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^ To be entertaining
■when one ought to be
asleep. To eat sweets I
and salads when the!
stomach craves the
simplest food or none
at alL To laugh
when one wants to
ciy. All this
much more
society
mandsofhe
followers.
What a
dreadful
The
crushing pains in
the back ahdloins.
The blues. All
such symptoms in
dicate serious de
rangements of the
_ .. _ | delicate female or-
S^ism, And must
be overcome at
thatthey once. Remove the
Wm* 1 cause. Strengthen
down? ' exhausted nature.
Bradfield’s Female Regulator
is the standard remedy for the weaknesses
and irregularities peculiar to women.
Bradfield's Regulator is not a mysterious
mixture of mythical origin, but a stand
ard remedy compounded in accordance
Regulator is endorsed by physicians who
have examined it, and has been in suc
cessful use over a quarter of a century. It
is sold by druggists at one dollar a bottle.
“Perfect Health for Women” mailed
free upon application.
THE BSADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ba.
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 the best in the
market at most reasonable prices. My
Restaurant is more
ESPECIALLY fob 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 Railway Com
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. O. Haile,
G. P. A. Savannah, Ga.
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, on the road, at the races,
ball game, etc. “Hit on if desired. All
nicklod. §1.50, express paid,
W. H. MORGAN,
Peabody, Kansas.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning until Monday
noon following date ot 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 car
fare,and the expense of meals en route.
Vfe take pleasure In commending to
the traveling pnbUc the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence via the
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 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
New York daHy 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 Ac.
S * ae sending a .sketch and description may
ascertain our opinion free whether an
in is prohahly patentable. * Communica
tion a strictly confidential. * Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely fflnstrated weekly. Largest cir-
culation-of any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 a
year; four months. SL Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & QO,361 Broadway, New York
Brandi Office, 625 F St, Washington, D. C.
Mew York Sun.
A pretty good test of the civiliza
tion of a country is to be found in
its railroad mileage. Among the im
portant countries of the world, the
one which stands lowest in respect
to railroad mileage is Persia. Persia
has just thirty-four miles of railroad
the distance from Brooklyn to
Fire Island,no more—and it is made
up of the line from Teheran to Sha-
abdul-Azin (a good name for a
brakeman’s announcement); another
line twenty miles long was began
but was abandoned later. Persia’e
distinction of being last on the mil-
road list seems likely to continue in
definitely. China and Japan have
been very generally regarded a3
similar countries, but while China is
described by Lord Salisbury as a
dying country, Japan is up-to-date.
The area of Japan is approximately
150,000 square miles; the area of
China is 1,300,000 square miles, or
more than eight times greater. The
population of Japan is 42,000,000,
whereas the population of China is
in excess of 400,000,000, or ten
times greater, and yet the railroad
mileage of China is only lSftt, while
that of Japan was 2,237 by last ac
counts. The longest of the railraads
in China is seventy-three miles, from
Tien Tsin to Peking. The Japanese
railroads carried last year 70,000,000
passengers, about 10 per cent of the
number earned by the United States.
There are in this country 180,000
miles of railways, a mileage greater
than that of the whole of Europe
and the whole of South America
combined. The extent of the Amer
ican railroad system, the wonder of
all other countries, is better under
stood, perhaps, with knowledge of
the fact that, in proportion to “popu
lation, the United States has more
than five times as much as Germa
ny, five times as much as Great
Britain and Ireland, more than four
times as much as France, more than
six times as much as Austria-Hun
gary, and more than twelve times as
much as Russia. The laggard among
European nations in regard to rail
roads is, of course, Spain; the coun
try having the largest railroad mile
age in proportion to its population
is Belgium. In respect to the rate
of increase in railroad mileage, Rus
sia stands first with a gain of 20 per
cent in the last five years, Germany
being 7, that of France 6, -and of
Great Britain 3. There are 9,500
miles of railroads in Africa, and 14,-
000 in Australia.
Chinese Drugs.
The employes in the office of the
appraiser of customs yesterday were
busy examining a shipment of Chi
nese medicines, and the place smell
ed like a fertilizer factory. There
were the usual number of dried
snakes, the looks of which would be
certain to kill or cure any intelligent
patient. There were’ also a number
of pliunp lizards, spitted on rods and
expanded with slips of bamboo until
they resembled tennis racquets; a lot
of “sea horses,” a long, slender fish
with a head like a horse and a pre
hensile tale; bundles of centipedes
flattened out and. pasted on sticks;
cans full of preserved pollywogs and
angle-worms, and many other curi-
oos panaceas, each of which smelled
worse than the other. There were
pills as large as prunes, handsomely,
decorated; roots and “yarbs” of many
kinds, which would paralyze a Qua
ker doctor, and boxes and bottles of
unknown mixtures which would par
alyze anybody. The forty separate
and distinct smells of the town of
Cologne are nothing as compared
with the odors' arising from about
§100 worth of Chinese mediaine,
which made some of the men hand
ling the stuff sick. Foul smeel seems
to be a requisite in most medicines,
and if the' beneficial effects of medi
cine are proportionate to its odor,
the medicines of the Chinese should
be the best in the wofld.—Portland
Oregonian.
In her childhood the Korean wo
man receives a nickname by which
she is known in the family and to
her dear friends, but which, when
she arrives at maturity, is employed
only by her parents. To all other
persons she is “the sister” or “the
daughter” of such and such a one.
After her marriage her name is bur
ied—she is absolutely nameless; her
own parents refer to her by men
tioning the district into which she
had married. Should her marriage
be blessed with children she is “the
mother” of so-and-so. If it happens
that a woman has to appear in a law
court the judge gives her a . special
name for use while the case lasts in
order to save time and to simplify
matters.
Chicago Inter-Ocean.
The smallest book ever printed is
the story of Perrault’s little “Hop
’o-My-Thumb,” lately published. The
book is one and one-half inches long
by one inch wide and one-quarter
inch thick. It can be read only by
the aid of a microscope, but is com
plete in every way and has four en
gravings.
Shears no longer than a pin is one
of the exhibits of the skill of a Shef-
. field workman. A dozen of these
shears weigh less than half a grain,
or about the weight of a postage
j stamp; they are as perfectly made as
I shears of ordinary size.
Gaust is the smallest republic as
| to area, which is exactly one mile.
! The population numbers 150. It is
situated in the Pyrenees.
Tavolara is the smallest republic
as to population, having only fifty-
three men, women and children. It
is twelve miles from Sardinia.
Tristan d’Acunha, in the South
Atlantic, sends out its' mail once a
year to the outside world. It has a
population of sixty-four persons—
eighteen men, nineteen women, fif
teen boys and twelve girls.
King Malietoa, the Samoan mon
arch, lately dead, received a smaller
salary than any royalty, §150 month
ly, and it was usually in arrears.
Chinese streets are the narrowest
in the world—some of them are on
ly eight feet wide.
The smallest horse in the world is
a Shetland pony owned by the Mar
quis Carcano, Its height does not
surpass seventy centimeters; it is of
ten harnessed to a liliputian mail
coach.
Berlin' has the smallest elephant
in the world. It is only one meter
high and weighs eighty kilograms.
The smallest camels belong ii
Persia. They are not more than fif
ty centimeters high.
The smallest cows in the world
are to be found in the Samoan is
lands.
The smallest locomotive ever made
can now be seen at the Omaha expo
sition. Its height from the top ofthe
stack to the rail is 25 inches, and the
gnage is 12J inches. The cylinders
are 2 by 4 inches; the boiler is 1J
horse power, made of steel and test
ed to 300 pounds pressure, and will
hold twenty-four gallons of water.
The diameter of the driving wheel
is 10 inches. The weight of the lit
tle engine is about 600 pounds, and
it- will run on a rail three-quarters of
an inch square. It will draw ten
cars, each containing two persons.
Cities and Towns Must Help.
Hon. Pope Brown said the other
day, in his address before the wheat
growers’ convention, that the farm
ers ought not to allow a pound of
flour, or a bale of hay, or a bushel of
com, or a pound of- butter, and the
like to be shipped into the state. He
added, also, and a great thought it
w.as, that our moneyed men in the
cities and towns should also see that
no wagons, buggies, farming uten
sils, furniture and other manufactur
ed articles that can be made here
are shipped into the state. He called
upon the people of the towns and
cities to lay hold and help on these
lines, concluding that every factory
not only added to the wealth of the
state, but produced consumers for
agricultural products.—Macon Tele
graph. *
No other large city is as quiet as
Berlin. Railway engines are not al
lowed to blow their whistles within
the city limits, and the man whose
wagon gearing is loose and rattling
is subject to a fine. Strangest of all,
piano playing is regulated in Berlin.
Before a certain horn- in the day and
after a certain hour in the night the
piano must be silent in that musical
city. Even during playing hours a
fine is imposed for mere banging on
the piano 1 —Berlin Correspondence.
Three Dectors in Consultation.
From Benjamin Franklin.
“When you are sick, what yon 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.
But if you can get Dr. Inclination, Dr.
Experience, and Dr. Reason to hold a
consultation together, they will give you
the best advicethat can be taken.”
When you have a bad cold Dr.
Inclination would recommend
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy be
cause it Is safe and pleasant to take.
Dr. Experience would recommend
it because it never fails to effect a
speedy and permanent curp. Dr.
Reason would recommend it be
cause it is prepared on scientific
principles, and acts on nature’s
plaD in relieving the lungs, open
ing the secretions and restoring
[the system to a natural and healthy
■ condition. For sale by Hoitzclaw
; ’& Gilbert, Perry, and L. W. Stew-
art, Myrtle Ga.
Wsm
Queen Victoria has had over sev
enty descendants, over sixty of whom
are living. She has had nine chil
dren, seven of whom are living,
and innumerable grandchildren and
great-grandchileren. Her sons and
daughters who are living are: The
Prince of Wales, the Duke of Con
naught, the Duke of Edinburgh, the
ex-Empress Frederick of Germany,
the Princess Christian, the March-
ionness of Lome, and the Princess
Beatrice.
The falling of a leaf is brought
about by the formation of a thin
layer of vegetable tissue at the point
where the leaf stem joins the branch
of the tree. After the leaf ceases to
make starch and sugar for the tree;
this tissue begins to grow, and ac
tually cuts the leaf. The falling of
ripe fruit is dependent upon the
same process.
For broken surfaces, sores, in
sect bites, burns, skin diseases aud
especially piles there is one reliable
remedy, DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
Salve, When you call for De-
Witt’s,dont accept counterfeits or
frauds. You will not be disap
pointed with DeWitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve. Cooper’s Drugstore.
There is a rumor afloat that Con
gressman Bailey will leave Texas
and take up his residence in Ken
tucky. He has leased a large stock
farm in that state, and is said to be
desirous of devoting himself to rais
ing thoroughbred horses.
A stubborn cough or tmkhug in
the throat yields to Oue .Minu'e
Cough Cure. Harmless in effect,
touches the right spot, reliable
aud jast what is wanted. It acts
at once. Coopers Drugstore.
Sew York Sun.
An engineer and some workmen
have been busy for months near the
Arctic ocean making a little town.
They have not bothered their heads
about the inhabitants, for the Rus
sian government will see to that
The usual order of events in making
a town are being reversed in this
case. Instead of a lot of persons set
tling in the same place and making
a town, the town is being built and
the residents will come later.
The town has been provided with
a name before anybody lives in it.
Its name is Jekaterinograd, and the
most imposing thing about the
town, as yet, is its name. There was
nothing there a year ago to show
that a white man had ever seen the
site, but now it is beginning to look
something like a town, needidg only
inhabitants to make it quite a go-
ahead place.
The town is on the bay of Kola,
near the Arctic coast of Russian
Lapland, a flat and uninteresting re
gion, in a large part of which scarce
ly a shrub, much less a tree, will
grow. In August last year the Rus
sian government sent the site of the
proposed town, which had already
been selected, a civil engineer named
Olsen, whose specialty is harbor im
provements, and soon twenty men
under his direction were hard at
work building a couple of piers out
into the bay for the use of the fish
ing craft, which will give the town
all its importance.
Last winter fifty wooden build
ings were constructed at Aaehau-
gelsk, on the other side of the White
sea. It is probable that the work is
now going on of transporting them
to the coast of the Arctic ocean,
where they will be hammered to
gether and set up for the people
who are going to live in the new
town, and as soon as everything is
ready the town of Kola, further
south, will be abandoned. Every
body there will be transferred at the
expense of Russia, and Jekaterinog
rad will be all ready to begin busi
ness.
The thing that will make the town
is the Arctic fisheries in the neigh
borhood, which employ about 1,500
men every summer. For the pur
poses of these hard toilers the new
town is much more conveniently sit
uated than Kola, and that is the
reason why Kola is to be-deserted
and a new town has sprung,up near
er the sea.
A Serial of Thrilling Interest.
The National Magazine has se
cured the great serial of the year,
“Stories of a Confederate.” It will
mark a new and bold departure in
magazine enterprise, for although
leading generals and engineers have
given accounts of their successes
and defeats, there are few periodi
cals which have ever published, the
reminiscences of a southern gentle
man, reflecting justly his motives,
ideas, hopes and experiences, as well
as giving a vivid and just account of
some of the most important events
in American history. That this sto
ry can now be told frankly and fair
ly, without awakening dangerous
and bitter emotions.north and south,
is due to the healing hand of time;
the inflexible logic of common inter
ests and established conditions; and
more than all, to the renaissance of
American military and naval renown
and the glorious victories in which
Northron and Southron have shared
the same dangers and hardships, and
have been rivals only in the common
desire of carrying the banner of the
stars from victory to victory.
The initial number of this inter
esting serial will appear in the No
vember issue of “The National Mag
azine,” and will deal with the ending
of that hollow truce between the
representatives of the new Confed
eracy and the government at Wash
ington, which had for months pre
vented Anderson from opposing the
erection of hostile batteries and de
terred Beauregard from a complete
isolation of the Federal garrison,and
finally resulted in the firing upon
Fort^Sumpter. The series has an
entertaining and historical value not
equaled by anything that has ap
peared in any periodical for a decade
past. Send 18 cents to the W. W.
Potter Co., 91 Bedford Street, Bos
ton, Mass., for a three months’ sub
scription.
A Great Book Free!
When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffa
lo, N. Y., published the first edition
of his great work, The People’s
Common Sense Medical Adviser, he
announced that after 680,000 copies
had been sold at the regular price,
§1.50 per copy, the profit on which
would repay him for the great
amount of labor and money expend
ed in producing it, he would dis
tribute the next half million fbee.
As this number has already been
sold, he is now giving away, abso
lutely free, 500,000 copies of this
most complete, interesting and valu
able common sense medical work
ever published—the recipient pnly
being required to mail to him, at
above address, twenty-one (21) one-
cent stamps to cover cost of mailing
only, and the book will be sent post
paid. It is a veritable medical libra
ry, complete in one volume. Con
tains 1008 pages, profusely illustra
ted. The free edition is precisely the
same as that sold at §1.50, except
only that the books are in strong
manilla paper covers instead, of
cloth. Send now before all are giv
en oway.
A Maine man offers small prizes to
the school children in the intermedi
ate grade of his town who take the
[best care of their teeth.
It is of interest at all times to
inquire into the causes of our un
happiness aud to seek a remedy.
Just now the low price of cotton
is thg source of much complaint
aDd uncertainty. In view of these
things a recent series of tables is
sued by the Treasury Bureau of
Statistics, showing the remarkable
increase in cotton productou acd
the coincidental fall in price, can
not fail to attract attention. These
tables show that the United States,
the chief cotton producer of the
world, bas quadrupled its cottou
productions since 1872, and that
the price of cotton in the same pe
riod has faUeu to about oue-fourih
that which prevailed-iu that year.
In 1872 the cotton crop of the
Urited Stans is shown to have
been 1,384,084,494 pound* with an
an average price of 22 19 cents per
pouud; in 1898 the crop is report
ed at 5,667,372,051 pounds with an
average price of 6 23 cents per
pound. Thus the production of
1898 is more than four times that
of 1872, aDd the average price but
a little over one fourth that of that
year.
When it is considered that the
other portions of the wofld that
grow cotton have not at all , reduc
ed their production meantime, it is
apparent that the increased cotton
supply of the world in the quarter
of a century under consideration
has been very great, and far iu ad
vance of the increase in population
or consuming power.
Twenty-five years ago the United
States produced 70 perceut of the
cotton of the world; to day it pro
duces 85 per cent of the world’s
cotton. This increase in the per
centage has been, not because of a
reduction of the cotton produced
in other parts of the world, but
simply on account of the increase
in our own.’ The cotton supply of
the other cotton-producing sec-
tionaof the world in 1872-73 was
1.667.000 bales, and in 1897-98,
1.665.000 bates. The average cot
ton production of other countries
from 1872 to 1878 was 1,618,000
bales per annum, showing tbat
there has also been a slight growth
in .cotton production in other parts
of the world, while our own pro
duction has been increasing enor
mously.
Have Cbme to Slay.
W. W. Hill, of Ashburn says,
in theTifton Gazatte: “I saw Mr.
Jones yesterday. He is a stock
and wheat man of Tenneaee, who
has been selling wheat in Irwin
and Worth counties. He told me
that he sold 1,300 bushels of seed
wheat in the two counties, to be
delivered this month. He says
this is about all he has, so you see
this will take the place of about
1.000 acres of cotton in each coun'-
ty. Judge J. B. Clements will
erect a fine flourmill at Irwinville.
I bear there will be another at Pou-
lan. If the wheat is sown there
will be plenty of good flour mills.
When cotton was worth 15 to 30
cents per pound, the wheat and
flour mills * were do good, but dow
cotton is under 5 cents per pound,
the wheat and flour mills come to
stay.”
. #-0-4
To those who have never consid
ered the subject it might appear
that each letter is of equal impor-
tance in the formation of words,
but the relative proportions requir
ed in the English language are
these: A, 85; b, 16; c, 30; d, 44;
e, 120; f,25; g, 17; h, 64; i, 80; j, 4;
k, §;l,40;m, 30; n, 80; o, 80; p, 17;
q, 5; r, 62; s, 80; t, 90; u, 34; v, 12;
w, 20; x, 4; y., 20; z, 2. It is this
knowledge of how frequently one
letter is used compared with others
that enables cryptogram readers
to unrevel so many mysteries.
The largest building in the
West for killing and dressing poul
try was finished in Kansas City
last week, and pat to use at the
Armour packing establishment. It
is 200 by 53 feet, and houses 20,000
to 25,000 chickens. From 125 to
150 hands, mostly negroes, are
employed # in the industry at the
the packing house, and 15,000
chickens killed and dressed is con
sidered a fairly good day’s work
for them.
Truth wears well. People have
learned that DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers are reliable little pills for
regulating the bowels, curing con
stipation aud sick headache.
They don’t gripe. Cooper’s Drug
store.
Valnable to Women.
■' Especially valuable to women is frowns’
Iron Bitters. Backache vanishes, headache
disappears, strength takes the place of
weakness, and the glow of health readily
comes to the pallid cheek when this won
derful remedy is taken. For sickly children
should be , without this, famous remedy.
Browns’Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers
When the Blood is Pure a Wound Heals Quickly.
The Fact Demonstrated in the Case of a
Baptist Clergyman of fishley, Ohio.
From the Times, Ashley, Ohio.
Elder A. S. Shoemaker has been a life
long resident of Ashley, Ohio, and is favor
ably known by a wide circle of friends ip
this part of the state. For many years he
was a prominent-Baptist minister.. He has
been Mayor of Ashley for three successive
terms, filling the position with dignity and
honor, and has held other offices of trust.
He is sixty-six years of age, hale and
hearty, and attributes Ms present healthful
condition entirely to the use of Dr. 'Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People.
“For about twenty-five years,” he says “I
was afflicted with rheumatism and was con
stantly in pain. I could not remain in one
position for but a few moments at a time and
could sleep but little at night. I was drag
ging out a miserable existence. Especially
in damp, lowery weather I would be very
miserable. I frequently remarked that I
was a traveling barometer, as I could always
tell when a change in the weather was com
ing. I tried a great manv remedies that were
recommended, but they did not. help me.
“One day while at work and complaining
of my pain in the presence of Mr. Elias
Bishop, a neighbor, he asked me if I had
ever tried Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People; I told him no. I had never heard of
them. He advised me to try them, saying
they had benefited him and might help
me.’ I replied, that I had no faith in any
medicine as I had. tried so many different
remedies without receiving any benefit that
I did not think it worth while to throw away
more money.
“ Time passed on for nearly a year until
one night I was suffering intense pain and I
thought of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People and concluded to try them. In
the morning 1 went to the drug store and
purchased a box ofthe pills and commenced
using them according to directions.
“It was the wisest thing I ever did. On
the third night after commencing their use I
went to bed and slept all eight without a
particle of pain. I continued taking the
pills until I used five boxes and have not felt
any symptoms of my old trouble since that
time, now two years ago.
“Just after I stopped the use of the pills I
met with an accident. In chopping wood I
cut my foot very badly, the axe going clear
through the instep of my foot, ft was
thought the wound wonld be very hard to
heal'for a man of my age, but to the surprise
of everybody it healed quickly without any
difficulty. I attribute this also to the good
condition of my blood through the life of
the pills.”
In rheumatism the blood has an acid im
purity which irritates the sensitive tisanes
that unite the joints and cover the mnseies,
thns causing those indescribable tortures which
rheumatic sufferers endure. Rheutaatiam is
always dangerous as it is liable to attack the
heart.
Years ago those afflicted, were bled; as U
taking away some of the impure bliod could
remedy the balance. This folly has been
abandoned, and to-day physicians prescribe
and druggists recommend the use of Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, as
these marvelous vegetable pills go directly to
the seat of the trouble exerting a powerful
influence in purifying and enriching the blood
by eliminating poisonous elements and renew
ing health-giving forces, llms making a potent
remedy for curing this disease.
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
PRICESBEFORE
BUYING.
We Operate^ Machine Shops and Foundry.
we handle^ Full Line Mill Supplies.
MALL ARY. BROS. & CO.,
-Miacon, G-sl.
(Successor to L. Cohen & Co.)
551 Cherry St., - - MACON, GA.
WHOLESALE DEALER IN
LiQUORSi, BEERS, CIGARS, TOBACCO,
AND DISTILLEB
JLennesaw Mountain € orn Whiskey,
the best corn whiskey in Georgia. We send out better goods for the
money than aDy other house in in onr line in Georgia. Jug trade a
specialty: No extra charge for jugs. Prices range from 81.50
per gallon up. Send us a trial order.
We carry a full line of Beers: New York, Philadelphia, Cooks,
Queen, &c.
E. 8TEIDHEIMER, MACON, GA.
Mb. alfbed Mack is with us, aDd would appreciate the favors of his
friends.
"WIE ELFUiLP
BRICK, LATHS, SASH, MOULDINGS,
LIME, PLASTER, DOORS, MANTELS,
CEMENT, HAIR, BLINDS, NEWELS,
Pine and Cypress Shingles,
Ceiling, Flooring, Weatherboarding
and Gable Ornaments.
LUMBER,—Green and Kiln Dried.
LATHE AND SCROLL WORK. - DRESSING AND MATCHING.
ALLiKINDS WOODWORK ACCURATELY AND PROMPTLY DONE.
We are in the business to stay, and OUK PBICES ABE BIGHT. Compare
’em with Macon’s aud see. Special prices on car lots.
HZ| Xj. <Sc GO.,
FORT YALLEY, GEORGIA.
Sole Agents lorj Anniston Cement Lime.
N. B.—If it’s made of wood, we have it or will make it.
37.
BICYCLES
carried over from 1897 must-be sacrificed now. Ari-V IIic.ii
Grade, all styles, best equipment, guaranteed,
.75 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 ’OS models.
Learn how to
arf catalogue
2BiC37-cle gFiee
. ' for season to advertise them. Rider Agents wanted.
Earn a Bicycle and make money.
J. L. Mead Cycle Co., Chicago, 111