Newspaper Page Text
THE MONROE ADVERTISER.
VOL. XXXIII
ATTENTION
FARMERS!
We make a specialty of your trade, and mto anxious to increase our trade in your
county. Wo cordially invito you to call on us and arrange to do your future business
With us. Wo keep in stock
BAGGING AND TIES, BACON, LARD, CORN OATS, HAY,BRAN,FLOUR
MEAL. TOBACCO, CIGARS, SYRUP, COFFEE, SUGAR, ETC.
Wo soli on time to farmers cheaper than any house in Middle Georgia and besides
our regular stock, wo soli on time
Miles, Waps, Colli Planers, Dry Goofls, Boots, Sloes
and in ftmt anything needed. We offer those extra inducements so as to make it con
venient for you in trading. We have every facility for these outside items, and will
•ell as cheap as any one. Wo have just received anew lot of
Georgia liaised live,
Georgia liaised Barley,
Texas llust Proof Oats.
FERTILIZERSTFERTILIZERS!
We are agents in Middle Georgia for
G KORGIA CHEMICAL WOHKS, of Augusta, Ga.
JOHN Mhltll\ MAN A: CO., of Baltimore, Md.
LISTER'S I’UJIE BONE FEKTILIZEKS, of Newark N J
M AGON OIL AN D FEUTIL 1Z Eil CO.,
(OI the latter only Cotton >Sood meal.) We call special attention to our
“SOLUBLE BONE DUST,”
which is the highest grade Phosphate for composting ever offered. Wo
pay highest price for Cotton Soed.
ROGERS, WORSHAM & CO.
4-0 and 422 Third Street, MACON, GA
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
MA X U PACT U H ERS O F
DOOR, SASH, BLINDS,
Mantels, Moldings, Ballusters, Newels,
WINDOW AND DOORFRAMES
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, SHINLFES, LATHS aNDBRICK.
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
We now have our Factory in operation and will he glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. We feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
our work. Call before making your purchases and get prices.
Factory 13th S treat, Oppoite Cotton Factory.
OFFICE PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N- H. —Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break
loose, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
SMITH & MALLARY,
MACON, GEORGIA.
STATE MANAGERS OF THE
Watertown Steam Enaine Cos.
AGKNTS FOR DEALERS IN
BROWN’S COTTON GINS,
LUMMUS COTTON GINS, ENGINES AND BOILERS,
FINDLAY COTTON GINS, SAW MILLS.
SCIENTIFIC MILLS, BELTING, LUBRICATING OILS,
NOIIDYKE A MARMOX’S CELIA j IRON PIPE AND FITTINGS,
BRATED GRIST MILLS. 1 BRASS FITTINGS.
WE a-TTjALeTVTsTTSGI] THS
WATERTOWN STEAM ENGINES
To bo the Safest, Strongest, Most Reliable and Efficient Engines in the
Market. Send for Circulars.
’HUNGER’S MUSIC HOUSE
Masonic Temple, 96 Mulberry SL, Macon, Ga.
Li.rgost Wareri’om and Most Complete and Elegant Stock of
Pianos and Organs:
No Low Grade or Shoddy Instruments.
All Pianos scale, lull 7J octaves, genuine ivory keys, all modern improvements,
e egant finish and fuilv warranted. All Organs in Solid W alnut Cases Elegant Designs,
line Finish, Strictlv First-elas ai.d Fully Warranted. Special Catalogue of Sheet
Music will be se*t Free t any address. If you \?ant anything m the Music Line, send
in your orders and they will be promptly filled.
All Sheet Music, Music Books & Small Instruments
Pianos and Organs sold on long time with monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or yearly
payments, without interest. The scale of uniform prices adopted by this bouse are th
lowest ever otlered on superb, first class instruments that are cheap enough for every
body and good enough for anybody. Address all Communications to
M. L. HUNGER,
96 Mulberry Street, MACON, GA.
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
W e advise all of those wanting Furniture of anv kind to go to
JOHN NEAL & CO.,
Nos. 7 and 9 South Broad Street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
As they keep a Full Line, which they are -elling at LOWER PRICES than can be
elsewhere Sets from $17.5) up, etc. Don’t lor __et our address.
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 14 IBSS.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE.
Mrs. Caroline F. Corbin, in reply
ing to Senator Blair's report of the
seriate select committee on woman
suffrage, says:
‘•lf women vote they must also
hold office and assume the working
duties incident to politeal campaigns.
It appears from the published record
of your life that yon commenced
your political career at about tlie
age ot 30. For the next ten oi fif
teen years you were actively in poli
tics. Now, will you tell mo if you
think it would have been convenient
or agreeable during those years when
you were laying the foundation of
your political success to have been
also engaged in bearing and rearing
a family? Could you have done
what you found it necessary to do
politically, and at the same time
have attended properly to your du
ties as wife and mother? You will
say that the very suggestion is in
delicate, and 1 agree with you, but
the fault is in the situation as pro
posed by you. The duties and offices
of motherhood are all sweet, and
pure, and holy when kept within
the sacred precincts of the home.
Brought out into the garish light of
publicity what do they become?
“You say in your report that there
arc many women who are not wives
and mothers. Very true, and when
women vote and hold office there
will bo more of them. A true re
gard for the best interests of society
demands that their number shall be
reduced by all natural and reasona
ble means, but when political re
wards are offered as the price of
services in public life, do you not
believe that many, and those not of
the weak and ignorant, but ot the
more gifted and intellectual, will be
tempted to forego marriage and
motherhood for the sake of winning
them? Woe betide the land which
thus offers its political trusts as
premiums for childless women ! The
morals of society are corrupt enough
now. What do you suppose they
will become when not to be married,
not to be a mother, is the prerequisit
for a woman’s success in a chosen
and tempting career. I speak ad
visedly and in the light of thirty
years of profound and prayerful
study of social problems, when I say
that the direct tendency of woman
suffrage would be to form a class of
women such as held high court in
Greece in the days preceding its
downfall ; women brilimit- and intel
lectual, but wholly wanting in that
steadfast faith and abiding viitue
whicli’charactemes the Anglo-Saxon
ideal of womanhood, 1 may say the
Christian ideal as well—the wife and
mother. Are American men pre
pared to relegate the wives and
mothers of this republic to a secon
dary and subservient place, and
share the political leadership of this
great and free country with an
oligrancy of. Aspasias ?
This is an eloquent presentation
of an argument which is based upon
indisputable factand invincible logic,
and Granny Blair, who can neither
bear children nor make laws, need
never expect to answer it.
‘•You say that you have only pro
posed the measure because women
have asked you to do it,” says Mrs.
Corbin ; “the same plea was made
by your great progenitor in the
Garden of Eden; but it did not avail
him. Moreover, in the ease of Adam,
it was true. In the present instance
the plea contains but the minimum of
truth. There are fifteen millions of
women in this country (I quote your
statistics) of voting age. Will you
kindly inform us what proportion of
that fifteen millions you have heard
from. You say that these women are
being governed without their consent.
Is it possible that you can sincerely
believe that fifteen millions of A mcr
ican women could be governed with
out their consent? Do 3*oll not
rather feel assured that if a bare
majority* of that number did not
consent, tor what appear to them to
bo good and sufficient reasons, to he
governed b}* indirect rather than
direct representation there would be
a revolution within twenty-four
hours? With ever}* right of agita
tion at their command which man
possesses —free speech,free assembly*,
the right of petition, a press ever
ready to disseminate their views, and
many* privileges of courtesy besides
that men lay* no claim to —what
power could withstand the moral
force of any demand which these
15,000,000 should unitedly* make?
“With what show of reason do y*ou
compare free born Americon women
to be degraded and ignorant slaves
on southern plantations, and speak
of men as their masters ? Asa mat
ter of fact the power ot men over
women is not greater than that ot
women over men. Nature lays the
infant man a helpless creature in the
lap of bis mother. He is in her
power for life or for death, and for
the first ten or fifteen years of his
existence, and that during the
forming and determining period of
his career —a period too, in which
he is answerable to no other law
than that of his home—her power
over him, physical, intellectual, and
moral, is so nearly supreme that no
! power which he can arrogate over
iier in later years can overbalance it.
Under ordinary eiscumstances the
faithful, intelligent mother may
j make of her son. in all essentials of
manners and morals, whatsoever she
wiil. If A merican men were to-day*
narrow-minded, tyrannical, vicious
creatures they are charged with being
by the woman suffragists, unfitted to
be legislators lor the whole nation it
could only be because their mothers
had misunderstood or neglected the I
opportunities which nature puts into ■
their hands. Such a charge is a
tremendous indiement against the
motherhood of the Nation, and if it
could be sustained, ought of itself to
bar woman from all legislative func
tion until thex* can better fulfill that
which nature demands of them in
childbearing and rearing. More
over, it is the function of slaves to
labor; but it is this Nation’s pride
and boast that in no other country
that the sun shines on arb there so
many homes supported by the loyal
and untiring industry of icon, where
women are kept in ease and comfort,
in order that they may give their
time to the higher duties ot rearing
children and planniug and carrying
on enterprises of charity, philan
thropy and reform ; and the influ
ence of these homes upon public
sentiment is the one irresistible pow
er in American social and political
life.
. *
Extorsion Fostered by Protection.
Even the protectionists arc be
ginning to understand .that protec
tion is calling into existence and
sustaining more monopolies than
the country can stand. What are
these trusts which are being formed
but huge monoplies, made possible
by the prohibitory tariff taxes?
The Philadelphia Times, a strong
protection journal, said, the other
day, ”lf the sincere friends of
American industry wdftild protect
protection they must promptly sep
arate it from the extortion of trusts
and monoplists. It cauj urvive the
hostility of open, manlyjibes; it can
not survive the suicidal blows of
those who use protection only to
abuse it by the arbitrary oppression
of consumers that would not be
tolerated in despotic Russia.”
Who is there who is st> simple as
to suppose that the monopolies will
heed advice like this?- Have they
not always sought to, ijpakc every
cent out of protection- that they
could? It is folly to think that
they will voluntarily abandon a sin
gle advantage which ilg&ves them.
They prate about thelWeeessity of
protection to labor. \\ fell did they
ever willingly mak a cession to
labor, and when did lb- y over miss
an opportunity of sq’l king every
cent possible out. of oor They
would impoverish the country arid
pauperize labor before they would
miss a single chance to iucrease their
wealth.
Trusts arc only bigger and more
grinding monopolies than those
which already existed. There were
steel monopolies before the steel
trust was formed, but they were not
quite so powerful as the trust is.
Two years ago the steel rail manu
factures combined and raised the
price of steel rails from 827 to 840.
They made a fair profit at 827 and
an immense one at 840. When
there is competition steel rails can
be obtained at a fair price, but
protection makes combination
possible, and they prevent competi
tion and take from the pockets of
consumers immense sums beyond a
fair profit. Is labor benefited by
trusts and monopolies? The fre
quent strikes show that it is not.
The money extorted from the people
goes only into the pockets of the
monopolists. If a railroad pays 810
a ton more for steel rails than it
ought to, it pays its employes less
than it otherwise would and collects
more from its patrons.
The resolution of Mr. Bacon,
chairman of committee on manufac
tures, to investigate the subject of
trusts, introduced into the house on
Wednesday, is a wise one. If there
is an investigation the people will
be made aware of the way they are
being robbed by the aid of the pro
hibitory tariff taxes. Protectionists
will not be able to hide the truth.
The consequence will be that the
demand for a reduction of the tariff
will be more emphatic than it has
ever been. There will boa clearer
realization ot the truth of the presi
dent’s message, and a better under
standing of the misleading statement
of the protection journals. —Morning
News.
It Fills the Bill.
Pyhsicians,consumers, dealers and
all proclaim Westmoreland’s Cali
saya Tonic the best of all;
Joxesville, S. C., Sept. 3.—West
moreland Bros. —Gentlemen ; I have
used your Calisaya Tonic in several
forms of indigestion, and can recom
mend to the Profession as a fine
Tonic for digestive disorders.
Respectfully,
Wm. O. Southard, M. D.
Messrs. Westmoreland Bros.—
Gentlemen : I can heartily recom
mend your Tonic for chills and fever.
It cured me when all other remedies
failed. Yours truly,
T. O. Togo art,
Baggage Master C. &. G. B. R.
Messrs. Westmoreland Bros.,
Gentlemen—-Please ship by first
freight another case of your incom
parable Calisaya Tonic, it is the
only preperation of the kind I have
seen that fully* bears out the prom
ises made by* the sellers. We guaran
tee it.
H. C. Edcmumds,
Druggist and Physician.
Take Dr. Dukes Anti Billious Wafer
with Tonic if your liver is out order.
GIVE IT JUSTICE.
Under the above heading Col.
Whitson G. Johnson, of Lexington,
Ga., writing to the -Macon Telegraph,
takes occasion to defend the state
constitution. It is often charged
that the constitution stands in the
way of paying higher salaries,(which
are too meager) to our governor!
Supreme and Superior court judges,
Ac. On this subject Col. Johnson
says:
“The constitution of 1877 does not
make any mention whatever, in
reference to tho chancellor of the
State University; nor does it make
any mention whatever of salary that
shall be paid to tho chancellor or
any of the faculty of the State Uni
versity. All that the present con
stitution has to do with the State
University is that in paragraph 1,
article 8, section G. Trustees of the
State University are authorized to
receive bequests and donations that
may bo made to the University by
anyone generous enough to make
them.
In the code of Georgia, of tho
edition of 1882, paragraph 1,196,
sub section 3, it will be seen that it
is the duty of the trustees of the
State University to fix the salaries
of the chancellor and faculty, and
this matter belongs exclusively to
the board of trustees. Hence, your
readers will see that the constitution
of Georgia has nothing whatever to
do with the salary of tho chancellor
of the State University. The trus
tees have the sole management of
this thing, and they can fix the
salary of the chancellor at any sum
they please, and it is not forbidden
by the constitution so to do. There
is the very best reason for this ar
rangement, and that is that the state
cannot regulate the salaries of the
chancellor and faculty of the State
University, either in its organic or
statute law, because these officers are
not officials of the state, but are of
ficials spoken into existence by the
trustees, who have tho entire man
agement of all the money to which
the University is entitled, and it is
with them to disburse this money,
and not for the law making power
of the state, either m framing a
fundamental or statutory law, to
interfere. “Thou canst not sav l
did it!” can well be the reply of the
constitution of Georgia.
Now, as to the salaries of the gov
ernor and judges of the Supreme and
Superior courts. If tho people or
the legislature wish to increase the
salaries of these officers, it can be
done without any amendment to the
constitution. Such an amendment
is not necessary, as you assert in
your editorial.
In article 5, section 1, paragraph
2 of the constitution of Georgia of
1877, it is provided “that the gov
ernor shall have a salary* of $3,000 a
year until otherwise provided by a
law passed by r a two-thirds vote by*
both branches of the general assem
bly.”
In article 6th, section 13th, para
graph Ist of the same constitution it
is provided—that the judges of the
Supreme court shall each have 83,-
000 per annum ; and the judges of
the Superior Court shall each have
82,000 per annum.
In article 6th, section 13th and
paragraph 2nd of the same constitu
tion, it is provided, that, “the gener
al assembly may at any time, by* a
two-thirds’ vote of each branch, pre
scribe other and different salaries for
any, or all, of the above officers, but
no such change shall affect the offi
cers then in commission.”
So, again the constitution is not at
fault on the salary* question. Ex
cept under the constitution of Geor
gia of 1868, the salaries of these offi
cers are as high or higher than they
have ever been in Georgia. Geor
gia's great, jurist, ornate scholar and
honey-tongued orator, Hon. John M.
Berrien, who was also a profound
statesman, served on the Superior
court bench at a salary of SI,BOO
per annum. It is for the people to
change these salaries at their own
instance. How, it may be asked?
The people have only* to elect a leg
islature charged with notice of the
duty that it is the will of that same
people to increase the salaries ot the
governor and judges of the Supreme
and Superior courts. When the
general assembly* shall have passed
such a law by a two-thirds’ vote of
both houses, the matter is ended, and
the salaries are increased ; and such
a law would not have to be referred
back to the people for ratification,
because, there is no constitutional
amendment required to increase
these salaries. The salaries of the
attorney-general of the state, and
the various solicitors-general of the
different judicial circuits can be in
creased in the same way, it the peo
ple see fit to uo so.
The constitution has, therefore,
“been more sinned against than
sinning,” for if these salaries be sins,
the sinning is at the door of the peo
ple and not at the door of the con
stitution of the state.
If it is really desired to change
these salaries, it would be an easy
mutter to take the voice of the peo
ple on it, by* having the state demo
cratic executive committee or the
state democratic convention to for
mulate some resolutions or sugges
tions embodying such changes, ana
request the people to pass on them
at the election tor members of the
general assembly.”
Opposes Repeal of Internal Revenue.
Deputy Collector, T. L. Gantt, re
plying to “wide Awake” through
tlte Constitution, on the repeal of the
internal revenue, says:’
••My reasons for opposing any re
duction of the whisky tax are en
tirely unselfish. I 'well know that
to remove the tax from the unneces
sary luxuries of whisky and tobacco
means to foster it iti the necessaries
of liftPjpcOn articles that are in daily
use by ourxoiiing masses. This
Imruen, while enriching a few and a
%G>red class, has been for long years
grinding into, poverty the farmers
of bur htfui. From the time the
husbandman rises in tho morning
until he wearily sinks upon his conch
at.night touches, tastes or handles
anything but that lie pays to the
manufacturer a tax in many in
statt rides amounting to half the value
of the article used. Is it a matter of
surpriso, then, that while the manu
facturer is aocummulating his thous
ands and millions of wealth, that
nine-tenths tho farmers of Georgia
are to-day worse than bankrupts?
The last dollar of their hard earned
profits have gone into the pockets of
the few men who are being bone
fitted by this protective tariff. It is
as clear as the noonday sun to me
that all this war upon the internal
revenue service has been gotten up
by designing men solely with an
eye and intent to deprive the general
government of tho revenue it re
ceives from tho whisky and tobacco
taxes, so as to render any material
reduction impossible on the hun
dreds of articles necessary to sustain
life that now bear such a burden
some tax.
Knowing, as I do, tho true in
wardness of this bitter attack upon
the internal revenue service, was it
wrong or out of place in me to raise
my feeble voice in warning to tho
people of my state against the great
imposition that was attempted to be
practiced upon them? Free liquor
means nigh priced iron, sugar, cloth
ing, hats, shots, tinware, crockery,
and in fact every article used by our
farmers except the products grown
upon their own lands. To show the in
justice to which our southern
planters are subjected I have only
to refer to the fact that the price to
be paid them for their great staple
—cotton—is fixed in England, a
free trade country, while they are
forced, through our un just tariff laws,
to purchase back the same cotton,
when in a manufactured form, laden
with a tariff of 50 per cent, on the
value of the goods imported.”
SOUTHERN MILLS.
Increase in Cotton and Woolen Factories
Since 1880— Cotton Consumption.
Chattanooga, Tenn., January* 31.
—The tradesman has compiled sta
tistics from official reports showing
the growth of the cotton industry in
the Southern States in the past seven
years. The increase in mills in the
south during that period was 85, or
51 per cent.; of spindles, 654,025, or
116 per cent.; of looms, 157,343, or
79 per cent.
The increase in each of the South
ern States separately in the past
seven years, as follows.
In Alabama the mills increased
18 per cent. ; spindles, 81 per cent.;
looms, 76 per cent.
In Georgia, mills, 37 per cent.;
spindles, 90 per cent.; looms, 81 per
cent.
In Mississippi, mills. 25 per cent;
spindles, 155 per cent; looms, 109
per cent.
In -Maryland, mills, 16 per cent!
spindles, 35 per cent; looms, 14 per
cent.
In North Carolina, mills, IS per
cent; spindles. 139 per cent; looms,
22 percent.
In South Carolina, mills. 107 per
cent, the largest percentage ot in
crease ; spindles, 181 percent; looms,
195 per cent.
In Tennessee, mills. 75 per cent;
spindles, 188 per cent, the largest
increase; looms 185 per cent.
In Virginia, mills, 50 per cent!
spindles, 35 per cent; looms, 17 per
cent.
North Carolina has 80 cotton mills
against 49 in 1880; South Carolina
29 against 14 in 1880; Tencssee 28
against 16 in 1880; Georgia 55
against 40 in 1880; Virginia 12
against 8 in 1880; Alabama 19
against 14 in 1830. Arkansas has
added one mill since 1880; New
York one; Louisiana one ; Missisippi
two, -Maryland three.
The total number of mills in the
south to-day is 249, and the con
sumption of raw cotton in 1886 and
’B7 was 401,452 bales, against 316,
062 in 1886, ’BS.
♦
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
known and so popular as to need no
special mention. All who have used
Electric Bitters sing the same song
of praise.—A purer medicine does
not exist and it is guaranteed to do
all that is claimed. Electric Bitters
will cure all diseases of the Liver
and Kidneys, will remove Pimples,
Boils. Salt Rheme and other affec
tions caused by* impure blood. —Will
drive Malaria from the system and
prevent as well as cure all Malarial
fevers. — For cure of Headache, Con
sumption and Indigestion try* Elec
tric Bitters —Entire satisfaction
guaranteed; or money refunded.—
Price 50 cents and 81.00 per bottle
at Ponder A Hill s Drug Store.
mm ;
igp ■■■
kmmO
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies A marvel of
purity, strength ninl wholesonieness. More
ecumenical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot be sold in competition with the mul
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. SuU/ only in catin .
Royal Baking I’owdkh Cos., 100 Wall
street. New York.
Important School Notice.
THE attention of patrons and teachers of
public schools is called to the following
points in the revised and amended school
law, and to the instructions of the State
School Commissioner in accordance there
with.
Ist, Schools must use the text books
adopted by the County Board of Education.
No pupil, who uses other books, will bo
allow ed to receive the benefit of the public
fund.
The following are the text books adopted
by the board last July for five years to-wit:
Sander s School Primer, Swinton’s Spellers,
readers, geographies and histories; Ameri
can graded rcadcrs.Cathcarts liteary reader,
Sanford’s or Itohinscn’s arithmetics. Well’s
or Butler’s grammar, Webster’s school
dictionaries. Smith’s physiology and hy
giene, and Spencerian copy books.
2nd county boards are required to estab
lish. one School, each, for white and colored
children in every school district, as near
as practicable to the center of the district
“reference being had to any school house
already erected and to population of said
school distrit, and to the location of white
ar.d colored schools witn regard to conti
guity ; and no additional school can be
established in the sub-district without tho
enrollment therein cf not less than twenty
live pupils.
Under the present law there arc no dis
trict trustees. Teachers must apply for
schools to the Board through the County
School Commissioner.
3rd. Teachers are examined only on the
day appointed by- the. State School* com
missioner ; find no teacher can he examined
at any other time except on affidavit that
he or she was providentially hindered from
being present on the general examination
day or days and has not seen or been in
formed of the contents of the general
question papers.”
No teachers w ill he licensed whose stand
ing is below sixty. Papers of unusual
merit may be forwarded to the State School
Commissioner with an endorsement by the
county school commissioner of the authors
good moral and profes.-siona! diameter.
Upon these the State School Commissioner
may issue a permanent license revocable
for good and sufficient cause by him only.
By order of the County Board of Education.
THOMAS G. SCOTT,
County School Commissioner.
Forsyth, Feb. 3rd, 1888.
“announcement r
T HAVE this day sold my entire stock
i of Furniture, Fixtures and good will
to Messrs. Ponder & Ensign, who are
live, active and good business men.
Thanking the public for the liberal pa
tronage bestowed on ui<*, I cheerfully
commend Messrs. Ponder & Ensign to
my fr.ends and patrons.
Yours trul v,
J‘. J. LEARY.
Forsyth, Ga., Jan. 31, 1888.
J. M. Ponder &C. \. Ensign compos
ing the firm of Ponder A Ensign have
this day boa rig the entire stock, fixtures
and good will in the Furniture business
from Mr. J. J Leary, and will continue
the business at. bis old stand next door
to J. 31. Ponder’s dry goods store. We
propose to keep in s‘o:k every thing
suited to the demand of the trade at
prices as low as the same goods can be
bought in Macon or Atlanta. In this,
our new enterprise, we most respectfully
solicit your patronage.
Yours trill v,
PONDER & ENSIGN.
Forsyth, Ga., Jan. 31, 1888.
- Or. HSM 3 ~
*£■ -y * -■/ ' *-A
A- " ‘ -> jK-
A. Poet fffs3flvß Combination.
T;?* wp?l fcnowa Tn:*' cth! Nervine is pain in?
great r**.* and .a > ;- t sire for lability.
K3, and a’L:Ii(U s !fcorders. It relieve# all
1 end flpLilsrat***! conditions of the sys
tem : strengthen* the intellect, i*mi bodily functions;
build* np worn out Nerm : aids iiz?e*tion : re
store* impaired or losi A'itnlitr, and bring* back
youthful strength end vigor. It is pleasant to the
taste, and used regularly braces the Sy&teiu against
the depressing influence of Malaria.
r rrice-SI.OO per Jiottle of 24 ounces.
* FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
6c 00221, Prcp’r.,
BAMTIMOKE, md.
WRIGHT & STONE,
ATTORNEYS ATLAW.
OFFICE up stairs Pye’sOpera House
building. Forsyth, Ga.
Loans Negotiated
On Farms and Town Property*, In
Bibb and Adjoining Counties.
ELLIOTT ESTES,
563 Cherry St., Macon. Ga.
NUMBER 6