The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, November 27, 1890, Image 1

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-TOIITV TX. HODGES, Proprietor. DEVOTED TO HOME U^TEP-£ST3, ! 5RS.SS AND CULTURE. PRICE: TWO DOLLABS A Year. VOL. XX. FERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEOEOIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1890. NO. 48. WILLINGHAM’S WAREHOUSE. MACOK, GEORGIA. Ilf YfiUR SHOES FROM ROFF SIMS & BRO„ 406 Third Street. MacorxGa, The Press Shares the Glory. Atlanta Consiitniion. The democratic press shares the glory of the great victory, but in the general rejoicing the work of A Good Lincoln Story. Chicago >!ews. “That the most learned may sometimes be mistaken was proba bly never more humorously illns- The Choctaw Hereafter. Good Facilities, Clnse Attention to Business, Liberal and Square Dealing. Money Loaned to those who Deal with Me at 8 per cent Per Annum. Send ZMIe “Sr©Ta.r CottorL. C. B. WILLINGU AM. W. J. R03S SCO. Wholesale Manufacturing and Retail Dealers in ' ROAD CARTS, HARNESS, WHIPS, ROBES, BABY CARRIAGES, ETC. CORNER COTTON AVENUE and CHERRY ST., MACON, GA GEORGIA—Houston County: T. O. Skellie administrator of the es tate of Miss J. O. Kellogg, of said coun ty, deceased, Ms applied for letters of dismission from his trust: This is therefore to cite all persons -concerned to appear at December term, -1390, 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 August 28, 1890. J.H. HOUSER, Ordinary, GEORGIA—Houston County: W. M. Edmundson has applied for letters of administration oh the estate of John Edmundson, deceased. This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned to appear at the December term, 1890 of the Court of Ordinary of said county and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not bo granted. Witness my official signature this Oct. 30, 1890. - J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.. GEORGIA—Houston County: Mrs. M. F. Edmundson has applied for 12 months support from the estate of John Edmundson, deceased. Thisis therefore to cite allpersonscon- esmed to appear at the December term, 1890,of the court of Ordinary of said coun ty, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be granted. Witness my official signature this October 30,1890. J. H. HOUSERr Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County- WJ. Greene,'W. R. 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 therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at December term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of Hous ton county, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be ""witaess my official signature this Oct. 30, 189 °‘ h HOUSER, Ordinary. Adijiinisti*ator’s Sale. By the order of the Ordinary of Hous ton county, there will be sold before the court house door in Ferry, Ga., withm the legal hours of sale on the first Tues day in December, all of* the lands be longing to the estate of John Moms, late of said county, deceased, said lwms be ing 1(38 acres of lot of land No. 101 in the 10th distiict of said county, and bound- tods of J W Woolfolk. Said tods sold for distribution and for payment of debts of said deceased. ^ Adm’r. of J 0 Morris, deceased. Best anif Cheapest. WATCHES, CLOCKS, jiijfii of all mil Silm Ware, Sawing Machines, its editors and reporters is likely to, trated than by Abraham Lincoln be overlooked. j during a trial in a court of this The cimpaign through which we; state,” said Luther Lafiu Mills,one have just passed has been, in many j afternoon, not long ago, when he respects, a surprising one. It was \ apparently had nothiug better to feared that the democrats through-j do t&an amnse several friends by REPAIRING A SPECIALTY 5®"T,ow Prices. Best Work. First-clxss Goods FINCHER BROTHERS, FORT VALLEY, GA. FAVORABLE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE Negotiated upon most reasonable terms. Interest payable annually at 8 and 7 per cent. Commissions low. Apply to H. A. MATHEWS, Fort Valley, Ga. HI. H). t!)Q;H)N]§@Sa, OBOTTIST, 28M Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga. SPECIALIST. CROWNS AND BRIDGES. MONEY LOANS On Houston farms procured at the low est possible rates of interest. As low, if not lower than the lowest. Apply to W. D. Nottingham, tf Macon. Ga. MONEY TO LOAN. In sums of §300.00 and upwards, to be secured by first liens on improved farms. Long-time, low rates and easy payments. Apply to C. C. DUNCAN, Nov. 20th, 18S9.—tf Perry 1 Ga. J. B. EDGE, Pliysiciasi and Surgeon, Perry, Georgia. Administrator’s Sale. By virtue of an order from the court of Ordinary of Houston County, Ga., I will sell before the ec urt house door m said county, within the legal horns of sale, on the first Tuesday m Decembej. 1890, the following prescribedlands be longing to the estate of Jacob W Basin, deeU, to-wit: Lot of land No. taming 202acres more or less, and 7o aere3 off of the southern part of lot No. jieres nn ul nuv • 104, making 277l| acres, more or loss, in -- “ r Fifth district of said county, beirmtho portion set apart as a dower to- tho widow o£ said J.W. Baison. A desir- ..i.i — (Aval, cood water and well able location, level, good water improved Terms on aa^otjte^. Administrator. Oct 16, 1890. XMAS GIFTS FREE $600 IN PRESENTS To bo given to the Subscribers of The Weekly News, Savannah, Ga. I sample copy. Send tor particulars and; Office adjoining Porry Hotel. Can be found at office during tho day, and at Hotel at night. All calls promptly an swered day or night. Hg m . Attorney;at Law, Office: 510 Mhlbebby Steeet, MACON, GEORGIA. - Special attention given to.business in Houston county. JF. 0k Attoi-ney at Law. Ferry, - - - Ga. Will practice in all the Courts of this cirrcnit. Z. .SIMS, DE1TTIS-T, PERRY, GEORGIA. Sg“Office oh Main street, lately occu pied by Dr. W. M. Havis. First-cla lass work. Prices moderate. Pat- ronhgesolieited. apl281y m J 5 . BWMMs I^EXII IST , Perry, Georgia. Office or Main Street, King house. €?i Attorney at Law : Judge of Houston County Court, Peiiis, Gxougia. 1 CHANCE TO GET SOMSTUyG Foil NOTHING. PC bBY SCHEBDI-E Will practice in all the Courts of this Circuit except the County Court. J L Hardeman. W.D. Nottingham. Perry at*J So'Ym! HARDEMAN & NOTTINGHAM, Arrive at Fort "V alley 8:40 a. M. Attorneys at-Law, Leave Fort Valley at ll:oo p. At .. . Geoegia. Arrive at Perry at 12:20 A.-ai. moos, Leave Perry at 3:05 P. St. i Will practice in the State mid Federal i riveat Fort Valley 3:50 P. M | Courts. Office 306 Second Street. Leave Fort Valley at 8:25 p. At | STJBSCRI3E advertu Arrive at Perry *^9:10 r. it. , fqr> ik out the country ' were lacking in that perfect organization which.- is essential to success. The republi cans seemed active, and from day to day their movementsWere chron icled by the democratic press. But there was very little evidence of an aggressive democratic campaign An omnious quiet seemed to reign along the lines: It was then that the press, tear ing for the success of the party, came to the vescue. Here in Geor gia the Constitution, alarmed at the apparent apthy in doubtful con gressional districts, sounded a warning which echoed through the state, and in answer to its clarion calls district after district fell into line; the ranks were closed up and the democrats rallied to the fight, which resulted in victory. But this was not alone the case in Georgia. The cry was taken up by every democratic newspaper. North, south, east and west the warning rang like n Greek war cry. The democratic press gave all its mighty strength and energy to the work. The editors enlisted, heart and soul, in the canse of democra cy. They gave their ringing col umns to its advocay. Editors, re porters, all worked unceasiugly, UDwearyingly for the victory. The sentinels on the house tops, they saw the danger from afar and gave the alarm; the soldiers in the field, right valiantly they fought. Whenever help was needed they were found. So the press shares in the gener al glory and rejoicing and in the high honor of the victory. And not the democratic press alone. Republican editors--honest men— with the courage of their convic- tious, for once stood for the right and denounced the corrupt meth ods of their party—notably in Pennsylvania— becoming powerful allies of the party of right and jus tice. But great is the glory of the democratic press, and every mem ber of it is entitled to the thanks of the people. They have fought a good fight; they have kept the faith; they have converted the country! A census enumerator in Bates county, Mo., has been unfortunate financially, and had borrowed small-sums from an extended cir cle of acquaintances. His appoint ment was hailed with pleasure, as it was expected to help him out of his difficulties. When his sched ules were turned in they footed up several hundred below what the actual population was known to be, from a local count made shortly before, and when the people began to compare notes they found that the enumerator had carefully avoided going to the houses of all creditors.- Catarrh Can Be Cured. Catarrh can never^be cured by ointments and other local applica tions, but there' is one remedy that can permanently remove the canse. It has cured cases where the dis charge wjis so copious and offen sive that it felt as if the whole head was a mass of corruption. Other cases indicated by an irresistible desire to hawk andspit, the phlegm collecting in a tough mass behind the soft palate. In other cases where the matter dried up in such large lumps as to fairly close up the nostrils and prevent nasal res piration. In other cases whore the ■breath was so offensively revolting and fetid that the person Became a disgusting object in society. Other cases wherein complaint was made of a distressful feeling above and between the eyes, and where the sense of smell was entirely lost. Ofber cases where the droppings his story-telling talent. “Everybody has heard of Ste phen T. Logan, the famous attor ney, who was once a partner of Lincoln, but who has long since slept with his fathers. Logan was eccentric to a fault. One of his peculiarities was to never wear a collar or necktie. No matter how great the' occasion he would not dress up or don a ‘boiled shirt.” This was often e cause of embar rassment to Logan’s five daugh ters, who were promtoen; in socie ty- “Toward the last of his career Logan was engaged for the defense in a celebrated case,in which Abra ham Lincoln prosecuted. The day of the closing arguments would be i great occasion; the court room would be crowded, and the Logan girls wanted their father to look nice.,. So they bought Min a cloxen white shirts and placed them on his. bureau. Then they pleaded- so hard that the old man consented to wear one next day. Logan, never having had a shirt of that kind on before, got the bosom behind and the buttons in front. Buttoning his coat close up to his chin,he went to the court house. The girls did not see their father before he started; and any body else who met bini did not 'no tice his shirt, because lie usually dressed so slovenly that they prob ably noticed no difference in his appearance. “In court, however, the attorney opened his coat, and Lincoln, al ways ready to notice anything of- the' kind, saw the old man hud made a mistake. During his ad dress, the future president spoke of the possibility of Mr. Logan being mistaken when he believed his client to be innocent. “‘The best men,’ said he, ‘are often mistaken. Possibly you, gentlemen of the jury, will uot be lieve me when I say my learned friend there has made a mistake to-day, yet he believes he is all right. He has, nevertheless, put his shirt on wrong side front, and if you tap him on his back you will find I am right.’ From that day until his death, it is said, Ste phen Logan never again put on a boiled shirt.” Dr. Bull’s Sarsaparilla cured me of a long standing case of catarrh, and I feel better in health and spir its than ever did since I was a young lady.—Mrs. Mary E; Hume, Richmond, Ya. The collective-length of the Lon don streets would reach over 32,- 000 miles. From St. Joseph Hospital. A young girl here-had been suf fering for 12 years with Blood Diseases until she had lost the.use of her limbs, and was subject to many troubles incident to the “dis ease. The physicians declared her case incurable, and predicted that bar life would come to a speedy end. After taking S. S. S. she re cuperated, so fast that it was plain that she had-obtained a new lease on life, and she continued to grow better until her. permanent cure is assured. Many other patients in our hospital have .obtained sig nal benefit from S. S. S. and it has become quite a favorite 'in our house. Tee St. Joseph Hospital, Highland, 111. • CUBED HEBSELF AXTD HER CHILD. S. S. S. has relieved me of a ter rible Scrofula, from which I suffer- ed for years. It affected my nose' first as catarrh, then carries off the bone, and coutinned to eat-until it destroyed the soft boneih therigbt side of the nose, then went to my ihront, and later on to my lungs, and it looked as if i was doomed. fell into tho throat and the voice i S. S. S. has cured me, and has al- became husky, audcaused a troub-; so cured my little daughter of ilia . ‘ 7 “. , - ’. , ,™Sh Oh! you want to , same disease. " ° nothing good in his opponents,and juncJaT Traill TV 9 *00 am. Arrive Fort Valley 9:4a a .in a *irc Perry C:15 i> iu lesorne cough, know the name of the medicine? It is called Dr. John Bull's Sarsa parilla. It can be bought druggists. Boston Transcript. From their earliest traditions the Choctaws have been taught to believe in a life after they leave this world. They believe that the spirit, the- moment that it leaves the body, is compelled to travel a long distance to the west until it arrives .at an immense chasm, at the bottom of which flows a very rapid, rocky and dangerous stream. This terrible gorge, which is sur rounded on every side by great mountains, the soul has to cross on a “long and slippery pine log with the bark pealed off,” the only pas sage to the “happy hunting grounds,” which lie beyond the dangerous bridge. On the bank of the stream just on the other end of the log, there always stands six persons, who. have, reached the “happy huntiug grounds,” and who throw sharp rocks at whoever at tempts to cross the treacherous loj the moment, the middle of it is reached. Those wh^-have.Jived properly, according to the Indian idea of morals, have no trouble in crossing the log; the stones fall harmlessly from them, and thev reach the“happy hunting grounds,” where there is perpetual day, with out difficulty. There the trees are ever green, the sky cloudless, and the breezes always gently blowing; there, too, a continuous feast and dance are going on; the people never grow old, but live forever, and revel in perpetual youth. The wicked, when they attempt to cross the dangerous bridge, can see the stoues which are thrown at them; and in trying to avoid them, they will fall from the giddy height into the awful gorge thousands of feet,below the slippery log, where a rushing, boiling stream is tum bling over the great, sharp rocks, filled with dead fish and animals, which are continually brought around to the same place by the eddies and whirlpools. There all the trees are dead, the water in fected by poisonous snakes, toads aud other repulsive looking rep tiles; the dead are ever hungry, but have nothing to eat; are al ways sick, but never die. There is no sun, and the wicked are con stantly “climbing up by thousands on the sides of a high rock, from which they can overlook the bean tiful country of the ‘good hunting grounds,’ the abode of the happy but can never reach it.” He Got OH Lucky. A Detroiter, who was looking for lands in Southern Kansas; got off the train at a little town at mid night, and, in trying to find his way to a hotel, says the Detroit Free Press, he went astray, and brought up against a mau who held the muzzle of a shotgun against his breast, and said: Now, then, if you move a foot yon are a dead man!” He moved his tongue instead, and asked what was wanted. Two more citizens joined him, and he then marched to the lockup, and told that he was a prisoner, charged with attempted burglary the night before. Two of the men positively identified him as the man they had seen running away from a jewelry store. Seeing it no use to talk, he kept still, and they went through him. They found nothing suspicious, but held to their case, and he was locked up and left alone. Early next morn ing a fat little justice of the peace came puffing in, and called out: “Why didn’t you tell us we had got the wrong man?” “It was no use.” “It wasn’t, eh? You’ll have to pay for all this!” “But it wasn’t my mistake.’ “Yes it was! Here you’ve gone and laid ns liable for a suit for false imprisonment, and I won’t stand it.” “If the officers don’t know their business I can’t help it.” “Well, I find you to be a disor derly person, and I fine you $5 and a month in jail! If you'll get out of town I’ll remit the jail part.” “And I must pay $5 - because your offices made a mistake,"quer- rie the Detroiter. “Certainly. While we were fool- Local Legislation. Greensboro Heralil-JonrnaL ing with you the young man we Already a large nnmber of local bills have - been introduced in the legislature, and the tide has not fairly set in. The indications are that the present session of the gen eral assembly will approximate the last in the nnmber of local bills introduced, and if this be true, it will be simply impossible for the body to transact its business with out a summer session. The Herald-Journal has strong ly and repeatedly contended that the sessions of the general assem bly will never be held within the constitutional limit unless the vast mass of local legislation is taken from them and authority given to the counties to pass acts of a local character. As an illustration of how this local legislation cumbers the workings of the general assem bly, we notice that the county of Chatham alone will introduce up ward of twenty-five bills. In these bills the state at large has no earthly interest, aud yet the peo ple of Georgia are taxed to pass them, and the time of nearly two hundred representatives consumed in considering them. The legisla ture is an expensive body, and a day counts for more than a thou sand dollars. Why is it that their time, which concerns mainly the interests of the state, must be con sumed in the passage of laws af fecting the interests of only one county. It should be remedied, and we believe the best remedy is in the passage of an act giving leg islative powers to the commission ers of each county. The sessions would be shortened; acts of a gen eral character could be considered with more deliberation, aud the people of the state saved an im- Reed Blames The Women. Only twelve states were carried by the republicans in the elections of this year. They are Maine and Oregon, which voted in Sep tember, and Vermont, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, California, Wash ington, Wyoming and Pennsylva nia, which elected in November. In Pennsylvania the democrats elected the governor, but the re publicans the majority of the con gressmen. They contain, in all, only 9,217,441 of the 62,500,000 people of the country. An advance statement given to the Financial Chronicle by’ the census bureau, shows that there are now sixteen cities in the United States having a population above 200.000, twentj-eight cities above 100.000, and no less than fifty- eight cities having populations ex ceeding 50,000. In 1880 there were only ten cities having popula tions - above 200,000, only, twenty above 100,000, and only thirty-five above 50,000. New York surgeons are attempt ing to piece out a lame boy’s leg with the muscular part of a dog’s leg. If successful it will be a most remarkable operation. Several op erations have already been per formed successfully, and one more is to follow. been a complete wreck for four years from rheumatism, catarrh and kidney troubles. Two gallons of theMicrobe Killer have entire ly cared her. Louis Conrad. >. V ~ ' Winfield, Kansas. For sole by HoltzclawA Gilbert, sole agents, Perry, Ga. Watch the man who can see Til '• riOJno.IOUKNAL Subscribe for the Home .1 Mrs. N. Eitchet, .tise on Blood lied free. The Swift Sr the one who delights in speaking evil of others. wanted got away. Any more hes itation will be contempt of court and SlOOftoe and six months in jail. Train is about due, aud my buggy is outside.”' He rode down with him, and as the train moved off “His Honor” said: “Yon got out of this mighty lucky, old fellow! There is only one lawyer in town, and he was calculating to charge you 850 for advising you to take the dirt road out of this and strike a gait of ten miles an hour!” The messiah craze among the Iudiaus of the northwest is begin ning to attract a great deal of at tention. The religions excitement is very great, and there are grave fears that the Indians will attack the whites. Those who have talk ed with the Indians, however, are inclined to think that they will not show a hostile spirit. The Indians say that all the whites are to be de stroyed, but notjby the red men. They declare that a mud wave will engulf the whites,bnt that the Indi ans will be lifted above it until it passes. mense amount of money now gob bled up in local enactments. We trust this matter will be agi tated in the present general assem bly. It is made up of farmers who have long beeli convinced of the burden of lengthy sessions, and who are pledged to reform in this particular. It is to be hoped that they will inaugurate the reform, and one of the best means of ac complishing it is by the method suggested above. A House in a Bottle. St. Louis Republic. Some years ago a blind boy re siding in Chicago constructed a miniature bouse inside an ordina ry four ource medicine bottle. The building was made up of forty pieces of wood, all neatly fitted and Savannah News. Speaker Reed is beginning to smile again. He has not smiled much since the recent elections,bnt the edge wears off the keenest dis appointment after awhile. The speaker says the women are chiefly responsible for the disas trous defeat which the republican party sustained, and that the com mercial drummers helped to effect iit- The women, he says, keep the run of prices and have the keenest scent for increased cost. The clerks in the stores told them that the price of this and that article had been raised because of the McKinley bill, and they went home and told their husbands and broth ers, who went to the ballot-box and pnt in their protest against any farther increase iu the cost of liv ing, The drummers, who travel all over the country, told the country merchants that they should buy heavily before the McKinley bill increased prices, and the store keepers told their customers all about the effect of the bill upon prices. The couseqnence was that the whole country got the impres sion that the McKinley bill placed new and unnecessary burdens up on the people. The speaker is about right in what he says concerning the wo men and the drummers. They were as effective agents as the newspapers in informing the peo ple what they might expect from the McKinley bill. And prices are higher—a great deal higher—than they were be fore the McKinley bill became a law. It doesn’t make any differ ence how the people learned what the effect of the bill would be. They learned it, and they rebuked the party which, without any satis factory reasons, greatly increased the cost of everything the people have to have in their homes, and in conducting their industrial enter prises. A perplexing suit involving pro fessional secrecy has been before the Paris Society of Pudlic Medi cine. - A suburban practitioner, called in to attend a patient suffer ing from scarlet fever, advised the landlord to disinfect the house. This was done, and the landlord sued the patient’to recover the cost* The patient thereupon sued the doctor for breach of professional secrecy, and it is thought that he will win his case. A curios anaesthetic used by the Chinese has recently been made known. It is obtained by placing a frog in a jar of floor and irrita ting it by prodding it. Under these circumstances it exudes a My eleven-year-olddaughter has thetic properties. After the fin ger has been immersed in the liq uid for a few minutes it can be cut to the bone without any pain being felt.” Uuckleii's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Colds, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, LADIES ::-2C-oiRga ionic, orcftHdrc-a that ’.rant building tip, should take ^ iu i;una Mianuiu. (ji fl. t: :.t: 1 l’.:liGtisiie=s. All dealers keep Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles or no pay re quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money re funded. Price 25 cents per box For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert. Subscribe for the Home Journal. glued together. It would have puzzled a man with two good eyes to put the pieces in the bottle with out the task of i putting them to gether. As wonderful as the above may seem, it is only a part of the remarkable achievements of this sightless lad. After completing the house to his satisfaction he set about fas tening the cork in the bottle, but how he accomplished the startling fact has ever remained a mystery. Inside the bottle below the neck a small wooden peg was driven through the cork, which extended far enough on each side of the stop per to prevent it being removed from the bottle. The boy is un able to explain the astonishing piece of ingeniousness. HiNSLEYTOWN.'Ky., March 28,1890. Eadam’s Microbe Killer Co., Nashville, Teen.: Gentlemen—In reply to your in- quiry-as.fco what effect the Microbe Killer has had on me, I will say' that I have been treated for dys pepsia ever since I was seven years old, making now thirty-five years. I have now taken nearly three gal- liquid which forms a paste with the flour. . “This paste, dissolved _ _____ _ in water, has well-marked antes-- have found great relief from it; much more than from anything 1 have ever used. You can nse this if you choose. Yours Truly, For sale by’ Holtzclaw & Gilbert, sole agents, Perry, Ga. _ 11T>I . „ - ■ . , The wife of a day laborer,!.,Mu In a recent article the K«n g f, a Farmers’ Advocate, the organ of the farmers alliance, announces the purpose of the Kansas farmers to begin at once to prepare for the conflict of 1892 on anti-sectional lines. “Sectional lines,” says the Advocate, “must be abolished. In terests which are identical must be brought together, and the forces of the agricultural and laboring classes must be consolidated against the corporations, trusts, nionopo- • lies, syndicates and moneyed aris tocrats who have for years feasted upon the substance of the people.” If the Kansas farmers really en tertain these sentiments, they are very poor protectionists, and hard ly good republican's. In that view of the case, there is no manner of doubt but they will very properly abolish Mr. Ingalls.—Savannah News. Sammy had been told that if he would be good he might go into the next room and take a look at his new baby brother. Sammy promised and was admitted. He stood for some moments looking in silence at the diminutive morsel of humanity, and then he freed his mind. “I don’t know what they’re going to call you, bnb,” he said, “bnt I know I had everything fixed for goto’ fishin’ to-day—bait dug an’ everything, and now you’ve come along an’ spoiled the’whole programme I call It a doggone small piece of business, that’s what I call it.” Considering how little the bell knows, it is wonderful how much it has been tolled. riic Pulpit and tile Stage. Ions of the Microbe’ Killer, and Eev - F. M. Shrout, Pastor United Brethien Church, Blue Mound Kan. sayg: “I feelit my duty to tell what wonders Dr. King’s New Discovery has done for me. My lungs were badly diseased, and my parishioners thought I could live Mrs. S. T. McGhee. onl - v a few weeks. I took five bot tles of Dr. King’s New Discovery, and am sound and well, gaining 26 lbs. in,weight. ^ Arthur Love, Manager c*. Funuy Folks Combination, “After a thorough trial, and co: j viucing evidence, I am has given birth to her twenty-sec ond child. All the births have ■ ® r - King’s New Discovery to. beeD single, and thirteen 0 f the ; Consum P tion beats ’em all] and children are still living. £,“ res w,jen everything else fails. : ffie greatest kindness I can do i Doctors prescribe Dr. Bnll’s 11 ? an ^ thousand friends is to u Worm Destroyers because ehil- ^HMzclaw dren like them and they never fail, store. Regular sizes 50e. auiUl