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The Monroe Adverti
Official .1 knai. ok Monroe <’o
—TKlt.MH OK HITIWCUMTION—
Per Annum, Cash in Advance - 1.5<
Six Mont 75
fered in fin* Post Office at
Forsyth, <; , a md-clftHs matter.
MUt'I'iik, Mmnhok, A iivk
la rg< iron toll III
Jone Jasper, and ot.icr J- (Mi fit
EDGAR L. ROGERS,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
'1 hank ' Jull"-'! -i\ ' U.'aVTan.’ n^'read^ mS kSt
the pr—m vm.R and I lhr Mm
KA LL TAPE ever done in 1>KY GOODS in BARNESVILLE. 1 have
two large store room pa. full of all 1 1 10 latest novelties, in every line,
and being content at all times with short profits 1 intend to make the next
six months ; un era of unprecedented low prices.
CLOTHING.
v Q (*<
— !!(' I othii Besides this 1 have a full stock of medium and low priced
;ood so if on want a suit 1 am more than sure I cun suit you.
DRESS GOODS.
I urn prepared to eater to the taste of the most fastideous in all styles,
and prices, >n 1 >r< <;< sis and Trimming. The markets are full of some
very rare beautie 1 his season, and relying on rny past trade, I have been
bold eiiotnrli in bur the largest assortment I have ever had.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
My car load ot bargain Boots and Shoes places me in front and has
made competitors shudder. I can give you Shoes from 25 cents to 87.00,
and pledge a saving of 25 per cent, on every pair.
An to, Hats, ('ups, Gents Furnishings, Flannels, Ticknoys, Table Linen,
Jeans, Gas-itneres, Notions, Trunks, Valises, Umbrellas etc. 1 will offer at
prieos that will soil them to cyon a customer who is only looking around.
DOMESTIC GOODS.
All Domestics :it strictly 7 factory prices and all best brands of Calico at
G cents Alter September 15th I will sell all goods at close margin for
cash. Yours truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS *
N. B Messrs. J, F. Howard, U. A. Collier and Edgar Cook are with me
and invito their friends to call.
Hi .£i aj®
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A ’—iH rr."- : . . -A
- THE OL^D RELIABLE
T^v I ) F\ I ) A 1 m I n ' "l TIT I IVI 'h—n ij -ir Bj —1 vr-N 1 'SPn I ^ tti lj JT'v 13
f\ L\ I a I I J . I I \j r j I I P
X mix JL T JLA JL J—J i JLJ I JL/ J_J 1. l»
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■ AYTvfD C(YNDEj]N S-HjRq
Daniel Pratt Gin Co
PRATTVILLE, ALABAMA.
It Will be to Your Interest to Write to or Gall on
S. H. GRISWOLD. GramUam.
Price’s Warehouse, Fourth Street, MACON, GA.
1,000 These Gins Said in 1888.
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
--MAM' F A OT U B E US O F
Doors, Sash. Blinds. Matels, Mouldings, Balusters
NEWELS. WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
-IDecilerc ixv
Lumber, Shingles, Laths, and Brick. Also,
Contractors and Builders.
We now have our Factory in operation and will be glad to sec all wanting Building
Material and give prices. W o fool confident wo can please both in price and quality ot
our work. Call before making votir purchases and get prices.
F.U'TOBY Utth ST UK FT. OPPOSITE COTTON FACTORY. OFFICE PLAN¬
TERS' WARE HOUSE. GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
N. K. 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!
Ifc-dla.xi.vLfa.cIru.rers ancl ToTctoers cf
Steam Buenos, Boilers, SAW MILLS, Cotton Presses,
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
---Solo Owner and Manufacturers of-
Schofield's Famous COTTON PRESS!
-To Back by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam-
BRASS GOODS. PIPE FITTINGS. LUBRICATORS, BELTING,PACKING,SAWS. ETC.
--General Agent for-
HANCOCK INSPIR ATORS AND GULLETT’S MAGNOLIA COTTON GIN
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
M AGON, GEORGIA
Barnesville Planing Mils.
TURNER & PROUT, Proprietors,
BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA.
lla- Ihh* n thoroughly renovated and and equipped with the Mu.-t Approved Machinery,
L prepared to fill all orders for
DOORS, SASH, BL1DNS J
-MOULDING, OK ANY CLASS OF
BUILDING MATERIAL
At as short notice ami of as good material aud workmanship as is to be found in the
. South. We are now making a specialty of the best
FRUIT CRATES
For PEACHES and SMALL FKFITS in the market. Y'our orders and patronag
respectfully solicited, TURNER & PROUT, Barnesville, Ga.
t \ A fi ADVERTISER
mT U MONK 1 \ ^
' “T 'll Mi m >
ji__L. l JL a
J m ■ , iiK'aeSK HR
VOL XXXIV
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 17. 1889.
alliance store !
(O)
The Monroe Farmers Alliance Store is
HOW OpCll foi* bllsillCSS aiicl will kCCJ) COll
STtinilJ , .1 , lltllld j
Oil a
GENERAL MERCHANDIZE
Stock ’ comprising everything needed by
F armors.
Fhe trading public invited to inspect our
stock T. J. CHEYES, Supt.
TWICE SHOT.
THOUGH BADI.Y MOUNDED HU
nknt cohhandh to him
REGIMENT.
The Wounding of Kepre«rtutiue John
T. Crowder, of Tlourov, nt Shlirpi
burg, no Told by nn Miyc
WitnruN— X Display
of Remarkable
Courage.
Brunswick Daily Times.
There is no man in Georgia who
has been brought more prominently
before tho people recently than Hon.
John T. Crowder, of Monroe county,
the author ot the bill pensioning the
wounded soldiers of tho state, 011
account of which the veterans re¬
cently' presented him with a band
some watch and chain as a token of
their appreciation of bis efforts in
their behalf.
Mr. Crowder is an old soldier him¬
self. All during the time from GO to
Ga when men’s souls were tried and
their courago was tested he was at
the front, where the smoke of battle
was thickest and the shells and balls
fell fastest, and lie knows what it
was to have faced the enemy and felt
a stinging bullet pushing its way
into tho flesh. He was soriously
wounded at the battle of Sharpsburg,
ami for a long while he lay in the
hospital. Many were the times that
it seemed as if all hopes of his re
covcry were blasted and quite a
struggle did he have
between like and death.
A prominent physician of this city
was in the same command with Mr.
Crowder and yesterday he told a
Times reporter the story 7 ot how that
gentleman was wounded. This will
bo interesting reading because of
the promiuenco tb^t h^ . 1*011 an
t!ie mvsmVtati'oT of the watch.
-it was Aui^Lall a bright,
* ingin nature seemed to
ar. 1 mated and brightened and
moio cheerful than usual, and old
Sol rose in glistening splendor over
the tall mountains in the distant
east,” said Dr. J. A. Bntfc, t’.VS p'.iy -
sician in question.
“All was calm, and there was lit¬
tle that indicated that a great battle
was soon to take place, save the fact
that the hills and valleys around
were filled with Confederate soldiers.
Some gathered around their tents
eating their scanty breakfast, while
others lay on the ground, or walked
about, telling yarns or dreaming
some sweet dream of the loved ones
at home. Tkeylittjj? thought of the
buttle that was soon to take place.
Just across a little creek was the
camp of the blue coats and they too
seemed unmindful of the dread¬
ful fight that was then being plan¬
ned.
“Presently there sounded the
crack, crack of musketry. It was
along the picket lines and was the
first warning of what was to come.
Then followed *
THE COMMAND TO EORM,
and in less' time than it takes to tell
it the two armies were advancing
toward each other. Then came the
boom of a cannon from the Confed¬
erate side. This was answered by a
volley from the Union ranks and the
battle had begun. of the
Mr. Crowder was colonel
Thirty-first Georgia, and I was then
lieutenant of a company, but at the
end of that battle was made surgeon.
Our regiment was the first on the
extreme east of the Confederate line.
There it seemed that the fight was
the hottest. Amid the hailstorm of
bullets, shells and minnie balls Col¬
onel Crowder was always at the
head of his regiment, and many is
the time that he raised his sword
aloft that day and called out ‘onward,
boys, we can’t afford to give up this
line!’ He had taken his position
near the colors of Phe regiment when
a'shell from the enemy-’s suns struck
him ih the breast. Then a minnie
ball came whizzing through the air,
striking him in the abdomen. Both
the wounds were serious, and as the
colonel fell to the ground he called
out, ‘Take me off,
so 1 won’t be struck by shells!’
“Hearing his call, Sergeant Sutton
and myself took him and placed him
behind a large rock which lay- near
by. When we put him down he
said, ‘Boys, don't let me be left here,
1 don’t want to fall into the hands
of the enemy.’ We then carried
him down a ravine to a little church
beyond the Potomac. I did all that
I could toward dressing his wounds,
but with the lack of the proper ran
; | terial the work was poorly growing done at
best, and the colonel was
very weak from the loss of blood
when an ambulance came along and
carried him to the hospital. There
he struggled for a long time, just
between life and death, but his
wounds were at last healed and he
was restored to -ds country-, which
sorely needed his services.
1 never saw a man more brave and
courageous in time of danger than
ho and, as he lay in that old church
with two ghastly wounds in his body,
either of which might have producod
death, he talked as calmly about
what was going on and gave com¬
mands that were to be conveyed to his
regiment with as much coolness and
judgement as if he had not been in
jured at all. 1 was even more inti¬
mately connected with him after
that occurrence than before, and 1
came to know him well. He is one
of Georgia’s best and truest sffns,
wise in time of peace, and brave
when the smoke of battle would
cause stronger men than you or 1 to
tremble. In him the people of
Monroe have an able legislator, and
it is as little as they can do to let
him retain his seat in the general
assembly as long as he desires. My
story may bo a little long, but it is
only a fit memorial to Mr. Crowder’s
extraordinary courage.
A True Tonic.
When you don’t feel well and
hardly know what ails you, give B.
B. 13. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) a
trial. It is a fine tonic,
T. O. Callahan, Charlotte, N. C.,
writes: “B. B. B. is a fine tonic,
and lias done me great good.”
L. W. Thompson, Damascus, Ga.,
writes: “I believe B. B. 13. is the
best blood purifier made. It has
greatly improved my general
health.”
An old gentlemen writes: “B. B.
13. gives me new life and new
strength. If there is anything that
will make an old man young, it is
L L L
Shepherd, .Norfolk, Va.,
August 10th, 1888, writes: “I de
P en< l 011 13. 13. for the preservation
n H Leal Lb. 1 have had it in. my
family’now nearly two years, and in all
that Ume have oot had t o have a
Tho*. Paulk, Alapaha, Ga., writes: *
suffered terribly from dyspepsia.
^he .use of B. 13. B. has made me
eel like a new man. 1 would not
take a thousand dollars for t
it has done me.
Cheshire, Atlanta, Ga.,
writes: 1 had a long spell of
tvphoid fever, which at last seemed
to settle in my 7 right leg, which swell
ed up enormously 7 . An ulcer also ap
peared which discharged a cup full
of matter a day. y then gave 13. B.
B. a trial and it cured me.”
Seme White Slave**.
New York Herald.
These three phases of experience
in the coal regions of Pennsylvania
have been noted.
First—The miners are continually
on strike because, they say 7 , their
wages are just high enough to enable
them to starve to death with prompt¬
ness and dispatch. The truth is
that if the condition of these miners
were to be described by’ the graphic
pen of Howells the whole people
would cry’ in unison, “Impossible I”
But it is possible, nevertheless, and
the tragedy is being enacted not in
Dahomey, but in the “land of the
free and the home of the brave.”
Second—The owners of the mines
solemnly affirm that they are mak¬
ing no profit whatever. They amass
large fortunes, all the same, and
their representatives meet every au¬
tumn weep copious tears over the
cost of production, “wipe their eyes
with the public,” and the decree
that every 7 poor man 111 the country
shall pay a dollar more a ton during
the winter months. Why these coal
barons suffer so much from pinching
want that they- can have one special
ear, only 7 one steam yacht, only six¬
teen or twenty- thoroughbreds, and
other things in the same economical
proportion. The great American
heart bleeds for them.
Third—The consumers of coal
complain that the price is so high
that laboring classes are compelled
to spare something from their fru¬
gal meal in order to keep the room
warm—and that is a fact. The dis¬
tress in New York in a cold spell is
something to stir the pity and sym¬
pathy of the charitable.
That is the situation. The miner
is the angle worm on the hook, the
mine owner is the bold fisherman
who grumbles at his luck. But he
catches the fish which is the wage
earner, all the same, slaps him into
his frying pan aud makes a good
meal of him.
A Woman’s Discovery.
“Another wonderful discovery has
been made and that too by a lady
in this couuty-. Disease fastened its
clutches upon her and for seven
years she withstood its severest tests,
but her vital organs were under¬
mined and death seemed imminent.
For three months she coughed in¬
cessantly and could not sleep. She
bought of us a bottle ot Dr. King’s
New discovery for Consumption and
was 60 much relieved on taking first
dose that she slept all night and with
one bottle has been miraculously*
cured. Her name is Mrs.
Luz." Thus writes W. C.
& Co., of Shelby’, K. C.—Get a free
trial bottle at any- Drug Store.
T»CE GRAND AR.TIV & PENSIONS.
PI fladelphia Times.
While there was large element of
patriotic conversation in the recent
encampment of the grand array at
Milwaukee, Tannerism dominated
thi in^Its single proceedings exception throughout, of demanding with
a
thorough investigation of Tanner’s
aeinimstration of his office, and that
dqj&and was lllogically preceded by
ar unqualified indorsement of him.
Tie record of the grand army on
Cf mmissioner Tanner is—first, he is
hi nest and right; second, thorough
inquiry- should bo made to ascertain
waether ho is honest and right.
The official deliverance made by
the encampment on pensions is most
unfortunate for the grand army and
Mr the cause of meritorious pension¬
ers. The declaration is as follows:
.Itesolved, That the action of the
twenty-second national encampment
u]»n the subject of necessary pen -,
fiion legislation by congress is here¬
by reaffirmed, and the pension com¬
mittee is hereby instructed to pur¬
sue all proper means to secure leg¬
islation in accordance with such
policy.
The foregoing resolution calls for
the passage of the disability bill and
also for a per diem service bill to all
who served in the army. The disa¬
bility bill would cost over one thou*
sand millions to execute it, and it
would bankrupt the national treasu¬
ry the first year it went into opera¬
tion. It is a much more costly bill
than the one vetoed by president
Cleveland; and if it were enacted
with a universal service such as is
demanded by the highest authority
of the grand army, tlie taxes of the
people would have to be increased
fully twenty-five per cent, to save
the treasury from bankruptcy, it
requires an additional one hundred
millions annually to execute these
two laws for at least three years
after they went into operation, as
they would carry arrears with them
ir most if not all cases.
These facts should have been so¬
berly considered by the highest au¬
thority of the grand army before
committing the whole organization
to an utterly impossible policy; and
the supreme tribunal of the grand
army having failed to consider the
magnitude of the question, the hon¬
es'- veterans should take early oc¬
casion to emphasize their hostili¬
ty to the universal pauperism pro¬
posed for the best soldiery of the
eijfe wyrld and to the efforts of inconsid
v.ffce or demagogic leaders to pro
popular'contempt for the vete
rt.ps of the land. They should re
y mbe r that there wa s not a single
Forty, Tcttiy that did not either President broadly Cleve- or
%d’s approve of
veto of the disability bill yav.fi
remember also that Paere is not
T-ogm unity- newspaper in this city
of any party, that now indorses
Tanner or the deliverance of the
grand army should encampment be on pen
sions. It not forgotten
that Philadelphia is the most loyal
city of the Union; that it is more
heartily in sympathy 7 with every 7
true interest of the soldiers than any
other community in the land; and
when there cannot be found a single
prominent newspaper in loy r al Phil¬
adelphia to come to the defense of
Commissioner Tanner and the pens
sipn demand of the grand army,
where can there bo a public senti¬
ment to sustain them ? Without the
support of the intelligent and patri¬
otic judgment of the people, no pen¬
sion sy r stem calling for indefinite
scoi’es of millions annually’ can be
sustained. Arc these facts not worth
the soberest consideration of all true
veterans?
Especially should every veteran
who lias a wife or mother or sister
or daughter rise up and demand the
prompt dismissal of Commissioner
Tanner for his flagrant insult to the
wives and widows of our soldiers in
his mad. zeal for pension profligacy
in the Milwaukee encampment, it
is creditable to the encampment that
Tanner was hissed down, his propo¬
sition defeated and the whole pro¬
ceedings finally 7 expunged from the
records; but when the bewilder¬
ing pension profligacy 7 of Tanner
proposes to pauperize tho wives of
soldiers to protect their virtue, and
welcome dishonorably’ discharged
soldiers, skulkers, bounty’-jumpers
and army bummers as pensioners on
equality with the honored heroes of
the republic, it is time to efface Tan¬
nerism from the pension department
and from the councils of the grand
army.
The people of the nation will glad¬
ly 7 give reasonable pensions to every
honest soldier who is in need of sup¬
port, and any amendment of the
pension laws to embrace all such
soldiers would be approved by all;
but pensions to dishonorably dis¬
charged soldiers, to deserters, to
skulkers, bounty-jumpers and doub¬
le pensions with large arrears to fa¬
vorites will not be sustained by the
people, and the people will revolu¬
tionize the whole pension system if
necessary to halt such infamous
•proflgacy. We appeal to the true
soldier of the country 7 to protect
themselves and their wives and the
love the nation cherishes for them by
promptly crashing out the last ves¬
tige of Tannerism from the pensions
system of the government.
The Pridr ot Woman.
A clear pearly and transparent
skin all is always a sign of pure blood,
and 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. I Try it, and if satisfaction
is not giren it will cost yxra nothing.
It is fuliV warranted,
B. D. Smith, Druggist.
OUR STOCK
OF
DRY GOODS, HATS,
SHOES AND NOTIONS
IS ARRIVING AND IS COMPLETE.
FULL STOCK OF GROCERIES
ALWAYS ON HAND.
jgffi^Prices LOWER Than Evcr.^jm
YOUR TRADE MOST RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.
Money on Accounts Thankfully Received.
J. H. HUDDLESTON & BRO.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
OPTIMISTIC.
News and Advertiser.
There is no shadow that there
must bo sunshine, no night but
there is a day 7 , and the pessimistic
view that the world is growing from
bad to worse has no lodgment in
our hearts. We know that there is
evil but its antitheris, good makes it
appear so dark and foreboding.
The selfishness of mankind is
more apparent to-day than centuries
ago; lor the Christian lives that now
brighten the world, reveal its ugly
form just as the sunbeam that
throws a streak of lignt into a dark
room discloses tho motes that float
in the air.
There is sin in high and low
places but it is looked upon with
much less toleration than when the
world was lost in the darkness of
sin, before the love of God was shed
abroad in the hearts of men, and
when all hearts were wicked and
deceitful.
Tkero is a new dispensation of
hope, a hope that is bngseci 'Upon
1 ./righto ■; •yxpoctaV’itrns than those
that cheered the inhabitants ot the
ancient world. Its influence is
feltm the beautiful lives that illus
ti’ate its gladdeuing power, it is seen
in the Christian charity that tells us
that all is not sordid and selfish, it
is seen in tho tenderness of the
brotherly love that lights up
this “vale of tears” with a reflec¬
tion of the glory of Heaven, its home.
Human nature is softening under
the benign influence of such eviden¬
ces of Christianity, and hearts that
were desperatety 7 wicked have be¬
come gardens in which the Christian
graces have bloomed with a vigor
and freshness that inspired others
with the desire to have such a fra¬
grance. in life, but
There are crosses with¬
out the cross there is no crown,
without trials there could be no tri¬
umphs. It was an inspiration in the
mind of the poet who said that he
did not sorrow over the fact that
every rose had its thorn, out rejoiced
the rather that the thorn was crown¬
ed with a rose. Thus it is life’s ex¬
periences—there may for not-be a flow¬
er of realization every bud of
promise, but disappointments only
render sweeter the full and ultimate
realization. The brightest vales are
reached through the most rugged
ways over rough and rocky 7 paths,
but the journey’ is forgotten in the
sweet enjoyment into which they
lead.
The -world is brighter and better
than most of us take it. We are too
prone to look upon the dark side,
torgefting that every landscape has
its lights as well as shadows.
Let us be brighter and better, and
the world will appear bright and
better, for it takes coloring from the
light in which we view it.
Mrs. E. Slattery, of Delhi, La.,
says her son, 14 years of age had a
dreadful time with ulcers, sores and
blotches which followed chicken
pox. After using many remedies
without benefit, she gave him
Swift’s Specific, which cured him
sound and well.
We have sold S. S. S. since the
first day we commenced the drug
business, and have heard some won
derful reports of its effects. Many
use it with best results to cleanse
malaria from the system, and for
blood poison, scrofula and such dis¬
eases it is without a rival
COLDERFIELD & Co.,
Monroe, La„
Mr. W. A. Tibbs i3 a printer in
the office of the Jackson, Miss.,
Clarion-Ledger. He says that three
years ago he was a victim of bad
blood which deprived him of health
and threatened serious consequences
■^■ e further says that he took S. S. S.,
anc * ^ eure d him.
1 have been subject to painful boils
auc l carbuncles over my body during
the spring season, and after much
suffering and much useless doctoring
1 found a permanent cure in Swift’s
Specific. It is the monarch of blood
medicines. £. J. Willis
Augusta, Ark.
-
Try Lamar’s Diahrhoea Mixture
and your Dysentery will be stopped.
NUMBER 36.
Thnt “Tired Feeling.’ ’
The newspapers are having a good
deal of fun nowadays over that
“tired feeling” so much spoken of in
medical advertisements, in connec¬
tion with the ill health of females.
It may be a source of hilarity to
witty 7 paragraphers but not so to
suffering women, who by 7 overwork
and a disregard of the laws of health
have lapsed into a condition border¬
ing on invaladism. What most
women need is to be relieved of some
of the slavish work that is piled on
them, and a free but judicious use of
strengthening tonics, snch as P. P. P.,
(Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and Potas¬
sium), tho greatest blood purifier
and invigorater in use. Superb as
a builder up of woman, bringing
back lost energy to the body 7 , and
color to faded cheeks restoring, the
appetite and thus renowing in her
that healthy vitality long lost. P.
P. I\ cures all blood diseases, such
as Rheumatism, Syphilis,, Gout,
Scrofula and all Ulcerous affections,
'oveli van ini flung 7 that melancholly
enemy 7 of man
Por sale by Alexander & Son.
--*•«
THE IIAIJ. BESOMTIONS.
Which Arc Hpeeial Order iu the House
of Representative To-day.
The Hall resolutions form the
special order in the House to-day.
These resolutions bear, it will be
seen, upon tho settlement of the bet¬
terment question—one of the most
important before the legislature—
and as such will be read by every¬
body.
Tho resolutions read:
Whereas, It is alleged by those
who now control tho Western and
Atlantic railroad that they have cer¬
tain claims against the state, grow¬
ing Whereas, out of the lease ol said road and,
They allege a wish and
willingness to adjust the same and,
Whereas, Neither the validity of
said claims nor the duty of the state to
allow the same or make any settle¬
ment thereof is admitted, but,
Whereas, It can work no harm to
receive from said parties an authori¬
tative statement of their claims and
their proposed settlement thereof,
therefore, be it
Besolved, That a joint committee
of five-from the senate and nine from
the house bo appointed to confer
with the said parties and ascertain,
1. What claims do they 7 make
against the state and tho basis there
Of?
2 What settlement thereof, if any
do they propose?
Besolved, second, That said com
mitto is only’ appointed to receive
said statement of claims and propos¬
ed settlement, and has no authority
even by implication to bind this leg¬
islature in any jnanner whatever.
They shall report the whole of their
action to this legislature as soon as
possible.
Spartanburg to .Baltimore.
What a Spartanburg physician
has to say- in praise of Westmore¬
land's Calisaya Tonic:
“I am delighted with the benefit I
have derived from taking Calisaya
Tonic. I consider it an excellent
1 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 dy-speptie for years, receiving
no relief from the best medical at¬
tendance or the numerously 7 adver¬
tised “patent medicines,” I tried
y-our “Calisay’a Tonic” which I con¬
sider the best preperation before the
public, having given me instant re¬
lief after y’ears of suffering
Yours truly-,
Oliver P . Merryman.
For sale by Alexander & Son.
Why in It.
That people linger along always
complaing about that continual tired
feeling? One bottle of BEGGS’
BLOOD PURIFIER and BLOOD
MAKER will entirely 7 remove
feeling, give them a good
and regulatr digestion.
B. I). Smith, Druggist.
JOB PRINTING
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads,
Note Heads,
Cards, Letter Heads,
Envelopes, Dodgers Statements, Circulars,
Or Programmes, kind of Hand Job Printing Bills,
any other
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
Monroe Advertiser.
am
W C R P YAL KHWf Jk ^
Kg
m
zz>
* 4 KI N c
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Tiffs powder '1
pur’-V>, •--■' -ogtfi and wholesomeness. Mora
t-r noiiiical than the ordinary kinds, and
I cannot he sold in competition with the mul¬
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. Sold only in can*
Royal Baking Powder Co., 106 Wall
street, New York.
SHERIFF’S SALES FOR OCTOBER.
-VITILL he sold before the court house
YY ia the town of Forsyth on the first
Tuesday in October next, between the
legal hours of sale, the following property
to-wit:
Three-fourths (f) of an acre of land moro
or less, situated just outside the corporate
limits of the city of Forsyth, bounded north
by Violet Jordan, east by public road
leading from Forsyth to Cabaniss, south and
west by lands of B. S. Willingham. Levied
on as the property of Win. Phillips to sat¬
isfy a fi fa issued from the J ustice court of
the 480 District G, M. in favor of B. S.
Willingham vs. Wrn. Pillips. Levy made
by G. W. Green, L. C
Also at the same time and place, one
house and lot situated on the corporate
boundary line of the city of Forsyth con¬
taining throe acres more or less adjoining
the lands of li. P. Brooks, A. H. Sneed
estate and known as the Wade place.
Levied on as the property of Jane Wade
to satisfy a cost fi fa issued from the Or¬
dinary court of Monroe county, in favor of
J. T. McGinty vs. Jane Wade.
G. A. KING, Sheriff.
Sept. 2nd, 1880.
Attention District Road Commissioners
r 1 TIIE attention of the Load Commis
sioners in the various districts of the
county are hereby called to the condition
of the public roads in their respective
districts. And said commissioners aro
hereby directed to see that said public
roads are put and kept in good condition,
as the laws bearing on the same will be
enforced. J. F. CHILDS,
JNO. A. DANIELLY.
W. T. LAWSON,
Commis. Roads and Rev.
AI>g. 27, 1 889. Monroe County.
PIANOS
---- 9
MONEY SAVED BUYERS
ORGANS®
300 To P> ANOS be Close AN Out D ORGANS Before ♦ ♦
■ — o Removal*
Special Prices as an Inducement •
logue and circulars for the asking. Address
PHILLIPS & CREW, Established,86S' ATLANTA, 8A
LIPPMAN'S \ L
PYRAME f\SUf\ECllf\E
CHILLS 8iFEVfeR FOflJ nr
\ DUMB *\QUE /\ND J
L
NOTICE.
hibit the sale of clttZm tho mS feed
county of Monroe, or any district
and