The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, November 20, 1890, Image 1
BHBMj
TON HOME JOURNAL.
.roYTTV LI. HODGES, D’roprietor,
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AMD CUL'URE.
PRICE: TWO DOLLIES -A. Tear.
VOL. XX.
PEEEY: HOUSTON COtVSTY. GEORGIA, TITLES DAY, A OT EMBER ’20,1890.
NO. 47.
BUT TOUR
0 E S FROM
C.B, "WTT ,T ,TTTn-Ty A ~N/T
KM!® GEORGIA. -
Goad Facilities, Clnse Attention to Business, Liberal and
Square Dealing. Money Loaned to those who Deal with
Me at8 per cent P?r Annum.
SIMS & BRO., 406 TLnrd Street, Macon, Ga,
Vanity.
Youth's Companion.
In a girls’ school in one of the
western states there was lately an
symptoms of which at first
the physicians. One afthe pnpila
, Southern Goal, and Iron.
Atlanta, November 12.—3
Atlanta Journal this
contained: the following;
outbreak of a peculiar illness, the To the Editorof the Journal r—
allow me through your col-
to warn the-formersof Geor— Pittsburg, Pa Several other ship
died, the others recovered slowly, gia against the spread of that most
Send T’o-mr CottOEL
Cl B. WILLINGH AM.
BALKCOM, BAY & D1NKLER,
450 MULBERRY STREET, MACON, GEORGIA.
WHOTiSATiE DEALERS IN
Corn, Oats, Hay, Bran, Meat; Sugar; Coffee,
Bagging a-nnd. Ties,
bat in several cases, their health
was permanently injured. It
discovered that they Indbeen tak
ing arsenic for several weeks in. on-
AND A. GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF CANNED GOODS.
rST" Write to ns, or call lit the store^nd we will guarantee satisfaction in every
particular.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
T. G. Skellio administrator of the es
tate of Miss J. C. Kellogg, of said couu-
C. Kellogg,
tv, deceased; has applied, for letters of
dismission- 2 fc *
i from his trust;
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at December term,
13901 of the Court of Ordinary of said,
county, and show cause, if my they have,
why said application should not be
granted. .
Witness my official signature tins
August 28, 1890.
X.H. HOUSED, Ordmary.
GEORGLA—Houston County:
W. Mi. Edinundson lias applied for
letters of; administration on tne estate
of John Edmundson, deceased.
Thig is, therefore,, to cite all persons
concerned.to- appear at the December
farm, 1890 of the Court: of Ordinary of
said county and.show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not
Witness my official signature this Oct;
30, 1890. eg* j£
J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEOEGIA—Houston Countv:
- lira. M. F. Edmundson has applied
for 12-moutlis support from the estate of
John Edmundson, deceased.
Thlc is therefore to cite aEpersonscon-
cemed to appear at the December term,
1890,of the court ofOrdinary of said comi
ty, and show cause, if any they have, why
Witness my official signature this
October 30,1890.
J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County -
W. D Greene, W. E. Anderson and_H. A.
Mathews, executors, of the estate of Wm.
J. Anderson, deceased, have applied for
leave to sell a portion of. the lands be
longing to said estate.
Tiis is t
, »therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at Docembar term,
1890, of the Court of Ordinary of Hous
ton county, and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not be
granted. ... .
Witness: my official signature
In sums of 3300.00 and upwards, to be
■secured by first liens Oil improved farms.
Oct; 30, 1890.
J. H. HOUSES, Ordinary.
Administrafcor s Sale.
Bv die order ottbe Ordinary of Hons-
. ton 'county, there will be sold before the
-court bouse doorm Perry, Ga-, mthm
the legal-hours ot sale on. the firstTues-
ofSd county, deceased, jmg
ing 188 acres of. lot of land No. lOlinthe
liltb disti ibt of said county,
ednortbby the l=m<feotJ DTharp,east
B Wsou^^R^ 0 ^ br the
for distribution and tor payment ot
debts of saiddeceased.
JOSakdbfub,
Adm’r. of J G Morris,
Administrator’? Sale.
Bv virtue of an order from: the court
of Ordinarv of Houston Gounty, Go., I
^UrSl before the «urt home door m
Raid county, within- the legal horns ot
sale, ou-the fiist Tnesday m December,
1890 fheVtotlnwing- prescribed.lands be-
ISSSW WBasin,
dee^to-wit- Dot of land No. 175, earn
S^b«:202K acres more or le3S, andra
aebrs offiof soutiimn part of otHo.
acres, more or less, in
7. Timor Fifth district of said conity,
being: the f ortiarr setapart as a dower to
&o4tsaidEW-Brnson. A dur
able location, level, good water
:„. mTW l Terms on day of sale.
unproven j- j g j Vinson.
Administrator.
Oct.16, IS90.
' f600 IN PRESENTS
' To be given to the Subscribers of
‘ Ga,
Send for particulars and sample copy.
, chance to <;nr ionvrsrr.o ror. nothing.
SCITEDCLE
Cxcep< Sunday.
T-50 .i. :i-
pEBBf JlAll,KO.tX>
nail;
^FortYaUevatll^B^
Arrive at: Perry atL^.0 a. if.
Rare Perrv al 3:0a B-Ji.
Arrive at Port Talley o:o0 P- m
Sre Fort Talley at Sdfop. *
Arrive at Perry at JJ.0 P. 3,.
"RvLWJer 9:4; ana
Best and Cheapest.
WATCHES, CLOCKS,
JEWELS! OF |l (INDS.
Silver fa. Sewing Machines,
Foolish attempts to gain beauty
by ignorant interference with nar
tnro are not confined, to young wor
men. Stout matrons, and middle-
aged fot men, whose vanity is
wounded by jokes at their size, fre
quently undertake to set: the mat
ter right by a sodden extreme
change in their diet
Foot women between the ages or
50 and 60, who considered their
figure too stoat for beauty,resolved
two years ago to try one of the
“systems for reducing fat” given in
a newspaper. They were in per
fect health at the time They gave
np at once and wholly, the use of
certain kinds of food to which they
had been accustomed since child
hood. They took each day exces
sive and unaccustomed exercise,
and overstrained- their muscles by
lifting: heavy weights;. All this
was done without the knowledge of
a physician.
REPAIRING A SPECIALTY
:5“Low Prices.
Best Work.
First-clvss Goods
FISCHER BROTHERS,
FORT TALLEY, GA.
FAVORABLE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE
Negotiated upon most reasonable
terms. Interest payable annually at 8
and 7 per cent Commissions lorn
Apply to
H. A. MATHEWS,
Fort Talley, Ga.
®p. w. m. gpHp§|pffi§
3Z> 3 ZEST TIST.
28}4 Whitehall Street Atlanta, Ga.
SPECIALIST. CLOWNS AND
MONEY LOANS
On Houston farms procured at the few
est possible rates of interest As low, if
not lower than the lowest. Apply to
W. D. NoTTINGHAil,
tf Mhcon. Ga.
MONEY TO TO Aisr,
Longtime, low rates andeasv payments.
C. C. DUNCAN,
Apply
Nov. 20th, 1889.—tf
Perry* Ga.
X B. E D GrE»
Physician, and Surgeon,
Pebby, Geubgia.
Offiee adjoining Perry HoteL Can be
office dur
found at office during theday, and at
Hotel at night AIT calls promptly an
swered day orniglit.
This is how an expert statisti
cian figures oat the chances of win
ning in a lottery: “A ®L ticket
implies cme chance in three of whi
ning 85 cents; one chance in nine
teen of winning $L7o, und one
chance in L237 of winning 34.25.
"It will be seen, therefore, tfaatthe
8 @£&B8*
Attorney at Daw,
Office: /nf|-MYmromTrT<4- TT>!t f r
MACON, GEORGIA.
most unswerving devotion to the
purchase of lottery tickets cannot appreciate acts of kindness,
be depended upon To insure affltt— casts his-cost at regular intervals
Special attention given to business in
Houston county.
W* lb* -mg
Attorney atDaw.
Pebby, - Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of
this cirrcnit.
Z. SIMS,
o.sisr IdBfekr,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
Hg-Qffice onMainstrset. lately occn-
pied bv Dr. W. 3t Havis..
First-cl asvwork. 7
trices moderate. Pat
ronage solicited. apl28 ly
w. w.
ZD'IB 2TTIST
Perry; €feorgiii.
Office^ on Main Street, King house.
& a
Attorney ntDaw-,
Jtidge ob BBrasroir Godoty Cottbt,
Peeet, Gsohota.
Wi ] l practice in all tile Courts of tins
Circnit except the County Court;
J. D. Hardeman, W.D.
2ALD3NAN Jt
Attorneys at Daw,
Macon, - Geobqxa.
WH1 nractice in the State and Federal
Street.
SUBSCRIBE ABVEB.TIE
bos. nr
XII:' HOME JOLliNAL
cessful. Daring the first fortnight
they lost flesh rapidly. The de
crease in weight was accompanied,
with a sense of prostration and
pains in the bmbs, but these things
mattered little with them com
pared with their joy in the more
narrow waists and delicacy of feat
ure. They persevered with the
experiment.
One is now a victim of nervous
prostration; a secondeontructed ty-
phoid fever, and after a straggle of
weeks for life, died; the two oth
ers have suffered with rheumatic
goat. In each case the physician:
stated, that the weakenings of the
tissues by the sudden and com
plete change of diet had rendered
the patient unable to resist dis
ease.
Do not tamper with that most
wonderful complex of all machines,,
your body. When yon attempt to
change its workings, unless trader
malignant disease, “glanders.” To
enforcer this warning I will repeat
what has been recently published
by Dc Porter, state health officer
-ofJElorida. ■ TTa m»y»- “The press
of the country announces an. epi
demic of ‘glanders,’ prevailing in
the state of Texas with great fatal
ity, and! would suggest the im
mediate necessity of exercising
great care in. the matter,and watch
ing carefully all avenues hy which
drovas-of horses or cattle may en
ter your section.
ATI horses or cattle coining into
your vicinity from Texas should be
immediately and carefully inspect
ed before allowing them, to be sold.
Any animal which presents a dis
charge from the nostrils should be
looked upon with suspicion, and
carefully guarded from all inter
course with other animals until
such time has elapsed as to pre
clude the possibility of the dis
charge being caused by tbis dis
ease.’
I have recently had- letters men
tioning the presence of a similar
disease in Georgia, at present con
fined to-the southwestern and mid
dle portions of the state. I have
on foot a measure which, I trust,
will stamp out the dread diserfse in
its incipiency, but until it can be
carried into effect, I would earn
estly urge that the farmers exer
cise the utmost care in keeping all
Hacon. Telegraph.
Several months ago the attention
of Idle whole country was. attracted
by the shipment of a largeqoantity
of pig iron from Sbeffied, Ala., to
Atlanta Constitution.
One Teeson of the recent general
Glove Tfafel,; in America.
Boston Cultivator.
mentsofthe same sort have been,
subsequently made They were
magnificent advertisements »f the
progress of the south in a great in
dustry in which she tookvery little,
part ten years ago, and spoke vol-
nmes,for the possibility of cheap
iron production in this section.
Recently another event has taken,
place which indicates the vastness
of the material wealth of thesooth-
A cargo of coal from thePocahon-
tas mine in. Virginia, was shipped
to England. It is stated that or
ders have been received from Eng
land for more coal from the same
source These purchases of south
ern coal by English manufacturers
are intended for a3pecifiic purpose,
and do not indicate the prospect of
a general British, demand for
southern coal, bat they do illus
trate the remarkable variety of the
mineral wealth of this favored re
gion. The south is so rich in coal
that it will not. be long before the
demand for it will come from dis
tant parts of the United States,and
from foreigh lands. There is more
coal in Alabama than can be found
anywhere else in the world in an
equal area. Kentncky, Virginia,
West Virginia, North Carolina and
Arkansas also have coal deposits,
the extent of which lias not been
estimated except in general terms,
which indicate its vastness. The
mineral wealth of the sonth is as
yet only faintly comprehended by
Chicago Post.
= A large amount of capital is in- ! The recent celebration of the
election should no be forgotten. It terested in the glove industry in 250th anniversary of its ineorpora-
is this: The American people will j the United States. Two towns in tion by the town of Braintree,
throw any politicaLparty overboard f ew York, and substantial and Mass., has brongh a claim for that
as soon as it begins to injure (he i prosperous towns they are, too, are
town, or rather, that portion of it
business interests of the country- j given over to this sort of industry, j which was set off in 1792, and
diseased stock separated horn the I the most intelligent and most in-
others, and that all pronounced
cases be unhesitatingly sacrificed
for the good of the remainder.
I would be gratified if the week
ly press of the state would copy
this article, and thus put the farm
ers on guard against an insidnooB
and terrible enemy.
Respectfully,
R. T. Nbbbitt,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Mr. Oxley’s Valuable Sn&ke-
Thomas Oxliey, a well known
farmer of Lincoln county, W. Va.,
has a. quern: pet. It is a huge
black snake, eight feat six inches
the direction, of a skilled physician,, long. - The snake has been an ad-
yon lay your ignorant hand: on the
mainspring of life.
The Chances at Battery.
jnnet of the farm for twelve years,
and is considered by Mr. Oxley as
among his more valuable posses
sions. It stays about the barn sum
mer and winter; and is the most
indefatigable exterminator of rats,
mice, and othervermin, ever own
ed by Mr. Oxley. “Jim,” as the
snake is called, is perfectly tame
and docile, and answers to his name
as promptly as the family dog or
cat He is fond of being petted
fay the family, and seems to highly
Jim
ence, or even, a comfortable liveli
hood, for the smallest ancLmost
frugal household. It is absolutely
necessary that yon have some oth
er means of subsistence,’
The United States is by- far the
largest consumer of stamped enve
lopes of any nation in the world,
upward of 500,000,000 having: been
used: during the past year., lit
England, Germany France, Bos-
sia and Austria combined, the
number used last yeas was only a
little more than 70,000,000, or ;
about one-seventh of the quantity
used in this country.
Lejcqlhton, N. C.,.March 22,1890.
Radam’s Microbe Kills; Co.,
Nashville, Tenn.:
Gentlemen—We have handled
the Microbe Boiler for some time.
Its sales nave given us satisfac
tion, and all our customers that
have nsedifearepleased:with. it.
Ybnrs Respectfully,
Johs*Beedx & Co.
For sale by HbltzolawA: Gilbert;
sole agents, ferry; Ga.
Works: have been constructed at
Maidstone, England, for the:
provement of Ceylon and Indian
iy the admixtureaf dried bops
with them. It is claimed that the
hops counteract the irritant ten
dency of the tea without altering
its flavor or aroma.
Many Persons
Are broken dawn from m mill mi Inn ilinllT
c * r “ Brown’s Iron Bitten
f-tny* flacths^winiim
of twelve months, and every one of
hia suits have been kept by Me.
Oxley.
The distance traveled by Stan
ley in the interior of Africa is es
timated by him. at 5,400 miles; of
which all but LOOO were on foot.
The expedition occupied three
years, and rescued 300 persons, at
a cost of less than £30,000.
A Birmingham man, while un
der the influence of drink, knocked
off his great toe with a hammer,
imagining that he was cutting his
throat with a carving knife.
wheat and oats, in the Southern
Slates, as compared with the pro
duction ten years ago, is over
220,000,000 bushels
ahlk aexcce.
Mrs. Mich BelCnrtain, PlninfieM,
HI., makes the statement that she
caught cold, which settled an her
lnngsrshe was treated for a month
worse. His told, her she was. a
victim of consumption
dustri jus of those who have stud
ied the subject. Its stores of iron
and coal are known to be practi
cally inexhaustible, but their vol
ume no man can estimate.
The Biggest Apple Tree.
Boston. JouraaL
The largest apple tree in New
England,and probably in tbe world,
is fix the northwestern part of
Cheshire, Conn., standing in Mr.
Delos Hotchkiss’s dooryard. Its
age can be traced by a family tra
dition to 140 years at least, and it
may be twenty or twentp-five years
older. It is nt the present time of
symmetrical shape; the trank is
nearly round, without a scar or
blemish au it; there are eight large
branches; five of them have been
in the habit of bearing one year,
and the remaining three the next.
Mr. Hotchkiss has gathered in one
year from the five branches 85
bnshels of fruit, and his predeces
sor had harvested 110 bushels
from the same five branches. By
careful measurement tbe circum
ference of the trank one foot above
the ground, above all enlargements
of the roots, is 13 feet 8 inches.
The girth of the largest singlelimb
is 6 feet 8 inches. The height of
the tree has been carefully meas
ured and found to be 60 feet, and
the spread of the branches as the
apples fall, is 100 feet or 6 rods.
The fruit is rather small,sweet and.
of moderate excellence.
Electricians are beginning to
look about for a substitute metal
for copper.
Weak 3Ien and Weak Women.
Men and-women both suffer from
weakness and loss of stength. Wo
men, however, suffer more than
men. Men don’t haye those bear
ing down pains, the bane of a weak
woman’s existence. Both, howev
er, have their dizzy spells, both.be-
moan thar loss of appetite, their
lack of energy, thafc&elingof weak
ness and constant fatigue.- Both
become languid, insipid, and lifeto
either hardly seems to be worth
The masses like the excitement
of politics. They bave tbeir favor
ite leaders; and they would gladly
see them in office But when, they
find, that a. certain policy or that
certain partisan leaders are making
the country less prosperous, caus
ing hard times, and making it more
difficult for the average citizen to
earn a living, then they revolt and
give other men and other methods
trial.
We have seen an instance of this
in the recent campaign. Thou
sands ofrepublicans in the north
cared nothing -for tbe south, and
were even hostile to that section,
bat when it. struck them that the
force bill would materially injure
southern industry and indirectly
hurt the north they lost no time in
arraying themselves against snch a
policy and its champions. It was
a business matter with many of
these republic.;us. There were al
so thousands of republicans in the
north who, in a general way, fa
vored protection, but when they
saw that'tbe McKinley bill would
make them, pay an average of 15
per cent more-for tbe necessities
of life they rose in their wrath and
renounced McKinley and his en
tire party. Again it was a matter
of business.
The republican leaders bare been
taught by tbe result of tbe late
election that business interests are
supreme. A party may play some
very fantastic tricks, and commit
many follies, but when it smites
with a heavy band the business of
the country,its days are numbered.
Democrats, too, should heed tbis
lesson in tbe near future when
they come to shape our economic
policy. Business is bigger than
politics.
Gloversville is a place ot 13,000
and Johnstown of9,000 people, and
they are wholly dependent npon
these glovemaker3 for their snp
port. It does not seem that they
are disappointed in their hopes.
Both are in a very prosperonu con
dition; the workmen own their own
homes and are well paid. Glove
sewers receive from 89 to 812. a
week, while the table-cotters are
paid from 83 to 83.50 a day.
Most of tbe American-made
gloves areof the heavier kind, such
as ase used by teamsters, farmers
and tbe industrial community gen
erally. Bat our facilities for mak
ing tbe finer grades of gloves are
constantly increasing. There is no
good reason, in fact, why in a com
paratively short time we cannot
surpass France in sewing and fin
ishing the gloves, because the
American worker is better paid
and will show more pride and care
in bis work.’ Tbe chief obstacle at
present" in the way of the Ameri
can kid glove lies in tbe dressing
of the leather.
This is a very importantdesider-
atu m. When we can prepare our
leather with the same skill that the
foreign glovemakers are able to do
it will be a great stride forward in
tbis industry in America. The
best kidgloves made in this coun
try are made from imported kid
leather. Bat the improvements in
this direction have been made so
rapidly that in a year or two the
which is now known as Quincy, as
being the first place at which a car
pet was woven in this country.
The facts in relation to the mat
ter, as told by the granddaughter
of Susanna Bass, afterward Mrs.
Bnrrill, are that this lady, who was
born in tbe town in 1793, wove be
fore her marriage, the date of
which is unfortunately not given,
a carpet on the looms of Jonathan
March, who hod. a mill near her
home.
The carpet, we are told, was
woven in strips and then put to
gether. People came from far and
near to see it, and Mr. Josiah
Quincy, who was the Mayor of
Boston, indneed her to place it on
exhibition at the first county fair
ever held in Dedham. She did so,
and was awarded a prize of $15.
The carpet was in constant wear
until some time in 1850, when it
was token care of ns a relic.
This correspondent tells ns far
ther that after her marriage Mrs.
Bnrrill made for her first child an
embroidered christening slip and
cap, which was a i emark&ble piece
of fine work that it was borrowed
by a great many pasenia to be used
for their infants, among whom
were the late Dc and Mrs. Starrs,
of Braintree, and the present Dr.
Starts, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was
christened in this rob&.
Gentlemanliness.
Kindly feeling, quick sympathies
and gentle manners, joined with
true self respect form the basis of
that gentlemanliness which is so
naturally amnired and coveted.
Vulgarity, which is so much dread
ed and so much misunderstood,
consists in the absence of one or
all these qualities. It is not vul
gar to wear a coarse coat or cheap
gown; bnt it is essentially so to
dress in fine cloth or costly silk at
the expense of one’s creditors or
ones peace of mind. It is not vnl
gar to make a mistake in the laws
of etiquette; bnt it is to sneer at
one who makes it, to ridicule ig
norance, to be rude to the aged, to
scorn honest frugality. A true
gentleman may be poor or rich, but
will be neither a miser or a squan
derer; be may be slenderly or
thoroughly edneated,but he will be
neither envious or supercilious; he
may speak a provincial dialeet, but
will not use slang; be may be
known or unknown to fame, bnt
will be neither obsequious or. con
temptuous.
Louisvuxe, Ky., April 15,1890.
Radam’s Microbe Killer Co.,
Nashville, Ten.:
Gentlemen—I have been troub
led for some time with an acute
form of kidney disease, for the re
lief of which I have consulted sev
eral of the best physicians in this
city, bnt with no. appreciable bene
fits resulting from the faithful nse
of the medicines ordered. I had
lost thirty or forty ponuds in
weight, was-naturally greatly re
duced, in strength andhad frequent
rigors which possibly may have
resulted from urenic poison. Sev
eral weeks ago I concluded to give
the Microbe Killer a trial, and the I
James G. Blaine was asked by
glovemakers of the United States (the Washington Post last week
wilt take a front place. what he thonght of women. He
L. W. Barrett, county treasurer
of Whitfiel county, Ga., is a most
accomodating officer. At the last
term of Whitfield superior court,
the county had no funds to pay
off the juries, and Mr. Barrett fur
nished the money and paid them
off without expense to the county.
The banner orange growing town
in Southern California is River
side, anti it is, perhaps, the richest,
town in the country, concludes the
Commercial Advertiser, if
wealth has been correctly esti
mated. OF500 persons 266 are
sessed for more than 84*060 each,
which representsS12,000 of value;
I never was strong and I mar
ried a delicate little lady. We
traveled much m search of bdoith,
bnt we remained invalids until we
began a use of Dr. Boll’s Sarsapa
rilla. We both, are now in better
health and feel stronger.—R. A.
Pa.
The most successful and pro
gressive towns in theUnited States
are those which liberally support
their local papers. A sossessfhi
newspaper is-one of the best adver
tisements in the world ofthe place
where the paper is published-—
Ex.
The Sioux Indians of South Da
kota are daily expecting the com
ing of their Messiah. He is to
that will bury all the whites and
the bad Indians.
Not Able to Walk.
smiled and then aelrpA- “What
sort of a woman do you refer to?”
“Well, fake for example the wo
man who mounts the stomp to.
make a political speech.”
The smile vanished, and in its
stead came that perpendicular line
between the eyes which all Mr,
Blaine's friends will recognize.
“I hate that sort of a woman,”
he said, and he said it.as if he
meant it, too.
“She is oat of her places God
never meant that woman should
A wo
man’s power is for love, not tor
battles. She should not enter the
contest, bnt remain outside, an in-
falliable judge of who should win
the crown of victory-”
' “I have observed,” continued Mr.
Blaine, “that on great occasions it
is almost always women who have
given ns the strongest proofe of
virtue and devotion. The reason
for this is that, with men, either
good or bad qualities are the re
sult of calculation, while in wo
man they are the result of im
pulses, and impulses usually spring
from, the best, that Is in ns.”
The following is a list ofthe sal
aries received by the chief rulers
of the various nations:; The United
States, 350,000 a year; Persia,330,-
000,000; Rassia, 810,000,000; Siam,
810,000,000;. Spain, 83,900,000; It
aly, 33,000,0(H); Great Britain, 83.
come riding a huge wave of earth, u00,000; Morocco, $2^00,000; fZ-
pan, 824100,000; Egypt, $1,575,000;
Germany. 81,000,000; Portugal,
Sweeden and Brazil, each, 8600,-
000; France, 8200,000; Hayti,
8240,000; Switzerland, 83,000; Sax
ony, 8700,000.
I was confined to my bedfor six
mouths with Hheamaiism, notable-
to walk a step. All the remedies
usually prescribed for this disease I e u luc . uuay
. , . _ | editor fb r about fifteen minutes
having been, employed to no effect, stead ily. Finally he yawned sieeo
I commenced fairing S. S-S I j ay ^ remarked: ^
hare now taken 1! bottles of ^ ^
excellent medicine and am on my ■ - -
feet, attending: to all my
work as of yore Lfeel that ican-
witbont saying.” “I know it,”
| snapped the editor, “bat there are
tinned its use and after taking ten
well, now does her own. housework
and is as well as she ever was.
Free trial bottles of this Great
Discovery at Holtzclaw * Gilbert’s
Drag Store, large bottles 50a and
3L00.
living. Their kidneys are weak,
and seem to be ’wasting away j ofits 056 has been gratify-
Their livers are inactive, their ™ff to ine and a surprise to my
stomachs disordered, then- bowels i ®ends I have folly regained my
■ too darned many things that say a
not snfiuaentiy express my thanks I - a—r _ . - „
the use. of this medicine;
Mbs Mi A. Wood ward,
Webb City, Mo.
seek the way to health andofthe rigors, appetite good, and
Others as miserable as! have tbe fullest
King’s New Discovery for Con
sumption; she bonght a bottle and
fitted^m^fet^o^r^lbecon- J onIselTCS are aow in th e fall en-| complete restoration to
’ - --- joyment of happy, joyous life, sim-i willingly recommend tbe
ply because they pat their preja-j Killer
dice aside and began a nse of that*
excellent alterative known as Dr. Wit H. Meffebx.
John Ball’s Si.rsaparilla. Ask : For sale by -Hia
your neighbors who have used it j ageuts. Perrj'^Gn.
wbat they think about it. Ask —This is the heat time of t
voor druggist for a bottle, and don’t year to subscribe for tbe Ho
Subscribe for the Home Joubxal. 1 ake any other, JOCB.vax.
A G<*orgif#woman who is en-
| gaged in the chicken business has
! sold 150 dozen eggs from twenty-
seven hens this year.
, | —■.Arnica Salve.
for several years, and The Best Salve in the world
to be. i for Colds, Braises, Sores, Ulcers,
' <*r.
nSti,'