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JOH1V H. HODGrE^, Proprietor.
J DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS,
3 -“Vt RiSSBS fife-
AND CULTURE.
PKiGE: s£X..~0 A TOA« £
■
VOL. XXI.
PEERT, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1892.
; • •• - ; Ji
*&$&&&& EHT?2j^J3 ■"'-■r
.
T-
jDOIh/CIIUTGrOS,
561 MULBERRY STREET,
MACON, - - - GEORGIA.
(Next to Hotel Lanier.)
HEADQUARTERS FOR
CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE
Tinware, "Woodenware, Housekeepers’ NTo\ cities, Lamps
Chandeliers. Stoves and Ranges. „
UNDERSOLD BY NO ONE,
Courteous attention to all. Your patronage solicited,
2v£x. G-eo. S«t MOOISE
Av ill be ]>leased to wait on his frieudsfrom Houston county
Best and Cheapest,
FOB CASH OB ON INSTALLMENT,
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GEOEG-B ZFAGCTXj,
PERRY,
GEORGIA,
PURE
ID JEt TT C3- S ,
DRUGS! GHEflP DRUGS! 1
I carry a full line of Proprietary and Patent Medicines. Always on hand the
best line of Stationery and Toilet Articles.
FlNb PERFUMERY! A SPECIALTY-
A Full Assortment Of Ceo. LORINZ’S EXTRACiS
1 have exclusive sale of
PtiASTICO*All Colors-,!- 1 ' Latest and Beat Wall Finish.
The very best line of
ToToslcco aad Olgrais
Always on hand.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM
POUNDED by one of the vory best Druggists, - ,
Sunday hours: 8 to 10 a,, m.; 3:30 to 6 p.m.
* Eg” A share of Public Patronage is respectfully solicited.
L. A. FELDER, M, D., Proprietor.
CASTOR IA
THE LIGHT OF LIFE.
Arthur J. Lamb, in Once A We eh.
Two little children whispered love
Beside a quiet stream,
The sunlight played about their forms
In many a golden gleam.
“And this,” I thought, “is innocence,
Love's purest, sweetest dream.” '
A lover and a maiden sat
Beside the running river,
He whispered vows of endless love,
That nought bat Death should sever.
“And this,” I thought “is Love that
’ lives
A' day. Then dies forever.”
An aged couple o’er the sand
Their footsteps slowly wending*
Two shadows on the ocean strand
In perfect twilight blending.
“And this,” I thought, “is Love indeed
That lives whenLife is ended.”
snojv, I conld not stop her. The [drew up in front of “aunty’s. That j
WASHINGTON TOPICS.
THE ENDS AIMED AT.
team went by like a rocket, , • and
just as I was about to swing the
mare into the road once more, my
self, my companion, and all the
resolution of mine to give her back
talk had completely vanished. I
was as humble as Uriah Heap.
Special. Correspondence.
loose belongings of the cutter were
The elimination of the sil
ulver'i
i
d$h>-.
Woe Advertiser.
She opened the door and stood j question from Congress and from:
A Sleighing Adventure.
DETROIT FBEEPErES.
for Infants and Children.
“Castorlnls so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Anomm, XL D.,
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T.
“The use of ‘Castoria’is so universal and
its merits so well known that It seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who c!o ett Seep Castona
within easy reach.”
Caelos JtarmD.D.,
New York City.
Late PastortBloomlngdala Beformed Church.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Fills Worms, gives Sleep, and promotes dl-
“ For several years I have recommended
your 4 Castoria,' and shall always continue to
do so cs it has invariably produced beneficial
results."
Enwnc F. Pardee, H. D.,
“ Tha Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
Thk Cuktaub Cohpaxy, 77 Murray Street, New Yobs.
THE STAR THAT LEADS THEM ALL,
Is Mads Upon Honor, and Sold Upon Merit.
The Cry of To-day ii
The Echo Comes’Bach
— Best material. Ba3t attachments. Consequently the best judges buy the
“X> O MCE SSTIC. ” and are made happy.
D. C. HARRIS & GO., Sole Agents,
<513
MACON GA.
tg8“ JAMES MILLER, Local Agent, Perry, Ga.
STAND ASIDE COMPETITION
PIANOS, I ORGANS,
.Froai $125.00 Upward. I From $45.00 Upward.
■ Sheet: Music iOc.
If yon -wish to SAVE MONEY -write ns and
mention this paper. Easy Terms for Pianos
- - Most Liberal Honse in
l generally.
GEORGIA MUSIC HOUSE, MAGONJA.
mmanufaeturers 1 Wholesale and Ketail Agency for WEBEE, STEIN WAY
BVJ5EETT. STAKE Pianos; PACKARD, NEWMAN BEOS., Jho. CHUHCH &
CO.. SILVER TONE Organs.
Children Cry for. Pitcher’s Castoria.
That sleighing party was one
long to be remembered. There
was a ten-mile drive to the -farm
house of a wealthy old Scottish
gentleman. The roads v
gleam of well-beaten snow, the
crisp air was laden with glistening
frost flakes, and a clear moon gave
a light that was so reflected that
its power seemed doubled. I drove
the Morgan mare, and the spirit of
the occasion, with all the charm of
its surroundings, seemed to pos
sess her. It required no urging of
voice or Whip to hasten her gait,
but from “aunty’s” to the party,
she took ns a lively clip. “Adonis”
was oat with his blacks, bat no op
portunity offered to try issues and
we reached the great brick farm
residence without accident The
Scotchman was a whole-souled, jo
vial representative of his class,
hard headed, soft hearted and of
unstinted hospitality. His round,
red face was a cherry welcome,
and it beamed that wholesome
good humor which years caDnot
eclipse. His sturdy sons and hand
some daughters were well educated
and had that inherited refinement
which culture alone can never sup-
ply.
I had forestalled any monopo
listic designs of my, big rival by
arranging for all my dances as we
drove to the scene of festivities,
and there was a quiet satisfaction
in uoting that some fatality led
him to ask for nearly all the sets
that I asked for in advance. And
how we did dance! The pleasure
obtainable was the one thing
sought f<?r and it was a merry, rol
licking party from start to finish.
For the venerable Scotchman,
whose legs seemed rejuvenated by
the inspiring music, we served
such veuerdble relics as the Vir
ginia Reel and Money Mask. It
was a siglft worth witnessing to see
.im get np and down the middl.
uid vigorously iutrodnee th
quaint steps that he had learned
Half a century before. His face
glowed like an Italian sunset and
uis eyes lit np with genuine enjoy
ment. Once he collided with
“Adonis,” and the latter made a
semi-circular fall and landed fall
length on the floor. Everybody
laughed, bntl wasjhe one whose
jocular demonstration seemed to
cause another entry in his growing
list of grievances. We ate and
danced again, and it was only when
all had Tealizedthat we had stayed
too long that the sleights were
called for.
As I landed my partner into the
cutter, and while the high-strung
Morgan was champing her bit and
impatiently pawing the snow, the
jolly host patted her neck, called
her a beauty, looked her oyer care
fully and considerately gave this
advice as I tucked the robes about
my fair companion: “Don’t let her
get the- upper hand, lad. She’s
well ready for a run if the chance
be given her.”
I only laughed, and said tQ him
let her go, and go she did. She
shot across the broad front yard,
through the open gateway and
headed homeward at a rattling
pace! There was-rare life in the
motion, the pure air and the broad
stretches of silver sheei^that open-
ened out in every direction. Not
more than a mile had been covered
when I heard the dash of a team
behind ns, and heard “AdoBis”
yelling "to clear the way. “My.
team is running away,” he shout
ed, “bat give me the road^ and I’ll
tire them down.”
I was inconsiderate enough for
a moment to look upon the whole
thing as a. ruse to give him the
lead, but the second thought was a
more worthy one, and just as the
maddened blacks were within pis
tol shot I drew the restless mare
to the side of the road, and even
she plunged through the drifted
piled into a miscellaneous heap.
We were pitched, head foremost
into an apparently bottomless ditch
of snow, and the more we straggled
the deeper we . seemed to go. I
had instinctively clang to the lines,
but one strong lange of the mare
had jerked them from my grasp.
When I had dug my‘ vvay oat and
then dug the snow from my eyes,
I looked upon the vanishing whirl
of cutter and mare, going like an
express train. I could hear her
heels beating a tattoo on the dasl£
board and I groaned iu anguish
when I thought I would have to
settle for the cutter, and, what was
far worse, settle with-my father for
running away from college, run
ning away with his favorite mare
and then allowing her to run away-
Had we been in any condition I
would have desperately proposed
that we two lone creatures, out
there in the cold and snow, close
the series of runaway incidents by
running away ourselves. I was
never more weighed down by
troubles before or since and only
pride prevented me from breaking
forth into a lamentation of freezing
tears.
As the companion of my joys
and sorrows of that eventful night
was drawn sputtering and spit
ting snow balls out of the drift, the
first use of her voice was to pro
pose this conundrum: “What do
you think auntie will say this
time?”
I gave the robe a jerk that treat
ed us to a tempory snow storm and
irreverently remarked: “O, auntie
be blowed. If she hasn’t retained
enough sense to know that we
can’t capture a runaway horse with
half a mile start, she had better
apply for a guardian, or at least
find another one for you. If she
goes blatherskitting around . this
time I’ll give her a piece of my
mind.”
there for a second like a graven | politics, for the present, clarifies
image in the mellow light of a
band lamp. Then gentle carves be
gan to wreath her moqth as -she
gathered the situation.
Finally three of us were laugh
ing uproariously, ( and the farmer
declared that he had . never before
“struck sich agol darn lot of idy-
ots.” I settled with him and set
tled more cheaply with “aunty” by
telling her of our adventure.
the atmosphere very materially. It
need not be assumed by-thedis-
SIGNIFICAXT PLATFORM:
St Lonis Republic. _
rile acrimonious onslaught made J After instructing their
tank reader that there is not a pds-
by some politicians upon the pod
tical -position taken by the wor-kin.
people of this government strike us
as being uncalled for, and calcn
itive majority in- both Houses of.
Congress in favor of the free coin
age of silver, for such a majority
certainly exists, but that there are
potent reasons for postponing fur-
ther.action at this time even the
warmest advocates are willing to
udmit. It is a question which di
lated to stir up ire and fierce con
Meantime I knew that the Morgan j '^es on sectional lines, to a great
mare had struck.Across the coun-1 es tent, and for the-democrats.in
Congress to wrangle over it and
try for home, and the folks there
were in an excited state of uneasi
ness. I left a telegram with-the
clerk, to be sent as soon as the of
fice opened, and then I went all
over dreamland with runaway
horses, a pretty girl, and snow so
deep that a whole summer could
not have melted it
THE PERSIAN SHAH’S TREASURY
The bare idea of my taking that
estimable old aunt to task so tick r
led my partner in trouble that she
settled down into the snow' with
peal.after peal of laughter that had
the genuine ring of merriment. I
was mad enough to shoot, but what
could I do?
“We have got to get home.” I
stated in a dignified way, 'which
must have been supremely ridicu
lous. - “I am perfectly willing to
carry you a matter of eight or ten
miles, but that would preclude the
possibility of our ' seeing ‘aunty’
before dinner time. If yon can
modify your risibles sufficiently to
walk until we reach a house, I may
get something to take as home.”
Then there" were" two of us mad,
and a solmen-looking procession
we marched single-file np the road!
“Let me carry something,” -she
suggested. .
“Not a thing,” I responded de
cisively. “If we come across the
cutter anywhere along the road,
I’ll pick that up and carry it, too.”
I heard a smothered snicker and
ground my teeth;for did ever such
great chunks of adverse.fate strike
the same man within so short a
space of time?
At length we reached a farm
house, and I partially relieved my
pent-up wrath by pounding the
front door. Two or three curs
made the first response and I was
keeping them at bay with the
whip when a big, raw-boned man
opened the door and wanted to
know “What’s this fuss about?”
I explained, and it took several
minutes to convince him that I had
not tried to knock his door off the
hinges. He was finally .pacified,
and, after agreeing upon a price
that was more than- his old turn-
put was worth, prepared to take us
to “aunty.” Has cutter was a
jumper, made, out of two saplings
for runners and thills combined,
the superstructure being a dry-
goods box, carved out at the sides
with a handsaw and nailed to the
cleats which held the uprights to
gether. The motive power was a
broken down wheezy old horse that
really wasn’t fast enough to plow
corn with. Limpety jog, he went,
the big farmer gently plying the
whip and chirruping incessantly-in
a way tijat meant nothing. I was in
dulging in mental profanity while
the sensible girl leaned in one cor
ner of the primitive strnctnre and
saw only the funny side of the sit-
qfttron. It was five o’clock jq the. j qjilifqry irgiging.
jpoming, Jhat outlandish hoar at j
which some one is poetically de- j
scribed as telling “the old, old sto
Galginani’s Messenger.
Sir Henry Drummond Wolff ob
tained permission for Mrs. Bishop,
the authoress, to visit the Persian
Shah’s “Museum,” or treasure
house. She says of it: 1
The proportions of the room
are perfect. The floor is of fine
tiles of exquisite coloring, arranged
as. mosaic. A table is overlaid with
beaten gold, and chairs in rows are
treated in the same fashion. Glass
cases round the room and on costly
tables contain the fabulous treas
ures of the Shah and many of the
crown jewels.
“Possibly the accumulated splen
dors of pearls, diamonds, rubies,
emeralds, sapphires, basins and
vessels of.solid gold, ancient ar
mor flashing with precious stones,
shields studded with diamonds end
rabies, scabbards and sword Lilts
ihcrusted with costly gems, hel
mets red with rubies, goldeu trays
and vessels thick with diamonds,
■crowns of jewels, chains, orna
ments (masculine solely) of every
description, jeweled coats of mail,
dating back to the reign of Shah
Ismail, exquisite enamels of great
antiquity, all in a profusion not to
he described, have no counterpart
on earth. They are a dream of
splendor not. to "be forgotten.
“Among the extraordinarily lav
ish uses of gold and gems is a
globe, twenty inches in diameter,
turning on a frame o N f solid gold.
The staud and meridian are of sol
id gold set with rabies. The equa
tor and elliptic are of large, dia
monds. The countries are chiefly
outlined in rubies, but Persia is in
diamonds! The ocean is represent
ed by emeralds. As if all this were
not enough, huge coins, each worth
$165, are heaped round its base.”
It was Ben Johnson, we believe,
who, when asked Mallack’s ques
tion, “Is life worth livirig?” re
plied, “That depends on the liver.”
And Ben Johnson doubtless saw
the double point to the pun. The
liver active—quick—life rosy, ev
erything bright, mountains of
trouble melt like mountains of
snow. The liver sluggish—life dull,
everything blue, molehills of wor
ry rise into mountains of anxiety,
and as a result—sick headache, diz
ziness, constipation. Two ways are
open. Cure permanently, or re
lieve temporarily. Take a pill and
suffer, or take a pill and get. well.
Shock the system by an overdose,
or coax it by a mild, pleasant way.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasaqt Pellets are
the mild means. They work ef
fectively, without pain, and leave
the system strong. One, little su
gar-coated pellet is enough, al
though a whole vial costs but 25
cents.
Mild, gentle, soothing and heal
ing is Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy.
Only 50 cents J by druggists.
The Rogton Transcript declares;
"The great apple erop has been as
unfortunate for the New England
farm, relatively speaking, as the
great cotton crop has been for the
Southern plantation.”
One might as well try to stem
the rapids of Niagara, as to expect
perfect health while a Scrofulous
taint exists in the blood. Through
its alterative and purifying prop
erties, Ayer’s Sarsapailla removes
every vestige of Scrof ulous poison
from the blood.
Twelve outof twenty-three Pres T
idents enjoyed the advantages o,£
arsons
inject their differences - regarding
itjjjto the approaching national
campaign, when no result conld be
obtained at best beyond a Presi
dential veto, would neither have
been wise statesmanship of good
politics. Next session a contest
over this question will not be at
tended by such immediately dan
gerous party results, and at that
time there may be better prospects
of favorable action in the White
House. The coming campaign
ought to be, and will be, fought on
issues upon which the democratic
party is united, and there is work
enough for this session of congress
in line with those issues.
Leaders in the House are plan
ning to push forward the necessa
ry business, and secure an early
adjournment. With the free wool
bill passed and out of the way,
their expectation is that the other
tariff bills will early come to a
vote, and the most strenuous ef
forts this Session will be devoted
to nndoing, as far as possible, the
extravagant work of the billion dol
lar congress. But close observers
of congressional ins and outs do
not anticipate that ah end can be
reached before midsummer. There
is so much of the business of con
gress that can not be exactly held
under control, and so many things
occur to cause delay, that these
calculations are nearly aiivays at
fault. Oratory cannot be meas
ured off by the yard by a commit
tee, and the time allowed for the
consideration of certain measures
js generally found too short, to say
nothing of the things which come
to the front unexpectedly. Differ
ences between the House and Sen
ate over appropriation bills will
doubtless cause more than usual
delay this sassioa. The House ap
propriations committee is not vot-
millions here and millions
there with the lavish hand of the
last House. All the appropriations
for the various departments of the
government, and for other pur
poses, are scrutinized by the com
mittee, and no needless drains up
on the treasury will be allowed.
The sundry civil bill, as already
reported, makes a cut of $13,000,-
000 under the amount of this bill
last year, and similar redactions
will be effected wherever they are
possible. The republican Senate
will make a vigorous “kick” on
this score, and conference commit
tees will have a hard time coming
to an agreement.
One of those funny incidents
which sometimes occur in legisla
tive bodies happened a few days
ago. Two New .York Congress
men delivered short eulogies to the
memory of the late Gen. Spinola,
representative from that state, and
it was discovered shortly after that
they were practically the same
speech. Neither was present when
the other spoke, hence the situa
tion did not dawn upon them until
the little speeches had been deliv
ered and reported. Since then
members of the house have been
enjoying no end of fun over the af
fair. To the unsophisticated it
seems a little strange that two
great minds should ran in precise
ly the same channel upon such a
subject, but it is easily accounted
for. There are numbers of men
in congress who can neither make
nor write a speech on any subject.
But these same men figure con
spicuously in the Record on one or
more occasions daring the session
as the authors of untold jvisdom
and eloqnence, which, when print
ed, they send broadcast over their-
districts for the wonder and admi
ration of their constituents. These
speeches are written to, order for
so much cash equivalent by some
newspaper correspondent or pro
fessional writer ybo has too mnch
brains eyer to be elected to Con
gress.
test where harmony and harmoni
ous effort should obtain.
The farmers of the country, who
chiefly compose the Farmers Alli
ance, and members of other labor
unions are smarting under the lash
of unjust burdens heaped upon
them by national legislation, and
are casting about for. methods
whereby they can relieve them
selves from its sting. In their po
litical affiliations and manipula
tions the great body of these organ
izations have in view, as their chief
purpose, the good of all the people.
If in their adoption of methods to
attain this, they make honest mis
takes, rebuke and viUification are
not the instruments with which to
win them to other ways and other
means. - ’
If their methods be shown to
contain dry rot, they stand ready
to lop it off, and use nothing but
sound material. Their aims are
not extr^bne in their compass when
scanned from an unprejudiced
standpoint. .
These were succintly defined and
set forth by Hon. D. W. Yorhees
in a late speech Before the United
States Senate, when,- referring to
this subject, he said: -
“The just ends in view by the
laboring people of the United
States in the present crisis of their
affairs are few and simple, bat
far-reaching and as powerful
the mighty principles which up
hold lifej liberty, and the pnrsu.it
of happiness. They may be stated
in brief space, as follows:
' “First Absolute eqaalityin the
burdens and blessings of govern
ment founded on a tariff reform
which will place, as nearly as pos
sible, all the necessaries of life on
the free list, causing wealth, rath
er than the wants and necessities
of working people, to pay taxes
and furnish government revenue.
\ “Second. A fall and sufficient
volume of gold, silver and legal
tender paper currency, at par with
each other and incontrovertible.
“Third. Free elections in all the
states, un trammeled by ‘force
bills,, or any other federal machin
ery implying a want of faith in the
intelligence, the honor, or the pa
triotism of any portion of the
American people.
‘"Fourth. . Rigid economy in
public expenditures so that no
more billion congresses may come
to curse the country.”
to Of
for Mr. Cleveland,
Jhicago
g Minnesota democrats
significant plank on silver:
“We hold, in accordance wi:h a
traditional policy of our party, to
the use of both gold and silver,and
the sole function of the govern
ment is to examine therelativeval-
ue of the metals of coinage as es
tablished by the commercial world,
and if there has been a sufficient
fluctuation in the value of either to
.make the existing ratio unequal,
then to-readjust the ratio so that
the. number of grains, of either
metal io-the unit of coinage, the
dollar, shall be equivalent in value
and then to permit the free, unre
stricted coinage of both
New
We join the democracy
York in demanding the
the Gherman silver-coinage
We condemn that act as an at
tempt to distract the friends of
honest bimetalism, and denounce
it as calculated to debase onr cur
rency, cantract the circulating me
dium and wreck the confidence
and safety of the business world.”
This is a plain statement of the
democratic theory of free coinage,
but it is remarkable at this time
because it brings to the front the
vital qnestion of the entire disons-
sion—that of the proper coinage
ratio between gold and silver.
It is. worth recalling here that
expressions almost identical with
that of this platform were atti ib-
uted to Mr. Cleveland in newspa
per interviews not long after the
publication of his coinage letter.
His solution of the matter, as was
then asserted, was the re-adjust
ment of the coinage ratio between
gold and silver so that they would
bear to each other the same ratio
for coinage that they bear in their
average price throngh a period
long enough to give a fair average.
As against the Minnesota plat
form the advoc; 1 4 s of contraction
will have to find other arguments
than those they have beeD-advane-
i' J o against free coinage at the
present mint ratio,
form
Pronounced Hopeless, Yet Saved.
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 Langs,
cough set in and finally terminated
in Consumption. Four doctors
gave me up, saying I could live
bat a short time. I gave myself
up to my Saviour, determined if I
could not stay with my friends on
earth, I wbold meet my absent
ones above. My husband was . ad
vised to get Dr. Kingls 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
bottles free at Holtzclaw & Gil
bert’s Drugstore, regular size*- 50c.
and $L00.
For this plaf-
proposes to keep tne two
metals together in circulation, not
by “bulling:’ or “beariug” the sil
ver bullion market on a gold basis
as the republicans have been do
ing, but by coining the two metals
at their proper ratio of exchange
with each other.
The Minnesota platform means
a good deal. It will be heard from
at ■Chicago.
The Fanners’ Alliance leader:
in Minnesota are preparing to fol
low the example of their brethre
in 'Kansas, and unite .with the
Democrats in the coming State
and.National elections! The basis
for a fusion is for Democrats to
support an Alliance man for Gov
ernor, and divide the Presidential
electors, giving five of the nine to
the Democrats! At the last elec
tion in 1590 the Democrats polled
85,844, the Republican 88,111, ahd
the Alliance 58,514/ The union,
therefore, if carried out, would
givean an ti-Republican majority of
over 50,000.—National Democrat
A man with patched pants, no
money in his pockets and nothing
to eat at home is a big fool to hol
ler and hurrah for any party that
will not legislate for the poor man.
—Monteznma Record: •
Aud he is a big fool to “holler
and hurrah” for any party npon
the idea that it will legislate mon
ey into his pocket, or something to
eat into his home, unless*he woiks
aud works intelligently for the
money and the something to eat.
The man who is depending-on any
party for these tnings will wear
patched breeches all his life.—
Cuthbert Liberal-Enterprise.
The production of pig-irob dur
ing the last six months of 1891 was
unprecedented, but the output for
J angary 1892, showed a farther
increase. It looks to the New
York Commercial Advertiser as if
England had been permanently
passed in this line of indu
Except West Virginia, the
era States showed an increase in
production last year nss compared
with any earlier year. Pennsyl
vania aud Ohio showed a heavy
falling off, dae largely to stagna
tion in the rail trade;
.■ : m
"§B
For years the editor.of the Bur
lington Junction (Mo.) Post has
been subject to cramp colic; or fits
of indiljestioD, which prostrated
him for several hours, and unfitted
him for business for two or three
days. For the past year he has
been using Chamberlain’s Cholera,
Colic and Diarrhoea^Remedy when
ever occasion required,- and it has
invariably given him j
lief." 25 and 50 cent
. y :
What is more disgusting to a re
fined person than to see a dirty,tar-
tar-oovered. set of teeth, and there
is po 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 all Tooth Washes,
and is_beneficial id the teeth, aud
qqt injurious, as are many of the
cheap tooth washes now on the
market. Sold aud warranted bv L
A FoUor -d n- -
Sim
gists, Perry, Ga.
It is estimated that flie expendi
tures necessitated by the World’s
Fair will exceed 828,000,000. Over
818,000,000 of this will be expend
ed directly by the commission in
the erection of baildings, pay of
employes, etc. The remainder* will
be expended by the States and for
eign governments.
Oh! how I dislike t
Beggs’ German Salve is giving <
wonderful satisfaction wherever
so gray. Say do
i cents iu
-ry, of: love,” when onr
M an;
Are LraEcn dn a f«.ja overwork or bmBebdd ia-a/l fotnil-rr Ao., iff-’..j'
“““ Brown’s iron Bitters . { « , be :
rebuilds:he -—-i.-?:-.. aid-- digestion, removes ex-
without it. Sold and warranted by
L A"Felder, druggist, Perry, Ga.
1 and