Newspaper Page Text
La non feeds the world.
Thf federal bayonet to crush labor.
Wiiv not declare Clavaland a dicta
(Or.
Asa wrecker Cleveland is a sue
rcss.
GftovF.B blood nobly by the sugar
trust
Gold is not only a coward but a
traitor.
Pjiotw r the railroad the people
be d—d.
___
Ku.i. somebody if it is only an inno
cent girl. _____
Irthis is prosperity give us Munc
thing else
_
No qri ailos is s-tiled until it is set
tied right.
Tub democrats have lo-»t the -leflcr
eimian eburt.
- Xo lot ai. elf-government nomenM
for Cleveland.
CoXthac HON of the currency !b the
curse of the age
Uovib.smt si own-isbipof railroad*
is not far di- taut.
iia< v now-a-day* <onsi&U» in
voting the ticket.
When parties run out of argument
they resort to abuse.
Tailing I'cpulist* anarchists '!o» t
answer any argument.
A pkmoctiaik congress could give
relief, but it don't do it
WiiriiK now Is your hugs bowl
about federal bayonets?
Mott* money i< tha broadest plank
ever pul In soy platform
Tin democratic party lias adopted
republican principles
1!k A sox with your neighbor and In
duel* him to vote right.
T it it place for labor to make its de¬
mand is at the ballot box.
p You may suppress the truth for n
time, but you can't kib it
Win don’t some democrat howl
about Called Sint s marshals-
5,Tiik labor problem can't be solved
by putting its advo cates in jail-
Tint strike lias set tho people to
thinking, b ut It is a costly lesson
W* Aim facing a condition which
the old parties are responsib le for.
Tux (trike has not ended Jt will
be repealed at She palls trk Xoveeuhqr
Tub plutei can imprison our men
butihey can’t Imprison our principles
Kvkhyhopv is In favor of free silver
in their mouth, but somehow we don’t
get it. _____________
||Tiik banks have got control of tho
finances and it is bard to “bell tho
cat”
Tim issue of money now by tho gov¬
ernment would unlock that which is
In the banks.
A MottKi that calls for redemption
In some other kind of money is a
fraud.
Lkt there be an organization that
will take in every workingman In the
country.
TllosK I’nlted Mates troops In bln
cago made a few corpses and » ,ot °*
I'opulltu.____
BoCK-wnuBboolooed democrats will ,,,
be the next variety announced by the
bourbon bosses
That letter which Cleveland wrote
to Congressman Wilson caused a
mighty rumpus
Tub inpar trust don’t *■ eiu to be
suffering ranch, It stands in with
both old parties
Camtaion contribution'' by trust*
an«i corporat on* ar* moi if’au'e* on the
leaders of parties.
FOMum*» could ftrt every industrial
wheel in motion within xty days if
It would only vio it
Alt HOP OH you may be out of deb'
the debt slave* set a price on vour
product# and your labor I
I
Nkw 7.i ai asi> is more socialist c
than any other country iu the world
_sud it is mo e prosperous than any
otcer
ClJtvicuxi) favor* free rau material j
even the rau pauper lub,T that votue#
to thia country- to underbid American
labor
THE democrat* are committing
themselves to a *> :i« * of Id under."
■Af » t keep them out
power.
To increase your business Adver
tise your ^oods. Try it and see.
_
V
I’OUTIC.U, HASH.
SERVED HOT AND COLD TO
SUIT OUR READERS.
Whitt li Hr i tig Sul/1, Thooiclit anr)
litre, There mn/1 FoerjrvKehL
It is nn old saying that “when
thieves fail out honest men get their
dues ' Wo do hot stop to discus, the
truth or falsity of this adage, but it
reminds us of the fact that the crim¬
ination* and recriminations in the
ranks of the democratic party iaunfo d
ing to the eyes of the people a great
deal of < ussedneas. < le»elr.nd's recent
letter to chairman Wilson, containing
so ostensible plea for the observance
of a democratic principle — free raw
material— has a much deeper meaning.
A syndicate composed of Secretary
Ramon t, ex-Se.crctnry Whitney, .iohn
I, ftusse 1 and others of Mr. Cleve¬
land's friends, own the Immense coa
mines of Nova Scotia and of course
want the privilege of dump ng their
coal on our shore* f ee of duty, It i*
natural for Mr. Cleveland to make
this plea In their behalf '1 lo se mines
were purchased by Whitney, Lnmont
A to., through Mr. 1 harlcs 1-1. Bell, a
wealthy banker of ( hieago Mr Bell
got an 0 [.ti n on th.-m prior to the
(dcclion of !-'• and when it was
learned Unit tin- democrats would
control the hour by 7 , or so majority,
fco an to he tire coal on tin* free list,
he closed the trade. The bill went
through the? house all right with coal
on the free liht. but Senator* (iorman,
htbson and ( arnden own large coal
field* in Virginia, Senator lirfee owns
mine* in Tennessee and a number of
other senatorh are equally Interested,
and the senate saw fit to tack on a
duty to protect the home product
from Whitney and Lemont’* dump
Hence the row
The general supposition now Is
that Mr. George M. Pullman
is a liar. During tho recent
"unpleasantness" lie slated to tho
public that tho Pullman company
were running their business at a loss,
and hence hod nothing to arbitrate.
At the same time the following card
appeared on the business envelop© of
the company:
PI I.LMAN PAI.ACE CAB CO ,
Stock 180 , 000 , 000 .
MVtUI MIS A VKItAGK * I F.lt < I NT.
Surplus In lBBU-yti, Over Chargespnd
divh ends, »Z,2lis, 1 .11; in HUO-Ul, t'!,- :
u*.).v:t; in INlG-tia, j;s l t'f.b,'P'.i Extra
dividends are paid. ( Ispp's Railroad
tecu rities.
And now, since the strike, tlie com¬
pany has issued the following notice:
"A quarterly dividend of 00 per
share from net earnings was declared
this day, pay able on and after Aug.
It, to stockholders of record. At close
of business Aug. 1, I Ht*4. By order of
committee ’ Ah WiifHM'g-*
ll.is dividend amounts to f> m.ooo,
uuo , per oust on 830,Odd,two ot stock,
Ml per cent ut which is fictitious. ’
Did Pullman tell the truth when he
published a statement that the busi¬
ness did not pay and ho was obliged
to cut wages to pay expenses?
9 here 1* some pretty strong evidence
that the railway companies them
selves are responsible for most of the
destruction of their property in the
recent strike. The two objects they
are supposed to have had W, to get
pay for their old cars, and to obtain
the sympathy of tho public nml get
military aid in suppressing the strike.
Vice 1’resident Howard of the A. U.
Fmade some very important and
not altogether unlocked for revolu¬
tions, while being interviewed at the
Cook county jail, the next morning
after his arrest. He said:
"This tli'-ng is going tube a tost
esse Wo don t consider ourselves
j bigger than the law, and incidentally We
wc think the railroads are not
nre getting some evidence for
^ ^ baU , ami UB t ,„„
^ (( ^ pn>Uy f>ir Krai , B .
„ fr# u a ]eU ,, r ,,-e receiv
ed telling of evidence tlist most vtf the
freight car burning done In t hleigo
was done by two men in the employ of
the General Managers’ association,
6ne of the secret agents of » certain
committee saw two men on the night
of the tire tfo through the > ard* wilh
a hami'iir of inflammable waste, which
they HtfhteJ and systematically thtvw
amouir the a» s This anient over*
heard a conversation between the
men, from which he £le »neJ that they
were paid J 1 0 d uvo, and were to re
ee.ve more when the job was
•tone Thi , we understand, was done
before the troop# were call ed out. Au
off, rl is now t*>itig m* e t,i arrest
these two moo. We further have
pretty poeltive widen c that the big
man who led the mob of V> ■ at lit e
Island xv as a Pinkerton man ©tup eyed
by the railroads, and it is significant
that although he could be ea-.il-
idenl tied, yet he has not been arrest
ed It Is tsk tosav that thi* case will
1,01 vutire’v onesided. *
llememlH*r that Chicago pay the
los the rail way a lose nothing by the
burning
The Review of Reviews a popular
magaidti* "f «v tens we c rental on and
new* e », devotes a lengthy article to
the le'a party and its work.
76 ■i
.V/ 17 -
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By National Relorm Press Aitoesation. \
\
"OLD GLORY’ OUR SLOGAN.
A . 1 • r ... I'npuliHtt Are •*- bad Helms Seen In a Truthful bight
I see the People*’* party movement
through the eye* of an old Lincoln
republican; 1 have followed the repub¬
lican party from its birth through its
glorious triumph' in the field of na
tional l.-pislation, bu> shall not follow
it to its grave, ( all in- anarchist, if
.von will, but for myself I see In the
People party the industrial masses
rising In their might under
the dear old Hag which only
July 1 Mtc. We clip the following ex¬
tract;
I'o|iull«m Slid 111* TftrKT.
’i h)* 1 'opt) I - t patty adopted no tariff
plank whats ever in its Omaha plat
form. )• believed that there were
other questions more
titan the tariff, and that the purifica¬
tion of polities and the adjustment of
some other issues would make it more
possible to deal with the tariff ques¬
tion upon its merits, and in tho inter¬
ests of ihe nation at large. Its criti¬
cism of the tariff struggle between the
two great parlies was embodied in the
following language;
“Wo have witnessed for more than
a quarter of a century the sti uggles
of the two great political parties for
power end plunder, while grievous
wrongs have hern inflicted upon the
people. We charge that tho control¬
ling Interests dominating both these
parties have permitted the existing
dreadful conditions to develop with
out a serious effort to prevent or ro
strain them Neither do they now
promise any substantial reform,
They have agreed together to ignore
in the coming campaign ovory issue
but. one; they propose to drown the
outcries of a plundered people with
the uproar of a sham battle over the
tariff, so that capitalists, corpora¬
tions, national banks, ring*, trusts,
watered stocks, demonetization of
silver-tf’i! the ORummsUmc of JJxi%
usurers m^» all be lost sight of.”
This denunciation of the two parties
seemed lo the country at tho time of
,u promulgation quite toodlsmal and
overdrawn; but In viwvv of what ha*
“dually happened, and ot the exist
^ tariff legislation,
there ore m citizens who vote with
v,"lm°"-ill' t! fcel’inclined otiitr of the old parties
to sympathize
* om ewhnt with the view that the
I’op.ilistft recorded iti their platform
two years ago. It has no doubt
been somewhat of it sham battle.
this light over tho tariff Tho
tiling party in tho senate has
made no disinterested attempt to
serve ttie interests of tho who o coun¬
try, hut has indulged in an Ita¬
seem ly scramble for the protection
of tliis locality or interest or trust or
(ombluath n, and for the correspond
in, punishment of aoiiie other locality
or interest or combination The out
come is much what tho Conn lists had
predicted, and appears to bo viewed
by them with more equanimity and
less concern than by anybody elso.
Here again, it seems to us, tho I’opu
Usu have scored something, although
in a teas definite w*y. Thoir . redle
tion was that this .lemocratic victory
"ou on a pretense of settling the
tariff question and ou a claim that
their settlement of tint question
would bring about tho most far-reuch
ing' und beneficent result*—would
prove a disappointment Further
more, the Populist duel.iration that
the solution of these questions would
remi*re a statesmanship mce frtn*
fr<>m im pronei n Hue nee, has seeineti
to Ue shamefully verified by the
cireumstanecs under frhieh tlie tariff
mi-ai.iirc lias Wen handled in the
Semite.
iVelt. we are to have an increase in
the standing army, sure as shooting,
l ive money sharks have more than one
way of ''skinning the eat.” Rut the
rascals are not going to he on top very
mig Next fall’s election will change
If It don t labor would be
better »»tT \t it should go back t*> the
old chattel >vstem of slavery—if it
O&lv could, which we doubt, for the
cap it ifct* know that capital control
labor beats chattel slavery all hol¬
low, and d"C* not carry with it tbe
care for the a borer l rce Trader
l *U>r pays for every Van',uet.ovcry
r|*eons dress and every
i * cf wraith that
I a eye* an» intoxicates the
n* ;o c t-ho world. People*a Voice.
once since *.770 floated otej a Worthier
cause. Then. dear brot »»-■«, let me i
ask you to rally one' ar ud the
old fia f, that for 1 r “dWjdft]/ "
|-j rne we may demon® awr-wr*- . te
monarchies of Europe that “a govern
ment l>y the pe-ple, fo* the people
and of the people ' sh.fl not perish with
from the earth, (lod, a« gvor, 1S
us, and victory will be ours. — J- rom
an address to the Rock River confer
cnee on 1’opuTst day, Auj- t, 1894.
[)l MQCRATIC PRAYER.
No. IX. ,
, arit (Jllr e.i po .... t t ,
1 • s
faU,, ' r whose strength Can only be
computed by the length and breadth
1 '® P olltic “| l>‘« coatee; whose
word i* Jaw a id whose wrath s like
unto the lightning that striketh the
Hills an 1 rmpelh up tae Vests , of .
those , who , walk ,, not . in • .e thy — ways; „
whose word . out and it will ...
is gane
not . return . to , thee, we worship thy
mighty name, and bow before then in
humble submission. Oh, almighty
father, thou » ho cause,, it to rain
political manna upon thestai wart and
the mugwump alike; thou who art not
a respecter of persons but appointed
a Gresham, or a McVeigh, or a negro,
as thou scccst fit; thou Who holdeth
in the hollow of thy hand the fattest
ofllces in the land, aid d stribute
them whithersoever it n -ftseth thee,
we come to tho« in dee;, and humble
contrition that we may it t provoke
thy displeasure, hi <-st R<loral{je
muster, our enemies .^compass us
round about. The inorts i a eateth up
our wheat and cotton; the indroads
take our corn and pork, and lo! the
sheriff gathereth in the remainder for
taxos. Winter holds ns in its icy
grasp and tlie cold ehfils trot glee¬
fully up and down our spinal column.
This seems to be all Mtat our back¬
bone is fit for BuJ t of. nil, the
I’cnulIfttaTTorment ^ rantH Ufa
u. is a
burden. Wherever ve urn is h— 1.
We voted fo- SI.09 "lea and lo! 40
cents a bushel stare* ti i in the face.
Wo voted for 10 cent citti in, and again
we ar ■ obliged to i ink the gall of
bitterness. Disappoinlm snt seems to
be tho b ulge of demoeiaejy Tho sen
of democratic exfocta.ion is strewn
wiU ' <Uo w,ock o( disappointment in
vain do «e look for the oetter times
that do not come. t»b, precious ( leve
land; canst not thou wop Dame For
tune back, even as than didst woo
Maria 11 »1 pin, that shol may smile
upon us a* thou didst smile on Marla.
Most adorable father, our (punishment
is greater than we cm beer. We cry
for work and there is no work Our
children cry for bread and there is no
bread Help ns, oh gracious father of
mugwump democracy, a»d save us
from the body of this death. If it
pleasoth thee, send us over to Hawaii
to thy friend Queen Lll, that we may
eat of the crumbs wiih her jdogs. Send
out thy servants and put these Popu¬
lists to (light, for they cry from every
corner: ‘ Aha! wc told you So!" Let
thy servants smite them with a splinter
of thy wrath. They sorely distress us
speak disrespectfully of thee]
They area dangerous clement and
will not vote for tliec. We are not
like unto them, most adorable master.
We take things as they come. " e
“vote ’er straight.” We love thee
because we love thee. We are demo
orals because we are democrats, We
propose to continue to ’ vote er
straight” if it siuks every pound of
cotton and every bushel of wheat into
the bottomless p‘t* Our loyalty to
thee and the party shall not be ques
tioned. lot thee and dem cratie sac
ci-ss we will face poverty, cold and
hunger. For democratic success we
will forsake our wives and our
children It is so pleasant to have a
democratic- postmaster. For this
pleasure alone we are willing to sell
our wheat at 4 > cents aud_our cotton
at t> cent#. It is worth it We are
P< or We don’t deserve to be any¬
thing else. We never expect to be
any better off. But we propose to
keep right on voting the democratic
ticket It is born au.l bred in us. We
can't help it. We know our leaders
lie and make promises they never ful¬
fill. Hut it don't swerve us# Wo pass
rbrht on. The road of poverty is
broad and we I beaten, and many
there are that travel thereon. But
im«>t "t-rsh pful master, we look to
thee for comfort in this cur hour of
trial. We know tnat when thou
peakest tby vciec is like unto tbs
thunder. When the American con
guess heareth it it trembleth in its
boots. It humbly bows to tby man¬
date. We pray thee to la-h it with
the eat-o'-nine ta is of tby d sp easure.
Misery loves company, Make our
lawmakers as miserable as possible
Scorch them with the rod of thy
wrath. Make them dance to the
tune of thy displeasure. We love
to see it, even as it pleases
us to watch the trained dogs
of a circus. Beit 'em over the head
with an empty political pie pan. Sock
it to’em with the toe of thy pclitieal
patronage boot. Kip 'em up the back
with thy civil rervice knife. Spot
'em on their political snouts with the
ungloved band of thy wrath. Lay
them down on the floor of thy dignity
and stand on them with all the weight
of thy political greatness until the r
eyes stand out like a tumblebug's
with a wagon wheel rolling over it,
and their tongues protrude from their
mouths like that of a dying calf,
Bravo! old -Big Paunch! Go on with
tlie show. We are enjoying it. it is
meat and drink and clothe3 to us
Punch up the cattle! Make ’em
squirm! It is the “Greatest Show On
Earth!' 1 It shows the “vanity of all
things," and especial.y of democratic and
p ro . n i(, es . Rut soak it to ’em we
wilt be with you to the end, and thine
shall be the political glory. Amen.
CONSPIRACY.
IU Definition IiepemU Upon Who It I*
that “Con*plr**H ”
In all the contests bewcen emp’oye
and employer, similar to the one now
going on, it is noticeable that it is the
employers that appeal to the courts
and ask for military aid Another
noticeable circumstance is, that they
ra ^ „ t a :j they ask for in this
Is this because they are
* r , ut and the worll men are
' ^ „ ig ally con .
cedc-d that the laborers , , , have a right
to organize, h but what for.’ itis also
conceded that they have a right to
quit work when they feei so dis¬ ...
1
po8C< ’
tha , worktng- __, •
» . 8 ‘ 1 ®'"®‘ . 1 ^ ^
men have any kind df right to prevent
,n aD >' " a 7 ot " er people from taking
thelr Vet ln doln " t ' 1,s
!lre on| y wLat ls d b f
some corporations notably the Pu „ -
man corporation. 1 here are also rail
■‘oad companies that are successful in
almost every instance [by conspiring
together] in preventing certain dis
charged amp’eyes from securing work
from any other company. r I hey do
not use force to attain this end, but
they accomplish it nevertheless.
» There are many former railroad em¬
ployes wh > testify that they have been
forced to engage in other business be¬
cause, after being- discharged, they
found that wherever tbev applied for
work under another company they
were blacklisted. They are tasked
where they have worked, and, on giv¬
ing the information, the telegraph is
brought into p at, and they are soon
informed that their services are not
needed. Yet they do not invoke the
aid of the courts or of the federal
authorities, knowing well that no at¬
tention would he paid them if they
did.- Topeka State Journal.
Let no one say again that Cleveland
ts a blunt, honest,but misguided man.
1-tter to Wilson on the tariff bill
shows him ft dissembler. With expres
sioiis of regard for the interests of the
people ho calls for a tax on sugar,
^ ow ;i t ax OI , sugar will put millions
j n the pockets of the sugar trust,
Then after all his party has said about
the "tariff barons,” "robber manu
faeturers,” etc., etc., be urges free
f0a ] aiu j f ree iron ore, just what the
manufacturers want. Free coal, free
woo ] an( j f rce j ro n ore will shilt
millions 0 f taxes off the manufacturers
onto the people. Without discus
g j„g. t] ie merits of free trade or
protection or intending in any way
to help keep up the “sham bat¬
tle over the tariff,” wo rail the atten¬
tion of the democrats of the west and
south to the fact that their party is
legislating in the interest- of the so
called “tariff barons.” by protecting
tho manufactured articles and giving
them free raw material upon which
they (“tariff barons ") have been pay
iug millions of tariff duties to the
government It was Bob Ingers 11
that raised the banner of “free raw
ma terial, the product of ignorant
labor, and protected manufactured
g 0CH is, the product of intelligent
] a b or .” This is the way he stated it,
lhoU; ,}, pro bab y not his own words
as we >[uote from recollection, it was
at a re p U o]i ca n meeting iu the Audi¬
torium at Chicago i t ls*s that luger
soli, tho republican, announced this
doctrine-, It was a night or two be
j Qrc assembling of the republican
convention at that place that nomi¬
nated Harrison the first time. It was
a republican meeting. Delegates to
j e convention were there. And the
sentiment was cheered to the echo.
Now we have in the present tariff
b.li the embodiment of that .--enti
meat. **Fr«c raw materi al the prod
u t of ignorant labor.*' Wool is raw
mat rial. Wool is produced on the
farm. Verilv there is no difference
between the two old parties. — Mo.
World.
Kkukvj.fr, the democrats are at the
Bv their fruits xe shall know them.
iYUatareihe fruits of the present
democratic ad ministration?
GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULES.
OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER
Commencing April Meridian 29th, 1894, Timd. the following The schedules schedules are will subject l ^.^ er to . a ‘ ed chang* v ' ^
trains run by 90th
without notice to the public. tlt.AU tjtc a T1 TTP or.
READ DOWN. Train
Train Train i Train EAT NIGHT
night dat No. 28 ESCB’S No. 1SB
No. 11 espb’s mail, No. 27 STATIONS. MAIL.
6 15p 11 OOp 11 58a 8 00a Lv Augusta Ar 9 25p 1 20p 5 15a 7 45»
5 45pTl 26p 12 27p...... Belair 12 53p 4 50a 7 10a.
.....
5 58p 11 38p 12 39p 8 32a Grovetovrn 8 63p 12 43p 4 38a 6 59a
12p 11 50p 12 51p Berzelia 12 31p 4 26a 6 46a
6 8 34p 12 24p 4 16a 6 37a
6 21p 11 59p 1 OOp 00 49a Harlem 4 07a 6 28a
6 30p 12 07u 1 09p OD 56- Dearmg 8 25p 12 15p
6 47p 12 26a 1 27p CC Ha Thomson SOSpll 59a 3 49a 6 12a
6 68p 12 39a 1 39p...... Mesena 11 48a 3 36a 6 Ola
.
7 06p12 48fl 1 47p 27a Camak 7 5 Op II 40a 3 28a 5 54a
7 14p 12 56a 1 55p 34a Norwood 7 43p 11 33k 3 20r. 5 48a
7 29pi 1 lift 2 lip 46a Barnett 7 29p 11 19a 3 02a 5 34a
7 40p 1 26a! 2 25p 58a Crawfordville 7 18p 11 06p 2 48a 5 22a
8 OOp 1 52a 2 49p 10 17a Union Point 7 OOp 10 43a 2 22a 5 00a
2 06a 3 04p 10 30a Greensboro 6 31p 10 30a 2 06a......
2 34a 3 30p 10 52a Buckhead 6 07p 10 04a 1 40a.....-
2 51a, 3 47p;ll 06a Madison 5 52]> 9 49a 1 23a!......
3 Ha 4 06p 11 22u Bntledge 5 .'Up 9 30a 1 03»j......
3 27a 4 22pll 35a Social Cirele 5 20p 9 15a 12 12 23a 48a|...... 1
3 50a 4 45p 11 54o Covington 4 59p 8 52n ......
4 13a 5 08p 12 13p Conyers 4 40p 8 30i\ 1200nt'......
4 27a 5 2Op 12 24p. Lithonia 4 29p 8 17a 11 47p[.... ..
4 46a 5 37p l2 40p Stone Mountain 4 13p 7 58a 11 28p' -.
4 58a 5 47p 12 50p Clarkston 4 Olp 7 48a 11 17p ......
5 08a; 5 57p 12 58p Decatur 3 56p 7 38a 11 07p......
30a' 1 15p Ar Atlanta Ly 3 40p 7 20a TO 4 5p s
5 6 15p 7.. Til ......
~2~00a 1 52p...... Lv Camak Ar 38a 12 40ft.......
2 10a 2 Olp...... Warrenton 11 29u12 30a .......
48a' Mayfield 11 0Hft j 12 04a.......
2 2 24p...... 54aH 45j>......
3 14a! 2 38p...... Cnlverton 10
3 36a 2 49p...... Sparta 10 43a11 28p ......
4 10a 3 03p...... Deverenx 10 29a11 04p......
4 28a 3 12p...... Carrs 10 20a 10 50p......
5 10a 3 32p...... Milledgeville 10 00ft 37a| 10 lOp......
5 40a' 3 55p!...... Browns 9 9 38p....... 55p......
5 54n 4 08 j>...... Haddocks 9 24a' 9
6 14a! 4 22]>...... .Tames 9 10a 9 20p.......
7 00a 5 OOp...... Ar Macon Lv 8 32a 8 30p.......
7 30p 11 25a! 2 15p XT Barnett Ar 2 OOp 9 30a: 6 55p...... 40p......
7 42p!ll 37a! 2 27p Sharon 1 45p 9 15a 6
7 55p 11 50a 2 40p Hillman 1 34 p 9 04a- 6 29p......
8 25j)! 12 20p 3 10]) Ar Washington Ly 1 05 p 8 35a 6 OO p ......
j 8 20p 2 50p Lv Union Point Ar 10 05a CfiOlCilCz’lCSOCiQOl 4Op ......
. 8 33p 3 OOp Woodville 9 54a 29p......
. 8 40p 3 04p Bairdstown 9 50ft 23p ......
. 8 50p 3 16p Maxeys 9 38 a lOp......
. 8 57p 3 22p Stephens 9 31a 02p.......
. 9 09p 3 34p Crawford 9 18 a 47p......
. 9 28p 3 50p Dunlap 9 02 a 29p.......
. 9 33p 3 54p Winters 8 55 a 24p......
9 45p 4 lOp Ar Athens Lv 8 40 a lOp......
10 48ii............ Lv Union I’oint Ar ...... 2 05 p......
11 41ft............ Biloam ...... 1 42 p......
12 Olp............ Ar White Plains Lv...... 1 20 p ............
AiTftbfrUtrains rundailv, except 11 and 12 which do not run on Suudav. Sleeping Cars be
tween Atlanta And Charleston, Augusta and Atlanta. Augusta and Macon, on night express.
THOS. K. SCOTT, JOE W. WHITE, A. G. JACKSON,
General Manage-. Traveling Passenger Agent, G-eu-.-ral Freight and Pass AgouS,
Aeoeais. tl*
■— SSL- 1
- .
//
/
r /
y /
/ / s*' /
By J. HAMILTON AYERS, M. O.
A Valuable Book
of 600 pages, illus¬
trated, containing
knowledge of how
to treat and cure
disease, prolong
life and promote
happiness.
Sent by mail, post¬
paid, on receipt of
Price, 60c,
itmress a")l orders to
Atlanta Publishing Sins,
116 Loyd Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
?:.V. Tm m m . .Vi'. - - - ---- - - - ., .
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