Newspaper Page Text
Doctors Can’t
Cure It!.
Contagious blood poison is alisnlntoly
beyond th<» skill of the doctors. They
may dose a patient for years on their
mercurial and potash remedies, but he
will never be rid of the disease ; on the
other hand, his condition will grow
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for this terrible affliction, Iwcr.ii-e it is
the only renv dy which go. s direct to
the cause of the disease and forces it
from the system.
Afflicted with Rlnnd Pntenn. Mi the
best doctors did me i <!. though T took
e W <?
tnedlefne. and tt etrnd ompl<’<lr. I>i>il<4
Inioipm' hraltherol brorfnshig my a -ro<-t it-.
Alt! , tht- v.n- ’ ■ .> ou'<>. I hnv n-vel
y< t had .. r.cn <>l l!. .-turn
W. R. S; UMAX.
.-t.iGii; >n Va.
It is like -truction to continue
to take i >•;: h :■ id jn rciiry; Itesides
tot i’ly di—troy ing the digestion, they
dry up the marrow fn the bones, pro
ducing a stiflne-- and of the
joints, ciuisitig the hair to fall out, and
completely w recking the system.
S.SS.% Blood
is guaranteed Purely \ egetable. and i
the only blood remedy free from these
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B '.l< on si-if-i;, ~1 tl ont sent free bj
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THE NORTHWEST
Pulman Buffet Sleepers un night train*
Parlor chairs and dining cars on daj
trains. The .Monon trains make the fast
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Northwest.
W. H. McDOEL, V. P. A G. M.
FRANK J. REED, G. P. A.,
Chicago, 111.
For further particulars address
It. W. GLADING, Gen. Agt.
Thomasville. Ga-
Academy of Music.
Monday, Oct. 31.
M rs. SMYTH and RICE present
tile Quaint Comedian
Willie Collier
in the Famous Farce
‘•The Ulan from niexico”
Ry H. \. Du Soueliet, Author of “My
Friend From India/’
RECORD Six months in New York.
Two months in Boston. Three months in
Chicago.
I’m xi i lied for hearty laughs. A com
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A COLLEGE ESBCATiOH Bl MAILJ
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FRENCH
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These are the genuine French Tansy
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at tot i'•■'l irntaUx ii or ulcvra
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V S i * < r Kv>!t 1 piam wrapper
v r epaid, f>’
- or . tH»Ub— f:? 75
Hudson River Du Daylignr
The most charming inland water trip on
the American continent.
The Palace Iron Steamers,
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Os the
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Daily except Sunday.
Leave New York, Desbrosses 5t..8:40 a.m.
Lv New York, West 22d st, N. R. 9:00 a.m
Leave Albany, Hamilton stß:3o a.m.
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The attractive tourist route to the Catskill
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Through tickets sold to all polats.
Restaurants on main deck. Orchestra on
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F. B. Hibbard, Gen. Pass. Agent.
E. E. Olcott. Gem. Manager.
L Desbrosces at. pier. New York.
tli' r tr< r •■•nt faith
fully. In fact. 1 jMcm.-d
to ge t worse all the
while, I t<«.k ,-ilmo-l
every Ho cal)d blood
r< hut theydldno*
cake, and had no effect
what.ver. I was die
h<»rten« d. for It s‘cm. d
that I would rjf*v«*r
cur* ci. At lb'- cnlvf/'C’ f»i
a Liend I then
HEAVEN PROGRESSES
DR. TALMAGE TELLS HOW GOD’S
HOME HAS IMPROVED.
i The OJd rauhl'incil Iden of Henicn
The Jll iin H it b1 e Vnrfnrtt of
di»e— W hat <he Future «>n High Will
, Be—Heaven Beautified by Death.
I [Copyright. Ixsß. by American Press Asso
r eiation.l
. j Washixgtos, Oct. 30.—A1l out of the
} Usual line of sermonizing is this story of
j Dr. Talmage concerning the next world,
t and it may do good to see things from a
: novel standpoint. The text is Revelation
xxi. 1, “And I saw a new heaven.”
‘ The stereotyped heaven does not make
adequate impre*ion upon us. We need
I the old story told in new style in order to
• arouse our appreciation. Ido not suppose
j that we are comp iled to the old phrase
, ologv. King James’ translators did not
• exhaust all the good and graphic words in
1 the English dictionary. I suppose if we
l shcu|d take the idea of heaven and trans
late it into modern phrase we would find
that its atmosphere is a combination of
i curly Juno ami of the Indian summer in
October—a place combining the advan
te.gesof city and country, the streets stand
i ing forthci neand the ISmannerof fruits
| for tJieotiier; a place of musical enter
tainments—harpers, pipers, trumpeters,
doxologies; a place of wonderful architec
ture —behold the tempb s; a place where
j then* may the higher forms of animal
! life—the lx a.-ts which were on eaith beat
en, lash whipped and galled ami un
blanketed and worked to death, turned
. out among the white horses which the
\ lx>ok of lu'vi iation describes as I ing in
I heaven; a plat of stu’ emlous literature—
, the Ixioks open; a j lace of aristocratic and
i tletnrx ratio aitrnctivcness the kings
I standing for the one, nil nations for’the
I other; ail botanical, pomological, orni
thol< 'ic .l, arborescent, worshipful beauty
! ami grandeur.
but my idea now is to speak chiefly of
■ the improved heaven. People sometimes
' talk of heaven as though it were an old
city, finished centuries ago, when I have
| to t i yon that no city on earth during
I the last 5(1 years has hud such changes as
1 heaven. It is not the same place as when
, .(<>!> and David and Paul wrote of it. For
i hundreds and hundreds of years it. has
! been going through peaeciul revolution,
| and y. ar I y year, and month by month,
I a* 1 hour by hour, and neiir.ent by moment
>' is changing, ami i hanging for some
thing b : r Away back tiiere was only
one r uiienco in tiro universe—the resi
dence of tiro Almighty. Heaven had not
yet ! ■■■■' n started. Immensity was the park
all around a! oi,t tin.-, great residence, ljut
• ioil's -ymtiat het <• heart after a while over
flowed in o(li r creal ion's, and there came
all th.rough this vast country of immensity
inhabited villages, which get w and en
larg <1 until they joined each other and
beeairroone great central metropolis of the
universe, streeied, gated, templed, water
ed, inhabited Gnoangel went fortli with
u reed, wo arc told, and he measured heav
en on one side, and then he wont forth
ai. measured hitiven on the other side,
and then St. •!■■): n tr ied to take the census
of that city, and lie heeainu so bewildered
that ho gave it up.
Improvemeuts In Heaven.
That brings me to the first thought of
my theme—that heaven isvastl.v Improved
in numbers. Noting little under tins head
uliout tile muliit ndo of adults who have
gone into glory during the last 100 or 500
or 1,000 years, ; remei , her there are 1,600,-
000,0<|p of ik’o;do in tho world, and that
tiro vast majority of people die in infancy.
How many children must have gone into
heaven during the last 500 or 1,000 years.
If New York should gather.in one genera
tion 1.000.000 pc. pul nt ion, if London
should gather in one generation 4,000,000
population, what a vast increase. But
what, a morn nothing as compared with
t. 500,000,000, the 2,000,000,000, tho
‘•multitude that no man can number,”
that have gone into that city. Os course
all tliis takes for granted that every child
that dies goes a ■ straight into heaven as
ever tho light speed from a star, and that
is one reason why heaven will always bo
fresh and beautiful—the groat multitude
of children in it. Put 500.000,000 chil
dren in a country, it will bo ti blessed and
lively country.
But a Id to this, if you will, tho greijt
multitudoof adults who have gone into
glory, ;n d how tho census of heaven must
run up. Many years ago a clergyman
steed in New England pulpit and said
that l.e believed that tho vast majority of
the race would finally lie destroyed, and
that not nioio than ono person out of 2,000
persons wonk! be finally saved. There
I happened to be about 2,000 people in the
v iilago where he preached. Next Sabbath
two persons were heard discussing the
sub je t and wondering which one of tho
I “,(-. t) peoplb in tho village would finally
11 reach heaven, and ono thought it would
F be the minister, and the otl er thought it
would bo the old deacon. Now, I have
not much admiration for a lifeboat which
will go out to a sinking ship with 2,000
passengi rs and get ono off in safety and
let. 1,01(9 go to the bottom. Why, heaven
must have been a village when Abel, tho
first soul from earth, entered it as com
pared with the present population of that
great city I
Even Henven Must Change.
Again, I r. niark that heaven has vastly
improved in knowledge Give a man 40
or 50 years to study one science or all sci
ences, wit h’all tho advantages of labora
tories and observatories and philosophic
apparatus, ho will be a marvel of informa
tion. Now , into what intelligence must
heaven mount, angelhood and sainthood,
not after studying for 40 or 50 years, but
for thousands <>f years—studying God and
i hi'soul and immortality and the universe I
How the intelligence of that world must
sweep on and on, with eyesight farther
reaching than telescope, with power of
calculation mightier than all human math
ematics, with powers of analysis surpass
ing all chemical laboratory, with speed
swifter than telegraphy! What must heav
en learn with all these advantages in a
month, in a year, in a century, in a mil
lennium? Tho difference between the
highest university on earth and the small
est class in a primary school cannot be a
greater difference than heaven as it now j
is and heaven as it once was. Do you not
suppose that when Dr. James Simpson
went tip from the hospitals of Edinburgh
into heaven he knew more than ever the
science of health, and that Joseph Henry,
graduating from the Smithsonian institu
tion into heaven, awoke into higher realms j
of philosophy, and that Sir William Ham
ilton, lifted to loftier sphere', understood
better the construction of the human in
tellect, and that John Milton took up
higher poetry in the actual presence of
things that on earth bo had tried to de
scribe? When tho first saints entered
heavan, fin y must have studied only the
A B Cos the full literature of wisdom
with which they are now acquainted.
A-rain, heaven is vastly improved in Its
society. During your memory how many
exquisite spirits have gone into it? If you
should try to make a list of all the genial,
loving, gracious, blessed souls that you
have known, it would be a very long list I
—souls that have gone into glory. Now, j
do you not suppose they have enriched the ;
society? Have they not improved heaven?
You tell of w hat heaven did for them.
Have they done nothing tor heaven? Jlake
all the gracious souls that have gone out
of your acquaintanceship and add to them
all the gracious and lx*t.utiful souls that ‘
for 500 or 1. <■ years have gone out of all
the chies and nil the villages and all the
countries of this earth into glory, and how
tho society of heaven must have been im
proved. Suppose Paul the apostle were
introduced into your social circle on earth;
but heaven has added all tho apostles.
Suppose Hannah More and Charlotte
Elizabeth were introduoed into your so
cial circle on earth; but heaven has added
all the blessed and the gracious and the
holy women of the past aged. Suppose
that Robert MeCheyno and John Sum
merfield should be added to your earthly
circle; but heaven has gathered up all the
faithful and earnest ministry of the past.
There is not a town, or a city, or a village
that has so improved in society in the last
109 years as heavi n has improved.
A Change of Decree Only.
But you say, ‘‘Hasn’t heaven always
been perfect?’’ Oh, yes, but not in the
sense that it cannot be augmented. It
has been rolling on in grandeur, Christ
has been there, and he never changes—the
- same yesterday, today and forever, glori
ous then and gloriqyis now and glorious
, forever. But I wjieak now of attractions
I outside of this, and I have to tell you that
no place on earth has improved in society
as heaven has within the last 70 years, for
the most of you within 40 years, within
20 years, within 5 years," within 1 year—
■ in other words, by the accessions from j
i your own household. If heaven were i
placed in grmps—an apostolic group, a
patriarchal’ group, a prophetic group,
group of martyrs, group of angels and I
then a group of your own glorified kin- |
dred—which group would you choose? You
might look around and make comparison, '
I but it would not take you long to choose, i
! You would say: “Give me back those !
whom I loved, on earth; let me enter into I
i their society—my parents, my children, ’
Imy brothers, my sisters. We lived to-
I |iether on earth; let us live together in
heaven.” Oh, is it not a blessed thought
that heaven has been improved by its so
i ciety, this, colonization from earth to
■ heaven?
Again, I remark that heaven has great
| ly improved in the good cheer of anuvinc-
■ed victories. Where heaven rejoiced over
one soul it now rejoices over 100 or 1,000.
In the olden tiin<*s, when the events of
human life were scattered over four or five
centuries of longevity and tho world
moved slowly, there were not so many
stirring events to be reported in heaven,
but now, 1 suppose, all the great events
of earth are reported in heavou. If there
is any truth plainly taught in this Bible,
it is that heaven is wrapped up in sym
pathy with human history, and we look
at those inventions of tho day—at teleg
raphy, at sWift communication by steam,
at all these modern improvements which
seem to give one almost omnipresence—
and we s.o only the secular relation, but
spirits before the tnrone look out and see
tin* vast and the eternal relation. While
nations ris** and fall, while the earth is
shaking with revolution, do you not sup
pose tfiere is arousing intelligence going
up to the throne of God, and that tho
question is otten asked before the throne,
“What is the news from that world—that
u ■ rlii that rebelled, but. is coming back to
its allegiance?” If ministering spirits,
a<<- riling to the Bible, are sent forth to
minister to those that shall be heirs of
heaven, when they come down to us to
hle-s us. do they not take the news back?
Do the ships of light that camo out of the
celestial Earlier into the earthly harbor,
laden with cargoes of blessing, go back
uni reff hti d . Ministering spirits not only,
but our loved ones leaving us, take up the
tidin. s. Suppose you were in a far city
and had been i acre a good while, and you
heard that some one had arrived from
your native place—some one who had re
cently seen your family and friends—you
would rush up to that man, and you would
ask all about the old folks at home. And
do you not suppose when your child went
up to God your glorified kindred in heaven
gatla n d around and asked about you to
ascertain as to whether you were getting
along well in the struggle of life, to find
out whether you were in any especial peril,
that, with swift and mighty wing they
might come down to intercept your perils?
Oh, yes! Heaven is a greater place for
news than it used to be—news sounded
through tiro streets, news ringing from the
towers, news heralded from the palace
gate. Glad news! Victorious nows!
The Future Heaven.
But the vivacity and sprightliness of
heaven will lie. beyond all conception when
tho final victories come in, when the church
shall bo triumphant everywhere. Oh, what
a day in heaven it will be when the last
throne of earthly oppression has fallen,
when the last chain of serfdom is broken,
when tho last wound of earthly pain is
healed, when tho last sinner is pardoned,
when tho last nation is redeemed! Wjiat a
time there, will be in heaven! You and I
will be in tho procession, you and I will
thrum a string in that great orchestra.
That, w ill bo tho greatest day in heaven
since tho day when tho first block of jas
per was put down for tho foundation and
the first hinged pearl swung. If there is
a difference between heaven now and heav
en as it was. oh, the difference between
heaven as it shall bo and heaven as it is
now! Not a splendor stuck fast, but roll
ing on and rolling on, and rolling up and
rolling up, forever, forever. •
Now, I say these things about the
changes in heaven, about the new im
provements in heaven, for three stout rea
sons. First, because I find, that some of
you are iinpatient to be gone. You are
tired of this world, and you want to get
into that good land about which you have
been thinking, praying and talking so
many years. Now, be patieu. I could see
why you would want to go to an art gal
lery if some of the best pictures were to bo
taken away this week or next week, but if
some one tells you that there are other
beautiful pictures to come—other Ken
setts, Raphaels and Rubenses, other mas
terpieces to be added to tho gallery—you
would say: “I can afford to wait. The
place is improving all the time.” Now, I
want you to apply the same principle in
this matter of reaching heaven and leav
ing this world. Not one glory is to be
subtracted, but many glories added. Not
ono angel will be gone, not one hierarch
gone, not one of your glorified friends
gone. By the long practicing the music
will be better, the procession will be lon
ger, the rainbow brighter, the coronation
grander. Heaven, with magnificent ad
denda! Why will you complain when you
are only waiting for something better?
Another reason why I speak in regard
to the changes in heaven and the new im
provements in heaven is because I think it
will be a consolation to busy and enter
prising good people. I see very well that
you have not much taste fora heaven that
was all done and finished centuries ago.
After you have been active 40 or 50 or 60
years it would be a shock to stop you sud
denly and forever, but here is aprogressiv
heaven, an ever accumulative heaven,
vast enterprise on foot there before the
throne of God. Aggressive knowledge,
aggressive goodness, aggressive power, ag
gressive grandeur. You will not have to
come and sit down on the banks of the
river of life in everlasting Inoccupation.
Oh, busy metl, I tell you of a hpaven where
there is something to do. That is the
meaning of the “They rest not
i day nor night,” in the lazy sense of rest
ing.
The Old Fashioned Heaven.
I speak these words on the changes in
heaven and the new Improvements in
heaven also because I want tp cure some
of you of the delusion that your departed
Christian friends have gone into dullness
and silence and unconsciousness. They
are in a sirring, picturesque, radiant, ever
accumulative scene. When tjaey left their
bodies, they only got rid of the last hin
drance. They are no more in Oakwood,
Laurel Hill or Mount Auburn than you,
in holiday attire, having seated yourself
at a banquet, can be said to be in a dark
closet, where you have left the old apparel
that was not lit to wear to the banquet.
A soldier cannot use a sword until he has
unsheathed it. and the body of your de
parted was only the sheath of a bright and
glittering spirit which God has lifted and
I is swaying in the heavenly triumph. Ac-
I cording to what I am telling you at pres
i ent. your departed Christian friends did
: not go so much into tho company of the
martyrs, and the apostles, and the proph
ets, and the potentates of heaven as into
the company of grandfather and grand
mother and the infant sister that tarries!
just long enough to absorb your tenderest
‘ affection and all the home circle. When
they landed, it was not as you land In
Antwerp or Hamburg or Havre, wander
ing up a strange wharf, looking at strange
faces, asking for a strange hotel. They
landed amid your glorified relatives, who
were waiting to greet them.
oh, does not this bring heaven nearer?
Instead of being far off it comes down just
now, and it puts its anus around our
necks, and we feel its breath on our faces.
It melts the frigid splendor of the conven
tional heaven into a domestic scene. It
ponies very clc.se to us. If we had our
choice jq heaven, whom would we first
see? Rather than look at the great poten
tates of heaven we would meet our loved
ones. I want to see Moses and Paul and
Joshua, but. I would a great deal rather
see my father, who went away 30 years
ago. I want to see the great Bible hero
ines. Deborah and Hannah and Abigail,
but I would rather see my mother than to
see the archangel.
Ido not think it was superstitious when
• one Wednesday night I stood by a deqth
bfid within » few blocks of the church
MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 31 1898.
where I pr. ached, and on the same street,
and saw one of the aged Christians of the
ebun-.b going luta glory. After I had
prayed with her 1 said to her: “We have
all loved y »u very much and will always
cherish your memory in the Christian
church. You will see my son before I see
him, anti J wish you would give him our
love.” She said. “I will, I will,’’ and in
2u >! Inures she was in heaven —the last
: words s.,e ever spok,-. It was a swift ines
; sage t.' the skies. If you had your choice
betv • n riding in a heavenly chariot and
I occupy iug the grandest palace in heaven
i and .-c _r on the throno next highest to
I th throi.e <u God and not seeing your do
i parted ones, and on the other hand dwell-
I ing in the humblest pla.-o in heaven, with
i out crown or throne n:..l without garland
i and without scepter, yet having your loved
ones around you, you would choose the
' latter I say t h-so tilings tccause I want
you to know it is a domestic bca-.en, and
consequently it is all the time improving.
Every one that goes up makes it a bright
er pl.ioe, and the attractions are increas
ing month by month and day by day, and
heaven, so vastly more of a heaven, a
thou»;nd times m .re < f a heaven, than it
used to bo, will b,j a better heaven yet.
Oh, 1 say this to intensify your anticipa
tion.
At tliv Final Day.
I enter heaven one day. It is almost
empty 1 enter the temples of worship,
and th, re are no worshipers. I walk down
the stn t. and there are no passengers. I
go i;: i the orchestra, and I find tho in
struments are suspended in the baronial
hall -of heaven, and the great organs of
eterni y, with multitudinous banks of
key s, are closed. But I see a shining ono
at the gate, as though he were standing
on guard, amt I say: “Sentinel, what does
t„is ■ . an - I thought heaven was a pop
u oiis city. Jias there been some great
pl sue sweeping off the population?"
“Lave you not heard tho news?” says the
• a.lira 1. “There is a world burning,
there is a groat conflagration out yonder,
and ail heaven has gone out to look at the
con I’.gratiou ami take the victims out of
tiro ruins. This is the day for which all
otli. r days are made. This is the judg
in: nt. '1 bis morning all the chariots and
th -cavalry and the mounted infantryrum
!.li. l and galloped down the sky. ” After
1 had listened to the sentinel I looked off
over (he iiuttlements, and I saw that the
fields of air were bright with a blazing
world. 1 said, “Yes, yes, this must be
the judgment,” and while I stood there I
heard (lie rumbling of wheels and the
clattering of hcofs and the roaring of
many’ voices, and then I saw the coronets
and plumes and banners, and I saw that
all heaven was coming back again—com
ing to the wall, coming to the gate, and
the multitude that went oil’ in the morn
ing was augmented by a vast multitude
caught up alive from the earth, and a vast
multitude of the resurrected bodies of the
Christian dead, leaving the cemeteries and
the ablieys and tho mausoleums and the
graveyards of the earth empty. Proces
sion moving in through the gates. And
then I found out that what was fiery judg
ment day on earth was jubilee in heaven,
and 1 cried: “Doorkeepers of heaven, shut
the gates; all heaven has come in! Door
keepers, shut the 12 gates lest the sorrows
and tho woes of earth, like bandits, should
some day come up and try to plunder the
city!”
Allies on Steamships.
Formerly the ashes on steamships were
gathered into great cans, hoisted to the
decks with more or less difficulty and
thrown overboard. Among the new de
vices for labor saving in this direction is a
shoot into which a very strong air current
is forced. The ashes are placed in this
shoot as they aocumulato.and are almost
instantly blown through this conductor
into the sea. The amount of labor saved
by this means cun scarcely bo appreciated
by those who have not watched the weari
some dragging of the enormous quantity
of refuse from the furnaces in steamships
and large plants of this description.— New
York Ledger.
A TEXAS WONDER.
Hall’s Great Discovery.
small bottle or Hall’s Great Dis
covery cures all kidney and bladder trou
bles, removes gravel, cures dffbetis, semi
nal emisisons, weak and lame backs, rheu
matism and all irregularities of "the kid
neys and bladder «n both men and women.
Regulates bladder troubles in children. If
not sold by your druggist will be sent bj
mall on receipt of sl. One small bottle is
two months' treatment and will cure any
ca.ss above mentioned.
E. W. HALL,
Sole Manufacturer.
P. 0. Box 21t, Waco, Texas.
Sold by H. J. Lamar & Son, Macon, Ga.
READ THIS.
Cuthbert, Ga. March 22, 189 S 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.
Fhca, fallen, j
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.,
Proortet.ors. Cleveland. O
Several pieces city’property
and two farms, part of estate
H. T. Johnson, sold before
court house tomorrow.
- - -
Vlacon, Dublin
and Savannah R. R
~*4| 2dj 1 ldF”3»
P.M?fP.M.| STATIONS. |A.M.|A.M
4 00 2 30|Lv ...Macon ....Ari 9 40|10 1-
4 15 2 50 f ..Swift Creek ..f 9 20'10 0(
4 25 3 00 f ..Dry Branch ..f 9 10j 9 50
4 35 3 10 f ..Pike’s Peak ..f 9 00| 9 4<
t 45! 3 20 f ...Fitzpatrick ...f 8 50| 9 31
4 50 3 30 f Ripley f 8 40' 9 2-
5 05 3 50 s ..Jeffersonville.. s| 8 25| 9 1’
5 15 4 OOf ....Gallimore.... fl 8 05| 9 01
5 25 4 15 s ....Danville ....s' 7 50| 8 5(
5 30 4 25 s ...Allentown... s| 7 5<3l 8 5l
5 40 4 40 s ....Montrose.... s| 7 25| 8 31
550 5 OOe Dudlev s| 710 i 8 25
6 02 5 25 s Moore s| 6 55i 8 12
5 15| 5 40 Ar. ...Dublin ...Lv| 6 30! 8 3(
LMJRM.J |A.M.|A.M
♦Passenger, Sunday.
1 Mixed, Daily, except Sunday.
\ews and Opinions
OF
National Importance.
THE SUN
ALONE
Contains Both.
Daily, by mail«*s6 a year
D’ly and 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
AddreM THE SUN, New York. i
CASTOR IA
The I - nd. You Have Always Bought. and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
S'-yf? z r -,„ni:d lias been made under his per
-B<>“al si’.pcr’i.'ion since its infancy.
* ■''’*> Allow ito one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex
periments that 1 rille with and endange r the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor OIL Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Svruj , It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither OpL n, Morplih.i nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age Liis guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teel. ing- Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It dmilalcs the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving-, healthy and fiatural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
sy Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 71 MURRAY STRLE”, IV t w VOdK CITY.
Home' Industries •
I
and Institutions
HENRY STEVENS, SONS & CO
H. STEVENS' SONS CO., Macon, Ga., Manufacturers of Sewer and Railroad cul
vert ripe, fittings, fire brick, clay, etc. Wall tubing that will last forever.
MACON REFRIGERATORS
MUISCKE’S Improved Dry Air 1 Refriger ators. 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 rec them at the f»c
■y a# w - atr-rt.
J|
F. R. GutlenDerger & Co
452 Second St '
Celebrated makes of
Pianos ano Organs
JHT9 New Upright Pianos from
ffl $1 upwards.
Organs from $35.00 to 150.00.
‘ Sold on easy terms.
Jr^yy/Lv 1 s°l e a » ents lor t^ie Yost
1 .... —, —_— typewriter.
I n Love
® 1 Jra jSu ‘ !rs ‘ S’gtit
Bl| ® x A-iWjp With one of our Cleveland
H S bicycles and any one will bi when they
jig m see the combination of lightness, strengh,
■ /vY ’ \ £ ra( ' e of movement and beauty of outline
flB fl that ls c ' om i’ ri ' sef l '» one of these up-to-
gßjfe Jm'Fir date and high grace machines.
,><)ur line, also includes the “Staunch
Crescent.”
81/nvV. S <>ur Prices aro as attractive as the
■>-' k wheels. Call to see us.
S. S. PARMELEE
Corner Second and Poplar Streets.
THE FAIR STORE *
Has removed to Cherry street, next to
Payne & Willingham’s and L. McMa
nus’ furniture stores and opposite Em
pire Store.
IT 1S TIM E
TO
& zd
/iny\u~~o] j
/"aTT
( \ fcai •
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.
I
Central of Georgia
Railway Company
Vgeorgia Schedules in Effect June 12, 1898, Standard Time
90th Meridian.
11 20 am 7*4ft Z| I *L STA tions I No. 2•{ No? T» Ns. •
12 24 pm •« 40 nm’ "tZ* 0011 ” ,Ar * 725 pm 740 *“ 350 pm
!935 pm P “ Y”" F J? rt VaUc T LIV I «27 pm 639 am 242 pm
I L?,t° am l-4r. ... Per ry Lv|! 4 45 pm Ju 30 km
I -IJ 1 ls> amjAr. ..Colum bus. . ,bvi 400 pm ..
1 52’pm " 9 k-n'ml pmiA , r - ’ B m ham - • -bvl 930 am
’2 17 pui jo 21 nm U'* ‘l mer ! CUS 518 am 107 pm
327 pm 11 o=l kmi f r " ‘ Smit hville “M 1 4 68 am l f 12 42 P“
600 rmi.: Pm| f r •••• A,b ••• Lv I< 15 am| 1135 am
306 pm; i Ar ••Colum bm .... Lv| | | g 65
346 pm ... '• - Da Y ? on ••••Lv; I | n 62 am
500 pm...; Nn"o"i’ Y -•• Lv L, I I 11 11 am
437 pm.. Y "*? rt Laines ..Lv| No 10 • I 955 am
8 14 pm\. 7 45 *“'s* ....Euf aula ....L,v| 7 SO pm I 10 20 aai
VsVXi i| 9 ® 5 am i Ar •■Union Springs Lv; 600 pm ’.r.’.’.i’.’.’.’J 905 am
—Y 3O 1 10 35 Montg omer x ••Lv| 420 pin Zkk.’.’.;| 740 am
« am 540 *™! 42 ® ptu .' Lv ••• Macon. . ..Ari'll fo° ami* 11 W° pm| pm
•12 00 TitnoT' - 40 PmibV - • Baruesv lll® • -Lv| 945 r 945 Jm fOS S
•« kOO m| 710 pm Ar.... Thom aston IS 10 ami.. '3OO nm
“u? ?0 613 Pm !Y’ " ri rtl ’- • - b T' » 13 •i 5 pml’ 5 3 M S
ii nn lAr... .Newnan.. .Lv | 340 pm
isss ... N £fi ran
M s S i “ >’ -i- -—iFilfl “IT.'
10 00 P ' 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eatonton. . ,Lv!l2 50 pm 5 25 em
•j^ L ...|! 6 50 pmlAr. .. Covington. ..Lv-! 9 20 ami |
n i 17 pml’ 1 ! 30 amffV am , l T L ’- -Macon . ~Ar|- 345 pm♦ 355 545 pm
230 dm! 225«l f o U pm ! Lv - • - Ten n>He Lvl 156 pm 152 am| 156 pm
251 nm ! 4a »' o pmiLv ‘ • Wadley. .. .Lv|fl2 55 pm 12 25 am| 12 55 pm
330 nm 2v T' 281 p Midville. . Lv| 12 11 pm 12 25 am| 12 11 pm
s 4 17 nm -f U UIU| _ 4 n °„° pm /Lv.. ..Millen .. ..Lv 11 35 am 11 50 pm|sll 30 am
5530 n 625 f“• P “ Lv -Waynesboro ..Lv| 10 10 am| 10 34 pm 10 47 am
° P , am !b 50 Pm|Ar.. ..Augusta .. .Lv; 18 20 am! 840 pm| 930 am
L?J* 0 <m 600 pm|Lv.. .Savannah ..Lvi 845 am| 900 pml
I N °- 16. *| ~ ""■ | ' No. 157»!
r 1 730 pm'
i 940 am|Ar.. Monticello .. Lv 545 pml
I 12 00 m|Ar .. .Eatonton .. .Lv|! 3 30 pm|
I 10 45 am Ar. ...Madison. .. Lvj 4 40 pm 1
I 12 20 pm|Ar. ... Athens .. ..Lvl 330 pml
* all . y ’ . ! Oa, ly Sundaj. f al station. • -junday enly? “
o’t ai? ,11S are run to ai)dr from Maeon an(i Mojtgomi ry via Eufaula. Saras
a , nd • 4 «“t» vw Macon. Macon and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Blrmlna
• tolu nibuß. Elegant sleeping care on train- No. 3 and 4 between Manor
ma savannati and Aaianta and Savannal,. Sleeper, fr Savannah are ready for sec
w.i.-y n Macon dept,: at 9-.00 t m. Pas- sengees anvln,- in Macon on No.’3 and t
an on vo 4, ur< aikr-vec ... remain iusldep* until 7a. m Parlor cars between
'77-' .Th ant ,' OD ,:ain ' : Not aß<l Sp "’ ' ' ’ J nt -’ Passengers foi
t a?' . , S?no ’ a. it 25 Un arrive? Fort Gainet
*.40 p. m., and weaves 10:10 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. m. and leave*
.. oO a. m For further information or sch »-• yond our •Ines, r.ddre-
i g. carlist t p a m r pdnner, u. t. a
J. T. KNIGHT. G. H. DOLVIN
KNIGHT DOLVIN
Livery, Feed and Sales Stables.
Telephone 329. Plum street’, opposite *Union depot,
Macon, Ga.
southern R’y.
I Schedule iu Effect Oct. 16, 1898
_ CENTRA L TIME
READ DOWN. READ UP.
No. 7 | No. 15 | No. 9 | No. 13 | West. | No. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No. 10
7 10pm| 4 45pm| 8 3Cam[. 2 05am|Lv .. Macon .. ATf2~osam| B_2oam|ll8 _ 20am|ll 00am| 7 _ lopm'
9 45pm| 745 pm 11 10am) 4 15am|Lv .. Atlanta. Lv|ll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm
I 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.. Rome.. Lv| 0 40pm| 1 44am| | 9 00am
11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton...Lv 8 42prri;12 10am| | 750 am
1 00pm| 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat’nooga Lv| 7 30pm|10 00pm| | 8 00pm
7 10pm| 7 10pm| 7 40am| |Ar .Memphis . Lvl | 9 15am| | 8 00pm
4 30pm| | 5 00am| 5 40pm|Ar L<-xingion. Lvjlo Stamph 50am|.... .TkflO 40pm
7 50pm| | 7 50am| 7 45pm|Ar Louisville. Lv| 7 40am| 7 40am| | 745 pm
_7_3opm[... | 7 30..m| 7 3i>pm Ar Cinoinaati Lv| 8 3-ain| 8 30am| | 8 00am
9 25pm| 'I 7 25pm| 9 15am||Ar Lvj 6 52,.m. 6 .‘.2pm| 7J 8 00am -
t 11 45am| |lO OOpmjll 15am| Ar Birm’ham. Lvj 4 Upm| 4 15pm|........| 6 00am
8 05am| | 1 10am| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 7 00am| 7 40pm| ...j 740 p -
| I No. 14 I NoTltTi : South: |To. 15. I No. isF| |
| 7 10pm| 2 10am| 8 35amjLv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20amj 2 00am| | .’
| j 3 22am|10 05am|Lv Cochran.. Lv| 3 20pm|12 55am| |
| | jlO 45am|Ar Hawk ’ville Lv| 2 50pm| | j
| | 3 54am|10 50am|Lv. Eastman. Lvj 2 41pm|12 25am| |
| | 4 29am|ll 36am|Lv.. Helena.. Lv| 2 03pmlll 54pm| |
| I 6 45am| 2 38pm|Lv.. Jesup... Lv|ll 22amj 9 43pm| |
| | 7 30am| 3 30pm|Lv Everrett.. Lv|lo 45am| 9 05pm| |
| | 8 30am| 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| 6 50pm| |
I i 9 40aml 9 25amiAr Jack’ ville. Lvj g ooaml 6 50pml |
fJ | N 0.7 | No. 9 | No. 13 | ha st. I No. - 16 | No. 10 | | ’
j 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05amjLv.. Ma con.. Ar| g 2oamj 7 10pm| ..j........
e | 9 45pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20am| 4 20pm| |
| 9 25amj 8 30pm| 6 lOpmfLv Charlotte Lv|lo 15am| 9 35am| |
h | 1 30pm|12 OOn’tjll 25pm|Lv . Danville. Lvj 6 07pm| 5 50am| |
e | 6 25pm| 6 40am|... |Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 10n,n| |
j 5 SOp-nj 7 35am| fAr.. Norfolk. Lvj 9 30am|10 00pm|
a | 3 50| 1 53am| |Lv. .Lynchburg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| |........
’ | 5 4£pm| 3 35am| |Lv Chari’ville Lv| 2 15pm| 1 50pm| |
| 9 25pm| 6 42am| |Ar Wash gtan. Lvjll 15am|10 43pm| |
| 3 OOamjlO 15am|.. |Ar Philadlphia Lv 3 50am| 6 55pm| j
| 6 20am|12 45n’n[ |Ar New York Lv|l2 15am| 4 30pm| |
j 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lv| 5 OOpmjlO OOaml |
THROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC.
Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Cincinanti and Jacksonville,
also between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at
Macon.
Noe. 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween Atlanta and Brunswick.
Nos. 9 and 10, elegant free Observatior cars, between Macon and Atlanta, also •
Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot,
Atlanta, with “Southwestern Vestibuied Limited,” finest and fastest train in tht
South.
Nos. 7 and 8, connects In Atlanta Union depot with “U. 8. Fast Mail Train” to and
from the East. * \
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. P. A-,
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
’ C. S. WHITE, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon. G* 565 Mulberry BL, Maoen, G*.
, -WE ARE-
Ready for Busmess I
As t r the fire—next door to old stand.
All c; ‘ers promptly filled and shipped. ’
T. C. BURKE.
Teleph ne 129.
Clothing and Gents’ Furnishing Gooes.
BENSON & HOUSER.
DRYJSOODS.
HUTHNfINCE & ROUNTREE
GIVE
'i HADING STAMPS.
A’.so forty other merchants in Macon give
'
hook. 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.
3