Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 3>
H. H. M'DONAID,
pENTISm
Hill b found at his Office, Room No. 3 W hits-
M,-.* Uousa, Conyers, Qa., where he is pre-
Mml to do all kinds of work in his line. Fill.
Teeth made a speciality.
l i/ork Warranted to give Satisfaction
■ Heine thankful for past patronage, ho re
spectfully solicits a continuance of the same.
Waiti&M Si&mt-'
I mm and JEWELER
CoNYEItS, CEOItaiA
I batches, Clock, and Jewelry of every de-
I rjplion repaired. AH work done neatly, and
I order, at lowest prices for cash, and warran-
I dto give satisfaction. Shop : next door to
| )gt Office. , aug^3lß76-ly
I
B EcOM&FoaOe
11BDG8I ad WAGON REPOSITORY,
1 OVYERS, GEORGIA,
DEALERS IN AND MANUFACTURERS OF
carts,
I 1 WHEELBARROWS,
and VEHICLES of all kinds.
IMjIARNESS, from the Cheapest to the
I Dearest, both Hand and Machine
Hip. We keep the best
lIIHdUDIi HARKENS.
|| Use, for CARRIAGES
or one Horse WAGONS.
• Gan supply any part of HARNESS on
notice.
■■Also, a lull stock of
IL TJ M B E R
great variety always on hand, tor
lire building purposes. Cdi'pt-liters
J Contractors would do well to see our
mnl wholesale rates.
’■Mouldings, Lntiees, Stops, Strips, etc.,
■speciality, arid 'tissue of any width,
itlckness, or shape. Window Sash—
[ Amed and glassed—Blinds and Doors:
Hllier white or yc'low pine.
(■Also suitable lumber tor Coffins. We
■pays keep iu stock Burial cases and
of various sizes and lengths,
Ifro n infants to adults—all at very low
I figures. Coffin Hardware generally,
our facilities, we propose to make
ot any style, from the plainest to
|t!k finest, cheaper than we possibly could
H iia'rl alone. Give us a trial and
patent wheels.
Hubs, Spokes, Rims, Bodies,
its, Shafts, Poles Dash Frames,
les, Springs. IRON in great
E 'iety. Screws and Bolts ot best
be. L’.itent and Enameled Leather,
ameled Uoths, Moss and everything a
itnmer needs. Full stock of best
rriage Paints, Varnishes, Oils, Colois,
nanients, and Paints generally. NEW
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES
i< WAGONS always on hand, iu greal
defy, and can make to order any sty le
quality desired. Old ones Repaired,
kited and Trimmed at short notice,
dat living rates. We buy the best
iterial, and having suitabh machinery,
! able to turn off work with neatiiese
<1 dispatch.
itb constant devotion to our Busi
*fi, Honest Dealings with our Custom
kExperienced Faithful Mechanics, and
e raauutauture of Reliable Goods in
lr bne, we hope to merit a liberal pat
'age from a Generous Public. Thank-
J you tor your past favors, we will be
id to see you again at our office on
'P°t Street, near the Geo R R.
Respectfully,
Downs & Langford
KM,Lee*M, #.
: i and APOTHECARY ; \ j
Centre Street,
i
INYERS > GEORGIA
—Dealer in—
I L'GS,
medicines,
CHEMICALS
rfumury srnl Fancy Toilet articles,
PULE WINES & LIQUORS
e Vicinal use.
faces 8 ’ ' ! s lUß , hes ' ic - Trusses and shoul-
aTi r t 81l j Gard - n Seede - Tateot
'Wong accuraf l^ 8 ’ JPre
—— — cutely compounded.„£t£jp
'*■ ® fiBEAT CENTENMAL 1876
in i,,, f j ea - . 7 o
’•a Uia Ccnteni nf f rmation as to beßt routes
“nany ’° r -° any SjIQUJBr tte
h l in tb country
B w - WRENN.
Agent Konnesaw Route,
[ Atlanta, Ga.
—W—MW————^_____- . . . . , .
w SmMalr IMsfat.
Y. M. C. A.
Young hearts are hold, and yet, they count the
cost.,
Men’s souls are far too precious to be lost. ’
Christian awake ! Christ. Will the strength
supply.
Association works means Christ Md I.
Young though thou art thy Saviour: “Go,
THOU,”
Men’s souls arc faint for “jiving waters” now.
Christian ! what! “slocepost thou ?" O, b{d
me come.
Association work bring sinners home.
Young is our cause, iftf wondrous blest of God.
Men’s thoughts ore duily turning toward the
blood,
Christian! the blood that “cleanseth from all
sin,”
Association faith brings sinners in,
Young men are daily dying without hope,
Men’s eyes are blinded, they in darkness
grope,
Christian, awake ! lift high the gospel flame.
Association faith in Jesus’ name,
To the Peoole of the United
States.
Fellow- Citizens : We congratulate
you as patriots, as partakers with us in
the common destiny ot American free
men, upon the results of the October
elections. We rejoice in the victory
which tho people's ballots have bestowed
upon the friends ot reform, in the valley
of the Ohio where the Republican hosts
had an overwhelming ascendency in ev.
ery PreeicUnt'al election since 1856.
We rejoice in the assurance these elec
tions convey that your ballns will be
stow decisive majorities to the allied
forces of Democracy and Reform in the
November elections throughout the Un
ion. But we rejoice not as partisans; we
rejoice with you as fellow-citizens.
And when the decision ot this week
of one million voters aldng the valley of
the. Ohio shall oe ratified next month, by
the fiat of eight million voters through
out the whole Republic, we shall still
tejoice, chiefly for the reason that not
one of its citizens can iniifs ot an equal
share with us who are Democrats, in the
political peace and good will which will
then and there be established among all
sections, races, classes auU conditions of
men,- and in the prosperity ot which po
litical peace; based on equal rights and
fraternal good wilt, is the first condi
tion.
Upon the three States of West Vir
ginia, Ohio and Indiana, were concentra
ted air the influence of ihe Administra
tion, all their efforts, and the vast sums
of money forced fiom the one hundred
thousand office holders ot the party in
power.
These were feorful odds, not again to
be contended against so concentrated ;
tor in November elections the contest
will be in every one of thirty eigiit
Slatos upon the sa::te day.
Nevertheless, against these odds the
Democrats and Refoimers of West Vir
ginia and 4 Indiana have been victori
ous, and in Ohio they have all but res
cued a Stale hitherto deemed hopeless,
and have created an assurance of victory
in November.
If it falls to our lot as a National
Democratic Committee to congratulate
the people of the Uuion upon the victory
in the first battle of the reform cam
paign, it is only because Democrats have
been honored to be the leaders ot the
people in the work of national regenera
tion. *
Tlie Victory won, the victory still to
be won, will be a deliverance as much to
Republicans as to Democrats.
The patriotic masses ot the Republican
party nmy be thankful that the misdeeds
of tbeir unworthy leaders have been re
buked and are to be arrested. The suf
ternig whites of the South may lift up
their heads to greet the dawn ol a better
day for them as well as the nation ai
large. The colored citizen may share
the general -joy that he will soon cease
to be the stock in Hade of corrupt poli
tioanE, but shall enjoy his rightlul liber
ties aud his equality before the law amid
universal good will.
As for the Reform Democracy, to
whose standards victory has beeu tied,
with all her garlands on, it only remains
lor them to Welcome every ally, every
friend, close up the ranks aud press on,
shoulder to shoulder, under the banner
and with the one watchword,
REFORM.
Fellow-citizens: Peace between all
sections ■, Prosperity in all our homes:
of these you hive been for years depri
ved by the mistaken s-iii-jiiudes of patri
otic Republicans played upon by selfish
and corrupt leaders, who have been kept
fanning the dying embers of civil strife
in order to escape inspection ot the trusts
which they have oetryed.
For eleven years you have had the
name of peace. At no time have you
had the substance of peace. In lieu
CONYERS, GA„ THURSDAY. OCTOBER <O, 1870.
thereof you have had ihe grinding tnxa
tion and wasteful expenditure of war.
Just before every year you have had the
preaching of anew crusade -tgsinst a
section utterly defeated in war, and anx
ious only to be completely reconciled in
ptabb'.
For eleven years thfe' power of the
men who have seized awsy the control
ot their patty from the hands of its
statesmen and founders has been supreme
in almost every department of the Fed
eral Government.
Discarding the hope tif prolonging
their damnation by benefioieut public
measures, they have created and traflick
ed upon public calamities. The policy
they have adopted has been worked "out.
Its failure has beeu absolute.
In place of past performances these
same corrupt and Selfish leaders now
proffer promises already broken as their
titles to further trust.
Having prostrated our manifold indus
tries by the vast aggregate and the worst
methods ol federal taxation, they now
again solicit your confidence as the in
struments of retrenchment and reform.
Having debauched the public seivice,
and having just now, in the face ot open
day, assessed their army tit a hundred
thousand office-holders—the people's
servants—paid by the people’s taxes—in
order to create immensecorrup;ion lands
to frustrate the people’s will, they now
profess to be the champions of civil ser
vice reform. Having imposed upon the
Southern States the rapacity, fraud and
pluudtr of the carpet-bag governments,
having almost ruined the p osperiiy of
the North by destroying the prosperity
of the South, having credit'd terror, un
certainty and confusion in all the produc
tive industries of the South, which fur
nish most of the exports ot oui whole
country, keep iu motion the commerce
and manufactories ot the North and East,
and furnish a market for the agricultural
products of tlie West, they now purpose,
by renewal of the same fatal policy, to
to prolong their ow n power in tho hope
ot concealing tl eir misdeeds, and for
this purpose they do not hesitate to le
new 'lie cry ot intolerance; to revive
the dying memories ot fraternal strife,
and to appeal to the leai's and prejudices
6\ the timid and tho ignorant.
Fellow-Citizens: .These and their
measures have been completely tailed.
An oppressive luxation, an exhausted
South, an impoverished North, a fluctua
ling currency,the enterprise ot an industri
ous people locked fast in the paralysis of
hard times—such is the outcome of their
political policy, such are the achieve
ments of their long supremacy. Your
ballots m November can alone dictate a
change of measures* and a change ol
men. Shall not the uprising of patriot
ism along the vallc-y of the Ohio go on
to a complete and beneficial revolution
in the administration ot the government
of the United States’
Will you not, by r the voice ot over
whelming majomies at the, polls, pro
claim your invincible taiih, alter all these
yeais of co luption and passion, in the
high immortal principles ot government
by the people for the people, in simple
honesty and strict economy, as the su
preme wisdom of public policy, in justice
as the mother of power, and in civil
freedom as the be-all and the end-all of
a true Republican nationality.
Will you not build up anew prosperity
for all the people on the old foundations
ot American self-government, on peace,
reconciliation and fraternity between all
sections, all classes and all races embra
ced within our system of Americau coin
monwealihsi oil frugally aad eecnomy
in all governments ; on honesty and pu
rity ot Administration, and having lost
your prosperity through governmental
misrule, regain that prosperity throug
Governmental reform ? We commit this
©
great issue to the intelligence and science
of the American people, with an unfal
tering trust in the wisdom aud justice ot
their decision.
By ordei of the National Democratic
Committee.
AbraH S. llewitt,
Chairm u.
Frederick O. Prince,
Secretary.
New York, Oct. 13, 1876.
A Nebraska paper invitingly says :
‘Who says farmers cannot -row rich in
this State? Fifteen years ago a young
man came here without a dollar in the
world. Last week he went home, carry
ing with him the sum of one dollar and
thirty eight cents, the savings of fifteen
years of Iruga! lile. Come •> est, young
man, coin** West.'
A Vermont paper announces that it
will ’exchange a few tender-lines for
spare-ribs or sausages.’
A Quaker Trick.
\K hen a stranger has climbed four
pairs of stairs and made a half dozen
turns he finds himself at the door of the
chief editorial room of the Philadelphii
Bulletin. Max Adder sits just inside,
anti as the stranger enters he is seated at
Adder s right hand. He is seated iu an
old- fashioned splinibottonied chair, the
bottom ot which lias gene to look for
the dust ot the Pilgrim fathers. There's
a newspaper spread over the vacant spot,
and Mr. Adder cheerfully remarks:
‘Sit right dowu—flue day—wheo did
you arrive ?'
The man ffitff down. If he is a small
man he sits on the floor, his feet slant
toward the ceiling, his knees dig into his
throat; and his back is dreadfully bent,
while his hit is jamnrjd'over his eyes.
‘Fell through eh ?’ inquires Mr. Ai'e
ler iis lib loots around. Glow do you
like Philadelphia ?’
The stranger struggles, finds iiiinsdf
fast, and asks to be extricated. He is
politely informed that lie is against the
rules hi the office to extricate any one
who falls through the chair iu which Ar
temus Ward used to sit, and is in just
the condition he left it.
‘Does Philadelphia come bp to your
ideas?’ kindly inquires Mr. Adder as he
openS Another exeliiftfge.
The stranger sets to work to bust that
chair or break his back; but he can do
neither. lie thinks the joke has been
carried farjenough, hut is informed that
it is not a joke—that no man around that
office was ever more sober in his l.te.
The victim tries to laugh, and remarks
that five minutes more will finish his
spinal column.
‘Oh, no it won’t/ replies Mr. Adder.
‘\\ by, 1 have known men who were on
the verge ot the grave to live iu your
position for one hour and sixteen min
utes !’
After a quartet Of an littnr or more
Mr. Adder ca Is in three more editors
and introduces them to the s’ranger, and
they want to know if he i pleased with
Philadelphia; ami if lie lias any hard fed
ings against the memory of William
Pbiirj. Five minutes is then spent in
u;iuiiioi‘ iLxa vu*.iiin pjin be i:x—
treated under a suspension ot tfie rifles.
The vote is a tie, and the c'ty editor is
called in to cast a ballot. He makes a
speech explaining his reason for voting
‘yes,’ and after twenty-fivs minutes have
passed away the stranger is released, a
photograph of William Penn is given
him, and lie is told that any street car
line will take him to the Centennial
grounds. —JMtroit Free Press.
The .President’s Proclamation.
The second act in the grand farce is
now being played upon the South Caro
lina hoaids, The chief ot the dramatis
personae being the President ot this
great repub ic.
Grand, gloomy and peculiar,tie sits upon
his throne, and at his nod, like Jupiter of
old, armies nove, States are shaken, and
rifle clubs disband and retire peaceably to
their homes.
The whole plot of the farce is so rid
iculous, ihat really criticism would cn y
prove ignorance and stupidity. Were We
disposed to parodize, or had we a brush
to daub a caricature, it would be the
picture of a very large bomb shell with
the stuffing taken out—belched forth
from an enormous gdn —and falling
harmlessly in the midst of a few unarmed
rifle clubs — News
Signs of Prosperity. —lf anybody can
give any belter signs of a tip lop state
than the following, let us see the list:
“Where spades grow bright and idle swords
grow dull;
Where jai s aro empty, and where bams are
full;
Where church-paths are with frequent foot
steps worn ;
Law court-yards weedy, silent and forlorn;
Where doctors foot it, aud farmers ride;
Where age abounds and truth is multiplied ;
Where these signs are, they clearly indicate
A happy people and a well-gcverned State,"
Sugar boi'ing being now in order, we
give the following recipe for making
molasses candy :
Take two cups of molasses, one of su
gar, one tablespoonful of vinegar, a piece
ol batter the size of a walnut. Boil
briskly anil constantly twenty minutes,
siiring a.l th“ time ; when done enough
to pull, do it quickly and it will cone
white rapidly.
Use the above proportions, and follow
directions, end you will have good caiidy.
.
A clergyinam not a thonsawd miles
from Augusta, after finishing her ser
mon, and announcing a temperance lec
ture, said be had some cotton seed for
sale, of anew variety, which could be
I bad at- at only three dollars a Dueliel.
A Good One.
One ol Max Adder's characters enters
a lawyer’s office, Stays: ‘I called in
Judge, to get your opinion of a little
point of law. exposin' you lived next
door to a man named; Johnson. And
s posin you was to say Johnson that a
splendid illustration ot the superiority
of the human intellect was to be found
in the {lower of the human eye to re
strain the ferocity of a wild animal.
And s’posin' Johnson was to remaik that
that was all bosh’ and you should de
clare that you could hold llm severest
beast fhnft was ever born if you could
once fix your gaze ou him well, then
s'posin' Johnson was to say he’d bet a
hundred dollars he could bring tamo ani
mals that you Couldn't bold w ith your
eje; and you was to take him up on it,
and Johnson was to ask you to coiue
down to his place to settle the bet, You'd
go, we’ll say, and Johiison’d introduce a
dog biggtru any four decent dogs ought
to be, and sick him ou you, and he’d
come at you like a sixteen inch hell out
of a howitzer, and you’d get skeery -iLout
it and try to hold Hie dog with your eye
aud couldn't. And s'posin’ you’d slid
dcnlyconclude thut _may be your kind of
an eye wasn’t euloula ed to hold that
kind Of a dog, and you’d conclude to
break tor a plum free. You ketch my
idea. Very well, then. Well, sir, ’spo
sin'just as you got three tcetnp the tree,
Jolisoii's dog would grab you by the
hind leg and hold on like a vise, shaking
you uutill you Marly lost your hold.
And'B'posin' Johnson was to stand tlife'te
and holler: ‘Fix your eye on him, Biiggs!
and so s'posin’ he kept that dog
on lliatjleg uutill lie made you swtar to
pay that bet, and then at last had to pry
the dog oil with a hot poker. S’posin’
(his; wli:!t I want it> know is, couldin
you sue Johnson for damages?'
Judge Pi&kaii’s Boy.
Jitdgfe Pitman's hoy, Bill, gays the
Philadelphia Bulletin, acquires learning
in a log house. At one place the
plaster between the logs is broken away,
and through this aperture Bill endeav
ored to escape feet forfcrflost during
school hours one day last si miner. Uu
tortunately, he sines ibi .. i.„.. i.-ir ..—j.
through, and he could neither return nor
retreat. When the attention of Mr.
Simes, the teacher, was directed to the
culprit, Mr. Simes proceeded to the ex
terior of the edifice and embraced the
opportunity afforded by William’s posi
tion to hammer with a shingle. Then
young Mr, Pitman was pulled out and
plunged into nuns in vulgar fractions
Near the school house there is a mill race
at the end ot which there is a since gate.
Immediately below the gate there is a
huge, deep tank, which carries the water
to an undershot wheel. The inside ot
ihe tank i green and slimy, and when
the water is drawn carefully out ot it, a
great many fish can often be found lying
in the bottom. Tile tank is fifteen fefct
deep. A few days after the flogging,
Bill happened to pass the tank and '.o
look m. He saw Mr. Simes at the bot
tom picking up fish and putting them in
a bag. William felt that the hour of
vengeance had struck. He turned the
handle of the sluce-gate, and in less than
a minute that jolly old pedagoiige was
floundering in six feet ot water, trying
in vain to clamber up the slimy sides ol
the tank. When he saw young Pitman,
be shrieked to him for help. But Bill,
with fiendish coolness, said: “No, sir;
you’ve got to tread water till you prom
ise never to lick me again,’ Then >imes
solemnly pledged 'himself never to si i ike*
another blow at him, and Bid let the
wat r from the tank and helped Sinn s
out. That night, when Bill got home,
he found Simes there conversing with
the Judge, and five minutes later the
Judge, was foundling V\ flliain with a
trunk strap, while Simes sat by aird
smiled. William has since expressed
the opinion contidentialy that Simes is a
perfidious scoundrel.
A Troy policeman swore as follows
ogainst a prisoner; ‘The prisoner set
upon me, calling me an ass, a precious
Jolty a scarecrow, a rawamiiffin and an
of which I certify to be true.”
A coroner’s jury in Illinois rendered w
verdict that a man, whose, bod 1 )’ .was
found floatiug in the river, came to his
death by a blow on the head, which was
given either before or after the drown
ing>
‘I made nine hundred dollors during
my three days’ visit/ said young hope
ful to his father on his return from New
York. ‘How so my boy?’ replied the
delighted parent. ‘Why I had a thou
sand dollars' worth of tun, and it only
cost a bend red.’"
F. B. PHINIZY,
Sift'Ci s.u r to 0. H. Pbinizj ,t fv>.
corro.v
Fd€TQS
AUGUSTA GEORGIA.
o
Liberal .leva n see made on Consignments.
aug‘23 Sin
THE
National Hotel,
ATLANTA, - - - GEORGIA.
Ithe rates of hoardihA KAat this popular
hotel have bean N f 'l||i'edued to j*2.50
per day. For this” offer ac
commodation* and fare unsurp&Bsed by auy
threw or four dollar house iu the South.
Come uud got an old Virginia welcome.
LEE it HEWITT,
Phi ritntrons.
Kidney 6&nsMat*
Probably there is no complaint that afflicts
tho human system, which is so little under
stood at the present time, as some of the va
ried forms of Kidney Complaints.
There is no disease which causes such acute
pain or more alarming in its results tlianjwhon
the kidneys fall tg secret" tfcu blood from the
uric rfeid, ntld other poisonous sub
stances, which the blood accumulates in its
circulation through the system.
If from any cause the kidneys fail to per
form the functions devolving upon them, tho
cumulations are taken up by tho absorbents
and tho whole system thrown into a state of
disease, causing great pain and suffering, and
very efteu immediate death. IlfcbVe the im
portance of keeping the kidneys and blood in
a healthy condition, through which all the im
purities of the ho ly must pass.
Pa IN IN THE HACK.
There is no remedy known to medical sci
ence which has proved itself more valuable irf
cases of Kidney Complaints than the Vogutine.
It aota directly upcAi the secretions, cleanses
and purifies the blood, and restores the whole
system to healthy action.
'The following extraordinary euro of great
sufferers, who had been given up liy the best
physiuiuns as ) opeless eases, will speuk for
themselves, aid should challenge tho most pro
found utter tion of the medical fuculty, us well
as of those who ure suffering from Kidney
Complaint.
! HE BEST MEDICINE,
East Mabsheikld, Aug. Tl, IK7O.
Ma. Stevkns; Dear Sir—l am sevenly-ono
years of age; h ive suffered many years with
Kidney Complaint, weakness in my back a id
stomach, i was induced by frieuds to tiy
your ruAjiTtnwj r mu tin it tun trxjnv *•+*,*•*
Cine for weakness of the Kidneys I ever used.
I have tried many remedies for this complaint,
and never found so muoh relief as from the
Vegktine. It strengthens ahd invigorates
the whole system. Many of my acquaintan
ces have taken it, and I bulieva it to be good
for all the complaints for which it is recom
mended Your truly,
JOSIAH 11. SIIEiIMAN.
fiosTON, May 110, IK7I.
PRONOUNCED INCURABLE
H. It. Stevkns, Esq : Dear Sir —I have been
bndly afflicted with Kidney Comphiuit for ten
years ; hone great pain in my hack, hips and
side, with great diliculty in passing urine,
which wuh often, and in very email quantities,
frequently accompanied with fdood and uxem
tiating pain.
I have faithfully i rid most of the popular
remedies recommended for my complaint; I
have been under the treatment of s me ef the
most skillful physicians in Boston, nil < f whoi/C
pronounced my ease ii cu able. 'This was my
condition when 1 was advised by a friend to
try the Vhoitink, and 1 could see the good
effects from the first dose I took, and from
that moment I kept on improving until I wak
entirely cured, inking in all, I should think,
about six bottles. ,
It is indeed a valuable medloino and if T
should be afflicted again in the same way, I
would give a dollar a dose, if I could not get
ii without.
Respectfully. J, M. GILIS.
3(11 Third Stteet, South Huston.
NEARLY BLIND.
H. R. Htkvensj ; Dear Sir—ln expressing
my thanks to you for benefits deiived from
the use of V egetine, aud to benefit others, I
will state
When eight or nine years chi 1 was afflicted
with Scrofula, which made its appearance in
my eyes, face and head, and 1 was very near
blind for two yearst All kind* of opporations
were performed on my ores, and all to no good
result, Einallj the disease [V inipally settled
in my body, limbs end f; t, and at times in am
aggravated wily.
Last Summer I whs, fioui some cause, weak
in my spine and kidneys, and it was at times
very hard to ietin ibe mine. Seeing your
advertisement in th i Commercial; l bought a
bottle of VEGETI.NE, and commenced using
according to diieafioSs. In (wo or three days
I obtained cteat relief. After using four or
five bottles I noticed it lmd a wonderful effect
en the rough scnly blotches on my body and
legs. 1 still frsed VkcEtTNE and the humor
ous sores one after another disappeared until
they were all gone, and I attribute the cure of
the two diseases to Vegetine, and nothing
i else.
If lam ever effected weth anything of the
I kind ajgain f shall try Vi Jitinb, as the cn'y
reliable remedy. Oncemoreac cpt mythinks,
and believe me to be, Vc rv respectfully,
AUSTIN PARROTT.
Dec. 1, 1872. No. ffSGano St., Cincinnati,Ohio
Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, etc., aro
always-unpleasant, end at times they become
the most distressing aid dangerous diseases
that can affect the human s-Csteui. Most di
seases of the Kidneys arise from impurities in
the blood, causing humors which softie cn
these parts. Vegetine excels any known
remedy in the whole world for cleansing and
purifying the blood, thereby causing a healthy
action to all the-oi garni of the body. se27lm
Vegetlnc is Sold Jiy all Druggists,
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Mainv. t vc 13-11
NO. id.