Newspaper Page Text
THE MONROE
VOL XXXIV
COST! COST!
NO FOOLING! BUT FACTS!
01'i'ora October the 1st to January the 1st I will sell everything in my store
AT
STRICTLY FIRST COST! I
I will have no favorites either in customers or the line of
Goods. Remember that everybody cun buy anything 1 have
got at THESE PRICES. M 3 * reason for doing this is not
that 1 am going to break or quit business, nut with the new
year I am going to take a partner into 1113 ’ business, and it is
our desire to run the stock down as low as possible.
Thin is no old Cost Chestnut, but I mean absolutely what
i say ; and if requested will show original invoice on any
article from a paper of Pina to a fine Dress or suit of Clothes.
it is needless for me to particularize for my customers and
friends all know that I keep the N EW EST, CHOICEST and
BEST SELECTED STOCK in this section, The most desir
able goods will of course be picked up by the first purchasers.
So call earlj*. In selling goods at these cut prices CASH
will he demanded for everything. No goods will be charged
to anyone. 1 shall also insist on prompt settlement from
those who owe me.
Yours truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS,
BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA.
Messrs. EUSTACE <’. ELDER and JAMES M. JOHNSTON, arc with
me, and extend a cordial invitation to all their friends to call and see them.
-AYCOCK-
Manufacturing Company,
-M A N U FACT U11E RS O F--
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,
Mantels,-Moldings, Balusters, Newels,
WINDOW AND DOORFRAMES.
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS AND BRICK.
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
\Vt> now have our Factory in operation and will bo glad to sec all wanting Building
Material and give prices. We feel confident we can please both 111 price and quality of
our work. Call before making your purchases and get prices.
Factory 13th Street, Opposite Cotton Factory.
OFFICE PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. B.— Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break
loose, thus pseventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
R. L. SWATTS
THE LOWEST PRICE
FURNITUREi
Dealer in Middle Georgia!
slock is large and complete, including Side Boards, Book Cases, Marble and
Wood top Tables, Single and Double Wardrobes, Office, Library, and Dining Chairs,
Dining Tables, Bed Spring Mattresses, Childrens Beds, Cradles, Ac. 1 have a large
to< k of
WINDOW SHADES, CORNICE POLES,
Oil Paintings and Pictures, Plush Bronze and Gilt Frame, Wall Pockets, Ha
Backs. Basics Ac. Picture Framing a Spreialy.
I \v il! call your attention to the NEW HOME SEWING MACIININE, which lam
now selling for $35.00. Call to see me and get my prices. j
K. L. SWATTS. Barnesville, G:i.
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
x
W e advise all of those warding Furniture of any kind to go to
JOHN NEAL & CO.,
Nos. 7 and 9 South Broad Streets,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
A* they keep a thill Line, which they are selling at LOWER PRICES than can be
h«J elsewhere Set- from $17.50 up, ote. Don't forget ouraddress.
Hunnicutt & Bellingrath • 7
jdt: a Xais^s
Stoves, Tinware, Galvanized Iron Cornice, Sewer and Dr: l Pipe, Sani¬
tary Plumbers, Steam and Gas Fitters.
THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTMENT
Of Cooking; and lU'atin- Stoves. Rii> m Coal llods. Tin Sets. Granite,
Iron and Enameled \\ are, Bras* Fire Sets. Andirons, Coal \ ases. Fenders,
ami in lacl all kinds ot llousefurnishing Goods in the State.
Plain, Enameled and Nieklc Trimmed Grates.
Marbleized Iron anclHardwood Mantles 5
TILE HEARTHS AND TILE FACINGS A SPECIALTY.
\\ ater ( . sets. I rinaD, Hydrants, Bath Tubs, Pumps, Hydraulic Rams
Hose, Steam Cocks, Valves, Gas Fixtures, Woooen Ware, Feather Dusters
ilrustles, &c., &c.
AGENTS FOR KNOWLES STEAM PUMPS,
Hancock* Inspirators, Dunning's Boilers, Climax Gas Machine, Otto Gas
Engines, Wrought Iron Pipe for .Steam, Water and Gas.
ffsgr Write for Prices.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
DYB
V J liB? ' ^
£
rJM
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 29, 1889.
A REVOLUTION IN STEEL.
A staff correspondent sends from
Springfield, O., to the Atlanta Con¬
stitution, the following:
The revolution about to be made in
the manufacture of steel is the most
important change in the iron busi
ness that has occurred since the in¬
troduction of the Bessemer process.
Mr. Bookwalter, the millionaire
iron man of Springfield, says the new
process of converting iron steel will
do with a $10,000 investment what
the Bessemer process does with a
$150,000 plant. A ton converter
making four heats an hour, will de
carbonize 100 tons of pig iron in a day.
Every iron furnace making a hundred
tons a day will he able to convert its
product into steel ingots through ma¬
chinery that it might pay for in a few
days’ business.
The difference in the cost of invest¬
ment between the new process and
tlie Bessemer is due largely to the
economy in power. It requires a GOO
horse power engine to furnish the 25
pound blast, which is forced through
the molten iron from bottom to top
by the Bessemer process, while a
forty horse engine furnishes the two
pound blast which is used to stir and
beat the irom fron the top in the new
process.
Mr. Bookvvalter’s superintendent
says that the blast sent through the
iron from the bottom fills the molten
mass with air hubbies and causes the
floating impurities to mix with the
metal all through. For this reason
lie says the Bessemer people have to
cast their steel in fourteen inch in¬
gots and break it down to smaller
si7.es with heavy and expensive roll¬
ers. Mr. Bookwalter claims that by
introducing the blast on top the im¬
purities are not mixed, the iron is
free from bubbles and is almost as
fluid as water. For this reason He is
enabled to cast his steel in 2, l T inch or
five inch ingots as the rolling mills
desire. This difference, he says, will
save five dollars a ton in rolling.
The process is very simple. A ton
of pig iron is melted in a cupola and
run into the converter. A two pound
blast is introduced on the surface and
the temperature is raised till enough
of the carbon is burned out to leave
steel of the desired hardness. When
the iron goes into the converter it has
two or three per cent, of carbon. In
about eight minutes after the blast is
put on all the carbon but, say thirty
five hundreths of one per cent, will
have been burned out. If the metal
is run out with that amount of carbon
remaining it makes steel suitable for
rails. If all but twenty hundreths is
burned out it makes the grade used
for nails, and if only five hundreths
are allowed to remain it makes a soft
wrought iron. Tool steel retains
about fifty hundreths carbon.
The question that interests Georgia
and Alabama is, will the new process
utilize ores which have over ten or
twelve hundreths of one per cent, of
phosphorus? Mr. Bookwalter thinks
he can manage iron with not over
20-100ths phosphorus. This would in¬
clude much of the ore found in north
Georgia. Another iron man here
says, however, that the best grade of
steel could not be made of ore con¬
taining over ten or twelve hundreths
of one per cent phosphorus, but he
coupled with it the remark:
“The patent for the Basic process
will expire in four years.”
“What will that amount to?”
“Why, then the steel will be made
in the south. While the Bessemer
process will not admit of much phos
pliorus, and therefore excludes your
southern ores, the Basic process re¬
quires as much as two percent, phos¬
phorus and that kind of ore you have
in the south. Another thing about
the Basic process is that it makes
steel of greater tensile strength than
any other. The Washburn and Ma¬
con wire works use 1,600 tons a week
of Basie steel, and it is all brought
from Germany.
“The Bessemer people got hold of
the Basic process and retired it be¬
cause they were determined that the
south should not make steel. They
have millions invested in Bessemer
plants and are bent on protecting
them.”
This shows how Mr. Carnegie,
while lie nursed a presidential can
didate and piped of a policy that
would develop the resources of the
wholeeoimtrv.hashad hishand on the
throat and choked out for a time the
very life of our most promising in
dUstr y
Ingrowing Nails.
One who has bad many years'
experience with it uses a coneentrat
ed solution (an ounce of perfectly
fresh tannic acid dissolved with Six
drachms of pure water with gentle
heat, and has the soft part around
the nail painted twice a day. Two
e:u»es recently had no pain or lame
ness after the first application, and
went about their work immediately,
which they could not do before,
After about three weeks of this treat
ment the nail had grown to its prop
er length and breadth and the cure
was complete. No other treatment
of any kind was used though former
ly* he introduced lint under the
ingrowing nail in such cases.
—Medical Journal.
WHAT AN AFRICAN SAYS
IIIS PEOPLE ONLY AT SC2IOOE IS
A Vi ELS IC A.
Thp African wi»o is the
(Attest of Bishop Turner, Tells
of the Condition oi the .Ne.
grocs in Africa.
Rev. Samuel J. Campbell, the Af¬
rican preacher, who is visaing this
country, is a black man, evidently
of pure negro blood, and a member
of the AJandingo tribe, He stands
about five feet eight inches nigh, has
a well formed head, intelligent black
eyes, small mouth and chin, is bet¬
ter proportioned and has smaller
hands and feet than most negroes.
He has an easy dignified manner
of quiet reserve, and speak , English
well and fluently as it it were the
language of his every day life. In
speaking of his own country he be¬
comes more enthusiastic, especially
in regard to the resources of its fields
and forests and the wonderful min¬
eral wealth of the mountains.
“Whi.e I am an African,' said he,
I have lived for a long time in civi¬
lization. I go among the natives a
great deal as a treaty maker. They
are not wild people, as it was inti¬
mated to me since I have been here.
They are very fond of trading and
come into the town by hundreds for
that purpose. They (the natives)
are governed by kings. Each tribe
has a king and several head men
who assist him in governing the
people.
“The laws ato very strict, but for
the Violation of certain rules you
can pay. For instance, if you stop
the road and interfere with trade
you can pay for that, but it you in¬
terfere with the king’s wives or a
young unmarried woman it is death.
They take you out and chop your
head off and throw your body in the
creek.
“For young girls there is a place
called the ‘gregory bush,’ say five
acres, fenced off just as you would
fence off a college, and in that space
they gather two or three hundred
girls. The girls go in in October,
November and December, and re¬
main there a 3 *ear. They undergo
certain rites and training and are
taught obedience to their husbands
and how to conform to the rules of
the tribe. They are also taught to
doctor their husbands whe \ey are
sick. During that time no man is
allowed to enter, and if a man has a
wife in there he has to carry to the
gate whatever he may wish tp send
her and there deliver it to the mis
stress ot the place. He is not allow¬
ed to speak to his wife or shake
hands with her.
“Before going through the grego¬
ry bush, girls are not allowed to at¬
tend funerals or to take part in fam¬
ily business, because they are re¬
garded as sinners and unfit for busi
ness. \Ye are trying to put the
gregory bush down, because it is
doing great damage to civilization
and Christianity. It will take time to
get rid of it.
“The Africans never steal from
each other. They are very strict in
that particular. In regularly or¬
ganized towns they trade a great
deal and make large country cloths.
This cloth is woven in strips as wide
as my two hands. They* use crude
looms, and in this way 7 a man will
weave two or three hundred yards
in a day*. Eight or nine widths of
these strps are then put together
and of the wide cloth so made, two
yards sell for a dollar. The mer¬
chants buy 7 these cloths by the hun
dreds and thousands and sell them
to the crewmen. The houses are
built wiih caves extending over be¬
yond the end of the house and a
bench is put there, and upon it
cloths are arranged. If a man wants
to sell his cloth for eight heads of
tobacco, he will put down eight
rocks and put a leaf of tobacco on
the cloth and he will go off and leave
it all day. When lie comes back he
may find his cloth gone but he will
find the tobacco there in the place of
it. If you want a cloth you take it
and leave eight heads of tobacco. No
one dares touch the goods for if he
interferes and no account can be
given they call the town together
and set to work to find the guilty
party. When he is found they take
him out and chop his head off, and
they don't have any* stealing.
“In trading they use as mediums
n p exchange ” tobacco, ’ powder, f ’ guns,
brass kettles, salt, rum and cowries.
Cowries . small white . shells
are
brought from England. They are'very are
filled with dlack* gum and
valuable. The natives wear them
as ornaments.
“The crewmen are natives who
au a(e%^t^r m r 1hovlS nS| We
these crewmen are engaged. Some
times 30 or 40 crewman are at work
loading diversfand one ship. They are great
can remain under water
half an hour and they kill sharks,
They sharpen their knives and go
under the shark and cut him open,
They are the bravest men in tiie
country, and have never been en
slaved. They were afraid to enslave
them, because they found that their
wealth was in the crewmen’s hands,
You don't see any mulattos among
them, though they are continually
brought in contact with men of all
races. If a mulatto is born among
them they drown him in the sea.
“The Africans are tall muscular
people, well put together. The^r are
4 1 J
I
I not as historians have represented
j them, with loin; feet and red eyes,
some of the most handsome people
in the world you will find in Africa.
As a general thing they are beauli
fully shaped and not dwarfed like
Amerieans. Especially the females
are better developed. The Pessi
and Bundi tribes have thick lips and
flat noses, and the Congo people
pm take of that peculiarity. 1 he
great majority of Africans do not
mve t’at.feature. They are as
clever looking people as you will
nt ‘
“l think the African lias only*
been in America at a university, and
I think he will make his country
the greatest in the world. Provi¬
dence is working up this race to a
higher point of civilization, and fi¬
nally they will go out. 1 think the
system is wrong. I.think that in
these schools they ought to be
teaching the boys and girls in an
industrial department, and instead
of keeping a boy six or seven years
in the school, filling his head and
developing his hands, it would be
belter to educate the hands with the
intelliect and let them both come out
accomplished.”
*»•
The Duty on Tin.
Atlauta Journal.
The senate of the United States ad¬
opted last week, by a party vote (ex¬
cept that Senator Brown voted with
tiie Republicans) an amendment to
its tariff bill imposing duties ranging
from 33 to 70 per cent, upon tin plates
and plates of composite tin and iron.
It was alleged in the debate by demo¬
cratic speakers, and admitted by re¬
publican senators, that there are no
industries making tin plate now in
existence in the United States. The
latter supported the amendment on
the ground that there was tin ore in
Pennsylvania and one or two of the
western territories, which could be
worked if protected by the exclu¬
sion of foreign competition; the duty
was to be laid, not to protect an exist¬
ing iudustry, bat to build up a new
one.
If it is constitutional and proper to
pay from the treasury a bounty on
sugar produced in the United States,
so as to encourage and build up the
sorghum and beet industry, why was
it not also best to pay a bounty on tin
plates, so as to develop that industry
also? In both cases the money would
be collected from all the people by
taxation and given to another and a
comparatively small portion to help
them in their business. The only
difference is tiiat the people taxed can
more readily see the injustice of the
bounty system.
Tin plates are now admitted free
of duty. The imposition of duties
will necessarily have the effect of
increasing their cost to the manufac¬
turers, and they must have increased
protection on their wares by way of
compensation. Thus all the people
of the country are to be made to pay
higher prices for tinware to develop
an industry confined to one or two
localities and one or two companies.
This is in conformity with the policy
of protection throughout. It taxes
the people not outy to support indus¬
tries existing, but to force the crea¬
tion of new ones by increasing the
cost of importations -, ..a ro give them
a market for tneir high priced pro¬
ducts.
The pretense that this is done for
the benefit of American labor is false,
as is shown by the wages paid to the
workers in tin in the large establish¬
ments of the country. We were told,
a few days ago, by a gentleman en¬
gaged in business of a similar kind,
that the manufacturers of tin coffee
pots paid their workmen only 20 cents
per hundred for making the half-gall¬
on pots, and prices equally low for
other sizes. Can the prices paid in
Europe be less than this, or can the
imposition of a duty on tin plates
(now free) have the effect of increas¬
ing the wages paid by employers to
the workers in tin ? No one can be¬
lieve it.
Dr. Talmage on the Sabbath.
The great divine in his grand ser¬
mon, Jan. 13th, on the Sabbath day,
said, most eloquently and truthfully:
“The Sabbath comes, and it bathes
the soreness from the limbs, quiets
the agitated brain, and puts out the
fires of anxiety that have been burn¬
ing all the week. Our bodies are sev¬
en day clocks, and unless on the sev¬
enth day they are wound up, they
run down into the grave. The Sab
bath was intended as a savings bank*
into it we are to gather the r-sourees
•**? ty,° h " «" *° b “ty
“ r
““ s ' le > hls °" “ * 11 ; aln ®' h ' so " n bon ® a -
! P Up 6 m > . J V* !
~
„ . , i
**, n ir< V'' , * a ' ,a /' e '* r ‘ jrea '
Lord’s T day gives a mortgage to
^ase Physical and estate death and at upon the most his entire unex
P ecte< * moment t. at moitgage ill je
foreclosed, and the soul ejected from
the premises.
Cough ! and Cough ! ! and Cough ! ! !
What in the world is the reason
you will cough and keep coughing
and still keep trying inferior medi
eines when "BEGGS 5 COUGH
SYRUP will positively relieve your
cough at once? This is no adver
tising scheme, but an actual fact, and
we guarantee it. B.D. Smith, Druggist
Obstacles ol the Farmer.
By Fr'Hl, of Alsborough, Ala.
I have read with interest the dif
ferent communications on the con
dition of the farmers. I see the law
ver, doctor, merchant and preacher,
all theorizing, but none of them sug
gest a real remedy for his relief. In
the first place, we all sensure the
banks for not furnishing money to
the farmers as to the merchants!
Look into our exemption laws and it
solves the grand prohibition that is
in the farmers way. 2nd. Take the
lien laws made in favor of the mer¬
chants, who use it as a means of op¬
pression, and it affords facilities for a
large class to obtain a living and live
in laziness and neglect their crop
work, only to make the present crop,
and when it is finished loaf the re¬
mainder of the time. 3rd. Our being
compelled to raise only one crop
which we can obtain money for, and
that is cotton, only having money
once a year.
Give the farmer a maiket for every¬
thing he raises at cash prices, and
pay the cash for the same and enable
the farmer to pay cash for his work
and tools—everything he needs—in¬
stead of this barter system which is
established throughout the south.
The merchants of this section will
refuse to pay cash for meats and order
from Memphis and Chicago and send
the money out of the country that
would otherwise remain here. The
same thing exists with corn hay,
oats, etc.
To make a country prosperous,
everything should be sold for cash at
its market value, and retain as much
money in the hands of the producer
as possible, and it will return again
to the merchant, if not by one man it
will by another, and this is one of the
causes of so much dissatisfaction
among the farmers. Another cause
is the neglect of our common free
schools. Large appropriations to
high schools and schools in towns
forces the farmer to neglect the edu¬
cation ot his children, as he is not
able to pay board, and of all classes
and professions, we need an educated
farmer most, and the proper place is
in his country schools. Keep the
young men away from towns and
and cities if you wish to make good
farmers of them. Let them acquire
a knowledge of agricultural chemis¬
try by which they can utilize ma¬
nures to the best advantage, and learn
to keep out of debt, to know that
work is honorable ; and to raise his
children to work is his first great
duty, and by so doing you will di¬
minish crime in our land.—Southern
Farm.
THE tJDYING OF VOTES
To tc Dealt With by the Randolph Coun¬
ty Alliance.
CiTTHBKET, Ga., Jan. 17.—Ran¬
dolph county alliance mot in this
place Tuesday. Their object was to
form some combination in the pur¬
chase of fertilizers. The matter was
referred back to the sub-alliances
with the understanding that they
make the best terms possible with
agents.
Among other matters discussed
was the prevalent mode of purchas¬
ing floating voters in the different
elections. The alliance bound
themselves solemnly together in a
pledge that they* would ferret out
and report every offense of that na¬
ture which may occur in their re¬
spective precincts at all coming elec¬
tions.
What on Earth.
Is the reason people will not, can
not, or do not see any difference in
cheap nostrums put up by 7 Cheap
John houses or irresponsible parties
at enormous profits, rather than take
a medicine of world-wide reputation
undone that is giving universal satis¬
faction at equal price ? No medicine
in the world is giving such un
paralled satisfaction for purifying the
blood as BEGGS’ BLOOD PURI¬
FIER & BLOOD MAKER, and
every bottle tiiat does not do its
work will cost you nothing. B. D.
Smith, Druggist.
One of Georgia’s Needs.
Columbus Enquirer-Sun. .
What Georgia needs is a board of
pardons. The duty and
sibiiity of considering and passing
upon the numerous applications for
pardons should not be placed upon :
the S overnel \. In J. he mid J of tl ' e
. h
nnrae ” >UH c* ’ °
each cJW
onlj be neoeessarj for it to meet at
tVlt y er ?p °f ° /'' ' ^ ° t
ut * 1 ' ' i
fourth district will introduce . a bill ;
providing: for suen a lhe i
ne.d ses sion, and i t should p ass.
&yrup*tngs s
__
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is
ine most easily taken, and the most '
effective remedy known to Cleanse >
the System when Bilious or Costive;
to dispel Headaches, Colds, and Eev
ers; to Cure Habitual Constipation,
indigestion, Piles, etc. Manufactur
ed only 7 by tbe California Fig Syrup
Company, San Eraoscisco, Cal.
sy For sale by Alexander & Son, For
syth, Ga.
NUMBER 3.
ROYAL U/TpuO, ?oK«S
C
is
is% mk
pas K i
«
k , 1 T ■ 30
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot he sold in competition with the mul¬
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. Sold only in cans
Royal Baking Powder Co., 106 Wall
street, New York.
Governer Bullock’s Remedy.
Atlanta Constitution.
in a recent issue of the New York
Press Governer Bullock elaborates
his plan for settling tho controversy
as to the suppression of the negro
vote. Briefly stated his remedy is
that in congressional districts where
there is only one candidate and not
a full vote the election shall he made
null and void until a proper propor¬
tion of the known vote is east. In
other words, Governer Bullock sug¬
gests that no member of congress
shall he entitled to a seat who is not
the choice of a full vote in his dis¬
trict.
This it seems to 11 s, is a round¬
about way of getting at the matter,
Why not announce that no member
of congress shall he seated who is
not elected over an opponent by a
This majority of those entitled to vote?
would be an easy way to get
rid of southern democratic represen¬
tatives in tho house, for tho republi¬
cans could, at no expense whatever,
prevent nominations by their party
in the south, and also instruct their
voters to remain away from the polls
Nothing would be easier; and, al¬
though the democrats might contin¬
ue to elect their candidates, they
would grow tired of it and after a
while, seeing that congress would
refuse to seat their represontatives
elect.
Governer Bullock’s remedy is one
that would certainty suppress demo¬
cratic representation. Tho only
reasonable remedy from a republican
point of view is to do away with tho
various congrssional districts. The
duties of the army would be complex,
hut a little complexity more or less
would do no harm. In tho first
place, the army would have to com¬
pel the republican party to organize
and make nominations, and then,
after the nominations, were made,
it would have to get behind the re¬
publican voters with its bayonets
and compel them to go to the polls.
This done, tho remedy would bo
complete.
They ould Have Been Saved.
We can not but notice how many
of the citizens of this country, of
both sexes, are apparently being
taken away before their time. One
of Georgia’s most honored sons—her
gifted silver-toned orator, not long
since fell a victim to frightful male
dy. Gen. Grant was another victim ;
and the dispatches from the world
across the Atlantic tell us that
Germany s new emperor will very
soon follow his honored father.
Many others, scores and hundreds,
unknown to greatness, but very
dear to those around them, are
perishing every year from the same
scourage. It is unnecessary 7 to tell
you that this terrible, repulsive and
loathsome disease is—cancer. Can it
be cured? Medical skill has ap
parently* exhausted itself, and tho
surgeon’s knife has cut in vain to
root ^ out
Seemingly, cancer is incurable,
Now whut is to be done? If you
wa j t unl ii the disease is upon you
; s t 00 i a j e> Then why 7 not antici
pate the monster and use the prevent
ative * In order to avoid this and an
Sod
„f all Purifiers—“Guilin’s Pioneer
Blood Renewer.” It extracts. the
virus from the blood and keeps it in
a pure and excellent condition.
Don’t delay nntilit is too late. Call
at the druggists for an almanac, and
Y ou W 'U find tbat this celebrated
medicine has cured, right here in
F our own country, about every dis¬
ease emenatan g trom a depraved
coadition of the Wood.
A few bottles taken in tho spring
and fall will be all that you will need,
-An old adage, but a very* good one,
that “an ounce of preventive is better
than a pound of cure” is very appli
cable here,
Ask for “Guinn’s Pioneer Blood
Renewer,” the druggists all sell it v