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MORE COTTON
to the acre at less cost, means
more money*
More Potash
In the Cotton fertilizer improves the
soil i increases yield—larger profits,
Send for our book (free) explaining how te
get these results.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
THE COMMONER*
(Mr. Bryan’s Paper.)
The Commoner bus Ht.tnmed within
eix months from ditto of the first issue n
oiiTitliitiou of 100,000 copies, n record
probably never eq uled 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 natioual paper de
voted to the discussion of political,
economic, and social piob tms. To the
columns of the Commoner Mr.
contributes his best efforts ;aud
of political events as they aria',
time to time can not fail toinfceies
who study public questions.
The Coinraouor’s regular snhonption
price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang
ed with Mr. Ur)an whereby we ouu fur
nish his pttpe* and Wombs Journal, to
gether for om rear for $1.90. The reg
ular subscription price of the two pa
pers when suboribed for repnratoly is
92.00.
AND ENCYCLOPEDIA
4 STATISTICAL
TOLU ME OF . .
Over 10,000
Facts and Figures
Containing Over 600 Pages
I - Special Features.
millonnlrea of the United State*; Parti
cular* About Threo Thousand American
Magnates. Organized Labor; Strength of the
■rroniuiK L4>bor Unions, The
A&rtsSrat Trust*. United State*
Census. New Census
ofBuropoanCountries.
Th* Nicaragua Canal
and the Hay-Paaace-
fote Treaties With
Oreat Britain. TheR*.
lotions of Cuba With
the 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. Tho New York
Municipal Election of 1901. Agriculture.
Manufactures, /lortallty.
^ FACTS ABOUT POLITICS.
[THE BOOK THAT BELONGS
IN EVERY OFFICE AND
IN EVERY HOME OF
EVERY AMERICAN.
STANDARD
AMERICAN ANNUAL.
AT AU NEWSDEALERS.
Price
35 CtS.
9T4E WORLD Pulitzer Bldg., Mow York
The above described book free at this
ofHce to every Homk Jouunal subs crib
er who ays 1,60 strictly n dvanco.
50 YEARS*
EXPERIENCE
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Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
- ‘ ascertain cur opinion free whether an
-w- x agency for securing pat
Patents taken through Muun & Co. reoolve
special notice, without charge, In tho
BKMpM f I . ■ |
culation of any soienttao journal. Terms, (3 a
r; tour months, |L Sold by all
weekly. Largest olr-
■mjlB—*'. Terms, (3 a
newsdealers.
361 Broadway, NdUU Yfif|r
P st, WashteBwv. ». a
WM
mmymm
s®
US YOUR JOB WORK. SATIS-
FACTION GV k RANCETD.
After Seventy-Five Years.
A visit to the old home is one
of. the rnoBt delightful experiences
of old age. In New England
more and more has been made
each year of the feeling for the
old homestead, and it is only nat
ural that the “old home” paper,
The Youth’s Companion, should
participate in this renewal of “old
home” acquaintances.
Last week the publishers of the
Youth’s Companion enjoyed a
visit from one of their seventy-
five-year subscribers, Mr. R. W.
Peabody of Chicago, now ninety-
one years old, who had been
spending a few weeks in New Eng
land. He is one of the few sub
scribers on record who has taken
the Youth’s Companion continu
ously since its first issue, April
17, 1827. The letter in which he
sent his original subscription was
one of the first he ever wrote.
Through young manhood, maturi
ty and old age, through times of
war and times of peace, in New
England and in the West, through
all the last, seventy-five years of
his life, his dafe^hstant compan
ion has been the old Youth’s Com
panion. .
Thejjgtfowth of The Companion
itselfi^CTom the first small four-
page'issues to the great family pa-
pel of the present is merely typi-
oijjfof the growth of the country
ulwing Mr. Peabody’s lifetime.
The wonderful triumphs of steam,
and electricity | the great inven
tions that made the nineteenth
century what it was, nearly all
occurred in the period through
which Mr. Peabody and The
Youth’s Companion have passed
side by side.
The regard Mr. Peabody holds
for the paper is not because of its
age, but beoauBe the paper, al
though the same in purpose in its
last issue as in that of seventy-
five years ago, has kept pace with
all the extraordinary develop
ments of these three generations,
and instead of growing old has
grown young in enterprise, in
originality, and in the ability to
know and supply the literary
wants of the American family.
Says Roosevelt will be Re-Elected.
St. Augustine, Fla., March 26—
Senator Platt, of New York, was
here on his return from his Cuban
trip. He said that he had enjoy
ed the trip and his health was
good. With regard to the next
presidential election, he said that
Roosevelt would be a candidate
for re-election, and he knew of no
opposition sufficient to cause any
anxiety regarding his renomina
tion,.
He declared that he would go
into the next convention with a
solid delegation from New York,
and that Roosevelt would not only
be renominated, but elected. He
did not anticipate, however,* that
any of the electoral votes of the
southern states would be cast for
him.
Wants To Help Others.
“I had stomach trouble all my
life,” say8 Edw. Mehler, proprie
tor of the Union Bottling Works,
Erie, Pa., “and tried all kiuds of
remedies, went to several doctors
and*, spent considerable money-
trying to get a moment’s peace.
Finally I read of Kodol Dyspep
sia Cure and have been taking it
to my great satisfaction. I never
found its equal for stomach trou
ble and gladly recommend it in
hope that I may help other suf
ferers.” Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
cures all stomach troubles. You
don’t have to diet. Kodol Dys
pepsia Cnre digests what you eat.
Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
Another prince is coming to the
United States this year. He is
Prince Victor Emanuel, cousin of
the king of Italy. Prince Victor,
however, is coming in a “strictly
private” manner. This is taken
to mean that he will journey to
America for the purpose of inves
tigating the matrimonial market.
He will visit Cincinnati, Chicago
and New York, where the best
bargains in that line are apt to
be picked up.—Dawson News.
This signature is on every box ot the gennlno
v Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet*
the remedy that enns • eold la •»* tty
Subscribe for the Homs Journal
Items of Interest.
The Russian mercantile marine
has 745 steamers and 2,298 sail
ing vessels.
Columbia, with only 4,000.000
inhabitants, is twice the size of
Germany.
About $4,500,000 of gold was
shipped from Nome during the
past season.
The peace footing of the armies
of the civilized world is in all 4,-
000,000 men.
Cocoanut is much used in Ger
many,instead of cod liver oil, for
consumption.
Bombay, with an average tem
perature of 80 8, is the hottest of
the world’s large cities.
Thirty to forty miles an hour is
the rule for railroad trains in Rus
sia ; in Siberia 15 to 20.
The agricultural department
will furnish fig fertilizing insects
to growers of that fruit.
London school board children
used over four million exercises
and copy books last year.
Of every three persons in Ber
lin, one has a savings bank, or,
more accurately, 10 of every 27.
Ohio has 26,920 working women.
Their average weekly wages are
$4.88 and savings 14 cents.
The 2,000 Mormons in Germany
are total abstainers from alcohol,
coffee, tea and worldly amuse
ments.
Japan now possesses the heav
iest and finest battleship afloat,
the Mikasa, of 15,200 tons dis
placement,
Tacoma, Wash,, is'8,209 miles
from New .York, by the shortest
route, and it takes 127 hours to
get therfi.^..
Thp.ti&Q'.number of medical
praotitfio^eq/ in Great Britain and
Ireland is 86,788, an increase of
404 within a year.
The population of Germany; in
creased by 7.8 per qpnt^’ 5 in the
years 1895 to 1900—the' highte/st
rate on record in that country. '
Thirty million stamps beariug
King Edward’s portrait were plac
ed on sale in the postoffices
throughout England on New
Year’s day.
By the census of 1900 only two
states had more fereign-born than
native-born male residents of vot
ing age—Menuesota and South
Dakota. t, . V ^,v.
ed that tnere are
otersj'in New York
to. become iden-
-he/great par
leyed more
aking 110m-
It is esti
nearly 250,0
city who declj
tified with eit
ties, while tjier
who take no pjirt
inations.
BETTERN PILLS.
The question has been asked,
“In what way are Chamberlain’s
Stomach & Liver Tablets superior
to pills?” The answer is: They
are easier and more pleasant to
take, more mild and gentle in ef
fect and more reliable,as they can
always be depended upon. Then
they cleanse and invigorate the
stomach and leave the bowels in a
natural condition, while pills are
more harsh in effect pad their use
is often followed by constipation.
For sale by all dealers in Perry,
Warren ,& Lowe, Byron.
Col. F. S. Andrews of Ohio,
who has been spending some time
in Cuba, says that in less than
five years the island will be in tho
throes of civil \yar, as one acci
dent of which Spain will propose
to the island that it return tp
Spanish domination. A pro-
Spanish movement, he says, is al
ready being fostered by the rich
land owners who, while claiming
to be Cubans, are really Span
iards.
ALL CASES OF
DEAFNESS OR ”f ARIWC
ARE NOW CURABLE
by our new Invention. Only those bomde.fare incurable.
HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY.
IBUnU «r a WERMAN, OP BALTIMORE, SAYS:
F. A. W , Baltimore, Md., March 30, 1901.
G'.tkmm\ - Being entirely cured of %&£*&** to » 1 wiU ” ow S* ve
■ sisapsm* u *..>1°»s»»* wo m i »
then cease, but the hearing m the affected }„ a New York paper, and ordered your treat-
I then saw yo«r^®tiBmetttJccffl^|nyjtt a New^xo ^ noisesc * ased and
S3&. after" fiveweeks? my^'euring in ^diseased ear has been entirely restored. I thank yo«
heartily and beg to remain V ery tr ^y y j^rMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
Our treatment does not interfere with your usual occupation.
YOU GAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME1
INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICAGO, ILL,
WINCHESTER
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
“New Rival" “Leader” “Repeated
F you are looking for reliable shotgun am-i
munition, the kind that shoots where you*
point your gun, buy Winchester Factory
Loaded Shotgun Shells: “New Rival,” loaded with
Black powder; “Leader” and “Repeater,” loaded
with Smokeless. Insist upon having Winchester
Factory Loaded Shells, and accept no others.
ALL DEALERS
no
KEEP THEM .
PENNSYLVANIA. PURE RYE,
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS
Pour fuJ Quarts of this Fme ,01u, Pure
RYE WHISKEY,
EXPBLSS
.r AID-
Wo ship on approval plain, sealed boxes,
with no marks to indi'ytte Contents, When iyou
receive itand te3t it, ff it is not satisfactory,
return it a* our expense and we wil return your
$3.60. We guarantee this brand to be
EIGHT TEARS OLD.
$3.50
Eight bottles for $6 60, express prepaid;
12 bottfes for $0 60 express prepaid.
One gallon jug, express prepafd, $3 00;
2 gallon jug, express prepaid, $5 60.
No charge for boxing.
We handle all the leading brands of Rye a
Bourbon Whiskies and will save you ’
GO Per Cent, on Your Purchases
Boon
McBrayer Rye.
Maker’s .A AAA.
O.O. H. (Old Osc
Old .Crow
Hoffman House Rye.
Quart,
Gallon.
$1 26
160
105
1 «JP
2 00
226
240
U5
24C
76
2 5C
2 6C
3 0C
36C
126
400
Chicago's Pig Club.
Melrose Park, a Chicago suburb,
has a new club, popularly known as
the Pig club. The tie that binds tho
members together is a common lik
ing for what used to be called in In
diana “hog fixin’s.” The president
of the Melrose Park Savings bank,
Ferdinand Dunnebecke, is president
of the club. “We shall hold sessions
each week,” he says, “and pork will
be the one meat served. Between
times, too, we will eat no other meat
than pork.”
Send for a catalogue.
All other Soods by tho gallon, such as Corn
Whiskey, Peach and Apple Brandies, etc., sold
equally as low, from $126 a gallon and upward
We make a speoiasty of the Jug Trade?
ancl all orders oy Mail or Telgeraphwilj
have our prompt attention: Specia
inducements offered.
Mail Orders shipped same day of the
receipt of order.
The Altmayer & Plateau
Liquor Company,
600, 508, 51Q, 512 Fourth Street, near
Union Passenger Depot.
MACON, GEORGIA.
Cures Blood Poison, Cnncer, Eczema
Ulcers, Etc. TreatmeNt’Frce.
If you have offensive pimples or erup-.
tions, ulcers on any part of the body,
aching bones or joints, falling hair, mu
cous patches, swollen g’tnds, sore lips,
eating, festering sores, sharp, gnawing
pains, then you suffer from serious blood
poison or the beginning of deadly can
cer. It is a dangerous condition, put you
may be permanently cured by taking Bo-
tamo Blood Balm (B. B. B.), made espe
cially to cure"the worst blood diseases.
It heals every sore or ulcer, Btops all
.ches and pains and reduces all swell
ings. Botanic Blood Balm oures all ma
lignant blood troubles, such as eczema,
scabs and scales, pimples, running sares,
carbuncles, scrofula, etc. Especially ad
apted for all obstinate oases' that have
reaohed the second or third stage. Drug-
K 'sts, $1. Trial treatment free by writing
r. Gillum, 213 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga.
"bribe trouble and f >«• xa«dicsl«dviee
in. Mtdicins aaut aidBi'a ^piid. -
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat*
This preparation contains all of the
digestants and digests all kinds of
food. It gives instant relief and never
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. The mofet sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It
prevents formation of gas on tho stom
ach, relieving all distress after eating.
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It oan't help
. but do you good
BETWEEN
ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE
IN THE
Southeast
Connecting at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
PLYINQ 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, W. A. WIN BURN,
Gonaral Sup't, Traffic Manage.
4. O. HAILE, Qanaral PWO'f Agdltt, I
p. 0. ROWMBON, AmI Sonar*! Pate’r Aj»ft%
llllil