Newspaper Page Text
* ir4 9 rABLISHELED 1I865*9A*Vt1r ______)86._ NEWBERRY1,_"z.,S., Co, FRIDAY, JULY 9,9 1897.TIEAWK,15OAYA TEARS WILL COME W31EN 'wAR VETERANS MEET EACH OTHER AT THEIR REUNIONS. - Arp Says Let V.gW,', For the Tears They St fP.e Oaused by the Recalling of7 Meworles of tile Hattleftold, 'Atlanta Constitution.] My good, happy, genial friend, Charley Lane, delivered a most on joyable lecture on the analyi-s of laughter, or "Why Do Wo Laugh." Now, if he will analyze our tears and tell us why do we weep, we will the better understand another 9ie of the mydteries of our emotional hu manity. Why does a man weep when there is no sorrow in his heart -especially an old man-a veteran? If it were not pathetic, it would be funny to see. the tears in these old soldiers' eyes as they mot and marched and listened to the martial music or sat together under the sound of words that came from the. lips of old men eloquont-olt-6m rades in,arms-word thAt awakened 432dq ieni emories and quick ened into life the hard but heroic scenes that were living facts a third of a century ago. How hard they look-these old soldiers-hard in face and feature but soft in heart. It seems to me I can pick them out from common people. Every wrin kle tells of service, in suffering and disappointment. The bronze of their furrowed faces has never yet been bleached and their walk is still a true but tired march. Yes, I can pick them out all around me. Look at old Captian Neal and Major Foute and McCandless and Durham and Mounteastle. They can't hurry now. Their quick step has gone. They marched and counter-marched, they advanced and retreated, they; charged and doublo-quicked for four long years until the spring of their instep was-worn down to a. plane with heel and toe and now it is a fact that the hollow of the foot makes a hole in the ground. But why should an old man weep? I remember that when Ben Hill's statue was uncovered and the great speeches were over and queenly Winnio Davis was brought forward on the platform and presented to us as the daughters of the confederacy by General Gordon, acalamations rent the air and reached the heavens and made the welkin ring. Then everybody cried except those who had no feeling-no emotion-no pa triotism. Old General Black was leaning heavily upon mv and I felt 'We'~quiver lhis massive frame. He leaned more heavily and I turned quickly to look into his face and saw the tears coursing down as free ly as if he were a boy. As I brush ed my own away I said: "What is the matter, General? Do you wvant some water? Are you about to faint ?" "Oh,-no--no," said he, '-just let me alone and hold me up a little. I am feoling good. Thank God for His mercies. I feel like old1 Nico demus when he said, 'Now let me (lie since I have seen thy salva-. tion.'" Th'Ie medical books tell us that tears are contagious. We all know that and have experienced it but or dinarily our. tears conmc from our own emotions and not from another's. I suppose that there were probably ton thousarnd bona fide veterans at Nash1vilky, and( while aindor the in. fluence the occasion, the surround e ings, th momories of the past and ,J.lI,boughts that breathed and the words that burned, they all shod tears or felt like it. What a spec tacle for northoern eyes. What a commentary on northern intolerance. How long will it take to eradicate our love for the lost cause or our ad * miration for its heroes. Like fath.. er, like son and daughter, and it is already transmitted adown the line fr-oml generation to generation and in a few years mxoro these reunions will be0 baptized with another name and be called the sons of tihe con.. ~. federate veterans. I saail probably t here were ton thousand real bona lide con federate veterans gathered 'nt Nashville, for it is a fact that our vetergns arLg.Awjftly passing away. TherjV not 100,000 now alive n ore than one in soven of all o servod. There might have boon more, but unponsioned sol diors don't livo forever; neither do they multiply as thoyoars roll on. "Time cuts down all Both great and small." Except a pensioned soldier. No. For the peace and brother hood of all our people it would have boon far better for the north to have said thirty years ago: "Now let us be brothern. You thought you were right and maybe you were. You fought a good fight and shall have your share of all this pOnsion money." If Lincoln had lived he would have said so and stood on that platform. Walter Scott says: "Woo awaits a counti-y when she sees the tears of bearded men," and so it would be po tter to conciliate our people with kindness rather than to alienate them with abuse and unfriendly log islation. Soo what a martyr and a horo our people have made of Sam Davis, the noble boy who hold his honor dearer than his life. And this reminds me to say that I have a letter, a gooil letter, from H. S. Hal bert, of Crawford, Miss., who was an army comrade of Calvin Croizer, the Texas soldier who was put to death by order of Colonel Trowbridge at Newberry, S. C., for resenting ain in suilt given a lady by a negro soldier. I wrote of this in a former letter and of the monument the good people of Newberry had erected to his mem ory. The negro was but slightly wounded and in the confusion in the car another man was arrested for the deed. When Crozier learned this ho gave himself up and was shot at sunrise. Mr. Halbert had never heard of Crozier's fato until he read it in The Constitution and he now begs for more information concern ing him and his sad fate. Will some one who knows please writo to him. He says that Crozier was a noble man and a gallant soldier and belonged to Goode's battery organ ized at Dallas, Tex. Sam Davis and Calvin Crozier were but two. We had many more just like thom, but they were not so tried. But speaking of tears and war the most touching lines over written were by Langhorne, who died inore than one hundred years ago: "Cold on Canadian hill or Minden'" plain, That woping inot,hcr mournied bei husband slain; Bent o'er her' babe, her~ eye dissolved The big drops mingling withi t.he milki he drew. What a sad pre.sage of his futurei' years The child of misery baptized in tears. What could be more sweetly, sad ly pitiful, No wonder that Burin shed tears wvhen he looked at the print that had been made of the scene. Why has not some great artist taken the hint and painted it to the life--the mother seeking bor dead husband among the slain on a battlefield and weeping over her child as he nursed from her breast-"the big drops mingling wvith tihe milk lhe drew." It is enough to make an angel weep. It is enough to emphasize Genera] Sherman's pit less remark that "War is hell." The poet 4logors said the pr-etti est thing about a tear. lie wvanted to find a chemist who could crystal lizie one so that he could wear it as a gem next to his heart for a tailmm. Shakespeare calls the tears of an old man "honorable dew that silvers down thy cheeks," and another p)oet describes man as "a p)endulum lbe twixt a smile and a tear." So we will let these old soldiers wool) if they wish to. It will do them good for they arc not tears of sorrow noi grief. They are the welling up and overflow of sacred memories. It is like unto a man after years and years of wondering going back tc the home of his youth and groeting his kindred and schoolmates and communing together about the joys and sorrows of the olden time. These veterans all shared a common peril and it is but natural that they should love to get together and talki of it. So let them meet anmd talk and weep) if they feel like it, and curses be upon the heartless set whc scoff at it and say oh, let the old wam go-we are tired of it. AUGUSTA AND NEWBERRY ROAD THAT BOTHi CITIES AKE (11EATLY INTEtESTED IN. Strong Vul Is anl That is Needed to Hulld it-Sentiment aund Feeling Ripe For an Organized Effort. (Augusta Chronicle.) Newberry, S. C., July 1.-When the editor of the Augusta Chronicle visited Newborry during the late m -it ing of the South Carolina State Pr( -* Association he captivated not only the association, but also the city of Newborry, by a magnificent addrems, which he delivered as ora tor of the occasion. Mr. Walsh's visit and address had the happy offect of bringing Augusta and New berry closer together by social ties of friendship and mutual admiration. This binding together of the two cities by these strong social ties is followed by a movement to bring them closer still by steel ties of corn morco. When Mr. Walsh returned to his post of duty after his pleasant ex porienco there lie said in the col umns of his paper that "Newberry is one of the best towns in South Car alina. The people are anxious for direct, railroad connection with Au gusta." Two short sentences; two long truths. Ho also said: "The people of Augusta and Newberry can easily build the Augusta and Newberry railroad. Whenever they determine the raiiroad will be built. Augusta needs railroads that will do volop the country that supports her." Moro true and important statoments briefly but strongly made. When the railroad mass meeting in Saluda nominated lHon. Patrick Walsh, of Augusta, for president, and Hon. George Johnstone, of New berry, for vice president of this pro posed railroad, the said meeting nominated two mon of ability and strength. What is in the way of the' building of the road ? Mr. Walsh, in the samo issue of his paper, from which is above quoted, also said: "Newberry has the Southern and the Columbia, Nowborry and. Laurens railroad, but the good people of the commu nity are anxiously looking for a di rect railroad to Augusta. They are willing to do thoir full share. The road is graded nearly all the way from Nowborry to Augusta, and if there is a union of the business sentiment of each community in favor of completing the ontorpriso, the railroad will ho built. If the merchants of Augusta want the Augusta and Newborry railroad the progroessivo citizens of Nowho~ ry will meet thomn half way. We hope the Augusta and Nowborry railroad will comnmand the support, of the mer chants and capitalists of Augusta." Could anything be more encourag ingly p)ut hoeforo the people? Mr. Wanlsh and Mr. Johnstone stand ready to (10 their duty, the newspapcrs are ready to do their part andi the people "arc anxiously looking~ form a direct railroad to Au gusta." T1hey are even "willing to (10 their full share." These things, ini connection wyith the imuportant and vanluablo fact "the road is grad1 ed nearly all the way from New herry to Augusta," should, in the expressed hope of Editor WValsh, surely "'comnmand the suplport of the merchants and capiitalists of Augus ta. Mr. Walsh says "if the merchants of Augusta wvant .the Augusta and Newborry railroad the p ogressiYe citizena of Nowberry will meet them half way." Let Mr. WValh continue to spur the capitalists of Augusta to the importance andl necessity of this purpPosed line of railroad and Mr. Johnstone will see to it that, in the language of the Chronicle, Newberry, "one of the best towns in South Caoin, which is "anxious for direct rail road conection wvith Au - gusta," will do her full share. One wvay to get the road is to keep hammering awvay at it, and that is why the Chiroaicle's Newborry cor respondent wishes to reproduce the above strong editorial utterances of t.he cityv4 nd the ronlM chnmpion. The way to impress the people fully and widely is to keep the subject matter before the public mind. Re petition often counts and pays. Merchants may be too busy one day to read. That day's paper is gone. One day they may read casually and think no more of the matter. An other paper gone. One may read it tomorrow who would have missed it iyosterday. Then follow it up when it is a good thing. There foro lot me repeat, that if "Augusta neods railroads'that will develop the country that Lupports her," and the people of Newberry, ("one of the best towns in South Carolina") are "anxious for direct railroad connect tion with Augusta." why in the world cannot ;t be built? "Tho poo plo of Aligusta and Newberry can easily build the Augusta and Newborry railroad." Yes, "when over they determine thi railroad will be built." So why cannot there spoedily be "a union of the business sentiment of each community in favor of complet ing the entorprizo?"-tho railroad, mind you, which is already "graded nearly all the way from Newberry to Augusta." it. Hf. G. Camkpaigt Apiointmenta. The following are tho appoint ments for the sonatorial campaign now in progress in this State: Beaufort, Saturday, July 10. Hampton, Monday, July 12. Barnwell, Tuesday, July 13. Aiken, Wednesday, July 14. Edgolield, Thursday, July 15. Saluda, Friday, July 10. Lexington, Saturday, July 17. Winnsboro, Monday, July 19. Columbia, Tuesday, July 20. Orangeburg, Wodnesday, July 21. 1 Dorchester, Thursday, July 22. Bamberg, Friday, July 23. Union, Monday, July 26. Spartanburg, Tuosday, July 27. Cherokee, Thursday, July 29. Greenville, Friday, July 30. Pickens, Saturday, July 31. Oconee, Monday, Aug. 2. Anderson, Wednesday, Aug. 4. Greenwood, Thursday, Aug. 5. Abbeville, Friday, Aug. 6. Lanrens, Saturday, Aug. 7. Newberry, Monday, Aug. 9. Chester, Wednesday, Aug. 11. York, Thursday, Aug. 12. Lancaster, Friday, Aug. 13. Kershaw. Saturday, Aug. 14. Cbostorfield, Monday, Aug. 16. Marlboro, Wednesday, Aug. 18. Darlington, Thursday, Aug. 19. Marion, Saturday, Aug. 21. Horry, Monday, Aug. 23. Georgetown, WVednosday. Aug. 25. Williamsburg, Thursday,, Aug. 26. Manning, Friday, Aug. 27. Florence, Saturday, Aug. 28. Jolly street D)ots.. We arc having sonme very hot wveath er hero now. Rtegular' summer time. I stated in my last letter' that there would be a barbeu at Jolly Street on the 17th, but on account of the reun ion at Little Mountain they have put it off' until the 24th Inst. Special ar1. rangemnents will be made for' the young folks. Come, boys, and bring your' sweethearts. Dinner wiI be cheap 1ladies5 30cts., gentlemen 36ets. hev. R{. 1, Livingston, of Sandy Run,. Lexington County, sp)ent last Wy0ok with his father', Mr<. '. . ivingstron. Mr. G. M. Singley has plenty of cot ton blossoms, lie says lhe thinks ,e will have seome co'ton to pick about the last (of July. ,Joshi, I am not deadl yet. Now please0 pull oil, that tube that you have all ar'ound1 those pants legs of yours, for you know that is not the place to weari It. The tr'ustce.s of Jolly Street school are going to have a well bored at the school house and( If any one desir'es the job) it would be well for' them to speak to the trustees ---Messr's. U. M. Singley, J. W,. Wert,s or .l. C. Wilson. 1EIther' one of these gentlemen will (10. 1 hope they will have the school house elled, for' when It gets cold it isn't very comn fortable In there. Mr'. and( Mr's. J1. II. Livingston anid their little dlaughter Annie sp)ent last Sunday with their father, Mr'. D. T. Livingston. Look hier'e, Jfosh, dlat's all r'ite, Meet mec at the hen house tomorrow SARGE PLUNKETT 111-ACKIEIMiES ARE RIPE AND TilE COUNTRY IS NOW SAFE. k Sewing Woman of the City-Uhe Tells of Seic of the Ilardohips to Which They are Subjected. LAtlanta Constitution.] Blackberries are getting ripe, the Irought is broken, and the prospects or a good crop were never bottor. Everybody in Georgia should ro oice, and we rejoice with them. The iolds are the clearest of grass that I >vor saw them, one of the blessings >f a dry spring. The long drought vas just at the right time, and the armors profited by it in a degree ieldom soon before. The only com >laint to be heard is that crops are amall-cotton is very small and corn a nothing to brag on. The ont crop vas not encouraging, but wheat is dl right and thvre was a lot moro )lanted than we had thought. Near y all the farmers will make wheat nough to do them. There may not. o much profit in raising whoat when lour can be bought so cheap, but it nakes us, fool good to look at the ihocks in the field and hoar the ,hroshers humming around in the sot ,lements-4t home whore onough of worything to live upon is raised has mn air of cheerfulness that is never 1eon among those who go to the West or their supplies in meat and bread. It does me good to watch the roung people. It is just the happi mst time of all for them, for they live i happy anticipatinn of the good ime that is just ahead, and Brown ays that there is more pleasure in 'pursuit than in possossion." One noro month and crops will ho mado md big mootings will coneunco. Fine homo-raised hams will bo >rought from their hiding placs and 3hickens are already sot aside for the 'company" and "big days" at hurcb. The young mon are slook ng up their horses and the girls are getting their pretty ribbons and 3ashos, and such a timo as they will bavo will never be known under the fad of bicycles, sweaters and bloom irs. We don't exactly know what swentors and bloomers are, bit we Ban imagine that a girl pedaling a bicyclo on a hot July day would be far from a starched up picnickor if thoro was not something to protect against her dampness. Bicycles may give a girl an independence, and they may be as fully in the bounds of proprioty as the horsos, but the ridlers will never look as swooet and cool as tie p)rotty girls (of thre coun try who congregate in the shades of the trees around the old churches through the big meeting time that is just a short time ahead. Nor (10 the old people1 of the coun try fail in receiving their full share of country blessings. The old mani of the coanitry is ini his glory at big miooting timie, arnd the wvrinkles are all cleared from his brow as he hears the rain pattor against the old1 church arnd the thunders lumbar out and away in tIhe direction of Ihis lit tIe crop. ~,eld people of the towns can feel rno i a pleasures. Ini fact the 01(d man of the towns is a brack niuribor. There are mighty few p)laces for him to tili. Railroads (10 noQt wlmt an old mran, nor tihe street cars, nor thre piolico, nor the stores all these positions mnnust bo filled bry yrounig men. It is tihe tendency of theo timies to do without the old1 mani, rind to such an extent hans this be comoi alpparenIt that we rmight wvell risk, what is t.o become of the 01(1 p)0o1)1 of the towns? There are marny things to be sooen in a city that makes this (question pertinent, arid it involves the old1 wvomarn as well as the 01ld man. All the world in read1y to give out sym p)athiy to those who are strong and( who might lie ab)le to mnake themr selves felt in tire p)olitics or thre schemes of thre day, b)ut there is noth ing for tire woeaking with age anid infirmities to (10 but to wait for thre summnons "over tire river" and1( pass away without munch regret. it mariy be sad for thre 01(d to contempnhlato such cond(itions, but you may as well undarr.nnd that trare s notMm. in the hurly-burly of the towns that fools itself called upon to Waste time in considering your conditions. Me and Brown passed a poor wo man on the road that we used to know, and we know that she should be receiving a pension sufficient to keep her up for tho good she has V done in hor humble and patient life. She was loado1 down with garmonts that she had just finished to the or der of one of Atlanta's morchants, and we could so that she staggorod under the load and the heat. "Mighty hot," said I, as we drove v up along sido of her. "Yes," she said, as she changed her load from one hip to the other, "mighty hot, mighty hot." Wo remombored this woman as i one wo used to know. Sho is the f widow of as bravo a soldier as passed through the war, and she told us many things we had never dreamed of as to what the sowing wonio of ! the towns have to go through. First, thoy must go to tho stores and bog for tho work and then lug it. to their homos. The load must necessarily be a large one, when wo think that 0 they got about 30 cents a dozon for t, making pants and live too far away c to visit the etoro ofton. When they have finished the work they nmst, lug it back. Then comes an inspec tion of thoir work. They hardly got enough to pay thei for the lugging of the goods to and froi their 9 homes; but thoro would never bo a complaint for this. Some of those merchant.s are harder upon t iose a womo than the woather or the wor ry or the lugging. The "inspectors" are the dread. If 1,hl stitches awo a little long when the "inspector" views it thoso womon are "docked." V If the buttons are not sowed just as thseo "inspectors" think thoy should a be, there is another "dock." Ofton, I am told, those "inspoct.ors" catch ia garment and rip it from end to eud i with one ernel swool. So it is, with r the small price paid for tho work r and then those "dockings," thoso poor women are noarly st arved, and they daro not mutter or grumblo. Night and day those women of the towns have to work. Thoro is no eight hours, nor ten hours, nor from sun to sun wit,h thenm. It, is work, work, work! While tihe sun shinos they work, and when tho sun is down they must light their lamps. If they wore to compllain thoy would be dropped by the merchant and would got no rioro work at any prico. At. last the "poor house" is all that t.hes poo womnen canl expet., and there are a plenty of just such ciasos in ev cry city of the land. No such 1pov-t erty andi hardships, and1( no suclh ab) senice of "'hope,'' can over he~ (expoet e(d in ai country life as if found ini the towns ~ l'oor, buart, sorie,LlIiig mon11sirous kind11 Makes a eount.ry life subIlimrie: Old , but age is no( dIisgrae The1 counitry's ol d enni filll a placeO. Suninny1113 5eoichi alnd faces t,ani, lHut, G od hais blessedt~ l,be couniItryma"- tn n1OVa KIL.EJ) nV'r A TICA IN. Accitient Occu mre DuringAi, itn Coheunrbiai, S. C., .11uly 4.-An eight yeair-orIldIO boy H was killed foiu mles from Cohninia by3 a tral.n on thre C('OIlmbIia, soim,ewhaiti sing Iua ci ( ircumst ances. iCngineerm Wb. I). G raam waZs ill chlarge or tIhe tmraini. lie wais runnin111g at, 11 aot t.went,y.-live mril es anr hour,i haivinIg stoppjed a hralf-miile baeck itotake writer. He( was coin rg a rond aiI lonrg (curive In a1) Ibl( inig rainistormr when heo sawV aheadii l,w) menC andr t,wo boys3' on t,hre track. Hie had thre boll mrng, bunt t,he four who were comtinrg toward ire, tra in seemeid to take nro not. in. Hie thought tbey wVouldC step1 firom the track everey mrorinenit. Soonm he saw they would hrave a close call, harving comei oin a t.hiree-foot trestle. Then i hre revemrsed Ihis en gIne and1 appl. sd t,hr 0 air brakes. Th'ree of thie parirt,iesi jumped)O(, one0 beOing tIhe frat.hrr of thne dead1( boy, hameod P11rank Wash in gton. Will iam dId niot mo1Ave as fast as thei otherrs 1and( t,he engine, wihel had( aLli but stoppbed, hilt imi irn tihe baik, knocking him11 ol. Th'le boy's faltheir says' t.he rinr was frillIng so hrard at the thne t.hat nrone of themn heard'( t.he t.rin till It wars abnriost nnon01 t.herm GREAT CONTHAST TO SUMTER. nial and Apathetic Crowd Listens to the The Caudittates for the Senate. (Special Atlanta Jov-nal.) Monck's Corner, S. C., Jiy 0. 'hto catnpaign ineting bere today ,as in startling contrast to that at umitor yesterday. It was quiet and irgely froo from personalities. Only bout a hundred people were pres [it. Colonel Irby had the opening. He aid he was unwell, but he made a ory good spoech, devoid of person lities and devoted principally to his 3cord as a reformer and his sympa iy for the common people and what o had done for them in the consti itionil convention and in the re >rm faction. Ite said he had no confidence or rust, in politicians and they should o frequently weighed. He said int any man who was chaperoned y Editor Gonzales was to be 'atlchod by reformers. Senator McLaurin said he was olighted with tie temper and style f Irby's speech and hoped that the vo would koe up the plane of the tipaign shown in to day's meeting. Leaurin said when the reform iovotioent needed help he fought for but this is a day of progress and 10 best men can be elected. He 'as still a reformer and never apolo ized for any position lie ever took. [e sid he never consulted with or indo any trade with Gonzales or ny one else. lie said his tariff views ore entirely now and he never con alted with Tillman who now con urred with him. The audience which was small, as divided in its sympathies, and io lack of enthusiasm was co 1)p1iuous. Ex-Governor John Gary Evans, olin T. Duncan, M. L. Donaldson Id 8. (1. Mayfield, who have Big. iled their iitantion of making the aco for senator, were not a the looting to-dny. Item From Maybintonl. N iss M hnne lilai of itlir's has been isiting Miss Hlelen Hardy. Miss Mary (ollid, who has been vis ting in Newherry for soveral weeks anst, is at home agaLin. Mrs. M. C. Rtenwiek, Misses Fannie >xne nd (1( lein Colild and George Co leld visited Mrs. S. A. Jeter's familly he fourth Sabbath. TIhecy attended ui-eaching at Inlg's Creekc also. Th'le we1,aer for the past.-three weeks ias beeni exceedingly wr-rmn. A cr in lady was sewing and~ her face per p~ired so mtuch t,at, is, washed her spec aieles off. Now the weatber is hot sure vbe atoi person01 perispilres that much. Mrs. Johin 'Turner of Newberry spent night and1( day in this cit,y recent.ly. Ye have a slight idea what the att,rac bin hereO is. 'i'here will be a pienic at the grove at virs. Sarah 10. Chiick's on1 ilday, July 'lth. A well huled basket enititlus my~doe to ant invitation. Tlhiere will he a big (lance in the vlayhit,On 1ha1lltPa n rday' night and my one that, wishes to " shake their cot'" will have the pleasure of doing 4) if t,hey wvill only at,tend the dance. Invitations arO oult for the marriage if Miss Annio Pe'arsoni of Newberry mid M r. WV. II. Oxner of Maybinton, on hie 7t.ht inst,. Thet yountg peop)le will iiis.s the amtniable w iower from their oeal gat,berinogs, but out' loss is Mi ss \nniie's gain. We welcome her in our nidlst and wilsh thoem heal.h, wealt,h md1( happiness. Wve extend our1 symp)athy to Mr. and dlrs. 1'. I'. Hi 1lton ini thet death of hir son0, 1 iurence, which sad event icurrted at Clemson College on the 8t.h inst. is remaiins wore interred ~t Ifellyt; Chapel in Carlisle oni the 9th. Oneo of onr t harming young ladies, ti iss i'ann Oxn()~ er has' retirnted from onesvillbe, whore site has been visiting he Misses Werbher. She is wear'ing a ,roald smuile. We can guess theo reasoni. I ilairsv ille, S. C., .Juine 18, 1897.-My niothier was tr'oIiOle very mtch witn tidigestiont, blit after talkInrg a few >Ot.ls of iil ood's Staaparilla :shte can att miany kinds of food which she~ had tot before daureud to eat for maty years. talke leaLsure' ini recommiiendinig food's Nuarstparilla as an excelleut ttedl ineOt, andic 1hope others may be ,enefitedl myI oiur experience. SAM I,. BLAIR. Ifood's Pills are the only pills to take with Hlood's Sarsapairilla. Easy 1.l vn yt nalnhint