The weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1891-1921, October 27, 1891, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

-—NS BAN SDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 27,1891 JOHNSTON’S HISTORY- Sevei&l days ago the Banner printed »n editorial criticising Johnston’s hi»- tory, a book now being used in the University of Georgia as a text in the Department of history. The Banner disclaimed any inten tion of making an attack on any man or any set of men, but in a spirit of frankness, of soberness and of honesty proceeded withj the fulfillment of a rightful duty. The book was introduced into the University %y Professor McPherson the newly elected Profess or of History. We knew that Professor McPherson was a native of Maryland, we had been told that he was a sympa thizer with the Southern cause. We were criticizing the book, not the man. Whatever suggestions may have gone with the criticism of the bobk to the Department surely carried with them nothing but a feeling of profound interest for the welfare of the college. What we said then in criticism of the book we have no desire to retract now. We are more inclined to emphasize our criticism, since the prudential commit^ tee of the trustees, acknowleding the objectionable features of the history have allowed it to be retained as a text book. Our criticism of the book has gone to the world. We say it is not right to teach in a southern university a book that denounces the lead ers of secession, that speaks of the Southern states as “erring Sis ters.” that calls the Southern Confederacy a “despotism,” and that terms slavery a “moral stigma,” and more. We would have, on the contrary, a book that teaches the sons of dead Confederates, who gave up their lives beneath the blessed shadow of the stars I and bars, that their fathers were patri ots to a cause, please God, | that was holy; that they died not I traitors nor out-laws, but heroes, with the approving smile of Heaven kissing | their eyelids into eternal sleep. Upon such principles and such faitn | the editor of this paper bases the criti cism of Jobntson’s history in good faith | and with kind feelings to every mem* ber of the faculty of the University. WllSEMiSp 1 DURING THE WHOLE OF THE NEXT W EEK. Be sure to be on hand early to reap the benefit of my cheap prices of a very large shipment of THE LATEST STYLE OF DRESS GOOllQ direct from New York, AT HALF THE PRICE of my competitors, who buy on a credit of six months, 'kite 1 t>uy U’OKdFor (Ja3H. A n ri Don’t my Jt'ine ~XjA13L‘-3» of £!!HbXC^2b5SS3 • Sixty cases of Fine Shoes Just received, will be sold THIS WEEK at half the regular price of other Shoe men. DON’T FORGET TtJE GROCERY DEPARTMENT The Grocery Merchants are alarm ed at my quotations of the necessaries of life. \V hile only a few merchants suffer under my knife of slaughter of prices of Groceries, yet thousands and thousands' of needy, hard-working people are so richly benefitted by it. 1 butchered the Dry Goods busi ness, and now with willing bands 1 shall render you my assistance of ob taining Groct ries at prices as they should be sold. May it hurt where it will, the ben* effts derived therefrom will a thous and fold be acceptable to the needy, where it belongs. 25 barrels best Standard Granula- ulated Sugar, 20 lbs. for 1 00. Best pure Rio Coffee, 5 lbs for 1 00; 6 bars Horse Shoe Soap for 25c; 10 boxes Sardines lor 50 cents; 12 boxes Matches for 5c; 5 pounds Soda for 25 cents And other good things at just such I prices. Also. DRY GOOD^J, Read these prices. New arrival of a large shipment of Novelty Dress Goods. The latest and newest pattern, just received Friday. ,1 case Reps at 5 cents a yard. Dont he slow coming—they are handsome; get yonr pick. 1 case yard wide Reps,fleeced backs —worth 15 cents, to go at 8$c. 1 case yard wide Flannellette Dress Goods, very handsome, worth 25 cents at other stores, if they have these novelties. Our price will be 12£c. this week. 11 pieces very fineb ack Cashmere, 40 cents grade at 25 cents. 8 pieces extremely nice heavy grade and fine quality black cashmere, 60 cents grade at 35 cents. I bought these per chance. Avail yourself of this opportunity. They are beauties. Come early. 15c. Wool Brocade Worsteds at 5c; 15c assorted color Wool Cashmeres at 5 c; 30c heavy twill double width Plaids at 15c; 25c gray Beiges at lty 'i 60o assorted color Bnlliantine 42 inches wide at 25c; 15c corded Suitings at 4J-j; 15c pure Moaair at 10c; Think and study your interest well, j^his is no catch trap notice to you. One hundred patterns will be on ex-i hibition at the front stand of my (40c assorted colors 36 inch Mohair store. They are in Plaids. Polcadots,' 12£c; and combinations of Plaid and Polca dots Flowers in large and small de signs. Call early and get your choice. BLACK CAbHMERES. New arrival last Friday. Wonder ful bargains for this week. 6 pieces elegant black Cashmere, 25 cents value at ?12£ cents. 9 pieces splenaid black Cashmere, 30 cents grade at 17 £ cents. 7c latest style fall dress prints, choice 4£; 2c large Plains Calicoes at 3£c; 35c wool Lindseys at 10c; 30c broken Plaid Flannel at 16u; 55c assorted colors Dress Flannels at 16c; 20c Black Cashmere, double width, 12£c; 12|c Outing Flannels at 6.J ■; 25c twill Cotton Dress Goods, double width, 7^c. Special Bargains offered on Shawls. Elegant Breakfast Shawls 15c: Zepbjr wool knitted Breakfast Shawls* value 75u at 35c; Extra fine all wool soiid color Breakfast Shawls at 25c; Very large 1 00 breakfast Shawls at 48 cents; Large size regular all wool 2 50 Sha*la at 1 00: Fine Beaver Shawls, value 3 00 at 1 50; Extra fine doable face 5 Ot) shawls at 2 50; Black India Shawls, value 7 50 only 3 50; 140 pairs sampl s fine Ladi s hand- sewed shoes, worth 3 50 at 2 00 for choice. Cioth top Ladies button Shoes, 2 25 grade at l 15 a pair; Calf Button Ladies Shoes, 2 00 quality at 1 00; Patent leather button Ladies Shoes, 2 00 quality at 90c; Stitched India kid Ladies button Shoes, patent leather top 2 00 quality at 85c; High-top fancy stitched Ladies But ton Shoes at 1 25; School shoes good quality, at 40c; ■Jhi dren’s button shoes at 50c. .Vusses kid button shoes, 1 25 qual ity at 75c; Men’s calf Congress, 2 .00 quality at 1 00; Men’s calf Machine sewed Bale, 2 00 quality at 1 00; Men s button Shoes, good 2 50 qual ity at 1 50; Men’s combination (Marshall’s) Lace and Congress, a new style 5 00 Shoe, hand-sewed at 2 50; ’lest quality full stock tops, white oak bottoms, Men’s-Brogans, at 1 00, Morocco best handtpegged 2 25 Bala lor working men, a very substantial wearing Shoe at 1 35; Boy s Congress calf Shoes at 1 00, , worth 2 00; T>oy’s Bals, good calf uppers, solid soles, worth 2 25 at L 2o: Scotcn bottom hand-sewed 6 00 Con gress at 3 50; Heavy Check Homespun at 4c; ^ itcavy Shirting at 4^c; Heaviest Checks at 4$c; Fuli yard wide heaviest Sheeting & 5£c; Best heavy Drilling at 6c; ica is and Sheeting, 9c grade at 6£c: > 1 ,-avy hickory Stripes at 7£c; Good remnant Bleaching at 21 Remnants yard wide Bleaching a i>ood Mattra=-s Ticking at t at Good Feather ticking a» 10^ ’ *“ CJ Wi. 8 Heaviest and best feather ticking 2oc grade at 14 C ; kla ?> Fancy double width Sa.teen « • , ui&r' ,icki “ 8 ’ 30 a *»«* Elegant Wool deans, 33 13 cent, quality at 2Ue; nt8 Best »Vool Jeans, a 40 cents crude at 25c, b Heavy Canton Flannel, 10 cen U grade at 6c; Very heavy Canton Flannel, 15 cent8 gi ade at 8c; Mixed wool twilled F.annel 20 cents quality atl2£c; All wool red Fla me l, 20 cents grade at 12£c; Medicated scar ei Flannel best twilled 35c grade at 20c; Very fine lamb’s wool medicated red Flannel, very best manufactured 50c grade at 32£c. BORNTT<nBE HUNG- v An evil- star, indeed, must have I VISIT MY STORE THIS WEEK. You will be amply repaid for calling. I put Special Bargains on for this week. ' Yours, Respectfully, MAX JOSEPH. 221 and. 223 Broad Street, ATHENS, « GA- thiB vile slanderer for what he has ; vice. If the Postmaster General now presided over the nativity of poor I ga j^ Thia mon ft f! finds that he was mistaken about the This man is not worthy of j even rebuke from a Southern news paper. His life is known by heart, and he is condemned by every news paper in the land. He seems able to extract more misery from life than any living man, and onr correspond* And jet if there ie one men in the I eat h8B Mrre0 “J P ut the 8888 whe8 civilized circle of humeoity who 9e 8a ^ s: ‘' AboM the 08l f 80urc8 of takes from our heart it?prefooodest Dleaeere he has is his unyielding bo und most sorrowful pity, he is none U4l ' n the gloomy dogma of eternal other than editor Shepard, poor, mis punishment which he preaches to his erable man ! The paradox is truth- readers every day. He believes there fully complete. We are told by a | is a hell, and is more than half per- old Uncle Shepard, the dyspeptic editor of the New York Mail and Express. If there is one man in all this fair, happy land of onrs,ot whom we were forced to say ‘‘This one was horn to be hung,” unquestionably that man is poor Uncle Shepard. negotiations with the railroad com pany. surely he will correct the wrong he is inflicting upon the peo ple along this line. The G., C. & N. railroad company is in an attitude before the people that satisfies them that it has done all that it could do to furnish the mail service. Now let us have the mail. SECOND MARRIAGE. correspondent from New York City | that while all the other New York papers “are printing kindly accounts I of the unveiling of a monument to the gifted Grady at Atlanta, where snaded that he is going there, it wonld appear.” Bat, there is one thought that comes along with the venom of this vilf adder, and that is this : How Governor Hill is to make a speech, much more important than ever it is Col Shepard’s organ waxes wroth L - 8cbools and Southern and says . colleges to keep out of their carrion* Rebel yells will greet Hill. Rebel . .... .. . , . bunting will greet him. The nasty, lum8 h,8tone8 that even mild, y whipped ensign of treason will flaunt that the South was wrong in seces- throngh the pure American air.wbere 8ion> While 8Uch 8lander ig on the it ought not to be allowed to live for one moment. It ought forever to be | buried in Lee’s grave at Richmond ; it ought to be dragged down to hades by the shade of Jeff Davis. God pity the heart of this man, Shepard ! God give patience unto Southern hearts so villainously stab bed ! A trying -hour it once was to bear the sting of sectional abase. Pride is no lees sensitive to-day. is hard breeze that floats down from the North, the South must for honor’s sake keep alive the fire of patriotism and of pride. • - LET US HAVE THE MAIL. It was a prompt ancr emphatic de nial contained in Mr. John M. Rob inson’s letter published in The Ban- It I ner yesterday concerning the Gov- o bard to langh in pity ernment’s disposition to put a mail this tradueer. Bat we do, and I service on the Georgia, Carolina and Let us have pure drinking water by the time the fair opens.—Chicago Her ald. Is that all the hospitality that Chica go will have to offer ? A little purity iu some other liquids which are especi ally grateful iu a cold climate like that of Chicago would not be rejected, Dear Herald.—St. Louis Republic. a.11 in favor of the motion make it known by saying “aye,” and don’t all speak at once, please. Says the Memphis Appeal-Ava lanche : The McKinley hill is the won der of the age, if the Republicans are to be trusted. It keeps out the pauper- made goods of Europe, yet it increases the imports $47,877,744 in a year. It raises and lowers the prices of the nec essaries of life. It has also bought about a big wheat crop in the West, and the farmer who wants rain ought aereafterto petition McKinley. ... At tbe'Prohibltion rally the Indiana oratress threw cold water on the tin plate industry. Her description of the Piqua mill, where ;Mr. McKinley] bent over the boiling cauldron and dipped the historic plate, would make an effec tive campaign document for the Demo crats. Mr. Quincy would probably be willing to furnish 100,OCO copies to the Republican state committee. pass it by without serious thought. In the same paper a dispatch dated Atlanta, bat evidently hatched up in the editorial rooms of the Mail and Express is printed and reads as fol Iowa: Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 19th.—The Northern, The Assistant Postmaster General had Btated that the reason the mail was not pnt over this new road, was because the Railroad Company had refused to carry the mail unless the maximum rate allowed by the Gov ernment was paid. This could not » position taken by the Mail and Ex-, ,, _ . . , . , press in denouncing the rebel cele-1)» done > 80 the Department claimed, hralion in Richmond when the Sou thern party of king men, the white ruling class, attempted to deify Lee and to crush patriotism to death, is gratefully remembered by very many of our best and loyal citizens, and they hope you will do an equal ser vice now, when the same kind of die* because it being a new road, the amount of mail would not warrant the expense. Bat, Mr. Robinson, President of the Railroad Company, who reads The Athens Banner every day of honoring celebration is attempted I his life, chanoed to see the letter cf here and will drive the Confederate I tbe Assistant Postmaster Genera’, flag off t e e . As a consequence we published yes- tbrt tb. unveiling «f the L rdty . lau , r from Mr . BoHlnum, Grady monument i. over, end every- j dw , lKiD| , h>t tle tal i road company body North and South knows that it was a celebration at which thousands of Southerners and Northerners thronged in mutual love and admi ration for a man who, when he died, was “ literally loving a nation into peace,” it is not necessary to rebnke only asked the minimum rate allowed by the Government, and that the Post Office Department bad declined to pay that rate. This puts a new light on the whole matter. It now behooves the Post Office J ohn Montgomery, a farmer of Oco nee county, living two miles east of Watkinsville, is the owner of a straw hat that he has worn for twenty-Bix summers. At the close of the late war Mrs. Elizabeth Lee, a relative of Mr. Montgomery, made the hat out of rescue grass that grew luxuriantly in her gar den. It is in a good state of preserva tion. Fort Yalley Leader: There was! dropped on the place of Will Flowers' on Tuesday a calf with six legs and two * 8 F,rst *-ove the only Lov heads. The heads separated from each other at the neck, giving the calf two distinct heads with a set of eyes, theeth and ears each. , -Wooid Athens is the best city in the South in the strict acceptation of that term. There are more good men and womeu in Athens than an?' other city in the state. When once an object of charity is made known, the people of Athens baste to give liberal relief. “It’s all luck in horse-races, and principally bad luck,” says Plunger Walton. Any one who has ever watch ed the faoes in the cars returning from the race track will believe Mr, Walton says Henry Watterson. Mbs. James Bbown Potter is to star in South America. The father she goes from civilization the more her his toric talent seems to be appreciated. Kentucky is considerably pained over the reports going the rounds of the press that Illinois produces more whiskey than she does. m It was not a political boom that brought. Governor Hill—to speak aT Grady's grave as The Charleston News and Courier says it was. President Harrison bad one colored oppointee inlndianna,but the poor devil got so lonesome that he resigned. A SNAKE STORY. Editor Larry GanTt is able to be at his post again as editor of the Southern Alliance Farmer. The South Georgia Baptist General Association will hold an important ses sion at Abbeville on Thursday before the third Sunday in November. This association is made up of a number of Baptist associations, all being for the most part in wire grass counties, and a great work is being done. Charles H. Allen, the Republican candidate for Governor of Massachu setts, is a society favorate. It is not likely, says an exchange, that Mr. Al len will be disturbed in bis fondness for leading the german in order to do the Governor-business for the old Bay State. Department to give ns the mail ser- collected. The Lincolnton and Washington tel ephone line will declare a dividend of 17 per cent,about the first eft November. The dividend would have been declared at the annual meeting, held two weeks ego, but at that time there were some outstanding debts that had not been If Chicago can’t run that World’s Fair, for the a«ke of reason send for Athens. The third party cranks in the wild and wooly west, like the winter winds are sighing. South Carolina and Georgia will shake bands in Augusta at the Expo sition. It’s a mighty pity that these October breezes can not blow up a rain Crisp and Mills; but the greatest is Crisp. pec new organization is to be formed here at once, the primary object of which is to put a stop to fraudulent and ques tionable pensions and to expose those that have already been granted. The promoters of the new order will style themselves the Old Gnard. They are prominently identified with the grand jury, tnd some are high officials in the grand encampment of the state. All are Republicans. A Chicago special says: The brothers of yonng ffm/V. Heisen, who was found dead in his room at the Welling ton hotel last Monday, are now satisfied, that the yonng man was either hypnot- 1 ized into committing snicide or mur dered by a Mexican, who has been liv ing in this city under the name of Wm. Ellis, and with whom yonng Heisen was supposed to be associated with in sev eral business enterprises. Ellis was Heisen’s cons tant companion and seem ed to possess great influence over him. The police are looking for the Mexican, who has disappeared. You Marry Again? Would you marry again? Think it over. It is not an impertiuent question. It is the most interesting question that can possibly rise in a man or.a woman’s life. It deals with the great mystery of love. It touches the great mysteries of life anti death. Can you love twice? Is there any loVeworth speaking of except the first, fresh, youthful, pxsaionate love of-the human heart? If vou can love twice, is not the sec ond love a different thing? Is it not commomplace and conventional com pared with the firBt sweet emotion that started your youthful blood? Is it not of coarse fibre and sordid and practi cal compared with tue purity and un selfishness of that early worship. Is not the first love of heaven and the second love of the earth—earthly? And speaking of heaven, supposing for a moment that you convince yourself that a second love on earth can be ev erything that first love was—just as pure and sweet and untouched of every baser thought, then how about the first dear companion of your youin, who is now indeed no longer by your side, but who, according to the belief of many goodaud wise people, and who, per haps, according to your own belief, is waiting for you in the world to which we may all oe journeying?^ -— If you shouldxllow secondTove to i proraptMCond marriage are you because of that second marriage unfaithful and disloyal to the first love, that yourself perhaps declared was eternal, had come to stay for all time and to which it was impos ible for you ever to be nature! These are questions that are asked thousands of times every day whereso ever human life is te be found and hu man hearts are beating. Puzzled and bewildered men and women are asking them directly from fellow mortals and from the books and from the Bible itself, striving to reach array oi light on this unfathomable and bewildering subject, aod then turning their glances inward, desperately in terrogating their own troubled hearts. Think them over now. Thifik them over, ye widows and widowers who miss the human com panionship that the cruel grave has swallowed op, and who crave for the strong and loving touch of human hands, even while your heart is pursu ing what the cynic regards as shadows through afar ofif world of shades. Think them over, ye youth and maid ens who even now are steeped in the first sweep rapture of “Love’s Young Dream.” Think them over. Is first loye eternal or is it not? And ye men and women who are now traveling along band in hand, helping each other and living for each other, encouraging each other and living for each ottie?. Supposing, for a moment, if indeed you can for a moment enter tain so awful a thought, that if death should rob you of your own—“would you marry again?”—Macon Evening News. The 3est Yet as Witnessed by Our Snake Editor. Onr p"ske editor comes forward now v. '*h the best snake story of the season, :•. ’ yet this is not a good year for .-nukes. lie says it was proven to him by Mr. I'. D. Newsome that a horse hair if put a bottle of plain water and corked, . fl turn to a snake. 9 hi* old saying has been said and un- is' -1 by nearly ever one and now hen it is proven we all say “well we kuew it.” . Mr. D. D. Newsome who has a store >■ ith his partner at. the Upper bridge f ..s often intendcdjto try it. About thr*e ;ninths ago he determined to do so, so iv and his partner went cut and pulled hair from a gray horse’s tail and put k. in a bottle and corked it having lilted the bottle with water In about a month they noticed that ‘.he hair had enlarged and has begun to move around and came near throwing it away thinking this was all it would do, hut they Bat it up again and on Monday looked again and Rbout one half of the water had evaporated and in the bot tom of the bottle was a snake, well formed about fifteen inches long and one quarter of an inch in diameter. Mr. Newsome brought it to town and showed it to many people our SDakeed- CONUENSED NEWS DISPATCHES. Domestic And Foreign and of General Internet. George W. Steele has resigned the governorship of Oklahoma. Wilkinson Call will represent Florida in the United States senate. 'Superintendent Porter congratulates himself upon tho perfectness of ths eleventh census The City of Rome has arrived in Liv- f erpool. Tliis is the vessel that was re ported sniik off the Newfoundland banks. The Governor Campbell meeting at Cincinnati, held at the music hall was the largest political demonstration ever seen in that city. A Loudon dispatch says that the wife of the late William Heury Smith, the leader in tho house of commons, will be elevated to the peerage. The murder of 15-yenr old Annie Ko- datz near Milwaukee ten days ago h is just been discovered. Her murderer, Albert Kohls, has confessed. There is likely to be much debate and more or less trouble in the distribution of committees ahd their chairmanships when congress gets to wora. A St. Paul special says: Mrs. James Q. Blaine, Jr., of Sioux Falls, S. D., is in the city for a few days, under treat- i. • r among the number. It is certainly. ment by a prominent ocnlist for partial jiderful _ The snake is Abont-tbecoN Tf of'lEe original hair. Now comes the question of what goes toward the formation of the snake. JEFFERSON JOTTINGS. Jefferson, Oct., 21.—[Special.]— Col. R. S. Howard, of Athens, is in the city. Miss Mattie Watson is visiting rela tives in the Classio City. The first brick of the new hank build ing has been laid, its doors will be throw ii open Dec, 1st. J. P. and J J. Hartly have skiped the county. They leave numerous credi tor to mourn their absence* They were young men and were liked. The Sheriff is looking for them assis ted by their creditors. Subscribe Banner. to the Athen’ a uwpmcn to tne London Chronicle from Paris says that after the recent in terview at Monsea, Coant Nigra, the Italian ambassador at Vienna, was in structed to acquaint Emperor Francis Joseph that Italy would afford ample protection to the papal conclave, thi. assurance being in response to the Aus trian’s emperors inquiry. A Philadelphia special says: The Commonwealth National bank ef tills city will wind up its affairs and its bus iness will be transferied te the Seventh National bank. The capital stock of the latter bank will be increased by the merge with the Commonwealth. Don- rad B. Day., president of the Common wealth, will become the head of the in- stions. a nasnviile special says that the su- S eme council of the Knights of Wise en, an insurance order for negroes, is said to be on its last legs. The grand treasurer, J. R. Walker, of Nashville, skipped from there some time ago, leav ing his family and a shortage in his ac counts. His family believe him dead. The'order has recently paid only a small part of its death claims. At Pittsburg, Phillips’ glassware honsd, on the South Side, was damaged by fire to the extent of $10,000. During the progress of the fire a temporary bridge tell ten feet, carrying with it a score or more of men, women and chil dren. Several persons were injured, but none seriously. Fireman Martin was also painfully injured by falling glass. At Seymour, Ind., Addison Arnold, aged 25 years, and his young wife, re cently married, have constantly disa greed. During a bitter quarrel he ex claimed: “Rather than to be alwas in hell, I’ll end this now," drew a revolver, placed it in his mouth and blew the top of his head off. Jealousy was. the canse. His wife is insane over the tragedy. A Pottaville, Pa., special says: A mountain engine on the Philadelphia and Reading railroad was drawing a long train of empty cars up a grade a short distance below Claire when tho boiler exploded, wrecking everything in a radios of several hundred. yards. Three train men were killed ontright and another fatally injured. No cause is known, the engine being just out of the shop. paralysis of the eyelids. A New York company that manufac tures self-winding clocks, has offered to furnish free of cost all the time pieces that will be needed in the build ings daring the World's fair. A Parkersburg, W. Va., special says: George R. Wallace, editor of The King- wood Argus, and Miss Minnie Keif, daughter of John Reif, eloped to Iron- ton, O., and were married. The bride s parents objected to a country editor as -son-in-law. John A Celia, storekeeper of the Cook county, Bis., insane asylum, was arrested for malfeasance in office m making false and fraudulent entries m the official records of the county. is said to be one of the thieves who has been systematically robbing Goo. county of.unknown sums of money. , A New York special says: P resi( *?”* Louis Contensin of the Italian chamber of commerce, received a cablegram from the Italian cabinet ministry at'dome stating that it had unanimously deciaea to abolish the decree against American pork. A proclammation will be ls9 '’ 9 “ to that effect by the Italian govern ment. The sudden death of Inspector Gen* oral AccollaS of the French home office has caused a sensatian at Paris. W mi visiting a woman with whom he was improperly intimate he took &n ove - dose of a drug as a stimulant unu tn effect was fatal. M. Accollas was married man and the revelation was painful shock to his friends. The exposition directory has upon the comptroller of the city Chicago to seU $1,000,000 of the *o,0W. 000 of bonds which the city voted m aid of the exposition. The P r0C ff T ”j which it is desired shall be rea J,.^ within ninety days, is to ba a PP mainly to paying the enormous . of the construction of the boil A"HAPPY COMBI* of the most potent and active proi* ^ of the whole vegetable kiugd m ^ rite which makes T>r. _^?® tly above Prescription so , P^^XVora- ervery other so-called woman live in the market. Don’t stop *^ jth the best 1 Don’t experiment worthless imitations, w**en or igi- acknowiedges oo snperiOTft* ^ rem . nal, reliable, and onlyrfsnfler* edy for the happy restorat no- and debilitab-d woman, bosi* ^ gee guarantee or fcottte-wrappeb