The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, February 27, 1902, Image 5

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Ci«vkN Wise Suggestion. “I have lately been much troub led iith dyspepsia, belelimg and sour stomach,” writes M. S. Head,.leading pharmacist of At tleboro, Mass. “I could eat hard ly anything without suffering several hours. My clerk suggest ed I try Kudol Dyspepsia Cure which I did with most happy re sults. I have had no more troub le and when one can go to eating mince pie cheese, candy and .nuts after such a time, their digestion must be pretty good. I endorse Kodol Dyepeptia Cure heartily. “You.don’t have to diet. Eat all the good food you want but don’t overload the stomach. Ivodol Dyspepsia Cure digests your food. IIoltxclaw.’s Drugstore. ?Mp- •IV.'.’I v 1 w: "i V* * * i \ * i fc&:s± Too much housework wrecks wo men’s nerves. And the constant care of children, day and night, is often too trying for oven a, strong- woman . A haggard face tells the story of the overworked housewife, and mother. Deranged menses, 1 leucorrkoea and falling of the womb result from overwork. Every housewife needs a remedy to regulate her menses and to keep her sensitive female organs in perfect condition. . . m m ■ ‘t5 iil VS 17*35! is doing this for thousands of American women to-day. It cured i Mrs. Jones and that is why she writes this frank letter : Glendoauij, Ky., Foot 10,1801. I am so glad that your W'mr. of Oardtii ia helping mo. I am fooling bettor than I have iolt for years. I am doing my own work without any help, and l washed last week and was not one bit tired. That shows that the IVino is doing mo good. I am getting llcisliior than I ever wr.3 h.-fore, and sleep good and eat hearty. Before J. began taking Wine qf CJardui, I used to have to lay down live or six timfes ovary day, but now Ido not think of lying clown through " " '*■ Hi * Mbs. RiciiAnu JoNas, the day §1.0!) AT IfltBfiGim For ndviaq or.d iiturntfiro, midviws, Riving eymp- imn. **'l'In' Ijr.dio3-Advl.orv Thn ton™, “'i'lio nr.dico’AdvI.ory Uep-irtment Tlie Chattanooga MedUdnc Co., Chr.aanooga, Xonn. mmi AW ENCYCLOFED; A STATISTICAL VOLUME OF . . Facts and Figures Containing Over 600 Pages Special Features. am m Iatlons of Cuba With C '^ the United States. The Conference of Ameri can Republics at the City of Mexico. The Anarchist Statistics of Thi3 Country and Europe. Progress of ferial Navigation in 1901. The New York •Municipal Election of 1901. Agriculture. Manufactures, flortaiity. SSg FACTS ABOUT POLITICS. THE BOOK THAT BELONGS IN EVERY OFFICE AND IN EVERY HOME OF EVERY AMERICAN. Price cts. if qcflihx uuja*. Being Worth. Knowing. A girl, eager, ambitious, restless Items Of Interest. Over 10.000 nuilonaires of the United States; Parti culars About Three Thousand American Magnates. Organized Labor; Strength of the Labor Unions. The Trusts. United States Census. New Census ofEuropeanCountries. Thu Nicaragua Canal and the Hay-Paunco fote Treaties With Great Britain. The Re. STANDARD AMERICAN ANNUAL. AT ALL NEWSDEALERS. world formany things, once heard two • sentences that changed much of j her life. They were these: ‘ ‘ Would! you be, kuown? Then be worth knowing.” In a flash she saw how cheap an ambition hers had been and how selfish. Who was'she, to long for the friendship of high souls? What had she to give in return for the high treasure of their lives.' Would she. as she was, even understand their language? In humility and sorrow she prayed again — no longer that she might be known, but that, in God’s good time, her own life might grow stronger and more beautiful, that she might prove worthy of all blessings that were given her. Then, since God in Iiis wisdom teaches ns to answer many of our-own prayers, she be gan to study, to read, and to think, and to try to love greatly. So years passed. Did she become known? Never as in her girlish dreams. But she found something far, far better. For she learned tliut v to be known is nothing, and to try to be worth knowing that one may be kuown is iess than nothing, but to lift one’s soul to highest' living be cause one will not be satisfied with lesser things, is a task whose joy deepens with every passing year and reaches on into God?s BRWG US YOUR JOB WORK, SATIS FACTION GIURANEETD. year and reaches on into God’s eternity. —Exchange. Tor Nosebleeding. A Maine correspondent sends the Springfield Republican the following simple remedy for nose bleeding : Hold the hands over the head, resting them against the wall, a tree or anything high enough to keep them up at the highest point. If only one side bleeds hold up the hand on that side. This is • a remedy known to all school boys in olden times. I tried it once on a man apparently “bleeding to death” from a fall and in about five minutes the bleeding ceased, after other remedies had been tried in fain. More than 60 years ago it was said to have been dis covered by a doctor who cut his face while shaving, and in reach ing up for a powder on the top shelf of a closet noticed that the flow of blood was less than when searching on the lower shelves. Dr. Benjamin Edison says in the Medical World that iernon juice is a remedy for nose bleed ing. One part of the juice to three or four of water is used by insufflation after clearing the nos- trials by “blowing.” In emer gencies he has used the lemon juice undiluted, but would not advise this procedure in ordinary cases. The author claims no credit for the method. Been Hunting' Twenty Years. Windfield Iowa, Nevemeber 24, 1900. Gentlemen:—I write to say that I havo been troubled with Dyspepsia and Indigestion for the past twenty years, and have tried many medicines and spent much money to no purpose until I tried Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. I have taken two bottles and am entirely relieved of all stomach trouble. I cannot say too much in favor of this remedy. I cheer-j fully recommend it to all suffer ers'from Indigestion or Dyspep sia. Yours truly, Wm. Ruebsam. Sold by druggists. During all of March the sun is coming farther north. About the twentieth it shines directly on the equator, and the day is just as long as the night. The time of the old Jewish Passover, and hence of our Easter, depends on this date. This latter always comes on the Sunday following the first full moon after the sun crosses the line. This accounts for its being so “movable” a feast.—March La dies’ Home Journal. Favorite Nearly Everywhere. Of the 20 tobacco factories in France, 8 are in Pam. Lotteries on horse racing are now prohibited in Pretoria. yuf Kentucky negroes consider that' the caterpillar brings fever. The Queen Victoria memorial fund now amounts to £190,000. The death rate in Glasgow from tuberculosis is still 20 per 1,000. New Zealand’s nearest neighbor is Australia, 1,200 miles away. In Poland it is a penal offense to speak Polish in a public resort, There is one titled personage to every hundred commoners in Rus sia. The fare on the Kongo railroad for 250 miles is $100, or 40 cents a mile. The hay harvested in the United States in 1901-amounted to .fifty* one million tons. A certain Beet in Russia consid ers hair sinful and baldness an ev idence of sanctity. In Russia the penalty for lead ing a strike is the same as that for rebellion. The paper currency of Spain is now at 48 per cent, loss on the gold standard. The loh’gest horse-car line in the world runs fifty odd miles out of Buenos Ayres. There are now in Boston 54,228 houses, in addition to 100 hotels and 558 familv hotels. The cotton crop of the United States now almost equals in value its wiioat crop. Over one million articles are pledged Avitli the pawnbrokers of London every Y/eek. , The number of government offi cials in France is 416,000. Fifty years ago it was 188,000. The Eastern Trunk Railway out of London carries one million pas sengers in and out daily. Boston, one of the richest cities in the country, has a municipal debt of fifty million dollars. Last year the sale of agricultu ral machinery in Greece was four fold that of the preceding year. Western Europe will soon have as complete a long-distance tele phone service as the United States uoav has. New York is to havp a chil dren’s theater, patterned, after one in Boston, which pays good dividends. Nearly all the silk of Spain is produced in the province of Mur- chie. Last year its value Avas about $270,000. In 1909 the 'Eiffel tower be comes the property of the city of Paris, and will then be used for its weather bureau. The Yucatan mahogany and logwood forest# are to be exploit ed by a company Avhich will build 275 miles of railway. Thirty-six per cent of England’s revenue and 89 per cent of our na tional revenue are from tax on al coholic drinks. Out of one million soldiers of the civil Avar Avhose heights Avere recorded 3,518 were over six feet and three inches high. Pulitzer Bldg., New York The above deneribeol bookfroe at this ofliefi to every Homis Joubnau subscrib er who pays $1.50 strictly in advance. Constipation means dullness, depression, headache, generally disordered health. De Witt’s Lit- tdo Early Risers stimulate the.liv- open the bowels and relieve s ;,!< dition. Safe, speedy and thorough. They never gripe. Fa vorite pills. Holtzcla.w’s Drug store. Old Age. Old age as it comes in the or derly process'of nature is a beau tiful and majestic thing. The very shadow of eclipse which threatens it makes it the more-.prized. It stands for experience, Knowledge, AVisdom and counsel. That is old age as it should be. But old age as it so often is means nothing but a second childhood of mind and body. What makes the dif ference? Very largely the care of the stomach In youth and the full strength of manhood it does not seem to matter liow avb treat the stomach. We abuse it, over work it, injure it. We don’t suf fer from it much. But when age comes the stomach is Avorn out. It can’t prepare and distribute the needed nourishment to the body, and the body, unnourished, rtAvxil a rl AAft-tT T\ T* falls into senile decay. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is a wonderful medicine for old people Avhose stomachs are “weak” and whoso digestions are “poor.” Its invigrrating effects are felt by mind as rvell as body. It takes the sting from old age, and makes For HOLIDAYS and hh other days. Mail or- , * '• v ' ‘ i .: *.} ... ! Au .'Ll:"'- ©HUsH dors promp ly filled, CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. T. A. COLEMAN, ; A • . ' { ■". ' A, A; -BooTksselleir and stationer, | 803 Second Street,'MACON, GA as The Kind "STon. Hav© Always Bought, mad which lias been in. ns© for over §0 years, lias Thorn© tiro signature o2 .MMWtaKW f'xid lias boon mo,do under bis per- ,, , t-yfo f. serial supervision, since its infancy. cc&c- v. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘ <:, «Tust-.as-good ! ” are btite Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Snfhuts and Cliildrcn-rExperiene© against Experiment- What is i ©astoria is a harmless Sultutltuto for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing? Syrups. It is Pleasant, It contains neither Opium, Koupkrxfe x;.o.f ©f lier NarcotM substance. Its ag^o-is its '^ru&rantee. It' destroys. Worms and allays''Feverishness, it euros Phn.'riieoa m»d' Wind Colic. It relieves ®ot!ffngr TiT.ubt.s8j, cures C.imstlpation and Flatulency, It asirimJTUte!! the ’/food, regnlntes tho. Stomach, and Dowel'-s., g/kT . / r-.ru'.dy' And n.tiimil sleep* Tim Children’s PamiceL U.‘.v© o5HBisE : A'BteTflRIA Always ^ iho f'Zgzataxo uf "V Use For Over 30 Years. THB OENTAlin OOMPANV. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITV. KEEP POSTED CONCERNING:— Houston County Affairs BY READING "«HOME JOURNAL. THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. Subscribe for the Home Journal old people strong. We strive to make the paper a welcome visitor to ever household, thereby deserving patronage. Subscription >1.50 a Year. Liberal reduction for cash one year in advance. Subscribe now. JN0. H. HOUSES, l —— Peury, Ga. ——