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JOHN II. HODGES, Proprietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
• * -‘.'.’Tv/' • • *" r
PRICE: TWO DOLLjVRS A Year.
+. - t
VOL. XXI.
PERKY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31,1891.
- ... —-—— —:
• NX). 52*
THE NEEL SHOE CO.
ACROSTIC.
By Her. T. B. Bussell.
DIRECTORS:
Jos. N. NEEL, of Eads, Neel & Co., John W. EE1D,1
Jno. C. EADS, “ “ “ “ WaiiTEK F. HOUSER.
Mellifluous happy wit
In friendship’s hall, on wintry night
Sweet hours of converse blest prolong,—
Smiles too of beauty, charming, bright.
The most, popular Shoe Store in Macon. Why? Because we have the Stock, the
prettiest store, the most goods, the Lowest Prices.
DON’T FAIL TO SEE US ON SHOES.
A h, who can tell the spaikllng fun,
Delightful ortfrom maiden’s heart
Enlivening, brightening as the sun,
Lights up a scene in every part,—
Effusing joy o’er sea and mart.
mm »a®m in
557 CHEEKY STREET,
gOTTON WAREHOUSE!
-CARRY TOUE COTTON TO-
•W. JA. TD .A. V I B.ac C O.,
Poplar St., - MACON, GA.
Consignments on I'brough. Bills Solicited.
Being centrally located and in the very midst of the buyers, we possess advan
tages not heretofore enjoyed.
H§ WE GUAEANTEE SATISFACTION.
Furniture
i
Best and Cheapest,
FOB SASH 01 ON INSTALLMENT.
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Cliairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.^
Complete Undertaking department.
(3rIECCI)IE^C3rIE JtP^
PEEEY, *
GEOEGIA,
Pure Greoeries!
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 ^ GROCERIES
Fruits and Confectioneries/
Tobacco, Cigars, etc.
Fish Every Saturday.
My Stock is FBESH aud PTJKE, and prices very LOW. Patronage solicited.
A-ent for the SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Full line of Fixtures aud Oil on hand.
J. M. NELSON, Perry, G-a.
CROCKETT'S IRON WORKS,
Mmm%, 'a*® Itiiiits*
Everything sold at spot Cash Prices. No
Discounts to Middle Men
g@“ Ask for; what you want. The price will be low; the work
strictly first-class. ,
E. CROCKETT, Proprietor.
for Infants and Children*
“Castoriais so well adapted to children that
known to me.” H. A. Annumi, M. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
“The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and
tny usd o tnQWn ttat it se ems a work
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
wing Worms, gives sleep, and promotes oi-
Without "injurious
medication.
“ Fear several years I have recommended
your S Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so cs it hosinvariahly produced beneficial
results.”
Edwin F. Padded, JL D.,
“ The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
Tbs Cektaob Company, 77 Muhkay Steket, New Yobs.
EADS, NEEL & GO,
■ THE OHLY-
-05’ MA.OOKT.-
Still in the
We want y'ourtode. i Will make it to your interest. Come to see us. Mr. WAL-
TEE F. HOUSEE will do the rest.
552 & 55i CHEEKY STREET,
a » IWMllt
E’er has such sportive pastime erst been heard
Like lovely lady touching her guitar,
In sweet accord, just whistling as a bird?
Zeno, stoic, of ancient times afar,
Admiring, if alive, would praise this star,
But O, what graces frolisked o'er her month!
E’en so, they play round Cupid's glittering car!
Thus gentle zephyrs o’er the sunny South
Hilavions showers portend to banish drouth.
Kefuse.1 she still the hnmble bard a view
At those rose lips which she in pucker drew.
Gath’ing them thus, that out the “whistling* ’ flew
Indeed, at last, she gave her promise true,
No more her lips to hide, if pressed in verses due
WATERWORKS BILL.
INDIVIUALITY SHOULD RULE.
Mb. Editor:—
The fact that your columns Lave
stood open for sometime with an
invitation to the public to discuss
the embryo law, or artesian well
and water works project, for the
town of Perry, the same hereafter
to be submitted to its citizens for
ratification or rejection; and the
further fact that no one, except
friend “Xenophen,” whom 1 will
turn over and examine before I
close, has stepped to the front with
an idea, or even quasi argument,
would seem patent on its face to
the individual viewing the public
and trying to determine what it
will do in the premises: That the
people either are acquiescing in the
bombastic spirit, which made such
a law probable or possible, stand
ing ready to accept it as a good
and expedient investment; Or have
determined, each in his own indi
viduality, that discussion is not
what we need—only votes temper
ed with justice and backed by com
mon sense to kill it—realizing that
there is a necessity of higher dig
nity than sentimentality, and fully
competent to burst all such bub
bles born of nothing, yet to become
an incubus upon the surplus of our
substance so much worse needed
in other directions. It is thus, In
the latter position, I hope our peo
ple will stuDd and realize. This is
as it should be, and if they see
themselves as the situation finds
them, thus it will be.
No doubt every man with suffi
cient individuality to think and act
for himself, now in the midst of a
financial pressure no man can ex
actly see the end of, has settled
down in his own conviction and
business discretion as to where his
duty lies, both to himself and the
future welfare of his friends and
town.
Unfortunately the people every
where, and in almost every avoca
tion of life, have been trying to
live too much on bombastic ideas,
or sentimentality, forgetting that
there is a reality to be met with
every step we take. Individuality
is almost lost sight of, and the
masses, with no intention to do
wrong or injure themselves, are
rapidly becoming a pack of gaping
dependents, following a shadow, or
the man who is a fool, without
knowing it.
I am dealing in generalities and
not personalities, bat whosoever
would take it to himself, I can eas
ily open the great book of records
and prove that he is one of them.
Debts are to be avoided and dread
ed as an adder, as insignificant in
appearance, yet with a bite so per
nicious in the end.
The world is full of idiots, and
the one howls while the other
grins.
The overpreponderance of mis
information and ignorance against
correct information and intelli
gence has found a mischievous
lodgment in our legislature appall
ing to behold.
From nothing we can but ex
pect nothing. The many things
which they have done and those
which they have left undone are
enough to damn them in their own
eyes. Yet, by the people they were
thus taught and instructed, from
the people they were sent, and pity
for the one must become commis
eration for the other.—“The blind
leading the blind”—but it is never
too lgte to repent and mend our
ways, improve our judgment, and
make laws hereafter instead of
abortions, that will require “every
tub to stand on its own bottom,”
every fellow in his own individual
ity, stimulating every boy and ev
ery young man to efforts of man
hood and honor, instead of encour
aging and teaching them to evade,
avoid and cover up against just ob
ligations, or looking upon the
rogue p§ a gentleman, who under
the technicalities of our laws
What is a Temperance Pledge?
COTTON GROWING RESTRICTED.
friends or swindled bis neighbor.
This may sound harsh, but the
great book of records will be open-
epupon him who would feel per-'
sonally attacked, and from it
proven that he is one of them.
“Our forefathers cleared the
ground and laid the foundation
deep down on the living rock—on
Human Rights.”
Rut the drift, under a false sen-
«
timentalism seems determined in
tentionally, unintentionally or un
consciously to reverse the true or
der of things.
I am no alarmist, nor apologist
for truth that would attack and
maintain against so many innova
tions with the work of Cain upon
them. The outcome from want of
self reliance, in keeping with the
laws of nature, and with the inten
tion and will of God, that every
man should “earn his own living
by the sweat of his brow”—not by
robbery from the other, or as an
equitable justice upon the whole.
Again, I am no widow appealing
to unjust man to take his hand off
my throat, else give me an oppor
tunity by law to exercise my voice
or vote, as well as as the babboon
and tramp, when I am to be further
burdened by taxation—but a man
open and above board, in my own
position, folly able to stand any
imposition fixed by misguided
judgment and justice, and do npt
hesitate to say I do not believe
that God ever intended that the
tramp, babboon, and man of no
substance should dictate to those
who day in and day out have strug
gled, and worked, and economized
to place themselves and families
above the plane of an animal to
live an honest man and gentleman.
God may allow me a good while
yet, and gladly wilpl work on and
continue to live by the sweat of
my own brow, but never will the
widow with property rights and no
liberty, aud the old man who has
filled his place and done bis duty
to his own and the public, find me
exercising my vote to unnecessari
ly and unjustlyHburden and op
press.
This is an inate principle, hav
ing truth and justice as a safeguard
to personal rights, and the only
protection to the liberties of a peo
ple, yet all is being disregarded
and the tendency from self reliance
into miserable corporations as
heartless as they are often incom
petent to economically manage and
direct.
No just and sensible man ob
jects to all necessary and just taxa
tion, for he is a fool who would
contend we can get along as a peo
ple without o) der and government.
The people are howling for re
lief which only their own individ
ual elicits, good judgment aDd
economy can give them, still plac
ing other task masters over them
to become perhaps, worse failures
than they themselves have been.
It is a conceded fact that every
man has a right to his own opin
ion, but when in disregard of jus
tice and the rights of others he is
a bubble on a wave doomed to fall
to atoms.- And again, that he who
would dabble with the public may
expect to get mud thrown on him
from the same mud bole he had
dabbled in. I am open to all that
can be thrown and will not take it
amiss if I get it from head to foot,
just so I may be impervious to
wind and water.
Friend “Xenophen,” from my
own individual and friendly stand
point, sits comfortably astraddle
the fence, but unfortunately jump
ed so far through his breeches as
to show a cloven foot on either
side. He is or is not opposed to
water works, or now I am, and now
[ am not. As I view it, he jumped
into the arena, coat off and suspen
ders down, with a saw in one hand
and a claw hammer in the other, or
with a hotel innovation that ought
to make justice blush or turn red
all over, evidently desiring the
people to furnish the substance
and then, so to speak, stand off and
see him do ill 0 sawing and the
clawing. “Consistency, thou art a
jewel;” and weighing his material
on my scales, his judgment is found
wanting, and his justice gauzy and
full of holes, or unconsciously oc
cupying the position of an enter
prising failure, the same as “Du
plin,” who masticated and digest
ed the county school law, finding
it a palatable morsel to be taken
by the people, at least experiment
tally, when in fact, it is.an abomi
nation to be spit oat by all alike.
In a word, kill the waters works,
kill the county school law—then
repeal Perry’s free school abomi
nation, and there will be some hope
for the gounty again. Qne inno
vation and another, this mistake
and the other, for and against the
whole, has well nigh killed the
goose (the country) that most con
tinue to lay the golden egg.
Individuality.
New York Press.
Mrs. S.M. L Henry.
It is simply the promise of a. It appears that some enterpris-
man or woman to abstain from all j newspaper man has been in-
intoxicating liquors, and, like any, terviewing eminent lawyers abroad
promise, tp make it good, requires; on the subject of the marriage of
an honest intention and the ability! American girls to titled foreigners,
to keep it. It is naturally expect
ed that any one will be able to keep
snch a promise.
“Of coarse I can keep it,” says
the victim of drink, and he folly
One of these legal gentlemen is re
ported to have declared that the
main cause of unhappiness in the
marriage of American young wo
men with French husbands lay in
believes that he can, but the results j fact that the bride’s ideas of
of observation and experience have j matrimony had been formed at
proven that we mnst not be too i home, and that if she expected a
sure; there has too often been fail
ure in spite of the best intention
on the part of those who have sign
ed the pledge, to allow us to in
dulge in confidence in the ability
of man alone. Men do not like to
believe this of themselves, and so
this leaflet may come into the
hands of some man who is jnst
such a slave, who has broken
pledge after pledge. And yet there
is hope.
In the affairs of this world, if
the promise of one man is not
broad enough and strong enough
to meet the requirement, if he has
not enough in his own person, he
begins to look about for “backing,”
for indorsement; and if he
get a “good name on his paper,” he
is all right. He may not own a
dollar:; he may have been even
proven untruthful, careless about
his promises; but he will be ac
cepted in business circles to the
extent of the “backing” he can get.
Take notice, however, the dishon
est and untruthful do not get in
dorsement. So in this matter. You
have a certain strength in your
own will, bat the power of the ap
petite for drink, and of the open
saloon, are against you, and if you
could not get the backing of God
Almighty, yonr case would surely
be desperate, for yonr soul knows
better than to trust the word of
yonr demoralized flesh. Bat Jesus
Christ has taken into account all
yonr need, the need of yonr home,
wife and children, of your soul,
and will indorse yon, poor bank
rupt that you are, to the extent of
all you lack, provided that you will
be true to yonr part,and with a sin
cere purpose to do the best you can,
trust Him. Yonr part is not to go
in the way of sinners; not cross the
door of a place where liquor is
sold or drunk; not to put out your
hand to take a drink; not to stand
and look at it; but to cleanse your
lips of profanity and uncleanness,
and be willing to let the Holy
Spirit of God and His people do
their work in yon.
Do the best you cau for God,
and He Will do the best He can for
you. “My God shall supply all
your need according to His riches
in glory by Christ Jesus.” Phil.
4: 19.
George All Right.
Anxious Mother—“My dear, I’m
afraid George is getting into bad
company. He is out very late near
ly every night.”
Observing Father—“Oh, he’s all
right. He goes to see some girl or
other. Shonldd’t wonder if he'd
announce an engagement soon.”
“He hasn’t said a word about
any young lady.”
“No; but he’s keeping company
with one all the Bame. His right
wrist is full of pin stretches.”*--
Good News.
No household which is blessed
with children, should be without
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. In the
treatment of croup and whooping
cough, thE Pectoral has an almost
magical effect. It allays inflam
mation, fress the obstructed air
passages, and controls the desire to
cough.
“Bear,” the old dog that was
taken to the Artie regions by the
Greely expedition and survived, all
its horrors, is still alive, and is
owned by Comigodre Gridley, of
Erie, Penn.
Guaranteed Cure.
We authorize onr advertised
druggists to sell you Dr. King’s
New Disscovery for Consumption,
Cough and Colds, upon this condi
tion. If yon are afflicted with
a Cough, Cold or any Luni
Throat or Chest trouble^ andwi
use this remedy as directed, .giv
ing it a fair trial, and experience
no benefit, yon may return the bot
tle and have yonr money refunded.
We could not make this offer did
we not know tliat J?r. King's I?ew
French marquies or count to act
np to her ideals she was pretty
sure to be disappointed. He added
that American women who have
traveled on the Continent suffi
ciently to get rid of the American
idea of marriage, and who conse
qnently married foreigners coolly
and with their eyes open, were sel
dom disappointed, and were gener
ally able to live with their hus
bands in tolerable comfort.
It would be difficult to pay a
finer compliment to American man
hood than that contained in this
interview. It is m effect a frank
admission that the chivalric devo
tion, tenderness and protecting
care of the American husband to
ward his wife are virtually un
known in Continental fashionable
circles. The unsophisticated Amer
ican girl, brought np in her native
land, naturally expects from her
hnsbaud the same affection, fideli
ty and generosity that she sees ex
emplified in a great majority of
American husbands. At home she
sees men as gallantly attentive and
affectionate to invalid or middle
aged wives as they were in their
early married days. She sees wo
men everywhere held in high hon
or by men in general, not because
of their youth, or beauty, but be
cause they are women. Then if
she marries a foreign noble she
finds that the superficial yarnish of
polished politeness covers only too
often brutal personal selfishness
and cynical contempt for woman
hood. If, however, she has grown
sufficiently worldly andun-Ameii-
can to regard fidelity and sustain
ed affection in a husband some
thing not to be expected, she may
get along very well.
It would be well if these facts
were thoroughly understood by the
fair and pare yonng women of the
United States. Tbe best husbands
for American girls are the Ameri
can noblemen that are to be found
in every walk of life in this coun
try.
The Boston Transcript muses:
“There are 142,519 children under
five years of age living in the ten
ement houses of New York City.
Over one hundred thoasand chil
dren under school age, still in
the formative period and surround
ed by scarcely any influence for
good. This is indeed food for
thoaght, and such thought as is
stirring the philanthropists to de
mand a remedy. The workers of
the New York Kindergaten Asso
ciation have a great problem to
solve.
What is more disgusting to a re
fined person than to see a dirty,
tartar-covered set of teeth, and
there iB no excuse for having the
teeth in this condition when yon
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 ail
Tooth Washes, and is beneficial to
the teeth, and not injurious, as are
many of the cheap tooth washes
now on the market. Sold and war
ranted by L A Felder, Druggist,
Perry, Ga.
A huge toadstool hr.s appeared
every fall for tbe last ten years on
a low branch of an elm tree near
WoldeckPark, Berlin. It stands
about twenty-five inches high and
has a cap almost two feet in diam
eter. Two years ago a policeman
picked it, cooked it, and ate it, and
suffered no bad results from the
meal.
Colds are frequently the result
of derangements of the stomach
and a low condition of the system
generally. As a corrective and
strengthener of the-alimentary or
gans, Ayer’s Pills are invaluable,
their use being always attended
with iqarked benefit
A farmer of Murray county, Ga.,
sixty-five years old, boasts that
himself and several members pf
his family hay 0 never worn any
thing bat home-made clothing. The
Hiscoyery could be relied on. "it I wool was raided, woven, dyed and
never disappoints. Trial bottles j made np at Lome,
free at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s Drug _ — ** . , .
Store. Large size 50c, and §1.00. Yucca blossoms eight and a half
! feet long from hase to lip are said
is the time to subscribe for to he abundant in the San Gabriel
the Home JoubnaL, (Cal.) canon.
Colambos Enquirer-Sun.
An important convention of this
cotton planters in the southern
states has been called to meet in
Montgomery on the 6th of Janua
ry next, to take action in reference
to the adoption of some practicable
measure whereby the production
of cotton may be restricted. The
call for this convention has jnst
been issued by the Commissioner
of Agriculture of Alabama, at the
suggestion of the Commissioner of
Agriculture of Tennessee, with
whom he fully agrees in the views
expressed by that gentleman re
cently upon the imperative impor
tance of decreasing the acreage of
cotton in the south. Montgomery
has been selected owing toils geo
graphical location as the center of
the cotton belt, and it is earnestly
hoped that there will Idb a full at
tendance. Commissioner Lane, in
his circular, says:
“It is unnecessary for me to
elaborate or go into details of the
cause of the present depressed con
dition of the agricultural interests
of the cotton belt, since it seems to
be an indisputable fact that all
things point to au over-production
of cotton. Being deeply impressed
with the conviction that this de
mand is most imperative, and ac
tion ought not to be delayed, I re
spectfully ask your immediate con
sideration, and through you that of
the cotton growers, in reference to
this subject, and the urgent neces
sity of au early meeting for the
purpose of discussing, and, if pos
sible, arriving at some conclusions
that will accomplish the desired
result.”
The Enquirer-Sun has repeated
ly stated its firm conviction that
only through diversity of crops, or
rather a determination to make
cotton a surplus crop, and not the
principal crop, can onr planters
ever be relieved from financial em
barrassment and difficulties. More
foodstuffs should be planted. As
long ci3 tarmcra liave to bay their
bread and meat, and receive less
for cotton than the cost of produc
tion, they will be afflicted with
hard times and grow poorer and
poorer. The.farmers have the so
lution of their troubles in tlieir
own hands. Upon them it will de
pend whether they shall become
independent or yearly grow poor
er. We sincerely trust that good
may come of this convention, and
most heartily endorse tbe object
for which it has been called.
BLAINE HARD TO BEAT.
The laws of health are taught in
the schools, but not in a way to be
of mnch practical benefit, and are
never illustrated by living exam
ples, which in many cases might
easily be done. If some scholar
who had just contracted a cold,was
brought before the school, so that
all could hear the dry, loud cough,
and know its significance; see the
thin white coating on the tongue,
and later, as the cold developed,
see the profuse watery expectora
tion and thin watery discharge
from the nose, not one of them
would ever forget what the first
symptoms of a cold were. The
scholar should then be given Cham
berlain’s Cough Remedy freely,
that all might see that even a se
vere cold could be cared in one or
two days, or at least greatly miti
gated, when properly treated as
soon as the first symptoms appear.
This remedy is famous for its cures
of coughs, colds and croup. It is
made especially for these diseases,
and is the most prompt and most
reliable medicine knotfn for the
purpose. 50 cent bottles for sale
bv fiolzclaw & Gilbert, drnggists,
Perry, Ga.
The smallest known species of
hogs are quartered at the London
Zoological Gardens. They came
from the southern part of Austral
ia, and are known as “the pigmy
hogs of the Antipodes.” They are
well-formed, frisky and good na-
tured, and about the size of a mask
rat. They are real hogs, and are
not to be confounded with guinea
pigs, which are a species of rodent.
An Iowa butter dealer gives this
direction for distinguishing be
tween butter and oleomagarine:
Cut a piece of the questioned but
ter in halves. If ever it saw in
side a churn there will be watery
exudations right in the track of
the knife, but if it is a combina
tion of prepared and disguised fat,
there will be a smooth, greasy sur
face only,
Do yon know that one bottle of
Beggs’ Blood Purifier and Blood
Maker will change a dark, greasy,
oily looking complexion to a clear,
transparent skm? The secret of
this great change is that it oper
ates so successfully on the liver
and kidneys. Sold and warranted
by L. A. Felder, Druggist, Perry,
Ga,
Savannah News.
All of tho. peculiar ingenuity for
which the professional politician is
noted is now kept in active exer
cise by those whe are anxious to •
deyise sagaciously plansible and
imaginary reasons why the Presi
dent and Secretary Blaine fail to
take the weighty and important
political prophet so completely in
to their most intimate confidence
as to fully disclose to them their
respective plans relative to the
forthcoming presidential can
vass.
Among the most aniqne expla
nations of the suppositions strain
ed relations that are now presumed
to exist between “the President
and his Secretary of State” is that
advanced by a New England vete
ran gnesser from Massachusetts,
who solemnly and impressively de
clares that Blaine is merely being
used as s club to batter Harrison’s
prospects out of shape by unscra-
pnlonsly designing intriguants,
who really have but little more
use for Blaine than they have for
Harrison.
Apparently the theory upon
which this hypothesis is based is
the assumption that these unknown
wily schemers wish to keep Blaine
and Harrison in at least an osten
sible acrimonious wrangle, with
sufficient heat in their discordant
relations to keep them so conspic
uously before the public eye, and
cause their respective adherents to
take sides so earnestly as to scare
others off the field and eventually
disgust even their own partisans
with the vindictiveness of their op
position to one another.
Then is supposed to come the
time for the shrewd plotters to
bring forth their irresistible candi
date and rush him right through
to the putative glory of a republi
can nomination and tbe almost in
evitable humiliation of au ultimate
defeat at the polls.
Whatever may be the fate of Mr.
Harrison in his contact witn tu<>
manipulators of the pariy ma-
cbire, the chances are that Mr.
Blaine has ha:l altogether too
much experience in traveling with
the maebine to let it dump him off
very easily. If that machine
wishes to keep fully intact it would
pursue tbe part of wisdom in con
fining any cate tricks that it may
contemplate to Mr. Harrison if it
doesn’t desire to be indefinitely
laid np for repairs.
ST. GEOBSE 1 It is said that in a
and the > lake near the city of
DRAGON, ) Silene, in England, a
huge dragon dwelt whose insatia
ble maw seemed satisfied with
nothing the people could give him.
In their despair they cast lots to
determine who among their dear
est ones should be flung to the
beast, and the lot fell to -the King’s
daughter. As she .was going, like
Jeptha’s daughter, to meet her ter
rible fate, she was met by George
of Cappadocia, who, after hearing
her sad story, bade her fear not,
and making a sign of the cross he
brandished his lance, attacked and
transfixed the dragon, and leading
him into the city beheaded him in
the presence of 811 the people. For
this noble deed he became the
Patron Saint of England. Many a
dragon in the form of disease,
while leading his victim to death,
as sure as that which would have
befallen the King’s daughter but
for her timely resene, has been de
molished by the use of S, S. S.,
and the victim restored to health.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis
eases mailed free.
Swift’s Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga,"
Oil and water may now . be ex
pected to assimilate at almost any
time. Political rumor from Penn
sylvania states that Senator Quay
and his ancient enemy, Chris Ma
gee, are united for the purpose of
nominating Blaine against all the
intrigue for Harrison that Heads*
man Clarkson can manufacture. If
the two Pennsylvania professionals
should go “agin” the national ma
chine there will -propably be a
mighty lively and interesting tus
sle in the republican comer of the
land.
An illiterate farmer who wished
to enter somo animals at an agri
cultural exhibition, wrote as fol
lows to to the secretary: “Enter
me also for a jackass.” And he
took the prize.
'
Little Giants! Little Giants! I
What a blessing that any one can
get a pill that acts in such perfect
harmony on all parts of the system
and leaves no bad results. |T~
are positively perfect. Sold 1
A Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.'
.-Mm