Newspaper Page Text
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s - r - ; *X-
JOHN H. HODGES, Proprietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS. PROCRESS AND CULTURE. .
PRICE: #1.50 A YEAR EV ADYAA CE.
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;:
VOL. XXI.
PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1892.
Mallary Bros.
Macon, - Georgia.
Ploas3 Write us for Prices Before Buying
Engines, - Boilers, - Cotton - Gins,
Cotton Presses. Saw and Grist Mills,
.MOWERS,
•‘DOE YE NEXTE THYNGE.”
—OR-
Any - Kind - of - M<t-
chinery.
Can Save You Money on;
First-Class Goods.
Mallary Bros. & C5o.,
MACOJST, -
9@“ Mention This Paper.
GEORGIA.
or. "W_ IDOZMII-N G-OS,
561 MULBERRY STREET,
MACON, - - - ’' GEORGIA-
(Next to Hi;tel Lanier.)
HEADQUARTERS for
CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,
Tinware, Woodemvare, Housekeepers’ XoVelties, Lamps
Chandeliers, Stoves and Ranges. . / .
UNDERSOLD BY NO ONE.
Courteous attention to all. Your patronage solicited.
O-eo.' i^OOIEBIE.
Av ill lie pleased tojwait on liis friends from Houston county.
Allice Armstrong. In Frank Leslie's.
The mysteiions thread of life
Which lies in a tangled skein
Of duties and joys and.voicless hopes,
All knotted at times with pain,
Will untwist its vexed string
As yon “doe ye nexte thynge.”
Do dnties of every day
Coil closely from head to feet,
Till, throbbing with pain, the heart and
brain
Against the dread meshes beat?
’ Would your heart soar and sing?
Only “doe ye nexte thynge.”
Ambition with mighty greed
For riches, or fame, or place
Entwines round the soul its web of Inst
And strangles each heavenly grace.
Would yon live by the word?
Give“ye firste thvnges” to God.
With peace in the heart and mind,
Life’s skein in its tangled maze
Unravels its mysteries one by one.
E’en down to the end of days.
Then “ye laste thynges” will be
To pass over Death’s sea.
COMMISSIONER NESBITT REPLIES
Atlanta Journal.
Editor of Atlanta Journal
Allow me, through your col
umus, to correct some errors o£
Judgo Henderson’s letter, which
appeared in your issue of Thurs
day.
When the judge . says that i
statement is. “absolutely untrue’
one naturally supposes that he has
proof positive to back his asser-
tion. But au examination of the
books of the agricultural de
partment will show that he has
perpetrated an inexcusable—mis
take.
Under my administration there
has never been au assistant ci
Furniture,
Best aad Cheapest,
FOR SASH OR ON INSTALLMENT.
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
GEORGE PAUL?
PERRY,
missiouer.
Mr. Hunnicutt
GEORGIA,
3D 7cR, TT G- S ,
PURE DRUGS! CHEAP DRUGS!’
I carry a full line of Proprietary and Patent Medicines^ Always on hand the
best lino or Stationery anti Toilet Art^lesi
FiNh PERFUMERY A SPECIALTY.
Assortment Of Ceo. LORINZ’S EXTRACTS
A Full
I have exclusive sale of ,,
PLlASTICO-A XI Colors-< ta LatcBt and Bert Wall Finish.
The very best line of
□To’toa.cco.axi.d. Oig'iars
Always on hand.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM
POUNDED by one of the very best Druggists,
Sunday hours: 8 to 10 a.m.; 3:30 to 6 p.m.
a. share of Public Patronage is respectfully solicited.
L.' A. FELDER, M. D., Proprietor.
CASTOR IA
for Infants and Children*
“Cmstorla is so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as snperior to any prescription |
known to me.” H. A. Aucheh, 1L D.,
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Castoria cores Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Wills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dl-
Witlout injurious i
“The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and
its merits so weU known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse ft Few. are the
within easy reach.”
who’Cocctisiep Castoria I results.”
“ For several years I have recommended
your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
o os it lias invariably produced beneficial
Late Faster Bloomingdals Reformed Church.
Edwin F. Pardee, JL D.,
“The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
Tbb Ckktadb Cohpakv, 77 Hurray Street, New Yobs.
PE R
HOTE Xi
fgEQBGms .
POLITE ATTENTION GIVEN ALL GUESTS COMFORTABLE
ROOMS. TABLE SUPPLIED WITH THE BEST
EDIBLES THE MARKET AFFORDS.
R A TES: $2-00PER HAY.
Liberal reduction by the week, or by the' month.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
occupied the
place o£ chief clerk, filling the po
sition which Mr. Carter now occu
pies, and his name so appears ou
the books. Also, while he served
there was but one other clerk, and
not two, as Judge H. so positively
affirms.
• The office of assistant commis
sioner, at a salary of $1,800, created
by the judge, was abolished when
I took charge of the department
and the work since then has al
ways been carried on hy two clerks
with my aid.
The statement that I owe my
olection to Mr. Hunnicutt is also
untrue, as everyone acquainted with
the work of that convention knows.
On the other hand, the position
of professor of agriculture at the
University, which Mr. Hunnicutt
now holds, was secured to him in
great measure through my assist-
andee.
' The work there is more congeni
al to a man of his attainments than
an office clerkship, and I cheerful
ly aided him to enter this wider
field.
How can Judge Henderson claim
any creditit for the reform in the
oil inspection law, when during his
administration of twelve years
nothing decisiye was accomplished
on this line?
Is it not a little strange that, if
the judge was such a warm advo
cate of the present law he should
try to defeat its provisions? This
he did when he attempted to keep,
his kinsman in position as oil in
spector at the old exorbitant fees
when his term as inspector had
expired.
The judge will doubtless remem
ber that he came into my office and
insisted that the minutes signed
by himself, under au opinion ’ of
Attorney-General Anderson, were
wrong,- and that the term of his
kiusmau did not expire as there
stated, October 1,1891. Tlie ques
tion was submitted to Attorney-
General Little, who sustained me
in appointing another inspector,
but while his decision was pend
ing the kiqsman pocketed the sum
of $642.65.for two days’ work. Al
lowing him his full month’s sala
ry, which, under the present law,
would have been $125, he still
has $517.65, which, but for Judge
Henderson’s iaterference, would
now be in the state ‘treasury. If
his kinsman had continued . in of
fice for the three months claimed
for him by Judge Henderson, he
would bave collected $2,291.58, not
one cent of which whonld have
come to the state.
Does this prove Judge Hender
son’s warm advocacy of thenew
bill?
Is it not rather unfortunate for
the judge that in attempting to
pervert my langnage and place me
in a false position, he should chal-.
lenge his own statement that cot
ton can be produced at a fraction
over two cents per pound? This
statement lie makes in his Com
monwealth of Georgia, page 367,
published in 1885.
I produce only one witness—the
experiment station—to show, that
cotton can, after years of renova
ting' crops, had been made at a
cost of 3J cents, while he brings
forward seventy-five of the best
WASHINGTON TOPICS. THE GAMBLING SPECULATOR.
THE PATH OP DUTY.
Spatial Correspondent.
Washington, D. C., June 26, ’92. i
Atlanta Constitution.
A business. man in New York.
Southern Cultivator.
From one extreme to the other j
The real trouble and anxiety of
and his result was obtained in one
season, without preparatory reno
vating crops.
Since Judge Henderson has prac
tically denied his own statemeo t>
that cotton can be raised at a little
over 2c, and is at present attempt
ing to pose as- the champion of the
has recently told the story of his 1 of this terrestrial globe there ap- probably the most corrupt assein-
bucketshop experience, and, as pears to be a spirit of unrest J biage of its kind in the Uiafn™
pears
spirit
j blage of its kind in the history of
farmers in Georgia to prove that it the President is now just begin- J the speculative gambling he de-; among the Nations of the Earth, the party or of the country. It
was done at a- fraction over 2 cents, uing.. After bending all his'ener- scribes differs from the options of Famine, Pestilence and Discord! was controlled
gies and every resource of his. of
fice to secure a re-nomination, lie
now begins to realize that a still
harder fight most be made in the
canvass, and that even then he
may lose. He already finds that he
has his hands full. As he proposes
totake general direction of his own
farmers, and since he says such | campaign, of course the public
statements are injurious to them,ibnsiness must'suffer. To keep
would it not be well for him to ;> track of the legislation of Con-
show wherein he was wrong, and grass and pass upon thfe Bitih sent
why he made such statements?
Since taking charge of the de
partment 1 have never ceased to
urge upon the farmers the impor
tance of making home supplies and
of reducing not only the acreage of
cotton, but the cost of its produc
tion also. It was with this end in
view that the experiments * at the
station were made with the resnlts
as published.
That my talks, add articles pub
lished from time to time have had
influence, is evinced by the fact,
that this year the cotton acreage in
Georgia is reduced about 20 per
cent, representing at the average
production, about 225,000 bales,
while 100,000 tonB less of commer
cial fertilisers have been sold, and
much of that used has been put
nnder the graiD crops.
It is on this question of reduced
cost of production that the future
prosperity of Georgia farmers de
pends.. If we cannot reduce the
cost of making cotton, it would be
befter to abandon it altogether, for
we cannot, at present figures, com
pete with Texas and the Mississip
pi valley, with their more fertile
lands, and to make cotton at 7 to
10 cents and sell it for less means
agricultural rain.
I stand to-day exactly where I
stood when my interview and letter
was published. I deny nothing
winch appeared in there and I
challenge Judge Henderson to
prove his absurd change—that 1
said cotton is or can be raised
throughout Georgia for 3^ cents.
What I said about 2^ cents cot
ton was in reference to a few acres
treated in a special manner, and
did not apply to the Georgia crop.
In regard to the cost throughout
the state I distinctly said “The
price of cotton is far below the fig
ures which uuder the present sys
tem represents the cost of produc
tion.”
The judge was commissioner for
welve years and should be able t.
find in his record acts that would
sufficiently recommend him to the
suffrage af the people, without de
scending to subterfuge and mis
representation of my acts.
I have heretofore refrained from
using the facts against the judge
elicited in the last campaign, but
since he is again a candidate and
has made a most unwarranted at
tack on me, I call attention to the
following:
In his long service he had suc
ceeded in making the department
unpopular that many of the
farmers of the state wished it abol
ished; and a great part of my time
has been occupied in eradicating
impressions and changing false
methods that has grown np with
his administration.
He persisted in paying out large
sums in clerk hire, oil fertilizer in
spectors’ fees and salaries; his
careless distribution of tags, his in
difference to the sentiment against
bnlk inspection; his determined
fight against every reform suggest
ed by the legislature, especially the
bill making th9 office of commis
sioner elective and reducing the
fees, for the inspection offeriilisers
came near costing him ■Imposition
more than once, and made the du
ties of his" 8nccessoir~exceedingly
difficult and*perplexing.
Butin less than two years' the
present administration ’has carried
to the White House for his signa
ture, and at.the same time give
proper. consideration to all the
matters brought before him by his <
cabinet officers, while his days and
nights are given np to consulta
tions with politicians from every
where, is an utter impossibility.
Another perplexing feature of the
-i - . , , Bd ■ , , by office-holders
the big stock exchanges only in de- j m ar the tranquility of the people, j and venal southern delegates who
gree, it will be of interest, while and distrust and uncertainty pre- were openly purchased.
vail. ' . In open defiance of the princi-
In the United States the phs- ple3 of civil-service reform 130
.sions of men are being aroused by Federal office-holders were dele-
political propagandists, and neigh- gates to the convention in behalf
bors and friends are being es- of their chief, and ‘hundreds more
tranged aud arrayed against one were working for him on the ont-
another. The low price of cotton side. More than sixty negroes
the Hatch bill is pending, to pre
sent some of the facts stated iu his
narrative.
This New Yorker started out
two years ago to beat the bucket
>ps. He saw men with their
thousands on the stock exchange
make money, and he thought that j j las eu tailed severe losses upon the I toriously for sale, according to’re-
dreds in the bucket shops,
started out with a good business,
and wound np with no business
and no money.
The young speculator studied
the quotations of the slock ex
change, and made h’is first venture
iu a small way. He pocketed $10
profit, ilfid then bought more stock.
This time his margin was wiped
farming classes, and,' naturally, publican testimony on both sides
•°' e * they have become discontented, were members of the convention. *
and are seeking to better their con- Of Mr. Harrison’s 535 votes, 211
dition. - came from southern states which-
It is obvious to the calm and are surely democratic. These votes
reasoning man that no positive were his in return for favors and
and enduring good can result to rewards past and hoped for.
situation is the filling of the large on U Me learned that he could pro-
son never once attempted, and that
a legislatufe of farmers cheerfully
sustained 'and - aided me to these
reforms; is another proof that my:
work has been on tberight-line.
Before closing I wish to ask the
. ers, is a man who! does: not
even own a farm and who has not
engaged in farming operations for
several years, who is now president
of a phosphate company, who was
overwhelmingly repudiated at the
] tolls by his neighbors in Rockdale,
; lenry, Morgan and Walton, coun
ties, and by his county meninNew-
ton,'receiving only one vote in the
militia district in which he had
lived. Is this the man to represent
the great agi'ionltnral industry of
Georgia? Respectfnlly,
R. T. Nesbitt.
number of offices now vacant, and
taking care of the promises made
before the ballot at Minneapolis.
It is no secret now that every of
fice in the gift of the President has
been promised two or three times
over, not only for the present, but
for the second term, should there
be one. John C. New bad carte
blance at Minneapolis, and he used
it unstintingly. Should Harrison
pnll through in the election there
will be lots of fun over the situa
tion. All this emphazises the ne
cessity of making ’ the Presidents
inelgible for a second term
It is the idea of Mr. Harrison to
have a money campaign. He knows
that Quay and Dudley bought In
diana, and New York for him four
years ago, and while he went back
on them after he got possession of
the office, he thinks somebody else
will be fonnd to carry out the same
programme this year. It is pro
posed, to raises corruption fund
even larger than that secured by
Quay and Wanamaker in 1888.
That is why Whitelaw Reid was
put on the ticket. Mr. Reid has
himself come to be a very rich
man by the questionable ‘methods
employed by money-getters
Wall street, and his paper, the
New York TriBune, has been the
organ of this element ever since
Reid obtained control of it. This
thrifty young man claims in pub
lic that the nomination was unex
pected to him, yet he was sending
electrotyes of his portrait around
to the newspaper offices in . New
York two days before it occurred.
It is said also that he furnisbed the
cash to solidify the Southern dele
gates for Harrison; and stands
pledged to secure the largest cam
paign fund ever raised. That is
Mr. Reid’s, sole strength. HiB
weakness will be fully explained
before the campaign is far ad
vanced. One illustration of his
character is fnrnished in his treat
ment of poor old Horace Greely.
In 1872 Mr. Greely made Reid
what he was. He gave him an
opportunity on the Tribune, and
favored him in every way. Yet
when Greely was nominated for
President and temporarily left the
editorship in charge of his protege
the latter proceeded through rich
friends to get permanent control
of the paper, and supplanted his
patron. After the campaign was
over Mr. Greely learned the truth.
And it was that which broke the
old man’s heart. An editorial
which he wrote and sent np a few
days after the election was even
suppressed by Reid. From that
time to the present the great Trib
une “founded by Horace Greely”
has been the organ^ of manopoly
and Wall street—“confounded by
Whitelaw Reid.”
CHEAP MEDICINES--SAVE MONEY
All bay medicines, and yon want
them cheap —at retail at wholesale
rates. Jacobs’ Pharmacy, the
largest Southern “cutters” of
prices, has an advertisement in to
day’s paper containing a few prices.
All other articles are sold at simi
lar low .rates. No matter what you
want that is usually kept in a large
drug store send to them. They
willisellit at astonishing low rates.
Express charges for packages un
der five pounds, twenty-five cents
Watch these' .advertisements.. and
prices, Send for a namber of
thjngs at once. Is a word to the
wise sufficient?
There is a whirlpool'in the San
ta Fa river; three miles northwest
of‘High Springs, Fla.,, into which
1,000 feet of line has been lowered.
IT YOUR BACK ACHES
re all worn out, really good for nothing
it is general debility. Try
Or you are i
mtoirirsixdjr bitti—
tect his stock with a margin, So
he tried that precaution, and often,
made money, bat in the long ran
he lost more.
He fonnd himself paying less at!
tention to his business. His spec
nlstions absorbed his thoughts.
New schemes for beating the buck
et shop occupied his mind, and his
losses continued. Of this period
of hiB life he says:
“I could not afford to Jose
much money, and my business was
suffering because of my absence
and loss of interest in it. I felt
that I ought to quit speculating at
once, bat I still believed that my
experience would tell in the end
and the losses be made good. Then
I began to think and talk of luck.
I noticed how pins lay on the side
walk and picked up those with the
point toward me; that meant good
luck. If the first white horse
saw in the morning as I came down
town was going toward the ferry it
was my lucky day. A black cat at
my door or showing friendliness
for me would bring good luck. If
anything had impressed me on a
day when I made money, it was
forever afterward in my mind as a
favorable omen and I looked con
tinually for it.
“It has been a losing game right
through. I was on the Tight side
of the market when the bull move
ment set in two months ago, bat
all I gained then, and more be
sides, soon found its way to the
backet shop’s bank account. I am
now convinced, when too lote, that
I cannot beat- this'game, althongh
it seems so easy a thing to do.
can neither bny nor sell stocks now
because I have no money, and I
would not if I could.”
In conclusion the writer declares
that the small backet shop specu
lator never quits until his last dol
lar is gone. He is nnder a spell—
a corse—and when he finally col
lapses he rarely ever polls himself
together and gets on his feet again.
Nine times out of ten he becomes
an utter wreck or commits snicide.
Here we have an everyday story,
and after reading it the thoughtful
citizen will wonder why the re
formers who take such an active
interest in suppressing lotteries
and ordinary gambling booses are
apparently nnwilling to interfere
with this most destrnctive evil of
American bnsiness life.
What are we going to do abont
it?
the body politic by having class | The President was not the choice
of the republicans of the state*
Happjr noosiers.
Wm. Timmons, Postmaster at
Idaviile, writes: “ElectricBitters
has done more for me than all oth
er medicines combined, for that
bad feeling arising from liver and
kidney trouble.” John Leslie,
farmer and stockman, of the same
place, says: “Find Electric Bit
ters to be the best kidney and liv
er medicine; made me feel like a
new man.” J. W. Gardner, hard
ware merchant, same town, says:
“Electric Bitters is just the thing
for a .man that is all ran dowD, and
don’t care whether he lives or dies;
he found new strength, good appe-
jnst like h4 had a
tite, and felt jnst
new lease on life. Only 50 cents
a bottle, at Holtzclaw & Gilbert’s.
The vaults of the . sub-treasury
in San Francisco are being fitted
with wire for protection from
thieves. The wires are to be be
tween fevery two rows of brick,
and any attempt to interfere with
the cemeqt or bricks will disturb
an electric, circuit and sound a
warning,
arrayed against class, and brothers I ot *ne republicans of the states
and friends and neighbors at dag- that are or haye been surely re-
gers points, each striving to throw j Publican. From those states he
the responsibility for a lack of received only 193 votes, while hia
prosperity upon the other. I opponents received 246 votes. *
The path of d uty is clearly point- P were not for the purchased
ed out in the scriptural injunction: loyalty of the southern delegates
“First cast out the beam out of at, d the selfish venality of office-
tbine own eye, and then shalt thou I holding delegates, Mr. Harrison
see clearly to cast the mote; out of [ could not have been nominated,
thy brother’s eye,” If all pursue I The- proceedings at Minneapolis
this safe rule, and succeed in cast- placed a blot upon our political
ing the beams out of their own system. They were worse than
eyes there will be no motes left to elections in the English rotten bor-
cast out of their brother’s eyes. oughs before the passage of the
The season of a heated political Corrupt Practices Act. '• Bv as
campaign is approaching, and in- much as the nomination represent-
dications point to its being more ad a hope of success its was prac-
heated than usual. We urge upon tically a sale of the Presidency to
all our readers to exercise the I the highest and shrewdest bidders
greatest toleration and forbearance j It is not credible that such a
on all questions of this character, nomination, so made, will be rati-
Let no difference of opinions mar fied by the voters.
your friendships or estrange you I — ■*•«■
from yonr neighbors. Accord to.J 7 6 Quit the Republicans.
all the same honesty of opinion ' Atlanta constitution
and purpose that you claim for | A prominent negro voter of At-
on
and
yourself. ' Discuss all questions lanta stopped Mr. A L Holbrook
with freedom, but without acerbi- a member of the city conncil
ty or passion. Act np to the cour- the street a short time aor 0 ’
age of your convictions, But in-1 said: ° ’
dnlge not in violent or vehement “Mr. Holbrook, I’ ze dun ’cided
denunciation of those who do not to wote the dimocrat ticket the
look at a question as you do. In ne xt ’lection ”
considering a question rather ex- “Why, John,”' said Mr Hnl
amine to see whether yon have I h rnr .t- ,, ’ .
failed to perform your duty, or by y 0U ?” 16 ma 6r Wif ^
personal wrong-doing bmnglrt -'Well,,on see, Tze been wot.ng
about a result, than to saddle the the ’publican ticket ever since the'
entire responsibility upon friend W ar, dat’s, yon know, has always
or neighbor or somebsdy else. Re- been my platform, but I’ ze been
member that “to err is human,” studying dis question of hi^b ter
and that yon are human. race and Iow terrace eonsid ° rabje
All should bear in mind that if and I’ ze just come to de concln-
the commnnity or nation is to be sion dat Mr. Cleveland is right
prosperous, each integral part of Mr. Harrison, you know, has nev-
the commnnity or nation mnst do er been down here in dis country
its part towards accomplishing this and he don’t know what ige need*'
result. This is not .possible where bat Mr. Cleveland has. I s’pose
each is endeavoring to shift the re- up whar Mr. Harrison comes from
sponsibility upon the shoulders of m dat high conntry where dey has
others, and each integral part is so many high hills and big rock*
standing idle or warring upon the dey is ’bleeg;ed to have a high ter-
other integral parts. race, but yon knows as well as I
No possible good can oe aecom- does dat down in dis flat country,
plished. by divided and distracted whar me and yon wnz riz, we don’t
counsels, by petty jealousies and want no high terrace, alow terrace
internecine strife. The inevitable is all we ’quires. Tze don made
result will be: nnharmony, retro- up my mind to wote. for Mr. Cleve-
gression and want of prosperity, land, kaize he’s been down here
Let each one ask himself: “What and knows jnst what we wants.”
bave I done to prevent general This will solve the vexed qnes-
prosperity?” “What'can I do toj tion of the politicians—“a high
promote harmony, good fellowship] terrace” for the hill conntry and a
and universal prosperity?” “low terrace” for the flat conntry
Let kindly sentiments be voiced j would nnite all parties and make
in kind words and deeds, and the | even the “colored brother” a dem-
resnlt will tend to united action ocr at.
for th. general good. I. ilSSi co rae s
ill IlG rvimtn T l
The following item,clipped from ^ ere he more or less bowel
the Ft. Madison (Iowa) Democrat, j complaint in this vicinity. Every
contains information well worth I P er s° n . and especially families,
remembering: “Mr. John Roth, of l °PS‘ 1 ^ to have some reliable medi-
tbis city, who met with an accident ?} u . e at f° r instant use in case
a few days ago, spraining andjl, s e , 'A 25 or 50 cent bot-
brnising his leg qnite severely, was] tle o£ ‘ 'hamberlain’s Colic, Chole-
enred by one 50 cent bottle of ra . an , Diarrhoea Remedy is just
Chamberlain's Pain Balm.” This! , a ^ ought to have, and all
remedy is without an equal for y° a would need, even for the
sprains and bruises, and should !£ os . t ? e vere and dangerous cases.,
have a place in every household. , 13 tae ° es L the most reliable
For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert, I f D< ^ mos t successful treatment
nor sale by Jtloltzcla
Druggists, Perry, Ga.
kuown, and is pleasant to take. For
sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert, Drag-
Father of the Family—Irene, I Perry, Ga.
... ^ Ylreat he oncesaw upon the coast of
Brazil a race of gigantic savages,
week?
Miss Irene—Why, papa, I hiird-
ly_l_ ' * ; - I oneof whom was 12 feet in height.
Johnny (coming to her relief) M..Tlievet, of France, in his de-
know what brings him here. A j scr 'p*Y° n -^- mer ica, published at
pair of the slimmest lpgs a dude ^ ar ' s 1575, asserted that he saw
ever walked on. That’s the thing an ^ measure d the skeleton of a
that brings him. [South American which was 11 feet
5 inches in length. The Chinese
Blany Persons
Are broken down from orernor!; or hotuehold
euros Brown’s Iron Bitters
rebuilds the sysieiu. aids digestion, remoyes ex-
of bile andenreV-nalaria. Get the genuine.
Subscribe for the. Home Joubnal
Oh! how I dislike to see my hair are said to claim that in the last
getting so gray. Say do you know century there were men in their
that 75 cents invested in one bottle i , meir
of Beggs’ Hair Rehewer will not f “ . 7 wh ° measm ' ed 15 feet in.
only restore the color, bat give it a! height,
rich glossy appearance? Try one
e. So”
ild and warranted Vi-1 wu i ? Ie ^ ia ? ts L Little Giaots! l
■Drnrrmsf: Porrrr C'J YVhat a blessing that
bottle.
A. Felder, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
Ripans Tabules cure scrofula.
„ any one can
get a pill that acts in such perfect *
A quarter of Scotland is owned I harmony on all parts of the system
by twelve persons. au( l leaves no ba(Fresults. They
- are positiyely perfect. Sold bv I*
Ripans Tabules: pleasant laxative. A Felder, druggist, Perry Ga.