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ItUmm flail® Enterprise.
Links, Wing & Smith, Proprietors,
Term* of Kubwrlptlon i
One Tear. * ® 99
Six Months * JJJ
Three Months * w
Invariably in advance.
To city subscribers by the month, Seventy-Ive
cents, served by carriers.
OLD AWE.
A songless bird, a garden without flowers,
A river-bed dried up in thirsty hours ;
A sterile field untutored by the plough,
A withered blossom ou a withering bough,
A flickering llglit that falls when needed most
To warn the sailor from a treacherous coast,
A thought that dies ere yet ’tis fully born,
A hope that gleams like poppies midst the corn,
Fair idle weeds that Haunter in the sun,
Fair morning hopes that fall ere day be done,
Fair life, so seeming fair, so coldly bright,
Fair life, beloved of love, and youth’s delight—
At early daw how fresh thy face appears !
The twilight sees it furrowed o’er with tears,
Spring flowers are sweet, but autumn’s;wood’s
are dry.
Spring birds are silent ’neatli a wintry sky;
Spring thoughts that wake to ilc, ds inspire no
more;
When the dull daylight fades along the shore;
The ice-blocked stream can bear no precious
freight,
The stripped and sapless oak stands desolate,
And ttie hill fortress that defied the foe
Id crumbling fragments fills the vale below.
Yet there is golden beauty in decay,
As autumn'6 leaves outshine the leaves of May;
The claim of evening with itß roseate light,
The starry silence of the wintry night;
The stillness of repose when storms are o’er,
And the sea murmurs on a peaceful shore ;
The brooding memories of the past that make
The old young again for beauty’s sake;
The hope Bubliine that cheers the lonely road
Which leads him gently to the hills of God.
ENAMELLING THE FACE.
It lias become a fashion to enamel. We
do not mean to say that ladies use enamel
when promenading the streets, but they do
so when attending balls, the opera, etc.,
etc. This fact is as undeniable, under the
present reign of fashion, as the use of a
fau or the pencilling of the eyebrows.
Let us, therefore, say a word as to.the
way in which skin painting, or enamelling,
must interfere with the functions which
Nature has given to the skin to perform.
Were enamel ever so innocent, chemic
ally, it must, when applied to the skin,
become a poison; but bow much more
harmful if chemically noxious? A pig
ient laid upon the skin is necessarily
poisonous in its results, even though not
coming under the usual category of
poisons.
Greek, Homan and Assyrian ladies used
ceruse, white lead, and a variety of other
poisons on the skia. .Black antimony was
in ordinary use by Hebrew and Egyptian
ladies, to darken the eyebrows and eyelids.
But this preparation is not, strictly speak
iug, a poisonous one.
The process of skin enamelling begins
with a medicated bath, l’imples and all
excrescences must be removed —this is, in
itself, excessively dangerous then all
wrinkles must be tilled up. Veneering or
enameling follow ; then the addition of
color on the cheeks, and, lastly, a glazing
of the whole face, cheek and arms, which
last act prevents the damaging of the whole.
The effect of the medicated bath is to
soften, brighten and purify the skin, and,
if the bath be continued, all pimples or
excrescences disappear. Some French
women, when subjected to this process,
have been so desirous of being made
"beautiful,” that they have submitted to
having pimples shaved from their faces
with a razor.
The next process is the filling in
of wrinkles—unsightly peculiarities—with
a paste which constitutes a foundation for
the white, flesh colored or slightly yellow
toned enamel.
The enamel itself is composed of white
Japanese vegetable wax, one part leviga
ted ; Oriental pearls, two parts ; glyce
rine, four parts ; all melted together in a
golden pot, and stirred with a platinum
ladle. When sufficiently cool, this prepa
ration is laid on with a soft silk rag ; and
soon resembles a French polish.
The above preparation is the only real
Paris enamel, and is very costly.
When the surface of this enamel be
comes dry, a tinge of rouge is added. The
latter is harmless, but liquid rouge is
highly irritant, being a kind of vinegar,
frequently creating sores that may become
ulcers. This is due not only to the rougue
itself, but to the fact that it is rubbed
on, leaving a yellow mark, called by the
physicians a surfeit.
All limitations of the real enamel are
injurious to the skin. Oriental pearls
cannot be attained by every purse; and
many paltry enamels offered by various
druggists to a credulous public are likely
to alter the original beauty of the skin
Before undertaking the enamelling ex
periment, the ridiculous contingencies
should be made known. One of these is
that, unless the person enameled knows
how to repair the enamel if it breaks, the
most übsurd appearance is offered to the
anything but admiring gaze, for the hard
surface of the enamel being cracked, a
face appears like a damaged Hevres tea
cup. Then, too, a scratch, a drop of wa
ter, an oozing out of perspiration, too dry
an atmosphere, and other drawbacks, may
all produce a change in the enamelled
countenance. A certain stiffness in the
feeling of the skin is said to accompany it,
which is probably owing to the glycerine.
In fine, although the real enamel is used
by some, and imitation articles by others,
a more foolish practice can scarcely exist,
for the enamelled face never changet its ex
pression. It must remain statue-like. —
Let the actress enamel if she will, but
that ladies , and especially young ladies,
should resort to such a practice is absurd,
and, until of late years, incrednble.
There is another reason why enamelling
should never be resorted to. It alters the
original texture and tissue of the skin—
hardening it, and giving a darker or sal
low tint. A lady who has once enamelled
must continue the process, or she will
scarcely be recognized. After presenting
the appearance of a beautiful wax doll,
she cannot return to mere humanity with
impunity. To enamel once is to enamel
t irever.— Lady's Journal
Religion Among the Worldly.
Worldliness in the church furnishes the
preacher with his favorite philippic and
the cynic with his finest sarcasm Ever
! luc * tje early Christians debased the
* Supper into a coarse love-feast, sen
suality and fashion have lurked behind the
Vo™ B ° f l ) Je sancl uary, and conscienceless
“ on “J* sought to monopolize every
Dractir "i t Ut ** not wholespwe and
church teems with worldliness, let us in
quire, on the other hand, whether any re
ligion is found among the worldly, uud if
so, how much aud of what quality. Do
spiritual facts never impinge upon the
society-woman’s consciousness ? Does a
breath from a diviner world never blow
across her life's gilded aridity ? Do the
shadow of the Cross and the reflection of
the Passion never fall through the ener
vating sunlight of society success ? Are
none of the religious impulses of the age
responded to in the hearts of those whose
Held is the drawing room and whose am
bition is limited by a fashionable coterie ?
For our part, wa suspect that there is a
good deal of religion among the worldly—
religion, not in the sense of belief in defi
nite creed and the shaping of one’s life to
accord with one's convictions, but religion
in the broader sense—of habitual interest
in spiritual questions, thoughtful curiosity
with the ultimate destiny of man and the
condition of a future existence. We have
almost as many churches as drug stores
aud ueai ly as many clergymeu as apothe
caries ; aud the result is that some of us
get spiritually poisoned by too bliud a con
fidence in the integrity with which our
theological prescriptions are prepared.—
Th* paiu that ensues has the admirable
etteet of putting others upon their guard ;
and among many of our fashionable church
es may dou biles* be found the girl aud the
woman of society who ponder spiritual
things in their hearts aud evolve ail inde
pendent religion of their own at the mo
ment when their neighbors give them
credit for debating the latest style in bon
nets or the newest caprice of etiquette.—
The religion of the worldly, perhaps,
leads to no very valuable result. Its in
fluence is negative aiid-preveut* their be
coming quite so worthless as they might
otherwise grow. They are not the sort
of believers who go rejoicing to the stake
and comfort themselves iu afiliution with
psalms and hymns and spiritual songs.
But, possibly, they are just as far from
that lapidescent stage of the heart in
which church-going is only a form and
words of worship a vain repetition. They
pay Providence the compliment of think
ing of Him with reverence aud speculat
ing with honesty about the mysteries of
life. Sniffing fashion up with one nostril,
they sometimes get a whiff of genuine piety
through the other. Life is to them like a
double-yolked egg; they break it open,
find God and Mammon enclosed in the
same shell, and, feeling it impossible to
choose between them, eagerly open their
mouths to both. But the religion of the
worldly man is certainly preferable to the
worldiuess of the devout. It at least
claims our respect for its honesty, though
its weakness may attract our pity.
The eclecticism of the man of the world
who reverences personal piety and spas
modically tries to protect it is one of liis
most ingenuous traits. On Saturday even
ing you observe him at “ Leo and Lotos
on Sunday morning St. Alban’s church
witnesses Ins genuflections. He scarcely
scruples to attend an opera bevffe ball,
and acknowledges to being fascinated by
Mr. Frolbingham and the Religion of Hu
manity. Between his diamonds and his
divinity it were hard for him to choose.—
He fluctuates between the “ Acts of the
Apostles ” and the “Letters of Lord Ches
terfield," and when he repeats the laws of
etiquette he thinks he has said the Deca
logue. You suspect, he would have to
pause before deciding whether the Apos
tle Peter or Beau Brummel were the
greater man, and had Couat d’Orsay and
the beloved Disciple been contemporane
ous with him we may feel sure he would
have cultivated both. He might share
his head to-morrow for righteousness
sake, but that would not prevent his buy
ing an invisible wig the day after.—Jler
aid.
MR. POMEROY INTERVIEWED.
The Kansas Senator stopped over the
Sabbath at Chicago, and was interviewed
there very briefly by a reporter of the
Inter-Ocean. Ho was at the hotel, very
much fatigued, and refused to go at length
into the merits of the conspiracy by which
his defeat was brought about. He said :
I can only say now, as I have already
said in a letter that has been published,
that I am the victim of a villainous con
spiracy, and only ask a suspension of
judgment till the whole matter is made
public through the courts.
Reporter : But will not your silence be
misconstrued, and tend to injure you ?
Mr. Pomeroy : No, I think not; I have
served the nation for a long time, and I
think I have their confidence. These
charges are serious. What they call “the
Kansas bribery case ” has already been
published to show that a deep plot was
laid by persons in and out of the Legisla
ture to defeat my election. Of course the
man who was the instigator and acting
party in this intrigue was not himself
bribed, because this crime of bribery can
only be attached to those whose votes arc
purchased with money. His motive, as
shown by his own speech at the election,
was merely to accomplish my defeat.
Reporter: Who is this man York, who
surrendered 17,000 said to have been re
ceived from you ?
Mr. Pomeroy : He is a Judas. He was
one of my bitterest opponents from the
first, and himself a candidate for the Sena
torship He came around after awhile
with some of his friends, and was warm
in his support of me, but finally threw off
the sheep's clothing and showed himself
a wolf. He cannot injure me, however,
aud his case will be settled when the in
vestigation is made.
Reporter: When you return to Wash
ington shall you make no explanation be
fore the Senate ?
Mr. Pomeroy : I shall refrain from mak
ing a statement in detail, because, as 1 told
you, the case is pending in the courts. I
shall take occasion in the Senate, upon my
return, to make a denial of these trumped
up charges, and exonerate myself from
guilt. We had the case in court, but the
third party—a man named Clarke, a sort
of go between—ran away, and it could
not be immediately tried. 1 have got a
clear conscience, and that is a good deal
of satisfaction. 1 am confident 1 cun show
a clear record, and will come out all right
pefore this thing is ended. I did not get
a vote after that speech of York's. Ingalls
was fairly elected, and I was shoved out
entirely. My friends asked for an adjouru
i ment till I could he sen*, lor aud defend
myself against the charges, but they could
not gel it, and the plot was sprung upon
us—the people see bow it was done.
Keperter: Did the result surprise you t
Mr. Pomeroy : Ye* ; 1 was quite con
fident of election.
MACON, GA., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1873.
Reporter : Who is Mr. Ingalls ?
Mr. Pomeroy : He is a good friend of
miuc, and a straight Republican. I am
glad he is elected, for be will make a first
rate Senator.
Reporter : Is he a mau of much ability.
Mr. Pomeroy : He’s a sort of literary
lawyer aud magazine writer. Ho has an
education, is a fine speaker nutl will take
a good stand in the Senate. He has done
good work for us this lost campaign stump
iug. He is a gentleman, and I can speak
well of him ; say that he is a reputable
gentleman—that expresses it. All my
friends voted for him, and I am glad they
did.
Reporter: Shall you continue to re
tain your scat iu the Semite until the ex
piration of your term ?
Mr. Pomeroy: Certainly. After the
4th of March I shall speud a few days iu
Chicago, then go back to Kansas and go
into business. I linve been elected presi
dent of the King Bridge Company, and
shall manage their affairs
Reporter:. The King Bridge Company,
of Cleveland ?
Mr. Pomeroy: Yes; t lie western branch
of it.
Railway Accidents.
Duiing the month of December, 1872,
there occurred in various parts of the
United Slates, as reported, one hundred
und twelve railroad accidents, sixleen of
which caused death, and twenty-eight pro
duced other injury to persons. The total
number killed during the month was forty
two, and the total number injured one
hundred and thirty-three. This is found
to be the largest number of serious railway
casualties that ever occurred in the United
States in any one mouth.
The following list, beginning with Feb
ruary, shows the list for the past year :
No. of Accidents. Killed. Injured.
February 21 is 128
March 27 ?! !S7
April 22 13 32
May 27 (I -33
June 41 (13 114
July 31 35 08
August 63 15 49
September 71 24 104
October 90 29 1(12
November 103 37 114
December 112 42 133
Total 611 288 972
It will be gratifying to residents of Mis
souri to know that not one of the accidents
resulting in death, in December, occurred
on any road in that State, and nono, it is
but just to state, of either injury or
death, on the Missouri Pacific. —Savannah
Advertiser.
[Regulator]
mar.
For over FORTY YEARS this
IMKKI.Y VKUETAHMI
LIVER MEDICINE has proved to he the
Great Unfailing; Npecllic
for Livek Complaint and the painful offspring,
DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice,
Billlous attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Colie,
Depression of Spirits SOUR STOMACH,
Heart Burn, Ac., Ac.
After years of careful experiments, to meet a
great and urgent demand, we now produce
from our original GENUINE POWDERS,
THE PREPAKEO,
a liquid form of SIMMONS’ LIVER REGU
LATOR, containing all its wonderful and val
uable properties, and offer it in
OSE DOLLAR HOTTLEM.
The Powders, (price as before)sl.oo perp’kgc.
Sent by mall 1.04
Ur UAI TIOY !! JSI
Buy no Powders or PREPARED SIMMONS’
LIVER REGULATOR unless in our engraved
wrapper, with Trade mark, Stamp and Signa
ture unbroken. None other is genuine.
.1. If. XEILH A
MACON, GA., and PHILADELPHIA.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
jan 31-523
o! Chronic or Acute Rheumatism, Gout, Scia
tica, Headache, Lumbago, Ague, Nervousness
or Kidney Affections accepted for treatment
that I cannot cure. n022 tf
For sale by ,J. 11. Zcilln & C., Macon.
THE FKEMIUM WEEKLY.
IHT Is universally conceded that advertising Is
| a necessity to success in business; it is also
conceded, by the shrewdest business men, that
newspapers are the best medium for reaching
all parties whose trade is desired.
THE IfONROE ADVERTISER
reaches more of the people trading with Ma
con than any other journal published in the
country; it is, therefore, the best medium of
communication with the planting interests.
We will be happy at any lime to furnish refer
ences to leading merchants here and elsewhere,
who will testify to the fact that they have re
ceived orders lor goods from parties who read
their cards in The Advertiser. In fact, many
who have availed themselves of its columns,
candidly say that its value exceeds that of all
other journals in which they are represented.
The. Advertiser lias the freshness of youth and
the ripeness of age, and is therefore deservedly
successful.
CHARACTER OF ADVERTISEMENTS.
No advertisements are admitted wtaleh are
not believed to be above question and of real
value, and from parties so unquestionably re
liable that the readers of 77ie Advertiser will lie
safe in ordering them from any distance. To
our readers, tba fact of its appearance here haa
all tbs weight of endorsement sod authority.
Address, JAB. P. HARRISON,
Fonjtlf, Georgia.
THE sirjf FOB 1873.
Special Announcement.
The Sun has entered upon tlio New Year
with several Important changes, which will, wo
trust, commend It yet more to the patronage
of the reading public. The subscription to
the Daily Is reduced lrom tcu to
Eiuht Dollirb cun Annum ;
Tim Dollars jter Quarter; 75 Vents }>er Month.
The purpose of tills reduction Is to place
the Daily within roach of those of every class
who desire to read—the workingman and the
farmer, as well as of the merchant aud cap
italist.
While The Sun is not quite so large as our
eotemporuriea of this city, und we shall not
attempt to compete with them in the amount
of general reading, wo promise that us
A NEWSPAPER
it shall lie second to none in the city or State
in quantity of news, either Foreign, National,
State or Local. Our
MAKKET RKPOItTS
shall he very full aud strictly reliable, and this,
wc are sure, will he uu attraction for our read
ers, especially those out of the city. Our
EDITORIAL STAFF
receives two valuable aeetoslons, lu the per
sons of Mr. C. H. O. WilAglnuu, (late editor
of the Lagrange Reporter) in the Political De
partment. and Mr W. 11. Moore, well known
In this city by a former connection with The
Sun as Its City Editor. The Editorial corps of
The Sun will he us follows :
ALEX. 11. STEPHENS, Political Editor.
SAM’L. A ECHOLS, Associate Editor.
C. H. C. WILLINGHAM, Asu’t Political
Editor.
PASCAL J. MORAN, News Editor.
W. H. MOORE, I ci , E , ilorg
A. J. HULSEY. i Klliu,re -
Willi tills corps of writers, we enter The
Sun upon the New Year, soliciting of the pub
lic patronage, which wc shall endeavor contin
ually to merit.
Weekly, $2 pbh Annum.
Letters and remittances for The Sun should
he addressed
Samuel A. Echols,
. Business Manager.
Brown’s Hotel,
MACON. GA.
JF long experience and a thorough knowl
edge of the business In all its diversified,
branches are essential to the keeping that which
the public has long hrartl of but seldom seen,
A GOOD IIOTKI.,
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 and MOST COMPLETE
LY AND EXPENSIVELY FURNISHED
house throughout, In the State, which is loca
ted exactly where everybody would have It sit
uated
IMMEDIATBI.T IN MONT AND ADJACENT TO
TUB I'ASSBNOBB DBFOT,
where travelers can enjoy the most sleep and less
liable to he left 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 the 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.
For the truth of these statements, we refer
the public to our patrons who reside in every
State in the Union.
E. E. BROWN A SON, Proprietors.
MACOn, Ga., April 15, 1872. 78-10*
The Great Democratic Journal,
Till-; HEW YORK
WEEKLY NEWS.
BENJ. WOOD, Editor and Proprietor.
A Mammoth Eight Page Sheet, Fifty six
Columns of I{ending Mutter.
Contains all the news, foreign, domestic, pa
litleal and general,with lull uud reliable market
reports. Each number ulso contains several
short stories, and a great variety of literary,
agricultural and scientific matter, etc., etc.,
constituting, it is confidently asserted, the
mast complete weekly newspaper In this
country.
TERMS, 82 A YEAR.
Inducement* to Club*:
Five copies, one year t 8 00
Ten copies, one year, aud an extra copy
to the sender X 5 00
Twenty copies one yeur, and an extra
eopy to bender 25 (X)
Fifty copies one year, and an extra copy
to sender 55 00
forties snullrtfi dubs as above, may retain 20
j)er cent, of the money received by them, as com*
paeimtton.
Persons desiring to act as agents supplied
with specimen bundles. Specimen i oplessent
free to any address. All letters shot Id be di
rected to
NEW YORK WEEKLY NEWS,
Box 8,785,
novlS-tf Alew York City Ibd Office.
DIVIDEND NO. 38.
SOUTHWESTERN R. R COMPANY, )
Office, Macon, Ua., December lfi, 1872. f
A DIVIDEND OF FOUR ($4) DOLLARS
per Share has been declared on the Capi
tal Stock of this Company, as held on the night
of theiWth alt., payable oa and after the 26th
inst., in the currency of the United State* as
now received.
Stockholders in Savannah will receive their
Dividends at the Central Railroad Bank.
JNO. T. BOIFEITLLBT, Treasurer.
4ecl74w.
A MODEL NEWSPAPER.
THE SAVANNAH DAILY NEWS.
The Savannah Daily Mohnino News is ac
knowledged by tlio press and people to be the
best dully paper south of Louisville and east of
New Orleans. Carrying with it the prestige
and reliability ofngu, it lias all the vigor and
vitality of youth, and Its enterprise ns a gutli
crer of the latest and freshest new* Ims aston
ished its contemporaries and met tlio warm ap
probation of the public.
During the year 1873, no expense of time, la
bor, and money will be spent to keep file Morn
ing News ahead of nil competitors in Georgia
Journalism, und to deserve tlio Haltering enco
miums heaped upon it from all quarters,—
There Ims, as yet, been no surious attempt
made to rival the special telegrams which the
News Inaugurated some years ugo, and the
consequence is, that the render in search of the
latest Intelligence always looks to the Mokn
ink News. The telegraphic arrangements of
the paper arc such Unit the omissions made by
the general press reports are promptly and re
liably supplied by its special correspondents.
The Mohnino News has lately been enlarged
to a thirty-six column paper, and this broud
scope of type embraces, daily, everything of
Interest that transpires In the domuiii of Liter
ature, Art, Science, l’olltlcs, Religion, and Gen
eral Intelligence; giving to tile raider more
and hetier digested mutter than any other pa-
per in tlio State.
It is, perhaps, needless to speak of tlio pol
itics of the Mohnino News. For years und
years—lndeed, since ils establishment—it bus
been a representative Southern paper, and from
that time to the present, m all conjunctures,
it Ims consistently mid persistently maintained
Democratic-States Rights principles, and la
bored, with an ardor ami devotion that know
no abatement, to promote and preserve the In
terests and honor of the South.
The special features of the Mohnino News
will be retained and Improved upon during the
ensuing year, and several new attractions will
he added.
The Georgia News Items, with their quaint
and pleasant humor, and the epitome of Flori
du Allidrs, will tie continued during the year.—
The Loeul Department will be, us It Ims been
for tlio past year, the most complete und relia
ble to be found in any Savannah paper, iinij
the commercial columns will lie full uml accu
rate.
The price of the Daily Is flO per annum ; $5
for six months; $2.50 for three months; $1 for
one month.
THE TUI-WEEKEY NEWS.
This edition of the Moknino News Is espe
cially recommended to those who have not the
facilities of u daily muil. Everything that lius
been said In the foregoing In regard to the dully
edition may ha said of the Tri-Weekly. It Is
made up with great care, uud contains the la
test dispatches and market rejiorU. The price
of this edition is 80 per uiinuni, 88 for six
months, and 81.50 for 3 months.
THE WEEKLY NEWS.
The Weekly Mornino News particularly
recommends itself to the farmer and planter,
and to those who live off the lines of railroad.
It Is one of the best family papers In the coun
try, and its cheapness brings it within the reach
of all. It contains Thirty-six solid columns of
reading mutter, and is mailed so as to reach
subscribers with the utmost promptness. It, Is
a carefully and laboriously edited compendium
of the news of the week, and contains, in addi
tion, an Infinite variety of other choice reading
matter. Editorials on ull topics, sketches of
men, manners, and fashions, tales, poetry, bi
ography, pungent paragraphs and condensed
telegrams enter into its make-up. It contains
the latest telegraphic dispatches and market
reports up to the hour of going to press, and
Is, In all respects, an Indispensable adjunct to
every home.
Price—One year, 82; six months, 81; three
months, 50 cents.
Subscriptions for olther edition of the Morn
ing News may b sent by express at tbo risk
and expense of the proprietor. Address
J. H. EMTILL,
janl7-tf Niivnnniili, Gu,
H. C. STEVENSON,
WITH—
CHAB. McMASTER,
EIIICAGO, 11,1..
ORDERS for Western Produce filled in any
quantity desired.
Bacon, Dry, Salted and Green Meats, laird,
Sugar-cured or Green Haras shipped In bulk or
boxed as directed.
CORN, OATH,
WHEAT, ’ HAY,
BItAN it ml FLOUR
From the highest to the lowest grades.
The cheapest market in the United States.
11. C. STEVENSON, Agent
For C’has. McMustcr for the Btute of Ga.
jan 7-tf
FOR SALE.
A FOUR room dwelling and vacant lot,
also, splendid well of water In the yard;
fronting on Spring and Rose Streets, contain
ing one quarter of an acre. For sale cheap.
Apply to
GEORGE HGHMIDT,
nov. 25—lm. corner Third and Plum Streets.
PROSPECTUS
Man Weekly Ealerprise,
ON or about the first week In December,
we will issue from tills office the first num
ber of a
La®, Live Weekly Paper!
It will contain all the the Telegraphic news
of the week, and the latest reliable Information
on all subjects and from all parts of the world.
In its editorial department will be found dis
cussions of all the
LIVE ISN UE S
of the times. Particular attention will he giv
en to ttie advancement of Science, Art, and
Literature; while ail interesting event* and
authentic progress of the political world will
be faithfully presented.
srascßiPTioN fric*.
One Year tl 50
Six Months 1 00
Invariably In advance.
PO~Sa subscription taken for less than six
montht.
Ep-Now la the time to subscribe. Specs
jeffOoraU SENT on AITUIAtIU,
FOR THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE,
LAWTON Ac BATES
Fourth Street, (Next Door to Lawton A Willingham.)
prc|iarixl to furnish the trade with
GROL'KKIIM, PROVISIONS, PLANTATION SIPPI.IIm
UINU, TIES, ETC., ~AW
•“ na reasonable teriua as any house In Georgia. We will keep constantly i,.,„i uarnv
LARD CORN, OATS HAY, SUGAR, COFFEE, lUGfHNoTnd mS
ment of such goods as aro kept In a first class Grocery House. Givens aaPl, '•s,aVtmiming
tlic EAWLEI LOI RING MILLS, wd
direct-special attention to our “CHOICE,” “EXTRA." “FAMILY” .
found exactly adapted to the trade, and wo guarantee every barrel to give satisfaction'* 1 Our
''uiniv'uelT of * lhc sftme (fades can be bought la the South,
quality** ollH<l R,,d u " l,oltei1 ’ unhand, of our owa make aud of the best
I HiO-188
11. BANDY & CO.
TUI ani> sheet iko\ Roorira,
Mill ail Bepaiiw,
JpSPffll! i
- l| 5 TIN ANU GA, - VAN fZE IRON CORNICIB
\ / 1 \ Executed at short notice and satisfaction
\ B / \ I _ guaranteed.
D \ j L Aw ' ‘*® Third Street, Mncon, On.
If Particular attention given toGuttorlngput np
\ J with
V WOODRUFF’S
98-mig3 PATENT HAVE FASTENINGS.
IMPROVED Ml GEAR.
SOMETHING NEW.
SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HOBSE POWER
IT IS NO HUMBUG!!
T H Ute°worlfbolted fl °° r 1188 "° eflCCt ° n 1510 <luurln - Kln K Po#t of Don and all
IT IS MADE TO LAST, AND TO RUN TWENTY-FIVE PER GENT. LIGHTER TUAN ANY
OTHER POWER IN USE.
Call aid see for youaself.
I bm.u a Portable Home Power that challenges all other MAKES, hut it will uot do the work
with the same Draft that my PATENT GIN GEAR will.
All kinds of Machinery made ami repaired at
10a IMfi CROCKETT’S IRON WOUMN,
Near Brown House, Macon Georgia.
cc .uz . ■■-.
BROWN'S GALLERY.
No. 8 Cotton Avenue,
Is the place where all the differ
ent styles of pictures are made
at greatly reduced prices.
W. Sc E. P. TAYLOR,
Cor. Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street,
DEALERS IN
FURNITURE, CARPETS & RUGS,
OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, ete:
Metaiic Burial Cases & Caskets,
Fine and Plain Wood Coffins and Caskets.
. bx Wtf
by Telegraph promptly attended to. ——
JAMES H. BLOUNT. ISAaC! HARDEMAN.
It 1.0 UNIT A nABDEDUN,
ATTORNEYS "AT LAW,
MACON, GEORGIA.
OFFICE, at entrance Ralston Ball, Cherry
street.
Barber Shop For Rent.
TBE Basement room, formerir occupied by
Mike Napier, In Browu’sHotsl building Is
for rent This Is one of the host stands for a
HOTEL.
Volume I.—Number 256
INMAN LINE
ssshsa^g
ei Wsl
aoroea theAtkati* comfort and eon
mgs,