The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, December 19, 1889, Image 1

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THE liOJlKJOUBNAL Headquartersfor Houston news. —The Home Journal Job of fice is fully prepared . to do any kind of Commercial job work that may be needed. All nicely pad* ded, and at priees that will com pete with, any city. Call and look at our samples and get our prices, and you will leave your orders.--? Going- to tlie Wall. Don*t Pledge Yourself to Can didates. An Imitator of Mrs. Canfield. | Presidential Preaclnngr and { Practice. '£ SB-fanntlx News. i ' ; Prc!.J.W. Martin*, of New Or-5 :? . - NatIonal capital. ^ leans, failed to profit, by the expe-j The President says: “The loin rience of Mrs. Canfield, of Kansas, ing of public fuuds to the. banks jo announce candidates for the ob it will be remembered that sever- without interest, upon the security. fieers to be elected in October, al months ago Mrs. Canfield, while of Government bonds, I regard as 1890. Soon the candidates will bs a guest of Nashville, wrote to a ! ah unauthorised and dangerous ex- on the march and the state in a friend in Kansasa private ; Tetter,.;podinty It results inya temporary‘ politicaUtiirrnoil. The little chim in which she said some. very un- and unnatural .increase of the dren will begin to hear the foot- kind things, about the southern people, and that she was mortified a few. days afterward to see her let ter in print.;. Prof. Martin is.hav ing a somewhat similar experience. He was imported to New Orleans from another State to take charge of a high school for boys in that city, and he had hardly . got well into harness before he wrote a let ter to his_friend,„the editor of the Lathrop (Mo.) Monitor/ from which the following is an. extract;- “A school teacher in the north is one who fears God and loves the little children. In the south a school teacher is a person who has a .well developed muscle and whose watchword is dispatch. All. honor to whom" honor is due,- but the pu pils here obey only when compell ed by force or fear. You cannot appeal to their sense of right and honor, for they are destitute of such dualities. Such is now and 1 Augusts Evening-Sews. The jdte bagging combination, it is reported, has reached the con clusion that it will be more profit able to dissolve their league aud seek incorporations. .According to the Boston Commercial Bulletin eight companies, with a total an nual capacity ;of . 31,300,000 yard^ .will be incorporated under the laws of West Virginia as the Amer ican Manufacturing Company, with a capital stock of $1,000,00(1 Pour- teen mills will remain independ ent*, with a capacity of 30,600,000 yards.. , - ■ • : § Commenting on those statements the Springfield Republican says;— “So goes another trade conspiracy* It held up prices with the grand result of stimulating a most profit able .production from the: inde pendent mills and driving the cot ton planters to the use of a large amount of bagging of other mate rial—of diminishing demand, and increasing production where there has already been over-production: Prices must come down now, and the last state of the-trade is infi nitely worse than the first,” .*. All of this, says the News and Courier, will be interesting to. the Farmers’- Alliance and tq other farmers throughout the South who are already preparing to continue the fight in favor of cotton cover ing next year. It is plain that by -oueerted action the cotton pro ducers caneasily make themselves master of ,thS situation. It ,$rill not do, hoVever, to wait until midr summer before taking action, as they waited this year. The whole question in regard to. the covering GAINS J. H. HERTZ, elialjie (MKr and Furnislisrj macqn. ga... . Will give his cnstcriur better goods; low er prices, and a larger assort ment to select from. cautious and gin to mate their inquiries: ; deposits to - Mother, who is it outeo.late? ommercial in- Nobody, love, but the candidate, be, expected The farmer will be run down in hese. depositsj the field, his wife will be flattered, to the Treas- and his children kissed. We resent highly wish to impress upon our farming nt is contin-<friends, not to be deceived, itically gefcin.- Don’t promise. Say you will e bonds and see about it,.and then do what you f further use say. When the proper time comes, is method of canvass the matter among—your- efliTON tmm .XTrLdeiweai. * To fit a boy three years old, or the largest sized man. i. W. HSiTZ, y "• 574 anj-57^6 Cherry Street, macon’ GA. MACON, GAi IF YOU WMT FIEST-CLASS GROCER IE Si should be . done. The expedient which the President says is “un authorised and dangeuaus” has been persisted in by a Secretary of the Treasury over whom it is popularly supposed the. President is capable of exercising some in fluence. The President implies that the. deposits, cannot be with drawn without “id j ary to the com mercial interests,” unless it is done a “cautious and gradual” way. He has been so cautious and gradual that he has reduced * the deposits less than 160,000 since the begin ning of the fiscal year. But the Administration which General Harrison denounced last, year for its financial policy reduced the de posits $7,756,554 .in the corre sponding .five months’ including the last four months of the Presi dential campaign This was done without injury ..to the commercial interests and without that procla mation Secretary Windom has just issued, which gives a six weeks’ notice of the proposed withdraw als, which is quite .as much inter est to the speculators as it is to fha. regular business interests of the country. During these five months at the beginning of the fishal year the interest bearing debt has been re- duced $51,798,240, which is very creditable; and- the average of about ten 'millions a moiith is as good as the late Administration showed, but the late Administra tion kept that average up for twelve months an d the present Ad ministration has not kept it up'for nine. The reduction of the inter est bearings debt since this Admin istration came iii is . $80,050,470. Its reduction of the net debt, how ever, is only S60,895.29n. If this Administration has 'Ireduced the deposits in the banks $7,756,564 instead of a beggarly little $59,709 its reduction of the debt would have compared very-favorably with that of its', predecessor. the. corresponding nine months of lasf year the bonded debt was reduced $94*695,850, or fourteen millions more than this year. - COMFECTlOf\-ERIES, Friiits in Season, Ci gars, Tobacco, Etc. Examine my stock before purchasing Besides a full stock of ; ST ANDARD GOODS,’ I trill always have On hand some the town in which the Monitor is published. He at once wrote to the New Orleans Spates, and made a very decided effort to crawfish out of his former statements. He said he was not writing for the New Orleans public, that he had no intention of reflecting upon The pupils and teachers of southern schools,- end what he meant ..was that “more force, was used, in- the south than in schools iu thefioitli.” This was an explanation that did not explain. Indeed, Prof. Mar- tin’-s letter to the Latjn’op Monitor is so direct a reflection upon south ern teachers; pupils and parents, that it would be a mistake for him to say anythiug about it* unless he wanted to retract his formes state ments, and make a frank admis sion that he was either impelled : by prejudice to say what he did, 'or that .he knew nothing of what ; he wrote about. It appears that he received a paft ,of his education in the south, and that he has taught : school in the south a number of years. He, was not ignorant, there fore, upon the subject* and it is to be assumed that he was controlled by a very improjjei 1 motive. He certainly acted in' a very fdfclish manner, but he will probably be itke only sufferer. His statements have no doubt caused him to lose whatever influence /for good ; he may have, .had among his pupils, and such .being the-case, hrs work in New Orleans, where he has a ,good school, will soon come, doubt less to an end. - ’ v / • »«'«:. :—-m-fjpjj . In Nashville, Tenn., they de vised a shrewd arrangement for enabling voters who could not iread,.to. place their cross in the right plape on .the .ballot of the Australian system. They had tin plates made just, the size, of the ballots, and With, slots cut in them at such, intervalsv that the open spaces would come oyer those names which the voter desired to. cross. A young lawyer' of Nash ville invented the device the bight before the election. The republican ad ministration and the .representatives of that party iu .congress certainly need: instruction, which they will receive i -ip due season. In 1892 it will be | emphatically demonstrated that! the United States constitute an in-! stitution that.is much larger than : the republican^ party" : at remarkably low figures. I^Loo&oiit for changes in this ad verticepieni. i S.L. SPEIGHT, . ; Mian, ga. - Qen. Alger doesn’t propose to let the president get ahead of him iu hatching pension schemes. He wants census enumerators to col lect the names of -all old, federal soldiers who are living, and of-rep resentatives of those who are dead, with regiment, rank,- residence, physical . and financial condition, etc. In a word, Gen. Alger wants the government to search the high ways and the. r byways for people* upon whom to bestow - pensions. As such reports Would be from government agents, the govern ment would hardly go back. bn them, and as a consequence many a person who misrepresented mat ters to tha enumerators would get a pension. This is a brilliant scheme—for getting the good will of the.grand army. It is on a par with President Harrison’s.—Sav annah News. Opposite Hotel Lanier, Macon, Ga» Meals at all Sours.. Open Say and Sight* sleeping Accommodations in Cod- neciions: 25 Cents a Bed. Elegant Barber .Shops. Attached. . /Berlin now has' a system of large postal wagons-—with.- sorting stamping arrangements, preparing t—which tables, and everything used in p’ mail for. transportation- operate on all the city mail routes. About two hours is thus saved in preparin' teams, as the clerks do ail the .sort ing, stamping and bundling while the wagon rolls swiftly along. A large tract of swamp land on the line of the Jacksonville-South eastern rajlipad, near Manito, 111., has been recently/ drained./ The result of. the_ draining has; been peculiar. In some places /the . 7. have just opened, the elegant ‘SUWANW.EE;RIVER BAR’ Where.only- the ’best Liquors will be sold: Come to see me when in Macon. Will fill jpgs promptly, and at low fig. : xtres for cash. Ary liquors are guaran* the city mails for the There are ten gentile churches, in Salt Lake City of the / leading i denominations. The Methodists, j the Prebyterisns, the Baptists andj the Congregationaiisis—through, i the New West Educational 'Asso ciation-all have mission schools, the Methodist being a 'hoarding school Hammond Hall, the gift of /Charles G. Hammond, of Chicago, is the oldest . school of the New : West* which has beside it two op ithree ward schools? The virions! nafeing necessary re-. j iniskiea schools .seem to be full. ——- j - Itis said thatTemqn juice-will m is no* dying off and. ma ke the hands soft and smooth. from the earth anvj **»S« he Caucasian is. They/ A ^ fe . 3 most part, adopted’ is one which 15 guaranteed to id habits, and live bring S| satisfactory - results, cr pr,, . . m case of railure. a return pur- Auey are v; tDcreasin^ chase: price. On this safe' plan you decreasing,. They arp can bay from our advertised Drug- erqus, are raising fam- : gist-a bottle of Dr. /King’s New atlily increasing in the : Discovery for Consumption. It.is ■ guaranteed to bring relief in every; , c , c* ise* when used for any affection.; r has been sued £q r ‘ of Throat, Lungs or'Chesi such aal 'lands’. Consumption, Inflammation of; teed to be the best in the market! Bespectfully, WILL WAGNOY 673 Forth St reei, Corner of Pi MACON, GA /.-.; Refrigeration has become an in dispensable factor in domestic econoipy* both on land and sea/ and many of the ships no w.sailing on distant voyages .are provided •with steam refrigerators* In which milk and .other food rnay readily, be preserved for any length - of • time. . There are 198 womem operators in. the great operating room of the Western Union in New York. In this room a husband and wire are ; working side by side. . They are | perfectly matched in skill, but the. | nian gets $15 more a month than : ! the women. YD'&ODYK Bsui \, 19 FOURTH ST., MACON, GA. .1 Open Uay and ISTigM at All Hours, The 3est Stock of Wises, Liquors aa£ a Z*r+i Accompanied by ail thC*Driicacie» of th* to'rct dQH» NOXA09 NOXiOD THE RESTAURANT DcPARTI Polite Glmka and Attentive Wait ways on hand. . • GIVE ME A CAU J. VALENTINO* M Keuralffia Persons And. those troubled with nervousness resulting Ircun cure or overv/ork iTiil be relieved by taking Jiroimvs lron m*ik tad srowed red lines on wrapper. FOll DYSPEPSIA Use IJrov.-u ; M Hitters. All dealers 1-etp it. $1.00 per bottle. Genuine ku trade-mark and crossed red lines on wrapper.