Newspaper Page Text
■
i
v . .. ,. jgKgMMQ■ .
gg
V
mmpvrr
PENNSY IiVA.NlA PUItM RYE,
EIQHT YE ARB OLD.
OLDBHARPE WILLIAMS
Four fulIQunrts of this P|no .Old, Fnro
EVE WHISKUT.
1.50 “ X1 V “l S D.
Wo ship on approval In plain, nonled hoxos,
with no markfl to indlcnto oontonta. Wlion lyou
rooolvp itnnd tost It, If it Is not natlafaotory,
rotnrn It n> onr oxponno and wo wll roturn your
93.60. We guarantee thin brand to bo
EIGHT YEARS OLII,
repaid j
No obargo^or boxing
Wo handle all tho loading brands of Ryo and
llourbon Whiskies and will flavo you
50 Por Coni , on Yottf Purchases:
Quart, Gallon.
KentuckyStar llourbon,36 9125
Elkrhlgo llourbon 40 1"
Boon Hollow llourbon 411 1
Col wood Pure Hye 60 100
Monogram llyo 66 200
MaBrayor Ryo uo 220
Makers A AAA 06 2 40
O. O. P. (Old Oscar Popper) 06 240
Old Grow 76 260
Plnohor’s Goldon Wedding 76 2 60
8 »ffin*n'Houso Ryo.. 00 800
ount Vernon, 8 years old 100 860
Old Dllllngor llyo, 10yoars old,.... 126 400
Tho nbovo oro ouly a fow brands.
Bond for a antuloguo.
All otbor Hoods by tlio gallon, snob as Corn
Whlflkoy, Poach and Apple Brandies, oto., sold
equally as low, trom 8126 a gallon and upwards
womnko n npoolnsty of tho Jug Trade,
and all orders by Mall or Telgeraph will
have our prompt attention: Special
lnduoementa offorod.
Mail Orders shipped same day of tho
rooeipt of ordor.
The Altmaycr & Flateau
Liquor Company,
606, 808, 610, 512 Fourth Street, near
Union'Passenger Depot..
MACON, GEORGIA
i»
-
THE SEMI-WEEKLY
OF ATLANTA, GAt,
Is a twico-a-wcok NEWS pupof, published on
Monday and Thursday of often week, with all
tho latoBt nows of the world, which comes over
tlielr loosed wires diroot to tholr office. 1$ an
eight-page soven-eoluinn paper.
By arrangements wo have secured a speolal
rate with thorn in oonnootlou with
OTJlt PAPEli.
and for $2 wo will send
THE; H0ME J0URRAE,
THE ATLANTA
-Senii-WeeklY Journal-
and tho
SoTithrn Cultiv at or
ALL THREE ONE YEAR.
Thitf is the best offer we have ever made our
friends and subscribers. You bad 1 otter take
advabtage of this offer at once, for The Journal
may withdraw their special rate to us at any
time.
The Semi-Weekly has many prominent men
and women contributors to tbelr columns,
.among them being Rev. Bam Jones, Rev. Walk
er Lewis, Hon. Harvle Jordan, Hon. John Tem
ple Graves and Mrs. W. H. Felton, besides their
crops of efficient editors, wbo take care of the
news matter. .Their departments are well cov
ered. Its columns of farm news are worth the
tho nric© of tho uaoor.
Bend direct to this office 92.00 and secure
the three above mentioned papers one year
Address
THE HOME JOURNAL,
PERRY, GA.
A Lazy Man’s Thrift.
Find but what you want others to
do for you and then go at it and
get them to do it. Tftere is noth
ing like having good help.
Start right—as soon as you can
get some one to start you.
Fall in line with your work as
early as possible, but eee to it that
it is a platonio attachment. Do not
be jealous if some one else falls in
love with it, and wishes to do it for
you.
Poverty is a good schoolmaster;
but leave his institution as soop as
you can; there are others.
Necessity is a priceless spur; hut
Easy Street manufactures the finest
ki id of saddles.
Learn the alphabet sb soon as pos
sible, if you didn't have it pounded
into you when a child; but don’t on
any account neglect Arabic Nota
tion, and the table of Federal Cur
rency.
When an extraordinarily good op
portunity comes along, take a good,
straight look at it before you seize
it v Some of them are red hot.
Try and make everything that
happens to you lucky in some way
or other.
When you find out exactly what
your supreme purpose in life is, tole
raph at my expense and let me
now.
Tho world always listens to a man
-if it’s worth tho price.
If you have an idea, be awfully
carefully about it, and don’t let it
get lonesome for lack of others to
keep it company.
Find a way or make one—if you
can’t get some one else to do it for
you while you are cushioning the
vehiole.
•'It is a sin to steal a pin”—and
also to pick one up, when the time
and wear and tear employed are
worth more, than the pin.
"A stitch in time saves nine” has
some truth in it, but a stitch too
late loses eight is preferable, be
aause the rhyme is better, and the
stitoh you have to take in order to
save the others has been subtracted.
—Edward Blake, id Will Carleton’s
Magazine, Every Where.
► • *
Hypnotizing Two Dollars.
Two men were walking behind an
elegantly dressed woman on Fulton
street the other day, Bays the Brook
lyn Eagle.
“Did you ever see me hypnotize a
woman?” asked one.
“Nonsense!” the other sneered.
“Bet yon $2 I can make that wo
man ahead of ub touoh both her
ears before she has gone half a
block.”
“Do yon know her?”
‘No. Never saw her before.”
“What would you do to* her?”
“Nothing but walk behind her.”
1 won’t touch her.”
“What would you say to her?”
“Nothing; not a word.”
“And you’ll make her put both
her hands to her ears without touch
ing her or speaking to her?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Well, it’ll be worth $2 to see you
do it. I’ll have to go you.”
“Very well! Watch now!” In a
tone loud enough for the woman to
hear he said to his companion:
“Charley, how do you like the new
fashion the women have of wearing
only one earring?”
Instantly tbe woman clapped one
gloved hand and then the other to
her ears to see if she had lost one of
her sparklers.
“It’ll work every time,” said the
winner. “You can make good wages
belting on it if you can find suckers
enough to take you up.”
M. Pottiez, the distinguished
French bacteriologist, has just found
that the corks of long-bottled wine
are full of mioroscopic spiders, a spe
cies of tyroglyphus, a repugnant
mite whioh feeds on detritus. Oth
er microbes were also found in large
numbers in old corks. Lovers of
old wines must take care that bot
tles are not only tightly closed, but
with good corks.
Every Bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy Warranted.
We guarantee every bottle of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and
will lefund the money to anyone
who is not satisfied after using
two thirds of the oontents. This
is the best remedy in the world
for la grippe, coughs, colds, oroup
and whooping cough and is pleas
ant and safe to take. It prevents
any tendency of a cold to result
in pneumonia. All druggists.
A Half Century of Athletics. I
The year which has just ended!
marked in a way a semi-centennial
in athletics. It was probably in
1862 at Exeter Uollege, Oxford, that
athletic sports were first held in\the
modern fashion. The Cambridge
University games were established
in 1857, the Oxford games three
years later and tbe track and field
games between these two universi
ties in 1864.
Athletics began to boom in popu
larity in this country in the early
seventies,.but despite bard work and
great progress it was true up to]
1880 that no standard championship:
record belonged to an American.'
Last year’s elope found nearly all
the world’s records held by fast and j
strong men of tbe United States. ;
The most notable new record of 1
1902 was A. F. Duffy's hundred-
yard run in 9 3-6 seconds. The fig-1
urea had stood at 9 4 5 for twelve
years. There is a remote possibility
that a lower mark may yet be reach
ed. Perhaps even the nine-second
man may flash on the scene, aided
by some farther improvement of
runn ng-track or racing thoes. But
the Duffy record stands for a condi
tion which has been' established
generally in sports dependent on
human endeavor—an arrival close
to the limits of human strength’and
endurance. In no future year is
there likely to be any great new
burst of record-breaking.-New York
World.
Cow
*
‘ \ t!
The
Or the Bike.
An Irish farmer went into an iron
monger’s shop to buy a scythe, says
Tit-Bits. After serving him the
shopman asked him if he would buy
a bicycle.
“What is that?” queried the Irish
man.
j "It’s a maohine to ride about the
town on.”
“And, shure, what might the price
of it be?”
“Fifteen pounds.”
“I’d rather see fifteen pounds in a
cow.”
“But what a fool you would look
riding around the town on the back
of a cow!”
“Shure, now,” replied the Irish
man,“not half such a fool as I’d look
trying to milk a bioycle.”
»-•-*
A billion minutes have passed
since Christ was born. I do not
know just when the biyionth minute
was passed, but it was during last
year. And this item gives one a
fair idea of a million. For instance,
if the great steel trust was to divide
tbe dollars it stands for there would
be a dollar aud a half to squander
during every minute of the Chris
tian era. It makes the head swim
to contemplate suoh figures.
—:
Physiologists have declared that
the face of every human being, when
closely examined, resembles some an
imal. J. Swift McNeil, the Irish
member of Parliament, applies this
test to Mr. Chamberlain and olaims
that the colonial secretary’s face
bears a by no means far-fetched re
semblance to that of a fox, especial
ly when one looks at his profile.
KO— -
The Georgia Society of New York
will give its second annual banquet
in New York February 3rd. Gov
Terrell, of Georgia, and staff; Clark
Howell, president of Georgia Sen
ate; United States Senators Bacon
and Clay, of Georgia; Gov. Odell
and Mayor Low of New York, and
Rear Admiral Schley have been in
vited. /
Forcible Facts.
One-sixth of the deaths from dis
ease are due to consumption. Nine
ty-eight per cent of all those who
have used Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med
ical Discovery for “weak lungs” have
been perfectly and permanently cur
ed. Cornelius McCawley, of Leech-
burg, Armstrong Co., Pa., had in all
eighty-one hemorrhages. He says:
“My doctor did all he could for me
but could not stop the hemorrhages,
and all gave me np to die with con
sumption.^ What doctors could not
do “Golden Medical Discovery” did.
It stopped the hemorrhages and cur
ed their cause. -This is one case oat
of thousands. Investigate the facts.
Free. Dr. Pierce’s great work, The
People’s Common Sense Medicel Ad
viser,is sent free on receipt of stamps
to pay cost of mailing only. Send 21
one-cent stamps for paper covered
book,or 31 stamps for doth binding.
Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo,
N. Y.
The Kind You Have Always Bought f and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has horne the signature of
and H&s been made under his per*
s sonal supervision since its infancy* t
Allow no one to deceive you in this*
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What Is CASTOR IA
Castorfa is a liarmlcss substitute for Castor Oil, Pare^
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither‘Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency- It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep*
Tho Children’s Panacea—Tho Iilolher’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTOR fA always
Bears tlie Signature of
The KM Yon Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THK CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY.
eumaftsm
and all Liver, Kidney and Blad
der troubles caused by uric add
in the system. , It cures by
cleansing and vitalizing the
blood, thus removing the cause
of disease. It gives vigor and
tone and builds up the health
aud strength of the patient
while using the remedy.
URICSOL is a luminary in
the medical world. It has cured
and will continue to cure more
of the above diseases than all
other known remedies, many of
which do more harm than good.
This great and thoroughly tested
and endorsed California Remedy
never disappoints. It cures in
fallibly if taken as directed.
Try it and be convinced that
it is a'wonder and a blessing to
suffering humanity.
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 0 bot
tles for $5. For sale by druggists.
Send stamp for book of partic
ulars aud wonderful cures. If
your druggist cannot supply you
it will be sent, prepaid, upon
receipt of price. Address:
URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., LosAngtles, CaL
or tbe
LAMAS & RANKIN DRUG CO., Atlanta, Os.
Distributing Agents.
NEW YORK WORLD
thrioe-a-week:edition.
Read wherever tae English Language
is spoken.
The Thrice-a-Week World was a bril
liant suocefis in the beginning, and has
been steadily growing ever since.
This paper for the coming winter and
the year 1908 will make its news service,
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 oan furnish at five or
six times the price.
In addition to ail 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 166 papers. We offer
this unequaled newspaper and the Home
Journal togecher one year for $1.90.
The regular subscription price of the
two papers is $2.50.
•FOB TO-osiec
NEATLY JEX.IEC’TJTTi'r)
— AT THIB OFFICE —
Subscribe for the Home Journal.
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
NORTH 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,
J. O. HAILE, General Pass'r Agent,
f, <1. ROBINSON, Ass't Qenorol Pass'r Agsn^
8AVANNAH. QA.
Subscribe...
FOR
~ Christian'Union;Herald,
a strong, religions, seven-column paper,
devoted to the moral and material ad
vancement -ef the colored race, with an
extensive oircnlation.
Published Weekly atj Savannah, Ga.
Subscription $1.00 Per xear.
REV. W. A. DINKINS, Editor,
' P. E. Fort Valley District,