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THE HENRY COUNTY WEELt Y
VO I . XVII.
PROFESSIONAL VA lil>S.
ji f 3£. «. I». CMU'IH !.!,
DENTIST.
Ml n<>N(ll Oil li*.
Any one desiring work dune can !>e ac
comniod.iteJ ell her hy calling on me in per
son or addressing me through the mails
Terms cash, unless special arrangement
ire otherwise made.
Geo W r . Bryan j W.T. Du ken.
ISRYA.ti A
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Oouri
oi' Georgia and the United States Uistric
Court. apr27-ly
j H > .1. HKAGAA,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
McDonoi'oh, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
othercollections. Will attend alltheCourts
at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
Tiik Weekly office.
A. itROHN,
" ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonquoh, 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
A. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the District Court ol the
United States. Special and prompt atten
tiongivento Collections, Oct ti, 1888
Jno. D. Stbwart. j 11. T. Daniel.
STEWART & I>A>lK*.,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Guifjun, Ga.
JOIB.A S.. TI E.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal Bank Building,
Atlanta, Ga,
Practices in Ihe State and Federal Courts.
F. WEEMS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga.
Will practice in ail the Stale and Feder
al courts. Collections a specialty, and
prompt attention given to all business en
trusted to me.
TEE
East Toe Virpia & Go.
R’Y.
IS THE ONLY
SHORT AND DIRECT LINE
TO TIIE
NORTH, SOUTH,
EAST AND WEST.
PULLMAN’S FINEST VES
TIBULE SLEEPERS
BETW KEN
ATLANTA <2 KNOXVILLE
MACON & CHATTANOOGA
BRUNSWICK & ATLANTA
wiTieoi'xcnt^Gß
Direct Connections at Chat
tanooga with Through
TRAINS AND PULLMAN SLEEP
ERS TO
Memphis and the Vfest,
nl linoxTllle vilh I’ml'iicin
Sieeptrslor
WASHINGTON,
PHILADELPHIA,
AND N EW YORK.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS,
B. W. WSENN, CHAS. N. KIGHT
Gcnl. Pas*. Agf., * A.C. r. A.
KNOXVII.EE. ATLANTA
Ceorgia 55idlanii
SOUTH.
Leave McDonough *'oo a. m.
Arrive Greenwood 7.27 “
“ LoiuTla 7:25 “
« Griftin B:05 “ (
NOKTH.
Leave Griffin 4:00 p. m.
Arrive Louella 4:40 “
“ Greenwood 4:48 “
“ McDonough 5:05 “
M. E GRAY, Sup’t.
■j tt i v / t i' T>ar cures scratch on
JYI LlHj 1.11 Ji horses, mange on
dogs with one or two applications. Fo'
gale by D. J. Sanders.
HVliia > DR. TAUT*B ASTHKALINS
a S FilVr AA-nilHCr: ■ >cr taU.: .eudu
md.lms.weVn: GUllti* L'KCBPP
IKE Da. TAfT BSSS. f*. Co.,S6iHEiTta,*.«.r EtCC
MV ANGEL BRIDE.
Alone by (lie firelight’s fitful gleam
I sit in my easy chair,
And watch in the flames the bygone scenes
Which my fancy pictures there,
And as swiftly by on memory’s wings
The pictured lancies glide,
1 catch the trace of a beautiful face,
The face of my angel bride.
Our lives were joined by no priestly words,
And no bridal wreath had she,
For all too soon did the angels come
And bear her away from me,
Hut I know while eternity’s ages roll,
She is mine, whatever betide,
For our souls wore wed, ere the spirit fled
From the form of my angel bride.
My soul has no space for a living love,
For ’tis tilled with the love of the dead,
A love that was purer than many a love
Where the priestly words were said.
So as still alone on the river of life
X float with the drifting tide,
I'll place each day a fresh bouquet
On the grave of my angel bride
—L. P. Hills,
Burdett’s Message to Boys.
My boy, the first thing you waut to
loat-u—i£ you haven’t learned how al
ready—is to tell the truth. The pure,
sweet, refreshing, wholesome truth.
The plain, unvarnished, simple, every
day, manly truth, with a little “t.”
For one thing it will save you so much
trouble. 0, heaps of trouble! And
uo end of hard work. And a terrible
strain upon your memory. Sometimes
—and when I say sometimes, I mean
a great many times —it is hard to tell
the truth the first time. But when you
have told it, there is an eud of it.
You have won the victory ; the fight is
over. Next time you tell the truth you
can tell it without thinking. Your
memory maybe faulty, but you tell
your story without a s’mgle lash from
the stinging whip of that stern old
taskmaster, conscience. You don’t
have to stop and remember bow you
told it yesterday. You don’t get half
through with the awful sense upon you
chat you are not telliug it as you did
the other time, and cannot remember
just how you did tell it then. You
won’t have to look around you to see
who is there, before you begin to tell
it. After Ananias told a lie, his wife
had to tell another just like it. l r ou
see, if you tell lies you are apt to get
your whole family into trouble.
And then it’s so foolish for you to
lie. You cannot pass a lie off for the
truth any more than you can get coun
terfeit money into circulation. The
leaden dollar is always detected before
it goes very far. When you tell a lie,
it is known. Yes, you say, God knows
it. That’s right, but he is not the only
one. So far as God’s knowledge is
concerned, the liar doesn’t care very
much. He doesn’t worry about what
God knows —if he did, he wouldn’t be
a liar, hut it does worry a man, or boy,
who tells lies to think that everybody
else knows it. The other boys know
it ; your teacher knows it ; people who
hear you tell “whoppers” know it;
your mother knows it, hut she won’t
say so. And all the people who know
it, and don’t say anything about it to
you, talk about it to each other, and —
dear ! dear! the things they say about
a boy who is given to telling big stories.
If he could only'hear them, it would
make him stick to the truth like flout
to a miller.
And, finally, if you tell the truth al
wa) s, I don’t see how you are going to
get very far out of the right way.
And how people do trust a truthful
boy ! We never worry about him when
he is out of sight. We never say:
“I wonder where he is ! I wish I knew
what he is doing ! I wonder who he
is with! 1 wonder why he doesn’t
come home!” Nothing of the soit.
We know that he is all right, and that
when he comes home we will knew all
about it, and get it straight. We don’t
have to ask him where he is going, and
how long he will be gone, every time
he leaves the house. We don’t have
to call hack and make him “solemnly
promise” the same thing over and over
two or three times. When he says,
“Yes, I willor “No, I wontjust
once, that settles it. We don’t have to
cross examine him when he comes home
to find out where he has been. He
tells us once, and that is enough. We
don’t have to say, “Sure ?” “Are you
sure now?” when he tells anything.
But, my boy, you can’t builu up that
reputation by merely telling the truth
about half of the time, nor two-thirds,
nor three-fourths, nor nine-tenths of
the time. If it brings punishment up
on you. while the liar escapes ; if it
brings you into present disgrace while
the smooth-tonged liars are exalted ; if
it loses you a good position ; if it de
grades you in the class ; if it stops a
week’s pay—no matter what punish
ment it may bring upon you, tell the
truth.
McDonough,!ga.. Friday. November h,1802.
All these things will soou be righted.
The worst whipping that can be laid on
a boy’s back won't keep him out of the
water in swimming time more than a
week ; but a lie will burn more than
fifty years. Tell the truth for the sake
of the .ruth, and all the best people in
'lie world will love and respect you,
and all liars will respect and hate you.
—Ladies Home Journal.
The School Teacher.
The least appreciated worker in the
community is the school teacher, says
tlie Now York Recorder. Oue of them
retired from the New York public
-chools the other day after fiity seven
years of sei vice—fifty-seven year# ol
modeling humau character iu the na
tion’s household, and the nation accepts
the service with the same complacency
as though she had been cooking pies in
stead of morals. It’s an ackievemenl
to make good pies, but it’s a greater
achievement to cook good morals.
They receive small measure of hom
age—do school teachers, and they are
not an envied class of workers. The
field is a trifle narrow to the outside
observer, but some oue has to work in
the narrow field.
In all vocations there are rules that
govern routine work. There is a good
bit of red tape in modern educational
! fields, a good many ledgers and day
books to be kept and schedules to be
made out, and minutes and hours are
accorded due importance, but for the
inner working of the educational ma
chine there are no rules bearing on
attrition, on the moral sensibilities, on
the sympathy between teacher and pu
pil, on the sentiment that must live in
tfcfe breasts of these foster mothers of
the nation to make them a success in
their vocation. The monetary com
pensation for this work is merely nom
inal.
Fifty-seven years of teaching—think
of it!
Eleven thousand four hundred days—
by actual count —22,800 times of re
sponding to the call of the school bell
—a reception committee to a horde of
arrant young anarchists, whose mothers
bless their absence for the peace it
brings.
Why Farmers Fall.
There was a farmer who, forced to
take a badly worn-out farm abandoned
by the owuor to his creditor, occupied
a whole day in studying out a plan to
make that undesirable property profi
table. He went to work on the plan,
without changing it in any important
matttcr, and, following step by step as
had been foreseen and fixed upon, at
the end of seven years made au income
of $2,500 clear of all expenses from
only seventy acres.
Of course, this farmer had experience
and extensive knowledge of his busi
ness, but it is not difficult for any farm
er who chooses any special kind of
farming to do the same by exercise of
patient industry and perseverance in
the course chosen. The greatest trou
ble is this vocation, as in all others, is
the want of sticking to the rigid line,
first laid out with judgment and know
ledge. These are -indispensable, but
when, with these, a plan is chosen, it
should be adhered to. “Unstable as
water, thou shalt hot excel,” is as true
to-day as when the old patriarch utter
ed that finally-fulfilled*prophecy. Aud
if an unsuccessful farmer is met with,
he will be found to be a man of the un
certain disposition.
Sermonettes.
Beware of the flattery of city' cous
ins.
Beware of the flattery of a son-in
law.
Beware of the preacher who tells
dirty yarns.
Beware of the man who does not
respect his wife.
Beware of the stray dog that wants
to be too friendly.
Beware of the stranger who tells you
his family secrets.
Beware of the man who professes to
be too good to sin.
Beware of the mau who will cheat
in a game of croquet.
Beware of the man who says there
is no virtue among women.—ltev. M.
G. liambo, in Western Plowman.
It is a safe aud good rule to sojourn
in every place as if you meant to spend
your life there, never omitting an op
portunity of doing a kindness, or
ing a true word, or making a friend.
Seeds thus sown by the wayside often
bring forth aD abundant harvest.
Nothing but the ocean of God’s re
deeming love can cleanse the foulness
that even the best must contract as
their life flows forth to eternity.
LET US HAVE PEACE.
r-'
Some Timely, Sensible aud Conserva
tive Kclkotions.
In common with ttvery democrat and
every democratic paper in Georgia, the
Times rejoices at tne glorious v ictory
'list has been won iu the State.
While it is true taat a gieat battle
has been fought and a grand and gh ri
ms victory won, whereat every good
citizen in the land may rejoice, and for
which thanksgiving , should well up
from every heart, yet, for our part,
there is a tinge of sadness that colors
iur rejoicing.
We cannot help this feeling when
we remember that this victory lias been
gained over those whom we love, our
neighbors, our brethren, our friends,
and in the rejoicing of victory we do
not feel like gloating over those who
have been defeated.
We remember the wrongs and op
pressions that we, in common with
them and every other citizen of this
land, have suffered from financial de
pression, oppressive taxation, class leg
islation, high tariff and all the other
ills that republican power and republi
can hatred could fasten upon us, espe
cially of this sunny southland home
that we all love so well.
We deplore the fact "that those evils
have driven many of our good and
clever citizens almost to desperation,
aud iu their eagerness for relief have
listened to the seductive but dangerous
delusions of selfish men, who for place
and power, for the gratification of im
placable hatred of tire-- south, for the
accomplishment of their own ambitious
ends aud designs, or for the purpose of
bolstering up and perpetuating the
waniug power of the republican party,
have taken advantage of the discontent
and restlessness that has pervaded all
classes, and with seductive words have
led off many of -our brethron and
friends into schemes to remedy these
evils, which, however, meant only dan
ger and destruction to the dearest in -
terests of all our people aud the over
throw of the government.
We believe that of tho
third party have been deceived as to
the purpose of the leaders in the move
ment, aud wo aro fully satisfied that
they have been deluded by false prom
ises, deceitful hopes aud improbable,
as well as impossible suggestions and
schemes of relief.
These things have brought, not re
lief and help, but only trouble. Divis
ion and separation have been the re
suits. Neighborhoods have been di
vided, households disrupted, bather
and son have been arrayed against each
other, brother against brother, friend
against friend, class against class, and
even the sacred mariiage tie has been
strained because of the disagreement
of husband and wife upon these issues.
The Times appreciates these facts,
aud although we have fought these
alarming dangers with might and main,
and expect to continue to do so as long
as ability and opportunity are afforded
and necessity demands, yet it always
has been and always will be witli the
kindest feelings of love aud brother
hood for those whom we have opposed.
We know that there are as good and
honest, as upiight, sincere and cousci
tntious men in the ranks of the third
party in this county, and all over the
State, as can be found anywhere—men
whom we have honored and esteemed
ever since we kuew them, and it is
with no ill will or malice that we have
opposed them, but because, with equal
honesty and conscientiousness with
themselves, we thought they were
wrong. And the logic of events has
borne out the truth of our position.
But we would not tantalize our
friends in their defeat. We would pour
the oil of consolation into their wounds
and bruises. We would be reconciled
and invite them again to take part with
us in doing battle for our rights and
for relief under the folds of the grand
old democratic banner.
Let us have peace and reunion again
forever. No longer let households and
communities be divided against each
other, but let there be unity and har
mony.
We do not rejoice becauso yoti have
been defeated, but because the right
has prevailed, and we again call upon
you to be united with us. Let us,
shoulder to shoulder, stanj united
against the common foe, not led by
men who have been soured and who
are embittered against us. but by those
whom we have known and honored all
their lives, who are a part of us. whoso
interests are identical with ours and
who will lead us to victory.
May God in His wisdom and love
spare us from further disunion and sep
aration, and make of us a united, pros
perous and happy people.—Thomaston
Times.
MACUNE GIVES GOOD ADVICE.
Ho Says the Third thirty Is as Dead
ns Can Be and Urges Alltancemen
to Save the Order.
Out:i.iKa, At, a., November s.—The
AUiaucetneu of this section are return
ing to the Democratic fold. A decid
ed change has came over many of those
who strayed off from Democracy to
follow Captain Kolb, and Dr. Macune,
i the famous Alliance leader, is said to
i he responsible for the change,
j The Doctor has been regarded as a
1 strong People’s party man, though he
has held his counsel and has said noth
ing.
But a letter just received from a
prominent Aliiauceaian here, shows
that lm sees the inevitable dissolution
i which stares the order in the face if it
allows itself to he led off hy the Third
party leaders, and his advice for them
is to return to thu original purposes of
tho Alliance aud eschew politics.
That means, if it means anything,
that the Alliance must repudiate the
Third party aud that the members must
vote as the}' have heretofore voted, not
listening to those who would lead them
from Democracy.
Tho letter has created a decided sen
sation here.
ANI) AT MOBILE.
Mobile, Ala., November s.—Hon.
Daniel Smith, leading allianeeman,
Miibile county, received tho following
letter from the chairman of tho exec
utive board of the National Farmers’
Alliance :
“Washington, November 3.—1 tako
the liberty of writing you as an influ
ential allianeeman of tho state to say,
I now think it necessary, if wo pre
serve tho order, that we at once go to
work and urge all Alliancemen, re
gardless of political affiliations, again
to come to tho ranks and put their
shoulders to the wheel, assuring them
that we will make it in fact, as well as
in name, a non-partisan oiganization.
The complete defeat of the People’s
party, which has every day been more
apparent since the Georgia election,
must not he allowed to destroy the Al
liance, and we can prevent it by timely
and wise action. Let the spirit of in
terference cease. Fraternally,
C. W. Macune.”
The Georgia synod of tho Presby
toaian church was held last week at
Cartersville. There were more than
100 members in attendance, Prominent
divines from Augusta, Atlanta, Macon,
Columbus, Savannah and other points
were present, Among them Drs. Mack,
state evangelist; Barnett, Stickeer, Jen
nings, Vass, Cleveland, Goetchius,
Laker and many others. Past Mod
erator Vass of Savannah opened the
services of the session in a splendid dis
cussion of the advancement of the
church of Christ aud its cost. After
his sermon he organized the synod for
business, and Rev. W. 11. Jennings of
Macon was made moderator over Dr.
Mack by a small majority of three
votes, af.er a cost spirited and inter
esting race. Dr. Cleveland of Atlanta
was made secretary without opposition.
A IG-year old boy, an inmate of tbe
reform school at New Brunswick, N. J.,
iias completed a long fast which he un
dertook under circumstances out of the
ordinary. lie had been an inmate of
the institution but a short wl ile when
Ids stomach began to trouble him, and
could retain nothing he ate. The result
was that he lost all use of his lower
limbs and could only get about by
crawling. Some time ago be asked for
sweet oil with which to rub himself,
saying that, with the use of the oil, he
would fast fifty-one day, which he be
lieved would cure him. Three times a
day regularly ho rubbed himself with
the oil, and when he finished his fast
the other day it was said that he ap
peared well and happy.
An exchange truthfully says that
while you are searching for the “wan
dering boy, to night” you might inquire
about the wandering girl also. The
wandering boy 13 persuaded home and
the fatted calf is killed, but the poor
wanderirg girl, whose sin is no greater,
is cast off in her shame and dif grace,
and her only solace is in death.
The most dangerous ciasses wc have
in this country are the men who buy
votes and the men who sell them. It
is hard to distinguish between the two,
but the man who buys seems to be the
worst, and both should bo disfranchised.
—Alliance Plow Boy.
| 'ihe soldiers’ home, if accepted by
the legislature, will saddle an annual
debt of at least $20,000 on the people
of Georgia, for the benefit of—a few
pets and—Atlanta. This will be about
the size of it.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest Lf S. Gov’t Report.
■
i\ asms irOW£§BI B
ABSOS2-'fSL¥ PURE
IHtiin Joint Smith.
110 was plait) John Smith.
She was the beautiful and cultivated
Ethelrida Martingale.
But what mattered that to him? He
loved her.
Love is the groat leveler.
Not that it had leveled tho sweet,
pale Ethelrida exactly, for it had not,
but it had knocked John out flat.
Happy Ethelrida, for she had the
bulge on him.
It was ever thus.
In love’s sandwiches one piece of
bread will always have more butter on
it than tho other will.
Yet Ethelrida was not cruel, and she
did not long to let him drop hard
enough to cripple him for life.
On tho contrary, says tho Detroit
Free Press, she sought to let him down
ou the silver strands to beds of thorn
less roses.
But John wouldn’t havo it.
Nor is our horo tho only matt built
that way.
Ho loves hot little, or not at all,
Who fears the dampness of his fall.
That was John Smith all over, and
still John was no slouch, as tho word
goes.
Ethelrida knew what was coming,
but sho was powerless to prevent it,
unless she took an ax to John, and sho
hesitated to resort to harsh measures.
Woman's nature is ever gentle.
It was a calm and beautiful Sabbath
evening wheu John called for the last
time.
“1 love you, Ethelrida,” ho whisper
ed, low and lisping, at about 11 o’clock,
“and I want you for my wife.”
It was then apparent to Ethelrida
that Mr. Smith meant business.
“It cannot he, I fear,” she replied,
stand him off. “Papa it unutterably
opposed to our union, and he has said
he will lock me in my room and keep
me there if I persist iu seeing you.”
That was a tip John should have
acted upon : that and the palpable fact
that Ethelrida did not rush to his throb
bing bosom like an undammod torrent,
when ho had so unmistakably blazed
the way for her.
“Love laughs at locksmiths,” he
said, courageously, ignoring the surface
indications.
Again was the fair girl balked in her
generous purpose, and there came into
her lace the hard, cold lines of resolu
tion and into her eyes tho cruel glint
of justice 'oug deferred.
“Yes, and at John Smith’*,” she ad
ded, a naive simplicity scarcely con
cealing the edge of the sword.
And John (led away into the misty,
murky darkness of unforgettable disap
pointment.
Couldn’t Kluinmux That Walter.
The young man from the country
took bis green necktie and his best girl
iuto a restaurant, and, like some men
when the girls are around, be was dis
posed to be facetious at tbe waiter’s ex
pense.
“Waiter,” be said, “bring me a
broiled elephant.”
“Yassir,” replied the waiter, perfect
ly unmoved.
“And, waiter, bring it on tone!.”
“Yassir.”
Then be stood there like a Maine
for a minute.
“Well,” said tbe young man, ‘are
you going to bring it ?”
“Yassir.”
“Why don’t you, then.”
“Orders is, sir, dat wo ban to git pay
in r dranee for elephants, sir. Kle
piiants on toast, sir, am $,8,000.25;
ef you take it widout toast, sir, it an:
only SIB,OOO, sir.”
Tbe waiter never smiled, but tin
girl did, and the young man climbed
down.
Both air and water abound in mi
crobes, or gerrns of disease, ready to
infect the debilitated system. To im
part that strength and vigor necessary
to resist the effect of these pernicious
atoms, uo tonic blood purifier equals
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
Would you be just ? Please dou’t
punish a child for a fault learned from
yourself.
5 CENTS A COPY.
Perfectly Reckless.
A round-faced, apple-cheeked and
pleasant looking little old man sat by
the side of his rather acrid-loookiug
and elderly wife on the way home
from au excursion trip, o r, a 3 the old
man called it, “a little excursion toot.”
He was full of delightful memories of
all ho had seen and heard, says the
Detroit Free Press, but his wife looked
sad and unsmiling. Presently the
old man pulled out a little old buck
skin bag and shook a silver dime and a
nickel out of it.
“There, Ar’minty,” he said to his
wife, and ho held out the money on tho
palm of his hand, “there’s all that’s
left out of a $2 bill I tuk for spendin’
money.”
“1 know it, Nathan, and I think it’s
turriblo,” replied tho wifo.
♦‘Shucks! I don’t, f b’lievo in
havin’ a good time when you set out
to.”
“We could of had a good time ’thout
wastin’ all that money.”
.“Wastin’ it? Shucks! , ITain’t it
right for a feller to hev a little enj’v
ment out of his life ?”
“Ono kin hev onj’yment ’thout com
rnittin’ all sorts of sinful extravagance.
It jist makes mo sick to think o’ how
you’ve (lung money ’round to-day.”
“W hat’d I git that was -so dretful
extravagant ?”
“Well, you went beyond all reason
iu ov’rything. What airthly need was
there of ye buvin’ soda water twice ?”
“ ’Cause I wanted it twice.”
“0, yes ; you alius was one to pam
per the ttesh. An’what airthly need
had wo o’ that 10 cents worth o’ bolo
ny sossige ? Fivo cents worth would
o’ been a-plenty.”
“Wo et it all, jist the same.”
“Et it ? Of courso wo et it; you
reckon I was goin’ to add waste to ex
travagance by throwin’ any of it away?
And what need had wo o’ them sweet
crackers when we’d tuk along more
gud bread and butter an’ pio than we
could eat ?”
“I thiuk sweet crackers go mighty
good once in awhile.”
“Well, wo ain’t made o’ money to
spend on high livin’, no matter what’s
good. An’ look at them peanuts you
went an’ bought. Half of ’em was
bad. Peanuts are onhealthy things,
anyhow.”
“Then you’d ort to be glad that half
of ’em was too bad for us to cat.”
“They cost five cents all tho same.
An’ hero I been chilly an’ mizzable all
day on ’count that ice cream I did my
best to keep you from orderin’. I
luiowed it wouldn’t agree with my
stummick.”
“You oughten’t to have et it then.”
“I had to eat it after you’d went and
wasted good money for it. It just
seemed as though you was bound arid
determined to fling money away to-day:
you acted hke you was a millionaire, I
declare if you didn’t, Nathan Sipes.”
The Testlmonals
Published on behalf of Hood’s Sar
saparilla arc as reliable and as worthy
your confidence, as if they came from
your best and most trusted neighbor.
They state only the simple facts in re
gard to what Hood’s Sarsaparilla has
done, always within truth and reason.
Constipation, and all troubles with
the digestive organs and the liver, are
cured by Hood’s Pills. Unequalled
as a dinner pill.
A Boy’s Idea of Pleasing tbe Girls.
—ltz inch boiz that ketches the gurls.
Tha kin by cande and sod}- watter for
the guils an thats what girls wants.
If a l>o i kant be ritcb an wants
to pleeso the guils the best thing
for him to do is be a solger or
somethin an ware a yuneform.
Yuneform* gitz gurls. If a boi kaut
be ritcb or have a yuneform heed bet
ter be tuff. Thats tbe cbeepest way
too kelch gurls.
“A Chemical success and medical tri
umph,” so speaks an eminent physician
in reference to Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral ;
and the eulogy was none too strong.
No other medicine is so safe and effica
cious in all diseases of tbe throat and
lungs.