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RELIGIOI S BELIEFS.
THE ORIGIN OF SECTARIANISM AND
ITS EVILS AND CURE.
A ChariM-terlatfe S»rwmn by Rev. Dr. T»l
--magr Wrong Ed oration In the Home
Circle Intolerance Never Accomplished
Anvthingr God’* Snoxliine Utils Higotry.
(Copyright, b> American t’ri's A -fo
liation j
•Wamum; ion July 21.—Jn hi* MTinon
tinlny Dr. Tain ■ ihwr what sectarian
lain n ally l«, it* origin, evils and cure
The text w.-.x Jnd.-i - kli.i; Then Mid
they unto him. Say now -aibli J<-th, and
ho raid slLlxdcth. fir he could not frame
to pronounce it right. 1 le-n tb< y took
him anti -lew him nt tie* p/v- -igi’K of Jit
dan.
D<> you notion the difference of pronun
elation lx tav.cn vhibt>ol«-th and -Ibboleth?
A vit" einnll i::'I tminqtortu'it difference,
you say, and yet that diflcroticc wax the
difference !> t em life and death for a
great many people. Tlx- Jx»rd «jx ogle,
Gilead nn<l Ephraim, cot in to,a great light ,
and KpLiaim w.a.« worsted, and on the rc
treat i nine to the fords of the rivor .Jordan
to ci-oxx. Order wax given that ail
Ephrnindte* coming there lw slain. Hut
how could it I- found out v. ho w: re
Eplir.'dlnite i iwy v. ( j e detected by th« ir
pronunciation. SnitflMdcth waa a word
that -toiHl lor river The Ephraimite
had a brogue of theirown, and when they
Cried to say "shibboleth” always left, out
the sound of tho'*h.” When it was asked
that they say vhi.b’>oleth. tiny said r.iljr,
h th, and wore slain. '‘Then said they
unto him, say now shibboleth, and he said
sibboleth, for he could not. frame to pro
nounce it rigid. 'J in n they took him and
slew him at tiio pa->ages of Jordan '' A
very small dliTerime, you say, between
Gilead and Ephraim, and yet how much
infoicraiice nlioiit that, small difference.
The Jjord'.s trils s in our time—by which 1
mean the different deiffiminations of
Christians sometimes magnify a very
small (lit,ereiii c, unit the only difference
betwi-cti scon :. of dcnottihmtions today is
the difference between s.hibliolet 11 and sib
bo let h
Tho church of God Is divided into a
grout numtier of dcnomlm ’ions Time
would fail me to tell of the Cal vhiists, and
the Arminiatis, mid the Kabl aim iatis, and
the liaxti linns, and the Jiunkctx, and the
fshakers, and the Quakers, and the Moth
iMlists and the Baptists, ami the Episco
pniinns, nnd the Lutheran*, and the Con
gregat ionalixts, ami the Presbyterians,
and the Spiritualists and a score of other
denominations of religionists, some of
them founded by very good men, some of
them founded by very egotistic mon, some
of them founded by very bad men. Hut
ns I demand for myself liberty of con
♦icleTire 1 mm t glvetbat same iiiierty toev
cry other man, remembering that he no
more differ from me than I differ from
him. I advocate the largest liberty in all
religious Ixlicf and form of worship. In
art,, In politics, In morals and in religion
let there bo no gag law, no liaising of the
previous question, no persecution, no in
tolerance.
You know that the air and the water
keep pure by constant circulation, and 1
think there i- a tendency in religious dis
cushion to purification nnd moral health.
Between t he fourth mid the si.'iteenth <•» n
tlirles tlie church proposed to make people
think aright try prohibiting discussion,
nnd by strong ecus. r.J’.lp of the press and
rack and gibbet ami hot lead down the
throat tried to make peo; le orthodox, but
it was discovered that you cannot change
a man’s belief by twisting off ids bead,
nor make a man see differently by t Utting
nn awl through bis eves. There is some
thing in a man’s conscience which will
hurl off the mountain that you threw up
on it, ami, unsinged of the fire, out of the
flume will make redwings on which the
martyr will mount to glory
In that time of which 1 speak, betwen
the fourth ai d sixteenth centuries, people
went from the house of God into tho most
appalling iniquity, and right along by
consecrated altars there were tides of
drunkenness and licent.iousne s such as
tho world never h. aril of. ami tho very
Rowers of perdition broke loose nnd flooded
the church. After awhile file printing
press was freed, and it broke the shnekl.s
of f>he human mind. Then t here camo a
large number of bad books, and where
there was one man hostile to the ('brief tan
religion thi-.e were 20 men ready so ad va
cate it So I hart* not any nervousness in
regard to this battle going on between
truth ami error. Tho truth will conquer
just, as certainly as that God is st ronger
than the devil. Let. error run if you only
let truth run along with it I rged on by
skeptic’s shout and tranHeendontalist’s
apur, let it run. God’s angels of wr;Jh
nrc in hot pursuit, and quicker than eagle’s
beak clutches out a hawk s heart God’s
Vengeance will tear it to pieces.
Phases «'f Sect®rirmism.
1 propose to speak t o you of sect art in
ism- its origin, its evils p::d its cures.
There are those who would make us think
that this monster with horns and hoofs is
religion. I shall chase it to its hiding
place and dtag it out of the eav'erns of
darkness and rip off its hide. But, I want
to make a distinction between bigotry and
the lawful fondness for pjx-ultar religious
ik’llefs and forms of worship. J have no
admiration fora nothingarian.
In a world of such tremendous vlcissi
tuile and temptation and with a'sold that
must utter awhile stand before a throne
of Insufferable brightness, in a day when
tho rocking of the mountains and the
flaming of the heavens and the upheaval
of tile seas shall lie among the least of the
excitements, to give account for every
thought, wenl, notion, preference and dis
like—that man is mad who has no re
ligious prefrit .nee But our early educa
tlon, our physical temperament, our men
tal constitution will very much decide our
form of worship.
A style of psiilmixiy that may please me
may displease you Some would like to
have a minister in gown nnd bands and
surplice, and others prefer to hr' ea min
ister in plain citizen s apparel Some are
most impressed when a little child is pre
sented at the altar and sprinkled ot rhe
waters of a holy lietn dietie.n ”iii the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost, and ethers are more im
preS'H'd when the penitent comes upout of
the river, his garments dripping with the
waters of a lx*.[ J ism which signifies the
washing away of sin Tx t cither have bis
own way Gue man likes no noise in
prayer—not a word, net u whistler An
other num. just as good, presets by gestie
ulatinn and exclamation toexpress his de
votional aspirations. One is just as good
as the other "Every man fully persuaded
in his own mind
Givrt e Whitefield was going over a
Quaker i.qli, r roughly for son e of his re
ligious sentiments, and the Quaker said:
“George. I am as thou art. 1 am for
bringing all v >’ tethe hepicf the gospel
Therefore, if thou will not quarrel with
me about my broad t-tlm. 1 will not qunr
rel with k l-«x' r.L«» t:t thy black gown
George, give tuc t’.?' Land
In tracing out tue rcl- ion of soet.'.rinij
ism or bi« try 1 find t> a great deal of |
it conies from wret.g cdt emion in th-'
home circle. Fbere are jiarvmts wh > <*■>
not thii k it wroutr to c •-rieatv.re and jt<r
the peculiar fortusof religion in the world
ami denounei other sects and oil.er de
nominations. It is M' v often the case
that that kind of edu --<tl >n a -ts o;
iioshe to wh... Vus i OM.Mi :»• d the chil
dren grow up and after i.ohi.’c go and s-.-e
for themseivis and. kviking in tho-'
phurches and finding that the pec-plc fir
gooff jbere ami tl y love Gu l and keep
his courißfipd by natural reaction
they go ami 'uju ;r.- s e very ebvivhcs. I
could mention TTi-' uames of pr. .ninent
ministers f the go.u>< 1 who xps-nt their
whole lives burnt aiding other deuvniins
tions and who livtil to see their children
preach the gost-el m those very rienomina
tions. But it is often the vase that bigotry
start- in a hoi.-ehold, and that the subject
of it never recovers There tire tens of
thousands of bigots 10 years old.
1 think sectarianism and bigotry also
rise frotu too great prominence of any one
denomination in a community All the
other denominations are wrong and his
denomination is right bix ause his denoiu
iniition is the most wealthy or the most
poj.ular or the most influential, and it is
“our” church, and "our" religious organ
ization, and "our" choir, u-d our" min
ister, and the man tosses his head ami
i wants other denominations to know their
places. It is a grunt deal better in any
community when the great denominations
i of Christians are about equal in pywer,
marching side by side for the world's con
quest Mere outside prosperity, mere
worldly power, is no evidence that the
church' is a--< ; udile to God. Better a
barn w ith Chusi in the manger than a
cathedral with iriigniflccnt harmonica
rolling through the long drawn aisle and
an angel from heaven in the pulpit if
there ty> no Chir-t in the chancel and no
i Christ in the rots s
Bigotry sn<i Ignorance.
Bigotry is often the child of ignorance.
, You s< Idorn find a man with large intcl
: who is :i bigot. It is the man who
i think- he knows a great deal, but doee
I not. 'i hu» man is almost always n bigot.
The whole tctuicncy of education and civ
iiiztiiio’ Ist., b.-.nga man out of tiiat kind
of state <>, n. nd ami heart. There wax in
the far east a great ots-lisk, and one side
of the «>L“ link was white, another side of
the obelisk wax green, anot her side of tho
obeli-M was b'ue, and' traiwrs went and
looked a-' that oticlisk, but they did not
walk around it. One man looked atone
side, ano’hcr at another side, and they
came home, h one looking at only one '
side, and they happt neo to meet, the story
says, and they got into a rank quarrel
about the color of that obelisk. One man
said it was white, another man said it was ■
gns-n, another man said it was blue, and j
wl i n they were in the very heat of the
controversy a more Intelligent travele.r
came nn<l wfid: ’Gentlemen, I have seen
that oU iirk. and you are all right, and
you are all v. rung. Why didn’t you all
w alk around the obelisk?”
Ixiok out for trie man who sees only one
side of a religious truth. Look out for
the man who never walks around atsiut 1
th' si great theories of God and eternity j
,»nd the dead Ho will be a bigtit inevita- 1
hly- the man who only s< >-s one side. ,
There is no man more to lie pitied than he ‘
who hi s in his head jic-t one Idea—no
more, no less. More light, less sectarian- i
ism. There is nothing that will so sooq ■
kill bigotry as sunshine—God’s sunshine. ■
So I have set before you what 1 consider '
to be tho enme-ot bigotry 1 have set be- •
fore you the origin of this great evil. !
What (ire some of the baleful effects? First j
of all, it cripples investigation. You are i
wrong, and I am right, and that ends it. i
No taste for exploration, no spirit of in- i
vestigation. From the glorious realm of ’
God's truth, over which an archangel •
might i)y from eternity toetornily nnd not !
re,,ci> the limit, them,'in shuts himself out '
and di. s, a blind mole under acorn shock. ,
It stops all investigation.
Wiiile each <ienominatlon of Christians
is to present all the truths of the Bible, it
seems to me that God has given to each
denomination an especial mission to give
particular emphasis to some one doctrine,
and so the Calvinistic churches must pre
sent tho sovereignty of God, and the Ar
minian churches must present man’s free
agency, and the Episcopal churches must
present the, importance of order and solemn
ceremony, and the Baptist churches must
present the necessity of ordinances, and
the Congregational church must present
the responsibility of the individual mem
ber, and the Methodist church must show
what holy enthusiasm, hearty congrega
tional singing, can accomplish. Wiiileeach
denomination of Christians must set forth
all the doctrines of the Bible, I feel it is
es|K“’ially incumbent upon each denomi
nation to put particular emphasis on some
one dix'trine.
Damage Hone by Sectarianism.
Another great damage done by tho sec
tarianism ami bigotry of the church is
that it disgusts people with the Christian
religion. Now, my friends, the church of •
God w/is never intended for a war barrack.
People are at raid of u riot. You go down
tho street, and you see nn excitement and
missiles flying through the air, and you
hear the shock of firearms. Do you, the
peaceful and industrious citizen, go
through that street? Oh, no! You will
say, “I’ll go around tho block.” Now,
nu n come ifnd look upon this narrow path
to heaven,'and sometimes see tho ecclesi
astical brickbats flying everywhither, and
they say: ‘ Well, I guess I'll take the broad
road There is so much sharpshooting on
the narrow road I guess I’ll try the broad
rood!”
Francis I so hated the Lutherans that lie
said that, if he thought, there was one drop
of Lutheran blood in his veins he would
puncture them and let that drop out. Just
ns Jong as there is so much hostility be
tween denomination and denomination or
between one professed Christian and an
other or between one church and another,
so iong men will be disgusted with the
Christian religion and say, ‘‘lf that is re
ligion, 1 want none of it.”
Again, bigotry and sectarianism do
great damage in the fact tiiat they hinder
the triumph of the gospel. Oh, how much
wasted ammunition! How many men of
splendid intellect have given their whole
life to controversial disputes when, if they
had given their life to something practi
cal, they might have been vastly useful.
Suppose, while I speak, there were a com
mon enemy coming up the bay and all the
forts around the harbor began to lire into
each other. You would cry out: “National
suicide. Why don’t those forts blaze
away in one direction and that against the
common enemy?’’ And yet I sometimes see
jn the church of the Lord Jesus Christ a
strange thing going on—church against
c.hurch, minister against minister, denom
ination against denomination, firing away
into their own fort, or the fort which
ought to be on the same side, instead of
consecrating their energy and giving one
mighty and everlasting volley against the
navies of darkness riding up through the
bay.
I go out sometimes in the summer, and
I find two beehives, and these two hives
arc in a quarrel. I come near enough not
to be stung, but I come just near enough
to bear the controversy, and one beehive
says, "That field of clover is the sweet
est,’’ and another beehive says, "That field
of clover is the sweetest.” I come in be
tween them, and I say: "Stopthis quarrel.
If you like that field of clover best, go
there If you like this Held of clover best,
go there. But let me tell you that that
hive which gets the most honey is the best
hive!" So I come out between the
churches of the l ord Jesus Christ. One
denomination of Christians says. "That
field of Christian doctrine is best,” and
another says, "This field of Christian doe- I
trine is the best. " Well I Bay, "Go where
you get the most honey.” That is tho best
church which gets the most honey of
Christian grace for the heart and the most
honey of Christian usefulness for the life.
Besides that, if you want to build up
any denomination, you will never build it
up by trying to pull some other down
Intolerance never put anything down. !
How much has intolerance accomplished, !
for instance, against the Methodist church? I
For long years her ministry were forbid
den the pulpits of Great Britain. Why '
was it that so many of them preached in I
the fields? Simply because they could not {
get in the churches. And the name of the '■
church was given in derision and as a sar- |
easm. The critics of the church said, ;
"They have no order, they have no meth- i
od in their worship, "and the critics there- •
fore in irony called them "Methodists.”
J am toiu that in Astor library, New '
York, kept as curiosities, thew» are 707 ,
books and pamphlets against Methodism. I
Did intolerance stop that church? No. I« i
is either first or second amid the denomi
nations of Christendom, her missionary
stations in all parts of the world, her men
not only important in religious trusts, but
important also in secular trusts. Church
marching on. and the more intolerance
against it the faster it marched.
Intolerance Avails Nothing.
What did intolerance accomplish against i
the Baptist church? If laughing scorn!
and tirade could have destroyed the 1
church, it would not have today a disciple j
left. The Baptists were hurled out of 1
Boston In olden times Those who sym- ■
pathlzed with them were imprisoned, and *
when a petition was offered asking leni
ency in their behalf all the men who sign- ,
cd it were indicted Has intolerance stop
ped the Baptist chureh? The last statistics .
tn regard to it showed 44,000 churches and ■
4,COO,OOlicommunicants Intolerance nev
er put down anything.
In England a law was made against the '
Jew Etqdand thrust back the Jew and i
thrust d-. wr. the Jew, and declared that no
Jew should hold official position What
came ot it? Were the Jews destroyed? I
Was their religion overthrown? No Who j
became prime minister of England? Who
was next to the throne? Who was higher I
I
than the throne, tiecause he was counselor
and adviser? Disraeli, a Jew, What were
we celebrating in <JI our churches as well
as: synagogues only a few years ago? The
or 1 •■•’ndredth birthday of Montefiore, the
great .vish philanthropist Intolerance
never yet put down anything.
But now, my friends, having shown you
the origin of liiuotry or sectarianism and
having shown you the damage it does, 1
want briefly t> show you how we are to
war against this terrible evil, and 1 think
we ought to begin our war by realizing
our own weakness and our imperfections.
If we make, so many mistakes in the com
mon affairs of life, is ft not possible that
we may make mlHtnkee in regard to our
religions aff.drs? Shall we take a man by
the throat or by the collar because he can
not see religious truths just as we do? In
the light o£ eternity it will be found out,
1 think, there was something wrong
in ail our creeds and something right in
all our creeds, but since we may make
mistakes in regard to things of the world,
do not let us be so egotistic and so puffed
up as to have an idea that we cannot make
any mistake in regard to religious theories,
and then I think we will do a great deal
to overthrow rhe sectarianism from our
heart and the sectarianism from the
world by chiefly enlarging in those things
in which we agree rather than those on
which we differ.
Now, here is a great gospel platform.
A man comes up on this side of the plat
form and says, ”1 don't believe in baby
sprinkling.' Shall I shot e him off? Here
- is a man coming up on this side of the
platform, and he says, ”1 don’t believe in
the perseverance of the saints.” Shall I
| shove him off? No. I will say . “Do you
believe in the Lord Jesus as your Saviour?
Do you trust him for time and for eter
nity?” Ho says, -Yes.” "Do you take
i Christ for time and for eternity’?” "Yes. ”
I say, "Come on, brother! One in time
and one in eternity Brother now, broth
er forever.” Blessed lie God for a gospel
platform so large that all who receive
! Christ may stand on it.
Noble Institutions and Nobie Men.
I think we may overthrow the severe
j sectarianism and bigotry in our hearts and
in therhurch also by realizing that all the
! denominations of Christians have yielded
I noble institutions and noble men. There
is nothing that so stirs my soul as this
; thought. One denomination yielded a
Robert Hall and an Adoniram Judson;
' another yielded a Latimer and a Melville;
j another yielded John Wesley and the
i blessed Summerfield, while our own de-
I nomination yielded John Knox and the
' Alexanders—men of whom the world was
not worthy. Now, I say, if we ore honest
and fair minded men, when we come up
in the presence of such churches and such
denominations, although they may be dif
ferent from our own, we ought to admire
them and we ought to love and honor
them. Churches which can produce such
men, and such large hearted charity, and
such magnificent martyrdom ought to win
our affection—at any rate our respect. So
come on, ye 600,000 Episcopalians in this
country, and ye 1,400,000 Presbyterians,
and ye 4,000,000 Baptists, and ye 5,000,000
Methodists, come on. Shoulder to shoul
der we will march for the world’s conquest,
for all nations are to bo saved, and God
demands that you nnd 1 help. Forward,
the whole line! In the Young Men’s
Christian associations, in the Bible society,
in the Tract society, in the Foreign Mis
sionary society, shoulder to shoulder all
denominations.
Perhaps 1 might forcefully illustrate
this truth by calling your attention to an
incident which took place 25 years ago.
One Monday morning at about 2 o’clock,
[ while her 900 passengers were sound asleep
in her berths dreaming of borne, the steam
er Atlantic crashed into Mars’ Head. Five
hundred souls in ten minutes landed in
eternity! Oh, what a scene! Agonized
men and women running up and down
the gangways and clutching for the rig
ging, and the plunge of the helpless steam
er, and the clapping of the hands of the
merciless sea over the drowning and the
dead, threw two continents into terror.
But see this brave quartermaster pushing i
out with tho life line until he gets to the '
rock, and see these fishermen gathering I
up the shipwrecked and taking them into
the cabins, and wrapping them in the
flannels snug and warm, and see that
minister of the gospel, with three other
men, getting into a lifeboat and pushing
out for the wreck, pulling away across the
surf, and pulling away until they saved
one more man, ami then getting back with
him to the shore. Cun those men ever for
get that night’? And can they ever forget
their companionship in peril, companion
ship in struggle, companionship in awful
catastrophe and rescue? Never! Never!
In whatever part of the earth they meet,
they will be friends when they mention
the story of that night when the Atlantic
struck Mars' Head. Well, my friends, our
world has gone into a worse shipwreck.
Sin drove it on the rocks. The old ship
has lurched and tossed in the tempests of
6,000 years. Out with the life line! Ido
not care what denomination carries it
Out with the lifeboat! I do not care what
denomination rows it. Side by side in the
memory of common hardships and com
mon trials and common prayers and com
mon tears let us be brothers forever. We
must ire
One army of the living God,
To his command we bow;
Part of the host have crossed the flood,
And part are crossing now.
And 1 expect to see the day when all de
nominations of Christians shall join hands
around tho cross of Christ nnd recite the
creed: "I believe in God the Father Al
mighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and
in Jesus Christ, ami in the communion of
saints, and in life everlasting. Amen.”
A Texas Wonder.
HALL’S GREAT DISCOVERY.
One small bottle of Hall’s Great Dis
covery cures all kidney and bladder trou
bles. removes gravel, cures diabetis, semi
nal emisisons, 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 by
mail on receipt Os sl. One small bottle is
two montbs’ treatment and will cure any
case above mentioned.
E. W. HALL,
Sole Manufacturer.
P. O. 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 sufferer from
a kidney trouble for ten years and that I
have taken less than one bottle of Hall’s
Great Discovery and I think that I am
cured.
I cheerfully recommend it to any one
■ suffering from any kidney trouble, as I
know of nothing that I consider its equal.
R. M. JONES.
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MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING, JULY 25 1898.
SPANISH SOLDIERS.
IN PUERTO RICO.
Information at Hand at the
Bureau in Washington.
The bureau of information has reports
i of the number of Spanish soldiers on the
! island of Porto Rico last December and
thinks there has been no great change
since then. The reports show 399 officers,
seven chaplains and 6,862 enlisted men.
I making a grand total of 7,219. The in
fantry number 5,212 officers and men.
, There are eighty cavalrymen, with two
■ officers over them, which will be lost in
the shadow of the big Fifth United States
j cavalry, with its 1,300 officers and men.
I The artillery force numbered 732, the en
' gineers 211, the civil guard 780 and the
military police 196. The officers include
i one lieutenant general, one general of di
vision, seven colonels, fourteen lieuten
| ants, twenty-seven majors, seventy-eigltt
■ captains, 121 first and forty-nine second
lieutenants.
company, one section of workmen of the
j 5,219 men. distributed in five battalions of
I infantry, one section of cavalry, one bat
i talion of fortress artilery. one telegraph
compnay, one section of workmen of the
Park and a sanitary brigade. The garri
son of San Juan includes two provisional
batteries of three companies each, a bat
talion of fortress artillery, a battalion of
volunteers, a telegraph company, a sani
tary brigade and ten cavalrymen, who are
used for escort duty for the commanding
officer. At Ponce there are a barta’ion of
of Spanish rifles and three battalions of
volunteers. At Guayama the garrison
consists of a provisional bauaiioii ,nd two
battalions of volunteers. It appears from
these figures that none of the ‘garrisons
taken singly is at all formidable, bur the
presumption is that the Spanish forces will
be concentrated at San Juan.
Robbed th** Grave.
A startling incident of which Mr. John
Oliver of Philadelphia was the subject, is
narrated by him as follows: “I was in a
most dreadful condition. My skin was al
most yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated,
pain continually in back and sides, no ap
oetite—gradually growing weaker day by
day. Three physicians had given me up.
Fortunately a friend advised trying “Elec
tric Bitters,” and to my great joy and sur
prise the first bottle made a decided im
provement. I continued their use for three
weeks and am now a well man. I know
they saved my life and robbed the grave
of another victim.” No ons should fail to
try them. Only 50c per bottle at H. J. La
mar & Sons’ drug store.
LETTER LIST.
List of letters remaining unclaimed in
the Macon, Ga., postoffice, July 23, 1898.
Persons calling will please say advertised
and give date. One cent must be paid on
each letter advertised.
MALE LIST.
B —Siprel Butler, James C. Bell, Dunk
Burnett, J, J. W. O. Burny, J. E.
Brown. M. Biling.
C —W. W. Chancey,
D —J. L. Downs, John Douglass, James
A. Davis, Detective Association, Frank
Davis, D. B. (Dennis.
E —C. P. Earley. , ,
F—-M. A. Fordham.
G —Lewis aGtes, Ed. E. Grimes, Dave
Guyton, A. D. Galbraith.
iH— W. F. Hood, E. J. Hughes, J. H.
Hines. ,
K—C. R. King.
L —Ccrtis Langford, J. H. Livingston,
John P. Larson, S. W. Lockhart.
M —<B. D. Martin, Andrew 'Morris, Mick
lin & Edwards,
P —T. N. Parker. ~
S—Admas Spincer.
T—J. D. Teal, Geo. Telford.
V —Willie Vinson.
—Jerry Walers, J. Walker, Chas. W.
Watkins, Richard 'Wilyams.
FEMALE LIST.
iB- —Miss Madge Broen, Mrs. Annie But
ler, Mrs. Kasan Brown, Mrs. Mary Brady.
'Mrs. L. Belknap. Mrs. Jossie Bruden.
C—'Mrs. Fred Crosby, Mrs. Amy Chiles,
Ida Collins, Mrs. E. J. Cox, Mrs. Annie
Conner.
D —Mrs. L. M. Davis, Miss Estelle Dun
hart.
E —‘Miss Lillie Elder.
F—Mrs. Fannie Fenn.
G —Mrs. S. E. Garner, Miss L. Graham.
H —Miss Nennie Holomon, Mrs. Maud B.
Hudson, Mrs. Howell, 327 Ash street.
I —Mrs. Ellen Irby.
J —Miss Hallie Johnson, Mrs. Sallie Jor
dan, Virginia Jackson.
K —Mrs. Irene P. King.
L—-Miss Liddie Land, Miss Parley Lowe.
M —Miss Mary L. Mason, Mrs. Julia Mc-
Carthen, Hattie Maddox, Miss Sirlina
Miles, Mrs. J. H. McDonald.
N —Miss H. E. Newton.
O —Miss Adline O’Connor.
P—‘Miss Madaline Price.
R —Miss Virginia Ramsey.
S —'Miss Lena Sims.
T—Miss Maggie Taylor.
W —Mrs. Martha Warnock.
To insure prompt delivery have your
mail addressed to street and number.
J. H. Hertz, Postmaster.
J. L. Davis, Supt.
The Sure Ln Grippe Cure.
There is no use suffering from this
dreadful malady if you will only get the
right cure. You are having pain all through
your body, your liver is out of order, have
no appetite, no life or ambbition, have a
bad cold —in fact, are used up. Electric
bitters is the only remedy that will give
you prompt and sure relief. They act di
rectly on your liver, stomach and kid
neys, tone up the whole system and make
you feel like a new being. They are guar
anteed to cure or prive refunded. For sale
at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ drug store. Only
50c per bottle.
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
sent for a physician and It was under his
oare for a week. At this time the child
been sick for about ten days and was
having about twenty-five operations of tha
bowels every twelve hours, and we were
convinced that unless it soon obtained re
lief it would not live. ChambeCaiii's
Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was
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.
CALL FOR TICKETS.
Subscribers who are entitled to tickets
on the prizes which are to be given away
by The News can obtain them on Wednes
day Thursday of Friday of each week by
calling or sending to the office of the sub
scription department. Office hours 8:30
a. m. to 6:30 p. m. Remember that sub
scription must be paid when due to secure
tickets. G. W. TIDWELL,
Manager City Circulation.
The Rev. W. .B. Costley, of Stockbridge,
Ga., while atending to hia pastoral duties
at Ellenwood. this state, was attacked by
cholera morbus. He says: “By chance I
happened to get hold of a bottle of Cham
berlain's Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy and I think it was the means of
saving my life. It relieved me at once.”
For sale by .J. Lamar Sons, druggists.
men. t-ues i
Dr. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment will
cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles
yhen all other ointments have failed. It
absorbs the tumors, allays the itching at
once, acts as a poultice, gives instant 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, 50c and
SI.OO per box.
WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO.,
Proprietors, Cleveland, O.
Subscribers must pay up and not allow
small balance* to run over from week to
week. The carriers have been tn rtrueted
la accept no par* jnyment from anysne
L _,-„CftSTORIA
CASft|Hi|Thß Kind You Have
I Always Bough!
table Preparation Sm As- ;ga - ®
sinrilating he Food anti
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of |jjj ff &
l i /a/
” ——•— r ~ S Signature fM u
i Promotes Digestion,.Cfeerful- 3*. ’ ff /
ness and Rest Contains neither || c # |p ®r‘
Opuim.Morphine nor Mineral. afj 01 /I? f
Not Nahootic. g H * Sj**
• 8 & T i? Z"
ft! ,“< \JM
Pumpkin Sa<i~ r£j * 3 »
AlxSenna * 1 7j£ w
PockxlLi SJit - j AM? C
Artist Sttd * I 3S’’ SA <fl « ‘v7 *
ia up Ihe
(jirrihcn . t §7 KJ\
Haver. ) J §7 * -J
Apcrfect Remedy for Conslina- & ! H 0
! lion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca. i&! | | a nuiu
Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- l|g* B y.? ag
ncss and Loss or Sleep. f f HBVB
TacSimile Signature cf
I Always Bought
“ACT |
«r . . « ’ACA t;?Mr->«Y, NCWYORH CITY.
Central of Georgia
Railway Company
Schedules in Effect Feb. 25, 1898 Standard Tin e
Wjfreax 90th Mei idian.
.. N ?I 5 I A°; 7 *l No - I ‘l STATIONS I N<?. 2*| No. 8•) No. 8
L2oam| 740 pml <SO am|Lv Macon .. .Ar 725 pm 740 am| 350 «m
« 1 4 ol pm 840 pm ' 850 am l Ar ••••Fort Valley Lv 627 pm 630 am| 242 pm
. 8 35 pml. |!10 20 amjAr. .. .Perry Lv ! 5 00 pm 1111 30 am
' 3 38 pm .- ■:■ ■•■■ -I 9 40 am|Ar ....Perry .. ..Lv| 445 pm| |!11 30 am
, 1 pm ! 49 91 pm ' > Ar --Americus ....Lv| | 518 pm| 107 pm
’q97 Pm 1? P “ Ar ’ --Smithville ~Lv| | 455 am|f 12 42 pm
« H pm 11 05 P m l Ar ....Albany ...Lv) | 4 15 am | 1135 am
3 {) b pnl |Ar ....Dawson ....bvl I | u 52 am
3 48 pm Ar ...Cuthbert ...Lv| | | 11 11 am
® 99 PUI No 9 * lAr .. .Fort Gaines ..Lv| No 10 *| | 9 55 am
4 “J pm I 7 45 amjAr ....Eufaula ....Lvl 7 30 pm I 10 20 am
8 14 pra l--. I |Ar Ozark .. ~Dv| | | 0 .50 am
prings. Lvj 600 pm| | 905 am 600 pm| I 905 ami Ar ..Un S
| |Ar Troy. . . .Dvl | I 7 55 am
7 30 pm| ~| 10 35 am|Ar.. Montgomery ~Lv| 4 20 pm| | 740 am
No ll.’! No. 3.*| ““NoTT»| I No7l?r~No^T^ _
800 am, 425 am 415 pm Lv.. . .Macon. . ..Ar| 11 10 am| 11 10 pm| 720 pm
922 am| 547 am 542 pm Lv. .Barnesville . .Lvj 945 t 945 pm| 505 pia
!12 05 ami 7 40 pm Ar.. .Thomaston. ..Lvj 7 00 am| !» 3 00 pm
955 am| 616 am 813 pm Ar. . ..Griffin. . ..Lv| 912 am| 915 pm| 530 pm
• ! 4 pm|. (Ar.. ..Carrollton. . Lv| | |! 210 p®
11 20 am| 745 am| 735 pmlAr., ..Atlanta. ■ ..Lv| 750 am| 750 pm[ 4 Os. pm
£ Jp - 9 - ! l, ,No- 4 - *! No. 2*| ' i “ N». 1. •] nV. _ B’.'*T "fio.X l“
7 30 pm| 11 88 pro 11 25 am,Lv. .. .Ma con. . ..Ar| | 3 55 ami 7 45 am
8 10 pmj 12 19 am| 12 08 pmjAr. . ..Got <lon. .. .Ari 5 00 pm| 3 10 amj 7 10 mb
5 50 pm I’ 1 15 pm|Ar. .Milled gevllle .Lv|! 3 45 pm| 1 « 30
19 00 pmj 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eatonton. . .Lv|! 1 30 pml | 5 25 am
---I |! 4 15 pm|Ar. . .Machen. . ,Lv|!ll 20 am|. |.
I I? 6 50 pmlAr. .. Covington. ~Lv|! 9 20 ami j...
*ll 25 aml*ll 38 pmj*ll 25 amjLv. .. . Macom.. ,ar|* 3 45 pm|* 3 55
117 pm| 130 amjf 117 pmlAr. .. .Tennille Lv| 156 pm 152 am 156 pm
2 30 pm| 2 25 ami 2 30 pm|Ar. . .Wadley. .. .Lvlfl2 55 pm 12 50 am 12 55 pm
2 51 pm| 2 44 ami 2 51 pmlAr. . .Midville. . .Lvl 12 11 pm 12 30 am 12 11 pir
325 pm 315 amj 325 pm|Ar. .. .Millen. .. .Lv 11 34 am lx 58 pm 11 24 aw
8413 pm 4 42 am| 510 pmjAr .’Waynesboro.. .Lv| 10 13 am 10 37 pmislO 47 am
b 530 pm 635 amj! 655 pmlAr... .Aug usta. . .Lvl.! 320 am 840 pmis 930 ata
•••• i 42 ami 350 pm.|Ar. .Rocky Ford. .Lvj 11 10 am 11 19 pml
I I No. 16. »| F No. 15. •> j
I I 7 50 am|Lv.. .. Macon.. .. Ar| 730 pm| |
I I 940 am|Ar.. Monticello .. Lvj 545 pm| I.
I I 10 05 amjAr. .. .Machen .. ..Lvj 5 27 ptn! |
I *!l2 30 pmlAr .. .Eatonton .. .Lv|! 3 30 pml I
I I 10 45 am|Ar. ...Madison. .. Lvj 4 40 pmj |
I I 12 20 pm | Ar. ... Athens ~ ..Lv! 3 &0 pmL |
• Daily. ! Dally except Sunday, t Me al station, n Sunday only.
Solid trains are run to and* from Mac on and Montgomery via Eufaula. Savan
nah and Atlanta via Macon, Macon and A Ibany via Smithville, Maccn and Birming
ham via Columbus. Elegant sleeping ca vs on trains No. 3 and 4 between Macs?
and Savannah and Aaianta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready fur oocu
paney in Macon depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas- sengers arriving int Macon on No. ♦ and S»
vannab on No. 4. are allowed to remain la sleeper until 7 a m. Parlor cars between
Macon ami Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for
Wrightsville. Dublin and Sandersville take 11:25 Train arrives Fort Gaines
4:45 p. m., and leaves 10:10 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. m. and leaves
7:30 a. m. For further information or sch edules to points beyond our lines, address
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macon, Ga. E. P* BONNER. U. T. A.
sc H HINTON. Traffic Manager 5. Q. H.AILE. d P. a.
VHF<» 11 Kl iNE <1
Southern R’y.
Schedule in Effect July 6, 1898
CENTRAL TIME
~ READ DOWN. READ UP.
No. 7 | No. 15 | No. 9 | No. 13 | We st. | No. 14 | No 10 ; No. 8 j No. 16~
7 10pm| 4 45pm| 8 00amj 2 05amjLv.. Macon ..Ar 2 05am 8 20amjl0~55am| 710 pm
9 45pm 7 45pm|10 40am| 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lvjll 55pmi 5 20am| 8 lOamj 4 20pm
7 50am|10 OOpmj 4 OOpmj 4 20am|Lv.. Atlanta. Arjll 50pm| 5 00am' jll 40am
10 20amj 1 00am> 6 25pmj 6 30am Lv.. Rome.. Lv 0 40pm 1 44amj | 9 00am
11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pmjl2 lOamj j 750 am
100 pm, 4 15am, 8 50pm| 8 40am Ar Chat’aooga Lv 7 30pmjl0 00pm I 8 00pm
7 10pm| T Wn| 7 40gm| |at .Memphis . Lv | 9 15am]........| 8 00pm
4 SOpmj j 5 OOamj |Ar Lexington. Lv| [lO 50amj |lO 40pm~
7 50pm| | 7 50am| |A- Louis viile. Lv, j 7 40aml | 745 pm
7 30pm| | 7 30amj |Ar Tinci nnati Lvj I 8 30amj j 8 00am
9 25pm| | 7 25pm| |A~r Annis ton ~ I Lv 7”I .~6 Y2pm 7..' I 8 OOanT
11 45am;. (10 OOpmj | Ar Birm ’ham Lvj j 4 15pmj | 6 00am
8 05am| | 1 lOamj 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lvj 7 bdamj 740 pm! | 740 pm
j | No. 14 | No. 16 | . South. J No. 15. I No. 13 | |
I 7 10pm| 2 lOamj 8 35am Lv.. Macon. 7Ar 8 ~2oam, 2 00am 777.7 .. 77 '
I I 3 22am110 05-amjLv Coch ran.. Lvj 3 20pm 12 56amj .!
I | 110 45am|Ar Hawk ’ville Lvj 2 50»pmi I j
I I 3 54amil0 50am|Lv. Eastman. Lvj 2 41pm,12 2&amj
I I 4 29am 11 36am|Lv.. Hel en-a.. Lv 2 03pm It 54pm
| 6 45am| 2 38pm|Lv.. Jes up... Lv ll 22am 9 43pmj |.
I i 7 30am| 3 30pm Lv Ever rest.. Lv 19 45a<ni 9 05pm I
I I 8 30amj 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. LV| 9 30am 6 s<>pm'
- 8 00am 6 50pm .. . . 7 .777777.~
I >'o.7 | No. 9J No. 13~j East | No. 16~jNo. 10 | ~|. 7..... 7“
I 7 lOpmj 8 30amj 2 05am|Lv.. 'Macon.. Arfß 20amj 7 iOpmj... 7.7777”
i 9 25amj 8 30pmj 6 10pm Lv Charlotte LvjlO 15am| 9 35am; |
1 30pm,12 OOn’t 11 25pm Lv . Dan ville. Ly[ 6 07pm| 5 50am| j
I 6 25pmj 6 40aml |Ar. Richmond Lvjl2 01n’n|12 10n,n| |
| 5 30pm| 7 35am| [Ar.. Norfolk. Lv| 9 30am110 00pm| |
I 3 50j 1 53amj jLv. .Lynch burg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| |
| 9 25pm; 6 42aml |Ar Washgton. Lvjll 15am|10 43pm| j
jll 25am; 8 OOarnl |Ar Balti'more Lv] 6 17am) 9 20pm| |
| 3 OOamhO 15am| |Ar Phila dlphia Lv 3 50am; 6 55pm| |
| 6 20am|12 45n ’n |Ar New York Lv[l2 15am) 4 30pm| |
| 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lvj 5 00pm,10 OOamj j
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 a<
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 Vestlbuied Limited,” finest and fastest train tn the
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,
W r ashlngon, D. Q W’ashington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. P. A., 8. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A.,
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga,
?A\T)\U, CLIFTON, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon, Ga. 565 Mulberry St, Macon, Ga.
HOT SPINGS, Nort Carolina
-Mountain Park liotei and Barbe—Mcxlero Hotel Meaa In Every Department— Table
and Service UnexceUcO.
Swimming Pool, Bowling, Tenets, Golf, Pool and Hilliards. Photographer's dart
room. Riding, Driving. Tennis, Large Ball Room and Auditorium. Special reduced
summer rate*.
BEARDEN'S Orchestra. T. D. Green, Manager.
POPULAR SUMMER RESORT.
Dalton. Ga., is now one the most popular summer resorts in the South —
climate delightful, scenery supert). beauti fu! drives, good livery. Hotel Dalton is
the home cf the resort seeker and the com mercial traveler. Elegantly b'riit, electric
bells, elevator, telephone, bpt anl cold baths on every floor. Special rates to
families. Muny come cacti summer from lower Geewgla and Florida. Further in
formation given 1»-
D. L. I T ET , n>4< ........ Dalton, Ga.
Newport of the South.
SEASON OF 1898.
Motel St. Simon
♦
St. Simons Island, Georgia.
Newly equipped. Rates SIO.OO per week. Sea bath
ing. Fishing, Boating, Lawn Tenuis, Driving, Dancing,
Billiards and Pool. Two gertnans 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 •onstantly growing in popularity.
Every body will be there this summer. For information inquire
of your nearest ticket agent.
I). G. EDWARDS, Passenger Traffic Manager, Cincinnati, O.
ills Mi-
TO GO
To the niountalns.
Warm Springs, Ga.
4H
in me mountains,
Where the weather ie delightfully cool and ;
the conditions are all healthful.
The Warm Springs water is the best and
most pleasant cure for dyspepsia, insom- I
nla, rheumatism and general debility.
Hotel accommodations and service first
class. Rates moderate.
EJaslly reached by the Macon and Blr- j
mingham railroad.
For further information w»Ae to
CHHS. L. DRtfiS, Proprietor. ;
HOTEL IH|
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. Wight elevation.
All modern Improvements. Table exoel- i
lent.
'MRS. B. A. YO4WG. Proprietress,
TaJiuiab Falls, Go.
Glenn Springs
Hotel,
Glenn Springs, S. C.
Queen of Southern Summer
Resorts.
There Ik but one Glenn Springs and it
has no equal o® the continent for the stom
ach, liver, kidneys, bowels and blood.
Hotel open from June Ist to October Ist.
Cuisine and Service excellent Water
shipped the year round.
BHMBSON & SIMPGON,
Managers.
Bedford Alym, Iron and lodine i
Springs of Virginia.
From whose water the celebrated “Mass” <
so extensively known and used, is manu- ;
facteurcd. Opens June 15, and is the most j
home-Mke place in Virginia for recuper- j
atlng.
A modern writer on the mineral waters
of Europe and America says: "Bedford
Springs water cures when .Ml other reme
dies have failed, and especially in derange
ments peculiar to ftunalea.”
I»ng distance telephone o connections,
send for a 50-page Interesting pframplet of
proofs. P. O. Bedford Springs, Va.
3. R. MABKN, JR., Proprietor.
| STURTEVANT HOUSE, |
S Broadway a- <l S!» « St., New York, B|
B Americas. & European ptan. WH- I
M Ram F. Bang, p? jjxdetor. Dr .s i- g
M way cable ear.- passing the iooi
■ transfer »c aM pertr of the evty.
I Saratoga Springs g
I THE KENSINGTON. I
and eottages.
- —■ •
H. A & W. F. BANG, Proprietors, u I
New Yosk Office, Sturtevant House. S
Ocean View House.
St Simon’s Island Beach, Ga
Fine surf bathing, good taMe, artesian
I water. A. T. ARNOLD.
Proprietor.
I For Business Men
In the heart of the wholesale dis < ►
trtet. 1 >
For Shoppers
3 minutes walk to Wanamakcra;
> 8 minutes walk to Siegel-Coopers X
<» Btg Store. Easy of access to the <
4 * gre«t Dry Goods Stores. 1
For Sightseers <►
j . One block from care, giving < >
;<, easy transportation to all ooints 4 >
Holfil Atal,
;j New York. :•
Cor. 11th St. and University <*
)< “ Ilace. Only one Mock from < ►
)< j, Broadway. < *
!; i ROOMS, |1 UP. RESTAURANT, < ►
k Prices Reasonable. J ►
I
MACON AND IH’RMINGH'AM H. R. CO.
fPine Monubifn Route.)
Effective June 5. 1898.
4 20 pmlLv Macon ArflO 36 aan
4 20 pmiLv Sofkee LvflO 14 am
546 pm jLv ... .CoModen.... Lvj 909 «un
557 pm|Lv ... YaU svIMo... Lv| 857 am
6 27 pmjLv ...Thomaston... Lv] 8 28 am
7 67 pmlAr ...Woodbury... Lvj 7 48 am
SOUTH®RN RAMTWAYJ
7 2T> pm!Ar. Warm Springs. Lvl 7 *9 am
603 pmjAr ... .Cobimtme...
8 07 pmjAr* Griffin,.... Lvj 5 50 am
945 pm|Ar . . . Atlanta.^... Lvj 520 am
Souther . 7 ratdway.
4 20 amjLv .... Atlanta ....A*! 9 40 am
6 03 pm Lv Griffin Lv| 8 52 am
525 pmjLv ....Columbus.... Lv; 9 am
6 49 pmlLv .Warm Springs. Lvj 8 06 am
707 pmfLv.. ..Woodbury.... Art 7 48 am
7 27 pm|Ar ..‘Harris City.. Lvj 7 28 am
CENTRAL “OF GEORGIA.
745 pmjAr .. .Greenville... Jjvi 110 am
5 20 pm|bv ....Columbus.... Arj 9 40 am
7 27 pmlLv ..Harris City.. Arj 7 28 am
820 pmjAr .... LaGrange.... Lvj 635 am
Close connection at Maeon and Sofkee
with the Georgia Southern and P'lorida
Central of Georgia for Savannah, Albany,
Southweet Georgia points and Montgom
ery, Ala., at Yatesville for Roberta and
points on the Atlanta aod Florida di
vision of theSoutbem railway, at Harris
City City with Central of Gtorgla rallwoy,
for Greenville and Columbus, at Wood
bury with Southern railway for Colum
bus and Griffin, at LaGrange with Se
Atlanta and West Point railway.
JULIAN R. LANE,
General Manager,
Macon, Ga.
R. G. STONE,
Gen. Pass. Agt.
PULLMAN CAR LINE
ngn I«4 dj&l
BETtVtJEN
Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or
Louisville and Chicago and
THE NORTHWEST.
Pulman B-jffet Sleepers on night trains.
Parlor chairs and dining cars on day
trains. The Monon trains make the fest
eet time between the Southern winter re
sorts and the ewntner resorts of the
Northwest.
W. H. MoDO-EL, V. V. & G. M.
FRANK J. REED, G. P. A.,
Chicago, 111.
For further particulars address
R. W. GLADING, Gen. Agt.
Thomasville, Ge.
Slrtg n fs a
remedy for Gonorrhoea,
Gleet, Bpermatorrha*b,
Whltae, nnnatnral dia
chargfiH, « aoy kiflajimia
tion. irritation or ulcera
tion ra u c a fi« i- -mi*
Jq, hr ar** Noh-ju/ • uixc’it.
•3 KoX by Sir
If- r a i "'Z-i V =
*•|./ -*;•>. paid, lur
il.3’. < r : »tr- r-. 75.
'•iUrout-r seat •
New Steam
DYE WORKS,
F. H. JOHNSON, Prop’r.
25c Second Street, Macok, Ga.
Ladies’ dresses n’cely cleaned
t and pressed. Also Gents’ Linen
I Suits.
3