Newspaper Page Text
WOMAN’S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR
FEMININE READERS.
TAPER MIAOWS
All England . . is . crazy on the . subject , . of ,
paj^r pillow.. A ou tear the paper into
very smal pieces not tugger han you.
Anger nail, and then put them into a pil
hZ™ 1 l ey ar, k very t,f ,lnl cool :n / for *’ hot r h * climates lt ,u ku> and - i
much superior to feather pillows. rhe
newspapers are printing appeals for them
ior hospitals. Newspaper is not nice for
IIM as there is a disagreeable odor from
printer's ink, but brown or white paper
and old envelopes are the best, As I ou
tear then, stuft them into an old pillow .
case, and ,.*y/ ,u , when y ,ni f? ct
, ongh. . I he easiest
way is to tear or
cut thr paper in strips about half an inch
Zu.rH hp V?:° rrUt
. waken the
i ' 'a- " " pil
A TO! Mi lady's HAT
What are women s straw hats made
of* It seems a simple questioq, and yet
it is not one that the ordinary woman
ean well and truly answer. The braids
are all imported, many from China. If I
were to tell a young lady that the hat
she wore was made of straw from the
plantation of the Emperor of China, I
doubt if she would believe me, and yet
It IS HO. Some of this braid is called
Neapolitan, and is wide and coarse. The
straw of what is known as Neapolitan
pearledge is found in Chu Foo. It
grows tall, and the top is fine and the
bottom coarse, one stalk thus giving two
or more kinds of braid Venetian grows
tall, and is the opposite of Neapolitan
pearledge, whose base is coarse. The top
of the Venetian is coarse, and is called
mottled braid The centre is somewhat
finer, and of the stalks which are nearest
the ground is made the fine Venetian
braid Star-Saying*.
A JOLLY WHITER AND HER PETS.
A lady who was at the dinner given
by Mrs. .fames L. Fields to Amelia Ji.
Kdwards, writer and scholar, says that
that famous Egyptologist is a very jolly
table companion, and full of simple, un¬
pretentious humorous talk. She is very
fond of animals, and has a great many
pets, including dogs, monkeys and
parrots. Of the parrots she has a num
ber, and she regards oue of their idiosyn¬
crasies as a good subject for a naturalist’s
investigations;'they all unite in a bitter
and voluble hatred of one parti¬
cular Egyptian relic she lias—a much
battered bit of bas-relief of the cat
headed goddess. When she presents it
to the parrots they all .squawk and scold
in violent unison ! Who knows what
knowledge might be gained if only they
could voice the tradition that makes
them hate that fragment of stone. Miss
Edwards has a charming gift in her
lovely and very English voice, which is
quite as charming in lowsocialcoiiver.se
as when brought out more fully on the
platform.— Nen > York Saturday lievieic.
woman’s paradise.
A woman with an aim can clo anything
she pleu**es in Boston, if the aim suf
ticiently dominates her life. She may eu
ter uny occupation she chooses, work in
any lines she likes, and be certain, not
only of the approbation of individuals
but of that of the community iu which
she lives. The atmosphere of Boston
within the gates, and that larger Boston
without the gates, in all the Newtons and
olhci suburbs, is an atmosphere of free
dom for women who work. In the ranks
ot the non-workers there is a feeliug of
reaped and consideration for women who
lie in business, either because they must
be or because they choose to be.
In every city there are numberless
women engaged in self -supporting occu
pations. its here, and there are also plenty
of women elsewhere in business large
enough to employ other women. But
there urc several here doing a large busi
ness in lines which are somewhat dis
tinctively local in spirit, although their
influence extends, with their trade as far
ns California and Florida and the Cana¬
dian provinces .—Riston Transcript.
\ VEILED LADV.
A veil is a necessity to woman who
cares for appearance. In the first place,
it keeps the wind and dust from the hair. |
Miss Hallowell, who spends six months 1
of every year collecting art works from
American and European studios for the
Chicago exposition, is never without 11
veil. “If 1 didn't wear one,” she says.
“1 should waste nil my time washing my
face and combing mV hair. As my time
is very precious, 1 put my hat and veil
on when 1 get up in the morning and
keep them ou until night .’’ There are
veils and veils, of tulle, crepe, plain and
dotted net. gauze, baize, knitted silk,
pmll and invisible tissue which oculists
' contend have been the ruin of American
eyes and are still productive of spectacled
children. Be this as it may. the veil is
as firmly fixed as the 'tars and stripes,
and the consumption among women who
go about a great deal averages fifty per
year. The Hading veil was short-lived,
for the reason that phenomenal beauty, or
pronounced paint was The necessary idea, to peer
through its gloom. however,
suggest ed the wire veil, the novelty of
the stock, which is nothing more than a
semicircle of point d'esprit gathered on a
fine wire, by means of which it can be
adjusted to any hat-box or bonnet frame,
No pins arc needed. All one has to do
L to pinch the wire and it stays where it
.'ii placed.— Pittsburg Bulletin.
'TRIM, MILLINERY.
indications, as foreshadowed in the
first of the importations of millinery for
the spring season, favor much use of
lace straw and faucy braids. The lace
straws are extremely delicate in the raa
terials employed and in design, and are
verv beautiful. Some of them, with
w eb of horse , hair, . are wrought . . in foliage ,
aud blossom tigures. sometimes 1 dotted
with tiny buttons and finished with a
spiral or twisted purl edge.
There are untrimmed mode,' in toques
and capotes with t e crown of plain
braid, about one-third m an inch
width, so loosely woven ot very finely
'plit straw' as to be transparent, the lace
braid described forming the brim, and
also the upright band around the open
spac * if of a shade witu tu* open crown,
Little capotes, witb the b«ad-piece of
the loosely woven braid, and the brim
of tfc* lace braid, have the crow a eov
c-red with a straw lace butterfly, and
here we will take occasion to remark the
overcroppiag of the fancy for straw lace
tnd silk and cotton lace bqtterfiies
irago;*fUe£ and simulations of other in
sects witb gauzy wing*.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH, GA-, TUESDAY, APRIL 1. 1890.-EIQHT PAGES.
Toque a and capote? are shown with
▼cry melon slightly curved oral crowns m
volutes, shelving up from the
back to the front, made of the lighted
lace braids, with the brims of the braid
bands with purl edge; and capotes are
shown of lace braid gathered in a bunch
at base of the crown and stretched
out to form the head-piece, somewhat
after the idea of a scallop-shell. Hats
0 f the lace braids are also one of the
leading features of the coming mode.
The horse-hair Neapolitan braids have
had an unusual revival, and Milan braids
wi ll unquestionably reassert their claim
to utility for headdresses for the warmer
seasons, and will again have standard im
portance.
key-note to the shapes in the
spring hats was struck in the shapes of
those that came out in the autumn. The
principal variation in the large hats finds
f ortn in low crowns, and brims widening
from the" back to broad and projecting £
front. In some models the brim
very close and narrow at the base of the
crown at the back, and in some showing
several rows of braid in width. In some
models the brim is distinctly flat; in
some it droops a little all around, and in
many it lias a standing band, or a re
versed band all around, Suspicion of
the capricious is noticeable now and then
in exceptional shapes, but there is less
freakish ness in the new hats than we
have seen for several years in the general
effect.
Toques will probably hold their own
as a compromise in the head dress be¬
tween the hat and the bonnet, and it is
possible that turbans will have a con¬
tinued lease of life. In the collections
of millinery, however, from which we
drew our advices for the coming season,
toques and turbans were not as distinc¬
tive as we hud expected they might be
from their popularity at the present time.
—Millinery Trade Jteview.
FASHION NOTES.
English ladies wear plain gauze veils
iu blue or bright red when yachting.
A novelty in rings consists of a plain
band of silver set with five conch shells.
The perfection of elegance in thimbles
is reached in an article of plain gold with
diamonds set irregularly upon its sur
lace.
Brocades are generally chosen by ma¬
trons tot evening toilets. The designs
are of a set character, similar to those in
vogue during the first empire.
Gowns of black lace over deep yellow
silk—a very fashionable combination—
are frequently elaborated by stylish cor¬
sage decorations of gold galloon.
The ribbons used for trimming India
silks are two and a half inches wide, and
often match the color of the design oi
the silk rather than the ground color.
There is a furore iu Paris and London
just now for orange, gold and copper
garnitures. Passementerie bands in these
colors arc used in every conceivable
way.
Genuine tartan colors arc seen in the
newest Scotch plaid ginghams, especially
the gay Stuart plaids and the dark blue
and green plaids so much favored in
woolen goods.
Other India silks have fine pea dots all
over them, and are then strewn with flow -
era. Sometimes the flowers are massed
near the selvage, forming a border which
is used as trimming,
Owing to the light quality of India
silk a slight drapery is necessary in the
skirt. The silk foundation skirl has a
short reed in the back, and is more
trimmed at the foot than last year,
Chantilly insertions, headings, black or
w iij te m a0St ribbons of satiu, gros grain
an ff velvet and ecru embroideries in open
patterns figure as trimmings upou gowns
0 f India silk now being prepared for next
! season.
The India silks with black figures on
light grounds, blue, pink, green or cream,
I 1 introduced last summer, are again shown,
!inf i w m be made up with trimmings of
j , black lace or mousseline de sole, with
black ribbons,
Effective ginghams have half inch
stripes of three colors. Among the fa¬
vorite combinations we note green, old
rose and cream, gray, brown and green,
lavender, violet and brown, and pale
blue, dark gray and clear white.
The latest thing in gloves is designed
to meet the requirements of many ladies
who have the habit of carrying money in
the glove. It has a palm pocket attach¬
ment, which will hold a considerable
amount of “small change” or a small
roll of bills.
.Jeweled gloves are a fancy of the
hour. Tlu* kid, ot ciwtrse, is of the finest
quality, and in place of the usual etn
broidery or stiehing on the back are
three rows of diamonds, set singly iu
gold. The gems are so set as to be easily
transferred from one pair of gloves to
another.
The handsomest India silks have black
grounds and are striped with satin. The
stripes are of irregular widths, and be
tween them on the black ground are scat
tered gay-colored blossoms, single flow
crs "ith long stems, buttercups, violets,
carnations, blue cornflowers or large
sprays of acacia, almond blossoms or
wistaria.
A pretty and girlish arrangement for
curly hair is to part it in a line with the
back of each car, straight from the neck
to the crown, leaving the back hair un
confined and waved, with the ends curled,
The sidesarethen drawn up to the top of
the head at the extreme back of the
crown. and the ends curled and hung
over the back hair
A hat which is particularly effective
when worn by a tall, stylish woman is
known as the Charles II. It has a pro
jecting brim, and is woin well down ou
the forehead, shading the eyes admirably,
The brim is turned up at the back and on
; both sides, but one side is deeper than
the other, and turner! up more closely
■ against the crown,
. The newest thing in furs is a tight-
1 fittinsg bodice of seal. Persiana, astrachan
or krimmer. with a short, close frill,
Such a garmeul may WO ru with any
kind of skirt, and without a wrap, no
, mal t er )j OW eo ] t j the weather may be
q'^., s ieeves are of the skirt material or of
j velvet, lined with chamois, ami finished
witb d cutfs of tLc fur
J
1 The Government still owns 223t> miles
t seaeoast and interior telegraph lines,
many of the latter built by the troops for
1 military operations against the Indians:
tj> e policy is to abandon or sell the
Paes when the construction of coznmer
rial lines will permit Thee are now
sixty-four Government militarv telegraph
offices
Six of the members of the Yale law
i »chool are Japanese.
AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
PASTURING RYE IN’ WINTER.
Rye may profitably be pastured by sheep
ia some of the Southern States, but in
the North, where cold withers its leaves,
they are not worth enough to offset the
poaching of the ground that is sure to
occur in midday even in cold weather. If,
however, the rye is getting too large a
growth pasturing with sheep or calves is i
necessary. If there is any danger of its
getting kato Smount joint it becomes tender, and
a slight of cold destroys the crop,
as it would of the most tender vegeta¬
ble.
APPLE WOOD FOP. FUEL.
In most oid orchards there are some
trees that have become stunted, and ex¬
cept with extraordinary attention will
never pay their way. The better plan is
to dig them out root and branch and use
them for fuel. The extra care concen¬
trated on the remaining trees will bring
far larger returns. Most orchards are
planted much too closelv for the best re¬
sult Where the tree was dug out till in
with rich dirt from the roadside, and the
trees on all corners from the old one will
show in their increased products how
much they appreciate the wider range
given their roots. Apple tree wood
makes excellent summer fuel, and is es¬
pecially rich in potash.
FLOWER I’OTS.
It may be well to remember that there
are other uses for old fruit-cans than
feeding them to goats or tilling gutters;
they are just the things for home plants
of many sorts. They will retain moisture
much longer than an earthen pot of the
same diameter on top, they hold more
soil, consequently a larger plant can be
grown in the same sized pot. We have
seen all manner of house plants, including
hyacinths, in the windows of ordinary
farm-houses, growing in tomato cans,
that would put to shame many of our
florists productions, and mainly because
the plants were in better quarters than in
porous earthen pots. I ry tin cans, after
pounding holes in the bottom tor drain
age, painting them nicely, not reel but
some neutral tint that will not detract
from foliage or flower and mark the rc
suit. New lark Observer. •
ONION CULTURE.
Twelve years’ experience in raising
onious, and no trouble from maggots and
worms. I have sown and raised on the
same piece for six years, and the crop
grew better every year, When the
time comes to sow onion seed in the
spring, generally about the last of April,
as early as the ground will tvork, I spread
on thickly rotten manure, plow’ it uude^r,
and then rake the ground off and mark
it out in drills fifteen inches apart. I
next sow unleached wood ashes in the
drills at the rate of forty bushels per
acre. I then sow the black seed on the
ashes and cover with earth. They will
come up black and keep so. I have no
trouble from worms and maggots. Uu
leached wood ashes and onions are great
friends. “Use them freely” is my mot
to, and I have never failed of raising a
good crop of onions .—American Culti
v.ator.
THE use of fertilizers.
A farmer a few days ago made a.good
suggestion about the proper use of fer¬
tilizers, and ns he is a successful planter
it is worth giving for the benefit of
others. “I find,” said the farmer, “that
.t great deal of money is wasted by a too
lavish use of fertilizers when the crop is
planted. If you want to fatten a pig you
do not give him all the food at once,
simply because it will be wasted and de
stroved before it can be eaten up by the
pig. So it is with food for the plant.
Put on part of your fertilizer when you
plant vour crop, then every time you
work it add a little more. If a drouth
comes, and you find it will not be needed.
you save that much. It frequently hap¬
pens that a crop is injured more than it
is benefited by the improper use of fer
tilizers. Then again by putting the fer
tilizer on later in the season you get
benefits when the crop is maturing and
fruiting.” Apparently there is good
sense in the suggestion .—Atlanta Constl
"
5 ution.
iiSEs.SK in fowls
^“ L“X h bec T su,i t ami
™, Anthrax,
the disease or, It as it is
moniy .railed, cholera. i, a
of the liver and contagious. It
happens when fowls arc kept in
and lilthv houses and arc overfed,
these faults quickly produce such an
healths condition a, to make the
susceptible to the contagion. It
scarcely worth while to attempt a cure
The sick fowls should be killed
bleediuc and buried away from the
and the house thoroughly disinfected by
burning sulphur on hot coals in it with
the doors closed. It should be well
cleaned and kept cleaned. Feed the re
■naming fowls with scalded meal, dis
solving for each twelve fowls one drana
of hyposulphite of soda ia the
used Continue this for a week and
feed no more than one ounce of meal
each fowl daily. After the week feed
wneat , and , buckwheat, , .■ chopped , , cabbage
and 1 r
, some broken , bones. A . ..... little salt
and pepper should always be .riven in
the feed of hens two or three^times
week, and some vegetable food should be
supplied. Chopped ”—New cabbage is the best
food of this kind York World.
_
TO SAVE GRAIN IN BINS.
Every year a good deal of grain is
aStein’’ a lt ^ mre^nea. hed ^ Thi 1 m S ° v^ year, uni! unle^
threshing h delayed until very late, the
.—,.s from this cause are likely to be
Ul’usually heavy. owing to the wet
v. ather of harvest time and the bad con
tion in which much grain was got under
cover. We heard a few day< ago a prac
tical farmer describes a method bv which
h“ put up grain, however wet and in any
.mount, without injury. He kept a lot
i .inuiou brick under cover, so as to be
.l.’Yj ys dry. and when the grain was put
iato the bin he interspersed brick through
rhe heap enough to absorb the super
mens dampness. Almost every one
V iOWS that kiln dried, bnck will absorb
- great ' u: t of water in proportion of
: heir size . The brick in a heap of damp
or even we: grain will, if numerou,
.cough, dry it out. saving all danger oi
heating. After serving their purpose the
brick should be carefully put one side for
use another year. Our informant's father
had used the same pile of brick many
years, and however dry the grain, he
usually threw a few brick in the bin to
insure greater safety. It is possible that
this would prove a good method in dry¬
ing out corn or to keep hay or grain in
stacks from being spoiled by beating
through.
KEEP YOUNG STOCK GROWING.
If properly fed and kept warm in win¬
ter, young animals gain more from the
same feed than they will at any latei
period of their existence. The necessity
for good feeding must therefore be appar¬
ent. For the young stock, if not fed oi
cared for as it should be, becomes
stunted, and under this condition there is
scarcely anything more vexatious and dis¬
heartening. The cause of stunted growth
is usually impaired digestion, though this
is followed by, and often confonnded
with, attacks of scurvy in pigs, lice in
calves or colts or ticks on lambs, all of
which are serious evils. They generally
proceed from the one source of insuffi¬
cient nutrition. We use this word nu¬
trition rather than feeding advisedly.
There may be enough or too much fed,
and there may even be enough eaten, but
it does not digest. It is only the food that
digests which does an animal any good.
Where digestion is ruined easily the ani¬
mal never recovers to what it might
have been. Starving and surfeiting are
equally injurious. It is just these ex¬
tremes that the careful farmer avoids as
belonging to the wild state. No wild
animal produces as much gain in flesh as
one under intelligent and painstaking
human care. The wild animal gets its
food as best it may, and in latitudes
where cold winters prevail it is reason¬
ably sure to become pinched and stunted
the first winter. It is quite likely that
if the buffalo is domesticated and given
food and shelter winters, it will attain
larger size than the buffalo that formerly
ran wild over our western plains.— Ameri•
can Cultivator.
GRAFTING THE CHESTNUT.
In some old works on horticultural
operations the grafting of the chestnut
j s referred to as a rather difficult and uu
certain operation, and this may have de
terred many otherwise good propagators
G f trees from attempting it. But any
one w ho can successfully graft the applt
aQC l p Car need not hesitate to graft the
chestnut, thereby saving several years in
procuring a crop of these excellent nuts,
The cions should, of course, be taker
from bearing trees if possible, and only
the young healthy shoots used, and these
taken from the terminal points of large,
vigorous branches. After thecion is set,
cover every part of the exposed wood on
both stock and cion with wax, using
plenty of it, inclosing all with waxed
paper or thin cloth, to prevent admission
of air or water when the
stock begins to sw’ell with growth
in spring. I much prefer splice
grafting upon small stocks on branches
of larger trees, to the ordinary cleft-grat¬
ing, but have good results from both. It
is not at all rare to see the cion set in
spring blooming at the usual time the
first season, and bearing a few nuts the
second, and more the third. By having
| a few seedling chestnut trees growing iE
the orchard and garden we can always
avail ourselves of the opportunity for ob
taining cions of choice varieties found in
the forest, or ir the rr/’Hnds of friends
and neighbors. The same is true in re¬
gard to fruit and ornamental trees, and a
man handy with the budding-knife can
always obtain of his friends choice and
rare varieties without cost, if he is known
as a liberal man ever ready to return
such favors .—New York Tribune.
care of hole plants.
At this season of the year window
plants require considerable attention tc
maintain a healthy condition. Care has
de l ° ncd >e ta ^ en ln and watering saturated so that condition too much
£U vea a
s ' jd result. Do not allow water tc
remain in the saucers in which the flowei
| P°^ s ^°° are standing, C I as it plant causes will the remain soil tc
we aQL no
l° n g healthy in such a condition. Stii
the surface of the soil in the pots, and
occasiona Uy wash the leaves by spraying
^ i ^ lf, y are when smo °tfi they aQ d large, small and and by
s y r n S* n g' are
! covere< ^ hail - Also keep the pots
; f '^ eau - ^ j us k as necessary to keep the
j breathing _ pores. of the leaves in good
w e r king condition as it is to keep the
sk * n the human body free from dirt.
Pick off all decayed leaves and keep th*,*
plants free from insects. Green flv, tha<
i tet ***** *m *~p. *T »»«■ **5
m * k tC >
! ™ gU,ar , ^ , ,ttendcd „ ,0 ’ but
i** °? “ , ’ a ’*° nu “ b f. ,hc
° nl J. me,b ? d of ^truetton ,. ts
* hlch c ” bc «PP b «> b J Plf
l hc P kn ‘ s under 1 » U1 '
!"* r “ f ot , “
>? perfectly tight, till with smoke first.
; hen P 1 ”" >h e P lants ' Jnd ? r b v d m cklj
-
turmng . toe plants , sidt, , enough
on one ns
^ m ?, kc ' rcm ? m to d “ tr0 I the lns ? e,s -
?""*'A bave , **?*>*• their pots , well ,u '‘P with 8 ’ f=•> roots "' hlah can
'‘ ou ff bt 10t0 light and heat, when
W,U SOOQ “P and ,ha1 ’ «?” ers -
| , 0 " hen an T watering -* m , newly expanded l
1 ’ 0 D ° a 0w an !
-
“ . '““S theblooms,
rCm “ I ‘ ™ as ,t
, Se^onthti Y, secure a tew bu.bs
f^ f schlas i have tfa em now coming
; bloom, ’ will at once be convinced ul tJ
this , . . of the of recently
IS one sweetest
,„ . , .. ”
trod uced te The 0 y - are om so o easd , y ™ aa
-
i a p d , an f bl °° m SO finely that they
1 3 al ^ ^ers°f . bec ,°“ flowers e § ener wherever ? 1 fav ^tes introduced.
:
D Unn S tbelr dowerin ? Period give
of - water, but as soon as the foliage be
gins to ripen gradually withhold water,
geto until nixT August,'"'whin
T™ ^ ***** ^ ^° wth —
j ! Farmer.
-—
'
Best as a Core for Lockjaw.
Professor Renzi, of Naples, has re
ported cures of tetanus by securing ab
j solul f rcst for th o patient—that is, reu
senses as well as for the bodj.
j T he P* 1 ’ 6111 s ears are closed with wax.
. is dark, and the door
carpeted room Hi' is heavily
nurse attends him with .1
-haded lantern: he is served food that
re q a ires no mastication; and sedatives
are given to relieve pain It is not pre
Tended ^ ^ treatment shortens the
the but that it
force of tna paroxysms, which event
^' 5 .y cease.
-—--
Tne last census in New Zealand reveals
the tact of a profession of religion on. th-.
part of no less than ninety-five per cent.
of the whole population.
VanWINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY CO.
ATLANTA, GA., and DLAS, TEX.,
---MANUFACTURERS--
Cotton Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Presses,
COTTON SEED OIL MILLS,
Sliaftin, Pulleys, Wind Mills, Pumps, Tanks, Etc.
n
IVVs H$#j
fu m -
lp Ttx -
mm
ft'i HIS.H
m ■ i
$
-■
Si 11
THE
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feed mill made. Five sizes are made to cut as high as 50,000 feet per day.
gag
(
1 ' 1 fir
MB IPglfe
r-1
$ 200.00
Mill has “Champion’’ Dogs worth fifty’ dollars, variable feed, ratchet set works, simultaneous head blocks and cuts 10,000
board lumber per day’. Warranted to cut 2,000 feet board lumber in ten hours with four horse-power engine, and 8,000 feet
with fifteen horse-power. It is the only mill that fully meets the requirements of small nower. Thirty-Seven saw mills sold
in one month, and orders come from Michigan, Wisconsin, Montana, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and from all parts
oi the South.
This feed is easily attached to other 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
iach. with our famous Virginia stone, W AIIII ANTED to make as good table meal as any large top-runner mill in the country,
WATER or steam power. In case of failure to perform as stated, we to pay freight both w’ays and take the mill back, and ii
found satisfactory, partv to pay us the price agreed on. which, we will take occasion to say, is VERY low. Now, think st
moment; you can get a 20-inch mill to make good meal and make it fast. Write for catalogue.
DeLOACH MILL MANUFACTURING CO,, Atlanta, Ca.
I
I Li.
(I
ALWAYS ™ct§y
EIGHTEE N SIZESA ND RINDS
MX PDRCHASERS CAN BE SUITED
“i
MANUFACTURED B!
Ibufio ASheppard & Co.,Baltimore,#*!.
AND FOR .SALK ?>V
Bramblett & Bro.
Forsyth, Georgia.
DR. OWEN’S
ELECTRIC BELT
AND SUSPENSORY,
P«t«t»AoO. 18. 1887. UtPBO»EOjuir30,1889.
Aamja ,-,,MS^i|a,, i, BOOTbSt
SS& <Sk
Kervouanes^ Tremblios,
* 9 th*-omb * or ««.»! <ron.of ™ie « f«n^.
§?t PRjOWEN’stLtuInlu 6 a km ovr? p 1 Cpn INoULtotiPERPAiRa
Becate. postage for rai«llla5tnitedpamphlet, which Wiliba
•MWJOO in plain sealed envelope. Hc-ntion this paper, addres*
CWEK ELECTRIC BEIT & APPLIANCE CO.
SOGNouh Broadway, st. rouis, m o.
_
KUItIU ■nTTDTTT'DP JtCf JCl t l
« tLtWlnU# c C TDlfi DEI BtLT T
AND TRUSS
COMBINED
EE?TR0® ALV^o
&a4e mat, or urong. TLists theociy Aifficri^on^ combined
^ e L“ de r d‘
watj onIn plw ln »e »lea e nreiope. Sold only by the
"\
Dropsy W0 TREATED FREE. ■
treated Dropsy *ad iucos>pUc»tioos with tbs
J&Y,
r*j?i djr cusappear. &nd in tea day»
bSatvgNmhod: kaowicx acrtiwE*
ttent WI-l'‘toi^STtt 4 ecl«r*tun^b!e pampEier.^Amtsjnine u Uwa^week^Grives^fuUhi* 8
t”s T will'd u 0 w I't? to wm!
**» a. ■’ Jmats
*
WRITE FOR PRICES.
.................................................................................... ....... mi ■ » *■■■ ■■■ ■ ■ h —i im » , f
Engines n Mill Machinery Fittings.
Boilers and Piping and ail kinds of
Shafting, Pull»ys, Hangers, Boxes, etc., in Stock for prompt delivery. in We buy, South—Telephone sell, repair, exchange No. 27
and rent Engines on best terms. We have the most extensive shops the
GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO.
Foundry, Machine and I3oiler
1014 to 1026 Ferwick St., above Pass’r Depot, Agt. in Georgia, S. Carolina and Florida, for
AL’GUSXA, GA. Korting Injectors and Vanduzen Jet Puinps.
GEO. W. CASE.
t MARBLE
I*, -AND
i B GRANITE WORKS!
X
MONUMENTS
a JRON FENCING, ETC.
. n fS8ty Street,
K-j MACON, GEORGIA.
SMITH & MALLARY,
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BP
Mmmm j)
1 MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND.
Steam Engines, Boilei’s, Saw Mills, Cotton Seed Grindars, Belting, Lu'
■
t bricating OiU, Iron Pipoand Fittings, etc.
SMITH & MAL&ARY. Macon, Qa ?
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