Newspaper Page Text
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30 YEARS IN THEMUSID BUSINESS
The 014 Kell able Irvine's Georgia
Music House, Macon, Wa.
Knows what a good biano ie.for we have
been pleasing the people for THIRTY
YBA.RS—a pretty good record. We will
sell you an Upright Piano, full size 7}£
octaves. Beautiful Mahogany Finish,
with book and stool free, 0*1 Oiy
direct from factory, for
Beautiful Organ, waluut cnee. inwroved
Heed Cells, which are almost £Qiy lift
mouse proof, direct from factory V® I •(!"
liu wave urnni(;uu wsm vnu 'irum buiuiuu
Phonograph Company to coll tholr Kamo
•rAi.lvfim MACHINICS, and have madoadt
which will enable ns to noil a Most Exoelle
Wo have arranged with the Oroat Columbus
‘ to soil tholr Famous
deal
(lent
Machine for ONLY $3.50, This has novor
been dlfhe before to Any House In the South,
'i lils Machine, though sold at a low price. Is
oloar and powerin'. It Bings, Plays and Talks
with almost tlio Power nml Perfection of tho
$33.00 machines.
An endless amount of amusomont and pleas
ure can Be altonled tho purohasor of otio of
thoos Talking Machines at a Willing ouBt—
think of It. World's of Songs, hand Pieces
and t’omlo Bjioeohcij can bo played on this Won
derful machine.
Th* Popular DOMESTIC Sewing Maehine.
Wo aro closing up onr Maolilns Department,
and offer our stock of Famous Domestic imp
chinos at less than wholesale prloosMWB.OO ma-
i ohines at ^BABO ( $85.00 niahhlnos at $26.00, Oto.
Will give you until ootton comes in to pay.
SHIOKT MUBI0 sold: at .Half-Prlco. Our im-
nmiiHo stock for only B cents per piooo. Man
dolins, Guitars, Violins, DrumB.oto. Mandolins
from $2.00 up: Guitars from $2.60 up. Solo
agency for tho World-Famous Steinway, Knabe.
chlckurlug and Fischer Pianos. Knsv terms of
payment*. Call on or addtoBH—
Irviiio’H Music House,
304 Third SI.. Macon, Oil.
Grasp of Grip Pros*
trated Me.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine
Built Up My
Shattered Nerves and
Gave Me an Appetite.
Of the millions of people, who today suffer
front nervous or heart weakness, a large per
centage trace the cause directly to deadly
LnGrTppe, It Is a germ disease, and makes
a diiect attack upon the nerves, putting an
extra strain upon them at the time their vital-
I ty is at the lowest ebb. If l.uGrippe has
eft you w th a shattered nervous system, with
loss of appetite. Jack of ehergy, ins- main,
frequent headaches and morbid tendencies,
you should strengthen the weakened nerves
with Dr. Miles’ JNervine. It will undo all
that grip hns done, bring back appetite, rest
and restore the nerves to their normal activity.
“I want to write this testimonial for the
benefit of those who have Suffered from that
dreaded disease—LaGrlppe. I suffered sev
eral weeks with it, and nothing I tried seemed
to benefit, me in any way, shape or form (I
suffered almost death) and fina ly my
daughter recommended Dr. Miles’ Nervine
to me and I can truthfully say from the first
dny I felt better than in weeks. It gave me
relief, built up riiy shattered nerves and gave
me a splendid appetite. I cannot speak too,
highly of it and want to sky, each and every
one who has suffered from LaGrlppe will
find instant relief by getting a bpttle of Dr.
Miles’ Nervine. Insist on having it and take
no other. It is simply splendid. Hoping
this will benefitsomepoor sufferer I remain,
—Mrs. George B. Hall, Jackson, Tenn.
All druggists sell and guarantee first bot
tle Dr. Miles’ Remedies, send for free book
on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
OF ATLANTA, GA,,
13 a twico-a-weok NEWS paper, published on
Monday and Thursday of each week, with all
tho latest news of tho world, whloh oomes over
their leased wires direct to their office, lean
eight-page seven-ooluran paper.
By arrangements we have secured a special
rate with them in oonneotlon with
GUM PAPER.
Peril Of The Idle Rich.
Savannah News,
A week ago Orlando P Dexter, a
wealthy New Yorker, wsb assassinat
ed near his home in th j Adirondacks
He was shot from behind as he was
driving along in the road ia a bug
gy. Since that time there has been
discovered nothing to indicate who
the murderer was, notwithstanding
extraordiny efforts to clear the mys
tery have been made. Henry Dex
ter, the aged millionaire, father of
the murdered man, draws an unusual
lesson from the crime. It is that
the idle rich are hot safe in this
country; that there is a strong class
hatred against them, and that their
danger is continually increasing.
“They have killed my Bon,” he said,
‘'because the ignorant natives regard
the) newcomers of wealth who have
bought up the lands as interlopers
an<d tyrants, as men who are malig
nantly arrayed against the guide
and woodsmen."
Respect for property rights must
be insisted upon, or the fabric of so
ciety totters and falls. But is it to
be greatly wondered at that there is
a strong feeling against some of the
very wealthy, such as Mr. Dexter
notes? In the Adirondacks, on Long
Island and elsewhere about New
York—in other seotions of the coun
try, too, for* that matter—men of
immense wealth have bought great
forests and fenced them off for their
own pleasure. One of the Rockefel
lers, for instance, has a preserve of
tens of thou,sands of, acres of virgin
forest around which he has built a
wire fehce, In this preserve no
stranger or unauthorized person
may set foot, under penalty of the
law. It is Mr. Rockefeller’s proper
ty, of course, and he has a right to
o with it as he pleases. But among
the woodsmen there is a strong feeb
ing that Mr. Rockefeller has no
moral right to deprive the people of
their forest privileges; that wild life
should be common property, and
that one man should not be permit
ted to monopolize so vast an area of
land, to the exclusion of all other
persons. Again, there are rich per
sons who bear themselves in so ar
rogant and inconsiderate a manner
that s tbey arouse the resentment or
hatred of those who are called the
plain people.
The correct ubg of wealth is a
great problem, which few wealthy
men sucoeed in solving. Oae phase
of the problem is touched on by Mr.
Dexter when he asserts that tho idle
rioh are in danger of their lives ev
ery day from those who imagine
they suffer a grievance at their
hands.
*■ •-*- i
The girdling or ringing of grape
vines is done to increase the size of
each cluster. It is not practiced ex
clusively, however, although some
find the method profitable. The
bark is entirely removed below the
fruit cluster about a month before
the period of ripening, which has
tens ripening about a week or two
in advance, and enlarges the bunch
and berries. The sap ascends
through the pores of the wood to
sustain growth, but the elaborated
sap descends through the wood and
the bark, and can go no lower than
the point at which the girdle is
made, where it stops and is utilized
in feeding the grapes. Some injury
is done the vine below the girdle,
and it may not pay, to girdle on an
extensub scale.—Ex.
and for
we will send
THE H0ME J0URDAE,
THE ATLANTA
■
and the
Southern Cultivator
ALL THREE ONE YEAR.
This is the best offer we haye ever made our
friends and subscribers. Yon had b otter take
advabtage of this offer at once, for The Journal
may withdraw their special rate to ua at any
time.
The Semi-Weekly has many prominent men
and women contributors to their coiuh.. e,
among them being. Rev. Sam Jones, Be .»
< iLewis, Hon. Harvie Jordan, Ho*- 2fig Tern-
yleGraves and Mrs. W. H.Felton, resides their
crops of efficient editor^, who take care of the
news matter. Their departments are well cov
<ired, Its columns of farm news are worth the
} the price of the paper.
Send direct to this office $2.00 and secure
the three above mentioned papers one year
Address
THE HOME JOURNAL,
' ' PERRY, GA.
Advertise in The Home Journal.
Ik: . ' '
•
Abdul Hamid, Sultan of Turkey,
has issued an edict against the wom
en of his country wearing “picture”
bats. Muchly married Turkish hus
bands, unless they are very wealthy
or extremely generous, will doubtless
hail the edict .with gladness. Possi
bly some American husbands would
not take it amiss if the Sultan’s rule,
in point of arbiter of feminine fash
ions, at least, were extended to this
country. ,
i . i
Saves Two From Death.
“Our little daughter had an al
most fatal attack of whooping
bough and bronchitis,” writes
Mrs. W. IC. Haviland, of Ar-
moDk N. Y., “but^ when all oth
er remedies failed, we saved her
life with Dr. King’s New Discov
ery. Our niece, who had Con
sumption in an advanced stage,
also used this wonderful medi
cine and today she is perfectly
well.” Desperate throat and lung
diseases yield to Dr. King’s New
Discovery as to no other medi
cine on earth. Infallible for
Coughs and Colds. 60s and $1.00
bottles guaranteed. Trial bottles
free at Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
HE IGNORED THE TACTICS. '
A London daily had a comical ac
count the other day of the adven
tures of I battery of artillery that
was exercising in the neighborhood
of Salisbury plain. The gallant of
ficer in command, evidently bent on
playing the game thoroughly, or
dered his battery into a field of
standing corn, whereupon tne irate
farmer appeared on the scene and
ordered them off. The C. 0. direct
ed his men to arrest the farmer,
who promptly seized a pitchfork
and defied them. There being noth
ing about pitchforks in the books,
the gunners were hopelessly bewil
dered by these tactics, and the farm
er, seeing his advantage, fell upon
them and literally drove them out
of the field. Following this up, he
charged the commanding officer,
who, after hesitating for a moment,
ignominiously turned and fled. It
is said that there is to be an in
quiry into this “regrettable inci
dent.” It looks as if this Wiltshire
“boor” had been studying “the les
sons of the war” to some purpose,
but I am afraid the story is too good
to be true.—London Truth.
Utensil la of Quartz.
A German technical factory, which
has been making expensive experi
ments with high temperatures, has
produced utensils made of molten
quartz. After the melting was done
the manufacture of bottles, glasses
and other articles was not much dif
ferent in method from that used for
making glass articles. The objects
made from molten quartz are flash
ing and clear, with the effect of dia
monds. They are not brittle as
glass and have the further advan
tage of not being affected easily by
heat or cold. Glass articles, as ev
erybody knows from sad experience,
will crack if hot liquids are poured
into them when they are cold or vice
versa. Quartz articles, however, can
be heated to a cherry red, and then
ice cold water can he squirted on
them without affecting them in the
least. This is due to the fact that
quartz neither expands nor shrinks
much under changes of temperature.
Sensitive Mrs. Pat Campbell.
It is related that one evening last
winter at a dinner given in honor of
Mrs. Pat Campbell in New York the
English actress remarked loftily:
“They wanted me to play Tess of
the D’Urbervilles in England, but. I
thought it a vulgar character, and
I can’t be gross, you know.” This
from the woman whose whole fame
rested oil her impersonations of wo
men with malodorous pasts or no
torious presents was astounding to
all present, each one of whom had
said something in extenuation of
the sins of poor Tess and in admira
tion of Hardy’s masterpiece as a
dramatic character drawing. For a
moment there was an embarrassed
silence, and then Miss Warren, who
is to star in the play this season,
spoke up innocently: “It is dreadful
to be so sensitive. I expect, Mrs.
Campbell, you find it hard even to
accept your share of the gross re
ceipts.'”
Postage Stamp Paper. ,
“Crisp new bank notes” may
cease to be a descriptive term if
the government avails itself of re
cent discoveries by which paper can
be made soft, velvety and unshrink
able. In the making of postage
stamps, too, the discovery may work
a considerable change. It is said
that because of the shrinkage of the
paper now used after receiving the
printing on one side and the muci
lage on the other and because no two
sheets shrink alike one-fifth are
ruined in the perforation.
No Delay.
Tess—He wasn’t in our parlor
more than ten minutes last night be
fore he announced that he was go
ing to kiss me.
Jess—The idea! Yon should have
had a hatpin to stick him with.
Tess—Oh, he didn’t need to be
spurred on.—Philadelphia Press.
He JLearned a IGreat Truth.
It is said of John Wesley that
he once said to Mistress Wesley:
“Why do yon tell that child the
same thing over and over again?”
“John Wesley, because once tell
ing is riot enough.” It is for this
same reason that you* are told
again and again that Chamber
lain’s Coqgh 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.
FREE TRIP* TO MACON.
The Business Men’s League of Macon will pay your Rail*
road Fare and give specially Low Price on all Purchases.
On arrival inMacom look for Cards in Windows.
Any further information will be furnished by
EUGENE ANDERSON, Secretary, MACON, GA.
ADAMS & JOHNSTON,
Macon, Q-eoxgldi*-.
On October 1st we will move from our present stand on
Second Street to Poplar Street, next door to B. T. Adams
& Co’s., warehouse.
In our new stand we shall carry a larger stock than
we now carry, and will be able to give our friends the low
est prices on
STAPLE GROCERIES, FARM SUPPLIES,
BAGGING AND TIES, STOCK FEED, ETC.
Call to see us and get best results for your money.
New Buggies,
New Wagons,
New Harness.
/
New Store,
Everything New.
DPrxces invade to Soli to ■STo'cl.
The Big Store,
350 & 352 Third St.
Shinholser & Co. m ga n ’
Just Arrived.
Twenty-five different styles
and leathers in our famous
Mak-on $3.50
Also fp.ll line of oar Dorothy Dodd
$3.00 Shoes for Ladies.
MAGON SHOE GO
408 THIRD ST.
MACON, GA.
Style and Gomfort...
Are combined in the Shoes we sell.
Any kind you want and the best of each kind.
Mr. J. Henry King
is with us, and will be glad to see and serve his friends in
Perry and Houston county*
Mail orders receive prompt attention.
Oul Shoes give satisfaction-. Try a pair.
•9
519 CHERRY ST„ MACON* CA.