Newspaper Page Text
Don’t Go From the Farm.
Starkey «£ Paleti’s Treatment
tty Inhalation,
Grtilia Sun. From the LnnrenaviJle, S.C., IfeiMj feg.i. IS57.
The disposition of young men Our friend, Rev. A. W. Moore,
bred upon the f^rm to abandon has secured the general agency,
farm and go into the towns and for the United Statesfand Canada,
cities is one of the alafciing fea- of the justly celebrated and some-
tures of the times. It is not only what new preparation known as
an augury of evil to the future of • “Compound Oxygen.” The pro-
our country, but it is a grand mis-: prietors and discoverers of this
take upon the part of our young j Home Tteatment, Drs. Starkey &
They conceive the idea that j Palen, of Philadelphia, doitld not
ling will not pay, that it is the j have selected a better or more ef-
to continued poverty, and j ficient man than Mr. Moore to take
iat going into busiues3 in towns j charge of so wide and important
or cities as hirelings puts them territory, and they are to be con-
into fortune’s channel. Nor are
they wholly to blame for this
gratulated upon their good fortune
and good judgment in making so
course, for this idea is impressed judicious a selection. Mr. Moore a
upon them by the farm manage
ment aud preachiug of their
fathers. Here is where the great
/•mistake in the lives of many young
men are. made. The young man
on the farm sees the city clerks
wealing good clothes, working in
the shade and hears of the good
wages paid them, and concludes
at once that the town boys have
an en&y time and that there is a
stream of financial plenty pouring
into the pockets of the clerks all
the time, that will soon make them
rich. This is the bright side of
the picture. But they do not see
that those good clothes, the de
mands of fashion, of social eti
quette aud of society, besides de
mands from various other sources
axe continually drawing from city
clerks every dollar that their labor
commands. They do not see that
the clerk’s liberties, like those of
a caged bird, are in the hands of
others—they do not see that the
clerks are confined to their busi
ness prison from early morn till
dewy eve for three hundred and
thirteen days in every year; they
do not realize the fact that very
few town hirelings ever accumu
late much-above a bare living, but
remain, as a general thing, “hew
ers of wood and drawers of water”
as it were, for those who dictate to
them how aud when they must
work.
Now with fifteen years’ experi
ence on the farm, and with, twenty-
five years’ experience in other vo
cations, which are to the inexpe
rienced seemingly easy and profit
able, we say to the yonne men of
the country (and we say it for
their good and for their life hap
piness,) don’t go from .the farm
to hunt, with the expectation of
finding better, easier and more
profitable vocations in the city.
•The calls and demands for your
money aud the temptations to
spend it are five times as many
and as great in the city as in the
country, while the gross income
on a general average is no more,
where the young farmer works so
constantly as the city hireling.
Don’t go to the city and become
the servant of another; bat stay
on the farm wbeTe you can have
more freedom, more liberties,
more independence, more self-
reliance, more real contentment,
more of the luxuries aud true joys
of home, aud where you can- save
more money from your labors.
That man who will husband the
resources of hie farm, and who
will devote as many days work du
ring each year to his farm as the
city clerk is required- to devote to sizer—a levitaiizer in' troth worthy of the
few years ago Was supposed to be
in the last stages of consumption,
and there was scarcely a hope of
his recovery entertained by the
most sanguine of his friends. He
began the use of tile Compound
Oxygen, and within a few weeks a
most miraculous restoration was
the result, and he is to-day a living
proof of its great curative powers.’
EXTRACTS FROM A LECTURE,
Delivered at Waterloo, S. d., by
A. W. Moore, on Drs. Starkey &
Palen’s well tried;£treatment, the
Compound Oxygen.
Since the discovery of oXygen as
a distinct- element in nature, and
as the life-giving element in the
air so necessary and indispensable
that no animal can live without it,
there has been a firmly-fixed opin
ion among scientists and physi
cians that it could be made a pow
erful curative agent in diseases,
and a restorer of vitality.
About 19 years ago an eminent,
physician in Philadelphia, of high
professional attainments and marked ge
nius, was led to observe the surprising
power of the Oxygen Treatment in ob
stinate cases within his own practice.
Close observation and patient study of
the healing power of the agent, led him
to the conolosion that there was in this
simple agent illimitable Capabilities for
healing and healthfulness, and he de
liberately formed a fixed purpose of de
veloping the remedy to theutmost possi
ble perfection, and of making it known to
the world,
H® abandoned a lucrative practice and
devoted al! the resources at his com
mand to the work. The steady and sub
stantial success attending the office ad
ministration confirmed him in his con
viction and strengtheoed his purpose. As
all the sick, even in. Phailadelpliia, could
not go to the office, much less was it pos
sible for distant sufferers to go, he bent
all his energies and skill to the great
problem of fixing, the Compound Oxygen
in chemical solution,and retaining it there
in its purity and potency until released
by heating. This marvelous feat he has
most signally accomplished, as is attest
ed by chemists of world-wide fame, and
thousands of people who have been heal
ed of obstinate maladies in the quiet of
their homes thousands of miles from the
office. It is now conceded that the Home
Treatment, ordinarily, is as effective as
the Office Treatment-, so that the pure
life-giving Oxygen, through thebenefi
cent achievement of science, being firmly
held in its own solution, is being trans
ported over the continent and across the
ocean, ready to be disengaged and to dis
pense its boon to the sick. If you are suf*
fering trom dyspepsia, catarrh, consump
tion, or other maladies, you needn’t un
dergone annoyance, discomfort and ex
pense of a long journey; you can sum
mon the life-bearing element to-your own
bed-chamber and there inhale, its vigor
and experience the new and delightful
sensations of conscio as progress health-
ward. Literary men and women, scient
ists* physicians, artists, lawyers,fsenators,
editors, ministers of the gospel in all the
denominations, bear cordial testimony to
the genuineness and potency of Com
pound Oxygen as a curative agent of nn-
surpassd power, and an unrivaled revital-
Clippings.
—— *
There are pins enough made to
furnish every person in thejUnited
States with 500 eahli ^ear.
Only twelve Indians are left of
the 1,000. which inhabited the
Yos'emite Yalley only a few years
ago-.
Ex-Senator Tabor of Colorado
uses in his private office a bar • of
gold valued at $12,000, as a paper
weight-.
A peasant lias just died iii Aus
tria-Hungary who was 142 years
of age. Hd left & soil aged 115
years and a grandson of 85;
Be courageous; drop your best
friend if he shows lack of honesty
and integrity.
Avoid litegatiori al muck as
possible, for lawyers and costs eat
up the principal.
One tablespoon, well -rounded,
of soft butter weighs one ounce.
Have the courage to discharge a
debt while you have the money in
yofif pocket, i
The man who borrows money
and then borrows trouble is in
sheol sure enough;
The first Chinaman to receive a
pension has just been placed upon
the rolls. He was injured while
serving on a man-of-war.
Mr. Cleveland is in favor of free
wool, but Mr. Lincoln was ahead
of him on this point as the eman
cipation proclamation shows.
A scientific paper has recently
been started in . Paris with the
novel feature of publishing noth
ing that is not written by women.
During the year 1887 eleven
and a half tons of postage stamps
—nearly one hundred, and seventy
million—were sold at the New
York post office.
There are said to be more than
a hundred colored men in Wash
ington who are worth $25,000 cr
over. Fred Douglass has a for
tune of over $300,000.
The republicans of Wooodstock,
Ya., held a meeting in the interest
of harmony the other day, but
harmony was wanting, Senator
Riddleberger was there, and the
senator rarely contributes to the
harmony of any sdrt of meeting.
At any rate, he did not on this oc
casion. He engaged in a fight
with the chairman, and during the
excitement which followed, some
body strap; him a heavy blow on
the back of the head. Those Vir
ginia republicans are a pretty bad
lot.
A dentist in Calgary, Manitoba,
has been busy lately extracting
teeth from Indians. It is stated
that before the advance of civili
zation, when the natives subsisted
solely on buffalo meat, decayed
teeth were Unknown among them.
Braves who stand tb© torture of
the sun claries' Without flinching
ar© reduced to a state of abject
terror when they feel the cold grip
of the forceps.
his business, will not only have
the joys of home and the real
Gomforts of life around him all
the-time,-but will accumulate a
sufficiency before old age comes
upon him to support him at ease
through his declining years.
There is not now, there never was,
a hasty fortune in farming, hut to
the economical young man who
gives study, close attention, and
constant work to his farm, there is
plenty, contentment, and' gradual
accumulation through his vigorous
manhood and a competency for
eld age. Young man, take in
this truth, digest it, act upon it,
and then when you shall have
reached the hilltop of life - , you ivill
look back w-ith pleasure aud not
;ret upon the course you ivill
lave pursued. And if von go to
the city from ike farm,, and begin
Fife as a hireling, old age may
find you, as it has many who-have
pursued that course, looking" back
with soir-ow upon a misspent
young manhood.-
Ujwlilcn’s AriiicaNalvc
name; not wearing out the organs but ad
ding to them; giving vigor without lassi
tude, bonyancy mithont depression.
If Oxygen is the life-giving element of
the atmosphere, and if the life is in the
blood, and oxygen is the vital power in
the blood, you see at once that when the
blood becomes deficient in oxygen the
whole organism feels the lack, and the
S ;reat- nerve centers which supply the life
iorees become impaired, dwindle and fi
nally waste away. Through enforced res
piration by inhalation,the Compound Ox
ygen, which is-oxygen andnitrogen scien
tifically ozonized, is brought into contact
with the blood. Through chemical action
it combines with the carbons, wasted tis
sues and debris, and caste them out,thus
purifying the blood. Not only so; but- by
oxygenating the blood—enriching the
blood—freighting it with a precious cargo
new life, it deposits lire-snb3t auce all-
along its circuit, in tho nerves, muscles,
tissues, organs,so that the divine mechan
ism, the marvelous organism, in its mi
nute and mnlrioUcanows parte; responds
with avidity ftv the'poWesfftl reinfoTCe-
mont coming'in to help resist, overcome
and expel the invader. This potent or
ganized force acts all the more felicitous
ly from its being under the conditions of
&,peculiar, Vital magnetism. Nowyousee
why ail chronic diseases in which'the life
forces have bcc-n diminished, and all the
nervous diseases in which and norve cen
ters have been impaired, enfeebled or
perverted, are amenable to tho Com
pound Oxygon Treatment.
Bug apart-from theory and. the revela
tions of science and the teachings of the
rapeutics, therastands the ton thousand
facts of cures—many of these of the most
Absolutely Pure.
Tills powder never varies. A marvel of purity
strength and wholesomeness. More eeooomica
than tiieorcfinsUry kinds, and cannot be. sold in
competition with the multitude of low test, short
weight, alnm and phosphate powdera. Sold only
iricans. Royal Baking Iowdeb Co , lOGWaluut
street. K.Y.
BOOO Book Agents wanted to sell
yHU IH1 AUD PUBLIC SEHVICZ3 of ^
obstinate and inveterate maladies, bat
tling medical--cures attested by mi-
«• . w-., ... ,, „ t6»nstrained, gMtffeful testimoiiials from
Last onlve m idle world for men and women well known in the na-
Suts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt tion, as weti «w from thousands of humble
-r,: m .. ' „ srsTerors well KHOTVii iii tbeir respective
Elieiiniy lever feores.-Tctter s -C ; kop^lineal communities.
peel Hands, Cbiilfiaius, Corns., and j Overworked business and professional
....... , ./. , men,- luvnhds suffering from- nervous
alEbkin- Eruptions, and posmVoly I prostration, convalescents whoso return'
cures Piles,- or uo pay required. *°;k'alth is slow aud uncertain, .nil wjth
It is gmirauteecl to give satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 25 ecu ‘ s
per box. For Sale by all drug
gists.
Bencsy your subscription now.
Foil and aampUte £rom : H* boyhood to hi* nomination in Si.
Eouls, with personal reminiscence*, Incident* end anecdotes.
J OPMK8.
MIDDLE GEORGIA
Military and Agricultural
COLLEGE,
MltiLEDGEYILLE, GEQR&IA.
Gen’x,. D. H-. HILL* Pbesidkn-t.
Twelve Teachers in the Faculty. Four
Hundred and Fifty-One Students.
TUITION FREE,
Board very reasonable. Course of _Tn-
struetion full, including Classical; Scien
tific, .Commercial, Musical, In thorough
ness of Scholarship and Discipline this
College has no superior. Next term
opens September 5th, 1888. For cata
logues, etc. apply to
J. N. MOORE,
Secretary Trustees;
/July 26th* 1888.
leap Money;
I can now procure loans oil
lands at LOWER RATES than
ever before offered in Houston
County.
Interest S-per cent.,
o in ait 3 s ions 2 per cent**
- PER /ANNUM.
W.-D. NOTTINGHAM,
Mcli 17—ly Perry, Ga.
HIDDEN & BATES SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE.
FINDLAY IRON WORKS,
Mid-Summer Sale
AUD PAT WHEN
COTTON IS SOLD.
MID-SUMMER OFFER.
XtOOO
Pianos and
to Tie sold in Jane, Jniy.
August and Septemper at Spot
Cosh I»rices. Payable,
pianos, Cash down.
ORGANS, SIO CASH DOWS,
anA tlie balance next November
xat, wllbont Interest or advance
In Price. All onir Pianosand Or-
figStToS aStfSt! ££
ids. Wo nr choice from ten
leading makers and over 300
styles andPrlcea.
—SUMMER BARGAINS 1888-
New Makers, New Instruments, New
Styles, New Trices, Great Improvements
in our Lower Priced Instruments.
Large purchases enable us to offer Re
duced Prices. Here are sampleS.
A ' RIO % Octave, Up-
llUa right, Large Slice,
,trines, Beautiful Rosewood
_ case, Pull Rich Tone. Guar
anteed perfect and durable. Maker’s Price,
Octave, Up-
,, rightGrand,Large
Strings, Fall Iron
_ Frame, Ivory Keys, Rich
Rosewood Case. First/class every way.
Equals Pianos usually sold at 8300 and 8350.
Maker's Price, 8700.
: -with Pianos a Plush Top stool,
HtHtdsftins Cover* • lustr uctor*
Haste Boob and all Freight Paid.
Four Full Sets Reeds,
10 Genuine Stops,
_ _ , Beautiful Parlor ©r-
Thousands told. All pur
chasers delighted. Maker's Price, 8200.
with Each Organ a Bine Stool,
an instructor, BCusic Boole and
All Freight Paid.
15 DAYS TRIAL.
Order and test in your own Home.
No money required until Instrument
- - - We pay Freight both
The fairest way to deal.
Otn Instruments are good and cheap, and
a trial always givesa satisfied purchaser.
Send for Mid-Suinfeter Sale Clr-
cnlar. *
■ REMEMBER. — Dowest Brices; Easiest
Terms; Best Instruments: ©n>
ers; AB ~ "
is Eatisfatftorjr. We
• jjejo. jholi uHtwua. a-
la Freight Paid; 15 Days' Trial;
Fears' GuaroOziee; Sguare Dealing; One 1«—-
Only; Money Saved; AU!
LUDDEN & BATES
SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE. SAVANNAH, GA.
[OANS !EG0MEF
ON FARMS AND TOWN
PROPERTY.
IS BIB3 AND ADJOINING COUNTIES
ELLIOTT ESTES,
533 Cherry St# Macon, Ga.
ON FARMS,
At 7 pev cent Interest-
CHEAPEST OF THEM ALL.
Apply to
DATIS & FELDER,
juno 14—tf. PERRY, GA.
z. SIMS,
FERRY, GEORGIA.
fr^kO-kre over Paul’s Furniture Store
First- ;! Work. Prices moderate. Pat-,
romige soli cited. apl281y
whom vii al't/. frcflk any ca tceps rur-aing
low, will find in this new fireat-n'.e it- a re
vitalizing a-zont of singular power and
efficiency. For tho cure of consumption,!
asti iii-', broTicltifir, catarrh, dyspepsia, 1 Kmphr*ofSSmff”® 5ciro3£iEii5i''Tki« £SPSi#
’ " ’ ‘ ■* ’ ‘ mutkmtie IAf*. DonH b* tadaosd to **y otb*r.^Tb*r* wilr
. _ B«l
the* r**r
Lav l muthmuie IAf*. Don’tb* todoetd to«tt .
1- V, ', * . OZOe ‘ H, pa - fiL sic., probably b* nn*athori«*d Lives, bot ibi* i* tb* right on^
debility, :tml ail clirouic and uervonG dis-! p*y
-j , , . , so cents in lc. stamp* and b* tbs first us Uw Sms, and tbs
ordess, bj. h natural processor revitaliza- tktcoioobwMb- wittefcrtuiMiMUaaiaawtrifH^
tion W,i to tf. Addr-4, WINTER & CO.,
. Springfield, Mass. —
. FORT VALLEY, GA.,
3y| <Tki'YOPJSE;$S 5 Prop'r,
C. H. HABDISGIV, efcx-lc
FniST-cfi/fSo am, tss Appoint
ments. Accoiikouations. ampls an»
COjTFOr.TAT.LE.
aCA WcifBrawcxUt In tcrtriXaiiilt, of
form*. b?it ars j-ui-psVKe<r ; l»y tlie
__ marvels *»f iuvrliti-.r.. who
arc in need of iriTSlAble work th-if r-in he tjond liv-
in"at home shonM r»f ouce Send their :;dan*ps to
Hkilett & Co.* Portland, .Mai ip. and receive fuJlIn-
for mat;on how cither sex, of all a«?es, can earn $5
to £23 a day and upwards wherever they live. Tori'
arc started free. Capital not required ’ • Softie hive
made over $50 in a single day at : this wbrlc. All
yucceed.
MACON
6. Dr FINDLAY, Proprietor!
h. Farqnhar & Co, and R. W. Wilt & Co.; of the latfi ‘‘Central
City Iron Works.”
Mantifacthrgr of find dealel ih Steam Engines, Boilers, Sfiw Mills, Shaftings,
Pulleys; Sugar Mils, Syrup Kettles, Horse Power, Mill GUariflg, Castings and
Macluneiy ol every description.
. Steain; Gas and Water Pipe, imd Fittings, Brass Goods, (for steam or water,)
Steam Guages, Hancock Inspirators, Belting, Babbit Metal, etc.
IraDLAY’S RENOWNED COTTON SCREWS,
(for Steam, Water, Hand or Horse jSPiJwer).
PACKS UP OR 'DOWN,
Findlay’s Celebrated I. X. L. COTTON GIN.
FULLY WARRANTED.
3ESopa,Irs Specialty-
Steam Engines of all makes, Boilers, Separators, and all kinds of Machinery Be-
paired.
Old. X3S.spIx^tor ^naid-elld^re-^i
BRICK MAKERS’ MACHINERY.
She different parts of “SWOltD” Machines made and kept inStock at Manu
facturers’ prices.
TIME AND FREIGHT SAVED BY ORDERING FROM ME.
Barrow,-Truck find Gar Wheels especially designed for Brick Makers, constantly
on hand;
S. S. PABMELEEJ,
Cherry Street. - - Macon Gcorei B1
DEALER IN S '
CARRIAGES, BUCCIES,
WAGONS, ROAD CARTS
BABY CARRIAGES, 1
HARNESS, LEATHER,’
SHOE FINDINGS, Etc
D'eo. 15^-lyr
InventionS»ja
among tho wonders of hivlhtitepro^S'i,
odand system of work that can be performed »l*
over the country without separating the work...
from .their homf*, Pay UberJdT anyone
work; either sex. yonng or old; no special abilitr
required. Capital not needed; yon are started free-
Cut this ont and reitim to ns and we wfll send tm
free something of great valne ar.d importance t«
yon, that will start yon in business, which wfll
bring yon more money right »way than anything
else m the world. Grand Outfit Free. 8
Adddresa TRUE & CO., Angus la, Maind'
UEK?t RAILROAD SCKBBFtE;
Bally; Except Sunday;
Leave Perry at 7:45 L if.
Arrive at Fort Yalley 8:25 a. m.
Leave Fort Yalley at 11:40 p. m.
Arrive at Perry at 12:25 P: it.
Leave Perry at 2:15 p. m.
Arrive at Foft Yalley 3:00 p. m:
Leave Fort Yalley at 9:45 p. m.
Arrive at Perry at 10:30 p. ir.
FEfiflALE MEDICINE
corrects all lrregnlaritles and annoying tranblea
from which so many ladles suffer. It glv«
weak, debilitated womanheslth and strenVt” Mi
1SsK«K d -
HOLTZCLAW Sc GILBERT.
All the patterns (ff the late “Centtal City Iron Works,” (mciuding the pat
terns of the “FARQUHAE” Engines), are used and owned solely by me. ^3
Correspond with or call on me when yon wkh ANYTHING in thU way of
CASTINGS. MACHINERY OR REPAIRS.
. • ■ . - jet i*. mjmitjkj* s
FINDLAY IRON WORKS, Macon, Go.
t^”Send fd'f Circular and Brice Lists.
IIENDRiX j WILLINGHAM & CO.,
MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN
SASH
m
BLINDS, PUNTS, OILS,
fi,*°F aal! Zo injaiy,removes Frock.
VfttouLA* 1 les, Liver-MoleB, Pim
ples, Black-Heads, Sunburn and
Tan; A few applications will render the
most stubbornly red Bkih soft, smooth and
white; Viola Cream is not a paint or
powder to cbver defects, but a remedy to cure;
It is superior to all other preparations, and
is guaranteed to give satisfaction. At drug-'
gists or mailed for 50 cebts. Prepared by
G. C. BITTNER & COJ,
SOLKDO, OHIO.
For Sale by
Holtzclaw & Gilbert; Perry, Ga-
CENTRALIaILBOAdT
Savannah, July 1,1888/
On aud after this .date passenger trains will rnn
d*i!y unless juarked *; which are daily exerpt
Sunday. . „
The standard time by which tliese trains ut$
run is the same as Macon city time.
Iii* Macon 810 am | 6 00 am
Ar Atlanta C £0 cm I 9 58 am
2 05’pra j 5 25
5 40 i»m j 9 00 pm
Passeugers for Thtfmaston and Carrollion take
train lea vim; at 6:00 a. m:
Leave Macon.... | 2 55 am I 2 00 pm |
Leave .Columbus I G 55 am I. 5 55 pm |
AT Montgomery. [ 10 40 am j 9 40pra }
Passengers for T51botton should take either th«
2:55 am or 2 CO p ni train.
lH»ve Macon
Leave Columbus
Arrive Birmingham
.2 55am
8 25am
3 3 n pm
Leave Macon I 6 50 pm | | 10
Arrive Albany....; p 11 05pm | | 2 5*5
Passengers for Perry take either 1015 a m or
S'SOp in train.
3LjiKo.e, blaster, Cein.*erLt,
OFFIOil and S'LO’BEi
302 Third Street;
MACON, -
i' FACTORY:
| Foot of Cherry Street,
- * 6ES1G1A.
MACON CHINA
sas SECOND STREET. 181 COTTON AVENUE,
«*fei«§yr s mm@m.
We hnve the best variety of goods belonging to our line to be seen
south of Baltimore,
You will find in oar store' a' splendid line of
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, CHINA, TINT WARE,-
WOODEK WARE, ETC., DECORATED DIKKER
SETS, TEA SETS AKD CHAMBER SETS,
TABLE AKD POCKET CUTLERY,
Cooking Stoves and Oil Stoves.
The largest stock of LAMPS and CHANDELIEBS ; ever edrried in
Georgia. Come in to see us when yon visit Macon.
MACON CHINA STOBE, J. W. Domingos, Manager.
ArSIilledgeville.. j
Ar Eaton ton |
2 25 pm f
4 00 pm j
LvAtlanta 6 50 am f
ArM icon 1025 am |
9 10 am | 2 15 pm
1 00 piu j 6 36 pm
7 15 pm
losopni
Lv Montgomery 1
Leave Columbus. [
Arrive Macon.... j
3 00 pm { 2 05 am f
6 45pm j GOO m
10 45 am ) 6 00 am ]
Leave Birmingham
Leave Columbia
Arrive Macon
11 45 am;
6*45 pm
10 45 pm
Leave Albany |
Arrive Macon|
2 10am i 1
5 40 am | j
11 55 un?
5 15 pm
PERRY HOTEL,
Pmmm%
T N. Proprietor.
o ■
POLITE ATTENTION GIXLEN ALL GUESTS, COMFORTABLE
ROOMS. TABLE SUPPLIED WITH r PHE BEST
EDIBLES THU MARKET AFFORDS.
RATES: $200PER BAY-
jqgf* Liberal redaction by tl«r Week, or by the month.-
Leave Macon.... | Ilf 15 am } C pm I V
LvSpailhville f loo pm I 243am I
Af Montgomery.. J 7 CK» pm * 7 30am |
Paseen,;ers for Port Gaines, Buena Vista;
Blakely, and Clayton should take id 15a m train.
Leave Macon.... | 10 35 am | 11 00 pm I .. -Y.Y
Arrive Hillen..-. } 2 08pm | 3 00 am 1 .*
Arrive Angusta.. | 4 ZOphi | 11 50 am | ....
Arrive Savannah j 5 00 pm j 615 am |
Passengers for Sylvan:a, Wrightsvflle, Sanders*
Vllle, take the 10 35 nm train'.
tieave Montgomery, k 7 40 am j 10 05 pm \ ...
Leave Smithville.... { 1 48 adi | 5 21 am j ...
Arrive Macon.. .... | 5 15 am | 9 00 am j ...
Leave Millen | 9 45 am
l^ave Augusta | 7 39 am
-LeaveSavaunah .. j 7 10am
‘Arrive Macon | 1 40 pm
12.00 me..;.::
S 20 pm
2 59 am | .-
iLtenre.Eatonton... 1 *8 20.am
ArMillcdgeviile... i 9 40'am'
♦Daily except Sunday.
Sleeping cars on all night trains between Macon
and Savannah, Savannah' 2u<$ Atlanta, Savannah
and Macon, and Macon and Columbus.
'tickets for all points aud sloeping cer berths on
sale at city o£*ce HdHl' Lanier, and Dopot tickff
offlee.
J. T. HUGE, E. T. CHARLTON,
Agent. ^ G.P. Agent.
/.
' W* *• AgWH*
. KNAPP, Agent, Macon, Ga.
A PERFECT COMBINATION
Of harmless vegetable remedies that will restore the whole systerutb healthy action, ls :
absolutely needed to cure any disease 1 “for the disease that affedts one organ weakens
alb” Paine’s Celery Compound is THIS PERFECT COMBINATION) Read the proofs l
“I have EUfiefed terribly from nervousness and kidney
trouble. I bought two bottles of Paine’s Celery Compound,
and oh, how it did help me! 1 have so much faith In your
medicine, for I know what ft did fcr me.” _
Gfitsriof Centre, N. Y. MBS, J. 3. WAISOH.
PASTE’S CELERY COMPOUND
. “For'five years I suHered with malaria and nervousness,
d. Paints Celery_Cpinpouiid ! and I can truthfully say
that five bottles completely cured me. I cheerfully recom
mend it, for I know it to'be a good medicine.”
Cjias. L. Stbabns, Letter Carrier, Station B, Brooklyn, N. Y.
CURES ALL NERVOUS DISEASES,
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Paralysis,Biliousness,Dyspepsia,Costivenessi Piles, LiverCom-
plaint, Kidney Trouble, Female Complaints; and all diseases arisingfrom Impure Blood.
Cl. bix for ft5. Weulb. Bichabd. 8). six for $5. Seo that each bot I SOU air for So. Woo, Bicbaed-
eon A Co., Props., Burlington, Vt tie bean the Celery trademark. I ggfXOo.. Props., Burlington,Vt
For the Nervous, The Debilitated, | ^ Tho Aged.
Wien-’T say CuitF. I do not nie.ui merely to.
stop them for a time, and then have them re
turn agaiii'. I ii ka . A KADICAL CUBS.
I have nmdd fS? ^SsdaSo of
1TTS, BPIXiSPSY’or
WAJLIelim: SIGSI?ESS,
A. :??f: > •‘•rg sceir. T warpant my remedy to
Cvi:r. rho r/or-vt cases, oto<-rj h.-ve
f,-iil<-di- r,o re.xson t.irpixr-'d'v.rceeiv:n«r enre.:
Heroi ut oi;A* for a t :* ntl &V:zk - > n.E.
of in-.' lyp'.y.'swi ii'MSnv. Civ r>o <-«
and i’-Sf (M&K.. h polhlrm m 3
r.m: i t v.ifl eiirg jon A;hirc:.s
« c pror
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
and, beautifies tho bah
Never Fails io Retlore Gray
Hair to Ha Youthful Color,
diseases and hair faint
. at Draggfeta
PARKER’S GINGER TONIC 1
Invaluable for Con B h3, Colds, In-rari Pita, Ertacstion.'
Of Interest to ladies;-
We will emit sir BEESAfdPLEcf oar veadrrfrf,
Epecific Zy:trTT. si r • comx-!n i r. ? rft o onylady wt*s***
fofes£fftc2cnvr lH»ft>rt p»:rcbnriai'-
postal BAXE8 BtatDY 0Q., Box 104. SngkttuJfrXe
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