The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, February 19, 1903, Image 5
SRn pi Hotel NEXT DOOR TO ACADEMY OP MUSIC, 663 MULB33EY ST. * MACON, GEORGIA. Rates, $2.00 Per. Sa^. A HOME-LIKE HOTEL Special attention given to Transient Trade. The Macon Telegraph. Published every day and Sunday, and Twice-a-Week, by The Macon Telegraph Publishing Co. Subscription Daily and Sunday, $7.00 per annum. Daily except Sunday, $5.00 pjl annum. Twice- a-Week, $1.00 per annum. Best advertising medium m the city. Rates furnished on appli cation. Standard American flnnnaL and ENCYCLOPEDIA A Statistical Volume of Facts and Figures Containing Over 600 Pages. jgm SPECIAL FEATURES. ■Revj.iw nt the Coal St, ike; tlie Trusts In tlioUniUia .its os; Full Election Returns and I'lauorms ol Political P-rt es ol 1902; Of- Seers of the National — Bmmhluees; Federal, State ami Lu-or L.eirls- lutfbsi; Our Insular l'osse tsloos; Istnmian Cauit: Law; Civil Oov- emn isntij>> tliePiiillp- pI tint; t.>iiai>:icaLions V o r Voting in All Stats,.; Automob'l-; St<it sties, f raternal, AUl.tary and Pofr ot c Soeie. ie , Information on Fo. Wfrn Countries, It*e r h ui-.-w and Clov en,mens; Polar Ex- pl«ration : Review of S *| i e >. 11 fl c Achieve- nn t,i‘ The Sei«niic 1)1,-,ar once, oi fou?, ci,,,,; Peleej; Rccon ntiwlict, of the City of New York, Condensed Information for the Office, the Store and the Home. Price 1 Postpaid to any address, 35c MM the worn NewBBtaud| puu Uer Building, New Yorb The above described valuable book FREE to every subscriber who pays $1.50, a year in advance, for The Home Journal. Oall at this office, or send. BO YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. i probably patontablo. Communica tions strictly contidontml. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securlngpal it Co. .trough Munn &"CamwrtS tpecial notice, without charge, in the agency 5 Patents, taken tnr— American, A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms. *3 a year; four monthB, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUf!f!&Co. 361Broad ^ New York Brr ici Office. 625 F.8fc, Washington, D. C. THE COMMONER, (Mr; Bryan’s Paper.) The Commoner has attained within six months from date of the first issue a circulation of 100,000 copies, a record probably never equaled in the history of American periodical literature. The unparalleled growth of this paper de monstrates that there is room in the newspaper fields for a national paper de voted to the discussion of political, economic, and social problems. To the columns of the Commoner Mr. Bryan contributes his best efforts ;and his views of political events as they arise from time to time can not fail to interest those who study public questions. The Commoner’s regular subeription price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang- • ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur nish his paper and Home Journal to gether for on& year for $1.90. The reg ular subscription price of the two pa pers when suberibed for separately is $2.50. BRING US YOUR JOB WORK. SATIS FACTION GUARANEETD. The Foil; Valley Roller Mills. On Tuesday afternoon, Febru ary 3rd,at 2:80 o’clock little Ruby, the six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.JjH. Harris, pressed a button which started the machin ery of the Fort Valley Roller Mills to work. There was a large crowd of prominent ladies and gentlemen present to attend this, the “open ing of the Fort Valley Flour Mills, and each lady was the recipient sf a sample of the regular brands of flour to be manufactured by this oompany. This mill was organized some time ago with a capital stock of $18,000. W. H. Harris, president of the Dow Law Bank, was elected president, H. L. Harris, seo’y, S. W. Hunter, of Terre Haute, Ind.. superintendent. A large and commodious build ing three stories high, hesides a basement, was determined upon, which has recently hsuh complet ed. The machinery is the latest pattern and combines all the im provements of modern times. The capacity of th° mill is one huudred and twenty-five barrels of flour arid six hundred bushels of meal per day. - The management has contract ed for and will receive five oars of wheat per week, and so conven iently has everything been arrang ed that they can unload a full oar of wheat aud place it in position to be ground at a very small cost. — Fort Valley Leader. Another New Railroad. It is generally conceded, now, and the News has iuformution from a reliable source that a new railroad will soon be built between Cordele and Hawkinsville. The distance will only be about twenty-eight miles, but will trav erse and open up some of the fin est timber und farm lands in Dooly county. Besides these great advantages, Cordele will have another competing railroad rate- to deep water, for, when a road is completed between these two points, connections will be made right straight through, via Tennille, Augusta to Charleston, S. C. We need the road and must have it.—Cordele News. ' If we are not mistaken this is not the first time that our Cor dele contemporary has announced the early building of a railroad from that point to Hawkinsville, but vye hope it has the news straight this time, and that some thing definite will soon happen In the meantime it should not be forgotten that Hawkinsville is ready, willing and waiting to do all she can to bring the road this way.—Hawkinsville Dispatch. A veteran of the Spanish war recently applied to the Secretary of the interior a case in which he claimed a pension on account of corns he had contracted by wear ing army shoes. The department, after an exhaustive course of rea soning. comes to the conclusion that corns are not a pensionable disability. The decision says: “Corns are inconvenient, but are seldom incapacitating, and when they are,the remedy is simple and within easy reach of any one. The soldier’s patriotism ought not to terminate with his military ser vice. It should prompt him to go to a chiropodist rather than to the pension bureau.” — The scratch of a pin may cause the loss of a limb or even death when blood poisoning results from an injury. All danger of this may be avoided, however, by prompt ly applying Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. It is an antiseptic and quick healing liniment for cuts, bruises and burns. For sale by all diuggists. - ’ An American scientist named Banks had obtained from the Sul tan of Turkey a firmin or permit to carry on archeological research es at Tel-Abraham, in Mesopota mia, but’now the Sultan has with drawn the permit, as he says that the place in question- is sacred soil,supposed to contain the tomb of Abraham. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo, Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Drove’s signature on each box.25c. Breeders of Socialism. The chief teachers of socialism in this country are those who 1 have ostentatiously paraded their power, uuder present conditions, to, con jure enormous wealth from combinations, from trusts, from! water, from railroad disorimina- j tion from legislative fiivor. When j people see vast corporations built j up by secret contracts with com- ! mon carriers in violation of law, 1 when thoy see other corporations permitted by lll-adjuBted tariff duties to sell their goods here for so much that it i9 profitable to purchase abroad those same goods manufactured here ai.d freight them back, it is no wonder that they grow discontented. We firmly believe that a plunge into socialism would be the ruin of this country. Its' salvation ^must be found in freft initiative and enterprise as of old. Whatever seems to large bodies of the people to trench upon thc&t freedom by granting special privileges tends to provoke demands for stion reg ulation of equality as will kill in- ‘ dividualism and enterprise. Those who stand as leaders of the recent great developments ot private en terprise should be the first to use their power with moderation, and above all things, should remove every ground of complaint, if they wish to see long-oontinued the industrial liberty which has made possible this countrj’s phe nomenal growth in wealth.—New York Tribune, Derived $300 from an Acre of Oane. The Tatnall Journal in a reoput issue presented uu interview,,with J. B. Wilkes, Jr., of Lyons, G-a., in which he declared that one acre planted in sugar cane yielded him $800. He said: “I will tell you what I made last year on thirty-six acres of ground. Well, to begin with, from one acre of sugar cane I sold for chewing purposes $106.15, made 250 gallous ol as nice syrup as one could wish to see, which I sold for 50 cents per gallon, mak ing a total of $150; saved from the same acre enough seed to re plant the acre which is worth $40. Be rides, I have five children and they had plenty of cane to chew all the season,, to say nothing of what I gave my neighbors and friends when they ciime to see me. I made a Calculation from one acre of sugar cane I realized about $800. I also had in cultivation four acres in short cotton, from which I gathered two bales and sold for $72; eight acres in long cotton, made three bales, which 1 sold for $185. I planted twenty acres in corn, and from that I gathered 840 bushels, which was worth $340; I made forty bushels of peas-land about seventy-five bushels of the best potatoes I ever gathered. Besides the, above, I. have enough meat, fodder, hay and other forage to run my farm another twelve months.” -DEALER IN- Hardware, Stoves, Cutlery, Guns, Tinware, Wooden ware, Farming Implements, Etc. 308 Third St. , (Near Post Office) MACO Escaped an Awful Fate, Mr. H. Haggins of Melbourne, Fla., writes, “My doctor told me I had consumption and nothing could be done for me. I was giveu up to die. The offer of a free trial bottle of Dr. King’s New Discov ery for Consumption, induced me to try it. Results were startling. I am now on the road to recovery and owe all to Dr. King’s New Discovery. It' surely saved my life.” This great cure is guaran teed for all throat a nd lung dis eases. Price 50c and $1. Trial bot tles free at Holtzclow’s Drugstore. • Gen. Booth, the Salvation Army leader, has been a pronounced vegetarian for years. He even re fuses to indulge, in butter, milk or vegetables cooked in fat, living entirely on cereals, principally boiled rice. The General says he is a vegetarian for two reasons. One is his belief that primitive man ate no meat and the other is that after a long trial of that diet he finds himself much younger than his years. <a* A Liberal Offer, The undersigned will give a free sample of Chamberlain’s Stomach & Liver Tablets to any one w ,nt- ing a reliable remedy tor disorders of the stomach, biuomjaness ui constipation. This is a new rem edy and.tji good one. All druggists. Advertise in The Home Journal, *oSS^ T. 1 CISOOn^E, -DEALER in— WATCB.es,1 CLOCKS AMD JEWELRY OPTICIAN SPECIALTIES. High- Class', Work of Every Description. Absolute Satisfaction Guaranteed* 509 Fourth Street. MACON. GA. E. J. MILLER. O. J. CLARK. MILLER & CLARK, AMEBIOUS, GA. -DEALERS IN- MARBLE AND 6RANITE MONUMENTS CURBSTONES, STATUARY, ETC. Dealers iu Tennessee. Georgia, Italian and American Marble an(l European and Domestic Granite. Estimates furnished and contracts made for all kinds ot Building Stone. Iron Railing for Cemetery Work a specialty. We have lately added a fully equipped Cutting aud Polishing Plant, with the latest Pneumatic tools, and can meet all competition. AY&getable Prcpnratr:; for As similating iheFood u” filia ting the Stomachs awl jewels of Promotes Digcslion.Cfieerful- ness and Itesl.Contains neither S >it im,Morphine nor'Mineral. OT> AltCOTIC. /.*»•//* H/'/'/UjDrMKMLPfrC/tf,7 /'■ Seetl' Jis.St/,nd * lUnrmihl - iiiStud- r/ti-t/ml, SSwnr rUnlti'fivft. rlumn A’peifecl Romoctv for Constipa tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worm.'; .('ouvuliiuni.; .lvven.'.h- ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. and Children EXACT CO&Y OF WRAPPER. 1870, 1903. 1116 HOME JOURNAL THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM la this Section of Georgia. We strive to make the paper a welcome visitor to eveiy household, thereby deserving patronage, Subscription Price $1.50 a Year. Liberal reduction for ’cash one year in advance. Subscribe now. C Edi tor and Pubj:., — Perry, Ga. —■— JN0. H. H0DGE8, ME m