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AB/ERTESiPiC HATES.
bocal Itoticfts 10 ceu t f pgr 1 ineeach i nserSctn.
ue^tiliri Iwsincw- vlvortieemerits b.rsunsertian
• t>0 per inch Ya'cbaubsequentirisertioiiSO cents
A*?tf.5ST13l:'ja.
JytU'Aj .0 mo.,j 12 inq.
la 5®°
V ioil.dies.I 1.00
}iiriuvhet-j o*06
cci. I 7.oo
Col. j 12.00
ol. I lb.on
I o.OO
I ..§>00
l\(X'
I 15.00
| 25.00
! to.oo
8.or.
12.00 .
12.00
16X0
18.-00 •
21X0
25.00 ■
10.00 1
10.00
60.00
80.00 ■
lOO.UG :
- ■ r„&3'AL AiSYS-^TP&N&t
dvcrusoiitentosininatingt'rom pubiicofflecs
ecuar^eil for in strict accordance withanact
V) - the General Assembly of • leorgia—75 cents for
-it id--ed wordst'or each >f the first t'ournw-i-tims.
v - ; cents j;er. 10e words,for each' -ubrejiuetit
: , ' on. t’litr caaH.*•«net iccompatiy copy of each
jdi , jge-ne .V,.iuleee-Ufferent»rraM*eme.jtR have
been made.
OHN H. HOIjGES, Pi'opbfetor.
lie voted to Home Interests and Cnltnr'e.
TWO D'diiAKS A Year xsk Advane'e.
VOL. XV
PERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY,
3,1887i
NO. 9.
iWiiK
The Boom Craze.
'Past LI vine—S -rklrss I-'nCus—Hard Drink-
Inc—Poor fr.ccri:ijj—.’.-i-.-jir.I .Tcald'osy—
PolUIcnl Antbtsio:.—Violent Passions
too Race for. Money.
The alaxmiug disease of this
country is nervous debility and'
prostration. It. goes under
many nameB but it is essen
tially the same ccmplr-iut.
Hospitals and private institu
tions foh nervous patients are
crowded. The average of life
in the United States is de
creasing every year. Sudden
'deaths from nervous collapse
among qur business, profess
ional and public men are so
frequent as scarcely to excite
remark. The majority of sui
cides, committed without ap
parent reason, or under sd-called
‘‘depression of spirits, ” are
really prompted by nervous
prostration, which is a fruitful
source of insanity and crime
wi Lh all their grief and horror.
These facts are startling.
They threaten the very life of
the nation, They assail the
springs of its power and pros
perity. They wreck manhood’s
strength and woman’s useful
ness and beauty.
Eveiy one should know the
causes. "VVhat are they ? The
answer is easy and terribly
plain: Our vicious personal
habits; our careless ana lawless
bating and drinking'; the in
tense mental and physical strain
arising from our mad race after
money, position and influence;
the fears and struggles of pov
erty ; the use of narcotics and
stimulants; our fashion of
turning day into night and
night into day; and, briefly,
our desperate v. lllingxxoaa +.n
pay any price for an hour’s
pleasure or success. So we
burn life’s .candle at both ends
and fill the lunatic asylums
hud the graveyards.
The disease from which we
buffer and die is, in plain Eng
lish, Nervous Dyspepsia, as it
is seated in the. Nerves and in
the organs of Digestion, Assim
ilation and Nutrition, Healthy
digestion being impeded or des
troyed, the whole body, nerves
included, is literally starved;
Gvefl when there is no emaci
ation to tell the sad story.
Nervous prostration sends
Out its warnings:—headache
in. the morning; a persistent
dull heaviness or aching at the
base of the brain; wakei ulness;
loss of appetite and disgust wn a
food; loss of mental energy and
interest in ordinary duties and
business; restlessness and anx
iety without any assignable
reason; . eructations; bad
breath; foul mucous on the
teeth; occasional giddiness;
g dpitation of the heart; sal-
wness ©f tiie skin; coated
tongue and gradual failure of
Strength and ambition.
The remedy is a total aban
donment of the habits and cus
toms which cause the disease
in eacli individual case, and the
iise of Shaker Extract of Roots
(Seigel’s Syrup) to cure the
mischief already done. This
great remedy's prepared by the
Shaker Community of Mt. Leb
anon, N; Y., is especially adapt
ed to eradicate Nervous. Dys
pepsia. To do this it acts
directly and gently but power
fully upon the disordered stom
ach” liver and. kidneys, restor
ing their tone and vigors pro
moting the secretion of bile, ex
pelling waste matters from the
system,and purifying the blood,
j j Upon the nervous system
Shaker Extrcict(SeigeVs Syrup)
acts as a safe and wholesome
anodyne without the slightest
narcotic effect, and then leaves
- the nerves to regain their nat
ural tone and strength through
its wonderful influence upon
the function of nutrition.
It is safe to say more nerv
ous dyspeptics have been re
stored by it from the depths
Of miseiy to a fresh enjoyment
of life and labor than, by any
Foreytli Advertiser.
1 If there has ever been a time
I when the people of the south were
crazed on the subject of booms,that
time is now. Almost every city,
town and hamlet seems to be la
boring to get on a “boom.” Indeed
we have of late heard so much of
booms, and in most instances seen
so little profitable results, that we
have concluded that Webster’s
fourth 'definition of a boom is cer
tainly true. Stripped of all dis
guise, and as modernized, m most
cases, the boom is a stretch of ef
fort to put to flowing a current of
prosperity without a foundation.
We believe in push, in vim; in ef
fort strenuous and constant, but
in the name of all that is good, let
these have a basis. Wind booms,
like soap bubbles; ascend into
nothing and vanish. As engineer
ed, they are too often the snares' of
money trappers, thrown out to
fleece the unwary, and thereby to
enrich and make stronger some
syndicate.
A boom, in the common accepta
tion of the term, may be had in
almost any section of this country,
if based upon its proper founda
tion. That foundation Is energy,
directed by wisdom and applied to
the means at command, and -hot
reserved to be applied to means ex
pected to be attained at the end of
some fancied speculation. Booms
foisted upon the people and pa
raded before tthe world upon an
expectant speculative theory, are
but airy fabrics, subjeet to be
blown into nonentity by the first
strong blast of adversity, leaving
their sanguine followers in the
slough of failure. How often is
tnis too sadly true. And wlu? ?
Because, perhaps oftener than
otherwise, such proceeding^ are
but cunningly directed efforts to
obtain much for little, if not some
thing for nothing. And this is in
contravention to both civil and di
vine law.
As before stated, any section of
this favored land of ours may have,
can have a boom/a solid, lasting,
permanent boom, that will pi'oVe
beneficial and of great good, not
only to us of to-day, but to those
who are come after us.
Yes, Forsyth aud Monroe eoun
ty can enter upon this onward, up
ward march. But it cannot be
accomplished by wind effort only,
Something more than gassy brag
must be the driving wheel. Winter
fireside arguments and summer
shade disquisitions on which
God in nature has given us
will not suffice. But continued
and determined effort,and constant
and wise application in using these
advantages and what means we
have at command will bring us the
boom we all desire. Nothing
short of this will bring it, and it
is useless to calculate for future
prosperity upon any other basis.
A boom brought about through
any other channel or by any other
means is simply ah ephemeral sick
ly concern and cannot stay.
Hence, if our people earnestly de
sire a genuine, solid, permanent
boom, that will ramify every de
partment, they must base the
means at command, if those means
be naught but brain aud muscle,
upon vigorous effort wisely; di
rected; must look, not outside of
and beyond, but inside and to
themselves, and then they will
have it;
Wlien Sheridan Lost Courage; Tlie Population .Needed in tlie
South,
Savannah News.
If men dp not lose their mental
Chicago News.
Gen. Phil Sheridan is an inimi
table story-teller. Of late years ... ..... . ,
he has acquired quite a reputation an d moral balance and. conclude
as an after dinner speaker. He is j that the whole aim and end of life
not as eloquent or graceful as ■ tn the South is to make money,
Depew, 'and “yoii know” figures her progress in the next ten years
South
very frequently in his remarks,
but he always interests his heareia
when he speaks. Not long since
at a dinner given in New York
Gen. Skeridah related an incident
that befell him while calling
the young lady who is the present
Mrs. Sheridan. During the war
Gen. Sheridan was too much oc
cupied to fall in love. When the
malady finally overtook him in
Chicago, after the war, Sheridan
had passed what is generally call
ed the romantic stage, and was
settling down into a Well seasoned
old bachelorhood. Old bachelors
make the most enthusiastic of
lovers, and tfce General admitted
that he was no exception to the
rule.
. “J t was a warm summer even
ing,” Sheridan began, “and upon
my arrival at the house the young
lady and myself retired to the
back parlor. The front parlor
opened into the hall, and au the
night was warm, you know, we did
hot think it necessary to light the
back room. Now this young lady’s
father had a great fear of bur
glars. He had burglar alarms all
over the house, and had recently
put a hew alarm ott the front door.
Neither the young lady nor my
self knew anything about the
alarm on the front door. After a
time the old gentleman came down
stairs, set his alarm on the door,
and, seeing a dim light in the front
and turned out the light in the [ The opportunities in
hall. We were busily engaged in
talking, you know, and somehow
did not hear him. Finally, when
I got up to leave the young lady
accompanied me to the door. We
were surprised to find the light
turned out, and in fuiiibling around
for the doortimob, I set off the
burglar alarm. It seemed to me
that I never knew a burglar alarm
to work so well before. It sound
ed like the explosion of a keg of
dynamite. A moment later the
father of the young lady appeared
at the head of the stairs in his
night dress, with a lamp in one
hand and a large pistol in the Oth
er. At this apparition the young
lady deserted me and fled into the
darkness. My position was posi
tively dangerous. I suppose I had
been in dangerous places before
without thinking of it, but I con
fess for the moment I trembled all
over with fear, and scarcely mus
tered up voice enough to say:
‘Don’t shoot; it’s me/ Fortunate
ly he recognized my voice, and
came down and let me out.”
“Now, you know, gentlemen/’
he concluded, “if the young lady
had stood by me there would have
been no danger, but she didn’t,
you kfiow, and my position was
rather awkward before I was rec
ognized, One might die on the
field of battle without regret, but
I should hate to be shot down as a
midnight marauder; I only tell
the story because it actually took
place as I have said, and to show
that there are times when we may
all lose our courage.”
Glass mirrors were first- used,
spectacles were invented and clocks
made to strike in the thirteenth
century:
Slost Excellent
J. J. Atkins, Chief of Police,
Knoxville, Tenn,, writes: “Sly
family and I are beneficiaries of
your most excellent medicine, Dir.
King’s New Discovery for con
sumption; having found it to be
all that you claim for it, desire to
testify to its virtue. My friends
to whom I have recommended it
praise it at every oppo:
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption is ; guaranteed to
Coughs: Golds, Bronchitis,
or Aother of treatment jS/TcKup Se^SeS
temuiaee*. > 0 f Throat, Chest and Lungs.
Trial bottles Free at Mathsws &
Pay now what you eO>e The i Wiighfs clrrs
Booi-e Journal? ri - T "
Fort Talley.
will be the most remarkable ever
witnessed off this cofftinent. The
South has none of the disadvan
tages of the West. Her climate
is mild and healthful, her agricul
tural, industrial, mining and man
ufacturing advantages are unsur
passed, her educational and moral
interests are well looked after,
and her laws are as good and as
strictly enforced as those of any
other section.
The South needs population.
She does not seek pauper popula
tion, but her gates stand wide
open to admit the industrious and
the helpful froin whatever quarter
they may come. There is room
especially for that class of North-
erffeVs who; when tempted to
leave home, have heretofore
sought abiding places in the West.
There need be no fear of lawless
ness; no suspicion of disloyalty,
no doubts about the enjoyment of
freedom of speech, thought and
action. There are no political nor
are there any social obstacles
which should prevent Northerners.
from seeking homes in the South.
The conditions here are just as
they are iff the North: Those who
adhere to their peculiar opinions
without denying that right to_ oth
ers may choose their political alli
ances without fear of interference,
and those who are respectable may
take any social position to which
the free citizens. of the United
A Ke/'-HoIe Saw.
Memphis Avalanche.
. “Odd-looking bole in the panel
of your front door, there?” re-
marked an Avalanche man to a
main street grocer yesterdays
pointing to a four or five inch ori
fice cut in the panel near the floor.
“I thought so when it was first
made,” lie replied, with a Emile,
Encouragement to Large Fam
ilies.
Jorr^poudeisci rontaininj;
calut»s, briefly told, is can
at. Uouatci. i.ont.ta.
Mol i .Iiicnj-.sl.aiij be. alnc.vs open
enseiunn anj subjcciD.ncbinj;
ran ol ours;coi;ii oji-.ir"
she jdiloi svsettV tliatth
tm: .-I be be.u
nprnslVeoincicc
ciaiiui-.ihi right
worttimes: OJ al
liums ol his pit. er _
pondentwlieuevci thesnblect-calh
Articlesof
tinlessentirciy
eating vpersos fi
rateoi tenceuts
. _ being tlieihpreuiejndge «
coiixluniiiuiti.-:. t to euterth® e
luliific issue -with a «
AllAcSoaniqi t or Subscription-,
Job Worh.irb dneon demand, n
provided for by specialcontraci.
Commercial Job Work satisfactorily
and Li gal Ulankskepiconstanilion bj)Cd .... - ^
The Law and tuo
Mrs. Suuipkin’s oldest floy had
goue West, and-a friend of*
Demotest’a Slonfily Tor March.
The result of a census taken in f family wal making some in
France has just been announced, about him.
That nation, it seems, has but lit
tle over 58,000,000 of inh'abitanti,
and the increase of population, for
thirty years past, has been less
than any other country in Europe!
“but I wouldn’t have it closed for Drench journals and publicists
for progress in all directions are
charmingly inviting. It is : not
necessary to undergo the hard
ships endured by pioneers iff the
West, because the South possesses
all the conveniences and comforts
of a country long settled. The
markets of,the world are br easy
access, so that whether one is en
gaged upon tlie farm, in the mine,
or in the manufactory, his pro
ducts may be readily and profita
bly disposed of. Not only are
these things true/but there is nev
er any serious delay becaffse of
the weather to. business of any
kind.
There will never Be a trhie half
so favorable as the present for em
igrating tp the South. Lands are"
cheap and abundant, their own
ers- are anxious to dispose of them,
because they know the increased
wealth which increased popula
tion-brings. They are anxious to
to sell to Northerners, because
those that have already settled in
the South have proved their value
in developing her resource, But
Southern land owners will- fib! re
fuse to sell to foreigners, and it is
a question of but a short time
when the tide of foreign emigra
tion will turn toward the South.
With increased . population the
price of lands will advance, wheth
er that population be foreign or
native. The present is emphati
cally the time for emigration from
the North to the South, and those
who come maybe sure that in profit
ing the South they will also profit
themselves.
The latest idea in England is to
tax foreign workmen §25 a year.
The proposition is aimed at the
German servants And artisans, who
are found to be formidiable rivals
of the native article. German and
foreign competition in ocean com
merce is also seriously impairing
the prosperity of Liverpool; Its
shipping statistics for 1886 show a
decrease of 100,000 tons. The
coastwise trade shows an increase,
the falling off being in the foreign
trade".
Next to Mrs. Glevelaff'3, who
probably receives the most letters
of any woman in the United
States, Mrs. Jenness Miller, it is
said, has the largest daily post;
Mrs. Miller is one of the leaders
of the dres's reform movement for
%Yorami.
;-g
m
a §50 note now.”
“Tell us about it.”
“Oh, there’s not much to tell,
and yet it i.- a pretty , good story.
Shor ly after I moved in here I
noticed that the place was liteially
swarming, with rats. They were
of overy conceivable shape and
size. Some of them had long gray-
beards and gorgeous side whiskers
which swept the floor. Their tails
Were marvels in their , way, and
their teeth—why, I verily believe
every sinner in the crowd carried
a file and a cross-cut saw. At any
rate, it began to look that way be
fore I had'beeff here very long.
They cut into the flour, gnawed
the hpeks out of hams, chewed up
my cheese boxes, knocked^ down
bottles from the shelves and play
ed havoc generally. I tried poi
son, set traps, and kept whole col
onies of cats, but they did not
seem to diminish. They scamper
ed about at all hoffrs of the day
and night. Ladies who came iff
after supper for their supplies
were frighteffed nearly out of their
wits, and there was some of the
liveliest dodging and* screaifiiiig
about here now and then you ever
saw. I despaired of getting rid of
the Dests. -»nfl crlA, seriously of
moving out. One day a strange.
came in, and after a couple of them
Lad toved with the toes of his
boots, he asked me why I did not
get rid of them. I told him he
could wear a new suit of clothes at
! 1
my expense if he would tell me
how.”
“Never inind about a whole suit,”
he said. “Just promise me a hat,
and if there is a rat inside the
store at the end of six weeks, I
have a |20 bill for you.”
“Of course I promised, and He
then asked me to get him a key
hole saw. I gave him tlie tool,
and in a few moments he had sa w-
ed oat the hole you see there. I
began to think I had beeu played
upon, but kept my mouth shut,
and out he went. And, wonld you
believe me, in less than tliree
weeks there was riot a long tail
a’doiit the plade, At tlie end of
the six weeks the wizard came in
for his hat; and I never gave any
thing more cheerfully. He ex
plained that with the means of en
trance he had furnished, every eat
within a radius of half a dozen
blocks paid the store a Sail upon
his nightly rounds, and added that
he had cleared a dozen or more
stores in Memphis in the same
way.”
If any one wishes to prove to
what a great degree his. own per
ceptions depend upon his sur
roundings, let him hold the fingers
of one hand in a bowl of ice wa
ter, and those of the other in a
bowl of water as hot as he can
bear it, for say one minute, an,d
then plunge both hands into a
third bowl of water at the temper
ature' of an ordinary living room.
This water will be cold to one
hand and hot to the other;' It is
an amusing and instructive ex
periment.
take the . matter very.- mtfch to
heart, as the Germans, their great
enemies, are increasing rapidly.
A law was passed, not long since,
to "encourage large families. Ev
ery seventh child was to be cared
for and educated by. r the State;
without expense t6 Ills parents;
and now M. Eonquier advocates
the taxation of-bachelors. But he
thinks that this negative induce
ment to holy matrimony ought to
be supplemented by an induce
ment emphatically positive. The
father of a family, according to M.
Fouquier’s project,_._is to be allow
ed ap additional Vote, or at least
an additional fraction of a vote,
for each additional legitimate son
or daughter presented to him by
his wife. The State must perish
according to tfiip lively publicist,
unless it is firmly grounded upon
that equally necessary and equally
divine social organism—the fami
ly. This may seem absurd to
Americans, but the waste of liu-
man life, the preponderance of
deaths over births, which is trffe
of large citiffs everywhere, is be
ginning to be equally marked in
the rural district® Of Frffnee. It
is a curious fact that as civiliza
tion progresses the. number of
iies'tii decreases. It is poor fami-
with
culture, fewer cEildren are bom.
The human family, in this regard;
corresponds with plant life. “Ill
weeds,” says; the proverb, “thrive
apace;” but Beautiful and fragrant
plants are hard to bear and rare.
Nature does not seem to be satis
fied with an inferior product, but
when she produces a rare flower,
or a superior human family, she
rests contented with her work.
a&£
“I understand John is an
hey,” said fie. . . - , . ;
“Yes, and he gets lots of busi
ness,” she ai swere'd wjtli a moth
er’s pride.
“Is he.a/priminal lawyer?”
A shadow fell on the fjjood
lady’s face. - - ,
“No, n'ht yet,” she said. , “Least-
ways he hain’t told me. . But I’iff
afraid he will be. ,THe law is so
dreadful tempting!”
oli
A Personal Application.-
Susband—My dear,
long motto you are working.
Wife—Yes, John."
He reads on it:
that is a
A Lqndon newspaper vender
named Smith had hii experience
of a remarkable kind. He got
drunk a short time since. After
awhile he had lost his money and
tried to drown hiniself in the lake
at St. James park. He was pulled
oqt and aff emetic w r as administer
ed. , Smith promptly vomited up
all the mohey—four shillings, a
sixpenny piece and a halfpenny—
which lie hack misterionsly swal
lowed while drunk.
Life treatises on social etiquette
will have to He amended in ordet
to include the very latest way of
declining an invitation to a recep
tion. Thus, Mr. Henry Willard
andMr. Joseph Willard are twd
brother millionaires in Washing
ton who do not cultivate the virtue
of brotherly love. Mr. Henry
Willarcf gate .an .entertainment/
and sent a card to Joseph, reading:
Mr. and Mrs"; Henry^ Willard. At
home Jan. 15 from § to IT p. m.”
Whereupon Joseph sent a card to
Henry, reading: “Mr. Mrs. Joseph
Willard, also at hoffre J an. 15 from
9 to 11 p. m.” That was shoft,"
Iweet; graphic and to the point;
The county of Brewster has al
ready been created by the tV/epti-
eth legislator £. Hi: /fexas'." Ancj.
flow the lower house has passed
tlie bills creating ten other new
counties. . Home idea of the vast/
ness of Texas may be gleanbd
from the fact that the territories
etfibraBed in tK6§e. new counties
which were created out , of only
three counties already existing, is
as large as some of the States of
the Union": •
When a salvation sriny stopped
in front of a saloon in Portland
the other day and began .to.,sing/
“It is wafer we want, not beer,”
the accommodating saloon-keeper
turned the hose on them. He
“had anything you call for.”
The nose of a dog is so acute
that it can follow its master’s trail
almost anywhere, yfffc experiments
show that sheets of tissue paper
placed on the ground to be walked
over and afterwards to be reiffof ed,
effectually prevent any trace of the
scent froin lying, though strong"
perfume sprinkled cm the track
wilt not baffle the dog.'
An Expensive Delay/
Is failing to provide the proper
means to expel from the system
those disease germs which cause
scrofula, indigestion
debility,-Then-
li yon Wans a Good Ai
The
Piruh Toiixcco. a
‘While the lamp holds out to bum,
c ThQ. vilest .pinner m ay return.”
“Is it to Be Bung iff. the vesti
bule of the bhurcli, my dear?” .
“Nq; John; I’ll hang it on thO
bhandilier in the Eall!”—Harper’s
Bazar! . - -
Professor—“Next time, la
will bring to y'oiir acquaintance
one of the great men of the past”
Delightful young lady (to her
neighbor)—“I should prefer to
make the acquaintance of one of
the young men who haven’t passed
yet.”
“A'ma-n said to me Ike other
night,” remarked a well-kno^m
clergyman/ “I would not has missr
ed your sermon for §l0j” and yet
when the plate was passed round
that man put in a penny.” .. %
Is a peculiar medicine, and is carefully, pres
pared by competent pharmacists. The cornr
bination arid proportion c£ Sarsaparilla, Dan
delion, Mandrake, Yellow Hock, aiid otlie?
remedial agents-as exclusively peculiar tp
Hood's Sarsaparilla, giving, it strength and
curative power superior to other, prepo;
rations. A trial will convince you of Its,
great medicinal value. Hood's Sarsaparilla
Purifies the Stood .
creates and sharpens lho.app‘DtUe,;stiipnlatos
the digestion, and gives sifcengih to eveiy
prganof the body, it cuies the most severo
cases of Scrofula, Sait lilieum, Boils, Pimples;
and all oilier affections caused by impure
blood, Dyspepsia/ Biliousness, Headache!
Kidney and Inver CoinplainjSi Catarrh, Rheu
matism, and that extreme .tired feeling!
“Hood's Sarsaparilla has helped me more
for catarriL.and impure .blood than anything
else I ever iised.” A. Balt., Syracuse, X. Y.
, . Creates an Appetite /
- “Iused-Hood's Sarsaparilla to cleanse mjr
blood and tone up my system. It gave me.a
good appetite and seemed to build me over.”
E. M. Hale, Lima., Ohio. - . - r .... ...
“I took Hood's Sarsaparilla for canceroqs
humor,-apd it began to act unlike anything
else. It cured the littmor, and seemed td
tone up the whole body and give me nevr
Jife.” J. F. Nixon, Canibridgeport, Mass.
Send for book giving statements of cutes.
, ihfbocN Sarsaparilla /
Sold by all druggists, jgl- six for f5... Prepared onljr
by C.I. IIOOJ) & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell,Mass.
TOO Doses One Dollar
J; B; McNIECE/
-WITH-
A; I). SMALL,
HA&fef, - - - . GA(
Some months age the natives of
a certain district in Australia pre
dicted the approach of floods, and
left their low-lying villages for
the higher country. The floods
came several weeks later; anct the
natives said that their informa
tion had been gathered ffotff the
ants; which" had built their Bests in
the trees, instead of; as usual,' on
tlfc ground.
-DEAL EC ifiT-
r Respectfully solicits the patron
age. of his friends iff Hons toff
county.
Deb; 3H—if.'
UBFASK AY 015 K.
The swine census 0 compared
to the huiffaff is as eighty to one
Bundied., That is," according*to
Statistician Dodge,' of the Depart-
iffenl of Agriculture, Washington^
promptly.- Gold Rings made to" order/
Price and quality of work fiuaranteed to
give satisfaction. Respect cully," ;; .
'- F. A. .Jobson, .-
Sept. .30— tf. . . F/rry, Ga.
there are eighty hogs.to, every 100
ol population of the United States.'
— ...
A lievi York politician's , defrni-
tion of an honest man 1 “Gne who
wili stay bought.”
Direct froin tb.e Far:
rresb,
Pure,
A Lady iu Texas' Writes:
and
Crow.
sm to
“My case' is ot Ipfeg standing:
has baffled many physicians; have*
trfeef every remedy r could hear of,
no eb Seeds," imported
coin Europe," a specialty.
fresh
but Bradfielct’s Female I
with Directions for Culti?
Sent FSEE/
all that.
The