Newspaper Page Text
_
jail.* U. HODfxl-S. 3?i*opi-ietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
PRICE: XWO DOLLARS Al Year.
VOL. XXI.
PEKEY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1891.
NO. 43.
THE NEEL SHOE CO.
DIHECTORS:—
,Tos. N. NEEL, of Eads, Neel & Co.,
,Tno. C.EADS, “ “ “
John W. RE1IV
Waiter 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. ~m.
IBB RSSfe 9ft%»
557 CHERRY STREET,
Wmm% ® ' • !««#%.
SHIP YOUR COTTON TO
W. B. & 0. G. SPAM
MACON, GEORGIA.
On through bills of lading to Savannah, Ga., care of Union Com]: ress, Macon,
Ga., we can save to shippers from all points on the Georgia Southern and Florida
Railroad and Macon and Birmingham Railroad, from 60 per cent, to 80 per
cent, of freight rates. The only Firm in Macon that offers a Eebate from these Points.
Freight agents in tho territory named will give rates and shipping directions.
Douglas Sladen, fu Lippincott’s.
If life were one dance in a torch-lit hall,
If life were sweet music and that were all,
It would be as gay as a summer day.
But music ceases and lights die out,
And what of the darkness of night without?.
If life were but lover and lady gay,
No armor-to wear and no riding away.
It would be as bright as a wedding night.
Bnt Morning'bugles and Honor calls,
And, oh! the silence of widowed halls!
One rare brief moment they fight no more.
The sailor is home from the distant shore.
Awjpy so long! and rest bnt a song
Begun by a bride on the dead man’s vera,
And lost in the tempest or shock of spears.
RETREAT FROM LAUREL HILL.
Over the Rocks and Through the
Thicket. Zeke and Hornlky,
Alias Damon and Pythias.
As Thick as Thieves Al
ready.
Transcribed from a Soldier's Diary for the
HOME JOUBNAIS.
Furniture,
Boat and Cheapest,
FOR CASH mm INSTALLMENT.
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chans, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GEORGE IP-A-TXIj,
PERRY, - - GEORGIA,
Pure Groceries!
I 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 and PURE, and prices very LOW. Patronage solicited.
Agent tor the SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Full line of Fixtures and Oil on hand.
J. M. NELSON, Perry, Ga.
CROCKETT’S IRON WORKS,
■i||j| a*® tfisglte
Everything sold at spot Cash Prices
No
Discounts to Middle Men
Ask for. what you want. The price will|be low; the work
strictly first-class.
E. CROCKETT, Proprietor.
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
“Castorlais so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as snperiorto any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, H. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
“The use of ‘Castoria.* is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of suuereroeation to endorse it Few are the
intelhgtmt^amiUes who ' ‘
i Martyr,!
New York City.
s who do cct keep Castoria
CARLOS MaRTOLD-P-
New York C.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Beformed Church.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
wing Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di-
Witlout injurious
medication.
“ For several years I have recommended
your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so as it has invariably produce! beneficial
results.”
Edwin F. Pardee. H. D.,
“ The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave,
New York City.
Thb Centaur Cohpant, 77 Murray Street, New York.
NEEL & C0„
THE ONLY
ONE - PRICE - CIOTHIERS
1 m
-OF 3VT-A-C03Sr,-
We want yonr trade. Will mako it to youc interest. Come to see na. Mr. WAL
TER F. HOUSER will do the rest,
SAM, n &
552 & 554 CHEREY STREET,
&
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
jdly 14th 1861.
“By gosh, I’ll do it,” says Zeke;
and at once suiting his actions to
his words, quickly hobbles past
some of the other boys to Horniky’s
side, who, still looking back and half
halting, receives him in a chuckle.
Horniky’s sympathies evidently
had suddenly become aroused in
behalf of one whom he no doubt
mused to himself was the under
dog in the fight. He had seen
enough to convince him that all, to
a certain extent, for some cause or
other, were against Zeke in what,
he now considered to be an unkind
and unequal tease. Without know
ing the whys and wherefores, | he
had acted on the impulse of the
moment, as if in fun with all the
others, when first inviting him by
his side, bnt now ostensibly on the
spur of the moment, with the in
tention and purpose to aid him the
best he could in a quiet or sort of
secret way. His timorous manner,
or the ruse to get him by his side
indicated that he half-way feared
he could not openly defend or aid
him, not knowing the animus by
which we were actuated, or that we
were really as good friends to Zeke
as to each other—that it was only
a esmbined tease to recover lost
ground, get even with him, or deal
him one better.
Zeke and Horniky now exchange
smiles with each other as the one
skips along as nimbly as a cat, and
the other in a conpee style that in
dicated he was either trying to put
on airs, or to become the equal of
Horniky’s without the ability to do
so. On and on, over the rocks and
through the- laurel thicket, each
chats away in a whispering-like
voice that could not be distinctly,
or only partially heard by the next
closest man to the pair. Now Zeke
looks back, and nodding his head
to those strung along in the rear,
seems to say:
□“Now, I’ye got one friend in this
crowd that will help me pull
through. You fellows think you
are very smart, but it is an old ad
age, ‘faint heart never won fair
lady,’ and now with the help of
Horniky, who has promised to
stand by me through thick and
thin, I will spit in my hands and
try you again.”
Still down, down, sometimes
very precipitous, and then again of
gentler declivity, our course is run
to beat night to the foot of the
mountain.
Again says Zeke to Horniky, in
an undertone, but overheard by the
next of file:“Those fellows seem to
have a morbid taste to worry and
annoy me, bnt for what real or just
cause I am unable to account,unless
because they have taken up the ri
diculous idea that I greatly desire
to command or rule them. Their
position is a very silly and unjust
one, yet I have held my hand with
them very well, and even got the
best of that bander-shank Clint
and red-nose Jim.
“Indeed, until we reached the
house back on the_mountain, those
other fellows were moderately
kind to me and would help me ont
when they het me too hot, or seem
ed likely to entirely Iiack me, bnt
unfortunately, on the spur of the
moment, in sparring with them to
ward off their attacks, I' included
my quasi friends, and now they
are all tooth and toe nail against
me. One or two of them are in
clined to sympathize with me yet,
bnt the influence over them by the
majority, or their dread of especi
ally that knocked-kneed Clint and
red-head Jim, and that other flop
eyed rascal, who has never said
much bet continually urged them
on, they will not take an open, bold
stand with me anymore.
“Alt now seem to conspire and
plot against or try to destroy my
happiness in every conceivable
way. I tell you this Horniky, that
yornnay understand what a load I
have to carry, and that if they can
get you away from me, they will
again run me, perhaps from now
’till night.”
“Yes pardner,” says Horniky,
“I’s seen how they all pitch into
yon on every concassion, and I’s
gwine to help yon ont. all I kin
without bein’ too open in it. I’s
sorter ’fraid to say or do too much,
kase them other fellers might git
mad with me, bnt I’s for yon from
this on. If they is gwine to
you agin, I’ll say I.s sorter sick
at the stnmmic and rnther not go
so fast.”
“Well,” says Zeke, “I hadn’t
thought of that plan, but it is a
good idea; and now yon sta&d to me
and I’ll stick to you like a brother.
They won’t go ahead and leave
yon, because they won’t know
which way to go.”
“Look at Zeke and Horniky,”
says Jim to Clint, “they are as
thick as thieves already and would
make Daymond aud Pythias
ashamed of themselves if they
could only look down and see
them, or would be convinced that
history repeats itself—that the
world has at last produced their
counterparts.”^
“Well,” says Clint, “if Damon
and Pythias were as hard looking
nuts as Zeke and Horniky, they
would look in some other direc
tion—wouldn’t care to see their
counterparts.”^
Now Zeke holds fast to Horni
ky’s arm, and encouraged by his
friendship and kind assistance, oc
casionally begins to spat back at
the other boys now and then shoot
ing him in the rear.
“Oh,” says he, “you needn’t wor
ry your minds how next to devil
me. I am well heeled with Horniky
at the helm.” He sings “Vivi a la
mo, Yivi a la mo, here’s to the
flowing bowl without ^anything in
it. Only want to show you the
state of my feelings, if I am a lit
tle shaky in my feet. ‘SiU semper
tyranus.’ ”
Zeke had always seemed to have
a great mania for quoting French
and Latin, and 1 am not sure if I
have read him aright, but it is all
the same, as we generally took it
the reverse of what it was, and the
public can treat it in the same way.
We generally told him it was in
bad taste, or sounded to us like
the pot calling the kettle black.
But he had’grown too old, or was
too hard headed to accept good ad
vice, and as a rule what we couldn’t
reason into him we knocked into
him, leaving him none the wiser
however—incorrigible, and had a
will and a way of his own.
“Horniky,” says Clint, “do you
think we. will reach the foot of the
mountain by night, or how far do
you reckon it is yet?”
“Well mister,” says Horniky,
“the mountain is so thick ’till I’s
sorter befuddled about how many
sights it is, but to the best of my
berlief, we won’t quite git thar by
night, won’t miss it fur though.
The sun is on the home stretch
now, and we’ll have to stop purty
soon after her goes down, for it
will be mighty dark soon after
that.”-
“Let’s hurry up boys,” says
Clint, “and get down if possible
before dark. We want a straight
shoot across the valley to-morrow
and where we will be in sight of
the grand old Alleghaney all day.
You remember what grand scenery
we saw as we marched over it to
Laurel Hill—those spires built by
nature, that shot np so high and
made you fell so small and insig
nificant”
“Yes,” says Jim, “let’s pulldown
for all we are worth to the foot,
bnt I’m thinking about what a
lonely night again in the thicket.
It makes me feel like I have done
something mighty mean, and now
hiding ont”
‘The only thing that worries
me,” says Clint, “we won’t have
any supper, unless, indeed, we can
turn goats for one night and eat
leaves.”
T hadn’t thought about that
for the moment,” says Jim, “bnt I
imagine we’ve got the^appearance
and will only have topnrsuade onr
appetites to be full fledged and at
home.”
says Jim, “or if yon don’t life- it
pour it back in the jug.”
“Who’s got any of it along?”
says Horniky..
“Got any what?” says Clint.
“Apper jack,” says Horniky.
“By the way Horniky,” says
Zeker“is there any house near
where we will camp to-night that
we might get a little drap? You
know it will be cold late in the
night and would do ns good.”
“Yes that’s so pardner,” says
Horniky, “but there aint ho house
any where nigh where we will have
to stay when night ketches us, and
you see the snn is failin’ lower and
lower.,’
“Well,” says Zeke, “can’t we get
a littlo bit somewhere to-morrow?
JLt would do us good then.”
“I’m not shore,” says Horniky,
but I thinks I know whar we kin
git a little about night to-morrow,
if the folks aint ’fraid to let ns
have it.”
“You hear that now Zeke?” says
Jim, “and for goodness sake don’t
make a fool of yourself as you have
always done.”
“What do yon have reference
to?” says Zeke.
“Well,” says Jim, “I have refer-
ence-to where we did and where
we didn’t get it.
“Well, it is no use for ns to dis
enss that question,” says Zeke,
“for you’d swear you were right
and I wrong, -though the heavens
fall, but yon know you finished the
bottle and ”
“Oh well, don’t start np that
quarrel again, for we are all tired
of it,” says Clint.
“Well make him let me alone,”
says Zeke. “He’s always meddling
or putting iu his gab where he has
no business,~and some of these
days I’ll mash him np.”
“You can’t do it sir,” says Jim,
“I’ll get out of your way.”
“I’ll declare,” says Horniky, “I
thought you fellers was gwine to
fight right away.”
“You couldn’t make them fight—
they are afraid of each other,
they have already had too much of
it,” says Clint. -
“Wha-t’s that,” says Zeke, now
getting up with Horniky half
across him, both having fallen
down together.
Yes,” says Clint, “I’m glad of
it, and I wish Horniky would get
fully on your back and ride yonin-
to camps, and then halter you fo a
tree when we get there.”'
Wouldn’t he look nice, sc
terestiug, tied up like an old ox
with an armful of leaves thrown
down before him to eat like
shucks?” says Jim.
“It wouldjbe so homelike to wake
up in the night aud hear him swal
low his end and then belch it up
again, and chaw and chaw and
chaw. His teeth grinding togeth
er would remind one of the tick of
the old clock, or the cowpen just a
little way off.”
Pardner,” says Horniky, “them
fellers seems like they thinks you’d
make a fine lookin' steer.”
“Yes, and I’ll break a limb over
some of their heads directly,” says
Zeke, “especially that pigeon-toed
Jim, and he’ll look like a dead
cock in the pit, and the balance
will then learn to let me alone.
“Umpb! he’s getting upity
again,” says Jim to Clint, “because
Horniky has been showing him a
little friendship.”
“Yes,” says Clint, “give him an
inch and he’ll take an-ell. He re
minds me of an old mule my uncle
once owned—never wasfbroke ’till
he died. In the morning when
they began to put the harness on
him he would jump’ np and kick
and snort all around the lot gate.
Invariably they had to wring his
nose to get the harness on—then
he’d work all right ’till night. I
used to stand off and look on and
thought he was the smartest mule
I ever saw._ He didn’t want to
work yon know. But at night when
they would begin to take the har
ness off he would jnmp np and
kick and snort the same way—then
I decided he was a-fool.”
(to be continued.)
CHARACTER BUILDING. J CONCERNING LAWS AND CUSTOMS BUTTONS MADE OF BLOOD
Monroe Advertiser.
There is no one thing that should
concern us more, individually,than
the building for_ourselves a com
plete add fully developed ^charac
ter. And .right here - permit ns to
say that there is a vast difference
between reputation and character.
A man may have quite an extend
ed reputation backed by a depraved
character, or he -may have a char
acter as. pure and spotless as the
driven snow, just what every indi
vidual ought to and can have, and
yet be devoid of reputation in the
common acceptation of the term,
The truth touching this matter
Atlanta Constitution.
Savannah Sevrs.
Laws and customs, to be worth j What do you think of buttons
anything, must be the natural out- made of blood? Isn’t that nsin^
growth of the wants and necessi- the alleged waste with a vengance?
ties of a community. Truly this is an utilitarian age of
As Chief Jnstice Bleckley ex- the most practical sort,
pressed it in his admirable address Beef from the flesh, butter
before the Atlanta Law school, (oleo) from the fat, leather from'
laws must grow; they cannot, in the hides, beds from the hair, gl ae
the best sense, be said to be made, from the hoofs, combs from °the
When a horde of carpet-baggers horns, brushes from the bones be
in South Carolina, after the war, lognas from the intestines, and now
swept away the system of the laws we are to have buttons from the
in that state, and proceeded at one b!oo*d of the bullock. So it will
fell swoop to substitute the code of be seen that when the Chicago
New .York, the result was unsatis- man “lets np” on his beast there is
factory, confused and mischievous, j no great bulk left of him. Verily
is that each individual is building | The natives no sooner regained the meek-eyed ox is an exceed
nil nrnnfov Qonli rlovr onri nn nnnf i i . p -is* * u n . I * v » - _ _
SLECXIUC BITTERS,
This remedy is becomingso well
known and so popular as to need
no special mention. All who have
used: Electric Bitters sing the
same song of praise.—A purer
medicine does not exist and it is
guaranteed to do all that is claiin-
“You fellows seem only to con- ed. Electric Bitters will cure all
sider your stomachs,” says Watt, i diseases of the Liver and Kidneys,
“but it will be right coldlo-m-ht, I*® remove Pimples, Boils, Salt
at A- t , , , . ° , Rheum and other affections cansed
and Jam thinking abont trying to by impQre blood.—Will drive Ma-
sleep without a blanket.” | laria from the system and prevent
“I thought yon had gotten accus- ! as well as cure all Malarial fevers,
tomed to that style,” says Bill. j—For cure of headache, Consti-
“No I haven’t,” says- Watt “and ! P atioQ an £ Indiestion try Electric
a i .... Bitters—Entire satisfaction gnar-
hemoiel seeofU and try it the antee d, or money ref unded—lrice
less I like it. , go c { g> an d $1.00 per bottle at
‘Why don’t you change it?” Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s Drugstore.
character 'each day, and cannot
evade it. Onr little deeds and
transactions with our fellow being
each day index our true worth and
advertise our real characteristics.
For this reasou it is important
to remember that our character is
just what we individually make it.
This is an exceedingly important
lesson for the young to* learn, and
to learn in early life.
Thousands of the young of the-
present are laboring under the
false impression that worldly ac
cumulations will bring to them
i true character. It is lamentably
true that money or wealth has
much to do with individual social
standing, but all the wealth of
Gould apart from other requisites
will never give to one a true and
complete character.
Bnt the humble peasant boy
with habits of industry, energy
application, honesty, integrity and
devotion to right principles can at
tain to a pure and noble character
And this, as Ihe qualifications of a
young man, is better than gold
The individual, of a pui e and up
right character, will not swerve
from the rule of rightpior stoop
to ignoble deeds, and is a power
among men. Man’s sphere of use
fulness, and of wholesome influ
ence, widens as Iris pare and spot
less character develops. • Impervi
ous to the influence and attacks of
intrigue and chicanery he stands,
the . noblest representative of a
true man.
Another important point in this
connection is that it requires
months, years, yea, a life time, to
build and maintain a true charac
ter^ while only a short time de
voted to an ill-advised coarse and
evil deeds may blast one’s charac
ter beyond the point of possible
recovery.
None of our young people ean
cultivate a nobler ambition and
nurture a higher aspiration than
that which is constantly reaching
ont for a pure and stainless char
acter. Find a youth who makes
this the goal of his purpose, and
you will see an individual moving
forward in the right direction to
make life a success. Hence, our
advice to all, and especially to the
young, is to make each and every
day’s labors and efforts bend to the
building of a true character.
The ) Shows that all epidem-
Germ [ ic, endemicAud conta-
Theory ) gious diseases are pro
duced by minute infecting germs
or microbes, peculiar to each dis
ease, which enter the system. It
being a well-settled fact that any
remedy which would kill the germs
or microbes would destroy the life
of the patient, it has been fonnd
that to force onlrthese germs is the
only safe relief frjm their ravages.
In this way Swift’s Specific has
for 60 years-been caring blood and
skin diseases. It forces out the
microbes through the pores of the
skin, and soon.sends out the poison
which they may have- left. In this
way the disease is cured, and the
general health of the patient is
bnilt up.
Treatise on Blood find Skin Diseases
mailed free.
Swept Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
In Mexico they have a funeral
custom that many will consider an
improvement on any of oars. ‘In
stead of allowing the bereaved fam
ily to return alone to their darken
ed home, the friends go with them
and make a visit, which they re
peat for nine days. They talk
cheerfully of the deceased one, re
calling all that is good and pleas
ant, but there is no sorrowfal
brooding.—Ex.
Oh! how I dread to see my hair
tnr ning gray,” is a remark made by
so many ladies. If tlley only
knew that Y5 cents invested in one
bottle of Beggs’ Hair Renewer
would not only cheek it at once,
bnt give it a luxurious and glossy
appearance, we know that
would not hesitate to buy.
guarantee every bottle! Sold by
L. A. Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
control of affairs than they re-es- ingly Useful denizen while living
tablished in the main their old sys- and a positive bonanza when-dead.
tem. Louisiana had a somewhat When an enterprising Hebrew*
similar experience. - I by the name of Hirsh first intre-
ln a smaller degree may be seen duced into this country, some years
from time to .time, illustrations of ago, the somewhat novel experi-
the mistaken policy forced upon mental industry of making buttons
these two states by aliens during from bullock’s blood he lost nearly
their brief career of. misrule. It §20,000 within the first six months,
is a common thing in these days Bnt he stuck to the idea. With
ofprogressive experiments to see | him it was a straight question of
a city or a town borrow bodily the i money or blood. Finally he got
charter provisions or ordinances of the cash. Now he has piles of
another community, and attempt wealth. Nor can any one say he
to enforce them vigorously. In has not good blood. It is an es-
too many instances these innova- sential element of his business,
tions do not work well. When an Hear Chicago, in a town called
easy-going western or southern Bridgeport, there is now a large
town adopts the bine laws of a factory where more than 100 men
New England city, men kick and boys and girls dabble in blood
against the strange system, and and evolve buttons. Another equal-
never rest satisfied under it. Just ly extensive factory at a different
as great a mistake is the effort place is owned by the same firm,
sometimes made by a small city or There are a number of similar fac-
town to fit itself to the laws and tories in England,
customs of a great city of a mil- In the factory at Bridgeport from
lion oi more inhabitants. Espe- 8,000 to 10,000 gallons of blood
cially in police matters is this mis-1 are used every day. Only fresh
take most frequently made. When beef blood is used. Still it is said
a policeman in New York tells a that pig’s blood is jnst as good,
man standing on the sidewalk to Bnt it is more. trouble to collect
move on, the reason is obvious, and and save.
there is no protest or resistance. Much of the blood evaporates
But try it iu a small place, where daring the process of drying. Bnt
there is plenty of room, and no what remains is pure albumen,
crowd, and the citizen thus treated Some of it is of a light color and
will not be disposed to obey. He some is dark, according to the
will have the sympathy of others,
and people generally will resist
what they consider an arbitrary
and unnecessary command. —
There must be reason in all
thing?, and a law with no reason
back of it will soon fail into con
tempt. Municipal law-makei's
should study the conditions of
their own communities, and shape
fheir wants into laws. They waste
time when they study totally dis
similar communities, and borrow
their systems without reference to
the home situation.
In a word, thel ittle town of Tail-
holt should have laws and customs
suited to it, and should not at
tempt to force the policy and the
regulations of a big metropolis up
on its liberty-loving citizens.
' We want every mother to knotf
that croup 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
followed by the croup. The
time to act is when the child first
becomes hoarse; :i few doses of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy will
prevent the attack. . Even after a
rough cough has appeared, the
disease may be prevented by using
tins remedy as directed. For sale
by Holtzclaw & -Gilbert.
From the records of Yale Col
lege daring the past-eight years it
is shown that the non-smokers are
20 per cent, taller than the smo-
had 60 per cent, more lung capac
ity. In-the last graduating class
at Amherst College the non-smok
ers have gained in weight 24 per
cent", over the smokers; in height,
37 per cent.; in chest girth. 42 per
cent, and in lung capacity 8 26-100
cubic inches.
chemical process to which it Is
subjected.
When reduced to thin sheets
and broken up this dried blood is
then ready for the process of being
worked into various shapes and
sizes.
Large quantities of these sheets
of blood are used by cloth manu
facturers for setting the color in
calico goods.
Not only are buttons made from
blood in this way, but tons of ear
rings, breastpins, beltclasps, combs
and trinkets are made annually in
these factories from blood.
It is a strangely fragant and pe
culiar, but rather profitable sort of
an industry.
It Should Be In Every Honse.
J. B. WilsoD, 371 Clay St,
Sharpsburg, Pa., says he will not
be without Dr. King's New Dis
covery for Consumption, Conghs
and Colds, that it cured his wife
who was threatened with Pneumo
nia after an attack of “La Grippe,”
when various other remedies and
several physicians had done her no
good. Robert Barber, of Cooks-
port, Pa., claims Dr. King’s New
Discovery has done him more good
than anything he ever triedfor Lung
Trouble. Nothing like it Try it.
Free trial Bottles at Holtzclaw &
Gilbert’s Drag Store. Large bot
tles, 50c. and §1.00
Mr Cleveland lately wrote to a
Brooklyn youth who asked his ad
vice about getting a political ap
pointment: “There are no per
sons so forlorn and so much to be
kers, 35 p^i-ycent heavier, and jf itiecl as tbose wIl ° have learned
in early life to look to public po
sitions for a Iivelyhood. It unfits
a man or boy for any other busi
ness, and is apt to make a kind of
respectable vagrant out of him.”
Colic, Diarrhoea, Dysentery and
all kindred complaints are danger
ous if allowed to rnn any length of
time. So, it is the doty of all pa
rents to keep a medicine on hand
at all times that will effect a posi
tive and permant cure. Beggs’
Diarrhoea Balsam is guaranteed to
do this. Sold and warranted by
L. A. Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
Woman’s Best Friend,
LUXOMNI—The Gem of all
female remedies for irregularities,
pains and diseases peculiar to wo
men. Used 50 years by an emi-
neut physician. Never fails fo
care. Address with stamp, Xmx-
omni Co., Atlanta, Ga. P. O- Box
357. See : ' *
It is said that eight million pen
nies a year are dropped into the
slot machines of Philadelphia. A
proportionate number, thinks the
New York Observer, may reasona
bly be charged against other cities.
The charms of nature, the maj
esty of man, the infinitely _ loveli
ness of truth and virtue are not
bidden from the eyes of the poor,
bnt from the eyes of the vain, the
corrupted, and selfseeking, be ]
rich or poor.
that
Mr. T. D. Tinsley, of the firm of
we know that they -S. R. Jaqnes & Tinsley, Macon,
We Ga,says: I have never known a
single case of Headache that Bra-
dyerotine did not care, and that
Invalids should remember
the causes of sick and
headaches maybe promptly i
by taking Ayer’s Pills,
speedily correct irregularities of
the stomach, liver, and_bowels, and
are the mildest and most reliable
cathartic in nse.
These Pilla
Subscribe for the Home Journal within the time stated.
Subscribe for the Home
fellilSig
H
■
■
HHHHHRHBBMM