Newspaper Page Text
Links, Wing & Suixn, Propiuktouh,
IVrmM of (inbucrlptlon:
me * ? 99
Six Months 9”
!!reo Month* - w
Invariably in advance.
po city subscribers by the < <ih, Seventy-five
t\H, served l>y curriers.
FOR MAYOR OF M A'JON,
i:>n. w. a. Hurr.
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE.
Editor Enterprise: Lost spring I ap
pealed tlirougli your columns to the citi
zeus of Macon for aid, to put the chapel
(externally )and the grounds and surround
jogs of the Wesleyan Female College in
such condition that they would he no
longer a reproach to the fair fame of our
city.
My appeal met with favor, it being im
mediately followed by a letter or two en
closing liberal donations By personal
solicitations. 1 received enough in cash
and promises to pay to '.variant mv begin
ning work, in the htlii-f Ilia' Macon gea
erosily would see it paid h r wneii ihe
citizens should see wlmt was to come out
of their liberality.
I again ask a place in your columns.
Mr. Editor, to appeal to the citizens:
first for an inspection ol my work, that
they may judge whether or not I. have
kept my pledge ; and secondly, lot that
aid 1 deferred to ask last spring, on account
.of the stringency in the money market.
lire work is not yet finished—the tinal
Douches —the trimming being not yet done
(But tbe foundation for indefinite iuipror
iment is laid, and we can make progress
ais we shall have the means.
And now, to meet costs, I need tfo.hiiu,
a small sum for the many friends of the
College whom Macon holds, to raise. 1
had hoped, at one time, to recieve aid front
tiie city, ns the improvements were for the
ijWic, and not to maintain in any way
o r Institution. If the public will lake
care of our buildings and grounds, the
Trustees and Faculty will pledge them
selves to keep up an Institution that will
bring annually into Macon a large sum of
.money. I
But the city lets failed to respond, and I
annst seek for private benefactions : and
this I now do through your columns.
When it is considered that the work j
tone and projected is likely tu improve the j
vdue of property in all our neighbor -hood j
—that it has given anew outlet to Mag j
rud'io. ami ei'lisi'qui'nlly t ne*:_v !! *el. j
which will jKirliap* . no distant <! j he
traversed try a Mint niHroad. gristly
facilitating conubmiiiiitioii v,College
Hill and Viueville lean im! iu-lieviMiuU
• lie property holders and business men o!
Macon will generally ami generously re
spond to this appeal, and from these I am
hoping lor aid. Let me appeal also to the
graduates of the Institution to give me
t icir support in this matter. Some
can give; all can solicit a ill, and convey
.t.o me the contributions of others.
My time is 100 fully employed to permit
■,nc to see the citizens personally. Why
■should it he needed? The postoflice is
convenient —pupils are coming daily to
the College from many households. It
will be easy for the liberal-minded to make
sue a remittance. Small or large, it will
be welcomed. I may not expect very notch,
iperliaps, from any one person ; but some
loan give $5, some $lO. some S2O, or SSO
ur $ 1(00, and some may, perhaps, give as
much as from S2OO to SSOO, as a few have
already done. If all these figures are rep
resented in the donations as liberally as
the ability of our citizens warrant, the
$5,000 asked for will be soon forthcoming
If any one wishes to contribute, and
finds it iucouvenieut to make a remittance
by letter, it may he handed to either J. W.
Burke, E. Wiuship 11. L. Jewett or C. A.
Nutting. Esq.
A speedy response from the liberal
iminded will not only bring credit to them
selves, hut will greatly oblige one whose
.chief interest has been to serve the public
i. ; ntetiests faithfully in this matter.
Kespectfully, etc.,
E. If. Myers.
p. sS.—ln addition to the collections re- !
ported last spi'iog. I have received from
Messrs. Carhart .& Curd, $100; Messrs, j
Boss & CMeroftu. $100; Messrs. J. W
Burke & Cos., $100; Messrs. Hopson &
Cos.. SSO; Kev. It. M jLoekwood, SSO : J.
P. Fort. Esq., $25 ; C. Huberts, Esq , S2O;
Mr Ingalls, paints, $ '5; and handsome
donations of brick from Messrs Sparks &
Knight, Anderson & Ballard, and W. G.
lioge, and of paints from Mr. Peter. Not :
more than twenty five individuals or firms
have yet responded to my appeals, and.
therefore, many remain from whom I look
for assistance. Win) first volunteers?
E H M
TIf.AVE* —-Were there a country on j
aarthrUniting all that is beautiful in nature,
all that is great in virtue, genius and the
liberal arts, and numbering among its cit- j
izens the most illustrious patriots, poets,
philosophers, philanthropists of our age,
how eagerly would we cross the ocean to
visit it! And how-immeasurably greater
is the attraction of Heaven ! There live
the great of all ages and climes; the friends,
benefactors, delivers ornaments of their
race ; the patriach, prophet, and martyr ;
the true heroes of public, and still more
private life; the father, mother, husband,
wife, child; who unrecorded by man
have walked before God in the beauty of
love and sclf-sacrificiDg virtue. i here
are ail who have built up in our hearts the
power of goodness and truth, the wliters
from whose pages we have received the
inspiration of pure and lofty sentiments,
the friends whose countenances have shed
light throngh our dwellings, and peace
and strength through our hearts.—There
they are gathered together, safe from
every storm, and triumphant over every
evil , and they say to us, Come and join
us in our everlasting blessedness, come and
bear a part in our song of praise . share
our adoration, friendship, progress and
works of love.”
Anew railroad, 550 miles in length is
now being surveyed to connect the Medi
teranean sea with the Persian Gulf It is
to commence at Triaoli on the Syrian
coast, passing by way of Palmyra, and
oroaaing the Euphrates, thence traversing
Mesopotamia and the Tigris, and terminat
ing at Bagdad, where it would meet the
Persian Gulf line asorignally planned.
True happiness is of a retired nature,
and an enemy to pomp and noises , It
arises, in the first place, from the enjoy
ment of ooe’e self, and in the next, from
the friendship and conversation of a few
select companions
Hfefon fliti(i) enterprise.
BRET HARTE.
His Lecture on California Life in
its Early Days.
From tbe Springfield Republican, Nov. '.'ll |
To the destructive echoes of the city
hall and to -Mr. llarte's inadequate voice,
the audience, last evening, owed tlie un
fortunate loss of the most exqulsit por
trayal of an era unique in its conditions
and characters. What Mr. Harte said of
the Argonauts of 49 was as delicately
humorous aud tender, at once and in turn,
as those wonderful sketches that first sur
prised the world into a knowledge of his
rare, new genius. The lecture proved
him. once more, the one poetic soul com
missioned to perceive in that exceptional
life its underlying, yet essenojl romance,
and limn it for enduring recognition. The
rudeness, the desperateness. 'lie extrava
gance. the coarser humor, the outer sem
blance of the life, have found other and
remarkable chroniclers ; but no other has
reached with sucli keen and appreciative
touch, its pathos or its deeper tragedy.—
Bret Harte v merits never shone more
peileeily ihuu m the picturasque eharac
terizalioie- of tins lecture, amt the greater
part of the audience, who could not know
how tine a banquet they were losing, are
to lie compassionated.
Mr Hart proposed to tell of a crusade
without a cross, an exodus without a
prophet. "It is not a pretty story," said
he ; "1 do not know that it is even instruc
tiAu ; I do not know that it is strictly true
It is of a life of which, perhaps, the best
that can be said is that it exists no longer.”
After this brief preface tlie lecturer
sketched the primitive days of California,
when tbe laud and the dwellers therein
wet® alike enjoying a dolee far niente. lie
sketched then rapidly their sudden awak
ening to find themselves strangers on their
own soil, foreigners in their own laud, ig
norant even of the treasure they had been
set to guard. The causes of this swift
Change were prefigured for many years.
The oldest and newest faiths of the world
—the Roman Catholic and the Mormon—
were the pioneers of California. Father
Junipero Lena, ringing his hell in the
heathen wilderness of upper California,
and Brigham Young, leading his ludf-fam
ished legions to Salt Lake, were tiie path
dealers of the Argonauts of 49 The Ar
gonauts were not men to be deeply a
by these coincidence*. They were exalted
In mi special me .on. and skeptic 'i of
oven lie- existence' ‘ Ut-.j golden fi-iece '"-
tit they saw it. *■
The aliogeHici- unexampled e.otur*ii of
the new order of life io those early i tys
of the urgoiiatitie capture •>t ti e golden
Stale, were here depicted \viih Hint power
of chili HClerization oy incident and phrase
which have become so l'amiUii to ns in
Mr. llarte’s stories , as when be alluded
to tlie exchange of characters o common,
where tbe best men trail tbe worst antece
dents, and the worst rejoiced in a spotless
Puritan pedigree. “‘The boys seem to
have taken a fresh deal all ’round,’ said
Mr. John Oakharst to me,in the easy con
fidence of a niau conscious iu liis ability
to win my money, ‘aud there is no know
ing whether a man will turn up jack or
king.’ It is relevant to this anecdote that
Mr. Oakhurst himself came of a family
whose ancestors regarded games of chance
as sinful because they were trifling and
amusing, but who had never conceived
that they might be made the instruments
of speculation and tragic earnestness.”
And Mr. Oakhurst wondered, as he rose
with a gain of SSOOO, that there are folks
‘•as believes that keerds is a waste of time.”
This Oakhurst, the typical gambler of
that time (tire hero of "The Outcasts of
Poker Flat”), once more illustrates in this
lecture a phrase of contradictory nobility,
by redeeming from the gaming table for
bis wife a luckless gambler by buying
his next play, and then losing it by
concert with the dealer. As he confessed
the weakness to a friend he added,solemnly
" It's the first time as I ever pla.vcd a game
that was’nt on the square." Ilarte’s de
scription of the men of the milling camps
is more vivid than that of the city popula-
tion. Their personal attractions uro rep
resented in au exceedingly flattering light!;
heir habitual life, minutely drawn with iU
unnatural characteristics, its absence of
softening influence, of reverential custom,
arid —chieflack of all— of home. In this
connection, what more exquisit can be
thought of than the painting of the lone
woman —lone, cveu though wedded, and
though beloved by every miner in the
camp—pining slowly away, and, to every
body's astonishment, dying at last. “‘ Do
you know what they say Ma’am Richards
died of?’ said Yulia Bill to his partner,
•No,’ was the reply. • The doctor says
she died of nostelgia,’ said Bill. * What
d—d thing is nostalgia?’ said the other.
•Well, it’s a kind o’ longing to git to
heaven !’ Perhaps he was rigid.”
And with this pathetic incident we must
close our partial sketch of this eharming
essay on California pioneer life.
Maxims From Poor Richard.
Without justice, courage is weak.
Many dishes, many diseases.
Many medicines, few cures.
Where carcasses are, eagles will gather.
And where good laws are, much people
flock thither.
Would you live with ease, do what you
I ought, and not what you please.
Better slip with the foot than the tongue
Be slow in choosing a friend, slower in
changing.
Pain wastes the body ; pleasure the un
! derstanding.
The cunning man steals a horse, the
| wise man lets him alone
Keep thy shop, and thy shop will keep
i thee.
The king's ciieese is half watered in
paring ; but no matter, 'tis made of the
people's milk
Nothing but money, is sweeter than
honey
Of learned fools I have seen ten times
ten ; of unlearned wise men I have seen a
' hundred.
Three may keep a secret, if two of them
are dead.
Poverty wants some thing, luxry many
things, avarice ail things
A lie stands on one leg, truth on two.
What’s given shines, what's received
is rusty.
Sloth and ailence are a Idol's virtues.
There's reveugc in words, hut words
may be greatly revenged.
A man is never so ridiculous by those
qualities of his own. as by those that he
affects to have.
Ever since follies have pleased, fools
kava been able to divert,
j It is better to take many injuries than
to give one.
MACON, GrA., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1872.
Obedience to Law.—From the ad
vance sheets of “The English in Ireland
in the eighteenth Century,” by James An
thony Froudo, wo make the following
short extract and commend its profound
' wisdom to the render
It is possible that a noble people may,
through force of circumstances or great
numerical inferiority, be oppressed for a
time by the bntto force of baser adversa
ries. just as within tbe limits of a nation
particular classes may be tyrannized over,
or opinions which prove in the end true
may be put down by violence, and tin
professors of such opinions presented. But
the effort of nature is constantly to redress
balance. When freedom U so precious
that wiihont it life is unendurable, men
with these convictions light too fiercely
to be permanently subdued.
Truth grows by its own virtue, at|d fuls
hood sil ks and fades. An oppressed cause
when it is just, attracts friends, and cmii
inands moral support, which converts itself
sooner or later into material strength. As
a broad principal it may be said Unit, as
nature has constituted us that we must be
ruled in some way, and as at any given
time Him rule inevitably will be in the band
of those who are then the siumgest. so na
ture also lias allotted superiority of strength
to superiority of intellect and character,
and in lieeiding the weaker shall obey
the more powerful she i- in reality saving
themselves, and then most confers true
liberty when she seems most to be taking
it away. There is no freedom possible to man
except in obedience to law, and those who
can not prescribe law to themselves, if
they desire to be free must he content to
accept directions from others.
Stranoe Instance of Presentiment.
—A gentleman who is temporarily absent
from home and stopping iu the city, relates
to us that after rctiiiug to bed night before
last, and before going to sleep, he seemed
all at one to he iu a room at home. Ev
erything about tbe room seemed as real
aud tangible as if be were that moment in
it It c iild not be a dream, because lie
had never for a moment lost his conscious
ness. Upon a bed ill the room lay bis
brother, . ppareutly very pale, and leaning
over the bed stood his mother in great
seeming distress. All day yesterday lie
could not banish the incident from bis
mind, and last night came tbe sequel lie
reeeivo-i * Inner Iro'.n home saying Hint
ills hi oilier had taiien i... ..high window.
a; and ever since had lain in an unconscious
sluic. io due room which Jo- had so plainly
seen ffie before. and (its! his mother
i.ad si •?.i civ left his beside. We liu .c this
informal'on lmm gentleman ot iiilclli
getlc.e aid a. di-l"‘. <ci in all spirit nut
nmnitesti lions —JJm M.. ‘it Jiegieter
— -s* ♦-
Most brume diseases and many acute
ones are produced at the tabic. Asa rule,
no fluid lany kind should betaken at the
table, especially if the stomach is weak
The stomach should never be overloaded;
not more than two or three articles should
be taken at one meal, no stimulants used
bot'oro eating, tobacco arrests digestion—
Milk is the best diet for infants ami chil
dren. Tomatoes, with cream and sugar,
are healthy ami nutritious. Bread and
butter is the staff of life, and is easily di
gested. Too much salt irritates the stom
ach. Colds are often produced by drink
ing hot tea and exposure afterwards Late
suppers induce heart disease. Pastry and
cakes constipate the bowels. Boiled po
tatoes are not healthy as baked ones.
Fruits are to he eaten at breakfast and din
ner. The stomach requires much rest to
he healthy, purgative medicines weaken
the bowels. Cheerful conversation pro
motes digestion ; anger prevents it.
False happiness renders men stern and
proud, and the happiness is never com
municated. True happiness rendets them
kind anil sensible, and that happiness is
always shared.
Grief murmurs; anger roars; impatience
frets ; hut happiness, like a calm river,
flowsoniu thequietsunlight,without a rip
pie or a fall to mnik the rushiug on of
time towards eternity.
We make ourselves more injuries than
are offered to us ; they many times pass
for wrongs, in our own thoughts that were
never meant so by the heart of him that
speuketli.
The greatest of all injustice is that
which g"cs under the name of law ; and
of all sol 's of tyranny, the forcing the let
ter of the law against the equity, is the
most insupportable.
Grief knits two hearts in closer bonds
than happiness ever can ; and common
suffering is a far stronger link than com
mon joy.
The baud which casts into the waters
of lilie a none of offence, knows not how
far the circles thus caused may spread
their agi ations.
The worthiest people arc more injured
by slanders ; as we usually find that to he
the best tiuit which tire birds have been
picking at.
FOR SALE.
A FOUR room dwelling find vacant lot,
also, splendid well of water In the yard ;
fronting on (Spring and Hose Htrects, contain
ing one quarter of un acre. For sule cheap.
Apply to
OEOROE SCUM IDT,
nov. 25—lm. comer Third and Plum Streets.
. i.owK.vriiAi.’M
BAR & LAGER BE HR HA LOON,
(mabskt’h OLD STAND.)
Op[>osite Medical College, Mulberry St.
rpuis Saloon is supplied with the heat Wines,.
1 Liquors and Cigars in the market, awd
Sparkling 1 Agcr Beer of superior quality Free
lunch every day from lh to 12 o’clock and
extra lunches servo.d up at any hour in the day
or night. Swiss Cheese, Goose, Duck, Ham,
Saluda and anything that may he, desired for
lunch. nov24-tf
DU. B. F. lUG.
OFFICE ovei M. H. Rogers* Co’a., Con
fectionarv store.
Residence, Plum street, opposite George S.
Obear’s. ‘ oct 2lrn._
MI M. A. DANIEL
WOC CD respectfully Inform the Ladles of
Macon and vicinity that ahe, has taken
rooms at Ao. IO Cotton Avenue (up stairs),
where she 1- prepared to do Dkehs Makino in
the latent and m/M fwihioruiiile ntylu. and war
rants to give satisfaction. oetlil-2w
EDWARD SPRINZ.
X-eOTAKF PUBLIC and EX-OFFICIO JCfi
1> TICE OK TnE PEACE. I can he found
for the present at all hours of the day at my
offlee adjoining the law otßce of A. Proudflt,
over the store of Jaquas * Johnson, 1 bird at.,
Macon, Ga., to attend to all Magisterial botl
ueaa.
!!•*.
STr
This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to
contain a single particle of Meiiccrv, or any
injurious mineral substance, but is
I*ll EES’<.V VUUKTAIIMI.
For FORTY Y EARS It has proved its great
value In all diseases of the Liviilt, Howt.ls and
Kiunkys. Thousands of the good and great
in ull parts of the country vouch for Its wouder
fut and peculiar power in purifying the Blood.
Humiliating the torpid Liver and Bowiu.s, and
imparting new Life mid Vigor to the whole sys
tem. SIMMON'S LIVER REGULATOR Isnc
knowledgcd to have no equal us a
l.m:n niivicni:,
It contains four medical elements, never uni
ted in the same happy proportion In any other
preparation, viz : a gentle Cathartic, a wonder
ful fonle, no unexceptionable Alterative and a
certain Corrective of all impurities of the body.
Sneli signal success Inis attended Its use, that
it is now regarded as ti e
4ii■ 1 ills' iliute Npeeltlc
for Liver Complaint and Uie painful oilqn hig
thereof, to wit: DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPA
TION, Jaundice,Bllllousattacks, SICK HEAD
ACHE, Colic Depression of Spirits SOUR
STOMACH, Heart Burn, Ac., Ac.
Regulate, the Liver anil prevent
4’llll.liM A All Fi.VI-IK.
SIMMONS’ LIVER REGULATOR
Is manufactured by
.n. ii. /iiii.n a i 0..
MACON, GA., and PHILADELPHIA.
Price $1 per package; smithy mail, postage paid,
s 1.::o. Prepared ready for use hi bottles, e 1 .Ml, ‘
SOLI) BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
rjpf“Bewui'o ot all Counterfeits and Imitations, i
H 2-538
Ol •- ..w* * *’•
tics. Headache, Lumbago, Ague, Nervousneaft
or Kidney Affections accepted for treatment
that I cannot cure. tl
CROP OF 1812.
Clover and (draws Seeds.
RED CLOVER
CRIMSON CLOVER,
SAPLING CLOVER,
„ ORCHARD GRASS
BLUE GRASS,
HERDS GRASS,
LUCERNE SEED,
&<:., &<:.
Just received,
HUNT, RANKIN & LAMAR,
Wholesale Druggists,
146-156 82 and 84 Cherry Street.
The Great Democratic Journal,
TBit: .lEW VOHM
WEEK I, V NE\Y S.
BENJ. WOOD, Editor and Proprietor.
A Mammoth Eight Pago Sheet, Fifty six
Columns of Beading Mutter.
Contains ait Hu: new*, foreign, dour- tie, po
litical and general,with full and reliable market
reports. Each number also contains mvcral
short stories, and a great variety of literary,
agricultural and scientific matter, etc, etc.,
constituting, it is confidently asserted, the
most complete weekly newspaper in this
country.
TERMS, 82 A YEAR.
Inlii<:4‘in<*i>ts to Club*:
Vive copies, one yctai ? b 00
Ten copies, one year, and an extea copy
to the Bender...., * * W
Twenty copies one year, and an extra
copy to wonder w
Fifty copiea on a year, and an extra copy
to sender -to VU
Parties nerullng duJ/n <i* afx/vt, truly return 20
per rent, of th> in/ynry rrrtir , ed try them, oji com*
pariMjUbn.
Persons desiring to act as agents supplied
with SDerimcn bundles (Specimen copies sent
to^yidress. All lefcrs should he dl-
VEW TORE Weekly news,
Box B.7SC,
nov!3-tf Srw York CUy fat
MERCHANTS
mi
PLANTERS
WILL FIND IT TO Til Kill AD
VANTAGE TO CALL ON US
BEFORE MAKING THEIR
RILLS.
- (> a
WE HAVE IN STORE,
100.000 LBS. BACON OLKA R R.
SIDES.
25.000 LBS. BACON SIIOI'L
DERS.
10.000 LBS. BELLIES.
50.000 LBS. FLOUR, all grades.
500 ROLLS 21 BAGGING.
10.00(1 LBS. ARROW TIES.
10 BALES TWINE.
JOHNSON & SMITH.
JOHNSON & SMITH,
Have, it ml an offering at very
t e i
low ligtivi, :
10U BONKS TO BA COO. ill!
"11l lies
I
10(1 BBLK. WIIISKIKS.
150 BBLS. SUGAR.
50 BBLS. MOLASSES.
100 BALES I!AY.
1 000 BUSHELS <IORN.
| Togeliier with a Till I stock ot all
all gooiln in our line of busineKH.
1 io tf
Brown’s Hotel,
MACON, OA.
LK long experience, and a thorough knowl
edge of the business in all !U diversltled
branches arc essential to the keeping that which
the public 1 1 it-, long hctiot nj‘ but mount eea,
a uoou iio i i:i,
the, undersigned flutter themselves that they
are fully competent to discharge their obliga
tions to their patrons; but they are not, only
experienced in hotel keeping, they modestly
would claim to have the
BEST ARRANGED am- MOST COMPLETE
LY AND EXPENSIVELY I fIt.NISIiKD
house throughout, in the Piste, which Is loca
ted exactly where everybody would have it sit
uated
IMMBOIATEI.I IN FItONT ANO AIUACBNT TO
THE PAHHKNOEB DBPOT,
where travelers can enjoy the mo#< sleep and less
liable to be Ufl by the perplexingly constant
departure of the trains.
To all these important advantages is added
a TABLE that Is well supplied with the best
and choicest dishes Iho city and country can
afford : nor would they omit to mention that
their servants, trained to the business, have
never been surpassed for politeness and atten
tion to guests.
I’or the truth of these statements, we refer
| the public t.o our patrons who reside in every
i State In the Union.
E. E. BROWN & BON, Proprietors.
Macon, Oh,, April 15, 1872. 78-104
DAVIS SMITH,
(Bucceftftor to tlic lute linn of Binitli, Wint/ott.
A, 00., and of Hmitli, McOlhhliuu A: Cos.)
MANLTA* TURKU ANl> DEALER IN
SADDLES, HARNESS,
BRIDLES,
SADDLERY AND HARNESS HARDWARE,
Carriage Materials,
Leather of all kinds,
hoe Findings,
Children’s Carriages,
RI’BBEK, OIN BAWDS, ETC,,
Together with article uauaily kept In a
109 CMEBRT TANARUS„ WACOM, UA
150-I*s
| FOR THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE
~ .
LAWTON *V BATE ,
Toiirlh Miei'l,' (Meil Dour <> iataloii A itillingluun,;
VRF. prepared to furnish the trade with
.
4JK4M ICItH'.N. |>K4M INI4)VN, I*l . VVIVHO> Kl H.t4-
4J1.K44, in:**, ETC.,
mi as reasonable terma at any house In Georgia. Wc will keep constantly on hand, BACON:
LARD, CORN, OATS, HAY, SUGAR, COFFEE, BAGGING and TIES, and a general assort
ment nf such goods as are kept In a first class Grocery House. Give us a call. We sre running
the KAGLE FLOURING til 1.1. H. and
direct-special attention to our "CHOICE,” "EXTRA,” “FAMILY” Flours. They will be
found exactly adapted to the trade, aud we guarantee every barrel to give satisfaction. Our
prices are as low as those of the same grades can ho bought In the South.
CORN MEAL, bolted und unbolted, always on hand, of our own make and of tbe best
quality. 120-18 R
H. BAND Y & CO.
TIN AND SHEET IKON HOOFING,
litl!e|,||ls ’ nn,lli, l Mi Bepairw,
'* AMO
71 Spiff'll! ’’ V tin AND GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES
l%— < .rscV v 111 v
\ GjP J} '" I (.’lij \ Executed at short notice and satisfaction
\ 1 . / \(I I I guaranteed.
./)\ ' i *0 Third Ntreel, Huron, Cl®.
Ii Particular attention given to Guttering put up
\ WOODRUFF’S
\ IMIUAT EAVE FAHTENM4M.
08-aug o
l ■ . . ■ 1 i-- MV ; 1 LL.UJ'-K'ILJHJL'LtJ
IMPROVED 0-nr G-EAR.
soMirr llirv< i r* 1 <2w.
SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HORSE POWER
IT IS NO HUMBUG!!
1 Ml -11 j--•* „f tl.e Gill ItuiiM Ho. M- Inn 1 Ill'll nil tiie Gearing. King Pol of linn usd all
.4 ib< il l. hutted to Iron.
I r H M tpF.TO LAST AND TO RUN TWENTY FIVE PER CENT. I.IGHTEKTFIAN ANY
OTHER Ho TVER IN USE
(hill aud see for youaself.
I build a I'm table llorse Power that challenges all other .MAKES, but it will not do the work
w ‘VltT-1 "i'l"" Draft that ui.v PATENT GIN GEAR will.
am aim - ... Machinery made and repaired at,
4 UOt’KETT'ti IRON WORKM,
loe-lso Near Brown House, Maccm Georgia.
BROWS GALLERY!
No. 8 Cotton Avenue,
Is the place where all the differ?
ent styles of pictures are made
at greatly reduced prices.
W.’ds E. P. TAYLOR,
Cor. Cotton Avenue and Cherry .Street,
DEALERS IN
■mm, cmes, its,
OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, etc.
Metalic Burial Cases & Caskets,
Fine and Plain Wood Collins anil Caskets.
7Vtf
jarOrilcw by Telegraph promptly attended to.
4KAK.B U. BbOU.NT. BAAC lAMWAK,
BI.OE.TIT At HABDEWAI,
ATTORNEYS'*AT CLAW,
MAUON, GEORGIA.
OFFICE, at entrance Raj,ton Hall Cherry
atrect. _l__L
Barber Shop For Rest.
TEWS?
for rent Thf. U one of Urn beat eUo4 tor a
1(16 BOTEL.
Volume I.—Number 204
INMAN LINE
ABB
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"-SSi Agent