Newspaper Page Text
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JOHN H. HODGES, Proprifctor.
DEVOTHD TO HOi
• .. ■ --. -1.' : .
, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
Dll XXI.
PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GKOKGJA-, THURSDAY, NOYEMBER 26,
I89L.
■
■■ •
NO. 48.
THE NEEL SHOE CO
DIRECTORS:
Jos. N. NEEL, of Eads, Neel & Co., John W. EE1D,’
Jno. C. EADS, “ “ “ “ "Wai/tee E. HOUSER.
The most poptdar Shoo 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. “@8
wm mat mm v%fl
557 CHERRY STREET,
Kmw$ S M,
~lmp your cottoYto ”
W. B. & o; G.
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 Flo
Railroad and Macon and Birmingham Railroad, irom P •
cant of freight rates. The only Firm in Macon that offers a Eebate from these Points.
Freight agents in the territory named will give rates and shipping directions.
Furniture,
Best and Cllaeapest,
FOR CASH OR OH INSTALLMENT.
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GBORG-B PAUL,
PERRY,
GEORGIA,
Faxe~Grocertesl
I desire to call attention to the fact that I have in store, next to the
A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF
FANCY AMO FAMILY GROCERIES,
Fruits and Confectioneries,
Tobacco, Cigars, etc.
My Stoek-te IHESH^uf PURE, and prices very LOW. Patronage solicited.
f---—«r;rs,sasasgs:"
"^Wtturs IRON wobksT
. Stlifc ® ®
Everything sold at spot Cash Prices. No
Discounts to Middle Men
ggy- Ask tor; what yon want. The price will be low; the work
strictly first-class. __
E. CROCKETT, Proprietor.
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children;
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A An^ra, M. Dj.
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. x.
“The use of 'ofea
of iSSS^gationtoeudSFei^ Few amthe
inteSlgeirt fi&es who <*.o cct beep Castona
Castorla cures Colic, Constipation,
di-
Wttfotrtinjurious medication.
“ For several years I have recom 5™???
- • * ’ and shall always continue to
do so cs it has i
results.”
Edwin F. Pardes, SL
“The Winthrop,’ 1 125th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
Company, 77 Murray Street, New Yobs.
EADS, NEEL & CO
THE OKX.X-
2IACO 3J3",
Still in the Lead!
NOT SO EASY AS IT LOOKS.
He was looking at a typo
Piling letters in his stick,
And each one seemed to fall in line
So gracefully and slick.
“That’s easy work,” he muttered,
“I e’en could do it well,
If I only had a chance,
And could the boxes tell.”
The typo bade him try his hand;
O’erjoyed the stick he took—
He set one line—it’s standing yet—
ij, BeaRj jhissoRtoElooK.
Bitter But Wholesome.
BY HABTHA FaIEBAXKS BLASCHAED.
Mrs. Hals had left the outside
door slightly ajar. From behind
the folds of the library portiere
came the sounds of a conversation
Katherine could hardly have avoid
ed hearing.
“I don’t see how, with his fastid
iousness, he can endure boarding
there,” said Mildred.
“What I fail to understand is,
how with her intellect, she can
forego neatness to the degree she
does,” added May.
“Katherine is a good cook,”
Mildred continued. “At least the
results of her efforts in the culiua-
ry line taste well. One who knows
Katherine, however, feels a trifle
uncertain concerning the possible
stage an article may have passed
through before reaching the table
an entity.”
Another voice—with a pained
sensation Katherine recognized it
as that of Helen Armour, the Hale
girl s guest—interposed.
“Now do you know, girls, I don’t
believe I’ve given a thought to lit.r
looks since our first meeting.
Don’t you think her very enter
taining? It seems to me she re
members everything she has ever
read. How at home she was among
those foreign photographs 1
brought you! There doesn’t ap
pear to be a topic of the day she
isn’t familiar with. Don’t you re
member how delightfully willing
she was to sit down and play us
that Schubert air we were discuss
ing? I thought her just charming.”
So she is, that way,” exclaimed
Mildred. “Most of the time even
I forget the rest. Perhaps that ac
counts for Dr. Neale’s long stay.
Her merits dim her faults.”
“But didn’t she look extremely
untidy coming up the walk just
now? I couldn’t help speaking
plainly. I hope you won’t think
us too critical of our friend, Helen.
Her heart is all right.”
“That’s so,” said May Hale,
“Katherine is true blue. We are
very foud of her, indeed, Helen. ’
Katherine Orr stood waiting
quietly ou the side steps, when
Mrs. Hale brought her the recipe
she had run over to borrow. She
took the paper absently, and hur
ried through the gate in the fence
dividing the two homesteads.
“So, that’s what they think of
me,” she pondered, mechanically
taking off the shabby bat she wore,
and idly whirling it in her hand, as
she swayed back and forth in the
old kitchen rocker.
Katherine Orr was a clear head
ed young woman, and always
weighed things. As her friends
declared, it was strange that, being
so well balanced, she seemed una
ble to discern her greatest defect.
But now she had begun to think
“Is this true?” she deprecating-
ly questioned. As she glanced with
critical eye about the sunny kitch
en she beheld affirmative evidence
of her friends’ words.
The hard pine floor needed a
thorough oiling, the windows show
ing decided lack of care, the rusty
iron sink and the copper pump
mottled with green, assumed new
aspects in Katherine’s quickened
sight.
She sighed as she turned • from
the room to herself. The indigo
blue wrapper spotted with dust
and water, the dingy, hands, the
long, irregular line of black show
ing on her arm as the loose sleeve
was pushed up, were all silent, but
eloquent messengers to Katherine’
thought.
There was no doubt that she
had a fault that needed eradica
ting. But a general ovf-rturn meant
endless talk and wonder • among
those very friends who most eager
ly desired such a change. The un
tidy habits had grown upon her
slowly. In the same almost im
percepTble manner they must be
put away.
She could understand now why
it was that the one boarder she
wished to. keep to eke out her own
and her invalid mother’s small
income was always in a state of go
green lawn, its wide veranda, its:
large, sunny room3, seemed a de
lightful abode, scanned superfici
ally; but there was an atmosphere
about it that proved unhealthful to
every new comer. Katherine felt
the oppressiveness of it to-day.
As boy and girl, Katherine Orr
and Donald Neale had fought
against each other for first rank at
school. Whichever won, the other
took the defeat good naturedly.
It was a great disappointment to
them both when Donald joined the
freshman class at Harvard, that
the death of Katherine’s father
left her without sufficient means to
enter the Annex.
Katherine bore the deprivation
bravely, determined that if not by
one .way then by auothersbe would
match Donald’s attainments. Well,
she had succeeded in part, but had
it not been at a cost?
She had neglected her house
work and disregarded her appear
ance, to study, think, and write.
She was what the world calls a
cultured woman. Was she, in truth,
a refined one? Katherine had cour
age, to answer that qnastiou aright.
She saw “the little rift within the
lute.”
It is not necessary to enter into
a minute account of Katherine
Orr’s reform. In the dark, unseen
corners of her home she begun.
Day after cay, week after week,
she worked. For one pair of hands
it was a long, laborious process to
renovate the old house. Soap,
sand, .water, and a willing disposi
tion can work wonders, however.
Attention to details at the start
saved many a tired feeling later. .
Plenty of baths and fresh air
could not fail to produce then-
beautifying bodily effects. A ready
needle fud a washtub are valuable
ctors iu keeping one’s working
appai el iu presentable condition.
It was a long time—years—be
fore she could say confidently there,
had been a complete change, or
feel assured there were no reason
able grounds of criticism in her
regime.
Three years later Helen Armour
was again at her friends, the
Hales.
“Oh Mildred! who is that splen
did looking woman coming Up the
walk?” she eagerly asked, the
moruing after her arrival.
“That? That’s Katherine Orr—
Katherine Neale, I mean. You
remember her, don’t you?
“Katherine Orr! Why, yes,
remember her well; but hasn’t she
changed greatly?” Helen doubt-
ully replied:
“Changed? Perhaps; I haven’t
thought about it. We see her daily,
you know. Possibly t you notice
more.”
She certainly has changed, and
for the better,” Helen emphatical
ly responded. “And so she really
married that nice Dr. Neale?”
“Of course,” exclaimed May half
iudignantly. “We always knew
she would.”
“Did you? Why, I thought—”
but on consideration Helen kept
her thought to herself.
Who wants an invitation to ‘a
feast of reason and a flow of soul?’
In other words, who wishes to take
tea with the Neales to-morrow
night?” Katherine gaily querried,
as she came into the library.
Helen came forward to shake
hands cordially. “From my re
membrance of other feasts of rea
son, I, for one will strain every
nerve to be there,” she 'merrily
said.
lea? Tea at Katherine’s? That
means Nectar! Ambrosia! Olym
pus!” May melodramatically in
terrupted. “We’ll wash the dish
es, Katherine,” she- added in a
stage whisper.
“I’d like to see your vandal
hands laid on Katherine Neale’s
dishes, May Hale. You know you’d
never do them to suit her. She’s
very particular, that Katherine
Neale,” Mildred explained to
Helen.
Katherine’s eyes shone.
“You made me so, girls,” she
said.
“We? Now what do you mean
Katherine?”
Katherine told them .of the con
versation she heard so long ago.
It was hard discipline, girls j
but it did me good. The medicine
was bitter but wholesome.
Helen leaned forward and touch
ed Katherine’s hand, caressingly.
“We rise by the things that are
under our feet,” she gently quoted.
“But, oh, Katherine,” cried
Mildred; “it was cruel of us. We
would not say such a thing now.'
“You could not, truly,” was the
quiet response. And. Katherine
Was, as she felt,
THE COTTON OUTLOOK.
Atlanta Constitution.
' Avoided Unpleasant Argument. i The World's Temperance Congress.
Chilli Cry for P itcher ’ s Castoria -
ie Qrr homestead, with its
Under the new conditions of fi
nance, commerce and industry, the
successful farmer finds it necessa
ry to adopt business methods and
conduct his affairs according to
business principles.
Last year onr farmers held back
their enormous cotton crop, but
prices steadily declined. This year
thev have gone to the other ex
treme, and the rapid marketing of
their staple has forced prices.down
below the cost of production.
There is a time when it is to the
producer’s interest to hold his cot
ton, and close observers c£ the sit
uation are satisfied that now is the
time to resort to that policy.
Too many of onr farmers • and
merchants are misled by the pre
dictions as to cotton telegraphed
from New York. These reports
appear in the news columns of the
press, and it is taken for granted
that they are reliable. The fact
is, they are frequently the work of
speculators who send them out to
aid their speculative schemes.
Just at present the speculators are
trying to make it appear that this
year’s crop is exceptionally large,
but it is the opinion of southern
experts that the crop is very far
short of last year’s' output. Un
fortunately, however, the rapid
marketing of the crop has played
into the hands of the speculators,
and has caused their estimates to
be generally accepted. The only
thing that will help producers now
is to hold cotton back. If it must
be sold in order to pay off indebt
edness, it is all right, and this we
advise every farmer to do, but ev
eryone who is independent enough
to afford it, should hold his cotton
until the era of low prices is over.
It has been suggested that if the
southern farmers would buy 10,-
000,000 bales for future delivery,
and plant no cotton next year, they
would be masters of the situation.
Cotton would rise to war-time
prices, and the south would make
hundreds of millions clear profit—
more than production would yield
in fifteen or twenty years. We
have never favored speculation in
futures, but _ it is plain that this
suggestion, somewhat modified, is
full of tempting possibilities. Sup
pose our farmers, through the alli
ance, should purchase 5,000‘000
bales for delivery next summer,
and plant only enough seed to
make a crop of 4,000,000 or 5,000,-
000 bales? As soon as the facts
were known the bears would be
stampeded and cottou would ad
vance to prices that would yield
producers a handsome profit.
The southern planters have
reached a point where self-preser
vation is the supreme question.
They cannot go on selling cotton at
1 or 2 cents below the cost of pro
duction. Their lack of prosperity
effects everj industry, every line
of business and every class in the
south.
With united action it is possible
to materially improve the situation
It is not practicable to plant no
cotton, but it is practicable to re
duce production to the extent of
25 per cent.,and if this is done next
year the south will realize a splen
did price for her great staple and
the <vhole southern country would
prosper as it has not for years.
It is. time for our farmers to take
a strictly business view of the cot
ton industry . Let them begin their
work of self-protection by holding
back their cotton, provided always,
that their debts are paid. Then
let them get together in their alli
ance meetings and plan their line
of action next year. In the mean
time, they will do well to warn
their neighbors against cotton
predictions sent out from New
York in the interests of the specu
lators who control the market.
A great religious revival is
sweeping over Northern - New
Brunswick. It is said to be une
qualed in the history of the prov
inces. -
Pronounced Hopeless, YetSaved.
From a letter written by Mrs.
Ada E. Heard, of Groton, S. D.,
we quote: “Was taken with a bad
cold which settled on my Lungs,
cough set in and finally terminated
Consumption. Four doctors
gave me np, saying I could live
but a short time. I- gave myself
up to my Saviour, determined if I
could not stay with my friends on
earth, I would meet my absent
“It’s been pretty .warm this week,
hasn’t it?” remarked the thin man
with the prescription, leaning up
against the counter in Wilfert s
drug store last night, according to
the Cincinnati Commercial Ga
zette.
“Warm?” spat the fellow with
the cigar; “why, I thought it was
cool! You don’t have any hot
weather around here anyway.”
“We don’t?” asked the druggist,
interrogatively, doubting.
“Nup. Yon ought to try a hot
spell in Prattville, Ari. Have to
tie a wet sponge over your month
when you go out in the middle of
the day, to keep the hot air from
cracking the enamel on your teeth
and blistering your tongue. It gets
hot down there, I tell yon.”
“Bat. land alive, man, if you had
ever been in Texas with the United
States survey you wouldn’t speak
of a little thing like that,” quietly
whispered the pale customer from
John street. “The summer I was
there on duty there were three ice
houses burned down.”
“Catch from the heat of the
sun?” asked the druggist. -
“Well, not exactly, for you see
the flames broke out at the bottom.
It- weis a clear case; the ice had
caught fire from spontaneous com
bustion.”
A deep silence rested over the
group for a few moments, while all
the champions collected their
nerves. Then the commuter from
Sedamsville, who had just stopped
in on his way down to the train,
remarked casually:
“I have seen a little hot weather
myself in my time, but the hottest
I ever saw was in Mexico. We
had three Louisiana darkies with
ns, and they could stand a good
deal of hot weather. On one of
the hottest days it became neces
sary to have some outdoor work
done, and these fellows, of course,
were sent out to do it. Before they
started the chief of the workmen
warned them not to drink any cold
water before going out, as it was
dangerous. They hadn’t been out
side twenty minutes before we
heard two or three loud toots as of
a railroad whistle, and the whole
party hopped up to see the train
pass. But the chief looked up with
horrified face, and crying, ‘I
knew it!’ hurriedly picked up a
basket and a shovel and broke for
the door.”
‘Why, what was the matter?”
asked the crowd, as the narrator
paused to light his cigar, noncha
lantly.
Oh, those darkies had sneaked
around to the back porch and dis
obeyed orders by taking a drink,
so the minute they got in the sun
the intense heat began generating
steam just as in an engine boiler.
About the time there was a pres
sure of thirty or forty pounds on
the poor deyils opened their
mouths and the escaping steam
whistled, just like a railroad en
gine,out of their mouths and noses.
By the time we got to them they
had burst!”
“What was the basket and shov
el for?”
“Tj gather up the scattered re
mains,” was the solemn reply, as
the Sedamsville man walked out.
“I don’t like to make trouble,'
apologetically said the John street
man, “but if that fellow had stay
ed here I’d have had to call him a
liar.”
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 tbe
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 i3 beneficial to
the teeth) and not injurious, as are
many of the cheap tooth washes
now on the market. Sold am 1 war
ranted by L A Felder, Druggist,
Perry, Ga.
A Dakota paper tells the latest
corn story. It says a farmer raised
1,000 bushels of popcorn and
stored it in a barn. The barn
caught oh fife, the corn began to
pop, and filled a ten-acre field. An
old mare in a neighboring pasture
had defective eyesight, saw the
corn, thought-it was snow, and lay
down and froze to death-
The Glasgow (Scotland)Reform-
er referring to the action of the
National Temperance Society in
calling a World’s Temperance Con
gress, to be held in Chicago at the
time of the Columbian Exposition,
says:
“The American Temparance Un
ion has done a notable thing. It
has called a World’s Congress of
temperance men for 1893, and it
has asked, and will]; doubtless re
ceive, a hearty and extensive re
sponse to its invitation. There
have been Congresses more or less
world-wide in their character, at
intervals in the history of the tem
perance movement, and they have
proved of immense benefit to the
cause in many ways. We cannot
help thinking, however, that the
one now projected by our Ameri-
brethren will, on various ac
counts, prove of deeper interest,
and more beneficial in its results,
than any of its predecessors. It
may seem a long way ahead to
1893, but it indicates a determina
tion to secure the fullest possible
representation of every nationality
and every organization on the en
tire globe. Many who have to
consider the question of traveling
thousands of miles, and being ab
sent from home for possibly two
or three months at a stretch, re
quire to lay theii plans and. make
their arrangements far in advance,
and will not consider the date as
unnecessarily distant. There will
be much to discuss bearing on all
the aspects of the question, and by
the best intellect that the move
ment has enlisted. Without doubt
the influence of such a gathering
will be fruitful in results to the
whole world. We venture to ex
press an earnest hope that Scot
land will be well represented on
the occasion. It has always borne
worthy part in the great temper
ance enterprise, and it will not, we
are sure, be behind on this great
occasion.”
At a meeting of the Executive
Committee of Friend’s Union for
Philanthropic Labor, held at Sea
Girt, N. J., the following was unan
imously adopted:
“L Friend’s Union for Philan
thropic Labor, representing New
York, Baltimore, Ohio, Indiana
and Illinois, Yearly Meetings,
heartily approves the holding of a
World’s Temperance Congress in
Chicago at the time of the Colum
bian Exposition as arranged by
the National Temperance Society,
connection with the World’s
Congress Auxiliary, and will ap
point delegates thereto.
“II. We observe with much re
gret and apprehension the stall
widely prevalent use of intoxicants,
the increased and increasing pro
duction of distilled and fermented
liquors, the many and ominous
combinations of distillers, brewers
and saloon-keepers in national,
state and local organizations, and
we would urge united and vigorous
effort on the part of all friends of
temperance to discourage injurious
social drinking usages, and for the
entire suppression of the manufac
ture and sale of all alcoholic liq
uors for beverage purposea”
An honest Swede tells his story
in plain but unmistakable language
for the benefit of the public. “One
of my children took a severe cold
and got the croup. I gave her a tea-
spoonfal of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy, and five minutes later I
gave her one more. By this time
she had to cough up the gathering
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
croup the second night and I gave
her the same remedy with the same
good results. I write this because
I thought there might be some one
in the same need and not know the
true merits of tbiB wonderful med
icine.” Charles A. Thompseen
Des Moines, Iowa. 50 cent bottles
for sEile by Holtzclaw & Gilbert
Many old soldiers, who contracted
chronic diarrhoea while in the ser-
ones above. My husband was ad- yj c6j have since been permanently
VnQPfl' tn Uftfl I )l\ Kmi? 8 NfiW - T)lS- C it Lit in
situation.—[Exchange.
vised to get Dr. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colds. 1 gave it a trial, took
in all eight bottles; it has cured
me, and thank God I am now a
well and hearty woman.” Trial
oottles free at Holtzclaw & Gil-
mistress of the j berfis Drugstore, regular size, -50c.
andSLOO.
cured of it by Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy*—
for sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert,
Perry, Ga.
There are only twenty hearses
in Buffalo. One day recently every
one of them was in use, and at the
same hour.
Antoinette Sterling, the famous
singer, once attended a Quaker
meeting in England, and. after
prolonged silence on the part of
everybody, she - rose and sang,
“Rest in the Lord.” At the close
of the service one of tbe elders ap
proached her and said: “Thee
knowest, sister, that it is against
the rules, but if the Lord telleth
thee to sing thee must.”
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 not appear again?
Sold and warranted by L. A. Fel
der, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
MISS LIBERTY STILL LIVES.
Chicago Herald.
Philadelphians familiar with the
story or “Miss Liberty,” as they
term the young lady whose profile
was taken as the model for the
jss upon the silver dollar,
read with surprise recently that
the picture “represents the feat
ures of a once living, breathing!
beautiful American woman,” says
Philadelphia paper.
That “Miss Liberty” is beauti
ful, no one would question, but the
imputation that she was no longer
in the flesh all her friends were
ready to deny.
The young lady is Miss Anna
W. Williams, teather of kinder
garten philosophy in the Girls’
Normal School, Seventeenth and
Spring Garden streets. At the
time Miss Williams’ classic feat
ures attracted the attention of the
mint engraver she was principal of
the girls’ school at the House of
Refuge.
Her profile was then considered
to be the most perfect of any wo
man’s in Philadelphia. It was with
great difficulty, however, that she
was prevailed upon to give sittings
to the artist, and only upon the
condition that her identity should
never be revealed would Miss Wil
liams consent to have her likeness
indellibly stamped upon the hearts
of the people—for it is said the
dollar is nearest the average Amer
ican heart. But it was impossible
to keep the secret long, and soon
after the dollars were put in circu
lation the young woman’s identity
also became known.
The story that the engraver had
put too much of his own soul into
the work that he fairly worshipped
his ideal, and that the romance
ended as it always*does when two
hearts beat as one, was the produc
tion of a romantic imagination.
Miss Williams continued to teach
at the House of Refuge until a few
years ago, when she obtained the
position at the girls’ normal school
which she now so Eicceptably fills.
NO HABITATION.
There can be no habitation in
the blood or body for poisonous
microbes when Swift’s Specific en
ters the system. It changes the
character of the blood so that the
germs must either perish or get
out, and of course they leave. S. S.
S. also forces out the poison which
the microbes have left behind. If
there is a sore.br ulcer the poison
eomes out through that, otherwise
through the skin.
“Having suffered much from
contagious blood poisoD,after using
half a dozen bottles of Swift’s Spe
cific, I was restored to perfect
health, and all eruptive sores dis
appeared. You are at liberty to
make any use of my statement that
you wish—J. Cbosby Bybon, 208
Third Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa.”
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis
eases mailed free.
Swift’s Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
James Thorn, the village barber
of Lambertville, Conn., has just
completed a novel fishing line. It
is composed entirely of women’s
hair, of every color and shade.
Whenever a customer with partic
ularly long hair would come to
have her hair dressed he would
beg of her a few silken threads,
which he would carefully lay away
and work up at his leisure.
Wild horses are sociable in char
acter, and protect themselves
against carnivorous beasts byherd-
ing together in large numbers. In
face of any great danger, such as
storms and fires, they unite in still
larger bodies, probably from a
sentiment akin to the human one
at similar crises.
How many people know that
Mount Vernon was so named in
honor of Admiral Edward Vernon,
of the British navy, the conquerer
of Porto Bello, in whose unsuccess
ful expedition against Carta, gena
Lawrence Washington, George’s
elder brother, sailed as a midship
man? *'
There are 40,000 women study-
in the various colleges in
erica. And yet, marvels the
New York Commercial Advertiser,
it is only 25 years since the first
college in the land was opened to
women.
m
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lilggll
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 give it a
rich, glossy appearance? Try one
bottle. Sold and warranted by L
A Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
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