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BILL ARP’S
WRITES A CHAPTER OS
WANTON CRUELTY.
Sorry That He Ones Fired Upon His
Neighbor's Cow.
And the sports killed s thousand
pigeons in Macon the other day. That
** swful. I did not know thsrs were
such unfeeling people iu this civilized
country. Thera is nothing mors harm¬
less nothing so hsppy and so beautiful
ns the pigeons thst domesticate around
our homes and seek the protecting
care of mankind. I thought thst this
cruel sport had bean abandoned and
that day pigeons wefe substitutes and
wars tktofm from a trap by a spring.
No wonder the good people of Macon
refused to witness the unfeeling sport,
It is an honor to them and it seems to
they might have found some law to
prevent it. Where did they get so
many pigeons? Is it possible that any
gentleman who had them on bis pisoe
would let his boys sell them for
such s sacrifice? Just think of it I
A thousand happy, innoeent birds
torn and mangled by shot and
shell, legs bro or wings, and
then dying a lingering death of pain.
This thing oould not have been done
in Csrtsrsville. The other dey two
young books, who are proud of their
moaefe, planned a hall boxing and match to
none off at the oity onr mayor
rad oonaoil roae np in arms snd called
out the militia and beat the long roll
rad issued s proclamation and soared
the young book* so bad they left the
town for three days. Their boxing
gloves were seised as contrabands of
war and have been filed away among
the trophies. One of the backs is
from England and the affair may yet
get np another Venezuelan complica¬
tion with tha Monroe doctrine attach¬
ed. What right has Johnny Amerioan Boll born to
be knoeking No, oat an don’t believe in
sttissn? we
sports that are ernel or dangerous.
A man went np in a balloon here today
and hung from it by his toes on a
trapeze and than eat loose and cams
down with a parachute rad everybody
gased and but he wondered, ought for to it was have a been free
show, not killed
allowed to do it, lor they get
sooner or later rad it exoites a thirst
for dangerous risks rad an indifference
to death. A m e n who will wantonly
rad foolishly nut his life in hasard is
• fool for wantof sans# rad will never
get to hgvfra, in my opinion. Many
years ago I sew Blondin, a little
Frenchman, who was brought over by
Miblo to danos the rope at his garden
show fa New York. The garden
want big enough for his ambition
and he got to walking buildings rope* rad from
Steeples of high and last the great next
over waterfalls, ovsr The last
below Niagara falls.
tints I saw him he was walking
over that c Wc ? on a rope that was
1,800 feet long rad wss 150 feet above
rngi^wstars and he had a man
Well, of course
rat very wonderful rad very
u, but rad it aooomplisbad nobody would no good have
body
fallen and killad him
Dtkcr foo| gens,” And tha I
ore wo Id have said.
father toll about Bam
imping from top of vs*
from high bridges. He jump
telle of Paterson, N. J., abont
rad then the falls of Niagara
id finally the Gen case
His body was found
• afterwards and he waa
a flret-clase fooL Bnt still
i respect for Blondin rad
than for any set of men
kill a thousand pig
It is a bad sign in a boy to
pigeon* at onr
iKJ« slip
«
n
P$HtaJ§*mo no
MSB
< or
-
■*
honest mss. I am sorry that I
his oow. He loved to talk to me about
••hold h’England” sad once I hart
feelings became I seemed to doubt bis
word when be told me that his father
used to raise eighty bushels of wheat
to the sore. '•Sow wheat in dost
and rye in mortar,” be need to say,
“band you will ’sv’ a good crop.” He
was never weaned from his love of the
fatherland and was a good, loving citi¬
zen of both countries. What a beauti¬
ful trait is patriotism. An unrecon
structed rebel friend told me in Florid*
that nothing bad harmonised him sinov
the war until he visited Europe last
summer and saw the stars and etript
dying to the breeze in every foreig i
port, and then bis old love for tot
banner came back again and he felt
like be ooold shake hands and be at
pesoe with the whole Tankee nation. Z
wish that I and my wife eould travel
abroad.—Bill Arp in Atlanta Consti¬
tution.
ALTOELD CAUSTIC.
Illinois’ Governor Replies to Carlisle’s
Speech.
Governor Altgeld, of Illinois, is out
in an open letter answering Secretary
Carlisle’s recent speech in Chicago.
Among othei things Altgeld says:
Mr. Carlisle should have explained
why it was that for 200 years gold and
silver held the market ratio of abont
15} to 1. The ratio fixed by law was
15 to 1 in most oountries and for
awhile 16 to 1 in our country. In
other words, the market ratio as shown
by the tables remained practically the
same as the statutory ratio during all
that time. If the two metals cannot
stand together how does it happen
that they did so without serious fluc¬
tuation for 200 years, notwithstanding
the fact that the annual production of
each metal varied greatly from time to
time?
If only one of the metals can be a
standard and a measure of the value
of things, snd if s combined standard
of both gold and silver » as impossi¬
ble ss it is to here two yardsticks of
different lengths, why was it that some
of the greatest financiers of the world
and particularly Baron Rothschild,
stated in 1869 that was the
sum of the two metals»taken to¬
gether which formed the measure of
tbs veins of tbingk No matter wkjioh
metal might for a time predominate,
nevertheless the sum of the two taken
together wss the messnre of the vslue
of all property. If the same oountries
had etrioken down gold by law and de
ctroyed it for monetary uses snd made
«H™ the sols standard, would not sil
have gone np and the pnrohaeing
of gold gone down?
Nomtaattoas Confirmed by the Senate.
The senate haa confirmed the fol
lowing nominations :
Leo Berghol, of New York, oontnl
at Postmasters—Mississippi—Guy Eraeronm, Armenia. Nor¬
thrnp, Pam Christian; Catherine E.
Kelnnis, Mom Point,
Texas—0. 0. Lockett, Kerrville.
Also numerous promotions in the
revenue cutter servioe.
DIAE LIBERATED. •
Bo and His Brother Ordered to Laava
Cobra Boll
A special of Wednesday from Havana
■ays: Bar. Albert Diaz, Ike American
Baptist missionary, and his brother,
Alfred, who wore arrested last week,
have been set at liberty, but have been
ordered to leave tbs oouatry before
the expiration of six days from the
time of their release.
Two Amerioan correspond ante have
been arrested la Matan -Thomas
R. Dawley, who baa 'represented Har¬
per's Weekly in Cuba for the MoGarthy- past two
months, and Maurioe
O’Leary, the correspondent of The
Philadelphia Both made Bulletin. headquarters
men their
in Havana rad tiy went to Matan
province in search of war news
Dawley la an Amerioan cdtizen, and
O’Leary, a British subject They are
charged with maintaining relations
with Alfonso Lopes, who wae also ar¬
rested on suspicion of being a rebel
^Later advices state that the prison
on bail which
furnished by to* American vies
A special of Friday
Hall wd
aa
d aw
that he
^ —Ipromieed
a
fTTp
____
« sr
it”
*■:
FIVE SHOT DOWN.
ROBERT KILLS A FAMILY AND
TWO OFFICERS. g
Being Closely Poshed Ho Then Kills
Himself.
Saturday morning at Bockville, Ind.,
Peter Egbert, a young man twenty
three years of age, shot and killed
Mrs. Hermann Heaohke and her two
children, Hermann aud Aggie, Sheriff
W. D. Mull and Constable W. M.
Sweep. killed himself.
He then
Hie sister, Miss Florence Egbert,
who was lying very ill with typhoid
fever, died shortly after the tragedy
from the effect of the shook.
About 7 o’clock young Egbert was
sent into the backyard to saw some
wood for family use. Shortly after,
while Mrs. Hasobke, who lived next
door, was out milking her oow, Egbert
secured a double-barrelled breech¬
loading shotgun, and going into the
Haechke house, shot the little daugh¬
ter, a child of ten years,. dead aud
wounded the boy, two* years younger,
who ran out on the porch, where Eg¬
bert shot him again, killing him in¬
stantly. Killed the Mother.
The murderer then went out into the
and levelled his gun at Mrs.
who, seeing his intention,
to escape. He shot her,
however, the charge taking effect in
top of her head, removing part of
skull. She died within a short
Having oompleted this work of
Egbert shonldered bis gun
deliberately walked into the busi¬
part of the town.
Sheriff Mull and Constable Sween
planning a means of capturing
murderer.
Egbert w*« walking aorom the north
of the square, holding hie gun in,
with both barrels cocked,
he saw Mall and Sween crossing
street toward him. He oalled out
them not to oome any nearer. The
two offloers retired into a hallway
in ths national bank building for a
consultation, when Egbert
and coming upon them sud¬
denly shot rad instantly killed both
men.
The murderer then started to run,
taking a westward course toward the
fair grounds, with a number of oiti
sens in olose pursuit. He ran like a
deer, bnt while he was crossing an
open field jost west of town a shot
from his pursuers took effect in his
heel. This orippled him, and, though
he managed to seals the inolosnre of
the fair grounds, he wa« onable to run
further, afid, crawling into a stall, shot
himsalf in the right breast.
The fire from his gun ignited his
clothing, which was partially burned
when he waa found.
Egbert was at one time confined in
the insane asylum, but bad been dis¬
charged as eared. The general belief
is that insanity waa the cause of the
orime.
TWO MEN LYNCHED.
M«b Overpowered the Jailer rad
Took His Keys.
A special to the Nashville Bun says
that at 1 o’olook Sunday morning fif¬
teen masked men entered.the residence
of tho jailer at McMinnville, Tonn.,
overpowered the jailer, took bis keys
and entered the jail. William and Victor
They were after
Hiiiis, who were awaiting trial charged
with the murder of Carroll Martin, in
Van Buren oounty, in August, 1894.
When the mob entered theoell,where
the Hiiiis boys were oonfined, Victor
snatched np a bad slat and succeeded
in knocking down two of the crowd
before he was overpowered. William,
realizing that his doom was fixed, fell
into a swoon. time
Without giving the Hiiiis boys
to don any elothing the masked men
proceeded to their horses and mount¬
ing rode quickly and silently out of
town to a point abont five miles south¬
east, near SbaUaford, where they
banged the two brothers to the ia
tree.
BOI KILL WOMEN.
The of the H<
A horrible doable
panied by small burglary, was committed at
Hilltop, a village in Maryland,
AbontS o'clock Joseph Cocking, Hilltop, who
a at
by a is his store, over
family lived. Hastily aris
a Mr. Cocking cam* down stairs
by a blow on
tied with a rope
he
a 1
rad
a
Jkwt to
■ r
h: : -
i* j
OBOWTH OV TOE SOUTH. *
The Industrial Situation as Reported
for the Past Week.
Beporte of industrial, mechanical
and business affairs in all the southern
states for the past week indicate that
the lumber market has been aotive and
unsettled during the week and prices
are lower for all grades of pine. The
association has changed its list to meet
the new conditions. A good deal of
lumber is changing hands and the mill
operators are increasing their outputs.
Iron and coal are steady at unchang¬
ed prices. The advance made in
southern* iron has brought in many or¬
ders and the favorable reports as to
maintenance of prices, g under*
standings among the( largfT producers
and probabilities of market \he i building firm. The of
steel mills keep the
iron men are very confident of a pros¬
perous summer. The coal miners are
reduoing outputs somewhat to meet
the changing season. Supplies of
coal are ample and the market is rath¬
er weak. ’
Cotton prospects indicate that the
new crop will be a large .one. The
area of planting has been considera¬
bly increased over that of last year
and more care has been given to sup¬
ply fertilizers. Cotton manufacturers
report that stocks are accumulating
somewhat nnder a decreased demand.
Prices are low and some mills will soon
shut down unless an improvement is
soon apparent. The southern cotton
mills have bad a very prosperous win¬
ter's business and considerable and im¬
portant additions have been made to
their number.
Southern new industries are many
and some are of considerable import¬
ance. There is reported as organized
or established during the past week:
The Cumberland Coal. and Steel com¬
pany, of Norfolk, Va., capital $2,500,
000; the Cunningham Sugar Refining
and Paper Manufacturing eompsny,
of Sugarland. Texas, with $500,
000 capital, and the Jefferson
Coal and Railway company, of
Birmingham, Ala., capital $400,000.
The Texas City Mill and has Elevator been
company, capital $100,000,
chartered at Galveston, Tex.; the New
Orleans Furniture Manufacturing
company, with $50,000 oapital at New
Orleans, La.; the Upshur Seal and
company, at Richmond, Va., and
the W. B. Kindly Cotton Mill com¬
at Pleasants, N. G., each with
oapital. A $80,000 cotton oil
mill is to be built at Granbury, Tex
The Blount A Edwards Foundry and
Machine company has been chartered
at Milledgeville, Ga.; the Independent
Peanut company, at Smithville, Va.,
and Collins A Co., limited, saddlery La.,
manufacturers, at New Orleans,
rach with $25,000 oapital. reported
Brick and tile works are at
Knoxville, Tenn., and Blaoksburg,
Va.; a cotton oompreas at Cordele,
Ga.; proposed cotton mills at Leaks
ville and Tioy, N. C., and flouring
mills at Gadsden, Ala.; Eureka Springs,
Ark., aud Hartsville, Tenn. A manga¬
nese mining company is being organ¬
ized at Athens, Ga., a tannery is to be
built at Wayneaville, N. 0.; tobacco
works at Birmingham, Ala.; a furni¬
ture factory at Mebane, N. C., and a
planing mill at Hartford, W. Va.
The new buildings of the week in¬
clude a bank building at Scranton,
Miss.; business houses at Bristol,
Tonn., and a $20,000 ohuroh at Nor¬
folk, Va. A court house to cost $25,
000 ii roportod At ShsphflrdivillOj Ky«,
and one to cost $50,000 at Winston,
Ky.; a $40,000 hotel at Weston, W.
Va., and a $14,000 warehouse at Green¬
ville, Miss.—Tradesman, (Chattanoo¬
ga, Tenn.1
GROSVKNOR’S FIGURES.
His Division of the Delegates Elected
the Past Week.
An Indihnapolis rpetial says: In all
)he tables sent out from Washington
sach week by General Groavenor, the
thirty delegates in Indiana have been
placed in the MoKinley oolumn and
they have been oonoeded to him on all
hands, although only twenty-six of
them have been elected. It is believed,
however, fourteen or fifteen of these
voice will never go to MoKinley wheth¬
er the name of Harrison ia brought
before the convention or not. The
men on toe delegation who threatened
to bolt McKinley Harrison are warm personal
admirers of and their resent
t has been aroused by the charac¬
ter of the by McKinley campaign Gowdy, in of In¬
diana, led Chairman to*
state ittee. Mr. Gowdy has de¬
clared that the state don vention shall
instruct for McKinley even if Harrison it re¬
quires a bitter fight and the
him of inspiring oertain
paragraphs that are appearing in coun
try newspapers to the effect that Indi
ana would have for MoKinley
even had Harrison bean a candidate.
Harry New, of the delegates, said
tbit he Harrison saw no reaaon be why the s
trirad of might not
t friend of McKinley; that
had come to McKinley
only after Harrison had written
hia tetter, hot that if this sort of
SSTtJIa continued and the
toned to aa ia
see, they would take it
sslvea to de mo nst r ate in the Si. Louis
that Indiana’s first love is
>
21 * id ^Window* Glass Com
to go to work become
discharged in viola
, iSr -T '
eased.
BOOMS RUSSELL.
DEMOCRATS OF MASSACHUSETTS
WANT HIM FOR PRESIDENT.
State Convention of the Party Held at
Boston.
With enthusiasm ae great as that
noted at the recent state conven
ion of the Republicans of Massachu
etta when Thomas B. Seed was en¬
dorsed ae a presidential candidate, the
democrats of the state in convention
at Boston Tues lay named - ex
Governor William E. Hassell as their
choice for the nomination ae president
Cleveland’s suooessor.
Hon. Thomas J. Gargan, of Boston,
was named as chairman of the commit¬
tee on resolutions and Hon. John E.
Thayer, of Worcester, was chosen
permanent chairman.
The committee on credentials rey
ported 1,246 delegatee present, Judge repre¬
senting 81 cities and 327 towns.
Corcoran then presented Chairman
Thayer to the convention amid loud
applause, and Mr. Thayer addressed
the delegates. said: . „
Among other things he
The true interest of all onr people
who canqpt constantly and closely ob¬
serve the money market is to have
every dollar issued or authorized by
the government at all times, under all
circnmstanoes and in all its uses, the
exaot, unchanging equivalent—not only
in debt paying, bnt in its purchasing
power in any dollar- This can only be
obtained by the maintenance of the
monetary standard universally adopted
by the civilized world.
Mr. Thayer denounced the American
Protection association which he com¬
pared to a “fungus growth that sprang
from and took root and flourished in
the very heart of the republican
party.”
Mr. Thayer closed his address with
President an eulogy upon the administration of
Cleveland.
Daring the delivery of Mr. Thayer’e
address the applause was enthusiastic,
especially upon the severe critioism of
the A. P. A., and at the mention of
President Cleveland’s name.
The election of four delegates at
large was then moved and the names
of John E. Hassell, of Leicester, G.
Fred Williams, of Denham, John W.
Corcoran, of Clinton, and James W.
Donovan, of Boston, were presented
by Congressman Fitzgerald.
J. T. O’Sullivan, of Lowell, con¬
demned the ticket as machine made,
bnt upon the vote Mr. O’Sullivan was
the only dissenter.
The platform adopted conoludes ae
follows:
“Following long established demo¬
cratic custom, the democrats of Massa¬
chusetts in convention assembled will
not in any way instrnot or pledge
their delegates, but they do declare
that it is tho wish of the democratic
party of the state to present, and they
earnestly recommend to the considera¬
tion of the national convention to be
held in Chicago as their candidate for
the offioe of president ef the United
States the name of their victorious,
courageous, Willia high-principled ex-govern¬
or, m Eustia BusselL ”
NEBRASKA DEMOCRATS SPEAK.
They Demand the Restoration of Sil¬
ver to Its Place.
Nebraska Democrats held their state
convention at Lincoln Wednesday.
The currency question was the domi¬
nating feature of the convention and
enthnsiam was at a high point. With
the delogates, all of one mind, there
was little strife and the work was oom¬
pleted early.
The appearance of ex-Oongressman
Bryan and the incidental mention of
his name as a presidential possibility
was the oooasion for wild cheering.
The platform says:
“In order to UDdo the wrong already
done and to prevent a further rise in
the purchasing power of the dollar,
we favor the immediate restoration of
free and unlimited coinage of gold and
silver st the present legal ratio of 16
to 1, as snoh coinage existed prior to
1878, withont waiting for the aid or
oonsent of any other nation, snch gold
rad silver to be fall legal tender for
all debts, public and private.
• “We are uppuwu iu iuo nuiiiueut
of the greenback and demand that the
secretary of the treasury, -instead of
issuing interest- bearing bonds for the
purpose of gold, shall recognize the
silver as money of redemption and ex¬
ercise toe right to redeem greenbacks,
treasury notes and all other ooin obli¬
gations in silver when silver is more
convenient.”
The reeolntions favor tariff for reve¬
nue only, an income tax* election of
United States senators by direct vote
and in opposition to the Amerioan
Protective Association.
For delegatee at large: W. J. Ryan,
of Lincoln; C. J. Smith, of' Omaha,
and W. H. Thompson, of Grand Is¬
land, and W. D. Oldham, of Kearney,
were selected. Twelve district dele
atfai ware also nwf^.
Just before the convention adjourn¬
ed a resolution was in trod need in¬
structing the delegates to rapport W.
£. Bryan for pr e sid e n t. Mr. Bryan
protected, inasmuch as it would virtu¬
ally bar him from acting ae delegate,
and at hie earnest solicitation the ree¬
olation withdrawn.
Tobacco Dealer In Financial Trouble,
Meets Lindheim, a wholesale dealer
in teal tobacco at New York, is re
BUZ? “
are
SSomT 1 * to h* * 100 ’ 000
V imw t k •
Color of Women’s Eyes.
“Did yon ever notice that men al¬
ways instinctively put confidence in a
girl with blue eyes, and have their sus¬
picion of the girl with brilliant black
ones, end will you kindly tell me why V*
writes Lilian Bell in the Ladies’ Home
Journal. “Is it thst the limpid blue
eyes, transparent and gentle, suggest
all the soft, womanly virtues, and be¬
cause he thinks he can see through it,
clear down into that blue-eyed girl’s
soul, that she is the kind of girl he
fancies she is? I think it is, bnt some
of the greatest little frauds I know are
the parry, kitteny girls with big in¬
nocent blue eyes. Blazing black eyes,
and the rioh warm colors which dark
skinned women have to wear, suggest
energy and brilliance and no end of
intellect. Men look into such eye*
and seem not to be able to see below
They have not the pleas¬ ^
the surface.
ure of a long, deep gaze into immeas¬
urable depths. And so they think her
designing and*clever, and perhaps (God
save the mark!) even intellectual,
when, perhaps she has a wealth of
love and devotion and heroism stored
np behind the impulsive disposition
and those dazzling black eyes, which
would do and dare more in a minute
for some man she had set that great
heart of hers upon, than yonr cool
blooded tranquil blonde would do in
forty years. A mere question of pig
ment in the eye has settled many a
man’s fate in life, and established him
with a wife who turned oat to be very
different from the girl he fondly
thought he was getting. ”—Exchange.
Awful Punishment Abolished.
The last instance of boiling to death
took place in Persia in 1890. The
offender was guilty of stealing caldron state
revenues, and was put into a
of cold water, which was slowly heated
to the boiling point. His bones were
distributed as a warning among the
provincial tax collectors.
Better than Keflned field
Is bodily comfort. This unspeakable boon Is
denied to many unfortunates for whose
ailments Hostetter’s Stomach Bittern is m
promptly helpful remedy. The dyspeptic, tbs
rheumatic, the nervous, persons troubled
■with biliousness or chills and fever, should
lose no time in avslllne themselves of this
comprehensive and penial medicine, it pro¬
motes appetite and nightly slumber.
In Persia a nobleman’s wealth la judged
from the number of his slaves.
The best w»y to know whether Dobbins’ Float¬
ing-Borax Soap Is the beet for laundry and bath
Is to try It. It don’t turn yellow like uthor
floating soaps, as it la pure. Bed wrapper. Ask
your grocer for Dobbins* Floating-Borax.
Olve the world one-half of Sunday, tho
other half will soon go.
Half Kates to Chattanooga, Tenn.
The southern Baptist Convention meets at
Chattanooga. Tenn., May 8th to 14th. for
which occasion the Southern to8tb,cnod By. will sell
round trip ticket* May Bth toro
tnrn within 15 day*. The Southern Ry. offer*
superior schedule* and run* more trains to
Chattanooca than any route.
App>y for rates and schedules to
W. H. Tavxoh,
DIst. Pass. Agt., Atlanta.
“I Have Tried Parlxer’s Ginger Tosdc
and believe In it,” says a mother, and so wfll
yon when you know its revitalizing properties
Hall’s Catarrh Cure la a liquid and is taken
internally, and acta directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. Send lor
testimonials, free, sold by Drurgists, foe. t
T. J. Chismrt Se Oo„ Props,, Toledo, OU
FITS stopped free by Da. Klins’s 8aiw
NEBva Response, fltsafter flrstdar’a use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2. no trial bot¬
tle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phll&» Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain.onre* wind colic. 25e. a bottle.
I am entlrelr cure A of hemorhage of longs
by Piso’s Cure for Mo., Consumption.— Jan. 8, '9*. Louisa
Linda man, Bethany,
Nervous
People find just the help they so modi
need in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It fur¬
nishes the desired strength by puri¬
fying, vitalizing and enriohing tho
blood, and thus builds up the nerves
tones the stomach and regulates tha
whole system. Head this:
“I want to praise Hood’s Sarsa parill a.
My health ran down, and I had the grip.
After that, my heart and nervous system
were badly affected, so that I oould not do
my own work. Our physician gave
some help, bat did not curs. I decided
to try Hood’s 8arBaparllla. Soon I coakt
do all my own housework. I have taken
Cured
Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
and they have done me much good. I
will not be wfthout them. I bare 13
bottles of Hood’s Sasnaparllia, and throogk
the Messing of God, It has cored
I worked as bard as ever the past
mer, and I am thankful to my I
welL Hood’s Pills when takep with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.’*
Mas. M. M. Mnasxnoxa, Freehold, Peon.
This and many other cores prove
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
laths One Tree Blood Purifier. AUdraKgiats.$t
Prep a red only tor C. L Hood a Co, Loweti,
Rood's Pills
There is just a little ap¬
petizing bite to HIRES
Rootbeer; just a smack
of life and good flavor
in ~ '*
done up
style- Best i test.
iM*<drV vweasrtssa. V
am
- —