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Scott’s EmuE sion
JgJf——at— ** ■ - ,»,-, I^||f*’
of Cod-liver Oil, with Hvpophosphites of Lime and Soda,
is a constructive food that nourishes, enriches the blood,
creates solid flesh, stops wasting and gives strength. It is
for all
Wasting Diseases
like Consumption, Scrofula, Ansmia, Marasmus; or for Couglu and
Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Loss of Flesh and
General Debility. Scott’s Emulsion has no equal as
Nourishment for Babies and Growing Children,
Buy only the genuine put up in salmon-colored wrapper.
Send for pamplet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE.
Scott &. Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 50 cents and SI .
0 sMls X Stoves X SMIS 0
Iron King, Charter Oak, Ye Olden Times,
Virginia, Royal Oak and Heaters of all kinds
and sizes. We call Special Attention to these
goods.
Belting-Rubber and Leather, Lace Leath
er and packing of all kinds,
30,000 Loaded SUcIIs.
HARDWARE
LOWER
THAN
ANYBODY!
Saved 25 rer cent on freights.
W. D. DAVIS & BRO.,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
NEW * YORK • STORE
27 Hill Street.
If you want any
Dry Goods, Clothing
Shoes, Hats, Etc.,
GO TO TIIE
New York Store, Griffin, Ga.
Our connection with the Largest Wholesale Dry Goods
Houses gives us facilities which no other retailer has.
[J3ir Write to us lor samples and prices.
DAVID WAXELBAUM & CO.,
27 Hill Street, Griffin, Ga.
BUGGIES
AND
WAGONS
At less than manufacturers prides—strictly first class, and all
right every way. Can sell you a buggy anywhere from
$45.00 up —also Wagons and Harness upon the very best of
terns.
Call around and I will prove ta you that it is jo your in
terest to buy of me.
W.J.CRABBE, McDonough, Geo.
N. B. —Pay day has arrived, my Notes and Accounts
arc payable Oct. ist. Please come along at once to tne
settling rack, without lurther exhorting.
lAM NOW A / v ‘ We will send you the mar-
Mk ttk ■fa gJjT I / V >V A
Iwl |&Bf H Ks -fl-i tB- t ..J CALTHOB frw, l.v n-nkd
IVI jU ” nP JL in.ul, and a let.ul guarantee
IV I arm ■ Cl J ' that Caltuus will
Ohio Mo. Oct. ft, 19S8. X, ’ V t Dl«charg«» and
Imm troubled with •iniKMiona Xl V 1 SI Ui r.mi**ions
11 cure* I ?' 't'zz?**™-
Darin, IS. lut four ,»nr. I \ ? AT Y / VUIII curtle, uud
trum every remedy that w»#sold AS me was. as he is.
•ii<3 ««t no relief for any of my l&3Lw 8 Uitt» l*os* Vigor*
Ironblw‘until I look CA LTHOS-lt enrvd and I p '/ r> •/» , • s* i
BSB4ri^l£rs.v.ss:^ k , fc| l< si itcy pay ifsatisfied.
Address VQN IVIOHL. CO., Sc!o American Aoents, Cincinnati, O.
WHY NOT
Buy your FURNITURE from
B. B. CARMICHAEL.
From the fact that he has the LARGEST STOCK and
FIIsESI SELEC I ION ever seen in a Middle Georgia
town, and at prices that will meet all Competition.
Instead oi Rocking Chairs at cost, I have
them to Gl\ EAW A\ to parties who will make bills with
«ne like some do in Atlanta—l have no catch-penny business.
My Line of Undertaker’s Goods
Is full and complete. I have a complete line of Metallic
Caskets that I ha\e ne\er belore carried, and can accommo
date all. bull line ol Robes, from cheapest to best grades.
If YoU War\t
L-umber. Shingles, Sash, Blinds, Doors, Mouldings Brick
etc., AI BO 1l OM PRICES, come to see me.
B. B CARMICHAEL.
\Vill furnish tree hearse witl pll jobs amounting to $12.50
I IRISH POTATO GROWING.
j Wti t Cau IS. Ueali/.»<l by Plant Inc TV m
..i» Hit r, ul
Jeff Wolborn has the following on
Irish potatoes:
I ii'iv.' found out, that I can grow as
lunch food npon an acre of early peas an
I can of corn or oats, and harvest the
crop in time for a fall crop of Irish po
tatoes, and that the land will be in the
finest condition for the potato crop
when the peas are taken off (also two
crops of potatoes and one of peas on the
sanio land.) J have also co.ved the
problem of growing in field endure, a
much superior potato for the table or
seed for spring garden to any that can
be brought from the north, and this at
nominal cost and more certain (if prop
erly managed) than a cotton crop. My
last crop, which was the eigth crop in
four years, without change of scod, w_s
finer than any previous crop, both in
quality and quantity, yielding at the
rate of 100 bushels per acre, without
manure or fertilizer of any kind, on
common hill land, that would not make
over 1,000 pounds of seed cotton per
acre.
Now that we can grow them much
cheaper than they can be grown in the
north and of much better quality, and
the demand at our doors. Why not i
We do not need the immense frost
proof bins. In fact, in the south the
fall crop is very little trouble. They
do not sweat and rot like the yam.
They will keep perfectly in a room
where the thermometer does not run
below 30 degrees above zero.
Anything that grows in the fall is
superior to the spring grown. The fall
Irish pototoes isasfarsnperiortospriiig
grown potatoes as fall turnips are supe
rior to spring turnips.
Our potatoes have increased in size,
quality and quantity per acre each sea
son since we commenced planting them
bore. Seed from the fall crop planted
next spring will come on much earlier
than the earliest and most northern
grown. While there will not be so
many In numbers in the vine they will
be twice as largo and far superior every
way. -
The seed onco obtained need never
be renewed, for the fall growing im
proves them continually.
The peas mentioned are the early
maturing variety planted alter the
spring crop of Irish potatoes and taken
off in time for the fall crop.
To those who wish to adopt the val
uable suggestions of Mr. Welborn, we
give the following concise advioo by
Mr. Massey, of the North Carolina sta
tion, which has frequently appeared in
more elaborate form in these reports:
1. Bed the seed in soil until planting
time. This gets rid of those too Imma
ture to grow and which if planted
would leave gups in the rows.
2. Plant about second week in Au
gust., if possible, and use only those po
tatoes that are sprouted.
8. Plant in a deep furrow, hut cover
very lightly and pack the soil to the
seed.
4. Never cut the potatoes for the lato
crop.
E. Gradually All in the soil to the
plants as they grow and cultivato the
crop perfectly flat.
THE SWINE PLAGUE.
l>r. Salmon Tells of This Fatal IMneaso
Among the Hogs.
Dr.' Salmon, the chief of the bureau
of animal industry, has just issued a
bulletin on this subject which ought to
be in the hands of every hog keeper,
and can bo obtained on application to
the department of agriculture, Wash
ington, D. C. Dr. Salmon says that
whilst no absolutely certain euro can
be found for any disease, and certainly
not for hog cholera, yet that, as the re
sult of a long series of experiments, the
following has been found to be a most
efficacious formula in most casos of this
disease, and is valuable ps a preventive:
lbs.
Wood charcoal.. 1
Sulphur ..1
Sodium chloride 3
Sodium bicarbonate 2
Sodium hyposulphite 2
Sodium sulphate 1
Antimony sulphide 1
Pulverize and thoroughly mix and
give a large tablespoonful for each 200
pounds weight of hogs once a day. Feed
on soft food, made of bran audshipstnff
or brau and corn meal mixed in hot
water and stir in the proper quantity of
the medicine. Animals too sick to eat
should be drenched with the medicine
mixed in water. In drenching a hog,
never throw him on his back or rope
him and force him to take the medi
cine. The chances are that if you do
you will choke him. Pull out the side
of his cheek from his teeth and thus
make a pouch into which pour the med
icine, and it will run into his mouth
and be swallowed, or take an old shoe
and cut off a small part of the toe, so
as to make a hole through, and put this
in liis mouth. He will generally com
mence to chew the shoe— then pour the
medicine into the shoe and it will find
its way slowly into the month and be
swallowed. We have drenched hogs in
this way when we could succeed in no
other way. Keep the sick hogs dry,
warm and clean, or it is very little use
giving medicine.
To purify, vital'z», and enrich the
blood, and give nerve, bodily and di
gestive strength, take Hood's Sirsapa
ri!!a.
Bueklen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
cuts. Bruises. Sores. Ulcers. Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, l etter. Chapped
Hands. Chilblains, Corns, aud all Skin
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,
or no pay required. It is guaranteed to
give perfect satisfaction, or money re
founded. Price '2d cents per box.
For sale bv D. J. Sander*.
the land should be put intis fine tilth
fttnt manured '«» highly as f.,r turnips.
in t. 1.« northern pi ... of t! - < itou h. ,i
Soph mb**r is <*insu/en*l the l»*' r time
for sowing; further south, it is safer to
defer this Work until Oefolier. The full
sown grass stands a inneli Ijetler ehaoee
in the struggle for jsissi ssion with the
nai ive grasses when the spring comes
on, ije-cause it has attained such vigor as
to easily hold its own against crab grass
and other annuals that germinate in the
spring, and the weeds cau Is: kept in
check by successive mowings.
In previous reports the proper varie
ties and mixtures of seed have liemi
given. Bermuda, as a summer pasture
grass, is all that could be desired, but
we need a perennial winter grass, and
according to the best authorities the
"Schrader" bids fair to take this place.
This grass should not? Is: confounded
with the Rescue,, which it somewhat re
sembles, but to which it is much supe
rior. Thfflrlx long to the same family,
but the Schrader is a perennial, grow
ing vigorously; the Rescue is small and
an annual.
George D. Tillman of South Carolina,
who has given the subject of grass cult
ure a great deal of study and experi
mentation, says:
"Schrader is most, likelv one of the
new grasses that will shortly force it
self upon the attention of the whole ag
ricultural world, us neither heat nor
cold affects it injuriously much. A
number of my correspondents in the
northwest, write that it resists their arc
tic freezes as heroically as it does our
long, parching drouths at the south,
and I am sure it is well adapted to the
stiff, damp rice swamps of our southern
seacoast. As regards the fertile low
grounds that are subject to overflow by
our up conntiy water courses, Schrader,
rightly utilized, would prove an inesti
mable blessing, by making such lands
the most profitable of any at the south.
“Schrader will not thrive on sandy
soil, unless clay be near the surface, as
it affects a rather compact gravel or
clay, although it does remarkably well
on the gray granite land of Edgefield.
This arises -perhaps from the fact that
the grass seems to need a good supply
of potash.
“The grass also does much better on
stiff, moist land, if not too wet, than
on dry soil: vet it will thrive splendid
ly on tin' latter, too, if it be fertile, and
I never have seen any grass, not even
the far-famed Kentucky bluegrass, or
the world-wide orchard grass, that
flourishes in the shade of trees js Schra
der does. There is no use sowing Schra
der on poor soil, unless it bo highly ma
nured, as the grass yields such a large
amount of forage and seed that it is
obliged to rapidly exhaust the land, es
pecially when the seed matures, as they
are as large as oats. The seed can lie
harvested about as easily as oafs, and
nearly every seed will come np when
plowed in like oats. Even when not
plowed in, the seed have an aggressive
tendency to take possession of the land;
still the grass can be as readily exter
minated as oats, wheat or any other
small grain. During 10 years’ observa
tion, I have never noticed any indica
tion of disease, and whenever the stand
becomes thin, one has only to let a crop
of seed ripen, or scatter a few gathered
seed, and then plow or rake them m, to
to have a stand again.
“All kinds of stock relish Schrader
as a hungry child does pound cake, and
for all purposes of hay, pasture or soil
ing, it is superior to any crop, on fertile
land, that I have seen, out of over 200
different, kinds of forage plajits, grasses,
clovers, inclilots, medics, vetches, bur
nets, comfreys, etc., with which I have
experimented for about ill' years, in an
earnest seart->-4,f the the best winter
grass for the south.”
An experimental plat has been given
to this grass at our station, and should
it prove all that is claimed for it. it will
become a most important agent in build
ing up the material prosperity of our
state and section. Once its supremacy
is established the business of profitable
dairy farming
for the first time in Georgia’s agricul
tural history attracting considerable at
tention, will be much advanced. In the
more southern part of this state, where
the cattle range at will during the win
ter months, obtaining a good living
from the rich cauebrakes and bottom
lands, the need for sowing winter past
ure is not realized, but in the more
northern sections, if we would sustain
the cheese factories, which we hope soon
to sol' iii successful operation and make
our cows yield a profitable return, we
must plant crops for them. This ques
tion has been but little studied, but
opens a wide field for judicious invest
ment. One sowing of grass, if properly
managed, will last several years, and
saves the yearly preparation and seed
ing of the grains. These grass lots, for
convenience of grazing and manuring,
should bo as near the stable yards as
possible, and should be divided so as to
graze duly a part at a time. To avoid
unnecessary tramping, three or four
hours a day is sufficient, and will give
stock all tho grazing that they need.
As a fertilizer, nothing supplies the
place of good farmyard manure. While
the sowing of grass may be deferred, it
is important to sow
RYK AND HARLEY
lots at once. A rich lot of either is
very desirable, and a farmer cannot do
better than to secure this valuable addi
tion to his stock yard.
FALL OATS.
Again I would urge, don't be deterred
by fear of winter killing from sowing a
good area in fall oats. If they succeed,
they make at least twice a,s much as the
spring sown crop, are not more liable to
winter killing than the spring oats are
to destruction from drouth, and if they
fail there is another chance for a crop,
as the same land can be reseeded, or is
in line condition for a different crop.
FODDER PULLING
is another work which engages our at
tention during the latter days of August
and Sept. 1. I have, in this connec
tion, more than once called attention to
tlie wasteful practice of leaving tho
stalks to decay in (lie fields, ns is the
common practice with southern farm
ers.
The following figures from a bulletin
of the New .Jersey experiment station
show the constituents in
ONE TON OK CORN STALKS.
FOOD CONSTITUENTS j FERTILIZINGCONSTI
TUICNTS.
Eat 17 ll« Nitrogen... .15 7 lbs.
I’roti-in ik) " Rl». Acid.... 5.20 “
N fru. ex and
fibre lO.tii. j Potash 20.40.
By careful analysis, it is shown by
I’r 'fessor Alwikhl. of .the Maryland sta-
IMles! Piles! Itching Pile .
Si vi’Toms —Moisture; intense itching and
stinging; most at night; worse by scratch
nr. If A l ’,owed to continue, tumors
•>: in. which often Idee t and ulcerate, Ite
ming very sore. "Swavxe’s Ointjikxt'
-too- the itching anil Id. editig, heals ulcer
riou.au.l in most case* removes the tu
mors. At druggists, or by mail, for 50 cts.
Dr. S*«; m & Son t Bhioidelphia.
1 have a 10 acre Uiw with -i room
frame house close to rail road school
and church that I wd! rent this year
for 56.V00 to a man «bo has stock.
Come at cnee to see me. Thomas D.,
Stewart
| t >n, tnaf-j nsr.imafing t,h>- ivpi"hf of
Fl ill tumidly li ft in th" field at half a
ton t < the iutro, whieii is a fair average,
. v,e v. .sti; by iteriti!' to this pr.iet.e i
I Oil eaeli iUTiI eoiis'ituenl.-, to tile valaeof
4<-<> |xmuds of corn meal, orß 1-3 bushels
of corn, and how often do we send to
the west for supplies to make j, r o,n| this
! le s!
Another advantage in utilizing the
entire corn product, stalk, blade and
ear, is that wo clear our laud for suc
oeedinii crops, for if impossible to con
tinue it in a cultivated crop, it is still
| important to cover it with sometiiing,
i p as, clover, rye, barley, grass, to pr ■-
| vent I lie washing and consequent wast
ing of the soil. It has been proved by
high authorities in England that poor,
: arable land, left bare, loses by washing
i each year nitrates to the value of 334
j pounds of sodium nitrate per* acre.
‘ Japan clover offers a hardy plant,
| which does well on poor land and, bo
j sides holding and increasing the nitro
| gen, will furnish grazing, and requires
| little care or attention.
OATIIKIIING Till? COIIN
will soon demand attention. It should
j be gathered as soon as it can bo safely
stored in the crib. Every day that it
is left in the field, after that time, but
increases the risk of loss and waste.
PH AS AND VINKS
should also be gathered and cured. In
previous reports and in the bulletins
from our experiment station, the di
rections as to tlie best time for cutting,
and method of curing and storing, havo
been very full and explicit.
TO BUILD UP
Yutir System and restore
YOUU STRUNG HI
Invigorate your Liver and
PURIFY YOUR BLOOD
Strengthen your Nerves and
GIVE AN APPETITE
Take that Excellent Medicine,
P. P. P.
Abbott’s East Indian Corn Paint
cures all Corns, Warts and Bunions.
You will not only enjoy a fine lee
tore, bu In Ip a good cause, by goiny
"Ut to hear Rev. Chus. A. Line on
Friday night, 22 1 Inst. Don't forgei
it.
Purest grades of guano sold h\ M
C. Low ('all on him before purchas
ing i Lew hi ic.
cay-WINE OF CAROUI, a Tonic for Women
In
Poor
Health
means so much more than
you imagine—serious and
fatal diseases result from
trifling ailments neglected.
Don’t play with Nature’s
greatest gift—health.
If you arc feeling
out of sorts, weak
II # and generally cx
rVfYYlim C hausted, nervous,
XJIUWIIJ have no appetite
and can . t K work>
begin at once tak
ing the most relia-,
1 ble strengthening
■ ■||l medicine,'which is
JLI vli Brown's Iron Bit
ters. A few bot- ,
# ties cure—benefit
l-l . comes from the,
111 1 T prc very first dose-*/
Ui. L vvl J «*>«’< ttam four,
teeth , and it’s
pleasant to take. ,
It Cures
i
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments 1
Women’s complaints. ,
Get only the genuine—it has crossed red
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub- 1
stitutes. On receipt of two ac. stamps we
will send set of Ton Beautiful World’* 1
Fair Views and book—free.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. '
The Georgia Midland &
Gulf Railroad,
The only Line Running Double Dai
Lj Trains but ween Columbus
and Atlanta .
Schedule in effect October 14, 1894.
NORTH BOUND
Daily. Daily.
Lv. Columbus 7:10 am 3:20 pm
Waverly Hall 7:59 4:14
Oak Mountain 8:09 4:25
Warm Springs 8:40 5:00
Woodbury 9:00 5:22
Concord 9:26 5:71
Williamson 9:44 0:12
Ar. Griffin 10:00 6:30
Macon Cll R 7:35 pm 10:23 pm
Atlanta CR R 11:30 am 8:05
McDonough 7:39
SOUTH BOUND
Lv. McDonough 8:15 am
Ar. Crritlin 8:57
Lv. Macon CR R 4:15
Atlanta “ 7:30 4:25
Griffin 9:05 5:54
Williamson 9:23 6:12
Concord 9:45 6:31
Woodbury ' 10:15 6:59
Warm Springs 10:36 7:34
Oak Mountain 11:10 8:04
Waverly Hall 11:20 8:14
Ar Columbus 12:15 pm 9:05
All trains arrive and depart Union De
pots at Columbus and Griffin
Ask for tickets and see that they
read via the Georgia Midland and Gulf R. R.
CLIFTON JONES,
C. W CHEAKS. Gri,. Agt.
Gen. Mg’i\ Columbus, Ga.
Griffin Water Cure
Is permanently located one block from i
the pa>seng s depot. Open and ready I
to receive and treat all Acute and j
Chronic Invalids. t-end a postage!
stamp for circular.
I>lS J M. \KJISTRO*€i.
Proprietor, Griffin, Ga.
ja asa NESS4 hsai.m>is^scur£C»
■J Bpi fft Ma by Pack's invisible Tubular tar Cash- \
a>» SESI lon*. Whispers heard. Comfortable,
e-.: eosfulw.e real Iremrdfca fail. Soldby F. Itlaewx.only, CDCC
853 Broadway, New lark. WriU for book of proofs I ULU
For Malaria, Liver Trou
ble, or Indigestion, use
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
1095 VICTOR BICYCLES:— ? | AA
*• -ccaaajgf-' 1V" /♦Uv
There are eicht Victor Models for ladies and gentlemen, practically any height
frame furnished. Victors lead the cycling world. Send tor catalogue.
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
Makers of Victor Bicycles and Athletic Goods.
BOSTON. CHICAGO. DETROIT. *
NEW YORK. DEfIVES.
* PACIFIC rOACT.
SAN FRANCISCO t.CS A U PORTLAND.
P. P. P,
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Wakes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up
the weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expels
diseases, giving the patient health and
happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and lassitude first prevailed.
For primary, secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
in ail blood and skin diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
eczema—we may say, without fear of
contradiction, that P. P. P. is the best
blood purifier in the world, and makes
positive, speedy and permanent cures
In all cases. -
Ladies whose systems are poisoned
and whose blood is in an impure condi
tion, due to menstrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won
derful tonic and blood cleansing prop
erties of P. P. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium.
Springfield, Mo., Aug. l‘lth, 1893.
—I can speak in the hlgbe.st terms of
your medicine from my personal
knowledge. I was affected with heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
35 years, was treated by the v r> best
physicians ana spent hundred of del
lars, tried every know n romei ;; vith
out finding relief. I have only taken
one bottle of your P. P. P., ami can
cheerfully say It has done raomore
food than anything I havo overtaken.
can recommend your medicine to ull
sufferers of the above diseases.
MR9. M. M. YE ARY,
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
TURNIPSEED * BROS.,
Successors to IV. W. Turnipseed,
MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALER&IN *
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons,
Harness, Whips, Lap Robes, Etc.,
HAMPTON, - GEORGIA
Also, UNDERTAKERS.
Burial Cases, Caskets, Rrobes, Gloves, Wraps
etc,, Latest Styles and all Price.
Nothing but first class work and best material in every
thing sent out from our establishment, •
Repairing in all its branches neatly and promptly done.
Give us a call when needing anything in our line, and we
guarantee satisfaction in evesy department. Respt’ly,
TURNIPSEED BROS., Hampton, Ca.
N. B.—We have a nice Hearse for our Undertaking business.
Piease REMEMBER that
WE : ARE : HEADQUARTERS
. for
Engines, Boilers, Cins,
COTTON PRESSES, SAW MILLS,
And.everything in MACHINERY.
Please drop us line before buying.
MALLARY BROS & CO.
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
ASS OLD SPILES
CATBBBH, HAlfißia.
RIPELY TROUBLES
and DTSPEFSM
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
cium, tho greatest blood purifier oa
earth.
AebrdexW, 0., July 21,1891.
Messes Lippman Bitop., Savannah,
Ga.: Dear Sirs-I bought a bottle of
your P. P P. at Hot Springs,Ark. .and
It has done me more good than three
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs,
bend three bottles O. O. D.
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Capt. J. D. Jolmstofi,
To all whom it may concern: I here
by testify to tho wonderful properties
of P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin. I
Buffered for several years with an un
oightly and disagreeable eruption on
tny face. 1 tried every known reme
dy buii In vain,until P. P. P. was used,
and am now entirely cured.
(Signed by) J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga.
Skin Cancer Cared,
Testimony from the Mayor of Sequin,Tex,
Sequin, Tex., January 14, 1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros.. Bfcvannab,
Qa.: Gentlemen—l have tried your P.
P. P. for a disease of the skin, usually
known -s skin '’aucer.cf thirty years’
standing, and .ound great relief: it
purifies tho blood and removes all Ir
ritation from the seat of the disease
and prevents any spreading of the
sores. I have taken live or six bottlea
and feel confident that another course
will effect a cm l. It has also relieved
me from indigestion and stomach
troubles. Yours truly,
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Afcrorney at Law.
Or* Elffilfl DISSCSfiS BiliiGfl FfB3.
ALL DRU GISTS SELL IT.
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MALLARY
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Macon, Ga.