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CmicrstriUc °dfßk Aitwitmi.
VOLUME V.
li€>f>gS. Bl®ll I
WIKLeTY CO.’S
STORE.^= —
(ITOBTH ©3T POST OPPICB.)
FOR EVERYTHING IN THE
l£sok aai. liati
mammamam
Their news stands are kept constantly supplied with the latest and best paper
and periodicals. They take subscriptions for every
newspaper and periodical published.
nag* mmammmam —
Great bargains in pocket and lull books, ladies’and misses shopping bags, etc
They keep on hand a large stock of marbles, tops, balls, bats, school satchels, book
straps, slates, pencils, ink, paper, books, etc.
All orders by mail promptly attended to. Address,
WIKI'S & ©.,
OA RTERSVILLE, GA.
SANFORD L. VANPi V ERL
Wholesale and Retail
FURNITURE HOUSE.
NOW
w i mm t
1 I have on hand one of the b.rgest stocks of furniture ever exhibited in North
Georgia, and can fit you up in a handsome suit of fur
niture- for little money. Call and sec if I don’t
DUPLICATE ATLANTA PRICES.
S AFFORD L. YAKDIYERF
BARTOW LEAKE’S
Flk© liisiirait.ee fMllee*
Represents Sms of tie tf 11 Firs Insurance Companies of tie WorM,
When you want Insurance in First-class companies and at adequate rates call on
or address me and your orders shall have immediate attention. I also represent the
McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, of Chicago, whose machines for durability
and excellence cannot bo surpassed. I have the exclusive right for the sale of the
ustly popular Glenn Mary Coal, and will always keep on hand a full supply during
be coming fall and winter.
Feeling very much encouraged on account of your past patronage and soliciting
a continuance of the same, with a still greater increase, I am
Very Truly Yours,
BARTOW LEAKE.
*5 Tried in the Crucible. !^
About twenty years ago I discovered a little 3ore on my cheek, and the doctors pro
nounced it cancer. I have tried a number of physicians, out without receiving any perma
nent benefit. Among the number were one or two specialists. The medicine tney applied
was like fire to the sore, causing intense pam. I saw a statement in the papers telling what
S. S. S. had done for others similarly afflicted. I procured some at once. Before I had used
the second botile the neighbor- couid notice that my cancer was healing up. Siy general
health had been baa for two 01 tnr. years - 1 baa a hacking cougn ana spit blood contin
ually. I had a severe pam in mv hr, ast. After taking six bottles of S. S, S. my cough left
me I grew stouter than I had > for several years, lily cancer has lioaied over all but
a little spot about the siae of ahr an and it is 'rapidly disappearing. I would advise
every one with cancer to give S. ; -2 uir tr ini. *
Feb 1C 1880 - NAK< Y ‘ ONATJOnfiY, As'n'o Grove, Tippecanoe Oo. f Ind.
. Swift's Specific is entirely veg ; and seems to euro cancers bv fiwckl" oat the impu
ties from the blood. Treatise on a! and Skin Ihsca-cs m .i’w.i r r , * **
! ; • SWIi-T SPECIFIC Cdt Driver 0, Atlanta, Gft.
CARTERSYILLE, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER IT, 1880.
TO THK.MEMOKY OF GEN. K. E. LEE
BY W. T. LOCKHAKT,
As’t Surgeon late Confederate States
Army.
May he sleep the sleep ol a gallant man,
‘Neath the sod of Virginia, that once hap
py land,
Which gAve birtbio his vein,and strength
to his hand, f
To uphold a bright banner, that emblem
so grand,
Which floated in triurn p o’er fields wet
with gore,
But now' lies an emblem of mourning
and w6e,
In the grave with brave Lee, and thou
sands of more,
And sleeps the deep sleep and will rustle
no more
O’er the homes of the free, and the fields
red with gore.
May his spirit take wings to its Creator
ou High,
And therej-est in peace, and know not
a sigh;
Free’d from this w'orld of sin and no more
to die,
To rest in endless bliss with the angels on
High,
And exckiim iu pfoud triumph, the Vic
bW-L'won!
But won not by sword, neither cannon
nor gun,
But through God and Jesus Christ, the
only begotten son,
TV hose commands he obeyed; which were
“come, sinner, come.”
May liis spirit still hover o’er the land of
birth,
And a beacon light to the comrades on
fearth,
Who are falling into line, “may the last
be the first,’!
When the long roll is sounding, “cursed be
the earth,”
To rally to their colors from land and
from sea,
Exclaiming “we are coming to re-enforce
Lee,”
Who has fought the good fight and in
Heaven must be,
Where we hope to wake up to a last
reveiiie.
May he command us again on Heaven’s
bright Shore,
When tlie army is full from company to
corps,
With the ranks and the file of the troops
here below,
And those “passing muster” who have
gono on before.
Then with Lee as our guide, and Christ
to ‘command,
With banners unfurled, and swords in
our hands,
We will fight the last battle allotted to
man,
And exclaim “it is finished” with Victory
in hand,
And yield up the laurels to the great
I Am.
Farewell to the world, to fife and to
drum,
Also to cannon, the sword, the gun,
We leave you on earth where strife first
begun,
In taking the life of Christ’s only Son,
The world, may it own you to will and to
do
The deeds of Apolpon find his wicked
crew,
Farewell to friends, relatiyes, and enemy
too,
The Olive branch, a token of peace we
offer to you,
Accept it, we’re passing from earth with
Heaven in view,
Where Lee and his army will be waiting
for’ you.
Ex-Congressman Geo. It. Black ox
Sylvauia, Ga., is dead.
Prohibition goes into effect in Bald
win county, on the Bth of December.
Anew paper has just been issued at
Fayetteville, Ga., called the Chronicle.
A number of new houses are going up
m Milledgeville, and the old town seems
to be on a boom.
‘‘Twenty widows own twenty adjoin
ing ferns in Green county, Ohio.”
What a country for the relict hunter!
Friday, at his home near Hollywood
in Richmond county, J. B. Frainer, an
id and respected citizen, was found dead
in bed from natural causes.
Judge Fain has dissolved the order
c:joining the State Treasurer from can
celling bonds of the Marietta and North
Georgia Railroad for want of jurisdic
t on.
Though this has not been a good ap
ple year, Gainsville handles more than
she ever did. Chestnuts are very plen
t fill, and the merchants are shipping
them freely.
Miss Lula Jordan, of Washington, lias
a little baby shoe that was worn by
President Cleveland’s wife while an in
fant. It was gived to Miss Lula when
she was at school at Staunton, Va., by a
cousin of Mrs. Cleveland.
W. II Searcy is whooping up the citizens
of Griffin and urging them to subscribe
(he 825,000 required to secure the Griffin,
L Grange and Birmingham road. Only
815,000 are lacking, and he thinks he
will bo able to secure the amount.
Mainland 13 taking in one iudustry
alone, a prominent share in the business
• ioom of the South. That State employs
60,000 persons in patting up canned
goods, an industry in which she now
loads all the States ef the Union.
The prop = inter of aL. misvillebrewery
ha3 in his < dice one of the most wonder
ful pieces of clock mechanism ever seen
in that city. The ticker is about two
feet in diameter, and occupies a niche
in the wall. Nothing seems strauge
about the clock until the long hand
points to the hour. Just before the
clock should sound out a mechanical
man jumps up from the hole behind the
dock and elevates his right hand, in
which is a !! pony” beer glass. The lips
open, and the words “larger beer” are
spoken as many times as the Clock
should strike. The mechanical imita
tion of the human voice is so perfect as
to be startling. The clock was manu
factured in Strasbourg, aud was purchas
ed for a large sum of money.
* ONLY A COQI~ETTE
A Posthumous Sketch by Madam George
Sand.
CONTINUED —END.
“There i3 nothing more to say,” I
answered, “Your love is returned by the
woman w'hom you have made its object,
and'she will marry you if you ask her.”
“How do you know' all this?”
“I have it from her lips.”
“Did she tell you unasked?”
“No. She was stung and wounded by
a sneer from you, and she was
weeping her sorrow out upon my bosom,
I won her confidence and drew the story
from her.”
“Upon your bosom!” he repeated con
temptuously. “Why a month ago you
would have sooner put an adder in your
bosom.”
“I w T as a fool then.”
He laughed derisively.
“And yet, you then thought me a fool
because I seemed likely to fall in loyc
with this woman. Now', beyond doubt,
you will think me a fool if I do not fall in
love with her,”
“I tell you, I have changed my mind
since I so foolishly denounced her.”
“You may change it again.” It will at
least be prudent for me to w'ait and see.”
“My mind is fixed now,” I answer
ed, savagely.
“Parbleu! It seemed fixed before.”
“Then I had accepted your character
ization of her; now I speak from my own.”
“That, I suppose is equivalent to call
ing me a fool.”
“You interpret my meaning about as
correctly as you judge the woman whom
you pretend to love.”
The grief I thc-n saw in his eyes and
heard in his voice will never leaye me
until memory alsogoe3.
“Pretend! pretend!” he cried, pressing
his hand upon his brow'. “Oh, God! how
you are making me suffer!”
Still I did not relent.
“Pretend,” I answered,” seems to me to
be the correct word. If you love this
woman so much why do you not wed
her?”
‘Why do you so mock me,” he cried*
bitterly.
“You mock yourselt.”
“Do you wish to drive me mad alto*
gether? If 3'ou do 3 r ou have set about it in
the right w r ay.”
“I cannot make you what you already
arc. No one but a madman could be so
unreasonable. She loves you and you
say you love her. If that is true, w'hy
do you not marry her—or do you flttd it
impossible to reconcile anything so
prosaic as matrimony with your fanciful
and poetic notions?”
“Prosaic! You know I would - '-rifice
everything I cherish to call her ’ . wife!
You but —",
He paused.
“You can call her wife without rific
ing anything,” I remarked bluiv
He came over to my side an>. < me
by the hand.
“Sister,” he began, “w'hy will . >u per
sist in torturing me with hopes—”
I placed one of his hands over his mouth
and stopped him.
“Will you listen to me, brother, for two
minutes?”
He nodded his head.
“You say you loye this woman?”
“Yes.”
“And you are anxious to marry her?”
“Yes.”
“Assurance of her love, then, is all that
you are waiting for?”,’
Again he inclined his head.
“That makes the problem an pay one
to solve. She has confessed to . that
she loves you and that her hand yours
for the asking. Now, I can see no : other
obstacle. Offer her your heart an. hand
in exchange for hers, and all i.”
“She would reject me instant’ did
anything of the kind.”
“Nonsense!”
“Now listen to me,” he s;v... This
woman, with all her be.r ; , i no
truth in her. She has scut ' man
to his death and has brut i :b .rt of
many another . Do not curl y \o so
scornfully. No man can in ■’ he- with
out receiving the wound “cu- , and
you, lacking man’s emotion ever
know what it is to hav* nearest
hopes answered with sue. a .Oman’s
laughter. As you said, when <ve first
came into these mountains, though you
now'seem to have forgotten it, 1 m the
only man she ever approached who did
not succumb to her resistless fascinations.
That is w r hy she came here and that, also,
is why she told you she loved me. Such
women cannot love. They are merely
sreial actresses. She is useing you as a
decoy to lure me ou to my death, for it
w'ould kill me to be refused by her; I love
her too well to survive defeat.”
“You misjudge her. She ! you—
of that lam certain. lf ; —”
“No, no,” he said. “She h or "ived
you, as she has deceived every > ■ < tse.”
“I could not be deceived m oh a
matter.”
“Could not? You were deceived ime
You never once dreamed that I :oved
her until I told you. If you coul i no,
read me, whom you have known so long,
how could you exDect me to believe that
you read her any more successfully?
No, sister, you are wrong. She not'
love me; if she did my heart ,v tell
me so.”
•‘Do not be sure of that . Sh- t no
know that you love her H r - not
speak as plainly as you irnag
“Again yoTi afe ffSpeMlj.3' Tier
w T ord. If she did not know : love
her she would have gone aw o here
long ago. She is determined n > be
by aie>. wmJ bef departs re is
only delayed until she gains her purpose
in coming here—my undoing.”
I said no more to him, but I told her all
that had transpired, and my faith in her
was completely vindicated by her tears
and distress. She had not deceived me;
I was fully convinced of that. She loved
him madly.
The first few days which followed were
miserable enough for us ail, but we at
iength regained our composure and made
everything seem as it had been before.
She was most disturbed. No woman
ever full a man’s doubts and injustice
more keenly.
In every possible way, except by ever
avowing it in so many words, she tried
to show him how faithfully she loved
him, but availed her nothing. Had she
loved him lc-ss, she might have employed
her woman’s art to better advantage and
so unkind reserve. But art cannot be ex
ercised where love, in its highest sense,
exists.
The summer was fast dwindling and
there were still no sign of his relenting.
Nothing, apparently, could make him be
lieve in her.
For w'eeks she submitted to his un-
W'orthy doubts, with the extremest hu
mility and patience; and then, all at once,
her w'hole manner changed and she be
came frigidity itself. It w r as the very ro
acion w'hich I know eventually must
come, unless she rvas either a saint or an
imbecile.
As I had expected, it was the one thing
necessary to bring him to her feet, and he
sought her now as much ashc ha and avoided
lier before.
She begged me to pursuade him not to
humiliate lximself by asking her hand, as
she would certainly reject him if he did.
I told him, and it precipitated exacily
the thing she had hoped it would
avert; that very day he asked her to wed
him.
“You have waited too long,” she said.
“I w'ill not even now' deny that I love
you, but you have forfeited my respect.
Nothing could induce me to marry you
now r , though, w'ithin a week to be your
wife v;a3 my dearest aim and hope. You
have done that w'hich no woman can
forgive, ar.d, though sending you away is
to bre i my ow'n heart, I command you
to go c"b of my presence forever.”
lie simply said, “You haye triumphed,”
and then walked quietly away. An hour
later he had left the village.
When he was gone, she went up in the
mountains wild with her misery and
despair.
Night came and she did not return.
In the week that followed we searched
for her everywhere, but she never came
back.
Deep down in my heart I cherished the
hope that she had found my brother, re
lented, and gone away with him; but I
never even whispered it except to my
self.
When there was no longer any hope of
finding her, 1 left the mountains, too.
My brother seemed to have mjrste
riously disappeared. There was no trace
of him anywhere.
Three years elapsed and still there was
no word of either of them. I mourned
them as dead.
I again went to the little village in
Switzerland, and got a melancholy pleas
ure out of strolling about where they, my
lost ones, had been with me in the by
gone days.
Four weeks after my arrival my broth
er suddenly came. He had been travel
ing ever since the moment of his dis
missal, and only just returned from liis
yarious wanderings.
He w r as horrified at the story of the
disappearence of the woman whom he
had so strongly loved and wronged, and
at once expressed the opinion that she
had been lost in the mountains. Eyery
day he would wander about, aimlessly,
and one morning he went away at
sunrise.
When he returned in the evening he
■was a gibbering maniac!
In the front of his coat be had thrust a
sprig of sweet brier, the flowers and
leaves of which were the largest and most
fragrant I ever saw. To this he address
ed all of the wild, unintelligible words he
said. It was easy to see that he was
hopelessly insane, and I was also nearly
demented with grief.
At last he pulled the sprig of sweet
brier out of bis coat, and thrusting it into
my bosom started out of the cottage and
signed for me to follow him.
I -went with him and three stout Swiss
peasants followed close behind us.
Every few minutes he would stop, bend
over me, kiss the bit of sweet brier and
mutter something to it.
Finally he took us down into a nar
row and lonesome valley, which was
over-hung on three sides by high cliffs,
and was carpeted with the most luxuriant
grass. Under the tallest cliff in the midst
of the grass was a sweet brier bush. I saw
at once that the sprig in my bosom,which
you now hold in your hand, was broken
from that very bush.
I saw the frightful thing that unseated
his reason. The grass concealed a flesh
less skeleton, and the jewels and shreds
of cloth which clung to it disclosed the
awful fact that the crumbling bones we
saw were those of my brother’s lost love!
Blinded by her agony and despair she
j had fallen over the cliff on that awful day,
and death had so ended her troubles.
Ihe sweet brier bush had grown
straight out of the which had
l once held her heart, as ii it sprung
I from and been nourished by her heart
| itself.
The earthquake made itself ielt again,
Sunday, iu South Carolina, * '
A FIEND’S DEEDS.
SAM PURPLE MURDERS HIS WIFE
AND INFANTS.
And Tries to Kill His Wile’s bister and a
Son—Trying to Smother the Son
Taken Out of Jail and Lynch
ed at His Home.
St. Louis, November 10.—A special
from Learned, Ivan., says: Near Marine,
in the southeast corner of Hodgeman
county, lived, until las’. Friday, Sam Pur
ple, whose natural brutality was en
hanced by chronic drunkenness. His
family consisted of himself, his wife, his
wife’s sister and four little children, the
youngest of which w'as only three weeks
old. Friday morning his wife arose as
usual and prepared breakfast. She then
went to awaken her husband, which en
raged him. He sprang from his bed, and,
seizing him revolver, shot his wife
through the body, killing her instantly.
The new born babe was next fired at
with the same result. He next shot and
killed another of his children. His sister
in law, Miss Lowker, was then fired at,
the ball passing through the arm and
lodging in his shoulder. As this emptied
his revolver, he proceeded to load his
shotgun, in order to complete the work.
A slight mistake in this was the only
thing that stopped the deadly proceed
ings. The powder was poured into one
barrel of the gun, and by error the shot
into the other. With this he endeavored
to blow off the head of another child, but
as there was nothing except powder in
the barrel, the child’s face was only seri
ously burned by the explosion. A heavy
blanket was wound around the suffering
child, and this securely wrapped with
heavy wire, in the hope that he might ac
complish by suffocation what he failed in
by the use of the shotgun. The child will
recover, although slightly disfigured about
the face.
The murderer then mounted a horse
and started across the fields toward Ma
rine, with the avowed purpose of murder
ing his wife’s father and mother. Before
he could accomplish this, how'ever, the
wounded young lady had made her way
to the village and notified the inhabitants
of what had happened, and they had con
gregated for resistance. Seeing that his
plan was frustrated, Purple hastened to
Telmore and surrendered himself to the
authorities. He was placed in jail and
the jail surrounded by a heavy guard.
Last night a mob of about 100 w r ent in
quietly to the jail and demanded the
prisoner, who was delivered with little
ceremony. He was then taken back to
the scene of his crime and hinged to a
tree. Only one member of the family es
caped serious injury, and that was the
murderer’s little boy, who had hid under
his bed w’ben he heard his father coming.
Mr. A. J. Williams, of Gla scock
county, lias a hog that lias fasted forty
days and nights and is still living.
This hog fell in an old well about six
weeks ago, where he remained without
food or water until a few days ago. He
weighed about 150 younds when ho fell
in, and when taken out weighed sixty
pounds.
“What pretty children you have!”
said the new minister to the proud moth
er of three little ones.
“Ah, my little dear,” said he, as he
took a girl of son his lap, “are you the
oldest of the family?”
“No, ma’am,” responded the little
miss, with the usual accuracy of child
hood, ‘ ‘my pa’s older’n me. ”
There is a pretty good evidence that
Celia Monroe, a colored womm, who
died iu Kansas City a few days ago, was
125 years old. She is the mother of six
teen children, the foul* youngest of
whom are living at the ages of 81, 63, 58
and 50 years. Her second husband
died fifty years ago. A week before she
died she was about the house sweeping.
A cat at Galena, 111., climbed a tree and
attempted to pounce upon a group of
E iglislr sparrows which were sitting on
a branch. The sparrows attacked their
enemy with their bills and soon it was
surrounded by hundreds of angry birds.
The birds compelled the cat to jump to
the ground. They pursued it peeked
out its eyes, and finally killed it.
A novelist makes his heroine throw
SIOO,OOO of her own money into the sea
so as to relieve her lover of the suspicion
of being mercenary. She Should have
given the money to her lover to start a
paper intended to fill a long felt want.
She would have lost it just the same and
it would have been a little more natural.
Irate Parent—“ Well, sir, when I was
a young man I never squandered my
father’s money in such a scandalous way
as you are doing.”
Son (who knows his father’s weakness
for cards)—No, perhaps not; but you
have been making up for it by squander
ing my father’s money at a furious rate
ever since you were a young man.”
The “big trees’ of California will soon
bo extinct. Seventeen ljimber companies,
owning from 3,000 to 25,000 acres of iai
Wood forest each, are waging the war ° L
extermination with ail the j
know to the modern logging no
demand for the wood >
r mills re kept wA to the limit'
dl eta forest. targe,
but the forces employed against them are
aWJ it au irresistible.
NUMBER 27
XOVEM HER SKIES.
" luit the Student uf Astronomy Will See
In the Heaven#,
Fiovidence Joarauf,
Neptune is morning star until the 18th,
and then becomes evening star. He
takes the lead among the brotherhood
on the November annals, for he reaches
during the month the most important
epoch in his course as far as terrestiul
observation is concerned, On the 18th,
at 2 o’clock in the afternoon, he is iu
opposition with the suu. At that time
ho is directly opposite the suu, as the
term “opposition” implies, rising in the
east as the sun sets in the west. He is
then at Ins nearest point to the earth,
our little globe lying directly between
him and the sun. With a good telescope
and a clear atmosphere the most distant
planet that obeys our central sun may be
easily fouud, when his place is accurate
ly noted. A moug the surrounding stars,
which are always bright points iu th>.
most powerful instruments, a tiny
sphere will suddenly leap into being of a
pale blue color. This is far-away Nep
tune, a charming telescopic object, and
well worth the trouble of patient inves
tigation.
Saturn is morning star throughout the
month. He is now lihely situated for
observation, rising at the beginning of
the month at 9 o’clock, and at the close
aoout 7 o’clock in the evening. He
snincs with a serene light, and may be
readily found late in the evening in the
Northeast, having changed his position
but little from that of last mouth. The
twin stars, Castor and Pollux, are north
of him, and the red star Procyon is on
thesfuth,
Jupiter is morning star, and is rapid
ly reaching a point far enough from the
sun to make him beautiful to behold as
the dawn breaks. He rises on the Ist
more than an hour before the suu, and
must then be looked for iu the southeast
about three degrees north of Spica. L’t
is impossible to mistake him for .. y
other star if the observer has a posit n u
commanding the southeastern horizon
and commences his quest an hour before
sunrise. Even at his present small dis
tance from the sun he asserts his
sovereignty, and shines as if he were a
small sun himself, when it is remember
ed that his light reaches us from a po’ t
nearly 500,000,000 miles distant.
Uranus is morning star. lie may be
traced about three degrees south >f
Gamma Virginia, and i3 approaching < e
earth.
Venus is morning star, but almost . •
her lowest estate, for she will be visit e
only for a few days at the comment,-
ment of the mouth, after which liar
lesser light will be hidden iu the rays f
the sun, into whose near precincts she
has entered.
Mars is evening star. He sets abi. 5
two hours after tne suu, but he is so f :
away, so small and so far south, that i
might almost be blotted from the sky
and not be missed by the ordinary ob
server. At the close of the month,
Saturn, Uranus, Jupiter and Venus are
morning stars; Mam, Mercury and Nep
tune are evening stars.
One of the marked features of the
month is the recurence of the Novewlv r
meteors. The November me L eor-zone is
a gigantic ellipse peopled with countk is
myriads of tiny metors. Its periheli n
rests on the earth’s orbit, its aphee ;i
being beyond the orbit of Uranus. ;'s
boundaries are. therefore entirely with. i
the solar system, and it probably c.v s
its presence within the solor borders ■ o
the attraction of Uronus, whocaptured a
comet when it came too near his migh y
mass and changed his orbit into . >
ellipse. The comet in disintegrating h
being transformed into swarms of parti
cles foliowing iu the train of the coun t
and forming the meteoric showers. O i
the Ist, of November the earth plun s
through this meteor zone, the men
and the earth moving with name e
velocity and iu different directi .
The metors come with full tilt upo . o
earth’s atmosphere, are mflamod by t. .e
concussion and descend iu the form of
falling stars. Comet 1, 18GG, is f e
name of the imprisoned comet, and the
maximum show occurs once in thirty
three years, for then when the comet
comes round the swarming particles a e
thicker than the leaves iu Vailamtorosa,
and there is veritable rain of fan: g
stars. The year 1899 will usher in the
grand exhibition, and until that t' e
observers must be sontented with so >
times a few and sometimes many
ters.o
| The U. S, Supreme Court recency
S rendered a decision, reversing a deci h
j of the Supreme Court of Llinos, in r, /u
j ereuce to the right of State laws co 1
i trol railroad transportation o/' Oges
i -, . - .. Z „<ru snob ivni.e.
! freight passing throng
The
I Vn,to: } st ;;f •
and nan only be regulated by Cong .
1 I’lto antiprohibitioaists of AtV <
have secured, the candidate for Mi .r
and a working majority of tho Coro ■ ].
Strike at the fountain-head the so: oo
of all evil. Is it worms that has desk y
ed the health of your child? Give Sh:
er’s Indian Vermifuge before it is loq
late. Only 25 oeata a bottle,
■