Newspaper Page Text
T 171 \
i
VOL XXXIV
COST! COST!
NO FOOLING! BUT FACTS!
From October the 1st to^Jnnunry 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 PRICKS. My reason for (hung this is not
that I am going to break or quit business, nut with the new
year 1 am going to take a partner into ray business, and it is
our desire to run the stock down ns low as possible.
This is no old Cost Chestnut, but I moan absolutely what
1 say ; and if requested will show original invoice on any
article From a paper of Pins to a fine Dross or «uit of Clothes.
It is needless for me to particularize EW for mv •ustomers and
friends all know that I keep the N EST, CHOICEST and
BEST SELECTED STOCK in this section. The most desir¬
able goods will of course be picked up b}' the first purchasers.
Ho call early. In selling goods at these cut prices CASH
will bo demanded for everything. No goods will be charged
to any one. 1 shall also insist on prompt settlement from
those who owe me.
Yours truly,
EDGAR L.
BA RNESVI LLE, GEORGIA.
Messrs. EUSTACE C. ELDER and JAMES M. JOHNSTON, arc with
me, and extend a cordial invitation to all their friends to call and see them.
6
--ATLANTA. GEORGIA.
MANU PICTURES
m
WmmmW
Ww r -
psiii a raa )
,,
V.|
■ngSumt SBM s
s&yssSS m Y‘ *
*:■; jssfigt
W&i HP
-*-p
fcjgssi
*
COTTON SEED OIL MILLS!
COTTON GINS, FEEDERS AND CODEN SEES, COTTON DRESSES,
COTTON SEED CLEANERS,
SAW MILLS!
WIND MILLS, TANKS, SHAFTING, PULLEYS AND ALL KINDS
FOUNDRY WORK.
\\ rite for prices. We can save you money, by purchasing direct.
E. VAN WINKLE & CO.
Box 83, ATLANTA, GA.
AYCOCK
Manufacturing Company,
MA N UFACTU R ER8 OF--
DOORS, SASH. BLINDS 5
Mantels,-Moldings, t O’ Balusters, Newels, ’
WINDOW AND DOORFRAMES.
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS AND BRICK.
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND P'JILDERS.
Mp now Unit* our 1 Hcturv 11 operation niui wilt ho see nil wanting Building
Material an ™‘•■fc"-“■I 1 give prices. Wo feel confident we can please both in price aud quality of
.....
Factory 13th Street, Opposite Cotton Factory *
OFFICE PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
N. B,—Our Blinds are wired w.th Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break
loose, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
Redding & Baldwin,
-AT WINSHIP A- CALLAWAY’S OLD STAND-
Invite the public to call and suit themselves to whatever they wish in
AND HATS !
ADo UNDERWKAH. UMBRELLAS. RUBBER GOODS, Ac. Prices aro
Lower than the Lowest, and Satisfaction guaranteed in everv instance.
TDE'lAFvTlSTr' JlY U L/ 1 lN VJT GZ JP Li A T j_ TYTirncr I ) W IN
Aj i JL
368 Second Street, MACON, GEORGIA.
rwi ife
aH
FORSYTH, MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 19, 1889.
one Pi BMf scools.
The Work of the Ente Dr. Orr and the
Recent Appropriation**—The
Outlook.
Atlanta, Feb. 9.—Meeting Mr.
Edgar 11. Orr, of the department of
education, the Telegraph's corres¬
pondent inquired of him if, prior to
the late legislation of the present
general assembly, there had ever
been a direct tax levied for the sup¬
port of public schools when he re¬
plied :
“Excepting in my answer those
cities and counties which have local
systems under special laws, never.
The additional appropriation refer¬
red to derives its greatest impor¬
tance, perhaps, from the fact that it
establishes the principal of direct
taxation upon the property of the
state for the education of the masses
in the elementary branches of an
English education.
“What do you think of the much
discusred action of the North Geor¬
gia conference and its effect in influ¬
encing the recent legislative enact¬
ments ?”
“it is impossible to say with cer¬
tainty what effect this action of the
conference had upon the legislature.
It was taken on the 10th of Decem¬
ber, if 1 recollect aright, and the
house, in committee of the whole,
voted the appropriations on the 12th.
On the 13th Dr. Curry made a very
able address and thereafter, in the
afternoon ot the same day, the house
confirmed tho appropriation of the
committee of the whole by an almost
unanimous vote. Neither the action
of the conference nor tho speech of
Dr. Curry were decisive of the result,
but both., perhaps, gained some votes
for the measure, the latter especially.
The propriety of the action of the
conference, as you say, has been
thoroughly discussed and 1 do not
care to enter on it. However, is it
not strange that the education of the
masses is so thoroughly secular,
while the education is so sacred?
Some years ago, a noted colored
j.readier, introducing my father to
an audience of tho colored race,
styled him ‘An educational John the
Baptist, one who went before and
prepared the way fur the is ministry
to follow.’ This remark highly
suggestive in connection wit Lithe
attitude tion of the of masses.” the-chur^h to the j
i
“What ware the /nain causes/ 0 f
the change in the legislative attitude
towards popular education?”
“The work of mj T own father was
the main cause. To him, far more
than to any man, or set of men, is
this result due. The action of the
house, in committee of the whole,
took place exactly one year and one
day after his death, and the final
action of the house on December 13
was a fitting celebration of the first
anniversary of the committal ot his
body to the grave. He has told me,
hunderd times perhaps, that after he
was gone full success would come,
and that others would reap where
be had sown. I do not believe, how¬
ever, so far as his mernoiy and his
reputation are concerned that there
will be a failure on the part of the
people of this state to accord to him
the full credit to which he was enti¬
tled.
“Forsixteen years hocontendedfor
an increase of the school fund. To
ask this was almost his first official
utterance and his last appeal was
along the same line. It is a pathet¬
ic fact that after his Iasi illness was
upon him he discussed with me new
plans with the same end in vie w,
He preset!ted every phase of the ed
! ucational question in his official re¬
ports to the general assembly, in his
speeches at home and abroad, and
by official circulars and newspaper
articles. At different times he can¬
vassed the state, going before the
people,before grand juries and before
Methodist conferences and Baptist
associations or conventions, His
discussions were so thorough that I
rarely sec or hear a presentation of
the subject which is not already
i 1, " ,r ™« li T fttmilia y o ■»«, pro
J posed to the general assembly many
’ one tenth of 1 per cent.—a measure
embodied in the lute appropriation
aud tax acts for next year as to the
whole amount, and for this year as
to half the amount. The action of
ihe Troutb 'General assemble is the result of
t u 0 nf vumnlnr «, n iiment
labors of sixteen vears. One of the
things which strikes me with great
force is. that so many of the advo
cates of popular education, both in
and out of the legislature, were at
onetime its avowed enemies (and
this i* true ot some of the ablest and
best men among its advocates) or.
at best, wore its iuKcwarm support¬
ers.”
: “Were ! c tliere anv a special aoeeial eausea causes
-
winch , induced . . this , . action of the re
; cent session
•\ es. sir. C ne cause was tho fact
that the legis.ature was largely
posed of young men, who have
grown up to mature manhood within
the last seventeen years Take, for
instance, President DuBignon and
Hpeaker Clay. They have been
familiar with the idea of education
by the state from their earliest man
hood. 1 believe that the latter has
been a public school teacher himself,
1 do not mean to detract from the
credit due older men; fordllutration,
I)r ‘ CtOI *, an ' Judge Hall. They
arc men of broad and comprehen
sivo views, as other of the older
members. But the special cause not
before mentioned can be stated in a
nutshell. The decrease in the
bonded debt and increase in the as
sessed value of the taxable property
of the state, and last, but not
in its immediate effect, the eomple
tion of new chpitol. If this had
occurred prior to the summer session
of 1887. the result which ray father
so long desired would have been
reached in his lifetime. In fact, a
bill levying a tax of two-tenths of
one mill did pass the house at that
session by a vote of 100 to 28,
but failed in the senate, the
failure, in part at least, being
due to the fact ifrfti the re
suit would have in boon inadequate.
it was passed the house as a
preparatory measurec«ily—‘Creak¬
ing ot the ice.’”
“Is it not true that* Dr. jOrr was
the author ot the school legislation
on our statute book?’ i
“it is. The ‘Denny law’ i$_A very
partial exception to this statement.
This law is not revolutionary of
our school system, as has been sup¬
posed by many. It is the old law,
section for section word for word,
with certain changes. These chan¬
ges however, if printed together
would not cover more than a couple
of pages.”
“Have these changes been satis¬
factory ?”
“Without expressingany opinion
of my own, I would state'that the
greater part of them do not seem to
have been reeieved with favor by
the school officTPs^of^the counties.
Two hills are now pending, one in
the senate and the other in the house,
repealing the Denny law and re¬
enacting the old law in to to. What
the fate of these measures will be, I.
am unable to say.” (
“What is the present outlook for
popular education ?”
“It is most highly encouraging.
The attacks on the system, at each
rccurrring session of the legislature,
which had to be met during the
greater part of my father’s adminis
{ration of sixteen years, need be
looked for no more. Many able
advocates of increased appropiations
are arising. Judge Hook is devot
ing himself to the duties of his re
sponsible position <l?cAo with the greatest
carn cstne^ a>?4 unty school
coniMBfiMBBsP.past labors
wdM^iewtHKMBr^The arc- wording
churches
are waking importance ot
the education of the masses, and the
people themselves are stirred on the
subject. We will certainly have
9162,000 additional this year and
8330,000 next year, even though the
taxable property should not bo
increased in value. The brightest
hopes of all conservative school men
seem to be based upon the most sol
id foundations
—,«•
THE CBOAKEKS.
CrenlnreaWliow Live*are Sjii-m in ^5nk
iii’4 Their fcliam miserable.
The dictionary man says “the
croaker is one who croaks i mi r m urs
or complains unreasonably ; one who
habitualy forebodes evil.” And then
the dictionary man—perhaps fearing
his work is not well done says “this
is to rare-” bo The but croaking they men ought j
rare; are not; the l
woods are full of thejn. They are
dampers on spiritual fire and wet
blankets thrown on social progress.
The croak of the raven is most dis¬
mal music. It seems to be darkest
distress, as pointed as that held out j
by the shrivelled hand of a hungry
woman in faded bombazine and it is
not strange that crazed Edgar said :
croak not.black angel,! have no food
for thee.”
Some croaking men appear to be
cranks enough to tiling, themselves
and useful they as cautionary'(iangfeT^ygmilg, hoist
themselves liberally.
They believe they give warnings of
evils to come and that in a way they
are public benefactors. ^ They are
not. Tney come nearer being public
nuisances. They make people tired ;
and make the hopeful sick.
Listen to the weather croaker. He
knows the very weather you do not
want is bound to come. He cun
scent a ruined sugar cane crop and a
dead sure failure of the next peach
crop. He knows we are to have the
coldest winter and the hottest sum
mer known since the war, and that
we shall have floods until we cannot
rest, and drouths until we dry up
and blow away. His barometer is
unsettled and" his thermometer is
, 1 , l ° ... 0r t0 lovV *
° or a!1 v ‘
1 body comfort. -
s
« The
croaker in polities lie is always
down in the mouth. imagines
the country is going to the demni
j tion bow-wows! He does not re _
member the corruption in elections
before the war; but he sees nothing
; but corruption now. He is a natu
: ral and a reformer from
- j
{ °, .
^
*
! j niimtide ® he ,° is not satisfied ^ ‘ and U
’
not v jj]j n< ^ that xwhi’n . , ,
t ^ . ^he a month after ^
an e| L /L' onf
^ l)pon ^^ *
j n | oet ter taan n ^ t h 10 e th th 1 new ^• t ti refo | S rm. i i 1 ,P,l, *
Cough , and Cough* ! and Cough!!!
-
What in the world is the reason
' you will cough and keep coughing
and still keep trying inferior medi
cines when BEGGS’ COUGH
SYRUP will positively relieve yoar
cough at once? This actual is no adver- and
, rising scheme, but an fact,
! we guarantee it. B.D. Smith, Druggist
ADVERTISER.
tnom>D» W1I.I, BE IDEE.
The Work ou the Panama Canal to Stop
February 15.
\\ A8HIXGTON, Feb. 11. The chief
purpose of the appropriation of a
quarter of „ a milIlon .... for , the protection ,
ot American interests at the Isthmus
°t Panama is to fulfill the guarantee
given by congress in the act incorpor
at-lug the Panama railroad, to protect
it from iHjiiry. The preset ground for
fear that a demand may be made for
its fulfilment is the fact that on the
15th work on the Panama canal is to
stop, so that thousands of men will be
suddenly turned loose on the isthmus,
some of whom are liable to make
trouble. All but sixteen shares of
the capital stock of the Panama
railroad is held in France the most
of it in Paris, yet under the guarantee
the road must be defended by the
United States.
TROUBLES FEARED AT PANAMA—SO
TII E SENATE APPROPRIATES $ 250,000
TO PROTECT AMERICAN INTERESTS
THERE.
Washington, Feb.—The senate
remained in secret session nearly
three hours today. Its most impor¬
tant action was in regard to Panama.
Last week the committee on foreign
relations through its chairman, Mr.
Sherman, had proposed an amend¬
ment to the sundry civil bill as fol¬
lows :
“To enable the President to protect
the interests of the United States aud
to provide for the security of persons
and property of citizens of the United
States at the Isthmus of Panama in
such manner as he may deem expe¬
dient, $100,000.”
In the secret session of the Senate
today the form of the proposition was
changed to that of the bill and the
amount to be appropriated increased
to $250,000.
It is learned that the committee
had received no news of any outbreak
at Panama, but deemed it best to be
prepared for any that might occur.
It had decided to ask for the passage
of the bill at once as an independent
measure, rather than to risk the de¬
lays and-uncertainties attending an
amendment to an appropriation bill.
THE TgpUBLES FEARED AT PANAMA.
The! ubles that are feared are
such as are incident to the discharge
in a body (^KAie laborers whose means
of gaining other livelihood are there¬
by cut off, and who may resort to
violence and bloodshed.
It is understood that it has been
deemed wise by the authorities of the
United States, Great Britain and
other nations having large numbers
of their citizens employed on the
Panama canal to arrange for bring¬
ing them home in ease of a wholesale
discharge, and not to suffer them to
remain on the isthmus in destitution
and want. To provide for this, the
amount of appropriation was increas¬
ed from $100,000 to $250,000. There
was but slight opposition to the pass¬
age of the bill.
Late advices at the state and navy
departments in regard to Panama
show that affairs are quiet at present,
but that trouble may be expected at
any time. The United States ships
Atlanta and Ossipee are at Aspin
wall and the Mohican will beat Pana
nia in a few days. This force is re¬
garded as sufficient for the protection
of American interests on the isthmus.
TEXT OF BILL.
The text qf the bill passed by the
Senate ( in secret session relating to
Panama is as follows:
“To enable the President to protect
the interest of the United States in
Panama. Be it enacted, etc., that
there be and is hereby appropriated
out of any money in the treasury not
otherwise appropriated, the sum of
$2-50,090 to enable the President to
protect the interests of Jjhe United
States, and to provide Wr the securi¬
ty of persons and property of citizens
ot the United States at the Isthmus
of Panama in such mauner as he may
deem expedient.”
A * >ead Party,
~
ie ^ „ acon Telegraph , has the , fol- „ ,
. j™'nont the above
sub °Y! ect n£ ' which cf tako upon pleasute in
J we
our readers: ,
. 1 orn f 0 * ie republican organs
3me e r e< ? en ^ election have been
b,nd , of . epitaphs
writing on the d'e
' noc ] ac T- tbe democratic party
de ‘ M e think . not. W by do we
* ink . , so. oimpiy because the facts
fl; ? u;-es show the democrat
. than
! c party 13 8tron g cl ’ now it was
in 1884. When Cleveland was elec
ted he received 4,874.936 votes
a = a ' nst 4,851,931 for Blaine, Cleve
land 8 P lu ‘-ality was 23,005. At the
last election Cleveland received
5,539,966 votes against 5,440,406 for
Garrison. Cleveland lacked just
440 votes of 100,000 plurality. The
democrats beat tl)C republican can
dldate "> 1888 L° ver ' 0 '"; ‘I 1 ? 08 ? s
many votes , as they beat lam in
1884.
Does this show that the country
prefers the republican party’ to the
democratic party? We are not dis
tur bed over the strained and corrupt
! j victory which has recently leafe given
; the republican That party will a new have on
power party soon
to pay the debt of gratitude it owes to
, the bloodlers aud monopolists, and,
) in doing ao, will demonstrate to the
masses that the hope of constitution
al government of honest taxation
and econamical expenditures of pub
lie fnnds lies in the party which, on
the 4tb of March will pass out
power. We appeal with coufieQce
to the future.
Tariff Krform Still the tlotto,
Gov. Hill, of New York, still ad¬
heres to the principles of the platform
of 1S88. His confidence in the ulti
mate triumph of those principles is
unshaken. In a recent letter to the
Harlem democratic club the Govern¬
or says:
If we would win in the future we
must obey the lessons of the past ;
and ehiefest of these is that adherance
to right principles alone carries in
itself the certainty of triumph. Our
democratic president forced the fight¬
ing all along the line. He was con¬
fronted by an army whose centre was
chiefly composed of monopolists
whose right wing was made up of
mercenaries and whose left included
a multitude of impostors clothed in
the garb of pretended patriotism, of
whom Washington in Ills farewell
address bade us beware. Our lines
have been driven back, it is true, but
we are not dismayed, and the contest
must inevitably go on. If we now
prove recreant to the trust, the prog¬
ress of tariff reform may be delayed,
but the day is not far distant when
the democratic principles of equal par¬
ticipation in the benefits of taxation
shall be controlling and supreme. To
win the contest our weapons must be
those which will enlighten the igno¬
rant and release the credulous from
their fears. “Agitate” was the motto
and cry of O’Connell, the great home
ruler of his day. Let us add to this
the watchword “educate,” and agita¬
tion and education now will give us
that reform of the tariff—perhaps
even before our return to power—for
which we waged our recent campaign.
So from the nettle, defeat, we shall
have plucked the flower, victory,
The gentlemen who are traveling
in the north and west under com¬
mission from the southern immigra¬
tion convention to find a suitable
place in the middle or the eastern
states, and one in the western or the
northwestern states, for an exposition
of southern resources aud products,
are meeting most cordial receptions.
Every city which they have yet visit¬
ed has taken a lively interest in their
mission and offered inducements to
secureoneof the proposed expositions.
The New York Herald of last Sunday
says:
Of all the cities in the country New
York is unquestionably the proper
venue for the great exposition which
is to be established under the auspi¬
ces of the southern inter-state immi¬
gration Bureau. As we understand
it, one of the objects of this under¬
taking is to encourage capitalists to
invest in Southern enterprises. Well,
New York is the money centre of the
United States and the financial head¬
quarters in America of Europeans.
Another object of the exposition is
to invite immigrants to settle on the
fertile but neglected soil of the south¬
ern states. An excellent idea. There
can be no rival to the empire city in
this direction. It is the gateway of
the nation, through which at least 90
per cent, of the whole volume of
trans-Atlantic immigration passes.
New York is the most hospitable
city on the continent—for its size.
There is nothing worth having in any
other American city that cannot be
got here. Everything in the metrop¬
olis is wider, thicker and longer than
elsewhere. This is the very spot for
that exposition.
byrup oi Figs
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is
tne most casity taken, and the most
effective remedy known to Cleanse
the System when Bilious or Costive;
to dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fev¬
ers; to Cure Habitual Constipation,
Indigestion, Piles, etc. Manufactur¬
ed only by the California Fig Syrup
Company, San Franscisco, Cal.
sy For sale by Alexander & Son, For
syth, Ga.
What We Want,
We want varied industaies. We
want people encouraged in their oc¬
cupations who have no time to farm
and who can afford to purchase our
products at moderate prices.
When we have a fat shote or a
nice piece of beef, more than we de¬
sire for our own use, we want a con¬
venient market where we can dis
pase of it at a fair price.
We can not com pete with the broad
prairies of the west on grain growing
and stock raising for distant mark¬
ets. But we can supply our own
markets at a profit,
So,oursalvationliesintheestab
lishment and encouragement of home
manufucturiee.—Ex.
A D.scovery.
-
“Another wonderful discovery has
been made and that too by a lady
in this county. Disease fastened its
clutches upon her and for seven
years she withstood its severest tests,
but her vital organs deemed were under!
mined and death imminent,
; For three months she coughed in
eessantiy and could not sleep. She
bought of us a bottle ot Dr. King’s
New discovery for Consumption and
j was so much relieved on taking first
dose that she slept all nio-ht and with
1 one bottle has been "mira culously
cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther
Luz.” Thus writes W. C. Hamrick
& Co., of Shelby, N. C._Get a freo
trial bottlo at any Drug Store.
NUMBER 6.
=5
aw
I,
■
ER
Absolutely Pure.
-This powder never varies A niarvol of
purityfit^ength than and the wholesomeness. ordinary More
economical kinds, and
cannot he seldom competition with the mul¬
titude of low 'test, short weight, alum or
Royal phosphate powders. Powder Sold Co.,‘ only in cans
Baking 106 Wall
street. New York.
DIKU FROM A CAT’S ItlTE.
The Horrible Fntr of n Walton County
Ulan,
Monroe, Fob. 8. —Tho news has
just reached the city of the terrible
death of Mr. Henry Womac, tL-TO ^ J
spectable young farmer, who lived
six miles below Monroe. Tho facts
as related to your correspondent are
as follows:
Last Saturday a week ago Mr.
Womac was sitting by tho hro with
one of his hands hanging down,
when suddenly one of his house cats*
began to bristle up and growl.
ATTACKED BY THE CAT.
Before he could realize what tho
cat meant by her peculiar action,
she sprang uponhis hand and fasten¬
ed her teeth into one of his fingers.
He slung her loose and grabbing
the shovel killed her immediately.
lie paid no attention to what had
happened, and his fingor soon heal¬
ed.
Last Saturday morning, just one
week from the timo he was bitten,
he got up early, made a fire and
went to the lot to attend to his stock.
HIS WIFE BITTEN.
When his wife was in tho act of
getting up to dress, the other old
cat, that was sitting by the fire be¬
gan to show signs ot fight, and, with
bristles raised, ran under the bed.
Mrs. Womac thought nothing of it
until her feet struck tho floor, when
the cat sprang upon her foot, fasten¬
ing its teeth in her heel. She could
not get the cat loose, and her hus¬
band, hearing her screams, rushed
to the house, and had to choke tho
cat loose. When he threw tho cat
out the door, it made back at him,
but he seized a stick and killed it as
it came in the door.
HE FELL INTO SPASMS.
About 12 o’clock his finger began
to swell and pain him, and by night
he was having spasms, wich contin¬
ued until yesterday, when he became
so wild and ferocious that Ins friends
and relatives were compelled to fas¬
ten him up in a room by himself,
where he died a most terrible death
of hydrophobia.
M rs. Womae’s foot is three or four
times its natural size, and, no doubt,
she will meet the same sad fate as
her husband in a few days.
---—
They Could 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. Ono
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 bis 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 to tell
you that this terrible, repulsive and
loathsome disease is—cancer. Can it
be cured? Medical skill bas apt
parently exhausted itself, and the
surgeon’s knife has cut in vain to
root it out.
Now iScemingly, cancer is incurable.
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 of all remedy Purifiers—“Guinn’s for this is, that King
Pioneer
Blood Renewer.” It extracts tho
virus from the blood and keeps it in
a pure and excellent condition.
Don’t delay until it is too late. Call
at the druggists for an almanac, celebrated and
you will find that this
medicine has cured, right here in
your own country, about every dis¬
ease emenating from a depraved
condition of the blood.
A few bottles taken in the 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
Kenowor,” the druggists all sell it.