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DAILY i*r<kk I-DINGh of both
HOUSE and / SENATE.
I he Discussion of Important Measures
Briefly Epitomized.
The house r« -- ed consideration
the bill to r< P f " ■ 1 the state Dank tax act
at Mondav’s . .j'ssion, w the first
Inting Mr. Daz/,11, who sustained tho
(JOE titutionality of the law. Mr. Hol
naan l-hv* notioe that lie would, on
afl up the Indian nj»j»r^>j>ri
at i on bilj for c till 1 1 ration.
Iu t ho e, 1 tiesday, the commit
tee o r« ported an order limit
lng d bat, 1 on the bill to repeal th<
state ba to Mednt sday’s session,
th*! vote < )u tin amen no-nts and pass
age of the bill t„ I taken immediute
lv ujKiti rneeti General leave to
print remar W1 til ill ft period of ten
ll 1 giv it. Mr. lift'd said that he
desired to call attention to the fre
lent to of th method of closing
ote in th 1m e with nearly one
Ii ority, a method so at
var h tho good old methods
IV 1 1 to revere, But he expressed
J tis fact ion at th manifesta
tlot re on tl part of the dem¬
t <> reach an opportunity to repu
other pin tk of tlieir platform,
if < cr ther wa a platiorrn that
r ed stigmatizing in the house of
its frienda, it vv tie- platform on wliieh
lie l(ti erat believed they were re
turned to pow. r. Mr. (’etchings, re
t » Mr. Reed, aid that h<
ncktu *‘d with regret, that the
probubilitiea £ • re that the repeal of
the t would ot be adopted. But ho
desirwl to iy to him and the gentle
m u o! tli. • republican side that tho
ti ‘ would so, n come when currency of
th country i i volume sufficient to do
the | I oi the country would bo
i othci Vsteni of banks
t that n< iiv m existence. Tin
fitianciel thought of t country was
turning, he i aid, to tl necessity for
n ief in this direct ion. The reHoltl
tion was a nn d to and the substitute
of tin r n m i 11, <■ on banking and enr
ri ney for t he oi iginal Brawley bill and
the aiuendineut cd Mr. Cox, of Ten
= 1 see, to repciil the tax law outright,
s? , re formally laid before the house for
7 disitb rat ion.
1 he bill to repeal - bank tax act
Mil s taken ii| in lh use at 12:30
W odueaday, I urner, of Georgia,
having ft I teen lninutes £ to
H ipeak in favor of the rep, - there
being an hour and a quarter for argu¬
ment tieailist rep. III. Mr. Meiklejohu,
rt publican, of Nebraska, speaking of
the probable conditions under which
state bank issues won Id be made in case
the ystein was rehabilitated, ('a!hid at¬
tention to a batik law passed by the
Georgia legislature last December, in
, vpeetution of the repeal of the state
bank tax. That law, he said, author¬
ized a bank with ouo one-quarter o),
its capital in national bonds, on e
quarter in state, county or m-n
nicipal bonds of the stnt >‘d
one-half in currency, to issue,
upon the deposit of tlio bonds with
the stato treasury, notes the amount
of three times the security. The sub¬
ject, was fui ther discussed by Mr.
Bingham, ropiil>!iean,of l’ounsylvauia,
Mr. Hall, democrat, of Missouri, Mr.
Itobinson, republican,of I’enusylvauia,
and Mr. Cookrai), democrat, of New
)oi k. I he debate closed at 2:30 and
the vote taken, resulting iu 102 yens;
170 nays, a majority against repeal of
68 votes.
At 12:30 o’clock, Thursday, the
house went into a committee of the
whole on the Indian appropriation
bill. Mter Mr. Lynch of Wisconsin
had made a statement of the provisions
oftlu 1 bill, Mr. Linton of Michigan
made nn attack upon the system of
contract Indian schools, which tlie
bureau maintained through religious
organizations, chiefly Catholic; most
ot the evangelical denominations, he
said, had divorced themselves from the
bureau, and be urged the house to put
an end to the system altogether.
tii r niaaTR.
Tho first business done by tin sen
ale Monday was tho passage of H. -V<iin(
l't'SV dution uppropriatim/ VfD.OOO for
the expen t *Vjo inquiries aud
investi »>t' red bv the senate,
w o <aken up and the
pai igraph 182, offered
hi committee, changing
the time i the repeal of the sugar
bounty i a i e effect from July 1st,
1894, to ant -t, 4895, was agreed to.
Subsoip htU l v unanimous consent,
tUlll Iten tv couMtit red and tli<
amenduiei ts still remain open, Mr.
Allison t k the floor and argued
HgH t tli repeal of the sugar bounty
t the repeal of the sugar tin
able list.
ill bill was taken tip iu tbe
V.- * enatc Tuesday, the question being on
Jones’ amendment to the sugai
selied i lie, postponing its going into ef
feet ir, July 1, 1894, to July 1, 1895.
At 1 t •*!ie discussion was inter
rupteil by the vice president with tin
declaration that tl > hour had arrived
lor taking a votv on the amendment
offered by Mr. Jones, of Arkansas,
pi'stponing the repeal of the sugai
bounty provision ii > m July 1, 1894, to
duly 1, 1895. lhe v, v was taken bv
.veas and nays, and tho amendment wa
agreed to ; yeas 38, Lays 31. Mr. Pef
fer, of Arkausa-,vo\ed with the repub
lie ans z Sanderson offered at
end Z.+ to continue the sugai
bounty it 11 force and effect uuti
July 1, 1895. It was rejected; yea.-
32, nays 40.
In the senate, Wednesday, the tariff
bill was taken up at 10:30, tbe ques¬
tion being < >11 the tobacco schedule
Con Sf lerable discussion was had oi
a, faragrapi 1 . and some changes wer>
l'hc next schedule (G) “agri
•ulttiral products and provisions,” wa
then tak* - u up.
At l Imrsdav's session of the senat*
the tariff hi] 1 was taken up and set
siu'oches lhe agricultural scheduh
ade 1 Jlessr 1’offer, Gallinger ano
t ar*"
Battle With Miners.
One dead body, several men on tin
verge of the gra\ e, a number of others
seriously injured, $36,900 worth ol
property absolutely destroyed, and
many homes made desolate the re¬
sult of an attempt made Wednesday
by tho miners of tlie Peoria dietf’et t.
close the mine operated by Little Br3*>»
in Tazewell county, Ill.
THE M ON ROB ADVERTISE R. FORSYTH, GA., TUESDA -, J v, . JLi : 12. IR94.--EIGB I
latest
CONDENSED IN tO SHORT AND
BREEZY PA £ tAGRAPHS,
An«l Giving the (i , t of the News Up
to the I in»e of Going to Press.
Tlie strikers Wheeling Creek, O.,
have post* l u< iices warning the pub
lie to remai- wav and threatening to
throw n< w r reporters into the
river. They have 100 pounds of dvna
mite and hin
The Kansu rcpnhlicnn state con
vent ion in h< *ion at Topeka nominat
ed I. A. Tro, tman of Shawnee county
forlieutenf it gov, moron the third bal
lot; W. c.: .d wards, of Pawnee county,
for secrets f v of state, and George C.
Cole, of Cr 1 vford county, for auditor,
General Ja. nes U. Chalmers, former
democratic n 4 H n s pr< from
Mississippi, 1 T > i * s t- , to nil in¬
tents and porp (l8C(s rt rC8 j,] t . nt of Mem¬
phis, Ten n., nounced hiswilling
ness to bee. the people’s party cau
didate for '‘"ngresH in the second dis
trict of Mb * ,st ippi.
The Mot ' n i line steamship Ill Rio,
C aptain It< rt B. Quick, from New
York, with a general cargo, arrived in
port at Nt w Means, Thursday. She
made the r i from dock to dock in
four day ’» eventei n hours and twenty
light uiiiiiic, winch breaks all previ
oils records by.two hours.
The Ohi<« late prohibition conven
tion met i' tl Culunibus and nominated
the follow it,, I ticket: For secretary of
state, 11. (< MeCasline, of Kent; for
supreme court j,„ige, John Rosebor
ough, of Eluqore; for school commis¬
sioner, 1. V. Irish, of Columbus; for
member of tl board of public works,
H. T. Earles, 1 ronton.
Curt Iiuastate prohibition
convention met ii Columbia Thursday
afternoon, ninety Telegatcs, represent¬
ing thirty-four oi ithirty-five comi¬
ties, being prise ■ it. The convention
passed a resolut ion against making
nominations. N resolution providing
Unit candidate (j for all offices hi* inter
rogated as to their attitude cm the pro¬
hibition issut was adopted.
I ii tormati< , n j ia9 received in
San Francisco through a dispatch from
officers of the United States revenue
onttrr Bear, which says that she is fast
on the rocli at the entrance to the
harbor at ^itka. The steamer was
plowing her w Ay i n t 0 the harbor at a
good speed "b the night of May 29,
when she s U iek on a rock and all ef
forts to net L r on were unavailing.
Ai range\ Qe xits have been perfected nt
Chut fanout i w hereby a branch factory
ol the gre>,* lt Jeud pencil works of L. A
(, Hai dbnuth, of Budweix, Austria,
'')B 'Mien be estal lislied in Chattanooga.
h.tty completed it will give work to
men and will afford a market for
hundreds of cords of southern rod
cedar. The wood will be prepared for
the pencils here and sent to Budweis
to he filled with lead.
At Indianapolis, Ind., Thursday
■ii sovlu*o j-, av_
president < : the wrecked Indianapolis
National bi^nk, was given six years in
the penitentiary. A few months ago
he pleaded Gnilty to misapplying the
lands of the bank and thereby avoided
a public trim]. In passing sentence
tlie judge brol’xe down and cried like a
child. He sni 1 that it was the most
paiuful duty of his life.
GROWTH op THE SOUTH.
I he Industrial Sit nation as Reported
for the Pa st Week.
I h ■ r view i f tin: imlu M rial ki uation in the
sou 'h biv the j ast we k i-Wwa that there is no
noli,cable improvement m conditions. Tlie
coal strike has seriously disturbed the general
m tnation, and miners and pe atois P'ill seem
far from a settlement, but n > serious trouble
ban yet occurred, but at tin i it seemed immi
uent. \s yet no industries have closed on ac
count of scare tv of coal, 1'be lumber market
shows a little improvement
Thirty-one new indust,He, were establ sh d
or incorporated dm me || lt . we. k. among which
mav bo mentioned tt,y London National Brick,
Paint and Mann fig;, u'iiig Com pan v, of Luich
bmc. Va., capital $100,<XX), the We-J Virginia
vrtitic al St, Company, Fairmount, Va.,
capital Coal an\Y $lph,0 0; the Big Birch lhvei Lumber,
(> 1 Company, Hut in. W. Va., capi
ai y'lPO.OeO; the G. A. Due r Manufacturing
• mpany. San Antonio. Tex s, capital $j0,0t)0,
ml an electric lighting plant at Baris, lerm.,
capital 540,000. Brick works are to be estab¬
lished a Broad tray, Va.; bottling works at
'Yrrell, Texas; e retr o plants at Lexington.
Kv., and Wat r Valley Mi s ;a corn and fl tiring
m 1 at Honda, N. t'.. and flouring mi,Is at Du
lask , let n . nu l Houston, Va. A plant t,,
mat mfacture -culls and oars wi 1 bo crcc cd at
Gilveaun, Texa ; fence works a Gre nville,
S. C.; a kindling wo ,1 fac ory at Suffolk. Va.;
a moss factory st Morgan City, La.; a machine
shop Rouge. at Cordelo, Ga., an,l a paper mill at Baton
La.; sugar ri linei es at 15a mi Rouge
and Broussard, Ls.; a new t atting mill at Ter¬
rell, T xas, and a tubaeco faeiorv at Calhoun,
La. New wo dwtirki’ig p.a its are reported at
Beeni Vista. Va., Bell's Depot, Tenn., Russell¬
ville. Kv . Charlotte Haibo , Fla . and Sutton.
W. Va. Water woiks will be built atCutbKrt.
Ga., Ronceverte, W. Ta., slid Starke, Fla.
Among the enlargements report d are a foun
Irv and machine shop at J, ff r-ou, Texas; oil
mills a Rush Point, La., San Mateos, Texts
lest point. Ga , and West Point. Miss.; a cot
r on compress at Eutow, Ala,; cotton mill ai
Augus a; Gi-, aud lumber company at Bollin
cf. Ar ,v.
The u, w buildings reported include a S-0,
000 church at Gvo geto» r, Ky., a tiS.OOO co!
,ege at West Point, Miss.; a $55,000 court
h, u e at Brazoria, Texts, and a ‘25,000 hospital
ported at Knoxville, Fenn. A $0,000-an barium is re¬
at Atlanta, Ga_ au.i a $31,000 vrare
n, use at New Orleans. La. Set tool buildings
to cost $10,000each will be built at Covington
r- nn , F a rest City, Ark , and Louisville, Ky.
—Tradesman (Chatta oog<, Tenn.)
THROUGH A BURNING TRESTLE.
Striking Minors are Suspected of In¬
cendiarism.
A Birmingham, Ala., special says:
Thursday morning at 5 o'clock a west¬
bound freight train on tbe Georgia Pa¬
cific railroad ran into a burning trestle
near l’atton, sixty miles west of here.
The engine aud eight cars went down
and were practically destroyed by
tire. The lire was near a big curve
and could not be seen by the engineer
until it was too late to stop the train.
Engineer Goodman had his ankle
broken and is badly bruised. Fireman
Charles Berry was severely cut on the
tead, Brakeman Joe Mabry had a
hand broken aud Joe Scott an arm
lislocated. The loss of property is
very heavy. The fact that no train
had passed over the road for ten hours
makes it appear as if the fire was of
incendiary origin. The fact that the
train was loaded with so-called scab
coal has led some to the conclusion
that tbe bridge was fired by strikers.
Frost in Tennessee.
There was a light frost in tbe vicini¬
ty of Nashville, Tenn., Friday meru
ng. There is no record of such oc
•urreuce in any previous year as late
as tbe 1st of June.
against repeal
AND BANKERS MUST PAY TAX
ON CIRCULATING MEDIUM.
The Vote Was 102 to 170-Brawley’s
Bill Also Defeated.
By a vote of 102 to lfO the honse
Wednesday afternoon voted down the
bill unconditionally repealing the state
bank tax. The majority against the
bill was 68. Its defeat was expected,
having been predicted for several days.
It was due to the fact that the north¬
ern democrats abandoned the plank of
the democratic platform. Amos Cum
miI1 £ 8 > of ^ Y <>rk, one of a half
dozen northern democrats who voted
for the bill. The republicans and
populists voted solidly against it.
The debate closed at 2:10 o’clock,
and a vote was taken on the Cox
amendment to repeal the 10 per cent,
tux outright. The vote was announced
as yeas 102, nays 170. The announce¬
ment was received with slight ap¬
plause.
brawley’s bill fails.
The substitute of the committee on
banking aud currency for the original
Brawley bill, suspending the operation
of the 10 per cent tax as to the issues
of certificates, etc., by clearing houses
and other organizations last year,
merely changing the verbiage so as to
make it more explicit, was also defeat¬
ed on a viva voce vote. Then the orig¬
inal bill was lost, This was the end of
the ten days’ debate and a result that
occasioned some surprise, and the iiu
nouucement was received amid much
confusion and applause.
TRADE NOTES.
Business of the l*ast Week as Re¬
viewed by Dun & Co.
IL G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of
trade says: “It is a sign of cheering
import that in finished business, rep
resented by clearings and railway ton¬
nage, there lias been less decrease since
the strike beaan than might have been
expected. But in incohate business,
the orders which start the wheels to
result in tonnage and payment weeks
■r months later, there seems to be an
actual decrease. Not only are new
orders few and small in most depart¬
ments, but cancellation of orders pre¬
viously given is increasingly numerous.
I’his is, in part, the effect of the uncer¬
tainties which the strikes produce, but
it extends also to numerous industries
which tho proposed changes of duty
might affect. Meanwhile exports of gold
rapidly deplete the treasury reserve,
whileidle money gathers therein unus¬
ual amount for the season,although crop
prospects continue, on the whole,most
favorable. The stoppage of iron fur¬
naces between tho Alleghany moun¬
tains and the Mississippi river has be¬
come complete, and a great number of
concerns manufacturing iron, and
others requiring soft coal or coke for
fuel, have been forced to stop.
“Business cannot increase in volume
under such circumstances, and yet
fltjf AlltflilO 4A.11 “* * *~o
for the week show a decrease of only
20.8 per cent, compared with last year
and are nearly as large as in April,
averaging about $14-2,000,000 daily at
all cities, against $144,000,000 in that
month and March, against $140,000,
000 in February.
“Though a large number of works
are idle, the demands for products is
not what might be expected, either in
volume or in urgency. The output of
iron and steel has been suddenly and
sharply reduced, but the reduced sup¬
ply seems about as sufficient for the
demand as it was a month ago, except
in Bessemer. Sales of small lots of
Bessemer pig at places as distant west
as Troy and Duluth for transportation
to the Carnegie works, near Pittsburg,
iinclose how completely stocks are ex¬
hausted, and sales for delivery in July
and August at $11 to $11.15, a price
$1.50 higher than prevailed a few
weeks ago, indicates the belief that the
termination of the strike will not soon
bring back the old prices. But for
most products, notwithstanding the
interruption, the demand is unexpect¬
edly narrow, and buyers feel that the
present advance is but temporary.
“The outgo of gold continues and is
now believed to be due, in part, to
preparation for gold redemption in
Austria. The loss of $5,600,000 this
week and $28,000,000 siuce May 1st,
has reduced the treasury gold to about
$77,000,000. Meanwhile the Bank of
England holds the largest gold reserve
since 1879, the year of specie resump¬
tion hire. Currency continues ti
come hither in great amounts from the
interior, and bankers estimate that the
sum required to be sent west, in con¬
nection with the crop movement next
fall, will be not half as large as usual.
At present low prices the movement oi
grain is not likely to be rapid.
“Liabilities reported in failures for
the fourth week of May w'ere $2,593,
0S7, and for four weeks ending May
24th, $11,392, of which $4,445,005
were of manufacturing and $5,806,S91
of tradiug concerns. Reports yet to
come in may increase the aggregate to
“Failures this week have been 183
in the United States against 238 last
and 27 in Canada against 21 last
Only two failures, 1 o h bank¬
ings are for $100,000 or more.”
BIG STEEL PLANT
To Cost a Million Dollars to be Built
at Bessemer, Ala.
A Montgomery special says: The
stockholders of the Bessemer, Ala.,
Land Company at their annual meet¬
ing have rosolved to build a million
dollar steel plant, with a capacity of
300 tons daily, and giving employment
to 1,000 men. The company proposes
to put up a half million iu cash and to
raise a half million on thirty year
bonds. The plant will be owned wholly
by the Bessemer company and no ont
side parties will be asked to subscribe for
stock. H. F. DeBardeleben, tbe prime de¬
veloper of the industrial region of Al¬
abama, has been elected president oi
the company and will devote all of his
time and his splendid capacity to mak¬
ing the steel mill a success. A special
committee,consisting of DeBardeleben,
David Roberts and A. T. Smythe, of
Charleston, S. C., has been appointed
to superintend the erection of the
mill. They will go to work on the de¬
tails without delay.
Life is not so short but there is
always time enough for courtesy.
NATIONAL CAPITAL
NEWS AND GOSSIP OF WASH¬
INGTON CITY.
Brief Notes Concerning the Business
of Our Government.
Mrs. Cleveland, accompanied by her
two children, a tmrse and maid, left
Washington Wednesday morning in a
special car ovc-r the Pennsylvania rail¬
road for Gray Gables, ?fass.
The senate has confirmed the follow¬
ing nominations: Charles Nelson, of
Maryland, to be second assistant post¬
master general; William P. Roberts,
of North Carolina, to be consul of the
United States at Victoria, B. C.
District Attorney Birney concluded
to lay the matter of the two corre
spondents who refused to answer ques
tions asked them by the sugar investi
gating committee before the grand
jury. Mr. Birney said he did not ex
pect the indictment to be made out in
less than ten days and it will take
nearly that length of time to prepare
the document.
Mr. Honk, republican, of Tennes
see, has introduced ia the house a bill
appropriating $196,000 for necessary
and special facilities on trunk lines
, irom r Toledo, P , , O., via Cincinnati, . .
vnoxville, Chattanooga and Atlanta
to New Orleans The bill provides
that no part of the appropriation 6hall
be expended unless the postmaster
general shall deem it necessary * in
order to promote the interest of the
postal service.
The senate, Wednesday, authorized
the appointment of a special commit
tee to mvestigate the prevailing dis
tress that is said to exist throughout
the country and make such report
thereon as seems, best. This is the
outgrowth of the numerous petitions
presented by Senators Pefter and Al¬
len. The vice president appointed the
following senators to serve as members
of the special committee: Vilas, chair¬
man; Smith, Blackburn, Gallingerand
Patton.
Mr. Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle
have adopted a new policy. They have
decided no longer to annoy themselves
anoilt maintaining til© gol.i reserve at
ijjii Ainn UU, AAA UUU, I.,,* ullt i.i tO let a it i until . it
gO (lOWD
goes to nothing before issuing bonds.
They have given it out in plain terms
that there will be no new bond issue.
As a matter of fact at some seasons
gold shipments from this country are
very heavy, but it always comes back,
and while the reserve in the treasury
gets low at some times, it comes up
again at others and evens itself up.
At last the industrial armies are to
be officially recognized by congress.
The senate has provided a special com¬
mittee of five senators to hear all these
people who come to talk about the in¬
dustrial condition of the country. Con¬
gress is aw v ge that there is a wide¬
spread Vlis r'ntent throughout the
country am ng the industrial classes.
While congress may not be able to do
an ything to ^lieve this, still the clam
""'•>8 they ttok people ies.jeetiully; , 1 I'T’ie to be tiiereiore heard when
tUc
senate provided a committee. The
hearings will probably commence at
once, and the sessions will be open.
The claim for $15,000,000 filed
against the Stanford estate by Attor¬
ney General Olimy, as a preliminary
step to enforce the government’s claim
against the original holdersof the Cen¬
tral Pacific grant, has awakened much
interest iu San Francisco. It is now
learned that the government’s claim
was presented on May 26tli, but that
an attempt was made to keep the pro¬
ceeding secret, in order that the finan¬
cial operations of the estate need not
be embarrassed. The late Senator
Stanford’s estate was recently ap¬
praised at $17,000,000. Siuce the ap¬
praisement heavy obligations have
been met, and it is stated now that the
enforcement of the government claim
would practically wipe out the estate.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue
Miller states that the defeat of the
Brawley bill, to relieve certain south
ern corporations from the penalties
incurred in the issue of “scrip or so
called certificates” during the finan¬
cial stringency last summer and fall,
would not result disastrously to
any one or to the government.
1 lie attorney-general rendered the
opinions last fall, on samples of the al¬
leged money submitted to him, that
they were not subject to the tax, and
on that state of the case, all efforts on
the part of the internal revenue officers
to collect the tax or to ascertain how
much of the so-called money certifi¬
cates or scrip had been issued, ceased.
No such alleged money is now’ in use
anywhere.
Troops to the Front.
Governor McKinley has sent the
Second regiment of state troops, which
rendezvoused at Columbus, Ohio, to
Belmont county to reinforce Adjutant
General Howe,who, with two full regi¬
ments of infantry and a battery of ar¬
tillery is in camp at Barnesville. There
the Second regiment will join him and
the whole force of about two thousand
men will go to St. Clairville Junction.
There trouble is expected, as the
strikers number thousands and the
feeling against soldiers is intense.
Servian Cabinet Goes Under.
A cable dispatch from Sofia says:
The resignation of M. Stambuloff’s
ministry was due entirely to personal
friction between the several members.
M. Giekoff has declined to undertake
the reconstruction of the cabinet and
has advised Prince Ferdinand to sum¬
mon some representative of the oppo¬
sition for that purpose. The change
in ministry will not affect the foreign
relations of the country.
Direct Trade with Europe.
A Wasbinglon dispatch says: Capt.
J. M. Berry has returned from Great
Britain and the continent, having vis¬
ited Liverpool, London, Hamburg,
Bremen and Amsterdam in the interest
of direct trade Irom Augusta, Ga.
Captain Berry has appointed reliable
agents in those places for the sale of
bis flour mill product. Shipments will
be made direct from Port Royal, Sa¬
vannah and Charleston.
Failed for $700,000.
The Steel & Walker Co., the largest
wholesale dealers of St Joseph, Mo.,
has made an assignment. The liabili¬
ties are $700,000, and the assets from
$900,000 to $1,000,000.
Ldrrip Wicks of Clay.
A lamp wick has been indented
which is made entirely of clay and
claimed to give twenty-five per cent,
more light than the common wick,
says the House Furnishing Review.
It is made capillary by incorporating
with the clay, while in a plastic
state, filaments of unspun outj vegetable
fibre which are burned in the
process of baking. The object is to
provide an indestructible wick, which
shall qualities possess all the advantageous
of an which ordinary shall, cotton or
fibre wick and in addit
Ion, last an indefinite time without
renewal or necessity of trimming or
care. When the clay is baked the
vegetable fibre is burned out, leaving
capillary tubes running longitude
nally through the wick, through
which the oil from the lamp will bt
raised to the flame by capillary at
traction. Owing to the perfect corn
bustion of the wick, the flame is per¬
fectly white in character, devoid of
odor and smokeless, It is found
through a practical test, that oil is
volatilized by the use of this wick
and the vapor is consumed, thus giv
ln S the above results,
Cotton Manufacturers Confer.
Twenty of the most prominent cot
ton manufacturers of Georgia, Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee and
Kentucky met in Montgomerv, Ala.,
Thursday for the purpose ot agreeing
on a p r i ce for osnaburgs.
Good is Essential! j*
HEALTH.! to
Blood hope You cannot to be wel!>. §s
if your $ $
BLOOD
15 IMPURE.
If you are troubled with£ I
I BOILS, ULCERS or I |
PIMPLES, SORES
»your ^thoroughly blood is cleanse bad. A the few system, bottles of remove S. S. aU S. vvill^c ini-;*
gushes ^purities and build you up. All manner of blem-y£
me $
§6 AWAY u ,. v
8S "My blood badly poisoned last year, which got myj*- &
Gfwhole was sourcey^
y£of system out of order-diseased and a constant
suffering no appetite, no enjoyment of life. Two is bottles^ bel, "|
n °
f§3tifi£ » SWIFT bloodind SPECIFIC skin aKsmaitedfree! co., Atlanta, Ga. &>
F. J. Stiison,
B5 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
RELIABLE GOODS.
FAIR DEALING.
BOTTOM PRICES.
■J5555555S-
BUYS
A PIANO
which will do for practice pur- : ;
pose as well as a $i,ooo piano.;
We are determined to close out
l! our practice pianos at the above?
price.
This WEEK ONLY
:
WE OFFER
B GUAM) UPRIGHTS
$200 TO $250. :
These beat assignment prices
all to pieces.
Write or call on
GaJasic House
Macon, Ga.
our Christmas Piano
Lamps at COST to close out.
i^mnuiUiuiuuicuuuimKMiutiiKiinoiiaiiKnriuiiinnnnnmifiH 1
s DCISC8I3CR IlC!}!L|?gU£ WE GUARANTEE A CUBE §
: i 5 l and invite the most
caref ul investigation aa to our responsibil- ;
I ity and tlie merits of our Tabl ets. 1
Double Chloride of Gold Tablets ❖
Will completely destroy the desire for TOBACCO ir. from o to 5 da vs. Perfectly harm¬
less; cause no sickness, and may be given i:i a cun of tea or coffee without tne knowl
edge of the patient, who will voluntarily stop smoking or chewing iu a few days. W/
DRUNKENNESS ad MORPHINE HABIT S&'aW.T'/ . +
the patient, by the use of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURB TABLETS. A Tm-Tr
Daring treatment patients are allowed the free c?e cf I :gv”.r cr Hot. z/ 44 4 KKW "
phine until such time as they shall voluntarily give the:;; up. / a }4 ^
We send particulars aud pamphlet of teatimoniu Is fi>.-. 2 ,and shall ™ i I'OlliiiUululu
be glad to place sufferers from any of these habits in ccmmnnma
tiou with persons who have been cured by the use ef our Tablets. v» r
drll &yonr HILL’S a dmgg®?does£ot TABLETS are kelp for sale by all riasT -class //l f irom persOG3
them, enclose us S I .CO Wh ° IiaVO been
- seiiCi ^ ou,ty return mail, a package cl / cured by the use Of
Tablets ^
Write your name and address Tobacco, plainly, Morphiao and stato <r: V Hill's Tablets.
whether Tablets are for or *V
Liquor Habit. ^ J m
DO NOT BE DECEIVED into purchasing ^ ~
offered any of the various sale. nostrums Aik for HILL’S that are King NfTa. " f ^ J* The Onto Chemical Co. :
! for r S Deaj: have Been using your
T-A-232LETS and take co other. cure for tobacco habit, cud Found It would
Manufactured only by J h eft^u claim . 1 . 1 - for chevvir „ it. i I us? ten cent day. 3
orf onge: st tr tobacco a
__rn-r-pr -THE r ^ j/ r.nd Iron one to five (■;■?.!rs : o r I would smoke
from ten to lort x-s of Job: icco. Have chewed
OHIO CHEMICAL C9 •N end 1 smoked smok. for twenty-five years, s;nd two packages
2A of year iur Tablets cured me so I have no desire for it.
V., ii. M. JAY LORD, Leslie, Mich.
t 61. 53 & 55 Opera Block, Doc ns Febrt, N. Y.
:n: Onto Cbetticae Go. Gentlemen -.—Seine time ago I sent
LIMA, OHIO, j ■y L*o worth «.f your Tablets for Tobacco Itabit. and 1 received
* ..... r.‘ ■ id, r. i though 1 was both a heavy smoker ckewer,
PARTICULARS Jr /go. y - — - v,-oiu in less than three MATHEW days. JOHNSON, I am cured. Box 45.
fjdSkty iSpski. Truly yours, P. O.
FREE. Nff gf-.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
x| m IK /P word The ,.i' OhioCheitical , O.:— O. diets. Gentlemen:— My It strongly gives mo ::d pleasure dieted to to the speak useof a
j rr : , j or your son was
i aOa liq ied to try your Tat . was ;i heavy and
k and constant will drinker, liquor but after tu-ring kind. your I have Tablets waited but three four <i;iy.-be mouth be quit drinking, writing
•f: ,, nL wk not touch of any tore
momi m w Jr you, in order to know the cure v. la permanent. l'onrt truly,
MRS. HELEN MORP.iSON.
Cincinnati, Ouio.
" The Ohio Chemical Co -.—Gentlemen Tour Tablets have performed a miracle In my case.
I have used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, ana have been cured by the use of
two packages of your Tablets, and without any effort on my part. W. L. LOTEGAYe
uil Orders to
s ;AGENTS RESPONSIBLE WANTcb THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO.,
Gi, 63 and 55 Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO.
<In writing please raeat>ri this paper.)
o
1 B I ■a I
V ,.y-.
for Infants and Ch!;dren.
HJSOTHERS, JIWiS Bateman's Drops, Godfrey’s Do Cordial, You many so-called Know Soothing «»t Syrups, r^one, and
most remedies for children are composed cf opium or morphine t
Do Yna Kn ow that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons f
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
D > You Kno w that you sliould not permit any medicino to bo given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed f
Do Von Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a lie*, of
its ingredients is published with every Kittle ?
Do You Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Ditcher.
That it has Ken in use for nearly thirty years, and that mom Castoria is now sold than
of aU other remedies for children combined ?
Do You Kno w that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Ditcher and his assigns to uso the word
“ Castoria” aud its formula, and that to imitate them is state prison offense 1
a
Do Vow Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
Kcause Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do You Know that G-5 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 2«>
cents, or one cent a dose f
Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, aud that you may have unbroken rest f
\Uell t these things nro worth knowing. They are facts.
Tho fae-similo —— ia on every
signeture of 4S wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria*
Sehofie s Iron Works >
^<E«.xi.Ta.fsbCt\a.x©ico and JoTo’b.exa of
Sisai Em Biers, SAW ILLS, Sottu Prase
General Machinery and ail kinds Castings.
-—Sole Owner and Manufacturers of-
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
--To Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam-—
SSASS GOODS, FIFE F1TTING3.LUBRI0AT0RS, BELTING, PA€X1NG,SAWS.ETC
-General Agent for
PJiNCOCK INSPIRATORS ANDGULLETT’S MAGNOLIA COTTON Gift
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON, GEORGIA.
wygecr’.iv *
EVERY MAN
HIS OWN DOCTOR
KS J- HAMILTON A YEKS, IH. II.
A 600-page Illustrated Book, contain¬
ing valuable information pertaining to
disease of the hnruan system, showing
how to treat and cure with simplest of
medicines. The book contains analysis
of courtship and marriage; rearing and
management of children, besides valu¬
able prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a
and a full complement of facts in mate¬
ria medica that everyone should know.
This most indispensable adjunct to
every well-regulated household will be
mailed, post-paid, to any address on
receipt oi price, SIXTY CENTS. Address
I JUNTA PUBLISHING HOUSE
HE Uwd St.. ATLANTA. 0A
advertise Noy V V
It will Pay.