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JOHN H- HODSBS, Propr. DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND BmIw. 01.SO u Tenr in Advance
VOL. XXXI.
PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GA., THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1902.
NO. 12.
Not Good Politics.
Savannah News.
It seems, according to Washing
ton dispatches, that Senator Han
na was a factor in preventing
Mies Alice Roosevelt from visiting
England on the occasion of the
coronation of King Edward. The
President had about made up his
mind to let his daughter accom
pany the family of Mr. Whitelaw
Reid, one of the special envoys
appointed to repreesnt this coun
try at the coronation, notwith
standing the fact that Senator
Hanna and other Republican
leaders had told the Presiden that
it would not be good politics to
permit her to do so. The Presi
dent laughed at the idea that the
presence of his daughter at the
coronation in a private capacity
could have any effect on the po
litical fortunes of himself or his
party. Senator Hanna, however,
had a way of convincing him that
lie was mistaken. He bundled
together about five hundred let
ters from prominent Republicans
in various parts 1 of the country,
in each of which it was pointed
out that the visit would be a mis
take from a political stand-point,
and sent them to the President.
They seemed to have the effect of
making the President see the sit
uation as Senator Hanna saw it.
He decided that his daughter
could uot go, and sent her on a
visit to Havana instead.
It did not require a great
amount of political acumen to see
that.it would be possible to make
a great deal of political capital
out of a visit of the President’s
daughter to England to witness
the coronation ceremonies. In
fact, when the. visit was proposed
it was said in a number of papers
that it would be a mistake from
the stand-point of politics.Doubt
less the President had the idea
that his daughter would not be
taken notice of officially, and
that therefore her visit would not
be an incident that would attract
the attention of the British Gov
eminent or the newspapers. It is
certain that the newspapers would
have noticed it, and Miss Roose
velt could not have escaped a cer*
tain amount of publicity. In fact,
when it became known that the
President’s daughter was in Lon
don, it is probable that her pres
ence would have been noticed of
ficially for political reasons, if for
no other. Anyway, the fact that
the President permitted his
daughter to cross the ocean to
witness the coronation of a king
would have.been made much of in
this country. It is probable that
the President acted wisely in can
celling the visit. Senator Hanna
acted of course as the Chairman
of the Republican National Com
mittee.' In that capacity, if in
no other, he still has influence at
the White House.
Working 24 Hours A Day.
There is no rest for those tire
less little workers—Dr. King’s
New Life Pills. Millions are. al
ways busy, curing Torpid Liver,
Jaundice, Biliousness, Fever and
Ague. They banish Sick Head
ache, drive out Malaria. Never
gripe or * weaken. Small, taste
nice, work wonders. Try them
25c at Holtclaw’s Drugstore.
The Virginia Constitutional
Convention has been in session
nine months, and the date of ad
journment is still not in sight. It
has been impossible to « reach an
agreement with respect to the
franchise question. From pres
ent indications the convention
will round out a year before
finishes its labors.
* To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine
Tablets. All druggists refund the
money if it fails to cu,re. E. W.
Grove’s signature on each box,25c.
The First Woman Ever Photographed The
Foo System In County Admin
istration.
Nowadays, when the principal
business of photographers is mak
ing portraits of women, and when
being photographed is one of a
woman’s chief pleasures, it is in
teresting to know that the first
woman who ever sat before a cam
era died at Hasting last month.
This lady was Dorothy Catherine
Draper. In 1889, shortly after
Daguerre’s announcement of his
discovery of'tlie action of sun
light on silver, her brother, the
distinguished John W. Draper, af
terward president of New York
University’s medical college,
made some experiments with a
camera with his sister for a sub
ject. In order that the impres
sion might be clearer her face was
dusted with a fine white powder'.
This picture, the result of the first
experiment, is still in existence,
and is owned by Lord Herschel’s
heirs in England. Many other
men have alleged that they were
first in applying Daguerre’s dis
covery, but these claims are not
well founded. Miss Draper’s
likeness and the date it bears have
been accepted as final proof that
to her brother belongs the honor
of being the first man to photo
graph a woman, and to her the
distinction of being the first wo
man ever photographed.—March
Woman’s Home Componion.
How Helen Keller Writes.
Not one person in ten thousand
of those who will read Helen Kel
ler’s own story of her life, when
it begins in an early issue of The
Ladie’s Home Journal, will • have
the least conception of the
amount of hard work required to
write the story. Frst of all Miss
Keller puts down her ideas “in
Braille,” as the blind express it;
that is to say, iu. the symtenv of
“points” raised on paper by
means of a stylus and slate • de
vised to aid the blind; these
points” being read afterward by
passing the sensitive fingers over
them. When all this Braille
work has been. completed, Miss
Keller goes to her typewriter and
uses these notes as a guide to the
rewriting of the story.
As soon as a page of matter is
typewritten it is, so to speak, lost
to Miss Keller, who has to depend
upon her faithful teacher, Miss
Sullivan, to repeat it to her by
spelling out each sentence by
means of the hands. It is a te
dious task, especially ay some of
the pages have to be read again
and again, with changes here and
there, before Miss Keller is satis
fied. Then, when the proofs are
sent .to her, all this slow process
of spelling word after word has to
be gone through once more, so
that each word* that Helen Kel
ler writes goes through her fingers
at least five times. It will be a
'satisfaction to everybody to know
that the publishers of the Journal
have recognized in a substaiitial
manner the extraordinary ability
and patience which Miss Keller
has shown in her work.
Augusta Herald.
For some time there has been
a growing movement in the more
populous counties in Georgia to
reduce its county administration
to a salary basis, just as the ad
ministration of its municipal gov
ernment.
In Fulton . county, where the
capital of the state is located,it is
estimated that the fees of the
clerk of Superior court reach
$50,000 a year, the sheriff, $40,-
000, and so on in proportion. It
is given out that the ordinary of
Chatham county, in Savannah,
spent $10,000 in campaign expen
ses in the last election to secure
the office, which necessarily must
be highly remunerative, otherwise
such an outlay would be a bad
bargain.
In our sister state of Alabama,
a business men’s movement is on
foot to put this question before
the people of Birmingham and
Jefferson. It is charged in Bir
mingham that the fees of the
sheriff of that county reach $50,*
000 a year, and the Age-Herald
calls for an investigation by the
grand jury, so that the facts may
be known and the people be given
an opportunity to decide whether
fees shall be continued or reasona
ble salaries paid for the future.As
one business man puts it in Bir
mingham, “I have always been
opposed to the fee system. If it
is true that there are county offi
cials who are receiving more than
$59,000 a year, then I think it an
outrage that such conditions
should be allowed to exist. Why,
that is as much as the president
of the United States receives and
more than five times what the
governor of the state receives.’
Help Your Town.
A writer in an exchange has a
lengthy screed bn the subject:
“Help your town.” In part he
says: Another way to help your
town is to do all you can to beau
tify it. Beautify your own prop
erty all you can and then do all
you can to help beautify the
streets. Be friendly to everybody
and courteous to strangers. Your
civility will help make good im
pressions and will be carried away
and cherished. Never forget that
you are a part of . the town and
that your deportment helps to
make up the stranger’s estimate
of the place. Sell all you can and
buy. all you can at home. Every
dollar that is sent or carried away
from the town makes it that
much poorer. '
Night Was Her Terror.
‘I would cough nearly all night
Air© Ton Satisfied
With the Shoes that you have been getting?
If you are, you will be better satisfied if you
will try a pair of
ISTew styles now on sale. All leathers—
Kid, Patent Kid or Russian Calf. Oxfords
or High Cuts.
Call on or send your orders to
Tli© Macon Shoe Co.
llcKAY,
it
Lagrippc Quickly Cured.
“In the winter . of 1898 and
1899 I was taken down with a se
vere attack of what is called La
Grippe,” says F. L. Hewett, a
prominent druggist of Winfield,
III. “The only medicine I used
was two bottles of Chamberlain’s
Ceugh Remedy. It broke up the
cold and stopped the coughing like
magic, and I have never since
been troubled with Grippe.”
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
can always be depended upon to
break up a severe cold and ward
off any threatened attack of pneu
monia. It is pleasant to take, too,
which makes it the most desira
ble and one of >the most popular
preparations in use for’these ail
ments. For sale by all dealers in
Peary, Warren & Lowe, Byron.
long,” writes Mrs. Chas. Apple-
gate, of Alexandre, Ind.; “and
could hardly get any sleep.. I
had consumption so bad that if I
walked a block I would cough
frightfully and spit blood, but,
when all other medicines failed,
three $1.00 bottles of Dr. King’s
New Discovery wholly cured me
and I gaiued 58 pounds.” It’s
absolutely guaranteed to cure
Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe', Bron
chitis and all Throat and Lung
Troubles. Price 50c and. $1.00.
Trial bottles free at Holtzclaw’s
Drugstore.
TAILOR,
IMZacon. ©■©,.,
MAKES ALE THE
ABLE
Tailor-Made Clothes
WoLN BY THE
DBESST
of Central and Southern Ga.
Artistic and High-Grade Work.
Fashionable and Reasonable,."Fabrics.
OTallor/
&00 JjS<bconcl Sfc.f MACON, C3-A..
C.
HUH N,
DEALER IN
SPORTING GOODS.:
Bicycles, Baseball Goods, Fishing Tackle, Guns, Pistols, ere. Hand
some Specialties, Pocket and Table Cutlery* Mechanics’ Tools.
Repairing of Guns,
520 MULBERRY ST.
T==
Bicycles, Etc.
MACON, GEORGIA
HE. L.-B ABFIB3LD,
-GROCERIES A]N» 00XJN , TR.'Y 'I?]R01>XJ0^3.—
Cor, Second arid Poplar Sts., MAC50N* C a *
mEMCV WOR THE
Alt
' 8TEBK
woven,wise
If one has a cool room, where
the air can be kept moist during
the daytime when the sun is
strong, one may be able to grow
violets in the house. But in a hot
room failure is a foregone conclu
sion .—Feb.Ladies’ Home Journai.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind Yoa Haw Aiwa}} Bought
Bears She
Signature of
Made of large, strong wires, heavily galvanized,
Amply provides for expansion and contrac
tion. Only Best Bessemer steel wires
used, always of uniform quality.
Never goes wrong no matter
how great a strain
is put on it. Does *
,'oawai
not mutilate, but
does efficiently turn
cattle, horses*
bogs and pigs.
finm
-10 INCH
ew
“iP
MtSCfl
pi*—i a)
6IH,
-Sana
.5/, Ht
23 B3
OIH
411
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEED
by the manufacturers.
Gall and see iti Can show yon how it will save yon money and fence
ydur fields bo they will stay fenced.