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CEDARTOWN STANDARD.
DEVOTED TO THE BEST INTERESTS OF CEDARTOWN AND FOLK COUNTV.
VOLUME
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA. THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER l'l, 1901.
NUMBER BO.
THE WH0LF .Y8TEM
■ay Become Invuded by Catarrh— |
Manager Plan's Case,
f£L
Chisago, III.
J. Lo®i» Pfau. Jr M Manager Central
Trust Co., write# from suite 201,Tlmea-
Herald Building, Chicago, 111., aa fol
low*:
"Leal 4mm I had m nww attack oi
naaal catarrk which waa vary aanoy
lag and habilitated my ayatam. See*
log yam advert its monte I wrote you
ft**’ advice. I need Parana eometantly
until laat November, when the eymp*
turns dtaappaared entirely. ”
J. Louie Ptau, Jr.
Hon.Jamaa Lewi*, Surveyor General
of Louisiana, say a:
“1 have used Peruna for a short time
and can cheerfully recommend it as
being all you represent and wish every
man who is suffering with catarrh could
know of ita great value.”
James Lewis.
Wherever the catarrh is, there is sure
to be a waste of mucus. The mucus is
as precious os blood. It is blood, in fact.
It is blood plasma—blood with the cor
puscles removed. To stop this waste,
you must stop this cutarrh. A course of
treatment with Peruna never fails to do
this. /
Hon. W. E. Sch neider, proprietor of t ho
Baltic Hotel, of Washington, D. C.,
speaks of Peruna us follows: “I desire
to say that I have found Peruna u moat
wonderful remedy. I have only used
one bottle and am thoroughly satisfied
as to its merits. I c^snot find words to
express iny gratification for the Jesuits
obtained.”
Send for free catarrh book. Address
The Peruuu Medicine Company, Colum
bus, Ohio.
“Miss Creecher says the neighbors
don't appreciate hefr singing because
they haven’t cultivated ears.” “Cul
tivated? Well, I guess they will have
if they keep on listening to such har
rowing sounds.”
$100 Reward, $100.
The render* of this paper will be pleased to
cam tbat there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its stages
and that is Cntarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the
only positive cure known to the mediciiv
Catarrh being a constitutional disease,
requires a constitutional treatment Hall’s
Catarrh Cure i* taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys
tem. thereby destroying the foundation of the
disease, ami giving the patient strength by build
ing up the constitution and assisting nature in
doing its work The proprietors have so much
faith in its curative powers, that they offer One
H undred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonial* Address.
F. J. CHENKV & CO., Toledo, O
Sold by Druggists, 7SC
Hall's Family Fills are the best.
* —
Visitor—“Whom do you take after,
Bobby, your papa or mamma?” Bobby
Jones—“That depends; when Aunt
Sarah's here ma says I take after her
folks, and when Uncle Silas Jones is
here ma says I’m a regular Jones.
They’re both r-r-rich!”
CATARRH
Catarrh has become such a common
disease tbat a person entirely free from
this disgusting complaint is seldom mel
with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh
as nothing more serious than a bad cold,
a simple inflammation of the nose and
throat. It is, in fact, a complicated ami
very dangerous disease ; if not at first, it
very soon becomes so.
The blood is quickly contaminated bj
the foul secretions, and the poieon through
the general circulation is carried to all
parts of the system.
Salves, washes and sprays are unsatis
factor^’ and disappointing, because they dc
not reach the seat of the trouble. S. S. S
does. It cleanses the blood of the poison
and eliminates from the system all catar
rhal secretions, and thus cures thoroughly
and permanently the w’orst cases.
Mr. T. A. Williams, a leading dry-goods mer
chant of Spartanburg, S ~ * ‘ c
I had a severe ca«e of
nasal Catarrh, with all
the disagreeable effects
which belong to that
disease, ana which
make life painful and
unendurable. 1 used
medicines prescribed by
ieadiug physicians and
suggested by numbers
of friend*, but without
gettirig J
then begar °
after taking
FROM THE FAR WEST.
SOUTHKRN CALIFORNIA.
Our next stop was Santa Barbara, a
pretty little city upon the coast. Here
is an old mission of the Franciscan
order, founded in 1786. Here, too, we
saw the largest rose-bush in the world;
the stem is about twenty inches in
circumference. It is the LaMarck rose
and grows up the side of the Arling
ton hotel.
Six miles down the coast are the
famous submarine oil wells—the only
oil wells in the world sunk below the
water of the ocean. The oil is driven
out by strong gas pressure. At Car-
pinteria, near by, is the great grape
vine for which the directors of the
Chicago World’s Fair offered $2,OX).
The vine was said to be 8* s feet In cir
cumference and covered a trellis OOx
120 feet, producing several tons of
grapes per annum.
To Los Angeles is an interesting
ride through gooves of oranges, lem
ons, olives, F.oglish walnuts, etc.
There are, too,some flue stock ranches.
David C. Cook, of Chicago, has a
“temperance ranch,” which the boys
call the “anti-drinking and nnti-
eussin’ ranch.”
In traveling these days one rarely
sees a drunken man, and a gentleman
may go through many states and not
bear a word of profanity. Profanity
has been relegated almost entirely to
the “bums.”
The road passes through “Camulus,”
the home of “ Ramona.” Here at the
foot of tlie San Fernando mountains,
by the side of the Santa Clara river,
lived Ramona. The corrals, vineyards,
orchards and old chapel still stand,
vivid proof of the power of word-
picturing possessed by Helen Hunt
Jackson.
Los Angeles, the most modern of all
cities, having grown from a city ot
15,000 in 1880 to more than 100,000, is
the natural commercial center of
Southern California. It has an ideal
climate, never hot enough for an
umbrella and never cold enough for
frost. Perennial flowers bloom in her
gardens, frequently almost hiding
from view the beautiful homes. I
noticed a rose-bush spreading its limbs
r the top of a house, and heliotrope
blooming on top of the rose.
Tropical fruits are fresli upon the
stands or growing in groves in every
direction.
Irrigation is necessary all the sum
mer for gardens, lawns and farms.
The streets and public highways must
be sprinkled every day. It Is ten
miles out to Pasadena, and a herculean
undertaking to sprinkle so as to keep
the dust down, as the travel is very
heavy. Lately an unique method has
been adopted here, sprinkling with oil
instead of water. Crude petroleum is
gotten from oil wells near by,and only
costs about thirty cents per barrel.
Three hundred barrels will sprinkle a
mile and prevent dust for about three
months. I have heard of casting oil
upon the troubled waters, but never
before saw oil cast upon the dusty
highway.
We had the pleasure of being enter
tained at a beautiful ranch named by
Bishop Fitzgerald, “Ciela Vista.” The
ranch is owned by Mr. C. F. Harper,
father of our Rev. E. J. Harper, agent
of Wesleyan Female College. Mr. and
Mrs. Harper, originally Mississippians
and fine representatives of the old
school, gave us (seventeen Georgians)
such a welcome that we felt almost like
calling them father and mother. After
a lew hours spent in this charming
home We were turned loose in the
orange grove. You can imagine how
we spent the time there.
A TRIP TO MT. I.OWK.
Probably the most interesting moun
tain ascent in America is going up Mt.
Lowe. You take electric car past the
ostrich farm, Pasadena poppy fields,
Altadena at the foot of the Sierra
Madre range, and then to Rubio
Canon. Then take an incline cable
car and be drawn 8,000 feet, making an
ascent of 1,800 feet. A part of the
incline is (12 per cent. A bridge 200
feet long is 120 feet higher at the up
per end than at the lower. At the top
of this incline is the great search-light
of 8,000,000 candle power in swift ob
servatory.
We remained on the mountain until
night to see the search-light and take
a view of Lite moon through the fa
mous telescope
sss
If you have Calc
i the only purely veg
etable blood purifiet
known, and the great-
i est of all blood medi-
" cines and tonics.
. Catarrh don’t wait until il
becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be
gin at once the use of S. S. S., and semi
tor our book on Blood and Skin Disease!
and write our physicians about your case
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
look down on the white dome of the j
observatory thousands of feet below, !
while beyond it stretches the plains j
luxuriant in vegetation and dotted
with cities; and still beyond is the sen
with her island mountains of Catalina,
Santa Barbara and San Nicholas from
00 to 100 miles away.
On one side of the mountain we were
looking down on what we thought was
the sea with its whitecaps breaking in
every direction, but we finally dis
covered that it was dense elouds formed
thousands of feet below us nmi floating
probably between one ami two thou
sand feet above the earth.
SAN CATALINA.
Twenty miles south of Los Angeles
is the port San Pedro. Here we
boarded a steamboat for Catalina
island, which is thirty miles out in the
Pacific ocean.
The ocean swell is heavy and the
boat rocks fore and aft and sideways
at the same time, and happy is he who
reaches the island without getting sea
sick.
When you climb Pike’s Peak you
need a good strong heart, and when
you swing over canons thousands of
feet deep on tin* side of Mt. Lowe, you
need a good conscience, ami when you
venture out to Catalina you need a
good liver.
Catalina is a great place to fish.
While we were there a Miss Dickerson
caught with hook and line a fish
weighing 8(18 pounds. But the most
novel feature of the visit to Catalina
was the ride in a glass-bottom boat.
The boat will accommodate about
twenty passengers, and is built like
any other with the exception of hav
ing glass cases in the center that ex
tend below the water so that one can
see through them on either side and at
the bottom. We went out where the
water was from 50 to 150 feet deep, and
saw the bottom of the ocean as clearly
as you can see the ground beneath your
feet in open daylight. We floated over
plains of white sand with now and
then a beautiful shell, then over ledges
of rock—bare rock and moss-covered
rook, and some with crevices where
fish dart in and out; then over lawns
of grass, then over morasses of sea
weeds ami over forests of kelp which
in some places grows to the size of
saplings and reached up to the height
of an hundred feet, spreading out its
limbs and leaves into a veritable sea
forest. The kelp lias an uniform
amber color, while the weeds and
grasses and mosses and rocks give al
most as great a variety of coloring as
is seen on land. And fifth! it seemed
almost possible to reach out your hand
and touch large trout, electric fish,
Spanish mackerel, cucumber fish and
gold fish. Gold fish like the ones we
have in our glass tanks grow from one
and a half to two feet long.
The glass-bottom boat is a simple
device; it has common glass which ex
tends below the ripples on the surface,
and enables you to get a view with
perfectly still water.
PRKBNO.
Our return trip was up the noted
San Joaquin Valley with a stop at
Fresno, the center of.the raisin indus
try. .
The raisin grape grows from a stem
which is cut down to two or three feet
high. When the grape is ripe the far
mer cuts the bunches and places them
on wooden trays and allows them to
sun until one side is dried, then he
goes through the fields and turns the
bunches and dries the other side.
When thoroughly dried they are taken
to the packing house, stemmed,
steamed, packed and shipped.
We were very kindly shown through
the works of the Pacific Heeded Raisin
Go., where part of the raisins are
taken from the other packing houses
and by a simple device relieved of their
seed. The machine has two cylinders
which turn toward each other. One is
of soft rubber and the other is thickly
studded with steel points so close to
gether that the raisin seed can not get
between them. The raisins are poured
upon these revolving cylinders and
the fruit mashed between these points
while the seed is left out and a “flip”
brushes them off on the opposite side,
while another flip combs out the seed
less raisins. This factory has a capac
ity of 800 tons per day.
In ail Fresno, a town of 10,000 inhab
itants, ships 4,000 car-loads of raisins
per annum, and thousands of car-loads
of other fruits.
I went through one of its many can
ning factories. This one Dad a capac-
liF.TTER FROM MR. AKE.
Williamsburg, Pa., Sept. 4,1001.
Eds. Standard :— By some blunder
in the postal service I have failed to
receive h copy of Tint Standard of
Aug. 23d. The last issue reached me
in good time, and you cannot imagine
how glad I was to get it and read the
news of the old town.
The wheels of time are rapidly
turning oil* the days of my visit,which
were limited to eight weeks. The fifth
is almost gone, and soon I will be
brought face to face with those horribly
Impressive words, “Good bye.” They
have such a sad meaning, and I always
dread having to say them. I have
missed so many dear faces that gave
me a kindly greeting when 1 was here
eleven years ago. It is well that we
don’t know what is before us. It is
one of the kind providences of the
Great Ruler of the universe that the
future of our lives is with-held from
our sight.
Williamsburg, the home of my
childhood, is a lovely place of about
1,000 inhabitants, situated in the cen
ter of one of the finest farming coun
ties in the state. Across the Juniata
river from the town stands the old
home in which 1 was horn. Here it
was that my grandfather, Jacob Ake,
from Washington county, Maryland,
located in 1700 ntid built him a home,
and afterward laid out the town which
for a number of years was called
Akestown—now Williamsburg, after
his son William. The town lots con
tain 50 feet front by 175 feet deep, and
were sold to the purchasers by my
grandfather for one Spanish milled
dollar to be paid annually. Many of
these lots are still subject to this an
nual payment.
Being of German nationality my
grandfather was greatly interested in
education, lie established u school for
the youth of t he town In the upper
room of his house,and for fifteen years
assumed all the expenses of the school.
In this same roqpi on the Sabbath day,
although he had been reard to the
Catholic faith, the Methodist pioneer
preacher held religious services, and
mental and spiritual training have
gone hand in hand until the present
time.
Before leaving Ocean Grove, our
party spent a tiny in New York visit
ing some of the most prominent places,
among them Castle. Garden, Bedloe’s
Island, climbing to the top of the
Statue of Liberty, the tomb of Grant,
etc.
The ride from Philadelphia to this
place is through a section of rich
agricultural products. The wheat had
all been harvested, and the corn crop
showed no signs of the desolating
touch of.drouth which has been so des
tructive to the crops of other states;
an abundant crop will be gathered this
fall. Our farmers here are now busy
preparing their ground for sowing
wheat. In this preparation I was sur
prised to see that the dike plow was
not used. They are satisfied with the
good old two-horse turning plow.
They are also busy harvesting the
gecond crop of hay, and as I watch the
hay-makers raking up the hay in
windrows I am reminded of the way
it was done when the poet wrote these
lines:
“Maude Muller, on a Hummer day,
Raked the meadow sweet with hay.”
I am glad to learn that the crops in
old Polk are doing well, and that the
price of cotton has advanced. This
will be good news for oor farmers.
I notice with gratification that the
Central R. R. is going to locate its
shops in Cedartown. This will add
greatly to the already advancing pros
perity of our city, and it begins to
look like Cedartown can get anything
she wants. May her wants be many,
and her advancement continue until
she becomes one of the foremost cities
of North Georgia, is the wish of your
scribe. M. V. B. Akk.
Stood Death Off.
E. B. Munday, a lawyer of Henrietta,
Tex., once fooled a grave-digger. He
says : “My brother was very low with
malarial fever and jaundice. I per
suaded him to try Electric Bitters, and
he was soon much better, but contin
ued their use until lie was wholly
cured. I am sure Electric Bitters saved
his life.” This remedy expels malaria,
kills disease germs and purifies the
blood; aids digestion, regulates the
liver, kidneys and bowels, cures con
stipation, dyspepsia, nervous diseases,
kidney troubles, female complaints;
gives perfect health. Only 50c at
Bradford’s drug store.
DMIlcult Digestion
That In d;
It n’ukes
Is dyspepsia.
life miserable
Its HUflereis eat not because they want to,
— hut Is iguse they mutt.
They know they are Irritable ami fretful;
but they cannot t>e .thenvlse.
. They complain of u bud taste in the
month, h tendoftfjss at the .pit of the stom
ach. an uneasy fe< Ing of puffy fulness,
headache, tea-than, and what not.
The effectual remedy, proved by perma*
neat cures of thorn nuts of severe caws, is
Hood's Ssrsspsrllls
Hook's FI
d tbs best cathartic.
From the observatory the electric j ty 0 f 900,000 cans per day.
ar takes you up four and a half miles.
The track winds around the side of
tlie mountain, then comes back on
a higher track, and then winds around
again on a still higher track, making
three tracks, one above the other,
on the same side of the mountain.
When you have nearly reached the
summit you swing out on a curving
trestle over a canon about 8,000 feet
deep, and you hold your breath. From
Inspiration Point, near the, top, you
This letter would he loo long were
I to tell of the ride by the great snow-
covered Mt. Shasta in Northern Cali
fornia, or of Portland with its fine
scenery and salmon fisheries, or of
Tacoma with its great grain shipping
and warehouse 120x2,800 feet, or of
Seattle and the beautiful Puget sound,
or of the Northwestern Ship Yard
twenty miles up the sound, with the
Wisconsin and Oregon battleships.
So will close with the promise to end
these letters next week with the Yel
lowstone Park. T. R. McCarty.
Tlie following wa3 posted up in a
small country village: “Notice is hereby
given that the Squire (on account of the
backwardness of the harvest) will not
shoot himself or any of his tenants till
the 14th of September.”
A never failing cure for cuts, burns,
scalds, ulcers, wounds and sores is
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. A most
soothing and healing remedy for all
skin affections. Accept only the genu
ine. E. Bradford.
DIRECTORY.
CITY OFFICERS.
Mayor. L. 8. Ledbetter.
Mayor pro tern., O. W. Smith.
Clerk. J. C. Walker.
Treasurer, B. A. Kite.
Councilman: J.A. Liddell, B.A. Fite,
T. J. Griffin, A. R. Ooligbilv and C. \V
Smith.
Marshal, J. M. Jolley.
Supt. Water A Lights, II. B. Johnson
City’ Attorney, J. K. Davis.
OK Board of Health-Dr. J.A. Liddell.
Oh. Street Com.—A. R. Gollghtly.
Cemetery Commiuiotter, T. J. Griffin
CITY SCHOOL BOARD.
J. S. Stubbs, Cliairtfian; J. H. Dodds,
Secy; E. B. Russell, Trees; W.S.Shitlett,
W. C. Bunn, K. A. Adams, W. K.
Fielder, J. W. Judkins, J. E. Good.
Superintendent! Prof, H. L. Sewell
POLK SUPERIOR COURT.
Judge, G. G. Janes.
Solicitor General, W. T. Roberta, ot
Donglasavllle.
Clerk, W. C. Knight.
Official Stenographer. H. M. Nicholes.
c6unxy officers.
CominlMdoners, D. hi. Russell, T. H.
Adams, B. F. Johnson.
Ordinary, A D. Hogg.
Clerk, W. C. Knight.
Sheriff, John Hutchings.
Deputy ftlmriff, J. F. Carmlclucl and
J, E, Dompsey,
fax Receiver, M B. McCormick.
Tax Collector, W. A. Calhoun.
Treasurer, J. M. Hamrick.
Coroner, J. O. Crabb.
Surveyor, S. A. Hunt.
County School Commissioner, J. K.
Houseal.
COUNTY HOWOOL BOARD.
M. V. B. Ake, (film; A. D. Hogg, A. H.
MoBryde, J. K. Davie, J. S. King.
CHURCHES.
Baptist: Rev. C.K, Henderson, Pastor.
Services Sunday morning and night:
Sahlmth School 9.30 a. in. Prayer meet*
Ing Wednesday night,
Methodist: Rev.T.R. McCarty, Pastor.
Services Sunday morning and night;
Sabbath school 0.80 a. m. Prayer meet
ing Wednesday night.
Prsshytciian : Rev. F. L. McFaddon,
Pastor. Services Sunday morning and
night; Sabbath School 0.80 a.m. Prayer
meeting Wednendny night.
Episcopal : Rev. G. E Benedict, Rec
tor. Services 11 a. m. Sunday; Sabbath
School 0.80 a. in.
BOARD OF TRADE.
President, J.S. Stubbs.
Vice Presidents, W. F. Hall and J. E.
Good.
Secretary, E. B. Russell.
Treasurer, H. N. VanDevander.
MERCHANTS A SHIPPERS AHS’N
Preafdent, N. H. Swayne.
Vice Presidents, Thus. Adamson and
R. A. Adams.
Secretary, E. B. Purnell.
Treasurer, J. H. Phillips.
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
Chief, M. D. Russell; 1st Asst. Chief,
W. W. Crawford; 2d Asst., Boss Thom
ason; Sec’y, O. R. Pittman; Treas., Joe
Langford.
Fire Co. No. 1,—Capt., L. H. Smith;
Pres., F. W. Wood; Sec’y, C. R. Pitt
man; Treas., H. W. Branch.
Fire Co. No.2.—Capt., Robt.Van Wood;
Prest., Holmes Smith; Seo-Treas., Clift
Collins.
SECRET FRATERNITIES.
Caledonia Lodge, No. 121, F. and a.
M, , W.K. Fielder, W.M., J. Hutchings,
S. W., B. F.Slms, J. W., Cbas. Beasley,
Sec’y., T. F. Burbank, Treas. Meets 1st
and 8d Friday evenings in eaoli month.
Adoniram Chanter, No. 41, R. A. M.
W. G. England, H. P., W. R. Beck, K.,
J. W. Judkins, Sec’y., T. F. Burbank,
Treas. Meets 2d and 4th Friday even
ings.
Cedar Valley Council, No. 1880, Royal
Arcanum, W. C. Bunn, Regent, R. H.
Marchman. V. R., E. B. Russell, C M L.
S. Ledbetter, Sec’y, J. O. Crabb, Col.
Cedartown Lodge, No. 78, I. O. O. F.
A. L. Ellen burg, N. G.; G. W. Groce, V.
G.; Frank Howard, 8ec.; J. G. Eubanks,
Treas. Meets every 1st and 3d Saturdays,
and 2d and 4th Thursdays.
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
Cedartown. 1075th district, J.A. Bur
dette, 8d Tuesday: J. A. Wilson, N. P.
Young’s, 12°8d district, W. T. Lee,
4th Saturday, J. B. Jones, N. P.
Rocjcihart, 1072d district,J.G. Bullock,
4th Monday; W. N. Strange; N. P.
Fisk;’1074th district, L. Y. Jackson,
4th Friday; J. M. McKinney, N. P.
Blooming Grove, 1469th district, W P
Ray, 2d SatuMftay; Abijah Watson.N P.
Ksom Hill f 1079th district, W. A.
Hackney, 1st Saturday; J. N. Torrence,
N. F.
Hampton's, 1070th district, T.J.Demp
sev, 2d Saturday, L. Sutherlln, N. P
Buncombe, 1073d district, B.B Bishop,
4th Saturday. M. M. Jones, N. P.
Browning’s, 1447th district, H. H.
Tibbitta, 4th Saturday. N. V. Parris,
N. P.
Antioch, 1518th district, Thos.Wrlght,
2d Saturday; W. H. Morgan. N. P.
I.ake Creek, 1570th district. Bon II.
Harris. J. P., 2d Tuesday; W. J. Brown,
N. P.
Aragon, 1588th District.'!’. N. Vinson,
J. I\, 3d Saturday; S. R. Jones. X. P.
LEDBETTER & HARRIS,
LARGEST
Fire, Accident, Liability
AND STEAM BOILER
Companies in the World.
Special Attention given to the
Prompt Payment oi Losses.
Large or Small.
The Travelers’ Accident Ins. Go.
Hartford Rtenra Boiler.
jEtna Fire Ins. Co.
Phoenix Fire Ins. Co.
Phenix'.
Commerioal Union Fire Ins. Co.
Insurance Company of North America.
Continental Ins. Co.
Greenwich Ins. Co.
St. Paul Ins. Co.
Georgia Home Ins. C.
Pennsylvania Ins. Co.
Liverpool and London and Glibe.
German American Ins. Co.
Atlanta Home Ins. Co.
Home of New York Ins. Co.
Imperial Iiih. Co.
All Old and Reliable Companies.
Ledbetter & Harris, Agents.
KAY & BRO.,
DEALERS IN
Fine Whiskies,
Beer and Wines,
Cash Orders Promptly Filled,
Home, (jlii.
OASTOHIA.
Bears tho y,1ll8 Kinrt You Ha»8 Alwaft Joilghl
Signature
«/
OA8TORIA.
Bears the J The Kind Hull Have Always Bought
Signature
Pay up your subscription
PENNSYLVANIA PURE RYE,
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS
FOUR FULL OUARTB OF THIS
FINE OLD PURE RYE.
to cn EXPRESS
OUiUU PREPAID.
We ship on approval in plain, sealed boxes,
with no marks to indicate contents. When you
receive it and test it, if it is not satisfactory, re
turn it at our expense and we will return your
$3-5°. We guarantee this brand to be eight
years old. Right bottles for $6.50, express pre
paid; 1a bottles for $0.50 express prepaid; 1 gallon
jug, express prepaid. I3.00; a gallon jug, express
prepaid, $5.50. No charges for boxing.
We handle all the leading brands of Rye and
Bourbon Whiskies in the market, and will save
vou 50 per cent on your purchase*.
Quart. Gallon.
Kentucky Star Bourbon $ 85 91 25
Klkridge Bourbon 40 150
Coon Hollow Bourbon 45 1 60
Mellwood Pure Rye 50 1 90
Monogram Rye 55 2 00
McBrayer Rve 60 2 2T>
Baker’s A AAA 05 2 40
O. O. P. (Old Oscar Pepper) 65 2 40
Old Crow 75 2 50
Finches'Golden Wedding 75 2 75
Hoff man House Rye 90 8 00
Mount Vernon (8 year old) 1 00 3 60
Old Dillinger (10 year old) 1 25 4 00
The above are only a few brands of the many
we carry in stock. Send for catalogue.
All other goods by the gallon, such as Corn
Whiskey, Peach ana Apple Brandies, etc., sold
equally as low, from ft.as gallon upwards.
We make a specialty of the lug trade and all
orders by mail or telegraph will ha re our prompt
attention. Special inducements offered.
gQr-Mnil orders shipped same day receipt of
The Altmayer &
Flatau Liquor Co.
500, 508. 509, 510, 512 Fourth St.
Near Union Passenger Depot.
Phone 165.
MACON. GEORGIA
FOR RATES and MAPS
ALI. POINTS
North-West
ADDRK88
J. G. HOLLENBECK,
DISTRICT PAHBENGKIl AOKNT
Louisville & Nashville R. R.
No. 1 Brown Bid., Opp. Union Depot
ATLANTA, GA.
“No Trouble to Answer Questions.”
A clever butohor can always make
ends meat. ____
OASTOniA.
Bears the sf Kind You Havfl Mays
Signature