The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 15, 1906, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

1», 1W>. Insurance That Insures . whgt s man want* when he protection for those de pendent upon him. A Policy He PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE protects him. while he Is pro jecting them, as It provides In- ,nr.nce against the loss of his Earning Power by Accident-Ill- ,e>s or Total Disability as well ts by De ath - A broken leg oi a case of ty phoid fever would not seem so bad If he knew his Earning pnrrer was insured and he was not suffering a Financial loss as well a» Pain. Annual Dividends to reduce the premium or In-, crease the Insurance as desired. In asking for Information and rates, give your age and occu pation. Clements Shafer, manager, 413-14 Peters Building, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. ‘ DOUBLOONS A THRILLING NOVEL OF MYSTERY. TRAGEDY AND A STOLEN FORTUNE By EDEN PHILLPOTTS AND ARNOLD BENNETT AWNINGS TENTS UPHOLSTERY AVAIER i 'VOLBERG 130 So. Forsyth at A 25 Per Cent. Investment; An Investmsnt yielding a guaran-i teed 25 per cent per annum. Any lady or gentleman with $100,j and upward, apare capital, -can, j without rlak, aecure the above In-; come, payable quarterly or annu-: Illy. Principal withdrawable on SO j days notice. For particulars, address JOHN HENDERSON, j P. 0. Box 165. Nashville, Tenn. ] leeiseeiiseeesss as# s $••#•••*••••••••••••••••• •••••• A ttltatlfle frnfmut ftt Whiter, Opium, Msr« pblit, Coca/M, Chhrtl, Totoccp and Haaratlba* alt at Hant Exhautllaa, Tba Only Kesley Inifi* tuts in Georgii. Woodward Aw„ ATLANTA, 6A, School of Millinery. ho you dealro advanced Instruction, •r, ire you looking for employment “* will give you good returns for BJ labor? Address HIM E. ELIZABETH 8AWTELL, 40 1-2 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga WE BUY Joppor, Lead; tlraas, Zinc, Raga, Bot- . Burl “P. Wash Cotton, Sacka. All ordera solicited. ''EOMONT IRON AND METAL CO, 175 Madison Avenue, Both Phones 1739. ATLANTA, QA. Jblhhed Plato Glass for utoros. Wished Plate Olasu for residences. , hod Plate Glass for show casos. ^ost stock of Plate Glass In tho UCOOLEDGE St SON., - *- X. Forsyth 8L Sam Jones Tabernacle Meetings, Carters- o,. ville, Ga. .^ffmper 15th to 23rd, iuclu- M So Uc ;" tcrn and Atlantic rail- hitn,' ' "“ I tlcketa from Atlanta- hn.” *?.'* Intermediate stations, to rau 1 r * te of on# *• for Netan!. WlU **F °‘ tv er and other ministers i"“*n. Prof. E. O. Excell will tharg. of music, and other C ‘r/ rs o( note will attend. 5V" lce « «ach day, 10:80 a m, nl'V’’ 1 ’' 1 * : W. P. m, and the "01 Cn.-tersvDIe wtil welcome IK, with the same ho*- 7 ‘hey have always shown. CHA8. E. HARMAN, Gen. Pass. Agent T " t N *Tion7[ | , oental association *n»i, r ," ?' n, al work for persons kau i.. ' ‘heir names. Call at .the keworjli , r “f ''ollefe. I to I*, comer *M ,,,' nu, ‘ and Ivy street, regie- Btda, •‘I’lHdntments for the clinic win,,, September it. Expert perform all clinic work. CHAPTER XVII. A Move of Mrs. Upott.ry's, He waited at the comer of ^ong Acre and Bow street. One of the seven most dismal streets In London Is Long Acre. It Is Impossible that a street given up to banana merchants and motor car middlemen, a street, more over, which Is assisting at the alow agony of the honed-carrlage Indus try, should not be dismal. And on Sundays Long Acre expresses the con centrated dlsmalnesa of the entire town. It Is a miracle of melancholy. Philip passed the time In trying to guess whether the paasersby were go ing to the Great Queen Street We« leyan chapel or to the Freemason'S tavern or to Queen Charlotte's hos pital. He could not guess. They all looked alike. They were all struggling to live through the Sabbath gloom till Monday. He had foolishly arrived at the trys- tlng place too soon. The fact was he was Inexperienced In the art of keep ing an appointment with a lady. First he thought It quite conceivable that she. too, would arrive early. Then when a clock struck a quarter after 7 he began seriously to expact her, and to look for her In four directions at once. At 7:30 he ceased to make ex cuses for her. Ati 7:45 he blamed her. Yes, Incredible as It may appear, he blamed her; and It dawned upon him that love does not necessarily connote happiness. At 8 he was alarmed. He decided to stroll quietly and alertly down Bow street to Wellington street. She would be obliged to come up Wel lington street. He had not achieved more than Bfty yards—he stood be tween the opera arid the police court, those grandiose symbols of pleasure and punishment, and was glanc a poster of a fancy dress ball at fabulous prizes were offered—when it occurred to hfm that Harry Starkey might have sent her somewhere else and that she might not arrive at the tryst by way of Wellington street. He new back to hla corner. There was no sign of her. The clock which had struck 7:15 aow struck 8:15. She was exactly sixty eternities late. A green Kings Cross-Victoria omnibus lurched up the road. “Yet a little space,” re- flerted Philip, "and you will lurch no more up thla road and your horses will be dead and duly eaten, and the motor will rattle past In your stead." He could have eat on the ground and told sad stories of the death of things. He had perhaps never In all his career felt more depressed. He waited, waited, waited, wearing out curbstones under the mournful glint of gas lamps. Then at 8:35 he observed that a cab had drawn up about five yards east of the corner. “By Jove!” he exclaimed. "She may be In that!” She was. “I've been here a long time,” ehe said brightly, through a thick Sell. Now Philip knew that the cab couldn't have been there for more than thirty second* at the outside. But he said: 'Tm awfully sorry." He had spread his wings and In, an Instant had reached the supreme pinnacle of happiness. The foregoing eighty min utes were sponged out of existence, and he sosreely noticed even that she had no consciousness bf being late. “What are we to do now?” she In quired. ”1 will tell you what we are to do now,” he replied, with briskness. "Driver, No. 101 Hanover street." 8he made room for him and he got Into the cab. , He pretended not to remark the change In her. But In reality It almost stupefied him. He would not have be lieved that clothes could maks such a difference. 8he was dressed In mourn ing; a black skirt and a tailor-made jacket, a large hat with two plumes, and the thick veil encircling her mys terious fact as a cloister Iptloses a nun: white gloves! She was the llnal word of feminine elegance. She was amaxlng, bewitching, unique. It annoyed him to think that the simple stupid Tony had sat seventy- three nights running In the same stall to worry her with his stare. An Income of fifteen thousand a year surely did not give a man a right to commit such enormities! "I asked you what we are to do,” ahe said, as the cab rolled off. “I beg your pardon," he started, and then recovering himself: "Have you dined?" "No." "Have you by any chance iunchedT” "I think not,” she laughed. It was the first time he had heard her laugh. “So I Imagined,” he said; ”ws are going to eat something at the Alcaxar In Hanover atreet." “But my dear friend,” she protested, "I cannot possibly eat In a public place.” ”1 had thought of that,” he replied. "One can have a private room at the Alcaxar. C'My*dear friend." his heart blissfully repeated the words.) “On!" she• murmured. "Of course.' "So Mr. Starkel fixed you up?” he observed after a pause. “Yes, and he wax very flattered. He wanted me to stay for dinner. 1 told him I couldn't." "And the xear?" "The scar Is gone?” "May I see?" he asked boldly. She meekly raised her veil and show ed him her face, pure and heavenly. Ravlahlng gesture! Magical episode! Yet she had done nothing but raised her veil and smile and lower her veil. And he thought again. “All my life up to thla day ha* been wasted. -I have just begun to live." And If there had pnly been a luncheon basket In the cab he might have wished that the cab would roll on forever. At the Alcaxar discretion reign*. It Is the "note" of the restaurant, which prides Itself on being smalt and select, and on Its proximity, to St. Georges, Hanover Square. Nevertheless, the famed discreetness of the Alcaxar scarcely stood the test to which It was subjected when Philip and Miss Pollex- fen found themselves In one of Its pri vate rooms on the flint floor. A ven erable waiter had charge of the din ner which Philip ordered, a waiter who knew human nature as only a waiter attached to a discreet restaurant can know It. The waiter brought In the oysters and placed them between the lovers*and hurried out. Mary Poll**- fen thereupon raleed her veil In[ordtr to begin the repast. And then the waiter returned suddenly with a lem on neatly bisected on a charger. He Saw Mary* face, and accustomed though he was to conceal his feellnm 1 ' they i *ere too many for him on this occasion. One could almost see hl* startled lip* forming the word Ol- r *Msry made no sign, but Just as tbs waiter was leaving the room again, she “W&n'dr .h. said in her golden voice. __ •Madam Y* (Copyright, 19M. by IMen rblllpotts and Arnold HcnnctU You have recognised me, haven’t "Yes, you?" The aged fellow hesitated. srinm " madam. 1 "I am particularly anxious not to be recognised. Do you understand? 1 feel sure that you can keep a secret. I fancy you have served me before, somewhere." "Yes, madam. In the Golden Room of the Grand Babylon. I used to be there. I left when Felix Babylon sold the place to that American million aire." "Ah! Well! I am.going to rely on you not to recognise me. You will for- get utterly that you have seen me." “Certainly, madam." She opened a morocco purse, and handed the man a sovereign. He bow ed and took It, and Immediately re turned with It on a plpte. ' upoi me, madam. all, madam,” said th« wal- "You may rely. But—" He stopped,-extending the plate In a respectful ni/inneiv. Mary- -Pojlaxfen comprehended that, without 'witting, she had wounded the feelings'of a fal low creature. .. "I beg your pardon, my friend," she smiled faintly and took back the sov ereign. “Not at ter. The Incident was closed, and the din ner proceeded. It proceeded much too quickly for Philip, who ordered enormous quan tities of food In.ngfler that, the meal might never terminate. They did not talkWbout the Corner affair. Pushing aside the terrible actualities that sur rounded them, they exchanged opinion* about matters of the completest unim portance. It la extraordinary how In- a discussion, fori Instance J blue points, qatives. Os- Colchester* may become In the light hands! IPWllfl. felt fhat•'he was getting to know' Mary more Inti-* mately every minute. And eve/y min ute was delicious, divine, dreimllke. They heard the bell of St. George. "It la 10 o’clock,” she remarked with a certain significance of tone. , "Tes,” he said regretfully. "I sup pose we must be going.” And then, to postpone the moment, he summoned all his audacity, and hazarded an observa tion that had been on his tongue for nearly an hour and a half. "Your hair has grown magnificently!” and he add- 1. "If I may say §o." She was Indeed wearing a superb coiffure. "That Is ■ Harry Starkey," she re-1 plied. "He I hoisted. He will never do things by halves. He calls himself an artist and he Is on*; So Jfe In sisted on the half. He also, furnished the purse, these rings, and my umbrel la. As for the hair—I hope you don't mind." Her voice was so exquisitely apoto- S stlc that It made Philip blush. Lol he was excusing herself to him now! Not content with accepting hla advice, not content with obliging him, not con tent with trusting him,, she was now being humble to hla masculine mighti ness! It wns Ineffable. "Mlndl" he murmured. He rang abruptly for the bill, km paid It without the slightest examina tion. It might have been called a heavy bill, but happily he had several sov ereigns beyond the two Incriminating hundred pound notes. The aged wal ter got back the better part of the re fused sovereign In an unmsulttng form. "I will have another go at Mr*. Upot tery,” Philip said, when they were crossing the pavement In charge of the commissionaire who of all the discreet Alcazar - staff' was the most discreet. "King*way,"'he ejaculated to the cab man. "I will tell you when to stop." And In tho cab they did not speak, they did not speak nt all. Mary was waiting for him to state hie plans, and he was wondering what precisely hla plans were. He had no desire to apeak. He was content in the silent Intimacy of the cab. He stopped the vehicle. In Kings- way. a Utile below Strange street, and he got out. ’ "Stays where 'juju are, please, whispered. "You are leaving me?” ahe questioned plaintively. That night It seemed aa If she could iy nothing to him that was not Intox icating. The famous widow lx sure to be back by this time," he answered, will see h6r:' At all coats I will see her.' If necessary I will give her Into custody at- onde. In any case I will coirs back to you here aa quickly as possible. We.shall know better what to do.” She paused. "Dotbe.eaneful," she said. And he- went, waving a hand to her, nhd telling the cabman not to move. Mr. Hllg.iy, pale and shaken, had reinstalled himself once more In the little green office. Philip popped his head Into the office and put a question to Mr. Hllgay. Mr. Hllgsy's reply caused him to whistle a long high note. He stayed a moment In the hall, and then ran back to the cab In Kinga- way. "You have been quick,” said Mary from the mysterious gloom of the cab's Interior. •He's gone!” Philip-muttered. •Who?" ■Mrs. Upottery!" “Gone?” "Yes. Came In a about 7. Collect ed all his shirts and things and went off In a hansom.” • “Where tor' V'lnto London. Into heaven knows where. He's evidently suspected us, and he’s cleared out. Td give some thing to know where he has gone." "He may have gone to Poplar," said Mary. ."Poplar? Why Poplar?" "I told you I'd spent a day or two In following Mrs. Upottery about, didn't I?" Mary answered. "Of course! I'd forgotten! Well?" • "Twice he went to a house In Pop “WHEN IN THE COUR8E of human eventi It becomes necessary" to VULCANITE - It Is ths logical thing to sise, for reasons too numerous to mention. People who have bought Vulcanite are buying It when they need roofing again; There are facts which actually hap pen and they speak louder than words. It does not require expert labor to npply it It la recommended by the National Board of Un derwriters and Southeastern Tariff Association. "YOU CAN PUT IT ON.” g'M’ See that this Seal le on every Roll, ATLANTA SDPPLY GO., 80LE„8TATE AGENTS FOR GEORGIA. 29-31 South Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Gs. J. C. GREENFIELD, Prat. C. JL PEEK, See’y. DOWMAN-DOZIER MFG. CO. Manufacturers of Fire-Proof Windows, Doors, Cornices, Skylights, Crestings, Finials, Dixie Ventilators. Contractors for All Kinds of Sheet Metal Work. 20-22 Trinity Ave. Both Phones 525. B. L.WILLINGHAM, H. H. TIFT, President. Vlce-Pres. W. B. WILLINGHAM, Sec'y and Treat. WILLINGHAM-TIFT LUMBER COMPANY Rough and Dressed Lumber,. Bnsh, Doors, Blinds, Builders' Hardwire. 200 Murphy Are&uo. Take Bast Point or College Tark Car and, get off at McCall's Crowing on Leo Street Bell phone 85 west; Atlanta Phona 71L C. A. GOUGE. 83 N. Pryor St. Tin and Sheet Metal Worker. If it's made of metal, see me. BELL PHONE 1443. MONCRIEF FURNACE CO. 103 S. Forsyth St. Heating Plans and Estimates Free. The place to get your furnace. They install the best for any kind of fuel in residences, schools and churches. Both Phones. All Kinds of Building Material. Get Prices From ALEXANDER LUMBER AND MANUFAC TURING COMPANY. Factory and Yards, corner South Pryor and South- , em Railway. Phone 8354. Cltjr office, « North For syth, Austsll Building. WOODWARD LUMBER CO. Hardwood Interior-Finish St Mantels, Doors, Sash St Blinds Send Your Plans f<5r Estimates. Atlanta, . Georgia. WM. WILSON. Paint and Decorative Contractor. Large Contracts a Specialty. Contracts executed anywhere.. Surety bond. 59 8. Forsyth St. Atlanta, Ga. Both Phonss. HAHR-DAVIS LUMBER CO. PLANING MILLS, OFFICE AND YARDS: 333 TO 339 DECATUR STREET. Rough and Dressed Lumber, Shingles, Laths, Sash, Doors, Blinds and Builders' Hardware. Our saw mill Interests in Tift County, Ga., af ford us facilities to give prompt service and at the lowest prices. Dimension timbers a specialty. Both Phones 3725. .WOOD FIBER WALL PLASTER. The original product, and the only plaster manufactured in Atlanta. Can be put on at as low cost as the lower grade substitutes that have come into the market. We can readily show this, so do not be misled. GEORGIA WOOD FIBER l PLASTER COMPANY. Whitehall St. St Cent. R. R. Phone 1152. Atlanta phone 400. Bell-393. 'Dixie 'Tile and Cement Works YES, WE ARE -UNDER BOND TO THE CWY TO DO STREET SIDEWALKS. LET US BID ON YOUR WORK. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. PHONE W-445. DO YOU WANT $16.00? Yes! Then don't pay 166.00 for a Boggy when He will sell you ft better Buggy for 140.00. We I you ft better Boggy I _ civ* you the dealer’* p?ont of 118.00. Why not make thU profit yourself by buying direct from our faoterj t - - _ _ and light run ning. Don't buy ft Buggy until you get our catalogue and great Harness offer. Write to* day for oat^logoe No. a and Barnet* offer. NAM« .. , - ■ ■ ■ - Golden Cagle Boggle* a; equal to the Boggle* your d tri&OO. Handsomely finished i mi u Golden Eagle Buggy Co. du.u,m. ROUND TRIP And Cheap One-way Rates -TO- CALIFORNIA AND NORTHWEST Round trip 8ummer Excursion* from all point* Eaet to Pacific Coast and Northweat until’September 16th, with special stopovar privileges, good returning to October 31iL 1906. CHEAP COLONI8T ONE WAY TICKET8 TO CALIFORNIA AND NORTHWEST FROM AUGU8T 27»h TO OCTOBER Silt U*e the splendid through eervlee’pf tho 80UTHERN PACIFIC from New Orleans, or UNION PACIFIC from 8t. Loul* or Chicago to destination with 8teamshlp Lines to Japan, China, etc. Round trip tickets account. Baptist Convention, San Francisco and Los Angeles, on sale from Sept. 2d to 14th, final limit October 31st WRITE ME FOR RATES AND INFORMATION, J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, General Agt., 124 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga. R. O. BEAN, T. P. A. lar. No. 7 iotton street.' It'a off the High street.*' > "What sort ot a house?" "I don’t know. A house.” - "I mu»t go there.' I mustii't waste a second. I must go there.- No. 7, you ■ay.” Tonight r ‘Instantly." 'But—Then I will com* with you." 'Excuse me, Mlsa Pollexfen, you must do no such thing. You must go to a hotel—some quiet hotel. Go to the York. No one will recognise you there. Besides you can keep your veil on." “And you?—‘How shall I know— what?" ’ i You will hear from me or see toi before.9 o'clock tomorrow morning.’! “And supposing 1 don't?' "But you.wlll. I shall not fall to let you hear.” "But supposing I don't?' "Well, then, you had better see Sir Anthony Dldring, and tell him every thing. He’s the best friend I have.” "What? Tony a friend of yoursl He perceived at once that her appre ciation of Tony was neither more nor less serious than It ought to be. And he wsa glad. Because the mere fact that Tony had enjoyed her acquaint ance had given rise to a certain ridic ulous jealousy In his heart. He nodded, smiling. “Now It Is clear ly understood," he said. "You go to the York hotel and you stay there.” "As you wish,” the anewered. She put her lovely head out of the cab window. "U’a Impossible for me to thank you." "No. 7 Cotton street, eh—off Poplar High street7” She nodded. He Instructed the driver to go to the York hotel, gave Mary one glance, raised his hat, and hurried off In search of another cab. (Continued In Monday's Georgian.) Important Change of Sched ule on Seaboard Air Line Railway. Effective Sunday, September 9th, 1m portant chango of schedule will be mado on the Seaboard Air Line. Par ticular attention la called to the fact that train No! 3s, which' now leaves Atlanta, 9:16 p. m., will on and after September 9 th, leave Atlanta at 8:04 p. m.. Central time. Sam Jones Tabernacle Meetings, Carters- vine, Ga.' On Septemper 15th to 23rd, Inclu sive, the Western and Atlantic rail road will sell tickets from Atlanta- Dalton and Intermediate itatlona, to Cartarevllle, at rate of one fare for the round trip. Sam Jones will - be assisted by Evangelist Qllver.and other ministers of renown. Prof. E. O. Excell will have charge of the music, and other goapel lingers of note will attend. Three service* each day, 10:30 a. m... :00 p. m. and 8:00 p. m., and the people of Carteraville will welcome the great crowd* with the same hos pitality they hare always shown. CHA8. E. HARMAN, Gen, Pas*. Agent. Tile Rev. Mr. Good ms* <tn*peeiln( him- •.If la nilrror)-«’*rollBe, I don't rra’ljr iM-tlete I ought to wear tbl» wig. It look* like living z lie. Mr*. Oopdmza—Hire* your heart. Avery, don't lot that trouble you. That trig will never foot anybody fur’one moment.— Chicago Trlbuao, The Prudential Insurance Company of America Home Office, Newark, N. J. AKERS & SKINNER, Managers for Northern Georgia, ANNOUNCE The removal of their offices from the Second Floor Prudential Building, to 37 N. Forsyth St., Ground Floor Prudential Building. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. ! RAILROAD SCHEDULES. Trains Lsavs Atlanta. Ntw Tsrmlnal ! Mowing the Arrival and Departure of r*#. Station, corner Mitchell and *enger Train* of the Following Hoads; Madison Avenue. NvEuTrilth An1> atLaSTIc ItAiLhOlUT . . I No.—Arrive From— ) No.—Depart To— N. B.—Following achodulo figure* pul»* • I Nashville.. 7:10 ami* 2 Nashville, b « am Uahed only as information and are not I _T! Marietta... 8:3a aml.H Marietta..12:10 pm auaranteea: . N**hvllle..ll:45 ninj # 92 Naahvlll*.4:50 pm *•(.« a u v« ** twtrv •«. ne» 71 Marietta... 2 51 pm J Marietta.. G 30 pin 4^0 A. M.—No. 23, DAILY. Local to Blr • i Na*hvlHa. 7:35 pm ♦ 4 Nashville. 8:50 mlngbam, making all stops; arriving Hi " " - ~ 1 Itlrinlniyhiim 1A«1IL m tn out chzuze. compoMU at ve.tu.uled day roache, .ud l’uliuan drawing room sIhii- lug cars Arrive, (torn. 7Ju a. m.; Chat tanooga 8:45 a. m.; Clurl.natl 1-M p. in.; LouIitIU. 1:1* p. «.: Chicago ?:ZI a. m Cat. tar wrvleS. All awalz batwMa At lint* and Cincinnati. l:si A. U.—No. 21 DAILY, to Griffin an<l< Columbus Arrives UnOtu 7:11 a. m.: Co lumbus 10. a. m. Jack 5:16 a. m.: liruot- ,ILY. J —I'umnzn^ to -Local MTV* all lamia on routs Arrive. \ Bruuawlck and steps . arriving P. m.; Kansas city t:«5 «. m., sad Colored. ‘J tin throagh without chango. Dicing care — — —its .Arrive, wash- ) japrem Cay raarbm bstween Att.nl:. °nU "■AS for 14.coo, arriving Macon !:»«. m. 4:10 P. M.-So. Ilk DAILY.—Macon and llewkliiMVIlie. I’m.man OOMTV.UOQ chair DAILY.—Pullman **plng car and my coachn to Binning, am. Arrive, Birmingham •:!* p. m.j tSf p? »i.-.No."«, DAILY, earopt inn- day. "Air Lin* Beil." to Toccoa. 4:80 P. M.—No. 33, DAILY—Griffin and Columbus Pullman palaco Bumping car • u<l nay coaches. *M P. M.—No. a DAILY.—Local to Fay •KevlU* SOd Fort Vail*/. ago P. M.—No. Ih, DAILY.—Through drawing room, and alMploa rare to Cln- ArifeR 1 ! 35, 1 °DAiTy.—Makes all lop*. Local to IlrtUa; arrive* II,-mu 14*0 ’"llfli P. M.-Ko. M. DAILY—Florida Llm- ll-l A aolld watlhotci train to Jarkaoo- vlll*. Fla. Through ale-plng ran and day roorb*. t» Jarkaoo*in* and Brunawlrk; ar. riv*a Jacksonville lit a. m : Uruniwtck U J? - >f t, M.-3ty l W. M DAILY.. .Through Vullmau drawing room aiecplog car. At- hvllle. 1:50 pm EoIUITa llAII.VfAY. j Depart To— Arrive Prom-* Havannuh 7:10 nnvMaeon........ .12 01 i ai’ksourllJe.. 7:60 am .Havumiah 8.00 am [itcoa .11:4 i mu Macon 4:00 pm S iraunab 4:0G pin HavanDah 9:16 pm ■coa 7 W pm Jacksonville., ft-30 Dm a'ITaxta a.nu M I’Ohit miiT 1 ROAD. Arrive From— I Depart To— *flalma .11:40 atarMontgomory 5:30 am •Montgomery. 7:40 pmi # Montg’m’ry.l2:46 pm •Dolm*.... . .11:86 tun •Belma 4:20 pm LaOrange 8:20 am.LaOrange.... 6:30 pm •Montgomery. 3-40 pim*Montgla'ry.ll:lG pm •DalTy. All other jraln* daily except Ban- day. All trains of Atlanta and West Point Railroad rompsny arrive at and depart from Atlantn Tormina) station, corner of Mitchell street and Madison avenue, T3E6Ki}l'ATtAlLR6Aft. vs From— s 1:00 , Depart To— —. _:00 amrAugusta 7:46 am Conyers 6:46 amjUthonl* 10-06 am Covington 7:46 mnfAuguata...... S» pm gift MB •Augusta...... 8:15 pm,•Auguata”’*.*.*. 11:46 p3 '’Dally. All other train* dally except Bo# SHAllliAltD Allt LINE RAinr^T. Arrive From— I Depart To— Washington... 6:30 amBIrmlugham.. 6 60 »m Abbeville 9:46 am,Mount# 7:20 am Memphis 11:45 sin New York.... 12:00 m E ew York 3:8» pm Abbeville.... 4:00 pm onroe 7:4*1 pin Memphis 5 00 pm Irmlngham.. 7:45 pin Washington... 6:00 pm ttbown In Central time. lant. to Shr.vrpqrt, Local alMnsr Atlanta to Birmingham. Arrives Birmingham t a a. m,: Meridian J1 a. nus Jackaou 2:» p. m.; vtrkaburg. t'u6 p. m.; Shreveport 10:M f-00 D p «l*»P*r» open to rer.lv. passenger. U SIGHT—No. 38. DAILY.—United state. Ka.t M.IL Solid vestlbulcq train Hlreptoa cara to New : ork. ltlcbm-md, Charlotta kid Asheville. Conch*, to Wn.hfngton. Dining route. Arrive# York 6:22 a. m. sleeper open to paaaenevn at 9:00 p. m. Local Aiiania>Asheville sleeper open 10:30 p. m. Ticket Office No. 1 Peachtree, on viaduct. IVN-rs budding, and new Terminal Statioa. potk 'P** -Jrrjwr- ... . - ^ Asneviue. i_oncn<‘a to tvnsning cars serve all meals **n mu Washington 9:30 p. m.: New Yo Local AtlantaCharlotte sleep rroeire paaaeneera at 9:00 p. 'Phone*. City 142 main Btatloa. ANNOUNCEMENTS. For County Commiuion.r, • T. M. POOLE. - i