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GOOD HANDED DOWN.
OR. TALMAGE PREACHES ON INFLU
ENCE OF HEREDITY.
*G rand tn of hem a Mighty Power Fnr Good
or Evil-—Woman’s Qualities Transmitted
U> Her Children—A Mother’s Great lie
"l'OUMiblllty.
ICcpyright, 1898, by American Frees Asso
ciation.]
Washington, Oct. 9. —The augmenta
tion of parental influence as the centuries
go by Dr. Talmage here sets forth whilo
discoursing about one of the grandmoth
ers of Blblctimes. The textis II Timothy
i, 5. “The unfeigned faith that is in thee,
which dwelt first in thy grandmother
Lois.”
In this pastoral letter which Paul, the
old minister, is writing to Timothy, the
young minister, the family record is
brought out. Paul practically says:
“Timothy, what a good grnndiqother you
had’ You ought to be better than most
folks, because not only was your mother
good, but your grandmother was good
al.-’. Two preceding generations of piety
ought to give you a mighty push in the
right direction.” The fact was that Timo
thy needed encouragement. lie was in
poor health, having a weak stomach, and
was a dyspeptic, and Pau! prescribed for
him tonic, “a little wine for thy st.om
»•!.'■> -..?.e”—not much Wine, but a little
wine, am! only as a iui dicine. And if the
wine then had been as much adulterated
with h ..'wood and strychnine as cur mod
ern wines ho would not have prescribed
any
J at Timothy, nor strong physically, is
er. louraged spiritually by the recital of
grai imot I.erly excellence, Paul hinting to
htn , as I hint this to you, t hat God soilie
t:ce-, gather.■> upas in a reservoir, away
back of the active generations of today, a
godly influence and then, in response to
player, leiadown the power upon children
and grandchildren and great-grandchil
dren The world is woes illy in want of a
Sable of statistics in regard to what is the
/>roiroutedness and immensltyof influence
of ..mu good woman in the church and
world We have accounts of how much
evil has been wrought by a woman who
lived nearly a hundred years ago, and of
how many criminals her descendants fur
nished for the penitentiary and the gal
lows, and how many hundreds of thou
i-ands of dollars they cost our country in
their arraignment and prison support, as
well as in the property they burglarized
and destroyed, but will not someone come
out with brain comprehensive enough
ar.l heart warm enough and pen keen
enough to give us the facts in regard to
seme good woman of a hundred years ago
and let us know how many Christian men
and women and reformers and useful peo
ple have been found among her descend
ants. and how many asylums and colleges
and churches they built, and how many
millions of dollars they contributed for
humanitarian and Christian purposes)*
Good Women’s Influence.
The good women whose tombstones
were planted in the eighteenth century are
more alive for good in the nineteenth cen
iury than they were before, as the good
women of this nineteenth century will be
more alive for good in the twentieth cen
tury than now. Mark you, I have no idea
that the grandmothers were any better
than their granddaughters. You cannot
f.n t very old people to talk much about
how things were when they wen* boys and
girls. They have a reticence and a non
onmmittulism which make me think they
feel themselves to be the custodians of rhe
reputation of their early comrades. While
our dear old folks are rehearsing the follies
of the present, if we put them on the wit
ness stand and cross examine them as to
how things were 70 years ago the silence
becomes oppressive.
The celebrated Frenchman, Volney, vis
ited this country in 1790, and he says of
■woman’s diet in those times, “If a pre
mium was offered for a regimen most de
structive to health, none could be devised
more efficacious for these ends than that
in use among these people.” Thateclipses
cmr lobster salad at midnight. Everybody
talks about the dissipation of modern so
ciety and how womanly health goes
down under it, but it was worse 100 years
Ego, for the chaplain of a French regi
ment in our I?evolutionary war wrote in
17b2 in his “Book of American Women,”
living: “They are tall and well propor
’ ioi ed; their features are generally regu
lar; their complexions are generally fair
and v ithout color. At. 20 years of age the
•women have no longer the freshness of
youth. At 30 or 40 they are decrepit.” In
181” a foreign consul wrote a book en
tithd'-A Sketch of the United States at
the Commcneeim nt of the Present Cen
tury,” and he says of the women of those
times, “At the age of 30 all their charms
have disappeared.” One glance at the
portraits of the women 100 years ago, and
their stylo of dress makes us wonder how
they ever got their breath. All this makes
me think that the express rail train is no
mere an improvement on the old canal
boat, or the telegraph no more an im
provement on the eld time saddlebags
than the women of our day are an im
provement on the women of the last cen
tury.
A Glorious Hare.
But still, notwithstanding that those
times wore so much worse than ours, there
was a glorious race of godly women 70
and 160 years ago who held the world
back from sin and lifted it toward virtue,
and without their exalted and sanctified
Influen *e before this the last good influ
ence would have perished from the earth.
Indeed all over this land there are seated
today—not so much in churches, for many
of them are too feeble to come—a great
many aged grandmothers. They some
times feel that the world has gone past
them, and they have an idea that they are
of little account. Their head sometimes
gets aching from the racket of the grand
children down stairs or in the next room.
They steady themselves by the banisters
ns they go up and down. When they get
n cold, it hangs on them longer than it
used to. They cannot bear to have the
grandchildren punished, even when they
deserve it, and have so relaxed their ideas
of family discipline that they would spoil
all the youngsters of the household by too
great leniency.
These old folks are the resort when
great troubles come, and then.' is a calm
ing and soothing power in the touch of an
aged hand that is almost supernatural
They feel they are almost through with
the journey of life and read the eld book
more than they used to, hardly knowing
which most they enjoy, the Old Testament
or the New, and often stop and dwell tear
fully over the family record half way be
tween. We hail them today, whether in
the house of God or at the homestead.
Blessed Is that household that has in it a
grandmother Lois. Where she is angels
are hovering round and God is in the
room Muy her last days be like th
lovelv autumnal days that we call Indian
summer. .
| ..—. - ‘
A iw UsACAfe W *JI U*«l X J 1
things—swing open a picture gallery of
the wrinkled faces and st xjp -d shoulders
of the past and call down from their heav
enly thrones the godly grandmothers, to •
give them our thunks, and then to per
suade the mothers cf today that they are
living for all time, and that against the
sld'-s of every cradle in which a child is
rocked beat the two eternities?
For Good or KviL
Here we have an untried, undiscussed
and unexplored subject. You often hear
about your influence upon your own chil
dren. lam not talking about that. What
about your influence upon the twentieth
Century, upon the thirtieth century, upon
the fortieth century, upon the year 2,000, i ‘
upon the year 4,000, if the world lasts so ’
long. The world stood years before j '
Christ came. It Is not unreasonable to
suppose that it may stand 4,000 years aft- | ,
er his arrival. Four thousand years the
world swung off in sin, 4,000 years it may
be swinging back into righteousness. By
the ordinary rate of multiplication of the 1
i world's population in a century your do- ■ ■
scendantfi .wili be over 300, and by two I 1
centuries over 50,000, and upon every one* ■ 1
of them you, the mother of today, will ' ;
have an influence for good or evil. And if
in four centuries your descendants shall
have with their names filled a scroll of
i hundreds of thousands will some angel
from heaven, to whom is given the capac- i
ity to calculate the number of the stars
of heaven and the sands of the seashore,
step down ami tell us how many descend
ants you will have in the four thousandth
year of the world’s possible continuance?
Do not let the grandmothers any longer
think that they are retired and sit clear.
I Aack out of sight from the world, feeling
that they have no relation to it. The !
mothers of the last century are today in j
the person of their descendants, in the sen
ates, the parliaments, the palaces, the pul
pits, the banking houses, the professional i
I chairs, the prisons, the almshouses, the
company of midnight brigands, the cellars,
the ditches of this century. You have .
i been thinking about the importance of j
having the right influence upon one nurs
ery. You have been thinking of the im
portance of getting those two little feet on
the right path. You have been thinking
cf your child’s destiny for the next sb years
if it should pass on to be an octogenarian.
That is well, but mv subject sweeps a
thousand years, a million years, a quad
rillion of years I cannot stop at one
i cradle. lam looking at the cradles that
reach all around the world and across all
time. I am not talking of Mother Eunice.
lam talking of Grandmother Lois. The
only way you can tell the force of a cur
rent is by sailing up stream or the force
of an ocean wave by running the ship
against it. Running along with it, wecan
. not appreciate the force. In estimating
maternal influence we generally run along
with it down the stream cf time, and so
we don’t understand the full force. Let
: us come up to it from the eternity side.
| after it has l>een working on for centuries,
ftiSd see all the good it has done and all the
evil it has accomplished multiplied in
' magnificent or appalling compound inter
. est.
Dike a Mighty River.
The difference between that mother’s -
influence on her chiidicn now and the in
fluence when it has been multiplied in
hundreds of thousands of lives is the dif
ference. between the Mississippi river away
up at the top of the continent starting
from the little Lake Itasca, seven miles
long and one wide, and its mouth at the ,
gulf of Mexico, where navies might ride. *
Between the birth of that river and its
burial in the sea the Missouri pours in,
and the Ohip pours in. and the Arkansas
pours in, and the Bed and White and the
Y’azoo rivers pour in, and all the states
am! territories between the Alleghany and ,
Rocky mountains make contribution.
Now. in order to test the power of a moth
er’s influence, we need to come in off the
ocean of eternity and sail up toward the
one cradle, and we will find 10,600 tribu- ;
taries of influence pouring in and pouring
down. But it is, after all, one great river'
of power rolling on and rolling forever.
Who can fathom it? Who can bridge it?
Who can stop it? Had not mothers better
be intensifying lheir prayers? Had they
not better be elevating their example?
Had they not better be rousing themselves
with the consideration that by their faith
fulness or neglect they are starting an in
fluence which will be stupendous after the
last mountain cf earth is fiat, and the last
sea has dried up, and the last flake cf the
ashes of a consumed world shall have been
blown away, and all (ha telescopes of other
worlds directed to the track around which
our world once swung shall discover not
i so much as a cinder of the burned down
■ and swept oil planet? In Ceylon there is
! a granite column 36 square feet in size
which is thought by the natives to decide j -
the world’s continuance. An angel with I
robes spun from zephyrs is once a century :
to descend and sweep the hem cf that robe i
. across the granite, and when by that at- I ,
trition rhe column is worn away they say 1
time will end But by that process that
granite column would be worn out of ex
istence before mother s influence will be-
: gin to give way
Mother’s influence.
If a mother tell a child if he is not good l
■ some bugaboo will come and catch him,
the fear excited may make the child a I
coward, and the fact that he finds that I
there is no bugaboo may make him a liar, :
and the echo of that false alarm may be j <
heard after 15 generations have been born |
and have expired. If a mother promises a ‘
i child a reward for good behavior and after i
the good behavior forgets to give the re- ’
ward, the cheat may crop out in some i
faithlessness half a thousand years farther .
i on. If a mother cultivate a child’s vanity
and eulogize his curls and extol the night !
black or sky blue or nut brown of the ■
child’s eyes and call out in his presence
the admiration of spectators, pride and ar- 1
rogance may be prolonged after half a doz
en family records have been obliterated. If
a mother express doubt about some state
ment of the Holy Bible in a child’s pres
ence. long after the gates of this cal
era have closed and the gates of another ;
era have opened the result may be seen in ;
a champion blasphemer. But. on the ofher !
hand, if a mother walking with a child i
see a suffering one by the wayside and
says, “My child, give that 10 cent piece to
that lame boy,’’ the result may lx' seen on
the other side of the following century in
some George Muller building a whole vil
lage »?f orphanages.. If a mother sit almost
every evening by the trundle bed of a
child and teach it lessons of a Saviour s .
love and a Saviour's example, of the im- ■
portanco of truth uad tb.c horror cf a lie ;
and the virtue.- of industry and kindness
and sympathy and self sacrifice, long after
the mother has gone and the child has |
gone and the lettering on both the tomb
stones shail have been washed our by the
storms of innumerab e winters there may i
be standing us a result of these trundle ■
bed kessens flaming evangels, world mov- |
ing rest rmers. seraphic Summerfields, ’
weeping Paysons. thundering Whitefields,
omancipating Wash • ngtons.
God Never Forfitct*.
Good or bad influence may skip one gen- i
| eruticn or two generations, but it will be j
Mft.cn-- — MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER xo 'HcB |
sme uud m tue enud or louvch genera
tion. juat as the Ten Commandments,
speaking of the visitation of God on fami
lies. says nothing about tbe second gen
eration, but entirely skips the second and
speaks of the third and fourth generation
—“visiting the iniquities of the fathers
upon the third and fourth generation of
them that hate me.” Parental influence,
right and wrong, may jump over a gen
eration, but it will come down further on
as sure as you sit there and I stand here.
Timothy’s ministry was projected by his
grandmother, Lois. There are men and
women here, the sons and daughters of
the Christian church, who are such as a
result of the consecration of great-great
grandmothers. Why, who do you think
the Lord is? You talk as though his mem
ory was weak. He can as easily remem
ber a prayer offered five centuires ago as a
prayer offered five minutes ago. This ex
plains what we often see—some man or
woman distinguished for benevolence
when the father and mother were distin
guished far penuriousness, or you see some
young man or woman with a bud father
and a hard mother come out gloriously for
Christ and make the church sob and shout
and sing under their exhortations. We
stand in corners of tbe vestry and whisper
over the matter fend say, “How is this,
such great piety in sons and daughters of
such parental worldliness and sin?” I
will explain it to you if you will fetch me
the old family Bible containing the full
record. Let some septuagenarian look
with me clear upon the page of births and
marriages ami tell me who that woman
was with the old fashioned name of Je
mima or Betsy or Mehitafiel. Ah, there
she is, the old grandmother, or great
grandmother, who had enough religion
saturate a century.
Transmitted Power.
There she is, the dear old soul, Grand
mother Lois. In beautiful Greenwood
cemetery there is the resting place of
George W. Bethune, once a minister of
Brooklyn Heights, his name never spoken
among intelligent Americans without sug
gesting two things—eloquence and evan
gelism. In the same tomb sleeps his
grandmother. Isabella Graham, who was
the chief inspiration of his ministry. Y’ou
are not surprised at the poetry and pathos
and pulpit power cf the grandson when
you read of the faith and devotion cf his
wonderful ancestress. When you read this
letter, in which she poured out her widow
ed sou! in loggings for a son’s salvation,,
yon will not vender that succeeding gen
erations have been blessed:
“New York, May 20, 17&.
“This day my only son left me in bitter
wringings of heart. He is again launched
on the ocean—God’s ocean. The Lord
saved him from shipwreck, brought him
to my home and allowed me onco more to
indulge my affections (.ver him. He has
been with me but a short time, and ill
have I improved it; he is gone from my
sight, and my heart bursts with tumultu
ous grief. Lord, have mercy on the wid
ow's son, The only son of his mother.’
“I ask nothing in all this world for
him; I repeat my petition, Save his soul
alive, give him salvation from sin. It is
net the danger of the seas that distresses
me; it is not the hardships he must un
dergo; it is not the dread of never seeing
him more in ‘his world; it is because I
cannot discern the fulfillment of the
promise in him. I cannot-discern tbe new
birth nor its fruit, but every symptom of
captivity to satan, the world and self will.
This, this is what distresses me, and in
connection with this his being shut out
’from ordinances at a distance from Chris
tians. Shut up with those who forget
God, profane his name and break his Sab
baths. Men who often live and die like
beasts, yet ere accountable creatures, who
must answer for every moment of time
and every word, thought and action. Oh,
Lord, many wonders hast thou shown me;
thy ways of dealing with me and mine
have not been common ones; add this
wonder to the rest. Cail, convert, regener
ate and establish a sailor in the faith.
Lord, all things are possible with thee.
GrcVify thy Son Slid extend his kingdom
by sea and land. Take the prey from the
strong. I roll him over upon thee. Many
friends try to comfort me; miserable com
forters are they all. Thou art the God of
consolation. Only confirm to me thy
precious word, on which thou causedst
me to hope in the day when thou saidst
to me, ‘Leave thy fatherless children, I
will preserve them alive.’ Only let this
life be a spiritual life, and I put a blank
in thy hand as to all temporal things.
“I wait for thy salvation.- Amen.”
With such a grandmother, would you
not have a right to expect a George W.
Bethune? And all the thousands convert
ed through his ministry may date the sav
ing powt r back to Isabella Graham.
God fill the earth and the heavens with
such grandmothers) We must
go up and thank these dear old souls.
Surely God will let us go up and tell them
of the results of their influence. Among
our first questions in heaven will bo,.
“Where is grandmother?” They will
point her out, for we would hardly know
her. even if we had seen her on earth, so
bent over with years once and there so
straight, so dim cf eye through the blind
ing of earthly tears and now her eye as
clear as heaven, so full of aches and pains
once and now so agile with celestial
health, the wrinkles blooming into carna
tion roses and her step like the roe on the
mountains. Yes, I must see her, my
grandmother on ray father’s side, Mary
McCoy, descendant of the Scotch. When
I first spoke to an audience in Glasgow,
Scotland, and felt somewhat diffident, be
ing a stranger, I began by telling them
my grandmother was a Scotchwoman, and
then there went up a shout of welcome
which made me feel as easy as I do here.
I must see her.
Make Religion an Heirloom.
Y’ou must see those women of the early
part of the nineteenth century and those of
the eighteenth century,the answer of whose
prayers is in your welfare today. God
bless all the aged women up and down
the land and in all lands! What a happy
thing for Pomponius Atticus to say when
making tbe funeral address of his mother.
‘ Though I have reside,! with her 67 years, I
was never once reconciled to her, because
there never happened the least discord be
tween us, and consequently there was no
need of reconciliation.”
Make it as easy tor the old folks as you
can.* When they are sick, get for them the
best doctors. Give them your arm when
the streets are slippery. Stay with them
all the time you can. Go home and see the
folks. Find the place for them in the
hymnbook. Never be ashamed if they
prefer styles of apparel which are a little
antiquated. Never say anything that im
plies that they are in the way. Make the
road for the last mile as smooth as you
can. Oh, my, how you will miss her when
she is gone! How much would I give to
see my mother! I have so many things I
would Hke to tell her, things that have
happened in the 30 years since she went
away. Morning, neon and night let us
thank God for the good influences that
have come down from good mothers all
the way back. Timothy, don’t forget your
mother Eunice and don’t forget your
! grandmotner Lois. And hand down to
, others this patrimony of blessing. Pass
k along the coronets. Make religion an heir
| loom from generation to generation.
, Mothers, consecrate yourselves to God. and
, you will help consecrate all the ages fol
> lowing. Do not dwell so much on your
hardships that you miss your chance of
wielding an influence that shall look down
upon you from the towers of an endless
future. I know Martin Luther was right
when he consoled his wife over the death
of their daughter by saying: “Don’t take
’ on so. wife. Remember that this is a hard
world for girls. ” Yes, I go further and
> say it is a hard world for women. Aye. I
go further and say it. is a hard world for
men. But for all women and men who
trust their souls in the hand of
Christ the gates will soon swing
| open. Don't you see the sickly pallor on
I the sky? That is the pallor on the cold
cheek of the dying night. Don’t you see
the brightening of the clouds? That is the
flush on the warm forehead of the morn
ing. Cheer up! You are coming within
sight of the Celestial City.
O A S ’!• O 3FL X A .
Bears she The Kind Yon Have Always Bought 1
T" '
SPECIAL TRAINS
i io ths Carnival, Via. Central of Georgia
Railway.
The Central of Georgia Railway has ar
i ranged to run special trains as follows to
. Macon during the Carnival:
I Special from Atnens October 11th, 12th
■ «.nd 13th at 5:30 a, m., from Covington at
I 6:30 a. m.; arriving Macon 9:30 a. m. Re
[ turning, leave Macon at 10:30 p. m.
Special from Machen via Eatonton and
Milledgeville, 11th, 12th and 13th, 4:45 a.
m., arriving Macon 7:45 -a. m. Returning
leave Macon 7:30 p. m.
Special from Columbus 12th and 13th,
5:30 a. m., arriving Macon 9:05 a. m. Re
turning leave Macon 10:30 p. m.
Special leave Millen October 5:30 a. m.,-
arriving Macon 9:00 a: m. Returning leave
Macon 10:30 p. m.
In addition to the above, special train
will leave Macon for Atlanta, cxfnneeting
for Thomaston, on the 13th and 14th at
10:30 p. m.
Second division, train No. 7, due to leave
Macon at 7:40 p. m., will leave on the
nights of 13th and 14th at 10:20 p. m.
Persons going to Eatonton and Milledge
ville may leave Macon by regular No. 4 at
11:38 p. m. on the'nights of the 12th and
13th, special having been arranged to run
from Gordon to Eatonton on arrival of No.
4 at Gordon.
J. C. Haile, G. P. A.
If you don’t care to be both
ered with that tiap and yet i
want it decorated in the most
artistic manner turn it over
to the Macon Carnival Decor
ating and Contracting Com
-1 pany —Sims, Dennicke and
other 'decorators in charge of
this work. Leave orders at
1 Powers’ Curiosity Shop. •
DIAMOND JUBILEE CARNIVAL.
Macon. Ga.. October 11. 12, 13 and 14.
For the above occasion the Central Rail
way Company will sell round trip tickets
from all -stations on their line at very
low rates. On October 11, 12 and 13 fle
ets can be purchased for less than one
fare final limit October 15th. Tickets will
also be sold each day of the carnival for
one fare, with final limit October 16th.
For exact figures apply to nearest station
agent or address
J. G. CARLISLE.
Traveling Passenger Agent.
Three Doctors in Consultation.
From Benjamin Franklin.
“When you are sick what you like best
is to be chosen for a medicine in the first
place; what experience tells you is best
to be chosen in the second place; what
- reason (i. e., Theory) says is best is to
' be chosen in the last place. But if you can
get Dr. Inclination, Dr. Experience and
• Dr. Reason to hold a consultation to
j gether , they will give you the best ad
i vice that can be taken.”
I When you have a bad cold Dr. Inclina
: tion would recommend Dr. Chamberlain’s
! Cough Remedy, because it is pleasant and
‘ safe to take. Dr. Experience would recom
mend it because it never fails 'to effect a
speedy and permanent cure. Dr. Reason
would recommend it because it is pre- i
pared on scientific principles and acts on
nature’s plan in relieving the lungs,
opening the secretions and restoring the
system to a natural and healthy condi
tion. For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons,
druggists.
Wanted,
To buy or rent, by a young
white farmer with family, a
small farm, with improve-
I ments, about 25 or 50 acres,
I within fifteen miles of Ma
< con. Address “Cliff,” care
News.
■ I IV 'I \'
In n —v
' FU '
I j
It Is not too early to consider what to
order for the
I
Fall Season
and where to order.
We lay claim to your patronage by reas
on of the possession of a line of
Imported Suitings
which are wonderfully attractive. The
goods are such as will proclaim ihe wearer
■ a maai of taste and the fit and cut make it
j certain that the garments were made by ■
artists.
I GEO. P. BURDICK & GO.,
I Importing Tailors.
A Snap Shot
* <
At our extensive display of rare offerings for seoson Fall
1898 will develop a picture of perfect distinctiveness, show
ing in bold relief numerous groups of stylish, well fitting
ann elegantly trimmed DRESS AND BUSINESS
SUITS, beautiful NECKWEAR, up todate HATS.
Medium and Lightweight UNDERWEAR and scores
of otner useful articles at exceeding!}* fair and reasonable
price.
Your inspection of offerings will prove a pleasant and
profitable experience to you. Yours to serve,
1 in* 1 iimy
. I
DRY GOODS.
HUTHNfINCE & ROUNTREE
IXM give 1 *r sgfeA
TRADING STAMPS.
Also forty other merchants in Macon give
Stamps with all cash purchases. Ask for a
book. Save your Stamps and get an elegant
Clock, Lamp, Oak Table, Onyx Table, Watch,
Set of China, Morris Chair, or any one of the
numerous elegant presents we give away.
Office —Goodwyn’s Drug Store.
Buy your drugs from Goodwyn’s and get trad
ing stamps.
| J - T- CALLAWAY, -
In BANK, STORE'AND OFFICE FIXTURES.
| lira --4 TYPEWRITERS. J
j |H x,« scales, desks. 1 pffe :
k . SAFES CASH REGISTERS, 1 O
ELEVATORS. SHOW CASES. Jj pl|MUl_ |L_
bth iTjaJ-x/y
'Y~~. e ~ _p- — -
FOR RENT.
* *
DWELLINGS.
202 Cole street.
Gl2 Oglethorpe street.
719 Arch st., 6 rooms and kitchen. «
563 Arch st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
858 New St., 8 rooms and double kitchen.
855 Arch St., corner New, 12 rooms and
double kitchen.
135 Park Place, 6 rooms.
814 Cherry St., 5 rooms, 2 servants’ rooms
V* alker house, Cleveland avenue, 6 rooms
and kitchen.
966 Elm St., 7 rooms and kitchen.
758 Second st.. 8 rooms and kitchen.
459 New St., 5 rooms and kitchen.
457 New st., 5 rooms and kitchen.
136 Cole st., 5 rooms and kitchen.
1363 Oglethorpe st., 9 rooms and kitchen,
with stables.
417 Forsyth st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
664 Plum st., 7 rooms and kitchen.
*65 Spring st., 4 rooms and kitchen.
317 College st., 10 rooms and kitchen.
913 Walnut street, 10 rooms and kitchen.
917 Walnut st., 9 rooms and kitchen.
12 room house on Cherry street suitable
• for boarding, one block from business
portion of city.
Dr. Shorter’s residence on Orange street. •
H. HORNE,
315 Third Street.
e- F. fl. GiiitenDerger & Co.
452 Second St.
I have accepted the agency for the we’l
kaown Everett and Harvard pianos, and in
addition to other celebrated makes, such
as Sohraer & Co., Ivers & Pond and Bush
£_GrCsts, have the finest line of pianos ever
brought to the market. Lowest prices and
on easy terms. Have on hand a few second
hand pianos and organs I will close out
at a bargain. *
REMOVAL.
We have moved our office to No. 461 Second street, third door
from \\ illingham’s cotton warehouse, where we will still conduct a
real estate and insurance business.
J. S. BUDD & CO.
Phone 439.
Harris house, Vineville, Cleveland avenue.
Elegant 10 room dwelling of Capt. Park’s
on College street.
Irvine house, 7 rooms and kitchen, second
door from car line on Rogers avenue.
STORES.
I j 416-18 Third street.
Garden’s old stand, No. 173 Cotton avenue.
Mix's old stand, 107 Cotton avenue.
i A desirable suburban store and dwelling
> combined, on Columbus road, for rent
or sale, in thickly populated locality.
: 702-704 Fourth St., corner Pine.
417 Cherry.
419 Cherry.
421 Cherry.
125 Cotton avenue.
> | 469 Cotton avenue.
I 465 Cotton avenue.
421 Mulberry.
259 Second.
357 and 359 Second, will rent portion or all.
Elkan’s old store, rear Exchange bank.
Wolff & Happ building, half or all, will ar«
range suitable for tenants.
Stables near Cox & Chappell’s.
1 Walker house, Vineville, 6 rooms and
kitchen.
No. 415 Third street.
11