Newspaper Page Text
by ALEX - CHUR C H .
VOL. 1.
BY ALKYL. ClIUECII.
Cishr-.hctl SL-.rjr Satnrday nornlng.
Offiod—Iu Cm Masonic Buildlm*, South side
Public Square. Tip Stairs, Clevel and. G a.
TERMS:
One copy, one year, $1.0
“ sis months, SO
“ iirc^ month, - so
ADVERTISING RATES:
-,/ Ad-.-Hrtiseiuents inserted at the rate of .$100
.perInch (or loss) first ic union, and 50 cent:
•
.'for eac.h.suh .equent insertion. the nninber of
Advc.rii.-Hi'uiit...' t ha vim-::
insertions marked on thorn, will he published
until forbid, and charged accordingly. twelve
Contracts made for three, sis, or
moni.hs'on libera! terms.
Local Nolle ; 10 cents per line.
.-, ■, cry communication for pub', i tiof. in
the AnvuitTirtu:’. tr ust l.car tbo name of thcaa
* her. not r.eet --rarily for publication, but us git
ar.inty o'rood faith, AV e will not ua r&spdiDsiblo
for the opinions of correspondents; and no
■ :•< : uan.iication, will bo admitted into its col
ir.ii , having for its end th o ^defamation of
4 private' ebaruutor, or W any other way scur¬
rilous in ils import. s.'s!
, ... . u . ' t '■: 1
importance solicited—the. . it must be _ Lric 1
and to coiciii'jni-utions, the point. b’.since,; letters, and
' All
< money remittances must bo v. :dressed to
ALEE. CUT ft OH,
Publisher.
T T ;3S PAPER may be found on file
J ,, p. Rowell & Go’s Newspaper St.)
T'nverti.itv Bureau (10 Spruce be
v, here advertising cotitracts may
made for it in New York.
enjeial J, inner on r.
- : CLEYE ’• D CIRCUIT-1883.
.;■ Sunday, Eleven o’eloel, X it Cl arch .
.‘even oVl^ik nt night, RmUtnu's Ci«ai»«.- 1 ;
Eleven o cl-ook, Mossy Creek ;
.,
tfternoi :30, O’Kcfiy’e Chapel; Friday
l,Of"re the Third S.-nday, Eleven o’clock,
jviue Lid-re: dstrr my before the Thitr.
Sunday. Eleven o’eiiK'K, Mt. l'lcasunt.
wya;rU-tir.uuay, f.ievcs o o : . - f:, - 1 <ts a n t,
S..1U01I. ihlif. I.ou.h-vitlo : -..ploy ba
-, ■ « y ’
(Jhuftaho.fC-r.ew
.
night, Cleveland. Pastor.
her. IV.-0. Buti.er,
MAGISTRATES’ OCRTS.
y; Tit Ton.alt—S 6 l List.,—Third Fridays—
V, r F. Scars, N. 1’., C. C. Blalock, J. F.
.
*Iovv Ureek...423 Diet.....Third Saturday...
William 1’urgev.iea, N. 1’., J. At. Dorsey, J. if
Naooocr.ee...427 Dist.....First Saturday...
I). Si. Horton, 0 . V & N. P.
. Shoal Creek ...8 52 Ui-t.,...Fourth Satarday
II. C. Hunt, N P., J- W. Blackwell, J. I’
BIuo Creek...721 Dint.,...Second Saturday...
A. II. Renderaon, N. 1*., J. H. X reomue, J. 1 .
Testnteo...55.'i DUt.,...Fourth Saturday...K.
M. Castleberry, N. 1*. Augustus Allison, J. P.
Tow;. Cre-U...Diet.,...Third Saturday...
W. 13. Iliuvkuts, N. I’., J. K. iIvA‘-e. I V.
ARRIVAL AND DL’PARTUR 13 OF MAILS,
(iitinesvllle Mail—Tri-Wookly.
Leaves Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
at 8 o’clock, a. m ; Arrives Monday, Wednes¬
day- and Friday at 4 o’clock, J;. m.
Diairsville Mail—Tri-4veekly.
Tho same schedule as Gainesville route.
Uayesvillo, N. C.—Somi-Weekly.
Loaves Wednesday and Saturday at S o’¬
clock, a. in., and arrive tho same days at S
o’cluck, p. 11 . Mail—Scml-V. eekly. ..
DaKlonega 8 o’clock
Loaves Tuesday and Friday at o’clock
n. ra., and arrive the samu day at d
i>. m. BELL, Contractor.
W. B. kimsey P.-M.
henry d.
QJ
W. K. WILLIAMS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Cleveland White County Ga. ly.
" HARALSON
FRANK L.
A, TTORNEY AT LAW,
A..., Atlanta Georgia.
ill pracF.i-o in all the Counties embracing
tVestern mi Blue Ridge Circuits. Also
2 18 Federal Supreme Cour. s of the State.
11 business entrusted to my earo will re
■ e prompt attention.
Jan. 01 th 1880 wi’y. ly.
J. J. KIMSEY,
4 rrORNEY AT LAW. Cleveland Ga.
/V. Office, room No. 4, Basement wl’y. Court iy
-tense. Jan 10th T 88 P.
__
M. C. BOYD,
4 TTORNEY and COUNSELOR Al'.LAW
, V Cleveland Georgia. of
Will r>notice in tlie Superior Courts
White, Hull, Dawson, Haborsbam Lumpkin,
and the .Supreme Court cf tbo State,
.Tan. ltitb ISatf. wkl’y Jy.
GEO. K. LOOPEK,
l TTORNEY AT LAW. Gainesville Ga.
\ v- ill pracriee in any of the Courts
., v, .'Circuit. The eollection
..aimsinoinptly attended to. '
fT'-m p' MTm & ri! W £1
1 vmjm w mma . :l
OUR OWN SECTION—WE I, AS OR Ft’ i’S. ADVANCEMENT.
CL 1 {V!!L/>ND, G L, SATURDAY M 0 B/LN 8 ; MAY 8 1880 .
Unlit! ft'!!■:! StlHo
A baby’s boot, and a ri> .n of wool,
1 :i,'ird and soiled ; T mtt;
Odd thing, you ray, ! n - : fou’ra right,
Round a seaman’s nerk, tl.i: tornsy night,
Up in tbo y ardr aloft.
Most likely Ks folly, but motes, look hero;
When first X went, to sea,
With A woman wedding; stood on ring th^Rar-off the small, strand, soft hand
a on
Which clung to close to rue
My wife, (led bless her ! The day before
She sat beside iny foot;
And tbo sunlight kissed her yellow hair,
And the dainty fingers deft and fai-,
Knitted a baby’s bool.
The voyage was over; I camo ashore;
What, think you, found 1 there?
A grave the daisies had sprinkled white,
A cotta go empty, and dark a 3 night,
A nd this beside the chair.
The little boot, ’twas unfinished still—
The tangled skein lay near;
But the knitter had gone away to rest,
With the bub-: asleep on her quiet brent,
Down in the ch.ti'chyard drear.
A Child its Court.
the ro’/ER op Tittrai,
The following beautiful illnstratiou.
of the simplicity and power of truth is
Horn tbo p a of S, A. Hajcamond, form¬
erly editor of the “Alabama State Rsg
ister.” Ho was an eye-witness of the
scene in one of tho higher courts ;
A little girl, nine years of age, was
offered as a witness ;;g3mst a prisoner
who was on trial for a Riony eota'Aictea
in hrr father’s house.
‘Now, Emily,’ said die counsel for the
prisoner, upon her being offered as a
witness, ‘I desire to know if you under¬
stand the nature of an oath V
•I don’t know what you moan,’ was
the simple answer
•There your houor,’ said the counsel,
audressing the court, ’is any thing fur
til ..v r.tcossary to demmistruto the valid
Itj of my objectioL i This wittioss
v-ifjdDvmi* 'ii 'V.hfita.no^c 33 ...t;----
.■> ■ u
"‘Lotus fiee,’said tho judge. ‘Gome
here my daughter.’ '
A.asured by the kind manner and tone
of the judge, the child stepped toward
him, and looked confidently into his
face, with a calm, arui clear eye, and a man¬
ner so artless frank that it went
straight to the heart.
‘Did you ever rake an oath V inquir¬
ed the judge. The child stepped back
h a look of horror, and tho b!oi
«•««**’ ■
She thought lie intended to inquire if
she had ever blasphemed
‘1 don’t mean that,’said the judge,
who saw her mistake/ ‘I -mean, were,
were yon ever a witness before V
‘No sir, I never was in court before !
was the answer.
He handed her au open Bible.
‘Do you know that book, my daugh¬
ter?’
She looked at it and answered, ‘Yes,
sir; it is the Bible.”
iDo you read it f he asked.
‘Yes, sir: every evening.’
‘Can yon tell us what the Bible is?’
inquired the judge. she
‘It is the word of the great God,’
answered
‘Well, place your hand upon this Bi¬
ble, and listen to what I say,’ ks re¬
peated slowly and solemnly the oath
usually ?N®w,’ administered to tho witnesses.
said the judge, ‘you have
sworn aa a witness; will you tell me
what will become of you if you do not
tell the truth?'
‘I shall be shut up in State prison,’
answered the child.
‘Anything else' asked the judge.
‘I shall never go to heaven,’ 3ha re¬
plied,
‘How do you know this?’ asked the
judge.
The child took the Bible, and turning
rapidly to the chapter containing the
commandments, pointed to the injunc¬
tion, ‘Thou shalt not bear raise witness
against thy neighbor,"
•I learned that before I could read,’
‘Has asy one talked to you about
your being .1 witness in court against
this man V inquired tits judge.
‘Yss, air,’ she replied. ‘My mother
heard they wanted me to bo a witness,
and last night she called on me to tell
her the teu commandments, and then
we kneeled down together, and she
prayed that T might understand hew
wicked it was to bear falee tvituess
agaiust my neighbor, and that God
would he p rue, a fittle child, to tell the
truth as it was bejore Him. And when
I cam® up here with my father, she
kisst-d me and told me to remember
the niuth commandment, aud that God
would hear every word that I said.’
‘Do yon believe -his? a*Juki M tigs
while a tear ; i.i J’L - and
I. ■ up i quivered wif.li chiid^wR'i onto! . *» ■
. - -. ' ){co
; • i ii x.nner that howcl lier < '>t jo a
of ihs truth was pone 06 . .
‘God hi os”, you, roy chihV % tile
jm' ‘yon have a good mjihtv M, his
witness i» ecnnpetcr?./ ho c-. >»•
1V , ■■ i (■•>. iria! for m > i’fe, aitfT 10 1 -
crut of the charge Kgainat i ; ,< ! i 4
f.ray to God for such a •yitEiesv. -fK'
Lei her ba examined.’ TV
T’ic foraa
■?
Vr,.--;-edii.i;v <.. '! *
and hlessongot asnotuiftad -thV •- )V
i’..os, dsKroyiag many l.i*;pg P , ft
property. One of :f 2 ! . 1 ,
Mississippi, which, in th«' town
ion.-, kn «d sevantecu <j Wt- 1 Vtad
cd-twenty-two amt wrecked yy . pfcUy
valued at one hundred thou -AjMp[ )j}aM,
Another related to r, A* /r>siv»
tornmio in the State of I r~ , teod
ad wii it v.roat destruction of li'(#s ! pro
pet ty, oot definitely stated. vdiicfi TI third
was in Dalton, Gcrngia. u oofiwf
several houses and vvrooked ;»• uV treff,
but fortunately was attended. * Vf »loss
of life. V
Those three anfiotlccem v .won
the heels of that uiipreccd'R'' . ‘ irna
undo in ML-nuritho cents." V: thich
bosom wan Marshfield, of destruction—dosttwing which itr^p^ith the h
hundred ,i . grtfiibvCrjjtm tT«csab’ nd
■wounding a si ill -
Thc-to terrible ciisp,aye t -
gits cf Naturo, which «ut sj ^
human prevision an<: precat.
all wi. . dread. Thty art;
new--dating btytk only i i
in respect to their fre-. *
■■ pnarontly multip dug vm y
i -. hi . come to thW of !?.>.: '
Mi-.'joa?fhu of violet ..-.ibr’M* wen ■
■ uon dvacce4 j approhf
r ; uvud
I j: 'jtivntly.
I is tveih
■ rv n> tnlfesf
t rnad >, v.Licitl
' ;
; . "iEIMBBI® . „
1 , the track of
i.oavens ' ml.
uovi-a rapidly overEMst*
Such a cloud we ■< ; r ticihe/ed ?S4jl at
distance, passing over a re
gioa, and though we’anver s*-' - or vv;A
much about a tornado, Lit ’• -*b it
marked one; au-.i passing 0 m o track
•1 few weeks after, ‘saw t!,wa;,judr, tire
huge pines wrenched from butts,J earth or
wn-nched sSl'at their as ir they
sd been pipesteitui; and soma 'eases
Subscquetit (' i. ’'' ore
other such storms in South )rwj ..'L’l
and-sever ii more have b ,
iu the western and central arts of tho
State, iu ail cf which tha.i Jit / forces
of the storm laughed at al suivau oh
etruetions. It behooves e ryhody to
build with a view to the b ; resistance
ro the Hinds: bat, after I, a house
caught in tho difeet trat of one of
these mighty built. tornadoes is Ams, bo mat¬
ter ko 10 Torn ;d mp are seat,
perhaps, as another rem tinder ®f human
helplessness. They arc ancient institu¬
tions, for the Book te ila *« that tho
whole family of Job w ept away
by one of them; but it 5 ‘,-j of late
they seem to come every ay*.
Now let philosophers u ns what is
the abnormal condition oi •■■j heavenly
bodies,-or of tus earth's . face or at
mospbera which phenotp«i- develop^ eh a crowd
of these awful iL -It is aa in
Joii-i 'It:.: impossible. inq :i; . igc a/ ■- m cr
cure bo Are taey due at
all to any of the rapid chain;;-. 3 going
on iu the face of. tho American conti¬
nent— for illustration, to tue wholesale
denudation cf the timber ■) la any case,
unless a caange takss pi.are in the tern
per of the vsiuds, anoti) f must be ad
d©d iasutano© to thO tL risks 0 iisks CO voref lfO*a «ora<lL.c-0S. by proper^
liicideiu *------r
Ail With a. Moral.
More than forty five years ago there
was a bar-room in tho northwest oor
ner of tho market squ iu the city of
Savannah, behind the counter stood
a youug ciork, wuoso business it was to
deal out fire brands, arrows and death
to those who came. He did not then
think about the moral character of hia
business, though his heart was aching
with a sense of sin and by no meads in
sympathy with his surroundings. He
would not now eogaga in such business
fur a world. One dab a young man,
tail, erect and of commanding appear
anco, walked in minus boots, hat, coat
and vest, with a manijtc's stare on his
countenance. A few loungers present,
such us are always found in such a
placo, began themseivesat -
to name®
his expense Mean-tiM the facts of his
history were brough re-pectable out. He was and the
son of a highly man
ininister of ? Go - 1, a young r
In l ratrriod a your.<
ifiaphy :>,? well ;'V: cd as himself,- -vV
i La’cxrou to the city »vea moauK-d mi a
1 fine hors:*, saddle and bridle, well drwa
* ed, with $25St in his pocket. All tit I -
j ‘ money, ; :>, saddle and bridla, hat,
i.aittned iaWts, cm .. and vest—was i- k. Ha
iosensible to the insults ' f his
! iN^ieators, until, of decided
cue them
aid 1
droel t-b bolraffly:, joke, tool; a gun, left in -:ha bar
% drew oft' V-- ya- ;
b.aiza cover, and corame cad pr •• tra
flona to aim. Tin r «. victim Lm'. ■ 1
li all , ntimeani
with a gjaam : f intelligence, folio'..;;
the :ooh of a a- an, and r •;
upofi^hi'-i with tad fury i an out;, -wd
tigdr, saying in stentorian tones, tbav
be. was ,,aot nfmhl of heaven or of
Godmortha •,’• Til.and itslmli r.evi r bo
caid. that '.ho eon of -(calling his
father's n«tne{—was afraid of a gun. ”
Thfira was no fun in this. Tho era',
was put away, im wuc pso-fied v 'h
drink of brandy, ami in a rhort; time
was lying on ;; cellar door, just across
the at-re at, in a pitiable shameful and
i disgusting plight. Some t-.-.m efior
wards, not very long, ho died at
ja ! county si;-" not one hundred miles
from Savannah, and was buried
"''SfoSfbStend- • h row an hm
ored i clorgymvn u , > Baptist deno¬
mination, and in .;. , eccat in tho city
a§a legato to v t Gtpoist Stats Con¬
vention.—&• ••.■Mink Jb'ms.
In a bygo . > time in Old Virginia
industrious and pious Uncle Jasper,
and lazy, good-lar-uothiog Providence
belonged to tho r-ame kind master, who
had assi rned to each of them a plot of
ground to cultivate for their own bon
eilt, and ou which to raise melons and
other truck for market. One bright
Sunday rooming Uncle Jasper was sur¬
prised rode by his Baptist minislor, who
by. bis natch and found him hoe¬
ing out tho weeds.
Preacher (reprovingly)—“ why, Jas¬
per, don’t you know this is the Sab-,
(ba h of iho Lord; that you should do
work to-day?" Pno*
.or, brass you, Maisa, Kliged
mmtm gt: vftia ( <■■■■•- i’tdtwu
< he'll attend to that.’
Uoo'e •>upper (leaning on bio hoe han¬
dle aud laughing vehemently)—■“ Pore
God! He, be, he!—good Lor massy!
Hu. he, be! Prov'dence ain't gwyne
work his own patoh. Teo lazy,'Good
for nuffiu! Can’t trust dat niggahl’
When a man dies in Fiji, they don't
have to get a certificate of death ana
| a burial permit, and hire atr-under
! taker sod a clergyman aud all that.
The relatives just dance around the
deceased and howl awhile, and then
firs the remains into hole in the
ground, if they ain’t required for
food.
Life is but a span; marriage 13 a dou¬
ble team; youth wedded to,old age is a
tandem, an old bachelor a sulky.
There i*re fiftv-one furuaces in blast
in the Lehigh Valiay, Pa, with an an¬
nual capacity of over 600,000 tons of
pig iron
Postpou --;d Shei iifs Sale.
WILL Ba sold before tho Court house door
la tb .9 town of Cleveland White county Ga.,
on tbo first Tues ay iu June next, wit’uin th«
legal hours of sale, the following dotoribed
pr party to wit:
Part of lot vf lav;] No. !fv>, in Uio 3rd dis¬
trict of originally Habersham now White cona
| ty knowu as tbo Lewis Arthur komarfteaJ
1 place, containing eighty aeres more or less,
j levied on aa the pro;; rty of J. J, Merritt and
| 0. 0. Blalock, to sat;.-I v a ii fa issued front the
j I faTor Paljaor of doctased, J. P. Osborn, ter tho Administrator purchase of M, K.
money cf
I said land. Levy aatia end returned ta me by
J. W. McAfee L. 0 .
T. C, HAMILTON, Shff.
Aprii 10, 1880. tod’s
Letters bisiaission
GEORGIA White County.
; WHEREAS, Milt»u Moora Exseutor of
Hugh Ferguson decaased, reprssents iu his
| petition to the oanrt only filed end fioterci
| »n recard, that h« has fully admimisterod
Hugh Fergassn's estate. This is therefore,
j t» cite as.il person* coEserne i kindred .ted
creditor* to show cause* if any they cun why
1 said Exeouter .should not be discharged I'rosa
his said itast nod receive ict'srs ot disasissioa
ou the first Monday iu Jure nezt. Given
, „ d hind .nd offieUI aignatnre. This
j j Mll „ March h 4t!i lm 6 th , iaAAC 0 AK8, Ordinary, im.
» week in your owv :.>m. T rms and $6
Adllres3 Haj.x-ktt ; ct Co.,
Port ,, lan d ilain e.
*■> to $~O ^.perdayathonre. free Ad(lrcss StinsoK So Spies p * Co worth Port $6
. _
1 ^ Maine
A YEAH,
NO. 18.
h : lor* of Bisraisrloa.
Georgia, white County.
"'7 fl S ' v H. J. lloastoa, Kiecstor of
VV Wilil&ta L.SamptM a«ee«*«d, represents
*u ta.i Coartiu his petkicn July fiisti siij en¬
ured on res ’.'J, its: ke bas i'uliy administered
William L. -.uinpter’a estate. This is there
fere to cite ail persons concerned, hindtvl xud
creditors, to show ciais®.if ;■ nv they e. ti, why
i-dd Bir.i-.ato; sbou.d «»t be discharged from
hi.- said trait, and yrcaire letters of dUnjirstoa
on tbo first Monday .: i u 5 1 K.-'O. (liven un¬
der my b nd and old La si. .’tare. This
Metro 32nd 1889. ISAAC UAKS, Ord'y.
March 37. Sa.
Establichei 1278
Pie LeK.T F..y UN a!
So Was?,
Only 81,59 si Near.
9 ! 13 RllPj tIU proaelmur Thk Chicago i Uq oh.no I/edger of the is now seventh ap
i .
ty I gtestab’ijccd ^ . year or Hu existence, in tho mthVt having of Ik';. h-:>cn
The Leik#e 3 was started by i ‘s
conductors with son to ‘tnls.f'iv
^ iings j to tiie success of the eater
Py prise. id any literary ventures of a
kimirci kindred ciiaractor had been made iu
11 t miser
ably failed. T o aoa of journalifim
a 1 .50 ■ ‘ was stranded fitrevrn newspaper with the enh-.uprises. wrecks of
3 Others that were living, but stms
gggliiig m lur/e since for yielded a precarious to inevitable existence, fate
A (ear. pri and to-day n gone ted tho in down, Chi only leaving weekly The story-paps? Ledger
ongo. &
(plane The Ledger has not attained the
of success upon which it now
solidly rests without earnest, well
directed effort. Its conductors have
labored earnestly and persistently
not only to make it an excellent lit¬
erary journal, but also to make the
& Year, reading world acquainted \yi;h it.
Thousands upon thousands of dol¬
lars havi been expended in bringing
fts its merits to the attention of the
»s reading public. In fact, The Ledgeb
has been the most extcnsively-ad
vertised newspaper in the West.
ij&The r publishers have feeling of
a
pi*1o o-t.. t-he success that baa at
ft&S&l <heir e^oris to bn; id up a
4 Ite '-toi 4 :, paper?' Am
*
' puluishmf, .0 not ineau to relax
; tlieir efforts to rhake Tna I^dgeb
| the best weekly Rewnpupe* in the
! ! West, but intend to persevere In the
work, and during the coming months
will still further increase its value
and usefulness. w
Tho weekly contents of The Ledg¬
A Year. novels, er and embrace, Family several Doctor in short addition department, stories; to its a Home serial
em¬
bracing letters f rom women of ex¬
perienced heads and hands,on house¬
hold and kitchen economy, home
1.59 children, adornment, and tho recipes tganagtonent for the cure of of
many of the ills to which flesh la
f ^ heir; a Young Fe-lks’ department; a
A Year ‘-’i department devoted to Current Lifc
'4lit * jj f pi {% from orature, the consisting latest magazines; of choice excerpts Scien
c r a
vi iific department, giving tho latest
' s intelligence In regard to
■ nev/disoov
eries, mechanical inventions, etc.;
also biographical sketches, historic
papers, of short travels, poetry, and a mass
articles on misccllaneona
topics.
Address
A h Vnar Suibistd | THE JLEOGER, CLicago, I!
Subscriptions to the THE CHIC
LEBGEE will be received at this
Ti* i® S.lMcs*
ATLANTA AND CHARLOTTE AIR
LINE RAILROAD.
MAIL TRAIN GOING EAST.
Leave Attar??:............. 2.30 {>!•'.
Arrive Gainesville................. ..S.Afl pm
I.cave G aine.-ivUle................. .....Lai ,
Arrive Ghanettf................ . ....... .‘;U a e
GOING WEST.
Leave Clinrlutte................. .. ..12 , \
Arrive Gaivcsvillo.. ......... . . ....... ... h -20 am
Leave GamusviUo..a.................
Arrive Atlanta................. . ..
DAY PASS BN.: E R T ;
Leave Atlanta........................... '
Arrive Gainesville................ .
Leave Gainesville.........
Arrive Charlotte......................
GOING WEST.
Leave Charlotte.......................
Arrive Gainesville..................... ...
Laave Gainesville...,,.................. .
Arrive Atlanta.......................... ; ■
Ml EIGHT AND ACU'iAlOO •». : u n;
GOING EAST.
[Daily except Sunday]
Leave Atlanta...............................
Arrive Gainesville.......................... U.;, uh ,
Leave’Gaincsville........................... 1 0.25 a m
Arrive Central................................. 6.20 pm
GOING WEST.
Leave Central.................. fi .50 , m
Arrive Gainesville..........................I ..;5 J;1
Leave Gainesville...........................2.00 am
Arrive Atlanta........................J.......s.la ni
Close connection at Atlanta for all points
West, amt at Charlotte for ali points East.
G. J. I'i iikaci-.i;, Gen. , Man,
W. J. Houston, Gen. ?. amt T. Ag’t.