Newspaper Page Text
FOOTBALL.
a game: that If* SP Hi; AGING
RAPIDl.Y IN THIS CO I NTH V.
5i in Scientific, nml KoejulrexOmJix
WMviigi I, aixl ("onrage— llow It
b Plnyo<J till he Points
Made * Clear
root bad j» „ot only the nulumu i itii*
of Nt w England i I t) ic Middle At i
Htatc , but n* tachim? out
lilt; Houlh Mini NVi
cities of v/hir-fi h.
ball niw-a s
Let no - e 1 !»mH
unscientific routes hich n:
cular force wins, w f, II
d siues, fool 11 k
tests, s ifii the vit t hat
utsiu u
cool, well bain I mind.
which wiH ,-fj, i V in 'loi
to an emergei The no •dg<
strategy- requir r P vmtorio
paign f or a g.j d the lightnin
oiiqiicj rapidit of >rr let which decisio) •equired
ii it**,) could not be
fon s* >-n, are f ictors which show th.vt the
foot I Kill g S to. if the da is n g Hill
fair, T)i« hat a spir .t c d
ring f Iglll chain ruonxhi 3 gam*'
ay b< nd < in I'ff; < d at
-ending tin hu h have lx cn
played at tin Polo Ground New York
ha jften inhered 2*>,000 I
it);
Let ui imagine 1 » footballs teams,
n ‘ 'eleveui r iu position, and
bout to hr ■gin l{iiLil>y t;:tni< We st a
VC expiui of turf on which n para!
felogram f\ long and IfiO feet with
Le- been prominently marked out with
Jute Hu Midway in It end is ;*
ugewooden ontriVance, raised above
j he ground in the shajte of a giant If,
* igllle did a half i« et wide, which is
"•ailed >al. Crossing the field at
intervals of li-,, ids, a-od parallel to the
goal line are white lines. In the centre
of the field in the football. >*n g-shaped
affair. •nsisting of an inflated rdadderiu
(hick leathern •■overint,
The player >f each • [even are u
ranged on the field a - follow! In a,
parallel lint i( it yards distant, from the
t ■ >■ i im >n which tI k ball lies, arc seven
player fat inti thei opponents' goal line.'
J'h (even players const ittit what is
lined t In •rush lint', tnd t hey arc stout,
Deavy, mtisciihii young fellou s, of whom
)he ceutn lie is lln centre rusher or
• 'snap back. ’’ Some yards back of the
* cut r* • rusher is a player termed thequar
tar back, t'omc hit ecu or morn yards
back of( quarter back arc two ptuj r
called ha backs, who are separated from
each other by a pare < ‘I ten to twenty
Yard Hark of them* and not far front
itie goi.l, is the “full back,' or goal
Keeper.
I rom the subjoined diagram, and the
(>iicj outlitif of tlte me given below, it
‘*iH Im seen wliat numberless opportuni
*•'*•'<• uflered in the captain of an
f° r massing, concentrating,
'pleading, maneuvering and combining
bis players in shitting formations.
IM \OK.\M
i' • T
In ia I
I' l'
I
k u
in !»
t i
I
in
i touch
S
« 01
>t n
—
tt
•I tt I 'I
7
d. x
Explanation. 4 l>, .-,1 boti ida.-y line 4 , .'i'l i
tivi long; 1. goal lin-s. m i tcct i n, S ; t Sj £ •-.«
between goal posK !*■„ feet bitu< ; ^ >a
pn-vs, Mo center li-n-.l. lu>
point, nr which the ball is placed when the
gam-' <>p is. k, i-yic-il tin -•. T. touch in
goa . to • » " b «' •'> .
1 1 Center rusher, or -. Uighi eud rusitet
i 1 “snap back." >. (,hunter hack.
.eft guard. Left half back
;t. Right guard. 10. Eight half lKick
1 .eft tackle. 11 Full back, Ol*
Right tackle. goal ke p
(>, Left end rusher
The exclamation point.- represent tli > pin\
• i - ol oue side, and the daggers the player
ot the other.
Wluai the game is about to begin, tin
players ha* th isittons unlit
above, players 1 to being the “rush
Due Tin captain- of the leant 4 “toss
up” for clioh of goals, and the winner
.-houses the goal which tin moiiK'ntar
uuitttinus of wind and ^utt make the
easier to be ticfcitilcd 1'lic referee (ali
“play!" Then the rushcis on the team
which lost the to— t or choice of goals
run toward the ball, at aud one of
them either kick- it toward the g >al d*
fended In the other sid<'. or pii-k- it un
slid attempts to run with it Iowan
goal. In either ease there generally fol¬
low.- -peedily • “down''—that is. the
player who ha- possession of the bail
is “tackled by one o! the eiieini aud
cries “down" in order to retain the ball
for his own side. The two rush lines
range themselves opposite one another
and the center-rusher of the team which
has the ball passe- flu ball (using hi
toot in u peculiar, prescribed manner) t<»
the quarter back, who commonly thr, )WS
it to one of hi- half back-, aud thi- half
kick either run- with it or kick- it for¬
ward Then “tackle.-," “downs,'’
•“linings up." runs and kicks follow iu
blinding and indescribable -cries until
■oue side scores a “touchdown." or a
“goal from the field.’’ or forces it- oppon¬
ents to touchdown make a “safety touchdown.”
A i- made when the ball i
gotten behind th< opponent- goal line
and touched t > the ground. It entitles
the >ide making it to a “try-at-goal,"
which is commonly made a-follow-. A
play <*r of that side make- a mark on the
oal line oppo-.te the place where the
touchdown wa- made, brings it into the
field a certain distance at right angles to
the goal line, and then holds it while
oue of hi- half backs kick- it at the
opponents' Xr^oal goal. field is
from the made when,
no touchdown having been made, n
player by a jieculiar kick, termed a drop
kick, sends the ball over the cross-bar of
the opponents' goal.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH. GA, TUESDAY. DECEMBEI > i O o 1.1888-EIGHT PAGES-
I A -af r i touchdown is made when the
sent c carried by a player across
an goal line and then touched tc
rrov ind by himself or one if his side,
il counts six ix •r for the team
it, and a goal C to the field five
int A touchdown from which the
at-goal fa give* four points to the
ide ni it V safety touchdown
are oints for the side which did
not make it The team having the
•ger core at the conclusion of the
match i if course, the victor.
Il should l understood that in the
Rugby game, as played this side of the
Atlantic, nir g i ar more important
il.an kicking The ruti l is that running
oitli the fool 1 tuck £ under the arm is
the favorite met! 3. of getting the
1ml oward the opponent s' goal. On this
count the power to run fast is one of
mmendations u player can
ha In crack*’team, five players—
the half backs, the quarter ba< and the
end rush ar ordinarily, able to run
100 yard- in eleven seconds, or better.
T< draw a military simile, the rush
J i ri are the infantry of the team, the
i rushers being the light infantry, and
the five other 4 the grenadiers. “Greua
dierx ’ is peculiarly appropriate, as in an
(cellrnt team these five men are com
uAohly in the neighborhood of six feet,
as regards height, and generally average
170 to 1^0 pounds in weight. The quar
ter back is the skirmishing force, as.
when the other side has possession of the
ball in a “line* up, he whisks around the
ru*li lines, and in a detached way makes
a 4 much trouble as possible, lie is gen¬
erally small and often weigh* only 140.
One of the most brilliant quarter backs
in the history of the American game
weigned only 128 pound The lialf
back are the cavalry, combining the
fleetness and the dash of hussars, with
the weight and the tremendous momen-
1 turn of cuirassiers. The full back is the
artillery and bombards the enemy’s posi
ti<m with long range kicks when the
his fortune of battle brings tycilgev, the ball withifi
reach ,—Neir York
Physicians in China.
For many years, says au English paper
a young Chinamen has been iu this conn
try working hard to acquire a perfect
ktb'wledgi of our language that he might
attend a ’ medical ollege, and, after
graduating, return to his own country
and practice his profession according to
lish methods lie will finish his
duties at the hospital next March, and as
soon its possible will sail for China^and
i he will be the first, man to apply the sys
tern of medicine there a.s used in this
country In it talk with him recently
he said that the treatment of patients in
China IS in many cases very curious-,
though in some instances their ways of
relieving suffering were simple and effect
ivi Ally man can practice medicine
there, he says, as no special education js
necessary; and if a sign is hung out no
one thinks of inquiring whether the doc
tor knows anything or not. Should he
be successful aiid cure diseases he will
soon be looked upon as a remarkable
person, but if his patients do not thrive
I under his treatment they simply discharge
hint and try another man, and do not at¬
tach any blame to the first doctor,
j posed Continued sickness in a family is sup¬
to be due to evil influence, for
they are, as a race, firm believers in
supernatural influences. They believe
that the heart, not the brain, is the organ
of intelligence, and the seat of affection
is the liver,
Surgery can hardly be said to exist in
China, and they have no surgical
instruments, but use the simple medicine
of herbs that have been handed down lor
generations. Every little village has it*
medicine store. They *t'C every leaf,
flower, and tree that grows in the prep¬
aration of these drugs, and it seems ;to
It; a part of their creed to take as much
its they possibly can on every oocassion.
Animals, too. are used for healing pur¬
pose 4 . itnd the hoofs, skins horns and
blood arc carefully preserved until they
can be mixed into compounds. A paste
which is said to cure the worst bruise or
cut, and which is a common remedy, is
made of Hour and portions of frog.
The human body is held in great vener
. tioti bv the Chinese, and on no account
will they allow any sort of an examina¬
tion after death, and for this reasonrnanj
wait uttil they are too ill to b<i cured bc
f, m . trying ,7, to am of our hospitals, a
'’tally ot them , have * firm .. belief.that , \. .,
a
English doctors want their bodies to
make medicine of. It is a common
opinion of these people that the spirit
hovers around the body until it is buried,
and will bring vengeance upon those
who allow it to be molested.
Till'poiitine for Throat ami Lungs.
1 have been using pure oil of turpen
tiue iu affections of the throat ana
lungs for some time, and find better and
more satisfactory results than from any
other remedy I ever tried. 1 use the
ordinary hand atomizer, and throwed
spray_of the liquid into the throat every
few minutes; or at longer intervals, ac¬
cording to the gravity of the case. The
bull* ot the instrument should be com¬
pressed as the act of inspiration com
niettees. so as to insure application of the
remedy to the whole surface, which can
be done in cases of childreu very success¬
fully. It is surpri-ing how a a diph
' heritii membrane will melt away under
in almost constant spray of pure oil of
turpentine. I now use the turpentine
-pray whenever a child complains of sore
throat of any kind.
In eases of tuberculosis of the lungs,
bronchitis and the latter stages of pneu
nftroia, l have found the turpentine in¬
habit iou very beneficial, 1 use an
automizer. or paper funnel, from which
the turpentine may l>e inhaled at will.
I hang around the bed and iu the room
flannel clothes saturated with oil of tur¬
pentine, in all cases of catarrhal bron¬
chitis—in fact, in all infections of the air
passages: and my patients invariably ex
press themselves as being very much re¬
lieved.— Medical and Surgical Reporter.
A Wonderful Dragon Tree.
In au article in a French scientific jour
ual ou vegetation in Portugal reference is
made to an extraordinary dragon tree
t Dracvna Draco) growing in the garden
attached to the royal palace at Ajuda,
near Lisbon, which is supposed to have
attained development unequaled by any
other similar tree iu the world. -The
crown of the tree, the under part of
which is scarcely two meters from the
ground, i- upward of thirty-six meters in
circumference v a bout ItQ feet), and in its
upper outline forms a perfect dome,
There is a tradition that this tree was im
ported and planted in the garden when
, it was first created upward of three ceu
tnrif^ago.
INVENTOR EDISON.
WII \T THE" FtMOl’S xi \N K\TS
THINKS ANI) DIKES.
Hi, Workshop at IJewoJlyii Park
A Man of Very Simple Tastes—Care¬
lessly Pressed—Possessor of
a Very Active Mind.
I want to ma a pen piclure of Edi
son as he app- ears at the age of fort;, -five,
in theyich prime of his y years and at toe
zenith of his accomplishment -
writer in th<- New York World ,
it I have made a tnn or two to the phon
<. graphic laboratories, a mile or so from
Orange, in Jersey. It is two years since
Edison and the Edison interests took
lodge me at what is known as Lk-\
lyti Park, but now the personality of the
wizard i- over the ncigborhood like the
legendary “cloud by day and pillar of tire
by night.”
In the snrroundings of his laboratory
i au air of mystery The neighbors look
reverently at the big brick buildings, in
respect to the juggling and necromancy
that are taking place within.
Herein these great buildings of brick
is Edison's life Here, and more and
more, his ambitions are centering, The
laboratories were erected for work upon
the phonograph, which has been and is
the darling of his heart. And save when
some business or social duty—of the lat
ter' he acknowledges few*—calls him
away, here you may find him at almost
any hour.
He is a strange figure, in his long frock
of checked gingham, which buttons close
it the chin and reaches to the heels. B
4 nothing moti nor less than a man s
Mother Hubbard, which Edison pulls on
wlien at work to protect his neat suit of
Jack broadcloth from dust and acids
\mi oils and edged tools A big head,
with straggling hair, just turning gray.
utd a lug lace that has a queer some
thing mort^han Yankee shrewdness in
it, loom above this peculiar garment with
strange effect. Edison in liis working
govhi is a sight to laugh at, until you
remember that it is Edison. Still there is
nothing of the rapt genius about him to
repel the visitor or impress linn with a
sense of his own littleness. Edison is
blidt and hearty, and his enormous
mouth grins its easily as can be. He
speaks in a loud tone and scolds his as
sistants in a brusque way for their idle¬
ness, when they know he doesn't mean
it.
The lean telegraph operator has grown
fat in these latter years, not so much upon
high living as upeti high thinking and
for lack of bodily exercise. lie has the
action and vitality of a robust, healthy
man. He is broad of shoulder and deep
of chest, but there is a pallor about his
face, caused, beyond question, by pro
longed-confinement within doors.
nose is the color centre, us well its the
geometrical centre of his face, but its
ruddiness is not an alcoholic growth,
There never was an eye just like Edi
son’s. It is of cold color, that a strict
critic might call fi.fby, but it is au iu
(positive eye, and all about it are the
wrinkles which nothing but years of ge
nial laughter can impart. Altogether, it
is a face among a thousand. In repose
it is sadly solemn, like an owl's. Let
somebody crack a joke and in an instant,
if you’d look at that-face, you wouldn't
know it was the same Edison When he
is iu his inevitable suit of black, mid
adorned with a little white lawn cravat,
you might take him l’or a. preacher if it
were not for his face. But in his smock
frock you would have hard work guess
iug what he was. 0
With this gingham institution flapping
t /out his heels, the inventor goe< stump
ing around from room to room in the
great laboratory, overseeing the different
experiments that his assistants are con
lucting. He has the same little stoop at
the hips that plowmen acquire, but he
walks rapidly. There are between fifty
tnd one hundred men there, engaged
merely in experimenting at his bidding,
and reporting the results minutely to
hitn. Each experiment is conducted in
a room apart, but Edison never loses
track of one. He holds in his mind,
while bossing them all. exact remem
brauce of how far each hud progressed,
what the latest results and indications re
ported to him were, what his directions
anti xv 11 at to expect from them at the
next visit. In the experiment room, as
elsewhere, he is a wonderfully observant
man. lie believes a good part of inven
tion consists in catching nature at her
pranks.
There is something mercurial in his
way of work. He flies from one thing to
another, itnd. his workmen say, tires
quickly of a thing. Then it is long odd?
he will order it moved out of the way
until his interest m it is refreshed by rest
and absence from it. Meantime he will
set with a feverish energy about some
thing else. But Edison is like electricity
itself. No one "can tell what he will do
next. At times he will take some fads
in his head that some work must be done
nights. Then he* will tell the experi¬
menters they tire a lazy lot of chaps and
it's got to stop. He will order them all
to report early iu the evening, and
chance-are they'll sit around all night
ami do little or nothing. By the third
night they'll au<] do nothing at all except eat
lunch tell funny stories, and then the
bit of energy and the scheme of night
work will have died "
natural deaths.
At other times the persistence with
which Edison works and L-f.o-i-' i s tt,,,,,. tho c
about , him . working . . . something
is up
paralleled save in the histories of great
wars and great newspapers. Il' he gets
especially interested in an experiment he
will never leave the building for days.
He works night and day with a meagre
allowance of sleep that would throw an
ordinary man under such a mental strain
as his into brain fever.
His meals at such times are brought
to the laboratory, cither from his house
five minutes distant or from the little
hotel at the foot of the hill, a -tone's
throw from the work He eats at the
bench , and worts steadily meantime,
What* i- brought him to eat he doesn't
care so long as pie is included. These
are the time- when he accomplishes
wonders in the xxa\ ot keeping awake,
h requeptly he ha- spent five days and
nights in the laboratory, “debarred from
the luxuries of baths and barbers and
toilet water,” working constantly and
snatching altogether maybe three hours
of sleep in forty-etght. In his room in
the laboratory he has a reclining chair
ind in the intervals of his task, while
waiting foi a piece of lathe work neces
>ary to hi- experiment, he lies down and
iii a second «s fast asleep.
Edison s argument is that so loc_
he can continue to'do that his nerves are
unharmed. Such sleep of twenty mix-
utes or half an hour at a time bo holds
to be just as good, so far as it goes, as
sleep taken under more favorable con-'
ditions. He is a man of marvelous re
cuperative force, and says a half hour's
sleep in the middle of an experiment will
clear his head as rain does an over
Men atmosphere, experiment is over,when
But when the
to bed *nd sleeps until every lost minute
away is made for up. * -;^o o r;T g h, e t’'„r°v™
twenty-four hours at- a -tretch. It is hi«
v tko nature justiBo* her ...
balances m the matter of sleep.
The customary hours of work at the
laboratory, though, are from 8 or 9
o'clock in the morning, when the Wizard
puts in an appearance, to I? at night.
When he is not working on “double
time." Mr. Edision spends most of his
evenings reading at home, where he ha
! a library fully as well stocked as the
great -eientifie one at the laboratory. He
is a voracious reader, but of a necessity
nearly Jill his reading b done in the
sphere of his own work It it were not
he couldn't keep pace with the business.
He is a subscriber to all the technical
publications extant bearing upon his line
of work’and reads them all. including
the foreign ones, besides scanning care
folly the daily papers, for Edison is a
man of affairs as well as a scientist. He
considers Freueli easy and call? German
a “gymnastic language, But he makes
no effort to speak either one.
A Life Wrecked by Cigarettes
Two weeks ago a Yew York boy
i named John Barry was taken away from
home in a queei wagon that rang a bell
as jt rumbled over the rough streets,
qq K . i >e ll warned everybody to keep out
0 f the way. A man sat in the wagon
undqr the bell and held John Barry's
;mns . The boy dkhi't kiidw where he
W as. The «jueer wagon was an ainbu
lnnce hurrying John to Bellevue Hospi
tal to see if the doctors there could cure
him. He was iu u bad way.
The horse-cars, trucks, carriages, wag
ons ami drays got off the road when
j their owners heard the ambulance bell
t -iug. They looked in and saw that some
body’s lad was in ^rouble there. They
didn’t know what was the matter with
J 0 ht>. Nobody knew until the hospital
j doctors took him iu hand,
John’s father is Leonard J. Barry, a
police officer in Leonard street. Mr.
Barry was much grieved to see his sou
go away in this strange fashion. But
j lie did not try to punish or arrest the men
j in the ambulance, He wanted John to
j go to the hospital. The-reason why about a
good, kind father felt that way
John was this: The boy smoked five
packages of cigaaettes n> day. When he
got to the hospital the doctor said:
“His heart beats weak and low: his
eyes arc so dull lie can see nothing; he is
| so weak In cannot raise his arm to lus
head; he has no appetite and doesn't
like to play with other boys.”
John's father was distressed beyond
measure when he heard what the doctors
said. It was the awful mania for a cigar
etje. A great deal of fun had been
j made funny. of Poor cigarette-smoking, John Barry's It is shows not
case
that if lie had refused toMarn to smoke
he would be a sound, wholesome boy to
day. The doctors say ne will never be
, able to do n boy's part or a man's part
! hi the battle of life unless he promises
and keeps his promise never to smoke
a cigarette. This means life or death to
John, He's gone now to live among the
crazy people. lie knows, of course, that
Dr. Wood and Dr. Hamilton), or any
other famous New York surgeon, will
give him no medicine but this: “Stop
smoking. ”-—-Yew York World.
The Man in No. 7.
One night when three or four of us
boys boarded it sleeper on the L. and N.
road going south from Cincinnati a pas
senger in lower 7 began to snore as soon
as we were in bed. He had a terrible
snore for a human being, and after sev
end of us had called to him and failed to
>top it one of our crowd slid out of bed,
reached into No. 7 and. with deftness,
affixed a spring clothespin to the sleep
ep ’ s nose. It was, of course, expected
that he would wake up in a few second 4 ,
but. to our surprise, he did not, while at
the same time he suddenly ceased to
snore.
By and by all of us dropped off tc
sleep, and every one in the car was up
before No. 7. In fact, he slept so late
that the porter parted the curtains to
arouse him. After one look he jumped
back with a yell, and when we hurried
up we found the man cold and dead,
He was lying on his back, hands locked
under his neck, and that clothespin had"
pinched his nose all out of shape. The
body was taken to Cincinnati, and most
ot us had to attend the inquest. It was
there testified to by the doctors that the
! man had died of heart disease, but I tell
you we didn't hanker to do any more
joking for a full year .—New York Hun.
New York Heiresses.
Here, according to the Philadelphia
Press, is a table showing the market quo
tations of the foremost New York heir
f esses iu point of wealth:
Miss Sallie Hargous...... ... SI,000.000
NF S Mai’y Leiter........ ... 3,500.000 5.000,000
i Teresfa Fair.!!!!!!.’!! Caidweff. ... ... 3.000.000
Miss Gwendoline ... 3.000,000
-^ iss Havemeyer.......... 1.090.000
Miss Helen Gould......... 5.000,000
yjjgg yi 0 j-gr an .............. 1,000.000
Miss Corbin............!.. 3.000,000
Miss Florence Pullman 1 , 000.000
Miss Gerry .................. 3,000,000
J yli— 1.000.000
Mhrie I’erry ............... !N!.!!.....’.!!! 2 . 000.000
The Misses Isefiii 1.000.000
: Mias Shaffer.................... 1 , 000.000
j ^xTartin^ 11 dau g hter of Bradley
! Miss* 1 Green/ ' 1.000.000
daughter of Hetty
Green........................... -^- 1,000.000
15S€5 Jeanne and Mamie
Mi-?!ederick Neiison:.'!!N!!!!! 1 . 000 . out
1.000.000
j Miss Yan Wart................... the 1.000.00C
Marshall O. Roberts, in
Tornf.uli^. 3.000.000
. 1.000.000
Mrs. Andrew Coffin... 4,000.000
----——
Cottonwood for Cracker Boxes.
Not many years ago the cottonwood
tree was considered useless for the pur
pose of lumber. To-day it is crowding
white pine for certain uses, and large
fortunes are being made along the Mis
-issinpi River out of this wood which
was once so' despised. Every cracker
box in use in St. Louis to-day is made of
cottonwood, and a quantity goes in ceil
ing grain barges, as the grain, it is said,
cannot sweat in it. Along the lower
Mississippi there are men who are rich
liecause they own tracts covered with
cottonwood, who. five years ago, would
have traded it off for a vellow dog.—
’Woodirorlctr.
VanWINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY CO
ATLANTA, GA., and DLAS, TEX. y
--- MANUFACTURERS --
Cotton Gins, Feeders, 7 Condensers, 7 Presses
'
COTTON SEED OIJL MILLS,
C1 Sliattlll, i x», • ax I’llIlOVS, i i ww *- 111(1 • i ximi MlllS, a a r*v 1 1 Et-C. a .
•- 7 O " l UUlpS, * ailKS, 7
Ills,
1 PI- %
iw
H
—-i
-t
m ft
mm Hr m li I . fife?
mt
m Pm
W
--THE-
DeLOACH VARIABLE FRICTION FEED!
The Only Saw Mill in the market that fully utilizes-all the power. Warranted to increase capacity L'0 per cent, over any bel
feed mill made. Five sizes are made to cut as high as'50,000 feet per day.
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mm mm p.
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LTMilElij
$ 200.00
Mill has “Champion” Dogs worth fifty dollars, variable feed, ratcheCftet -yorks, simultaneous head blocks and cuts 10,000
board lumber per day. Warranted to cut 2,000 feet board lumber in ten houYrt w ith fiuur horse-power engine, and 8,000 feet
with fifteen horse-power. Jt is the only mill that fully meets the requirements of small cower. Thirty-seven saw mills sold
in one month, and orders come from Michigan, Wisconsin, Montana, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and from all parts
of the South.
This feed is easily attached to oilier mills—all “Champion” Dog, and at low prices.
A BUSINES PROPOSITION.
To any responsible party, giving satisfactory references, we will ship one of our under-runner corn mills, 20, 24 and 30
inch, with our famous Virginia stone, WARRANTED to make as good table meal as any large top-runner mill in the country,
WATER found satisfactory, or steam power. In case the of failure price agreed to perform as stated, we to pay freight both ways and take the mill back, and il
partv to pay us on. which, we will take occasion to say, is VERY low. Now, ’ think a
moment; you can get a 20-inch mill to make good meal and make it fast. Write for catalogue.
DeLOACH MILL MANUFACTURING CO,, Atlanta, Ga.
EXCELSIOR
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
EIGHTEE N SIZES A liD KINDS
JU PURCHASERS CAN BS SUITER
MANCFACTUKKi; i*
ISnSo A.Sheppard & Co..Baltimore,
AM) FOt SALE BY
Bramblett & Bro.
Forsyth, Georgia.
DR. OWEN’S
ELECTRIC BELT
AND SUSPENSORY.
PaTENTEOAuQ, 16, 1887. IMPROVED JULY 30,1889.
N&U. galvanic body belt
m AiftMC V and suspensory fot- <*r 0
wl. iBt?> guaranteed lo cure the
iJmV' ! '’OR ' 'f-'-r’Msrf- VXi^SKKheuniatio lowing <U«ase3, Complaints, namely: Ali
3 *\ e
dSiN tiveness, Nervoujueae, Edney Trembling’, Diseases
'
~ G•:a'Y dt-N ' tag SexualButiaustion.'Wast- Diseases
by ' Youth. Body, Age,
caused Indiscretions gleLife, in Mar¬
to ried the orSin- tyres lufactalUiscises peruluing
to*SEXT womb or genital organs of male or female.
TO RESPONSIBLE PARTIES OS 80 DAYS TRIAL*
Bend or. &c. oweVs for ELECTRIC INSOLES nt pSie. be
postage free illustrated pamphlet, which vrV \
•ent jou in plain sealed envelope. Mention this paper, addresa
OWM ELECTKI0 BroadwayTsT. BEIT & APPLIANCE CO.
808North LOUIS, MO.
RUPTURE !
ELECTRIC BELT
COMBINED. AND TRUSSES 1
DR. ISRAEL’S via,,, Ytl —______ X 3yaFwrith ____
EjEOTEO-GALVANIC Owen’B Electrio Belt Attachment. TRUSS, \ '• 'iJt ff Thi; trar-, Dr. is
■
Worn wltii ease ana comfort. The cur- can fc«
made mild or el rong. This is tbeoaly combined
electric truss and belt ever made. It - vrill CURB
Kaptare In from 60 to DO days. Fcr full description of Dr.
Oweii's Electro-Galvaaic Belts. Spinal AppHauces. Trusses and
insoles send 8c- for fer illustrated pamphlet -which, will be
geatyo tiia pla in sealed envelope. Sold only bf the
•k OWES ELECTRIC BELT & ABSLIANCE STrLOtUS. CO.
30Q »ottA Bread way, 2Ca
DROPSY TREATED FREE. B
Hay? tkjtrierfni ycated Itropsv and its ve^ktable complications remedies with th«
iaofl ?0bS- irtnjiiless. necen; Kemgre use alt vmptom* of drops}- en- in
fSci kef* WCTtontr tie days. ptostciaas. Core paii^nts Srora pronounced toe airet dvse hop®- tlie
to test of
tWo-V&irdeof rajiifiiy disappear, anain ler, d3v« at ieaat
ait eymptosas are terno-wed.
Bogy: mar IteBjfeniber cry tPAt-ug it does rrithcmt knowing anything
jeaSiZ'-tto ^ferirt it. tr-.ffatbf treatment ntocrat for yon yottrBeff. apytntn? We to
cmr
fee constant!? been tapped earing cases a i Usg of times standing—esuse* and ihepa
fhatfiwce ^aolareii-una»?e to a tinmeer liva-n wnek. CH-c £a’l fit»
•rot hew ion? afiiiajed, ■ a Ac.
yvy of bsbc. pjnnshief. age, seji.
Wtfd fee for rrc-vtoewt free ftoJitslieR cedjjouing Fllltr. tOiftimoeisfls, by mail. It
reh s **h!
S*. St.. Atiumja, Ga.
Cji ,
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1 Nk
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Jlhfe USM Sv :
mm
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WRITE FOR PRICES.
Engines st Mill Machinery
Boilers and Piping and all kinds of Fittings.
Shafting. and Pulleys, Hangers. Boxes, etc., in Stock for prompt delivery. in We buy. sell, -Telephone repair, exchange
rent tngi.ies on best terms. We have the most extensive shops the South No. 27
GEO. Ii. LOMBARD & CO.
Foundry, Machine jiimI Boiler* Works,
1014 to 1026 Ferwick St., above Pass’r Depot, A^t. in Georgia, S. Carolina and Florida, for
AUGUSTA, GA. Korling Injectors and Vanduxen Jet Pumpa.
GEO. W. CASE,
MARBLE
a\ -AND
II GRANITE WORKS!
Sf v MONUMENTS
Ti fcSMlt 1, 3. i\
! IRON FENCING, ETC.
fm
H .‘. 13-4 Street.
* « T
MACON, GEORGIA.
SMITH & MALLARY,
/
V
4 W^wMm
■m __
.
FfSS
<6§ in
m -■ P]
MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND.
Steam Engine?. Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Seqd (jrindora, Belting, im¬
bricating Oils, Iron t’ipe and Fittings, etc.
SMITH & MALLu&jR-Y, Macop, Ga }
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