Newspaper Page Text
PrticE: $2.00 Per Annum in Advancl.
JOHN H. HODGES, Editor and Buhlisher.
Trade Dollars.
Last Saturday the Congression
al House of Representatives pass
ed the bill providing for the retire-
Dunbar—Brown.
On the 19th insh, at the resi
dence of the bride’s mother, near
Pittsburgh, Ga., Mr. John
Perry, Thursday, February 17.
The., forty-ninth . Gongress will
expire two weeks from to-day.
Gossip now has it that Attorney
General Garland is to be married
soon.
Secbetaby Manning will retire
from the Cabinet on the 15th of
March next.
In material development, Geor
gia will contin ae to be in the front
rank of the procession.
The Griffin Daily Sun has again
changed hands. Mr. W. H. H.
Searcy is now proprietor of that
journal.
Miss Lula Hubst, the late
“Georgia Electric Girl,” was re
cently married to Mr. Paul Atkin
son, formerly her business mana
ger.
At the annual election of the
Holton Farmers’ Club, held re
cently at Holton, Bibb county, Ga.,
Mr. Edgar A. Ross was elected
President.
It is rumored that the Central
railroad shops are to be removed
from Savannah to Macon, but the
rumor has no official voucher at
tached to it
The Senatorial leection in the
34th district of Georgia, to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of
Senator E. M. Word, will take
place some time in March.
The New York bank statement
shows that the associated National
banks held last Saturday $18,609,-
600 in excess of the rule requiring
them to hold in reserve 25 per cent
of their capital.
The bill now pending in the
"United States Congress for im
provements in the navy and coast
defeses, appropriates $71,000,000
for new ships, defensive arrange
ments, and armament.
ment and re-coinage of trade dol-! D. Dunbar, of Butler, Ga., was
Iars. The essential features of the: married to Miss Leila 3L Brown,
bill as passed, are as follows:
“Section L For a period of six
months after the passage of this
act, the trade dollars, if not de-
faeed, mutilated or stamped, shall
be received at their face value in
payment of all dues to the United
States, and shall not again be paid
out or in any other manner issued.
Section 2 provides that during the
above period the holder of trade
dollars not mutilated, defaced or
stamped, receive in exchange on
presentation at the treasury, or
any sub-treasury, a like amount
and value, dollar for dollar, in
standard silver dollars, or in any
subsidiary silver coins, at the op
tion of the holder.”
“Section 3 directs that the trade
dollars received by the govern
ment in payment of dues or in ex
change, shall not be paid out, but
shall be re-coined into standard
silver dollars or subsidiary coin,
at the discretion of the secretary
of the treasury, provided that the
re-coinage of trade dollars re-coin-
ed under this act, shall not be con
sidered as part of the silver bul
lion required to be purchased and
coined into standard dollars, as re
quired by the act of February 28,
1878. Section 4 repeals all laws
authorizing the coinage and issu
ance of trade dollars.”
Tlie Situation,—Note No. 10.
Written for The Home Journal.
Engineers,'brewers, and other
workingmen in New York, have
.recently refused to quit work on
■an order issued by Assembly 49
KLnights of Labor of that city. It
seems that the order is losing its
grip.
President Alexander and sev
eral other officials of the Georgia
Central railroad, left Savannah
Tuesday night on a tour of inspec
tion of the lines of road and work
shops of the entire system and its
connections.
A number of Senators and Rep
resentatives gave an excellent ban
quet at Washington last Saturday
night to the Gridiron club, which
is composed of correspondents of
the leading daily newspapers of
the United States.
The colored people of Florida
will hold a State Industrial Fair at
Jacksonville during the week be
ginning on the 15th of March next.
The fair will be under the auspi
ces of the Colored State Fair As
sociation of Florida.
The Texas legislature recently
appropriated $100,000 for the re
lief of sufferers in the section of
that State that was stricken with
drouth last summer and fall.
Commissioners were appoined and
they are now at work.
The National Cotton Exchange
reports the total supply of cotton
from crop of 1886, that had been
marketed up to January 31st 1887,
to be 5,316,430 bales, againgt 5,-
143,675 bales for the correspond
ing period of the previous year.
At the semi-annual- meeting of
the Georgia State Agricultural
Society, held at Americas last
week, it was decided to locate the
State fair permanently at Macon.
Atlanta was very anxious to secure
ihe fairy and still desires the au
thorities to hold a fair there on
alternate years.
There is no need for the ser
vices of professional pension at
torneys in securing pensions un
der the federal laws. When an
application is properly made out,
the representative in Congress
from the district of the applicant
will cheerfully see that it reaches
the pension authorities.
A company has been organized
at Eastover, South Carolina, for
the manufacture of refined firno-
linic oil from raw pine wood. This
oil is used for mixing with paints,
and it is believed will in a short
while displace, to a great extent,
linseed and other oils now used
As time moves along in the even
tenor of its way, circumstances al
ter cases, everything changes, suc
cesses and reverses overtake the
people, and those who pay dearest
for their whistles, will be apt to
blow them loudest and oftenest, if
not the longest; but they will not
be apt to buy another of the same
kind, nor at the same price. Such
has been the experience of the
farmers within the last decade;
they are all catering to the music
of dearly bought whistles. Infat
uated by the fabulous prices of
cotton immediately after the late
war, the farmers, throughout the
cotton producig region, saw in
their visionary dreams vast for
tunes looming up before them,—
nothing but an effort upon their
part was necessary to put these
vast "visionary fortunes in their
pockets. But in secret attire be
hind the throne stood the verita
ble watch-doge, keeping incessant
watch over these fortunes. They
saw what the farmers did not see;
the raw' side of the hoe-cake.
They saw that to make money it
required money; and this, the
farmers of the South, who had
suffered the losses and misfor
tunes of the war, did not have.
At this unfortunate moment they
were not slow to proffer the needed
money, or its equivolent at usuri-
ouse rates of interest ranging any
where from one to five hundred
per cent. The hoodwinked farm
ers, in their infatuation, at once, J
and with alacrity, accepted the
proffered help, and went to work
to recuperate their losses, and
build up their waste places.
Spindle Shanks.
of Talbot county, Rev. J. W.
Domingos officiating.
The marriage occurred at $
o’clock, p. m., snd was a brilliant
affair. At the hour appointed, as
a beautiful march was played by
one of the young ladies at the
piano, the attendants entered the
parlor in the following order:
Mr. Eddie Dunbar, of Houston,
and Miss Annie Brown, of Talbot;
Mr. Martin Thompson and Miss
Cora Dunbar, of Houston; Mr.
Walter Stewart and Miss Lizzie
Russ, of Butler; and Dr. C. A.
Rider and Miss Lucy McCoy, of
Talbotton.
Then came the groom and the
bride. All the lady attendants
were beautifully attired; and the
young men were never more hand
some.
The-ceremony and congratula
tions over, supper was announced,
and all filed in to a most magnifi-
GEORGIA GLEANINGS^
Rumor says a Dalton *man has
made a considerable sum of money
from investments iu Chattanooga
real estate.
The Dawson oil mills have sus
pended operations. . Scarcity of
seed is the cause..
cent table. The table seemed to
Ip is insisted that a citizen of
Georgia should be a member of the
commission"under which the inter
state commerce will be operated.
This claim is based on the ground
there are more lines of railroad in
Georgia than in any other South
ern state. The most prominent
applicants for this commissioner-
James E. Childs, of Granger- ! !§§% Ex-President Hanoi, of
ville, has a boy only 15 years old, i ft Cen “ *odroad, ex-Govemor
-who weighs nearly 200 pounds. j James M. Smith, and Hon. Samuel
Barnett.
Forty firms are engaged in the j
manufacture of turpentine between j New Advertisements.
Hawkinsville and Darien.
The Georgia Match Factory at
Gainesville is making 100 gross a
day, and will soon iucrease the
o utput.
A. M. Durham, of Greensboro,
has a barlow kiiite that was made
O-ZEOZRO-BJ- ZP-A-TTHL,
PERRY, - - - - GEORGIA,
-DEALER IN-
in 1760. It is well preserved, and
cuts like a razor.
A part of the molds for making
$20 gold pieces was found in the
ruins of' a burned bouse near
Buchanan last week by Isaac
Weatherby’s little boy.
The big clock bought by Pulas
ki county for the court house is
groan under its rich and almost
endless variety of things most
tempting to the palate. It was
indeed a wedding supper. Rev.
N. D. Moorehouse, pastor of the
bride, was present, and graced the
occasion and the table—then all
partook.
Supper over, promenading, mu
sic, and conversation in turn, occu
pied the young until about half
the night flitted by, and*the crowd
dispersed. Thus passed an ex
ceedingly pleasant wedding occa
sion.
The groom is the second son of
Mr. D. C. Dunbar, of this county;
is a young man of good morals, in
dustrious habits, and good busi
ness capacity, and is now one of
Butler’s thriving, promising young
merchants; and he will doubtless
make a good hnsband.
The bride is an accomplished
young lady of charming beauty
and sterling piety. She taught in
the art department of the college
at Butler, during the last three
terms. We wish for the happy
young couple a bright and pros
perous future. * *
From a Little Girl.
President Cleveland vetoed
last Friday the bill granting pen
sions to all soldiers of federal
armies now dependent on labor
and unable to make a good living
by labor, irrespective of services
rendered. This bill has been
called the “Pauper pension bill,”
and was objected to by many sol
diers. The president recites his
reasons for vetoing the bilk
Mr. Editor:—I saw in a recent
issue of your paper a letter from a
little boy, so I thought you would
not object to having one from a
little Houston county girl.
My papa subscribed for the
Home Journal for me. It comes
every Friday just as my lessons
for the week are done, and I do
enjoy all the news from home.
My Grandma says little girls ought
to read newspapers, and she thinks
yours is a good one, because, un
like some others, you never print
anything that one cannot safely
read.
I am in Bamesville, a pupil at
Gordon Institute, which is every
where known to be the best and
cheapest school in the State. If
you knew how hard we have to
work and how carefully it must be
done, you would certainly say it is
the best. There are two hundred
pupils, some from other States and
from many counties in Georgia,
but I am the only one from Hous
ton. My music teacher, Miss
Lucy Goode, once lived in Perry.
Her friends will be glad to know
that she is very popular. She
teaches Art also. I am glad you
you have given the children a col
umn in your paper, for it is not
pleasant to be always “seen and
not heard.”
Beulah Hickson.
Barnesville, Ga., Feb. 12,1887.
now being put up. The clock
weighs about 3,000 pounds, and
the cost will be about $750.
The Governor has appointed the
following board of trustees of the
State Lunatic Asylum, the term of
the members to expire in Decem
ber, 1888: Thomas F. Newell,
William H. Hall, Thomas M Lat
imer, and John D. Erwin, of
Baldwin county, and Thomas S.
Hopkins, of Thomas county.
Editor Richardson, formerly of
the Savannah Times, will go into
the newspaper business in Bir
mingham, Ala.
About 200 children are attending
school in Dawson.
Savannah lias upwards, of three
hundred bar-rooms iu successful
operation.
The appointment of Morris S.
Belknap General Superintendent
of the Central Railroad has been
officially announced by President
Alexander, -and Mr. Belknap has
taken charge.
Hon. Clark Howell,- son of
Hon. Evan P. Howell, of the At
lanta Constitution, was appointed
a Post Office Inspector a few days
ago. He will serve in Georgia.
Jackson county is now building
a substantial stone jail, and a
dwelling in front thereof for the
sheriff’s residence, at a cost of
$7,500. They will be creditable
structures when finished.
CL s:. a^OOZ3Ei,
PEIIEY, GEORGIA,
DEALER IN
Staple Dry Goods, Shoes for Old
aod Yoi
All Kiads of Groceries,
ERESH MEATS, ICE
AND LEMONS.
SEWING MACHINES, OILS AND FI2TUBES
OF ALL HINDS.
Seed Irish Potatoes
AND
Fresh Garden Seeds-
DIXIE PLOW FIXTURES.
jgr I Will Buy HIDES, BEESWAX,
TALLOW, EGGS, snd all kinds of
Country Produce. Give me a trial
C. H. MOORE,
Feb. 10, 1887. Perry, Ga.
money]
in business w w
to be made. Cut this out and re
turn to ns, and we will send yon
free something of great value and
importance to yon; it will start you
in business ^ which will bring j^n in inDromon-
ty right away than anything else in this world.
Anyone can do the work and live at home. Either
sex; all agos. Somethihg new that just coins mon
ey for all workers. We will staat yon; capital not
needed. This is one of the important, genuine
chances of a lifetime. Those who arc ambitious
and enterprising will not delay. Grand outfit free.
Address TRUE & 00.,. Augusta, Maind. Feb.17
The Cosmopolitan
The handsomest, most entertaining, low price,
illustrated family magazine in the world.
($2.50 per year, with a $2.25 premium
free.) Sixty-four beautifully printed pages in
each number, filled with short stories, sketches,
travels, adventures, bright and brief scientific
and literary articles, by distinguished American
and foreign writers, such as Julian Hawthorne,
Harriet Prescott Spofford, George Parsons
Lathrop, Louise Chandler Moulton, J. Mac
donald Oxley, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, H. H.
Boyesen, Catherine Owen, Rey. R. Heber
Newton, Alphonse Daudet, Paul Heyse, Count
. ~. - . - Wests
FTTBUITURE!
FOR CASH OR ON INSTALLMENT.
PARLOR SUITS, CHAMBER SUITS, BEDSTEADS,
-CHAIRS, TABLES, SAFES, MATTRESSES.
BUREAUS, Etc., of all Descriptions.
CASKETS AND COFFINS
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, FROM THE FINEST TO THE
CHEAPEST, AT LOWEST PRICES.
USE
THE FARQUHAR COTTON PLANTER,
BECAUSE
IT IS THE BEST ONE MADE!
It drops iho unrolled seed with perfect regularity, ancl m
any desired amoirni.
UfW Price lower than any first class Planter. Send or
ders to
A. B. FARQUHAR & CO-, Macon, Ga.
GARDEN AND FIELD SEEDS.
GRASSES AND CLOVER.
FORAGE CROPS IN PARTICULAR
SUBJECT OF CAREFUL INVESTIGATION aND PROPER
EFFORTS USED TO INDUCE JUDICIOUS USE OF
THEM BY COTTON PLANTERS.
Headquarters for Seed of Kaffir Com.
Tolstoi, Th. Dostoivsky, William Wes tall and
many others. Also entertaining-XCTVEN 11,15
—* ’-’iHOlfSEMOI.Di'
The suspense of the people
along the routes of the proposed
extension of the Covington &
Macon, and the Georgia, Southern
& Florida railroads has not yet
been relieved. The, people have
not yet been informed definitely
concerning the ability o£ these
companies to construct the pro
posed roads.
Iron, lead and coal have been
discovered near Vicksburg, Mis
sissippi, and lands that were con
sidered almost valueless a week-
ago, cannotsnow be bought at fab
ulous prices. A stock company
has been formed to develop the
mineral lands, and experts declare
that the ores are exceedingly rich.
A Vicksburg boom is in order.
A firm of business men in
Chester county, South Carolina,
are extensively engaged in the
manufacture of Sassafras oil from
the roots of the sassafras tree. It
is claimed that the product meets
with a ready sale, and
M, . ----- that the
for painting and kindred purposes. • business yields handsome profits.
Augusta, Savannah and Mariet
ta experienced destructive fires on
last Saturday. At Augusta the
Masonic Theatre, Globe Hotel,
and thirteen stores were burned,
amounting to a total loss of about
$200,000. At Savannah the S. F.
& W. railroad shops were destroy
ed, amounting to a loss of $74,000.
One hundred and fifty men are
thrown out of work in conse
quence. At. Marietta the Van
Slack Infirmary was destroyed.
Loss about $20,000.
C. T. Guernsey, secretary and
treasurer of the Macon (Ga.) Bicy
cle Club, will ride his wheel from
Niagara Falls to Macon, a distance
of about 1,200 miles, per wagon
route. The start will be as soon as
weather wifi permit, either in June
or July.
Governor Gordon and his staff
will visit Savam-ak on the 22nd.
The Elberton Air-Line railroad
will be changed to a broad gauge.
After the 4th of March next
Hon. Frank Hiscoek will be U. S.
Senator of New York, displacing
Senator Warner Miller. It is said
that Miller resents Hiscok’s suc
cess and refuses to recognize him
even as an acquaintance. He re
fused to attend a dinner recently
given to Hiscock at Washington,
saying that he had two much self-
respect to sit at the same table
with Hiscock. Thus it is that
another split is made in the ranks
of New York republicans. Yet it
may be that the politicians do not -medicine as
represent the people
The order of the Knights of
Labor has been sued at Philadel
phia for the payment of debts in
curred during tbe mill troubles at
Augusta, Ga. The suit is brought
under u clause in the constitution
of the order making the general
order of the Knights of Labor lia
ble for debts incurred by local as
semblies in support of lock-outs.
This liability does not apply to
debts incurred in support of
strikes.
Astonishing Success.
It is the duty of every person who
has used Boschee’s German Syrup
to let its wonderful qualities be
known to their friends in curing
Consumption severe Coughs,Croup
Asthma, Pneumonia, and in fact
all throat and lung diseases. No
person can nse it without imme
diate relief. Three doses will re
lieve any case, and we consider it
the duty of all Druggists to rec
ommend it the poor, dying con
sumptive, at least to try one bot
tle, as 80,000 dozen bottles were
sold last year, and not one case
where it failed reported. Such a
the German Syrup
cannot be too widely known. Ask
your druggist about it Sample
bottles tatry, sold at 10 cents.
Regular size, 75 cents.. Sold by
all Druggists and Dealers, in the
United States, and Canada.
WORKING CUSSES
ATTEN.
TIOS!
We are now prepared to furnish all classes -with
employment at some, the whole of the time, or for
their spare n
their spare moments. P-nsiness new, light and
profitable. ~
Persons of either sex easily earn from
50 cents to $5.00 per evening, and a proportional
“lie business.
sum by devoting all their time to the
Boys and girls earn nearly as much as den. That
all who see thiB may send their address, and te^t
the business, wo make this offer. To such as are
not well satisfied, we wilisend one dollar to pay
for the trouble of writing. Full particulars and
irese GEORGE SXIN8QN & CO,,
outfit free. Address
'Portland, Maine.
and invaluable IKOUSI2]fIOX.I> departments.
One or more illustrated articles and several full-
page engravings in every number.
A Shannon Letter and
Bill File or a Shannon
Sheet-Music Binder
Free to every
Subscriber.
These premiums sell
everywhere for $2,25
each. Tbe File Is the most
perfect device ever invent
ed for the preservation and
classification (alphabetic-
ally and according to date)
of all letters, bills, etc.
Any paper can be referred
to, taken out and put back
without disturbing the
others. With the Binder
one can insert or take oot
any piece of music without
disturbing any other sheet.
Get SAMPLE COPY at NEWS STAND or
■end 20 Cents to publishers.
A5EHTS WAHTBD. BIO COHMISSIOH3 PAID.
Schlicht & Field Co., Rochester, N.Y.
IKK and ART.
L. & B. S. M. H.
Want to see you. iu fart, have got something im
portant to ggy you, and not owning this entire pa
per .in fact being limited by the gentlemanly and
good-natured publisher to 10 inches space, we (an-
not begin to say all we want to, or should, in jus
tice to the stock we have for your inspection. It
wi'l not only delight you to come and see our beau
tiful Temple of Musieand Art, but it willpayyou.
Still we know how impossible it is for < verybody
to come to Savannah, and to those who cannot
come, all we say ie write us, and we will doall we
can for you by sending you complete descriptive
catalogues of the goods you may wish to know
about.
Here they are, eleven of them. You wiil find
full descriptions of ail goods under different heads
and prices, will be found lower than any hereto,
fore heard of.
CATALOGUE No. 1. Piakos.
CATALOGUE No. 2. Organs.
C VTALOGUE No. 3. Music.
CATALOGUE No 4, Band Instruments.
CATALOGUE No. 5. Band and Orchestra
Music.
CATALOGUE No. 6. Automatic Instruments.
CATALOGUE No. 7. Small Instruments.
CATALOGUE No. 8. Strings.
CATALOGUE No. 9. Piano Stools and Covebs.
CATALOGUE T o. 10. Artist’s Materials.
CATALOGUE No 11. Frames.
Please indicate by number the Catalogue that
you wiBh.
n-nAo Chickering, Mason & Hamlin, Matk-
jLiclIlUiS. ughek, Bent k Arion.R S2G0 to $1,00;
$25 cash and S10 a month.
„ Mason & Hamlin, Bay State k Pack-
Wrgdllb. arg. $27lo $500. $5 cash and $5
per month,
MllCIP 100.000pieces in stock, new
uutci iu.uoiGa miis’c received as soon as
published. 2c. a copy up.
Mn ci r» ■RnnVc For Churches. Schools, S.
music JJOUKb. fchools, Ledges, Choirs
The crop of 1886, grown by Dr. <J. H. Watkins, the orig
inal propagator in this country of this grain, 50 cents per
pound, or by mail for 65 cents por pound. Also pure seed
of Millo Maize, African Millet, Yellow Millo Maize or
Dhoura, and other varieties of Sorghums for forage.
EARLY AMBER AND ORANGE CANES.
Pure strain of either, grown direct from selected Kansas sti ck, the
best for syrup and sugar, ns well as for forage purposes, being more
saccharine, BSTWrite for circulars of either garden and farm see ds,
grass and clover, or forage crops.
GKKKRAL AG ENCY FOR
PeterMn Improved Cotton Seed,
Prolific, Yielding Forty per cent. Net Lint.
S2T - Prompt attention to correspondence, and cash orders filled with dif-paicb.
Address J. H. ALEXANDER, SEED STORE,
t April 1. ‘ Augusta, Ga.
T. C. HENDRIX.
O. r. WILLINGHAM.
HENDRIX & WflLKFM,
HITES,
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN
NEWELS, ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER, SHINGLES,
ALL KINDS OE BUILDING MATERIAL,
LIME, PLASTEIL CEMEKT, HAIR,LATHS
PAINTS. OILS AND GLASS,
AND BUILDERS’ HARDWARE.
(DIXIE "WORKS.) Foot of Cherry Street, MACON, GA.
Dec. 9—4m.
MACON CHINA STORE
TRIANGULAR BLOCK, MACON, GEORGIA.
and Home Use.
Band Instruments. L ^8 rt from°t£
World’s best Factory, used by all the leading
bands of tbe south. Be sure and send for prices.
Ttnrwl TVTnctio We fnrDish everything
X»dHU JjAUSIL-. published. All the new
pieces received as soon as published, and our
customers furnished at lowest prices.
Musical °,? r slock ia complete in
all small goods, and we
Morph flTidicjP C3 “ F0U at Prise® thatena-
JX1.C1 LlldlHlioc. bleus to claim the largest
sales in the South. Buying direct from the lar
gest manufacturers in the world, we can sell at
prices that aefy competition. Our goods fully
lfi I exactly as repre-
guaranteed, and will be found
sented.
Strings i . m .P ort SP5 brings direct,jind
_ espedallv call attention to our Pag
anini string, which is used by all leading players.
Avficf’fi We keep e- erything needed by
XVI USlo Professionals and Amateurs,and
TV!a+zx-piolc Ornish all materials used in
AYvabCl painting on canvass, cloth, brass,
glass or china.
Pi m>oc Tie finest and largest assortment
X ibtuica. ever shown 1b the South. It win
pay prospective purchasers to come to Savannah
if for nothing else
Picture
than'to look throngh our im
mense stock. We have Paintings, Engravings,
Pastels, Oleographs. Intotints, Artotypes, Chro-
mos, Sketches, Drawings, etc., etc.
We carry a stock of the finest
moulding manufactured, over 500
Frames. $^ rent
the latest and most _
manfactnre the finest frames that can be made.
Onr prices the lowest.
Repairing
Department,
had in the United States, for repairing and over
hauling Pianos, Organs, Violins, Guitars, Ban-
jos, Accordeons, Orgninettea, Flutes, or any in
strument made. -Onr prices will be reasonable
for first-class work, and orders will receive
prompt attention.
BOS’T FORGET
PIANOS and OSSANS $5 and $10 a Month.
We sell Pianos and.Organs on easy term*, and
at lowest prices offered by any house iu theU. S.
Pianos offered at $25 cash and $10 permonth. Or*
gans for $5 cash and $5 per month. All newin-
strumente, fully guaranteed, and can be returned
if not fully satisfactory after fifteen days trial.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
China, Crockery, Glassware, Chandeliers,
Lamps, Tinware, Wocdenware.
T able and Pocket Cutlerv. Stoves and Grates
DON’T FAIL TO SEE OUR IMMENSE STOCKS
MACON CHINA STORE,
CAMPBELL, YAIf SYCKEL & CO., Proprietors.
No.
ROGERS, WORSHAM & 09.,
4 THIRD STREET, - - - MACON, C A.
DEALERS IN
GROCERIES AND FERTILIZERS.
Agents in Middle Georgia for Fertilizers manufactured by
John Merry man <fe Co., Lister Bros
Georgia Chemical Works.
We call the especial attention of planters to our
gokihle B@ue Bust,
and
Which has always had the highest analysis of any ncid phosphate for
composting, ever sold in Georgia.
ggf“ We arenow ready to deliver all brands of Fertilizers—Cotton
Seed Meal and Kainit. Call in to see us when in Macon.
ROGERS, WORSHAM & CO.,
MACON, GEORGIA-
144 THIRD STREET,
Oct 7,1886—6m.
JOB. WO
Bring us your JOB WO
Guarantee Satisfaction
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Ludden & Bates’ Southern Music House,
SAVANNAH, GEOBGIA.
duplicate Macon Price
L