Newspaper Page Text
Herald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN, CA.. FRIDAY, JUNE 9.
Rntercd at tlic I’ost Ollioc, Newnan, Ga., an
second-class mall matter.
THE EARLY HAMMOCK.
Hot.ween tlie trees the hammock swum?,
And it was merry May.
Alt, she was passing sweet, and young,
And it was merry May!
lie came ami sat beside her there,
Oh, lie was brave and she was fair—
They swung all innocent of care,
It was the merry May.
He held her trembling little hand,
Oh, it was merry May;
He told her that he loved her, and
It was the merry May;
They sw ung t here for an hour or two,
Forgetting time, as lovers do
ll is feet got numb, her nose got blue
It was the merry May.
The hammock swung between the trees
It was the merry May ;
The leaflets fluttered in the breeze,
For it was merry May !
Their joints got stiff, their ears gol rod,
For, as has been distinctly said,
11 w as tlie merry May !
Those lovers now are sick abed
Southern Spoliation Fund.
bew York Sun,
Washington, May 25.—“Tho re
cords of tho Treasury tire full of ro
mances,” Haiti n Treasury oflloial.
“Take Hint bureau called tho Division
of Abandoned Lands and Property,
lor example. It is in itself one groat
romance. Why, there is about $l,‘l,-
OIK),000 in ils keeping belonging to
people in the .South nlone. You soo,
during and nt the close of the civil
war, vnlunhlo property of all sortH
fflil into the linnds of army officers
and whh turned into tho Treasury.
Finally the amount becanio so great
that when Willinm E, Ohnndler be
came Assistant Secretary he created
a division to have charge of the entire
matter. More than $12,000,000
charged to that division is the pro
ceeds of cotton taken from planta
tions and towns all over the South,
and sold.
“I know of one ease In which $2,-
000,000 worth of cotton was taken
from a far South plantation, when
the staple was worth $500 a halo, and
aold. The people to whom it be
longed were not rebels at all, but
were always loyal to tho Union. Tiioy
haven't an idea where their cotton
went to. Their names were on the
hales, and it wouldn’t boat all difficult
lor them to make their case if they
only know what I do. It is neatly
I flirty- seven yenrs since the money
was deposited there. I don’t know
whether any of the owners are alive
or not, and it they nre it is hardly
^irohahle that they will ever get hack
what is really their owu. All the tes
timony in the ease is in the possession
of the Oovcrmnent, nnd it never lets
-£0 anything it gets its hands on. The
agent who took this cotton is dead
■long ago, as is the man who sold it.
So you see the owners could not
•>rove their case by either of them.
“There are other instances similar
lo this, fn 1 Hfl.'f wo received from a
Government agent more than $100,-
000, which wns the proceeds of cot
ton taken from a foreigner supposed
to be a blockude-runner in one of the
larger cities of the South. When
Atocretary McCulloch heard of tills lie
eaid:
“ ‘This money is only held in trust
4>y tho Government. Some day we
aliall be obliged to account for it, for
the United States lias really no right
lo keep it.’ But from that time uutll
«ow no demand lias ever been made
on us for it, and there it lies. I doubt
■IT tlie owner ever knew just where it
did go.
“When Gen. Sherman’s army oc
cupied tho towns of the South Atlan
tic seaboard the Confederates de
stroyed all the cotton possible before
they surrendered. Cotton worth mil
lions of dollars was burned to keep it
Irom falling into our hands. The real
owners could not tell what wns thus
liurned and what was saved. But we
luiow, and this was the way: The
•♦looks we often captured, for instance,
showed that James Brown, a mer
chant, hnd so many bales marked in
« certain way. The bales not burned
could thus be easily identified from
the marks and names on them. In
nil cases the books captured contain
ing the names of the consignors and
owners were sent to tlie Treasury
with the pnpers relating to the cap
ture. Where are these books and
papers? Well, 1 don’t know, hut I
suppose they are somewhere in the
Treasury vaults.
“As we never kuew when the
claimants might come forward nnd
make a demand on tlie Treasury for
tlie proceeds of their cotton, the
money it brought was never turned
into the general fund, hut always re
mained iu an account by itself. It is
so loug since this money was deposit
ed, and the testimony necessary to
make a ease is in so many instances
unattainable by the owners, that it is
scarcely probable that any great por
tion of this enormous amount of mon
ey will ever leave the Treasury. The
only very large sum from this fund | the fact of James V.’s quarrel with
tliat was ever returned to its owners the Queen, Mary of Lorraine, asked
was paid to Gazaway B. Lamar of i the question : “Why was Mary Queen
Bavannah, Ga., and New York. Ex- j of Scots born at Linlithgow?” when
Attorney-General Williams and Gen. up starts a little fellow and shouts:
B. F. Butler of Massachusetts were “Because her mother was there.”
his counsel. They got bnck for him
$600,000 for cotton taken in the man
ner I have described. Gen. Butler
said to me when the case was pend
ing:
“ .‘If I were a few years younger,
and wanted to make a vast fortune
quickly, I could do it more easily and
certainly in the prosecution of these
claims than in any other way.’
“It was always a wonder to me that
after the action of the Government in
the Lamar case more Southern people
did not attempt to recover their mon
ey from the Treasury. The principle
I of repayment wns then established.
| The main difficulty, of course, would
' be to prove that their particular cot
ton was taken, sold nnd the money
turned into tlie Trensury."
Two Great Remedies.
1'hilndclphia Press.
All who ever suffered from a tooth
ache know to their Horrow that tho
pains increase nH the night grows old
er. A toothache which during tho
day interfered but little with our en
joyment of life is likely to develop
during the hours of darkness Into a
veritable torror, that makes us curse
the accident of our birth. It is the
same with an earache, asthmatic
troubles, etc. Asthma is most likely
to develop into a smothering night-
mnre between the hours of 10 p. m.
and 6 a. m.
At tlie Vienna University I)r. Gold-
Hclinelder lias told tlie reason in a pa
per read before liin class. lie thinks
t lie dnrkuesN prevailing in tlie aver
age hod-room is at fault. Light, he
says, plays a greater part lu the pa
thology of aches than most people
imagine. Tiioso are, properly speak
ing, the healthiest members of ttie
human family who live in sunlit, weil-
aired rooms, nnd who move about in
the huh ns much ns practicable.
If in daytime we are stricken with
pain our sufferings are certainly less,
relatively speaking, than they would
he if the malady had seized us at
night, for light nnd sunshine soothe
our feelings nnd do not allow us to
abandon ourselves to the feeling of
pain.
When night comes the painful sen
sations increase; they are bearable as
loug ns we are in the gas or lamp
light, but become intense the moment
we stretch out in bed, enveloped by
stillness and darkness. A lessening
of the pain is observable only after
sunrise.
“What does it mean?” asks tlie
doctor. “That darknesn and stillness
aro not conducive to tlie comfort of
sick people. Therefore, I say, if you
have pains in the evening, do not rob
yourself of tlie soothing effects of a
lnmp. In ninety-nine out of 100 cases
tho presence of a light in tho sick
room alleviates pain.
“For tlie same reasons, do not let
your children sleep in the dark if they
prefer a light. The denial of a night
light has made many a child ill with
heart disease. If children refuse to
sleep in the dark it may bo ussumed
that there is some physical or mental
reason for it which we ought to re
spect.
“From tlie above rules nervous
people are exempt. Some of them
absolutely refuse to find rest until all
1b quiet and dark ubout them. I liavo
found that in cases of megrim, a neu
ralgic pain in one side of the head,
nothing would do but to place the pa
tient in an absolutely durk aud still
room—If possible at the top of the
house. 1 advise that people suffering
from sick headche should interrupt
their day’B work and take themselves
for a quarter of an hour to a darkened
room proof against noises. Nature
has put two great remedies in our
hands—light and darkness. Sufferers
should find out for themselves which
best agrees with them.”
Thomas Thurman, deputy sheriff of
Troy, Mo., sayB if every one in the
United StnteH should discover the vir
tue of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve for
piles, rectal troubles and skin dis
eases, the demand could not bo sup
plied. G. R. Bradley.
A popular drummer of the West
attended a large party one evening,
and after supper was over was prom
enading with one of the guests, a
young lady from tlie East, to whom
he had just been introduced.
Iu the courso of the conversation
the subject of business callings came
up, and she said:
“By the way, Mr. , may I ask
what your occupation is?”
“Certainly,” he answered. “I am
a commercial traveler.”
“How very interesting! Do you
know, Mr. , that in the part of
the country where I reside commer
cial travelers are not received in good
society?”
Quick as a Hash he rejoined:
“They are not here, either,
madam.”
In a hamlet on the hanks of the
river Ayr, one of her majesty’s in
spectors was examining a class on
Scottish history, and wishing to elicit
ONLY ONE CORE
FOR SCROFULA.
S. S. S. Is the Only
Remedy Eqoal to this
Obstinate Disease.
There are dozens of remedies recommended for
Scrofula, some of them no doubt being able to
afford temporary relief, hut S. S. S. is absolutely
the only remedy which completely cures it.
Scrofula is one of the most obstinate, deep-seated
blood diseases, and is beyond the reach of the
many so-called purifiers and tonics because some
thing more than a mere tonic is required. S.S. N.
is equal to any blood trouble, and never fails to euro Scrofula, because it
goes down to the seat of the disease, thus permanently eliminating every
trace of the taint.
The serious consequences to which Scrofula surely lends
should impress upon those afflicted with it the vital im
portance of wasting no time upon treatment which can
not possibly effect a cure. In many cases where the wrong
treatment has been relied upon, complicated glandular
swellings have resulted, for which the doctors insist that
a dangerous surgical operation is necessary.
Mr. II. E. Thompson,of Miiledgeville, Ga., writes: “A
bad case of Scrofula broke out on tlie glands of my neck,
which had to lie lanced nnd caused me much suffering. I
was treutod for a long while, but the physicians were un
able to cure me, nnd my condition wns ns bad ns when I
begun their treatment. Many blood remedies were used,
but without effect. Some one recommended S. S. S., and
I began to improve ns soon ns I hnd taken a few bottles.
Continuing the remedy, I was soon cured permanently,
and have never had a sign of the disease to return.” Swift’s Specific—
S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD
—is the only remedy which can promptly roach and cure obstinate, deep-seated
blood diseases. By reiving upon it, and not experimenting with the various
so-called tonics, etc., nil sufferers from blood troubles can he promptly cured,
instead of enduring years of suffering which gradually hut surely undermines
the constitution. S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable, and never fails to
cure Scrofula, Eczema, Cancer, Rheumatism, Contagious Blood Poison, Boils,
Tetter, Pimples, Sores, Ulcers, etc. Insist upon S S S.; nothing can take its place.
Books on mood and skin diseases will lie mailed free to any address by the
Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia.
The Fish Hatchery.
Atlanta (lor. Macon Telegraph.
Atlanta, May 81.—Hon. Ben Mc
Laughlin, of Meriwether county, is
here to-day. He says that the work
of constructing the United States fish
hatchery at Cold Springs, in Meri
wether county, is progressing rapidly.
In tills connection Col. McLaughlin
said: “Why, let me tell you; the
hatcheries that the Government is
building at Cold Springs will be the
biggest thing in the State, and will be
located in the biggest and best county
in Georgia. There are to be twenty-
five small lakes, or, as they call them,
breeding ponds, where the young fish
will he hatched out. Then there will
he several large lakes in which will be
placed the large fish. No two varie
ties of fish will be allowed in the same
brooding pond. There will be no
mixing of the different species. This
is the reason why there nre so many
ponds. Tiie size of these is about
20x80 feet, and the sloping banks are
to he protected’ from washing by be
ing sodded with grass. Mr. W. H.
Benton, representing tlie Govern
ment, lias charge of the work. He is
a civil engineer, and an assistant
United States fish commissioner. The
property covers about twenty acres
of land, and is beautifully located for
the purpose of a hatchery. The water
supply comes from ‘fold Springs, and
there is any quantity of it. Mr. Ben-
tou is to live at the hatchery, and is
to huve charge of the distribution of
the fish. The Government is to build
him a fine residence on the reserva
tion. He is a most agreeable gentle
man, thoroughly in love with his
work, and takes a great pleasure in
explaining in every detail the purpo
ses of tho enterprise. He will breed
principally trout or black basB, as
some people call them, bream and
perch, as these varieties are regarded
the most suitable for the waters of
our lakes and rivers. Mr. Benton has
uow on hand a large quantity of fish,
nnd as rapidly as a breeding pond is
finished some variety is placed in its
waters. He expects in a very few
months to have everything in run
ning order, so as to supply all appli
cants with any kind of fish desired.
“I’ll tell you another thing,” said
Mr. McLaughlin, “there is no meas
uring the good that this institution
will do to the people of Georgia.
Just think of it. All you will have to
do to stock your pond, lake or river
with fish is to file your application,
and you will get what you want.”
What you want is not temporary
relief from piles, but a cure to stay
cured. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
cures piles, and they stay cured. G.
R. Bradley.
It is easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than it is
for a man to miss his train and think
things that are fit for publication.
RoVal
Baking Powder
Made from pure
cream of tartar.
Safeguards the food
against alum.
Alum taking powders uc the greatest
menaccn to health of the present day.
sora sssiwa swots eo., sew rout.
Bankers Responsible for the Over-
Capitalization of Trusts.
American Monthly Review of Reviews.
The bankers also are responsible
for a part of the trust craze and for
most of the over-capitalization. Pro
moters can accomplish nothing with
out the aid of bankers to under-write
and float the trusts. While hankers
may have intended to hold the pre
ferred stock of trusts down to the ac
tual value of the properties consoli
dated—a share of “common” stock
going as a bonus with every share of
preferred and the surplus common
going to the promoters and under
writers—they have made great de
partures from this principle. In not
a few cases the face value of the pre
ferred stock has been two or three
times the actual assets. In one case
the assets,'excluding “good-will,” are
said to be' only about $500,000, al
though tho capital is $20,000,000, one-
half of which is preferred stock. But
in this case the “good-will” has been
ncquired by the expenditure of mill
ions of dollars in advertising and is a
very valuable asset. The preferred
stock is selling close to par and is
probubly worth that price.
The trust movement in its aspects
as a promoters’ craze will subside
when the hankers refuse financial
support to trusts which are paying
three or four prices for plants, and
which nre capitalized—as most recent
ones have been—with little reference
to first cost or to cost of duplication,
but almost entirely with reference to
the earnings as calculated from pres
ent high prices. This the bankers are
now Baid to be doing. Ab a conse
quence scores of would-be trusts nre
pigeon-holed. Some of them, after
being examined by search-lights, will
get through. In most cases they will
he held up until the options on the
plants expire, when the promoters
will start afresh aud try to obtain new
and more reasonable options.
Wlint is Kodol Dyspepsia Cure? It
is the newly-discovered remedy, the
most effective preparation ever de-
visod for aiding the digestion and as
similation of food, and restoring the
deranged digestive organs to a nat
ural condition. It is a discovery sur
passing anything yet known to the
medical profession. G. R. Bradley.
A Hopeful Sign for Georgia.
Colunibui Enquirer-Sun.
A Southwest Georgia county
shipped a train-load of home-raised
sheep and cattle to the West the oth
er day. A great many shipments of
cattle have been made from Georgia
and Alabama to the West in the last
few years, but this is the first time
we remomber when any one com
munity lias shipped a train-load nt
once. This is a favorable sign. It
shows two tilings; first, that sheep
and cattle can be raised successfully
in Georgia; and, second, that the far
mers in some sections of the State
realize the fact and are beginning to
take advantage of it.
There is also a disposition on the
part of the farmers to dispose of their
piney woods breeds of cattle nnd re
place them with improved breeds,
which mature early aud fatten easily.
Tlie pasturage iu many sections of
Georgia is far superior to that of the
West, plenty of water being one
great advantage, nnd auother is the
profuse growth of cane, which gives
the cattle green food throughout the
winter. When the farmers engage in
raising cattle for sale on a large scale
they generally make money by it,
and it also enables them to build up
their land, and thereby increase their
I crops aud make their farms more val-
" uable and remunerative. We like to
see this good work go on. It is a
! hopeful sign for the future of Georgia.
A Romantic Story From Madrid.
Chicago Record.
I hear a romantic story from Mad
rid, which, if true, will account for
the defeat of Cervera’s fleet, the de
struction of the Spanish armada in
the Philippines, the capture of Santi
ago, the loss of Cuba, Porto Rico and
the East Indian colonies of Spain, and
all the other misfortunes which that
nation has suffered, and re-establish
the ancient theory that the opal is the
! unlucky jewel.
j When Alfonso XII. was in exile
in Paris, according to this yarn, he
became acquainted with the Countess
de Castiglione, who had the reputa
tion of being the most beautiful wo
man in France, and promised that if
he was ever restored to his throne
she should share it with him. In
1875, after the dissolution of the re
public, he was called to reign, but he
had no sooner met the pretty Merce
des Montpensier, granddaughter of
Louis Phillippe, than he forgot all
about his vows and the charms of the
French Countess and was quickly
married. But the Countess did not
forget about him. With malice in her
heart and a deep desire for revenge
she obtained from some dealer in
supernatural merchandise one of the
most brilliant opals ever known,
which had brought misfortune upon
every person who possessed it. She
had it newly mounted in diamonds
nnd sent it as a wedding present to
the bride.
As everybody knows, Mercedes
died before the end of the honey
moon, and in the distribution of her
effects the opal went to her grand
mother, who immediately took the
small-pox and lived but a few weeks.
A sister of Queen Mercedes inherited
the ring and speedily succumbed to
its fatal influence.
For,several years the baleful jewel
lay in the treasury of the house of
Montpensier, but in the winter of
1804-5 the Duke of Montpensier sent
it to the queen, giving her an account
of its character and begging her to
have it destroyed. Instead of obey
ing hiB injunction Christina took it to
the royal chapel and with a golden
chain hung it about the neck of the
virgin that presides at the altar. ’
Up to that hour her reign had been
unusually peaceful and prosperous,
but all at once conditions changed,
and trouble began to brew in every
portion of the Spanish domain. Revo
lutions broke out in Cuba and the
Philippine Islands, crops failed, finan
cial panicB ensued, conspiracies were
discovered, and everything that could
injure and annoy the government
seemed to come in quick succession.
The explanation of all this is that the
holy mother was offended by the gift
of the accursed opal, and millions of
people of Spain believe that their
national disasters are due to that fact.
Liszt's Agony of Sensitiveness.
Letter in Pittsburg Dispatch.
“Liszt had already played a .great
fantasia of his own and Beethoven’s
twenty-seventh sonata in the former
part of the concert. After this latter
piece he gasped with emotion bb I
took his hand and thanked him for
the divine energy he bad shed forth.
At last I had managed to pierce the
crowd and I sat in the orchestra. My
chair was on the same board as Liszt’s
piano when the final piece began. It
was a duet for two instruments, be
ginning with Mendelssohn’s ‘Chants
Sans Paroles’ and proceeding to a
work of Liszt’s. We had already
passed the delicious chime of the
‘Song Written In a Gondola.’
“As the closing strains began I saw
Liszt’s countenance assume that agon}'
of expression, mingled with radiant
smiles of joy, which I never saw on
any other human face—only in the
paintings of our Saviour by some of
the early masters. His hands rushed
over the keys, the floor on which I
sat shook like a wire, and the whole
audience was wrapped in sound, when
the hand and frame of the artist gave
way; he fainted in the arms of the
friend who was turning over for him,
and we bore him out in a strong fit of
hysterics. ,
“The effect of this scene was really
dreadful. The whole room sat breath
less with tear, until Hiller came for
ward and announced that Liszt was
already restored to consciousness and
was comparatively well again. As I
handed Mme. de Cicourt to her car
riage we both trembled like poplar
leaves, aud I tremble scarcely less as
I write.”
Beauty
and
Purity
is found in
Cuticura
Soap
The most effective skin purifying and
beautifying soap In the world, as well
as purest and sweetest for toilet,
bath, and nursery.
Sold throughout the world. Price, iic. Poms D.
C. Coir.. Sole Prop,.. Boeton. "How to Brautifr
sad Purity the Skin," muled tree.
INSOMNIA
“I have been using CASCAHFTv.-
Insomnia, with which I have been nfllicteVi r 0r
over twenty years, and I enn xnv that c ,
Imve dlvcn me more relief thnn'anv other Vim
dv I have ever tried. I-l ull rertuffi?iSg-
men 1 them to my friends us beintr all thev
represented." Titus. Gillaiid, Elgin, 11; 8
CANDY
CATHARTIC
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Good Never Sicken. Weaken, or Grlne 11V o?;,'
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Sterling Ik m.-dr rn.n|«nr, flilrain.. llniitrenl. Sr. VnrlV'u
New Advertisements.
PARKER’S “I
HAIR balsam
Cleanses and beautifioi the heir,
I Promote! a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Boatore Qrav
, Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases ft hair lallinjA
SENT FREE
to housekeepers—
Liebig COMPANY’S
Extract of Beef
COOK BOOK-
telling bow to prepare many tltji-
cate anil delicious dishes.
Address Liebig Co., P. O. Box, 2718, New
York.
fJjJfJiM'i’rS F.nerlUh Diamond Ttrand.
Pennyroyal pills
I d-ffiTlV Original and Only (tonulne. A
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ire, alway* reliable, ladies aik .
Drt'go’lft for Chichttftra Xnalish Din. A
nond Brand In lted end Gold neullia\
traxee, waled wiib bine ribbon. Take
[ao other* Jtef'inedangrrouM rsbetitu- v
tiontand imitationa. At DrQgffi.4ii,orieod4e.
In Btatnpe for j.urtionlrtrs, toatimonltl' anl
_ “IlnUef for Ladle* M in letter, by return
T Mall 10*000 Testituonlaifl. Name Paper.
CfcloheotorChemicalConMadluon l*lnce.
LMbruakuu. PHILADA.. PA.
Skin Diseases.
For the speedy and permanent cure o!
tetter, salt rheum and eczema, Cham
berlain’s Eye and Skin Ointment it
without an equal. It relieves the itch
ing and smarting almost instantly an I
its continued nse effects a permanent
cure. It also cures itch, barber's itch,
scald head, sore nipples, itching piles,
chapped hands, chronic sore eyes ani
granulated lids.
Dr. Cady’s Condition Powders foi
horses are the best tonic, blood purifiei
and vermifuge Price, 25 cents. Soldbv
HOLT'S DRUG STORE.
CURE ALL VOUR PAIRS WITH
Pain-Killer.
A Hsdlclna Chait In Itsalf.
Simple, Saf* and Quick Cura for
\ CRAMPS, DIARRHOEA, COUCHS,
COLDS, RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA.
25 and SO cent Bottles.
j BEWARE OF IMITATION3.
BUY ONLY THE GENUINE.
£ PERRY DAVIS*
Excursion tickets At reduced rate*
between local points arc on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and nntil 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning until Mon
day noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a bus
iness or pleasure trip to the East
should Investigate and consider the
advantages offered via Savannah and
Steamer lines. The rates generally
are considerably cheaper by this
route, and, in addition to this, pas
sengers save sleeping car fare and the
expense of meals en route, as tickets
Include meals and berths aboard ship.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to New York and Bos
ton, and the Merchants and Miners
line to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling public
Is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangements. The
tables arc supplied with all the deli
cacies of the Eastern and Southern
markets. All the luxury and comforts
of a modern hotel while on board ship,
affording every opportunity for rest,
recreation or pleasure.
Each steamer' has a stewardess to
look especially after ladies and chil
dren traveling alone.
For information as to rates aud
sailing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations, apply to nearest ticket
agent of this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, Geu. Pass. Agt.,
E. H. HIATUS, Traffic Manager, j
Savannah, Ga.
English Spavin Liniment removes all
Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blem
ishes from horses, Blood Spavins, Curbs,
Splints, Sweeney, Ring-Bone, Stifles.
Sprains, all Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc.
Save $50 by use of bottle. Wai ranted the
most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known,
Sold by J. T. Reese, Druggist, Newnan, <Ja.