Newspaper Page Text
®hf itrald and ^ducrtincr.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF CITY AND COUNTY
» W. MURRAY, llin.li>*-** MBtiHjrrr.
IN AlYALACULLN RANGE.
A Country Yvhoro the Poor-ie Go
About on Horaobaok.
Adams.
Hood’s is Good
it
Makes Pure Blood
Scrofula Thoroughly Eradicated.
*‘C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
“It Is with pleasure that I give you the details
o! our little May's sickness ntirt her return to
health by the use o( Hood's Sarsaparilla. She
was taken down with
Fever and a Bad Cough.
Following tills a sore came on her right side be
tween the two lower rlbt. In a short time an
other broke on the left side. She would take
corruption. Her head was all
ulh and whon we had succeed-
; tlUs she would sutler with at-
OKI
spelle of sore moul
cl In overcomlug . . .
tacks of high fever and expel bloody looking
" affected and matter
rupt
noted from her cars. After each attack she be-
Hood’s 5 ^ Cures
came worse end ell treatment failed to give her
relief until we began to use Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Aftor she had taken one-half bottle we aould sue
that she was better. We continued until she
had taken three bottles. How she looks like
Th« Bloom of Health
end U fat es a pig. We tee] grateful, and cannot
oo much in favor of Hood's Harsaparllla."
, A. M. Adams, Inman, Tennessee.
Hood’s Pills act easily, yet promptly and
•Qeleutly, on the liver and bowele. 25o.
Professional <£arbs.
JOHN M. HA RlilNGTON,'
Attoriieyat Law,
New nan, (la.
Will practice lu all the Courts of this and
adjoining counties.
MKT- Prompt attention glv
Office with O. McClendon.
The Mountain Ronds Rave a Queer Way
of Going Into Partnership with the
Streams anil the Wagons
Have to Float.
The scenery la the same from the
middle of Pennsylvania to Georgia—
the same rounded, wooded mountains;
the same preen, often fertile, valleys,
checkerboardcd with farms; the same
stone-strewn watercourses brawling
bown the hill sides; the same frequent,
almost general, forests: the same few
roads and many trails; the same lop
cabins; the same clearings. Every
where the same deep blue hangs over
head, and the mountains turn from
near-by green to distant purple. The
wood fires everywhere send up thin
blue veils of smoke above the cabius,
and tho scenes in which humanity
figures are played by characters that
are everywhere very much alike. Per
haps in tho north there are more
covered bridges, but the rule, over the
entire mountain system, is for the
horses and wagons to cross tho
streams by means of fords over
“branches" and creeks that are floored
with great thicknesses of shaly, flut,
smooth stones. The pedestrians get
over the streams by means of foot
bridges, some of which are mere tree
trunks resting on cross-bucks, and
some of which are quite ornamental
though simple suspension bridges, with
certainly one hand-rail, If not two, be
side the planking.
It's a horseback country, writes
Julian Ralph, in Harper's Mugazine.
There are main roads and there are
wugons to use "Upon them, but they are
both "valley improvements," the pro-
duots of thy greutor fertility of tho
lowlands, where the “quality" lived us
planters before the war and worked
large tracts with slaves, or where the
small farms of tho poor whites begut a
prosperous middle class between the
quality folk and the mountaineers.
Hut a great population lives on the
mountain-sides and mountain-tops,
aloug bridle paths that are mere trails,
and these are not at all tit for wagon-
eerlng.
It has never occurred to anyone to
cloar most of these trails. They run
COLOR AT THE FAR NORTH. |
■■tease and Brilliant Color and Skirt at >
Surpassing Loveliness.
Frederick Wilbert Stokes, who wan a j
member of the first Peary Relief expe- j
dition, gives a new idea of the charms j
of arctic landscapes in a paper on
“Color ut the Par North," which he has
written for the Century. Despite the
desolation, he found, from an artistic
standpoint, a land of beauty, with seas
and skies of surpassing loveliness. The
intensity and brilliance of color im
press the beholder ns something super
natural. Our sojourn was from the
middle of July, through August, niul
a few days of September — a period
whon the polar latitudes are teeming
with animal, insect and plant life. Of
this brief period only am 1 qualified to
speak; but from the accounts given by
those who have passed through the
long, dreaded night season, the phe
nomena oocuring In the heavens are
most beautiful. The chief peculiarity
of color at tho novth, so far as my
short experience tells me, Is that there
arc no semitones, the general effect be
ing cither very black or Just the oppo
site, Intensely brilliant and rich in
color. In fact, a summer's midnight at
the north has all the brilliance of our
brightest noon, with the added inten
sity and richness of our most vlvkl sun
sets, while noon, when the sun 1h ob
scured by threatening masses of storm-
clouds, Is black. Indeed, it is the true
land of “Impressionism."
I remember ono brilliant morning
when the mcasurelens ether over
head, a huo of exquisite blue, re
peated Itself In a perfect mirror of the
sea. Far nway on the otherwise clenr-
,cut horizon a lino of pure white ice
shimmered its light up through a pink
ish yellow stratum of mist, which
bathed in delicate greenish blue an
enormous Iceberg that strongly re
sembled an anoient cathedral. In the
afternoon tho sky, a threatening hluclc,
overhung a vast oontorted sheet of
white and pink, ooinposod of Ice-floe
! and colossal bergs looming up above
I its muss at intervals, with deep black
f etches of water, the whole carrying
he eye to the horizon—a tapering
band of deop rich blue merging Into
tho sky. In the immediate foreground
of the l«e-floe, near the water’s edge,
were shallow pools of delicate blues,
purples r.nd greens.
Of tho wealth of color In flower,
lichen and inoss; of its curious riches
Clay.
"We are rut olnj," the preacher nafth:
"The heart Is clay, and clay the brain.
And soon or late there comelh death
To blend us with tho earth again."
Well, lot the preacher have It so,
And clay we are, and clay Rhall be;
Well, so be It' for this 1 know,
That day does very well for me.
When clay has such red mouths to kiss,
Strong hands to grasp. It Is enough;
How can 1 take It aught amiss
We aro not mnile of rarer stuff?
And If one totnpt you to bellevo
Ills choice would bo Immortal sold.
Question him: Can you then conceive
A warmer heurt than clay can hold,
Or richer Joys than clay can feel?
And when perforce he falters nay.
Hid him renounce his wish and kneel
In thanks for this same common elay.
-1'ull Mull llmlgok
What is
CASTOR IA
The Task of Life.
It Is not death hut life 1 fear
If nil llio other things were done,
'Twcre not so hard at lost to hear
The summons of the sunset gun
Uut all the chance, the seeming fate.
Pull ar.d unconscious, hold us hark;
When 1 have conquered these. I'll wall
In patience for the last attack.
—P II. Suvugo, In Youth's Companion
von to collections
T. B. DAVIS, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnau, Ga.
Office upstairs In Carpenter building.
J up and dtyya tho sfcpejieat iiwJijJOs that pg manifested In Insect, shell and unl-
' a linrse Odti climb, and they wind j mal life, and of its wonderful liin'r,lng
through forests and jungles of low
growth bo dense that I had to buy can-
1)11. J. W. DANIEL,
Dentist., .
Newnan, Ga.
(Formerly of New Orleans, I,a.)
Offers his professional services to the people
of Newnau und surrounding country. First-
class work; charges ve y rea-onnhle.
E)Bk-oillee ups'airs over Askew A Martin's
store, In Halhldo building.
A. A. & J. L. BARGE,
Physicians and Surgeons,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice In Newnan anil surrounding
country.
Calls day or night answered promptly.
Ofnne over U. K. lllaek A Co.’s'store.
O. W. PEDDY, M. D.~.
Phyeipjan and Surgeon,
Newnan, 3a
Office over W. K. Avery's Jewelry Htoro.
Offers Ills Horvlcevtf) the people or Newnan
and surrounding country. Allcallsausweied
promptly
9RLAND9 McClendon —
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Practices lu all the Courts.
Gives prompt attention to all busl-
Iness placed I11 his hands.
vaa “chaps” or leggings to ward off
the thorns. Nevertheless, 1 met men,
and even women, on these trulls who
were dressed just as they would be ut
homo, and who got through without
tatters—how, I dou’t know. Often tho
vegetation was so thick that If my
companions or I halted for even less
than a minute, those who kept on
were totally lost to view. This wild
ness ia on the steep hill-sides, Wherever
there Is a bench or a pluteau one comes
upon a clearing here and there, with
Holds sown in oats, potatoes und buck
wheat, and, perhaps, a little tobacco,
to be rolled Into twists for borne con
sumption and fftr barter with tho
“neighborhood men.”
It is on tho wagon roads that ono
meets the greater numbor of people,
skill as shown on the great Inland ice,
loe cap and glacier, I have neither
purpose nor pen to write. ^Tliis now
.world of color awaits Ibe ono who can
truly describe It. In nil these color
effects at the north there lies a wlzurd-
llke power Of enchantment—a dis
tinctive uncanniness that, basilisk-
like, both attracts und repels. Great
nature’s pltilcssuess broods over it
with a force and penetration possibly
;not equaled, and surely not surpassed,
1 In any other quarter of our globe. It
is a land of beautiful and awesome
dreams.
THE " CHILTERN HUNDREDS.”
A Singular ProvlnWftTS* lb® British l*ur-
1 hull cut.
Government Is full of “xnuke-bo-
lleyes." Ono of the fictions In the Eng-
DR. HATHAWAY ft CO.,
SPECIALISTS^.
(Regular Graduates.)
Are the lending and most mccciBfuUpeclatlBts end
will give you help*
Yoiiftf.'ond mid
dle aged men.
KcnmrkaMo to-
BUltH tillvfollow
fd our 1 mu ment
Many yruri of
vailed nmlBUccrB*
ful rxiicrlcnco
In ihu ubc of curn*
tlvo methods Hint
wc aloneownund
control for nil din
orders of nirn who
have weak, unde
veloped or dis
eased organa, or
iwlio nre nnlTcrlng
ifrom errors or
youth and excess
lor who are nervous
nnd Impotent,
the acorn of their
■fellows nnd the
contempt of their
friends nnd com-
Bunions, lends uh
to guarantee to nil patients. If they c.un possIHv
be restored, our own exclusive treatment
xvlll afford a cure.
WOMRNI Don’t you want to get cured of thnt
\v< aknoBs with n treatment that- you cnti use nt
home without InstrumontsY Our wonderful treat
ment bus cured others. Why not you V Try It.
CATARRH, nnd diseases of tho Skin,Blood,
Heart, Liver nnd KlUnoym
ft TP fill. I ft The most rnpld. safe nnd clYcctlvn
remedy. A eomplctu Cure Guaranteed.
KKI\ l)Tftf!ANF.M of nil kinds cured where
many others huvo failed.
VWtfATTTRAlA mftrilAROKft promptly
cured In n few days. t.Milek, sure und snfo. This
iucludes elect nnd lionorhuii.
TRUTH AND FACTS.
Y/e have cured panes of Chronic Diseases that
have failed to get cured nt the bauds of other special-
iutHutul medical Institutes.
win KM1IF.R that there Is hope
for You Consult no other, ns you may wssto vuluublo
tlnto. Obtain our treatment at once.
Ifteware of freo and cheap treatments We give
the beat und most scientific treatment nt moderate
pr'ees an low as can be done for safe and skillful
treatment. FKER consultation at tho otlleoor
by mall Thorough examination and careful ding
nosts. A homo treatment can ho given In ainnjonty
of eases. Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men;
No. for Women; No. H for Hkln Dlsenses. All corre
npondenen answered promptly. Business strictly eon
lldentlnl. Km Ire treatment sent free from observa
tion. liefer to our patients, buukn and business men
Address or call on
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.
32 1-2 South Broad Street, ATLANTA. QA.
, , ,, , . ,, I lish system Is that a momher of ptu-lji’,
but the roads are not exactly iWslan I mcn t eunuot resign his no ? t. ifitt el
)ou ever s. iqso that cross {bough ho is not allowed to njbijfn lie
ic niouu a ^ have a queer way of j may nevertheless retlT6 from purli -
• or, „ Into partnership with j merit at his pleasure. IIo asks to b-
Streams. Sometimes they run up tho . appointed steward of tho ('hilt"" i
streams, so that at high water 11 | Hundreds, JJ, Is tbo uieory of tno lirit-
farmer fording his way looks like a hu- f ^ constitution that when a member
man Neptune lloating In his wagon, j parliament accepts office under 111 •;
while his horses, up to their bellies In | crowni h e must obtain the consent <•!
his constituents. Thus his Seat is
H. A. Hall.
W. Y. Atkinson.
ATKINSON & HALL,
Attorney* at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice In all Courts of this and
acUoInlngcountleB and the Hupreme Court.
W. L. STALLINGS,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice In all the courts.
MV-Prompt attention given to collection!
Office with It. W. Freeman, over Newnai
National Bank.
\v7a. turner,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice In all the Courts of the State
and elsewhere bv (medal contract.
MORELA N D’S
GRADED HIGH SCHOOL
18 94 -- ’9 5.
FACULTY.
John H. Fe.vtiikrston, A. M., Principal.
Mas. Bertha Howell Camp, M. A., First
Assistant.
Mrs. Mary Keith Feathers ion, Second
Mrs. Emma B. Howell, M. A., Principal
Music Department.
RATES OF TUITION
Primary Department, per month 12.00
Preparatory Department, per month 2.C"
Grammar Department, per month 2.1
Academic Department, per month 2.00
Music Department, per month 3.00
Business Department, per mouth 5.00
BOARD OF TRUSTEES.
J. T. Matfiki.ii, President.
W L W M Camp’ { Inspecting
T. N Bingham, 1 Committee,
A. P. Camp, Secretary and Treasurer.
CALENDAR.
Fall Term begins September 3d; ends De
-•ember 21st. Vacation ChristmaB week.
Spring Term begins January lnt; ends after
the expiration of four scholastic months.
A grand commencement at the close of the
Spring Term.
JOHN
Reiipectrully,
H. FEATHERSTON.
HODGE & STREET,
BLACKSMITH AND WOOD SHOP
(D. J. FOLDS* OLD STAND,)
NEWNAN, GA.
W E HAVE LEASED TH E SHOPS
the rear of Hardaway & Hunter’s and
are prepared to do all kinds ■ baggy and
wagon repair work, painting, < promptly
and at reasonable prices. Hor- - hoeing arid
dlantatlon work o specialty. work guar
anteed. Give us a call nnd get « r estimates.
nODGf -IKEET
tho crystal water, show neither legs
nor flippers. Sometimes the stream
abandons Its bed and takes to the road
way for a ploce, each such Interchange
by the cne or the other being made to
get a clear right of way through tho
tree-cluttered, bowldor-strewn region.
Down in the valleys the roads are lat
ticed In by the very Oiliest fences that
are anywhere used by farmers. They
are called snake-and-rlder fences, and
tho snake part Is made of from seven
to eleven rails laid zigzag, one pile of
bars set this way and the next pile set
the other way, with at least one
rider," and sometimes two, perched
on tall crossed poles above the snake-
work. Thus does West Virginia pay
generous tribute to the agility of her
mountain-bred cattle, poor and thin to
look at or get milk or beef from, yet
able to bound about like self-propelling
rubber balls. t
A nUtorlo Stone.
At the foot of Ward’s heroic statue of
Washington, on the high steps of the
subtreasury building, says a New
York contemporary, is a brood piece of
stone carefully covered with a wire
grating. It Is so placed that should
the image of the immortal father of
his country come to life and step down
from his lofty pedestal he would stand
on the same spot where occurred the
crowning triumph of his career.
Through the protecting railing can be
read the following dim Inscription:
"Standing on this stone in the balcony
of Federal hall, April SO, 1788, George
Washington took the oath as the first
president of the United Htate* of Amer
ica." When old Federal hall was de
molished the sacred stone was care
fully preserved, and it now oeeujjileti aa
nearly as possible the same position as
before. Very few people have ever
noticed it on Che high base of the
statue, where it is fittingly placed as
one of the rellea of the nation’s birth. «
// i‘ VS- ~<;.VS v'\v^^S > \\Vv
Cnstorin is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s proscription for Infants
nnd Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotie substance. It is n harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It Is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria is tho Children’s Panacea,
—the Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
"Castoria Is so wt'll adapted to children that
I recommend It an superior to any proscription
known to me." II. A. Am-nicn, M. 1>„
111 Ho. Oxford 8t„ Brooklyn, N. Y.
" Tho uso of ‘ Oantorla ’ is no universal and
Its merits so well known that It seems a work
of supererogation to endorse! It. Few are tho
Intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within onay reach."
Caiuxm Mahttm, I). I).,
Now York City.
Castoria.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Hour Htomneh, Ularrhcna, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di
gontion,
Without Injurious medication.
"For several years I have recommended
your ' Oaitorla,' and ahall always continue to
ilo no ns it 1ms invariably produced beneficial
results."
Knwia F. Pasusk, M. D.,
120th Btroet and 7th Avn., Now York City.
Tub Ckntaitb Gimp any, 77 MiiaaAY Hmurr, New Yobs Cm
JACKSON OFFICE FURNITURE
COMPANY,
JACKSON.
TENN.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
vacated; and ho must bo elected agui.i
after Ills appointment if liq wishes to
accept the new office.
A member wljp \yishes to retire from
parliament applies for his nominal of-
fleo of stewards 6f the Chllteru Hun
dreds, Is appointed, thereby vacates hit
peat, and then Immediately resigns his
stewardship, so that the situation i'.
vacant for the next member who winli( s
to retire. How the custom grew up is
explained In the Quarterly Review.
A crown steward is custodian of ono
of the Manors, Hundreds or Honors be
longing to the royal demesne. Tin-
manors # wero Anglo-Raxon township-,
and “Hundreds" were collections of
townships within a given shire. The
(ibuses perpetrated by these stewards
Jed to the reduction of their numbers,
until finally, under Charles II., nearly
all the stewardships were abolished.
One of tho few crown stewardships
which survived was that of tho three
Hundreds of Chiltern, In the county of
Bucks. Through this region pass the
.Chiltern hills. From tho earliest Nor
man times this property has been “in
the hand of the lord and king."
In 1750 the “Ingenious constitutional
fiction" which Is noted above came into
practice. In that year the stewardship
of the Chiltern Hundreds was conferred
upon Mi. John Pitt, M. P., solely that
fie might vacate his seat. It has been
constantly in use for that purpose ever
since, and the stewardships of the
Other crown manors have been applied
In the same way at various times.
It is a disputed question whether the
Stewardship oan be refused to any ap
plicant, although it was refused to one
fnember half a oentury ago. Perhaph
the right to resign will soon be granted
without resort to this ancient fiction.
W. L. Douclas
rUAP IB THE BEST.
VnWbNOBQUCAKiria.
*5. Cordovan,
FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALL
V3.*- o FlNECAlf&KAN0ABOa
$ 3. W POLICE,3 Soles.
«'’SnS NEN 5
BoysSchoolShoes.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
W'L’DOUOILAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
You can save er “•*■ ■ *• L
Bscsuss, we sre tlfelargest manufacturers of
advertised shoe* In the world, and gunrnutee
the value by utamplng the name and price on
the bottom, which protect! you against high
prices und the middleman's profits. Our shoes
equal custom woik in style, easy fitting and
wearing qunltlies. We have them sold every,
where at lower prices for tile value given tlmn
any other make. Take no substitute. If your
dealer cannot supply you. we can. bold by
P- F. CUTTINO & CO.
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES,
SCHOOL, CHURCH AND OFFICE FURNITURE.
Schools and Churches seated in the best manner. Office
furnished. 3L-^“ Send for catalogue.
WHY YOU SHOULD
INSURE IN THE MUTUAL LIFE.
Report of Twenty-seven Companies to the New York In
surance Department, from Date of Beginning Bus
iness to December 31, 1893.
Out of n total net profit of (128,5111,155 oiirnt-tl by llio corporations collectively,Tho Mutual'
l.lfo Iiloni! OHi iiud (iH.hi.Ultd, or onc-liulf. This Is llio HtapondoiiH fuct In tlio history of Life
'""'JTiii’hoiii of all llio premiums paid to llio so Coral companies by their polloy-holdora from
ic, ilatcs'of organization to n,e close ol tin, year 1HUH Is >2 412,217,222, of which The Mutual
Ifc-H portion Is hut MKH,145,255, thus showing I hat, with only twenty nor cent, of tho colloe-
VI- caiiltttl of the business, The Mutual inis earned for Its policy-holders as much profit as
as earned by tin, remaining eighty percent. The Mutual Lire has mudo gross payments M,
,.s policy-holders of *:«17,:CH,B40, a return of more than twpnty-two per cent, of the total like
payments made by all the companies collectively. , ,, . ,, ,
1 And again, The Mutual Life exhibits In payments already mudo to Its policy-holders and
noney placed to their credit, und to ho paid
7,331, being
No
More
Weak
Eyo« I
Load la Profession.
There is no country in tho world
where practice end profession ere more
widely separated than la China, says &■
K. Douglas, of the British museum.
The empire Is preeminently one of
make believe. From the emperor to the
meanest of his subjects a system of
high-sounding pretension to lofty
principles of morality holds sway,
wfiilt the life of the nation is in direct
contradiction to these assumptions. No
imperial edict is complete and nO'offi
cial proclamation finds currency with
out protestations in favor of all the
virtues
fk* Bartk ImM for Tea Days-
The greatest earthquake that has
ever occurred within the limits of the
United States since the dlaoovery of
America began in California at 2:80
o’clock on the morning of March 26,
1871, and oontinned until the 4th of
April, during which time the surface
mf the earth wee odntlnnally agitated,
not being perfectly quiet for aa much
as a single moment. The most remark-
ale thing in connection with the whole
affair (especially when we consider that
Mount Loa, Sandwich islands, and
Mount Hood, Ore., were simultaneously
agitated) Is the fact that the region
around San Francisco did not receive a
single vibration. The entire face of
Tnzo county, Cal., was changed, and
thirtv-four pet -ons killed.
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain Sata and Effective Remody tor
SORE, VRK and INFLAMED EYES,
l‘rr>{ittrln{j fjonf/-Hlf/htntlne.nH, amt
Itcntorln0 the Siylit of the gfff.
Caron Tear Drops, Granulation, Slyo
Tumors, lied Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes,
AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
Also, equally elflracloiis when nm-il In
oilier ennlavlleN, sin'll ns Ulcers, Fever
Sores, Tumors, Nall Ulioum, Horns,
Piles, or wherever Inlluminailon exists,
HITCHHI.I/M SALVE limy bo used to
id vantage.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISIS AT 29 CENTS.
OR. 8. C. PAR8ON8’
FEMALE REGULATING PILLS,
Regulate the meases, relic-
pain and fullness, backache
headache, heaviness, flooding,
displacements, dizziness, not
vousuess, weakness and all dis
charges. Tumors of tho womb
or ovaries relieved without use
of knife and dangerous opera
tions. PRICE ai.oo
Offict7y,N.Broail8L Hourt 0 to 1.
For pamphlets, question lists, w
private Information, addreaa wltl
stamp, bb. a t. riBsoss.AUuu.us
Bold by U. R. Bradley, Newnan Ga.
DR. 8. C. PARSON8'
GREAT NERVE RE8TORER
A Hexiial and (Jeneratlve Tonic
always successful In sperms
torrlue, loss of seminal power
sterility, barrenness, self ahus-
and general debility of the bruin
and sexual svstem. Restores thi
snap snd vigor of youth and
given full sexual ability.
Price It a Bottle; 6 Bottles »5.
Office 7 l /i N Brow) 8t. Heurt U to 1
For pamphlet or private Infor
motion, address with stamp
DR. S. C RAR80NS, Atlanta, Ga
Hold by O. R .Bradley, Newnan Ga.
Tiie Herald and Adverti
SEkand Atlanta Weekly Con
stituaon one year for $1.50
In fulfillment of policy contracts, the sum of
as Mutual Life, ami each of them enjoying as good opportunities In locality and time,
singular and significant fact Is conspicuous, that with nil their sonarato pretenses of special
grandeur they arc merged In that one muss of competitors which, cont rasted with tho Mo
unt Life 'show that with four times the amount of capital, with nineteen limes the number
**-- — * - *.-cpuld management, they can only
inol
of years of active operation, und wllli tweiily-slx times the |
show a Joint net profit equal to that of The Mutual Life aloi
Forfthc best plan of insurance consult
A. W. HILL.
SAVANNAH AND WESrERN RAILWAY
ATLANTA SUB-DIVISION..
H. M. COMER AND R. J. LOWREY,- Receivers’.
KKAIi MOWN
II 45 am i D 15 pin
7 U5 am 1 II 27 pm
7 55 am
8 17 am
8 25 am
M 40 am
10 10 sm
10 40 am
10 45 air.
11 15 am
11 45 am
U 42 pin
II 51 pm
h 58 pm
7 22 pm
7 36 pm
7 40 pro
7 53 pm
8 07 pm
8 20 prri
IN EFFECT SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1894
No U+
5 55 pm
(I 20 pn.
8 35 pm
it it A I! or.
STATIONS
Leave...
.. Grinin
. Arrive
Hi.rmlM.
...Turin .
... Hharpsboro
... .Newnan
... Purge nt
....Whltesburg
... Banning
... Clero
Arrive..
.... Carrollton
.. Leave
No
10+
No 14$
No
#8+
8 45
am
8 65
urn
7 15
pm
8 17
ein
8 36
am
tl 20
pm
8 03
a in
8 24
urn
6 63
pin
7 42
am
8 08
a in
5 23
pm
7 26
am
7 57
ain
4 58
pm
7 III
nrn
7 62
am
4 60
pm
6 46
am
7 28
a nr
4 00
pm
II 28
am
7 14
am
2 42
pm
8 1/7
am
7 01
uni
2 22
pm
6 08
am
« W
a in
2 05
pm
5 46
am
6 44
am
1 52
pm
15.30
am
II HO
am
180
pfu
(Trains marked thus ( rku dally, except HundHy, and those xr arked thus (. Funday only.
For further Information as to schedules, lutes, etc., call on or write to
W. A. Moore, ftupt» Macon, <Ja. T. «. Krahiek. i gent, Ncwoan, Ga.
W, Y. Hjihuman, Traffic Mgr, Tnio. 1). Kliwk, General Hnpt. J .t. Hailm, U. P. A.
Huvunnah, Georgia.
ATLANTA AND WEST POINT RAILROAD, AND WES
TERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA.
RKAI! IK1WN. |
IN EFFECT JUNE 12, 1894.
Dally.
No. 36.
11 BO am
:2 56 pm
1 55 pro
2 03 pm
2 5ft pro
ft 25 pm
3 5i pm
4 10 pro
4 35 pm
5 08 pm
5 21 pin
5 50 pm
6 15 pm
Dully.
No. 84.
11 60 pm
12 45 am
1 52 am
2 00 nrn
2 W? am
8 80 till
4 10 am
4 28 am
4 55 am
6 36 am
5 45 am
8 16 am
II 10 n m
flatly.
No, 38.
i Dally
iKx. Hun
: No. 12.
Lv
8 2> ar»! Lv.
7 an am| Lv.
816ami Ar.
8 19 am; Lv.
865am; Ar
0 24 am:
8 48 am:
10 00 am:
10 21 am! 6 48 am
10 40 an. : 7 17 am
10 58 am; 7 32 arnl
11 22 uinj 800 am * r.
II 40 am: 8 25 ami. A r
HTATJONH.
... Helma Ar.
Montgomery. .Ar.
.. Chehaw . ...Ar.
.. Opelika ... Lv.
Opelika .... A r.
West Point.. Ar.
. I-aGrange . Ar.
. Ilogansvllle. Ar.
Grantvllle .. Ar.
Nuwnun ... Ar.
Palmetto ...Ar.
Knlrburn... Ar.
. .Last Point.. Ar.
. . Atlanta .... Lv
Dally
Ex.Hun
No. 66
7 25 pm
8 35 pro
640 pm
6 10 pm
5 45 pin
Dany
No.ff7
Dally.
No. S3.
• 20 pm
8 17 put
7 86 pm
7 33 pin
6 52 pm
6 27 pm
6 06 pm
6 55 pm
5 28 pm
i 06 pm
4 56 pn
4 35 pm
4 20 pm
8 a, pm
6 50 pro
5 50 pn
5 52 pro
5 02 pm
4 27 pm
ft 55 pm
3 40 pm
3 10 pm
2 39 pm
2 24 pm
1 55 pro
1 30 pm
JOHN A. OF.K,
General Passenger Agon:.
G. W ALLEN,
Trav. Pus, Agl,
GEO. C. HMITH,
Pres’l. J- Gen, Man.