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IS YOUa LIFE WORTH 50 CENTS?
IfSo, Tf; HMB or
We defy the world to produce n medi
cine for the cure of ad forms of Kidney
and Bladder troubles,and all diseases pe
culiar to womeu, that will equal Smith’s
Sure Kiduey Cure.. Ninety-eight per
cent, of the cases treated with Smith’e
Sure Kidney Oure that have come under
our observation have been cured. We
sell our medicine on a positive guarantee
if directions are followed, and money re*
funded if cure is not effected
Price 50 centi and $1.00. For Bale by
R. L. Cater, Druggist, Perr>, Ga.
is
PENNSY LVANIA. PUKE BYE,
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS
Pour fulJQuarts of this Pine .Old, Pnre
RYE WHISKEY,
$3.50 BXP K& 8 .
Wo ship on approval In plain, sealed boxes,
with no marks to indicate contents. When |you
receive it and test it, if It is not satisfactory,
return it a« our oxponse and we wil return your
$3.60. We guarantee this brand to be
EIGHT TEARS OLD.
Eight bottles for $G SO, express prepaid:
12 bottfes for $9 60 express prowaid.
One gallon jug, express prepaid, S3 00:
2 gallon jug, express prepaid, $6 60.
No charge for boxing.
We.handlo all the leading brands of Rye and
Bourbon Whiskies and will save you
GO Per Cent, on Your Purchases:
Quart, Gallon.
Kentucky Star Bourbon, $ 36 $126
Eikridge Bourbon 40 165
Boon Hollow Bourbon 46 169
Celwood Pure Rye 60 100
Monogram Rye 55 2 00
MoBrayer Rye .’. .. 60 220
Makers A A A. A,.... 65 240
O.O. P. (Old Oscar Pepper) 05 240
Old Crow 75 2 50
Fincher's Golden Wedding 76 260
Hoffman House Rye 00 , 300
Mount Vernon, 8 years old 100 350
Old Dillinger Rye, 10years old 126 400
The above are only a few brands. '
Bond for a catalogue.
All other^Soods by the gallon, such aB Corn
. " id Apple
we make a speciasty of the Jug Trade,
and all orders by Mail or Telgeraph will
have our prompt attention: Special
inducements offered.
Mail Orders shipped same day of the
receipt of order.
The Altmayer & Flateau
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606, 608, 610, 612 Fourth Street, near
Union Passenger Depot.
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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 effortsjand 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 one year for $1.90. The reg
ular subscription /price of the two pa
pers when suberibed for separately is
$2.50.
■ V.
JOB wouk
NEATLY EXECUTED
— AT THIS OFFICE. -—
Mr. Roosevelt and Congress.
Harper’s Weekly.
At the end of his second session
of congress Mr, Roosevelt has hard
ly any sincere friends in congress.
The party machine is. the most per- j
feet we have ever seen. It governs
absolutely, and its decrees are em
bodied in legislation. For the mo-'
ment the country is governed by the ;
edicts of an oligarchy, and not by |
laws which arc the result of discuB- j
sion and deliberation. The oligarchy j
gratifies the president with some
legislation, denying him much, and j
deceiving him in some respects, j
What it granite is for the Bake of;
harmony. The independent, think
ing republicans, who are averse to
this rule, who had hoped for help
from the white house against the
tyranny of the oligarchy, are hurt
and angry. The president may re
tain the affeotion of their constitu
ents, but he has lost the friendship
and the confidence of the represen
tatives. The president is now the
ally of the ruling oligarchy, whose
leaders do not agree with a single
principle which he announces. They
are satisfied, however, with his ulti
mate surrender, but they would
throw him over if they dared.
Agriculture in Mexico.
W. H. Verity in Conkey’sHome Journal.
I have made a careful study of
the subjecu of tropical agriculture in
Mexico, in connection with other
gentlemen who became interested
with me in a plantation there. I
have often bean asked whether I
would advise a man to go to Mexico
and establish a plantation for him
self. Unless he has a large amount
of time, capital and a readiness to
undertake a new business under new
conditions of language, methods, le
gal procedure, handling of labor,
etc., he will find his best opportuni
ty by buying stock in a reliable
company-organized and equipped
for the special business on a scale
large enough to avoid the difficul
ties of the small farmer. Mexico is
no place for the small farmer or man
of small means Good tropical lands
have been so much in demand for
the last two years that there is hard
ly any real good land on the market
now, and there is no good land that
oan be purchased in small tracts.
Thb demand foi;World’s Fair ex
hibit spaoe in all departments is
such that it will undoubtedly be all
taken months before the opening
day. Allotments are being made
rapidly. The value of the annual
product of manufacturing industries
in the United States has increased
fifty per cent since the Columbian
Exposition at Chicago. Notwith
standing the far greater area of ex
hibit space for the Louisiana Pur
chase Exposition in comparison with
the Chicago fair, it is really less in
proportion to the probablh demands
from the manufacturers and produc
ers in the United States and foreign
countries.
--
The Philadelphia Record says:,
“When in the service Admiral
Schley modestly contented himself
with the most distant and unpleas
ant naval station that Admiral
Orowninshield could pick out for
him. But Orowninshield, who nev
er did anything of note in the naval
service except nag the nero of San
tiago, retires in a huff because be
has no new line-of-battle ship for
his flagship. Such is the difference
between big men and little ones.”
«-•-*
(Arthur Jennings, are 27, a resi
dent of Florence, Cal., has negotia
ted with an Eastern medical insti
tute for the purchase of his head.
Jenning’s head is almost twice the
normal size. According to the in
formant, the price is $100,000 down
and an additional $1,000 to be paid
to his relathes at the time of his
death. His head measures thirty-six
inches in circumference.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
Thngs of Which Every Southern Man
Should Be Proud.
The Manufacturers’ Record of Bal
timore, In reviewing the evidences of
Southern progress during the past
year, including investment© of more
than $50,000,000 in building new rail
road mileage and of more than $20,-
000,000 In cotton mills, says: “To
fully grasp the progress of the Soiiith,
we should have to study the - change
which has conre about by which the
Southern factory 1b not only beginning
to supply the needs of the south, but
is bidding for foreign trade; we should
have to measure the influence on the
woodworking industry of the phenom
enal success of the furniture factories
of North Carolina, which are captur
ing the trade of this country as far as
the Pacific coast and the foreign trade
out to South Africa; we should have
to note the rapid development of in
dustries to consume at home the pig
iron for which we have heretofore had
to find a market elsewhere—the steel
rail mill at Ensloy, the steel car works
to be built in Alabama, the success oi
the steel wire operations which has
resulted In the plans f>r building the
$5,000,000 plant mentioned as to be
constructed at Gadsden; we should
have to measure the power of the new
combination of cotton mills, which will
turn Into this section a great amount
of textile interests; we should have
to note the progress of the great ship
building plant at Newport News, with
contracts on hand sufficient to supply
Its 1 7,000 or 3,000 men for the next
three years; we should have to take
into account the great developments
At" southern ports in terminal facilities
and the growth of the exports through
Southern ports now reaching to over
$600,000,000 a year or about 35 per
cent of the total exports of the coun
try. To all of these wo
should have to add the most vi
tal fact, namely, the accumulated
capital and the accumulated experi
ence which the South now has as
compared with the lack of capital
and the lack of experience of five or
ten years ago, and thus be able to form
a better *ldea of how greatly this will
count In bringing about a rate of prog,
ress fa,r surpassing all that has been
seen In the last ten years.’’
The Manufacturers' Record review
of railroad construction during the
year show© a total new mileage In tn«
Southern States, and in Missouri, In
dian Territory andi Oklahoma, whose
railroad systems are directly connect
ed with Southern development, oi
4,099.4. It alBO shows that, at least
5,167.8 miles of line will be construct
ed In these states and territories dur
ing the coming year. The following
table shows the mileage built in 1902
and to be built in 1903 by states:
Wakeful Children.
For a long time the two year
old child of Mr. P. L. McPhersen,
59 N. Tenth St., Harrisburg, Pa.,
would sleep but two or three hours
in the early part of the night,
which made it very hard for her
parents. Her mother concluded
that the child had stomach troub
le, and gave her half of one of
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
T.j hh'tq, which quieted her stom
ach and she slept the whole night.
Two bottles of these Tablets have
effected a permanent cure and she
is now well and strong. For sa^Ie
by all dealers.
■ ". ..... r ■ .
States.
'3 S
CD
fa.
OT
w a
a
si
Alabama
..211.9
213.5
Arkansas
465.5
Florida
13
Georgia
2'86
Indian Territory . .
.. 630.9
401
Kentucky
. 57
148
Louisiana
.. 256,3
354.1
Maryland ....
.. 43
85.6
Mississippi . . . .
. 127
203
Missouri
. 220
469
N. Carolina . . . .
. 153
259
Oklahoma ....
.. 643
571
S. Carolina . . . .
. 49
55
Tennessee . . . . .
. 94.7
174.6
Texas
. 665.6
930
Virginia
. 94.1
67.0
West Virginia . .
.. 123.1
457.6
Total
..4,099.4
5,167.8
The construction in 1902 represents
solely new lines.
The record for the year for textile
progress is remarkable. It shows ad 1 ,
ditjons in the South of 1,119,284 spin
dies and 31,667 looms.
“The low grade goods that have in
the past engaged the attention of the
Southern mills do not attract the new
companies, hut they plan for produc
ing the finer grades of cloth. Another
decidiedi tendency is that .which will
eventually enable the South to finish
the cloths made within its borders in
stead of shipping them to the north
ern and eastern finishing plant#. Be
sides several isolated finishing plants
there were two large ones reported
In 1892, one with a capital of $2,600,-
000 to have branches in different local.
Ities. Established companies seem
determined to keep their lead In the
matter of spindles. This feature in
dicates that the men who have had the
best and longest experience in th$
South know that the cotton^manUfac-
turin;; industry there is built on n
broad and firm foundation' and will in
time make the South the leading cot
ton manufacturing section of the
world."
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and has been made under his per
sonal supervision since its infancy*
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 CASTORIA
Oastoria is a harmless substitute fox* Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drop?! and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its ago is iis.guarRutee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It om*<\i Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teeth ing Tr-r,Vidas, cures Constipation
and Flatulency- It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Dowels, g’.vhw h.call'll;, - mid natural sleep.
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True Political Stories—Include The Plot to Kidnap Lincoln and Jackson’s Quarrel with
Calhoun, by Edward Vallandigham.
Pooplo YOU Kno W— Roosevelt in College, by Evert Jansen Wendell; My First Graduate—
Theodore Roosevelt, by Artiiuk H. Cutler; Toni Nast—Cartoonist,
by Albert Bigelow Paine.
Startling Disclosures of European, Courto-
■ '1 hese sensational revelations o( an international spy throw light on the
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Hcrnumlo Cortez
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Elder Boise, Evorott Tomlinson
A King’s Pawn.
Hamilton Drummond
Masters of Mon, Morgan Robortscn
The Antoorats, Ohao. X. Luoh
Captain Dieppo, Anthony Hope
Heart's Highway, MaryE. Wilkins .
On the Wing of Oooe.sionn,
Joel Chandler HarriB
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Owon Rhosoomyl
Tho Professor’s Daughter,
Anna Farquhar
A Modern Mercenary, .
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Col. Carter of Cartersville,
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Wolfville, A. H. Lewis
Forty Modern Fables, George Ade
Hr. Dooley’s Philosophy, ^ ^
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Marcella, Mrs. Humphry Ward
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Cant. Chas. King
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Anthony Hops
A Lady of Quality,
Frances Hodgson Burnett
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