Newspaper Page Text
fit is a paJnfi
sig. st to see an
otherwise robust
man limping
along on a crutch
or cane, a sufferer
from rheumatism.
Rheumatism is a
disease that will
never attack a
man who keeps
his blood pure
and rich. Therr.
ia just one way to
do this. That' is.
to keep the diges
tion and tkwsimila- ’
tion perfect and '
the liver and ’
bqxvels active.
AB cases of »
rheumatism are
promptly cured <
by Dr. Pierce’s
Golden, Medical
Disc Ave ry . It
creates a keen,
hearty appetite,
, , " corrects all dis-
orders of the digestion, and. all weakness
of the stbmach. ft rnak.es the assimilation
perfect, the liver active, the.“blood pure and
rich with the life-giving elements of the
food, the, nerves strong and steady, and it
drives all impurities and abnormal acids
froffu the blood. It allays inflammation aud
dispels pain. It is the great blood-maker
ana flesn-builder. It does not make cor
pulent people more corpulent. Unlike cod
liver oil, it does not build flabby flesh, but
hears down the unhealthy, half - dead tis
sues that constitute corpulency, carries
them away and excretes them, replacing
them with the firm tissues of health.
Thousands have testified to its merits.
■Sold at all medicine stores.
“ I have been afflicted with rheumatistn aud
kidney trouble,” writo- Mr C. B. White, of
Grove, Geauga Co., Ohio ”1 suffrr d untold
paw. I was afraid I would lose mv mind. Al
times was almo*t entirely helpless. There had
not been a night for three years that I could rest
KM any ponition. 1 tried Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Diwcovt-ry I used three bottles of it
and am well of both diseases.**
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con
stipation. Constipation is the cause of
many diseases. Cure the cause and you
cure the disease. One “ Pellet ” is a
gentle laxative, and two a mild cathar
tic. Druggists sell them and there’s
nothing else “just as good.”
COCOA- and
CHOCOL/ITESJ
FOR EATIHE DRINKING, il j !j
COOKING. BAKING 8? W ’ rfm f
Purdy of Material and v.'/ M ‘ /'•
•eteawfiMK-nawrUnexcelkd \
FDR SALE Al OUR STORIS
AMD BY \
GROCffiS tVtRYWHERt c
«Hisr C is a non-poißonoui*
•ernedy fur Gonorrhoea.
Meet. Spermatorrhoea
iVhites, unnatural dis
harges, or any infiamma
ion, irritation or ulcera
tion of n» uco u s mem
branes. Non-astringent
Sold by I>ru«.- C i»U,
or sent in plain wrapper,
by express, prepaid, foi
11.(10, or 3 bottles, |2.75.
CircwGr sent nn
® JAPANESE
Fa i a
CURB
A New and Complete 1 reatinent, consisting of
SI’PBOSI roRIES, Capsules of Ointment and two
Boxes of Oiatment. A never-failing cure for Piles
• f every’ nature and degree, it ma.<es ai; operation
with the knife, which is painful, and often results
in death, unnecessary. Why endure this terrible
disease? We pack a Written Guarantee in each
$1 Box. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. and ft a box, 6 for
’5. Sent by mail. Samples free
OINTMENT, 25c. and 50c.
i'‘ANQTIPATini\i Cured. Piles Prevented, by
UUIvO 511 n I Iv.) Japanese Liver Pellets, the
great LIVER and STOM ACH RF.GULATOKand
BLOOD PURIFIER. Small, mild and pleasant
to take: especially adapted tor children’s use. 50
doses 25 cents.
FREE.— a vial of these famous little Pellets will
be given with a $1 box or more ol File Cure.
Notice The genuine mu.sh Japanese Pili
Cure for sale only bv
For Sale at Goodwyn’e Drug Store and
Brown House Pharmacy.
Don’t Lose sight
Os the Fact...
I
That we do the highest class Bind
ery work at prices that will com
pete with any establistment in the
country.
la 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 &
showing--jt chance to bidon your
J work. 111111;
dl 2 We have added to our plant a
Well Equipped
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 ntins coPri.
VIGOR'MEK
Easily,Quickly, Permanently Restored
MAGNETIC NERVINE
antee to Cure Insomnia, Fits, Dizziness, Hysteria,
Nervous Debility, Lost Vitality. Seminal Losses,
Failing Memory—the result of Over-work, Worry,
Sickness, Errors cd Youth or Over-indulgence
Price 50c. and $1; 6 boxes S 5.
For quick, positive tnd lasting results in Sexual
Weakness, Impotence. Nervous Debility and Lost
Vitality, use YELLOW LABEL SPEClAL—double
strength—will give strength and tone to evert part
and effect a permanent cure. Cheapest and best.
joo Pills $2; by mail.
c REE —A bottle of the famous Japanese Live,
Pellets will be given with a Ji m>x er more 01 Mig
Übctic Nervine, tree. Sold enk by
m am,
WLat is Going on in Our So
cial World.
I PARTIES MO PASTIMES.
i
* Receptions, Teas, Cards, and all
Manner of Pleasure Things
at Home and Abroad.
Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Zettler, of Aijanta,
have announced the engagement of t’jei,
daughter, Hattie Guvton. to Mr. H. W.
Dent. The marriage will occur at the
home of the bride, December 22nd. and the
ceremony will be witnessed bv the rela
tives and intimate friends of the coutract
| ing parties.
• • •
The following invitations have been re
; ceived by a few Macon people:
The Relief Association invite you to be
present
at the reception
to
Our Distinguished Guests,
at the residence of
Mar and Mrs. W. A. Hemphill.
December fourteenth.
Miss Ella M. Powell, Pres..
I 4:30 to 6. 514 Peachtree street.
■ The invitations are prettily engraved.
I and are adorned with United Stares
’ flag in the national colors.
• • •
Atlanta is making great preparations
for the Peace ’ubllee and the entertain
ment of the distinguished guests who will
1 be in the city for that occasion.
The Misses ‘Wheeler will be entertained
at the home of Colonel and Mrs. W. A.
Hemphill during their visit to Atlanta.
This year there seems to be a singular
j dearth of debutantes in Macon’s social
i world, and as a consequence there have
i been comparatively few large receptions,
i One of the prettiest young girls who has
i entered society here for years is Miss
Nellie Collins, the daughter of Mrs. Ap
pleton Collins. Miss Collins was parrieu-
■ larly lovely at the recent recention given
by Mrs. .Taoues and Mrs. Talbott, where
she received a Dink organdy, looking as
someone said, like a bridesmaid rose.
• ♦ •
Late this month a beautiful reception
wLI be given by Miss Louise and Miss
i Hattie Hazlehurst, who are spending the
1 winter in their home on Fonsyth street,
I chaperoned by Miss Nagle, a charming
lady from Atlanta.
* * *
I Mr. Perry H. Oliver is the guest of Mr.
Joseph Clisby in Vineville.
■ Colonel and Mrs 'William Henry Ross
' give a reception tomorrow night.
* <5 #
Mrs. A. O. Bacon is in Atlanta with her
daughter, Mrs. Manly B. Curry.
• • •
The Current Topics club met this morn
ing in Mrs. Cobb’s parlors at Wesleyan
1 college. Mrs. E. J. Willingham had ar-
■ ranged the program, which was a most
; interesting; one.
Countess Casa Valencia’s bazaar at
j Downshire house in aid of the Spanish
| sufferers by the late war has been a bril
\ liant success. It was opened by Princess
; Henry of Battenberg and a dazzling array
of duchesses and countesses kept the
stalls. The princess herself did a brisk
trade in Spanish guitars, fans, etc., and
she also bought a number of articles, in
j eluding a water color by Garcia Mercia,
representing a Spanish gypsy, in behalf of
; the queen. Several of the contributions
were presented by the pope, the Queen re
gent of Spain, ex-Queen Isabel of Spain,
the queen of Servia and Princess Ludwig
of Bavaria. They fetched high prices.
The young king of Spain has just had a
vei;- pleasant windfall in the shape of a
legacy of 3.000,000 pesetas, bequeathed to
him by an old gentleman named Soler,
who had a close though unacknowledged
relationship to the king, being the natural
| son of Ferdinand VIII. and great uncle of
ing Alfonso. The testator's relatives op
posed the will, but the queen regent, as
her son’s next best friend, supported it
and the suit has now been decided in favor
| of the king.
♦ ? *
The Progressive Euchre club will be
entertained Thursday evening by Mrs.
Marsh Johnston.
# ♦ *
• Miss Jordan, of Augusta, will be the
; guest of Mrs. Hugh Miller Willet early in
January.
SHALL WE FORGIVE HER?
Marie Wainright’s New Play at the Acade
my Thursday Niglis.
Marie Wainwright will make her ao-
I pearance at the Academy Thursday night
in a new English play called ‘‘Shall We
Forgive Her." The story is-described as
simple yet full of human treatment. It is
admirably told in a clear, concise, direct
way; and rake it all in all. it is unques
tionably one of the most vigorous and
virile dramas of domestic life produced in
recent years. The curtain rises on a scene
in the backwoods of far-away Australia.
Nell Garth has refused to keep his promise
to the sweetheart of his youth, who has
left the home of their childhood in Eng
land and crossed the seas to meet him.
She finds him sadly different from the
blithe young hero of her girlhood, but she
lives on with him in the hope of a refor
mation which never comes. All the per
suasive eloquence of her great love cannot
win him back to the paths of rectitude.
; Evil associations have corrupted him and
all her efforts are in vain. She pleads
with all the earnestness of a broken
hearted girl to right the wrong which he
has done, but her pitiful cries are laughed
to scorn. There is is no hope, no future
in store for her —nothing but misery, pov
erty and despair. Her love is dead: her
girlhood idol is shattered. She determines
to shake off the chains which bind her to
a life that has always been abhorrent, and
she returns to Englad. where amid sur
roundings she hopes to atone for a past
that was not of her making. Into this
new life there comes a good and true man
who wins her regard and then her love.
She is worthy to be his wife —the sweet,
gentle young girl, who has come forth
from the fire of her early life purified and
sanctified. Her happiness is so great that
■ she fears to tell her husband of that one
episode in her life which she had buried
, deep in the sepulchre of the past from
I which she hoped there would be no resur-
MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 12 1898.
rect ion. All is peace and joy in the house
hold, v hen like a bolt from heaven there
comes into the sunshine of her life a
shadow ff’om the nast ! n the form of the
man who betrayed her. He threatens to
disclose all. She, fearful of the conse
, quences. gives him money. She Las an
enemy In her own bouse —a Jealous woman
Abo learns of her wretched past and ex
poses her. Her uresent life of true wo
manly devotion and stainless purity will
not atone in the stern husband’s eyes fur
the secret she has kept from him. Her
enemy has constructed a plausible story.
The man's rigid sense of right is shock
ed; he is unforgiving, and the weight of
evidence is so overwhelmingly against her
that he pitilessly drives her from his
home. The shock of the exposure, coming
as it does at a time when his eyesight is
' affected, makes him blind, and the wife
leaves the only home she has even known,
overcome with grief at the misery she has
unwittingly caused. She goe» out to bat
fle with the world again, her Jove for the
1 man who has driven her forth unshaken.
i 1
r y V t * •
T IW f
-‘l.*- — last v L.--2r ¥
'I- .
.Wwl fW 1
■or i j1 n 1
Wn 'l i H vi
- ; i iii i 1 *.
She is instrumental in securing the ser
! vices of a great oculist, who, after an
examination of the afflicted man's eyes.
I promises that his sight shall be restored.
1 Through the agency of friends, husband
. and wife are brought together and a re-
■ ' conciliation is effected after a severe bat
| tie between the man’s pride and his love.
' machinations of the jealous woman
i are made plain and her duplicity ex
; | posed, and the certain falls on. a pretty
; > scene of domestic bliss.
The play abounds in strong dramatic
j situations and powerful climaxes, all ar
-1 rived at by legitimate means and without
1 ‘ the assitance of mechanical effects or
■ j stage carpentry. The story is full of that
element of heart interest so necessary to
the success of a quiet play, and it is lack
ing in that lutra sensationalism so common
; to the average English melodrama. Neith
er is it what is known now-a-days as a
> "problem play.” It aims to settle no social
’ questions but presents a phase as it ex
ists, and the picture is a true one. Good
comedy is furnished by the amusing love
affairs of Nellie (Oliver’s sister) and Reg
gie Walton, her sweeiherat, also by the
I broad comedy of Aunt Martha, whose
j loyalty to Grace through her visissitudes
j for a splendid foil to the treachery of
j Joanna. Miss ’Wainwright has made a
notable success in the leading part.
Spain’s Greatest Need.
Mr. 11. P. Olivia, of Barcelona, Spain,
spends his winters at Aiken. S. C. Weak
nerves had caused severe pains in the back
of his head. On using Electric Bitters,
America’s greatest blood and nerve rem
edy, all pain soon left him. He says this
, j grand medicine is what his country needs.
; All America knows that it cures liver and
kidney trouble, purifies the blood, tones
{ up the stomach, strengthens the nerves,
puts vim, vigor and new life into every
muscle, nerve and organ of the body. If
i weak, tired or ailing you need it. Every
. I bottle guaranteed, only 50 cents. Sold by
H. J. Lamar & Sons, druggists.
Two Pointed Oaestions Answerer?.
M. hat. is the use of making a better ar
ticale than your competitor if you can
not get a beter price for it?
; Ans. —As there is no difference in the
, price the public will buy only the better,
so that while our profits may be smaller
i on a single sale they will be much larger
in the aggregate.
; How can you get the public to know
that your make is the best?
, If both articles are brought prominently ■
1 before the public both are certain to be
tried and the public will very quickly
pass judgment on them and use only the
. better one.
This explains the large sale on Cham
berlain’s Cough Remedy. The people have
been using it for years and have found
that it can always be depended upon. They i
may occasionally take up with some fash
ionable novelty put forth with exagger- i
ated claims, but are certain to return to !
i the one reemdy that they know to be re
liable, and for coughs, colds and croup
there is nothing equal to Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy. For sale by H. J. Lamar
& Sons.
PEACE JUBILEE.
Celebration in Atlanta, Georgia, on Dec.
14th and 15th.
Account of the above occasion tickets will
be sold at very low rates via the Southern
Railway. Rate of one first-class fare will
apply for tickets sold on December 14 and
15, with final limit December If*. Also,
I tickets sold on December 13 and 14, and
I for trains scheduled to arrive Atlanta oe
| fore noon of December 15, with final limit 1
j December 18, will be Macon to Atlanta •
' and return $1.90. Four trains daily via ’
Southern Railway.
Chamberlain's Colic,’Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy can always be depended
upon and is pleasant and safe to take.
i Sold by H. J. Lamar & Sons.
• Macon, Dublin
and Savannah R.
*<l 2a | id] ;«
P.M.jP.M. STATIONS. jA.M. A.M.
4 00 2 30 Lv ...Macon ....Ar 9 40jl0 15
4 15 2 50 f ..Swift Creek ~f 9 20 10 00
4 25 3 O')ff ..Dry Branch ~f 9 10 9 50
4 35 3 10 f ..Pike’s Peak ..f 9 00 9 40
4 45 3 20 f ...Fitzpatrick ...f 8 50 9 30
4 50 3 30 f Ripley f 8 40 9 25
5 05 3 50|s ..Jeffersonville., s 8 25 9 15
515 4 00. f ....Gallimore.... f 8 05 905
5 25 4 15 s ....Danville ....a 7 50 8 50
5 30 4 25 s ...Allentown... s! 7 s(f 8 50
5 40 4 40 s ....Montrose.... s 7 25 8 35
5 50 5 00 s Dudley,,... g: 7 10' 8 25
6 02 5 25’s M00re.,,., s' 6 55 J 8 12
6 15 5 40jAr. ...Dublin ~.Lv| 0 30| 8 30
~~ jA?MJA~ML
♦Passenger, Sunday.
d Mixed, Daily, except Sunday. ; _ •'
FOR BILIOUS AND NERVOUS DISORDERS J
such as Wind and Pain tn the Stomacu,
Giddiness Fulness after meals. Head
i ache. Dizziness, Drowsiness. Flushi-43
i of Heat, Loss of Appetite, CostiVsness.
Blotches on the Skin. Sold Chills, Dis
turbed Sleep. Frightful Dreams and all
Nervous ami Trembling Sensations. ’
TEE FIRST DOSE WILL GIVE h’JLIEP
IN TWENTY MINUTES. Every sufferer,
will acknowledge them io be
A WONDERFUL MEDICINE.
REECHAM-S PILLS, taken as direct
cd, will quickly restore Females to com
plete health. They promptly remove
obstructions or irregularities of the sys
tem and cure *ick Headache. For a
Weak Stomach
Impaired Digestion
Disordered Liver
IN MEN, WOMEN OR CHILDREN
Beecham’s Pills are
Without a Rival
And have the
LARGEST SALE
of any Patent Medicine ist the World,
25c. at all Drug Stores,
H /I /fe
iLRYSIPELAS
Tw® Diseases That Cause Their
Victims to Be Shunned by
Thdr
SPRIXeFIELD, Mo.
Gentlemen : I commenced taking P.
P. P., Lippman’s Great Remedy, last
Fall, for Erysipel is. My face was com
pletely covered with the disease; I took
I & short course of P. P. P., and it soon
disappeared. This Spring I became
ranch debilitated and again took an
other course, and I am now in good
> condition. I consider P. P. P. one of
the best blood preparations on the
market, and for those who need a gen
, aral tonic to build up the system and
Improve the appetite I consider that It
has no equal. V/ill say, anyone who
cares to trv P. P. P. will not be disap
pointed In its results, and I, therefore,
cheerfully recommend it.
ARTHUR WOOD,
Springfield, Mo.
RTrysfpelas and Scrofula cured by P.
P. P., Lippman’s ( reat Remedy, surely
and without fail.
Spring field, Mo.
Gentlemen: Liist June I had a
scrofulous sore which broke out on my
, ankle. It grew rapidly, and soon ex
tended from my ankle to my knee. I
got one bottle of your P. P. P., Lipp
man's Great Remedy, and was agree
' ably surprised at the result. Theentire
sore healed at ones. I think I have
i taken almost every medicine recom
mended for scrofula and catarrh, and
veur P. P. P. is the best I have ever
irivti. It cannot be recommended too
highly for blood poison, etc.
Ysura very truly,
W. P. HUNTER.
P. P. P. cures all blood and skin dis
ease, both in men and women.
Rheumatism, w hich makes man’s life
1 heli upon earth, can be relieved at ■
ones by P. P. P., Lippman’s Great Rem- ,
I edv. It makes a PERMANENT cure.
r P P. is the great and only remedy
for advanced caas»s of catarrh. Stop
page of the nostrils and difficulty in |
breathing when lying down, P. P. P.
relieves at once.
P. P. P. cures blood poisoning in all
ita various stages, old ulcers, sores and
kidaey complaints.
Sold by «U druggists.
UPPMAN BROS., A, sthscarlss. Seis Prsp’rs,
Uppsßan’s Bieck, Savannah. <2a.
i
Success
In advertising comes in a lumn.
You must not expect such things.
Advertise your goods clearly and
constantly. It won’t be long be
fore people will begin to believe i
in you and come your way.
< j
i i
TH EZ
NEW YORK WORLD
I 1
Th rlce-a-Week Edition ,
18 Pages a Week...
...156 Papers a Year
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Published every alternate day except Sun
day.
The Thriee-a-Week edition of the New
York World is first among all weekly
papers in size, frequency of publication
and the freshness, acuracy and variety of
its contents. It has all the merits of a
great 56 daily at the price of a dollar
complete, accurate and impartial, as all
of its readers will testify. It is against
the monopolies and for the people.
It prints the news of the world, having
special news correspondents from all points
on the globe. It has briliant illustrations,
stories by breat authors, a capital humor
ous page, complete markets, a depart- i
ment of the household and women’s work
and other special departments of unusual
interest.
We offer this unequalled newspaper and j
• The Nava together for one year for JS.OO. *
To ths Temperance
People:
In a speech at the Academy of Music made
recently Major J. F. Hanson said: “It is
my opinion that where there were ten
drunkards in Macon before you had a
brewery there is one now.”
Good Beer is the Best
Temperance Drink
The Medical Faculty has recognized
the fact that ACME MALT TONIC is v
a valuable Medicine and it is therefore
classed as a proprietary medicine. Order a
case from your druggist or from
The Acme Brewing Company
IT is timeT
I TO THINK—
J.
fil
■ V“ “
*
of what kind of cooking apparatus shall be put in for
tall! 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.
This IT'intry ITeather.
Demands that you look to the comfort of your house.
First, the’grate. If it is now out we have the new
ones. Latest and best makes. Next, the windows.
We have the glass. Full lines builder’s supplies.
364THIRDST. 3
| RRIERICRN DENTAL PARLORS |
It Popular Prices. Best Work. ;
■R Best Equipped and Finest Dental Parlors it the
■K South.
DRS. YOUNG & LANIER, H
■ r <<
Corner Second and Cherry Streets. • A ’l
...• i
/ * %
I Does Your
Watch Keep Time?
Most watches do, but few do so correctly. A
grain of dust, a bit of hair, a loose screw, may
be the trouble. You can’t find it—we can. The I
best watchmaker in Macon is here at your
I service.
BEELAND, The Jeweler. I
«MSHm£SSSHHHaH9BssffIKa»aaHHSEBaaIaHSBEgE@mKBraaHnI
3