Newspaper Page Text
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THE MONROD ADVERTISES
cr
FORSYTH, GA.
Official Organ of Monroe County.
-- I
BY McOINTY A CABANIS&
- ■
1 In Franco 148,808 families hart
claimed exemption from certain taxes
recently voted by the Government on
account of having seven or more chi.'
tlrea.
_____ _ ________
^ Tho number of persons tt
average
a family in this country ha* steadily
decreased sinoo 1 850. At that census
thero were 5.55 persons to each
family; now thero aro 4.93. The
greatest decrease has been in Maine,
from 5.04 to 4.40.
A conference of members of the Brit¬
ish and French Chambers of Com¬
merce was held in Paris recently, to
discuss tho question of a general Eu¬
ropean disarmament. Tho consensus
of opinion was that disarmament
would have a most serious effect upon
labor, as it would add the 3,750,000
men now armed and supported by their
Governments to tho ranks of the un¬
employed.
In his “Recollections of a Virgin
ian,” General Dabney II. Maury tells
of an old lady in Fredericksburg who
was reduced to taking in boarders in
order to make both ends meet. On
ono occasion of peculiar stress the
larder was so empty that the good
lady took to her bed and summoned
her servant. “Nancy,” she said,
“there’s nothing in tho house for my
boarders to eat except mush. But
give tliom that. If they are Chris¬
tians thoy will accept it in resignation
and thankfulness. And if they are not
Christians, it is a deal too good for
them.”
To take a cow from door to door and
milk her in tho presence of each cus¬
tomer is tho newest departure iu the
London milk business, and the experi¬
ment, so far as it lias gono at present,
is said to bo ono to which oven tho
cows themselves take kindly. They
linvo until now shown no objection to
linvo milking process prolonged
through several streets, nor liavo they
been found to give one drop tho less,
notwithstanding tho surrounding
crowds assembled to see tho fun. Tho
system appears to bo “catching on,”
and tho good people of London mani¬
fest much appreciation of tho few
minutes now intervening between the
cow and the breakfast-table. Besides,
the spectacle presented by herds of
kino boiug led through the streets of
tho metropolis during the morning en¬
dows London with a rural aspect which
has hitherto been lacking.
Eugene Germain, UnitodStates Con¬
sul at Berne, Switzerland, has sent to
the Department of State an account of
tho working of a novel enterprise. A
committee of seven, made tip of repre¬
sentatives of tho labor unions, em
ployors and tho municipal govern¬
ment, undertake to provide employ¬
ment for subscribers out of work or
to maintain them while awaiting em
ploymeut. A subscriber when work
iug pays eight cents per month dues.
Thero is also au appropriation ol
$1000 from the City Council, besides
charitable subscriptions. Subscribers
out of work for two weeks are entitled
to benefits ranging from twenty to
thirty cents per day, about equal in
purchasing power there to our dollars
here. Persons leaving their work
wilfully and without just cause aro de¬
barred from benofits. Com fortablo
headquarters are* provided, at which
tho unemployed report twice daily,
aud where they may make themselves
comfortable. The consul says the sys¬
tem is satisfactory in its result to tho
authorities and to tile citizens.
f
Tho battle of San Jacinto is a theme
of which a Texas audience nevei
wearies, and the St :c newspapers are
constantly r. rating tho valor of
TloU'-t u s little army on the field
vltoro they avenged the massacre of
the Alamo. Nevertheless the preserva¬
tion of the historic spot has not ap¬
pealed powerfully to Texaus, and it
has remained, remarks tho New York
Post, for a society kuown as the
Daughters of the Republic of Texas to
save it from neglect. Iu a circular
addressed to the women of the State
they say that the society will hold a
bazaar iu November next to raise
funds for the improvement of the
battle-field. To this bazaar each town
and city will be invited to send a table
of articles to sell. “Some years ago,
by personal subscription,” says the
circular, “a small marble shaft was
erected to mark the spot where those
who fell in that memorable battle were
buried. Is it not a disgrace to us that
we have so long permitted stock to
wander at large over the graves of
those who fell to make Texas free?
Our chapter, named after the famous
battle, has been given charge of the
ten acres owned by the State. Though
few iu number, we have done what we
could towards caring for the sacred
spot, bv having weeds, briers and
brush cleared away, and prohibiting
• the use of it a6 a public bnri'd ground.
To fence, build » r.. naiaeat, and
beautify dj? pIm: s G eu* de.ir* &u4
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA, TUESDAY, AUGUST T, 1M4. -EIGHT PAGES.
freer $500,0<W, W)0 are now employed
in electrical pursuits and this immense
sum is annually increased by orex
8100,000,000.
The Chicago Herald says that lawyers
and doctors are increasing in that
city at such a rate that there is no
living for them.
Some one has computed that there
are nearly 76,000,000 dogs in the
U nitod States. If this is so, the New
York Tribune feels it is within bounds
to say that half the number of dogs
could do the work.
Turkey has for gome time been
planning a great exhibition, to be
held in Constantinople in 1896. The
Snltan has just decided to postpone
it until 1897 or 1898 on account of
the Millennial exhibition, which is to
be held at Pesth in 1896, and at which
Turkey will be an extensive exhibitor.
There was great joy among the vege¬
tarians in Germany last year over the
fact that a vegetarian won the annual
walking match from Berlin to Fried
richsruhe. Tho same vegetarian
pedestrian was in tho race this year,
and it was generally oxpectod that he
would win the match again. But he
was badly beaten by a “moat-eater.”
Tho London Post, commenting on
tho decrease of emigration to the Uni
tel States, thinks “tho decrease is less
due to tho exclusion laws than to tho
fact that tho West has had its day,
and that tho tido of emigration has
turned toward Africa. Tho omnipo¬
tence of capital in the United States
has grown into an almost intolerable
tyranny, and has driven the farmer
and tho workingman to the wall.”
Dr. Edel, of Berlin, speaking to ai
assembly of medical men, recently, on
school hygiene, recommended, among
other points, that the following heter¬
ogeneous regulations ought to be en¬
forced : (1) All schools, especially pri¬
vate schools, should be examined by
medical officers of health in respect to
cleanliness, heatiug, lighting, ventila¬
tion, and closet accommodation; (2)
eye-glasses should not be allowed, and
spectacles only when ordered by a
medical man; (3) corsets should be
forbidden entirely if possible; (4) up¬
right writing should bo introduced;
and (5) studying by gaslight should
be avoided.
Tho wildest tales of the Western
hail correspondents aro eclipsed by a
description of a hailstorm that visited
Vienna, Austria, a short time ago.
Tho hailstones were of enormous size,
largo enough to npt only break /
windows exposed to their violencefout
in many cases roofs were penetrated.
At least two persons caught in the
Btorm were killed, and more than 200
were injured by the hail. Most of tho
wounded had either arms or legs
broken. Gardens, parks, public walks
and avenues were destroyed, the
ground under the trees being covered
with a thick carpet of leaves and hail¬
stones that lay many inches deep upon
them. Iu tho public gardens dead
pigeons, blackbirds, thrushes and spar¬
rows covered the ground. The hail
came so fast that in a moment the
openings into the sewers w T ere stopped
up, and the water overflowed into cel¬
lars and underground habitations.
The hailstones in the streets, when
swept up and shovelled together, lay
in heaps from three to five feet high
in all the thoroughfares of the town.
The rails of tho street-car lines were
buried in ice everywhere, and in some
instances tho cars stuck so fast that
they had to be shovelled out as in mid¬
winter, the impediment being ico in¬
stead of snow. At the great Central
Hospital alone 10,000 large panes of
glass were broken.
Dr. Justin Herold, who has had ex
ceptional opportunities for observa¬
tion as Coroner of New York City,
furnishes the World some statistics on
the subject of suicide iu that city and
other parts of the world, which may
well cause reflection. He says that
suic’des iu that city are alarmingly
frequent, sometimes averaging four a
day for a week at a time, and the aver¬
age yearly number for the past five
years is 122, though during the past
six months they number 175. There
are more suicides iu New York than
iu auy other Eastern city, iu propor¬
tion to the population, but iu San
Francisco there are nearly three times
as many as in New York. Dr. Herold
says that while there are more suicides
in France than in any other European
country, averaging about twenty a
day, the American average far exceeds
that. The largest numbers of suicides
occur between the ages of twenty and
thirty, and three times as many men
commit suicide as women. The causes
of suicide, in the order of their im
portance, are: Domestic trouble, re
verses of fortunes, sorrow, physical
suffering, insanity, the weather, Sui
cides are commoner among educated
than illiterate people. Religion seems
to have a good deal to do with it, as
statistics show that iu Catholic coun
tries suicides are but fifty-eight to the
million of population, while iii mixed
Catholic and Protestant countries they
ar« cluety'six to the million, aod in
purely eosttriii tittf
GEORGIA IX BRIEF.
NEWSY ITEMSGATHERED HERE
AND THERE OVER THE STATE
And Condensed Into Pithy and Inter¬
esting Paragraphs.
The long continued rains are begin¬
ning to seriously affect the cotton crop
in the section around Albany with
rust.
If the two new seats on the supreme
bench are created at the October elec¬
tion, there will be a lively raee among
a number of prominent Georgia jurists
to fill them.
+ m m
E. B. Johnson, alias C. E. Smith,
who murdered William Curry at
Chauncy, in Dodgo county, about
.three years ago, has been caught and
is now in jail at Brunswick. There
was a reward of $300 offered for his
capture.
♦ * *
An exchange remarks: It is gener¬
ally believed that farmers owe less,
they have more at home on which to
live, the prospect for abundant harvest
is good and why is the outlook not
bright for this section of Georgia?
The people are hard-pressed, but they
are all right.
The Georgia State Alliance will meet
August 15th at Dublin, Ga., instead of
August 20th. President Ellington will
preside at the convention and he says
a full meeting is expected. President
Butler, of the South Carolina State
Alliance, will be one of the speakers of
the convention.
The second annual session of the
Demorest chautauqua will open at that
place on August 13th. The session
held last year was a most successful
one in every way, and tho coming ono
promises to even eclipse it in several
particulars. The assembly is in excel¬
lent shape financially.
The Forty-fourth Georgia regiment
will hold a reunion at Fayetteville
August 8th. The Atlanta and Florida
road will run a special train to Fayette
ville on that occasion, and the attend
ance is expected to be quite large. An
invitation has been extended to the
veterans of Fulton county to attend.
Transfer Guard Starnes, of the state
penitentiary, reports that no prisoners
have been carried to any of the con
vict camps in the state during the past
three weeks. It is an off season, and
the convict crop is not as plentiful as
usual. Quite a large number of con¬
victs have been carried to the pen dur¬
ing the present summer.
The annual colt show of Washing¬
ton county, which always attracts so
much attention, will be held in a few
days. These occasions have been very
interesting in the past, and this one
ill ered,
>n
and e show promises to be one of
unusual excellence.
Cartersville is in a fair way to have
a cotton compress running in time to
get tho benefits of this fall’s crop. The
citizens, headed by Mr. L. T. Brad
field, have gone to work on the pro
ject with a will that augurs success.
A large part of the necessary amount
has been subscribed and the balance
is expected to be forthcoming in a few
days.
A movement is en foot to establish
a knitting mill in Madison. Captain
Becker, of Snapping Shoals, has a
plant which he proposes to move to
Madison, provided the people sub¬
scribed toward the enterprise. A
meeting of citizens was called recently
to consider the matter. Quite a num¬
ber of Madison’s moneyed men were
present and steps were taken to raise
the necessary funds. It is believed
that the amount will be raised and
that Madison will have the mills.
The officers of the Cotton Stakes
Exposition, at Atlanta are constantly
receiving inquiries about space con¬
cessions during the exposition. A
great many of the concessionaries of
the Midwinter Fair are writing for
space in the grounds and in response
to an inquiry from the officer in charge
of the government customs in Chicago
during the World’s Fair, Secretary
Lewis has sent detailed information
about the exposition. The govern¬
ment officer writes that he has inquir¬
ies from a great number of the foreign
exhibitors. The space and conces¬
sions applied for will not be consider¬
ed until the directors have issued their
prospectus.
* * *
Two important appointments in the
state’s volunteer militia were made a
few days ago and commissions were
issued to the appointees by Lieuten¬
ant Satterlee. Captain W. G. Obear,
adjutant of the Fifth regiment of At¬
lanta, was appointed assistant inspec¬
tor general with the rank of lieuten¬
ant colonel, and Captain William E.
Jones, of Augusta, was appointed colo¬
nel of the Sixth regiment of infantry
with headquarters at Augusta. Two
or three retirements were also record¬
ed and Lieutenant Satterlee finished
his report of inspection of the state’s
troops. This latter document is a
large volume in itself, and is a com¬
plete record of facts and statistics con¬
cerning the Georgia volunteers.
Money in Fruit.
The recent mid-snmmer fair in Tif
ton was a valuable object lesson, show¬
ing the possibilities within the reach
of all our agriculturists.
The principal exhibitors were Cap¬
tain Irby, of the Cycloneta farm, in
Irwin county, and Dr. Wilson, of the
Keystone Fruit Company, in Worth
county. The Cycloneta farm was
started by the Georgia Southern and
Florida Railroad Company, in 1888,
and its history since has been a
demonstration of the wonderful
work which a little intelligence
will ftcoompliah. Sometime later Dr.
Wiieen tateisd the field e* fruit grow
efforts were iKj»id*4
v, z* m*} ( tu* wissliJte Pf»e-
tical value of his experiments brought (
capital to his hand, and vineyards, or¬
chards and bowers of beauty sprung
up as if by magic, and the property
which he now controls rivals that of
Cycloneta. It was no wonder, then,
that at the recent fair Dr. Wilson and
members of hifrfamily carried off 20 per
cent of all the prizes offered. It is true
that in occasional years the fruit crop
will fail, but the great uniform
success of the business fully over¬
comes all these losses. Even in a year
like the present one, vigilance and in¬
telligence need not fail of reward. As
an instance may be mentioned the suc¬
cess of Mr. W. O, Tifton, of Tifton.
Last week he consigned ten crates of
peaches to northern markets, for which
he realized $71, or $10 a bnshel. Dur
ing the March freeze Mr. Tifton kept
sawdust fires burning in his peach or¬
chard. For this watchfulness he is now
reaping a rich reward as indicated by the
price he received for his first shipment.
TheAlbanyHerald,in commenting upon
this incident, says: Of course, such
prices as above named cannot be re¬
lied upon to obtain every year, but
the time has never been yet when
there was not an active market for
Georgia peaches. They are always in
demand, and while this industry has
grown late wonderfully in this section of
years, it may be safely said that
it is yet in its infancy. It has been
clearly demonstrated that the soil and
climate here are equal, if not superior,
to famous California: Certainly the !
soil is better; the crop may not be so
certain, but it is infinitely better to
have an occasional severe winter, that
the health of the section may remain
good.—Atlanta Constitution. ,
Big Slump in Values.
The big slump of 1894—the contrac
tion of values throughout Georgia as
indicated by the tax returns—prom- i
ises history to of be this one of the Captain features Farley of the j
state. ;
Fnrlow, of tho com p>troiler’s general’s
ofllce, in summing up the returns
from the counties which have reported
to date, says: estimate
It is a conservative to place
the decrease which we may expect this
year at between twenty-five and thirty
millions of dollars. It will more prab
ably be close to the latter figure. We
have now received digests from fifty
two counties, and but four of the fifty
two fail to show a decided decrease as
compared , with last year. These coun
tle « represent all sections of the state
they are, with a few exceptions,
Fma11 counties-that is, below the av¬
erage m point of wealth. Experience
of the past teaches us that in all prob
ability the same averago of decrease
will bo maintained throughout the en
tire list, the larger counties decreasing
in the same proportion as the smaller
ones. Of the fifty-two counties re
ccived, forty-eight show a decrease
amounting to 84,608,858. The net de¬
crease for tho fifty-two is $4,533,690.
The fact that these counties represent
all sections shows that tho decrease is
general and the fact that they are nl
most without an exception small coun¬
ties shows that the total decrease will
be about as I have indicated—$30,000,
000 .” -
Brr Stii'hcxc are .;A 0 ftnutf, speak
tnomselve**?
Rabun, decrease. ....$ 44,780
Pike, 9 decrease.... .... 112,932
Harris, decreaso....... .... 71,472
Clarke, decrease....... .... 205,240
McIntosh, decrease..... .... 82,949
Ware, decrease........ .... 59,950
Thomas, decrease...... .... 284,299
Montgomery, decroase.. .... 139,557
Pierce, increase........ .... 16,770
Miller, decrease........ .... 13,955
Gordon, decrease...... .... 166,785
Macon, decrease....... .... 34,924
Catoosa, decrease...... .... 63,096
Henry, decrease....... .... 14,798
Greene, decrease....... .... 134,856
Polk, decrease......... .... 314,853
Quitman, decrease..... .... 74,036
Gloscock, decrease...... .... 25,203
Oglethorpe, decrease... .... 48,335
Johnson, decrease..... .... 25,162
Liberty, decrease...... .... 85,440
Hart, increase......... .... 27,202
Milton, decrease....... .... 67,407
Jefferson, decrease..... .... 66,092
Laurens, decrease..... ... 194,341
Haralson, decrease.... .... 217,232
Murray, decrease...... .... 123,203
Walker, decrease...... .... 277,695
Troup, decrease....... .... 155,566
Butts, decrease........ .... 139,372
Clay, decrease......... .... 43,224
McDuffie, decrease..... 34,583
Gwinnett, decrease..... .... 20,855
Wayne, decrease....... .... 41,045
Early, increase........ .... 29,625
Effingham, decreaso.... .... 48,368
Bulloch, decrease.... .... 85,279
Chattahoochee, decrease .... 4,873
Webster, decrease...... .... 25,156
Rockdale, decrease..... .... 25,156
Chattooga, decrease.... .... 125,250
Cherokee, decrease.......... 85,867
Clinch, decrease.......... 173,596
Crawford, decrease........ 30,493
Dade, decrease........... 83,726
Lumpkin, increase........ 1,571
Forsyth, decrease......... 26,618
Hancock, decrease.......... 153,732
Pickens, decrease 18,179
Pulaski, decrease 151,830
Screven, decrease 117,401
White, decrease. 29,683
The net decrease for fifty-two coun¬
lies is $4,533,690.
When Baby was 6ick, we gave her Casioria.
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
Upholding Gantt.
Resolutions have been passed by
Larry Gantt’s local alliance at Spar¬
tanburg, S. C., refusing to acquiesce
in Gantt’s expulsion by the state alli¬
ance. The resolutions declare that
the state alliance acted unjustly in that
no notice was given Gantt, that it ex¬
ceeded its jurisdiction, going beyond
tne constitution, that Encampment al¬
liance will consider Brother Gantt in
good standing until he is regularly
tried and found guilty.
A Girl’s College Burned.
Unknown persons set fire to the
Presbyterian female college, at Win
Chester, Tenn., Monday night, and it
was entirely consumed, erected ine bunding 1830,
was * fitte structure, in
and the tddr.*» »b«
eubatfjr
menstruation
vcth a woman of vigorous health passes
otT in due .time without pain or dis¬
comfort; but when she approaches this
crisis MONTHLY with a frail constitu¬
tion and feeble health she endangers
both her physical and mental powers.
BRADFIELD’S
-e FEMALE e<
REGULATOR
r if taken a few days before the monthly
5 sickness sets in and continued until!
i nature performs her functions, has no
J equal as a SPECIFIC for Painful, Pro
f fuse, Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular
t IV! £ Nl ST K U AT IO INS
J t
t Book to “ WOMAN ’’ mailed free.
< BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
e Sold by all Druggists,
Jt
----B.M.WOOLLEY.M.l). PIUM out cured ana ticulars pain. Wkiaxey at sent home Book FREE. Hamt* of with¬ par¬
A Uaoa, Ga. Office 104 >i Whitehall Sl
r ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ i ~s
% fS A.
♦ #5 Jta;
/ m
^ jfoikjCorrects.i/viiqcstU pn r:
£ l '14 in 5 minutes
T Encm* Softer meals heafy
X ^ hose
prones its O'
^ ^ efficacy
m »
S PRICE 5C CENTS PER BOTTLE.
f x BOOK OF VALUABLE „
INFORMATION FREE.
T. - FOR sale by druggists. A
FORSYTH BOOI Ml
A FA IK STOCK. OF ALL THE
SCHOOL BOOKS
Used in the schools in Forsyth and
also those used in the country
schools kept on hand und for sale at
his usual
LOW PRICES.
Mugazines, Seaside Novols, and the
usual Daily Papers.
I. W. ENSICxN.
Q#t. 10th, 1891.
HELPLESS
INVALID.
“About 18 months or two
vonrs ago my wife’s health gave
way, and sho grew steadily
woil could u#>t retain
scarcely the anything .she ate and
case finally assumed tho
worst form of
DYSPEPSIA and CHRONIC
DiARRfKEA,
and sho became a helpless inva*
lid At tho age of 13. 1 had her
under tho treatment of a good
physician, lievo but his efforts to re¬
her were of no avail. So,
after matters had continued
thus for 8 or 10 months, and
my wife had given up to die, I
took the case in my own hands
and purchased a bottle of Dr.
King’s
ROYAL GERMETUER,
began giving it to hor in water as
hot as she 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 little of any¬
thing she desired, and today is
a well woman. Sho used alto¬
gether possibly 4 or (j bottles.
In my opinion
GERflETUER HAS NO EQUAL.”
Harry L. Watts, Winona, Miss.
Mr. Watts is traveling sa’esman fot It. Zu
berbier Co., wholesale grocers, New Orleans.
King’s Royal Oarmctuer Co . Atlanta. G.i
| v €> "O v v ©*• u*
i Dl
! GO *
t
i To Our Centra! Georgia Patrons
± ? v
a Yon want the JtKST for the I.E.VM
m MONEY. We sell just that kind.
j, Iieen at it 33 years, and placed over 7, _ '
£ 50,000 satisfactory Instrunuots in
w Southern homes Kvery one knows
6 that oar Instruments are 6
9 RELIABLE, ±
❖ DURABLE,
MUSICALLY PERFECT, f
4 and sold at lowest possible prices. 4 ’
* -BUY FROM OUR- v
I A p
MACON BRANCH. ^
❖ R. J. ANDERSON & SON, Mas.icebs. *>
What? Didn't you know we had a y ”
Branch House there? Yes; it’s true. &
Not an agency, hut our own sto e.
Y under our d reet con'rot, and the ^
T large st music house in Macon. Its
V» Y managers end seJesmcn under y T
A salary—and not selling on comniis- i
sioD. All expenses paid by or*. > aine
® instruments, ‘Ksn- prices, same
*** terms, same business methods in
Sav irnaii. A vents' r.mmissions and ^
< w
4 middlemen's profit* sat ed purchas¬
ers. Our greatest burg »ins t,rough -
to your very door-. Immerse stork
V to select fioro. AH n v, an 1 fr,.*!,
_
y from factories. XYrb u ; nd our saleV
A ! men will visit yon.
Send your order* for Sl-eoi Vi-tir. /
y Mcsii' Books. and all Band In tot. rns, X Y
A sir n^K, small nv:a *>>•-. rn.
W 7 merit*. Any j,r;< e* In the United V
A State* duplicated. ,
Kememher ci;r Macon Uraii'h. ft f
w run sure you m n y.
v jj UQDEN & BATES f
^ 4 L Soiibern Music Hcscc. (
f. Kram-he* Kain Ecus:, in >• Savansah, Os. f
’< rt' on,
g It-' rh. r
KnuCiv. Term
•> 1 *;■' n * 5 * f R’SU- “
v \
4 >■»*©••• 3^
CLOTHIERS!
TAILORS!
HATTERS!
FURNISHERS.
Eiseman -> Bros.,
WASHINGTON, P. C., ATLANTA. GA, Baltimore,
15-1. M lutehall St. Factory, 213 W. German St¬
Cor. 7th amt E, Sts. N. W.
ONLY MANUFACTURERS OF C^OTHIfr E SOUTH
DEALING DIRECT WITH CONSUMER.
CLOTHIERS,
TAILORS,
HATTERS,
FURNISHERS. *
Mallary Bros. & Co.,
I -i * ,1 MACON, GA.
m ^Bgigj§il Remember we
m are still headquar¬
■ ters for
m
s ENGINES,
1 I
BOILERS,
SAW MILLS,
GRIST MILLS,
COTTON PRESSES, COTTON machinery GINS, lino.
and everything else in tho
Ploaso don’t be persuaded into buying anything in tho maebinory
line before writing us for prices.
MALLAKY BROS. A CO., Macon, Ga.
WE HAVE
The largest clothing stores
in the South, in Atlanta
and Macon. W hen in need
ot clothes, call to see us.
Mail orders promptly fill
cd.
'
■•s.v.-;..-
39-41 Whitehall St., 552-554 Cherry St.,
Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga
The th« Best Jji'iwt Shoes Money. for *=1 . L. DOUGLAS
*3 sit Wi fc • V® HOE GENUINE WELT.
Squeakless, Bottom Waterproof. Best Shoe sold at the price.
ptb ( gm 255. $5, $4 T.ipial and custom work, $3.50 costing Dress Shoo.
y. % nS . from $6 to $S.
m \ i g4.S3.50 Polhc^ Shoo,.Solos.
Up & $2.50, Unequalled and $2 Shoes,
i at the price.
■t Boys $2 Arc & the $1.75 Best for Service. School Shoes
t* ^ • X $3, ^ $2.50 LADIES’ $2, $1.75
i V.
Best Dongola, Stylish, Perfect
i Ik Fitting and Serviceable.Itest
in the world. All Styles.
q at k Insist upon having W.L,.
........ .....I>oiiglas Shoes.
i; * yflfit v^S>k Name
, : lul< * price stamped on
bottom. Jiroekton
__
- -
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 cau
afford to sell lit a less profit, and wo believe you can save money by buying all your
footwear of the dealer advertised below. Catalogue free upon application.
For Sale by J. B, SHARP & SON, Forsyth, Ga,
Enterprise KiEBKSM R Works =1
GEO, T. GIFFORD, Proprietor,
KANUFACTUKEfi OF
Smoke Stacks )
Oil and Water Tanks, Iron Door and Window Shutters,
Wrought Iron Grating for Cellar Ventillating 1 .
in fact, all kinds of Wrought Iron Work.
Special attention given to repairs of all kinds. Competent workmen to send out on
in the country. Prices guaranteed to bo as low as good work can be done at.
All work guaranteed to be flrtft class. Orders solicited.
Dealers in'll! kinds of Steam Fittings, auoh as
Steam Guages,Safety valves,Whistles,
Globa Red CbecrT Valves, Guago Cocks, Etc.
Addrse#—
OJfiQRGFi T. aiFPOBD,