Newspaper Page Text
The M onroe Advertiser,
Official Journal <>f Monroe Co.
—TKKMH OF HUBKCRIITION—
lVr Annum, Cash in Advance 1.50
•
•Six Months, “ 75
£4P Registered in tin- Post Office at
roreyth, (la., a* second-class matter.
tan/r 1 tie Monroe Ai>vkrti8ku has a
lar^c circulation in Monroe. Butts,
Jones, Jasper, and other counties.
EDGAR L. ROGERS,
BARNESVILLE, GA.
I hankin nil my friend* and customers, for their very liberal patronage
lh« present year,nnd 1 wish to -ay that I am now ready for the BIGGEST
1' A LL TA DM ever done in DKY GOODS in BA BNKSV’ILLE. 1 have
two large store rooms pack, i full of all the latest novelties, in every line.
nnd being content ut nil times with short profits I intend to make the next
«ix inoniiu.; mi cm of unprecedented low prices.
CLOTHING.
fine Clothing. Besides this 1 have a full stock of medium and low priced
goods, so if you want a suit 1 am more than sure I can suit you.
DRESS GOODS.
I am prepared to cater to il taste of the most fastideous all styles,
and prices, in |)res> Goods an Trimming. The markets are II of some
very rare beauties this season, and relying on my past trade, I have boon
bold enough to buy tho largest assorttfient I have ever had.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
My car load of bargain Boots and Shoes places mo in front and lias
made competitor* shudder, I can give you Shoes from 25 cents to $7.00,
nml pledge a saving of 25 per cent, on every pair.
As to, I lain, < ’ups, (lent Furnishings, Flannels, Tiekneys, Table Linen,
Jeans, <lassimcn H, Notions, Trunks, Valises, 1’inbrellas etc. I will offer at
prices that will sc II them to oyon a customer who is only looking around.
DOMESTIC GOODS.
All Domestics at strictly factory prices and nil best brands of Calico at
t! cents After September 15th J will sell all goods at close margin for
cash. Yours 1 ruly,
EDGAR L ROGERS,
N. B M I'M- I •I. F. Howard, L. A. Collier and Edgar Cook are with me
nnd invite ti^dr Irit'ods to call.
FRICK & CO.
ECLIPSE, G0RLISS
( --and-
I22PS Automatic Stationary
«.v ■4r.i j ENGINES,
;■%.
Boilers Saw Mills, Pratt pH
Gins, Seed Cotton Eleva¬
tors, Cane Mills, Wood si G-.
Working Machinery, Shaft¬
ing, Etc. Gins from $2:25
to 2.50 Per Saw. .1
V m m
MALSBY & AVERY i s IWwS m
•Southern Managers, MS is
_ -- I
81, South Forsyth St., ATDAXTA, OA.
Us VIII. 1*11 Kl> 18011. uicuiTii.T 1883.
R C. WILDER’S SONS.
BUILDERS, CONTRACTORS AND MANUFACTURERS OF SASH, DOORS, BLINDS
MOULDINGS. ETC.
Our purposn is to keep n full linn of goods needed in House Building, Builders, ITard
wnru, Painters’ Supplies. Glass. Putty. Pure White Lend and Inst Linseed Oil; also,
11 ni i*un s lmvii and ( oun try Mixed Paints, guaranteed to be equal to any made. Our
nuieniiHiry is all new and the latest improved. We guarantee satisfaction. Fall supply
ot rough and dres-ed Lumber, Shingles and Laths always on hand, at the lowest market
P ru! « R (\ WU.DKli’S SONS. 614 and 622 Third Street Macon, Ga
AYCOCK
Manufacturing t’i Company,
M AN U F ACT V R EILS OF
Doors, Sash, Blinds, Matels, Mouldings, Balusters,
NEWELS. WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES.
•IDoalors In.-
Lumber, Shingles, Laths, and Brick. Also *
Contractors and Builders.
\\ <> now have our Factory in operation and will lie glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give P nees. M e feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
our work. fall before making your purchases and get prii *t*S.
FACTORY l.lth SI'RKKT, OPPOSITE COTTON FACTORY OFFICE PLAX
TKRS’ WARE HOUSE. GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. lb— 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!
^^aax-vafactVLxors and Xc To leers c£
Steam Emilies, Boilers, SAW MILLS, Cotton Presses,
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
---Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
Schofield's Famous COTTON PRESS!
-l'o Paek 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,
M AGON. GEOKGIA
Hunnicutt & Bellingrath J
-MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERSTX_
Stoves, Tinware, House Furnisliim>’ Goods ,
WROUGHT IRON PIPE FOR STEAM, WATER AND GAS.
Pumps, Steam and Gas Fittings.
G ALVON I ZED IRON CORNICE,
CONCRETE SEWER AND DRAIN PIPE.
CX-ZCIILlLaLX: G-JLS
AGENTS FOR KNOWLE’S STEAM PUMPS
--SOLI AGENTS FOR THE-
CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK STOVES AND RANGES.
NS e make a specialty of Hard Wood and Mnrbelized Iron Mantels,
•'Tito Hearths and Tile Facings, Plain and Fancy Grates.
IIUNNICUTT A BELLINGRATH, Atlanta. Ga.
T I IT I 1 I T __u_ li t * 7 ■ i MONROE.:#' * v •> ADVERTISER ™
voi. xxxn
FORSYTH, M0XR0E COUNTY, GEORGIA. ESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 22. 1889.
alliance store i
(O)
rpi 1 he , at Monroe tti runners Alliance ah* c<a. Store is •
j HOA\ r Oj)Cll J* IOl* 1 UllSlllCSS .* 1111(1 l Will *11 1 IvCCp
St . t , i 11(111(1 i
till Oil ci
*
T - ’NT T\ A T H /TPr\ nTT i ATTN nn
(j v -* X—' h 1 1 N 11 *—* r A K \ ii A jLu X I VI *X l—i r 1 K V I X H X lx. Am) 1 JlJ X l—i /r X —J
i
comprising everything needed by
Icil'UlCl'S
The trading public invited to inspect our
stock T. J. CHEVES, Supt.
lit: A FAiniEK IV YOU CAN.
Properly best prosecuted, farming is
the business on earth. We hope
our young men will determine to be
farmers and educated, scientific
farmers at that. There is no busi¬
ness on earth which requires more
constant care, watching and thought,
than farming does, There is no
business which pays a better divi¬
dend upon the money invested than
farming pays when carried out upon
business
Tho dividends which it pays are
not in money only, but they are in
a closer communion with nature’s
God, m a delightful study of the
ways and plans of the great Creator
and an exccutisn of those plans.
One of the chief dividends the farmer
receives is health and independaneo,
after a day’s toil a sweet rest, with
no trust to be betrayed for the
farmers’ trust is or should be in God.
It is true that all men cannot be
farmers and where that is the case
they should choose a business for
life and begin at once to tit them¬
selves for it.
it may be that with tho coming
3 *ear you are to decide on your bus¬
iness or work for life; if so, choose
one. Have a trade or a business to
which you give time, work and study.
Our world is not meant for idlers;
there is something for each one to
do; and if some neglect their part,
must do more, or somebody
Chough not compelled now
to work lor a living, you may he
forced to il before old age comes.
you will find that there are
more people ready to do the common
kinds ot work than there is work to
You will find that such people
very small wages, and at
are almost starvi* Barely
is it so vita Those wtvo n e a traae
#
or some special business requiring
more ilia.' ordinary knowledge or
skill. Even though you never need
to work for your own living, you can
use \ itir knowledge or trade to help
and to teach others. There come
times i>i ihe life of each one when
suel ”**"■* ’ f ~'
CVC!
plsu
nee
mig
\\ mu u i,
chosen? Not tne one mat hub me
greatest number following it; too
many workers may make it almost
as poor as no business at all. Nor
should one be chosen that lias
outlived its day. Not a few trades
are steadily growing less and less
valuable because men do not need
what they furnish, or can get it in
an easier and cheaper way.
Select, mm honest business. Been
gag •f* X\r\\ 1 I ■ K VAtl
ha a
Do
dirt
are professions and trades u.
worse than dirty and have greater
difficulties than hard work. -Many
a man and woman whose hands are
clean and dress neatly—even costly
—do far meaner work and have
more trying occupations than those
whose clothes are begrimed with
dirt and hands hardened with toil.
No honest trade will disgrace a man
or 'n humble business
wil
arc
the.........
some will succeed lairiy well in
almost anything they may undertake
There is something for which each
is specially fitted bv nature ; find out
what it isin your case. If you try
that, and work with all your power,
you will succeed in it, while in some
other occupations you may tail, or at
least meet with poor success.
Choose that to which you can give
your heart, in which you can work
with pleasure; with the heart in
something else, failure is probable.
A large part of the secret of the
success of some people in humble
occupations is that they enter their
ot their own.
Having chason, stick to your bus
iness: make the most of it yon can.
If you give it your best work, it will
give you its best pay and its best
honor. Despise your business, and
it will soon dispise you. Keep at it.
unles sure that something else will
be better. Holding on and working
steadily as well as faithfully will
bring the best reward your business
can give— not only money and re
speetability. but promotion and the
confidence ot your fellow-mon.—
Forward.
.4 Hood Cough Srrup.
There is nothing parents should
be so careful about as selecting a
cough syrup. Begg>’ Cherry Cough
Syrup costs no more than the
be sure and get Beggs Cherry Cough
Syrup. We keep it on hand at
t times. B. D. Smith, Druggists,
Sow drain
Southern Alliance Farmer.
If there is one thing ‘ybovo ail
others which we would urge upon
our Alliance bethren right now, it is
that they sow quantities of grain.
Georgia, from the mountains to the
sea, is one of the finest oat countries
in America, and it is a shame that
we should ever have to buy an oat.
More oats can*be raised upon an
acre of Georgia soil than upon anj'
land on earth. Middle and north
Georgia are all excellent wheat re¬
gions and only need proper cultiva¬
tion to develop into a great wheat
producing section. Some of my
readers will no doubt ridicule this
but it is
If Ohio, Indiana, Illinois were to
treat their wheat lands as we do ours
j they would not produce as good re¬
sults per acre as we do, and the grain
would suffer as much from rust.
The lime has come when we must
prepare land thoroughly and have a
perfect condition of soil in which to
put the seed. We should plant
wheat by all means and never let a
season find us without quantities of
borne raised bread. Some farmers
say : “If wo raise wheat we cannot
get it made into nice white flour and
our wives say it makes dark bread.”
Perhaps brethren, to use more dark
home-made bread, would shut out
tho dark days of poverty and priva¬
tion. It is a fact that tiie bread we
make at home is by far more health¬
ful than the while flour we buy.
More of the dispepsia, prevalent ot
this age, is due to the white chalky
bread we eat than to any one other
food. Then we arc making a grand
effort at independence this year, and
expect to make a far more clfeLm’
efor» " •£“'7 • t
come an independent people when
we go to another country for our
food? if in the future we expect to
fight the battle of agricultural inde¬
pendence, we must have bread and
meat. Then now fs the time to be¬
gin the work. Sow oats, wheat, and
rvc. As soon as possible, begin to
' oats again after Christinas and
e both the chances on fall and
ing sowing. Prepare the land
1. Be fortified for the next sea¬
’s seige by good grain crops and
i will be able to be men indeed.
Physician* Confer.
All honest concientious physicians
who give B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm) a trial, frankly admits its
superiority over all other blood
medicines.
Dr. W. J. Adair, Rock mart Ga.,
writes: “ I regard B. B. B. as one
of the best blood medicines.”
Rr. A. 11. Roscoe, Nashville, Tenn.,
tes : “All reports of B. B. B. are
arable, and its speedy actions tru
•vonderful.”
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, Crawfordville,
Ga., writes: “I cheerfully recoin
mend B. B. B. as a fine tonic altera¬
tive. Its use cured an excrescence
of the neck after other remedies ef¬
fected no percebtible good.”
Dr. C. 11. Montgomery, Jackson
M le, Ala., writes: “My mother in
ed on my getting B. B. B. for her
umatism. as her ease stubbornly
isted the usual remedies. She
experienced immediate relief and
her improvement has been truly
wonderful.” ”
A prominent physician who wishes
his name not given, says: “Apatient
of mine whose case of tertiary syph
ins was surely killing him, and
which no treatment seemed to check,
was entirely cured B! yvith about twelve
bottles of B. B. Ho was fairly
made up of skin and bones and ter
rible ulcers.”
-
New Diamond Field*.
-
New York Sun. j
S
200 miles northeast of Kimberly, me
present great center of diamond
mining. Uole-s the big diamond '
trust that now controls the output
at Kimberly hastens to get possesion
W the new discovery it may not reg
ulate prices as thoroughly as it has
fondly expected to do. x ros pec tors
are now promising bigger gold fields
in Mashonaiand than have yet been
opened, and every i.title while new
discoveries of sensational interest
are reported from the mysterious
continent. 1 he fact is that though
| many the lines of survey heie have and there, been run
ocei countic we
nave s.'.. \ v rv ..n. iagmu.t
arc knowledge of tue great continent
whoso area is over one-fourth larger
than that of N orth America.
I
will show its efficacy in restoring the
natural color of the hair and clean
j sing the scalp.
Lfl them .'Hodrrnte thrir Joy.
vannah Morning News.
The close observers of politics will
meiude that the republicans should
'Suerate their rejoicing over the
V&etions Actions in the new states. repub- The
were not as great a
hn victory as the organs of that
j arty would have the people believe
j |f North Dakota the republican ma
j H vflty {Ct was las about for 10,000. delegate At to
ro n year
n z ress iL wass11 > 500 - ln soutb
-
Dakota it was about 14,000, and last
ear it was 14,500. ln Washington
£ was about 6,000, and last year it
vas 7,300. In Montana the demo
«rats elected the governor and the
iigislature, and the republicans
fleeted Carter to Congress by about
‘,000 majority. Carter was elected
^publicans >st year b}' 5,000 majority. The
barely held their own in
n ?orth and South Dakota and Wash¬
ington, and lost largely in Montana.
Possibly the republican rejoicing
b due in part to the fact that tho
elections indicate that North and
louth Dakota and Washington will
five that party their ectoral votes in
SB92. Supose they do, how will
"Tat help the republicans? Under
the present apportionment there will
fe 414 votes in the electoral college
in 1892. If the democrats get the
'53 votes of the south, New York’s
JO, Indian’s 15, New Jersey’s 9 and
.(Lon tana’s 3, they will have 216
votes, or 8 to spare ; or if they carry
the south, New York, New Jersey,
Connecticut and Montana, they will
have 207 votes, or just one half of
the entire number, this would throw
the election in the House. It is
probable, however, that a new ap¬
portionment will be made before
1892, and if it is a fair one the
chances are that the democrats will
gain by it.
An interesting statement connec¬
ted with the Montana election is
that it is democratic because there
fire many southern-born people
among her citizens. They settled
• here soon after the close ot tho civil
war. The southern people are nat¬
urally democrats, and they vote tho
democratic ticket wherever they go.
They believe in the democratic party
because it is the party of the people.
PoiMOUtul with Malaria.
Mr. S. D. Price, a native of this
state, but now a prominent and in¬
fluential citizen of Dallas, Texas,
writes under date of April 12, 1889:
“About three years ago 1 was liv
; >ig in a malarial district of Georgia
and while there frightful sores broke
1,1 Y V |A ver my body. The poison
’ was .sodDad that it ruin
ed my health and prostrated me. 1
was at length so reduced in health
and apparently incurable after
taking large quantities of different
medicines prescribed by my physi¬
cians, that they advised me to go to
Hot Springs, as it was the only
chance of recovery left, and in this
they expressed their serious doubts
that 1 would derive anj- benefit from
the trip, I went to Hot Springs
and while there took a thorough
course of medicine under the physi¬
cians, which seemed to benefit, but
did not cure me, for in one month
after my return tho malady reap¬
peared. I immediately began
taking S. S. S., which made me per¬
manently well—well from 1886 until
now.”
Skm Eruption Cured.
One of my customers, a highly re¬
spected and influential citizen, but
who is now absent from the city’ has
used Swift’s Specific with excel¬
lent results. He says it cured him
of skin eruption that ho had been
tormented with for thirty years, and
had resisted the curative qualities of
many other medicines.
Robert Clegg, Druggist,
Falls City, Neb.
Treatise on blood and skin disease
mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFLC CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Negroes Not Invited.
The Boston Herald says that
“there are large iracts of land in
Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine,
Connecticut and eyen in Massachu
setts; where to-day you can buy a
farm for a song, and where Finns,
Swcdes,lcelandersorFrenchCana
dians are cordially invited to sue
ceed the Anglo-Saxons, who have run
away to engage in more lucrative
enterprises.”
White people from every foreign
country, it will be seen, are invited
to come and take these farms, which
can be had “for a song, but no m
vitation is extended to the negroes
of this country. As the negroes of
the south are so near at hand, and
the Republicans of the states named
above insist that they are badly
St “
doned farms of Vermont, New
Hampshire and Massachusetts,
where the Republican majorities are
so large.—fix.
Mewtovu*,.
We degire t0 sav to our citizens ,
tha t for years we have been selling
Dr j[ '» g -g ew Discovery for Con
*
s Budlen's tio Dr Kin „- s \ e w\Life Pills
Arnica Salve and Electric
Bitters, and have never handled rem
edies tbat , eU as w ell or that have
( _, jven 6ueh univer sal satisfaction.
'
We i1q uot hesitate t0 guarantee
tbein eve ,. y time, and we stand rea
dy to refund the i purchase price, if
^ factorv rc3ult do not follow
tfa ; These remedies have
won lheir great popularity purely on
l their merits. Sold by all Druggists
b ^ n ght l0 ,be .aid
jin old man, who was rubbing in Dr.
*ment iJ. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Lini
to relieve rheumatism.
OUR STOCK
OF
DRY GOODS, HATS,
SHOES AND NOTIONS
IS ARRIVING AND IS COMPLETE.
FULL STOCK OF GROCERIES
ALWAYS ON HAND.
f^*Prices LOAVER Than Ever.^^|
YOUR TRADE MOST RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED
Money on Accounts Thankfully Received.
J. H. HUDDLESTON & BRO.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
The Olive Bill.
Savannah Morning News.
The Oliye bill is condemned by
the most progressive men of Georgia
—men who make her best interest a
study, and who are doing all they
can to promote them. In fact, it is
condemned by all those who, with¬
out any bias whatever, have given it
careful consideration. It is not too
much to say that it has given rail¬
road building in Georgia a set-back
from which it will not speedily re¬
cover. It has made capitalists hesi¬
tate to invest their money in railroad
enterprises within her limits, because
they were afraid that it might be¬
come a law and greatly lessen the
value of their investments.
If this bill should become a law, of
whic;h there is no possibility, tho
progress of the state would receive a
very noticeable check. There would
bo suspicion when there is now con¬
fidence—suspicion that there would
be other legislation still more hostile
to capital. The farmers whirr
now clamoriugfor railroads
they find it so difficult to reach the
markets would not get them. Their
lands would not increase in value,
and there would be no improvement
in their sections. The state would
cease, in a great measure, to feel tho
influence of the forces which are de¬
veloping her resources and making
her rich and populous.
It is right to place such restric¬
tions upon railroads a.s will prevent
them from making unjust discrimi¬
nations, from charging exhorbitant
rates and to remedy other things
which are unjust, and the state has
provided a railroad commission, with
which the people have no fault to
find, to do that, but it is not right to
pass laws that will check railroad
building and will tend to weaken
those already built.
A Jail Delivery.
A considerable excitement pro-,
vailed on the streets yesterday
through a widely circulated report
that three of the most desperate
prisoners in tho jail had broken out.
Careful investigation discovered that,
absurdly enough, the rumor had
some foundation, but not exactly in
accordance with the facts. Three
prisoners had broken out with
•Scrofulous eruptions on the face,
neck aud limbs—but the pysician
called in prescribed P. P. P. (Prick¬
ly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium)
the renowned vegetable blood puri¬
fier and there is no doubt whatever
that the patients will soon recover.
Rheumatism, Gout, Syphilis, Scrof¬
ula, Malarial poison and all symp¬
toms of impure blood are quickly
removed by P. P. P., and as a ready
and simple restorative it is gaining
ground daily. Alexander & Son.
For sale by
--
The Central railroad is pushing
the work on the extension from
Eden to Americus and expects to
have the road completed within six
months, which will shorten tho dis¬
tance between Birmingham and
Savannah fifty eight miles.
LEAVENING POWER
Of Batin, Powders On- j i
trated from actual tests.
-royai. <Puei_
Grant's* (Alum) ...
Eomford’B* (&«&>...
Hanford’s (whenfresh)
m
Pioneer (San Francisco)
Cznr..................
^.Price’s ............
* aov TUke (Gro£Ps) *
1
effS'
Hanford’s Such), when refresh..
Pearl (A»d«w, & Co.)
Butniord’**(Phosphate),not fresh...
Reports of Government Chemists. I |
uu *
^ *
P.oral Baking Powder is undoubted
purest and nd most reliab le bale
the public. Heskt A.
and “The Jiigbest Eoyal in Baking strength Powder ol is baking purest powder in quality of I j |
knowledge. any
» liitii I have
“ WM. MCMUETKIE, Ph. D.”
Phosphate powders liberate softer their deterioration. gas too freely, ol
under climatic changes
. T
NUMbKK 41.
FINDLAY IRON WORKS,
MACON, GEORGIA.
C. D. FINDLAY, Proprietor.
Also successor to A. B. FAliQUHA.lt K CO., and It. 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 Inspi¬
rators, Belting, Babbitt Metal, etc.
FINDLAY'S RENOWNED COTTON SCREW,
For Steam, Water, Horse or Hand Power.
PACKS UP OR DOWN.
—FINDLAY’S CELEBRATED
JL»i 70TTONL-OJSt
FULLY WARRANTED
REPAIRS A SPECIALTY.
STEAM ENGINES OF ALL MAKES, BO IDE.LIS, 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 the “Farquhar” Engines, are used and owned
solely by me. Correspond or call when j’ou wish anything in tho way of
Castings Machinery or Repairs.
C. D. FINDLAY,
FINDLAY IRON WORKS, Macon, Ga.
Send for Circulars and Price Lists.
SMITH & MALLARY,
ZEN*
"I
/
».y 4_
\ ■ ■. -f'- f-j ,— % -
.
«, : H «^#y # 1 x ............ .....
'&S&, isggp Y--n_
_
y
MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND.
Stearn Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Seed Grinders, Belting Liu
bricating Oils, Iron Pipe and Fittings, etc.
SMITH & MALLARY, Macon, Ga.
FURNITURE.
(*)
If you need any FURNITURE, don’t fail to call and give mo a trial r
have bought the
BIGGEST FALL STOCK
That has been in Barnesville in some time and it must be sold I will
Guaratee to sell
Cheaper Than any FURNITURE House
In MIDDLE GEORGIA. When I say CHEAPER 1 mean what I say.
I appreciate your past patronage and earnestly solicit a continuance
Of the same. Respectfully,
R.L. SWATTS, Barnesville, Ga.
JOB PRINTINO
Business Men if you want
Bill Heads
Note Heads,
Cards, Letter Heads,
Envelopes, Dodgers, Statements,
Programmes, Hand Circulars, Bills,
Or any other kind of Job Printing
done, send your orders to the office
of the Monroe Advertiser. I
have on hand a large stock of printing
material of all kinds and of the latest
styles. Work done neatly and prompt*
J y- Monroe Advertiser.