Newspaper Page Text
— AMD-
Sun.
> Parian*.....**-°®
if,.# • • •**« * * *** *
. am is. i«w-
Piper of Spalding Co.
• dollar per #qnte fo rttofirwt
wrrrtjsrr:
| jig* (o {OQtlDtll WMH
faster to. D»Ut
ArutAroB highmr education
aWflestrsifs reputation.
htAhw ISLsUto that gentUman’s
some Interseting facto
•bout the State University and
£*?#«£ ars
It it veil that Georgia contain*
mm J Mr. Hammond’* thought. Such character men
-. . ^ •fr rt-iifrwnt
iuh) ooninr office in order to el¬
se and adrance the
welfare of their State.
What lathe university? What i«
ot
a college, a seminary of tewing. In
Md«mpWt»<»t«Wtohinoit.” Wh»t
U»t tu»rt
Our population then extended only
from Franklin county to th* mouth
«f Mary’s, scattered *11 tbs way;
only 60,000 white* and 80,000 ne-
in 1886, and
■ « ueuthe propo*i-
‘ Congress to die*
.,—», objection war
Tm ^ _____the constitution of
the United State, there ora* no au¬
thority to put oar hand* in the treas¬
ury and draw out money tor dis¬
tribution among the States. The
reply of Mr. Webstar was: This
money raised from tbs sale of public
lands, under the ordinance declares
that it belonged to the people of the
United States, and it is not like
other money raised in the usual
ways. We got onr $1,000,000 ap¬
propriated, of which three-fourths
were paid before the repeal of the act.
We gave one-third of it to the poor
school fund, ae I hare told yon, and
put the other two-thirde of it, iu
December, 1886, just sis months
after the appropriation, into the
building of the Western and Atlantic
Railroad. The money that built
that great road, over the lease of
which you are here talking and con¬
tenting to-day, was obtained by the
sale of the school lands that Virginia
and Georgia had given away pro
bono publico. And I say that in
morals any lawyer who can draw a
Wll to follow trust property through
various hands, could, in a court of
equity, mover that money for elu-V
cational purposes to-day/ " j
The history of Trion Cotton Fac¬
tory in Chattooga county is remark¬
able even in this day of rapid indus¬
trial development and in this favor¬
ed region. Eleven years ago the
mill was destroyed by fire and was
rebuilt by: the present company,
which then had $250,000 capital.
Last week th# company published a
petition for an amended charter al¬
lowing an increase of its capital
stock to $520,000. This increase is
to be made out of the earnings of th*
mill. In addition to this addition of
$270,000 to th# capital stoch, $225,-
000 has been distributed in dividends,
and many thousands of dollars ex¬
pended in improvements, such as a
brick store, a brick gin house, a new
tare, numerous dwellings for em¬
ployes, etc. It would be hard to
match the history of Trion factory.
It speakes volumes for the South as
the coming manufacturing center of
this
was
ft —unf— that time,
but they much
. then Mutt mogni-
which now »o. makes
Alabama and Mississippi. Virginia
the Ohio. Th# psoplsl
- - -Jam 1*701 fiVinllnifaii Sfs>AN
to the gtniral government Virginia
agreed to do so upon several condl-
tioni. Among them Are that they
most declare that primogeniture
■ rstrirrr; ol father
inherit aU the property the
SHHSS shall be devoted to
in that territory
purposes ol education. The great
schools, the munificent educational
u - m the Ohio stand
foundation laid by by
It is said that the Indiana Demo¬
crat# are lying in wait lor Col. Dudley,
th* alleged author of the “blocks of
five” letter. It Is expected that he
will pass through Indianapolis on
his way to the grand army encamp¬
ment at Milwaukee. I! he does he
may be detained in the former city
in a way that would not be pleasant
to him. It will be some time before
Col. Dudley is entirely free from the
“blocks of five entanglement.”
that he is
. Cm
A Co.
co«n
firm firm will pay the sum
DOLLARS for each ai md every r case t- : _ of _ Ca- .
tabbh that cannot be cured by the use of
B.„,C.,..™C„ fiLuiKj{ , nE](El
Sworn to before me a»d subscribed in my
presence this Oth dayo^I^mher, A.^I. 80.
J Notary Public.
Hell's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
act# directly on the nlood and mucu#surface*
of to. system.
«•“ Sold by Druggists, 76c.
Jefleraon in the resolutions of 1787
ag£s-“?SS
the United State#
, , ______ to give that territory
foi* States westward. Georgia agreed
to do so upon conditions, among
which were t!i# same terras on which
Virginia ceded hers. That wa* our
‘‘compact of 1802.” And the aplen
did schools of Mieaisaippi today rest
UDon those lands. Alabama, wise in
her generation, went to Congress
*»«* fot got 1 partnission to exchange the
' " asetfons foraoch aa ah#
might select, and ahe haa to-day th#
wtwtm l ktnda around Birmingham
and ahtowhere, and next to Texa# i#
the wsalthk'et State, prospectively,
in the Union lor educational purpoaea.
Th# people otGeorgia laid the foun-
dation for that education. But in
1794 we had that great swindle
known aa the '<Yaioo fraud,” and
our legislators began to fear that
the great bodies of land would not
be weU used. Therefore, they adopt-
*4 a different plan
“I wiah you to obeerveit,
Mr, Hammond, “because I am mak-
IK fag an argument which, aa I under-
stond it, make* it a simple duty
opoa the people of Georgia to respond
when called upon for educational
poipoaw. What woa the arrange¬
ment? We enacted first that certain
fioMiers, called *1116 Virginia Line,’
and tome others, abonld have so
maay aer«s apiece, and bance those
who came down and settled in Wilkes,
4ad all that part of th# State. Gen.
Toombe’ ancestor* —_ had throe thoua- 1
aad acres of land for meritorious
conduct. Georgia resolved to divide
JB, mw poo™* isns-H- “ >»*°? —T tote, *"♦ the
I next in 202K aero
next in 80 aero tote, and th* next iu
■■ ■■am We tn. _____A#— th# 1 land 1 A. to
40 aero • lots. . gave ___
the people unpaid for, put it with
«d the use until the State should
What did we do
Is?? •
SSSis To Cun Profanity.
Atlanta, Go., is said to have a queer
puot usiujf 1C bail LCilUUlA. language Av. made to h ..v wash —-
aro
their mouths out with water infused
with quassia. The bitter stuff is con-
sidereu yi LU M a v euro; Ml V , at ■** least it is not so
easily • * ... * forgotten AA as a licking nu ova .1 UOAI/l. scold¬
ing ... Is it .. not .... ............worth un invention
more general usef Our family disci¬
pline is u poverty stricken affuu 1 -
mostly made up of jawing aud thrash¬
ing; although with sotno their New offending Engiandero off-
stiu ps-ay ^Vliy havo^a family
Bjjring. not another containing quas-
___an, with say ricinus
salts, and a third with com¬
munis, that i'8 to say castor oilt—St
Louis Globe-Democrat
B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm.j
If you try this remedy yon will say as
•them hats said, that is th* best blood
fier end tonic. Write Blood Balm Co.,
ta, Ga., for hook of convincing testimony.
J. P. Davis, Atlanta, Ga. (West
writes: *T consider that B. B. B. has
nently cured meot rheumatism and sciatica,’
R. R. Saulter, Athens, Ga., says: ‘‘B.B
cured me ol an ulcer that bad resisted all
«r treatment. TiMley,Columbiana,
E. G. had ulcerated
mother and «ster them.” them.” sore
and ad scrofula. scrofula. B. B. B. B. B. B. cured cured
Jacob F. 8 poncler,Newnan,Ga., writes »:
B. B. entirely cured me of rheumatism i i in
•aS WoMFoMtoin
that one bottle of B. B. B. cured me.”
J. i. Hardy, Toccoa, Ga., writes: “B. B.
i*a quick cure lor catarrh. Three
cured me. I hod been troubled several
A. Hpiiik, Atlanta, Ga., says: ‘‘One
of B. B. B. completely cured my child of
%. A. Pepper, mother Fredonia. fuk-erated Ala., write#: throat, B. ’
B. cured my o sore
Rome Running Down.
If a clock ‘‘runs down,” we wind it
up. and in a few seconds it is
along in its steady time. rut, But if the hu¬
ing—using system up down we are in
man runs
groat trouble, days, weeks, months
and even years are spent in vain at-
terepta to Bet it right. About this
time an appeal to P. P. P. the great
vegetables blood corrector would be
the sensible course to pursue, aa it is
the only really sure restorer of lost
vitality. For Rheumatism, Gout,
Scrofula, Syphilis and all Ulcerous
diseases. P. A , P.P. A . X * 1# ro incomparable. iuwi*f|rte-ww v. It
is a first-class tonic and never toils to
cure. All druggists sell it. The in-
Prickl.v Ash, Poke Root
and Potassium, medicinal are a paoperties. guarantee
its natural
RSliSll ■
m ostss^sm
Tfce ©kite Siw i w tor the great sue
•ess of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is found In th«
article Itself. It Is merit teat wto*. and tho
sua,"s raswfta
ha* given to this medicln# * popularity and
Ml* greater than that of any other ursapa-
Merit Wins SUL’SVSE
Hood's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt
Bream and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache. Biliousness, overcomes That
Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength-
ms toe Nerve*, build* toe Whole System.
BmS’s Ssnepsrills is sold by all drug¬
gists. gl; sis for |S. rwparedbfC. AHeod
» Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mai*.
Application for Amend¬
ment of Charter.
TATE or Gkobgia, Spaloisg, Cop.vtt: ,
To the Honorable, the Superior Court of
said county: The petition of th# ’ „
Farmers Co-operative Man¬
ufacturing Company.
company desires to have their charter so
mded as to allow them to engage in the
Warehouse se and and Cammission Cammission business, businesi that
■ either on their own account or o
„^,„jnt of others buyjahip, other receive, farm produce stor ,
sell or barter cotton and
and all kinds of farm machinery, vehicles, fer¬
tilisers and other articles of merchandise used
by farmers and their families, can make ad
vances upon cotton and other farm prod
to secure « all debt# by mortRages, " eBB
deeds to erect,
bu KB for
warehouse e; to
purchase, irehase, 1 lease or rent each real and person¬
al. property ae may be necessary for the pur
pose of transacting this branch of its busi¬
ness, or securing toe payment of its debts
and __________ advances; to s sell, sell, rent, rent, lease lease purchased or use * w r
received >ai and when personal to the prop intercut rty so of the Company or
» do so and to to do do so bo and and to to do do any any and an al
rying ____ warehouse jich are proper proner and eommiaion and and legal legal in in busi- car-
on a e
xess.
ding it wit
nendment tka'
n said ware
onnectioi
origin 18® 1899. a.
charter le 3rddayof July ly
Co-operative W. E. H. SEARCT, M’f’g C©
Pres. Farmers
3. F,. STILWELE, office, Sect’y. Surpsrior Si Court
Filed , ____... in Cleric’s _______ __fice,
Spalding County, July __________I__, 3rd, 1889. Clerkk.
IVm. M. Thomas, i
Glebe’s ’s Office Office Supebiob Supebiob Col Coitbt. 1
Geobgia, Spalding Cor sty.)
I certify that the foregoing is a true ai
correct copy as appears of record in th
office. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
MACON, GA.
FULL FACULTIES. FIVE SCHOOLS
1. The Preparatory Department. Arts.
2. The The College Scietific of Liberal
3. Department Department. Theology.
4. The of
5. The Law School. Lib
TTJITlfON FREE in the Department of
Arts, Science and Wedues-
LL TFRM begin last
fOR*h\ l*» flontoTfj
1 other information od-
dent^ or'jOHN fNNALLY, D. D., F 'resi
J. BRANTLY. LY. Sec. Sec. pro tern
Macon. Ga. Sull7wed&su6w
Georgia Midland & Gulf RH.
Time Table, Taking Effect Aug 11, ’89
No. 60.—Fassexgeb, Sot th, Daily Except
Su; UXUAT.
Arrive. Leave
McDonough 5:00 a.m.
Griffin ,5:40 a.m. 5:45
Warm Springs.. .. 7:09
_______ limbus-—..................8:48 _ “
Colim
No. 51 .—Passenoeb, Noiith. Daily.
Columbus..................... 1:06 p. m
Warm Spring................ 2:34
Griffin.—.......................3:50 pf m.
No. 52 .—Pahskxokb, South. Daily.
Griffin—.................... 4:05 p. m.
5:21 ' 28 “
Columbus......................7:00 Warm Springs...™.........
p. m.
Ho. 53 r-P assexoeb, Nobth. Daily Except
S lIXBAY,
Colnmbns—.................. 5;10 p. i
Warm Springs............. 6:49 '■
Griffin....... ..................8:15 p. m. 8:20 “
McDonough........ ........9:00 **
No. 54 .—Passenger South, Sitnpat Only
McDonough................— 7:30 a. i
Griffin...............8:10 a.m. 8:15 «
Warm Springs..,—,------- 9:35 “
Columbus.........—.—„....11:10 “
No. 55 .—Passenoeb Nobth. Sukdat
Columbus.....o 7:40 a. i
Warm Springs.............. 9:14 “
Griffin.......... ,...10:38 a. m. 11:00 ”
McDonough—,—.......11:40 “
|No. 1 .—Freight North. Daily Except
Sunday.
Columbus...............—... 6:45a. m.
Warm Springs...—— 9:45 “
II Griffin............................12:29p.m. if lUD. y--------* 2:00p. m.
McDonough....... i ..........3:00 a.no “
No. 2.— Pseioiit South. Dailt Except
Sunday.
McDonough.................. 7:00 a. m.
Griffin.............-8:05 a. m. 9:15 a. m.
12:02 p. in.
E, >tl »*Wwl itUli
v'cnx-^-i worw.wilh an VW
tb« fttfeihmvnta.
[ W« grill ’ a too eoatly wad fire* and rclik«l«te cciuftalt
<mmt art
m, la return wt a#k tha* yow
___arte* wa WteL to U»ow wte
mtrrallat
tty, TpM feattrjdwh, fTnttd MtechttM to
aitoe fte
—---4 nd mxw mlt, tor
ttrsar-*■ Alibis
wnoass.'sess
irr w Abortte* • • BW-. j' 1, ' ■«!«*'
•
Ha who discovam a t sure means of
^dUteld SI
BSfisgg: W. WM punftil «5« and one
jr to life,
cut them
devised,
fur as the writer km knowsyioi none
jlutolv oert
trouble^is that aU felons are
oot near alike. In earno in others, deeper tissues and
involved .....ht than well 1 in a
which act ono
another. to the
slightly k&T around iSEtim it with some
and and to to pass ps over this
nitrate of silver. A.
ward the skin becomes
disappears the inUcimniatlon u ar-
rested. The dressing, blackened and in epidermis six days the re¬
ceives no
black The color author disappears. induced to try this
was The
remedy in a case of a fit of gout.
patksui had hw great too swollen at its
bate; it was painful to the lansmating touch, a
little rod, and the seat of
pains, which hindered the rest of the
patient* The painful articulation was
moistened ana rubbed over with a
______ J psuu paint* w
a quarter o/ an hour after the
ing, and * die patient got up to follow
his occupations. The victim of a felon
can do safe tefy harm. , tty Too this XXilS much urauueuif treataent; confidence it can uou
no in it—Bos-
mustnot^ however, be put
Strength to vigorously study for push profes¬ a busi¬
ness, strength strength to regulate a house¬
sion, to do day’s a labor
hold, without strength physical to pain. a Do desire
you
strength? If you are broken down,
have no energy, feel as if life was
hardly ________________and worth living, healtn you can strength be re¬
stored to robust
by taking Brown’s Iron Bitters, a
sure cure for dyspepsia, malaria
weakness and all diseases It requiring the a
true, true, reliable rename tonic. ionic, re acts act* on uu urc
blood, nerves and muscles and regu¬
lates every part of the system.
Clarke’s Extract of Flax Cough Caro.
It is a sure cure for Whooping and
Cough. It stops the whoop, per¬
mits the child to catch its breath.
It is entirely hsy-mless. Good for any
igh of childhood or old age. It
lIs 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.
S. Drewry’s drugstore. Clarke’s Flax
Soap makes the Skin smooth, soft
and white. Price 25 cents.
Extraordinary Bone Scratching.
Herbert Sperry, Tremont, IU., bad
-Jrysipelas in both lags. Confined to
the house six 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 wit v
out relief. I was tormented in tl
Way for two years. I then found
Clake’s Extract of Flax (Papillon) used
Skin Cure at the drug Store, it,
and it has cured me sound attd well,”
Clarke’s FJax Soap has no equal $1.00. for
Bath and Toilet. Skin Cure
Soap 25 cents. For sale at Dr. N. B.
Dre wry’s drugstore.
To The Ladles.
There are thousads of ladies
throughout the country whose sy
terns are poisoned and whose blood
in an impurs 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 Poke Boot prop
erties of Prickly Ash, anc
Potassium—P. P. P.
Hoses and bounding health take
the place of the sickly look, the lost
color and the general wreck of the
system by the use of Prickly Ash,
Poke Root and Potassium, as hosts
of females will testify, and many cer-
tificates are in possion of the Compa-
ny which they have ^ promised P.P. «...------------- P. abless- not to
publish, and al'prove
to womankind.
, PYRAFtiea LIPPMAN’S,
f\ SUF\ECUf\E ran
,CrilLLS8tFtVtR
DUMB f\6UC /\ND
tli
VO’.! SAT.I? BY ALL BHCGOISTS.
An Ordinance.
GriffinVandlt Be it ordained it is is hereby hereby by the Mayor orSa ordained and by Council autbori o
Griffin, and the
id after ad
hnai 11 be unlawful
any person to ride on a bieycl
plement plement or or npparatui apparatus the propelled city, by the rid
on any sidewalk in under penalty
;wenty dotlars, or work on the street# for
lay for each offence.
July 23rd, 1889.
*
...
September Sheriffs Sale
too noun mui w 113
in toe firet district of. bounded
Pike .nosr m Spalding and _ land line*.
e«t m eoBtain-
hr other load Sold t he
X01V4 »
County Court in favor ol
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
_ r Jw. lass..------- Disrate- .
applies to me for letters of
ou on on said muu estate. white-
Let all persons concerned show cam? beferc
"Durt of Ordinary, at my office, October by ten
UUUhU. Hh ska. m., IU., ! on UU the teA first usovsuuuuu.v Monday Dismission ’ J in ■** T should .--11
su^ '■ *" letters of ■ * i
tW iV*v r ° K W. mHUQSD. Orfiawy
ALU! KG Cot
I not not be granted. *
*8.15. B. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Executors’ Sale.
or, on
____next, during the legal R.
the real estate of L.
ss with dwelling
___ ol Eighth and
house thereon; one lot corner
Taylor streets, fronting 29 feet on Taylor
running back 90 feet to an alley. The first
lot will be divided into three panels to-wit:
and running I
on College street Sold ana for running the purpose uac*. of a-iu distri-
more or less. ^**w! £&&!»,■*
J3T w'. H. BREWER;
J, C. BREWER.
Executors of L. R. Brewer.
Administrator’s Sale.
ourt
iuuuij v*-„, f,.n, I
the __ highest t bidder ,, before the Court
........j during^ the legai
House door in Griffin, Ga.,
W. S. Bro le-
half acres of land more in the city of
Griffin, bounded as follows: o; _ the _jno. north _ by
Broadway street, south by Flemister and
Arnold, east by second street an- id west -------- by
the Brown place. Sold for the purpose of pay¬
ing the debts of deceased and for distribution
among his bars. Terms o^gate ^^
| 6 Adm’r W. S. Brown.
,
Notice.
Notice is herebo relio given giver thot application will
be made to the lie legislature now >w in in session to
pass an i act act requiring re the recording Commission imission- in the
office of Treasu surer and County in Spald
era of all fine ad forfeiture orders
count to be specially kept
for kindred pnrposes.
Special Election.
Notice is hereby given that there will be
held on Tuesday, the 13th day of August,
1889,in Spaldingeounty,an election to deter¬
mine the question whether bonds shall or shall
iot be issued by said county for the purpe
f paying for, improving and repairing pul
dollars, to be known as coupon l------
denomination of five hundred dollars each, to
hear interest ot the rate of six
_________cemienni
year. Two of sai
f on January let, 1891, and o >ne thou;
dollars illare annually annually thereafter --------- un ------- til all of said
onds are retired. iducted
Said election shall be held and cond
in t accordance accordance with with an an Act Act of of the th Leg^isli .egislature,
ed October 14th, 1879.
lots i____ id
the words the on :o«e >rds
opposed posed to to issnin issui bonds.” same
“Against ig MARION PATRICK, C. C.
T. J. BROOKS, C. C.
julylS-lm T. R. MILLS, C.C.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice is hereby given to ail who are indebt¬
ed to the estate of J ohn D. George, deceased,to
" parties holding
edare
to present them at once in legi
to A. L. ELLEDGE, Administr Iminiatrator,
jnnellw6.-fi3.70. Columbus, Ga
New Advertisements
TO ADVERTISE RS
A list of 1000 newspapers divided into
STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on
pijotttH n-FREE.
70 t
we can off(
and and efiecti effective work than the variou sestio:
our Select Local List.
GEO. P.,R0WELL & £0.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Spruce street, New
-VIA-
BRUNSWICK, 1ESUP,MACON. CHATTANOOGA
TA, ROME and
ONLY LINE
Double. Daily Sleeping Car
Between
• Cincinnati and Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Chattanooga and Jacksonville,
Closely connecting with double
with Pullman Sleeping Cars
to and from
Memphis, Nashville, Kansas Ci y
1 and the West and
KnoxviMe, Washington, New York
and the East.
THE S w 0RT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville,
Atlanta and Macon,
Atlanta and Rome.
For rates, Time Cards and other
information apply to agents of the
East Tew?., Va and Georgia P. R:
Gen. * Pass. & Ticket B. Agt., W. TVRENN, Knoxville, p
S. H. Hardwick,
Asst. Gen. Paw. Agt., Atlanta.
__.
_____ Si;
BLISHED r 1871
* 2 ? 5
Griffin News and Sun
'
daily and weekly, I
(CONSOLIDATED MAY ,20, 1889,)
OFFEUB
More Value
To Advertisers
Iii proportibn to prices charged, than any
other medium in the South.
.
-Jot--
W ith the combined circulation of two old
and well established papers, it charges the
prices of only one.
It is published in one of the agricultural,
commercial, manufacturing and railroad
centers oi the most progressive State In the
South, with a large and intelligent surroud-
ing population and extra facilities for dis¬
tribution.
<*■;-
Being a first-class newspaper, fully up to
all demands of the times and the require-
meets ot 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
other States.
-tot-
IT COVERS ITS WHOLE FIELD,
and covers it completely.
Prices low. Write for rates and sample
copies of Daily and "Weekly to.
DOUGLAS GLESSNER, Publisher,
Griffin, Ga.
(Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and
-MAKES POSITIVE CtTEES OF ALL FOBBtS AND STASZS Of <
Physicians endorse P. P. P. aa a splen¬ yon win regain fleeh —_--.—
did combination, and prescribe it with Waste of energy and all disease# renOtine
great satisfaction tor the cures of all from overtaxing tbe systain are eared bf
fonna and stages of Primary, Secondary the nM of F. P.P.
and Tertiary Syphilis, Syphilitic Bhen- Ladies wbese systems art poiscoed and
tnatism. Scrofulous XHcors and Sores, who«oblood la in aa Impure o onrtftkmd a#
Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Kid¬ to menstrnsl lrregnlaritiss arsps cnU a rt y
ney Complaints, old Chronic Ulcere that benefited by the wondsrfnl tonic and
SYPHILIS SCROFULA
hare resisted all treatment, Catarrh, SHn blood cleensing properties of P . J.><»
Diseases, Eczema, Chronic Female Prickly Ash. Poke Boot sad Potassium.
Complaints; Mercurial Poison, Totter, Sold by all Druggist#.
Bc&ldhoed, etc., etc. utnuH ww^ iw i te tei
P. P. P. is s powerful tonic and an
sxcellent appitizer. building np the whmmu Dsuawsta.
system rapidly. If you are weak and JUVAKKA*,®*-
feeble; and feel badly 07 P. P. P, and
rheumatism
s
___
FOR MEN MLJ