Newspaper Page Text
3
VOL. XXI.
PERBT, HOUSTON" COUNTY, GEORGIA. XliTTESDAT/OCTOBFR 29, 1891.
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—-xjXHLasewPOaets'fc—.
Jos. N. NEEL, of Eads, Heel & Co., . John W. ES1D,1
Jno. C.EADS, “ 3 “ . MisaxniM HipSPSEB.
The most popular Shoe Store in Macon. Why? Because -we have the Stock, the
prettiest Store,-the most goods, the Lowest Prices.
DON’T NAIL TO SEE US ON SHOES: =^s8
- UM ^557 '^II]3iniY^siEEET^
SHIP YOUR COTTON TO
W, B.& of
MACON,
GEORGIA.
On through bills of lading to Savannah, Ga., care of Union Compress, Macon,
Ga., we can save to shippers from all points on the Georgia Southern and Florida
Bailroad and Macon and Birmingham Railroad, from 60 per cent, to 80 per
cent, of freight rates. The only Firm in Macon that oSers a Bebate from these Points.
Freight agents in tho territory named will give rates and shipping diroctions.
THE LIGHT THAT IS, FELT.
John G. Whittier, in Simday School Visitor.
A tender child of summers three,
Seeking her little bed at night,
Paused on the dark stair timidly.
“Oh mother! Take my hand,” said she
! “And then the dark will all be light.”
We older children grope our way
,i From dark behind to dark before;
And only when our hands we lav,
Dear Lord, in thine, the night is day,
And there is darkness nevermore.’
yon,” says Glint, “and I was going- “Didn’t anybody seem to laugh
to say Gra-ei-ous look at that ; at your sniarkremark—too late, or
snake! Snake! Snake! He liked , getting moody,” says Zeke.
to bit me—stepped, on his tail — ; Jim now begins to sing, joined
yonder he goes. Kill-im, kill-im,; by one or two others:
kill-im boys!” ! “The sun has set in the west,
“Where, whereas he?” -j ^The moon is climbing the hiU,
Beach downward to the sunless days
Wherein onr guides are blind, as we,
And faith is small and hope delays;
Take thou the hands of prayer we raise,
And let us feel the light of thee!
RETREAT FROM LAUREL HILL.
As We Go. Chattering anfi Spattering
“Snake! Snake! Look Out! Kill
Him-im! Kill-im Boys! Like to
Bit Me!” Jim’s Lament.
Transcribed from a. Soldier’s Diary for the
HOME JOUENA1.
Parlor Suits, Clmifoer Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GBOBGB ZPALTTL,
PERRY, - - GEORGIA,
I desire to call attention to the fact that I have in store, next to the
Bank
A EULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF
Fruits and Confectioneries,
Tobacco, Cigars, etc.
Fish Every Saturday.
' My Stock is FEESH aud PURE, and prices very LOW. Patronage solicited.
Agent for the SINGES SEWING MACHINE. Full line of Fixtures and Oil on baud.
J. M. NELSON, Perry-, &a
Every tiling sold at spot Cash Prices. Mo
Discounts to Middle Men
Emus IN MACHINERY MADE BY koil lflill
Ask for. what you want,
strictly first-class.
The price will be low; the work
w
“C&storlaissoweH adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” U. A. Archer, M. 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 wort
withmeaayreach^
Castorla cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
TTfiig "Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di-
WitSout injurious medication.
For several years I have recommended
results.”
Edwin F. Pardee, M. D.,
m xho Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ava,
New York City.
The Ckntaub Compahy, 77 Mdbbay Street, New Yoke.
NEEL &
We want yonr trade. Will make it to your interest.
TER F. HOUSER will do the rest.
Come to see ns. Mi. WAL-
552 & 554 CHEERY STREET,
m
ehiSdren Off for Pitcher’s ©astona.
July 14th 1861.
“Doyou mean that for me?”
says Zeke.
Tell him yes,” whispers Jim.
No-o, I was only speaking of
Horniky making himself so offi
cious with us, and so intimate with
you on so short acquaintance, but
if you think the cap fits, you can
wear it awhile,” says Clint. “You
are so suspicious Zeke, or if you
had been listening properly, to
what I said you wouldn’t have got
ten mixed up in the mule story I
was telliug Jim and these other
boys.”
“Well,” says Zeke, “justas I got
up after Horniky and 1 fell down
together a hundred or two yards
back yonder, or as 1 was trying to
got Horniky off of me, 1 am sure I
distinctly heard you say, ‘he is
afraid,’ and evidently,inreply to
a remark Horniky made about that
moment. I mean just as we fell
down. As we. were gettin g up,or
perhaps, fully gained our equilib
rium, and while those other tarts
with you were laughing at such a
high rate, I indistinctly heard you
say something like glad of it—on
back—ride—camps—halter to a
tree—give him an inch—reminds
me—old mule—and finally decided
he was a fool. I heard enough of
the rigamarole to lead me to be
lieve you were comparing me to
something ridiculous—all were
laughing. Then again, I heard
fairly well the greater portion of
that smarty Jim, in his tirade, or,
as he would facetiously term it,
paradigm, holding me up to the
balance of you to bring up a home
like feeling in the night, and which
evidently was based on what you
had said just before. It is true I
lost some of it, but caught enough
in a disjointed way, or in spurts
through the rattling leaves and the
fuss of your abettors, to be led to
believe it was intended as a parody
on the ox aud the rat in the man
ger. Horniky tells me, to use his
own language, ‘that little red head
soldier called you an ox, aud said
hejjheard him tell the others that
he wanted to give him an armful
of leaves to eat like shucks,’ and
said he herad him say ‘a whole lot
of other things about chawing the
cud,’ but once I get my heel on his
sharp neck, he’ll think I am a very
large ox in reality, and he a very
small rat. He thinks he is very
witty, but when I take it off him,
it will all be mashed out—nothing
left but a ‘mess of a Jim,’ aud then
you all can dig a hole and rake
him in it, roll a big rock over the
place to mark the;last resting place
of the‘wit’ of the seven scouts
and reavguardsmen, or, if you like,
chisel on it: ‘Caught and made
hash of on this spot by the fool-
killer in the conscientious dis
charge of his duty to his country.”
Well,” says Clint, “that’s a
bright idea, hatch up a whole mess
and then charge ns with it. You
have worked up a fine parody out
of your own material, without de
tecting in what a ridiculous light
you stand before us. All we’ve got
to say, is if the cap fits you wear
it, or when you kill Jim we will
have great need for another fool
killer to come along and write
your epiteph.”
“Ha, ha,” laughs the boys.
“I don’t see anything to laugh
about,” says Zeke. “You fellows
thnik anything Clint says to or
about me is smart.”
“I only told the truth about you,
and that’s where the pinch comes
,”j says Glint.
“Well;” sayg Zeke, you rarely,
ever talk without undertaking to
ridicule ine,but you are always slick
enough to slip out of it some way
or other, or in plain English, T
ought to say lie out of it.
Well, just so you don’t say it,
there will still be a hereafter for
“Yonder he goes—there, run in
that hole in the thicket.”
“Hold on Zeke, you and Horni
ky, and. wait ’till we kill this
snake,” says Jim.
“Oh, let him alone,” says Clint,
“You’d look nice gouging in a
hole in the mountains and it near
ly night,' after a snake. What do
you want to kill him for? We
don’t expect to come back. here
anymore. Some of the Yanks
may straggle through here some-
of these days, and he can bite
them.”
“That’s a fact,” says Watt.
“Go on Zeke, you and Horniky,
says Clint
Horniky still leads the way
with Zeke clinging to his arm in a
sort of hipity-hopity style that
does not fail to amuse those be
hind them.
“Clint,” says Jim, “what sort of
a snake was that you said you
stepped on?”
“Don’t know,” says Clint
“I mean,” says Jim, “what color
was it?”
“Don’t know,” says Clint. “I
was blind as a bat just as i saw and
felt him altogether. Don’t know
if he was red, green, black, white
or blue, but rather think he was
blue.”
“Yes, that’s the reason it scared
you so bad. You thought it was a
Yank come up out of the ground
and spoke to you,” says Lawrence.
“Well,” says Jim, “if you.couldu.t
tell what ooIqi 1 it was, how big was
it?”
“Don’t know; big as my leg,
seemed to me, as] he flew up in
front and struck at me and hit
a bush that happened to be be
tween me and the snake.”
“Boys,” say Jim, “did you ever
see anybody who knows so little
about anything claimed to have
been seen and felt?”
“Clint, I believe you are lying
straightout about the whole mat
ter.”
“So do we,” says all the others.
“Call to Zeke,” says Watt, “and
tell him to ask Horniky what he
thinks about Clint and the snake.”
“Horniky,” says Zeke, “don’t
you think Clint lied about step
ping on a snake’s tail and seeing it
run in a hole before anybody else
could see it? I don’t believe
there are any snakes in these
mountains.”
“Well pardner, he mought not
lied,” says. Horniky, “for da is
snakes here. I’s seen ’em myself,
before now, and some mighty bad
uns.”
“What kind of snakes do you
find in the mountains?” says Zeke.
“Well, there is some little streak-
idy, stnkirdy fellers, and once in
a while yon kin see a little green
one up in the trees, and then agin
yon may run across a big yaller
and black feller that has something
on his tail like beads.”
“What’s the name of that kind?'
says Zeke.
“A radler snake,” says Horni
ky, “and ef he hits you, you is a
gon-er.”
“Do they strike with their tails?”
says Zeke.
“No,” says Horniky, “they bites
with their mouths, jist like any
other snake. They kin mighty
nigh sing a toon with ther tails,
but it don’t make you feel like
dancin’, ’less it’s to dance off oaten
the way. Mr.Ubycom says when
he tail begin to sing he is gittin
up pisin to throw into yon, and
then after he hits you and you
hear him sing agin, he is drawin’
it back into be tail.”
“Did a ‘radler’ snake ever bite
you?” says Zeke.
“No, siree, ef they had I wouldn’t
be runnin’ on wid you now, for I’d
bin like that little red head soldier
you wanted to mash up and bury.”
“Horniky,” says Clint, “how
high is the sun you reckon?,’
“Golly, her is done down. Don’t
yer see how it is ’ginnin’ to git dark
all out ahead of us, and all around
us on every side?”
“Yes, I believe you are right,”
says Clint, “and another lonely
night now stares us in the face.
Pull down Horniky,” says Clint,
“as long as we are safe in our
course.”
“Some of you fellows nearest
Zeke punch hi® up a little, be is
pulling back on Horniky,” says
Jim, “Nearly time to take the
harness off him, you know, Guess
we’ll have to ring his nose, as
Glint said about the old mule.”
The dd clock striking the hour
We promised to meet by the mill*
“I must bid ber along farewell,
But, Ob, ’twill be with a sigh,
As I watch by the pale moonlight
The tears that fall from her eye.
“Weep nomore gentle Hallie,
Let no tear drop fall for me, : j -
The stars will twinkle one by one
And guide my barque safe o’er tnesea
“Deep sea—deep sea ”
“Bless my life,” .says Jim, “it
ifea'm© toosadttssingany morer 1 twa. pouse
nlr nn thrnnab the forest nnrl . P 6r haps, different
Look up through the forest and!
see that little star twinkling dov.n
on us just like it did when not lost,
and I can imagine sweet Minnie
sees me boging through the woods
disconsolate aud hungry. ‘Foxes
have holes, and the birds of the
air have qests, but the son of man
hath not where to lay his head., I
feel now almost as if I could sit
down and cry. What a strange
and melancholy influence night
has over the mind. What magic in
the name of home. It does seem
to me now, like I had rather be a
well fed dog under the door step,
than anybody’s soldier boy lost in
the mountains.
“Don’t cry sonny,” says Zeke,
we claim you as our little dog
here, but can’t feed you overly
well. Quit whining, and we’ll let
you sleep at our feet next to the
fire, and to-morrow will giye you a
bone to gnaw, and maybe a piece
of bread.
“Tell that'.little ; soldier,” says
Horniky, “to sing that toon aga’D,
it’s mighty purty.”
Oh Horniky,” says Jim, “I’m
sick at heart, my feelings will go
back on me and I know I would
break smack down to try it again.
I will sing it for you some other
time—maybe about this time to
morrow, if it is not raining. I
must shake off what would soon be
a fit of the blues. I’ll sing Zeke’s
song, and then ‘Richard will be
himself 3 " again” ‘Yivi la mo,
Vi ’”
“Well men, we’ve got as fur as
we kin, and here’s a good place to
stay all night under these big
trees, with so many leaves to sleep
on, and so much wood all around
here to make a fire,” says Horni-
ky.
“Good as wheat,” says Jim,
“and here’s my place to sleep,” as
he lops down in the leaves.
“Here’s the same to you," says
Clint, as he tumbles down with a
grunt.
“It is so nice to rest,” says Zeke,
“after a fellow has trudged through
the mountains all day,” as he now
eases himself down on the end of a
log with a long drawn out phe-u-
‘Tm so tired.”
One and another turns in ’till
all are down except Horniky, who
says: “You-ons looks like yer is
usen to it.”
“Yes,” says Clint, “we don’t
much care how we make the trip
just so we get there.”
“I move,” says Jim, “ that Clint
takes the chair, (log) to preside
oyer this business meeting.”
“I second the motion,” says
Watt.
“All in favor of the motion,”
says Jim, “will say I.” .
“1,1,1,1,1.”
Opposed, no.”
“No-o,” says Zeke.
“The I’s seem to have it. Clint
you will take Zeke’s log.”
“We will let you preside some
other time,” says Jim. “We all
know how anxious you are to be
head, but you must go foot this
time, Zeke.”
“Yon are a stinking
“None of that now,” says the
chairman, who gets up with
limb as big as your arm for a gav
el and pushes Zeke off the end of
the log.
“Well boys,” says he, “you will
come to order at once, as it will
soon be too dark to record the min
utes of this meeting. The object
this meeting, as you all know ”
“But, Mr. Chairman,!’ says Zeke,
‘I don’t know the object, and
would like for you to fully explain
it.”
“See that already,” says Jim,
“upity as he can be.”
Down comes the gavel (limb) on
the old log, calling Zeke to order.
“Oat of order, as- usual,” says
Jim.
Says the chairman to Zeke,
“Yon are so quick on trigger you
wouldn’t give me a chance to ex
plain, or so suspicious that you
seem to be even afraid to trust
yourself, bat in a word, for we have
no time to lose, the object is to ar
range the different watches of the
night and any other little matter
we may deem expedient and neces
sary. You know the kind of com
pact we are under to each other—
tbat is to-gay, whatever is fixed by
the whole,must stand, whether it
is pleasant or not”
(TO EE CONTINUED. )
THE SCHOOL BILL VETOED.
THE .GOVERNOR’S REASONS.
. “This bill has received my care
ful consideration, as I am in en
tire harmony with the objects
sought to be attained by it. 1 have
taken counsel with the assistant
attorney general, the state school
commissioner; the. state treasurer
and the stateboard of education as
to the possibility of carrying its
provision,.-'- into effect without dis
turbing the disbursement of this
most important fund. It was pass
ed atthe close of the session, and,
as I am informed, is the result of
!ce between committees
o^tjie twGt houses, representing,
‘ views on the
. Immigration Does Not Improve.
Savanna! jUorning News.
Quite an interesting and instruc
tive report from Dr. J. Warren
Achom is printed in a recent num-
A PROGRESSIVE FAC'
Atlanta Constitution.
The’
same subject, and in the .hurry of
necessary business, as is natural,
suitable provision for its division
amoDg the several counties, as in
tended, must have been inadyer-
tently omitted.
“That the main provision of the
first section is, that all the school
fund, from every source, including
poll tax, shall be paid into the
state treasury as a special deposit
to be drawn only upon the order
of the state school commissioner,
commencing immediately after the
passage of the act, but no provision
is made in this section as to the
manner of its’ disburement. The
second section provides for this
distribution, and for quarterly
payments, as needed, but,'in ex
press terms, this section does not
go into effect until January, 1893.
NO PROVISION FOR DISTRIBUTION.
“So then, we have the fund paid
into the treasury, and, as the bill
is silent as to its distribution now,
it would have to be distributed un
der some other law now in force.
This would be the act of 1887, but
that act nowhere provides for a
distribution of the poll tax, -except
that- it requires the tax collectors
of the various counties to pay over
the poll tax direct to the school au
thorities in the counties in which
the tax is collected. Consequent
ly there was, under that act, nei
ther an apportionment or distribu
tion by the school commissioner of
the poll tax, This act under con
sideration expressly changes this
disposition of the poll tax and puts
it into the treasury at once; thus
becoming z, part of the school fund,
it would, as any other part of that
fund, be subject to apportionment
amongst the several counties, but
the same act of 1887 requires the
apportionment to be made by the
commissioner annually, on the first
of" July, or as soon thereafter as
may be practicable. Under this
act the apportionment was made
July last, but, for the reason
stated, this apportionment did not,
and could not, include the poll tax;
and as the law provides only one
apportionment annually, and the
apportionment for this year has
been made, any other would be
without the sanction of law; and
this item of poll tax, amounting,
when collected, to something near
$200,000, could be apportioned on
ly next July.
MONET NEEDED NOW.
“It is needed now to pay the
teachers for 1891.
“In view of the circumstances/1
am not disposed to risk any con
struction of this act which might
have the effect of delaying the
prompt distribution of the school
fund, or any part of it, or involve
its distribution in any manner
which might be questioned. And,
as the legislature will assemble in ]
another year, and will have a com
paratively early opportunity of
giving expression to the wishes of
the people on this important sub
ject, when matters of detail here
involved can be made more effect
ually guarded, and as the time cf
payment to the teachers is at hand,
the funds for these payments be
ing rapidly collected; and both the
poll tax and general fund can, un
der the law of 1887, be promptly
distributed as for the last three
years, I deem it wise policy to let
the matter take this course; and, for
this purpose, for the reasons giv
en, I enter my disapproval of this
bill.”
ed in 1885 by the legislature, is
doing more to revolutionize Geor-
ber of the Medical Record con- [ gia than aDy other agency or insti-
cerning the class of immigrants tntion in this state. A widely
who are now crowding into this traveled gentleman, who has stnd-
country at the average rate of about ied similar schools on two sides of
4,000 a month. the Atlantic, pronounced it by all
According to the doctor’s close odds the best in the south, and ex
examination, the 600 popple in the cellent in itself, “But,” said he,
steerage constituting that shipload it is a shame that Georgia does not
of iinmigrsnts lacked almost every qtfadruple her appropriation. T do
quality necessary to make desira- hot Rye in your state, but I have
ble citizens. Apparently they were invested some money in it, Let
not sound “either in mind, body me give you one benefit of these
or estate:” Medical examination institutions not familiar to every
showed that a majority of them one. If we wish to preserve Amer-
were fit subjects for treatment in a ican principles of government, we
sequestered hospital. They were must educate our own mechanics
found to be in various stages of de-1 and artisans, and cease to import
bility from the effects of different I foreign skilled labor entertaining
varieties of hereditary and more or alien ideas of political affairs,
less contagious and loathsome dis-- Right here in Atlanta 1 heard, the
orders that wholly unfitted them other night, a-group of Germans
for citizenship anywhere. Yet they giving, voice to sentiments rank
were allowed to pass the customs with socialism and communism. I
inspectors and alleged health offi- speak Germari, Spanish and one or
cers merely because they carried two other foreign languages, and
big red vaccination cards. Such a have, therefore, opportunities of
symbol of perfunctorily formal knowing their opinions. I am es-
compliance with a single regula- [ peeially averse to bringing in the
tion appears to be really all that is I Latin" races. These people who
required. (comefrom continental Europe to
Among these ignorant immi-1 our shores do not appreciate the
grants the doctor found many aged independence and freedom exist-
people and cripples who could not ing here. Feudality in their coun-
possibly be metamorphosed into tries has been succeeded by legiti-
self-sustaining, to say nothing of macy and-absolutism, ahd individ-
ereditably independent; citizens, ual ' liberty is suppressed^ We
Still they could actually stand np must educate our youth to work in
long enough to be counted. So wood and metals and in mining
they were admitted to the full free- aud engineering. Two davs in the
dom of the country. week I have carpenters employed
Native intelligence and.morality to teach my boys how to ran
were clearly not taken into account j plane.”
at all if the doctor’s evidence is of
any value. For he tells.of . an old THE { To rid the human body
ogress whe had with her six or TRUE) of the poison of disease,
eight Hungarian girls,palpably tak- W AY Ls to eliminate it through.
ing them for commercial purposes the pores of the skin. S. S. S. not
to the mining camps of Pennsyl-1 only does this, but it forces out al-
vania. But he adds that this nefa- j so the germs which make the poU
rious traffic is a regular business | son , and builds up. the general
with that woman. Furthermore, | ilealth at t he same time. Do net
lm states that]the whole crowd was | take any imitations or snbstitntes
individually and collectively of a for g. q. g for disap _
very low intellectual order. —— - ,—~ == ; _
, . » . pointed. There is only one Swift s
Accessions or disease, ignorance, ~ r^- -—— : — ——
mendicants, stupidity and vice are [ gL^xfic, and there is nothing like
not exactly the qualities desired in
newly acquired citizens. There
in
Mrs. E. J. Rowell, No. 11 Quin-
fore every future immigrant should I cy Street, Medford, Mass., says
be required to produce an official ^ er m °ther has been cured of
certificate of good character from J ® cro ^ u ^ a ^y >-he use of four bottles
his former place of residence, as S., after having had much
well as a clear bill of normal health other treatment and being reduced
before being allowed to land. In Gmite a low condition of health,
that way only can we properly pro-1 as was thought she coukl not
tect ourselves against all manner
of accumulating disorders, and
cease to be the stock subject of in
ternational ridicule.
Strength and Health.
The way the expenses pile up
against the municipality of Lon
don makes this city look like a
small town, says the New York Ad
vertiser. One district in London
has just incurred expenses upward
of $8,000,000 for improving the
sanitary condition of houses occu
pied by the poorer classes. The
mere widening of the sewers is to
cost $12,500,000, and a proposition
to extend the sewers to the sea will
involve an outlay of $50,000,000.
An imprpved water supply is also
contemplated, which will cost $50,
000,000 more. The only American
city which can lay any claims to
rivalry in this matter is Philadel
phia, where they have sunk $12,-
000,000 in a City Building, and it
is still very far from campletion.
“Oh! how I dread to see my hair
turning gray,” is a remark made by
so many ladies. If they only
knew that 75 cents invested in one
bottle of Beggs’ Hair Renewer
would not only check it at once,
bub give it a luxurious and glossy
appearance, we know that they
would not hesitate to buy. . We
guarantee every bottle. Sold by
L. A. Eelder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
Don M. Dickinsjn says that lit
tle Miss Cleveland has come just
in time to save the- country. “Gro
ver and the baby” is the cry now
all over the Union. It throws good
humor into any assemblage, and
will brush away all the captious op
position that has existed in Demo
cratic quarters to the Democratic
leader.
If you are not feeling strong and
healthy, try Electric Bitters. If
“LaGrippe” has left you weak and
weary, use Eleetri Bitters. This
remedy acta directly ou Liver,
Stomach and Kidneys, gently aid
ing those organs to perform their
functions. If you are afflicted with
Sick Headache* you will find
speedy and'permanent relief by
tailing Electric Bitters. One trial
wiil convince you that this is the
remedy you need. Large bottles
only 50c. at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s
Drug Store.
When the Japanese hitch a horse
in the street, they do so by tying
his fore legs together. Hitching,
posts are never used in Japan or
Corea, except by foreigners.
As a family medicine Ayer’s
Pills excel all others. They are
suited to every age and, being su
gar-coated, are easy to take.
Though searching and thorough in
effect, they are mild and pleasant
in action, and their use is attended
with no injurious results.
I live.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free.
Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Dallas, Texas, claims, taking
that city as a center, that within a
radius of one hundred miles there
is not to be found on the globe a
more productive soil or a more
healthful climate.. Within that ra
dius there is a thrifty population
of more than a million of people,
and it is capable of sustaining a
population of ten million. With
in this radius, adds the New York
Independent, nearly one-half the
cotton in Texas is raised, more
than half the oats and the wheat,
and nearly one-half the corn.
Mr. 0- B. Jones, of Spring Hill,
Iowa, says: “I have used Cham
berlain’s Pain Balm for severe and
painful burns with better effect
than anything else I have ever
tried. It relieves the pain instant
ly, and cures without leaving a
scar.” Pain Balm is one of the
most useful medicines that any
family can be provided with, espe
cially for rheumatism, lame back,
sprains, bruises, tooth ache, ear
ache and like ailments. One ap
plication will relieve the pain and
a fair trial insure a cure. 50 cent
bottles for sale by Holtzclaw &
Gilbert.
The largest amount of railroad
construction during the past year
in any one group of states was
1186. This was in the South At
lantic group, composed of Virgin
ia, West Virginia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia and Flor
ida, In the New England group
the number of miles of new road is -
only 109.
Little Giants! Little Giants!
Little Giants! are the pills that do
the work successfully, effectually
and permanently. We warrant ev
ery bottle to give satisfaction,
Sold by L. A. Felder, Druggist.
Perry, Ga.
Tommy—What part of speech is
woman? Papa—Woman is iio part
of speech at all, my son. She is
all of it.
.,.q;
Imm
Mr. Alfred Robinson,
N. C., says: Bradycro
never failing compound
ache.
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