The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, August 27, 1903, Image 1

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JOHN H. HODGES, Propr. DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROCRESS AND CULTURE. #1.00 a Year ia Advance. VOL. XXXIII. PERRY, HOUSTOX COUNTY, (i.V.. TIIURSPAY, AUGUST 27, 1903, NO. 35. CL ®. Ill InMemoriam. Ill MACOM, GA. B y a liberal policy and honorable methods I have built up the largest Cotton Commission business in Macon, Georgia. The Growth of Corporations. Ship rate your Cotton and get the best returns. O. 13. wiXiLii^rca-ia:^^ -A.rL3roia.e l^TescLir^g' COFFINS. CASKETS, BURIAL j at correct prices, call on or write to 3\ "W\ Piop’i, ANTHOINE MACHINE WORKS, FORT VALLE’S. GEORGIA. MACHINERY MADE OR REPAIRED. > ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER AT PROPER PRICES. Agt. -DEALER IN- Tinware, Woodenware, Farming Implements, Etc. 362 Third St. (ISTear Cherr Street) MACON, GA Written for The Home Journal. Tuesday morning, August 11th, 1908, the white winged angel again visited the home of Mr. M. W. Perdue of Maoon, and olaiin- ed for his own Mrs. Perdue.. Oh who can know the great sorrow that Mr. Perdue has in hiB heart? A little over two months ago his daughter, Lula, was laid to rest in her narrow bed; of day; now her mother is sleeping dose be side her. Mrs. Perdue was about 60 years of age; she has been ju bad health for several years; for the past Bix months she has suffered unknown pain from a cancer. None but God can ever know what that dear body suffered. All that medical skill, loving hands, and kind friends, could do was done, yet it availed nothing. It is so sad to give up those we love,, and we are often tempted to think the dealing of Providence so /hard, and we can never.see the justice in it until the mist has rolled away. She was a member of the Methodist ohuroh, and is surviv ed by a loving husband, two sons and four daughters, and oth er near relatives who loved her dearly. Besides many friends who will miss her smiling face when they visit that home. She had lived in Houston county most of her life, and was brought back and buried in the family cemetery near Bonaire. Dear husband and children, dry your weeping eyes, hold up your droop ing heads, and with David of old remember that she can not come back to you, but you can go to he?. Thank God for the doctrine of immortality that assures us that we can meet our loved ones beyond the river. Farewell, dear aunt, God haB oailed thee home, And left thy weeping friends on earth to mourn; We trust, ere long, on Oanan’s happy shore, To jneet thee there, with thee to part 'no more.” P. P. Bonaire, Ga. Georgia Fruits fo-i European Mar kets. Atlanta Constitution The formation of a corporation ’ is not always a sure sigu that a 1 new trust is being bred and nurs ed. Corporations have existed for concerted business purposes, public, private and commercial, for centuries untold. Tlieir enor mous development in numbers and magnitude is due to the in creasing complexity of world civ ilization and oommeroe. One.reason for their great mul tiplication in this country in re cent years is the expansion of bus iness operations which oarry the affairs of enterprises into any number or all of the states and territories of the nation. Eaoh gio- for the purpose of raising veg- of _ these political divisions have l etables. The land has now a<?tu laws peculiar to themselves gov-1 a ^y been bought an d * b 19 ^hld erning oommeroe, estates, “ ~~ dations, eto. Iu former U uu CO , , , . ^ . . merchants from everywhere in the | b ave b 0011 S0 l® ob ®4 ”7 w 9 r )d “I am short one Norwegian girl, hair light, eyes blue, destfn ed Horton, Mont.” This is the message sent by the St. Paul agent of the Northern Pacific Ex press Compapy to the agent al Chicago, because he had a bill of To rid ourselves of Second-Hand Buggies, Wagons, Hw-IKSMelMelkl woman ness and Harvesting Machines, and to do this we are going express package, had traveledas to sell our entiae stock, consisting of abou- 100 jobs, atkp?* ccl .ft®**" »»«!® | Tlio Peach Grower. Sir frhomas Lipton, tea mer chant and prinde of sports, has now joined the ranks of the Geor gia truok farmers. He has pur-, chased an immense tract of land near Brunswick and proposes to raise fruit and vegetables for the London market. The scope of Jiis operations will be very ex tended, including a line of cold storage steamers to carry his pro duce from Georgia ports to the markets of England. For more than a year there haB been a report that Sir Thomas in tended to purchase land in Geor- oountry went to Baltimore, Phil adelphia, New York and Boston to purchase stocks of goods, or ordered them from those whole sale and jobbing oenters. The laws of the place of contraob oov ered their transactions and part nerships could do business then throughout the nation with little fear of far-off and variable law 9 - Now the method of doing busi ness has changed radically. Com mercial travelers cover the land as the frogs oovered Egypt and are twice lively in their quests for customers and trade. The result of the new methods of business is the multiplying of corporations after the principle which inheres in monarchies, “where the king never dies.” So corporation is better than a traveller as the best place for a truck farm on an extended is a testimonial that cannot to attract much attention to resources of this section. Sir Thomas Lipton has looked the world over and calmly decided that Georgia has the best place for suoh an industry. He is a man not likely to be mistaken. He is a keen, sagacious business man going into, for v him, a new field of operation, and he must certainly have spent much time in selecting the ! place for his farm. It will be only a matter of time now before a M. P. can have Georgia peaches on his table. The establishment of the line o* cold storage steamers opens an entire new market for perishable partnership. The stockholder inproduce. i n England' is the former, though he may own a majority of the stock,, may die, rare and very high-priced. It was several yeurs ago that a Calif orn- but the corporation does not|i an 80 “ fc Queen Victoria a large thereby necessarily die or go into quantity of the fruit of that liquidation in order that his es- 8bat0 - | The queen very much ap- tate maybe settled. His stock predated the compliment.and ex represents his interest and is an P res80 d the_hope that the time asset of his estate that can be would some day come when eacn dealt with so as not to disturb 0110 of her subjects might enjoy for a moment the general opera- 8 h°^ / ruib * The que^n did uot tions of the business. | » It is because of the safety and I Edwrrd, it^appears, iyill. endurance thus inherent in cor- 9 nl y of California pro- porations that has caused their duoo it will be Georgia fruits and present popularity. This will in- vegetables. crease in the years to come andj a non-union union of working- 1 enne, Wyoming. Its .purpose is to protect its members against require that legislators and courts shall take greater pains to adjust the laws of state and nation to the control »d4 right regulationuuion“mTn TndHL..... of such bod.ee. loteretate com-1 £f them the righ “to wort whVre ’ they please unmolested. Any working-man is eligible to mem- ■'M iH i m Prices That rise as far &%, Chicago, and she had been lost ou^ the rebilling. The girl was‘found,- however, she hav ing left the car Unobserved, atad returned of her own accord. Some of these jobs are nearly new, sOiQe have been run some time but have good wear in them, others have seen better days, but we will give you our candid opinion on “The only thing that walks back from the tomb with the mourners and refuses to be buried is charac ter.” This is true. What a man of such bodies. Interstate com inerce already has demanded na tional control of them where state laws are impotent to reaoh and regulate their operations. Out of their logical expansion have come the trusts and with the trusts has come the duty to pro tect the people from too much power and too much independence by these giant monopolies. each class and you may know just what you are buying and U^ive^him m jdK> lEZIndJ T77"lll Sell "STcoo. -A.EL3T "2T©-cl XDesire -£J: a, Baigaiiia buried. It stays about the home when his footsteps are heard, no ** It lives in the community he was known; hence we should take care to build into our character only beautiful things. Come to see us when in need of anything in our line and We are headquarters for / Dysentery Cured Wlthout tlie Aid of a Doctor. save money. ZKa-rvestin-g: T^&cli5.n.es, O-stsolixie and ■XTTin-d. O^Eills. “lam just up' from a hard spelT of the flux’\ (dysentery) .says Mr .’IT. Pinner, a well known merchant Of-Drummond', Teiin. “I Asedbne smalii^ottlebf Cham berlain’s Colic,' Cholera And Diar rhoea - Remedy and was cuted without having a doctor. I con sider it is the best cholera medi cine in the.-world.,There is no need of employing a doctor when this remedy is used, iai ho doctor can prescribe a better medicine for bowel complaint in any form either for children or adults. It iever fails and is pleasant th take. Tor sale by all druggists. ‘ * be- ln There is a telephone line tween London and Paris, times of storm it is sometimes impossible to get an intelligible word in English over the line, but when the conversation is in French the transmission is said to be highly satisfactory, in spite of the storm. The difference is said to. lie in the fact that the French language has not so many sibilant sounds and unequally ac cented syllables as the English. bership, the only requisite being that he shall not be a member, of auy union. The new organiza tion has no wage schedule, - nor other rules as between employers and employes. The Cheyenne organization started with a mem bership of 250. It is proposed to make the movement national in scope. 38 ■fM -Exchange., The Death Penalty., A little thing sometimes results in death. Thus a mere scratch, insignificant cuts or puny, boils have paid the death penalty*. It is wise to have Bucklen’s Arnica Salve ever handy. It’s the best salve on earth and will prevent fatality when burns, sores, ulcers and piles threaten. Only 26c at' Holtzclaw’s Drugstore. WM fm m Mrs. Mollie Allen, of Fork, Ky., says she has prevent A Wisconsin man swaif6wed a bouth | bobbin from his wife’s sewing , . t • u i - event- machine, and the lopal paper ,> ed attacks of cholera morbus by. ^ tha t SB, tiine his lifa . taking Chamberlain’s Stomaoh • , on „ thread.-Hawkinsville Dis- and Liver Tablets when she felt L„f 0 h an d News an attack coming on. Such at tacks are usually caused by indi gestion and theSe Tablets is just what is needed to cleanse the stomach and ward off the ap proaching attack. Attacks of bil ious colic may be prevented in the same way. For sale by all druggists. CASTORIA ,Cv* For Infants and Children. '