Newspaper Page Text
ilLmm Dailii Jntr'priar.
Lines, Wing & Smith, Proprietors,
'lVrm* of *tiilmcrl|ll®* t
One Year # * j*{|
Six Months 4 Ujj
Three Months a 00
/uniritibhj in advance.
To city subscribers by Hit month. Seventy .five
cents, served by carrier*.
FOR MAYOR OF MACON,
HON. W. A. HUFF.
VARIETIES.
Case of kid-napping—Young goat asleep.
Army literature Bomb-proof maga
zines.
A Bcool board that is never elected—A
black-board.
Can a rat-pit be said to form an harmo
nious (w)hole ?
Civilizedcanibalism—Kaiinsr your bread
with a little Indian iu it.
What do you think of this motto for a
Mammon-worshipper : "Take the gods thy
goods provide thee ?"
The latest definition of n gentleman is
“a man who can put on a clean collar
without being conspicuous.”
To a handsome girl who responded to
an advertisement for a plain cook—" You
won't do ; you are too pretty ever to be a
good plain cook!”
‘•There's one thing," said a gentleman
at a race, "that nobody can beat, and tiiat
is time.” "Fudge !” exclaimed a bystander,
"every drummer iu the land beats time !’’
The Jacksonville Journal states that a
blooming, blushing school girl called at
that office the other day and inquired for
•papers for a week back.” The idea sug
gested was that she wanted them for a
paunier.
"You should Hto within your income,
sir,'' said a harsh old capitalist to a clerk
who asked for an advance of wages. “It
iseuough to live within an ineome,” mod
estly replied the clerk, "but what I should
like to know is, how a fellow is to live
without one.”
“Do you like to go to church ?” said a
lady to Mrs. Partingtou. -Law me I do,”
replied Mrs. P. “Nothing does me so
much good as to get up early on Sunday
morning, and go to church and hear a
popular minister, dispense with the gos
pel.”
A clergyman iu a strange parish wish
ing to know what the people thought of
his preaching, interviewed the sexton, and
asked him what the people eaid of Mr.
Jones, his predecessor. "Oh,” replied the
sexton, "they say he isn't sound.” “Well,
what do they say of tho ifcw minister?”
"O, they say lie’s all sound."
A young officer of the British House of
Commons wore a tremendous pair of
"moustaches," 011 which one of the mem
bers said, “My dear fellow, now the war
is over why don’t you put your moustaches
on the peace establishment ?” "Had you
not better put your tongue on the civil
list?” was the prompt aud happy retort.
As an early morning train stopped at a
stotion on the Harlem ruilroad, an old
gentleman witli a cheerful countenance
stepped out on the platform, and inhaling
the fresh air, enthusiastically exclaimed.
"Isn’t this invigorating?” “No sir.it is
Fordbam,” replied the conscientious brake
man. The cheerful old gentleman went
back to bis seat in the car.
A Shakspearian was reading “A Mid
summer Night's Dream” to the sailors of
a ship on which he was crossing the At
lantic, and they listened with pleasure till
he catne to the passage which describes "a
mermaid sitting on a dolphin’s back,”
when an old salt burst out,‘‘That’s non
sense !” A dolphin’s back is as sharp as
a razor, and no mermaid could ride one
until she'd saddled him.”
John Frederick, by boy, as you have
dscided to refrain from entering the news
paper business, suppose you take up some
thing substantial—say milling. How
would you like to own a grist mill ? Your
noble proposition, father does not strike
me ; milling is the most unprofitable of all
callings. Indeed, my boy, and bow is
that? Alas, father, if you must know, it
takes ten mills to make a cent. My boy,
I am proud of you—you shall never strike
s lick of work while I live.
Stanley annihilates the doubters by ex
hibiting Dr. Livingston’* blue military cap
and referring to the doctor’s brother. Tbia
nausea the Rochester Democrat to remark :
•Now we suppose that Mr. Stanley could
easily procure a cap which would anawer
for Dr. Livingston’s, and could deceive the
doctor's brother if that became necessary
to his good name; and there are men who
are deeply grieved that he didn’t bring
with him the doctor's scalp, which would
have been indubitable evidence of the suc
cess of the expedition.
How Gas is Made.
It mist interest us to know the piocesa
of making an article *o extensively used
in our cities, and we herewith publish a
sort of gas catechism, which conveys a
good deal of important "light” to the juve
nile mind on thli subject
"How do they make gas ?"
“Firat, they put about two bushels of
bituminous coal in a long air-tight retort.
This retort is heated red hot, when the gas
rushea out of it, as you see it burst out of
lump* of aolid coal when on the parlor
tire. The gaa passes off through pipes.—
A ton of coal will make 10,000 cubic feet
of gat. The gas. at it leaves the coal, is
very impure."
"How do they purify it?
‘•First, while liot, it is run off into
•mother building ; then it is forced through
long, perpendicular pipes, surrounded with
cold water; this cools the gas, when a
good deal of tar condenses from it and
runs down te the bottom of the perpendic
utar steam boiler, half full of wood laid
crosswise , then ten thousand streams of
cold water are spurted through the boiler.
Through the mist and rain and between
tha wet stick* of wood tha gas passes,
coming out w ashed and cleanesed The
ammonia condensea. joins the water, and
tails to the bottom.
What next?"
"VI ell, next the gas is purified it is
passed through the vats of lime and oxida
of iron, which lakes out the carbonic acid
and ammonia."
"What next?"
"The gas is now pure. It passes through
the big station-meter, and then through
the main* and pipes, till it reaches the gas
jots in your room. Then it burns, while
you ail acold because it don't burn better,
Gentlemen are beginning to wear Use
"gants Suedes" as well at ladiee.
80CIETY AND FASHION.
Tho new dress color with the golden
tinge is called “Aurifero.”
Very short wedding trips arc in fashion
just now, aud very short engagements.
Velvet is more worn by our fashionable
young ladies on the streets this winter thuu
it has ever been before.
A complexion which keeps its color in
cold weather is the most desirable posses
sion a young woman can have now-a
duys.
It is very noticeable how plainly ladies
dress on the streets now-a-days, in com
pari on with w hat they wore two years
ago.
An effort is being made among young
gentlemen to make the dress suit the only
correct tiling for evening wear, under all
circumstances.
The gay season has at last fairly be
gun, and every one says Unit it is the dull
est gay season New York has seen for
years. "Hard times” is the universal cry.
Church weddings have lately come to
be such occasions for vulgar display that
the best people have dropped them alto
gether in New York, and get married at
home.
Engagement bracelets arc anew idea.
They consist, of a heavy band of gold,
locked on the arm of the fiance , the key
which can unlock it being kept by the
gentleman “till called for.”
Young New York has invented anew
way of passing Sunday. Programme:
Breakfast at 11 ; walk till 1 ; Cafe Bruns
wick till 2 ; Harlem lane in the afternoon,
and Christ church in the evening.
Mutts remain small. Young ladies, par
ticularly those who pride themselves upon
what Mrs. Mantiliui would call their out
line, affect boas either flat or round. Col
lars are to be left to their mammas.
Brides in good society now-a-days avoid
most strictly the traditional grey and
brown traveling Buita formerly in vogue,
and dress as unconspicously as possible so
tbßt '• all creation needn’t know we’ve just
been married.”
Camei's-bair shawls can still bo found
costing $5,000 but there are long shawls
of antique design and richest coloring re
duced in prices from $l5O to $250, form
erly longed for at $1,500. The real Decca
is as low as SSO. Reversible camel’s-hair
shawls are especially popular, as one's
friends are thereby cunningly deceived,
and the owner credited with being the pos
sessor of two, and so quien sabe t
Seal skin sacques are exceedingly popu
lar, and prices are consequently advanced
over those of last setson. A garment of
good quality is held at S2OO, untrimmed.
Seal sacques are some times trimmed with
blue fox —a fur oftener seen on the boule
vards than on Washington street; it is a
fluffy, slegaut fur of a brown color, which
might, to gratify a dealer, be called blue
ish, and one might Anally be persuaded
into saying it really was slate-color.
Cheap imitations of ermine arc so com
mon that .the real fur is banished utterly.
The Hudson Buy sable, from mere caprice,
for it is not less beautiful thau the Russian,
is also somewhat under a ban, and sets
that two years ago would liuvc sold for two
thousand dollars can be had for half the
money. The sea-otter, an exquisitely line,
soft fur, is made up into costly sets, even a
muff and boa selling for S3OO to $450.
Astrachun has lost caste, though it is still
popular where warmth, comfort and econ
omy are desired.
PIPE STONE MOUNTAIN.
From the Golden Age.]
In the Southwestern portion of Minne
sota, about eighty miles from the mouth
of Terre Blcn Kiver, where it empties into
St. Peter's, or in the parlance of the old
Traders and Indians, three day’s journey
Is Pipe Stone Mountain. This mountain,
about one mile in length, and varying from
fifty to one hundred feet in height, is com
posed of layers or strata of soft stone of a
brick red color. When freshly taken from
its native bed it is soft, and easily cut and
moulded with a knife, but soon hardens.
This is the pipe clay or stone, the de
posits from which all of the Indian tribes,
for hundreds of miles around, procured
their supplies for the manufacture of their
pipes. As the pipe is the constant com
panion of the Indians when assembled in
their huts, a part of the ceremonial feasts,
and always requisite in their councils, this
mountain came to have an importance
little short of adoration. To them it was
holy ground—a gift from the great Spirit
—and as it furnished the material which
composed their emblem of peace, no strife
was ever engendered or permitted in the
vicinity of Ibis mountain. Here tribes be
tween whom feuds bad existed for a hun
dred years, met and smoked together the
calumet or pipe of peace. For this time
all differences were forgotten. It was the
recognition of a divine right to enjoy one
of nature'* free gifts unmolested.
This mountain was the only one of its
1 kind known, and no one tribe ventured
to monopolize it. The country of the
Sioux lay to the north of it, the Chippe
wa to east, and the Sacs and the Foxes
south, all hostile to each other, but their
journeys to Pipe Stone Mountain were
never molested. Nature seem* to have
made some extraordinary effort to produce
this mountain, and for a specific p.rpose,
as it rises in the midst of a prairio country
with no sister mountain or rocky ledge to
hear it company.
Fashioning the pipe howls witli a knife
or sharp stone, they affixed to it a long
wooden stem. They smoked a kind of
I sweet scented hark, known in their lan
[ guge as kiuriekeknic , mixed with a little
! tobacco. An Indian would deem it ex
tremely uncivil to sit down and smoke a
i pipe full by himself, but takes a few whiffs
and then passes it to his neighbor. He re
; peats the same ceremony, and passes it to
\ the next, and so until all have smoked in
i the circle. At a dogfeast, with the chiefs
1 in ceuncil, the pipe is passed in this man
ner after the meal, and the ceremony re
’ pented until it is smoked out.
How the pipe came to be a symbol of
peace, or what ancient legend began the
reverence for Pipe Stone Mountain, is
among the mysteries of the past, and will
go down with much of the unwritten his
tory of this peculiar people.
Washington, D. C. Nov. itli, 187 J.
••Well, we’ve got her boxed up,' was
the pathetic exclamation of a grief-stricken
j husband in Lenox, Massachusetts, lately
as he turned away from his encoffined
wife.
MACON, GA., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1872.
INTERESTING TO LADIES.
V I IDY'B DIAKY OK THK FIKTRENT*
CKNTfHY.
The following extract from Ih# "Jonrual
of Queen Elizabeth AVoodville, before her
marriage with Sir John Gray, is taken from
an ancient manuscript in Drummond
Castle It gives a curious picture of the
great in former times. After Sir John
Gray's death she bocame, iu 11>45, the
Queen of Edward IV. On the accession
of Henry VII , who had married her
daughter, she was coutlned iu the nunnery
at Bermondsey, and died there, but was
interred at Windsor.
Monday, ilth March.—Rose at four
o'clock and helped Catherine to milk the
cows, Rachel, the other dairymaid, have
scalded her hand in so bud a manner the
night before; made a poultice for Rachel,
and gave Robin a penny to get something
comfortable from the apothecary's.
Six o'clock. —The buttock of beef too
much boiled, and the beer a little of the
stalest. Memorandum. —To talk to cook
about the first fault, and to mend the sec
ond ntyself by tapping a fresh barrel
directly.
Seven o'clock.—Went to walk with the
lady, my mother, into the courtyard. Fed .
twenty-live men and women ; chided Ro j
gcr severely for expressing some ill will j
as attending ns with some broken meat. j
Eight o'clock.—Went into the paddock
behind the house with my maid Dorathy ; i
caught Thump, tho little pony, myself,
and rode a matter of six miles without j
saddle or bridle.
Ten o'clock.---Dined. John Grey, a
comley youth, but what is that te me ? A j
virtuous maiden should be entirely under
the direction of her parents. John ate i
but little, stole a gieat many tender looks
at me, and said, "two men never could be
handsome, iu his opinion, who were not
good tempered.” I hope my temper is not
intolerable; nobody finds fault with it
but Roger, and lie is the most disorderly
serving man in our family. John Grey
likes white teeth ; my teeth are of a pretty
coin, I think, and my hair is black as jet,
though I say it; and John, if I mistake
not, is of the same opinion.
Eleven o’clock—Rose from the table,
the company all desirous of walking in the
fields; John, Grey would lift me over
every style, aud twice he squeezed my
hand with great vehemence. I cannot
say that I have any objection to John
Grey ; be plays at prison bars as well as
any other country gentleman, and be
never misses Church 011 Sunday.
Three o’clock.—Poor farmer Robin
son's house burnt down by accidental
tire. John Grey proposed a subscription
for the benefit of the farmer, and gave no
less than four pounds himself with this
benevolent intent. Memorandum—Never
saw him look so handsome as at that
moment.
Four o'clock.—Went to prayere.
Six o’clock.—For the poultry.
Seven o’clock. —Supper on the table;
deleyed in couaequence of farmer Kobin
son'e misfortune. Memorandum—The
goose pie too much baked, and the pork
roasted to rags.
Nine o'clock. —The company fast asleep.
These late hour* very dissgreeeble. Said
my prayers a second time, John Grey
distracting my thoughts too much the
first time. Fell asleep and dreamed of
John Grey.
A lady wished to have her husband’s
life insured in a Boston ail ice the other
day, giving as a reason that she wanted
either a husband or some money, “she
didn’t care which." Bh# never expected
both at the same time.
“Where does this horse car run?” said
the old gentleman from the country to th#
boot-black, “Dunuo," said the imp ol the
blacking bottle, "the horses run st tlie
nose."
-
Teacher : "And what are the four quar
ters of th* world ?’’
First pupil : “Pleaie, teacher: air, aarth
Are and water.”
Secoad pupil (eagarly): “No, teacher :
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.”
The other day a little hoy who had cut
his finger, ran to his mother and cried :
••Tie it up, tna ; tie it up quick, for the
juice is all running out!" The same ur
chin, on one of the late excessive hot day*
appealed to mother for help saying ; “Ma,
do fix me, for I’m leaking all over.”
FUN AHEAD.
]’N anticipation of tlo: approach of the
. Christman Holidays, we have a large stoak
of new and fresh goods for the retailers, hotels
and families ; such *■>
EXTRA LARGE BLUSHING BEI> APPLES,
PRETTY YELLOW SWEET OK
ANGUS. GOOD SWEET
CIDER, ALSO
U MAPI'S, PEAKS ami PINE APPLES,
(TO HE DEIiK IN TIM*,)
MUSCAT, ANGELICA, BHEKKY AND
WHITE WINE FROM
CALIFORNIA.
nilß WORKS,
FIRE CRACKERS,
CANNON CRACKERS,
ROMAN CANDLES,
SKT SOCKETS,
TORPEDOES, ETC.,
Plenty Gilt Edge Butter, Georgia Cane syrup,
new Buckwheat Flour, Sultanua, Seed lean and
London Layer Raisins, Currants, Citron
Prunes, New Figs, Nuts, Domestic, Fancy
and French Candle#, Pickles, Pruned,!Jellies
aud Jam,
Chestnuts, Oranges aud Apples*
Must he sold to close consignment, * bint lo
the wlsa etc., at _
novffolm GREER. LAKE & CO.
I'OE SALE.
A KOI 1! room dwelling and vacant, lot,
also, splendid well "I water In the yard;
fronting on Spring and lto-c Streets, contain-
Ing one quarter of an Here For sale cheap.
Applv t o
GEOKGK SCHMIDT,
o n ’ corner Third anil Plum Streets.
DU. U. r.
J vFFICE ovei M. tt. Rcrev ,t 1 o's.. t ou-
V / fee thins ry store.
Residence, ftiuu street, opposllt George H.
Oboar’s. oct 8-fin.
DAVIS SMITH,
(ttucwasor to l!i* late tiriu of SuiilU, YN
,V , am! of Smith, MoGltfshttii A t o.)
■VMM KAfTnKKK WCAT.KK IN
SADDLES, HARNESS,
Ul{ MILKS,
SAIH)!.KRV AND HARNESS HARDWARE,
Carriage Materials,
Leather of all kinds,
lioe Findings,
Children’s Carriages,
HI Bltlllt. GIN BANKS,ETC.,
Together with every article usually kept in a
saddlery house.
20-4 CIIEKKY ST., WACOM, 04
150-183
SHOOTING MATCH
ANY arid all persons wishing to engage iu
this will, their good guns, will confer
with No. 8, Cotton Avenue, for the $lO colored
picture. Tickets (20) $1 each. decs-4t.
of Chronic or Acute Rheumatism, Gout, Scia
tica, Headache, Lumbago, Ague, Nervousness
or Kidney Affections accepted for treatment
that I cannot cure. n032 u
EPIZOOTY!
Epizooty!! Epizooh !!
Tie Gigli Floorii Mills,
HAVING pr|irt*<l * cooling and lioulllifnl
food for tin;
HORSE MALADY.
are now offi*rini£ it in any qiiunliU<*4.
Al*o an admirable article of
MOW FOOD,
Also mn HOI.TED tIEAE,
Alsu itll Grades ol I'l.OliK.
All of which can he ol,tallied by leaving or
ders at W, A. I luff a, Seymour, Tinsley A Cos.,
I). Good A Mona’, Hmail, Gamble V IJcckV,
Lawton A ByteV or at the Kuglft Mill*.
noWlrlw W. J. LAWTON A CO.
FOR SALE.
SIX BUILDING LOTS on Windsor Hill.
Will aell all, or as many as desired. The
lot* adjoin Dr. Cox’s on the top of the hill,
'file prettiest location out. Apply to
nov‘J7-4t No. Cotton Avrhck.
FOR RENT-
I3*fO PER MONTH hyUie year hi advance.
SSgJvl Two nice rooms, heat locality in the
city for L'c itiat or Millinery busini;*,. Apply
at tills office, or No. k Cotton Avenue.
oct'gt-lf.
ON CONSIGNMENT
HT
J. Holmes &Cos„
M. H 9 Third Sired.
j BBIA TENNMHEE APPLES,
V) bbla. POTATOES.
A.Go one car load ol ehoic . <•!-
HI ST PROOF REED OATS,
Superior to anything of the kind ever before
offered ir, this market. Give us s call.
novtibtf
This unrivalled Medicine ! warranted not to
contain a .- ingle particle of Mkih iuv, or nor
injurious mineral substance, but is
I*l Kill.l lI.UETAUI.I:.
For FORTY YEARS it bus proved IN great,
value in all diseases of the 1.1 v kh, Bow ki - amt
tvMiNKV*. Thousands of the good amt great
iu all parts ol' the country vouch for its wonder
fat and peculiar powirin purifying the Bi.oon,
stimulating the torpid l.ivi.u and Bowels, and
imparting new Fife aud Vigor to the whole sys
tem. HIM MON’S 1.l VKBIt KG I I, ATI >K D* •
knowledge.d to have no equal as a
1.11 i:k Miiuicm:,
It contains four medical clement s, never loo
ted in the sumuffnppv proportion in any other
preparation, viz; a gentle Cathartic, a wonder
fill Tonic, so unexceptionable Alta rathe uml a
certain Corrective of all Impurities of the body.
Such signal success has attended its use, lliul ,
it is now regarded as tile
Great I iiluiling *|>-< ili
for I.ivuk Complaint and the painful offspring
thereof, to wit: DYSFKPSIA, CONSTIPA
TION, Jaundice,Billions attacks, SICK HEAD
ACHE, Colic. Depression of Spirits SOUR
STOMACH, Heart Burn, Ac., Ac.
Regulate the Fiver and prevent
CUII.I.M 4.41* I'M UK.
SIMMONS’ FIVER REGULATOR
Is manufactured hv
.1. 11. /.im.n a t 0.,
MACON, GA., and IMIIFADEFI'IIIA. ,
Price ft per package; sent by mail, postage paid, 1
#1.25. Prepared ready fnrusehi buttles, *1.50.
SOLD BY Aid. DRUGGISTS.
Beware 01 ail Counte.rfelts and Imituttsns.
112-523
MERCHANTS
441*
PLANTERS
WILL FIND FT TO THK IK Al>-
V ANT AO F, To FALLON FS
BKKOIiK M A KINO THK IK
POLLS
WE HAVE IN STORE,
100.0(1(1 UiS, HAUON OLKA If li.
SIDES.
25.000 LBS. BACON SIIOTT.-
DEItS
10.000 TJIS ITEM.I KS
flO.ooo MIS. FLOUIt, fill {'iHtlcfl.
500 HOLES 21 I’AOOTNO.
lo.oooLßS. ALLOW TIES
10 BAI.ES TWIN I.
JOHNSON & SMITH.
JOHNSON It SMITH,
|]aV* 1 , and .‘tic nH'erinfr at /ary
low figures :
1.00 BOXES TOBACCO, all
grades,
100 BBLB. WHISKIES.
150 BULK. SIHIAL.
50 BBLS. MOLASSES.
100 BALES HAY.
1.000 BUSHELS CORN,
Together with a full stock of till
all goods in our line of business,
ildif
Building] Lot For Sale.
SITUATED near Talrmll Bi|nnri, within a
fewntej* of M*.rwr Univeralty.
Address K. C., Box K.,
n Macon, Git,
J NO. It. WREJVIft
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
OFFICE ON :si> HTP.KET OVER
H. KAMDAI/M NT OR 11.
SJO-I7#
FOR SALE.
A COMPLETE OUTFIT OF HOUSEHOLD
FURNITTRE.
A FAMILY designing to break up house,
keeping on the first of October, now offer a
complete outfit Ol furniture for five or air
rooms, together with all necessary kitchen
utensels, for sale at half original coat. It con
aisteof Mohair Parlor Chairs, Mahogany and
Black Walnut Bedsteads, Bureaus, Dining la
ble Dining, Rocking aud common chairs, Car
nets Dinner and Tea Setts, and In abort, almost
every article demanded in a bonae of five or six
room*. The furniture has not been used over
one or two year*, la in |>crfoct repair, almost. ;
as good as new, coat ll.Otti and will now ba :
sold for MOO cadi. Address Box 43J, Mai on, j
or apply *t this TIIIB OFFICE. |
FOR THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE
-
Is AWT( At HAT K ,
I'ourili Streci.l Artt Itmtr to I.mmlom A' H'illingliniu,)
y RE prepared Is furnish the trade with
<KOI liKI UN, FKOriNIO.IN, H.A .V1'44104 Nl PPI.IIIN, HAG
GI\W, TIIIM. ETC’.,
■n a. reasonable terms a* any Louse In Georgia. W> will keep constantly on hand, BACON;
I,AUD, ( OKN, OATS, it AY, 81 GAR, COFFEE, RAGGING aud TIES, and a general assort
ment of such goods hs are kept in a llrst class Grocery House. Give us a call. VW are running
the IMGI.i: I 1.01 KIAG M11.1.N. and
dirsei-special atUmttou ta our “CHOICE," “EXTRA," “FAMIFY” Hours. They will be
found exactly adapted to the trade, and we. guarantee every barrel to give fidisfaetion. Oiu
prices are as low as those of flic same grades can he bought In the South.
CORN MF.4I-, Lolled and unbolted, uhravH on Land, of our own make, and of the her I
quality. 180-188
NDY&CO.
'Wffi''-' T,N AN,,SHEKT ,Ko *
j Tiitteriii, Plnliif aiif? Bupaiiw.
{
U TIN AND GALVANIZED IRON CORN If K>
"tat 'A™ ih v
\ J-w"' /,’ j (,j 1 1 S Executed at abort notice anil satisfaction
\ iff \ guaranteed.
D \j| | Rio. 40 Thii-sl Mtreet, Macon, Uu,
\ I Particular attention given to Guttering put up
I \ with
\ WOODRUFF’S
\ TATE.VI' HAVE FAHTENINCIM.
'JH-aug :i
IIPHOYED GUT GEAR.
HOMF.THINO NEW.
SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HORSE POWER
IT IS NO HUMBUG!!
*
fTMIK nettling of the Gin Uouao floor lian no effect on the Hearing. King Post of Iron mid ull
I the work bolted to iron.
IT IS M Ame TO LAST, AND TO RUN TWENTY FIVE PER CENT. LIGHTER THAN ANY
OTHER POWER IN USE.
< lull and *n‘ for votia*elf.
I Imihl h Portable Horae. Power that chnllenjses all other MAKES, but It will not do the work
with tin anine Draft that iny PATENT GIN GEAR will.
All kind* •! Machinery made and repaired at.
nuM ttirrrN iito* wokun,
toy IS#* Near Brown House, Macon Georgia.
BROWFS GALLERY!
No. 8 Cotton Avenue,
Is the place where all the differ
♦
ent styles of pictures are made
at greatly reduced prices.
W. & E. P. TAYLOR,
Oor. Cotton Avenue aud Cherry Street,
DF.AI.ERB IN
FURNITURE, CARPETINGS, SIS,
OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, etc.
Metalic Burial Cases & Caskets,
Fine and Plain Wood Collins and Caskets.
Wtf
Orders by Telegraph promptly attended to. —.
■lx.#** k. m-outsT. istxc aw>*wN.
111.01 VT A HABDRHAR,
ATTORNEYSJTAT SLAW,
MACON, GEORGIA.
OFFICE, at entrance Ralston Hall, Cherry
strict.
Barber Shop For Rent.
THE Basement. room, formerly occnpUd by
Mike Napier, In Brown'sHotal boUdlsg is
lor rent. 'Oils is on* ot the best stands for a
Shop tr. th. city. H HfTrK)
Volume I. —Numbhr 207
UNMAN LINE
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