Newspaper Page Text
AN IMPORTANT ADDRESS,
- The Blllville Banner-’-?.
A primary election for postmaster
ot Billville will be held on Friday
morning next. The pay is $13 and
seven stamp* a year, and there - are
exactly thirty-seven candidates. ;
We recently wrote President Cleve
land to the eflect that we had named
six babies after.him. If that doesn’t
get us a foreign mission ora Georgia
postcffice, we’ll have- to go back to
splitting rails and chopping cot-
be high enough to warrant the pro
ducer to rely upoh it as a means of
purchasing supplies which can be
raised at home..
Very respectfully. fsfiiii
J. Z. George.
Every Cotton Planter In The South
Should Read It.
'■ THOMASVILLE, GA.,
Till Triplett, Editor {and Manager.
Satis;day, March sj, 1893.
j Why is it that"our Girthing Department is aiways as busy
in January and February as in December, while other Groin
ing stores have been as qu : et as grave-yards since the Holi
days. Yes, why is it? Careful and impartial observers will
find the reason for this fact, and it is our Matchless Low
Prices for strictly fine, sty 1 sh, new and reliable go 0 .-'e
have
The UuitedSutee senate in April,
1892, passed a resolution instructing
its committee on agrioultnre to make
ao investigation with a view of ascer
taining the cause of depression in
agricnltural products existing at that
time. Senator James Z. George, of
Mississippi, was made chairman of the
sub committee to investigate cotton.
This report will not be ready until
congress convenes, but the lion.
A Scientific DMcuvaiy.
A distinguished place among the
•dentifio revelations that are lending
snch rare lustre to this era must be
awarded to the discovery of Pro
fessor Virchow that the cellular prin
ciple inns through all forms of physi
cal life. Aa stated in a dispatch to
yesterday’s New York Bun: "Micro
scopic and other tests by the great in
vestigator have shown him that every
portion of animal and vegetable mat
ter possessing life abounds in vital
calls.’’ The law of analogy which'
Cleveland is taking, his t'me about
suing the ofiices.
The Whigham Gnt appears to have
S good deal of grit and git op and git
ibont it.
Hers They'Are.'
Havana, March 21.—The two Co
lumbus raravaia, Finis and Nina,
arrived hue Unday under the escort
of two United States warships,
Newark and Bennington, on their
tray to take pert in the great Colnm-
bua naval review at Naw York.
J. O. Harrell Offered an Office.
Balnrridge, Ga., March'22.—
Cel. J. D. Harrell, oflhia city, hts
been uS-ired the petition of chief of
the department ef special service in
the land office by the Secretary of the
Interior. He hat taken the matter
Even the rattlesnakes an more for-
toURte than we are, for they all have
buttons, while we are forced to fasten
op one suspender with a rusty nail.
Our dramatic chib has gone * to
pieces. Every member wanted to be
manager and play the leading charac
Shall the a,500 men in Georgia,
who are entitled to pie, go to Wash-
►bf rt 8 Hlno, to satlsfy a 8tate and coun
ix ft fa tune I by U. II. Hurst Tax Collector
oaa county. Ga., for 1832. Also, at the
i time and place, the following wild land.
It: Lot of land No. 27. in the 17th dlitrict
tomas county, Ga , containing 250 acres
i or less, levied on as the property ot J. &
ircess, to satisfy * State ana county Tax
issued by H. R Huts', Tax Collector
■a* county, Ga,, lor the year 1292.
Cm. B. P. Does, Sheriff.
After the New York eaithquake we
had a premonition that something
marvelous would turn up in the West
to restore the balance. Ai d it I as.
Telegraphic reports from Denver an
nounce the dircovety in Coiorado of
the skeleton ot an ;c!r.liyosaurus roo
Jeet long, and wnl, a backbone th eker
than g nad heg.r-ljfc ■’
Tile UVti-ro liar is mighty hard.1 to
down. Jiegc.t, there every rime.
These goods are strictly G st-class I
and guaranteed is represented. The
ladies are respectfully invited to
examine thtm at the I iot n Store on
Broad Street.
W. W, Thompson,
- -Hif-
(8 Sural Safa! Sensible! It Always Cures!
s&ttiau..: sSss, .£?■ .
m«wv«roRuomsTr" , -S K1? .
Dr - * *•■» 3 Panorama Place, Chicago. Ml,
Da liesseps baa been Grand guilty
of bribery in the Panama matter. A
great name is disgraced,
Mr. Cleveland has decided to call
an extra session of congress in Sep
tember. •
iagton in a body is the question.
llThe appointment of Senator 1 intis,
of Louisiana, as minister of France, is
0 Capital good appointment.
The Ryan case still lingers in the
courts. It will end—some time, aod
to will the world come to an end—
afterawhile.
A woman out weit is suing a rail
road for killing her husband. She
puts his value at $50,000. Husband*
are valuable cut there.
The Tennessee legislature has an
impcachracDt case on irs hands.
Judgh Dubose, ol Memphis is to be
tried.
Henry McIntosh is getting out
of the best evening papers in
state. The Albany Daily Herald
is a daisy.
It is now conceded that the sj
did ocean steamship, Narouic, with a!i
on board, is lost. She was u m?
cent vessel.
Mr. Cleveland has given gallant o:<J
Wade Hampton a good berih uncln
the new administration. The whole
country will endorse the app-iintment.
It is now reasonably certain tha>
all the exhibits at the World’s fair wil
not be in place bv the 1st of May
But the big show will open ail tht
same.
And now the Cincinnati, New Or*
leans and Texss_I*acific Railway has
Keen put in the haudsof of a receiver,
©or southern roads arc in a bad way.
What’s the matter with them.
Editor Stovall is fpoken ol tor a
foreign mission, lie is all right, and
weald fill an? place to a T, but Pleas
h needed in Georgia. He is trading
the fight for ballot reform and canno:
be spared.
Some prominent republicans say
that Harrison is the logical cand date
hi 1896. All right the democrats
Would as soon tackle Grand Father’;
Hat again as not.
«.f Gen
Premier Caprivi,
about to lose a situation 1
bill, the emperors pet m
about to tail. Then c IT will
Caprivi’s pohiic&Lhcad.
San Francisco, March 20.—
Coagres»man Biount and par«> board
ed the Rush immediately on 1
arrival here, this afternoon.
Rush then started on her voyage
Honolulu.
Washington, March 20.—
price paid for silver to-day by
treasury department, 37.75 sts ptr
ounce, is the lowest since the s
purchase act went into tffjct.
The prospect of sec
federal pic, coupled wi
pect for a blackberry
silvery lining to the cd
Now is the time to su*
President Djv
it is said, denies
be sold to Mr. .
generally under*-
to this end have
some time.
Baltimore News: The president’s
selection of ex Representative James
H. Blouat, of Gcorgi*, as special com
missioner to Honolulu is about the
bent that could be made. Now we
shall have the facts from the bottom
up.
At last accounts several gentlemen
from Georgia were holding on in
Washington wailing lor an appoint*
tetnt. Uneasy lies the head of the
office seeker. He docs not sleep on
k bed of roses. The thorns predomi
nate.
Mrs. Mary Ellen Lease, whose
bifkrealed tongue has done consider**
able wagging anent the south, has
MW taken up the sp’.it pen and is
Wpidly drifting towards Dr. Mary
Walker.—Augusta Chronicle.
Lit Tier drift.
An Eastern exchange has the fol
lowing item: Another epidemic of
is threatened in New York. There
Wive eleven deaths from this insidious
disease last week in this city, and 240
deaths from that kindred infliction,
pneumonia.. Too much care cannot
be ebterved during this and the fol
lowing month, when the weather in
thia latitude is always treacherously
uncertain.
Patrick Walsh has asked Senator
George to issue ao address, now, so
that planters may get the benefit of
bis views before pitching their crop.
Here is the address:
To the Cotton Farmers of the
United States:—In discharge of the
duty imposed by the United States
senate on the committee of agricul
ture, to investigate the causes of the
low price of cotton and remedy, I
have made some investigations which,
though as yet incomplete, authorize
me to state the following conclusions
There are cruses for this low price
coming from legislation n*>w in force;
and there are other causes coming
from needful legislation yet to be en
acted. It is certain, however, that
these causes cannot be remedied iu
time to affect the price of the crop
now about tefbe planted, even indeed,
if their force ever can be entirely
destroyed. The cotton farmers mast,
therefore, for the present, report to
such remedies or palliatives for low
prices as may come from their own
action independent of legislation.
The last crop (1892-93; has br-.ught
higher prices than the proceeding
or.e. This resulted from the fact
that it was much smaller. The price
would have been higher if there had
not been i. large surplus over the
needs of consumption, coining from
the very large crop of the proceeding
year (1891-92).
The natural rise in the price of the
crop now being marketed has been
largely impeded by the great strike
among operatives in the cotton fac
tories of England. In this great
strike sixty thousand operatives,
working 21,000,000 spindles, having
stopped work. The eflect of this
strike upon this date has been to
decrease the amount consumed by
British factories since September first
525,000 bales, and is likely to amount
in the near future to more than 100,
000 bales in addition. This decrease
in the demand has by a certain law
of trade, diminished the price, or,
which is the same thing, prevented
the full rise which would otherwise
have come from the small crop.
American spinners carried over
from last season an unusually large
stock of cotton, having bought heavi
ly at the low prices prevailing in the
spring and summer; and while doing
an exceptionally good business they
have taken so far 350,000 ba'es les-s
than for the same period during last
season. This, also, increased the
surplus- The prospect of another
large crop coming from increased
acreage, if that should happen, would
not only be an eflectual bar to any
rise iu the price but would cause a
still further decline. So that cow the
cotton raiiers of t lie South are con
fronted with this serious question for
solution : Shall we, by increased acre
ag:* iu the crop uow being planted, as
caicpared to the acreage of the last
season, i.r.sc a crop of nine or ten
millions ba’es and thereby glut the
markets of the world, causing a fall
t. • the low prices of 1891-92 and per-
h »ps even lower, or will v,e by re
ducing the acreage to the extent nec
essary ' to raise all our food and for
age crops and work animals, especial
ly our meat, < ora, horses and mules,
increase the price of our cotton crop
and at the tame time diminish the
uses of the proceeds of the crop by a
larger reduction in the amount here
tofore applied to buy the necessary
supplies?
There can be but one answer to this
question in the minds of thoughtful
men. If it be said that among so nu
merous a class as cotton raisers it will
be impossible to get up an agreement
which will result in combined action
to plant a reduced acreage in cotton,
and If this be conceded, then the sit
uation appeals with still stronger force
to each individual farmer to decrease
his own crop to the extent needful to
raise his supplies, for in case there
should not be such diminution in
the acreage as to eflect materially the
price so that the next crop is to be a
low priced one, the advantage to him
who has wisely raised his own sup
plies will be clear and manifest. He
will not have to buy high priced sup
plies with the scant proceeds of low
priced cotton. These proceeds will
then be in th& main a surplus or
nearly so. On the other hand, if
there shall be such a general move
ment in the direction of raising a
smaller crop as to raise the price, ihen
all who contribute to it in the manner
herein indicated will enjoy this in
creased price as the result of their
own wise action and at the same time
be exempt from expenditure for sup
plies. which they have bo raised.
After much reflection upon data col
lected from all counties adapted to
raising cotton, I am satisfied of this
piinful truth; That we are never, at
l<*n*t in this generation, to have gen-
orally the high prices for cotton we
once had. Cotton will never, but in
scopic and
vestigator have shown
portion of animal m
ter possessing life
cells.” The Jaw of analogy
traversetLall nature has prepared sci
entific minds for this great and impor
taut truth. It does not tell us what
life is, and perhaps no amount ol bio
logical investigation will ever square
that circle; nor Can it be said of Vir-
chow’s demonstration that it has the
picturesqe features that attend the re
searches of Daware in the realms of
inanimate matter. Yet it may be
fraught with results of far more im
portance to the life and health of tbe
human family.
Pension Reform.
The present administration should
give the country a healthy d*>se of
pension reform. It is needed, badly
needed. The Macon Telegraph tayt:
A lew weeks ago the Grand Army
of the Republic for the department
ot Pennsylvania adopted at a general
meeting a series of rather surprising
resolutions. They declared it to be
the duty of every member ot the or
der to use his best etlorts to make the
pension list a roll of honor, on which
no uqworthy name should appear.
Since then the Faruham Post, ot
New York, has taken more advanced
ground, or defiued its position more
cleaily. Resolutions adopted by the
Post delare that “the only veterans
entitled to pension* are those who by
wounds or disabilities incurred in the
service of their country are prevented
from earning a living iu their respect
ive callings as they might have done
had not such wounds or disabilities
been incurred, and whose circum
stances are such as to justify them
in calling upon the country for aid
or support.
Rights of Rai!way Strikers.
The public will follow with pecu
liar interest the proceedings growing
out of the strike of the engineers 00
the Ann Arbor Railroad. The at
tempt to boycott Ann Arbor freight
on other roads by refusing to run
trains containing it has been met by
an order from the United States
Court for the arrest of the engineers
who thus interfere with the carrying
of interstate traffic. They thall be
punished for contempt if they per
sist. The right of strikers to quit
work is conceded. The right of en
gineers who have no grievance to use
property of their employers in aid of
strikers by dictating what they shall
or shall not haul as common carriers,
is to be contested by the railway com
panies.—Philadelphia Record.
Credit Well Bestowod.
From The Louisville Courier-Journal,
Mr. Ward McAllister is not such a
bad fellow after all. True, he spreads
a pall of gloom over the country by
announcing that he would not kiss
woman if she asked him, but he
quickly follows this with the comfort
ing promise that if Mr. Cleveland
performs social duties at Washington
well, he shall be admitted into the
four hundred. Perhaps if Mr. Mc
Allister were approached in tbe prop
er way he would conseut to do his
country another estimable service by
revealing whether or cot he intends
to wear criuoline.
True as Steel.
The charge made that General Gor
don had proven false to one of his
triends will not stand. John B. Gor
don is as true to his friends to-day as
he was to his country when he led the
last forlorn hope at Appomatox. Here
is what he says about the matter
‘•My faith is pledged to Mr. Couper.
My official fidelity, my political honor
and my truth is involved in my adher
ing to my pledges. I have never
abandoned a friend, and 1 trust the
day will never come when 1 can be
charged with deserting a friend to
whom I have pledged my suppbrt.’”
Not Afraid of tbe Dark,
From The New York Press.
“Look here,” said the father of the
gentle maiden, as he popped his head
into the parlor where the spooning
couple sat, "I wish you to understand
that I am goiDg to shut oB the gas at
10:30.
“Ail right,” said the youth. “For
my part I wish you would shut it ofl
now.”
The Philadelphia Record has an
able article on “Bald Heads.” Among
other things it says:
* Unfeeling and libellous writers
have insisted that baldness is mainly
confined to married men; thus seeking
to create the interence that either
their hair is pulled out in tbe conree oi
some heated matrimonial argument, or
that baldness is a Presidential dispen
sation which lessens the opportunity
for one familiar method of feminine
tab'ishedin our midst. There ere
fifteen scholars end seventy five
voic< 8. Each one deserve?, and should
have a foreign mission.
Another Rumor.
Jacksonville, March 21.—The
latest rumor in regard to the Florida
Central and Peninsula railroad is
that the Clyde Steamship Company
of New York has made an offer for
the road. Tbe amount offered is said
to be even greater than that of the
Plant System. It seems that there
might he some troth in the report, in
asmuch aa the Florida Central and
Peninsula is a great outlet for the
Clydes. Should they obtain control
of the road they would have connect
ions with all the principal points
south, controlling a greater portion
of the cotton and tobacco shipments
from middle and west Florida. Then,
too, they would secure a great part of
of the shipment of naval stores, lum
ber and other articles ot commerce
now going to Fernandina and north
by tbe Mallory line. In this event
JackBouvilla would become even
greater shipping point than at present.
No More Third Party.
Atlanta, Ga., March 22.—In an
interview to day with Hnn. Thomas
E. Winn, the (teople's party ex con
gressman from thejiinth Georgia die*
trict, h« announces that there is room
for only two great parties, and says
that if the democrats carry out in
good faith their platform, the people’s
party will give them fall credit and'
act accordingly.
Hon. Thomas E. Watson, the most
notable third party leader in Georgia,
takes the same position, saying that
it the pledges made by the democratic
party in their national platform, on
which the party won, are carried out,
the people ought to be satisfied
The announcement of these inter
views is received with considerable
intererest here, indicating *that the
third party in the south will rapidly
go to pieces if the democratic party
stands squarely on its platform.
The Coming New Postmasters
A dispatch from Washington says:
Postmaster-General Bissell told
delegation of congressmen to day, in
relation to the appointment ot post
masters, that he thought the question
of candidaUs'should, in a measure at
least, be decided by the pe tple of the
locality. They were more interested
than anyone else, and undoubtedly
their wishes should be consulted and
given very great weight. No one
would be ignored, and the advice and
recommendation of congressmen are
earnestly dteired. He said also the
statements that the women and news
paper men were to be discriminated
against in appointments were un
true.
Interior. He
under advisement.
Macon, Ga , March 22.—The
committee, W. G. Raoul, T.
Gresham, Frank H. Miller, have
made their report to the Southwestern
stockholders advising them to accept
stock in the new organization rather
than operate the Southwestern road,
one or the other must be done.
This is good news for the Central.
It is a most valuable property, and
should bo preserved intact. The re
organization plan as projected, will
save it.
“That Sottles It.”
President Cleveland defined his
views on nepotism to day in a manner
so forcible that it left no doubt in the
mind of his hearer that he was irre
vocably opposed to the practice. The
gentleman to whom Mr. Cleveland
outlined his views on the question is a
western congressman who came to
secure the appointment of a constitu
ent to office. He told Mr. Cleveland
that the applicant was a good demo
crat, a good fellow, and, furthermore,
a relative of the president himself.
•’That settles it,” Mr. Cleveland is re<
ported as saying, "his name cannot
be considered.” And then the presi
dent is said to have read the congress
man a lecture on the danger of ap
pointing relatives to office, in which
he placed himself on record as against
nepotism in all its shades, meaning,
and application.
Danville Deliverance
New York, March 21.—The Her
ald Bays the reorganization of the big
Richmond Terminal system of moi
than 8,000 miles by Drexel, Morgan
& Co. may now be slid to be assured.
The plan is about ready and may be
announced any day. One of the first
steps toward restoring order ont of
chaos will be the appointment of a
receiver for the Richmond and Dan
ville railroad who will
Drexel, Morgan & Co., and who will
be entirely independent of either frui
tion in the company. Mr. Samuel
Spencer, who is connected with the
banking firm, will be selected for the
position.
No Elections For Postmaster.
Washington, March 2l.—Mr.
Clew eland says be does not approve
ol elections for postmaster*, and would
not appoint any party elected, as it
would be a bad precedent. However,
he wants to consult the interest of
the community in making the ap
pointment.; fr - * - V
The New York Sun admits that it
has a warm spot in i s great illumined
heart for Georgia. It says:
"IIow could any sensible newspaper
fail to cherish such a partiality. Ob,
it one could only be in Georgia now,
where the peach trees are veiled in
bloom, and the yellow jessamine flut
ters its delicate loveliness along the
woods. Tbe laid of "lovely women
and gail-wit men, faithful forever.
We salute them all, and may they all
gel the < flices they desire.”
The Cincinnati Tribune publishes,
in a New York dispatch, this remark
able bit of political gossip: "It was
rumored in political circles this after
noon that Col. Elliot F. Shepard
would, in a few days, announce a
change in the politics ot his paper, the
Mail and Express, in order to support
President Cleveland”
This would be a severe blow to Mr.
Cleveland. He can stand a good deal,
but not the support of Col. Elliot F.
Shephard.
The Vienna Progress truthfully
say*: “The judges of our superior
courts are paid $2,000 per year and
out of this have to pay their expenses,
railroad fare and living. Tbe ques
tion is, how nch does a lawyer have
to be before he can afford to be
judge for the honor there is in it?
The penuriousness on ihe part of the
state is a shame and a disgiac*.
The railroads have been caught
napping. Heretofore all property,
moneys &c., held on the first of April,
were taxed by the g'ate. Undvr a re
cent law all property held on the first
of March is taxid It is likely that
great many private citizens hate been
c*ught also.
"God has lent us the earth ior our
temporal life,” says Ruskin. "It
great entail. It belongs to them who
are to come a‘ter us equally with
ourselves, and we have no right by
anything we do cr neglect to involve
them in unnecessary penalties, or to
deprive them of benefits now in 01 r
power to bequeath.”
Congressman Lester, iu his inter
view 111 the Morning News yesterday,
points out in a forcible way one of
the vexations that fall to the lot of
every new president. There are 30,
000 seekers after the 500 offices that
he has to bestow. The impossibility
of making 30,000 “go into” 500 is
absolute; so is the impossibility ot
pleasing everybody.—News.
THE HIGHEST GRADES,
THE VERY BEST QUALI1Y,
THE NICEST ASSOli'i MEET,
Petition for Charter.
Georgia— 1 Thomas county:
To the Honorable Superior Coi-rt ot said
county. The petition of A. A. Parker. A. del
Pino, W.B. Mitchell. A. T. MacIntyre, Jr., 2.
Y. Del Pino. A. M. Watson and their associates
■how that they have entered into an aasocla
Uon under the name and style ot A. Del Pino
° < That > tl)e object ot said association Is to op
erate a dear factory, to deal In tobacco* of all
kinds and to have tbe piirllece of manufao-
turlne the same into dean, cigarettes, etc.,
to manipulate and to buy and sell tobaccos of
To borrow or lend money and tor the pu
.too# thereof, to make and execute, as well 1
take deeds, mortgages and other securities.
To eue and be aued, nnd to hare power 1.
purchase and hold property, both real and
personal, and to exercise all powers usually
conferred upon corporations of similar charac-
‘ir.
That said Company will hare Its place of
■ near TbomasYllle, 1 homas coun-
Tiuwiyia.
That said Company Is to be operated and ran
for the purposes aforesaid tor profit.
Petitioners farther show that th_
stock shall be forty thousand dollars (f (0.000),
The Greatest Variety and the I
Parker’s
l. F. THOMPSt
, 1 M
i\J liy vki ii
UNDERTAKEN
by this court granting this their applicatloi
and that they and their associates be incorp*
rated for and during the term of twenty years,
with the privilege ot renewal at the expiration
of the said twenty years, for tho purposes
hereinbefore set forth.
MacIntyre a macixtyre.
GEORGIA—rnonAs County,
Ordinary’s Office, March 8, ’tS.
Whereas, J.T, Pittman executor of the last
will and testament cf John G. Pittman, de
ceased, represents to the court in his petition,
duly filed that ho has fully administered John
G. Pittman’s estate. This Is therefore, to cite
all persons concerned, hi ‘
to snow cause, If any thej .
tor should not be discharged froi
istintlon, and receive letters of aitmussion <
the first Monday tn June 1898.
Jos. 8. Msec ill. Ordinary.
le. If any they can, why said execu-
notlfled, directed and commanded to be and
at the next term of the superioi
tbe county of Thom
be held on the 3rd Monday
sms
State of Georglk. t<
GEORGIA—TnowAS County,
OnanNAKY’s Office, Mar. e, 1WJ
To all whom It may esneom: M. A. Fie
wood, public administrator, has In due to
applied to the undersigned for permaui
letters of administration, du boats non, on 1
‘ Joel Mabry, late of said
all persons
sy have, be-
of this court,why
, if any they
*“* —*ia .
be appointed
minis tr a tor has moved out of tho jurisdiction
of this stats. Given nailer 1
signature.
y hand and official
Agreeable to an oMer obtained from 'the
Honorable Oonrt of Ordinary ot Thomas county,
Ga., will bo sold before the court house door
In Thomasvllie.Ga.. between tho legal hoars
of sale on the first Tuesday in April, 1893. the
following property to-wit: One vacant lot in
the ettv of Thomasvllle, Ga., fronting on Jack-
son a treat 70 feet, and running back 106 feet and
lying between stables of W. A. Davis, sold as
the property of Geo. R. Smith, deceased, late
The Sernuuah Pres* say*: “The
town of Washington, Ga, was the
first place to be named for tbe father
of his country, and the first Georgia
town to get a democratic postmaster.
A Southern man. Senator Harris,
of Tennessee, has been e'eoted presi
dent pro tem of the Senate, Between
Adlai and Senator Harris, the practi
cal business of the country will be
pushed along.
A new theatrical spectacle is to
have Vn •‘electric ballet.” That
Bounds aa if it might bo a pretty
shockig show.
St. Paul Miss , March 21.—By
a rote of 31 to 19, the Senate passed
to day the Senate bill extending full
tufirage to all elections in Minnesota
to women.
The Southwestern road will go in
to the re-organization of the Central.
This assures the success of the
plan.
The Constitution saya it ii no joke
about Georgia being entitled to 2,500
offices.
Senator Feller, of Kansas, lua ap
pointed hie daughter as secretary to
hii committee.
LIVERY,
Feed and Sale Stables.
Having bougbtout the stables known
as Ainsworth's stuh’e-, on Jackson
street, we will conti ue to do
LT7SB.7 BUSINESS
We have good rolling stock and
first-class saddle and harness horses to
furnish our patrons. We will also
conduct a feed and sale department,
in which can be found all grtdes of
horses and mules for sale at all times,
^ ^ ELDER & THOMPSON.
TET77" E L
. -AND-
AUCTION SALES
Every Morning,
AFTERNOON AND NIGHT.
ANY OF THE GOODS
Will also be Sold at
WE HAVE THE FIN^ciT
and
HAN DSOMEST H A.
in the city, which we furnuh om- P;i!
free of charge.
THOMASVILLE SCHOOL OF
lillf; A -
158 Broad Street, Mitchell Kocee i
a. w. ball, PnnHp;
SCrBusiness correspondence taken charge of bv
f -
I offer this morning for sale any of these j r : v
S800. 10$ acres, with new 0 room house, on
52750. 28 acres, well wooded, in ang’e of msgno.i. i
about half mile irom city limiu; and atljoi jin-,- . ...
place, with neat new seven room, two story house, j.laiA .
§3500. The choicest little farm in the county. 7',' -. ,u
Court House, on Maguolia road, two room hou?e, ^ ;
fence, railroad frontage, ten acres in bearing he Conic !‘...
in youDg Kiefers, 150 young Botau plum trees, n
wagon, farming outfit, feed, etc. A splendid chance. Vise ’••
alone will pay a big dividend.
23 acres on Southern Boulevard, no improvements, u; ;
10 acres on Southern Boulevard, no improvements, a:. . < )
55 aeres on Southern Boulevard, beautiful wo ds a :d ,:i ..i
improvements, at $30.00 per acre.
20 acres jus* beyond the new cigar town, oa Irwiuvii..- . ..!.
to raise vegetables on for the Cubans, at $25.00 per acre.
Any of the above places on easy terms.
E. M. MALLETTE,
Real Estate and Insurants „
UNDER MITCHELL HOUSE BLOCK
Broad. St- - 1 1 ia.orrxas^7-IlIe,
Comparison with ol
COX-fCTT'/
The Finest Finish, t".i:
The Easiest
Agency for Pc ::
175 BROAD _
Forbe’s fit.:;::
THE BEST STOCK OF
HFimillNIIlTIIDYi:
CARPETS and BEDDING,
Matting and Window Shades,
CAN BE FOUND AT
Fortes’ Furniture House, 175
HA8URY BUILDING. '
Always the best goods for the least money. Look for:
«8U Si,
PLAN OS & ORGANS
Stelmvay Pianos,
Malhushet Pianos.
Mason & Hamlin Pianos and ©rg-jusy,
Sterling Pianos and Organs,
For Cssh or on easy payments.
GE0-W. FORBES, Agent for Ludden & Bates’ 8ca*iio..t titi& Il^ujo.
1T5 BROAD STREET,THOSIASVILLg, GA.