The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, July 09, 1891, Image 1

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VOL. XXI. PEKBY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEOKGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1891. NO. 28- Our life, oar life is like a narrow raft- Afloat npon the hungry sea; ' "Hereon is bat a little space, And all men eager for a place, Do thrust each other in the sea. And so our life is wan with fears, And so the sea is salt with tears, Ah, well is thee, thou art asleep! - Ah, well is thee, thou art asleep! ARE YOU GOING A SOTHUfd TO BOY Irani THIS SEJLSOHSF? DO YOU WANT Onr life, our life is a curious play; Where each man hideth from himself. “Let us be open as the day,” One mask does to the other say, When he would deeper hide himself, “Let us be open as the day,/ That he may better hide himself. And so the world goes round and round, Until our life with rest is crowned. Ah, well is thee, thou art asleep! Ah, well is thee, thou art asleep! RETREAT FROM LAUREL HILL. Seven of Scouts and Rearguardmen Slip the Battalion. Council of War. Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Cotton Gins, Cotton Presses, Sailor Seed Elevators, Mowers, Morse Hay Hakes, Circular Saws,Cotton Seed Crushers, Inspirators, Belting, Pul leys, Shafting, Pipe AND MACHINISTS’ SUPPLIES. Be sure and write us before buying. We can take care of you. Transcribed from a Soldier’s Diary for the HOME JOURNAL. MALLAEY BROS. & CO., MACON, GEORGIA. Georgia—Houston County: H E. Murray, administrator of estate of B. A. Culp, late of said county, de ceased, has applied for dismission from his trust: This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned to appear at the September term, 1891 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 tins May 2l> ’ 1891 ‘ J.H. HOUSER, Ordinary. GEORGIA Houston County. 'L' D. Warren, administrator of the estate otC. A. Warren deceased, has ap plied for dismission from his trust: Tbis is therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at the August term, 1891, of the Court of Ordinal? of Hous ton county, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not bo granted. - ,, . Witness my official signature this April 30, 1891. • J. H. HOUSERfOrdma'ry. GEORGIA—Houston County: ' Mrs. N. J. McDowell, widow, of G. W. McDowell, deceased, has applied for 12 mjnths support for herself and one mi nor child from estate of said deceased, and the appraisers appointed to set apart the same, have made their return to this office. Ordered that citation issue ac cording to law. This is therefore to cite all persons con cerned to appear at the August term, 1891, of the Court of Ordinary of said eounfcy, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be granted. . Witness my official signature this Juft© 29,1891. J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. Georgia—Houston County: Chas. L. Bateman, administrator of es tate of Kiuclien Taylor, deceased, has ap plied for dismission from said trust: This is therefore to cite all persons concerned to .appear at the October term, 1891, of the court of Ordinary of said count), and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be granted. . Witness my official signature this the 29th of June, 1891. J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County: C.C. Richardson, administrator of es tate of Mrs. Lizzie M. Warren, late of said country deceased, lias applied for J is mission from his trust: This is therefor© to cite all persons con cerned to appear at the September term, 1891, of the court of Ordinary of said county, and sliow cause, if. any they cave, why said application should not be granted. Witness my officicial signature this June 2,1891. J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. MONEY LOANS On Houston farms procured at the low- Mt possible rates of interest. As low, if not lower than the lowest. Apply to „ W. D. Nottingham, 11 Macon, Ga, J. P. DUNCAN. W. B. DEW. DUNC.AN $ DEW, Attorneys at Law, Perry, - Georgia. . I M M, Attorney at Law, Perry ... Ga. Will practice m all the courts of this circuit. Attorney at X.aw, Perry, ... Ga, Will practice in all the Courts 1 of his cirrcnit. &L M. USSI TIS 1 ?!, 306 Second -Street, Macon, Ga! SPECIALIST. CROWNS AND BRUCES. J. W. PRESTON. A. S. GILES. HOPE POLUILL. PRESTON. GILES & POLHILL, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW. Office, No. 510, Mulberry St., Macon, Ga. Will practice in all the State and United States Courts of Georgia. J. L. Hardeman, . W. D. Nottingham. HARDEMAN & NOTTINGHAM, Attorneys at Law, Macon, - - - Geobqia. Will practice in the State and Federal Courts. Office 552J4 Mulberry Street. J. B. EDGE, Physician and Surgeon, Perry, Georgia Office adjoining Perry Hotel. Can be found at office during the day, and at Hotel at night. All calls promptly an swered day dr night. Z. SIMS, 3D E12ST TIST, PERRY, GEORGIA. JSy.Office on Main street, lately occu pied by Dr. W. M. Havis. First-class work. Prices moderate. Pat ronage solicited. apl281y MIikAS GMRK, Boot & Shoemaker, West end of Carrol Street, PERRY, - - GEOREIA. Will make or repair Boots and Shoes, repair Harness, and all Leather Work. - Good Work. Low Prices. Half-Poling, Sewed, 75 Cents. « “ Pegged, 50 Cents. ggg“ Patronage Solicited. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. july 13th 1861. As if under some.strange wand, or suble influence simultaneously holding over all alike, the lips to the seven occupants of the old log seem closed for a moment, both of expression and'suggestion; or all seem to sit in silence as a delega tion or devotees of'Quakerism. The expectant glance of the one soldier* to the other, however, does not fail to plainly show the great solicitude, or to become an unmis takable index to the uneven and flighty misgivings of the mind— the doubt, the dread, the uncer tainty ahead. Does not fail to disclose the storm within, whose billows lap around and lash the victim without mercy, without cessation, without care; or oblivious to the silent pleading of the mind for relief be comes nevertheless impervious and heartless to the cry for help. But the old craft,' full of holes, without supplies, without a rudder, without a compass, without a pilot, and with all the buoys removed from around the harbors every where, must be set afloat to drift aimlessly and hopelessly as it were over a barren and tumultuous sea, whose answer to the cry of dis tress could only be another and another pitiless wave. Mast be set afloat somehow and' somewhere. In some direction toward a friendly, but unknown harbor, or to be swamped with all on board and lost forever. Must be set afloat to be patched or rebuilt and provisioned as she sails; to be manned in hunger, in thirst, trepidation nnd doubt, or held to its place and proper course by a courage which only despera tion can supply. But the pilot, the pilot! Where is our pilot to guide the frail bark and direct the strokes of the weary and untrained oars men? Eye meets eye in the mind dis cussion of the question, pnly to turn to, the other to receive an an swer of silence, or a wistful glance of “why don’t yon suggest some way out of this dilerna?” But it is a long lane that has no turn, and a strange set of soldiers that can long be held under the ban of melancholy, and deprived of its esprit de corps under the se verest circumstances. My diary says: “The silence is now first broken by Clint Duncan, sitting on the right hand end of the log, (now with his head hung down as if in a brown study) who straightening up and clearing his throat with the assumed dignity of a ragamuffin, or as if ready to offer some feasible expedient, says: ‘Well boys, (listen) I have a se vere pain in my stomach.’ As. ap parently so much ielieved at the very fine suggestion he had brought forth, and the cat of his sneaking eyes, it was hard to tell whether he was really suffering, or had some other object in view. “Jim Bice, sitting next to- him, without raising his head to ob serve the countenances Of the oth ers, or failing to see the half smile on the faces of those toward left of log, says: ‘Yes, and I have not only a pain in ' my stomach, but both in my sid'e and back—besides I feel as weak as water all over.’ This second remark, with such in nocent purport brought* forth a snigger, justas Zeke , Ezell, with his face buried between his hands, began to say: ‘Well Clint and Jim, I am worse off than’—who at this moment looking iip and to his left caught the other four laughing outright iu his face. About this time Clint nnd-Jim canghl on and remarked: ‘We are not fishing for sympathy, and can’t really see.anv fun In you fellows making a set of asses of yourselves in trying to ridicule us.’ ‘Zeke was too mnch dejected to make a rejoinder, and again plac ing his elbows upon his knees and his head between his hands, fully represented in appearance, a hack ed old rooster, whose wings half raised, with feathers up, seemed to say iu so many words: ‘I have enough and am in no frame of mind to jest over do serious a mat ter.’ ‘Glint, however, had lost neither plack nor combativeness, or stimu lated by the fun pokad at the three, now broke the 'silence again with indeed a suggestion that canght the ear and attention of the entire log from right to left, follows: This is a matter of self preser vation, a matter of starvation per haps for the whole, while seven may work out their own destiny alone, and I therefore move that we leave the battalion and take our chances.’ “Zeke now pricks np his ears and tha other five seconded the motion almost in one voice. Every man seemed to have been discussing the same thing in his own mind, bnt perhaps pre ferred one of the end men to make the suggestion-.- “But Jim Bice, or some one else now says': ‘But the commander of the battalion will put us under ar rest if we attempt to leave the bat talion.’ But says another: ‘The forest is very thick, and just but yonder, (pointing to the front) the laurel undergrowth is so dense that we can’t be seen if once be yond that clump, and I therefore move that wo break up from the old Jog one by one and carelessly saunter around, and finally into the clump of bushes designated.’ “This motion is again carried without a dissenting voice, and Zeke suddenly seems to become himself again—ready to fight or rnn as the case may. Now one, and then another be gins to saunter about and around this way and the other, and finally out of sight without attracting at tention from the battalion, till the old log holds not a single soldier, or is left' as a crumbling land mark to the first earnest, but whis pering harrangue between the sev en of scouts and rear guardsmen. The plan and its execution now fully consummated, we find the point agreed npon aud designated from the old log almost as dark as night and drear as death itself,.or dell that naught else bat despair as a companion. “Bat the seven soldiers imme diately huddle together, or squat around in a circle for a solemn conclave or last council of war; to agree under oath of honor and manhood to move only in concert of action, or concurrent in all things, live or die as one man. Each hand is raised above the - head as the oath is registered that we will fight three times our number, or less, hand to hand or otherwise, bnt to the -greater number will use the Fabian policy to the best accout, or indeed, in the last extremity show them the bottoms of our feet —withdraw in regular, but rapid order. “This oath is backed by a mus ket and some thirty rounds of car tridges, a six-shooter and an im mense bowie knife to each and ev ery soldier in the council. So far, so good. ‘But now the first and. most im portant question presents itself Where are we, and where is Cheat river? Where or in what direc tion is that natural laud mark that must become our guide and direction out of the enemylg.coun try back to succor aud safety? No one can answer this question ex cept by the bent of his own mind conceived and fixed in confusion and uncertainty,yet the first next to be considered and settled between seven ball-headed and determined soldiers. Each knows as much as the other and ready to swear he was right, though on a mere basis of belief and uncertainty.. In the confusion of battle, wind and rain, at and near the ford—the pusbirfgTietween -of McClellan’s army and onr consequent: retreat and intense watching for the ene my, as we edged up the -mountain; or again in onr meanderings to si i p t h e battalion to reach our pres ent position, all had lost the cor- reel bearing or points of the com pass; and while it was known-that Cheat river lay ; not far away, no one had the remotest correct idea of its direction. except,-as already developed that it lay in seven .dif ferent directions according to the wild conceptions of the seven ' ob stinate soldiers. Each differed with the other and seemed unintention ally to aspire to a leadership that had no following. Each realized and recognized the fact that we were burning daylight which should be utilized for all it was worth—that night, now mid evening, coaid not stay the march, whom to overtake would hold ns still captives in hanger and disappointment in the midst of the fowling wolves and hooting old owls, and with no poultices to apply to Clint and Jim. And yet with all this in view the discnssion with signs of temper, continued to warm ap as the lash fell one upon the other vainly and persistently at tempting to .whip each other into line. Each had a better opinion of his own judgement than that of the other fellow, or was an willing to follow in a direction he had sworn time and again to himself, was wrong, and that led further and farther into the enemy’s coun try and to starvation. All were well agreed that if we coaid again reach Cheat river it would be a safe guide, as npor down, (as the case might be) would lead in the direction of Staunton, some hun dred or two miles away. Bnt how to harmonize, how to find the riv er, was the mooted question. Each soldier seemed as determined that he was right and all the balance wroDg, as the whole were deter mined they would neither starve nor surrender v/hile there was life and strength left to drag through the mountains. But the question of direction, or the want of harmo nious adjustment of honest differ ences, although one subdued speech and argument after another had been made with the most dogged persistence and energy, still stood as it started, confounded and un settled—still to us a ground hog or gopher case. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Georgia’s Educational Interests. Serannah Kero. The “Cracker” Girl. Col. “Arp,” of Georgia, talking to a Kansas City Star interviewer about the “Georgia Cracker,” said: “A gentleman recently told me' of an experience of his trip among mountaineers. My friend was an unusually handsome man, and the daughters took a great liking to him. The girls flew around and got up the best supper the house afforded, which was poor enough at that. After we had seated one of the girls turned to my compan ion and said: “Stranger, will you have your eggs one-eyed or blind?” “It took him some time to think oat what Was meant, but he finally managed to make ont that the girl meant done on one side or turned over: “I’ll take mine blind,’ he answered. “Well, do yon want ’em loose or tight in the middle?” “Again he was confused, but af ter another mental effort he sur mised that the girl meant done through, soft or hard.” Twenty one years ago Jeff Davis wrote to his wife' from Fortress Monroe, ns follows: “It is true that my strength has failed me, and the loss of sleep has created a morbid excitability, but an unseen hand has sustained me, and a peace the world could not give and has not been . able to destroy, will, I trust, uphold me to meet with res ignation whatever may befall me. If one is to^mswer for all, upon me it most naturally and properly falls. If I alona coaid bear nil the suffering of the country, and re lieve it from farther calamity, I trust onr Heavenly Father would give me -strength to be- a willing sacrifice.” The South' is attempt- ing_to raise enough money to erect a monument to the memory of this honored man, and he who wrote such patriotic words as the above fully deserves due. g Gettysburg and Waterloo Compared. Government Control of Railroads. The people of Georgia are tak ing more interest in educational matters than ever before. That they are. doing so is a sure sign that they are advancing in every thing that makes a state great and' prosperous. The commencement season is-over, and the press of the state hasrnoticed very fully the ex ercises at the different colleges and seminaries. And Georgia has rea son to be proud of her higher edu cational institutions. They com pare favorably with those of any other state r both in number and educational advantages. Their graduates are as well equipped for studying, any one of the learned professions or for entering upon the duties of life as those of more pretentions institutions of some of the other states. There is no rea son why the girls and boyB of Geor gia should be sent to northern ed ucational institutions. They can find in their own state schools that offer them all the advantages that can be obtained elsewhere. And the increased interest that being taken in the common schools is very gratifying. At Tif- ton, Berrien county, Thursday, (June 18th)3,000 people who were assembled to witness the laying of the coruer-stone of the Tifton In stitute, listened with profound in terest to Gov. Northen and Super intendent of Education Bradwell point ont the needs of the common school system and the benefits which flow from education. The people cannot hear too much about the importance of education, and they are willing to listen. The. governor and school commissioner can render them no better service than to strengthen the growing de sire for a better system of common schools. This awakening interest in com mon schools is shown in the grad ually increasing appropriations for common school purposes. But the appropriations are not yet any where near as large as they should be. Better school houses and a higher grade of teachers are greats ly needed. Aud it is important that the schools should be kept open nine mouths of the year. To accomplish these reforms money is required, and a great deal of it. The people must be taugnt that they cannot put their money to a better use than that of building up the common school system. They must invite taxation for that pur pose. J£ they give their children a good common school education they will give them something thai will be of more benefit to them than the money they may leave them, because a good education is something that cannot be lost, and is always available in earning a living. —; .And just in proportion as the common schools arerimproved will the state prosper. A good class of immigrants will seek homes where there are churches nnd first-class schools, which are the signs of an advanced civilization, and which are recognized to be such by all. At Gettysburg, writes Theodore j Roosevelt in the Century, there J Monroe Advertiser. Whenever railroads or other sim- were present in action 80,000 to 86,000 Union troops, and of the Confederates abont 65,000. At Waterloo there were 120,000 sol diers of the Allies under Tyelling- ton and Blucher,and 72,000 French under Napoleon - r or there were abont 150,000 combatants at Get tysburg, and about 180,000 at Wa terloo. In each case the weaker army made the attack and was de feated. Lee did not have to face such heavy odds as Napoleon; but; whereas Napoleon’s defeat was a root in which he lost all his gnns and saw his soldiers become a dis organized rabble, Lee drew off his army in good order, his cannon un captured and the morale of his formidable soldiers unshaken. The defeated Confederates lost in kill ed and wonnded 15,530, and in captured 7,467,some of whom were likewise wonnded, or 23,000 in all; the defeated French lost from 25,- 000 to 30,000—probably nearer the latter number. The Confederates thus lost in killed and wonnded at least twenty-five per cent of their force, and yet they preseryed their artillery and their organization; while the French suffered an even heavier proportional loss and were turned into a fleeing mob. At Gettysburg the Northerners lost'17,555 killed and wounded,aud 5,435 missing; in other words they suffered an actually .greater loss than the much larger army of Wellington and Blucher, relative ly; it was half as great again, be ing something like twenty-two per cent in killed and wonnded alone. parative obstinacy of the" fighting. In making any comparison be tween the two battles, it must, of couse, be remembered that one oc cupied but a single day -and the other very nearly three; and it is hard to compare the strain of a long and very bloody, with that caused by a short, and only less bloody, battle. Gettysburg consisted of a series of more or less completely isolated conflicts; but, owing to the loose way in- which the armies marched into action, many of the troops thaUdid the.heaviest fighti'ug were engaged but a portion of the time. The Second and Third Corps were probably not heavily engaged for a very much longer period than than the British regiments at Wa terloo. Both were soldiers’-, rather than generals’- battles. Both were waged with extraordinary courage and obstinacy, and at a fearful cost of life. Waterloo was settled by a single desperate and exhausting straggle; Gettysbarg took longer, was less decisive, and was relative ly much more bloody. According to Wellington, the chief feature of Waterloo was the “hard ponnd- ing;”and at Gettysbarg,the pound ing—or, as Grant termed it, the ‘hammering,”—was even harder. ilar corporations are operated in such manner as to oppress people antt-cripple them in the returns of their labor, then it is right for the government; to step in and, if pos sible, by equitable and just means, protect the people against such op pression where real oppression ex ists. Bnt the view, that the gov ernment should, in the event of certain contingencies, take abso lute control, and, if yoti please, possession of all railroads and sim ilar corporations,and operate them, stiikes us as an extreme one, and taken by the advocates of such measure without counting the cost. There are but two methods by which the government can get pos session of these vast moneyed in terests. One method is—to confis cate them, the other to buy them. Of course there can be found no advocates for confiscation. And to bay them would cost somebody ’something. This fact was very strongly brougkfomt by Senator Carlisle a few days ago, when interviewed by- a delegation of third party men, while discussing this very point. When Mr. Carlisle suggested that they would have to confiscate or buy the railroads, etc., they readi ly and like honest men repudiated the idea of confiscation. Mr. Car lisle’s reply was: “Then, yon mast bay them; and to buy them yon mast pay for them, and to. pay for them yon mnst tax yourselves. Have yon - any idea how much it would cost? Our government debt at the close This gives some idea of the oom--^f-the .war was more than $2,000,- 000,000, and we have been almost thirty years in paying half, of it. The railroads, telegraphs, tele phone lines and steamboats ip the country represent abont $14,000,- 000,000 invested capital. Four thousand million is bonded indebt edness, which must be paid. Are you ready to tax yourselves to raise”" this money? Then, after you have got the property are you ready to tax yourselves to operate it,for the .government never yet succeeded in doing business at a profit? Con sider another effect. Such a plan would add, perhaps, 1,000,000 men -ind women to the roll of govern ment employes. How would you ever succeed in turning out of pow er ah administration with such re sources at its command? The more corrupt it was the more difficult it would be to displace it.” The advocates of government ownership of railroads, transporta tion lines, &c., will do well to con sider, and consider well, these sug gestions of Senator Carlisle, who is an authority on matters of gov ernment. This is a great big sub ject that requires grasp of intellect to compass, and patient and care ful study and thought to handle - wisely. The Never Failing Remedy. One of the African envoys of King Gungunhama, in London the Where they are,comfortable home*-° the r 0$ w f 8 nearly frightened to death by a phonograph. He talk- and a thrifty and prosperous peo ple are sure to be found. It i3 certain that the 3,000 peo ple who assembled at Tifton are ed into the instrument, and when it repeated his words to him he fell on the floor in a swoon. It more deeply impressed with the - wa9 sometime before he gained necessity for better common schools than they ever were before, and that in future their influent^ will be in favor of larger common sahool' appropriations. The British Mnseum lias just come iDto possession of an almost complete collection of the horns of the animals, if India and Central Asia, Mr. A. O. Hume having pre sented to it his accumulations of many years. There are nearly three hundred specimens, and one species only—the littld four-horned antelope—is unrepresented. courage to ask questions, as be thought a witch doctor was in the phonograph. He proposed to si lence the witch by staffing a dried frog’s leg into the instrnment, along with some other charms he had with him. h Having been dis suaded from this, and the matter explained,he said it was no use for him' to tell lies, all his words were recorded. Those who continae-to suffer with contagions blood disease, af ter having gom^through the usual course of treatment, have one con solation. They can fall back on the never-failing specific, S. S. S. Sometimes they suffer from the disease itself, and sometimes from the effects of the treatment itself, especially -if mercury and other •' poisons have been employed. In either case they can find an infal lible remedy in S. S. S. It would be "better to take advantage of the remedy before undergoing other treatment, as thousands have done and are doing, but it .is not every body s foresight that is as good as his hindsight. Many-of us have two standards; one for ourselves that reaches the clonds, while the one which we give to others trails low in the dust. Guaranteed Cure. .Cold,'cough, coffin is what phil osophers term“a logical sequence.’ One is very liable to follow the other; bnt by curing the cold with a dose of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, the cough will be stopped and the coffin not needed—jn9t at present. The Atlanta Constitution puts it this way: “How can the farmers and the democracy be separated? They have been one party here in the south. Their interests are the same, and so are their principles. The farmers have voiced no prin ciple that is not one of the essen tials of democracy.” * Bnclileu's Arnica. Salve. We authorize our advertised druggists. : to sell you Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Congh and Colds, upon this condi-. tion. If yon are-afflicted- with, a Cough,. Cold or apy. Lang, Throat or Chest trouble, and will •use-this remedy-as directe'3p~giv- mg if a fair trial,, and, ^experience no benefit, yon mayxetntn the bot tle and have ydur money ref unded. We could not make this^ offer did we not know .thatUf; King’s New Discovery could be relied on. It never, disappoints. - Trial- bottles free at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s Drug Store. Large -size 50c. and $L00. Australia lies now 4,750,000 -of people/" 1,500,000'more than the population of the American colo nies when they declared their in dependence, and the same as Ire land at the present time. The Best Salve in the world for Colds, Bruises, Sires,,Ulcers, Salt Rbepm, Fever Sores, Tetter, 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 A well-known New York physi cian advises a mother with young lady daughters to have their trail ing street gowns cleaned in the open air immediately on coming in from the streets. .“Yog may not believe it,’ lie adds, .“but in -the filth, dust and dirt collected on the hosiery, shoes abd underwear ty the trailing skirt, there is germ life enough to destroy your whole / family. I—have nothing -to say against the fashion, bnt-if yon were in my family and addicted to* it, I should compel you to play Tark, and leave-your shoes, stockings and trailing robe3 outside.” ‘ Mr! Jere R. Traylor, traveling salesman for Penn &'Co., says: have been a sufferer from Sick and Nervous Headache all my life, bnt found perfect relief from using Bradycrotine. - It has been calculated that a bee must sack-218,750 flowers for eve ry ounce of honey gathered. The difference between a man’s sphere and a woman’s is that the woman does the most work and the man gets the most salary. Neuralgic Persons And those troubled with nervousness resulting And those troubled with nervousness resulting Sum career overwork win be relieved by taking Broom’s Iron Bitters. Genuine has trade mart and crossed red lines on wrapper. l ont, r it wy-neral debility.’^Try^ i: it.ms’s mox jiJTTjeits. oroyotnrod^reago^petBe. Sold brail c Subscribe for the Hohe Journal Subscribe for the Home Journal ' Teeth axe pulled by electricil N'jLZ 2