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is YOUR LIFE WORTH 50 CENTS?
If So, Try a Bottle Of
Kionev
We defy the world to produoe n medi
cine for the oure of all forms of Kidney
aud Bladder troubles,aud all diseases do*
culiar to women, that will equal Smith’s
Sure Kidney Oure.. Ninety-eight per
cent, of the oases 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 oents and $1.00. For sale by
R. L. Cater, Druggist, Perry, Qa.
R-I-P-A-N-S Tabulea
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind
The 5-cent packet is enough for usual occasions.
The family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply
for a year. All druggists sell them.
30 YEARS IN THE MUSIC BUSINESS
The Old Reliable Irvine’s Georgia
Music HOuse, Macon, Ua.
Knows what a good biano is,for we have
been pleasing the people for THIRTY
YEARS—a pretty good rebord. We will
sell you an Upright Piano, full size
ootaves, Beautiful Mahogany Finish,
with book and stool free, KA
direot from factory, for
Beautiful Organ, walnut ease, improved
Heed Cells, which are almost CA
mouse proof, direct from factory
We have arranged with the Great Columbus
Phonograph Company to aell their Famous
TALKING MACHINES, and have made a deal
which will enable us to sell a Most Excellent
Machine for ONLY $3.50, This bus never
been done before to Any House in the South.
This Machine, though sold at a low price, is
clear and powerful. It Sings, Plays and Talks
with almost tho Power nnd Perfection of the
$35,00 machines.
An endless amount of amusement and pleas
ure can be afforded the purchaser of one of
thees Talking Machines at a trifling ooBt—
think of it. World’s of Songs, Band Pieces
and Comic Speeches can be played on this Won
derful machine.
The Popular DOMESTIC Sewing Machine.
We are closing up onr Machine Department,
and offer our stock of Famous Domestic Ma
chines at less than wholesale prices—$65.00 ma
chines at $32.50; $55.00 machines at $25.00, etc. 1 . _ ii xi
Will give you until cotton comes in to pay. 608011 6110
SHEET MDSIO sold at Half-Price. Our im
mense stoelc for only 5 cents per piece. Man
dolins, Guitars, Violins, Drums, etc. Mandolins
from $2.00 up: Guitars from $2.50 up. Sole
agency for the World-Famous Steinway, Knabe.
Cnickcrlng and Fischer Pianos. Easy terms of
payments. Call on or address—
Iryitie’s Ga. Music House,
304 Third St.. Macon, Ga.
Mrs. Fred Urira-th.
PrcuKIciit^Conntry Cliib, Benton
“After my first baby was bom I did not
seem to regain my strength although the
doctor gave me a tonic which he consid
ered very superior; but instead of getting
better I grew weaker every day. My hus-
band insisted that I take Wine of Cardui
for a week and see what it would do for
me. I did take the medicine and was very
grateful to find my strength and health
slowly returning, in two weeks 1 was out
of bed and in a month I was able to take
up my. usual duties. 1 am very enthusi
astic in its praise.”
Wine of Cardui reinforces the organs
of generation for the ordeal of preg
nancy and childbirth. It prevents mis
carriage. No woman who takes Wine
of Cardui need fear the coming of her
child. If Mrs. Unxath had taken
Wine of Cardui before her baby came
she would not have been weakened as
she was. Her rapid recovery should
commend this great remedy to every
expectant mother. Wine of Cardui
regulates the menstrual flow.'*
What a Georgia Farmer Can Do.
Macon Telegraph.
Mr John B. McDonald of Vien
na Was in the city yesterday look
ing hale and hearty—browned by
the tan of outdoor experience on
the farm, for he is one of the
moat extensive and one of the
most progressive farmers of Doo
ly county.
Mr. McDonald is a farmer from
ohoice. A few years ago he was
engaged in the insurance business,
with headquarters at Atlanta,
and was known throughout the
state its one.of the hustlers in the
insurance ranks. But his natu
ral inclination tended to the
farm, and the insurance workers
of the state lost one of their best,
and Georgia secured a farmer Who
is demonstrating that farming as
a business, conducted on business
lines, ranks second to none in its
profit-earning possibilities.
“I believe that farming as a
business offers greater opportuni
ties to our young men, with
greater independence, than any
other vocation,” said Mr. Mc
Donald, “but farming must be
conducted on business lines. It
would sound tc many like a fairy
tale perhapB were I to tell what
profit I have found in growing
broom corn. As a money crop it
is among the best—with the by
products it will give a revenue of
$200 per acre. But you can
plant it twice in succession on the
same piece of land, because it is
a soil exhauster. '
“We fatted 800 head of cattle
on our place last year, and in ad
dition to the profit from the cat
tie. we got over four thousand
loads of manure to put on our
land. Three hundred loads of
stable manure were put on the
land where we planted ootton
this year; that land will produce
a bale to the acre,
‘‘Then we are interested iu cane
growing and will make a large
crop of cane, and produce a big
lot of syrup this year. We have
put up an up-to-date plant for
the manufacture of cane syrup of
a uniform grade. We make a
test of the first lot of cane, and
gauge our subsequent work by re
sults obtained with the first lot.
The quality of the cane and the
proper treatment to secure best
results vary— : never the same two
successive seasons.
‘‘My experience,” said Mr. Me
Donald, “teaches me that a farm
in Georgia can have something
year round, and down
our way the soil will baok up any
effort in this direction, if handled
roperly. Our crop outlook in
ooly is promising, and we will
be in shape* to come to the State
Fair in great force. We are com
ing too. We may be prepared to
show what we have done—but in
any event we will come to ascer
tain what the other farmere of
the state have done, and profit by
it.
“There is a man down in Doo
ly who ruus a small farm that
can give points to a good many
farmers Of the state. He went
into debt for his land, and paid
for it—bought more and paid for
it, and has a cash surplus of
$5,000. He has somthing to sell
at all seasons of the year. Rais
es a bale of cotton to the acre,
and thinks he is not doing very
much if he produces less than
thirty-five bushels of corn to the
acre. Gome down to Dooly and
I’ll show you something worth
looking at in a crop way.”
Buying a “Corset’” in Maine. either need a Stove or a Range? If
— ~ J«\#W so, I can fill your drder and guaran-
A Bostonian, quoted in the New t ee jo it satisfactorily. 1 carry a. complete line of
York Press, says: “I am not a hard
drinker, but once when traveling
through Maine I nearly died for
something to loosen Up the bronchi
al regions. It was in Camden that
met a chap ip the street and said
to him: 'You look like a real good
fellow; one that wouldn’t hesitate to
take a drink if it came your way.’
He replied: ‘Stranger, your estimate
of my character air correct.’. ‘Then,
my good friend, you may sympa
thize with me. My tongue is hang
ing out. I have a dark brown taste
in ray mouth. My throat is as
parched as the Great Desert. My
stomooh laments. Oan you, in the
kindness of your heart, tell me
whore I oan find relief?’ He was
alive to my woe, and, like a good
Samaritan, said: 'Do you see that
dry goods store on the third corner,
west side, just above the red briok
store? Keep it in mind, and do as
I tell you.
“ ‘You just go into that store and
step up to a fine looking old lady
with white hair and ask her if she
has any K. & L. corsets. Plank
down a dollar and a half on the
counter as you put the question,
and tip her a wink out of the righl
eye. Don’t ask to look at the cor*
Bet. Just take what she gives yor
and walk out with it under youi
arm.’ I followed his instruction!
implicitly. She was a handsome
matron, fat and fifty. As I laic
down ohe dollar and a half and tip
ped the wink, she fumbled arounc
i3 pasteboard box branded *K. & L
oersets. (I am using, of course,
fictitious name.) [ took it under
my arm and strolled down to my
hotel with it, where, in the Bolemn
solitude of my room, I broku the
seal. There was a full quart of the
old stuff, and I did it full justice
But it was the first time I ever
heard of a man wearing a corset on
the inside.”
Ninety-nine men in a hundred at
the bar will, when incited to “nomi
nat6 their poison,” say, “Oh, a little
whisk.” In Maine it got to be, “Ob
a little corset.” Finally this was ex
panded into, “Oh, gimme a corset
cover.”
National Steel Ranges (unilasttia,)
Excelsior Stoves and Ranges,
New Enterprise Stoves,
Grand Oak Stoves (^{“faSr^Vso 1 ];
My fall stock of Crockery ami Housefiirmsnings is even
moie complete than it has been heretofore.
Refrigerators, Iceream F reezers,Fruit Jars
CALBER B. WILUNSHAM, JR.,
TriangulabGBlock. || MACOls, GEORG
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Louisiana the Paradise of Wives.
The Louisiana supreme court has
affirmed the constitutionality of an
act passed by the legislature at its
last session which provides for the
punishment with imprisonment
hard labor of men who desert their
wives or fail to support theeir wives
and children. A number of arrests
were made shortly after the law
went into effect, but punishment of
the culpritB was suspended, as the
act was’ supposed to be unconstitu
tional. The supreme court's deck
ion now settles the matter, and
future the Louisiana man who gets
married ’must expeot to bear the
consequences.
It is to be hoped that the law will,
not have a tendency to discourage
matrimony, and there is no likeli
hood that it will. If it does, the
ones who permit themselves to
frightened away from marriage
it will be better anyway. Louisiana
has made a good, start in this mat
ter, and should now provide for the
imprisonment at hard labor of wife
beaters. That done, the state will
have a clear lead in at least one im
portant respect.—Chicago Record
•Herald.
El
•nr" "I” "T" 1 "i"—> A 1 TTI
Cor. Second and Poplar Sis.
MIDDLE GEORGIA AGENCY FOR
JD,
MAON, G-A
AMERICAN FIELD AND NOG FENCE
55 INCH.
Regular Stylo
Stays ia*ln. or 6ln. apart
s*
7
-
-•sift
* 1-•*
:a*.
SSv
Special Hog, Horse and Cattle Style
Stays ia In. or 6 In. apart
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 borne tho signature of
and has been made under his per*
sonal supervision since its infancy*
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** jWt-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What Is CASTORIA
Castorla is a harmless 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 the
Stomach and Bot/cIs, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend.
genuine:
CASTOR!A always
Bears the Signature of
JOB WORK
NEATliY EXECUTED
— Al’ THIS OFFICE.
Puts an End to It All.
A grievous wail offcimes comes
as a result of unbearable pain
from overtaxed organs. Dizzi
ness, backache, liver complaint
and constipation. But thanks to
Dr. King’s New Life Pills, they
put an end to it all. They are
gentle but thorough. Try them.
Guaranteed. Only 25c at Holtz-
claw’s Drggstore.
Uncle Sam is the largest em
ployer of typists in the country.
There are 5,000 typewriter girls
hammering the machines and
grinding out the letters for the
United States gbvernment. She
names the machine and it is pur
chased for her.
When you want a physic that
is; m lid a n d geiltle, easy tq take
and certaiu to act, always use
Chamberlain’# Stpmach and^Liy-
Tablets,
gilts.'
For sale by all drug
There are almost as many univer
sity teachers in the United States as
there are university students in the
United Kingdom. The number of
professors and instructors at the uni
versities and colleges included in the
list of the United States commis
sioner of education is 17,000. The
number of students in British uni
versities and university colleges is
only about 20,500.
End of Bitter Fight.
“Two physicians had a long and
stubborn fight with an abscess on
my right lung,” writes J. F.
Hughes of DuPont, Ga., “and
gave me up. Everybody thought
my time had come. As a last re
sort I tried Dr. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption. The ben*?
efit I received was striking and I.
was on my feet in a few days.
I’ve eritrirbi : y regained my healtu.”
It conquers all coughs, conis and
throat arid lung troubles. Guar
anteed. Price 503 and $1.. Trial
bottles free at Holtzclaw’s Drug-
istore.
Years.
TH( CENTAUR COMPANY. 7T MURRAY STREET. HEW YORK CITY.
Easy Way to Purchase a Firstclass
Pii
lano at Lowest Prices
on Very Easy Terms*
1st. Join the Club for very best Pianos
* - •-“iio and
Pian-
2nd. Join the Club for good medium Pi
anos,l fully warranted (prices from $250 to
$300), by paying $8 to join and $2 per week
or $8 per month.
These Piano* «re nil the very best mth-s.
Call at once :,n>i j.<in the UJiib. urtd hiek-
your selootiou of one of these celebrate!,
makes of Pianos.
F. A. GUTTENBERGEB.
432 S«coud St., Mi;