The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, October 23, 1902, Image 8

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Cured His Kliemuntisin. Air. John Chick, of Lob Angeles, Gal., writes: "1 feel very grateful to you'for iuduoing we to use your Rheumatic cure —Uiuoson. I had suffered intensely for two years, using all kinds of remedies, internal and external, withons the least benefit. GriosoXi cured me.” It alio cures r!I Bladder and Kidney troubles caused by urio acid. Send stamp for book of particulars to the Lamar & Rankin Drug Co., Atlanta, Ga., or Urio- son Chemical Go., Los Angeles, Cal. DrugRiSts sell it at §1.00 per bottle, or six bottles for $5,00. PENNS V IiVA-NlA. PURE RYE, EIGHT YEARS OLD. OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS Four fultQuarts of this Pine Old, Pure RYE WHISKEY, $3.50 Wo ship on approval In plain, sealed boxes! with no niarkB to Indicate contents. When (you rocolvo it ami test it, if it is not satisfactory, return it at our expense and wo wll return your 93.00. Wo guarantee this brand to ho EIGHT YEARS OLI). High t bottles for $0 SO, express prepaid; light bottlos for $i 12 bottfos for 90 50 ■ ' oxproBB pronaid. press propafd, 93 00: ss prepaid, $0 00. i jug, express Wo haiifffo all-the loading brands of Rye and. llourbon Whiskies and will savo you BO Per Cent, on Your Purchases: Quart, Gallon. Kontuoky Star Bourbon, 9 85 9125 liilkridgo llourbon 40 165 Boon Hollow llourbon 45 Gel wood I’nro Rye 00 Monogram Kyo 55 Mcllnuttv Rye *. 00 Malcor's A AAA, 00 O. O. P. (Old Osoar Peppor) . 05 Old Crow 75 Finoher's Golden Wedding 75 Hoffman Houho Ryo 00 Mount Vernon, 8 yours old 100 Old Dillingor Ryo, 10 yours old,.... 125 Tho abovo »ro only a fow brands. Bond for a catalogue. All other floods by tho gallon, such as Wbiskoy, Poaoli and Apple Brandies, oto oqunlly as low, lrom 9125 a gallon and up wo make a spoa;‘ ‘ and all ordorsby ^ have our prompt .. inducements offered. 100 200 220 240 240 260 260 300 360 400 Corn . sold wards lusty of the. Jug Trade. Mail or Tolgeraph will ?t attention: Special Jrdors shipped same day of the roaeipt of order. Tho Alt may or & Flateau Liquor Company, 616, 508. BIO, 512 Fourth Btreet, near Unlbn Passongor Dopot. \i\oon, Georgia An Education From Five Cents. That a way may be found to ob tain an education if only the will is there has been proven by the expe rience of more than one determined and ambitious boy and girl, but in the whole history of education en deavor there is probably no story so remarkable as that of a western wo man who is now a successful physi cian and who started out to acquire an education with a capital of only five, cents. Her brother, whom she entreated to send her to school, so the story runs, laughingly handed her a nickel and told her Bhe could go if that would pay her expenses. Piqued by his indifference, she determined to show him what could be accomplish ed by a resourceful woman even if her entire financial capital did con sist of but five cents. Buying a yard of calico, she made a sunbonnet and sold it for a quar ter, with which she bought material for other bonnets, ahd later for aprons, which she sold at a small profit until she had made several dollars. Her brother, seeing her de termination, gave her a small piece land, which she herself planted in Bweet potatoes, which yielded,! the first year, a forty-dollar crop. When she had saved a sufficient amount for the few necessary expenses, she entered a state school and was grad uated with high honors. Later, she entered a medical college at Balti more, Maryland, paying for her tui tion by nursing, and from this insti tution also she was graduated with honors, and moved book to her old home to take up her brilliantly suc cessful life work. Potentialities, in a nickel? Yes, they are marvelous .when the small amount is wisely invested, but they are nothing in comparison with the powers for achievement that belong to many women, but too often lie dormant because of a lack of faith io one’s self or a fear of conditions in the outside world all too rarely favorable to the woman who works. —Exchange. PERFECT PASSENGER AND SUPERB SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Connecting at SAVANNAH with STEAMSHIP LINES PLYING BETWEEN Savannah and New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore AND ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST Complete Information, rates, schedules of trains and sailing dates of steamers cheerfully furnished by any agent of the company. •PHEO. D. KUNE, W. A. WINBURN, Qanaral 8up*t, Traffic Manage^ O.O. HAILE, Goneral PaM'r Agent,; . fc * R9BIN80N, Asc’t G*ior»l PoM’r Atftftfe / 8AMAHNAH.QA. BRING US YOUR JOB WORK. SATIS FACTION GUARANEETD. "Killing Time.” .. " A young man a day or so ago was seen to approach a crowd of young men loafing in front of one of the stores on Jefferson street, to whom he made the remark; “What are you all doing?” “Oh, just killing time,” answered one of theha. This is a very oommon expression and a very forcible one. But its meaning is some thing fearful, says the ^Roanoke Times. It is the young man who, gen erallyspeaking, does the killing of time; for in advanced age it is all too late to moke amends; time that has been killed can never be resurreoted. “Killing time” lit erally expresses a fact, and when so killed is as dead to ail intents and purposes as though it had been a living body. But the sad ness of the thought, What re grets must have come to those who, having passed the meridian of life, and tne lengthening shad ows are pointing to the grave looking baok over their past lives recall the time that has been killed. To save time lengthens the life; to kill time, shortens it Life is short at best, without the aot of one’s volition contributing to its hastening. The value of a few moments of each day is sel dom calculated. Bonaparte once said he won his battle because his enemies did not know the value of five minutes. So it is with ev eryone. There is no battle of life that cannot be won if due regard is had for the five minutes a day With the multiplication of books and the simplification of the ele mentary principles in every art or profession, thirty minutes a da; of diligenoe and application wif sooner or later mean the mastery of the art or profession. The young man who deliberate ly kills time commits a crime against himself and nature’s laws The quota of time meted out to rveryone has no surplus moments and he who can saccessfully weave the whole of life’s fabrics in the given time has done well. _ SMITH’S NERVE RESTORER This medioine is guaraateed to care all cases of Nervous Prostration oaused by. overwork. It is a trne Nerve Tonio and restores Nqfyqj|:| Vitality or Loss of Manhood." It will hot only relieve these nervous troubles ahd weaknesses, but will restore them to full vigor and man hood. Guaranteed. Sold by Dr. R. L. Cater. ;; f • C ^ . Items of Interest. Every hair has two oil glands at its base. The globe of the eye is moved by six muscles. Roses cam© from Persia, and into Persia from India. Canada has over 800 lobster can neries in operation. ‘ All animals ruminate which have horns and cloven feet. London is better off for trees than any other city in Europe. The human skeleton, exclusive of teeth, consists of 208 bones. In some New Zealand towns there are more women voters than men. The amount of French capital in vested in China exceeds $100,000,- 000. ' In Germany the state debt amounts to £11 17s. per head of the. popula tion. Canadian trade with Great Brit ain increased $6,000,000 the past year. SI An acre of sago-palm will yield as much nourishment as 163 acreB of wheat. Twelve per cent only of the Brit ish army are 5 fefet 10 inches or over in height. Half a million miles is the latest estimate of the length of the world’s railways. One of the boroughs of London, England, has a motor street clean ing machine. . Ducks, when migrating, rarely fly lower tnau 600 feet, and more usu ally 1,400 feet. In the eleven states interested in the industry 260,000 acres are sown in sugar beets. Tea pills are how sold. They run 14 to the~ounce, and each makes a large cup of tea. During the South African war 1,- 400 Germans are said to have fought against.!the British. The armies and navies of Europe absorb 12 days’ earnings yearly of the entire population. The Brazilian coffee crop for the year ending June 30, 1902, amount ed to 10,000,000 bags. The wheat crop of Minnesota is variously estimated at from 80,000, 000 to 110,000,000 bushels. Recent analysis of the city water at Manila showed that it was not responsible for the cholera raging there. The total value of Canada’s min eral products for 1900 reached over $63,000,000, or $12 per head of the population. By Bowing nitrate of soda in small quantities in showery weather under trees a most beautiful verdure will be obtained. Alaska has paid its cost 20 times It was bought for $7,200,000, and has supplied $160,000,005 in furs, fish and gold. Land cultivated by irrigation is more productive than land where rainfall moisture alone is sufficient to mature the crops. The* charge for ft dog taken to Europe on the main lines of steam ers varies from $10 for a lap dog to $30 for the larger varieties. The human body of average weight contains three pounds and 13 ounces of caloium, which at present market rates is worth $200 an ounce. Penny X-ray instruments, by the aid of which the curious may see their own finger bones, are being sold on the streets of London. It costs $48,000 a year for a page advertisement in the Ladies’ Home' Journal, and that publication gets all the advertising it wants, at that rate. The publishers have just closed a $24p!000 ; contract with the Proctor-Gamble Company of Cin cinnati for advertising Ivory soap. And yet some say it doesn’t pay to advertise. the the There are more patients in Georgia State Sanitarium for Insane at Milledgeville than ever before in its history, says Dr. T. O Powell, the superintendent, in his report to the governor just submit ted. These patients number 2,635 of which 1,840 are white and 796 colored. Ihifl signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quiiiiiie Tablet* tho remedy that care* a cold lit ooo deg The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has home the signature of d ■ - ~ and has been made under liis per- \sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health off Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is GASTOR1A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing, Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the Stomach and Dowels,- giving healthy r^nd natural sleep. The Children’s L anacea—Tho Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA always Bears the Signature of In Use For Over;30 Years. THC CENTAUR COMPANY. TV MURRAY STREET. NtW YORK CITY. and all Liver, Kidney and*Biad- der troubles caused by uric acid in the system. It cures by cleansing and vitalizing the blood, thus removing the cause of disease. It gives vigor and tone and builds up the health aud strength of the patieut while using the remedy. URICSoL is a luminary iu the medical world. It has cured and will continue to cure more of the above diseases than all other known remedies, many of which do more harm than good. This great and thoroughly tested and endorsed .California Remedy . j never disappoints. It cures in* 1| fallibly if taken as directed. •* 11 Try it and be convinced that it is a wonder and a blessing to suffering humanityr < * Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 bot tles for $5. For sale by druggists. Send stamp for book of partic ulars and wonderful cures. If your druggist cannot supply you It will be sent, prepaid, upon receipt of price. Address: URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., Los Angelw, CaL or the LAMAS & RANKIN DRUG CO., Atlanta, Os. Distributing Agoata. The Macan Telegraph. Published every day and Sunday, and Twice-a-Week, by The Macon Telegraph Publishing Co. Subscription Daily and Sunday, $7.00 per annum. Daily except Sunday, $5.00 per annum. Twice- a-Week, $1.00 per annum. Best advertising medium, m the city. Rates furnished on appli cation. THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL OF ATLANTA, GA. ■i Is a twlce-o-weok NEWS paper, published on Monday and Thursday of each week, with all the latest news of the world, which comes over their leased wires direot.to their office, lean eight-page seven-column paper. By arrangements wo have secured a special rate with them in connection with OUE PAPER. and for $2 we will send ME HOME JOURNAL, THE ATLANTA -Sefni-Weekl.Y Jeur rta- and the Southern Cultivator ALL THREE ONE YEAR. This is the best offer we have ever made our friends and subscribers. You had better take advahtage of this offer at once, for The Journal may withdraw their special rate to us at any time. The Semi-Weekly has many prominent men and women contributors to their columns, among them being Hev. Sam Jones, Rev. Walk er Lewis, Hon. Harvie Jordan, Hon. John Tem ple Graves arid Mrs. W. H. Felton, besides their crops qf efficient editors, who take care of tho news matter. Their departments are well cov ered. Its columns of farm news are worth tho the price of the paper, Send direct to this office $2.00 and secure the three above mentioned papers one year Address . ■ C7 - THE HOME JOURNAL, PERKY. GA. Subscribe... Trade Marks . Designs »^‘ c te n . fldentral -. Handb00k on Patents Oldest agency for seeurihg patents. Patents, taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the lve Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, S3 a r 2?°,2 t ^ 8 ’ W * Sold by all newsdealers. Subscribe for the Home Journal for ~ Christian Union Herald, a strong, religious, seven-column paper, devoted to the moral and material ad vancement of the colored race, with an extensive circulation. Published Weekly at Savannah, Ga. Subscription $1.00 Per ie,«r. REV, W. A, DINKINS, Editor, P. E. Port Valley District. THE COMMONER, (Mr. Bryan’s Paper.) The Commoner has attained within six months from date of the first issue a circulation of 100,000 copies, a record probably never equaled in the history of American periodical literature. The unparalleled growth of thiB paper de monstrates that there is room in the newspaper fields for a national paper de voted to the discussion of political, economic, and social problems- To the columns of the Commoner Mr. Bryan contributes his best effortsjapd his views of political events as they arise from time to time can not fail to inteiest those who study public questions. . The Commoner’s regular snbcription price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur nish his paper-and Home Jotjbnaii to gether for on* year for $1.90. The reg ular.subscription price of the two pf pers when suboribed for separately i s $2.60.