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MAD THIS,
AND HE MEMBER THAT
YOU C-jkN
SAVE MNEY
BY CALLING ON
T. M. GREEN,
AND
Buying Gofls Cheap
——i
A Good Cloak for $1.50
A Good Polman, 3.00
Aussian Circalar, 10.00
Balmoral Skirts, 50
All-wool Felt Skirts,
$1.00,1*50.
Col’d Batize Skirts, 40c
and 75c.
Carpeting worth 30c at
25c.
Good Carpeting, 30c
Do von need an Oil Cloth
Rug all sizes,l’ve got them
Do vou need Blankets at
$1.25.
Look at mv Blankets at
$1.75.
Suva Comfort at SI.OO
Some and see mv Trunks
at cost, sav 50, 75c, SI.OO,
to $5,00.
Do vo need a Gossimer
Coat at $1.25.
Kid Gloves at 25 and 50c
Suva good Cloak at $3.50
Seta Splendid Overcoat
at $2.50.
A Better Overcoat, $4.00
A Superb Overcoat, 8.00
Do vou need Towels at 8c
Do vou want Curtains at
Cost.
Gaze on mv CLOTHING
before hiving.
Look at mv Dress Goods
at 10c.
See my Col’d Cashmeres
at lc
Black Cashmeres at 2
lo 40c.
Canton Flannels at iOc.
Good Canton Flannel 12
and 10c.
Red Flannel at lc.
White Flannel at 10c.
Brocaded Cashmeres,
7 to 10c.
Crey Deßage, 15 to 20c
Plain Cashmeres 12 to
15 cents. '
Flannel Suitings 15 to
20 cents,
Black Cashmeres, 25c
Coats at 2.00
Coats at 1.75.
Suits at 4.50
Good Suits at 7.50.
! Elegant Suits 12.50
Gents’ Calf Boots 250
T. M. GREEN.
Thto medlclnt, eemWßln* Iron with pot
Vegetable tonlo,, aolckly and onmylrt*!
“It l?an unAitTfntr remedy fcr Diet— ofth
K U*u r tn“n*W , *for Wae—i peculiar to
Women. and mil who lmd aedentary live..
It doM not injur* torn teeth, cunae
produce oonatlpatlon— cOttr Iron mUcktmda.
V Itenrlenet mnd purifiet the blood, Blmulatw
the mppetlte, mldm the awlmllatlon of fcod, re
lieve* Heartburn mnd Belch In,, mnd itrtnffUi
•l4 the mueclea mnd nerree.
For Intermittent Trim, Lead tud* p tack of
lutrgy, Ac., It hmm no equml.
4V The menulne bee shorn trade mark mnd
erotead red line, on wrapper. Take no other.
nowmcnuKUm co..liLtiaoaa,in.
1885.
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Wricht s Indian VecetablePills
FOR THR
LIVER
And all Bilious Complaint*
MASTER RICHARD.
I may say that I was brought up if
the family, for it is now nigh on t<
thirty years since I came into it, and I
was then a lusty youth of almost 20. II
almost makes me tremble when 1 thint
of it to find that in a few months I shall
be half a century old. Well, daring
those thirty years I’ve seen and known
some startling things in the family, but
nothing more so than what I’m abont
to tell.
Of course I use no real names, and I
shall call my master Richard, thougl,
that was not at all his real name an;
more than that of the family was Strati
ton, which 1 shall call them. Master
Richard Stratton’s father was a very
practical man, who had come from Eng
land as a toy, married a New York lady
and made a large fortune as a merchant,
lie had but one child, a son, Master
Richard, and of him he made an idol,'
especially after the death of his wife,
who departed this life, beloved by all,
when Master Richard was 5 years old.
I havo said that Mr. Stratton was a
very practical man, and ho showed if
when ho employed me, a stout and in
telligent lad of 20, freshly art-ivod from
a rural part of England, as a care-taker
of Master Richard, then a handsome
toy of 3 years old. French tonnes,
fresh from Ireland, was not then in fash
ion, and it pleased Mr. and Mrs. Stratton
to intrust Master Richard to me rather
than to some half-witted nursemaid, and
I am confident that they never re
gretted it.
llow fond I became of that toy, and
how well he deserved all tho care and
devotion I lavished on him! 1 taught
him to ride, to jump and to drive, and,
that I might teach them again to Master
Richard, I learned to box and tho use of
the sword, I really felt as if that boy
belonged to me, and 1 do believe that it
was on my account that he should not
bo separated from mo that his father
employed a tutor and had Master
Richard educated at home instead of
sending him away to school; and, farther
than that, when it came to college years
ho sent him to Columbia tm that I had
daily care of him, instoad of to Harvard,
which I kn%r was his first choice.
All these years pas*id away very
rapidly, and 1 may say very happily, and
Master l.ichard always treated me with
the highest consideration, never allow
ing me to feel, for an instant, my in
feriority, but, ou tho contrary, always
placing before me his desire that 1
should uphold liis and my own pride by
acting as if I was a gentleman and Un
equal of any one, as long as I wss
honest and behaved myself. I was his
own man and I felt it an honor. Before
strangers he always called mo Mr.
Brown, tot when alono he would call
me Brown, and sometimes Rob, which
latter cognomen I liked much the best.
But now comet the first opening of
what 1 call the dork era. Master Rich
ard graduated with high honors, and
had chosen the law for his profession,
since it seems that in this country every
man, no matter what his wealth or
tastes, must to something, and to b->-
fau to study for it. Then it was that
lastcr Richard fell in love. I knew it
before his father did, and was the me
dium of correspondence, for tho boy
made a confidant of me in everything,
and I did not hesitate in doing anything
to forward it, feeimg that the fatly*
must approve of the lady.
Miss Allie Sylvester was simply beau
tiful. She was of unimpeachable fam
ily, and for her age, which was only 19,
was one of tho pronounced belles of so
ciety. I knew that Mastor Richard was
engaged to her, and he told me when
he made his father acquainted with the
fact, and soon afterward I found that it
was whispered freely atout. At first it
was easy to bo seen that Mr. Stratton
was pleased with tho match, though ho
hinted as much to mu as to say that he
thought his son too young to marry.
Then, after the affair began to be well
known, it was evident that there a
some cloud lowering botwoen father and
ion.
One day when Master Richard was out
Mr. Stratton sent for me to come intc
the library and put me through the
severest lino of questioning I over under
went in my life, and it was all about
Miss Sylvester, and much ot it, as t
then thought, of a very curious kind,
bearing, as it did, on my impressions oi
the lady's personal looks and conduct. I
answered him as best 1 could, but he did
not seem satisfied, and afterwards when
I thought tho matter over I got suspicion
as to what ho was driving at. and ro
memliered that several times when 1 had
been ordered to deliver a letter or mes
sage, personally to tor, she had acted in
a way that I thought a little strange, tot
as I attributed it to her being iu love—
though I was never that writ myself—l
thought nothing of it. Mr. Htratton
gave me no orders to keep tho interview
with him secret, and so I told it to
Master Richard who was at first very
angry, but afterward laughed at it.
though he made no explanation. A
week later Mastor Richard came in very
much excited and angry, and said to me
“Bob, havo you seen anything about
Miss Sylvester when you havo been
there for me, that looked as though she
had been using stimulants, either wino
or opiuml’'
The question shocked mo, find I was
obliged to confess to him that 1 had no
ticed a singular levity in Miss Sylvester
at times, but that I bad never thought
of attributing it to that cause until
after his father had questioned mo, and
that 1 was not prepared uow to pro
nounce it so. Then he said, the anger
flashing out of his eyes: -
“Do you know that Dr. Wtllsev, that
old scrub, has dared to presume, be
cause ho has been our family doctor foi
30 years, to come between my fathet
and myself by telling him that Mist
Sylvester is an irretrievable victim tc
stimulants, especially opium!”
‘ ‘How did he know it, Master Richard?”
I asked.
“He says he has known it for several
- years, nml that ho has had her several
times under his treatment for it. It’t
a lie, but my father believed it, and
even it it were true I’d marry her and
trust to love afterward to cure her oi
tho habit, if she had it.”
I could not help approving this, thongfc
my heart misgave me, because 1 knew
that Master Richard s whole life was ah
sorbed in his love, aud that without hei
that life would boa waste to him. Twi
or threo times after this 1 saw that my
boy was excited and almost wild witb
suppressed anger, but he did not speak
until one evening some weeks after the
last conversation, whan he said to me:
“Bob, I am going to put a stop to this
infamous slander. I have ordered a
carriage to be hero at 8 o’clock, and in
the meantime you must pack my trunks
and hold yourself ready to go with me.
I shall marry Miss Sylvester to-night,
and to-morrow I shall depart for
Europe. I havo written to my father,
and he can forgivo me or not as he
pleases, tot I’m uot afraid of the final
result.”
I had nothing to do tot to obey
orders, and at 8 o’clock,* when the car
riage came, we are ready. Mr. Stratton
was out—he generally was at that hour
—at his club, and Master Richard laid
the letter for him on the library table,
and we drove away to a hotel, where lie
saw his trunks deposited in elegant
rooms which he was as careful in select
ing as though he and his bride were to
inhabit them forever, instead of for a
single day.
Then we drove to Miss Sylvester's
residence. Her only parent ’ was her
mother, a scheming, fashionable woman,
who, of course, favored the match, but
whom Master Richard did not like, and
had several times said to me that when
he was married he intended to keep bis
wife as much away from her mother as
possible. Tho two ladies Wire expecting
us and were prepared. It ten minutes
we were ail on our way !o the clergy
man’s. Miss Sylvester, her mother,
Master Richard and the bridesmaid,
Nannie, a Swiss girl, very pretty, but. I
must say, I did not like her, though I
can say without vanity that she had
made plenty of advances to me. I was
on the box with the driver.
How supremely beautiful did Miss
Sylvester appear that evening in her
iilain traveling dress, as sbe stool up
before tho minister to be made Mrs.
Richard Stratton. It was all over in a
few minutes, aud then she was a wife.
Her mother tried to cry a little, but it
was a failure, as was also Nannie's at
tempt. It was 1 that ought to have
cried, anil i would have had I been able
to see a little into tbo future.
Tbe marriage over, we drove back tc
the bride's mother's bous -, where we left
that lady and took oil board Mrs.
Richard Stratton’s trunks aud returned
to the hotel. There was no shadow upon
tlmt marriage, anil it seemod as though
they were as happy a couple as could b<
found anywhere; for though Master
Richard had married against liis fat iter’s
consent he had not to depeud on Mr.
Stratton for money, lie had a very fine
income of his own, left him perfectlj
uncontrolled by ills mother, and the
bride also had property of her own, left
by her father. Besides that, 1 bad
savings of atout 600 pounds sterling,
which I drew from bank and took with
me iu case of emergency.
“1 gave the governpr a chance to come
and see me or rend for me this morning,
Bob,” said Master Richard, when we
got on board the steamer for fioutharap
ton, “but he’s mad and won't come
Well, 1 can’t help it,” and Master Rick
ard laughed lightly.
Wo had a delightful trip, and I am
sure nothing could have been so absurd
as any suspicion that the story Dr.
Willsey told had any truth in it. To be
sure she was lively, but not any more sc
than any young bride ought to lie who has
a young, handsome ana rich husband
whom she loves and who ta devoted to
to her. It was not until wo had ar
rived in London and been there two
weeks, that I saw anything that looked
wrong, and then it was ouo day when
Master Richard had gone outtoo dine
with some American friends, and sent
me back—l always went everywhere
with him—to get some letters that he
wanted.
I found Mrs. Richard, whom he had
left an hour before ix-rfoi tly rigid, undei
au intiucuce, either of morphine or wine,
that was plainly perceptible. Nannie
was frightened and began to beg mo uot
to tell Mastor Richard, and to declare
that she could uot help it. I promised
to say-nothing and to detain Master
Richard as long as 1 could, and charged
her to do all she could to make tor mis
tress sober. But why dwell on this ter
rible episode ill my life? Wo went tc
Paris, to Madrid, to Rome, to Naples, to
Vienna, to Berlin, and then back tc
Paris to stay. Every day and every
place made it more apparent that Dr.
Willsey had been right, and that all
Master Richard could do was useless.
Get tho terrible drug of stimulant sin
would in some way. I ventured one day
to suggest to Master Richard that he
should place her in some asylum, but 1
never oveu hinted at it again, for his re
sponse was a dreadful rebuke. Death, he
said, rather than that Then 1 spokt
plainly atout Nannie as pandering tc
tier mistress's appetite and suggested hot
discharge, tot this 1 saw was folly. It
would be out of the frying pan into the
fire.
1 saw its terrible effect on my
Biistress, tot more ou Master Richard",
lie gave up all society, and watched hei
like a child. He was haggard aud
nervous and ho longer like himself. Then
came anew phase of tho terror. Denied
the deadly poison at home, she, with the
cunning of a maniac, as she was, would
steal away from her watchers and re
main awa'v, at first, for hours, then for
all day, then all night, and be brought
home by the police, draggled and with
out reason. Then, at last, when Master
Richard had almost concluded to place
her in an asylum, with wlmt seemed tc
be an instinct of tho intention, she dis
appeared altogether, and every effort oi
the police and detectives failed to obtain
any trace of her, notwithstanding the
Urge reward.
Master Richard was crazed, and m
was I almost. Tho polico coolly de
clared that she would never bo seen
again alive; that the strongest proba
bility was that the Seine would eventu
ally give her up. The only theory te
combat this was that Mrs. Richard had
worn a fortune in diamonds when she
went away, something she had never
done before, and which seemod tb show
that she had prepared herself to stay
away.
A month elapsed, and one morning
Master Richard was notified that the
body of his wife was at the morgue.
We tvant there instantly, and, in spite
of the fact that the body had been sc
long in the water, identified it. Bhe
was dressed in plain black, trimmed
with lacc, when sho went away, tot the
! lace was gone; sho was shoeless and
tonnetless and had not a shred
f jewelry; even her rings were
gone, and" her earrings had been torn
from her ears. The police said that it
was a case of robbery, perhaps murder,
and the poor, mutilated, disfigured
body found it* resting-place in Pere la
Chaise. Nannie, with more money than
she had ever possessed before in her life,
was sent to her Swiss home, and Master
Richard and I bent our steps toward
New York.
I have forgotten to say that all the
trouble between Master Richard and his
fattier had been made up. The old man
could not bear the absence of his son,
and was pleading for Master Richard to
bring his wife home as soon as he could,
not knowing anything atout why
Master Richard omild not, nor yet, when
he was notified of the death, of the
cause of it.
The next three years of our lives were
quiet. Mrs. Richard had made a will
immediately after her marriage, be
queathing all her property to Master
Richard, hut he wou'd have none of it.
He made it all over ! > her mother, and
after that was consummated, refused to
see Mrs. Sylvester again.
After these three * years Master
Richard’s father began to fret. He
wanted to see his icon married again,
and he had picked out a wife for him.
The lady was a great beauty and had
always been a great pet of the old man,
as sho had been of Master Richard be
fore ho fell in love with Misc Sylvester,
and I always used to think sfce really
loved him. To make a tong story short,
ttiey were married, and a more quiet,
happy couple I never saw. A year
elaps’d and an interesting event was
atout to happen. The doctor was in the
house, not Willsey, and Master Richard
expected every moment to become a
father.
Almost at this critical moment there
came a violent ring at the street door
bell and it was announced to me that a
woman demanded to see Master Richard,
and, though she had been told sho could
not, had insisted on forcing her way in,
aud was then coming through the hall.
1 was in the library, and went out to
meet this woman. The gas was turned
low, but if it had been darkness itself 1
would have known her. Good heaven!
it was Mrs. Richard risen from the dead,
o!d, haggard, bleared aud ragged. Slit
was almost at the library door when I
met her, and heard her gasp out, "Browu,
where's your master.'”
Hardly had she nttcml tho word- I
when sho staggered and fell, rolling ova j
on her back. I was so frightened that I !
was not only spec lilcss, but paralyzed
Tho footman came up, and the terror oi
the situation recalled mo to rnyreif. J
ordereJ him to assist mo, and between
us we raised tho woman and carried her
into tbe library, laying her upon tht
sofa. Then i told the footman to go uj I
to the doctor, and whisper to him t,- j
come down stairs, but not to let Ml. {
Richard know anything about it, tot in j
less thau five minutes, before tho doctor
got down, I saw that the woman wat
dead, and so tho doctor pronounced her.
In a cold, professional way, to asked tr.e!
if I knew the woman. I said I did not.
Did my master! I said I thought not.
Ho sat down to tho table, wrote a cer
tificate that the woman had died of
heart disease, turned to tho footman
who stood by horror-stricken, gave him
the address of an undertaker not far
away and his message, telling the man
to use hts name, and went back to his
charge upstairs, following my injunction
not to say anything to Master Richard.
In Half an Lour the undertaker's wagon
was at the door, and a few minutes
later, as the living was ushered into the
world, upon one floor, the coffined dead
was carried out from the floor below.
The next morning 1 told Master Richard
the story of the night before, and to
gether we went to the undertaker's and
looked upon tbe dead woman. There
could b,no doubt atout tho identifica
tion this time, though there was nothing
about her lo recognize hut a single ring,
the wedding ring, and tho wreck of her
great beauty. Where she had been in
all those four years, how she had found
her way back and who the woman was
that sleeps iu Pere lo Chaise will remain
a sealed book forever.
- , r -.,.n *
The KacsUyptu* lit Anstrali*.
IMflboaroe Cor. (Ymrter-JtmroaJ.J
Australia has a vegetation that is pe
culiarly and emphatically its own. Be
longing to the myrtle family they form
a distinct class of trees, with distinctive
features peculiar to no other part of the
globe. These are known here as the
gum tree, and to botanists as the eu
calyptus. There are atout 150 distinct
species, which form four fifths of tho
vegetation of the country. Wherever
you travel you come across the eucalyp
tus. On the arid plains are found the
dwarf si>eeies, ami on the mountain
slopes and undulating lauds they form
gigauiic forests. . They shed their bark
annually, but not tho leaves, which are
evergreen and very abundant.
The leaf has a peculiar action of turn
ing one or the other side constantly to
tho sun, and whilo this affords poor
shade, ;.n operation of absorption and
exhalation is constantly going on that
is fatal to malaria. The leaves are full
of oil cells, 100 pounds of them yielding
from twenty to sifty ounces of a vola
tile oil. This oil has valuable medicinal
qualities, and parlies hero in Victoria,
who have a patent process for extract
ing the same, have the most valuable
“oil well” in the world.
The different varieties of the eucalyp
tus furnish the commercial timber of
the colouy. The blue gum is a hard,
light-colored timber of greater strength
aud tenacity than cither the English oak
or the Indian teak, and is chiefly used
in heavy building and for piers and
bridges. The red gum is also hard
wood, with -short-curled grain, and is
used for ship-building, railway sleepers
and wagon wheels, aud is especially
valuable for salt-water piers, as it con
tains a peculiar aeid that resists the at
tacks of the sea-worm.
Kqual to the Occasion.
[Faria Paper.}
Scene in the Chinese war:
Captain of ironclad to artilleryman—
Do you see that Chinese general there,
about three miles off? Let him have one
of those eight-inch shells in the eye.
Artilleryman, equal to the situation
I —Aye, aye, sir. Which eye, your
honor?”
Victor Hugo: Youth, with gentleness,
lira upon old men the effect of sunshin*
without wind.
BLOOD
And it* nnparill*‘lTed xhntax, aro fti!!y vj
freely diflctisse l in a n**i 32 page book, mailed
FREEt© any address,by Blood Balm Cos.. At
lanta, Oa.
Drop a postal for it, as every man and wo
man needs It and will be delighted with ita
valuable and entirely new revelations.
* SMALL VOICES
Sometimes shake a nation of people and arouse
them to aetthu. Expressions similar to tha
following, from a well known Prnggiat of At
lanta, pour In from sections where B- B. B.
has been used.
Atlanta, June 12, 1884.
It is our firm belief that B. B. B. is the Bvr
Blood Purifier on the market. We are selling
rous or rivjs bottles of it to ONE of sny other
preparation of the kind. It has failed in no
instance to give entUe satisfaction. Merit
is thw secret
W. P. SMITH k CO*, Druggist*,
Thl* 1* the only blood medicine known that
combines quick actios, certain effect, cheap
price and unbounded satisfration.
WE PROVE
That one single bottle of B. B. B. will do aa
much work iu curiLg Blood Poison*, Skin Af
fection*, Herofula, Kidney Troubles, Catarrh
aud BhenmatUfin ns six bottles ot sny other
preparation on earth.
One 50-year old chronic ulcer cured; Scrof
ula of children cured wi’.h on j bottle. Blood
Poison* cured wllh a few bottles. It never
tyi*. Wj hold hon>% proof, in, book form.
Brnd for it. I*rg* botfl.-a fROQ, aix for
Erprwi'O’? on receipt of price, if your Drug
gist can't supply yon. address
BLOOD CALM CO.* Atlanta, Oa.
TUTTS
- PILLS
A25 YEAlt^^Utt^
Th* Ore.Mft Hadicsl Triumph of th Aft!
SYMPTOMS OP A
TORPID LIVER.i
I.oasef Appetite, Dowels coatlve, Pal* It
Ik* head* with a 41! sensation tn tha
hack Mart, Pain under the shoulder
blade, Fullness after eating* with a din*
Inclination to exertion of body er mind*
Irritability of temper, Lew spirit*, with
a feeling of having neglected tone duty*
Wear! nee#, Dtsxtuese, Flattering at tho
Heart, Dots before the eyee, Headache
over the right eye, Re*tle**ne**, with
fitful dreams, Highly colored Urine* and
CONSTIPATION.
' xrTT S riUi are especially adapted
to anch cant, one doae effects such •
cßans of feeUnxa. to astonUh the sufferer.
rtier Increase the Appetite,led cause tbe
body to Take ou rlctb.titis tbe system la
nourished* end by their Tonte. Action ou
tbe It ItmUt. Organ., ItcauUr Stools era
produced. Trio. gc. Murray Wt..N T.
TUTTS HfiIROYL
Ghat Hunt or Wmntn changed to •
Glossy Black by u atngle application of
this Dr*. It imparts a natural color, acta
Instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or
sent by express on receipt of ft. I
Office, 44 Murray St.. NtW York.
THE 05LT TRUB
gSpgRQN
Sltonic
FACTS R'CMIOW!
D?. Esitfi lr® M
It will purtfF ft-d eitr’eb the BLOOD, ***!:•
•f LIVE!* i>d KIOWeYS.*!idRMTORE Til*
l EAV.TH nnd VIGOR of TOTJTHI In *M them
.***< ■ rvwmrli.f ucvruU*•<! rttieie* TONIC,
ueeluJty l>t-wf'v))ii.\V*.ittor Appetite.lNdtjres
>u. I -rack if ntrpDftb. etc.. It* use i* marked
Hl* Imnvprffate mis *o*teM*l retells. Bone*,
uA rTMui tiM! new force. Enliven*
.k mind and stipphet Brain Fjwsr.
i A soffern.g Iron* *ll eonrplalntn
V* /?, Lr 1 iZ * J peculiar tei their sex wllifind In
it. TSAJWrEBM IRON TONIC * (c sn<l speedy
ire. U gives * rirr ajvi fcemlUty complexion.
The strongest ipilii>y < the vlu of Hit.
i*.ftTeirs turn* Tonic :• that frsquetiiattempt*
.1 coaulerfirflliis lisyc mih aihivd to Ua;popi*>
ij of Ue oriKiU4>. If you earnestly desire health
lo not experiment—xcl the OftKHMAL AND But
/f Send y w addrM toTba Vr Ifsrter Mad.CO. V
. oi Louse, Mo., (yf our "LKkAU BOOK." ■
V oil oi ntraos* sad ttswfm in* zrnrat ioa. free.**
Xu HAfTTER’a Iron Tonio is row Bal£ by au
Ofiuucurr3 and Dealers Evehywhcra..
90 haw OB XXiLni um wart *# fespMaamni
INViGORATOR
DR. SANFORD'S. LIVER INVICORATOR
vast what its time implies; a vegetable Lnrer
Medicine.and for dtneasrn revolting from a deranged
or torpid condition of the Liver; each as Biliousness
Ccstsrenese. Janndtce, Dyspepsia. Mslaria, Bick-
Uetdicfae, Rhnmititm, etc. n invaluable Fam
ily Med trine. For full in',on., .fcion send year ad
dress on n postal card tor 100 page book o a the
“Liver and Y;* Diwa-ios,’* to LrTbJLNFOILD, M
Dnsne Furee X. New York. J
> ASX PaUHaUV WlU* TXIX YOU IT* AKOTATXNL j|
EXCELSIOR
COOKJTOVES
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS
ALL PURCHASERS CAR BE SUITED
/ MANmcmUID BT
Isaac A.Sbeppard 4 Co.,Baltimore,Md.
JSC FOB SALS BY
\V. T. JOHNSON,
W ashixgtq.v.Ga.