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So-Called Bryanism.
Atlanta Constitution.
Machine politicians and their
newspaper organs who imagine
“Bryanism” has been ridiculed out
of existence, ought' to make certain
that they laugh last. “Bryanism,”
under whatever name, has given the
world whatever measure of civil and
religious liberty it enjoys to-day. It
made England, despite her incon
gruous royal establishment, the
greatest constitutional government
on earth. It made France a repub
lic and drove feudalism out of Ger
many. The term is only a flippant
epithet for outraged democracy
about to assert its sovereignty. Mr.
Brypn made a magnificent fight for
the people against the allied power
of money, caste and monopoly. His
two defeats were moral victories.
However large or small his mental
stature, whether he talks too much
or not, whatever his merits or de
fects as a party chieftain, he pos
sesses the enthusiasm of sincerity
and the rare jewel of consistency.
The cause he stands for has not suf
fered through his personality. Nei
ther it nor he iB responsible for
transient reverses brought about en
tirely by artificial influences. Truth
is eternal and a “prosperity” based
on falsity can only make our latter
oonditiou worse than the former.
“Bryanism” will fulfill its mission in
America so sure as right will tri
umph ovtr wrong-—slowly, it may
be, but very surely. The pioneer of
a noble accomplishment, like the
prophet received with stones, gener
ally leaves his bones in the wilder
ness.
The democratic party has a great
opportunity. Whether it will pro
ceed unswervingly upon its heroic
course or fall supinely into the
spoils-watering maws of oheap trim
mere of the Hill breed, will be seen
two years hence. If it does not
eleot to stand for the common peo
pie, honestly and unequivocally, an
unborn party will supplant it.
Democrat.
Of Aiiother Sort.
A Little Mistake.
Cosmopolitan Gotham.
“It was a Second avenue elevated
A Cleveland, Ohio, dispatch states; car on a gunny Sfunday afternoon
Macon Telegraph.
If there is one oity above another
in whioh labor is a stickler for its
“rights,” that city is Ohioago. There
is at present a strike of the Bridge
and Structural Iron Workers’ Union
11 Chicago, involving the stoppage
of work on $9,000,000 worth of
buildings; and capital has nothing
whatever to do with the matter.
The fight is between union carpen
ters on one side and union iron
workers on the other, over the erec
tion of a $300 traveling orane at
the new Book Island depot. The
o.ane is to be used for hoisting iron
beams, therefore the iron men say it
is their right to set it up. But the
crane is to be made of wood, and
must be framed by carpenters, there
fore the carpenters say it is their
work. Neither side will give in,
holding out as a matter of “prinoi-
o'e,” and the strike continues as a
0 msequence.—Savannah News.
*" m •■W".— — 1 ■
Bird S, Coler, the democratic can
didate for governor of New York, is
1 worker and a fighter. “I never
won anything in my life that I did
not fight for,” he said in ja speech to
the Brooklyn Y. M. C. A. a few
evenings ago. “The day of the pas
sive man has gone by,” he contin
ued, “and that of the active man has
'Mme to stay.” That observation is
vorthy of the thought of the young
men of the, period. It is the wort
hy the “hustler,” who succeeds these
»lays in politics, in business and ev
erything ebe.—Savannah News.
Great things are being predicted
< f the International Telephone Com
pany of America, which is said to be
just entering the field as a rival of
the Bell and other telephone compa
nies. The new company has a capi-
' dization of $100,000,000, and it is
-rtid to bo its purpose to install tele
phone service in all of the large cit
ies of the country at the rate of two
. cents per message—the price of a
postage stamp. |?
• ;
Porto Rico has had Civil govern
ment, under American rule, since
May, 1900. yet the oivil service law
is not yet applied there. The good
old spoils system obtains, to the de
light of the practical politicians.
' •———
Stops the Cough and Works off
the Cold.
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets
e ares a cold in one day. No cure,
No pay.. Price, 25 cents
Subscribe for The Home Journal,
that Frank Buebtner, a contractor of
that place, awoke one morning re
cently with a severe pair* in his
throat, andj as his false teeth were
missing, he concluded that he had
swallowed them. Surgeons and an
X-ray machine were procured, and
the former by means of the latter
promptly located poor Buettner’s
“store teeth” in his esophagus.
There was nothing to be done but
to operate, it seems, and the opera
tion was performed. But no sooner
had the esophagus been cut open its
entire length than “a relative rush
ed in with the missing set of teeth,
which had been found in Buettner’s
bed.” Naturally the surgeons then
concluded, notwithstanding the tes-
timoney of the X-ray machine, that
it was not a case of false teeth after
all, but of acute laryngitis.
This little mistake was somewhat
embarrassing, of course, though it
was open to the surgeons to free
themselves of responsibility by ac
cusing the X-ray machine of lying.
No doubt they were ready to assure
Buettner that if they had known
they were dealing with a machine
of bad character they would have
been less eager to usp their knives.
No doubt also that Buettner would
have been willing to accept these
assurances with a meek and proper
spirit, although aware that he would
oarry the mark of the outting of his
throat to the end of his days. But
the trouble was that Buettner’s sit
nation was more embarrassing than
that of the surgeons, or of even the
disreputable X-ray machine, he be
ing too far gone to listen to apolo
gies for the slight miscalculation,
which resulted from misinformation,
or to make any polite remarks in re
ply. In short, poor Buettner was
compelled to depart in haste to that
bourne whenoe no traveler returns,
and where there are neither false
teeth nor X-ray machines.
lately that gave me an idea of the
cosmopolitan character of your
oity,” said one of the members of a
French delegation that recently vis
ited New York.
“I thought Paris was the most
polyglot city in the world, but I
jfiave been led to think that New
York shelters as many diverse__peo-
ples. When the car started at South
ferry it contained a young English
couple, a phlegmatic Dutchman of
the Kruger type, a bearded Russian,
who looked the part of a stage ni
hilist, and half a dozen rotund Ger
mans.
“At the firet stop some Norwegi
an sailors and a couple of Turks got
in. A little farther on we were
joined by a Greek, who sat scowling
at his Mohammedan enemy. Then
came Ohinamen, and as the train
stopped at the stations on the east
side the unmistakable features of
the Irishman, the Russian Jew', the
Italian and the Hungarian appeared.
“Farthur up town a Japanese got
in, and then a Scotchman and a
couple oi negroes. A distinguished
looking Austrian gentleman got
aboard, followed by some chattering
Uubans and a few dark-faoed Span
iards.
“As some left the car and others
came in at the different stations, I
was able to pick out Frenchmen
from three provinces and a Swiss
valet, and when I thought the as
sortment was about complete I was
astonished to see the high cheek
bones of the rarest raoe in America,
a full-blooded Indian.”—New York
Commercial Advertiser.
One Result of Ambition.
While overweening ambition, oh
pecially that whioh looks to p inl
and money, may not be a desirY.M
attribute, the ambition to bailor
one’s self in the world may, if har
bored by many men of one nation,
materially add to the aggrandize
ment of that nation.
Men who have studied the ques
tion affirm that it is because our
Amvrican workman is determined to
rise in the world, because—in spite
of his grumbling, his discontent and
his strikes, to say nothing of his dis
sipations—works hard in order that
he may rise, our manufacturers must
always be superior to those of Eng
land, where the meohanio never
hopes to rise any higher, knowing
absolutely nothing of the incentive
of the American worker who sees in
his employers and the higher offi
cials men who have worked them
selves up from a place as lowly as
that he himself holds.
The English manufacturers have
been advised to study American
methods in manufacture, to send
their head men to this country to
see how time may be economized by
organization, the advisers believing
that this is the only means by which
the British may hope to cope with
their rivals on this side of the wa
ter; but the desired results will nev
er be attained unless the English
workman has as high incentives for
labor as those that actuate his Amer
ican cousins.—Augusta Herald.
——| ; •
Probably one of the oddest claims
ever made against' a bank is record
ed as having Been made against the
National Bank of Belgium. An old
peasant woman had laid on the
grass a jacket containing bank notes
of small denominations to the
amount of $240 in the pockets, and
while she was at work her pet nan
ny goat had got at the notes, which
it had eaten. The beast was killed,
and the chewed paper recovered
from the stomach was submitted in
support of a claim for compensa
tion, which the bank paid after veri
fying the facts by chemical analysis
and other inquiry.
Out of Death’s Jaws.
“When death seemed very near
from a severe stomach and liver
trouble, that I had suffered with
for years, 11 writes P. Muse, Dur
ham, N. O., “Dr. Kings’ New Life
Pills saved my life and gave per
fect health. ’ ’ Best pills on earth
and only 25c at Holtzclaw’s Drug
store.
■JL'.
Books. Periodicals, Stationery, Art Goods,
IF
call or write.
OLD SCHOOL BOOKS Bought, Sold and Exchanged.
Our Circulating Library Plan is just the thing, and cheap.
We have the best of everything in our line -
McEvoy Book & Stationery Co.,
572 Chefry Street,'MACON, GA.
Too Much Buying Abroad.
We buy too much of everything
away from home.
Georgia is the greatest state in
the Union, measured and estimated
by the standard of natural resourc
es, and when we get to thinking
about how improvident we are as a
people and how indifferent we are
r i. iho possibilities of our surround-
i; i/s—the great advantage that na
ture has given us in a variety of soil
and climate, in addition to our vast
wealth of timber and minerals—we
are almost ready to declare that it
would be a blessing to us to be
fenced in or otherwise cut off from
the balance of the world for a few
years, or until necessity drives us to
utilize our resources and live at
home.
“Necessity is the mother of in
vention,” and it not infrequently in
flicts seeming deprivations and hard
ships upon us which prove to be
blessings in disguise.
The people of Georgia can grow
and manufacture in Georgia every
thing that they have to have, and
live well at that, and if they would
adopt such a policy for ten years
they would be the richest people on
earth.—Albany Herald.
—
The Watchword of Women.
Modesty is woman’s watchword.
Whatever threatens her delicate
sense of modesty frightens her. For
this reason many a woman permits
diseases of the delicate womanly or
gans to become aggravated because
she oannot bring herself to submit
to the ordeal of unpleasant question
ing, offensive examinations and ob
noxious local treatments,which some
physicians find necessary. Doubt
less thousands of the women who
ha>e taken advantage of Dr. Pierce’s
offer of free consultation by letter,
have been led to do so by the escape
thus' offered from a treatment re
pugnant to modesty. Any sick wo
man may write to Dr. Piejce, Buffa
lo, N. Y. v in perfect confidence; all
letters being treated as strictly pri
vate and sacredly confidential, and
all answers being sent in plain en
velopes with no advertising or other
printing upon them. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription has been long
hailed as “a God-send 'to women.”
It makes weak women strong and
sick women well. “Favorite Pre
scription” contains no alcohol, nei
ther opium, cocaine or other narcotic.
H. L.
Cor. Second and Poplar Sts., MACON, CA
AGENCY FOR THIS
ALL
STEAL
WOVEN WIRE
Made of large, strong wires, heavily galvanized.
Amply provides for expansion and contrac- 1
tion. Only Best Bessemer steel wires
used, - always of uniform quality.
Never goes wrong no matter
how great a strain
Isputonit. Does
not mutilate, but
does efficiently turn
cattle, horses,
bogs and pigs.
sam
A Florida firm has shipped ten
tons of deer tongue during the past
season. It is used to give a pleas
ant aroma to cigars. Deer tongue
grows profusely in this
Way cross Herald.
The Only Guaranteed Kidney Cure
is Smith’s Sure Kidney Cure. Your drug
gist will refund your money if after tak
ing one bottle you are not satisfied with
results. 50 oents at Cater’s Drugstore.
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEED
by the manufacturers.
Call and see it. Can show you how it will save you money and fence
your fields so they will stay fenced.
RAPID
Hay
■ ' BEST AND. CHEAPEST.
Made and Sold by
WILLIAMS BUGGY
COMPANY,
Macon,
O-eoxg'ia
E,. J. MILLER.
MILLER & CLARK
C. J. CLARK.
,
AMERICUS, GA
-DEALERS IN-
MARBLE AND GRANITE MONUMENTS
CURBSTONES, STATUARY, ETCV
Dealers in Tennessee, Georgia, Italian and American Marble and
European and Domestic Granite, ... “
Estimates furnished and contracts made for all kinds of Building
Stone.. - Iron Railing for Gemebery Work a ipecialty.
We have lately added a fully equipped Gutting and Polishing
Plhnt, with the latest Pneumatic tools, and can. meet all competition.