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The Macon Telegraph.
Published every day and Sunday,
and Twice-a-Week, by The Maoqn
Telegraph Publishing Oo.
Subscription Daily and Sunday,
$7.00 per annum. Daily except
Sunday, $|.00 per annum Twice-
a-Week, $1.00 per annum.
Best advertising medium in the
city Rates furnished on appli
cation.
Mrs. Laura. S. Webb,
Vteo-ProHlitont Woman’* Demo
cratic Club* ot Northern Olilo.
"I dreaded the change of life which
wai fast approaching. I noticed Wine
of Cardul, and decided to try a bot
tle. I experienced some relief the
first month, so I kept on taking It for
three months and now I menstruate
with no pajp and I shall take It off and
on now until I have passed the climax."
Female weakness, disordered
menses, falling of the womb and
ovarian troubles do not wear off.
They follow a woman to the change
of life. Do ho^ wait but take Wino
of Cardui now : and aVoid the trou
ble. Wine of Cardui never fails
to benefit a suffering woman of
any ago. Wine of Cardui relieved
Mrs* Webb when she was in dan
ger. When you come to the change
of life MJrs. Webb’s letter will
mean more to you than it does
now. Hut you may now avoid the
Buffering she endured. Druggists
soil $1 bottles of Wine of Cardui.
MNEofCARDUL
NEXT DOOR TO
ACADEMY OF MUSIC,'
663 MULBERRY ST. MACON, GEORGIA.
Rales, $2.00 Per Bay.
A HOME-LIKE HOTEL
Special attention given to
Transient Trade.
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FOR
311! Christian Union Herald,
a strong, religious, seven-column paper,
devoted to the moral and materiul ad
vancement of the colored raoe, with an
extensive circulation.
Published Weekly at Sft v ammh, Ga,
Subscription $1.00 Per rear.
REV. W. A. DINKINS, Editor,
P. E. Fort Vnlley District.
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Subscribe for The Home Journal.
California’s Unique Journal.
New York World.
So far as is known, there is but
one newspaper in the world printed
below the level of the sea. That pa
per is the Indio-Submarine, or as it
is now known, the Coachella Subma
rine. The paper is a little four-page
weekly, which does not present a re
markably prepossessing appearance,
but it serves the requirements of the
community in which it circulates.
The desert does not present too
abundant facilities for journalism, as
one or two extracts from the paper
will suggest, and the Submarine is
situated in the midst of the most
formidable of the deserts of Califor
nia—the Colorado desert, of this
country. Regarding the paper’s re
cent move from Indio to Coachella,
the editor of the paper says:
“Inducements of a flattering char
acter having been offered the pub
lisher, in the way of a bonus, we
have removed our printing office
from Indio to Coachella, a distance
of three and one-half miles. We
have drbpped from 22 feet below sea
level to 76 feet below sea level.
“We hit Coachella with a dull yet
raucous thud. The low rilmbling
noise you heard last Tuesday was
caused by our printing office mak
ing the drop. It may be truly said
that the Submarine iB the lowest
down, or the lowdownest, or the
moBt low down newspaper in the
world. As nearly as we can com
pare the distance, hades is about
212 feet below our new office. The
paper will continue to advocate the
interests of all the country below
sea level, and we want you to fire in
all the news you know.”
A short time ago the Submarine
failed to appear for two consecutive
weeks, and the editor made the fol-
lbwihg apology and explanation:
“Having business to transact in
Riverside, in Los Angeles and in
Ventura county, the editor left In
dio on September 8, and was gone
an even two weeks. Before leaving,
he printed one-half of the Subma
rine for the next week. At Los An
geles Le gave a printer $10 as ex
pense money, and a key to the office,
to come down and get out the rest
of the paper for the 13th, as well as
the following issue. Care free, he
sped away to Ventura county, and
after transacting the business in
hand, set out for a good time, and
he had it, too.
“Returning to Los Angeles, he
read a Riverside dispatch to the
Los Angeles papers to the effect
that fears were entertained that he
had met with foul play, as the pa
per of the 13th had not made its
pearance, and the etitor had not
been heard of in two weeks. That
brought us home in a hurry.
“The only foul play that we met
with, outside of a baseball game,
was the failure of the printer to
oome down and get out our paper
during our absence.
“When we discovered that the
paper hadn’t been issued, we imme
diately returned and took up our
work where we left off, and that’s
why, gentle reader, the last issue
you received bore two date?—one
sheet that of September 13, and the
other that of September 27. The
issue of the 20th? We were obliged
to out that out.”
Free medical advice. Men and
women suffering from chronic dis
eases are invited to consult Dr.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y./by letter, ab
solutely without fee or charge. For
more than thirty years as chief con
sulting physician of the Invalids’
Hoterand Surgical Institute of Buf
falo, N. Y., Dr. Pierce has devoted
himself to the treatment and cure of
chronic forms of disease. Assisted
by his staff of nearly a score of phy-
cians, each man a specialist, his sno-
cess has been phenomenal, ninety-
eight persons in every hundred
treated being absolutely and alto
gether cured. Women have espe
cially availed themselves of Dr.
Pierce’s offer of free consultation by
letter, thereby avoiding the unpleas
ant questionings, the obnoxious ex
aminations and odious local treat
ment considered neoeasary by some
practitioners. Over half a million
women have been treated by Dr.
Pierce and his sta^ for diseases pe
culiar to women,' with" unvarying
success. Write without, fear as with
out fee. Every letter is treated as
strictly private and sacredly confi
dential, and all. answers are sent in
plain envelopes, bearing no printing
upon them. Address Dr. R. V.
Pieype, World’s Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
How The Mine Was Named.
Up in the Black hills of South
Dakota is a mine with a peculiar
name. This is the way it came to
be christened, says Lippencott’s.
A prospector and his wife were
one day strolling over the hills on a
little excursion. In stepping from
one rook to another the man chano-
ed to dislodge a stone.. As he pick
ed up the chipped rpek to toss it
away his eye fell on a little thread
of yellow. It was gold.
When the mine had been staked
out and the claim filed at the land
office, the question of a name was
raised. Qis wife asked him to call
it after her.
The man smiled sweetly. “It is
just as you say; the mine shall be
named in your honor.”
And from that day to this one of
the richest gold mines in the mid
dle west has gone by the endearing
name of “Holy Terror.”
Reports from Bogota are occa
sioning great anxiety to the friends
of the Panama canal. It appears
that the railroad lobby, which has
been working in Bogota in the in-
est of the transcontinental railways,
has persuaded the Uolombians that
they must amend the prenent treaty
and that will mean an entire renew
al of the old fight between the Pan
ama and Nicaraguan routes in the
United States senate. Senator Mor*.
gan is as convinced as ever that the
interests of the United States lie in
the construction of the canal by the
Nicaraguan rou'jte and will make a
vigorous fight if it is attempted to
accept an amended treaty.
—.—
When you want a physic that
is mild and gentle, easy to take
and certiiiu to act, always use
Chamberlain’s Stomach and' Liv
er Tablets. For sale by all drug
gists.
By Cipher.
Some young people of Norborne,
Mo., have invented a cipher system
fc r the purpose of communicating j
with one another, but it seems hot
ialways to work well. On Sunday,
says the California Dispatch, a
young man sent a note to a young
woman in that town requesting the
pleasure of calling on her. On one
corner of the envelope he placed the
letters “S. B. N.” An answer waB
received in due time, which bore the
letters “E. H. T. C. I. W.” When
he arrived at her home she asked
what <4 S. B. N.” meant. “It means
‘Sent by nigger,’ of course.” was his
reply. Then he asked what the let
ters on her note meant. “Why,
John,” she replied, “don’t you know
what those letters mean? They
stand for, ‘Excuse haBte, the coon
is waiting.’ ”
The Southern Cultivator
is the best Agricultural, m gazine
published in the South, and is is
sued twice a month.
We will furnish the Cultivator
and the Home Journal one year
for $1.75. cash in advance. Send
subscriptions to this office.
THE OLDEST WHfS^EY HOUSE
IN GEORGIA.
A German paper, the Frankish
Courier, in giving an account of the
wedding of Joseph Pfeifer tg Frau
Josepha Haushofer, says that about
260 persons sat down to dinner af
ter the ceremony.- The guests were
served with 6,600 pounds of meat,
260 puddings and 770 gallons of
beer. That is about 26 pounds of
meat, one pudding and two and a
haif gallons of beer per head—a
very fair allowance, sayB the London
Skqtoh, even for people with such
good appetites as the Germans*
The Jonesboror Enterprise tells of
one citizen of Clayton who raised
an Elberta peach weighihg 13£
ounces, and of another who brought
to town a 3-pound tomato. ,
WANTED-SEVERAL 1NDUBTRIOUS PER
SONS In each state to travel for house estab-
llsoed eleven years and witlta largo capital, to
call on merchants and agents for successful
and profitable lino. Permanent engagement.
Weekly cash salary of $18 and all traveling ex
penses and hotel Dills advanced in cash each
week. Experience not essential. Mention refer
ence and enolose self-addressed envelope. to30
THE NATIONAL, 334 Dearborn St., Chicago.
fS*;-
OM Sharpe Williams, guaranteed
eight years old; by the gallou, $3.U0;
four full quarts 553 50 express prepaid.
George J. Coleman Kye, guaranteed
fix years old; by the gallon $2.76, four
full quarts $3 00 express prepaid,
Auvll Rye, guaranteed four years old;
by the gallon $2.60, four full quarts $.75
express prepnid.
Clifford Rye, by the gallon $2.25,
four full quarts :s>2 50 express prepaid.
<>ld Kentucky Corn, guaranteed eight
years old; bv the gallon $3.00, four full
quarts $3.25 express prepaid.
. Old Pointer Club Corn, guaranteed
four yeurs old; by the gallon $2,60, 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
to fifty per cent, on your purchases.
Send for Price List and catalogue.
Mailed free upon application.
Altmayer & Ffatau Liquor Co.,
50&-608 610-512 FourthlStreet,
Macon, Georgia.
To
Kidney and
Bladder Diseases
No matter how long you have suffered, FOLEY’S KIDNEY
. CURE will help you. This we will GUARANTEE, k
It has cured many cases of Bright’s Disease and Diabetes that
had been thought incurable, however we do not claim that it will
cure these diseases in advanced stages as no medicine can make
new kidneys for you, but
will positively cure every case of kidney and bladder trouble if taken
in time, and even in the worst „ p .. „ - . ..
cases of Bright’s Disease and He C#uW H# ‘ S,raIgh,e " *
Diabetes it always gives com
fort and relief.
neys are affected
destruction never
Remember when the kid-
the work of
ceases, so
commence taking FOLEY’S
KIDNEY CURE at once and
avoid a fatal' malady.
FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE
is made from a prescription of
a specialist in kitjney diseases
and was used for years in pri
vate practice before it was
Thomgs Maple,.Birbeck, 111., writes: “I had a very bad
case of kidney trouble and my back pained me so I could
not straighten up. The doctor’s treatment did me no good.
Saw FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE advertised and took one
bottle Which cured me and I have not been affected since.
I gladly recommend this remedy.”
Three Physicians Treated Him Without Success
W. L. Yancy, of Paducah, Ky., writes: “I had a severe
case of kidney disease and three of the best physicians in
southern Kentucky treated me without success. I then took
FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. The first bottle gave imme
diate relief and three bottles cured me permanently. I
.gladly recommend this wonderful remedy.”.
Suffered Twenty-Five Years
Seymour Webb, of Moira, N. Y., writes: “I had been
troubled with my kidneys for twenty-five years and had
tried several physicians but received no relief until I bought
a bottle of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. After using two
bottles I was absolutely cured. I earnestly recommend
FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE.”
TWO SIZES 50c and $1.00
138
put on the market. <
SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BV
For sale by R. L. CATEJfc, Perry, Gar; J. O. MANN, Elko, ana F. F. WALKER; Bonaire.