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I HOME JOURNAL,
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR
f Cho Great Farm, Industrial and Stock
Journal of tho South.
ONE
YEAR FOR $2.75
CASH tN ADVANCE.
'vinnile copies of the Southern Culti
vator^i be mailed FREE on applica
tion to Jas. P. Habbison & Co., Drawer
Atlanta. Ga. .
A- C RILEY*
Attorney at Law'j
FORT TALLEY, GA,
■ (OfBce over Dow Law Bank.)
I Practice in tho counties of the Macorf
; C iibuii; ih Macon and Talor counties
I and ii^ il e Fcdeial Cheats.
JOHN II. HODGES, Proprietor.
Devoted to Home Interests find Culture.
TWO DOLLABS A Year in Advance.
yoB WORK
kkatly executed
‘ at THIS OFFICE.
VOL. XVH.
PEltKYt GEORGIA, THURSDAY MARCH 17,1887.
NO. 11.
Watches; Clocks, .fewelry, Sewing MfD
I ehihes, Gubs.Pistois: Locks, and Unmi-
[ tnre of alikmds repaired in best style ant?
promptly, Gold Bings made to order.-
Price and quality of work guaranteed to'
give satisfaction.- Respectfully;
B. A.Jobson,
SoptiBO-tf;
Perry,- Ga.
Renew yonr subscription now.
Tpjfyibi
LlUiiLud
t®
:iii
A FATAL MISTAKE..
The Cleveland (Ohio) Press,
of February 23d, 1883, pub
lished an account of a fatal
surgical operation which caused
a great commotion among med
ical men throughout the whole
country, Dr. Thayer, the most
eminent surgeon in Cleveland,
pronouncing it scandalous. It
appears that a Mrs. King had
been suffering for many years
from some disease of the stom
ach, which had resisted the
treatment of all the physicians
in attendance. The disease
commenced with a slight de
rangement of the digestion,
with a poor appetite, followed
by a peculiar indescribable dis
tress in the stomach, a feeling
faint “all
sticky
that has been described as a
gone” sensation, a
slime collecting about
tab teeth, causing a disagree
able taste. This sensation was
Hot removed by food, but, on
las contrary,, it Was increased.
After a while the hands and
feet became cold and sticky—■
a cold perspiration. There
Was a constant tired and lan
guid feeling. Then followed a
dreadful nervousness, with
gloomy forebodings. Finally
the patient was unable to' re
tain any food whatever, and
there was constant pain in the
abdomen. All prescribed rem
edies failing to give relief, a
consultation was held, when it
was decided that the patient
had a cancer in the stomach,
and in order to save the patient’s
life an operation was justifi
able. Accordingly, on the 22d
of February, 1883, the opera
tion was performed by Dr,
Vance in the presence of Dr,
Tuekerman, Dr. Perrier, Dr.
Arms, Dr. Gordon, Dr. Capner,
e nd Dr. Halliwell of the Police
Hoard. The operation consist
ed in laying open the cavity
of the abdomen and exposing
the stomach and bowels. When
this had been done an examin
ation of the organs was made,
but to the horror and dismay
of the doctors there was no
cm;car to be found. The pa-
.1 nt did not have a cancer.
Wan too latethe medical men
d. covered that they had made
a terrible mistake; but they
t wed the parts together and
dressed the wound that they
bad nutgle, but the poor woman
dank from exhaustion and died
in a few hours. How sad it
must be for the husband of lliis
j-wff woman to know that his
wife died from the effects of a
surgical operation that ought
never to have been performed.
this woman had taken the
proper remedy for Dyspepsia
t.nd Nervous Prostration (for
this was what the disease really
Was), she would have been liv
ing to-day. Shaker Extract of
Hoots, or Seigel’s Curative
Syrup, a remedy made ex
pressly for Dyspepsia or Indi
gestion, has restored many such
cases to perfect health after all
other kinds of treatment have
failed The evidence of its
efficacy in curing this class of
cases is too voluminous to he
published here) but those who
read the published evidence in
favor of this dyspeptic remedy
do not question its convincing
nature, and the article has e an
extensive sale.
j Broom Corn Culture and Broom off the brush may be done by ft
i Makings handscraper, or by a machine made
! •“— j expressly for the purpose and run
j southern Ouibvatef. j ^ p 0wer . For a small quantity
| In. response to numerous re- spikes driven close together in a
• quests for an article on this snb-' board or bench will answer; but
ject, the following suggestions are for a crop of several acres
presented to readers of the Culti-
Now when tie buds begin
’Tis time tor yotmg and
old to know
Tb»t .Fevers, lassitude and
all
The ills fit Indigestions
vator:
According to Chapman, tile spe
cific name of broom corn is sor
ghum saccharatum, which also in
cludes the several varieties grown
for syrup making—Chines Im-
phns, fete. The sorghum genus
also includes Durra com, millo
maize, Egyptian corn and others.
The nomenclature is rather con
fused, and botanists differ some
what in their classifications.
The character and preparation
of soil, time of planting and gen
eral method of culture that are
suited for the ordinary Chinese
sugar cane are also adapted to
broom com culture. So far then
as planting and cultivation are
concerned the farmer who under
stands how to cultivate one will
find no difficulty in growing the
other.
Very rich land is not indispens
able; neither will very poor land
yield a profitable crop of broom
corn or anything else. Light, dry
bottom land is excellent for the
purpose. Any land, however, that
will bring a good crop of Indian
corn will yield a corresponding
crop of broom corn. Land that
has just grown a cotton or other
hoed crop is best for broom corn,
as there will be less weeds and
grass, which seriously interfere
with the young plants. Prepare
well and throw up beds to 4
feet apart. When the spring is
fully open, say between corn and
cotton planting time, it is the right
time to make, the first planting.
Open very shallow farrows, sow
seed by hand, two or three quarts
to the acre (if clean and sound),
cover not more than one inch. It
is very desirable to have the beds
freshly harrowed just ahead of the
planting. The “Tennessee Ever-
green” is the best and most popu
lar variety, and seed may be had
of Messrs. Jos. H. Johnson & Co.,
of Atlanta, and other seedsmen, at
$3.00 per bushel.
So soon as the plants are well
up cultivation should commence,
as the little stalks are delicate and
easily choked by grass. A harrow
or cultivator is well suited for this
working. When the plants have
attained a height of two or three
inches they should be reduced to
a stand of two or three plants every
foot, or twice as many at distances
of two feet. The thickness of the
stand, or number of plants left to
grow, should Vai*y according to the
strength of the soil. In the West
very little hand thinning is done,
reliance, being placed in the plant
ing drill to drop the right number
of seed.
Cultivate rapidly until the plants
are six inches high;-.after which
period, if seasons are at all favora
ble, growth will be continuous and
rapid. The culture should be
shallow, especially :n later stages,
and continue until the plants are
as high as the shoulders of a man.
TIME TO HARVESJa
It should be born in mind that
no broom maker wants red com,
not will he pay anything like fts
much for such as fot that of a fine
pea-greeU color. To have it this
nice green color the com must be
cut when the bloom begins to drop
and before the seed commences to
form. (Don’t forget this.) Red
corn is not worth more than one-
third as much as the same com
would have brought if cut at the
right tune and cured a bright
green color. Commence by break
ing two rows across each other;
about thirty inches high, so as to
form a sort of platform. The cut
ter, with a sharp shoe knife, cuts
off the head with eight inches of
witt’erocr tronM*,«<*8 j stalk as near as he can judge, and
lays it across the platform or table
formed by the stalks. As fasf as
cut the brushes should be hauled
to the drying place, where the first
ThstfoUoWS in the BiHoui
train.
Will Matter like the thieves
Before a draught of Seltxer
MEXICAN WAR SURVINORS
rtt “JS 'SfBS* a SB*i85»Ar thing.:*? be done b to strip off the
T'vojity yt-are'experience. Best reference. Snc-; OOA /l 0 RfietK, Never haul
tess.gr no fee. B. ilcALLISTEK, Jb., Attorney I Seeds BBu iiUSBbi it ever AlttUi
ut Law. P. IK Box 493 Washington, D'. C.
; while the heads are wet with detV
* j' 1 OVKBTISEBS—Lowest rates for advertising - ^ain, but Wait Unt-ll the lattGl
i.uu iooo sood newspaper*sentfw. ■ v— dried off.- Stripping the seed
a ma
chine thrfesher, something like the
ordinary spike grain thresher,
costing from. $25 to $60, according
to capacity, and run by hand,
horse or steam power, is indispens
able.
After threshing, the brush should
be laid straight in racks, under
shelter, from f sun and rain, the
layers'to be not more than two or
three inches in depth. In broom
corn districts regular ^ dry houses
are built for the purpose. When
the brush is perfectly dry through
out, stem and hull it is laid "regu
larly into a bailing pl’eSS; stem
ends outward and endwise the
bale, lapping the brush ends in the
middle as may be necessary. The
most approved size of bale is three
feet ten inches long by two feet
wideand deep as may be convenient
weighing from 300 to 350 pounds.
Care should be taken to make the
bales solid and secure so that they
will not come to pieces in handling.
Steel bale tie wire i3 prepared and
Bold in bundles, cut to proper
lengths. Do not mix good and
bad, green and red, straight and
crooked brush in the same bale, as
you would not mix “good mid
dling” and “dog tail” cotton in the
same bale of cotton. Most of the
large cities in the country now
have broom factories or merchants
who handle the crop on commis
sion.
We have said but little about
machinery for handling the crop
and will not attempt to describe
the process in the manufacture of
brooms. Those ivho wish to buy
machinery for preparing the brash
for market should write to Messrs.
D. G. Colton & Co., Galesburg,
111., for illustrated price-list of
broom corn machinery, implements
of culture, etc., and also imple
ments and machinery for making
brooms. In conclusion a few
words of caution.
A farmer about to engage in the
culture of broom corn must not be
over sanguine in his expectations.
Bear in mind that the business of
growing broom corn is now con
ducted on a very large scale and
with the most improved imple
ments in several of the Western
States. Competition is plenty and
strong; careless, slovenly culture,
delayed harvesting (producing red
brush), poorly cleaned brush,
mixing of good and bad together,
awkward, unsightly packages, etc.,
will meet their merited reward
failure.
It must not be expected that pur
home factories will give us much
for ottr inferior brush as the best
because it is home grown or South
ern grown. They won’t do any
such thing. Not much should be
expected from a first venture and
from only a fetv acres planted in
broom corn.. Knowledge and skill
must be acquired by experience.
It would not be wise for any farm
er, without experience, to risk a
large area the first year.
Again, if a farmer succeeds in
making a good crop and putting
it into market in good condition,
he may find the price far below
what it was when he planted his
crop. He may make very little or
even nothing clear, but he should
not therefore abandon the culture.
The market for broom corn, as
that for hops, fluctuates wildly in
a Very few Months. The best time
to go into the culture of broom
corn is when the price is low, for
then many thousands of acres, be
fore in broom corn, will be other
wise devoted.
Southern growers have the ad
vantage df three to four weeks'eat-
lier harvest which enables them
often to reap the benefit of high
prices which follow a short crop
before Western growers can get
their crops into selling condition.
Another advantage is that a second
crop can often be secured after the
fiyt is Cut (standing) from the
suckers,- which spring from the
joints; and which make good ma-
terial for whisk, and other small
brooms. A fair average yield ot
broom corn is 500 pounds of mar
ketable brush per acre, and five
cents, per ponnd or $100 a ton isj
Freaks of Fortune.
Philadelphia Special to the Pittsburg Dispateh.
Richard Penistan has just been
Duck Hunting in the BayouS.
Correspondence New York Sun.
The only explanation of the dis-
admitted to. flie Forrest Home, [ appearance of the ducks from their
The story of his life-is a romance,
and a plungfe from riches to pover
ty. He and his wife were of Eng
lish birth and professional breed
ing, and were -members of the
company of the Arch street thea
tre, and plftying responsible parts
before Wheatley and. Drew became
the lessees, about 1852. Mrs.
Penistan, long since deCfe&sed, was
also a playwright of some note,
and several of her plays were rep
resented on the American stage.
Soon after the dissolution of the
old Arch street company the
brown stone building on the south
east corner of Third and Chestnut
streets was erected, and in the
basement of v.this Mr. 4 Penistan
opened S drinking jilace, where he
soon found fame, patronage and
money by ids pleasant address and
the quality of his liquors, more
particularly his ales; He was in
the liquor business for years. He
became embarrassed financially,
partly through investment in fast
horses. One day he received word
that a Havana lottery ticket which
he held had drawn half a million.
This was in 1873. In company
with his friend, Whitney, the
brewer, Mr. Penistan at onCe went
to New York and placed the tick
et for collection With August Bel
mont, receiving in cask alter some
delay and litigation with Whitney,
who claimed a share -of the prize,
which was, however, disallowed by
the courts, $420,000, $80,000 being
charged by Belmont for collection,
exchange, etc. Then, upon re
turning to Philadelphia, Mr. Pen
istan sold his place, with a portion
of the stock, for $54,000, and an
other place at the northest corner
of Eighth and Sfih&om for $5,000,
besides which he had about $5,000
worth of liquor. There was prob
ably money owing, but in all he
had at least $500,000 in clear mon
ey, probably more.
He was a genial man, and had
many friends, some of them true
ones, who advised him to put half
of his money, if not more, into an
invincible trust fund. Instead of
this he began operations on Third
street, and inside of two years had
dropped there from $150,000 to
$200,000. His dealings in horses,
too, went all the while, and he lost
heavily on a stud fatm near Lex
ington, Ky. He was, besides this,
badly defrauded by the agents who
ran or trotted his horses in races,
and his blooded dolts When sold at
auction, although well advertised
and of irreproachable pedigree,
went for a song, buyers Combining
not to bid against each other, - and
dividing up the pooriy-paid-for
stock afterward. In fact he was
remorselessly skinned by horse
men, and in iess than six years was
reduced to a bare living upon the
income of some few investments
he made in his wealthy days. This
finally was exhausted, and for some
years past he hafebeeh indebted to
the kindness of fiiends for sub
sistence.
He bred some noted trdttefs, One
Of which, Grafton, a trotter, with a
record of 2:15, was sbld to Robert
Bonner for $15,000, as was also
Lady Stewart with a record of
2:28, the fastest time up to then
that a three-year-old had ever
made. In his prosperous days, too,
he occasionally appeared upon the
stage in heavy tragedy, hiring the
house himself and playing with a
good deal of spirit and not without
approval; and he now fitly finds a
home in the pleasant retreat en
dowed by the great actor or whom
he was a most fervent admirer.
Jt is just to say, aiid it is the moral
that the tale points, that no one
who knows Richard Penistan be
lieves Other than that if he had
not drawn that lottery prize he
would to-day have been a wealthy
man.
e-4
Envied "by her Sex,
Is the fate of every lady with a
bright, glowing countenance, which
invariably follows the use of Dr;
Harter’s' iron Tohi&
former haunts ' near the city . of
New Orleans is the destruction of
the feed—wild celery, wates? cress
es.. wild rice, etc. Daring the past
month these plants have died in
such quantities that thfe ducks have
fled to other feeding places, and
those that remain behind are
said to be remarkably thin
.and have & fishy flavor. The un
usually low water in the river and
in the swamps, in consequence of
which most of the lagoons are dry,
may have something to do with
the disappearance of these swamp
plants and the flight of the ducks.
The ducks have retired deeper
into the swamps, and Lake Leary
Bayou des Ailemands have become
the hunting grounds for mallards
and teal. The'latter is one of the
oldest hunting grounds in the
Union, and the supply of game is
apparently as inexhaustible to-day
as it was a century and ft half ago,
when the Dutch hunters from
whomthebayon is named supplied
the town of New Orleans witn
ducks. There are over 400 pro
fessional duck bun tfers on Bayou
des Ailemands alone, and from the
single station of Bayou des Aile
mands, on the Southern Pacific
road, no less than 1,000,000 ducks
were shipped to New Orleans last
year, and as Many as 12,000 in a
single day. The average number
killed each year by a good profes
sional hunter is 7,000.
The professionals hunt in par
ties of from ten to thirty, and have
regularly organized caMps in the
centre of the swamp. They have
their rude huts built oh the high
er patches of ground, and running
from their hduofes for inileft back
in the prairie are ditches they have
cat, and which they'fkeep always
open. It is through these minia
ture canals they push their pi
rogues when searching for ducks.
Roth sides of the bayou are com
plete networks of these ditches,
running in all directions. The
most rigid observance is maintain
ed of the rights of ownership of
these canals. It is this that pre
vents amateur khnters from ac
complishing much in the way of
shooting ducks, as they have no
use of these canals, and are una
ble to push their pirogues, or dug-
outs, through the thick matted
grass everywhere covering the
swamp; Even the professionals
find this grass very troublesome,
and more than half thfe ducks kill
ed are lost in if. Nearly all the
best hunting grounds in the bayou
have been thus taken tip, and the
amateurs are left only the outlying
districts, where ducks are few and
the hunting bad;
Just west bf the diick fields are
the fenipe and woodcock grounds,
in St.- Mary parish, where ft good
hunter will pick off 350 snipe and
150 woodcock in a day; Both
snipe and woodcock are abundant
just now, and there arfe some prai-
rie.chickens to be found also; The
supply of these, of Wild turkeys,
deer, rabbits, and other game, is'
making gbod some of 'the defi
ciency due to the lack of ducks.
Librarian _ Spofford’s Memory. ■
Tetter to Memphis Appeal.
It is Cointhoniy said that Mr.
Spofford, the Librarian
of
GSOBGLY—Houston County:
The return of’the appraiser*; to set apart
a 12 months supports for Mrs. Mattie
S-yauand Estelle Bryan;. .widow and
trddpfod daughter of C. S- .Bryan, dec’d,
out of the estate of said* deceased; has
Coi:-" been filed in office tiiis day;
-t ,, • i i.i ! This is therefore to cite all persons con
gress, knows something about the ; cerned to appear at the April term 1&S7,
contents of every volume in the li- j of the Court of Ordinary of said county
brary. This mails that be has |
stowed in a moderately-sized head made the judgement of this court;
600,000 Volumes of various _ sizes | -g§N -fruature; this
and bindings. A member of con- J ' j H. HOUSER,
gress facetiously said: “I don’t! Ordinary?
read books, I read Spofford.” In | GEORGIA KpUjSTOx C-Ot.xjri*:
, ", iri? i m j D. H. Houser, aanumstrator of the ee-
that way, lie added, lie got the j 0 f jl JLonscr, dec^asbilj lias ng
whole library at one glance. A plied for letters of dismission frbin earn
figure of speech, but not as broad
as it sounds. IFa member or "a
senator wants a quotation that
cannot be found in any of the
“Familiar Quotations,” and is of
a very obscurfe origin, he goes to
Mr. Spofford. If he wants the
best authority on any subject, or,
indeed, if be wants to learn any
thing that mayjbe found irr'atiy of
those thousands’“'of volumes, he
goes'to’the same source. Members
seldom think of looking at the cat
alogues.
While wandering and lecturing
in Mississippi, Bill Arp'put up at
a model hotel in the towh of New
ton, where he paid his bill with
supreme- satisfaction. He thus
talks: “I say a model dduiitry ho
tel—the best I have ever found,
for all the workfisjlone by pretty
daughters, and it is done merrily
and neatly, and the fare was just
splendid. They are notTasbained
to helpTheir good parents'make a
living. They are smart, amLpret-
ty, and well behaved. How gladly
would I| weicoroey’them fas 1 my
daughters-in-law, for I would then
know that my boys were safe.
Safe from want, and safe from so
cial folly.”
trust:
This is therefore to cite all per sons con-
cerned to appear at the May term, 1887;of
the Court of Ordinary of said county, and
shoir canse, if any they have, why said
apnl’cition should hot be granted;
"Witness inv official signature this Jan?
27,1887.
J. H. HOUSEF;
3m. Ordinary:
Georgia—Houston County:
The return of the appraisers to sel
apart ii,12 mouths support for Mrs. Lilly
13. Collier aml.be;- minor children from
the estate of vY. E. Collier, late of .said
county deceased; has been filed in offifcft
this day:
This is therefore to cite all persons Con=
cerned to appear at the April. terin;
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of. said
county, and show cause, if any they have;
CIMIUIV, dUU JrtlUY. clLTV UoVl|
why said return should, not be allt wed
and made the judipueut of this court.
Witness mv official signature this Feb
ruary 18; 1887, J. H. HOUSEB;
4t. OrdinarV
It is estimated that there are as
many as 50,000 suicides in Ear ope
every year. The largfest number
of suicides in proportion to the
population take place in Paris;
then come Yienna, Berlin, New
York and Loudon in the order
named, in Austria it has been
noticed that young women o£ Sla
vonic nationality are 1More liable
to suicidal impulses than German
girls, and in Italy and France the
number of female suicides is larger
than in Germany.
V
In Germany long troughs are
placed at the eaves of houses for
the accommodation of sparrows in
building their nests. "When the
young sparroWs are hatched and
the mother gofes out to procure
food for them, wire sereens are
placed over them, with the inter
stices large enough to permit of
the passage of fuod in to the
younglings, but too small to allow
them to escape from thfe nest - j
As soon as they have'grown large
and plump they are! killed, and
they make a very desirable article
of foocL
-- O -
Closer estimates of the lessfes to
workingmen by the recent strikes
in New York and New Jersey gave
the number of strikers' at 39,-350,
whose earnings from Jan. 1 to Feb.
10 would have been $1,405,000; In
addition there are 38,000 persons
in the. same section who were re
duced to idleness through lack of
coal or the strike of others, and
whose wages would have amounted
to $350,000. This brings the loss
in earnings to $755,000;
>0—«
Vermont farthers pay their help
$20 a month and board;
A Captain’s Fori-Ana- e Bisooverr-
Capi Coleman, sciir. Weymouth
plying between Atlantic City and
New York, had been troubled with
a doiigh so that he eould not sleep,
and Kras induced to try Dr.- King’s
New Discovery for Consumption,-
It not only ggyfe him instant re
lief, but allayed tlie festi'eme sorft- ;
nesS in his breast. His children
were similarly affected, and a sin
gle dose had the same happy effect:! . .
Dr. King’s New' Discovery is now; kodwu to their friends in curing
the standard remfedy in the Cole-1 Consumption severe Coughs,Croap
man household and on board the Asthma, Pneumonia,-^tnd ui fa<-:
schooner. Free trial bottles 0 f! all throat and lung diseases. No
Astonishing- Success.
It is the duty of every person who
GEOBGIA—Houston Goi -vi y :
E. S. Welloijs, Administrator of the its-'
tato of R. W. SLirah, of said county de
ceased, has applied for dismission froifi
his trust.
This is therefore to cite all personi
concernccLto appear at the April term;
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause; if any they have;
why said application should nbt be grant
ed.
■Witness my official signature thiS
December 23,188H.
JOHN H. HOUSEB;
3ni; Ordinary:
GEORGIA—Houston - County-
Josiah Bass has applied for permanent
letters of.administration on the gpStSjbf
Mrs. E; J. McCoy; of Said coiinty, de J
cessed:
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the March Term;
1887, of the. Court of Ordinary of said
county; and show cause, if any they
have; why said application should nbt bb
granted.
Witness mv official signature this Jan;
20.1887.- . J
J; H; HOUKEll,
Infc Ordinary.-
GEORGIA,—Houston County.-
C. M. Chapman, Administrator of tbd
estate of. Mrs; M. J. Chapman; of said
county; deceased. Inis applied for dismis
sion from said trust. °
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear ;:t the April.term;
1887; of the. Court of Ordinaiy of said
county; ai»d show cause, if riny they have;
why said application should not bd
granted. . . .
"Withess mv offieirdsighatore this De-
ceidber 23,1880; JOHN B; HOUSEB,
3m; Ordinary;
GEORGIA -Houston County:
JL M. Harvard sad J. W. Christ inns;
administrators of the estate of .Terry W;
Christmas; Sf said county deceased, have -
iippilod.for dismission from said trust.
This is therefore to die all perfors
concerned to appear at the April
term 1837, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause, If any they Lave
why said application should hot bd
granted.
Witness my official signature tln v ,Tai *
uary 6; 1837.
3m.
J; H. HOUSEB,
Ordinary:
Humors*
Erysipelas,
I do not believe that
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has
an equal as a remedy
for Scrofulous. Hu
mors. It iS pleasant
to take, gives strength
and vigor to the body,-
and produces a more
perinauent, lasting, re
sult than any medicine
I ever used.—E:
Haines, No. Lindale, O:
I. have used Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla, in my famj
ily, for Scrofula, abd
know; if it is takeri
faithfully, it will
thoroughly eradicate -
this terrible disease. —
W. F. Fowief, M. D.;
Greenville, Tenn;
For forty years i
have suffered with Ery= -
c-Ias. I have tried
— sorts of remedies
Sanker.and SKSSSS
commenced using
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.-
After taking ten bot
tles of this medicine l
am completely Cured.-
—Mary C. Ainesburr,-
Rockport, Me. <
I have - suffered, for
years, from C ‘ ’
which Was so
that it destroyed
! appetite and wlakeneu
mv system. After trr-
j mg other remedies,
| and getting ho relief, I
began to‘ 'take AVer’s
j Sarsaparilla. :>u-l. in a
j fewfhontl.-'.v--;sr
I —Susan J.. t
t Albany st.v
“ “AM®
Catarrh,
about the average price.
TPII
agjfijri
Boston has a gymnasium
women exclusively.
for
fee-)
eon- j
bot-
wefej
• « a., . -. . .. i{i rf*, . sold last year, and not one ease
yorce is Uqt to get married. ’ That where it failed reported;' .fjveh s
r?. 3, , western bull; bat medicine as the German Syropj
cannot be tod widely kaotvii. Ask}
A C'alifernia ifajJet has ft>Mfe to ’ d.-atasq I it the pom-; dvi: ^
Qie ejpficlnsidn that fen the Pacific toast to try one
eoast “the best Way to get a
Ga ft be
cirred by
purifyingj
the blood
Highlands,
Ayer’s
issu
rtonn
pur
lever
- tlfe,- ns. 80,003 ~ d;;;:?n bottles
taken it i
jCankef,
flife editor Might suggest a sure
way.to avoid death, that is, not to your.druggist about
get born; . bottles to try, soli’
ff Vou Want a Good Article
Op Plug Tobacco ask your dealer for
all Drug
Pfltjfc J