Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 40, Petersburg, Pike County, 14 February 1896 — Page 7
DUN'S COMMERCIAL REVIEW. (Im Socmn <»f ».Kj> poMlsr Quid Bond tele Dm » Sflafftc Effect Upon BtulneM. end Mnkee t h«. Outlook One of Booeoto Brlphtneas, While R*nd«riar the Cnstomarjr Record of Ut« Tnnwetlou Lew Valuable than Usual. Sew Yomt, Feb. 8.—R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review, issued this jnorning, says: W Failures for the week have been 323 in the United States, against 281 last j, year, and 83 in Canada, against 53 last J year. The wonderful success of the popular ! loan alters the face of events. January operations become ancient history as the nation mounts above all doubts and fears to a solid certainty that the people can and will uphold their government. The influence of this event upon all manufacturing and all f tirade can not be lightly estimates, it strips the silver situation of all its power to hurt. It puts the treasury upon a safe basis for the time, whether congress does anything or not. It notifies foreign nations that the United States has power as well as purpose. It unlocks millions of gold which had been gathered in preparation, brings directly several millions of gold from Europe and stimulates the anxiety of foreign investors to obtain American seeuri
With such a revolution in business suddenly effected, the customary rec- ! ords of the past week and month are of less value than usual. But there have been signs of changes in iron manufactures, although the average of price is nearly one per cent, lower this week, and orders for wire nails are stimulated by a decision to advance the price again March 1. There is also a more' active demand for plates and sheets. Southern competition lowers coke iron at ; Chicago, and prevents advance at the ‘ east, while sales of last year's speculators in the PtttSburgteftv-gion still depress Bessemer. / -S Speculation iiasraised copper to 10*^ cents, with sales of 6.000.000 pounds, and tin to 13 S an<| lead to three and ; one-tenth cents, with large exports of Mexican. The boot and. shoe manufacture does not gain as vet, leather being, about'one per cent, lower for the week. Hides are depressed by tight money, though in light demand, and about four per cent, lower for the week. Sales of wool have been 4.500,00C pounds, against 5,192,000 last year, and with reported ■ reduction in clay worsteds and mixtures, the orders for other woole.n goods are still cnusUSlly delayed. The cotton mills continue generally , active, though talk of decreasing the production still continues; print cloths * do not rise above 2% cents and some 'goods tend lower. jl Speculation in wheat has again lifted prices. The speculative1 market has been largely influenced.by rumors of , injury to the coming crop and by for eign advances. Corn has been comparatively quiet. Cotton is practically unchanged, receipts continuing to accord with a yield of about seven million^bales for 1S95. HON. WM. H.° ENGLISH,
rhe Indla.n» Capital »*ti roiiuctan ana Literal'•nr, is 11**4. ISDIAJrAJfOIJS, Ind.. Feb. 7.—At p. m. Hon. William H. Engtish. cap' tali&t, politician ami literatear, died in his j rooms at English's hotel, after an illness of six' weeks. He was unconscious for an hour before his death. Around his death bed were his son. Will English, his daughter, ' Mrs. Rose Walling, «f Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Hodges.- Mr. English's stenographer, and I)r. Franklin W. Hays, who attended him. [William Hnyden-English was a native of Indiana. Bn was bora at Lexington. Scott county, August 27. 1822. His father. Elisha G-Engli-h. one of the pioneers or the state, was honored with many public trusts during a period of to years, and his mjther wts the daughter of Philip Easton, an officer In the war of tae revolution. Mr. English was educated in the oo.niiMon schools and at Hanover college: studie% law and entered upon the active duties <>f life young. When he was only P year", of age be was ape of th two «* lc„- *e* from his county to the democratic state convention at Indianapolis. January 8. IMOl The other delegate was his lather, then a mem bet of the legislature. For over half a century he was actively Identified with about all the democratic state conventions held in Indiana. He was licensed to practice law before he was 21 years of age. and before, he was SI had been admitted to practice in the Indiana supreme court and the United States supreme court. He waa Mr time* elected to the congress of the United State*, serving during the eight years at intense; excitement immediately preceding the great civil war and was tbb author of a compromise measure in relation M the admission of Kansas as a state, which became a law and was a prolific theme of controversy in the heated political contests of that day under the name of the “English bUl.** He was ever a friend of the union of the states and was always a democrat in politics. In Pdl be declined a re-election to rongrem and since that tunc engaged In bonking, street railroad and various other enterprises, and thus added the reputation of n first-class j financier to the reputation he had previously acquired as a statesmen. In !8Mi Mr. English was unanimously non- j lnated for vice-president «g the United States j on the ticket with Gen. Hancock. Although I the ticket waa defeated, it rwelred a greater j number of votes in Indiana than the state { ticket of the democratic party recei ved at the election held only a few weeks before. During the last um years ol hi* life Mr. Ea- j glish was engaged in the work ef preparing and collating material to perpetuate the early i history of his native state. This work he caly j partially compict*:d. hut one voiunje that touching on theeoaquestof the uerihwest ter- j ritory. being in print. Mr- English acquired a considerable fortune during his lifetime. He waa married to Miss Emma M. Jackson, of Virginia, fa tW7 She died In Indianapolis, la 1S57. leaving two childten. Will E English, «f Indianapolis, and Mrs. Bose E. Walling, of Chicago, both of whom are still living.? JOHN HAYS HAMMOND, While Released on Excessive Ball, la Ear der Constant barvetllanee. Pretoria, Feb. 8.—The release of John Hays Hammond, the American j mining engineer, who was set at liberty on Wednesday, waa due in his illness which was caused and aggravated by hia incarceration . The amount; of bail required waa £10,006, and his release was asserted to be apon the condition th§t he remain under constant police surveillance, and that he shoalcl not be permitted to aaa anjr wisilors without official permission.
THE FARMING WORLD. SAVING THE MANURE. Difftrent Methods of Performing This Important Work. There Is as great a difference in the way two men will save manure on a farm as in the way they will care for tbeir stock or raise their crops. One farmer will recognize the value of the manure and will add straw and all sorts of refuse, working them in and incorporating them together so as to make an excellent article. Such a method was systematically carried out on a farm where the writer visited this summer. Nothing was wasted either inside the house or out. Whatever was not of value for pigs or chickens was set aside for the compost heap. It did not matter how trifling the amount, it always found its way there during the course of the day. Aa a result the owner is steadily bringing up a rundown farm at the yearly expenditure of a very small sum for commercial fertilizers, while his next-door neighbor, with originally better land, larger means and a more extended experience, is rapidly becoming bankrupt.
The change in their circumstances is being brought about by their different methods of handling the mnnure question. The old fanner is going on in the old rut he got into 20 years ago. when his land iVas virgin and the prices of farm products high. Labor was high too, then, and he economized by moving his animals about, feeding here and there in odd corners in the woods or along the road, wherever it happened to be convenient, or where it would save the trouble of cleaning up after* wards, for he regarded the manure as simply a waste product. These habits eling to him still to a far greater extent than he is aware of. lie thinks ^hat he saves his manure, or at least “alj that is worth the bother,” but fully ofae-half of it is still lost and« the remainder is thrown out, to be leached by every passing storm, while an insufficiency of betjding causes the almost total loss of the liquid.manure. Though this farmer keeps double the amount of stock that his careful neighbor does, he has always fewer loads of manure to haul. He says he eannbt understand it, and gets very indignant at the suggestion that he, a farmer lorn and bred, can learn anything from an engraver, whom failing health and sight have driven to an outdoor life. Yet the beginner-is already doing better than the old farmer. He says his only strong point is his manure heap, but it struck me that he is succeeding because that same care is bestow-ed on every part of the farm. 'He finds nothing too much trouble, and consequently there are no leaks to run away with the profits.—C, D, Bell, in X. Y. World, GOOD FEED BARROW. With It llalf the Labor of Cirxln Feed Ins Can Be Saved. Where grain is fed to a lot of stock the mixing of individual messes in individual boxes eutaiis much needless labor, no small part of which is the carrying of one or more of these boxes at
a time from the feed chest to a long" line of cattle cribs. A better plan is to make a borrow as is shown m the cut, with a small wheel at either side, and mix the whole ration in it at once. Then wheel the mass along before the stalls and shovel out into each crib the proper amount. Half the labor of feedinggrain will in this way be saved. The same kind of a barrow will be found useful in feeding roots to stock.—X. Y. Tribune. • ' Drewlac Fowls tor Market. Different markets require different styles of dressing fowls; for some markets the entrails should be removed, for others not; some require the heads on, others off. etc. For these reasdipi it is advisable to determine where you are going to ship and then to write to some commission merchant at that place asking for directions as to how the fowls should be dressed. It never pays to ship badly picked or packed fowls. These are largely responsible for the unsatisfactory returns which ure generally blamed on the commission merchant. It is impossible for the moat skillful seller to obtain the best prices fdr such stock. HameXailf Fork iuuafw. The sausages that come on the farmer’s table ought always to be homemade! Those which are purchased in the butcher shops are almost always made of meat that is nearly ready to decay, and the high seasoning they get with spices is for the purpose of concealing their euwholcsomeness. A well-made sausage is not at all unwhole-, some, though it is usually harder to digest than meat Dot so highly spiced. The home-made sausage ought to have cot more than one-fourth of its meat fat. Most boughten sausages contain more fat' than this, the sausage being uses! to get rid of fat meat that would not be otherwise salable.—Rural World. Eraifdj for Cornstalk Dlsoaso. Here is a remedy for cornstalk disease which Ambrose Cochran, Little River. Kan., sends to the Kansas Farmer: A neighbor had a cow that took sick very suddenly after being in the stalks and they sent for me to help give the cow some medicine. When I got there the cow seemed to be in ■ great deal of misery, and we poured down her five pints of coai oil and tbs eow got well, bat it was three days before she would eat. There was another case of the same kind close by, and they gave cool oil and H got well. The best food for been in winter in thick clover honey, to which white sugar sirup may be added.
ERYSIPELAS AT 8L Physicians Favored Amputation of the Limb. It Vm Kpt Done, and the Patient Wu - Oared by Internal Remedies. From Ms Stjmtliean-BeyitUr, Gal ft burg, JU Biggsvilie, twenty-nine miles west of Galesburg, DL, on the line of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, is an old, quiet little town. In earlier days it was noted as a good business point. It was here that a representative of the I ReptM Icon- Register found Mrs. Rhoda Tal- j cott, 81 years of age, who told him, in the I presence of her grateful daughter, Mrs. E Sloan, the following story, which is given as nearly as possible in her own language: “Tea, it is with great pleasure that I can give my testimony to the great value of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Over thirty years | ago I was taken with a chill and erysipelas set in. For sixteen weeks I was not able to walk a step. The physicians proposed to take off one of my limbs but finally decided not to do so. It mortified in spots, which had to be cut or burnt oat. After i was able to get about, with the use of crutches, every two or three months erysipelas would set in I again, and I suffered intensely from it. I j had a good many different doctors : Dr. Fitch, of Sheridan, Iowa; Dr. Brown, of Chanute, Kansas; Dr. Scarf t, of Burlington, j Iowa; Dr. Trembly, of Oakland, California; Dr. Searle, of Galesburg, Illinois, and a doc- i tor in Kansas City, but obtained no relief, j and after treatment from all these physi- j cians, instead of getting better, began to j get very much worse. ■’The other limb j broke* out in two places with sores about the sice of a silver dollar. I could not sleep nights without the aid of morphine. My limbs were so badly swollen that I could not j put on my shoes or walk a step withoutj either having on a heavy bandage or a silk 1 or rubber stocking. About a year ago I j read of and was told by a neighbor, about | Sr. Williams’ Pink Pills.. I concluded,'as a * ,st resort, to try theoij as I felt certain I : could find no other relief. From the verv I first after I commenced to use the pills, I ] began, to improve and since that time I have not been troubled at all. I would not have 1 done without the Pink Pills for anything, ] as they have most certainly prolonged my j life. My general health is much better than ! it has been for a good many years, and 1 am i now 81 years of age. Have not only used the Pink Pills with success, but have ree- j ommended them to my friends whom I , thought needed such treatment, and several have tried them and found relief.”
Mrs. sloan said that just before comment;- i Ing to use the Pink Pills, she thought her mother could lire but a very short time, and was most agreeably surprised after she had given the pills a trial. Mrs. Talcott has mode her home with her daughter;,for five or six years, and she can most cheerfully certify to the benefit her mother has derived from the use of the medicine. the reporter also called on Mr. George Kelly, the son of one of theprominent hardware dealers in Biggsville, who has used the I*ink Pills. He was troubled with pains in the stomach and back, and from the very first he commenced to get better, and now he is not troubled at all. John McKee, the druggist in the village, stated that he had sold a great many of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and that they most oertainly give the best of satisfaction and have accomplished great resulta. Quite a number of tne villagers are now using them. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerv es. They arc an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation ef the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in made or female. Pink Pilhs are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, SO cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold in bulk or by the J90), by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, X. Y. For On«cw “You told me to bring something home when I came this evening, Maria,-" said Mr. Billus, who had just come in, “and I’ve forgotten it, as usual. I have so many things to think of during the day, anj'how,'” he went on, with some resentment, “that it’s an imposition to burden me with-a trifling commission and expect me to charge my mind with it all day long. Now I know perfectly well there was some little jiggambob or kickshaw you asked me this -morning to bring when I started for home to-nighl. but I haven’t thought e? it from that time to this. What was it? I might as well take my lecture right now." asked you, John." replied-Mrs. Billus, “not to forget to bring your head home this evening.-”—Chicago Tribune.
—5f your farm is too small for you, fro deeper and pet more. Subsoil, and. brio.? more land into cultivation. Hit makes no difference bow hard he may try. 1 doant beilebe dat a red-nosed maix.au look coldly iaieiiectuaL THE MARKETS. Xrr YtutK. February 10. !W CATTLE-Native Steeis.. ... I 4 0) 4 *•) (X/IT >N- M iddiinc FLOCK—Winter Wheat...... WHEAT-No. 8 Xfe>4... CORN -No. i.. OATS'-No 2.... PUMK- New Ve**.. ST. LOUIS. OOITON—Middling ... BEEVES—Wan- y sirens_ Mt-ulutn-...—. HOUS F»ir toseiati... . tsHEEP— Fair to OMiec ... 30 4 Oil SS3* 37* a ■*<* 35* 10 CC y* 11 * FLOCK—Patents .. *75 Fancy to Extra «la. WHEAT -No. * Red Winter... tb/Oi-Xo ■’ *acU...... OATs—No 2.. KVE-Fb-2.... TOHAOOO- Lucs .... Lear Uariey...^. HAY—Clear T.aiothy. ...... BnTKH-Choice twirr- ...... EUUS—i-Ycsh ... PultK—SUii.slard 3Ies»(Ne«E BACON—C tear Rib..... LAKO—Pritne Skaa. CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipp: sjr... HuCS—bJtit-toCno.ee... SHEEP—Fair to Choice —. FLOUR—B'-nter Patents.spnu* Patent*.. .... W HE AT—No. 2 pria*. .Vo. 2 Keu... CORN—No. £,.... UAis~NV 2... PORK-Mcm> (new).. 10 *0 a » * KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—SkimMnc Steer*. .. S 2ft & 4 35 HOOs-AU tirades ...... 3 *i & 4 Oi WHEAT—No 2 Red. 77 & 7» OATS-Vo. 2...... J* i* CUKN-Ne.2. Zt%+ 23 NEW ORLEANS FLOUR-Hieh tirade.. 3 »' A 3 25 OOHN-Kdl . 32 ,4 *» OATa-W&usrn. M 26 HAY—Choice . IS «W ii»W ' PORK-ft-w .dew.. S JO* BACON—Sides. .. 6*0 * M oorroN-jaiddiiiMr.... .... ^ r\ LOCISViLLE WHEAT—No. Skied. . 75*0 J7 OORN-Va.2 Mixed.. ... 3B » 3»« OATS—No.2 Mixed......—.,... 22*5 23* PORK—New Mom. .10 7VM 11 & BACON—dear filb.. 6*5 6* a/regar-judduo*.. .... » i i
City Gonnumrat mt Waihlnttoo, D. C. Home-ret e in local affairs is a vital principle in onr government. It is entrenched in onr constitution, which reserves to local authority every right not specifically granted to the general government. Yet in matters entirely local, in school affairs, in health measures, Washington > citizens have so voice nor control over the expenditure of a single dollar of their taxes. In other cities the power to correct official abuses is in the hands of the people; here, whatever the blunders committed, it is bard to locate the guilty ones. What is worse, though the guilty be known, the people are powerless to rebuke them at the polls. The spectacle, meanwhile, of a body chosen to legislate for sixty-five million people diverted into a city council dealing with ditch cleaning, care of markets, graveyards and other neighborhood concerns, becomes more incongruous each year. ▲ Peculiar Australian Storm. % A prize was recently awarded by the Royal society of New Sou Hi Wales to the author of a paper on “Southerly Barters.” This, is the name given in Australia to storms which begin with violent northerly winds, withering like the breath of a furnace, because they have swept across the burning sands of the interior, and bearing clouds of suffocating dust. “ Suddenly, in the midst of the tempest, the wind swings round into the southwest or south, and heavy rain begins to fall, driven before chilling blasts from the ice-clad regions surrounding the South Pole.— Youth’s Companion.
LET THE EARTH REJOICE AND farmers sing'. With our new hardy grasses, clovers and fodder plants the poorest, most worn out, - toughest, worst piece of land can be made as fertile as the valley of he Nile. Only takes a. year or so! At the same time you will be getting big crops! Teosinte, Giant Spurry, Sacaifr.e, Lathyrus, what a variety of names! Catalogue tells you! If you will cut this on and sen d it to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., with 14c. postage, you will get free their mammoth catalogue and ten grass and grain aid fodder samples (worth $10.00 to get a start). They are fine, the editor believes. (x) “What is the most convenient and economical way to travel in America i” inquired the Visiting Englishman. “On -a pass,” replied Trotter, dryly.—Harper's How’s Thte ? , . 1 We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh thao can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheset & Co., Props., Toledo,O. We, the undersigned, lave known F. J. Cheney for the last 15- years, and believe him perfectly honorable ia all business transactions and financially able to carry out anv obligations made by their firm. West '& Trcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldino, Kixxan & Manns, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. fail's Catarrh Cure is mken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all'Druggists. Testimonials Hall's Family Pills are the best. “W* have no use for boar stories,'’ saic the editor. “Our readers demand some thing spicy.” “Well," sai d the man witi the'taanuscript. “this storv is about a ein oamon bear. ” —Sports Afield.
The Modern W*/ Commends itself to the well-informed, tc ,do pleasantly and effectually what was formerly done m the crudest manner am disagreeably as well. Tc cleanse the sys ten and break up colds, headaches, and fe vers without unpleasant after effects, us< the delightful liquid iaxutt re remedy, Syrui of Figs. Manufactured by California Fi$ Syrup Company. “BLTKixshas his own way In his house.’ “Yes. But tis wife always tells him wba it is going to be beforehand.'*—Washingtoi fctar. , Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Grea Nerve Restorer. No fits afterfirstdav's use Marvelous ceres. Treatise aud $1 trial bol ■fe free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Pkila., Pa ( “JaBBEE'seon, thev-say, could taEk whs j only two weeks old.’’’ ‘-That’s nothin; | Tue Bible says Job cursed the day be w* j torn.”—Judge. Beecbam's pills for constipation 10c a® SSc. Gei the book (free) at you; drugsist* aid go by it. Annual sales c.ua»,0u0 tx«xe= Hcsbaxo—“Dr. Foot , the chiropodist, wi «iaie wi.h »e to-day.” Wife—-Ad righ’ I’ll order corned beef.” ■“Brows’* Bronchi ax Troches’* wl qaickfy reliev e Bronchitis. Asthma Catarri and Throat Diseases. Bold only ii boxes. -“How xicrdo get such a hearty-e ncore' -slie saic, as the half-back was ended baa After an SO-yard Fun.—Harvard Lampoon. As exchange heads a local?item: “h puts for the bloomer girl.” That's wh. they *«—-he pants”
^ -;----— Very Awkward Indeed. This is precisely the kind of mistake a man makes If he ‘ turns out” on the wrong side of the road when a vehicle comes toward him. No less absurd is the error of, the individual who takes drastic medicines to relieve his liver. That origan is on the right side, and the road to its relief is Hostel ter’s Stomach Bitters, a medicine also adapted to the relief of dyspepsia, constipation, kidney and rheumatic ailments and malaria. “Chah’tt,” said Uncle Eben, “willkibber er multitude of sins, an’ yit most ob us * dean* seem ter hab'much'mo’ dan’ll go roun’ foh our own pus’nal uses.”—Washington Star. < Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar relieves whooping cough. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. He that resolves upon any great and good end has by that very resolution scaled the chief barrier to it.—Tryon Edwards.
Since 1851 1 have been < great tnfftrerfrom catarrh J tried JBtg’e Cream Bate and to all appearances an cured. Terrible headache from «ehich I had long suf ftred arioSne.—W.J.Hilch cock. Late MaJorV.S.VoU A. A. Urn,, Buffalo^ N. Y
CATARRH ELY'S CKEAH 3AIM Open* snd cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from colds, Restores the Senses of Tsaste and Smell. The Baits Is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and Is agree able. Price 53cent" a t Pnuretsts or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York.
Never Out of work. zrtsr ^ zz most from PAINS and cannot work. ST* .JACOBS OIL will cure and fit them for work when the chance comes.
A Perfect Food That is what Baron von Liebig said of good chocolate. All of Walter Baker & Co/s Cocoas and Chocolates are good,—the best, in fact. Walter Baker •& Co*, Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
\}l rKOftCCI DU UJIUS3T. m«9T nt«if HBM* UK'I’WUAI f' They *« bred S* eariiaesa: lull of life and *-ic>r t hat's the I •taireiaal eer-diec a trial will eowvirce the iuo>t doubtful.I PtkuillittiWif! HilMi.tfi..* list !ur fi irfcet gardeners. Send :fcnstaapeaad«e* oar Mammoth P unt and Seed Catalog d* package «t She p-jmokio yellow watermelon sensation. talogalo— M Car postage, li will pay yo-i to get It. |
Rattlesnakes, Butterflies, and...? WasMngton I “ring said, be supposed a certain hifl -was called “Rattlesmake Hill ” because it abounded in—butterflies. Theu rule of contrary” governs other, names. Some bottles are, supposedly, labeled * Sanaparilla • because they are full of. . . well, sre don’t know vrhat they are full of, but we know it's not sarsaparilla; perhaps, "enough for a flavor. 'There’s only one 1 of orcapartHn that can be relied on to be all it claims. It's Ayer’s, i It has bo secret to keep. Its formula is open to all < physicians. This formula was examined by the Medical Com-, mktee at the World's Fair with the result that while every other < make of sarsaparilla was excluded from the Fair, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla was admitted and honored by awards. It was admitted be- < cause it was the best sarsaparilla. It received the inedal as the . best No other sarsaparilla has been so tested or so honored. * Good motto for the family as well as the Fair: Admit the best, , nrHrnb fh* rest * VI Asfdsobesbootit’ Send forth. “Cartbock.* | It kills doubts snd cures doubters. ' Address: J. C. A,«r G* LsmH, Hm+ (
WE HAVE. NO-AGENTS*”
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Treated free. Patau*!? CCKK® bbubobfI hon*!**«- Wmm fintdofr I'nfUBl rapirtir (Uiappear, *B<M» ■■» 4»j» u Inn twotBir.U Bf Bit Bn rc-ajorf*. BOOK Bf mlMslBB Bf BtanlMB nm mi FREI. Jt<f •» '» 4*ys u l-wt two Uliriis Bf i BOOK “f ■'BtBwiM .r atm_rnliB, TEN CAYS TREATMENT FURNISHED FREE *7 **« Bit li H.6KKKX * •B^rtelUta.Atlanta.«■> ^OIISII *** WHISKY tobiunnd. Nttnt Ur iilm n» k *• *• wooun, iiusu, at, mrs ,jl£ as ftm hbhmmwjrn* 1591. vats vamx« t® utekhiui num Btets Outs |M m tte A4TertlM«Mt 1® Ote
