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Is thoroughly oquippecl
with modern machinery,
and we are prepared to
save. you the middle
man's profit on any
of Vehicle, from a
Cart to the finest
ber Tire Buggy, by
mg
Factory
sell-
direct from our
we
are file best you can get.
We handle a complete line of
Buggies,
ns.
Harness,
Laprobes,
Carriage
and
American “Hustle” Wins.
Hi
an<
New York World.
"1 / r
effield Chamber of Commerce
recently visited this country as ar.
investigator of its manafacturing
, an d commercial conditions: In’
an interview published in a Lon
don paper on Saturday- last he
the .results of his observa
tions. He informs his country
men, that the Steel Trust is by po
means “the whole thing,;”, fchat
works of the largest ’ dimensions
are springing^ up rapidly outside
of it, ap.d that “there never .has
been somuch individual enterprise
as is at present showii”-iii this*
country.
The chief contrast which Col.,;
jhes remarks between British;
_ -American industrial life is
that we put more -, vim into our
business than the English do into.
theirs. He says:
“Undoubtedly American manu
facturers are very much alive to"
j..-,of moving with the
>^imes. Both masters. and men;
display an energy which, is per
fectly refreshing to see after' the-
leisurely habits on this side. The
American workman seems anima
ted with the desire to do as much
work as he possibly can and earn
as jj&dgh money as possible.”
ughes also points out that
a great difference between Ameri
can and English works is that in
the former there are “fewer men
and more machines in every di-
red tion . ” He also notes a univer-
sal American tendency to concen
trate ail the branches of one trade ;
in one comprehensive plant^ so
that the raw material are brought
in by rail at one end and kept
moving until the finished product
es put by rail at the other end.
He reports further that Amer
ican railroad transportation is
vastly superior” to the English,
both as to passenger and freight
service. Our freight traffic par
ticularly impressed him as being
handled “in wholesale fashions
with fast-running trains, unlike
the slovenly methods prevalent in
England.”
In short, the Col.tells his coun
trymen that they must wake up
and “hustle”; and “must never
forget that both masters and men
i
The Work that Counts.
Geuius has so wall been defined
as an.infinite capacity for taking
pains, that-it is sfcrange that there
are not more people in the world
who have learned ifevih
The man who works . steadily,
-who is always at his post,, who
crowds his work,-rather than let
his work crowd him, always . has
plenty of time, says the Augusta
Herald, and yet be will accomp
lish twice as much - as the man
who is always in a rush.
It is the old story of the hare
and tortoise. The story *o£ the
plodder who gets there and of the
naturally brighter, man. who fails.
There is no more valuable les
son to be .taught in childhood, no-
more valuable prospect to be fol
lowed up when the young man or
woman starts out in business,
than to do carefully and steadily
and persistently to the best of
one’s ability, all that one’s hands
find to do.
Try for one day to put in every
minute and count up at the close
the work done,- the minutes wast
ed and strike a balanqe. It will
only take a few minutes of men
tal bookkeeping, and the exercise
will .be instructive.
Think About It.
Almost eye^y young man likes
the idea of some day, “setting up
business” for.liimself. The fool
ish spendings of iimiiy a youth
would, if wisely saved, help to
give him 'an independent start
'The following illustrates this
pdint:, A New Orleans paper tells
of'a printer who, whenever his
fellow-workmen at the case went
out to drink beprj piit in the sav
ings bank the exact amount h e
would have spent if he had gone
with .them to' drink. He did this
for five years. : "He then. looked at
his bank account; and found that
he.had laid up $52i.86. In. five
years he had not lost a day . be
cause of sickness. Three but of
five of his fellow workman had in
the mean time become drunkards.
The water-drinker then bought
out the printing office, and in
twenty years from the time he
began to put by liis money, ..he
ha^ laid aside many thousand
dollars.
The Journeys of a Magazine.
trade of the world.”
A full line of ....
“I have been suffering from dys
pepsia for the past twenty years
and have been unable after trying
all preparations and physicians to
"get any relief. After taking one
Hardware, bottle of Kod'ol Dyspepsia cure I
found relief and am n °w in better
health than Ihaye been.for twen
ty years. I cannot praise Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure too highly,’’writes
Mrs. C. W. Roberts, North Creek,
Ark. Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
TJ 0 ■n'tmciin fT Booseveltproclaims: j‘I believe
±1 di V UoUIJg in the Monroe doctrine with all my
heart.” Emperor William may as
well abandon his dream of a Ger-
it.-
-N. Y. World.
Special attention
given to
^epa.iririg'
You Know What You Are Taking
When you take Grove’s Taste
less Chill Tonic because the for
mula is plainly printed on every
>ottle showing that it is simply
Iron and Quinine in a tasteless
form. No cure, no pay. Price 50c.
Probably no other magazines
are read by so many people as the
copies of The Ladies’ Home Jour
nal that go to a Connecticut lady.
After reading each number she
forwards it to a sister in Scotland,
where it is read by the household
and neighbors, and carefully laid
away till the end of the year. The
twelve copies are then given to
the stewardess of a Shetland Is
land steamer, who retains them
until read by her and all the
crew. -Then they are left’at a re
mote Shetland Island town, where
they serve as a sort of circulating
library, passing from house to
house for a year or more, until
they are literally worn out. In
its journeys each magazine finds
its way into scores of homes and
is eagerly scanned by hundreds of
eyes.
The popular view of the relation
of the blood to human character
and conduct is marked in many a
familiar expression. We speak
of there being “bad blood” ^be
tween people at enmity, of “blue
blood” as indicating ancestry, of
“black blood” as describing a
treacherous nature, and in many
another phrase mark our belief
th.at in the mental/ moral and
physical man, “the. blood is the
life.” The one basis of a health^
fill, happy and useful live is pure
blood. With the blood pure,
disease has no permahent lodging
place in the system. For this rea
son the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery rids the body
of diseases which have their ori
gin in iffipurifcjUof the blood. It
absolutely purifies the blood, car
rying off the waste and poisonous
matter, increasing the action of
the blood making glands, and
building up the body by supplying
the blood in. quahity and quality
such as is essential to a condition
of health. It cures ninety-eight
people out of every hundred who
give it a fair trial.
Subscribe for the Home Journal.
M 0ur little girl .was unconscious
from strangulation during a. sud
den and terrible. attack of croup.
I quickly secured a bottle of One
Minute Cough Cure, .giving her
three doses. The croup was mas
tered and our little darling speed**
ily recovered.” So writes A. L.
Spafford. Chester/ Mich. Holcz-
claw’s Drugstore..
—-—-*■ ——
Another Congress of Mothers
gathers this week.. I will bring a
lot of good women together at
Columbus. But, after all, the
great, real congress of mothers is;
that which sits always, the land
over, in perpetual Committee of
the Home.—N. Y. World.
You are much more liable to
disease when your liver and bow
els do hot act properly. DeWitt’s
Little Early Risers Remove the
cause of disease. Holtzclaw’s
drugstore.
Ireland’s recent census shows
that her population has decreased
at the rate of 5.3 per cent, since
1891. Scotland’s population has
increased in the same ten years
over 10 ner cent.
BOWBRY BARBER SHOPS.
These are in the Bowery barber
shops at which one can get shaved
for 3 cents. Bay rum costs an addi
tional 2 cents, making. 5 cents in all,
at which'price there begins to be
something doing for the shop. There
are plenty c-f places on the east side,
in the Bowery and elsewhere, in
which one may be shaved for 5
cents; Generally in a 5 cent shop
a bay rum shave would he 10 cents,
but it is by no means always so.
Witness, a sign which announces,
for 5 cents, a shave with witch hazel
or bay rum. Sometimes one oan get
more than bay rum for 10 cents, a3
is set forth in a sign announcing at
that price a shave with bay rum and
Florida water.—New York Sun.
The man who is unable to bear
misfortune is unfortunate;
THE HOME GOLD CURE.
An Ingenious Treatment by Which
Drunkards are Being Cured Dai
ly in Spite of Themselves.
No Noxious Doses. No Weakening of
the Nerves. A Pleasant and Posi
tive Cure for the Liquor Habit.
It is now generally known and under
stood that Drunkenness is a disease and
not a weakness. A body filled with poi
son, and nerves completely shattered by
periodical or constant use of inros icating
liquors requires an antidote capable of
neutralizing and eradicating this poison
Stop :]ie Cough and Work off the Cold.
Laxitive Bromo-Quinine Tablets
cure a cold in one day. No Cure,
No Pay. Price 25 cents.
A TEXAS WONDER.
Hall’s Great Discovery,
One small bottle of Hall’s Great
Discovery cures all kidney and
bladder troubles, removes gravel,
cures diabestes, seminal emissions,
weak and lame backs, rheumatism
and all irregularities of the kid
neys and bladder, in both men and
wemen, regulates bladder troubles
in children. If not sold by your
druggist, will be sent by mail on
receipt of $1. One small bottle is
two months’ treatment, and will
cure any case above mentioned.
Dr. E. W. Hall, sole manufacturer,
P. O. Box 629, St. Louis, Md-. Send
for testimonials. Sold by all drug
gists, and H. J. LamAr & Sous, Ma
con, Ga., and H. M. Holtzelaw,
Ga. ’
BEAD THIS.
Cuthbert, Ga„ April 2nd, 1900. .
This is to certify that I was affected
with gravel and: that! took sixty drops
of HaU’s Great Discovery, and it com
pletely jcuredjpis/ . It is worth $1.00 per
bottle to any-one needing it.
j. T. 8tbVens.
Sufferers may now cure themselves at
home without publicity or loss of time
from business by this wonderful ‘Home
Gold Cure,” which has been perfected
after many years of close study and treat
ment of inebriates. The faithful use ac
cording to directions of this wonderful
discovery is positively guaranteed to'cure
the most obstinate case, no matter how
hard a drinker. Our records show the
marvelous transformation of thousands
of Drunkards into sober,industrious ahd
upright men.
Wives cure your husbands! Children cure
your fathers! This remedy is in no sense
a nostrum, but is a specific for this dis
ease only, and is so skillfully devised
and prepared that it is thoroughly solu
ble and,"pleasant to the taste, so that it
can be given in a cup of tea or coffee
without the knowledge of the person tak
ing it. Thousands of Drunkards have
cured Themselves with - this ’priceless
remedy, and as Many more have been
cured and made temperate men by hav
ing the “Cure” administered by loving
friends ani relatives, without their
knowledge, in coffee or tea, and believe
to-day that they discontinued drinking
of their own free will. De net "wait*
Do not be deluded by apparent and mis
leading “improvement. 1 ’ Drive out the
disease at, once and for all time. The
’‘Home Gold Cure” is sold at the
extremely low price of One Dollar, thus’
placing within reach of everybody- a
treatment more., effectual than others
costing $35 to $50. Full directions ac
company each package. Specific advice
by skilled physician when requested
without extra charge. Sent prepaid to
any part of the’world on receipt of One
Dollar. Address' Dept. 1)478, Edwin B.
Ginns & CoMPANX,2330 and 2332 Market
Street, Philadelphia.
All correspondence strictly confidential.
ISAACS' CAFE,
413 Third Street..
MACON, OA. ...
-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,
market at most reasonable prices. My
Restaurant is more
for LADIES,
r •
having no connection with saloons. 1....
If yon want anything choice to eat.yon vi
That Isaac’s s the place to go.
Old Veteran Caterer,
E. ISAACS.
and
ECorse-
SlxoeiELg".
Our Prices
are Low.
The Williams Buggy
■ *
Company,
'.A t-ti
’—* MACON, GEORGIA.
Poplar Street,
’1 1 : 9 n •••' .A
®xt to Adams’ Warehouse.
■f.,
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