Newspaper Page Text
f Daniel Pratt Gin Co
A! PRATTVILLE, ALABAMA.
Eh
o o It Will be to Your Interest to Write to or Call on
CD S. H. GRISWOLD, General Agent.
Price's Warehouse, Fourth Street, MACON, GA.
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
MANUFACTURERS OF
Doors.Sash.Blind.Mantels.Mouldings.Balusters *
NEWF.LS. WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
■^Dealers ixv
Lumber, Shingles, Laths, and Brick. Also 1
Contractors and Builders.
Wo now have our Factory in operation and will be glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. \\ e feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
'H»r work. Fall before making yonr purchases and get prices.
F V(TOKY Pith STUF.KT. Ol’l’OSlTK COTTON FACTORY. OFFICE PLAN¬
TERS W VUE HOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
V 15. -Our Blinds sire w ired with Patent Clincher Machines and will not break
loose, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
Engines » Mill Machinery
Boilers and Piping and all kinds of Fittings.
Shafti ing, Pull«.s, Hangers. Boxes.etc., in Stock tor prompt delivery. We buy.sell, repair, exchange
and r ent Engl, let on best terms. We have the most extensive shops in the South—Telephone No. 27
GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO.
Foundry, Mncliiiiu mill Uoiler W oi-li*.
1014 to 1026 Feneick St., above Pass'r Depot, A A in Ge^ruin, S. Curolinu and Florida, for
AUMUSTA, MA. Korling injectors and Vanduzon Jet Pumps.
Schofield’s Iron Works!
^Ean\xfa,ct*aj:ers and J"alolaers cf
Steam Ensiiies, Boilers, SAW ILLS, cotton Presses j
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
----Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
lo lfiu-U by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
R3ASS GOODS, PIPE FITTINGS. LUBRICATORS. BELTING. PACKING, SAWS. ETC.
--Genera! Agent for-
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT'S MAGNOLIA COTTON GIN
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
M AGON. GKOBG1A
Reddnig & Baldwin.
Sell the Finest and the Best
CLOTHING, HITS AND CENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS
To be found in the South.
368 SECOND STREET,
MACON, GEORGIA.
vlTri vuo'"o vji C iiiiulO —
and there are no danger points now.
The track is in splendid condition,
braced inside and out. 1 had rather
expected to find it dilapidated, and
was very much surprised in this re¬
spect.
“The marble, I understand, is of a
superior quality, and the demand
greater than the supply. It is ship¬
ped all over the eastern part of the
United States. It is better than the
New England variety because it is
more uniformly crystalline in struc¬
ture. This enables it to stand cold
and water better, and it doesn’t stain
readily. Taken altogether, 1 never
spent a day more pleasantly or more
profitably Mr. in my life.” thinking
M u,stin, of Morgan, is
seriously of moving to pickens coun¬
ty forthwith.
“1 never dreamed.” siad lie, “that
such things were done in Georgia.
Five years ago there were no mar¬
ble there, Now there are five
quarries, the nearest only about
three-quarters ot a mile from Tate,
where we leave the Marietta and
North Georgia, and the furthest off
not more than three miles. The
espeiJP? Gcofeh^marble interesting. company’s They quarry have is
been drilling there for about three
years, and the hole now is about
sixty feet square Dy 100 deep. There
are steps leading down from the
surface, but I stayed up there and
looked over the edge.
“Those engines are enough to
deafen the workmen. Some of the
quarrying is not vertically down¬
ward, but in a slanting direction. I
liked to watch them saw the big
blocks into slabs. It is very slow,
delicate work, but just as simple as
sawing off logs. The saws are thin
bands of soft iron, with no teeth.
Wet sand is fed into the slot along
the cutting edge of the saw. The
idea in making the saw of soft iron
is this—that the grains partially !
imbed themselves in it and cut like
the teeth of an ordinary saw. The ,
crude marble is worth there §1.75 a
cubic foot. One ot the prettiest
thingii we saw was a window made
of a thiu slab of colored marble, cut
so thin that it transmitted light like
glass. The works are run night and
day. Electric lights are used. .. —
“Corn there is tjie finest I ever
saw. That's all they raise—corn
a nd children. Some ot the corn
along the railroad’s banks was was
twenty feet high, and they plant it
thicker than 1 ever saw it planted
before—almost a.y thick as wheat.
Home of the best fields were on the
steep hillsides. 1 don t see how on
earth they plowed the it. mule I hey and must let
have tied a rope to
him down to swing like a pendulum,
then give him more rope and let him
down to swing for another furrow,
The country i.s broken up by the
foothills of the Blue Ridge and the
scenery is the best in the southern
states.
“There is marble everywhere.
Log shanties in Pickens, worth less
than §5, have marble chimneys and
pillars worth 8100. Nigger us
with marble steps—just tlii
that.”
Pimples, boils and other humors,
are liable to appear when the blood
gets heated, ino remedy is
Dr. J. H. McLean s Sarsaparilla.
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.;Y: i ADVERTISER A 9
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is the mar/ his who gives character
dignity to; occupation, as to his
clothes.
Do not tihink, because you were,
rated dull Dt school, that there is no
honorable pi ace for you in the world.
There are talents and powers which
do not deal wi th books. God serum
no man into the' world without pro ¬
viding an occupation for him im
which he may earn resp\i\£j. YotLi
have yours. f v *
But take care that the woi :k is
that for which the tool is fitted.
The mere fact that the work seeirps
pleasant and attractive to you do^fes
not prove that it is fitted to your fac¬
ulties, you may be ambitious but yoju
cannot climb a ladder without fetet.
and hands.
Learn the strength of your fdet
and hands, find the right ladder, yovjir- apd
then trust only in God and to
self to make your way up it. )
The Pride of Woman. ■
A clear pearly and transparent
skin is always a sign of pure blooji,
and all persons troubled with dark,
greasy, yellow or blotched skin cam
rest assured that their blood is omt
of order. A few doses of BEGGk’
BLOOD PURIFIER & BLOOD)
MAKER will remove the cause afiid
the skin will become clear and tran s
parent. Try it, and if satisfaction
is not given it will cost you nothin g
It is fully warranted.
B. D. Smith, Druggist
PIa"u«* Of Sand Fliei. 1
Ton a won i) a. N. Y., July 27,—This
village has been visited by a plag^ue
of saud flies compared to which that
visitedon King Pharoah fades iilto
insignificance. Wednesday hanging night,
a heavy cloud was noticed
over the Canadian shore of the -Ni¬
agara river, and many supposed a
storm was coming up. When t:he
street lamps were lighted the nature
of this storm became manifest. 1 »il
lions of Canadian sand flies, having
a wide spread of wing and a catjfer
pillar-like body, descended on i,he
town.
In an hour it was impossible to
walk the streets. Houses were s. iut
up, stores were closed, and every one
prematurely went to bed. Most; ot
the flies were dead Thursday mourn
ing, their bodies covering the streets
and house tops nearly three inc^ i-s
deep, Tiie me river river harbor naroor and ana the tne «pa- •A -
nal were thick with their remai ns.
The street commissioner was busy
with a force of men all day cleaning
up the dead insects. The principal
streets are now free, but there lis a
horrible sten h from the decay of
their light bodies in a thousand
other places. Nothing ' similar is
remembered here.
♦♦ 0
You Cannot Afford
At this season of the year tc.. be
without a good reliable diarrhoea bal
sam in the house, as- cramps, (joffe,
diarhoea and all inflammation ot the
stomach and bowels are exceeding
dangerous it not attended o at
once. One bottle of BEGGS DlAJI
j KHCEA BALSAM will do mpre
good in cases of this kind than £j.ny
other medicine on earth. We gt fir
, r ntee it. A £
B. D. Smith, Druggist
JACK, TIIERIPPER.
I Startling Theory Unit'd on au Arre*t~
■ I.nmlou'x ( ut-Throut is a H oinnn.
London, July 29. —The following
startling and appalling story relating
to Uie Whitechapel atrocities was
furnished the correspondent last night
and if it proves true it will show that i
the really sensat ional elements of the
horrible crimes have either heretofore
been uuknowu to the London police,
or, if known, have been successfully
suppressed from the public until now.
Theperpetratos of the Whitechapel
butcheries is a woman, so the story
goes. It is stated that this allegation
is not based on a theory, but a fact.
The letters signed by Jack, the Itip
per, were thus signed to lead to the
supposition that the murderer was a
man, and the reason why all of the
victims selected by the murderess
were women was because the tigress
who has so vilely treated her seub
jects is
INSANE FROM JEALOXSY.
Great surprise has been expressed
at the fact that so many murders
could be committed in such a thickly
populated locality as is the East End,
and that the man who did the killing
could escape, esperially as all of the
fallen women of London have been
on their guard for months past- There
need be no longer any astonishment
felt on that score, since it is known
that the victims of the knife-wielder
had no suspicion that the bloody
work was being carried on by one of
their own sex. The murderess could
approach a woman without beiug
suspected, because she was a woman
herself, she could discuss the murders
with her dissolute companions, and
on the pretense of illustrating how
the butcheries were committed would
pass her left arm around the victim’s
head, covering the eyes and pulling
the head back with the one hand
while she drew her knife across the
throat with the other. Had a man
attempted such a thing his actions
would have elicited screams that
purely sufficiently would have to attracted insure his attention capture.
soon
^Because every member of the class of
women killed has had her suspicion
keyed up to the highest tension ever
since the Whitechapel murders have
d>een given worldwide publication—
i. e., suspicion against men, but not
women.
1 There are conflicting statements
inade relative to the identity of mur¬
derers, and it is impossible at this
hour to say whether the authorities
have i>ositive information on that
point or not.
It is asserted that the fact that the
is’a ’womaii was developed uy
an unsuccessful attempt to murder a
harlot in Whitechapel, made within
the last few hours, and the arrest of
the would-be perpetrator, who is said
to be a Spanish or an Italian woman,
whose motive was to murder all the
fallen women she could in the hope
that by so doing she would remove
the one that had aroused her jealousy,
she not being positive as to the exact
woman who had charmed her lover
from A\p_r side.
In addition, it is alleged - thst the
tigress mutilated the corpses of those
she had killed in order to further
satisfy her crazy desire for revenge.
Why is It.
That people linger along always
complaing about that continual tired
feeling? One bottle of BEGGS’
BLOOD PURIFIER and BLOOD
MAKES will entirely remove this
feeling, give them a good appetite
and regulatr digestion.
B. D. Smith, Druggist.
To Keep Irish Potato*--.
I will inform you of my method of
keeping Irish potatoes in Texas. I
first prepare the ground, giving at
least three deep and close plowings;
then cut your potatoes and plant
during the moon in March. Throw
out a furrow with a turning plow by
running each way, which will make
a ridge, so the water will not stand in
the ground, but run off. Let stand
until pototoes come up, and then cul¬
tivate with double-shovel plow and
hoe, when the vine commences to
bloom; watch your potatoes daily,
and when the outer skin on the tubers
ceases to slip your tubers are grown,
or matured. Let six days pass after
the tubers are matured; then dig
potatoes. Put in a box or half-bushel;
whenjfull, carry to some place in the
shade and let dry. When dry, divide
or assort the potatoes and spread them
out in a loft, where there is plenty of
dry air, and where the sun cannot
shine on them. In assorting never
use a sack, as the potatoes are very
tender, and the pressure exerted by
the flexibility of the sack will bruise
them and they will rot. There are
two causes of rot. First, after the
potato is matured, the vine will fall
and wilt under the hot rays of the
sun, then the force of the heat from
the sun scalds the potatoes while in
the ground, and,then when dug thev
will rot; second, bruises caused from
handling in a gack or verv ; large box .
From one aud a half busi els planttid
last year I dug and put away forty
bushels, and I never bought a potato
ie " . 10 , ^ ar r „. ai» . sp. . mg T p , ante . ,
‘
,, tbreG bushels, . and to day, (May 6) at
dinner liad my first mess of new
potatoes. Duriug the whole of the
past season my potatoes were as fine
a nd as palatable as anv shipped from
the north.—J. W. Allen in Texas
Farm and Ranch.
-
That distention of the stomach
which many people feel after eating,
may be due to improper mastication
ot the food : but, in most cases, it in
dicates a weakness of the digestive
organs, the best remedy for which is
one of Ayer's Pilis, to be taken after j
Fnshioii'N Fallio.
A female correspondent writing to
the Athens Chronicle on the tollies
of fashion says:
“About the first thing a young
man thinks ot when he launches
forth into the world of fashion is to
decorate his mouth—with a mous¬
tache on his lip? Oh, no, he is too
young for that. But it is with a
lovely (?) cigarette. See him as ho
promenades on the tashionable ave¬
nues (hardly large enough festive to leave
off knee pants) with the cig¬
arette in his month. The vanity,
pomp, and conceit, that ho then ex¬
hibits is inexpressible. He is barely
tolerated. The miserable little fel¬
low !
But now we see him again ! He
has taken the second degree in the
great school ot fashion where the
moral ideas of these lords of crea
tion are formed, A fashionable
man is something that is built on
extremes—I mean the dude. Throe
years ago the beautiful (?) things
looked as though they had been
melted and poured into their panta¬
loons.
But the lords of fashion have
changed!
Instead ot adorning themselves in
these “glued on” pants, they have
adopted pants that make them look
worse than a rhinocerus. See some
of those little “pipe-stem” look fellows like on
a windy da} r ! They a
balloon filled with gas, and ready to
ascend. And those collars! You
have scon them, reader, and 1 will
not attempt to describe how the lit¬
tle short necked dude does look.
He has not discarded the cigarette,
though he has taken the second
degree in the great fashion school of
the lords of creation. In Ins full at¬
tire, after taking this degree, ho
very much resembles a monkey
dressed in a pair of meal sacks for
pants, a coat, and witlfa half yard of
linen around his neck. Young ladies,
beware!
But the society dude is progres¬
sive !
To fully understand what it is
composed of we have to see after
taking the third degree. He is ab¬
horred by the ladies. (I mean tboso
ladies who exhibit any taste or
judgment.) The attire of the dnde
after having been initiated into the
third degree of fashion is about the
same as that of the second. The
only precoptiblo difference is that he
has become more brazen. lie lias
the “cheek” to stand in front of
church doors and puff his precious
cigarettes! He has the “cheek” to
interrupt the minister and disturb
the congregation by strutting down
Ci’ie itiaJv SOi l ic‘£* '« -hAJ-f. -t ver.
He has the “cheek” to stand outside
after service, and puff the smoke of
the dainty (?) cigarette in the facos
of the ladies as they pass. O, you
little dude! Verily, thou art a
treasure—for Barnum’s museum.”
A Woman’s Discovery.
“Another wonderful discovery has
been made and that too by a lady
in this county. Disease fastened its
clutches upon her and for seven
jvaars she withstood its severest tests,
but her vital organs were under¬
mined and death seemed imminent.
For three months sA\p coughed in¬
cessantly and could not sleep. ' -She
bought of us a bottle ot Dr. King’s
New discovery for Consumption and
was so much relieved on taking first
dose that she slept all night and 110111
one bottle has been miraculously
cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther
Luz.” Thus writes VV. C. Hamrick
& Co., of Shelby, N. C.—Get a free
trial bottle at any Drug Store.
An Important Bill.
lion. M. V. Caluin, of .Richmond,
introduced into the house the other
day a Dill which will be of great in¬
terest to the farming interests of the
state. “It provides that as soon as
practicable, the board of directors of
the Georgia experimental station
shall organize and have conducted
throughout the state each year dur¬
ing the season most convenient to
the agriculturists, a series of Farm¬
ers’ Institutes for the instruction of
citizens of this state in the better
methods of agriculture in its various
branches. These institutes shall be
held at such time and at such places
as said board may direct. The said
board shall make such rules and
regulations as it ina}’ deem proper,
for organizing and conducting such
institutes. The board may in their
discretion, employ a lecturer or lec¬
turers, preference, in this matter,
being given to practical and success¬
ful farmers possessing aptitude for
the work.
Section two appropriates §15’000,
or so much as may be needed, for
the support of said institutes for 1889
and the same for 1890, and the same
for all subsequent years, the money
to be paid from the state’s income
arising from the inspection of fertil
zers, those appropriations to have
precedence of all aperopriation what¬
soever from that fund next after that
for the salary of the commissioner of
agriculture and that ot his clerk, and
that for the support of the experi¬
ment station, the money to be drawn
upon order of the board of directors
of the experiment station. The said
board shall have authority to issue
annually, through the department
of agriculture, a bulletin which shall
contain the procedings of each of
said institutes.—Atlanta Constitu¬
tion.
Disease lies m ambush for the
weak, a feeble constitution is ill
adapted to encounter a malarious
atmosphereana sudden changes of
temperature, than d e least robust
are usually the easiest victims wili Dr
J. H, McLean’s Sarsaparilla
give tone, vitality and strength to
the entire body.
Hrallh in Mu tnuicr.
Savannah Morning News.
Physicians don’t agree concerning
the best way to keep well during the
summer months. Home recommend
one set of rules, and others recom¬
mend another. Dr. William A.
Hammond says that ice water should
be avoided altogether, and other phy¬
sicians say that the use of ice water
in small quantities and at short in¬
tervals is beneficial. One says that
the eating of light meals is essential
to health at this season, and another
says that a person may safely eat
about as much as he pleases.
The views of Dr. John Morris, of
Baltimore, upon this subject seems to
be sensible and well considered. He
says that to retain good health in
summer, oue should get" as much
fresh air as possible, guard against
excess in eating, exercise in modera¬
tion, and keep cool. He thinks that
fruits should form a considerable part
of one’s diet, but that great care
should be taken that the fruit is sound
and ripe, as probably more sickness
during summer is caused by unsound
and unripe fruit than by anything
else. Pure milk is also recommended
and rice is claimed to be the best
summer food, as it is cooling, and
tends to keep the stomach in good
condition. The summer bill of fare
that he suggests is a small quantity
of meatymd rice, fruits, vegetables
and milk. What he says about the
care of young children in summer
seems to be of especial value. He
thinks tiiey should be bathed and
rubbed systematically—in cold water
in the morning, and at night in water
that has been warmed in the sun.
Of course their food should be abso¬
lutely pure. If they are given milk,
it should be kept at a temperature of
from 70° to 80°. They should be in
the open air as much as possible, but
in shady places. If they cant go to
the country, let them play in the
parks and squares. One of the most
important things to do is to keep them
cool, as the summer disease to which
they are liable are caused mainly by
heat. Dr. Morris was formerly pres¬
ident of the Medical and Chirurgical
Faculty of Maryland, and lie lias
given much study to this question.
The Hiiuiuici-’m Sun.
If you are suffering with General
Debility, feel sick, languid and good
for nothing, dont fail to get of your
druggist a bottle of Westmoreland’s
Calisaya Tonic. It will do you
good.
Fairview Post Office, June 12,
1883.
Gentlemen : I bought a bottle of
vour Ca 1 isaya ” fi onTo* so mo ti trie ago'
for my daughter who was suffering
with a headache almost constantly,
had no appetite and was suffering
with general debility. It gives me
great pleasure to state to you that
she is now entirely well, and did not
take any other medicine except your
Tonic, and I don’t hesitate to recom¬
mend it as a good medicine.
Very respectively D. M. Peden.
For sale by Alexander & Son.
Internal Revenue.
Commenting on the report of the
commissioner of internal revenue,
the Macon Telegraph says :
The proposition now before tbo
Gewgd.a legislature is to ask con¬
gress to begiTv itb.o work of reducing
federal taxation by remedying the tax¬
es on whisky, brandy and cigar's in¬
stead of reducing the tax on clothing,
family supplies,farm implements and
on a long schedule of the other nee-,
essaries of life.
The commissioner’s report shows
how hollow is the pretense that the
people of Georgia suffer any great
hardship from the collection of inter¬
nal taxes. During the lasjt fiscal
year the total internal collections in
Georgia were only §436,119, * while
in Illinois they were §31,007,419 or
over seventy times as much as in
Georgia. Of course the people of
this state really paid more of the in¬
ternal revenue tax than is expressed
in the figures for collections in this
state, but they paid it in the enhanc¬
ed price of whisky, brandy and
cigars—articles which are about the
fittest subjects to taxation. There is
very little of the internal revenue
collected in this state and the only
persons who find the law bearing
hard on them are those who persist
in disobeying it. To the peaceful,
induslrions citizen the internal rev¬
enue laws are neither a terror nor
a burden. The taxes which they
impose are paid by those who in¬
dulge in luxuries, and arc therefore
voluntary expenditures. They are
not taxes on the cost of living, taxes
which every man must pay and
which diminish the income of every
family in the land. But such taxes
are levied and collected to an
amount beyond the needs of the gov¬
ernment, and it is the desire of the
people of Georgia that they should
be reduced before whisky and cigars
are relieved of the burden they now
bear.
The Verdict Unanimous.
W. D. Hull. Bippus, Ind., testifies :
“I can recommend Electric Bitters
as the very best remedy. Every
bottle sold has given relief in .every
case. One man took six bottles,
and was cured of Rheumatism of 10,
year’s standing.” Abraham Hare,
“The druggist, Beiiville, Ohio, affirms:
best selling medicine I have
ever handled in my 20 years’ ex¬
perience, is Electric Bitters.” Thous¬
ands of others have added their tes¬
timony, so that the verdict is unani¬
mous that Electric Bitters do cure
all disease of the Liver, Kidneys or
Blood. Only a half dollar a bottle
any Drug Store.
Lamars Diarrhoea Mixture should
be kept always in the house for cases
of emergency.
JOB PRINTING
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads, Heads,
Note
Cards, Letter Statements, Heads,
Envelopes, Dodgers, Circulars,
Programmes, 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 lat est
styles. Work doneneatly AdvkutiskhI and prompt
ly Mon roe
IPilijgi}
*4KlHG
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This pow der never \ aries A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More
economical 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 can *
Royal Baking Powder Co., 10t> Wall
street. New York.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
ll F.ORG I A—Monroe county—To the
Superioffoourt of said county: The pe¬
tition of W. D. Stone, J. II. Huddleston,
It. L. Berner, 0- II. B. Bloodvvortli and
such other persons as may lie associated
with them show that they desire to be
incorporated under the laws of Georgia
for twenty years with the p-ivffegr of of
renewal—under the corporate name,
The Georgia Investment Company with
the power to sue and be sued, implead
and be impleaded and to have and use a
common seal. The object of said corpo¬
ration will be pecuniary profit to the stock
holders. The particular business to bo
carried on shall he to purchase, hold,
sell, improve, lease or rent real and per¬
sonal property of every description ; in¬
cluding stocks, bonds, mortgages, choses
in action and securities of every e.harac
ter, to take shares in any other corpora¬
tion of this or any other state, ta erect or
improve buildings 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.
The officers of said company shall be a
President and Board of Directors, Secre¬
tary and Treasurer—but the duties of
the lust two officers may be exercised by
the same person—and such other officers
as may be created by the bv-laws which
said board is hereby authorized to make
for tire government of the corporation.
These officers shall he first elected upon
the organization of the company, and
thereafter at such time and places as may
be fixed by the by-laws. The duties ana
powers of said officers shall he fixed by
i>A.. ; ' . "• ' ’ " ’
power to require of l’he Secretary u.r
Treasurer such bond as they may deem
proper. The shall
divided capital stock $100.00 be $5000.00—
into shares of each with
power to increase the same to any amount
not exceeding One Million dollnrs by a
majority vote of the stockholders at a
meeting called for that purpose. No
stockholder shall fie liable for more than
the Petitioners unpaid stock show subscribed that by him.
the company
will not commence business until ten
per cent of the stock is actually paid in.
The balance of said stock to be paid in
at such times and in such amounts as
may be determined by the directors.
The principal office of such company
shall be Forsyth, <Id., or such other place
determine. as a majority of the shall stockholders may
And it have power to
establish agencies in this and other
states,
Wherefore, after the publication of
the citation requirsd by law, petitioners
pray to be incorporated and made a body
corporate and politic under the name of
Tie Georgia Investment Company as
above sts.t forth, July 8th 1889.
W. D. Stone,
J. ii. Heom.ESTOx.
O. If. B. Bloodwobth
It. L. BlAVNElt,
Petitioners.
Filed in office and recorded Jiu'v Sth
1889. CYRU8 H. 8IIA RP,
Clerk Superior Court Monroe count. y
A true extract from the minutes of
Monroe Superior Court. July 8th, 1889.
' CYRUS H. SHARP,
Clerk Superior Court Monroe Count y-
2a
LIPPMAN'S
PYRAFU9E
* f\ SUf\£Qjf\E
\ l CHILLS aFEVfeR
DUMB f\GUC /\ND
57 L
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
WRIGHT & STONE,
ATTORNEY S ATLAW
0 F P undTnT ta Foky» eraHon6e
b
70 WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
GEORGIA—Monroe
statute in such cases made and provided,
fij the citizens of Johnston’s, and Cabaniss’
districts respectively for an election in said
districts to put in operation in those dis
thcUUfo the sale ff of Ct ; cotton tU 1 - in an the “ seed 4ct to in Prohibit Monroe
county, or any militia district thereof
f£uSj‘ «tc ■’ 1 °‘ , " d th »
concerned tiled ttS'"f itl tiC ‘° n " Ul > ti0 S
In "
Monday in August next.
th?]uT«S' I 'S ( n 9 d " ,d » 91<!l > 1 signature
JOHN T. McGINTY, Ordi
nary.
NOTICE.
f r the
examine applicants for sehoflarslhn“ , „
the school, Forsyth, Au^tsut the ,
in
„ THOMAS G SCOTT.
July 20th m i889.‘ Sch ° o1 Comm «*K>ner.