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Every expectant mother has
• trying ordeal to face. If she does not
get ready for
there is no telling
what may happen.
Child-birth is full
of uncertainties if
Nature is not given proper assistance.
Mother’s Friend
is the beet help you can use at this time.
It is a liniment, and when regularly ap
plied several months before baby comes,
it makes the advent easy and nearly pain
less. It relieves and prevents “ morning
sickness,” relaxes the overstrained mus
cles, relieves the distended feeling, short
ens labor, makes recovery rapid and cer
tain without any dangerous after-effects.
Mother’s Friend is good for only one
purpose, viz.: to relieve motherhood of
danger and pain.
One dollar per bottle at all drug stores, or
Bent by express on receipt of price.
FnKE Books, containing valuable informa
tion for women, will be Bent to any address
- upon application to
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO..
Atlanta, Qa.
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. 1
am now prepared to
FEED ALL WHO COME,
and will give them a cordial greeting and
satisfy the inner man with the best in the
market at most reasonable prices. My
Bestaurant is more
ESPECIALLY for LADIES,
having no connection with saloons
If you want anything choice to eat, you will
know
That Isaac’s is the place to go.
Old Veteran Caterer,
E. ISAACS.
STEAMSHIP SERVICE.
The Central of Georgia Bail way (-om-
pany and the Ocean Steamship Compa
ny are offering increased facilities for
passenger and freight traffic between the
south and east.
There will be sailings 5 times each
week from New York. A steamer will
leave Savannah each Thursday for Bos
ton, and leave Boston each Wednesday
for Savannah.
For specific information apply to near
est depot agent, or write to J. C. Haile,
(t. P. A. Savannah, Ga.
BLCYCL13 SUPPORT.
Best attachment ever put on a wheel-
Light, strong, sure, always goes with
wheel, stands it anywhere, in the house
or out doors, on the road, at the races,
ball game, etc. ait on if desired. All
nicklod. §1.50, express paid,
W. H. MORGAN,
Peabody, Kansas.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points arc on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and nntil 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning until Monday
noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a busi
ness or pleasure trip to the East should
investigate and consider the advantages
offered via Savannah and Steamer lines.
The rates generally are considerably
cheaper by this route, and, in addition
to this, passengers save sleeping ear
fare,and the expense of ineais en route.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Bailway to Savannah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to New York and Boston,
and the Merchants and Miners lino
to Baltimore.
The comfort of the' traveling pnblio
is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bellsj
handsomely furnished 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
hew 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. II. HlhTOX, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, Ga.
50 YEARS’
EXPEDIENCE
Trade Marks
Designs
Copyrights &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Comnranica
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing: patents.
- Patents" taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without Marge, in the
Scientific flmtrican.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a
year: lour months, $L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & Co; 3 * 1 ***"*' New York
Branch Office, <35 F St. Washington, D. C.
Exchange.
The United States government re
quires large sums of money to pay
expenses, but the railroad corpora
tions of the United States expend
more than §100,000,000 per annum
than does the government, not
counting the §250,000,000 interest
on guaranteed stock, nor the §100,-
000,000 per annum paid out as divi
dends to stockholders. Railroad cor
porations do not hoard money. There
is a place or an item of expense
awaiting the great bulk of all moa- :
eys received by them. Never less
than a billion of dollars is handled
by them every year, and all of that
great sum is paid out as received,
and goes on its mission of relieving
want and furnishing comfort to the
multitudes.
From the most reliable sources
we have gathered the following
facts in regard to expenditures by
railroads in this country, which
should be of interest to every citizen
of the republic.
It requires $75,000,000 annually
to keep in good condition the road
beds, §35,000,000 for new rails, ties
and sleepers, §15,000,000 for new
bridges; for fences, signboards and
signals, §3,500,000; for printing and
advertising, §8,500,000; for taxes,
§40,000,000; for attorneys’ fees and
court costs, $10,000,000; for dam
ages to persons and property, $5,-
000,000.
There are 800,000 people employ
ed by the railroads of America, divi
ded as follows: 100,000 station men,
35.000 engineers, 40,000 firemen, 25,-
000 conductors and train dispatchers,
65.000 train hands, 30,000 machin
ists, 100,000 shopmen, 20,000 tele
graph operators and helpers, 45,000
switchmen, flagmen and watchmen,
and 175,000 trackmen. The daily
pay roll amounts to $2,000,000.
All these vest sums of money go
into the hands of the large army of
employes,--who pay it our to others
engaged in the different lines of
trade; never idle, always busy on a
never ending circuit of relief.
It is generally supposed that rail
road corporations are a combination
of blood-suckers whose sole aim is
to gather within its ponderous maw
the wealth of the country; but the
thoughtful man, the man who inves
tigates, will find that railroad corpo
rations are not near so bad as the
political shysters paint them.
A Toast to Onr Flag.
At a champagne supper to a num
ber of captains of the navies of Eng
land, Russia, Turkey, France and
America, says an exchange, a toast
by each one in honor of the flag he
defended was called for, and the
following are the toasts given:
The Russian said: “Here is to the
bars and stars that have never been
tom down.”
The Turk faid: “Here is to the
moon of Turkey, whose wrings have
never been clipped.”
The Frenchman said: “Here is to
the cock of France, whose feathers
were never pqlled.”
The American said: “Here is to
the stars and stripes of America,
which have never know r n defeat.”
The Englishman concluded as fol
lows: “Here is to the rampant, roar
ing lion of Great Britain, who has
tom down the bars and stars of
Russia; who clipped the wings of
the moon of Turkey, who pulled the
feathers from the cock of France,
and ran like h—1 from the stare and
stripes of the United States of
America.”
Statistics of the Blind in Europe.
A Russian medical journal has just
published a series of statiscal arti
cles showing the number of blind
persons in Europe. French scien
tists, while not doubting the truth
of the figures, consider them some
what remarkable.. Of the 302,000
totally blind persons in Europe,
192,000 are in Russia—that is to
say, one out of every 500 subjects of
the czar is blind. It is is believed
that this unfortunate proportion is
equaled by no other country in the
world. The proportion in France,
England, Germany, Italy and Spain
is recorded as a little less than one
to every 1,000 of population. The
Russian physicians who compiled
the statistics attribute the great
number of blind persons in Russia
to the bad hygienic state of peasant
life, to the intense cold, and to the
glare of the sun on the snow, which
the Russian rustic takes pride in
facing. It is reported that the total
number of blind persons in the world
is 2,000,000.
The workman often eats his lunch
on the same bench where he does his
work. The office man turns his desk
into a dining table. Neither gets the
out of doors exercise he needs, nei
ther takes the proper time for eating.
It is small wonder that the digestion
of both gets out of order. In such
cases Dn Pierce’s Pellets come to
then - assistance by aiding natiu-e in
taking care of the food.
The cause of nine-tenths of the
sickness of the world is constipation.
From this one cause come indiges
tion; disorders of the stomach, liver
and kidneys; biliousness, headaches,
flatulence, heartburn, impurity of the
blood and the serious complications
that follow. To begin with, consti
pation is a little thing, and a little 1
thing will cure it. The “Pleasant
Pellets” are tiny, sugar-coated gran- j
ules. They will perfectly cure the
worst case of constipation and indi
gestion. If the druggist tries to sell
you some other pill that pays him
greater profit, just think of what
WILL BEST PAY YOU.
Two Americans who were cross
ing the Atlantic met in the cabin on
a Sunday night to sing hymns. As
they sang the last hymn, “Jesus,
lover of my soul,” one of them heard
an exceedingly rich and beautiful
voice behind him. He looked around,
and although he did not know the
face, he turned and asked the man if
he had been in the civil war. The
man replied that he had been a con
federate soldier.
“Were you at such a place on such
a night?” asked the first
“Yes,” he replied, “and a curious
thing happened that night which
this hymn has recalled to my mind.
I was posted on sentry duty near
the edge of a wood. It was a dark
night and very cold, and I was a lit
tle frightened, because the enemy
was supposed to be very near. About
midnight, when everything was very
still, and I was feeling homesick,
and miserable, and weary, I thought
that I would comfort myself by
praying and singing a hymn. I re
member singing this hymn:
“ ‘AH ray trust on the3 is staye J,
All my help from thee I bring;
Cover my ilefeasele3s head
With the shadow of thy win,'.’
“After singing that a strange
peaee came upon me, and through
the long night I felt no more fear.”
“Now,” said the other, “listen to
my story. I was a union soldier, and
was in the wood that night with a
party of scouts. I saw you standing,
although I did not see your face.
My men had their rifles focussed up
on you, waiting for the word to fire;
but when you sang out—
“ ‘Cover my defenseless head
With the shadow of thy wing,’
I said, ‘Boys, lower your rifles; we
will go home.’ ”—Drummond.
About Bryan.
Apropos of Col. William J. Bryan
a correspondent of the Springfield
(Mass.) Republican writes that pa
per:
“It would be surprising if we had
not seen so many examples of it,
how mean and malignant the honest
money newspapers can be toward
Mr. Bryan; no falsehood is too great,
no insinuation too base for them to
swallow and emit in regard to the
leader of the party which came so
near beating them in 1896, and is
apparently going to beat them in
1900. Of all prominent men in this
strange military and political war
fare, since the Maine blew up, Col.
Bryan has been one of the most
American and sagacious, yet none
has been so persistently misrepre
sented by the men and newspapers
that have been maligning and un
derrating him ever since he carried
the Chicago convention two years
ago. The only sure effect of all this
is to increase his political strength
and his personal following,and noth
ing could mark the pettiness of a
very petty war department more dis
tinctly than to force him to remain
in the military service when peace
has come, in order to keep him away
from his political elements. Calhoun
und Clay undertook to lessen the
strength of Jackson as a presidential
candidate. The result was the elim
ination of Calhoun from the presi
dential field, and the triple defeat of
Clay, who. ran for the presidency
twenty years, only to be beaten.”
The Italians are discussing the
advisability of pensioning Mrs. Mad-
dalena Granatta, a lady of 57, who
lives near Nocera, 12 miles from Na
ples. Her husband has been dead
ten years, but during the nineteen
years that they lived together as
man and wife they had sixty-two
children born to them, fifty-nine of
the lot being males. Eleven differ
ent times in nine years triplets were
born, and on three different occa
sions four boys were announced, and
once there were four boys and a girl.
—London Times.
What a pity that every preacher
feannot have just such a little daugh
ter as one we know of. The four-
year-old daughter of a clergyman,
after listening to her father preach
one Sunday morning for quite
while, finally became restless, and,
climbing up on the seat, she ex
claimed: “Come on, papa, you’ve
said enough; let’s go home!”—St.
Louis Star.
The Yellow river in China has
changed its channel four times in
the.pasi 1,000 years, and the point
at which it empties into the sea has
from time to time moved up and
down the coast a distance of 300
miles. Its floods have drowned over
10,000,090 people during the past
three centuries, and the destruction
of property has been proportionate.
—Exchange.
For broken surfaces, sores,
sect bites, burns, skin diseases and
especially piles there is one reliable
remedy, DeWitt’s Witch Hhz?1
Salve. When you call for Da
Witt’s dont accept counterfeits or
frauds. You will not be disap
poiuted with DeWitt’s -Witch
Hazel Silva. Cooper’s Drugstore
If the farmers of the south would
reflect upon the fact that they re
ceive no more money for a crop of
11,000 bales than one of 7,500,000,
but that the big crop costs a great
deal more to produce and market,
they might see the wisdom of reduc
ing production.—Savannah News.
Atlanta Journal.
Both the democrats and the re
publicans are confident of carrying
the next house of representatives.
In.oldm times, says the Boston
Transcript, vessels used often to
be struck by lightning, and the
The republicans have a majority of 1 1° 33 by that cause was very great,
fifty-six in the present house. A From 1790 to 1840 no less than
change in twenty-nine districts 230 ships of the British navy were
would give the democrats a majori- struck, 100 men being killed and
ty; and there are more than fifty re- j i vr j . •
publican members who were elected . 2 j0 ‘vound^i Nowadays warships,
by less than 500 majority. | 88 wf d* 8H big nr-rcliant vessels,
It has been the fate of many ad- j have lightuing rods ruuuiug down
ministrations to have an adverse. their masts and into the sea,so that
house of representatives chosen at | {ire electricity is carried off. In
How He Spent the Greater Part of His Life—A
Time When His Life was in Danger.
the intermediate election, and we
shall not be surprised to see this
happen again.
The democrats are more united
than they were at the presidential
election. A great majority of those
who either bolted or sulked then
have come into line for the congres
sional elections, while there is now
more disaffection and friction among
the republicans than there was then.
The republican congressional cam
paign committee figures out only a
very small majority in the next
house; the Democratic committee
claims thirty majority.
The republicans may lose the
house, but they have a good chance
to increase their strength in the
senate.
The election of Joseph Simon to
the senate from Oregon fills a vacan
cy that has long existed and com
pletes the full list of senators.
Of the 90 members of that body
the republicans have 45, the demo
crats 34, the populists 5, the silver-
ites 2, the silver republicans 3, and
there is one independent. The lat
ter, Mr. Kyle, of South Dakota, has
announced his intention of acting
with the republicans hereafter. Of
the senators who retire in March
next 11 are republicans, 15 are dem-
ocratt, 2 are silver republicans, 1 is a
silverite and 1 is a populist. The re
publicans expect to retain their pres-
sent seats with the exception of that
occupied by Senator Clark, of Wyo
ming. The democrats can count
with certainty on but 6 of their 15
seats. The silver republicans, silver
ite and populist are likely to be re
turned to office themselves, or be
succeeded by men of like politics.
Of the senators who hold over in
March next, there are 34 republi
cans, 19 democrats, 4 populists, 1
silver republican, 1 silverite and 1
independent. The republicans re
quire to elect 12 members to secure
a majority of the senate, and they
will probably do that, at least.
A stubborn congb or tickling in
the throat yields to One Miuu e
Cough Cure. Harmless iu effect,
touches the right spot, reliable
and just what is wanted. It acts
at once Coopers Drugstore.
Railway Development.
It is gratifying to learn from the
data recently compiled by The Rail
way Age that the past nine months
of the present year have witnessed
greater activity in railway building
in the United States than has any
corresponding period of time since
1893.
According to the data from which
we cite, there were 2,200 miles of
railway constructed in the United
States up to Oct. 1, 1898. If this
rate of increase continues until the
year expires, there will be not less
than 3,000 miles of track laid by
January 1st next in the United
States.
Most of the progress made in rail
way building up to the present time
has been restricted to the southwest,
although Minnesota, in the north
west, has participated more enten-
sively in the general improvement
than has any other individual state.
Texas, Alabama, Missouri, Louisiana
and North Carolina have each made
heavy gains.
Men are just like hogs, however
distasteful that may sound to the
hogs. When a hog gets an
ear of com, every other hog will
trot along behind him and squall
and whine and beg and toady for a
bite, but just let the front hog get
caught with its head fast in a crack
and every other hog will jump on
him and tear him to pieces. Just so
with men. As long as a man is
prosperous and has money, he can’t
keep friends off with a ball bat. The
moment he is unfortunate and his
wealth is gone, he is not only snub
bed by his former alleged friends,
but they at once begin to do him all
the harm possible. When a man
starts up grade the world falls be
hind and pushes. When he starts
down grade, the world greases the
track and steps aside.—Exchange.
Three Hectors in Consultation.
From Benjamin Franklin.
“When you are sick, what you like best
is to be chosen for a medicine in the
first place; what experience tells you is
best, to be chosen in the second place;
what reason (i. e., Theory) says is the
best is to be chosen in the last place.
Bnt if you can get Dr. Inclination, Dr.
Experience, and Dr. Beason to hold a
consultation together, they will give yon
the best advice that can be taken.”
When you have a bad cold Dr.
Inclination would recommend
Cliambsrlaiu’s Cough Remedy be
cause it is s-afe and pleasant to take.
Br. Experience would recommend
it because it never fails to effect a
speedy and permanent cure. Dr.
Reason would r< commend it be
cause it is prepared on scientific
principles, and acts on nature’s
plan in reli u ving the longs, open-
ing the secretions and restoring
the system to a natural and healthy
condition. For'salp by Holtzclaw
& Gilbert, Perry, and L W. Stew
art, Myrtle Ga.
these days nobody hears of the de
structiou of a vessel by lightning
Churchps.if they continue to build
as now, will always be favorite tar
gets for lightning. They are the
buildings most commouly struck.
In Roman Catholic countries the
introduction of lightuing rods was
bitterly opposed; they were called
“heretic rods ” Nevertheless, they
defend most of the cuurches now.
There is record of a certain chnrch
in Carinthia which was hit by
lightning four or five times a year
on an average, the services being
stopped in summer on this account.
A rod was pnt on the steeple, and
there was no more trouble.
The government has ordered
4,000 volunteers now at San Fran
cisco to Manilla, and this will bring
the force at the Philippines to 20,-
000 men. As $1,500 a man per
year is the estimated cost of onr
troops in foreign service, this Ma
nila army will cost $30,000,000;
the 12,500 assigned to Porto Rico
will cost $18,750,000, and the 60,
000 to Caba $90,000,000—or in all
for the three proposed colonies
the military occupation will cost
for the first year $138,750,000.
And this is not all, for the civil ad
ministration will amount up to a
pretty figure. As ex Senator Ed
munds remarked, we are paying
pretty dear for our expansion
whistle.
When the breath of scandal
comes in touch with the garment
of a friend, it is your duty to be
lieve that friend innocent until his
guilt is established. A friendship
thftt will not wear through adversi
ty is worth little in the days of
prosperity. We are too prore to
accept a naked charge as positive
proof of guilt, forgetting that there
are many despoilers of fair names
in this world. Life would be sweet
er and better if friend would trust
friend. The scandal monger can
tear down in one day what it has
taken years of patient labor to
build up.—Exchange.
The Japanese are ruthless in
their tampering with nature. If
they decide that they want a bird
or an animal of a certain shape or
color, they set about manufactur-
iDg the article, so to speak, by tbe
exercise of eceedingly clever ingen
uity and untiring patience. Here,
for example, is how the white spar
rows are produced. They select a
pair of grayish birds and keep
them in a white cage iu a white
room, where they are attended by
a person dressed in white. The
mental effect on a series of genera
tions of birds results in completely
white birds.
Mr. W. D. Bynum, recently man
ager of tbe gold faction of the
Democratic party, has the stump
for the Republican party in Iowa
Mr. Bynum declares that the atti
tude of the Democratic party Id
respest to silver has driven him
into the Republican party. It will
not be forgotten, meantime, that
Mr. Bynnm did not change his po
litical affiliation until his salary as
manager of the “gold Democracy”
had been discontinued.—Savannah
News
Irwin county, the scene of tbe
Northern colony in Sontbern Geor
gia, tamed np a big Democratic
majority at the recent election in
that state. It does not require
much time for the intelligent
Northern Republican who comas
South to live to see where his in
terests lie, when it comes to voting
for state and county officers.—Bir
mingham News.
The treasury gold reserve has
reached the highest mark iu its
history. A few days ago it touch
ed $245,000,000, or nearly $100,-
000,000 more than one year ago.
The probabilities are that it will
go ev en higher during the present
month.
Troth wears well. People have
learned that DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers are reliable little pills for
regulating the bowels, caring con
stipation and sick headache.
They don’t gripe. Cooper’s Drug
store.
Among the seven hundred resi
dents of Weston, a town in Maine,
there are but two persons of foreign
birth, and these are naturalized
Irishmen. Both are officeholders,
one being mayor and the other con- *
Btable of the town.
One of the staunchest supporters of the
deep-water way from the Great Lakes to the
ocean is Haj. A. C. Bishop, of 715 Third
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
From the Free Press, Detroit, Mich.
He has been su
MAJOR A. C. BISHOP.
Maj. Bishop has had unusual experience
in that line of work and probably few are so
well qualified to speak intelligently of it
as he. For the greater part of his life he
has been engaged in water ways ( and is one
of the oldest and best known cirri engineers
north of the Ohio river.
Commencing in 1850, he was for a number
of years an assistant engineer for tbe Hud
son’ River Railroad, and later held like posi
tions with the Genesee Valley Canal, New
York, and also the Des Moines River Im
provement and Railroad Co.
aperintendent of large min
ing operations and when the State Reforma
tory at Elmira, N. Y., was built, he was
superintendent and engineer in charge of the
construction.
Major Bishop was attached to the staff of.
Brigadier General Chamberlin, o’f the Na
tional Guard of New York, with the rank
of Major from 1857 to 1885.
He has been located in Detroit since 1885,
and has a large acquaintance among the busi
ness men and citizens of this city.
Two years ago, for tbe first time, M«or
Bishop was in the hospital. For two months
he had the best of medical attendance but
when he was discharged he was not like the
Major Bishop of old.
When asked regarding his health, he said:
“When I had my last spell of sickness
and came out of the hospital I was a sorry
sight. I could not gain my strength, and
coala not walk over a block for several
weeks.
“I noticed some articles in the newspapers
regarding Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People, which convinced me that they were
worth trying and bought two boxes. I did
not take them for my complexion but for
strength. After using them I felt better,
and know they did me worlds of good. I
am pleased to recommend them to invalids
who need a tonic or to build up a shattered
constitution. “A. C. Bishop.”
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
eighth day of January, 1898.
Robert E. Hull, Jb., Notary PuUic.
The pure, powerful vegetable Tngredii i.fs
in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale P.-.i) le
supply the antidote for poisonous matter in
the blood and add those elements need.u : •
build up body and brains. Many diseases
long supposed by the medical profession to
be incurable have succumbed to the potent
influence of these pills. They can be taken
by young or old, being harmless in their
nature, but powerful in eliminating disease.
Manufacture and Sell
SAW MLLS,
We
ENGINES,
BOILERS,
COTTON GINS,
COTTON
PRESSES,
SEED COTTON
ELEVATORS,
GRIST MILLS,
AND
EVERYTHING
IN THE
MACHINERY
LINE.
GET OUR
PRICESBEFORE
BUYING.
We Operate^ Machine Shops and Foundry.
we handle .Full Line Mil! Supplies.
MALLARY BROS. & CO.,
Miacon,
(Successor to L. Cohen & Co.)
551 Cherry St., - - MACON, GA.
WHOLESALE DEALER IN
LIQUORS, BEERS, CIGARS, TOBACCO,
AND DISTILLER
Rennesaw Mountain Corn Whiskey,
the best corn whiskey in Georgia. We send out better goods for tbe
money than any other bouse in iD onr line in Georgia. Jug trade a
specialty: No extra charge for jugs. Prices range from $1.50
per gallon np. Send ns a trial order.
We carry h full line of Beers: New York, Philadelphia, Cocks,
Qaeeo, &c.
E. 8TEINHEIMER, MACON, GA.
Mb. Alfred Mack is with us, aud wonld appreciate the favors of his
friends.
WE 3EC.'T3333=»
BIUCK, LATHS, SASH, MOULDINGS,
LIME, PLASTER, DOORS, MANTELS,
CEMENT, HAIR, BLINDS, NEWELS,
Pine and Cypress Shingles,
Ceiling, Flooring, Weatherboarding
and Gable Ornaments.
LUMBERj—Green and Kiln Dried.
LATHE AND SCROLL WORK. - DRESSING AND MATCHING.
ALLOTS WOODWORK ACCURATELY AND PROMPTLY DONE.
We are iu the business to stay, ami OUR prices ABE RIGHT. Compare
’em. with Macon’s aud see. Special prices on car lots.
13I. L. BLA-ZEURIS <5c GO.,
N. B
FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA.
Sole Agents forgAnniston Cement Lime.
-If i:’s made of wood, we have it or will make it.
TEX,EI>B.OKrE 37.
BICYCLES
carried over from 1897 must be sacrificed now. N ew High
Gkauic, all styles, best equipment, guaranteed,
$|,75 to jpg 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 ’98 models.
Don’t ir.gl.ct Your Liver.
Liver troubles quickly remit in serious
complications, and the man who neglects liis
hver has little regard for health. A bottle
of Browns’Iron Bitters taken now and then
will keep the hver in perfect order. If the
duease has developed, Browns’ Iron Bitters '
» it permanently. ''Strength and
vitality will always follow its use.
Drowns’Iron Bitters is gold by ajldeelera. j r .
Subscribe for The Home Journal * ” • D. MCcWl GyCi0 (?0., IlL
Bic3rcle IDF’ree
for season : to advertise them. Rider Agents wanted.
Earn a Bicycle and make money.
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