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The Macon Telegraph.
Published every day and Sunday,
and Twice-a-Week, by The Ma'ion
Telegraph Publishing Co.
Subscription Daily and Sunday,
$7.00 per annum. Daily exqept
Sunday, $5.00 per annum Twice-
a-Week, $1.00 per annum.
Best advertising medium *n the
city Rates furnished on appli
cation.
Hotel Arcadia,
NEXtf DOOR tO.
ACADEMY OF MUSIC,
663 MULBEBEY ST.' MACON, GEORGIA.
Rates, $2.00 Per Day.
A HOME-LIKE HOTEL
Special attention given to
Transient Trade.
ft. J). SP’ftftKS, ftg<t.
Subscribe...
FOR
The
hristian Union Herald,
a strong, religions, seven-column paper,
devoted to the moral and material ad
vancement of the oolored rnoe, with an
extensive circulation.
Published Weekly at Savannah, Ga.
Subscription $1.00 Per icur.
REV. W. A. DINKINS, Editor,
P. E. Fort Vnlley District.
I have had occasion to use your
Black-Draught Stock and Poultry Medi.
cine and am pleased to say that I never
used anything for stock that gave half as
good satisfaction. I heartily recom*
mend It to all owners of stock.
J. B. BELSHER, St. Louis. Mo.
Sick stook or poultry should not
eat cheap stook food any more than
sick persons should expect to be
oared by food. When your stook
and poultry are sick give them med
icine. Don’t stuff them with worth
less stock foods. Unload the bowelB
and stir up the torpid liver and the
animal will be cured, if it be possi
ble to cure it. Black-Draught Stock
and Poultry Medicine unloads the
bowels and stirs up the torpid liver.
It cures every malady of stock i£
taken in' time. Secure a 25-cent can
of Blaok-Draijght Stock and Poultry
Medioine and it will pay for itself ten
times over. Horses work better. Cows
give more milk. Hogs gain flesh.
And hens lay more eggs. It solves the
S roblem of making as much blood.
esh and energy as possible out of
the smallest amount of food con
sumed. Buy a can from your dealer.
We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign
fSend model, sketch or photo of invc-rtion lor
f free report on patentability. For free book
Opposite U, S. Patent Office <
WASHlNGTbN D. C.
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Trade Marks
Designs
... - Copyrights &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain cur opinion free whether an
invention Is probably patentable. Communica
tions strlctiy conildentlal. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for see—
— Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents token through Munn ft Co. receive
U4, without charge, In the
tptcial ftottcs.
ft handsomely illustrated weekly. largest clr-
»SSKi&
ALL OVER THE . HOUSE.
The Beauty and Lasting Qualities of
Inlaid Linoleums.
Inlaid linoleums are to other lino
leums what Persian rugs are to ordi
nary worste'd carpets, the patterns
infinitely more beautiful, their last
ing qualities five times as great.
The materials used in thc^omposi-
tion are the same as in other lino
leums, finely ground cork mixed
with oxidized oil and subjected to
enormous pressure.
But instead of the patterns being
printed on the surface they are sol
idly pieced in and go right through
to the back. You can wash and you
can scrub it, scrape your boots over
it day in, day out, or lay it out in a
blistering sun, and the pattern will
not, for it cannot, come off; ©either
can it fade.
This makes it particularly desir
able for public places where there
are heavy travel and frequent clean
ing.
The manner of making them per
mits the reproduction of patterns
resembling parquetry flooring, china
tiling, mosaic wopIc, oriental rugs,
brussels carpet, practically any kind
of a design that taste dictates, for
the material absorbs and retains the
most delicate colors as perfectly as
wool does.
Fruit Rolls.
Stir one tablespoonful each of
butter and sugar and one teaspoon
ful of salt into one pint of scalded
milk. When lukewarm add one-half
yeast cake dissolved in one-fourth
of a cup of wator and three cups of
flour or enough to make a drop bat
ter. Let it rise until light, then stir in
one-half cup of butter creamed with
one-half cup of sugar and enough
more flour to make a stiff dough.
Knead until smooth and when light
roll it out thin and cut into squares
about four inches. Lay on the cen
ter of the dough half a peach, well
drained,, or four or five stewed
prunes or any preferred fruit which
has been stewed and sweetened.
Bring the corners up to the center
and press them together lightly,
leaving spaces where the fruit shows.
Lay them close together and when
risen again till light bake in a quick
oven. This recipe is equally good
for winter when canned fruit is used.
I
fcrvuvr
Stained Glass In the Home.
Among materials used in interior
decoration stained glass and its sub
stitutes have been quietly but sure
ly finding a foothold in professional
and popular taste, says the Wall
paper News. Stained glass is usual
ly linked in the mind with churches,
and an imitation of stained glass
somehow leads up to the idea of ho
tel barrooms. Nothing is more er
roneous. Today stained glass and
its substitutes arc being used with
excellent results in the decoration
of houses. The effect of the light
shining through it is something that
can ho gained in no other way, and
for windows, door panels, transoms,
interior partitions, fire screens,
lamps and a dozen other ways it is
used to great advantage.
Household Hints.
The tone of a piano* is much im
proved when the instrument is
moved away from the wall of a
room.
Some people say there is nothing
so good for restoring silk as strong
black tea. The silk is sponged with
the tea, then pressed.
The best way to clean doormats is
to turn them upside down and give
them a vigorous stamping with the
feet. This frees the dust better
than shaking the mat.
To disinfect and deodorize a sink
mix a little charcoal with water and
put this in the sink.
^Tea should be kept in either a
tin or glass vessel which has a lid,
as it is necessary to keep it tightly
covered.
He .Learned a Great TTiiili.
It is said of John Wesley that
he once said to Mistress Wesley:
“W T hy do you tell thait child the
same thing over and over again?”
“John Wesley, because once tell
ing is not enough.” It is for this
same reason that you are told
again and again that Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy cures colds
and grip; that it counteracts any
tendency of these diseases to re
sult in pneumonia, and that it is
pleasant and safe to take. For
sale by all druggists.
On the Siberian Railway.
Think of the snap the railroad
lunch counter privileges would be at
Irkutsk, Jakutsk and the other Si
berian points. Even on the dining
cars ice cream could be served the
year around without the use of re
frigerators, especially through Si
beria. Simply by ^topping the train
occasionally to milk a musk ox
one could obtain all the ready fla
vored ice cream necessary to human
happiness. And then it would be
so pleasant to hear the brakeman
sing out: "Bering, Bering 1 Change
cars for the north pole, Pearysville,
Walrus Beach, Nansen’s Ford, Mel
ville island and all points north.”—
Baltimore American.
Lions In a Balloon.
Probably the most remarkable
balloon ascent ever made, took place
at Roubaix recently. The author of
this singular exploit was a Captain
Henri, a menagerie proprietor, who
went up in a cage boat attached to
a balloon, with two lions in the cage
with him and two aeronauts, MM.
Wellet and Duchateau, on the top
of the cage. The ascent took place
at 5 p. in., and the balloon rose
splendidly in presence of a great
crowd, taking a course toward the
Belgian frontier, descending with
out accident at Etaimbourg at 6:30.
Afraid of Hla Teeth.
Charley Adams, a Carthage (Mo.)
colored man, having had the last
of his teeth extracted, ,h|ts con
cluded to get him a set of ftttse ones.
It makes his gums chatter to think
of it,, though. "I dreads to use dem
false teeth,” he has confided to a
friend. "I’ze afraid I’ll git some
dead man’s teef in my head, and den
his ghost ’ll ha’nt me. I alius heerd
false teeth wa’ ha’nted, and I ain’t
a-goin’ to sleep in de room wid ’em.
When I goes to bed I’ll jis’ drown
’em in water and sit ’em in some
oder room.”
YOB TBmtY
Prices Reduced 20 Per 'Cent
on our present stock of Pianos and Orgaiis, to make room for fall
stock. Some fifty new Pianos of the very best makes. Also a num
ber of Upright Pianos, slightly used, from $100 to $200. Automobile
Tickets given away with every purchase.
Have secured the services of Prof. Snyder of New York, an artistic
Piano Tuner of national reputation, and with our Mr. W. M. Adams
who has been with us the past year or more, can put your Pianos in
first-class order on short notice. All work guaranteed.
Gall and secure one of these Great Bargains in Pianos.
F. GUTTENBERGER & CO..
_ 462 Second Street.
MftOON, GEOltGIA.
11. C. BAUt&fc
| Agt.
-DEALER IN-
Hardware, Stoves, Cutlery, Guns, Pistols
Tinware, Woodenware,
Farming Implements. Etc.
362 Third St. (Near Cherry Street) MACON, UA
J. T STEWARDS PRICE LIST.
ExPESSAGE PREPAID ON
4 quarts Old Harvest Corn 1
4quarts Horse Shoe Rye.
1 gal Jug *• “ “
4quarts Jeff Clarke Rye
T gal Jug “ “
4 quarts Anchor Gin 3 o«
1 gal Jug “ “ 276
1 “ “ New Eugluml Uum.No 1 3 0u
1 “ “ old Harvest Corn 2 76
Express prexaid on two Gallons or more $2 Goods to same address.
4 quarts Lewis “66” Rye
" Yellowstone Rye
Dunn.s Monogram Rye
Mur.iay Hill Rye
Wilson Rye
Paul Jones Rye
Woodford county Rye
Rose Valley liyo
1 gal Jug “ “ “
4 quarts Mill Creek cabinet Rye
lgal jug “ “ “
$5.00
6.00
5.00
6.00
4.00'
4.00
4 00
4 0(1
3 75
4 00
300
$3 00
3 00
2 75
3 00
2 75
1 gal Jug 100 Proof N C Corn $2 00
1 gal Jug 00 Proof N O Corn 175
1 gal Jug Old V A Brown Rye No 1 2 00
1 gal Jug Old V A Brown liyo Xo 2, $1 75
1 gal Jug New England Bum No 2 2 no
1 gal Jug Holland Gin 2 00
Satisfaction in Every way, or Money Refnnded.
J. T, STEWART, 416 Poplar Street, Macou, Ga.
Q>w Wopfe fa b imi
FOLEY’S
KIDNEY CURE
Guaranteed for All Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Is Safe and Sura
Subscribe for the Home Journal
FOLEY S KIDNEY CURE
cures the most obstinate cases of
“kidney and bladder diseases.
It supplies the kidneys with the
substances they need to build up
the worn out tissues.
It will cure Bright’s Disease and
Diabetes if taken in time, and a
slight disorder yields readily to the
wonderful curative power of this
great medicine.
It sooths and heals the urinary
organs and invigorates the whole
system. If your kidneys are de
ranged, commence by taking
FOLEY'S
KIDNEY CURE
at once. It will make you well.
A Physician Healed, Now Prescribes It Daily
Dr. Geo. Ewing, a practicing physician at Smith’s
Grove, Ky., for over thirty years, writes his personal
experience with FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE: “For years
I have been greatly bothered with kidney and bladder
trouble and enlarged prostate gland. I used everything
known to the profession without relief, until I commenced
to use FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. After taking three bot
tles I was entirely relieved and cured. I prescribe it now
daily in my practice and heartily recommend its use to all
physicians for such troubles, for I can honestly state I have
prescribed it in hundreds of cases with perfect success.”
Had to Get Up Several Times Every Night
Mr. F. Arnold, Arnold, la., writes: «I was troubled
with kidney disease about three years. I was nervous
and all run down, and had to get up several times during
the night, but three bottles of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE
effected a complete cure. I feel better than I ever did
•nd recommend it to my friends.” t
TWO SIZES 50e and $1.00
For sale by R. L. CATER, Perry, Ga ; J .O. MANN, Elko, an- F. F. WALKER, Bonaire.