Newspaper Page Text
O
the hoe mmn
FORSYTH, GA.
OflJcial Organ of Monroe Connty.
BY McGINTY A CABANIB8.
It would take 12,000,000 years to
j nniji the sea dry at the rate of 1000
gallons jet second, so some man of
0cures h as calculated.
The United States manufacture more
iron, steel, copper and lead than any
other country on tho globe, Great
Britain being a littlo ahead on zinc
and tin.
Sir Thomas Gray, formerly Gov
ernor of Gape Town, South Africa, is
of tho opinion that a federation of
English speaking people is possible in
‘.he near future.
Neighborhood rivalry runs so high
in one pari of Wasco County, Ontar
io, that they stoal bridges aud move
them to other roads. Au organized
watch has to be maintained to pre¬
vent inure depredations of the sums
kind.
A new diplomatic departure hat
been initiated by France in the send
ingof mi agricultural engineer to Ber¬
lin as a technical agricultural attache
to the French Embassy. The station¬
ing of similar attaches in all^countriei
is under consideration.
The average density of population
per sere in London is 57.7, and the
av< rago death rate is 23.2 per thou¬
.
sand. In some parts of Whitechapel,
in the tenement region, tho density of
population is about 3000 per acre,
and the death rate is 41.4 per thou¬
sand.
Now York City appropriated in one
year, for sanitary purposes, $435,
000, while fourtoen States, including
some of tho largest aud wealthiest, !
appropriated $449,000. “This,” com¬
ments the New York Independent, “is
the penalty for being the gateway of
tho nation.”
Arizona is rapidly dovoloping hei
orange industry, and there is one or¬
chard of uinety acres, near Phoenix.
Tho past winter was the most rigorous
within tho memory of tho oldest set¬
tlers, yet tho trees survived it entire¬
ly uninjured, while the orchards ot
►Southern California suffered much
from frost.
Tho Brooklyn Standard-Union is
authority for tho statement that per¬
sons iu that city residing along tho
line of tho trolley roads get sufficient
power for tho running of small ma¬
chinery by attaching wires to tho
service pipes of tho gas and water
systems, which become conductors of
tho eloctricity which escapes from tho
rails into tho ground. Baloon keepers
and others, it says, get all the power
in this way that they waut to ruu
their fans free of charge.
The Japanese Government has
placed orders for two great battle
ships with English firms. One is to
be built on the Tyne by the Elswick
firm, who have already turned out
several lirsfc-olass cruisers for Japan,
and tho other by the Thames Iron
Shipbuilding Company, As tho
builders are not restricted in cost,
tho firms named promise to surpass
tho latest type of British battle ships
iu speed aud power. It is estimated
that these additions to her navy will
cost Japan $10,000,000 at least, The
ships are to bo delivered fully
equipped within four years.
The English sparrow domesticated
hero finds a defender in I. M. Pray,
before tho American Naturalists’ So
ciety, who says that it is not the evil
minded, litigious, greedy or pug
naeious bird which it has been as
sorted to be, but a useful, diligent
and peaceable tomtit of a creature,
worth twice its weight in cuckoos or
chickadees, and of inestimable service
iu consuming noxious varieties of
tree-destroying worms and insects
which other birds won’t touch. If
this is true, observes tho New York
Tribune, Mr. l’ray ought to be sent as
» missionary to those communities
which decree the extirpation of tho
sparrow aud offer bounties for its de
struction.
An English woman physician, Dr.
Anderson Brown, lias established an
industrial farm for inebriate women,
an experiment that, the New York
Times thinks, will be watched with iu
terest by all students of social econom
ies, as well as the world of law and
order. Lhe test is to be made under
the auspices of the Women’s Temper
ance Association, and one of its chief
features is to be the number of out¬
door occupants to be provided. Dr.
Brouu is to be in charge, and from
the first the principle that drunken
ness is a disease will be recognized.
The outdoor industries will include
fruit growing, poultry farming, gar¬
dening, bee keeping and butter mak
ing. Through the winter cookerv
will be taught, a» well as dressmaking,
embroidering and lace making.
If faith is to have its desires ful
filled, it must be moved with the force
of action.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA-, TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1894.—EIGHT
The New Zealand farmers are the
most properous in the world.
•Lynching in most aises is simply a
remit of lack of confidence in law,"
*ays the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch.
The Connecticut Supreme Court has
decided that pension funds, thongh
deDosited * in abank. cannot be attached
fur < ‘‘ t
Only ten per cent, of tho soldiers
recruited in the British armies last
year were Irishmen. Once the per¬
centage was much larger.
The consumption of celery in the
United States is enormous, Accord
ing to the census of 1890 there are
about 16,000 acres devoted to celery
market gardening in this country.
Tho electricity used on trolley rail¬
roads goes into the ground and weak¬
ens gas and water mains. The genius
who will discover a method of return¬
ing the fluid to the power houses will
become a millionaire at once, declares
the New York Mail and Express.
Lord Salisbury snvs that the popu¬
lar agitation against the British House
of Lords is not likely to effect any¬
thing for a long while to come. The
Upper House, he says, is not a bul¬
wark against popular passion, but
against parliamentary intrigue.
The annexation fever is increasing,
notes the New York Mail and Ex
l.rc-M. 1 ittsburg, Penn., is thinking
of annexing Allegheny City. The
consolidation wonld gico Pittsburg
343,904 inhabitants, anil make it rank
eighth instead of thirteenth among
American cities.
Insanity has increased so in France
that the asylums can no longer hold
tho lunatics. The Assistance Publi
que has therefore decided to place
some of the crazy paupers who are
harmless with some of tho peasant
families, just as it puts out pauper in
fants and children.
----------------------
Kate Field’s Washington says that
every magazine reader is in duty
bound to read all the advertisements
at the back of the publication, as it is
the supposition that he will do this
which enables him to buy tho mnga
zine at less than the cost of its pro
iluction. Tho same rule, in the opin
ion of the New Orleans Picayune, ap
plies, and with more force, to the
uewspaper reader.
Bays tho Ban Francisco Chronicle :
The bicycle is growing in favor iu the
interior and the usual collisions be
tween tho owners of horses and the
steeds that eat no liny are of constant
occurrence. •Tha fact, however,
ought not to create any uneasiness,
nor is any legislation needed to
restrain the cyclists. Before the ex¬
citement of discussion subsides horses
will have become accustomed to
them. That is the experience in the
vicinity of this and all cities and
towns where the wheel is much used.
It is not generally known that tho
nickel-in-the-slot machine, though to
ns moderns a new idea, was iu reality
in use before the Christian era. Yet
more than two thousand years ago, in
the country of the Nile, temples were
provided with vessels from which
perfumed water would fun when a
coin was dropped through au opening
or slot. They were described by Hero,
of Alexandria, who lived about 117-81
1 f > hi his “Pneumatics,” from
which wo quote: “When the coin
was dropped through the slit it fell
on one eml of a balauced, horizontal
lever, which, being depressed, opened
a valve, suspended by a chain at the
other end, and the water began to
j flow. When the lever was depressed
: to a certain auglo tho coin fell off,
! and the lever being weighted,returned
! to its seat and cut off tho supply.”
Wo nre so near to our own groat
; Columbian Fair that we have nearly
lost sight in tho United Sthtes of the
' fair recently opened at Antwerp by
the King of the Belgians. All the
European Governments have erected
i buildings on the fair grounds at Ant
j werp, but that of the United States is
. the mest conspicuous for its size,
' tasteful aiehitecture and position,
Since Eiffel erected his wonderful
tower in Paris for a lookoxat, other
men of mechanical genius have
planned points of vantage for other
fairs. The Ferris Wheel in Chicago is
; in point; though, uulike the Eiffel
| Tower, it liar, not become a permanent
* fixture of the city iu which it
was
: first erected, but is to be taken to
. New York. Iu emulation, rather than
j i u imitation of Eiffel and Ferris, a
j Belgian engineer has devised a series
of monstrous anchored balloons, that
rise for a thousand feet above the sur
rounding country. Below the bellows
there is a platform or lookout large
enough to accommodate 300 people at
a time. This platform is reached by
an elevator, or lift, of peculiar form.
At first this appliance would impress
the observer as being unsafe, but eu
gineers who have carefully examined
j this “c.istde in the air,'\as it is called,
* believe the risk of ascending and de
seendiug is no greater than that on
the lifts of ordinary buildings.
The Electrical Review says that the
electrical purification of sewage “ is a
complete success, chemically and bao
teriologioally.”
An authority estimates the silver
production of the United States in
1803 at 60,000,000 ounces, while the
P r °duction in 1802 was 65,000,003
°™ces.
-- ............... ..... .—r
Earnest efforts, which in the opiu
r—■ —h
be followed more closely bv other
States, are being mads by the State
Cattle Commissioner of X aw Hamp¬
shire to suppress animal tuberculo: s.
Agricultural co-operation appears to
be very successful in New Zealand. At
«h« recent aa„„»> Meeting of Oto
Farmers Co-operative Association the
annual report showed a net profit of
more than £7,000, equal to 30 per
cent, on the paid-up capital.
TV est U nion is the only county seat
in Ohio which has neither railroad
nor telegraph. A Philadelphia com¬
pany wants to build an electric road
from Manchester, on the Ohio river,
to the place, but the town council re¬
fuses to grant it a right of way on ac
count of tho dangers of the trolley.
The Sail Francisco Examiner esti¬
mates that there are in the United
States at least fifty thousand tramps
who could not be persuaded to work
under nnv circumstances. The St.
Louis Republic believes the estimate
is low . Thcre „ ro probabl more thaI1
that> but wbero thore ia onc ,
, vllo wilI not „. ork at n „ therc ar0 three
or four men who are out of work be¬
cause they cannot get the kind of work
they have been accustomed to. Most
of these will get other work in time.
Some of them will become hopeless
ly idle.
Some statistics have just been com
piled as to the chances that man has
of living in different large towns. The
town where the greatest percentage of
inhabitants per 1,000 die is Rheims.
The proportion is ‘28.62 per 1,000.
Then follow Dublin,27.05; New York,
26.47, and Vienna, 25.07. Paris oc
cupies the next place, with an average
of 23.61 d „ths per 1,000 inhabitants,
In Berlin the people die only at the
rate of 20.58 per 1,000; in London
the proportion is 19.11; in Chicago,
18.95. It appears that the town in
which relatively the fewest number of
deaths occur is Minneapolis, Minn,
The statistics tell us that only 9.60
persons per 1,000 die there in each
year.
Farmers make a smaller percentage
on their investments probably than
au Y °H ier class, maintains the Cour
ie r *'Journal. Tho mercant, banker
nnt ^ manufacturer would go out of
business if his visible income from his
investment was no more than the far
mer’s, yet notwithstanding that this
is indisputably true, it is a fact, never¬
theless, that there is a smaller percent¬
age of failures among farmers than
any other class. More than this, there
is a larger percentage of farmers get
well to do iu this world’s goods and
provide themselves and families a good
living than any other class, This
being the case, we certainly conclude
.that it pays to work for a small in¬
come. Especially is this true when,
in the case of the farmer, the income
is steady one year with another.
New uses of aluminum are likely to
follow each other rapidly, since, from
costing $50 a pound a few years ago, it
has now become one of the cheap
metals. La Nature, of Paris, says that
attempts have been made to use it for
bank bills and commercial paper, as
thin sheets of it are lighter than the
thicker varieties of paper. Possibly,
conjectures the Atlanta Constitution,
the near future may see our whole cir¬
culating medium—gold notes and all
— now made of paper that is easily
soiled, easily destroyed, and readily
capable of transmitting disease germs,
made of aluminum sheets as thin ns
paper, almost as light, not subject to
tarnishing or corrosion, non-combus¬
tible, and easily cleansed when soiled.
A manufacturer of artificial limbs in.
Atlanta is now using aluminum for the
construction of his goods, 0 its lightness 0
anil toughness being especially valu
able in this direction.
The Japanese Government is show¬
ing wisdom iu its action regarding
emigration to the United States, and
to other countries, remarks thr Balti¬
more American. The people of Japan
are, as a rule, fond of their beautiful
and rarely . , leave . unless they
empire, it
go out as laborers, un i r contract with
promise of good pay and safe return
to their native country as soon as their
fixed term of service is over. The
alien contract law of the United States
forbids the admission of such laborers,
and at the port of Sau Francisco sev¬
eral Japanese have been denied the
right to land aud sent back home.
The Japanese Government has, there¬
fore, made a law that no emigrants
wh'-*se admission would be contrary to
the laws of any other country shall be
all >ved to leave that empire. If China
and the countries on the continent of
Europe would pass and enforce such a
law. the United States would find the
enforcement of its emigration provis¬
ions a very simple matter.
CH R 1ST I AN KNOT A VO R K RS.
Their Big Convention nt Cleveland
Saengerfest Hall, the mammoth an- \
ditorinm of Cleveland, O., with a scat
ing capacity of 10,000, was crowded to !
ing the exenfises of *he great Interna- '
tional Christian Endeavor convention,
It is estimated that over 20,000 strang- !
ers were in the city.
The exercises consisted °z of tremen- h rt |
:z
big tent in the eastern part of the
city. The lent has a scatiug capacity
of 10,000. The address of welcome
was delivered by Governor McKinley.
In the absence of President Clarke,
who was unable to be present owing
to illness,"'Rev. Charles F. Dickins, of
Boston, presided over the principal
”"L p-t The
twelve months has been the largest
since it was organized, thirteen years
a g°- During that period 7395 compa¬
nies have been added to tho ranks,
against a gain of 5278 companies add¬
ed to the rolls during the previous
year,
SHOT FROM AMBUSH.
White Miners Attack Negroes Who
Hail Taken Their Places.
About 5 o’clock Monday afternoon
a large body of men, armed with Win¬
chesters, were discovered near slope
No. 3 of Pratt mines, of the Tennes¬
see Coal, Iron and Railway Conqiany,
seven miles from Birmingham.
It was the hour when the men at
work in tke mines came out. The men
at work were negroes who had taken
the places of striking miners, and the
attacking party were strikers and their
sympathizers. As the negroes came
out the strikers, who were squatting
around behind bushes aud fences,
opened fire. The people who heard it
supposed it was a Gatling gun in the
hands of the troops. Several hundred
shots were fired before the strikers
scattered.
Guards stationed around tho mines
returned the fire, but they were few in
numbers. The casualties are: B. W.
Tierce, white guard, killed, negro
miner, name unknown, killed, one of
the strikers was badly wounded and
will die.
Several on both sides were wounded.
Ono of the wounded strikers was drag¬
ged off by his friends. It was a delib¬
erate attack by the strikers on tho
miners put to work in their places, and
they shot to kill. Two local military
companies were hurried to the scene.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Gas tor ia.
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
Rioters Ditch a Train.
A train loaded with soldiers was
ditched by the rioters near Sacramen¬
to, Cal., Wednesday. The wrecked
train was aTSP fo r San Francisco.
ar Bridge.
It is claimed that a recently com¬
pleted bridge over the south branch
of the Chicago river is the only one
of its kind in existence, and it is cer¬
tainly a radical departure from com¬
mon methods, the principle upon
which it works being that of raising
or lowering a window. On either
bank rises a tower of iron lattice¬
work 191 feet high. The bridge,
eighty-nine feet in span and weighing
300 tons, extends between them, its
ends fitting into grooves. It is fitted
with counterweights, cables and pul¬
leys, all of which are governed by a
seventy-liorse-power steam engine.
When the bridge is to be opened the
engineer throws off the balance, and
the bridge rises smoothly and hori¬
zontally in its grooves, halting at a
heiglit of 155 feet. It is probable
that so ingenious a structure is by no
means the last of its kind, as its ad¬
vantages in certain situations are
self-evident.—[Detroit Free Press.
ATLANTA MARKETS.
CORRECTED WEEKLY.
Groceries.
(jc.fTee—Roasted—Arbnckle’s 22.25 ~St 100 lb.
cases. Leveling’s 22.25c. Green—Extra
choice 20c; choice good 19c; fair 18c; com
nion 17c- .Sugar——Granulated 4.\f c
powdored 4 J 4 C; cut loaf ■H
white extra C 4c; New Orleans yellow clari¬
fied 4\i}£c; ye low extra C 3%c. Syrup—
New Orleans choice 45c; prime 35@40e; common
20@30c. Molasses—Genuine Cuba 35@38c; im¬
itation 22@25. Teas—Black :>5((|55c; "reen
40@69c. Nutmegs 65@85e. Cinnamon 10@12t£.
Allspice 10@llc. Singapore pepper
11c, Mace $1. llicc, Head 6 c; good Salt—Hawley’s 5^-.common
4[-^c; imported Japan Ice 5(§5%e.
dary, $1.40; cream $ 110 ;
Virginia 70c. Cheese-flats
White fish, half bbls. $4-00; pails 6 Jc;
Mackerel, half barrels, $6-00@5.50. Soap.
Tallow, 100 bars, 75 lbs $3.00@3 75.
turpentine, 09 bars, 60 lbs, $2.25 a 2.59;
Gaudies—Parafine 11 c; star 11c. Matches—
100s $4 00; 300s $3 00a3 75; 200s $2 00a2 75; 60s
5 gross $3 75. Soda-Kegs, bulk 4%c; do 1 lb pltgs
5%c; cases, 1 lb 5%c, do 1 and /^ibs 8 c, do% lb
Kffic. Crackers—XXX soda 53^c; and XXX butter
6 7c;lemon %c; XXX pearl oyster^ 9c; XXXginger 6 }^c:sbell excelsior 9c;
cream snaps corn
mixed hin * , ^•,„ 12al2%. 95 n Canned ^ _Aasortc goods-Condensei ? B ^ ick , 6c; f r Mils, A n , ch
«0 00 a 8 00 ; imitation mack rel$3 95a4 00. Sal
toon $5 25a5 50; F. W. oysters $175; L W
$135; corn $2 50 a 3 50; tomatoes $2.00
Rail rotash $3 10. Starch—Pearl 4c; Lump,
4- 2 - ; nickel packages $3 10; celluloid $5.00,
Pickles, plain or mixed, pints $i OOal 40; quarts,
$1 50a 1 SO. Powder—Rifle, kegs $3.25; %kegs,
$1 90; % kegs$l 10. Shot $1 35 per sack.
Flour. Grain anil Meal.
Fleur—First patent $4 50; second patent
(4.00; extra fancy $3.30; fancy $3 15; family
$2.90. Com—No. 1 white 67v\ No. 2
white, 66 c. Mixed, 65c. Oata, Mixed
---- rJ 2 • white ----- 55c; Seed rye, Georgia,
75a'0e- Hay—Choice timothy, $1.09; larsre choice bales,
$1.00 No. 1 timotnv, Hrg - bates,
Umo thy. small bales, $1.-. No. 1 timothy, small
bales, 95c; No. 2 timothy, small bales, 85;.
Meal—1'iain 661 : bolted 62c. Wheat brau—
Large sacks 90c, small sacks 90c. Cotton
seed meal—$1 3o per cwt. Steam feed—$1.10
per cwt Stock peas $1.25al.39. Grits—
I'earl $3.50.
Ceniitrr Produce.
Eggs 8.i9o. Butter—Western creamery
15a20e. Fancy Tennessee^ 12%al5c; choice,
•alO, oth'r grades 4a5- Live poultry— 20a22J^c.
Turkeys 7#8 j per lb; hens
Spring chickens, large 18a20c
Docks; 18a20c. Dressed poultry-Turkeys I0al2-p,
12%al5c: ducks, 12%al5o; chickens,
Irish potatoes, $'2.U0a?'2.50 pei bbl. Fancy
per bushel, 99c.a$1.00. Honey—Strained, Sweet potatoes 8 alC*c new,
$1.59*2.00 per bu. I ;
in t!ie comb. bHG'ib'e. Onions 75a89 per n
H f bbl. sacks fl.25G.50- Per bbl. $200a2.50.
Cabbage, 22
Provisions.
Clear rib si-les, boxy 1 8 %c ice-cured bellies
10c. Sugar-cured hams 13x14?, according
to brand aud average; California, 10}^c. breas
fas' bacon 12c. Lard, leaf 8>^c. Compound 7
Cotton.
Market closed nominal. Middling 6 11- 16c.
<Z>£ £ ^
Become afflicted and remain so, suf
fenng untold miseries from a sense
delicacy they cannot overcome.
BRADFiELD S FEMALE REbllLATOR,
by stimulating and arousing to
healthy action all her organs,
________
rACTS AS A SPECIFIC. ^
It causes health to bloom on tho
cheek, and joy to reign throughout
the frame. It never fails to cure.
The Best Medicine ever Hade for Wc~cn.
“My t cifs has been under treatment of leading
physicians there year-', t ritfnmi 7-'rmaJc benefit. if'gulntor After using
three bottles of Brad fir Ill's
the can do her own cooking, milking end washing."
N. S. Bktax, Henderson, Ala.
BRA0FIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, G&,
Bold by _:n£2ists at $1.00 per bottle.
3 U W0 80S out ana cared B.M. Hculars pain. Whiskey WOOLLEY,M.D. at sent home Book FREE. Hamte of wlth- par
wly 4.Uai,U,Ga. Office UM>4 TVhlWhsUi
| it
*1 'M
w ♦
I TYNER’
♦
o
TfeSorrccU <5 imUijcsticn trlnates ❖
«*> «n
❖ 1
proves /fcNgte; Ct>j
efficacy
® PRICE 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE.
I COCK EO Or R SALE VALUABLE BY INFORMATION DRUGGISTS FREE. * ❖ _
FOBSYTH BOOK SIB!
A FAIR STOCK. OF ALL THE
SCHOOL BOOKS
Used in the schools in Forsyth and
also those used in tho country
schools kopt on hand .‘ind for sale at
his usual
LOW PRICES.
Magazines, Seaside Novels, «ind the
usual Daily Papers.
I. W. ENSIGN.
0$t. 10th. 1891.
HELPLESS
INVALID,
“About IS months or two
yours ago my wife’s health gavo
way, and sho grew steadily
worse. ►She could not retain
scarcely anything she ate and
the case finally assumed tho
worst form of
DYSPEPSIA and CHRONIC
DiAR RtiLEA,
and she became a helpless inva*
lid At the age of 13. I had her
under the treatment of a good
physician, lieve her but of his efforts avail. to So, re¬
were no
after matters had continued
thus for 8 or 10 months, and
my wife had given up to die, I
took tho case in my own hands
and purchased a bottle of Dr.
King’s
ROYAL GERMETUER,
began giv : lg it to her in water as
hot as sho could drink it, before
and after each meal, using a
mild purgative occasionally on
retiring at night.
Suffice it to say in less than
a week there was
A WONDERFUL CHANGE.
See could eat. a Jitlie of any¬
thing she desired, and today ia
a well woman. She used alto¬
gether possibly 4 or (j bottles.
In my opinion
GERriETUER HAS NO EQUAL/*
Harry L. Watts, Winona, Miss.
Mr. Watts is traveling sa'osman f<n II. Zu
berbier Co., wholesalegr-«:er.H, New Orleans.
King’s Kcy.il Oermetuer Co , Atlanta. Ga
4- >*< v €>- +€>*3 v -O •>
i 6
❖ m 9
4
4 *
4 Central Georgia Patrons 4
t To Our 4
You want the BEST for the I.EAST 6
MONEY. 4Ve sell just that kind.
Y Been at it 23 years, and plated over A
A 50,000 satisfactory instrunn nts in
y Southern homes Every one knows y
T that our instruments are 4
4 RELIABLE,
* du 5iusic. v
• , ally PERFECT, 8
▼ and sold at lowest possible prices. ”
4 •{• -0-1-®*- -J
-BUY FROM OLK- 0
^ MACON BRANCH. (
-i- R. J. ANDERSON & SON. MANAGERS. V 9
© ” What? Didn't you know we h;.;! ;*
Branch House there? Yes; it's true. A .
Not an asfrncj-, hut our own sto e. f
*:• unrler our fl rect control, a:id the
9 largest music house 5n Macon. Its 9 a
managers and salesmen under
salary—and not sellins: on com mi*- ,
A sion. * All expense- paid hy us. .‘ n tm - A
Y instruments. business sam * methods nrucs. Fair. : J ^
terms, same as n
Savannah. Agents'commiss'onsand ’f
, middlemen's profits saved j urcl-.as- !
A ers. Our greatest bars :ins brought Q
“ to your very doors, immense stock f
to select f'otn. All new an * fresh A
y from factories. Write ^nd our sa ! es- y
' n;e.n will v isit you.
A .
*' A Send your orders for Si-.ert Music. X
Music Hooks. Band In trnuif nts,
f 8tr ners, and till small musi« at it- ru - A
meats Anv pri kes la the t tried y
j btates deplicat c-t. -6
RetafinlMToisr Myron Brancli.
can save yt u m ney.
4 i UODEfi & BATES
4 L icsfis'R Music tee. ?
2Cain Kouec, fiar: nr>ab. Os. .* 4
V Bran; lies In ,>>*. Colaml.nv, t
» Urc 2 .-« : ol:. Ga.; Ch-r!otto. Eiiicigii. )
J3 X. C.; 11: . Tk;;d.: few f>r- t
leans. Lj : n*l nedt-r oar direct Joan- ->
%
d- *r €?’- v rdfic- *>- £>■ v
^ LOT 0 l L ^ ^
TAILORS!
HATTERS!
FURNISHERS.
Eiseman -> Bros.,
WASHINGTON, D. C., ATLANTA. GA.. IUT.TI MORE,
Cor Tth and E. Sts. N. \V. 13-17 Whitehall St. Factory, 213 TV. Herman St.
ONLY MANUFACTURERS OF CLOTHING IN THE SOUTH
DEALING DIRECT WITH CONSUMER.
CLOTHIERS,
TAILORS,
HATTERS,
FURNISHERS.
_
Mallary Bros. & Co.,
3 MACON, GA.
*.i. : ■ m Remember avc
T L.r
are still headquar¬
ters for
l ' ' mmm J •C ENGINES,
IB P Wi
BOILERS 3
SAW MILLS,
GRIST MILLS 3
COTTON GINS,
LO 1 EON PRESSES, and everything elso in tho machinery lino.
Please don’t bo persuaded into buying anything in the machinery
line boloro writing us for prices.
MALLAKY BROS, k CO., Macon, Ga.
The largest clothing stores
in the South, in Atlanta
and Macon. When in need
of clothes, (tall to sec us.
Mail orders promptly fill
ed.
39-41 Whitehall St.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The the Best Beast Shoes Money. for W. L. DOUGLAS
sir ' $3 SHOE GENUINE
w si m A \tt MELT.
® ! Squeakless, Bottom Waterproof. Best Shoe sold at the price.
lw: *j§ rw * a S m®!’ ', 4 83.50 Poli Shoe Dress Shoo.
, $ ? e 8 .,,3 Solei,
2 . 60 , and $2 Shoes,
JSfe Unequalled at the price.
tyfasipi WM Boys $2 Are & the $ 1.75 School Shows
Best lor Service.
/ *
" ippS»»5£j x $ 3 , $ 2 . 60 $ 2 , $(.76
■"~*s323S5! Best, Ilongoia, Stylish, Perfect
This is the BEST43 K Fitting and Serviceable. Best
41 in the world. AJ1 Styles.
Sho •"“MBS *«••• Insist upon having W. jL.
• Bonglas
t v:4?3S^ Mfl price Shoes. stamped Name
** |. IISI on.
'r»._ r HEVfORP^ bottom. Brockton.
1 -- Mass -
■>
DEALERS sr n^W r _
wh .° P ush th ? sale of W. L. Douglas Shoes S ai customers.
which helps to the n
increase sales on their full line of ooods gOOUS. They can
afford to sell at a less profit, and we believe you
footwear of the dealer advertised below. ~
For Sale by J. B. SHARP & SON, Forsyth, GaC
Enterprise BOILER Works
QBO, T. GIFFORD, Proprietor,
manufacturer of
Boilers, Smoke Stacks )
Oil and Water Yanks, Iron Door and Window Shuttern,
Wrought Iron Grating for Cellar Ventfflating.
in fact, all kinds of Wrought Iron Work.
All work guaranteed to be £r« fa aolIc‘tod. so** ** *° 0d W °' k “ •• n ■*■>*> don «• ' * - L
< M . Orders
Dealera In til kinds of Steam Fittings, „ uoh
Steam Gnages, M
Safety Valves, Whistles,
Globo and Cbec*t Yalves, Guage Cocka, Eto.
Addrepa—
T GIFFORD,
Entarprue Boiler Wark* MACON GA,
552-554 Cherry St.,
Macon, Ga