Newspaper Page Text
■The Home Journal.
PUB.LIstl EX? EVERY THURSDAY.
AUHSCKU'TION KATES.
.one Mix year. - One .Fifty’ dollar
Tnonthfl. cents
Three months. Twenty-five cents
Advcrtisipg rates on application.
All checks, drafts and other business letter
hould be addressed to
JA.S. II. BOYKIN Xiditor & Publisher.
Thursday, May 1, 1902.
Kntered in the postoJ^ice at LincQlnton, Ga„ a
t ccond claBB ipatter.
CrawfordviHe’s new court house is
about completed.
The fate of Cuban reciprocity
shows that some pills though sugar
coated are still hitter.
It is estimated that the war tax
repeal bill, .which goes into effect
duly 1, will reduce government rev¬
enues $70,000,000.
Two»thirds of the jobbing hard
ware concerns of the country have
united to control the trade, with a
.capitilizution of $120,000,000.
The power of the sliip subsidy bill
as ti vote repeller is so generally rec¬
ognized that the republicans are not
anxious for the passage until after
the Jail elections.
The late General Wade ILnnptpn,
of South Carolina, was the third inun
to bear the name, a}l the family be¬
ing daring soldiers, his grandfather
being a general in the revolution.
Henry Watterson says: “We have
never had a president who was as
good a president as he should have
been, or as he would have been, if' he
bad been ineligible to succeed him
self.”
Some of the most prominent gen*
■tlemen of the prize ring were to have
been invited to the Charleston Expo¬
sition to draw a greater crowd, hut
the goverpor vetped the proposition
in no uncertajn terms.
When oppressive taxes are abolish¬
ed the demand for dishonest goods
will cease, as the poor man can then
afford the best. Congress should
spend more time trying to make it
easy to get good food rather than
|iard to get bad food.
If President Palma’s idea!, that
the best way to attach one country to
another and insure the prosperity of
both is by reciprocal removal of tar*
riff barriers, were realized it would
rob trusts and ruin (?) the countries.
Monopolies are not generous.
Some have reduced cost of produc¬
tion, cost of carriage and cost to con¬
sumer, but they have also destroyed
the private business qf many who
.were making a good living, and have
paid enormous dividends andsajaries
t.o the Jew.
The selection of Judge Griggs, of
Georgia, tis chairman of the demo¬
cratic congressional committee is
another exampje of the bringing of
young blood to tiie front. Coming
to manhood after the civil war lie is
entirely devoid of sectional prejudice,
though an ardent southerner and a
staunch democrat.
Whooping Coujrl).
A woman who had experience
with this disease, tells how to pre
V.ept any dangerous consequences
from it. She says: Our three chil¬
dren took baby whopping cough last sum¬
mer, months our old, boy being only three
and owing to our giving
them Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy,
they lost none of their plumpness
and came out in much better health
than other children whose parents
did not use this remedy. Our oldest
little girl would call lustily for cough
syrup between whoops.—Jesse Pinkey
Hall, Springville, Ala This rents
edy is for sale by Price & Nash.
Wiiat’s Your Husband Worth?
The above question was suggested
to our mind last Monday at the El*
bextoai court house when we saw Ella
Raiford settle a damage suit against
the Seaboard Air Line Railroad for
killing her husband, Iliram Raiford,
in Atlanta about a year ago. The
bereaved widow wears the weeds of
mourning in complexion only, she
compromised with the company for
the sum of $150. Her brother-in
law, and next best friend, Davis
Bowman, colored, remarked after the
settlement; “Hiram was a mighty
trifling kind of feller, and never did
do Ella much good until now.” So,
like Samson of old, Hiram acconn
]dished more in death than in life.—
Eiberton Tribune.
The Hope of the South.
It is no use to hide the fact that
the hope of the South lies in the
white hoy who is determined to be
useful and is willing to work hard
that he may he, says the Tennessee
Mountain Herald. There are many
who ;,tre studying Latin and Greek
and fitting to be lawyers, doctors and
ministers, but there is no great de
manxl for them. There is a never
ending demand for young men who
cap do something and superintend
coni moil labor while this labor
does what active clear brains
plan and oversee. The diploma day has pass¬
ed when a man with a from
some small oollege can win his wav
carle blanche, ft has been found
that there is culture in gardening
as well as in Greek, in a lathe as well
as in literature, in the handling of SD
plow as well as in the handling of BD
Making it Pay,
What agriculture needs is not
more land, hut larger crops on the
lands we have. No farmer knows
the limits of possible productiveness
of his land, for no matter how heavy
the crops may have been, it is possi¬
ble to increase the yield a little, or a
little more. Average fanning does
not pay. The average farmer may
continue tp maintain the integrity 6f
soul and body bv smothering M
and working the other beyond
but this is not even niakiii?' f A
living. It is continuing to o'st, !
vj gh t adequajjjgM^' calculate tlie , cost 11 is of
enou to
returns from any given crop, and it
will he found in all cases that there
is no profit unless the yield of the
crops is above average. To have
larger crops, we must have better
farming. Better farming does not
mean more work, hut better work,
and better work means that the in*
tellect with all its acquired knowl¬
edge must be employed.—-Farm and
Ranch.
Talked Himself to Death.
One frequently hears of persons who
are capable of talking others to death
■—-meet them sometimes, in fact—but
it has remained for a Pennsylvania
town to produce himself a man death. who has ac*
tually talked to Some
months ago Isaac Getting, of that
state, lost his power of speech. He
could not utter a sound. Last week
he suddenly found himself in posses¬
sion of his voice, better than it ever
was before. He has overjoyed, and
insisted upon talking all the time.
He would talk incessantly to every¬
body who would listen, and when
nobody would listen, he would talk
to himself. He had been i 1 [ and was
weak and the excitement and
constant talking so sapped his
strength that after about five days of
talking he died.
liig Kent far a Gold Aline.
Hon. L. W. Latimer tells us th at
his gold mine, which a year ago he
sold to the company which lias been
operating it has been turned hack to
him. He made the company a deed
in escrow, to he made into a warran¬
tee deed after the lapse of one year,
if the purchasers so desired. But
the company has concluded not to
have the transaction completed, and
has consequently forfeited the twen¬
ty-five hundred dollars which it paid
to Mr. Latimer for I he mine. The
practical result has been that he re¬
ceived twenty-five hundred dollars
for one year’s rent of the mine, and
has gotten the property hack again.
He would have received eight thous*
and dollars i( the company had con¬
cluded to keep the mine.—Washing¬
ton Chronicle.
---- --
. (let a free sample of Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Diver Tablets at Price
& Nash. They are easier jo take
and more pleasant in elhvt. than
pills. Then there use is not follow¬
ed by constipation as is often the
case with pills. Regular size, 25c.
per box*
r
CRANK’S CORNER.
We have met lots of folks this week,
Some were rough, some were sleek;
If yon look over the sketches below
No doubt, you’ll see some you know.
i
<jn-n
; <
J V? \
rid. IQ,
f
The above is ye editor and the kid.
devoid of “tin,”
They Returning to the Deacon’s Inn.
went to Charleston full of glee,
But ye editor is now as cranky as lie
can be.
*
t 7 </£ 1
i I
f
\
This is our friend Mann Nash,
He’s trying hard to make a mash.
He would he good looking 'tis said,
If he didn’t have so much hair on
head
* vW
ns
Now, Charley Harris we do greet,
Selling some of his “bully” meat.
He looks better out of the shop
Doing duly as Lincoln ton’s, cop.
s-.
I
h
A
L.
Ni
'fliese two females, as you can see,
Are preparing things for yon and mu.
Rub-a-dub-dub, its a weary old rub,
For these old queens of the tub.
JtS! YeY-r - c
SI
m wj*r 3 Vp =±:;&n| -—^1
V
I m k,
V ft
This is Pope Bentley giving his views
How to get a 10 foot in No, 9 shoes.
Pope had a very persuasive wav,
He worked them off on that jay.
I fl
§Sd %
l
ito % e-hC
/ W
This is the girl that has mashed many
She a chap, kodack’s
is taken with a snap.
The artist is no Romeo, you bet.
Neither is she a Juliet.
V.- -S
JE
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m m u W‘"
a w
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Of other people we have sang,
Let’s now introduce Bruce Lang,
lie’s a disciple of vulcan, all right,
And plys his trade with all his might
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable,
Almost everybody who reads the news
papers is sure to know of the wonderful
cures made by Dr.
L Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
Gl .1 " It j an the d great bladder kidney, remedy. liver
M i = It is the great medi
Tfn | cal triumph of the nine-
1 M_l\ | teenth century; dis
' J ..—.MS ! I I covered after years of
•I ,<• p“ f scientific Dr. research by
I Kilmer, the emi
_ - ” der nent kidney and biad
wonderfully successful specialist, and is
in promptly curing
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou¬
bles and Bright’s Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec
ommended for everything but if you have kid¬
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found
just the remedy you need. It has been tested
in so many ways, in hospital work, in private
practice, among the helpless too poor to pur¬
chase relief and has proved so successful in
every case that a special arrangement has
been made by which all readers of this
who not already tried it, may have a
sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book
telling more about Swamp-Root and how to
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
When writing mention reading this generous
offer in this paper and ryiy
send
regular fifty cent and Homo of Swamp-Root,
dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists
Cheap Excursion Kates
TO
_p
Pot B'c above occasion the Georgia
Railroad will sell round trio tickets
at very low rates.
Three Daily Trains between At¬
lanta and Charleston.
follows; Through sleepers on all trains as
j
Trains 2 and 27 St. Bouis/imd
GharlesUon. y
’ j J Cinqiui/ati ”* ' and
1 US .
l a 1 1011.
Trains 4 and 3 Atlanta and Char
leStOlL
m I I <11HS . . *9: a anti i -j q tliso i IrXVG sleepers
and Augusta.
„ b schedules,
and or limits rates, dales 'of sale
on tickets ask Agents
Georgia Railroad or the undersigned
c, c. Miirn j. g. jACKsaa,
G API) C P A
A. O. Dawson, S. A.,
S E ill Augiista. Ga.
Mag 0 1) Cox,
Gen’l Agent. Gen'l Agent.
Atlanta. Ga. Athens, Ga.
W W Hardwick, AV 0 MCMillin,
Gen’l Agent, S F & P A
*S. W. "Wilkes, Macon, Macon,
W m McGovern,
’T T & P A Gen’l Agent,
Atlanta, Ga. Augusta
if ii 4r 1 n ■!!i □ nn ua rav
I. hill'll lV j
A 0
AT $ i.50, $1.75-, $2.00 and $3 00
. .
Direct to Consumers,
Saving Middlemen’s Profits.
or more.
meicial agencies or nierclmnt here. Reference: Com*
any
J, H. WOOLLEY, Cherryville, N. c.
5 | I F u 7
% ■P w A %
a CHigh Art Cl othing.^
* • t
FIT ANY SIZED MAN.
r
f
Full Line of /
DO OQ ■7 r ■Tj' fell ) CO m yy tj : i
1
Gent’s Hats and Furnishings,
Ladies’ Tailor-Made Shirt Waists and Ready-to-Wear
Hats, Neck Wear and Novelties/
i No. 844 BROAD STREET. 0 o » AUGUSTA, GA. $
» -*
■
Charleston & Western Carolina
Railway.
Al !j l: j A : .’AD ASliVJLLE SIIOIiT LINE
Schedule in effect December 2!>, lilt)].
Lv Ai gnsta 10 05 a in 2 55 ]> m
Ar Greenwood 12 80 jj ni
Ar Anderson 7 Ml p 111
Ar Lmirens 1 40 p in
Ar Greenville 3 25 p m
Ar Waterloo (H’rrs Spg'e) 1 12 p in
Ar Spartanburg 3 30 p in
Ar Saluda 5 35 p m
Ar Hendersonville 0 11 p in
Ar Asheville 7 15 p m
Lv Asheville 7 05 a in
Lv Spartanburg 12 15 a m 3 30 p m
Lv Greenville 12 22 p in
Lv Laurens 1 45 p in
Lv YV aterioo (IFrrs Spgs) 2 33 p in
Lv Anderson 7 25
Ar Greenwood a ni
3 07pm
Ar Augusta 5 10 p in J1 35 am
A r Aiken 7 30 j) in -3 55
]> m
Lv Greenwood 5 01 p m
Ar Raleigh 1 34 a m
Ar Norfolk 7 (JO n m
Ar Petersburg 5 48 a in
Ar Richmond 0 43 a m
Lv Augusta 4 15
Ar Allendale p m
(» 20 p m
Ar Fairfax 0 32 }> u>
Ar Yemassee 10 a.! a m 7 35 p m
Ar Beaufort 11 40 p m 8 35 p m
Ar Port Royal 11 55 a m L 45 p m
Ly Port Royal 1 00 ]> rn 0 40
n m
Bv Beaufort 1 15 p m 0 50 a n s
Lv Y’omassee 2 30 {> in 7 45 a m
Lv Fairfax 8 48 a in
Lv Allendale 8 58 a m
Ar Augusta 11 05 a m
TUKS DAYS, TUUKSDAYS and SAT VI! DAYS
Lv Augusta 6 50 a m
Ar Charleston 12 30 ]> m
Lv Charleston 5 35 p m
Aj Augusta 1 i 35 p m
Close connect ion a at Greenwood for all point*
on 8. A. L. and J. & u. Railway and at Spartan¬
burg with Southern Railway.
T or any inlonnution relative to tickets, rates
schedules, etc., address
Y\ . *J. CRAIG, Gen. Puss. Agent,
L M. NORTH, .Solicitor Agent,
f I. „M. L.MRR 80 N, Traffic Manager,
Augusta, C,n
9) ^^s^ssssssssssssssese
a v
vA & 1
m
^promptly W ,, or photo for procured, free report OR NO patentability. FEE. Send model, Book sketch, ‘ ‘How
on
(t) ® PATENT LAWYERS OP 26 YEARS’ PRACTICE.
All 20,000 business PATENTS confidential. PROCURED Sound THROUGH advice. THEM. Faithful
®XL> vV
Mod t0
*
a) to o
® patent lawyers,
® 0pp. U. S. Patent Office, WASHINGTON, D. C.
Reliable man for Manager of a
Branch Office we wish to open in Ibis
vicinity. Here is a good opening for
the right man. Kindly give}good
reference when writing.
l fie A. T, Morris till oft.sale Rouse
Cincinnati, Ohio.'
Illustrated catalogue 4 cts. stamps.
3 M.oxv Are Tcma* ?