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Isaacs
413 Third Street,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Regular Meals 25c.
WITH UP-TO-DATE
quick lunch counter
prompt and Polite Service.
Patronage Solicited.
PATTON & HECKLE
Proprietors.
CITATION.
M.G. Bayne ) partition in
va ( Houston Supe-
_ t. ,1 j. i V rlor COurt, Oc-
Juliette B. Hufbaeur, etal) tober term, 1902
To whom it may concern:
Notice is hereby Riven, in accordance
with an order of his Honor,Judge W. H,
Felton, Jr., that application has beeu
made by the plaintiff in the above sta
ted case for partion of the Easr ha'f of
lot number 179, in the • Bixth district of
Houston county, and showing being
made that the Bame cannot be so divi
ded as to be of value to the parties, an
order was passed to sell the sumo by the
undersigned as commissioners. If no le
gal objections are filed with us before
the 1st Tuesday in October next, the
same will be sold, and the prooeeds di
vided in accordance with said order.
J. W. Rushing,
M. L. Cooper,
Jno. H. Hodges,
Sf-pt. 1, 1902. Commissioners.
TOW*®®
PARTITION SALE.
Will be sold before the court house in-
Perry, Georgia, during the legal hours
of sale, on the 1st Tuesday in October
next, to the highest bidder for cash, the
following property, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of mnd situat
ed, lying and being in the sixth district
of Houston county, known and distin
guished in the plan of said district as
lot No. 179; and being the east half of
said lot, containing one hundred one and
one-fourth (101^) aore^more or less.
Said sale made by order of his Honor,
Judge W. H. Felton, Jr./ on application
of M. G. Bayne, for a partition of said
land between him and Mrs. Juliett B.
Hufbauer, and others, as joint owners of
said land. Said sale will be made in
pursuance of said order! and title made
to the purchaser by the undersigued,'
who were appointed commissioners by
said order to sell said land.
J. W. Hushing,
M. L. Coopbb,
Jno. H. Hodges,
Sept. 1,1902. Commissioners.
PARTITION SALE.
By virtue of an order granted on Aug
ust 12th, 1902, by his Honor, Judge W.
H. Felton, Jr„ there will be sold before
the court hours in Perry, Georgia, on
the 1st Tuesday in October next, during
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for oaeh, the following property,
to-wit:
Being that tract or parcel of land lying
in the sixth district of Houston county,
and known in the plan of said distriot as
lot No. one hundred thirty-nine (189),
and also 20 acres off of the northwest
corner of lot No. one hundred and fifty
(150); said lands bounded on the north
by lands of O. O. Bateman, on the east
by lands of the estate of J. F Sykes, on
the south by lands of Mrs. M. M. Rush
ing, on the west by lands of James
Barnes.
Said sale made by said order on the
application of M. G. Bayne for himself,
and as guardian for Lester, Alva and
Marmadulre Bayne, for partition of said
lands between him and J. W. Rushin'g,
and others, joint owners of said lands, or
their assigns.
Said sale will be made in pursuance of
said order, and title will be made to the
purchaser by the undersigned, who were
appointed commissioners to sell said
lands by said order.
M. L. Cooper,
Jno. H. Hodges,
M. A. Edwards,
Sept. 1,1902. Commissioners.
GEORGIA, Houston County:
. Abe Glass has applied for administra
tion ou the estate of Bettie Reddick,late
of said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the October
tern, 1902, of tbe court of Ordinary of
said county and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not
be granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1,1902.
SAM T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA. Houston County.
Abe Glass has applied for administra
tion on the estate of Ritta Felder, late of
said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at. the October term,
1902, of the court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause,if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1,1902.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
The Supplanting of Agriculture by
Chemistry.
Scientific American.
Senator Berthelot, the well-known
French chemist, has published an
interesting paper anent the chemi
cal synthesis of aliments, iu which
he foresees in the difficulties it still
presents the economical emancipa
tion of the human race, and the
transformation of this planet into a
vast pleasure ground. The more the
conquest of electrical energy advan
ces the nearer it appears to M. Ber
thelot that mankind approaches to
ward the substitution of chemistry
for agriculture.
Just as agriculture was evolved
from the hunting, fishing and pas
toral stages of mankind, so chemis
try now sets up to displace with its
products agricultural industries bas
ed on the production of living or
ganisms, animal and vegetable, by
the creation of nutritive matters.
The farm is already being edged out
by the factory, and engineers and
mechanics will soon take the place
of peasants and field laborers. It is
not long since the possibility of cre
ating by synthesis all the organic
matters was held to be ohimerical;
now the possibility has been demon
strated so often as to render it un
deniable. Alimentary stuffs may be
broadly divided into three funda
mental classes—fats, sugars and al-
bumenoids. As early as 1854 M.
Berthelot by chemical synthesis cre
ated bodies exactly similar to natu
ral fats by means of substances rela
ted to them, namely, glycerine and
acid. He also generated these two
substances with hydrocarbons. Su
gar can now be produced in the
chemist’s laboratory by similar com
binations. Uhemical synthesis has
not yet created the albumenoids,
which are more complex and more
liable to spoil. There is no doubt,
however, but this feat will be short
ly accomplished. Ohemical discov
eries have already given rise to
changes in agriculture. Madder has
gone out of cultivation in the south
of France, indigo in the West In
dies and vanilla in other tropical
places, owing to the chemical sub
stitutes, and chemical foodstuffs are
no more an impossibility than chem
ical dyestuffs. M. Berthelot, how
ever, utters a note of warning
against the illusion of thinking thit
food can be condensed into lozenges
and pills, and that one’s meals can
be carried in a small chocolate box
in one’s waistcoat pocket. The hu
man organism has its habits which
are tantamount to necessity, and
among its habits is that of burning
from 250 to 300 grammes of carbon
daily, and of eliminating from 15 to
20 grammes of nitrogen. Allowance
must also be made for the waste in
the body of about one-seventh of
the food consumed. A certain
weight or bulk of food will, there
fore, continue to be indispensable,
and though this may be chemical
food it is not likely ever to become
so condensed that a man may carry
a week’s rations on the march with
out inconvenience, as iB sometimes
suggested.
The newspapers of this country
have published frequent reports re
cently of the establishment of large
cattle ranges in various southern
states, notably Florida, There are
tracts of land in Georgia, cleared by
the turpentine operator and the
lumberman, that could with large
profit be used for the extension of
ttys industry. Independent packing
houses are being built and the beef
trust will find it difficult, possibly,
to regulate the prices of cattle on
the hoof. The industry in all its
phases is one that well deserves and
will well repay the consideration of
southern capitalists. The most pros
perous country, it has been said, iB
that which has the least need of im
ports, and the principle applies with
no less truth to a section or a state.
—Savannah News.
Promises.
Marietta Journal.
Promises, it is said, are like pie
crust, easily made and easily bro
ken. People want to be sincere,
but they like strength of will pow
er or character to be true to prom
ises made. A man promises to
mef t another at a certain hour to
transact an important piece of
business; the hour arrives but]the
man does not; and there is disap
pointment, a waste of tim4 and
probably loss of confidence. There
is a moneyed obligation and a
promise to pay on a certain day. —
The other party makes a promise
on that promise; the first party
fails to pay and the second par
ty is placed in an embarassing
situation, sud confidence is lost
in his honesty. There is a hurri
ed parting, a go^d bye, and a
promise to write soon. Weeks
and months run by, and the long-
looked-for letter does not come.—
There is a suspicion of flippancy
and insincerity, und doubt sad-,
dens the heart. Be punotul, be
sincere, and keep the promises you
make aud there will be good ex
amples set by old and young.
-
Each ear ha9 four bones. The
body has about 500 muscles. The
human skull contains thirty
bones. The lower limbs contain
thirty bones each. The smse of
touch is dullest on the baok. Ev
ery hair has two oil glands at its
base. The globe of the eye is
moved by six muscles. The cere
bral matter is about seven* eighths
water. The human skeleton, ex
clusive of teeth, consists of 208
bones. Hair is very strong. A
single hair will bear the weight of
1,150 grains. The enamel of the
teeth cbntains over 95 per cent,
calcerous matter. The roots of
the hair penetrate the skin about
one-twelfth of an inch. The nor
mal weight of the liver is between
three and four pouuds. The wrist
contains eight bones, the palm
five; the fingers have fourteen.
The weight of the average-sized •
mau is 140 pounds; of a woman,
125 pounds*.
Uncle Billie Hogan says he will ■
be eighty-eight years old the first'
day of October, and ho looks hale 1
and hearty. He is the father of j
twenty-three children and has 1
over three hundred grand-children
and great grand children.
When asked if it was true that he
could bite the head off a 10 penny
nail, he replied that up to |a few
yerrs ago it was no trouble to
take a ten-penny nail between his
teeth and snap the head off. He
was born in Emanuel county and
moved to Irwin when a very small
boy. He has five sons, each
weighing over 200 pounds.—Ash-
burn Farmer.
GEORGIA—Houston County,
A. B. Greene and F. C. Houser, execu
tors of Mrs. Emily Greene, have applied
for leave to sell the real estate of said
deceased.
This is therefore to cite ad persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1902, of the court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 1, 1902.
SAM T. HURST, Ordinary.
A Parson’s Noble Act,
“I want all the world to know”
writes Rev. 0. J. Budlong, of Ash
away, R. I., “what a thoroughly
good and reliable medicine I found
fn Electric Bitters. They cured
me of jaundice and liver troub
les that had caused me great suf
fering for many years. For a gen-
uine all round cure they excell
anything I ever saw. Electric
p (jter* r re the surprise of all for
th e ir wonderful work in Liver,
Kidney and Stomach troubles.
Don’t fail to try them. Only 50
cents. Satisfaction is guaranteed
at Holtzclaw’s drugstore.
NEW YORK
1 1
I am offering my complete snd choice stock of Dry Goods,
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Notions, etc., at
BARGAIN
PRICES
Having
bought cheap, I sell at lowest possible figures.
My friends are invited to make my store headquarters, and
leave their packages, especially during Carnival Week and
the Farmers’ National Congress.
Wagon yard and stable in rear of store free to my cus
tomers.
I can save you money. Come to see me.
II. URK
454 MULBERRY ST.
MACON,GEORGIA
Bibb Supply Company,
MACON, GEORGIA.
SUPPLIES, farm machinery
I AND IMPLEMENTS,
Belting, Saws, Engines, Saw Mills,
Chattanooga Reversible Disc, 1)1 rv , vra
Syracuse Chilled and Mallory J-10 W b
Chattanooga Cane Mills,
Superior Grain Drills,
Keystone Shredders.
Osborne Harrows, Mowers & Rakes
Perkins Wind Mill
BlToTo Su.ppl.3r Coaao.pa,n.3r.
Whiskey Medicines.
The temperance press is empha
sizing the danger to the home in
the use of “medicines” which are
loaded with whiskey or alcohol.
In this respect, as well as in the
remarkable character of their
cures, Dr. Pierce’s medicines dif
fer from other preparations. Dr.
Pierce’s* Golden Medical Discov
ery and “Favorite Prescription”
contain no alcohol, whiskey or
other intoxicant, and- are equally
free from opium, cocaine and oth
er narcotics. Every family should
have a copy of the People’s Com
mon Sense Medical Adviser, sent
absolutely free", on receipt of
stamps to pay expense of mailing
only. Send 21 one-cent stamps
for the book iu paper covers, or
31 stamps for cloth binding. Ad
dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo,
N. Y.
Ex-Gov. Hogg of Texas refuses
to be considered as a oundidate
for the executive office again. He
says he has made .$2,000,000 since
his last term expired and would
not pass through the ordeal again
for double that amount.
*-•-* —
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine
Tablets. All druggists refund the
money if it fails to cure. E. W.
Grove’s signature oneachbox.25c.
A GOOD PLACE.
Notice is hereby given to ladies and
gentlemen who visit Macon that Mrs.
W. H. Houser ie now running a first-
class Boarding House at 755 Cherry St.
which is very near the businSes center
of the city, and Bhe will be pleased to
serve them meals at 25c. each.
UTTENBERGER’S PIANO CLUB.
Easy Way to Purchase a Firstclass
Piano at Lowest Prices and
on Very Easy Terms.
1st. Join the Club for very best Pianos
(prices from $850 to $500) by paying $10 and
then $2.50 per week or $10 per month. Pian
os delivered as soon as you join olub.
2nd. Join the Olub for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $250 to
a , by paying $8 to join and $2 per week
per month.
These Pianos are all tbe very best makes.
Call at once and join, the Club, and make
your selection of one of these celebrated
makes of Pianos.
F. A. GUTTENBERGER.
452 Second St., Macon, Ga.
©rtrs.
Weber, Brown, Russell and Thornhill Wagons
than you ever bought them before, to make room
duce storage and insurance.
Subscribe for the Home Journal
MACON,
GA.
J. W. SHINtiOLSER,
chonp*
and r
MACON,
GAj