Newspaper Page Text
C. V. Han vine, in New Tork Press.
Jos. N. NEEL, of Eads, Neel & Co., John W. BE1D,
Jno. C. EADS, fc “ “ “ Walteb F, .HOUSER.
The most popular Shoe Store in Macon. Why? Because we have the Stock, the
prettiest store, the most goods, the Lowest Prices.
DON’T FAIL TO SEE US ON SHOES, “©a
557 CHJERRY STREET,
Best and Cheapest,
FOR CASH OR ON INSTALLMENT
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
(/omplete Undertaking Department.
gkeoielg-ie ifalTTL,
PERRY,
Pure
GEORGIA,
1 desire to call attention to the fact that I have in store, next to the
Bank
A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF
FANCY AND FAMILY GROCERIES,
Fruits and Confectioneries,
•Tobacco, Cigars, etc.
Fish Every Saturday.
My Stock is FRESH aud PURE, and prices very LOW. Patronage solicited.
Agent for the SINSEB SEWING MACHINE. Full line of Fixtures and Oil on hand.
J. M. NELSON, Perry. G-a.
Choice New Goods!
I have just received a nice lot of early Spring Goods consisting of
'I uiiiuiim"**! vviiiiu vbvmWi
And other DRESS GOODS, which the ladies aro invited to examine.
AND A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF GROCERIES*
Pricts LOW, and Goods FIRST-CLASS. “©8
PERKY, Ga.
Uto W*> ■'?/!
Cnx-x-oll stiteet,
IRON WORKS,
a .©» e> 1 ^
Everything sold at. spot Cash Prices. Noj
if Discounts to Middle Men
EVERYTHING III MACHINERY MADE | GEORGIA WABKMEN
8@“ Ask for. what you want. The price will be low; the work
strictly first-class.
E. CROCKETT, Proprietor.
for Infants and Children*
M f?»ttflTt^lfif ft **Yl adapted to childreo tli at
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Asuhu, JL D.,
1U So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T.
-The use of‘CMtotU’is sonnlraraal awl
" B YnS&- i waa&i
Castorla cores Colic, Constipation,
Soar Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, ^
vTna Worms, gives sleep, and promotes at-
s Far several years I have recommended
your 1 Castoria. ’ and shall always continue to
do so as it haiinvariahly produced beneacUl
results."
Edtvih F. Pxsnxa. M. D.,
“ The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Are.,
New York City.
s Cams Cojcpaxv, 17 Shnuttx Sxaxar, Sif Toss.
EADS, .NEEL & CQ„
ONE 11
. the only
-02? ivr /lcomt.
We want your trade. Will make 8 to yotwinteres*. Come to see us. Mr, WAL
TER F. HOUSER will do the rest
Children Cryfo
. • •-
If yon cannot look in my eyes and say,
“My trust is perfect and full and free,”
£ or the sake of a day that would work ns
woe, *
I pray y on pity and tell me so.
When yon look into my eyes and kiss
my face,
And hold me close te your throbbing
heart.
Is there ever in it a hint or place
That tells you we could in the future part?
Does a doubt, as faint as an unknown
breath,
Suggest a parting that was. not death?
Dear love, search so deep in your heart,
I pray,
That its innermost corner shall come to
light,
Then look me straight in the eyes and say
The truth, as the truth seems just and
right.
If your love can change—ah, love does, I
know—
I pray yon pity andf tell me so.
RETREAT FROM LAUREL BILL.
Horniky the Guide. ‘fTrue. Blue but
will Lie About Huntin’.” “Many
a Sight to Monterey.”
, i. .1 - / T. .* i i j i\ ».
Transcribed from a Soldier's Diary for the
HOME JOURNAL.
jdly 14th 186L
“Bad,” says the old man, “run
over to Horniky’s and tell him to
come np here—some men here that
wants to hire him to go a huntin’, I
reckon. I send him that word be
cause he is sich a great hunter, the
Nimrod of old Virginy.”
Is he reliable—that is truthful
aud faithful to a trust,” says Clint.
Oh, yes, he is true blue about
everything but huntin’—he will lie
about that, or at least you’ll think
so wheu you bear him tell all his
cock and bull stories about how
many deers and bars he kilt, and
how he liked to lost his life several
times with a bar that got. holt of
him. He is a great feller to sing
all sorts of songs, and can tell
more tales than yon ever heard.
He’s a right good fiddler, too, but
he lost his fiddle sometime ago
scrambling in the mountains try
ing to catch a deer he had shot and
wounded. He always in gineral
took it along and this time he lost
it, but he can make a corn stalk
fiddle in a few minutes that makes
right good music with him holt of
it. You jist ought to hear him.
Come in Horniky,that’s him now,”
says the old man, “how do yon does
today?”
‘Tin all hot," suys Horniky—
only a little tired. I’s been hunt-;
iu’ and kilt a-fine buck this moru-
jist got bim skint and put up
as Bud come for me.”
“Let me make you acquaints*
with these men. I don’t know noni
of their names, buo tbey’s all sol-;
diers from one of them gentleman’s
army that had the fight the other
day."
‘How do you do, Mr, Horniky,"
says the seven soldiers in one voice,
“We are, glad to make, your ac
quaintance, and feel it ah honor to
meet the greatest man, as-wo have
been told, in -all the mountains of
‘old. Virginy.’ We would JtkKJto
hire you to pilot us through the
mountains the., nearest and most
unfrequented route from liere-to
Monterey, or perhaps to Staunton,
Va. We are on a special mission
from - Head Quarters to one of those
places and most get through by a
certain .time and wish to take all
.the near. cuts and over a way
where we won’t be seen often. We
are willing to pny you a liberal
price for your services, as we feel
sure no one could do us such valu
able and reliable service as your r
self. Do yon know all the by?
paths dowu Cheat, across the Val
ley, over Alleghauey and through
the other Valley between that and
the Blue Ridge? How far would
yon call it to Moutery and then
again to Staunton?”
'I know the mountains,"suys
Horniky, “almost as well as if I
had made'em mysplf, qn4 it is
many.a sight from here to Monte
rey. It is still further to Staun
ton, yon know. Monterey is be
tween the Alleghaney and Bine
Ridge in the Valley ; Staunton is
beyond /the Blub Ridge,, and a
mighty party place. I’ve been tbar
selling deers and bais in; times
past, but not right lately, and
wouldn’t mind goin’ agin._ The
last time J WW J fW ni°re
party-gals than Gartep pad oats
They’s got wbafc I b’lieve they cal!
a femipe .college tbar. Bat them
gals won’t take no stock in a feller,
like me. They’s stuck up and calls
aj) feljerg ljjfp_®e } or from way up
j'p ‘ke pjoBpisin.e/
iers, or some sich nap»e. Qnp of
’em axed me to my
‘Master, are yop what is called a
mountain. hobsier?’ and I heard
anqther one say standing off a littl
piece, he looks like an old coon, or
a monkey sorter dresshd up. ; I
didn’t like.no sich chat, and wept
off and set down on the sidewalk,
bat I jist couldn’t help looking at
’em, for some of ’em was mighty
party—pnrty as some of our motto 1
tain gals almost You fellers looks
like you might sta*nd your hands
with ’em if yon could git on sbme
clean clothes and comb your beads
right nice. Soldiers takes with the
gals seems like better than other
folks. They are more frisky,
reckon, and they don’t seem to care
much what they say, sassy like-
most of thq gals likes that if yqn
ain’t too open about it. Our moun
tain gals do 1 know. I always did
think a nice ; ,gal was the next
parties! thing to a bar and a deer.
But I didn’-texpect to talk-; so long
without giving yon a chance to put
iua.word.” .
“Oh, that’s all right, says all
conV^Sltohll^ Sh;B?dTike
to hear about the girls anywhere
aud everywhere on eartli; in and
out of war, first, last and always.
The world would be a blank
out thhin.” '
‘Now you are talkin’,” says
Hornicky, “and even in the moun
tains they is nice and looks as
sweat as sunflowers. Them’s the
purtipst flo vers I ever seed"-
“But you didn’t tell us hoiv far
it is to Monterey,” says Glint.
Well to the best of my uuder-
standin’ it is about two hundred
sights to Montery and about eighty
more to Staunton,” says Hotuiky.
You seem to compute distance
differently from what we are ac
customed to. \Ye speak of it in
miles, while you seem to use the
word or term llight. What is a
“Wehj I’ll "dedlarej wb<
yoq fellers raised that you.: don’t
know how much a sight is?. Any
body ought to know what that is
seems to me, The children, kno.ws
what it is here. A sight is what
you can see before yon with riotb-
the way. I will say from
here to the top of that spur ant
yander,” now-pointing.out through
the door. “You see how fur it is
and now you can see how fur onr
sight is, and maybe you ean - get at
it that way.”
“Yesjj? says Clint, “now I think
I understand you very. well. A
sight with you according to your
computation of distance, amounts
to about a half-mile with us. So
Iiundrei
one hundred and forty, miles, more
or less.”
‘Well, that’s it to the best of my
knowledge and belief," says Horn-,
iky. “I’ve been all over it until I
know it like a book, as the feller
says, though I don’t know very
much|about boobs, more than what
I’ve been, told.”
“Can’t you read and write ?’’
says Clint "
“No, I can’t write, and X don’t
reckon I can read like yon fellows.
But 1 can read as fast as you can
ready found out yon don’t know
very much. Where wob -yon
raised Mister ?’■’ says\ Horpiky to
“in the states,” spys Qlint,
“X golly ! I thought so."
Clint endeavors to. throw off by a
hearty langh at this juncture,but the'
continued and extreme enjoyment
of the other boys forces him into a
dry grin, especially as Horniky
now points at him, tickled todeatl),
as much as to say; (! I)idn’t I git
him ? Migtor, yon ipRSfl’t mind
my jokes, I've ftH'ers; been r Rsip
to it, and have a big tiine every
time I get with any of the boys,"
says Horniky.
“Go for him,” says Zeke, again
forgetting his resolve.
“Yes,” says Clint to Zeke, “we’ll
mark: c
. Horniky had already developed
into a rare character, wholly igno
rant in a general sense; but sharp
and witty in his way, and with thaf^f . heI . d tbis ar8 . in J owa 88(1
audacity: of ; a pine rooter at home
in .the woods, with .or. without food.
in, his maimer and conversation
that was beth interesting and
<frawingi;so to speak. It could be
seem at'once that every fellow en
joyed the idea of having Horniky
go along with us, and that there
was much fan in store to lighten
Je buMens- lying aft * along our
ktfi^^for yet more than a hun-
dred miles t^rongh the rugged and
precipitous mountains—or that is
to say, over the Tonte we felt it
prudent’ to’ folio#’ till at least
nearer bur next base of operations.
It would be'liard to describe hi to,
bht h^was one of those rare spec
imens of the human family—half
Ohio in the'West; in New York, - of ten, because my heart is pure. 3
TV T 1 • '
™ ^ ,, : Dr - Larduer, writing of the
My strength is as the. strength st eam engine, said: “
on IvQnnnoo run naorf id rvm*a i • # «
Pennsylvania and Massachusetts
in the East.
Of these the Iowa election is
undoubtedly the most important,
as it will test the strength of the
Western movement which resulted
ip subh overwhelming Republican
reverses last yean If Iowa re
mains Democratic, the presump
tion will be inevitable that the
West means to maintain its inde
pendent attitude and to force a new
era in politics in which the West
ern States, will hold a balance of
power-and dictate policies to both
parties. If, on the other hand,
Iowa goes back, to the'republican
party; the conclusion will be equal
ly inevitable that the Northeast
will dictate in the campaign of
1892, and that the Western States
are not yet ready to assert their
claim to leadership. There is
hog, half bear, and perhaps half every prospect at present that
other .already, and pan giye and
take; but yon better lie Jaw.”
“Let him work ont his own des
tiny,” says Jim.
“Well, Horniky,” says Clint,
“how much will yon charge us to
toke ns ttuough the mountains ?'
“Qb, I won’t want mnch for it.
me just
ajplt af
., IftokHM ganlleiqen,
y, sorter ragged aud
winking at Zeke with the last re- Perry, Ga.
—
goat in Pis general appearance.
His patched pants struck him
about half a foot, above his ankles,
barefooted with feet apparently as
rough mid hard as an elephant’s
snont, no coat oh and wearing a
patched home-made blue shirt,
hnir long and iinkept, face partial
ly coverfed with a straggling beard,
indicating that there was at least
enough man iu him to do and dare
the mountains. His complexion
was swarthy or dark-iike, possess
ing an eye at first indicating
stealth, but upon closer scrutiny a
manly openness that could not bg
mistaken for other than character
and trust in the man.
Others of the party may not
have seen the man as I had read
him, but I felt lucky that we had
(it seemed accidentally) stumbled
upon Horniky—especially in our
dire extremity to find our way back
through the dehse and wild moun
tains so many miles ahead of us.
“But we are burning daylight,”
says Clint, “and must not tarry
longer with our goo* 1 and clever
friends wGo have furnished us
such a bountiful and nice dinner,
ahd whom we hope by now to have
convinced that we are not too crazy
to enjoy something that is good.”
“Ha, ha,” laughs the old man,
and “ke, ke,” the old lady and ail
the gals ; we’ve enjoyed seein’ you
eat as much as you have to do it,
'and wish you could stay the bal
ance of the day and all night with
ns. People can be so badly
fooled,” says the old lady. “Now,
just think how badly we was
hkeered at first and now ain’t
skeered a bit”
• “Yek, madam,” says Zeke, “we
have met with snob occasions be
fore, but have learned how to even
up the rough places or get around
the corners back into the straight
road very well—begin to feel now
like we are equal to any emer
gency, especially by using a little
ingenuity or policy.”
“How nmol) is our bill ?” asks
Clint.
“Not one: cent,” says the old
man. “We wouldn’t think of charg
ing you .anything'tor dinner, and
you are jist as welcome as you kin
be.” ■
“We are a thousand times
obliged for yotir kindness, and
hope G94 win' always Tjies§ yon
with health amLa plenty of every
thing good to eatj^ says'-Zeke^I-ap-
parently determined to leave the
last impressipn .that he is the “cap
tain” of the sqnad.)
Clint winks at Jim, as much as
to say; “We’ll sock him when we
get well Into the mountains aud
after he has forgotten himself ’
“Boys,” says Zeke in the next
breath, ahd as if fearing Cliufc
wonld destroy ;fhai impression, “we
certainly must . move on at once.
Mr. Horniky, how long will it take
you to get ready to go with us ?”
“t’ffl rea^y now,” gftys 5firqfky.
IfMy fi^e is oqt there fly's tree arid
fljy an)njeynition is lying down by
jt,’i 1 ■
"Bril WPri't yoriihave to go and
gat your shoes?" asks Zake,
“Shoesl” says Horniky. “I’ve
got ’em on. I haveReen wearing
this pair a little over thirty years,
arid the more I wear ’em the better
they giL, They’s,made oaten man-
i-gator skin—the best in the world,
ongO|O ft gjfp ft ^!t ffi; 55
He Upw jqojis at-Zeke's toe and
winks at Clint, who enjoys the hit
in one of hi9 whickering la
(TO BE CONTINUED. )
:
are 1 “ “ -
■ ! Renewer. It will stop it at once.
ty, now gold by L. A. Felder, Druggist,
t Incf va. Dqiti? n rv
IINDISTB*
Governor Boies will be elected,
and that Iowa will thus reaffirm
the independence.of the West.
The result in Ohio will be less
significant, as Ohio is a border
State, belonging to the East rather
than to the West, but not iu a po
sition > to express either Eastern or
Western sentiment.
The Western reform movement
of 1890 was felt in all the Atlantic
States except Maine and Vermont,
and the present indications are
that there will be no reaction from
iu. The Democrats are in a posi
tion to carry New York against
Fassett as the Cnstom House can
didate of Harrison and Platt. In
Pennsylvania they. are . attacking
Wanamaker, Quay aud the Phila
delphia National Bank and Treas
ury ring with every prospect of
success, and in Massachusetts they
have been re-enforced by the most
active and progressive element of
the population of the State.
East or West, Democratic pros-
pects were never better than they
are now. All that Democrats have
to do to win this year and next is-
to push Republicanism at every
point, as they did in 1890.
Onions for Chills, Colds, Etc:
One day I was taken with chills
and headache, says a writer. My
quinine box was empty, and I was
looking forward to a restless night.
Iu desperation I peeled a raw on
ion and slowly ate it, then went to
bed with warm feet and ari extra
quilt, I was asleep iu five min
utes, and awakened iu the morn
ing quite well. Our homely but
strong friend will be appreciated
in time as a medicine, and if agri
culturalists would turn their atten
tion to raising model onions with
the strong scent taken out that
taints the breath so unpleasantly,
families would be putting snob
pills in the cellar by the barrel,
and the doctors wonld take to on
ion farming. The onion acts as a
oathartic and diuretic, and may
help to break up a cold or lessen
the bad symptoms. A doctor says:
“I always store a barrel of onionB
in my cellar in the fall. We have
them cooked twice a week, and
whoever of the family is threaten
ed with a cold eats some onions
raw. If this vegetable were gen
erally eaten raw there wonld be no
diphtheria, gout, rheumatism, kid
ney or Btomach troubles. I know
the young men and women are
afraid to eat them. One young
man went so far as to say to me:
‘If my wife ale onions I would get
a divorce the saqje day.’"
Happy Hoosiers*
Wm- 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
kidney trouble.” John Leslie,
farmer and stockqiaii, qtthp same
pla^e, says; “-Find Electric Bit
ters to, fee the best kidney and liv-
er medicine; made me feel like a
new man,"- J, W, Gardner, hard-
ware merchant, same town, says;
“Electric Ritters is just the thing
for it man that is all run down, and
don't oare whether he lives or dies;
he found new strength, good appe
tite, and felt just like he had a
new lease on life. Only 50 cents
bottle, at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s.
Imitations are always adnlteya-
liohp. ^ei every one he himself-
but his best self, not his worst self.
There are two selves in every self.
Bring out into prominence the an
gel arid subordinate the animal,
” My. ino, Flannery, Savannah,
Ga., says: I obtain relief from
Headache by using Bradycrotine,
in a shorter time than from any
other remedy.
Of all the noble, or tender inci
dents that thrilled our heaVts While
we watched over the flickering life
of onr soldier hero, General Grant,
none pleased me better than those
which denoted his parity. It is
said of him that he did not swear,
did not tell or listen to vulgar sto
ries, and did not hesitate to say to
the man who began a narration
with the remark that it wonld not
do to tell in the presence of ladies,
that then it would not do to tell in
the presence of gentlemen. If
were General Grant's mother.
would feel pronder of this record
of parity than of his world-wide
fame as a commander of armies;
believe Jus valor came largely
from his purity, and I wish every
boy in the world would make him
m this respect an example. But
General Grant wonld not have
been a pure minded man had he
not been a pure-minded boy.
You know that all boys are not
pure in thonght, or word.. Some
times when among themselves they
talk in a way that they fancy is
manly, .but they would not want
their mothers to hear them,
once stood in a wondrons room in
the new palace of the Emperor
William near Potsdam. The walls
were covered with shells laid in
beautiful patterns, and" sparkling
here and thre were large and
splendid precious stones, ame
thysts, rubies, garuers, and they
gleamed and scintillated dazzingly
in the sunlight. Would you not
think the Emperor very foolish if
he were deliberately to mar and
deface those walls, and tarnish the
gems? Yet he would not be as
foolish as the boy who defiles and
defaces the jewels oj purity in his
heart. Evil thoughts and words
make an indellible impress.
ate its present effects would be to
count almost ev
every luxury ofl!* J T
creased the sum of
ness, not -only by caning new
pleasures into existence, but by so
cheapening former, enjoyments .as
to render them attainable by those
who before could never have hoped
to share them- The.snrface of the
land and the face of the waters are
traveled with equal facility by its
power; and by the
t.-• * - - ’Ircons^pf
merce of people with people, it has
knit together remote countries by
bonds of amity not likely to be
broken.
“Streains of knowledge and in
formation are kept flowing between
distant centers of population, those
more advanced diffusing civiliza
tion among those that are more
backward. Tfee:- .
which mankind owes, in sp ]
ment iri mordern times, has had
its power and influence increased
m a manifold ratio by its union
with the steam engine.. It is thus
that literature is cheapened; and
by being cheapened, diffused; it is
thus that reason has taken the
place of force, and the pen has su
perseded the sword; it is thus that
war has almost ceased upon the
earth, and that the: differences
which inevitably arise between
people are for. the most part ad
justed by peaceful negotiations.”
Building an Electric Carriage.
A uovelty amoug vehicles in tbis
country^ an electric carriage, is
now being constructed at the fac
tory of M. W. Quinlan, in Brook
line, Mass., from plausdrawn from
a photograph of a similar carriage
present use in Loudon. The
battery contains thirty-two cells,
and is placed iu the rear end of the
body of the carriage. The motor,
which is of foreign manufacture,
rests between the hind springs,
where it is attached to the body by
two binge clasps in such a manner
as to allow it to swing when the
motiori of the carnage is irregular,
although this swing is regu^ted
by a connecting rod. The driving
shafts of ihe motor extend on ei
ther side beyond the springs, and
are fitted with cog-wheel attach
ments which connect by an endless
chain with large cog-wheels on the
inner side of the real- wheels. The
steering apparatus is on the left
side of the carriage platform. In
case of accident to the motor,
shafts can be fitted to the carriage,
and horses attached. When com
pleted, the whole carriage will
weigh about 2,500 pounds. All the
electric work is done by the Holtz-
er-Cabot Company.—New York
Tribune.
We want every mother to know
that oroup can be prevented. True
croup never appears without warn
ing. The first symptom is hoarse
ness; then the child appears to
have taken cold, or a cold may have
accompanied the hoarseness from
the start After that a peculiar
rough cough is developed, which
is followed by the croup. The
time to act is when the child first
becomes hoarse; a few doses of
Chamberlain’s Congh Remedy will
prevent the attack. ' Even after a
rough congh has appeared, the
disease may be prevented by using
tb.is remedy, as directed. For sale
by Holtzcluw & Gilbert. _
IT WO]
•NDERS.
Says Richard D. Blackmore, the
English novelist: “Anything more
absurd than our novelistic portrait
of the ‘Yankee’ could scarcely be
produced, I know many Ameri
can geutlemen; not one of them
differs from os, except that, as a
rule, they are more intelligent.”
Singular, but an actual fact.
Every one using Begg’s Diarrhoea
Balsam says they never tried a
medicine so wonderfully adapted
to all bowel complaints, as it re
lieves at once and uo had Results
following. Every bottle warrant
ed. Sold bj- L. A. Felder. Drug
gist, Perry, Qn.
A philological statistician calcu
lates that iu the year 2,000 there
will be 1,700,000,oOO people who
speak English, and tbnt other En-
The tonic and alterative qualities
of S. S. S. are now widely known,
and it enjoys wonderful popularitv
as a spring medicine. It mas per
fectly adapted to the delicate, sys-.
torn of a little child as it is to that
of the adult It works wonders on
those who use it as a- tonic,- as an
alterative and as a blood purifier.-
It gives health, strength and
heartiness to the sick and the foe-
ble. It is adapted to the. very
young and the veiy old. It re-
vives, renews and builds up ?he
feeble or the broken-down system*
A report has been made by the
designated committee upon the
question of providing suitable ac
commodations for yonng men,
clerks and others, living in Lon
don on moderate incomes. It pro
poses to erect a series of. dwellings
like the Peabody dwellings, prop
erly situated with an eye to busi
ness, to accommodate 450 tenant?,
each to have a sitting room with
bed alcove, for from $2.50 to $4.50
There will be common
reception and dinjhg rooms, libra
ry, reading, writing, lecture, smok
ing, billiard and recreation rooms,
Mr. C. B. Jones, of Spring Hill,
Iowa, says: “I have used. Chimb
berlain’s Pain Balm for severe and
painful burns with better effect
than anything-else I have aver
tried. It relieves^— ’ '
ly, and cures
scar.” Pain B
most nsefnl me
family can be proyi
daily for rheumatism, lame 1 „
sprains, braises, tooth ache, ear
ache ami like ailments. One ap-
bottles for sale by Holtzclaw k
Gilbert
——
A census bulletin shows that
there were 73,045 paupers iu this
country* in 1890. The poor who
receive outdoor relief will bring
the number up to 100,000. That
is not
Boston Transcript in 1
of over 60,000,000, and is a mere
flearbite in comparison
pauperism of
——
If paint has bee scattered on
window panes, wet the spots with
water and rob thoroughly witti .a
new silver dollar, or they may be
washed with hot, sharp vinegar.
neuralgia,
4 and sciatic.
Has Cured _
| pm will cure you.
ropenn languages will be spoken ■ '
by only 500,000,000 pe.^)e, ^Subscribe for th*
, 1
le sure to fellow
use of tMe
medicine.
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• •