Macon daily enterprise. (Macon, Ga.) 1872-1873, December 30, 1872, Image 1

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£X S> Wing & Smith, Proprietors, | or f*ir.ls i lilion s s s no ■ ’ 400 *V i K;.mth 8 00 Turk Month* rW.iW;/ in < loam-'-. <j, ity subscribers bytU numth, Nwcuty-hvv oOBt- served by carriers. V l liIKISiTM.* X 11*80*. nv BOSS TEllit i g;, lly before the window ■ The floating snowflakes fell. R],mg the air all cold and Mr, ■ And on my heart us well X , 'dreary weary Winter (■ Held ui> Ills mighty spaar, |jv Mood ran chill with winter W'And alow with winter’s tear. Shut suddenly a sunbeam ■ Across tlie snow storm hon aknd strange to tell, like any -, V Xhe snowflakes all were flown ! vanished like a vision ■ Before the sunny flame, I® ml in their place a sudden crowd ■ Of smiling angels came. Tp\ million little angels ■ With faces dazzling fair, And ayes as bright as starry light f Beneath their shining hair: 1 through the moaning temp . t ■ As suddenly there fell Wk liny, tinkling, laughing sound. ■ Like some sweet silver hell: Smother and another, ■ Till all the frosty sky repeat was ringing sweet, ■ And words came wandering by. ,Jl V are Love’s little angels, 1 , hen earth is bare and brown cover all her wounds and sears I With mantles soft as down. H ,y,crocks that liid their faces Ii summer green and deep, frown to-day severe and gray, ■ ii’e cover up to sleep. " The long and lonely meadows ■ That lose their blossoms bright, %nd weep for all their loveliness, ■ We vail with glittering white. ■ - The forest houghs that shudder. I All knotted, black and bare, Bwe hang with flowers like bridal b uvn -, I The blossom-bells of air. ■" The drear and silent solitudes I We vail with tender grace, ■There is no blight wc do not hide I On all the sad earth’s face. ■ ■Above the sleeping roses, I Above the wild-wood flowers, ■ We spread onr warm and shining roh<>. I Through all the winter hours. ■ - We arc Love’s little angels, I But mortal eyes are dim ; ■ Men cannot see liow fair wc be, I Nor hear our joyful hymn. I We are Love’s shrouded angels, I But birds and blossoms know, ■ When God’s dear love falls from above, I Though men may call it snow!” Early Marrying. ! Morally, mentally, physically, prema- I hie mariage is a mistake among women; I hil yet every day wo see this mistake snne- I toned by the ofiices of religion,blessed by I pnsent of friends, and entered into, with I 51 the eclat which should be reserved for I | triumph rather than trial. I ‘ Morally,” it is a mistake, because few I romen are fit, at an age when they should I e under authority, to rule a household l Lidenlly ; since no atmosphere is so dan g rous for an undeveloped soul us that ol lie almost absolute power which is gen ially delegated to the young wife. She ill ay now do whatever is pleasing in hei p. n eyes. Shelias now been treed iioiu parental restraint,and any other lias ucir luniierence so uudotincd that it is borrow id and enlarged according to 1 lie v. ill and B ora! sense oi her who draws it. Angels Bnght fear to walk in such a broad ficti on ,|. t t as is given by love and suli'crance to if.; majority of our young married women •-women by courtesy, children in the re flfourd ot both law and wisdom. "Mentally,” it is a mistake, because w ilh marriage all mental growth is suspended in the large majority of women. Educa tion. being regarded as simply a means to wa:d an end, is tdiandoned as soon as the end is obtained, it may be argued that all education from such a motive is a mis lake to begin with. True, but then it is one which keeps the culprit in the society p! wisdom, and it is just possible the n hid. under such influence, might arrive Jfc'ajuster concep'ion of its worth and Halue. I Physically,” it is a mistake, because, at early age at which mnuytnarriages are aßi.iide, the human form lias not arrived at j rfeettd strength ; and duties and rcspim- BibilUies are laid upon it for which nature jfllri*> made no adequate provision. Vitality H- destroyed quicker than it is generated, Hmd early and rapid decay of both mind Hind body are the results. Then the woman Hs said to die, by visitation of God,'though ■ i nine cases out of ten it is only the sirn ■ I'lc and inevitable results of laws of nature ■ pitilessly and persistently broken.— From I knee of Health. Vale able Cats.— At Hie cat show j : ccutly held in the Crystal l’alace Lon l >, there were some valuable animals or | '.he species exhibited. 1 lie Spectator j - I ys “Among the short haired female i ats lliere are two red tables, the only -peeimens ever exhibited of animals almost ai rare as the 'Tortoiseshell Tom. iliey i-e both exceedingly handsome, and ol i iursc form a distinct class. But they are of unequal value. ‘Zoonie,’ the first, I aged four years and three months, is the proud mother of fifty-three kittens, and : her price is prohibitory, £6OO. The sec- t o.id has no name, is four and a half mouths old, and may be purchased for guineas. The cats are divided into forty right classes, a variety very surprising to p -r ions who have not studied the subject, ill very interesting to trace in the differ ence and resemblance between the short i \ired land long haired animals. The firmer occupied one side of the raised platform; the latter, in corresponding order, were placed dot ii-dot to them : 1 while the pens at the end facing the crys tal fountain, were occupied by numbers of b l'utiful kittens, whose innocent dewy eyes and playful restlessness contrasted the preponderating expression of reserved and watchful gravity among the elder on either side." A gentleman who was noted for his nicety of pronunciation, went to a shoe maker and ordered a pair of boots to tie made A few days after he called and in I quired if they were ready, and was an wered in the negative. “Will they be "eady by Oheutday i" asked the geutle an. “ No," said the shoemaker, “ but •s shall have them by next Chaurdoy.” Changes in "Words and Names. Must men, and women too, desire fame and notoriety. Y< t a afeat name may come to base tees. St. r.dilcdrodu’s mime became shortened to St. Audruy, from whence comes the word "tawdry, 1 ’ signi fying cheap and gaudy, it is snid that the images of the saint were so much overdressed bv 1 1 *• r voturiu-. tliat tlicy thus unconciouslv t’urnisiied the English laiigunge with ibis very expressive term. A*:] limber oiidor-eluent was given totiu* anid h fairs held on St BlheUlr t D;. v . at which articles "1 ieiunte linen were sold. A not lin siiinn 1 i 1 1 v wl;o liveil hi the same century, the seventh, gives a household to tho cut. “Tabby" is said to come from SI. Abbe, i'wo .towns iu England are named in her honor, Tubley, i ■ runi" from the eorrlipled name "Tub.” •• :i- ... (> lew people know, is St. Biiiolph spm sliortetied. and there is in the Amei ieau as well ns the English Bos ton, a street named "Hntelph, ’ utter Ihe Sltillt. Among the nio-t curious derivations is the Turkiah name of Consliuilinople— Slnniboul. Tim colloquial phrase among the Greeks to designate the place was tin poiin —"to the city Ol this he Turks made " Istampol, and dually, Staniboul. in an elfort to produce Eng lish words in Turkish characters, a lui- Uisli scholar could :• i t no near, r to “scon it drel" than "Ascondcrel," T ..e tratisfor iimiiou in this case is us curious as Stum boul, propound'd istaniboul, from cis ten poiin. York, from the i.atin Kbonicum, would seem to present at the tirst glance little resemblance to its original. The pro cess of change in common usage was something as follows : Kboracmn, Etrnuc, Eorforwic. Kore, York. This is almost, equal to the derivation of the name of a pickle from Jeremiah King; .Terry King, •ler. King, girHn. But colloquial changes are not always to bo despised. f bey mean history. The common expression •* n game leg,' 1 lor a ianio leg, would at first seem to be making game of a misfor tune. The true word is "gam,” old Eng lish, meaning defective. Me have Cam bridges in great numbers in the United States, in places where there is neither a river, cam, nor a bridge. Every machin ist knows that a “cam” is the name given to a piece of machinery which causes an eccentric motion. The river Cam is a crooked river. Names of places in this country arc meaningless in their application, except as in the case of old towns, showing where the first settlers came from, like Chester and others. There are many Nottingliams, but people who date their letters in those towns do it without con sciousness that they are noting the fact that the respected ancestors of some of us were troglodytes and lived in caves. Snolincghain the origin ,3 name oi Not tingham, signified "the home o! the dwell ers in caves and nntiqu riau examina tions have found traces of the residences | of those cave dwellers. Such arc a few' of the curious transfer- j mations to which words and names were subject, while as yet people were unable i to read. The sound changed the orlbog- | ruphy, and thus nearly every trace of the ; original disappeared m the course of time. : If the world were in like condition now, with no printed books and newspapers to preserve the correct-spelling, wild work might be made even wbh prominent names Eel-del fy would hardly be recog nized by the founder, could lie return. Bawltmer would be a puzzle to Lord Baltimore. Two oilier leading cities, when mentioned together, seemed to have, in the sound of their names, a distinction as to age—namely, New mik and Newer Leans —though the latter lasi a syllable in the second word to the enrichment of the first. A BAD SPELL. CURIOSITIES OF ORTHOGKAPIIY. A writer in the Cincinnati Times and Chronicle remark- that some of the spell ing that an editor has to encounter is enough to EXCOUtiTiui lib soul and tieeze llie marrow in his bones: A young lawyer in an interior city one early morning locked Lis office nuor and left upon it this mysterious let eud: "Lou to brexfus.” In a small New England town a drug gist was surprised amt disiurbed to receive, at Hie hands oi a dii !ydookiii'. r customei, the following prescription: "Pleas give the bare sumption hi fiziek him 15 cts woith.” Dining the war a letter, wiilteir by a rebel soldier to his swcellic.ai t wa • cup lured, wherein the writer said: ‘‘We will whip the yanks iwo-morrcr if.godlemily spares our lives.” Htifus Choate, or foimbody ei- , tliat tlie ivays of Providence and tlie de cisions of a petit jury are past accounting for. We may safely say the same of the spelling of the latter, since a Pittsburg jury handed up to tlie judge a communi cation indorsed, "To ihu onorablo gug. The proprietor of a country store once worked hinißelf nearly into a brain fever endeavoring to make intelligible the fol lowing note, given to him by a small boy. the sons of one ot Ins customers ■mister Gream "Wun! you let my bony lie\ a pare of Easy load |huzV’ However, he was probably not more hor rified than tint schoolmaster who received a letter from a man who wrote : ■■l have decided to inter my hoy in your scull.” The letter which one person wrote to an editor, when discontinuing his paper, con tains internal evidences o, llio truth of i's assertions , . •1 think the folks often! to spend their iituuuy for paynur. my dad dnklent, ami evary boddy soil ho was the intelligeulist man in the country and h id the smartest family of boize that ever dug taters.” “This house for sail" was the announce ment a traveler ‘aw nailed over tire door of an humble dwelling in New liamp shire He called the proprietor to the door and gravely inquired. “When i~ your house troinyr to sail V" "When some feller conies along who can rai-c the wind," responded the man, with a sly twinkle in his eye, and the traveler moved mournfully on. The home in which 'he poet Bopc was born, in Plough court, bombard street, London, is being pulled down. A matrimonial Terre Ilautentot i, look ing around for a sixth wile He "gener ally takes them as has grown-up sons wi. i a trade.” A philosopher who married i y.: cu, but amiable girl, used to call his wife brown sugar, because, he said, she was sweet but unrefined. MACON, GA„ MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 187_\ The opening address of Judge Fuller ton in the Stokes trial, now in progress in New York, contains several points which cannot fail to meet the general approval of every community. In calling the jury's iilL'iifion lo the lawlessness of the times mid the frequency of homicide cases, ho sail the question now prominent was. whether criminals should be arrested, and, when arrested, whether they should be properly, punished, and a stop put to bloodshed. Bad men now regard the law punishing murder as played out, and it ihi-state of things is permitted to go on anarchy must, lie the necessary result. It is to lie hoped that the time lets come when justice will everywhere lie rigidly lm'lc l out to the lawless, who seem to think they can net with perfect impunity, as it is clear that nothing lose will check tin* deeds of blood that now disgrace the eivdi ;:dion oi tiie " — liiUanoi, (lazclle. 7>r. \l7 NOTICK. s i. . ; IH iit'.u.iHY CIVKN THAT JjR. W. W. FORD ,UK ONLY LIOLNiSUE pOU THE rs.K OF \i' "'M AS A BASE •FOR ARTIFICIAL TEETH, i>i ••.. n, -c. ■ ii. All |h*!voha arc l.'Yvby r-tiii’ i.incii ; ■ st.list p'.ircliaHin*/ Rubber Ibulal 'tvs.of any jurli •- not Licensed of this C<>m- I•:ii,, hv bn doin'-** they render themselves c j mil \ libido pr ention 1 infringcmeilt, A rcwiird w paid for Inform ition that will ]i*;id t'> the comb-lion of nny parties of unlawful 11 •Of our Pul-ut . d()si Ml BACON, Tmm Oot'ilvefir Dental Vulcanite Cos. i. Ji . 1, I c del'll -1 111 Georgia Syrup. ',VJO have now in Store ONE 111 N- DltEi) AND FIFTY Uurrcla very choice New Crop Georgia Syrup. Retail dealers will do well to call on us. ns we can afford to sell it much less than tlie New York or New Orleans Syrup. SEYMOUR, TINSLEY CO.’S ■ C 55. 1 *){) BOXES just r.-.ojsived, SEY.MiJUR, Tlh:si,EY CO.’S NSW LARD. 100 TlK! ' r:: - x “ w lAIiD " SEjitiorr, fiislej & Cos. d< cl 1 ff. h’jX .-■• ii; ti'jS.’S BAilili —OF — Railroad Stock and Valuable City Property, in Macon, Georg-ia. I T NDEIt and by virtue of authority of the VJ will of Mrs. Jane Rogers, late of Bibb county, deceased, the undersigned will sell be fore tlie Court-,.,- : " door, in Macon, Gu., on tlie tirst Tuesday In January, 1878, and within the legal hours of sale, the following property, viz: Twenty-four hliare ■ of tli<* Capital Stock of the .Southw*■stern Railroad Company. Al.-o, Two brick Stores on Cherry pf.vet, two -i. tries hk.li, fronting about 52 feet on ciierry street, iuul running buck, same width, 210 f i t to Lighthouse Alley. A] it. blocks No. 0 and 10, containing near four acre , and bounded by Third, Oglethorpe, Second and Hawthorne streets, known us the p . the lab; 10--id ueeof said Mrs. Jane Rogers. Anew i-trect will be opened. These two lots will be subdivided into :;0 of the most eligible lots in Macon cither for residences or stores, and utfv have er -I and upontlu iii Mrs. Rol'Tk’ id. a ice ji•; < 1 si 1 , other comfortable dwelling ires i fi! ot her lrhpfoven Al -o Lots Ng-.. i and 2 in block til, contain* hr r on a: ie, on corner of Third and Arch streets, with •: stoi-c-hoi!- c and other improve ments He . ill to have iniO, In - ' ll :-u!)-divided 1 into smaller ones. Aho Lot Nos 2, J and 1, subdivisions ■ of block •, in s'luare js, near the % Yiri**viile Rianeh, frontimron Wudiingbm street, SJ feet, mulling back 1 i ho t to any alley. • Ah - T linger.-,' Lute lie r Ren Lot, joining Jh’owit*. Ti-h Rond Lot, Mrs. Dillard and oth <,•_ (:(;)■*aiitiiig 1;; acres, with a small house “Vi-ij p.,! . -i mid (3, i.: what i.- known ... (;i:iri.:-*.'d'., i.cm* Macon aol the Houston road, in said countv, containing about two aei< and join:.j'.;' din aunotoir*. Ai-.o Rogers’ brickyard lot. containing: 188 acre., mol-' f ,r le- ,on the Jirumwick Rail ,■ i,’, tto M on, oiini.u; the: City Reserve, J-iliik'-’s brickyard, Cherry and others. On tills place there are about sixty acres of lino m\mj'.o land, cleared and ready for cultivation; the balance is heavily timbered. Al t. -.vamp lot No. Bb, containing 100 acres, within I V, miles of the city limits, joining Ral -1 ston, Cherry and others, and known as Rodg ers’ Cowles field. Also north half of -wnrnp lot No. 12b, within ;; miles of the city limits, containing 50 acres, more or le.-s; jf/uiin:.' Itarihii Johnson and other-, with the Brunswick Railroad pas -big through the lot known a Rodgers 1 Briar Batch jp ; p|. 'One-half cleared, the balance in woods. The foregoing png.‘Tty oil t- a fine, chance for investment,' as tlie city lota arc ull in that part, of Macon which is rapidly improving. For further information apply to the under signed, who will take pious ure in showing the property; or to Whittle <fe Dustin, where the maps and drawing of the same may be seejj. '1 KITVLSFor tl.< Railroad Htock, cash. For tlie other property, one tiif kf > cash, one third at, six month:*, and one-lliird at twelve months, the deferred payrn -nt to bear seven ! per c rd.. int.ere t, if paid promptly; if not paid promptly tlmn te?i per cent, per annum from {j„v ~'f FBI EH BARKIS. ' Executor of Mri. .lane Roger j, deceased. ■ i l oo'K‘, V v, ja>< >r i <r > Wrc i Tilt: ".-'/I. 111 MACON DRUG STORE” if jo-* receive.) a good supply of Medic- A JL ml Liquor-. Ltv.-toh brandy, California ' i r V /rand'. live Whisky and Sherry Wine. Ako. a lot of Fine Cigars. TUB .1 111 UN T At. cocon BAM, AM, a ridi.il la and -:tfe remedy for nil, in selling r.,; div—trv a bottle' -only Weents. For-ale l, v jju'nt, Rankin • 1 .roar, -I 11 Zellfn A Cos., J'olm liigalU and tlie Proprietor. Those old drug- that you have been told : about so often i,a\• been out for years, and fresh supplies are reeeived monthly. Come on, you ean get Drugs and Medieines at any hour, day-or night. _ M--Jw _ _ __ 8- D - gVgBBTT. MISS M. A. DANIEI. \\7 DU LI) respectfully inform the La die* of \ V Macon and rlchtity that she has tam*n roou at Ho. lO Cott/oj Avenue (up where sue i-. : repared to do Dkesh MaKINo in Uic and rneM fivkionaWt *tyle* % and WIT* ranta to jflve satisfaction. oct3i-2w This tunivnllod Medicine is warranted not to contain u single particle of Mkhci iiv, or any injurious mineral substance, but is ■>i! iei:*,l’ UGIiTAIIMt. For FORTY YEARS it has proved its great value in nil diseases of the Livuii, lioWMLs and Kionevs. ’Thousands of the good and great in all parts of the country vouch for its wonder ful and peculiar power in purifying tlie Blood, stimulating the torpid I.iveii and Bowels, and imparting new Life and Vigor to the hole :-vs tein. SIM MON’SLIVI.KKEGULATOK i ae knowledged to have no equal as a s.EVBiU vra:i>B^'i*E'. it contains four medical elements, never uni ted in the same lmppv proportion in any other preparation, viz.: a gentle Cathartic, a wonder ful Tonic, an unexceptionable Alterative ami a certain Corrective of all impurities of the body. Sueli signal success lots attended its use, that it is now regarded as the Ureal ii ufai. sit; Specilio for Liven Complaint and the painful offspring thereof, to wit: DYSPEPSIA, CONBTIPA TK i\, .iaumliee,Billion attacks, SlC'lv II FA I >- ACHE, Colie, Depres n of Spirits SI It it STOMACH, Heart Burn. Ac., Ac. Kogulatc 1 tie Liver ami prevent I'lltl.lA AfVl* S'lT* 9 3S. SIMMONS’ LIVKIt lIKOULATOIt Is manufuetiireil I>v -I. 81. if.S.jl.l -8 .V < >.. MACON, GA., and PlilLADEU'illA. Price $1 per package; sent by mail, postage paid, sl.'J6. Prepared ready for use in hot l ie,-, $1 ~M). BOLD BY ALL l)Kl GGISTS. 3:*' ‘Beware ol nil Couutorfeits and Imitatiouß. 112-633 " DAVIS riMITH, or lo the late linn of Smith, W* oL :Mt. iV C<>., and of Smith, Mcdlashan (’o.) MAMTAnrin.it and healer in SADDLES, HARNESS, liHI DIiEM, SADDLEHY AND IIAKNRSS IIAItDWAUK, Carriage Mat rials. Leather of all kinds hoe Findings, Children’s Carriages, IlimiiGß, Il\ KB\DS, ETC,, Together with evtry article usually kept In a saddlery house. 102 tBIIICRY r ß\, MAC ii A 150-182 SHOOTING MATCH ANY and all persons wishing to engage in this with their good guns, will confer with No. H, Cotton Avenue, for the £lb colored picture. Tickets (20) 81 each. docs-it. eftgFt of Clirouin or Acute Klii'uirmtisin, (font, H< i tic-, HeddaChc, I.uml/ago, Aguv, N' voimnc - I or Kidney Affections ic opt and for t ••rtrurait ! tliat I cannot cure. no'St tt Stockholder s Meeting. Ol l'l, E JitniX ANI> Wr.STKKV It. !!. /:., I Macon, fix., Nov. ISO, J >’/i. ) j Tlmanmud meeting of Eto/ lihoid'is of the Ms oi amt W( tern Kail road Coinpan for t lie i election < f I'rei ident and Directors to n rv lor i the ensuing year, and uny otln r t/u iner.stb:it may be brought before i hem will beheld at'be oftb-e of the Company in thi - • i'y on I no 1 ;Y tlielth <l:iy of Juuuaryi.' t o ) oVIo'-k A. M. Mil/) z. FREEMAN, nov'so-td Hccrctury and Treasurer. Building Lot For E: le. St 1 BATED near Tutriult Fqiiare, within a f. w u-ps of Mere, r ' ni r ity. i Add. It. a. Box L, Macon, hit. DR. it. I’. OtKB B OVCI M. K. Roger.: .V Cos ~ Con fectionary store. Re-id. ,ec, Plum .treei, opposite c. orge a. Ob. r. ®f * h "‘ . byikgton hotel. CKIKFi' , OA. rpjjiK UOTJvLrank -econd to ikjik m J Georgia, for OOOD COMFORTABLF. ROOMS, WELL SUPPLIED TABLES, AND CHEAPNESS OF KATE. A-. a resort for the rezlden"’ of the prer/mt hot term, it Is unequalled, the ulghta • rg rewLirkablc cool amd pie - ant. The bc-t Water in Georgia- W.BYINGTON, I uo . m Proprietor MERCHANTS ,\\ PLANTERS WILT, V I Nl> IT TOT If KIR AD VANTAGE TO r A 1,1, ON us DEFOIIE M A KIND Tit KIN DILLS t > WE HAVE m STORF, 100.000 LBS. BACON CLEAR R. SIDES. 25.000 LBS. BACON SIIORL DERS. 10.000 LBS. BELLIES. 50.000 LBS. FLOUR, till "rtuF’s. 500 BOLLS ID, BACCINC. . 10.000 LBS. ARROW Tl US. 10 BALES TWINE. JOHHSOH a SMITH. JOHNSON & SMITH, lliiYPj and are . .11. rin<r u t Vfiry low figures : 100 BOXES TOBACCO, all <’Tildes. 100 BBSS. Will 0\ I i'.S. 150 BBLS. SUC A Ll. 50 BBBS. MOl/ASSES. JOt) BALES IIAY. 1.000 BUSHELS (MIBX. Together wil.li it full .slock ol all all goods in our line of business, m; if FOIL siAIX. ACOMPI.ETK OUTFIT OF not .HEIBit.D Ft KN IT THE. A FAMILY designing to break up Jjousn keeping outlie linsl of Oel<ilu:r, now oiler a complete outfit of furniture for live-or lx rooms, U>gel!o r with all 11* '<• sary kitelien uteimelft, for sale at half original cost. Iteon histaof Mohair Parlor Hiair . Mahogany mid Black Walnut, Bedsteads, Bureau*, Dining 't a ble, Dining, Rocking and common chain*, Car pets, Dinner and Tea Letts, and in short, almost every article, demanded in a hou.-.cof live or six rooms. The furniture has not been used over one or two years, is In perfect repair, almost art good as new, cost M.oi*') and will now he sold for SSOO cash. Ad.lre. Bov 482, Macon, or apply at this I’IIISOhFIGE. rcplbtf Bi BoiPWUo.wia a firs BAH A LAMER REEK KA LOON, f.UAsfJFT* "Ll* '*: I* Ojipusili- Meilical Colb" MirllMTiy St. rpjllK Saloon is Mipt-b'-.l • . iHi'-Im t Wines, J l.iijiioi Mid ( Igar-. io til ■ market, and sparkling Ir Beer of ; ni- s*r .juality. free luneli every day from lb to I l o clock and extra luneli. - . rvedupat I. r i.i the day or night.. a i-rt Che< •r, i i< . .< , Duck, i lam, Halud* and anything that m;ij b desired for luneli. noYJI tf PROSPECTUS lacon Weekly Eiierprlse, ON or a 1 ".it the It, -! W" k in PftCMnliM, wcw.iii ue trnrii 11.i* ■ • ■ 1 i.<- first mini her of it | Largs, Live M!j Paper! i j [twill’on! : t all the the 1 1 b.'iaphio n'ots of the we. . 1 lithe, 0.1.' roll tide information or. nl! -1.:old from ..I [ t* of tin: world. Iri its .alitor ileptntmcui .i) i found (hs ■ caestons of till the 1,1 vj: isk> i:s i jof the time . Partleul. rattention will hoe.v --;n to the adv.inceni.sit of t . •, Art, and Literature; while all inter, ling “.*{] authentic progrew. -f tin: |.o and • ul world w.ll In: faithfully presented. sermCßimo* util'll. i One iil j Hix Months W |^N Irj.‘^f 1 rj.‘^fp T ttoi.' -'''‘.ed for less than sir j “urfiow U the time to subscribe. Bei- j co m* *r.sro *pn.i'i™*. 1 FOB THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE - 1i A WT< >T\ .V IIAT K, I'oiirfli a sir<‘ri,|i*i*\l D*or lo I.awlon A’ RE prepared to furnish the. trade with 4JKOI lllllliN. I'BOI ISIOM, PI.4N I .UnO> M PPLIKS, UAU tik, .mu ren ninble I,u nis a nay liunan In Georgia, We will keep eonstently on hand, BACON; 1.4 Kl), (h >k.V, OATS, II\Y, SUGAR, COFFEE, BAGGING and TIES, and a general aaaort ment of Mieli goods as are keptin a lire! elasH Grocery House. Uivcu* aesll. Wr ar running the DAGIiKFLOIJBING f1111.1.M. and dim l-speeinl attention to oar “CHOICE," “EXTRA," “FAMILT” Flours. Tlioy will be found exaetly adapted to the trade, and we guarantee every burred to give satisfaction. Onr price* are, „* low an those of the same grades ran ho bought in tlie South. CORN MEAL, bolted and unbolted, always on hand, of our own make and of tlie he&t quality. lAO-18H 7 JjpJ. 11. BAN DY & CO T,N AXD S,,EET IBOJf ROOFING , ' Tlllterills ’ nil,lillt 1,18e P ai ™i, feli ' l ' ltw AN,, OAI.VANIZKD IKUN COBSIVKR A Ugpy; to' i Executed at short notice and satisfaction \ a \ t 1 guaranteed. j) \ * 1 *° Thlril Nlreel, Mnron, Ua. \ | Particular attention given to Guttering put up 1 I with V ’ WOODRUFF'S \ PA I’UNT RAVE I’AHTHNINGS. lkang^t_^ IMl'UOra MS G-EAR. fSOMI rm ING 'NEW. SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HORSE POWER IT IS NO HUMBUG!! /TMIE nellllm< of the Gin House floor lias uo effect on the Gearing. King Post of Iron and all 1 the work bolted to iron. IT IS MADE TO LAST, AND TO KUN TWENTY FIVE PER CENT. LIGHTER THAN ANY OTHER POWER IN USE. (•all and kcc for youagclf. I build h Portable. Horn Power that challenges nil other MAKES, but It will not do the work with tlie Bime Dm ft that my PATENT (iIN GEAR will. All kind of Machinery made and repaired id s:o< i4i:aT*s mo\ uoiirn, 10S 186 Near Brown House, Macon Georgia. BEOWFS &ALLERY! No. 8 Cotton Avenue, Is the place where all the differ- ent styles of pictures are made at greatly reduced prices. ~~~W. s£ E. P. TAYLOR, Cor. Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street, DBAKERB IN FUME CARPETS k ICS, OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, etc. r Metalic Burial Cases & Caskets, Fine and Plain Wood Coffins and Caskets. dei by Tel. graph i.romptly attended to. .MH.BhOP.NT. ISAAC HAKDI’MAN. III.Oa NT .V H VIIDEKAN, ATTORNEYS”AT LAW, MACON, QKOBOU. OFFICF,, at eritrancs Ralston Itall^tlherry Ht.reet. 11 I Barber Shop For Rent. A Th s U one erf the Ml sUuah. for a Volumk I. —Numbkb I*N MAN LINE ’"-U F ° r H^STE^NSON^Kem.