Newspaper Page Text
DAILY ENyl'IREK- SUN: COLUMBUS GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER a. 1886.
<£olwalius<£ni)itirtr^ttH.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily. Weekly and Sunday, j
The BNQU1RER-8UN is issued every day, ex
•opt Monday. The Weekly is issued on Monday.
The Daily (Including Sunday) is delivered by |
carriers in the city or mailed, pontage free, to sub-
■oribers for 75c. per month, $2.00 for three j
months, $4.00 for six months, or $7.00 a year.
I'he Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in the j
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
$(.oo a year.
The Weekly is issued on Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will be taken for the
Daily at $1 per square of 10 lines or less for the
first insertidh, and 60 cent* for each subsequent
insertion, and for the Weekly at fl for each in- i
aertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged as advertisements, j
Special contracts made for advertising by the !
year. Obituaries will be charged Sor at customary >
»atcs.
None but solid metal outs used.
\jj communications should be addressed to the
EwyuiKKii-BuN.
Some of lln» ilruinntw 1 (Mnn|uini«»s that I
me milking (lie publir tired, inLrlit be
imjirovedby a fail road accident.
A sn\\ poi'in licjiiiiH wilh this line: i
“I wish to die away from Home.” The j
(met should take “Hoiijih on Hats.” II j
will make him no off to 1111111 water.
(IKS. SIIKHMAN, AM AS OKItOMMO.
The excoriation lately administered by
ex-I’rwidont l)avin tft Hen. Sherman in
the columns of the Baltimore Sun brings
to min i some other conduct of that Im
mune (?) and honorable (?) warrior that
has passed into history. His reckless
statements made in 1HK4 in regard to
■ ‘resident Davis arc thoroughly consis
tent ttitli tlie nature of the beast as re
vealed in Ids subsequent explanation of
ids celebrated “ memorandum,” signed
with (ien. .losuph H. Johnston, near Dur
ham Station, X. ('., on April hs, 1805.
This memorandum provided for the dis
bandment of the confederate armies, for
the recognition bv the federal govern-
sia. The establishment of the more direct
route, however, made the support of Eng
lish interests in Constantinople but an
empty precaution against Russian en
croachments, and practically, it ih now a
matter of indifference to Great Britain
what jiower may now occupy the seat of
tlie unstable Moslem empire. The sultan
has become to all intents and purposes
the servant of the czar. There is hut
one consideration that seriously concerns
England in tins matter. An alliance
between Russia and Turkey would,
if Russia were disposed to be hostile,
give tlie Czar a maximum opportunity to
attack England, while at the same time
reducing to a minimum all England':
Dr.PR |CE5
CREAM
J
ll
«
A Jaiuxksk proverb says: “A woman’s
tongue three inches long can kill a man
six feet high.” And yet people call the
Japanese an uncivilized nation.
A meat dealer lias put the “Dove
Hum” on tlie market as something new.
It is old. Hum was u hoy in the ark
wlieii I lie dove went out to look for dry
land.
Tun real virtuous side of I’aris is but
little known to American travelers. It
is a fact that adventurous American wo
men make their way into society more
ensile in London than tliev do in Paris.
Tiikiik is a truthful difference between
Eli Perkins and Wiggins. Eli lie’ll lie to
hear himself talk. Wiggins will lie to
hear other people talk. Wiggins lias (lie
most interesting time of it.
11 usnv W am Bukciiwi’n lectures in Eng
land seem to have been a hippodrome.
Ivicli admission ticket eontai list ids notice:
“To meet the heavy expenses, this ticket
is given on the tacit understanding that
the holder will contribute to the collec
tion not less than two shillings.”
Pinm i: llesin, of Buttcnberg, has re
turned from .higenheini, where he went
to meet his brother Alexander, late of
Bulgaria. Now Punch will tell why they
were .luggenlieim [jugging him.] The
Punch jokes are always in brackets, to
make them clearer in the London fog.
Tub Canadian Pacific Company is
building five miles of snow sheds in the
Rocky mountains, at an estimated cost
id (0,500,000, a tact which suggests one
item of the expense of operating rail-
wavs over the snowy ranges of the great
continental ili\ i !e.
Pauty devotion in Texas knows no
hounds. The D dins News says: "(Jn.
Re-- doe.- not seem to lie much ot a
speaker. I! it tic e who are for hint have
tlo iegrets about it. They would vote for
liiiu first, last mid all the time, if lie was
deaf, dumb, blind and pigeon-toed.”
’fill', republican parly in Ohio will not
tolerate decency. lienee the Cincinnati
Times star, which was once moderately
conservative in its sentiments, and fair
and liberal to it.- opponents, is getting to
he one of the in -t intensely hitter of re
publican papers. Some of its correspond
cuts are as almsive and libellous as any
writer on the Commercial Guzeltc.
mentof the several state governments of opportunities of reaching Russia. The j
opening of new channels of commerce,
the advancing'means of connecting dis- ,
taut nations and empires in eiose com- j
tnercial relations is working mighty
changes in the attitudi of nations, one ,
toward another. Wheneverthe question
of war between two nationalities is now
debated, it is not alone a question of
how many human lives will lie sacrificed !
in the struggle tint one of the hnporta.ni ,
matters to be taken in the account will I
he the sudden disruption and destruction 1
of the great and almost inestimable com- J
tnereial interest which the ages of peace
ful activity are constantly establishing !
throughout the whole habitable globe. j
Whenever the time shall arrive that
the .Moslem empire can fall into the
hands of some nation who is imbued j
with the spirit of Christian civilization,
without such an event, endangering the j
peaceful relations of other nations, it will
be cause for rejoicing. The Turks have
ever been an eye-sore and a blot upon
European territory, and their home and
influence properly belongs in the Asiatic
dominions.
A nkm morning newspaper i* proposed
in New York city, to be called the Ga
zette. and to lie issued on week days
only, with no Sunday edition. The
price willin' two cents. Philadelphia
men will he behind the enterprise.
Philadelphia men recognize the fact that
if they want a live newspaper they must
print it in New York.
Knulaxo has little for her silly lords
to do wlieu those of tlie Lonsdale stripe
loan themselves out to a cheap, married
actress to travel and work up scandal
as .i.i ad vertisiug tradeinnrk. And British
aristocracy must lie quite low down, in
my lord’s case, when it allows itself to
he bounced from a place like the IIoll-
inan house by s landlord like Stokes,
on moral grounds.
\ kkm years ago the literary markets
of tlie world were overstocked with
American humor, but somehow or other
the stuff spoiled on tlie hands of tlie first
purchasers, and to-dav it is almost im
possible to get a decent specimen of pure,
original humor.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
What is tlie matter with Halstead’s edi
torials on McLean? Everybody outside
of tlie Enquirer otlice thinks tliev are
funny.
tin; confederacy on the taking by the
ofileials and legislatures of such stalegov-
ernnients of tlie oath prescribed
by tlie constitution of tlie
United Slates, for the re-establishment
of the federal courts in the late revolu
tionary states, and for general amnesty
as fur as tlie executive government could
command. Sherman signed this agree-
int nl as “general commanding United
Stales army in North Carolina,” and per
mitted < ien. Johnston to sign us “general
commanding Confederate States army in
North (’arolina.” Under this arrange
ment, as is well known, Johnston sur
rendered. But how it “.fatigued public
indignation” when subsequent events de
veloped tlie extent to which Gen. Sher
man, witli a treuchery only equalled by
his cruelty, hail “stolen tlie livery of tlie
court of heaven to serve the devil in!”
A growl of dissatisfaction went over tlie
north at Sherman’s unwonted liberality,
and, as is well known, President John
son repudiated the agreement. Sherman
could not stand tlie lire.
A few weeks after this he embalmed
himself in infamy by testifying as fol
lows before a committee of congress at
Washington. Speaking of how his “mem
orandum” came to be agreed upon, lie
said: “It then occurred to me that 1
might write off some general proposition,
meaning little or meaning much—what 1
would term glittering generalities. 1
therefore draw up the paper, which lias
been published to the world, simply to
cover the pride of the southern men. I
never designed to shelter a human being
from any liability incurred in conse
quence of puHt acts."
This shameless confession of an inlen-
tion to deceive adversaries acting in tlie
utmost good faith, would seem to have
reached the climax of human baseness;
hut at a soldiers festival in Ohio some
months Inter lie placed Ibis cap upon it,
by saving in a speech, "When the rebels
venltired their all to destroy our govern
ment, they pledged their lives, their for
tunes and their sacred honors to (lie
cause, lienee, when we conquered, their
prop rty became ours by conquest. They
lo{it their all, and even their lives and
personal liberty were theirs only by our
forbearance and liberality. So, soldiers,
wo became owners of all they laid, and I
don't waul you to lie troubled in your
consciences fortaking, while on our great
march, the property of conquered rebels.
They forfeited their rights to it, and I
living agent for tlie government gave you
authority to keep all the quartermasters
couldn't take possession of, or didn’t
waul !” N i doubt the “consciences" of
tin' solde rs enjoyed the most unper
turbed rest, if they had any capacity to
minthemselves In the military ethics
of i heir commander.
The truth is President Davis and the
.- intliern people should dismiss (leneral
Sle-i man. ami all lie lias to say about
them, with the full know ledge that lie is
simply an educated savage. If it were
possible to take Geronimo, or the most
uiereile s and treacherous Apache or
t'oiiinianehe, educate him, improve liis
intellect, bring him in contact with de
cent society, allow him to absorb a
k now ledge of ordinary gentilit), w it limit
in the slightest degree toning down or
siihjngntinu his inherent ferocity, or di-
reetliis. and reforming his moral percep
tions, in him would lie embodied the
exact counterpart of General Sherman.
MEXICAN COTTON.;
Consul Mackey, writing from Nuevo
Laredo, to the state department, Wash
ington, of the influence of railroads on
tlie cotton producing industry of Mexico,
makes it appear that the building and
operating of railways in Mexico have
retarded nil her than advanced tlie culti
vation of (cotton. The reason given is
that the cotton regions of the United
States furnish the staple cheaper than
it can be produced in Mexico. Tlie
fanning tools of the Mexicans are of
(lie rudest kind, and although labor is
very cheap and the land suitable for the
production of cotton, yet nothing
can compete with civilized tools
and methods. A ll that is needed to de
stroy any industry dependent on such
means as cheap labor and poor tools is to
open cheap and easy avenues to tlie pro
duction of more highly civilized coun
tries. The statistics for the year ending
June :ll), 1 XSIt, gave tlie cotton production
of Mexico at 55,Jill,072 pounds valued at
than 12 cents a
MOST PERFECT MADE
The United States Government
Places Dr Price’s at tlie head of the entire list.
(See National. Hoard of Health Bulletin—Supjjlemcnt Pin. C, page 33, Washington, D. C.)
The Canadian Government
Places Dr. Price's at the head of the entire list.
(Soo report to the Commissioner op Inland -V.EVF.Nur Dr.pAi%TMENT,Otttiwu(scatof govern-
incut), Canada, April Orel, 1883.)
It is the purest and strongest. Free from Ammonia,
free from Lime, free from Alum, and is recommended for
general family use by the Heads of the Great Universi
ties and Public Food Analysts.
Persons doubting the truthfulness of this can write any of the Chemists named.
Prof. R. OGDI5X DOREMUS, M. !>.. L. L. 1).. Bellevue Medical College. New York.
Prof. 11. V. WHITE, State Clu mist, University Georgia, Athens, Ga.
prof. li. (’. KEDZI15. Late President State Board of Health, Lansing, Mich.
Prof. 11. M. SCHEFFER, Analytical Chemist, St. Louis. Mo
Prof. CHARLES 15. DWIGHT! Analytical Chemist, Wheeling, \V. Va.
Prof. JAMES E. BABCOCK, State Assayin’, Boston, Mass,
Hr. ELIAS II. BARTLEY. B. S., Chemist to tlm Dcp'tof Health. Brooklyn, N. \
Prof. CURTIS C. HOWARD, M. Sc., Starling Medical College, Columbus, Ohio.
Prof. M. DELFONTAIXE, Analytical Chemist. Chicago, III.
Prof. it. S. G. I’ATON. Late Chemist Health Department, Chicago, 111.
Prof. JOHN M. ORDWAY, Mass. Institute of Technology, Boston.
Prof. li. A. WlTTIlAUS, A. M., M. i)., University of Buffalo, N. Y.
Prof. A. II. SABIN, State Chemist,•Burlington, Vt.
Prof. JOHN BOIILANDER, Jr., A. M., M. ]>.. Prof. Chemistry and Toxicology
College Medicine and Surgerv. Cincinnati, O.
Profs. AUSTEN & WILBER, Prols.Cliciiiistry, Rutgers College, New Brunswick,X..J.
Prof. GEORGE E. BARKER, Prof. Chemistry Univeraity of Pennsylvania, Phila-
Prof. PE’rljU (JOLLIER, Chief Chemist for the United States Department of Agri
culture, Washington, D. C. _
Profs. III5YS & RICE, Profs. Chemistry, Ontario School Pharmacy, Toronto,Canada.
Dr. JAMES ALBRECHT, Chemist at the United States Mint, New Orleans, La.
Prof. EDGAR EVERHART. Prof. Chemistry, University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Prof. E. W UILGARD, l’rol. Chemistry, University California, Berkeley, Cal.
A WEEK FOR BARGAINS
CO’S
OPENING DAY!
Thursday, October 7th.
Oh the above flute we will ex-
hibit till Ihe late
NOVELTIES
iisr
A. C. CHANCELLOR
Ml!
And be pleased to meel
-TjHZIE
before many decades, spread over
every part of North America. ,
j The infusion of the vim, push and enter- j
I prise which characterize the people of '
i ihe states, with their improved methods,
j will, with every moving train, carry new
j lift* into Mexico and will be to her gs u
new revelation. Not even bad govern
ment or unstable and unsettled e.indi-
I lions of society can mueii retard die on
ward movement.
ESTABLISHED 1874.
JOHN BLACK MAR,
Real Estate Agent,
OOLITMBUS, C3-.A..
roll SALK.
Building Lot and Dwelling on northeast corner
of Eleventh street and Fifth avenue.
2-f t*cr Font. Hn vestment.
Four quarter acre lots, three ‘I room Dwellings
and one 3 room Dwelling. Price i£800. Renting:
for $10 per month.
Enjoyed a Large Trade in SeptemlxT. (amsequciilly
many lots of Suits. Hals and P;mis have been broken. Now
is ibe time to buy Goods at Half Price.
No. 265, the best located Build
ing: Lot in the city of Columbus,
S2O.0U Sl’iTS Now
5.00 HATS Now
jjd ().()().
2.50.
E. S. Ci.bvbi.axo, tlie democratic nom
inee for governor in Connecticut, is said
to be one of the most liberal and progres
sive public men of the day, a man of
positive convictions and independent ac
tions. He presents the sharpest possi
ble contrast with the republican
candidate, who is a wealthy New
York business man and speculative poli
tician. With Cleveland as their can
didate, the democratic party is pretty
Certain to elect the state ticket.
I'll K sill AT I ON AS TO TIIIKKV.
ll was not so long ago that the intima
tion of a purpose with the czar of Russia
to move on Constantinople would have
11 red every British mind with loyal mad
ness, and the clamor for war would have
I teen directly heard.
A11 English writer on that subject
wisely says: “If Russia were to annex
it to-morrow, however much we might
lament such a step in the interests of
Russia and of the general pence, it would
not justify our drawing a sword or firing
a rille, so far as British interests are eon- j
cerned.” As one of the great powers '
charged with the duty of main
taining the harmony of Europe and of
supervising the affairs of tlie Ottoman
government England would feel an
active interest in the affairs of that in
secure ami barely tolerated empire. But
this active interest would hardly extend
to a call to arms to keep Russia on the
far side of the Bosphorus. This change
of sentiment lias come about within a
few years.
England is gradually moving towards
the vital fact that Constantinople is no
longer indispensable to the preservation
of her commercial interest or the main
tenance of her national dignity. There
was a time, prior to the opening of the
Suez canal and the establishment of a
continental line of trade when it was ab-
solulely essential to tlie welfare of Brit
ish interests that Constantinople be kept
in the control of a power hostile to Kus-
\t the National Druggists' convention
at Minneapolis the report of the commit
tee on tlie drug market was very en
couraging. it showed that the amount of
I quinine used in the United States during
the past your was 2.000,000 ounces, and
that the use of morphine as a stimulant
w as rapidly growing. The sale of rough
on rats to servants was not fully dis
cussed, and the payment of hiuh salaries
to drug clerks, in order that the best men
might lie secured, and an occasional
poisoning hj mistake through ignorance
Remnnhn'. our Mrrr/i'iuf T'lilorhiij is bnuminj.
//our iiic'/stirc mid t/ef <t prrfccf-fit/hi;/ sail.
prevented, was not insisted upon.
Think of a woman with a silk gown
on and a stuffed bird in her hat, stand
ing iqi and singing, “Naked, poor, de
spised, forsaken, Thou from hence my
all shall he.”—Sunday School Times.
That is very poor advice to come from
such a source. Sunday school children
might think ofsomething better.
Tim self-made man never knows when
lie is finished. John McCullough, a poor
Irish lad, made himself, as the saying
goes. From making chair bottoms in
obscurity, lie rose to be tlie most striking
figure on the American dramatic stage,
lie made himself. He also ruined him
self.
It is not their ability or love for the
drama that makes such imported per
sons as Langtry and Cameron popular in
tlie loose circles of New York, it is their
ability to attract dudes and brainless
lords that seems to interest the public.
Auction Sale
Valuable City Lots!
Directly Opposite the Eagle and
Phenix Mills.
WILL BE SOLD, on the First Tuesday in No
il vember next, in front of the Auction House
of F. M. KNOWLES & Co., corner of Broad and
Tenth Streets, in the City of Columbus, at ll
o’clock a. m., the Valuable Lots fronting the
Eagle Factory Buildings, on Front street, in the
City of Columbus, Georgia, and next adjoining
the Alston Warehouse, and near offices of the
Georgia Midland Railroad, beginning on
east side of Front street, at the North Wall of
the “Alston Warehouse,” running east along
said wall 127 feet 0 inches, thence north 150 feet,
more or less, to the line of the lot occupied by
the Southern Express Company, thence west
along said line, 127 feet 6 inches, to Front street,
thence south along Front street 150 feet, more or
less to the beginning point. This property, im
mediately fronting the Eagle Factory, is admira-
piupinj, im. lull uiiuc UI .ui.^1.111 IV , .1 ■
Terms of sale one-third cosh od day ot purchase,
balance, one. two and three years, equal amounts,
with 7 per cent, interest, secured by the property.
MARY B. HANSERD.
oct3 tu&setw
COMMISSIONERS’ SALE
-FOR PARTITION
’wo Valuable Plantations
A CARD.
To all who are suffering from the errors and
indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early
decay, loss of manhood, kc., I will send a recijKj
that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great
remedy was discovered by a missionary in South
America. Send a self-addressed envelopo to the
Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D, yew York City.
sepll eod&wly ^fol r m)
$80 to $90 per month ami ex.
penses to travel and sell out
lers. or $40 a month and ex
bute circulars in your vicinity. Bus-
less fionorahle, permanent, pleasant & easily operated.
.11 expenses advanced. SAMPLE CASES FREE. NV
tamps required. No humbug. We mean what we say.
.Address NATIONAL SUPPLY COMPANY.
Bradford Bloch.CINCINNATI, OHIO
* by virtue of an order from the Superior Court
of Muscogee County, passed at the May term, 1866
thereof, the undersigned Commissioners appoint
ed by said court will sell in front of the court
house of said county, in the city of Columbus, on
the first Tuesday in Novf mber next, between the
legal hours o? sale, at public outcry to the highest
bidder, the following described plantation proper
ty, all lying in the county of Muscogee, state of
i Georgia, to-wit: All that body of land known as
the "James H. Jones” or “Ridgewood Plantation,’
consisting of lot No. 256 in the ninth district, also
lots Nos. 288 and 291, two hundred two and a half
'2021*) acres each, more or less: also 100 acres of the
north part oflot No. 287 at Jones’ Crossing, also
fractional lots Nos. 289 and 290. eighty-one < 81» acres
each, all in the tenth district, also the so :h half
of lot No. 287 one hundred one and a quarter
< 101 1 11 acres more or less; also fractional lots Nos.
257 and 288, ninety <90> acres each, in seventeenth
district: also fractional lot No. 1 in eighteenth
! district,sixty-seven and a half 167 1 u) acres more or
1 less. Said plantation containing in all twelve
hundred and eighteen and ore-fourth (1218F,)
! acres more or less; (excepting therefrom the
I small plat or enclosure known as the "Jones
family cemetery,” containing *u acre, and the
right of access thereto , bounded on north bv
lands of Boyd, Stripling and McFarland,
west by McFarland. south by Mc
Farland and Cox, east by the i
"Carnes place.” Improvements—an 8 room two-
story dwelling house, tenant houses, gin and I
\ screw, stables, well fine water and good fences, i
Also, the body of land known as the "Carnes
place,” consisting oflot No. 257, two hundred two
and one-half 202*2 > acres; part of lot No. 25-1 west
| of Kendall creek, one hundred five and three-
j fourths • 105 i acres, more or hss; fractional lot
No.256, eighty-one 81 acres , and all that part of
fractional lot No. 255,‘west of Kendall creek and
south of a line running due west from said creek
8 chains and 20 links south of the district line, con- I
taining eighteen and three-fourtns 'IS'd acres
more or less, said plantation containing in all |
four hundred and eight acres, more or less; all in
the tenth district of said county; bounded north 1
by Boyd’s place, south by Cox. east by Kendall ,
creek and Jenkins, west by “Jones place ” Im
provements -a commodious one-story dwelling
house, out houses, good fences and well of fine
water.
Terms of sale: One-third cash on day of sale,
balance one and two years ; equal amounts, with
interest 7 per cent, secured by mortgage. Posses
sion of both places given on January 1,1887. v De
scription of lands from recent survey by Jno. E.
Lamar, county surveyor. Sale for partition.
D. A. ANDREWS. )
J. G. MOON, Coram’re.
TOLY. CRAWFORD.)
octScUwtd _
Three Rose Hill Residences—
fa. $1250, $1800, $2000.
wife Two Wynnton Residences—
3® SI SOO, $3000.
| IHvelSings Kor EtonS tVoiu October Ist.
; Hodges Manor, Linn wood, 8 rooms. Price $12,
or will rent the rooms separate,
j Twelttli street Residence of Mr. Toombs How-
! ard, 5 rooms.
t Wynnton Residence of Mrs Elizabeth Howard,
Lett V0 j next to Mr. W. G. Woolfolk, 6 rooms. $16,
l No 82! Third avenue, one story brick, 5 rooms
j t water works and good well.
No. 1216 Fourth avenue, 5 rooms, on hill; splen
did well; very healthy.
No 309 Eleventh street, ni xt west of Judge Pou,
2 story, 6 rooms. Will be painted and
repaired.
No 1221 Fourth avenue, next to Mr. Win. W.
Bussey, 2 story.
No H2l Second avenue, opposite Mr. J. S. Gar-
ret,5 rooms,2d door above Judge Ingram
No 1022 L<irst avenue, 5 rooms, opposite east of
the market. Suitable for boarding bouse
Rose Hill new Residence of Mr. Harris, stable,
etc.. $15.
No 1315 Third avenue. 2 story. 6 rooms, next to
Mr. Homer Howard.
No 1344 Third avenue, corner west of Mrs.
Rowe’s residence, 9 rooms, water works
and bath room.
Store* For Kent from October Int.
Broad Street Stores Nos. 1204 and 1240.
Stores at Webster corner, formerly occupied
by John W. Sanders. Will rent low to firstrclas*
tenants and fit up to suit the business.
Brown House Hotel, 27 guest chambers, op
posite Rankin House. If it is conducted properly
will prove a gold mine. Business is increasing
every day. Will be painted and thoroughly reno
vated.
All advertising at my expense. For a small
commission i which will be less than the cost of
your advertising bill,) I rent property, collect, pay
taxes, «fcc., attend to repairs and give careful
supervisipn to all property in my charge. With
an experience of 13 years. 1 can serve you to ad
vantage.
TKXAXTN.
Call and see ray list. If I have not the place
you wish, I will file your order free of charge and
till as soon as possible.
JOHN BLACKMAR,
se well IVi tf Real Estate Agent.
CatarhH
fctel^cUBrcCOV
jold in Head,
CATARRH,
[HAY FEVER.
Ivota Liquid, Snuff or
U.SJL] ’oivder. Free from
injurious drugs and
offensive odors.
►lied into each nostril and is
‘ cents at Druggists; by mail,