Newspaper Page Text
*
I
Mrs. Laura. S. Webb*
Vice-President Woman’s Demo
cratic Clubs of Northern Ohio.
“I dreaded the change of life which
was fast approaching. I noticed Wine
of Cardui, 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 pain 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 thechange
of life. Do not wait but take Wine
of Cardui now and avoid the trou
ble. Wine of Cardui never fails
to benefit a suffering woman of
any age. Wine of Cardui relieved
Mrs. Webb when she was in dan
ger. When you come to the change
of life Mrs. Webb’s letter will
mean more to you than it does
now. But you may now avoid the
suffering she endured. Druggists
sell 81 bottles of Wine of Cardui.
MeaRDiJi
HOLIDAY EXCURSION RATES
Via Central of Ga. Railway.
During the Holidays excursion
tickets will be sold between all tick
et stations on the Central of Georgia
Railway at rate of a fare and a third
plus 25 cents for the round trip (no
whole ticket to be sold for less than
50 cents nor half ticket for Iobs than
25 cents.
Excursion tickets will also be on
sale from all stations on the Central
of Georgia Railway to points on
connecting lines south of the Ohio
and Potomao and east of the Missis
sippi fivers, as follows:
Tiokets will.be sold to the general
publio December 23, 24, 25, 30 and
31, 1903, and January 1, 1904, lim
ited to January 4, 1904 for return
passage. To teaohers and students
of schools and colleges, upon presen
tation and surrender of certificates,
December 16 to 22, 1903, inclusive;
final limit January 8, 1904.
For prompt and reliable service
see that your ticket reads via Cen
tral of Georgia Railway. Any agent
of the Company will cheerfully fur
nish additional information on re
quest.
Better Thau a Plaster-
A piece of flannel dampened
with Chamberlain’s Pain Balm
and bound on the affected parts
is better thau a plaster for a lame
back and for pains in the side or
chest. Pain Balm has no superior
as a liniment for the relief of
deep-seated muscular and rheu
matic paius. For sale by all drug
gists.
TO® TBimiY BAY!
Prices Keduced 20 Per Cent
on our present stock of Pianos and Organs, 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 seoured 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 Bhort notice. All work guaranteed.
Gall and secure one of these Great Bargains in PianoB.
F. GUTTENBERGER & CO.,
452 Second Street,
MACON, GEORGIA.
A Remarkable Bargain
A year's Subscription to PEARSON'S MAGAZINE . . ioo ) Both for
Your choice of any one of the following books originally issued at 1.50 f $1.25
Cyrus Townsend Brady
FOR LOVE OF COUNTRY
“An intensely patriotic tale," says the Outlook.
One of his best.
George W. Cable
JOHN MARCH. SOUTHERNER
A celebrated story of the South
Edward Eggleston
THE CIRCUIT RIDER
“Fresh and vivid portraiture,” says the Christian
j -Union
E. W. Hornung
THE ROGUE'S MARCH
“ A noteworthy addition to romantic literature.”
•—Chicago Tribune
BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD
THE GARDEN OF EDEN
“A fascinating; powerful novel.”—Boston Beacon
Richard Harding Davib
GALLEGHER AND OTHER
STORIES
“ Gallegher ” is the story that made the author
famous
Robert Louis' Stevenson
ST. IVES
His last and one of his finest novels
Thomas Nelson Page
PASTIME STORIES
“The old Virginia flavor could not be used to
finer effect”
Frank R. Stockton
THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN
HORN
“ His best work."—Boston Advertiser
FRANCES HopGBON BURNETT
THAT LASS O' LOWRIES
A novel of international reputation
Clara Morris
A PASTEBOARD CROWN
A vigorous and popular novel >of the New York
stage
Harrison Robertson
THE INLANDER
“ A novel of remarkable power."—
New York Herald
Arthur R. Ropes
ON PETER.’S ISLAND
An exciting Russian story
Molly Elliot Seawell
THE HOUSE OF EGREMbNT
“Romance filled with the two great qualities of
loyalty and love "
Octave thanet
THE HEART OF TOIL
“Not only good, but excellently told.”—
London Daily News
NOTE —The acceptance of this offer not only secures the publications and
books mentioned, but it also entitles you to the privilege of buying for one year books
at discount prices. As this plan includes practically the entire fiction product of every
American Publisher, the magnitude of the proposition is readily apparent.
A FEW WORDS XBOUT PEARSON'S MAGAZINE FOR 1904
Pearson’s Magazine appeals to every member of the family. In the words of
a subscriber, “ It is the easy-to-read Magazine. It is different from any other maga
zine, and by that quality, although less than five years old, has taken its place amongst
the very best ‘sellers. Its field is a .general one of wholesome entertainment and
instructiveness.
Following are four of the special features for 1904 :
TOM NAST, CARTOONIST
WALL STR-EET METHODS
OF “ FINANCE ”
By HEjWRy GEO'RGE. Jr.
A number of true accounts of some of the Wall
Street "deals” by which the savings of the many
have been sacrificed to satisfy the cravings of the
few. Read these articles and realize the wisdom
of the advice of the Late Governor Roswell P.
Flower to a party of his friends to “keep your
money in your pocket.”
MODERN INDIAN WARS
•By
CV'Rl/S TOWJSfSEJHD B“RADi?
A brilliant and thrilling history of the hostile
frontier of the past forty years, giving justice to
the public service of such men as Miles, Lawton,
Crook, Forsythe, Custer, Carrington,
McKenzie, Howard, Wheaton, Davis, Sully,
"By ALBEBT BIGELOW PAIJVE
Illustrated by the choicest of the world-famous
cartoons of the man who has been described as the
greatest molder 0/ public opinion ever known.
The biography of Nast is veritably a world’s pic
ture of the times when history was warm in the
making. - ■ .
Trie Overthrow of the Tweed Ring—
The Civil War Period—The Horrors
of Slavery—The Reconstruction Pe
riod—The Greeley Presidential Cam-
-The Garibaldi Campaign in
Heenan-Sayers
Fight in London—The Blaine Pres
idential Campaign
are a few of the important headings upon which
sr eight papers are buift.
f iaign—■_ _
taly — The Great
“'ight in London-
lential Campaign
a few of the 11
the series of six or
THE REVELATIONS OF AN
INTERNATIONAL SPY
Which ran in Pearson’s through the first six
months of 1903 will be resumed in January, 1904.
This new set of detective stories has been arranged
for in response to the demands of thousands of
readers w 1 -. ■ ..'.-retted the termination of the first
’ proper place in the history of our series •c Mother still stipulates that his name
nation. A series of six or eight articles, musi r ‘<111.11 :i s-rret.
Subscribers to this combination who wain more .mu; one book from above list
can add 49 cents for each book required.
Send your orders to
PEARSON PUB. CO.
2 to 20 Astor Pla.ce, N- Y. G,
Christmas In Bethlehem Of Judea.
Bethlehem* the home of Christ
mas, is that happy Utopia of
which every American child
dreams—it has more than oue
Christmas. In faot it has three
fig ones, and strangely enough,
the one falling on December 25th
of our own calendar is not the
greatest of the tffiree. It is, at
least, the first. Twelve days af
ter the Latin has burned his
Christmas incense iu the sacred
shrine, the Greek church’s pa
triarch, observing that it is
Christmas time by his slower cal
endar, oatohes up the gloria, aud
bows in the Grotto of the Nativity
for the devout iu Greece, the Bal
kan States and all the Eussias.
After a period of another twelve
days the great Armenian church
of the East takes up the anthem
of peace and good-will, and its pa
triarch visits the shrine.
All three of these big Christmas
observances, have some few thiugs
in oommon, at least oue—the red
fez-capped Mohammedan soldiery
of the sultan that stand with fix
ed bayonets as the back-ground to
briillant pictures. In this most
sacred of all Christmas shrines,
and especially on the natal day—
according to the different calen
dars—of him who taught the
brotherhood of mau, the Latin, as
le ohants the song of gcod-will,
must be protected from fanatical
Greek and Armenian; the Greek,
as be sings his gloria, must be
protected from fervid Armenian
and Latin; and the Armenian, as
he takes up the glad refrain, must
be protected from Greek and Lat
iu. All must be protected from
Copt and other Christian church
men, who, in their turn. must al
so be protected from the zealots
of the three big churches. This
duty falls on the followers of Mo 4
hammed. The presence of the
armed Turkish soldiers has pre
vented riots at the Christinas and
Easter festivals iu recent years.
The last great clash, thirty years
ago, resulted from a discussion
over some curtains. Tile result
of that bloodshed iu the holy of
holies, and the constant threaten
ing attitude of the different pro
tectors of the holy shrines, was
that the Sultan stationed a garri
son of troops at Bethlehem, and
connected the town with Jerusa
lem by a telegraph wire. Now, at
every hour„of the day and night,
two Mohammedan soldiers with
fixed bayonets stand sentry over
the birthplace of the Nazarene—
December Woman’s Home Com
panion.
The blue grass region of Ken
tucky is noted for its production
of fine horses, and the Depart
ment of Agriculture is endeavor
ing to find out to what extent the
soil of the region affects them.
Mr. May, of the Experiment Sta
tion there, says that the greatest
development of live stpok has
been attained in limestone re
gions, and that the soil of the
blue-grass country has been form
ed largely by the disintegration
of a limestone very rioh in phos
phates. This; he thinks, has ma
terially aided in the production
of thoroughbred horses, but be
believes that the quality of the
stock may be improved even over
what it now is by the addition of
certain material elements to the
food and is making experiments
to that end. ,
. -O'O'O- i
To improve the appetite and
strengthen the digestion, try a
few doses of Chamberlain’s Sum
ach and Liver Tablets. Mr. J. H.
Seitz of Detroit, Mich., says:
“They restored my appetite when
impaired, relieved me of a bloat
ed feeling and caused a pleasant
and satisfactory movement of the
bowels.” There are people in this
community who need just such a
medicine. For sale by all drug
gists. Every box warranted.
Several Chinese cities have
ereoted temples in honor of Li-
Hung-Chang. His tomb also has
the form of a temple. 1 Two of its
inscriptions are: “Ail countries
in this world mourn him,” and
“He changed heaven and revolu
tionized t iie earth.”
WANTIC"'-aiiViSHAL INDU8T”T’'tts PER.
SONS iu cacti state po travel fur i.-uoo estab-
llsoed eleven ye t tit and with a largo capital, to
call on merchants and agents for successful
and profitable line. Permanent engagement.
Weekly cash salary of §18 and all traveling ex
penses and hotel hills advanced In cash each
week. Experience not essential . Mention refer
ence and enclose self-addressed envelope. to30
; THE NATIONAL, 834 Dearborn gt., Chicago.
■ *3as® S=la,ca To B-U.3T
Staple Groceries, Stock Feed, Farm
Supplies, Bagging and Ties
is where the stock is complete, the goods of best quality
and the prices right.
MY STORE IS OF THAT KIND.
I invite the farmers of Houston county, and other readers
of the Home Journal, to give me a share
of their patronage.
GOODS GUARANTEED TO BE AS REPRESENTED
T P TV/TTPT? THTHP
s ills JYLJlXwXbl JL JL y
<151, 453 & 455 Third St.
MAGONY GA.
Hi.
Cor. Second and. ^Poplar Sl8. MAOONi G*A
MIDDLE GEOEGIA AGENCY FOR
AMERICAN FIELD AND HOG FENCE
I-iu—13- £
55 INCH.
mmm
i—IHHWHIB
Regular Style
Stays la in. or 6 in. apart
Special Hog, Horse and Cattle Style
Stays fa 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, hoga
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*
lieaith
For a Quarter!
People
'misery.
who have torpid liver find life a
All they need is a mild remedy like^
ON 5
iand Tonic Pellets. The phi stimulates the,
iliver to its proper work and the Pellets invig-<
Vorate the system. In short, they both assist i *
Nature, as a medicine shbulddo.
S& >t Complete Treatment
Only 25 cents.
SgOo.. st. lioute Oil
'Drawing-Room Vestibule Sleeping Cars
BETWEEN BIRMINGHAM. COLUMBUS, ATLANTA. MACON, AUOUSTA
AND SAVANNAH. OA„ AND BETWEEN ATLANTA AND ALBANY, OA.
Pullman Sleeping Cars
BETWEEN ST LOUIS. NASHVILLC, CHATTANOOGA. ATLANTA,
MACON. OA., AND JACKSONVILLE. FLA.
Parlor Cars on - Day Trains
Between ATLANTA. MACON AND SAVANNAH. OA.
w. a. wirumjiRN.lC,. o. c. mau-ee.s
■ VICE-FREE IOCNT AHS TRAFFIC MANAGER.|?gi QENERAL PASSENGER AGENT?
* p . 0. ROBINSON,
’assistant GENERAL passenger agent.