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ISAACS’ CAFE,'
413 Third Street,
MACON, CA.
I have recently returned in harness to
meet my old friends, and will endeavor
to make as many new ones as possible. I
am now prepared to
FEED ALL WHO COME,
and will give them a cordial greeting and
satisfy the inner man with tlie best in the
market at most reasonable prices. My
Restaurant is more
ESPECIALLY foe LADIES,
having no connection with saloons
If yon want anything choice to cat, you will
know
That Isaac’s is the place to go.
Old Veteran Caterer,
E. ISAACS.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
S. H. Eumpb, executor of the will of
Mrs. Caroline Humph, of said county,
deceased, has applied for dismission
from said trust.
This is therefore to cite aU persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1898, of the court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
Juno 0, 1898.
JOSEPH PALMER, Ordinary
BICYCLE SUPPORT.
Best attachment ever put on a wheel.
Light, strong, sure, always goes with
wheel, stands it anywhere, in the house
or out doors, onThg, road, at the races,
ball game, etc. 'Bit on if desired. All
' nickled. SI. 50, express paid,
W. H. MORGAN,
Peabody, Kansas.
Cleveland Bicycles.
Standard for Quality, and
More Popular Than Ever..
A SPLENDID RECORD!
\Vc introduced the....
FIRST safety bicycle of standard type.
FIRST bicycle of light weight and nar
row tread.
FIRST cross-thread fabric tire. Strong
and resilient.
FIRST bicycle chain with hardened
block and pin.
FIRST dust-proof, ball-retaining bear
ing. (Barwell.)
FIRST bicycles with frames built of
large tubing.
OUR ’9S FEATURE:—Improved Barwell
bearings with self-oiling de
vice. On Clevelands only.
..’98 MODELS, $50, $65, $75..
H. A. LOZIER & CO., Mfrs.,
Catalogue Free. Cleveland, Ohio.
stew, yonre, BOSTON, niir.ADKLi'ii r,\
BALTIMORE, BUFFALO, DETROIT,
SAN FRANCISCO, LONDON,
PARIS, 1IAMBURO.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points arc on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning until Monday
noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating cither a busi
ness or pleasure trip to tlic East should
Investigate and consider the advantages
offered via Sarannali and Steamer lines.
The rates generally are considerably
cheaper by this route, and, in addition
to this, passengers saTe sleeping car
fare,and the expense of meals en route.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence via tlie
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to New York and Boston,
and the Merchants and Miners line
to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling public
is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
handsomely fnrnished staterooms,
^ modern sanitary arrangements. The
* tables are supplied with all the delica
cies of the Eastern and Southern mar
kets. All the luxury and comforts of
a modern hotel while on board ship,
affording every opportunity for rest,
recreation or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
look especially after ladies and chil
dren traveling alone.
Steamers sail from Savannah for
New York daily except Thursdays and
Sundays, and for Boston twice a week.
For information as to rates and sail
ing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations, apply to nearest ticket
agent of this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, Gen. Passenger Agt.,
E. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, Ga.
50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Trade Marks-
Designs
... Copyrights &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Commnnica-
sentfree. Oldest i
• Patents taken
special notice, without c
Scientific Hmericatt.
A handsomely illustrated weekly, largest dr- *
cnlallon of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a
- Bold hy all newsdealers.
year; four months, ?Li~
MUNN &Co. 3G,Broad ^’New York
Branch Office, OB F St., Washington, D. C.
NESBITT REVIEWS
HIS STEWARDSHIP
The Retiring Commissioner of
Agriculture to Farmers.
GRATEFUL FOR SUPPORT
He Gives a Brief Resume off the Inno
vations and Retrenchments Inaugu
rated Since He Took Charge of the
Department Eight Years Ago.
Department of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Sept. 1, 1898.
As this will perhaps be my last
“monthly talk” to the farmers of Geor
gia before my successor takes charge of
the affairs of the agricultural depart
ment, I wish through this medium to
thank the people of the state and the
farmers more especially for the manner
in which they have “held up my hands”
in my efforts to build up the agricult
ural interests of the state and to focus
publio attention on some of the more
important agricultural issues of the day.
I am indeed grateful for the considera
tion and courtesy which I have received
from a large majority of my fellow citi
zen? during my administration of the
affairs of tne agricultural department,
and I feel that I owe it to myself and to
them to give a short review of my stew
ardship since they entrusted me with so
important work.
Notwithstanding the wise and benefi
cent aims of its founders, some, un
checked abuses had found their way
into the agricultural department through
the inspection of oils and fertilizers,
duties simple enough in themselves, re
quiring integrity of purpose rather than
superior skill and knowledge, but which
brought disproportionately large emolu
ments to the fortunate holders of snch
In justice to my predecessors it should
be stated that the condition re'erred to
was the outgrowth of an unforseen
and rapidly increased consumption of
both oils and fertilizers, for which
no provision was made in the
stante law of the state. At leading
central points like Atlanta or Savannah,
under this system, as much as $8,000 or
$10,000 annually were received by indi
vidual inspectors of oils and fertilizers,
these two offices being at that time con
solidated. That is, one inspector re
ceived about as .much as the entire su
preme judiciary of the state. In 1890,
when I took charge, the farmers, whose
interests were especially to be served by
the department, having fonnd a few
tares amidst an abundance of wheat,
were in the front ranks of those who
were willing to tear down an institu
tion which had been built up mainly
for their protection and guidance.
partmenb I can refer with a feeling ol
just pride. The department has been
elevated to a high plane of usefulness,
and tiie farmers throughout the 'state
are beginning to realize its importance
and close relation which it bears to
every line of their business. The oppo
sition among them to the department,
once so pronounced, has subsided, nnd
it is with gratitude that I point to
the fact, that my staunchest supporters
have come from the ranks of the farm
ers, those who once so bitterly opposed
it I trust that the farmers will extend
to my successor the same cordial sup
port that thffy have given to me and
that he will rise to the full measure of
the vast work yet to be accomplished
through the Georgia department of ag
riculture.
It is the farmers who keep the life
blood of our country in fresh, healthy
condition. The business of farming
feeds the whole people. It is the basis
of the prosperity of our transportation
lines in railroads and ships, as well as
of all the money transactions of the
country. It pays its own taxes and
much besides that should be paid by the
monied powers of the country. It sends
the life blood coursing through the ar
teries of trade and commerce. It lies
at the foundation of the moral and po
litical power of the nation. Without
its sturdy support all that is beautiful
in literature and art, and even in sci
ence, would languish and die. Statis
tics show that but for the infusion of
fresh blood from the country into city
families the latter would die out in three
generations.
It has been said that the success of a
nation is measured by the condition of
its agriculture. Granting this to be
true, how all important that every
means, agricultural departments, ex
periment stations, farmers’ institutes,
agricultural and mechanical colleges,
I agricultural societies, farmers’ clubs,
j - county and state fairs, in other words
| every educational engine should be used
to elevate and broaden our agricultural
interests. I believe that Georgia is on
the threshold of a wonderful agricult
ural era. May her people, from the
governor down to the humblest citizen
within her borders, work harmoniously
and together to secure the advantages
which will accrue to each and every one
of them, when Georgia becomes a self
sustaining state, buying largely, per
haps, but selling more.
R. T. Nesbitt, Commissioner.
Universal Peace Proposal.
By order of Emperor Nicholas,
Czar of Russia, Count Muravieff, the
foreign minister, on August 24th
handed to the foreign diplomats at
j St Petersburg a note declaring that
j the maintenance of peace and the
reduction of the exeesrive arma
ments now crashing all nations is
the ideal for which all governments
ought to strive.
The text of the note follows:
“The maintenance of general peace
and the possible reduction of the ex
cessive armaments which weigh up
on all nations present themselves in
existing conditions to the whole
world as an ideal toward which the
endeavors of all governments should
be directed. The humanitarian and
magnanimous ideas of his majesty,
the emperor, my august master, have
been won over to this view in the
conviction that this lofty aim is in
conformity with the most essential
interests and legitimate views of all
the powers; and the imperial gov
ernment thinks the present moment
would be very favorable to seeking
the means.
“International discussion is the
most effectual means of insuring all
people's benefit—a real, durable
peace, above all, putting an end to
the progressive development of the
present armaments.
“In the course of the last twenty
years the longing for general ap
peasement has grown especially pro
The Philippines Problem.
don’t think I am assuming too much
when I state that in the eight years of
my incumbency the department has
gradually been growing in favor with
the-farmers and that my earnest efforts
to make it effectively and actively use
ful to them are even now bearing fruit.
The state legislature was in session
when I took charge in 1890, and I im
mediately suggested and urged the abol
ishment of the system by which oil in
spectors were receiving snch exorbi
tant fees. An act allowing them to re
tain only $125 per month out of inspec
tors’ receipts and requiring them to
make monthly returns to the state
treasury of all sums in excess of
this amount,* was approved Dec.
20, 1890, and since then by this in
novation $100,000 from oil and $125,000
from fertilizers have been saved to the
state and placed in the treasury.
In December, 1891, following the
same line of retrenchment, the fixed
salaries of the 12 guano inspectors were
reduced from $125.00 to $83.33 per
month, and only foiqffpf these were kept
on duty the whole year, the others from
four to six months. Here was another
saving of several thousand dollars. The
office expenses were also reduced by the
salary of one clerk $1,800.00 annually,
and although the office duties have
steadily increased until they have been
more than doubled and trebled, the work
has been carried on by the original
number of clerks, with a slight increase
of salaries.
During my administration the whole
plan of fertilizer inspection has been
revolutionized. The old plan was in
Hulk, and before leaving the factories.
The new bill, which is now the law,
was most carefully planned to give full
protection to both buyer and seller. It
provides that the inspecting shall be
done only after the fertilizer is shipped
to different points and put upon the
market in separate packages. The pro
visions of this bill are such as to place
Georgia in the lead as to the judicious
and careful supervision of her immense
fertilizer trade. This law, as compared
with those in force in other states, is
superior, which is evidenced by the fact
that many inquiries have come on this
subject to this department from differ
ent southern states. The Georgia fer
tilizer law lias finally become the basis
for similar laws-in her sister states.
Another important change has been
the removal of the state laboratory from
Athens to the capital, where the impor
tant work of analyzing every brand put
on sale in the state, is carried on under
the immediate supervision and inspec-
tian of the commissioner of agriculture.
Tliifc affords increased advantages and
facilities to tbs' state chemist in his
daily routine.work which has increased
tremendously since 1890.
Another innovation which has made
the department the medium of comma-
eating valuable information to the farm
ers throughout the state is the substitu
tion of plate matter, furnished to th'e
weekly press, in lien of the circulars
and bulletins previously issued. The
“monthly talks” and answers to ques
tions containing practical hints on topics
connected with the farm, the garden,
the dairy, the orchard and kindred sub
jects, carefully arranged as to time and
season of tHe year, are published in the
weekly papers of the state. These go
to the remotest sections each month and
thousands of farmers, who are practi
cally cut off from the usual sources of
information, are thus reached and placed
in touch with the busy world and kept
informed on many subjects most valua
ble in the conduct of their farm opera
tions. Besides these publications the de
partment has issued a handsomely illus
trated manual entitled “Georgia, a
Fair Field For Homeseekers and In
vestors,” and in addition to this an
other larger volume has been prepared
and issued entitled "Georgia, Her Re
sources and Possibilities.” The latter
volume was intended as a sequel to
‘The Commonwealth of Georgia,” and
not only points out the various advances
made in the economic industries of the
state, but shows by an exhibit of
the resources of every county through
out her- length and breadth what
her boundless possibilities are. Both
of these volumes have been widely
circulated and widely read, and I be
lieve have been largely instrumental in
advertising the enormous advantages I
which our state offers to those seeking !
homes in a healthy section, where wise \
laws are rigidly enforced, and where the ;
faithful laborer will in due time reap ;
the rewards of faithfnl work.
To my rgeqrd in. the agricultural d§;
Collier’s Weekly.
Much more serious is the inter
national problem presented in the
Philippines. The fate of those is
lands is a matter of great moment
not only to Great Britain, France
and Spain, but also to Germany,
Russia, China and Japan. The dip
lomatic representatives of the Pekin
and Toldo governments, as well as
the embassadors of the German Em
pire and the French Republic, have
already requested President McKin
ley to indicate his intentions with
regard to the Philippine archipelago.
The balance of power on the western
shores of the Pacific was not affect
ed, so long as the islands remained
in the hands of Spain, which was
strong enough to repress piracy, but
not strong enough to constitute a
factor of appreciable weight in an
international coalition. Should the
Philippines, on the other hand, fall
under the control of any of the great
maritime nations which already pos
sess coigns of vantage in the far
East, the balance of power would be
upset, owing not merely to the
wealth and population of the islands,
but to their unrivaled strategic posi
tion. In the hands of Germany, for
example, they would be a perpetual
menace to the French dependencies
in farther India, to the British es
tablishments at Singapore and Hong
Kong, to the Japanese island of For
mosa, and to the southeastern coast
of China. In the hands of France,
they would, in conjunction with
Anam and Tonquin, convert the so-
called China Sea, which is the great
highway of travel between Europe
and the far East, into a French lake.
To Great Britain, they would prove
more valuable than any territory on
the Chinese mainland, because they
could be more easily defended, and
the base which they would offer for
the operations of a fleet would as
sure to England ascendancy in ev
ery Chinese seaport. Could J apan
secure the archipelago, she would
double her insular posssessions, and
would become a formidable compet
itor for the eventual acquisition of
the great islands further south.
There is no doubt that, next to the
Spaniards, the great powers would
prefer to see the Americans estab
lished at Manila, provided, of course,
we did not enter into a political alli
ance with Great Britain. Had we
made the mistake of forming such a
league, all the great maritime na
tions interested in the far East
would have combined to bar us out
of the Philippines, and they would
have the sagacity to fight now, while
our navy is comparatively small, and
can render, therefore, to Great Brit
ain much less assistance than it will
be able -to give some years hence.
By adhering to our traditional poli
cy of avoiding entangling alliances,
we shall excite the minimum of jeal
ousy and apprehension, and shall
undoubtedly be suffered to control
the Philippine archipelago, either as
annexed territory or under the guise
of a protectorate.
Free Technological Scholarship b
Mr. Aaron French, of Pittsburg,
Pa., has supplemented his munifi--
cent gift of $5,600 to the textile de
partment of the School of Technolo
gy by giving $500 for the payment
of the expenses, fees, tuition, etc., of
some young man in the school. This
fund will be available September 28,
Rev. W. A. Dunnett, a Man Whose Good W<
Widely Known—He Relates Events in His
Career of General Interest.
*
1898, the date of opening of j.he fall
mi , - , n . , Throughout Canada, .mu. .....
session. The scholarship is to be boundar £ of Outario to the Atlantic Ocean,
awarded by competitive examination
under the following conditions:
. The applicant must be fifteen and
a half year's old and a resident of
Georgia.
The parents,guardian or family of
the applicant must not have taxable
property amounting to over $3,000.
The applicant must present certifi
cates of good character and exemp
lary habits.
The applicant must present him
self at some place in Georgia to be
named hereafter by President Hall,
on September 28th for a written ex
amination in the following subjects:
Algebra (Lyman Hall’s preferred)
through quadratics, Plane geometry
(first book), English grammar.
The papers of applicants will be
examined by the school faculty, and
the scholarship will be awarded to
the one receiving highest average.
The scholarship may be forfeited
at any time by deficiency in studies,
neglect of duty or breach of rules.
The beneficiary must accept the
money as a loan and give monthly
noimeed in the consciences of civil-! notes of $10 to $25 each, due after
ized nations; and the preservation of, leaving school, without interest, and
peace has been put forward as an: thus perpetuate the scholarship,
object of international policy. It is No student who has heretofore
in its name that great states have j been a member of the Apprentice(or
concluded among themselves power-1 higher) class of the school shall be
According to a New York surgeon
of a statistical state of mind, the ex
penses of palatial St. Luke’s hospital
are so heavy and the interest on the
investment is so large that its in
mates, say 2,500 for one year, could
be boarded at swell hotels and at
tended by crack doctors, nurses, etc.,
at a considerable annual saving. St.
Luke’s is the costliest institution of
its kind in New Yorh, and it has an
endowment fund of nearly $1,000,-
000.
ful alliances.
“It is the better to guarantee
peace that they have developed in
proportions hitherto unprecedented
their military forces and still contin
ue to increase them, without shrink
ing from any sacrifice.
“Nevertheless, all these efforts
have not yet been able to bring
about the benefiicent result desired
—pacification.
“The financial charges following
the upward march strike at the very
root of public prosperity. The intel
lectual and physical strength of the
nation’s labor and capital are mostly
diverted from them natural applica
tion and are unproductively con
sumed. Hundreds of millions are
devoted to acquiring terrible en
gines of destruction, which, though
to-day regarded as the last work of
science, are destined to-morrow to
lose all them value in consequence of
some fresh discovery in the same
field. National culture, economic
progress and the production of
wealth are either paralyzed or check
ed in development. Moreover,
proportion as the armaments of each
power increase, they less and less
fulfill the object the governments
have set,before themselves.
“The economic crisis due in great
part to the system of armaments
l’outrance, and the continual danger
which lies in this massing of war
material, are transferring the armed
peace of our days into a crashing
burden which the peoples have more
and more difficulty in bearing.
“It appears evident that if this
state of things were to be prolonged
it would inevitably lead to the very
cataelyan it is desired to avert, and
the horror’s whereof make every
thinking being shudder in advance.
• “To put an end to these incessant
armaments and to seek the means of
warding off the calamities which are
threatening the whole world—such
is the supreme duty to-day imposed
upon all states,
“Filled with this idea, his majesty
has been pleased to command me to
propose to all the governments whose
representatives are accredited to the
imperial court the assembling of a
conference which shall occupy itself
with this grave problem.
“This conference will be, by the
help of God, a hapjiy presage for the
century which is about to open. It
would converge into one powerful
focus the efforts of all states sincere
ly seeking to make the great con
ception of universal peace triumph
over the elements of trouble and
discord, and it would at the same
time cement their agreement by a
corporate consecration of the prin
ciples of equity and right whereon
rest the security of states and the
welfare of peoples.”
One Minute Cough Care sur
prises people by its quick curee
and childreu may tak* it in large
quauities without the least danger.
Lf lias won for itself the best rep
utation of any preparation used to
day for colds, croup, tickling in
the throat or obstanate coughs.
Coopers Drug Storp.
The “Kloudyke” is not in it.
The town of DomstedeD, in Wur
teuburg, not only has no tax levy,
bat its funds are so well invested
that everv inhabitant receives a
bonus of $25, besides free firewood
and use of land for vegetables.
When you call for DeWitt’s
Witch H«ze| Salve the great pile
cure, don’t accept any tiling else
Don’t be talked into rccpptiug a
substitute, for piles, fi r sores for
burns. Coopers Drugstore.
You invite disappointment when
von esi eriment. DeWitt’s Little
Ear'y Kisers are pleasant, easy,
thorough little pills. They cure
cvuistipation and sick headache
j ist i b sure as you take them.
Cooper’s Drug Store.
Half of the 125,000 Scandinavi
ans in the United Stats live in
Chicago.
Subscribe for The Home Journal
An Old Idea.
Every day strengthens the belief of emi
nent physicians that impure blood is the
cause of the majority of our diseases.
Twenty-five years ago this theory was used
as a basis for the formula of Browns’ Iron
Bitters. The many remarkable cures effected
by this famous -old. household remedy arc
sufficient, to prove that the theory is correct.
Browns’Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
allowed to compete. No student who
has heretofore been a member of the
freshman (or higher) class of any
college shall be allowed to compete.
All young men who desire to com
pete for this scholarship will forward
me their names before Sept. 20th,
and will please state if it will be
more convenient for them to stand
the examination at Macon, Colum
bus, Savannah or Augusta rather
than in Atlanta.
The student securing the scholar
ship must satisfy the authorities that
he has complied with the conditions.
A catalogue of the school and full
particulars as to courses, expenses,
etc., will be sent on application.
Address, Lyman Hall. Pres.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The man with a weight on his le
can’t hope to win in the race. A
man with a weight on his health
can’t expect to compete in life and
business with those who are not
handicapped. If his brain is heavy,
and his blood sluggish, because of
constipation, he will not succeed in
doing anything very well. Constipa
tion is the cause of nine-tenths of
all sickness. Symptoms of it are sal
lowness, listlessness, poor appetite,
bad taste in the mouth, dizziness,
biliousness and lassitude. Constipa
tion can be cured easily and certain
ly by the use of Dr Pierce’s Pleas
ant Pellets. They are not at all vio
lent in their action, and yet they are
more certain than many medicines
which are so strong that they put
the system all out of order, The
great advantage of the “Pleasant
Pellets” is that they cure perma
nently.
Send 21 one-cent stamps to cover
cost of mailing only, and get - his
great book, The People’s Common
Sense Medical Adviser, absolutely
free. Address World’s Dispensary
Medidhl Association, No. 663 Main
Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
The new wife of ex-President
Harrison is said by a Washington
rumor to be very anxious for her
husbafid to be president again, in
order that she may enjoy a term as
mistress of the white house, and the
rumor goes on to say that Gen. Har
rison himself is not averse to the
idea. But there is small likelihood
that the lady will get her wish.
A CRITICAL TIME
During
the Battle
of Santiago.
SICK OR WELL, A RUSH
NIGHT AND DAY.
The Packers at. the Battle of Santiago
de Cuba were all Heroes. Their He
roic Efforts in Getting Ammunition
and Rations to the Front, Saved the
Day.
P. E. Butler, of pack-train No. 3,
writing from Santiago de Cuba, on July
23d, says: “We all had diarrhoea in
more or less violent form, and when we
landed we had no time to see a doctor,
for it was a case of rush and rush night
and day to keep the troops supplied with
ammunition and rations, but thanks to
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy, we were able to keep at
work and keep our health; in fact, I sin
cerely believe that at one critical time
this medicine was the indirect savior of
our army, for if the packers had been un
able to work there would have been uo
way of getting supplies to the front.
There were no roads that a wagon train
could use. My comrade and myself had
the good fortune to lay in a supply of
this medicine for our pack-train before
we left Tampa, and I know in four cases
it absolutely saved life.”
The above letter was written to the
manufacturers of this medicine, the
Chamberlain Medicine Co., Des Moines
Iowa. For sale by Hqltzclaw & Gilbert,
Perry, and L. W. Stewart, Myrtle, Ga.
there is no name more widely known in tem
perance and evangelistic work than that of the
Rev. W. A. Dunnett. Mr. Dunnett has been
the Grand Vice-Councillor of Ontario and
Quebec in the Royal Templars, and so popular
is he among the members of the order that in
Montreal there is a Royal Templars council
named “Dunnett Council” in his honor. For
more than ten years Mr. Dunnett has been go-
iug from place to place pursuing hw good
work, sometimes assisting resident ministers,
sometimes conducting a series of gospel tem-
f ierance meetings independently, hut always
aboring for the good of his fellows. AVhile
in Smith’s Falls a few months ago in connection
with his work lie dropped into the Record office
for a little visit with the editor. During the
conversation the Record ventured to remark
that his duties entailed an enormous amount of
hard work. To this Mr. Dunnett assented, but
added that in his present physical condition
lie was equal to any amount of hard work.
But it was not always so, he said, anil then
he gave tlie writer the following little per
sonal history, with permission to make it
public. He said that for the past thirteen
years he had been greatly troubled with a
pain in the region of his heart, from which
ne was unable to get any relief. At times it
was a dull, heavy pain, at others sharp and
severe. Oftentimes it rendered him unfit
for his engagements, nnd at all times it
made it dirlicult to move. _ His trouble was
always visible to the public and frequently
when conducting service he would give out
and doctors had to be called in to attend
him. This occurred to him in the Yonge
Street Church, Toronto; the Baptist Church,
Woodstock. N. B.; the Methodist Church,
Carleton Place, Ont. On another occasion
while preaching to an audience of 2,500
From the Smith's Falls Record.
from the western ' .
had arrived and were in attendance before
lie regained consciousness. In all these cities
and towns tlie newspapers freely mentioned
his affliction at the time. Mr. Dunnett said
he had consulted many physicians, though he
said, to be entirely fair, he Bad never been any .
great length of time under treatment by any
one doctor because of his itinerant mode of
life. In the early part of the summer of 1896,
while in Brockviile assisting the pastor of the
Wall Street Methodist Church in evangelistic
services, lie was speaking of his trouble to a
friend who urged him to try Dr. A) llhams
Pink Pills, and next day presented him witn a
dozen boxes. “-I took the pills,” Mr.
Dunnett, “and I declare to you I am ft well
man to-day. I used to worryA great deal ,
over the pain about my heart,font that is all
gone now, and I feel like a new rnan.” All
this the reverend gentleman told in a simple
conversational way, and when it was sug
gested that he let it be known, he rather
demurred, because, as he put it, ’ I am almost
afraid to say I am cured, and yet there is no
man enjoying better health to-day than I d .
At that tun:, at Mr. Dunnett’s requ st,
his statement was only published loca y,
but now writing under the date of Jan. 2 ft,
from Fitchburg, Mass., where lie has been
conducting a very successful series of evan
gelistic meetings, he says: I had held back
from writing in regard to my health, not be
cause I had forgotten, but because it seemed
too good to be true that the ohl .time pain
had gone. I cannot say whether it trill ever
return, hut I can certainly say it “as not
troubled me for months, and I am m better^
health than I have been for years. 1 :
gained in flesh, lienee in weight. I woi Id
prefer not to say anything about my appe :
tite; like the poor, it is ever with me. Yes.
I attribute my good heulth to Dr. Williams
Pink Pills, and you have my consent to nsf
the fact.”
We Manufacture aud Sell
ENGINES,
BOILERS,
COTTON GINS,
COTTON
PRESSES,
SEED COTTON
ELEVATORS
GRIST MILLS,
SAW MLLS,
AND
EVERYTHING
IN THE
MACHINERY
LINE.
GET OUR
PRICES BEFORE
BUYING.
we Operate Machine Shops and Foundry.
Full JLine Mill Supplies.
WF HANDLE
MALLARY BROS. & CO.,
‘fcs/£a,coru G5-a,
(Successor to L. Cohen & Co.)
551 Cherry St., - - MACON, GA.
WHOLESALE DEALER IN
LIQUORS, BEERS, CIGARS, TOBACCO,
AND DISTILLER
Ivennesaw Mountain Corn Whiskey,
the best corn whiskey in Georgia. We send out better goods for lbe
money than any other house in in our line in Georgia. Jug trade a
specialty: No extra charge for jugs. Prices range from $1.50
per gallon up. Send us a triai order.
We carry n full line of Beers: New York, Philadelphia, Cooks,
Queen, &c.
E. STEMIIE1MER, Macon, Ga.
Mr. Alfred Mack is with ns, and wonid appreciate the favors of his
friends.
BRICK,
LIME,
CEMENT,
MOULDINGS,
MANTELS,
NEWELS,
LATHS, SASH,
PLASTER, DOORS,
ITAIR, BLINDS,
Pine and Cypress Shingles,
Ceiling* Flooring, W 7 eatherboarding
and Gable Ornaments.
LUMBER,—Green and Kiln Dried.
LATHE AND SCROLL WORK. - DRESSING AND MATCHING.
ALL KINDS WOODWORK ACCURATELY AND PROMPTLY DONE.
We i9e iu the business to stay, anil our PRICES ARE RIGHT. Compare
’em with Macon’s aud see. Special prices on ear lots.
EC. L. HAEEIS & GO.,
FOR L’ VALLEY, GEORGIA.
Sole Agent* fora Anniston Cement Lime.
If it’s made of wood, we have it or will make it.
T’EZjEPBLOKTE 37,
N. B
B!CYCLES
carried over from 1807 must be sacrificed now. N fjv High
Grade, all styles, best equipment, guaranteed, .
$0J75 to 17.50.
Used Wheels, late models, all makes,
$3 to $12.
We ship on approval without a cent payment. Write for
Bargain List and art catalogue of swell J i)S models. '
5BiC37-cle fFre<
for season to advertise them. Rider Agents wanted. Learn hew to
Earn a Bicycle and make money.
J. L. Mead Cycle Co.,'Chicago, 111.