Newspaper Page Text
BACON'S WEDS
IIKIUSM
Find a General Response Over the
Whole Country-
SPEECH A MASTERLY EFFORT-
Governor Taylor C-sns red In
Stronst Terms by Demo
cratic Congressmen.
(From our Regular flm respondent )
Washington, Feb. 2, 1900.
The administration programme
is receiving some severe jolts in
congress, and its path is getting
rackier every; day. This week sev
eral republican senators went to
see Mr. McKinley and requested
him to withdraw the reciprocity
treaties now before the senate, in
order to save them from formal re
jection, which would not only hu
miliate Mr. McKinley but would
advertise the difference of opinion
between him and members- ot his
party in congress. He has also
been told that the only chance
the free trade section of the
Porto Rico bill has to become a
law is by the help of democratic
votes, many democrats having ex
pressed themselves in favor of it on
general principals, although it is
not likely that any conceited act
ion in its favor will be taken by the
democrats. The republicans of the
house ways and means committee
have reported a substitute for the
administration bill for free trade
with Porto Rico, which provides
for a duty of 25 per cent of the
present tariff on Porto Rican pro
ducts. These things show that
the much talked about repub
lican harmony is a fake.
Senator Bacon’s speech against
the imperialistic policy of the ad
ministration in the Phillippines
was full of coservative but unan
swerable arguments against imper
ialism, which he declared meant a
standing army of 400,000 men and
an annual expense of $ 100,000,000.
He told the imperialismists that
“the thirst for empire is like the
desire for human blood.” The
following extract gives a good idea
of the general tenor of the speech:
“The conditions which now exist,
and which will undoubtedly exist
hereafer if we permanently retain
the Phillippines. makes it impossi
ble that they can ever become a
state; and to hold them as a subject
colony, makes necessary a revolu
tion in our system ot government
which should not be aided by anyone
who is loyal to the principles upon
which that system is founded. It
is revolution which, while it denies
liberty to other people, endangers
the liberty of our own people,” 111
answer to questions from Senator
Spooner as to what thin congress
could do, Mr. Bacon said it could
make the same declaration regard
ing the Phillippines that the last
congress did with reference to Cu
ba. Senator Bacon was followed
bv Senator Teller, who was the
author of the Cuban resolution
adopted by the last congress, and
he took occasion to express his
most sincere regret that he had not
included in that resolution the peo
ple of all the Spanish possessions
acquired by the United States, as
well as the Cubans. This was
help from an unexpected quarter,
as Mr. Teller had been counted as
a supporter, albeit a lukewarm one,
of the retention of the Phillippinds.
The New York Reform Club, of
which Hon. John De Witt Warner
is president, has stirred up the ad
vocates of the shipsubsidy job by
circulating a letter against it con
taining this sentence: “Lobbyist in
the employ of toe prospective bene
fieiades of the bounty have already
carefully canvassed congress, which
means that every approachable
senator and congressman has, by
some sort of a promise or bribe
been reasoned with and made to see
the benefit of subsidies.” There
was a regular circus of a time at
this week’s meeting of the house
committee on Merchant Marine,
which has charge of the subsidy
bill, when Representative Gros
venor, of Ohio, chairman of the
committe, read that letter.
Kentucky democrats in Congfess
are*even more indignant at the act
ion of Gov. Tar lor in adjourning
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the legislature and ordering it to
meet Feb. 7, at London, and declar
ing martial law in Frankfort, than
tliev were at the dastardly at
tempted assassination of Geobel.
They regard it all as a part of the
political game that Taylor is play
ing. Senator-elect Blackburn came
very near voicing the sentiment of
every Kentucky democrat in Con
gress when he said of the whole
business: “The reorganization of
the militia of tile state by Bradley,
during the latter part of his admin
istration, placing the military af
fairs of the state upon substantially
a republican partisan basis; the im
portation of armed ruffians from
the mountains into Frankfort with
in the last few days; their indefen
sible r , mluct there, coupled w.Tk*
threats, of resort to violence, all
j ointed to the present situation.”
LITERARY NOTES.
Louis Zangwill’s complete novel
in the February number of the
“New Lippiucott,” entitled “The
Siren from Bath,” is a refreshing
antidote to the Colonial romance
which has been so popular for some
time past. A strong appeal to
one’s sympathies is contained in
the second Mormon story in Mrs.
J. K. Hudson’s series, begun in
the January number.—“ Stake of
Zi n in the Wilderness.” “The
Squire” is a first-rate story of a
city election, with much local color
and character thinly veiled, by
Francis Churchill Williams, who
is rising into note for this class of
fiction. A tale ol the new West,
i.B called "The Girl in Red.” The
distinguished honor recently
achieved by I)r. Horace Howard
Furness at Cambridge University,
England, has never been fully re
viewed. Professor Albert H;
Smyth writes of this, and the ar
ticle is accompanied by a private
portrait, not before seen, of I)r.
Furness in his scholarly robes.
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Custer,the widow
of General Custer, whose Western
experiences have been wide and
varied, contributes an article of
special interest to her own sex. It
is called “Where the Heart is.”
“VV hat Gives a Popular Song its
Vof u 2?” by the eminent musical
cri’ c, Henry T. Finck, is entirely
sea ( n ible for the opera months;
an* ' A Dav with a British Mili
tia Regiment,” by Herbert Hudson,
a late militia subaltern, is of spe
cial interest at the moment, and is
written with spirit and inner know
ledge. Miss Cecilia Beax con
tributes 1 sonnet called “Rainless,”
which reveils anew side to her ar
tistic nature; and “A Rainbow
Fancy,” by Clarence Urmy, is a
quaint thought in couplet form.
The English author, Mr. Tighe
Hopkins, is to begin a novel, anu
indeed unique, series of stories in
McClure’s Magazine with the Feb
ruary number. They are stories
depicting prison life—not prison
life from the rather matter-of-fact
standpoint of the social reformer
and the economist; but prison life
as it affects, in all their human
emotions and relations, specific
typical people who are themselves
personally involved in it. Each
s.ory is entirely complete in itself;
but still the series will have a cer
tain continuous interest.
Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly
for February numbers among its
literary contributors such celeb
rities as Gen. Nelson A. Miles,
Bret Hartc, M. E. M. Davis, Eger
ton Castle, Jeannette Walworth.
Anna Randall Dielii, Jennie Betts
Harts wick, Harold Bolce, Mabry-
De Zapp, and ex-Sup mntendent
R. C. Jackson of the Railway Mail
Service. All these writers are in
teresting in their respective hues,
and the pictorial illustrations ac
companying their aiticles and stor
ies in this number of Frank Les
lie’s Popular Monthly are even
more profuse and elegant than us
ual. This is a timely paper upon
“The Centennial Anniversary of
the Death of Washington.” *An
Army Career, is a well illustrated
article.” Major-General Nelson
A. Miles, the gallant and distin
guished soldier cimmanding the
United States army, addresses him
self particularly to young metfc n
templating a military career, and
inspiringly compares army service
in this country with that abroad.
“The Fighting Poers,” by Haroici
Bolce at j hrnnesburg and P e
toria, is a masterly study of thr
tmbattle 1 .. urghers of the Tran
vaal.” 1-re. Harte’s la.est story
(complete in this number ot Frank
Leslie’s Popular Monthly ) is called
“The Youngest Miss Piper.” It is
racy and Californian, in the au
thor’s best comedy vein. Jean
nette Wahvo'th’s story, also com
plete in this number, is entitled
“The Fate of an Olivi; e Ring.”
Ex-Superintendent Jackson tells
all about the railway mail service,
and Anna Randall Diehl, instruc
tively eloquent on “Woman and
the Study of Shakespeare.”
The topics editorially treated in
the Ameiicau Monthly Review of
Reviews for February are the
Nicaragua Canal proposition now
before congress, the Canadian and
Erie Canal projects, underground
transit in New Yorkand elsewhere,
the currency and business situation,
the treasury and the banks, the
popular election of senators, Mr.
Beveridge’s speech in the senate
on the Philippine question, our
tariff, policy in Puerto Rico and
Cuba, the meaning of “neutrality”
in the Boer war, and the strength
and weakness of the Boer position.
“The First Night of a Play.”
“Through the Slums with Mrs.
Baliington Booth,” “What it Means
to be a Librarian,” by Herbert
Putnam, Librarian of Congress,
and “The Pew and the Man in it,”
by lan Maclaren, are among the
notable features of the February
Ladies’ Home Journal. An Amer
ican Mother answers conclusively
“Have Women Robbed Men of
Their Religion?” and there is an
interesting article on Mile. Cliam
inade, the famous composer and
pianist. Another article describes
“Frank Stockton’s New Home 111
West Virginia ” The opening
chapters of “The Parson’s Butter
fly,” anew serial by Mrs. Charles
Terry Collins, are also presemed.
Molly Donahue discusses woman’s
rights with Mr. Dooley, and “Edith
and I in Paris,” “Her Boston Ex
periences,” and “The Autobiog
raphy of a Girl” with increasing
interest. The pictorial feature, “In
Honor of St. Valentine,” by Alice
Barber Stephens, will recall some
happy, bygone days. By the Cur
tis Publishing Company, Phila
delphia. One dollar a year; ten
cents a copy.
The Self Culture Magazine for
February shows no diminution in
the rapid strides it has been mak
ing to the forefront of the maga
zine world during the many months
past. Its new’ cover is a genuine
*vork of art, and its pages do not
belie its exterior. Thoroughly
healthy in tone and free from sen
sational illustration or reading mat
ter it is par excellence the maga
zine for the family. Its contents
are, moreover, so varied in char
acter and of such intense interest
that all classes of readers must
find within its cove'rs several ar
ticles which appeal particularly to
their individual tastes. Of its
eighteen principal articles no few
er than twelve deal with strictly
American subjects, making this
magazine essentially one for Amer
ican readers. The illustrated ar
ticles, pictures, describe and de
pict “The Manufacture of Amer
ican Tea;” Scenes in the Philip
pines; “Amalfi and Its Strange
Disaster;” “ ‘Tess,’ an Educated
Chimpanzee;” “The Man Vi ho
Wrote ‘David Harum;’ ” and “Our
Cattle Industry,” Other papers
treat of: “Mary the Mother of
Washington; I’he Race Suprem
acy in Africa;” “Uncle Sam as a
Builder;” and “The True Glory of
Nations.”' Appropriate to the sea
son is an article on “The Festival
of St. Valentine.” Of great inter
est to lovers of nature is “Ornith
ology from a Car Window.” Time
lv also is “Washington Notes —
Gossip from the Capital.” “An
American Crom well—Nathaniel
Bacon” is a good historical sketch
of the early Colonial rising against
Governor Berkeley in Virginia.
“Woman’s Invasion of Man’s Pro
vince as Bre^d-Winner” is further
discussed while the Educational
Department has an excellent paper
OTA S H gives color ,
flavor and firmness to
all fruits. No good fruit
can be raised without
Potash.
Fertilizers containing at least
8 to 10% of Potash will give
best results on all fruits. Write
for our pamphlets, which ought
to be in ever}’ farmer’s library.
They are sent free.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
S3 Nassau St., Near York.
on “The Teaching of Civil Gov
ernment in the public schools.”
The editorial columns review the
Necrology of 1899 and discuss the
current topics of general interest.
THREE KILLED IN A WRECK-
Passenger Train Crashes into a
Freight Nar Winston, Fla.
Lakeland, Fla., Feb. 1. —At 9:15
o’clock last nigh a rear-end collis
ion took place on Savannah, Flori
da and Western railroad at Win
ston, three miles west of this place,
hotel train No. 27 running into a
train of box cars loaded with phos
phate rock.
The passenger train and locomo
tive were completely wrecked and
Engineer C. J. Kennedy, who re
fused to leave his post, was instant
ly killed. An unknown tramp
was also killed and horribly mutil
ated. Ten or more passengers
were injured, but none seriously.
Mail Clerk Sam Herndon was
badly injured, and also his little
son, who was with him in the car.
The boy died of his injuries today.
No blame is attached to the con
ductor of the passenger train, as it
is claimed the freight was running
at a iovver rate of speed than orders
called for.
Rules in Farming.
Boaz in Southern Farm Magazine.
Don’t try any costly experiments
bn a costly scale.
Don’t buy anything of any de
scription whatsoever, especially a
house, from a peddler who tells you
he is losing money by it, because
he is going away and don’t expect
to return.
Don’t fail to “ra se your own vit
tles,” and then be sure to raise'a
little more “vittles.” The farmer
who always has something of that
kind to spare will be as sure to
prosper as the faro banker who
swaps you ivory chips for green
backs.
My standard for a successful
farmer may be considered too high,
but I believe he requires a more
extended ability, a more diversified
education and experience than one
in almost any other kind of occu
pation. You may know’ how to
“hoe corn and dig potatoes,” you
may learn how to perform all the
manual labor required in the rou
tine of ordinary crops, but you will
find tiiat far more is necessary on
a well-appointed farm if you keep
your improvements in “apple-pe
order.” your stock in .first class
condition, and at the same time get
all out of your land that it is capa
ble of producing.
The Country Boy’s Chance-
Southern Farm Magazine,
I here are undoubtedly many op
portunities in industry awaiting
young men, but the young men
must decide for themselves whether
they are qualified to seize the op
poitunities, and in the case of those
engaged in farm work, whether
they will better their condition by
changing, their occupation. If the
South is to become what it should
be it must draw largely upon its
country boys or upon those living
in the smaller towns to equip its
industrial undertakings. There
are country-bred boys eminently
fitted to meet the demand, and with
increased opportunities for indus
trial training there will be many,
more. A young man, however,
who has no more reason for seek
ing such emplyment than being
tired of working at home will do
well to consider carefully all the
circumstances before he turns his
back upon the farm. Work on the
farm is hard, it is true, but it is
free from many of the ills which
fall to the lot of young men who
leave the country in pursuit of
easier or more agreeable work.
The Tariff For Puerto Rico-
Washington, D. C , Jan. 28.
Administration officials are mani
festing interest in the legislation
now before both houses of congress
providing a form of government for
tue Island of Puerto Rico and reg
ulating. the tariff rates on imports
from the island into the United
States.
It can be stated that the presi
dent is willing that a small or nom
inal rate of duty shall be imposed
on imports from the island, and it
is understood that he is not urging
lelay in legislation affecting its
status pending a decision by the
supreme court as to whether
Puerto Ri.eo is a part of fhe United
States.
“Iltens Are Fruits,
Voids are out leaves.” Ii is not what
we say, but whst Hood’s Sarsaparilla
oes that tells the story, The ninny
wonderful cures effected by this merli
•ine are the Iruits by which it shoulc he
Indeed, These prove >t to be the great,
unequalled remedy for dyspepsia, rheu
matism, scrofula, salt rheum, catarrh
,nd all other ailments due to impure or
lnpoverished blood.
b od’s Pills arb nou-irritating, mild,
effective.
There is no secret of success in
business. All you have to do is to
attend to your business and go
thead, —Cornelius Vanderbilt,
J ! rcm VT/rs . Sun tor
to 97/rs. !Pinkham m
[LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. 76,244]
“One year ag-o last June three doc
tors gave me up to die, and as I had at
different times used your Vegetable
Compound with good results, I had too
much faith in it to die until I had tried
it again. I was apparently an invalid,
was condned to my bed for ten weeks.
(I believe my trouble was ulceration of
womb).
“After taking four bottles of the
Compound and using some of the Livwr
Pills and Sanative Wash, at the end of
two months I had greatly improved
and weighed 155 pounds, when I never
before weighed over 138. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the
best medicine I ever used, and I recom
mend it to all my friends.”— Mbs. Anna
Eva Gunter, lligginsville, Mo.
Mrs. liarnlurt Evjoyg Life Once More.
“ Dear Mbs. Pinkham—l had been
sick ever since my marriage, seven
years ago; have given birth to four
children, and had two miscarriages. I
had falling of womb, leucorrhcea, pains
in hack and legs; dyspepsia and a
nervous trembling of the stomach,
how I have none of these troubles and
can enjoy my life. Your medicine has
worked wonders for me.” —Mbs. S.
Babxiiart, New Castle, Pa.
SMALLPOX IN KENTUCKY.
Dread Disease Prevalent In Thirty
five Counties.
Louisville, Ky., Jan. 28. —The
whole state of Kentucky is at the
mercy of smallpox. With the dis
ease prevalent in about thirty-five
counties, ihe state board of health
finds itself without money’ to fight
the disease.
Secretary J. N. McCormick has
received the resignations of the
county boards of health in about a
dozen counties in which the disease
is the most serious, the last being
that of Caldweil county, where
nearly 50 per cent, of the people
are suffering from the disease. The
cause of these resignations is the
lack of money with which to com
bat the disease.
Daily requests for inspectors
come from other counties, where
smallpox undoubtedly exists, but
the state board lias no money with
which to send the inspectors, so
the county authorities refuse to
take any action.
The disease is becoming more
virulent, and fatalities are being
reported in considerable numbers.
Paducah, next to Princeton, shows
the largest percentage of afflicted
people, and the whites arc begin
ning to take the disease.
Dr. McCormick, the secretary’,
has advanced the state board SISOO
out of his own pocket to fight the
disease, but refuses to do anything
further.
E.&W. K. K. OP Alij&
Taking Etlect Oct. 28, 1895.
So 1 Passenger—W No 2 Passenger— Km<
DAILY. DAILY.
Lv Cartersville lO.OOain. Lv Pell City 7.12 a
“ Stilesboro.. 10.33 “ “ Coal City 7.40 “
•• Tayl’rsv’le 111.48 “ “ Ragland 9.20 ••
Rockmart .11.22 “ “ Duke’s ...10.40 “
“Grady 11.50 “ “ Piedm0nt....12.38 p*
“ Cedartown.. >2.35 pm “ Warner’s 1.30“
“ Warner’s ...1.11 pin “ Cedartown.. 2.25 “
" Piedmont,.. 2.10 “ “Grady . 2.44 “
“ Duke’s .. 4.05 “ “ Kookmart... 3.08 •
“ Ragland. .. 5.30“ “ Ta.vPrsv’le.. 3.36 “
“ Coal City.... 6,10 " “ Stilesboro... 3.51 “
ArPellCitT .35“ Ar.Cartersville.. 4.18“
No 3 Passenger—West No 4 Passenger— Eai^
DAILY EX. SUNDAY. DAILY EX. SUNDAY
Lv Cartersvllle.. 6 45 pm Rv Cedartown.. 6.15 a*
“ Stilesboro... 7.12 “ •• Grady 6,33 "
“ Taylorsville 7.24 “ “ Roe km art 6.56 “
“ Rook in art... 7.49 “ •• Taylorsville..7. 2l “
Grad.v 8.12 “ " Stilesboro 7.33 “
ir Cedartown... 8,30 “ lAr atCartersville 800 •
No. 35 Passenger—W No. 34 passenger—k.
SUNDAY ONLY. SUNDAY ONLY
IjY Cariersville.,l 15 p ill Lv Cedartown 11.20
" 5ti1e5b0r0....1.37 " “ Grady ...11.33
“ Taylorsville 1.47 “ “ R0ckmart....11.53 “
" K00kmart....2.07 “ “ Taylorsville 12.13 pa
“ Grad.v 2.27 “ " Stilesboro.... 12.23 “
Ar Cedartown...2.4o “ Ar Cartersvllle..l2.4s *
Foreclosure of Mortgage.
D. W. K Peacock \ Foreclosure of mortemire in
vs j Bartow Superior Court,
Afines Lavlite. ; July term. 1899,
It being represented to the court by the peti
tion oi li. v\ . K. Peacock, that on the 20th day
of February 1897. A ifm-s Lavltte executed .ni
'delivered to John W. Akin and was thereafter
translen ed and assigned to the said petitioner a
mortßHße on certain real estate lviiui and being;
in Bartow county, Georgia, and described as
follows: The larm where I now live and which
belongs to me. consisting of above 53 acres, and
beinit the place 1 bonuht from Newton Cochran
in the 17th district and 3d section olsnid county
of Bartow and state of Georstia, bounded on the
north by F. M. Martin’s pliice. east.b.v the T. H,
Powell place, soulb by the K. T. Leke place and
west by the S. E Garner farm. being; parts ol
lots Nos.-669, H&2 and 700. for the purpose ot se
curing; fhe payment of a certain promissory note
for $52 50 executed and delivered to said Akin
and thereafter transferred and assigned to the
s'id petitioner, on the 20th dav of February,
1897, due October 1, 1897. with luterest on tiie
principal from maturity at the rate of ' pereent.
per annum, and lfl per cent, attorney s fees.
11 is ordered, that the said defendant pav into
this cour’ by the first day of the next term
1 hereof, the principal, interest,, attorney’s fees
leasaciedit of $lB 50 paid on November 2 1897,
and costs, due ou said note, or show cause why
the sHid defendant should n>t pay the same,
or that in default thereof the aforesaid niort
pnif’be foreclosed and the equity of redemption
of ihe said defendant therein be foiever barred,
and that service of this rule be perfected on said
de’e.ndant according to law.
In open court this August 5, 1899
PAUL F. A KIN. A. W. FITF,.
PI intifiTs Att’v. j. s. C. C. O.
GEORGIA, Bartow’’ounty,
I, w. W. Roberts, clerk of tne Superior Court
of said county, hereby certify as such that the
foreiroinir is a rru“ and correct copy of the orig
inal rule nisi eranted in said ease. Witness my
hand and seal
This August 5. 1899.
W. W. ROBERTS, rierk
Snperior Poijrt I’Hmn- Pn Ga.
CURED with referable
I IkC 8 D ■ Remedies. Have cured
Lr B \y I KJ I many thousand
called hopeless. In t#t
cays at lead two-thirds of all symptoms remov
al; Testimonials and TEN DAYS t rest ment free.
urn., u. n. GREES ’3 SGSS, Box K. Atlanta, ua
farm loans NEGOTI ATPn
TIILIZSJZ & MILSB*
Attorney** at I~ Nv
CARTEICSVILLE, <U.
Commercial anil Corporation p,
J fact*.
ami Collections.
Offices withOmige T. w vn„
Bank of f'artersviiie. filer
OR. WILLIAM L. CASON
DENTIST- ’
Teeth Without Plates a e P eci aitf
Office over Young Bros. DnmSt,,
_-CARTEhSVILLE. C A
iH. GEO < OEKTJEIP
Veterinary Surgeon
Office at Ga* Works. Telephone ’
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
Mares and Cows attended in doli VerT
W.P.4 L. W, BURf
Chamberlin & Johnson 15,
ATLANTA, GA.
Fillings sl,o° up. SeJ
ot I Belli piH) to slo 00, • Twentv
carat Gold Crowns.ss.oo. Gold
per tooth Ail work giiai-amS
to please. Correspondence solicited *
THE HEBT
sawn# rnecite
OF ALL KINDS.
Needles, Shuttles, Repairs, Etc.
Bicjcies and Appiiaims
UNION SUPPLY CO.
In Store o r Mason Music Cos., ncarthe
Book Store.
Cartersville, Ga.
E. BOY D.
ilisrctiani Tain
IMPORTED FINE WOOLENS.
Just Received Fall
and Winter Samples
Suits made to order. Firsi-class
workmanship guaranteed. Pauls,s3.so
and up Suits, sl2 50 and up. cleaning
and repairing on shortest notice.
Bank Block. CARTERSVII.LE, GA,
News and Opinions
OF
National Importance
The Sun
A LONE
CONTAINS BOTH.
Daily, by mail, - - $6.00 a year
Daily and Sunday by mail, sßJ)oavear
The Sunday Sun
Is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in
the world
Price sc. a copy. By mail, $2 a year
Address THK SUN', New York.
$1 AAA i wm e
Given
CASH ! Away.
On February 14, 1900*
To AerntN Sending: Subscribers to
SELF CULTURE MAGAZINE.
Two Hundred and Fiftv Dollars to tne
agent sending in tne largest list—slM-‘
00. $75.00, $25 00, sls 00, $lO 00 and sc on,
a total of 5® Cash awards; and in addi
tion very large commission will be gif*
en, making the most liberal proposition-
Send lor lull partii-ularsand freeequi
ment. Profitable work for intelligent
dersons. Semi two references.
THE WERNER COMPANY.
Dept H. Akron, 0.
Wanted,
100 Good Hiffli Grade Heifer
Calves
Six to twelve m< Hths old, healthy :!n< *
sound.
Good Grade Milch Cows,
Fresh
In milk, with either first or serofl
calves.
Healthy, Sound and in Good < )r ‘
drr.
Good milkers.
Good Grade, Slirosliire
Oxford Sheep
(Ewes) Six to eighteen months 0
(six to twelve months old preferred.)
Healthy and Sound.
Dr. Howard K. Felto>*
Near Cartersville, Ga.
11-29—1 m. ___ _
Are You Weak l ,
Weakness manifests itself in the I® BB 0
ambition and aching bones. The blo® J
watery; the tissues are wasting—the
being opened for disease. A bottle of bf
Iron Ritters taken in time will restore 7 f
strength, soothe your nerves, make .
blood rich and red. Do you more ;; ’ ;!e . 1
tiian an expensive s'-vird course of me 1 ‘
L'.Mwas’ Iron Riti- n is sold by all de***