The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 08, 1922, Image 5
U. S. GIVES MEDAL
TO FRANCE
Verdun.?In the name of tne American
Congress and the American people,
Myion T. Herrick, the American
an.; awv:W?r, presented to the city of
Verdun the first and only j.iecHl over
given by the United St ites Clovemment
to any'Community in the world.
The ambassador and Premier Poincaie
together .visited the ground where
are buried many thousands of French
whose valor the medal commemorates,
and both spok6 under the emotion
aroused by the thought of the dead
and the sight of the "red zone/' so
4 devastated that it may never be ht
for human habitation .
Mr. Merrick fissured France of the
deep friendship of the United Stater,
which, though it might not prevent
disagreements and misaivJeivtandings,
would dissipate and survive them.
"Verdun and valor are forever one
and inseparable, said the ambassador.
"Here biased the -oirit of
France. And so this medal, which 1
give to this illustrious city, hallowed
by ;the sacrifices and courage of all
France, is a tribute from the whole
United States to all of France.''
M. Poincare recalled the thrill at
the coming of the Americans, the joy
of their victories, the sorrow over
their dead, and expressed in glowing
terms the gratitude of France to
America.
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^ I2|22|tf. Mari^i
THE UNITED LIMERIC KS
OF AMERICA
4 A man in the hills of Ky
Is "ifl by his frier'!. to he ly.
Who" rets in a fued,
If ho has a larire hrued
Of sons who can shoot and arc ply.
There was a voun g fellow in Fla.,
Whose he/irt became torrid and ta.,
Twas no use to beseech
The peach at the beech.
For she treated him horrid and ha.
r
THE FABRIC OF I)R FA MS.
"That new show of mine is to be a
m" sure-tire hit " announced the producer
gleefully. I've got a swell idea for
costuming the chorus."
"Ur-huh!" grunted the critic. That's
about all most of 'em wear nowadays."
CALOMEL SALIVATES
AND LOOSENS TEETH
The Very Next Dose of This Treacherous
Drug May Start
Trouble
You know what calomel is. It's
mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is
dangerous. It crashes into sour bile
likr> dynamite, cramping and sickening
you. Calomel attacks the bones
and should never be put into your
system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist and got a bottle of
. i)odson's Liver Tone for a few cents
which is a harmless vegetable substitute
for dangerous calomel. Take a
' spoonful and if it doesn't start your
liver and straighten you hp better and
quicker than nasty calomel and without
mi'.king you sick, you just go back
*tiul get your money.
Don't take calomel! It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a day's
work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great.
No salts necessary. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harmless
and cannot salivate.?Adv.
Herald is now $l..r>0.
. An AUCT!
<
o ~C
i: Clothing, H<
Underw
:: Beginning at 1:
' FRONT OF r
<
? t n i
> | iNext saturd<
| ALSO one full Jersc
gets the goods at your pri<
! H. M.
1
civic league
arrange: plan
At a meeting of the Civic League
held last Monday evening it was decided
to serve the members of the
State Press Association the dinner
which appears on the program on
June 21, one hundred of the visitors
at the Hotel Grace diningroom and
another one hundred at the rooms of
the Chamber of Commerce.
It was stated that there would he
about two hundred in the party and
therefore too many to be sei"ved all
at once place.
Other business matters of the Civic
League were attended to at the mceir
ing and the women are co-operating
with the Chamber of Commerce in
laying nice plans for the editors of
the *iaie.
o
LOW DEATH RATE
Examinntion of the report of the
medical department of the state hospital
for the insane, which report was
sent out on June 2. and a copy of
which is here at the office of Hon. R.
B. Scarborough, member of the board
of regents of the /institution; it appears
that there has been aremarkably
low death rate at the hospital.
The report is one of the most interesting
made by the medical department
in quite a long time.
||||p^Pendl No. 174
Made in live grades
:NCIL WITH THE RED BAND
MIKADO
V1PANY NFW YHRlf
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ICK BRICK |
4%
an* and poo what 5jc
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rV()::KS, (Mst. 18R5) *
v, S. C. %
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RICHLAND MAN
SHOT BY WIFE
Columbia.?B. C. Kiupr, a farmer
living1 at Pontiac, in upper Richland
county, was killed by his wife at ar
o.'trly hour one morning last weok.
She used a shotgun and the discharge
entered the back of the head. It is
said King used ahur.ive language
towui'd hip wife and a ouarrel ensued
Ofiicers from Columbia have gone t<
'.'.ako an investigation and to arrosMrs.
King.
Child-birth
Valuable Illustrated Book Sent Free
How thousands of women, by the simplo
method of an eminent physician, have avoided
unnecessary miseries through many months
ami up to the moment
Uaby has arrived, is fully gfSgafcgffiy
explained in tho rvmarkaLlo Ml
book, "Motherhood and tho
flruvr stores everywhere, ml
"Mother's Friend" is ap- VJw V
plied externally, is safe, ?&lVv v>0>
free from narcotics, permils
easier natural read- ^BsMKHEA
juatment of muscles and nerves during expectancy
and child-birth. Start usintf it today.
Mrs. K. E. Ker*rer, Slayton, Minn., says:
"it pulled me through." Send for book today,
to Iirad(]e!d Regulator Co., 13A-35, Atlanta,
(Ja. "Alolhcr'a Friend" ia auld at all
I tirut ?Vorw,
Despite the fact that New Orleans.
La., lias heen chosen ;is its cot.
vention city, the American Legion
has received a $200,000 offer from
Kansas City, Mo., which would he
host to the ex-soldiers this year as
it was in 11)21. The offer followed
questions l>y the New Orleans Ol\n;oher
of Commerce, inquiring of Kansas
City if the service men's ft'atherinjr
was a commercial asset.
^ J
>F -- |
ats, Hosiery, |
ear, Etc. |
|
30 o'clock sharp 5
rOWN HALL I
iy, June 10th |
*
V Bull Calf. Your bid i
t
"FX T T /-"X f~>4 T
KU?5 X
o
THE HORRY HERALD, CONWA
ED.MB1NGHAM
ON RESENTENCE
Attorney A. L. King Will Ask
Court for A Mew
Trial
LETTERS ARE DISCOVERED
This Week in Florence Marks
Another Event in History
of Bad Murder Trial
Great interest is felt in Florence
this .week as to what will be clone
with 'the Edmund D. Bigham case.
Bigham was convicted of the killing
of his brother, his mother, and
several other relatives last year in
the Florence court and was sentenced
to.the electric chair for the crime.
He appealed.
1 . . ! ? 1 1 1 I
xwui.iiu.v his ,uppeai was hi si aim
recently Solicitor Lonnie M. Gasque
had Judge Shipp to make arrangements
to have Bigham taken back to
Florence while the court is in session
there this week to be resentenced to
die in the chair before very long.
In the meantime his attorney, H.
L. King of Florence abandoned his
attempt to appeal the case to the
United States courts and later it was
published that after discovered evidence
had been brought to light by
way of some letters written by Smiley
Bigham, the brother of Edmund,
showing that Smiley had contemplated
suicide and had threatened to kill
other members of the Bigham family.
Some of these letters were published
in the daily papers.
While the criminal court is in session
this week in Florence, Bigham
will be brought there from the penitentiary
to be resentenced and it is
then that his attorney will move for
a new trial of the case before Judge
Shipp, basing his plea upon these letters
to show that Edmund may have
been entirely innocent of the deed and
that Smiley, one of the slain parties,
wM.s likely the instigator of the whole
plot.
.lust what day this motion foj' a
new trial will lie made is not known
at the time of writing this article. It
will come up before the end of the
week, when the attorney of Bigham
will read the letters and make such
other showing as he is able to make.
Edmund Bigham in the penitentiary
at Columbia has again and
again protested his innocence of the
crime, it was expected mat muham
would be hack in the Florence
jail early last Monday morning to
await the action of the court on his
motion for a new trial. Mrs. Hicham,
the wife of Edmund, was hack
in Florence early this week to learn
the outcome of tho proceedings.
o
WHEN TO APPLY SODA #
Clernxon College, June <N.?A great
many fanners are asking tho question,
"When should soda be applied
to cotton and corn?" The following
I suggestions on the subject are given
! by Prof. Plackwell, agronomist.
When nitrate of soda is to be used
on cotton as a side application it
hou'd bo applied early in tho season.
On heavy soils it may be put under
i iie crop at planting time with good,
esults. Where this has not been
'.one. however, and side applications
ire to l>e made, these should be made
immediately after chopping or in any
rase by the time the cotton begins to
*'orm squares. A late application of.
<>da to cotton under boll weevil conlit
ions will injure the crop ordinarily
rather than help it.
Side applications of soda for cor;'
! should be put on early. The old idea
that nitrate of soda leaches out quick
'y and that it should be put on at
Mav-by" time or when the cor.'
bunches to tassel has been proven t??
be erroneous. That is too late for
I best results. Soda will give best re
suits when applied to coin when the
plants are knee high or waist high.
| Tired f
j^J "I was weak and run-down," Rj
M relates Mra. Enla Burnett, of 4k
^ Dalton. Ga. "I was thin and
. ?0 just felt tired, all the time. J81
W I didnl reet well. I wasn't fcjg
WA ever hungry. I knew, by BJI
?gj tliis, I needed a tonic, and fin
|| ae there ts none better than? ^
8 The Woman's Tonic S
r_ ... I began using Cardui," /gj
Sb continues Mrs. Burnett. V
k "After my first bottle, I slept ktf
yA better and ate better. I took
A four bottlea. Now I'm well, Dm
^ feel Just fine, eat and sIcod. K
amy skin la clear and I have
gained and sure feel that ??
jS Cardnl is the best tonic ever w
P mado-" U
ri ThoroandB of other women M
M have found Cardui Just as Si
W Mrs. Burnett did. It should K
M help yw. Jjffl
At ftll (tnicHofa ^
?- ?- -C301WW* ^
@1 R
^K83GEgaiSSg85gE?
Y, S. C., JUNE 8, 1922
HOW TO HAVE FALL CABBAGE
Clemson College, June S.?Making:
shade with one crop while another is
taking hold is like one fellow working
while another sleeps; beans and cabbage
or cow peas and cabbage work
well together and result in a good
crop ot' cabbage, says George* P. Hoffman,
extension horticulturist, in suggesting
how to overcome the difficulty
of getting the fall cabbage crop well
started.
For the fall crop the Succession,
Charleston Wakefield, or Karly Jersey
Wakefield, and for very late fall and
winter use the Late Flat Dutch or
Danish Ballhead should be planted in
a well-prepared seedlied the last week
in May or the first week in .June.
The great trouble with growing
cabbage successfully for fall and ear
ly winter use is to find some means
of keeping the hot sun from hurting
them until the plants are well under
way. A common method is to plant
/IaiiKIa I'nu-c cft'incrltAntie twnlvp
inches apart with a .-pace of three
feet between these double rows and
to set the cabbage near the double
rows so that the bean vines will shade
the cabbage plants. After the beans
reach maturity 1 ho vines may be
pulled out and the entire space given
to the cabbage, which at that time
should bo well under w.uy.
Another good method is to lay the
rows off three to three and one-half
feet apart and sow cowpeas thinly
as a means of shading the cabbage
plants. The plants may be set under
the pea vines and when well underway
the peavines may be pulley out or
thinned.
Yhf! Qulrr'.n? That Does Not btwr.t ifo friac*
B-ct o( it* tonic nud laxative effect, I.AM.
TiN'K BKOMO \JU1NINKis V?ottev thau cditis*.
,:'u?ne and does not cause vousors? *
>? ??Ay in hend. Remember the lull n?mc v
fo? tlii* nature cl E. MT. GHOV1J.
a
MRS. A. J. I JON I'M PASSES AWAY
As the sun was ;ibout to sink below
tho western horizon the afternoon
of May 9, God, in His infinite
wisdom, saw fit to call to her reward
Mrs. Annie Jane Bon urn. a resident < :
the Allsbrook section. Hev lie:: 111
had been gradually failing for several
months and although she was not
to be considered an old person, doctors
seemed to think that death was
inevitable.
She was born on August 23, 1S70,
the daughter of the late Rev. John
B.' Skipper. She was married on December
30, 1909, to Robert J. Bonum
of North Carolina, who came to this
state to live with her. She was con
j 1 " .1 _ . i /? l i
verieu in cany me ar.u joineci \r.o
Missionary Baptist Church at Ml.
Zion. hut later transferred her church
membership to New Home, where it
remained until her death.
Mrs. Honum was of an industrious,
generous, gentle and amiable disposition
as was obvious from the fact
that she had many friends in the adjacent
communities as well as in her
immediate environment.
She is survived by her husband and
little daughter, Mac. two brothers .and
four sisters. W. K. Skipper, of Allszrook,
S. C.; G. C. Skipper, of Wilmington,
N. Mrs. G. L. Stevens
and Mis. L. D. Stevens of Allsbrook.
S. ?C., Mrs. M. F. Collins of Koris, S.
C., and Mrs. D. A. Collins of Cairo,
Ga.
While her friends niiiurn her departure
they fully realize that it is
her eternal gain. It should be among
our aspirations so to live that when
our bodies must be returned to dust
ami our souls put on immortality we
may go with tho same sweet assurance
that Mrs. lionvim carried with
her to "The Land in the Great Beyond."
G. W. S.
U'lJGI \R I-'WWS. IS SHOT TWICK
A burglar attempted to break and
enter the pantry ;it the Conway Hotel
last Friday night between 10 and 1
o clOv'k.
Mis. Pete Gore, the proprietor of
<he hotel, hoard ;i noise he made, : nd
as she approached he (led. She fired
two ^hots at him from a revolver ;is
he disappeared in the darkness. She
could not to I! whether the man was
while or colored.
Tracks were found at the place i
where the attempt was made.
666
Cures Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Dcmrut* or Hilious Fever. !t kills the
germs.?t f
o
While waiting with his outfit to ho
called up to the front in 1918, a Peabody,
Mass., soldier fell out of a
hay loft and suffered peynanont injuries
to his back. He has just now
obtained Government compensation,
however, following; the American Lotion's
direct appeal to President Harding.
o
Herald is now $1.50.
SCHOLARSHIP \NI) ENTRANCE
EXAMINATION
Winthrop College
The examination for the award of
vacant Scholarships in Winthrop College
and for admission of new students
will be held at the County Courthouse
on Frirlnv. .Inlv 7. j?t Q 11. m.
Applicants must not bo less than sixteen
years of age. When Scholarships
are vacant after July 1 they
will l>e awarded to those making the
>ighest average at this examination,
provided they meet the conditions governing
the award. Applicants for
Scholarship should write to President
Johnson before the examination for
Scholarship examination blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and
froo tuition. The next session will
;>pen September 20, 1022. For further
information and catalogue, address
I). H. Johnson, Rock Hill. S. C.
">-ll-4t
TO BANISH RATS
Clemson College, June 8.?In answering
inquiries regarding the extermination
of rats from farm buildings,
t !io division of entomology
makes the following suggestions:
In our experimental work we have
used poison as well as various kinds
of traps. We have also used rat terriers
and good cats and we have come
to the following conclusion in regard
to this rat situation:
1. We must eliminate from our
premises as far as possible all rat
hiding places which are not necessary.
We must as far as possible
keep our grains and feeds where rats
have not free access to them. It is
pr;<*v loally impossible to exterminate
rats by any method when they have
plenty of food available. This ma>
sometimes be laborious but the cfl'cct
is worth it.
2. Whatever method of extermination
is undertaken it will not succeed
unless it is undertaken over the
entire premises at the same time.
If HV^VIIV t J/WU'V/H V K I I ai C V?^V \l u
is a mistake to put these out at one
place with the intention of moving or.
to other places from time to time, because
this method will never control
rats. If it is the intention to depciui
on cats it is important that the cat:
owned lie ?ood ratters and there |
should be plenty of cats to vi'ct the j
situation under control. A <yit has
only a limited capacity for feeding,
and frequently there are more rats
on a place than cats can possibly con- .
su me.
(><?(> quickly relieves Colds, Constipation,
Uiliousness and Headaches. A
Fine Tonic.?tf
ARE YOUR COWS PROFITABLE
OR I'NPRUFITAHLK?
Clcmson College, June S.?Many
South Carolina farmers are just starting
in the dairy business and the
closer they follow orthodox business
I ?>\/^( K<wK- t I'n n'vo'it f>r will l\n tlif.ii" <nr* I
Mivtuvnir* utv i vnv*. * * iii ??v v ix. > .
cess. Starting right will make success
easier. A business man who .is
successful always knows the the status
of his business, that is whether
each division of the business is net
ting- him a pain or loss. So it should
he with the dairy fanner. He should ,
know whether each cow he owns is
producing enough milk and butter- I
fat to show him a profit or loss .above
feed cost. To know this he needs
only a milk scale, which can be purchased
for about $4. a milk sheet to
enter the weights at each milking,
and a book for entering records, says |
I. R. Jones, assistant dairy husband-1
man.
A sample of milk should he tested j
once per motuh. A fair sample I
should be an Average of two to four j
milkings, at least of one morning and j
one night milking, since cows vary ii !
test much more in morning and night
milkings of the same day than in
corresponding milkings of different
days. The milk should be thoroughly !
mixed by pouring -'rom bucket to
bucket before sampling. A one-half
pint sample is sufficient. Any cream
1 ery, ice cream factory, vocatiotv.il agricultural
high school, or the s al<
agricultural college will usually In
glad to do this testing. The ownci
can easily learn to test once he get.
a Babcock tester.
The pounds of milk for the mont!
multiplied by the test gives tin
pounds of buttorfat. The focd cost
can be figured at the prevailing mar
ket price. A profitable cow shouh'
product not less th.an (>,000 pounds o<
milk or 200 pounds of butterfat i:
300 days.
BOLL WKKVILS ? CHIN A IittRKIHy
The Horry Herald, published at
Conway. South Carolina, asserts i'i;:
it has been definitely established i
that county that ! oil weevils binrow
in china berries. Two into li
ge::i. farmers, living it: different sec
tiers of the county, who e oottofield:
sufiV>d last year from \v?c
vil infestation, reporte 1 -heir care
fu! observations. One of them st.ti
ed that in the berries on t ho )chin:
trees around his place he found wee |
vils in all stages of growth. H
promptly cut down his chinaberr
trees to destroy one more hiding
^ " ? ' I 1 W\ IMI/lt ll'A HAi't 1*1
I # I 1 ? ' I , I I I vJ * I 1 W V v I \ v I ' VI
of course lie did so regretfully
the china tree is ornamental and ii
shade is coinfortahle.?Montgomen j
(Ala.) Advertiser.
r. O
HIGHWAY Bl" I LIVERS
Florence.?A very important meting
will he held on the invitation o-'
the Conway Chamber of Commerce
at Myrtle Beach Thursday. June ?v.
for 1he purpose of organizing the
Stonewall Highway association, which
association is intended to promote :
hard surface highway connecting
Chicago on Lake Michigan with the
Atlantic ocean opposite Conway.
Very vita! interest has ! ecn showi
by all the towns f join Chicago to the
ocean and there will he a large delegation
from each of tl e towns along
this route. This highway is being
sanctioned t>y the rallioun Highway
association.
o
Fat dairy cows that are loan producers
should 1)0 sent to market.
rVIT AMINES]
precious health-building elements
are essential factors
of growth to every child.
Sscif s Emulsion
; is the food-tonic of special [
value to children. It !
is ?<ch in vi'amines? !fv-5si I
bu.ids health and pro- yf |
, iotcs ! ?ift *
>U is. ''owi'f- >Ci *>ir'.<. ! INI 2? I I
>??va*auiA. ' tvviu - --t -?* ?i m wii r r
PERFECT I.OVEK'
IS NOW DEAD
Kansas City, Mo.?Peggy Marie
Beal, nurse of Springfield, III., and
Dayton, Ohio, who recently attempted
suicide after shooting Frank Warren
Anderson, war veteran and department
store welfare direct of1, because
he would not marry her, will
get well, doctors at the hospital believe.
The young woman, told that she
stood a good chance to recover, turned
her face to the wall.
"1 want to die," she s/iid.
Then she beckoned to a nurse. "I'm
sorry I shot him," she gasped. "He
deserved it. I did right to shoot him.
I should have killed him before I did."
At Miss Beat's request, visitors
were barred from her room. Physi
cians said that in spite of a bullet,
throuirh her lunu\ Miss Heal's chances
of recovery are good and that her
condition has improved.
Meanwhile Anderson, whose hotly
awaits directions from relatives in
Collit\L?swootI, N, J., was not without
visitors. Women came to see the hotly
of the man, declared by Miss Heal to
have been "the perfect lover," the
man who, according to the i*irl, boasted
to her of his conijuesis, told her
fifty women loved him. and declared:
"1 Love No Woman."
"Peg*, I'm a devil. 1 love no woman."
Possible echo of another romance
was seen by the police in the story of
a woman who called by telephone to
the hotel, where Ander>on and Miss
Heal had lived as man and wife. This
telephone call came the niuht after
the trauedy ant! the woman .asked for
"Mr. or Mrs. Anderson.,' The hotel
clerk told her what had happened, and
the woman screamed.
"Dear," she cried. "Oh, no, 1 can't
believe it."
She asked where the body had been
taken, and a woman about 30 years
of age asked to see the body. She
said she had been a friend of the dead
man and had known him in the department
store where he worked, she
<mii1 Sim u :k nprniittf*<l 1 n s;r>r> tlm
body, gazed at it a long time and
shuddered.
"How could she!" she exclaimed,
and added, "what devils women are!"
Then she left.
Letters From Father.
Letters from Anderson's father in
Collingswood, N. found after his
death, spoke of a woman, referred to
as "IV who might he following the
young man.
Anderson, it is indicated in his
papers, was an otticer in the air service
during the war. He- was never
sent overseas, apparently, but he
prized his army experience greatly.
The department store man solaced
himself after the war by writingstories.
In one of these the hero was
an army flier, who achieved undying
fame during the war and fell in love
with a girl who scorned him because
of his father'^ wealth. The 'he tlier
found her at last, living in the South
Seas, where she had tie ! to escape
his attention.-. Letters t'r >m Anderson
to Miss Hea! spoke of the possibility
of honey-mooning in the South
Seas.
lint the romance of Anderson and
Marie L?eal ended in a h >tel bedroom
in the gray of the dawn, not in an
atmosphere oT tropica I ird- and {lowers.
but of clanging trolley cars, taxicabs
and rumbling trains. Anderson,
according to the girl, h/.nl told her he
had changed his mind, that he could
not many her now. Later perhaps.
He had not divorced his wife yet, he
I said, according to Mi Heal.
The Second Trip.
It was the second time a wedding
had been postponed, she said, adding
that she had come here in February
and there lv.ul been no wedding;.
"My faith survived that," she said.
"I ought to have known then. But 1
didn't. I believed him. 1 thought
he cared for me. And then he told
me there were titty others and showed
me their names wriiten in a diary and
tlie cities where they lived. And my
name was last of all.
"Will there be more?" I a.-ked him.
"'1 don't know,' lie said. 'Maybe
there will. Maybe I'll go hack to
some of thej-e. I c/.m't tell."
"Then I killed him."
[ 0 ;
I TWO NEGROES
ARE CAUGHT
Florence.?Two more fellows were
caught peddling hott'ed moonshine
right on the streets of Florence. OtVicer
Worrell nabbed both of them, with
the perambulating bar, s ock and all
appurtenances, including an automobile
in one case and a suitcase in the
other.
Mr. Worrell found Amos Shields
with five and one-half gallons ok'
liquor in his automobile. The stufF
was about as raw and rotten as the
police ever have got4en hold of, in
the opinion of Chief Mclver. He had
three one-gallon jugs and one two
gaiion jug, wun two single quarts of
stock.
He also found Simon .lames in the
act of serving a customer from his
suitcase, in which he carried a stock
of two quarts. James was on the
open street plying hi:- business when
the otlicer interrupted the trade.
Koth men are negroes. They are
enrolled on the police blotter, which
the oflicial engagement book of Recorder
McNeill.
No Worms in a liealthy Child ^
All children troubled with Worms have ac ui?healthy
color, which indicates* poor h'ood, and as a
rule, there is more or less sunnach disturbance.
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIO ? re?u
larly for two or three weeks will enrich t!t>- blood.
Improve the digestion, and net ns a pern ralStrcndthening
Tonic to the whole system. Nutur > vv i!! then
throw off or dispel the worms, and the ( Sildwillbo
in perfect health. Piea-r.ul to taKe. U>c per bottle.