The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, September 11, 1902, Image 8
BMfiBjBEBSE5M&! A GOOD PLACE. Notice is hereby given to ladies and utlomeu who visit Macon that Mrs. . H. ilouser is now running a first- class Boarding House at 765 Cherry St. which is very near the businees center of the city, and she will be pleased to serve them meals at 26<j. each. AH0H&WKE HOTEL HAVING LEASED THE Mulberry St., MACON, GA., Nest to Academy of Music, It is my pnrpose to conduct a hotel that will be home-like and satisfying to all guests. It is speoiully suitable for ladies or others visiting Maoon for a day or longer. We Strive to Please. George Si. Riley. Subscribe... FOR t| Christian Union Herald, a strong, religious, seven-column paper, devoted to the moral and material ad vancement of the oolorod race, with an extensive oiroulation. Published Weekly at Savannah, On. Subscription, $1.00 Per rear. REV. W. A. DINKINS, Editor, P. E. Port Valley District. THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL OF ATLANTA, GA., Is ft twlco-a-wcok NEWS paper, published on Monday and Thursday of ouch wook, with all tho latest nows of tho world, which comes over tlioir leased wires diroot to their oilleo. Is an olght-pago seven-column paper. By arrangements wo havo scoured a special rato with thorn in connection with OUK PAPER. and for $2 wo will send THE; HOME JOURNAL, THE ATLANTA -Semi-Weekly Journal- and tho Southern Cultivator ALL THREE ONE TEAR. This is tho host offer wo Juivo over niado our friends aiul subBcribors. You had bettor take atlvftlitngo of this offer at once, l'or Tlie Journal may withdraw their special rate to us at any timo. Tho Somi-Weokly has many prominent mon '.and woinon contributors to choir columns, among thorn being Rov. Sam Jonos, Rov. Walk er Lewis, Hon. Harvlo Jordan, Hon. John Tom- plo Graves and Mrs. W, H. Folton. besides tholr crops of oillolent editors, who tftlco oaro of tho nows matter. Tlioir dopartments aro well cov ered. Its columns of farm nows are worth the tho price of tho paper. Bond diroot to this office $2.00 and seoure tho throe abovo mentioned papers one year Address THE HOME JOURNAL, PEUUY, GA. Perfect and Peerless and all Liver, Kidney and Blad der troubles caused by uric acid in the system. It cures by cleansing and vitalizing the blood, thus removing the cause of disease. It gives vigor and tone and builds up the health and strength of the patient while using the remedy. URICSOL is a luminary in the medical world. It has cured and will continue to cure more of the above diseases than all other known remedies, many of which do more harm than good. and endorsed California Remedy never disappoints. It Cures in fallibly if taken as directed, is* Try it and be convinced that it is a wonder and a blessing to suffering humanity. ** Price $1.00 per bottle, or 8 bot tles for $5. For sale by druggists. Send stamp for book of partic ulars and wonderful cures. Zf our ‘ " ' receipt of price. UtlCSOL CHEMICAL CO., Lot Annin, Cal. orthr .Subscribe for the Home Journal The American Farmer. Americus Tlmes-Recoruer. The American farmer is the greatest man ip the world. A “combine” with a capital of $1,- 000,000,000 is a great thing be cause it is a combine; but $1,- 000,000,000 relative to the capital of money, brain and brawn in vested in the agricultural indus try, in this country is not at all a great thing. Figures simply stag ger and fall down when they at tempt to represent the real foun dation wealth of America, which is agricultural. We are all, when we attempt to contemplate that wealth, very much in the position of the irishman who had to look several times, in order to see the tall building-—taking it little by little. One section of the view is the information, entirely accu rate, that the farmers of Minne sota and the Dakotas have receiv ed $800,000,000 for their products this year. Another,is that the corn crop of the state of Kansas this year will be 260,000,000 bushels. Still another, that one million dollars at thelowesfc esti mate, fell in one soaking rain in the single Territory of Oklahoma the other day—the rain having checked the growth menace of a fortnight’s dry spell. In a single year the miloh cows of the United States yield a product equal in value to one-half of the oapital of the steel trust—and there are more cows at the beginning of the new year than there were before. Behind the agriculture is the ag riculturist, and the American far mer is gaining in intelligence, in mastery of his soil, and in fitness for political power quite as rapid ly as his products are increasing in magnitude. He may be merely waiting to be organized in a vast and irresistable force. Or, again, he may be slowly and sadly rec onciling himself to the knowledge that he is a passive force only— like his own fertle acres, which by intelligent cultivation and exploi tation, are made to yield rich crops for those who know how to get them. A '9,700,000 bale cotton crop for 1902,which is the figuie at which the yield for the year is put, means lots of prosperty for the planters. The corn and wheat growers are not the only agricul turists who willbe in clover this year. Probably the yield will be slightly below that of 1901, but in the general tendency toward an increase of the foreign demand the chances are that it will bring considerably more money than last year,s output did. The coun try is in a flourishing condition in every respect and the best part of the story is that the prosperity is diffued througout the entire United States, and in almost all interests.—St. Louis Globe Dem ocrat. Long and careful inquiries by German doctors indicate that can cer is not probably hereditary, but that it is perniciously contagious. In certain districts the number of sufferers in proportion to the pop ulation is much larger every year than in other areas. Dogs and cats in many instances become cancerous, but few horses and cat tle are attacked. Men and women are stricken on the average earlier in life in this generation than in those which proceeded it. *-•-< An effort is being made in Swe den to use electricity in agricul ture. A seed field is covered by a network of wire and a strong elec tric current is turned on during nights and chilly days, but out off during sunny and warm weathf- er. This system was invented by Prof. Lemstrom, of Helsingfors, Findland. If You Can't Sleep At Night use Smith’s Nerve Restorer. It is a true Nerve Tonic. Will oure any oase of Ner vous Prostration ;does not contain opium in any form. At Oateb’s Drugstore. September will be the least im portant month this year, so far as the dividend disbursement by the industrial companies are concern ed,the total payment thus far an nounced reachin only $15,240,215. This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo=Quinine Tablet* the reutwl; ‘that cures a cold in one Jny - '■ - ' } A Successful Farmer. We publish the following arti cle to let our readers see what can be-accomplished upon an acre of land which is properly attended. The Montgomery Advertiser says: One of the most remarkable in stances of diversified farming, if it can be called farming, is report ed by Mr. H. Durham in “The Land and Sunshine.” The farmer- is Samuel Cheeks and his farm consits of just one acre*of land in the Sacramento Valley, California. Of that acre his buildings occupy nearly one- Bixth of the space, but on the bal ance is grown nearly every varie ty of fruits, nuts, vegetables, etc., that will or can be grown in that climate. Through irrigation,high manuring, cThse intelligent culti vation and infinite variety of pro ducts is the secret of his success. On this small acre, which the av erage farmer would consider bare ly large enough for a garden or potato patch, Mr. Cheeks has sup ported himself and wife for forty years, and he informed Mr. Dun ham that he not only realizes a comfortable living, but puts aside an average of four hundred dol lars a year. This would seem incredible, but his neighbors substantiated his statements, adding that he was one of the men in the community who always has money to loan, and who is ever ready to make a donation to a worthy object. Nat urally one the ,secrets of Mr. Cheeks’ success lies in what . may be called the folly of those around them. The Sacramento Valley is noted as a wheat country and the farmers there, like the farmers in a great many other places, devote all their attention practically to one crop. Consequently Mr. Cheeks is able to sell them fruits, vegetables and other luxu ries at remunerative prices and always find a demand for all he can raise. If all of them were to adopt his plan there would be ,no home demand for his products, and his acre would be less profit able. That, however, does not prevent his methods and his suc cess from furnishing an object lesson to others. Take care of the stomach and the health will take care of itself. If the people only realized the soundness of that statement the majority might live to a good old age like Moses, “the eye undim med, the natural force unabated.” It is in the stomach that the blood is made. It is from the stomach that nourishment is dispensed to nerve and muscle. If the stom ach is “weak” it can’t do its whole work for each part of the body. If it is diseased the dis ease will taint the nourishment' whioh is distributed,and so spread disease throughout the body. It was the realization of the impor tance of the stomach as the very center of health and the common source of disease, which led Dr. Pierce to prepare his “Golden Medical Discovery.” “Diseases which originate in the stomach must be cured through the stom ach.” The soundness of this the ory is proven every day by cures of diseased organs, heart, liver, lungs, blood,—by the use of “Dis covery” which is solely and singly a medicine for the blood and or gans of digestion and nutrition. It is a temperance medicine con taining no alcohol, whisky or oth er intoxicant. A recent Louisiana election was decided by a majority of one vote. Moreover the vote was unani mous in favor of the Bale of li quor in the parish in which the election was held, The explana tion lies in the fact that amend ments to the constitution of the state have made registration a prerequise to the right to vote and a single citizen of the parish had availed himself of the privilige. He was thus enabled to swing the election as he pleased. No Remedy Equals It. Dr. O. Laux, of Loe Angeles, Cai., who has been a druggist and chemist for for ty-one years, says: “I can honestly say that I have never made or sold a rheu matic remedy that gives such a large percentage of cures as URIOSOL.” It also pleasantly builds up the general system. Every sufferer should try it and hut be deluded into trying other things said to be “ju-t as good.” Drug gists sell it at $1.00_ per bottle,' or six bo.ttles for $5:00. Items of interest. Thirty thousand Filipinos have been vaccinated by the Americans. Practically all of the nitrate supply of the world comes from Chili. American brewers have already invested over $4,000,000 in and about Havona. Forty-five hours constitute a weeks’ work for women and girls in New Zealand. Since 1879 France has s spent $120,000,000 on canals. This does not include Panama. At Turin they had an automo bile cotillion recently in which 45 automobiles took part. The jaw of the shark furnishes the best watchmaker’s oil. In each shark is found about half a pint. Germany drills this year 68,400 reserve troops, nearly double as many as she drilled two years ago. In China grand banquets last twelve hours or longer, and Jbhe menu includes such delicacies as pickled birds’ nestB. In tbs United States navy the largest guns outside of those on monitors are 18-inch; on the monitors the largest are 16-inch. Statistics go to prove that peo ple are now living longer than they did in times gone by. but Methuselah still holds the record. The Macon Telegraph. Published every day and Sunday, ad Twice-a-Week, by The Macon Telegraph Publishing Co. Subscription .Daily and Sunday, $7.00 per affimiri. Daily except Sunday, $5.00 per annum. Twice a-Week, $1.00 per annum. 77 Best advertising medium in the city. Rates furnished on appli cation. All WOMEN Wine of Cardui is the guardian of a woman’s health and happi ness from youth to old age. It helps her safely into womanhood. It sustains her during the trials of pregnancy, oliildbirth and motherhood, making labor easy J and preventing hooding and mis carriage. It gently leads her through the dangerous period known as the ohange of life. WINE or CARDUI cures leucorrhoea, falling of the womb, and menstrual irregularity in every form. It is valuable in every trying period of a woman’s life. It reinforces the nervous system, acts directly on the geni tal organs and is the finest tonic for women known. Ask your druggist for a $1.00 bottle of Wine of Cardui. Ba&esville, Ala., July 11,1900. I am using Wine ox Cardui and Thed- ford’s Blaok-Draught and I feel like a different woman already. Several la dles here keep the medloines in their homes all the time. I have three girls and they are using It with me. Mrs. KATE BROWDER. Chattanooga, Term, , th!e commoner, (Mr. Bryan’s Paper.) The Commoner has attained within six months from date of the first issue a circulation of 100,000 copies, a record probably never equaled in the history of American periodical literature. The unparalleled growth of this paper de monstrates that there is room in the newspaper fields for a national paper de voted to the discussion of political, economic, and social problems. To the columns of the Commoner Mr, Bryan contributes his best effortsjand his views of politioal events as they arise from time to time can not fail to interest those who study public questions. The Commoner’s regular subeription price is $1.00 per year. We have arrang ed with Mr. Bryan whereby we can fur nish his paper and Home Journal to gether for one year for $1.90. The reg ular subscription price of the two pa pers when suberibed for separately is $2.50. 1 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ATENIS Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description mas dulokly ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communica tions striotly confidential. Handbook on Patents sentfrep. Oldest agency for seeuringjpatents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal- *a - year; four months, $L Sold by a) .... Bry-icrV. OIBoe, 625 F St, Washington, D. C. PENNSYLVANIA PURE RYE, EIGHT YEARS OLD. OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS Four fui Quarts of this Fine Old, Pure BYE WHISKEY, $3 r\ EXPRESS .OU PAID* We ship on approval In plain, sealed boxes, with no marks to indicate contents. When lyou receive it and test it, if it is not satisfactory, return it at our expense and we wil return your §3,60. We guarantee this brand to be EIGHT YEARS OLD. Eight bottles for $8 60, express prepaid; 12 uottfes for $9 60 express prepaid. No charge for boxing. We handle all tlie leading brands of Rye and Bourbon Whiskies and will save .you 60 Per Cent, on Your Purchases: Quart, Gallon Kentucky Star Bourbon, $ 86 §125 Elkrldge Bourbon 40 155 Boon Hollow Bourbon 46 16 Cel wood Pure Rye 50 .19 Monogram Bye 66 2 0 McBrayor Rye 60 22 Make/s A AAA 06 24 O. O. P. (Old Oscar Pepper) 66 24 Old Crow 75 26 Fincher’s Golden Wedding 76 26 Hoffman House Rye 90 30 Mount Vernon, 8 years old 100 36 Old pillinger Rye, 10 yearB old,.... 125 40 The above ere only a few brands. Send for a catalogue. All other Soods by the gallon, such as Corn 'biskey, Peach ana Apple *' eq W e make a speciasty i and all orders by Mail or Telgeraphwil have our prompt attention: Speeia inducements offered. Mail Orders shipped same day of the receipt of order. The Altmayer & Flateau Liquor Company* 606, 508, 510, 512 Fourth Street, near Union Passenger Depot. MACON, GEORGIA PERFECT PASSENQER AND SUPERB SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE BETWEEN ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS IN THE Connecting: at SAVANNAH with STEAMSHIP LINES PLYING BETWEEN Savannah and New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore AND ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST Complete information, rates, schedules of trains and sailing dates of steamers cheerfully furnished by any agent of the company. THEO. D. KUNE, W. A. WINBURN, General Sup’t, Traffic Manager, J. O. HAILE, General Pase’r Agent, F. U. ROWNSON, Ass’t General Pasa’r Agent 8AVANKAH. OK