Newspaper Page Text
9
The French peoplo pay over S10,
000,000 a year tuxes on their windows.
Mon are not enlisted in the regular
army for loss than five years in time
of peace.
Chicago is tho great cold-storage
dejHit for egg*. It is calculated that
nearly half a million coses are packed
away thcro every fall.
1 Hecrotnry McBride, of the Miners’
Union, says that within the next three
▼•■nrs there will be a strike of every
branch of organized labor in the United
States.
| ? if teen years ago thcro was not a
telephone exchange in tho United
Htntea. To-dav, boasts the St. Louis
n » H ' ,l *1 ler ' ! ,ir ’“ 1 14 4 cx . ~
’
ermnges, employing 10,000 persons
and furnishing service to nearly 250,
000 telephone subscribers.
It lias now been practically settled
that tie chief sensation of the Paris
Exhibition of 1900 will consist of a
bridgeovur the Seine 100 metres broad,
and with houses, theatres, and monu¬
ments on either side of it, liko tho
Pont Neuf in olden days, not to men
t ion old London Bridgo. It will span
the Heine from tho Champs Elysees to
tho I aval ides.
Horseflesh in China lias been con
sidered a great delicacy for centuries,
The inhabitants, however, for tho
purpose iff the kitchen, use almost ex¬
clusively animals of a small breed, lit¬
tle larger than ponies, which have
thin legs and small bones, and grow
fat oil little food. They are fod nl
most entirely on grass and hay. Many
farmers devote their time almost ex¬
clusively to raising those horses for
the market.
, Returns from the Stato census of
Michigan, tho taking of which has
just, boon <complotod, aro boing re
coived at the office of tho Secretary of
State. A rcmarkablo fact in connec
tion with tho census is that tho re
turns from the first eighteen counties
rocoived show a decrease sinoo 1890 in
population outside of thirteen cities
of about 10,000. The population of
tho thirteen cities increased 79,000
during the past four years.
A Tho San Francisco Chronicle re
marlfti: lho denial of the right of
citizenship to Japanese in Boston iB
tho simple following out of tho rule
that all colored aliens except Africans
are , barred , out. 1 his . may , be hard in
the case of an educated Japanese who
has spent yoars in this country, but
no procedeut can l>o established for
euch exceptions. Tho ordinary Jap¬
anese coolie, who has a perfect right
to enter this country if he does not
come under contract, would not make
a desirable citizen.
Some very interesting facts in ro
gwd to railway bankruptcies aro given
lly tho Railway Age and Northwestern
Railroader. During tho last six
months receivers havo been appointed
for twoutv-three companies, making a
total in tho last eighteen months , of
ninety-seven railway couqiauios own
iug nearly 32,000 miles of rood and
representing more than 82,000,000,
WOO • , bonus , and , stook, , , w'kieli 1 • , 1 havo
in ’
gime into the hands of receivers, .
There are at present 152 railway com
panics operated by the courts.
, ■■ ■ .. . —
* Greenland seems to tho Chicago Her
Ikltl to be on tho verge of booomiu* » ’
summer resort for scientific . ( “sharps.”
It has been ascertained that the sum
mer climate of Greenland, with its end
loss day and crisp air, is a delightful
one, and tho country itself, with its
ioe cap and its glaciers, its fauna and
Horn, is, scientifically, very interest
ing, amWhe men of science are resort
ing*thither as their predecessors did
to Mount Desert under tho lead ot
Agassiz in those far-past, days when
tho dross coat was unknown in that
happy isle aud its inhabitants dined
at 12 o’clock.
I The New York Press observes: The
statement made , , by General „ , Roy ,, „ Stone,
of tHo Agricultural Department,before
the National Good Roads Conference,
at Asbnrv •* Park, N. J., that tho farm
ers of » this .. couutrv . , lose between . 8l>00,
‘ '
000,0(0 and 8 < 09,000,000 yearly from
being compelled to haul their produce
over poor roads, shows the practical
importance of the good roads move¬
ment. Good roads mean not only
speedier means of communication, but
longer service from horses and vehi
cles. They are another way of making
the labor acd capital of farmers more
t
There is a fortune insured for the
inventor of silk gloves that will have
something approaching the durability
of kid, says the Philadelphia Press,
Many women who perspire freely cm
not wear the latter at all during the
summer, and yet, with the silk substi
Mites at seventy-five cents a pair, and,
although warranted “double finger
tipe,” rarely lasting more than a week.
they find the question of handgear
rather a serious one. If the mitts,
fashionable some fifteen years ago,
would be revived, it would prove n
boon to this large class. Bat a still
large r oh as, who set tho atyies, do no*
like them
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH. GA., TUESDAY, YUGUST 28. 1894.-EIGHT PAGES
YEWS
CONDENSED FROM OUR MOST
IMPORTANT DISPATCHES.
Short and Crisp Items of General
Interest to Our Readers.
The big strike of the miners at
Spring Valley, Ill., has ended by an
agreement between the coal companv
n ud the strikers ns to terms. The
men will resume work at once,
It developed Wednesday that tho
two hundred employes of the Ports
mouth Manufacturing Company, South
Berwick, Ale., had not been paid sala
Ties for six weeks when the mills closed
' aht w «; k -
After making a thorough investiga
tion of the conditions existing among
the employes of the Pullman company
who participated iu the recent boycott
nnti strike, Governor Altgeld basis
sued an appeal to the people of Illinois
or relief.
A dispatch from Shanghai says that
the court of inquiry has established
the fact that the Japanese war ship
Naniwa ordered the destruction of the
drowning men from the Chinese trails
port Kow Shiug, which was sunk by
tho Japanese.
Tlie whisky trust has succeeded in
borrowing all the money it needs for
the present and on Wednesday depos
ited over 81,000,000 in one of the city
banks of Peoria, Ill. This was bor¬
rowed in small lots and jiartios are of¬
fering the trust money in all direc
tions.
The spinners at the Standard Spin
uing Company s works, ball Iliver,
went out on a strike Wednesday re
fusing to work under a further reduc
tion. They have been working at
lower wages than are usually paid in
mills where colored hosiery yarns are
made.
A Chicago special says: Officials of
the American Railway Union and local
labor leaders are much pleased with
the methods of the national strike com
mittee so far. Several of them have
expressed themselves as satisfied that
both sides of the question will receive
ft ^ ,lir au<A bnpartial hearing.
The triennial convocation of the gen
cral grand chapter of the United
States Royal Arch Masons xvas held at
the 3Iasouic temple at Topeka, Kas.,
Wednesday. Three hundred and fifty
members of the fraternity, represen
ting membership grand chapters with an aggregate
of over 150,000, were
present. The sessions will ceutinuo
* or ouo w oek.
An Indianapolis special says: A call
is being circulated for a state mass
meeting to be held in that city to or
ganize a good citizenship political par
ty. The Christian Endeavor, with its
45,000 members ; the Epworth League,
with 30,000 members, and the Baptist
Young People’s Society, with perhaps
10,000 members, havo recently gone
i uto the movement.
A dispatch of Wednesday to tho
Central News, London, from Shang
liai states that advices have been re¬
ceived thcro from Chemupo to tho
effect that some unimportant skir¬
mishes havo taken place on the great
road north of Pongsan between the
Chinese and Japanese forces. The po¬
sition of the Japanese troops is un¬
changed, and all the passes are strongly
held by Japanese soldiers.
General officers of tho Illinois Cen
tral railroad have given out informa¬
tion that after September 1st that road
will own and control tho Chesapeake,
9^° j tS fat £ antA Southwestern, ftnt4 freight and would train run
lm K f, UR ° r 8
from New Orleans < + to Chicago +v through .
3Iemphis over tho Yazoo and Ylissis
sippi \ alley anil the Cliespoake and
Ohio, abandoning tho route for fast
* rai “ 8 th r ough Jackson > Miss - and
Jackson, , Tenn. n
The m Tokio, , . Japan, T correspondent
telegraphs that the court of inquiry
which has been investigating at Shan
ghai the circumstances of the sinking
the Chinese transport Kow-Shuug
by the Japanese warship Naniwa, has
rt 1? rned “ ‘ U ’S U<m hoKliu «
action of the Japanese commander 111
firing upon the transport was justified,
and that, therefore, the Japanese gov
eminent will not be called upon to
make any compensation for the de¬
struction of the vessel.
The Big Four freight depot at Cin¬
cinnati burned Tuesday afternoon.
The building was two squares long
and was valued, with its contents and
Wn £ ner sleepers and coaches, at 8500,
000. Owing to the material of which
the structure was built the flames
could not be checked. A row of frame
buildings opposite the depot caught
lire several times, but the incipient
blaze was extinguished in every case,
About twenty of the Wagner rleepers
and chair cars were destroyed.
The window .class manufacturers of
Indiana met at Anderson Wednesday
afternoon to consider the wage scale
f° r the next year. There were repre
een tatives from thirty glass manufac
turing towns, where 0,000 \ men are
employed, , , r lhe ri manufacturers e named i
representatives to meet the wage com
mittee at Pittsburg and announce that
the Indiana manufacturers must have
a 30 per cent, reduction. Tho local
glassworkers say it will never be
r
agreed to. They are demanding a 20
per cent, advance iu some branches,
Tke affairs of tho Second National
bank of Altoona, Pa., where Bank £x
amint ’ r 3Iiller committed suicide, are
furnishing a new crop of sensations.
Mayberry Miller, one of the clerks,
has been arrested, charged with fasi
fying the books of the bank. Tues¬
day Harry Clabaugh, assistant cashier,
was also arrested on a similar charge
and Tuesday night a dispatch was re¬
ceived from a Pittsburg detective
agency saying that Gardner, the ab¬
sconding cashier, was seen in Pitts
burg and asking for authority for his
arrest.
A fi re started at an early hour Tues
m< ^5 n * n 8 four-story build
mg at Nos. 367 and 378 Shelby street,
Memphis, Tenn., occupied by the
Mansfield Drug Company, and within
less than an hour’s time nearly §250
000 worth of property was destroyed.
Th rt fire started among chemicals and
oils in tho rear of the Mansfield build
i 0 g and spread «o rapidly that the lire*
nacu eoT*u lost /’-'ntrtd of it. Among
the heaviest losers are the Mansfield
Drug Company, I^adtr k Co., whole¬
sale grocer:-, and A. B. Trta iwell A
Co., wholes.de grocers and cotton
factors.
Thomas Harris, of EUensbnrgh, Pa.,
returned from Mount Clemens, where
he had been for his health. He fonud
his home closed, and, after considera¬
ble trouble, broke in. He found the
d« a 1 and decomposed body of his wife
on the bed and by her side slept their
two children, aged two and four years,
respectively. Thursday The woman died last
with hemorrhages and the
bed was saturated with blood. The
neighbors supposed that the family
was away. The children are in a pre
carious condition from lack of food
and breathing the contaminated at
mosphere so long,
American Bar Association, of
which Judge Thomas 31. Cooley, of
Ann Arbor, Mich., is president, began
its seventeenth annual meeting at Sar
atoga, N. Y., Wednesday morning,
The president’s address was read. It
was very lengthy and he commented
on the most noteworthy changes in
statutory law on points of general in
terest which have been made in the
several states and by congress during
the preceding year. Thesecretaryre
ported the membership as 1,113, and
the election of sixty new members,
Every state but Nevada and three out
of five territories are represented.
F jXlA \ IT\T l A 1/lu I iYlU/lLJ^O \
Jk
GIVING TIIE NEWS UP TO THE
HOUR OF GOING TO PRESS.
-
a Brief Summary of Dally Happen
i lugs Throughout the World.
Four hundred weavers in tho China
mills at Suncock, N. H., did not go to
work Thursday because of the reduc
: tion in wages, equal to the cut-down
iu the Fall River mills. Wages paid
at the China mills are governed by
the scale paid in Fall River, and the
. ojjeratives were accordingly notified
of a ten per cent, cut-down Tuesday.
The south Dakota state republican
convention went through the entire
list of business at Yankton Thursday,
Permanent organization was effected,
with W. C. Palmer, of Sioux Falls, as
! chairman. The following ticket was
: nominated: Two congressmen, B. J.
‘
1 Gamble, of Yankton, and J. A. Pickier,
of Faulkton; governor, C. A. Sheldon,
of Pierre.
Wabash freight train No. 97, in
charge of Conductor William Bryant
and Engineer Charles Charles Felton,
which left Johnsburg, 3Io., Wt-ulnes
day night, just ahead of the Kansas
City express, ran into a herd of horses
two miles west of the town and was
badly wrecked. Those killed were:
Engineer Charles Felton; William
Fidlcr, of St. Joseph; William 3Iiller,
residence unknown. A large number
of the crew were injured.
Three Indianapolis banks—the mer¬
chants’ National, Fletcher’s and the
Indiana National—have advanced 8I0»
9G2 to Governor Ylatthews to pay off
the state militia for services during
the riots at Hammond, Ind., in the
mining region. There was no regular
fund in the state treasury from which
the amount could legally be drawn. It
is understood that Governor Slatthews
mortgaged his fine stock farm in Ver¬
million county to the banks in order
to secure the loan.
Applications from individual exhib
itors from 3Iorocco, Ceylon and San
Francisco for space at the Atlanta ex
position were received and filed in the
exposition office Thursday morning,
| It is probable that all of the foreign
1 exhibitors which were at the World’s
j Fair will come to Atlanta. They will
, have new exhibits, however, and the
exposition authorities will 6ee that all
of their .... displays and , not ,
are new re¬
productions of the exhibits at the
World’s Fair.
A distressing accident occurred near
Baton Rouge, La., Thursday, which
resulted in the death of three estima
ble young ladies, and which has cast a
gloom over the entire capital. The
unfortunates were Ylisses 3Iar Lee
Read, Belle Chambers and Elenore
Garland. The young ladies were
bathing in the Amite river, when one
of their number got beyond her depth.
She screamed and the other two went
to her assistance, and all of them were
drowned.
While threshers were at work on a
farm of George Whitmer, near Akron,
O., a box of dynamite was found con
cealed in a sheaf of wheat. Half an
hour later a dynamite cartridge, which
had been secreted in another sheaf,
was exploded in the separator, wreck
ing the machine and setting fire to the
barn. John W. Hines, Jacob and
Charles Lacy attempted to rescue the
horses in the barn. Hines was fatally
in i ured * Four Worses, one mule and
several head of cattle were burned to
death, and V kitner s entire wheat and
oat cro P and man Y farm implements
were destroyed,
TO BUILD FACTORIES.
A Plausible Scheme of the North
Carolina Alliance.
At the annual meeting of tho North
Carolina Farmers’ Alliance, held at
Greensborougk C. P. Simmons, of
Halifax county, proposed a novel
scheme for building a number of cot¬
ton factories iu the state. His plan is
to open subscription books in each
congressional district, under the man¬
agement of a special committee for
subscriptions, to be held monthly,
ranging from 81 per month up. When
the total amount of subscriptions is
sufficient to warrant steps being
taken for the erection of a
factory, the committee will in¬
invite propositions from the differ¬
ent towns and communities for its lo¬
cation, and the place which offers the
best inducements, iu the opinion of
the committee, will secure the factory.
It is proposed that every subscriber
shall be a stockholder, and be entitled
to a vote according to the amount of
his stock, and that the*matter shall be
entirely free from all party and politi¬
cal influence, a purely progressive
manufacturing movement, t-o be open
to fartners, business men and capital¬
ists alike. Th« plan is meeting with
mu.*- .ivor,
HALLS OF CONGRESS
DAILY PROCEEDINGS OF BOTH
HOUSE AND SENATE.
What Our National Law-Makers are
Doing for tho Country.
t a. 1? n r , y mem, , ; cr ! ' ere P rc6
-
21° fM; „’t ,he e ' e , hon “ * “ be e ‘ " S ™1 T“ “" ■ ,ca ;
lhl “ “ D « r “ 8 ! ta> on the
adjournment Members were ctow.l
ug eagerly about the arena in front of
-he speaker a desk with requests for a
□n&mmons consent for passage of bills
of local tntereat to them. Mr. Say
ers, chairman of the appropriation,
committee, secured unanimous con¬
sent for the consideration of a bill ap¬
propriating §9,000 for an additional
force for collection of internal reve¬
nue and $3,000 for carrying into effect
the arbitrations convention between
the United States and Venezuela, sign¬
ed at Caracas in January last. It was
passed without objection. The house
then adjourned at 12 :50 until Tuesday.
In the house, Tuesday, Mr. Boatner
endeavored to secure the immediate
consideration of Senator Hill’s anti
anarchist bill, but Mr. Warner, of
New York, objected so strenuously
that the bill wen t over. The consid¬
eration of Mr. Roar’s anti-lottery bill
■was prevented by objection from Mr.
Davey, of Louisiana. The house then
adjourned until Thursday.
About fifty members were present
when the house met Thursday morn¬
ing. A number of senate bills were
laid before the house and several
passed. Mr. Cummings, chairman of
tlie committee of naval affairs, pre
sented a report of the committee’s in
vestigation of alleged frauds in the
manufacture of armor plate. At 1:10
the house adjourned.
tiie senate.
!n the senate, Monday, Mr. Harris,
from The finance committee, reported
back to the 'Senate tho sugar bill
amended so as to provide a duty of
forty per cent fiat on all sugars. The
committee did not report back any of
the amendments and several senators
who had previously given notice of
amendments reserved them, notably
Mr. Quay, who brought forward his
McKinley act entire ns an amendment,
and Mr. Mitchell, of Oregon, who pro
posed the McKinley duty on the free
coal , bill . -was reported back amended
so m to provide for reciprocal
free coal The iron ore bill v as re
ported back without amendment.
The barbed wire fencing bill was
amended SO as to make barbed wire
The
senate agreed that wdien it adjourned
it would be until Wednesday. The
finance committee decided to re
port these bills at a meeting Monday
morning by a strict party vote, Mr.
White (democrat, California,) acting
with the committed for the first time.
The bill went to thf calendar and can
now be called up * a majority vote
only. :
When the senate met Wednesday
morning 21 senators xvere present—
less than half of a quorum. Upon a
later call 32 answered. Mr. Harris
moved that absentees be sent for, and
this was agreed to. At 1:20 o’clock a
quorum was secured and the senate
went into executive session. The ex¬
ecutive session lasted but a few min¬
utes, and at 1:40 the senate adjourned
until Thursday. Immediately after¬
wards a long list of confirmations of
presidential nominations to minor of¬
fices were made public.
Even before the reading of Wednes¬
day’s journal the absence of a quorum
in the senate Thursday morning was
pointed out by Mr. Manderson and
the roll was called, showing the pres¬
ence of thirty-three senators, ten less
than a quorum. Mr. Harris moved
that the sergeant at arms be directed
to request the presence of absent sena¬
tors, but Pasco and Cockrell pointed
out that the order made Thursday was
still in force and the latter asked that
the report of the sergeant at arms be
read. This was done and reported
that of forty-two senators who had
failed to answer to their names the
previous day only two were in the city
and one of these, Mr. Voorhees, was
too ill to attend. The others were tel¬
egraphed to attend immediately. Up
to 12 :30 o’clock thirty-five senators
had responded. At that hour it
being apparent that a quorum
could not be secured, upon mo¬
tion of Mr. Harris, the sergeant-at
arms was directed to compel the atten¬
dance of the absent senators. This, it
is said, will not amount to anything as
the sergeant-at-arms has always
now refuses to arrest the senators, and
bring them before the bar of the
senate, unless he is given a warrant
for their arrest. The senate has al¬
ways likewise refused to issue its war¬
rant. As a matter of fact, a quorum
could be obtained if all the republi¬
cans would vote, as there are a number
about the building who have so far
declined to enter the chamber. At
1:18, the senate, pending the ex¬
ecution of an order to compel the
members to attend, adjourned un¬
til Friday. This was owing
to the fact that it was de
monstrated to be impossible to get a
quorum. Executive clerk, Pruden,
reached the eapitol at 1 :lo with some
important nominations, but owing to
the absence of a quorum they could
not be laid before the senate. They
were taken back to the white house.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
■When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
Jumped From a Tower.
Colonel J. M. Winstead, president
of the Piedmont and People’s Savings
bank, of Greensboro, N. C., Thursday
morning removed his shoes and jumped
from one of the towers of the city ball,
a distance of one hundred and twenty
feet. He was cruelly mangled. His
left leg caught on a projection of the
tower and was torn from its socket.
No nao«e in known for his conduct.
SUGAR RAGULOTII O. It.
r
The New York Exchange Says That It
Is Good Delivery.
Many letters have been received bv
! the New 3 oik cotton exchange, both
for and against the use of sugar bag
cloth for baling cotton. The board ol
managers, afur a full discussion of the
i matter, have passed the following ree
elutions:
“Resolved, That many inquiries
having been received bv the New York
cotton exchange as to whether or not
,h0 080 >•« *b»t is known as sus „r tag
cloth ill covering cottou is contrary to
tbc rule, of tho cwlmngo, tho so. r taw
is iu8 , rl , clc j to , a , iw tll , ,,, nlblTn
ch , u ut hcrs known to bo uiter
ertod in this matter of tho fact that
ootton covered hv such lmgsing cou
„i,utoa rules a good'delircrr ' under the
of this exchange."
FAILKD TO COME ACROSS.
China’s Effort <o Float a Loan Falls
Flat.
The Central News, (London) has ad¬
vices from Shanghai to the effect that
the attempt of tho Chinese government
to float a loan of 1,000,000 taels, to be
guaranteed by Chinese merchants, has
proved a flat failure.
The American consul at Shanghai
has ordered the Japanese living in that
city to discard Chinese costumes and
advises a majority of them to return to
their native country.
Mr. Oteri, the Japanese minister at
Seoul, is reported to have been killed.
The stories iu circulation as to the
manner of his death are conflicting.
Aid for Pullman Strikers.
A Chicago special says: Governor
Altgeld and plan'ot Mayor Hopkins have de
cided on a relief for the stnrv
ing Pullman strikers. The scheme is
to secure the aid of tho railroads by
their furnishing free transportation to
all those of the town people who clo¬
sire to seek work elsewhere.
„__
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▼ I Oil I
I r_|^ IvHi ^ 9 S _ rj« 1310011 AA J V
^ L m
▼ i s the most important part of N
3® your organism. Three-fourths of 19
the tem complaints is subject are to which due to the impuri- sys-^ ™
ties in the ^lood. Youcan,there
‘ ore > reakze how vital it is to
Keep ft Pure M
J ' movesESBI .. ... “impSS! ,. Z J
83 a11
cleanses the blood thoroughly W
and builds up the general health,
Our Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases mailed
^ SWIFT SPECIFIC CO-.'fttianta. 8a. ¥
^ ‘Su 8 k. 9*31
** *
I a tilson,
JEWELER
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
RELIABLE GOODS.
FAIR DEALING.
BOTTOM PRICES.
—
if
‘
i#Ki|p
rs
m
S mt mil
<
r.FY.F A3IP J^VE.1.
Tilt GREAT LV\NGEUST
Tells H'.w Germs aar ll>sB:i3::d
1! s Homi,
“Mv Geailacke, wife, wh'i was an invalid from nervons
»iek lias been entirely e ired by
Royal Uetruecuer. I w gli every )>rior suffe r-
1 e wife liad access to that mediomc. Two
rtiny by It. children It is were care i of nasal ca.„rjh
trn y
A GREAT REMEDY.”
It is said endorsed that proprietaty by rlie medicines R r e
tisually only lower und more
{taorant clas-es of the people. Gennttner is
a notable exception. Its endorsers and its
friends are everywhere among the very he t
and most and prominent harmless people, its ler-. pleas¬
ant taste nature, its singular
merits and unquestioned superiority recom¬
mend it to lutellipent people every where as
the safest, sure-r and h.-st remedy known to
medical science for the relief and cure of In¬
Nervousness. digestion, Dyspepsia, Khlnc Ca’orrh, Rhe> matism,
v and Bladiler Troubles,
Bowel Complaints, Fevers and all Mclaiial
Disorders.
f.1.00, 6 for $5.00. Sold h» Dnsjrgists.
least’s Royal Germetuer Co.. Aiisnta, Ga.
|| ^ Bli § § % |Jj B BJ anaWhlafeeyHabits
BoSfoTpVi-
bma” 104^'^bnfhan r* nl '4i
office
TT. . . ~ „ —— - — ----
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t 444444444444^444444444444444
4
: m
^ .V
4 mil
4 Tjf^^brrtcls intiqzsUcxt
♦ ^ in -5 minutes
: ^ dose\i eon :
♦ proofs «! | Pv
1 efficacy m
-
4 X f-
4 11 r
4 PRICE 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE.
f >00K f OF ** VALOABlt Le * v l*I3SMATl8h OSUOOI F((l.
8 T*.
"••a*
4
V R
for Infants and Children.
H«OTHERS, Do You Know o»t r^no.
Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for cluldren are composed of opium or morphine ?
Do Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisoas ?
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists arc not permitted to sell narcotics .
without labeling them poisons ?
Do Yon Know that you should not permit any inedicino to bo given your ci’lUl
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list ok
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Do You Know that Castoria is tho proscription of tho famous Dr. Samuel 1 itcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Do You Kno w that tho Patent Office Department of tho United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Ditcher and his assigns to use tho won/
“ Castoria” and Us formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense I
Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to bo absolutely harmless?
Do Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria arc furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose ?
Do Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and that you may havo unbroken rest I
Well, the se things nro worth knowing. They are facts.
The fae-nimilo is on every
signature of wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria
m 53”®* MACON, GA.
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If > still headquar
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as Hi 1GINES,
sBHRsIBfiP Li
BOILERS,
1VL it jLd 3 ,
, GRIST MILLS,
COTTON GINS,
COTTON PRESSES, and oPesyfcbfug etc*s fn tho machinery line.
Please don’t bo porsuadod Sb$© anything in tho machinery
lino before writing us for pH}??,,
BROS. & CO., Macon, Ga.
—> . SaaSawSV-* i i ' ■' ■■ ■T i n.
Zl 1
In a iM the i&qrest clothing stores
S©£th, in Atlanta
and Macon, W) ten in need
ot clothes, ©all to see us.
■ Mail orders promptly ftll
ed.
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.
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s^h-. &
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39-41 Whitehall St., 552-554 Cherry St.,
Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga
FANCY AND PLAIN 1 l m 4 l
<■ n H l S % k
Enterprise BOILER Works
GEO. T. GIFFORD, Proprietor,
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 in the attention given to repairs of all kinds. Competent workmen to send out on
repairs work country. Pricos guaranteed to bo as low as good work can bo done at.
All guaranteed to be first elass. Orders solicited.
Dealers in 3ll kinds of Steam Fittings, such as
Steam Guages, Safety Valves, Whistles,
Glob© and Che<A Valves, Guage Cocks, Eta
Address—
GEORGE T. GIFFORD,
BnUrpris© W*rk\ MACQJN, QA-