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MONTICELLO, - - - GEORGIA,
MES, A. P. PENN, PROPRIETRESS.
ADVERTISING RATES MADE KNOWN
ON APPLICATION,
OrrICIAL ORGAN OF URDINARY.
OrrICIAL ORGAN OF SHERIFF,
Terms of Subscription:—One year, $1.00;
gix months, 50 cents, Subscriptions pay-
Shle In AOYRBOE . v i vy e e
Entered at the Monticello, Ga,, post office a 8
second class matter . . . . . .
TELEPHONE 34,
Friday, October 30, 1903,
e e s
Atlanta wants the next State
Fair--of course,
Milledgeville will cclebrate her
one hundreth birth day in 1904.
The little city of Winder, Ga.,
is to have an Electric Light Plant.
Bring your cotton to Monticel
lo and you will have no trouble
in getting thé top of the market.
An Armour employe who lost a
hand in a sausage mill got $9, 500,
What did the sausage caters get?
Roosevelt's pro-negro agitation
must have something dangerous
in it. It has even sct Gorman go
ing.
The bright and newsy Madison
Advertiser waves two flags of
Greater Georgia on the front
page.
Editor Vaughn of the Milledge
ville News is pulling for the next
State Fair to be held in that city.
If there are a dozen other citizens
as active as brother Vaughn the
next Fair will be held in Milledge
ville, ‘
It will be up to Patnam next to
name her senator. We suggest
the name of Hon. Geo. W. Adams
the able representative of that
county. Morgan awaits her time
to send forth Hon. Emerson H.
George.
The Pittsburg Post, a promi
nent Republican newspaper,
boldly says: “Negro suffrage
has been a mischievous and dis
astrous policy, and it is largely
responsible for the degradation of
the ballot, about which there is
general complaint,”
Dr, Henry E. Tully has opened
war upon toy pistols and all kinds
of fire works, and wishes a nation
al law enacted forbidding their
manufacture, He asserts that
more cases of lockjaw result fr om
these agencies than any other
known to the medical fraternity.
Mr, Bryan still has a hankcrin&
after the silver issue. He insi-®
that the democrats cannot i«°"¢
the issue entirely, Withe
national convention mees Ne Will
see how quickly t'¢ del"'g“‘e_’
from the sovereig- states of this
pation put th 15sue to sleep.—
Athens Ba'"®T
«i Coffee county the grand jury
has found true bills against sever-.
al parties for selling Peruna, This
leads Editor Douglas Gessner who
seems to have sampled the brand,
to remark, ‘'those grand jurors
know poor liquor when they see it,
no matter what the label on the
bottle, " —Macon News,
BROKE INTO HIS HOUSE, |
8. Le Quinn, of Cavendish, Vt. |
was robbed of his customery |
health by invasion of Chronic!
Constipation, When Dr. King's/
New Life DPills broke into his
house, his trouble was arrested
and new he's entiely cured
They re guaranteed to cure, 25¢
at C. D. Jordan's drag stove.
" . ?
Job Printing ?
Farmer and Automobile,
The automobile will not milk
the cow nor teud the baby, but it
will churn the butter and grind
the corn meal and do pretty near
ly every other kind of work on
the farm. After the farmer sees
the exhibit of farm implements
made by the manufacturers of
South Bend, Ind., at the World’s
Fair, to which the South Bend
Tribune calls attention, and in
which the atomobile plays a stol |
lar role, much of the antipathfl
formerly felt by the ruralist for
the horeless carriage will be re
moved, Of course the South
Bend manufacturers will not neg.
lect the auto as a pleasure vehicle
bit it is the uses to which the ma
chine may be puton the farm that
will prove most novel and inter
esting. An automobile with a
plow attachment will be in uper-%
ation, showing how much f;ntcr}
the soil can be turned with thcl
new power than when the plow is
drawn by horses. The automobilcl
harrow will make Dobbin turn
green with envy, so much more‘
smoothly does it glide over the
field. Another exhibit will shuw!
the automobile used as a farm
wagon. The practicability of
mowing hay and cutting wheat
with agricultural automobiles will
be demonstrated. ‘The traction
engine used by threshers has pav
ed the way for the automobile in
this field and it will not appear as
80 great a novelty, |
The versatility of the automc
bile will be demonstrated when it
is seen, as it actually will be in the
Palace of Agriculture, grinding
grain, The same machine that
conveys the farmer and his family
to church on Sunday, may be
placed in the barn on the week
days, and the wheels as they turn
upon certain riggings in the floor
will grind the farmer's grist.
~ This is not all of the uses the
automobile may be put to on the
farm. There are many others and
all will be shown at the World's
Fair. South Bend is a great manu
facturing center, and she will
make an exhibit that will call at
tention to her importance.
A LOVE LETTER.
Would not interest you if you're
looking for a guaranteed salve for
Sores, Burns or Piles. Otto Dodd,
of Ponder, Mo., writes : **l suffer
ol with an ugly sore for a year,
but a box of Bucklen's Arnica
Salve cured me.” It's the best
Salve on earth. 25¢ at C. D.
Jordan's drug store.
Hon. S. E. Leigh, of Coweta, is
one of those Georgia farmers whe
is & good an orator as he jx~ plan
ter, He is as succeseé4! In raising
eloquence as he cotton, and his
success at v latter is noted. His
eloquen+ 4ddress at Niagara Falls,
wher 0¢ nominated Hon, Harvie
Je-dan for president of the Far
mer's Congress, is well remember.
ed. Recently at the Farmers' In
stitute, in LaGrange, he spoke
eloquently on the subject of ed
ucated husbandry.—Macon News
Ten Thousand Churches
In the United States have used
the Longman & Martinez Pur
Paints.
Every Church will be given a
liberal quantity whenever they
paint.
Don’t pay $1.50 a gallon for
Linseed oil (worth 60 cents)
which you do when you buy thin
paint in a can with a paint label on
it,
8 and 6 make 14, therefore when
yvou want fourteen gallons of
paint, but only eight gallons of
L. & M.. and mix six gallons of
pure linseed oil with it,
You need only four gallons of
L. & M, Paint, and three gallons
of Oil mixed therewith to paint a
good sized house.
Houses painted with these
paints never grow shabby, even
after 18 years,
I'hese celebrated paints are
sold by C. D. JORDAN,
Give Penn Bros., yovr job \\'olk;
THE MONTICELLO NEWS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1903.
Hon Harvie Jordan Speaks.
Macon News says: The address
of welcome to the farmers gather
ed here Monday to ferm a farmers’
congress was delivered by Hon.
Harvie Jordan. He welcomed
the visiting farmers to the great
fair and declared it to be a grand
object lesson for every farmer in
the state. He commended the
exhibits to the visitors for inspec
tion and spoke in glowing terms
of the splendid showing made by
Georgia's tillers of the soil.
He spoke enthusiastically about
the plan to organize a farmers’
congress of Georgia and made
many valuable suggestions. Mr.
Jordan was eloquent and held the
attention of his large audience
throughout his address. Many
times during his speech he was
interrupted by applause when
he made a declaration which
caught the fancy of his hearers
and he finished amid a storm of
applause.
SAVES TWO FROM DEATH.
“QOur little daughter had an al
most fatal attack of whooping
coungh and bronchitis,”” writes
Mrs. W. K. Haviland, of Armonk,
N. Y., “but, when all other rem
edies failed, we saved her life with
Dr. King’s New Discovery. Our
nicce, who had Consumption in
an advanced stage, also used this
wonderful medicine and today she
is perfectly well.”” Desperate
throat and lung diseases yield to
Dr. King's New Discovery as to
no other medicine on earth. In
fallible for Coughs and Colds.
50¢ and SI.OO bottles guaranteed
by C. D. Jordan. Trial bottles
‘free.
The times may be ever so hard,
And corn fields seared and brown,
But there's always plenty money
When the circus comes to town,
ll\nd croakers may walk the streets
With their jaws all hanging down,
But there isn't any gloom 1n sight
When the circus comes to town.
Legal Notices.
Notice to Creditors and Debtors.
GEORGIA--Jasper County.
Notice is hereby given to all persons
having demands against Franklin J.
Blackwell, late of said county, dezeased,
to present them to the undersigned,
properly made out, within the tme
prescribed by statute, showins their
character and amount. And all persons
indebted to said decease are hereby re
quired to make ipvuediate payment to
me. T'his Sept Tth, 1903,
Lesuna E. Blackwell, Admx.
aEORGIA, Jasper County,
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed as administrator of the estate of
Mrs. Mary M. Cornwell, late of said
county, deceased, has applied to the
court of Ordinary of said Jaspexr county,
for leave to sell the realty of said intes
tate's estate, for the purpose of paying
debts of said intestate and distribution
among the heirs at law of the said Mary
M. Cornwell, deceased. Said applica
tion will be heard on the first Monday
in November next, at this office by 10
o'clock a, m,
C. B. SANDERS, Admr.,
of estate of Mary M. Cornwell, de'cd.
’Notla to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA, Jasper County. |
All parties indebted to estate of A, A. i
‘T'yler, deceased, are hereby required to
make immediate payment, and all pnr-}
ties holding demands against said estate
are required to present them at once
made out according to law. This Oect.
26, 1908.
Mrs. Otelia Tyler,
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA, Jasper County
All parties indebted to estate of
Mamie Tom Webb, deceased, are
hereby required to make immedi
ate payment, and all parties hold
ing demands against said estate
are required to present them at
once made out according to law. ‘
Chis October 22, 1903,
B. W, Peurifoy, Admr, |
Mo
“ l
J. F. WEBB, |
Physician and Surgeon.
Office Benton Building, Room 1, |
recently vacated by Col. Johnson, |
Phone No. 3.
l " Washington Letter.
(Special correspondence of THE
NEws.)
Washington, D. C., Oct. 28!]’1'03.!
The coming Fall elections are|
important as showing the drift of?
public opinion on political issues, |
%and especially how the voters of|
‘the states in which elections are
iheld view the erratic course of the |
| Republican Administration. If
‘the Republicans hold their own, |
it must be taken for granted that
Ithe majority of the voters of the
United States are satisfied to con- |
itinue the extortion of the trusts
‘through the protective tariff and
| the continued high prices of the
cost of living. By endorsing the|
Republicans, the voters will sanc- |
tion the program that the leaders |
of their party have agreed upon, |
iuf allowing Congress to take no|
action other than to pass the ap-|
‘propria(inn bills and adjourn at |
the earliest day practicable. |
That would mean the transcon-i
tinental railroads have sufficient
linfluence with the Republican|
leaders to prevent the building of
the Panama or Nicaragua Canal;
That no action will be taken upon |
treaties whieh President McKinley i
so ardently wished to see ratified, I
to ward off the inevitable reform |
of the tariff, which he foresaw
must come unless some relief from
monopoly was granted; That the
much-agitated labor legislation is
again to be postponed, and that
the promises made in the Repub
ican platform are again to be
oroken: That no investigation of
the frauds in the departments is
to be undertaken; That the finan
cial legislation that has been de
clared so necessary to prevent a
panic will not be attempted, and
that Secretary Shaw can continue
to loan the surplus, without inter
est, to favored banks and continue
to disobey the law for the protect
ion of the United States by re
ceiving doubtful security in place
of United States bonds, which the
law plainly commands, Why is
this Republican Administration
afraid to legislate on these and
other matters? Being in league
with the trusts and combines,
they dare not legislate against
them. They fear the people.
If the Democrats show gains in
the elections this Fall| it will in
dicate that the voters are deter
mined to turn out the Republi
cans, with their sumerous scan
dals, and inaugurate the reform
that is so necessary for the public
welfare. ‘**Equal rights to all and
special privileges to none’ is the
Democratic slogan, and as the
voters are beginning to see that
trust prosperity means the piling
up of millions in the pockets of
the favored few and no fair share
to the many, it is only reasonable
to expect the voters will demand
a change in political conditions.
That the Republican leaders are
frightenad to the point of desper
ation is plain enough or President
Roosevelt would not have author
ized the speaking members of his
cabinet to take the stump for
Hanna in Ohio and to bolster up
the rotten Lodge machine in
Massachusetts, and to aid the dis
reputable crew in Kentucky that
call themselves the Republican
party in that state.
A Gallon of B OLL mixed
itk & galion o
makes 2 gallons of the very BesT Paree
ia the WORLD
f your paint bill, IS FAR MORE DURANLE tha
‘f‘rn ufi’l L:mf‘n.fl..«m.‘m.}s.r&ofl
soNOUS, Hamymar PAINT is madeof the BESTO®
PAINT MATERIALS—such as all good painters use,
end s ground THICK, VERY THICK., Notrouble to
mix, any boy can do it. It is the COMMON BENSD
or Houss PAINT, NO BETTES paint can be mado
ot ANY cost, and is
mor 10 OrAck, BLisTen, PREL or Curp,
F. HAMMAR PAINT CO,, St. Louls, Mo,
CAPITAL PAID IN $500.000,
Saad. ' “n
SOLD AND CUARANTEED BY
J. D. HARVEY.
In Style, in quality, in Price.
Ideal High Lace and Button
Tuxedo Cut and Dußarry
Slippers are the swell things.
Qur stock is ready for in
spection. -
THE REID SHOE CO.,
MACON, = GEORGIA.
Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklhoma, Indian,
Territory, California, Coloradao, Utah, Wyoming
Oregon, Montana, Washington and other points.
West, Northwest and Southwest
Write or call on,
J. G. HOLLENBECK,
Dist. Passenger Agent.
Louisville & Nashville R.R
No. I. Brown Building, opposite Union Depot.
Atlanta, Ga. |
o e
Southern Pacific Company.
=7 SUNSET ROUTE o o
Lowest rates and through service to California. Ask about them.
Through the *<Rice and Oil Belt.” :
4 Daily trains; best service; best everything. Ooil Burning Locom~
otives.
Through Pullman Tourist car from Washington, Atlanta, Montgo~
mery and Intermediate points to California. Tri-weekly.
No trouble to answer questions.
J. F. Van Rensselaer,
R.O. Bean, T. P. A. General Pessenger Agent Atlanta, Ga.
Union Yacifie Railroad Gompany,
A ad _o
Southern Yacifie ‘Gompany.
Cheap Colonist Rates to California
and the Northwest.
Sept. 15th until Nov. 30th. 1903.
Ask for particulars.
J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, Gen. Agt.
No. 13 Peachtree st., Atlanta, Ga.
R. O. BEAN, T.P. A,
G. W. ELY, T.P. A.
are here to stay and
[O DO YOUR WORK
We have moved into our new building next to the Electric
Light Plant—We are ready to do your
Blacksmith and Wood Work.
Our Painting and Trimming Departiment is in charge “f' )\lr', ¥
D. Valentine who has been with J. R. Carmichael Mfg., of Jackson
for the I“"" 19 .\‘l‘:xl'.\.
Look for our sign—we are only a half a block from our old
tand, Furniture Upholstering a specinlty,