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SFE OUR
Best and Cheapest.
FULL CIRCLE, TWO STROKES
NO REBOUND.
om
FACTORY
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 Rub
ber Tire Buggy, by sell
ing you direct from our
Factory.
The Vehicles we male
are the best you can get,
"We handle a complete line of
Buggies,
Wagons,
. i
Harness,
Laprobes,
“ ml Carriage t'A
Hardware.
A full line of....
Harvesting
Machines.
m
Special attention
given to
tE’a.Ira-txia.g:,' r
!E3epa,iiI:n.g'
“ nd Hoxce-
Sl2.oeim.g-.
Natural Gas and Fuel Oil.
The production of natural gas
WeBt Virginia, which in teu
years has increased in annual val-
J® fr °m $25,000 to nearly $3,000,-
000, is having a marked effect
upon the industries of the state.
A correspondent of the Manufac
turers’ Record calls attention this
week to one of the most interest
ing phases of this development in
the stimulus given to the glass
trade through the cheapness of
gas. A score of towns have with
in the last few months secured
factories or have taken steps to
attract investors in glass works.
One of the latest enterprises looks
to the investment of about $100,-
000 at Weston, in the center of
three-cent gas, near which a well
with a daily capacity of millions
of cubic feet, began to spout last
week. The authorities, of the
place have begun negotiations
with the owners of works at Mor
gantown for a duplication of their
plant at Weston. This plan in
volves the construction by the
town of a large bridge giving ac
cess from the town to the site of
the proposed plant, die erection
by citizens upon 150 lots to be
bought by them of cottages cost
ing not less than $300 apiece, to
be rented by the glass oompany
for its employes. It is believed
that these requirements will be
met and that before cold weather
arrives the deal will have been
consummated. In other towns,
such as New Martinsville, Came
ron, Huntington. Clarksburg,
Fairmont and Point Pleasaut,
glass manufacturing is attracting
the attention of investors and
1902 promises to record the estab
lishment of a number of modern
plants using gas for fuel.
In the southwest the develop
ment of oil from the Beaumont
field for fuel purposes is being
pushed through transportation
companies and industries in near
by regions. But it is not stop
ping there as is indicated by the
loading this ,w?ek at Port Arthur
of a large oil steamer with capaci
ty of between 55,000 and 60,000
barrels of oil for abroad. During
the first eight days of November
68,219 barrels of oil were shipped
by rail from Beaumont to more or
less distant points. But the de
mand for this fuel is not to be
measured by the shipments, for
the equipment for the transporta
tion of oil by rail is comparative
ly speaking, rather meagre, the
difficulty in getting oil cars being
similar to that experienced by the
lumber interests in the same re
gion. So scarce is the,tank equip
ment that one of the companies
ej Beadmont field
k-an order for 500
cars to be delivered within three
or. four months. The discovery
of oil at Beaumont, has within
ten months increased the popula
tion of that place from 10,000 to
2Q!,0Q0 and there is not a house
to be rented in the city.
The history of the rise of indus
try at such centres as Richmond,
Va., Charlotte, N. O., Mt. Pleas
ant, Tenii., Cedartown, Ga., and
Birmingham Ala., where, again
and again there has' been a de
mand for permanent homes, for
an increasing population followed
by an expansion of building oper
ations, is being repeated on a
somewhat more rrpid scale at
Beaumont. It is an indication
of stable prosperity for all parts
of the South.
Macon Telegraph;
Secretary Gage is reported to
have said while in Denver recent
ly that he had twenty positions in
banks to dispose of, each worth
$25,000 a year, but that the men
who secured them would have to
‘young” and “capable.”
111UL1U UIJUU v/uw
•operating’ 1 in'; tdic
plriced'last week
be both
The latter quality goes without
saying, and the former arrests at
tention.
We have here another of the
multiplying reminders that this
is an age of j^oung men. The
saying is true especially of this
country. It is much less true of
England and the countries of Eu
rope, and in this circumstance-
may no doubt be found one im
portant reason >vhy America forg
es ahead so rapidly. In the Brit
ish parliament it is still necessary
for a man to have the experience
of half a century behind him be
fore he can secure serious atten
tion, but in this couutry we have
a president who is only forty-
three and many another young
man of great . ability and wide
fame in a variety of callings. Mr.
Schwab, of the steel trust, for ex
ample, who is reputed to cash a
check for a million every year, is
not yet forty.
• Even a generation ago this wits
in many respects a young man’s
country, a fact brought out very
clearly by an English writer some
time ago, when discussing “youth
versus age in generalship.” He
attributed the slowness of the
campaign in South Africa partly
to the advanced age of the Eng
lish generals who had been sent
there, pointing out that “Stone
wall” Jackson was 31 years youn
ger than Lord Roberts, and “Jeb”
Stuart 83 years younger than Gen.
Buller. Among Northern gener-
erals, Grant was only forty when
he t commanded at Shiloh; Sheri
dan was thirty-three when he took
command of the cavalry of the
army of the Potomac; and Sher
man was only fort.y-four when he
marched through Georgia. This
is contrast indeed with Gen. Bul
ler at sixty-one, Gen. Gataore at
fifty-seven, Lord Methuen at fifty-
five, Gen. Clery at sixty-two, Gen.
Warren at sixty, Gen. White at
sixty-five and Lord Roberts at
sixty-eight. Lord Kitchener was
put down as fifty.
As the assertion attributed to
Secretaey Gage shows youth is
nowadays demanded particularly
in business and it is not -merely a
matter of energy and vigor but of
courage and confidence. It is not
that the older mdn are less wise —
they are wiser—but that time has
taken from them in great part
those qualities which are so nee
essary for success in this hurrying
age. The demand for adaptive
youth and vigor in preference to
age and experience is, , in fact, so
positive that he who has not made
a comfortable berth for himself
by the time he is fifty is likely to
come to want. In looking fo,r a
new position after that age his
chances would be improyed by
shaving off his beard, dying his
hair and cultivating vivacity and
physical activity. Therefore, let
the young man work hard and
bring out the b.est that is in him
while he may. \
Our Prices
are Low.
Our Goods
are Right.
The Williams Buggy
Company,
~^,M^CaN- y-E:0jaGIA v ;--er—
' """
Poplar Street,
Kext to Adams’ Warehouse.
Putting food into a diseased
stomach , is like , putting money
into a pocket with holes. The
money is lost. All itswalue goes
for nothing. When the stomach
is diseased, with the allied organs
of digestion and nutrition, the
food which is put into it is largely
lost. The nutriment is not ex
tracted from it. The body is
weak and the blood impoverished.
The pocket can be mended. The
stomach can be cpred. That ster
ling medicine for the stomach
and blood, Dr; Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery, acts with pe-
,cujUar promptness and power on
the organs of digestion and nutri
tion. It is a positive., cure for al
most all disorders of these organs
and cures also such diseases of the
Mr Tart, blood, liver, and other or-
> on;, as have their cause in a
weak hr diseased condition .of the
stomach. • .,. T- \
ubscribe for ths Home Journal
BEDROOM SUITES, PARLOR SUITES,
DINING TABLES, SIDEBOARDS, CHAIRS
donestig sewing machines,
BEDSTEADS, MATTRESSES, SPRINGS, WINDOW SHADES
AND POLES, BABf CARRIAGES, ETC.,
You can save money at
Paul’s Furniture Store.
A complete line
on hand.
of COFFIFS and CASKETS always
Saved His Life.
“I wish to say that I feel I owe
my life to Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure.” writes H. C. Chrestpnson
of Hayfield, Minn. “For three-
years 1 was troubled with dyspep
sia so that I could hold nothing
on my stomach. Many times I
would be unable to retain a mor
sel of food. Finally, I was con
fined to my bed. Doctors' said I
could not live, j I read one of your
advertisements! on Kodol Dyspep
sia cure and thought it fit my
case and commenced its use. I
began to improve from the first
bottle. Now 1 am cured and rep-
ommend it to all.” Digests^your
food. Cures all stomach troub
les. Holtzclaw’s Drugstore, j
The Chicago Tribune says five
people have been killed and sixty-
four seriously injured in football
games this year.
CA.-AL.A. BUS!
. Scholarships offered
! ^ y Wrltei-quick to
•SS COLLEGE. Macon, Ga.
't-
GEORGE PAUL, Perry, Ga.
Tlie Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has bceu
in uso for over 30 years, has borne tho signature of
and has been made under his per
sonal supervision since its infancy*
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeit^, Imitations and “ Just-na-good” are bub
Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTOR!A
Oastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drabs mid SeotSdng Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Fevorislmcfls.- It cures Diarrhoea and ,Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sloop*
The Children’s Panacea—TSj.o Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE
CASTOR IA always
Rears the Signature of
THK OCNTAUn COMPANY. 7T MURRAY •TRKT, NEW YOR^ CITY.
Pianos
At Greatly
Reduced Prices.
Fifty new Upright PianoB will cidse out at
greatly reduced prices within the next few,
weeks. Among them such celebrated makes
us
Steinway, Sohmer & Co„ Kranieli
& Bach, Stultz & Bauer, Bush
&Qests, Lester and Royal.
Call at once and secure onejof these bargains
F. A. GUTTENGERGER & CO.,
4L52 Second st., Macon, Ga.
Hitting the Nail on the Head
Is what you do every time
you buy your
Lumber, Sash,
Doors,
Mouldings,
Blinds;,:.Y ■ .
Trimmings
. : : l i i Y\ . i ‘ /C ? he V . I.-.; >;
and all kinds of mill Work and|builders supples frpm om-
superior stocl?.> Builders 'and coiitrjactor^ will, nn’d fnat
they get a superior grade of - lumber and workmanship n
their dhie at dower .prices than, they, can get elsewhere. •
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Phone J87i
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PORT VALLEY;:}
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