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9
TIIE LEGISI.ATI RE.
«KORG|A *8 LAW.MAKR1LS MEET
AM) BEGIN WORK.
Routine Business of Hotli House and
8 euate~nills of Interest.
SESSION OF THE HOUSE.
32d Day.—M onday , . • »wnon . of . the
louse hohl at niglit, the da% lia\
ing been occupied in memorial exer
rise# Brown. over the body of Hon Joseph L.
The house met at 7:30. After
the roll call had been dispensed with Mr.
Hodges submitted a resolution, pro¬
viding an order of business, the effect
of which would be to displace the reg¬
istration bill and proceed with reading
senate and house bills, so that tho
work on the clerk's desk could be
cleaned up. Mr. Hodges and Mr.
Jenkins urged the adoption. Mr.
Branch and Mr. Hurst thought it
would be best to go ahead with the
registration bill. It was urged, how¬
ever, by the friends of tho resolution
that there was a light house and that
some important feature of the bill
might be killed on account of slight
opposition. Under the call for the pre¬
vious question the resolution was adopt¬
ed, so the registration bill went over.
Until 10 o’clock the house clerks were
at work, reading senate bills the first
nnd second time, and bouse bills, fa¬
vorably reported that came up on their
second reading. Several efforts were
made by tired members to adjourn but
all failed until the business was com¬
pleted. Mr. Blalock was, by resolu¬
tion, given tho committee places Mr.
Cook had, and Mr. Bird, of Effing¬
ham, was given those which were held
by Mr. Spier.
33d Day. —The first special order of
the day in the house Tuesday was tho
educational bill to systematize tho
finances nnd incr* use tho efficiency of
the common schools by providing for
direct payment into the state treasury
of all the moneys belonging to tho
common school fund, nnd tlio use of
the same for common school purposes
only, for quarterly apportionment and
disbursements of tho common school
fund, for quarterly payments to teach¬
ers, for making tho school year
coincident with tho calendar
year, for making tho school
fund a fixed and certain sum,
The most important section of tho bill
provides that tho school fund for each
year shall be a fixed and specified sum
and in order to carry out this provision
fho state school commissioner, the
comptroller general and the treasurer
shall, on tho first Tuesday of each year,
make an estimate of what the school
fund for tho eusuing year shall be, and
this estimate shall be divided into four
equal parts and each shall bo available
aud payable at tho times specified in
tho bill. Cuito a fight was made
by an amendment from Mr. Fouche,
of Floyd, to strike out tho pro
visions authorizing money to be
treasury paid from any other fund in the
when tho school money falls
short, but tho amendment portetU^fl^^he wueu lost.
Thu bill was then rt
t it
Hmied, and tho The bill yeHs^fpJlwi.v* passed
was
vote of 132 to 11. Tho resolu
Won to make aud appropriation for tbe
Cotton States and International Expo¬
sition came up ns a special order fol¬
lowing the educational bill. By some
mistake it lmd been road only one
time, so on motion of Mr. Howell of
Fulton it was made the special order
for Wednesday morning. The origin¬
al resolution to appropriate $25,000
was introduced by Mr. Hall of Coweta.
It went to the finance committee which
reported favorably upon it, then it
was sent to the general judiciary com¬
mittee to see if there was nuy constitu¬
tional objection against it. The com¬
mittee reported that there was not aud
recommended that the resolution do
pass. Tho next business was the regis¬
tration bill which was taken up the
other day but not completed. While
this was under discussion the house ad¬
journed until half past seven at night.
34th Day— -The resistration bill
which was considered Tuesday aud
Tuesday night, Wednesday was again taken up in
the house morning. Mr.
Branan, of Fulton, who has often re¬
ferred to the faot that he had a regis¬
tration bill since this bill came up, of¬
fered it us a substitute for the whole,
when the house was ready to vote on
the measure. Mr. Branan made a
strong speech in favor of his bill and
ended by declaring he was not a learn¬
ed graduate, but he was graduated in
being true to his God, true to his
country aud true to his people. He
called the yeas and nays and took
his seat in the midst of uproarious ap¬
plause. The call was sustained and
the substitute was lost by a vote of 48
to 97. Mr. Branan gave notice of a
motion to reconsider. The exposition
res dution was taken up when the reg¬
istration bill had been disposed of. It
came up in the shape of a substitute
from the finance committee. While
it was being considered a motion pre¬
vailed that the committee rise, report
progress aud ask leave to sit again at
7:30 p. m.
35th Day—T he entire morning ses
sion of the house Thursday was taken
up in discussing the exposition bill
and the registration bill, which went
through all right, aud is now iu tho
hands of the stiuvte. The resolution
to increase the appropriation for the
agricultural department $25,000, so
that a state exhibit could be made at
the Cotton States and International
Exposition, was taken up as soon ns
the registration bill ha.l been disposed
of. 1 ho house went into a committee
of the whole with Mr. Hodges, of Bibb,
iu the chair. Mr. Howell, of Fulton,
made his first speech siuce the session
opened iu support of the resolution to
make the state exhibit at the exposi¬
tion. Following Mr. Howell, Mr.
Willingham, of Monroe, spoke against
the resolution on the ground that it
was unconstitutional. Asa substitute,
Mr. Fouche, of Floyd, moved that
the bill be recommended unfavorably.
The substitute was ^adopted by a vote
of 69 to 66 . The registration bill
which had been printed, was read for
the third time and put upon its pa b*
sage. A call for the previous question
was made and Mr. West, of Lowndes,
rnado a motion to lay the bill on the
table. The motion was overwhelm¬
ingly defeated. The committee’s bill
fliei# came up for final action. The
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH, GA-, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1894.--EIGHT PAGES.
r^luot ^2
Middlebrook of Newton, moved to
suspend the rules and trausmit the
bill to the senate. The motion to
transmit wss carried by a vote of 110
to 37. This shut off a motion Mr.
West, of Lowndes, wanted to make to
reconsider and the registration bill is
safe so far as the house is concerned.
SESSION OF THE SEXATE.
32xd Day—I n the senate Monday
Dr .Whitley, of the thirty-sixth dis
t r j c ^ introduced a bill to allow jndges
to exclllde {rom tho court room during
the trial of cases where obscene testi
rnony may be introduced, and also to
give judges the power to prohibit the
publication of that character of testi¬
mony in any newspaper in tho state.
Senator Lewis, chairman of the com¬
mittee on finance, introduced an im¬
portant bill. It was a bill authorizing
the governor to sell the Northeastern
railroad. Tho senate adjourned to
take part in the memorial services over
the late Hon. Joseph E. Brown.
33d Day— In the senate Tuesday
morning the bill introduced by Sena¬
tor Boyd to allow the jury under in¬
structions of the judge, and accompa¬
nied by the sheriff, to visit the scene
where homicide or accidents occurred,
was passed. Senator Boyd’s bill to
amend the Code invalidating all titles
to property tainted with usury, by
adding “only as to tho excess above
legal rates,” was reported from the ju¬
diciary committee with a recommenda¬
tion that it pass. Senator Beeks sub¬
mitted a minority report, that the
present law was sufficient and ought
not to be changed. The minority re¬
port was adopted and the bill was loet.
i he bill introduced by Senator Venable
to allow insurance companies to do busi¬
ness in Georgia through brokers, with¬
out depositing security us now requir¬
ed came up for consideration. Sev¬
eral amendments were offered to the
bill and adopted, tho most material
being a paragraph requiring the com¬
panies doing business to pay any judg¬
ment obtained against them in this
state within thirty days after the judg¬
ment, and on failure, then the brok¬
er’s liceuso to do business to be re¬
voked. After a brief discussion, the
bill was passed by a vote of 31 ayes to
1 nay, and upon motion of Senator
Harris, was immediately transmitted
to tho house. A bill to piovide how
city taxes shall be collected in Mil
lcdgeville, nlso a bill to amend the
charter of Milledgeville, were passed.
34tii Day—T he committee to whom
w as referred the bill of Senator ltob
erts, making women eligible to hold
appointive offices, returned the bill to
iho senato Wednesday morning with a
recommendation that it do not pass,
Several new bills were introduced and
read. The following senate bills were
passed: Bill to amend section 279 of
the Code, concerning the appointment
of judges of county courts; Bill to
prescribe tho method of serving
dejj^^Jlill bills oLj^cxception upon non-resi
to regulato benevolent
institutions. The bill provides
how they shall be chartered,
how they shall receive children into
tho institution, care for them and when
necessary bind them out; Bill to pre¬
scribe the attes'ation of deeds executed
without the limits of Geor^tiJ Bill to
fix a lieu in fa ersons furnish
ing material au^STipplies to railroad
companies. The bill creates a superior
lieu, and requires tho court to order
these claims paid first: Bill to set aside
$300 as a homestead for the head of
each family, aud providing the man¬
ner of doing so; Bill to amend tho
charter of the South Georgia bank, of
Way cross.
35th Day.—T he first bill passed by
the senato introduced by a populist
senator passed Thursday morning. It
was a bill to amend tho road laws so
ns to allow the building of third-class
roads. By third-class it means that
they shall in certain instances, be less
than tho present regulation width.
The bill introduced by Senator Lewis
to sell the Northeastern railroad was
passed, aud immediately transmitted
to the house. A bill to amend the act
providing for a board of county com¬
missioners in Talbot county and a bill
to provide a board of county commis¬
sioners for Jones county were passed.
A lengthy debate occupied the senate
on the bill of Senator Monro, making
it unlawful for municipal corporations
to levy a tax upon non-resident manu¬
facturers, merchants or traders. The
bill was finally lost, receiving only
twenty votes. Senator Wilson’s bill
to change the manner of changing the
venue in criminal cases was passed.
It allows the judge to hear testimony
orally or otherwise on the subject,and,
if he sees proper, order the case
changed to another county. The house
bill to change Dawson county from the
Blue Ridge circuit to the Northeastern
circuit and a bill regulating the taking
of oysters and the location of oyster
bods were also passed.
PLEAD GUILTY
And Turned State’s Evidence In Order
to Save Themselves.
In the United States court in ses¬
sion at Columbia, S. C., the big Bar¬
rett postmaster conspiracy case was
called for trial Thursday. There were
fourteen defendants,nearly all of them
postmasters whom Barrett had gotten
the government to appoint at country
places alleged to be towns, bearing
their respective names. At the outset
a sensation was caused by some four
or five of them pleading guilty and
then turning state’s evidence to save
themselves.
BLOW TO FEMALE SUFFRAGE.
An Effort in Ohio to Debar Women
Front Voting.
A dispatch from Columbus, O., says:
Application has been made to the state
department of election by ex-Secre
tarv of State Daniel Ryan to strike all
names of females from the voters reg¬
istered. If the mandamus is refused,
proceedings iu the supreme court will
be instituted. The action is taken to
test the new law giving women the
right to vote iu school elections. They
will vote under it for the first time
next spring, but many have already
registered._______
Populist Convention Called.
A special call for a national meeting
of the populist party has been issued.
The convention will be held in St.
Louis. The call is the result of the
taken by the bi-metallic league
iu recommending the establishment of f
new silver party.
TIIE CONGRESS.
THE NATIONS? LAW-3IAKERS RE
SIMF. OPERATIONS. I
The Proceedings of Both Houses
Briefly Kpitomixe<l.
THE SENATE.
The presentation . and reading _ of the
president s annual message constituted
the chief point of interest in the first
day’s session of the senate. There
w* re seventy senators present. The
f™ but little la attention ” “ = and ° "‘"a" was ordered
to be printed and laid on the table—
the general course with such docu
mtnts. In tho usual routine of the
opening day, Senators Harris, demo
crat of Tennessee, and Manderson,
repu ohcan,.of Nebraska, were appoint
td a committee on the part of the sen
ate to notify the president that
the senate was in session and
ready to receive w hatever com
mnnication he might desire to make,
‘ 1 e ? Grief recess was
taken, , during , . which . senators inter
changed pleasant and friendly greet
mgs. Ai the close of the recess a re
port was made by Mr. Harris, from
the committee to wait upon the presi
dent, and immediately thereafter Mr.
ruden, one of the president s secre
taries, delivered the presidents annu
al message, which was thereupon read
by Mr Cox, secretary of the senate.
amp^.c,.copies of the message having
x < a distributed in the chamber, the
senators who sat throughout the read
ing followed it by an occasional glance
at the pamphlet, but no one seemed to
be particularly interested in it. The
pamphlet covered thirty-eight printed
pages. Tho reading was finished at
8:45 o’clock. Various resolutions
were then offered on both sides of the
chamber. At 4 o’clock the senate ad
journed until Tuesday at noon.
The senate spent only thirty-five
minutes in session Tuesday. It passed
one rather queer pension bill,pension
ing n woman whose husband left home
twenty ; 1 years ago ° and who may still bo
i; living, • but , contains , • the ,, y
, unique pro-
1
vision that u. the pension ; is • to , cease “if
the .v „ soldier , i a. _ returns. r ,, , Air. T t, Peffer, „
populist, i ol p t- Kansas, contributed x u j. i
t sorno
half f> dozen -j „ projects . . of . , legislation, • i .• in- •
eluding the proper disposition of the
bodies of senators and members who
die at tbe capital; tbe repeal of that
part of tbe resumption act wbicb re¬
lates to tbe sale of bonds, and
the government control of freight
and railroads, A resolution was
then offered by Air. Blanchard,
democrat, of Louisiana, and went
over, looking to tbe payment of the
hourly on tbe sugar crop of 1894, un¬
der tho terms of tbe McKinley act. A
cloture resolution was offered by Mr.
Vest, who gave notice that he would
ask action on it Wednesday, and two
resolutions were offered by Mr. Lodge,
republican, of Massachusetts, calling
for information as to affairs at Blue
fields in Nicaragua, and for Bear Ad¬
miral Walker’s report in ov *
the Sandwich islands. *ne early ad
journment was out of respect to the
w.emory of the late Representative
Wright, of Pennsylvania.
In tae senate, Wednesday, a resolu¬
tion was o^metlJrv^IcPherson, demo¬
crat, of New Jersey, T>y T PfjtftfSr^rrr?
structing the committee on education
and labor to inquire and report as to
the availability and advisability of es¬
tablishing a national unit of value of
labor wherewith to regulate wages au¬
tomatically. It was referred to the
committee on education and labor.
The resolution offered at the first
day’s session, by Mr. Lodge, request¬
ing the president to furnish informa¬
tion as to the delivery to the
Chinese authorities at Shanghai of two
Japanese citizens who were afterwards
tortured and put to death, was laid
before the senate, and after discussion,
lasting an hour, was referred to the
committee on foreign relations. /The
senate then proceeded to consider Mr.
Peffer’s resolution regarding the le¬
gality of the act of the secretary of
the treasury in the recent issuing of
bonds. The resolution was agreed to.
It simply instructs the judiciary com¬
mittee to inquire into the matter.
The first action of the senate, after
the reading of the journal Thursday,
was an order, on motion of Mr. Gor¬
man, that the adjournment for the day
should be till Monday next. The reso¬
lution offered by Mr. Turpie several
days ago, declaring for a change in the
system of electing United States sena¬
tors, was taken up, and Mr. Turpie
addressed the senate in support of the
resolution.
THE HOUSE.
The gallaries of the house were
crowded when it resumed its session
Monday. Beyond some uproarious
cheering when ex-Speaker Beed ap¬
peared on the floor, and a round of
milder applause when Chairman Wil¬
son came in, there were no scenes of
great interest. The house proceeded
to business without recourse to any
formality other than that of ordinary
meeting days. The roll call showed
the presence of 210 members—more
than a quorum. Messrs. Wilson, Hol¬
man and Reed were appointed a com¬
mittee on the part of the house. At
12 :83 o’clock P; m., the house took a
recess until 1 o’clock. At 1 :20 o’clock
the notification committee reported
their duty discharged. At 1:37 o’clock
p. m., the president’s message was
received by the house, and its reading
was promptly begun by Clerk Kerr. All
of the members who had answered to
their names, and a few new ones who
had just been sworn in, were in their
seats, and the attention they gave to
the message was remarkable. The
reading was completed at 3:15 o’clock
g. m. A o applause or other demonstra
tion marked its conclusion. It was
referred to the committee of the whole ;
house on the state of the union. Im- i
mediately after, Mr. Scranton, of |
Pennsylvania, announced the death of j
Representative Myron B. Wright, of
Pennsylvania, and offered the custom- i i
ary resolutions, which, on his motion,
were unanimously Mr! adopted, whereupon, |
on motion of Scranton, the house,
at 3:18 o’clock p. m., adjourned until
Tuesday.
The house was in session four hours
Tuesday. Representative Storer, of
Ohio, secured the passage of a resolu
tioo extending until the next term of
congress the time in which the engi
neer officers surveying proposed routes
for a canal to unite Lake Erie with the
Ohio river may make their report to
congress. Bills were passed appro
printing 820,000 for the dedication of
the Chiekamauga and Chattanooga
National Military park on the 19th and
20th of November, 1895, and appro
printing $75,000 with which to pur
chase 3,000 acres of land on which the
battle of Shiloh was fought, and to
begin the construction of a national
park thereon. The greater part of the
day was spent in a consideration of
the conference report on the bill
passed at the last session, providing
new regulations for the printing and
wTbout^eUon X
house at 3:55 o’clock adjourned until
Wednesday. In
the house, Wednesday, Mr. Blair,
of New Hampshire, presented a reso
Intinn nd-imr ♦ ),„ immeriintA mrs i,i p .
ration thereof, calling upon the presi
dent, if not incompatible with public
interests, to transmit to congress all
the correspondence by telegraph or
otherwise with the governments of
China and Japan, relating to the pend
ing war between those countries. Ob
jection was made to the present con
sideration and the resolution went to
th e committee on foreign affairs. The
house bill to prevent the free use of
timber on public lands and to revoke
a ]j permits heretofore issued in certain
states, and the senate bill asking land
warrants applicable to the payment for
all cWb of Public ]andg p^T.
The ‘
’ the bill
confer en e report on to
regulftte the prin tiug and the distribu
tion 0 f p ub p c documents was called up
a t \ - 15 ^ Bnd occupied the attention of
tbe bouse for the rest of the alter¬
UO on.
Ihe fpatfloations .• and , pension ap.
f fl’"?"* u, « 30^ . 1996, were for tbo reported J ,e ? r , e ( to nii “ the g
house at Thursday s session The first
" l1 1 be c “ lkd U P aiter tbe
™ , lr ? ,d , P°°>'n . g hill is disposed 1 of.
1 ho house then proceeded in he morn
'“8 hour to consider the hill to protest
bo P"hhc forest reservations Alter a
,ew minutes discussion tho hill went
over till Friday. At request of Mr.
layers, (deni, of Texas) the revenue
marine bill was laid over till baturday.
Consideration , ,. of , the ,, t bill • to amend , the ,,
interstate . , , , , laws to
commerce so as per- J
mit .. the ,, railroads to pool tneir , business, .
1
w’as resumed. , mu The discussion t • ot ,. this •
'" e “ sur0 ° 00 ,, P led . , «*e ,, , balance , of ... the
'
tYhen Baby was sick, we gave her Uastoria.
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
CARLISLE’S PLAN.
The Secretary of the Treasury Makes
His Report to Congress.
By far til* most interesting part ol
the report |pf the secretary of the
treasury. v| i? ich was sent to congress
h.ueectay, 1 13^ exhaiistive attention
paid by that olf| c j a ^ cond jti ou
of the treasurj^j^ currenc y reforms.
that In the the openin^^g excesg f eecr€ q ar y mentions
ceipt durijj^pjjg 0 expenditure over re¬
] ag x flgeal year was
---,___, and during the first five
months of the present fiscal year $ 21 ,-
737,367.
“It is not believed, however,” he
writes, “that this difference between
the receipts and expenditures will con¬
tinue in the same proportion until the
close of the year,” and, accordingly,
he estimates a deficiency of $ 20 , 000 ,
000 at that time, -while he further ex¬
presses the opinion that present laws
will yield ample return for the fiscal
year 1896, as all their provisions will
then be operative, and the prospective
improvement in the business of the
country, if realized, will greatly in¬
crease the sources from which taxes
arc collected, and accordingly a sur¬
plus of $28,814,920 is estimated for
that year.
THE SECRETARY’S PLAN.
The secretary presents a plan which
would relieve the government from
some of its burden and secure safe and
elastic national and state bank curren¬
cy, and result ultimately iu a perma¬
nent retirement of United States legal
tender notes of both classes. Tho
features of this plan include the re¬
peal of all laws authorizing a deposit of
United States bonds as security for cir¬
culation; permission to national banks,
under certain requirements, to issue
notes to an amount not exceeding 75
percentum of the paid-up capital; re¬
quiring each National Banking Asso¬
ciation to redeem its notes at ifs own
offices; providing a safety fund for the
immediate redemption of the circulat¬
ing notes of failed banks; a repeal of
laws imposing restrictions upon a re
duction and an increase of national
bank circulation and of law's requiring
banks to keep a reserve on account of
deposits; exempting from taxation,
under certain provisions, circulating
notes issued by banking corporations
which transact no other than banking
business; together with other measures
which the secretary explains.
He gives at length his reasons for
the repeal, as his plan proposes, of all
provisions of existing laws which re¬
quire National banks to hold a fixed
reserve against deposits. “Every pru¬
dently managed bank, if left free to
conduct its deposit and discount busi¬
ness in a manner most advantageous
to its own interests and the interests
of its patrons, will undoubtedly keep
on hand a reasonable reserve to meet
n °t only all the ordinary demands
upon it, but to provide for such emer
gencies ns are liable to occur in the
community where it is located. But
if ought not to be prohibited by law
from using such reserve for the only
purpose it was designed to accora
plish.”
Among other provisions in the sec
retary’s plan, is that no note 3 be of
less denomination than ten dollars.
Kolb Still Kicks.
R. F. Kolb, who calls himself gov
ernor de jure of Alabama, has issued a
message “to the general assembly and
people of Alabama.” He starts out
with a reference to “the revolutionary
condition of your state government,”
stigmatizes the democrats as “usurp
ers,” and declares that the constitu
tional guarantee of a fair election has
^ een overthrown,
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^thoroughly ^porines and cleanse build the up. system, All manner remove of all blem-|
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ItEV. M. IT. WELl.S.
GLADLY RECOMMENDED
--KY A-
WELL-KNOWN EDITOR.
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THERE TO ABIDE
during our virtue. natural ,'lfo (laugh:er or its retention of
present liovcd of inherited Our has been ro
NEURALGIA «nd RHEUMATISM
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I USE IT CONSTANTLY
for th c prevention of neuralgia and nervous
prostr alien, it serves
AS A TONIC
and braces against nervous agitation I am
g'ad Germetuar to commend is it.”
pleasant, ref not siting a nauseous delightful compound, but
containing a alcohol re and opium in drink, form,
no or any
ami is harmless always, for old and voting
fl.00, f. for *.' 00. Sold by Druggists.
King’s Royal Uerntetuer Co., Atlanta, Ga.
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Music Books, Band In-truments, ...
Strings, and all sn’.all musical instru- &
y ments. Any prices in the United
T States duplicated. 6
Remember our Macon Branch, n
*:• can save you money. ♦>
? 9 UDDEM & BATES
❖ Southern Music House.?
Main Houss, Savannah, Ga.
Branches in Macon, Columbus,
i Brunswick, U a.; Charlotte, Raleigh. A
N. C.; liiiOvx k'KIe, Ten:,.: New <:r- W W
leans, La.; all under our direct man- •*
Q agemeut.
•J* •h ' I* <© ‘I’ <S v *!•
n
Poor
Health
means so much more than i
you imagine—serious and
fatal diseases result from
trifling Don’t ailments neglected.
play with Nature’s
greatest gift—health.
■ If you sre feeling
Brown’s gout of sons, v.eak
Sand generally ex
9 Jhausted, have no nervous, appetite
Sand can’t work,
Iron ■ begin Ing the at oncetak
Ible ■ most relia
S medicine,which strengthening
|Brown’s is
Iters. Iron Bit
Jr A few bot
* gtles care—benefit
I ► infc 5 comes from thc
very first dose —it t
t von t slain your
* tsetk, and it’s
pleasant ta take.
It Cures
^ Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments
i Women’s complaints.
Get only the genuine—it has crossed reo Y
lines on the wrapper. AH others are sub-<
- 'lutes. On receipt of two rc. stanios we
Jt “ Pair '••’ll send V tet of Ten Beautiful >Vortd’s 4
j? lews and book — iVQZ.
enov/N chemjcal CO. ealt more fAO. \
^
F i B
s
m i s i H
for [sifantG ar.d Children.
D T H*l En ? Oo / oil that raroporic,
|f | Bateman's Proiis, Gtxlfrey's Conlial, many so-called Soothing Symjts, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine f
Do Yon Kang that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons T
Do Yrm Kii.uv tint h; most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them ixdsons ?
Do 5'on Know that you should not permit any medicine to lx> given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list
its ingredients is published with every bottle ? /•
Do You Know that Cacioria is the prescription of the famous Pr. Samuel Pitcher?
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Uastoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined f
Do Yow Kno w that tbe Patent Office IVpnrtment of tho United Slates, ftiul of
other countries, have issued exclusive rig'nito Ilf. iitcher and his assigns to use the word
" Ces'toi’ia.and its formula, and that imitate them is state prison offense ?
to a
Do You Knou r that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to l>c ivbsolutoly harmless?
Do Yon ISwow that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a doso f
Do Yon Know that when possessed cf this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and chat you may havo unbroken rest f
Well, th e se ti lings are worth knowing. They aro facts.
The fac-simile is on ever;
nignatnro of wrapper.
€Sil6dr@ii €ry for PStcSier ? s €ast©ria»
Mallary Bros. MACON, & Co.,
GA.
m I }E
me&m ■■try. i emember we
HmuMH @f© still lieadquar
E£ tarn for
« 9 R ENGINES,
BOILERS.
SAW MILLS,
COTTON .........../ PRESSES, and COTTON ©IfiG Cn tho machinery GINS, lino.
Please don’t be persuaded i&t© fetSySc..-; anything in tho machinery
line before writing us for prioos.
BMLM.fJY BROS. & CO , Macon, Ga.
fc ;
OTie In latest clothing stores
the SoLvth, in Atlanta
and Macon, When in need
ot clothes* call t© see ns.
Mail orders promptly till
ed.
yPi- tj
39-41 Whitehall St., 552-554 Cherry St.,
Atlanta, Ga. - Macon, Ga
Enterprise BOILER Workj,
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, ell kinds of Wrought Iron Work.
Special attention given to repairs of all kinds. Competent workmen to send out on
repairs in the country. Prices clua. guaranteed to be as low as good work can be done at.
All work guaranteed to b« first Orders solicited.
Dealers in Ell kinds of Steam Fittings, such as
Steam Guages, Safety Valves, Whistles,
Globe and ChecT Valves, Guage Cocks, Etc.
Address—
GEORGE T. GIFFORD,
Enterprise Hcilor Work*, MAOO.N, GA,
lilt A ft yap W 9 se No T%J
t H n Cl 17
Cij *