Newspaper Page Text
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DOVOLAS ,*4.*P*^
LY. (Ip Mv***) t*
elf(«n*.«*«. f ........
, oewsta, An*. 11 , 1889 .
ef Spalding
******** Bates.
SAILT-Ose ■Y—Oat doher dollar per per eqesre wiser* for for the the
et. •**
adverlfeMMSts longer
The vital question of the hour is
whether Mr. Olive of Oglethorpe is a
“csmng jfart*’^ __ |
The birthday of tien. Robert E.
Lee wifl hereafter be a legal holiday
in the 16th o! January
hi the daWkn-this honorable auniver-
•ary. Tb# Empire State w”l never
forget th e heroes ofthe Sout h.
Then is possible exaggeration in
the report that in some ofthe pockets
of thwmaa’s clothing sent out by the
"• post office com-
Wanamaker store
missions aw found. The advertis¬
.
ing department of the store may en-
The editor of the Perry Home
■
’ ' Journal, at whose place Mr. Grady
recently made an Alliance address,
says: “It is noted as a remarkable
fact that Editor H. W. Grady does
not express the same views on the
torigqUMtbflas^ge ^undated by
In a recent tour through four
southern states, rU; Louisiana, Tex-
as, Mlnflfferifipl and Alabama, Mr.
Jnstiee Lamar saw such evidences
sr cirspzzz
confirmed in the belief that at no
very distant day the south will be
THIS HEW8TA1
Montana ought to be a Democratic
Stats. Local excitement on an Issue
tUt ^ra'sM9S?aahn>ei $ ctv twx i n u re -1 y
stood last year took t be Territory
out id the Democratic column. But
with reasonably good management
on the Democratic side the influence
of Federal patronage can be over¬
come, now that the illusions of the
preeidental campaign have been dis-
Bat no extraneous Influence can
* legitimately control the result In
It is the mident voting population
of thoOk communities that will shape
their polkfee. All that any outside
can properly doisto sap-
atkm on subjects i of general
interest, In so far as Republican in¬
terference may extend beyond that
point, it will deeerve the rebuke of
the constituencies.
Democrats may hope for success in
tucky election. They have a right
Hi to tetok ter victory ta Montana if the
voters of the Montana States are
left to tkeuselrea. Even against the
pressure of Russell B. Harrisonism
they ought to win. If two out of
tiM tour new State* should go Dem¬
ocratic the result would indicate the
approach of a sweeping counter rev-
otutiea in national politics against
the feitocfaeidns of1888.
To Democrats who are solicitous
about the inability of the National
Democratic organisation to compete
for the control of the far Western
elections, there Is only this to be said;
that if the voters are ready to be
made merchandise of, the Democrats
have not the means, if they had the
will.to compete with the’'floater fund’
managers and their resources. All
that non-resident Democrats can do
is to encourage their brethren in the
V.:? effibryoeotnmonwealths to make a
stout, honest and victorious fight
for the Democratic autonomy upon
which their future prosperity de¬
pends.
Nevada proves that new States
cannot be coddled or petted into
prosperity. American wealth must
come of manly effort. The
State voters may take the decadence
of Nevada as a warning of the fate
that follows reliance on centralised
% ppotwtNr
Jartrf 8to^
it it 'esuefir©*'" '■'^*
,*r»y lietween
r | oook a: matt __ be ^ and a French
excwJjrtT#Ijr no i*ome to
I U, jcratie branch of the
L«* ..can party.
Marcel Pelonard baa been Lord
Sackville’s buUor all the time hi*
Lordship ha# been British Minister
here and has been in his service in
France long before coming to Wash¬
ington. During the same long per¬
iod his wife, Mme. Pelonard, has
done ail his Lordship’s cooking and
has done it well. Mr. Harrison nnj
turallj thought that a cook who
Was good enough, winter and sum¬
mer, for one who lived and enter-
toined so elegantly as Lord Back¬
was good enough for the White
House, at any rate for the summer
months when there are no State din-
logs and no fancy cooking is required
So Mr. Harrison’s steward offered
Mme. Pelonard an engagement to
preside over President Harrison’s
kitchen. The Madame was at the
time engaged in doing the cooking
for the historian Bancroft. But she
thought in her innocent French way
that it would be a great t hing to do
the cooking tor the White House.
Alter that, she imagined anything
Would be possible. Besides, she was
(lad to leave Mr. Bancroft's service
or*place where she and her hus¬
band could secure an engagement to¬
gether, and this prospect was open¬
ed to her at the White House. She
Was to take charge ofthe kitchen
Immediately and her husband was to
enter upon his duties as butler of
the White House on tbeffrst of Au¬
gust.
Even then Mme. Pelonard hesitated
to give up her place with Mr. Ban¬
croft unless site could have some
guarantee that the engagement
would last during the entire summer
season, which among the cooks and
butlers of Washington means all the
months np to the first of November.
Assurance was given for the summer,
she said, and a very fair promise tor
the winter. The Madame has not
been retained, and she has placed her
claim in the hands of the law repre¬
sentative of the French government,
it is said. If this be true, we may
look for the establishment of a new
court of claims, and a form of di¬
plomacy hitherto unknown in inter¬
national relations. We congratulate
the government on having for its
head hi a man who displays so much
A’ ranees In dealing with his French
domeatip. ” Ho i* mot a man to b*
swerved by aide dishes nor muzzled
by a pate de fois gras.
to response to an inquiry from
the Baltimore Manufacturers Record
the president of the Griffin Manu¬
facturing Company writes: “There is
evidently an over-production of three-
yard sheetings, drills and Southern
plaids. Without* large export trade
I fear a glut in the market and un-
remunerative prices. The hope of
Southern cotton mills is a foreign
market, and the manufacture of a
finer grade of goods by the new mills
now bring built.”
B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm.)
If you try this remedy yon will gay as many
e.hers have said, that is the best blood puri¬
fier find tonic. Write Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, j. Qa,, lor book ol convincing testimony.
V. Davie, Atlanta, 6a. (West End),
write*: “I consider that B, B. B. has perma¬
nently ft. cured meof rheumatism and sciatica.’
K. Saulter, Athens, Oa., says; “B. B. B
cored me ol an ulcer that bad resisted all oth
^Tu^Eslev, Columbiana, Ala., writes:“My
other and sister had ulcerated sore throat
•nd scrofula. B. B. B. cured them.”
Jacob F.SpODcler,Newnan,0a.,writes: “B.
B. B. entirely cured me ol rheumatism in my
shoulder*. I used six bottles.”
Baltimore, Chaa. Reinhardt, ltd., write*: No, 2038 Fountain with Street,
“I sullered bleed¬
ing that piles for bottle two olB. years, B. B. and cured am glad me." to say
one
J. J. Hardy, Toccoa, Qa., writes: “B.B. B.
Isa auick cure lor catarrh. Three bottles
cured me. I had been troubled several years.”
A. Hplnk. Atlanta, Ga., says: “One bottle
ol B. B. B. completely cured my child of
ma."
W. A. Pepper, Fredonia, Ala., writes: B. B.
B. cured my mother of ulcerated sore throat.’
Some Running Down.
If a clock "runs down,” we wind it
up, and in a few seconds it is going
lag—using along in its steady rut, But ticking—tick- if the
up time. hu¬
man system runs down we are in
great trouble, days, weeks, months
and even years are spent in vain at
tempts time to appeal Bet it to right. right. P. P. P. Abo About the this
an gre,
vegetables blood corrector would 1
the sensible course to pursue, as it is
the only really sure restorer of lost
vitality. For Rheumatism, Gout,
Scrofula, Syphilis and all Ulcerous
diseases, I*. I. P. is incomparable. It
is a first-class tonic and never fails to
cure. All druggists sell it. The in¬
gredients, Pnckly Ash, Poke Root of
and Potassium, are a guarantee
its natural medicinal paoperties.
ADVICE TO MOi’ttKRS.
Mbs. Winslow’s teething, Soothing Strop,
for children is the prescrip¬
tion of one of the best female nurses
and physicians in the United States,
and has been used for forty years
V ag the dry May, when the out
aok for crop* was gloomy, the vera¬
cious weather prophet, Wiggins, pro¬
claimed himself inspired to say that
there would be an alarming absence
of rain, and that the summer would
be a Sahara one—dry oa a bone and
parched to the core by dint of the
abnormal absence of the annual pro¬
portion of min and moisture. This
was about as near as this weather
prophet ever comes to gueasingright.
Tha months of June, July and Au¬
gust, 1889, will live in the memory
of him who is some time to be the
“oftlest inhabitant” as a most mem'
orable period on account of inces¬
sant and extensive rains and storms.
Strength to vigorously push a busi¬
ness, strength to stndy for a profes¬ house¬
hold, sion, strength strength to regulate do day’s a labor
to a
without physical pain. Do you desire
strength? If you are broken down,
have no energy, feel as if life was
stored hardly worth living, health you can strength be re¬
to robust and
by taking Brown’s Iron Bitters, a
sure cur# for dyspepsia, malaria
weakness reliable and tonic. all diseases It requiring the a
true, acts on
blood, nerves and muscles and regu¬
lates every part of the system.
Fran (or Breakout.
The modern breakfast is not the
heavy meal with which men of a gen¬
eration ago began the day. It was
once within the fashion hour to lay in two a heavy after leav- sup-
y an or
■' t bed. When the stomach the re-
during ' work hot it weather called at to
was the upon wont
man was
as ill and to resort
the farinaceous cranks
who insisted that the stomach needed
raapiag claimed tu the that morning, health go is far as
My diet large- more
preserved than on a more then
s right, but was there is popu-
some
doubt 'felt now that the gritty oat-
meal and cracked wheat are so bene¬
ficial as they were at one time sup-
posed to be. b< The agitation resulted
! n the qddit ition to summer bills of fare
Of “dairy t in „ dishes." < city like a New great York improve- where
a
i to many thousands are at the mercy
of restaurants.
There is a tendency now to substi¬
tute fruit for farinaceous food for
During breakfast, the or to cat them together. there is
summer season
nothing tem for the that fatigues better of prepares the day the than sys¬
a
matutinal meal of fresh fruit or sliced
tomatoes, or a salad with good bread
and eotfee. The eater arises from
such a breakfast with a feeling of
lightness and comfort he can derive
digested from no other and contains meal The minimum food is easily of
a
heating elements. eating Morning is Those the
proper time for fruit.
restaurants with the are intelligent becoming that favorite provide re¬
sorts Tele-
fruit for breakfast.—New York
gram. m
Clarke’s Kattract of Fla-t Cough Cure.
It is a sure cure for Whooping
Cough. It stops the whoop, and per¬
mits the child to catch its breath.
It is entirely harmless. Good for any
cough o( childhood or old age. It
heals the bronchi and lungs, and
stops the cough. For Winter or
Bronchial Cough this syrup is the
best ever discovered. Only one size,
large bottle. Price $ 1.00, at Dr. N.
N. Drewry’s drugstore. Clarke’s Flax
Soap makes the Skin smooth, soft
and white. Price 25 cents.
Extraordinary Bone Scratching.
the housesix weeks. He says: “When
I was able to get on my legs, I had
an itching sensation that nearly run
me crazy. I scratched them raw to
the bones. Tried everything with¬
out relief. I was tormented in this
way for two years. I then found
Clake’s Extract of Flax (Papillon) used it.
Skin Cure at the (p-ug Store,
and it has cured me sound and well.”
Clarke’s Flax Soap has no equal *1.00. for
Bath and Toilet. Skin Cure
Soap 25 cents. For sale at Dr. N. B.
Drewry’s drugstore.
To Toe Ladies,
There are are thousads thousads of ladies
throughout the country whose sys¬
tems are poisoned aud whose blood is
in pn impure conditiod from the ab¬
sorption of imqure matter, due to
menstrual irregularities. This class
are peculiarly benefitted by the won¬
derful tonic and blood-cleansing Root prop¬ and
er! r es of Pi ickly Ash, Poke
Polassium—P. P. P.
Roses and bounding health take
the place of the sickly look, the lost
color and the the general of wreck Prickly of Ash, the
system ltoke Root by and Potassium, use hosts
as
of females will testify, and the many Compa¬ cer¬
tificates which are they inpossionof nave promised not to
ny publish, and all P. P. P. bless-
womankind. prove a
to
Ad Ordinance.
tv tion of the game that from and after the adop¬
of this ordinance it shall be unlawful for
any person to ride on a propelled bicycle or other the rider, im¬
plement sidewalk or apparatus In the city, under by penalty of
on any for
twenty dollars, or work on the street* 80
day for each offence.
Jnly 28rd, 1888.
IS
Sasss^sc®&
The Chief mmrnm for the free* m
•mi at Rood’s Sarsaparilla I* found In the
article Itself. It U merit that win*, and the
SBESSJSfl-tS5S has given to this medicine * popularity nnd
sale greater than thsi ol any other s&rsap**
Merit Wins CJL.’tkKi Salt
Hood’* SareapaBBa cure* Scrofula,
Bheum Headache, and BiHousae*s, an Rumors, overcome* Pro*!**. That *«?*
Iked Feeling, creates an Appetite, strengttv-
*bs the Nerves, buUdsup the Whole System.
■toed** S«w.e-»«fe u .old by C. Mil X. Hood drug-
(Ota. $i; six for $ 8 . Prepared by
• Go* Apothecaries Dowell. Mam.
Application for Amend¬
ment ofCharter.
State or Oeobgu, Spalwhq, Cotncrr:
To the Honorable, the Superior Court of
said county : The petition of th#
Farmers Co-operative Man¬
ufacturing Company.
of said county, a corporation incorporated organised un¬ by
der the law* of Georgia and
thi* Honorable Court on the 30th of Aprd, of
1888, at the February adjourned the term said
said court, at
com] npany desires to hav# their charter so
ended as to allow them to engage in the
irehonse and Commission business, that
,y may either on their own account or on
i account of others buyjBhip, receive, store,
[ or barter cotton and machinery, other farm vehicles, produce fer¬
and all kinds of farm used
tilizers and other articles of merchandise
by o y farmers mriiRsiB auu and their unai families, can make ad
▼ancea upon J ----” cotton ~ and i other farm produce
to secure ail debts b; J mortgages, liens or
deeds on real or pers to erect,
gs for a
business; to
poae ______| securing l Jig the this payment of its debts
ness, , advances; or snch
and to sell, rent, lease or use
real and
received received when to
to do bo and to i ly an'
other acts which are proper and nd commision commision and legal in bnsi- bm car-
ryiug on a warehouse
mess.
To rder may
onorable
and allowing - dment anc
j it a part of the chartei •ter heretofore itofo: is
sued to thie corporation inn esting it with thi
power ft asked asked for for in in this this amendment tha*
may have the right to carry on said ware
houee and commission business in connect!oi
with the business anthorized by the original
charter. Done this the W.E. Srddayof H.SEARCY, July 1899.
Pres. Farmers Co-operative M’t’g Co.
J. F.. STILWELt, Clerk’s office, Beefy, Surpsrior Court
riled in 3rd,
Spalding County, July Wm. M. Thomas, 1889. Cl<
Clerk’s Office Superior Court. \
Georgia, Spalding County./ and
I certify that the foregoing is a true
correct copy as appears of record in this
office. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
MACON, GA.
FULL FACULTIES. FIVE SCHOOLS.
1. The Preparatory Department.
2. The College of Liberal Arts.
3. The > Scietiflc scle r Department, I Theology.
4. The i Department Department Law of
5. 5. The The Law School School.
TUITION FREE in the Department of Lib-
■al Arts, Science and Theology.
FALL TFRM begins on the last Wednes¬
day (25th) . in in 3eptem September. and information ad-
Fq; ir Catalogue G. NUNNAI.LY, other D. D„ P: Presi
dress, Rev. A.
dent, or JOHN J. BRANTLY, Sec. e. pro pro tem- tem
Macon. Ga. iull7w ed&su6w
Georgia Midland & Golf RR.
Time Table, Taking Effect Aug 11, ’89
No. 50.—l’ASsexo EB, South, Daily Except
Sdn XDAT.
Arrive. Leave.
McDonough...... Griffin............... ....5:40 5:00a.m. 5:45 “
a.m.
Warm mbus......................8:48 Springs.. “ 7:09 “
Colun "
No. 51 .—Passenger, North. Daily.
Columbus.................... 1:05 p. m.
Warm Spring................ 2:84 “
Griffin______.........U........3:50 p. m.
No. 52 .—Passenger, Sooth. Dailt.
Griffin........—.............. 4:05 p. m.
Columbus......................7:00 Warm Springs.............. 5:28 “
p. m.
No. 53 —Passenger, North. Daily Except
Spnray.
Columbus........ fa..* 5;10 p. m.
Warm Springs v.. 6:49 *•
Griffin......- Griffl’ McDonough....................9:00 ..... ..,.8:15 p. m. 8:20 “
“
No. 54 .—Passenger Sooth, Sondat Only
McDonough....... Griffin...,................ ........ 8:10 7:30 a. m.
a.m. 8:15 “
Columbus......................11:10 Warm Springs.............. “ 9:35
No. 55— Passengrr North. Sunday Only.
Columbus...............fail.., 7:40 a. m-
Warm Griffin........... Springs..9:14 10:38 11:00 “
a. m. ”
McDonough..................11:40 “
JNo. 1 .—Freight North. Daily Except
Sondat. i
Columbus............... 6:45 a. m.
Warm Springs............... 9:45 “
McDonough...................3:00 Griffin.......................„...12:29p.m. “ 2:00p. in.
Ifo. 2 .—Freight Sooth. Daily Except
Sunday.- ’ '
Griffin..........................8:05 McDonough............ 7:00 9:15 a.m.
a.m. a. m.
Warn Springs............ 12:02 p. in.
September Sheriffs Sale
\,/ II.I. BE SOLBON THE NMW TEES
Ing County, Georgia, the following described
P TK r lorth , hUtt of originally lot of load Monroe No. then US
in the first district of hounded
Pike now Spalding County, original Georgia, laud
north, east aud west by lines,
bv Other land of J. B. Kok*, contain-
Rotas % “f-t*
teuantin^omlegaRyno^^.^fiO gc rTrs g
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
OFFICE— Spalding Covk-
TV, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888 .—T. C. Mc-
Executor of Mr*. Janett Bethnne,
applies to me lor letters of Dismis¬
on said estate. befar*
Let all persons concerned show cause
of Ordinary, at Monday my office, in October by ten
a. m., on the first should
why such letters of Dismission
»8.1S? be granted. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary „ ..
RDINABT’S OFFICE—Spaldisq Coon
tv, Geobgia i. ......18.—W. May 81,1881 3 E. Alex
applies to me for letters 1 letters of of Dismission Dismission
the estate of Wm.W( oodward.late of said
deceased
tun
n., on the first Monday of dismission
next, why such letters
h f ^l^WHAMMOND, Ordinary.
Executors’ Sale.
By virtue ol an Spalding order granted oonnty, by will the be court sold
of Ordinary of
before the Conn Housefloor, on the first
Tuesday of September next, during the legal
hours of sale, all the real estate of L. R.
Brewer, late of said county deccaeed: consist¬
ing of one lot corner of Ninth and dwelling Poplar
streets containing two acres with
house thereon; one lot corner of Eighth and
Taylor streets, fronting 29 feet on Taylor
running hack 90 feet to an alley. The first
lot will be divided into three parcels to-wit:
one lot fronting 105 feet, more or less, on
Poplar street running back 420 feet, more or
less, to College street. One lot with dwelling
fronting 105 feet, more or less, on Poplajr o>
street and running back 210 feet, more
less. One lot 105 feet, more or less, fronting
on College street and running back (10 feet,
more or lesc. Sold for the purpose of distri-
but on and payment of debts. Terms of sale
cash W. R. HANLEITER,
W. H. BREWER,
J. C. BREWER.
|6. Executors of L. R. Brewer.
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtu# of order granted by the court
; County lunty Georgia u corgi a, 1
derbefoi i the Court
Ga., durir
hOU:
her,
the following Brown, deceased to-wit: One and one-
W. S. , in the city of
all acres of land more or less, the north b;
Iriffin, bounded asfblh ows: on
Broadway street, south by Flemister an,
Arnold, ■ - - east • by second ... st: it an, nd west b:
the Brown place. Sold fortl purpose of pay-
ing the debts of deceased ai for distribution
among his heirs. Terms cash.^^
$6. Adm’r W. S. Brown.
Notice.
Notice is herebo given thot application in session v
be made to the legislature now
quiring the record :ording in
Commute
ers of all line and torteiture Payments <
IngCouutjr to have on earn
made only by fine and forfeiture order froi
Commissioners on a fine and forfeiture ac¬
count to be specially kept bY Treasurer and
for kindred purposes.
Special Election.
X
property in said cuunty.
(A the aggregate amount of sixteen thousand
dollars, to lie known as coupon bonds of the
denomination of five hundred dollars each, to
bear interest at the rate of six per cent, per
annum and payable sejni-annually, day on July the
1st day of January and the 1st of
of each year. Two of said bonds to be paid
off on January 1st, 1891, and one thousand
dollars annually mnually thereafter until all of said
bonds are retired
Said elec lection shall be held and conducted
in accordance with an Act of the Legislat
approved October 14th, 1879.
There shall be printed or written on the bal¬
lots of those voting for issuing said bonds
the words “For issuing bonds,” and on those
opposed to issuing the same the words
“Against issuing MARION bonds.” PATRICK, C. C.
T. J. BROOKS, C. C.
july 13-1 m T. B. MILLS, C. C.
Noiioe to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice is hereby given to all who are indeb
ed to the estate of John D. George, deceased,to holding
call and settle at once. All said parties
claims against the estate of deceased are
notified to present them at once in legal form
to A. L. ELLEDGE, Administrator,
jun#llw8.-fi3.70. Columbus, Ga
New Advertisements.
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspapers dfvided into
STATES AND SECTIONS will b« sent on ap¬
plication—FREE. To those wh'
we can offer no
aud effective wo:
our Select Local List.
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Newspaper Advertising New Bureau,
10 Spruce street, York
wmm
-VIA-
BRUNSWICK, JESUP,MACON. ATLAN¬
TA, ROME and CHATTANOOGA
ONLY LINE
Double Daily Sleeping Gar Service
Between
Cincinnati and Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Closely Chattanooga and with Jacksonville, double
with connecting Pullman Sleeping Cars trains
to and from
Mfliiiphifi, Nashville, Kansas f i y
and the West and
Knoxville, Washington, New Yotk
and the East.
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville,
Atlanta and Savannah,
Atlanta and Brunswick,
Atlanta and Macon,
Atlanta and Home.
For rates, Time Cards and other
information apply to agents of the
East Tenn., V*. and Georgia R. R.
B. W. WRENN, Knoxville.
Gen. Pass, k Ticket Agt,,
tt H. Hardwick,
• Asst. Geo. Paw. Agt., Atlanta.
THE NEWS, % THE SDN,
ESTABLISHED 1871. ESTABLISHED 1877
1 THE
Griffin News and Sun a
DAIJaY and weekly,
(CONSOLIDATED MAY 26, 1889,)
OFFEKS ■
More Value
To Advertiser*
In proportion to prices charged, than any
other medium in the South. 1
■tot--
With the combined circulation of two old
and well established papers, it charges the §
prices of only one.
It is published in one ofthe agricultural,
commercial, manufacturing and railroad
centers of the most progressive State in the
South, with a large and intelligent surroud-
ing population and extra facilities for dis¬
tribution.
-
Being a flrst-class newspaper, fully up to
all demands of the times and the require¬
ments of its constituency, it is read not only
by nearly every family in Spalding County,
but in the eight surrounding counties, with
a good general circulation in the State and
%ther States.
--- -to;-
IT COVERS ITS WHOLE FIELD
and covers it completely.
Prices low. Write for rates and sample
copies of Dally and Weekly to
DOUGLAS GLESSNER, Publisher,
Griffin, Ga. |
(Prickly Ash, Poke Root and
-MAKES POSITIVE CUBES OF ALL POEMS AND
Physicians endorse P. P. P. as a splen¬ you win regain flesh and etMflft.
did combination, and prescribe it with Waste of energy andaUdizeaM* resulting
great satisfaction for the cures of all toom overtaxing the system are cured t?
towns and stage* of Primary, Secondary theuseofp. P. P. >
and Tertiary Byphilia. Syphilitic Rheu¬ Ladle, whose systems art poisoned and
matism. Scrofulou* TBcera and Sores, I whoee blood is in an Impure eoadtttoodn*
Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Kid¬
ney Complaints, old Chronic Uloers that I benefited by the wonderful tealo sad
SYPHILIS!^ SCROFULA
hare resisted an treatment, Catarrh, Skin Iblood properties of 7 P.P.
Diseases, Eczema, Chronic Fomala | c : .
Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tetter, Prickly Ash, Poke t. Boot Boot —fl | Ju tW tfl ffi
Scaldhead, etc., etc. Sold by aU PruggMe,
excellent P. P. P. appitizer, b a p owerf bunding u l tonic sad < sa |uppman nea, rmtom,
up wholxsals P ee—leva .
system rapidly. If you are weak and I Iliegamu
feeble, and feel badly try P. P. p„ and I Block, l4TJUDU*«fc
RHEUMATISM
FOR MEN ONLY!