The Macon news. (Macon, Ga.) 189?-1930, November 17, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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Out in Kansas lives a happy wife. She writes: “ I have used Mother**» Friend before two confinements. The last time I had twins, and was in labor only a few min utes. Suffered very little.” The reason why Mother’s Friend does expectant mothers so much good is because it is an external liniment, to be applied upon the outside, where much of the strain comes. It helps be cause tiic pores of the skin readily absorb it, and it comes into direct contact with and is absorbed by the parts involved. Mornin" sickness is quickly banished, and nervousness is kept completely away. The sense of dread and foreboding is not experienced, even during labor itself. Confinement is short and almost without pain. Recovery is quick and sure. Best of all, Mother's Friend benefits the unborn just as much as the expectant mother, and when the little one conies it will be strong, lusty and healthy. Druggist* sell Mother's l-rlcnd for $1 a bottle. ' nd for our free book on the subject, finely illustrated. Till: BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO A I LANTA, CIA. It Is True We do mighty talking on the superior tailoring of our clothing, but it admits of it. The true merit is there, and it is by this knowledge we maintain our confidence in the goodness of every gar ment we sell. For Fall and Winter We arc offering the most Leantiiul assortment of styl ish made suits ever seen in the city, at SIO.OO, $12.50 and $15.00. Every suit must fit perfectly before we permit it to be worn. The Up-to-Dale Clothiers. Benson & Houser. Don't Lose Sight Os ths 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 ' sronage. 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 shewing--* chance to bidon your < . work. We have added to our plant a Wen Eauipped Binderu 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. PULLMAN CAR LINE •“ • V - * BETWEEN Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or Louisville and Chicago and THE NORTHWEST. Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains. Parlor chairs and dining cars on day trains. The Monon trains make the fast est time between the Southern winter re sorts and the summer resorts of the Northwest. W. H. McDOEL, V. P. A G. M. FRANK J. REED, G. P. A., Chicago, 111. For further particulars address R. W. GLADING, Gen. AgL LL_ „ Thomaarille, Ga. (WHATSOEVER IS THUE JO JOST Rev. Sam. P. Jones Preached at Mulberry Street Meth odist Church. . HE 'JUST TO TOUR WIFE. Tells How He Was Cured of Being Cross and Unkind to His- Rev. Sam Small The tent was too wet for the Rev. Sam | Jones last night and he took to the chiurch, i but at any rate his congregation followed h..u and tilled old .Mulberry to the doors ami ou! into the corridors. Mr. Jones opened his address for the evening with a reference to some editorial comments on the position of the Macon lie* on the prohibition campaign. He handled them lightly and good huanor edly, however, and passed on to bis text which was takwn from the Bible verse ad vising mtn to cleave to 'whatsoever is honest and pure, true, and just and of good report. .Many preachers, he said, preach what they think, while others think what they preach. He was called a curious 'fellow because he preached what he thought and his tongue was faithful to his mind. Soms p. yo.; did 110 L like his methods*, but he rfft there just the same. At one time when he was a pastor of a church there was one fellow in his congre gation whom the former ipaator had tried to convert for many years. One day Mr. Jones picked him out in the congregation, and pointing to him said “You old sinner 1 know you. You hired a 'woman to .pick blackberries for you for two weeks and paid tier with twenty pounds of sjXJiled Hour and now you come to church. I 'would as soon see you in heaven as the devil himself. The man went out and vowed that lie was going to whip Jones. But 'that night he sent the old woman her twenty 'pounds of good Hour and <wh.-n I left that church tie was as good a fniend as I had in that section. “J just shot into the hole that he was in. You know that if you shoot into the 'hole that a fellow is in he will crtvwl out and say that he warnt there but to -ave his life he can’t explain how the boles came in his hide. "Be honest with yourself and with your community. That you pay your debts does not mean necessarily that you are honest. They've got you tied so hard and faat that you can't get away and you've got to pay c«in. I like a fellow iwho ean stand with out hitching. I like a man whose word is as good as his bond. ,A man can't hy pothecate his church membership in this town or in any other 'town. You go to a bank to borrow money. They ask you what you have got as collateral and you will tell them that you have your mem bershhip in the Baptist church. They’ll say, Oh, shucks, that don’t go. Just come in here and I'll show you the members of the Baptist church 'who have gone iback on us. 'And so it is with the (Methodist and the Presbyterian and the Episcopal church. 1 want <0 see the time come when a man can hypothecate his membership in the .Methodist church as collateral. "It's got so you don’t know who to trust. Here conies the little farmer to the merchant and says: ‘Kin you run me for this year?’ ‘Yes,’ and about the first of December tihe little farmer is going lit at" a mile a minute and the merchant after him. “It reminds of the rabbit that gets out iu the open and says to the dog ‘say, will you just run me for a mile or two.’ “Now give me the man that is 'honest with himself and honest with his God and honest with his community. “Is whisky honest? I go down here to a saloon and give the barkeeper a dollar for a quart and I drink it and go home. Have I had value for value? Say bud, what would you give for it? “1 didn't say that the man who sells whisky would steal but I just say what my wife's husband would do the under the like circumstances. "Why. the whisky men say to me, ‘Mr. Jones. I know that it is a dirty business, but. I can’t make a living in any other way and and I say to him that I would rather commit suicide than say that I couldn’t make a living other than iby sell ing whisky, and 1 ain't going to commit suicide. No siree. I’ll never go out at the back door. I'm a going on living until I die a natural death or someone kills me. “I was on the train -with a man one night who had the morphine in his pocket and said that he was going to kill himself. “1 said to him. you go ahead bud and take it and you won't be frying in hell for three minutes before you say, Oh Lord if you'll just let me get back again I’ll never do the like again. “Everything that is just. It is easier to be generous than it is to be just. Its the hardest thing in the world to be just. "Is it just to go down here and put a vote in the box that will perpetrate the saloons of this city and make your neigh bor's boy drunk? “Is that just? Get up you old red nose and talk back. Is it just? “Did you ever try to be just to your wife? And if there is anj’ one on earth to whom you should be just it is your wife, but 1 tel! you that there is not one man in a hundred who is just to his wife. I've had some experience in that line myself and I never was unjust to my wife that I didn't feel like a dog and I felt natural too. “I say that you can't justify a harsh word or an unkind expression that you ever used to yx>ur wife, “And. look at the way you treat your wife about money. You pay your cook cheerfully and when your wife asks for $lO you frown at her and ask her what she want with so much mopey, “I tell you that if every hog in Georgia went to growing bristles hair mattresses ■would go down five cents a pound. “I divide up with my wife. Half of everything I have is hers and in her name and her name at the banks is as good as mine. I won't be an agent and I don’t board with my wife. "But I tell you that there is many a dirty dog who hides his property under his I wife's petticoats and goes out driving with her in her carriage while the widow woman | to whom he owes money la walking the I streets with her toes out of her shoes. If hell hasn’t burned out before that rnntj dies then he will be frizzling there after I he goes away from this earth. “If a man and his wife ain’t one they’re I two .and if they are two there's the devil ' to pay in that family. "You are good to your cook and its right to be good to your cook I tell you I loved the first cook I ever had. I used to go out in the kitchen and hug and kiss her and we had a good time together—but my wife was doing the cooking at that. time. “Be just to your children. The man who will be domineering over his children and his poor pale wife is a cowardly dog. The man who will fuss with his wife is a dog and if she fusses with him she's the other one. "Be just to your children. So hejp me God I would rather blow my brains out than cast a vote that might make a drunkard of my boy and send him stag gering down the dark corridors of hell to everlasting death. The man who will cast such a vote deserves that his son should die a drunkard for it were better his eon than another’s. “They find fault with roe and say that tny illustrations are not elegant. I know it. But they illustrate just the same. The thinnest skinned thing on earth is an edi- tor and a preacher. They are always criticising others but they can’t stand it themselves. But I ean, my hide is -•> thick as a buffalo's and when these little gnats and flies light on me -they affect me like I a bob-tailed yearling in fly time. . "Yes you get up in the morning and are j crosa with your wife and with the ehhil dren and you put it down to dyspepsia. Oh! what a heap of devilment is done in the name of dyspepsia and Democracy. The preachers do it. I used to think that a I preacher had wings but bless you I've seen ’em without their coats on and they ain't got no wings. “Hear me! I was cured of fussing with my wife long ago. 1 saw the life that was all the world to me swing like a pendulum back and forth for seven long weeks. One Christmas eve the saddest day of my life, the doctor called me out on the porch and .-aid: 'Jones, your wife has gone where I materia medica cannot reach her. Call your children to her. Don’t let them make a noise. And I called them and they stood beside that bed three on one side and three on the other. They gazed with ' .me on the shrunken features and the half unconscious glare of the eyes of the mother that they loved, then wiping away the big tears that rolled down their cheeks they turned their backs and went out. As I looked upon that wan face I saw every cross and unkind word that I had ever spoken written in raised letters on the palid cheeks and I promised my God that if he would but spare her to me I would never say another harsh word to her. "Hear me, you soldier boys. Are you just to the mother at home? If you were there would be no need for those sentinels in front of the saloon doors. No, there would’ht boys, sure as you are 'born. My, what a rfdght those sentinels are to me. It looks like the soldiers had said, 'We’ve licked Spain JX>w and we’ll turn and lick ourselves.’ “Boys, its so unjust to that precious old mother at home. If my mother were the keeper of a house of shame I wouldn't do it, boys, and that mother of yours Is as pre cious as an angel. There’s something about a mother’s voice that is as sweet as the aeolian harp, something about her touch that is more soothing than the zephyrs put in motion by an angel’s wings. It is unjust to mother to do anything when you are away from her that would bring sad ness to her eyes if she could but see you. “Isn’t it horrible to think of the man who swills liquor and goes home where his child can't kiss him without smelling the fumes of the distillery on his ’breath. You ought to be killed right now. I tell you if you had the willow wicker round you and a handle they could carry you about a great deal (better than you can navigate yourself. “Whatsover things are pure. "An old woman once said of me ‘I tell you I like brother Jones. His heart’s all right, but oh Lord, what a mouth. “(But I like the man whose heart's all right. “1 was preaching up here In Madison one time and a man came to me and eaid, Brother Jones so and so says he won’t come to hear you any more, he says you’re too vulgar. "Is that so, says I, who is he. “Well, he’s a saloon keeper. “(Hear me, to the pure all things are pure. Thousands of the beet and purest and sweetest women in America have come to hear me and have come again. But .the saloon keeper won’t come. “Listen, it's not what I say but what is in you that hurts. Half a million of the •best .women in this country have come to me and has given me their hands, but a whole lot of society folks go away and say they can't stand me no how. I don’t mind. I haven’t much use for them any how. “The old-card-playing sister runs away, but the poor folks come to me and hear me. The society girl who has just left the german where she was whirled in the arms of the leacherous dude goes away and' says she cannot bear to hear me talk, but the girl who has not been to the german who has never been clasped in the arms of the leacherous dude will come to hear me and ■will stay. “Hear me, Bam Jones never said a thing in Macon as vulgar as the decolette dress. “I was in a fellow’® parlor once that smelled horrible. Said 1,, ‘What is that stink?’ He replied, ‘Oh it's a hog that died in the lot, but you mustn’t talk about it here. “ 'lf you’ll move the hog” said I, ‘I won’t 'talk about it.’ “And that's just how it is. ‘You fellows in Macon must move the pig if you want me 'to stop talking about it.’ “There’s nothing half so sweet as the love of a pure woman. The two pillars of a woman are modesty and ipurity. Take away either or both of them and she falls and you can’t get her back again and if there is anything that is vulgar and nasty it is Macon liquor. If you don’t think so hear the men talk who drink it. Why a hog pen is a hottie of new mown hay be side it. “If you can stand fifty-eight Macon sa loons you can stand one Sam Jones. “Oh girls, girls, girls. Silly little things most of them. It’s the breaches that catch ’em. They may be doing anything but just let a pair of breaches come along and they will leave it to meet the breaches. “But I say that a woman should be as careful who she walks with as a man. He will not be seen with a woman of disrepute and yet you girls will walk the streets with a man who is known to be of bad reputation and you know of it.’’ The address was followed by a great handshaking after which Rev. Sam Small asked permission to say a few words. He said that it had been reported to him that he had been charged with going into Putzel’s saloon to eat a meal and take a drink of beer. Such an untruth is was really unnecessary for him to deny but he wished to state the cause that had given origin to the story. The day that his regi ment arrived in 'Macon the officers were unable to get anything to eat and as it was Sunday Putzel’s restaurant was the only place where he could get what he wanted for them to eat and he had order ed some cooking done and sent out to the grounds. The following day he had called and had paid for the service . He only wished to add that the [people of Macon should abolish a place where a gentleman and an officer could not go into and get a meal without having his char acter smirched. This morning at the church Re.-. Francis Murphy preached again to a large congre gation and tonight a meeting especially for the negroes will be held though half of the big tent will, weather permitting, be reserved for the whites. 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, cure® diubetis. 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 troubles in children. If not sold by your druggist will be sent by mail on receipt of sl. One small bottle is two months' treatment and will cure any case above mentioned. E. W. HALL, Bole Manufacturer. P. 0. Box Sit, Waco, Texas. Sold by H. J. Lamar & Son, Macon, Ga. READ THIS. Cuthbert, Ga. March 22, 1898.—This is to certify that I have been a sufferer from a kidney trouble for ten years and that I have taken leas 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. From New Zealand. Reefton, New Zealand, November 23, 1896.—1 am very pleased to state that since I took the agency of Chamberlain’s medicines the sale has been very large, more especially of the -Cough Remedy. In two years I have sold more of this particu lar remedy than of all other makes for the past five years. As to its efficacy I have been informed by scores of persons of the good results they have received from it and know its value from use in my own household. It is so pleasant to take that Iwe have to place the bottle beyond ths reach of the children. E. J. Scantlebury. For sale by H. J. Lamar & Sons, druggists. MACON NEWS THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER i 7 1898. 1 PURCHASE OF ANCESTORS. Neither a Difficult Nor an Eipealive Operation In t'Hi'lnn. Persons an> constantly calling at the heralds’ college in Queen Victoria street in quest of coats of a-nis or ancestors. In l addition to that ancient oak paneled hall there are shops in the streets of London, gay with heraldic devices and marvelous mediaeval birds and beasts, where pedi grees can be purchased /tnd shields pro cured, with supporters, quarterings, crest and motto complete. When W. S. Gilbert playfully alluded to "ancestors by purchase,” he probably did not realize that he was making a smart hit at the traffic in crests and shields. This Is how it is done: A clerk keeps a kind of stock reference book, giving the names of various county families and par ticulars of their heraldic bearings. “Your name and place of residence, please, ’’ says the clerk. “Brown of Camberwell,” or "Jones of Wardour street,” or “Smith of Mile End,” replies the applicant. “Ah, yes; Wardour street is in Middle sex Jones of Middlesex. Oh, here it is, a lovely arms too! Azure, three balls of Lombardy or crest, an empty purse, vert; mottoes, ‘L’empire, e’est la paix,’ and ‘Keep off the grass.’ ” “Think I’ve a perfect right to it?” asks Jones of Middlesex, with an assumed care less r ess. “Oh, most decidedly!” replies the clerk. “We’ll make you a lovely sketch of it. Only 3s. fid., that’s all. Thank you, sir.” "Nobody ean touch me for wearing it?" pursues Jones, with a growing fear of ar rest for petty larceny. “Nobody at all,” says the shopman. “Pay the annual tax for bearing arms, and nobody can touch you.” That is correct. On the principle of the great Mackford Squeers, that a man may call his house an island if he pleases, there being "no law ag ! in it,” so a man may call certain arms his own and apply the same decoration of his note pajier, signet ring and wheelbarrow. So that some em inently respectable heraldry, originally granted perhaps tor some desperate valor amid the steel clash of Cressy or the ar rowy showers of Agincourt, is passed off in thia matter of fact age for a miserable Bs. fid. to "Jones of Middlesex.” But the college of heralds is the only place in the British empire which can grant a man arms by royal letters patent. It cost Colojiol Shipway £683 to obtain arms and ancestors that did not belong to him or his family. At the college of heralds the extreme expense of a genuine coat is just, one-ninth of that sum. Seven ty six pounds ten shillings is the highest fee the college may charge, and this in cludes stamp duty and a vellum serool with the royal sign manual affixed there to. Nor may the college charge a fee sot any information unless it states that fee before giving the information. The man who goes there knows exactly beforehand what ho will have to pay. The bill is not being constantly added to by disinterred lead coffins or initials on belfry beams. "But can any one walk up Queen Vic toria street, enter the little courtyard, ascend the stone steps and plank down £76 10s. and got himpplf a coat of arms?” The Daily Mail representative asked this question at the college. No, was the answer. Before being granted a coat of arms a man must prove he has reached a state of life in which arms can bo suitably borne. The proof is left entirely to the discretion of the Duke of Norfolk, earl marshal of England.—Lon don Mail. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence tins 6th day of December, A. D. 1898. A. W. Gleasan, (SEAL.) Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi monials, free. F. J. CHENEY &CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Book Binding. High class work. Prices the lowest. Get our estimates. News Printing Co The Reason Why The people should and do buy their frames and pictures from us is simply this, We have three times the assortment of any one else to select from, we are th only xclusive frame makers in Macon, w r e do the best work and our prices are as low and often lower than our would-be competi torrs. New Goods daily!. W. Lamar Williams, 422 Second St. “Queen or Sea Routes.’ Merchants and Miners T ransportation Co Steamship Lines Between Savannah and Baltimore, Norfolk, Boston and Prov dence. Low rates and excellent service. Accommodations and cuisine unsurpassed Best way to travel and ship your goods. For advertising matter and particulars address J. J. CAROLAN, Agent, Savannah, Ga. R. H. WRIGHT, Agent, Norfolk, Va. J. W. SMITH, Agent, 10 Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga. J. C. WHITNEY, Traffic Manager. W. P. TURNER, General Pass. Agent. General offices. Baltimore, Md. The Think I’ll-J ust-Try-It-Once Advertisers must remember that before direct results can be ob tained from an ad it has got to do the missionary work of educating the people to the fact that his store is just as good and just as reliable as his better known com petitors. And when you remember the reason why his competitors are better known is because they advertise to secure their reputa tion and standing, and are still advertising in order to hold this ground, you can better understand the hard up-hill work the mis sionary ads have to do. ■ 3 |g® i ®j| wIW 1 KWm v€l UJ bi rAI z i iX\\\\x <! ( >6£S^7nSSS3cssSSSsS^ : The Kind Yon Have Always IJoag-ht, and which has been 1 iu use fur over 30 years, has borne the signature of t - , sonal supervision since its infancy. ‘ * * 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, I'aregoric, Drops t and Soothing* Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It . contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic I substance. Its age Is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrlxva and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Jr y f J/ 'f' J&r ' The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET. HF.W YORK CITY. Home Industries and Institutions HENRY STEVENS, SONS & CO H. BTe 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. MUECKB’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 roe them at the sac- */ -y •» *• strr-c Macon’s Oldest Established and Reliable Jewellers, 3 H & W. W. WILLIAMS, 352gSecond Street. r r « Invite their customers and general cus- 7 tomers to call, now that. Christmas time /77\ I CFi.'y is coming on and see their beautiful line ' ® terlin silver noveltise suitable for ’Mg 1 *' ''MHl*” holiday gifts for father, mother, brother or —"iSgP*'"' ’wriß sister. Our entirely new selected choice cases of manicure sets, traveling shaving pl SetS and sentlemen s ' toile,t sets - All kinds 'B ° f art silver ware and all Lhat pertains t 0 A/if I MSBBMraSja. a W6ll kept jewelry store in delicate and <_ I esthetic styles of watches, diamond jew- ZzTTTs- j- ir? IsOraSaW- elry and opera glasses, can be found at WILLI AIMS’. Give us a call and we will welcome you. J S BUDD X m R ea i state an d i nsurance » waMHK&EHBnsMEKHHi 461 Second St. Phone 439 FOR RENT. 372 College street. 719 Arch street, ocf S° U j street * 6 room dwelling on Hill rA street ‘ street near Whittle school. 482 Orange street. 858 New street. 6 ro( ? m dwelling on Stubbs 1522 Fourth street. Hill. Gl3 Georgia avenue. Dwelling and store corner 517 Georgia avenue. Third and Oak streets. We represent several strong Fire Insurance Companies. THE FAIR STORE Has removed to Cherry street, next to Payne & Willingham’s and L. McMa nus’ furniture stores and opposite Em pire Store. if IS TIME “ TO A. A i f j ®SL j Id. PeWI of what kind of cooking apparatus shall be put in for fall! 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. Clothing and Gents’ Furnishing BENSON & HOUSER. DRY GOODS. HUTHNANCE S ROUNTREE GIVE TRADING STAMPS. Also forty other merchants iu 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- R. COOK. ARTHUR J. TOOLE, T. J. COOI J. R. COOK & CO. Coal and Wood Prompt Delivery, Lowest Prices. Phone 713. Yards, Pine and Fifth Streets Macon, Georgia. £])_ Southern R'y. > Schedule in Effect Oct. IG, 1898 - CENTR A L TIME READ DOWN. READ UP. No. ; | No. 15 | No. 8 | No. 13 | We at. | No. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No. 10 710 pm 4 45pm| 8 30*m| 2 05am|Lv .. Macon .. Ar| 2 05am| 8 20am|11 00amI 710 pm J •Lpm, . 4i>pm;ll loa<m| 4 15am|Lv .. Atlanta. Lv|ll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 lOaml 4 20pm -I ™ an \ lo °°P m l 4 °°P m l 4 20am|Lv.. Atlanta. Arjll 50pml 5 OOaml In -Warn 10 1 00am| 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Rome.. Lv| 0 40pm| 1 44am| I $t 00am H 30am 2 34am 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton. ..Lv 8 42pmjl2 10am| I 750 am I Oopmj 4 15am[ 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat’nooga Lv| 7 30pm|10 00pm| | 8 OOum _7 10pm| 7 lOpmj 7 40am| |Ar .Memphis . Lv| | 9 Isam| | 8 00pm * 30pm| | 5 00am| 5 40pm|Ar Lexington. Lv|lo 50ain 10 50am| 110 40pm t,' ,aplu l I 7 50am| 7 45pm|Ar Louisville. Lv| 7 40am| 7 40am| | 745 pm _ 7_ 30pm| | 7 30am| 7 30pm[Ar Cincinnati Lv| S 3oam| 8 30am| | £ 00am 9 I 7 25pm| 9 15am||Ar Anniston. Lv| 6 52pm; 6 ..2pml ,| 8 00am 11 4 ' ,am l |lO ot>pm|ll loauijAr Birm'ham. Lv| 4 l.’>pm| 4 15pm| | 6 00am 8 05am| j 1 ioam| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lv| 7 ooam| 7 40pm| | 740 pm I- J No. 14 | No. 16 | . South' "| No. 15. | No. 18 | |........ I 7 10pm| 2 lOamj 8 3&am|Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20amj 2 00am| |...T7T7 I | 3 22am1 10 05am|Lv Cochran.. Lv| 3 20pm|12 55am| ".j”’’”” I I 3 54am|10 50am|Lv. Eastman. Lv| 2 41pm|12 25am| I ** I I 4 29am|ll 36am|Lv.. Helena.. Lv| 2 03pm)ll 54pm| I J 6 45amj 2 38pm|Lv.. Jesup... Lv|ll 22am| 9 43pmj I I 8 30am| 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| 6 50pm| | I I 0 40am| 9 25am|Ar Jack’Ville. Lv| 8 00am| 6 50pm| | I N 0.7 | No. 9 | No. 13 | East | No. 16 | No. 10 | | I 7 10pm| 8 30am| 2 05am|Lv.. Macon.. at| 8 20am| 7 10pm|.T......| I 9 45pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20am| 4 20pm| |. |H 60pm|12 00pm| 7 30am|Lv ..Atlanta. Arj 5 10am| 3 55pm| I 9 25am| 8 30pm| 6 10pm|Lv Charlotte Lv|lo 15am| 9 35am| I J I 1 30pm112 00nR.|ll 25pm|Lv . Danville. Lv| 6 07pmj 5 50am| '.f "7.".* I 6 35pm] 6 40am| |Ar. Richmond L.y[l2 01n’n|12 10n,n|..7.77,.|7......" I 9 30pm| 7 35am£. |Ar.. Norfolk. Lv| 9 3oamllo 00pm|.7......|77. I 3 50| 1 53am| |Lv. .Lynch burg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| | I 9 25pm| 6 42am| |Ar Wash gton. Lv|ll 15am|10 43pm| | I 3 00am|10 15am| |Ar Philadlphia Lv 3 50am| 6 55pm| | I 6 20am|12 45n’n| |Ar New York Lv|l2 15am| 4 30pm| |../..7 I 3 pm| 8 30pm| |Ar .. ..Boston Lv| 5 OOpmjlO 00am| THROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC. ‘ Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Cincinantl and Jacksonville, also between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at Macon. Nos. 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween Atlanta and Brunswick. Nos. 9 and 10, elegant free Observatior cars, between Macon and Atlanta, also Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot, Atlanta, with “Southwestern Vestibuled Limited,” finest and fastest train in th€ South. Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. S. Fast Mail Train” to and from the East. FRANK S. GANNON, 3d V. P. & G. M., J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager, Washingon, D. d Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK, G. P. A., g. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A., Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. C. S. WHITE, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A., _ Macon. Ga 6«6 Mulberry Bt. Macon. Ga. Central of Georgia Railway Company YTCEORGIA Schedules in Effect. June 12, 1898, Standard Time 6 ! 7 *l ~ N °- I *l STATIONS | No. 2 No. 8 7 B \°A Pm i o s L am F v Macon .. .Ar| 725 pm| 740 am| 350 pm U 24 pm 840 pm 850 am|Ar ....Fort Valley Lv| 627 pm| 639 am' 242 pm ! 9 30 i> m l’ 1 9 4 P am|Ar. ... Perry Lv|! 4 45 pm| |!11 30 am . 1 53 pm 957 pm |Ar.. Americus ....Lv| I 518 am| 107 pm . 2 17 pmi 10 21 pm |Ar.. .Smithville ..Lvj ] 455 am|f 12 42 pm 327 pmj 11 05 pm| |Ar ....Alb any ...Lv| | 4 15 am| 11 35 am 600 rm | Ar ..Columbia .... Lv| | | g 55 am 3 96 pm. |Ar .. .Dawson ....Lvl I I 11 52 am 3 46 pm: |Ar ... uth bert ...Lv| I | 1111 am 500 P m No 9 • [Ar ...FortGaines ..Lv| No 10 • | 955 am 437 pm; 745 am|Ar ....Eufaula ....Lv 730 pm ! 10 20 a n s 14 pmi |Ar Ozark .. ..Lv j 650 am 600 pm| 905 am|Ar ..Union Springs Lv 600 pm j 905 am 7 25 pm| | |Ar Troy. . ..Lv | 7 55 am 730 pm|..... j 10 35 am|Ar.. Montgomery ..Lv| 420 pm j 740 am No. 11.*| No. 3.*i Tlo. l.«l | No. 2.*| ~No. 4.*j No. li* 8 00 am! 425 ami 4 20 pmjLv ... .Macon. . ..Ar! 11 10 am| 11 10 pm| 720 pm 922 am; 540 am[ 540 pm|Lv. .Barne sville . .Lv, 945 r 945 pm| «05 pm 112 00 ml 12 00 m| 710 pm|Ar... .Thom aston |8 10 am| ! 300 pm 955 am 608 am| 613 pm|Ar. .. .Gri Bin. . ..Lv| 912 am| 915 pm| 520 pm |! 100 pm| |Ar.. ..Carrollton ..Lv| | | 220 pm II 20 am| 735 am| 735 pm|Ar.. . Atlanta. Lv 750 am! 750 pm! 4 OF, nm No7?. !l No. 4. *| No. 2*j , He. l n„. Ko 6 : ‘ 730 pm 11 38 pml 11 25 am|Lv. .. .Macon. . ..at! ...J 155 s’-• 745 am 8 10 pm 12 19 am 12 08 pm,Ar. , ..Gordon. .. .Ar| 4 00 pm| 2 10 am| 7 10?.in 8 50 pm ! 1 15 pm|Ar. .Milledgeville .Lvj 3 00 pm| I 6 20 am 10 00 pm ’ 3 00 pm|Ar.. ..Eatonton. . .Lv!l2 50 pm | 525 am I 4 45 pmjAr. . .Mac hen. . .Lvl!10 55 am; | ■■■■!’ 6 50 pm|Ar. .. Covington. ..Lv|l 9 20 ami j •11 25 am ’ll 38 pm|*ll 25 am|Lv. 77. Macon 7 ..Ar|* 3 45 pm;* 3 55 ami* 3 45 pm 1 17 pm; 1 30 am f 1 17 pm|Lv. . .Tennille Lv| 156 pm; 152 am| 156 pm 230 pm| 225 am 230 pm;Lv. . Wadley. .. .Lvlfl2 55 pm 12 25 am! 12 55 pm 251 pmj 2 44 am| 251 pmjLv. .. Midville. . Lv| 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[sll 30 am s 4 17 pm. 442 am 503 pm Lv .Waynesboro ..Lv[ 10 10 am| 10 34 pm 10 47 am s 5 30 pmi 635 am! 650 pm|Ar.. ..Augusta .. .Lvl !8 20 am| 840 pm 930 am I 342 am| 3 50 pm|Lv.. Rocky Ford.. .Lv| 11 03 am 11 14 pm I 3 58 am!| 408 pm|Lv Dover. . ..Lv| 10 47 am| 10 57 am I 6 00 ana; 6 00 pm|Lv.. .Savannah. . .Lv| 8 45 am! 9 00 pml No. 16. *| | No? 15. •) * i 10 45 am|Ar. ...Madison. .. Lv 440 pm 7 • Daily. ! Daily except Sunday, f station. ■ Sunday »nly. 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 Macoa and Savannah and Aalanta and Savannah. Sleepers for Savannah are ready for •ecu pancy in Macon depot at 9:00 p. m. Pas-sengers arriving in Macon on No. 3 and Sa vannah on No. 4, are allowed to remain tusleeper until 7a. m. Parlor cars between Macon and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 2. Seat fare 25 cents. Passengers for Wrightsville. Dublin and Sandersville takell:2s. Train arrives Fort Gaines 4:45 p. m., and leaves 10:10 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. m. and leaves 7:30 a. m. For further information or schedules t* points beyond our lines, addisan J G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macsn, Ga. «. P. BONNER, U. T. A. 8. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager J. C. HAIL®, G. P. A THEO T). KT.TNW n '•-«> Si, nerln ten dent. HARNESS AND R SADDLERY, GO TO G. B E R N D&. CO . Our goods are the Best, and our prices the Lowest. 3