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~ The best thing with which |
a mother can crown her '
daughter is a cotn
w nsc knowl
edge of the distinct
r)( * T f ern ’ n ’ ne physi-
L-Ts, *>y IC. ■ jh. ologV- Every wo-
K man should thor
///A ~ understand
V her own nature.
JftP' *' 'H D Every woman
fl'„- YHjka J«\ should under
[7f fop N st and the su
’x<( prune import
v x/3f>?-/y- >- '371 ance .of keeping
■ ii herself well aua
F -> J" ’ Rtron K i n a
' womanly way.
’ w» Nearly all of the
pains and aches, nearly all the weakness
and sickness and suffering of women is due
to disorders or disease of the organs dis
tinctly feminine.
A woman who suffers in this way is un
fitted for wifehood and motherhood. Ma
ternity is a menace of death. Thousands
of women suffer in this way because their
innate modesty will not permit them to
submit to the disgusting examinations and
local treatment insisted upon by the average
Physician. These ordeals are unnecessary.
>r. R. V. Pierce, an eminent and skillful
specialist, for thirty years chief consulting
physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgi
cal Institute, at buffalo, N. Y., has dis
covered a wonderful remedy with which
women may treat and speedily cure them
selves in the privacy of their own homes.
This medicine is known as Dr. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Prescription. It acts directly on the
delicate and important organs concerned.
It makes them well and strong. It allays
inflammation, heals ulceration, soothes
pain and rests the tortured nerves. Taken
during the critical period, it banishes the
usual discomforts and makes baby’s advent
Fa*y and almost painless. Thousands of
women who were once weak, sickly, nerv
ous fretful invalids, are now happy, healthy
wives, because of this medicine. It is sold
by all good medicine dealers and no honest
dealer will advise a substitute.
■' When I commenced using Dr. Pierce’s med
icines some three years ago.” writes Mrs Ella J.
Fns. care of W. C. Fox. of Eldorado, Saline Co..
Ills " I was the picture of death. I had no heart
to take anything. Weight was 125. My husband
had l>een to see five different doctors nliout my
trouble (female weakness). I commenced taking
Dr Pierce’s medicines, also wrote to him for ad
vice. J !z.k four bottle* of Dr Pierce's Favorite
Prescription, and one vial of his ’ Pleasant Pel
lets,' and am now a well woman."
The News
Printing Co.
Does Binding and Job
Printing of every de
scription. Ask for
estimates. High class
work.
JkStROFOLA
ffc - and
Two Dlsoasas That Causo Their
Victims to Bo Shunned by
Their Fallow-Maa.
HrRINOFIKI.D, Mo.
Gknti.Rmf.N : I commenced taking P.
P. P., Lippman's Great Remedy, last
Fall, for Erysipelas. My face was com
pletely covered w ith the disease ; I took
a short course of P. P. P., and it soon
disappeared. This Spring I became
much debilitated and again took an
other course, and 1 am now in good
condition. I consider P. P. P. one of
the best blood preparations on the
market, and for those who need a gen
eral tonic to build up the system and
Improve the appetite I consider that it
ha* no equal. Will say, anyone who
cares to try P. P. P. will not be disap
pointed In its results, and I, therefore,
Obear fully recommend it.
ARTHUR WOOD,
Springfield, Mo.
Efrysfpelns and Scrofula cured by P.
P. P., Lippman’s Great Remedy, surely
and without fail.
Sfruvofirld, Mo.
Gkwtt.rmrn: Last June 1 had a
scrofulous sore which broke out on my
ankle. It grew rapidly, and soon ex
tended from my ankle to my knee. I
got one bottle of your P. P. F., Lipp
man’s Great Remedy, and was agree
ably surprised at the result. The entire
sore healed at once. I think I have
tak en almost every medicine recom
mended for scrofula and catarrh, and
{our P. P. P. is the best 1 have ever
ried. It cannot be recommended too
highly for blood poison, etc.
Yours very truly,
W. P.’ HUNTER.
P. P. P. cures all blood and skin dis
ease, both in men and women.
Rheumatism, which makes man's life
a hell upon earth, can be relieved at
once by P. P. P., Lippman’s Great Rem
edy It makes a PERMANENT cure.
P. P. P. is the great and only remedy
for advanced cases of catarrh. Stop
page of the nostrils and difficulty i 1
breathing when lying down, P. 1\ P.
relieves at once.
P P. P. cures blood poisoning in all
He various s’.uges, old ulcers, sores aud
kidney com plaints.
Sol.t by all drug-gift*.
UPPMAN BROS., Apatbacarlea. Sole Prop'ra,
Lippman * Block. Savannah. ll«.
TH El
NEW YORK WORLD
Th rlce-a-Week Edition
18 Pages a Week...
...156 Papers a Year
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Published every alternate day except Sun
day.
The Thrice-a-Week edition of the New
York World is first among all weekly
papers in size, frequency of publication
and the freshness, acuracy and variety of
its contents. It has all the merits of a
great $6 daily at the price of a dollar
complete, accurate and 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 all points
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 16.00.
MUSK FROM TIBET.
Mncb Kb 11 barb Al<w» Come* to Thi* Coun
try From There.
In return for the tea and other articles
sent into Tibet through the Mohammedan
representative of the Tibetan trade guilds,
the natives send back a long list of art!-
I cles. including musk, rhubarb, wool, skins
of various kinds, precious stones, medi
cines and a coarse grade of unbleached
silken fabric, says The Manufacturer.
Musk, which forms an important part
Os Tiltetan ontward trade, is a secretion of
a small deer << <-r tis moschus). This ani
mal rceiirs throughout eastern Tibet, but
the largest herds an- said to roam over the
plains mar the Koko Nor. A great deal
of mnsk passes out to north China. The
consumption in Szu Chuan is consider
able, and there is no article more easily
smuggled. A -ingle "pod” rarely con
tains more than one-third of an ounce of
mnsk. The supply is less than it might
be i the Tibetans had sporting rifles or if
the dangers and difficulties of the chase
were not such ns to [in vent Chinese mer
chants from hunting the doer.
Gixxl musk, which is nxmgnized by its
rich brown color and intensely pungent
odor, is bought for 10 or 12 times its
weight in silver on the frontier. In
Chung-King it. sells for as much as 18
times its weight in silver. The musk that
goes to Shanghai is ad altered with grains
of dyed sand and other extraneous matter,
to the extent, it is said, of 50 per cent. A
few grains of good musk will perfume a
w hole room. Musk, however, is used not
onlj =.j» a perf tine, but also as a medicine,
? i<l it, is pH. ed among the clothing and
fui .s a pr< veiiiivc again-1 moths.
It is said that practically all the mnsk
which | si s through Ta-Chien Lu is
adulterat’d by the Tilietans liefore it
reaches tl mi f.ai'ki-t by i i> f bh-< J and
liver. The usual test for asc< rtaining the
purity of mnsk is running a thread rulilwsl
w ith garlic t.hrough the p<xl. If no odor
of g r< . <aais lie [.erfume Is held to
Ixj sutliei<*’it ly pure
An im)Hi!-iant article of expert from
Tibet i rlic •b. Tl.is pt.-nfcgiows abun
dantly in many parts of the country, and
the supply is said to be in execssof the de-
mand. Great, pi.ini.it ies are grown on the
hills about '1 -■ < ’hi -n-Lu, but. the natives,
in order to <'impose of it rapidly, dry it by
artificial heat and thus injure its quality.
This drug i, , irom the pointof view of the
civilized natives, the most useful of the
Tibetan medicines. The best, quality grows
at an altitude of above y.OGJ toet, and the
roots arc brought, down in the rough state
by the trilies or by the Chinese traders in
Tibet. The large r<x>ts are trimmed or
chopped into rough s [uare lumps. In the
Ta <'liien-Lii district, owing to the damp
ness of the climate, the roots have to be
carefully <iriud and arc p< r,orated to pre
vent mildew, which is the great enemy of
the Chinese drug merchant. On arrival at
Chung King, the lumps of rhubarb are
again trimmed into small, square pieces,
and after Ixiing dried arc packed for
Shanghai, w here an equal weight is worth
five times its value on the frontier.
LEMONS AS MEDICINE.
They regulate the liver, stomach, bowels,
kidneys and blood ns prepared by Dr. H.
Mozley in his Lemon Ellxer, a pleasant
lemon drink. It cures biliousness, con
stipation, Indigestion, headache, malaria,
kidney disease, fevers, chills, impurities
of the blood, pain in the chest, heart fail
ure, and all other diseases —nine-tenths of
all the diseases of the South and West are
caused by the failure of the liver and kid
neys to do their duty. It is an estab
lished fact that lemons, when combined
properly with other liver tonics, produce
the most desirable results upon the stom
ach, liver, bowels, kidneys and blood.
Sold by druggists. 50c and $1 bottles.
MOXLEY’S LEMON ELIXER
Cured me of sick and nervous headache,
I bad been subject to all my life.
Mrs. N. A. McEntire, Spring Place, Ga.
MOZLEY’S LEMON EUXER
Cured me of indigestion. I got more relief
and at once from Lemon Elixer than all
other medicines. J. C. Speights,
Indian Springs, Ga.
MOZLEY’S LEMON ELIXER
Cured mo of a long-standing case of chills
and fever by using two bottles.
J. C. Stanley,
Engineer E. T. Va. & Ga. R. R.
MOZLEY’S LEIMON EDLIXER
Cured me of a case of heart disease and
indigestion of four years’s standing. I
tried a dozen different medicines. None
but Lemon Elixer done me any good.
Tules Diehl,
Cor ll:Uxirsha.ru and SL Thomas sts.,
Savannah, Ga.
MOZTASY'S LEMON ELIXER.
I fully endorse it for nervous headache,
indigestion and constipation, having used
it with most satisfactory results, after all
other remedies had failed. J. W. Rollo,
West End, Atlanta, Ga.
listofJrFzes
To be Given to Paid Up Sub
scribers of The News.
The following list of prizes will be given
away on September 30th, at which time
our offer will expire.
One prize of $lO in gold.
Four prizes each for one year's subscrip
tion to The New.
Six prizes each for six months’ subscrip
tion to The News.
Eight prizes each for three months’ sub
scription to The News.
Twelve prizes each for one month’s sub
scription to The News.
Making a total of thiry-one prizes or $lO
in gold and ten years’ subscription to The
News. These prices are entirely free. The
only requirement to obtain tickets is to
pay when due.
Al monthly subscriptions must be paid in
advance and all weekly subscriptions must
be paid each week in order to secure tick
ets.
The prizes are up from July Ist to Sep
tember 30th—thirteen weeks.
Tickets can be obtained by calling at the
office o fthe subscription department of
The News and will be issued at any time
after this date. Each 10 cents paid when
due entitles the subscriber to a ticket.
Each person paying promptly until Sep
tember 30th will receive thirteen tickets.
G. W. Tidwell,
Manager City Circulation.
About one month ago my child, which Is
fifteen months old, had an attack 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 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,s Colic
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was rec
ommxtded and I decided to try it. I soon
noticid a change for the better; by its
continued use complete cure was brought
about and it is now perfectly healthy.—C.
L. Boggs, Stumpcown, Gilmer County, W.
Va. For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons,
druggists.
The Rev. XV. B. Costley, of Stockbridge,
Ga., while attending to his pastoral duties
at Ellenwood, that state, was attacked by
cholera morbus. He says: “By chance I
happened to get hold of a bottle of Cham
berlain’s Colic, 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.
THE BEST REMEDY FOR FLUX.
Mr. John Mathias, a well known stock
dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says: “After suf
fering for over a week with flux, and my
physician having failed to relieve me, I
was advised to try Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and one
bottle cured me.” For sale by H. J. La
mar & Sons, druggists.
Flies, rues, miesi
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 instant re
lief. Dr. XX illiams’ 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
IXI.OO per box.
WILLI .VMS MANUFACTURING CO.,
Proprietors, Cleveland, 0.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
XVE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO
THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND
“PITCHER'S CASTOIJA,” AS OUR TRADEMARK.
7, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator- of “CASTORIA,” the same that
has borne and does now bear on every
the sac- simile signature oj 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. /} . a
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 fexv more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which evsn ire do< s not know.
“The Kind Yoa Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF
r /?
Ins t Cxi l-i'ving
The Kind That Never Tailed You.
THE CKN T Auri vOmIPANY. 77 MURRAV STREET. NLWY RK ITV
CHEERING NEWS
For persons having defective vision and desiring to obtain glasses
to improve and preserve their sight.
Mr. FRIEDMAN, the Optical Specialist,
Has returned from a pleasant trip to Florida. Persons wishing
to consult him about their eyes can do so by calling at his office,
314 Second st., where he has been located close on to two years.
The only safe, sure and
8 " c>rs a "zk reliable Female PILL
PENNYROI Al PILLSi
Aak for DB. MOW 3 JPESnsrEKCYAI. PILLS and take no other
Send for circular. iPrice $ 1 -OO per box* tt boxes for $5.00,
Uli. JMLOT'I”tS CHE-UIC Alu CO., - Cleveland, Ohio
For sale by H. J. LAMAR 8t SONS. Wholesale Agents
The News Printing Co.
Printers and Pubishers,
WILL PRINT
BRIEFS, BOOKS,
FOLDERS, STATEMENTS,
PAMPHLETS, CIRCULARS,
CARDS, CHECKS, ENVELOPES,
LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS
AND
Ajili ii He filer’s Line
On Short Notice,
At Low Prices,
In Artistic Style
We have added to our Plant a Well-Equipped
Bindery,
And can now turn out any sort of book from a 3,000 page
ledger to a pocket memorandum; or from the handsomest library
volumn to a paper back pamphlet.
A Trial is All We Ask.
NEWS PRINTING CO
MACON NEWS.THURSDAf EVENING, AUGUST 25 1898.
QUALITY PRICE
A
The quality balances the price. That’s the
way it must be in every honest transaction.
That’s the way it is in buying clothing
from us—the quality determines the price
—y ou get what you pay for always.
BENSON & HOUSER.
The Up-to-date Clothiers.
'"’’“KiCoast Liiie to Mackinac
The Gre«te«t Perfeo
KHW STEEL jkGs tlon yet attained In
PASSENGER y Boat Construction:
STEAMER#, Luxur,ou# • E<l u| p-
SPEED, rnent, Artistic Fur-
COMFORT / nlshlng, Decoration
AND SAFETY andEfficlentSorvlcs
To Detroit, Mackinac, Georgian Bay, Petoskey, Chicago
No other Lino offers & Panorama of 160 miles of equal variety and interest.
Fear Trips per Week Be twees Every Day and Day and Mjrht Service Between
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac cKE? >™ ANDCLEVELANS
FXTOBUT, “THS SOO.” ■ASQUKTTE Put -In- Bay TUrth., Tte., sl. Stateroom, $1.75.
AJSD DULUTH. and Toledo Connections are made at Cleveland with
TX>W ItTis f a P(.tnreanna Earliest Trains for all points Kast, South
RMnrn, Ineludlns Meals andli.rth., Approx- hF rth Dotroitforall P omt *
"?!. Detroll mi ceveiond wooiimi gooiiw
_fh Southern R’y.
J|> Schedule in Effect July 6, 1898
CENTRAL TIME
READDOWN. ~ ~ READ UP.
No, 7 | No. "15 No. 9 | No. 13] We st- TNo. 14 | No.lo |1?o7~8~| No. 10
7 10pm| 4 45pm| 8 OOamj 2 05am|Lv.. Macon . .Ar| 2 05am| 8 20am|10 55am | 710 pm
9 45pm| 7 45pm|10 40am| 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lv|ll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm
7 50am|10 00pm| 4 00pm| 4 20am|Lv.. Atl anba. Ar|ll 50pm| 5 00am| [ll 40am
10 20am| 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Ro me.. Lvj 0 40pm| 1 44am| | 9 00am
11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pmjl2 10am| | 750 am
1 00pm| 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat* nooga Lv| 7 30pm|10 00pm| | 8 00pm
7 10pm| 7 10pm| 7 40am| [Ar .Mem phia . Lv| | 9 15am| | 8 00pm
4 30pm| ] 5 00am| |Ar Lexington. Lv| |lO 50am| jib 40pm
7 50pm| | 7 50am| |Ar Louis ville. Lv| | 7 40am|........| 745 pm
7 30pm| | 7 30am| |Ar Cincinnati Lvj j 8 30am| j 8 00am
9 25pm| | 7 25pm| |Ar Anniston .. Lv| | 6 32pm| | 8 00am
11 45am| |lO 00pm| | Ar Birm ’ham Lvj | 4 15pm| | 6 00am
8 05am| | 1 10am| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 7 00am| 7 40pm| j 740 pm
........ |....".T|"N0. 14 No."T6~] ~South. | No. 15. | N 0713 | |
| 7 10pm| 2 10am| 8 35am|Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am| 2 00am| |
| | 3 22am|10 05am|Lv Coch ran.. Lv| 3 20pm|12 55am| |
| | |lO 45am|Ar Hawk ’ville Lv| 2 50pm| | |
| | 3 54amjl0 50am|Lv. East man. Lv| 2 41pm|12 25am| |
j j 4 29amjll 36amjLv.. Helena.. Lv| 2 03pm|ll 54pm| |
j | 6 45am| 2 38pm|Lv.. Jes up... Lv|ll 22am| 9 43pm| |
| | 7 30am| 3 30pm|Lv Ever rett.. Lv|lo 45am| 9 05pm| |
| | 8 30amj 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| 6 50pm| j
| | 9 40am| 9 25am|Ar Jack’ville. Lv[ 8 00am| 6 50pm| |
| N 0.7 | No. 9 | No. 13 | ~ Ea st |N0."16 ]~ NoTTO*j [777777.7
| 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05am|Lv.. Ma con.. Ar| 8 20am| 7 ibpmj |
| 9 45pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20am| 4 20pm| |
| 9 25am| 8 30pm| 6 10pm|Lv Charlotte Lv|lo 15am| 9 35am|
| 1 30pm|12 00n’t|ll 25pm|Lv . Dan ville. Lyj 6 07pmj 5 50am| |
| 6 25pmj 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 10n,n| |
I 5 30pm| 7 35am| |Ar.. Norfolk. Lv| 9 30am|10 00pm| |
| 3 50| 1 53am| |Lv. .Lynch hurg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| |
| 5 48pm| 3 35am| |Lv Chari’ville Lv| 2 15pm| 1 50pm| |
| 9 25pm| 6 42am| |Ar Washgton. Lv|H 15am|10 43pm| .|
| 3 00am|10 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| jAr .. ..Boston Lv| 5 OOpmjlO OOamj j
THROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC.
Nos. 13 aad 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 th€
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. Q Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. P. A., S. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A.,
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
RANDALL CIAFTON, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon, G*. 565 Mulberry St, Macon, Ga.
Central of Georgia
Hailway Company
'WGEORGIA Schedules in Effect June 12, Standard Tin e
Evea 9oth Meiidian.
No. 5 | Ho. 7 *| No. 1 *1 STA TIONS | No. 2 *| No. 8 *| No «
liii™ 1 ! Vm P 1 Macon .. .Ari 725 pm 740 am| 350 pm
L 24 pm 840 pmi 850 am|Ar ....Fort Valley Lv 627 pm 639 ami 242 pm
! 9 30 P m l, I 9 40 am| Ar. ... Perry Lv|! 4 45 pm I ill 30 am
I |ll 15 am|Ar. ..Columbus. . .Lv| 400 pm
I 5 50 pm|Ar. . .B’mham. . .Lvl 9 30 am 1..........
152 pm 10 01 pm| |Ar ..Americus ...,Lv| 518 ami”i'o7*pin
’BI7 Pm J? pm l, Ar - •-Smithville ..Lvj |4 55 am|f 12 42 pm
fnZ P “ 11 °° Pm Ar ••••Aibany ...Lv| | 415 am| 1135 am
346 pm |Ar ... ath bert ...Lv| | I u n am
500 pm No 9 * [Ar .. .Fort Gaines ..Lvj No 10 *| I 955 am
4 37 pm 7 45 amjAr ....Eufaula ....Lv| 7 30 pm ....I 10 20 a n
8 14 pm| | |Ar Ozark .. . .Lv|.
6 00 pm| | 9 05 am|Ar . .Union Springs Lv| 6 00 pm| I 9 05 am
7 25 pm| | |Ar Troy. . ..Lvl | 7 755.™
7 30 pm| | 10 35 am|Ar.. Montgomery ..Lvj 420 pm| | 7 40 am
No. ll.»| No. 3.*| No. L*| | No. 2.*j NoTT*? - No
800 am| 425 am| 420 pm|Lv ... .Macon. . ..Ar| 11 10 am| 11 10 pml 720 dm
922 am| 540 am| 540 pm|Lv. .Barnesville . .Lvl 945 e 945 pmi «05 nrn
!12 noon| | 710 pm|Ar.. .Thomaston. ..Lv] 700 am| !300 pm
955 amj 608 am| 613 pm|Ar. .. .Griffin. . ~Lv| 912 am| 915 pm 530 pm
ll_2oa-m| 735 amj 735 pm|Ar.. .Atlanta. . ..Lv| 750 ams 750 pm 405 pm
No. 6. !l No. 4. No. 2*| j No. L•[ NoAj”
7 30 pm| 11 38 pm| 11 25 amiLv. .. .Macon. . ..Ar| | 8 55 am| 7 45 am
810 pm| 12 19 amj 12 08 pmjAr. . ..Gordon. .. .Arj 400 pm| 210 am| 710 am
850 pm| ! 1 15 pm|Ar. .Milledgeville .Lvj! 300 pml | 620 am
10 00 pm] 1! 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eatonton. . .Lv!l2 50 pm| 5 25 am
i I! 4 45 pm|Ar. . .Machen. . .LvjilO 55 amj j
■ I |! 6 50 pmjAr. .. Covington. ..Lv|! 9 20 am| |
*ll 25 aml*ll 38 pm|*ll 25 am|Lv. .. .Macon" . _.Ar|* 3 45 pmj* 3 55 amj* 3 45 p m
117 pm 130amf 117 pm|Lv. . .Tennille Lv| 156 pml 152 am| 156 pm
230 pm 225 am 230 pm|Lv. . Wad ley. .. .Lv|fl2 55 pml 12 25 am| 12 55 pm
251 pm 244 am 251 pm|Lv. .. Midville. . Lvl 12 11 pm 12 25 am) 12 11 pm ■
855 pm 335 am 400 pm|Lv. ...Millen. .. .Lv 11 35 am 11 50 pmis 810 am
5935 pm 442 am 520 pm;Lv .Waynesboro .. Lv 945 am 10 34 pmj 725 am
slO 50 pm 635 amj 740 pmiLv... .Augusta. . .Lvj! 740 am] 840 pmj 615 am
- 350 pm|Lv.. Rocky Ford.. .Lvj 11 03 am 11 14 pm|
’ No. 16. *j | No. 15. •! j *
| 12 20 pmjAr. ... Ath ens .. ..Lv 330 pm I "
• Dally. ! Daily except Sunday, f al station, b Sunday «nly.
Solid trains are run to aadf 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 Macos
and Savannah and Aalanta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for eccu
pancy in Macon depet at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengera arriving in Macon on No. 3 and Sa
▼annah on No. 4, are allowed to remain in sleeper until 7 a. m. Parlor cars 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 Gainet
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 edulea to points beyond our lines, address
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Ma-.-en, Ga. E. p. BONNER, U. T. A.
S. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager J. C. HAILE, G. P. A.
THEO. D. KLINE, General Superintendent.
HOT SPRINGS, North Carolina.
Mountain Part: Hotel and BaMs» Modem Hotel Ideas Id Bveev DnPMrtmmt—■Table
and Service Unexoefled.
Swimming Pool, Bowling, Tennis, Goif, Pool and Billiards. Photographer's dart:
room. Riding, Driving, Tennis. Large Ball Boom and Auditorium. Special reduced
summer rates.
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, superb, beautiful drives, good livery. Hotel Dalton la
the home of the resort seeker and the com mercial traveler. Elegantly built, electric
, . e l ev ator. telephone, hot anl cold baths on every floor. Special rates to
amines. Many come each summer from lower Georgia and Florida. Further In
formation given by
D. L. DETTOR, 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
ing> 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.
iiisWi
TO GO
To the mountains.
Warm Springs, Ga.
IS
In Hie mountains,
Where the weather is delightfully cool and
the conditions are all healthful.
The Warm Springs water is the best and
most pleasant cure for dyspepsia, insom
nia, rheumatism and general debility.
Hotel accommodations and service first
class. Rates moderate.
Easily reached by the Macon and Bir
mingham railroad.
For further information write to
CjiHS. L DBVIS, Proprleior.
Hi MIBIOI
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 alevation.
All modern Improvements. Table excel
lent.
MRS. B. A. YOUNG, Proprietress,
Tallulah Falls, Ga.
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 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.
SEMPSON & SIMPSON,
Managers.
Bedford Alum, Iron and lodine
Springs of Virginia.
From whose water the celebrated Mass
so extensively known and used, is manu
facteured. Opens June 15, and is the most
home-like place in Virginia for recuper
ating.
A modem writer on the mineral waters
of Europe and America says: ' Bedford
Springs water cures when all other reme
dies have failed, and especially Inderange
ments peculiar to females.”
Long distance telephone connections,
send for a 50-page interesting phamplet of
proofs. P. O. Bedford Springs, Va.
J. Jt. MABEN, JB-, Proprietor.
I STURTEVHT HOUSE,
I Broadway and ‘Z9th St,, New York,
'j American & European plan. Wil
liam F. Bang, proprietor. Broad
way cable cars passing the dooi
transfer to all parts of the city.
Saratoga Springs
THE KEHSIHGTOH,
and c-ottagea.
H. A. AW. F. BANG, Proprietors, g
■ New York Office, Sturtevant House Q
Ocean View House.
St. Simon’s Island Beach, Ga
Fine surf bathing, good table, artesian
water. A. T. ARNOLD,
Proprietor.
J* For Business Men <►
* ► In the heart of the wholesale dis < ►
J ► trict <,
For Shoppers <►
> 3 minutes walk to Wanamakers; 4 *
> 8 minutes walk to Siegel-Coopers %
> Big Store. Easy of access to the <
> great Dry Goods Stores. C
> For Sightseers s
< One block from cars, giving <
< easy transportation to all points S
I Hoiel Allien, i
I New York. I
Cor. 11th St. and University
Place. Only one block from «
Broadway. <
ROOMS, $1 UP. RESTAURANT, <
Prices Reasoi.:'Jjle. S
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM R. R. CO.
(Pine Mountain Route.)
Effective June 5, 1898.
4 20 pm Lv Macon Ar|lo 36 am
4 20 pm Lv Sofkee Lv|lo 14 am
5 46 pm Lv ....Colloden.... Lv| 9 09 am
5 57 pm Lv ...Yatesville... Lvj 8 57 am
6 27 pm Lv ...Thomaston... Lv| 8 28 am
7 07 pm Ar ...Woodbury... Lv| 7 48 am
SOUTHERN RAILWAY] ——■
7 25 pm Ar. Warm Springs. Lv| 7 29 am
6 03 pm Ar ....Columbus... Lvj 6 00 am
8 07 pm Ar Griffin Lvj 6 50 am
945 pm Ar .... .Atlanta Lv| 520 am
SOUTHER.. RAILWAY. ~
4 20 amlLv .... Atlanta ....Ar| 9 40 am
6 03 pm|Lv Griffin Lvj 9 52 am
5 25 pm|Lv ....Columbus.... Lv| 9 «0 am
6 49 pmjLv .Warm Springs. Lvj 8 06 am
707 pm|Lv.. ..Woodbury.. . Ar| 7 48 am
7 27 pmjAr ..Harris City.. Lv| 7 28 am
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA.
7 45 pmlAr ...Greenville... Lvj 7 10 am
5 20 pmjLv ....Columbus.... Arj 9 40 am
7 27 pmiLv ..Harris City.. Arj 7 28 am
_8 20 pmjAr ....LaGrange.... Lvj 6 95 am
Close connection at Maoon and Sofkee
with the Georgia Southern 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 Gtorgia railwoy,
for Greenville and Columbus, at Wood
bury with Southern railway for Colum
bus and Griffin, at LaGrange with the
Atlanta and West Point railway.
JULIAN R. LANE,
General Manager, •
Macon, G*.
R. G. STONE,
Gen. Pass. Agt.
PULLMAN CAR LINE
•)) (j»tA6o.|lWUMW>USsfcciSWlli p.MUMV (ty
BETWEEN
Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or
Louisville and Chicago and
THE NORTHWEST.
Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains.
Parlor chairs and dining cars on day
trains. The Monon trains make the fast
est time between the Southern winter re
sorte and the summer resorts of the
Northwest.
W. H. McDOEL, V. P. & G. M. I
FRANK J. REED, G. P. A.,
Chicago, 111.
For further particulars a/ldrese
R. W. GLAMNG, Gen. Agt.
Thomasville, Ga.
SBig <J is a non-poisonons
-etnedy for Gonorrho-a.
licet, Spermatorrhre*
Yliites, unnatural dis
hargos, or any intlarnma
ion, irritation or ul«-Ta
tion of iiiucsuh mem
branes. Non-astringeut.
Sold by Orninriata.
or sent in plain wrapper,
by express prepaid, for
«1.00, or 3 bottles, >2.75,
Circular sent on reuuest.
New Steam
DYE WORKS,
F. H. JOHNSON, Prop’r.
25c Second Sireet, Macon, Ga.
Ladies’ dresses nicely cleaned
and pfts.->ed. Aiso Gents’ Lineu
Suits.