Newspaper Page Text
Special Railroad Passenger Rates.
The Central of Georgia Kailway
Co. will sell low rate excursion tick
ets for occasions specified below.
Ask any railway agent for addition
al information.
National Encampment G. A. R.,
Washington, D. C., October 6th to
11th. Very low round trip rate.
Tickets on sale from 3rd to 6th'.
One stop over going and one return
ing allowed. Final limit Oct. 16th.
May be extended at Washington.
Farmers’ National Congresss, Ma-
cou, Ga, October 7th to 10th. One
fare for round trip. Final limit Oc
tober 12 th.
Macon Street Fair, Macon, Ga.,
October 6th to 11th. One fare for
round trip. Final limit Oct. 12th.
Meeting United Confederate Vet
erans, Sons and Daughters of Veter
ans, Columbus, Ga., October 29th
and 30 th. One cent per mile in
each direction.
Southern Inter-State Fair, Atlan
ta, Ga., October 8th to 25th. One
fare for round trip plus 60 cents for
admission for individuals; for mili
tary companies and brass bands ia
uniform, 20 or more on one ticket,
one cent a mile each way. Final
limit 10 days.
, —— i ■.. » —
Farm For Rent or Crop,
3 to 4 horse farm Good land,
6 room dwelling with barns, out
houses, etc.50 aores Bermuda
pasture. One mile west of Myr
tle station.
Call on or write,
F. T. Houser, Myrtle, Ga.
MACHINERY
Prompt attention given to repairing
Engines and all Machinery.
Model and Pettern Work
a specialty.
Full stock of Pipe and Steam Fix
tures always on hand.
Rubber Belting.
Write for what you want.*
Anthoine Machine Works,
J. W. ANTHOINE, Frop’r.,
. FORT VALLEY, GA
Isaacs’ Cafe,
413 Third Street,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Regular Meals 25c.
WITH UP-TO-DATE
QUICK LUNCH COUNTER
Prompt and Polite Service.
Patronage Solicited.
PATTON & HECKLE
Proprietors.
MOUSEWORK
Too much housework wrecks wo
men’s nerves. And the constant
care of children, day and night, is
often too trying for even a strong
woman. A haggard face tells the
story of the overworked housewife
and mother. Deranged menses,
leucorrhoea and falling of the
womb result from overwork.
Every housewife' needs a remedy
to regulate her menses and to
| keep her sensitive female organs
in perfect condition.
iWINE"'CARDIN
is doing this for thousands of
. American women to-day. It cured
| Mrs. Jones and that is why she
Writes this frank letter:
Glendeane, Ky., Feb. 10,1901.
. I am so glad that your Wine of Cardul
I is helping me. I am feelings better than
1 have felt for years. I am doing my
own work without any help, and I
washed last week and was not one bit
tired. That Shows that the Wine is
doing me good. I am getting fleshier
than J ever was before, and sleep good
and eat hearty. - Before I began taking
Wine of Oardui, I used to have to lay
down flv6 or Six times every day, but
now I do not think of lying down through
the day. Mbs. Riceabd </ l
§1.00 AT DRUGGISTS,
For advico and literature, a
toms, “ The Ladles' Advisor^
attaneoga Medicine Co.,
Rural Mail Delivery.
Columbus Enquirer Sun.
Rural free mail delivery be
comes more popular as its bene
ficial effects are more extensively
fait. There will be 14,000 routes
in operation $ in the United States
by July 1st, next, and the esti
mate for appropriations for the
nf-xt fiscal year provides for 12,-
000 more. There are few improve
ments that have been made in the
mail service in recent years which
benefit so large a number of peo-
The Industrial South.
' Atlanta Constitution.
It is significant that the presses
and public men of the country are
so generally substituting the
phrase “the industrial south” for
those other too familiar descrip-
tives—the new south, ..the solid
south and the reactionary south!
The south is doing well. She
has had a long and serious strug
gle to clear away the rubbish of
the great revolution through
which she passed during four
—
pie as the establishment of rSral | yeai of war.^eWe E of I
tree mail delivery. It helps a construction and as many years
class of people who contribute very more of readjustment to the
largely to the support of the mail changed conditions of her people,
service, but who heretofore, have .her labor system, her polifcioal
received only slight benefits from j pacifications and the development'
,, j of industries in the midst of her
, -Heretofore the man who lived resources,
in tne rural districts received his I But those periods are now past
mail only when he or some of his history aud the south is throbbing
neighbors went to town, and the! from the Potomac to the Rio
consequeuce was once or twice a Gf; ifH will the. onthusiam of
week was about as often as the • practical endeavor. Her\penple
postoffice was visited. But rural - are realizing their power to organ-
free mail delivery conies to him 1 ize, develop and reap the profits
as a great relief and a great coti- J of industries they once thought
venience. He receives his mail impossible. They aie finding capi-
daily delivered at his door, and ( tal both at home aud abroad, and
he is thus enabled to keep up with, inspiring aud becoming inspired
the markets of the world as well with the confidence that wins.
as with the daily news in gen
eral .
The country people were entit
led to such a mail service aud
every one is glad that they have
at last been given the benefits and
advantages of it, and it is hoped
that the service will be increased
until all have it.
Roosevelt and Cleveland.
J. Piermont Morgo.il has deter
mined if possible to defeat the
nomination of President Roose
velt in 1904, and if he fails in his
purpose to dictate to the Repub
lican national convention he will
try to secure the nomination of
Grover Cleveland as the Democrat
ic candidate and support him for
President. This is stated on the
authority of a friend of Mr. Mor
gan, a man who stands high in
The record of the industrial
progress of the south grows lar
ger and more satisfying every
week. New mills, foundries, fac
tories and crafts are being built
and operated—and yet all men
say we are but iu the infunoy of
our growthjjinj those matters. The
industrial south will soon become
a forceful factor in the national
field of production and competi
tion and in that day her influ
ence upon national policies will
be oven as in the days of old,
when her statesmen were leaders
and her verdicts were irresisti
ble.
A Queer Political Situation.
Savannah News,
Is Senator Harris of Kansas
talking simply to bring himself
politic and finance,
that Morgan made this deliberate
statement to him, “He must be
defeated for the nomination and
a safe man must be nominated in
his stead. If he cannot be defeat
ed for the nomination, then we
must see that the Democrats nom
inate a safe man like Cleveland,
whom the business interests can
support, and beat Roosevelt at
the polls.”—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
■»•*«
In his speech at Asheville, on
his return to Washington from
the South, President Roosevelt
said among other things: “In
civil life the danger is not so pat
ent, but it is just as great,-if abil
ity is not accompanied by a right
ful sense of accountability to the
moral law. In addition to hon-
esty and decency you must have
courage. I want to see every one
a good man, and in addition to
that I want to see him a man.
We must have the manly virtues
deeply imbeded as part of our na
tional characteristics, if we are to
do our work aright in peace or in
war.”
—
Charles T. Yerkes, the ,Chicago
street railway magnate who is try
ing to get control of the London
street railways, says he is much
in the notion of writing a book on
the queer, old-fashioned, slow,
English methods of doing busi
ness. For two years, Mr. Yerkes
says he has been trying to give
the Londoners rapid transit, and
in that time he has accomplished
only what could have been accom
plished in an American city in
two months, owing to the extreme
conservatism, or rather slowness,
of the people with whom he had
to deal.—Ex.
- -o-eo-
Goes Like Hot Cakes.
“The fastest selling article I
have in my store,” writes drug
gist C. T. Smith, of .Davis, Ky.,
“is Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, Coughs and Colds,
because it always cures. In my
six'years of sales it has never
failed. I have known it to save
sufferers from Throat and Lung
diseases, who could get no help
from doctors or any other reme-
,i v m ^others rely on it, best
physicians prescribe it. \ Satisfac
tion guaranteed or refund price.
Trial bottles free, Regular sizes,
50c and $1.00_>t Holtclaw’s drug
store.
it is his opin
ion that neither the Democrats
nor the Republicans want to elect
a majority of the members ,of the
House of the Fifty-eight Con
gress? Mr. Harris, the last one
of the Populist senators, is looked
upon as a brainy man, and a man
who has convictions and gives ut
terance to them.
He says the reason the Repub
licans do not want the majority is
that they don’t want the respon
sibility of legislating on the,trust
question on the eve of a presiden
tial campaign. And the Demo
crats don’t want t-he majority for
the same reason. According to
Mr. Harris therefore neither par
ty feels itself equal to the task of
making laws in regard to trusts
that will satisfy the public.
Mr. Harris may be right, so far
as the Republicans are concerned.
The Republicans would like to
dodge the trust issue, but if the
Democrats were to get a majority
of the next House they would un
doubtedly enact an anti-trust law
that would be much more string
ent than the present one, but
what would the Senate do in the
matter? The Senate will be Re-'
publican until after the next pres
idential election. Alter all, the
Republicans will have to take the
responsibility in connection with
the trust question whether they
win or lose the next House. Still,
they may think that if the Demo
crats carry the next House they
will make them, in some way,
share the responsibility, or at
least prevent them from getting
political capital out of the trust
question.
-*>*-*»
Dr. Koch guaranteed to stamp
out malaria in D'ar-es-Salaam
(German East Africa) in five
years by means of a special sys
tem, which rests on the assump
tion that the germs are carried
by mosquitoes. The results have
been so successful, says the Brit
ish consul, that by the end of
1958 malaria will have entirely
disappeared from Dar-es-Salaam.
—Ex.
FENCE; s BEST
It’s a better fence than any other you can get or make; no matter
how much you spend or how long you work at fence building,
and the big saving of it is that it comes ready-built from the
factory—ready to stretch and staple as soon as your posts are set.
Don’t build another rod of fence without going to your dealer’s
and examining the
AMERICAN
Field
and Hog
You are bound to buy it if you see it, because it speaks for itself
of strength, endurance, economy—the fence that fences. If your
dealer hasn’t it, write to
AMERICAN STEEL AND WIRE CO.,
Chicago, N«v York,
San EVnncluo,
Deliver.
IbTIE'W 1TO .EtHL
BARGAIN HOUSE,
I am offering-my oompl Ho and choice stock of Dry Goods,
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Notions, etc., at
■V BARGAIN
'• PRICES 1
Having bought cheap, I sell at lowest possible figured
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.
111*1
454 MULBERRY ST.
MACON, GEORGIA
fhiA signature ia on ©very box of the genuto?
i Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets
the remedy that mures a cold in one dew
Subscribe for the Home Journal
iood,
Easy Way to Purchase a Firstclass
Piano at Lowest Prices and
on Very Easy Verms.
1st. Join the Olub for very best Pianos
(prices from $850 to $500) by paying $10 and
then $2 60 per week or $10 per month. Pian
os delivered as soon as you join olub.
Snd. Join the Club for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $260 to
$300), ^paying $8 to join and $2 per week
or $8 per month.
These Pianos are all the very best makes.
Gull at onoe and join the Club, and make
your selection of one of these celebrated
makes of Pianos.
F. A. GUTTENBERGER.
1 452 Second St., Macon, Ga.
* '
Weber, Brown, Russell and Thornhi’I Y^afons cV'aper
than you ever bought them bef >re, to ma .u room him re
duce storage and insurance.’
MACON,
GA.
J. W. SHINHOLSER,
MACON*
Wm .