The Macon news. (Macon, Ga.) 189?-1930, October 24, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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Catarrh is Not Incurable But it can not bo cured by sprays, washes and inhaling mixture!* which reach only the surface. The disease is ' in the blood.-and can only be reach«*d I through the ld<Mxl, S. S. S. is the only remedy which can have any effect upon Catarrh ; it cures the disease penna* i nently nnd forever rids the system of ' every trace of the vile complaint. Miss Josie Owen, of Moatnelier. Ohio. I ... vnin, j write*: -I was af flicted from Infancy ■ with Catarrh, and no one can know the •offering it produce* better than I. Th* •prays and was bes<| prescribed by the doc- j tors relieved me only I •temporarily, and i though I uM/1 them j •onstantlv for •< > years. lw dim-M* had • firmer hold than ever. I tried a nutnl>er of blood remedies, bat their mineral ingndi. nW Settled in my !».-»,'><■< anti gave me rheumatism. | 1 was in a Inmerita' ><- '•..nditlon. and after ei- , haunting ail treatment, w>i .<i« «la od incurable, i Sr.-ing S s. H. n■ • • »l>—-<i as a cure for blood I dl-wnl decided to try it. As neon a« my ' •y-t.nl was Wilder the effect of the medicine. 1 1 lieffan to improve, and after taking It fol 1 two months 1 was cured completely, thr dreadful disease wtt s eradicated from my sys i Um, and I have liad no return of it." Mnny have been taking local treat ment for years, and find themselves < worse now than ever. A trial of S.S.S. r f he Blood will prove it to Im the right rpmedy for Catarrh. It will cure the most ob stinate Case. Books rnniled free to any address by Swift 'Specific Go., Atlanta, Ga. PULLMAN CAR LINE ©SB® Q/j < )*»»?■ ’lß!*fflv'tjx fwwit Raiikav BETWEEN Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or Louisville and Chicago am' THE NORTHWEST. Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains Parlor chairs and dining cars on da? trains. The Monon trains make the fast e«t time between the Southern winter r< aorta and the summer resorts of th Northwest W. H. McDOEL. V P. A G M FRANK J. REED. G. P. A.. Chicago, 111 For further particulars address R. W. GLADSNG, Gen Agt. Thomasvll) n« Macon, Dublin and Savannah R. 1 2 mJ 2d! j id, . P.M.|P.M.| STATIONS. |A.M.|A.M 4 001 2 30]Lv ...Macon ....Ari 9 40110 If 4 15 2 60'f ..Swift Creek ..f| 9 20|l<> (Mi 4 35 3 o<>,f ..Dry Branch ..f 9 10| 9 50 4 35| 3 10|f ..Pike’s Peak ..f 9 00| 9 4( 4 451 3 20if ...Fitzpatrick ... f | X 50i 9 30 4 50 3 30 f Ripley f| 8 40| 9 2! 5 05 3 50 s ..Jeffersonville.. s| 8 25| 9 II 5 15 4 OOlf ....Gallimore.... f| 8 05| 9 05 5 251 4 15is ....Danville ....sj 7 50] 8 5o 5 30j 4 25|« ...Allentown... s| 7 s(j| 8 5r 5 401 440 s ....Montrose.... si 725 l 8 35 5 50 5 00 « Dudley s| 7 10! 8 25 6 02| 5 25 a M00re.,,.. s| 6 55| 8 12 « 15| 5 40 At. ...Dublin ...Lv| 6 30| 8 30 I’M l’.M.| | A.MJ A M •Passenger, Sunday. d Mixed, Daily, except Sunday. F. W. Williams 416 Cherry St. Maker and Repairer of Car riages, Buggies, Wagons, Drays, etc. Horseshoeing a specialty. We guarantee to stop inter fering the first trial or refund the price. Give me a trial and I will do you good Don’t Lose Sigur Os the Fact... That we do the highest class Bind ery work at prices that will com pete with any eetablistment In the country. Is a home enterprise that doesn’t depend upon patriotism for pat ronage. If It can't give you the right sort of work at the right price, go elsewhere. But we do think it, or any other home enterprise. Is entitled to a •bowing- a chance to bidon your work. We have added to our plant a Well EQUiDDBH Bindery ! And can now turn out anysort of book from a 3.000 page ledger to a pocket memorandum; or from the handsomest library volume to a paper back pamphlet. News Printing Co. News an d Opinions OF National Importance. THE SUN ALONE Contains Both. Daily, by mail $6 a yea: D’ly a-nd Sunday,by mail..sß a year The Sunday Sun is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world. Price 5c a copy. By mail $2 a year Address TUA SUN. New York. NO PLACE LIKE HOME. — ■ DOMESTIC LIFE THE SOBJECT OF DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. Every Member nf the llowsehold Mwinld Strive to Make It Hsppy. Start In She Itlßht Way—Keep God AlSnjr nt the Flrenidr. ciation.! WaeiuvgTiX. Oct. 23.—Dr. Talmage in this discourse sot* forth radical theorie*, which, if adopted, would brighten many domestic circles; text, .John xx, 10, “The disciples went away again unto their own home*. ” A church within a church, a republic within a ~ public, a world within a world, is sjsdlid iiy.f<»ur letters—home! If things go right there, they go right everywhere; if things g i wrong there, they go wrong everywhere. The doorsill of the dwelling house is the foundation of church and state. A man never gets higher than his own garret or lower than his own cellar. Domestic life overarches and undergirdle* all iXhcr life. The highest house of con gress f« th* domestic circle; the rocking chair in the nursery is higher than a t hrone. George Washington cninmanded the forces of the United States, but Mary Washington commanded George. Chrysos tom's mother made his pen for him. If a man should start out and run 70 years in a straight line, he could not get out from under the shadow of ids own mantelpiece -1 therefore talk to you about a matter of infinite and eternal moment when 1 speak of your home. Ah individuals we are fragments. God makes the race in parts, and then he grad ually puts us together. What I lack, you make up; what you lack, I make up; our deficits and surpluses of character Iteing the cogwheels in the great social mechan ism. One person has the patience, another has the courage, another has the placidity, another has the enthusiasm. That which is lacking in one is made up by another or made up by all. Buffaloes In herds, grouse in broods, quails in flocks, the human race in circles. God has most beautifully arranged this. It is in this way that lie balnjjces society; this conserva tive and that, radical keeping things even. Every ship must have its mast, cutwater, taffrail, Itallast. Thank God, then, for Vrinceton and Andover, for the opposites. I have no more right to blame a man for lieing different, from me than a driv ing wheel has a right to lilamo the iron shaft that holds it to the center. John Wesley bniancesCalvin’s “Institutes.” A cold thinker gives to Scotland the strong bones of theology. Dr. Guthrie clothes thorn with a throbbing heart and warm flesh. Tlio difficulty is that we are not satisfied with just the work that God has given us to do. The water wheel wants to come inside the mill and grind the grist, anil the hopper wants to go out and dabble in the water. Our usefulness and the welfare of society depend upon our staying in .just the place that God has put US, or intended we should occupy. Marriage Garlands. For mors compactness and that we may fie more useful we are gathered in still smaller circles in the homo group. And there you have t lie same variety again— brothers, sisters, husband and wife, all different in temperaments ami taste,s. It is fortunate that. it. should bo so. If the husband bo all impulse, tho wife must be all prudence. If one sister lie sanguine in her temperament, the other must bo lym phatic. Mary ami Martha are necessities. There will lie no dinner for Christ if there bo no Martha there wi'll be no audience for Jesus if there he no Mary. The home organization is most, lieautifully construct ed. Eden lias gone, the bowers are all broken down, tho animals that Adam st roked wit h his hand that morning when they camo up to get their names have since shot, fort h t usk and sting and growl ed panther at panther, and midair iron beaks plunge till with clotted wing and eyeless sockets the t w lin come whirling down from under tho sun in blood and fire. Eden has gone, but there is just one little fragment left. It floated down on the river 1 liddekcl out of paradise. It is the marri age institution. It does not, as nt. tho beginning, take away from man a rib. Now it is an addition of ribs. This institution of marriage has been defamed in our day. Socialism and polyg amy and tho most damnable of all things, free lovism, have been trying to turn this earth into a Turkish harem. While the pulpits have been comparatively silent, novels, their cheapness only equaled by their nastiness, are trying to educate, have taken upon themselves to educate, this nation in regard to holy marriage, which makes or breaks for time and eternity. Oh, this is not a mere question of resi dence or wardrobe! It is a question charged with gigantic joy or sorrow, with heaven or hell. ‘Alas for this new dispen sation of George Sands! Alas for this mingling of tho nightshade with the mar riage garlands! Alas for tho venom of adders spit into tho tankards! Alas for the white frosts of eternal death that kill the orange blossoms! The gospel of Jesus Christ is to assert what is right and to as sail what is wrong. Attempt has been made to take the marriage institution, which was intended for the happiness and elevation of the race and make it a mere commercial enterprise, an exchange of houses and lands and equipage, a business partnership of two stuffed up with the stories <>f romance and knight errantry and unfaithfulness and feminine angel hood. Tho two after awhile have roused up to find that instead of the paradise they dreamed of they have got nothing but a Van Amburgh’s menagerie, filled with tigers and wild cats. Eighty thou sand divorces in Paris in one year preced ed the worst revolution thpt France over saw 1 And I tell you what you know as well as I do, that wrong notions on the subject of Christian marriage are the cause at this day of more moral outrage before God and man than any other cause. God In the Home. There are some things that I want to bring before you. I know there are those of you who have had homos set up for a great, many years, and then there are those here who have just established their home. They have only been in that home a few months or a few years. Then there are those who will after awhile set up for themselves a home, and it is right that I should speak out. upon these themes. My first counsel to you is, have God in your new home, if it be a new home, and let him who was a guest at Bethany be in your household, let the divine blessing drop upon your every hope and plan and expectation. Those young people who be gin with God end with hAven. Have on your right hand the engagement ring of the divine affection. If one of you be a Christian, let that one take the Bible and read a few verses in the evening time, and then kneel down and commend yourselves to him who setteth the solitary in families. I w<juit to tell you tiiat the destroying an gel passes by without touching or enter ing the doorpost sprinkled with blood of the everlasting covenant. Why is it that in some families they never get along and in others they always get along well? I have watched such cast's and have come to a conclusion. In tije first instance nothing seemed to go pleasantly, and aft er awhile there came a devastation, do- I mestic disaster, or estrangement. Why? i They started wrong. In the other case, although there were hardships and trials and some things that had to be explain ed. still things went on pleasantly until the very last. Why? They started right. My second advice to you in your home is to exercise to the very last possibility of your nature the law of forbearance. Pray ers in the household will not make up for everything. Some of the best people in the world are the hardest to get along with. There are peojile who stand up in prayer ihcetings and pray like angels who at home are uncompromising and cranky. You may not have everything just as you want it. Sometimes it will txt the duty of the husband and sometime* of the wife to yield, hut both stand punctiliously on your rights, and you will have a Waterloo with no Blucher coining up at nightfall to decide the conflict. Acknowledge Wronjx. Never be ashamed to apologize when you have done wrong in domestic affairs. Let that be a law of your household. The ‘iest thing I ever heard of nty grandfather, whom I never saw, was this: That once. having unrighteously rebuked one of his j children, he himself having lost his pa ! time*! and perhaps having been misin formed of the child's doings, found out his mistake, and in the evening of the fwme day gathered all his family together 1 and said: “Now, I have one explanation Ito make and one thing to say. Thomas, i this morning I rebuked you very unfairly. lam very sorry for it. I rebuked you in ! the presence of the whole family, and now ! I ask your forgiveness in their presence. ” I It must have taken some courage to do I that. It was right, was it not? Never be ashamed to apologize for domestic inaccu racy. Find out the point*, what are the weak points, if I may call them so, of your companion and then stand aloof from them. Do not carry the fire of your tem ‘ per too near the gunpowder. If the wife be easily fretted by disorder in the house hold. let the husband be careful where he throws his slippers. If the husband come home from the store with his patience ex hausted, do not let the wife unnecessarily cross his temper, but both stand up for your rights, and I will promise the ever lasting sound of the warwhoop. Your life will be spent in making up, and marriage will be to you an unmitigated curse. Cow per said: The kindest and the happiest pair Will find occasion to forliear And something, every day they live, To pity and perhaps forgive. I advise also that you make your chief pleasure circle around about that home. It is unfortunate when it is otherwise. If the husband spend the most of his nights away from home, of choice and not of necessity, he is not the head of the house hold; he is only the cashier. If the wife throw tho cares of the household into tho servant’s lap and then spend five nights of the week at the opera or theater, sho may clothe her children with satins and laces and ribbons that would confound a French milliner, but they are orphans. It is sad when a child has no one to say its prayers to because mother has gone off to the evening entertainment! In India they bring children and throw them to tho crocodiles, anti it seems very cruel, but tho jaws of social dissipation are swallow ing down more little children today than all tho monsters that over crawled upon the banks of the Ganges! Godless Fireside*. I have seen the sorrow of a godless mother on the death of a child she had neglected. It was not so much grief that she felt from the fact that the child was dead as the fact that she had neglected it. She said, ‘‘lf I had only watched over and cared for the child. I know God would not have taken it.” The tears came not. It was a dry, blistering tempest—a scorch ing simoon of the desert. When she wrung her hands, it seemed as if she would twist her fingers from their sockets; when sho seized her hair, it seemed as if she had in wild terror grasped a coiling serpent with her right hand. No tears I Comrades of the little one came in and wept over tho coffin, neighbors came in, and the mo ment they saw the still face of the child the shower broke. No tears for her. God gives tears as the summer rain to the p:,r< hod soul, but in all the universe the driest and hottest, the most scorching and consuming thing is a mother’s heart if she has neglected her child, when once it is - dead God may forgive her, but she will never forgive herself. The memory will sink tho eyes deeper into the sockets and pinch tho face and whiten the hair and eat up the heart with vultures that will not ba satisfied, forever plunging deeper their iron beaks. Oh, you wanderers from your home, go back to yoi rduty! The brightest flowers in all the earth are those which grow in the garden of a Christian household, clambering over the porch of a Christian home. I advise you also to cultivate sympathy of occupation Sir James Mclntosh, one of the most eminent and elegant men that ever lived, while standing at the very height of his eminence, said to a great company of scholars, “My wife made me.” The wife ought to be the advising partner in every firm. She ought to be interested in all the losses and gains of shop and store She ought to have a right—she has a right—to know everything. If a man goes into a business transaction that he dare not tell his wife of, you may depend that lie is on the way either to bankruptcy or moral ruin. There may bo some things which he doesnot wish to trouble his wife with, but if he dare not tell her he is on the road to discomfiture. On the other hand, the husband ought to be sympa thetic with the wife’s occupation. It is no easy tiling to keep house. Many a wo man who could have endured martyrdom as well as Margaret, the Scotch girl, has actually been worn out by house manage ment. Kitchen Martyrs. There are 1,000 martyrs of the kitchen. It is very annoying after the vexations of the day around the stove or tho register or the table, or in the nursery or parlor to have the husband say: *You know noth ing about trouble. You ought to be in tlie store half an hour.” Sympathy of occupation? If the husband's work cover him with the soot of the furnace, or the odors of leather, or soap factories, let not the wife be easily disgusted at the be grimed hands or unsavory aroma. Your gains are one, your interests are one, your losses are one. Lay hold of the work of life with both hands. Four hands to fight the battles; four eyes to watch for the danger; four shoulders on which to carry the trials. It is a very sad thing when the painter has a wife who does not like pic tures. It is a very sad thing for a pianist when she has a husband who does not like music. It is a very sad thing when a wife is not suited unless her husband has what is called a “genteel business.” So far as I understand a “genteel business,” it is something to which a man goes at 10 o’clock in the morning and from which he comes home at 2 or 3 o’clock in the aft ernoon and gets a large amount of money for doing nothing. That is, I believe, a “genteel business,” and there has been many a wife who has made tho mistake of not being satisfied until the husband has given up tho tanning of tho hides, or tho turning of tho banisters, or tho building of the walls and put himself in circles where ho has nothing to do but smoke cigars and drink wino and get himself in to habits that upset him, going down in tho maelstrom, taking his wife and chil dren with him. There are a good many trains running from earth to destruction. They start all hours of the day and’ all hours of tho night. There are the freight trains; they { a very slowly and very heav ily, and there aro tho accommodation trains going on toward destruction, and they stop very often and let a man get out when he wants to But genteel idleness is an express train. Satan is the stoker, and death is the engineer, and, though one may come out in front of it and swing tho red flag of “danger” or tho lantern of God's word, it makes just one shot into perdition, coming down the embankment with a shout and a wail and a shriek— crash! crash! There are two classes of people sure of destruction—first, those who have nothing to do; secondly, those who have something to do, but who are too lazy or too proud to do it. flow to Have n flapp} Home. I have one more word of advice to give to those who would have a happy home, and that is, let levo preside in it. When your behavior in the domestic circle be comes a mere matter of calculation, when the caress you give is merely the result of delilierate study of the position you oc cupy, happiness lies stark dead on the hearthstone. When the husband’s posi tion as head of the household is maintain ed by loudness of voice, by strength of arm, by fire of temper, the republic of do mestic bliss has become a despotism that neither God nor man will abide. Oh, ye who promised to love each other at the altar, how dare you commit perjury? Let no shadow of suspicion come on your af fection. It is easier to kill that flower than it is to make‘it live again. The blast from hell that puts out that light leaves you in tho blackness of darkness forever. Here are a man and wife. They agree in nothing else, but they agree they will have a home. They will have a splendid house, and they think that if they have a house they will have a home. Architects make the plan, and the mechanics execute it, the house to cost $ 100,000. It is done. The carpets are spread, lights are hoisted, curtains are hung, cards of invitation sent out. The horses in gold plated harness prance at the gate, guests come in and take their places, the flute sounds, the dancers go up and an<l one MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 24 1898. grand whirl the wealth and the fashion and tho mirth of the great town wheel amid the pictured walls Ha. this is happiness. Float it on the smoking viands, sound it in the music, whirl it in the. dance, cast it In tho snow of sculpture, sound it np the brilliant stairway, flash it in chandelier*. Happiness indeed I Something Lacking. Let us build on tho center of the parlor floor a throne to happiness; Jet all the guests, when come in, bring their flowers and pearls and diamonds, and throw them on this pyramid, and let it boa throne, and then let happiness, tho queen, mount the throne, and wo will stand around, and. all chalices lifted, we will say, “Drink, O queen; live forever!" But the guests depart, tho flute* aro breathless, the last dash of the imiiatieut hoofs is heard in the distance, and the twain of tho house hold come back to see the queen of happi ness on the throne amid the parlor floor. But, alas, as they come back, the flowera have faded, tho sweet odors have become the smell of a charnel house, and instead of the queen of happiness there sits there the gaunt fefftu of anguish, with bitten lip and sunken eye nnd ashes in her hair. Tho romp of the dancers who have left seems rumbling yet, like jarring thunders that quake the floor and rattle the glasses of the feast rim to rim. The spilled wine on tho floor turns into blood. The wreaths of plush have become wriggling reptiles. Terrors catch tangled in tho eanopy that overhangs tho couch. A strong gust of wind, comes through the hall and the drawing room and the bedchamber, in which all the lights go out. And from the lips of tho wine beakers come the words, “Happiness is not in us!” And the arches respond. “It is not in us!” And the si lenced instruments of music, thrummed on by invisible fingers, answer, “Happi ness is not in us!” And tho frozen lips of anguish break open, and, seated on the throne of wilted flowers, she strikes her bony hands together and groans, “It is not in mo!" That very night a clerk with a salary of 31,000 a year—only 31,000 —goes to his home, set up three mouths ago, just after tho marriage day. Love moots him at the door, love sits with him at the table, love talks over the work of tho day, love takes down the Bible and reads of him who came our souls to save, and they kneel, and while they are kneeling, right in that plain room on the plain carpet, the angels of God build a throne not out of flowers that perish and fade away, but out of gar lands of heaven, wreath on top of wreath, amaranth on amaranth, until the throne is done. Then tho harps of God sounded, and suddenly there appeared one who mounted the throne with eye so bright and brow so fair that the twain knew it was Christian love. And they knelt at the foot of tlie throne, and, putting one hand tin each head, she blessed them and said, “Happiness is with me!” And that throne of celestial bloom withered not with tho passing years, and the queen left not the throne till one day the married pair felt stricken in years—felt themselves called away and knew not which way to go, and the queen bounded from the throne and said, “ Follow me, and I will show you the way up to the realm of ever lasting love.” And so they went upto sing songs of love and walk on pavements of love?] and to live together in mansions of love, and to rejoice forever in the truth that God is love. A TEXAS WONDER. Hall’s Great Discovery. One small bottle of Hall’s Great Dis covery cures all kidney and bladder trou bles, removes gravel, cures dicbetis, 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 trounies in children. If not sold by your druggist will be sent by mail on receipt of sl. One small bottle is two montbs’ treatment and will cure any case above mentioned. E. W. HALL, Sole Manufacturer. P. O. Box 21S, Waco, Texas. Sold by H. J. Lamar & Son, Macon, Ga. READ THIS. Cuthbert, Ga. March 22, 189 S.—This is to certify that I have, been a sufferer from a kidney trouble for ten years and that I have taken less than one bottle of Hall’s Great Discovery and I think that I am cured. I cheerfully recommend it to any one suffering from any kidney trouble, as I know of nothing that I consider its equal. R. M. JONES. MORE THAN UP TO DATE. Adam Forepaugh and Sells Brothers’ Show this Season. The great Adam Forepaugh and Sells Brothers’ America’s Greatest Shows con solidated are coming to Macon on Nov. 10 and with an innumerable array of attrac tions. Among these are representatives of the new woman as clowns and ring masters, the two biggest herds of the best trained elephants, champion male and fe male bareback riders, the only educated Arctic seals and sea lions, rarest wild beasts, performing animals, renowned trainers and brilliant perfarmers; three circus rings and two elevated stages; most thrilling and graceful aerial acts; an imperial program of classic and com icoal hippodrome races; special animal performances, attractions far too numer ous to mention, and a free street pageant of surpassing magnitude and splendor. There does not seem to 'be any room for another such show. OA.STOXt.X_A.. Bears the Kind You Have Always Bought HOW TO PREVENT' CROUP. We have two children who are subject to attacks of croup. Whenever at attack is coming on my wife gives them Cham berlain’s Cough Remedy and it always prevents the atack. It is a household ne cessity in this couty and no matter what else we run out of, it would not do to be without Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. More of it is sold here than of all other cough medicines combined.—J. M. Nickle, of Nickle Bros., merchants, Nickleville, Pa. For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons, Drug gists. Academy of Music. Wednesday, Oct. 26. George Wilson’s World’s Model M I NSTR EILS AND W. 5. Cleveland’s Greater Massive Minstrelsy united. Two show’s, one price. Dual program includes E.M HALL, JOHN QUEEN, NEWSBOYS’ QUINTETTE. TROUBADOUR FOUR, KENO & WELSH, numerous other notables and English Hunt Club Parade. • IHacon Luceum Lecture, Wesleyan Chapel, Monday, Oct. 24, 8 p.m. SUBJECT STONEWALL JfICKSON. Members will find tickets awaiting them without pay at H. L. Jones Co s Second street. Extra tickets for sale at 75c. @Bic €> ia a non - poisonout. ■emedy for Gonorrboa. -lent, Spermatorrhoea Vhites, unnatural die hargea, or any inflamma ion, irritation or ulcera tion of tn uce u s mem brane*. Nou-aetringeut. Sol* by Dr unsafe, or sent in plain wrapper, by expreiM, prepaid, for SI.OO, or 3 bottles. $2.75. Circular sent on roaueat. k W® The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of— and has been made under his per /y: _ .Z, sonal supervision since its infancy. ' 4 Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Varegoric, Drops P and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It » contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic fe substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms » and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind » Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation S and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho P Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, f The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. 1 GENUINE. CASTORIA ALWAYS X? Bears the Signature of • Tbe.Kind You Have Always Bought. In Use For Over 30 Years. ▼HE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY «TRFfT, WIAV YORK CITY. Home Industries . and Institutions HENRY STEVENS, SONS & CO H. BTm VENS’ SONS CO., Macon, Ga., Manufacturers of Sewer and Railroad cul vert pipe, fittings, fire brick, clay, etc. Wall tubing that will last forever. MACON REFRIGERATORS~ ~ MUECKE’S Improved Dry Air Refrigerators. The best Refrigerators made. Manu factured right here in Macon, any size and of any material desired. It has qualities which no other refrigerator on the market possesses. Come and 'ee them at th«> r* i r in * atej-L ... T CALLAWAY, 1 BANK, STORE AND OFFICE FIXTURES. I |! TYPEWRITERS. |§g £ f I SCALES, DESKS. ' I ® SAFES CASH REGISTERS, I Tl ' 4 I ELEVATORS, SHOW CASES. -J] <* IjL-A- ®ST , ~W| ARE Ready for Business I After the fire—next door to old stand. All orders promptly filled and shipped. T. C. BURKE. Telephone 129. ■” Trying to Get Over It tl Would be imposible, as it n is a fact as unalterable as the laws of the h Medes and Persians that the Cleveland and JJ Crescent bicycles are unexcelled by any / other makes in the country. We have a splendid stock of these machines in this U year’s models that we are closing out at greatly reduced prices. The more you ride a Cleveland or Crescent the more you will appreciate their superior merits. ; S. S. PARMELEE ■Tl—* »*•.*»&-» Corner Second and Poplar Streets. THE FAIB STORE * MB—WWBiaaiWWMWi'I/MITIIIIUBMHHMIIII M 1111111111 l 1 Has removed to Cherry street, next to Payne & Willingham’s and L. McMa nus’ furniture stores and opposite Em pire Store. IT IS TIME TO ft wQ e J kleh OEF // Zy > of what kind of cooking apparatus shall be put in for fall I The oil and gas stove will have to be abandoned. Why not get a TRIUMPH STEEL RANGE ? It is the most perfect yet invented, and is unsurpassed , for the quality of its work and economy of fuel. Is .less trouble, cleaner and less expensive than any other stove made. Come in and examine it. Price S3O, with complete furniture list of 30 pieces. Central of Georgia Railway Company xlkvEOßlllA Schedules in Effect June 12, 1898- Standard Time 90th Meridian. , , N °. 6 I *•<>. 7*l No. I*| STATIONS I No. 2*| Na. B*| Na. I I, V Opm! 750 am;Lv Macon .. .Ar 725 pm| 740 am| 350 pm to q- Pm 8 pm ! 850 amlAr ....Fort Valley Lv 827 pm; 639 am| 343 pm . a 00 pm'. | 9 40 am|Ar. ... Perry Lv ! 4 48 pm,' 11l 30 am •.! |H 15 am Ar. ..Columbus. . .Lv 400 pm| 1' 8 P m iAr. • -B'mham. . .Lv| 930 ami , , Pm ' 9 5 ." P m | |Ar.. Americus ....Lv| |5lB am 107 pm ' ; U Pm 10 21 P“ |Ar.. .Smithville ..Lv j 4 59 am|f 12 42 pm e pm UOS pm| [Ar ....Albany ...Lv| 411 aval 1135 am 8 £ |Ar ..Columbia .... Lv| | | g M am , Li pm lAr .. .Dawson ....Lvl I I 11 53 am “ « pm (Ar ... uthbert ...Lv| | | 11 11 am 500 pm n o 9 • |.\ r ...FortGaines ..Lv| No II • 955 am •f! pm 745 am.Ar ....Eufaula ....Lv 710 pm 11 20 am 8 pm lAr Ozark .. ..Lv «50 am b „ pm 905 am|Ar . .Union Springs Lv 600 pm 905 am _ 7 - 5 p “l I |Ar Troy. . ..Lv 7 55 am 7 30 pm|... | 10 35 amlAr.. Montgomery ~Lv| 430 pm| 740 am No. I!.*! No. j.»j No. 15i j nTT’F" No. 4.*| No. H.*"’ „Yr am 425 ami 420 pm|Lv ... .Macon. . ~Ar| 11 10 am| 11 10 pm| 730 pm 92~ am 540 ami &4® pmiLv. .Barnesville . .Lvj 945 r 945 pm| 105 pm !12 00 m 12 oo m | 710 pm|Ar....Thomaston |S 10 am| |! 390 pm 955 am 6OS am| 613 pm|Ar. .. .Griffis. . ..Lv| 912 am| 915 pm| 530 pm 11 20 am| 735 ami 7 35 pm|Ar.. . Atlanta. . ..Lv| 750 am| 750 pm| 406 pm No. I. I No. 4. •! No. 2»i ~~ 1 Na. 1. •[ NJTtT*I NtTi. I 730 pm 11 38 p m u 25 amiLv. .. .Macon. • ..Ar| | 355 ami 745 am 810 pm 12 19 am 12 08 pm Ar. . ..Gordon. .Ar| 400 pm| 210 am| 710 am s 50 pm ! 1 15 pm;Ar. .Milledgeville .Lv|! 3 00 pm I 20 am 10 00 pm 1 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eatonton. . .Lv!l2 50 pm 5 25 am ••••• 6 50 pm|Ar. ~ Covington. ..Lvl! 9 20 am *ll 25 ami*ll 38 pm|*ll 25 amlLv. .. .Macon . ..Ar|* 3 45 pm • 3 55 am* 3 45 pm 117 pmj 130 am|f 117 pm|Lv. . .Ten nille Lv| 156 pm 162 am 156 pm 2 30 pm; 225 am. 2 30 pm|Lv. . Wadley. .. .Lv|H3 55 pm 12 25 am 12 55 pm 2 51 pm| 244 am I 2 51 pm|Lv. .. Midville. . Lvl 12 11 pm 12 25 am 12 11 pm 3 30 pm, 3 35 am| 4 00 pm Lv.. ..Millen .. ~Lv| 11 35 am| 11 50 pm all 30 am s 4 17 pm 442 ami 503 pm Lv .Waynesboro . .Lv| 10 10 am| 10 34 pm 10 47 am s 5 30 pm 635 am,! 650 pm|Ar.. ..Augusta .. .Lvl !8 20 ami 840 pm 930 am I 6 06 am 600 pm|Lv.. .Savannah. ~Lv| 845 am| 900 pm| No. 16. *| | No. 15. • ' 7 50 am|Lv.. .. Macon.. .. Ar> 7 30 pm ■ 940 ani'Ar.. Monticello .. Lv 545 pm i 10 05 am;Ar. .. .Machen .. ..Lv 527 pm I ! 12 00 m|Ar .. .Eatonton .. .Lv ! 8 30 pm [ * 110 45 amlAr. ...Madison. .. Lv 440 pm * Dally. ! Daily except Sunday. I _eai station, s 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 Macon and Savannah and Aalanta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for acen i iancy in Macon depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengers arriving in Macon on No. I and Sa v xnnah on No. 4, are allowed to remain in sleeper until 7 a. m. Parlor cars between and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for Wr ’ghtsviile, Dublin and Sandersville takell:2s. Train arrives Fort Gaines 4:45 P- m., and leaves 10:10 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. ra. and leaven 7:30 .8. m. For further information or schedules to points beyond our lines, addrsae J. G. CARLISLE. T. P. A., Macsn, Ga. E. P. BONNER, U. T. A. H. H. HINTON. Traffic Manager J. C HAD «. G. P. A TWO n VT TVV n ■ < • _<Pl> Southern R’y. Schedule in Effect Oct. 16, 1898 CENTRA I. TIME READ DOWN. READ UP.“ No. 7 | _ No’ IT| No. 9 _ TNoTTH West. \<>. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No. 10 7 16pm| 4 45pm| 8 3<'am; 2 05am|Lv .. Macon .. Ar| 2 05am| 8 20am|ll 00am! 710 pm 9 45pm| 7 45pm|ll Kam; 4 15am,Lv .. A.lanta. Lvill 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am, 4 20pui 7 50am|10 00pm[ 4 00pm| 4 20am|Lv.. Atlanta. Arjll 50pm| 5 00am| |ll 40am ; 10 20am| 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Ro me.. Lvj 0 40pm| 1 44am| | 9 00am 11 30aml 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42pm;12 10am| | 780 am I I 00pm| 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat’ nooga Lv| 7 30pin|10 OOpm} | 8 10pm 7 10pm| 7 10pm| 740 am;.. lAr .Memphis . Lv' j S 15am| | 8 00pm " 4 30pm| | 5 00ani| 5 -1" m \r Lex ngion. LrjlO 56am|10 50am| |lO 40pm 7 50pm| |7 5 am; 7 45pin|Ar Lou sville. L<v| 7 40am| 7 40amj | 745 pm 7 30pm| | 7 30am| 7 30pm|Ar Cincinnati Lvj 8 3'ami 8 :’.oam| | 8 90am 9 25pm| | 7 25pm| 9 15am'|Ar Anniston. Lv 6 52, m 6 . 2pm| | 8 00am I .11 45am| |lO 00pm|ll loamjAr Birm’ham. Lv| 4 15pru| 4 15pm| | 6 01ain I .05aml ' 1 10am| 7 45p;u Ar Knoxville Lv| 7 00am| 7 40pm| | 740 pm “777... I I No. 14 | No. 16 I ’ South. TN O - 1B - I No. 13 | | 7. I 7 10pm| 2 ldam| 8 35aiu Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am| 2 OOamf | | 3 22am|10 OuarujLv Cochran.. Lvj 3 20pm|12 55am| | ] |lO 45am Ar Hawk’ville Lv| 2 50pm| | | ..J | 3 54am|10 50am|Lv. Eastman. Lv| 2 41pm|12 25am|........| | 4 29am|ll 36am|Lv.. Hei ena.. Lvj 2 03pm|ll 54pm| | | 6 45amj 2 38pm;Lv.. Jes up... Lvjll 22aml 9 43pm| | ' i 7 30aml 3 30pm|Lv Ever rett.. Lv|lo 45am| 9 05pm| j "J j j 8 30amj 4 30pffi|Ar Bruns wick. Lv| 9 ::oaml 6 s<)pm| | | 9 40am| 9 25am|Ar Jack’ ville. Lv| 8 6 50pm| | 7;—...| ~7J No. 9 | No. 13 | Kist. I No. 16 | No. 10 | | ' ryq 9pm! s 30amj 2 05am|Lv.. Ma con.. Ar| 8 20am| 7 10pm| | j 9 4 pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20am| 4 20pm| | u s" >m|l2 00pm| 7 30am|Lv ..Atlanta. Ar| 5 10am| 3 55pmj j I 9 1 30pn A l l 2 00n,t !ll 25pm|Lv . Dan ville. Lv| 6 07pm| 5 50am| j ~ | 6 25pmj "fiToamj (Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 16n,n| | ~ | 5 3o prn | 7 35am| |Ar.. Norfolk. Lv| 9 30am1 10 00pm| | moTTA * am l •Lynchburg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| | " 5 4£ 'i 3 35am| |Lv Charl’ville Lv| 2 15pm| 1 50pm| | ””””11 25am 80- l, Ar V| ® ® pm | | 3 00am 10 15 Ln| Ar Philadlphia Lv 3 50am| 6 55pm| | ig Ep 45n n| lAr New York Lv|l2 15am| 4 30pm| | “T HROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC. Nos 13 and 14 Pull *»an Sleeping Cars between Cincinanti and Jacksonville, also between Atlanta t nd Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at AC-acod 1K 1C -nrM< trains, between Atlanta and Brunswick. Aos. 15 and 16, day ez prest » Nos 9 and 10 elegant free C cars, between Macon and Atlanta, aIM ’ ain hn tween Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot, Pullman Sleeping cars be iween . ...... .v. Atlanta, with “Southwest era Ve. Limited,’’ finest and fastest train in th€ S ° U Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. S. Fast Mall Train’’ to and 'fka™ SHANNON. 3d V. P. 40. X J. M. CULP. Traffle Wat hlngon, D. G Washington, D. a W. A. TURK, G. P. A., * S ’ H ’ HARDWICK, A. G P A. Wash liigton, D. C- Atlanta, Ga. C. S. WHITE, T. P. A., w BUR ?6S B MuSy C a t: Ga. ! - ;i F - fl - GuttenDerner & Co., DEALERS IN Il'Kjllßlßfeaa Piano.s, Organs. Sheet (I ! Music and Musical Marchandise. : 422 Second St., Macon, Ga. makes of Pianos— So hmer:& Co., Everett, Ivers fife ' & Po nd ’ Bush & Certs ’ Har " ward. Burdett Wate ! ' ,o °* Fcj......— So]d on o asy terms . We represent Six sti ‘ong and r^’ a ble FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES Protect your property by insuring witl.i J. S. BUDD & CO. Office 461 Second Street. Telephone 439. Clothing and Geu.ts’ Furnishing’Goo s. BENSON & HOUSER. DBY GOODS. HUTHNRNCE & ROUNTREE GIVE TRADING STAMPS. Also forty other merchants in Macon give Stamps with all c .sh 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.jg 3