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HAVING LEASED THE
Stubblefield House,
Mulberry St., MAOON, GA.,
Nest to Academy of Music,
It is my purpose to conduct a hotel that
will be home-like mid satisfying to all
guests. It is specially suitable for ladies
or others visiting Maoon for a day or
longer.
We Strive to Please.
George 8. Sit lev.
A GOOD PLACE.
Notice is hereby giveu to Indies nud
gentlemen who visit Macon thnt Mrs.
W. H. Houser it now running n first-
class Boarding House at 755 Cherry St.
whioh is very near the business center
of the city, and she will be pleased to
serve them meals at 26c. each.
A
MOTHERHOOD
The greatest ambition of Amer
ican men and women is to have
homes blessed with ohildren. The
woman afflicted with female dis-
oaso is constantly monneed with
becoming u childless -wife. No
mcdloino can restore doad or
gans, but Wino of Cardui docs
regulate derangements that pre
vent conception; does prevent
miscarriage; does restore weak
functions and shattered nerves
and does bring babies to homes
barren and dosolato (or years.
Wino of Cardui gives women tho
health and strength to bear heal
thy ohlldreh. You oan got a
dollar bottlo of Wino of Cardui
from your dealer.
WINE or CARDUI
U$ Market Biroot,
. Momphie. Tomi., April 14,1901. .
In February, 1001,1 took ono bottle of
Wine or Onraul and ono package of |
“ 1 bad boon
liud v'over
[took Wino
Djrn
Card til.
jyjflrlwh
K I am mother of"a trio
i"" ~ ■
torch 81 lint,
loumla and I
vmsuui m mv miu»u
Mro. J. W. 0. 6MITH.
.For ftdvloq nn«l llleiiitiira. iwhhvwi, utvhm
BymittpniH. ‘‘The l/viien’ Artvluory
C) C "*‘ 5 V^HlI SimWw Company,
ImttanooBa,
bnftttinsooBft
, 'ronn.
- OF ATLANTA, GA,
Is ft twloc-a-wcok N1CWH paper, published on
; .elght-pago . .
’ Ry amuigeinouts wo have seouvod a speciul
fftto vftth thorn in connootion wltli
-•OUR PAPER.
ftnd for
wo will soml
IB H0ME: |0Ul||k,
THE ATLANTA
-Seffii-WeeklY Journal-
ivmi tlio
Southern Cultivator
ALL THREE ONE YEAR.
This is the best offor wo lmvo over made our
friends and subscribers. You bad bottor take
advahtage of this offer at onoo, for The Journal
? may withdraw their special rate Vo us at any
tlmo.
The Semt-Wookly has many j)roiuincnt men
and women contributors to their columns,
among them being Rev. Sam Jones, Rov. Walk
er Lewis,Hon. Harvio Jordan, Hon. John Tem
ple Graves and Mrs. W. H. Felton, besides their
crops of efficient editors, who take ditto of the
news matter. Tlielr departments are well cov
ered. Its columns of farm nows are worth tho
the price of the paper.
4 Send direct to this office $2.00 and secure
■the throe above mentioned papers ono year
Address
THE HOME JOURNAL,
PERRY, GA.
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Anyone sending a sketch and description may
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ons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
cent free. Oldest agenoyforsecurtagpatents.
Patents taken through Munn & Cfo. reoelve
special notice, without charge, in tho
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A handsomely lUustrated weekly. Largest dr-
eulatlon of any scientific journal. Terms, $8 a
icarj four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers.
00^61 Broadway, How Ygf[r
oe. 625 F SU WashtoRWi. D, 0.
A HAPPY SEQUEL
The Result of a Felicitous Termina
tion to a Novel.
A few years ago one of-our most
popular novelists was busily en-
;ed in writing a serial novel for
jondon journal when a certain
nobleman called on her in a state of
intense excitement.
“Do tell me,” said he, “have you
finished the story now appearing
in < ?”
“Wiry, of course; some time ago,"
was tire reply.
“Does the heroine die at the
end ?”
“Oh, certainly. After such Con
sumptive symptoms as I have de
scribed how could she possibly
live ?”
“But you must make her live.
You must change the ca-ta&trophe,
for on your heroine’s life depends
my daughters.”
“Your' daughter’s?” exclaimed
the novelist in surprise.
“Yes,” was the startling rejoin
der. “She has all the varipus
symptoms of consumption whipn
you have described and watches
mournfully for every number of
your novel, feeding her own fate
i«i that of your heroine. Now, if
you make your heroine live I feel
persuaded that my daughter, whose
imagination has been very deeply
impressed, will live too. Come, a
life to save is a temptation”—
“Not to bo resisted,” added the
novelist.
Consequently the last chapter was
changed. The heroino recovered and
was duly made happy. About five
years after the novelist met the
nobleman at a party.
“Ah!” ho exclaimed, “let mo in
troduce, you to my daughter. I
think Bho owes her life to you:
There she is.”
“What! That handsome woman
who looks the very picture of
health ?”
“Yes; she is married, and has
had three children.”
“And my novel has had threo
editions,” said the novelist with a
laugh; “so we arc quits.”—London
Tit-Bits.
Men’s Hats In Elizabeth's Tlmo.,
The gay young courtiers of the
queen—Elizabeth of immortal mem
ory—shone resplendent in high
crowned hats of rare device, which,
liko tho brilliant Kalcigh, they hung
nround with strings of pearls.
Kingsley describes his Elizabethan
adventurer John Oxenham as hav
ing on his head “a broad velvet
Spanish hat,” and Master Fra/qk
Leigh as shading his delicate com
plexion from tho sun with “a broad
dove colored Spanish hat with
feathers to match, 'looped up over
the right ear with a pearl brooch.”
But hats or caps were worn ac
cording to taste or circumstances,
and Scott tells us that when Leices
ter rode bareheaded at, Elizabeth’s
side oil her entry into Kenilworth
his esquire had charge of hi3 lord
ship’s black velvet bonnet, gar
nished with a clasp of diamonds
and surmounted by a white plume.
—‘Chambers’ Journal.
1 Cunning Gulls.
An example,, of the cunning of
gulls was observed at Tacoma when
several alightod on a bunch of logs
that had been in the water for a
long time, with the submerged sides
thick with barnacles. One was a
big gray fellow, who seemed to be
the captain. IIo walked to a par
ticular log, stood on ono side of it
close to the water and then uttered
peculiar S cries. The other gulls came
and perched on the same side of the
log, which under their combined
weight foiled over several inches.
The gulls, step by step, kept the
log rolling until the barnacles
showed above the water.* The birds
picked eagerly at this food, and tho
log was not abandoned until every
barnacle had been picked.
“I am using a box of Chamber
lain’s Stomach & Liver Tablets
and find them the best thing for
my stomach I ever used,” says T.
W. Robinson, Justice of the Peaoe,
Loomis, Mich. These Tablets not
only correct disorders of the stom
ach but regulate the liver and
bowels. They are easy to take
and pleasant in effect. Price 25
cents per box. For sale by all
dealers in Perry, Warren & Lowe,
Byron.
Thus far the United States has
built 850 school houses in Porto Rico
TH6 Knots That Are Tied Fop Wofte,
Not For Better. I
Nothipg is. more beautiful than ,
the old age of a mati arijt tf-he j
lrayc ffioafo dear to eacli other byj
the manifold experiences of fife.
So nothing is more grim a«?d hid
eous than such an old ago when the
long. yea*3 liave heaped up bitter
ness and discord only. M many
a oountoy household, whefo wife
beating would be regarded with
horrof^ JQ&fcte is practiced a cruelty
no less terrible, and even-more per
sistent.
An old couple who Had boen-mar-
ried fifty years finally separated be
cause the man wanted a half bushel
of ashes oiy the hearth and his wife
wanted only a peck. They, had ar
gued the question unremittingly
and savagely for forty-*nino years
and at last ended the bitter sport
by a stormy parting.
There is a grim humor in many
of the eountryman’s expressions of
hiS 'domestic irritation and discom
fort, but they are none the loss sig
nificant of untold suffering.
Ono night a country doctor was
detained at a farmhouse where hus
band and wife were notoriously in
compatible. From the “kitchen
bedroom” where he was installed
he was forced to hear every word
of a tirade which the woman poured
upon the head of her husband. The
victim bor.e it without a word. At
last, the doctor relates, the farmer
rose to go to the barn for his nightly
visit to “the critters.” With his
hand on the latch of the door ho
flung hack over his shoulder,
“Waal, Sairey, there’s that in ye
that notlrni’ but the groundTl ever
take out!”
An old blacksmith drove home
from the funetal of liis wife with a
lifelong friend. As thpy .yode ejewyty
through a winter twilight the wid
ower half soliloquized: “She was
a good cook an’ a first rate house
keeper. She was savin’. She allera
kep’ me mended up. But I never
liked her!”
The grotesqueness of the inci
dents does not cohceal their tragedy.
That might he made the text of a
sermon on self control, cheerfulness,
lovingnesa and the other lipmely,
useful clbmcstid virtues. These same
virtues must be planted and culti
vated iu the boy and the girl if mar
riage is to bo aught but an intoler
able slavery for the man and tho
woman.—Yon til’s Companion.
Ugowe Bay.
A new name to be seen on the lat
est, maps of British East Africa is
Ugowe bay, applied to an arm of
the Victoria Nyanza. This namo
originated with Stanley, tho explor
er, in a singular way. When he
was making a chart of the lake
shores, he came upon a great bay,
and, calling to a native, he asked
what it was called. After repeating
the inquiry several times he got for
answer something that sounded
like “You go ’way,” and the inter
preter’s efforts met with no better
success. So Stanley, accepting the
sound, named the bay Ugowe, which
is pronounced like the English
phrase quoted above.
Convenient Ailments.
“Archibald, dear,” his wife said,
arousing him in the dead of night,
“I wish you would walk with baby a
little while. He’s going to wake
up.”
“How can I do that, Lucinda?”
expostulated the sleepy husband.
“You know, Fvo got tho pingpong
ankle.”
“Then put him in his cradle and
rock him awhile.”
“I can’t do that either. I’ve got
the golf shoulder.”—Chicago Trib
une.
Cures Eczema and Itching Humors
Through the Blood. Costs
Nothing to Try,
B.B. B.(Botanic Blood Balm) is a cer
tain and sure cure for eczema, itching
ekin, humors, scabs, scalds, watery blis
ters, pimples, aching bones or joints,
boils, carbuncles, pricking pain in the
skin, old eating sores, ulcers, etc. Bo
tanic Blood Balm cures the worst and
most deep-seated cases by enriching, pu
rifying and vitalizing the blood, thereby
giving a healthy blood supply to the
skiu. Other remedies may relieve,but
B. B. B. actually cures, Heals every sore,
and gives the rich glow of health to the
skiu, making the blood red and nourish
ing. Especially ,advised for old, obsti
nate cases. Druggists $1. Trial treat
ment free by writing Dr. Gillam, 218
Mitchell street, Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble,and free menical advice given.
Subscribe for the Home Journal
T=r T-...
GROCERIES AND COUNTRY PRODUCE.—-
Cor. Second and Poplar Sts., MACON, C A *
AGENCY FOR THE
ait
STEEL
WOVEN WIRE
FIELD FENCE
MMS
Made of large, strong wires, heavily galvanized.
Amply provides for expansion and contrac
tion. Only Best Bessemer steel wires - Mm
used,' always of uniform quality.
Never goes wrong no matter
how great a strafe
is put on it. Does
not mutilate, but
does efficiently turn
cattle, horses,
hoga and pigs.
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEE!*
by the manufacturers,
Call and »©e it. Can show you how it will| save you money and fenoe
your fields so they will stay fenced.
1M! ©ttiltai Om WMAnt*
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 GALLONS or more. Terms, cash with order.
Send yonr order and write Tor Descriptive Circular of Wines
and Brandies, t References, the Commecial Agencies, or any
3Iercliant Here.
J. H. WOOLLEY, Cherryville. H, C.
. f ■ V
IF
PENNSYLVANIA pure rye,
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE Willlil AMS
Pour ful5Q,utvrts of tLjs Pino Old, Pure
RYE WHISKEY,
$3.50
We ship on approval in plain', sealed boxes,
witli no marks to indicate contents. When |you
receive it and test it, if it is not satisfactory,
return it at our expense and we - wil return your
$3.CO. .Wo guarantee this brand to ho
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
Eight bottles for SC 50, express prepaid;
12 hottifes for §9 CO 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
Rourbon Whiskies and will save you
50 Per Cent, on Your Purchases:
Quart, Gallon.
Kentucky Star Rourbon, $ 35 §125
Elkritlgo Rourbon 40 150
Booh Hollow Rourbon 45 105
Celwood Pure Rye 50 l OP
Monogram Rye 55 2 00
McRrayor Rye (10 225
Maker’s A AAA 05 240
0.0. P. (Old Oscar Pepper) 05 2 40
Old Crow 75 2 50
Fincher’s Golden Wedding 75 2 50
Hoffman House Rye 00 300
Mount Vernon, 8 years old 100 350
Old Dillinger Ryo, 10 years old,.... 125 400
The above are only a few brands.
Send for a catalogue.
All other Soods by tho gallon, §uch 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 ordershy Mail or Telgeraph wiU
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.
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 ;and his views
of political events as they arise from
time to time can not fail to interest those
who study public questions.
The Commoner’s regular subeription
price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang
ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur
nish his paper and Home Journal to
gether for onfc year for $1.90. The reg
ular subscription price of the two pa
pers when euboribed for separately is
$2.60.
The Macon Telegraph.
Published every day and Sunday,
and Twice-a-Week, by The Macon
Telegraph Publishing Co.
Subscription Daily and 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
Southeast
Connecting at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
PLYING BETWEEN
Savannah and
New York,
Boston,
Philadelphia,
Baltimore
AND ALL POINTS
N0.RTH 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 8up’t, Traffic Manager,
v J. O. HAILE, General Pass’r Agent,
F. J. ROBINSON, Ass’t General Pass'r Agent;
SAVANNAH. QA,