Newspaper Page Text
I 1 nj 1 r <o
VOL XXXIV
COST! COST!
NO FOOLING! BUT FACTS!
From October the 1st to'January the 1st I will sell everything in my store
AT
STRICTLY FIRST COST!
1 will have no favorites either in customers or the line of
Goods. Remember that everybody can buy* anything 1 have
got at THESE 1*KICKS. My reason for doing this is not
that I am going to break or quit business, nut with the new
year I. am going to take a partner into my business, and it is
our desire to run the slock down as low as possible.
This is no old Cost Chestnut, but 1 mean absolutely what
i say; and if requested will show original invoice on any
article from a paper of Pins to a tine Dress or suit of Clothes.
It is needless for mo to particnlarize for my customers and
friends all know that I keep the NEWEST, CHOICEST and
BEST SELECTED STOCK in this section. The most desir¬
able goons will of course be picked up by the first purchasers.
So call early. In selling goods at these cut prices CASH
will bo demanded for everything. No goods will be charged
to any one. I shall also insist on prompt settlement from
those who owe me.
Yours truly,
EDGAR L.
BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA.
Messrs. EUSTACE C. ELDER and JAMES M. JOHNSTON, are with
me, and extend a cordial invitation to all their friends to call end see them.
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
-M A N U FACT U RE RS O F--
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,
Mantels,-Moldings, Balusters, Newels,
WINDOW AND DOORB RAMBS.
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS AND BRICK.
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
We now have our Factory in operation and will bo glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. \Ve feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
our work. ( alt before making your purchases and get prices.
Factory 13th Street, Opposite Cotton Factory.
'’OFFICE PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. R.—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
FURNITURE
Dealer in Middle Georgia!
stock is large and complete, including Side Boards, Book Cases, Marble and
M ood top Tables, Single and Double Wardrobes, Office, Library, and Dining Chairs,
Dining Tables, Bed Spring Mattresses, Childrens Beds, Cradles, Ac. I have a large
tock of
WINDOW SHADES, CORNICE POLES,
Oil Paintings and Pictures, Plush Bronze and Gilt Frame, Wall Pockets, Ila
Hacks, Basics Ac. Picture Framing a Speeialy.
I will call your attention to the NEW HOME SEWING MaCIININE, which I am
now selling for $35.00. Call to see me ami get my prices.
It. L. SWATTS, Barnesville, Gn.
FURNITURE !
Ws u'ivifle nil of those wanting Furniture of any kind to go to
JOHN NEAL & CO. J
Nos. 7 and 9 South Broad Streets,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
As they keep a Full Line, which they are selling at LOWER PRICES than can be
had elsewhere S« t- from $17.50 up, etc. Don't forgot ouraddress.
Hunnicutt & Bellingrath ?
DE-AX.EBS
Stoves. Tinware. Galvanized iron Cornice, Sewer and Drain Pipe, Sani¬
tary Plumbers, Steam and Gas Fitters.
THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTMENT
Of Cooking and Heating Stoves. Ranges, Coal Hods. Tin Sets, Granite,
Iron and Enameled Ware, Brass Fire Sets, Andirons, Coal \ use 8, Fenders,
and in tact ad kinds ot liousefurnibhing Goods in tho Slate.
Plain, Enameled and Nickle Trimmed Grates.
Marbleized Iron and Hardwood Mantles J
TILE HEARTHS AND TILE FACINGS A SPECIALTY.
Urinals. r
WaUr Closets. Hydrants, Bath Tubs, Pumps. Hydraulic Rams
Hosc, Steam Cocks, Valves, Gas Fixtures, Woooen Ware, feather Dusters
Brustles, Ac., Ac.
AGENTS FOR KNOWLES STEAM PUMPS,
Hancocks Inspirators, Dunning’s Boilers, Climax Gas Machine, Otto Gas
Engines, Wrought Iron Pipe for Steam, Water and Gas.
Write tor Prices.
ATLANTA,
T> U '> uPt) \ m \ Mil: ral
1
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 5, ‘889.
WII AT SOI THEKX KKPRFSKXTA
TIVKMWAV
Of Senator Chandler, and his views
on .1 the nc"ro question, as reported
by , the , ... Washington .. correspondent of .
the Atlanta Destitution.
Colonel Oates, of Alabama, said :
“I knew it was in him. The repub
licans are of two classes—conserva¬
tives and radicals. Chandler is a
good representative of the latter. I
don't know which are the most nu
morons. Time will soon
strate to which of these classes the
president-elect belongs. ‘Congress¬
man Oates has never submitted any
‘proposition to disfranchise the ne¬
groes.' What I have said through
the newspapers was but a friendly
suggestion to the republicans, who
are now about to come into power,
of a way by which they might get
out of the whole trouble they brought
on themselves. They put the negro
into politics, believing that would
make the southern states perma¬
nently republican, and their disap¬
pointment produces great grief, and
is the real source of Senator Chan¬
dler’s impotent ravings. Well, as
my suggestion is not acceptable I
withdraw it. The white people of
the south and the negroes will get
on very peaceably and nicely togeth¬
er if Mr. (‘handier and his conferees
will cease clamoring for the latter’s
vote. lie says of such amendment:
‘The north will oppose it because it
would be
AN AMENDMENT OF TIIE NEGRO,
which would dishonor the north and
destroy the republican party, is
highly probable since it is the negro
vote in the great states of New York
Indiana, Ohio and Illinois that car¬
ry them for the republican.s As
to the north’s abandonment of the
negro, nothing could be a greater
blessing to him. The New Ila:n-
8bire senator assumes that the votes
of the negroes throughout the south
are suppressed, and that they are
denied the rights common to human¬
ity, all of which is utterly untrue.
Ho knows nothing, or but little,
about the subject. One who did
not know better would suppose, from
his statements, that a majority of
the voters in the south were negroes,
when, in fact, in the eleven states
which formed the late confederacy
the white voteis aggregate 655,000
more than the colored, and there are
but two of those, Carolina and Mis¬
sissippi, in which the negro voters
OUTNUMBER TIIE WHITES,
and in these the majorities are not
so great but that they are easily
overcome by the superior intelli¬
gence, means and energy of the
white men in a perfectly fair elec¬
tion. Mr. Chandler’s threats of a
terrible retribution are in keeping
with some that we have heard before,
and are not calculated to frighten
any one, and will have no other
effect than to incite the poor igno¬
rant negroes in some localities to acts
of violence, which will result disas¬
trously to them. His advice may
cause some very valuable negroes
to be killed. Senator Sherman’s ad
vice to the colored men of Wash¬
ington lately was much more sensi¬
ble, and better for them and the
country.”
JUDGE CRISP OF GEORGIA,
said: “As a matter of fact the
elections in Georgia are as fair as in
any state in the union. That law
accedes tho colored man every right
that is accorded to the white man.
There is no disposition to eliminate,
suppress or prevent the colored man
voting. Senator Chandler is willing
to say or do anything that will have
a tendency to stir up strife between
....... ..................*......
cal capital. He is now seeking in
iny judgment, to pander to the preju
dice of a certain class of people who
cherish an animosity to the people
of the south, and 1 infer from his
interview that he would be willing
; to see, in fact, glad to see the passion
and prejudices ot the colored people
so aroused that thev would resort to
V
all sorts of deeds of violence and
outrage thr.Mlcl.oot the south,
Knmvino as 1 do that the colored
people arc accorded all their rights,
1 believe that the fair minded people
! in the north, when they examine
i this question, will so see and the
schemes and plans of such dema
gogues as Chandler wiii be thwarted
and come to nothing. I am much
mistaken in the temper of the Amer¬
ican people if thev do not condemn
’
1 utterances .. which i • i aro calculated , , , .
intended to excite the prejudice
an ignorant and superstitious people
to such an extent as to make them
resort to the pistol and torch to re¬
dress any grievances, supposed or
real.”
MR ’ rnn an* » of tfnnf^ff ‘ j"' ”
it . twaddle. I
s : is t.ie merest oe
. has passed when the south soould ^
^ 1 ^ about the opinion ot
mk-L radical and ignorant men as
! ^ euab,r Chandler?
MR. CRANE, OF TiXAS,
said : ■ The threats of
Chandler are in keeping with the
programme foreshadowed bv Messrs,
Por&ker and Murat Halstead in
their respective articles in the
Forum. They amount to nothing,
as there is not the slightest
of a war between the races in
south brands. if left alone by political proposed fire
The remedy
Senator Chandler implies that it
not to emanate from the
■ department of the government, but
is to be brought out by the use
the shot gun and the bayonet, by
I the colored people. This is by no
mean8 a patriotic or statesmanlike
solution of the problem, 1 : which the
senator . alleges ,, confronts . the
1 coun
lyy ■.
,,R. candler, oe GEORGIA,
8a U .
“Tho suggesstion of Senator Chan
as to the right of the negro to keep
and bear arms, issedieious
ma ,.| <8 j t | ie senat()1 . a3 a blind f anat .
ic an( pa *‘ ,tj 8an readv to precipitate
on t | ie 0}) | e 0 j t |' )e south a race
war to seeul . c partisan advantages
lie don’t know anything about the
negro, and his condition in the
south. Such utterances are unpatri
otic, unwise and cruel to the negro.
In such a conflict as Mr. Chandler
encourages, there could be but one
result, the exterminatiofTof the black
race. The south accords to the
negro race every right guaranteed
to him in the constitution. He is
satisfied,and if such men as Chandler
had more of the patriotic and less of
partisan in them, the race question
is already settled to the entire satis¬
faction of both races, but if it were
not, it could not be settled by outside
agencies or influences. The south¬
ern white people will settle it.”
--—
DO HEARTS BREAK?
Why Should Acute Miseries be Memori¬
zed Into Chronic Oriel?
II :ine Journal.
Since Washington Irving wrote
his story of “The Broken Heart,” no
one else has ventured to write one
bearing a similar title. We have
grown more cynical and literal. It
has been shown that, anatomic-ally
speaking, hearts do not break—at
least they seldom do—and we refuse
to accept the phrase in its metaphor¬
ical implication. Probably no bur¬
lesque was ever more enjoyed than
‘‘Camille; or a cracked heart.” Its
enormous absudity was indorsed as
a just satire upon the facility with
which that organ was assumed to bo
shattered. At very long intervals
we read in the newspapers of a
heart that has literally burst from
excess of anguish in the person
whose life blood it propelled. Such
a physiological phenomenon is sure
to awaken interest at a period which
worships reality so much that when
Joshua Whitcomb, in the ‘‘Old
Homestead,” washes lm face with
actual water from a bona fide pump,
the audience break into rapturous
applause. But in hearts that meta¬
phorically break there is little belief.
The World is apt to turn up its nose
at them and say it is a pity they
had nothing better to do. The
world believes in being amused
when it is not at work ; and there
is no amusement in discovering that
here and there a human being is so
worried and stricken with life’s be¬
wilderment as no longer to be ca¬
pable of holding up against it brave
!y.
There are a good many strong and
coarsely healthy natures, incapable
of feeling pleasure or pain with ex¬
treme intensity, who take the
ground that nothing is worth that
of sorrow which leaves mind or
body too weak for battle. Take, for
instance, ono of the deepest of all
griefs, the treachery, perfidy and in¬
gratitude of one whom we have long
and profounbly loved, in whom we
believe more completely than in
ourselves; for whom we would have
laid down, if necessary, almost all
the world esteems good. Whence is
the compensation to come that shall
he a balm to the wounded spirit,
cause it to fee! anything like happi¬
ness which once it felt, and present
to tiie imagination aught wherewith
memory will not interfere by calling
back the presence which has so
wantonly departed? What is the
secret which explains the fact that
we will still ding, perhaps through
vears, perhaps through a lifetime,
the tenderest recollections of those
who have repaid love with insolence,
devotion with indifference, geneorsi
ty with selfishness? Then it is a
" eaK " ess in which some of: the best
" omcn ?* tel •'"’I 1 of t!le
are proficient. Is it explicable on
Hie assumption that those who are
as falthIess a * are hicinating
j j a,,,e,,t havc an an(I »><jefectible i mani,er charm wh,t!h temper- 5 * t!,e
rarest possession of the most invin
eibie virture? Do the false and the
treacherous Dind us by asp;’! which
honor might be glad to own? Does
Lothario , . . remain potent, evc i n to
* ’
those be has abandoned , . because his
magnetism is sweeter, finer, subtler
than Chevalier Bayard's?
Then again, do hearts realty
break? always Is* in tho metaphysical
meaning. the shock ever so vio
lent and permanent that life loses
forever after a considerable portion
0 p . ke comfort and happiness it
i f ormer j y bad? Does not the deceiv
j f v I e n *J, when the frenzy of the
twenty-four hours is over soon
^ recover from the disillusion and not
; not only conduct his business as
j though nothing important had
: pened, but eat with undiminished
apqjetite and sleep dreamlessly and
j well? Does Werlher even if he ab
j stains from suicide, always live with
i heart which simply performs its
muscular duty, in a manner more or
i less impaired, to be sure, but which
never more beats to passion, becauso
! passion can never more be felt?
Are there not Camilles who forget
their Armond as they conquer their
consumption and settle down into
I unremorseful and derm respectable
I /, .... r Si PR JMImW.IB 11 02
middle age? Bo immeasurable dm
appointments always make existence
a desert? Is there not such a thin"
as forgetfulness ° of acute miseries in
stead of memorizing them , into .
chronic S ricf 8 ? Does not cxpccto
rant treatment often cure the most
bruised and bleeding soul—cxpec
that still looks for happiness,
C T 1 e? ,n tj Is 1 ' 8 there '\«>rhl no and true the philosophy world to
»>> the vulgar maxim which remindsus
there :u ' e as good fish in tiie sea as
ever were taken out? Can it be
P OK8 >Gle that any two souls, in spite
' a ' s ‘ divergencies, are made for
eac ‘h oilier when sundered by irn
l )e, ‘ l ti\ c fate neither again c\or find
at " m •
We are not wise enough to answer
all these question which wo so
blithely propound. As year after
year experience in human lives he
meets at distant intervals a temper¬
ament its so lovely in the warmth of
sunshine, the brightness of its
beauty, the sweetness of its inhala¬
tion, the purity of its labyrinths, and
the tantalization of its mistcries,
that to yield is as inevitably natural
as for the plummet to seek the bot¬
tom of the sea. Who shall define
the magic of a touch, the secret of a
look, the mesmerism of a caress?
Nay, who shall explain the secrcy of
a presence, the witchery of an influ¬
ence?
WKAT TUEBKPI’BLIl’ANS TIUAK
OF ST.
In a recent interview, bearing upon
the political aspect of the south,
Senator Chandler asked that Mr. H.
W. Grady tell him through the At¬
lanta Constitution what a republican
president, house and senate, for the
first time in twelve years, mean as to
the fifteenth amendment.
After painting Mr. Chandler in very
true colors, Mr. Grady proceeds to
answer the Senator’s question and
says:
“Mr. Chandler wants us to tell him
what the republican party on its
second accession to power, thinks of
the fifteenth amendment. Our honest
opinion is this: The republican party
realizes that the fifteenth amendment
was an awful blunder. It realizes that
the amendment—the most important
law ever passed in any government—
was conceived in passion and passed
in haste—that it is unwise in policy,
imperfect in detail, and has been jus¬
tified neither by reason nor experi¬
ence. All this the republicans know.
They know further, that while the
Indians are brought to suffrage gradu¬
ally and individually, and while the
Chinese are shut out altogether, the
negroes, without preparation, were
suddenly forced into our political sj’s
tem. The enfranchisement was not
the order unfolding of a predetermin¬
ed plan, nor the reward of a race that
was developing into information and
responsibility, but the hasty, passic -
ate, ill-considered action of a parry
majority. It was intended to perpet¬
uate republican power. It bus done
just exactly the reverse of this.
There is one other thing the repub¬
licans understand as they take up the
reins of power. That is that by no
force or by no usuraption of power can
they so browbeat or buldoze the south¬
ern people as to make the negro vote
serve the purpose for which it was
created. It is on this particular
flinty fact that the notorious Mr.
Chandler is filling his teeth. The
dominance of the white race is simply
dominance of intelligence and proper¬
ty, and it will continue to dominate
here, in spite of statutes or force, just
as it would dominate in New Hamp¬
shire under the same circumstances
and in the same despite. The south
understands aud does not complain
there at,that the fifteenth amendment
is final. But It understands, also that
fifteen more amendments, even
though they were drawn with the
refi,lfed and expert trickery for which
Mr. Chandler is famous, (or the re¬
verse,) canot put the negro in con
(rol in the south.
In the meantime there is no ohjeo
tion t0 Mr - Chandler emulating the
reformed burglar who, with his soul
full of remorse and his pockets full
of boodle, ran aimlessly about the
streets cry Ing“stop thief;’’except that
it is annoying. There is nosunpress
ed ' te in the south, Tiiere is
v0 no
precinct in the south at which any
man cannot vote and does not vote
nerfiKd * ’ “ freedom ’ We have
called ,. time and . again . for . one instance . .
of or violance wolance, actual a tuai or or threatened threatened, that that
‘Kterred any voter from voting las,,
^ Da,lot ia f n ^ A:5 8t f for e ’ a So ia much -’ r couut for a tb€ie “free
-
has b&en no serious trickery-no po
lltieal vuHainy, more than will occur
here alld there at precincts in any
state—since Mr. Chandler, backed by
federal bayonets, stole the vote of a
sovereign state and with it secured,
went out from the execration of this
helpless people to the cold and ill
concealed contempt of his own people,
t>yrup ot rigs
-
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is
tne most easily taken, and the most
effective remedy known to Cleanse
the System when Bilious or Costive;
to dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fev
ere; to Cure Habitual Constipation,
Indigestion. Piles, etc. Manufactur
ed Company* only by the California Fig Syrup
San Frauscisco, Cal.
syFor sale by Alexander A Son, For
syth, Ga.
j thkcottoks#ith kekroes,
-
Bi-G«T*rnor Buii*ck, of neorgia, Ad
: nw« Hands off.
New York Graphic.
‘‘It seems impossible for our friends
at the north to understand our situa¬
tion in the section agnominated by
the Chicago Tribune as the cotton
south. It is easy for you to ask why
the republican party in Georgia, for
instance, does not show itself compe¬
tent to put out and support republican
candidates in all the congressional
districts. But it is not so easy to
answer in a way that you anti our
friends here will understand. For
example, I am a republican and have
been since I accepted the reconstruc¬
tion policy ofeongress. But the party
organization which carried that poli¬
cy to a success, culminating in Geor¬
gia, formally and by resolution, dis¬
banded when a republican congress
abandoned that policy. The republi¬
can party organization now in Geor¬
gia is composed exclusively of ne
groes, with ... exception ,. of .. a tew .. white . .,
federal office holders and aspirants
for federal position. Recognizing
the right of the majority to rule in
a party, the supremacy of the negro
in the republican party of the state
is complete, and this condition is no
doubt true of all the cotton south.
Now it must be plain to you that
white recruits cannot be attracted to
a party organization, the control of
which, numerically, is with the
blacks, especially when the general
public repute of that party is that its
chief object is to magnify the political
power of the blacks. There are many
thousands of men like myself, who
while agreeing with the national
party on economic issues, have no re¬
lations whatever with the local party,
and vote with complete independence
on all home issues.”
EDUCATE TIIE NEGRO.
“But what shall be done for the
negro voter?’
“I believe that the republican party
has done for the negro all that it can
do politically. His rights as an
American citizen are fixed in the
constitution of the United States, and
of every state. These rights are being
admitted and exercised everywhere
in the ‘cotton south,’ There is noth
ing more his ‘Uncle Samuel’ can do
for him, except to make liberal ap
propriations for his education. This
will benefit him in a practical way,
and benefit the communities in which
he lives by making him a more useful
citizen. But above all things, our
party should attempt no legislation
for the regulation and control of elec¬
tions. Its only effect would be to
keep the whites consolidated in op¬
position in the south and imperil the
narrow majority we now have in the
north. Massachusetts or Iowa do
not need national control in their
elections, and the people ot those
states will not approve of legislation
which is suspected of being intended
to gain negro votes in the cotton south.
After twenty years of experience I
can assure you that there is no law or
force of federal control that will in¬
crease the republican vote in the cot¬
ton south. If the so-called republi¬
can organizations in those states had
not been in existence during the last
ten years we would have had a divis¬
ion among our white people, and a
majority in favor of He Chicago plat
form at the last presidential election.
A very large number of our ablest
citizens did not vote at all because
they would not support the free trade
policy of their party, but were not
willing to align themselves with a
local party controlled by negroes,
The material growth ana prosperity
of my section depends upon the main
tenance of the republican economic
policy in the nation. Our own people
will see and act upon this fact when
prejudice of cast and color is not
stronger than pecuniary interest.
Keep a solid north on these great
issues, and the south will soon give
you a majority of her congressional
votes for their support.”
A Sitrikint; Encidral.
Among the northern visitors to
Greensboro is Captain W inters, of
^ ew York ’ wl ,V\ da nng t!ie war
,.^ , arnuas
' vas a '! ie < IV!S
,on under Hooker. . ,,
At the battle of Chancellorsville, he
. Iost . hls ltft A ai ,n - I oilier day he u
as ]na store f or the purpose <^>f
p ure hasing a glove for his right
n'was necessary to buy the
pair, and be was putting the left in
llis poc ket when Capt. W. H. Branch,
0 f 0ur citv walked in. Capt. Win
te rs noticed the empty sleeve on the
j right side of Capt. Branch, and ban
ding the feft glove, begged him to
accept it as a momento of the “blue
and gray and the battle fields on
j which each had lost an arm—one a
right and the other a left. Capt.
Branch readily accepted and the two
veterans were soon in earnest con
versa tion about the dark days which
tried men’s hearts.“ As Capt Win
ters remarked: “Thereisnobitter
ness between tho men who faced the
cannons or clashed against each
other in deadly battle. They fought
like brave men then, and they honor
and respect each other as brave sol
diers. Those who would keep the
strife of years gone by alive receive no
sympathy from the men who fought ■
and bled in battle. i
NUMBER 4.
(T ROYAL foS'olS
#t 3
i.
HKIH**
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies A marvel of
purity, Economical strength and wholesomeness. More
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.
The Negro i«u.
The Hamilton Journal, in discuss¬
ing the negro question, says:
“The presence of the negro hero
undoubtedly has a depressing effect
upon the value of farm lands. In
every community where the white
population is largely predominant
the value of lands is notably higher
than in communities where the ne
gro is in the ascendancy. We are
not among those who believe that the
former times were better than these,
nor do we believe the negro race is,
as a whole, retrograding in morality
or iudussry, but the “negro problem,”
as it is called, undoubtedly prevents
many thrifty people from settling in
this section who are uleased with our
natural advantages and would make
good citizens. We believe there are
hundreds of negroes in Harris county
who would improve their condition
if they emigrate to the rich lands of
the west, and we do not believe the
county would suffer from their loss,
As they grow in intelligence, and
they are growing, they will see this,
Negro labor is so cheap that too many
lazy white men try to live on the
profits of it. Fewer negroes would
insure more white laborers among
the small farm holders, and these,
working themselves, instead of rely¬
ing upon others, the cultivation
would be closer and crops better, and
this would have a good effect upon
the price of lands. Upon the whole,
we think the state would do better to
offer a premium upon emigration
agents than to impose a tax 011 them.
They Could Have Been Saved.
Wc can not but notice how many
of the citizens of this country, of
both sexes, are apparently being
taken away before their time. Ono
of Georgia’s most honored sons—her
gifted silver-toned orator, not long
since feil 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.
M others, scores and hundreds,
unknown t o greatness, but very
f j oar those around them, are
perishing cverv year from the same
scon rage. It is unnecessary to tell
you that this terrible, repulsive and
loathsome disease is—cancer. Can it
be cured? Medical skill has apt
parently exhausted itself, and tho
surgeon’s knife has cut in vain to
root it out.
Seemingly, cancer is incurable,
Now what is to be done? If you
wait until the disease is upon you
it is too late. Then why not antici¬
pate the monster and use the prevent¬
ative. In order to avoid this and an
innumerable number of other blood
troubles, you must keep the blood
pure and healthful—and the one
great remedy for this is, that King
of all Purifiers—“Guinn’s Pioneer
Blood Renewer.” It extracts tho
virus from the blood and keeps it in
a pure and excellent condition.
Don > t delay unt n j t i 8 too late. Gall
at the druggists for an almanac, and
you will find that this celebrated
medicine has cured, right hero in
■’ vour own wunu eoun trv v. about « everv ovciy dis- uis
ease emen ating from a depraved
conclitjon 0 f the blood.
p ew bottles taken in the spring need!
and fall will bc ail that you wiil
0 j,j a .j a „ e , but a very "ood one
that « an 0U nceof preventive is better
than a pound of cure” is very appli
cab j e here
for “Guinn’s Pioneer Blood
£ e newer.” the dru^ists all sell it.
♦ O*
What on Earth.
Is the reason people will not, can
not, or do not see any difference in
cheap nostrums irresponsible put up by parties Cheap
John houses or
at enormous profits, rather than take
a medicine of world-wide reputation
and one that is giving universal satis
faction at equal price ? No medicine
in the world is giving such un¬
paralled satisfaction for purifying tho
blood as BEGGS’ BLOOD PURI
FIER & BLOOD MAKER, and
every bottle that does not do its
work will cost you nothing. B. D,
Smith, Druggist.