The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, May 02, 1901, Image 5

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• v c %■s; ijfi g £ j The Williams Buggy ‘ Company, ^ macon, Georgia. Poplar Street, •^fcxtto Adams’ Warehouse. OUR FACTORY Is thoroughly equipped with modern machinery, and we are prepared to save you the middle man's profit on any kind ol Vehicle, from a Log Cart to the. finest Rub ber Tire Buggy, by sell- . ing you direct from our Factory. i T y -- * iS kw&u"*** The Vehicles we male are the best feu can get, We handle a complete line of Buggses, Wagons, Harness, Laprobes, Carriage Hardware. and A full line of.... Harvesting Machines. Special attention given to IPa^IrLtlrLg:, ALL OVER THE HOUSE. A Few Simple but Useful Buies For Wasliday. Try washing red table linen in "water in which a little boras has been dissolved. Add a few drops of ammonia to the blue water to whiten the clothes. Clothes turned right side out, carefully folded and sprinkled, are half ironed. Sprinkle salt on a wine stain and pour hot water through it until it is gone. Wet fruit stains with alcohol or pour boiling water through them. Kerosene may he safely used with boiling water to whiten yellow clothes. The quantity required is a tablespoonful to each gallon of suds. For very yellow or grimy things make an emulsion of kerosene, clear limewater and turpentine in equal parts. Shake them together until creamy, then add a cupful to a boil erful of clothes and boil for half an hour. The same emulsion is good for very dirty articles, such as jumpers, overalls, working shirts, children’s trousers. Use it in conjunction with strong suds, as hot as the hand can bear, and rub a little upon the spots that are dirty and grease spots. Let the clothes stand five minutes be fore -washing out, and be sure to have the second suds and the rins ing water as hot as the first. If coffee is spilled on linen, the stains can be removed by soaking the part hi clear cold water, to which a litlle borax has been added, for 12 hours. If the stain is from tea or fruit, do not put the article in cold water, or the stain will become set; sim ply pour boiling water over it until it disappears, which it will do if quite fresh. HOW TO TREAT BRUISES. For an ordinary bruise such as re sults from an ill directed hammer or from a door shutting on one’s fin ger use a mild astringent of some sort, such as witch hazel or vinegar. Keep the bruise constantly wet un til the pain ceases, using a bandage of old muslin for wrapping. If the pain is very intense, laudanum may be added. After the pain has ceas ed and only discoloration and swell ing remain to tell the tale it is a good plan to apply a stimulating liniment. This induces an extra flow of fresh blood to the spot. In the case of a severe bruise the sup ply of blood to the injured part must he lessened by elevating it above the heart and applying cold water or even ice. Of course when the bruise, or contusion rather, is of such moment house remedies should be indulged in only while waiting for a doctor, a truth that necessarily applies to all the various emergencies that arise. In cases of severe burns physicians are often hampered by the home remedies that cover the burns and hide the real extent of the injury. Stop the Cough and Works off the Cold Laxitive Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. YOUNG ICE CREAM PATRONS. Every day a big freezer of ice cream is made in the senate restau rant. No senator ever eats ice cream in the daytime, and the few ladies who take lunch in the restaurant rarely call for it. The chief patrons of the frozen food are the hoys. The love of these youngsters for ice cream surpasses all understand ing. It is a purely 4 juvenile taste, and they indulge in it to their hearts’ content. The substantial ' sandwich, the succulent pie, the ninety and nine other things that a sensible man would select for his lunch have no attractions for the bright little fellows. They want ice cream and plenty of it. At lunch- i time half a dozen pages can he seen burying their noses into heaped up plates of ice cream, while their faces are the very mirrors of content ment. If it r wasn’t for the pages, the ice j cream freezer would have to go out oi business.—Washington Post. THE G. A. R. GOING PAST. The adjutant general of the Grand Army of the Republic re-1 ports that during the last year the death rate among its members has rapidly increased. At present taps j are being sounded over the graves! of the old soldiers at the rate of 1,000 a month. During the last ten ‘ years the membership of the order has decreased by more than a third. | In the department of Illinois the loss by death has been especial ly severe. During 1900 more than 3 per cent of the total enrollment at the beginning of the year answered the last summons. The flag was hung at half mast more than once over every Grand Army post in the country. Inevitably the death rate of the order must rapidly increase j with the passage of each year. Twenty years hence the men who wear the bronze star and eagle will he a mere handful. The Grand Ar my will be practically’ extinct.— Chicago Tribune. "FOR THE LITTLE ONES. Fun A TEXAS WONDER. Hall's Great Discovery, One small bottle of Hall’s Great Discovery cures all kidney and give j bladder troubles, removes gravel, A Game That Is Full of and Also Instructive. is a game that will eople as jolly a half hour as ! cures diabestes, seminal emissions, ild ask for. It may be call- ! weak and lame backs, rheumatism elements.” The players are 1 and all irregularities of the kid- divided, with a captain for j neys and bladder, in both men and each side. The sides take seats dp- wemen, regulates bladder troubles posite to each other, and one of the in children. If not sold by vour captains is chosen by lot to begin j druggist, will be sent by mail on the game. receipt of $1. One small bottle is This he does by taking a knotted two months’ treatment, and will handkerchief and throwing it at j cure any case above mentioned, one of the players c on the opposite j Dr. E.W. Hall, sole manufacturer, side, calling out at the same time P.O.Box 629, St. Louis, Md. Send “Earth!” “Water!” “Air!” or for testimonials. Sold byall drug- “Fire!” . gists, and H. J. Lamar & Sous, Ma- If he calls “Earth!” the player C on, Ga., and H. M. Holtzclaw, TRAINS AS PLEASURE RESORTS. In this twentieth century we shall expect bands of music in our trains, says The Railway Magazine, at in tervals of the journey and-perhaps entertainments in the style of the theater or the music hall. We shall see advertisements of this nature: “First class company of star Lon don artists carried.” The modem Utopia will be found in the railway carriage, and if the modern system of competition is retained and the fares undergo, well, some modifi cation it ’will become one of the fashionable resorts of pleasure. This signature is on every bos of the genuine Laxative Bromq=Qumine Tablets the remedy that cns-es a cold in one day KNEW HIS BUSINESS. “It was very noble of you, Willie, to plead that your brother he spared a whipping.” “I guess I know my business. Ev ery time he gets licked he turns around and licks me.”—Indianapo lis Press. Prof. Ivison, of Lonaconing, Md., suffered terribly from neu ralgia of the stomach and indi gestion for thirteen years and af ter the doctors failed to cure him they fed him on morphine. A friend advised the use of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and after taking a few bottles of it he says, “It has cured me entirely. I can’t say too much for Kodol Dyspepsia Cure.” It digests what you eat. H. Ml Holbzclaw’s drugstore. Subscribe for The Home Journal. into whose lap the handkerchief has fallen must name some quadruped before the captain can count ten; if he calls “Water!” the player must name a fish; if “Air !” he must name a bird, and if “Fire H he must re main perfectly silent. If a player fail to name an ani mal or name the wrong one or speak when he should remain silent, he drops out of the game, and the captain then takes the handkerchief and throws it at some one else on the player’s side. ; If, on the Contrary, the player an swers properly, he must throw the handkerchief at some one on the opposite side, calling out one of the elements and counting ten, as the opposing captain had done. The game goes on in this way un til all the players on one side have dropped' out, when, of course, the victory goes to their opponents. This is a simple game, but it is full of fun from beginning to end. And it has its helpful features, too, for a successful player must be alert and quick witted and must have his tongue in as good training as his wits. The fun—and plenty of it— is made by the absurd mistakes that the necessity for quick answering- gives rise to. TAIT’S EYES. J. M. Barrie in his ‘"Edinburgh Eleven” has drawn a vivid picture of Professor Tait, who has just re signed the chair of moral philoso phy in Edinburgh university. “I have his figure before me,” he writes. “The small, twinkling eyes had a fascinating gleam in them; he could concentrate them until they held the object looked at. When they flashed round the room, he seemed to have drawn a rapier. I have seen a man fall back in alarm under Tait’s eyes, though there were a dozen benches between them. ’ Perry, Ga. READ THIS. Cuthbert, Ga„ April 2nd, 2900. This is to certify that I was affected with gravel and that I took sixty drops of Hall’s Great Discovery, and it com pletely cured me. It is worth §1.00 per bettle to auy-one needing it. J. T. Steyrns. To Debtors And Creditor!. GEOKGIA y —Houston Cou.ty. Notice is hereby given to all persons having demands against G. M. T* Fea- gin, late of said county deceased, to pre sent them to me properly made out with in the time prescribed by law, so as to show their character and amount. And all persons indebted to said deceased are hereby requested to make immediate payment to me, U. V. WHIPPLE, Executor of G. M. T. Feagin, Cordele, Ga. GEORGIA—Houston County. W. B. Fitzgerald, executor of the es tate of Green Fitzgerald, deceased, has applied for dismission from said trnet. This is therefore to era all persons con cerned to appear at the July term, 1901, 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 April 1,1901. SAM. T. HURST, Ordinarv. GEORGIA- Houston County. W. L. Means, administrator of the es tate of Leanna Lane, deceased, has ap plied for dismission from his trust. This is therefore to cite all persons con cerned to appear at the -inly term, 1901, of the court of Ordinary of said county, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be granted, N Witness my official signature this April 1,. 1901. SAM T. HURST, Obdinabi*. GEORGIA, Houston County. Mrs. Mary Barker, widow of W. M. Barker, decea-ed, has applied for twelve months’ support from the estate of said deceased. This is therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at the May term, 1901. if the court of Ordinarv of mathematically to ms own satis-; granted. faction that a golf ball could only j Winess my official signature this be driven a certain distance. The April 1,1901. calculation held good until his own son drove a ball 30 yards farther. The Stomach controls the sit uation. Those who are hearty and strong are those who can eat and digest plenty of food. Kodol Dys pepsia Cure digests what you. eat and allows you to eat all the good food you want. If you suffer from indigestion, heart burn, belching or any other stomach trouble, this preparation can’t help but do you good. The most sensitive stom ach can take it. H. M. Holtz claw, druggist. To PATENT Good; may be secured by oar aid. Address, THE PATENT RECORD, Baltimore, Md. Subscriptions to The Patent Record $1.00 per annum. 1 ■ SAM T. HURST, Ordinary ISAACS’ GAFi;~ 413 Third Street, MACON, GA. .. I have recently returned in harness to neet my old friends, and will endeavor :o make as many new ones as possible. I im 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 wi know That Isaac’s s the place to go. Old Veteran Caterer, ft. ISAACS. ^epaixiri.g' “ d £Zoxse- Slxoelxxg'. Our Prices are Low. Our Goods are Right. S