The Fulton County news. (McConnellsburg, Pa.) 1899-current, April 12, 1900, Image 4

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    FULTON COUNTY' NEWS.
Published Every Thursday.
13. W. PtiCK, Editor.
McCONNELLSBURG, PA.
Thursday, April 12. 1900.
Published Weekly. 1.00 per
Annum in Advance.
Prompt attention will be
given to applications for ad
vertising rates.
Job Printing of every des
cription executed with prompt
ness, in a workmanlike manner
and at-consistent prices.
ROCK OF ACF.S.
"Flock of agos, cleft for me,"
Thoughtlessly the. imiiilen ming,
Fell the words unconsciously
From her girlish, (fleeful tongue;
Sang as little children sing;
Sang as sings the birds in June;
Fell the words like light leaves down,
On the current of the tuno
"I lock of ages, cleft for me,
Let me hldo myself In thee."
"Let mo hide myself in thee,"
Sweet the song as song could be,
And she had no thought beside;
All the world unheedingly
Fell from lins untouched by care;
Dreaming not that they might bo
On some other lips a prayer
"Hock of ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself In thee."
"Ilock of ages, cleft for me,"
'Twas a woman sung them now,
Pleadingly and prayerfully,
Kvery word her heart did know:
Hose the song as storm-tossed bird
Heats with weary wing the air,
Kvery note with sorrow stirred,
Every syllable a prayer
"Hock of ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in thee."
"Ilock of ages, cleft for me,"
Lips grown aged sung the hymn
Trustingly and tenderly,
Voice grown weak and eyes grown
dim,
"Let me hide myself in theo."
Trembling though the voice, and
low,
Hose the sweet strain peacefully,
Like a river in Its flow;
Sung as only they can sing
Who behold the promised rest
"Ilock of ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in thee."
"Rock of ages, cleft for me,"
Sung above a coflin lid;
Underneath all restfully,
All life's joys and sorrows hid.
Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul,
Nevermore from wind or tide,
Wilt thou need thyself to hide.
Could thy sightless, sunken eyes,
Closed beneath the soft gray hair,
Could the mute and stiffened lips
Move again in pleasing prayer,
Still, aye still, the words would be
"Let me hide myself in thee.''
In another week the Cumber
land Valley telephone company
will have its line from Lehmaster
to Mercersburg completed. The
poles are planted between the
two points.
A stone bridge is to bo built by
Franklin county over Dennis
creek in Hamilton township. The
point at which the bridge will
cross the stream is about six
miles from Chambersburgon the
Fort Loudon road.
Since the auditors' settlement
at the beginning of the year
claims for damage to sheep by
dogs have been tiled as follows:
A. R. Edwards, Taylor town
ship, live injured, appraised dam
age, 0.50; Oliver Hill, Bethel
township, six killed and seven in
jured, fcUG; Benjamin Weaver,
Thompson township, six killed,
$20.
U. II Hain, for several years
editor of the Duucannon (Perry
county) Record, has sold the pa
per to S. G. VanFossen, of Sha
ron, Pa., and will engage in the
grocery and huckstering busi
ness. We wish him abundant
success in his new Held and ven
ture to predict that ho will make
far more. money than he did in
the newspaper business.
Twenty-one pounds and four
teen ounces of butter in seven
consecutive days wustho result
of a Holstein cow owned and rais
ed by Samuel II. Eby, toller of
the First National Bauk ofGreen
castle. Ffty pounds of milk per
day is her ordiuary yield during
the pasturing season. Mr. Eby
holds the belt of Southern Penn
sylvania. Mrs. George O. Clark, of Bed
ford county, has just finished a
quilt that has one hundred and
eight squares, with twenty-one
pieces each, undone hundred and
forty-seven squares, with seventy
pieces each; the border has four
hundred and live pieces in it.
The total number of pieces in the
quilt is Ave thousand, one hun
dred and seventy-t'vo. Who can
boat it?
FIRST OF APRIL 1 I.MS.
- ,
Prom Kiillou Hi'puhllean.
Our poet dedicates the follow
ing verses to those who moved
this spring:
As you near your destination
Kilger eyes through curtains peer,
All the furniture inspecting,
Then come comments oft severe.
And the people who'll be neighbors
At the place of new abode
Watch till everything is taken
From the last big wagon load.
Then the woman who is mistress
Of the house just occupied
Takes her turn, and makes inspection
Of each room from side to side.
And she'll make this declaration
When the neighbors on her call:
"I've seen many dirty houses,
Hut found this one worst of all."
Ex-Sheriff Frank Mason moved
from Cleveuger property to that
of Miss Jennie Carson.
P. P. Mann from property re
cently purchased by Max II.
Sheets from M. S. Wilt to Clev
enger property.
John Sheets from house sold
to D. T. Fields to that vacated by
P. P. Mann.
I). T. Fields from farm in Tod
township to residence purchased
from John Sheets.
Hon. Peter Morton from farm
in Belfast township to one pur
chased from D. T. Fields in Tod
township.
William Riuedollar from this
place to Shady Grove, Franklin
couuty.
Levi Dehart from Sheets prop
erty to house vacated by Cooper
family.
J. Frank Sheely to residence
vacated by Mrs. Erb.
Mrs. Erb to Maryland.
Charles Rider from Greathead
property to farm purchased in
Ayr township. 1
Mrs. George McQuade from
Ayr township to Greathead prop
erty. J. Milton Uuger from farm in
Ayr township to Isaac Hull's
house.
Eli Largent from Daniel's
house to Gress house.
C. C. Rotz from Gress house to
farm of Samuel A. Nesbit, in Tod
township.
Harry Linn from Mrs. Jack
son's house to Daniel's property.
Mrs. Egulf from Mrs. Unger's
house to house of Mrs. Jackson.
Harry Gress from farm iu Ayr
township to house of Mrs. Uuger.
Edward Brake from Baum
gardner house to Wagner's.
Prof. Miller from Wagner's
house to Hopewell, Bedford
county.
Charles Tritle from Senator
Alexander's house to Mrs. Baum
gardner's house.
William II. Nesbit from Dick
sou's to Mollie Seylar property.
Misses Sloan from farm iu Tod
township to Dickson property.
Edward Grissiuger from town
to Sipes' tenant house on farm
recently purchased from Dr.
Trout estate.
Aaron Richards from Big Cove
Tannery to Sipes farm.
Robert Cutcliall from Sipes
farm, east of town, to McQuado's
farm, west of town.
James Henry from his farm at
Knobsville to one recently pur
chased from Sloan's heirs, ad
joining this place.
Will Cowan from S. A. Nesbit's
farm In Tod township, to farm of
George Stiger, in Franklin coun
ty. Strike.
This b a world of strife, aud
this an age of much striving. The
nations are striving for possess
ions, the individual, for objects,
until it all seems like a mad
whirl for the thing desired. Gold
and silver, honor aud power, all
are the weak beggarly things of
the world, and how small they
look to us by aud by, if by their
attainment we barter life eternal.
Paul recommended "striving to
gether for the faith of the gos
pel;" and from the lips of One
who spake as never man spake
wo hear, "Strive to enter in at
the straight gate: for many, I say
unto you, will seek to outer in
and shall not bo able."
For what are you striving? For
what am I striving' For the
meat which perisheth or that
which eudureth?
A slick swindler visitedllagors
town recently and worked u bo
gus check game. He rented a
house and got money in change
on a bad check. It is believed ho
worked this old game upon oth
ers there.
WF.IRI) (iVl'SY OFRFMONV.
i i
Vi'llcy Spirit. April .
Within Hie shadow of the old
Holly well .paper mill this after
noon, a weird ceremony, the
chief actors iu which wore mem
bers of the famous Lovoll gypsy
tribe, of Elizabeth, N. J., was en
acted. Last November So1.li
Lovoll, a leader of the tribe, died
in a Philadelphia hospital, leav
ing a portion of his worldly pos
sessions in Chambersburg. It
was for destroying these possess
ions his wife, Rhoda,, and her
nephew 'and niece, Mr. and Mrs.
William Smith, Israel Smith,
aud Lovoll 'a adopted son, came to
Chambersburg this morning.
Immediately upon the arrival
of tlie party here they made their
way to the carriage shop of Lem
uel King, whore Lovoll 's van, in
which he had made many trips,
had been stored for the winter.
The wagou was taken to Holly
well aud there, with many of the
dead man's belongings, was cov
ered with kerosene aud set on
ti re.
The ceremony was not without
its pathetic features. On a small
bauk near the burniug'wagou the
gray haired partner of the dead
gypsy sat and wept out her grief
calling Him her "dear Seth," be
moaning her loneliness in the
world and wishing that she
might join him, assenting her
readiness to die. The wagon of
ferod up as a sacrifice and tosti
menial of her affection cost $ir(0
and it contaiued articles of the
husband that made the total val
ue of the burning property 2( (().
William Smith, the uephew.had
charge of the ceremony, although
the wife kept a watchful eye
from her seat on the bauk that
there should be no hitch in the
program and that all of her lius
baud's belonging's be destroyed.
The wagon was a substantial ve
hide built of the best material
aud of excellent design. Pre
vious to going to their cam) the
gypsies obtained a large quantity
of kerosene aud it was poured
bountifully on the iuside and out
side of the wagou.
The custom of destroying the
wagon in which the gypsy had
been accustomed to journey is au
old one. Israel Smith, whose
wife died last fall, burned a wag
on at Latrobe. Lovell, the man
iu whose honor the ceremony
was performed, was (50 years old.
He was in this section last fall
aud when the tribe returned to
Elizabeth he was taken ill. He
was removed to a Philadelphia
hospital where he died. The
weather was not propitious for
coming here until a few weeks
ago and thus the ceremony was
delayed.
Quito a number of town people
witnessed the ceremony, iuclud
Burgess Hamilton and Chief of
Police Mull. When the wagon
containing harness valued as $200
aud a quantity of bedding had
been partially destroyed it oc
curred to the wife that the gun of
her husband had not been iuclud
ediu the lire aud she directed her
nephew to place it iu the bed of
the wagon which was still on tire.
Things Worthy Of Imitation.
It would be worth while to im
itate the elephant in his stately
quietness.
It would bo worth while to im
itate the seal in his amiability.
It would be worth while to im
itate the trained dog in his pa
tience. It would be worth while to im
itate the bear in his affection.
It would be worth while to im
tate the camel iu his willingness
to assume burdens.
It would be worth while to im
itate the horse iu his air of good
breeding.
It would be worth while to im
itate the tiger in his diplomacy.
Millions (jiven Away.
It is certainly gratifying to the
public to know of one concern
which is uot afraid to be gener
ous. The proprietors of Dr.
King's New Discovery for Con
sumption, Coughs and Colds, have
given away over ten million trial
bottles aud have the satisfaction
of knowing it has cured thous
ands of hopeless cases. Asthma,
Bronchitis, La Grippe and all
Throat, Chest aud Lung diseases
aro surely cured by it. Call on
W. S. Dickson, Druggist, and got
a free trial bottlo. Regular size
5()o aud $1.00. Every bottlo guaranteed.
l'l T.LISIIF.R AM) l'ATRON.
There is no class of business
men who are imposed upon to the
extent of newspaper publishers,
add no men who lose such a large
percentage of their earnings
through the dishonesty of pa
trons as do they.
There are many people who
make it a rule to pay for their pa
per in advance;; there are others
who feel that it is only fair to re
ceive the paper a year before a
year's subscription be paid; aud,
then, there are others who will
take your paper year after year
and will not so much as pay you
a quarter of a dollar; and if you
press them for a little money,
they get mud, and swear your pa
per was'ut lit to wrap up old
clothes for a tramp.
There is not a publisher iu the
State who would not cheerfully
furnish his paper with the under
standing that it shall be paid for
at any time uot exceeding the end
of Hie year, if every subscriber
would live up to that rule; but it
is those- people who start in to
take your paper the second year
when they know they owe for the
first, that hhlp to shorten the life
of the publisher.
The publisher can't play auy
game like that. For every pound
of type, paper, ink, or auy other
kind of material he uses, the
cash must bo paid; at least, not
later than the eud of the current
mouth. When pay day comes
around every month, the office
employes must have their month's
wages in cash. If you try to put
them off they get mad, kick the
stove over, pie a form, rub ink
overyour facc,audgooutuud slam
the door then you are in a fix.
"The Fulton County News" is
one of the few papers that does
not have a complaint to make
along this line. Not one of its
many hundred subscribers owes
as much ns a year's subscription
to it. Nearly every one has paid
something. A half dollar drop
ped id a couple of times a year
keeps -your paper always paid up;
or twenty-live cents runs your
subscription ahead a quarter of a
year.
It shall be the policy of the
News to drop from its list the
name of any one who may be
careless enough to fall behind a
whole year. If they appreciate
the paper they will pay up and
have it started again; if they do
not appreciate it they would uev
or pay anything at any rate.
The law regarding subscrip
tions to newspapers condensed
aud arranged is as follows: .
1. Auy person who receives a
paper from the post-office is by
law a subscriber, whether the
paper is ordered or not, as it is
the privilege of the recipient of
the publication to refuse to ac
cept the paper from post-office,
WHEN ALL AKKKAHS AUK l'AIl).
2. Notice to the publisher that
papers are no longer wanted, and
will not be paid for, does not re
lease the subscriber from the re
sponsibility for the subscription
price until the full amount of cur
rent year's subscription is paid,
together with all previous ar
rears. !!. Failure to receive a copy of
a newspaper, without fault of
publisher is no defense as the
publisher's responsibility ceases
when the papers are delivered at
the postoftice in the town iu
which the paper is published,
properly addressed to subscri
ber. 4. Parties receiving a newspa
per or periodical who do uot give
notice to discontinue at expira
tion of paid term are considered
as wishing to continue their sub
scription, from year to year.
Parties moviug to other
places, without notifying the pub
lishers of the change in their ad
dress are. responsible for all pa
pers sent to the former address.
(i. By rule of implied contract
any person receiving au article,
even in the absence of a direct
order is liable for payment for
such article received-.
7. When judgment is entered
defences are barred. The proper
time to settlo nn account is before
the case gets into court aud be
fore costs are added aud publicity
is given the matter.
The Valley National Bauk of
Chambersburg, of which George
J I. Stewart of Shippeusburg is
the president, has been designat
ed by the United States Govern
ment as a depository for Govern
ment funds. This is the only
National depository in this sec
tion of the State.
not ni.i:..MiM)i;i).
l-'ritiii thn llcruUl uni! IVONbyM.'i'.
This word occurs only twice in
the New Testament, in .las. i. K
and iv. 8. The Greek is "di
psuchos. " "Psuchos" comes
from "psucho," which is usually
translated "soul." The refer
ence is rather to our moral than
to our intellectual nature. In i. '
8 James says: "A double-minded .!
man is unstable iu all his ways"; j
and in iv. H ho says, "Purify!
your hoarls, ye double-minded." j
The Apostle has in his thought j
not the opinions of those to whom i
he writes, but the heart and the
will of those affections aud voli
tions which control the character
aud the conduct.
But what does lie mean by call
ing a man double-minded? Is it
that he has twice as much char
acter mid energy as his fellow
men? Of course not. Such a
man could not be unstable and
vacillating. The idea evidently
is that this unstable man, whose
heart needs to bo purified, has a
divided moral nature. He is a
half-and-half minded man.
He has a sort of twofold con
sciousness. He is drawn by his
inharmonious affections towards
two discordant objects. He
loves with one-half of his heart
what he hates with the other.
He resolves to seek with one
half of his will what he resolves
to llee from with the other.
Such a man is like a ship with
two rudders. He whose baud is
upon one of them is trying to
steer to windward, while the oth
er is trying to steer to leeward.
Such a double-ruddered ship
could not make a successful voy
age, but would be iu constant
peril of shipwreck.
Double-minded men are not ab
normal rarities, like the Siamese
twius. Even Paul, the great
apostle, was, for a time at least,
such a man. He gives us a
graphic account of his experi
ence in the seventh chapter of
his Epistle to the Romans. There
was a law in his members which
warred against the law of his
mind (verse 2.'!); when he would
do good, evil was present with
him. And there are multitudes
of Christians to-day who might,
if they would, make a similar
confession. They love God with
one-half of their hearts, and love
the world with the other. Some
times they love all the brothers,
or think that they do, and then,
at .other times, they are filled
with envy because some of the
brothoru aro more gifted or more
highly honored than themselves.
To-day they have faith, and al
most think that they could re
move mountains. But to-morrow
they will doubt the reality of
their owu conversion, and even
the power of Christ to save.
The explanation of this double
miudoduoss is that two diverse
aud coullicting powers are trying
to control the spirit of truth and
the spirit of error, the spirit of
light and the spirit of darkness,
the Holy Spirit from above aud
the evil spirit from beneath. Of
these the Holy Sjririt is the
stronger, but hcwill not coerce
aud enslave us. Hence, if we
would put an end to the conflict,
aud to the moralinstability result ing
from it, we must "resist the
devil." We are responsible for all
that wo permit him to do, since
God is ever ready to help us as
soon as we try to expel him from
our hearts.
Job says, in one of his discours
es about God, "He is of one mind,
and who can turn him" Job xxiii.
HI? There is unity, harmony, and
therefore efficiency, in all God's
operations. A double-minded dei
ty could not have made and ruled
the universe as it is to-day. For
myriads of ages infinite intelli
gence and energy have carried
out a plan which was fixed iu the
counsels of eternity. Aud there
fore Moses could say of him: "His
work is perfect" (Dout. xxxii. I).
If we would bo iu harmony with
him, if we would accomplish any
thing in this life commensurate
with the ability aud opportunities
that God gives us, we must try
like him, to be of one mind. And
Paul tells how iu Phil. ii. 5: "Lot
this mind be in you that was also
in Christ Jesus." Study the life
of Christ, pray for the Spirit of
Christ. Thus only cau wo es
cape the blight of doublo-miuded-ness.
Advertising is the lever that
moves the' business world.
JAMKS lU CIIANAN.
Franklin county has a histori
cal society. Its object is to col
lect and preserve the unrecorded
local hislory. Fulton county
ought to have one. The older
folks who remember the happen
ings of the early part of the cen
tury are rapidly passing from
earth. Last week Hou. W. Rush
Gillan, a familiar figure in our
courts, road a very interesting
paper on James Buchanan. We
have room for only a few -paragraphs
of this excellout paper.
"When James was about five
years of ago his parents moved
1o Ihe village of Mercersburg,
where ho received his first school
ing, and was taught the Latin and
Greek languages. The school
was at first kept by Rev. James
K. Sharon, a st udent of Divinity,
with Dr. John King, the Presby
terian pustor.and afterwards by a
Mr. McConnell and Dr. Jesse
Magaw, who married Mr. Bu
chanan's sister."
S waking 'of Mr. Buchanan's
later life Mr. Gillan says: "Mr.
A. .1. Ungor, of Foltz, tolls me the
two gentlemen came driving over
the pike from the direction of Mc
Counollsburg. They tied llieir
horse somewhere iu the village
and proceeded to walk through
the gorge to Buchanan's birth
place, Mr. Unger, himself being
a boy, having observed them. A
teamster, who had gone into the
mountain for a load of sand, saw
t lie two men, and recognizing Mr.
Buchanan from pictures which
lie had seen, rushed to the village,
11'.. . u T I i .
camug, .jimmy iHicnanau is up
here." It was but a few moments
until every mnu and boy in the
village was on his way up the path
to see the candidate for Presi
dent, aud at the head of the party
was Brady Seylar, who at that
time ran a foundry at the Gap,
and Mr. Unger's father. They
were both acquainted with Mr.
Buchanan. He received them very
cordially, and left a very pleas
ant impression, especially upon
the boys of the party. They
drove over to Mercersburg, and
whether on .that occasion or some
one prior to that time, I do not
know, but Mr. Buchanan at one
time, spoke at a mooting in front
of Colonel Murphy's, now Fen
drick':: hotel, which was presid
ed over by Capt, Jack Cushwa.
' "On the 17th day of June, 18(i,
Mr. Buchanan, in consideration
of ::.ir,li2l, conveyed to Jeremiah
K. Black two hundred and forty
acres and fifty-nine perches of
hind near Mercersburg, known
as the Patchwork farm. This
was the last real estate which he
owned iu this county, aud was
the Duuwoodle farm which he
spoke of iu his autobiography as
Inning been convoyed to his fa
ther in IT'.M. This farm is now
owned by Henry Van Tries Black
and Mary Forward Black, minor
children of Henry Black, the
youngest son of Judge Jeremiah
S. Black.
"Mr. Buchanan Hover accepted
a railroad pass, but always paid
fare. He never, while iu public
ellice, accepted a gift. On the
day on which he was ejected
President of the United States,
Mr. Unger, who 1 hen conducted
a distillery close to Buchanan's
birthplace, made a barrel of very
fine whiskey. He. kept it for
three years aud then sent it with
his coinplinieuts to thePresideut.
Mr. Buchanan accepted it, but
shortly afterward thero came to
Mr. Unger a package post-marked
Washington, containing sev-euly-live
dollars. Mr. Unger
was at a loss to know where it
came from, and showing it to
.Judge Carson, of Mercersburg,
who was familiar with the writ
ing of the President, was at once
informed that the package had
been addressed by the Presi
dent's owu hand, lie never al
lowed any expense of any enter
tainment at 4ho While House to
be paid out of the public funds,
but always insisted that what his
salary did uot pay for, must be
paid from his own private purse
Among the anecdotes of Mr.
Buchanan related by Mr. Gillan
was one illustrating his practical
turn of mind. Mr. Buchanan was
traveling eastward from Pitts
burg in a stage coach with a party
of gentlemen, one of whom was
Mr. Mackcy, the father of Capt.
W. H. H. Mackoy, of this society.
Between Somerset and Bedford
it was observed that the burr had
boeu lost from ouo of the spindles
mid Ilia: ti,,.
leme the (V
won as ilt
ried and ,,Xl.
accident
ly repaired,
ing around,
OF
cottage iit i.
to it he ;isW F"' '
nil old sin,,, fe the 11
duced and ft, jhovetnt
CUt the h,,,.. t. "Will
in the i i' On tl
end of H1(.S1 fcolasu
traveled Fflt 01
tas inci
italute
LICK!
.ed. in
)M set
John Met, in pub
Clearfield ft j,s eUt:
returned !, , invest
Our new j Surrcu
Hughes In,,! t,s."
Sunday alVn Grnun
preaching in;, (fas ti
day in the ,,. id As
ten o'clock i When '
Miss Em,.; took s!
turned lui
Mrs. A L'i
je com
,ot wit
Hustonlown, Imong
time with !,- conn'
Mumniii. t-A n
Daniel i;ilsi in thir
ed service ui -
ternoon. u fwr1
The mads a; 6 tha
dition-toi n i f" P
gines. Jounti
Captain UiJas y
line horse Ian, deil
from D. K. Jl,8Urn
for his depart fu'in
. year,
Our orgiauv . '
, ' Jctors
Sunday alt,,,, UuJ
son. "
jexce!
' equet
'''l-jjidortf
-.in m
Aaron Uis
Jit we
is improving!.. Inl
Mr. Ezra (1 the
friends in tliiv S1
The pro;!, pir(1
Grove last Su:ne8S
attended timilil
Jefi'Palm
ihroi
('IT:,
were visiting . I
Friday evening. !oUN
Miss Fiuini- j
home, from Pi: J11"
countof the ill: Jdd6
John Tniax P'11
moved tohisfa'l00
MissDiauaS::tur
sick list.
The PloasaD'
closes next Fri e'
drou will begla , tQ
Preaching sit !0 V'
next Suudiiv uv f"Sf
tf tl
......
.. fe fol
cov
Bd f:
John Fislii'i'iii
moved last wirk. i
Isaac Barnlwrk
like the West v
understood that
home soon.
Charles AIyi'i
diana lustTi
dtt
poets to work k
gn
To
tun
Hess.
William W. I
tins place, wim it .
at Pittsburg li:ii'g0(
Illinois.
nnois. j
There was a m
or Barnliai't's'. 'L
a
an
mi
uing. They r uu
The new 'ori'h,,,
fording is nearly '
The Sunday
M. E. church
last Sunday "it1
dance.
Our farmers lu'
ing for corn.
1.
v
a
lo:
I
at
There was also; c
Wilson Myers's 1 t
evening. ip:
Rov. Barney w'-j
ley next Sunday a:bn
The CaliUiii"1)1'
have missed mir (ei
H. W. Hatfield.
ble, boys? t'is
"b,
. . i a v'l
When thing: al
they become "tl"'
Pi
AbrahaniHarc.il i'-
of Belleville, .Vvr'
Bitters aiv tin' bl','
tors I have hiw
i
You know why'' '
begin iu disoi,il'r
liver, kidneys, l'1
nerves. Elect i'"10
up the stoinufli, V'
kidneys and bow
blood, strength
hence cures ni"11"
adies. It builds jj
system. Puts hp;
into any weak, 11'
man or womau. 1
Sold by W. S. Du