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"
JOHN II. HODGES, Proprietor.
DltYjOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS -AND CULTURE.
— 1 -r — —— ; — — *= ^— r— : — 1— = :— :
$1.50 a YEAR nf advance.
VQL. XXIT.
PERKY. HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 6- 1893.
‘ . NO. 14.
D. U. ADDY, Proprietor,
Lbesvii/le, Lexington County, S. C.
EYOLUTION.
Written -for Tub-Home .Toursal by R. M. 0.
Breeder and shipper of Lt. Brahmas,
P. Cochins. White and Barred Plymouth
Bocks, Black Langshans, Indian Games,
S. C. White ahd Brown Leghoms, Black
Minorcas, White Wyandotte. Eggs $2.00
per 13. Pekin Duck eggs $1.00 for 9.
Mammoth Bronze Turkey Eggs 26 cents
each. Toulouse Geese Eggs 20 eta each
Registered Berkshire, and Black Essex
Hogs. Satisfaction in all Sales.
Si
Q. HOLLINGSWORTH
—OFFERS FOB SALE—
Jersey Heifers and Grades
of best butter families,
BEGISTERED BERKSHIRE PIGS,
Premium Fowls, aad- Eggs,from same.
Invincible in the show room, my birds
haye just been awarded highest honors
Louisiana State Fair, Shreveport, Nov
4th, 1892. Write quick and get my prices
on Lt Brahmas, Pit and Exhibition dames,
Silver Wyandottes, Langshans, Plymouth
Books and Buff Leghorns.
Eggs $2.50 and $3.00 per setting of 13.
, Address S. Q. HOLLINGSWOBTH,
P. 6., Coushatta, La.
-:OTJR>
CLOTHING
—IS ALWAYS READY FOR—
INSPECTION.
We continue to lead the
Clothing Trade.
EADS. NEEL & CO.
-THE ORIGIN AL-
One Price Clothiers,
MACON, GEOBGIA.
MONEY TO LOAN.
In sums of $300.00 and upwards, to be
Bqcuredby first liens on improved farms.
Longtime, low rates and easy payments.
Apply to ■ O. C’. DTJNCAN,
Nov. 20th,1889.—tf Perry* Ga.
Money, loans
On Houston farms procured at the low
est possible rates of interest. As low, if
not lower than the lowest. Apply to
W. D. Nottingham,
tf -Macon Ga %
Attorney at' Law,
Montezuma - - Ga.
. Will practice in'all the courts of this
circuit.
Attorney-at-Law,
MACON, - GEORGIA.
In office of Minter Wimberly,
Comer Mulberry and Third Streets.
c DENTIST,
|306 Second Street, Macon, Ga.
SPECIALIST.. C30WNS AND BBIDSSS
W. C. DAVIS,
Attorney-at-Law,
PERRY, - GEORGIA-.
Will practice in all the courts of’this
circuit.
And all Patent business conducted tor
MODERATE PEES.
Information and advice given to Inventors without
charge. Address
PRESS CLAIMS CO.,
JOHN WEDOERBURH,
Managing Attorney,
V. a Box 483. i Washington, D. C.
WThi, Company is managed by a combination of
the largest and molt influential newspapers in the
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lag their ■abaerlfcen againit- nnecmpnlons
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bility end high standing of the Press Claims Company.
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Ripans Tabules cure scrofula.
Not from monkey'came forth man.
Nor from stag, nor wolf, nbr lamb;
Not from womb of Mother Earth,
'Nor from sun, norstar—his birth; -
Forth from his Creator’s hand,
Came this,wondrous creature—man.
Can Evolution then he-true?
Ask yon fields, cerulean blue,
If the stars their vigils keep *
When obscurantist snore and sleep;
Ask the misty mountain top,
If tremulous morn its’dew,doth drop;. •
Go to the maid, with blushing cheek,
Ask if her heart of love doth speak. ...
“Behold we know not anything”—an enlarging
sphere,
This we call knowledge, and hold most dear;
This nescience, by our science seen,
Is the Veil, the Almighty’s screen,,
Thai shuts us in to a rule of action,
Without shadow of turning or infraction.
Reality to us, at last,
jytbe relaqahAhatji^smdstjfast, ' • V :
Separating the object seen
From the subject that is within.
The world is not made; hut is being made,—
This to fools a mystery, the wise have said.
“Order is Heaven’s first law,”
From Esau's birthright to Jacob’s paw;
If you perceive it not, in you the flaw.
Nothing can from nothing come;
The Something is Eternity—one
Eternal change.
. ■ »
The Daughter’s Sacrifice.
BY SYLVANUS COBB, Jr.
Mary Goldtbwait sat by the well
filled grate in her father’s drawing
room. It was on a cbld-evening in
winter,and the wind howled mourn
fully around the street corners and
through the lanes and alleys. Mary
was a pale, slim girl,' but possess
ing a beauty which even the most
fastidious could not have question
ed. Her hair, which was of a deep
golden brown, lay neatly waving
upon a brow as pnre as snow, and
the soft, lustrous eyes,which seem
ed to have the same deep golden
hue, shed a light from the soul
which could only have omAbated
from a source of purity and worth.
She had seen eight and twenty
years of life, and yet she remained
a maiden beneath her father’s roof.
A close calculator of physiognomy
would have said that Mary had
some heart-grief' that made her
look so pale. So she ha?l, though
perhaps no one save herself, on
earth, knew all her heart secrets.
She had lost a beloved mother
when she was twenty, and since
then she had seen one brother aud
one elder sister laid away in the
tomb. She sat now with her small
white hands clasped over hsr bos
om, and her eyes turned downward
till the long lashes lay like golden
pencilings upon her cheeks.
Near her, in his great arm-chair,
sat her father. He was a tall, slim
man, whose bead was white, aud
whose face was deeply furrowed by,
the hand of time. There were some
kind marks upon his features, and
some hard; cold ones; bnt now he
looked unhappy.
“Mary,” he said, in continuation
of a conversation already com
menced, “for eight and twenty
years I have found a home for yon,
and your every "wish has been
promptly met and answered'. Your
good bas been my highest aim,and
your peace and happiness my only
joy. Ydn are advancing in years,
and soon your father mast leave
you alone. Bnt I—I—cannot leave
yon at the mercy of a cold world.
Now a good home is open to you,
aud you # mast accept it. Men
might call me selfish could they
know all my motives; but I am
sure yon will not. A crisis has
come; a volcano has grown up be
neath my feet. In a few more
short days it must whelm me in
ntter ruin, if I be not sayed. Mr.
Smith has asked me,for yonr
hand. He has seen yon at chtttch,
and he has watched yon narrowly.
Ah, that old man had forgotten
one! He had forgotton a ,bright-
haired yo&th who once laid his
heart at Mary’s feet. But that was
many years - ago, and his mind
wenbnot back-so far. ^
‘‘Now, what shall I tell Mr.
Smith?”. '
“My heart is all broken and
torn,” she said, gazing sadlyinto
her father’s face, “but my. hand is
free; tell Mr. Smith this. Tell him
I will give my hand to save my fa
ther, and forget not to tell Liip
that my heart is not in the trade,,
for I could not deceive him.”
“Ob, you will love him, Mary.
He has. .promised that you.shall
have all that you can ask for, and I
know he will be kind.”
“I have said that I will marry
him,” the fair maiden returned,
“and so yon may tell him. But
yon would only cruelly deceive
him did you tell him no more. Tell
him my father has cared for me
and protected me through a weary
life, and that now I am ready to
save that father frpm ruin. Tell
him this, and then he shall know
all.”
“I shall tell him to come to-mor
row evening, Mary; for so he wish
es. Oh, I know you will be happy,
He will make yon one of the best
of hasbands. He is rich—very
rich.”
“In what, my father?”*
The old man starfed at these
words, for they were spoken very
strangely.
“In the goods of this world, and
in—in—honor and manhood,” he
replied.
Mary did no.t speak further, for
she wished not to worry her fa
ther. She knew that his soul was
already tortured by.misfortune and
commercial calamity, and she
would not make her sacrifice 'for
him ungrateful by casting a shade
of reproach upon him.
Ere long old Andrew Goldtbwait
allowed his feeling to ran in a
more pleasing channel. The ruin
which had stared him in the face
was to be averted, and in his soul
be believed that his, child would
not be one whit worse off for the
transaction. He knew Mr. Smith
to be wealthy, and he believed him
to be a kind and honorable man.
He fancied, too, that be could look
into and read his daughter’s heart.
He thought she wept and sorrow
ed for the mother and brother and
sister she had lost, and. that she ob
jected to this match because she
bad resolved not to marry. Bat
he flattered himself that at the end
of the first year of married life be
should find her a happy wife.
On the fqllowing evening Mary
again sat by the grate in the draw
ing room. She was alone now,and
her face was more pale than usual.
Bnt she was calm—as calm as the
marble statue that stood near her.
Tne outer door was opened, and
she heard the tread of heavy feet
in the hall. Then the inner door
swung back aud her father enter
ed. She looked np and saw anoth
er mau-rit was he' to whom she
had promised her hand; the man
whose money was to save her pa
rent.
Mr. Goldthwait introduced Mr.
; Smith. Mary arose and extended
her hand. It was cold, but it did
nqt tremble, She looked up into
his face, and she saw a man of me
dium height, with -a high brow,
dark eyes and a neatly trimmed
beard. He greeted her politely,
and then took a seat.
Some half an hoar was spent in
He loves yon; and, moreover, he is
wealthy; more wealthy than yonr j conversation, mostly between the
father was. Apd he hold| notes of
mine, too; notes to the anibunt of a
hundred thousand dollars.”,
“Bnt yonr name is npt ,alone on
these notes?” gasped Mary.
“No; only the’ first of four, but I
am holden for the whole. Yet the
.quarter part of that is more than I
two men, and | then the remarks
grew gradually less, until a silence
ensned. Nearly ten minutes elapsed
before another word was spoken,
and the stillness was becoming op
pressive,when #he visitor broke the
spell;.' •' /*•: .. - • >
“Miss Goldthwait,” he said, in a
sufficient to rum me.
“And Mr. Smith makeg'my f band
the equivalent ?”
I low, soft tone, “yon are, of course,
aware of the object of my visit
here this; evening, jank I know you
“Yes. Or—I mnst^ay, he has | -will pardon me if I speak plainly,
not said so. _ Bdfhe knows my-sit-
nation, and knowing it, he has ash
ed for the hand of my child. Ah,
1
Mary, it does seem to me tb
has kept yonr hand till now 5 ,
might be the means of lifttogyoar
old father np from ruin. You have
even rejected suitors whom'Thave
favored; bnt I do not think yon
have rejected a better man than
Mr. Smith/’
Mary looked up, bnt she made
no reply. The tones of the speak
er’s voice were so kind and gentle
that she began to pity him. She
felt thart he ought to go' and find a
wife who could love him.
“Yonr father has spoken plainly
with me,” resumed Mr. Smith,
“He has told me-that.you fear you
have no heart to give, but that you
will yet be my wife. Yet he as
sured me that yon will learn to
love me in time. I once thought I
should never love again, but the
sight of yonr face dispelled the il
lusion. I will toll you all,and then
you shall judge for yourself wheth
er I even have a heart for yon.” .
Mary had now fixed her eyes
steadily upon the speaker, and her
features had assumed an eager,
wistful expression.
“Long years ago I loved a beau
tiful gift, and she loved me in re
turn. I was young then, and I on
ly thought of love; and I did not
&sftBfi&|bat Me could crash my
soul’s dearest hope. That fair girl
was ail to me. I held her in nay
soul as my very life, and not a
thought had I of the future, but
’twas of her. And I knew that she
loved me as well, for she had told
me so a hundred times. But a ter
rible - crash came upon my joys
My idol’s father was wealthy, aud
I was poor. He was a. merchant
I only an humble clerk. When 1
told him of my love, he sparned
me from his door, and bade me
never enter it again. .All crashed
and broken down, I fled from the
place where my love had grown up,
and in the heat and whirl of busi
ness, I tried to forget my sorrow.
Worldly fortune seemed to single
me out as its especial favorite. My
wildest and most reckless transac
tions turned out well, and money
seemed to fly out, as if by magic,
from everything I placed my hands
to. Thus passed away eleven years,
and then I came to this city, where
I settled down, That was one year
ago. I saw'yon, I lovetj you; yoa
opened my crushed heart and let
the tide of love forth. I asked the
merchant again for his child, and
—and— 1 — ’
The speaker’s lips trembled, his
bosom seemed heaving with a pow-
erful'emotion. . “Mary,” he .said,
m a breaking tone, “I have asked
yonr father, and he has told me
yes. Will you be mine?”
The maiden had.no more doubt.
Years seemed to have passed like
magic from the calendar of the
past; it seemed only yesterday.that
a loved youth told his tale of love,
for since then only grief had been
hers; and grief was no more now.
She sank forward, and on the next
moment was clasped to the bosom
of the man who for long years had
possessed her heart.
. “James Smith!” gasped the old
man, starting to his feet in aston
ishment.
“Yes, sir; the very same. Do yon
retract your promise?”
‘‘No, no, no! Oh, my soul, no!
Take my child, and if you loverher,
forgive her father.”
“Ah,” replied .the happy saitor,.
as he led Mary to a seat, and then
reclined by her side, and drew her
head upon his shoulder, “if I for
give, then I must remember a
wrong, and that I will not do. Let
us forget all of the past but its
joys, and look to the'future for
wha^; .dnfcy an fi .t r ue love can give
us. I am now content,.”. .
GIVE US AN INCOME TAX.
“And so am I/’ uttered the aged
parent. . V
“And what say you?’ asked
James, gazing into Mary’s face-
“Ah,” she replied, in. a tone too
deep for passing emotion, “content
were too poor a word to tell all I
feel. God grant that I forget Hi m
ndt in this great joy.
Simon B. Walkingstick, a full
blooded Cherokee, has been ad
mitted at Muskogee, Indian Terri
tory, to practice law in the United
States Courts. "The New York
World: facetiously observes that
Simon should be: a good one for
a client to lean upon in an emer
gency.”"
We desire to say to onr citizens,
that for years we have been selling
Dr.King’s New Discovery for Con
sumption, Dr. Bang’s New Life
Pills, Bachten’s Arnica Salve and
Electric Bitters, and * have never
handled remedies: that sell as .well,
or that have'given snch, universal
We do not hesitate
Written for The Home Journal.
Iniquitous taxation in-whatever
guise, whether by tariff, or other
wise, has, since the earliest dawn
of civilization, eventuated in the
political ruin and overthrow of ev
ery government that has practiced
it.
The old proverb runs: “Experi
ence is a dear teacher, but fools
will learn of no other.” The writer
has worked long enough on a farm
to know that very few farmers are
fools; that most of them have suf
ficient wisdom to profit by experi
ence of others, and to know, too,
that there is not an active working
farmer in all this broad land of
ours wha has not grievous cause to
lament the hardness of the times.
When farms, all over tbe\coun-
try, will scarcely bring the cost of
improvement—and many of them
already abandoned-farms on which
nature’s choicest gifts have been
lavished, leave, after paying taxes,
but a bare living; when farmers in
Kansas burn corn for fuel for lack
of coal, and coal miners in Penn
sylvania are half starved for lack
of opportunity to work and bay
this very surplus corn, it is evi
dent that the cause and the care
must bo speedily found - and ap
plied, if we would avert the conse
quences.that in all ages have fol
lowed such coeditions. What then
does history tell ns of the causes
that produced like conditions in
the past, and what the result? His
tory informs ns that Mahomet Ali
laid a tax of so much upon every-
date tree in Egypt. The result was
the date trees were cut down. Sim
ilar taxes sapped the strength of
the Egyptian peasantry, and to
day in the rich valley of the Nile
where the arts .and sciences flour
ished when all else was to the
backgrounds and blacknight of
barbarism, we find the fellahs with
the life and Spirit so thoroughly
ground out oE them that thev
meekly wear the yoke of one tor
eign potentate after another, and
to abject poverty toil unremitting
ly to pay everything save a bare
living to the agents of British
bondholders.
Like injudicious and excessive
taxation has made paupers of the
Turks, once so vigorous that Eu
rope’s combined strength scarcely
sufficed to tarn back the tide of
their invasion. Its effects are the
same among East Indians, whose
tendencies are.so good that crime
is hardly a factor. It has pauper
ized Spain, once the wealthiest and
most powerful nation of Europe.
It has pauperized Italy, whose
sons once rnled the world, and the
stentorian voices of whose orators
once shook the firmament and
made the kings of the earth trem
ble. '
It has driven the canny Scot and
the thrifty German by thousands
from their- homes, and made Irish
men, in spite of their love for old
Erin, aliens and wanderers over
the whole earth. It breeds pau
perism in every civilized commu
nity on the globe. It is to-day, in
spite of oar national resources and
oar limitless domain, exhibiting
the same tendencies here that it
bas produced at all times and to
all places under the sun since civ
ilization began.
There are other issues to which
attention* may well be given in
their turn; There are other wrongs
to ,be rightedi other grievances to
be redressed, bnt, as compared to
onr barbarous, unequal, injudicious
and injurious modes of taxation
there are, perhaps, none that sur
pass them in magnitude for evil.
Onr present system of taxation
came ;down to ns from those old
times when the robber barons of
the Rhine levied toll on passing
travelers, when the pirates' of Tar-
ifa enforced tribute from all traf
fic, apd the.theory on . which they
operate is that of the blackmailer
or the bandit: To take all but.tbat
which will enable the victim to live
and bear futn re exactions. It has
been well said and often repeated
of this system of taxation that “it
little bp has is in farms tbat'can-
uot escape the eye oE the vigilant
tax assessor. Hence, abandoned
farms aud the steady flow of the
bone and sinew of our country
homes to cities, where to a great
extent it is possible for industrious
men to escape taxes on industry,
for thrifty men to accumulate with-
A FEW JEFFERSONIAN IDEAS.
i Atlanta Constitution.
More than a century ago, when
Thomas Jefferson visited Franee
he wrote a letter fo Madison, in
which be called attention to the
fact that the property of that coun
try was controlled by a few menJEfis
ont disgorging the greater part of observation of the evils resulting
their savings for taxes. - When it from this unequal state of affairs
is remembered that lan^ in the led him to the conclusion that
heart of many of the largest cities 1 legislation should afford proper
has sold at the rate of seven mil- facilities and inducements for the
lion dollars per acre, and then go sub-division of property,
nntaxed in proportion to the little The father, of American demo-‘
country farm, it can be seen how [ Grac y was ej s0 1° favor of an iri-
u • I come tax. He expressed.himself in
greatly farmers would gain by in- these , 70rds . ,. Anoaet meaM (
resting all in city property, espe- silently lessening the inequality of
cially when it is remembered that proverty is to exempt all from tax-
personal property in cities escapes ation below a certain point and to
taxation no'w in spite of law. tax, the higher portion of property
In the light of history let us gepmeh-rcal progression as they
, , , . “ , rise.” InMiort,hewasfor agraded
plead for an income tax law. If | income tax-
everything else has tp be taxed I Concerning land ownership and
why shonld “incomes” be an excep- the benefits of small farms Jeffer-
tion to the rale? Snch a law, with so !?,™ rol;e: , - -
a suitable enforement clanse,would LJF® earth * 88 ac , Q . mm ° n
. . , ’ , stock for man to labor and live on;
go a great way towards remedy-1 if f or encouragement of industry
ing many existing evils.
Duplin.
Pow^rsville, Mar, 26th ,93.
A Large Mortgage.
we allow it to be appropriated, we
mast take care that other employ
ment be furnished to those exclud
ed from the appropriation. If we do
not, the fundamental right to labor
the earth returns to the unemploy-
One of the largest mortgages I e< ^' ^ ^ 0<:) s00n y e f»i n onr country
ever recorded to the ffice of the I to Say that every man cannot find
cannot
... . , T . .employment, bat who can find un
clerk of court for Laurens connty cultivated land shall be at liberty
was recorded on Tuesday of last to cultivate it, paying a moderate
week. The mortgage was for $477, rent; but it is not to soon to provide
000 and was given to the Mercan- |by every possible_me«ns that as few
tile Trust Co., of New
-y t . as possible shall be without a little
’ portion of land. The small land
secure the payment of 447 bonds of owners are the most precions part
$1000 each, issued by the Oconee of the state.”
anp Western Railroad Co. This It will be seen from these ex
represents $9000 per mile for the prnssions that Jefferson looked for-
Oconee and Western railroad,which ^ ard aud in ^? i P ated s ° me of the
. .. .. . m, V j conditions which vex the present
is fifty-three miles long. The bonds generation. His suggestion regard-
are thirty year gold conds, bearing ing tbe graded income tax might
interest at 5 per cent., the interest have heen expected of him. He
payable on the first of March and saw 3 wa8, the fairest way of
1st of September of each year. The ta f u es > ani coaId ba “ ade
t iTT l c it W raise the revenue needed for
Oconee and Western folks seem the expenses of the governrn ent.
to have placed their bonds upon g e agree d with Burke that the
very advantageous terms.—Dublin lines of liberty and epual rights are
Post. I laid on the lines of taxation, and
that every battle of freedom had
The law passed by the last Con-I been fought ont on that parallel,
gress in its closing days, requiring I °wn independence and the con-
all railways to adopt ant omatic "? hts . oE the people-of
, i, ... . ~ in the days af Charles I.
couplers on ail their cars, will en- j ant i James 11. were the outcome of
tail a
very large expenditure of a conflict over questions of taxation
money by the railways. Channcey aa d revenue.
M. Depew, President of the New 0ar statesmen cannot do better
York Central, said that there were Mil g° c ba ck occasiohly to this
between 2,000,000 aed
cars in the country, and - that the J Jefferson were not merely for his
equipping of a single car with an- day and his party. They were for-
tomatic couplers cost about $20.1 mQ toted for all time and for. the
satisfaction’.
to guarantee them every time, and is the art of plucking the feathers
we stand ready to refund the pnr-.j f rom the iuncent goose without
chbse price, if satisfactory resnlts ^ ifc sqaaw ’ k .
do not follow their use.. These rem-i -, T , . ... ,
IS at nr ally from this endeavor t«
edies have won their great popular-.
ity purely on their merits. Holtz- 1 tox everything, the working farm-
claw & Gilbert, Draggists. . j er is the greatest sufferer, for what
The total expenditure of the roads
with this, single item, therefore,
would be about $50,000,000. Auto
matic couplers have, however, al
ready been accepted.
benefit of all mankind.
Hood’s Cures
Stephen Langford, a ^wealthy I
farmer of Madison county, Ken-
tacky, has bad made for his occnp-1
ancy a stone cpffin weighing abont
1500 ponnds. It was finished in [
Lexington and delivered to him
last week, and is ngw stored in his.
house awaiting developments. Mr.
Langford is 80 years old, bnt is in
good health. He says he wants to
assure-the fact that his body shall
be preserved from polecats, minks |
and such animals.
Terrible Headaches
Distressed and Discouraged
Health all Broken—Thoroughly Built
up by Hood's Sarsaparilla
When we say that a person has
good sense abont mo3t things we
mean, of course, that abont most!
things he has the good sense to j
agree with ns.
The. largest empire in the world j
is that of Great Britain, being 8,- j
557,675 sqnare miles, and more j
than a sixth part of the globe.
Life is short and time is fleeting,
but Hood’s Sarsaparilla will bless
humanity as the ages roll on. Try
it this season.
London is the largest city in the
world, containing a population of
4,764,312 persons.
“Iam glad to have my experience with Hood’s
Sarsaparilla widely known, becailse the medi-
eine has dons me so much good, I think It will
benefit others who are out of health. I was la a
very distressing and discouraging condition. I
had no appetite whatever; eould not sleep well;
suffered with excruciating headaches. X felt
Tired and Languid,
mm no ambition and seemed all broken down.
After X had taken medicine prescribed by two
of our best physicians, a kind neighbor advised
me-to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I-followed her
advice, and the result Is. I aaa perfectly ^wall.
I do not have the headacnes now, sleep well,
that tired feeling is vanished, and I am bright
and ambitious. X can eat heartily ai every
meal, and have gained in weight from 94 to 105
pounds. I do not have any distress in mj
_ old.
_ ( Off rued t
monthly by thousand* of La-
ndies. Is the only perfectly safa .
'andreliable medicine discov
ered. Bewareof unprincipled
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
— —. who offer inf erica*
medicines In place of this. A*k for Cook’s Cot?on i
Rsot Compound, take no substitute, orincloeesi and j
6 cento In pottage in letter, and we will sead. sealed, j
by return man. Full sealed particulars in plain
’TAllWteo* i stomach, and epileptic £ta, to which I was
No.3rSSer'Bi^kjDetroS’feiei. I formerly subject, never trouble me now, I
Sold in Perry by HoltZelaw & Gilbert, I eheerfully recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla and
and druggists; everywhere. 1 ’ — ' * ‘ —'—'
Ripans Tabules: one-gives relief.
’ i do not wfah to be without It” Mrs. Eta
Covert, Bath, Steuben County, X. V.
Ripans Tabules: a family remedy.
i Hood's PHIS act easily, yet promptly amf
efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c.
leSSSft-
bhHBHbS
Ripans Tabules are always ready.
Ripans Tabules cure dizziness.