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Isaacs’
413 Third Street,
MACON, CEORCIA.
Regular Meals 25c.
WITH UP-TO-DATE
quick lunch counter
Pronjpt and Polite Service.
Patrouage Solicited.
PATTON & HECKLE
Proprietors.
) Partition in
(He us ton Supe
CITATION.
M.G. Bayne
_ »T 8 ., . , f rior court! ~6c-
jfuliette B. Rufbaeur, etal) tober term, 1902
To whom it may ooncern:
Notioe is hereby given, in accordance
with an order of his Honor,Judge W. H,
Felton, Jr., that application has been
made by the plaintiff in the above sta
ted oase for partion of the Hast half of
lot number 179, in the sixth district of
Houston county, and showing being
made that the same oannot be so divi
ded as to be of value to the parties, au
order was passed to sell the same by the
undersigned as commissioners. If no le
gal objections are filed with us before
the 1st Tuesday in October next the
same will be sold, and the prooeeds di
vided in accordance with said order.
J. W. Rushing,
M. L. Cooper,
Jno. H. Hodges,
Sept. 1,1902. Commissioners.
PARTITION SALK.
Will be sold before the court house in
Perry, Georgia, during the legal hours
of sale, on the 1st Tuesday in October
next, to the highest bidder for oash, the
following property, to-wit:
All that tract or paroel of land situat
ed, lying and being in the sixth district
of Houston county, known and distin
guished in the plan of said distriot as
lot No. 179; arid being the east half of
said lot, containing one hundred one and
one-fourth (101)0 acres more or less.
Said sale made by order of his Honor,
Judge W. H. Felton, Jr., on application
of M. G. Bayne, for a partition of said
land between him and Mrs.. Juliett B.
Hufbauer, and others, as joint owners of
said land. Said Bale will be made in
pursuance of said order; and title made
to the purchaser by the undersigned,
who wero appointed commissioners by
said order to sell said land.
J. W. Hushing,
M. L. Cooper,
Jno. H. Hodges,
Sept. 1,1902/'' Commissioners,
PARTITION SALE.
By virtue of an order granted on Aug
ust 12th, 1902, by his Honor, Judge W.
H. Felton, Jr., there 'will be sold before
the court house in Perry, Georgia, on
the 1st Tuesday in October next, during
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash, the following property,
to-wit:
Being that tract or parcel of land lying
in the sixth district of Houston county,
and known in the plan of said distriot as
lot No. one hundred thirty-nine (139),
and also 20 acres off of the northwest
corner of lot No. one Hundred and fifty
<I50); said lands bounded on the north
by lands of O. C. Bateman, on the east
by lands of the estate of J. F. Sykes, on
the south by lands of Mrs. M. M. Rush
ing, on the west by lands of James
Barnes.
Said sale made by said order on the
application of M. G. Bayne for himself,
and as guardian for Lester, Alva and
Marmadulce Bayne, for partition of said
lands between him and J. W. Rushing,
and others, joint owners of said lands, or
their assigns.
Said sale will be made in pursuance of
said order, and title will be inade to the
purchaser by the undersigned, who were
appointed commissioners to sell said
lands by said order.
M. L. Cooper,
Jno. H. Hodges,
M. A. Edwards,
Sept. 1, 1902, Commissioners.
GEORGIA, Houston County: *
Abe Glass has applied for administra
tion on the estate of Bettie Reddick,late
of said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the October
term, 1902. d? the court of Ordinary of
said county and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not
be granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1,1902.
SAM T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA. Houston County..
Abe Glass has applied for administra
tion on the estate of Ritta Felder, late of
said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1902, of the court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause,if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1,1902.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
Burning Purse String, at Both Ends-
Southern Educational Board.
The little town of Pawtuckett in
Rhode Island has one hundred and
thirty-one inventors—one hundred
and thirty-one men and boys who
have patented that number of use
ful articles and appliances, says the
North Mississippi Herald.
Rhode Island has a compulsoiy
school law. A man is compelled by
that law to educate his ohildren.
In raw material and natural re
sources Rhode Island is poor be
yond compare with Mississippi. Yet
with her manner of education her
people have turned to manufacture
and invention, and that section is
now the richest spot on the conti
nent. Mississippi spends quite as
much of her comparative wealth on
education as Rhode Island, yet I
doubt whether there are one hun
dred and thirty-one inventors in the
whole State.
Every town and city in the Sta,te,
has an over-supply of brainy young
fellows who have been crowded into
the professions—law, dentistry, the
ministry, etc. Only a very small
per cent of these have their heads
above the level. Many of them
will live and die failures*- It is not
their fault. They have the brains,
the energy, the mussle and /the de
termination to do, but there is little
left when their brother lawyers or
doctors get their share. So in the
end he becomes listless and content
ed with a bare livelihood—a victim
of mis-applied education.
Our lawmakers are largely to
blame for this state of affairs. They
refused to see and are still blind to
future possibilities. And parents
are to blame, too, for not taking up
arms against the system, when each
year has but added to their further
discontent. The same trrin that
carried their boy Jo New York or
Chicago for the completion of his
education as a proffessional man,
carried also au order fora wagon
from Ohio, a buggy from Indiana, a
dress from New York, or a watch
from Connecticut, thus lighting
both ends of the purse string at the
same time.
Why not teach a boy to make the
things that we buy elsewhere.
A Candid Candidate.
A Kansas editor announces him-
Belf as a candidate for the Republi
can nomination for trustee of the
township in which he lives. He
“I am not aware of any urgent
demand that I stand up and be shot
at. None of the prominent citizens
of the township have ‘urged’ me to
‘allow’ my name to come before the
primary. In fact, very few beside
myself have even surmised that I
had a yearning for the office until
now. But the subject has been
worrying me for two or three days,
and after much deliberation arid
against the protest of the other and
better half of the household, i have
concluded to euter the race,
“Why?”
“Because I want the job. I be
lieve I can hold it dowp, and I am
willing to try. The little money
that is in it will help me to pay for
my home, and the honor in it will
be a step aoward the United States
presidency, which will place me in
position—if I could get it—to pro
cure for this township a federal
building and an extention of the
Panama Canal.
GEORGIA—Houston County.
A. B. Greene and F. O. Houser, execu
tors of Mrs. Emily Greene, have applied
for leave to sell the real estate of said
deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1902, of the court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1, 1902.
SAM T. HURST; Ordinary.
Some of the greatest men Eng
land has produced have resolutely
refused to accept titles even when
urged to do so. Carlyle was a no
table instance in the field of letters.
Mr. Gladstone in the field* of poli
tics. The ordrir of merit will meet
cases of this kind and will be a
higher badge of honor than any ti
tle. Carlyle accepted the Prussian
order of merit. Lord Kelvin is now
the holder of both the Prussian and
British orders.
Stops the Cough and Works off
* the Cold.
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets
cures a cold in one day. No cure,
No pay. Price, 25 cents
Mrs. Carrie Nation, the famous
“saloon smasher,” has been engaged
to deliver two lectures in Valdosta
during the state fair. That she will
Drove a great attraction, goes with-
i out saying.—Exchange.
Pointed Facts That Boys Who Drink
Might Profitably Ponder.
.Kxchuige.
A lady living in a western state
has recently written to a number
of men prominent in the business
world, eaoh of whom furnishes em
ployment to a large number of peo
ple, asking what their attitude
would be toward a young man who
presented himself for employment
and was known to partake of liquor
occasionally. In almost every case
where she put the question she‘ re
ceived an answer, and if there is
anything surprising in tne whole af
fair, it is the unanimity of opinion
on the part of those who sent re
plies.
Heads of large mercantile estab
lishments, manufacturers, bankers
and contractors all agreed as to the
course to follow. None of them
cared to employ a young man who
indulged, even rarely, in the use of
liquor. These men of wicle experi
ence unanimously voted such em
ployes unreliable. Not one of them
woqld give work to moderate or oc
casional drinkers if any other candi
dates presented themselves. One
prominent Westerner, in a lengthy
and earnest letter, expressed the
opinion that the young man who
“handicapped himself” by forming
such habits had .a very poor chance
of rising in the world.
Now this is only one side of "the
temperance question, and perhaps
an insignificant Bide in comparison
with certain other phases. Yet no
boy or young man ambitious to
make his mark can be indifferent to
these publicly expressed opinions.
It is significant that even proprie
tors of saloons, when advertising for
a barkeeper,frequently stipulate that
the applicants shall be men of tem
perate habits.
Indulgence in liquor unfits men
to do their best in any kind of em
ployment, and in these days of com
petition no young man can expect
to succeed who does not work at his
best. One who deliberately handi
caps himself at the start has only
himself to blame for his future.
3STEW YORK
mm„
mWlM
I
I I
I am offering my complete snd choice stock of
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Notions, etc., at
Goods,
BARGAIN
Having bought cheap, I sell at lowest possible figures.
My friends are invited to make my store headquarters, and
,leave their packages, especially during Carnival Week and
the Farmers’ National Congress.
Wagon yard and stable in rear of store free to my cus- -
tomers.
I can save you money. Come to see me.
Earnings of American Farms.
Approximately the earnings of the
five and two-thirds million farms of
the United States was, for 1901, five
and t n j-fiftb billion dollars. This
is far in excess of the total income
of the farmers at any other time in
their history. The products of the
farms for 1899 sold for $4,739,118,-
752, The cereals, save corn, are
about equal to the crop of 1899.
This year 600,000,000 bushels more
corn and several hundred thousand
head of steers were .placed on the
market, A^d one should also re
member that the number of farms is
continuously increasing at a rate of
from 16,000 to 40,000 annually.-r-
Review of Reviews.
Editor John Temple Graves, of
the Atlanta News, is responsible for
the following truthful and inspiring
sentiment: “Let our young men of
Georgia understand that there are
better things than holding office;
that office never yet exalted man
hood; that the man exalts the office
which seeks him, while the office
that be seeks by questionable meth
ods will degrade them both. Let
them know that the argument that
is effective and eloquence that lives
is founded upon the Right, and that
amid the changes of- a ^mutable
world the one,thing that is immor
tal and unchanging is the Truth.
Let them know that the fame that
is perpetual is founded upon high
character, and that the enduring
names that live in honor are carved
upon the marble of integrity. *
1C. ZAR
454 MULBERRY ST.
MACON, GEORGIA
Ibb Supply Company,
MAO N, GKOBGIA.
AND IMPLEMENTS,
Belting, Saws, Engines, Saw Mills,
Chattanooga Reversible Disc.. pirklirci
Syracuse Chilled and Mallory L1U W b
Chattanooga Cane Mills,
Superior Grain Drills,
Keystone Shredders.
Osborne Harrows, Mowers & Rakes
Perkins Wind Mill
HSIToto S’u.ppl'jr OorcQ.parn.'sr.
Easy Way l« Purchase a Firstclass
Piano at lowest Prices and
on Very Easy Terms.
1st. Join the Club for very best Pianos
(prices frona $860 to $600). by paying $10 and
then $2.50 per week or $10 per month. Pian
os delivered as soon as you join' club,
Snd. Join the Club for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $250 to
$300), by paying $8 to join and $2 per- week
or $8 per month.
These Pianos are all the very best makes.
Dali at once and join the Club, and make
your selection of one of these celebrated
makes of Pianos.
J080,
F. A. OTTTENBERGER,
' 432 Second St., Macon, Ga.
Laxative Chocolates cure chronic
constipation and liver trouble. Pleas
ant to take. Purely vegetable. Guar
anteed, at Cater’s Drugstore.
It has come to light why a cer
tain great Hindoo Maharajah, who
recently visited England, did not
appear at any of the social functions
to which it was the earnest desire
to invite him. The name of the par
ticular god whom he reverenced be
ing piously engraved on his card in
large letters and his own beiag
modestly shown in one corner, the
invitations were all addressed to the
wrong personage. This was proba
bly the first time the smart people
of London ever invited a heathen
god to meet and make merry with
them,—Exchange.
Sound Kidneys—Perfect Health.
The use of Smith’s Sure Kidney Cure
will produce both. Try a bottle aup
be convinced. 60 cents at Cater’s
Drugstore. * ,‘f ■
Subscribe for tike Home Journal
Weber, Brown, Russell and Thornhi’l ^Varmis cheaper
than you ever bought them before, to make room ana re
duce storage and insurance.
MACON,
GA.
J. W. SHINHOLSER, ^