Newspaper Page Text
MMjjH
A GOOD PLACE.
Notice is hereby given to ladies and
entlemen who visit Macon that Mrs.
y. H. Houser is now running a first-
class Boarding House at 755 Cherry St.
hi oh is very neat the Mainees 1 ehntAr
the
NEW __
THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION.
Bead wherever tae English Language
is spoken.
The Tkrice-a-Week World was a bril
liant success in the beginnit
jiuuu — r ung and has
been steadily growing ever since.
This paper for the coming winter and
the year 1908 .will make its news servioe,
if possible, more extensive than ever.
The subscriber, for only one dollar a
year, gets three papers every week and
more news and general reading than
most great dailies can furnish at five or
six times the price.
In addition to all the news, the Thrice
a-Week World furnishes the best' serial
fiction, elaborate market reports and
other features of interest.
The Thrioe-a-Week World’s regular
subscription price is only $1.00 per year,
and this pays for 156 papers. We offer
this uheqoaled newspaper and the Hons
Journal together one year for $1.90.
The regular subscription price of the
two papers is $2 60.
Isaacs’ Cafe,
4(3 Third Street,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Regular Meals 25c.
WITH UP-TO-DATE
QUICK LUNCH COUNTER
Prompt and Polite Service.
Patronage Solicited.
PATTON & HECKLE
Phoprietohs.
Wood’s Seeds.
VA. GRAY OR TURF
Sown in September or October,
make a much larger yielding and
more profitable crop than Wheat.
They can also be grazed during the
winter and early spring and yield
just as largely of grain afterwards.
Wood’s Pall Catalogue tells all
about Vegetable and Farm
Seeds for Pall Planting, Seed
Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley,
Vetches, Grass and
Clover Seeds, etc.
Write for Catalogue and prices
of any Seeds desired.
T. W. WOOD & SONS.
Seedsmen, Richmond, Va.
; - u,-■"tc.-Aiu.jjsr
Wood’s Pall Catalogue also tells about
Vegetable and Flower Seeds, Straw
berry and Vegetable Plants, Lawn
Grass, Hyacinths, Tulips, etc.
Catalogue mailed free upon request.
ba
bearing down pains — „
During the past month I have been
taking Wine of Cardui and Thedford’a
Black-Draught, and I passed the month
ly period without pain for the first time
m years. Nannie Davis.
What is life worth to a woman suffer-
ing like Nannie Davis suffered? Yel
there are women in thousands of homes
to-day who are bearing those terrible
menstrual pains in silence. 7 If you are
one of these we want to say thai this
same
WIHi 0F
will bring you permanent relief. Con
sole yourself with the knowledge that
1,000,000 women have been completely
cured by Wine of Cardui. These wom
en suffered.from leucorrhoea, irregular
menses, headache, backache, and
bearing down pains. Wine of Cardui
will stop ail these aches and pains
lor you. purchase a $1.00 botHe of
Wine of Cardui to-day and take it in
the privacy of your homo.
Heredity. Environment, Will Power.
xssGsvpjtsxxai
_ Augusta Herald,
In some of the magazines, not
many years ago,there wasjpublish-
ec * a striking and thought-coin-
pelung story of a youhg American
girl who married a European no
ble who could trace his lineage
^e Conqueror.
She presents an heir to the no
ble house into wliioh she had mar-
ri N.i iL U ^i? ne as she lies
with the child on her arm begins
to dream of the kings and nobles
whose blood runs in the baby’s
veins. She sees that they were all
dissolute men. among whom there
were many thieves and murderers
and even greater criminals. Cruel,
unprincipled, vicious, impure in
thought and deed* with physical
and mental health impaired by
fast living and repeated intermar
riage, these the men whose blood
had entered into that of the little
innocent child. Then, another
procession began to move before
the mental gaze of the mother,and
she knew that they were her own
ancestors she was looking at. She
saw sturdy Indian ohiefs,‘brave
and strong, leading healthy lives
and harboring simple and clean
thoughts. After these came the
Puritans who had sacrificed their
all for the love of Truth, and then
again the women who were unself
ish devotees at the shrine of Lib
erty. With the sight came great
consolation, for the mother real
ized that simple' Americans had
bequeathed to her child valuable
attributes that would possibly
counteract the effect of the baser
qualities of the kingly born.
Professor Carl H. Eigenmann
has recently published,in the Med-
ioal Record, the scientific side of
4he truth the loving mother intui
tively grasped. He says:
“Sometimes one mental trait of
the parents is transmitted to one
child, while others are transmit
ted to another. Galton.has deter
mined just how much, on an av
erage, each ancestor contributes
to the peculiarities of an individ
ual. The parents together con
tribute one-half of the total herit
age, the four grandparents togeth
er one-fourth, the eight great-
grandparents one-eighth, the six
teen great-great-grand* parents one
sixteenth and all the remainder of
the ancestry one-sixteenth.”
But neither parent nor scientist
took into account the great influ
ence of environment which is, if
anything, a stronger force than
heredity, and the power of which
Mr. Berry Benson has made clear
in his masterly outlines in the
“Century,” in which he shows
how two seeds from the same plant
may be planted in different soils
with results widely divergent.
Both heredity and environment
are potent factors in character
building, bpt strongest of all is
the force of personal wilj.
One effect of the coal strike is
seen in New York in the great de
mand for oil stoves which far ex
ceeds the ahitity of dealers t"
supply. Manufacturers of these
stoves sell from 100,000 to 150,-
000 in a season, but this year
their sales have been doubled and
some of them assert that 500,000
stoves could he sold if they could
be obtaiued. The increase in the
sale of gas stoves is also said to
be about 100 per cent.
The formal sale and transfer of
Beauvior, the home of Jefferson
Davis, by Mrs. Davis to the Sons
of Confederate Veterans was con-
snmaied at Jackson, Miss., Octo
ber 15tb, at the opening session
of the reunion of the Mississippi
division Sons of Confederate Vet
erans. The home will be used as
a home for indigent Confederate
veterans. Mrs. Davis received
$10,000 for the home.
Pine Goods in the South.
Columbus Inquirer Sun,
The statement is made that the
Merrimac Manufacturing Compa
ny’s new cotton mill, which is to
be established . at . Huntsville,
Ala., at a coat of $1,600,000, is to
‘‘supply the print works of the
Merrimac in Lowell, Mass., with
the material that is now being
bought at a high 'figure iu the
open market.” This print clpth
is what'is known as fine goods;
that, is, it is of light fabric.
Commenting upon this the Sa
vannah Morning News says:
“It has been only a few years
since the claim was made that
the fine cotton goods could not be
manufactured in the south. It
was admitted that the coarse, yel
low cottons might be made here,
but the allegation was that the
climate was against the produc
tion of the fiuer ‘counts.’ Here,
however, we have oue of the larg
est of the New England cotton
mill corporations pooling south
to establish a large factory for
the production of .this very class
of goods, because they can be
made cheaper here than else
where. If we are not mistaken,
there have been established in
South Carolina within the last
three or four years mills that
make cotton lace curtains, 1am-
berkius, table covers and similar,
artioles. Are these not ‘fine’
goods? Gradually it is being de
monstrated that the south can
manufacture any. kind of cotton
fabrics, flue or coarse; and the
mills continue to spring up in
this section.”
The possibilities of the BOiith in
the manufacture of cotton goods
are really unknown to even the
most experienced .manufacturers,
and nearly every week some new
development takes place that
startles the manufacturing world,
and scatters former theories to
the winds. The establishment of
this great mill at Huntsville is
the beginning of a new era in cot
ton manufactures in the south,
and its success, which is practi
cally certain, will no doubt rev
olutionize the industry in the
south. Similar mills will be es
tablished iu other cities of the
south and before very long this
section will no doubt be produc
ing a large proportion of “fine
goods.”
■■■
SIGNIFIES THE BEST.
is.the best product of a New Roller
Process'
It is made of the best wheat, for in
dividual customers of the mill and
for the.trade.
Ask your merchant for JERSEY CREAM FLOUR,
or bring your wheat to
KCO-TTSS^S MILL.
A. J. HOUSER, Prop’b., EVA, GA.
ztsrzErw york
■
11
I am offering my complete snd choice stock of Dry Goods,
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Notions, etc., at
BARGAIN
A plan is under way for a thor
ough protection of visitors to the
World’s Fair in 1904. If the ar
rangement is carried out in its
completeness thousands of repu
table citizens will wear badges in
dicating thoir membership in an
organization formed for the pur
pose of directing visitors to reli
able hojbels, boarding housos and
private houses where lodging may
be procured at reasonable rates.
With reasonable care any visitor
may escape being victimized by
confidence men aud other crooks'
who are unavoidably present dur
ing such events as the great expo-,
sitions.
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
f rom doctors or any other reme-
,i v .” Mothers rely on it, _ best
. oicians prescribe it. Satisfac
tion guaranteed or refund price.
Trial bottles free, Regular sizes,
50c and $1.00_at Holfcclaw s drug
store.
The plan of soaking brick in
oil and using them for fuel seems
to have sprung into favor. Re
ports Tarrytown, N. Y., Youngs
town, O., Boston and several oth
er places say that experiments
have been made with the oil-soak
ed brick for both heating and
ceoking, aud that satisfaction has
been given, in each instance. It
may be that, after all, this will
be the solution of the fuel prob
lem.—Exchange.
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 •moneys Come to see me.
454 MULBERRY ST.
MACON, GEORGIA
'~4jLJ U
Susy Way to Purchase a Flrstclass
Piano at Lowest Prices and
on Very Easy Term&.
1st. Join the Club for yery best Pianos
(prices from $860 to $500) by paying $10 and
then $2.60 per week or $10 per month.; Pian
os delivered as soon as you join club.
Sad. Join the Olub for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $260 to
$300), by paying $8 to join and $2 per week
or $8. per month.
These Pianos are all the very best makes.
Call at once and join the Olub, and make
your selection of one of these celebrated
makes of Pianos.
F. A. GUTTENBERGERo
452 Second St., Macon, Ga.
•. I 5 '■
President Mitchell of the min
ers organization says -that 148,000
men, the full force of the strikers,
will be ready to report for wbrk
24 hours from the time of the set
tlement of the differences between
the men and the operators, and
that 75,000 tons of coal can be
mined and ready for shipment
within 48 hours.
- .- ^ — ■
Eleven counties are in the con
test for the first premium at the
state fair at Valdosta. They are
Bartow, Spalding, Dodge, Worth,
Troup, Camden, Berrien, Lau
rens, Lowndes, Jones and Mitch
ell.
• — —> .
If You Can't Sleep At Night
use Smith’s-Nerve Restorer. It is a true
Nerve Tonic. Will cure any case of Ner
vous Prostration ;does pot contain opium
in any form, ^.t Oateb’s Drugstore.
Subscribe for the Home Journal
:
mm
slip
Safes'"
m
Weber, Brown, Russell and Thornhill Wappns cheaper
than you ever bought them before, to ina >e room and re
duce storage and insurance. '
hJT\ J. W. SHINHOLSER, K”.