The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, March 20, 1902, Image 8

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How The South Grows. mm I-- ism OF ATLANTA, GA, Is ft twlcc-a-\vcok NEWS paper, published oil Monday and Thursday of each week, with all tho latest nows of the world, which comes over tjiolr leased wires direct to their oHlce. Is an eYjrhffpgo sovou-ooluinn paper, Jiy arrangements wo have scoured a special rate with thorn in connection with OUK From The Now York Commercial. On our front page this morning you will see your Uncle Sam, con templating with a pleased look of wonder and admiration the growth of one of his large family. Well, the old getitleman is right in fashion, for onoeJ The whole world wonders at the marvelous growth .of the south. And almost every new day seems to bring with it Borne new sources of wonder ment-some pleasing surprise in the industrial and commercial activities of that great section. If it isn’t a discovery it is the re markable development of one. If it isn’t that, it is achievement of some city of the south or of some man or some enterprise there that holds up the business world for a little bit if interested attention. “I am glad,” said John H. Kir ay, of Texas, in his address before the New Orleans Progressive Un ion last night, “that the southern people have come to the belief that nothing is so honorable as work that there is greater dis fcinction in being a laborer than in being a gentleman.” The south has the double distinction of suc cessfully combining the two. The PA PEE. $2 wo will Bond THE M0ME MM ami for THE ATLANTA -Semi-Weekly Journal- ami the Southern Cultivator ALL THREE ONE YEAR. Till# Is the boflfc offer wo have over mado our l'rlontls uml BUuacriuqn, You had hotter, take ftdvahtnge of thin olfor at once, for The Journal nmv wltli * lulraw tlielr spoolin'rate to ub at any timo. Tito Soml-WeoUly haw many prominent men amt women comrlhutorR to tliolr columns, among thorn being liov. Sam JoneB,ilov. Walk- or Lewis, lion. Ilarvlo Jordan, Hon. Jolm Tom- plo Grav'd' an# Mrsv W, 11. Felton, hoBldes their crops of.dllotont editors, who take oaroof tho nows matter. Their dopartiUonts are well cov ered. Its eolnmoH of farm iiowb aro worth the tho price of tlid paper. Soml direct to tilts office $2.00 and soouro the three, above montlonod papers ono year Addross * THE HOME’ JOURNAL PiaitHY, GA. Am BNGYCLOPEDR. A STATISTICAL VOLUME OF . . Facts and Figures Containing Over 600 Pages miltonnlrei 61 the United States; Part! About Three Thousand American Mhgoates. Orgadiited Labor; Strength of th« Labor Unions. The Trusts. United States If Census.' New Census of European Countries. Tha Nicaragua Canal and the Hoy-Pounce* fote Treaties With Great Brituln, The Re- lotions of Cuba With tho United States* The 'Conference of Ameri can Republics at the City of Mexico. The Anarchist Statistics of This Country and Europe, Progress of Aerial Navigation In 1901. The New York Municipal Election of 1901. Agriculture. Manufactures, nortattty. FACTS ABOUT POLITICS. [THE BOOK THAT BELONGS IN EVERY OFFICE IN EVERY HOME OF EVERY AMERICAN. Price STANDARD nto AMERICAN ANNUAL JCO GTS. I AT ALL NEWSDEALERS. THE WORLD Pulitzer Bldg., How York The above described book free at this office to every Homk Journal subscrib erwho ays l.eostriotly n advance. ypical. southerner of today is gen ileman and laborer, both in one. The^husiness world of the south of is a great aggregation of indefat- gable workers. They have got ihe hustlers of the west, the north and the east all “qn the run.” It jars the New Englander just a trl lie w'hen he hears the eohoes ~ those millions of southern spin dles. It sets the manufacturers ‘ from all over” to thinking hard \yhen they see that the south not content to grow cotton and cane and rioe and timber, not wholly satisfied to dig her coal and her irqn from the earth, and to set her mineral oil to spouting She is taking and is plauning to take the added profits that come from turning raw , material into finished products. She is a great manufacturer already—is bound to be a bigger .one,. She is work ing not only to keep at home the millions of money that her indus tries yield, but to gather the sun plus funds of other sections into her treasury to help in the devel opment of her resources through investment and reinvestment there. Keep your eyes oh Dixie 1 And vyhat a pity it is that we can’t all live to witness the mighty civili zation that will confront our sons and grandsons there 1 *The Real Thing. Prince Henry must have felt that he had found the genuine American at last when he met Governor Van Sant of Minnesota. The governor having duly pre sented the engrossed resolutions that had been prepared, Prince Henry expressed a wish to meet the governor’s staff, “who stood at a respectful distance.” Much pleased, the governor “slapped the prince on the back” and said: “All right, prince; all right.” The highly afnusing account con tinues as follows: “Then turning, Minnesota s chief executive started toward his fellow delegates, but observing that the prince hesitated, Van Sant crobked his finger, beckoned toward the prince, and hurriedly exclaimed: ‘Gome on; come on.’ The prince seemed somewhat astonished at the apparent unu sual method of addressing him, but finally grasped the situation and advanced toward the colonels of Minnesota and was introduced, receiving three cheers and a tiger for his condescension.” Of course nobody ought to be slapped on the back by any one except an old and familiar friend, but this episode is decidedly re freshing after so much more of “Your Royal Highness” than is called for on the part of Ameri can imitators of European courti ers. Governor Van Sant’s manner was the expression of a breezy western impudence, if you will, but at the same time it was an unconscious expression of that sense of independence and equal! ty which is one of the beat results of American civilization and which enables the American to carry himself in European society with an air hopelessly beyond the reach of the middih-class Englishman or German. To Pay Tobacco Rebates. ALL CASES OF DEAFNESS 9JJ HARD HEAR‘NC ARE WOW CURABLE by our”w invention. Only tbose bom deafer* incurable. HEAD NOISES CEASE b a WERNIAN. OF BALTIMORE, SAYS: F. A. Wfc * Baltimore, Md., March 30, 1901. iyJ. _ Being entirely cured of deafness thanks to your treatment, I will now give you fU Abou1 0 five 0 y“a y rs Ca a S go t myrigh d t ea^gan tosing,’and this kept on getting worse, until I lost berof physicians, n 1 atXeven“hat only temporarily, that the head noises would then cease^but tlm ^y^^^^^^^^^^tal^iu^i^e^^rk^aper, and ordered your treat- I then saw your ^^‘sementr e w davs nixording to your dir ections, the noises ceased, and Ith “ t heartily and beg to remain Very tru^r ^ wRRMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md you Omu treatment does not interfere with ““’f Baraiti.tion and UQIJ QAM (JURE YOURSELF AT HOME east iNTIRMAflONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICABD, ILL. McCall’s Fashion Magazine one year and a selected pattern, td ev ery Home Journal subscriber who will pay $1.50 strictly in advance, one year. 'In a Wisconsin store the other day. a young woman shopper drop ped a penny on the floor. It roll ed away and hid in a dark corher. She insisted tfpon 'the coin being recovered. The clerks joiued in the search. Somebody struck a match to light up a nook. A roll of cotton batting caught the flame. The loss to the owner of the. store was $00,000. Before the embers of the building was cool the young woman shopper remind ed the owner,,that, she hinid lost a penny in his place of business and would like to have him 'make it good.—Ex. ' : An exchange says: “A fellow by the name of Moon living out in Michighfi, got married. That was a change of Moon, f After a while, his wife ‘^esentqd;him. with a daughter. This was a new Mqon. He went out v and got drunk for joy. That was a full Moon. When-lie sobered up he had only 25 "cents left. That was the last quarter. When lie got home his mother-in-law: met him with a rolling pen and then there was a total eclipse and he saw stars,” A special from Atlanta says The internal revenue collector for Georgia has been notified by the Washington authorities that war rants are being drawn up for the payment of all rebate claims which arose when therecont sched ule on tobacco products went in-' to effect in July, 1901. It is es timated that $100,000 is due the tobacco merchants of Georgia as a result of these claims. All dealers, manufacturers and others whose claims were properly prepared and filed with the - inter nal revenue officers within the re quired time following July 1,1901, will evidently soon receive their settlement warrants, although the internal revenue department of this state is not now prepared to say just when payment will com mence. ■ The tax on tobacco under the war revenue act-was $12 per. 100 pounds, or 12 cents a pound. Tiventy per cent, of this tax was Removed by tlie last act, making the tax now $9.60 per 100 pounds, or 9.6 cent per pound. PENNSYLVANIA PURE RYE, EIGHT YEARS OLD. OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS Pour ful Quarts of this Pine Old, Pure XTC33 WHISKEY, EXPRESS PAID* We ship oil approval In plain, sealed boxes, with no marks to indicate couteuta. Wben lyou receive Itand test It, if it is not satisfactory return it at our oxponso and we wil return your $3.50. We guarantee this brand to be EIGHT YEARS OLI». Eight bottles for $6 50, express prepaid; 12 bottl'os for $0 50 express prouaid, $3.50 One gallon jug, express prepaid, $3 00; ,lIo ‘ 2 gallon jug, express prepaid, $5 60. No charge for boxing We handle all tlie loading brands of Rye and will save you Bourbon Whiskies and GO For Cent, on Your Purchases Quart, Gallon US YOUR JOB WORK. SATIS- Could Not( Breathe. s,' colds, croup, grip, bron chitis, other thrdat'and lung trou bles are quickly cured by Qne Minute Cough Cure. One Min ute Cough Cure is riot a, mere ex pectorant, which giv.es only tem- poary relief. It softens and liqui fies the. mucous,, draws out the inflamation and removes the cause of the disease. Absolutely safe. Aots at once. “One Minute Cough Cure will do all that is claimed for it, says “Justice of the Pea,ce J, Q, Hood, Crosby, Miss. “Mv When you wake up with a bad taste in your mouth you . may know that you need a dose of Chamber lain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will cleanse your stomach, im prove your appetite and make you feel like a new man. They are eaoy to take, being sugar coated,and pleas ant in effect. For sale by all dealers in Perry, Warren & Lowe, Byron.. Kentucky Star Bourbon, $ 35 Elkridgo Bourbon 40 Boon Hollow Bourbon 45 Oelwood 1’nre Bye 60 Monogram By 55 McBrayor Rye Maker’s A AAA.... 0.0.1’. (Old Oscar Popper) Old Grow..... Fincher’s Golden Wedding Hoffman House Ryo Mount Vernon, 8 years old........... Old Dillinger Rye, 10 years old,.... The above are only a few brands. • Send for a catalogue 60 05 05 76 75 90 100 125 $126 150 105 190 2 00 225 240 240 260 260 300 360 400 All otlior goods by - tho gallon, such as Corn le Whiskey, Peacli and Apple Brandies, otc., sold equally as low, from $125 a gallon and upward We make a speciasty of the Jug Trade and all orders ‘ have our inducements offered. Mail Orders shipped same dav of the receipt of order. The Alim ayer & Plateau a speciasty of the Jug Trade era hy Mail or TelgeraphwiT prompt attention: . Speoia Alim ay er & Liquor Company; 606, 508, 510, 612 Fourth Street, near Union Passenger Depot. MACON, GEORGIA Jacob S. Coxey, who leaped in to notoriety some years ago by 'leading an army of tramps to Washington, is now glad that he was made to“ keep off the grass.” He is in the iron and steel busi ness, and says he is making mon ey. “Business beats politics every time” he said to an interviewer a day or two ago, Cures Eczema and Itching Humors Through the Blood. Costs Nothing to Try, B. B. B, (Botanic Blood Balm) is a cer tain and sure oure for eczema, itching skin, kurnorfy scabs, scalds, watery blis ters, pimples, aching bones or joints, boils, oarbuncles, prioking pain in the skin, old eating sores, ulcers, etc. Bo tanic Blood Balm cures the worst and most deep-sealed cases by enriobing, pu rifying and vitalizing the blood, thereby giving a healthy blood supply to the skin. Other remedies may relieve, but B. B. B. actually oures, heals every sore, and gives the rich glow of health to the skin, making the blood red and nonrish- wife could not get her breath and j ing. Especially advised for old, obsti- " '■ ‘ ‘ nate cases. Druggists . $1.* Trial .treat- was relieved by the first dose. It' Rate-eases. u Pru «?. ,ats Mb fcr ®“: has bean a beneMto aU FACTION GYARANEETD. - ly- HoteolaW. Drngfeg^f Digests wh&t you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed, prevents formation of gas on tho atom' ach, relieving all distress after eating. Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. St Sselp , feat eSo you good IJrepared only by E. CL, DeWitt & Oo., Chicago ■The $1. bottle contaf*>r^ t-Kmastfae 50a. okia ENTIRELY FREE. £ A FREE PATTERN (your own selection) to every sub scriber. Only £0 cents a year. MSGAUft MAGAZINE A LADIES’ MAGAZINE. A semi beautiful colored plates; latest fashions | dressmaking economies | fancy work | household hints; fiction, etc. Sub scribe to-day, or, send jc. for latest copy. 1 Send f Lady agents Wanted. Send for terms. Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-to- date, Economical and Absolutely Perfect-Fitting Paper Patterns, jMS CALL! ■Pattons* All Seams Allowed and Perforations show the Basting and Sewing Lines. Only to and IS cents each—none higher. Ask for them. Spld in nearly every city and town, or by mall from' THE MoCALL CO. 113-115-117 West 31st St., NEW YORK. PERFECT PASSENGER AND SUPERB SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Connecting at SAVANNAH with STEAMSHIP LINES THE COMMONER, (Mr. Bryan’s Paper.) The Commoner has attained within six months from date of the first issue a circulation of 100,000 copies, a record probably never equaled in the history of American periodical literature. The unparalleled growth of this paper de monstrates that there is room in the newspaper fields for a national paper de voted to the discussion of political, economic, and social problems. To the columns of the Commoner Mr. Bryan contributes his best efforts ;and his views of political events as they arise from time to time can not fail (o interest those who study public questions. The Commoner’s regular suboription price is 61.00 per year. We have arrang ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur nish his pape\ and Home Joubkait to gether for ona /ear for $1.90.' The reg ular subscription price ”Of the two pa pers whengsuberibed for separately is 62.50. ■' PLYING BETWEEN Savannah and New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore AND ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST Complete information, rates, schedules of trains and sailing dates of steamers cheerfully furnished by any agent of the company. THEO. D. KLINE.V - W.A. WIN BURN, Garverat 8up’t, ’ Traffic Manager, J. O. HAILE, .Oaiicral PaiVr Agent, F. A ROBINSON, Au’t Owwrtti P**4’r AgonL arAWAfiti'AMa ’OiwV ’•