Newspaper Page Text
. ,
JOHN XI. HODGES, Proprietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PBOCRESS AMD CULTURE.
$1.50 A YEAB IN ADTANCE.
* ■
VOL. XXIT.
PERRY. HOUSTON COUNTY, GEOEGIA, THURSDAY, MAY 11.1893.
NO. 19.
Application for Charter.
Georgia—Houston County;
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT of SAID COUNTY :
The petition of J. A. Spain and 5t. J. Nelson
respectfully shows to the Court that they and
those who may he hereafter associated with
them, and their successors in office, desire to be
incorporated for the term of twenty years with
the privilege of renewal at the end of that time.
The name and style'of said corporation to be
“The Houston Hame and Manufacturing Com
pany.” Petitioners show to the Court that tr
EYER PRESENT WOES.
New York Press.
object of said incorporation is for pecuniary
gain; '
that they propose to manufacture Hames,
Singletrees, Hubs, and to carry on a general man
ufacturing and miUing business. That the
amount of capital stock to be employed in said
business is Ten Thousand Dollars, with the
privilege of increasing said capital stock to
Twenty-five Thousand Dollars; said capital
stock to be divided into,shares of the par value
of One Hundred Dollars a share. Petitioners
aver that 10 per cent, of said capital stock has
been paid in. Petitioners ask that their
pal office be located at Perry, Houston
rinci-
unty,
pal omce oe locatea at rrerry, Houston county,
Ga., with the privilege to establish branch of
fices elsewhere as they may see fit. Their prin
cipal place of doing business will be In Houston
connty.
Petitioners therefore pray that they be granted
the right to sue and be sued, to plead and be im
pleaded, grant cr receive, to buy and sell real
estate, or to purchase and hold the same, as may
be necessary in carrying into effect said purpose
of incorporation, or for the debts due to said
atic
corporation, and to bargain, barter and to sell
all products of said business, and to do all
other acts as natural persons may, in the opera
tion of said business and in furtherance of their
purpose of incorporation aforesaid.
Tha
..hat petitioners may have a common seal, and
be allowed to make such by-laws, rules and reg
ulations as may be necessary to carry out the
purposes of said incorporation.
Petitioners pray that they and those who shall
be associated with them be bound to .the credit
ors of said company in their private capacity
for the amount of stock subscribed by them .until
their subscription is fully paid up, or until the
stockholder shall have paid out of his private
property debts of the said incorporation to
an amount equal to the unpaid subscription, as
provided by law,
Wherefore petitioners pray that this their pe-
• * J ■ H—’-■» granted -
tition be granted, and that they be _
charter of incorporation as provided by tho laws
of the state of Georgia, with all the rights and
privileges allowed them under the constitution
and laws of the state of Georgia, and petitioners
will e\ cr pray.etc Att’y. for Petitioners.
This May 3rd, 1893.
GEORGIA—Houston County :
1 certify the above and foregoing to be a true
copy of the original petition of file in my office,
copy b M / A . EDWARDS, Cl’k. S. C.
S. Q. HOLLINGSWORTH
—OFFERS FOR SALE—
Jersey Heifers and Grades
of best butter families,
REGISTERED BERKSHIRE PIGS,
Premium Fowls, and 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 Games,
Silver Wyandottes, Langshans, Plymouth
Bocks and Buff Leghorns.
Eggs $2.50 and $3.00 per setting of 13.
Address S. Q. HOLLINGSWORTH,
P. O., Coushatta, La.
Nothing to do but work;
Nothing to eat bat food;
Nothing to wear but clothes
To keep one from being nude.
Nothing to breathe but air—
Quick as a flash ’tis gone—
Nowhere to fall but off,
Nowhere to.stand but on.
Nothing to comb but hair,
Nowhere to sleep bat bed.
Nothing to weep but tears;
No one to bury but dead.
Nothing to sing but songs;
Ae, well, alas! and alack!—
Nowhere to go but out;
Nowhere to come bnt back.
Nothing to see but sights;
Nothing to quench bnt thirst;
Nothing to have but what we’ve got,
Tims through our lives we’re cursed!
Nothing to strike but a gait—
Everything moves that goes.
Nothing at all but common sense
Can ever withstand these woes.
REVENGED.
-:OUR:-
CLOTHING
-16 ALWAYS BEADY FOE'.—
INSPECTION,
We continue to lead the
Clothing Trade.
EADS. NEEL & CO.
-THE ORIGINAI,-
One Price Clothiers,
MACON, GEOEGIA.
MONEY TO LOAN.
In stuiis of $300.00 and upwards, to be
secured by first liens on improved farms.
Lon" time, low rates and easy payments.
Apply to C. C. DUNCAN,
Nov. 20 th,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.
~J, m. G E* MBM,
* Attorney' at Law,
Montezuma - •- Ga.
Will practice in all the courts of this
circuit.
* t3> » Jk v & ^ 9
Attorney-at-Law,
MACON, - GEORGIA.
In office of Minter Wimberly,
Comer Mulberry and Third Streets.
DENTIST,
J306 Second Street, Macon, Ga.
SPECIALIST. CROWNS AND I BRIDGES
w. o. DAVIS,
Attorney-at-Law,
PERRY, - GEORGIA.
Will p rabtice in all the courts ofthiB
It was abont half an hour after
sunset, but an orange light still
burned above the lonely southern
valley. The. trembling evening
star was banging over the green si
lence of the fragrant Tennessee
woods. Vapor wreathed phan
toms from the river coarse, and
from the dense thickets that skirt
ed the camp ground came ever and
anon the mournful sound of whip
poorwills, sounding faint and low,
like the remembered echoes of a
dream. Yet Wallace Keen would
have exchanged well nigh all he
was worth to exchange its luxuri
ant verdure one moment only for
the pine clad heights and salt
winds of Maine, with rusket wing
ed robins chirping their familiar
madrigals in the orchards below.
“Two years ago I left home,”
murmured Wallace Keene, as he
gazed thoughtfully out where the
purple sky seemed to touch the
waving woods. “Two years since
young Harney told me he never
could give Marian to ‘a common
mechanic,’ yet the wound rankles
sharply still.*’
“Captain—” "
“Is that yon, Spicer? What
now?”
Captain Keene turned his face
toward the opening of the tent,
where Private Spicer’s head was
just, visible.
“Why, sir, our fellows have just
brought in that lot o’ men that was
hart in that scrimmage across the
river this morning, and some on
'em is wounded bad.”
“I tvill *be there directly, Spicer.”
There was^a little crowd of men
gathered on the river shore in the
warm glow of the spring, but they
silently parted right and left for
Captain’s Keene’s tall figure to
pass through their midst
Six or seven dusty, bleeding
men were sitting and lying around
in various postures, .their ghastly
brows made still paler by the faint,
uncertain glimmer of the young
moon. Keene glanced quickly
around, taking in the whole scene
in that one brief survey.
He stopped short as his eye fell
on a new face, half shadowed by
the green sweep of drooping al
ders—a pale, blood-streaked face,
with a gaping cut on the forehead.
“This is not one of our men!” he
exclaimed sharply. “How came he
here?”
“No, sir,” exclaimed Spicer, step
ping forward. “I thinkTae belphgi
ed to the Eighth. I’m snreT don’t
know how he ever got inked up,
with pur fellows,, but there he Was,
and 1 thought we’d better not wait
for their ambulence, but bring
him straight here.’
“Right,” briefly pronounced
Keene, stooping over- the insensi
ble figure. “Let them carry him
to my tent”
“I beg your pardon, Captain—to
your tent?”
“Didn’t you hear what I said?”
sharply interrogated the superior
officer. “Brace, make the others
comfortable in Lientenant Ord-
way’s quarters. There will be plen
ty of room for tbein there.”
“Well, I’m." beat!” ejaculated
Spicer five or ten minutes after
ward as he came out of the cap
tain’s tent scratching bis shock of
coarse red curls.
Meanwhile the dim light of a
lamp swinging from the center of
the'litlle tent shone fall upon the
singular group within its circling
folds—the wounded private lying
like a corpse, still and pale, on the
narrovg iron bedstead; the young
officer leaning over him and sup
porting his head, and the brisk,
gray-eyed little surgeon keenly
surveying both as he unfolded his
case of phials and powders.
“He is not dead, doctor?”
‘ No; but he would have been in
another half hour. Your prompt
remedies have saved his life, Cap
tain Keene.”
“Thank God! oh, thank God!”
The snrgeon looked at Keene in
amazement.
“He doesn’t belong to your regi
ment; why are you so interested in
the ease?”
“Because, Doctor,” said Keene,
With a strange, Lright smile, "when
I saw him lying nnder the alders,
dead, as I thought, I rejoiced in
my secret heart, at first—only at
first. The next moment I remem
bered that 1 was a man and a
Christian. For years I have car^
ried the spirit of Cain in my breast
toward that man; nowit is washed
out in his blood.”
lt was high noon of the next day
before the wounded man started
from a fevered, doze into the faint
dawn of consciousness.
“Where am I?” he faltered, look
ing wildly around him, with an in
effectual effort to raise /his dizzy
head from the pillow.
Now, be easy,” said Private
“T know what you thought. She
was engaged and almost married.
We bad nearly induced her to be
come Lisle Spencer’s wife, but she
refused on the very eve of the wad
ding day.”
Keene bad risen and was pacing
np and down the narrow limits of
the tent with feverish haste. •
“Because,” went on Harney,“she
loved a certain young volunteer'
who left S-— about two years ago
too well ever to become any other
man’s wife
Harney, you do not mean to
say—’ 1
I do, though, old fellow; and
whatsis;, more, I mean to say that
since Tve been lying in this tent
my eyes have been pretty thor
oughly opened to my own absurd
folly and impertinence.”
Captain Keene wrung his com
panions band and hurried away, to
mistake the bootjack for the ink-
stand and to commit several other
no less inexcusable absurdities.
“I see you’ll get nothing written
to-day,” sighed Harney, as he lay
watching Wallace Keene tear up
sheet after sheet of condemned
note paper.
“I shall, though,” smiled Wal
lace. “Only I can't tell exactly
which end of my letter to begin at”
Captain Keene did write—and if
he inserted a little foreign matter
into the epistle, it didn’t matter,
for Harney, considerate fellow,
EUROPE’S WEAKNESS. 1
ENGLAND’S INCOME TAX.
ANIMALS TAMED BY PERFUME.
wsm
Spicer, who was cleaning his gun never asked to see it..
by the bedside. “You’re all right,
my boy. Where are yon? Why, in
the Captain’s tent, to be siire, and
that's pretty good quarters for the
rank and file, I should think!”
“The Captain’s tent? How came
I here?”
“That’s just what I can’t tell you
—you’ll have to ask himself, I
guess. You ain’t any relation to
Captain Keene, be you?”
“Keene—Keene?” repeated the
man.
“Because,"' pursued Spicer, “if
you’d been his own brother born,
he couldn’t have taken better care
of yon. His cousin, maybe.”
“No! God forgive me, no!” fal
tered the wounded man with a low,
bitter moan.
“Here he is now,” said Spicer,
the familiar accents of his voice
falling to a more respectfully mod
ulated tone as he rose and sainted
his officer. “He’s ail right, Cap
tain—as clear headed as a bell!”
“Very Well, Spicer; you can go.”
The private obeyed with alacri
ty. When they were alone togeth
er in the tent, Wallace Keene* came
to the low bedside.
“So you’re all right, Mr. Har
ney?” he asked kindly. .
“Captain Keene,!’ murmured
Harney, shrinking from the sooth
ing tone as if- it bad been a dag
ger’s point, “1 have no right to ex
pect this treatment at your hands.”
“Oh, never mind,” said the young
man, lightly. “What can I do to
make you more comfortable?”
Harney was silent, but his eyes
were full of the tears be- fain would
drive back—tears of remorseful
shame—and he turned his flashed
face away lest the man he had once
grossly insulted should see them
Ml.
The next day he again allnded
to the home subject.,
“Captain Keene, yon asked me
yesterday what you could do for
me?"
“Yes.”
“I want you to obtain leave for
May to come and nurse me when I
am transferred to the hospital.”
QGaptain Keene turned toward
the sick man a face, white a,ud.hard
as marble; and said in a strangely
altered voice:
“Do you mean your sister?”
“My sister—yes.”
“Of course, if you wish it, I can
obtain permission, Harney. But—”
“Well?”
“Keene’s cheek colored, and he
bit his lip. '
“I should not suppose she would
be. willing to leave her husband for
the very uncertain comforts of hos-t
pital life.”
Harney smiled, looking into his
companion’s face with keen,search
ing eyes.
“May is not married,. Captain
Keene! She has no. soch append
age as a husband.”
“Not married?’
Marian came, and when her
brother was promoted into the con
valescent ward, and she went home
again, it was only to lose herself
in bowers of orange blossoms, for
ests of white satin ribbon . and
acres of pearly, shimmering silk,
shot with frosty gleams of silvery
brocade,for the course of true love,
after all its turns and intricacies,
had at length found its way intt
the sunshine and was ran ring
smoothly over sands of gold.—New
York News,
DEVELOPMENT OF THE SOUTH.
Governer Murphy J. Foster, of
Louisiana, has the following tb say
in regard to southern development.
Money cannot be spent to better
advantage than' encouraging immi
gration, but there must be some
method in it. I favor the communi
ty systim. Establish communities
and get people with common ties to
settle together. Fertile land is not
the chief consideration by any
ibeans. t'he Germans, the Swiss,
the Swedes and the Piedmontese
farm oh a small scale and wrestfrom
the poorest soil a substance which
would Absolutely astonish our peo
ple. And andther thing of the
greatest importance is that we as
sure these people, whether from
Europe or the Northwest, that they
Mir have the utmost protection of
6ur law. They" look for the co-pper-
ation of the citizens of the commu
nities iu which they locate. Colo-
hiztion will not be a success so long
asour.people take no further inter
est in the settlers than to sell them
land. Probably the best field to
draw immigrants from is.the North
west, where the climate is so severe
that it would satisfy the Esqui
maux in the winter. The people
wlio have settled there are turning
in other, directions. So are the
farmers of the thickly settled mid
dle west California, .by an ex
penditure of $30,000 in advertising,
attraetsd the tide. A'stream of new
settlers is pouring into Missouri,
Texas and the Southwest from Illi
nois, Indiana and Ohio. Georgia
has excellent lands, good railroad
facilities and an inviting climate or
rather all sorts of climate. This
State should draw immediate and
large benefits from any develop
ment enterprise.
LaGrippe.
During the prevalence of the
Grippe the past seasons it was a
noticeable fact that those who de
pended upon Dr. King’s New Dis
covery, not only had a Bpeedy re
covery! bat escaped all the trouble
some after effects of the malady.
This remedy seems to have a pe
culiar power in effecting rapid
cures not only in cases pf La-
Grippe, but in. all diseases of the
Throat,-Chest and Lungs, and has
cored cases of Asthma and Hay
Fever of long standing. /Try it and
be convinced. It won’t disappoint
Free Trial Bottle at Holtzclaw &
Gilbert’s Drug Store.
Ripans Tabulea: a family remedy.
Macon Telegraph.
The Paris Figaro, perhaps the
most influential of French newspa
pers and always distinguished for
the great ability with which it dis
cusses public questions, is much
concerned about the'danger threat
ening -Europe, and especially
France, from the United States.
The Figaro points out that the
United States have nearly paid
their war debt, while the debts of
European countries, amounting to
more than $125,000,000,000, are in
creasing; that the tax payers of
this Country are called upon to sup
port only 27,000 men withdrawn,
from industrial pursuits for ser
vice in the army, -while European
tax payers must support 3,500,
000 so withdrawn. “One must be
blind not to see,” says the Fi
garo, “in those conditions of rap
id and progressive development
of the United States that Europe is
threatened with such acompeti-
tion that there will come a time
when the balance of industrial
power and political influence
must be placed to the profit of the
new world.”
There can be no * doubt that .the
United Sates possess an enormous
advantage over Europe by reason
of the facts pointed out by the Fi
garo. It is true that we pay in
pensions more than any one Eu
ropean nation pays for war prepar
ations, but we do not withdraw the
the flower of our population'- from
productive industries. Pensions
may have the effect of making
some men idle who would not be
able to live without work, but it is
perhaps true that a great majority
of the pensioners are still produc
ers of wealth. The question with
us, therefore, is not so much one of
national waste as of national injus
tice done some tax payers for the
benefit of others. In Europe, not
only is the amount necessary to
support 3,500,000 men in idleness
wasted but the labor of the men it
self, a matter or importance, is lost.
The difference is great between dis
tributing unjnstly the money rais
ed by taxation and nsing money so
raised to support men in idleness,
whether considered froJi the stand
point of a moralist or a political
economist.
In spite of the' great advantage
of the United States which the Fi
garo points out, and it is only one
bf many, there are many people
who belive that the only safety of
the country lies in keeping Europe
away from us—as if Europe were
strong and we weak. The next
tariff law will demonstrate that
they are unnecessarily timid. .
Atlanta Constitution.'
There is a $100 bill on deposit in
the People’s' Bank, at Talbotton,
Which could be identitied by a cer
tain mark. A man came into the
bank to have a check cashed, and
Mr. Beall paid him tins' bill; In 'a
short while another man brought
in the same bill and had it placed
to his credit on deposit. In a few
minutes Mr. Beall had paid out
this bill again, and presently it was
'again deposited. This, paying out
and receiving back was continued
until Mr. Beall bad paid .out $500
with the same $100 bill, in less
than one hoar. How many times
it may have changed hands outside
the bank is not known.—Ex.
In order to make np a deficit of
$7,800,000 in the revenue for this
year the British chancellor of the
exchequer has increased the in
come tax from 6 pence to 7 pense
per ponnd sterling. This will in
crease the revenue to the extent of
$8,700,000.
The income tax in England has
varied from 14 pence in 1854, 16
pence in 1857, 6 pence in 1892-93
to 2 pence in 1874,76. TV hen the
government wants any extra money
It is taxed out of the people’s in
comes.
No British income is taxed un
less it is over $750. Last year the
6 penny tax on incomes yielded $69-
250,000 And the remainder of the
revenueneeded was collected by
means ofimport and excise taxes.
Great Britain, as oar readers
sbboldknow,is not absolutely a free
trade country. She has ajtariff on
luxuries that yielded $99,000,000
last year, but only a few articles
paythis tax.
The tax proposed for this coun
try will not touch small incomes. It
is not likely that will be affect
any income under $5,000. The
idea is that it should be borne by
thosewbo can best afford it, and
whosepresent enjoyment and past
monopoly of so many govern
mental favors, with bond holdings
exempt from taxation, make it
just and equitable that they should
pay itand thus make up the loss
of the revenue that will be caused
by reducing the tariff to a revenue
basis.
Such an income tax-should meet
with-no opposition in any quarter-
It will lighten the burdens of the
masses; and will not be serionsly
felt by those who in this way will
pay their jnst share of the expenses
of the government.
A story was printed, recently of
a leopard who was tamed by giving
him a paper upon which lavender -
water had been sprinkled. The
statement was made that friends
had been made with a leopard and
a lion in a menagerie throngh the
medium of a bottle of perfume.
For a number of years the keeper
of the carnivora house of the Zoo!
logical Gardens in Philadelphia
was an Irishman named Shannon,
who is well known to a Mail And
Expressman, and this man devel
oped a fondness for his ferocious
charge which was simply astonnd-
ing, and he took as much care of
them as he did of his own children.
Among them was a pretty black
coated animal of the jagolar or
panther tribe, and to everybody
connected with the gardens with, the
single exception of Shannon, this
beast was the. most treacherous and
formidable of the collection.
With Shannon he was as 'gentle
as a kitten. The keeper has whiled
Away many an hoar, seated on the
ledge of the cage, his back tnriied
to the animal—and act which of it
self would hjive been fatal to anyr
one else—an his hand thrnst
through the bare, holding a ccent
ed handkerchief.
The cat would lie on its back for
hoars, purring contentedly over the
handkerchief and seemingly taking.
great delight in burying its face in
the piece of perfumed linen. Shan
non could never tell whether there
was any virtnre in the perfume, or
whether the animal’s docility was
owing to its liking for him, . but
since he left, more than a year ago,.
the new keeper has been unable to •
make friends with the animal and
admits that he has not tried the
perfnme, and, what’s more, he don’t
intend to.—New York Mail and
Express.
The vandal woodcutters still work
apace in the western forests, cut
ting . down the monarchs of ages
with never a thought, save of the
number of shingles each will yield.
One lumberman who visited Port
land, Oregon, recently told with
great -gusto how he coaid get out
hmber from his claim, near the
Green basin, that would square 4J
feet“for 140 feet of its length. He
said he had one tree on his clain|
that measnres thirty-one feet in
ciircnmfrence, six feet above the
ground, and 170 feet fo the first
limb, and which he “estimated con
tains 70,000 feet of timber.”
A young Australian traveler
claims to have discovered that the
waltz was the creation of neither a
German nor a Swiss, but of the os
triches of Africa. He asserts that
every morning at sunrise these
amiable birds assemble in groups
and begin a regular and graceful
movement which is none other than
the waltz.
The Dundee (Scotland) Courier
tells of awhite leghoru hen layiag
an egg two and a half inches in
diameter and weighing over four
and a half ounces.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrli that
contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely de
range the whole system when enter
ing it throngh the mneoua surfaces.
Such articles should never be used
except on prescriptions from repu
table physicians, as the damage
they will do is ten fold to the good
yov can possibly derive from them.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O.,
contains no, merenry, and is taken
nternally, aeting directly upon the
ilood and mucous surfaces of the
system. In' buyihg Hall.a Catarrh ,
Cure besnre you get the genaine.:
It isiaken internaUy, and^m ad e~in of «^ IemTe g*?.
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & wai
Co. Testimonials free. il^gSetin^
B@*Sold-;by all druggists, price.
75c. per bottle. 1
Abatalion of infantry carries
150 picks, 150 shovels, ten spades,
twenty-five axes, fifty billhooks
and four crow bars. An engineer
company has 130 picks, 130 shovls,
six spades, eighty-one axes, thir
teen handsaws, four cross-cat saws,
forty billhooks, thirteen erowbars
and two heavy hammers.
The Minnesota Historical Soci-
There is a’liquor saloon for every
93 persons in'San Francisco, in Al
bany one for every 110 persons, in
New Orleans one for every 121 per
sons, in Atlanta one for every 93
persons, in Augusta one for every
150 persons aud in Savannah one*
for every 33 persons. Now, let
somebody figure np the number of
drunkards and make the figures
com plete.—Exchange.*
The expression “Vox populi vox
Dei” —the voice of the people-is
the voice of God—was used in the
writings of Wiijiam of Malmes
bury, who was born A. D. 1075 or
1095, and died 1 abont 1142. He
quoted the expression as a proverb
even in his time sufficiently well
known.
The gold product of the United
States last year was $23,000,000.
Of this amount Alaska produced
$1,000,000 and California $12,000,-
000. Of the world’s product the
European goldsmiths alone make
np $24,000,000 annually into gold
plate and jewelery.
Sad and Gloomy
Weak arid Dyspeptie
Model's Sarsaparilla Gave Strength
and Perfectly Cured.
ety says that the source of the Mis
sissippi river is in a partially en
closed basin, containing many
ponds, lying directly sonth of Lake
Itasca, and distant from its head
three miles.
When yon speak or even think
of spring medicine, how quickly
Hood’s Sarsaparilla comes into
your mind. Take it now.
The money spent on the world’s
fair buildings amounts to nearly
$18,000,000. Tbisis twice the snm
spent for the samejpurpose in Par
is in 1889.
WOOD’S' PHOSPHODEVE,
The Great English Remedy.
.over
Of
and Hem-
for Wood’* Phost
it-hm offers soma
worthless medicine la place
nest (ton. Inclose price In
by return mail.; Price, ons
as. One via .please. MixvtOloure.
n sealed envelope, 2 stamps.
MplvoSl wspd avenue, Itetrolt. Mich.
Sold in Perry by HoltZclaw & Gilbert,
Vr. J. R. White -
Birmingham, Alabama.
“I hare not words .enough to express my
thanks for the great benefits received from a
few. bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I -wa3
weak, and it made me strong; I was a dyspep
tic, and it cured me; I was sad and gloomy, and
it made me cheerful and hopeful. And last,
though not Ieasl^ it made me an ardent i
Sarsa-
o partlla
working democrat All who have 1
Sarsaparilla with my advice, report g
suits. I gladly recommend lt to all s
J. R. Whits, JL D., Birmingham, Ala
K. B. If yon decide to take
saparilla do not he induced to buy any i
instead. Insist Upon HOOD'S.
and druggists everywhere.
UnHoi
Ripans Tabules haye come to stay.
Ripans Tabules: one gives Telief.
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