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MW STOP WORK
ON THE OWING
Citizens Will Ask Council to
Hold Iheir Hand Until
After the War.
COSTS TOO MUCH MONEY
They Say That Money is Hard to
Get in the Banks and That Ex
pense Would be Hardship,
It is not at all Improbable that at th.
next meeting of the city cornu * I a reso
lution will introduced providing for the
auapenxion of the paving w >rk after Pop
lar street has been completed until after
the war scare is over.
A movement is on foot 'to tn is effect and
It Is loaded bw some of the large property
owners who say that the money market Is
getting tighter and tighter every day and
that money is hard to borrow at the banks.
This being so they say that if the pacing
is pushed with vigor at this time the pay
ment for the share of the paving at this
time will be a very great and an unnec
essary hardship.
Tiny s.ay that they want the paving but
that they may want their money before
the war is over with, ami that the war is
as yet in unknown quantity. It may last
for a year, in which event th. burden will
fall very h< avlly on the people of the
South and want the city to ho! I up until
they can see iheir way out nt the wools.
The objection will come from sonic of the
property ownefs on Cherry street anti on
Tbitd and Mulberry. Thi y dl- tlnctly dis
avow any de.ire lo retard the work that
Is crediiable to the city, in.i which, tin.l.i
ordinary conditions they favor. They also
say that material has nothing to do with
their positions at this lime, for, as a mat
ter of fact they aie Indiffer-nt a.s to the
material that is used, and some of th. in
have signed no 'petition. They will sim
ply go before council with a proposition
which seems to them to be reasonable,
and If council will not see it their way
they will have do satisfied.
Yellow .Inundice Cured.
Suffering humanity should be supplied
with every means posisble for its relief.
It Is with pleasure we publish tile follow
ing: “This is to certify that I was a ter
rible sufferer from yellow Jaundice for over
six months and was treated by some of the
best physicians in our city and all to no
avail. Dr. He'll, our druggist, recommended
Electric Bitters, and after taking two bot
tles. 1 was entirely cured. I now take great
pleasure in recommending them to any
one suffering from this terfble malady. 1
am gratefully yours, M. A. Hogarty. Lex
ington. Ky.” Sold by H. J. Lamar & Sons,
druggists.
COMPARISON,
What a Correspondent Has to Say About the
Three Armies.
War Correspondent Steep, of the Scrbpps-
Meßia League, who knows more about the
present war than any other man attached
to the press, says:
Un the silent bivouacs of the night I have
lain on the fields of Cuba, listening to
the snapping camp fires. In the hull of a
ship, amid unspeakable squalor, 1 have
slept wbth the dirty soldiers of Spain. To
night in the tented fields of the American
’troops I have a mental contrast of three
armies.
A few hours ago if you had walked
through this eamp you wuld have thrilled
with admiration at the chivalrous appear
ance of the \meriean youth in leggings,
straps ami other martial habiliments.
You would have noted their physique.
Jocularity and kindly tboisterousness. As
the rattle qf the pla'lese were dying away,
and taps were sounded, you would have
heard many a word passed in confidence
about loved ones at .home.
In tlie morning when the sun shines on
Don’t Drink
Potash and Mercury.
It is a wise precaution which a great m.anv people every
where take in the spring to purity their blood, and tone up the
general system. It is an absolute necessilx to assist Nature in
cleaning up the system and getting rid of the many impurities
w Inch h ave accumulated. 'tins is the most enervating season
of the entire year; demands are made upon the system which
it can not supply unaided, and tin* result is a loss of energy
and a general depressed feeling, and in ninny cases a break
down comes with spring weather. To prepare for this try
ing sea-on, it is eminently proper that a good blood
remedy be taken to force out all impurities and tone up and
strengthen the system But great care should be exercised
in selecting the remedy which is to perform this important
work; no one would knowingly and willingly run the risk
of taking a medicine composed of the most injurious ami dan
gerous ingredients. This is a matter worth looking into, for
•no ong wishes to take chances on a harmful remedy. It is a
fact worth considering that
is the only purely vegetable blood remedy made, and is the only
one guaranteed to contain not a particle of potash, mercury,
sulphur, arsenic, or any other mineral substance. S. S. S. is
far ahead of other similar remedies, because of the results it
produces, and it is in every way superior to them in the fact
that every ingredient of which it is made is a vegetable one,
gathered from Nature's forests; while all other blood remedies,
no matter what else they contain, are composed of some dan
gerous mineral as their basis. Everybody knows the harmful
effects of mercury, potash, sulphur, arsenic, etc., and no one
wishes to pour these minerals into their stomach. There is ab
solute safety in S. S. S. (Swift’s Specific), and, while it is per
fectly harmless, it is the best blood remedy made, forcing out
every impurity and building up and strengthening the system,
rather than tilling it with mineral mixtures which spread their
injurious effects throughout the entire body, besides destroying
the digestive organs. Get the best blood remedy, the one that
is purely vegetable, backed by a forfeit of one thousand dol
lars if it contains the slightest trace of a mineral ingredient.
Be fair to yourself and get the best blood remedy and purifier
made—S. S. S. Remember that Swift’s Specific is the only one
Guaranteed
Purely Vegetable.
the white tents and white sands there will
be bustle and blowing of bugles and a
rattle of accountrementa that would make
your hr ad swim. But there Is no confu
sion; there is order and calm and alacrity.
There is a unity, a completeness and a
neatness that would make you proud that
you are an American.
Marching through the long manigua and
across the hot savannahs of’ Cuba are the
rohiirr- of Cuba, some of them are bare
footed; sewr of them bear arms, wrenched
from the enemy; one or two of them, per
haps, in a vein of humor, have ma»ie a pair
of pantaloons out of Spanish flags.
All of them are hungry. Many of them
have been in a e-tate of semi-starvation for
three year*. When victory is won many
of them will have starved for victory. They
have marched through the tnaniqua for
’three years.
Moored at the wharf in the Bay of Bata
bano is a Spanish ship. Its hull is filled
with Spanish soldiers, mules and cattle.
The beasts are petitioned oft. The soldiers
are scattered a!,out 'the floor. Some of
them are covered with slime from the
floor; some of them are wearing pieces of
hide for sandals; some of them, writhing
with acbc-se, are hugging dirty blankets to
cover their bodies.
Some of their faces smirk in the ecsta
cies of a murderous, dream. There is a
signal, then a dive for midships. A cal
dron of stuff is placed there. Fingers,
sticks and wins are plunged into the cal
dron -an 1 the panish army is feeding. It
is th<- army that is standing between the
American army and the Cuban army.
It is a horrible remembrance, this re
membrance of the P>panish troops, as I lie
now in the quiet and contentment of the
American camp. It is hard to believe that
the youths of America are not moving
against a worthier foe.
C A.S TO XS. X _/V.
Tha he- z? _
dmiio / / s’s" 7 5,59
The half a cent a ward column of The
Mewi is th* cheapest •'tverticln* median*
<■ Geerrle
BLACKBERRIES IN WAR TIME.
The Little Fruit Has Put in Its Appearance
Early.
B.tekin ni - tim-to 1,.r z. .prej.mns t., be
bad in the vi-initv of Ma.-cn will ynn
mile their v.iy to h>- ,‘d.i. ri mailrets to
join strawberri, s and othr is of their kind.
Th* y will answ.r to the patriotic call,
and though a comparatively small sqa-.l has
yet a.’i iVi l to Join the regiment sure to'be
here witi.in a short time, those are full,
crisp and luscious, being as well qualified
for the service as those that will later call
at the market to volunteer.
The bet rles from the fields have cotne
more to look into the situation and make
such arrangements as will help the real
mobilization of their kind, which the mar
ket men fully expect within ten days.
Heard alxjve the cry of fish dealers, the
hissing of geese and the general clattering
of a crowde market, is the chirp of his
royal highness, the spring chicken, rang
ing in size from a good bite to a small-
Biztd meal. Being a raw recruit he has
an up-hill pull of it, but the headway he
is making with buyers that he is already
assured of supplanting the well drilled old
hen and boarding house rooster, stripping
them of the laurels they have been exhib
iting In the market house all winter. When
reinforcements comes there is no doubt
the old veterans will be routed by the
spring chicks, because of the superior
taste and tenderness of the young mem
bers.
After a hot engagement the battle be
tween Georgia and Florida strawberries
has ended with the Georgia’s in posses
sion of tile market house and commission
houses. Large, bulky strawberries came
up by rail under the leadership of various
truck growers before war was really de
clared and while the growers around Ma
con are training their berries. Fancy
prices were then the commanders, as high
as 50 cents a box 'being asked for the first
of them.
These prices were held up some time,
during which the truckers were busily en
gaged training their crops with a view to
coming down on the enemy with a fiedce
fire. At last everything was ready and
the attack, which promised to be short,
was sucessfully made.
The little knotty, soft, unsound berries
in possession of the market house and mer
cantile houses all over the city fell an
easy prey to the big, ruddy, luscious ber
ries trained in this vicinity. The conquest
was complete and soon nothing but Geor
gia’s will he handled.
AT A NEGRO REVIVAL.
Unlettered Men Who Wisely Expound the
Troth.
Wa were a party of six, all Sunday
; school teachers, all «up|s»sed Scriptural
| experts. Ono of our number was a re
tired American Mie.-iotmry association
I worker and another one? had been prepar
■ ing for the foreign mission field whoa her
health failed her. Tbv live of us accepted
the invitnlioti of the sixth, our host* ss, to
attend a colored revival meeting near by.
Me were the only white p oplo in the
crowded church All al» ut us were dusky
faces; nil around us the mellow negro
voices rang out in charaeK rl.-tlc negro re
vival songs. The word-; were trivial the
choruses hut disjointed bits of sentences,
hut the melody was itrfuiieating to the
senses. Though untuned, what voices;
untrained, without rule, yet with a
strange rhythm and passionate fire that
stirred one's pulses as rawer operatic aria
could!
Our dark skinned brethren were of the
Christian religion; t!;< i- fore- they wore
nearer to us than In-athf-n. Nevertheless
between us and them roiied a great gulf.
They were illite rate, emotional Lalies in
the gospel. They had no ver heard of the
higher criticism and never studied Barnes
or Adam Clarko and were not afraid of
Do Wette or Ri nan. So wo sat there with
thy patronizing mr that human beings arc
apt to assume when thrown in contact
with mortals less wise than themselves.
Brother Jonah Watkins, a white wooled,
bent backe<L man of 7<J, was called upon
to pray. lie responded, in nowise over
awed by our supi rior presence. He prayed
as though his lip.- had indeed been touched
by a live coal from God’s own altar.
“O Lord,” he prayed, •‘thou knowest
dis people. Here wo arc In to' de, down on
our marrer boles in tie low lands of sorrow.
Raise us up, dealt ixjrd, an stan us up
upon our feet upon du mountain tons of
glory. An du slim.-ths of tils congregation,
deah Lord, smite ’em wid de hammah of
Jeremiah”—
I heard no more. ‘‘The hammah of
Jeremiah”-—what was it.? I had read the
prophet Jeremiah through and through,
with the comimntai les and Bible diction
aries open at every page, but never a syl
lable had I caught about Jeremiah's ban;-
icer. Whnt did this In nt backed colored
min know about J< renimh that tho wisa
teachers of the law had overlooks lit The
question was hr. r.'Loil on tie* hciiteward
walk Our p '-rt;. had Mi tioon strni k with
the i xtiri hut n< t. one ci us six Suu
day school tv.iei;; r.-. had t.ho remotest idea
of .v hut J ii mt.di s h.iiiii i r might, lie
The next day six men and women read
their IJiuli . , cud eacti <>; ;be .ix began at
the first vt i-.-.o of She fir.-t ciiapu.r of Jere
miah Oiw by ono as we reached flic
twenty .ninth \erso es the twenty-third
chapter we found what we were alter.
‘‘ls not my word like a fire? saith the
Lord, and like a htimmet that bjoaketli the
rock iu pieces?’' Jeremiah's hammer watt
God's word, that was able to break down
the flinty resistance of the indifferent soul.
Could Scripture reference have been more
applicable? And the wonder of all was
that this low born son of toil, spelling his
text out word by word, should have found
the kernel of the meat, while others, with
every help ut hand, passed over it.—ln
dependent.
Beats the Klondykc.
Mr. A. C. Thomas, of Marysville, Texas,
has found a more valuable discovery than
has yet been made in the Klondyke. For
years he suffered untold agony from con
sumption, accompanied by hemorrhages;
and was absolutely cured by Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colds. He declares that gold is of lit
tle value in comparison with this mar
vellous ere—wouM have it, even if it cost
a hundred dollars a bottle. Asthma, Bron
chitis ami all throat and lung affections
are positively cured by Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption. Trial bottles
free at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ Drug Store.
Regular size 50 cents and sl. Guaranteed
to cure or price refunded.
'Many soldiers now feel the effects of the
hard service they endured during the war.
'Mr. George ;S. Anderson, of Rossville, York
county, Tenn., who saw the hardest kind
of service at t'he front, is now frequently
troubled with rheumatism. “1 had a severe
attack lately,” he says, “and procured a
bottle o'l Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It did
so much good that I would like to know
what you would charge me for one dozen
bottles.” IMr. Anderson wanted it both for
his own use ami to supply it to his friends
and neighbors, as every family should have
a bottle of it in their home, not only for
rheumatism, but lame back, sprains, swell
ings, cuts, 'bruises and burns, for which
it is unequalled. For sale by H. J. Lamar
& Sons, druggists.
Subscribers must pay up and not allow
small balances to run over from week to
week. The carriers have been in structed
to accept no part payment from anyone
xft.ar April let
A BESSEMER FAILURE.
Sir Henry’s Ship Which Was to Do Away
With Seasickness.
A quarter of a century ago tho Into Sir
Henry Bessemer tackled the problem
which thousands of his fellow countrymen
tackle every year in vain—the problem of
finding a remedy for seasickness. Mr.
Bessemer’s idea was to secure a quiet
haven of rest in the midst of tho vessel at
sea where the voyager might remain and
ilofy seasickness with ease and dignity.
His plans first began to take shape in
18(19, though they did not arrive tit the
point of practical experiment until five
years later. Ho perceived early that the
not ion of gaining steadiness by suspension
on axes, as in the ship's lamp or compass,
would not stillieo, for. though the compass
is by means of suspension on a double
axis retained in a horizontal plane, it nev
ertheless rises and falls with tbe pitching
of tho vessel. Hence, in applying the prin
ciple to a saloon, it was necessary to go to
tho middle of the ship's length, where the
pitching is practically nothing, and to the
middle point of her breadth also, where
there is little or no motion.
But there were other difficulties to bo
overcome. Freely suspended objects, such
as pendulums, begin to oscillate whenever
their point of suspension is moved. The
transit of the passengers to and fro would
produce motion, and the action of the
wind on the sides of the vessel would cause
the same effect. Mr. Bessemer believed
that he had overcome these difficulties by
the application of hydraulic power.
Tbe hydraulic power was certainly ar
ranged with extreme ingenuity, and the
large saloon, weighing 140 tons and sus
pended in tho midst of the vessel, could be
moved with a touch- In order to make
room for tbe saloon the engines and boilers
were moved &om the usual place which
they occupied in the old paddle steamers
to points oti either side fore and aft of the
saloon, and duplicate sets of boilers and
engines were provided—“in order to short
en” tbe dreaded channel voyage.
The hydraulic suspension was not the
only ingenious device which was depend
ed upon to keep the saloon steady. The
great speed of the ship—she was expected
to attain very high speed, although in
practice the speed never exceeded
knots—was trusted to diminish the pitch
ing, and she was given a low freeboard,
40 feet long at each end. The effect of this
freeboard, so it was believed, would be to
cut into the waves, ship part of them on
tho low deck, and so balance the vessel.
The Bessemer inaugurated her first trip
to Calais by smashing old Calais pier, the
hydraulic steering gear failing to act at a
critical moment, and. as a matter of fact,
the hydraulic appliances for steadying her
saloon were not tried, the real reason be
ing that they were not finished. 'Subse
quent experiments were equally unsatis
factory. The swinging saloon did not be
have at sea in the same way as the steam
rocked model which Bessemer bad studied
on land. In comparatively calm water,
which still might have enough swell to be
unpleasant, it would not. act at all.
Moreover, the boat was really too large
for Calais harbor. Her late was sealed by
the bankruptcy of the company that
owned her, and in 1870 she was sold by
order of the liquidators. The buyer re
moved the saloon and its machinery, dis
carded tbe hydraulic steering gear and
built up the low freeboard to the level of
the rest of the deck. In this commonplace
guise the old Bessemer had a career and
only differed from the less stuffy channel
boats in having four paddle wheels in
stead of two. —Philadelphia Record.
MACON NEWS’ WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY u 189 b.
THE STEAMER’S CHIMNEY.
Some <>f Intvrest Itn
Construct ion uml
The str?J!er along the wharfs who
should s‘o rising from the smokestack
of a big steamer a small and at tbe start
perf“i t!y (iefined column of smoko which
-< la-ti to eoiiio fi' 'H a small smoke
pipe within the Lig one might wonder
if the great smokestack was filled with
smalh 1 stm-ks. one for each boiler. As
a matter <;f fact it is nut so filled, but
th* r- is within it a smaller smoke pipe
ealle<! the d.-i.key stack, whif h is the
eiiimuey for the boiler of the. donkey eu
gitie. which is used when tbe vessel is
in port in hoisting cargo iu and out It
is from thi.; pipe that tho small column
of smoke is seen to issue.
The tlo.'ikey slack is plaoeil sometimes,
against the lorw ird iunt r side of the big
Ktnck, sometimes against the aft rinmr
sitl->. It may he a complete pipe, or it
may be funned of iron in the shape < f
halt a pip ;, with tl.iugi s riveted to the
main pipe.
If a single one of the large boilers
were used, as it might be when the ship
is in port, it might bo connected with
the donkey stack, but in their 7 -gtiiar
and common arrangement and use tbe
uptakes of all the.-, boilers run into the
great chimney, whoso whole interior is
op-.-n, except for the braces running
across it to strengthen and support it.
The. chimneys of all large steamships
however, and of many other steam ves
gels as well are built double, with an
inner and an outer shell, with a space
between varying according to tho size,
of the vessel. It may be from five to ten
inches. The primary purpose of this
chamber around the smokestack Is to
afford ventilation for the engine room
and the stokehole. In at teast one mod
ern passenger ship ventilating pipes
from the, passenger quarters have been
carried to these chambers. Incidental’/
the space between tire shells helps tv,
keep the stack sightly, for thus con
structed the chimney is coo;: r on ’
outside ii.'tt'i it would (.iiicrwis-. tic, -*>.u
so it holds paint the h-it.<-r.—New Ya*. ’■
CASTOR IA
For Infants ami CLibLat.
1 - z?
siailh x'TV / - r ——— i S K
«urt4»urt>z' s <>•«■?»
s . /z;.y
his WwjMnJ
WORST 'STWiI
p
For Three Years He Suffered Cou Id
Hardiy Breathe at Might —One Nostril
Closed for Ten Years.
Mr. A. M. Ramsey, of De Leon, Texas,
was a sufferer from Catarrh in its
Wurst form. Truly, his description of
his sufferings seem little short of mar
velous. Instead <>f seeking his .couch,
glad for she night's coming,-he wont to
it with terror, realizing t hat another
long, weary, wakeful night, and a
struggle to breathe was before him.
De Leon, Texas.
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah, Ga.,
GENTS; 1 have used nearly four bottles of
P. P. P. I was afflicted from the crown of my
head to the soles of my feet. Your P. P. P.
has cured my difficulty of breathing, smother
ing, palpitation of the heart, and has relieved
me of all pain. One nostril was closed for
ten years, but now 1 can breathe through it
readily.
I have not slept on either side for two years;
in fact, I dreaded to see night come. Now I
sleep soundly in any position all night.
I am 50 years old, but expect soon to be able
to take hold of the plow handles. I feel glad
that I was lucky enough to get P. P. P., and I
heartily recommend it to my friends and the
public generally.
Yours respectfully,
A. M. RAMSEY.
The State of Texas, I
County of Comanche,
Before the undersigned authority, on this
day, personally appeared A. M. Ramsey, who,
after being duly sw.orn, says on oath that the
foregoing statement made by him relative to
the virtue of P. P. P. medicine, is true.
A. M. RAMSEY.
Sworn to and subscribed before m*- this,
August 4th, 1891.
J. M. LAMBERT, N. P.,
Comanche County, Texas.
CATARRH CURED BY P. P. P.
(Lippman’s Great Remedy) where alt
other remedies failed.
Woman’s weakness, whether nervous
or otherwise, can be cured and the
system built up by P. P. P. A healthy
woman is a beautiful woman.
Pimples, blotches, eczema and all
disfigurements of the skin are removed
and cured by P. P. P.
P. P. P. will restore your appetite,
build up your system and regulate you
in every way. P. P. P. removes that
heavy, down-in-the-mouth feeling - .
For blotches and pimples on the
face, take P. P. P.
Ladies, for natural and thorough
organic regulation, take P. P. P., Lipp
man’s Great Remedy, and get well at
once.
Sold by all druggists.
LIPPMAN BROS., Apothecaries, Sole Prop’rs,
Lippman’s Block, Savannah, Ga.
I>. A. KSATING.
'V »WwW
- - r vuZiSsfr Vty-
General Undertaker and Embalmer,
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Caskets, cases, coffins and burial
robes; htarse and carriages furnished
to all funerals in and out of the city.
Undertaker’s telephone 467. Resi
dence telephone gas Mxlbsrry
street. Msccx
2- ike requirements of every dress-stalker , /r.- i
fessionai ar anitrnr. ,-T valuaku fe.iiute is its j
CUT PAPER PATTERNS
Ea< k issue coiilairts, ameng its risk t-.irieiy of |
fsstiions. tioo gowns .for txtkick cut paper patterns i
are furnisked. If you wish to wear the latest I
UTILITY SKIRTS. WASH SKIRTS, SHIRT- !
WAISTS, TAILOR-MADE GOWNS |
cr i/" you are seeking neia designs, you nt'i!! find J
what yen, want tn the pages of the HA ZA R, at |
25c. PER PATTERN
WAIST. SLKEVK or SKIRT - COMPLETE GOWS. 9
and if yc*H will send ns thennmler of the twittern 9
you wish, and enclose the amount, am will sen I 1
z7 to you. If you are not familiar with ths I
BAZAR, we will send you as a special of era ?
TRIAL SUB. ?.>c. FOUR WEEKS
upon receipt es the money.
10 tents a Copy - Sul;., $1 00 por year
nWrrM HARPER Jc BROTHERS, PBhlkh-rs. X. V. (My
« I CASTO RIA
f ASTG^iAii Tkc M Tou Have
L.'LL'A, ih.o rac-simile
ling the Stomachs and Lky.klsrt c; 1
PianaTJire
: . ;.}j or
j Promotes Dtgeslinn.Chccrful- A;
ness and Rest .Con tains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. . s f //_
item.cor,.- L • |
rumfinn Stfi‘ OJj THE
* 1
/Mull, d..*, - i ;W|
Hi • } ill WRAPPER
Mrw Jrr<7 - f -
! fZz*z)srr/.fecscr . ; &y
f
Apcrfectßemedy forConsHpa-1
: lien. Sour Stomach,Diais hoca,! k M B IS
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish j|| : ] iLJ’Vx li. JL<-B—v>
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
FacSinule Signature of (tsy'R'T’i imvr*
I THE kIUD
NEW YORK.
gtaSß »«ws
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THF CENTAUR COMPANY W‘W C TV
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Ml-l -T/b'V forget their cares. Good
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~ rowful and fills the body with
life. Good Beer is a tonic—it hurts no one. Our Beer is
more than good--it is the best that can be bought. Abso
lutely pure and refreshing. Try it the next time you are
feeling tired.
ACME BREWING COMT
The News Printing Co.
Printers and Publishers.
WILL PRINT
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NEWS PRINTING CO
ESTABLISHED NINE YEARS. 1898'.
Southern Dental Parlors,
Are the oiigitmtors cf “Live mid Let Live” charges for High Class Den
tistry in Central and Southern Georgia.
Our business is constantly increasing because we prove all our claims.
Wb Don’t Do Any work We can’t Guarantee.
5 -cent cotton dent :-<’mit of war-time pric.es for dentistry. Our charges are:
22k Gold Crown, best made at any price $4.00.
Bridge work, (per tooth) best made at price 4.00
Set of Tee’h on Rubber Plate : 5.00
Set of Teeth on Bose Pearl Plate (prettiest and best
plate made).............*. 8.00
Gold Fillings, governed by size of cavity 1 up
Teeth extracted without pain 50c.
(No loss of consciousness or had after effects)
AHOther W ork at Proportionately low Charges
We want your patronage, and as an inducement for a
limited time
W e will Pay Your Railroad Fare io and From niacon.
If you want Dental wot k done and want to save money yon should act
promptly, and write for particulars, as our offer is strictly limited.
SOUTHERN DENTAL PARLORS
Wm. G. LONG, D. D, S , Propr. and M’gr.
6m Cherry Street, = ==== Macon, Ga.
54 I TALK IS CHEAP!
s S! =L|| DON’T PAY SIOO FOR A
TALKING MACHINE
2gj when you can buy one which for amusement will
rrfy make the children happy and cause the old folks Lo
<lSf smile. Complicated machines get 01K of order.
t ll THE UNITED STATESTALKING MACHINE
_ issimple, durable ; no parts to break orget
„ out ot ort ' er - Any child can operate it.
i z' It is neatly encased in a hard wood box,
~ we) i brushed, size B^xii^x 3 % inches,
Si with brass hinges and catch; has hearing tubes tor two persons, one (Ber-
Jim * s u i amophone) record and twenty-five needle points. Price complete with one Record
(expiess charges prepaid) $3.50, weight 4 lbs Remit by Bank Draft, Express, or Post-
Office money order. Agents wanted. For terms and particulars address
UNITED STATES TALKINC HACKING CO., (DEPT. ~) 57 E. 9th ST.. NEW YORK CITY*
LANDLORDS!
Do you know that we are the only exclusive rental agents in Ma
con. No other departments. If you are not satisfied with your in
come give us a trial.
A. J. McAfee, Jr., & Co.
357 Third Street.
J. S. BUDD& CO.
320 SECOND STREET.
421 Walnut St. Tarsi’ 1016 Oglethorpe St.
728 Walnut St. gill olg| | I 1171 Oglethorpe St.
460 Oak St. 1 liUHI . Se * oud St J
Dwelling with large lot, head of Oglethorpe street.
Rooms and offices in building 258 Second street.
Store and offices in different locations. We have calls
for houses every day. List you property with ns.
Fire and Accident Insurance.
No Book to carry around. No
Tickets to get lost. In using
Trading Stamps simply have your
book at home and ask for Stamps.
When you buy for cash. Every
member of the family can get
them. We give you orders on
merchants or elegant Premiums
valued ai $5.00 to $9.00 each.
Philadelphia Trading Stamp Co.,
Office Goodwyn’s Drug Store,
Macon, Ga.
Home Industries
and Institutions.
Henry Stevens’ Sons Co.
H. STEVENS’ SONS CO, Macon, Ga., Manufacturers of Sewer,
and Railroad culvert pipe, fittings, fire brick, clay, etc. Wall tubing with
perforated bottoms that will last forever.
Macon Machinery.
MALLARY BROS. & CO., dealers in Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills. Specialties—Watertown Steam Engines, Saw Mills, Grist Mills,
Cotton Gins.
Macon Refrigerators.
MUECKE’S Improved Dry Air Refrigerators. The best Re
frigerators made. Manufactured right here in Macon, any size and o!
any material desred. It has qualities which no other refrigerator on
the market potseswi t ome and see them at the factorv Mew Si
Rainy Weather
J
Make see l grow if they are GOOD.
We don’t have any other kind.
Plant now.
Streyer Seed Comp’y.
466 Poplar Street.
3