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TITE MACON TELEGRAPH : SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER
4. TQO*
Presto!
AGONY FROM DYSPEPSIA.
A 25-cent bottle of the
GROVER
GRAHAM
DYSPEPSIA
REMEDY.
what becomes or
THE COLLEGE GIRL
interesting Occupations Taken
Radcliffe Graduates—Few Ente
iness But Many are .Cha
Workers.
cliff e
CAMBRIDGE. Sept. 3.—The open
ing of the academic year at Radcliffe
College four weeks from now will mark
the 2th anniversary of the Institution
of university training for women in
this country, and the occasion is likely
to renew with vigor the discussion of
the
A single dose.
ate? 1
PERFECT RELIEF!
It never fails to cure all forma of stom
ach disorder.
u Three bottles cured xno after years of
terrible suffering.**
MRS. T. FOSTER, Elizabeth, IT. J.
DELAYS ARE
DANGEROUS.
Constant Irritability of tho stomach in
variably produces Cancer which is incur
able. It is estimated that 25 per cent, of
tho chronic cases of Dyspepsia oventually
turn into cancer of the Stomach. Why
nssumo this riskP Our Remedy is guar
anteed to euro.
Three sizes. 23c., 50c. XJjd $1.00. Sold by nil
leading druggists.
Write for pamphlet.
S. GROVER GRAHAM CO./lNC.) NEWBURGH, N.Y.
usefulness of the “higher educa
tion.” The answer to the question,
'What become** of the college gradu-
ls pretty well known now every
where when it refers to men, but the
careers into which women enter after
taking a degree from one of the higher
colleges are le$s generally understood.
Radcliffe College is unique in that it
offers girls exactly the same kind of
lining as Harvard provides for men.
standards are, then, those recog-
Bd as the highest in this country:
whole mode of life and system of
ehing is that of a man’s university;
course of study are Harvard courses
conducted by Harvard professors. So
the occupations into which its gradu
ates go may Ije somewhat different from
those taken up by the alumnae of many
girls’ colleges, but they are, perhaps,
the most significant of the tendencies
developed by the higher education of
women.
After the recent discussion of the
effect of college education on family
life it is interesting to find that seven
teen per cent, of Radcllffe’s graduates
teen per ceiu. 01 naoenne s grauu.iveo investigations In psychology with Fro-
have married, thereupon natural y t( ,„ sor MuenI ,terbrnf. the other, Mlaa
falling out of the ranks of workers In 1
DID
YOU
‘gainful occupations,’* as the govern
ment statisticains say, and a large
proportion of the entire body of alum-
EVER
REALLY
nm
Of THE
BENET/T5
OF
A
BANK
Account-
LOW ROUND—TRIP
RATES VIA
Central ot Georgia
RAILWAY.
HOT SPRINGS AND EUREKA
SPRINGS, ARK.
Tickets on sale each Wednesday
and Saturday in the months of
July, August and September, at
rate of qne fare plus $2.00 for
round-trip, Anal limit 60 days from
date of sale. Extension of limit
may be secured by payment
certain amount
FRAN
Triennial Conclave Knights Tem
plar, September 6-9, 1904. Hover
eign Grand Lodge I. O. O. F„ Sep
tmber 19-26, 1904. Round-trip
rates from Macon $62.65. Tickets
on sale August 15th to September
9th, Inclusive, limited to October
23d, 1904, /returning. Telephone
805 for additional information.
FRAN
Also to principal points in New
Mexico, Arizona. Colorado, Nevadi
Utah and Texas. . Second
one way. colonist tickets on
September 15 to October 15, 19004,
inclusive, at rata of $39.40.
BALTIMORE, MD.,
National Convention Fraternal Or
der Eagles, September 1^-17, 1904.
All rail or via Norfolk and Steam
ers one fare plus $1.25; via Sa
vannah and M. & M. T. Co. Steam
ers, one fare plus $6.25. Tickets
via all rail and via Norfolk and
steamers on sale September 10,
and 12; via Savannah and Steamer
tickets will be sold for' boats sail
Ing September 8th and 10th. Final
limit September 19, 1904.
ROME, GA.
State Reunion Confederate Veter
ans, September 14-15, 1904. One
cent per mile In each direction, plus
25 cents (from Macon $3.50). Tick
ets will be sold September 12,
and 14. limited returning to Sep
tember 19, 1904.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
International Association of Fire
Engineers, September 13-16, 1904,
On? first class fare plus 25 cents
for round trip. Tickets on sale
September 11th nnd 12th, limited
to September 20th. 1904. Ex ten
sfon of (Inal limit may be secured
by complying with certain lnstruc
tions.
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
National Baptist Convention (col
ored). September 14-19, 1904. On#
fare plus two dollars and twenty
five cents for round trip. Tickets
on sale Septeml^er 11th and 12th,
1904, limited to September SOth,
1904.
bridge, in the other suburbs of |
on, and in “the Hub’’ itself, there !
•arcely a branch of the Associated {
itles which does nqt Include among ,
iff leers at least one representative ;
its Interesting body of alumnae,
lly to a limited extent have Rad-
daughters become business wo
men. A few are trained nurses; one or
two in their work as secretaries have
developed marked commercial ability;
but only one instance of a downright
business undertaking appears in the
fairly complete records. This ip a part
nership betweent two Southern girls,
one a Radcliffe student, who, storting
•atory kitchen” where, at
first, only scientific baking was done
have now In very profitable operation
two unique restaurants in Boston.
There is. too, a class of graduates
that shows most strikingly the apti
tude of the modern American gjrl in
the fields of. advanced scholarship,
which, but a few years ago. it was
thought only men cbuld enter. Un
doubtedly the unequalled facilities
Radcliffe has in the graduate school
of Harvard University are a strong
factor irt this matter, for, every year,
a goodly proportion of the graduating
class stays on for post-graduate stu
dies. and on increasing number of
graduates of other institutions all
over the country come here to do ad
vanced work, seeking the A. M. or Ph.
D. degree. A great attraction for
such students, besides the splendid [
opportunities afforded by the close re- j
lationship with Harvard University, Is I
the recognised worth of R.vlcllffe's '
higher degrees, which, like all the rest 1
of the college's certificates of scholar
ship, require work of precisely the
same character and standard as Is de
manded by Harvard for Identical de
grees.
At least two scholars of no mean
accomplishments have been developed
among these girls, one now -pursuing
When the patient is weak, the doctor says “Drink Beer.”
When the nerves need food, beer is the usual prescription. So
RICHMOND, VA.
Grand Fountain, United
True Reformer*. September
1904. One fare plus 25 cents t
the round trip. Ticket*
September 4th to 7th Inclusive,
1904, limited to‘September 15th.
For Furthsr information, write or apply
to Jno. W. Blount, Traveling Fas-
C.TocSberry, C. T. & P. A.*
352 Second street. Macon, Ga.
* E. P. Bonner, Depot Ticket Agent,
still under twenty-five. A full
third of. the graduates who have not
married are not obliged to be self-sup-*
pottthf, A striking thing about the
remaining fifty per cent. Is their suc
cess In positions of managerial re
sponsibility. The majority still be
come teachers, for in teaching the val-
of the college degree Increases
ery year not only lnsecurlng a posi
tion to start with but markedly In gain
ing ofterawrds. number of Radcllffe’s
girls who have taken up this profes
sion have already reached excellent
positions, ten holding appointments In
colleges and two being the head of pri
vate schools; of the rest a large pro
portion are settled in New England
schools.
Miss Mary Cops of the class of *87
Radcliffe Is now secretary of her
alma mater, and the secretary of the
7 Simmons college of domestic arts
Boston Is also a graduate of the
girl teaches at the Huguenot Seminary
at Wellington, Cape Colony; four are
on the instruction board of Wellesley,
where a fifth teacher has a Radcliffe
one Is an assistant professor nt
Vassar* and two holders of A. M. de
grees nre also there; four are "read-
in the Bryn Mawr faculty; two
Instructors nt Smith; one teaches
at Wells College; another Radcliffe A.
M. is a member of the Milwaukee-
Downor teaching force,mnd a number
of tho college’s alumnae are helping
to Americanise the Filipinos through
tho public school system of our island
dependencies. Indeed, so prominent Is
pedagogy in the activities of the col
lege woman nowadays that a commit
tee of Boston women who nre parti
cularly Interested in tho subject have
arranged two series of outside lectures
especially for the benefit of Radcliffe
students, one on elementary and
on kindergarten work.
As might bo expected from such a
university life as these young women
lead in Cambridge, not a few of them
another niter graduation. * Quite
another a ftergraduatlon. Quito
number take secretarial positions and
still more become active workers In
college settlements. One Radcliffe girl
has found a new field for women In
the care of the valuable photographic
collections of Harvard’s Fogg Art Mu
seum, and several have been engaged
in astronomical work at the Harvard
observatory—Miss Henrietta 8. Lea
vitt Is winning marked distinction by
her discoveries among the stars—while
representatives of several classes are
to be found In the Boston Public Li
brary and like institutions. Not many
go Into the old-time "professions"
which women have begun to seek in
competition with men, but the few who
have become physicians got their M.
D. degree from the medical school of
Johns Hopkins University, that
Harvard not admitting women.
Already the names of several au
thors and editors who were trained at
Radcliffe have become well known.
Beulah M. Dlx In the seven years since
her graduation has published four
novels besides numerous short stories,
has written and seen produced one
play, and has collaborated on another
with Carrie A. Harper of the class of
'96. Josephine Preston Peabody has
also won success as a playwright and
author; her drama, "Marlowe,” and her
poetry having secured recognition as
belonging to the better American lit
erature of the day; a little book of
children’* poems In Imitation of Rob
ert Louis Stevenson** child’s verses be
Ing considered of special merit. Helen
Keller’s "Story of My Life" was pub
lished while the remarkable blind girl,
who graduated from, Radcliffe last
June, was In the Junior clans and her
name has appeared frequently In pe
riodical literature. Helen Leah Reed
author ef the only fictional study of
Radcliffe life that ha* as yet appeared,
has already made herself known by
series of girls* stories of a new, mod
em typ«y. while Abble Farwel Brown
has Issued two volumes of folk lore
and fairy stories. Two RadclifTe girls
are employed by leading houses and
one Is In the office of a women’s mag
azine.
That highly educated women should
go Into such employments as these
not surprising, but what Is not com
monlV known, probably. Is the extent
to wjtlch they are carrying on the char-
ltablfe work of our great cities. A grad
uate of Radcliffe *95 Is assistant secre
tary of the 8tate Charitable Aid Asso
ciation of New York, which has a sort
of/general laj” oversight of all the
cghrltsble and penal Institutions of the
nplre State. Another, of 96. Is head
rker at Hartley House In New York
[y, a third Is at the head of the
lendly Aid House connected with All
, r -Uls* Church there; a fourth has’ been
for I f**d worker, of the Neighborhood Het-
ale I foment conducted by the students and
teachers of Pnitt Institute at Oreen-
polnt. Brooklyn, while a fifth Is a “slum
nurse** In Ht. Louis, In tunne ways the
most conspicuous and interesting work
of this sort being done hr a Radcliffe
girl Is that of Mis* Ada Eliot, who suc
ceeded Mrs. Rebecca Foster of New
Xork as the "Tombs Angel.” Here in
Kate O. Petersen, for several yearn en
gaged In researches In early English
literature. The results of Mias Peter
's first Investigation formed tho
thesis upon which she qualified for her
Ph. D., and were published among the
Radcliffe Monographs. Since then she
has pursued the same lines of atudy
tor the mero pleasure nnd scholarship
and a second monograph has appeared. -
Altogether there has been thirteen
Radcliffe monographs, preserving In
permanent form the work of ndvanced
students; some of them. Indeed, have
become standards of reference in their
special subjects.
On the whole, the important nnd in
teresting fact that comes out in a
glimpse of the doings of Radcllffe’s
girls after they have taken their di
plomas nnd Joined the breadwinners
that, given a real university educa
tion. women find for themselves un
occupied fields of activity which they
can fill better than men. nnd which are
cultivated to the advantage not merely
of the individual, but of the world at
Inrge.
A Cold Settled in His Kidneys.
A. J. Jennesse. 0201 Butler Ht., Chi
cago. writes; "I um a switchman and
i out in all kinds of weather. I took
cold which settled In my kidneys
and I was In bad shape. I tried sev
eral advertised remedies with no ben
efit, until I was recommended to try
Foley’s Kidney Cure. Two-thirds of
bcttle cured me.” For sale by II. J.
Lamar & Co.
AN ODD CHAPTER
IN DIPLOMACY
America’s Deal With Ethopia’s Crafty
Old King Menelik—The Disappear
ance of tho Brother of the Assistant
Secretary of State Who Carried the
Treaty.
Old “Monitors” Oroken Up.
All but one of tho old vessels called
monitors.” to distinguish .their type,
which has lain nt League Island for so
many years, have been sold nnd taken
away and are being broken up by their
several purchasers and transformed into
auction along with four others, the
the Nahant. the Lehigh and the MonGiuk,
a few months ago. The appraised value
of the Cnnonlcu* was |tf*,Of)o, nnd of rath
of the others $10,000. The Jason nnd the
hoi ’ | ‘ * |
Nahant were bought by L. K. Hunt, nnd
are now being broken up In Philadelphia.
The Montauk was bought by Frank flat
_ ... isl ,
uels and Is now at Richmond, nnd the
Lehigh wns bought by J. T. Potter of
Fell Oliver. These fnmoun old vessels and
a few others of the same type, which have
previously been sold In the same «•;
pmilipipPlIPNPMPIMRPMIy,
wero nil built shout the same time in
1862. Ericsson built the Jason, the l/>-
hJgh and the Montauk nt Chester, Pa.,
nnd Hnriison Lorlng built the Nahant and
the Canonicua at Boston,
When troubled with constipation try
Chamberlain'* Stomach and Liver Tab
let*. They are eany to take and pro
duce no griping or other unpleasant
effect. For sale by all druggists.
AT QIDRALTAR,
England, I stand on thy Imperial ground,
Not at all a stranger; ns thy buglen
blow.
I feel within my blood old battles flow—
The blood whose ancient founts In thee
are found.
Rtlll surging dark against the Christian
bound
Wide Islam presses; well Its people
know
I think how Lucknow heard their gather.
Ing sound,
turn, to meet the cruel turbaned
England, ’t<« sweet to be ro much thy
son!
I feel the conqueror In my blood and race
' t nlr"* *
day
hark, thy evanlng
Startles the desert over Africa!
Thou art the rock of empire set mid-sens
Between the East and West, that Clod
has built;
Advance thy Roman bordtra where thou
wilt.
While nm thy armies true with his «1e
I aw. Justice, Liberty—great gifts are
these;
Watch that they spread where English
blood la split,
Lest, mixed and sullied with hla coun
try’s guilt.
The soldier’s life stream flow, and heaven
displease!
Two swords there are, one naked, apt
Rejoices In the sheath, end hides from
Ughr
lencs
Id from ports wftho
eorge R. Wood berry.
SUMER SICKNESS
Can
Avoided by All Who Take Moz
leys Lemon Elixir, the Ideal
Laxative.
Typhoid fever and other dangerou
ailments so prevalent In summer ca
be avoided by taking the necessary
precautions. The germs of th
eases often lie dormant In the system
for months, and are harmless as long
as the system ran resist them. A tor
pid liver, constipation, biliousness, and
other Internal Irregularities open the
y for attack,
sickness Is the
Mosley’s Len
effective nnd pleasantest lax
It acts gently, with no unp
feet*, and thoroughly cleans
tem of nil impurities and
tions. It promptly pure»
contfpatlon. indigestion, <
fttom^'b, dlzzlnexx, sick hen
and tones up and strength*
tie It to ret
us to
-0C
in insomnia: so in nervousness.
The doctor knows that malt and hops are nerve foods and
tonics. And he knows that most people drink too little
fluid to rid the system of waste.
He knows that pure beer is good for you.
That is why he says “Schlitz.” He knows that Schlitz beer
even cooled in
is brewed in absolute cleanliness. It
filtered air. And every bottle is sterilized.
cost of our brewing is spent to insure absolute
Ask for the brewery bottling.
Half the
purity.
Phouo 414, Sam & Ed. Welchselbaum,
3G1 Third St., Macon, Ga.
The Beer That Made Milwaukee famous.
Kent Loomis, who,disappeared from
the Kaiser Wilhelm II on June 20 and
whose body was found ort the English
coast, carried with him a state docu
ment which owed.lt* being to circum
stances, most unusual In the world of
diplomacy. It was a commercial
treaty between the United States and
Abyssinia,' or Ethiopia, that strange,
semt-clvllized African empire ruled by
Mcnollk II, who calls himself "king of
kings,” and who f>y forceful but crude
diplomacy, has balked for many years
the power* of Europe.
Monel lit Is a man of grent forco and
has shown himself a cunning diplomat
well as a mighty warrior. He sud
denly stood in the white glare of fame
eight years ago when ho routed a
thoroughly equipped Italian force of
35.000. This negro king, who traces
his ancestry back to Bolomon, by this
one strike placed himself In n position
never before occupied by nn African.
Although diplomatic relations be
tween the United rttates atul Abyssinia
never existed before last November,
when Robert P. Hklnner, American
consul at Marseilles, headed an expe
dition to Menelik* capital, this govern
ment ha* taken a strong position
there. How much this Is due to the
commercial treaty which Consul Skin
ner negotiated, how much to Menelik’*
belief that he can uae the United
States as a foil against the territorial
mbltlon* of Europe, and how much to
the Influence of that picturesque char
acter, William Ellis, the Cuban negro
who left this country sharing a statn-
ous silks and satins, with lion and leop
ard skin mantles, gold and silver plated
bucklers,and carried lances from which
floated the national colors.-The forma
tion of this force, which wns mounted,
was apparently disordered. A band of
shnwn players played mutolc which had
not changed since the full of Jericho.
At the palace twenty-one guns were
fired In honor of the United States and
the commission was received with
elaborate formality. Presents were ex
changed nnd many conferences wore'
held during the following nine days.
Meantime Ellis hud made his ap
pearance, having come from the sea
coast with hi* own caravan. His affable
and lively nature made u great Impres
sion nt Menelik’* court. Consul Hklnner
had assured the king that tho United
Htntes desired only to negotiate with
him a commercial treaty, mutually ben-
tllciul to both governments. Tho king 4.
of king* was satisfied that America j
contemplated no territorial nggrundlzo- J
ment.
With much ceremony a conference
wns held and tht? following commercial
treaty was drawn, signed nnd done In
duplicate In French and Amharlc texts:
Th* Treaty With Abyaainia.
"His niujesty Menelik II, king of
kings of Ethiopia, In the name of tho
empire, and Robert P. Hklnner, In tho
name of tho United Htates of America,
httVf agreed, etc.”
What the trouty la expected to do Is
Is best told In Consul Hklnner’s own
words, ns contained In the message of
President Roosevelt transmitting the
treaty to the senate for ratification;
"Ethiopia Is wealthy in resources be
yond the power of any man to calcu
late. Gold, silver, asphalt, petroleum,
Iron nnd coal exist In 'combination with
a salubrious climate, agricultural pro
ductiveness and a population of slngu- |
ler docility. With watchful
the future, the emperor seeks to r
European power ugalnst (mother In or
der to preserve thu political lmlepend
cnee of his people, which has beet
handed down through the centurlei
♦ ♦ +++♦♦♦♦♦♦♦++>♦ ♦♦♦♦♦ »+♦♦♦
$20.95;
$20.951
Macon to Baltimore
Via Southern Railway.
— AND —
RETURN
Tickets on sale September ioth, nth
and 12th, and good returning Septem
ber 19th, with privilege of extension to
September 25th.
STOP OVER Will be allowed nt Washington, going nnd returning.
l.m. I 7; 30 p.
7/>
Schedules:
Leave Macon ...8:30 1
Ar. Washington .6:42 i
Ar. Baltimore ...7:55 :
For Further Information Call on ;
G. R. PETTIT. J. W. JAHISON, \
D. T. A , Macon. On. C. T. A., Macon, On. j
♦ JAS. FREEMAN, T. P. A., Macon, Oa. ■
J Phone 424. }
?4+44444*444++444++4444*4444444444*444*4-4 44 4444*****41
§$ No Deception
or Misrepresentations
room with young Kent Loomis, and .. . . , .
who after I^oomls’ mysterious dlsa 4 | nnd In the meantime he hopes to devel
pearance went on with the treaty to «P the Intelligent!
Africa, remains to bo determined by
Ume.
Consul Hklnner planned an expedi
tion.
The management of the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition *valunteered to
bear a portion of the outlay If Mr.
Hklnner would represent the World's
Fair In obtnlnlng an exhibit from Men
elik. Pinna for the expedition were
then matured. When the:
became
partlaiiy public Ellis became known
to the state department.
Cowboy, boom town explorer, capital
ist. receiver of water supply corpora
tions In New York, a moving spirit In
Central America and West Indian trad
ing companies, a high liver, a mirror
of extreme and gaudy fashion, a side
figure in the famous Fayne Moore
badger case— Ellis had cotne into me
tropolitan notoriety more than once.
Although he had made much money
elsewhere, his attention had been at
tracted to Abyssinia. He made several
trip* there, gained the confidence of
Menelik. nnd when he heard that the
United Htates intended to negotiate a
commercial treaty he at once brought
into the newspapers his high favor at
Menellk’s court.
In November Consul Hklnner at Na
ples boarded the United Htates steamer
Machlaa. temporarily withdrawn from
Beirut., Turkey. At Djibouti, In French
Hland, the expedition consisting of
thirty persons. Including marines and
bluejackets under the command of
Captain Thorpe. United Htates mount-
cavalry. and Lieutenant Hussey,
United Htates navy, was landed on No
vember 17. The French government
afforded every facility In the Journey
from Djibouti to Dire-Douah over the
newly completed railroad. At the lat
ter place camels were brought to carry
the baggage and aupr
for mounts. A side trl
Jlsrrsr. the principal t
of Ethiopia, where Com
tier paid his respect* to
ed governor, the Ra
The
Adis-Alstba was accomplished after |
man/ unique experiences. The expedl- |
tlon had eruvrnped about three miles |
from the emperor's palftce, where It
was met by 91 I-*** Chefneus, councilor |
of state, and
advisers of fh-
clal city
ney from Dlre-Donah to
nnd resources of the
population to such a point as to ena
ble it to withstand any pressure from
without.
"Whatever may Ire the results of this
mission, it Is certain that If the treaty
be rutlfled It will have regularised an
uncertain condition, where we had an
existing trade Interest of value, and
have placed us In a position to profit
by eventualities. In view of the fact
that we have sustained diplomatic re
lations with every power of Import
ance on the face of the earth for many
years, and In many case* where our
material Interests were very much In
ferior to those which we have In
Ethiopia, the surprising fact Is not
that we have sent u mission Into Af
rica nt this time, but that we did not
do It many years before.”
Ellis had several conference* with
Menelik, who told him that If ho wotjid
return to Abyssinia he would be given
valuable commercial concessions.
Ellis returned to America and told
his friends of his vast Influence with
King Menelik. who termed him the
"duke of America," and he straightway
set about getting the capital for the
establishment of the trading company.
Why Kent Loomis, the manager of a
small paper In Parkersburg, W. Va„
should leave his business, his wife nnd
his 5-weeks-old baby to go hunting in
Abyssinia Is something that his ac
quaintances in Washington were never
able to axplsln, *nd yet Assistant llec-
retary Loomis says that he knows of
nothing else.
Ellis desired to carry back to King
Menelik the copy of the treaty, which
must be delivered to him by October to
make the convention operative. As
sistant Secretary I.oomls, however, de
cided that It would be best for his
brother to carry the treaty, and con
fided it to hi* care.
The theory was suggested that the
two might have quarreled over who
was to carry the treaty; that Kills
might have expected great prestige
from being able to hand It to King
Menelik himself. Even If he did it will
do hlin no good, for, fast ns he la now
traveling toward Abyssinia, a ruble
."upon 1
Sam & Ed. Weichselbaum
361 THIRD ST., MACON. GA.
Army Maneuvers
Manassas, Va.
On account of the above occasion
the Southern railway will sell tickets
from all points at rate of one nnd one-
third first-class fares to Mnnassas,
Va., nnd return. Tickets on sale Sep
tember 4th, 6th and 6th, final limit
Hcptember 11th, 1904.
During tho encampment through
trains Nos. 35, 36, 37. il, 39 nnd 40,
will stop at 61nnaa*as to take on nnd
lot off passengers.
Train leaving Macon 8:SO a. m. car
ries through sleeper. Train leaving
Macon 7:30 p. m. carries through
sleeper from Atlanta.
For further information apply to
JAH. FREEMAN, T. I*. A..
'Phono 424. Macon, Ga.
TIFTON, THOMA3VILLE & GULF
RAILWAY COMPANY.
till
A M|P M|
7 001 3 lOILv
7 »i tm
7 ri JMi
7 271 3 St)
f 3X1 »
1 4 w...
Arban*
, Omtif ,
... Vad ..
Huggins
j A M V M
|ll J9. 7 tl
8TILLMORK AIR LINE HAILWAY
K | I | l | STATION.'
p M|P MIA M|Lv
I 9 40! 1 !«
! 56
• ’ll r: o 17*13 41
'11 0S 12 !5
Ill 101 8 f.0,12 1|
47* ^ 21 II J4
. !0 M Uf> 11 1.6
1 H.-etlonvil!* | S ST* 7 <7| 9 <}
Ar Collins Lvl 'J 75.’ 4 56! 1 21
& R< I lsvUitf
7 41 4 Obe
t 01 4 3?| Barbers ,
t 2«; 6 671....i
I 461 t 17[...„
... Kins*
.... Moultrie
Corbetts
1 wTh Apa
rtment
... Murphy
. Bothers*
... t.oolldge
.110 Otj (
.. 9« (
.19 m *
SCI) 6»l.., (
9 IC[ G 42 Merrillville
* y 5 l: Dillon | . ., , ii
t 46| 6 lt|Ar.. Thoraasvtlle ..Lv{ 9 6l| I If
. 1 and 2 dally. Nos. 11
of :
A-er bottle at drug stores*
lent of the imperial troo
The soldiers were am
United Htates a
represents in no
Redsee.
Through Pullman SI |m :. Ma-
.“11 to SU Louit via Cliattant.^a,
Lexington ami Louisville "ti 1:35
p. tn. train daily by Southern Rail-
O. M. BRiNHON, I'l
Tvbi
et*
mlv
for
loro o po
ll ud av, September 4th
* last day Parlor car 50 cents.
■