Newspaper Page Text
-DIRECTOKS s-
Jos. N. KEEL, of Eads, Neel & Co.,
Jno. C. EADS, ‘‘ “ “ “
Jokx W. REID, *
Walteb P. HOUSER.
The most popular Slioe 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.
■' §na ««» ,«an
557 CHEERY STREET,
£«««»»
&
littfit*
SHIP YOUR COTTON TO
W. B. & 0. G. SPARKS
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
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 Rebate from these Points.
Freight agents in tho territory named will give rates and shipping directions.
Best and ©l©ap©st 5 .
FOR CASH 'mm INSTALLMENT.
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Cliairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GKEOIR-GKEi; PAUL,
PERRY, - - GEORGIA,
Fusr© ©roeerie^I
I desire to call attention to the fact that I have in store, next to the
Bank
A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OE
FANCY AND FAMILY
Fruits and Confectioneries,
Tobacco, Cigars, etc.
Fish Evcit Saturday.
Mv Stock is FRESH aud PURE, and prices very LOW 7 . Patronage solicited.
Agent for the SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Full line of Fixtures and Oil on hand.
J. M. NELSON, Perry- G-a.
for Infarcts and Children"
“Cast orlais so “well adapted to childre^i that g
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known tome.” H. A. Abcheb, M. IX,
111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
“The use of 1 Castoria * is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of suDereroeation to endorse it Few are the
intelligent families who <!o net keep Casfcona
iBssSlbs!iw :
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation,
TTiiig Worms, gives sleep, ana promotes ai-
Without injurious medication.
“ For several years X have recommended
your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so gs it has invariably produced beneficial
results.” _
Edwin F. Pabdeb, M. D.,
« The Winthrop,’.’ 125th Street and 7th Am,
i New York City.
Tbs Centaub Coupaot, 77 Moebat Stbebt, New Yobs.
NEEL & CO
We want your trade. Will make it to y our interest.
1 ter F. HOUSER will do the rest
Come to see-us. Mr. WAL-
&&BS, Ml® *I
552 & 554 CHERRY STREET,
glfyg
= ChTdrenCry fo 7pitche7Tca8tUria,
CROCKETT’S SRON WORKS,
■ ® ,
Everything sold at spot Cash Prices. No
Discounts to Middle Men
MIlHIIG IN MACHINERY MADE 81 GEORGIA, WnBKMEN.
Ask for. what-you want. The price will be low; the work
strictly .first-class.
E. CROCKETT, Proprietor.
PLANTING.
A tobacco plant will ripen in
about 100 days from the time it is
set out Transplanting should not
be earlier then the 10th of May
nor later than the 20th of June.
The plants are set out very much
as cabbage plants are, by inserting
them to the bud and pressing the
earth well to their roots.
Plants should never be suffered
to wilt before they are set out. A
good plan is to select a good time,
just before a rain if possible, and
pat all available forces to the work
of setting out. The plants should
not be too’small, bat should be of
good size, and if. given ihe feme
care that yon would give a tomato
or cabbage plant, they will live
and grow off rapidly.
CULTIVATION.
Tobacco should receive only sur
face culture. As soon as the plants
have taken root they should be
gone over with the hoes, breaking
the top crust and drawing- fresh
earth to the plant, this destroys
the first crop of grass and kills the
cut worms; if the land between
the rows~bas become foul, it should
be plowed with a small bull tongue
or shovel at this first working.
When grown to say a breadth of
twelve inches, they should be cul-
ticated thoroughly with plow, or
cultivator, and hoe; they should be
kept clean and ’v some earth drawn
to the plants. This is all the plow
ing the crop will need, but should
grass and weeds appear it should
be scraped off with the hoe.
TOPPING.
The buttons 1 or seed pods should
be pinched off as fast as they ap
pear. This usually begins about
the first of July, maybe a little
earlier with us. Those plants that
are ready should be pruned at the
first topping, that is, the lower
leaves should be taken off. There
is no definite rule as to the num
ber of leaves to be left on-a stalk
where the old method is used, but
there should never be more than
twelve or thirteen, generally eight
to ten. As the season advances,
reduce the Dumber of leaves left
on the stalk, as quality, more than
quantity, will regulate the profits
realized.
The suckers should be pulled off
every week as they appear, aud
should never be allowed to get over
two inches long. No one need ex
pect a crop of fine grade tobacco
who does not pull off the suckers
while small, and prevent the horn-
worms (the worst enemies to to
bacco) from cutting the leaves to
pieces.
WORMS.
There are three varieties of
worms that are enemies to the to
bacco plant at different stages of
its growth: the. cut-worm, bud-
worm aud horn-worm. Tho cut
worm will cut the stalk of the
yonug tobacco plant as it will any
other young plant in our gardens,
and is best gotten rid of by early
working; the bud-worm makes its
appearance, about the time the
plant is coming into top, and feeds
upon the bud, catting it into small
holes, which enlarges a's the leaf
grows. The third, or horn-worm,
is the same species as that found
on Irish potatoes or tomatoes.
Some recommend planting the
common Jamestown weed at inter
vals in and around the tobacco
field, aud injecting a solution of
Paris green, or of cobait, into the
flowers thereof; another plan is to
place lighted lanterns around in
the fields set in pans of molasses
or coal tar. All these, together
with early planting and pushing
forward the crop, and going over
the crop at least once a week (ear
ly in the morning), and waging re
lentless war upon the worms that
may be found upon the leaves-of
the plants, will insure a good crop.
As the season advances, and the
days become cool, it is bast to gb
over the crop in the afternoon and
look for worms.
FERTILIZERS.
There is nothing better than
well-preseryed stable manure for
tobacco, bat there are jpapy goo4
commercial fertilizers that can be
used to advantage. The following
formula will be found to be a com
plete fertilizer for tobacco:
NO. L
Nitrate of soda:..... .300 pounds.
Acid phosphate 400 pounds.
Sulphate of lime .300 pounds.
no. n.
Kainit................800 pounds,
Nitrate of soda .......200 pounds’.
Acid phosphate’...... 1300 pounds.
must be borueic mind that the to
bacco plant is a gross feeder, and .
responds readilv to generous fer-1' Thls is a question worthy of con-
tilization " 1 sideratiou by every one, .when we
By following the foregoing sim- ! ^member there are many failures
pie rales a much'larger profit can ,
be realized from tobacco than cot- men ever be S ia life ; as P 1F£l -
ton. Try itj on one or two acreas ra ^ ons lower than success, no mat-
and be convinced. !. ter what may be their beginning.
i A man starting but with a lower
GATHERING AND CURING. , , .... ...
: mark-for himself than this, is a
As the market value of no crop; failare j the beginDing . •
depends more on the quality than j x ^ attain . sacc8S s:shonldfbe..thl
that of tobacco, it follows as a nec-i ... ,. • - - j-
, . ... . . prompting motive ot every inai
essary conclusion that not only;5s, f , , ... ■ ,,, ,
J «f: wirlnnl vrrhr\ nnfave f bournr 1 ri O ffrOOl
should proper care be taken in the
selection of seed. andjsoil, and at
tention paidjto the preparation of
the latter, but that the best meth
ods of harvesting should be con
sidered aud a modern system of
curing adopted, involving, as the
process does, more or less of scien
tific principles.
For years no method of curing
was used, except the ordinary log
tobacco barn, a system which fail-
eel to utilize the space within the
building to any advantage, which
required the stalk for ?he purpose
of hanging, and thus deprived the
soil of the ammonia and potash
which it contains, and which sacri-
ficej the primings and other leaves
which may ripen prematurely.
That by the modern system the
stripped stalk is left standing in
the field, which, with the suckers
that will shoot from it, can be
turned under to enrich the soil,
immediately recommends it to the
thinking fanner, and, when the
many features of extravagant waste
attending the stalk cure are con
sidered, almost imperatively de
mands that it be adopted, if the
farmer desires to raise tobacco as
one of his moderate or larger
sources of revenue.
Under the modern barn system,
the farmEr places himself in posi
tion to take advantage of evEry
condition, and whether his toaacco
ripens early or late in the season,
he is prepared to cure it. Not on
ly this, but by the use of . the mod
ern barn, or the stick for the old
log barn, the necessity of carting
in useless stalks to be used as a
handle on which to cure the leaves,
and the consumption of- so much-
fuel with which to -dry them, is
avoided.
By the use of baskets,with small
labor (but little more than would
be required for priming),the leaves
can be gathered as they turn the'
proper color on the stalk without
waste. And next it is proper to
say that the. best method is to com
mence taking off the leaves at the*
bottom as soon as.they changa
from a dark to a pale green.
The stick, inveuted by Mr. W. H.
Snow, of High Point, N. C., holds
six steelj B wires, 9 inches long aud
about 6 inches apart; each wire has
two points, and with these points
women and children can easily
place the leaves on the wire, six to
each, by pushing it through the
butt of the stem.
A first-cl ass'modern barn of the
Snow system will cost $325,_aud
will cure twenty acres.
vidaal whoenters’the)world’s great
field of work. To enter the’great
battle with a lower ambitiou’is but
to fetter.'ourselves with the chains
of failure ’ere’the task'is'begun.
To ejei'y industrious, energetic,’
brainy, honest individual who en
ters any department of the world’s
field of business, the avenue to
success is open. It matters not
how humble, or how exalted may
be'the calling, the chief goal pos
sible of attainment is success, and
anything short of this is, at best,
partial failure. Thus, if in our
pursuits we fall short of this, the
question arises, are we responsi
ble for the failure?
If not, then comes the question,
how is it that any succeed? A
close analysis and sifting of the
ramifications bearing upon this
subject will develop the fact that
most failures in this life are at
tributable to mistakes or misdi
rected efforts upon the part of
those who fail.
It is as true as truth itself, that
if we misapply or misdirect the
time, the talents, the energies and
powers that God has given us, ul
timate failure will be the result.
Herein is where the responsibili
ty of man’s failure falls upon him
self.
Real success does notjjconsist jin
hoarding riches and piling| up
wealth, but he who fails Jo acquire
for himself aud his, the reasonable
comforts of life, falls short of the
possibility within his reach. And
when he traces this effect back to
its prime cause, he will oftener
than otherwise find that this cause
within himself. Hence the
The imports of bananas , into
United States ports, and especially
into-the port of New York, have
in recent years reached much
larger proportions than is general
ly supposed. No steamers were
chartered for this special purpose
until about 10 or 12 years ago.
Before that time banauas were
brought to United States ports
mainly by passenger steamere.
Now the trade has become of such
importance that during the twelve
months ending with July 1 no less
tiiaD 129 steamers, including re
charters, were -engaged in this
trade, of which 76 were chartered
for an aggregate of 709 months by
one’firm alone of this city.
Each of these steamers makes on
an average two round trips per
month, carrying from 10,000 to
20,000 bunches of bananas, and of
ten from 30,000 to 80,000 cocoa-
nuts in addition. The .imports
during 1890 aggregated 12,582,550
Argonia; Kansas, has |jnst bad
the experience of one of the most
unique weddings that any ’place
can. boast of. Argonia is ; under
woman rule. The to wn officers are
all women, .and, .inj fact, when it
comes, to official business, the men
are not iujih This-'peculiar, and.to
a certain extent abnormal, condi.
tion of affairs has given to the la
dies an independence of thought
and'action thatjis far in advance of
tile ordinary women of’thejcountry
generally.
Not only do the^married ladies
enjoy greater freedom and broader
views, but the young ladies and
girls take on freer thought. There
has been ajgrowing independence
among the young ladies, and at a
small evening party some weeks
ago the matter of equal rights was
discussed by -the young, of hoth
sexes. The youug men took the
ground that while they could vote
and hold.office, there were some
bunches, an excess over the im- instances in which the ladies had to
conclusion is, that if a man is not'
making at least comparative, suc
cess iu his efforts in the great field
of work, it behooves him to in
quire seriously where the cause
lies.
Gold Chain in a Lump of Coal.
OMALL
LN — BUT—
^DEADLY
Oh! how I dislike to see my hair
getting so gray. Say, do you know
that 75 cents invested in one bottle
of Beggs’ Hair Renewer will not
only restore the color but giye it a
.rich, glossy appearance? Try one
_ ... _ bottle. Sold and warranted b;
Mix thoronShly and apply from A Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
Morrisonville, (Ills) Times: A
curious find has been brought to
light by Mrs. S.. W. Culp. As she
was breaking a lump of coal pre
paratory to putting it in the scut
tle she discovered, as the lump fell
apart, embedded in circular shape,
a small gold chain about 4 inches
in length of antique and quaint
workmanship. At first she thought
the chain had been dropped acci
dentally in the coal, but .as she un
dertook to lift the chaiD,the idea of
irs having been recently dropped
was made fallacious, for as the coal
broke it separated almost in the
middle, and the circular position
of the chain placed the ends near
together. As the lump separated
the middle of the chain became
loosened, while each end remained
fastened to the coal.
This is a study for the students
of archaeology who love to pnzzie
their brains over the geological
construction of the earth, from
whose depths the carious is always
cropping out. The lump of coal
from which this chain was taken is
supposed to come from the Taylor-
ville or Paua mines, and it almost
hushes one’s breath with mystery
when it is thought for how many
long ages the earth has been form
ing strata after strata which hid
the golden links from view. The
chain was of eight carat gold,, and
weighed eight pennyweights.
The combination of ingredients
found in Ayer’s Pills render them
tonic and curative as well as ca
thartic. For this reason they are
the -best medicine for people of
costive habit, as they restore the
natural -action of the bo ivels, with
out debilitating.
— I^O-«
j^ever to tire, never to grow cold;
to be patient, sympathetic, tender:
to look for the budding flower and
the opening heart: .to hope always;
to love always—this is duty, -
How fearful those blotches look
on your face! : Are you aware that
one bottle of Begg’s Blood Purifier
And Blood Maker will not only re
move them, but cleanse your blood
so that they will notappear again?
Sold and warranted by L. A. Fel
der, Druggist, Fprry, Ga,
Sold and warranted by L Now is the time to subscribe for
ports of the previous year of 3,-
4S9,993. The baches average about
80 bananas each, and are worth at
this port from 75 cents to $1 per
bunch. Of the imports of 1890
4,731,289 bunches, or more than
one-third of the total, came to New
York, other ports importing more
t’han a million bunches being New
Orleans, with 3,668,462; Boston,
1,602,231, and Philadelphia, 1,518,-
865. The chief sources of supply
are Jamaica, Baracoa and Hondu
ras, and Central American ports
generally.
Iu unloading the fruit is all
passed out by hand, and a steamer
will unload and be ready for a re
turn trip often in 48 hours from
the time she reaches lierdock. The
bananas which are to be shipped
to the interior are never carried
through the streets, but are trans
ferred from the steamers to light
ers or to freight cars upon trans
fer boats, whence they are taken
directlyjto thejinterior. The heav
iest importations are made in Ju
ly, other leading months follow in
this order: June, May, August,
April, September.
MAN AND THE LOCOMOTIVE.
Are many of the
countless microbes
which infest the
earth. Their destruction is great,
as they desti’oy- life iu thousands
of human, beings annually. The
only limitation to their devasta
tion is food to feed on. They pro
duce countless diseases—as mala
ria, scrofula, eczema, cancer, con
tagious blood poison, etc., etc.
The remedy for this small but nu
merous and destructive foe, is to
expel him from the body by the'
use of Swift’s Specific. S. S. S.
will route hiin put completely, and
force out aiso thepeison which he
has left behind. Be sure to get
the genuine. Do not lei any one
put off jo ii you' a substitute or imi
tation . Send for our book on the
blood and skin.
Swift Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The underground system of elec
tric railways in London will be im
itated in Paris, and probably in
New York. This system, main
tains the Boston Transcript, solves
the problem of rapid transit. The
cost of running is only seven cents
3 mile, By a new process the tun
nelling nan be (lone very pheapiy,
It is predicted that underground
railways will become practicable in
cities of a hundred thousand in
habitants.
your county paper.
A locomotive is noisy when she
is hot; so is a man.
When a locomotive gets too full
she Jays down; men do.
A lqeoDQotive’o draft is governed
by a petticoat; the draft of men
are often affected by the same in
fluence.
On a'damp, dark night a loco
motive is slippery and treacherous;
man, too.
A locomotive,when run by night,
should always have a pilot; man
should have two.
A locomotive that is always out
nights soon becomes faded ;wnhave
seen faded men.
A dead locomotive has no pnll;
dead men same.
Locomotives spark nights; so.do
en.
As a locomotives changes from
warm to hot she perspirefe; and a
man.
A locomotive is alwaye hot when
there is an “Injin-near;” heap so
white man.
Water is good for a locomotive;
try it on a man..
A smoking locomotive is a nuis
ance; ditto man.—Westorn Rail
way.
A correspondent of the Macon
Telegraph, discussing the tariff,
says: “Remove the iniquities of
the protective tariff, repeal t^e. na
tional banking law,and there would
be no power on earth to prevent
the people’s money from flowing
into their pockets, where it prop
erly belongs; and into every .chan
nel of commerce in just and equal
proportions to the requirements of
every class of business, giving new
energy to legitimate commercial
enterprise throughout the land,‘and
producing contentment and happi
ness ameng all classes of our fel
low citizens. Then all this dis
cordant clamor for free coinage of
silver, for the sub-treasury or
something better q»lan, and the
land loan scheme would die oat.”
Guaranteed Cure.
We authorize our advertised
druggists to sell you Dr, King’s
New Disspovery for Consumption,
Cough and Colds; upon this condi
tion. If yon are afflicted with
Congh, . Cold or any Lung,
Throat or'Chest trouble, and will
use this remedy as directed, giv
ing it a fair trial, aDd experience
no benefit, you.may return the bot
tle and have yonc money refunded.
We could not make this offer dicj
.we not know that Dr. King's New
Discovery could be relied on. It
never disappoints. Trial bottles
j free at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s Drug
acknowledge the supremacy of
man, the matter, of courtship and
marriagejjbeing especially referred
to.
This was at first a poser for the
ladies,' but Miss Ella Smith said
she thought she had as much right
to go courting as][a man had, and
if she wanted to marry a man she
would ask him. The matter was
lookedjupon as a joke, but several
days afterward the young lady
made good her assertion byjcalling
upon Walter Tiffin, and, after a
brief conversation, she proposed
marriage
As she was one of the most de
sirable young ladies of the town,
she was eagerly accepted by the
fortunate young man, and thejwed-
ding came off as soon as the ar
rangements therefor could be per
fected. The ceremony was per
formed by Mrs. James Gibson,who
is Justice of the Peace of the town.
The wedding was a joyous affair,
and it is said the innovation will
spread.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Pride is a deceitful iikness of
greatness.
Debt is an inexhaustible foun
tain of dishonesty.
A little tliing consoles ns because
little things affect us.
Amonst true friends there is no
fear of losing anything.
Exomple is the school of man
kind, and they will learn at no oth
er.
To persevere in one’s duty and
be silent is. the best answer to cal
umny.
The most certain means not to
lose the good that one does is to
forget it.
To live without working is to
check within one’s self the well-
spring of life.
Little minds are hurt by little
things; great minds see them all,
and are not hurt.
The pain of living without pleas
ure is well worth the pleasure of
dying without pain.
Piety ought to be lovable*, be
cause it ought to be virtue adorn
ed, and there is nothing so lovely
as virtue.
We are exact in counting the
tribulations that .afflict us; are we
equally so in counting the sins
that drew them upon ns?
,..0-4 ’
What is more disgusting to a re
fined person than to see a dirty,
tartar-covered set of teeth, and
there is no excuse for having the
teeth in this condition when you
can get a bottle of Sexafroo for 75
cents, which in a short space of
time will change them to a pearly
white. It takes the lead of all
Tooth /Washes, and is - beneficial to
the teeth, and not injurious, as are
many of the cheap tooth washes
now on the market. Sold aia 1 war
ranted by L A Felder, Druggist,
Perry, Ga.
Xew York Commercial AiiverU.er.
P-rofessor Francis G. Pi
of Harvard
on the item]
the Loweli Institution of Boston
the other day, said injsubstahce:
There are two aspects of the
liquor question, the' economic and
the moral. There are at present in
the liquor traffic throughout the
country’- some 200,000 persons - ^
163,000 in the retail, and the rest
wholesale. These -figures repre
sent only the dealers. The num
ber of persons employed ib upward
of 1,000,000. . The worst of these
horrible figures is that'they mean
the withdrawal of jnst that many
persons from the right kind of em
ployments. In tEeir present occu
pations they contribute little or-
nothing to the wealth of the coun
try.
As to the amount of liquor con
sumed in 1886, £$337,000,000 was
spent for spirits, 8304000,000 for
beer, S16,000,000 for imported
wines, and $34,000,000 for domes
tic wines; a frightful total of about
S'700,000,000. This is one-twelfth
of the amount spent for food, cloth
ing and necessaries of life.
In the same year there was re
ceived as wages §957,000,(XM), and
the liquor bill cqnsnmed two-thirds
of it. Again, it costsj$350,000,000
a year for churches; snd’tiiBi&wk
bill would buy all the churches in
six months. -
Behind all this is the great im
portance of the moral aspect That
drink is injurious to 999 cases out
of overy 1,000 goes without proof.
The question is:. How can it-he
stopped? Legislation fails of its
aim. The solutionof-the-problem,
though still far off, perhaps, is in
each individaaljfeeoghizmgthat he
is himself an important factor in
his community, as an example, and
adopting for himself the teaching:
“If eating meat make my brother
to offend, I will eat no meat, lest I
make my brother to offend.”
One of the best indications of
tbe good results of enforced prohi
bition in Portland, Maine, comes
tq notice in the loading of the
English steamers. Before the law
was enforced last fall, of the first
$1,000 given in labor tickets, $400
was paid to men known to be en
gaged in the sale of intoxicating
liquors. Since Sheriff Gram has
been enforcing the law, a new state
of things has come about The
workmen, instead of giving np
their tickets, now present them for
payment Saturday nights, and Re
markable to say, during the load
ing and unloading of the last four
English steamers not a single tick
et has been paid to a' rnmseller.—
Commenting on this the Portland
Herald says: “Portland merchants,
will' i t not pay you to help-support
prohibition? It means business
for you.”
An honest Swede tells his story
in plain but unmistakable language
for the benefit of the publia “One
of my children took a. severe cold
and got the croup. I gave her a tea-
spoonfnl of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy, and five minutes later I
The knowledge of one’s defects
is all the more beautiful, inasmuch
as ifc is not only the most neoessary
of all sciences, but also the most
rare,' “
in her throat. Then she went to
sleep and slept fifteen minutes.—
Then she got up and vomited,went
back to bed and slept good for the
balance of the night She got the
cronp the second night and I gave
her the same remedy with the same
;ooa results. I write this because
t be some one
. not know the
true merits of this wonderful med
icine.” Charles A. Thompseen,
Des-Moines, Iowa. 50 bottles for
sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert
It appears that out of 68,801 ....
ters posted by the Bank: of Eng
land authorities,, notifying the con
version of stock, no fewer than
12,700 were returnd through the
dead letter office, owing to changa
of address, and the bank author
ties'learned for the first time
hundreds of the stockholders
dead, and their representat;
unknown.
Talkativeness has another plagne
attached to it, even curiosity; for
praters wish to hear much that
theyj-may have much to say.
Many old soldiers, who contracted
chronic diarrbeea while in the ser
vice, have since, been permanently
cured of H by Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.— :
for sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert,
Perry, Ga.
Store. Large size 50c. and $1.00. ! Subscribe for the Home Journal
'
vsii ;1
And now cottonwood
the front as a sugar factoi
southern grower says its sacchar
ine qualities are *"
greater than sngar can
ty times stronger than beets.
Do you know that one bettle of
Beggs’ Blood Purifier and Blood
Maker will change a dark,
oily looking complexion to a clea'K
transparent skin? The secret of
this great change is that ^oper
ates . so successfully on the liver
and kidneys. Sold and warranted
^.A. Druggist, Perry.
A ernsade against high hui’dinga
has been inaugurated by 4he Chi
cago Real Estate Board*
. . ... -
: .