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WACON, DUBLIN AND SAVANNAH
RAILROAD COMPANY
LOCAL TIME TABLE*.
Effective July 2, 1911.
No.lß N 0.20 “Station^’ N 0.19 No.ll
A.M. P.M. Lv. Ar. A.M. P.M.
*7: 16 3:25 Macon 11:15 4735
7:22 3:37 Swiftcreek 11:03 4:20
7:30 3:45 Drybranoh 10:55 4:12
7:34 3:49 Atlantic 10:51 4:09
.7:38 3:53 Pike’s Peak 10:48 4:06
7:45 4:00 Fitzpatrick 10:42 4:00
7:50 4:04 Ripley 10:37 3:53
8:00 4:14 Jeff'sonville 10:27 3:42
8:10 4:23 Gallemore 10:15 3:30
8:20 4:33 Danvile] 10:07 3:22
8:25 4:38 Allentown 10:02 3:17
8:34 4:47 Montrose 9:53 3:08
8:44 4:57 Dudley 9:42 2:58
8:50 5:03 Shewmake 9:36 2:52
8:55 5:09 Moore 9:29 2:45
9:10 5:25 ar lv 9:15 2:30
Dublin
9:15 5:30 lv ar 9:10 2:25
9:17 5:32 SouMD&SJct 9:08 2:23
9:21 5:36 NorMD&SJet 9:04 2:19
9:31 5:45 Catlin 8:54 2:09
9:40 5.54 Mititor 8:47 2:01
9:50 6:05 Rockledge 8:36 1:50
9:55 6:10 Orland 8:31 1:45
10:08 6:23 Soporton 8:19 1:33
10:19 6:34 Tarrytown 8:07 1:21
10:26 6:41 Kibbee 8:00 1:15
10:40 6:55 Vidalia 7:45 1:00
CONNECTIONS.
At Dublin with the Wrightsville and
Tennille and the Dublin and South
-western for Eastman and Tennille
and intermediate points.
At Macon iwth Southern railway
from and to Cincinnati, Chattanooga,
Rome, Birmingham, Atlanta and in
termediate points. Also the Central
of Georgia, G„ S. & F. railway, Ma
non and Birmingham railway and th*
Georgia railroad.
At Rockledge with the Millen and
Southwestern for Wadley and inter
mediate points.
At Vidalia with the Seaboard Air
Line for Savannah and intermediate
points, and with the Millen and South
western for Millen, Stillmore and in
termediate points.
J. A. STREYER, G. P. A.,
Macon, Ga.
Foley’s
GRIND
Laxative
I* Pleasant and Effective
CUREB
Constipation, Stomach and
Liver Trouble.
by stimulating these organs and
i restoring their natural action.
Is best for women and chil«
dren as ORINO does not gripe
or nauseate. /
Portable end Stationery
ENGINES
AND BOILERS.
Ba*, Lath and Shingle Mill* Inpetera,
Pumps and fitting*, Wood Sa*t, Split*
ter a. Shaft*, Pulley*, Belting, Gate*
|lm Engine*.
LARGS STOCK Al
LOMBARD
Veuadry, Bachin* and Boll** Wwto
Supply Store.
AUGUSTA. GA.
feiIYSEIDNEYCURS
kfzko* Kidneys and Bladder Right
UYour
Printing
czq —i
If it is worth
doing at all,
it’s worth do
ing well.
First class work
at all times is
our motto.
Let us figure
with you on
your next job.
. tz_ tzzi
STEAMING down the Ohio river, the copy of Nicholas Roosevelt’s vessel, New Orleans, is carrying on a con
tinuous celebration ot the centennial of steam navigation on that highway of commerce. The christening
oi the little boat at Pittsburgh was a gala event, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth being the sponsor. President
Taft and many other prominent men saw the New Orleans start on its trip.
DISCHARGING A COOK
Found to Be a Hard Task in Chi
cago Household.
•
Police Unable to Dislodge Obdurate
Servant Whom the Householder
Wishes to Dismiss—She Says
It Takes Two to "Fire."
Chicago.—Clara Klppe, a cook em
ployed in the residence of Dr. Edwin
J. Kuh at 4330 Drexel avenue, brought
about a new police rule which will
discomfort Chicago householders.
Hereafter persons who cannot dis
charge their cooks need not appeal
to the police. The latter have decid
ed they have no power in the matter.
Dr. Kuh and two policemen strove
manufully all day to discharge Clara.
They failed utterly. Just as the
shades of night were falling and Dr.
Kuh and the policemen were retiring
vanquished from the scene, Clara dis
charged herself.
’it was Sunday evening, in fact,
when Dr. Kuh essayed to separate
Clara from her jub.
“Miss Klppe,” said the doctor, diffi
dently, “owing—er, ah —to a variety
of circumstances It will be necessary
—ah—it becomes imperative, in fact
—ah—that you should no longer con
tinue in my employ.”
“I suppose,” replied Miss Klppe
calmly, casting a chilling glance in
the doctor’s direction, “that you mean
that I am canned—fired?”
“Well,” said the doctor, “I trust
that I am too much of a gentleman to
put it in that crude, not to say, un
diplomatic fashion.”
“Don’t chew your words when you
are talking to me,” said Clara sharp
ly.
“Now,” she went on, “as to your
firing anybody, why, that’s different.
It takes two to make a firing. Now, 1
don’t Intend to be fired. I always fire
myself. You just go back and attend
to your business, and I’ll attend to
mine.”
Dr. Kuh went to the telephone and
explained the situation to the police.
Woman On Glacier
Base of Her Camp Made at Height
of Over 16,000 Feet —Explorer
Caught In Monsoon While
on Mountain.
Paris. —Writing from “Camp, Sep
tember 9,” Mrs. Fanny Bullock
Workman, the mountain climber, in a
letter posted at Skarkie on September
25, gives further details of her ex
ploration of the Himalayan glaciers.
Mrs. Workman says the climax of
the summer’s work was the crossing
of the Saltoro pass at a height of 18,-
300 feet on August 19 and a visit of
three weeks to the great Siachen, or
Rose glacier, reputed to be the largest
and longest in Asia. It has never yet
been measured, but is probably 50
miles long. It cannot be ascended
from the tongue from May 15 to Sep
tember 15 owing to the depth of the
Nubra river, which flows therefrom,
and the presence of dangerous quick
sands. The only summer approach is
by the great Saltoro pass and the de
scent of the Saltoro glacier, which
taps the Saichen at a height of 16,000
feet.
The first European to cross the Sal
toro was Dr. LongstafL who accom
plished this feat in June. 1900, and de
scended toward the Saichen. remain
ing one day on the glacier and re
turning by the same route.
Baltistan, Mrs. Workman’s Italian
guide, with porters and 80 coolies,
reached the barren mountain on the
flank of the upper Saichen on August
20 in a violent snowstorm. The base
of her camp was made at a height of
OHIO RIVER NAVIGATION CENTENNIAL
Patrolman John Gessord was sent to
the Kuh home.
“On your way,” said Clara, “or I’ll
bate you with this pot of tomato
soup.’’
Gessord went back to the station.
Pretty soon Dr. Kuh called up again.
Another policeman, this one Patrol
man Charles Pearl, arrived.
"What,” said Clara, “another one 1 .
Well, well! And 1 suppose you are all
swelled up on yourself, thinking you
are going to succeed where that other
policeman failed. Well, you’re not. 1
fire myself, see. Whenever I want
any help I’ll send for you.”
So Policeman Pearl went his way.
A little later Clara sent for Dr. Kuh.
He came quite submissively.
“Doctor,” said Clara, “1 don’t like
this place. There are too many po
liceman around. Good night.”
Rattlesnakes Aid a Lover.
Cubter, S. D.—Rattlesnakes won for
Charles Pringle just as he was about
to be rejected by Mary Clark, a pret
ty school teacher. About to be bitten
Mary rescued Charles and they will
marry. He killed the snake.
Sandals for Women Urged
German Savant Predicts Four Toed
Foot From Present Style of Shoes
—Change Now in Progress.
Los Angeles, Cal.—" American wo
men will have only four toes on each
foot a thousand years from now, be
cause they wear shoes too small for
them. This in time will pinch the lit
tle toe of each foot out of existence.”
This was the assertion of Dr. Franz
Bergman, a noted physician of Berlin,
touring the United States to study
American life.
“It will take generations to bring
about this change in the anatomy of
the foot, but it is coining,” he con
tinued. "In fact, it is already in prog
ress.
“The toes of American women are
cramped out of their natural shape.
over 16,000 feet. The minimum tem
perature for two nights was five de
grees Fahrenheit, when it cleared up
and a rush was made for the source
of the glacier, 15 miles to the north
west.
One of the highest branches was as
cended to its origin at a height of 10,-
000 feet. After descending to another
base, where Mrs. Workman saw a few
patches of grass, she found a second
affluent, and ascended to a height of
19,000 feet and stopped in a great
snow platform.
A 21,000 foot mountain was ascend-
Five-Cent Tip Is Spumed
Disappointed Taxicab Pilot Astonishes
European “Fare” by Strange Dis
position of Largesse.
New York. —Women were discarding
their wraps in the lobby of the St.
Regis at the dinner hour when a tall
man from Europe entered the hotel
through the huge revolving doors.
There was a loud rattle-rattle-rattle
on the glass. The man from Europe
turned hastily and looking about asked
the guard in gold braid:
“What was that?”
"I don’t know, sir. I saw nothing,
sir,” the braided one replied.
“Very strange,* said a man in the
lobby, stepping up. “Quite a loud re
port. Must have come from the out
side.”
"Ah, there, guard! Step out and
CAT HAS SOUL OF DEAO KING
Sacred Siamese Feline, Personal Gift
of Prince Djamahranji of Royal
Siam Family, Is Stolen.
Boston. —A sacred Siamese cat. In
which the soul of a departed Siamese
emperor is alleged to reside, has been
stolen from its owner. Miss Florzell
Silverado, No. 24 Somerset street.
The cat is a personal gift to Miss
Silverado from Prince Djamahranji of
the royal family of Siam, having been
given to her in Bangkok, Siam. The
Siamese believe in the transmigration
of souls, the souls of emperors taking
up their habitation in the bodies of
this species of cats. Accordingly, the
cats are kept only in the royal palaces
as objects of religious veneration,
with capital punishment prescribed
for the man who kills one.
Alters Long Name.
Terre Haute, Ind. —“I am glad of
the opportunity to have my name
changed,” said Miss Katherine Otto
rordemgentschenfelde, twenty-three
years old, the other day, as she was
handed the papers which gave her
the privilege to change the burden
some appelation. She will be married
to Louis Kalen, a farmer.
One year they wear high heels, the
next low. Some seasons their toes
are pinched by shoes narrowing in
front to a point and others shoved up
ward or sideways by shoes that rep
resent the changing styles. The only
way to save the little toes of fu
ture generations is to start women in
America wearing sandals.”
Men Learn to Cook. •
Logan, Utah. —The domestic sci
ence classes of Utah Agricultural col
lege no longer are sacred to women.
Harley Greaves and John Short, prom
inent in college affairs, have enrolled.
“We intend to homestead 320 acres
of desert land apiece,” said Greaves,
“and we’re not going to starve to
death while we are doing it.”
ed, on which the party was caught in
a monsoon and driven back to camp.
Thirty miles of the glacier were trav
ersed without any sign of wood. A
number of large ibexes were seen. Not
withstanding the storms and the dif
ficulty of obtaining supplies, the ex
pedition remained on the Saichen un
til September 15, and secured new
and interesting glaciological and geo
graphical information.
Mrs. Workman I» the first woman
who ever set foot on the Rose glacier.
She concludes her story by saying:
“We placed eight big stone cairns
on the Saichen and its affluents and
explored much where no human foot
had trod, but much remains to be
done before the problems of this glo
rious snow area are solved.”
see!’" thundered the assistant mana
ger. The mah went out trembling
The result of his inquiry was as
tonishing to the man from Europe.
He had returned to the St. Regis in
a "tramp” taxicab, and after paying
his fare gave the chauffeur a nickel
for himself. The latter threw it with
all his force at the glass door.
“I was thoughtless,” murmured the
man from Europe. “Undoubtedly he
is a gentleman chauffeur and too
proud to take a tip.”
Police Whistles for Car Men.
New York. —Because street car em
ployes often need the assistance of*
police and are unable to leave their
cars to find officers police commission
er Waldo will supply them with police
whistles.
NOTED EDITOR OEM
Pulitzer One of America’s Fore
most Publishers.
Although Stricken Blind Over Twenty
Years Ago He Since Editorially
Directed His Two Big Dally
Newspapers.
Charleston, S. C.—Joseph Pulitzer,
editor and proprietor of the New York
World and the St. Louis Post Dis
patch, died recently on board Mils
yacht. Liberty, in the harbor here. He
had been UI only about 48 hours and
until just before he died it was be
lieved that the illness was only a
slight indisposition. His passing re
moved one of the greatest newspa
pers publishers us the age.
Late one afternoon 22 years ago,
Joseph Pulitzer, then but forty-two
years old, was-'leaning on the rail of
a yacht as the boat was standing out
of* the Bosphorus and into the Black
sea, looking toward the setting sun
through eyes which for years had
been strained, when he was stricken
blind.
And for the last 20 years almost up
to the moment of his death —he has
been in constant touch with the morn
ing and evening editions of uis New
York World and his Post-Dispatch of
St. Louis, personally during his short
and infrequent visits to Manhattan
and by telegraph or cable while
cruising here and abresid on his
yacht.
Os late years he has spent most of
his days aboard his palatial yacht,
surrounded by a corps of readers and
secretaries, who read the newspapers
to him carefully and then carried out
his orders. It was an ordinary oc
currence for him to wake up his staff
aboard the yacht at two or three
o’clock in the morning to aid him in
some work he had suddenly thought
of.
Mr. Pulitzer was sixty-four years
old. Besides three sons, Mr. Pulitzer
Joseph Pulitzer.
leaves two daughters, Miss Edith
Pulitzer and Miss Constance Pulitzer.
Mr. Pulitzer’s entry into New York
journalism occurred in 1883, when he
bought the World, tnen a paper of
small circulation.
Prior to his debut as a newspaper
man in 1870 Mr. Pulitzer had, for
five years, worked In various capaci
ties. Going to St. Louis at the close
of the Civil war, after having been
mustered out of the First New York
cavalry after a year’s service, he ob
tained his first employment as a
deckhand on a ferryboat.
Afterward he did manual work on
the levee, then became a hostler in
the Benton barracks, and later be
came a waiter in a case.
Following this he had a place as a
coachman, and through part of the
cholera epidemic in the latter sixties
he was a grave digger.
THIS LOUD EATER IS REBUKED
Pennsylvania Justice Roundly Lectures
a Man on His Table
Deportment.
Wilkes-Barre. Pa.—After making so
much fuss while eating in a restau
rant that he had started a quarrel,
Walter Gorden of Duryear, was lec
tured severely by Aiderman John F.
Donohue of this city and told to return
home and learn better table manners.
“There are a great many fellows
like you,” said the alderman, "who
come to this city and make them
selves offensive to others by their lack
of table manners in public places.
They drink their coffee as if they were
donkey pumps and eat their food with
a noise like a concrete mixer at an
asphalt plant.
“You ought to be sent to the county
jail, where you could eat your beans
with a knife and drink your soup with
a fork. Next time you come here
bring a handout with you, put it in a
horse’s nosebag and eat it on the river
bank.”
Train Cuts Off Sleeper’s Hat.
Kewanee, 11l. —William McGregor, a
peddler, fell asleep in the railroad
yards and lay so close to the track
that a passing train cut off his hat
and chopped a suitcase full of cloth
ing to bits. McGregor did not awaken
Laughs at Show Till He Dies.
South Weymouth, Mass— Literally
splitting his sides with laughter while
witnessing a comic opera In a Bos
ton theater, Thomas M. Ryan of this
place, reptured a blood vessel near
the heart and died.
MARRIED AND
UNMARRIED
LADIES
Will Find Some Useful Advice in
the Words of Mrs. Jay McGee
of Stephenville.
Stephenville, Tex.—"For nine years,*
says Mrs. Jay McGee, of this place. I
suffered from womanly troubles. I
had terrible headaches and palna in
my back, etc.
My husband suggested Cardui .to
me, but I did not think anything would,
do me any good.
It seemed as if I would die, I suf
fered so! At last, I consented to try
Cardui, and it seemed to help me,
right away. I was interested, and con
tinued its use.
The full treatment not only helped
me, but it cured me.
It will do the same for all sick and
suffering girls or women—both mar
ried and unmarried.
I will always praise Cardui highly,
for it has been the means of saving
my life and giving me good health.”
Half a century of success, with thou
sands of cures, similar to the one de
scribed above, amply prove Cardui’s
real, scientific, medicinal merit.
Being purely vegetable, Cardui can
be taken safely by young and old, and
can do nothing but good. Its action
is very gentle, and without any bad
after-effects.
Why not benefit by the experience
of others? Try it, today.
N. B.—Write tos Ladles’ Advisory-
Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat- |
tanooga, Tenn., for Special Instruc
tions, and iM-page book, “Home Treat
ment for Women,” sent In plain wrap
per, on request.
SUCCESSFUL COLLECTOR,
go
XW® ml \
Easte Turner —I should think you’d
have lots of trouble collecting ’way
out here.
Collector Suremark —Not on yer
life; everybody here knows I kin
plunk the bull’s-eye nine shots out ot
ten!
A POLICEMAN'S EXPERIENCE.
Suffered for Years From Chronic Kid
ney Trouble.
Walter J. Stanton, 1139 Pear St.,
Camden, N. J., says:
"Kidney trouble
bothered me for 1^
years. If I stooped,
sharp twinges shot
through my back and
it was hard for mo to
arise. I was treated
|by several doctors,
one a specialist, but
I did not receive relief.
Finally I began using
Doan’s Kidney Pills
and soon noticed im
provement. I con
tinued until the trou
ble entirely disap
peared.”
"When Your Back
Is Lame, Remember
the Name —DOAN’S.”
50c, all stores; Fos
ter-Milburn Co., Buf>
falo, N. Y.
Adam Bede on Pittsburg.
Pittsburg patriots twisted their
faces awry at a Smoketown pun de
livered by former Congressman Bede
of Minnesota.
Bede put it over in the climax of a
sparkling speech at a chamber of
commerce banquet.
After telling how dearly he loved
old Pittsburg and her fine old people,
her rich people and her toilers, he
said:
“I like Pittsburg because if I ever
get tired of the town I can wash it
off.”
In High Life.
“So the Filptons have separated?”
"Yes.”
“no you know any of the particu
lars ?”
“She keeps the poodle.”
For HEADACHE— Hicks’ CAPLDUVJB
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Cupudine will relieve yoix
It’s liquid-pleasant to take—acts immedi
ately. Try it. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at drug
stores.
No man will have any trouble about
understanding as much of the Bible
as he is willing to live.
To strive at all involves a victory
achieved over sloth, inertness and in
dl fference.—Dickens.
1
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pell#' 'inflate
and invigorate stomach, liver f with ( els.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules, a Hike
as candy. Jr. V
1 f to pay
The man who is enviotf he ’**’
ers will soon be one himr“ 0