Newspaper Page Text
Woman’s Keliance.
After Many Discouragements They
Turn to Munyon.
Mrw. JT. Fl Wood, .27 Atihum AVfnnA
Atlanta <\ ■ . . . ■■ i f . . r - ;
<yr U> dytpop.iia for y< u. Lvci/tULitf
...
< -TVA
MV-- ? ;V
< V
V ‘' J I , •\- I\ !
*“** '
I ate <l!»trr«iv > d m' 1 , nnd I wan rapidly
)>oooinltii4 w< ik and d< I ilitab d from my
Inability to pirtak<- ■ f a ri .nr ■ hlnz <!; t.
As« w w< < k.«’ ii. of Mur; .■>»»’« Dyspep
sia. i'uiv . ured me completely It acted
F- a utrong lonic to my rtnrriu h, amt
built up my strength In an aimoi.t mar
velous manner.”
Munyon hat a separate euro for each
Him aie. At all druppl'.tn, Mostly 25 ciuta
k vial. Pd-Honal ]<-ii. ; to J’j.-f. Munyon,
I,Mr. Aich St, I’hll < toiphta. Pa. an
-1 a cred ulUi tfve mi le al advice for auy
FRENCH
TANSY
WAFERS
These are the Genuine French Tansy
Wafers, imported direct from Faris.
I.aibes can depend upon securing relie!
from and cure of Famftil and Irregular
Periods regardless of cause.
EMERSON DRUG CO.,
Importers and Agents for the United
States, San Jose, Cal.
C. T. KING,
Druggist, aide agent for Macon, tin
TH El
NLW YORK WORLD.
Tliricoa- Week Edition.
18 Pages a Week . . .
... 156 Papers a Year
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Published every alternate day except Sun
day.
The Th rice-a Week edition of the New
York World is first among all weekly
papers in .size, frequency of publication
and the freshness, aeeuraey and variety of
its contents. It Xias ail Un merits of a
great J(> dally at. the price of adollar week
ly. its political news is prompt, complete,
accurate and impartial, as all of its read
ers will testify, it is against the monopo
lies ami for the people.
It prints the news of all the world, hav
ing special news correspondence from all
points on tin globe. It has brilliant illus
trations, stories by great authors, a cap
ital mumor page, complete markets, a de
partments ofr the household ami women's
work ami other special departments of un
usual interest.
We otter this unequided newspaper ami
The New. together for one vear for SS 00
W. H. HEIGHERT.
PRACTICAL PAPER HWR
AND
INTERIOR DECORATOR.
HONEST WORK. LOW I'RJCBS. 'Esti
mates cheerfully furnished. Prop me a
postal.
163 COTTON AVENUE. MACON. GA.
Horse Shoeing.
New and Improved Methods.
Guarantee! to
Stop Forging.
Scalping Knee ami Shin Hitting. Prevent*
Contraction, corns and all ailmeuts caused
by improper shoing. Diseases of the iet
and foot a specialty.
PROF. C. 11. MESSI.ER,
620 Fourth Street.
Carried off highest honors of his class
Boston 1895. Philadelphia 1896
Turn
(Almost opposite Post office.)
II its anti Tit s
II a ter Coolers,
Ice Cream F resets,
Betty Plates,
Notions, Ct 'oekety,
Glassware anti China.
THE FAIR,
XVx JAPANESE
riA IKS I LrE
CURB
A New and Complete I refitment. consisting
SI PPOSI TORIES, Capsules oi Ointment and two
Boxes of Ointment. A never-failing cure for Pilo
of every nature and degree. It makes an operation
with the knife, which is painful, and often results
in death, unnecessary. Why endure this terne.e
disease? We pack a Written Guarantee in each
$1 Box. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. and $1 a box, 6 lor
$5. Sent by mail. Samples tree
OINTMENT, 25c. and 50c.
CONSTIPATION
treat LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR and
BLOOD PURIFIER. Small, mild and pleasant
to take: especially adapted lor children’s use. 50
doses 25 cents.
. FREE.— A vial of these famous little Pellets will
be given with a $i box or more of File Cure.
Notice—The genuine fresh Japanbsb File
Cure tor sale only by
For sale by Goodwyn’s Drug Store and
Browa House -Pharmacy.
THE LIGHT OF LIFE.
DR. TALMAGE PORTRAYS THE BLESS-
INGS OF MISFORTUNE.
I’eople Who Are Hlind to the Tlright
Light In the Clouds F-arthly Bereove
meot* Fmeiititd to Heavenly Welcome.
Glory Succeed. Gloom.
{Copyright, ISSB, by American Press Asso
ciation. ]
Washington. April 24.—This sermon of
Dr. 'i -<lmago will have a tendency to take
the gloom out of many Jives and stir up a
spirit of healthful anticipation; text.
Job xxxvii, 21, “And now men nee not the
Bright light which is in the clouds.’’
Wind east. Barometer falling. Storm
elgnnls out. Ship reefing inaintopsail.
Awnings taken in. Prophecies of foul
weather everywhere. The clouds congre
gate around the sun, proposing to abolish
him. But after awhile be assails the flanks
of the clouds with flying artillery of light,
and here and then) is a sign of clearing
weather. Many do not observe it. Many
do not realize it. “And now men see not
the bright light which is in the clouds.”
In other words, there are 100 men looking
for storm where there is one man looking
for sunshine. My object Will he to get
you and myself into the delightful habit
of making the best of everything.
You may have wondered at the statistics
that In India in the year 1875 there were
over 19,000 people slain by wild beasts,
and that in the year 1870 there were in
India over 20,000 people destroyed by wild
animals. But there is a monster in our
own land which is yenr by year destroying
lucre than that. It is the old bear of mel
ancholy, and with gospel weapons I pro
pose to chase it back to its midnight cav
erns. I mean to do two sums—a sum in
subtraction and a sum in addit ion—a sub
traction from your days of depression and
an addition to your days of joy. If God
will help me, I will compel you to see the
bright light that there is in the clouds
and compel you to make the best of every
thing.
In the first place, you ought to make
the very best of all your financial misfor
tunes. During the panic a few years ago
you all lost money. Sonic of you lost it
in most unaccountable ways. For the
question, “How many thousands of dol
lars shall I put aside this year?” you sub
titutid the question, “How shall I pay
my butcher and baker mid clotbier and
landlord?” You bad the honsation of row
ing hard with two oars and yet all the
time going down stream.
You did not say much aho.ut it because
it was not politic to speak much of finan
cial embarrassment, but your wife knew.
Loss variety of wardrobe, more economy
nt the table, self denial in art and tapes
try. Compression, retrenchment. Who did
not feel the necessity of it? My friend,
did you make the best of this? Are you
aware of how narrow an escape you made?
Suppose you had reached the fortune to
ward which you were rapidly going? What
then? You would have been -as proud us
Lucifer.
What Is Success?
How few mon have succeeded largely in
a financial sense and yet maintained their
simplicity and religious consecration!
Not one man out of 1(10. There uro glorious
exceptions, but tho general rule is that in
proportion as a man gets well off for tins
world he gets poorly off for tho next. He
loses his sense of dependence on God. Ho
gets a distaste for prayer meetings. With
plenty of bank stocks and plenty of gov
ernment securities, what does that man
know iff the prayer, “Give me this day my
daily bread?” How few men largely suc
cessful in this world are bringing souls to
Christ oi' showing self denial for others or
are eminent for piety? You ean count
them all upon your eight lingers and two
thumbs.
Ono of tho old covetous souls, when he
was sick and sick unto death, used to have
a basin brought in, a basin filled with
gold, and his only amusement and tho
only relief he got for his inflamed hands
was running them down through the gold
and turning it up in tho basin. Oh, what
infatuation and what destroying power
money has for many a man! Now, you
were sailing at HO knots the hour toward
these vortices of worldliness—what a
mercy it was, that honest defalcation! The
same divine hand that crushed your store
house, your bank, your oilice, your insur
ance company, lifted you out of destruc
lion. The day’ you honestly suspended in
business made your fortune for eternity.
“Oil,” you say, “I could get along very
well myself, but I am so disappointed that
I cannot leave a competence for my chil
dren!” My brother, the same financial
misfortune that is going to save your soul
will save your children. With the antici
pation of largo fortune, how much indus
try would your children have, without
which habit of industry there is no safety?
The young man would say, “Well, there's
no need of my working. My father will
soon step out, and then I’ll have just what
1 want.” You cannot b.ide from him how
much you are worth. You think you are
hiding it. Ho knows all about it. He can
tell you almost to a dollar. Perhaps he
has been to the county office and searched
the records of deeds and mortgages, and
ho has added it all up, and bo has made
an estimate of how long you will probably
stay in this world, and is not as much
worried about your rheumatism and short
ness of breath tts you are. The only for
tune worth anything that you can give
your child is the fortune you put in his
head and heart. Os all the young men
who started life with $40,000 capital, how
many turned out well? 1 do not know
half a dozen.
Inspiring Inheritance.
The best inheritance a young roan can
have is the feeling that he has to fight bis
own battle, and that life is a struggle into
which ho must throw body, mind and soul
or be disgracefully worsted. Where are
the burial places es the men who started
life with a fortune? Some of them in the
potter's field, some in the suicide’s grave.
But few of these men reached 35 years of
age. They drank, they smoked, thay gam
bled. In then) the beast destroyed the
man. Seine of there lived long enough to
get their fortunes and went through them.
The vast majority of them did not live to
get their inheritance. From the ginshop
or house of infamy they were brought
home to their father’s house and in de
lirium began to pick off loathsome reptiles
from the embroidered pillow and to fight
back imaginary devils. And then they
wore laid out in highly upholstered parlor,
the casket covered with flowers by indul
gent parents, flowers suggestive of a resur
rection with no hope.
As you sat this morning at your break
fast table and looked into the faces of your
children perhaps you said within your
self: “Poor things! How I wish I could
start them in life with a competence!
How I have been disappointed in all noy
expectations of .what I would do for
them!” Upon that scene of pathos I break
with a pirnn of congratulation, that by
your financial losses your own prospects for
heaven and the prospect for the heaven of
your children are mightily improved. You
may have lost a toy, but you have won a
palace.
“How hardly shsll they that have riches
enter into the kingdom of God!” “It is
easier for a camel to go through a needle's
eye than for a rich man to enter the king
dom of heaven.” What does that mean?
It means that the grandest- blessing God
vver licstoweil upon you was to take your
money away from you. Let me here say,
in passing, do not put much stress on the
treasures of this world. You cannot take
them along with you. At any rate, you
cannot take them more than two or three
miles. Y'ou will have to leave them at
the cemetery. Attila had three coffins. So
fond was he of this life that he decreed
that first he should be buried in a coffin of
gold, and that then that should be inclosed
in a coffin of silver, and that should be in
closed in a coffin 4>f iron, and then a large
amount of treasure should be thrown in
over his body. And so he was buried, and
the men who buried him were slain so
that no one might know where he was
buried and no eno might there interfere
with his treasures. O men of the world
who want to take your money with you,
better have three coffins!
Profit by Bereavements.
Again, I remark you ought to make
the very best of your bereavements. The
whole tendency is to brood over these sep-
and to give much Jimo to the
handling of mementos of the dcpartid,
and to make long visitations to the ceme
tery, and to say: “’Oh, I can never look
up again ! My hoj-e is gone. My courage
is gone. My religion is gone. My faith
in God is gone. Oh, the wear and tear
and exhaustion of this ioneliness!” The
mo.-t, frvqu< nt !a*re>i\oinent is the loss of
children II jour <i< parted child had lived
as long as you have lived, do you not sup
post- that would have had about the
same amount of tumble and trial that you
i.uvo had? If you could make u choice for
your child l<etw« n 10 years of annoyance,
loss, vexatii n. exasperation and bereave
ments and 4'i years in heaven, would you
take the resj>onsil 'lity of choosing the
former? Would yon snuU h away the cap
of eternal bliss and put into that child’s
hands the cup of many is reavements? In
stead of the complete safety into which
that child has been lilted, would you like
to hold it down to the risks of this mortal
state? Would you like to keep it out on a
sea in which there, have been more ship
wrecks than safe voyages? Is it not a
comfort to you to know that that child,
Instead of Luing In sidled and Hung into
the mire of sin, is swung clear into the
skies? Are not those children to be con
gratulated that the point of celestial bliss
which yon expect to reach by a pilgrimage
of 50 or 60 or 70 years they reached at a
flash? If the last 10,000 children who had
entered heaven had gone through the av
erage of human life on earth, are you sure
all those 10,000 uhikin n would have final
ly reached the biisstui terminus? Besides
that, my friends, you are to look at this
matter as a self denial on your part for
their benefit. If your children want to go
off in a May day party, if your children
want to go on a flowery and musical ex
cursion, you consent. You might prefer
to ha\e them w itb you, but theif jubilant
absence satisfies you. Well, your departed
children have only gone out in a May day
party, amid flowery and musical entertain
went, amid joys and hilarities forever.
That ought to quell some of your grief,
tho thought of their glee.
Glorious Welcomes.
So it ought to be thut you could make
the best of all bereavements. The fact that
you have so many friends in heaven will
make your own departure very cheerful.
When you are going on a voyage, every
thing depends upon where your friends
an—if they are on the wharf that you
leave or on the wharf toward which you
are going to sail. In other words, the
more friends you have in heaven the easier
it will be to got away from this world.
The more friends here the more bitter
goodbys. The more friends there tho more
glorious welcomes. Sonic of you have so
many brothers, sisters,children, friends, in
heaven that 1 do not know hardly how
you are going to crowd through. When
the vessel camo from foreign lands and
brought a prince to our harbor, tho ships
were covered with bunting, and you re
member how the mon-of-war thundered
broadsides, but there was no joy there
compared with the joy which shall bo
demonstrated when you sail up the broad
bay of heavenly salutation. Tho more
friends you have there the easier your own
transit. What is death to a mother whose
children are in'heaven? Why, there is no
more grief in it than there is in her going
into a nursery amid the romp and laugh
ter of her household. Though all around
may be dark, see you not the bright light
in the clouds, that light the irradiated
luces of your glorified kindred?
So also, my friends, I would have you
make the best of your sicknesses. When
you see one inovo off with elastic step and
in full physical vigor, sometimes you be
come impatient with your lame foot.
When a man describes an object a mile off
and you cannot see it at all, you become
impatient of your dim eye. When you
hear of a well man making a groat achieve
ment, you become impatient with your de
pressed nervous system or your dilapidat
ed health. I will tell you how you can
make the worst of it. Brood over it—
brood over all these illnesses—and your
nerves will become more twitchy, and
your dyspepsia more aggravated, and your
weakness more appalling. But that is the
devil’s work to tell you how to make the
worst of it. It is my work to show you a
bright light in tho clouds.
Which of the Bible men most attract
your attention? You say, Moses, Job,
David, Jeremiah, Paul. Why, what a
strange thing it is that you have chosen
those who were physically disordered!
Moses—l know he was nervous from the
clip he gave the Egyptian. Job—his blood
was vitiated and diseased and his skin
distressfully eruptive. David—ho Lad a
running sore, which ho speaks of when ho
says, “My sore ran in the night and ceased
not.” Jeremiah had enlargement of tho
spleen. Who can doubt it who reads Lam
entations? Paul—he had a lifetime sick
ness which tho commentators have been
guessing about for years, not knowing'ex
actly what tho apostle meant by “a thorn
in the flesh.” I do not know either, but it
was something sharp, something that
stuck him. I gather from all this that
physical disorder may bo the means of
grace to the soul. You say you have so
many temptations from bodily ailments,
and if yon wi 10 only well you think you
could be a good Christian. While your
temptations may be different, they are no
more than those of the man who has an
appetite three times a day and sleeps eight
hours every night.
No More Pain.
From my observation, I judge that in
valids have a more rapturous view of the
next world than well people and will have
higher renown in heaven. The best view
of the delectable mountains is through the
lattice of the sickroom. There are trains
running every hour between pillow and
throne, between hospital and mansion,
between bandages and robes, between
crutch and palm branch. Oh, I wish some
of you people who are compelled to cry:
"My head, my head! My foot, my foot!
My back, niy back!” would try some of
the Lord’s medicine. You are gokig to be
well anyhow before long. Heaven is an
old city, but has never yet reported one
caso of sickness or one bill of mortality.
No ophthalmia for tho eye. No pneu
monia for the lungs. No pleurisy for the
side. No neuralgia for the nerves. No
rheumatism for the muscles. '‘The in
habitants shall never say, I am sick.”
“There shall be no more pain.”
Again, you ought to make the best of
life’s finality. Now, you think I have a
very tough subject. You do not see hew I
am to strike a spark of light out of the
flint of the tombstone. There are many
people who have an idea that death is the
submergence of everything pleasant by
everything doleful, if my subject could
close in the upsetting of all such precon
ceived notions, it would close well. Who
ean judge best of the features of a man—
those who are close by him or those who
are afar off? “Oh,” you say, “those can
judge best of the features of a man who
are close by him!”
Now, my friends, who shall judge of
the features of death—whether they are
lovely or whether they arc repulsive? Y’ou?
You are too far off. If 1 want to get a
judgment as to what really the features of
death are, 1 will not ask you. I will ask
those who have been within a month of
death, or a week of death, or an hour of
death, or a minute of death. They stand
so near the features, they can tell. They
give unanimous testimony, if they are
Christian people, that death, instead of
being demoniac, is cherubic. Os all the
thousands of Christians who have been
carried through the gates of the cemetery,
gather up their dying experiences, and
you will find they nearly all a
jubilate. How often you have seen a dy-
Yng man join in the psalm being sung
around his bedside, the middle of the verse
opening to let his ransomed spirit free,
long after the lips could not speak look
ing and pointing upward.
Some of you talk as though God had ex
hausted himself in biulding this world,
and that all the rich curtains ho ever made
he hung around this planet, and all the
flowers he ever grew he has woven into tho
carpet of our daisied meadows. No. This
world is not the best thing God can do.
This world is not the best thing that God
has done.
Season of Blossoms.
One week of the year is called blossom
week—called so all through the land be
cause there are more blossoms in that
week than in any other week of the year.
Blossom week! And that is what the fu
ture world is to which the Christian is in
vited—blossom week forever. It is as far
ahead of this world as paradise is ahead
of Dry Tortugas, and yet here we stand
shivering and tearing to go out, and we
MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING,’APRIL 25 1898.
want to stay on the dry sand and auiid
the stormy petrels when we are invited to
arliors of jasmine and birds of paradise.
Ono season I had tno springtimes. I
went to New Orleans in April, and 1
marked the difference between going to- 1
ward New Orleans and then coming back.
As I went on down toward New Orleans
the verdure, the foliage, became thicker
and more beautiful. When 1 came back,
the farther I came toward home the less
tho foliage and less and less it became un
til there was hardly any. Now, it all de
pends upon the direction in which you
travel. If a spirit from heaven should
come toward our world, ho is traveling from
June toward December, from radiance to
wanl darkness, from hanging gardens to
ward icebergs. And one would not be
very much surprised if a spirit of God sent
forth from heaven toward our world
sbould be slow to come. But bow strange
it is that we dread going out toward that
world when going is from liecember to
ward Juno, train the snow of earthly
s.tonu to the slow of Edenic blossom,
iroui the arctics oi trouble toward the
tropics of eternal joy!
Gh, what an ado about dying! We get
so attached to the malarial marsh in which
we live that we are afraid to go up and
live on the hilltop. We are alarmed be
cause vacation is coming. Eternal sun
light and best program mo of celestial min
strels and halleluiah, no inducement. Let
us stay here and keep cold and ignorant
and weak. lib not introduce us to Elijah
and John Milton arid Bourdaloue. Keep
our feet on tiie sharp cobblestones of earth
instead of planting them on tho bank if
amaranth in heaven. Give us this small
island of a leprous world instead of the
immensities of splendor and d light. Keep
our hands full of nettles and our shouluer
under ihe burden and our neck in the
yoke and hopples on our ankles and
handcuffs on our wrists. “Dear Lord,”
wo seem to say,“keep us down here where
we have to suffer instead of letting us up
where wo might live and reign and re
joice.”
Amazing Infatuation.
1 am amazed at inyeelf and at yourself
for this infatuation under which wo all
rest. Men you would suppose would get
frightened at having to stay in this world
instead of getting frightened at having to
go toward heaven. 1 congratulate any
body who has a right to die. By that 1
mean through sickness you cannot avert
or through accident you cannot avoid—
your work consummated. “Where did
they bury Lily?” said one little child to
another. “Ob,” she replied, “they buried
her In the ground.” “What! In the cold
ground?” “Oh, no, no; not in the cold
ground, but in the warm ground, where
ugly seeds become beautiful flowers!”
“But,” says some one, “it pains me so
much to think that I must lose the body
with which iny soul has so long compan
ioned.” You do not lose it. You no more
lose your body by death than you lose your
watch when you send it to have it re
paired, or your jewel when you send it to
have it reset, or the faded picture when
you send it to have it touched up, or tho
photograph of a friend when you have it
put in a now locket. You do not Jose
your body. Paul will go to Romo to get
his, Payson will go to Portland to get hie,
President Edwards will go to Princeton to
got his, George Cookman will go to tho
bottom of tho Atlantic to get his, and we
will go to tho village churchyards and tho
city cemeteries to got ours, and when wo
have our perfect spirit rejoined to our per
fect body then wo will be the kind of men
and women that tho resurrection morning
will make possible.
So you see you have not made out any
doleful story yet. W hat have you proved
about death? What is the case you have
made out? You have made out just this—
that death allows us to have a perfect
body, free of all aches, united forever with
a perfect soul, free from all sin. Correct
your theology. What does it all mean?
Why, it means that moving day is coming
and that you are going to quit cramped
apartments and bo mansioned forever.
Tho horse that stands at tho gate will not
be tho one lathered and bespattered, carry
ing bad news, but it will lie the horse that
St. John saw in Apocalyptic vision—the
white horse on which the King comes to
the banquet. The ground around the pal
ace will quake with tho tires and hoofs
of celestial equipage, and those Christians
who in this world lost their friends and
lost their property and lost their health
and lost their life will find out that God
was always kind, and that all things
worked together for their good, and that
those were tho wisest people on earth who
made the best of everything. Seo you not
now the bright light in the clouds?
Free Pills.
Send your address to H. E. Bucklen &
Co., Chicago, and get a free sample box
of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A trial will
convince you of their merits. These pills
are easy an action and are particularly ef
fective in the cure of constipation and sick
headache. For malaria and liver troubles
they have proved invaluable. They are
guaranteed to be perfectly free from every
deleterious substance and to be purely
vegetable. They do not weaken by their
action, but by giving tone to the stomach
and bowels greatly invigorate the system.
Regular size 25c. per box. Sold by H. J.
Lamar & Sans, druggists.
□ A lie idea of bringing to
gether all of the veterans and
other ex-members of the
company and forming an as
sociation to be known as the
Old Guard of the Macon
Volunteers, has been dis
cussed for months.
All of the above described
members are requested to
meet at the Armory on next
Tuesday night at 8 o’clock
The privileges of the Ar
mory are restricted to the
active and honorary members
of the Macou Volunteers.
B. C. Smith,
G. C. Conner,
D. B. Woodruff,
W. W. Wrigley.
Scared Tunny sou.
Tennyson one day entered a club read
ing room and sat down in a large arm
chair before the fire. M uch to tho amaze-
Luent of tho other occupants of the
room, ho proceeded to elevate his feet
until they rested on the chimneypiece
in “real American” fashion. No expos
tulations on the part of hie friends re
specting the inelegance of the position
were of the slightest avail. Suddenly a
brilliant inspiration seized one of them.
Going close to Lord Tennyson, he whis
pered in his car, “Take ycur feet down
or they’ll mistake you for Longfellow. ”
In an instant the poet’s boots were on
the floor, and he assumed the ordinary
position of an Englishman.—San Fran
cisco Argonaut.
Calm In Time Gs Emergency.
Servant (rushing in) —Ma’am, the
house is on fire 1
Boston Mistress (Who is giving a 5
o’clock tea)—Summon the fire depart
ment, Ilonoriff, and do not disturb us
again. We are discussing the “crime of
the split infinitive. ” —Chicago Tribune.
C ASTORIA
For Infants and Children
TH fw-
Subscribers must pay up and not allow
small balances to run over from week to
week. The carriers have been in structed
to accept no part payment from anyone
after April 1«U
■« (CASTOR IA
l^ e Y°u Have
y s .i*rJ y Always Bought,
——— - , . »a
AVcpc (able Preparation for As- RgHTS t >l6 1 PG-SHTihG
: similating the Food ancißegula- |»
ting the Stomachs and Bowcis of qfn -V'
a — OF _
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ;£
ness and Rest. Contains neither ig
Opium,Morphinc nor Ifineroi. igp
Not Naucotic. ; w
m-Trr
ZM»fci lg| . Oh iHij
| WRAPPER
Jil Cajlm-iH Tads » ( IMS > V * X. A sfX A
ft-am Seed - | [gS
) | OF EVERY
A perfect Remedy for Cons lipa- |g tr**
tion.SourStomach.Diarrhcca, I. ip?,.? B * f .
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- & - A s-wa-*#
ncss and Loss of Sleek §
b 1 THE KIND
NEW YORK.
fifejgggMi YOU EAVE
JALWAYS BOUGHT.
Rainy Weather
Make see I grow if* they are GOOD
We don’t have any other kind.
Plant now.
Streyer Seed Comp’y.
466 Poplar Street.
LANDLORDS!
Do you know that we are the only exclusive rental agents in Ms
con. No other departments. If you are not satisfied with your in
come give us a trial.
A. J. McAfee, Jr., & Co.
357 Third Street.
J. S. BUDD <&, CO.
320 SECOND STREET.
421 Walnut St. TVir F! rural 1016 Oglethorpe St.
728 Walnut St. Fi|| HH H I 1171 Oglethorpe St.
460 Oak St. lUS 4J0J.111 904 Second St.
Dwelling with large lot, head of Oglethorpe street.
Rooms and offices in building 238 Second street.
Store and offices in different locations. We have calls
for houses ever} 7 day. List you property with us.
Fire and Accident Insurance.
See the Crescent Ohainless
Price $75. Catalogue Free
Celebrated Cleveland
the city. Prices from ' yhe Staunch Crescent
s2otosioo The Go=Lightly Imperial.
S, S. PARM ELLEE.
Home Industries
and Institutions.
Henry Stevens’ Sons Co.
11. STEVENS’ SONS CO, Macon, Ga., Manufacturers of Sewer,
and Railroad culvert pipe, fittings, fire brick, clay, etc. Wall tubing with
perforated bottoms that will last forever.
Macon Machinery.
MALLARY BROS. & CO., dealers in Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills. Specialties—Watertown Steam Engines, Saw Mills, Grist Mills,
Cotton Gins.
Macon Refrigerators.
MUECKE’S Improved Dry Air Refrigerators. The best Re
frigerators made. Manufactured right here in Macon, any size and of
any material desred. It has qualities which no other refrigerator on
‘he market possesses. Come and see them at the factorv on blew St
The News Printing Co.
Printers and Publishers.
WILL. PRINT
BRIEFS, BOOKS,
FOLDERS, STATEMENTS,
PAMPHLETS, CIRCULARS,
CARDS, CHECKS, ENVELOPES,
LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS
AND
Mi io Hie Pier’s Line
Central of Georgia
Railway Company
IniEORGIA Schedules in Effect,_Feb. 25, 1898, Standard Time,
90th Meridian.
lI N 2O aV 7 N 4°O - N -°n I *L STA TIONS | No. 2»| No. 8•? No. 8
12 I'iaiu ' s o t.*n B*-n C am L ' Ma «>u. • .Ar| 725 pm| 740 am| 355 pm
I 3 35 oml P V' ‘ • Fort Valla*. . Lv| 527 pm| 630 am, 253 pm
' 3 35 Pm '| !y0 20 am|Ar. .. .Perry Lvl! 5 00 pml. 'll 30 am
i* - Il 19 am Ar. ..Columbus. . .Lvl 400 pm I .
Tri’nin lo’fti’nmi 0 i>o P ,u , Ar - • -B mham. . ,Lv| 9 30 am! I
t 2 05 pnJ 10 25 pj,, 'R" ‘ I 6 18 Pmi 1 * pm
315 nml 11 05 Ar.. ..Smithville .Lv 455 am!f 105 pm
550 nm '• Albau >’ • ' Lv 415 am 11 50 am
V 5 ’‘vk'T ; Ar ” " . ..Lv 1 1130 am
4 «.<; d L|' I' - 9 . Ar - -Fort Gaines. Lvj No. 10 • no 30 am
x JI P “| ' ‘ 40 am Ar Eufaula.. ..Lv 7 30 pml 10:05 am
- ~r, P “ 1 9:10 •••• UnSprings. Lv| 800 pml | 9 15 am
—?. Btl 10 45 am Ar.. Montgomery. .Lv| 4 20 pml | 7 45 am
11.* I .NO. 3.* 0 1 * I XT -x XT 4 'LI »- _ J
800 aim 425 am 415 pmiLv.. . Macon. . ..Ar‘ll 10 am] 11 10 pm 720 pm
,?> 1? ™ aU ' -!' Lv -Barnesville .Xv 945 r 945 Jm 605 pm
OPr dln ■'e’G'’' ’ lIUI Ar Thomaston. ..Lv 700 am !300 pm
95a am 616 am bl 3 pm|Ar. . ..Griffin. . ..Lv 912 am 915 pm 530 pm
r, 1 . J- a ° l, Ar " -.Newnan. . Xr !8 23 pm.
a w'ii; ’ 5 i? 5K
u s Si2 ;u ...
810 pm, 12 1J wu; 12 08 pm;Ar. . . .Gordon. .. .Ar 500 pm| 310 am| 710 am
, 5 pui | ; J Pm|Ar. .Milledgeville .Lv !3 45 pnij j «30 »jn
10 00 pw l ■ j OO Pm|Ar.. . Eatonton. . .Lvl! 1 30 pm| | 5 25 am
I ’* s Pm|Ar. . Machen. . .Lv|!ll 20 am| |
1 *' 1 ' P 5 • Covington. ..Lv ! 9M) am ....|
•11 25 « Pmy 25 am Lv. .. .Maeon. . . .Ar|* 3 4Tpmffi3~ss am|* 346 pm
>F P I 9 am,f ll 7 pni Ar - •• Tennille Lv| 156 pm 152 am| 156 pm
2 30 pm, - 25 am, 230 pm|Ar. . .Wadley. .. ,Lvlfl2 55 pm 12 50 am 12 55 pm
. nl pm| - 44 am; 2 al pmi.tr. . .Midville. . .Lv 12 11 pm 12 30 am 12 11 pm
2a pm ( 3Li am 32a pm Ar. .. .Millen. .. .Lv 11 34 am li 58 pm 11 34 am
3 rA pm 1<" am ’i 10 plu Ar Waynesboro.. .Lv 10 13 am 10 37 pm 810 47 am
s 5 Ot) pm 6aS am.! uos pm,Ar... .Augusta. . .Lv,! 820 am 840pms9 30 am
• • 6 W am 600 P_m Ar.. .Savannah. ..Lv| 845 am 900 pm
No. 16. »| j No. 15. »| ’
I to 05 am|Ar. .. .Machen .. ..Lv 527 pm
I -t- 30 pm'Ar .. .Eatonton .. .Lv ! 3 30 pm
1 1 t 0 45 am Ar. ...Madison. .. Lv| 440 pm |
I I 12 30 pm ; Ar. ... Athens .. ..Lv| 330 pm |
* itaily. I Daily except Sunday, f Meal station, s Sunday only.
Solid trains are run to ands from Macon and Montgomery via Eufaula, Savan
; nah and Atlanta via Macon. Macon and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Birming-
I halu y :a Columbus. Elegant sleeping cars on trains No. 3 and 4 between Macon
! and oavannab ami Aalanta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for occu
paney in Macoa depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengers arriving In Macon on No. 3 and Sa
vannal'. un No. 4. are allowed to remain tnsleeper until 7a. m. Parlor cars between
Mucou and Atlanta on trains Nos. 11 andl2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for
A rlgliisvilie, Dublin and Sandersville takell:2s. Train arrives Fort Gainea
4:30 p. tn., and leaves 10:30 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7.25 p. m. and leaves
7.45 a. m. For further information or schedules to points beyond our lines, addreaa
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macon, Ga. E. P. BONNER U. T. A.
ffi. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager j. c. HAILE’, O. P. A.
THEO. D. KLINE, General Superintendent.
Southern R’y.
Schedule in Effect Sunday, Jan. 16 1898.
CENTRA L TIME
READ I>OWN i j READ UP
Nq. 7| No. 15| No. 9| No. 13] West | No7 lij No? 8 |No. 16| No. 16 '
7 05pm| 4 45pm| 8 30am| 3 05am|Lv .. Macon .. Ar| 1 05am| 8 lOamllO 45am| 705 pm
9 45pm; 7 30pmlll 10ain| 5 20am Ar. .Atlanta .. Ari 10 55pm 5 30am 5 OOain 110 pm
7 50ain| j 2 20pm| 5 30am|Lv. Atlanta.. ..ArllO 40pm 5 00am 5 00am 110 pm
10 15am! j 4 45pm| 7 37am|Lv . .Rton... Lv 720 pm 12 11am 12 Ham 9 23am
1135 am I 5 54pm; 8 38am|Lv... Dalton.. ..Lv] 720 pm 12 Ham 12 Ham 9 20am
100 pm | 7 20am| 9 50am|Ar. Chatt’nooga Lv! 6 10pm|10 00pm 10 OOptn 8 00am
I 7 20am| 7 20pm|Ar. .Clnclnuatti .Lv| 8 3frui| - 8 00pm
I 7 27am| 7 30pm!Ar. .Louia ville. .Lv| T4sam| | 745 pm
| | 656am|Ar. ...St. Louis. Lv| 9 15pm|
|... i 7 50pm| 9 25am|Ar. .Anniston.. .Lv| 6 45pm| 8 10am
I |lO 00pm|ll 45am|Ar. Biim’ham.. Lv 4 15pin| | 6 00am
I I 7 40amj 9 40pm|Ar.. .Memphis. ..Lvl 6 20am1 1 9 00pm
|.. . 2 . . ..| 7 10aro| 5 4 r pm|Ar„_JE£an.Clty. ..Lv|lo 40amf. | 9 30pm
9 50pm| I 9 50pm| 1 15pm|Ar. Knox vili<,... Lv|2 25pm| 2 25pm| | 466 am
| No. 16; No. 14|_ iti ’ J No. 131 No. 15| |
I |7 50pm| 7 25am|Ar. Brunswick ..Lv|9 10pm 9 30ara....<
I 9 25pm| 8 55am|Ar. .J’ks’nv’le. Lv| 8 00pm| 8 15am| |
' i 6 15pm|Ar ..Tampa ....Lv| 7 30am| | |
1 50pm|12 lOamlll 25pm|Lv.. .Danville. ..Lvj 6 05arn| 6 20pm| 5 50amj
| | 7 35am| |Ar .. Norfolk.. Lv| | |lO 00pm]
| 3 00pm I 8 30pm I Ar. . .Boston. . .Lv 5 00pm 10 00am
THROUGH CAR SERVICE, ETC.
Nos. 13 and 14, "Cincinnati and Florida Limited,” Pullman Palace Sleeping
Cars and through vestibuled coaches between Cincinnati and Jacksonville and Tampa
via Chattanooga, Atlanta and Evcreett; Pullman sleeping care between St. Louis and
Jacksonville via Louisville and Chattanooga; Pullman Palace sleeping cars between
Kansas City, Mo., and Jacksonville, Fla., via Birmingham, Atlanta and Everett.
Pullman Sleeping Cars between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved
to be taken at Macon.
Nos. 15 and 16, Express Trains between Atlanta and Brunswick.
Nos. 9 and 10, Elegant Free Chair Cars between Atlanta and Macon. Pullman
Sleeping Cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in union-depot, Atlanta,
with "Washington and Southwestern Vestibuled Limited,” finest and fastest train
to and from the East.
Nos. 7 and 8, Fast Mail Trains between Macon and Atlanta, connecting in union
depot, Atlanta, with "U. 3. Fast Mail” trains to and from the East. Mo. 8 car
ries Pullman Sleeping Car, Chattanooga to Atlanta.
F. S. GANNON, V. P. and G. M. W. A. TURK, Gen. Pass Agt.,
DEVRIES DAVIS, T. A., Macon, Ga. 8. H. HARDWICK, Asst. G. P. A., •
RANDALL CLIFTON, T. P. A., Macon. BURR BROWN, City Ticket Agent,
565 Mulberry Street, Macon, Go.
I
B. A. WISE,
“THE RENTING AGENT.”
FOR RENT.
No. 208 Spring street, 5 r. with bath and gas $21.25
No. 358 Spring street, 5 r. with bath and gas 20.00
No. 259 Orange street, 6 r. with bath and gas 12.50
No. 723 College street, 7 r. city water 16.60
No. 1710 Second street, 5 10.00
No. 616 Second street, 5 r. with servants’ house 17.00
No. 715 Arch street, 7 r, with bath and gas 20.00
No. 421 Walnut street, 9 r. with bath and gas 25.00
No. 915 Walnut street, 9 r. with bath and gas 16.00
No. 105 Wilder street, 5 r 7.00
Jeff Davis street, South Macon, 6 r., large 10t..., 6.00
VINEVILLE.
Near St. Stanislaus, Main street, 6 r SIB.OO
Lynn avenue, 5 10.00
Lynn avenue, 4 8-00
; No. 523 Pine street, 5 r, bath, 2 r. servant house 15.00
Lists of Stores and Offices Furnished on Appli
cation.
*
B. A. WISE,
358 Second Street, - - Macon, Ga.
THIS MATTER
OF JEWELRY
Is much a matter of taste. No matter
whAt your tastes are, we can suit you, be
cause we’ve got the stock to select from,
and the prices are right.
GEO. T. BEELAND, Jeweler, Triangular Block.
take Periodical Tickets
3