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Waw
Learning A Lesson.
FEIGE, $1.50 A YEAS, IN ADVANCE.
Published Every Thursday Morning.
j Seldom has a better chance for
j “stay-at-home traveling” been of-
While the crop conditions in fered than in The Ladies 5 Home
Georgia are for from satisfactory, it Journal for July. From West
! is not yet certain that fairly good . Point, as pictured by George Gibbs
j crops will not be harvested.
Corn and Oats for Sale.
I have for sale 1500 bushels of
Corn, and 300 bushels Feed Oats,
jull. A. A. Smoak, Perry, Ga.
Jao.H. HODGES. Editor and Publisher
Perky, Thursday, June 27.
Copies of this paper may be found on
file at the office of our Washington cor
respondent, E. G, Siggers, 918 F. Street,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Be the result what it may, fair
[ profits on the year’s gwork, just a liv
ing, or loss, the’conditions of prepa-
| ration, planting and cultivating
this year should teach a lesson not
to be forgotten.
In many sections of the state farm
on the cover, readers may go with
W. L. Taylor to see “A Busy Bos
ton Street at High Noon;” next try
“Goin 5 Fishin’ with Joe Jefferson”
in Florida; then travel out West
with Ernest Seton-Thompson to see
The Mother Teal and the Overland
Route;” next go along the Atlantic
Baled Hay For Sale.
On farm four miles east of Per
ry on road to Tivola. S Bonner.
Best White Duck Horse Collars,
at ered m. houser’s.
Don’t let the
your judgment.
weather overheat
laborers have been scarcer than; Coast to find out how the places
heretofore, with no reduction in the “Where Our Country Began” look
demand. I to-day; then seek Northern Michi-
Be the cause of this scarcity what j gan to hear “The Story of a Maple
Georgia lands can produce a bale
of cotton per acre.
Turkey is said to be preparing for
an aggresssive revolution.
Native Georgia grasses make plen
tiful hay of superior merit.
*- 4 -
The Georgia peaches so far mar
keted are not up to the standard of
excellence.
Georgia editors will see and en
liven the Buffalo exposition several
days in July.
— ►
The Emperor of China has offi
cially announced that he will return
to Pekin in October next.
The great need in Southern agri
culture is not more acres cultivated,
but more products per acre.
*#-*
The report of a new bale of cot
ton shipped from Texas last Thurs
day sounds decidedly fishy.
►-O * .
Reports say that Germany is
woiking earnestly to secure com
mercial supremacy in South Ameri
ca.
it may, it can be safely calculated
that the conditions next year on this
line will not be better.
If the labor can’t be secured, then
the urgent need for it must be avoid
ed.
The grain crop can be materially
increased in acreage, and by increas
ed care in preparation and manuring
the product per acre may also be
considerably increased.
Other crops may be planted, and
extra care taken at every step to in
crease the productiveness of the soil.
In cultivating, the cost per acre is
practically the same, be the product
much or little. An acre that will
produce only \ bale of cotton will
be almost as expensive to “chop out”
as an acre that will produce a full
bale. The same can be said of al
most any other crop. Certainly the
productiveness of the soil can be in
creased.
When we make as much on 20
acres as is now made on 40, the
need of farm laborers will be very
much decreased.
Georgia people don’t want politi
cal agitation this year, and they will
not give their attention to anything
of the sort.
Since the recent public property
decision by the supreme court, there
has been much|talk about anew state
constitution.
Forty-eight dollars will pay for a
round-trip ticket to the Pan-Ameri
can Exposition at Buffalo, N. Y., via
the Central of Georgia railroad*
’ Georgia farmers will not have cot
ton cultivation within proper bounds
until the average production reach
es a bale for every acre planted.
An order issued by the Secretary
of War says that only graduates of
high schools can be admitted to the
Military Academy at West Point.
Atlanta Constitution’s Sc hool Offer.
The Atlanta Constitution has of
fered to every boy or girl in Georgia,
who will secure 100 new subscribers
to the Daily and Sunday Constitu
tion a year’s tuition at any educa
tional institution in Georgia and
$100.00 towards the student’s ex
penses for the year.
This opens every school and class
room door in the State to every am
bitious boy or girl who will take ad
vantage of the proposition. The
terms are not beyond the reach of
one determined to secure an educa
tion. This work will be well paid
for. One hundred or more scholar
ships are up. The cash value repre
sented in 100 such scholarships and
expenses for one year is approxi
Tree,” by William Davenport Hul-
bert; next visit an Eastern maga-.
zine editor’s office and enjoy the
good-humored raillery of “The Case
Against the Editor,” by Edward
Bok; and finally see what “The
Country of Sheriden’s Ride” looks
like now-adays. There are many
other articles of equal interest on
various subjects. By The Curtis
lubliehing Company, Philadelphia.
One dollar a year; ten cents a copy.
—Mr. Josiah Bass, one of Hous
ton’s prominent citizens, writes
as follows: “After trying various
remedies, without obtaining any
benefit, I was cured sound and well
by Mncalee Chill Stop. It is the
best remedy in existence for chills,
fever and malaria.” Every bottle
guaranteed. It costs you nothing
if it fails to cure. Sold by drug'
gists at 50 cts. Manufactured by
H. J. Lamar & Sons, Macon, Ga
A WORTHY SUCCESSOR.
GEORG IA—Houston ('ouu ty.
M. A. Edwards, administrator of the
estate of Mrs. G. C. Haddock, deceased,
has applied for disnussion|from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerae 1 to appear at the September 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
June 3,1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston Countp.
M. A. Edwards, administrator of the
estate of John A. Howard, deceased, has
applied for dismission from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the September 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
June 3,1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
B
Attorn ey-at-Law,
MACON, GA.
Office in Exchange Bank Building.
Will practice in Courts of.Macon Circuit
Special attention to collections.
Administrator’s Sale.
Georgia, Dooly County.
Under and by virtue of an order of the
Ordinary of said county, granted on 1st
Monday in June, 1901,1 will sell at pub-
lie outcry before the Court house door in
Perry, Houston county, Ga., on the first
Tuesday in July next, within the legal
hours of sale, the following property be
longing to Emmett B. Graham, late of
Dooly county, deceased: One warehouse
and lot in the town of Grovania, Hous
ton county. Ga., known as lot No. 51 in
block No. 7 in said town of Grovania.
This June 3rd, 1901.
Jno. T. Graham, Adm’r.
Estate Emmett B. Graham, dec’d.
GEORGIA—Houston County.
pH T. Ulm has applied for administra
tion on the estate of R. S. Rutherford,
late of said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite aU 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
Juue 8,1901.
SAM T. HURST, Ordinary.
“Something New Under
the Sun.”
All doctors have tried to cure Catarrh
by the use of powders, acid gases, inhal
ers and drugs in paste form. Their pow
ders dry np the mucous membranes,
causing them to crack open and bleed.
The powerful acids used in the inhalers
have entirely eaten away the same mem
branes that their makers have aimed to
cure, while the pastes and ointments can
not reach the disease. An old and expe
rienced practitioner who lias for many
years made a close study and specialty
of the treatment of Catarrh, has at last
perfected a treatment which, when faith
fully used, not only relieves once, but
permanently cures Catarrh, by remov
ing the cause, stopping the discharges
and curing all inflammatiou. It is the
only remedy known to science that ac
tually reaches the afflicted parts. This
wonderful remedy is known as “Snuf
fles the Guaranteed Catarrh Care”
and is sold at the extremely low price of
One Dollar, each package containing in-
Idle-Hour Stock Farm,
MACON. GA.
The following Stallions will he at the Farm after May 1st, 1901:
Judge Guy (3)
- Sorrel trotter, by Guy Wilkes, 2:15% (sire of 63 trotters, 8 pacers in list), dam
Chantilly, 2:19%, by Nutwood. 2:18% (sire of 130 trotters, 33 pacers in list),
second dam Crepon, oy Princeps (sire of 46 trotters, 5 pacers in list),
Lardoret (2)
Bay trotter, by Baron Wilkes, 2:18 (sire of 71 trotters, 19 pacers in list), dam
Miss Gate-wood, 2:19%, by Hermitage 4241. second dam Margaret, by Geor
gia Wilkes.
Nylic (2)
Black trotter, by Dare Devil, 2:08%, dam Straight Line, 2:12%, by Jerome
Turner, 2:15%, second dam Tricotrin, by Stillson (sire of 10 trotters, 1 pacer
in the list.
Prince Bells (2)
Bay trotter, by Bow Bells, 2:19% (sire of 15 trotters, 9 pacers in list), dam
Reply, by Princeton. 2:19% [sire of 13 trotters, 7 pacers in list), second dam
Florence D., 2:29, by Jay Gould (sire of 26 trotters, 3 pacers in list).
Red Cypress (2)
Chestnut trotter, by Red Chute, 2:24, dam Ida Meg, by Robert McGregor,
2:17% (sire of 84 trotters, 5 pacers in list), second dam Ida Chief, by Clark
Chief (sire of 6 trotters in list.
The above are handsome and fast, standard and registered. Mares kept at $10 per
month, owner’s risk of accidents and escapes.
Parties wishing other information, please apply to
J. F. GODDARD, Manager*
mately $25,000. No one need lack ternal and external medicine sufficient
—.a. : • : * for a fiill month’s treatment and everv-
when such ample pro\ision is made
The enterprise and liberality of The
Constitution will be commended and
vast good will result from the offer.
The Constitution will furnish all
particulars on application.
: :
Much Reading for Little Mouey.
Last Thursday Policeman Debray
of Atlanta was shot and killed by a
negro on a street of the city. The |
officer was attempting to arrest the
negro.
From a democratic standpoint,
which is preferable, a democrat who
endorses republican policies, or a re
publican who supports democratic
policies?
On July 1st the amended war tax
law will go into effect, and it will no
longer be necessary to place stamps
on bank checks and certain other
business papers.
Judge Taft is the civil governor
and Gen. Chaffee the military arov
emor of the Philippine Islands. Civ
il government is being inaugurated
as rapidly as possible.
•-*-«
Mrs. Stonewall Jackson is m
Georgia, and at the Chautauqua at
Jackson next week will give a sou
venir to every Confederate veteran
attending the exercises.
If it. is contempt of court fora
preacher to condemn in his pulpit
the official acts of a judge, may it
not be that by reason of the said
acts, the judge made himself con
temptible,
* —— 11 1,1 ■■ .
It is reported from Washington,
through a Tennessee congressman,
that there is much talk of a South
ern man, probably Senator Bacon,
as the candidate for president on the
democratic ticket.
The New York World has got -the
cost of printing down to a mini
mum. Its latest offer of its month
ly newspaper-magazine is interest
ing if from no other cause than that
it shows the acme of “how much
for how little.”
The Monthly World is a 32-page
magazine with colored cover. Its
pages are about the size of the pages
of the Ladies’ Home Journal, and
it is copiously illustrated in half
tone. The illustrations are the re
sult of the best artistic skill, aided
by all the latest printing-press appli
ances, making a magazine unrivaled
in the quality of its contents and
its appearance.
Each issue contains storses of ro
mance, love, adventure, travel; sto
ries of fiction and fact; stories ef
things quaint and curious, gathered
together from all over the world;
the results of scientific research, and
editorial reviews. It numbers
among its contributors the leading
literary men and women of the day.
A feature each month is a full-
page portrait of the most famed
man or woman of the moment in the
public eye.
In collecting and preparing for
publication the literary matter and
art subjects for the Monthly World
no expense is spared.
The New York World will send
six numbers of this newspaper-mag
azine on receipt of fifteen cents in
stamps. Address The World, Pu
litzer Building, New York.
Treasurer Park borrowed $200,-
000 last week from Atlanta and Sa
vannah bankers, j providing thereby
for the immediate payment of about
85 per cent of the amount due the
school teachers of the state.
A movement to organize the “Al
lied Third Party” is said to be on
foot in Missouri, bnt it is not re
garded with any apprehension by
democrats. It was alleged that W.
J. Bryan was identified with the
movement, but he has denied the
report positively.
for a full month’s treatment and every
thing 1 necessary to its perfect use.
“Snuffles” is the only perfect Ca- I
tabrh Cure ever made and is now rec
ognized as the only safe and positive
cure for that annoying and disgusting |
disease. It cures all inflammation quick
ly and permanently, and is also wonder
fully quick to relieve Hay Fever or|
Cold in the Head
Catarrh when neglected often leads to j
CoNSUMPTi.oN-“Sniiflies” will save you j
if you use it at once. It is no ordinary
remedy, bnt a complete treatment which I
is positively guaranteed to cure Catarrh
in any form or stage if us-d according j
to the directions which accompany each <
package. Don’t delay, bub send for it at
once, and write full particulars as to
your condition, and yon will receive spe
cial advi -e from the discoverer of this
wonderful remedy regarding your case
without cost to von beyond the regular
price of “Snaffles” the “Guaran-1
Seed Catarrh Cure.”
Sent prepaid to any address in thej
United States or Canada on receipt of
One Dollar. Address Dept. C478, Edwin
B. Giles & Company, 2330 and 23 2 Mar- j
ket Street, Philadelphia.
GEORGIA—Houston County.
W. B. Fitzgerald, executor of the es
tate of Green Fitzgerald, deceased, has
applied for dismission from said truet. I
This is therefore to cia 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 I
granted.
Witness my official signature this]
April 1,1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinarv.
GEORGIA; Houston Cotinty.
W. E. Green, administrator of the es
tate of J. B. Murray, deceased, has ap
plied for dismission from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all persons con-
1901, of the court of Ordinary of said
cemed to appear at the August term,,
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
"Witness my official signature this
May 6th, 1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA. Houston County.
W. L. Means, administrator of the es
tate of LeannaLane, deceased, has ap
plied for dismission from his trust.
This is therefore to cite 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, Ordinary.
It’s Foolish
to take chances with an un
certainty. It’s wise to inves
tigate where everything is in
your favor. Our store pro-
uides she best clothing you
can have, at the best prices
you could find. There is ev
ery reason why you should in
vestigate and be safe in the
inspection.
BURNETT & GOODMAN,
Third Street, Macon, Ga.
Job Work.
Letter Heads,
Note Heads,
Bill Heads,
Statements,
Envelopes,
Posters, Etc.,
AT THIS OFFICE.
GIVE US A IRIdL ORDER