The Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1905, November 26, 1894, Image 2
*rs^ THE MACON TELEGRAPH: MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1894. TEN YEARS OLD YESTERDAY. Bemarkable Growth of a Little Church Founded Just a Few loans Ago as ft Mission. A XEW CRGRCU TO WE BUILT <nia Lot Mm Noon Bvagnt and FoM For —Ha out Anvlvanorr formon by Jt.v. O. B. Cho.tor—A- Largo }fe|ok Og.rlag Giron. (Yesterday mi an Important day at Ceaitanary church, dor It marked the ninth anniversary of the dhurch and the tenth of the Sunday eohool, which latter era* realty the foundation of the church, and moot fittingly did both the church and echool celebrate the day. OCt the 11 \ o'clock morning eerrtce Bey. O. Tt. Chester, the pastor, preached a eoectal annlyeraary eer- mon. In wMch he pointed out the prog- roes of the church (Turing the short time It <h*a been In existence end the good work It lias accompHahed In snaking Christian men and women of go many of Macon's good people. He also took oooaiion to oHude to the fact that plans are already partially under ■way for e new church edifice, the tot tiling already been bought and paid for and certain arrangements made. He appealed to the members to build their new churoh at once, and, no doubt, the preacher's words stirred up «he church and hie advice will be heeded. • SUNDAY GCSHOOL ANNIVERSARY. Uhe service for which special ar rangements bad been made <was the Sunday school anniversary service in the afternoon. The exercises were highly successful ind Me elurch was crowded with members and visitors. The church was tastefully decorated, on the walls In gilt being Ike ngures "lSSt-.SSt." and over the pulpit In gilt letters the words. “Our BirthdayA profusion of beautiful Chrysanthe mums, roses, palms, ferns and other pi nts ornamented the churoh, and the whole presented a beautiful scene. The anniversary thank offering by the children was the largest in file history of the school, amounting to 3185.26. The following class-* gave the largest amounts In the order named: Mm. Land's class, Ben B.' Goodyc.tr’* class. Mrs. BeaH’s and Mr. Cobh's class, P. K. Dennis' class. In the review of the aCtiool before Suuertntendeut J. J> Cobb and invited guests each class carried an appro priate symbol representing tome po rted In the Savior's life. The music was etpefilaXy good, the tinging bring acoompaned by organ, piano, cornet, vlo'ina and flute. The following was the very attract ive programme rendered: Opening song—School. Prayer. Song—School. Superintendent's address. Review of studies In me or Jesus. 1— The land In which Jesus lived (map of Faustina) sxp.alneri by Miss Loula Belle Poole. !—Babyhood of Jesus, by primary dsai. 2— Boyhood of Jesus, by Mr. W. P. BMckahear's class, , 4—Manhood of Jesus, by J. B. Ben nett's Close, Miss Bailie Van Houten'a class, .Miss Annl« Strayer'a class. Song—By school. Anniversary address—F. L. Mailary. Birthday aong-Trlmaxy department. Offerings. Anniversary gift*. Banner presentation. Bong—"OOod-bye," by llttlo folks. TUB ANNIVERSARY SERMON. Rev. o. d. Chester took os a text for the anniversary sermon delivered at the morning service, “Fight the Good light of faith." First Jeremiah. O il, and bslow Is a synopsis of what he Mid: In the Bible the church Is constant ly compared to an army, and the Chris tian life to a warfare. Paul also com- paras the Chrlatlan life to racing Ini the the Grecian games, where men .con tended for a prise. It moans there will be a contending against offering fixv» « to tha end. U la true us regards our personal experience, In order to maintain our Integrity an Christian*. Being con verted don't place you out of reach of (linger: you may, as Paul feared, become a castaway. There Is no 'Math of Christian perfection In this’life, wherein the contention against evil, as regards your personal experience, owses. Then It la a warfare between the church and the world. The church la an nrmy. We all speak of tho church militant and the church triumphant; I. e.. tho church engaged In warfare, and tho churoh In triumph after victo ry. No triumph until the tight Is over. The death of u Christian Is a triumph. Joining tho Church' Is swelling the army. Suppose an enemy Invading our country, and ruining our Homes—you ask a man to enroll to meet the enemy, and he declare* himself In sympathy with your moveent, but .declines to fight. You would not care for a man who only had sentiments to place at your disposal: you want a man to fight. I would not give a copper for a man who only has sympatny tor the church. There should be oj compro mise between the church and world, and thcra can be no harmony. It la a light to the death. ouortfloe begin* with enrollment In Che army. Hon- the htouia of fathers, h'si- banla end eons thrilled st they ktessd loved ones goodbye to loin the army! How great sacrifice wtvas and mothers have made to send huab.ir.tVi and stme to the front! Oi(Mur’s eotdtpra. from devotion to cause, gained a victory and Mndcd In Britain, though thy had to light While tmv'mnWntr In the water. They labored In Omul a month day and ntetit tn r>ln and coM. r.vltvr on half mhWn: when O-eesr Offered to nl’reat they cried no. YA In' our pretended warfare sei'rmt Popular, Preacher Says HOOD'S Rallies the Vital. Forces and elves Strength. Uev. J. if. Driver, D. D., Is widely known as pastor oI the First M. B. Churcb at Columbia City, Indiana, and u a powerful pulpit orator, Bis book, "Samson and Bbyloek, or a Preacher's Plea for ths Workingman," bag received mneb praise from press sad clergy. Iir. Driver ssjst “C. L Rood ft Co., Lowell, Mass.) “Dear Sirs—Among the rallers o! an the vital forces, I regard Hood's gar. aaparilla as the genersMn-chlel Crowded and overworked, as a preacher and lecturer, I sometimes am conscious that I am not measuring np to the best that lam capable of doing. A few drees-a bottle or two—ot Boons however, greatly Invigorate My Body, Clarify My Mind, and Make me feel Like a New Man. "In a track I am up to concert pitch again, cheerful, buoyant and ready for any work and capable of any feat of strength or endurance. To all over- worked profeetlonal men Hood's Sar saparilla 19 a God-seuii. "Very truly yours, •'Jonx Juaanu DnrvBB.” Sarsaparilla CURES Bren when other preparations fall. Be sure to get Hood’s and only nood's. Hood's Pills become the favorite ca thartic with every ono who trios them. 21c, Not, Stour muen we mnJnk of our uauiler ih*r„. -uott ip*ay wl Guiuv-ja.i, -y. A man upoue It Itui .ure trims until hts puetor 9411*0*00 iwt nuu avow utrougn toe lire, mni Utm wlnciMi mmjaan wuu a few (hickung utoten icy a hungry negro. Men Ulik of sjicrjnce, but nb man gives unui the’ltaa lose head on hia ta ll thrills me to read of bnave men: men not aluid ot sacrifice. i would never euunins a cowunl- Herpksm has not died out ot church: many wuu are ligating for God now are tho ibraveat trf the (brave. l But coturch being colled an army moans (that at is oagraastve. It la sn In vading onmy. A etsan should not join churoh hast to get euved. It a man la seeking wifely. Inateend ot Joining the army he mould cnurl Into a hollow tree. A man loins the tunny to fight. , The .Bible nowhere declare# we are tq ecnqulr the worM by pnsstve viriuea. Meny of ithe Hiolletit meet I ever knew acoctnpBab little tor God. A church mey be the .purest of churoh tn, nnd unless tt Is aggremlve, lmlera ft ha* the spirit ot an Invading nnmy, St .will accomplice but little. The Mnntw's command is "Fo!" He doeanlt say Ju*l be good. TM*.i» a spiritual cjiuch, and durin" tho last three yearn there have bean over two hundred bonverrtons here; tju* •while Oemenwnr has been wondertult- akve. llishe loose the npVnlt of arrgrew- Ivenass She -will (become wonderf u’.l? dead. SLEEPLESSNESS, V* i Nervous De- iTfcT UUtv, K*rv- ^ * 1 * out Exhaust ion. Nt'urmi* 1 Faraly- /tu, Locomo tor Ataxia, aci kindred oilmen**, whether nNMbI from over overwork or study, or from unnatural habit* or exocwM, art treated iu a RpectoUv, with gr-^i tuoceet, by the Staff cf HpedalUta attached to the luvnlisls’ H-tod tadBIRkul Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. FvkdiI examinations not alnyi necessary. Many cases am ruceeas- fuUr treated at a distance, a amir it a A new and wvuderfully AiJlllfllilt lUCieCftll treatrrivnt ha* been divcvvervd (or Asthma and Uav Fever, uiuoh can Iw aent by Mall or Kxjjrau. It U ua tlmply a )*lLat;va but a radical cioy. Fur pwmphtota, question bhmka, rrfer* «w« and paruculart, m relaUon to any Of tha above mentioned diaroMM, addreaa, with tan centa In stampc, WorM'e Di&p^na* ary Mtdit*al AaaxaaUoc, 063 Main blreet, Buffalo. B. Y. Tha lnaerlptlon In tha Fly X**f. “People who sell bookw to iwoondband I bookitoree should pay attention to the ■ tunall matter ot removing their name* ! from the fly leavta,” remarked a Fourth j avenuolounger. “Of oourse thero 1bnoth' lug very dlaturblng In reading ‘Aunt lea- bel, from her loving nephew, George; j Christinas, 1888/ or ‘To mydoar, darling ; wife, on her twenty-fifth birthday, from i her devoted hnuband, Janie*/ though tha j sentimental wind must naturally fool a , patliotlo |Ming that the roduoed fortunes of ■ Aunt Isabol and tho darling wlfo foroed 1 them to part with the aforesaid tokens. It ; U kwnly dintru*»lug, huw.'vt r, to reml lu i an almost new book of poems by n not al- «together obsoure poet the name of aproml* noni iHiitor, with (ho U'rvld compliments of the author. Suppositious are aroused. Ars cold hearted editors In ths habit of thus working off presentation volumes of poetry in onLr to keep themselves In cigars and neckties or did the editor's untrust- j worthy colored servant abstract tho book muI gui ivnta on it lu buy ht*r*elf an extremely ueeescary silver bangla ring? I This should be made a star chamber affair and the agitating occurrence bo not al lowed to happen again.“—LoulsvlUo Cou rier-Journal. | Be WM Shocked. It is a truly a-malting thing, this Euro pean lndlfferrnos to corn. The poople cat •omo such tueer things over there that one would think that corn would seem a mighty blotting. In the course of two long journeys over various parts of Europe wo have never but onco found the cereal, and that was at a hotel almoel entirely patronised by Americans and kept by a man who had lived In America in Paria We were talking of corn to an English | man. 8a!d lio, “And do you really o«l it in the Stateef" “Why, yes." “We only feed 1% to animals." “Well, theu, you treat yonr animals better than yourselves.' ITe paused for a minuto. “Then tell me/ eald he, “in what way do you eat iti" h “0n the oar"— “The oarl Oh, fancy) Uow strange!" And he looked quite shocked.—Rochester Post-Exprees. The Name of China. W# speak of “China'' and the “Chi nese" little thinking that the natives of j the Flowery Kingdom never hear thoee ] terms until after leaving tlu« placo of their birth or coming in contact with some ! traveler. They have many names by { which they dorignai* themselves and the land which they inhabit, but “Chinese" and ‘'China" are not among the number. The most ancient name of China Is Tien- • Hia, which signifies “beneath the sky." . Since the present ruling house took eon- ■ lrv>! wf the cmplrv in 1050 ths came of j Ta-Tsing-Kwoh has Uvn applied to Up > kingdom as a whole, and Chuug-Kwoh to J that portion known to Amorioan rvsders as the “Middle Kingdom. "—St. Louis Re public. EIGHT FIFTY. W E WILL OPEN' UP TODAY two dozen new Tailor-made Dresses at $8.50 per Suit that could not be bought for less than $13.00 one month ago at any housein New York. Mr. Juhan secured these among a big purchase of Wraps New York last week, and the ladies of Macon will be given an opportunity of securing ati elegant Suit, ready for wear, at just about the amount of dressmaker’s bill, to say nothing of material, etc. ITT of our recent purchases in Ladies’ Wraps nilll will be opened today and Tuesday. You are fortunate if you’ve postponed buying your Wrap or Dress.;. NOW IS THE TIME m JUHANS’IS THE PUCE. JXJH^JNT 5 ^ 606 CHERRY The lather of a younc nun who hu Ju«: com mitt ej tuicM* in New York layt hv cannot account for the ruh act, though he allow* that a copy of “Trilby" wa« found on the boy** Wde. Possibly somebody had aeked Mm If he had read 1L 0HINESE FISHMONGERS. . rtih m Tame u Domeltlo Animal, and That Like to. Be Handled. In Canton the flibmongcr's la a moat Important trade. The Chinaman la a born fitherman. He also baa for age* past cul tivated a system of artificial breeding ard rearing of llvo fish for the market. In the shops were displayed live and dead flab, fish fresh and salted, smoked and preserv ed.' One variety waa like whitebait, In baskets, graded from tiny things dot halt nn Inch long to what appeared to he tho same fish grown to eight or nine Inches in length. These wero told frosh, salted and smoked. Shark flits are o delicacy. There wero fish mottled and barred, bright and dull, fish of quaint and (to us) unknown shapes, but foremost ahovo all and every where to be seen were the artificially grown llvo fish. I A wonderful creature was this, always appearing to auffer from beat, gasping at the snrfaee of the water for breath and re calling Verdant Green'* fish that were be ginning to sweat and complain. They were as tamo us domestlo animals, seem ingly careless of being knocked about, thrown from ponds Into boats, from boats Into tubs, from tubs Into bnckets and then back Into tubs again. They were used to bolng bandied nnd Inspected, and, If disap proved, put back Into tho water, to bo sold alive If bought whole, or cut to pieces while living and bold In bleeding chunks. A thick, abort fish Is this, of tho mullet shapo, averaging about IS Inches In length nnd weighing about threo pounds, but often longer and running up In weight to as much us four or oven ,flvo pounds. When out up, they blood llko pigs, and to show how freshly they mo killed tho sales man Is In the habit of slicing a llvo one Into pieces and. with the blood smearing all the pleocs for snlo, so thn* they look reeking and horrible to European eyes. To keep them alive In tho shops they arQ always placed In a largo tub with a small er vessel fixed above It. From the bottom of the upper vessel a bamboo, with ono or two sawouts In It, stteks out, and from those ants streams of water flow In thin cssoadss into the tub beneath. Every now and then, when tho upper veisol becomes empty, the fish all rise to the surfaco nnd glop! glopl glopl takedown both air and wator. Then an attendant, attracted by tho nolso, plunges a bucket down among them mid from tho water tn which they swim tills the upper vessel full again.!— Florence O'Driscoll, M. P-, In Century, j SIZE OF A THUNDERBOLT. -j I (JeolofftsU Have a Syntem by Whl6h Such Meaenree Are Taken. “Did you over *eo tho din motor of a lifchtnlnK meaiumir’ asked n geolo gist. “Well, hero is tho cogo which onoo inclosed a Hash of lightning, fitted ib ex actly, so that you can eeo how big it was. This la colled a 'fulgarlto,' or ‘lightning holo,’and tho material it it made of is glass. “When a bole of lightning strikes a bed of sand, it plunges downward Into (ho sand for a distance loss or greater, transform’ ing Mniuitnneoubly into gln*8 the ailion in tho material through which it passes. Thus, by its great heat, it forms a glass tubo of precisely its own size. “Now and ihou such a tube, known as a ‘fulgarlto/ is found and dug up. Ful« garltcs i.»vo boon followed Into tho sand by oxcavntlons for nearly 80 (cct. They vary iu interior diameter from the size of a quill to threo inches or more,’ according to tho 'boro' of tho flash. Rut fulgaritos aro not produced alono In 6and. They aro found also in solid rock; though.very nat< ur&Uy of slight depth, and frequently ex* istlng as a thin, glassy covering on tho surface. ./Such fulgaritos occur in astonishing abuudance ou the summit of Little Ara rut, in Aimenla. The rock Is so soft and porous that blocks a foot long can be ob tained, perforated in all directions by llttlo tubos filled with bottle green glass formed from tho fused rock. "Some.wonderful fulgaritos were found by Humboldt oh tho high Nevada do To luca, In Mexico. Masses of tho rook wore covered with a thin layer of green glass. Its peculiar shimmer in tho sun led Hum boldt to ascend the precipitous peak at the risk of his life."—Pittsburg Dispatch. flu Crispin. A pleasant story is told of tho Emperor Charles V. Ono night ho strolled into a cobbler's shop to get his boot mended. It happened to bo the festival of fit. Crispin. Tho cobbler was making merry'with his friends and declared that no work could bo Uono ou that day lor any man, even though ho wero Charles hlmsrif, bat the stranger was ooAUally invited to join in the merrymaking. He did as he was bid den. “Hero’s to tho health of Charles V/' said tho cobbler. “Do you love him?" asked tho emperor. “Lots him?" said the cobbler. “I da X lovo his long nose- ship well enough, but I should low him more If he taxed Us lees." They finished St. Crispin’s day very pleasantly. Upon tho morrow the emperor sent fur tho cobbler to tho palace and greatly sur prised him by thanking him for hi* hospi tality of tho previous evening, asking him what reward ho h!.t best. The amazed cobbler asked for a night to think of it. Tho next day he appeared boforo the emperor and requested that the cobblers of Flanders might bear for their coat of arms a boot with a crown upon it.—Lip- plnoott’s. Judge Ragsdale tells of a Clarkson youth who wanted to marry. He was awfully frvcklcd and homely, but ho said ho ssked Sal. and she said: • Well, John, I want to marry, I know, but I want a man all oco odor."—Atlanta Constitution. 2 ONE CENT ^ S -A WORD... K WANTED. WANTED—To sell you a ’9* model Denemore typewriter, beet machine in the world. J. E. Mlnter. axent. ‘Phone No. 283. A BOOKKEEPER wants a. position; will work ohean. Address Harman. 128 Academy street, Macon, Ga. FOE RENT. FOR RENT—8ft Orange street; seven rooms, gas sod water, car line. Apply to J. N. Birch. F OR RENT.—Rooms Suridshed or nn- fumtehed. Oose In. Anoly ho 6511-2 Poplar atreeit. FOR RENT.—A deslnsMe bxnme. vlth large «ifidem: convenieraUy lnoaited on Chestnut street. Amply to C. J. Toole, 760 Second street. FOR RENT—Office, or desk room, on ground floor; rent reasonable. E. A. Home. 454 Cherry. FOR RENT—Rear of second floor, all of third floor and basement of American National Bank building. Constructed especially for printing office; after Oc tober 6. R. E. Park. FOR PONT—(The large warehouse, stablee. etc., now occupied by Wat son. Adame ft Co., on Pine street. Immediately on line Georgia Southern and Florida railroad. Terms to an approved tenant. Possession January 1st. Geo. W. Dunoan & Co. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Six heavy working cattle, suitable for logging. Will sell cheap. CU11 on Dwight Gibbs, Penla, Ga. FOR SALE.—One of the beat realdenos bunding lota on the Mil, on Orange street, opposite Tower Fork. Enquire of A. G. Butts or A. L. Butts. LOST. LOST OR STOLEN—Roan mare. 151-2 hands high; eight or 10 ycare old. Suitable reward If returned to Davis' stables. MISCELLANEOUS. FISH AND OYStEHS—All lUndB received every morning and afternoon. Dopson, Clorko & Daniel. BOARD at Chapman's English Kitch en, only 318 per month. nOLM£& ft COUTT’S oelebrated extra toast crackore retail at the low price ot 10c. a pound. TURPIN’S BAKING POtVDER Is the best mads. Have you tried It? PERSONS owing taxes bn wild lands must pay up to save cost and lard. I . cannot advance It. A. G. Butts, Go. Land Agency. L O. O. F.—Alttenttain Franklin Lodge (No. 2) and Macoa Lodge (NO. 12J1. Attend meeting of Vailed Brothers Lodge (NO. 2) Tuesdw Wight. First meeting In nj«v hbtl. VMBB, breth ren Invited. Frank M. Jenkins, N. G. L. S. Hill. Secretary. LINDEN BAKING POWDER always gives satisfaction. Retails 20a. lb. 43 PER CENT, avenge weekly profit* on $150 Invested. Prospectus, ttemlrcd statistics free. Ben eon 4k Dwyer, £34 Broadway, New York. FRESH poultry enrery day. Leave your order with us for a Tlwnknglvlng tur key. Telephone 317. Newton ft Jones. BLUE RIBBON TURKEYS.—Have you ae*n bur bexirttful turkeys? Halve you given us nzi order for one? We •will efreas them nhe day before Thanksgiving and insure you a nice sound, fresh turkey, dressed or Uve. Came <o head Quarters for.eveiything nles and oheaj). Jno C. HMmea & Co. SARATOGA CHIPS are all toe rage, ask your grocer for them. EXPERIENCED workmen and supertog nutcnhl moke MerkN'a plea, ernun i.u«s, ceiahw. par.L-shiMl, macaseoaa, lady Ungers, the beet tn the city. RHORER'd broad raising !s the best bread preparation made. Try U. SIOKVT TO UEND.—No comm^rsion oh«ng\-d. —Porsooib deHdrlrvg to borrow money -in emoariM of $300 and up- waTvJa upon kixproved r«ll estate in the city or suburbs, irttero^t ^vaj*able QUBltsrt? ast e4gbx per ceoit., loan to run troai one to ohree voarw, nbay be oocommfxMte^l toy addressing P. O. toox 663. Dearrtbe the real tuttfle of- f«nod a/* sgmrtir. and <4:ate wmount of ln.sumuco oa the tiigrongnsm.' Bor rower wtil be aut r.o expense except fee for examining a Ue. LINDEN BAKING POWDER always gives satisfaction. Your grocer sells It. BLUE RIBBON.—The Judge* awarded us the first premium for our Rohrefs Bread Raising, pronouncing Rohrer’A better than Horsford’a after a thor ough teat. W. C. Turpin it Co* INTERESTING QUOTATIONS. Fifty 6ne French Suits, no two alike, on front counter j prices cut half in two; some at cost, some less. Ten pieces 32-inch lino printed French Flannels at 35c, to close; worth 75c. Ten pieces 38-inch all-wool Mixed Cheviots just received; old price 50c, now 33 l-3c. Twenty pieces 36-inch "Wool Serges, navy and black, at 16c ; good value for 29c. Superb values in all the new weaves in Dress Silks. The only complete line of carreet styles Dress Trimmings in the city. Two hundred children’s wool and cotton undervests, drawers and union suits; prices, 16, 20 and 25c each, to close out; many of them worth three times the price asked. See them at once. Ladies’ fleece-lined, silk-finished vest and pants, $1 a suit. Stuttgarter’s non-shrinking ladies’ merino union and two- piece 6uits. Big drives in Hosiery and Canton Flannels this week. Full line Brainard and Armstrong's celebrated Wash Silks, Tinted Table Covers, Laundry and Slipper Bags, Art Squares, Honiton Lace effects, Fringes, Felt, Drapery Silks, etc. Bargains in every department. Store always crowded. BURDEI, SMITH k CD. What is Castorla Is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morph I do nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Hlllions of Mothers. Castorin destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castorla prevents vomiting Sour Ourd, cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. Castorla relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castorla assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas« toria is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend. Castoria, “Castorla is an excellent modidae for chil dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of it* good effect upon their children." Da. a. O. Osooon, . Lowell* Mm*. “ Castorla is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hope the day to not for distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children* and use Castoria In stead of the various quack nostrums which are destroying their loved ones* by forcing opium* morphine* soothing syrup and other hurtful agent* down their throats* thereby sending them to premature graves." Dr. J. F. KmewELOR* Conway* Ark. Castoria. “Castoria to so well adapted to children that I recommend it oa superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Archer, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. “ Our physicians in the children’s depart ment have spoken highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castorla, and although wo only have among our medical supplies what to known as regular products* yet we ore free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it" Unitso Hospital ard Dibpxx&ary* Boston, Mass. Alls* c. Siam* JFVe*., Tke Centaur Company, TT Mnrnty Street, New York City* §£r Q n p Pimples, Blotches 3 ^LJLJLJ—LJL and Old Sores 3 ^PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT JT—7“7TT“. and potassium Catarrn, Malaria ^ and Kidney Troubles^ gr Marvelous Curas IE in Blood Poison ^Rheumatism S~and Scrofula Are entirely remove* by P.PJP# m —Priokly Asb, Poke Root and Potas sium, the greatest blood purifier on * earth. • t Aanoror, O.. July 21,1991. » If bisks Lippmam Bros.* Savannah. _ Q*. t Dkajc Hituj—1 bought a botUs of your P.P. P. at Hot Springs. Ark. .and m Itbai doaame more good than tbreo _ months* treatment at the Hot aprlags. Head three bottles O. O. D. . #■ ■“arawmt i- Aberdeen, Brown Ooanty, O. . ** Cap*. J. D. Johnston. ' To alt *»Aom it may concamt I here* 0 • p. p. p. porlfles the blood, builds np , the weak and debilitated, gives strength to weakened nerve*, expel* ■ tl'ieaaee.givliiff the patient health and For primary,■•oondary and tertiary syphilis, lor blood poiaonlcg. morcu- 1 rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and , in all blood and akin disease*, like blc. che*. pimples, old chrome ulcer*. 1 tetter. »cald head, boll*, eryalpela*. , edema w* may aay, without fear of oontrad! ’‘on.that P. P. P. lathebe*tt • blood peri sor in the world,and makes , peeltift. »rxedjand permanent cores la all c*>(*.. Ladles whose systems are poisoned are peculiarly henelted by the ' dc fu: ua.c AtiJ l -l cl.'ftualuc prop* • ortiesof P. p. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke Root and rotsulum. firRiRonno, , HU. Ang. 14th. 1893. ran apeak in the highest terms of { ourmedlalns from my own personal ncwlodge. I was affected with heart dieeaM, itl earl ay and rbenmatlau <or > SA years, waa treated by ths vsryhess , physicians and spent hundreds of dol lars, tried every known remedy with- > out finding relief. 1 have only tak.n , one bouie of yporP. P. P., and c*a cheerfully aay it has done ms more • good than anything I have ever taken, lean recommend your medicine to all sufferers of the above dlseeaea. _ MUfl. M. M. YKaRT. Springfield, Green County, Mo. by testify to the wonderful properties . of P. P. P. for eruptions of the akin. X suffered for several years with an an- ‘ sightly and disagreeable eruption oa , my face. 1 tried every known reme dy bat in vain,until P. P. P. waa need* « TagSfiWiSpixsTos; ■ Savannah, CfaSa * SktoCanesrOarsd. Tutimony fromxhs Mayor if Satpdn Joel * oradUesse of Um. Kin, nsagily _ j as skla cancer,of thirty years* « Wv Standing, and found great relief: IS purlflee the blood end recneves all Ir- riutlon from tha seat ot the dlseaa* e— nnd prevents any aoreodlog of thu sores. I bave taken five or six bottle* and feel confident that another course will effeos a core. It ttaa also relieved ^ me from ludlge*tlon aid stomach trouble*. Yours truly. * OAPT. W. M. BUST, 2Z Attorney at Law. ^*^K» Bock on Blood fissases IM fret ALL DRUGGISTS 6HLL IT. L1PPMAN BRQ8. PROPRIETORS, Umhror'i «lertr,SafSRR>ht fl* BIBB COUNTY SHERIFF SALE. Will be sold before the court hnu„ door in the city of Mscon, during the legal hours of eale. on the first Tues day In December. 1S91. lot. Nos. I, J, S and t. in square 23, couth west com mons. between Har.el and Ash streets. Said property levied on to satisfy two justice court ti. fas. Issued from tiSath district. G. M., ot Muscogee county. In favor ot Doeb a Kaufnan »nd Loots BuhUr ft. Co., and one fi. f«. Issued from superior court of Musco gee county In favor of A. J. Bethune vs. L. W. Bates. L. B. HERRINGTON. Deputy Sheriff. LAND SALE. Oa the flret Tuesday in December next I will offer at public sale before the court house in Macon. Bibb coun ty, Ga.. lot No. 234. in Rutland dis trict, eigrht milee from Macon, known as the George Cherry place; contain* 202 1-2 acres: near the Georgia Sonth- ern ami Plodlda and Southwestern rail roads. Good shipping {Mint, good land, gr*od neighborhood., six room dwelling, fine water: 130 acres cleared ond per fectly level; bf lance mixed woods. Easy terms or cash. For further particular*, addreas H. F. STROHBCKER, Attorney, 103 Cotton avenue.