Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, April 26, 1895, Image 3
Mrs. R. L. Harris spent, several days this week villi friends at l'ovvel to a. Mrs. Jno. F. Thompson, arid litt’e John Jr. arc vistiug Mrs \V. J. Norton. Col. Holden attended court at Lexing¬ ton this week. The Rosebuds held a meeting lust Sun day evening. Miss Snllio Stephens, who has been nt an Art School in Atlanta for several months past returned home last Monday, and with the eitv councils’ permission will H: immediately begin to “paint the town ® IS red”. Judge Rhodes was off on a fishing tour the first of the week. Urs Harris aud Thomas of Norwood . excellent dentists well-known in two our city, are spending several days with Mr. Bergstrom. • Hev. F. McClesk.v prone-hod to men last Sunday. It is needless to re that thn “wool flew.” "M m The cleaned in ndmirnbh cemetery wns H manner preparatory for memorial servi today. , I The young people had a most enjoy sociab'e at the residence of Mr. nnd imirs. W. A. Leg wen. Miss Maude Li-gwen She beautiful young hostess entei tained those present in a way reflecting much credit upon her hospitality. This weeks' issiiecontninsnn advertise nient of the Atlanta liasiness College It is a school far superior to nt-y other in tlie -State and tho-e of our friends w ho wish to tuks a course should at once write for a scholarship. Next week the A vocate will change handa. Mr. C. E. Atkinson Editor Far mere Light assisted by Mr. .1. A. Fiery will take charge. Messrs Atkinson and Flury arc both experienced news-paper men and will give the citizens ol Tnliferro 11 hustling . paper. 1 . he present manage. merit, of the paper wishes the new-comers muchsuccess and beg our friends to extend to them the courtesies that we have received from their hands. W~ Dr.White has bought a bicycle aud is bow astonishing .... ... the town ... Ins and Col. Jas. Davison of Wood ville delivers the address liere on memorial day. Mr. Steine who is with F. Rudin hero, visiced Greenosboro last Sunday. Nine persons from here attended the Sousa's Band concert in Augusta Mon day, Mr. Ilay Andrews is general manager of theCrawfordville Telephone system: so said. F. RUBINS’ TALK. F. Rubins’ 15c molasses “makes the cake.” Good Syrup 25 and 35 cents per gallon. Fine stock of Spring goods coming in every day. Large lot of latest style Straw Hats, ready now for your inspect ion. We are always in the front ranks fw bai’gains of any kind, but our low prices od^ilotbiog ot all kinds will astonish you. The Ladies should not fail to look at. \ our stock of laces before purchasing. Respectfully, F. Rubin. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE Of Profitade Employment for Ener¬ getic Young Men. There are many excellent young men in this vicinity whom we happen to know have besq idle for months past by reason of their inability to procure employment. It is a matter of pleasure to us, there¬ fore, to now assure them that the Geor Business College at Macon, Ga., is i prepared to give them a written guarun- 1 tee of good positions at fixed salaries, and wants them to write at onco. This is the largest institution of the kind iu the South; and for three years £ has been unqualifiedly endorsed by the P business world ns thoroughly sound nnd I entirely reliable in every way. SHERIFF SALE. GFORGIA, Taliaferro County; Will be sold in front ol the door of the court house of said county, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder for P cash, on the first Tuesday in May next, all -• that tract or parcel, of land lying in one |||>ody, containing two hundred acres, toore or less situated in the 602nd di; -(Itrict G. M.in said comity, bounded on tho ‘north bylands of.Iohn Rhodes’ estate, W. O.Holden and John T. Akins; on the east by lands of Robt Gunn; outlie south by lands of John Rhodes’ pstate; on the west by lands of John T. Allen and Win. X. Gunn, Sr. Said land levied on as Hie prop erty of the estate of George F. Bristow deceased, by J. W. Tucker, constable in and for said county, to satisfy a tax fi. fa- against Thos E Bristow, executor on tho estatr of said decease, aad turned over to me for advertisement and sale. 1). 1 *. Henry, Sheriff. April 4, 1895. THE ATLANTA BUSINESS COLLEGE. The Advanced IJusinesn School. Book-keeping, Banking, Sliort«mn«I, Penmanship, Mathmatics, Elocution, j • * and all the Commercial and English Branches Taught by Practical, and Pro femonoHy Trained Teacherp, Students ma y enter at any time. For full information, nnd write to, Atlanta. BnsinessCollege | Whitehall St, AtlantaGu. _ ____ •'•‘SWitii'!'---'-- r..r.r. - I g! shipment g! compictins ° ry ' | , Then promptness of - 4 A f/^m y vou Bn, Of-he .Va.tcc." \ c I - AUGUSTA LUMBER CO., ? s: THE lEiDiN j NlNj't.'UR f*S O* •- Uat Z. ,.4 — 7 - —•!——.»A — # -- , | • AUGUSTA, GA. A MAN’S THOUGHTS. Work, there is work to be done, A whole day’s work in a day, From the rising sun to the setting sun Work for all who may. And the prayer of the working hand Is the prayer of the working head— The clamorous prayer of the hungry land— “Give us our daily bread!” Fame, there is fame to be won, A name that stands for a name; prize when the race shall be run; And the honors a victor may claim. Gold, and better than gold, Power, and the world’s good will; ^ better than aU a thousandfold, An honest conscience still. To suffer and know no shame, To conquer, and leave no ban. To lire as giving, through praise and blame Assurance of a man. —Good Words. THE “ HIGH BALL." hard times had made it necessary —jl Furniture ior the Mitcheil Com pany to cut down the working hours of all of its em J ploves. A little ^ ^ J before more than two a bun- year ~~' 1J dred tired men N TT passed the time ^ J keeper every even ing at six o’clock, homeward bound, Now but ninety hands were employed, including the office force and boys, and work was over every afternoon at f our o’clock. The majority of the men whiled away tho interval between quitting time and their supper hours in the stores and saloons, which surrounded the public square. Malchester had its public square,as every well ordered coun fy sea f should have, and the ad ygrtising leaflet, issued by tho Mai cheater Improvement Society, con tained a most alluring picture of it. There were also in this leaflet some fine "half tone” engravings of the courthouse, * ew high school, Mai chester - 8 6tone churches, the stores of her leading merchants (who paid $25 “to defray the actual cost of preparing the engraved plates”), the new depot and the old round house of the Jacksonville, Malchester and Springficld Railway. Tho leaflet also called attention, in bold, rod display type, to the fact that Malchester was a division point on the Jacksonville, Malchester and Springfield Railway, and that for over a quarter of a cen tury from one hundred and fifty to two hundred employes of the road had made the town their headquarters. One afternoon, as President Mitoh ell’s stenographer, FranS Ashley, was tidying up the papers on his em ployer’s desk, ho came across the leaflets of the Malchester Improvement Society, and the display note about the Jacksonville, Malchester and Springfield Railway reminded him that it was high time to go over to tho round house aud hear a story which his old ■ friend, “Commodore” Foote, t)toj|SnM|Knecr fPSp^msed of locomotive No. 02 , to tell him the -ncxfc4ime he came around. Now, even if tho buildings in which locomotives are housed are universally called round houses, each one, I sup pose, has its shady side. I remember the one at Malchester was so blessed, and here, at six o’clock, well out of the burning rays of a declining sum mer sun, on a portable and improvised bench, made bj r placing a broken freight car door on two discarded “draw heads,” sat Foote and young Ashley. Jim Walsh, tho fireman, was oiling, polishing, watering and gene rally preparing No. 92 for her ap proacliing run. Presently tho fireman had tipped tho long snouted oil can enough to suit even the critical com modore, aud, as if half in sympathy with the mechanism of his engine, the commodore’s power of speech became lubricated, and he began : "It’s a true story. I knew Harry Powers, the engineer of old No. 47, before the war, when his wife was station agent at Malchester, and trains were run wholly by time table. There wero no such things as telegraphic train orders in those days. “Powers made his headquarters at Malchester, and his wife, being the station agent, the company let the family live in the upper story of the depot without paying rent. Powers and his wife and their little girl Elsie lived over the depot for fifteen years, ‘hand running,’ with the exception of about two months, when Elsie was sick with typhoid fever, and they hired a cottage up in the town, where Bhe wouldn’t be disturbed by the noise of engines and trains. It was shortly after Elsio had pulled through u.id they had all moved back into the depot attain that tho thing happened I am f'ointr ° “jflf to tell J you off. ia was twelve years old then, The doctor said it would hasten her tszszsrss&z L?r mother sis he, afternoon .««, berrying. half down the “About a mile and a track toward Millegeville, in a clump of woods, was a fine blueberry patch and here vou could find Elsie almost every afternoon. She could fill her pail quickly there, and then she liked the woods anyway. “One afternoon she had been slow, or the berries were not as plentiful as usual, for it was after six o’clock when she started for home. As she was about to leave the woods and strike the railway tracks she was suddenly C 0 n f rO nted by three masked men. Now Elsie was weak and nervous from her long sickness, and when she re ahzed that she was among robbers she fainted. The next thing she knew she W,’.s coming to, and instead of being murdered or robbed, was being tenderly held in the arms of one of the bandits, while the other two were busy sprinkling water in her face and fanuing her with a piece of crumpled She was so relieved to find that she had not been beheaded M cut into auarters, as the robbers were in Ali B"aba, that her lips began to tremble some sort of thanks. But ‘he minute she showed that she was wnjcions p/inapiArm we fKo roown rolib 6 rs lost i«s do no ume time in id telling her why they had taken such pains to bring her‘round.’ She was to stay with them until eight o clock, the mail and express was due, and signal and stop the train at the Millegeville 6 iding, a desolats side track half a mile down the track from where they were. “A few minutes before eight o’clock a little figure sat on a big tie, at the switch, at the west end of the Millege ville siding. One of tho robbers had a switch key and had turned the switch so as to throw the train off on to the siding. This in itself they reckoned would canse the train to stop. The signal lamp at. the switch had been twisted orouud until it showed the white light of safety, aud tho gleam of tho ‘bull’s eye’ shod just enough light to show the robbers m ambush at the edge of the woods that their unwilling little accomplice was waitipg aud ready to give the signal which would give them the oppor¬ tunity of robbing the express and mail enrs of the most important treasure rail¬ bearing train then run by any road in the State of Illinois. “It must have seemed ages to those four watchers. At last, however, tho rumble of tho approaching train could be heard up the valley, As it flew through the sleepy little hamlet of Millegevillo it whistled and the noise re-echoed against the quiet hills. To the robbers these sounds meant only the rapidly approaching chance of rich gains, but to Elsie, who had risen aud was standing back a short dis tance from tho track, those familiar whistle shrieks meant far more. They meant that her father’s engine was drawing tho train and that if he should recognize her in the dark all her plans would miscarry, However, thero was no time left for speculation. Six eyes gleamed with satisfaction through three black masks as the little figure at the switch light began to slowly wave a white handkerchief as » warn mg signal to the approaching train, “The infinite pleasure of liaviug their well laid plans carry without mishap was felt by tho robbers, as El sio waved more and more furiously, aud the engine could be distinctly heard shutting off steam and slaeken ing for tho stop. Thon suddenly came a quick change. “Olin, ehu, chu,” came in quick succession from the lo comotive, as her drive wheels slipped on the track and made a wild plunge forward. “Chu, chu, chu, chu, onu, chu,” again came from the engine. What could it mean ? The speed of the train was increasing instead of di minishing. Elsio was now signaling wildly, yet onward, faster and faster, came the mail and express. It cn tered tho siding and flashed past the little figure at tho switch light. Even the sudden unexpected swerve from tho main line on to the siding had not diminished its rapidly increasing ve locity. In a moment rnoro it had passed from the siding on to the main lino again and tho signal lights on the rear platform disappeared around o curve up the line, “The robbers now left cover and came over to find Elsie in a faint, tho second time that day. This time, however, they did not stop to bring her to. Thero was no time to bo lost, She had done her full duty,, fulfilled every promiso she had given them. Certainly sho was not to blame for tho train not stopping. Little did those men know as they left her and disap poared iu tho woods tlmf Elsie Rowers had given her father that signal of safety universally known among rail road men as the “high ball. Only a railroad man, certainly no technically unsophisticated tramp or robber, could have told that those liandker chief wavings meant ‘All right! All right! Come on full speed! Como on full speed!’ instead of ‘Danger!’ and ‘Stop!’ From her earliest in¬ fancy, when sho played ir .in with the parlor chairs. Elsio knew well the whole code of technical railroad sig nals, aud sho also knew that unless her father recognized her at tho switch his unquestioning obodienoo to the signals of the road would savo the mail and express from robbery. “Up in Chicago, on the desk of tho President of tho Jacksonville, Mal cheater and Springfield Railway, half buried under a sea of important let tors and official papers, thero is a lit tie silver frame, containing a photo graph of the little girl who, when only twelve years old, saved the mail and express from robbery at Millegevillo siding. Each year, when the Presi dent inserts in his annual report to his Board of Directors ‘For tho efficient service rendered by all em ployes our acknowledgments are due,’ he takes this picture in his hands and sits for quite a long time all alone, buried deep in thought, Ho knows Elsie intimately now, for she is the mother of his two grandchildren. Some of the society people up in Chi cago shook their heads and said that President Roberts’s son Harry was throwing himself away when he mar ned Elsie Powers. ‘But, said the Commodore, as he arose and, button ing his blue checked jumper, turned half round toward young Ashley, at the same time unconsciously extend ing his left arm toward No. 92. ‘I tell you, she’s as good and true as you’ll find them anywhere in the world.’ C1 ““ e0 — __ * *•” - >«•*”«"• Forty locomotives Paris-Lyons-Mediter- have just been ordered for the ranean Road, which mark a new de parture in construction. The engines are of the compound type, with four cylinders and two immense driving wheels coupled. The novelty consists in shielding all the parts offering re sistance to the ail, the smokestack, cab and firebox, with plates inclined at an angle of forty-five degrees to the roadbed, which make the engine re semble the ram of an ironclad Ex penment has shown that in doubling the speed of an exprets train the engine the re sistance on the front of is multiplied more than six times.-New /ork Advertiser. —— ™ Are metis Strong ^ .lan. Juan Dias Faes died recently in tho province of Asturias, Spain. He was a man of Herculean build and strength , a giant who with his bare fists was able to fight and subdue bears in the mountains. With one blow he once almost killed a famous English boxer, and his hunting adventures formed the basis of novels and melodramas, Queen Christine, tne Duke aud other ot .Mont pensier, young Caraot great peopw neoDle were were we th f * ffisodB iri-na^ ftinl 1 He tie . , of aes. was one o. .. i and most good natura l e ows favonte in pm- sonal intercourse and a great with all.—Chicago Times-HeralJ. BUDGET OF FUN. HUMOROUS SKETCHES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. Nor the Chaps That Say They DM— Worse Thau the Ailment—Com¬ forting—A Welcome Re¬ lief, Etc., Etc. llon’t give way to worry; Some time you’ll get your wish; It isn’t the chaps that hurry That laud the biggest flsh. —Philadelphia Inquirer. FAR BETTER NOT TO KNOW. Mistress—“Bridget, how do you keep your hands so white aud clean?” Mixin’ tho dough, mum.”—Chicago Tribune. THE FALSE METER. Witticusse—“What do you think of these ‘Lines to a Gas Company?’ ” Pitticusse—“The metre is false.” Wittiousse—“That’s dono intention¬ ally to rnako it realistic?”—Lifo. OOMFOBTINO. She—“Do you love ma moro than any other girl you ever knew, George?” Ho—“Er—I love you moro than any other girl who would have me.”— Puck. WORSE THAN THE AILMENT. Forty-ninth Friend (sinoo breakfast time)—“My, Morton, what a dreadful cold you’ve got. AVhat aro you taking for it?” Morton (hoarsely) -— “Advice.” — Truth. MORE PRACTICAL. Directory Solicitor—“Anu what your business?" John Browne—“Fencing.” “Instructor?” “No-, barnyards, farms and coun try roads.” A W’ELCOME RELIEF. Newsdealer—“This magazino bM up about to Napoleon date at nljj in it.” There’s na ^ s a j Customer—“What, nothing atonc| a? Napoleon? Give me a copy '_. New York Herald. BY PROXY SAFER. 0 Lft Mabel (to her young’man)—"I! now you must ask papa for his con¬ sent.” 0 -M Young Man (very sliy)—“Oh, iSr tainly ! Your—papa—has—I his—office?” hope— a -telephone—at man. ii “Mamie and I have made a wager on the age of the prima donna wo saw last week.” said the young woman. “Are the stakes high?” y “Yes indeed. We bet a bramynew theatre hat.”—Washington Star. % AN ACQUIRED TASTE. “Wo boil all our drinking wiser,” said Mrs. Blossom, of St. Louis, to her cousin from Kansas. tive. “How “Now, vory odd,” I couldn’t roplied th'y’ieli- f^ hot fl u water to save my life. T’’ ,lt h A FRUGAL SPENDTHRIFT. I Bjones (very parsimonious)—l“It’s relief a great comfort to mo to that time is money.” Browne—“Why?” Bjones—“Whenever I want to bo particularly liboral to my frionds I go and spend some time with thorn.” puzzled. Miss Passoo—“I toL? Afr. good Fuij, mos I rode tho bicycle for the on my complexion, and he said it would bo impossible to improve my looks. Miss Passeo—‘‘I’m Terry—“Well?” thi Miss trying to uk if he meant to insult or to compliment mo!”—Puck, ? the worst of it. Sympathizing Friend—“Oh, dear; i&ion this is dreadful I Even if it has shown think to of be a boing horriblo arrested mistake§gj|kt, to you oi pus pieion Mis. of Sayles boing (bitterly)—“Ye*|| a shoplifter!”*^ hoo!) One of the papers said 1 ttS evidently over thirty, 'too.”—Pu DISTINCTION WITHOUT MUCH DIFFER % R. Johnny—“What is the difforofmo between a battle and a duel, mamma Mamma—“A battle is between a number of people. A duel is between only two.” Johnny—“Oh, I see. Yon and papa fight duels. But when grand-mamma comes here, and Undo Jim, then it is battle.” ■ a _ __ • ' Simmons~"Timmoiw, which i.your ideal of the old writers? Timmons—“Seneca, every time. They say he used to put in his spare time adding up tho interest due him on his loans. If that isn’t abont the s -Indian.,,,!!, Jon™,. 'riw ”7 hT ^ THE tabi.es turned. “Henry,” said Mr,. Meekins, as she put the finishing touches to her toilet, preparatory to a bicycle ride, “I dis like to hurt your feelings.” “Do you, my dear ! ’ “Certainly, but I can’t wear the neckties that you bought for me. They are simply outrageous combma tions of color. There is one thing a man should never undertake, and that is to select his wife’s cravats and bus penders. — W aehmgtou Star. —- such a nice youno man, too. Mrs. Hashleigh- “Such a gentle man, that Mr. Hallrurne was! Never complained if he had no towels, never sneered at the primes or made re ma rks about the napkins. Bat for his one great fault I’d never have let him leave the house.” Forth Flour—“Oh! he had a fault, had he?” Mrs. Hashleigh—“Yes; he thought if he sat around praising things, it wa-n't necessary to pay board.”— Pack . — a wandering gourmet. Meandering *« » Mike (the /,» trump)—"I a (( r am not really hungry, missis, but will pleased to hauipie anything yo 1 m bftv<J m thfc lino of ^lads. I am traveling through the country getting on°co£y s for Rbcjk lamwritins ” Tho Wife of a Farmer—“How do you generally travel?” Meandering Mike—“Well, mostly on foot, as it gives me a bettor chance to nick up things as I go along."— Truth. THE SCIENCE OF WAH. understand Proprietor of Iron Works—“If I you correctly, you wish to place an order for armor-plate that no cannon shot can pierco. Wo are turn¬ ing out that kind of thing every day, and- ” Agent of Foreign Government- “No, you misunderstand, I wish to know if you can manufacture a cannon that can pierce any armor-plate?” Proprietor—“Certainly, sir. Wo ara j”—Chicago doing that kind of thing every day Tribune. Prince of Dead Beats. There was once a celebrated Boho mian named Bart, who prided himself onjDever paying any bills. Ouo of tho least striking of his financial feats wiuj “l/ung once when he happened to be up” in a hotel without tho where¬ withal to settle. He left behind him a heavy trunk, telling the landlord that lie would soon .return. When a nnynber of days had gone by and Bart <id i|p not reappear, the landlord went to examine the priceless coffer which his guest had left behind him, ijnd iff was much amazed at tho weight it. His most muscular porters could Sot lift it. Theroforo they broko it open to seo what was inside, and when they opened simplj^naileil ’t, they found nothing, for Bart had it to tho door. But tho achievement on which : jie most prided himself was once when 4ie was in a strange city for several days. Ho wanted a new pair of boots. So ho went to a shoemaker and or dered a pair, giving minute directions to their < ‘style. From this corcl as wainer he weut to another, some squares away, and gave him a similar order, couched in exactly tho same language. IIo made both shoemakers promiso to fiiiish the shoes in two days. At tho expiration of the nlloted time, both pairs were dono. Bart tried on tho first pair, and said to Shoemakor Number One that tho left fitted him perfectly but that the right pinched him, asking him to stretch it, which the shoemaker promised to do, nnd Bart carried off tho left boot. Ho then wont io Shooinaker Number Two, aud tried on tho second pair, telling him that while tho right boot fitted him pefcctly, tho left pinched him, and re¬ quested him to stretch it and lie would call for it in on hour. It was done. Bart then took tho two halves of his two pairs of shoes, put them on liis feet, and silently stole away.—Argo¬ naut. How Lobeiignla Died. A correspondent, writing to a South African contemporary, supplies what he states is the true story of tho death of the great Matabelo chief, Lobon gulft. It is n pathetic story. The cor¬ respondent relates: Lobouguln, suf¬ fering from smallpox, worn out by his long flight, disappointed in his hopo of peace, and altogether broken down bv the loss of his cfiiiutry, his 14 iwor and possessions, oam,; to ii ti.fl t iVvIHsf among the mountains aortti of the Shangani River. Hero he boggod his witch-doctor to give him poison with which to end his life, but tho man refused. The de¬ spairing chief went up u hill to tho foot of tho crag which tops it, and, sitting there, ho gazed for a long time at tho sun as it slowly sank to¬ ward the west. Thon descending, he again domnnded poison of his doctor, and insisted, till finally, it was given to him. Onco moro ascending tho slope, ho seated himself against tho krantz, took the poison and gazed ub tho setting sun, stolidly awaiting tho death which presently put au end to his sufferings and his bloo d-stainod lifo. There is something pathetic and grand in tho picture. It is the last scene of tho great epic, tho conquest of Matabclelnnd. liis followers found him seated thero in death, and, piling stones and rocks and around him, they loft him. Whether lie was placed in his royal chair, flanked by guns aud covered over with his blankets aud other possessions, as described in tho South African Itoviow, I know not. All this may bo true, and also that a strong palisade of tree trunks was planted round tho spot, but I give tho story as I heard it, and beliovo that, as it emanates from Mr. Dawson, it is the correct one.—Westminster Bud¬ get. Cologne to Cure a Cold, The nrocess bv which a cold in tho head or throat may be a^rench^hv nromntlv ro¬ Heved. aasuirireHted bv ^ revival tatit ^ a forlotte^ of a * ,nos most * a agreeable * rew ‘ ble ’ if half bait forgotten, memou. Frenchwomen have long known ti c virtues of prompt inhalation of can de 1V.“.h1 1 re Tf, i J'„ , 1; ,, . ? water B ' Loul<l lie inhaled at once ’• as oca/ P , f the in 8 _ attac k an Deen whiffs must be taken and the fumes are more fS ootent when the coloauo is nourftd'ou P ‘ ke rcbief inhalations Four or five of from twn minutes e.ch ^ are sufficient ^ « . tUo d t ^ the most willinsr-to-stav ,/ . f the prevcIltive is egnn f u " time—Reflector ' ’ _ The lire ^ Sink. At the folk lore congress, in Mem .Eis, the other day, Dr. Selim H. Peabody delivered a lecture on tho f , r0 stick, said'that or “swastika.” Dr. Pea ody probably the first dis coverv of importance made by tho primitive man after he had become ware of the fact that death would t are] v occur and that the sun was the earth’s torchlight, was the discovery ,,f the fire stick by which a blaze was made The speaker pointed out the varied symbols taken from ancient drawings and inscriptions aud said tho fir® /« jrtick * i, the ii stepping , • stone a i by which the prehistoric man seems to have gone from things earthly things heavenly.-Chicago Times Herald. GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULES, OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER. Commencing Dec. 23rd, 1894, the following schedules will be operated. All trains run by 90th Meridian Time. The schedules are subject to change without notico to the public. _REA D DOWN. READ UP. "Train No. 3. No. 1 . Train Train No. 2. No. 4. Train No. 11 N’t Exp Day m’I No. 27 STATIONS. No. 28 Day m’I N’t Exp No. 12 - 4 40p 10 30p 11 30a 7 15a Lv Augusta Ar 8 30p 1 OOp 6 16a 7 48a 6 09p 10 58p 12 54a Belair 12 36p 4 48a 7 14a 5 22p II 09p 12 04p 7 45a Grovetown 8 00 p 12 27p 4 37a 7 00a 5 36p 11 21p 12 I 6 p Berzelia 12 lOp 4 26a 6 47a 6 45p 11 29p 12 24p 8 00 Harlem 7 43p 12 OOp 4 ICa 6 86 a a 7.28p 5 54p 11 38p 12 34p 8 06a Bearing 7 20p 12 m 4 07a 6 28a 6 12p 11 58p 12 52p 8 19a Thomson 7 05p 11 44a 3 50a 0 12 a 6 24p 12 08a 1 04p Mesena ..... 11 33a 3 38a 6 Ola 6 32p 12 ICa 1 12 p 8 35a Camak CD 50p 11 26a 3 28a 5 66 a 6 41p 12 25a 1 20 p 8 40a Norwood CO 41p 11 19a 3 20 a 5 48a 6 54p 12 42a 1 30p 8 53a Barnett CD 28p 11 05a 3 04a 5 34a 7 05p 12 50a 1 50p 9 04a Crawfordville tD 17p 10 54a 2 48a 6 22 a 7 2op 1 22 2 15p Ar ’ Union Point 40 10 34a 2 21 a 6 00 a a 2 30p 9 25a Lv. ...... 1 38a 2 44p 9 88 a Greensboro AO 10 21 a 2 04a 2 05a 3 lOp 10 00 a Buckhuad ID 10 00 a 1 37a 2 22 a 3 23p 10 12a Madison kO 9 45a 1 20 a 2 41< 3 40p 10 28a Rutledge ^ 9 26a 1 Ola 2 50a 3 56p 10 40a Bocial Cirole 9 10a 12 45a 3 19a 4 2 Op 10 58o Covington ^ 8 40a 12 22 a 3 41a 4 45p 11 15a Conyers ^ 8 25a 1200 nt 3 54a 5 OOp 11 26a Lithonia CO 8 13a 11 45p 4 15a 5 21p 11 42a Stone Mountain CO 7 54a 11 24p 4 28a 5 34p 11 51a Clarkston CO 7 43a 11 lip 4 39a 5 45p 12 m Decatur CO 7 34a 11 OOp 5 00a 6 OOp12 15p Ar Atlanta Lv CC 7 15a 10 45p ^ .. ....... .......... T ■ 1 7 ' 1*--' Camak Ar 6 50p U 25a 12 15a 1 15a 1 15p 8 40aLv 1 31a 1 24p 8 47a Warronton 6 43p 11 17a 12 03a 2 00a 1 44p Mayfield 6 27p 11 01a!ll 36p 2 80a 1 66 p Culverton 6 16p 10 49a11 18p fi 50a 2 07p 9 22a Sparta 6 08p 10 40a11 02p 3 22a 2 2-tp Devereux 5 54p 10 2(la 10 38p 3 37a 2 33p 9 43a Carrs 5 4fip 10 18a 10 25p 4 16a 2 55p 10 00 a Millcdgeville 5 29p10 00a © 54p " 4 48a 3 13p Browns 5 14p 9 4fia w 80p 5 07a 3 24p 10 24a Haddocks 5 05p 9 37a 14p 5 28a 3 35p 10 32a James 4 57p 9 28a c. OOp I! 30a 4 05p 11 00a Ar Macon Lv 4 25p 9 00a X' 15p ...... l> 55p IT 08a 2 OOp Lv Barnett Ar T32p 8 50a ...... 7 05p 11 20a 2 12 p Bliaron 110 p 8 87a 14p ...... 7 12p *-1 30a 2 20 p Hillman 1 07p 8 27a 04p A-— 7 43p Cl 03a 4 29ji Ar Waahington Lv 12 40p 7 55a 32p ...... (i 15p 2 35p Lv Unfon PofnTJr ctcscaaoaococeccc- 20 a $ Wp ...... 6 27p 2 4Cp Wood ville 08a 5 40p ...... 6 32p 2 50p Bairdstown 04a 5 35p i ...... C 45p 8 01 p Maxeys 51a 5 22p ...... G 52 p 3 08p Stephens 44a 5 16p ...... 7 05p 3 19p Crawford 30a 5 03p ...... 7 22p 8 35p Dunlap 12a 4 40p 7 27p 3 89p Winters 07a 4 42p ...... 4 25p 7 44p 3 65p Ar Athens Lv 50a ...... 10 40a Lv Union Point Ar 2 05 p...... 11 30a Biloam 1 42p ....:. 11 50a Ar White Plains Lv 1 20 p...... All ubuvi- I rn ins run daily, except It and 12 wlitoli do not run on 8nnd«v. No. 1 dlnnor at Union Point • No supper tit Harlem. Sleeping G*r» between Atlanta and Charleston, Augusta and Atlanta. Alp Mid M.icon, on night express. Sleeping cars between Macon and New ITorkon train 27\ n leaving Macon a* 11 o'clock, a. m. THOS. K. SCH .a, JOE W. WHITE, A. 0. JACKSON, General Manager. Traveling Passenger Agent. General Freight and Puss Agent Auodhta, Ga, W. W. HARDWICK, J. W. KIRKLAND, Pass. Agt., Macon, Ga. Pass. Agt., Atlanta, Ga. mm ■ ..j jgfP ^ 7 t. m 1 HMl mm <5% Jrf..: it r v mMi, iff i:r,v..)\o,c nun urss THE UNIVERSAL OPINION “UNQQliGTtDLY IKE BEST.’’ ‘I lakfl pleasure in Btaflng* that Dr Klng'H ROYAL CERMETUER bii* lif-un of I* ‘iiWH to on* ia catarrhal ' roubles am! ii^ivous prostration. It impiiM) PLEASANT TO TAKE, .siliic\< i ’ much like lemonade, and is un ioubfcd'y the BEST TONIC I KNOW OF •or toning tip ami invigorating .John r. r.rmtrss. the luiuum strill. Editor Univernalist Herald. Notasulga, Ala. Hi I’cru ph-a-'.an*. ta^t.e and harmless na 1,re of llov.d <•erimM.iier, it.i singulnr reeoimncnd merilH it id f»itf*>lj;'i inMJuc'Ationod ojiIh BUpenority, where the safest-, ') nf l>« every as • ljvst jiimI Ii i - s 1. rcmmlv known to medical -r\r ce for the relief and cure of indigestion. l)y-l «•!»•• li. riitarrli, ItlM'iimatism, Nervous* ■ -1 • -*v-, Kidney and Blmlf!'*r'! »oiildes. Bowel ' oinpliilntH l evei h sirnl ad Malar al llisor* via, i\ for^h.Oii. Bold by Druggists. King 5 Popl Germelur.r Co., Atlanta, Ga. l / cs ’■Z w: Burning Pain Erysipelas in Face and Ey«S Inflammation Subdued and Tor* tures Ended by Hood’*. "I a in so glad U be relieved of my torttarei ant I am willing to toll the bannflu I have da. rived from Hood’s Sarsaparilla. In April nod Mar, I was attlcted with erydpelas In my face and ayes, which spread to my throat and neck. lav, I Keaaa urruiri,.^ t-ike pain, peculiar Sarsaparilla to this and complain*, to Hood’s Felt Marked Relief beforo I had finished the first bottle. loo* tinned to Improve until, when I had taken tort B PMa 1 3 1 J 8 R it m ® Coveonorilltl WfCUScipcilll lei CURES jfk ■ ■ uBfw ■ mHBiwMw bnttUst, I was completely cured an-1 fett thataB sii^iis. nuu'Ks <;inl svifiptouis Anitliod.’’ ^1 thut dir© ©f>nv had U>w< v Mas. E. K. Ottawa, Hillsboro, Wisconsin. ^Hood’a _ Prtla are prtmipt aad ea<dent,ye* e*. r in action. Sold by all druisUts. *c. I BANKRUPTinhealth. constitution undermined by ex¬ travagance in eating, by disre¬ garding the laws of nature, or pftysical capital afl gone, if SO, NEVER DESPAIR Tutt’s Liver Pills will cure you. For sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, malaria, torpid liver, constipation, biliousness and all kindred diseases. Tutt’* Liver Pills an absolute cure. wfcAVUI W COPYRIGHTS.^- b, I HAUL MahBjw CIAIV I OBTAIN A PATENT? For « jMjom^answer and an honest business, oplnton^wnn^to ^omniunlca experience In the potent tlniiniiook of In tlons strictly confidential. A ob¬ fftrnmtion confuiminir Dnlerite nnd how to tain thero sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan¬ ical nnd scientific hooka nent free. A Co. receive Patents taken through Murin and special notice In the Hclentlflc Amrrlrnn, thus are brought tho widely beforo the splendid public with¬ out cost to Inventor. This far taper, ho . Issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, has bv ♦ iartfost circulation of any scientific work in tho world. a year, gam pie copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, *2.. r j0 a year, KlnRio conies, cents. Kvery number contains beau tifiil plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs & and secure contracts. Address MUNN CONKW VoiiK, 3«l BltOADWAY. Prevention better than cure. Tutt’s Liver Pills will not only cure, but if caken in time will prevent Sick Headache, dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, constipation, jaundice, torpid liver and kindred diseases. TUTT’S Liver PILLS ABSOLUTELY CURE. $ 1800.00 GIVEN AWAV TO INVENTORS. $ 150.00 every month given away to any one who ap¬ plies through us for the most meritorious patent during the month preceding. the best patents for clients, We secure our and the object of this offer is to encourage inventors to keep track of their bright ideas. At the same time we wish to impress upon the public the fact that IT’S THE SIMPLE, TRIVIAL INVENTIONS THAT YIELD FORTUNES, such as the “car-window" which can be easily slid up and down without breaking the passenger’s back, “sauce-pan," “collar-button,” “nut-lock," that “bottle stopper," and a thousand other little things most any one can find a way ol improving; and these simple inventions are the ones that bring largest returns to the author. Try to think of something to invent IT IS NOT SO HARD AS IT SEEMS. Patents i»ken out through us recci«speoai notice in D*C, which is the of inventor*. oust newspaper We published furnish year’s in America sub in the interests a wv^iwadle'nDe, free oi cost, iheinv’enmin each thousands month which wins our *150 prize, and hundreds of [keSTrf thi ^ne^ N ^STdJ^^W the United Us°i£Si! Statesamong will be scattered throughout SS All ^MSSSSSS^S communications regarded strictly ‘"Tf coufidential * “ JOHN u/cnncoD. WEDDERBURi* ,ov a. vU** rn « Solicitor, of American and Foreign patents. 618 F Street, N. W., Box 3*5- Washington, D. C. UT *<*~^ 7 ^*‘**ftt free. wn**rmr