Newspaper Page Text
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FORSYTH, OA.
Official Orfcan of Monroe Gonnty.
BY McGINTY & CABAN 186.
There are only fifty-eight prisons in
England. Leas than twenty years ago
there were 113.
i A long distance telephone line is
being constructed between Madrid
nnd Barcelona. Spain is coming to the
front.
The day may come, suggests the
Scientific American, when we shall
>»refer to pay a doctor for keeping us
well to curing us when we are ill.
Doctor Klein, of London, says that
the cholera is a much more prevalent
disease than many others, which are
more common and more deadly, but
less feared.
A law enacted In Germany requires
that all drugs intended for internal
use be put up in round l ottles, while
those for external use shall bo put up
in hexagonal bottles.
The London Anarchists havo suc¬
ceeded in frightening Queen Victoria
and the Prince of Wales, declares the
Atlanta Constitution. The two are
guarded by detectives, and the I’rinco
no longer shows himself in public with
his old freedom. The Queen is nerv¬
ous and uneasy all the time.
It will surpriso many, thinks the
New York Independent, to learn that
tho pineapple is becoming an impor¬
tant crop in Florida, tho estimate for
the present year being 50,000 crates,
or 15,000 greater than last year. As
a popular fruit the pineapplo ranks
above tho banana or fig, and only just
below tho lemon in valuo of tho do¬
mestic crop. In tho census year 1890
the valuo of the domestic production,
of pineapple was greater than that of
the imports.
During tho past eight years onlj
sixteen immigrants havo landed nt
Charleston, fourteen at Savannah,
twenty-two at Brunswick, sixty-eight
at Fensacola, three at Mobile and
about twenty-six thousand at New Or¬
leans. Of the 541,667 immigrants last
year 320 went to Alabama, 415 to Ar¬
kansas, 2765 to Florida, 372 to Geor¬
gia, 3409 to Louisiana, 265 to Missis¬
sippi, 280 to North Carolina, 221 to
South Carolina, 423 to Tennessee,
2574 to Texas and 583 to Virginnia.
Tho great penal junilnmetd on tho
miuuman Islands, off the coast of Ben¬
gal, resembles in one respect the Ari¬
zona penitentiary at Yuma, notes tho
Han Francisco Chronicle. This like¬
ness is tho hopelessness of escape. Tho
Andaman Islands are far from the
mainland and tho seas around are
swept by tierce tempests that will
swamp any small boat. For this rea¬
son, though there are 8000 convicts in
the settlement, few guards are em
ployed. At Yuma it is not the sea but
the desert which mocks the convict’s
longing for freedom. To escape death
by thirst or tho bullet of tho treacher¬
ous Indian trailer is little short of t
miracle.
Herr Johann Most, the apostle of
anarchy in this country, is sad and
disgusted, observes the Atlanta Con¬
stitution. Ho thinks there is no hope
for tho glorious cause of anarchy in
America, and in a four-column screed
to his paper, tho Freheit, advises his
followers to go back to the more hope¬
ful fields of Europe. Says he; “Turn
your backs upon this accursed coun¬
try to continue your labors in Europe,
even if you have to travel over the
ocean in cattle ships or in coal bunk¬
ers.” He says that he would go him¬
self if ho only knew where he could go
without finding himself behind prison
bars. It is hardly to bo supposed
that Most expects his followers to take
his advice seriously, as ho would
hardly care to be left without a con¬
stituency, but, if they would, the
country would be glad at their de¬
parture, and would doubtless be will¬
ing to provide them first-class pas
sago.
Count Tolstoi, tho Russian novelist,
thinks that the world is going to the
bod very fast, and lias been declaim¬
ing a good deal of late about the
growth of vicious tendencies in so¬
ciety. Not long ago he was asked by
a correspondent of an American paper
which country he considered the most
abnormal in this respect. He replied :
“At any rate, not the Americans, To
their credit must bo put an immense
national love, which cannot exist in
an abnormal people. I one day wrote
an article on America and Americans
in which I did not particularly over¬
load the latter with flattery. Never¬
theless, 1 sent the manuscript over the
ocean, thinking it would be accepted
by any paper as eagerly as my other
productions. Not a bit of it. The
translator took it to fourteen editors
without getting it accepted, and finally
it had to be sent to England.” The
Count thinks that a people which has
enough national pride not to be will¬
ing to read ill things of itself, must
have some good left in it. France,
he said, was the most degraded and
corrupt nation in the eivil izadj yorld.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA-, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1891.-EIGHT PAGES.
Every year moie nnd more land is
coing out of cultivation in England.
Since 1873 more than 2,001',000 aerta
have been abandoned.
Reports received by the Mannfac
turers’ Record of Baltimore, states
that less cotton is being planted in the
South this year and more attention is
being given to food products.
Lord Dufferin, the British diplomat,
thinks that the prospects for the peace
of Europe are even brighter than
they wero last year. So far as heard
from no armies have been disbanded
on that account.
A North Dakota paper puts it:
“North Dakota is pre-eminently a
stock raising region. Millions oi
acres of nutritious grasses are wasted
annually. Millions of tons of hay are
left uncut, and tens of thousands of
icres are burned by prairie fires.”
The revenues of the clergy of the
Church of England amount to $38,000,
000. But of this sum (which is not so
much aw the clergy of America receive),
almost nothing comes from the free¬
will offerings of the people. The in¬
come from private benefactions made
wince 1703 amounts to less than $1,-
500,000 a year.
The study made of foods by Mrs.
Richards, of the Institute, by Profes¬
sor Atkinson and others, and the con
sequent opening of “New England
Kitchens,” w’hore nutritious food at a
low price may be had by the poor,
cannot fail, in the opinion of the Scien¬
tific American, to help fn lessening the
tide of intemperance and its number¬
less attendant miseries.
Archibald Forbes, a writer with
few, if any, superiors in lus special
field, is of the opinion that tho war in
Europe which so many believe to be
impending will not occur until 1896.
1 ranee and Russia have a united army
of more than 1,500,000 men, but Rus¬
sia is not well supplied with modern
weapons. Germany, Austria and Italy
havo a force of about 1,200,000 men,
well equipped. When Russia has is¬
sued the new weapons to her army,
Mr. Forbes believes the long-expected
and oft-predicted conflict will begin.
M. Bertilloii, one of the chiefs it
polico service of Paris, is at work on
the preparation of an illustrated dic¬
tionary of Anarchists of Paris and the
provinces. The portraits of those ene¬
mies of society are arranged alpha¬
betically and according to their
physiognomical typos, tho Roman
uoood in otxxj uxid tlio G roc if nosed
in another. A copy of tho work will
be sent to tho police agents in various
parts of France and other countries,
whose duty it is to keep a watchful
eye on tho Anarchists and their do
\ngs.
Thcro have been four commercial
panics in the present century, prior
to the one w’hich occurred last year.
.Flio first was in 1819, and recovery
from its effects was not clear until
after 1823. Tho next great panic was
in 1837, audits effects lasted fully five
years, improvement becoming pro
nounced in 1842. The panic of 1857
had not lost its force when the entire
situation was changed by the outbreak
of the Civil War in 1861. The panic
of 1873 was almost continuous in its
effects until 1877, or, perhaps, 1878.
As far as stocks are concerned, the
low prices following the panic of 1873
were made in April, 1877. This, to
the New York Exchanges, seems quite
suggestive of the idea that a. general
commercial panic exerts a depressing
iniluenee through a period of four or
five years, during which retrenchment
and economy result in the liquidation
of debts and prepare the way for a
new start.
A late issue of London Truth hat
the following: The Matabele war was
commenced by the Chartered Com¬
pany nominally because, after inviting
Lobengula to send troops to chastize
the Mashonas, the forces of the com¬
pany killed his troops as they could
not get back to Matabeleland (which
was thirty miles distant) in an hour—
really for the same reason that led
Ahab to cause Naboth to be killed. It
was carried on by men enlisted by the
promise of “loot.” It was waged with
hideous cruelty. Lobengula wrote to
ask what tho company desired; no
reply wa6 sent. He sought to forward
a letter to the queen ; it was not for¬
warded. He sent envoys; they were
killed. Finally his capital was de
stroyed and parceled out into “town
lots,” and he was driven into the
swamp; old, fever-stricken and de¬
serted at his utmost need by those
his former bounty fed. He was pur¬
sued. When the bloodhounds were on
his track the poor man sent and of
fered to surrender, and as an earnest
of his good faith forwarded a present
of gold to his pursuers; for. like the
Spaniards under Pizzaro, they had
shown that the love of gold conld
alono influence them. What hap¬
pened? The message was suppressed,
the gold was stolen. This is Dr.
Jameson’s own account. And we are
asked to regard these men as heroes,
and to pay $400,000 for having aided
them to rob this kiug of hit? country
and of his life!
GEORGIA IN BRIEF.
NEWSY ITEMS GATHERED HERE
AND THERE OVER THE STATE
And Condensed Into Pithy and Inter¬
esting Paragraphs.
The board of trade of Jacksonville,
Fla., has endorsed the Cotton States
and Internationa] exposition at At¬
lanta, and the board of county com¬
missioners in Orange county has rec
omended it to the favorable considera¬
tion of the people of that county.
Similar actiou is likely to be taken by
tha commercial, trade and industrial
organizations in other parts of the
state.
The Georgia railroad is greatly im¬
proving its roadbed. Hundreds of cars
loaded with heavy new steel rails are
to be seen along the roadside ready to
be put down and the work is already
going on with a vim. The Georgia has
as good a roadbed as any in the South,
and with new rails it will indeed be
handsomely equipped. It is said that
it is the intention of the management
to put on a very quick schedule be¬
tween Atlanta and Augusta as soon as
the heavy rails are put in place.
It seems as if Darien is about to
have a railroad at last. The Darien
Short Line was incorporated in 1885,
but was put in the hands of a receiver
and sold out before it ever reached
Darien. It was bought in by a num¬
ber of gentlemen from Yonkers, N.
Y., Mr. W. F. Cochran, Mr. George
1>. McKay, and Mr. Waldo G. Morse.
They have associated with them a
number of Darien gentlemen, Judge
James Walker, Mr. Bichard W.
Grubb, Mr. H. S. Ravenel, and Mr.
George E. Atwood, and they will begin
at once to build the road. A few days
ago it was reincorporated by Secretary
Cook under the name of the Darien
and Western Railroad company, with
a capital stock of $200,000.
Tho Interstate Immigration and In¬
dustrial convention to be held in Au¬
gusta on the 30th instant, will be at¬
tended by the southern governors and
numerous capitalists and men of enter¬
prise from all over the Sbuth. Among
the delegates will be the governors and
commissioners of agriculture of fifteen
southern states with tlieir delegates
at large from each state and one
from each congressional district. The
presidents, general managers, general
passenger agents of the southern roads,
Secretary Morton and various senators
and representatives will attend. The
objects of the convention are to dis¬
cuss and adopt practical plans to draw
capital and desirable immigrants in
this direction, and to unite the state
governors, legislatures, railroad mana¬
gers and the press in the work of de¬
veloping tlie south. The newspapers
all over the country are encouraging
the new movement.— Ex.
Tifton’s Midsummer Fair.
At a recent meeting at Tifton of rep¬
resentative citizens from Berrien,
Worth and Irwin counties it was de¬
cided that the midsummer fair would
be held at Tifton July lOtti and 11th.
The meeting was largely attended and
enthusiastic throughout, and the pro¬
moters of the enterprise are confident
of its success. Colonel G. W. Ful
wood, of Berrien, Captain D. G. Irby,
of Irwin, and Dr. Wilson, of Worth,
were chosen an executive committee.
These are all progressive and influen¬
tial citizens, and the affairs of the as¬
sociation will be well cared for. The
city of Tifton has given the buildings
and grounds for the fair. The chief
object of the fair is to further the ag¬
ricultural interests of southern Geor¬
gia. Valuable premiums for county
and individual exhibits will be offered.
Fine Seasons and Fine Crops.
It is ascertained at fhe office of Com¬
missioner Nisbett in the agricultural
department that good seasons prevail
in all sections of the state, and that
the crops are growing off nicely since
the rains. The cold weather in the
earlier spring caused considerable de¬
lay in planting, and in many sections
of Georgia there are very poor “stands”
of both cotton and corn, due to the
cold snap. Farmers have found it
necessary to do a great deal of re¬
planting, and it is a common thing,
even at this late season, to see cotton
choppers,with little sacks of seed with
them, dropping here and there, while
they hoe out the furrows, a few of the
seed where the stand is poor. But,
the good effect of the rains which seem
to have been pretty general lately, will
soon be felt and the crops are already
looking brighter and growing most
rapidly.
* * *
Federal Aid for the Exposition.
All over the south the chambers of
commerce, boards of trade, commer¬
cial clubs and the like are endorsing
the Atlanta exposition and asking con¬
gress to aid that enterprise. Now,
there can be no possible quibble about
extending all possible encouragement
to the exposition. The southern states
and cities should rally around it and
make it a grand display of southern re¬
sources and progress. Tha special
purpose is to bring the states of Cen¬
tral and South America in touch with
the gulf and south Atlantic states of
the union, with a view of promoting
trade between them and us. In that
matter Birmingham is particularly in¬
terested. and the district should by all
means bare a complete exhibit of its
products.
A committee is to leave Atlanta to¬
morrow to go before the congressional
committees for the purpose of asking
federal aid for this great enterprise
and the Age-He raid wishes them all
the success thev deserve. Birming¬
ham is deeply concerned in this great
movement, and it is gratifying to state
that Hon. Frank P. O'Brien, of this
city, has been selected as a represen¬
tative of this section of Alabama be¬
fore the congressional committee. He
will ably represent this great iron, coal
nnd agricultural section.—Birmingham
„ (Ala.) Age-Herald.
For Teachers.
Capt. S. D. Bradwell, state school
commissioner, has issued a circular
letter to all the county school com¬
missioners in the state, instructing
■ a _m with reference to holding the
teachers’ institute this summer. The 1
law passed by the last general assem- j
bly changing the system of holding j
these institutes for the improvement ;
of teachers so as to have only annual j
sessions. The time for holding the
annual institutes in the counties this
year as fixed by the law is within the
period of June, July and August. The
state commissioner says he will be
glad to co-operate with any of the
county commissioners who may
desire to combine several counties
in holding a united teachers’ insti¬
tute. The law requires that there shall
be an expert selected to aid in con¬
ducting the county institutes, and that
he shall be paid 825 for five days'
work. The commissioner will be glad
to furnish to the county commission¬
ers who may desire it a full list of ex¬
perts who are willing to serve in this
capacity. The expert, however, does
not have control of the work. He is un¬
der the county school commissioner,
who is the Q£e to preside at all the
sessions of the institute. The white
and colored 'Institutes are to be con¬
ducted at the same time and place,
though the law requires that they shall
be in different halls and apartments.
The expert is required to give the same
course of training to the colored teach¬
ers as to the white.
There will bejio Peabody institutes
in Georgia this year, the state legisla¬
ture having refused to grant any state
aid to the Peabody fund and the man¬
agers of that fund having decided on
this score not to spend any money in
Georgia in this way until the state is
willing to meet them on half-way
ground. Every teacher in the state is
required by law to attend the insti¬
tutes. If the time fixed for holding
the one in his own county falls on him,
while his school is still in session, he
must suspend school long enough to
attend it, and then make good the time
lost in teaching after it is over.
State School Commissioner Bradwell
has also called the attention of the
county commissioners to the fact that
the next general examination of
teachers is to be held June 2d. It will
be conducted under the regular rules
and regulations that have governed
heretofore.
The teachers of the state association
will, this year, hold their convention
the first week in July in their new’
home at Cumberland island. It is a
delightful place for the teachers to go
for a convention, and it is said that
the approaching convention will, in
many ways, be one of the most pleas¬
ant and one one of the most profitable
ever known to the Georgia State
Teachers’ association.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
Electiq# Railway Sold.
The Ove electric railway at
Nashville, Tenn., has been sold by or¬
der of the court, subject to $100,000
mortgage bonds, The property
brought $10,433.
Congressman Bratton Dead.
Representative Robert F. Bratton,
of the first Maryland district, died
Thursday morning at Princess Anne,
Maryland.
Coxey for Congress.
The populists of the eighteenth Ohio
congressional district have nominated
Jacob S. Coxey for congress.
PREPARING FOR ACTION.
Featherstone—Will your sister Ik
down soon, Willie?
Willie—I guess so. She is chang¬
ing her dress.
Featherstone (impatiently)—What
is she doing that for?
Willie—She said she wanted to put
on something that didn’t rumple—
[Philadeluhia Life.
ATLANTA MARKETS.
CORRECTED WEEKLY.
tJrocerles.
Coffee—Roasted—Arbuckle’s 53.10 100 1b.
cases.Lion 23.10c,Lcvering’s23 10c. Green—Ex¬
tra choice 21c; choice good 20c; fair 19c; com.
mon 17al8c- Sugar---Granulated 4WTc;
powdered 5%c; cut loaf b l / t
white extra C 4c; New Orleans yellow clari¬
fied 4c; ye low extra 0 3%c. Syrup
New Orleans choice 45c; prime 35@40c; common
20@30c. Molasses—Genuine Cuba 35@38c; im¬
itation 22@25. Teas—Black 35@55c; green
40@60c. Nutmegs 6a@85c. Clover 25@30c;
’ innamon 10@12%o. Allspice 10@llc.
Ginger 18c. Singapore pepper 11c, Mace
$1.00. Rice, Head 6c; goo 1 5%; common
4%c; imported Japan 5(g5%e. Salt—Hawley’s
da’.ry $1.40; Virginia 70c, Cheese-flats ’.2%@13;
White fish, hair bbls. $4-00; pails 6)c;
Mackerel, Tallow, 100 half barrels, $0.00(^0.50. Soap.
turpentine, 60 bars, bars, 75 lbs $3.00@3 75.
60 lbs, $2.25 a 2.50;
Caudles—Par&fine 11c; star 11c. Matches—
400s $4 00; 300s $3 00a3 75; 200s $2 OOa2 75; COs
5 gross .$3 75. Soda-Kegs,bulk i%c; do 1 lb pkgs
5%c; cases, 1 lb 5%c, do 1 arid %lbs 8c, do%lb
GX C - Crackers—XXX soda 5)^c; XXX butter
C%c; XXX pearl oysters'6)^c*hell and excelsior
7c;lemon cream 9c; XXXgiuger snaps 9c; corn
hills 9c. Candy—Assorted stick 6c; French
mixed 12al2V». Canned goods-Condense 1 Milk,
$0 00a8 00; imitation mackerel *;! 95a4 00. Sal¬
mon $5 25a5 50: F. W. oysters *1 75; L W
•tl35; corn $2 50 a 3 50; tomatoes $2.00
Ball potash $3 10. Starch—Pearl 4c; Lump.
4 ‘tu ; nickel packages $3 10; celluloid $5.00,
Pickles, plain or mixed, pints $1 00a! 40: quirts,
$1 SOal 80. Powder—Rifle, kegs $3.25; igkegs,
$1 90; % kegs$l 10. Shot $1 40 per sack.
Flour, (.rain and Meal.
Flour—First patent $4 50; second pa’eat
$4.00; extra fancy $3.25; fancy ?3 15; family
$2.75. Com—No. 1 white 02:. No. 2
white, 60c. Mixed, 59c. Oats, Mixed
48:; white 50c; Seed rye, Georgia,
7-5a80c. Hay—Choice timothy, large bales,
95c. No. 1 timothy, large bales, 95c; choice
timothy, small bales, 95c; No. 1 timothy, small
bales, 93c; No. 2 timothy, small bales, 82J^c.
Meal—Plain 57e ; bolted 55c. Wheat bran—
Large sacks 90e, small sacks 95c. Cotton¬
seed meal—$1 30 per cwt. Steam feed—$1.10
per cwt. Stock peas 81.25al.3Q. Grits—
Pearl $3.00
Country Produce.
Eggs 9a9%c. Batter—Western creamery
20a22%c. Fancy Tennessee 15al7%c; choice,
10a 12%; other grades 6il0e. Live poultry—
Turkeys 7-g8c per ib: hens 22J£a25c.
Spring chickens, large 15 to 40c;
Duck-*, 20a22%c. Dressed poultry-Turkeys
Irish 12%al5c; potatoes, ducks, 2„50<®2.75 12%al5c; chickens, bbl. Fancy, I0al2j^.
bnshel $1.05a$!.10. pet per
Sweet potatoes 9€ca$l.
per ba. Honey—Strained, 8al0c; in the comb,
10al2Xc. Onion- fl 50a$1.75per bu. $3.00a3.50
per bbL Spanish onions, one bnshel crates,
$l-40al.50. Cabbage, lal%c. Grapes, Malaga,
50 to 55 lb. kegs, $5.50a$6-00.
Provisions.
it rib sides, boxed 7>£c: ice-cured bellies
10c. Sagar-cnred hams 1 l%al3c. according
to brand and average; California, 95£c. break
fast bacon 12c. Lard, leaf 8}^ Compound
6%a6%. ‘
Cotton.
Market closed quiet. Middling 6 5-So.
OH ILL) BIRTH • • «
* • MADE EASYJ
1 Mothfps* Friend ” scientific¬
is a
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre¬
dient of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro¬
fession. These ingredients are com¬
bined in a ifianrier hitherto unknown
“MOTHERS’ FRIEND”
• •
WILL DO ail that ; .s claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to " Mothers ”mailed FREE, con- *
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express receipt of price $1.50 per botti*
BRADFIEL0 REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga.
SOLI) BY ALL DKUGGIST&
*—1 1
fu
TYNER'S
m^Correchindiqzstm 5 mi mites] j
N n tit
.tfterhccrhf j
dose ^ rrtfci Is
proves efficacy its ^
SlK'gT.
FRiCE COOK 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE. X
OF VALUABLE INFORMATION FREE.
♦ FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS.
F01SYTH BOOK STOEB!
A FAIR SkTOCK. OF ALL THE
SCHOOL BOOKS
Used in ihe schools in Forsyth and
also those used in the country
schools kept on hand and for sale at
his usurT
LOW PRICES.
Magazines, Seaside Novels and the
usual Daily Papers.
I. W. ENSIGN.
Oat. lQtb. 1891.
ana cured Whiskey at home Hamto
with¬
out tlculars pain. Book of pnr
sent FKEE.
----- A.tJocLa.Ga. office B.M.WOOLLEY,M.D 1WJ* Whitehall
St
In the
Spring: Jr c_D
Those who would insure to
themselves the greatest de¬
gree of safety, and the cn
joymert of that good health
which is life's greatest bless¬
ing, should be careful to do
these two things :
PURIFY THE BLOOD
A TV D
TONE UP THE SYSTEM
For doing these things in
the safest, surest and most
pleasant way
Dr. King’s
Royal Germetuer
is pre-eminently the great¬
est of all medical remedies.
It is as pleasant to take as
lemonade, acts like magic
upon the blood and nervous
system, expels all the waste,
stimulates digestion and
gives appetite, puts roses
on the cheek and joy in the
heart.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
$1.00, six for $5.00.
Manufactured only by King’s Kov¬
al Germetuer Co., Atlanta, Ga.
* >*1 i*
PIANOS
A CD *:•
To Our Central Georgia Patrons 6
^ You want the BEST for tlie BEAST »
. i
J. A MONEY- We sell just that hind. Q
Been at it 23 years, and plaeed oyer A
A 50,000 satisfactory instraimnts in
W Southern homes Every one knows y
*<► that our Instruments are 6
RELIABLE, DURABLE, V
6 ,
f ’ and sold MUSICALLY at lowest possible PERFECT, prices.
-«©•:-«> * 6
-BUY FROM OIK
aMACON BRANCH. 6 J
v R. J. ANDER.SON & SON. Managers. *>
© What? Didn't you know we bad a 0 7
; Branch House there? Yes: it'.-itrue. 6
A Not an agency, but o'ir own sto e.
T under our d root cen'roi, and the
largest music house in Macon. Its
managers and salesmen under
A salarj-—ar:d not selling on cominls- i
Jr sion. All expenses paid l»y us. Sam
instruments. >ani : prices, sacoe ...
B V terms, same business methods as ir> X
7 Savannah. A gents' commiss’ons and 'J I
middlemen’s profits saved j urebas- A
cr-. Our grf- ati rst barg . in-* brought
V to yonr very door-. Immense tdo- k Jr
A to select from. VII new and frcdi A
y from factories. Write and our sales-y
A men w ill visit you.
Send your order; for .Sheet Mrsie. n
... Music Boohs. Band In truments.
SirDgs, and al! small musical ir.stru- A
ments. Any prices in the United y
4 States deplica 0
Be member our Macon Branch, 14
can save y<:u nv-ncy.
» 1 UDDEf! & BATES 7
6 Fout'iein Music House, 0
bln in jtxcuGr. Savannah, C-s. V
y Branches in Ksron. Co!tin,him
0 * Brunswick, Ga.; Ci»-r’otte, Ra : e;sh A
N. c.: iw.ox*ii!e. Te ,n.; \-«• or- 0
*I> lean*. L * : a!! under ,.t:r direct sea::- •>
Q agement.
CLOTHIERS!
TAILORS!
HATTERS!
FURNISHERS.
Eiseman Bros.,
WASHINGTON. L). en¬ ATLANTA. G V.. BALTIMORE,
ter 7th and K. Sts. N. \\ 15-17 Whitehall St. Factory, 213 \V. (Jetman St.
ONLY MANUFACTURERS OF CLOTHING IN THE SOUTH
DEALING DIRECT WITH CONSUMER.
CLOTHIERS.
TAILORS,
HATTERS,
FURNISHERS,
n
fl gfilgi! | MACON, GA.
Remember we
y
i* are still headquar¬
m: . ters for
BS3 ENGINES,
BOILERS,
SAW MILLS,
GRIST MILLS,
COTTON PRESSES, COTTON machinery GINS, lino.
and everything else in tho
PIcaso don’t ho persuaded into buying anything in the machinery
line before writing us for prices.
MALLA UY BROS. & CO , Macon, Ga.
The largest clothing stores
in the South, in Atlanta
anti Macon. When in need
of clothes, call to sec us.
Mail orders promptly fill
cd.
39-41 Whitehall St., 552-554 Cherry St.,
Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga
■f
Tho Best Shoos for
the Least Money.
XI: B B
ST* GENUINE
35IV1 X
WELT.
S3 Squeakless, Bottom Waterproof. Best Shoe sold at the price.
m i S5, $4 and S3.50 Dress Shoe.
oy J'.qu.-u custom work, costing from $0 to $S.
fill m !$k$3.50 Police Shoe, 3 Soie&»
® KB¬ %:■ f>ost VVulking* Shoe ever made.
ps £ Km ; $52.50, Unequalled and $2 Shoes,
ct m \ at ' the ’ price.
aP ,*d /is X Boys 82 & 81.75 School Shoes
Are the Best for Service.
w jL, X $2.50*
p-m ylUL B ™£A $2, $I.?S
\ >wnsola » Stylish, Perfect
m This BEsf^f Nfcv Fitting and Serviceable.Best
is the m Insist llie world. upon having All Styles. W. L.
Sh 0 J n Douglas and price Shoes. stamped Name on
;theworp v bottom. Brock ton
Mass.
DEALERS WLlspltfy
who push the sale of AV r . L. Douglas Shoes gain customers*
which helps to increase the sales on their full line of goods. They can
S5££ ofthe^^ufradwrtis^brtowf^atalogu^fre^u^on^piil^tioiu^^ ^
For Sale by J. B. SHARP & SON, Forsyth, Ga.
Enterprise Works
GEO. T. GIFFOBD, Proprietor,
MANUFACTURER OF
Boilers, Smoke Stacks )
Oil and Water Tanks, Iron Door and Window Shutters,
Wrought Iron Grating for Cellar Ventillating.
In fact, evil kinds of Wrought Iron Work.
Special attention given to repairs of all kinds. Competent workmen to send out on
repairs in guaranteed" the country. Pric** guaranteed to be as low as good work can be done at.
All work to be first i-luss. Orders solicited.
Dealers in *11 kinds of Steam Fittir gs, such as
Steam Guages, Safety Valves, Whistles,
Globe and CbeoY Valves, Guage Cocks, Etc.
Addrefii—
GEORGE T. GIFFORD,
Enterprise Boiler W®rki^. AiAQQ/N, GJk.