Newspaper Page Text
The Monroe Adv* IRT1SER,
Official Journal of Monroe Co.
—TERMS OF 8UB8C JU ITION
J’or Annum, Cash in Advance 1.50
Six Months, “ « « 75
Forsyth, Registered in the I‘out OlVkuat
(Ja. f an second-claw* matter.
Dkxr'l'nr. Monroe Advertiser lias a
largo circulation in Monroe, Butts,
Jones, Jasper. and other counties.
VOL XXXIV
EDGAR L. ROGERS,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
Tlinnkin all my friend* and c» tomors, for their very liberal patronage
the present year, and I wish I ay that 1 am now ready for the BIGGEST
FALL TALK ever don in DRY GOODS in BARNESVILLE. I have
two large store room packed full of all the lateHt novelties, in every line,
and being con ton l at all t * with short profits 1 intend to make the next
six months; an era of uni edentod low pricOH.
CLOTHING.
Clothing is now, and has always I sen my pot hobby. I have the exclu
sivo control of VOORJi KKS, M ILLER A RUPEE'S al HO STOUSE& BROS.
fine Clothing. Besides tbi* 1 have a full stock of dium arul low priced
good*, so if you want a wait I am more than sure 1 can suit you.
DRESS GOODS.
I am prepared to cater to the tu*te of the most fhstideous in all styles,
and prices, in l)r i; •ooc Is and Trimming. The markets are full of some
very rare beaulii hi iea n, and relying on my past trade, I have been
bold enough to buy t • largest assortment f have ever had.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
My car load of bargain Bools and Shoes places me in front and has
made competitors shudder. 1 can give you Shoes from 25 cents to §7.00,
and pledge a saving of 25 per cent, on every pair.
A* to, Hats, (taps, (lent.* Furnishings, Flannels, Tickneys, Table Linen,
Jeans, Gas-i in ere*, Notions, Trunks, Valises, Umbrellas etc. I will offer at
price* that will sell them to oyen a customer who is only looking around.
DOMESTIC GOODS.
All Domestics at strictly factory prices and all best brands of Calico at
6 cents. After September 15th I will sell all goods at close margin for
cash. Yours truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS t
N. B.—M J. i\ Howard, L. A. Collier and Edgar Cook arc with me
and invite their friends to call
FRICK & CO.
7i ECLIPSE, CORLISS
AND —
I ■ llini '• <r v .‘^.
Automatic Stationary
| ENGINES,
Boilers Saw Mills, Pratt
Gins, Seed Cotton Eleva¬
tors, Cane Mills, Wood |e$
Working Machinery, (Shaft¬
ing, Etc. Gins from $2.25 gV
to 2.50 Per Saw. ij M inify
MALSBY & AVERY c mm
Southern A!txiiagcni,
RJ, Smith Forsyth St., ATLANTA. Cl \ -JV.*
>.S A III.IHII l> ’ 8(10,
Hiiurm.T 1883.
R C. WILDER’S SONS.
BUILDERS, CONTRACTORS AND MANUFACTURERS OF SASH, DOORS, BLINDS
MOULDINGS, ETC.
Our purpose is li) keep u full line of >o:ls in>odcd in House Building, Builders, Hard
waiv. Hanson'. Painter.-’Suppli.s, Glass Putty. Pure White Lend and bi.st Linseed Oil; also,
“Town and Country" Mixed Paints, guaranteed to be equal to any made. Our
inaelduery rough i.- all new and the latest improved. We guarantee satisfaction. Full supply
ol and dressed I,umber, Shingles and Laths always on hand, at the lowest market
U. t\ \V 11J) K It’S HONS, (il l and 022 Third Street, Macon, Ga.
A YCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
-M AN UFACTU REUS OF
Doors, Sash, Blinds, Matels, Mouldings, Balusters '
NEWELS, WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
■ZDealers in.
Lumber, Shingles, Laths, and Brick. Also
Contractors and Builders.
Wo now; luivo our Factory in operation and will be glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices • V e feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
our work. ('all before making your purchases and get pric es
FACTORY 13th STREET. OPPOSITE COTTON FACTORY. OFFICE PLAN¬
TERS’ WARE 1101’SB. GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
N. 1$.—.Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machij.cs and will not break
bs'se. thus preventing the unsightly appearance tliat most others do.
Schofield’s Iron Works!
2v£an-cLfa,ctvirer» and. T’c’bToers cf
Steam Emilies, Boilers, SAW MILLS, Cotton Presses,
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
-Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
I'o Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
BRASS GOODS, PIPE FITTINGS. LUBRICATORS, BELTING. PACKING, SAWS. ET0.
--General Agent for
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT'S MAGNOLIA COTTON GIN
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
M.UXLN, GEORGIA
Barnesville Planing Ms
TURNER & PR0UT, Proprietors.
BA RNESVILLE, GEORGIA.
Has be on thoroughly renovated and equipped with the Most Approved Machinerv
and i- prepared t<> fill ail e: lor* for ‘
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS
-MOULDING. OR ANY CLASS OF-
1=>U T"iTTTT 1 L TNTIVTO O 1 JN Or w JVL yr Al A r T^ T—' T~^ T I AL a
At ha short notice and of as good material and workmanship as is to be found In the
South. We are now making a specialty of the best
FRUIT CRATES
For PEACHES and SMALL Flil IT»S in the market. Your orders and patro
respectfully solicited. TURNKH& PROCT, Barnesville,Ga. ^
m u iTt MONROE ADVERTISES.
n Ph
9 t
■
.
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 8. 1889.
alliance store !
(°)
The Monroe Farmers Alliance Store ii
now open for business and will keep eon
s
standv on hand a V 4
GENERAL MERCHANDIZE 3:
Stock, comprising everything needed by
Farmers.
rhe trading public invited to inspect our
stock T. J. CIIEYES, Supt.
IN ( OM)iUDO’S CANYONS
Southern Kiiilron.l IlauN Trip Through
Hi* Itig .Timing Stal*.
Road master C. FI Marvin of the
Central railroad, who attended the
Road masters annual convention at
Denver, Col., during the early part
of the month, was impressed with
the during engineering of the west.
The railroads gave the roadmasters
excursions over nearly every portion
of the slate, and the roads vied with
each other in making the trip a
pleasant arid profitable one for the
visitors. There were three sections
of the trains on nearly all of tho
excursions.
The traveling was novel. A train,
in order to make a sharp grade
would oftentimes run several miles
beyond the incline and forming a
circle, come back and crossing the
track go up the grade. This is done
to give the locomative and train the
velocity to climb the grade. On
some roads tho trains run along in
a straight line tor a considerable
distance, and then suddenly climf a
grade, and seem to he moving in the
direction from which they had just
came. They are then running oy a
ledge overhanging the other portion
of the road, and the other section of
the train could bo seen dashing
along down the grade, just under the
forward section. The curves in
mony places arc so sharp that in
passing cl ills or knobs, the locomo¬
tive and front portion of tho train
is hidden from the rear portion, and
the train lias made a horse shoe.
In crossing a chasm the track is
built close on the brink of it, and
running puralel with it until a bridge
is reached, when the train crosses
and runs back up the other side ^ of
Tire prooaLf pom
opposite that where the track touch¬
ed the other side of the chasm. Then
the track turns. While the first
train ran along on one side of the
chasm, the other two sections were
following in an opposite direction.
Mr. Marvin said that the trgck in
one place on one of the largest roads
in Colorado is suspended directly
over a large creek. The hanks on
either side of the stream are very
steep, so that by bracing from either
side of the stream a bridge was
formed which dispensed with having
to run up one side of the stream
probably to a return of the other.
For several miles tho train ran along
over the creek.
Mr. Marvin sain that the country
in many places is very barren, and
the only means of livelihood appa¬
rent is mining. The mountains rise
up all over the country as sterile
and unfruitful as a rock, hut in
almost every available spot on the
sides of it are mines, of either gold
or silver. The scenery, the road
master said, id simply indescribable.
A mountain rises up, apparentljq a
few hundred yards from you, and is
seemingly not more than as many
hundred yards high, when, in fact,
it is many miles from you, and the
top of it is id the cloud
Mr. Marvin said that he went up
on a mountain which towered in the
clouds. \\ bile lie was among tho
clouds he seemed to be in a heavy
fog, and the moment lie got below
them everything was perfectly could fair.
Just above, the clouds he seen.
Air. Marvin said that nearly every
temperature was experienced while
in Colorado. In some places over¬
coats had to he worn, and in other
sections it was very warm. In some
places it was snowing and in others
tho thermometer registered 90°. • On
some of the mountain tops it was
suowimr ail the time, and on the top
of other mountains equally as high
the sun seemed to he pouring down,
and it was hot as in the south. Air.
Marvin said that to a person who
has lived always in the south the
distance of objects cannot be even
intelligently determined, and no idea
of size can be arrived at.—Ex.
-.#•-
A Jail Helivery.
A considerable excitement pro
vailed on the streets yesterday
through a widely circulated report
that three of the most desperate
prisoners in the jail had broken out.
Careful investigation discovered that,
absurdly enough, the rumor had
some foundation, but not exactly in
accordance with the facts.
prisoners had broken out with
Scrofulous limbs—but eruptions on the
neck aud the
i ca ^ed in prescribed P. P. P.
I ly Ash, Poke Boot and
the renowued vegetable blood
tier and there is no doubt
that the patients will soon
| Rheumatism, Gout. Syphilis.
ula. Malarial poison and all
I toms of impure blood are
removed by P. P. P-, and as a
• and simple restorative it is
ground daily. Alexander & Son.
For sale by
It goes right to the “spot,”
an old man, who Volcanic was rubbing in
J. H. McLean’s Oil
ment to relieve rh A mat ism.
TARE ON COTTON.
The Augusta Evening News con¬
tains the following very sensible ed¬
itorial on the question of the tare on
cotton.
The question of taro on cotton i$
still giving trouble. Some of the
exchanges in tho country notably
Alemphis, are protesting against the
proposed plan adopted by the New
Orleans convention which declared
in selling cotton by its net weight,
allowing a tare of twenty-four pounds
for jute covering and sixteen for cot
should ton covering. Why the exchanges’
protest, when the
tive cotton men all over the country
have agreed that such a plan would
bo fair and equitable for both
of covering, we cannot explain unless
objection be made simply to a change ^
iu an old custom.
Tho farmers on the other hand,
declare that they are satisfied with
the proposed arrangement, and the
Alliancemen back it up by the decla
ration that they will not send their
cotton to any city whoso ex
change does not, agree to the
terms or resolutions of the seems* New ;
Orleans convention. This
to settle the question in com- 1
munilies largely influenced hv the
farmers’ Alliances, and it will have
weight all over the country.
In any event the first of October
will see some big changes in the cot
ton markets and in the cotton world.
The resolution is proposed for inaug
n ratio ii that day, and tho Augusta
exchange is in session this
to decide on Augusta’s action in the
premises. As this city has been fa
vorable all along to cotton bagging,
and as our representative presided
over the New Orleans
J. b f u , '3 h aufeufct
ta’s pesition arid as to the decision of
the exchange meeting this afternoon.
There will of course be some trouble
and some tears about the change in
the start, but it will be adjusted in
good time, and Augusta’s cotton ex¬
perts and accountants will soon drop
into the new custom, and have no
difficulty in arranging and figuring
the difference in the old and new
tares.
The advocates of the old custom
have Liverpool to back them in their
protest against a change, but they
should remember that Liverpool is
more selfish than sensible in its arbi¬
trary and unaccommodating deter¬
mination ; and tho protestants and
the great cotton houses of Liverpool
wilf find that if American Exchan¬
ges unite on the proposed and equit¬
able tare for jute and cotton covering
that the question will he practically
settled-. It can be settled best aud
quickest with the consent and acqui¬
escence of the great English cotton
market, but it can. in fact, be settled
without the aid of Liverpool, if Amer¬
ica will stand firm and exchanges
and farmers hold to their rights.
And if Liverpool does not finally
come under, it will find some other
port will take place as the first and
greatest foreign market in handling
our staple.
--
IIEK HEALTH WAS RUINED.
Her Eife Was One of Pain, But She ts
Now Well ,
Mrs. Alexander Vaughn, wife of
one the most prominent and exten¬
sively known merchants of Prescott,
Ark., writes the following letter
under date of April 22d, 1889.
“I owe the preservation of my
life under Providence to Swift’s Spe¬
cifiers. S. S.) For four years my
health was wretched,ruined—my life,
a life of constant pain and misery
and torture. Food soured on my
stomach, and what I ate to-dav T
would , , vomit ... tomorrow. My ,, sleep
at night was broken with the most
horrible visions in dreams, so much
so that I could not bear to be left
alone; chronic diarrhoea, a painful
cough that threatened me with eon
sumption : my feet and ankles were
twisted out of all proportion, and
my limbs swelled more or less. 1
could not walk except on a level
floor, and then with difficulty, and
for a while could not get in or out
ot bed without assistance.
The pressure of a finger on my
body would leave its impression, and
in short 1 thought 1 had dropsy, iD
addition to my other afflictions.
Two doctors treated me faithfully
during these four years hut did me
no good—the medicines they gave
me were as useless as stagnant water,
My friends thought I would die, suf
fering as I was with such a combina
tion of diseases.
; In 18S» 1 discontinued the use
the medicines 1 hud been heretofore
taking and began to take Swift's
Specific (S. b. S.) five bottles
this truly wonderful medicine was
wlxat worked the miracle of my
plete and permanent recovery.”
Treatise on blood and skin disease
] mailed SWIFT free. SPECIFIC
1 CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
the CONGRESSIONAL
Prog*t«» of «he Work-Tht Fiual Com.
New York Evening Post.
Work on the new congressional
library that building is making strides
with seem marvelous by contrast
what was done, or left undone,
under the old triumvirate manage¬
ment. Gen. Casey, the chief of en
gineers, who is at the head of the
undertaking, has already made his
reputation, but that does not in the
least dampen his enthusiasm. Under
him are the architect, Paul J. Pelz,
who draws the plans and details,
and the supervising engineer, B. it.
Green, who sees that the design of
Mr. Pelz is carried out. Tnanks to
the perfect dicipline of Mr. Green,
the 300 men engaged on the work
move almost as one, wfthout jar or
friction, nobody getting into his
neighbor’s way, and the various
forward parts of the building being pushed
in such an order that all are
continually employed.
Although the law sets the limit of
time for completion at soveu years,
it would not be surprising to see
everything finished at least a year
earlier. The present management
took hold Oct. 4 last, when there was
nothing but a huge hole in the
ground to show for the labors of
their predecessors. To-day three
quarters of the foundations have
been carried up to the level of tho
i ground floor, and by the end of the
season the whole will havo reached
that stage. Contracting for material
November is going forward rapidly, and by
1 it is probable that the
material for all the exterior of the
building will be under contract.
Considerable criticism has been
passed upon the present raan
agement far contracting for
English glazed brick instead of
American. The explanation offered,
however, is that there is nothing
'Dade in America of the kind wanted,
'These brick have an ivory-white
enameled surface, and were chosen
with especial reference to their power
°f reflecting light. They will be
used for the facings of the courts;
J ‘ixd it is expected that, by their aid,
titles of books on tho shelves,
which will run nineteen or twenty
Ret inward from the light, will be
quite easily read by the librarians in
search of them. The bricks chosen
white or nearly white, all the
through, so that if the enamel
becomes broken in places the light
still he reflected from them, and
their artistic effect will not be de
by a revelation of inharmo
nious colors. No American enameled
brick has this white body ; the white
ati H laM sa tiU-aai.
every chipping makes an ugly biotch
on the surface.
The gi’anite which will be used for
facings and for which a §1,200,000
contract has been awarded to a New
Hampshire quarry, is tho lightest
granite, perhaps in the world. It
resembles in tone a white marble,
with the faintost wash of India ink
over it; so that the building will bo,
to all intents, a white one. The
generosity which congress suddenly
manifested when it was finally set¬
tled that Gen. Casey was to handle
the work and funds for the future
has done a great deal for the man¬
agement in this matter of material
contracts. Under the usual rule,
which forbids entering into agree¬
ments involving more than the ac¬
tual appropiiation available, it would
have been impossible to insure the
absolute integrity of the stone work
in tint, because the stone ■procured
under piecemeal contracts might
have come from different quarries.
As it is, however, Gen. Casey is em¬
powered to make his contract for
this important feature quite indepen¬
dently of the regular appropriation,
and congress has bound itself to foot
the bills.
Congi*ess, it will be i-emembered,
chose the §6,000,000 plan when the
final struggle came. As a matter of
fact there will be about 6,5000,000
available, as something like a §500
000 unexpended balance was turned
over by the old management to the
new. It is believed that the expense
will be kept easily within the esti¬
mates, and that there may even be a
saving to x’estore to the treasui’y.
The new libi’ary when finished
will be of a capacity to serve with¬
out change for ninety years, it
would be possible, however, by build¬
ing small additions in the courts to
extend the term to 120 years.
“That” said Architect Pelz, to whom
the question of its practicability was
referred by your correspondent,
“will, in my opinion, never be done.
There hotel, is Probably fixed limit in to a library, its capacity’ as in
a J a
fm . use nlneM . In a hotel
late that tho limit is reached at 500
rooms. When you get beyond that
yen find it unweildy, and the effort
expended in management is not
compensated so“huge bv the returns, while
some part of an affair is like
j |y to be always in trouble, causing
discomfort and iueonvenienc in the
other parts. Possibly, elapsed, when the
ninety years have- if the
books still continue pouring in, it
will be deemed wise to divide them
into special classes and find room for
those classes elsewhere. There
might be, for instance, a scientific
annex and an artistic annex, and so
forth, the main library purposes, and
students of particular topics going
. to the places where the works they
wish to consult can be found. At
j any rate that is something which, I
think after having taken care
three generations, we can afford to
leave posterity to work out for itself.”
" ‘
--
Is giving splendid satisfaction to
| the marvelous, trade and which the sales are be positi > ely ted
can aecou a
lor in no other way except that it
\%ithont h doubt the "best on the mar
ket. Ask for and be sure you
trie genuine. We keep it.
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.
Prices LOWER Than Ever.« a Jpp
YOUR TRADE MOST RESPECTFULLY SOLICITDE
Money on Accounts Thankfully lteeeived.
J. H. HUDDLESTON & BRO.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
Physicians Confess.
All honest concientious physicians
who give B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm) a trial, frankly admits its
superiority oyer all other blood
medicines.
Dr. W. J. Adair, Rockmart Ga.,
writes: “ I regard B. B. B. as one
of the best blood medicines.”
Dr. A. H. JRoseoe, Nashville, Tenn.,
writes; “All reports of B. B. B. arc
favorable, and its speedy actions tru¬
ly wonderful.”
Dr. J. W. Rhodes, Crawfordville,
Ga., writes: “I confess B. B. B. is
the best and quickest medicine for
rheumatism I have ever tried.”
Dr. S. J. Farmer, Crawfordvillo,
Ga., writes: “I cheerfully recom¬
mend B. B. B. as a fine tonic altera¬
tive. Its use cured an excrescence
of the neck after other remedies ef¬
fected no percebtiblo good.”
Dr. C. H. Montgomery, Jackson¬
ville, Ala., writes: “My mother in
Sisii.i Gy Let
rheumatism, as hor case stubbornly
resisted the usual remedies. She
experienced immediate relief and
her improvement has been truly
wonderful.”
A prominent physician who wishes
his name not given, says: “A patient
of mine whose case of tertiary syph¬
ilis was surely killing him, and
which no treatment seemed to check,
was entirely cured with about twelve
bottles of B. B. B. lie was fairly
made up of skin and bones and ter¬
rible ulcers.”
--—
The Woman’s National Industrial
League, which met recently in Wash¬
ington adopted resolutions favoring
the erection of a monument in this
country to Queen Isabella of Spain
in commemoration of the assistance
she rendered Columbus in the dis¬
covery of America. In the preamble
and resolutions the following occurs :
“Two million two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars have been expended
in Washington for monuments and
statues, but not one dollar to perpet¬
uate the memory of the discoverer of
America, Christopher Colum bus. To
Baltimore alone is the credit due in
x-ecognition of a statute to Christo¬
pher Columbus, and that through
donations of private individuals.
Monuments and statues have been
erected at fabulous sums to warriors
and statesmen in the capital of the
western world. Four hundred years
haye rolled into the lap of ages since
the discovery numbers of our great 65,000,000 country.
Our nation of
people, but to our shame no monu¬
ment records the virtue or blessings
which women have shown and con¬
ferred upon man. The only mention
of the great queen is found in the
sirnpel history read by our youth in
schools, in the capital of the west¬
ern world her generosity aided the
discoveror—woman gave her bright¬
est jewels to man, and her kindness,
sympathy and devotion are the cor¬
ner-stone upon which is erected the
greatest and most progressive nation
in the history ot ancient or modern
times.”
LEAVENING POWER
Of the various Baking Powders illus¬
trated from actual tests.
BOYAL (iW) wmtam
Grant’s’ (Alum) ...mssa
Eumford’s* (fresh;...■■
^i^’STptwdL)"
Bavitf* Cleveland’s..’............ and 0 K.* (Alum)
Pioneer (San Francisco)..
Czar.....................
Dr. Prioe’a..............
Fla ke (Groff’s)....
^ekarv".............. G1U*?«......
Hanford’s (None Such), when not fresh..
Pearl (Andrews & Co.)
Eumford’s* (Phosphate), when not fresh...
Reports of Government Chemists.
j either alum or r Uos ffr| t ^^.^j jt Y e ^^ T ^ 8 8 Y, l> ‘
Powder : J ( ;D
Baking is undoubtedly d!-’ the
mo8t 10
whichf^vekno'^ge. The Eoyai Baking Powder la pnrest’in powaer quality ot
01 “ y bating
mcmubtms, Ph.i>.”
NUMBER 39.
FINDLAY IE0N WORKS,
MACON, GEORGIA.
C, D. FiNDLAY, Proprietor.
Also successor to M B. FAJBQUHAK & CO., and R W. WILT & CO., of
the late Central City Iron Works.
Manufacturer and dealer in Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Shaftings,
Pulleys, Sugar Mills, Syrup Kettles, Horse Powers, Mill Gearing, Cast¬
ings and Machinery, of every description. Steam, Gas, and Water Pipe,
and Fittings, Brass goods, for water or steam gauges, Hancock lnspi
■ rators, Belting, Babbitt Metal, etc.
FINDLAY'S RENOWNED COTTON SCREW,
For Steam, Water, Horse or Hand Power.
PACKS UP OR D OWN.
-FINDLAY’S CELEBRATED— kJtA'? .
iXL COTTOIn
FULLY WARRANTED
REPAIRS A SPECIALTY.
STEAM ENGINES OF ALL MAKES, BOILERS, SEPARATORS, AND
ALL KINDS MACHINERY REPAIRED.
OLD INSPIRATORS MADE NEW.
BRICK MAKERS MACHINERY.
The Different paats of “SWORD” Machine made and kept in stock at
Manufacturers Prices.
TIME AND FREIGHT SAVED BY ORDERING FROM ME.
Barrow, and Truck Wheels especially designed for Brick Makers, con
stanly on hand. All the patterns of tho late “Central City Iron Works,”
including the patterns of tho “Farquhar” Engines, are used and owned
solely by me. Correspond or call when you wish anything in tho way of
Castings Machinery or Repairs.
C. D. FINDLAY,
FINDLAY IRON WORKS, Macon, Ga.
B&T" Send for Gii’culars and Price Lists.
SMITH & MALLARY,
DEALERS ILT
-.~--=r*ir^rx5
H
-■ -JTH j ■ . 'i'-/ ;
. . ■ * V
Sis m
-
J)*
MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND
Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Seed Grinders, Belting Lu*
bricating Oils, Iron Pipe and Fittings, etc.
SMITH & MALLARY, Macon, Ga.
FURNITURE.
■(x)
If you need any FURNITURE, don’t fail to call and give mo a trial I
have bought the
BIGGEST FALL STOCK
That has been in Barnesville in some time and it must be sold I wi
Guaratee to sell
Cheaper Than any FURNITURE House
In MIDDLE GEORGIA. When I say CHEAPER I mean what I-sav.
I r appreciate your past , patronage . and , earnestly solicit a continuance
of the same. Respectfully,
R. L. SWATTS, ;
JOB PRINTING
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads,
Note Heads,
Cards, Letter Heads,
Envelopes, Statements,
Dodgers, Circulars,
Programmes, kind of Hand Bills,
Or any other 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 latesti
styles. ly. Workdoneneatlyandprompt- Monroe Advertiser.