The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, August 28, 1890, Image 1

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IOURMAL. JOHN H. HODG-IOS, Proprietor, , i — ^ DtVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE. • is*- i i m PRICE: TWO DOLLAKS A Yem*. VOL. XX. PEBRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY.. AUGUST 28, L890. NO. 35. WILLINGHAM’S WAREHOUSE. S Editoi-Mopinion. Southern Marble. Out of Sorts. . How Our Churches Grow. In the Quiet Country. C- IB. T^T33L.I-.I35TG-S: J It is better to be defeated for ' openly advocating the right than | to be successful by reason of a compromise -with the wrong.— [Sparta Ishmaelite. COTTON FACTOR MACOS, GEORGIA. Cood Facilities, Clnse Attention to Business, Liberal and Square Dealing. Money Loaned to those who Deal with? Me at 8 per cent Per Annum. Send ZLv£e Tom Cotton.. C. B. WILLINGH AM. FINCHER BROTHERS, FORT VALLEY, GA. DEALERS IN Watches, Jewelry, HOUSTON SHERIFF'S SALE. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY J. L. Hardeman, W. D. Nottingham. ffAMEMAH & NOTTINGHAM, Attorneys at Law, Macon, Geoboia. I will sell on the first Tuesday in Sep tember next before thQ the Court House door in the town of Perry between the legal hours of sale the undivided one- sixth (1-6) remainder interest after t^e death of Mrs. A. E. Tnrrentine, of the defendant J. B. Tnrrentine. the follow ing lands to wit: In the 13th or Lower Town district of Houston county, and known as the James Tnrrentine home place, and containing 875 acres more or less;lying on both sides of Elat creek, and bounded east by lands of W. M. Gordon west by C. A. Thompson south by Hafer & Hickson lands, north by Boss Hill place. Levied on as the prop erty of J. B. Tnrrentine, to satisfy a fi fa from Houston Superior Court in favor of Day & Gordon vs J. B. Tnrrentine. M. L. COOPEE, Sheriff. Perry, Ga., July 31,1890. It seems as if the people, as majority, are anxious that a dog tax be levied and- the money so se cured placed in the public school fund.—Greensboro Herald-Jour nal. A man has no business to seek a public office unless he intends to perform the duties of the office faithfully. Some men get elected and*that ;fe all they do.—Mon tezuma Record. Several radicals have been prom inently, mentioned for Congress in Georgia of late. They will only be prominent by being mentioned. They will not go to Congress.— Darien Gazette. Will practice in the State and Federal Courts. Office 306 Second Street. MONEY LOANS On Houston farms procured at the low est possible rates pf interest. As low, if not lower than the lowest. Apply to W. D. Nottingham, tf Macon. Ga. MONEY TO LOAN. In some of $300.00 and upwards, to be scoured by first liens on improved farms. Longtime, low rates and easy payments. Apply to C. C. DUNCAN, Nov. 20th, 1889.—tf Perry' Ga. C.-BIUkEV, A.-frtox*ney at Law, Judge of Houston County Court, Pebbt, Georgia. Will practice in all the Courts of this Circuit except the County Court. B. BM&WMS, A.ttoi*n.ey atLaw. Ferry, -" - Ga Will practice in all the Courts of this cirronit. m ID B1TTI B T Perry, Georgia. Georgia—Houston County: T. 2E. Means, administrator of the es tate of M. H. Means, of said county, de- ceasedjhas applied for leave to sell the lands of said estate: This is therefore to cite all persons con cerned to appear at the September term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of said county, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be granted. Witness my official signature this July 31,1890. J. H. HOUSES, Ordinary. M ¥« Want TO BUILD A HOUSE ZE3SU337- Terras; Democrats have their little fam ily quarrels, but when the voice of the part / is heard in the primary, all is over, and the same old solid phalanx is presented to the enemy. —Milledgeville Union &Recorder.- The Americua Tim as. Macop Telegraph. \ The Independent is considered interviewing a well" known marble j When a printer is working away dealer abont southern marble: ! at his case, putting the glowing! ver y ^ a ' r authority on church mat- “It has been bni^r about three-'thoughts of another ; in type, it | I! years ago,” said the dealer, “since very frequently happens that the apartment before him, set aside Do away with our exemption laws and- strengthen the credit of our people. With better credit and less risk to the-lender, the borrower would be greatly benefit- ted.- It is the poor man who is hurt by our exemption laws.— Cuthbert Liberal-Enterprise. If tbe southern white man is an enemy to the negro he has no friends at all. The treacherous and designing yankee only needs him in the voting season. He feeds him on sweet words, but will not allow him a chance to work.— Southern Appeal. (Negro paper.) The opproaching legislature ought to devise some plan by which tax-payers can be made to give in their property at reasona ble rates. Taken as a whole, we doubt if the property in Georgia is given in at more than half its val ue. This ought to be remedied.— Hawkinsville Dispatch & News. Secure FIBSTiCLIISS IHVESTMEST THE INSTALLMENT PLAN -P — Tf T! .TOOK THE INTERSTATE Loan The fact is, when we reach a con tain age, or mental stage, the world nuih.es on past us, and we condemn what we cannot keep up with. Each generation forges ahead un der the irresistible laws of prog ress, and all that may be said by thosewholagbehind^anirotstart a retrograde movement.—Atlanta Constitution. Office on Main Street, Ring bouse. YOU CAN SAVE ■ML O lsTBT AT THE ii FACTORY. YOU CAN BUY Maco-Made TrunkSi Valises, Satchels, Hand-Bags, Pocket-Books, ; . ASSOCIATION. For particulars, apply to JOEK E. EODG-ES, Agt. Perry, Georgia. if Zff.ct, ■■iExoeMrtiaOIdorYoimF. Doserlptlvo Book* mUutksud proof* milled (waled) fM. krw ERIE MEDICAL CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. and other leather goods in this line of the very best quality, at Examine onr stock when in the city. J. VAN &CO., 410 Third Street, Macon, Ga. RUNS EASY. GINS FAST. Cleans SEED PERFECTLY. NEVER CHOKES or BREAKS THE ROLL >thecelebrated COTTON BLOOM Has All LATEST II IMPROVEMENTS Including Balance Wlicel on Briuh which in sures even speed. This feature is peculiar to this make of Gin and is used on no other. Ace I’lLLY GUARAYTEED and Arc Delivered address the General Southern H.W.HUBBARD Agent n a Agent, ATLANTA, GA.«r 3 Ton' $35. _SENT SI Tri*. OSCOOD U.S. STANDARD CALES itpdi, fWly S^hSjbkSd!' QenLSouih'. A*«nt l AU*au,Ga.or DaUao,T«*. WHAT I BRONCHITIS EMULSION CURES COLDS' WaatingDlBBiBes Wonderful- Flesh ^ Producer. Many have gained one pound per day by ita use. Scott's Emulsion is not a secret remedy. It contains the stimulat ing properties of the Hypophos- phites and pare Norwegian Cod fiver OKI, the potency of both being largely increased. It is used by Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE AS MILK. Sold by all Druggist*. SCOTT A BO WHS. Chemist*. N.Y. PERKY JCA11.RO A P SCHEBBM Daily. Except- Sunday. Leave Perry at 7’50 a. it. Arrive at Fort Valley 8:40 A. M. Leave Fort Valley at 11:35 p. it Arrive at Perry atl2:20 a. M. 1 Leave Perry at 3:05 p. M. Arrive at Port Valley 3u>Q p. i£ Be dependent on no man, but work, think and get for yourself, read and study and have a reserve of ; your own, and be not dependent upon others for their words and their direction, but be able to ex press an opinion when necessary, and take a position and hold it.— Southern Alliance Farmer. Amid all the clatter of political bangwhanging, and in spite of the promises of office-seekers;- this fact may as well be recognized by the farmers of the country: Their ex ertions can alone make them solid ly prosperous. AH the good gov ernment can do is negative in its character, the positive good Must came from themselves.—Americas Times. The labor question is one of the questions deserving consideration at the hands of the next legisla ture. A large element of the la boring'class in this country has be come so uncertain as to compli ance with contracts that no em ployers can count on it with certainty. Cannot sqm&method be devised whereby this thing can be remedied?—Monroe Advertiser. southern marble began to be used 1 for cemetery purposes. Long be fore that it ranked the market .for" furniture;tops, and its standing was good for building purposes, bnt it was thought to be too guilty for cemetery work. The Producers’ Marble-Company, of Vermont,held the entire southern trade,!’and al most owned the dealers down here. Bnt the change came rapidly, and a year ago the' representative of the. Producers’ Marble Company, who had been with them for years, quit in disgust, and went into the retail business. It was fonnd that the southern marble could be worked advantageously, and its color gives better satisfaction than the color of the eastern marble. The Little Dbrset, Southerland Falls, Rutland or American-Italian quarries, in a few years, will rank lower than the North Georgia or East Tennessee stone. . The Geor gia pink marble is now becoming known throughout the country. As a building stone it is unsur passed; for furniture work it ranks the.market, and,for cemetery work its beauty is beginning to be ap preciated. “There is now very little call for Itajjan marble, and still less Ital ian marble used. America will be the marble market of the world in a few years, and the south will be the section which will supply most of the stona I do not anticipate any sadden boom, but there will be a rapid and continuous growth in the bnsiness in this section. The white marble of North Georgia and North Carolina is finer than the Carara marble, al though its more common form is with pink or blue variegations. “The piers and abutments of the bridge across the North river on the Marietta and North Georgia railroad, and the Wautello river on the Western North Carolina railroad are built of marble, the stone being right near the bridges, and consequently as cheap as any other material. These bridges are a great curiosity to passengers. “In. North Georgia is the only vein of black marble in the United States that has stood the tests of experts. Should this be develop-; ed it would be a ‘most important factor in southern industry.” A Hebrew Divorce. Abraham Cohen and his wife, of Jeffersonville, lnd., had been di vorced by law, bnt the Jewish faith required other formalities, and these are thus described.by a special to tbe. : St. Louie Republic: “In his right, hfind the Rabbi held ■aUdocnmentii-written in Hebrew characters, ‘fthtl a!-Hebrew bible, from which he read alternate pas sages to the man, .who repeated them afterrhim. -The- document, which was supposed to-be the ' di vorce, was doubled up; and the Rabbi turned upon the woman, and, after going through a cere mony, to which tbe-wife. listened, weeping and witliher hand raised ‘before her, he threw the paper into her hands, which she clashed upon it. The article was then handed to the Rabbi, who took it, and with a sharp knife severed it in twain; at the same: time handing one piece to the woman and one to the for one of the letters, runs short, and then: he is said to bg “out of sorts.” All of the other apart ments may have plenty of letters, but as soon as the printer strikes a word in which it is necessary to use one of the letters that belong to the empty one, be must stop. Men and women are aU working away at cases. They- are--putting words and deeds into a- beautifnl whole, and it sometimes happens that they, too, ran “out of sorts,’ as well as the printer at liis case. There mast go into every day of onr lives a - great many different sorts of words, thoughts and deeds. Here a deed of kindness, there a soft word th^t smooths away th.o rough angles, or a patient word that robs the little annoyances of the world of their pang, at another place a beautiful thought that will incite some one to noble effort We frequently hear the expres sion, “1 am out of sorts,” and it .is not often the case that those who use the expression know how ex pressive it is. “Out of sorts.” We may have had a ran on one particular case as the printer frequently does, and it is exhausted. We may have had unusual calls for patience and for bearance, and lo! the supply runs short. We may have had more work than usual, and the result is that we run short. When the printer gets “out of sorts,” he goes to work and replen ishes his case, and really, this is the only way to get rjd of the diffi culty. His example points-a use ful moral: if you get “out of sorts, ' and in this world of oars, full as it is of carking care and annoyance, it is very easy to do it, replenish yonr casa The printer would make a bad proof if he were to attempt to use the wrong letter, andyon will make a bad proof of your life ^ work, if you use one thing where another Is needed. The printer is allowed to correct his proof, but, unfortu nately, we cannot; each day’s rec ord is made up and sent to the au thor, and we cannot go back and correct the mistakes we have made, because happened to be “out of sorts.” stead of creeds. It published in its issue of last week some inter esting figures relative to the strength and growth of the various religions denominations in the United Stales. There are it, says, in this country, 151,261 churches, 103,300 ministers and 22,000,000 members. The past twelve months have betm prolific of church exten sion. Thenumber of churches has increased 8,500," the number of ministers 4,900, and the number of members 1,000,000. There Was never a time when so many newspapers, so many influen tial men, so many manufacturers^) many'ofthe'people'were demand ing reduced taxation in the inter- of the producer and the consumer, both. There never was a time when the fraudulent character of the so-caUed protective - tariff was so fuUy exposed. In the words of Mr. Cleveland, “The. leaven is working.”—National Democrat. If by reason o| the democratic division, the negroes are permitted to regain control of the govern ment of South Carolina, it can safely be said that within a year thereafter the bonds of the state will not be worth fifty cents in the dollar. They will have value at all only because of the hope that the intelligence and property of the state will finally regain control and redeem its honor.—Macon Tele graph. There are-5;000 insane people in the city of New York, the New Orleans Times-Democrat asserts, and-experts on insanity say that the ratio of lunatics is increasing much.faster than'that of the popu lation. The poorest soul on earth is the man who has no time or inclina tion to do anything but make money. Happy nooniers. ffm. Timmons, Postmaster at Idaville, writes: “Electric Bitters has.done more for me than all oth er medicines combined, for ^ that bad feeling arising from liver" and kidnay trouble.” John Leslie, farmer and stockman, of the same place, says: “Find Electric Bit ters to be the best kidney and liv er medicine; made me feel like a new man.” J. W. Gardner, hard ware merchant, same town, says: “Electric Bitters is just the thing for p. man that is all run down, and don’t care whether he lives or dies; lie found new strength, good appe tite,"and felt just like he had a new lease on life Only 50 cents As a result of the increase in importation costs under _ the new customs administration bill,selling prices have been adyaheed to a proportionate extent The increase in price comes out of the consumer, of course, and if the McKinley tariff bill, which raises taxes fur ther, should become-a law, there would be another' increase in sell ing prices. The increase is mere ly an additional tax on the con- snmer for the benefit of the favor ed manufacturer. The importer derives no benefit from. it. He raises the prices of his goods in proportion to the increased duty on them. Snatched from the Grave. In his testimonial attesting the virtues of Radam’s Microbe Kill er, Mr. M. C. Battey, well and popularly known from his'*corifiee- tton with the Queen and Crescent Railroad, presents a picture of the results of blood poisoning which cannot bnt have its weight with evenly balanced minds. Blood poisoning comes to the sufferer in each an insidious shape that it is only discovered when, under ordi nary circumstances, it is too late to combat it. According to his well-authenticated statement, Mr. Battey was veritably snatched from the grave by Radam’a Mi crobe Killer, and hence gives to the world his faith in it as a cure for blood poisoning, whUe others tell of it as having cured them of consumption and kindred diseases. For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert, sole agents, Perry, Ga. Gen. Booth has taken steps to stop smoking in the Salvation Army. He has issued an edict an nouncing that no member who smokes shall reoeive a promotion, and that sergeants, bandsmen, ser- i geauts-majors, secretaries and; treasurers must give up smoking i or resign office. The Roman Catholics are the most numerous denomination in the country, with 7,500 churches; 8,300 priests and 8,277,000 popula tion, of whom 4,676,000 are com municants. Next come the Methodists with 4,980,000 communicants. The Bap tists have 4,272,000; the Presbyte rians 1,229,000; the Lutherans 1,086,000; Congregationalists 491;- 000; the Episcopalians 480,000. The increase in Catboiic popula tion during the year was 421,700? in communicants 238,000. The Methodists gained 256,000; the Baptists 213,000; the Lutherans 93,000; Presbyterians 49,000; Con- gregationaliats 16,000; Episcopa lians 9,500. These are figures for net gains. The Independent- con siders that its figures disproves the idea sometimes advanced that the churches are losing their hold on the masses. The growth of the churches in theUnited States du ring the past year was greater than it ever was before during any sim ilar period. The great question, however, is not as to the numerical growth of ichurches, but as to the real influ ence of church doctrines and asso ciations on those who are number ed as members. This is a ques tion upon which statistics can throw no light It will be admit ted, however, that the increase of membership' is prima facie evi dence that the charches are con tinuing to exert their moral and conservative influences in a most gratifying degree. I had been staying at an India na farmhouse all night and next morning the farmer said he would give me a lift into town, says a writer in the New York Snn. As he was abont ready to start he called to his oldest boy: * “Bill is that shptgun loaded with salt for tramps?” “Yes.” “Got the gates shut so that no mad dogs kin git in?" “Yes.” “Well, keep a lookout for wind mill, lightning rod, organ and sew ing machine men. Don’t have any track with peddlers and poul- tiy buyers. Don’t let in any pat- We desire to put the world on notice that the Farmers Alliance is its own adviser, and that the in fluence of outside politicians must and shall not be used upon onr or der. This organization is not a venture, it is not an experiment, bnt it is an assured fact; more than being an assured fact, it is a posi tive success, and that success is. the result of noity and fidelity to the principles of the great agricultural and laboring people—Southern Al liance Farmer. How are tbe Folks. “Oh, they are all well except' mother, she’s about the same. Poor mother, worn Out by house hold cares, exposure and overwork; No wonder she gives up at last, and takes to her bed. Bnt oh! how much brighter the family fire side would be if mother’s chair was not vacant The doctors don’t seem to 6e doing her any good. She says their medicine don’t seem to go to the spot She feels so weak, and longs for strength. “Oh, give me strength,” she murmurs; Why not give her the remedy her system craves ? Her impoverished blood and shattered nerves are starving for jiist such ingredients as are contained in B. B. B. (Bot anic Blood Balm). Then try a bottle of this excellent remedy. It is truly woman’s best friend. It quickly relieves pain and restores health, strength and functional regularity, James W. Lancaster, Hawkinsr ville, Ga., writes: “My wife was in bad health for eight years. Five- doctors and as many more differ ent patent medicines had done her no good. Six bottles of B. B. B. has cured her.” ent gate and wire fence- men. Keep clear o’ patent hayforks, and don’t waste no time on chnrns, force-pumps, ice-cream freezers, bag-holders, patent barrels, frnit trees, wagon-jacks, nor owl-traps.” “No.” “And say, Bill,” called the old man, after we had driven forty or fifty rods, “don’t bay no cares for the heaves, no fire-proof paint, no patent: gate-hinges, pitchforks nor encyclopedias.” We had driven abont three miles when he suddenly polled up with an exclamation of disgust. . “What is it?” “Hang my hide if I didn’t clean forget to warn Bill agin’ Bohe mian oats, New Zealand clover, an’ them pesky insurance agents. Well, ifs too late now, but I guess 1 kin git back home before' the. mob overpowers him.” Earned His Fortune. Brunswick Times. Gen. Butler, who always looks two ways to make a dollar, has a brand new scheme to rob the gov ernment. He told his grand army friends at the Boston re-union not to worry abont pensions, • but to make a united effort to get from the government what, according to his statement, were their rights, se cured by contract. The man who bonght United States bonds- in 1862, and-paid for them in depre ciated paper, received the face of the bond and the interest thereon in gold. Butler thinks the federal soldier was entitled to the same treatment, and that he should de mand and get now the difference between the real and the gold value of the $13 paid him per -month. As gold once rose to 285, and was for a long time 150, and as there were at times a million or more men under arms, the amount of figuring and money that wodldbe required to pay these sums is beyond calculation. Butler nothing if not a demagogue. He is an inveterate and irrepressible office-seeker, and is evidently fish ing for an office which the soldier influence might help him to get. He cannot have-made^the proposi tion in all seriousness. He simp ly talked that way to lead the vet erans to believe that he thinks that nothing they may ask is too much -for their services. If the G. A. R. men think that snch a proposition would ever be adopted they are easily galled.—Sav. News. “Should every dog of every breed in America be killed to morrow,” says a St Louis statis tician, “the real loss to. the coun try would not be $100. On the contrary, the gain would be at least $30,000,000 a year. Nations famed for their thrift and economy do not take to dogs.” The reporters and correspond ents who wrote the accounts of the Johnstown disaster have or ganized a club in New York, and have held theirfirstbnsines3 meet ing. The majority of the mem bers are writers for the newspa pers, although newspaper men from other cities are eligible, if they were amoDg the special cor respondents sent to Johnstown. Monthly meetings of the clnb will be held, and the experiences of the memorable days spent among the dead and dying at Johnstown will be told over and over again. J edge Jeremiah Smitli,of Dover, N. H., who has recently been ap pointed to a professorship in Har-. vard, is said to be the youngest of the few sons of revolutionary sol diers now living, having been born in 1837. His father, Jere miah Smith, fought in the battle of Bennington. Chills have been very common in these parts, bnt Smith’s Tonic Syrup never fails to cure them— D. W. Mcllroy, Peru, Ark. Leave Fort Valley at 8:25 P. it —itmr^E* ’ new lease ou me. wmy ou cents’ —— iuuueu. a hoc uo ucuis per ^oox * j*\y umw qm Arrive at Perry at 9:10 P. K. For tGdpey.Bladdgr. Liver, w. W. C. a bottle, at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s. Subscribe for, the Home Journal For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert, without them.. Oucklou's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Colds, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped HaDas, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles or no pay re- sole agents, Perry, Ga. quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction of money re funded. Price 25 cents per,box New Orleans, La., Oct. 23,1889. Wm. Radam, M. K.: Sir—I cheerfully testify as to the curative powers of your medi-. cine. Having been a sufferer from weak lungs, bronchiaL affection and indigestion, after taking three gallons of Microbe Killer all of the above symptoms have entirely dis appeared . Yours, etc., Thom. L. Davis, Janitor Howard Memorial Library. For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert, Twenty years ago a young man just out of college sought work in the line of his profession, civil en gineering, in one of the largest cit ies in the southwest He found it, but it was uncertain and nnremn- nerative. He was dependent upon his own exertions, and his failure to make a living caused him to de cide to get oat of professional work and learn a trade. He went into the machine shops of a rail road company as a common day la borer. He joined no cliuqes or se cret societies; he did not attempt to make his employers regulate their business to suit his ideas, and he did not spend even a short portion of his time grumbling. He worked, and he worked in telligently; so that at the end of four years he was a master ma chinist, fully capable of “bossing.” One morninghe was told to re port for duty the next day as as sistant to the foreman of the shops* Soon after he succeeded the fore man, who accepted a position else where. Two years later a western railroad comdany offered him a po sition with a large salary. His employers said to him: “Stay with ns; your salary shall be even larger than that offered by .the western railroad.” He remained. A year ago the young man of whom this true story is is told, was elected general manager of one of the largest iron mills in the south, with a salary running high ap into the thousands. Happily married, the owner of a handsome fortune, he is reckoned by those who know him among the luckiest of men. Bnt his success has not been due to lack; plnck has been Ms mainstay. When a man has brain and pluck and a trade, nothing bnt bad health or death can prevent him going to the top. A hint to the ivise ought to be sufficient. Young man, this is the work-n- day age; learn a trade, stick to it, don’t grumble, and, if you alsi have an educated brain, you are sure to win position and fortune. The week before the Hon. W. J. Northen was nominated for gov ernor he was short one hand in hi- field. He took that hand’s plac -, and dropped pens like the res'. The day before the convention h • pat on an apron and taught a wi>- man how to chnrn. He laid asicto the apron, came to Atlanta, and in an able and patriotic speech ac cepted the nomination for govern or of Georgia,—Atlanta Journal. Gen. Greely, who has been vis iting New England on official bus iness, was almost inclined to tMn’: that the local weather bureau ser vice in Boston the most effective in the country. A Very Good Season. Druggists who are selling Smith’s Tonic Syrup, made by Dr. Job ; Bull, of Louisville, Ky., wonder that its sales increase so rapidly. At first they began to buy a qnai - ter or a half dozen, but fonnd that amoant was sometimes sold in a single day, and now they say they are obliged to buy in half grost and gross lots in order to keep a supply on hand. There is a verv good reason why Smith’s Tonie Syrup should sell so well. There not much newspaper advertising done, but it advertises itself. Every bottle used is an advertisement, for it does exactly what it is ex pected to do. It will break up the chills and fever in less time than any other drug. It will prevent and quickly cure colds, influenza, la grippe, etc. In fact, it can be substituted for quinine in every instance, and with better satisfac tion, for its effect is more certain and reliable, and it never leaves tbe unpleasant effects that quinine sometimes does.—Marion Co. Sig- V- No man is in a condition to en joy riches until he can be happy / •l- "-«%v *=r;>. it- i£4i ■ - A subscriber who takes a news paper from a pcstoffice and reads it and then puts it back marked “refused,” or “returned,” when he owes a year’s subscription, is sure for a double-leaded seat in Heaven —in other words, a position with the goats on the left.—Albany News and Advertiser. A Purely Vegetable Remedy. exempt of mineral poisons, bad odors and taste, acting on the liver, kidneys and system, curing Headache, Rheumatism, Bladder and Liver troubles, ^ is the nonpareil of all home prescriptions. Subscribe for the Home Journal