Newspaper Page Text
r 1,000 These Gin]
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
M AN UFA (’TUBERS OF
Doors. Sash, Blind. Mantels, Mouldings, Balusters
NEWELS, WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
■Dealers ixv
Lumber, Shingles, Laths, and Brick. Also,
Contractors and Builders.
AW now Iihvi- our Factory in operation and will he glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. We feel confident wo can please both in price and quality of
our work. Call 'eforo making yonv purchases and get prices.
FACTORY ldth STKEKT, OPPOSITE COTTON FACTORY. OFFICE PLAN¬
TERS' WARE MOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. R.— Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machines and will not break
loose, thus preventing flic unsightly appearance that most others do.
Engines ss Mill Machinery
Boilers and Piping and ail kinds of Fittings.
SkaftiM, Pull«v*. Hangers. Boses, etc., in Stock for prompt delivery. We buy. sell, repair, exchange
and rant Engines on bsst terms. We have the most sxtensive shops in the South—Telephone No. 27
GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO.
Foundry, Machine and lJoiler Works,
t0t4 to 1026 Ferwick St., above Psss'r Depot, Agt- Georgia. S. Carolina and Florida, for
AUUI’NTA, MA. Sorting Injectors and Vanduzen Jet Pumps.
Schofield’s Iron Works!
2vrD.ri.-_vfactv-rers ar.d Tc'cYers cf
Steam Endues, Boilers, SAW ILLS, Cotton Presses,
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
---Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
O Scnoneld i -1 S F&IIIOIIS „, COTTON riATTAItT TVTFT710 PRESS 0 T
,
•To Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
BRASS GOODS. PIPE FITTINGS. LUBRICATORS. BELTING. PACKING. SAWS. ETC.
--General Agent for
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT’S MAGNOLIA COTTON GIN
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON, GKOBGIA
Reddnig & Baldwin
Sell the Finest and the Best
CLOTHING, HITS ADD GENT'S FDRNISSING GOOES
To be found in the South.
3G8 SECOND STKEKT,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Daniel Pratt Gin Go
PRATTVILLE, ALABAMA.
It Will be to Your Interest to Write to or Call on
S. H. GRISWOLD, General Agent.
Brice’s Warehouse, Fourth Street, MACON, GA.
“The dignity and usefulness of the
present system is lost in the fact
that it is not a permanent factor in
the judiciary and must work all the
time under the discouragement that,
after all their fidelity, their work
will, in the main find a grave ready
dug into which nearly all of it must
go as soon as they adjourn.”
The Summer’* Sun.
If you aro 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
your Calisaya Tonic sometime 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.
Georgm’s Peach Crop.
Griffin News and Sun,
~ hi* t? fruit cron this rear oir
will do more attract people to has
state than all the cotton that
finrimr the rmst half
century It will attract people be
eause the fruit eTOwinff hpin5 region ralidlv of the
TWpH cur
“ *» "
groum in Georgia become
each 0 sueceedin- C 'yearU Vtetter
handled and the territory in which
it can be sold is beirsp- enlarged,
With the largest fruit crop ever
known in the state, the prices have
been the best thus conclusively
showing that the supplv has not ex
‘ When look
pppdpd laAV thp LnvinH we
at the ffities-in the north whfch
must alwavs deoend innnlies upon other sec
tiorw fm* (heir of fruit we
need have no fears that fruit < T row
ino- in Georgia reas<Tn will prove unprotita
ble bv of over production.
• The love of fruit D inherent in
cverv human being, and this love
‘hi-i na . tn Georgia a”desire thousands of
people who hav-> to sit in
tins* S
favored section Within the
next twenty-five Years the old red
hills of Georgia will be covered with
orchards and vineyard* and land
You Cannot Afford
At this season of the year to be
without a good reliable diarrhoea bal¬
sam in the house, as cramps, colie,
diarhoea and all inflammation of the
stomach and bowels are exeeeding
ly dangerous if not attended to at
' BEGGS’
once. One bottle of DIAR
RRCEA BALSAM will do more
good in eases of this kind than any
other medicine on earth. We guar¬
antee it, B. I). Smith, Druggists.
, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 20, 1889.
a part boiled with cottoa-5533W!H
other heated food. So soon as coldf
weather begins feed your poultry
with wheat and oats and plenty of
boiled turnips, and they will give
you plenty of eggs in return for it.
Try it and see what a diffei*ence it
makes. For earl}* use prior to De¬
cember, sow the cow horn, flat
Dutch and for later the Aberdeen
and yellow globe and ruta-baga and
begin to sow in July and continue
to the middle of September. It is a
fine crop to precede corn or a spring
crop of rye or oats. Manure the
turnips well, and the following crop
will thrive on the residue of manure.
At another time we will show what
a splendid combination crop turnips
and rye and oats make.
-
Spartanburg to lialtimorc.
What a Spartanburg physician
has to say in praise of YVestmore
hind’s “I C^jisaya delighted Tonic: with the benefit I
am
have derived from taking Oalisaya
Tonic. 1 consider it an excellent
preperation. My health is now bet¬
ter than it has been for years. It
tones up the stomach, and gives life
and vigor to the whole system.”
Baltimore, Md.
Gentlemen : Having been a con.
firmed dyspeptic for years, receiving
no relief from the best medical at
tenc * ance or the numerously adver
ider ..‘cSyaCie "»hieh I con
s the best 1 nreneration ,P U dT1 9 n before De * ore me the
f U , haying . given mo instant , re
llet f utter i,’ V ea V s °* suffering
Yours truly,
ForBale bv Li L“, E ”'
*•
_
A youth brought up on novels has
an over-heated imagination and no
common sense. To walk up the
steps of marble’palaces and como in
contact with heroes and heroines of
phenomenal virtues and vices is apt
to unfit a boy for splitting wood for
the kitchen stoves or doing ° work
about the house.
After spending an evening in con
suming a dime novel and breathless
ly following in the fortunes of women
and sainted faces and men with over
grown mustaches, everyday life
seems a bit insipid and it becomes
bard to crawl out of bed at five
i 0 clock in the morning with the
mercury at zero, and go to the office
I Stt itaS “ *” 4<,Ua ”
- What our boys need is less spice
; and more corned beef. Good solid
I reading that makes them feel that
they, burnishing the brass on the
it is a beginning, is better than a
thousand which inflame the fancj
and render real life tasteless. The
dime novel is the devil’s ri«bt bow
er when lie is plavin (r for a boy's
head and heart.—New vork Herald.
-- - -
Many people habitually endure a
feeling of lassitude because the}
think they K ave to. If the\
would take Dr. J. H. McLean’s Sar*
saparilla this feeling of
wouldgive place to vigor and vitalitj*
V
^ADVERTISER.
The Farmer'* Opportunity.
Manufacturers Record.
There are innumerable ways in
the farmers of the south, and
especially those living near large and
cities, can make themselves in
just as there are ways in
which a man in business can make
himself independ^ht. It is not the
makes owning the best land who
the most money any more
it is the business man who has
the finest store or factory who sue
ceeds best. In each case success
comes to him who strikes a popular
chord and keeps himself in tune to it.
in every city are people who are
notional in some direction or other,
are willing to pay liberally for
the sake of petting their notions.
What the farmer should do, is to
study and analyze these notions. A
years ago a young man just
graduated from a well known college
found himself much broken in health
business and with only
§2,000 or so from a recent legacy,
His only alternative seemed to buy
a farm. As soon as he was settled on
his land he began, with his other
the carefui rearing of pigs. He
kopt them in clean pens, fed them on
selected food, and soon had a fine
collection of porkers. Some thirty
miles off was a large city. By eare
ini enqniry he learned of several
persons in that city who were fond of
pork, yet who were afraid of the
stuff usually sold in the public mar
kct. The young farmer promptly
{Struck a bargain wfth these people to
supply them with fresh and salt pork,
sausages and lard at very reinunera
tive prices. These customers soon
brought more, and as business in
creased the farmer enlarged his fa
cilities and added to his other pro
ducts the choicest butter that hands
could make.
This young man, almost an inva
lid and with scarcely money enough
to buy a poor farm now has an an
nual income of §12,000 or more, not
because his farm is such a fine one
or because he is skilled agriculturist,
but because he hunted up those peO'
pie who had weaknesses for the
very best pork and the choicest of
butter, and tickled their palates with
what they wanted.
Throughout the south arc many
who have every advantage
that this young man had, and who
ean, by a little expenditure of energy
line their pockets with gold by work
ing some notion for all there is in it.
Severe Case* of JBIood Poison
4 Thousands suffer from blood poi
son who would be cured if they gave
B. B., (Botanic Blood Balm) a
fiend to the Blood Balm Co.,
cal. It is sent free.
J. O. Gibson, Meridian, Miss.,
writes: “For a number of years I
suffered untold agonies from blood
poison. Several prominent physi*
cians did me little if any good. I
began to use B. B. B. with very lit
tie faith, but, to my utter surprise it
has made me a well and hearty per
son.”
Z. T. Hallerton, Macon, Ga.,
writes: “1 contracted blood poison.
I first tried physicians, and then
went to Hot Springs. 1 returned
home a ruined man physically.
Nothing seemed to do me any good.
My mother persuaded me to try B.
B. B. To «my utter astonishment
every ulcer quickly healed.”
Benj. Morris, Atlanta, Ga., writes:
“I suffered years from syphilitic
blood poison which refused to be
cured by all treatment. Physicians
pronounced it a hopeless case. I
had no appetite, I had pains in hips
and joints and my kidneys were dis
eased. My throat was ulcerated
and my breast a mass of running
sores. Ln this condition I coni'
meneed the use of B. B. B. It heal
ed every ulcer and sore and cured
me completely within two months.”
Cotton ts. Jute.
Albany News and Advertiser.
ln ‘advocating the substitution of
winTto^fSfffieuVS d dlfll " ultl ? s Il^Tvayt that .Aways
attend * , such u a great innovation and
anticipated the opposition of Liver
pool to the proposed change. We
advised early in the genesis of the
mo T emcnt> v at ,r matbe r cotu,n
Liverpool and regulate the tare to
the difference in the weight between
cotton bagging and jute. This mat
ter did not recieve the prompt and
energetic attention which it demand
ed, and the negligence ofourcottton
exchanges, besides seriously compli
eating matters, will entail'a loss on
the farmers who use the cotton bag
ging this season. Stanley O. Them
as, President of the New Orleans
Cotton Exchange, has been in cor
respondenee with the Liverpool Ex
change on this question. The whole
correspondence can be found on the
first page of this morning’s News
and Advertiser and from it will be
seen how neat’}* Mr. Thomas sets
aside all objection urged by the Liv
"Ct bc^xpectod that i„ver.
pool would interpose all possible ob
it jeetiens is in the to this interest proposed of the change, southern as
planters and opposed to English in
T.
end. I he south will suffer tempo
rary loss, but justice is on her side,
’ and she will emerge from the smoke
of battle with victory perched upon
her bauDer, and with the proud con
* seiousness that she has fought a
| good fight in a holy cause, and es
tablished firmly the principles of her
; ! own independence
-
Any case of extreme Bowel Dis
orders may be pi*evented by using
Lamar’s Diarrhcea Mixture in time,
The Value of Slock Rauing uutl Im¬
provement to the Farm,
Whether the keeping of stock is
for the purpose of conducting a dairy
or for the sale of meat, says the
Philadelphia Record, the farm itself
is made most valuable, and for this
reason it is doubtful if a loss occurs
in stock raising when the receipts
and expenses are nearly equal. The
farmer views only the .amount he
has received from sales and com
pares it with the sum expended, if
there is no profit the venture is con -
sidered a loss. But it is a truth that
all materials brought on a farm re¬
main until removed, and though they
may change in form yet they pos¬
sess value for some purpose. The
farmer who buys large amounts of
bran, middlings and other refuse of
the mills bring on bis fa^m that
which remains as an investment
uutil it can be converted into some
other salable product.
ffvory ounce of food procured tor
the use of stock is converted into
beef, mutton, pork, milk or manure.
In the shape of meat and milk the
farmer disposes of it at an increased
price, but the expenses are to be
deducted. All that remains on the
farm unsold, after the cost of the
whole has been secured in the sales,
is just as much a matter of profit as
that which has been mai'lteted,
and this surplus is the manure,
which can be converted into food for
the next year. The farm is there'
fore increased in fertility, and at the
same time increased in value, the
profits being expended on the farm
as manure. If the value of the ma¬
nure could annually be made in this country
estimated on some basis the
figures would be startling, and they
would show that the farmers create
more wealth than the estimates giv¬
en in the crops only.
It is an old proverb, “More stock
more manure; more manure more
crops; more crops more stock.”
There is, of course, a limit to be
reached somewhere in the increase,
but the farmer wbo engages in stock
raising is sure to reach the point
where his stock cannot dispose of the
productions of the soil by producing
meat and milk, and his expenses are
then reduced by reason of his abun¬
dance and independence of the ne¬
cessity increases of buying elsewhere, which
the profits from sales and
gives the farm a greater value, due
to its capacity of production, and in
that respect he may be storing up
the profit of each year to reap it at
a future time in the shape of the
surplus crops sold over and above
the amount required for stock. The
farmer whoso farm is abundantly
stocked with all the animals he can
^ ^
sometimes charged, as the hay is
simply a portion of the surplus which
has been added to the farm in the
manure, and which now becomes
profit.
^ A ^ S0N °j 777 vvronvil ... 1 o,
>
I rank!in ,• parish, . La., says : 1 thin c
Swift s Specific is the best b ood rem
e( ty ^ ie wc ’ l U )' ^ have known it
to make wonderful cures of persons
w blood diseases, some cases
which . had been regarded incura
as
hie.
Dr. B. T. Coppedoe, of Verona,
Mo., says he has sold a large quanti'
tv of Swift’s Specific, and to a great
many customers, and knows it to be
most successfully used for maladies
of the blood.
Swift’s Specilic is not one of the
old potash, sarsaparilla, or mercury
mixtures. It contains no mercury,
or any poisonous substance. It
relieves the system by forcing the
impurities out through pores of the
skin, and builds up the patient from
the first dose.
We sell gi’eat quantites of S. S. S.,
and the sale holds up well—no fall
ing off, or prospect of falling off.
While many are loud in its prais¬
es, not one complaint has been
heard from our customers.
J. E. Sears’ Drug Store,
W aco, Texas.
“ OI ”
Atlanta constituting
In view of the immense possibili
ties of the melon crop of the south,
Colonel William Duncan, of South
,he8urp,us
“jlTLd during tbe
war on more than one plantation in
the south, and in Putnam county, at
it}, east, Iiopeil} P^eX°made mate, UP it itTfc is elearer clearer
than honey and as sweet, and while
the primitive experiments to reduce
it to sugar were failures, there can
be no doubt that the surplus crop
can be made to take the place of the
“honey sweetening” of commerce to
a great extent. It may be, too, that
experiments'carried on in a more the
scientific way will result in
granulation necessary to make
sugar.
But that is not absolutely necessa
ry. It is certain that an excellent
quality of syrup can be made, and it
is to this fact that the farmers should
“llS“ lessen"
than either sugar-cane or the sugar
beet, and if the syrup is properly of
j handled it will take the place
• cane syrup and molasses as an arti'
C, «i>»
! n » n thjt.be
the melons were made into s}rup,
which is more than the crop would
bring if it were sold as fruit. In
, addition the refuse remaining after
the ciushing process makes excellent
i stock feed, and, according to Colonel
j Duncan, this will the cost of
repay
making the syrup,
We do not vouch for the figures,
but we present them cheerfully, with
the remark that the south is the
greatestsectionofagreatandgrow
ing country.
NUMBER 32.
OLD-TIME REMEDIES.
Nature the Priucipal College for Pbyii
cinus of Tlidiievnl Time*.
All the Year Round*
Ague wws much more prcvalcut
in the old days, when so many thou¬
sand acres of what is now good ara¬
ble land were lying in waste marsh>
es, reeking with malarial vapor.
But the sutferor was not without
choice of other remedies which, if
their efficacy was at all in propor¬
tion to their simplicity, left little to
be desired. If he was unable to ob¬
tain the chips of a gibbett, or object¬
ed to them on superstitious grounds,
many other courses were open to
him. Thus, he is directed to have
a cake baked of salted bran; while
the fit is on he is to break up the
cake and give the pieces to a dog.
The disease will then leave him and
stick to poor Tray.
Another authority recommends
him to seal up a spider in a gosse
quill allowing it to reach as low as
the pit of the stomach. Aspen leav¬
es, too were good against ague.
And this reminds me of one curious
principle which appears to have in¬
fluenced strongly in his choice of
remedies—the so-called “Doctrine of
Signatures.”
To the old physician all plants
seemed to posess such curative pow¬
ers as would render him valuable
assistanca if he only knew the ail¬
ments in which a particular plant or
part with of a plant might bo prescribed
propriety, llis peculiar meth¬
od of reading between the lines in
the book of nature soon enabled him
to surmount this difficulty to his
own satisfaction, if not tbo advan¬
tage of the patient. The shape of a
a leaf or flower, its color, and a hun¬
dred othertrifles were gladly accepted
as indicationsofthe medicinal virtues
upon which he could most confidently
rely. Thus, nettle tea was sure to
prove helpful in a case of nettle
rash ; the heart shaped leaves of the
ordinary wood sorrel were remedial
in cardaic diseaso ; and the termoric
on account of its deep yellow color,
was of groat reputation in the treat'
ment of jaundice. Is it any wonder
then, that the quivering leavos of the
aspen were esteemed as a euro for
ague.
Iiippnmna Pyrafngc.
Take time by the forelock, in time
of peace, prepare for war. Keep a
bottle in the house. For chills and fe¬
ver,Dumb Ague,and all fevers having
malarious origin, use Lippman’s
Pyrafuge.
much Needed “Don’ls” For Women.
New York Graphic. *
lantern
to wanfTfo, but take whining by the
aw f u j examples you see of doleful
0 id gi r ] s that have yielded to the
temptation.
If people stare at you don’t plume
yourself and simper; it may bo bo
cauge y 0U have a paper pinned on
y 0m - back or a streak of srnut on
y 0ur U09e .
Again, if you are stared at don’t
fl 01ince an( j f rown ; it don’t do any
g 00( j an( ] ma R es y 0U conspicuous.
gggjjgg y 0U aro probably imagining
the attention anyway,
Don’t think ail the men you know
are in love with you, and that oidy
various secondary motives restrain
most of them from declaring their
passion. It is likely that very few
of those that do declare it tell the
truth.
Don’t run down prettier women to
men. Your motives are certain to
be impugned.
Don’t estimate yourself by the
most extravagant compliments paid
you ; remember you hear inevitably
a great deal more from the poeple
that admire you than from that per
haps equally large constituency that
don’t,
Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores color
and vitality to weak and gray hair.
Through its healing and cleansing
qualities, it prevents the acumula
tion of dandruff and cures all scalp
diseases. The best hair dressing
ever made and by far the most econ¬
omical.
The La*t Time.
Do you ever stop in tho midst of
life’s hurry and flurry and think
that the “last time” draweth nigh
when the pleasant associations of
this life must be forever severed?
There will be a last time for the
careless goodbye thrown to wife and
children as you hurry to the train.
There will be a last time when your
step will board the car and your
form will mingle with the crowd of
those who go about business when
the day is new. There will be a
last time to speak a kind word in¬
stead of a cross ono, to give a smile
for a frown. There will be a last
time to mingle in the city’s busy
stream of life, to mount your office
desk. There will be a last time to
lunch, a last time to read the daily
papers, a last time to spend a happy
evening at home, and bestow your
company, speech and manners upon
the members of your own family
circle. There will be a last time to
say “good-night” to turn out the
lamp and woo the fickle godess of
slumber. There will be a last mid¬
night and a last new dawning cf a
last day on earth.—Ex.
The Pride of Woman.
A clear pearly and transparent
skin is always a sign of pure blood,
and all persons troubled with dark,
greasy, yellow or blotched skin can
rest assured that their blood is out
of order. A few doses of BEGGS’
BLOOD PURIFIER & BLOOD
MAKER will remove the cause and
the skin will become clear and trans¬
parent. Try it, and if satisfaction
is not given it will cost you nothing.
It is fully warranted.
B. D. Smith, Druggist.
JOB PRINTING
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads,
Cards, Note Heads,
Letter Heads,
Envelopes, Statements,
Dodgers, Circulars,
Programmes, kind of Hand Job Bills,
Or ally other Printing
done, send your orders to the office
of the Monroe Advertiser. I
have on hand a kinds large stock of printing
material of all and of the latest
styles. Work done neatly and prompt -
ly* Monroe Advertiser.
ROYAL M»"‘
KS M
ry
I
*AKlH 6
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This pow dor never vuries A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More and
economical than the ordinary kinds,
cannot be sold in competition with tho mul¬
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate Baking powders. Powder Sold only in Wall cans
Royal Co., 106
street. New York.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Monroe county—To the
Superior tition court of said county Huddleston, : Tho pe¬
of W. D. Stone, J. If.
R. L. Berner, O. II. B. Bloodworth and
such other persons as may be associated
wfth them show that they desire to bo
incorporated under the laws of Georgia
for twenty years with the privilege of
renewal—under the corporate name of
The Georgia Investment Company with
the power to sue and be sued, implead
and be impleaded and to have and iise a
common seal. The object of said corpo¬
ral ion will lie pecuniary profit to the stock
holders. The particular business to be
carried on shall be to purchase, hold,
sell, improve, lease, or rent real and per¬
sonal property of bonds, every description ; in¬
cluding in action stocks, securities mortgages, chosen
and of every charac¬
ter, to take shares in any other corpora¬
tion of this or any other state, to erector
improve buildings either for itself or
others, to secure debts due it by mort¬
gage or otherwise, its to mortgage raise funds or in¬ for
cumber property to
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 last two officers may he 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 the government of the corporation.
These officers shall be first elected upon
the organization of the company, and
thereafter at such time and places as may
be fixed bv the by-laws. The duties and
power* of said officers shall he fixed by
¥ mil bond alley SWA deeiri
reasurer si as may
proper. The capital shall he
stock jGOOO.OO—
divided into shares of $100.00 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 bo liable for more than
the unpaid stock show subscribed by him.
Petitioners that the company
will not commence business until terl
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 he Forsyth, Ga., 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
he Georgia Investment Company as
above set forth, July 8th 1889.
W. I). Stone,
J. H. Huddleston,
O. II. B. Bloodworth,
R. L. Berner,
Petitioners.
Filed in office and recorded July 8th
1889. CYRUS H. SHARP, > •
Clerk Superior Court Monroe county!
A true extract from the minutes of
Monroe Superior Court. July 8th, 1889.
CYRUS H. SHARP,
Clerk Superior Court Monroe County.
a
r. i LIPPMAN’S
IPYPJGE I ASUHECUHEroU
\ S CftILLS SiFEVfea
DUMB ftGUE /\ND
L
FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
LTPFMATT
Sole Props.
WRIGHT & BTONE,
ATTOIRUEY S .A.T T, a
_
UvFFICE U upstairs Pye’s, Opera House
building. Forsyth Ga
70 WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
GEORGIA—Monroe county—"Whereas
petitions ordinary have of been duly filed with the
said county in terms of the
statute in such eases made and provided
by the citizens of Johnston’s, and Oabaniss’
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 the first of
February, etc.”
Thi3 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 tho first
Monday in August next.
Administrators Sale.
B Y virtue of an order rrom the court of
sold Ordinary before of Monroe inForsyth°
the courthouse door
on the first Tuesday in September, 1889*
between the legal hours of sale the Jno!
W. Lake place in Forsyth, bounded north
and east by Central railroad, south bv
street, and west by the Banks and Bice
lots containing U acres more or less.
Sold for purpose of distribution, Terms
half cash, balance Dec. 1st, 1889*
O. H. B. BLOODWOKTH, Adm’r.