The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, February 05, 1903, Image 8

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*4 m I d mm ■ V Which ? A lean and potash-hungry soil, wasted seed, wasted labor and Idle gins—A MORTOAQB. Or, plenty of In the fertilizer, many bales and a busy gin-A BANK ACCOUNT.*' Write u*, for our booic*. They are money win* new. We eend them frtt to farmer*. GERMAN KALI WORKS A GOOD PLACE. Notioe is hereby given to Indies and gentlemeu who visit Macon that Mrs. W. H. Uouser ie now running a first- class Boarding House nt 755 Cherry Stf whioh is very near the buBiuees center of the oity.iand she will be pleased to serve them mealB at 25o. enoh, 0 "W •ffrf “ l*ilNNSY JjVANlA PURB1 UYB, BIGHT YEARS OLD. OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS Pour fulIQuarts of this Fmo %01d, Pure RYE WHISKEY, $3 Cfk EXPRESS .OU PAID* • Wo ship on approval In plain, sealed boxos, with no marks to lndloato ountonts. Wlion |you roooivo it and tost it, If it is not satisfactory, return It to our expense and wo wll return your 93.00. We guarantee this brand to bo EIGHT YEARS OJLIK Bight bottles for 90 80, express prepaid: 13 bottfos for 90 co oxpross premia. Ono gallon jug, express propafd, 98 00: 2 gallon jug, oxpross prepaid, 90 00. No oliargo for boxing. Wo handlo all tbo loading brands of Rye and Bourbon Whiskies and will save you SO Per Cent, on Your Purchases: , Quart, Gallon. Kontuoky Star Bourbon 9 85 9126 Blkridgo Bourbon 40 Bonn Hollow Bourbon 40 Col wood Pure ltyo 00 Monogram ltyo 08 MoBrayor llyo «n Maker's A AAA.... {HHHM-i-: ?S Finoher’s Goldon Wodding 70 100 100 100 2 00 220 240 240 200 200 800 300 400 Hoffman Houso Ryo 00 MountVornon, 8 yoars old 100 OldDillingorRyo, 10yoars old,.... 120 Tbo abovo nro only u fow brands. Send for a outaloguo. All otlibr 1 Bonds bv* tbo gallon, suob as Corn Whiskey, Peach an.d Apple Brandies, oto., sold oqunlly as low, troin 9125 a gallon and iipwardB of the Jug Trade, have our _ ”pro’mpT"attontioru era JpoTial ired. Ipped same day of the oqunlly as low, trom 9125 a we make a spooiasty 1 and all orders by Mail < have our prompt a induoamontB offered. Mall Orders sh: receipt of order. Tlie Altimiyer & Flatoau Liquor Company, 600, 508, 610, 612 Fourth Street, near Union Passenger Depot. MACON, GEORGIA GF ATLANTA, GA., Is a twioe-a-weok NEWS papor, published on Monday and Thursday of ottoli week; with all . t.iwi iota., n.: u wliloh comes ovor heir office. Is an rato * w MW r vu-vuuuuu • y arrangements we have secured a- special > with them in oonnootion with OUK PAPER, and for $2 wo will send THE; H0M£ J0ORRAL, THE ATLANTA Niagara’s Promise of Power Without Goal. New York World. Possibly the* solution of the coal problem is being rapidly worked out at Niagara Falis without our having yet awakened to the fact. The main demand for coal is not as a source of heat but of energy. Steam pow er is the great coal glutton. But what if running water can furnish all the energy needed to keep the mills and factories of thu country going? So great has been the success of the single American company that hks thusf far attended to the har nessing/of Niagara that a Becond company of American capitalists has secured rights from the Canadian government and is now constructing a plant to produce 160,000 horse power. A third company, formed wholly of Canadian capitalists, has applied for the privilege of creating auother 100,000 horse*power plant, and its application will probably be granted. A condition of all the franchises granted by the Canadian government is that one*half of all the power developed must be sold to Canadian consumers if demanded; the other half will be exported to tne United States. Remarking on the fact that the 850,000 horse-power now being der veloped will be sold at $20 per horse-power*per year, Consul Brush points out that for manufacturing purposes it provides a clean, safe and inexpensive driving power, and makes expensive equipments for gen erating steam unnecessary. It is ob vious that the power of Niagara to provide a cheaper substitute for coal in a large number of industries, though not in all, is only in the in fancy of its development. Within a few years it will Bupply 1,000,000 horse-power daily, and for twenty- four hours in every day. It is not yet settled how far elec tric power developed from running water can be effectively transmitted. One fact, however, is known. Fac tory wheels are being driven in San Francisco with electric power trans mitted from dynamos in the Sierras, 250 miles distant. That this is the furthest radius of delivery attaina ble do electrician believes. Every considerable river in the oountry is a potential power-house as well as Niagara. What is being done, therefore, on both sides qf the oataraet is prophetic. The deliver ance of the oountry from the grip of the greedy coal combinations, both hard and soft, iB plainly in sight, so far at least as manufacturing power is concerned. The Pennsylvania railroad is go ing to lay nickel* steel'rails on all of the heavy ourve3 on its lines. Nick el-steel is the metal of which armor plate for'warships is made, and the rails to be used will be 'in all re- speots as hard as armor plate. Stan dard Bteel rails on heavy grades wear quickly and have to be replac ed at short intervals. Nickel-steel rails oost about three times as tiiuoh as the standard rails, but it is be lieved their use w y ill prove economi cal in the long run. — -4 — The House of Representatives the other (lay passed a bill to amend the lkw which forbids the keeping of live stock in cars more than twen ty-eight conseoutive hours without food or water by extending the time which stock may be kept shut up to forty consecutive hours. The amendment, it is said, is at the in stance of the beef trust, which does not want to be bothered with feed ing and watering cattle on the road to its butcher penB. About the General Staff. “George, what is this I’ve been reading about the oontrol of the ar my being placed in the hands of a general staff? What is a general staff, George?” asked the woman, according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer. “A general staff, my dear, is a bunch Qf gold lace and brass but tons that poses around a library ta ble and pulls the wires that keep the soldiers moving.” “Thank you, George. You are al ways so lucid. I suppose the general staff runs the army instead of both ering the generals in the field to do it?” ! “That’s about right, my dear.' They stay there in Washington and keep in touch with the best restau rants and the paymaster and the social gatherings, and relieve the fighting generals of all the responsi bility.” “How nice that isl And it’s some thing new, too isn’t it? I don’t re member reading that Alexander was ever helped in that way, or Hanni bal, or Julius Caesar, or Napoleon. 'c#y But, of course, 'they were so dread fully old-fashioned ,and so rash. Just think how much slower the world’s fighting .would have been if the general staff had been consulted every time Napoleon wanted .to make a move. Theta wasn’t any telegraph then, you know, and bo the general would have had to senjd a courier, to Paris to ; ask if the staff would approve qf his advancing the right center, or withdrawing the lpl't wing, or making a concerted night attack all along the line. How different things would have turned out, dear.” “You are . quite right* my love. iThe general staff would have cut short a good many of Nap’s pet sur prises, and I. rather think history would have to be rewritten.” “Yes, dear. And just think how funny' it would be if one of our commanding generals, just as he was going into battle, should sud denly discover that the telegraph wires were out of order and the wireless machines in the repair shop. How would he know. whether to ad vance or retreat until he heard from home?” “That would be very funny, ray love; very funny.” ) “Thank you, George. It seems funny to me. But I guess it seems funnier to us than it would to the commanding officer.” “I’ve no doubt you are quite right, my dear.” The Pour D’s. Now that Senator . Platt of New York has been triumphantly re-elect ed to’ succeed himsels, the rumor is revived that he will shortly resign and retire from politics. The sena tor is nearly seventy years of age, and for some time his health has been bad. He realizes, so it is as- SoutKem Cultivator serted » that if he h °p® s to live muoh " ^ ■ longer he must lay aside the bur dens of his political leadership. Charles Spurgeon once said that there were three great enemies to mar—“dirt, debt and the devil.” He might have added one more d and included dyspepsia. The evil results of this disease could hardly be exag gerated. It’s effects are felt in mind and body, and are as far reaching ad the effects of the curse that was laid on the Jackdaw of Bheims which was cursed in “eating and drinking and sleeping, in standing, and sit ting and lying.” The good effects of Dr. Pierce’s Goiden Medical Dis covery are .most marked in aggrava ted and chroific cases of dyspepsia. It enables the stomach glands to se crete the necessary quantity of di gestive fluids, and this at once re moves that craifing or gnawing sen sation so oommon to certain forms of indigestion. It tones and regu lates the stomach, invigorates the torpid liver and gives the blood- making glands keen assimilating power. “Golden Medical Discovery” cures ninety-eight per cent of those who use it. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are superior to all other lax ative medicines when the bowels are obstructed. \ -Setfii-WeefelY Jearrial* and tbe ALL THREE ONE YEAR. ThiB is the best oiler we bare ever made our friends and subscribers. You bad t etter take advahtage of this offer at once, for The Journal may withdraw their special rate to us at any tune. The Semi-Weekly has many prominent men and women contributors to their columns, among them being Rev. 8am Jones, Rev. Walk er Lewis, Hon. Harvie Jordan, Hon. John Tem ple Graves and Mrs. W. H. Felton, besides their cropB of efficient, editors, who take otoe of the new? matter. Their departments toe well cov ered. Its columns of farm news are worth tbe the price of the paper. ^Bend direct to this office $2.00 and secure Addre 166 above mentioned papers one year THE* HOME JOURNAL, v PERRY, GA. A Mother’s Recommendation. I .have used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy jfor a number of years and have no hesitancy in saying that it is the best remedy for coughs, colds aad oroup I have pver used in my family. I have not words to express my confi dence in this remedy.—Mrs. J. A. Moore, North Star, Mich. For salf by all druggists. # thin «lgnatare is on every box of thegetudas Subscribe for th. Hoki JoORSAi. There is to be no more fusion in Nebraska. The populists have de termined to “tote their own skillet” and raquire the democrats to do the same. The populist state executive committee, at a meeting held a few days ago, passed a. resolution to the effect that they would go it alone hereafter, believing they would be stronger without democratic aid. Many a man neglects his own chances while figuring out what he would do if he had some other man’s chances. For Infants and Children The Kind You Have AVfcgetable Preparation for As similating (heFooclar.tilleg da ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither \ Opium,Morphine nor Mineral., INot "Narc otic • ficeipc ofOUJOrSAKUELPtTCftKR fimi/jfiln SeetC ' Mx.Senna. * Rochelle Suits— elitist Seed * tssu*. Hiciii Setiih- gmified. ,ht/ytr . lmteijtnutifidvoK Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature oP NEW YORK. or Over Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK OITV. eumaiism 1 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 and strength of the patient while using the remedy. UR1CSOL 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- i 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, orfl bot tles for $5. For sale by druggists. Send, stamp for book of partic ulars and wonderful cures. If receipt of price. ilRICSOL CHEMICAL CO., Los Angeles, Cal. or the UMAR & RANKIN DRUd CO., Atlanta, Oa. Distributing Agents. thrige-a*week:editioit. PERFECT PASSENGER AND SUPERB SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Read wherever tae English Language is spoken. The Thrice-a-Week World was a bril liant suooess 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 eyery 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 fiotion, 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 together one year for $1.90. The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.60. JOB WORK NEATLYEXECUTFD --- AT THIS OFFICE Subscribejfor the Homs Journal 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, d. O. HAILE, General Pase’r Agent, F. d. B0WM80N, Asa't General Paae’r Agent SAVANNAH. GA. Subscribe... FOR — Christian r Union;HeraM 9 a strong, religious, seven-column paper, devoted to the moral and material ad vancement of the colored race, with an extensive oironlation. ■ f Published Weekly at'j Savannah, Ga. Subscription $1,00 Per tear. REV. W. A. DINKINS, Editor, . P.E. Port Valley District. ..A urn - r m