Newspaper Page Text
THE HENRY COUNTY WEEmA
VOL. XVII.
DIIOFESSIOXAL CA EDS.
||ll. «. I». CAMPBKLI,
DENTI ST.
McDonough Oa.
Any one desiring wnrk done onn lie ac-
BOini'.odatcd eiiher by railing on me in per
son or addressing me through the mails
Terms cash, unless special arrangements
are otherwise made.
Geo W. Bryan j W.T. Dicken.
liltVA\ DICKIE,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
McDonough, el a .
Will'practice in the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
ef Georgia and the United States District
Court. apr27-lv
|Y J. UKI6A.H,
ATTORNEY at law,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
othercollections. Will attend all the Courts
At Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
The Weekly office.
yy A. IIBOWM
’ ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the counties compos
ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia and the United States District
Court. janl-ly
j | A. PBEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hamj'TON, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme-Court
of Georgia and the District Court ot the
United States. Special and prompt attcu
tiongivento Collections, Oct 8, 1888
Jno. D. Stewart. j R.T. Daniel.
STKWART A. I»AMI1I-,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Griffin, Ga.
JOHN 3.. 'I'VE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal Bank Building,
* Atlanta, Ga,
Practices in the State and Federal Courts.
y r. minus,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga.
Will practice in all the Slate and Feder
al courts. Collections a specialty, and
prompt attention given to all business en
trusted to me.
THE
lllijjßilim
East Tenn. Virpa k Ga.
R’Y.
IS THE ONLY
SHORT AND DIRECT LINE
TO THE
NORTH, SOUTH,
EAST AND WEST.
PULLMAN’S FINEST VES
TIBULE SLEEPERS
BETWEEN
ATLANTA & KNOXVILLE
MACON & CHATTANOOGA
BRUNSWICK & ATLANTA
WITHOUT CHAJHSF.
Direct Connections at Chat
tanooga with Through
trains and Pullman Sleep
ers to
Memphis and the West,
at Knoxville with l*ullmnn
KSeepcrti lor
WASHINGTON,
PHILADELPHIA,
AND N E W YORK.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS,
b.w.wrenn, chas. n.kicht
Gen’l. Ag f „ A, G. P. A.
KNOXVILLE. ATLANTA
Ocorgio IlMiaitd A t»«ill IS, IS.
SOUTH.
Leave McDonough 7:00 a. m.
Arrive Greenwood 7.'27 “
“ Louella 7:25 “
“ Griffin 8:05 “
SOUTH.
Leave Griffin 4:00 p. m.
Arrive Louella 4:40 “
“ Greenwood 4:48 “
“ McDonough 5:05 “
M. E GRAY, Sup’t.
-r rII T / 1 r 1 T) f cures scratch on
Jvl Li Li“vT Liil .'1 horses, mange on
dogs with one or two applications. For
sale*bv D. J. Sanders.
» TSB. TAFT’S ASTHtCALSIfB
ASTnmA-ni|»e|' •-'<* __ >«i r
w C . ~, «U‘i £ “ Ir .™CDCC
THIDI.TAFTIsaS.M.CO .BOCHISUR.N.I.r KBC
THE YOUNG WIDOW.
She is modest, Put not bashful,
Free and easy, but not bold ;
Like an apple, ripe and mellow,
Not too young and not too old ;
Half inviting, half repulsing. <t
Now advancing, and now shy ;
There is mischief in her dimple,
There is danger in her eye.
She has studied human nature ;
She is schooled in all her arts ;
§hc has taken her diploma
As a mistress of all hearts ;
She can tell the ver> moment
When to sigh and when to smile ;
0, a maid is sometimes charming,
But a widew all the while !
Are you sad ? How very serious
Will her handsome face become !
Are you angry 1 She is wretched,
Lonely, friendless, fearful, dumb !
Aro you mirthful ? How her laughter,
Silver sounding, will ring out !
She can lure and catch and play you
As (he angler does the trout.
Ye old bachelors of forty
Who have grown so bald and wise;
Young Americans of twenty,
With the love-look in your eyes ;
You may practice all the lessons
Taught by Cupid since the fall,
But I know a little widow
Who could win and fool you all.
PARSON PLADLEY.
BY MANLEY 11. PIKE.
It was “meeting time’’ in Iludderfield,
Massachusetts Bay Colony, on a Sun
day morning in June, 1676. The fifty
or sixty log buildings which made up
the settlement stood silent as so many
tombs among the black stumps of the
half cleared fields, for every soul in the
place, from the old man of ninety to
the youngest child, was in the meetiug
house on hill—every soul, that is, ex
cept Abner True.
Abper True, whose father was a
deacon and a tithing man, and counted
second only to the minister himself in
rigid piety, was actually playing truant
from meeting; aud this in a village
which looked upon Plymouth aud
Weymouth as dangerously worldly
towns, relaxed in morals aud manners
by overmuch prosperity.
But Aimer had worked from sun to
sun every day for the last week, and
knew he must do the same every
day of the next week aud the week
aftei that; for the corn was to be hoed,
the grass crops got in, aud a score of
other tasks to be done.
It seemed to him too hard that, on
this one day of rest, he should be ob
liged to sit upon a backless plank
bench all the forenoon, if, indeed, he
did uot find himself forced tn sit there
longer; since Parson Pladley, who
rarely preached less than three hours,
sometimes preached four, and once or
twice bad been known to exceed five
hours.
Abner felt sure that the sermon
would not be a short one this day, even
according to the preacher’s ideas ol
brevity ; and the more he thought of it
the more he dreaded it, until he became
willing to incur any punishment for
the sake of escaping that discourse.
So when Deacon Amos, with his
wife and younger children, were ready
for meeting, no Abner could be found.
Hidden in the little hay-mow of the
rough barn, he saw the family depart—
his father marching ahead, equipped
with musket, bandoleer and powder
horn; for King Philip and his ludians
were at war against the whites, and no
man throughout the colony went to
field or church without his aims.
Similar groups, sinrlar accoutred,
paced solemnly along toward the rude
sanctuary upon the hill, uutil Abner,
seeing that all Huddersfield had passed,
felt that he was safe—for the present
—and lay down upon the soft hay to
prepare for the sound nap he had so
longed for.
Below old Fly, the farm horse,
stamped and munched without, the hens
crowed in the sunshine, with a drowsy
note that should have been favorable
enough for slumber. But between his
guilty consciousness of what he had
done and his dread of wbat Deacon
Amos would do, Abner could not man
age to go to sleep.
lie began to wish himself upon the
backless plank bench, even if the ser
mon were to last al' day ; yet a tardy
arrival wou’d be nearly as great offense
as not to come at all; and he had not
the courage to meet the public reproof
which Parson Pladley might adminis
ter, or to hasten the private chastise
ment that Deacon Amos would surely
inflict.
The time went on. The old horse
was still now ; the heus uttered only
an occasional croak. From the far dis
tance the preacher’s voice came down
McDonough, ga., Friday. November 4, 1802.
ou the warm breeze iu a softened tnur
mer. Abner was dozing.
What was that ? He heard a sound
that awakened him quite, and he sprang
up to listen.
Nothing but a slight swishiug sound
in the tall grass behind the barn —
nothing hut that. It was probab’y
some fox or polecat on the watch to
snatch a chicken. Abner peered out
through a crack to see if be could dis
cover the animal, for the swishing
sound seemed drawing near.
In the meeting-house Parsau Plad
ley had turned his big hour-glass twice,
and uow the sands of the third hour
were almost speut. Before him rows
of serious men, women aud children in
reverent attention, not once removing
their earnest eves from the minister.
The heavy door was flung open and
shut again with a loud bang that startled
every member of the congregation. A
boy, staggering aud streaming with
perspiration, ran up the broad aisle aud
fell exhausted at the foot of the pul
pit.
Every man stretched out bis hand
to the musket that stood beside him :
but no one arose, no one said a word
or littered an exclamation.
Whatever the danger was —and they
knew well what it might be—this was
God’s house, and in it none but God’s
servant should raise a voice or venture
upon any action unless he permitted.
The minister descended from his
place, leaned over the panting Abner
and caught the few words the boy had
strength to whisper: “Savages—full
five score—stealing up—to take us un
aware !’’
The minister returned to the pulpit.-
“Kind’.e your matches, brethren,”
said he in a voice of perfect tranquil
ity.
The ring of flint and steel sounded
all oyer the house.
“Make ready your guns,” continued
the minister, takiug up a heavy musket,
and blowing the match, or fuse, by
which it was discharged. “Musketeers,
to your stations. Ye that have swords
or pikes, sit fast.”
The congregation obeyed these or
ders as calmly as they had been given.
Twenty-five men, headed by Deacon
True, silently ranged themselves at the
loopholes which were pierced in the
door aud along the walls. Each knew
his position, and took it without delay
or hesitation ; while the fifteen men
who had no firearms sat stiffly on the
benches with the women and children,
most of whom had not looked behind
them since Abner rushed in.
Parson Pladley looked at the hour
glass, which still continued to run, and
quietly resumed his sermon. Around
the sides of the room the musketeers
stooped at the loopholes amid the light
vapor from their smouldering matches.
Ou the benches the body of listeners
kept their composed countenances
turned upon the preacher. Save his
voice, there was no sound but an infre
quent metallic rattle, as some musket
eer examined his gun or loosened his
iron-hilted broadsword in the scabbard.
The words of the preacher sang
throughout the house:
“And even as aforetime the heathen
did furiously rage, and did compass the
children of the covenant with spear
and javelin round about —”
A high-pitched, thrilling screech
filled the air without, and now rose
above the minister’s voice. It was sus
tained and prolonged in many pavage
throats. There came quick, sharp
patterings on the roof and walls, like
hailstones.
Enoch Brett fell backward from his
loophole with an arrow through the
brain. Another man arose from his
seat, picked up the gun which Brett
had dropped, and took the vacant sta
tion.
A dozen muskets answered the storm
of missiles. Their fire seemed to check
the advance of the Indians, inasmuch
as the war crv grew fainter, and the
patteriug of the arrows diminished.
Parson P adely had not interrupted
his sermon, although his voice had
been temporarily drowned by the noise
of the assault and defense, except that
he cast one glance at the musket beside
him, and another at the hour-glass.
All the men who could act were at
their posts, why should he not continue
to the end, while waiting for the des
perate struggle which must come ? His
sense of duty told him that he ought
not to cease his holy office before the
appointed time, except under compul
sion in which' he must recognize the
hand of God.
His hearers understood this as well
as if he had declared tie determination
in so many words. They did their
part by listening with steady attention.
Again the cries grew louder and ar
row flights thicker. The guns replied,
but this time the attack was not re
pulsed. A ponderous thumping on
the door, which shook the whole build
ing, told that some kind of battering
ram was being employed io break it
down, A few more such shocks and
the door must fall.
Only a pinch or two more of sand
remained iu the hour glass. Still it
was not quite empty and Parsou Plad
ely preached on.
Crash ! The door was half off its
hinges. The firearm tuen crowded be
hind it and delivered a volley that ap
peared for a minute to clear the pas
sage. There was yet some sand in
the hour glass. Che parson’s lips
could be seen to move, though his voice
was not heard.
A renewed yell and the crashing
blows once more beat upon the door.
No shots answered this time, for the
muskets were empty.
An arrow whistled across the church
and stuck quivering in the front of
the pulpit. Around the edges of the
shattered door hatchets and clubs were
brandished in the faces of the defend
ers, who dashed them aside with the
butts of their guns. The women be
gan to scream.
The last sand ran out of the hour
glass. Parson Pladley bowed his head
and said, “Amen!” And all the con
gregation answered together, “Amen !”
Up sprang the hitherto motionless
listeners—women to the rear, men to
the front —and from the pulpit the old
minister, with sword and gun, led the
way to the aid of the others, who were
beginning to give ground before the
crowd of hideously-painted figures who
were forcing their way through the en
trance.
Then came out another side of the
Puritan character. The fierce energy
—almost joy—with which the colonists
fought was as surprising as the stony
self-control they had shown but a mo
ment before. Ahead of them all,
Parson Pladley swung his mighty
sword with cries which betrayed the
old horse-soldier of Cromwell aud
Harrison, for such he bad been and of
those who followed him, more than
one had stood in the ranks of the pike
men who met the charges of Prince
Rupert’s Cavaliers, and repelled them,
too.
As if he remembered this the min
ister lifted up his strong voice in a
stern Psalm which had thundered over
the battlefields of Nasehy and Marston
Moor—the war song of David the
King, rejoicing over his victory :
“I have pursued mine enemies and
overtaken them; neither did 1 turn
again till they were consumed.
‘T have wounded them that were
not able to rise; they are fallen under
my feet.
“For Thou hast girded me with
strength unto the battle; Thou hast
subdued under me those that rose up
against me.”
The Indians were like wolves com
bating lions. They shrank, wavered
and were pressed back to the door,
through it, and outside of it. Then,
by one last rush, they were broken,
scattered and dispersed. They ran in
every direction for the shelter of the
woods ; many of them fell by the way
under the pikes and swords of their
pursuers. Huddersfield was saved.
Within the meeting-house, now' half
ruined, dim with powder-smoke and
heaped with broken benches, arrows
and dead bodies, the congregation
gathered around its minister, who,
blackened and bloody, with gown torn
to shreds and a great slash across his
forehead, once more raised up his
voice—this time in the glorious strain
of one of their triumphant hymns.
All joined in it—even the wounded,
who could scarcely lift their heads
from the ground, and the dying, who
sang their own breaths away in the
grateful chorus.
When the injured had been cared
for, and there was once more time for
ordinary matters, Parson Pladley called
Abner True to him.
“Son Abner, thou didst well so cun
uingly to avoid those ruthless savages,
and privily warn us be-times. F'or this
thou meritest reward.”
Abner looked up astonished.
“And this shall be thy reward —
that for thy willful tarrying away from
the sanctuary thou shalt receive no dis
cipline —from the church.”
“But my father will—” stammered
the boy.
“Of a surety he will,” placid replied
the minister, “and I trust it may do
thee good.”
“Come with me, Abner,” said Dea
con Amos.—Youth’s Companion.
A Lesson on tlie Tariff.
The following object lesson for Steve
Elkins and any other person capable of
reading, is furnished by the Chicago
Times:
Mr. Elkins bought a line fowling
piece f"r the eldest boy just before the
McKinley hill became a law. Later
on, after the passing of the bill, his
other sous persuaded him to order for
them in New York duplicates of the
gun. #
The guns arrive ! when the secretary
was on a stumping tour. When he re
turned the hoys exhibited the guns,
with the statement that they were “just
like brother’s.”
“Yes, boys,” said the secretary, “1
ordered duplicates of the first one.
After he had examined the guns one
of the boys asked :
“Well, papa, where have you been
this week, and what have you been
doing ?”
“I have beau to Martinsburg, Graf
ton, Morgantown aud Kingwood, mak
ing speeches.”
“What did you talk about?”
“The tariff.”
“Did you tell them that the tariff
was not a tax, and the consumer did
not pay it?”
“Certainly.”
“Now, papa, if the tariff is not a tax
and the consumer does not pay it, will
you please ex| lain to us what this
means on the bottom ol the hill that
came with the guns ?”
Here the lad produced the bill, aud
on the bottom of it was written :
“Mr. Elkins, we are obliged to
charge you $4 more for each of these
guns, on accouut of the McKinley bill,
making .118.”
The boys were still waiting for the
secretory’s explanation when last heard
from.
Judge Wuxem’s Political Proverbs.
Mighty few tuen sell their votes to
get money to pay their onest (lets.
Most Congressmen thinks more how
to git re-elected than how to benefit the
country.
Taint often that a party gits too cor
rupt for a pollilishan ez long ez it takas
good keer uv him.
The ritch pollitician wants to buy
aud the pore wants to sell.
The man that’s tricky in politics
will be tricky anywhere else.
It takes editors to make staesmen
feel about half as big as they air.
Religion gits lost in politics mighty
soou.
Stump speakers had better talk
about tho tariff than to talk about each
other.
That Mammoth Cheese.
That mammoth cheese coming from
Canada to the World’s Fair, mentioned
in the World two week's ago, has been
made. It was manufactured at the
Dominion experimental dairy station at
Perth, and will certainly rauk as the
largest cheese in the world. It weighs
over 22,000 pounds, and contains the
curd of a day’s milk from 10,000 cows.
A gigantic oaken press was erected for
J,he purpose of constructing the cheese,
and 200 tons of pressure was applied.
The cheese has already been pro
nounced perfect in texture, flavor and
color. The cheese will be placed in the
pyramid of Canadian dairy products at
the fair, and will afterwards be cut up
and sold in pound blocks either in Chi
cago or in one of the large cities of
Great Britaian.—Chicago World.
T tie Saliirilii)’ liliiile
Is the greatest newspaper wonder of
the age. It is four years old and has
a circulation of over a quarter million
copies a week. The latest sensations
and the most marvelous events are
written up in the b 'St style and fully
illustrated. Subscriptions received at
52.00 per year, SI.OO for six mouths,
or 50 cents for three months. Special
inducements to clubs. Send fur free
specimen copies. Boys everywhere
are making big money selling the Blade
on the streets. Wri’e for particulars
Address the publisher, W. L). Boyc
110, 115 and 117 Fifth ave., Chicago.
Some of the hotels have a bill of fare
with the fly leaf covared with, cards of
various business houses. An Oregon
man recently took a seat behind one of
them, when a waiter appeared with
“Wbat will yon have, sir?” To the
utter coufusion of the waiter he leisurely
remarked, “You may fetch me up a set
of new teeth, in a gutta pereba, an im
proved sewing machine, with [latent
lock stitch, a box of Brandredth’s pills,
and a pair of No. 7 French calf skin
boots.” In a moment the waiter re
plied, We do not furnish those articles.”
“Then what have you got them on the
bill of fare for,” ictortedt he customer.
Highest of all in Leavening Power—Latest U S. Gov’t Report.
D o v a | Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
It Was Business.
About 10 o’clock in the morning,
says a writer In the New York Sun,
two colored women rode into the town
on a mule to do some trading at a store
and it wasn’t over half an hour later
that 1 ran across the younger on the
platform of a cotton warehouse walking
hand in hand with a colored man. lie
let go of her and followed me down the
platform to say :
Seed yo’ grinniu’, boss, and I thought
I’d ’splaiu dat it was a case of luv at
fust sight. I war jist tuk wid dat gal
do fust minit I sot eyes on her, an’ I
reckon she ll dun promise to many me
befo’ noon.”
Soon after 12 o’clock I went down
to the depot to see about a train, and
found the man sitting on a salt barrel,
with the other woman, while the first
was standing beside the mule under the
tree across tho street. The pair on
the barrel were hilling and cooing, hut
as I outered the depot tho man follow
ed to sav:
“Reckon you am sorter surprised
ober de change, eh ?”
“Rather. You were courting the
daughter two hours ago.”
“Dat’s a fact.”
“And you said it was love ut first
sight.”
“Exactly.”
“Well, why did yon diop her for
the other?”
“Dey am mudder aud darter, sail 1”
“Well?”
“Wall, I dim found out dat de mud
der owns de mewl, sah.”
Chlvftlrte Maxims.
The sacred hooks of India contain
the following maxims :
He who despises women despises his
mother.
Who is cursed by a women is cursed
by God.
The tears of a worm n call down the
fire of heaven on those who make them
flow.
Evil to him who laughs at women's
sufferings; God shall laugh at his
prayers.
It was at the pra}ers of a women
that the Creator pardoned man. Cursed
be be who forgets it.
Who shall forget the sufferings of
bis mother at his birth shall be reborn
in the body of an owl during three suc
cessive transmigrations.
There is no crime more odious than
to prosecute a women.
When women ate honored the diviu
ities are content; but when they are
not honored all undertakings fail.
The housholds cursed by women to
whom they have not rendered the hom
age due them find themselves weighted
down with rum and destroyed as if
they had been struck by some sicret
power.
It is time to appreciate all things at
their true value.
To-I>ay
Hood’s Sarsaparilla stands at the
head in the medicine world, admired
in prosperity and envied in merit by
thousands of would be competitors. It
has a larger sale than any otb r m di
cine. Such success could not he won
without positive merit.
Hoop's Ptt.t.s cure con-nip ; > i by
restoring the paristaltic action of the
alimentary canal. They are the best
family cathatic.
Secretary Sheriu, of the democratic
national committee, who has hern
spending some time in Indiana, his
home stale, says that he was surprised
to learn while there of the large num
ner of prominent republicans who have
recently left their party to vote for
Cleveland. It is his opinion that the
democrats will sweep the state, elect
ing president, congressmen and the fu'l
state ticket.
It is alleged that in New York town,
where tln-re are over 800 political
“floaters” the purchasables have or
ganized a trust and agreed upon S3O
as the uniform price to be charged for
each vote. Magee will probably be
sent to secure “harmony” there.
Numerous married women of the
land are indorsing' that plank of the
Omaha platform which declares that
men who will not work shall not eat. —
Detroit Free Press.
5 CENTS A COPY.
One Glass Too Much.
A glass of wine changed the history
of France nearly twenty years. Louis
Philippe, king of the French, had a
sou, the duke of Orleans, au heir to
the throne, who always drank only a
certain number of glasses of wine, be
cause even one more made him tipsy.
On a memorable morning he lorgot to
count the number of glasses and took
one more than usual. When entering
his carriage he stumbled, frightening
the horses and causing them to run. In
attempting to leap from the carriage
his head struck the pavement, and he
Boon died. That glass of wine over
throw the Orleans rule, confiscating
their property of £20,000,000, aud
sent the whole family into exile.
The llilrogv l,<'<l|ter.
Is twenty years old aud ban a circula
tion of 140,000 copies a week. It is
u combined story and family paper,
fully up to the times in every particu
lar, and handsomely illustrated. There
is a Fashion Department, and also a
Young People’s department, either of
which alone is worth the su scription
price of $2.00 per year, SI.OO for six
months, or 50 cents for three months.
Send for free specimen copies aud in
ducements for clubs. Hoys aud girls
everywhere aro making money selling
the Ledger to regular customeis. Write
for particulars. Address the publisher
VV. D. Hoyce. 113, 115 and 117 Fifth
avenue, Chicago, 111.
Paid for Stamps.
For the year ending June 30, 1891,
the ordinary postal revenue of the
United States, exclusive of money order
business, was more than $05,000,000.
Something like $11,500,000 of this
came from letter postage, the majority
of which came from the sale of twoceut
stamps. It is estimated that the whole
number of this stamp used exceeds two
billions yearly.—Ex.
The Valdosta Telescope, edited by
one of the sweetest little wonera in
Georgia, hits the truth squarely in the
following, ‘-Mrs. Lacso may bo au
intellectual, talented women, swaying
a multitude of people with her elo
quence, but atas ! she is not a womanly
women. Indeed we cannot associate
her with womankind at all. ' ,r e can
not think of her as a wife and a . ither,
a woman whose children will rise up
aud “call her blessed.’’ Women can
not purify politics by going to the bal
lot box. The revolution that is desired
must begin at home, and women who
want to purify and revolutionize the
political world must stay at home and
teach her sons to be honest and reliable
and her daughters to be pure and true.”
For the cure of headache, constipa
tion, Btomach and liver troubles, and
all derangements of the digestive and
assimilative organs, Ayer’s Pills are
invaluable. Being sugar coated, they
are pleasant to take, always reliable,
and retain their virtues in any climate
The continued lawlessness about the
Homestead steel works seems to indi
cate that the taxpayers of Pennsylva
nia are not done paying out money fo
which they are in no way responsible.
It may yet be found necessary to re
turn the troops to Homestead.
The Irishman who explained that a
cannon was made by taking a hole and
putting brass around it came nearer be
ing explicit in bis explanation than
McKinley can be in explaining how
the United States government succeeds
in making foreigners pay our taxes.
Illinois, like New York, has sur
prised party managers by registering
an extraordinarily latge number of vo
ters. And in Illinois, as in New Y'ork,
it is believed the increased registration
augurs well for democracy.
Jay Gould’s outlay iu pocket money
amounts to about thirty five dollars a
mouth, and he rarely has more than
ten dollars iu his clothes. Nearly all
his purchases are paid for in checks.
If the care of the hair were made a
part of a lady’s eduction, we should not
see so many gray heads, and the use of
Hall’s Hair Renewer would be unnec
essary.