Newspaper Page Text
THE MACOK TELEGRAPH! FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1901
S-X-\-\-N-N-V-V-%-V
-x—x—X' -X-X-X-V-X-X-X -: X-X—X—:X-X—^X f
Wash Them
When they’re soiled
and they will look
as good as over, our
madras 4 in hands,
batwing and butter
fly ties.
25 Cents.
INCREASE , IN VALUE OP EXPORTS
IS VERY I;AflGB-.pART PLAYED
III' COTTON CROP—3IILLH ORI.\G
BUILT AND OTHERS ENLARGED.
WHAT GEORGIA IS DOING I.\ Lj.
TAI) LI SUI NG 11 \TER PR ISES.
BRYAN AND SILVER
NOW OUT OF IT
Tonne,
Vice-Pi
h 1 Friend, Charles
ndidute Lust Year
DROUTH IX TEXAS,
Hot Wen
Ruin
DALLAS
Prevail*
ed Ilndiy.
IS.—Tho drought
eslde
CINCINNATI, July 18.—A special to
the Commercial Tribune Irom New
York say.:
• Charles A. Tovvne. formerly of Du
luth,’Ulnn., and the free sliver Repub
lican party, now of the Texas oil Illeas.
In the city today for the purpose
/ ■ x-x-x-v-x-x-x-x-x-x-
THREE PinEMEX WERE SERIOUS
LY INJURED—HEAVY RAINFALL
PREVENTED .MOTOR MAN AND
DRIVER FROM SEEING 1JACII
OTHER —MOTOR MAN AND PASSEN
GERS WERE ALSO PAINFULLY
HURT.
BRYAN’S EDITORIAL
UNWISE AND UNJUST
nt Ida Veiled
Attach
Strang
McLeiti
ely local
lined to
pa
it, but the rainfall
n extent and was
t of Fort Bend count;
and, near the Gulf coa
e In
und
and mi ____
ton crop situation
today in the s-tate and the
signs of any. Cotton grower
tie raisers are gloomy.
Strengthens
System
Body
Brain
and Nerves.
ATLANTA, Go., Juty 18.—A collision
occurred about 7 o'clock tonight, cor
ner Ivy and Baker streets, between the
truck of Are engine company No. I and
u street car of the Atlanta Iinpld Tran
sit Company, tn which Firemen Wil
liam H. Cody, Joaeph N. Shield* and
O. H. Hudnon were seriously Injured.
The truck was on Its wny to a tire,
nnd ue It reached tho street crossing
UL tho foot of a steep grade It ran
into a street ear. Cody, Hhlelds and
Hudson were thrown violently to tho
ground and tho former was dragged
under the car thirty feet before the
car was stoppl'd. The fireman wnn re
leased from his perilous position. .
Deep gnehe* were cut in tho bond of
Cody and Hhlelds und both were pain
fully bruised, but no bones were brok
en. Hudson leaped with less Injury
than either Cody or Shield#. Flramfen
Fuasley und Franklin Jumped, from
tin- truck In time to avoid uoldent.
The men were carried to Grady hos
pital for attention.
A heavy ruin wan falling at the time,
rendering It Impossible for either tho
CINCINNATI, July 18.—The follow
ing. of goneral Interest to the country,
appeared In a local paper, the Com
mercial Tribune, today:
"The editorial of William Jennings
Bryan on tho Ohio platform was the
subject of much discussion among local
Democrats yesterday.
Ills attack on Mr. McLean was In
the nature of a surprise to Mr. Me
n's friends, as he hag always been
u friend of the niun from Nebraska.
"They know that Mr. McLean was a
large contributor to the campaigns In
which Mr. Bryan was defeated, and
that he should bo made the subject of
almost a personal appeal to “vote for
Kllbourne but knife McLean,' waa moro
than tho editor's local friends could
stand for.
“It was the opinion of nearly all lend
ing Democrats that the editoriu! was
very conservative and showed soma
study, that Is ns fur as the platform
was concerned, but when It canto to the
reference to Mr. McLean all ugreed
that ha let his judgment run away
from him.
"They were of the opinion thnt It was
utiwlso and unjust, us Mr. McLean hns
not announced himself a candidate for
senator or any other office. They were
of the opinion thnt Mr. I!ryan would
havs done much better had he not made
the <^]|torpil a personal matter, and
that <WI reference to Mr. McLeun Khould
have been omitted.
"The rank and file of the Democrats,
however, did not use such cholco lan
guage In expressing themselves. They
know Mr. McLean ns their friend, and
to bo attacked by Mr. Bryan made
them hup things thnt Mr. Bryan would
not llk«» td hear. But the general opin
ion was that Mr. Bryan had made a
big mistake In attacking Mr. McLean.**
Hhl
inn of the sir
to see the
chin
itb' ix of the
In ths
v of ths
Atlont
rch-mak-
irward to
survivors
DEATHS.
MRS. It. M. HUltTON.
KASTMAN, (la., July It.-Mr* It. 8.
Ur ton. wife of Editor lturton of Oris
5jty. died today of a complication of
**»•#. Mrs. Burton waa about 6? years
- . "f** *he leaves a large circle of
friends throughout the etotA who are
r*fdy. grieved to learn of her death,
tra. Burton waa a good woman, a de-
oted wife, and loving mother.
W,,«*• Rsdcllffe of Cordele. Iter remains
will ho interred in Woodlswn cemetery
tomorrow.
BALTIMORE, July 18.—Of the 81.460,-
2,268 worth of domestic merchandise
exported from the United States dur
ing the /local year just cloned the cot
ton of the South represented more than
$313,000,006. The increase In the value
of these exports over the preceding
year was $&9,5$&,695. Of this, cotton
represented $71,617,413. The Manufac
turers* Record points out this week
that not only was there this great In
crease in tho value of cotton exports
but that there was an lncreaee by more
than 400,000 bules In the quantity ex
ported. These figures are a fair indi
cation of the great part played by the
Houth In the commerce) of the country.
When to cotton are added cotton seed
oil and cotton seed cake, lumber, naval
stores, phosphate rock, pig iron, steel
rails, petroleum, cattle and hogs, bread
stuff and other products of Southern
origin, it Is easy to believe that the
complete statistics will show that of
the products exported at least one-
third were sent by the South, and pos
sibly more than a third passed out
ward through Southern ports.
While tho South exported more than
6,500,000 bales und sent nearly 2,000,000
to Northern mills, It kept for Its own
mills at least 1,400,000 bale*, and while
there has not been much activity in
new mill undertakings aa In the pre
ceding eighteen months, mills have
been built and plans are still being
made for others and for Improvements
In existing ones.
Among such undertakings are the I
doubling of the capacity of tho Enfield, I
N. C. knitting mill, an Increase by |
$100,000 of the capital of the Nantucket I
mills at fipruy, N. C\, for the purpose j
of enlarging the building and Increas- I
lug the number of spindles, the dou
bling of the equipment of th“ Har
mony Drove. Ga., mil!, the installation
of 1,000 more spindles in the Strickland
cotton mills nt Vatdorta, On., and an
Increase In the capital stock of the
Easley, 8. C., cotton mill in order to
make improvements, while a survey of
tho Appomattox river between Peters
burg and Funnvllle with a view to de-
eloping the water power squlnta to
ward the establishment of more mills
in Virginia.
value cf the* South'n magnlfi-
watcr powers has received practl-
ccognitlon in the plant? for Its
utilization in Virginia, the Carolina*,
Georgia and Alabama, but there Is
much of such power still going to
aslc. When in this connection are
•nsidcred latent resources In oil and
tc Immense coal deposits still to be
orkod it la obvious that the South
111 have n » shortage In this respect
)r many centuries. Still, the *>*nrch
)r petroleum is being pushed with'un
bated vigor, not only In Texas, Ken-
ucky and West Virginia, but In Jlor*
iu. Virg'.nlu, Tennessee. Alabama and
other states. At Russellville, In Ain-
bumn, a company has been organised
to bore wells, while at Illrininghum
sympathetic effort? are being made to
follow* Indications of oil. The Tennes
see Southern Oil Co. ha* been organ
ized with $50,80) capital at Nashville,
Tenn , one of $16,000 capital nt Aber
deen. Miss . and mil of $100,000 at Crow-
ley. La. Meanwhile, other industrial
undertaking.-* are under way. Viewed
by states, they are as follows:
Arkansas—A $100,000 cotton compress
at Little Rock, a $110.0(0 cotton
YVIIY FRANCE DON'T GROW.
The French census shows that the In-
crease of population since 1836 has been
of selling In Wall street a few sliai j on j y 230,000. Q f which 297.000 is In Paris
of stock and some bonds of the oil oc- 1 alone. France, outside Paris, therefore,
topus, of which he 18 president. His ; remains practically stationary, say* the
stock he guarantees verbally to pay 100 j Westminster Gazette. Since lf>30 France
per cent. per year In dividend,. j “othS
Mr. Towne, who was nominated lor European nation. This being so, we think
vice-president last year by the Popp- it la wrong to talk of “depopulation;'' the
list, and silver Republicans, on tho tfoMrinew’of
ticket with Bryan, and withdrew wheu ; correspondent of the Times sets out three
the Democrats at Kansas City refused ; principal ^couFes which prevent France
to put him on their ticket, has aban
doned politics for good, he says. While j —JW
n.'c.f Inrt tlmt li.i In mi t nnlltfnd 1 * ^
bigg. ..
Mr. Town* lays tbst^ fcort ! So™*" t0 B ° rounl wl,5n 11 '* rtlvllc4
track of the political situation and feel- i (2.) The obligation of the wife to pro-
Ing In the West . Of that situation he j vide a sufficient dowry,
told today some things that may not <*.) The love of dress among the French
please hla former friend, Mr. Bryan. women of aH ranks. m -
•• *in .tw nnininn ' k-.li Mr Tnivn. How these causes are to be removed It
.O . v , l f:„ seems Impossible to say; the third, for
Senator Hill of New York will be the ‘example, certainly passes the "wit of
next candidate for president of the “
regular Democratic party, and the plat
form adopted will, 1 believe be a very
reactionary one. In fact. I believe the
party will split In 1904, and Mr. Bryan
will lead a third party faction in sup
port of the Issues to which he is still
loyal. The feeling among Democrats
throughout the West is that they want
to win. and they don’t care a rap what
sort of platform they win on. There Is
also a strong feeling In that section
in fa / X2 r jJJJJ nomination of Mr. Hill \ per rc'oTuUon ot the mayor and coon-
or some other Eastern man and the , c ji passed July 16, 1901. Flan* for these
adoption of a platform that will be a 1 improvements can be seen at my office.
(MARIANl WINE)
er preparation has ever received
many voluntary testl * *" """
ent people as the w
rlana Wine.
Before Meals APPETIZER
After Heals DIGESTIVE
At all Times TONIC
Sold by all druggists. Refuse substitutes.
Marlani & Co.. 52 W. 15th st.. New York,
publish a -handsome book of endorse
ments of Emperors. Empress. Princes,
Cardinals, Archbishops and other distin
guished personages. It Is sent gratis and
postpaid to all who write for It.
SPECIAL NOTICES
of Tuesday, July 23. 1901. for making
certain changes in the Interior of the
city hall building aa shown by plans; also,
for building an annex to said building.
total repudiation of the chief Issues of
1830 and 1900.
“ ‘The free silver question Is abso-.
lutely dead In tho West. It will not
only not be an Issue In 1904, but I don't
believe It will be mentioned In tho Dem
ocratic platform or campaign.'"
SUITS DISMISSED.
York Regiment C
er Daiiiaem,
NEW YORK. Julv IS.-Judge Lacombe.
of the United States circuit court otday,
on motion of counse ifor the plaintiffs,
dismissed twenty suits by members of
the E'xty-nlnth regiment against the
Louisville and Nashville railroad, to re
cover damages for Injuries received in n
wreck of a train from Chattanooga while
they were being transferred from one
camp to another, during the Spanish-
American war. There were some seventy
suits In all. brought by members of the
regiment. Two or threo were brought
to trial, resulting in the recovery of dam
ages for small amounts.
COMMITTED SUICIDE.
The work to be completed by the 8th day
of October next. The city reserves the
right to reject any or all bids.
WM. BEE ELLIS.
Commissioner Public Works.
ELECTION NOTICE.
Whereas, a vacancy has occurred in the
County Board of Com mis* loner for Bibb
county by the death of W. T. Shinholser:
Ordered. That «n election by the qual-
fied voters of said county, to fill sab
MACON & BIRMINGHAM RY. CO.
1’Ine Mountain Rotate.
Schedule Effective June__30, 1901. __
33‘I 31 I | 32 1 3!
1A MIP M
M. & B. R’y.
4 30)
5 64
5 20
640
Lv Macon Ar
Lizella Lv
Lv.... Culloden ....Lv
Lv.... Yatesvllle ....Lv
r... Thomaston ...*
*.... Woodbury ....
Southern Railway.
Ar... W. Springs ...Lv
Ar..., Columbus ....Lv
Ar GrifTIn Lv
Ar Atlanta Lv
Southern Railway.
. Atlanta Ar
.. Griffin Ar
Lv.... Columbus ....Ar
Lv.„ W. Springs ...Ar
M, & B. R’y.
11 10 10 15
10 211 9 £1
9 391 8 09
9 21 8 49
8 55 8 25
8 10| j[_o3
H 7 30
6 8C
7 09!
5 301.....
10 40
9 16
9 501
8 28|
sioL..
7 50|
C. ef Ga. R’y.
Ar. .. Greenville ....Lv
1 50 Lv.... Columbus ....Ar
M. fic B. R’y. 4
Lv Harris Ar
. LcQrange ....Lv 7 00 v ...
' Nos."33 and“34,"Sundays; .Nop. 31*'and
82, dally.
Nos. 31 and 32 connect at Macon with
cancy. be nelcl. ns provided by law. on the j Central of Georgia Railway to and from
13th day of August. 1901, at the several j savannah and Southwestern Georgia, and
voting precincts of said county; and that ; the Georgia Southern and Florida
the clerk of this board publish a copy of Railway; *t Yatesvllle with Southern
thl* order at the courthouse door and also Railway for points south of Yatcsvllte;
in The Macon Telegraph nnd the Macon nt La Grunge with Atlanta and West
J. F. Andrew# of the Southern Itnll-
nrny, .Shot Himself nt Memphis.
MEMPHIS. July 18.-J. Franklin An
drews. soliciting freight agent of the
Southern Railway, committed suicide
today by shooting himself In the head.
The cause Is unknown.
Andrews was recently transferred
from Tuncumbla, Ala., to this city on
account of 111 health.
TO EXTERMINATE MALARIA.
A true extract from the minutes ot Bibb
Countv Commissioners, of date of July
18th, 1901.
Wltress my official signature.
Universal Brotherhood
Organization and
Theosopbical Society.
NON-POLITICAL AND UNSBCTAHIAN.
Nos. 33 and 31 .Warm Springs Limited,
stop only at LIzclla. Morans. Culloden,
Yatesvllle. Thomaston, Crest and Wood*
burjr. running through solid to Warm
Trains arrive and depart,from corner
of Fifth nnd Pine streets, Macon, Ga.
JULIAN R. LANE. Gen. Man.
M. R. MEADOWS. Gen. Agt.
TH08. H. FREEMAN. C. T. A., Hotel
Lanier.
J. A. STREYER. Com'l Agt.
Macon. Ga.
TIFTON, THOMASVI LI.E & GULF RY.
"Tlionifirtvlllo Route."
Effective May 12. 1901.
No. 41 No. 21 INo. UNo. 3
judge JACOI) AVATSOJf. plena at S* him. a twenty-rtvo ton Ice
IIAWJK INAVILl.B. Ga., July H.-Jodco U ,l * nt ftl BeiUonvlUc.
Jacob Watson, who hud u >. vero stroke Alabama—'Iwvlve new compresses In
«»f p.<ra)y«l* about three years ago. which the northern part of tho state, a ten-
rauaed him to give up his law practice, ton Ice plant In Courtlnml.’a stave mill :
• L r<1 L.!I" n . y naming from ] a t Mnrieelle.
Florida—A planing mill and novelty
pin-1 statement fr<
villa bar. and was a very popular man.
At one time ue was judge of the district
court, lie enjoyed tne confidence of the
peopto who knew him. Th«» funeral oc
curred thl* morning from the rcMdence,
and waa largely attended.
Firth Expedition to the “Wl
Mau’s Grave.'*
Major Ronald Ross, who has already
rendwrert great service In establishing ths
connection between mosquito bite nnrl
mularlul fever, will next week start for
the west coast of Africa on the fifth ex
pedition th.it has been *ont out by the
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine,
says the London Dally Mall.
Major Ross, who was the chief guest
at a dinner given last evening by L. A.
Jotir» in celebration of the expedltlon.told
,a Dally Mall representative that his
prim® object of th® expedition is to deter
mine without a doubt the theory of the
l propagation of malaria by means of tho
: bite of the anopheles mosquito, and to
demonstrate thnt the discoveries made re
cently may <be applied in a practical way
I to exterminate the disease In any given
"\V® have already discovered," said
! Major Ross, “two valuable fact# concern-
: Ing the mosquito. Ona Is that It propa
gates Itself under conditions easily as
certainable, namely, levs lie e«a* in pools
where the larvae, when hatched, may
I feed on more minute organisms of stag
nant water; end another la that It Is In
capable of night over anything like
.ille, a 100-ton oil mill j great distance.
I “Microscopical Investigation ha* proved
** 4 mosquito of thli
species bo Inflicted upon a person sufTer
- 1 m ii« 1 ,n * fr °m malaria, the partially developed
- 4 .! germs of the disease existing In such per-
31 ATT KOI.Ilil
CAMILLA. Gi .
Kolbiv son of Mr. tharlle
t smllls. died In Columbus, (it., '
day. Ills remain# will arrive on aft'
AND J. H. HOLTON. v u n
f ul ^w W o Ya ,M n ^ llerb.n* nnY the'
Tble of <
t Jnck
at Jacksonville.
Georgia—A fu
tory at Macon,
works nt Dnlto
farture paper from cotton seed bulla j son’s blood find IrT the
at Columbus. { Insect a habitat ronaenlal
ntucky—Fire brick works at Ful- ' development: that tn the co — _ ....
nDutton of a com* I tlIT ^ they r# *°. h maturity and
Mr. J. R. Holton, one of the beet elt-
ja-ns n. Mitchell county, died at his home
threo miles west of Camilla last Thurs-
ny of Ns
nd Kentuckians
to build a railroad from Madlsonvlllo
to Dan son Springs and to develop
coni lands along the route,
Mississippi -~T!»e Installation of addi
tional machinery to the value of $50,090
In u lumber mill at Ora and a doubling
of the capacity of the Ice plant at
[ Laurel.
.North Carolina—A plant at Thomas-
he spores pass
VHTLBDG
Tiftirdiy non
fge W, died at Ito make machinery for chair and
• at the age ; tumlturu
lister of tho company
me. factory at North WUkesboro, a handle
,# “-'“rymt Tryon.
throw off spores; that _
Into the system of the Insect, r.nd so'into
the matter which exudes from Its 'lance'
when It pierce* the skin, and that by thl*
means a healthy porson bitten by
fected insect Is Inoculated with the deadly
malaria-haunted district In th<
son by poisoning or fiUlnx up all breeding
places of the anopheb*# mosquito within
given area. This. If effectively carried
(*ct«rl«a. n 1100.000 lumber j «ul--nd «h» expe.lltljj will In that re.
nt Man.-h.qtsp n fnrrtlt nrc »P*Ct h*Vt the food Offices Of In# COlonh!
°North' W11 keaboro, S teSS KST " U "‘ U "‘ U ,r “ ,h * {
ding of the' city I f
i«ld this m un'ng ft \ \
or the Whitehall j ‘
saphalt at an ad- ’
OIBHALTAr
“HhnuM malaria banish srllh the anap<
Tennctatfr— A meat packing and cold l tie*, or be very materially dlnlmlnlshed.
flour .
Harr e
and »h
along t
co of the* ntlnfall™ al*
NA till AM I'l
LITTLE ROt'K. July
roll, known the
ItOFLU
It - william Far-
-amber King" of j
It All.HO AIL
Arkaness. died today.
tU«UMl|*|il Authorised
MAN! 10 iu:t*o\ K
ARID 1. \NIts.
r* nod llullit Rand.
Trans-Ml •>•!*• Ip |tt »
iimoerclnt Con.
arc* Adopts imp,
rtnnt R rt olii.
S ' 1 ^ • r 1; l: 1.' . •
cRirn.E crrekT
trans-Mississippi comm
?o|.. July 11—The
rectal congress to
propose 1 n, n road **
a rontluu itton of the
>n awl Kit* •TV.
of It* work, adopted r»
a multitude of subject
st Important part
and selected 8t.
January? lie
Paul ae the next place
to b Hattiesburg and
resolution*, after citing
for rural home* ae eh
6. The total length wilt
litea.
ferrUur 11 '** tf!? 9 ** ^
public Und* whl.*h > ca
41c lands, and re-
an acre# of arid
♦ Ml Nil .
'moilllfc ..11 Itrlln 4«*n
vll !*•» <!»«• limp.
f the waste waters
ona of the West
1 eaX*!?l»lc* f by
. ff* 1 ,* A**.
H'pLtata
)r. A. ^T*Curt7tf**u?ge5S-
government
. vn. .
ROANOKE. Va..
' BN It AIN.
Ja'.y IS.-Heavy
nSn'X\"?' 9 ' rr
ratne causal Big 1
Mfc mt tn the
IDS Ml h . July UL—The
oat of Ha banka tor
• rilar* and ground
along its bank*. Fi
was badly damaged
•ured *11 WSSU*
were forced to dt~*
that A.dnity.
plant at Knoxville und
mm ■! Ashwood.
Texas—A $175,000 power house for the
Gntv< hton Street Hallway Company, a
machine shop at Loekney, a wood
working factory at Laporte, a flour mill
at Whltswrlght.
Virginia—Development of coal lands
N#e A meric in i ,n Frederick county, woodworking fac-
H nator Han- tory at Norfolk, atavt mill at Oriana.
as class vale- \V*st Virginia—Development of coal
1^41 mines at lioury and Elkhorn. tho erec-
l«m of a tin plate plant and a steei
lant at Clarksburg and a cannery
ear Charlestown.
LoiIrc No. 13 will liold Its rewulnr
monthly public meeting Sunday,,
July Ulst. nt Its hnll, Trlnimnlnr
k H:IR p. m. Muslcnl selections.
All Invited.
Suits at Summer Prices.
If you linre any cash to Invest
or it nobby Summer Suit, cont nnd
pants— *30.00
QOETTE, THE TAILOR,
123 Cotton Ave. Phono 3IT8.
6 45p!lo 00a(Lv Thomnsville Ar
7 ISp 1! Ofta Lv. Moultrie .Lv
9 I0pll2 23p'Ar... Tlfton ...Lv
I G. S. * F.
12 46a 12 50plLv... Tlfton ...Ar
1 2 C3p|Lv.. Cordele ..Lv
3 50aI 4 lOplAr... Macon ...Lv
I C. of O.
4 15a 4 20p Lv... Mftccn ...Ar
7 23a! 7 JSplAr.. Atlanta ..Lv
I N. C. & 8t. L.
8 Hal 8,20p Lv.. Atlanta ..Ar
I 1 Lv. Lv
1 Oftp IS 37a .. Chattanooga .
6 gSpl 5 iSalAr. Nashville .L
—PAINTING.^
DECORATING
AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.
UEO. W. LINGO,
•118 SECOND ST.
Hart & Branan,
FUNERAL DIRECTORS.
GENERAL UNDERTAKERS AND
EMBALM ERS.
Caskets, Cases, Collins and Burl
Robes.
Special Attention to Funeral Di
recting and EiuhulmlnK.
023 MULBERRY ST. - - - PHONE 407
NIGHT PIIONE 3203.
(Masonic llulldlug.)
5 50P
4 49p
3 4 9p
3 30p
2 fJlp
11 30a
7 00a
4 00a
2 50a
12 45a
At Thomosvllle. No. 1 with Plant Sys
tem. No. 68 for Snvannah nnd JacksonvIUo
Ith Plant System No. 57 for Ment
or Albany, and No. 53 f<
nnd points west,
f will
Montgomery
ptlso Monticello. .
No. 2 with Plant System No. 5S from
.■'I'Ui'c* in- r-. :• e r , ,. n f! i Inhri'h' •; N'-
No. 71 from Albany
ontgomsg
. with Plant 8ys
nnd Ts from 5Iontgomery; also train from
Monticello.
\V. I'UniRiLL. Gen. Pass. Agt.
R. O. STONE. Trnv. Pass. Agt.,
Tbomasvllle. Gn.
GEORGIA AND ALABAMA RAILWAY,
Effective Jan. 1. 1901.
^Vla O. 8. A
Lv Cordele [Ar 1 46pm
Ar Flttgerakl Lvl 7 03 un
Ar Bavanpah ......Lvl 7 gam
Ar Amerlcus ...!..Lv 12 3tpm
11 20amILv Macon Ar| 4 15pm
1 SOpmjAr Cordele Lv| 2 06pm
(Vla'Q- A A.>
’2 10pm ILv
8 03pm Ar
8 SSpmlAr.
I lflpnalA.
6 20pm Ar Columbus Iv
7 55pm Ar.... Montgomery ....L’
12 25ngt]Ar.... Birmingham ....Li
S 05am|Ar... v ... Mobile Li
1 tOamlAr.... New Orleans ....Lv
(VtaT Bo7 Ryl)
12 55ngtTLv 'Macon aTT3 OSanT
3 26sm Ar Helena Lv 11 Kpm
8 84am I Ar Collins Lv 10 25pm
7 KpmlAr Savannah Lvi 3 09pm
Close connections 'made at. Savannah
4 03p.n
Mr. D. A. KEATING
with us. and will be u
lit* old trlritds and «
nil times.
vlll
nnln
true, but that It will be possible to ren
der certain spots In West Africa Immune
from the scourge, and, therefore, under
inltury supervision, safely habl-
?.X r b:
JLLAII ORATOR 14,
MRMOIUEN OP TURNER.
'• Leslie (elder brother of the Ace^e- account*f
ary Me
Pali
l*le tin
L. H. Burghard & Co.
FUNERAL FURNISHINGS AND
SCIENTIFIC EMBALMING.
and Disinfecting Free
In the Tlnv- Mr. Percy Fitzgerald
tells us how Bcs.tr.t and Hlce collabor
ated. Rice and llesant consulted. Be-
sant wrote, Rice criticised. B«.*ant re
wrote. That, we are told, was the
order of proceedings, and It may partly
that the earlier nov-
urred recently, j ei# of Desant nlono are more like the
reminisce**** of j books the two men wrote together than
a youth, used to the latter ones. The echoes of the voice
'• Leslie. R. A.) to j of the critic were still heard for ^ while
ishlng days, and < after the voice Itself w as silent, and
great landscape ; then gradually ceased to be heard or
er used to amvo sitended to. It la probably the b*-st
ftlng. and to work method of < .Elaborating, but It was not
stitch were some- | the only one known to titerary history,
v he began. “There In "The Gre%*n Bay Tree." which had
j It C. Leslie, “a I a success d® rcandal* a few years ago.
rnie gallipot* sn i the two author*- Me*«:s. Wilkins and
and -r I Vivian—signed their names to their re-
ret one that must l tptCtivt chapters, and the result was
sd. He us«st short tolerably harmonious; but the most in-
like the 'mi 1 |en>«i re Idea* of the function* of a
ors. working with I col la bora tor was that of Dumas the
dtlte ground, oftd |elder, who offered the appointment to
hit son. "I wilt give you a thousand
a year.’* he sail, “and you wlU ha\e
nothing; to do but raise objections." The
offer was refused—possibly because the
author cf "La Dame aux Camelias"
knew that his father was not the man
to listen to objections meekly. The
collaborate* who w*ra found by
L I Dumas Pc-re wem practically Uttle more
^ tilery, jthan the great man's amanuenses. At
a* half opened. I soy rate, they never d‘4 any tolerable
their own.—London Graphic.
fretted
Phone 0. Night Phon
Arthur L. Wood, Agt .
Funeral Director
and Embalmer
Day and Night Phones $ ns
i 435
TIFTON AND NORTH EASTERN It. R.
_Efftethre* Feb. X VHA.
aim* with lines conerglng.
Immediate connections at Montgomery
Ith Louisville nnd Ohio for ail point*
West. North nnd Southwest.
A. POPE, Gen. Pnss. Agt.
General Offices: Savannah. Ga.
Through ^Pullman cars between Macon
* _ Effective April 14. 1901.
Lv. Milled)
Ar. C«ma
Camnek
-• -Li
lacs. . .
Ar Augusta. C. T.l \ V-v t 15n
I.v Augusta, E. T. 2 30p
Lv Florence. . , .
Lv Fayetevllle. ,
Ar Petersburg. . ,
Ar Richmond. . .
Ar Washington. .
Ar Philadelphia .
t| 4 15:
0 19p
•; i •
1
13 5a
7 45a
1 ISp
Cherry at.
\V. C. 5
Cherry st.
v «. frf« Augusta and points
e 10:;.» a. m. and 9:25 n. m.
k nnd way stations 6:00 p. tn,
JACKSON. Gen. Pass. Agt.
rdwlck. Gen. Agt., 403 Cherry
Mmin. Soliciting Agent, 409
nt Ill IN A SAVANNAH R. R.
4 |~2 | STATICNSl | \
P v I* M A M a, *.(
4 - 3^LT...... Macon ......Ar^ w ft/M 15
4 15, . 2S Swift Creek 1 9 10 :o lo
4 - 3 50 Dry Branch
* 5; « H Ptke’s Peak
*« < i' v . Fttxp itrlck
ftH4 4N Jeffersonville
6 15 4 oO! Oalllmoro .......
| 25! S 15 Danville
6 5 25!...... Allentown
6 4'M 5 451....... Mnntrcse
< « « 26 Uoore !!!
< 15! < 4:'Ar Dublin ......Lv
few
ared
i u£ •. ■ »i«5!'
r UipSiaml.:
V ruon Mil I 10> \IIIK
,ur\,j In bf^-Au," h.
: 1 < -! t.« ; .1 r,..v v .«
K: ■ N- • I P . , . !
him Th-y .Ir.csth.n ih*
h a.j in-
. Imrrovr art.nv Prlr. J$c.
! ■ k tf n.t • . ,• . lt
4 Ul 4 W » m. pSd'11 c 5 .v. P M y M a M Lv. Ar •• M pw p yj
_ CPMJA Nr.
"Train s“Noa. L L J am
W.ffuaday; trsiu No
na. Tlfte*^ and If* .T* r v
N bomawttle nog Outr at
Georgia and AUhAure’ st FI
c. Boatwright,