Newspaper Page Text
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•Feioreburg __
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Washington ..
. baUnuure..
.FhUacelchla.
. New tor*...
8 44 pm at.
7 60amlAr.
Charlotte.
..vuaitotw..
Wilmington
-Norfolk
Nortol* (b)
He I # A .« . n. a.
. Baltimore..
Philadelphia.
•New Vtirk.
.Portaoioath (uj
Philadelphia
Mew lurk
.Portsmouth (w).
KLBhRTON ACCOMMODATION.
“ Castoria Is so well adapted to children that
X recommend It as raperlor to any prescription
known to me.**
H. A. AacBan.lL D.,
Ill 8a Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
11 Oar physicians in the children's depart
ment have spoken highly of their experi
ence in their outside practice with Castoria,
and-although we only hare among our
medical supplies what la known aa regular
products, yet we are free to confess that the
merits of Castoria has won us to look with
faror upon it."
Uarran Hoarrrai. aan Dmrxaaan,
Daily.
etween Atlanta and Columbia a. O.. with through coach lui Chan
X J'AMui^M C ,'«: P. V*’ N0, * KUnb *H. Ko ““.-
ihia, General Manager,
li. A SKWhAMJ, Div. Past. Agt.,Atlanta, Ga.
402— Daily.
read down
Train
Mo. aa.
-STATIONS
...Be lair..
•Groretown
. .Berselia..
..Harlem ..
..Hearing .
..Thomson.
..Mesenn
.. Gainst .,
-Norwood..
. Harnett..
Grawiordr’i
Union Point
Ureoh8U.ro
Hnekoobd
..Madison..
..Rutledge..
The Past
Guarantees
The Future
E D. STONE,'
Book and Job Printer
IN BANNER BUILDING (Second Story),]ui
15 Jackson St., Athens, Ga.
Haring [purchased from the Athens Publish
ing Company the BANNER JOB OFFICE, the
undersigned Is prepared to execute
JOB PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
Fine Commercial Printing a Specialty.
Tour patronage solicted.
B. D. 8T0NB.
a octal Circle
Covington
. .Conyers/.
. .Bit homo..
atone Al’tn.
others is certainly sufficient
reason for belief that it will
cure you. It makes pure,
rich, healthy blood, tones and
strengthens the nerves, and
builds up the whole system.
Remember
flood’s^
Warreutoa
. .Ai mr coin..
Culverton
. , Sparta ..
Dersraox..
. Carrs ...
Jtilledgvilie
. .Browns ..
STRELT car schedule.
First ear leave* Ball Park at T a. m.
First ear leaves Post-offloe at 7.» a. m.
First car leaves Baxter street at 7.*1 a. m.
■Leaves Port-office five minutes, twenty-five
minutes and forty Jive minutes after the boor.
Leave Ball park on the hoar, twenty minutes
and forty minutes after the boor.
Leave Milledge and Baxter streets one min
ute, twenty-one minutes and forty-one minutes
after the hour*
Cara meet at the -junction at tea minutes,
thirty minutes and fifty minutes after the hoar.
Last ear leaves Post-office at 1005 p. m.
Last ear leaves Baxter street at 10,01p.m.
Cara leaving down town at five minutes and
forty-five minutes after the odd hours and
tweaty.flve minutes alter the even boors, will
run out Prince and return via Boulevard.
Cars leaving down town at twenty-five min
utes after the odd hoars, and five minutes and
forty-five minutes after the even boon, will ran
out the Boulevard and return via Prince av e.
Be Sure to get HOOD’S and
Only HOOD’S.
THE POPULAR BARBER SHOP
No. 117 Broad Street-
The 8tadeQta|and public generally in
vited to patronize us. Host experienced
workmen employed. Hot and cold
baths at all hours. Prices reasonable
B. S. Haxbxs, Proprietor.
iBpplll
jv * * * ' * ’ i r ■
mis A-mirwtt oaninek, FRToay nOnnum, nuvemhbk 16 im>*
[he Athens Daily
PnbUshad Dally, Semi-Weekly aed ftanday
PHINIZY * UPSON.
6. C. UPSON Managing Editor
C. H. PHINIZY ANDK.8. UPSON.Leosorsand
Managers.
OTHE ATHENS DAlLYHANNERtSdelivered
• ■- “ •* ‘ — Tree,
per
by carriers in the city, or nislled, postage free,
to any addrera at the following rates: *5.00
», S 1.15 tor three mmitj.
otklv or Sunday RUNNER $1.0* per year,
to any
year. 82.60 for stx months
The Wo< kly or Sunday I, . .
•0 rente for * months. Invariably Lash In ad
vance.
Transient advertisements will be Inserted at
the tatoof fl.hOperHjuarelor the first Insertlou,
and 60 cents for each subsequent Insertion, ex
cept contract advertisements, on which special
rate-, can ba obtained. . „
Loral notices will be charred at the rate of IP
cents per line each Insertion, except when con
tracts for extended periods, when special rat* f
will be mads. . ,
Remittances may be made by express, postal
note, money order or registered letter.
All business communications should bo ad
dressed to the Bariose. Manager.
l^ery, , r-r- ——.•'—7—
os or failure to deliver with absolct
rsguiirity on the pert of th# carrion
Such Lotifloetion is the only means o’-
k no wing of the existence of any cause
for complaint and will be appreciate*!
accordingly.
A Banner
Adv.
Will do It.
No business man
can afford to see time
passing away with
out being put to its
full value. He should
endeavor to do some
thing each hour that
will bring up his
trade and increase the
profits.
A Banner adver
tisement will do the
work. Not only will
it bring customers
daily, but every hour
seek new ones for tlie
coming day.
VXlZPXXXaWXa
Fpsi-
ttw
certain
these effi-
or personal mc-
tbe compensation
of those p.>#tmuiere whose salary i* de
pendent on the amount of their sales
0' pntage Camps is fr*q tently ssrionf-
y a fleeted, aa ba* lately been illuttrat-
ed in at least < ne postoffice in the in-
medlate vicinity cf Boston. General
J* n a properly remarks that t‘iis prac-
iee is carried to a grievous extent in
some communities, and it sach an in
terference with the usual and regular
dbpoaitirn of the mails as, in bis judg
ment, calls for legislation by Congress
We should say so decidedly.
The method of seleoting Jndgae and
solicitors will be settled in the regular
meeting of the General Assembly and
not in caucus.
NOW IS THE TIME
If there ever was a time in.tbe history
of Athena when bar people staoull work
with 00 c rted effort it ia now. A1
Chough it has not bien confirmed by
the railroad cflloiale, it seems to be
definitely settled faotthst the Seaboard
Air Line Railroad Company conten -
plates building at an early date a road
from some point on Us road iu Nortl -
east Georgia across this section of tL
State to Cartersville to connect at that
point with the East and West rotd
leading to Birmingham, Ala. It
A CORNER IN ELK TEETH.
Loaekaaip Has Over 101,000of Then Locked
Ip la Safety Vault*.
Hr. John D. Losckamp of Billings,
Mon., practically holds the elk tooth
stock of tbo entire country, and to liia
already enormous snpply he* is constant
ly adding, the Indians and hunters
bringing teeth to him from all over tlio
country. Not every ono knows that tho
i-ik teeth, or nitlifr the tusks/of which
wo only are found in the mouth of tho
adult elk, have a practical commercial
value. The teeth are used an jewelry,
mostly os pendants oa watch guards or
■is insignia of the secret society known
as tho Elk?. The value of a tooth ranges
from 50 cents to £2.50, according to its
size, color and marking.
Mr. Losekamp lias now over 86,000
lk tcttli deposited in safety vaults.
Many of tho old ludiau dresses were
highly ornamented with elk tooth, some
of them being fairly covered with the
teeth. Mr. Losekainp has lived on tin
frontier ail his mature life and under-
lands Indian trading perfectly, yet he
has sometimes paid over £100 for a sin
;le garment thusuruailicuted, caring, of
course, for uothiug but - the teeth. Tho
Indians brill tho teeth to fasten them on
tboir dresses, and this tloes not iujnro
tho value of tho tooth, but they have a
much worse habit of sometimes stainiii.;
the teeth a bright red. This dye cannot
be extracted and depreciates the value
of the elk teeth for a white customer.
The Indians do not dye the teeth so
much now since they have learned they
can seil them for more in their natural
state.—Forest and Stream.
v :
•-
What is
IN EFFEOT.SEPT, 38,1894.
[ Atlanta and. Waahlrtgton Special.
SOLID VE8T1IIULED TRAIN, NO EXTRA FARE CHARGED.
No. 4*1
Daily.
sa;. 1 '
4 0*pm
6 to pm
3 03 pm
2 Mpm
116 p fi
re 4e |,nr
12 Ot p t.
6 ospm
4 oi pm
■ osp a
2 32p m
1 46pm
Castoria Is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants
- and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It Is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor OIL
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty yean* nse by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Cord,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cares constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas
toria is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend.
6 So a m
,7 to p m
••••* t7 ooai
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder |
Awarded Cold Medal Midwinter Fair. San Francisco.
CITT TAXES.
Please pay your city taxes.]
The time is short. The city
registration books close Nov-
suggested that Eiberton wdi be the | ember 20th at 2 o’clock, P. M.
A. L. MiTchell, C. of C.
Two Baltimore physioians say lying
i* an incurable disease.
Both of North Carolina’s new Senator*
will act with the Republicans.
Ihe preas of the State is backing
Governor Atkinson in his efforts to
puniah the Monticello lynchers.
The Cotton Grow era’ convention at
Montgomery urges the cotton planters
to rednee the aoreage of the next crop.
It is a settled fact that Mr. H. M. Cc
mer is to remain as president of the
Central Railroad under the new or
ganisation.
Governor Morton’s campaign ex
penses in New York amounted to near
ly twenty thousand dollar*. Judging
from hia tremendous plurality he might
have left hisHbarrel untouched.
Athena ahould act promptly in regard
to the new road that ia to be built
Cartersville. Ihia is the point on the
8eaboard Air Line from which this new
road abonld be built.
place from which the new road wil
start. Why should it be Elbertoo
preference A he a, Our City p s
sssses many more advantages and mi.ii
more reasons can be advanced why th-
new road should start at this point- The
plana of the Seabord Air Line have hi
all probability not yet been perfected
and the proper thing for Athens to (jo
is for her people to get together and
take some motion looking to the offeting
f sufficient inducements to the Sea
board Air Line to get that company to
ee.tle upen Athens as the starting point
for its new road. This is a matter that
should not be pataed lightly by. It re
quires action on onr part and that
once. The building of this road from
Athena to Canersviile will put ns in
•lir-ct connection with the coal fields of
Alabama, and in the one item of coal
conaumed in tbia city our people wonid
save upward of ten thousand dollar,
per annum This in itself should be
sutficient incentive to rouse our citizens
to early and effective action. A cou
rt. d movement in this dir. otion meana
much for our city and its future welfare
and prosperity. It mesns cheap coal
and with that will come more manu
facturing interests With more manu
facturing interests will come more
people and more money and Athens
will advance with rapid and prosperous
strides. Let a citizens meeting be held
on this subject atonoe.
Castoria.
"Orator!& la an excellent medicine for chil
dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me aC IU
goad effect upon their children." '
Du. G. C. Owjood,
Lowell, Mara.
“ Castoria Is the best remedy for children of
which 1 am acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
Interest of their children, and use Cantoris In
stead of the varioasquack nostrums which are
destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sealing
them to premature graves."
Da. J. F. Kncazum,
Conway, Ark. Aixxx C. Surra, fVra,
The Centaur Company, TT Murray Street, New York City.
at. iissni
LV| 7 OOP ml -GWlBhJd
No. 43.
4 30pm
7 14 P m
Lf
At...
~..Atiiuita^.
Ar
8 Hum
(7 60 p m
Hinder...... ”,
Lv
•••*
_ 8 top m
ram 1 Ar ,
Atht»»n
11
7 3tf a m
«team
6 40 * m
atf to pm
Rlbencn
..LV
(b> Via Bay line, (n) Via New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk R. R. (wl Via Knrfniir
aoud voeUbulodujrine witU^VuUufan^BiSet
mgtou and New hot*; Sleeping car Halle? ana Wllimm.Tm. iV-Tn/T.!- 2r5j*. , ? e SJ V J!!s:
MARRIAGE CUSTOMS.
U.A.JB,Jilssis ICeceiver.
lime Table No. 11, in j£Uect Suuuar, juue 24th. 18U4.
Dr. Price’s Cream t»auig>.jder
World's Fair Hlxhsst Medal and Diploma.
CITY ELECTION NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that an election
will be held in the several wards of the
city of Athens Georgia, on Wednesday,
December, 5th, 1894, between tho hours
of 9 o’clock a. m. and; 4 o’clock p. ro.
for one Alderman from each ward, to
serve said city for the years 1895 and
1886.
The election in the 1st ward will be
held in the building on Broad atreet
known as the “Dorsey Store.”
In the 2nd ward, at Peter Weil's shop
on Clayton street. •
In the 3rd ward, at J. A. Garebold’s
shop on Washington street.
And in the 4lh ward, at the county
oourt house on Prince ayeaue. By
order of the Mayor and Council, Nov.
6,1894. A. L. Mitch ill, Clerk.
Radical Changes That Have Taken Flaoe
In England.
Marriage customs have changed ev
erywhere with the advance of civiliza
tion. Anglo-Saxons in ancient times, it
is said, used to capture their wives by
force from their fathers or their hus
bands, it did not matter which.
This was before Augustine came to
preach Christianity. Then purchase was
more common than capture, although
the latter seems to have been frequent
enough to the reign of Ethelbert to need
regulation by law. By this law a man
might run away with a woman, provid
ed he afterward paid her previous own
er, be he father or husband, 50 shillings.
If it was husband who had thus been
deprived of his wife, the woman’B cap-
tor had not only to pay him the fine,
but also to buy him another wife. In
any case the stolen woman belonged to
her captor.
If a man had purchased his bride in
the days of Ethelbert and afterward
concluded he had paid too much for her,
it was lawful for him to return her to
her former owner and claim again the
purchase price, provided that he bad
not previously expressed satisfaction by
making the bride a present on the morn
ing after the wedding.
The next step was the ' ‘foster lien,
when the bride price was paid on the
day of espousal and was supposed to
compensate the parent for the cost of
bringing up his daughter. It seems,
however, that this soon fell iuto disre
pute, as there was no law against the
father’s engaging his daughter to nu
merous suitors, taking from each the
‘foster lien, ” and, ot course, cheating
all but one on the wedding day, which,
at that time, was only the day of be
trothal, when the suitor gave a “wed
or pledge for the future performance of
his contract If the suitor did Rot claim
his bride within two years, after the
wedding day, he forfeited all right-to
her and to whatever money or goods he
bad paid for her. If the woman or her
father broke their promises, the father
had to give the suitor four times as
much as the suitor had already paid
him.
As civilization advanced the bride
price was given to the woman herself
and became her dowry, while nowa
days the tables are frequently turned,
and the bride settles the money on her
husband.—Kate Field’s Washington.
McClure’s
MAGAZINE
For 1895.
Volume IV begins Dec., 1894
A splendidly illnstrated.life of
NAPOLEON,
tbs great feature of whioh will be
75 PORTRAITS
of Napoleon, showing him from youth
to death; also portraits of hit familv
and contemporaries and pictures tf
famous battlefields; in all nearly
200 PICTURES.
Begins in November and runs through
night numbers. The Eight Napoleon
Numbers, $1 00.
TRUE
DETECTIVE
v STORIES
by authority from the archives of the
PiNKkRTON Dztsctivz Agbhcy.
Lincoln and Pinko*ton (Nov. lH94);ch* r
Molly Maguires; Allan Pit kerion’s'
Life; Stories of Capture of Train-rob
ber?, Forgers, Bank-robbery etc.; each
complete in one issue, 12 in all.
SHORT STORIES BY
W. D. Howells Rudyard Kipling,
Cun an Doyle Clark Russell,
Robert Barr Octave Thanet,
Bret Harce Captsin King,
Joel Chandler IIi*ri* and many otbers.
NOTED CONTRIBUTORS
Robert Louis -Stevenson,
F.Marion Crawford, Archdeacon Farrar
Sir Robert Ball Prof. Dtummond
Archibald Forbes Thomas Hardy.
Send three 2-sent stamps for .a sam
ple copy to the publishers.
S. S. McClure, L’t’d.
30 bifayette rlace, New York.
A. Me
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9 0$
9 00
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CENTRAL STANDARD TIME.
STATIONS.
Uar-on
....Ooauigoo Street....
•61., D. A S-Juucuon.
..Unit* Cut
V*ii Bureu
Aortuu
U.ajs
BiMuiey
........Witjsiuo
Round Out. :..
......iliusuoro
Mumeu
Alouuoello
E. T. HONK, General fil*uager.
e. c. mahoney, a. g. p. a.
MacUen.
..M. G. & A. Creating
alutUy Dale
G.uuirc;
utuOiaun
Flore iico
Faiwuigion
Blalio i>
Wiiti,in»vUle
ciduey
Wiiueiutil
Alueoa
.-G. C. A N, Depot
ifAqSK.NUKK.;
403—Dally ~
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0 27
0 2*
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6 48 1
6 62 4
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2 15 P. Mi
a, xt. fuETao, oupeiiutexjuuno.
J. O. MoM.Abi.KK, Agent.
TEETH
EXTRACTED
WITHOUT PAIN Z
NOTICE.
All persona who have ajpart of,an on- I
Dr. L. G. Hardman has withdrawn
his oonteat for the position of Senator
from the S3rd, district, and Mr. T. S.
Johnson, Populist, now holds his seat
undisputed.
In Switserlaud there are 1,064 men to
100 women, in Greece 934 men to 100
women. In Hong Kong, according to
an authority,there are only 366 women
to 1,000 men.
Judge Andrew Allison, of Nashville,
Tenn., was shot and killed by George
K. Whitworth, elerk and master of the
Chancery court, Wednesday. Whit
worth then k lied himself. A politick
difference was the cause.
Mrs. Lease was making one of her
political speeches and became so affec
ted with her subject that she cried for
thirty minutes and the managers of the
leotnre wanted to dock her for the time
lost.
The McDuffie Journal remark* that
the jubilant rejoicing of some of onr
Populist friends over the recent Repub
lican viotory is a great big glaring sign
post which points oat the road they are
Bv tbs nse of Vitalized Air, thei-8afest Anns-
tkettc known, it suspends all teeilng ot pain
and la pet feet ly harmless In its effects, riving It
to tie* or well, old and young, to strong or
expired subscription or advertisement $&&**"***"*
running over into September, will
please settle for same when due at the J
Banner office.
Phihizt A Upson.
Never Asked For a Patent.
“Fifty-three years ago I invented the
winnowing mill now in common use,’’
says Moses Gilman of South Sanger-
ville. “If I had had it patented, I might
have realized a fortune from it, as all
the machines that have been built since
have been upon the same principle.
Even the thrashing machine separators,
which have superseded the old time i . ,
flail, use the winnowing mill sabetan- j I “6 I3Ct (belt rlOOd S SsiStph
tially as 1 first made it for clearing the
chaff from the grain. I have invented |
many other things that were valuable,
but I never asked for a patent” Mr.
Gilman, though 77 years old, is still at I
it inventing, and Bays if his strength
and reason hold ont he is going to pro
duce some valuable new ideas yet— |
Auburn (Me) Gazette.
Extra Car to Episcopal Chuiuh.—
In order to aooommodate those living
down town who desire to attend the
Episcopal church, an, extra ear will
leave the postoffloe at five minutes to 11
each Sunday morning, running direct
to the Episcopal ctauroh.
C. D. Flanioen, Supt.
Dotal Walk -Dim ii tka Neatest Style
Prices to autt.tbe times. We; torn-;ont nothing
hut ttrst-cUae wot*-
Drs. Betts & McGalla,
| Office over Grlffeth Bros* and. West’s Store,
ATHENS, - - GEORGIA.
CITY REGISTRATION.
The City Registration
Books will close November
20th at 2 o’clock p. m.
A. L. Mitchell, C. of C.
GASH SYSTEM.
Please bear in mind that Tnz Athens I
Aimng the Number
ot those who have made the world better and
* wiser by having lived in it none can raise
• higher claims on our consideration than that
i American of whom his successor as
i plenipotentiary’ at the French court. Thomas
, Jefferson, said: **! succeed him—none can
* replace him.”
Benjamin Franklin had next to no schooling. I
and like all ambitious boys of limited means,
was forced to replace by systematic reading
that academic and collegiate training which is |
generally regarded as indispensable.
In his Autobiography he has told of his early |
loves among the books to which he had
access, and has enabled us toTorm some idea
of that discursive taste which brought him
lato contact with the material out of which
were to come later the productions which
Astonished an Age
accustomed to the brHIIancy of Burk*, and the |
versatility of Voltaire.
No predecessors had paved the way for
Franklin, and he was forced to wade for hall a
century through books which would have
obscured an intellectual vision less clear than |
bis.
Wliat would he not have accomplished if he j
had possessed, in convenient form, those
stores of special knowledge he spent his mo?t |
vigorous years In acquiring?
In Franklin’s Old Age
the first edition of the Encyclopadia Britannica
began to appear.
Since Franklin’s day eight successive
editions, each better than the foregoing one.
have lightened the labors of students, and
' enabled them to economise their efforts; and
now any young man can secure the revised and
monumental Ninth Edition, between which and
the prodigy of Franklin's old age. the First
Edition, there is astnuch disparity as between
| Herschei’s telescope and the
Qreat Lick Refractor
This thought brings into clear perspective
i the possibilities of a young man of this day and |
j time, who can dispense with a college course
by devoting his spare moments to the
—-prosecution of special studies in the privacy
of his home.
With such a vs.t array of information as
the Encyclopaedia Britannica offers there is ne |
reason to fear that he will be handicapped In
competition with college graduates.
In fact, specialized study is fast taking the |
place of curriculum work, and foremost In the
esteem of students stands that Incomparable
work of Reference which looks back on a world |
J of untold good it has accomplished for Itfc
j users, For particulars address
! The Constitution
. ATLANTA, GA.
KORTHJfiAbTEftN R. ft ol Ga., SCHEDULE.
BETWEEN ATHENS AND LULA
a To take ellecl at 5:00, A. H., Sunday. November 4.1834. Eastern Time Standard.
aODTUBOUMD
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R* K. REAVES, Slate Agent.
J, S. OJUEW8. Chief Clerk.
All regular traius from Athena to Lulu have the right of truck over, train a of the
». K. KSiVii, J ' “■ C "*'
CrHOJiGJLA K41II»HUAJP SUfiJLLDULtta.
OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER.
Acoosta. Ua., October 14tb 1834.
Commencing Oct. 14tb th* following schedules will he operated. All tram*.’ran bv s
Meridian Time. The aehednlee are aubjeol to ehnnge without notion to the pnblie. J
KAAD UK
Tran;
No. 12.
a£ w^^^SSVtorito&mti."^ 0 * wlUl0eutr ‘ la »“ «•»« *
AH above ran ran Dnilj except U «nd it, whioh do not run on SnndnT.
Slteging Cara between Atlanta and Charleston, Augnste and Atlanta, Augusta and Macon oa
Sheping Cars betweeu.Maeon and New York on train 27 and train leaving Macon at 9
TH03. KHOOTT, JOK W. WHITE, A. G. JAOidON
Sea’lFreight and P.«.A