Newspaper Page Text
Scrofula, a Vile
Inheritance.
Scrofula is tho most obstinate of blood
troubles, and is often the result of an
inherited taint in the blood. S. S. 8.
is the only remedy which goes deep
enough to reaeh Scrofula ; it forces out
every trace of the disease, and cures
the worst cases.
My son, Charite, was SfnietM from infancy
with Scrofula, and he suffered so that it was
Impossible to dress him
for three years. Hi a
head and body were a
mass of gores, and his
eyesight also became
affected. No treatment
was spared that we
thought w>. Id relieve
him. out he tn-w worse
until his condition was.
indeed pitiable. I had]
almo»t desj,aire<i O | .'. -
ever ts-ing cured, wb n
by the advice of a friend
W* gave him 8. b .8.
(bwiffs Hjieelflc). Ade-
A;
. 1 i> ’ “■ /■'
’ V-' '
rub . i;i;>r. i-o-• .nt «■i. th<- re-ni t. ind jftxt
h<* had t»J»n » doiwii no one whokixw
of bin former Ireu.fful condition would have
recognized him. All the n<>r<*. on his body
haw healed, hla skill is jwrfeetiy cle-r anil
■rnootb, and ho has teen res'ored t > ■>< rs. < |
health. M ll«. ,s. S 5! ahr , .
Bfl'i Elm St., Mae-on. <>a
For real blood trouble? it is a waste
of time to I'xpeet a cure from the doc
tor*- Blood diseases are lieyond then
skill. Swift’s Specific,
S.S.S. Th S Blood
reaches al) deep-seated eases which
other remedies have noeffect upon. It
is the only blood remedy guaranteed
purely vegetable, and contains no pot
ash, mercury, or other mineral.
Books mailed free to any address bj
Swift specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
OcRGFiiIA
RYSIFELAS
Two Diseases That Cause Their
Victims to Be Shunned by
Their Fellow-Man.
BPRINOFIKI.D, MO.
Gkwti.Fmkx : I commenced taking P.
P. P., Lippman’s Great Remedy, last
Fall, for Erysipelas My face was com
pletely covered with the disease ; I took
a short course of P. P. P., and it soon
disappeared. This Spring 1 became
much debilitated and again took an
other course, and I am now in good
condition. 1 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 syst«rn and
improve the appetite I consider that It
hai no equal. Will say, anyone who
cares to try P. P. P. will not be. disap
pointed In its results, and I, therefore,
cheerfully recommend it.
ARTHUR WOOD,
Springfield, Mo.
Erysipelas and Scrofula cured by P.
P P., Lippman's Great Remedy, surely
and without fail.
SrRINGFIKI.D, Mo.
GunterunN: Last June I had a
Scrofulous sure 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. I*. P., Lipp
man's Great Remedy, and whs agree
ably surprised at the result. The entire
sore healed at once. I think I have
taken almost every medicine recom
mended for scrofula and catarrh, and
(our P. P. P. is the best Iha eve,
ried. It cannot be rfconuner * too
highly for blood pros a, et
Y< k very tn.
W. P. HU R.
P. P P. cures ail blood and troii dis
ease, both in men and wrouen.
Rheumatism, whicn make man’s life
a hell upon earth, can be relieved a:
once by P. I'. P., Lippman's (>r"at Rem
edy. It makes a I‘ERMANF'
P. P. P. is the great and i te
for advanced cases of eatai
Eage of the nostrils and di >..v
reathlng when lying uowi P. f
relieves at ones.
P. P. P. cures blood poisoning in all
its various e Ages, old ulcers, sorts aud
kidney complaints.
Hold by •!! draggaatu.
UPPMAN BROS., A*>othtfcarlr« e Sos<? Pt
Upprvan*« Bieck.. stv«nnih. <j>
Macon, Dublin
and Savannah K. R.
*> j Id 3*
P M l‘ M STATIONS. A M. \ M
4 00l 2 301,v ...Macon ..’..Ari 9 40|10 15
4 15 2 50 f ..Swift Creek ..f 9 20; 10 00
4 25 3 00 f ..Dry Branch ~f| 9 101 9 50
4 35 3 lolf ..Pike's Peak ..f 9 001 9 40
4 45 3 20 f ...Fitzpatrick . ~f| S 50, 9 30
4 50 3 30 t Ripley V 8 401 9 25
5 05 3 50’s ..Jeffersonville.. s! 8 25! 9 15
5 15 4 00 f ....Gallimore.... f- 8 05 9 05
5 25 4 15|s ....Danville ....s’ 7 50| 8 50
5 30 4 25|s ...Allentown... si 7 S(V S 50
5 40 4 40 s ....Montrose.... s| 7 251 8 35
6 501 5 00 s Dudley e| 7 101 8 25
6 02- 5 25s M00re.,,.. s; 8 55| 8 12
* 15 1 5 40 Ar. ...Dublin ...Lvl t St’t 8 30
i’ M r.MJ pLM \M
•Passenger, Sunday.
d Mixed, Dail*', except Sunday
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AddreM HAHPEK A BBOTHBg, Pubiishena, W. Y. Oty
HONDURAS PLAN
IS ABANDONED
The Big Scheme Started rn
Central America is Not
Found to be Promising.
ASTOR REAOITO mOOVI
Says That the Building of the Nica
ragua Cana! is Likely to Knock
Their Undertaking on Head
w York, Sept. 16—The Honduras Syn
dicate. to which was granted the conces
sion for buil ling a railroad from the At
lantic/o the Pacific Ocean, for establish
ing a banking institution and a coast line
of r-teamships and for settling the foreign
bt of the Central American Republic of
Honduras, it was said yesterday, would not
go any further with its work for the pres
ent.
The rumor has been about financial cen
tres for several days and was verified yes
terday by a dispatch from New Orleans
announcing the arrival at that port of Col.
D. B. Cooper, general manager, and G. R.
Gierer, a contractor of the syndicate, on
their way to hold a conference in this city
with Col. J. J. Astor and President Chaun
cey M. Depew as to whether it will be wiser
to go on with the work or not.
The syndicate was the result of several
years of clever diplomatic work by William
S. Valentine, who formed a syndicate to
work out a concession obtained from the
government of Spanish Honduras, whereby
the syndicate assumed entire control of the
customs of the republic.
In consideration of a yearly payment to
the government of about >500,000 the gov
ernment gave the syndicate power to col
lect and disburse the customs receipts of
the country and act as its special financial
agent in the settlement of its Indebted
ness, to build an interoeeanic railroad
from Put no Cortez, on the Atlantic side,
to point on the Pacific side onthe Bay
of Fonseca, and to establish a coast line
of steamships from Belisle, o« the Atlantic
coast of Honduras, to Belize, in British
Honduras.
'Besides this, the syndicate was given
permission to establish a bank with special
powers beyond those given ordinary
banks; a grant of more than 500,000 acres
of land, and valuable colonization and
mining privileges.
The syndicate began operation last No
vember. Two hundred colonists —fruit
growers from Florida, farmers from Illi
nois and twenty Cubans to start a tobacco
colony—started at once, and new settlers
have gone from New Orleans by almost
every steamer.
Colonel Astor,the principal stockholder,
visited the country in his yacht, Nourma
hal, last February. He attended the offi
cial opening of the syndicate’s bank, and
arranged for the relaying in standard
gauge of the four miles of the present rail
road. Everything loked then as if the
scheme would be a. success.
Central and South American republics
are. however, very uncertain, and as soon
as the syndicate fairly began its work re
ports became current that the government
was giving it as much trouble as a Span
ish -American government knows well how
to do. Work was stopped on the railroad,
only l;> mileshav ing been built, and things
looked pretty badly mixed, until Colonel
Cooper arrived and straightened them out
again. Since then no one has been able
to find what the syndicate has been doing.
Now conies the rumor that the syndicate
might not care to continue work.
“I never took to the project,” said a
prominent shipper yesterday. “If the syn
dicate has had any trouble it Is with the
$.%.000,000 bonds, which is the ‘foreign in
debtedness' that the syndicate is to ‘set
tle.’ This enormous debt has overshadowed
the people of Honduras. It was contracted
between 1M.17 and 1872, and the British
Parliamtn" after investigation, refused to
take any steps to enforce the claims of
bond' dders, asserting that the debt was
conceived in fraud, as the republic got
only $1,000,000 out of the whole issue of
bonds.
“The Astor road, when finished, if ie
ever is, .ill find a strong competitor in
the Guatemala Central, which runs now
from St. Jose, on the Pacific coast, to
Gautemala City, and in a very strong time
will be finished from Guatemala City to
Porto Barrios, on the Atlantic, And before
< if Astor road is finished the Nicaragua
Canal, which the Journal has been urging
so strongly,’will have been dug, and then
I doubt very much if any of the Isthmus
roads will have enough local traffic to pay
expenses,”
At the office of the Honduras syndicate
nothing could be learned except that Gen
era: Manager Cooper would arrive today
or tomorrow.
President Depew said last night that he
did not know the details of the Honduras
syndicate s plans, but he though the work
would be. continued.
The members of the* syndicate are
Chauncey M Depew. John Jacob Astor, M.
Seward Webb, former Secretary of the
Navy Benjamin F. Tracy, I. G. McCul
lough. F. B. Jennings. George S. Scott, N.
A. Prentiss. Charles McVeagh and Melville
W. Ingalls. Jr., president of the “Big
Four" railroad.
Remarkable Rescue.
Mrs.. Michael Curtain, Plainfield, 111.,
makes the statement that she caugh* cold
which settled on her lungs; she was treat
ed for a month by her family physician
but grew worse. He told her she was a
homeless victim of consumption and that
no medicine could cure her. Her drug
. <t suggested Dr. King's New Discovery
for consumption: she bought a bottle and
to her delight found herself benefitted
from the first dose. She continued its use
ind after taking six bottles, found herself
sound and well; now does her own house
work and is as well as she ever was.
k ree trial bottles of this great Discovery
at H. J. Lamar & Sons' drug store. Large
bottles 50c and sl.
fl CRITICAL TllflE
During the Battle of Santiago—Sick
or Well, a Rush Night and Day.
PACKERS WERE ALL HEROES.
Their Untiring Efforts in Getting Ammu
nition and Rations to the Front
Saved the Dxy.
P. E. Butler, of pack train No. 3. writing
from Santiago de Cuba, on July 23d. says:
“We all had diarrhoea in more or less
violent form, and when we landed we had
no time to see a doctor, for it was a case
of rush and rush night and day to keep
the troops supplied with ammunition and
ra-.ions. but thanks to Chamberlain’s Colic
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, we were
able to keep at work and keep our health:
in fact, I sincerely believe at one critical
time this medicine was the indirect sav
iour of our army, for if the packers had
unable to work there would have
tx-vii no way of getting supplies to the
front. There were no roads that a wagon
.rain eould ues?.. My comrade and myself
Stood fortune to lay in a supply
Os i for our pack train before i
we left Tampa, and I know in four cases :
it saved life.”
The above letter was written to he man- I
ufacturers of this medicine, the Chamber- I
lain Medicine Co., Des Moines, lowa. For i
sale by H. J. Lamar & Sou.
VACATION FOR JEWS
In the Arm* Who Wish to Observe the New
Year Fast and Feast.
New York, S?pt. 16 -The Jews of the
Ci’v wbc have rel lives ent<si> I in the va
rious regiments were elat*d yesterday *upon
upon receiving news that all Jewish sol
diers who desired to celebrate the Jewish
j holidays would receive furloughs of three
: weeks, and in some cases of thirty days.
This special privilege granted to the
i Jewish soldiers will be taken advantage of
j by thousands of Jewish soldiers now doing
■ duty in various parts of the country. The
! movement to have furlcughs granted to sol
i diets of the Hebrew faith was started by
j the Orthodox Jewish Congr-gational Union
‘of America. The executive committee of
. the Union held a ■meeting about ten days
| ago, and at that meeting it was decided to
I petition the United States government to
grant furloughs to Jewish soldiers during
the Jewish holidays. The holidays begin
on Saturday and end about October 10.
The New Year is celebrated on the 17th
and 18th of this month, and many Jews
who ha<l enlisted in regiments now at
Montauk Point were anxious to return to
their homes in time to celebrate the New
Year. These soldiers made their wants
known to the executive committee of the
Orthodox Jewish Congregational Union,
ami it was then that the Union took action
In the matter. A resolution was passed
directing the officers of the union to draw
up petition and send it to the adjutant
this resolution the petition was sent to
Adjutant General Corbin.
Robbed the 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
petite—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 <ny life and robbed the grave
of another victim.” No ons should fail to
try them. Only 50c per bottle at H. J. La
mar & Son»’ drug store.
Pay third installment of
city tax by September 15 and
save tax execution.
CHEAP TICKET TO BOSTON
Via the Central of Georgia Railway
Company.
On September 14, 15, 15 and 17 the Cen
tral of Georgia Rajiway Company will sell
round trip tickets from Macon to Boston,
Mass., via Ocean Steamship Company, for
$29.55, account meeting Sovereign Grand
Lodge I. O. O. F., limited October 2d re
turning. J. G. Carlisle, T. P. A.
ONE OF HODGES’ MEN
Dangerously Wounded in a Gambling Fuss
at Camp Northern
Griffin,rGa., Sept.'l6—Privatet William
J. Linn, of Company M, is lying in the
hospital at Camp Northen with a terrible
wound in his head made by a ball from
a 38-calibre Smith & Wesson pistol.
The particulars of the shooting are very
meagre and somewhat conflicting, but the
evidence against his two tentmates Is very
strong and they are now under arrest.
Linn and two other soldiers were in a
tent and had been playing cards, when
the report of a pistol startled the men in
that section of the camp, and a crowd
Sbon gathered, when a horrible sight met
their gaze. Linn was lying on the floor of
his tent with the blood gushing from a
wound in the forehead, saturating his
clothes and running in a crimson stream
over the rough 'floor.
'Sergeant Cotter, who was in charge of
the company at the time, went into the
tent ami asked Linn, who vas still con
scious, the particulars of the shooting,
but all he could say was that 'the shooting
was ■accidental.
The wounded man was carried to the
hospital, where he again stated that the
shooting kas accidental.
The officers, however, think differently,
and from the evidence brought before them
ordered the arrest of the two men who
were in the tent a't the time of the shoot
ing. They were very reticent about the
affair and wished very little said about it
until the facts are more clearly brought
out. >
The shooting occurred at 2 o'clock yes
terday afternoon.
Linn is from LaCrosse, Wis., and joined
Captain Robert odges’ company in Macon.
A TEXAS WONDEB.
Hall’s Great Discovery.
One o mall bottle of Hah s Great Dis
covery cures all kidney and bladder trou
b <, removes gravel, cures dtebetis. semi
nal emisisons, weak and lan backs, rheu
n . tism and all irregularities of the kid
neys and bladder in both men and worn.n
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
case above mentioned.
E. W. HALL,
Sole Manufacturer.
P. O. Box 21$, 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 1
know of nothing that I consider its equal.
R. M. JONES.
Pay third installment of
city tax by September 15 and
save tax execution.
LIST OF PRIZES
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 eich 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 pr'«jes 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.
Pue», rues, riles i
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. 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. 0.
MACON NEWS FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 16 1898.
A Rwrefuced Rnnko Game.
One evening while CoJcnel Riche’s rejrl
menr was ttioned :.t the fair grounds a
bronzed and : road sh >uld d Texan walk
into the otlice of the Commercial hotel
and. squaring himself at a table, began
the task of composing a letter. It was ev
idently a hard job. He stuck out bis
tongue, scratch**! his head, changed pens
a dozen rimes and v. nt through all tho
' contortions of a man w ith a had case of
: St. Virus' dance before he concluded the
epistle. Then he fished out a black wal
let. unwound a strap a y;.r I long and ex
tracted a $5 bill, which he c irefully folded
up with tne shwt. By that time the ix*r
forniance had excited the sympathetic in
terest of several bystanders, and one of
them pointed out tbo mail box in the
corner.
“Just put your letter in there, my
friend, ” he said.
“Hey?” exclaimed tho Texan, glancing
up.
“I said to drop your letter In that box,”
repeated the other. The big immune bont
upon him a look of unut er able scorn.
“Well, I’ve heerd tell of all kinds of
city bunko games,” ho said slowly, “but
that’s tho d'irndest. barofacost one cf the.
hull lot! Don't you say nothing, now, or
I1! have to smash you. Say, mister,” he
called to the clerk, “kin you tell me where
the postmaster keeps his shop?”
Ho was given the proper directions and
returned beaming.
“Say. He asked ono of the hotel staff
confidentially, “do I rwly Took as green as
all that—like I'd bito at sech a game'?”
He was assured that he looked rtke a
thoroughbred and went away happy.
“ Hope to die if I ever give any more tips
t<> a Toxan,” was the comment of the gen
tleman who pointed out the box. New
Orleans Times-Democrat.
An Impressive Ceremony.
A rich widow in a town not far from
Winter Harbor was making arrangements
for tho marriage of her daughter, when
tho Methodist conference met in that town
and 20 ministers came to attend it. She
invited them all to the wedding, and, her
pastor belonging to that denomination,
she expiossed to him a wish that the cere
mony be arranged so that they could all
participate. The dominie thought tho
matter over and told her that he could de
vise no scheme by which her wish could
be gratified. He did not see how the mar
riage service could bo cut up into 31 seg
ments, and, furthermore—and he express
ed it as delicately as possible—he did not
think tho members of tho conference
would consider it dignified to engage in
any such performance.
As the widow was a person of great im
portance, he had to treat her gingerly.
She is the largest contributor to the sup
port of the church, and the parson expect
ed a handsome fee so/ hitching her daugh
ter to the most eligible young man in
town. Hence he promised to consult with
some of the brethren and see her later, but
she did not wait for him. She took mat
ters into her own hands and formed a
plan that at least had the merit of origi
nality. She went direct to tho presiding
elder, Invited him to perform the cere
mony and suggested that after he had pro
nounced the couple man and wife all the
members of the conference stand up in a
row before the pulpit and recite the Lord’s
Prayer in unison.—Chicago Record.
Annual Sales 0ver6,000,000 Boxes
FOR BILIOUS AND NERVOUS DISORDERS
such as Wind and Pain in the Stomaen,
Giddiness Fulness after meals. Head
ache. Dizziness, Drowsiness. Flushings
of Heat, Loss of Appetite, Costiveness-
Blotches on the Skin, Gold. Chills, Dis
turbed Sleep. Frightfu, Dreams and all
Nervous and Trembling Sensations.
THE FIRST DOSE WILL GIVE RELIEF
IN TWENTY MINUTES. Every sufferer
will acknowledge them to be
A WONDERFUL MEDICINE.
BEECHAM'S nuxtakm as direct
cd, will quickly restore Females to com
plete health. They promptly remove
obstructions or irregularities of the sys
tem and cure sick Headache. For a
Weak Stomach
Impaired Digestion
Disordered Liver
IN MEN, WOMEN OR CHILDREN
Beecham’s Pills are
Without a Rival
And have the
LARGEST SALE
of any Patent Medicine in the World.
25c. at all Drug Stores.
n* A non-poi.-ooouf.
i‘‘niedy fur bi tiorrhata
C fSEw v ? !,? - •> per mat orrh up ■»
f yr iu Ito 5 is\y. r hi ?•.*!<, unna .'
Av f Guaranteed cbargtH, or an ■nrrimmi;
p-Li'rfS; uot t- tricvure. lion, irrita hi -it
(• •toiitagion. ti'H) of i; nr' .<)
tbJwIrHEEvANSGHEWCALCo. branw. Not cut
CINCINNATI,O Sold by »> .iMts,
\ U.S.A. * Y or sent in plain -vrapper
express, pr» • ; d. so
<>o, or 3 bo’ : r
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM R. r.. CO
(Pine Monutain Route.)
Effective June 5. 1898.
4 15 pm| Macon Ar|lo 40 am
4 20 pmjLv Sofkee LvjlO 14 am
546 pmjLv ... .Colloden.... Lvl 909 am
5 57 pm Lv ...Yatesville... Lvl 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... Lv| 6 00 am
8 07 pm Ar Griffin Lv| 6 50 am
9 45 pm Ar Atlanta Lv| 5 20 am
SOUTHER.. RAILWAY.
4 20 amjLv .... Atlanta ....Ar| 9 40 am
6 03 pmjLv Griffin Lv| 9 52 am
5 25 pm|Lv ....Columbus.... Lv| 9 o 0 am
6 49 pm|Lv .Warm Springs. Lv|‘ 8 06 am
707 pmjLv.. ..Woodbury.. . Ar| 7 48 am
7 27 pm|Ar ..Harris City.. Lv| 7 28 am
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA?
7 45 pmjAr ...Greenville... Lvl 7 10 am
5 20 pmlLv ....Columbus.... Ar| 9 40 am
727 pm|Lv . .Harris -City.. Ar| 728 am
_B_2o pm 'Ar.... LaGrange.... Lv| 635 am
Close connection at Macon and Sofkee
with the Georgia Southern and Florida
Centrad 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 rallwoy,
for Greenville and Columbus, at Wood
bury with Southern railway for Colum
bus and Griffin, at LaGrange with th*
Atlanta and West Point railway.
JULIAN R. LANE,
General Manager,
Macon. Ga
M. J. CHANCEY,
General Passenger Agent.
News and Opinions
OF
National Importance.
THE SUN
ALONE
Contains Both.
Daily, by mail $6 a year
D’ly a-nd Sunday,by mail..sß a year
The Sunday Sun
is the greatest Sunday Newspaper
in tte world.
Price 5c a copy. By mail $2 a year
AddreM THE SUN, New York.
w * ■ .... 7 H I
Kind You Have
Always Bought
simflating the Food #
ting lhe SloiiUidiiifindßove'SQf 1 t til 6 <
~ -’"T - !’ Signature
Promotes Digestion,Gieentd- °
ness and Rest. Contains neither & n a E
Opmrri.Morphine norFfineral. |J| 01
Not Narcotic. 1 i
Aape aT Old TYSAKITLPirCffi'Jt H
dlx.Scw 1 .*a •
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dnite ft
P-pfcrmint ~ > kJ . Hl | » j [J Q
J9t < I * ; ifel I K u £ B
HvmSeed - I F' 15 ft J 3 II I V
Cltrnfud . I |v. l kA. 9
HiiAyzww rs,i;vr. ! I Sw R If *
Apcrfrcf Remedy for Cons tipa- t J 'M S rk all (1
tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, rj a lAj
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- a K- V II
ncss and Loss OF SLEEP. fny HAVR
Facsimile Signature of O
iAlways
-Ol Southern R’y.
>• Schedule in Effect July 6, 1898
CENTRAL TIME
READ DOWN. READ UP.
No. 7 | No. f 6 | No. 9 | No. 13 | West. ~ | No. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No. 10 '
7 10pm| 4 45pm| 8 00am| 2 05am|Lv.. Macon ..Ar| 2 05am| 8 20am|10 55 am | 7 16pnT
9 45pm| 7 45pm|10 40amj 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lvjll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm
7 50am|10 00pm| 4 00pm| 4 20am|Lv.. Atlanta. Ar|ll 50pm| a 00am| |ll 40am
10 20am| 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Rome.. Lv| 0 40pm| 1 44am| | 9 00am
11 30 am | 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pmjl2 10am| | 750 am
1 00pm| 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Ghat’nooga Lv| 7 30pm|10 00pm| | 8 00pm
7 10pm| 7 IQpmj 7 40am| |Ar .Memphis . Lv| | 9 15am| | 8 00pm
4 30pm| |SOO am [ |Ar Lexington. Lv| |lO 50am| 110 40pnT
7 50pm| | 7 50am| |Ar Louisville. Lv| | 7 40am| | 745 pm
7 30pm| | 7 30am| |Ar Tluci nnati Lv| | 8 30am| | 8 00am
9 25pm| | 7 25pm|., |Ar Anniston .. Lv| | 6 32pm| | 8 00am
11 45am| |lO 00pm| | Ar Birm’ham Lv| j 4 15pm| | 6 00am
8 05amj | 1 10am| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 71)0am| 7 40pm|."L | 740 pm
I 7 10pm| 2 10am| 8 35am|Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am| 2 00am| |
■••••••• I | 3 22am|10 05am|Lv Cochran.. Lv| 3 20pm|12 55am| |
I j |lO 45am|Ar Hawk’ville Lv| 2 50pm| | |
I I 3 54am|10 50am|Lv. Eastman. Lv| 2 41pm|12 25am| |
I | 4 29am|ll 36am|Lv.. Helena.. Lv| 2 03pm|ll 54pm| |
I I 6 45am| 2 38pm|Lv.. Jesup... Lv|ll 22am| 9 43pm| |
I I 7 30am| 3 30pm|Lv Everrett.. Lv|lo 45am| 9 05pm| |
I | 8 30am| 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| 6 50pm| |
I I 9 40am| 9 25am|Ar Jack’ville. Lv| 8 00am| 6 50pm| | ~~
I N 0.7 | No. 9 | NoTI3 | Ease? | No. 16 | No. 10 |“.T7..’.J........
I 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05am|Lv7r~Macon7?~Ar| 8 20am| 71 Opmj |
I 9 45pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20am| 4 20pm| |
I 9 £sam| 8 30pm| 6 10pm|Lv Charlotte Lv|lo 15am| 9 35am| |......
I l_3opm|l2 OOn’tjll 25pm|Lv . Danville. Lvj 6 07pm| 5 50am| |
I 6 25pmj 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 10n,n| |
• I 5 30pm| 7 35am|?~.....*.[Ar..~ff0r tolk~.~Lv~| 9~3oam|~lo~ddpm| j
I 3 50j 1 53am| |Lv. .Lynch burg Lv| 3 55pm] 3 40amj |
I 5 48pm| 3 35am| .‘.|Lv Charl’ville Lv| 2 15pm| 1 50pm| |
I 9 25 pm | 6 42am| |Ar Washgton. Lv|ll 15am|10 43pm| e |
I 3 00am|10 15am| |Ar Phila dlphia Lv 3 50am] 6 55pml |
I 6 20am|12 45n ’n| |Ar New York Lv|l2 15am| 4 30pm| |
I 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lv| 5 OOpmilO OOaml |
THROUGH CAR SERVICES. ETC.
Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars be tv rn Cuanauuoga and Jackson rift
also between Atlanta and Brunswick berths may tx ved to j. Mken a"
Macon.
Nos. 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween au and
*Jos. 9 and 10, elegant free Observauo; :ars. between Macon and Atlanta, also
Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta &nd Cincinnati. C*- aects in Union d pot
At.anta, with “Southwestern Vestibuied Limited," inest i tastes' ht
South.
Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot « ’ S Past Mai. train” to and
from the East.
Nos. 7 and 6, Pullman sleeping cars between Mavuu and Asheville.
FRANK S. GANNON, 3d V. P. & G. M., J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washingon, D. C Washington. D. C
W’. A. TURK, G. P. A., S. H. HARDWICK, A. G ' A..
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
CLIFTON, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon Ga. 555 Mulberry St., Macon. G*
€ Central of Georgia
Railway Company
Schedules in Effect June 12, 189 b-, Standard Ti»> e
90th Meridian.
~- 6 I 7 ‘l No. I*| STATIONS | No. 2•; .1 Ne g
9A am! i VJa 1 ” 11 ', 7 50 am^ v Macon .. ,Ar| 7 25 pm| 7 40 ami 3 50 pm
12 24 pm 840 pm 850 amiAr ....Fort Valley Lvl 627 pml 639 am| 2 42 P pm
!9 30 Pm l’ I 9 4° « m A Ar - 7 Lvj! 445 pm| !U 3 0
"•"I""', I, 5 50 pm|Ar. . .B’m ham. . .Lvl 9 30 am| j
1»2 pm; 957 pm |Ar.. Amer leus ....Lv| 5 anil "1i fiv'nm
!2 17 pm, 10 21 pm |Ar.. .Smit hville ..Lvl j' 455
3 27 pml 11 05 pm |Ar ....Albany ...Lv.... 4 15 Sf H 35 am
306 pml • ]Ar .. .Daw son ....Lv| I 1 11 co
346 pm] | | A r ... ath bert ...Lv n n
’OO pm, No 9 * |Ar .. .Fort Gaines . ,Lv| NolO*hhh’" 955
37 7 45 am Ar ... .Euf aula ... .Lvl 7 30 pm 10 20 am
7°2r P nml I 905 ftm|Ar •-Union Springs Lv] «00 pm ..i.*.*:.*.*:.* 9 0 5i am
730 P m l 110 35 am|Ar.. Montgomery ..Lvj 420 pin ... i.i ii|7 40 am
No. 11.*l No. J.*| No. l.*| j No. 2.*| No 4 Nr 12 •
800 am 425 ami 420 pm|Lv ... .Macon. . ..Ar| 11 10 am 11 10’nm 720 nm
922 am 540 am| 540 pm|Lv. .Barnesville . .Lv| 945 r 945 nm' «b'
•12 00 m 12 00 m] 710 pm Ar... .Thom aston I 8 10 am' t ’OO nm
955 am 608 ami 613 pm|Ar. .. Griffin. . ..Ly|‘ 9U S pm ’SS pm
11 20 am| 735 am] 735 pmjAr., , Atlanta. .
No. 6. ! No. 4. •( No. 2*j —_ —jj-- ——l -
730pm1138pm 11 25 am]Lv. .. .Macon. . ..Arj .‘.7„ 555 am 7 4°5 am
810 pm 12 19 am 12 08 p m| Ar. . ..Gordon. .. .al[ 400 pm 210 Im 710 am
8 50 pm ! 1 15 pmjAr. .Milled geville .Lv ! 3 00 ?m 6 20 am
10 00 pm ! 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eato nton. .
•11 25 am. Hl 38 pm *ll 25 amLv. .. Macon . .. ArFF4S
117 pm 130amf 117 pm'Lv. . .Ten nilie Lv| 156 pm 152 am 156 pm
2 30 pm. 225 am 230 pm.Lv. . Wadley. .. .Lvlfl2 55 pm 12 25 am 12 55
251 pm, 244 am 251 pm;Lv. .. Mid ville. . Lv| 12 11 pm 12 25 am 12 11
330 pm, 335 am _4 M pm.Lv.. .Millen .. ..Lv 11 35 am 11 50 pm|sll 30
s 4 17 pm ( 442 am ao3pm Lv .Maynesooro ..Lv] 10 10 am 10 34 pm 10 47 am
s 5 30 pm; 630 am,! 6aO pm,Ar.. ..Augusta .. .Lvl !8 20 am 840 pm 930 am
m 1 11 14 pm|
m 1
I 600 am; 600 pm|Lv.. .Savannah. ~Lv| 845 am| 900 pm |
No. 16. *| “ | No. 15. • “j
-...! 12 00 m|Ar .. .Eatonton .. .Lv ! 3 30 pm ......... j.".**’,’.’*.*”
• Dally. ! Daily except Sunday, f al station, a Sunday only” ~
Solid trains are run to ands from Macon and Montgomery via Eufaula Sa van
nah and Atlanta via Macon, Macon and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Birmlng
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 accv
paney in Macon depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengers arriving in Macon on No 3 and Ss
vannah on No. 4, are allowed to remain iusleeper until 7a. 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 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 schedules to points beyond our lines, address
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macon, Ga. w p BONNFR T T a
B. H. HINTON. Traffic Manager ' j c <3 P A
THEO. D. KLINE. G-n-rai aurerir.o. u oeD»' *
WHTCHES. JEWELRY.
Right Prices.
Honest Goods.
BEELAND, the Jeweler,
Triangular Block.
DIRffIONDS. CUT-GLASS.
01 - 1 y sure and
ramoYiL
MOTI , 5 PaJUNYB.OYAL PILLS and take no otL.
fog, circular. Pr» j J.1.0U per box, 6 boxes for £S.Jo.
DR MOTT’S <JX-I3£r. ICAL CO., - Cleveland. Ohic
For sale by H. J. LAMAR & SONS Wholesale Agents.
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.
‘ CHOICE
Wedding Gifts
In Sterling Silver ’
cll Cnt G^ ass -
Invite you to call and inspect our
i A beautiful new goods. We taka pleasure In
" showing them to you whether you wish to
I ' purchase or not.
J H & W. W. WILLIAMS,
352ISecon d* Street.
CoastTineto MackinS
NEW STEEL The Greatest Perle*
PASSENGER tlon»•»attained tn
STEAMERS Boat Constructions
Luxurious. Equip*
SPEED, mont, Artistic Fur*
COMFORT / niching,Decoretloc
and safety ( cndEfflclentSsndcc
To Detroit, Mackinac, Georgian Bay, Petoskey, Chicago
Ns sthsr Line offers a Panorama of 400 miles of equal variety and interest.
taw Trt>s >er Weak Batwaaa Irsry Day and Day and Night ftsrvfsa Bstwaaa
Toled., Detroit ma Mackinac cKK? DETROIT AND CLEVEUNB
™ui, ..T.l,»«Put-in-Bay
A. D DLLCTH. »nd Toledo. _ConneetiOM »re made at OeTelMd with
LOW SATIS t. FlaiKr.aqu. VaaUaaa aad Earliest Trains for all points East, South
Return, taaludlnn ■salt and Barlki. Annr.x. and at Detroit for all pointe
(mat. Coat from t'l.y.Und, 0111 fm Tolad., North and Northwest.
SUj fr.aa Detrait, Sll.so. Sunday Trips Anne, July, Annat. ,
j - SeytMab.r and Oatobar Only.
A. A. SONSNTZ. e. W. DETROIT- MICH. Deiroli ono Cleveland ioviooiion coiopov
Tne News Printing Co.
P IntcL uaO Pub.sui.rs.
WIL .- »- R IXi .
BRIEFJ, BOOKS,
FOLDERS, STATEMENTS,
PAMPHLETS, CIRCULARS,
CARDS, CHECKS, ENVELOPES,
LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS
AND
AijH ii fc Priiiifs Lin
On Short Notice,
At Low Prices,
In Artistic Style
We have added to our Plant a Well-Equippdd
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
volume to a paper back pamphlet.
A Trial is All We Ask.
NEWS PRINTING CO