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DEN AND FIELD
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1 i I
ONION SETS,
EARLY AMBER and
ORANGE SORGHUM.
CORN,
PEANUTS,
WATERMELON,
CANTALOUPE
Stock and Poultry Powders.
L. W. GRAY, Mug’n
400 Poplar St, WACOM, OA
fl HQME-MKErllQTEL.
HAVING LEASED THE
Stubblefield House,
Mulberry St., MAO ON, GA.,
' Nest to Aoadomy of Musio,
It iB my purpose to oouduct a hotel that
will be home-like and satisfying to all
guests. 'It is specially suitable for ladies
or others vlBitiug Maoou for a day or
longer.
We Strive to Please.
George S. Rsley.
A GOOD PLACE.
Notioo iB horebv given to Indies and
who visit Macon that Mrs.
a flrst-
orry St.
which is very near the bttsiuees center
pftho oi|y, and she will be pleased to
sorvo them meals at 263. eaoh.
#1
W. 11. Uouaer id now runnin
olass Boarding House at 765 r
OF ATLANTA, GA,,
Safe
_jfe
Hi •::
Ih ft twJoo-a-wook NMWS paper, published on
Monday and Thursday of oaoh wook, with all
tho hvtoBt nowB of the world, whloh oomoB over
thoir loasod wires direct to thoir olllco. Is an
eight-page sovon-ooRurm paper.
By arrangements Wo have socurod u special
no with thorn In oonnootlon with
OUR PAPER,
lyidfor $2 wo Svill soud
* HOME JOURNAL,
THE ATLANTA
-Seffii-WeeklY Journal-
and tho
Southern Cultivator
ALL THREE ONE YEAR.
'I'hiB Is the host oiler wo luvvo over nuido our
friends awl subscribers. You hud hotter take
htftgo of this offer at once* for Tho Journal
withdraw thoir special rate to us at, any
„ pi
and women contributors to thoir columns,
'iiimmir them being Rev, Ham Jones, Rev. Walk
er Lewis, Jlon. J-Iarvio Jordan; ■' “
pie GravoS and Mrs. W, II. Foltou, bOBides thoir
mops of oilli
HOn. John Tom-
tiiiu i,nn. „. xi. bullion, bosides thoir
loiont oilitors, who take caro of tho
rows matter, Thoir departments aro well cov
ered. Its columns of farm nows aro worth tho
tho price of tho paper,
Send direct to this olllco $2.00 and securo
the tlirec above mentioned papors one year
Address v
THE HOWIE JOURNAL,
PKltliY, GA.
■ ' . 1
H
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of the
digestaots and digests all kinds of
food. It gives instant relief and never
fgils 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. It
prevents formation of gas on tho stom
ach, relieving all distress after eating.
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It can’t help
but do jjom pood
Trade Marks
Designs
’ r™’* ' Copyrights &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and desorlptlon ma.
inlctly ascertain cur opinion free whether an
I. nnth.Mi. nnf.nf ConiniUniCft-
Onlctly
invontlo- ... . —,
tlons strictly confldeul
sent free. Oldest nger...
Patents taken throui
( special notice, without o
§|§f J "
S3SSSE
isnwaraBilP
Subscribe for the Home Journal
STORIES.
'
Foraker Works the Hale Old Philadel
phia Joke on Penrose.
Senator Foraker and Senator
Penrose had a short wordy tilt dur
ing the debate on the Chinese ex
clusion bill which gave the Ohio
man 9 chanco to poke fun at Penn
sylvania. Foraker had asserted that
the courts have decided that no
Chinese except laborers may be ex
cluded under the present law, and
he had alluded to a decision of the
supremo court. Penrose suggested
that the -Fifty-seventh Federal Re
ports contain a different decision.
‘Tea/’ said Mr. Foraker, “hut
long subsequent to the Fifty-sev
enth Federal Reports the supreme
court decided as I have said. The
old report is not modern law."
Then he told his stony.
“The senator from Pennsylvania
reminds mo of the man who was go
ing around gathering up last year’s
almanacs and calendars.
“*What can you do with those?’
some one asked him.
“ ‘Why, I intend to sell them in
Philadelphia,’ he said.’’
Cause of Extra Charge.
In a majority of the shops in
Washington the barbers charge only
10 cents for a shave. Representa
tive Eddy of Minnesota one day
“OH, YOU OHABCin 8 CENTS EXTRA.”
was under the hand's of a barber
with a dull razor. After powdering
the congressman’s fpco the barber
turned him over to the brush boy
with the remark:
“Fifteen cents, please/’
“Oh, you charge 6 cents extra for
pulling the hairs out, do you ?’’ re
marked Mr. Eddy as he paid his bill'.
Theater Going In Burma.
Mme. Knonorah, a Texan by birth
and a German by descent, is at pres
ent a conspicuous personage on the
stages of the London concert halls.
She is a thought reader and a light
ning calculator and as such has giv
en exhibitions pretty nearly all over
the woftd. One of her stories of
gravel refers to an experience at the
box office in Rangun, where her
manager was approached by a well
dressed and apparently Anglicized
Burman, who said:
“I think I will go in. How much
for a ticket ?’’
“Three rupees for the best seats
“Too much. I will not give that.”
“Well, take a ticket for the gal
lery. It will cost you but a rupee.”
“That will do,”-replied the Bur-
man. “But, tell me, what is going
on in the gallery ?”
Spring- Fever.
Spring fever is another name
for billiousness. It is more seri
ous than most people think. A tor
pid liver und inactive bowels mean
a poisoned system. If neglected,
serious illness may follow such
symptoms. DeWitt’s Little Ear
ly Risers remove all danger by
stimulating the liver, opening the
bowels and oleansing the system
of,impurities. Safe pills. Never
gr^pe. “I have taken jDeWitt’s-
Little Early Risers for torpid liv
er every spring for years,” writes
R. M. Everly, Mcundsville, W.
Ya. “They do me more good than
anything I have ever tried.”
Holtzclaw’s drugstore.
N-.. \
A school teacher recently re
ceived the following note: “Please
excuse James from school, as his
grandmother is dead. I shall see
that it doesn’t happen again,”
Laxative Chocolates cure chronic
constipation and liver trouble. Pleas
ant to take. Purely vegetable. Guar
anteed^ at Cater’s Drugstore.
CHAMPION BULLFIGHTER,
Luis Mazzantini, the noted Span
ish bullfighter, has had a remarks-,
hie career. From the position of a l
railway porter he has become fa-j
mous kfe the most successful- and'
popular matadore of Spain, and he
numbers among his friends many of
the leading peqpl'e of that country.
He left wie ■ Spanish railways to
take up telegraphy and afterward
began the study of law. Next he
turned to the stage, where, howev
er, progress was slow. So, possess
ing a fine physique and an attrac
tive appearance, coupled with a
keen eye, steady hand and unflinch
ing nerve, he was attracted to the
bull ring, wh^re his success has
been phenomenal. While he has
had some very narrow escapes, he
has never lost a fight in the bull
ring in Spain, France or in Mexico
and Central America, in all of
which countries he is looked upon
as the foremost fighter of modern
times.
Brusque Honesty.
Stories linger in the wake of
Prince Henry of Prussia. The Hew
York Times says that during his
tour of tho steerage on board the
Kronprinz Wiihelin his royal high
ness noticed a man sitting on the
floor, leaning against a water butt.
The man was plainly a German,
but not one of those sunny, good
fellows of whom the prince is a
type.
“Why have you lpft the vater-
land ?” asked Prince Henry.
The man glanced at him and
spoke in a surly fashion.
“I left there,” said he, “because I
am a free man, to do as I choose.”
Then he glanced at his meager be
longings and added sneeringly,
“Thp vaterland has not lost much.”
The prince flushed.
“Ho country oan .afford to lose a
man who is conscious of his free
dom,” said he quickly and passed
on.
Wood Alcohol.
Writing on the use of wood alco
hol in the manufacture of flavor
ings, cordials and other bottled
goods, the Philadelphia Medical
World says:
“Wood alcohol is certain to pro
duce blindness when used as*a drink
or otherwise introduced into the
system,” said Dr. Harlan. “If a
large dose is taken on an empty
stomach, death is almost certain to
follow immediately.
“The consumption of wood alco
hol by manufacturing chemists
throughout the country has in
creased enormously during the last
decade. It can be bought for 75
cents per gallon, while ethyl alco
hol costs $2.45 per gallon.
“It is time that the men who are
sending bottled blindness and cer
tain death broadcast through the
country should be halted.”
A Bad Complication.
A woman recently entered c an om
nibus in an English town, accom
panied by a small boy, who wore a,
saucepan on liis v head in place of
the more usual hat. His appear
ance provoked comment.
“Wot’s ’e doin’ it fur?” asked
one traveler.
“Doin’ it fur?” cried the mother.
“Why, he was playin’ at bein’ Lord
Kitchener or somethin’, and ’o
wanted a ’elmet, so ’e puts the sorse-
pan on ’is ’ed, and now ’e can’t get
it off, so I’m takin’ ’im to the ’ors-
pital.”
“Poor kid 1” said a sympathizer.
“Poor kid I” cried the mother.
“It’s poor me! ’E was in such a
’urry that ’e never looked to see
wot was in the sorsepan, and now
’e’s got my\blessed breakfast on ’is
’ead.”
T=r Xj- B-A.KE’XEXJZD.
-GROCERIES AISX> COUNTRY PRODUCE.-
Cor. Second and Poplar Sts., MACON, GA.
agency for this
AM.
•TEIt
WOVEN WIRE
esses
Cures Eczema and 1 telling Humors
Through the Blood. Costs
Nothing to Try,
B. B. B. (Botauio Blood Balm) is a cer
tain and sure onre for eczema. Rolling
skin, humors, scabs, scalds, watery blis
ters, pimples, aching bones or joints,
boils, carbunoles, pricking pain in the
skin, old eating sores, ulcers, etc. Bo
tanic Blood Balm oures the worst and
most deep-seated cases by enriching, pu
rifying.and vitalizing the blood, thereby
giving a healthy blood supply to the
skin. Other remedies may relieve,but
B ; B. B. actually cures, heals every sore,
and gives the rioh glow of health to the
skin, making the blood red and nourish
ing, Especially advised for old, obsti
nate oases. Druggists $1. Trial treat
ment free by writing Dr, Gillam, 218
Mitchell, street, Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble,and free naenical advice given-
Subscribe for the Home Journal
Made of largo, 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
not mutilate, but
does efficiently turn
pattfe, horses,
hogs and pigs.
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEED
by the manufacturers.
Oall an<i see it. Oan show you bow it will|save you money,and fence
your fields so they will stay feneecl.
mm otvtfflMi
At $1.50, $1.75 $2 and $3 per Gallon,
DIRECT TO CONSUMER, SAYING MIDDLEMENS’ PROFITS.
All Express Charges paid by me on all packages of
TWO GALLON'S or more. Terms, cash with order.
Send yonr order and write for Descriptive Circular of Wines
and Brandies, s References, the Commecial Agencies, or any
Berclingn Here.
J. H. WOOLLEY, Cherryville. S, C.
PENN8YLVAN1A PURE BYE,
BIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS
Four fullQuarts of this Fine ,01d, Pure
RYE WHISKEY,
$3.50 EX1 ?!i S D B .
Wo ship on approval in plain, sealed boxes,
with no marks to indicate contents. When lyou
receive it and test it, if it is not satisfactory,
return it a* our expense and we wil return your
$3.50. We guarantee this brand to ho
BIGHT TEARS OJLD.
Eight bottles for $0 50, express prepaid;
12 hottfes for $9 50 express prenaid.
One gallon jug, express prepaid, $3 00;
2 gallon jug, express prepaid, $5 50.
No charge for boxing.
We handle all the leading brands of Rye and
Bourbon Whiskies and will save you v
50 Per Cent, on Your Purchases: j
Quart,' Gallon.
Kentucky Star Bourbon...........$ 35 $125
Elkridge Bourbon 40 150
Boon Hollow Bourbon 45 105
Cel wood Pure llye 50 100
Monogram Rye 55 2 00
McBrayer Rye 60 225
Maker’s .AAAA 05 240
O. O. P. (Old Oscar Pepper). 05 2 40
Old Crow ; .... 75 250
Fincher’s Golden Wedding 75 250
Hoffman House Rye 90 300
Mount Vernon, 8 years old.. 100 350
Old Dillinger Rye, 10 years old,.... 125 400
The abovq are only a few brands.
Send for a catalogue.
All other Soods by the gallon, such as Corn
Whiskey, Peach and Apple Brandies, etc., sold
equally as low, from $125 a gallon and upward
We make a speciasty of the Jug Trade,’
and all orders oy Mail or Telgeraph wilj
have our prompt attention: Special
inducements offered.
Mail Orders shipped same day of the
receipt of order.
The Altmayer & Flateau
Liquor Company,
606, 508, 510, 512 Fourth Street, near
Union Passenger Depot. v
MACON, GEORGIA.
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 jand his views
of political events as they arise from
time to time oan not fail to interest those
who study public questions.
The Commoner’s regular suboription
price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang
ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur
nish his paper andBoME -Journal to
gether for one year for $1.90. The reg
ular subscription price of the two pa
pers when suberibed for separately is
$2.60.
The Macon Telegraph.
Published every day and Sunday,
and Twice-a-Week, by The Macon
Telegraph Publishing Oo.
Subscription Daily an,d Sunday,.
$7.00. per annum. Daily except
Sunday, $5.00 per annum. Twice
a-Week, $1.00 per annum.
Best advertising medium in the
city. Rates furnished on appli
cation.
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE
BETWEEN
ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS
IN THE
Connectitig at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
PLYING BETWEEN
Savannah and
NW 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. KUNE, W. A. WINBURN,
. General Sup't, . Traffic Manager,
il. O. HAILE, General Paat’r Agent,
F. «l. ROBINSON, Au’t General Pass’r Agent
SAVANNAH. OK
m