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fancies in Uclo.’s.
Many are the fancies connected with
colors; some of them curious, some ab¬
surd, some altogether unaccountable. One
tint is deemed unlucky in this place, an¬
other in that, while both are highly
esteemed in a third; who shall explain all
these things? Take green, for iusti.nce,
ihe color Oi youth and hope; no one in the
Scotch Low.ands would wear it at a wed¬
ding for any money; for the fairies would
resent it, and bring some evil fate upon
the unlucky transgressor of elfiu laws.
In the northeast of Scotland, if a girl
married before her elder sister she gave
her green garters;, in the west of Eng¬
land,’ the forlorn verdant maiden hue; received and custom stock¬
ings of the same
furthermore demanded of her that .she
should <laace in the hogs’ trough. folk-lore
A well-known writer on re¬
lates that on one occasion a brother and
sister performed this interesting ceremony
together with such vigor that the trough
feu to pieces, and brought the dance to an
abrupt termination. Blue is the virgin’s god
color, and in India is sacred to the
Vishnu. The dress of the ancient Druids
was also of this tint. It is curious to
learn that the regard superstitious it among extremely theat¬
rical players color, but consider as an that its evil
un lucky counteracted by using sil-
effects may be
ver with it. In the p'ece “Babil and Bi¬
jou” several members of ihe corps de bai-
let refused to proceed with the in which full dress they
rehearsal because the scene
had to dance was entirely in blue, with no
silver to act as a saving charm. A dif¬
ferent idea apparently prevails in Tripoli,
for there a light-blue object is said to
bring luck to its possessor; and eggs may
often be seen hung up outside the houses
with a blue glass bracelet round them.
A Wonderful Map.
Mrs. L, R. Tuttle, of Jacksonville, Fla.,
as getting up United a silk quilt to represent exhi¬ a
map of the States to be on
bition at the World’s fair. She is solic¬
iting from everyr governor or governor’s the
wife a piece of silk or satin cut exact
shape of their state. She also asks for
their signatures with date written on the
piece, also prefers the piece to be from a
dress worn by the governor’s wife. She
so far has been very successful, All of
the New England states have responded,
most of the western and some of the ter-
li tones, Presideufc and Mrs. Harrison
send a lovely ;L colored silk,
which will have ~ white house
embroidered or done in lustro-painting
on it. She will have three years to make
it in. Some of the letters containing the
pieces are prettily expressed, and very
encouraging. The pieces, as a rule, are
very handsome. The first to respond was it
Vermont, as there was only one name
The supposed piece the ivory governor white is surah, a bachelor. neatly
was
tacked to a piece of card-board to facili¬
tate the writing. The quilt when finished
will bo very handsome and valuable as
at\ heirloom, containing the autographs
of so many distinguished people. The
Chicago, Burlington],und Quincy railroad
has presented Mrs. Tuttle with a large
map of the United States as a pattern to
work by. The idea of the get-up is origi¬
nal with Mrs. Tuttle.
He Had Jined.
A Louisville boy was hit in the stem
aeli with a base ball, but retained strength
enough to observe, “It's mighty lucky I
jined the Sunday School,” and then
curled up for the balance of the base ball
3 u-on.
A Woman Ttvu Hundred Years Old.
A case is on record of a woman who lived to
this advanced age, but it is scarcely necessary
to state that it was in “the olden time,” Now-
a-<lnys too many women do not live half their
allotted years. The mortality due to func¬
tional derangements in the weaker sex is sim¬
ply frightful, to say nothing of the indescrib¬
able suffering which, makes life scarcely worth
the living to so many women. But for these
sufferers there is a certain relief. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription will positively prolapsus, cure
pain leueorrhea, in ovaries, painful menstruation, short, all
the weak hack; in
t hose complaints to which so many women are
martyrs. It is the only Guaranteed cure, see
guarantee on bottle-wrapper.
t leanse the liver, stomach, bowels and whole
system by using Dr. Pierce’s Pellets.
Every inch a king—The keeper of a dissect¬
ing room. His subjects make no fuss.
The Ladies Delighted.
The pleasant effect and the perfect safety
with which ladies may use the liquid fruit
laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions
make it their favorite remedy. It is plea- Hg
t he eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual
i:; acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels.
■an likes to be told to “move up” in poli-
ir i rofessional life, but not in a street car.
ling men smoke “Tansill’s Punch.”
Don't Get Caught
'.‘ ‘"A as you may have beeu before, with
y -i Olooa fall of impurities, your digestioa im-
u ■’ ■■ appetite poor, kclueys aad liver torpid, an i
"uo.r p -' ste m liable to be prostrated by disease—'out
8 t yourself into goal condition and ready for the
uangmg aud warmer weather, by taking Hort'i
parilla. It stands unequaled for purifying the
t ebingauappetite, and fora regulating and
■Spring meitciue. Be sure to get Hood’s.
* >•1 live years I was sick every spring, but last
i: began in February to talr« Hori’s HarsaparUIa.
* ‘' eJ battles and have not seen a sick day
-M' ~~ G ' W - ^OAN-, Milton, Mass.
,vas afflicted with the worst type of
ersf\ .f i aie . aBj0n him Hoad th ® recomuleu ’ 4 Sarsaparilla. datioa To-day of my drug-
he is
.! al " eI1, not withstanding it was said there
a ’ -bough me llciue In Illinois to effect cure.’’
_, CHIUSTIAJt, a
• l'. till.,oils, 11L
Dt re to get
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
■ 1 > ah druggists. $ 1 six for
; $:,. Prepared only
, Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
loo Doses One Dollar
flBlII&l UilUm HABIT. Oaly Certain aad
wnl J. L. Cl’ RE In the World. Dr.
STEPHEN 8, Letoaaon. O
PATENTS N°w - N •1 *<U.-eraid 5 r nt >c * I,a v* Wash* tree. Z.
- Co.. u
SOUTH HKN MILES.
INTERESTING NEWS FROM ALL
POINTS IN THE SOUTH.
GENERAL PROOltESS AND OCCCRI’.r.NCES
WHICH ARE HAPPENING BELOW MA¬
SON’S AND DIXON’S LINE.
Northern capitalists are to establish a
paper ba;r factory in Athens, Ga.
J. W. Craddock was committed to jail
iu Henrico county, Va., Tuesday for at¬
tempting to wreck a train on the Chesa¬
peake and Ohio railroad on March 10th.
T. F. Wilson, secretary of the Missis¬
suicide sippi Agricultural college, committed
ing himself Monday at Staikville, by shoot¬ No
given for through the deed. the heart.
cause
The first sale of the Pittsburg Devel¬
opment company took place Tuesday in
the new iron manufacturing town of Car¬
negie City, Va. AH lots were freely
taken at prices largely in excess of the
listed prices.
Moses Harmon, editor of Lucifer, a
free love paper of Valley Falls, Kansas,
was tried in the United States district
court at Topeka, on the charge of send¬
ing obscene matter through the mails and
convicted. His counsel pleaded insanity
for him, but without avail.
Governor Nichols, of Louisiana, on
Tuesday, received the following appeal
from Bayou Sara; “We have been over¬
whelmed by the storm and rain; cre¬
vasses are numerous along the front. Old
Morganza levee has broken. Send boats
at once to save the people, or there may
l>e great loss of life.” Governor Nichols
at once made arrangements for their as¬
sistance.
A dispatch of Tuesday from Louisville,
Ky s says: W. P. Campbell, assistant
, Kentucky House of
enrolling clerk of the challenge to
Representatives, has sent a
fight a duel to Thomas II. Davis, editor
of the Maysville Republican. Davis pub¬
lished that Campbell had left debts un¬
paid when he recently went away from
Augusta, Ky. Campbell threatens to kill
Davis on sight if the duel is declined.
All the carpenters, bricklayers,painters Ala., who
and plasterers in Birmingham,
belong to the various organizations of
their crafts, will probably strike go will out be on for a
strike May 1st. The
more pay and shorter hours, If the
miners and laborers can be induced to
join in the movement, the strike will be
for eight hours. May 1st all the labor
organizations demonstration will unite in a grand be for street the
eight-hour parade, the to
movement.
The South ( arolina Melon Growers’
association met at Blackville, S. C., re¬
cently. They have secured a rcduc
tion of rates from 4fi 8-10 cents
per hundred to fit) cents. This makes
the cost of transporting a car load to
New York $8fi, against |10fi.5)-J last year.
The South Carolina crop will be small
this year. Well informed planters than say
that the acreage will not be more
half what it was last year.
Governor Stone, of Mississippi, Prof. on
Monday received a telegram from
Magruder, of the Agricultural and Me¬
chanical college at Starkviile, stating that
the books, etc., of Secretary and Treas-
uror Wntson, of that institution, who
committed suicide on Sunday by shoot¬
ing himself through the heart, had been
examined and found correct, tallying
with the six thousand dollars iu cash in
his hands. General depression is thought
to have caused the rash act.
The largest legal sale ever occurring in
Huntsville, Ala., took place Monday at
the coin f house door, amounting to
$46.’),000. The properties sold consisted
of three blast furnaces at Sheffield, Ala.,
and large tracts of mineral lands, mineral
rights in Walker, Winston, Fayette, Jef¬
ferson and Marion counties, Alabama,
consisting of about 75,000 acres, These
properties were sold to satisfy a mortgage
of the Central Trust company, of New
York, made to secure $1,400,000 of bond?
of the Sheffield and Birmingham Coal,
Iron and Railroad company.
A Dinner Cooked hy a Meteor.
At the home of Martin Kittringham, a
large planter, near Monticello, Miss.,
there was recently eaten a dinner, the
cooking of which w as unique iu ancient
and modern history. A large, glowing shortly
hot meteor passed over the town
after 10 o’cloek one morning, and from
the comparative slowness of its motion
and its downward tendency it had
clearly lost most of the force which was
propelling it. Parties abroad were much
alarmed, thinking it about to fall upon
them, for it was scarcely 100 yards passed above
the steeples of the churches. It-
over the town, however, and fell in the
pasture of Mr. Kittringham. who lives
about 10 miles east of Monticello. In
this pasture Mr. Kittringham has, or had,
a large fish pond, which he had stocked
with trout and perch, and the meteor fell
as plump into the pond as if it had been
fired at it by some dead shot in another
world.
The red hot stone struck the water
with a loud hiss and soon converted the
entire volume into steam, of course kill¬
ing and cooking the fish at the same
time. Mr. Kittringham and his hands
went running to the spot when they saw
the meteor fall and found the fish thrown
out on the ground, and on examination
saw that they were thoroughly rooked,
upon which’ Mr. Kittringham had his
men to secure as many of them as they
could reach with long poles, still for white it was hot
impossible to approach the
mass. and
Invitations were at once issued a
large number of friends of Mr. Kittring¬
ham sat down with h?m to a banquet —by pre¬
wired as banquet never was before
the reci])e coming from the very skies.
—[Washington Star.
Characters in Colors.
Mr. Wanamaker’s new brand of post¬
age stamps have been placed on the mar¬
ket, but will be sold sparingly until the
old crop is disposed of. The profile bust
of Benjamin Franklin, in ultramarine
blue, adorn the one-cent stamp; the two-
ce it variety is decorated with a profile
bust of Washi ngton, in carmine; three-
cent, profile bust of Andrew Jackson,
royal purple; four-cent, portrait of Abra¬
ham Lincoln, in chocolate; five-cent.por¬
trait of Grant, in pale brown; six-ceut,
portrait of Garfield; ten-oent, Webster,in
milori green; fifteen-cent, portrait of
Henry Clay, in dark blue; thirty-cent,
profile bust of Jefferson, in black; uinety-
eent, profile bust of Commodore Perry, in
orange.
Delaware has ten ex-governors. The
other 500 inhabitants would move away
if they didn't expect to become govern¬
ors themselves pretty soon.
How to (<row Beautiful.
She knew it was necessary to become beauti¬
ful in order to be considered attractive, and so
she made the art of beautifying a stil ly. ISbe
felt it wiser to be plump and hearty than to be
thin and delicate. To this end she knew good
healt h was essential. She bad suffered from
backaches, sideaches and bearing down pains,
and was restless until she found the medicine
she needed, it improved her appetite regular. and Her, di¬
gestion. Her habits became
flesh increased and became more firm and
solid. Iler complexon became clear and beau¬
tiful and free from pimples. Her lips grew red
and her cheeks grew rosy. She did not know
an ache or pain. Exercise gave her pleasure
and she became the life of her companions.
She could ride a tricycle for many miles and
never seemed to grow weary. Her laughter
was catching and all the young men loved her.
She is now a happy wife and mother. Who
was she? What was her name ? Well no mat¬
ter, let us know the medicine she used. With
pleasure, with pleasure, sweet girls. She used
Dr. John Bull’s Sarsaparilla. If any there be
among you who are sickly, go quickly and do
likewise .—Mansfield Independent.
Looks as if the ice cutters of this year would
be the coupon cutters of next year.
A man who has practiced medicine for 40years
ought to know salt from sugar; read what he
says. Toledo. O., Jan. 10,18S7.
Messrs. F. .T. Clieney A Co.—Gentlemen: I
have been in the general practice of medicine
for most 40 years, and would say that in ail
my practice and experience, have never seen a
preparation that I could prescribe with as
much confidence of success as 1 can Hall’s
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have
prescribed it a great many times And its effect
is wonderful, and w raid say in conclusion that
I have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it
would not cure, if they would take it accord¬
ing to directions. Yours GORSUCH, Truly, M. D.
L. L.
Office, “15 Summitt St.
We will give S100 for any case of Catarrh
that can not be cured with Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Taken CHENEY internally. CO.Props.., Toledo, O.
F. .T. &
f2?“So]d by Druggists, price 75c.
l>le Hallway.
This popular Eastern Line is running solid
vestibuled trains, consisting of beautiful day
coaches, Pullman sleeping and New dining York cars, and
between Cincinnati, Chicago, Iaike Chautauqua
Boston. All trains run via
during the season, and passengers holding
through tickets are privileged to stop off at this
world-famed resort. Be sure your tickets read
via >!. Y„, L. E. & W. 11. 11.
It goes without saying that if it was not for
the bars the prisons would not be “full."
I have been a sufferer from weakness for
eight years and tried many remedies that did
me no good. My father got me to try Bull's
Sarsaparilla and before I had taken a half bot¬
tle I felt a great deal better. I now enjoy a
regularity of habit that has not been the case
for many years .—Sarah E. Keller, Ottawa,
Kas.
_
No matter what the seasons arc in other
places they always have Hot Springs in Ar¬
kansas.
_____
Don’t let worms eat the very life out of
vour little children. Restore them to health
by giving Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyer*
They say that most of our young novelists
are consumptive. They consume too much.
FITS stopped free by Du. Kline’S Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 031 Arch St.. Phila., Pa
To Restore Tone
and Strength
to the System when
weakened by
La Grippe
or any other
Illness,
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
is positively
unequalled.
Get the BEST.
Prepared by
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.,
Lowell, Mass.
SEVEN eCVENTEtN SEVENTY
[■X. >
To cure Biliousness. Sick Fleadache. Constinatlon.
Mataria. Liver Complaints, take the safe
and certain remedy, SMITH’S
BILE BEANS
Use the SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to the bot¬
tle). They are the most convenient: suit all ages.
Price of either size, 25 cents per bottle.
IflQQINf* IkiaalllM at panel 7 size 17 * of 70 thle ■ Photo-gravure. picture for 4
cents icoppers or stamps).
J. F. SMITH A CO..
Makers of * ’Bile Beans. * ’ St. Louis, Mo.
h* STEVENS PATENT, IMPROVED
“ k! Si Unequaled Durability for and
u!u ™
SEND FOR
™ ■
Catalogue.
J. P. STEVE8S S BRO.,
Atlanta, G-n.
Make Your Own
PTice List of Rug Machines, Rug Patterns, Yarns,
etc, FREE. A (IK NTH WANTED.
E. ICOSS X lO. # Toledo, O.
Y
afl <5>
V! A
Jl <?: i i •V -I? *o mi iy- r •>- {h
p i 1) N )
$ t\
. A W
1 •■N *1 V \
A
<V Q
I 7 LfikJ
\ (•; IV t o \sL'' I VI
/
s? or
'A: '{ - • -T
\ — ‘-'W
PAT’S DILEMMA.
Shure, docthor, this pain is jist awful!
I Be hope jabbers! will I’m tbry all of a sweat I
you to relave it.
For bclave me, I can’t lay nor Bet!
Well, Pat, I will try and relieve you, [dueed).
And (With a smile which Pat’s speech ‘'set” had in-
if you can’t “lay” nor either,
Perhaps you had better just roost!
For Liver Disease, Biliousness, Indiges¬
tion, Scrofula or any blood-taint or dis¬
order, the “Golden Medical Discovery” is
the only remedy possessed of such superior
curative properties as to warrant Its manu¬
facturers in selling it, through druggists, It will
under a positive guarantee that
either benefit or cure in every ease, or
money paid for it will bo refunded.
It’s a legitimate medicine, not a bever¬
age ; contains no alcohol to inebriate, no
syrup wonderful or sugar its to derange results digestion. As its
in curative as in
incomparable! peculiar composition. Therefore, It don’t stands be alone.— fooled
into accepting something instead, said to be
the “just dealer as good better .” because the substitute pays
The equal a of the “Golden profit. Medical
Discov¬
ery M has not been invented ; if it ever is, it
won’t be sold for a less price than what the
for “Discovery” $5.00. It’s costs, concentrated viz: $1.00, or six bottles
a vegetable ex-
1 $500 the OIPFEIIED proprietors of ........ DR. SAGE’S for Catarrh an CATARRH incurable in the REMEDY. Head case by of
^ falling SYMPTOMS throat, OF CATARRH.—Headache, obstruction and acrid, of nose, others, discharges thick.
/ into sometimes nrofuse. watery, at
M [7 W -i deafness, letmoious, difficulty mucous, of purulent, moody and expectoration putrid; eyes weak, of ringing in cars,
vWA \ ijf breath clearing throat, and general offensive matter; Only
WH 1 * *** ijY few of offensive; these symptoms smell and likely taste to be impaired, present at once. Thousands debility. of eases a
-
result in consumption, and end in the grave.
By its mild, soothing, antiseptic, cleansing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage’s Remedy
cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists everywhere.
the Catarrh
REMEDY ★ H
FOP
c a. l □ R £
COLD 6TJFFEBISG in HEAD FROM ly m
SNUFFLES I
TO
OR (/St |
USA.
•FEVER
A part icle is applied into each nostril and D agreeable.
Price50 FLY BROTHERS, cents at Druggists; hy mail, regi-tered, New York. 60ct-s.
oti Warren Strait,
jvy j£ l0r COMBINING 5 ARTICLES/^. (I
FURNITURE.
| in va L i o-~S
Jr VKl&i WHEEL CHAIRS jiffl fig
We retail at the /.>«■«*< Aatoamie Brake
xckotemle farlory price/,/Kj on all FREE
knd ship goods to bo .Uaefcrt
paid for on delivery, vrji WHKIL ( Hills
Send ntamp for Data- \Al l, TO II1KK.
iogue. JVame good/de/ired. SSMteUL FREE
LLULIiG Sfi’ti. CO.. 145 _ UIUUUI.
fi. sth St. rhllada.. Vt.
Money in Chickens
If you know how to properlv care
fortheni. For25 cents in stand BOOK *
you can procure a 100-PAGE
giving the experience of a practi-
t^r P bm7m.n wSVforTot perirdof
lars and cent—during a
KdTndVr?Dices': for F- ttening; to°Fo d
for Kgge and also cvJryt{5ng^ "^f
\ p™^'s?aad this subject 0 to make it r ■refit-
CYC iould kn-w ipostpaid on to \ 1*.
Svnt l-eiwiard N. \
SK. l.ll >teei,
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
CONSULT D1C. 1.0BB. 329 North Fifteenth
Street,! litiaaelputu. i«enty years'experience
Complaints, U „^,TJm. < i T/i' Blood 8 t'’i ; Poisoning, r. ur i e * ,be 'vorstcases Blotches, of Eruptions, Xerv^u.
Plies, Catarrh, Dimness Ulcers, Sores, Impaired Memory,
Stomach, Despondency, Bright’s of Vision, Lung, Liver,
Kidney Disease); confidential.
f*'Call or write tor question list and book.
FARQUHAR VIBRATING SEPARATOR.
“ 6EN0 FOR CATALOG J a.
„ Wonderful
CAp*eitj.
;
G a Jl \
■-
t 2 Ml; < p
115 EM S X.
4«dre» k. B. FAttQCH 18 t().,\«rk. Fa.
X IRON FENCE
11 SIXTY STYLES FOR
CEMETERY & LAWN
CATALOGUE FREE
J. W. RICE, ATLANTA, GA.
1 CIS Oil
Best Cough Medicine. Recommended agreeable by Physicians. the
Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and to
■ 25 taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
M
But, Pat, for the pain you complain of.
l Simply I roosting' alone might not do,
think would try Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, too.
tract. Dose small and pleasant to the tasta.
Equally good for the adults liver, or sharpen children.
To invigorate the appe¬
tite, improve digestion, ami build up both
strength and flesh, when reduced below the
standard of health, it ranks pre-eminent.
Has the largest sale of any medicine in the
world, For without itching, a single scaly, exception! festering, burning,
all Hi
tormenting Skin and Scalp diseases, it
especially efficacious. Salt-rheum, Tetter,
Psoriasis, Erysipelas, Eczema, and all hu¬
mors. from a common vanish pimple or eruption of to
the worst Scrofula, under the use
this world-famed remedy, if continued for
a reasonable length of time. Scrofulous
Sores and Swellings are cured, and th»
most tainted systems are, from- by its somewhat
persistent use, cleansed the most viru¬
lent blood-poisons and completely renovated
and built up anew. W ori.d’s Dispensary
Medical Association, Proprietors, Buf¬
N. Y.
ULTIw B»rlin$tqn inmup NORTH
Route; ES T
BURLINGTON ROUTE
—THROUGH TRAINS FROM-
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
—TO—
I Kansas City, St. Joseph, Denver, St.
Paul and Minneapolis.
The Best J.ine for nil Points North and
West and tlie Pneilie Const.
HOME SEEKERS’ EXCURSIONS!
Reduced Rntcs of one fare for the ronnd I rip hare
h»en made tiv the It Mr ling l on Idaho, Route to po nta in
('oloriulo, North and Wyoming, South Dakota, l iuli, Northwestern Honlana,
town, Minnesota end Wisconsin. Round trip
tickets on sele April 22ml and .Mity 20th, good fot
30 days. For r.ites and further nfonnation apply to
the address. ticket egerit of me Hurling!on Route, or
HOWARD Uru’l Pass. ELLIOTT, Agl., Si. l.ouis, Mo.
ILF. II. It. Freight TCDD, JL (Irti’l Pa... Aut. Agt.
BLAKE, Trnv.
( HAS. F. l.l IILI iM,
Trnv. Pukn. Ait.,
1 89 N'ortli Market Sit., Nashville, Trail.
m !SSS
tor.
1. m
They have been tried for over fifty years, and
are to-day the most popular la use.
**«■ aad used them. They are
the Barest, Purest, and Best Remedy for Liver
aad Stomach Diseases ever compounded.
S For Sale by *11 Druggists. Price 25 ct*. par box;
boxen for 65 cts.; or aent bj mail, postage fr#»e, oo
receipt of price. Dr. J. II. Scbenclt Son, rhilai 1 *
MADISOM RATTLER RAZOR, $1.25
True Apollo Bing Razor. S2.00
Hote screw,’sSC. $1.09
New Style Button Scissors, with set
Mail«l, registered. Refer to your postmaster.
ALl.lNL ic LODGE. Box i)7. Madi-oii, lud,
_______
B fl I Hi flbfiB ■ ard WHISKEY HAB-
9| jg |s I I SV9 ITS out cared psln. at Book home of with- par*
lUBlI 13. b c m‘uoollev 31. V> UULL&I R ju, m E u-
■npMMpMHH| ATLANTA. Ga- Office <»« Whiubah , 8C
PEiiSiGNS SL’ICErOit ALL ar NO PAY.
X. iV. Utzgerald, Att’y, Wash., D. C.
T prescribe and fully en¬
dorse Big O as the only
SDeeific for the certain cur«
L TO 4 DAT8. SH of this disease.
MBearutMd not t. ■ G. H. INGRAHAM, M. D ,
3*C I nta Strtewre. * Amsterdam, N. Y.
Itr4 only by the We have sold Big G
Fi:i Chemical So. many years, and it baa
| L Cincinnati,® — given the best of satin-
" faction.
■A Ohio. J D. R. DYCHE i CO., _
j Chicago, Ill.
^.-1181.00. Sold bv Druggists.
A. N. U....... ......Seventeen, Ids')