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PERRY. GEOEGIA, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1889
ROYAL powoSS
unriyrC-V:
IF YOU WANT
8jgi8W!i
m
-
r-n
roRi
--ANY KIND OF
-GIVE THE
-The Home JouhNAi,
ee is fully prepared . to 'do aaj
kind of .Ccininercial job wbri likf
may be needed: All nicely jjk&r
lied, and at prices that 4rill Col»- jj
pete with any city. Cnll nhd lo«£
at otir samples and get our pricM ’
Tii nking of that cannon, and of But presfenlly the excitement of at high tide lie saw the water would ings, while the boat swung back-^ Some' Interesting English Sta-
what he could do with it if he discovery overcame his qualms of not be much mote than two feet ward and forward , like a great j tistlcs.
A bar had formed off Warble’s could only get hold of it, sometimes conscience, and He began with deep. w that the door was not-pendulum, flashing through tb$! * ‘
Wharf, sd that a whaler could not kept him anjke at nt ht. He. even great interest to examind His sur-; fastened, he could roll up his rays of sunlight. The particles of , Pan m»u < ezette.
lie at it,, nor anywhere near it; but tried op several occasions to roundings by the uncertain light trousers and wade in whenever he" dust which the jar had shaken ; It is snid that encfl year 15 peP-
this was not a matter of any spe- make friends with Miss Ruth, to that entered through the hole that chose to.
cial consequence,- for more than the end that he might gain per- he had dome in by, and that filter-j After he had gni out of the oil-
tliirty yejys had passed since a mission to investigate this delect-: ed through the cracks in the old Inns* 1 , and inte his clothes again,
whaler and the wharf had anything able place. Once—when he had walls in long gleams of sunshine Teddy bad some twinges of con
to do with each other.
discovered the Barkum’s pigs in tvhich crit across the shadows like : science in regard to the liberties he thought he would Sneeze his; been married before and 902 are
Mtoa Pnfli’c onrl rlt*nvrA it :;i ' ! _ i_ _ a i l .1!* : '! til n n ll63.d off. I StlillflfPTS. T WpIfa lYlfl rriflfroa nnt
It Was a wharf in ruins; and al- Miss Ruths garden, and drove ; golden wires.
most as badly dilapidated was the them opt before any great harm j He found himself in Something; Warble’s property. These twinges
oil-house that stood bn the end had been done
of it, with great doors that opened cd.
out over the water so that a gang- j To Miss Ruth, in her poverty,
way could be rigged across the ; the loss of her garden staff would
'ship’s rail and into the big room , have been a very serious matter
where barrels of oil were stored. | She was truly grateful to Teddy
But these doors were never open-
he almost succeed- like a little open dock in the floor were but feeble on the following stopped swinging, and hung stead,! The average age^ at which men
■of the oil-house; evidently a place I morning, however, and be cduld fly by the falls just ffiefir of the marry is about 27, while the aver-
where, in former times, a boat had scarcely eat his breakfast, so eager
been kept. Steps, black and rotten 1 J as to get to work at setting the
with age led to the level- of the little boat afloat.
ed now, nor was the little sliding
Moor that shut fairly down into the
water, and, ’when raised, opened a
channel in which a boat could be
floated. Both of these doors were
fastened oh the inside, and the door
that opeiied on the wharf was fas
tened with a padlock as big as a
small cabbage, and as rusty as if it
had been towed astern of the Har
mony Home in a whale-cruise.
ihe,Harmony iloinh Was the
Whaler that used to discharge he|
Cargo into the oil-house. She had
been owned and sailed by Capt.
Tranquil Warble, and for a long
time she and her master * had the
reputation of being the lilckaest
ship and luckiest captain afloat.
Captain Warble was coining mon
ey, the Graybells., people said—
Graybells was the name of the
little port—and was getting richer
and richer every year. Moreover
he was hoarding his money in coiu
“No banks fur me,” said Capt,
'Warble, “an’ no reel estate, nuther.
I tried banks in ’37, an’ where was
1 after they all broke, I’d like to
kpow?. An’I tried reel estate
’50, an’ after the man I’d bought it
frum got off to Californy, another
mail come ’long an’ proved a mort
gage on it, an’ where was I then?
No, no! Hard dollars hid in a place
that nobody but me knows about
'thet’s safe, an’ thet’s sure.”
.This was ail very well so long as
good luck attended tne Harmony
Home’s cruisings; but when news
came from the northern seas that
the Harmony Home had been nip--
ed in the ice, and had gone to the
bottom with every soul on board,
the captain's financial methods did
not make quite so satisfactory
(showing, for his widow had not the
lehst notion in the world where the
fortune in hard dollars, that was
how hers, was to be found.
'She looked’in all the likely places
for it, aiid in all the unlikely places
that she could think of—and she
thought of a good many—but not
a trace of it could she find. At
last, while she was still looking
for it, she died.
Then her daughter, Miss Bath
Warble—who was then a young
girl and very energetic, though that
seem shard to believe now—be
gan the search. And Miss Ruth
spent all her youth aud most of
her energy in search ing/fitKi here
She was now, forty years old ahd
looking fifty, with her fortune as
safely hidden as ever, and herself
still as poor as anybody could be
butside of the town farm.
Miss Ruth was S thin,- sour,
Bharp-tongued little woman, but
the Greyshells people, who were
very sofry for her, said that it was
no wonder that she was so thin,
when she got so little to eat, and;
that she was less to blame for her
sourness and sharpness than she
would have been had her temper
been less sorely tried.
For Theodore Bedford—widely
and, I am pained to add; somewhat
hnfavorably known, as'‘that Teddy
Bedford”—the oil-house down at
Warble’s wharf had a wonderful
Attraction. He had peeped through
the chinks in the boards time aud
again, and what he had seen inside
ihade hinfVildly eager to explore
it thoroughly.-
For strewn about on the floor
were old harpoons,- and piles of de
lightful ropes, and big and little'
blocks and oars. He was almost
for saying it, and told so with much
warmth. Indeed, she even went
so far as to add the some What
equivocal compliment that “it was
a comfort to know shat he wasn’t
bad all the time, anyway.’ 5
Being thus encouraged, he was
emboldened to ask her if she
wouldn’t, sometime or other, let
him take a look around in her oil-
house. And Miss Ruth, still mel
lowed by her gratitue, said almost
kindly that maybe sordeiime ; or oth
er she would.
♦ Nye’s wharf, down on the Point,
was where the boys usually went
in swimming. Warble’s wharf was
nearer, but because, of the bar, the
swimming was not very good there,
even at high water; but it happen
ed one hot day that Teddy felt too
lazy to walk all the way down to
the Point, so he thought he would
j ust step down to Warble’s wharf
and get cooled off a little. He
whistled for Noah JBarkum, but as
N :ah did not hear him,he had to go
alone.
Although it was low water, and
the bar was bare, there was a cool-
looking pool just in front of and
shaded by the old oil-house, and
into this pool he settled down very
.‘.omfortably. While he was i sit
ting on the sandy bottom • in this
pleasant place, with ODly his head
out of the water, he made a very
exciting and.delightful discovery.
It was dead low-tide, aid the
stone foundation of the oil-house
was bare clear down id the tops of
the piles on which it rested. The
sliding door was out of water en
tirely, To his joy, Teddy- per
ceived that so large a part of one
corner of this door had been
floor; Up these slippery steps
Teddy went gingerly. His first
object of investigation was the
shadowy place under the stairway.
He found that he had been right.
It was a cannon, a little six-pound
er, such as whalers used to carry
to fire signals with, and it was a
regular little, beauty.
If he only could manage to get
the use of that cannon for the ap
proaching fourth of July, he
thought, bow gloriously he could
celebrate that glorious day!
He did not stop to eiftmine the
other interesting things that
scattered about him. With these,
thanks to his frequent peepings
through the cracks; he already was
tolerably fatriiliaf. The sall-loft
was an undiscovered country that
he longed to explore, so up the
stairway that led to it he went, two
steps at a time.
The loft was far lighter than the
room below; for the sunbeams came
through the cracks in the roof as
well as through cracks in the wall.
It was a great bare -place, with
some old sails piled up iu one cor
ner, some sail-making gear still
lying pn a little bench, and stiiiie
chalk marks still on the floor" that
doubtless showed the exact cut of
the Harmony Home’s last' suit of
sails.
There was something a little
awesome in finding all these things
just as Oapt. Warble, years and
years before, had left them; almost
a suggestion that at any moment
the captfdn himself might come up
the stairs.
But unpleasant thoughts of*this
nature Were driven quickly and
completely out of Teddy’s head as
he caught sight of a delightful, fat
little tub of a boat; standing close
kuocked away—probably by a bang j to the side wall at the end of the
from the hoSe of some badly steer- building nearest the water. The
ed boat in a long' past time—that a
boy twice as big as he was could
wriggle through the hole.
It is only just to Teddy to state
that he did debate briefly with
himself the propriety of taking ad
vantage of his discovery, and it
also is but just to add that on this
occasion his logic and bis conclu
sion were equallj 7 unsound. Miss
Ruth frequently had forbidden
him to climb over her fences, he
admitted, but she Sever, he rea
soned, said a Word about forbid
ding him to go through holes in
her doors. Indeed, so far from
having sail that he must not enter
the oil-house, he had her own word
for it that perhaps he might go in
there some day.'
Very likely, he thought,- she
might have meant to take him in
that very day, and had forgotten
about it, in which case, of course,
she would be glad to find that her
forgetfulness .had been set right by
his own energetic action. Of course
this settled the matter; he would
be very sorry, lie thought, that
Miss Ruth should be uncomforta
ble on his account.
He gave a look up and down the
river to see if anybody in a boat
was in sight—a curiously" anxious
look, considering that he had so
well convinced himself that what
he was about to do was just what
Miss Ruth wanted him to do—and
then having assured himself that
the Coast was clear', he slipped, out
eff the water and acro'SS' the bit
of bare sand, and through the hole.
When he Was fairiy inside—again
oars,* and a little mast With sail
wrapped around it, lay fore and
aft on the twarts; and the riidder,
all ready to be shipped, was lying
in the stern-sheets. Runningtackle
was rove to rings in bow and stern,
afid to stoat hooks in the ridge-pole
of the roof. Tne ends of the lines
Wfere coiled away neatly over belay-
iiig-pins in two of the upright
beams.
Then Teddy perceived that a
gfoat trap-door,= rigged with coun
ter-weights* opened in the floor just
over the little dock below. Ob
viously, this was the identical boat
for which the dock had been built.
So here' the boat was, in perfect
order—except that her seams had
opened a little, and that would be
all right when she had been a day
or two in the water—aud with ev
erything ready for lowering her
down into the water once more, and
away for a jolly cruise!
As he thought of what fun he
could have in that boat—along with
Noah Barkum and Lem Harbum
and Pud Nye and, perhaps;' Sam
Wyburn,—he forgot everything
else; even the little brass cannon
and the Fourth of July.
He wanted to go right to" work
at swigging the boat up by- the
tackle’ and then lowering her
through the trap-door, but h6‘
foundlfe'his surprise; by the way
the light was fading, that the, sun
must be nearly down. Accordingly
he went downstairs again,' and
fouud that the tide was half in, and
the hole in the door s foot finder
water.
There was a pin that held the
door down, and when he had pfill-
Anyway, he thought, by way of
salve to his Conscience, it would be
good for the boat to be put into
the water and swell its seams tight.
He decided that it would be time
enough after he had performed this
useful and friendly act for the im-
orovement of Miss Ruth’s boat, to
ask Miss Ruth’s permission to go
out in her.
He hesitated a little as to
whether he should or should
not take Noah along with him.
but finally decided that tb°|s
would be more excitement in doing
this part of the work alone, and
then springing bis discovery on
Noah and the other hoys when the
boat was all ready for her first
cruise. ’
It wris just half-tide when he
went down to the wharf and there
was only about a foot of water at
the sliding door. He was bare
footed to start with, and it did not
take him many minutes to roll np
floor, he was pretty well rested and j age at which women marry is
ready to go to work, again. To! about 25 years. Oilt■of every l,0d0
open the trap-door he must raise persons 602 are unmarried, 345
the boat about six feet. He went
at th9- r op"s with a trill, hanline
are married and 53 widowed. Over -
one-half of all the women Uei#een
his trousers; slip down the edge.ot
considering what a perfect right
certain that he Could make out be had to bfi there—it certainly
among the shadows aisddr the -was odd that the very first thing ! ed this out. he fofind that he eotffd
stairway leeding to. the sail-loft. he thought of was a burglary, of [ raise 4 the dool 1 ^figiJy—-for if,* fijgo,
overt he storehouse, a little brass ! which he had see!! an aecoant a i was’hung with _ foituter-weights—
cannon,’partly covered with a hit few days before in a New Bedford I so' be got out without diving; and
pulled totf -ftew ri Wga’hr,- E-yen rest.
the wharf, open the door and shut
it behind him, and then scamper
upstairs to the sail-loft. It was the
most splendid thing he had ever
had anything to do with, he
thought, aud he was so excited
over it he quivered from head to
foot.
It is possible that Teddy would
have qtjivered still more violently
had he known that Miss Rath War
ble had seen him go down on her
wharf and then disappear over the
edge of it—that she had felt in
stinctively that something was
going wrong, and ,had made up
her mind to go down to the
wharf herself, as soon as she had
finished paring a pailful of JuDe
apples, and see what he was up to.
Notwithstanding his excitement.
Teddy went fit his work very judi
ciously. His plan was to swing
the boat up by the tackles—haul
ing alternately at the bow .and
stern; and making each line fast to
its belaying-pin before he went at
the other—until she was free of
the Chocks find high enough aoove
the floor for the trap-door to open;
then, keeping a couple of turns of
the ropes around the belaying-pins,
so that the boat would not get
away from him, lowei first at the
bow and then at the stern, until he
had her safe in the*dock below.
This was a gopd plan, but he
eneouotered serious difficulties in
oxeeutiug it. The bow came up
all'right, but for the life of him he
could not budge the stern.
This was discouraging.; but Teddy
was a lad of expedients, and had
not lived all his life on the sea-
i shore without le'armflg something
about rigging.
There were plenty of blocks and
ropes lying around, and it did not
take him long to rig a snatch-block
to a Hearn and to the end of the
line mat he had been hauling on.
With this doable purchase, by put
ting out all his strength; he was
able to raise" the boat’s stern.
It was the queerest thing in the
world, .he thou'ghf, that the stern
of that boat should be. so. heavy.
It seemed as" though it was made
of solid iron. ■ At last he got the
boat clear of the chocks, and got
the Hue. made fast just in time to
meet the jerk on it that came as
the boat—now hanging free by
the falls from the ridge-pole of
the ro'of—swung across nearly the
whole Width of. the !d£t, with such
?. lange' that the ridge-!pole bent
and creaked, and the whole frame
work of tire aid . oil-house swayed
as if thougii it were coming down
run. ", ,
Teddy .vas glacf to take a' g
away easily at the bow fall, and j 15 and 45 are unmarried. In all
tugging at the stern fall, with the j countries aboet.5 per cent, of mar-
louble purchase with all his might. | riages prove barren.
At last:the bow was high enough.
and one more tussle with tha 5
dreadfully heavy stern would mak
everything clear for him to open
the trap-door and lower away.
At about this time, also, Mis r
Ruth bad finished paring her pan
of .Tune apriles.
Teddy strained away at his tackle
with all his strength; stopping t
est and to puff , like a porpois;
after each round,but gaining stead-
ly. At last the. boat swung level
a clear six feet above the fiqo'r, and
victory was almost within his grasp,
It was just when he had reach
ed this almost triumphant point an
his labors, and had turned to make
the rope fast to the belaying-pin
while be opened the trap door—at
this critical moment Miss Ruth
Warble’s spectacled face showed at
the top of the stairs, and Miss Ruth
Warble’s sharp voice exclaimed:
“Why, Teddy Redford! Of all
created things, what badness, an-
you doing here. ?” '
Teddy jumped as if he had been
shot. The rope slipped From his
hands and whizzed through the
blocks, and that tremendously
heavy stern of the little boat flash
ed downward through the^sunlight.
With a bang and a crash of splin
tering wood, it struck a beam with
such force that the old oil-house
swayed aud tren^bled and seemed
in a fair way to fall to piedes
and there.
With this banging and crashing
was also a most curious jingling
sound; and very astonishing was.
its cause. As the stern of the boat
struck the beam; the stern-sheets
were broken all to pieces, and out
of the stern-locker poured a stream
of gold and silver coins which jin
gled as they fell,- and which blazed
and glittered as the* sunbeams
touched them while they went
rolling every which way over the
floor.
In the silence which followed
this outburst of noisp, Miss Rath
Warble and Teddy Redford just
stood and stared at each other
across more gold—five-dollar
pieces, aud ten-dollar pieces, and
even twenty-dollar pieces—than
either of them had ever seen any
wheres, and certainly more than
they were ever likely to see again,
loose dn the floor of the sail-
ioft.
And so the lost fortune that
Captain Tranquil Warble had hid
den in this queer place, before be
sailed away in the Harmony Home
to his death in the northern seas,
wag found at last.—Youth’s Com
panion.
Among the
English nobility 19 per cent, are
childless. Married women liv*
wo years longer than single ones,
dthough 1 in 70dies in childbirth.
If the mother dies first the fathei
Absolutely Pure. 5
This powder never varies. - A marvel of *^ri5afc
strength and wholesomencss. More economic*
than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be -suldijjt
com: 8 ition with the .multitude of low test# shop*
weight, alnm aiid phosphate powders. Sold onljt
in cans. Boyal Baking Powdeb Co , 106 Walnut
street. N.Y. -
survives 9J years, bu.t if the fathei
lies first the stifyival of the moth
er is 11| years as an average. Twt
'housand four hundred and forty
me births occur in England daily
about 33 for each 1,000 inhabitants.
Februaijr is • the month in whici
the greatest number of births oc
cur, June the month in which oc
our the fewest. The average num
her of births for each marriage is
4.33. In every 1,000 births 10 art
wins.
Trying to Keep the Hogs Out.
“Mr. President;” observed Oo 1 -
onel Hartford to Mr: Harrison
this morning, “have Yod tried the
new pfizzle?”
“What puzzle-Elijah^” inquired
the President, gently..
“Putting the ‘pigs in -the' pen,’
Mr. President.”
A shade came over the Presi
dent’s face.
“No, Elijah,” he said wearily; ”1
have'been so’busy trying to keep
the hogs out of office shat I
haven’t had time for any other'
puzzle.” And the President pick
ed np a pile of applications and
muttered a mutter too deep to be
articulate.'—Washington Critic..
Notice to Contractors and Builders.
Sealed proposals will be received, sf
the office of the clerk of the. Commie;
sioners Court, of Houston county,’ up tcj.
the -1st _l»lpu$ay in Juno next, for
building and repairing Clarks’ bridges/
over Big Indian creek, on tho Macon an A
Hawkinsville road. For particnlare
and specifications, apply at the office of
the Clerk of Commissioners’ C< '
Per y, Ga. ,
The Commissioners reserve the
to reject any or all bids.-
By order of the board. .
.... j. m; HSvis, erk:
April f24th, 1889. .
Court,’
Georgia—HoustoA County:
Mrs.'Mary Thompson has. applied for a
12 months support frqnL the-estate* of,
filed their returniri this office:.
This is therefdfeto cite all persons con
cerned- to. appear ,at: the June term/
1889 of the court of Ordinary i£f yaid.coun
ty. and show cause,If any they haves, why
said returns should not be received ana
mage the judgment of this, court. , • •
-■fWitness my official mgiiatnre,' this
May 2nd; 1889.
_ J H. HOUSER, ^rJina^y. '
GEORGIA—Houston Countt:
He Tiiriied the Other Cheek.
Willie had just come in with one
eye in m’ouring, a swelled lip, and
other traces of animated psrsonal
encounter with some other bdy,
but his face wore an unmistakable
look of triumph.
I’ve been fighting again, mama,”
he said, in anticipation of a re
buke, “and with Boh Stapleford,
too, but he hit. me first. He* got
in a stinger on my cheek' bone.”
You should have turned the
other pheek to him Willie.”
j di d; mama,” replied Willie,
looking critically at U Contusion
on his diminutiye-fist. , “I turned
the other cheek toward, him; but
. cilesief Pearce bias applied for permaq
nent letters of administration J>n theefif
ih,te of Simon ESlde'r, deceased:. . - . “5
This is therefore to cite all persons eon/
cerned to. appear .at the June. Term/
1889, of the ConrAdf .Ordinary ,#>f I said
County,’ aiid .Show oaifse; if .fcpy they;
have, why said application should*not be
f "ranted, .. . ..
fitness mv official signature this May
2cd,l8>39:' ; -. . . -.-
J. II. HOUSER, ‘
Ordinary:
GEORGIA—Houston County:
Jot letters.
estate of Mrs."
A. C;.. Bryan has ai
fiaminiktratioii. on the.
Harriet. T. Bryan; deceased: , 'MSB
| .This is. therefore to cite all persons com"
cerned.do appear at the June, term/
1839/ of the court of Ordinary of said, conn ;.
ty| and show cause, if any they have/ jrhiy
said application should not granted.*,.
Witness my official signature thifeMaf
2tfd.A889r J. H. HOU&EB,
$w. Ordinary/
you can jnst bet your little pile !
didn’t give him time to hit it.”
A man has just died at Lancas-
tei 1 ,- Pennsylvania, after fifty-three
years of illness. When a boy of
ten years he became afflicted with
rheumatism, and from that time
until his death was confined to his
bed. His body was that of a bov
with the- head . of a full grown
man.
In a Tarrytown sanitarium is a
petrified prehistoric lizard 11 feet
a;nd one inch long, 18 inches
broril at the shoulders, and 9
inches at the head, and weighing
three hundred pounds. Its color
is gray and its substance . sand
stone. The specimen, which is al
most perfect, was exhumed ou tL e
shore of Charlestown lake, five
miles from Farmersyilfe, Prov
ince of Ontario, in Jdfy of last
year. .
GEORGIA.—Houston County:
C. G. Gray/admluistratbr bt the pafaM
6'f W. W. Cook; deceased, has applied for
letters of dismission from said trust:
Thisis therefore to cite all persons .Cbi?-
ceroed to' appear at the : .July term
1889 of the COurt of Ordinary of - saio
granted; _ t , r
Witness rpy official, signature this
March 28/1889. J-: H; HQUSER,
3m. _ Ordinary.
A RUINED HOME.
Our hotac- is on fire!
Our home b burning op H
What Jrj-so pipreing to the soul! Fire, indeed, is’
terrible when it adtroya inanimate things we love/
but-how rr.nch ihore terrible when it ddtroys tha!
hyin^.t-ssucs of the fiesh! Fire,in the. blood, how.
Oscar Clute, the new president
of the Michigan board of agricul
ture, has been a paper boy, clerk,
teacher, farmer, minister fed edi
tor.
A Female Paradox.'
Many Carsons
Are brohnn drgrii from overwork or household
oares jjroivirs Iron Bitters
rebuilds tha system.-aids digestion, removes ex
cess of hiie. and cures malaria. Get the genuine. •
A lady, old and growing’ older still/ -
(As ladies will’grow did, yon know); be
came,
?rae! in its eSect I Covering the fair skin withspoti
and blemishes Twinging the limbs and Joints with
aches and pains, creating ulpervand running sores.
Singeing the very rgdtS'qf ihe hair.and causing it-
to fail dead away Cramping the functions of the
liver an.d kgfffgys with internal swelithgs. and seres.
Disfiguring form and feature. Thank Heaven, in'
_ - the midst cl such fear-
Qy ISK CURE Sul a
f ' . CUSE. safe- 5 ure an£
5UICK in its effect, ccmee to mend. a It is Bctanic
Blood Bairn, made- :r.-tci beautiful c;'-? of.ACa
pa. An i'.iustraced “hock of Wonders’-'senV.ftee
(be Blood Balm Co.. Atla&a, Gai.
most convincing proof ci its remarkable merit.
Z3TRobert’ Ward. M'asey/Ga;, writes- “For
twelve or fourteen years i hays beer, a great ;u5ct*
er from a terrible tor- of blood poison.^ My head,
I tiom and final;-,-the disease commenoedibi
my sjjillbcnes. fbeesme so horribly repulsive that,
for three years i absolutely refused to.let people se*
me. 1 used large, ouanteties of most noted blood
remedies and applied to nearly .all physicians near
me, bat my. condition con-
j BAD BLO.QD tinned to grow worse,and
, : - “*• ------ * iu sureiy.
■*. di rA’! y beaame th^sjat of excruciating’
In spit9 of age, as young as yhttth—;” e5 ..
nT £ • % • acr.es,sr.d pains; my nights were passed in misery; I 1
! was reduced in aesh.aid.itreheth; my kidneys were
The United States’ lost §2,500,-
000 by wreck of the War vessels ih
the harbor at Apia/
CQKSUSLvTiO:-; bWH CUitEB.
of
good
To' ggs Editoii—Please-infom your jread-
cfs tliaE.I liate a..pbsitiveremedy for the above
named defuse. -By its iimely use tiioiisSuds o!
hopeless ifieies liav'e keen permanently cured
Ishaii lie glad to send two bottles of my reme
dy rnu.iifo any o£ your readers who have con-
sum ptipp’ if EVey will send me their express
And old, and wretched, feeble, lame, and ijnribiy'dersnged. and file
sore, j tchaniied to tse sr. ady^ti
A lady young becaipe" in fipit-e of youth, 1 1 15 B>aad when e^ijt.or.te'a bottles had
■Asladios will, and’ wby?
truth,- j a map who had been burned and then restored M
That keeps a lady yotiug, they fail -to tese' -wasweli known ir. the coan:y. : ‘
grasp/ ..i..,;,/.,'/;''
AndYielding to disease; die in its - fatal'
clasp,
3 n^n «
case well in the ccaiitV. ,J
^
Lew johr.^n. Bein’
,‘;M years and scalp a
... : my hair came put. 1 io
That truth is that woman’s weaknesses a mere skeleton, lam
may be sores are gc-Bg »**• *
' and post office address.. Respectfully,
Subdued by Ur. Fierce e Fax
- m :m. c-
WYorlr.
scrip!