Newspaper Page Text
Doctors Can’t
Cure It!
Oontnuious blood poison is absolutely
beyond the skill of th© doctors They
may dose a patient for years on their
mercurial and potash remt'dies, but he
will never be rid of the disease ; on the
other hand, his condition will grow
Bteadily worse. S S S is the only cure
for this terrible affliction, Itecauso it is
the only remedy which goes direct to
the cause of the disease and forces it
from the system.
1 was afflicted with Blond Polson, and th*
best doctors did me no good. though i took
th*ir treatment faith*
fully. In fact. I seemed
’ to got worse all th*
while. 1 took almost
T every so-call ed blood
■h *** remedy, hut they did not
worn to roach the dis
’ iK'"’* z ease, and had no effect
—i ■ ,'. ?V3B- whatever. I wa s d1 s-
w' ; V %*-*'X* " r heartened, for it rei-meif
b that I would never t*
- 'J**? « cured Att.e advl'-o of
C
we er ’ prove. I con’lnm-l tb<
medicine, and it cured me completely, build
ing up my health and Increasing my appetite
Although this vo> ten yea -ngo. I have nevei
yet had a sign of the disea-<- to return.
W. R. Nkwman.
Staunton, Va.
It in like Rolf-dnstruction to continue
to take potash and mercury; le*side«
totally destroying the digestion, they
dry up the marrow fn the bones, pro
ducing a stiffness and swelling of the
joints, causing the hnir to fall out, and
completely wrecking the system.
S.S.SXBIood
is guaranteed J*ur< lv \ egetable, anti i. J
the only blood remedy free from these
dangerous minerals.
Book on -< If-trciitmont sent free by
Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga.
GEORGIA, 8188 COUNTY.
Under and by virtue of the power of sale
contained in a died to secure debt made
by Ji M N< llig.in, dated Macon, Ga., Sep
tember 23d, 1X97 and recorded in the office
of clerk superior court, Bibb county, Ga.,
in lesik 92. |.u’> 237, the undersigned will
*<•11 on Tuesday, the twenty-third day of
August, IS9X, bi'for* the court house door
of Bibb county, during the legal hours of
sheriff’s »ales, at public outcry, to the
hlgluet bidder for cash, the following de
scribed property, to wit:
All that lot, tract or parcel of land,
situated, lying and being in Che city ofMa
eon, in said state and county, and known
in the plan of said city ns part of lot num
tier seven, in block number seventeen,
fronting fifty two feet on Fourth (formerly
Mclntosh) street, and extending back an
even width between parallel lines one
tiundnsl and sixty feet, and being the
property formerly belonging to the estate
of John Flowers.
In said deed to secure debt it was stip
ulated th.it Hhould default occur in the
paymen-t of the principal debt or any one
of the interest < oii|H>ns, or should the
taxes or insurance premiums be not paid
whi n due, then, in that, event, tiho power
of sale should become operative, and such
default having occurred, the above de
scribed property will be sold under said
jHiwi r of sale for the purpoae of realizing
the amount of the indebtedness, which will
be. on the twenty-third day of August.
1898. ssl l.ii.'t, besides the expenses of the
proceeding.
The proceeds of said sale will be applied
to the payment of said Indebtedness and
the balance, if any, paid to tin said 1». M.
Nelllgun.
MRS. 11. N. WHITE.
July 19th, 1898.
The News
Printing Co.
Does P>inding and Job
Printing of every de
seription. Ask foi
estimates. High class
work.
Hudson Hiver Dy Dayliyni
The miwt charming inland water trip on
the American continent.
The Palace Inin Steamers,
“New York" and “Albany’’
Os the
Hudson River Day Line
Dally except Sunday.
Leave New York. D«sbrossvs 5t..8'40 a.m.
Lv New York, West 23d st, N. It. 9:00 a.m
'Leave Albany, Hamilton st, 8:30 a.m
Landing at Yonkers, West Point, New-
burgh, I’oughkeep.de, Kingston Point,
Catskill and Hudson.
The attractive touriet route to the Catskill
Mountains. Saratoga and the Adiron
dack?, Hotel Champlain and the
North. Niagara Falls and the
West.
Through tickets sold to all poi its.
Restaurants on main deck. Orchestra on
each steamer. Send six cents in stamps
for "Summer Excursion Book.”
F. B Hiblrard, Gon. Pass. Agent.
E E Olcott. Gon. Manager.
Ih'sbrossos st. pier. Now York
MA POX' VX’D XEW YORK SHORT LINE
Via Georgia Railroad and Atlantic Coast
Line Through Pullman ears between
Macon and New York, effective August
4th, 1898
l.v Macon 9 00 am 4 20 pm 7 40 pm
Lv MiU’gevTe 10 10 am 5 24 pm; 9 24 pm
Lv Sparta.... 10 .’>l am t> 03 pm 10 31 pm
Lv Camak.... 11 40 am 6 47 pm 10 31 pm
Ar Aug’taC.T. 1 20 pm, 8 25 pm 5 15 pm
Lv Aug’taE.T. 2 30 pm
Ar Florence.. 8 15 pm
Lv Fayettev'le 10 15 pm
Ar Petersburg 3 14 am
Ar Richmond. 4 00 am
Ar Wash’ton. 7 41 am
Ar Baltimore 905 am
Ar Phila’phia. 11 25 am
Ar New York 2 03 pm
Ar N Y. W 23d st 2 15 pm
Trains arrive from Augusta and points
on main line ti 45 a. m. and 11:15 a. m.
From Camak and way stations 5:30 p. ni.
A. G. JACKSON.
General Passenger Agent.
JOE W AV HITE, T. P A
W. W HARDAVICK, S. A . 154 Cherry St.
Ma eon. Ga.
TH El
NEW YORK WORLD
T h rlce- a- W eek Edition
IS Pages a Week...
...156 Papers a Year
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Published every alternate day except Sun
day.
The Thrlce-a-Week edition of the New
A ork AVorld is first .among all wee>kly
papers in size, frequency of publication
and the freshness, acuraey and variety of
its contents, it has all the merits of a
great st> daily at the price of a dollar
complete, accurate ami impartial, as all
of its readers will testify. It is against
the monopolies and for the people.
It prints the news of the world, having
special news correspondents from allpoints
on the globe, it has briliant illustrations,
stories by breat authors, a capital humor
ous page, complete markets, a depart
ment of the household and women’s work
and other special departments of unusual
interest.
We offer this unequalled newspaper and
The News together for one year for s(>.oo
TOLDALGERWHAT
HE THOUGHT OF IT
The South Simply is Not in It
With the Powers at
Washington.
DR. DABNEY fLAGS ALGER
Speaks of the Uniform Distribution
of Officers and Criminal Incom
petency at the Capitol.
From the New Orleans States.
”1 want to tell you that the nearer you
get to Washington, the closer you get to
the higher circles, the more implacable is
the prejudice against the South and every
thing Southern."
And Dr. Oabney loked every word he
said. Only last night he returned from the
national capital, where he did something
which few men have done and which no
politician would have dared to do. He told
the secretary of war, Mr. Russell A. Alger,
to his face that every Southern soldier who
dies from the pestilence or disease in the
anny would have emblazoned on his tomb,
“Bled through the Criminality of Russell
A. Alger.” Not only did he tell the secre
tary this, l>ut much more to the same point
and read those in high offices ar Washing
bm a lesson that fairly took their breath
away.
It was perhaps the first time that an
honest man had told them to their faces
his honest opinion. They were astounded
ami nonplussed, and Dr. Oabney, known
throughout the scientific and medical world
as one of the fort most yellow fever experts
in the country, is the moral victor of the
issue.
The States reporter called upon Dr.
Dabney to learn something more of his
trip to Washington, and aside from x s
already expressed opinions as to the metii
ods of the government in regard to its
nit-dieal forces, he dilated upon the ques
tion of sectional prejudice.
"As a simple instance of it.” said he,
"seme time ago, when the last batch of
appointments to the rank of major went
In, but one was a Southern man. It was
Mr. Money, of (Mississippi, wfio moved that
tlie appointments be sent to a special com
mittee for investigation, and Mr. Hawley,
of Connecticut, and Air. Money were put
upon it. All the appointments, however,
were confirmed, in spite of Mr. Money’s
protest, the plea toeing made that it was
unbecoming in the South to object because
all of the appointments but oue were
Northern men. Why our Southern repre
sentative did not fight against this in
jndtiee I canot see
"I spoke to Mr. McKinley about the
matter, and he said: ‘Oh, it is very unfor
tunate, indeed; 1 don’t see how it hap
pened. Mr. Alger, you know, sends these
names over to me and I sign them wilthout
looking at th< in '
"I called on Mr. Alger,” continued Dr.
I iiliney, "and asked him the same ques
tion. His reply Was the same, saying that
Adjutant General Corbin sent, them to
him. ’Will you will in General Corbin'.” I
asked. He came in and 1 put the question
to him. He drew out a packiage of ap
pointments from one poekett, appointees
by Mi McKinley’s own recommendation.
Out of the other ho brought up a (batch
from (Mr. Alger. They both tried to lay
the whole blame upon him.
"Id is simply politics all the wfay
through. 'When 1 told Mr. Alger to his
face that he was responsible for the deaths
of the soldiers by disease, he stormed and
said that he did not initend to he lectured.
I told him I had come to Washington to
speak to him and that 1 intended to do so.
He said he was not responsible for the
death of 'the men at 'Camp Alger.
'They are staying that some one must
be courtmartiaJed for the neglect there,
Mr (Alger. - I said. ‘Whether i.t will be
you whom they will courtmartial, !Mr.
Alger, 1 do nt' think.’
"Mr. Alger seemed to be nonplussed and
some little whisper-snapper of an officer
with a bar on his shoulder came up and
said he would like to speak to him.
“ ‘You stand aside, sir, until d am fin
ished, l am now conversinlg with Mr. Al
ger,’ I told him, and he went back from
where he came. H told Mr. Alger that 1 did
not intend to serve as a lieutenant under
majors and colonels of the medical depart
ment who were men who knew absolutely
nothing of the disease they had to fight.
Thar I did not intend to be hampered toy
political military medical officers, and
would not go to the front unless 1 went
with the proper rank and authority to
which my knowledeg of the disease en
titled me. (He complained that there were
no funds to pay siica expenses and I then
told him that down in Louisiana $25 a day
was paid for the services of a competent
physician in times of epidemic. He seem
ed perfectly aghast at such an idea. I told
him that it was not the pay that I wanted
but the rank, so as to be able to be in
authority over the political incompetents
who knew absolutely nothing of yellow
ft ver. I told him that the South had been
shamefully and wilfully neglected and
through nothing more than political chi
canery and that if he would send Southern
troops to the front and give me the rank
I asked, I would go without pay, but that
I would not serve under such an adminis
tration in a position where I would be
hampered into total disuse by physicians
front the North who have never treated
malarial or yellow fever. Every corps,
division and brigade surgeon is a Northern
man. The South, which in the present ne
cessity could furnish the very material
they want for fighting the disease, has
been left totally out simply because of de
termined prejudice and antagonism and
political criminality. Mr. Alger told me
that the South expected too much.
'Mr Alger,’ I said, ‘the South expects
nothing. The North is getting every
thing. Contracts, contracts, contracts. Let
it be written upon them that 'no South
erner need apply; the South is barred; all
profits belong to the North.'
"When Mr. Alger said that he did not
intend to be lectured. I told him that I
had come at the earnest solicitation of ex-
Governor Kellogg, and that I intended to
him what 1 pleased. I was perfectly po
lite. but I spared no effort to show him up
to himself in his true colors.
"As for Surgeon General Sternberg, 1
must say that he is not to blame except
that he is a politician, and is afraid to as
sert himself. He is an able and scholarly
gentleman, but is simply overriden by po
litical pressure. ‘He would do the right
thing if he could. The whole business is
simply a big political job for the benefit of
he Noi.h. They are afraid to give the
South and the Southerners a chance Else
why has General Fitzhugh Lee been side
tracked and kept in the background? Why
is it that they are talking of recalling
General Wheeler? I told Mr. Alger that his
appointments were a travesty. In the med
ical branch political wire-pullers were ap
pointed to majors, or colonels, who are
totally incompetent, whereas those who’
should be entitled to such rank by the
irrefutable establishment of their records
in medicine and science are ignored and
made mere nothings under these political
puppets.
"In Santiago thesoldiers are stricken and
are dying with the fever. There is no need
to retain them there. There is no war
there. A garrison is all that is required
and the generals, and colonels, and majors
who are riding up and down the line on
horseback could be put to better use as
nurses to the sick.
I told 'Mr. Alger to look at the map of
the United States with me. I put my
finger on our own state. I told him to tell
Mr. (McKinley that Louisiana was still on
tha>t map and one of the United States.”
Dr. Dabney had this and much more to
say in regard to his trip to the capital and
his arraignment of the secretaryof war
will be read by Southern people with much
pleasur He told the administration of
ficers fearlessly and boldly what he
thought of them and their methods. They
might have read such in the daily papers,
but it Is perhaps the first time since they
have been in office that President McKin
ley and Secretary of War Russell A. Alger
have been told to their very face, in plain
ml unequivocal terms, that they were
nothing but political hirelings. Dr. Dabney
did tear oft his lieutenant’s shoulder
.“traps in the presence of the secretary of
*ar and lid resign his position in the
army. He came home without either the
rank of lieutenant or colonel, but with the
gratitude and approbation of every South
ern man in whose body flows the blood of
resentment against political oppression.
The Rev. W. B. Costley, of Stockbridge,
Ga.. while attending to his pastoral duties
st Ellen wood, that state, was attacked by’
cholera morbus. He says: “By ehance I
happened to get hold of a bottle of Cham
berlain's Colle, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, and I think it was the means of
saving my life. It relieved me at once.”
For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons, druggists
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
Grand Encampment, Indianapolis, Ind, Au
gust 22-29, 1898.
Account of the above occasion the South
ern Railway Company will sell round trip
tickets to Indianapolis at one fare. Half
rate tickets on sale August 19th, 20th and
21st with final limit August 31st. By de
pas t ng tickets with a< «t I’dlanapnh
on or before August 29th and payment of
fee of 25 cents, an extension of the final
limit can be obtained to leave Indianapolis
on September 10th. The quickest and the
beat route is to leave Macon via Southern
beat route is to leave Macon via Southern
Railway at 2:05 a. m., arriving Chatta
nooga 8:40, taking Q. and C. route, arriv
ing at Indianapolis 11 p. m. same day. For
further Information apply to
Green R. Pettit, Depot Ticket Agt.
C. S. White, T. P. A.
Burr Brown, C. T. A.
BUSINESS "MYSTERY
Sprung on New Yorkers at a
Civil Trial for Real Es
tate Receiver.
New York, August 3. —John Pettit, who
is said to be worth several million of dol
lars, and has been an active operator in
real estate, is said to have disappeared
more than three months ago-
The announcement was made today in
an action which has just been begun in
the supreme court by William Calhoun to
recover property valued at $5,000,000 in dif
ferent sections of the city, which, he alle
ges, he has been deprived of by Pettit, with
whom he was jointly interested in many
large deals.
An order to show cause why a receiver
for the property should not be appointed
pending the litigation has been obtained
from Judge Deugro, and is returnable on
Thursday.
John Pettit was the organizer of the
John Pettitt Reality Company, which is
the owner of several office buildings.
'Pettit has not been at his office in this
city for about four months. His wife is in
Europe. The company of which he is at
the head, is capitalized at $1,800,000, the
stock oT which is SSO par value. Pettit and
Calhoun own about two-thirds of i't.
Pettit, according to report, was the in
vesting agent of Queen Victoria in this
country.
A CLBVE4I TRICK.
It certainly looks like It. but there Is
really no trick about ft. Anybody can try
It who has lame back and weak kidneys,
malaria or nervous troubles. We mean he
can cure himself right away by taking
Electric Bitters. This medicine tones up
the whole system, acts as astimulant to
the liver and kidneys, is a blood purifier
and nerve tonic. It cures constipation,
headache, fainting spells, sleeplessness
and melancholy, tt Is purely vegetable,
a mild laxative, and restores the system to
its natural vigor. Try Electric Bitters and
be convinced that they are a miracle
worker. Every bottle guaranteed. Ouly
50c a bottle at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ drug
store.
MILLIONAIRE
Is Sir Thomas Lipton, Chal
lenger for America’s
Cup.
London, August 9.—Sir Thomas Lipman,
who has issued a challenge for America’s
yachting cup, is an Irishman of Belfast.
He was born in 1851, the year America won
the cup.
England and Scotland failed to win the
cup. he said, and I wish to see what an
Irish-built yacht can do. His vessel will
be built at Belfast in secret, so that there
will be no danger of her lines and other
details of construction becoming public.
She will be about the size of Valkyrie HI.
Charles Russell, of the Royal Ulster Yacht
Club, will leave for America in a few days
to carry the challenge to the New York
Yacht Club,
The builder of the Shamrock is a bache
lor. who made $50,000,000 in eighteen years
out of the tea business. He has agencies
all over the world. He is a strong advocate
of Irish rights.
Queen Victoria knighted him in 1898 for
giving SIOO,OOO to the Princess of Wales’
children’s jubilee dinner fund. He also
gave a large amount to other charities.
ft is said that Sir Thomas will bring his
Yaeht to America next summer and sail it
himself in the contests.
AN DNTERPRJiHNG DRUGGIST.
There are few men more wide awake and
enterprising than H. J. lamaar & Sons,
who spare no pains to secure the best of
everything in their lines for their many
customers. They now have the valuable
agency for Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption. Coughs and Colds. This Is
the wonderful remedy that is producing
such a furor all over the country by its
many startling cures. It absolutely cures
Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoarseness, and all
affection of the Throat, Chest nd Lung”.
Call at above drug store, and get a trial
bottle free, or a regular size for 50 cents
and SI.OO. Guaranteed to cure or price re
funded?.
“THE HIAWASSEE ROUTE.”
Only Through Sleeping Car Line Between
Atlanta and Knoxville.
Beginning June 19th, the Atlanta, Knox
ville and Northern Railway, in connection
with the 'Western and Atlantic Railway,
wil establish a through line of sleepers be
tween Atlanta and Knoxville.
Trains will leave Atlanta from Union de
pot at 8:30 p. m. and arrive in Knoxville
at 7 a. m. Good connections made at
Knoxville for all points not th, including
Tate Springs and other summer resorts.
Tickets on sale and diagram at Western
and Atlantic city ticket office. No. 1 North
Pryor street; also at Union depot.
J. E. W. Fields,
C P. A., Marietta Ga.
J. H. McWilliams, T. P. A..
Knoxville, Tenn.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
MACON NEWS WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST io 1898.
IN CAMP WITH
YELLOW FEVER.
Incident of the Epidemic at a
Santiago Fever Hospital.
Yellow Fever Hospital, near Slboney,
Cuba, July 20—(By mail) —“Say, fellers,
I’ll give you all a good tip on goin’ to
sleep, it's a bad idea to look out of the
tent at somethin' distant —as, for instance,
them mountains (there. That keeps your
mind wonderin’ and thinkin’ and a re
mindin' you of home and somethin' good
to eat, and keeps you wishin’ all night,
after stars come out, that you’d a never
seen the tropics; or at any rate, that they
had good grub in the tropics and not such
a d—d lot of mangoes aud green cocoanuts
and land crabs and nothin' else. The way
to go to sleep quick is to look at somethin’
nearby, and it's a cinch you'll go to sleep
in a minute, if you ain’t got any pains.”
The doctor had just made his rounds to
our tent, administering a half dozen tablet
medicines to each man; the orderly had
just brought each man a cup or malted
milk of beef tea, according to his needs;
the light had been taken out of our tent,
and now illuminated the tent next door;
evening silence had settled on the ten men
In the tent, and the light of the stars
strayed in. There had been a dearth of
gossip when the speaker broke in. He
slept next the "door,” and as he spoke he
himself was peering up at the stars. No
man said a word; but It did seem that the
argument was good, for mountains and
stars and floating white clouds do seem to
inspire sleepless dreaming. He was an
ungrammatical speaker, certainly, and no
one would accuse him of romantic
thoughts. No one said a word.
Whether they all went to sleep or not,
I don’t know. At any rate, it was a long
time afterward, when the moon wandered
far above the mountains, that I heard him
again. He began to hum, and then directly
to sing softly:
"Over the trail to 'Corpus Christi,
With forty mules we travel along.’
“You’ll find it pretty comfortable at the
‘■Ranchers’ Home,’ when we get there,
young fellow,” he continued talking.
“They do put up some pretty good meals.
Let’s see, we’ll get into 'Christi before sun
down and have a good, hot supper. Oh, the
fellows 'll treat you white. We’ve got a
jolly good crowd, and If you can take a
round at cards, so much the merrier." ,
Not one of the nine men said a word at
this midnight monologue. Every one of the
nine men knew what was the matter. In
the morning, when the doctor came, he
asked if the man was delirious the night
before. The nine men said “yes.”
The doctor then made a memorandum,
part of which was as follows: “James
Corran; died; yellow fever; muleteer;
home, Corpus Christi, Tex.”
That night nori® of us gazed on the
mountains or the stars, and yet we could
not sleep.
They say that the yellow fever patients
are coming in at a rate which will soon
bring the list into the thousands. But we
don’t know it. Ten lay in a tent together.
If one dies during the night we have a new
comer the next morning. We lay on the
flat of our backs 24 .hours every day. The
doctor comes and goes; the orderly brings
the beef tea or malted milk. We have ex
hausted every comonplace topic, and being
without methods to beguile the weary
hours, talk the same thing over again.
It is a revelation to learn, after all how
like children men really are. Here is a
sample conversation heard in the morning,
then in the.afternoon and at night again;
Macpherson: "(How would you like to
tackle a big apple dumpling—ah! with
good, juicy, hard sauce on it?”
Gores: “Or a good slice of blackberry
pie, with a cup of good American-made
coffee.”
Harris: “Or a big bowl of mock turtle
soup, with a slice of lemon squeezed in
it! eh?”
Tupper: “I’d like to tackle a good, juicy
tenderloin, well broiled on the outside and
rare in the middle.”
Sheldon: “With some French fried pota
toes.”
Pope: “Or a nice chicken potpie, with
brown crust.”
These are some of the cravings of yel
low fever convalescents. Yet were the
edibles obtainable the doctor would not
permit anyone to touch them. Fever has
taken the strength out of every man.
Thus, with talking over trivial things
and bearing the fever patiently, do the
yellow fever patients who have mild cases
pass the monotony of the hospital away
A TEXAS WONDER.
Hall’s Great Discovery.
One small bo-ttle o< 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 of sl. One small bottle is
two months’ treatment and will cure any
ease above mentioned.
E. W. HALL,
Sole Manufacturer.
P. O. Box 211, Waco, Texas.
Sold by H. J. Lamar & Son, Macon, Ga.
READ THIS.
Cuthbert, Ga. March 22, 1898.—This is
to certify that 4 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.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
Grand Encampment, Indianapolis, Ind,, Au
gust 22-29, 1868.
Account of the above occasion the South
ern Railway Company will sell round trip
ticket*, to Indianapolis at one fare. Half
rate tickets on sale August 19th, 20th and
21st with final limit August 316 t. By de
positing tickets with agent at Indianapolis
ou or before August 29th and payment of
fee of 25 ceota, an extension of the final
limit can be obtained to leave Indianapolis
on September 10th. The quickest and the
beat rout) is to leave Macon via SoutLera
Railway at 2:05 a. m., arriving Chatta
nooga 8:40, taking Q. and C. route, arriv
ing at Indianapolis 11 p. m. same day. For
further information apply to
Green R. Pettit, Depot Ticket Agt.
C. 8. M’hite. T. P. A.
Burr Brown, C. T. A.
About one month ago my child, which ia
fifteen months old, had an attack of diar
rhoea accompanied by vomiting. I gave it
such remedies as are usually given in euch
but as nothing gave relief we sent
for a pfiysician and it was under his care
for a week. 'At this time the child had
been sick for about ten days and was hav
ing about twenty-five operations of the
bowels every twelve hours, and we were
convinced that unless It soon obtained re
lief it would not live. Chamberlain.e Colic
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was rec
ommended and I decided to try it. I soon
noticed a change for the better; by its
continued use complete cure was brought
about and It is now perfectly healthy.—C.
L. Bogga, Stumptown, Gilmer Countv. W.
Va. For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons,
druggists.
Piles, t'jlea. nieei
Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment will
cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles
when all other ointments have failed. It
absorbs the tumors, ailays the itching at
once, acts as a poultice, gives instant re
lief. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment
>a prepared only for Plies 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
>I.OO per box.
WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO.,
Proprietors, Cleveland, O.
Subscribers must pay up and not allow
small balances to run over from week to
week. The carriers have been la atructed
to accept no part payment from aayaas
attar AwU UL - 2
■*>.«*■•<•( ' •• (.!!<«((( . 'J 'iftTnnm
!CASTBI?i<|TIB Kind You Have
Always Bought
PrcparatioalorAs- ||s|
1 Simla ting the rood and Reg ula i ; #
ting lheS!onicU±oandßo'Aelsof JJCHTg til6 A
Signature / M
Promotes Digestion,Clietrful-;
' ness and itest.Contains neither 1' p M
Opium,Morphni'2 nor Mineral. L'l t < '
Not Nahcotic. p ik i H
■■ a gF ®
* j 39 S Ja
Jf/xAtlle S-rfa - I feg *
► J\up>rnunt , > 4 II 1
( 1 il • t 2
Him Setd - | I I I I I V
flarifud
rltmr. f kg V 1/ *
A perfect Remedy for Constipa- 0 11 IH II
tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, g'|
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1
ness and Loss of Sleep. |fj!i HQt,
FacSimile Signature of
plways Bought.
BKiiiil I n 10Tn nI a
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. M E■ M B MM
'*’’ ’ ‘ '*' THt etNT.UW COMR.HV, NEW YORK OITT.
Southern R’y.
Schedule in Effect July 6, 1898
CEaNTRAL TIME
~ READ DOWN; READ UP. =
No. 7 | No. 15 | No, 9~f No. i3~~[ West. f NoTI4 j No? 16 | No. 8 | Nd? 1170 -7
7 10ptn| 4 45pm| 8 00am| 2 05am|Lv.. Maoon ~Ar| 2 05am| 8 20am 110 55am| 710 pm
9 45pm| 7 45pm|10 49am| 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lv|U 55pcn| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm
7 50arn|10 00pm| 4 00pm| 4 20amjLv.. Atlanta. Ar|ll 50pmj 5 00am| [ll 40a.m
10 20am| 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv., Rome.. Lv| 0 40pm[ 1 44am[ | 9 00am
11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42*>m|i2 lOamj | 750 am
100 pm! 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat’ nooga Lv| 7 30pm|10 00pm| | 8 00pm
7 10pm| 7 Jopm| 7 40am| j'Ar .Memphis . Lv| | 9 15am| | 8 00pm
4 30pm| | 5 00am| |Ar Lexington. Lv) |lO 50am| [lO 40ptn~
7 50pm| j 7 50am| |Ar Louis viile. Lv| | 7 40am[ | 745 pm
7 30pm| | 7 30am| |Ar 7inci nnati Lv| j 8 30am[ | 8 Ooam
9 25pm| | 7 25pm[ |Ar Anniston .. Lv| | 6 3.2 pm! I 8 00ami ~
11 45am| jlO 00pm| | Ar Birm ’ham Lv|..s I 4 15pm| [ 6 00am
8 05am| | 110am[ 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 7 OOamj 7 40pm] | 740 pm
| | No. 14 | No. 16 | . South. | No. 15. [ No. 13 [ |
| 7 10pm| 2 10am| 8 35um[Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am| 2 66am| !
| | 3 22am|10 05am|Lv Coch ran.. Lvj 3 20pm[l2 s&am[ |
| I |lO 45am;Ar Hawk'viile Lvj 2 50pm; | |
| | 3 54am|10 50am|Lv. East man Lv| 2 41p<njb2 25am[ |
I | 4 29amjll 3fiam|Lv.. Helena.. Lvj 2 03pm[ll 54pm| |
I | 6 45am| 2 38pm|Lv.. Jes up... Lvjil 2aam| 9 43pmj |
| j 7 30am| 3 30pmjLv Ever refit.. Lv|4o 45amj 9 05pmj [
| | 8 30am| 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| 6 50pm| |
| | 9 40am| 9 25amjAr Jack’viile. Lv 1 8 OOam| 6 SOprn] !
' ■ N ®' 7 ! X 9 I No ‘ 13 I " East. fNoTlO'l No. £6 | i
j 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05am|Lv.. Ma coo.. Ar| S 20om| 7 lOprnj |
j 9 45prn|ll lOamj 4 15am|Ar . .Atlanta. Lv| 5 20aml 4 20pmj j
| 9 25am| 8 30pm| 6 10pm|Lv Charlotte Lv|lo 15amj 9 35am| |
I 1 30pm|12 00n't|ll 25pm|Lv . Dan viile. Lv| 8 07pm| 5 oOamj |
| 6 25pm| 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n[12 10n,n[ j ..J - ~
j 5 3(ipm| 7 35am| j<Ar.. Norfolk. Lv] 9 30amll0 00pm| |
| 3 50j 1 53am| |Lv. .Lynch burg Lv| 3 55pm| 8 40am| j
| 5 48pm| 3 35am| |Lv Chari’viile Lvj 2 15pra| 1 50pm[ |
| 9 25pm| 6 42am| |Ar Washgton. Lv|ll 15am|10 48pm| I
| 3 OOamjlO 15am| |Ar Phila diphla Lv 3 50amj 6 55pm| |
| 6 20am|12 4&n’n| |Ar New York Lv[l2 15am| 4 30pm| |
| 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lvj 5 OOpmjlO OOamj I
THROUGH OAR SERVICES, ETC.
Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Chattanooga and Jack son;-! Ha
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 Observation 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 taj ttrt.
South.
Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. S. Fast Mall 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. Cl Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. P. A., ‘ S. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A.,
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
SLANDALL CLIFTON, T. P. A.. BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon. Ga 565 Mulberry St., Macon, Gk.
Central of Georgia
Railway Company
Schedules in Effect June Jl2, 1898 Standard Time
uveaLZ 90th Meiidian.
1 5 ! 7 *l No ’ I *l STATIONS | No. 2 No. B*| No. «
To o 0 )*™, 740 Pm ' 750 am i Lv Ma con .. .Ar 725 pm 740 am| 350 pm
,0 pm| 840 pm 850 am|Ar ....Fort Valley Lv 6»7 ptn 639 am‘ 242 pin
■ 9 30 pm ' iS» 40 am]Ar. ... Per ry Lv !445 pm |!11 30 am
I |U 15 amjAr. ..Colum bus. . .Lv 400 pm I
I 5 50 pmjAr. . .B’m ham. . .Lvl 9 30 amj |
lu2 pm 10 01 pmj |Ar ..Amer icus ....Lvj | 518 amj 107 pm
. 2 1, pm 10 2p pm, |Ar. ..Smithville ..Lv| I 4 55 amjf 12 42 pm
ana Pl “' 11 °° pm ‘ Ar •■•• Albany ...Lv| | 415 am| 11 35 am
899 rm: I Ar ..Colum bia .... Lv| | | 855 am
3 (9 pm . , lAr .. .Dawson ....Lvl j | 11 52 am
? 49 pm i,Ar ...Cuthbert ...Lv! I | 11 n am
“ 99 pm j I No 9 * [Ar ...Fort Gaines ..Lv| No 10 •! | 955 am
43< pm . j7 45 am;Ar ....Eufaula ....Lvi 730 pm |IO2O am '
BRn 8 Rn 4 f> Pm ' 1.......... |Ar Ox ark ....Lv’ | | 650 am
, o- pm i , 9 Oo a™.Ar ..Union Springs Lv, 600 pm; | 905 am
_ 7 2° P m ' -I |Ar Troy. . ..Uv| | 7 55 * a
7 30 pm; | 10 35 ami Ar.. Montgomery , .Xivj 420 pm| | 740 am
No. 11.*i No. 3.*| No. !.•• | No. 2. e | No. 4.*i No.
800 am 425 am 420 pm Lv ... .Macon. . ~Ar| 11 10 ami 11 10 pml 720 pm
922 am 040 am 540 pm Lv. .Barnesville . .Lvl 945 i 945 pml 605 pm
.12 noon 7 10 pm;Ar.. .Thomaston. ..Lv| 700 am| || 8 00 pm
955 am, 608 am. 613 pm;Ar. .. .Griffin. . ..Lv 912 am 915 pm 5»0 pm
1 05 Pml I Ar.. ..Carrollton. .Lv I! 8 10 prr
II 20 am, 735 amj 735 pm Ar.. . Atlanta. . ■ .Lv| 750 am 750 pml 406 pm
No. 6.11 No. 4. »| No. 2*| ] Na. 1. •( No. 3. •; NoTl-
< 30 pm 11 38 pm| 11 25 amjLv. .. .Ma con. . ..Arj 8 55 ami 7 45 wn
8 10 pm 12 19 am. 12 08 pmjAr. . ..Gor don. .. .Arj 4 00 pm[ 2 10 amj 7 Item
850 pm ’ 1 15 pmjAr. .Milled geville .Lvj! 300 pmi | 620 am
10 00 pm 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eato nton. . .Lv!l2 50 pm' | 5 25 am
•11 25 ami’ll 38 pm|*ll 25 amiLv. .. .Ma con . ..-Ar'* 3 45 pm • 3 55
117 pm 130amf 11, pm Lv. . .Ten nille Lv| 156 pml 152 am! 156 pm
230 pm 22a am 230 pm Lv. . Wad ley. .. .LvjflZ 55 pml 12 25 am 12 55 pm
251 prn 244 am 251 pm Lv. .. Mid viile. . Lv, 12 11 pm' 12 25 am 12 11 w
8 pm 330 am 400 pm Lv. Mil ien. .. . Lvl 11 35 am 11 50 pm sBIO am
s93a pm 442 am a2opm Lv Wayne sboro .. Lv 945 am' 10 34 pm' T 25 em
slO aO pm 635 am ! 740 pm Lv... .Augusta. . .Lv !740 am 840 pm 615 am
i 8 00 am, 6 00 pmLv.. .Savannah. ..Lvj 8 45 ami 9 00 pmj......... 1
I NO. 16. •[ . r No. 15. •] i *
750 amjLv.. .. Macon.. ..Ar 730 pm!
940 am|Ar.. Monticello .. Lv 545 pml
10 05 amjAr. .. .Machen .. ..Lv 527 pm!...
1 ! 12 00 mAr .. .Eato nton .. .Lv !3 30 pmj...
i jlO 45 amlAr. ...Madison. .. Lv 440 ptn;..'.*."*.*ll**
I |l2 20 pmjAr. ... Athens .. ..Lv 330 pm 1.111 11.1111111
• Dally. ! Daily except Sunday, f al station. 3 Sunday only.
Solid trains are run to ands from Macon and Montgomery via Eufaula Savan
nah and Atlanta via Macon, Macon and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Birming
ham via Columbus. Elegant sleeping cars on trains No. 3 and 4 between Macce
snd Savannah and Aaianta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for ecc*
pancy In Macon depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengera arriving in Macon on No. 8 and Sa
vannab on No. 4. are allowed to remain iueleeper until 7a. m. Parlor cais between
Macon and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for
Wrightsville, Dublin and Sandersville take 11:25. Train arrives Fort * GaJnea
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 schedules to points beyond our lines addreas
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Maeen, Ga k. p. BONNER U* T A
K- H. HINTON, Traffic Manager j. c. iuii,K G P A
THEO. D. KLIN3. GaEftfaJ Superintendent.
HOT SPRINGS, North Carolina.
Mountain Park Jftitel t»nd —MoArn Hotel Idem kt Every Department—T*bt*
artd Service Unexcelled.
Swimming Pool, Bowling. Tennis, Golf. Pod and Bil Hards. Photographers dart
room. Riding, Driving, Tennis, Large Ball Room and Auditorium. Special reduced
summer rates.
BEARDEN'S Orchestra _
rcntMra. T p Green, Manager.
POPULAR SUMMER RESORT.
Dal*oD. CrS.. is now nn .v, _ , .
climate h most popular summer resorts in tbe South—
the home of the *** MVerT ’ HOt *’ Da ’ tOn U
bells, elevator, ttj. T2 1 trawler. -Elegantly built, electric
families. Many w: <i n ‘ d v ', r ‘ ev ’ ry ' K,or rates to
formation given by “ ninl ' r from lower Georgia nnd Florida. Further In-
D. L. DETTCR. Proprietor
’ • • • • .... Dalton, Ga
Newport of the South.
SEASON OF 1898.
Hotel St. Simon
St. Simons Island, Georgia.
Newly equipped. Rates SIO.OO per week. Sea bath-
Fishing, 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.
D. G. EDWARDS, Passenger Traffic Manager, Cincinnati, O.
S i! Illi Till!
—-TO GO
To tne mountains.
Warm Springs. Ga.
In the mountains,
Where the waatJ'er is d<-ttgtNS-wfclj cool emd
the condßAorus are ail healthful.
The Warm Bprtngs water la the beet and
most pleasant cura fin dyaiM_n»s>m, hnsotu
ttta, I'tieumetism and general debility.
Hotel accommoCkitlorKS and set vice llrat
ctaee. Rates moderate.
Easily reached by tbe Macon and Bir
mingham raitnoad.
For further information write to
CHHS. L. ORVIS. Proprietor.
HOTEL MARION
And Cottages.
Tallulah Falls, Ga.
Open for the Beason. Board from sls to
S3O per month, according to room. Six
hundred feet of shade piazzas tn center of
finest scenery at Tallulah.
Climate unsurpassed. Hight elevation
All modem Improvements. Table excel
lent.
MRS. B. A. YOUNG, Proprietress,
Tallulah Palls, Ga.
Glenn Springs
Hotel,
Glenn Springs, S. C.
Queen of Southern Summer
Resorts.
There ts but one Glenn Springs and it
has no equal on tbe continent for the stom
ach, liver, kidneys, bowels and blood.
Hotel open from June Ist to October Ist.
Cuisine and Service excellent. Water
ebApped the year round.
SIMP3OW ft SIMPSON, I
Managers. .
Bedford Alum, Iron and lodine
Springs of Virginia.
From whose water tbe celebrated ' Maes’''
so extensively known and used, Is manu
facteurod. Opens June 16, and is the most
home-Hke piece in Virginia for recuper
ating.
A modern writer on the mineral waters
of Europe and America says: “Bedford
Springs water cures when ail <*ber reme
dies has T e failed, and especially in derange
ments peculiar to females.”
Long distance telephone connections,
send for a 50-page interesting ph am pi et oi
proofs. P. O. Bedford Springe, Va.
J. R. MABEN, JR., Proprietor.
I STURTEVANT HOUSE,
I Broadway and 29th St,, New York,
E American ft European plan Wil-
S| Bam F Bang, proprietor. Broad
way cable care passing Che doot
I transfer to ail parte of the city.
I L
Ocean View House.
St. Simon’s Island Beech, Qa
Vine eurtf bathing, pood table, artesian
w ater. a. T. ARNOW.
Pj-opr'letor.
I For Business Men
In the heart of the wholesale di* g
trlct. , *
For Shoppers <►
3 minutes walk to Wanamnfrers; < £
’, 8 minutes walk to Siegel-Coopers ’t
4 ► Big Stoi e. Easy of access to the <
4» great Dry Goods Stores. < ,
j! For Sightseers
< ’ One block froi cars., giving <,
S eoey traneiMHXatio. to ail points S
I Hal AM J
:> New York. :>
4 K Cor. ITth St. and University < *
4, Place. Only one block from '4 k
< Broadway. 4 ,
5 ROOMS, $1 UP. RESTAURANT, < ,
, t Prices Reasonable. 4 »
MACON AND BHIMPNGITAM R. R. CO.
(line Monutalu Route.)
Effective June 5. 1898.
. 420 pmtLv Macon ArflO 86 am
4 20 prnjLv Sofkee Lv}lo 14 am
5 46 pmfLv ....CoHoden.... I,v 9 09 am
5 57 pmjDv ...Yatesville... Lv| 8 57 am
6 27 pmlLv ...Thomaston... Lvj 8 28 am
707 pm|Ar ... Woodbury... Lvj 748 am
SOUTHERN RAiiIJWAYT '
7 25 pmlAr. Warm Springs. Lv| 7 29 am
603 pml ; Ar ... .CoJum/bus... Lvj 600 am
8 07 pmlAy? Griffin Lvi 6 50 am
J> 45 pm|Ar Atlanta Lnr| 5 20 am
boUTHEB.? RAMjwtA’Y? •
4 20 amt L-v .... Atlanta .... Ari 9 40 am ‘
6 03 pmrLv Griffin Lvi 9 52 am
525 pmfLv ... .OrfuuYbus.... Lv| 9 }ian
6 49 pmjLv .Warm Springs. Lv| 8 06 am
707 ..Woodbury.... Ar| 7 48 am
7 27 pm? Ar . .Harris CHy. . lA-| 7 28 am
CENTRAL OT GEORGIA.
745 pmjAr .. .Greenville... Lvj 710 am
5 20 ptn ( Lv ....Columbus.... Arj 9 40 am
7 27 pmtLv ..Harris City.. Arj 7 28 am
j 8 20 pm[Ar ....LaGrange.... Istj 6 33 am
Close connection at Macon and Softeee
- with the Georgia Southern and Florida
Central of Georgia tor Savannah, Albany,
Southwest Georgia pointe and Montgom
ery, Ala., at Yatesville for Roberta and
points on the Atlanta and Flortda di
vision of the Southern railway, at Harris
City City with Central of Gtorgla railwvy,
for Greenvine and Columbus, at Wood
bury with Southern railway for Coljnn
bue and Griffin, at LaGrange with th*
Atlanta and West Point railway.
JULIAN R. LANE,
General Manager,
Macon. Ga.
R. G. STONE, ■
Gen. Pass. JPgl. *
PULLMAN CAR LINE
jCOtfflWl
BETWEEN
Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or
Louisville and Chicago and
IHE NORTHWEST.
Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains.
Parlor chairs and dining cars on day
trains. The Monon trains make the tejal
eet time between the Southern winter re- a
sorts and the summer resorts oJ tha
North weat.
W. H. McDOEL, V. P. & G. M.
FRANK J. REED, G. P. A.,
Chicago, 111.
For further particulars address
R. W. OLADING, Gen. Agt.
, ThomaevHle, Ga.
@Hlv O H a non - poleonotM
■evnody f:>r Gonort hrea,
J’eet, Spermatorrhoea,
Vhlt-ae. n nnatnral dte
barg<«, or any inflamsna
iou, irritation or ul<-r«a
tion of in 11 e« n b mem
branes. Non-astringent.
SoM by BrogKiata.
or &<-ot in pl*un wrapper,
by expreM. prepaid, for
Ji.oo, oz 3 bottle, |z.76.
Circular »ont ou reuuftet.
New Steam
DYE WORKS,
F. H. JOHNSON, Prop’r.
23c Second Street, Macon, Ga.
Ladies’ dresses nicely cleaned
and pressed. Also Gents’ Lfnea
Suits.
3