Newspaper Page Text
and wife should know about the pre
paration that for half a century has
been helping expectant mothers bring
little ones into the world without
danger and the hundred and one
i«g*> discomforts and distractions
incident to child-birth. It
is applied externally, which
is the only way to get relief.
Medicines taken internally
will not help and may
result in harm.
«>>
Mother’s
Friend
fits and prepares every
organ, muscle and
part of the body for
the critical hour. It
robs child-birth of its
tortures and pains.
Baby’s coming is made
quick and easy. Its
action is doubly bene-
Y ficial if used during the whole
r 'period of pregnancy.
$1 per bottle at all drug stores, or
sent by mail on receipt of price.
Books Free, containing valuable infor
mation to- all women, will be sent to any
address upon application by
Jhe Bradfield Regulator Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
ISAACS’ CAFE,
413 Third Street,
MACON, GA. ..
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 wiU
know
That Isaac’s is the place to go.
Old Veteran Caterer,
E. ISAACS.
STEAMSHIP SERVICE.
The UeDtral 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.
B ist attachment ever put on a wheel.
Light, strong, sure, always goes with
wheel, stands it anywhere, in the house
or out doors, onthe road, at the races,
ball game, etc."TjiF
nicklal.
; on if desired,
1.50, express paid,
W. H. MORGAN,
Peabody, Kansas.
All
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 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 thli, passengers save 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
Bailway to Savannah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to Kew 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
Hew York dally 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.
The first Thanksgiving in this
country was appointed by Governor
Bradford, of Plymouth, Mass., in
1621, the year following the landing
of the Pilgrims, in order that the
Washington Star.-
I had taken a very toothsome but
not highly finished dinner at the
mountain farm house, and when I
started on my way at 1 o’clock in
colonists in a more special waycould the afternoon the daughter, who had
rejoice together at having all things looked after my wants at the table,
in good and plenty, writes Clifford informed me that if I had'no objec-
Howard in the November Ladies’, tion she would “ride a piece with
Home Journal. In preparation for, nie. As she was a . good-looking,
the feast “gunners were sent into, ruddy mountain maid, unlike the
the woods for wild turkeys, which j majority of her kind, I gave an im-
abounded there in great numbers;' mediate and unanimous consent, and
kitchens were made ready for pre- j wq were presently jogging along to-
paring the feast—especially the large j ward the Cumberland river, which
one in Dame Brewster’s house,which i we could see lying like a silver
was under the immediate direction < thread acrosss the green valley far
and charge of Priscilla Molines, she!below us.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Invention is probably patentable. Coramnnlca-
lions strictly confl dentiaL Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest acency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Mnnn & Co. receive
special notice, without (marge, in the
who afterward became the wife of
John Alden—while a messenger was
sent to invite Massasoit, the chief of
the friendly tribe, to attend the cel
ebration. Early on the morning of
the appointed Thursday—about the
first of November—Massasoit and
ninety of his warriors arrived on the
outskirts of the village and with wild
yells announced their readiness to en
joy the hospitality of their white
brethren. The little settlement,which
now consisted of seven dwellings
and four public buildings, was soon
astir with men, women and children,
who gave the Indians a hearty wel
come as they filed into the large
square in front of the governor’s
house. Soon the roll of a dram an
nounced the hour of prayer, for no
day begun without the religious ser
vice. Then followed a holiday of
feasting and recreation, which con
tinued not only that day, but during
the two succeeding days. The usual
routine of duties was suspended; the
children romped about in merry play;
the young men indulged in athletic
sports and games in friendly rivalry
with the Indians; the little Ameri
can army of twenty men, under the
leadership of Miles Standish, went
through its drill and manual of
aims, to the great delight , and as
tonishment of the natives, while the
women busied themselves in the
careful preparation of the excellent
meals, which were eaten in the open
air.”
The following is said to be the
first proclamation by the president
of the United States, fixing a day
for public Thanksgiving:
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA A PROCLAMATION.
Whereas, It is the duty of all na
tions to acknowledge the providence
of Almighty God, to obey His will
to be grateful for His benefits, and
humbly to implore His protection
and favour; and
Whereas, Both houses of congress
have, by their joint committee, re
quested me “To recommend to the
people of the United States a day of
public Thanksgiving and prayer, to
be observed by acknowledging with
grateful hearts the many signal fa
vours of Almighty God, especially in
affording them an opportunity peace
ably to establish a form of govern
ment for their safety and happi
ness.”
Now, therefore, do I recommend
and assign Thursday, the twenty-
sixth day of November next, to be
devoted by the people of these
United States to the service of that
great and glorious being, who is the
beneficent author of the good that
was, that is, or that will be: That
we may then all unite in rendering
unto Him our sincere and humble
thanks for His kind care and protec
tion. of the people of this country
previous to their becoming a nation;
for the signal and manifest mercies
and the favorable interposition of
His providence in the course and
conclusion of the late war; for the
great degree of tranquility, union
and plenty which we have since en
joyed; for the peaceful and rational
manner in which we have been en
abled to establish constitutions of
government for our own safety and
happiness, and particularly the na
tional one lately instituted; for the
civil and religious liberty with which
we are blessed, and the means we
have of acquiring and diffusing use
ful knowledge; and in general for all
the great and generous favours
which He hath been pleased to con
fer upon us,
And also, that we may then unite
in most humbly offering our prayers
and supplications to the great Lord
and Euler of nations, and beseech
Him to pardon our national and
other transgressions; to enable us
all, whether in public or private Sta
tions, to perform our several and rel
ative duties properly and punctually;
to render our national government a
blessing to all the people, by con
stantly being a government of wise,
just and constitutional laws, directly
and faithfully obeyed; to protect
and guide all sovereigns and nations
(especially such as have shown kind
ness to ns), and to bless them with
good government, peace and con
cord; to promote the knowledge and
practice of true religion and virtue,
and the increase of science among
them and ns; and generally to grant
unto all mankind such a degree of
temporal prosperity as He alone
knows to be best.
Given under my hand, at the city
of New York, one thousand, seven
hundred and eighty-nine.
G: Washington.
“I presume,” I said, bowing with
as much gallantry as the circum
stances would permit, “that if any of
your beaus should see us riding to
gether my life would scarcely be
safe from their jealous rage.”
“Oh, I reckon ’tain’t so bad’s that,
all to once,” she laughed in response.
“I’m sure they are not so indiffer
ent as you would lead me to think.
Pretty girls are not so plentiful in
the mountains,” I smiled, and she
blushed.
“Well, I s’pose ef Jim wuz here,”
she hesitated, “it mightn’t be sich a
picnic as it looks, fer Jim’s mighty
bad about me. That’s why he ain’t
here now.”
“Why?” I asked with considerable
more interest and not nearly so much
bow and palaver.
Savannah Newe.
“What is sassafras- gud for?’
asked a Sonth Carolina corres
pondent of a South Carolina news
paper the other day. Tneorres^
pondent, if he is a native of the
sonth, has probably been familiar
with the plant all of his life. No
doubt he has drank sassafras tea
hundreds of times, smacked his
lips' over it an asked for more.
Nevertheless be knows no more of
it than that sassafras is a shrab or
tree, the roots, branches and leaves
of which have a rather stroug,pun
gent, aromatic and sweetish taste,
and that lea is sometimes made of
the bark of the roots. Familiarity
with the sassafras has made it an
interesting; nobody in the sonth
pays a great deal of attention to it.
It grows almost everywhere, and
especially likes the soil of old fields
and hedge rows. To suggest to a
Georgian or South Carolinian that
sassafras be cultivated would be
laughed at.
N-verteeless, the sassafras .plant
is fall ofvirtne from thelowest point
of its tap!- root to the crown of its
foliage. Bark, leaves, wood, pith
and roots contain val uable proper-
: ties. The leaves are heavily ebarg
He shot a hole through the last ec j with mucilagiunus juice, which
feller I rid with, and had to take to
may be made to serve every pur-
the woods till he gits well. , . . _ ....
This was not altogether as pleas- J P ose S am arable. The pn.h is
ing as it might have been, but I a 'so a gum producer in even larger
couldn’t ran away from the lady, so degree than the leaves. An ioves-
I remained. • j tigator says that a few inches of
“Wen,” I said, in a tone of strong 8aS8afra3 oith ' pat U Q a glass of
lsarmroval. “on von intend to mar-! ,. ... . ,
cold water will in a few miuutes
make a glassful of mucilage. Dur
disapproval, “do you intend to mar
ry a man like that?”
“ ’Tain’t safe to marry any other
—not fer him, ner me neither, even
ef I wanted to, which I don’t. Jim’s
plenty suitable fer me.”
“Does your mother approve of
your marrying him?” I asked, hop
ing somebody might be found -who
would come to the rescue.
“No,” she responded easily. /Maw
ain’t talkin’ one way ner t’other.
She’s been married four times, and
has made such a dratted muss uv it
every time that she says she ain’t a
fittin’ person to give advice on the
marryin’ question, nohow, even ef I
wuzn’t old enough to do my own
pickin’ an’ choosin’,” which seemed
to be such an unanswerable argu
ment that I retired from the field.
Real Lesson of Christmas.
Constipation prpvenfs the body
from ridding itself of waste mat
ter. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers
will remove the trouble and cure
Sick Headache, Biliousness, Inac
tive Liver, and clear (he Complex
ion. Small, sugar coated, don’t
“Too often in our Christmas reli
gious observances is this thought al
most entirely lost sight, of, or not
sufficiently emphasized,” writes Ed
ward Bok in the December Ladies’
Home Journal. “There can be no
love for God which is unattended
with love for man. The final test of
a Christian life is not the worship of
God, but always the love of man for
man. If the message of Him whose
birth we celebrate at Christmas
teaches ns one thing above all oth
ers, it is not that we shall try to do
for him as a person, but that ..we
shall seek to do for one another.
That is knowing Jesns and clearly
understanding Him. And wherever
this true conception of His life and
teaching is reached, there we find
men and women filled with the pas
sion for giving. The little child
wakes on Christmas morning with
its heart full to overfloSving with
gladness, and by every gift in stock
ing, or beside cradle or bed, is taught
anew the old, old lesson of love.
Husband and wife, brother and sis-
tee, lover and sweetheart, friend and
friend, as they receive their gifts are
reminded once more that love is not
a dream, but a reality—and a reali
ty which grows more vital, more
precious and more enduring with
the years. The sick, in chair or in
bed, as they open their Christmas
packages are almost reconciled to
loneliness and pain. The friendless,
the poor, the outcast, the • waifs on
the streets; those who have sinned
ond seem shut out from God and
from man, all begin to feel strange
thrills of hope and renewed aspira
tion as they are taken up and enfold
ed in the richness and fullness of the
divine love as it comes to them
through human love or attention on
Christmas Day. That is knowing
Christmas in its highest and noblest
sense; in the truest conception;
knowing it in that spirit from which
we derive the surest happiness.”
When a man owns a blooded horse
he is always careful of its health. He
looks after its diet and is particular
that the feeding shall be regular and
right. While he is doing this it is
likely as not that he is suffering'Erom
some disease or disorder. When the
trouble gets so bad that he cannot
work, he will begin to give himself
the care that he gave the horse at
the start. Good, pure, rich, red
blood is the best insurance against
disease of any kind. Almost all dis
eases come from impure or impover
ished blood. Keep the blood pure
and strong and disease can find no
foothold. That is the principle up
on which Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi
cal Discovery works. It cleanses,
purifies and enriches the blood, puts
and keeps the whole body in order;
makes the. appetite good, digestion
strong, assimilation perfect It
brings ruddy, virile health. It builds
up solid, wholesome flesh (not fat)
when, from any cause, reduced be
ing tbe civil war in some pirts of
the south sassafras leaves were em
ployed to furnish thickening for
soup; and it was very palatable
and healthful thickening, too. Dar
ing that time, also, sassafras tea
was largely used as a substitute for
coffee aud the ordinary tea of com
merce. The sassafras infasioD,
however, is a more healthful bev
erage Jthan either coffee or tea. It
has positive alterative properties,
and as a blood remedy it should
be ranked along with sarsaparilla.
It is also a diuretic and a suporif-
ic; it is good for the kidueys, and
to produce perspiration. It is val
uable in cases of colds and fevers.
Oil of sassafras, according to a
medical authority, “is U3ed in the
treatment of cutaneous diseases,
rheumatism, gout, etc ” It is com
monly used in connection with oth
er drugs. It has been stated that
a great many of the “magic” cure-
all proprietary liniments which are
30 popular, at'25 to 50 cents a bot
tle, are made of spirits of turpen
tine, costing about 40 cents a gal-.
Ion, and a little oil of sassafras,and
that a great many of tbe “discover
ies,” “cores” and the like which
cost SI a bottle have as their base
an infusion of sassafras. We rec
ognize the virtues of the sassafras
and turpentine after somebody a
thousand or so miles away has mix
ed them aud given them a catchy
name; but we do not care much
about them in their natural state.
Flavoring extracts are also made
from sassafras, and there is no
more delightful and refreshing
beverage than cool sassafras beer
on a hot day. The mucilage from
the pith of sassafras is said to be
an excellent remedy for sore eyes,
or for almost any irritated and sore
tissue. As a gargle for sore throat
sassafras tea, with alum, has a rec
ognized standing in every rural
housewife’s cupboard. Still, most
people are unfamiliar with the sas
safras, for the reason that it is so
common.
Here is n a n >'d ha i Ibil',
somewhat similar to the one repro
duced in these pages a week or
two ago, says the L union Sketch.;
This bill aisn was- printed and cir- j
culated iu Cumberland qarly in the !
century;
Ig'T, Jame3 Williams parish clerk,
saxtoae, town cryer aad bellman, j
make au i soils ail sorts of hiber ;
lasbaries, groceries, etc., likewise :
hair and whig? drast, and cut, o i ot^W^lowa 1 ?'
the shortest notice. Also I shirt manufacturer, has accom-
“N. B.—L keeps an evening
LIFE ms EBBINS ASSAY WHILE IN THE
A Woman was Rescued when in a Perilous Plight.
.The Hovel Method Used to Save Her.
de, of 416 East Maine Street,
Ottumwa, Iowa, ‘daughter of Mr. E. if.
From the Press, Ottumwa, Iowa.
Company, Schenectady, N. Y., as they con
tained in a condensed form all the elements
plished a work which will not’only benefit
sihool, wh°re I teach at reasonable
rates, reading, writing, singing and
sam3.
N. B. —I plays the h >ob >y ocea
sionally, if wanted.
N. B.—My shop is next door',
where I bleed, draw teat ban 1 shoo
ier, but undoubtedly be of service to many
others. It was a praiseworthy undertak-
; ing; one which she may feel proud of and
amply repaid for her indefatigable efforts,
i A reporter of the Press hearing of her suc-
i cessful achievement sought an interview with
i her.
| Miss Noble seemed cheerful, hopeful and
! in the best of health. Apparently she bad
j not suffered any ill effects from her efforts
! which were reported to have done much
good.
; About two years ago slie accompanied her
parents to the west, and resided among the
mountains for several montlis. This was
horses, all with greatest seil.
N t> m mj l * l a done in the hopes that her health might be
. 15, Children fcaiu to uauct, improved, as she was suffering from anaemia.
if agreeable, at six pence per week,
by me, J. Williams, who buy and
sell old iron and coals- shoes clean
and mended.
“N. B.—Liok over the door for
the sign of the three pigeons.
“N.B. —I sell good ayle, and
sometimes eyder-Lodgings for sin
gle men.”
Neili’s final estimate of the cot-
toa crop of 1893 99 places the com
mercial crop at 11,500,000 bales
minimum, 3,800,000 from Texas
and Indian Territory and 7,700,000
ontside of Texas. Neill thinks the
prosperity of the Texas farmers
will enable them to hold an unusu
al proportion of their crop from
the market and that the growth of
the crop in that state will reach
400,000 bales, or more. Outside
of Texas the crop does not compare
so favorably with last year, bat the
growth is estimated to reach 7,900-
000, or more. A damage from cli
matic conditions has been more
than overcome.
Admiral Dewey is to be honored
in Vermont by the erection of a
“Dewey hall’ at the state’s military
institution, Norwich University at
Rutland. This institution has long
been a military school and many
of the officers who served in the
civil war were among its graduates.
It is likely that the legislature will
appropriate a sum toward the ad
dition of this hall to the universi
ty and it is proposed also to raise
money by popular subscription for
the same purpose.
Tbe wife of au English clergy
man has mod9 a collection of all the
buttons placed in tbe offertory
bags daring the last two or three
years, and has fastened them to
cardboard in various canning
shapes of animals, birds and flow
ers. As a bazaar is shortly to take
place in connection with the church
she has had these button pictures
photographed, and copies will be
on sale at the exhibition.
Preparations are on foot in Hon
olulu to test the applicability of
the United States immigration
laws to the Hawaiian Islands by
the importation to the cane fields
of 1,000 Koreau laborers. The con
tract form, as advertised by the
agent who proposes to furnish the
Koreans, provides that they shall
be paid $12.50 per month each,
United States gold.
Overcome evil with good. Over
come your coughs and colds with
Oue Minute Cough Cure. It is so
good children cry for it. It cures
croup, bronchitis, pneumonia,
grippe and all throat and lung dis
eases. Cooper’s Drugstore.
Tiro Pointed Questions Answered.
What is the use of making a bet
ter article than your competitor if
you cannot get a better price for
it?
Ans.—As there is no difference
in the price the public will buy on
ly the better, so that while our
profits may be smaller on a single
sale they will be much greater in
the aggregate.
How can you gat tb.e public
know your make is the best?
If both articles are brought
prominently before the public both
are certain to be tried,aud tue pub
lie will very quickly pass judgment
on them and use only the better
one.
This explains the large sale of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
The people have been using it for
years and have found that it can
always be depeuded upon. They
may occasionally take np with
some fashionable novelty put forth
with exaggerated claims, bGt are
certain to return to the ond reme
dy that they know to be reliable,
and for coughs, colds and croup
there is nothing equal to Cham
berlain’s Cough Remedy 1 .
For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert,
Perry, and L. W. Stewart, Myrtle.-
Ab Uncertain Biieue.
There is no disease more uncertain in its
nature than dyspepsia. Physicians say that
the symptoms of no two cases agree. It is
therefore most difficult to make a correct
diagnosis. No matter how severe, or under
what disguise dyspepsia attacks you. Browns’
Iron Bitters will cure it. Invaluable in all
diseases of the stomach, blood and nerves.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
THE
OF BALTIMORE, MD.
j gripe or cause nausea,
i Drugstore.
Cooper’s low the healthy standard.
The total number of office holders
Since the passing of the first
vaccination act in England,in 1841,
the death rate from smallpox has
fallen from 576 per million to 20
per million.
Leaf,” “Sheep Husbandry.” “Wheat Grow
ing,” “Grasses,” and other agricultural
PUBLISHED BY
Manufacturers’ Record Publishing Co.
A Monthly Illustrated Journal devo
ted to Southern Agriculture, dealing
•with | all matters relating to General
Farming, Live Stock, Poultry, Dairying,
Truck Farming, Fruit Growing, and ev
ery farm interst and pursuit in the
Sonth.
It is widely read ljy Northern and
Western farmers contemplating mov
ing South.
It onght to be in every Southern
family, for it is “of the South, by the
South, and for the South.”
EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTORS.
Chas. \Y. Dabney. -Jr., Ph. D., LL. D.
Ex-United States Assistant Secretary of Ag
riculture, Ex-Director United States Agri
cultural Experiment Station-in North Caro
lina, President University of Tennessee and
President of United States Experiment Sta
tion in Tennessee.
Instead of the change of climate benefiting
her, she rapidly became worse and her parents
hastily returned east with her.
Refutable physicians were summoned and
exercised their skill, but it was of no avail.
Her condition became worse and her face
assumed a ghost-like appearance. She was
wasting away for want of blood, and what
little she did have, was watery and in a de
praved state. Any slight exertion caused
excessive fatigue) and palpitation of the
heart. She had no appetite and the daintiest
viands did not tempt her. Her condition
was deplorable, and death seemed nigh.
Many of her friends thought she was going
into consumption.
Finally some friends advised her to try
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People,
prepared by the Dr. Williams’ Medicine
elements
necessary to give new life and richness to
the blood and restore shattered nerves.
Tiiey had learned of cases similar to here
which had been cured. The pills, they said,
were inexpensive, only costing -50 cents a box
or six boxes for $2.50, and could be had at
any druggist’s.
Miss Noble was reluctant to try them, for
it .seemed as if all possible remedies had been
tried and the expense had been considerable,
without being benefited. Her friends were
so enthusiastic regarding the good qualities
of the pills, that she finally decided to try a
box, and purchased one from E. M. B. Scott's
drug store.
A decided improvement was noticeable
after the pills had been taken and she pur
chased some more. The change in her con
dition was so great that after taking four
boxes of the remedy, she considered herself
well, 8nd stopped taking the medicine. But
her severe sickness could not he cured so
soon and she was obliged to commence taking
the pills again. After using a few more
boxes, all traces of her fearful disease had
disappeared. To-day, she is the picture of
health, her complexion being that of an
ideally healthy young lady, and she is aa
active as in her younger davs.
Her father was so muck impressed with
the marvelous improvement wrought in the
health of his daughter through the merits of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, that he too is using
them and is rapidly regaining his failing
health.
Several have heard of Miss Noble’s case
and experience with these wonderfhl pills
and are ®.ing them with satisfactory results.
If You. Want Anything
BEDROOM SUITES, PARLOR SUITES,
DINING TABLES, SIDEBOARDS
Chairs of any kind, Tables of all sorts,
BEDSTEADS, MATTRESSES, SPRINGS, WINDOW SHADES
AND POLES, BABY CARRIAGES, ETC.,
You can save money at
Paul’s Furniture Store.
A complete line of COFFIN'S and CASKETS always
on hand. x
GEORGE PAUL, Perry, Ga.
WE BfEEF*
BRICK,
LIME,
CEMENT,
LATHS,
PLASTER,
HAIR,
SASH,
DOORS,
BLINDS,
MOULDINGS,
mantels,
NEWELS,
Pine and Cypress Shingles,
Ceiling, Flooring, Weatherboarding
and Cable Ornaments.
LUMBER,--Green and Kiln Dried.
LATHE AND SCROLL WORK. - DRESSING AND MATCHING.
ALUKINDS WOODWORK ACCURATELY AND PROMPTLY DONE.
We are in the business to stay, and OUR prices are bi&ht. Compare
Special prices on car lots.
’em with Mason’s aud see.
JJI. Hi. HIARHIS <£s co. 7
FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA.
Sole Agents ford Anniston Cement Lime.
N. B.—If it’s made of wood, we have it or will make it.
T"EZiSE»BLOKrE 37.
AND DEALERS IN
GRRCERfES AND PLANTERS 5 SUPPLIES
We take pleasure in informing- our many friends and the
public that we have removed to our Warehouse at
517, 519, 521 POPLAR STREET,
(B. If. Ray’s old stand), where we are prepared to handle
their cotton.
We shall always keep on hand a full stock of Groceries
and Planters’ Supplies, and we will sell goods to planters
at merchants’ prices. We make a specialty of Bagging
and Ties. Please give us a call.
MAYER & WATTS, Macon, Ga..
We Manufacture and Sell
ENGINES,
BOILERS,
COTTON GINS,
COTTON
PRESSES,
SEED COTTON
ELEVATORS,
J. B. Killebrew, A. M., Ph. D.
GRIST MILLS,
SAW MLLS,
AND
EVERYTHING
IN THE
MACHINERY
LINE.
GET OUR
PRICES BEFORE
BUYING.
Ex-Commissioner of Agriculture for Ten
nessee, author of “Culture and Curing of
Tobacco” for U. S. tenth.census, “Tobacco
T.«rf ” “Shflfln Tfuahanflrw ”
We Operate Mafbini Shops and Foundry.
we handle ... F u jl Line Mill Supplies.
- The regular subscription price of tjie
Southern Farm Magazine is &1.00 a year,
but we offer it with the Home Joubnai,
together one year foi£$1.75, cash in ad-
J vance.
MALLARY BROS. & CO.,
t^acoru G-su.
.