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S&WH
mm
55 INCH,
Regular Stylo
Stays la in, or 6 In. apart
Special Hog, Horse and Cattle Style
Stays is In. or 6 In. apart
IS YOUR LIFE WORTH 50 CENTS?
II So, Try a Bottle Of
Sure
Sinus
Cure
Kjdne
We defy th i world to prodnoe a medi
cine for the cure of all forms of Kidney
and Bladder troubles,and all diseases ne-
culiar to women, that will equal Smith’s
Sure Kidney Cure.. Ninety-eight per
cent, of the oases treated with Smith’s
Sure Kidney Cure that have come under
our observation have been cured. We
sell our medicine on a positive guarantee
if directions are followed, aud money re
funded if cure is not effected.
Price 50 cents and $1.00. For sale by
R. L. Cater, Druggist, Perrv, Ga.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTKR.
Georgia, Houstou County:—
To the Superior Court of said Couuty:
The petif iou of Joe Walker, Richard
Smith, Fannie Smith, Speucer Johuson
and Mary Hlo.cumb respectfully shows:
1. That they desire for themselves aud
their assooiates, successors and assigns
to become incorporated under the name
aud stylo of “The Union Aid Society of
Oak Ridge.”
2. That the term for which petitioners
fesk to be incorporated is Twenty (20)
years, wilh the privilege of renewal at
the end of that time.
8. The purpose of the proposed Asso
ciation is to promote the cause of the
Christian Religiuu, aid the sick and dis
tressed members, bury their dead aud
dispense charity to such worthy objects
as they may deem fit and proper.
4. That "Oak Ridge Okuroh,” in said
county, shall be the principal place of
business, with the right aud privilege of
establishing subordinate Lodges in as
many different places in said county as
they may see proper.
Wherefore, petitioners pray for them
selves and their legal successors to be
made a body corporate uud politic, with
all the rights, privileges, immunities and
restrictions usually fixed by law.
DUNCAN & DUNCAN,
Attorneys for Petitsoners.
GEORGIA—Houston County,
I, I. t] Woodard, Clerk of the Superior
Court of Houston county, Ga, do certify
that the foregoing is a, true aud exact)
copy of petition filed in my office this
21st day of April, 1903,
I. T. WOODARD, C. S. C., H. O., Ga.
ESTABLISHED IN 1881.
THE OLDEST WHISKEY HOUSE
IN GEORGIA.
Old Sliftrpe Williams,,- guaranteed
eight yeHrs old; by the gallou, $3.00;
four full quarts $8.50 express prepaid.
George .T. Coleman Rye, guaranteed
six years old; by the gallon $2,75, four
full quarts $3.00 express prepaid.
Anvil Rye, guaranteed four years old;
by the gallon $2.50, four full quarts $.75
express prepaid.
Clifford Rye, by the gallon $2.25,
four full quarts $2.50 express prepaid.
Old Kentucky Corn, guaranteed eigLt
years old; bv the gallon $3.00, four full
quarts$3.25 express prepaid.
Old Pointer Club Corn, guaranteed
four years old; by the gallon $2,50, four
full quarts $2.75 express prepaid.
We handle all the leading brands of
Rye and Bourbon Whiskies in the mar
ket, and will save you from twenty-five
lo fifty per cent, on your purchases .
Send for Price List and catalogue.
Mailed free upon application.
Altmayer & Flatau Liquor Co.,
506-508 510-512 Fourth Street,
Macon, Ge ia.
The ‘‘Iowa Idea”'Devitalized.
IXew York World
The reported agreement of Pres
ident Roosevelt to incorporate
Gov. Cummin’s “Iowa idea” in
the next national platform is
qualified by an important excep
tion . The pith of the Iowa Re
publican resolutions on the tariff
was. contained in the' closing
words:
We favor any modification of
the tariff schedules that may be
required to prevent theii* afford
ing a shelter to monopoly.
This clause the President is said
to have characterized as “tactless
in phraseology.” Precisely 1 It
was the edge of the sword—the
“business end” of the waspl To
admit, even by implication, that
any of the sacred Dingley duties
could “afford shelter to monopo
ly’*’ was so “tactless” that Speak
er Henderson declined to stand
for re-election rather than to in
dorse this language.
President Roosevelt in his
speech at Cincinnati last Septem
ber said that “the real evils con
nected with the trusts cannot be
remedied by any change in the
tariff laws.” The real evils of the
trusts as seen and, felt by the
Iowa farmes are in the high cost
of all iron and steel products, of
farm machinery and implements,
and of scores of other articleSv for
which arbitrary and extortionate
prices arc exacted under the
“shelter afforded to monopoly”
by a 50 per cent, tariff. The Iowa
Republicans did not imagine the
evils. They did not mistake the
cadse. They intelligently and
boldly indicated the remedy.
The President says this was
’’tactless.” It offended the trust
magnates and other campaign
contributors. It gave aid and
comfort to the Democrats. He
is willing to adopt so much of
the Iowa platform as favois ”such
changes in the tariff from time to
time as become advisable”— in
other words, a “revision of the
tariff by its friends” the day af
ter never 1 But as for admitting
that the tariff does promote and
shelter monopoly, and was in its
main schedules intended to do
that very thing, the President is
as far from that as are the most
hidebound of the trust agents in
the Senate.
The omission of the sting from
the Iowa resolution? reduces them
to what Gov. “Bill” Allen of Ohio
termed “a d—n barren ideality.”
But it leaves the tariff and trust
issue in splendid shape for the
democrats in the presidential
campaign.
t oe-a—
Discussing th- race question in
the South and the North, the
Houston (Tex.), Chronicle-Herald
makes the point that if the South,
as argued, ’’won’t let the negro
vote it lets him work; while the
North lets the negro vote
but won’t let him work.”
The New .York Tribune (Rep.)
quotes and calls attention to the
Texas paper’s statement but it
does not attempt to reply to it.
As a matter of fact there is no
answer to be made to it. It is
the truth and shows that the
North’s race question is more se
rious than that of the South.
Qolored Servants go North.
PittaBburg Dispatch
either need a Stove or a Ratige? If
so, I can fill your order andgiiaran-
The idea” of"supplyTug colored tee to do it satisfactorily. IJcarry a complete line of
girls for household servants is to
*
have a thorough test in Pittsburg.
Arrangements have been made by
A. Lewis to bring 1.000.girls,from
the Southern states to Pittsburg
to work as servants. Some of
them will arrive next month.
Lewis has established a home
for working girls at 529 Wylie
ayenue, where he will have accom
modations for 100 girls. He has
made arrangements with various
persons in the South to send him
girls. No girl will be -received
who has not been vouched for by
some influential person. They
Will all have some training, re
ceived in the training schools of
the South.
Within the last few months tile
question of help has been a serious
one in Pittsburg. Lewis has ap
plications from a number of prom
inent people for girls. He olaims
that with his arrangements he
will bo able to supply the demand
in the future.
Few people desire girls from
this section for servants. For'
signers and Southern, colored
girls are preferred, Lewis says.
These can be taught the ways of
their employers better than home
girls, and' are said to make better
servants.
The home at 529 W.ylie avenue
will not be a .boarding house, but
a temporary stopping place for
girls out of employment. Wages
for ordinary house servants are
now $4 per week.
Agriculture at tlie World’s Fair.
The achievements, history and
possibilities in the science and in
dustries of agriculture are to re
ceive extensive treatment and dis
play at the Universal Exposition
at St. Louis in 1904. The exposi
tion authorities have given the va
rious materials, industries and
pursuits which are to be included,
or implied, under the heading Ag
riculture, such as theory of agri
culture, appliances and methods
used in agricultural industrias;
agricultural implements aud farm
machinery; farm equipment;
methods of improving lands; ag
ricultural products, vegetables,
cereals, etc., a leading place in
the classification. The 'space de
voted to agticulture covers 65
acres on a commanding site.
Countries have to be educated
up to providing for new economic
or social conditions. Denmark
is already adjusting itself to the
altered conditions which decreased
the probability of a female child’s
marriage. It has a system of in
surance against the possibility of
spinsteroood. In Denmark if a
sum of about $225 is deposited on
behalf; of a girl at birth, she be
comes entitled if unmarried at
the age of 30 bo receive an annui-
of $25 which is increased by $25
every ten years. It however she
marries before she is 80 $225 is
returned to her or if she dies be
fore she is that age there is a con
tribution of some $30 or $35 to
ward her funeral.
National Steel Ranges
Excelsior Stoves and Ranges,
New Enterprise Stoves,
n rj, flair ^tnVPcY 7 " 15 iu °k oven with 'full*!
V*Tc!l|U MctU OlUVUk Vjisfc of furniture, $8.50 J
My fall stock of Crockery andjj Housefnrmsnings is even
moic complete than it has beenjheretofore.
CALEB B. WILLINGHAM, JR.,
TriangularQBlock, || MACOR, GEORG— .
T31. ZB-A-JR-IF
Cor. Second andfjPoplar Sts.
ELD,
We promptly obtain U. S'. and Foreign
PATENTS
Send model, sketch or photo of invention for <
.bility. For free book
[freereport on
[ How to Secure
; Patents and
■-MARKS
; Opposite U. S. Patent Office<
WASHINGTON D. C.
A Toledo real estate man paid
$500 for an old dock at Manhat
tan, Ohio, a year ago, And his
friende said he was crazy. He has
been selling the oak and walnut
logs of which the dock was con
structed, and has thus far cleared
$20,000,. with prospects of making
as much more. The dock was six
ty years old, and, the water curing
has made the logs more valuable
thaii they were when newly cut
—o-o-c*-
' A Sure Thing.
It is said that nothing is sure
except death and taxes, but that
is not altogether true. Dr. King’s
New Discovery for'Consumption
is a sure cure for all throat and
lung troubles. Thousands can tes
tify to that. Mrs. 0. B. VanMetre
of Shepherdtown, W. Va., says;
“I had a severe case of bronchitis
and for a year tried everything I
heard of, but got no relief. One
bottle of Dr. King’s New Discov
er^ tbpn ■ cured me absolutely.”
lb's v iilible for croup, whooping
couga, grip, jmeumonia and con
sumption. Try it. It's guarap
teed. Trial bottles free at Holtz
claw’s Drugstore.
50c and $1.00. ,
cured me.
druggists.
MACON, GA
MIDDLE GEORGIA AGENCY FOE
AMERICAN FIELD AND HOG FENCE
Made of large, strong, high-grade steel wires, heavily galvanized-.
Amply provides for expansion and contraction. Is practically ever
lasting. Never goes wrong, no matter how great a strain is put on it.
Does not mutilate, but does, efficiently, turn cattle, horses, hogs
and pigs,
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEED
by the manufacturers and by us. Call and see it. ' Can show you how
it will save you money and fence your fields so they will stay fenced*
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been,
in use for over 30 years, has home tlie signature of
and has heen 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 lmfc
Experiments that Grille with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
©astoria is a harmless Substitute fop 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 as:uimJa(/.>s the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend.
The following note was recently
received by a Higginsville (Kan.)
school teacher: “Respected M.iss;
please excuse Willie for absents.
He fell down stairs just before
school time and we feared his in
ternal insides was hurt at first,
but they ain’t. The Doctor says
that no part of his annatomy was.
hurt but the brewzing of the ep-
pyredmis of the outside hide, and
also his hipp hurt some. JBiit he
narrowly escaped fatal death. So
kindly excuse.”
A Farmer Straightened Out.
“A man living on a farm near
here came in a Bhort time ago
completely doubled up with rheu
matism. I handed him a bottle
of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and
told him to use it freely and if
not satisfied after using it ho need
not pay a rent for it,” says C. P.
Rayder, of Pattens Mills, N. Y.
‘A few days later he walked into
the store as straight as a string
and handed me a dollar saying,
‘give me a another bottle of Cham
berlain’* Rain Balm. I want, it
in HU limi-A all the rime for it
genu!
CASTORS A always
Sears' tha Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TH. CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
CrUTTENBERGER'S PIANO CLUB.
For saie by ull
—Three papers for $2.25, the
Regular sizes Home Journal, Atlanta Weekly
Constitution and Sunny South.
..v m
IkSs
Easy Way to Purchase a Firstclass
Piano at Lowest Prices and
on Very Easy Terms.
1st. Join the Club for very best Pianos
(prices from $850 to $500) by paying $10 and
then $2.50 per week or $10 per month. Pian-
,'os delivered as soon as you join olub.
2nd. Join the Club for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $250 to
$300), by paying $8 to join and $2 per week
or $8 per month.
These Pinnoq n’-p all the very bpel mahn
Gall at i<tum hinl join the Club, atm iim ! e
your selection of one of these celebiaib l
makes of Pianos.
F. A. GUTTENBERGER.
•vpytt,
g 452 Second St., Macon, Ga’.
Mi
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