The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, February 24, 1893, Image 1

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THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY VOT . XVIII. PROFESSIOXJ L CARDS. C eo. «. m:v an, b ATTORNEK AT LAW, Me Donocoh, G\. Will practice in the counties comp.; injr Hie Flint Judicial Uircuit, the S.ipi nc Court of Georgia, and the United Ft. tc- Disfriet Court. U7M. T, OICKEI*, ATTORNEY AT LAW, M ( Do.SOt Ml, GA. Will practii in the counties composing the Flint J udicial Circuit, the Supreme Court Ci Georgia and the United Slates District Court. apri7-ly p j. it;:ua\, ATTORNEY AT LAW. MoDonoi oh, Ga. Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia Special attention given to commercial and other collection W ill attend all-the Courts at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over Tut Weekly office. A. KROWA * ATTORNEY AT LAW, iioDoxofoa, Ga. Will practice iu all the counties compos ing thi Flint Circuit, the tSiffireme Court of Georgia and the United States District Court. janl-ly JOUA 1,. TI E. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Gate City Natioal Rank Building, Atlanta, Ga, Practices in the State and Federal Courts, s:, " a 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 of the United States. Special and prompt atten tiongivento Collections, Oct 8, 1888 Jno. D. Stewart. j It.T. Daniel. STEWART A IMA I 111,, ATTORNEYS AT LAW r , Gbifkin, Ga. |jl*. <K. E». EA.MIHtEI.E, DENTIST, McDonough i*a. Any one desiring work done can l>e ac commodated eiiher by calling on me in per son or addressing me through the mails. Terms cash, unless special arrangements mb otherwise made. East Tern. Virginia & Ga., R’Y. 1 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 umioi r« i* ix>IN DIRECT Connections at Chat tanooga with Through TRAINSAND PULLMAN SLEEP- j ERSTO Memphis and the West, at 14 noxville v illi Pullman Slcepci* l«>r WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA, AND NEW YORK. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS, ! B. W. WRENN, CHAS. N. RIGHT (jlen'l. Pits ß * Ajf'., A,G. I‘. A. KNOXVIATLANTA ' Georgia Midland A Gull' K. 11. SOUTH. Leave McDodoii.'li 7:00 a. m. Arrive Green* >oii 7 :11 “ “ Louelia 7: - J5 “ “ Griffin 8:05 “ SOBTH. Leave Griffin 4:00 p. m Arrive Louelia 4:40 “ “ Greenweed 4:18 w “ McDonough 5:05 “ M. E GRAY, Sup’t. i r Ty i / < |’T)lf cures scratch on JY A IjJj'VT ILIt .<1 horses, mange on dogs with one or two applications. Fo* sale by D. J. Sanders. 1-TI I /'r I) is guaranteed to JYI li L v « i J il Jl cure itch in thirty minutes. For s.i ebv i). J. Sanders. n-rUCU a Bl’.. Tier’s A STHM ALETTE Aa I nM ' cn,! y“* n, . 'TC'CTDirgr THE SI. TAFT BISS. M. CO.,KSt:itSUI,*.T.» Ktft AS IT ST KIKES l s. \ Of late we have been repeatedly ! questioned about the state school cen sus - ivhen it would be taken, etc. For :ho information ot' those we will state ! that Commissioner Brad well has issued I a circular asking the city and county boards throughout the state to meet nu the first Tuesday in March and select the enumerators. These enumerators will be paid $2 a day and they will be engaged about two mouths on the work. ! for Commissioner Brad well will only allow that much time to be occupied. It will be their duty to go from house to house and ascertain how many chil dren there are in each between the ages of G and 18 years, the race and sex, whether or not they attended school, whether or not they can read and write, and how many children there are that are blind or deaf and dumb When the enumerators have gone over the territory assigned to them, they will report to the county school com missioner of the county, and he will compile the figures for the whole coun ty and send them to Commissioner Bradwell, who will compile them for the state and publish them. * * * We clip the following interesting news item from the last issue of the .Jackson Argus : Mr. J. S. Elkins, one of Ilenry county's most substantial farmers, who resides in five and one-half miies of McDonough, was in town yesterday after a load of provisions. He says he bad rather deal in his own county, but if by driving his .stock a few miles he can make ten do.iars a day he will con tinue to come to Jackson for supplies. Thos. D. Stewart has invested in a bran new safety bicycle, and can al ready ride with the grace and ease of a professional. In the language of the small boy, we remark, “YYiu just ought to see him burn the wind.” Alexander hasn’t pur chased as yet. # * # An air ship could do a very success ful business in Henry county at pres ent. Public roads nearly impassable. % * * The early gardener has been trying to regain lost lime the past week. But he can’t do it, you know. * -* * There was a People’s party club or ganized at Phillippi, in Henry county, last Saturday. That is right, take it out of the Alliance, and let it be sep arate as it should.—Jackson Argus. * * * Advertising pays. A few issues hack we mentioned the fact that our garden seed had been destroyed, and in a castfil way reminded our con gressman that a few from the Depart ment of Agriculture would be accep table. A liberal supply received this week, for which we return thanks. Book racks have been place on all the pews at the Presbyterian church. They are not only useful but are also ornameutal. There are but few as conveniently arranged church edifices outside of the larger cities, and our brethren of that denomination have just cause for pride. * * * Mr. C. F. Turner, of Monroe couu ty, according to announcement met with the County Alliance at this place last Friday. He also delivered a pub lic address, which was but slimly atten ded. * * * Robins are as plentiful around Mc- Donough just now as flies iu summer time. Hut their numbers are being rapidly diminished by the young sports men of the community. Although our merchants have re ceived large consignments of Western corn, we have not thus far noted the receipt of any Western hay by them. I We take it for granted from this that j our farmer friends saved enough of this ruffage last year to supply the home consumption, and add, by way of pa renthesis. that this is just exactly as it should be. Wouldu’t it pay to iaise and bale hay for sale instead of c ,n --tinuiug to make cotton at a loss? Hay made from Bermuda grass or German millet is superior to most of that usu ally sold here at S2O to $23 per ton, and either can be grown at a profit at much less. I » * * * People cry.,dowu the credit system and talk up the cash, but the fact is credit is just as important as cash. A man must have one or the other or there is bad getting along. It is the McDonough, ga.. frii>a wfebruary 24, ihjw. abuse and not the judicious use of credit that is to be condemned. We are not an advocate of the credit sys tem as it is generally followed, but a cautious use of credit has enabled many a mau to gain a foothold who could nover have succeeded without it. To abulish credit would be to paralyze the whole commercial world, create vast armies of paupers, and to clash with the ecouomy of nature and grace. The earth itself does business on a credit— paying the wages of t|ie toiler at harvest times. Ail incentives for right living are based on promise—the divine promise of reward. * * # Mumps are raging iu the vicinity of Flippen to such an extent, so we have been informed, as to considerably iu tefere with the school attendance at that place. * * * The other day the writer met a very small “cuffe,” carrying a very large armful of books, which brought forth the ioquiry : “Doing to school ?” “Yas sar, boss.” “Do you study all those bouks ?” “No sar, deys my brudder’s. Ise a ignorance kind ’er nigger ’side him, boss. Yer jest ought’er see dat nigger figgerin. He done gone au’ clean cy phered through addition, partition, sub straction, distraction, abomination, jus tification, hallucination, derivation, cre ation, amputatioD and adoption. Lem me tell you what’s de God’s trufe, wince man, dat dere brudder ’er mine is sho’ got er double-story head on ’im w’eu it comes ter cackilatiu.” And we thought as rnneh. Last Sunday was the first real bright sunny Sabbath of the new year, and the people showed their appreciation of the weather by the presence of good congregations at all the religious ser vices throughout the day. * * * We heartily agree with Rev. Elam Culpepper in his remarks about idle ness, especially among boys just grow ing up, brought forth during his dis course at the Baptist church, this city, last Sunday evening. It is a true and undisputed axiom that, “An idle brain is the devil’s workshop.” An idle boy soon becomes a lazy one. Idle ness tends toward laziness, and lazi ness is worse than death. A lazy boy makes a lazy man, as sure as a crocked twig makes a crooked tree. Who ever yet saw a boy grow up in idleness, that did not make a shiftless vagabond when he becomes a man, unless he had a fortune left him to keep up appear ance. The great mass of the thieves, paupers and criminals that fill our pen itentiary and almshouses have come to what they are by being brought up in idleness. Those who constitute the busiuess portion of the community— those who make our great and useful men—were trained up in their earliest boyhood to be industrious. * * * Drummers, agents, peddlers, and such like, have been as numerous in and around McDonough the past week as tramps in Jacksonville. * • * The soft, mellow tones of the plow boy has been heard in every part of the county the past few days, telling “old Beck” in carressing(?) tones to “git up thar, durn yer ; whoa, gee, you fool,” while they turn the sod pre paratory to planting spring oats. # # * The season has arrived when the venerable (we say venerable because of their antiquity) jokes and puns about the fate of the “Spring poet,” and the arrival of “Gentle Annie,” will be res urected and again perpetrated upon an innocent and unoffending public. *** While transferring a car load of ap ples at the depot last Friday, a Maltese cat was discovered in the car. The cat bad come all the way from the j state of New York, from whence the apples were shipped, and was in a starved out condition, having been eight days in transit without food or water. Kind hearted Car Inspector Waller procured some milk for it, but the first taste of food threw it into convulsions, . its hunger was so great. Owing to its numerous lives it survived, however, and was becoming quite a pet when a day or so later it was run over by a freight car. Tiif. Weekly’s representative was 3 standing unobserved in ear-shot dis tance of a couple of popular young men, one living here, the other an often visitor to our town,who were conversing near the postoflice on St. V ijSn Hue's day, and this is a part of the sracjsrsa i tion we overheard : The Visitor.—“ You say ®f»-,jyas mailed here ? Well, I don’t kPgjfdroo !it was that sent it, and that*"‘“tept.” Here his friend made som s9Sj|r*rk in such a low tone of voice 'Mpytw-e unable to catch it. “You don’t say so,” oxelnj|iiJsjlri- Visitor. Do you really fellow. Well, she is not beautiful, you might say ; but (Brut of a face and figure upon w ijdyjfiv one might look with pieasui e.VTVotn the graceful shaped nose, to which look like the last effonV# s'ome Grecian chisel every feature 1 1 strays refinement and culture. The soft blue eyes have evidently been ace istomed to melt beneath the charms tfuAoetry, aud the Mobile lips show eves* in re pose how their fine expression might make more delicate a tender seftiuient, or render more elegant a polistfed shaft of wit. When those lips are opened in speech, the voice is soft and sntet, and the words are ‘like apples of -.old in pictures of silver,’ ” We managed to creep away vt this juncture, although we must confess our knees felt “terribly shaky.” Who this “piece of perfection.' is we can’t imagine—can you ? **» There is a lively demand to* Lcottou seed. They have been sel. ing|he past week at sl.lO per hundred; Ten years ago our people would have bur ied to scorn the idea of cotton seed ever be ing sold for such a price.« ~ * Home is a man’s ark when trouble fprings, When gathering tempests shade t ie mor row ; And woman’s love the bird that brings His peace branch o’er a Rood of <t.K. iw. *** The violets and yellow joiquils, harbingers of the glad spring i iop-. are lifting their dainty heads abevp the brown old earth, filling the attT with their delightful aroma. Wiute| had about as well pack his trunk **# Judging from a small ; among the. local items in TwJr.fwGiY County Weekly, the order of “Sons of Rest” is having a good run of busi ness in McDonough. It is presump tious monopoly on the part of McDon ough to thus intentionally appropi iate one of Jonesboro’s most enterprising and successful orders without “money and without price.” 'This will never do.—Jonesboro Enterprise. * * * Cotton, a little ; “hog and hominy” much, will make our country prosper ous. This is a fact we hope our far mer friends fully realize. A BRILLIANT WEDDING. Miss Elizabeth Thompson Married to Mr. James Grier Zachry. As an old Henry county boy, [the frieuds of Col. Greer Zachry congratu late him on upon his recent brilliant marriage. It was a notable event in the upper society circles of New York city, aud was attended by some of the most distinguished people of the union The following account of the wedding was sent out in the dispatches of the national press association : New Y'oek, February 14. —At St. Thomas’ church this evening Miss Elizabeth Clark son Thompson, daughter of ex-Governor Hugh S. Thompson, of South Carolina, a nd James Grier Zachry were married. Mr Zachry is a well-known lawyer In this city and is a member of the Manhattan and \ Lawyer clubs. The wedding ceremony was j performed by Rev. Dr. John Wesley Brown. Lieutenant James H. Oliver, of the United States navy, was the best man and the ushers were Cary Hutchinson, W. W. Sharpe, Roland Conklin and Frederick Me- Kenney. Miss Caroline Thompson was maid of honor. Among those at t’ e church were ex-Secrctary and Mrs. Charles S- Fairchild, John McCall, Mr. and Mrs. Trenholm, Congressman and Mrs. Hemp hill, of South Carolina ; and Congressman and Mrs. Oates, of A’abama ; Miss Buttlcr. Miss Wilkins and Miss Cuthbert, of Wash ington ; Miss Thompson, of South Caro lina, cousin of the bride ; Colonel and Mrs. Daniel S. Lamont, Hugh S. Thompson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John M. Thompson, of South Carolina ; Dr. and Mrs. Tuck, and Dr. and j Mrs. Polk. The critics are beginning to find fault with the new Columbian stamps. It has been discovered that the picture of Columbus on the one cent stamp ropre sents him as clean-shaven, while on the two-cent stamp his distinguished phy siognomy is decorated with a full beard of luxuriant growth. Yet the one ceut picture portrays the great navigator in the act of sighting land, in the two cent picture he has just stepped ashore —an interval of time certainly irtsuffici entto account for so marked a capil lery change. i Bring in your Job Work. Sparks from Our Anvil. It is owing to the kiud of wood we j hum whether we make the sparks tly | or not. Mrs. A. W. McDaniel is off on a visit to her daughter, Mrs E. M. Hooten, of < ’Olivers. Johnnie McDaniel is left aloue to j run a lonely bachelor’s home during the absence of bis m titer. Julinuie ! says the chickens won’t come iu forty I rods of him, and he has four old liens ; that are all try ing to lay in the same j nest at the same time. To obviate | this difficulty he exhausted his mcchau jieal ingenuity iu constructing a lot of I new nests, but lie says the pesty old I he us won’t go in forty feet of the new I msts. Johnnie is wanting to procure a partner to run that department of thb household firm, and don’t want to know i too much in that line, for fear l is ser- I vices might be brought into demand more frequently than would bo con genial with his feelings. Johnnie says his house is entirely too large for him to occupy by himself. Some young lady would have but little difficulty in procuring a comfortable home if she wiH take in Johnnie as a life partner. A hiut to the wise is sufficient. Tom Standard is one. of the most en ergetic, business going men we have in this community. He is a stirrer when ho moves, and slow when he don’t go. Tad Goodman is auotlier man who can “git up and git” when he goes to work. Old Uncle Fielding can rent and cul tivate more land and raise more cattle than any other man in Georgia, the outlook taken into consideration. Mr. Jim Bunn has moved into our community and is occupying the home and farm recently left by Mr. Sam Duffy. Our farm work, as a general rule, is greatly below par. There is almost a universal com j, plaint of the loss of the potato crop, j Those who are fortunate enough to 1 keep theirs should keep them tor seed, j and not run up the price beyound the j reach of their poor neighbors. We regret to state that Mr. Barfield ! is still in very feeblle state of health. .tlorfe arioiu W. T. G. A woman appeard on the streets in Canton, Miss., recently, who attracted much attention. She has a perfectly white face aud hands ami short kinky hair, with the features of a negro. The woman said that she was born black aud remained so until she was fifteen years old, when she suddenly turned white, remaining so for one year, when she turned black again. Since that time she is alternately white aud black, not only in spots, but changes color entirely. She is fairly intelligent, and says she has never had a spell of sickness and has never taken a dose of medicine. She lives near Sail is Station, on the Canton and Aberdeen road. She says she cannot stand the situ at all, and wears a double veil and heavy gloves. She says if the sun shines on her skin for one minute it causes it to blister at once. She has been examined by the physicians, who are unable to account forjhe change in her color. The Worth County Local is respon sible for the statement that there are two men in Mitchel county who claim to be the fathers of fifty children. One is a white man and the other is a col ored mau. The white man is the fath er of thirteen children and is ex-editor of a country newspaper ; an excellent farmer ; an eloquent Baptist preacher ; a practitioner of law and judge of the county court of his county. The color ed man is the father of thirty seven children, twenty-one of whom are strong, healthy boys, of one mother. The stingiest man that has come un der the observation of a Call reporter iu many days, developed himself a few ! days since. An officer of his called on him for his monthly stipend for the support of liis paster when he claimed a reduction on the ground that he I 1 1 missed a couple of good s' noons, an I he thought it bard to nay ior that lie had not received. The ‘‘golden streets” doubtless have great attraction for that ruau s soul. —Griffin Call. Some interesting figures on dairying iu Georgia is given in one of our daily exchanges. It shows that from a dairy, Sol and twenty cows capital, the pro ceeds were §1,400 per year. Of course, this is a wonderful profit to make in a small business. “I was deaf for a year, caused by catarrh in the head, but was perfectly cured by Hood’s Sarsapaarilla ” 11. Hicks, Rochester, N. Y. f brings success. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest V S. Gov't Report. ABSOLUTE*?/ PURK Obllunr). TARFLKY—The subject of these lines, Mrs. Mary J. Tarplcy, wife of C S.Tarpley, and daughter of James and Nancy Waters, was born in New ton county, Georgia, on the 2nd day of May, 18it7, and died at her home in Henry county, Georgia, on the 23rd day ot December, 1892 ; being sixty-five years seven months and twenty-one days old. Site remembered her Creator in the days of her youth, having made profession of re ligion and united with the Missionary Bap tist church between ten to fourteen rears of age. She grew up to lovely womanhood and was married to Charles S. Tarplcy, on March 9th, 1848, with whom site lived hap liy to the day of her death, leaving him six children, three sons and three daughters. A bereaved family, with many relatives and friends, mourn her loss, but they mourn not as those without hope. Her dealli was sudden, lint not untimely or unexpected, for she repeatedly said that she expected to depart in this wav, being in delicate In alth and troubled with heart failure. She was I always ready and prepared to go no matter j how sudden the summons- Her children I were all grown and settled in life ; her bus- j Imnd passing swiftly down Us doclivili her life’s labor ended, and, we think, well done; she had builded her house and wa ready to go to sleep as she did. From long and intimate acquaintance with sister Tarplcy wo wish to sav that she was a consistent, kind, faithful, obliging, and in some respects, most remarkable wo man. As a Christian she was hroad minded and liberal, believing iu and practicing the preeepls of Christianity. As a wile sh was ail that the term wife and companion can imply ; us n mother, most gentle, kn <1 and considerate ; and au relative, friend and neighbor, most affable, true and obliging Her gratitude amounted almost to a pas sion It aeeined like she feared that ifla could not sufficiently requite what she re - garded as a kindness. Sister Tarplcy wa blessed with a most retentive memory ui.d well stored mind, and was to the very last a lover of good literature, and always kept well posted on the current topics of tie day. We feel thut in her death Brother Tai - ! pley’s loss is irreparable until he shall join ! her in the great beyond ; that her children ; have lost a good mother and counselor ;.| thut her church has lost a good and faith- | lul member, and society an ornament worthy j of imitation, John M. Tin i. man. Feb. 14th, 1893. John 11. Nutt. Our pen has been chosen to coutrib ute a brief obituary of our friend and fellow citizen, late of Spalding county. Mr. Nutt was horn in Spalding conn ty, Ga., on the l'Jth of July, 1840. Iu his early manhood he was married t<> Mias Samantha Rodgers, hut she sui vived only a short time, and our friend was left alone. After this he was married to Miss Emma Duke, who also in the iu the course of human events I passed away, and left him with two small children to provide for. llealiz ing that it was not good for man to he alone, he was induced to look for an other companion to share with him the joys and sorrows of this precarious and changeable lite. Never was mail more fortunate in the selection of a won m to fill the vacuum produced iu tin ; house by the loss of his first coropa i ious. This grand, incomparable wo man was found in the person of Mis Sallie Barfield, whose untiring devotion to the man to whom she vowed at the marriage altar an unwavering faithful ness, so long as they both might live, and the life-long obligation was faith fully kept until severed by the cold hand of death. By this happy union there are two little hoys and one or two little girls left without the watch ful care of a lovin'' failu r to confront j the rough places thaL are ofteu found while running life's eventful journe; . It is not necessary in this cennectio-i, to speak of the loathsome disease with which our late friend was so long ami deeply afliictcd. Let it suffice to say. lie bowed in humble submission to the sovereign will of Him who orders til things after the counsel of His ow n it finite wisdom. Our friend for a long time greatly desired that lie might be recovered from his deep and loathsome aflliction, hut when he clearly saw that he was doomed to die, he calmly sur rendered the prospects and hopes of this life, and looked away through the shed blood of the central cross to that cleansing fountain that could wash away all the stains of life, and make him fit mate for his Master’s use. Af ter unity wearisome mouths of deep 5 CENTS A COPY - . suffering, at half past 1) o’clock, on tridajr night of the <!th day of ,)ami ary, 1893, .Tolm 11. Nutt ilh d ni.uit i a groad or struggle, in gin,ions a-, i | tion of a hotter life in the ‘‘over | yond.” May tho God of love i.r eup a host of true and sincere friends to aid and guide those dear lit’- < u over life’s rugged pathway, and n, ,y they all meet again in tin! siv t live and hye. \V. T. < •. THE INAUGURATION Of l’rosident CieveL'i ;d i 4th, 181)3. ANNQCNCKMKNT Ol It aJ 1 . The I'.. T., V. & G. is the first line s to announce rates for the In uigur.uion on March Itli. All Coupon A , s have been instruct! I to soil on Mu h | Ist, 2nd and 3rd, round tiip ticket., to Washington at one and one third taro for tho round trip. Those tickets will be good to return until March .v.h, 1893. \\ itli the superior train service of th: i line, which passes through East Ten nassee and the beautiful. Slieimmroah Valley route, it is fully prepared to take care of the immense crowds which niii take advantage of tho reduced tut' , The Washington & Cliatiauooga Limited, which is the celebrated Vesti bule train, composed of Pullman Draw ing Room Sleeping Gars, Day Co.iely s and Dining Car, leaves Chatoutoow daily at 12:35 noon, taking up <:<■ lions from all Southern, Southeast-:n Western ait&'fouihwestern j .a: rives at Washington next mi.n.-i.-v at 9:30. The Hbetiaudoah Valley Express, with Pullman cars attached, leave, Chattanooga at' 10:20 |>. in. ai.d ar rives in Washington next evening at 11:15. Detailed schedules can !>■. secured by applying to any Coupon Ticket Ag at ior Traveling Passenger Agent of this ] Company, or 15. W. Wrenn, Gen’l, Pass. & Ticket Agent, Knoxville, ! TVnn. There need he no fears tiiat the high offices in the state will go begging. There are a few patriotic citizens left in Georgia who are willing to - lerilie. them lives on the alter of public olio Wo do not want to decry the ollica Iml deis, bit we think that the y unger .-et of men who have brain aid Capa i v could come to the front be for age dull t their intellects and enfeebles their man hood. -Angus‘a Chronicle. There is talk income ■; .’■ four new territories to the I 'oiled State , —New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma and Utah. Three of these territories would he surely, and one (< >klahoni:i; probably democratic. A Cobh county fanner, Geooge W. Worley, has demonstrated hi m ! democracy by naming his six hoy-. I Cleveland, Gordon, Clements, Candle-- ! Clay and Everett. | The harder tile work the swe i the bread. The robust man who si'- down and depends on others for h j living is a human parasite most dis pisuble. If the sale of cotton s<- d eontiua s very much longer, there will not be enough left in the country to plant a very big crop. 1 IliM-imi'y (it «S»e t ", ■■ I ('atarrhal Deafness Cured. No ’■'( Use for Ear Trumpe ts. Triumph at Last An infallible remedy for the cure .of ea ! tarrh and deafness in all its f s, by cue j who has been a threat guficrer from Catarli i and almost total deafness. No catarrh or slimy green nud yellow ; sticky matter discharging from the nose, No deafness. No ringing cruck!in,c sound 4 jin the head. No mucous matter lodging in the throat. No occasional backing cottyj j with throwing up slimy gr* cu and veil >■* ! sticky mi tier. It is a biasing that woedj I cannot describe. For further inform ition write for cUamd ( lars. Address, Frank Worts & Co., W. u I sau, Wia. Drawer JO2D.