jno. I’. Starr, late of *aid fine
ly, deceased, to render an account of their de
mands to me within the time presetibed by
law, properly made out. And all persons in
debted to said deceasod are hereby requMted
to make immediate payment to the undersign
ed. This August 23, 190!».
MRS. KATIE T. BTARR,
Administratrix of Jno. P. Starr. ,
-wya ,
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice i* hereby given to nil creditor* of the
estate of Ida G. Wi oten, insane, of Spalding
county, Ga., to render in an account of their
demand* to me within the time proscribed by
law, pro|a>rly made out. And all persons in
debted toMtid Ida G. Wooten are hereby re
quested to make immediate payment Pi the
underdgned.
Thia iKhrlay ot October, tWM*.
W. H. WHEATON,
Guardian Ida G. Wooten.
New Livery
STABLE
Everything new and up to
data, including horses, harness
and vehicles. Also Feed Sta
ble for farmers and others.
Good Tenneaaee and Kentucky Hor
ses and Mules a specialty in the Bales
Department.
Come around and see one of the best
equipped Livery, Feed and Hales Bta-
Htabies in the Bouth.
In rear of Postoffice,Griffin, Ga<
W. E. POWELL CO.
Phone 172.
BROWN & HAGIN,
WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS.
P. O. Box 58 Chattanooga, Tenn.
MAIL ORDERS OUR SPECIALTY.
Ail Oriers Filled the Minute Received.
We take pleaaure in notifying the public that we have moved back to Chattanooga.
Tenn , and we are tilling all order* from this point We have moved our Lexington (Jky.)
houne back to Chattanooga, Tenn., due to the derision rendered by the of Chancery
Court in which he declares that dUtilleriea located hi Tennessee ran whip whhkej **“ l **}”*
State of Tennessee. As we are now again located In the greatest diatrirt of
Corn Whiskey, we take pieaeure in altowiug you to deduct IS ceatii on of each gallon <W Corn
Whiskey purchased from ux. Below appears our regular price hat, and,wo hope you win
give u, * cotomeneenient order, which will Iw promptly •hipped out of * natSMmega, Ir-nn.
H/L* I (i«l. * n Four Kight <’•»«
Lorn Whiskey. Jug Quarts. Quart*. UQb.
New Corn 52 (ft f.... f.... ♦....
North (MfeMna (Style) ............. •• 2.2 ft .... ....
Rocky Mountain 260 2.00 4.75 7 -*0
Old Statesville, N. C. Style ~7ft ■»»
Prhate stock, (Old) 4,w * l,l *•*' 11 l *'
Lincoln County Whiskey.
Old Lincoln County No. 11... 3.26 8• • o •«*
Old Tennessee Club, Lincoln County 3.0 U 400 JW 1100
Old White Oak, Lincoln County ».MI 4.(0 B.W 11.(W
Deep Spring, Lincoln County ; *.6U 4.00 6.00 1! !?
Tennessee, LiucolnCounty A6O 4.00 KOO 11.01
Kentucky Bourbon .., 3.50 S.tft 7.20 W.M
Rye Whiskey.
XXX Rye .. 2.50 **} < 7 ?
XXXXRve 3.40 360 8,0 9-50
Centennial Rye'7. .. . < ® 8 «° 1, 00
Kentucky Club, Rye 4.U0 KUO 11.00
Ola Prentice, Rye ... 3.50 4.75 9.20
Murray Hili, Rye 4.5 9 a ° 12 50
Settled in Bend Whiskey. •
01d...... - 3.U0 7 50 10.60
Old Kentucky Tavern ... r.-,4.00 b <o 12.00
Apple iSrtorty'e Beet <• 4.75 7.00
Apple Brandy, Tenneeee’h Bert 3.40 3.60 tt.7.>
Apple Bran ly, KM) Proof .... 4.40 4MI 8.7a 12-tW
Gins and Malt Whiskey.
Old Tom Gin...., 2.40 2.50 4*5 <.OO
Holland Ota (Ftae Oradei 140 - 87 ®
Geneva, Imported (shalf-pintstobelOe .... 8.00 11.50 ....
Fine Wines.
Port, Sherry, Apricot, Bcuppernong .t>. 2.50 ) amortad
Banana, leoMetaV Blackberry. 2.10 ) iaa * y "
Kailroad Schedules.
r : . :■
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILWAY.
' '• if ’
ttara mtvmbß.ii
For Atlanta
Fw Ansui.
For
For Atlanta fcteS
For Atlanta ’
For Ma«m .mi Vatoreta.\ CJ
f"
For Marnm, Albany and Jarks’vilte Jb':2» am
For Mmxnt. allmay,
f*
!or Chattanooga. “»5a
ABMVAt*.
te •»-
From Atlanta p:22*m
From Atlanta.......
From Atlanta....... KriUon.
From At1aaia,..,,,,, h.m>iku
From Jackaoarill* and Mncoe 5:25 *a»
F“-^^ ny srX e jM *‘?. u,e
From Albany, Americas, Maeus.. vtfpra
J row Savannah, Augusta, Macon. 3:lb mn
FrZ Macou,. tee {X
brom ledanowaano Neworui(dally
except Sunday) g ;
No. 3 from Cedartown (Sunday only) gffiflam
hrom Chattanooga
For forthtr tnformauoa apply to L. iH.
Gkk>kb, Tkket Agent. J. £ ParraMto
Agent Griffin, G.~W. 11. Food, I>, F*a’
Fourth National Bank Bid’g., Atlanta, da.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
•CHK»vi.Ka.
Figure* «howo only a* inforniation and ar*
nut guarauteM.
NORTH BOUND.
Leave Griffin tt.Xaiu 5.52 pm
Arrive Atlanta....... i(l:soatn 10:40pm
SOUTH BOUND.
, No. 30. No. 22
Leave Griffin tf:ssam
Arrive Cointntrus 1u.05 am pm
For information a* to rates and rahedulea
yolumbuannd Atlanta, ecnsah L. H.
® t,< ‘ k S MjeutiUrtfliUi or write
JAMW FRftEMAN‘, Diet. Paas. Agt.,
Atlanta, va.
■it——B
G.S.&F. RY.
THE BEST LINE TO SOUTH
GEOIGIA AND FLOKIDA. .
Sckedale Affective Asgeat *, IM9.
DEPARTURES FROM MACON.
11:30 a. m.. No. 1, Torough train to South
Georgia and Florid*. Carn** Olwervatton
Parlor ear amt cmvchq*. Macon to Cordele,
Tifton, Valdosta and Jacksonville; oonure
tion made for While Springs, Lake Cltv aud
Palatka.
12:15 a. tn., (midnigut)No. 3, Tbroagh solid
teain to Florida, carrying twelv* motion
Draw tog Room Sleeping Utra and coach**
Macon to Jacksonville via Cordele, Tifton
and Valdosta. Sleeping Car opened at V:3Q
p. m., In Macon Union Depot.
4.06 p. m., N«ks, "Shoofiy,” Macoa to Vat
dost* and intermediate pointe.
12:15 a. m., No. 95, "Dixia Flyer,’’ sad
2:07 a m .No. 3», "South Atlantic Limited,”
solid ventibuled train* to Jaeksouvdle via
Tifton aud A. 0 L. en route front Chicago,
St. Louis and Cincinnati.
ARRIVALS IN MACON.
From Jacksonville, Palatka, and point* in
Florida and South Get rgia, 3:38 a. m., and
4:26 p. m. Sleeper arriving on 3:35 a. m.,
train remain* at Union Itepol until 7:30a. m.
From Valdoata 11:15*. m.
From Jacksonville via Tifton and A C. I
-2:56 a. m and 3:85 a. m.
These schedules show the time at which
train* uuiy be expected to arrive and depart,
but such schedule* at the tune stated are not
guaranteed]
For tnformntion a* to ticket*, rates, routes,
etc., apply to
j. w. Jamison,t. p. a, i
Maeou, Ga.
C. B. RHODES,
General Paas tiger Agen’,
Macon. Ga.