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THE WEEKLY LED LEE, EE T DAY. DECEMDEE 21. 1S9t. m NfW rAKTWl'V Mill ! hisrh, Wiii> a boiler and «*n-ino house Wlj!! uArrNijI WllLL. |;,o x ;*u foot, nil of !»ri« k. Tlu-l.uild- i in<r will be* of tin* most modern mill — ■ * 1 | r? i construction, with gravel roof, etc., THE SUCCESS 01* A SOUTHERN i mid with a capacity of in.tHMtspindles ‘•FINE" MILL. ftn< ^ looms, and will he completed j by September next. I Our illustration shows the Oatfney mills as they will appear when the new mill is completed. The portion to the legend, •'OatTn.\\ Manufaetur- in^Co., Is!) 1 is tin new part now ! under course of const met ion. “The mill will he equipped wit h t he j followinir machinery : happens from the A. T. Atherton Machine Co.. Pawt ticket. It h. latest improved i trunk system: cards anil from Pet tee Machine \\ ork- I'pper Paris. Mass.. IS revolving cards. l:?2 deliveries drawing: roving machinery. It!) frames. from the Woonsocket Machine and Press Co., Woonsocket. It I.; spinning. 2'>.<)!iu spindles, Whitin gravity spindle, huilt hy the well-known Whitin mm* A Full Description of the New $425,000 Mill Showing the Marvelous Growth of the Gaffney Manufacturing Co. The following from the Hoston Journal oft'ommeree is of local inter est to Till*: I.i:i«;i*.i: readers: We illustrated last \pril the “tine” cotton mill of the (iafTney Manufaet tiring Co .. of (iallney. S. ('. This mill was huiit in IS92. The main mill heing 2(il feet long hy 7’> feet wide, two stories high, with en gine room, cloth room, and hoiler house 120x10. twostories. except the drawing Newton 1 vi n"'-llat Machine the Corliss Steam Engine Co., Provi dence, R. I., and is especially de signed hy D. M. Thompson, lute man ager for il. II. A R. Knight. The mill will he fitted up c ’ e with elec tric lights, automatic sprinklers, etc., furnished by the well-known l>. A. Tompkins Co., of Charlotte, N. The heating of the mill will he*by blow system. ' .'.'T- 'I'hc hoard of directors and otlicers of this company are as follows: Pres ident. A. N. Wood, hanker; treasurer and general manager, II. I>. Wheat, formerly superintendent of the Clif ton Manufaet wring Co directors, A. X. Wood, H. I). Wheat. J A. Carroll. William JetTcries. <>. (>. Falls. J. I>. Jones; .1. P. Wilson, treasurer ^Char iot te Supply Co.; R. M. Miller, Jr., treasurer the l>. A. I’ompkins Co. C2 The new mill will he run on the same class of goods as are now made at tin* old mill, namely, til squares made of the v«*r\ host cot toil' C '.fL.'Ti These mills are lonatcd at tialTney. houses are now located at convenient points around tin* present mill, which is supplemented hy a large under- ivriters lire pump of one thousand gallons per minute capacity, nearthc hoiler house, which is at all times, nights and Sundays, ready for duly, fifty pounds of steam being kept up for this purpose. I his pump has a> its supply a brick and cement reser voir of 17n.<•(M) gniIons eapaeit y. Re sides this reservoir a P'lMMi gallon iron tank in the top of the old mill tower supples the automatic sprink ler system. Such additional facili ties for preventing or extinguishing fires that experience ran suggest will also he added in connection with the new mill. The old mill was huilt cheaper than any ot her lirst-class mill in t he soul h. the cost perspindlc being only-f IN.21. wliicl: inelndes real estate, tenements, warehouse, reservoir, mill buildings and maehinery. and we have no doubt when tin* new'mill is linallv eom- yyy i fa It It a ’ \rd.-K l« id ! slMtli , m 1 a es LJ j ft ji if !,i al.fabi 7 a T\rT?r; boiler house, which was only one xtory. This mill started operation in ! May. IS'JJ. spinning yarns of 28 warp ami :u; to :itt lining, making cloth the 1 same count and number as print cloth (t»l\<'>l) but instead of being printed it is linished fcrlhe Ideeeli- ing trade running 10.122 spinning spindles and t!"ii looms. It has run day and ni^ht since that time, its product being sol ! up and part of it ahead It' siic< i - • has been so great that ao ine^a e of capacity has been found neee-.sary and steps have been taken to meet the demand for its out put. Aeeordioglx tlie capital stock of the companv has been increased from $ I No.o* to to immi. This in crease is t" he put iiito a new mill, equipp'd with the most modern im proved inachinci> lie' new huild- iog will he :{*_0\|0 ' feet four stories Works, Whitinville. Mass.; spoolers and warpers from t ien, !>raper A* Sons, Mopodaic. Mass., latest improved iron box or spooler a ml latest design new pattern warpers; looms from Leo. Draper A'sons (ilkt; late ' patent au tomatic lilling am! warp stop-motion. The slashers are not y *t i!e{< nuiued on. 'Fhe entire miil \ ill ir ‘ittetl up with the I’nited S;a? - \« •pli »r sys tem of air moist ni l fu I’iiislied hy the I'nited States Air-Moi-iening and X'entilating <'o.. of 1’ o ': iema R. I. The steam plan! v.ili be me of the best and most '•"lophae plants iiorth or soul h— 1 1 *■)-horse p iv, (*r cross-com pound 'ondeusing (ico. II. t'orlissen- goie; si/e of !ly-v. liec!. 2o feet ilianu— ter. by 7-fno( !-incii fae * for two h'dt r : Weigll I of v. I ;“e|, '.)o.< M ?(1 poll mis: and the boilers . i the t'oriis- water- leg type. This p : ..e', is fu * .i Uc i hy ' S. (’., fifty-three miles south of Char- i lotle. X, on the main line of the Southern railroad. The company owns forty-one acres of land. 2.uni) feet of which fronts on the above rail road. Resides the building men tioned the company owns a two-story brick olliee building, size o(5x22. also standard cotton warehouse and waste house, thirty tenements, eight ol which are brick, the others are neat frame cottages. This company lias the lust cottages in the south for its opera! ives. The new building will lie ciiilim>e<[ with automat ie sprinklej^g lights, etc., similiar It) Tin- (dd mill is claimed ! insurance companies t< best fire risks In tlu; coiuT new mill will he fully eql Sprinkler equipments ir ROBBED A Holt Tli* 1 HIS St|i i i* .si l| 111 fHi* .1 W * « U. Down" at Pretty l.ak Charley Cook used t'> Is rnullII. People till over fesed to kniAv li FISH LINE. bows a ml arrows. amt the arrows I lid., old a great tlsh- tlie country could catch fidi whether there were any or not. lie bad a place along the bank of the lake which lie looked upon ns hi 1 'own, and which was seldom trespassed upon by judglihurs. And there he had built n staging out into the lake and set his lines from the end of it. Every morn ing he used to come down and take the fish that had been caught in the night. One time, says the Chicago Herald, he came down there and found the line in the water, but the honk was. as lie afterward expressed it. “as nakvdas. H bird's foot." That night he baited the hook again and set ih and in the inornlng lie found it empty again. That sort of thing Went on for a week. There were no track’s in the soft sand and he did not know whom to suspect. ; He took a lish-line and stretched it about the entrance to his • tag'mg ami attached the end of it to a string of aleigh Iwlls, so that the trespasser, whoever In announcement of his felony Hut the lish were gone from the hook in the morning, and the line tils nit the entrance of the staging was just as he had left it. Mr. Cook was in a good deal of trouble. Hut he was a persist ent man. and so he fixed up a shelter and laid out there one night and watched with his shotgun in his hand. About midnight he heard a noise at the farther end of the staging, a j splashing in the water and a low growl. li* 1 could not understand it, be cause he had been .watching closely and no man bad passed. Hut he came Closer and saw a small animal out there j above the deep water,and it was strug gling with a lish. Mr. Cook put his gun t<» his shoulder and tired, and a email gray wolf leaped into the water and swam to the shore, where he took another shot and finished it. That wolf had been robbing his fish line every night fora week. tipped with Hint, with edjr.-s eldsel- ,shaped and the tips not sharp. The IP/vptia 11 contingent marches bi reg ular order, “locked up*." tie.* negro sol diers straggle. 'ilit* latter must have been the irregulars, because to use the bow and arrow must have required a loose formation. WHERE DIALECT RUNS WILD. might be. would ring an H|ieelineii of Die An'ot in t <e \moic.; Aus tralian Sln-cn Shearer*.. If the specimen of Australian dialect which Gilbert Parker give , in the Idler is a fair sample of what we may expect when dialect writers begin to work up that country, we have not yet seen the worst. Here is a little story which reads like a missing word pu/./.le or a cipher telegram: “Tell ye uw it was. 1 toddles olf to the s.'hed, pulls down me tongs, 'auls out a bloomin' pnpillion, and was gohf down the whippin' side, both blades 'cavilv load ed. w’on the boss drops and shot me dead. 1 takes a op skip an’ a jump back to the 'ut. put t wo folds hut he old shirallee, slings the 'og 'hie on the tall crocodile, goes up the river like a frog, sits down along sleepy Jim's muster and strips a hundred and forty by four o’clock next." And here is the inter pretation which Mr. Parker is kind enough to furnish u>: “This is how it happened: 1 walked oiT to the shearing shed, took down my shears, hauled out a beep, and 1 was clipping down the riylit-liand side with all my mig*ht, when the manager came and discharged me. I went back to the hut. folded up my blanket, put the sad dle on my horse, galloped up the river, stopped at Sleepy .I ini's sheep pell and shore a hundred and forty by four o’clock next dav." pleted that it will show a cost per spindle , hat will even discount that of the *'oid mill, if a mill less than two years old ran lie called old. W hen lids mill was started on tine numbers it was predicted hy a great mam mill men that it would never be a - ueee-s spinning t hese numbers, a> it was (houghl that no other mills but 1 hosi in New England eould do it. It has demonstrated tiiat tine goods eat) lie made ill the south just a good a* ; they e/n^be anywhe re else in the worh^p chetiper D»o. The *s X v A tialTney S-‘ .^ll ;?le smit it. Rti I - MY KIDNEYS! Yes. your kidneys are one of the most vital parts of your body. They are the great Itloocl 11 orH ami must be kept pure, clean and in their normal condition if you want to enjoy good healt h. THE WEAK AND NERVOUS have their kidneys alfeeied. They need cleansing and restoring to a healt hy state, t hen t he blood becomes purified and the bloom of health re turns. In order to cleanse your kid neys, use STUARTS GiN AND BUCHU. It is the one reliable remedy. Sim ple. cheap and elTeetive. It is an in fallible rein'dy for kidney, bladder and til! urinary disease*. It has CURED THOUSANDS. Mr. E. L. D. Mddey .-u lie red for year* from excruciating pain in the bladder. ST I A RT S (JIN AND Hi t'll I made him a well man.” Mr. \Y. A. Culver considers STl - ART S GIN \.\D Rl till I lie best kidney, urinary and bladder remedy in the world. Sold In W . R. Dui’re Prepare For The Hereafter! I am prepared to place your I INtr^S Iv* A < ; in such rrliaho* companies as THE /ETNA, HOME, AMERICAN, PENNSYLVANIA, HARTFORD, Im c;. AL Y. POSITIONS GUARANTEED. under reasonable conditions. Do not say it cannot be done until you send for “free” 12<) page catalogue— DKAI'UIION's I’KAITK'AI, Ht’SINKSS I Of.. i.kck and School of Shorthand. Type writing and Telegraphy . X asiivii.i.k, Tkxx. 4 wkkks by Draughon’s method of teaching book keeping is equal to 12 WKKKS by old method . It expends more money in the in terest of its Employment Department than half the business colleges in the south take in us tuition. It is strongly endorsed hy hankers, mer chants and practical book-keepers all over the I’nited States. Reasonable rates of tuition. Cheap Hoard. Open to both sexes. tilHI students past year, representing Rti States and Ter ritories. It also has prepared hooks for sent on (it) days trial. When you write explain “your wants.” Ad dress, S. F. Draughon, I’rcst., Nash ville, Tenn. X. 11. It pays cash, IN, for vacancies as book-keepers, ste nographers. teachers, etc reported, provided it fills same. W.L. Douglas S3 SHOE X IS THE BEST. MO SQUtCAKING. ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SOLDIERS. Dlarovt-rlc* Tint! l.ulcl) Itrrn Mad* In tin* Torn!* of .\>niut. Mention was recentIv made in a f<rr- \\ lull On. rim ,\r<*. The ipicrn is nmong tlie oldest and most primitive .>f nn <*lianiMiis for the grinding of grain. Tiierc is a fixed stone and above it a rotating one. There is a hide in Use middle of the upper, or movable s’, >ne, into which the 1 grain is dropped. A stick tix«*d into ! the upper stone permits of it being ; moved around. A wooden spindle runs ; through both stones. It is a good ma- | chine, hut useless to-day. Neverthe less. the quern, with but very little va riations. precisely as it wssusi d in pre- NAPOLEON’S Tim l.Hftt Mils Ht IluiHlred Daj It nvas customnr review his tn'otajl time of peace, iL iPfrcat battle. Th assumed the natm and were held ii«, Haris. The las: cugo Herald, wl ISl.*>, in the I'lai 1 ] anniversary of Rome, and inchi in Haris. It famous “huii The emperor, every rank, t’j Selves into s» addressed ini returned to hundred id the love of the brance of me cherJ troops. I have no! 1 y exiH'etations; I tha The glory of all that is a<? tirely due to the people an* My only merit consists in hayTI appreciated you. We are on < of marching to drive from our terfrmry the auxiliaries of foreign princes; the nation will no doubt second our en deavors and follow onr impulse. The French people and myself rely upon you. We wiil not meddle with the af fairs of other nations, but woe he to those who interfere with us. If they have six hundred thousand men we can oppose them with two million." During the whole of the address, which was somewhat extended, the en thusiasm of the soldiers was every where apparent, and at its conclusion their expressions of approbation were reiterated for several minutes, .lust as the review terminated, a lady, very elegantly dressed, made her way toward the emperor, bearing a scaled package in her hands which she pre sented to him. requesting that it might not Ik* opened until his return to the palace. It was afterward under stood to contain bank bills to a con siderable amount, the tribute of an un known patriot in upport of her coun try and the rau*-e of tlie elii|*»*ror. A GENUINE SNOOZE. j?»oyne A k.of t he ('harlot t e M a- I. D. Wheat treasurer Manufacturing Co., ueers of t in* now mill. came uproarlou-,. ami ■tls” wanted to know* if g to be “nineteen years iZe business." At this ■gan to snore. This E>ter, who opened a the stage and Is*gun fi below. Tlie fagged il in his pocket for an iy ticket and muttered right through, due- tirely new reading the xaustixed with aina/e- Ll at once JctiVr. on sat shriek, evidently m operated prompter had h a pin. $5. COUDOVAN, french&enameheocalf v 5 4. s 3. 5 - 0 FlNECALF&KiAkGAROl \ $ 3.5P POLICE,3 Soles. | $ o!i?»2 W0RKINGMENs 1 F.XTKA FINE. ’2a1. 7 _ 5 Boys$choolShoes. •LADIES* ^ 'b^stDONGOL^ jENO TOR CATALOGUE off W'L* DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Von can save vumey iiy pur*, busiug VV. L. iniiiuiiiH S Hcc*iusc, we arc tlie lar;. **-1 manufacturers of relvcr'.isc 1 shots in the r. jiU. ami guarantee tlie value by stampini; tlie name and price on tlie bottom! which protects "u against hiRh prici'S and the middleman's profits. _Ot*.r shoes tijiml custom woili i*.t style, easy fitting and wearing qiialitien. We have them sold every where at tower prices for the value given than any other make. Take 1:0 sab-mute, it your dealer cauuot supply you. * .e can. Sold by Wl‘ Kl'iS ‘Jh’OxSait'nev. S. C. The Henneman Monumental Jewelry Store. The largest stock of Solid Silver Ware, Silver Novel ties, 1 > 1 -TV - and in Pied mont Caro- lina. Out of town orders solic ited. 45 Morgan Spare, ", ' ’ JU SOLTIIKKX RAIIAVAY CO. (liVSI l.KN >\V1K\I.) NT GARTER. cign exchange "f the disenverv "f the historic time-, i* uiade and sold and tomb of Assiut (tilth dynasty) of wood en models of two companies of Egypt ian soldiers. Each company consists of forty figures about thirteen inches high, fixed to a w ooden board in squads of four. The figures are colored and have the loin cloth. They are equipped with spear and shield. The spears arc as long as the men and the buttscar- ried on a hvelwith the knee. The bronze heads are about one-sixth the total length of the spi .r, an*! are shaped like those of tlm pf to-day. 'I'hc sld'i base and come t<^ eight indies long. i iortion is a butte] land passes, black-skinned, sit feteeato Uiu trulis luaro rear , grinds its ;:*r;:in to-day in t!ic Orkney and llebridian island.s. \\ bat a patent Hour-making mill of the p; • ent day would cost we do mi, know. Init a few years ago a good quern ct i id be mat.e in Shetland ior about on.* i! liar. Wbli ii W el me Itri IcV As g'ood an example .- j’ 'mman in justice as could ea-I'y la* found .\ a re- voiili d hi a remark i aide b . ;; ueiii w!io was recently nm « ’.irin t'. : r» et by ti cabman. Tin injmvd iii.:n v.asked if he knew tlie cabp. n’.-, nui ii • *, and answered: “No, I c >ul ! e 1 . ! : but I got even with the bmto. Just ,e. be was driving i ay i hit !i !;..i e a fearful blow with my cir •, an t I shouldn't wonder if i* would lame him.” The l.iKlieruiis Situation of H Nol«"<l Com- eUinii. Joe .TefVers<'m is a careful actor, but mice in Chicago he overdid 01 c portion of his performance. Re was playing Rip Van \\ inkle, and went to the thea ter vi ry mudi exhausted by a long day's lishing'-n tlie lako. As tlie cur tain rose on the third act, says our in formant, if uiseloseil the white-haired Rip still deep in the twenty years' nap. I'ive. ten. tw**iit\ minutes passed and he did not waken. The audience began to get impatient am' the prompter un easy. The great actor doubtless knew what be was about, but this was carry ing* the realistic business too far. The fact was that all this time Jefferson was really sleeping the sleep of the just, or rather of the fisherman w ho i t had sat ciuht huurs in the fjUu. Final- licnrce nmi It Mxs He in a I'nloniHt. stance of the paucity says Westminster Hud- Koschery should have qint Garter on a liberal the distinction was brd Lansdowne w as on ffentitlcd. e order consists of fifty knights, thes/fcventy-flve are royalties, in- cTudin'Pur own princes and a number of the continental emperors and kings and royal dukes. The other twenty- five are English noblemen. The late Earl Grey and the late carl of Derby both belonged to the order. Of present members the following are unionists: Earl Fit/.w illiam. Earl C'ow- per. duke of Richmond and Gordon, duke of Reaufort. duke of Westmin ster, earl of Leicester, marquis of Sal isbury, duke of Grninon, duke of Ar gyll, marquis of Northampton, mar quis of Abergavenny, duke of .Norfolk, marquis of Londonderry, duke of Rut land. Earl Cadogan, duke of Devonshire and duke of Abercorn. The liberal IC. G.'s number only four —Earl Spencer, marquis of Kip m. earl of Kimberly and carl of Rosebery. '1 he other dates from 134t», and everybody remembers the legend associated with its foundation- the then countess of Salisbury was the lady--and to which Itrowniug refers in the follow inglincs: The eurl's greatest of all grttiiUniothors Was grainier tlauuhter still to that 'air game Whose carter slijiueit down at tlu* famous ball. A Modern Itabel. Switzerland, with its mixture of races and tongues, is a sort of modern Hubei a fact which causes muth trouble, in particular to the military authorities. At Wullcnstadt the other day, at the recruiting station, there was a guard compor-ed of live men. The cine! was a lieutenant v. h > spoke German only, tlie second a sergeant, jm PENNsHOUL PiLLS Lr'giee ..•:••• i FomiMo Regula- ’I tor *e -.. .tie ways re .lee. ! it ,. . gll 'a: ’.t ICS, i :• t.iil Mi - • • S' ppreS- (O a''onI a E.vfK- ; -Rive • > •. a *.- of e\- ■<! i!::ect p •: i':i'*i.age. .• :* .y'"i.t!H. by 1;: Hu k a 1 • k . G ii-s sealed) ie. HAKK K'r.M. i;\ k!> , Hoston, Mass. J. E. WEBSTER, A i i oi'tiv' V- At* i < -1 vv • Gaffney City. S. C. I’r.iet ie-il: all the eoiirts. t'ollec I 1 : :l •: > ' i • 1 a ' *• m m % y i 08 m ii H ^ /• JL f ; ^ < ».c r- SJt’.A j fe. 53. * - 5 L v m.ij* m who spoke Italiau the thinl a corporal. w!io coa.J speak I'reneli and Spanish, tin* fourth, a private, who eon! 1 speak I’reneli and < • n an. and the fifth a private who could -peak French and Italian. Wisent i.e lieuten ant had to transmit an order to the bergeant he had togctlh * la*)-!*, nned man to interpret tor him: when ho Wanted to connnunicat. w iifi the cor poral he had ti> rcipii ition ttie fourth man, and so on great del*, and con fusion being thusoccasi nod. PIEDMONT AIR LIME. oonolxsko scutum: or rAvstsi.iiK iH*isa. Yc>. f stns 1 N«irtbliaun«t No.au No ail No. l*i \|' J4 Lv Altai.ta e lime 12.0'm i> K.DO a ** Atlanta i: lime l.UO t> hi oo a •*.D0 a ...... . •• NorcrosV lo a •.♦.44 a • • ... • •* llulord u.i n 10.17 a # “ tiai: c-ville.. 2.25 |i ll 2' o 10.4; a ...... . '* l.ula 11.51 V ii.n a ...... . “ « ornvl.a. li.:-:; ; , •• Ml Airy . ■«. 1141 a ... .., , . *• Tn.roa — 12 41 a 1 .Mi P #. “ Wot minster . 1.17 a 12 42 j . . *• S, ne. a .. l a 12 .0 i ## '• (Vntral 4.4 i P 2 o.* a 1 .s»J •• Cr.'fiivilk*.... 27 I' :: iij a - Jg i # # •• S]iartunburK.. (i.ls I» 4"t a J 4 • 11 , . ** i iaiiin-y * . 4.42 a 4/J4 i» , . *• iVafivti rn • ■ . 7.0.'. P .'>.01 u 4.1J i* . , •' Kin,* sMonnt n .. •J.'j J a pi -••••• lia-tonia .. 5.40 a i* Ar. Charlolt'* 8.2" P 0.50 a b y.uu » Ar. DnuviKe 12.00 a 11.55 a i r .j:» a 12.50 • — i •- — -• ..— Ar. Kicnmoiul 6.45 a ** 4.50 »• 0.46 a Ar. Was'.ilunton .. 6.4: 8.: so P ./ 7.42 • • li.lltitllV IMI.lt. K.i 5 II r P •• 0.02 • 1 > ailad"l|iliia 1".25 a ay ii a • *• 11 20 • •• New York 12 .VI It i». L'G a .vv.*. t 2.1J V Vc - f si m l Soi.tlitxicml. No. a7 No. a *i No. 11;No.31 Daily Daily .Daily j Dally I.v Nvv. vorlt I'.u.K 4 ao n l.'.ti ti ...j J *iu p *• t’iiitaitclliiiiii. 6gS [i 7.'.*ii a ... J.S3 p •* llti!'.imore ... i>a!0 |> '.l.’ a ...| s.S7 p *• Wa-.i:ia^ t"ii. l'l.4U ji ll.i'l a ..jlii.u} p •* Kb-limonil 12.50 a 12 :m n l.*.:o a “ Danville. •* t’iirr'.otu*.. •* (iustonia . “ Kinv -..do' itt'ii “ ISSa<Uv.;r„'... 10.47 “ llitffl.cjs •* Sg r'.a!i | 't,.iv.. 11..')7 '* Civcioillv 1J.2S '• (Vuiral 1.15 “ Seite.-a . •* Wvsintitislvr I .... *• 'It. VOU Mo;.in Airy ... l iii'l.vlia . .. .. “ la:la “ < iaitiesN ille. I a.al “ llulord •" Xor« ros*. Ar Atlanta Ktime 4.55 Ar Atlanta I* I a.. r >5 a .y..V» a ' .nit a 7>.( a 11." 1 p 12 2n a' » ; .#11 .T' p 1.1*4 i»i .. . I S p ... a 12.12 a 1AI n . l.io a 2 I" p 2..W n . 1 *2 a 4 o.*. n a.4*j a 7.01 it.. . . :1 1.42 a' ^ {,. iv 4.72 a S.:o ]>.. . .. ‘J.o'J j).. ., y.a*.' i>.. *e '• 20 a lii.a.i ;ii.. '.j| 5.2 i a y.aii n .. ••A" n. m. “1*." i> m. ‘ M." noon "X." niitbt. Pultnian Car Service No*, .‘to and 30 Uni ted S'a: sUaat Matt. I'nllniaii s'.' cpin^ ('am tp- tween Atlanta Monisfomery. and Xev, \'oiU. Nos..17 undas W'uSi.tnvtonaiid Soiithwciilaril Vestibnlcd Limiit’d.TliroiigU Dul’man SIvcptri I'clwvcii N'i \v York and NtovQrlean-. \ .a Atlau- la and Montn'oiii' i'y.aii^^^^^ji^.-'ou York aiu lt;5.«U3T AS COOP FOR ADULTS. WA.55AWTtv. pjttiCii POcts. Dllill.tf Oal'a. Nos. Il amj# itivlllllol Train! Short l.J U "'O*' i'a>* liolweek r .N ^ Jr* i •JgN.^w \ ork Klorida Pullman '.'nrs. - (• \ > .-11a, it i.Not. K., L()l;’«* ■ i o ! "Mid .LI ' SMC M S a’ ■ V y>.i. la HAIM, in tm dim: l.u-lne.-JI do Hi .itl- i e ..n h UliiUT.su] vUIC. Voun truly, v .. v.Caub \ \\ . E. Du N ‘ L