The Monroe advertiser. (Forsyth, Ga.) 1856-1974, March 20, 1888, Image 1

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I I Tl Ph “T" i 4 i m (i M : J W; r:y- 1 — GO t=d i VOL XXXIII ATTENTION FARMERS! Wo mak ipocifdty of your trado, and are anxious to increase trade in J; wVkeip our your With ' V ° U *° CaH ° M U9 Und " rrHnge l ° d ° ^° Ur ftUure buslne8 ‘ in B ^filNG AND TIKS, BACON, LARD, CORN OATS HAY BRAN FLOUR MEAL, TOBACCO, CIGARS, SYRUP COFFEE L SUGAR ^ UUAK t FTC U Wo ’ ’ * ,oll on tl mo ««™„T,r, Of, h , „r P ' r , "‘ y h , '’““ G d b id “^“ *" "> « Miles, Wagons, Colton Plaalers, Dry Gooils, Bools, Siiocs »rul in but anything needed. \\ <* offer these extra inducements to make it vanioiit trudhig. We so ns con ,, r you m have every facility for these ouUii'.o items, and will n il as cheap oh any one. We have just received a new lot of Georgia Raised Rye, Georgia Raised Barley, Texas Rust Proof Oats. FERTILIZERS! FERTILIZERS! Wo are agents in Middle Georgia for GEORGIA CHEMICAL WORKS, of Augusta, Ga. JOHN M ERR YM A N A CO., of'Baltimore Md. LI S I LI*. S RL II L RONE 1- LR'I’l UZERS, of Newark N J MACON OIL AND EEIITILIZER CO., (Of the latter only Cotton Seed meal.) We call special attention to our U SOLUBLE BONE DUST,” which is the highest grade Phosphate for composting ever offered. We |>ay highest price for Colton Seed. ROGERS, WORSHAM & CO. 420 and 422 Third Street, MACON, GA. S -A Y COCK Manufacturing Company, -M A XU FACT U RERS OF-- DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, Mantels, Moldings, Ballusters, Newels f WINDOW AND DOORFRAMES -----DEALERS IN LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS ANDBRICK. ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. XVe now have our Factory in operation an 1 will lx* glad t< > see all wanting Building .Material and give prices We feel contflcnt we can please both m price and quality of our work. Call before making \ >ur par -liases and get.prices. Factory 13th Street, Oppoite'Cotton Factory. OFflOS PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. N. M, -Our Blinds are wired \v\th Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break loose, thus pseventing the unsightly appearnu •«* that most others do. SMITH & MALLARY 3 MACON, GEORGIA. SI’ATE MANAGERS OF THE Watertown Steam Engine Co. -AGENTS FOR- X -DEALERS IN BROWN’S COTTON GINS, { LUMMUS COTTON G lN8, ^ 1 ENGINES AND BOILERS, FINDLAY COTTON GINS, * * fcLvXV MILLS; SCIENTIFIC MILLS, BELTING, 7 LLBRICATING OILS, NOUDYKE A MARMON’S CELE- j IRON PIPE AND _ FITTINGS, BRATED GRIST MILLS. BRASS FITTINGS. WE GRT.A.'RAlIN'TIEIII: TT-IJ23 WATERTOWN STEAM ENGINES Tr. be tiie Safest, Strongest, Most Reliable and Effcient Engines in the Market. Send for Circulars. HUNGER'S MUSIC HOUSE Masonic Temple. 93 Mulberry St., Macon, Ga. Largest XX'are room and Most Complete and Elegant Stock of "i -% • OTld g X KlQll ICMlUO AO dj I I \ i 1 ! 1 -yi I "5^ I fN T VWAiVa. S WJL Cl /l. I 9 • •vr -r n. ^ ixl J .LOW Viraaa 1 or bilOudy instriinisirts. 2. i ■7 ' ?V J Full > Warranted. Special Catalogue of Sheet in in Tl your orders w and ftn t h they r ° e w ill n he fldd1 promptly filled. f J ( ' u want anything in the Music Line, send All a n r«i Sheet — Music. Music Books & Small Instruments ST IEv,IO TUG'S - CA.SI2. F U ' s * ’"' n l? r' rs f R " s sold on lh0 of with uniform monthly, prices quarterly, adopted semi-annual bv or yearly & - , W i 0, \ 8 lT erb clils instruments that this house are the body and good i enough to r any ’ body. * Address all Communications are etoeap enough for every¬ * to M. L. MUNGER, 90 Mulberry Street, MACON. GA. FURNITURE! FURNITURE! X X\ e advise all of those wanting Furniture of any kind to go to JOHN NEAL & CO., Nos. 7 and 9 South Broad Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. A* they keep a Full Line, which they are selling at LOWER PRICES than can be ebjwTioro S ;l> frj u jilLD up, old. D.» fit Grg ?t j uul Irui*. FORSYTH, MOXROE COUNTY, GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING. MARCH 20 1888. ■ COME TO THE SOUTH. TIJF. CKSTKAL H VH.RO VD S B( - r»r.4i or ijitih.ratiov. .4 no it fliij Paper to lie Published Giving: I’nru and lisiirrs to 1 ii ti ii cc I m mi trillion. To Tin-: Peoplk of Georgia The Central railroad, in connection with the state agricultural society, lias just established a bureau of immigration, that promises great goo.i to the state, if the people will give it their encour agement and active aid. The object »f O.ii communication i, to got the plans of the burearu fully and prop¬ erly before the public, in order that all the different sections of the state may cooperate in bringing their help to the enterprise. The Central authorities have selec¬ ted Mr. W. L. Glessner, of Amerieus, a gentleman in every way qualified to take the management of the bureau. Mr. Glessner will begin at an early day the publication of a monthly pa per, to be kown as The Houther Em pire, devoted to the agricultural in forests of the state. The purpose of this publication will be to disseminate, throughout the north and west, reliable information about our climate, soil, field crops, mirerals, woods, etc., in order to induce parties from these sections to purchase our unoccupied lands, take up their residence with us and help us to build up the material interests of the state. Ten thousand copies of the Southern Empire, will be judi¬ ciously distributed where they will effect the most good. About midsummer, the central will fit up a handsome ear, beautifully let¬ tered in the name of the society, to be filled with samples of vegetables, field crops, minerals, woods, etc., il¬ lustrative of tiie resources of the state. The car will be taken, under the management of Mr. Glessner, to the state and district fairs of the north and west, to aid more effectually, in advertising the state. With this car Mr. Glessner will spend several months in the states north of us, in tin* interest of immigration- In addi ditiou to the copies of the Southern Emhire taken with him Mr. Glessner will be glad to carry, also, any num¬ ber of circulars and pamphlets, fur¬ nished him by any country or section desiring to advertise its general ad¬ vantages. It must be understood that the Centra I does not coptine its scheme to its own line of roads but it is desired that the benefits shall be shared by all parts of the state equally and alike. During his stay noj-th Mr. Glessner will make up large excursion parties to be brought to the state fair. The ear under his charge is intended to represent Georgia in miniature, and the state fair is expected to illustrate the products and rosources of the state abundantly and in profusion. I he success of the undertaking, t here¬ fore, must depend largely upon the success of the state fair. If the coun¬ ties desiring immigration will send to the state fair large exhibits, beau¬ tifully arranged, our visitors from the north will be interested and attracted and we will doubtless, secure large numbers of them as settlers, If Oil the other hand the people of the state are indifferent and allow the state fair to be a failure the bureau of im¬ migration will be a failure also, and we will be left again to the slow methods of the past that bring gradual decay. In addition to these unusual advantages, the counties making exhibits can enter for the splendid premiums offered by the society for the best county display. NX e will be glad to make room in our agricultural building for any and every county that will bring us wor¬ thy exhibits of fieid crops, vegetables, minerals, wood, etc., etc. Applica¬ tions for space should be made as ! early as possible, so that we may ! determine in time the additional i buildings necessary to accomodate j exhibits. I am now in correspondence with the railroads of tho state to secure the lowest possible rates for the transpor I ! tation have already of exhibits. reed Many take of the roads a S to county exhibits to Maeon and return them without charge for freight. The re of my efforts with other roads will be given to the public in due time. In its plans for building up the state, the Central does not stop with the scheme for immigration here present introducing what ever changes may be needed, in bringing about better methods upo our farms that will pro dace better results and establish thrift and prosperity among our own people. In addition to subscribing liberally to the fuuds of the agrieul tural society, the Central has offered the society every facility for dissemi nating useful information among the farmers, and for bringing them to gether in local and district clubs, for the purpose of counsel and concert of action. Realizing the benefits that may eonie to farmers by an actual com parison of methods and results, Mr. M. S. Belknap, general manager of the Central, authorizes me to say that the Central will transport, free from all charges from freight, all exhibits intended for local fairs, held under the management of the J8tate Agri cultural society-. Purely there is nothing left to he added to the action of the Central in ... the scheme that x. it . . has opened , up for ; the good of the state. This is but the begining of an enterprise which the Central is willing to continue, as long as the people will lend the help nec essary to carry it through. The state fair is to be a large factor I in the results to come from this scheme. It is a state institution held, not in the interest of any one section, or for tiie exclusive benefit of any one elass, but for the purpose of develop¬ ing all the reasourees of the state * ...... l nder .present . advantages, , , from . its connection with the central's bureau of immigration, the generous aid of , fere.i , by , other roads and the services tendered by the press of the state, it deserves the help of every patriotic citizen, that it may meet the lightest expectations for good. It will be my pleasure to answer any inquiries upon the subject matter of this comhauni j cation. I Papers favorable to the enterprise will please publish. XV. J. Nothkn, President Oa. 8tate Agricultural Society, Sparta, Ga. -- ANTIQUITY OF THE TELEPHONE. - The „ „ Pr, , Ti" d ;t„d : yZZ'I?' . f0r Tw„ u t f i “Tho principle of tho telephone has been known for 2,000 yea” j n India,” was the rather incredible b^ j statement made last night *cd Amesbury, who has just retifriilfcl to New in York land after a twoyears’tsoj^Jjtrn the of striped tigers id wonderful fakirs. “I do nol a K mark you,”continned M r. A mW BTi “that they use the telephonoCafftvo anySvmym . use if, or that they have of general communication. W1 C 1 do say is that the high cast have a method of com mu n4fe * with diaphragm, each other just by vibrator^C do, on a as we confined entirely to their te» and its existence has rent: 1 a secret until within a very fe\£ '^ars. “I was in a town cailedr about two hundred miles froth l ras, and while there beeaj^ ac quainted with an English. - flatter named Harrington who wasavTimo favorite with the natives beqjtt«) on one occasion lie had saved, wasjj*4prv i driest from drowning. He andjHrVfeat genial, pleasant fellow peculiar magnetism about that ; made and kept friends ev*: re “It was through HarHu., lr *,c 1 was enabled to learn the exiateiYbe of telephonic communication'and to satisfy myself of its antiquity-. “There are two temples in the village about a mile apart. In the interior and on the ground floor of each is a small circular structure which is guarded day and night from the natives as well as from strangers and is supposed to be the abiding place of the ‘governing spirit,’but in reality is the terminus of the telephonic line, which is laid underground from one building ° to the other. “Thcsupcrstitous natives regarded this little structure with the greatest awe and reverence, because they had seen demonstrated before their eyes—or rather ears—the power of this spirit to communicate with the other temple. They were required to make their offering in one build¬ ing, and make known their wishes and desires. Then immediately repairing to the second temple they would be informed of all they- had said and done, although neither priest had left his post. This was regarded as a demonstration of the power of the spirit. “XVe wore unable to determine the composition of the wire that connected the two buildings. It was some kind of metal, but neither steel, copper nor brass, although it closely resembled the latter. The transmitter was of wood and about the size of the head ot a flour barrel, and to establish connection, instead of ringing a bell, the person wishing to attract attention at the other end stood close to the curious looking thing and shouted, ‘Ooey! ooey! ooey!’ “This was answered by a similar shout, which, while faint, was dis- j tinet, and could be heard two feet I away. | “After Harrington and I had i gained rather, the confidence of the priests j —or, after he had—we were given a carte blanche to do as we I pleased, and we talked to each other for more than an hour, and were enabled to make an incomplete in- ! vestigation. ! “We learned that the telephone that we saw had been in use for thirty years. The priests were verv : old men, and they- remembered that : the line ot communication had been renewed only once during their in cumbeney. -• They- showed us remains of worm-eaten transmitters and wood ©n conduits that must have been * hundred of years old. They claim ed that the system had been in ex- j istence since the creation, and fonghed at us when we told them j lbat san }© principle has only- j beea applied in England and Amer * ca w ' tb ' n lbe fo 1 ^ dozen years. In ev er Y part of India and iu Burmah tb l . s s J sle>n secret communication ex ’ st ’ though hundreds of tavelers ■ kave never suspected it. 1 believe thousand that it dates back full two > eals - \ el , vetta . . delightful ? , loilet arti is a . c e. Fry it you will take no other. DOES THESMALL FAKN PAY? . A . writer . . ,. the harm Life . ._ in says: “Does the small farm pay better in proportion to its size than the large one Jjf ■ ,s a question often asked me mon interested in large farms, j 1 hoso .' vh ? enquire are usually ready mn,n | il,n l ‘ iat docs no L ^ ut 1 1 ,ol, « ! 1 } ° ,tcn avoid un argument on I the subject, l I am equally well con¬ vinced that it does pay much better. In considering the question there are different things to be looked at. It is true that in many cases the man who can make a small farm pay can j ,„ ake lav r ou0 )lay ' in p, oportion Dia # f ar m can be too . large. I know a farmer that trios a | one ( 0 farm 100 acres, who, if he would retain about five acres and : let the rest to some good farmer, would double his yearly income, Let me particularize: This farmer puts in about eight acres of corn with the intention of working it himself, He also plants two or three acres of potatoes, some 10 to 20 acres of oats ar, d 15 to 20 acres of wheat—or in round numbers ho has about 50 acres under cultivation, the work on which he expects to do himself. In this* lie makes his first mistake, and acres '"**,**? left lor »***■ pasture and He meadow. lias 110 The point I wish to make is, that this farmer has too many irons in the fire. He should have one man by the year, and il necessary at times, as it probably would be to his work properly and in season, he should employ another by the day. A second mistake is in attempting to crop land without a sufficient -.quantity farmers of manure. I have seen who worked their land to death without enough manure, who -never thought of clover, who slaved early and kite as if there were no other days to come, and at the end of the year it was the same old story, ?Ja farmers living, that’s all.” How many-, with 100 acres are. just doing the same thing. To the question often asked by such indi¬ vidual, “How can I make my farm pay?” 1 would answer, “Give it manure or give it a rest. Do not let your farm run down ; crop only what you have manure enough to dress; keep the land well covered.” 1 wish right here to call the at tention ,d> t!l ° farmers who are in the dr .Y belt, those of Ohio especially, to *- 10 v alue of fresh manure. This fall, when you were top dressing 3* oul ‘ wheatfields, did it not come to your mind that the manure had decreased in value about one-half since last spring? Had you taken that manure and spread it oyer your sod before you planted corn, your torn would have yielded one-third moi ‘e and your wheatfields would nmv Le a very different color. 1 bave pteached this to some of the formers around me for years but ! be Y hold to the topdressing, * know of somo few who scatter their manure when fresh, so that rain can beat it into the ground, then plow it under. Their farms are improving tiie every year, while those who lot tnauure lie in the barn yard from one year to the next, then throw it on the surface of the land for the sun and the wind to carry away, are at a standstill. I will acknowledge that you may get a better crop of wheat by top-dress¬ ing in autumn, but if you put two years’ crops together the advantage will be decidedly in plowing under the previous spring. It we small fruit growers and market gardeners were to use our manure in this style and get no bet¬ ter returns from it than does the average farmer we should soon be broken up at the prices we have to P a y. 1 pay 7- more for manure for acres each year than the average "’heat grower makes of his 40 acres wheat. 1 believe that were he to spend one-half as much his y-ield would be so increased in a few years that his outlay would be returned tenfold. Here is where the small form has the advantage over the large one. It is worked every year; every- foot has to pay; what is planted sure to come, let the season be or dry, for the ground is always m °ist. You can notice when you work about where the old stock yard has been for years the soil i holds the dampness. Some are great sticklers fer rotation of crops. They sa Y wo must not take over two crops j °* field. corn This in succession is all from the If same j j nonsense. you have tiie manure to cover it as it | ought to be covered y-ou can raise j corn crops in succession for 25 years. 1 H is the manure that pays; see that | you lose none of it. j And this leads to the subject of I specialties in farming, which is tho strong point in favor of the small farm. Not but you can make a specialty of some one thing on the large farm also, though not with the same advantage as on the small farm, simply oecause a proportionally large amount of floating capital is not usually at command. I can find work for five men for seven months in the year on 30 acres, and pay from §15 to §20 per month be sides board. I pay more for manure than the average farmer clears from his wheat on the same number of acres. Quite a dif ference between this and attempting to run 160 acres "by- one-man power without manure. Some say special ties foil. What if they do? Or- j dinary farm crops sometimes fail.! This year in Ohio we lost apple 1 our crop, but other crops made up for I it. The berry crop sold for more than it has for years the reason j wholnade being a general shortage. The man | though a specialty of berries, al his crop also was short had berries also to sell and made some money, while the one who had but a small patch had none to sell ' I do not mean to say that we should drop everything else and just tie to one thing, by any means; but we should take one or two things and plant largely of them, and then raise enough other truck to keep up expense and run the farm. 1 take two crops leave yearly from my land and still it in better condition than I found it. It is manure, labor, thorough culture, economy that makes the small farm pay. A second crop of vegetables takes no more fertility from the soil than a crop of weeds. It takes no more to grow a good article than a poor one ; it will command a bettor price and is no trouble to sell. In speaking of my own place I do not include my plant trade. That is a business by itself. Some things I have not ex¬ plained as fully as i could have wished. I will take up somo of the subjects separately at another time. As winter is now upon us we have time to consider whether some of us are not going over too much ground. Let us bear in mind that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well. The South’s Manufacturing Advan¬ tages. Some years ago Gov. Gordon said that in manufacturing the lower grades of cotton goods, the southern manufacturers had an advantage of fully 10 per cent, over those of New England. This statement was ques¬ tioned at tiie time, but a Mr. Hill, from one of the New England States who for five or six years has been superintendent of the Eagle and phoenix mills at col urn bus, recently said that lie had become convinced of its correctness—in fact, that tho southern manufacturer has an ad¬ vantage of as much as 15 per cent. In an interview in a late issue of the New York Graphic, Gov. Gordon reiterates his statement, and shows the reasons for such an advantage. It is duo, ho says, to economic and climatic causes. In the first place, the cotton is manufactured where it is grown, and this saves the middleman’s commis¬ sion, and it prevents wastage* from samplings, and from other sources/ That the southern climate affects the cost of manufaeturingcotton goods isa fact that tire Eastern manufacturers seem to find some difficulty in grasp¬ ing. It cheapens both mill power and labor. In what way? Tho cheapest power for mill purposes is water, and in the south the water can be utilized at all seasons. Drouths rarely interfere, and the rivers are never frozen. It is not so in the East. There droughts and cold compel the mills to shut down. Therefore the manufacturers must i? i steam, which means the erection of" expensive boilers, engines and other appliances. In the south la¬ bor is cheaper. The homes of labor¬ ers need not be so expensive; fuel is cheaper; less clothing is required, and food is not so costly. The east¬ ern laborers require more meat to produce animal heat; the southern laborer in summer can subsist to great extent on vegetables, which he can himself raise, Gov. Gordon says it is not alone the price of man’s labor which measures his re¬ muneration—it is also tho cost of living; and while the southern mill hands got less wages, they can real¬ ly live better than those of the east. Tim manufacturing growth of the south in tite last few years has been very marked, and it was never more so than last year. It is believed that the present year will show even a better record. With such advan¬ tages as the south possesses, what is to hinder her from becoming a great manufacturing section ?—Ex. Give Them a Chance ! That is to say-, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the large air passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them, When these are clogged and choked wi.h matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot do their work. And what they do, they- cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneu monia, catarrh, consumption or any of the family or throat and nose and head bad and All lur.g^ ougni obstructions, to be got all rid are ot. - F ber Y ’ s J us - one sure way to get r ' d °/ them. That is to take Bos chee s German Syrup, which any druggust will sell y-ou at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything eise has foiled, you may-depend upon this for certain, Syrup of Figs Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is tne most easily- taken, and the most effective remedy known to Cleanse the System when Bilious or Costive; to dispel Headaches, Colds,and Fev ers ; to Cure Habitual Constipation, Indigestion, Piles, etc. Manufactur ed only by* the California Fig Syrup Company-, San Fraoscisco, Cal. For sale by Alexander & Son, syth, Ga. NUMBER 11 ROYAL foSolS . .. mm Bakin 0 sjl! 1- I Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot he sold in competition with the mul¬ titude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only - in cans . Royai, Raking Powder Co., IOC Wall street, New York. ANNOUNCEMENT! I of 5- ~ day , Fixtures sold my and entire good stock will to Messrs. Ponder & Ensign, who are live, active and good business men. Thanking the public for the liberal pa¬ tronage bestowed on me, I eheerfuily commend Messrs. Ponder & Ensign to my friends and patrons. Yours truly, J. J. LEARY. Forsyth, Ga., Jan. 31, 1888. J. M. Ponder <fc C. A. Ensign compos¬ ing the firm of Ponder & Ensign have this day bought the entire stock, fixtures and good will in the Furniture business from Mr. J. J. Leary, ami will continue the business at his old stand next door to J. M. Ponder’s dry goods store. XX r e suited propose to keep demand in stock every thing to the of the trade at prices as low as the same goods can bo bought in Macon or Atlanta. In this, our solicit new enterprise, we most respectfully your patronage. Yours trillv, PONDER ct ENSIGN. Forsyth, Ga., Jan. 31, 18S8. Important School Notice. TNIE attention of patrons and teachers of JL public schools is called to the following points in the revised and amended school law, and to the instructions of tho State School Commissioner in accordance there¬ with. I ,. .g, ■. 1st, School* must s&e the text hooks adopted by the County Board of Education. No pupil, who uses other hooks, will be allowed to receive the benefit of tho 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 readers,Cathcarts litcary reader, Sanford’s or Robinsen’s arithmetics, XVell’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 school erected and to population of said distrit, and to the location of white ar.d colored schools with regard to conti¬ guity; and no additional school can be established in tiie sub-district without tho enrollment therein of not less than twenty live pupils. Under the prssent law there are 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 rnissioner; and no teacher can be 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 will be 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 professsiona! charractei, Upon these the State School Commissioner may issue a permanent license revocable for good and sufficient cause by him only. By order of the Count v Board of Education. THOM A S G. SCOTT, Forsyth, County School Commissioner. Feb. 3rd, 1888. mmm, V • j m'A OS&jroN. A Most Effective Combination. T!ii* well Irnfvyn Tonic ami N«- V-’rvtne Is training great reautalion N as TOTS a cure fur Debility. Dyspep t-ia. a - id i Ut -’.iporders It relieves all languid and innditions of the sye tem ; stmizthens the Intellect, und bodily functions; builds up up worn worn out out Verves Verves: : aids digestion : re srores unpaired i in pal red or or lost lost Vitality, and brings back youthful strength and vigor, It it is is pleasant pleasant tn v> the tne taste, and used regularly braces the System against the depressing influence of Malaria. Jfrice—$1.00 per Uottle of 24 ounces. __ i FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGIST*. dc 00221, Prop’r.. BAMTIMORE, MD. WRIGHT & STONE, ATTOEUEYS ATLAW. AFFICE 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.