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umfmnHhitimumluu
^getable Preparationfer As-
similating UieFoodandReguIa-
ling the Stomachs andBoweis of
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
ness andRest.Contains neither
Opium.Mofphine nor Mineral.
Not^ascotic.
Ikr*pt of Of-f-RrSAMUEL PITCHER
Seed/' v
Mx.S'nna * I
RocKetl* Sultt—' I
JStmt Seed * \
fKrtpSmd.-
Clonfitd Sugar
W/tbiy/fr/t flu
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
A.I b: : uioSti'li\ old
OUR
Is thoroughly equipped
with modern machinery,
and we are -prepared to
save you the middle
man's profit on any kind
of Vehicle, from a Log
Cart to the finest Kub-
ber Tire Buggy, by sell
ing you direct from our
Factory.
The Vehicles we male
are ihe best you can pi
We handle a complete line of
Buggies,
Wagons,
Harness,
Whips,
Laprobes,
aml Carriage
Hardware.
A full line of....
Harvesting
Machines.
Special attention
given to
ZPairLtin-gr,
lESepairin.g'
““EEoxse-
Slxoeixxg - -
Our Prices
are Low.
Our Goods
are Bight.
The Williams Buggy
Company,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Poplar Street,
Next to Adams’ Warehouse.
Egyptian Cotton In Georgia.
. Atlanta Constitution-
intimation from Professor
Webber °f the United States de-
P- T* 2 f a S ri cnlture, that
there have been some favorable
indications connected with the
Lgyptiau cotton experiments in
Georgia is no more than was ex
pected. The Constitution holds
that pe rsi8tent experimentation
and the development of affinity
between seed and soil will yet pro
duce a favorable result.
., New York Sun discusses
the Egyptian cotton question in
connection with experiment far
ther west. It holds, that it will
be a great thing for our cotton
raising and manufacturing indus
tries if all the Egyptian cotton
want may be raised at home.
Ihe Egytian staple is unique
among cotton fibers. It was dis
covered in 1821 by a French bo
tanist, who found it growtng wild
near Cairo and recognized it as
cotton with an exceptionally long,
fine fiber. It is not equal to sea
island cotton, but is the next
thing to it in length and fineness.
The Sun says:
The world soon found that it
had use for this superior fiber. It
has become the great export crop
Egypt, being about three-
fourths of all that country sells
to < the rest of the world. India
raises much more cotton than any
other country except the United
States, but Indian cotton, being
the shortest of the export fibers,
is adapted only for spinning very
coarse yarn ; for this reason, Eng
land buys more cottou from
Egypt than from India, taking
about half of the Nile crop. The
longest of the cotton staple ex
cept sea island, the Egyptian fi
ber is used as a supstitute for it
for fine goods where strength
and luster are essential, and mix
ed with American upland cotton,
it is regarded as indispensable in
some branches of our manufactur
ing. We buy, for various purpos
es, a considerable amount of raw
cotton from other countries, and
three-fifths of it comes from the
Nile delta, our imports from
Eypt in 1900 amounting to about
$5,000,000.
It will be a new source of wealth
for this country if the present ex
pectations as to its cultivation
here are fulfilled. It will also in
crease our sales of cotton abroad,
for the Egytian fiber is in de
mand at a high price in all the
manufacturing countries of Eu
rope.
If the cotton planters would add
active experimental work to what
is being done by the government
a good result would be facilitated.
The prize is too great not to be
fought for.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they can
not reach the diseased portion of
the ear. There is only one way
to cure deafness, and that is by
constitutional remedies. Deaf
ness is caused by an inflamed con
dition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube
gets inflamed you have a rumbling
sound of imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed deafness
is the result, and unless the iofla-
mation can be taken out and this
tube restored to its normal condi
tion, bearing will be destryoed for
ever; nine cases out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is noth
ing but an inflamed condition of
tbe mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dol
lars for any case of Deafness
(caused by catarrh) that cannot
be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Send for circulars, free.
E. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
l—^ m ^;—“
The women of Canea, in Crete,
have formed a society to oppose
the luxuriousuess of dress, me
members of the society wear
only the simplest of costumes and
anathematize jewelry and orna
ments. The Cretan government
is to be petitioned to introduce a
bill to make the wearing of ex
travagant cloths penal.
Yon KnowWhST£ou Are Taking '
'\fh*n you take Grove’s Taste-
p Oil ill Tonic because the for
mula is plainly printed on every
bottle Showing that it * Jggg
Iron and Quinine in a tasteless
form. No cure, no pay.
The Limits of Cotton.
That there is more opportunity
of increasing the value of cotton
by manufacture over other crops
raised in the* South is shown by re
cent government statistics of
some of the staple crops of the
United States. In 1900 the corn
crop was valued at $757,000,000;
hay, $445,500,000; cotton, $357,-
000,000; wheat, $823,000,000. Cot
ton is the only one of these that
can be materially increased in val
ue before it goes to consumption.
Corn is very largely consumed in
the state in which it is harvested.
Hay is entirely so consumed.
Wheat, when turned into flour,
is increased less than 50 per cent,
in value. Cotton, when turned
into fabrics, may be increased
two, three, four, and in some
cases many fold in value. The
crop of $357,000,000 value may
easily be made by manufacture
into fabrics worth $2,000,000,000,
or more than all other crops put
together, the raw cotton included.
Price 50c
A puny child is always an anxi
ety to the parents. There 9eems
generally no reason why the little
one' should be weak when it is so
well fed. But the fact is that it
does not matter how much food
the child takes if the stomach
cannot extract the nourishment
from it. No benefit can be deriv
ed from just eating. That is the
condition of many a sickly child.
The stomach and organs of diges
tion and nutrition are not doing
their work, and the body is really
starving. It is little use to give
fish foods, like cod liver oil or
emulsions, in such a case, because
these also have to be digested;
they may lighten the stomach’s
labor but they don’t strengthen
it. Strength is what the stomach
needs. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med
ical Discovery strengthens the
stomach, nourishes the nerves and
increases the action of the blood
making glands. It is superior to
every other preparation for chil
dren’s use on account of its body
building qualities, and also be
cause it is pleasant to the taste
and contains no alcohol, whisky
or other intoxicant. Dr. Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets are a valuable
aid when the bowels are irregular.
They are small. Children take
them readily.
► »-<
The department of agriculture
and commerce of Japan will send
eighty-four students abrad this
month for practical training. Of
these twenty-five will come to the
United States and twenty-seven
will be sent to Europe.
Stop tlie Cough and Work off the Cold.
Laxitive Bromo-Quinine Tablets
cure a cold in one day. No Cure,
No Pay. Price 25 cents.
Open Market for Roundlap Bales.
More roundlap bales are being
used in Southern mills this season I
than ever before. The Massachu- j
setts Mills at Lindale, Ga., and:
the Langley Manufacturing Co. I
and the Graniteville Manufactur- 1
tng Co. at Augusta, Ga., have;
spun large quantities of cotton
baled by this process with entire
satisfaction. These bales would
be used more largely in the South
but for the fact that they can be
sold more profitably to foreign
spinners, who will take every
roundlap bale made. In order to
demonstrate the roundlap bale’s
advantages, the American Cotton
Co. is disposed on oven terms, to
give American spinners the pref
erence. Whether sold at home or
abroad, every bale that leaves a
roundlap press has a wide and
steady market at top prices.
While the American Cotton Co.
is always ready to buy roundlap
bales, it does not require that a
single bale be sold to its cotton
department, licensees and other
owners of roundlap bales being
free to sell in the open market to
the buyer who will pay the most
nioney. So far from discourag
ing, the company welcomes the
competition of other buyers for
roundlap bales. The farmer who
hauls his seed cotton to a rouud-
lap gin can sell it on the spot at
the highest market price, or he
can hold it with the assurance
that his roundlap bales will al
ways bring their full value. The
American Cotton Co. makes liber
al advances on “held” Iroundlap
bales. *
If You Want Anything
BEDROOM SUITES, PARLOR SUITES.
DINING TABLES, SIDEBOARDS, CHAIRS
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES,
BEDSTEADS, MATTRESSES, SPRINGS, WINDOW SHADES
AND POLES, BABY CARRIAGES, ETC.,
You can save money at
Paul’s Furniture Store.
A complete line of COFFIN’S and CASKETS always
on hand.
S PAUL. Perry, Ga.
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children
Pianos
At Greatly
Reduced Prices.
Fifty new Upright Pianos will oiose out at
greatly reduced prices within the next few
weeks. Among them such celebrated makes
as
Steinway, Sohmer & Co., Kranicli
& Bach, Stultz & Bauer, Bush
& Gests, Lester and Royal.
Call at once and secure one of these bargains
F. A. GUTTENGERGER & CO.,
452 Second st., Macon. Ga.
There is One BEST * n Everything.
IN TONICS IT IS
THE ACME MALT TONIC,
BREWED BY THE
ACME BEE WING COMPANY, MACON, GA.
For sale by all druggists. If your druggist does not
hand it* this health-giving tonic, write us for prices.
Acme Brewing Company.
GIVE US A IRIdL ORDER