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The ; iIonroe Ad TISFR
Official .!< RNAI [ • f IF (*i
—TERMH op hi HI I’TION
P er Annum, ('ash in A cc 1.50
•Six Month* <* 75
f Forsyth, Hegistered in th< Post Office at
(la as second'd ass matter.
totT I n* Monroe A nvKitTiKEii has a
urge circulation in M Butts.
.Into J fl: sper
EDGAR L. ROGERS
SWEEPING SUMMER REDUCTION.
Price's (Jut Low on Everything.
v O
I' t*OH) J ij I i*i, fur m i]h I T <• to ( l 1 l’( K ES REGARDLESS OF COST.
I will do tli to • u.di fuel t< clear rnv store for n
TREMENDOUS FALL STOCK
That I = n< - buying, I don’t fit tli is way H mutter of se ntiincnt, but just
wlmt 1 mean
1 ^ y Entire aUx-V ill l • subjected to tliif
Reckless Cut of Prices,
fiiil 1 will bit bar,le t on WOOLEN DRESS GOODS and CLOTHING J not.
am
overs tm ed ’ll anvthin I neve uffer rnyuelf to get •, but 1 want the room these
K'eu, the ioiiey that in invested in them.
MY BARGAIN COUNTER!
YV ill 1 m* nn ti iiMittl f«Mttun* f<»r IbirnCBvilk But I am going to have one on a RIG
HU A LI- him! allow tlx'*trade what a BARGAIN COUNTER means. Uu.-*h, is the
mighty lc i»r itli wliic I ]iro)H to nuHD iisation in
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, ETC.
Next M'limiii anil r-ii*li I ivill have.
N "" 1,1 t'»‘ I»"hit it you have gyt 6 cents or 50 cents to .spend, come m for the next
8.0 dav“ and L?et inv ITT PRICED. Pri. not talk will tell the tale.
Yours Truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS,
BAKNKSN I LLK, GA., July 1st, 1889
N. B Mes ■ is. Collier and Howard are still with me, and extend a
regular warm i ii miner invit ation to all their friends to share these bargains.
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—THE OLD RELIABLE
FEEDER
A N D CO N DEN SER.
Daniel Pratt Gin Co.,
PRATTVILLE, ALABAMA.
jt Will be to Your Interest to Write to or Gall on
S. H. GRISWOLD, UknkralAobnt.
rrico’s Warehouse, Fourth Street, MACON, (jA.
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
—MANUFACTURERS OF
Doors, Sash,Bliiyi .Mantels, Mouldings,Balusters
NEWELS. WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
—JDecilers In.
Lumber. Shingles. Laths, and Brick. Also
Contractors and Builders.
Wo now haw our Factory in operation and will bo glad to-oo all wanting Building
Material and give priors. \\ e (Vol oonlident we ran please both in price and quality of
our work, (’all before making vonr purchases and get prices.
FACTORY IRth STREET, OPPOSITE COTTON FACTORY. OFFICE PLAN¬
TERS- \\ \KK BOUSE, GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
N. R. Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machines and will not break
loose, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
Schofield’s Iron Works!
n. rx vsf a. c tv-re re and Tc'cters cf
Steam Emilies,, Boilers, SAW MILLS, cotton
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
^
---Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
SplinfipIrl'Q OvllUAit?lvl o PommiG X; dlllUllo PHTTHM lj\J 1 X UIN x PPTT'QQ XuHilOiO
-To Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
BRASS GOODS. PIPE FITTINGS. LUBRICATORS. BELTING. PACKING, SAWS. ET(
--General Agent for--
11ANC0CK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT’S MAGNOLIA COTTON
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MAGON, (' FOHf' I \
Redding & Baldwin I
Soil the Finest and the Best
(MIU111UHI, CLOTHING HATS lUUU AND niUJ GENTS’ Ubllll) FURNISHING lUillUOUinU
To be found in the South.
368 SKCON1) STREET,
MACON, GEORGIA.
■
I ?
THE MONROE
VOL XXXIV
Engines af Mill Machinery
Boilers and Piping and all kinds of Fittings.
end Shafting. Engine* Pull***. Hanger*. Bote*, etc.. In Stock for prompt delivery. We buy. soil, repair, exchange
rent on best term*. We have the most extensive shop* in the South—Telephone No. 27
GEO. R. LOMBARD &, CO.
Foundry, Machine and Boiler \V orlis,
1014 to 1026 Ferwfck St., above Pa**> Depot, Agt. in Geonri in. S. Carolina ami Florida, for
AllIal’MTA, 4«A. Hurting Inject ors and Vanduzen Jet Pumps.
W
FORSYTH. MONROE COUNTY. GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 28. 1889.
THE OI.IVE It II. I..
The following interview had by a
Constitution reporter with Major
N\ allace gives the latter’s views
touching the above bill.
“I am perfectly willing,” said Ma¬
jor Wallace, “that my views on this
bill as a private citizen, and not in
! my official capacity, shall be given
; to the legislature. But 1 don’t
i think that I should appear before
: the committee in my official capaci
ty to take a position in the matter.
If tho billl becomes a law, which 1
hope it will not, it would be
the duty* of the commission to
sit in judgment on its provisions,
and wo, therefore, don’t think we
should appear before the committee
in an organized capacity concerning
the bill. J have no hesitation, how¬
ever, in giving, as an individual cit¬
izen, my views concerning the mea¬
sure, 1 once thought i might with¬
out impropriety, appear before tho
committee with some suggestions,
especially* as my opinion seemed to
be desired by some disinterested per
sons. But upon reflection I hesitat¬
ed to do so. The law under which
the commission acts requires it in its
reports to the governor to reccom
mend such legislation as it deems
advisable. But as a citizen 1 have
my views, winch views, I think I
may say are aided in their accuracy
by the labors of the position 1 hold.”
•‘Major, has the commission under
the laws you mention ever suggest¬
ed the necessity of such legislation
as the Olive bill?”
“JMo ; it never has.”
“Well, major, as y’ou have not
gone before the committee of the
house and as the people desire to
hear from you, will y*ou please state
why* you have not advocated the
passago of some such law as the
Olive bill?”
“Speaking for myself, I do not
hesitate to say* that l fear greatly*
the effect ot such legislation upon
the state. 1 do not question the pu¬
rity of tho motives ot tho projectors
and advocates of this sort of legisla¬
tion, but looking at it as I think im¬
partially it seems quite menacing to
capital, and without capital rail¬
roads cannot be built. In the prov¬
idence of God capital is aggregated
in persons and societies of persons,
and we have to deal with it as it is,
and where it is. Great good is be¬
ing done to-day* in the advancement
of intelligence, morals and religion
by* the use of capital. The people
have no reason, that 1 can see, to
treat capital as an enemy. I say*
this especially in regard to railroad
investments. 1 am well aware that
short cuts aro^taken by capital, and
that wholesome restraints ot legisla¬
tion are sometimes necessary to cir¬
cumvent the greed of gain. Ever
since I have been in tho commission
(and that is from the beginning) we
have had the pool. This is about
the same as for one man or the
West Point Terminal or any* other
combination to own all tho railroads
embraced. As to rates our fight has
been with the pool from the start.
Vet I think the pool has done some
good. By* maintaining rates it lias
many* times saved the merchant
and as a consequence the people
Let us fight the evils incident
to tho use of capital itself, For
the life of me I cannot see any*
occasion for making war just now.
What wrong do the people labor
under now that should make us for
fiet anybody’s stock in a railroad or
take away* the charter of any rail¬
road ? We need every* one of them
and more, and if they* becomo op¬
pressive as monopolies let future leg¬
islators deal with them. ‘Sufficient
unto the day* is the evil thereof. I G
“But the advocates of this measure
hold that the constitution of the state
requires the legislature to pass some
law about buying stock in rail¬
roads ?”
“Now inow, - lepneu replied Majoi M-,ior Wallace Wallace, “it it
does seem to me that theie is great
nnsapprehensiOH of the constitution
on this sutqect 1 am not a lawyei,
but I think I have been listening to
the English language long enough
to have something hko a corieet un
derstanding of it. The language of
the fourth paragraph, section - aiti
“The i ne General ^eneiai assembly* assemoiy of oi this mis
state shall have no power to author
lze any coipoiation to buy shares or
fn 0tber C0 T P tl0n
DU i
jwn-ation!’which may hZAeoZt
ov be u,tended to have the effect to
detest or lessee competition, etc.
lo ™ ind lhlB se ® mS a ne 5 a '
I t V. . 1 ? ; b A dh0r .. !:*™?°' , 1
the association a source of grea
ttlis a^oeiaGon ^"por info'r v' 1
will call on the local secretary, Col
Willingham. ’
r t 7--— h olKi • d ekor^f
pine or m7xld W "D
very For -ale ' trv iIk- cord J. Pb !!
A_________
Wnivrim ious in Abiu.iam
The watermelon business ia e
gia has growu to huge dimens*
uafi present season. One hundri ______
eighty-four ear loads are repo e
on thur.^br
states and relating to stocks m roads
[ UDn,ug across statc line *’ couid not
bo controlled by state legislation. I
came to this conclusion from what I
understand to be the decision of the
United States supreme court as to
riaU's o reight and disci immation
by through lines. Interference as
to those matters was denied the statc
of Illinois by the United-States sn
commet-ee as the other.
“Then if I understand you cor
rectly you see no need of any legis~
lation on the subject of the sale
roads and stocks at the present?”
‘None whatever. Some of us are
\
A m P ¥
-A V
, i k s
poor. Others are rich. Let
legislature be fair and just to
All are necessary to the body politic.
The people have the law
always powers and I trust in God, will
have it. The way to main¬
tain it is to exercise it discreetly.”
Piiuplen, Morfit, Aches aiid l*ain«.
When a hundred bottles of sarsa¬
parilla or other pretentious specifics
fail to eradicate in-born scrofula or
contagious blood poison
that 13. 13. 13. (Botanic Blood Balm)
has gained many thousand victories
in as many seemingly incurable in
stances. Send to Blood Balm Co.,
Atlanta, Ga. t tor “Book of Wonders,"
and be convinced. It is the only
'
TRUE BLOOD purifier
G. W. Messer, Howell’s x Roads,
Ga., writes : I was afflicted nine
years with sores. All the medicine
I could take did me no good. I then
tried B. 13. 13. and 8 bottles cured
rne sound ”
Mr. S. M. Wilson, Round Mount
tain, Texas, writes: A lady’ 'friend
of mine was troubled with bumps
and pimples on her face and neck,
She took three bottles of B. B. B.,
and her skin got soft and smooth,
pimples disapeared, and her health
improved greatly*.”
Jas. L. Bosworth, ^Atlanta, Ga.,
writes : Some y*oars ago 1 con
taacted blood poison. I had no ap¬
petite ray* digestion was ruined,
rheumatism drew up my limbs so I
could hardly walk my* throat was
cauterized five times. Hot Springs
gave me no benefit and my life was
one of torture until I gave B. B. B.
a trial, and surprising as it may
seem, the use of five botttes cured
me.”
FARMING AS A VOCATION.
Southern Alliance Farmer.
The recent copious showers have
brightened the aspect of things, and
merchants and farmers all indulge
the confident hope that a bountiful
harvest will reward the labors of
the husbandmen, this season. The
farmers are especially radiant and
hopeful, and it makes one feel hap¬
py* to see their smiling faces.
This fact has caused us to indulge
a few thoughts on the farming of to
day, and especially* as contrasted
with the long ago.
bays the Albany Nows. 1 he old
saymg “it was not that way* before
the war, is more truthful of nothing
than of farming. I he changes that
two decades have ushered in tho
conditions of the farming interest,
are more marked than a casual ob v
server would know. Most of these R
changes add to the possibilities of
Kiioeessful ,, and .r 1
attract the attention of intelligent:
young men to a field of such honor
ble, pleasant and profitable occupa¬
tion.
It seems strange that farming,
the only* occupation that can never
be overdone, should be neglected
for professions that hold out no in
ducements for profitable employ
merit. This was net true 25 years
ago, when the fanner’ll occupation
was considered the most honorable
and inviting that a young man
eould choose, and when intelligence
and refinement characterized the
class that pursued the peaceful vo
cation of agriculture and they* were
rewarded with plenty.
the most distinguished public
men in the early history of the
coun ry were farmers, and they de
voted tune and thought to their oe
cupaticn, and laid in tho pursuit of
agriculture the foundation for the
present prosperity and wealth of the
nation.
The conditions of agriculture have
undergone great and radical chan
*es since then; labor-saving raa
chines new products, more markets
changes in human conditions, im
proved methods, and many other
whi t l ? ? llla, ' g f- U ‘° P"”™ 1 '
tics of the chief vocation of man—
the cultivation of the soil. These
things have absolutely altered what
seemed a fixed law of production—
that the average reward of labor
was but a trifle m excess cf the av
erage consumption. The perishable
products that once possessed no
market value, by the increased fa
ed “jities staple ot and transportation mercantile are eommodi- render
ties. What an advantage this gives
the intelligent planter of to-day over
the plodding plowman of half a cen
? Bt er w tho iKt“IHelv manTn
every clime through all seasons.
There can be no over-production,
! be °1 communication bring
ing the wants of each section of the
voucbsa ^ e a distribution for the sur
pl usa S e ; ana tbe growing exchange
°F products will alvyays’maintain the
commercial equipoise
Agnvulture isand a! ways wfil be
the , cheit industry in toe south, and
whenever her educated young men
employ their intelligence in the oc
cupation of tilling the soil a healthy
circulation will be restored, and
then will the heart of the
beat with a new life. That agrieul
ture is honorabie and that agrieul
tnrista deserve more consolidation,
lhe esai »p1e of a long list of
factors to the human race,
with Abraham and embracing Wash
ington, the father of his
and many of the most
names that adorn the history* of
country, abundantly attest.
ante-bellum days the
and chivalry of the south were
an.asa.Ki large lot-tunes.
Pimples, boils and other
are liable to appear when the
gets heated. The best remedy
Dr. J. H. McLean’s Sarsaparilla.
ADVERTISER.
lfKOAI.OCKPHAI.ITIM.
j L A Brier ,ri#u
“ Mi -“ *
| Philadelphia Ti mes.
! ; Megalocephalitis, the mysterious
malady which has recently* stricken
ho many of our public men, and which
|Mie Times first last brought to public seri¬
notice, has at attracted the
| ous attention of the medical profes¬
sion. In a communication which
,. EDshed few „ days , ago our
0 P u a
,earncd correspondent evidently
vonfbunded , it with paresis another
* lm0 : st C( l uall T tatai m ?, ntal disease,
^ # uU , us at mistake l n v,e us ' v hardly °, f tb e to stnkl be won- ?S
’
between the eliaracteris- ,
** symptoms ot both diseases—the
^ll-known '^©constant delusions repetition of of acts grandeur, of un¬
der. conscious and inexplicable asm.n
: ai ? d the overpowering self-conceit
mistakes approaching imbe
Amity for omniscience and omnipo¬
tence.
j As so little is yet known of me
gaiocephalitis wo can do the medical
profession and tho public no greater
service than to give a brief summary*
,ot what is now certainly* ascertained
concerning it, and to incidentally*
point out wherein it differs from
.paresis, i!y the dread disease it so close
resembles.
| prived, The name, megaloeepalitis, medical student is de¬
as every* and
every* lover of Pliny, too, will under¬
stand, from megas, big; Itephale,
head, and itis, fever, and means, lit¬
erally*, big-head fever. It lias long
vulgarly* call by* the political
workeis “the big head;” and what¬
ever may* be the indifference of the
(boys dear to Pliny books in general, or to the
in particular, there can
‘be no doubt about their capacity for
cal, .Sizing up persons and things politi¬
and giving their proper names
every* time.
j Right Megalocephalitis from is not, as one
’ its fever
suppose name, a
which men of big heads or large
are liable ; but, on the contra
y, its victims are generally those
jv 'having bo are small microcephalous, that is,
loped or imperfectly devol
beads, and experience shows
that the smaller the head and tho
lighter the brain the greator the
Susceptibility to its attacks and the
.more malignant the type ot the dis
ease. In other words, the megalo
ecphalitic are the microcephalous,
N{ or ra »st it be confounded with
■'hydroccphalous, or dropsy of the
brain, for that disease can not even
get in its first work unless it has at
'least a small quantity* of brain sub
to begin on; whereas, megal
> ephalitis just lets itself loose and
—j -l lanxic'l it 1 k u
thoroughly empty* head to begin
business in.
Megalocephalitis is supposeed to
be caused by an inflamation of the
membrane or lining of the empty
brain cavity and probably results
from a, tutile effort of nature to rem
e dy a congenital defect, in accords
ance with the well-known law that
nature abhors a vacuum,
While paresis finds its victims in
every rank and profession, megalo
cephalitis has thus far confined its at
tacks chiefly to men in public office,
Whether this peculiarity of the lat
ter disease is due to the universal
tendency ot officials, and possibly, of
levers, to hold on to office as long as
possible ; or to the marked tendency*
0 t our modern political system to
elevate to office those who are eon
genially microcephalous, and there
fore, predisposed to megalocepHalit
j S) remains to be discovered. But,
however that may* bo, the fact cannot
he disputed that megalocephalits is
distinctively the disease of office
holders.
Again, unlike paresis, there are no
lucid intervals in megalocephalitis.
The delusions of grandeur, instead
of subsiding J' after a time, continue to
in01 ' ease d, ^ da 5'- Tl >«
cephalite soon loses all proper sense
of proportion and perspective. He
looks at all things around him as it
were , through the object glass of a
telescope. Those who are immeasu
ra bly his superiors in education, in¬
telligence, influence, standing and
importance, seem to him to shrink
to Liliputian dimension, while he
feels himself growing to Brobdigna
” tfian nroDortions.
The political megalocephalite, for
instance, who cannot even carry his
own election division, labors under
5“ ZT^' f form.ug hi8 . com cab.nete “ and i a ” and d f"* com
■
hhtiTeliTo’in^oreign too.‘ 0 kings”and"po!
tentates. So, the judicial me
galocephalite is firmly convinced
that the learning of the entire bar is
| : dom ; that in himself are centered all
the powers and duties, not only of
; judge and jury, but also of the legis
| fative and executive branches ©f the
government as well. And thus the
unhappy victim goes on from delu
sion to delusion, wholly-unconscious
of the pitiable spectacle he presents
j to men and angels. And thus the
i poor, weak head continues constant
; fy swelling and day* by day* growing
; bigger and bigger," until but oue of
two things can possibly happen to it
to relive the sufferer—either it must
burst open or else blow away, carry
ing him with it like a kitten tied to
an escaping balloon.
And right here let us stop and ask
whose is the fault if so many of our
public men perish thus horribly from
this dreadful malady? When so
many men with congenial tenden
des to imbecility are forced by an
captallic heads, what can bo expect
cd but an epidemic of megalocepha
»»
Unfortunately, discovered no cure has yet
been lor this most horri
fule disease. Purgatives and vermi-
fuges, siuapistns and rubefacients are
ot no avail. The only palative ivo
can offer to the afflicted is an oc¬
casional editorial on the subject in
the Times.
These are Mlrnii;tat Papers and Flust
Carry Conviction.
The value of a resomendation de¬
pends wholly on the giver of it: as
spurious and alleged testimonials are
as plentiful as the leaves in Vallam
brosa or the sands on the sea beach.
When a gentleman ot such promi¬
nence however’ as the Hon. W. II.
Wilder, mayor of Albany, Georgia,
speaks, his words carry weight with
them. He sa\*s ‘‘I suffered fifteen
years with Rheumatism and in that
time tried all the so-called specifics 1
could hear of. One of them cost me
$3.00 per bottle for nine bottles and
yielded no relief. My grandson who
runs on the 13. & W. Railroad finally
got me a bottle of P. P. P. (Prickly
Ash, Poke Root and Potassium) and
induced me to try it. The first bot¬
tle showed its remarkable effects ami
alter using it for a short time the
Rheumatism disappeared and I feel
like a new man. 1 take great
pleasure in reccommending it to
Rheumatic sufferers.
W. H. Wilder.
Albany*, Ga.
KVUNGS OF TIME EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE.
The following rulings of tho exec¬
utive committee, in tho matter of the
state organizer, will take effect at
once, constitution, section 18th and
19th, article 2nd, to mean what their
language implies.
We would rule that the State Or¬
ganizer only* has the power to ap¬
point district organizers, who shall
report for duty to him alone, he be¬
coming responsible for the accuracy
of their work; said appointments
being subject to ratification by the
president ot the State Alliance. The
congressional district organizers
shall appoint such deputies as are
fitted to carry on the work of organ¬
izing, who, in all cases, shall report
organization perfected to the state
secretary direct, at least once a week,
sending the foes due the state, which,
in all cases, must be £3 net; they
shall also send a duplicate report ot
each organization perfected to the
-state organizer; and when a Farm¬
ers’ Alliance is organized in a coun¬
ty having a county organization, a
triplicate report shall be sent the
secretary of such county* organiza¬
tion. Any work done by the state
organizer shall come strictly under
the foregoing rules.
The following ruling of (he exec¬
utive committee in the" matter ot
county reports will take effect at
once:
No county will.be entitled to rep¬
resentation at State Alliance meet¬
ings unless they have made a full
and complete report of all subordi¬
nate, or Farmers’ Alliances in their
respective counties, and paid all dues
required by them under section 3d
of article 3d, of constitution and by
laws for County Alliance. County
secretaries shall make returns Lo. the
state secretary for all Farmers’ Al¬
liances in their county*, whether such
Farmers’ Alliances have made re¬
ports to county* secretary or not; in
such cases in using the membership as
reported the last quarter as a
basis for their report, provided that if
the county organization see fit they
have the power to suspend such de¬
linquent- Farmers’ Alliance as pro¬
vided for in the constitution and by¬
laws.
The county secretaries shall col¬
lect from their Farmers’ Alliance 25
cents on all initiations, allowing
said Farmers’ Alliances to retain the
initiation fees of the first sixteen
members, to reimburse tho amount
paid the organizing officer, The
county secretaries shall collect from
every member of the Farmers’ Alli¬
ance 10 cents quarterly dues on all
members, including the above six¬
teen charter members. In all in¬
stances fractional portions of quar¬
ters in which members are initiated,
shall be paid for as if full quarters.
in all instances the county secre¬
taries shall remit their report to the
state secretary 15 cents for each
male initiation during the quarter,
and 5 cents dues for all male mem¬
bers reported. No Alliance will be
allowed to drop any portion of its
membership unless properly demit
ted, expelled or removed by death ;
and no member shall be demitted
unless entirely clear of the books,
and not then if charges of any kind
are pending against him.
Ln no instance will the County
Farmers’ Alliance be entitled or au>
thorized to withhold any portion of
the dues from" the State Alliance to
reimburse them t or rt e amount P a W
for organizing said County* Alliance ;
this'expense shall in all instances be
defrayed by the Farmers’ Alliance
represented at the organization of
the County Alliance.
All County Alliances having dif
ferently constructed the law and
withheld any portion of their dues,
as above stated, are in arrears to the
State Farmers’ Alliance, and will
not be entitled to representation
unless this arrearage is fully settled.
Felix Corput.
Char. Ex. Com. S. F. A.
Macon, Ga., Oct. 23, 1888.
, . T
The Pride of woman. '
-
A clear pearly and transparent
skin is always a sign of pure blood,
and all persons troubled with dark
^reasv assured yellow or blotched skin can
rest that their blood is out
^ ^ d s Z SSSSS
MAKER will remove tho cause and
the skin will become clear and trans
parent. Try it, and if satisfaction
is not given it will costj-ou nothing.
It is fully warranted.
B. D. Smith, Druggist.
NUMBER 2 8.
am
§
ft
Kb
&4KlH c
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This pow dev never \ nries A marvel of
purity, economical strength and wholesomeness. More
than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot be sold in competition with the mul¬
titude of -low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. Sold only in cans
Royal Baking Powdek Co., 100 Wall
street. New York.
D. H. GREEN,
JEWELER,
zFOiRs-srTiH:, georgi a..
Reliable goods, fair dealing bottom
Prices. Pino repairing a specialty.
TBfe
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CORNS, E3UNIONS |
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amd WARTS, W/mWrPAlNI
'10 WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
GEORGIA—Monroe county—Whereas
ordinary petitions have been July filed with the
of said county in terms of the
statute in such cases made and provided,
by the citizens of Johnston’s, and Cabaniss’
districts respectively for an election in said
districts to put in operation in those dis¬
tricts an Act, entitled an “Act to prohibit
the sale of cotton in the seed in Monroe
county, or any militia district thereof
between the first of August and tho first of
February, etc.”
This is therefore to notify all persons
concerned that, unless a counter petition be
filed in terms of the statute, an order will
be granted for said election on ttie first
Monday in August hand next.
Witness my and official signature
this July first 1889.
JOHN T. McGINTY, Ordinary.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Monroe county—To the
Superior court of said county. The
petition of "W. T. Maynard, J. AV.
Newton and W. T. Lawson and
such other persons as may bo hereafter
associated with them and their successors
and assigns show that they desire to be in¬
corporated and the created laws a body corporate and
politic under of Georgia and that
they and their associates and successors
and assigns may have a continuous exis¬
tence as a corporation for the term of
twenty years, with the privilege of renew¬
al at the expiration of said term under and
by the corporate name of The Co-operative
Manufacturing Company and as such may
have the power of having and owning a
common seal, sueing and being sued, of
buying, owning, leasing selling, mortgaging ex¬
changing or real or personal prop¬
erty or in any manner disposing of the
same, he for and the best of making interest such of contracts a3 may
said company.
The particular business they propose to
carry on is:
To erect and operate a Cotton Ginnery,
Cotton Seed Oil Mill, Guano Factory,
Grist ’Mill, and to manufacture out of
wood, iron and other substance, such uten¬
sils, vehicles, farm implements and ma
chinery, as are used upon a farm, especial¬
ly such as are used in sowing, planting,
cultivating, and harvesting of all agricultur
and horticultural crops, and in manipulat¬
ing manures and all farm products. To
acquire by gift, purchase or otherwise real
and personal property, and hold and im¬
prove, and use the same in connection with
its business herein before set forth with
power to mortgage, or sell, said property
whenever the interests of the Company arc
best subserved thereby, to receive and en¬
force mortgages and other liens given in
security repairing for purchase work of its products, or for
or done, or services render¬
ed, and to do any and all other acts which
the law allows a Cotton Seed Oil Mill,
Guano Factory, public ginnery, and grist
mill, and general farm manufactory to do.
The officers of the Company shall he a
President and Board of Directors a Sec¬
retary and Treasurer, (the duties of which
two last named may be exercised by one
person) ami such other officers as may he
fixed by elected the by-laws. These officers shall
be first upon the organization of
the Company,and their successors in such
manner and at such times as may he fixed
by the by-laws. The powers and duties
of such officers shall also be defined by
the by-laws.
The capital stock of said corporation
shall be Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars,
$25,000,) with privilege of increasing the
same to One Hundred Thousand Dollars,
divided inlo shares of One Hundred Dol¬
lars ($100) each, to be actually paid in,
as the Board of Directors of such corpo¬
ration may require—each shareholder be
iughabtefar lie amount of stock sub
^plSioiL-^-howthatthevwqinotcom
mence by to exercise Charter the until privileges conferr
ed the ten yer cent, of
the Stockholder.^ capital stock is paid shall in.
who have paid their
hable fo/th^debts'ot the corporation or
for any wrongs committed Inmt.
The principal office of said Company
s h a,! be at Forsyth, Monroe County with
th e n ? ht 'P establish agencies at any
. A hS foiconductin^
vnmv deem g
lt8 business.
Petitioners ask that this petition for a
charter be filed in the office of the Clerk
of the Superior court of Monroe county,
«iaSteDfovidefand"^blication'beside
as required with by law and that upon cotnpli
ance the statute the Court will pass
ed anorderdeclarlngsaidapplicationgrant- and goners wdl
ever pray, etc.
.....
p “~
in offineami recorded June iilt h
clerk Superior Court Monroe county.
A true extract from the minutes of
Monroe ,, Superior Court. June 24^1889.
Clerk Superior Court Monroe County.
JOB PRINTING
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads,
Note Heads
Cards, Letter Heads,
Envelopes, Statements,
Programmes, Dodgers, Circulars,
Hand Bills,
Or any other kind of Jon Printing
done, send your orders to the office
of the Monroe Advertiser. I
have on hand a large stock of printing
material of all kinds and of the latest
styles. Work done neatly and prompt -
APPLICATION TOR CHAR ER.
In re the Forsyth Canning Company.
U' EORGIA—Moxrok covnAy—T o the
vJ Superior court o( said county : The
petition of L. 11. Alexander, J. .1 Cater,
H. P. Hooks, R. T. XIallory and A: II.
Bramblett, shows that they, and such
others as may l><> associated with them,
desire to be incorporated for twenty
years with privilege of renewal under
the name of The Forsyth Canning Com¬
pany with power to sue and be sued, to
have n common seal, to borrow money and
mortgage its property to secure the same
to make all contracts and do all things
necessary to carry out the purposes of the
organization. establish The objects in Forsyth, of said Go com¬
pany is to the
said holders county, for the and profit evaporating of stock¬ bus¬
a canning both, and and
iness, either one or to can
evaporate fruits and vegetables. And and to
this end to have power to own, rent
cultivate land, to grow fruits, erect build¬
The ings and to purchase of said and run machinery. shall
be capital Thousand stock Dollars, company eent.
Five ten per
of which has actually been paid in, capital with
the right to increase the said
stock to any thousand amount not exceeding
twentv-flve dollars by a two
thirds vote of the stock holders at a
meeting for that purpose.
The capital stock shall be divided into
shares of twenty-five dollars each and
said stock shall be owned and assigned By¬
only in manner pointed out by the
laws to stockholder be adopted shall by the be company. individually
No
liable for anymore than board his unpaid of directors stock.
There shall be a
elected annually by the stockholders, and
said board shall elect from themselves a
president, and either from their own
number, or from the stockholders a sec¬
retary and a treasurer, but said officers
may be consolidated. Said board shall
have power to create and fill any other
offices they may deem necessary for the
efficient management of the company’s
affairs.
The Bylaws of the company shall pre¬
scribe Hie duties and liabilities of the
various officers and provide for their
giving bond and security for the faithful
discharge principal of the place same. business of said
The of
company shall he at Forsyth, Ga., but it
shall have power to establish branches
at Wherefore any place it petitioners deems proper. that
pray an
above order be granted forth. incorporating This them as
set June 1st, 1889.
BERNER & BLOODWORTI i,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
Piled in office and recorded June 3rd,
1889. CYRUS II. SHARP,
Clerk Superior Court Monroe county.
A true extract from the minutes of
Monroe Superior Court. June 3rd, 1880
CYRUS H. SHARP,
Clerk Superior Court Monroe county.
LIPPMAN'S
PYRAFJGE ASUaEoJf\Erow;
CHILLS 8 K rts/m
DUMB (\6UE l \ND
MALARIA.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
WRIGHT & STONE,
ATTORNEYS AT LALAVY
VJ rvFFICE upstairs Pye’s, Opera House
building. Forsyth Ga
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Monroe county—To the
Superior tition court of said county: The pe¬
of W. D. Stone, .UII. Huddleston,
R. L. Berner, O. H. B. Bloodworth and
such other persons as may be associated
with them show that they desire to be
incorporated for under the laws of Georgia
twenty years with the privilege of
renewal—under the corporate name of
The Georgia Investment Company with
the fiower to sue and be sued, implead
and be impleaded and to have and use a
common seal. The object of said corpo¬
ration will he pecuniary profit to the stock
holders. The particular business to be
carried on shall he to purchase, hold,
sell, improve, lease or rent real and per -
sonal property of every description ; in¬
cluding in action stocks, and securities bonds, mortgages, of ehosLs
ter, to take shares 'in other every charac¬
tion of this other any corpora¬
improve buildings or any state, to erect or
either for itself or
others, to secure debts due it by mort¬
gage or otherwise, to mortgage or in¬
cumber its property to raise funds for
the company’s use, to make abstracts of
title to land and guaranty the same, and
to make any and all contracts necessary
to carry out the purposes of the corpora¬
tion.
J iio officers of Bflld company sfiAill be ji
P resident and Board of Directors, Secre¬
tary and Treasurer—but the duties of
the last two officers may be exercised by
the same person—and such other officers
as may be created by the by-laws which
said board is hereby authorized to make
for the government of the corporation.
These officers shall be first elected upon
the organization of the company, an<l
thereafter at such time and places as may
be fixed by the by-laws. The duties and
powers of said officers shall be fixed by
the by-laws and the Board shall have
Treasurer power to require of the Secretary and
such bond as they may deem
proper.
The capital stock shall be $5000.00_
divided into shares of $100.00 each with
power to increase the same to any amount
majority not exceeding One Million dollnrs bv a
vote of the stockholders at a
meeting called for that purpose. No
stockholder shall be liable for more than
the unpaid stock subscribed by him
Petitioners show that the company
will not commence business until ten
per cent of the stock is actually paid in.
J he balance ol said stock to be paid in
at such times and in such amounts as
mav be determined by the directors.
The principal office of such company
shall be Forsyth, Ga., or such other place
as a majority of the stockholders may
determine. And it shall have power to
establish agencies in this and other
states,
Wherefore, after the publication of
the citation required by law, petitioners
s* name a '«'>• of
as
AV. D. Stoxe,
J- H. Huddleston,
O. H. B. Bloodworth,
K- Ij- Berner,
Petitioners,
IsS!” 11 in """CYRUS' Monr^erSniv. 8,h
Clerk Superior Court
A true extract from the minutes SlsS!
Uouroc KupenorCourt. July nf
Clerk Superior Court Monroe COTnty