The Macon news. (Macon, Ga.) 189?-1930, July 18, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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ONE LIFE IS ENOUGH A SECOND JOURNEY WOULD SUREIA □ E A FAILURE. Dr. Thlirakc Hhnwa the Imparlance <> Pl-ewent Opportunities Eesauns Drawl From Different Kinde of I/, ch Buoy ♦ Mark the Kight Channel. (Copyright, IK*, by Am rb.in Press Asso elation, j WASHINGTON, July 17.—This <Us.otirM of Dr. '1 a linage extols our prqwtit opj-or tnnities so that lucre opportunities that we enjoy in this life do nopMiem desirable tlie text. Job ii, }. • All that a man hatl will he give for his life ” 1 lint is untrue. Ihe I>ird did not aaj it, but Satan said it to the Lord when tin evil one wanted Job still more afflicted The record is. ‘‘So went satan forth fron the prcM'ncx; of the laird and smote Jot With son- lions.” And satao has iieen tin author of all eruptive disease since then, and ho hojss by poi lining the blood U poison the soul. But the result of the di | abotlcal experiment which left Job victoi i proved tin- falsity of the satatiic remark, “All that a man hath will he give for hit ■ life.” Many a captain who has stood on the bridge of the steamer till his passen gers got off and he drowned, many an engineer who has kept his hand on the throttle valve or bis foot on the brake un til the most of ttie train was saved while ho went down to death through tin npen drawbridge, many a 11 reman wh plunged into a blazing house to get a alecplng child out, the firutffan sacrificing his life in the attempt and the thousands of martyrs who submitted to fiery stake nnd knife of massacre and headman's a* and guillotine rather than surrender prin tdplo, proving that 4n many a case my tex! »va» not true when it Hays, "All that a man hath will he give for his life.’’ But satai;'« falsehood was built on a truth.. Life is very precious, and if we would not give up all there are many filings we would surrender rather that; surrender it We sec how precious life in from the- t.w l that we do everything to prolong it. Hems; al! sanitary regula tions, all study of hygiene, all fear of drafts, all waterproofs, all doctors, all yuodicines, all struggle in crisis or accl ifdtit. Au admiral of the British navy was e-'tuL murtiuled (or turning his ship around in time of danger, and so damag ing the ship. It was proved against him, but when his time came to Is- heard hw fluid; "Gentlemen, 1 did turn the ship around ami admit that it was damaged, but, do you want to know why I turned it# There was a man overboard, nnd 1 wanted to save him, nnd I did save him, and I consider the life of one sailor worth al] the vessels of the British Davy." No won dor ho was vindicated. Life is Indeed very precious. Yea, there are those who d<-uli| life so precious they would like to refloat it. They would like to try it over again. They would like to go back from 70 to (50, from GO to 50, from 50 to 40, from 40 to R 0 and from 3b to 20 I propose, for very practical nnd useful purpose-,, ns will up Jieiir before 1 got through, to discus* the question wo have nil asked of others anil others have iignln nnd again asked of us, Would you like to livoyotir Jifeover again? What Is Buccnm? The fact is that no intelligent and right feeling man is satisfied with his past life However sucre fui jour life may have been, you lire not satisfied with it What is success? Ask thnt ijuestion <J a him dred different men. and they will give a hundred different answer ; (tile man will gay, “Success is ” Another will snj’, *’Hui ee- sls worldwide publicity. ’ ’ ‘‘Another will my ‘Success is gaining that which you started fol ’’ But as it is a free country 1 give m own definition nnd say, “Success is fuldlling the particu lar mission upon which you were sunt, whether to write a constitution or invent n new style oi wheelbarrow or take care of a esjck child Do what <iod culls you to do, and you uro a success, whether you leave IfI,O(MJ G.’.’O at death or are buried at public- expense, whether it takes 15 pages of an enevelojH-din to tell the wonderful things you have done or your name is IM-ver printed hut once, and that in the dentil column. But. whatever your success has been, you are not »utistied with your life. Wo have all made so many mistakes, stumbled into so many blunders, said so nuii.iy things that ought not to have been said ami done so many things that ought not to hav< been done that wo can suggest nt least 9,'» per cent of improvement. Now, would it not be grand if the good Lord would say to you “You can go back and try it over again. 1 will by a word turn your ’uiir to black or brow n or golden, and smooth all the wrinkles out of your tem ple or cheek, and take the Ix-nd out of your shoulders, ami extirpate the stiffness from ttie joint, and the rheumatic twinge from the foot, and you shall be 21 years of nge and just what you were when you reached that point before ” lit he proposi tion were made, I think niiiay thousands Would accept it That finding caused I,’tp ancient search for what was called the fountain of youth, the waters of which, taken, would t urn the hair of the octogenarian into tug curly locks of a Itoy, and, however old a person who drank at that founftiin, he would lie young again The island w.tns said to belong to the group of Bahamas, but lay far out in the ocean The great Spanish explorer, Juan Ponce de Leoti, fellow voyager of Columbus. 1 have no (doubt felt that if lie could discover that fountain of youth he would do its much tvs his friend had done in discovering America. So he put out- in 1512 from i’orto Hico and cruised about among the Bahamas in search of that fountain. 1 am glad lie did not Hud it I’herv is no such fountain But if there were, anil its ;ya fet-H were botch'd up and sent abroad ut fl.iMga a bottle, the demand would be greater than the supply, and many a m.ni) who has come through a liteot uselessness and perhaps sin to old age would be shak ing up the potent liquid, and if he .vrre directed to tak, on!) a teaspooiify! after each meal would lx> so anxious to tnait sure work he would take a ttiblespoonful, and if directeii to take a tabJu.spoonful would take a glassful. Oenorat ions Hack. Bnf some of you would have to go bai-k further than to 21 years of age to make a fair start, l“i there an- many who manage to get all wrong before that period Yea, in order to get a fair start some would have to go Ixu k to the lather and mother and get them correeb-d- yea. to the grand father and grandmother a-td have their life cornx'tixl. for some of you i»rv sijt)vr ing trom Ixid hereditary iutiuene«s which started lob years ago Well, if your grand father lived’hts life over .again, and your father lived his life over again, and you livixl your life over again, what a clutter ed up place this world would be —a pix-.t tilled with miserable attempts at repturs 1 begin to think that it is bet uh for each gmteration to have only one chance, am; then for them to jmss off and give another generation a ■ linnet Besides that, if we were perndtfcoit to live life over again, i» would be a st.» e »-ui stupid The /.«'st and spur and ontb.us.asiu of I’fo eutue from the fact that w< have never been along this road before, and every thing is new, and wo are alert for what may appear at the next turn of the road. Suppose you. a man of midlife or old ago, were with your present fix-lings nnd large attainments put ba<-k into the thirties or the twenties or in the teens, what a nui san, • you would be to others and what an unhappmess to yourself! Your eoiitcm porari<-s w<.<ild n >t want you. and you would not wm.t them Things that in your previous journey of hie stirred jjour healthful ambition or gave you pleasurable surprise or led you into happy interroga tion would only call forth from you a dis gusted “Oh, pshaw !“ You would lx- blase r*t Hu. and a misanthrope at 40, and uiu-n durable at 5u I'he im-st inane and stupid thing imaginable would Ik- a second jour ney of life Jt. is amusing to hear people flay, "I would like to live my life over again if I could tak,. my present experi emv and knowledge of things back with inc and N-gin under thus • improved pus piei-s Why what an uninteresting boy you would is- with your present attain nieuts in a child’s mind! No one would want such a boy house —a phi losopher at 2U, a scientist at 15. an archae ologist at 10 and a domestic nuisance all the time. An oak crowded into an acorn A Rocky mountain eagle thrust back into Uw eggshell fr-um w inch it was hatched. Life’* Sadn«-<»<»«. i Besides that, if you took life over again you would have to take its deep sadneeseJ ■ over again. Would you want to try a-?::in | the griefs, and the heartbreaks, and the | liereaveim nts through which you have gone* Wh.-it a merey that we shall never | be called to .suffer them again' We may ; have others had enough, but those old otH-n never ;.g iii Would yci want to go throng!, the pruccs.H of losing your father again, or your mother again, or your com ! panion in lite again, or your child again? I If you were j>-r .nitted to stop at the six- ■ tieth miiuston.-. or rhe fiftieth milestone, I or the fortieth milestone and retrace your step- to the twentie’h, your ex|x_-rience would lie something like mine one No- I vemtier day In Italy I walked through a 1 great city with a friend and two guides, s and there were in all the city only four persons, and they were those of our own group. We went up and down the streets We ent<-re«l the hou-cs, the nuifleums, the temples, the theaters. We examined the wonderful pictures on the walls and the most exquisite mosaic on the floor. In the street - were the deep worn ruts of wagons, but nova wagon in the city On j the front steps of mansions the word “Wel come" in Isttin, but no human being to ; greet us. The only tx-dies of any of the citizens that we saw yvere petrifiixl and in the museum at the gates Os the 35,000 js-ople who once lived in those homes and worshijM-d in those temples and clapped in those theaters not one left I For I.KOO years that city of Pomjieii had been buried Ix-fore modern exploration scooped out. of it the lava of Vesuvius. Well, lie who should Ixj permitted to return on the path way of his earthly life and live it over again would find as lonely and sad a pil- ■ grimagc. It would be an exploration of J the dead past. The old schoolhouse, the old church, the old home, the old play- I ground, either gone or occupied by others, and for you more depressing than w<vs our j Pompeiian visit that Novemlier day. Besides that, would you want to risk ' the temptations of life over again? From the fact that you are here 1 conclude that, ' though in many respects your life may ' have beep unfortunate and unconsecratcd, I you have got. on so far tolerably well, if I nothing more than tolerable. As for my j self, though my life has been far from be- I jpg as conset r..ted to God as I would like to have bad it, I would not want to try it over again, lest m,xt t’mo I would do Why, just look at the temptations we have all passed through and just look at tie, multitudes who have gone completely under! Just pall over the roll of your i<ohoolnuites nnd college mnb-s, tho clerks who were with you in the same store pr bank or the. ojiera-tives in t he same factory w ith just as good iin.spects as you, who have come to complete mishap. Some young man that told you that he was go ing to boa millionaire, and own the fast est trotters on the turnpike, and retire by the time he was 35 years of age, you do not hear iron) for many years and know nothing about him until some day ho comes Into your store and asks for 5 cents to get a mug of beer. Another l.ife Might Be Worse. You. the good mother of a household, and all your children rising up to call you blessed, can remember when you were quite jealous of the belle of the village, who was s<> I ranscendently fair nnd popu lar. But while you have these two honor able and queenly unitieH of wife and moth er she became a poor waif of the strei-t and went, into tho blackness of darkness forever. Live life over again? Why, if many <;f those who are respectable were permittud to expej-lment, the next journey would be demolition. You get through, ns Job says, by the skin of your teeth. Next time you might not get through at j all. Satan would say, ‘‘l know’ him now better than I did Ix-fore and have for 50 years been studying his weaknesses, and I will weave a strongi-r web of circum stances to catch him next timt>. ” And t,.ian would concentrate his forces on this ope man, and the lust stale of that man woulil be worse t han the first- My friends, our faces are in the right direction. Bet ter go forward than backward, even if wo had tin- ehoien. The greatest disaster 1 can think of would be for you to return to boyhood in 1898. Oh, if life were a smooth Luzerne or Cayuga lake, I w-ould like to get into a yacht and sail over it, not (Once, but twice—yea, a thousand times. But life ;s an uncertain sea, and some of the ships crash <.ij the icebergs of cold indifference, and some take firp of evil passions, and some lose their bearings and run into the Goodwill sands, and some are never heard of. Surely on such a tre.aeherou* flpft as that one voyage is enough Besides all this, do you know, if you could have your wish and live life over again it would put you so much further trom reunion with your friends in heaven? If yell are in the noon of life, or the even ing of life, you are not very far from the golden gate at which you are to meet your transported and einjJoradised loved ones. You are now, let us say. 29 years or ten years or one year off from celestial conjunction. Now, suppose you went back in your earthly life 30 years or 40 years or oo years, what an awful post ponement of thetdmopf reunion! It would be as though you were going to isur; Fran cisco so a great banquet, and you got to Oakland, four or five miles this side of it, and then came back to Baltimore to get a better start, as though you were going to England to be crowned, and, having come Insight of the pie un tai ns of Wales, yon ! put back to Sandy (look in order to make a better voyage. Would you like for ninny years to adjourn the songs of heaven, to adjourn tho thrum's of heaven, to adjourn the companionship of heavgji, to adjourn ‘he rest of heuvaq, t<> adjourn the presence of Christ in heaven? No, the wheel of time turns in the right di"-‘.-tion, and it is | well it turns so fast. Ynree hundred and | vixty-ilve revolutions in a year and for ward r.-gher than 365 revolutions in a year Bud backward. But hpar ye, iu-ar ve, while I tell you how you may practjcpHy live your life over again and be ail the better for it. You may put into the remaining years ot your life all you have learned of wisdom in your i«)st life. You may make the com ing ten years worth the preceding 10 or 50 years When a man says vyould like to live his life over again because he wojild do so much better and yet goes right on living as he has always lived, do you not av he stultifies himself? He proves that if he could go back he would do almost the ; same as he has done. If a man eat greun apples some Wednes ; day in cholera time ami is thrown into j fvunul cramps nnd sivys on Thursday: "1 wish I had been more prudent in my diet. ■ Oh. if 1 could live Wednesday over again!“ ■ and then on Friday euts apples just as gts-vi,. he proves that it would have been j no advantage for him to live Wednesday ’ over again, and if deploring our past ■ life and with the idea ut improvement. . long for an opjiort,unity to try it over ' again, yat go on making the same mistakes ! and committing the same sins, we only I demonstrate that the n-ixdijion of our ex ' Istenuu would afford no improv It was gnx-ii app;es before, and it would lx, gjwn apples over ngsia Buoj* :<» Mark the Bight Vbamifll. As soon as a ship cajitain strikes a rock in th,- lake or sea he reports it. and a buoy is swung over that reel, ami mariners henceforth stand off from that rock Ami all our mistakes in the past ought to bo buoys, warning us to keep in the right ’ channel. There is no excuse for us if wu split on tho same riwk where we spilt Is* fore Going along the sidewalk ut night where excavations are being made we fre quently sts.- a lantern on a framework, and we turn aside, for that hint* .-n says keep out of this hole. And all along tlie jvivth ‘ way of life lanterns are set as warnings, ami by the time we come to midlife we ; ought to know where it is safe to walk and where it is unsafe Besides that we have all these years twen learning how to be useful, ami in the next dtx\gje we ought to aceomplish more for God and the church and the world than in any previous four decades. The ■ best way to atone for post jjidolcnee or past tran.--givision is by future :»H-iduity Yet we often find Christian men who were riot eonvvited until they were 4U or 50, as old ‘er comes on. saying. ’ Well, my work is .its.ui done, mid it is lime for me to rest. ” They gay;: 4'.‘ years of their life to satau and the world, a litrh; frag ment of their life to God. and now •acy want rest \v hetlier that belongs to come dy or tragedy 1 say not The man wbo gave one nait of his early existence to the world and of the remain ing two quarters one to Christian work and the other to rest would not, I suppose, g > .i very brilliant reception in heaven. It there are any dried leaves In heaven, they would be appropriate for his garland, or if there is any throne with broken steps, it would be appropriate for his coronation, or any harp with relaxed string, it would be appropriate for his fingering. My broth er, you give nine-tenths of your life to sin and satan, and then get converted, and then rest awhile in -sgictified laziness, and then go up to get your heavenly reward, and 1 warrant it will not take the cashier of the royal banking house a great while to count out to you all your dues. He will not ask you whether you will have it in bills of large denomination or small. I would like to put one sentence of my ser mon in italics and have it underscored and three exclamation points at the end of the sentence, ami that sentence is this: As we cannot live our lives over again, the nearest we can come to atone for the past is by redoubled holiness and industry in the future. If this rail train of life has been detained and switched off and is far behind the time table, the engineer for the rest of the way must put on more pressure of steam and go a mile a minute in order to arrive at the right time and place under the approval of conductor and directors. Your Own Application. As I supixtsed it would be, there are young people on whom this subject has acted with the force of a galvanic battery. Without my saying a word to them, they have soliloquized, saying: “As one cannot live his lite over again and I can make only one trip 1 must look out and make no mistakes I have but one chance, and I must make the most of it.” My young friends, I am glad you made this applica tion of the sermon yourself. When a min ister toward the close of his sermon says, "Now, a few words byway of applica tion," jKJuple begin to look around for their hats and get their arm through one sleeve of their overcoats, and the sermonic application is a failure. I am glad you have made your own application, and that, you are resolved, like a Quaker of whom I read years ago, who In substtyice said, “1 shall be along this path of life but once, and so 1 must do all the kindness I can and all the good 1 can.” My hearers, the mistakes of youth can never be corrected. Time gone is gone forever. An opportunity passed the thou sandth part of a second has by one leap reached the other side of a great eternity. In the autumn win-n the birds migrate you look up and sec the sky black with wings and the flocks stretching out into many leagues of air, and so today I look up and see two large wings in fnjl sweep. They arc the wings of the flying year. That is followed by a Hock of 3(55, and they are the flying days. Each of the fly ing days is followed by 24, and they are the flying hours, and each of these is fol lowed by 6<), and these are the flying min utes Where did this great flock start from? Eternity past. Where are they bound? Eternity to come. You might as well go a gunning for the quails that whistled last year in tho meadows or the robins that hist year caroled in the sky as to ti-y to fetch down ami bag one of the past opportunities of your life. Do not say, “I will lounge now nnd make it up afterward ” Young men and boys, you can 't make it up. My observation is that those w ho in youth sowed wild oats to the end of their short life soweti wild oats, and that those who start sowing Genesee wheat always sow Genesee wheat. Heaping the Harvest. And then the reaping of the harvest is so different There is grandfather now. He has lived to old age because his habits have boon ffood His eyesight for this world ha* got somewhat ']iin, but his eye sight lor heaven is radiant His hearing is not ho acute as it once was, and he must bend clear over to hear what his little grandchild says when she asks him what he has brought for her. But he easily oatolres the music rained from supernal spheres. Men passing in the streets take off their hats in reverence and women say, ‘What a good okl man he is!” Seventy or 89 years all for God and for making this ivovld happy. Splendid! Glorious! Mag nificent! Ho will have hard work getting into heaven, because those whom ho helped to get there wilt fill up and. crowd the gates to tell him how glad they are ut Ids coming, until he says, “Please to siand buck a little till I pass through and cast my crown at the feet of him whom, hav ing not seen, I love.” 1 de not know what you call that. £ cull it the harvest of Genesee wheat. Out yonder is a man very old at 40 years of age afc a time when he ought to be buoyant as the morning. He got bad habits on him very early, and those habits have become worse. He is a man on tire, on fire with alcoholism, on fire with all evil habits, out with the we.i id and the world out wit h him. Down and falling deeper. His swollen hands in his thread bare jwckpts, and his eyes fixed on the ground, he passes through the street, and the quick step of an innocent child or the strong step of a young man or the roll of a prosperous carriage maddens him, and he curses society and he curses God Fall en sick, with no resources, he is carried to the almshouse. A loathsome spectacle, he lies ail day iqng waiting for dissolution or in the night rises on ids uoi. and lights ap paritions of what he might have been and what he will be He started life with aS good a prospect as anv man on the Amer ican continent, and there he is a bloated carcass, waiting for the shovels of public charity to put him Hye Icet under. He has only reaiied what he sowed Harvest of wild oats! “There is away that set-m --eth right to a man, but the end thereof is death. ‘ 1 A Masquerade. To others life is a masquerade ball, and us at such entertainments gentlemen and ladies put on the garb of kings and queens or mountebanks or clowns and at the close put off the disguise, so a great many pass their whole life in a mask, taking off the mask at death While the masquerade ball of life goes on they trip merrily over the floor, gemmed hand is stretched to gemmed hand, gleaming brow bends to gleaming brow On with the dance! Flush and rustle and laughter of immeas urable merrymaking. But after awhile the. languor of death comes on the limbs and blurs thp ey«isight Lights lower Floor hollow with sepulchral echo. Music saddened into a wail Lights lower Now the maskers are only seen in tne dim light Now the fragrance of the Howers is like the sickening odor that comes from gar land - that have lain lung in the vaults of cumeteri-'s Lights lower Mists gather in the room Glasses -tuike as though quakixi by suteten thunder Sigh i-auglit tn the curtain Scarf drops from the shoulder of beauty a shroud. Lights low er Over the slipfs-ry Ixirds In dance of death glide jealousies, envies, revenges, lust, despair and death Stench of lamp wi ki almost extinguished Turn garlands will not hull viiver the ulccreted feet. Choking damps, chilliness Fi-ct s'ill. Hands closed \ oices hushed. Eyes shut Lights out 1 invite yu!l Jo quit all that and begin a new life Roland went into battle Char lemagne s army had tieen driven buck by the thn-.- armiesof the Surace-ns, and Ro i.-nut aim- i in despite took up the trumpet and blew laree I last- in one of the moun tain passes, and under the power of those thi<- !:i.vsi;- the Sasaceiis recoiled and (ltd in terror But Jiistory says that when he h-id blown the third blast Roland's trum jx-t broke 1 take this tru:iq>et- of the gos I -el and 1 blow the first blast. “W ho.-«>ev<-r will I blow the imLxmd blast, “Seek ye the lord while he may Is-, found.” 1 blew the third blast. “Now is the accept.-d time.” But the trumpet does not break, it vv.is handetl down by our fathers to us,” and we will h ind it down to our children, that after we are dead they may blow the trump-t. telling the world that we have a pinioning God. a loving God, a sympa thetic God, amt that more to him than the throne on which he sits is the juy of seeing a prodigal putting his thumb on the latch of his fa’b.e: s house. I remember that there were two vessels on the sea and in a sf irm It was very, very dark, and the two ves.--.-l8 were going straight for each other, and the vaptains kppw it not. But after awhile the man on the lookout saw the approaching ship, and he shouted ‘‘Hard a-larbuardl” and from the other vessel the cry wept up, “ Hard a-ltirteard I” and they turned just enough to glance by and pissed in safety to their harbors, borne of vou are in jhe storm of tempta- MACON NEWSjMONDAY EVENING, JULY 18 1898. tion and you are driving on and coniing toward fearful collisions unless you change your course “Hard a-Urboard!’ Turn ye, turn ye. for. “why will ye die, oh, house of Israel?” \<>ar One Life. Y'oung man, as you cannot live life over again, however you may long to t; • so. be sure to have your one life right There is suine young who has t ..*■ away from home, perhaps under 50...e little spite ox evil persuasion of another, and his parents know not where he is Mv son. go home! Du nut go to sea! Don’t go tonight where you may be tempted to go Go home! Your father will be glad to see you. and your muiher —1 need not tell you how she feels How I would like to make your [larents a present <>t their wayward boy, repentant and in his right mind 1 would like to write them a letter, and you to carry the letter, saying, “ By the blessing of God on my sermon I introduce to you one whom you have never seen before, for he has be come a new creature in Christ Jesus ” My boy, go home and put your tired head on the bosom that nursed you so tenderly in your childhood years. A young Scotchman was taken captive in buttle by a band of Indians, and he learned their language and adopted their habits Years pissed on, but the old In dian chieftain never forgot that he hail in his possession a young man who did not belong to him. Well, one day this tribe of Indians came in sight of the Scotch ‘egi ments from whom this young mm, had Ix-en captured, and the old Indian chief tain said: “I lost my son in battle, and I know how a father feels at the loss of a son Do you think your father is yet ali ve?' The young man said. “1 am the only son of my father, and 1 hope he is still alive ’ Then said the Indian chief tain- “Because of the loss of my son this world is a desert You go free Return to your countrymen. Revi.-+it your father, that he may rejoice when he sees the sun rise in the morning and the trees blossom in the spring ” So 1 say to you. young man, captive of waywardness and sin Your father is waiting for you Your mother is waiting for you Your sisters are waiting for yon God is waiting for vou Go home! Go home! The Acme of Rliss. Our idea of a good time is to see an elocutionist who thinks she can work the gooseflesh on an audience forget her lines and break down.—Atchison Globe. A TexaM Wonder. HALL’S GREAT DISCOVERY. One small bottle ot Hall’s Great Dis covery cures all kidney and bladder trou bles, removes gravel, cures diabetis, semi nal emislsons, weak and lame backs, rheu matism and all irregularities of the kid neys and bladder in both men and women. Regulates bladder troubles in children. If not sold by your druggist will be sent bj mail on receipt o's sl. One small bottle is two months’ treatment and will cure any case above mentioned. E. W. HALL, Sole Manufacturer. P. 0. Box 218, Waco, Texas. Sold by H. J. Lamar & Son, Macon, Ga. READ THIS. Cuthbert, Ga. March 22, 1898.—This is to certify that I have been a stifferer from a kidney trouble for ten years and that I have taken less than one bottle of Hall’s Great Discovery and 1 think that I am cured. I cheerfully recommend It to any one suffering from any kidney trouble, as I know of nothing that 1 consider its equal. R. M. JONES. COULDN’T LIVE ON SIOO A WEEK New York Society is Agog Over Marriage of Jost-phine Louise Rubsani. New York, July 16. Glover-Rubsam On Friday, July 8, 1898, by Rev. Mr. Meu ry, Josephine Louise Rubsam to Fred S. Glover. This announcement tells of the sudden marriage in Jersey City of a young girl who couldn’t struggle along on SIOO a week and a young man well known in .he social an,! business circles of New York. Miss Rubsam was the adopted daughter of Jo seph Rubsum, a Staten Island brewer. She became a member of his family when IS months old, and now she has reached tihe dignity of as many years. Glover is a wool merehait. It is known that Miss Rubsam could not get along on $lO a week, be cause she said so to Judge Russell of the supreme court. He was incredulous. Glover has been spending the summer in Larchmont with his bachelor Chum, A. E. Coe. He has been at the Victoria Hotel with a party comprising H. W- Swift, A. P. Gardiner, A. Linsey, A. 0. MacDougall, Charles Wustlich and William Hulse, all of this city. Coe was taking a nap on Friday -after noon when Glover rushed Into their apart ment, seized a dress suit case, hurled into it a collection of raiment that may have suf fered in the process, and ashed out again, leaving Coe blinking in mild astonishment. As Glover was leaving the hotel he paused at the desk and wrote a few hurried lines. When Coe went down stairs he received a note. As he read it several other mem bers of the party approached. “Fred is going to be married,” he gasp ed. Then there was a general handshaking and a resolve to have a stag dinner as soon as the honey moon was over. Meanwhile Glover was speeding toward New York. Here he met Miss Rubsam, there was a 'hurried trip to Jersey -City and the Rey. Meury tied the knot. Saturday was passed in the city and then the de parture was made on the wedding trip. Mrs. Glover is an extremely attractive girl. Her adopted father died in October, 1890, leaving a large fortune. By his will one-third of his estate went to the adopted years old, when she will receive the prin cipal. Her mother by adoption died in 1896. • August Hoorman and William K. Leight are the surviving trustees. The income for the girl amounts to $9,000, and Mrs. Glover has been receiving SIOO a week. In 1896 ghp was aljowed $7,000 to tide along, but about a month ago she complained tp the court, without avail, that it was diffi cult to make ijoth ends meet. She atten ded a fashionable school on Fifth avenue and at the close of last season she engaged a suite in the Hotel Savoy for herself ans maid. It was there that she was introduced tp Mr Glover by his aunt, Mrs. Hutton., Remarkable ReHeiie. Mrs. Michael Curtain. Plainfield, 111., makes the statement that she caught cold which settled on her lungs: she was treat ed for a month by her family physician but grew worse. He told her she was a hopeless victim of consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Her drug gist suggested Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption; she bought a bottle and to her delight found herself benefitted from the first dose. She continued its use end after taking six bottles, found herself sound and well, now does her own house work and is as well as she eyer was. Free trial bottles of this great Discovery at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ drug store. Large bottles 50c and sl, About one month ago my child, which is fifteen months old, had an atack of diar rhoea accompanied by vomiting. I gave it such remedies as are usually given in such cases, but as nothing gave relief, we sen: for a physician and it was under bis care for a week. At this time the chib! been siek for about ten days and was having about twenty-five operations of th » bowels evt-ry twelve hours. .mJ we w. re convinced that unless it soon obtained re lief it would not live. Chambcr'aia's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy w;s recommended, and I decided to try it. I soon noticed a change for the better; by its continued use a complete cure was brought about and it is now perfectly healthy.—C. L. Boggs, Stumptown. Gil mer Co., W. Va. For sale by H. J. Lamer & Sons, druggists. rues, ruesi Dr. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles when all other ointments have failed. It absorbs the tumors, allays the itching at once, acts as a poultice, gives inetant re lief. Dr. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment is prepared only for Piles and itching of the private parts and nothing else. Every box is- warranted. Sold by druggists or sent by mail on receipt of price, 56c and SI.OO per box. WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO., Proprietors, Cleveland, 0. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO ' THE EXCLUSIX E USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND “PITCHERS CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADEMARK. Z, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of “CASTORIA,” Ike same that has borne and does now bear on every the sac-simile signature of wrapper. This is the original “CASTORIA” which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought on the and has the signature of wrap- per. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company, of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 24,1898./? * Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he docs not know. “The Kind You Have Always Bought" BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having The Kind That Never Tailed You. THE (.CITAUH COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STRUT, NIW VOHK CITY __(Jh Southern R’y. J*--*"* "TIIHL Schedule iu Effect July 6, 1898 CENTRAL TIME ’ RBATTDOWN* ' READ ill’. = No. 7 | No. 15 | No. 9 | ~NoTI3~] WeTst/ | No. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No.lo 7 10pm| 445 pm | 8 00am| 2 05am|Lv.. Mac-on ..Ar; 2 05aml 8 20am 110 55am j 7~opm~ 9 45pmj 7 45pm!10 40am| 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lvjll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm 7 50ara|10 OOpmj 4 00pm| 4 20am|Lv.. Atl anba. Arjll 50pm| 5 OOamj [ll 40am 10 20am| 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Rome.. Lvj 0 40pml 1 44amj j 9 00am 11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pm|12 lOamj | 750 am I OOpmj 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40amjAr Chat’nooga Lv 7 30pinjl0 OOpmj | 8 00pm 710 pm, 710 pm, 740 am; |Ar .Memphis . Lvj | 9 15am| | 8 00pm 4 30pmj | 5 00am| |Ar Lexington. Lvj [lO 50am| [lO 40pnT" 7 50pm| | 7 50am| [Ar Louis ville. Lvj | 7 40am| | 7 4npm 7 30pm| | 7 30am| |Ar Tlnci nnati Lvj j 8 30amj ] 8 00am 9 25pm| | 7 25pm[ |Ar Anniston .. Lvj | 6 32pm| [ 8 00am 11 45am|.. |lO OOpmj | Ar Birm ’ham Lv| | 4 15pm| | 6 00am 8 05am| | 1 10am| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 7 00am] 7 40pm] | 740 pm. ■_ | | No. 14 | No. 16 | . South. | No. 18. I No. 13 |. ~ ~.~|'777’.~'.". - ,| 710 pm | 2 lOamj 8 35-am'Ly.. Macon .. Arj 8 20am I 2 OOamj ....... |....... 7 I I 3 22amjl0 05am|Lv Coch ran.. Lvj 3 20pmjl2 55amj I I | 1 10 45am Ar Hawk 'ville Lvj 2 50pm| [ j 1 ' 3 54amjl0 50am|Lv. East man. Lv: 2 41pmjl2 25a ml [ I I 4 29am|ll 36am|Lv.. Helena.. Lvj 2 03pmJl 54pmj j i I 6 45amj 2 38pm|Lv.. Jes up... Lv 11 22am| 9 43pm I I i 7 30am| 3 30pm,Lv Ever ret't.. LvjlO 4&am| 9 05pm| j j- ■ I 8 30am l 4 30pm|Ar Bruns wick. Lvj 9 30amj 6 50pm| j .. x . ,| 9 40am; 9 25am|Ar Jack’ville Lv 8 OOamj 6 50pm| |.7~.7..7. ~ j N 0.7 | No. 9 [ No. 13 | East? "I'No. 16 j - No. 10 | | I 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05am|Lv.. iMa eon?? Kr 8 20am| 7 l.Opmj ....... 9 45pjujll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lvj 5 20am | 4 20pm [.’ |. ]H 50pmjl2 OOpmj 7 30am|Lv ..Atlanta. Arj 5 10am] 3 55pm| | | 9 25am| 8 30pm| 6 lOpmjLv Charlotte LvjlO 15am| 9 35am| | *.j 1 30pm|12 OOn’tjll 25pmjLv . Dan ville. Lyj 6 07pm[ 5 50am| j I 6 25pm| 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 10n,n| j T7~ I 3 50| 1 53amj |Lv. .Lynchburg Lvj 3 a.jpmj 3 40amI | 5 48pm| 3 35amj |Lv Chari’ville Lvj 2 15pm| 1 50pmj ~.[,, | 9 25pm| 6 42am| |Ar Washgton. Lvjll loamjlO 43pm| j jll 25am| 8 OOamj |Ar Balti'more Lvj 6 17am| 9 20pm| j I 3 OOamjlO 15am| |Ar I’hila dlphia Lv 3 50am| 6 55pm| | | 6 20am|12 4on ’n| |Ar New York Lv|l2 15amj 4 30pm| | j 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lv| 5 OOpmjlO 00am| | THROUGH OAR SERVICES, ETC. Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Chattanooga and Jacksonville, also between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at Macon. Nos. 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween Atlanta and Brunswick. Nos. 9 and 10, elegant free Observatior cars, between Macon and Atlanta, also Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot, Atlanta, with “Southwestern Vestibuled Limited,” finest and fastest train in th4 South. Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. S. Fast Mail Train” to and from the East. Nos. 7 and 6, Pullman sleeping cars between Macon and Asheville. FRANK S. GANNON, 3d V. P. & G. M., J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager, Washingon, D. C. Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK, G. P. A., S. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A., Washington, D. C- Atlanta, Ga. RANDALL OLIFTON, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A., Macon, Ga. 565 Mulberry 2t.. Maoon, Ga. Central of Georgia Railway Company Schedules in Effect Feb. 25, 1898 Standard Tlr-t rtvea 7 90th Meiidian. n N 9n 5 ! 7 ?°- I ’l STATIONS | No. 2•' No. 8«| N.. t H am| 740 pm \ 7 ' 50 a * n l Lv Ma con .. -Arj 725 pm 740 am 350 »m L 24 pm : 840 pm| 850 amjAr ....Fort Valley Lvj 627 pm 639 amj 242 pm . i 3o pm|. |!10 20 amjAr. .. .Per ry Lvi! 5 00 pm |!11 30 am | jl2 30 pmjAr. . ..Opelika. . .Lv! 2 45 pm j. •••••.••••I I 550 pmjAr. . .B’m ham. . Lv| 930 amj j . 3 _3o pm .. .~j 9 40 am Ar ... .Per ry .. . .Lvj 445 pm, | 111 30 am Ha_ pm 10 01pm |Ar .. Amer icus ... .Lvj | 518 pm, 107 pm '«o- Pm I? pm Ar ’ --Smithville ..Lvj j 455amf12 42 pm 321 pm 11 0a pm ;Ar ....Albany ...Lvj | 4 15 ami 1135 am ® PW I l Ar •■ Columbia •••• Lv i I I 855 am 3 06 pm, |Ar ....Daw son ....Lvj j u 52 am ? 48 pm ' | i Ar .. "uthbert ...Lv ' j 1111 am ** I Xo 9 » .Ar ...Fort Gaines ..Lv No 10 *j I 955 am 407 pm, j 745 amjAr ....Eufaula ....Lv 730 pmj iIO2O am 814 pm;.... ...j |Ar. ..Ozark ....Lvj I j 650 am Pniigs- Ly| 600 pm; | 905 am 600 pm, i 905 am,Ar ..Un S ■ 25 P 3 2! -I |Ar Troy. Lvi _J ! 7 55 7 30 P m ! I 10 35 amjAr.. Montgomery ..Lvj 4 20 pmj ! 7 40 am No. ll.’i No. 3.*| No. 1«j i NoTiTi No. 4.*| No. 11.•' 800 am, 42a ami 415 pmjLv.. . Macon. . ..Arj 11 10 ami 11 10 pm 720 pm 922 am| 54/ am| 512 prajLv. .Barnesville . .Lvj 945 p 945 pmj 606 pin 112 Oo am. I 7 40 pm|Ar.. Thomaston. . Lvj 7 00 am! J! i 00 pm 955 am; 6 16 ami 6 13 pmjAr. . . Griffin. . ..Lvj 9 12 amj 9 15 pmi 580 pm - ..Ffcwnan. . .Lv j j; 323 pm II 20 am; 745 am! 735 pm|Ar., ..Atlanta. • Lv: 750 am| 750 pmj 406 pm No. 6. ! No. 4. *| No. 2*| \ 3 £ • jjo. 3. *|~ No. 5. 1 1 30 pm 11 38 pml 11 25 .. .Ma con. . ..at! ’ 3 55 am! 7 45 am 8 10 pm 12 19 am 12 08 pmjAr. . ..Ger don .. .Ar 500 pun 310 amj 710 am 850 pmj ! 1 15 pmjAr. .Milled gevilla .Lvl! 3 45 pm, I « 20 10 Wpm '3 00 pmjAr.. ..Eatonton. . .Lvjl 130 pm| j 5 am I 4 4 & pm|Ar. . .Machen. . .Lvi’ll 20 am, j j! 650 pmjAr. Covington ..Lvj 920 ami t •11 23 ami’ll 38 pmj’ll 25 am|Lv. .. .Macon. . ~Ar,» 3 45 pm • 3 55 am * 3 45 pm 1 17 pmi 1 30 am,f 1 17 pm|Ar. .. .Tennille Lv. 156 pmi 1 52 ami 1 56 pm 230 pm 225 am| 230 pmiAr. . .Wadley. . .Lv.flz 55 pm, 12 60 am; 12 55 pm 261 pmj 244 am 251 pm|Ar. . .Mid ville, . .Lv, 12 11 pm 12 30 ami 12 P pm f 825 pmj 3 15 amj 325 pm|Ar. .. .Millen. .. .£vj u 34 acl ; lx eg pm j u M Mnl • < 13 pmj 4 42 am; 5 10 pmiAr .Waynesboro.. .I,vi 10 13 ami 10 37 pm 810 47 am •5 30 pm; 635 amj 655 pmiAr... .Aug usr.a. .Lt !t 2G ami 846 pm,« 9JO aa j 342 ami 350 pu.(Ar. .Rocky Ford. .Lv, 11 10 am 11 19 pmi I 3 58 ami 4 08 pm|Ar.. . .Dover. . ..Lvi 10 5 2am- 11 00 pm| j 600 am COO pmiAr.. .Savannah. .Lvi 845 am: 900 pmj........... I I No. 16. •! j No. 15. j I I 750 am|Lv.. .. Macon.. ..Ar 730 pmi j -...] 9 40 amjAr.. Monticello .. Lv] 5 45 pmi J. i ; 10 05 am|Ar. .. .Machen .. ..Lvi 5 27 pm; *.*. j 'JI2 30 pmjAr .. .Eatonton .. .Lvj 3 30 pm'' j | 10 45 am Ar. ...Madison. .. Lvi 4 40 pmj • Daily. • Daily except Sunday, f Meal station, s Sunday only. Solid trains are run to ands from Maron and Montgomery via Eufaula. Savan nah and Atlanta via Macon. Macor. and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Birming ham via Columbus. Elegant sleeping can- on trams No 3 and 4 between Ma cox vnd Savant.; . and Aalanta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for •ecu pancy in Macon depot at 900 p. m. Pas sengers arriving in Macon on No. 3 and Sa vanuah on No. 4, are’allowed to remain iusleeper until 7a. m Parlor cars between Maoon and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for ' nghts-rtib-. .»::nlin and Sanders-. B e rake 11.25 Train arrives Fort Gaines 4:45 p. m., and leaves 10:10 a. tn Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. m. and leaves 7:30 a. m. For further information or sen eduies to pointe beyond our lines, addreu J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macon, Ga. E. P. BONNER. U. T. A. £ H. HINTON, Traffic Manager J. C. HAILE, G. P. A. TUEv. D. KUNE, l-en«ral Superintoadent. HOT SPINGS, Nort Carolina Mountain Park Hotel «nd Bathe- Modern ilotel Ideas in Every IX-vartment-Vable and Service Unexcelled. Swimming Pool. Bowling. Tennis. Golf, Pool and Billiards. Photographer's dart room. Riding, Driving, Tennis. Large Ball Room and Auditorium. Special reduced summer rates. BEARDEN S Orchestra. T. D. Green, Manager. POPU larsummer Dalton. Ga.. is now one the most popular summer resorts in the South— e imate delightful, scenery superb, beautiful drives, good livery. Hotel Dalto-n is b.*>i« l< ~i \-T J 1 ** re *ort seeker and the com mercial traveler. Elegantly built, electric families' M° r ' hot anl cold baths on every tloor. Special rates to formation given by™* U BUmmer from ,ower Geosgia and Florida. Further In- D. L. BETTOR, Proprietor Dalton, Ga. Newport of the South, SEASON OP’ 1898. Hotel St. Simon St. Simons Island, Georgia. Newly equipped. Rates SIO.OO per week. Sea bath ing, Dishing, Boating, Lawn Tennis, Driving, Dancing, Billiards and Pool. Two germans weekly. 25 mile bicycle path. Excellent orchestra. Hotel lighted by electricity. Table the best. W. B. ISAACS, Lessee. Keep out of Reach of the Spanish Gun. TAKE THE C H. & D. TO MICHIGAN. 3 Trains Daily. Finest Trains in Ohio. Fastest Trains in Ohio. Michigan and the Great Lakes constantly growing in popularity. Everybody will be there this summer. For information inquire of your nearest ticket agent. Warm Springs, Ga. R mOUNTHIN RESORT. The health and pleas ure resort of the South. With better bathing than on the coast. Swimming Pool, 50x150 Feel. of warm mineral water, 90 degrees tem perature. Also individual pods. 1,200 feet above sea level. * Delightfully Cool Climate. Ab solutely pure air. No mos quitoes First-class accomodations and ser vice. Electric lights, excellent or chestra Board, per day, $2.00 t® $2.50, week $ll.OO to $14.00. Four weeks $36.00 to $44.00 I ORYY 3 HOURS FROfll RJRCCN. Write for booklet with full in formation j CRRS. L. DRVIS, Proprietor. HOTEL MARION And Cottages. Tallulah Falls, Ga. Open for the season. Board from sls to S3O per month, according to room. Six hundred feet of shade piazzas in center of finest scenery at Tallulah. Climate unsurpassed. Hight elevation. All modern Improvements. Table excel lent. MRS. B. A. YOUNG, Proprietress, Tallulah Falls, Ga. I Glenn Springs Hotel, Glenn Springs, S. C. Queen of Southern Summer Resorts. There Is but one Glenn Springs and it has no equal on the continent 9>r the stom ach, liver, kidneys, bowels and blood. Hotel open from June lot to October Ist. Cuisine and Service excellent. Water shipped the year round. ampaoN & SIMPSON, Managers. i Bedford Alum, Iron and lodine Springs of Virginia. From whose water the celebrated “Mass” so extensively known and used, is menu facteured. Opens June lb, and is the most home-like ydace in Virginia for recuper ating. A modern writer oh the m'neral waters of Europe and America says: “Bedford I Springs water cures when all <xher reine- I dies have failed, and especially inderange j meats peculiar to females.” Uxig distance telepfi.jce connections, J send for a 56-page interesting phamplet of proofs. P, O. Bedford Springs, Va. J. K. MABKX, JK-, Proprietor. STURTEVANT HOOSE, j Broadway au«i St., New York, E American & Euiopean plan Wil- ■ I liarn F. Bang, proprietor. Broad- R way cable cars passing the dooi g transfer io all parts of the city , I Saratoga Springs THE KENSINGTON. and H. A. & W F. BANG, Proprietors, New York Office, Sturtevant House. Ocean View House. St. Simon's Island Beach. Ga Fine surtf bathing, good table, artesian water. A. T. ARNOLD, Proprietor. For Business Men In the heart of the wholesale dis <* ] ► trlct. <, For Shoppers > 3 minutes walk to Wanamakers; j’► 8 minutes walk to Siegel-Coopers L Big Store. Easy of access to the < > great Dry Goods Stores. <, I For Sightseers One block from cars, giving < * easy transportation to all points HuM Atel, J I New York. :> Cor. 11th St. and University < ► Place. Only one block from , ► Broadway. < * ROOMS, $1 UP. RESTAURANT, < ► Prices Reasonable. ] > I ■ I MACON AND BIRMINGHAM R. R. CO. (Pine Monutnln Route.) Effective June 5. 1898. 4 20 pmjLv Macon ArjlO »6 am 4 20 pm’Lv Sortne LvjlO 14 am 5 46 pm[Lv ....CoHoden.... Lvj 9 09 am 557 pm!Lv ... YateaviHe... Lvj 857 am 6 fl pmjL/v ...Thomaston... Lvj 8 28 ata _7_O7 pmjAr ...Woodbury... Lvj 7 48 am S< >Y J’IHBRN It AILWA Y. ' 7 26 pmjAr. Warm Springs. Lvj 7 29 am 6 03 pnij-Ar ....Columbus... Lvj 6 00 am 8 07 pmlArf Griffin Lvj 6 60 am 9 45 pm Ar Atlanta Lvj 5 20 am ~ feOUTHER.”. RAILWAY. 4 20 amjLv .... Atlanta ....Ari 9 40 am 6 pmjLv Griffin Lvj 932 am 5 25 pm [Lv .... Columbus.... Lv, 9 «0 «m 6 49 pmlLv .Warm Springs. Lvl 8 96 am 707 pmfLv.. .. Woorftrtiry.... Arj 7 48 ani 7 27 imilAr . Harris City.. Lv| 7 28 am ~ CENTRAi, OF GeORGLA. 7 46 pmiAr ...Greenville... Lvj 7 10 am • 5 80 pcnpjv ....Columbus.... Arj 9 40 am 7 87 ..Harris City.. Arj 7 B 8 am 8 20 pmjAr ....LaGrange.... Lv| 6 36 am Cloee conm-ctloa at Macon and SoTkoe with the Georgia Sourthern and Florida Central of Georgia for Savannah, Albany, Southwest Georgia points and Montgom ery, Ala., at Yatesville for Roberta and points on the Atlanta and Florida di vision of the Southern railway, at Harris City City with Central of Gtorgla railwoy, for Greenville and Columbus, at Wood bury with Southern railway for Col urn bug and Griffin, at Lafkange with the Atlanta and West Point railway. JULIAN R. LAbFE, General Manager, Macon, Ga. R. G. STONE, Gen. Pass. Agt. PULLMAN CAR LINE QTrowni' •" 1 ■ 1 S BETWeESS' Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or Ix>ulsvllle and Chicago and THE NORTHWEST. Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains. Parlor chairs and dining cars on day trains. The Monon trains make the Cast eel time between the Southern winter re sorts and the summer resorts of the Northwest. W. H. McDOEL, V. P & G. M. FRANK J. REDD, G. P. A , Chicago, 111. For further particulars address R. W. OLAUfNG, Gen. Agt. Thomaevflle, Ga. >Bk' «J* t* a n<>n-poisonoa» rwmedr fur <4r,riojrh««Mn Ciwt, 8 f e rm a t o r r h k> J to t Say .Wa 11 n n a t n r a 1 <Ua- Guaranvvl chargee, or ariv fntianinia- I | lion, irritation or u'-. -ra- evuMrioa. tion «>f rrt nv-* a " meta- Or;, t rarir-a. X<... astnn ..-nt. V 8 i r t *''* ln I'lam wrapper, i by <-xrrt‘*s fi-r.ii.;, for * * v "■ Cirralar aent -»< New Steam DYE WORKS, F. H. JOHNSON, Prop’r. 25c Second Street, Macon, Ga. Ladies’ dresses nicely cleaned and pressed. Also Gents’ Linen Suits. 3