Newspaper Page Text
VOL. VIL
Had to Go Round.
“What do you think that girl said
when she refused me?”
J ’» never guess-”
“She said she had so many similar
\periences lately that she couldn’t
to be more than a half-sister to
Weekly.
Comparing Notes.
“My ancestors came over ia the
Mayflower,” said the ioy young wo¬
man.
“Indeed?” responded her equally
frigid friend. “None of my traveled people
have ever, to my knowledge,
otherwise than first-class. Wash¬
ington Star.
Swallowed Bis Fal?e Teeth.
A man recently swallowed his false teeth
and H drove him mad. Sumachs will stand
a great deal, but not everything. If yours Is
weak try Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, It
cures indigestion, constipation, kidney and
liver troubles, as well ns malaria and fever
uml ague. It is particularly effective in all
nervous affections, and is strongly recom¬
mended at this season of the -year when the
system is run-down and meat susceptible to
disease. All druggists keep it.
The British sealer Geneva sot 1,1543 sealskins
in two months off the coast of California.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
incite, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No To
(Sac, (p tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men
reag. Ail druggists, 50c or It. Cure guaran
Booklet and sample free. Address
iterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York.
Don’t cover your neglected duties with the
cloak of excuse.
How’s Tills?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of ( ntarrb that cannot be cured by
llnll's I'atarrh Cure.
We, tbe F. 3. undersigned, Cheney & Co.. have Props., Toledo, P. J. O.
known Che¬
ney for the last 15 years, ai d believe him per
iectly honorable In nil business transactions
and linancfally able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
West * Thcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
YValihko, Kinnan & Makvih. Wholesale Drug
l-tBis. Toledo, Ohio.
Ball's Catarrh Cure 1s taken lnteriinlly, act¬
ing directly upon the Price, blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. 75c. per bottle. Sold
by ai. Druggists. Testimonials tree,
flail's Family Pills are tbe best.
There arc ahontsixteen breweries in Mex¬
ico, of which three are iu the capital.'
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarots Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
It C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
Many them, men who have actress’ pictures be¬
fore would be startled to remember
what Christ says about them in the Sermon
on the Mount.—Ram's Horn.
To Cuie a Cold in Ono Day.
Take Lnxnllve Brcmo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. 2De.
charge A man of is insanity, on trial the iu base Washington the charge on a
of
dressed being the fact that lie appeared in public
in a red sweater, a full dress suit
and an opera hat.
Educate Your Bowel* Wttn Cnsearet*.
lOc.SSc. Candy If Cathartic, C. C. fall, cure conslipation forever.
C. druggists refund money.
A little cloud may hide the sun, and a little
doubt destroy our peace.
44 He Who Pursues Two
Hares Catches Neither/'
Said a weu known young
man about town, “I tried
for years to bum the candle
at both ends, in the pursuit
of pleasure while trying to
attend to business. My blood,
stomach and kidneys got into
a wretched state and it
seemed that I could not carry
the burden any longer.
But now my rheumatism lius gone, my
courage has returned, and all on account
ot that marvel, Hood’s Sirsaparllla, which
has made mo a picture of health. Now
I’m in for business pure and simple."
eight Hip Disease— “I hips. had I running confined sores for
years on my was to
my bed at times and at others used cratches.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cured my hip nnd gave
me permanent health.” Ollie J. ARC lie a,
189 Dudley Street, Dayton, Ohio.
tite, Indigestion—“I well, sleep well now and have a good dyspepsia appe¬
eat my
and indigestion have left me. The icason is
I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla which entirely
cured me. I am Baggage Master on the B. &
O. Railioad.” Thomas Coles, 119 Carr St.,
Sandusky, Ohio.
JfcodA Si 0 ,
h
Ho od'd Pills care Hvar liis, the non-irritating an d
the only cathartic to take with Hood'* Sarsaparilla.
\7A
T 8AM *■«•»
For INOICE8TION and OY8PEP8IA.
‘‘I have found Immediate relief in every In¬
stance.”—?. B. Louden, Philadelphia.
A cure for a try. 25c. a hoi. Ask your drug¬
gist, or write for free sample to
TJ2AKURE CO., Tarpon Springs, Fla.
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more
than common chimney®. All dealers.
PITTSBURG GLASS CO„ Allegheny, P».
D RO PS YS.”S2.rS:s;
cases. Book of testimonials and fO (lavs’ t reatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’S 80N8, Box D. Atlanta, Oa.
OPIUM Habit. New Painless home cure.
GUARANTEED. FREE Write to
__day PURDY, for 8AMPLE and
book. UR, E. Houston, Texas.
WANTED—Case of bad health that B I-PA N S
VY Will not benefit. Send 6 cts. to Bipans Chemical
Co. NewYork, for 10 samples and IOOO testimonials.
Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. DM
In time. 8018 by druggists.
ggQSSSBEBEDSISJ
THE RECORD.
DEYOTED TO THE INTEREST OF JOHNSON COUNTY AND MIDDLE GEORGIA.
WEIGHTSVILLE,'GATHURSDAY, APRIL 21 , 1899.
AND INDUSTRY
ITEMS OF INTEREST TO
UNION WORKMEN.
I'crliM of the I.lquor Traffic—
Temperance Is the Anclior of the Toil¬
er's Homo—Relief for Cube—Competi¬
tion for Labor—Prosperity—Notes.
Social Peril* of the Liquor Traffic,
(By George Milton Hammell.)
That an eventual crisis lies ahead
in the history of society is clear to the
eye of the Christian sociologist. Stand¬
ards of social conduct cannot be ai
ways ignored by men and women who
symbolize the spirit of tbe age. The
ctate, a3 developed in the American
republic, cannot always play fast and
loose with fundamental principles, con¬
fusing definitions in an administration
of law which ostensibly "taxes’’ a
traffic that it cannot constitutionally
license, and authorizing officials to
perform acts which it negates by with¬
drawal of support.
A nation never rises above its ideals.
If the ideals of our boyhood and girl¬
hood are mere money-makers and po¬
litical trimmers, there is dim hope of
a republic, whose standards are un¬
righteousness and whose gates are in¬
justice.
In our great cities the saloonkeeper
defies all laws that have ever been en
acted in restraint of I 113 so-called
"business.” He sells to minors, to in¬
toxicated women, inen, boys aud girls.
He sells on Sunday, on election day,
after midnight. If arrested, the pros¬
ecuting attorney secures his acquittal
or dismissal, but thunders penalty at
the friendless victims of his trade.
The city council, instead of repre¬
senting the best citizenship of tlie city,
represents the worst; instead of em¬
bodying the dignity, wealth, refine¬
ment, scholarship and morals of tlie
great municipality, embodies the dis¬
grace, poverty, hoodlumism, ignorance
and depravity of the city. In Detroit
the statistics of an election held in
1838 show that in one of the tvards,
characterized by culture and religion,
only 49 per cent of the voters exer¬
cised the suffrage, while the saloon
ward cast G6 per cent of its total vote,
and more "straight” tickets were de¬
posited in the ballot boxes in the
culture-piety ward than in the saloon
ward.
In Detroit there are six saloons for
every church; in Cleveland and Cin¬
cinnati ten saloons for every church;
in Cleveland, a nest of one brewery
and fifty-two saloons within a small
radius. True! but all the greater rea¬
son for protest against the diabolic
supremacy of an Institution which
cannot exist except in an atmosphere
already poisoned.
Prof. Peabody, In a paper on
“Liquor Legislation in Norway,” Jan¬
uary issue of The Forum, accentuates
this when he says; ‘‘Norway is a
monarchy only in a formal sense; the
spirit of its people is as democratic
and self-respecting as that of the
Yankees. As in the villages along the
coast of Maine, most of the men have
followed the sea, and many have trav¬
eled far; but they like to end their days
in their native hamlets. Everywhere
there is a condition of life little above
poverty, but nowhere are there beg¬
gars or loafers or extortionate land¬
lords. It is a laborious and isolated
life, in which the summer’s toil does
little more than tide over the winter’s
darkness. But this hard struggle for
existence has bred a self-contained,
self-respecting stock; and the same
conditions which have made prohibi¬
tion effective in many a Maine village
make it effective In the interior of
Norway.”
Aristotle was right when he said
that the enactment of law is educative
of the people in virtue; and old Con¬
fucius was wrong when he said a very
good statute might be a very bad law.
The statute is seldom or never bad. It
Is almost always the product of the
best moral sentiment.
In original inspiration it is the prod¬
uct and index of high civic sentiment.
The enactment is. of course, symptom¬
atic of civic disorder; it implies the
existence of an element antagonistic
to good order, and there is danger that,
in a republic constituent of hetero¬
geneous populations, there will arise
a conspiracy between civic authority
and law-breakers to nullify law. This
conspiracy has already been formed In
the United States, and the most In¬
fluential member of it is the Liquor
League—with lobby at Washington,
and agencies established in all state
capitals. Brewers, distillers and sa¬
loonkeepers subsidize the campaign
committees of both great political
parties, and a so-called i'bi-partisan”
administration is conducted, by means
of which the "bosses” of both parties
divide spoil after each election—
whichever party win3 out at the polls.
Cotnpetltion for Labor.
The owners of factories in Japan
have a hard time of it, judging by an
article in the Christian Register. In¬
dustrial progress has been so rapid,
especially since the war between Japan
and China, that a rather peculiar con¬
dition of things prevails. The emigra¬
tion to the cities has not kept pace
with the demand for labor, and conse¬
quently the factories, which have such
a press of work that in the case of th^
and spinning industries they are
run day and night, cannot find enough
laborers.
In this state of affairs the factories
vie with each other to obtain men and
girls. They send out agents to dis¬
tant places to muster a crowd of work¬
ing girls and bring them to the towns.
Dormitories are built for those who
come from a distance. But the num¬
ber of girls and men thus obtained is
not sufficient. The inhabitants of the
cities must be bribed to work la the
factories. Different attractions Are of¬
fered, Some owners provide tenement
houses which they let to the workers
at a nominal rent; others sell them
theil P r lc ®*
Competition goes further still. Not
only do the. factories bid for outside
help, but they try to lure away the
wor.ters from rival factories. This has
led to so much quarreling that often
the police are called upon to interfere.
As a consequence, a union among the
thread factories has been formed, and
an agreement made that no factory
shall employ man or woman from any
other factory in the union until he or
she has for a certain stated period left
the other factory. If an employer does
thus engage one from another factory,
he is fined.
Yet the stealing of laborers goes on.
^t has become a necessity for each fac¬
tory to send an inspector to other fac¬
tories from time to time, to spy out
the stolen ones. The thief, however, is
often too wary to let his booty be dis¬
covered. It is said t(jat some factories
have skillfully contrived hiding places
where the fugitives can conceal them¬
selves the instant an inspector enters
the factory. One of the factories is
said to have gone so far as to feed the
men who have left other employers
until the stated time has elapsed.
liollef for Cuba.
An industrial movement to give em¬
ployment to the rural people of Cuba
who were left starving and naked by
the inhuman reign of Weyler is now
being inaugurated by William Willard
Howard of New York. Land is secured
outside of Havana. American super¬
intendents will be in charge and
American implements used. Labor will
be paid its full value and the produce
sold at the best market. Three crops
can be raised yearly, and the money
thus turned over and over again will
enable the movement in time to be
self-supporting. It is a form of phi¬
lanthropy that must appeal to the good
judgment of all, and, as Gen. Wood
says, will be a great factor in the re¬
construction of Cuba either in fitting
for self-government or for American
citizenship. But funds are needed and
contributions of plows, axes, hoes, har¬
rows and all farming implements are
solicited. We bespeak a hearty re¬
sponse to this call. The country which
gave its blood and treasure for tbe
freedom of a people will not desert
them now w’hen from the ashes of their
homes and hopes they are feebly
reaching out a hand for help. Out
flag waves over 300,000 people who
have neither food to eat, clothes to
wear nor homes to live in. Hundreds
of thousands more, pinched by hunger,
too proud to beg, are looking to us for
help. Mr. Howard is known through
England and America in connection
with his work for Armenia. He was
commissioned in the latter part of
February to go to Cuba to investigate
the conditions of the poor, and espe¬
cially the agricultural classes. A copy
of his first report is given on another
page.
Prosperity.
This country is prosperous. More
prosperous today than a year ago. Sc
prosperous that we have felt justified
in undertaking the costly work of at¬
tempting to civilize, as well as we un¬
derstand the term, a lot of freakish
wild men distant from us nearly hali
way round the world. But we do not
appear to be dividing our prosperity as
equitably as we might. Thus I read In
the report of the New York State
Board of Lunacy that on an average
7,000 young working women of that
state go insane each year for want of
sufficient food and clothing. Just
think of it! In the Empire State, the
richest in the Union, and containing
the metropolis of tlie American con¬
tinent, thousands of young women
grow insane every year from lack oi
food and clothing. Truly a token oi
prosperity we all can be proud of, and
use as proof that we are such an en¬
lightened nation when compared with
Spain, with whom, because of her
cruelty, we went to war. Again we
feel the need of a man—just one—who
will rise to the occasion, and be ‘‘in¬
tensely interested” in seeing that jus¬
tice is done his fellows. And when
that man appears, as he some time will,
I imagine that he will not chop much
logic about our duty to the Filipinos,
or to Darkest Africans, but will insist
that something be done, and right
speedily, in the way of securing, right
here at home, equitable division of the
products of industry.
Algy—Not up yet, you lazy fellah!
Cholly— Deuce take the luck, old chap!
I’ve lost me glove stwetchahs and
can’t get me twousahs on.
fHETTY FAIR WORLD, AFTER ALL?
With eyes o£ many colors, many hues.
We look at things and all get different
But views;
when we meet, and view with view
Why, compare, bless all things look
your hearts,
pretty Indeed fair.
Despite they do, declare;
what some
For it i9 true
That things look pretty fair.
Wo speak in many tongues these latter
And find days, good
more faults to blame than
to praise;
But when tho speooh Is done to the last
Eaoh letter, admits getting
oue the world is
hotter.
Indeed they do,
For Despite is ot faults that fetter;
it true
This world Is getting better.
Even the ones that wore tho narrow face,
And said that we were heading for some
hug place,
Now n thought, a haunting, shadowy
Half fear, shape,
half hope, that we may yet es¬
cape.
Indeed they do,
That by scratch and scrapo
Wo might pull through,
A-nd barely escape.
Ohl it is good to live these latter days—
So good we just like to live always;
For we are getting better everywhere
And all around us things look pretty fair,
Iudeed they do,
For Despite what some declare;
it is true
That things aro pretty fair.
—Galveston News.
PITH AND POINT.
Tills is the girl: Till (loom should blot
All time slut vow’d slto’s fail mo not,
Still her blue eyes look true and meek,
And lo! she jilted me lust week.
—Chicago Record,
George—“Do you think that your
father will consent to our marriage,
darling?” Ethel—'‘Oh, yes? He has
always honored my silliest wishes.”—
Brooklyn Life.
Frank—“Some genius in Birming¬
ham has invented a buttonless shirt.”
Billy—“Why, that’s old. I’ve worn
them ever since my wife learned to
ride a bike.”—Tit-Bits.
Doctor (to ruffian)—“Your eye is
liojrelessly smashed. I shall have to
insert a glass eye.” “No glass eye
forme! It would be broken to-mor¬
row.”—Fliegende Blaetter.
Fnddy—“You know bow long Miss
Nettleton has been fishing for Gud¬
geon? Well, she has landed him at
last.” Duddy—“Poor fellow, he has
embarked upon a sea of trouble.”
Miss Fiver Tardy—“P.eally, Mrs,
Sharp, I was almost ashamed to come,
it is so shockingly late.” Mrs. Sharp
— “Not at all, Miss Tardy; you could
never come too late.”—Harlem Life.
“Don’t you think, Mrs. Spitely,
that this hat is a little too gay for a
matronly woman like me?” “Not at
all, my dear. You know that you’re
years younger than you look.”—Tit
Bits,
Hospital Nurse (to mangled victim
of an accident)—“I understand that
tho derrick fell ten stories to the
pavement.” Maugled Victim (weak¬
ly)—“I was under thai impression.”
—Widow.
Tall Oue (angrily)—“Don’t dare to
contradict me again, sir; don’t you
know I could eat you if I chose?”
Short One—“Ah! but I should dis¬
agree with you even more, then.”—
Ally Sloper.
ceed Jones—“They say all diseases pro¬
from microbes.” Jackson—
“Then, I suppose a ‘complication of
diseases’ means that a lot of assorted
microbes have agreed on a harmonious
plan of campaign.”—Puck.
“How the beautiful old poems are
dying out!” she exclaimed, as she
buttoned her glove. “It never occurs
to people to burn a yule log.” “No,”
answered the dyspeptic-looking man;
“all they seem to think about now is
burning money.”-—Puck.
Once upon a time a Beggar im¬
portuned a Lawyer for alms. “Lht
me give you some advice,” said the
Lawyer. “I’d rather you sold the
advice and gave me the proceeds,”
ventured the Beggar, trying not to
seem forward. This fable teaches
that under certain circumstances fine
words can be made indirectly to butter
parsnips.—Detroit Journal.
The Hausers of Dlonnonisin.
Anyone who has over lived for any
great length of time in Utah when it
was a Territory, knows only too well
that the Gentiles found it to their in¬
terest not to criticize too adversely
the autocracy of Brigham Young. Dr.
Robinson would not be “counseled”
to refrain from censure. One beauti¬
ful moonlight night a man came to his
house and told him that a man had
been kioked by a mule “down on the
State road” aud that his leg was
brokeu. He was sufi'eriug the great¬
est agony, needed the services of a
surgeon; would the doctor not come to
his relief? Mrs. Robinson pleaded
with her husband not to go. He
laughed at her fears and went. One
block from bis house he was assassin¬
ated by a blow on the head with some
dull instrument, and a shot from a
pistol. His murderer wlas never ap¬
prehended.—Ruth Everett, in the
Arena.
Inland Water Commerce.
Our domestic water commerce,
coastwise, great lakes, rivers and
canals, is by far the largest in the
world, and is two and a half times
greater than that of the United King¬
dom, second on the list.
«® o
3
* t
regulate the ?
STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS, • •
AM>
PURIFY THE BLOOD. %
A RELIABLE REMEDY FOR
Indigestion, Biliousness, Headache, Consti¬
pation, Byapcpsla, Chronlo Liver Troubles,
IMeelnesa, Bad Complexion, Dysentery,
Offensive Breach, and all disorders of the \
Stomach, Llvr** and Bowels.
the Ripens mo»t delicate Tabules contain nothing Pleasant Injurious to
fc. effectual. constitution. to tako. I
- n k Sold by dntggists. Give immediate relief.
ooipt of A trial bottle sent t by jiAil
onro 13 cents. Address
THE 10 8PRDCE RIPAWS STREET, CHEMICAL NEW YORK CO. j 2
CITY.
>*•< •ihS
TRAVEL WITHOUT MOVING.
Novel Trips That Will be Offered to Visitors
to the Parin Exposition.
It has been said frequently by those
who know them best that to the true
Parisians Paris is the world, and what
is true of the Parisian in particular is
equally so of the French in general.
They are deeply interested in journeys,
expeditions and explorations, but when
it comes to leaving their hearthstones
the bare idea terrifies them.
Such being tlie case, oue of the fea¬
tures of the exposition should be a
tremendous success. This is the Marc¬
oni urn of the painter Hugo d’Alesi,
whose railway posters and whose
school picture tablets have been adopt¬
ed by tlie government..
Ilis plan will enable lovers of the
Boulevard to take a long journey with¬
out leaving their easy chairs—that is,
tlie journey from Marseilles on the
Mediterranean to Naples, Venice and
Constantinople.
The illusion is cleverly managed.
The passenger goes on board the
steamer, finds the deck and cabin cor¬
rect in all details, and the crew of
genuine sailors obeying tlie orders of
a bonafide captain.
Around the ship are the blue waves,
behind it the port of Marseilles, before
it the sea and the horizon. The order
to depart is given, smoke pours from
die funnel, tlie water is churned up by
the propellor of the vessel, which is
placed on a pivot, four hydraulic
pumps giving the motions of rolling
and pitching, and in a few moments a
fresh breeze, scented with the smell of
tlie sea, strikes the face. This IS fur¬
nished by ventilators filled with fresh
seaweed.
Comfortably seated on deck, the,
traveller enjoys the sight as the vessel
progresses, passes tlie forts and meets
ships and fishing boats. Ali the inci¬
dents of a sea trip are supplied. A
fleet of war vessels is sighted, sunrise
and sunset are admired, and the excite¬
ment of a storm at sea is safely tasted.
Tlie arrival at Venice takes place at
night, while at Naples the port is en¬
tered at daylight, as is that of Con¬
stantinople.
The illusion is produced by tlie walls
of tlie panorama moving on both sides
of the vessel. These canvasses, more
than lifteen yards high, slide smoothly
by, moved by machinery, and the ju¬
dicious use of lights and saline odors
completes an effect opposite to that
frequently experienced when journey¬
ing by rail, when the traveller seems
to stand still while the landscape
moves by.
Local color and music appropriate to
each country will add to the pleasure
of the journey on the Adriatic and
Mediterranean and the Bosporus. The
site of tlie Mareorama at the Champs
tie Mars will be between the Eiffel
Tower and the station of the Moliueux,
and it promises to be one of the attrac¬
tions of the exposition.
English Recruits.
As to (he reasons why men enlist
they are very mixed, and as many as
tin; men. After a smart cavalry regi¬
ment or a battery of horse artillery
passes through a town, young fellows
think that they would like to look “so
handsome, brave, and grand,” and en¬
list simply and solely for the sake of
the “clothes.” Others join tlie army in
order to see tlie “foreign parts” about
which they have heard chums speak¬
ing who had returned to their native
villages upon furlough, Then, of
course, there is often a she iu this, as
in all other matters. There lias been a
lovers’ quarrel, and tlie young fellow
enlists to spite the young woman; or
liis father lias put a stepmother over
him, and he thinks that a barrack-room
will he less disagreeable than Ids home.
Some become soldiers because they
cannot get work, and think that a sol¬
dier has nothing to do but dress well
and knock about with a cane. Men en¬
list for the queerest reasons. Once a
patient in a military hospital told me
that he did so In order to have a mili¬
tary funeral, an honor that the poor
fellow soon obtained. He was in con¬
sumption when lie joined, but by some
trick or another lie managed to sham
the doctor. Another man gave me as
his reason for enlisting that he wanted
to learn to read. He had escaped so
successfully tlie School Board Inspec¬
tors, and had been such a truant when
a boy, that he grew up quite illiterate.
Being ashamed of liis Ignorance lie
thought lie would learn something
quietly in a military school.
Subscribe for tbis paper ana keep
potted on affair* In general.
NO. 7.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY^
v- •
Schedule la Effect June S, 188A /
Northbound, No. No. No. No,
81. IS. 99. IS.
Lv. Brunswick..,, Everett....... -in
Ar.
Lv. Jesup..... =i
" Surrency. l**}er.......... 8
o - Hazlehurst......... IB -■118
- Lumber City....... 2^5
* * Helen*.............. Missler.............. ; ;; 'ik*
- Eastman........ .. 218p 129s
2 41? 148s
“ Empire 3 08p 219s
........
Lv. Hawltinsvlile..
“ Cochran........ ~ so
Macon.......... ' ' sm 7TBp
“ 4 45p 415.
“ Flovllla........ 0 03a «0Op 0 09p 627*
“ McDonough.... 942a 6 40p 84Sp 810(
Ar. Atlanta........ 10 40a 7 45p 6«5p 715*
Lv. Atlanta........ 4C0p S'**- lOuSpTKs
Ar. A Chattanooga... Memphis 8 Sflp 4 15a T 100? 40*
r, ..... 7 (0a 7 iOp
Ar St; Louisville Louis, Air .... FK5 0l5p YKSp ~TSSp TEoS (Goj
Ar. Line. 7 12a 7 12a
TrTojnci^iTQv&zr;: tss t§qp Tag
Lv. Atlanta..... ms
Ar. •* Memphis..... Birmingham .....11«»
" Kansas City...
Lv- A tl anta ....
Ar. As h eville ■■
Ar. ” 'Washington New York.. 9 86p
6 98a
Southbound* No. No. No. No.
10 10. 8 . 1 *.
Lv. New York.....
*‘ Washingt on...
Lv. Ash evjBc J
Ar. Atlanta
EvTfcansa* City....... 0 33p....... o#»e>o
“ " Memphis........... Birmingham....... 9 0Jp........
Ar. Atlanta 600a.....
........ 11 30a ......
Lv. Cincinnati, Q. <fe C 8 00|> _8!Da 8 39a oo s
Lv. bt. Louis, Air Line 7 fita 9 16p 9 15p
“Louisville 7 45p 7 40a 7 40n 7 45?
Lv. Memphis 8 lOp 9 15a 9 lta 8 00?
Lv. Chatt o anooga....... «8Ua lOOOp lOGOp 819?
Ar. Atlanta 1140a bOua 5 00a 8 0S?
Lv. Atlanta........ m§ caaoc* <5»<eoa firlrg SSe«o°
“ “ MoDonoueh.,.. Flovllla........
Ar. Lv. Macon.......... Cocln-an........
: : :
Ar. Haw kins Vi lie.. oi
“ Empire............... IDS
" Eastman.......... 10 1 15*
" Missler................ ...
Helena.............. .. 1117a
“ 11 33»
“ Lumber City......... .. 24a
“ Hazlehuvst....... .. 12 1285p 55p 800*
“ Baxley............. ..
" Surrency.......... • **>•••! I*
Ar. Jesup...... 8
Lv. Everett... 7 10a 3 3Sp SOp 4 5 40*
Ar. Brunswick 8 10a 4 80p SOp 6
Nos. 13 nnd 14.—Pullman Sleeping Oar* be
tween Brunswick and Atlanta, and_____ between
Jacksonville, rett. Fla., and Chattanooga, via Eve*
Nos. 9 and 10 —Pullman Sleeping Car* ha*
tween Atlanta and Cincinnati, via Chattv
nooga; also between Chattanooga and Men*
phis. Nos. 7
and 8— Pullman Sleeping Cars be*
tween Atlanta and Chattanooga and Chatta
nqoga and Memphis.
let Nos Sleeping 7 and 18—Pullman Drawing Room Bnff
Cars between Macon and Aaha*
vills.
Nos. 9 end 10—Observation Chair Car* ha*
tween Maeon and Atlanta.
Connection at Union Depot, Atlanta, for all
points FRANK north, east and west.
Third V-P. 8. GANNON, J. M, CULP.
& Gen. Mgr., TratBn Manager.
VT. Washington, A. TURK, D. C. B. H. Washington, HARDWICK, U.O
Gen 1 Pass. Agt. Asst. Gon’l Pass. Agfc
Washington,D, & _____Atlaata.B»...... .
Georgia
R’YCtt
Excursion tickets at reduced rate*
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. in.
Sundays, g-ood returning until Monday
noon following date ot sale.
Persons contemplating; either a busi¬
ness or pleasure trip to the East should
investigate and consider the advantages
offered via Savannah and Steamer lines.
The rates generally are considerably
cheaper by this route, and, in addition
to this, passengers save sleeping car
fare,and tho expense of meals en route.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savanuah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam¬
ship Company to New York and Boston,
and the Merchants and Miners line
to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling publle
is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangements. The
tables are supplied with all the delica¬
cies of the Eastern and Southern mar¬
kets. AH the luxury and comforts of
a modern hotel while on board ship,
affording every opportunity for rest,
recreation or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
look especially after ladies and chil¬
dren traveling alone.
Steamers sail from Savannah for
New York dally except Thursdays and
Sundays, and for Boston twice a week.
For information as to rates and sail¬
ing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations, apply to nearest ticket
agent of this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, Gen. Passenger Agt.,
E.H. HINTON, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, Ga.
YYJt ARB READY TO ENTER YOVR
NAME ON OUR SUBSCRIPTION
BOOKS. YOU WILL NOT UIBB TBM
SMALL SUM NECESSARY TO BECOME
OUR CUSTOMER.