Newspaper Page Text
1 f PASHION.
IT IS OUR PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCE OUR USUAL SPRING AND
C MER DISPLAY' OF
GENT’S, ] ZEUEZUriE SUITS,
YOUTH’S, I FURNISHINGS,
BOY’S,} UNDERWEAR, NECKWEAR.
Children’s Hats > Hosiery, &c.
We do not exaggerate when we say, that our present season’s exhibit SURPASSES
any stock EVER shown by us, iu QUALITY', MATERIAL aud PERFECTION
of FIT.
MAIL ORDERS
Have our mo9t careful attention, and rules for measurement and other information
cheerfully sent on request.
C. O. D.
Shipments, with privilege of examining before paying.
EXTRA SIZES*
For STOUT, THIN, TALL and SHORT gentlemen, a specialty.
COUNTRY MERCHANTS.
Can, by virtue of our heavy purchases, and extraordinary facilities, obtain BIG
TRADES in SUPERIOR Cothin g. YVe have some JOB LOTS that cannot fail to
prove profitable investments for COUNTRY DEALERS.
B. H. LEVY Sc BRO.,
361 CONGRESS ST.,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
SMITH & TURNER,
STATESBORO. GA.
Have Opened, and will Carry in Stock, all kinds of Goods
Needed by the People.
r
GROCER DRY GOODS, HARDWARE
Tinware, Farming Utensils, Etc.
HITS. ^-TVe also keep in stock a full line of Ready-made CLOTHING, FINE
SHOES, etc. We are agents for WaNAMAKER & BROWN,
the celebrated clothiers, and we will have your clothes made to order if you
desire it. We want our share of the trade, and when you buy come to see
us, and we will make prices low, and endeavor to please you. fe21-ly.
Statesboro Brig St@r@,
DR. M. M. HOLLAND J
-DEALER IN
Pure Drugs, • • Fresii Drugs,
Most Noted Patent Medicines, White Leads,
Paints, Linseed Oil, Machine Oil, Var¬
nishes and Brushes^
FAMOUS FIRE-PROOF KEROSENE OIL!
1ST* Hue Regard for Life and Property requires the use of this celebrated oil.
CIGARS, —Land CANDIES
—
TOILET ARTICLES.
Everything Usually kept in a Drug Store!
Mr. Tom Newsome, who is my clerk, will take pleasure ia waiting upon
customers, at any hour, day or night.
PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY
JOB PRINTING
—OF
EVERY DESCRIPTION
NEATLY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE.
Orders Will Receive Prompt Attention I
!
: *.
A DVERTISE NOW.
Yiil insert you a nice, well-displayed ad
iment at as low rates as any first-clasi
tai afford to do. Advertising rates made
^application.
HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
SAGO WITH FRUIT.
Sago with fruit is an nppetizipg
Bert and one that is especially nice in warn
weather. Soak a cupful of sago in hal
milk and water; then add it to a, quant
of boiling milk, stirring it until it pud| be !
comes thick, and let it cool, In a
ding dish put a layer of peaches, or otfc*
fruit if you prefer it, and on this If
of sago, and another of the fruit, IMj ha
little sugar if needed, and so on
dish is full. Set it on the ice. Ser
with sweetened cream .—Prairie Pas
cauliflower or bhoccoli, To BOIL, t
Choose those very white, close anC
cut compact the stock ; trim off off dose all decayed to the head; leaves, opejP anjj
the flower a little in places and wastU
place them, head down in salt and watt?
for two hours previous to dressing, whic
will draw out all insects; put into boi _
.
ing water, with a heaping tablespoon < 1
salt to each two quarts of water; bo
briskly fifteen to twenty minutes over a
good fire, keeping the sauce-pan uncos"
ered, skimming the water several timtft
When boiled-tender, take up, drain, |mr
if large heads, place upright in a tBsl?’
and serve little with plain the melted flower; butter,'pouf" whiC
mg a on or. a
sauce or drawn butter may be used wif
it. All
ENGLISH BEEF SOUP. ■ .■•I
Let a soup stock hot and strained 3h£ cf
ready. Put in a saucepan two slices on<’~
raw ham, an onion cut up, a carrot,
half a turnip,one-half a pound of butte/’
a Let bay these leaf, be and fried a few whole thorough]^ pepper^
until
browned and then mix in a cupful t
flour and let brown again. Then diluf e
with three quarts of hot stock and a ca a
of tomatoes and allow to boil for ar
hour. Cut in small dice-sized pieces tv/ 0
carrots and one turnip and parboil cookeS i?
salted water. Cut one pound of
lean soup-meat in small pieces. Parboil
one-half a pound of barley. Then strair
the soup, skimming off all fat, and adc
the boiled vegetables, the meat and bar
ley, season with salt and pepper, and 1&
boil for fifteen minutes more. Finis! 1
with the juice of one-half a lemon and R
smaU ii portion .. Worcestershire ... vs**
jhicago News. ,, Ypp
A FRUIT CAKE THAT IS EASY TO MAK
While making cake for sheep-shearei s
1 thought that there must be some / ■i
your readers, writes a Canandaigua Pr.yj (N
Y.) young lady to the Detroit Wee
who would like to know how to make’ 11
farmer’s fruit cake that, though lich ah’
hearty and universally liked, especially
by the men folks, is yet inexpensive, i
Take one cup of dried apples, soak ovj r
night in water enough to cover them;
Then chop tine, add one cup of syrup tP
the water in which they were soaked anP
boil all till the apples are tender and tP e
syrup very rich and thick. After this‘ s
cool add it the last thing to the folio*'"' ~?a
ing: Two well beaten eggs, one cup
sugar, one and one-third cups of soul
cream, or two-thirds of a cup of sogr
milk and two-thirds of a cup of butter,
three teaspoonfuls of soda, one-half cup
of raisins, one-half cup of currants, fidur
enough to form a stiff batter; bake half
an hour in a moderate oven.
Dried apples prepared in this way can
hardly be told from citron. Indeed,
when well made this cake is good enough
for any occasion.
POTATO YEAST.
I send my recipe for making potato
yeast. I thought some of the readers
would like to try it: Mix together two
cups of cooked potatoes mashed through
a sieve, one cup of sugar, and four cups
of warm water. Put this in a warm
place for twenty-four hours, when it
ought to be foamy. It may take a longer
time to sour it, but one experienced in
bread-making can tell when it is ready.
It is now ready to be mixed into dough.
To provide a potato-ball for the next
time, take one cup of mashed potatoes and
one tablespoon of sugar. Mix this with
a little of the foam and a little of the
sediment (a tablespoon of each will do),
cover closely and let stand a few hours in
a warm place. Then add a teaspoon of
salt, and remove to a cool place. When
ready to bake again, prepare two cups of
mashed potatoes, add one cup of sugar,
and mix in the potato-ball. for Let stand an
hour more, take out a cupful the next
baking, add salt to it, and set away. To
the remaining three cups add four cups
of water, and let it remain over night,
when it is ready to mix into the sponge.
I think I have made this plain, but if not,
I stand will answer York anything Witness. you don’t uadi(’
.—New
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Salt will curdle new milk; so in pre¬
paring custards or porridges the salt
should not be added until the dish is pre¬
pared.
Two tablespoonfuls of washing soda good in
a gallon of boiling water makes a
disinfectant for the kitchen sink. Pour
it in at night, while it is still at boiling
heat.
Tin pans can be prevented from rust¬ with
ing by heating them heating and rubbing again. well Wood
linseed oil aud
ashes or whiting (which is better) mixed
with kerosene will brighten them.
Make a list, in the order in which you
pack them, of the contents of your wool¬
len chest, and paste it on the outside.
Then the articles at the head of the list
will be in tho bottom of tho box. ,
Rusty black cashmere should be ammonia^ sponged
with equal parts of alcohol and
diluted with a little warm water. When
pressing use a piece of alpaca or un¬
dressed cambric next the warm iron.
If ironed when damp, and pressed till
dry, table linen takes a certain stiffness
which is more permanent and less subject
to creases than the stiffness of starch,
which is also injurious to the fabric.
Lime and alkali stains may be re¬
moved from white goods by simply wash¬
ing. In the case of colored goods and
silks the goods should be moistened and
citric acid, much diluted, applied with
the finger.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
One need not live high to be above
suspicion.
|Jever covet that which cannot pos
sibly _ be obtained.
.Where much is sought for little is
often to be found.
-"'A wise man embraces an opportunity;
the fool hugs a delusion.
The happier one’s thoughts the
pleasanter will be his reverie.
Hoping for the best will make the
worst none the easier to bear.
Perseverance, to receive a rich reward,
uiust have an object worthy of it.
Those who follow will always be flat
tered by the other end of the string,
It is better to repeat the idea of others
than to make an effort to be natural,
The very' essence of intelligence is the
liberty inspired in every living thing, °
sure—siowhTwrn r»„u i S , f ?° and
W
' Sl ° W *° learn and sure * to for S et f
-
Be persuaded that your own treasures
arc t * lose w kich Y ou carry in your heart,
An easy way to get a living is to flatter
rich, but the honest way is to earn
it.
^ The man who has reached a condition
of perfection must suffer for room to de¬
velop in.
Don’t carry the whole world on your
shoulders, the far less the universe, Trust
eternal.
than - Nothing is more common or more fatal
of grasping at an advantage at the cost
ten times its value.
I if thou art wise, thou knowest thine
own ignorance, and thou art ignorant if
knowest not thyself.
Sight Recovered After Many Years.
Twenty-nine years of total blindness
and now old John McDonald, of Water
bury, Conn., over sixty years of age, can
see.
; “You will find father walking in the
garden,” and attractive said his daughter, a cheerful
little dressmaker, when
the New York Press reporter called at
the door of 3S Franklin street, where the
blind man has lived for years.
I A sturdy old Irish gentleman, though
and gray, and with a stout cane
in his hand, was descried through the
foliage, walking erect and happy, with
no uncertain step.
“Good morning,” he cried, heartily.
“Yes, I can see again. I can see the
roses and the honeysuckles, my hands
and my shirt, my shadow on the gravel
walk and my two feet as they step out
from under me. I can see your face, too.
“It is just twenty-nine years now since
I had my left eye removed. I was living
in Prospect then. I am from Ireland,
you know. All the Yankees out there
in Prospect advised me to leave the
doctors alone, and I wish I had now. 11
was for some sort of a cataract that my
left eye was treated. Blindness is com¬
mon in my family.” ,
_
“But what doc to! has helpedto cure
you?”
“No, doctor,” he said, with disdain.
“I was taken ill three weeks ago. I had
terrible pains in my head back of my
right eye. I did not know what I was
about, whether awake or asleep. When
I began to get well the other day 1
noticed that I could see my hands. Every
day since then I have come to see better.
My daughter Mary has written to my son
in New Haven, who has a livery business
there. He will come on and take me to
3ome expert physicians. But I have inde¬ no
faith in doctors. I got my sight
pendent of them.”
Mr. McDonald’s experience has puzzled
all the Waterbury physicians who have
heard of it. Cases of restored sight are
common when blindness has been caused
by temporary inflammation, but twenty-nine recovery
from an optical disease of
years’ standing is an event unprecedented
in medical history.
Origin of “We Won’t Go Home.”
An interesting history of an old and
well known comic tune was given by Pro¬
fessor Ensel, a music teacher, in a speech
in the Music Teachers’ Association re¬
cently. He said that when the army ol
the first Napoleon was in Egypt in 1799
the camp for awhile was near the pyra¬
mids. One afternoon about sunset the
band was playing. The inhabitants ol
the desert had collected near and were
listening to the music. Nothing un¬
natural happened until the band struck
up a tune which we now hear under the
name of “We Won’t Go Home Till
Morning.” Instantly there were the wild¬
est demonstrations of joy among the
Bedouins. They embraced each other
and shouted and danced in the delirium
of their pleasure. The reason was that
they were listening to the favorite and
oldest tune of their people. Professor
Ensel then-stated that the tune had been
taken to Europe from Africa in the elev¬
enth century by the Crusaders, and had
lived separately in both countries foi
over seven hundred years. This is cer.
tainly enough to make “We Won’t Gc
Home Till Morning” a classic. Its origin
is more of a mystery than the source ol
the Nile .—Louisville Post,
Street Scenes in Damascus.
The streets of Damascus are crowded
from morning to night, like a town on
circus day, and are a scene of hubbub
and bewildering confusion, men, dogs,
horses, camels and donkeys jolting
against each other in careless commotion.
Here you see the white Bagdad donkeys,
which are a famous breed and distin¬
guished by the unusual length of theii
ears. Their turbaned and bearded riders
have the bearing of Kings. Among the
other groups ure Bedaween of the deserl
who come to the city to make purchases.
The men are tall, straight aud thin, liave
dark complexions and eyes, wear hearth
and gay handkerchiefs about their heads.
Their eyes have a fierce expression, bul
they carry themselves like Lords. Tht
women have straight black hair, art
coarse of feature, and tattoo their faces,
arms and feet. They do not keep them¬
selves closely veiled like the women ol
the city.— Mail and £rprm.
The Leech Business.
^z::iA^Trei^rt . , „ . ,, ,
the United States and a large part oi
South America are handled by them.
Their importations of late years have
been between 300,000 and 350,000, oi
which number 100,000 or thereabouts
were re-shipped The bo South which American
ports. sold is $35 average price at they
are a thousand, while the re¬
tail price for a leech is from 20 to 25
cents, leaving a profit to the retail dealer
of from nearly 000 to 800 per cent.
Prior to 1839 there was no regular im¬
port trade of European leeches into this
country, but sea captains were accus¬
tomed quantities to bring them in occasionally' in
small on private speculation.
Leechers were, therefore, obliged to
depend drawing largely blood, on the during native the leech for
and early
part of the century the American species
m considerable demand. All this
species is quite widely of supply distributed, the
source appears to
been, as it is now, Eastern Pen¬
and especially Berks and
Bucks counties.
Leeches are imported slight during most of
year, but only to a extent in
of heat. as they are easily July killed and by an
June, August
the months when the smallest quanti¬
are received, and when the greatest
occurs, They reaching imported sometimes 25 in
cent. are packed
earth, in air aud water-tight
cases, holding 1,500 rather leeches
These eases are made
are about 21 inches long, 15 inches
and 13 inches high.
In shipping leeches to customers in
country, the same cases are used for
large qualities, and quantities, tight
pails for the smaller
packing of swamp earth being also
American leeches, on the
are kept best in water, in
or considerable glass jars, in a cool place.
quantities of
are kept constantly on hand in
importing houses, Mr. Witte is
to draw on his storage ponds on
Island, between Winfield aud
for supplying large amounts,
especially for the export trade.-—
York Nows.
Cannibalism in China.
The steamship City of Pekin, which
recently arrived at San Francisco, brings
tidings of an attempt at cannibalism at
Pao Shan Ilien, near Shanghai. The
proprietor of a public bath there became
poescssed of the notion that to eat a child
would cure him of an illness from which
he was suffering. From an old woman
he bought a child, which he induced a
coolie to kill. The body was discovered
by the authorities in a large jar, ready
for cooking. All the persons connected
with the crime were arrested. The vice¬
roy of Fukien and Cheinangk has issued
a proclamation agaiust the drowning of
female children, which has been com¬
mon of late. He notifies families that
hereafter the penalty provided by law
will l>c strictly enforced. The penalty
is sixty blows of the bamboo and one
year’s banishment.
make One 1G,000 volume volumes of liquid inflammable, benzine wyi
of air
and 5,000 volumes of air highly explo¬
sive, but nothing but contact with flame
or a white hot body will touch off the
most explosive mixture of petroleum va¬
por and air.
Tliorc is a man in car town
And ho is very doesn’t wiso. feel sir, just right
When e’orho
One r* mcdy he tries, sir.
It’s just the thing to take in spring
The h ood to pur fy, and nothing else
He tells his friends,
Is he induced to try Golden
Because, having taken Dr. Pierce’s
Medical Discovery to cleanse his system, tone
It up and enrich tlio blood, aud result, finding he consid¬ that it
always produces the desired
ers that he would bo l'oo isfa is: to experiment “Prove all
wtth anything e^sc. His motto which good.
things and hold fast to that is ’
That’.-) why he j)ins his faith to the "Golden
Medical Discovery.’’__
Walking advertisements for Dr. Sago's Ca¬
tarrh Re medy are the thousands it h as cured.
A young spark, suffering from a too strong
sensation of the more tender feelings, defines
Itis complaint as an attack c.i lassitude.
Sarah Bernhardt.
is coining to America, slid great will bo the
enthusiasm aroused amongst her admirers.
But, we have our own bright star, Mary Ander¬
son, who will continue to bear off the palm in
the dramatic, as does Lucy Hinton in the
great tobacco world.
The telegrams make it hard to tel! whether
Mississippi has got Suiiivan or Sallivan has
got Mississippi.
Unnecessary litiscry.
Probably as much misery comes from habit
tual constipation as from any derangement of
the functions of the body, and it is difficult to
cure, for tbe reason that no one likes to take
the medicines usually prescribed. Hamburg
Figs and they were will prepared lie found to obviate pleasant this difficulty, of
to the taste
women and children. 2o cents. Dose one Fig.
Mack Drug Co.. N. Y.
AH Run Down
From the weakening effects ot warm weather, by
hard work, or from a long illness, you need a good
tonic and blood purifier. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gives
a good appetite, strengthens the whole system, puri¬
fies the blood, regulates tho digestion.
"It affords mo much pleasure to recommend
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My health two years ago was
very poor. My friends thought I was going with
oonsumptlon. I commenced using Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla, took five bottles of It, and to-day I can do as
hard a day’s work os r ever could. It saved me
from the gravo and put mo on my feet a sound,
healthy man.”— Will B. D. Tarn bet, 141 East Main
St, Wlggonsvlllc, Ohio.
Sold Hood’s by all druggists. Sarsaparilla |1; fix for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
_fOO Doses One Do 11 ar
S VniW 2 S AH MEDIC H0UR A 1, CO.. ”•*'? Richmond. rm.°?’KKfc 0 ?NH Va.
IPS JaN.Pt
for s,v i_c: bv
A.
BRYANT Keeping, Hhort & Kan STHTTONja ,!*"'• V
Jli.ok Write for vataloaue and ;
s
Wenderfu! Sucres*.
A remedy must have merit or it will never be
come a favorite reniedv with the people. Where
»• «■> are
‘l»«>ngWy known, it sc-Ha better than any other
medicme ' *“bow A Morrow, of Birmingham,
Ala., say they sell a gross of B. B. B. a mouth
to their retail customers. They buy it ten grow
at a time, as they also have a good wholesale de.
mind for it. O her s milar instances might be
mentioned, hut we have nt\ the spare to ; oare.
buttieient it is to know that B. B. B. has qu. :ker
effect than all other blood purifiers, and, as a
general health restorer and Btrengtheuer ot the
svstem, it is the best and only safe remedy.
When your blood is impure, when aches and
pains trouble you, when sores br.-ai out on your
person, when you feel weak, nervous and debil¬
itated, when your appetite fails, when you are
troubled with dyspepsia, when there is a gener¬
al functional derangement of thesy.-tem, when
you feel all broke up and life hardly seems worth
living, begin give B. B. B. a trial and you will atone#
to grow better aud stronger.
Many are the detractors of Charles
Dickens, him but his amanuensis has given
the most bitter blow of all. In an
interview published some time since he
Bays: “He (Dickens) was an insatiable
Cigarette smoker, and when dictating to
mouth.” me always had a cigarette in his
Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant
Crops. Best fruit, grain, grass and stock coun¬
try in the world. Full information free. Ad¬
dress Oreg. Im’igra’tn Board, Portland, Ore.
Have you tried “TansiU’s Punch" Cigar?
IKE STORY Of IERIQL
JUST PUBLISHED. L tr ^SS r e«!
An able solicitor, Woman or Man, can take 15t#
20 orders a day. Reliable reoresentatlve wanted la
every county In the U. S. Apply early It you warn!
a chance on this KING great PUBLISHING book. (Salary to right CO., party.)
It. S.
DUTCH ER’S
IT FLY KILLER
r Makes a clean sweep. Every
sheet will kill a quart of file*.
Stops buzzing around tickling ears,
diving at eyes, your
nose, skips hard words imd se¬
cures $#? peace at trifling expense.
Send cents for 5 sheet* to
F. DUTCHEK, St. Albans, VC
Dr. Lobb After ALL other!
fail, consult
320 1 15 th St.
9 PHILA., PA.
Twenty years*’ continuous practice in the treat
vice, ment and destroyiug cure of both the aw lul and effect*! body. of Medicine early
mind
and treatment for one month, Five Dollars, sent
securely sealed from observation to any address.
Book on Special Diseases free.
I Plantation Engines
With Self-Contaiaed
liSf|8 WmsWflg RETURN for flue driving boilers,
, * COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated p.mpblft Free. Addreaa
H i fosilAMES LEFFEL & CO.
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO,
110 Liberty St, New York*
ARE YOU I'll INKING
OF BUYING A
Cotton or Hay Press?
Si UJ! ffl / 4 Press We ar.d manufacture two Hay a Preaaea. Cotton
s* leg j I List Will upon r-eud Circulars application. and Prio#
rtf j&y I. KO \INOtvE lltws ram*
-iajHig ’KEfip :. wool* WORKS.
CHATTANOOGA. TKNN.
P.O.Box 230.
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
& „ PENNYROYAL Diamond PILLS. Brand#
Ked Cross
The only reliable pill for sale. Safe an!
■ure. Ladle*, IfragfCiftt f*r the Ola*
inond Brand, iu red metallicboxM, Send4*» xsal«!
with blue ribbou. Take uo other.
' JU (stamps) for particular* and “ Relief fo#
Ladle*,” in letter, by mull. Marne Paper*
Chick eater Ckoodcol to., MotUoon bq., rkitada* P*»
ANTED k'hVr’S One G1 N'’*H Ml ^ -O!clj^ < OU"ty to
IS the FA a K IMiNKTL New
way of sharpening «in*. Make your old gins new: keep
your new gins so. No files. Anyone can use it. Comrais
«ons paid agent on Ah I. sales in county, whether made
by us or him. 2l'0 machines in use since September last.
Machines and satis!action guaranteed. Write at ouo«
to J. ii. FAl.bS & CO.. iUeinpliis, Tenti.
$7* I V tor TO ug. Agents A MONTH preferred can who be made can work! furnish
a iorse and give their whole time to the business.
Sj.are few vacancies moments may be profitably employed £\ also.
/ in towns and cities. B. JOUN
f.;ON A CO., 3009 Main St., Richmond, V». N. B,—
Please state age aiul business experience, Never
mind about ee*tding stamp for reply. D. F. J. tfcCto.
3NT. O. m
Nashville. Tenn. College for Young Ladies,
Is the leading school of this section. Began 183!
with bO pupils, without grounds or building# of Its
own. Now hag 3 buildings, 160 rooms, 20 office#, 32®
pupil# Science, from Art, 18 Music, State#. privileges Full courto iu Vanderbuilfc in Literature* Uni¬
conveniences. versity, fully equipped For Gymnasium, and all modern
Bor. W. F. catalogue Price, I). address President.
Geo. I>„ Nashville, Tenzu
M U SIC—A R T—E LOCUTION De»Jr»ble PofiUost an*
General Culture*
open to progressive students. All interested
Will receive valuable Information Free,
by addressing E. TOUXUEE, Boston, Maas*
pi P&BHB iOiei P Ft HR iPBs >t» and cured ■Whiskey at home Hal*. with
iiriumsH£93i SM
Orators i [clear. for say sumption Pino’s keeping 26cents. is Cure THE the for BEST vole# Con¬
OO SKSSSSSfSSc'SU Curti dt Buffett, ‘13$ LANDS
s Broadway, V. Y.
A gents wanted. 81 an hnur. 5(1 new artio'os. Oat'lgua
A V and sample free. O. E. MARSHALL, Buffalo, N. Y.
PEERLESS DYES Sold Aro by tlio Davoumw. BEST.
SW3 who Eoid Cure say it everywhere. have is for BEST Consumptloa used OF Flsn’s AIX. 26a
I prescribe and fully
specificfortbecwtnincur# dorse Big G as the only
BFCorwin vS
rj TO 5 DAYS. of this disease.
IlarsctMd not t* G.H. INGRAHAM,M. D.,
etas- Strlstun. Amsterdam, N. Y.
Brdoalyby the We have sold Big G for
YiM Chemical Co. many years, and It ha#
Cincinnati,® a ■ given tbe best of latla
. L Jy faction. & CO.,
Ohio. D. R. DYCHF 111.
Chicago,
Trade Mark £1.00. Sold by Drugging.
A. N. U... ......Thirty-three,’8j