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4
THE MOXROK \ i)V ERTISER.
FORSYTH. GA.
0 TIC!\L ORGAN OF MONROE C0FT1 Y.
BY M.OINTY A- C \ :L\ Nl
t ( e r.f For
I ,-la *cr
T krmn r si'ii r.ICTT .>•
One y*‘nr ...... SI '0
Fix itfmtbi
Four Month*
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For «*h< It square of ten or u for
the fir'-t inserti oi One l? nnc! for j
r duction ich itiUrquerit mndi con'r«ct ii ««-it■. !• t nt* ,T'i
Load Noli 10 t„r each
in A11 < in. fbituttry nntii of re- j
ep«-< f. charfor. j < ■r. t r line.
AH onniiuiiici .ion. intended to pro¬
ITT ltd the privat J mt I ends or inter
C‘< 1 H lit' ill'll lial . ,.ti.v,I,! he
charg'd in * advert nts and must be
paid for in al van<
TUESDAY M0RNING.FFBRUARY 19/89
Thr Soalli'.'rn iirntnm.
There is a good deal being said
about the southern question among
the republicans and even among
southern journals. What the south¬
ern question is, is somewhat difficult
for us to concieve. In oilier words
wo can see no reason why the policy
of the national government toward
tbo south should differ in anywise
from that toward any other section
of the union. The south is a part of
tbo union, and as such is entitled to
the immunities of government as
much as the northern states or any
other section. But the extreme re¬
publicans seem dead to this truth.
They seem to lx' prompted by the
idea that tbo south is a subjugated
provinco to be held in abeyance.
11 once the idea among them that
thoro must bo a distietivo .southern
policy.
The south is as true to the union,
as true to the true principles of gov¬
ernment and to the best interests of
all tbo people as any section of this
union of states. That there are
occasional disorders in the southern
stales is true, but such are not more
common in the south than in any
other portion of tbo Union. And
federal interference with a view to
suppress these will but intensify
them, especially when such intorfoi
onco is prompted by nono other
spirit than that of malice and hatred
of the south. As to the social prob¬
lem among us, all the south asks is
to be lot alone, and sho will work
out the solution of this problem to
her best interest and to the best in¬
terest of the general government and
of all concerned. All •attempts and
nil efforts upon tho part of the na¬
tional government, tho republican
party or any other party, to force the
solution ot this problem can but re¬
sult in hurtful and harmful conse¬
quences. And any sectional legisla¬
tion or administrative policy shaped
with a view to oppress the south can
but aggravatethe disease it is claimed
to cure, lienee lei’s be done with
all such talk as a southern policy.
Tlir ('mini it t'niliiir.
Tho Fanania (.'anal, whiv.li for a
considerable length of time, has
been attracting much attention,
may now be considered a failure.
Stopping this Canal puts thousands,
who had gone there for high wages,
out of employment.
This was a gigantic project and
perhaps the greatest engineering
work ever undertaken. Mr. do Les
seps, the projector, has been faithful
to his conceptions of the scheme, but
the final announcement that the
work on it must stop is an indication
that . those . whose . , being .
money was
poured into it have concluded that
it, at least, is not a paying invest
mont.
About 8240,000.000 have alreadv
been spent in work on this canal j
and the end is far from view, while
there is a probability that this vast
amount will be lost to the investors.
It may be possible that the Nica¬
ragua Company, which is American,
may undertake tho prosecution of
tne scheme, and tho isthmus be yet |
crossed by canal. Time will devel
ope what will be done this line. |
on j
-*•*
3ue jKilitic.nl quidnuncs are still
tinkering at Mr. Harrison’s cabinet. !
but it seems they can not satisfy
the ai solve s as to what material s’- ill
go into it. j 1
The Pennsylvania loj.nslaluro has j
. ,, . bill
'c.ueit a making _ it a penal
oflense, punishable with a tine of I
not less than 850, nor more than
8100, for any one to treat another t >
intoxicating liquors
The bill making tho bureau 0 f
agriculturea department has been
annmvAil i,v ti,„ n,. ft ; , ,
'
- ;
. . another
a ing cabinet officer. The
present commissioner of agriculture
Mr. Oilman, of 5Ufcsom*i, has been
nominated to-*C^^lilion
. r» ?u •• r+t ts r'w
THE MONROE ADVERTISER: FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 18S9 —EIGHT PAGES,
l*Of*ITI3.\ tW. THK PLOW.
We do not recollect ever to have
seen a greater hungering among the
young men of'the country for a p-osi
tion other than that on the farm
than obtains at the present day. 11
you consul? almost any young man
in Lis higher teens an 1 just verging
on to manhood relative to earning a
lively hood, or as to his future course,
\ mi will readily extort from him
the ' confc-sion that ‘ be is hooin^ 1 ‘ to
get some position other than on the .
Linn. IK- lias no definite ness as to
his future course, has no special or
particular vocation in view, but t
would like to be a book-keeper,
bank accountant, a clerk, or set up
a pin-book business on his own ac
count—anything that has the
‘-'-st . ot little except
promise si money,
a positilion between the plow han¬
dles.
i ho universal drift of his ideas is
towards some indefinite position, it
matters not what, wherein he sees in
• ■ .. »»•' , comfort fit of
m «>«
body, and money easily made. And
why is this?
Thefe is a reason for it. And it well
behooves the fathers of this country
to consider well this question and to
ascertain, . if possible, the of
cause
this almost universal desire of their
sons to abandon the farm and seek
positions elsewhere.
Right at this point is where many
of our sons are making the greatest
mistake in their business life.. The
reason we say so is, because the ave¬
nues to every class of business voca¬
tion in this country is literally lined
and overcrowded with seekers for
positions therein. Tho supply for
such places is far greater than the
demand, , i and , hence tho vast . of ,
’ army
applicants are getting . in each otners ,
way. The result of this is disap
pointment and despond to many.
Now, while this is true as to busi
. „ „
less a\ctiae., .c su;>]i 3 o joung,
active, intelligent farmers is totally
inadequate to the demand, and the
result of both these combined is, that
the whole machinery of prosperity J
“ f “'"B ™'J- “'““ h out 01 »«<«■••
In llus way tlio great, broad, deep
stream that feeds business vocations
is being narrowed into too contract
ed limits.
A^iin A e .un, our oui sons sons msl-e make n a mKtiL-o mistake
when they bank on finding ease,
comfort, and pleasure coupled with
money making, in the positions of
accountants, clerkships &c to which
thev * arc aspire. 1 Instead, ’ they will
hnd ... that , in . these , positions, . . they , are
hirolings, wearing the yoke of the
servants ; that when ordered to go,
they must y go ’ and when ordered to
, co e, ,, mj must , come; ^ mat .. , ,, the ease
freedom, health and hilarity of the
farm life is no where to bo found in
business positions or in the turmoil
of tho business world ; in short, thev
will find that as hirelings thev ‘ are
"
not . ... -Lords ot what -the}
survey,
nor masters of themselves, but are,
to an extent, serfs of those who com
mand both them and their time
But tho vonni; man who be-ins ° hfs
worn- or the farm, guides his own
plow, maps out his own programme,
directs his own affairs, exercises dil
igencc and intelligence in the man
atemont of his farm affairs, soon
becomes , a fieeman, „ and . finds „ that
independence and freedom from re
straint, ami those health giving, bap
pvfving avenues that are to be found
in no other vocation. Indeed it be
liooxes the lathers ot this country to
impress upon their sons, if possible,
the positive truth that no other voea
tion promises a surer support, that
none other brings along with its in
telligent ‘r, prosecution more of the real
eomioi „ ts , ot *.|Y mo, more solid r . pleasure
und contentment than intelligent
agriculture. Tis true that its prom
. _ rapidly
isoi. ptofiis are not coming
thousands, but they are sure, while
thc P romisod fo *unes of the posi
tious of fancied ease for which our
sons hunger and thirst are a delusion
hoj-e trims ... vast majority .
w in a ol
instances are disappointments.
Let the young boys of our country
be undecieved, and grasp the naked
truth that the most independent
road to the comforts of this life is in
telligent agriculture and that land
is the best property in this country.
---
The Great^it %*ili-periotlic
Known to thc medical profession
q u * n ' n0 » l ^ ie base of which is the
Calisaya bark of commerce. This
bark is gathered by the natives ot
South American countries and
ted to all parts of the world for the
manufacture of quinine. -The ser
v »»t is not greater than his master"
aml lt stands to reason that the
extract has not lhe curative powers
ot tho original. There is no more
effective remedy for malarial disor
dors known to the world than West
more hZl*'-* l and s “® Dalisaya Touic, which
't 8 cionc y <> f the purest
a, * J a11 disorders of the system
Busing .. from a diseased liver readily
S ^’ivcunib loa t medicine to its is for influence. sale in This
t ^ ^°' Xt‘ 50 every
ie vn cents
Fop’Im * or sale by Alexander ii * & Soil
niKDB AM RN TO SK
ACKKII.TISK.
On this subject in his address be
fore the state agricultural society at
Brunswick last week, President
IN’orthern said : '
V* hat are the bin Iran cos to suc
cessful agriculture in Georgia and at
the m th ? 1 cannot believe there
s anv question that demands more
imperatively your investigation and
vour solution It is a matter vital
to ,no > and vital, alike, not only to
all the farmers of the state, but vita!
to ai j ( .| ayges c f our c i t , zens j„
every home, however humble, and
in every mansion, however magnifi
cent, your policy destinF and your success
determine the of the poor
and the rich alike, Have our oner
gies faded and our possibilities do
parted ? Patriotism forbids the one:
the god of the harvests is pledged
against the other. "
Under the action of the excutive
committee of this society, 1 have
looked into the causes ft 1 l* depression,
as I mingled freely with the farmers.
1 have inquired into their plans, I
have iiuormed myself as to their
management. I have 3,Si gathered front
thorn their results. I now pre
sent, for your consideratioj r , what 1
have learned.
I found In one county farm of in 800 middl^*Georgia aVes, with
a
teams and tenants and comfortable
cabins. On the 10th of January
tenants on this farm lin'd
barely cotton seed enough xo plant
the next crop ; not one peck of corn
nor a pound of meat that was grown
upon the place. Tho owner of this
farm has not seen it in five years.
A little to the north of this farm
and almost touching it is another
farm containing about 850meres,
in just tho condition of the one
before mentioned, except that it has
bankrupted two former owners, who
gave no attention to its tenants,
The present landlord has not seen it
10 y e;ll ‘s.
Etill further to the north isanother
farm , of r 600 ,, AA acres. Here 1T the woods ,
!ire full of cabins and the cabins are
full of freedmen, who live as they list
‘‘ lll d work as they please. These
tenants consume 'the products of
one vear before they begin the work
0 f another, as they enjoj’ without re¬
straint their idolence and their inac
tion. The owner of this farm lias
not beeu U P 0U his premises in three
c; 11
-
Just , a little , to the south
is a
smaller form, containing about 200
acres. The tenants upon this place
have actually starved three mules
within the last twelve months, and
another will soon wend his way to
l !'? koneyard. T he landlord in
this case has not secu Ins farm for
six years.
These farms are nqtHKdions: they
have all come
observation; they areVUVihe
they ^ tbe are best representative, ^ orL5 °" ®f i shall not
g 0 f lJr ther into detail than to say, of
the 138,000 farms in Georgia, 50,000
°f them are run by indolent tenants
‘ n ^ 1C “bsence of the landlords. To
each plow upon such farms arc fur
n ished, annually, about one ton of
guano, forty bushels of corn and 200
°£ pounds ot meat, to produce two bales
cotton, thirteen bushels of corn,
J- lm “° P 0( ‘ ks of potatoes and five
1<)Un<I dogS ’
Fifty thousand farms in Georgia
suffering from their own waste and
by the idleness and plunder they
encourage, ttb demoralizing, labor for miles
™ 1 them, tho that would be
>! TOduc,i g and prosperous. Fifty
thousand farms in Georgia ruining
j ts agriculture and bringing our
lands below the recognition ofeapi
tal,banks and money centers. Fifty
thousand farms in Georgia destroy
'"S,! 1 '® c " n fidence f ‘?g in « se and
putting all farmers P at a disadvantage
in trade, while they indulge an idie
foul ness that putrification fester with corruption itself. Fifty as
as
thousand farms in Georgia, spread
ll \° “"‘."Sj 0 " -
al and political poison, driving from
their neighborhoods the best classes
of our citizens to seek protection for
their property, secuMty for their
and advandiges that can
? iever be lound m such surround
!! -rt When ««UL-say I * av liKUj thtU. the thejjpnant >nant sya s rs
tem, operated outside of nie personal
supervision, personal control and
rigid discipline ot the onY* landlord has
been destructive to system of
agriculture, 1 make kiown to }*ou,
in my candid *.judgmcvit, the main
cause for depression among the peo
P ^ system has lost millions
nt money to the state by its waste
fulness; it has demoralized and
ruined the better class of labor, it
l-as broken up communities and
forced our people into the towns and
^ ie c *Ges Fra living: it has brought
countless acres to worse than deso
lation and to waste, and covered the
face of the earth with sadness and
decay,
It will be remembered that 1 am
now considering elements ol failure
for which farmers themselves are
mainly responsible. Prominent
among the most conspicious is the
purchase of commercial fertilizers.
Can the farmers of Georgia com plain
ot poverty when they pay in one
season 85.000.000 for commercial
fertilizers? One-third as much as
all dise the money the state: i£^:ed fifth in mereban- much
in one as
as all the mone\~ invested iu horses,
mules, cows, sheep, hogs and goats:
five times as much as all tbe money
invested in shipping; one-sixth as
much as it would require to buy ail
the railroad property, including en
gines, cars, irons and buildings.
Since 1879 tbe farmers in Georgia
have paid for fertilizers enough
money to lift every mortgage from
every iarm in the state—enough
money to buy all the town and city
property of Richmond, Chatham and
Fultoij counties. Tho
that the demand cannot bo supplied,
If such is the ease, tbo farmers in
Georgia, t he coming season, will pay
?d,250,000 for commercial fertilizers.
I ask again, are you able to nav it
and live? * '
" ll - a crop product ot 867.000,000,
6 eor S 5a spends 55 , 000,000 tor com
m <?i’cial fertilizers. Kentucky, with
a crop product of $G3,000,000, about
<>*145,000 ! 0 same as Georgia, spends only
for fertilizers. Michigan,
,vltl * a crop product of 590,000,000,
spends only 5300,000 for fertilizers.
° hio > ' vilh a crop product of 8136,
000,000, spends 8550,000 for fertiii
Zwrs - Tennessee, with a crop pro
duct of 202,000,000, spends 157,000
C,0 P piouuct ot ©7d,0dd,0o0, Tnen spends K
3170,000 for fertilizers,
Or, to put it differently, Georgia
averages on her farms only §15 for
ever Kentucky y P llt -> n fertilizers, while
makes 8440, Michigan
8304, Ohio 8280, Tennessee 8400, and
\\ isconsiu 8400. Out of this money
none of these states take anything
for corn or "meal or meat or mules or
horses, as they raise on their own
farms abb {bey need, From Geor
gifts 815 a large per cent, is levied
for horses, mules, meal, corn, meat,
oats and flour.
For commercial fertilizers Georgia
spends as much a Kansas, Kentucky,
Michigan, New York, Ohio Tennes¬
see and Texas. With 85,000,000
in fertilizers Georgia cultivates
8 , 000,000 acres, making an expendi¬
ture of 62 cents on every acre culti¬
vated. \Y ith 85,000,000 in fertilizers
the states named cultivate 91,000,000
acres, making an average of one-half
cent to every acre cultivated. Geor¬
gia makes a crop product of 867,000,
000 . With the same money in fer¬
tilizers the states named make a crop
product of 8773,000,000, more than
twice as much as all the taxable
property onwned in this state. 1
ask again can tlie farmers in Geor¬
gia afford to pay 81 to make 815,
while, under a different policy other
states pay one dollar and make four
hundred ? -
What . ^*.»«■ r Boys Hay Accomplish.
The Athens Banner says in an
editorial: Are country raised bovs
more suec-essfull than those raised in
the city? No arbitrary rule can be
laid down, but it is a matter of fact
that a great many of our successful
business men ot today were reared on
the farm. Their success is due in
some measure to the hardy constitu
tj on which thev inherit from toil
worn ancestry and which tho indi
vidual has made hard and enduring
by the free out of door exercise of
country life. of^life
i n the strugg^ physical
s trength Nn w tu>-* 4 ninor part,
There*a”o ^ 'TfifttviTT'ct or the wondcr-t 3
fui success of
withaMk physical
nature’but they are the, exception
Men who acheive the greatest suc
cess in the average business avoca
cations are as a rule, those who have
a full couplement of physical as well
as mental endowments,
One reason of the degeneracy of
many families is found in theeffem
inacy of their physical nature. The
inheritance ot wealth often leads to
a life of too great indolence, and the
physical man gives way and degen
eraey follows. The country boy
v '’ l!0 by inheritance and rearing
posseses a hardened and vigorous
manhood has tbe first essential to
success, and with tbe many
brigl.C illustrations before him has
every inducement to persevere, and
{) e does so success is more than
a pt to be his.
Ol2€
The following testimonial is from
a gentleman who knows our formu¬
la and is thoroughly acquainted with
the curative property of our Tonic.
The way to know the merits is to try
the article’ Any practicing phys' I
cianswhodesires the formula"ot Calis
aya Tonic may obtain it from the
Westmoreland Calisaya Tonic Com¬
pany Greenville, S. C. This letter is
from a malarial section.
West Point, Miss,
Having shown me the formula for
raaki "?>’°“ r Ton ic while
youv City the past f summer, L take
r* f re at pleasure in reecommending given it
am delighted with it, having
it in 1113 ’ practice succesfully. and to
members of my own family suffering
from malarial texasmia.
B*V truly,
Duncan, M. D.
For sale by Alexander & Son.
Have vour Watch
es, Clocks, Jewelry,
etc., repaired by
D. II. GREEN.
Forsyth. Ga.
macon
J A Y Gt A 9
mM
*32
-*■•*; •
. ^*3
■as
Hilliard Institute!
Mjm ss» r ‘
ggl§fe §!&$¥ •UeP-fe
■
ss*
A/
JS&LV iMSaK&fe*
ZwO^S^rTTiEZ, Or-A..
This Institute will resume exercises
"WfUjAI, Iff HITT) 1 \T JAllUAKl T 1 'JTT \ T) T J 1 14111. Jfh
*
Cost of Tuition to parent, 52.00 per Month
-payble
STRICTLY IN ADVANCE !
Contingent free SI .00 per term. Board can
be secured in the best frmi’ies at 10 to 12
dollars per month. This Institution offers
the Classical advantages and Business of a thorough English,
course. Good teach¬
ers will he provided In all departments as
they are needed, All persons interested
in building Forsyth up a flourishing Male Institute
in are earnestly requested to aid
us with their patronage and co-operation.
W. J. NOYES, Principal.
Law Firm.
\& T E have this day associated ourselves
W together under the style and firm
practice of Cabaniss in & and Willingham, all and will
any the courts. Prompt
attent.on given to all business entrusted
to our care. T. B. CABANISS.
B. S. WILLINGHAM.
December 3, 1838.
Application for ship. Letters of Guardian¬
H EORGIA—Monroe County.—.T H.
U Pierson, a resident of said county and
state having applied to me for letters of
of guardianship Ada of the person and property
T, Jackson, a minor under four¬
teen years of age, resident of said county;
this is to cite all persrns interested to
show cause, if any they can, by the first
plication Monday in February uexr, why said ap¬
should nit be granted.
"Witness m v hand anil official signature,
this Jan. 7th, 1889.
JNO. T. McGINTY, Ordinary.
u- . .
ADMINISTRATRIX’S SALE.
B Y virtue of an order from the Court of
Ordinary of Pike county, Georgia, will
be sold before the court house door in For¬
syth, Ga , on the first Tuesday in March
next, between the legal hours of sale, the
following property, to-wit: Lands kn own
as the dower of Elvina Pritchett, being
part ot Lot No. 226 containing 50 acres,
in^rtsami h’- ;s r also Lot No. 225; both said
Parcels' affSlHLot 3 t ’ 10 Third. District Monroe coun¬
ty; No. 225, and 120 acres off the
Eastern portion of Lot 256, also two-thirds
of Lot No. 227 the line riming Noith and
South containing 172, more or less, and 120
acres of Lot 228 of West side of Lot No.
223. The said last named four parc*ds be¬
ing in the Seventh District of Monroe
county. All of said lands being the lands
that Wiley Fleming, deceased, owned in
his life time. Said land sold for the pur¬
pose of paying debts and distribution
among heirs of said Wiley Fleming, de¬
ceased. Terms cash. Jan. 30th, 1889.
MBS. NANNIE FLEMING,
Administratrix of Wiley Fleming.
r ranted. Heavy Solid Gold
_tt 11 u nt i p r: Case3. Both ladies'
and gents’ sizes, with works
an< ^ cnf!CS equal vglue.
B vg One Person in each 2o
caltiy can secure dval- free,
together with . large
o ur an
uablo line of Household
m Samples. These samples, aa
well as the watch, wo send
x Free, and after you have these kept
them In your home for months and shown them to
who may have called, they become your own property. Thoso
who write at once can be sure of receiving the Watch
end Samples. We pay all express freight, etc; Address
sune*
Loans Negotiated
On Farms and Town Property in
Bibb and adjoining Counties.
ELLIOTT ESTES & CO.,
318 Second Street, Macon. Ga.
You Must Settle.
A LL parties owing accounts to the firm
of I). G. Proet'.r <fe Son made before
first day of January, 1889, are expected to
settle at once. If not settled the accounts
will be put in the hands of an Attorney for
ing Thanking you for past favors and solicit
your future cash orders we remain
Yours respectfully.
D. G. PROCTOR & SON,
WRIGHT & STONE,
ATTORNEY S
/AFFICE upstairsPye’sOpera House
V_J building. Forsyth. Ga,
|||3 R9 6 a 0 tU
iy
TRSATED F^ES.
Have treated Dropsy and it* complications with the
most wonderful success; u-e vegetable remedies en¬
tirely harmless. Eeinove all symptoms of dropsy in
right to the twenty best of days. physicians. Cure patients From pronounced hope¬
less by the first dose the
jymptoins rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least
two-thirds of all symptoms are removed.
Some it. may Bemember cry bnmbitg does without knowing anrthing
•boct it not cost yon anything to
realize the m»rit of our treatment for your-e:f. We
are coast* ntly curing cases of long standing—
that have been unable tapped a no mlj^r of times and the pa
rent declared to liv uve a week. Give a foil his
Ter r of case, name. ajte. sex. i how long afUicted,
Send Ten days for treatment free pamphlet, furnished containing FREE tes by timoni mall, als 1 !
you ord.r trivl send 10 cents in stamp* to pa y po *
a£6. H. H. GBEEN <£ SOX a, M. D’s,
30.^ Marietta St.. Atlasta.. Ga.
manufacturer*
-OF
_ . — T S
Improved Patent!
And the Improved Dow Law
COTTON PLANTERS,
Cotton din-, Conittnirn, Etc.
.y, .. Repairing Cotton Gins a specialty,
Write for Prices and Descriptive
Circulars.
JAS. T. GANTT, Macon, Ga.
PECIAL N
A FIRST CLASS—
I?
Will be at my Gallery for the next
Days. Satisfaction Come early guaranteed. and examine liis work] |
Forsyth, Ga„ Jan. 21, 1889 I). II. GREEN.
“V” 400
IN
I ho GlUFFIN I-Elli ILIZLR COMPANY offer tjic following Premiums
-for the year 1889:-
For Best Yield of Lint from One Acre, - $ 50.00
For Best Yield of Lint from Three Acres, - 100.00.
For Best Yield of Lint from Five Acres, - 250.00
The contestants must not uso a ivy other fertilizer except “BATE’S
GEORGIA STANDARD HIGH GRADE GUANO” on plat they enter
for Premiufii. The contest must*d>e confined to upland. AH persons en- F
tering for any of above prizes -must first subscribe to the rules by whioly*
they are to be governed, as mdde by the Company.
For further artieulars aikfives
YU A-- BATLS, Secretary,
January 29, 1889. GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
TE a
foC» »
IL.dZ"xxi.'Cu" r 3 J ct''o.xGrs aja^pi- T oloTosrs os !
Sisal G-^Sferal ENGINES, Boite, SAMiILLS, CotLu Presses 1
Machinery and i kinds Castings.
—---Sole Owner and Mann! kire'^i of
Schofield’s Famous 0 TON PRESS
To Pack by Hand, Horse, vfLRer or Steam-
BRASS GOODS, PIPE FITTINGS, LUBRICATORS,feELTlNG, PACKING. SAWS. ETc
•General Agent fo^ry ncotm
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT’S M Nni
C! kJ SCHOFIELD & SON/
. .
MACON GEORj
■O
N
f This spa^Jt^J d for
.{
r iNC
9
—GRIFFIN, GA.-
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons. *
^
I have removed to Solomon street,
opposite Brick warehouse.
g| lis
■The Largest, Cheapest and most Select Stock in Georgia,
BY ALL MEANS!
Save 25 per cent, and buy vour FURNITURE and C \TIRETS together. BEST
VALUE, BEST GOODS, will always get there. You will mbs agrond opportunity
if you fail to place your custom with ua- We wifi maintain and prove to you that
it will be decidedly to your interest to come and get otlr prices before buying a
single article elsewhere.
ANDREW J MILLER & SON
42 and 44 Peachtree St., ATLANTA, GA.
Engines, Boilers and Saw Mills.
Shingle and Lath Mill outfits? .Cot¬
ton Gins, Presses, «kc. Planers and^
Matchers and all kinds Wood-work-'
ing Machinery.
WMsM COTTON SEED HOLLERS/
and Gpndcrs the which shuck and also all grind kinds corn of
ZJr: graVJ/ r-. , -
• ,\'e mannfacturc the best
rff. Portable top RshTner WHEATS ■»- - , K
w va * CORN AND 1LlS|
j on earth. Write us for circulars, and
rf terms ; we can save vou rnonev. j
#6" Perkins lacMnery Co.
B«laM S3 rorsyjk SI., iTLUTt^
A. 9 a US
dUfj* aii 1301 &sn??;a
3 » B
IE B aS
Masonic Temple, S3 Mulberry St., MacQn, Ga.
L&rgest \\ areroom and Most Complete and Elegant Stock of
9 _ v -M
ianos and Organs!
No Low Grade or Shoddy Instruments.
A11 ri an .°? lar ge scale, full 7\ octaves, genuine ivory keys, all modern improveroenea.
Gegant finish and fully warranted. Al! Organs in Solid Walnut Cases Elegant De-dens
r me Finish, Strictly First-claa and Fullv Warranted. Special Catalogue of Korail
S?5J15;“L7,i r t’S ““ nt “ ,y ““ iDg “ lh “
All Sheet Music, Music Books & Small Instruments
STBICTLY CikSRI.
Pianos and Organs sold on long time with monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or year!
payments, without interest. The scale of uniform prices adopted by this bouse are ti
ever offered on superb, first class instruments that are cheap enough for eve^
o<Ady and good enough for anybody. Address all Communications to
XI. Xi. MUNGER,