Newspaper Page Text
Jo HIV H. HODGES, Pi-opi-ietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INYERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
PRICE: $1.50 A. YEAR
VOL. XXL'
PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1892.
Mallary
Macon,
Go.,
Georgia.
Ploas3 Write us for Prices Before Buying
Engines, - Boilers, - Cotton - Gins,
Cotton Presses Saw and Grist Mills,
MOWERS,
» TO MB. AND MBS. TV M. HOUSES.
Written for the Home Joubhax.
Her bright and beautifnl life was passed
In light and bloom and song; [youth,
And her warm young heart rejoiced in its
And her earthly ties were strong.
In the sweet home life and the family love
She fitted her place so well
None ever had dreamed of the aching void
Which there shall for ever dwell.
—OR-
Any - Kind - ot - Ma*
chinery.
We Can Save You Money on
First-Class Goods.
Mallary I3ros. &
Go.
MACm r ,
Mention This Paper.
GEORGIA.
jf w. iDOM;xisrc3-os,
561 MBLBERBY STREET,—
MACON, - GEORGIA-
^ (Next to Hotel Laniev.)
HEAT)QUAETERS EOR
CHINA,
4 * 5
•Timvsire, 'Woodenware, Housekeepers’ ISTov el tics, Lamps
Chandeliers. Stoves and RaDgcs.
UNDERSOLD BY NO ONE,
Courteous attention to all. Your patronage solicited.
Gr-eo. 2v£-
Av ill Be pleased to wait on liis frieuds from Houston county.
She clung to life, but she feared not death,
And though she saw her sun [prayed
Going down in the mom she trusting
“Father! Thy will be done.”
As a caroling bird, as an opening flower,
She gladdened life’s weary way;
And many will miss the tuneful voice
And the smile so bright and gay.
The Maste.- has gath’ed the fragant flower
Butits perfume lingers still;
The bird has flown to a brighter dime
To sing at the Father’s will.
And ye, who under the chastening rod
In faith and anguish bow,
Remember “the Everlasting Arms”
Enfold your darling now.
A Fbiend.
MEMORIAL EXERCISES
Held at tlie Perry Methodist
Church in Memory of Mary
Maud Houser, Sunday,
July 3. 1892.
CftB
CASH 01 OH INSTALLMENT,
Parlor Suits, Climber Suits, Bedsteads, Chairs, Tables
Safes, Mattresses, Bureaus, etc. of all descriptions.
Complete Undertaking Department.
geobge :p_a_tjl 7
PERRY,
GEORGIA,
3D TT C3- S ,
PURE DRUGS! CHEAP DRUGS!’
I carry a full line ot Proprietary and Patent Medicines. Always on hand the
best line of Stationery and Toilet Articles.
FiNb PERFUMERY A SPECIALTY.
A Full Assortment Of Geo. LORINZ’S EXTRACTS
1 have exclusive sale of
PXiA-STICO-A 11 Color S-t 1 " Iatet and W W Hntt.
The very best line of
ToTsstcc© eun-d. Cigars
Always on hand.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLI COM
POUNDED by one of the vory best Druggists,
Sunday hours: 8 to 10 a.m.; 3:30 to 6 p.m.
jggp- A share of Public Patronage is respectfully solicited.
L. A. FELDER, M. D., Proprietor.
for Infants and Children.
"CastorJais so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, H. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
‘•The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and
Its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it Few ore the
intelligent families who do cet beep Castoria
within easy reach."
STork (
Late Pastor Bloomingdalo Reformed Church.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, Eructation,
Fills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dl-
Witlout injurious 1
“ For several years I have recommended
— ' ’ ’ and shaU always CO—*
nvariably produoed 1
results."
Edwin F. Pabdxb, H. D.,
“The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Am,
New York City.
Thb Centaur Co up any, 77 Mubbay Street, New Yoke.
PERRY
Febm¥ 9
13 O T IE Xj
POLITE ATTENTION GIVEN ALL GUESTS COMFORTABLE
ROOMS. TABLE SUPPLIED WITH THE BEST
EDIBLES THE MARKET AFEORDS.
i ■ \— — fe • —
DAY.
the month.
RATES: $2.00PEE
ggjjp" Liberal reduction by the week, or by
Tribute of respect from the L.
A. W. Missionary Society—Miss
Emmie Smith.
The Perry Juvenile Missionary
Society was organized in 1888, and
was consolidated with the L. A. W.
Society in the fall of last year. Our
dear young friend was an efficient
officer in both of these societies, al
ways punctual in attendance, and
always willing to do more than her
part.
We come to-night, and bring
this, our tribute of love and respect,
to the memory of our departed sis
ter. She was indeed, a faithful
and zealous worker in our two so
cieties.
We will miss her more than
words can express. • She was a ge
nial companion,. and an earnest
Christian worker.
While she has left us, her influ
ence and the brightness of her ex
ample still lives to sheer and stim
ulate us to live more consecrated to
the Master’s cause. She not only
taught ns how to live, but she
taught us how to die. She was
ready to do the Father’s will, and
when the supreme hour came she
was not surprised nor alarmed, but
she fell asleep in the arms of Jesus
without one thought beside.
We cannot understand now, why
one so young, so fair, so good, and
so full ofpromise of long life and
usefulness should be taken away,
but we feel to-uight that when the
“Mists bavecleard away” we will
see that indeed it is all for tlie-
best; and while it is hard to give
her up, we know that she is better
off in that Land beyond the Stars,
in that “Kingdom not made with
hands eternal in the Heaven.”
Every one loved this bright and
noble girl, she was kind-hearted*
loving and true. She was attrac
tive in mind and heart, and her life
absorbed in many noble and tender
qualities. May we all meet our
dear sister in that bright and
Heavenly home, where there will
be no more parting and no more
tears.
Therefore be it resolved
1. That in the death of- dear
Maud onr county has lost a valued
member of society.
2. That tne church has lost a
faithful and consistent member.
3. That her parents have lost a
dutiful and affectionate daughter,
and that the Louisa Walker Socie
ty has lost one of its most zealous
and devoted members.
ous, and her Christian faith was
snblime.
A thing on earth, bat not of earth—her
brow
Hallowed by-God’s own signet.
As a slight tribute to her memo
ry, the following resolutions are
offered.
1. That in the death of Maud
Honser this society has sustained
an irreparable loss, and, the cause
of Domestic Missions a zealous
advocate and earnest worker.
2. That her example should
stimulate our zeal in the cause, and
inspire us to higher andnobler en,
deavors. - (
3. That we offer our sincerest
sympathy.to the bereaved parents,
THE THIRD PARTY.
WASHINGTON TOPICS.
party—but really the left wing of ’
the republican party—as they; ,
wonld the leper, the rattlesnake dr f , |
There seems to be considerable Ithe midnight assassin.” Washington, D. C., July 9, ’92.;
SUCCESSFUL
CAItEER.
“Ike Idler.”in Atlanta Journal.
A Lawyer Who Was a Good Man.
trouble on the mind of a gentle- j * * *
man who bears the euphonious , Parts of that letter may be a lit—
cognomen of Dennis McGinty tie homely as to style, but, taken
which I And appended to an inter
esting communication concerning
a latter day organization yclept
the third, party.
* * *
“I have waited patiently,” says
he, “for soma one competent to
give through your columns the true
status of the so called third party.
“That name is a misnomer, be
cause it simply means, as designed
by its projectors, the left wing of
brothers and sisters, and.our earn- the republican party in the south,
est prayers that a loving Savior 1 sap p 0se) is the begin-
will comfort and sustain them in
this trial.
4 That these resolutions be en
tered upon the minutes of this so
ciety, and a copy furnished the pa
rents of our deceased sister.
Tribute of respect from the Do
mestic Missionary Society—Miss
Susie Martin.
Death has again invaded our
ranks and laid-hia pallid hands, up
on the young and beautiful,;’’and
borne her away -upon- hitfi^Mjek
wiugs.Asbadowisorreveryheart,
for we mcrarn^the loss of ODerif
our brightest and best/members.
Maud Htmser-Fad, been identi
mesitic'JiHsfflonary^bci.tfty sihee ifs
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
Ub :
orgahizatibhyahdwas tme : of: its
most active and-ehthusiBSlib work
ers. Daring her-.-membefship she
held varionsoffices,-andaf the
time of het deatb-;was<mr~most ef
ficient Corresponding -Secretary;
and' in every position she was
faithful and efficient.
Though cut off in the bloom of
youth, our sister’s life was a grand
success. Beautiful in' person and
lovely in character, she attracted
friends wherever she - went. Her
amiable and sweet disposition
would not allow her to have an
enemy. She was exception!
* * * * * *
Tribute of respect from the Loy
al * Temperance Legion—Miss
Sarah Tounsley.
That unwelcome visitor. Death,
has again laid his hand upon one
of our loveliest, purest and sweet
est flowers. In the quiet early
morning hourofJun9 22nd Mary
Maud Houser’s pure spirit took its
flight from her happy home and
returned into the realms of Eter
nal Day.
We cannot understand these sad
dispensations of onr good and kind
Heavenly Father now, but “When
the mists have cleared away” we
shall then be enabled to under
stand all mysteries.
Mand is not dead; she has just
begun to live, and she stands to
night waiting and watching for us;
We have lost a dear friend, and the
Loyal Temperance Legion has lost
an ardent and devoted member.
But we bow in submission to the
Divine will, c.nd ask for grace to
help us say, “Thy will be done not
mine;” and help the sorely be
reaved ones to look up amid their
tears and say “The Lord gave, and
the Lord hath taken away, blessed
be the name of the Lord.” Jesus
has not left us comfortless, in this
sad hour we are not alone, who is
alone if God is nigh? Upon this
cloud of sorrow, which has hushed
in silence all the world, and made
it so strangely dark, God’s bow of
mercy gleams through the stillness
of gloom-aud solitude which death
creates. He bids His children look
up. His way is perfect, and
sweet submission His children bow.
If there be one child that shares
the riches iu the blessings of a Fa
ther’s presence more than another,
a is the chastened one. Shall we
hen repine that He leads us iii
shadowy paths? Iu love He gave,
in love He has taken away our
dear Maud. He took her in the
radiant morn of life, while her
heart, like the whole earth, was
beautiful and glad. He called her
ere the shadows came or the busy
workings of life clash and mar, and
cloud with doubt her faith and
trust in a Father’s wisdom, or the
world’s great heart. Gone while
her lift was filled with song,
plucked by an Angel’s hand, was
our beautiful flower, while in the
heart still sparkled the dew which
Heaven distilled. In onr brighest
dreams we see her. She is smil
ing, we are weeping. She is sing
ing, we are sighiug. She is call
ing—we bend to listen, and-^-
O'er tlie river, site beckons to zne
Loved one that crossed to the farther side,
The gleam-of her sonny robe I see
Bat her voice is lost in the dashing tide,
Hie gates of the City we cannot Ese,
Bat we know she is safe beyond the tide
Wh«r< the ransomed and Angels be,
Over the river—ove~ the . Iver
She stands watching rn awaiting for me.
. Over the river the bortnan pale
Can.led sweet Mau.d, t ’.eiiojEahold pet,. .
Her blown hair waves in ilia gentle gale
Dr,^ ; 3gMand,I see be? yet.
She c o3 .ed on her bosom her dimpled hands
And teiilegs'?- entered t ie' pbamtom barque,
• T7e felt it glide from the Elver sands
And all sunshine grew strangely dark.
Over the river, t ie mystic r_yer
My childhood friend is waiting for me.
ning of the much-talked-of respec
table republican party in the
south.
“That the third party,” he goes
on, “is not the alliance, is evident.
There is not one featnre or princi
ple inculcated by alliance consti
tution and by-laws that is the aux
iliary of this bastard, this born Bon
of treachery.”
Talks plain, don’t he?
“The mendacious leaders of this
new organization, it matters not on
which side of the line they were
born, are just the same.
“They are the enemies of the
entire country, and the doable en
emies of the south. They are de
ceitful above all things, and des
perately wicked.”
altogether it is certainly a- power
ful and picturesque presentation
of a mighty trnth of the greatest
possible moment to the southern
people.
Written for tha Home Journal.
The business of Congress has j tlpVnniqT; h ear
that you are
been vigorously pushed the past.; readi j and that you intend
week and the House will be readyJ tQ fae a la er! -.
to adjourn by the end of this
No greater calamity could possi
bly befall the south of to-day than
a divided democratic party, and as
the so-called third party is delib
erately seeking to bring about such
a division, this southern section,
southern society,can have no dead
lier political enemy than the men
who moved by mad and selfish am
bition are leading this mongrel or
ganization.
Here- is some horse sense.
“Those of our people who suffer
themselves to be misled by the
flattering unctions of these self-
constituted guides or leaders be-
comfften times more the children
of perdition than the guides them
selves, because they not only en
tail' upon us and themselves the
iniquitous legislation of a born en
emy of nncompromisiDg hatred,
but ours and their own posterity
as well.”
When the sonth was wrapped in
the outer darkness of reconstruc
tion, when she was bound hand
and foot by the hand of republican
and negro misrule, with federal
bayonets benettmg her bleeding
form, when the vultures of vice
and ignorance hovered over her
hungering for their pray expec
tant—
It'was then that her savior, the
democratic party of this sectioD,
stepped proudly forth, panoplied
in the mightiness of virtue aud in
telligence, calm as the time before
the storm and terrible as an army
with banners—
Stepped proudly forth in all the
grandeur of night and striking the
shackles from her bleeding limbs,
waved away the thickness of night,
that the stars did shin9,once more,
above a redeemed people.
Ana I alt rnd tLInk when the sunset's gold
la flashing hT’ sad rive? shore •
. I shallone day s nC ay .tie water cold.
And . v sfc* for the sound o:T the Boatman's oar,
I BhaU watch for a gleam of the flapping sail
As it comes from the shores of the Spirit Land,
I shall pass from Bight with the Boatman pale
To meet the loved oneE as it gains the strand ■
. Over the river, the peaceful river
CT Joyfully sweet wTi the meeting be.
What is more disgusting to a re
fined person than to see a dirty,tar
tar-covered set of teeth, and there
is no excuse for having the teeth in
this condition when you can get a
bottle of Sezafroo for 75 cents,
wliich ln a-short space! of time will
change them to a pearly white. It
takes the.Ieadof, ajl Tooth Washes,
andris f beneficial to the teeth, and
not injurious, as are maDy of the
cheap tooth washes now on the
market Sold aud warranted by L
A Felder, druggist, Ferry, Ga.
y j
•• i ,
Ponder this point:
“Let them revert to the recon
struction period. What man is
there, among us. who does not re
member the horrors of that terri
ble time, the depressed and rest
less condition of the southern peo
ple?
“Is there any man now sc igno
rant as to ask why that restless
ness?
“If so let him reflect upon the
dark clouds of ignorant negro
domination which hovered over
this fair land at that time. * Let
him recall how black ignorance
and vice were supported by bayo
nets aud sustained by the same en
emy, the republican party, into
whose hands this so-called third
party is now engaged in playing.
“That same enemy now threat
ens our liberties through the so-
called third party. Let him reflect
upon this and he has the answer,
And the man, or set of men, who,
by any sort of organization, would
to-day seek to cleave the democrat
ic party of the sonth in twain, are
the friends of her bitterest ene
mies, are meaner and guiltier than
the radical foes .who struck her
down, who pinioned her helpless
limbs, who placed over her bayo
net rule, who, grinding her virtue
and intelligence in the dust, set
above them in her high places
black ignorance and scallawag
vice.
“Why,” he continues, “why, let
me ask, are we not under that
black, unhallowed domination to
day?
“Is it because of the relenting of
that enemy?
“No!
“Is it because of any sympathy
known to his malignant nature?
“Not a bit of it.
“Whence came, I wonld ask, onr
wonderful deliverance?
‘I answer through the divine
guidance the democratic party of
the sonth was made the instrument
to lift these southern states from
the depths of political degredation
and humiliation—aided by the
sympathies of our friends, ‘the
brave brother democrats of tbe
north,’ and, to be just, I would say,
perhaps, coupled with a kind of
apathy on the part of those of a
more conservative turn of mind
opposing ns.
* * *
“Then,” says he, “let those of
our people who are inclined to
identify themselves with this for
lorn hope of the republican party,
not aid in distracting and dividing
our people, that they may again
usurp the powers of government,
both statfr and national, so that in
stead of our own people, or race,
occupying seats in that magnifi
cent bnilding for which we paid
hundreds of thousands of dollars,
the same seats will be occupied by
ignorant negroes, authorized by
force Rills, sustained by returning
boards and bayonets!
“Then, sir,” he concludes, “let
oqr people shun those self-consti-
of the so-called third
The hope, the only hope, of tbe
south is the democratic paity in
all its solidity and strength, and
those who would blast that hope
stand ready to deliver her to her
pristine despair.
Every vote that is cast against
the democracy of the sonth stands
for a shackle—every ballot against
its unity and integrity, a bayonet—
every leader who would seek to
divide it, a pitchy cloud of that
outer darkness of reconstructioQ
so happily swept a&ay by the sun
light of redemption.
Palsied be the tongue that wonld
speak for so unhallowed a division
paralyzed be the hand that would
part the surried ranks of the solid
democracy of our fair section.
Those who are not for ns are
against us.
There is no middle ground.
Fall in! Fall in! freemen, and
let the word of our own great lead
er, Grover Cleveland, ring along
the line, now eag§r to march to
victory—
“Under which, King Bezcnian?-
“Speak, or die.”
Cholera infantum has lost its
terrors since the introduction of
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy. When that
remedy is used and the treatment
as directed with each bottle is fol
lowed, a cure is certain. Mr. A. W.
Walter, a prominent merchant of
Waltersburg, 111., says: “It cured
my baby boy of cholera infamtnm
after several other remedies had
failed. The child was so low that
he seemed almost beyond the aid
of hnman bands or reach of any
medicine.” 25 and 50 cent bottles
for sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert,
Drnggists. Perry, Ga.
month if too much time is not con
sumed by the Senate in doctoring
the House bills now awaiting ac
tion in, that body. Politics will
also most likely cause some delay,
as tbe intention is expressed on
the Republican side to. inject some
campaign speeches into the Record
before adjournment, and, of course,
thesl will be replied to from the
other side. Senator Hale led off
early in tbe week with an effort iu
that direction, bat it was a feeble
•one. The feeling here is that we
are going to have a hard contest in
this campaign and the Republi
cans are far from easy in their
minds. Their end of the pole is &
“dumb site” the shortest as things
now appear.
Postmaster-General Wanainaker
has made a hard fight against tbe
provisions in the postoffice appro
priation bill to provide for the fast
mail service now carried out be
tween Tampa, Ela., and Spring-
field, Mass., and benefltting the
people of the entire Atlantic coast
region, bat especially those in the
South Atlantic States. In this
matter he presents the rather unn-
seal spectacle of a Cabinet officer
laboring to decrease the efficiency
of the service rendered by his de
partment. Mr. Wanamaker was
at the capitol early in the week
button-holing Republican Sena
tors and trying to secure the pas
sage of the bill in a shape accepta
ble to him. On the other hand,
several business men from the sec
tion affected by this measure were
urging upon the Senators of both
parties the necessity of restoring
the provisions of this service which
the Senate committee has stricken
out. The meat of the whole mat
ter is that the administration wants
to punish a few Democratic States
in the South. The friends of the
fast mail service did not propose
to give, up withont a determined
fight They succeeded in having
the Senate restore the appropria
tion.
The condition of the National
Treasury as four years of Repub-
can administration are drawing to
a close presents a-painful contrast
with its condition four years ago.
Then the Democrats had adminis
tered tbe financial affairs of the
country for one presidential term.
The result of that honest and eco
nomical administration was the
payment of millinns of cellars of
th3 National debt before it was
dne, and tbe accumulation of a
surplus in the Treasury of from
eighty to a hundred millions of
dollars in addition to the sinking
funds and the hundred millions of
gold held for the redemption of
greenbacks. A reduction of taxes
was proposed, but the people voted
for hightaxe3 and the billion dollar
Congress came in. The result of the
work of the billion-dollar Congress
has been to sqnander everything
except the gold reserve and about
fourteen millions of gold in addi
tion to it. The sinking funds have
been raided and depleted to the
extent of twenty millions of dol
lars. The obligations of the gov
ernment have not been met, and
now that a new fiscal year is began
heavy claims will be pressed for
payment which the Treasury will
A carious story comes from Cal
ifornia of a horse that eat chick
ens. He killed all the chickens
that came within his reach. One
day he died, and a post mortem ex
amination showed that he had eat
en a large chicken. The bones
catting bis stomach had caused
his death.—Ex.
be utterly unable to meet without
misappropriating funds. The tax
payers are bled to the extent of
from seven hundred thousand to a
million of dollars every day, bnt is
far from sufficient to sapply the
greed of tbe taxeaters. Ship sub
sidies and sugar bounties and the
ever expanding pension list must
be met. The taxpayers find no
mercy.
All the resources and energies of
the executive department of the
government are now being directed
and used wholly to secure the re-
election of the President Noth
ing else must interfere with this
purpose, and the public business
is allowed to take care of itself.
The President himself is taking
personal charge of every move of
the campaign, and Secretaries Fos
ter and Elkins . are fetching and
carrying under his direction. Com
missioner Carter, of the General
Hpw fearful those blotches look i r , \ t , . .
on your face! Are you aware that!^ e ° tec L® ec -
■■ SSWSSeSS
and Blood Maker will not only re
move them, but cleanse your blood
so that they will not appear agian?
Sold and warranted by L. A. Eel-
der, Druggist, Perry, Ga.
Bipans Tabules; best liver tonic.
to which he must give his time and
efforts, though of coure his salary,
as Land Commissioner, will go on
just the same while -some clerk
performs his duty. Truly, this is
a civil service reform administra
tion,
“Yes sir, I am, and have chosen
that profession as my business for
life.’’
“I am sorry for it Frank, be
cause I fear you are making a mis
take, for I don’t think you can suc
ceed. You are not made that way
—too sympathetic, good natnred
and kind-hearted—better be a
preacher.”
Frank looked serious, and said,
“In commencing-I intend to make
the Bible the foundation of my li
brary, build upon it and- make its
teachings-the law and rule of my
life and practice, and believe I can
and will succeed.”
This conversation was between
father and Frank Scarborough, a
better boy and young man I haie
never known. He was a brother
of Judge Scarborough, and a neph
ew of Gen. Eli Warren. They were
his efficient tutors and worthy ex-
emplers.
In due time Frank was admitted
to the bar and opened an office in
Hawkin&ville, Ga.
Through his successful career,
during which he rose to the posi
tion of Solicitor-General or States
Attorney for his judicial district,
hefwas true to himself, adhering
strictly and conscientiously to his
resolution to make the Bible the
rule of his life, he accumulated a
fortune, was an ornament to his
profession, a bright and shining
light in society and the church, the
friend of the fatherless, widow and
the innocent, was crowded with
business for them; and as attorney
for the representatives of the
largest estates in his section, which
was one of the richest in Georgia,
Frank succeeded, and having
reached the full maturity of a no
ble, virtuous and Christian man
hood and prosperity, he died uni
versally loved by all, rich and
poor.
Rev. J. L. Warren was present,
a witness of'the death scene, and
told the writer that it seemed as if
the Angels of Heaven had come
down and lighted up the room
with the brilliancy and glory of
their presence. Truly
“The chamber where that good man
met his fate
Is favored beyond the common waits
of life,
Quite on the verge of Heaven.”
J. S. J.
Live Oak, Fla., June 25, ’92.
Animals Have “Nerves.”
A correspondent writing of the
menagerie connected with the Par
is National History museum, says
the lionesses, tigresses and female
leopards are subject to “nerves,”
and frequently have to be treated
with large doses of bromkalium to
calm them. The elephant suffers
from toothache, and one of its
teeth had to be stuffed. The sa
gacious creators endured the oper
ation of filing and boring with
great patience, only .rapidly waving
its trunk when the pain was vio
lent. When all was over it show
ed its gratitude by caressing M.
Sauverre with the fiugerlike ex
tremity of its proboscis.—Yoissis-
che Zeitung.
There’s a good, deal of guarantee
business in the store keeping of to
day. It’s too excessive. Or too
reluctant. Half the time it means
nothing. Words—only words.
This offer to refund money, or
to pay a reward, is made under the
hope that you won’t want your
money back, and that you won’t
claim the reward. Of course.
So, whoever is honest in making
it, and works—not on his own rep
utation alone, bnt through the local
dealer, whom you know, must have
something he has faith in back
of the guarantee. The business
wouldn’t stand a year withont it.
What is lacking is confidence.
Back of that, what is lacking is
that clear honesty which is above
the “average practice.”
Dr. Pierce’s medicines are guar
anteed to accomplish what they
are intended to do, and their
makers give the money back if the
result isn’t apparent.
Doesn’t it strike you that a med
icine, which the makers have so
much confidence in, is the medi
cine for you?
As every thread of gold is valua
ble, so is every moment of time.
LADIES
Needing a tonic, or children who want build
ing up, should take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS.
It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Inai-
—•*
mmm