Newspaper Page Text
BY E. L. RAINEY,
—=JUST OPENEDI=—
' il IIT v RE ]
0000 WORTH OF NEW EoODS
: L 1 | 1y ]
The Greatest Bargains we Have Offered Vet
15 TO 26 PER CENT SAVED TO OUR CUSTOMERS BY OUR
===TRIP TO NEW YORK --i--
CONME IO SINE: USSP O E o OTT =ITY
Dress Trimmings without end.
Striped Burahs,
Persian Sitks.
Persian Bands.
Velvels
Plushes.
Fead Trimmings.
Praids.
Passairentrie, ete.
A beautitul lot of Jurseys and Wraps cheap, ©
A nice Black Jersey fiom 50¢, to $125. €
A nice Wrap from 8125 to $5.00. I 8
77 0.0 el PRana T ; ‘
w’a“gfifi ; ?fgj x’g TarlanErng E?ggw’fi:‘fizgpa '
ngéflil SRS LILEY \{QGEMHJ HEIN suifiimé ES ‘ fi -flx
\
- =—DAVIS & DOZIER-
T D"gfi\u ‘k’i ANJ C:,,.ij j_j 7 ASmeE‘;ln }JR—AE_ET_::*:;_*
DIENTISTTIY.
7
Lo H. Thurinond,
DAWSON. - GA.
l".\” Sflil?’.‘fl('(‘!mll (w‘l:‘:}‘::‘x)h
(== teed 1o ali kinds of Den
tai Work., Ol plates repaired
tid wade vood as new,
BEST LGCAL A NASTHLETICS - USED
for Painless Extraction of Teeth.
Patronage respectully solicited
Office up stairs over Toibot's store.
R. F. Simnicons,
ATTORNEY 47 LAY,
DAWRON, - GA.
Practice in all the conrts. Parties
having land for s:le should call ou
e,
Griggs & Laing,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
DAWERBON. = - (zA.
I"l‘fln‘pt attention to all busincss
Junes & Graham,
LITORNEYS AT LAW,
DAWSON, '== QGA:
Businass respectfully solicited
PROTEST YQUR EVES.
A RIRSCHBERg
! ngCTg‘ Cirg
S
7
LS
&YegLAgsES: U
BAT? JuLY 161 1878,
M. H. HIRSCHBE 6,
The well-known Optician of 629
live street St. Loais, has ap.points
“ Dr, W, C. KENDKICK
of I);u\mn, Ga., as agent for his
‘,'fil"’""“““‘l Dimond Spectacles and
'\‘ly{"l"‘“{’i‘ and also for his Diamond
po-Changeable Spectucles and
}9."o;!:x.~.~'cs. These glasses are the
featest invention ever m.de in
ecteles, By a proper constiue
li"’” of the Lens a person parchas
(?f"‘ buir of these Non~Changeable
(;i’."‘,s("‘ never has to chauge these
gr\,,"‘to"* Irom the eyes, and ev
titeo g F purchased are guors
l‘h'](“'l o that if they ever-leave
1l~: ?“’" (1o matter now scratehed
u;o “enses are) they will furnish
Gl MY with a new pair of
A3Bpg Cl.ee Uf ch.".rgc.
fu‘ll).l . W. C. KENDRICK hasa
“‘:l “*sortment. and invites all who
. | 1 satisty themselves of the
v m-@,f‘? Superiority of these (ilasses
g Aod all others now in use
qu, “ud examine the same at
. W. C. KENDRICK'S
Drug store.
» e - R T oLt S SO
; & oy e e A R GWS
P b 3 P e 3 -
e Lo L W
€ & \ h T, . &
% 4 4 \A e 4 . G (A 73
¢ e B¢ . N /A B, £ 5 3 B i
s 5 i ; v ) 7 = 53 A ¥
L fan & & LA e ¥l o A 2 G >
2 b & ¢ . K e & & g .
nIPAYW2< B ] D o <A 3
3 o s 3 S &3 w \ i oD =2 3
< > P 7 i ) I i + > 3 X R
o ) G + -4 -
¥ 2 A ) N 3
1,000 yards Chambray, worth 10
cents, for Tie.
Beautiful double-width Wool
Cashmere, 15e. worth 25,
160 pieces Vool Dress Goods,
which we are bound to sell, price
or po price.
500 yards Seersucker, worth 15
cents, for 83,
A ¥ i \i' K, “‘ A peeean ol . T
A, P HBATEHER
—IDIEAILIDEE IIN
T EROCE I lIRITES
nardware, Furniture & Stoues
i L ng. j%.j E H "@)9 R : E i
I am
BOW Tes
< ceiving a
Lirge stock
of goods for
tlie FALL AND
WINTER TRADE, urd
I guarantee ROCK BO'TS
TOM PRICES on everythinz
ALL MY GOODS AR SOLD AT THE LOWEST 10S-IIBLE MARGIN
AND IICORDIALLY ASK A CALLTROM EVERYBODY:
QoY A = g €YD
= A P HATCHER &
7 1 11" N Y £ |
SOTENn a 7 gl4 Plgmnsimaamiame ' -!
WANQNaR LSRN L RnHG
LAPUpULEULE 4wl ifls}z;’ii;fi%‘s U By,
Of nearly every deseription, g
|
“.;.Qrg‘ A “‘\:'.Y ",“":_; E7\ g % b ':(1::'7 g " 1 i
\,\,' i 4\,& v t\ ib ("'9 18 .._"‘l g P 0%"1' J%L Eg i‘l’ i
3LY BTN T §
CROCEKLHRY, TIN AND |
VWIIODRAW AR |
SEBIIPEDIA Y 132{}‘“}
Groceries, etc, We are now agenis for the celebrated
Charter Oak Stoves and Ranges, '
Which, being so well knows, need no recommendation. Call and ex
amine our stock. *As tar as prices are concerned, we know we dak
suit you. |
- lixamine our 25 cent Flexible Back Curry Comb. Just the thine
tor ALL horscs, Ispeciatly Nervious ond Sensitive Ones. o
AT A . .
MARLIN & SONS.
1 4
South Georgia Male and Female Collee
CLASSICAL SCIENTIFIC fiND COMMERCHIL, '
DAWSON, - - =/ GBORGIA, i
e () e
MUSIC AND ART DEPARTMENT UNSURPASSED. |
Ounly protessional teachers, who know what to teach and how to teach
are employed. 3 o
Pupi}s charged in each devartment trom the time of cutering until
the cloge of the session. Nc deduetion {or absence of pupils, exeept tor
sickness protracted ove week or longer,
The ve:'fr best homes for boarding pupils. For Cztalogue and par
ticulars address / .
i onidas Jones, Eaglll
2,000 y’ds Ginghams fiom &1 to 10
Beautiful Tab'e Damusk, 30 cents,
worth 59,
Big barsain in Ticking, Bleachiag,
and Sea Island.
All wool Plannel, 18¢, worth 25,
100 cases new Shoes that must vo,
4,000 yards Jeans from 15¢ to 35,
worth 25 to 50
UL RER I
i 3 :l
| |
Y —*\f‘vi)—— ii
I
“,(7 ey t
STOVES
ire
j SPECIATIES. !
DAWSON, GEORGIA, NOVEMBER 13, 1889,
16,060 yards Calico be. to Te.
Sheeting and Checks ot factory
prices
500 yards new Satleens at 83,
worth 12}
Hose, Handkerchiefs, Collars,
Cufls; Shirts, Gloves, Hoods,
Uunderwear, Ribbons, ete., for a
fong.
member AR L
I wake a g
SEECIALTY L
of FURNITURE; e
and STOVES,and ifs
will alwavs pay to eali o R
me 11 JN NEED OF ANYS
THING IN THIS LINTS
: S et %
e g ('URES IN FROM
@ LGP one to five days.
}":{ f{fil Manufactured oniy by
Eq 1. D. Sale,
m ‘, DAWEON, == GA,
RA A A
Price - SHOotw
5. G. PARKS. . . 8 DELL
J. G. PARKS & CTO.,
FIREINSURANCE AGENTS
DAWEON, GA.
All kinds of property msured at
reasonable rates, Losses satisfacs
torily adjusted and promptly paid.
Companies represented all strong
liberal and reliatle.
Office over drug store of ¢ heats
ham & Dean, north side of Public
Square, ol
MILITARY ANP
—AGRICULURAL -~
C O L. S GF RS
CUTHBERY, GEORGIA;
e O
Next session begins Bept. 4th,
Full corps ot prfessors.
TUVITON FREE,
Bourd £9,00 per month.
Send For Catalogue.
A, J. CLARK gebsident.
T N PR cu oo
ol e
L RREGRR B RCD a L ene
| AN ELOQUENT SPEECH.
Gur Senater Edwards Pays a Beau.
tiful Tribute to Southern Wo
men and the Old South,
~ The following is the beautitu!
and eloquent speech delivered by
Senator M. C. Elwards, of this
‘district, on the bill t) zet apart two
‘rooms in the new capitol for war
i relics:
~ Mr. President: When I wmtros
‘duced this bill I had no pacticular
room in my mind’s eye. As we
are so counstantly and persistently
misrepresented by the north as to
a correct history of the late war, I
saw. the necessity of some place of
deposit and preservation of the
trophies and relies of the lost cause,
that we might the better transmit
to after generations a true his ory
of a patriotic and chivalrous peo«
ple. As the committee by request
of the vetersus ot Fualton county
has scen fit Lo amend the bLill, T
Leartily concur in the smendment,
The general sgsembly havine
touderefiefl\e veterans of the state
this building for their reunione,
and as most veterans who come to
the city will come here to view
this capitol iu all its magnificent
prepertions, I think this the place
for the cabiret, Then, Mr, Presi
dent, I ask in the name of the vet
erans of (eorgia these rooms be
set apart for their souvenirs, Let |
all relics and trophies be there de
posited, with a true history ap |
pended. Tet the walls be hung
with the portraita of her lwrnvs.‘l
Let the private soldier, who has
achieved resown by Lis valor, le
placed there as well as the general.
Mr. President, in the annual |
reunion this will be the room nt"
roowms to the old soldier. Yes, let |
it be his meeer. and onee a year let
them assemble 10 Its walls and talk
over the trials «of the war. As|
they took upen these relics and the i
faces ot their old commandere, lot |
them once mare cateh the inspira. |
tion of the days of the sixties; lot |
them feel themsélves once more |
shoulder to shoulder in line of bat- |
tle ; let them gee the enemy as they |
wheel into line, in their front; let|
them see the couricrs as they dush |
to and tro; let themn feel that onii |
nous silence that ever settles upon |
an army belore the conflict begins; :
let them bear the order to torward |
as it pusses along the lives; lot |
them onee more hear the rebel yell i
that meant victory or death. \
In the annual visits of the old |
veteraus, let them bring their ehil
dren and thelr grand-chiidren witl |
thear. As they assemble in this|
room talking over the past, let!
some old, 2ray-haired veteran take i
for his text some relic in this cols |
lection. 1 would sugzest the fl:lgi
under which he fought. Let him |
tel! these children what lw:mlil'ul!
maiden or lively anation presented |
it to h'sregiment. Tell them how |
that repiment pledged to guard it !
with their lives. Repeat to them:
i 3 successes and adverses. Point!
'@fifife porirait of his (‘mnm;nuh-r.E
Fell how he rose {rom a hoy private |
to his present position. Give them |
his history complete 'l'ell themi
why the cause was so sacred, and, !
Mr. President, such a lecture will |
teach the child more and truer his- |
tory in one hour than the schools |
masterean impart in five years with |
the books now extant,
Let the janitor of these rooms |
be conversant with the history of |
every relic in them, and when our |
young men return from their almn |
m:ter feeling they havedrunk loug |
and deep at the Perian fount, that |
they are sufliciently filled with |
classic lore to watt safely their fit- |
tle barque over the great maelstrom |
of lite, believing their fathers were |
falterers and our history un worthy |
0! study, let that janitor for a mo- |
ment compare notes with them.}
Go with him, if you please, to
Atiense in his defense, by his|
wooden walls at Balamis, or follow |
Perry in his successes upon lhe?
gens, and teil Lim these successes |
give precedevce to the brilliant |
achievements o our own Semunies, |
Let him follow Cromwell in his|
religious infatuation, when, at the !
head of his old Ironsides, he went !
to battle with a claymore in hand g
and psaims in bis wowth, when t'e |
enemy melted before him like mist
before the moriing sun,
Or let him go to the 'ihim of
Waterloo, and there behold the
man of iron and hLe of destiny, as
they mect in that great struzgle,
Bee bow the lattle g bbs and flows,
At last notice the sh divisions
as they melt uwags hear the \'io-’
torious shoimeoki thes French ; Lo~ |
tice thag SEERRGE iron, impertur..
ble e itsell; at lust raises
LiSEYES Lo the sun aud in agony 0.1 l
' . exclaims: "Blucherl .(;r’
& 100 0
as ! ?iflfi:spa:n;!f?dt:{ uc‘h!éll’-
is in ,li%btf He comies dowirthas
slope Jike the mountain bould_er.’
strises the euvemy in flauk, turns |
the tide of battle, suves the iron
duke and banishes: Napoleon frow’
Europe forlifs. Tell that student
the indomitable impalse of a Crome
well, or the dauntless chivalry ofa
Blucher are eclipsed by the dare
and dash of our own Dedfurd For
est. Let him, if you p'ease, fol
low Xerxes scross the Hellespont,
Cwesar across the Rubicon,or follow
ll',c-onidus with his three hundred
iclmecu as e throws himself into
the mountain gorge, bids defiance
to thonsands of the enemy . and
with true Spartan conrage held the
post of danger till there wag hut
one to tell the tale. and he told it
in dis race, or let him follow that |
man of destiny throazh airid des
erts of Africa till he stands in the
shadow of the pyramids or through
’snm\'s of Russia till he beholds
Moscow in flames, and half of the
‘empire in waste, and tell him these
Drilliant aehevements grow pale
i the halo of glory that encireles
the brow of R. E. Lee. Yes, Mr.
President, our baby mation has
found a place in the hurial house
of nations, but she hus left a histo
ry noble and graud, and it we are
true to ourselves, true to our dead
heroes, true to posterity--we will
endeavor to perpetyate it.
In arranging this collection of
portiaits shall we forget the women
of the south? I have gone to the !
post of daty and danger at, night
and found it deserted by the eon
federate soidier. I have known
them to leave our camp ard go de
liberately to the enemy. - Untors
tunavely T was ¢ptured and placed
in a yankee heil. I have seen the
confederate torsake our flag and
swear allegrance to that of the enes
my; but, sir, ncither by history or
tradition have I ever known a
sotuthern woman desert the south
ern cause. Then, in behalf ot
their fidelity, I ask a place upon
these walls be appropriated o the
portruits of soutbern women. I'
witl ask thatone of Georgia’sstand
high in this temple; 1 mean she
who instituted the custom of strew
ing the gravesof our dead herves
with flowers —an ohject lesson as
beantiful 4nd chaste as she was cul
tured and lovely, Lot it be placed ‘
there, and may she. live in the|
memory of the s uthern people :\sl
fong as the rose ghall bloom
I Lear much these days of a new |
south, I assure you it has no eu
pliony for my ears. I see in it the
glitier of gold aund the skeen of sil
vor,and I alsosee a disposition to |
wean our children from the memo-!
ry of our past llistm‘y. Nu, we
veterans will call it tiie old south,
Ilove the name. I love her tradi
tions. I love her iustitutions, [
love her pure,sincere good women,
I love bher caltured, chivalrous
grand mer. “In that old south
wag realizad the republic o a Pla {
to, the Utopia of a More or Lhe%
Eiderado ot a W alter Raleigh. In
that old south was realized the
dream of the poet, and 1t was the
paradise of the practical. It was|
an Elen medernized without the
fall.” The graud consummation
of all that wmind .can eonceive or
money achieve to make man peacee
ful voble and happy.
Forget the old south, When my
eyes shall look upon yoader sun
for the last time on earth;’ when
memory’s tablet shall have so taded
that I scarcely remember the gol«
den seenes of my childhood; when
life's Last flickering ray shail be so
speut that I only remember the
teashings of a pious mother or the |
devotion of atrue and good “”P’l
muy I there not forget the greats
ness and grandeur of the old south. ‘
Batisfied that no senator in Lhi-x‘
chamber will oppose the bill, with
one other thought T eommit the
measure to them. [ feel thisc this
net will not be ccmplete unless
there be hung vpon the highest
arch in this tempie the portrait OH
the grand old chieftain of our lost
cause. Ie lives today in his solis |
tude. Blandered, traduesd, mas
ligned and outlawed. Yes, Br. ‘
President, autlawed, No country
he can call bis own. No flag t+
which lie can appeal for protection.
Yet that hero, stateman Christain,
scholarly patriot, like Mariusin the
wreek of Carthage, sublime even
in ruins. May he live to put to
shame his traducers and slanderers,
and when he bas filled his missicn
on earth and the last roll is called
and th tocsin o, lus enternal doom
is sounded,ns his soul wings its way
from earth to heaven may a cohort
ot rede med veterans stand at the
threshold beckoning Linr onward
and upward, god as he passes ‘the
pearlg gates of the new Jerusalon
may he receive from the Cuptain
of that might{ host the assuring
plauditof “Well done, goed ' and
taithful servout.”
For Consumotion, Sick or Bil
ious Headache, use Dr, Pierce's
Pellets, or Antilbilious Granules,
Purely Vegetaole and perfeetly
harmiess. Ounea dose, - :
Johusou’s Tonic 18 a splendid
Tonic and Agpetizer. Try it, and
it not plaased with it don’t pay for
ity 3
AT MIDNIGHT, - :
Tell me, lowing stars on lngh
Do I perish when I die ?
Or shall I beever I?
Will my spirit have rebirth
- Aund regain the things of worth
When my dust returns to earth?
Ye, too, perish; ye, too fall;
Flash a moment—then the pall.
Is that typical of all?
Boundless depths of glowing
st heres,
Changeless in the charming years,
Seem to negative our fears,
Yet your changeless 13 ail change!
Fleeting, flying on, ye range
Thro’ the vortex vast and strange.
Other creatures, other men,
Cling upon you live—ana then
Do they die and live aguin? |
THE OLD SLAVE. |
A Touching Tribute to the Negroes
of the South.
Rev. J. Howard Carpenter, pas<
tor of the Baptist church at West
Point, Ga., preached a sermon re
cently on the negro problem. Tt
; shows profound thought, and
breathes, throughout, a spirit ot
“conciliation and amity, in strong
“contrast o many. We take an
‘extract wlich will be found below
from the sermon. The preacher,
among other things, said :
“Bat it is our duty to help the
negro, because we owe him some~
thing. We are actually in debt to
him. When we mu'tiply our gifts
a thousand fold, we will not be
giving to him. He will etill be
our creditor by millions,
His own taithful hands swept our
fields of their virgin forests, and
broke the soi: all webbed with
roots, and sowed the seed and cul«
tivated the plants until the wilder
nzs bloomed like a roazo and filled
our barns with bread.
The pages of history are tingeq
with the Llood of war and dsrken
ed with the tale of treason. Our
own glorious and successful revos
lution is marred by the story of
Arnold. And no bloodier battles
e're were waged than those of
brothers against brothers in the
war between the states. But there
is one clean page left in its history
—one 08 white and pure as though
tresh from the mill of God—and
on this gpotless page should be en
grased by southern hands, in lets
ters af brass, and punctuated by
by tears from southern hearts :
tHeveesesivecscioansobuseeiks |
: Sucred to the Memory of the ; |
PIDETLITY, HONOR AND LOVE |
. of the . :
L NEGRO SLAVES OF THE gOUTH, |
¢ To their .
: MASTER'S HOME AND
: - Family. !
. 1861 —--1865. :
'fl:....-.........0-........-:{::
Fellow citizens, we venerate
Washington as the “Futher ol our
Country;” Lee 1s the emsbodiment
of =outhern chivalry and honor;
Jackson as the Bonapaite of the
confedcracy, and Davis as the apex
of putriot’sm and model of statess
manship. And we would like to
cerect endaring monuments to their
virtues. But [ fecl that the im
morlal souls of these men—for they
sannot die—would be among the
first ; yea, the first to lay in golid’
rock, a granite pedestal, and build
on that a marble monolith, rival
ing the snow in whiteness, to pers
petuate the memory of the faiths
fulness of the negro slave.
There is no sweeter picture in
memory’s gallery than that which
partrays the doathless love of thei
negro slave for his master. Indeed, |
with us there i 3 no complete pies
ture of home life and fireside hap
piness without his dusky figure.
Upon their ovn black bosoms
they cradled one iifant heads snd
gouthed our childish fears with
never-dyiog melodies. They taught
our baby lips their first innocent
prattle, aud some of us to-day, still
true to early training, forget oue
college days and vse “‘black mam
my’s” gramwar. Our first totter
ing step was made while their poor |
black bands were extended invit.
ingly. They guarded us in child
hiood, sympathizing in our surrows
and rejoicing in our happiness,
They added cheer to every festivity
aod griet to every. scrrow, Th“'fis
VOL. YI.—NO. 26.
{stood around the coueh'of our dgw:
ing loved ones as tearful sentinels,
and with their own hands, mads
soft and tender in aservice of Joyve,
they closed the cyes of our?
darlings and smootted the hair
they had lovingly Lkissed, %&‘d
when the bedy was luid to rest in
the old church-yard there were
many offerings of tender love from
fuirer Kgnds and whiter fip%, but
' when the teare, like dew diwilled
' upou the new made wmounds, there
spurkled nove with purer izl tian
those of the negro slave.”
These sentiments do eredit to the
mind and heart of the minister,
and they will find a regponsive
echo in the Learts of thousinds and
tens of thousands ot gouthern men
and women. lowever lould ang
noisy may be the eluius of north -
ern men, that they are the best
friecds of the nezro. history and
truth will record tic fact, that,
here at the south, among the peos
ple with whom he lias always hived,
and who understand them better
than any people on earth, the ne.
gro has, and will always have, his
traest and bost friends,— Zhomas~
ville Tomes: Enterprise.
What Aleobol Will do {or You.
Ho!d a moathtul of spirits
whisky forinstance—in your mouth
five minutes and you will fiud is
buras severly ; inspect the mouth
and you will find it influned Hold
it ten o 1 fifteen minutes, and you
will find that various
parts of the interior of the: mouth
have become blistered; then tis a
hankerchiet over the eyesand :aste,
for instauce, water, vinezar, millk
or creain, and’ you finld that you
are incapable of distinguizhing one
from the otlier. This experience
proves to a certainty that aleohol
i 3 not only a violent irritant, but
also a natectic, Can you Dbelieve
that the still more tender and im
portant internal organs ot the body
can be less injuriously affected than
the mouth ?—Dr. MeCUollcek.
A Large Estate,
A broad land is this in which we
live, dotted so thickly w.th thrity,
cities, towi s and villages! Awnid
them all, with ever-increas ng pops
alurity and helpfulness, is i
Pierce’s G ddon l\‘v:ficu! Digcovery,
giving hope and cheer where there
is diseases and despair. Where-~
ever there is humanity there issuf«
fering ; wherever there is sutering
th-re is the best field for this great~
est American Remedy. Consumps
tion (which is lung serofuln), vields
toit, it ampluyed in the earvly stages
of the disenses: Chronic Nassl
Catarrh, yields to it; Kidney and
Liver diseases, yield toit! IY you
want the hevt known remedy for all
disenses of the blood, ask for Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medizal Discovery,
and take no other. It is guarans
teed to cure in all cases of diseavcs
for which it is recomended,or mons
ey refwrded,
Scrofula in Children.
‘The following is taken from a
letier written under date of July
1, 1889, by ¥rs. Ruth Berkley, a
most charitable and Christain lady
of Baiiun, Kan.: *“ln the carly
part of 1887 serofula appeared on
the head of my little graudebild,
thea ouly eighteen mouths old.—
Shortly after breaking out it spread
rapidiy all over her buly. The
scibs on the sores would peal off
on the slightest tonch, and the
oder that would arise would mnake
the atmosphers of the room sicks
ening ah£ unbearable. The dis«
ease next attacked the eyes and
we feared would lose her sight.—
Eminent physicians frons the sur
rounding country were consulted,
but eould do wothing to relicve the
little innocent,and gave it o 8 their
opinior, ‘that ihe cise was hope,
lees and impossible to save the
clild’s eyesight.” It was then that
we decided to try Swift’s Specifie
(8.8 8.) 'That medicine at once
made a speedy and complete cure.
For more than a year pust shie bhas
becn as healthy as any child in the
lasd.” 1
CURED HIS LIPILE BOY.
My little bey hud impurities of
the bisod that were of o scro’ulous
nature,which resulted in the break
ing out of an abecess on the hip, [
%'nve him Swilt’s Bpeeitie (3. b} 8.)
t purified his blcod and restored
his health. As a bloed purifier
it certainly has no equal.
FeLix Sisx; Sa'em, N. €,
Treatise on"Blocd and Skin Diss
eases mailed free. 4
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO , Atlanta, |
Ga,
The best extracts, tooth brush
es, har brushes nad combs at
Baje’s drag store. \