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'Tke.Gfeat Farm, Industrial and Stock
ffburntal-of tbe -South
OWfelrYEAR FOR $2.75
6 fl ,. .; . CASH GST ADVANCE.
' "* Sample copies *6f the Southern Cnlti
Vator will be mailed FREE on applica
tion to Jas. P. Habbison & Co., Drawer
8, Atlanta,-Ga.
WORK
Neatly executed
—AT THIS OFFICE.
dk^**"*"**—" ■ ■■ i i
BBS
.rv
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—
~- • -T171—l-WiriVMir .
—
JOHN Hi HODGES, Proprietor,
Demoted to Home Interests and Culture.
TWO DODLABS A Year in Advaneb.
vol. xvn.
GEORGIA, THURSDAY OCTOBER # 1887. *
N0»-'4&
FOET TALLEY, GA.
(Office oyer Dow Law Bank.)
Praciicejin the counties of the Macoi?
Circuit; in Macon and Taylor countie
and in the Federal Cohits.
KEPAtR WOKE',
Watches, docks. Jewelry, Sewing Ma
chines, Guns, Pistols; Locks,'and Furni
ture of allkinds repaired in best style and
promptly. Gold Kings made to order;
Price and quality of work guaranteed to’
give satisfaction. Respectfully,
F. 'A. JobsoS
Sept. 30—tf.
Periy, Ga.
Renew your subscription now.
BMaBMnaMMMMBHHMMMMS
z. SIMS,
SENT IS4,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
sr j Gffihe'oVer Paul’s Furniture Store,
it-class work. Prices moderate. Pat-
roq»ec solicited.
apl 28 ly
A CARD.
• ’To the Planters of Houston, Maoon, Dooly,
. Worth, Wilcox, Dodge, Laurens, Twiggs,
Pfcl&8ki and other counties:
While it has been £ny earnest dfesire
to visit.you, and each of you, at your
home'B,and meet with you at your pub
lic gatherings, my farming interests have
demanded my personal attention during
the spring and summer months. What
time Pcould spare from my farm has
been- spent at iny office. This 1 have
deemed my duty to my friends, as I could
. there meet them at times during the
needy season, -where 1 cohid be of shb-
biantialaid to them, and this aid I have
given whenever in my power. I trust
and believe it has been and will be ap
preciated
I have still my able corp's of assistants
in my warehouse—Shine Lawson as
bailsman, Charlie Bozeman as weigher,
and Green Fleming as bookkeeper. My
wagon yards aud camping houses are
free, ample and comfortable. Two of
"the best and most liberal export cotton-
buyers in the South, have their offices di
rectly over mine. Press dispatches, giv
ing full cotton news six times a day, are
regularly received. All these facts show
my advantages for. promptness, care and
Accuracy in the storage and sale of your
cotton, and I respectfully solicit your
patronage.
R. W. ANDERSON,
Proprietor Planters’ Warehouse,
Opposite Postoffice.
" Hawkinsville, September, 1887.
Cleveland and Civil Service;
To the Farmers
Tulasii, Houston, Wilccc- Dooly, Dodge,
Laurens, Twiggs and other counties.
We are again applicants for your pat
ronage, better prepared to serve you than
at any time in the ptist. Dr. Fleetwood,
Messrs. Clay Brown and Burrell Jordan
are with us as before. They need uo in
troduction to the people of this section.
•In addition to these’ gentlemen, we have
Employed another ‘assistant in the per
son of Mr. Pope Brown, whose past ex-
; perience in handling cotton, renders him
!. Competent to serve your interests.
With increased facilities, renewed and
greater efforts in behalf 'of our custom
ers, we confidently guarantee satisfac-
tion to all who may favor us with their
; patronage.
Hawkinsville is better prepared this
'season tnan at any time in her history
(and she has always been the best inte
rior cotton market and trading point in
, the state), to make it to your interest to
patronize our merchants ana war&house-
Our cotton buyers have as good lim
its, and connections as any city in the
south.
O ir merchants Uliy direct from North
ern and Eastern markets, and will give
you the middle man’s profits.
Bring us your cotton and patronize
our merchants, and you will make mon
ey and save money.
Very respectfully,
ROCK WAREHOUSE & 0. CO.,
Hawkinsville, Ga.
AYER’S
PILLS,
Sugar-Coated
Cathartic
If the Liver be
comes torpid, if the
bowels are constipated, or if the stomach
fails to perform its functions properly, usd
Aydr’s Pills. They are invaluable.
For some years I Was a victim to Liver
Complaint, in consequence of which I
suffered from General Debility and Indi
gestion; A few boxes of Ayer’s Pill8
restored me to perfect health.—W. T.
Brightney, Henderson, W. Va.
For years ! have relied more upon
* teats , JL lltlVU ICHCU JLUUI
Ayer’s Pills than anything else, to
Regulate
my bowels; These Pills lire mild in action,
and do their work thoroughly. I have, used
them with good effect, iu cases of Rheu
matism, Kidney Trouble, and Dyspepsia,
—G; F; Miller, Attleborough, Mass.
Ayer’s Pills cured me of Stomach and
Liver troubles, from which I had suffered
for years. I consider them the best pills
made, and would not be without them.—
Morris Gates, Downsville, N. Y;
I was attacked with Bilious Fever,
tvhich was followed by Jaundice, and was
6o dangerously ill that my friends de
spaired of my recovery. I Commenced
taking Ayer’s Pills, and soon regained my
customary strength and vigor, — John C.
Pattison, Lowell, Nebraska.
Last spring I suffered greatly from a
troublesome humor on my side. In spite
bf every effort to cure this eruption, it in
creased until the flesh became entirely
raw. I was troubled, at the' Same time,
frith Indigestion, and distressing pains in
The Bowels.
By the advices of a friend I began taking
Ayer’s Pills, In a short time I was free
from pain, iny food digested properly, the
sores on iny body commenced healing,
hnd, in less tnnrf one month, I tv as cured.
—Samuel D. White, Atlanta, Ga.-
I have long used Ayer’s Pills, in my
family, and believe them to be the best
pills made,—S. C. Darden, Darden, Miss,
My wife and little girl were taken with
Dysentery a few days ago, and I at once
began giving them small doses of Ayer’s
Pills, thinking I would call a doctor if the
disease became any worse. In It short
time the bloody discharges stopped, all
pain went atvay, and health was restored,
—Theodore Esling, Richmond, Va.
Ayer’s Pills*
Prepared by Dr. 3. G. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass'.
< Seid by all Dealers in Medicine,
Extracts from a private letter.
Washington, D. D.
As A man, 1 think Mr. Cleve
land honest, straightforward and
capable, with an almost abnormal
development of spinal column. I
do not think he can with proprie
ty be called a statesman, and he
makes all the better president fo£
that, as whatever he does is with
a view to servin'g the ends of right
and justice i’ather than those of
party exigency. He decides upon
that course which he thinks right,
and follows it, regardless of conse
quences. And right here let me
say that in my humble opinion his
very failure to administer his of
fice with the sole end of future
party success iu view has been the
very means of strengthening both
him and the party. I have no
doubt he has lost strength in the
strongly democratic states, but not
enough to turn any one of them
over to the enemy, while, on the
other hand, I think he has gained
largely in the doubtful and repub
lican states. As for the charge
that he is no democrat, that is all
bosh. The worst that can be said
o£ him is that he has endevored to
dairy out the pledges which he
considered were made in the party
platform, and if this be treason it
rests upon the heads of the baild-
ers of that platform, and not upon
that of the executor of its pledges.
And as for the objection of his
civil service ideas, to me it seems
little weight can attach^ It may
be true that be has made few re
movals, but when an official was
removed, his place was almost in
variably filled by a democrat, and
as the terms of office of the old of
ficials expire they are succeeded by
ment Of his own party. He has
certainly appointed ho more re
publicans to office than there were
democrats appointed during repub
lican administrations. Of the of
fices within his control and gift,
ministerial, consulate, revenue,
judgeships, postmasterships, and
the like, I believe to-day, nine-
tenths are filled by democrats, and
he still has a year and a half of
official life ahead of him, leaving
altogether out the calculation all
idea of a second term. What more
could be asked?
Personally I do not believe in
civil service reform—that is, as in
terpreted—nor am I a strict spoils
man. I think fitness should be
the test, and at the same time
think that other things being equal
the applicant of thG same political
faith as the party ill power should
fill the vacancy. I dtJ not believe
in a division of the spoils. In
other words I think that for each
and every vacancy that may occur,
a perfectly trustworthy and capa
ble democrat cun be foiind willing
to fill it. And as far as I can see,
Mr. Cleveland thinks the same
way. The most that can be said
against him on this score is that
in cases where there have been
more than Giffi • applicant for a
place he has frequently ap
pointed tbe man he thought most
fit over the stronger political back
ing of some of the other candidates,
and with this the people will
scarcely complain. He does not
remote a man because he is a re
publican, but wheil a vacancy oc
curs, either through removal or
other causes, expiration of term,
resignation or death, a democrat
gets the plaee. This is the slower
way—in my opinion too slow—but
in the end the result will be the
same. When his term expires
the republicans holding political
offices that are under liis control
will be awfully lonesome, and this
result will have been accomplish
ed without raising anything like a
howl, and without friction other
than that caused by the impatience
of office seekeTs and their friends.
In the departments here, the-re
publicans are largely in the ma
jority, but Mr.- Cleveland is not re
sponsible, for with the exceptions
of the heads of bureaus and divis
ions, the clerks are tinder the pro
tection of the civil service law, for
which congress, and not Mr;
Cleveland, is responsible. Besides,
from aniy of them. !The head of
Sach department- 1 -each cabinet of*
ficer—regulates the removals in
his own department, and the ap
pointments are made after exami
nation, through the civil service
commission. It is perhaps true
that should he suggest to them : a
weeding out of repudlicans in their
several departments, the sugges
tion would be carried out. But
such a course would raise a howl,
and more than all, in his opinion,
would be a violation of the princi
ples of the platform upon which
he was alected. And here again I
disagree with civil service reform,
as interpreted. It keeps in office
a large number of clerks who were
there before the law was enacted,
and Consequently stood no exam
ination, and at the same time
keeps out many of those who have
passed the examination which the
law imposes as an antecedent to
appointment. If one is required
to pass an examination in order to
get in, the man in before the en
actment of the law should be re
quired to pass the same examina
tion in order to stay in. Both
should be tarred with the same
brush. Auother thing; the law
prohibits any inquiry as to poli
tics in the examinations, and con
sequently the appointing officer is
totally in the dark as to the poli
tics of the man appointed—which
the law intended he should be.
Well, it operates in this way: As
I said, the republicans in the de
partment are largely in the ma
jority; therefore, upon the theory
of the law, that appointments will
naturally come from a ratio about
equal to their relative strength, it
will readily bO seen that death
among the older clerks alone will
equalize things, which is awofully
slow process. It might be well
enough to continue the examina
tions, but if so, I should like much
to see some scheiiie devised by
which they would be confined to
democrats—at least until the pres
ent conditions are changed.
That Mr. Cleveland will be re
nominated I have not the slightest
doubt—no other name is even
mentioned in connection with the
place. That he will be elected I
have as little doubt. R. H-. 0;
Plain Speaking.
A Queer Story from Japan.
' A valuable disinfecting com
pound for purifying tbe atmos
phere is described in a Berlin
journal Oils of rosemary, laven
der, and thyme, in the proportion
of ten, two and one-half, and two
and one-half parts, respectively
are mixed with nitric acid in the
proportion of thirty to one aild
one-half. Simple as it is the va
por of this compound is said to
possess extraordinary properties
in controlling offensive odors and
effluvia.
- Vontli’s.Cdjapanidn'. j
Prince Orloff was the most trust-i
Od adviser of the Czar Nicholas I. ]
He owed his accession to favor to ;
a blow of hfs fist. While he was
aid-de-camp, one df the regiiiients
had mutinied, and the Czar,feeling
that a look would reduce the men
tp obedience, stepped in front or
them, accompanied only by Orloff,
and asked: “Havd^yon any com
plaint, my children? Whoever
has anything to say to me, step
forward.”
To his surprise several soldiers
did advance, and one of them lev
elled his weapon at the Emperor.
Orloff instantly stepped forward
and struck the man dead with a
blow of his fist.
The Emperor was grateful, and
Orloff rose, step by step, until he
became chief of the secret police
of tbe empire, an official before
whom all classes trembled.
Yet the Emperor occasionally
treated him like a school-boy. At
one time some secret information
in regard to military affairs had
become public property. The Em
peror, vexed at this, sent for Or
loff and received him ill the ut
most ill-humor.
“What have I a police for?” he
exclaimed.
“Your majesty should know that
best.”
“Quite right; onlj I don’t know
what good it is. And if you don’t
give me, in twenty-four hours, the
iiame of the traitor who let oiit the
secret you are cashiered.”
“Oh,” replied Orloff, quite calm
ly, “my police are so excellent that
I do not require twenty-four hours
to give your majesty the name of
of the traitors”
“You know' him, then? You
know who it is?”
“I know what I know, yotif
majesty, but I can oiily tell it at
the Emperor’s express command.”
“I give you that command.”
“The traitor whom you majesty
is looking for is Nicholas Paulo-
wich, Emperor of all the Russias;
who always forgets, when he talks
about state business, and especially
military measures, in the Em
press’ drawitig-fodm, that each of
the ladies of the coiiit present has
not only two ears, but also broth
ers, cousihs, aud relations in tiie
army, to whom they tell every
thing they have heard.- And ev
ery word the Emperor speaks
spreads like wild-fire throiigh tile
city.”
Orloff was not cashiered; doubt
less. the Emperor admired his
courage in speaking his iniiid.
Letter to the St. Louie Globe-Democrat.
Consolation.
Death Galley, Nev., is to be
turned into an Ostficrli ranch. A
Mexican has fourteen well grown
chicks that he hatched out there
at his little ranch from eggs
brought from the neighborhood of
Los Angeles. The eggs were sim
ply buried in the hot sand.
*-«-«
^Thomas Stevens, the bicycler;
who traveled around the world oii
his wheel, states that one custom
that appears to be universal is the
Use of tobacco: In some form or
other, he feays, the weed is used by
the men of every country and in
most df them by the wonieh as
well.
The famouse Dismal Swainp is
no longer used as a shelter for
runaway negro slaves; df course,
but it is believed to be the hiding
place of at least 100' Mute men
who for various reasons; want to
retire to private life for a spdlL
Mr. Spurgeon tests the readiness
df his pupils by sending them in
to the pulpit with a sealed envelope
containing a text From that text
the pupil is supposed to preach.
he -neither appoints to nor removes' affections.*
A JRicIi Legacy.
The General attorney df the
Pullman sleeping car company;
Ex-chief Justice O. A. Loelirane,
states that old Dr. Biggers could
leave no better legacy than his
Huckleberry Cordial for all bowel
There is a little stir in medical
circles here that may make Nagas-
ki known to all the world in this
connection, and Pasteur and the
hypnotizing Parisian will find
themselves deposed 'a‘3 lions in
medical society for a young peas
ant woman from a village near -
her9 who has a new theory and
enTe for rheumatism. Many of
those short-tempered people who
have had rheumatism in their
knees and gout in their toes hate
declared that the sensation was as if
something was^gcawing at their
muscles, and this Japanese woman
says that it is in reality that.
Rheumatism, according to her, is
a "growth of small 'parasites under
the skin, a small, 7 insect that gnaws
and bites’and causes the untold
misery and all the twinges of that
ailment. She has’had for one of
her patients here a grizzled and
Skeptical sea captain, and as sea
captains may always be believed,
except about the sea serpent; his
case ought to settle it. The mari
ner was completely laid up with
his ailing knees, and the Japanese
Minan was sent for. She claimed
to see the movements of the para
sites under the skin, ordered foot
baths of bran and hot rice brandy,
and came another day with a little
steel hook and nipped small white
insects out by the dozen. By the
stories it must be a large white
flea, for one of them when brought
to the surface made a spring and
was lost to sight. One of the by
standers felt a sting and the next
day had a sore place on his arm,
and cutting into it was found that
the rheumatism brig was there,
bufiowing like a tick.
The regular practitioners are
still sceptical about the new theory
of rheumatism. They put one of
the insects under a microscope
and decided that, by its organism,
it never conkl have lived under the
surface of the 3fcin away from the
air, and that she must have car
ried it under her finger nail and
produced it at the proper moment.
To this tlie sea captain enters vig
orous denial. He says that she
has taken the insects from his
knees and ankles by the hundreds,
and that all have been killed in his
sight, and that he is growing bet
ter, and can feel the relief after
each treatment.
By J. H. Ifc
‘Let not your hearts he troubled.”—Johs XlV; 1.
This earthly house is made with, hands,
And soon it will decay;
The friends whose faces now we see.
Will soon be home away.
But yet there’s one consoling '.thought
That collies amid the'gloom;
Our Saviour burst the bars of cte'ath;
And came forth ftem the tomb.
He rose in triumph o’er His foes;
He jives and reigns above;
The sting of death He took away—
How wonderful is His love!
And when afflictions come to us,
Should we not kiss the rod?
He loves us when He chastens fig,
Why murmur against God?
Adulteration of flour by means
bf potato flour may be detected by
Means of acids. Take a spconfnl
and pour it upon a little nitric
acid; if the flour be of wheat it will
change to an orange yellow; if
wholly of potato flour the Color
will not be altered, but the flour
formed into a tenacious jelly; if,
therefore; the flour be adulterated
with potato flour, it will not be dif
ficult to decide: Again; take a
spoonful of the flour and pour
ujjon it a little muriatic acid; if the
flour be of pure wheat it Ml be
changed to a deep violet color;
without odor; but if potato flour
be mixed in it, it will then have an
odor like that of rushes:
The Burnet and Palace Hotels
of Cincinnati, were cleverly swin
dled out of considerable money a
few days ago: The Swindler's
ruse was to call up the clerks of
these hotels by telephone; and by
feigning the voices of prominent
boarders, request the payment
Upon Mat seemed to be express
packages sent in by a messenger
boy.- In every case the money
was paid without hesitation. Some
of the other hotels declined to
advance the alleged charges, but
helfl the bundles, which, upon be
ing opened; Contained nothing but
sawdust and other rubbish.
Tallest People Lazy:
Why are the tallest people" the :
laziest? They He longer in bed
than others, and if they neglect
their coughs or colds, they will he
there still longer. Use Taylor’s
Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gam
and Mullein.’
Frank W. Harper, of Woodford
county, Kentucky, has ordered a
beautiful and costly monument of
pure Mite marble to be placed
over his iioted torse Ten Broeek’s
grave. It will be seven feet and
two inches high, surmounted with
an urn* The date of Ten Broeck’s
birth and death and his famous
record will bd inscribed On tile
monument.
The family Bible of the Lees,
giving their history for 200 years,
was stolen from Arlington during
the war. It has just been recov
ered in Maine, the widow of the
soldier who carried it away having
seen an advertisement asking for
information concerning it. Its re
covery is very fortunate, as, in ad
dition to its own value ffom asso
ciation and otherwise, it- supplies
important information which could
be found nowhere else:
Hugh Whitteika “Forty-niner,”
died at Alamends, Cal., some days
ago, and his remains now rest in a
monument he had erected some
years' ago, bearing his naiad, dates
of his birth and death, and this
epitaph: “He traveled oter the
first railway ever built in England;
and crossed the Atlantic in the
first steainship that eter ploughed
the ocean. He explored many
lands and died ib the fullness of
the faith. Amen.”
Bit in submission let us us bow
To His most holy ifcill,
And feel, however bard tbe blow,
Tbat Father loves ns still.
And when onr hearts are bowed with grief
We may not understand,
Lookup and smile) though hard to bear;
It comes from Father’s hand.
Why murmur, then, whenTtrials come,
Although they’re hard to bear?
There is a place where we'ean go,
And leaVe tli'e'burden there.
It is before the mercy seat,
Down humble in the dust;
The Sarionr will the burden bear,
If we will only trust.
Absolutely Pure*
6trengtli ami whok'sr.meueps. Moro pco^iomica*
than the ordinary kinds, and . cannot be ;8oId in
srtect, N. Y.
A Badly Mixed Questioiii
Hawkinevillo News.
While it is an admitted fact that
the cotton crop will be picked out
and sold earlier than is usually
the case, the question of the num
ber of balesjniade|p'er plow; and as
to how the present will compare
with last year’s crop, is a badly
mixed one. Some farmers were
overheardfdiscussing their pros
pects the other day, and [ in the
talk between them, the’ following;
statements'were made:
First Farmer—My crop is short.
I don’t believe I wil get more than
twelve bales per plow, but I am
consoled with the fact that my
corn crop is the best I ever made,
and that I shall have hog and hom
iny in abundance, cotton crop or
no cotton crop.”
Second^-^Farmer—“Well; how
many bales Mid] you make per
plow last year?”
First Farmer—“Oh, I made only
ten bales per plow last year; but I
counted on fully fifteen bales per
plow this year:”
And just such talk as the above
has caused iis to “give it up” that
the cotton crop question is serious
ly mixed, and difficult to solve.
POMONA HILL NURSERIES,
POMONA, N. G,
Two aiid a half miles west of
Greensboro, N. G. The main line
bf the P. & D. B. R. passes through,
the grounds and within 100 feet of
the office. Salem trains make
regular stops twice daily each way;
Those interested ih Frhil anfl
Fruit growing are cordially inViteti
to inspect this the largest nursery
in the Ste.to, and one among the
largest in the South.
The proprietor has for many
years visited tbe leading nurBbfife§
"XTrwfrV* nn/1 ocf uiirl Dnvi*h\2nVir*rlD/l
North and West, anil corr'espbr.ded
with those of foreign 'countries*,
gathering every fruit that was cal
culated to shit 1be South, both na
tive and foreign. The reputation
of Pomona Hill Nurseries is such
that many agents going out from
Greensboro, representing-, other
nurseries, ivy to leave the impres
sion
{!>
they are representing
these nurseries. Why do they do'
it? Let the public answer.
I have iu stock growing (and can show
visitors the same) tie largest and best
stock of trees, &c., ever -shown or seen
in any two nurseries in North Carolina
consisting of spi-te; peach, pear, cherry;
A sensible correspondent writing
Horn Europe advises American pa
rents to educate their children in
their native land.. He says:
“There are here in Europe multi
tudes of American children who
can speak French" and German
better than their own language. I
met the other evening a family
from Ohio, and E found tfle soil, a
boy twelve years of age, reading
Booper’s novels and ‘Uncle Tom’s
Cabiii;’ ih German. ‘I understand
them better in German than in
English,’ he remarked, with a
strong foreign accent The pa
rents spoke of the fact with evi
dent satisfaction. Another Ameri
can family, m which are five
daughters; who have made a great
success ih science, ihedicihP; paint
ing" and music, employ German or
French in their home circle, and
cannot pronounce an English sbh-
tence without making h bltihder.of
some kind.”
iipricofc; mulberry, quinces. Small frfiitsF
Strawberry, raspberry,. currants; pecan;
English walnuts, rhubarb, asparagus,
evergreens, shade trees, roses, &c.
Give your order to my authorized
agent, or order direct from the nursery:
Correspondence •solicted. Descriptive
catalogues free %o applicants. Address"
J. VAN. LINDLEY,
Pomona,
Guilford County, N. C.
THE GREAT
SEEING
SHSelferiag. Behold ns as we are.. Iinmenset
So it is, and all used in onr own Manic and Art
SSSPIfiNOS AND ORGANS
in which, wo lead tB, and SAVE buyers
LIVE HOUSE! Bight yen are. Dixie’s blaz-
ingEon don’t erenwilt H3 ona bit. 0-See oar
A farmer drove ih Charlotte,
Mich., the other day with a load of
20,160 eggs.
Addition: Makiug Shorter.
What word is that to' which if
you add a syllable it will make it
j shorter? Short. Taylor’s Ghero ; -
;kee Remedy of Sweet Gum and
j Mullen will shorten your cold and
•’ cure your cough.
Many pieces of skiii and leather
from the Egyptian tombs still ex
ist in a state of perfect preserva
tion which passed throngii tbe
bands of the tahnfer more than
thirty centuries ago, and which, 1
but for the invention of this pro-
cess, must have perishedfwithin a
few hours after they had left the
carcass from which they were
stripped; *
SPOT CASH PRICES, with credit
until Hoy. 1. Ho Monthly Pay-
itienis. Ho interest Buy in June,
July, August, or Septemberiand /
A Woman’s Dress
Is ah important matter as regards
hel* health. They ate much ihofe
subjected to cold than men; and '
Should be caret til to protect them-!
selves, but if they contract a co
or cold, they should take Ta
Cherokee Reined} o:
and Mullein:
pay yjhen crops come in,
Write for Circalara.
REMEMBER
Lcv.cst Prices known.
Easiest Terms possible. ..
Finest instruments .
Fine Stcois cr.d Covers;
All Freight Paid. .
Fifteen Days’ Trial."
Fui! Cuarsr.tee.
m
jggd&igit.
0M