Newspaper Page Text
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TIE liOE ADVERTISES
FORSYTH, <3A.
Official Organ of Monroe County.
BY MrGTNTY A CA BA NIAS.
A national collection of figure-head*
of old ships of war is to be made by
the British Admiralty. Figure-heads
will be taken from ail old ships sold
out of service in future and efforts
made to reclaim all such relics from
: uuk shops and scrap piles.
Oklahoma is destined to become a
great fruit-growing country, The
young Territory now has 683,000
growing apple trees, 648,000 peach
trees, 69,000 cherry trees, 51,000
pear trees and a great variety of other
fruit trees and vines of every descrip¬
tion.
The “agricultural crisis” has called
out a very interesting review of
Italian agriculture, by Signor Galantb
He states that the area of land under
cultivation in Italy is about 60,000,000
acres, of which nearly one-fifth is in
wheat, with an annual average yield
of about eleven bushels per acre;
6,000,000 acres are devoted to maize,
with an average yield of seventeen
bushels to the acre; 2,000,000 to
leguminous plants, while oats, barley,
rye and rice comprise the rest of the
cereals. Vines, citrus fruits, olives
and other fruits receive much atten¬
tion. The farm livo stock includes
5,000,000 cattle, 6,000,000 sheep,
1,800,000 goats, 1,800,000 swine, 720,
)00 horses, and 1,300,000 mules and
ionkeys.
A late census report gives some verA
Interesting figures on the growth oi
manufacturing since 1880. A smaller
number of firms turned out a larger
product. The increase in population
has been a little less tliau 26 per
cent. ; but the product of boot and
shoe factories increased 33 per cent. ;
of carpets and rugs, 50 per cent. ; of
carriages and wagons, 70 per cent. ;
men’s clothing, 80 per cent. ; women’s
clothing, 100 per cent. ; confectionery,
120 per cent. ; iron and steel nails,
500 per cent. ; jewelry, 55 per cent. ;
distillod liquors, 250 per cent. ; petrol¬
eum, 100 per cent. ; proprietory medi¬
cines, 133 por cent. The groat in¬
crease in these various products above
the proportion of increase in the pop¬
ulation shows, maintains the New
York Independent, at how great a
pace our production of manufactures
has been advancing.
The largest pieco of cut glass evev
mado in America is now on exhibition
iu New York. It was made at the
pioneer cut-glass factory of the United
States, now about forty years run
ning. Tlio piece weighed seventy
pounds before it was decorated aud
lost about tweuty pouuds in the cut¬
ting. It is a juineh bowl eightoen
inches high and twenty-four inches iu
diameter. The actual cost of produc¬
tion was nearly 3409, and live men
were busied five days in decorating it.
American cut-glass makers admit that
one English house surpasses them iu
«ome kinds of work, but insist that
the Continental glass cutters do not
equal their American rivals. English
glass cutters earu very moderate
wages, but the pay of skilled men in
the United States is from $25 to 335
per week. Strange to say, American
inventors have not greatly improved
the machinery for cutting glass. It
still consists of the iron wheel fed
with sand for the first rough cutting;
the stone wheel with water for the
next process; the wooden wheel with
putty dust for the next, and the brush
wheel for the final polishing. Many
uativo Americans are now skilled glass
cutters.
“The low price of wheat in this
country is not due to the speculation
iu the Chicago wheat pit, as so many
people imagine,” said Morris Collins,
a Minneapolis elevator man to a "Wash¬
ington Star reporter. “England de¬
termines the price of American wheat,
as she does of our cotton, and the
prevailing starvation prices should be
properly attributed to her. Last year
there were partial failures of the grain
crop in Great Britain, Germany and
France, but there was a big surplus in
Russia, India and the Argentine Re¬
public, whose wheat comes into direct
competition with our own. In Russia
aud Argentine machinery is used very
little, and in India not at all, because
labor is so cheap there that it can be
gotten for from three to ten cents a
day. With this condition, climate and
soil being equal, and the rate of trans¬
portation the same, the United States
cannot compete successfully unless
the price of wheat is such as to allow
it to be delivered at the Atlantic sea¬
board free on board for shipment at
sixty-five cents a bushel, which means
forty-five or fifty cents a bushel to the
American farmer. Consequently, the
only cause that can improve the price
of wheat in this country is crop failure
or famine ab road 11
__
When Baby Was sick, we pave her Casons.
When she was a Child, she cried for Caster la.
When she became Mi*, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA-, TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
The caue sugar product of Louisi- ]
ina amounts to 603,353,087 poundi,
entitling the planters to 311,634.461
>ounty.
It costs Uncle Sam 81,000,000 a year
lo pension the naval officers who have
?rown old or who have become dis
bled in his service.
The new magazine rifle which the
French army is experimenting with
can be fired 100 times without being
taken from the shoulder, aud the
cartridges weigh only half as much as
ordinary ammunition.
In adopting orange as its college
color, Chicago University has aroused
the ire of Syracuse. Orange has been
Syracuse’s color for years, and there¬
fore they consider the action of Chi¬
cago University as an infringement
ipon their rights.
As the result of statistics showing
a large increase in the number ol
youthful criminals, the Ministry of
the Interior, of Germany, is discussing
a reorganization of the system of com¬
pulsory education. The Ministry is
in favor of following the English sys
tem in this respect.
A British nobleman who was suec
for breach of promise is reported to
have declared that it was impossible
for him to contradict a lady and that,
therefore, he would not deny that he
had mado the promise; but he in¬
sisted that the lady had exaggerated
the value of his affections and that that
value was a fair question for a jury.
The lady recovered one per cent, or
so of her original claim and the
mulcted nobleman declared that the
cross-examination of her by his coun¬
sel was amply worth the money.
New \ r ork and Boston capitalists are
interested in a gigantic enterprise,
which is to construct a ship canal
across the southern part of Michigan,
connecting Lakes Michigan and Erie,
announces the American Cultivator.
Its eastern terminus would probably
bo Toledo, though one of the pro¬
posed routes is from Port Bento to
Detroit. Either way the line would
be 180 miles long. Its estimated cost
is $50,000,000, and when completed it
will save 700 miles of dangerous lake
navigation. Still another canal is
talked of, which is to connect the up¬
per Mississippi at St. Paul with Lake
Superior at Duluth. The country be¬
tween these points is low, with many
small lakes furnishing abundance of
water, and making the construction
of a ship canal both possible and easy.
It is said that Governor Northen.
of Georgia, rather to the surprise ol
the people of his State, has demon¬
strated himself quite a successful rail¬
road manager, remarks the New- Or¬
leans Picayune. The State endorsed
3260,000 worth of bonds for the North¬
eastern Railroad of Georgia, with the
provision that if the interest were not
paid the road should be seized and
run for the State, or sold at the dis¬
cretion of the Governor. Last No¬
vember the Richmond and Danville,
which was operating the road, failed
to pay the interest, which amounts
to 31500 a month, and the Governor
took charge of it, appointing R. R.
Reeves, the President, as State agent.
The Governor proceeded to reduce the
working force of the road and cut
down its expenses iu other ways, and
under his management the road has
been clearing between 32000 and
33000 a mouth over all expenses. The
Governor is an old school teacher,
but he seems to have a head for busi¬
ness.
Thanks to the good sense and mas
terful control over his people of ole
San Juan, the head chief of the Mesca
lero Apaches, that once warlike anc
dreaded Mexican tribe has remained
at peace with the whites for many
years. They number 125 families,
comprising about 800 individuals.
Most attractive in its natural features
is their reservation, ninety miles
northeast from El Paso. About two
fifths of its 575,000 acres of varied
surface is covered with timber forests,
iargely pine, which include numerous
grassy spaces of parks; its plains
lands are covered with grama grass,
aud water is everywhere abundant.
These exceptional advantages for tim¬
ber cutting, stock raising and farm
ing, together with its known riel
mineral deposits of gold, silver, cop¬
per aud coal, have caused the Mesca
lero reservation to be regarded wit!
a covetous eye by white adventurers,
who have long brought a strong pres
sure to bear at Washington to achievt
their aims. It is proposed that the
Indian famiiies and adult males shal’
receive allotments of 160 acres each,
and the remaining 550,000 acres be
thrown open to settlement as Govern
ment land. Under conditions of satis
i’actory compensation to the Indians
for the land they surrender, some
such outcome, which will probably be
the ultimate one, would not be unfair
to any of the parties concerned.
For the present the Apaches are likely
to retain their vast hunting ground,
except, perhaps. That portion of the
reservation that is known to be min¬
eral bearing, an area of about 50,000
acres, which, it is generally believed,
will soon be thrown open tc minerd
and
uhUIivtIA / ( PA|)G | i l\' I i*T)TT-*-p
. > •
NEWSY ITEMS GATHERED HERE
AND THERE OVER THE STATE
An<l Condensed Into Pithy and Inter¬
esting Paragraphs.
Hon. D. A. Russell has been ap¬
pointed by the governor judge of the
newly established city court of Deca¬
tur couutv.
The governor has appointed Hon.
James A. Hixon to be judge of the
county court of Sumter county to fill
the vacancy caused by the death of
Judge J. C. Matthews.
On the 1st of May, in Laurens
county, the residence and property of
Peter I*. Thompson was destroyed by
&re. The governor offers a reward of
3100 for the discovery of the incen¬
diaries.
* * *
The new telephone line to Douglas
ville in course of construction by the
Atlanta Telephone Exchange, has al¬
ready reached Austell and Lithia
Springs, and the line has been opened
for business between Atlanta and those
points.
Governor Northen has offered a re¬
ward of 3200 for the arrest, with proof
to convict, of the person or persons
_
T a att -f ml ! ted t0 b!oW U V tke llomes
ed «r \V. C. \\ all and J. H. Lakes, in At
lanta, with a dynamite bomb, ibis
sum, in addition to 31,000 already of¬
fered, ought to inspire somebody to
unravel that mystery.
A pardon has been granted to Frank
McLendon, who, in 1892, was sent to
the penitentiary under a nine years’
sentence on a charge of assault with
intent to murder. The request for his
pardon was a very strong one. Among
those joining in it were the judge and
solicitor who tried him and all the
members of the jury.
A reconciliation between the discord¬
ant elements of the Marietta and
North Georgia railroad has been es¬
tablished and all differences will soon
be settled. Upon the motion on the
part of the reorganization to remove
Glover a decisive ruling has never been
made by Judge Newman. Anent this,
it is said that a compromise will be
effected appointing Elias Summerfield
as receiver.
The Polk County Farmers’ Mutual
Insurance Association has been organ¬
ized with about 3140,000 of stock, and
this shows the very unusual interest
manifested by the farmers. Many of
the best farmers of Polk were present
and participated in the organization.
They were representative men and the
association certainly starts out with a
splendid beginning and an excellent
prospect for permanent benefit.
A few days ago the supreme court
at Atlanta handed down a decision in
the case of Dr. Hinkle, of Americus,
who was convicted and sentenced to
life imprisonment for the murder of
Dr. Worsham. The lower court had
sentenced him to life imprisonment on
the evidence that w as adduced on trial,
and the supreme court, after sifting
the case, decides that the lower court
has not erred. The decision was af¬
firmed.
An . , Interesting , . „ Order. ,
One of the most interesting orders
which has been passed in the executive
department in a long time is that pro
viding for the payment of the interest
on the Northeastern railroad bonds.
Tke fact that the Northeastern in the
hands of the state should be able to
meet these obligations certainly re
fleets great credit upon the governor
and his agent, Mr. R. K. Reaves. The
governor cites in his order that he is
informed by R. Iv. Reaves, the state’s
agent, that the earnings of the rail
road property have amounted to $9,-
100, which he says is sufficient to pay
the coupons due in November, 1893.
He, therefore, orders that an adver
tisement be inserted in a newspaper in
Athens, one in Atlanta aud one in New
York, setting forth that the coupons
will be paid on presentation to the
Bank of the University at Athens, and
he orders that bank to pay the cou¬
pons when they shall be presented.
Only Half a Crop.
The report of the weather depart¬
ment for the past week shows no im¬
provement in the condition or prospect
of Georgia crops. The memorable
cold snap several weeks ago played sad
havoc with cotton and corn, but
it was thought that warmer weather
would follow' and that everything
would take on new life. Instead
of improving, however, each day
the prospects have grown gloomier and
Officer Morrill declares that, so far as
he can ascertain, one-half of the cot¬
ton crop has been killed. The past
week has shown only a partial return
to normal conditions of temperature.
There have been pretty, warm days,
but the nights have been cold, so that
the average has been from 3 to 5 de¬
grees below the seasonal normal The
only exception is in the coast districts,
where nearly normal temperatures have
prevailed. In rainfall the conditions
have been more unfavorable. Over a
large portion of the state there has
been no rain, the exception being in
the northwest, where a few scattered
showers have fallen.
Homes and Farms in Georgia.
A census table of statistics, giving
the number and pereenage of families
in Georgia by counties and cities, oc¬
cupying owned, hired, free and incum¬
bered farms and homes will be soon
given publicity. The table shows that
in this state 175,688 families own or
hire farms. Of these 71,116 families
own free farms, 2,491 own incumbered
farms, and 102,081 families hire their
farms. This makes 40.88 per cent of
our farms occupied by their owners
unincumbered, In Atlanta 13,315
families occupy homes, 2,788
are free and 221 are in
cumbered. There are 10,306 families
hiring homes. The incumbered homes
of Atlanta are only 7.37 per cent of the
whole number. Of Georgia cities Au
has the smallest percentage of
Incumbered homes occupied by their
owners, it being only 2.64 per cent.
The u hole table deserves close study,
and it leads to the conclusion that the
farmers and home owners of Georgia,
in town and country, are very com¬
fortably situated. They certainly make
a far better showing than the people
of the western states.
Aluminum in Georgia.
A wealthy northern company has be¬
come interested in Georgia property,
northern capital has commenced to
flow into the state through an entirely
new channel and new and valuable
mining beds in the northern part of
the state are being developed. A short
time ago Mr. Runnette, of the Fidel¬
ity Banking and Trust company, of
Atlanta, sent some samples of the
bauxite found in northern Georgia to
Captain Hunt, the president of the
Pittsburg, Pa., Reduction company,
which company Mr. Runnette is also
interested in. Captain Hunt had
the samples analyzed and found
that they contained very
large per cent of alumina, from
which-The new and valuable metal al¬
uminum is made. After a thorough
investigation Fergusoji, Captain Hunt and E. M.
president of the Merchants’
and Manufacturers’ bank of Pittsburg,
came down to personally view the field.
As a result they have purchased valua¬
ble bauxite lands in Floyd, Bartow and
Polk counties and have established
headquarters at Rome with the First
National bank of Rome as their depos¬
itory. The principal factory of the
company is at New Kensington, near
Pittsburg, and another will be built at
Niagara Falls.
THE LIMEKILN CLUB
Brother Gardner Discourses Upon
Hygiene.
When’Mie routine business of the
mst meetTOg of the Limekiln Club
had been finished Brother Gardner
arose ^ud,said:
“I hev a letter from de Stait B’od
of Health of Arkansaw inquarin’ if it
am my opinyun, based on observa
shun, dat de cull’d man has made any
progress in de matter of hygiene
doorin’ do las’ five y’ars. I shall in¬
struct de secretary to reply to de ef¬
fect dat he has made a heap of prog¬
ress an’ am gittin dar wid boaf feet.
Time was when de cull’d man did’nt
know dat he had any constitushun,
system or health, but yo’ can’t fool
him no mb’.
“Ten y’ars ago if Samuel Shin had
bin told dat it was onhealthy to sleep
in a close room, with three dawgs
under de bed an’ a bar’l o’ soap
grease in a co’ner, he would hev
smiled wid contempt. It was onlj
arter he had lost his left lung an’ had
his right knee sprung out of sliapi
dat lie began to study de laws ol
health an’ drive de dawgs out doahs.
I kin remember callin’ at de cabin ol
Shindig Watkins a few y’ars ago.
Dar was nine^ pussons, fo’ dawgs, a
guinea hen an’ two cats in de family,
an’ dey was sjl asleep in one room.
Brudder Wat* ins got up wid a head¬
ache, an’ vhen I hinted at
de laws dfipn-eat < % health he looked
at me in al), est a &^nisliment.
Ten y’ars tji, if Giveadam Jones
had found $1 bill in de road, he
would hev bought a watermillyon gnawed an’
swallerd half de seeds an’
clean down to de bark. Den he would
hev heaved in a dozen harvest apples,
six plums, a quart of cherries, three
bananas an’ a few pears. Dar would
still liev existed a vacuum, an’ lie
would hev filled it wid a cocoanut, a
dlsh of ic0 cre am an - al)out a quart
0 f lemonade,
‘ ‘He would hev gone to bed
as peart as yo’ please, an’ had he
wo ke up at midnight wid de feelin’
q a p wolves was bitin’ him an’ ele
phants walkin’ on him, he would hev
claimed dat it was all on account
D f his wife wantin’ a new pa’r o’
shoes.
“I kin remember goin’ by de cabin
0 f Waydown Bebee and seein’ his
picaninnies a-playin’ in de yard
among slops, bones, cabbage stalks,
dishcloths, fish heads, chicken feat-h
e rs, old boots, bottles, cans an’ sich.
When I leaned ober de gate an’ spoke
of hygiene, Brudder Bebee got mad
an’ 'wouldn’t pay me de borrowed
money I had cum arter, an’ I
j shouldn’t hev got it to wid dis day lickin’. had 1
j j not threatened him a
He thought it hardened de chile,
an’ he looked upon me as an old
eranlc.
“Up to five or six years ago no
cull’d pussen suspected he had a
stomach. He sorter imagined his
food dropped down somewhar, but he
neither knew nor cared whar. De
idea was to keep de cavity full, an’
it didn’t make much difference wid !
what. One day I found Brudder |
Artichoke Johnson lyin’ out back of i
my cabin. He was jest de sickest
man I eber an’ be claimed be !
saw,
had been bit by a rattlesnake. It
lidn’t take me long to find out what
was de matter. He had eaten tur¬
nips, onions, tomatoes, cabbages an’
eowcumbers from my garden till de
billyous colie was pullin’ him apart.
I lifted him up an’ hooted him out
into de road, an’ explained de laws ot
health to him, but it was a hull
y ar befo’ he would accept my state¬
ments.
‘ Y"es, I am glad to say, de cull’c
people of dis kentry hev made rapid
progress doorin’ de las’ few y’ars in
ile matter of hygiene, an’ from dis
on dey will go ahead jest as fast
as white folks. Take de flattest
beaded niggar in de kentry, an’ if he
! inds a bottle of medicine in de road
ioes he pull out de cork an’ imbibe
de contents ? Not much he used to
do so, but he’s heard about hygiene,
He jest puts dat bottle in his pocket
till he meets up wid a doctor an’
finds out whether its port wine 6r
boss medicine. We doan’ sleep wid
our feet out of de winder no mo’. Me
doan’ soak our heads in ice water to
cure chilblains. Me doan’ sleep in
a feather bed with two blankets ober
US in Summer to keep consumption
away, an’ we has diskivered seven or
eight ears of green co n at a meal am
plenty ’null to keep de liver in good
order. We am gettin’ along an’ five
y’ars hence we will be able to take
kcer of ourselves, an’ perhaps giv de
white man some p’inters to boca..
ISt. Louis Republic.
The whale fishing industries of the
United States was at its height in 1854,
when 668 vessels were engaged in it.
BflADFiEL ?'f' w l
JIE RE
ft OS
CURES y\LL r. j*
&
, DISEASES'*^* 1
v 1 \
•TO WOMEN*
Have used and recommended it to my friend.;.
All derived great benefit from its use.
Mns. Matilda Larson. TY< via. III.
Best remedy I have over used fyr irregular
menstruation. Mas. G. Jrrrr,
November. 1SS8. Selma, Cel.
I have suffered a erf at deal from Female
Troubles, and think I am completely cured by
Bradfield’S Female Regulate'.
Mrs. Emma F. Sword. Mansfield, O.
Rook ‘ To Woman’’ mailed free.
BRACFIELD REGULATOR CO-,
For sale by all Druggists. Atlanta, Ga
pi
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«s
V-X.
. ?
/ Ur ♦
V
Corrects 5 indigestion minutes ] ]
in
\LacW* er meals h ecchf j
dose ►T3
I proves
j efficacy 4
Wi
PRICE BOOH 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE. X
VALUABLE INFORMATION FREE. *
FO SALE BY DRUGGISTS. ♦
FORSYTH BOOK STOBB!
A FAIR STOCKEDF ALL HIE
SCHOOL BOOKS
Used in ihe schools in Forsyth and
also those used in the country
schools kept on hand and for sale at
his usual
LOW PRICES.
Magazines, Seaside .Novels ana the
usual Daily Papers.
I. W. ENSIGN.
0®t. IGth. 1891.
ana cured Wtusxey at home Eaoite
with
ag 33 If! I'M Si fej S if S&# 65 BSpS j§|-s| out tlculars pain. sent Book FIIEK of par
JUII»iAa,Cla. 8aaBSSi5OTai»3is(KS3 office B.M.WOOLLEY,M Whitehall .L
104H S'
THE TIRED
BUIS am! BEEVES
Find Sweetest, Safest and Beat
Relief by using Dr. King’s
-
Royal
ie Liter.
As a Nerve Tranquillizer and
Tonic it never has been equalled.
Dr. L. D. Collins, Groldthwaite,
Tex., says of it: “It is the finest
Nerve Tranquillizer I have ever
used.”
L. C. Coulson, Deputy Clerk,
Jackson county, Ala., says: “I
commend it for Nervousness
above anything I have ever
tried.”
Geo. W. Armstead, Ed. The
Issue, Nashville, Tonn., says:
“Germetuer is an invaluable
Builder and Invigorator of the
Nerve Forces.”
Hon. G. YU. Sander!in, Ex
Auditor, N. CL now 3d Auditor,
Washington, D. C„ says: “I
have never found a better Nerve
Tonic and General Invigorator.
Contains no Bromides, Co¬
caine, Chloral or other inju¬
rious drugs. Always safe for
all ages and sexes.
31, 6 for $5. Sold by druggists.
Manuf’d only by King’s Royal
Germetuer Co., Atlanta, Ga.
6
m ❖
IU
6
m y I
a
To Our Centra! Georgia Patrons
. You want the BUST for the LEA: T i
MONEY. We sell just that kina. Q
Been at it 2.S ye^rs. and placed over in
50,000 satisfactory ir.strumi n-s
Southern homes Every one knows
i that our instruments are
RELIABLE, UL R ABLE,
NtU.ISALLY PERFECT, 6 ^
’ and sold at lowest possible prices.
*V*
-Bl Y FROM OI K
MACON BRANCH.
r. j. anderson & sox. Managers.
0 What? Didn’t yon know we lad »
™ a 'ifut ^u'r^ViV 1
under our d rert con ro-. and the
a
$ . salary—and not .ellin? id on eonmiU
ins"™meins^'i-L P * p
terms, same hnsWe-s methods at. ill
Q ers. Our greatest bar g ins br.)»{f h
v £
from fnetqries. Write auduariales
a "‘send >!,ur order* for sh«~: vrdr
Music hooks. Hand In t-ro--nt*.
., "frToi
Toy Z inuej 9
S , states duplicated. t
een :t k *
I ODD 1 ?i V; OAT M.l 3 n
.
i E " : r Liasfe r - ■■a
5?am He-:3.-. Sav-.mr
Bran: ;?■ fu-n: ,
Itroi* . ■ c. -i .i. <
t. * H
. leans. 1 Lbhl it ;;
r>f, l
<
- V
CLOTHIERS!
TAILORS!
HATTERS!
FURNISHERS.
Eiseman GO
WASHINGTON. I>. C.. ATLANTA. GA..
Cor 7th and E. Sts. N. W 15-17 Whitehall St.
ONLY SOl,TH
CLOTHIERS,
■ TAILORS,
HATTERS,
Mallary Bros. & Go.,
ms db MACON, GA.
Remember we
are still headquar¬
■ • -sans ters for
/:/
v? ■WPlMlili ii i ENGINES J
BOILERS,
SAW MILLS,
GRIST MILLS,
COTTON GINS,
COTTON PRESSES, and everything else in the machinery line.
Pleaso don’t be persuaded into buying anything in tbo machinery
line before-writing us for prices.
MALLAR Y BROS. & CO , Macon, Ga.
WE HAVE
%
The largest clothing stores
in the South, in Atlanta
and M acon. When in need
of clothes, call to see us.
Mail orders promptly fill
ed.
39-41 Whitehall St.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The the Best Least Shoes Money. for W. L. DOUGLAS
^i§ $3 SHOE GENUINE WELT.
Fifc K Jm I SqueakleRs, SS5, $4 Bottom and Waterproof. $3.50 Best Shoe sold at the price.
Lquni custom work, costing Dress from Shoe. $S.
c jr- V 1 . S3.50 Police Shoe, 3 $6 to Soles,
2 , iP* W IHh. isc.st Walking- Shoe ever* made.
sm \« $2.50, Unequalled and $2 Shoes,
at the ‘ price.
5®L I#” ' fm Boys $2 Are fit the $1.75 Rest for Service. School Show
X $3, $2.50* $2, $1.75
3 Best JDongola, Stylinh, Perfect
This Best!-} k -Fitting iu anti Serviceable.Best
m is the ■ Insist the world. upon having All Styles. W.L.
Sto iH T Bv Douglas anu bottom. price Shoes. stamped Brock Name tor. on
HEW)R m. Mass.
DEALERS who push the sale of W. L. Douglas Shoes gain customers,
which helps to increase the sales on their full line of goods. They can
afford to sell at a less profit, and w-e believe you can save money by buying all your
footwear of the dealer advertised below. Catalogue free ujx»n application.
For Sale by J. B. SHARP & SON, Forsyth,
Enterprise BOILER Works
GEO, T. GIFFORD, Proprietor j
MANUFACTURER OF
Boilers, Smoke Stacks )
Oil and Water Tanks, Iron Door and Window Shutters,
Wrought Iron Grating for Cellar Ventillating.
In fact, all kinds of Wrought Iron Work.
Special attention given to repairs of all kinds. Competent workmen to send out on
repairs in the country. Prices guaranteed to be as low as good work can be done at.
All work guaranteed to be find class. Orders solicited.
Dealers in ftll kinds of Steam Fittings, suob as
Steam Guages, Safety Valves,Whistles,
Globe and ChecY Valves, Guage Cocks, Etc.
Address—
GEORGE T. GIFFORD,
Enterprise Bailer Work* MACON, GA
552-554 Cherry St.,
Macon, Ga