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About Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1889)
FARMING HINTS, GARNERED FROM BSOUTHERN ALLIANCE SOURCES. The Alliances of Georgia are solid for cotton bagging. Many Allances are having their lec tures read at every meeting from the Southern Cultivator, of Atlanta, Ga. The Alliance men of DeKalb county, Gra,, will have a grand fourth of July meet ing at Wesley Chapel in that counvy. The Screven county, Ga., Alliances oppose the (;)assage of a law prohibiting hunting and fishing on unenclosed lands. The agricultural headquarters of Geor gia have been located in the Franklin Publishing House, of Atlanta, Ga., in rooms tendered for the purpose. The Dougherty county, Ga., Alliance bought & lot and will commence the erection of a warehouse at an early day. The lot purchased has a front of 102} feet, running back 210. In the last report of the condition of crops in South Carolina, it is estimated that 4 per cent. less commercial fertiliz ers has been used on cotton than last year, and that 29 per cent. of the fertil izer used this year was home-made. As to corn, 55 per cent. of the crop has be#n fertilized, and over onc-half of this amount with home-muade manures, A large number of farmers came as del ogates to the meeting of the County Al liance at Seneca, 8. C. Resolutions con demning the bagging trust and pledging the members of the Alliance to use only cotton cloth to bale cotton, were adopted. Though the Alliance declined as a body to e:gorse the proposed cotton sced oil mill, many of the members subscribed lurgely, thus showing their sympathy with and confidence in the enterprise. , The 7,670,000 farmers and farm labor ers of the United States (4,000,000 farms) labor chiefly to feed 60,000,000-of people and the domestic animals, and to _turnish wool, flax and other fibers as raw materials for partly clothing our own nation, and cotton to clothe more than 100,000,000 people besides our own; be sides large quantities.of sugar, molasses, pork, beef, lard, tallow, hides and horns which the factories work into forms and shapes suited to the conveniences of commerce and the wants of the people. Albany, Ga., people spent many dol lars in sending off and buying of an iten erant florist the clematis, when the wild clematis of that section is far more beau tiful. A resident discoveied one of these plants in one of his incursions into the country, and that for delicate beauty, it far surpasses the clematis that bloom in the gardens. The flora of that section embraces about 175 varieties, some of which are as choice as ever were fash ioned in Nature’s mould. Think to what some of these flowers, so beautiful in their wilds, could be brought through cultivatian. A Georgia furmer gives his formula for making a superior fertilizer. It is about the same as the popular Furman formula. He puts together, in layers, thirty bushels each of stable manure and cotton seed, sprinkling in 100 pounds of acid phosphate and fifty pounds of kainit. In this way he builds up the heap to the height of four feet. He al lows it to stand say six weeks, then spades over and applies from thirty to sixotty bushels to the area. He makes another fertilizer, with cotton seed meal and without the stable manure. One hundred pounds cotton sced meal, fifty pounds acid phosphate, fifty pounds kainit, mixed together, applying from two hundred to three hundred pounds ta the acre. The following experience of a French agriculturist was translated from a Mex ican journal: ‘‘T'wo peach trees of my orchard were covered with insects, just .as they were about to flower. Having ~eut several tomato vines, the idea occur red to me to place them around the trunks and branches of the peach trees, to shelter them from the rays of the sun. ‘What was my surprise, on the following day, to notice that all the insects had disappeared, except from the leaves be yond the influence of the tomato plant,. I carefully separated these leaves and ap plied the tomato to them, when the in ~ gects disappeared as though by enchant ment, and from that time the peach trees began to grow luxuriantly. Wish - ing to carry the experimeat further, 1 put some of the tomato leaves in water and sprinkled other plants, such as the rose bush, orange tree, apple tres, pear tree, etc., with the infusion, which also had the same effect of completely freeing them of insects within a few days.” . South Carolina papers mention a some thing astonishing to the ‘‘oldest inhab itant,” the finding of ,wild cane in seed: ““This rara avis in question is a growth resembling the red oak somewhat, and grows on a common cane or reed, such as ‘is found on branch and creek bottoms, The specimen stalks before us from ~ twelve to fifteen feet in heighth, thickly . filled from end to end, or from ground tc _ tip end, with oat-like heads, containing _ flat, plump grains. It seems that this M%euwg cane is of a very recont dis- ‘ . covery,never having been observed, infact, | ?Zmfilfiflnnthe past few days.” Boththe {%*Ws%cane bear sced, though ! nob freely, “as is the case with mosi _ plants, which increase freely by running . kootestocks. Tho luster fact, well knows | o botextats socounts for the simost in grass, the “maiden cane.” But J. H. i it ?fifiw - ' aeve FEIRLS Lt Bk e DTN B APR) W RS vl b omanstiletltuat bty M‘”‘ \ The farmers’ Alliance is becomili%t powerful and influential society in Mis sissippi. It has able public speakers and well-informed agents visiting all of the counties of the state, organiz%ng alliances and instructing the farmers in regard to their interests, their rights and their wrongs. Their lecturers are itinerant school-masters, teaching the farmers in their lectures exactly wiat they all ought to know. And the members of the or der will pass it round to their neighbors who do not belong to the order. They are not ouly taught important practical facts in agriculture, but facts relating to commerce and trade, how they shoulX sell their crops, how they are affected by “rings” and ‘‘corners” and ‘‘combines” and ‘‘trusts,” and by paying dearly for the credit they get; and they are taught important facts in pohtical economy, in relation to labor and national wealth, wliere the money comes from, and where it goes, and who gets it. And they are taught that they must have more farmers in state legislatures, and in Congress, and in state governments to look after the agricultuial interests of the country, and chat they must vote for tried friends of the farmers for all offices from the Presi dent of the United States down to the officer that tests the honesty of weights and measures. Farmers have a deep in terest in weights and measures, as well as in presidents and law-makers. ROBBERS HUNG. One of the most brutal tragedies cver known in the history of crime in Ten. nessee was expiated Wednesday by the murderous perpetrators, who were hanged toa tree by a mob on Wednesday. Tuesday evening vne week ago, E. R. Reynolds, aged 45, and Thomas J. Lloyd, aged 21, went to the house of Rev. Jacob Harness, a Baptist minister, in Scott county, believing him to have a large amount of money concealed in the house. They reached the house about midnight on Wednesday and demanded admittance, Rev. Mr. Harness was away from the house, and his wife and a half-witted son, aged 16, were sleeping in the same room. Mrs. Harness, who was about fifty years of age, went to the door and told the men they must leave, They Broke down the door and rushed in, shooting the old lady dead in her tracks the first thing. The boy, awak ened by the noise, rushed out at another door. They followed him out, aud, overtaking him, beat him to death with a garden hoe. They carried him back and threw him in the doorway, his legs protruding. They next ransacked the house, secured $74, and then, to cover up the terrible crime, applied the torch. They were arrested and jailed at Hunts ville. Both the villains confessed their crime before they were executed, and aaid they deservel what they got. VETERAN ORGANI!ZATION. A NEW ORDER, KNOWN AS THE UNITEL CONFEDERATE VETERANS. Governor Gordon, of Georgia, has beex elected general of the United Confed: erate Veterans, This Grand Army of the South was organized in New Orleans and Governor Gordon received official notice of his election as commanding general, accompanied by a ecopy of the constitution of the order. The objects are of a social, litcrary, historical and be nevolent character. An effort will be made to unite all associations ot Confed. erate veterans, soldiers and sailors, to gather authentic data for an impartial history of the war between the states; to cherish the ties of friendship that should exist among men who have shared com mon dangers and common sufferings; to care for the disabled; tohelp the needy; to(i)rotect the widow and the orphan; and make and preserve a record of the services of every member, and »s far as possible those of the Confederate dead. The officers will be a general, lieutenant general, adjutant-general, quartermaster general, commissary-general, judge ad vocate-general, surgeon-general and chaplain. General Gordon will appoint a lieutenant-general and a number of aides. The next meeting will be held on July 4th, 1800, at Chattanooga, Tenn. USED DYNAMITE. A REJECTED LOVER IN 01110 CAUGEHT WITH EXPLOSIVES—HE SUICIDES. Frank James was arrestea at Bowling Green, Ohio, on the charge of attempting to blow up Mrs. Mertie Williamson’s house with dynamite. He was put in the town jail where he committed suicide by hanging himself with a pair of sus penders. Mrs. Williamson is applying for a divorce from her husband, and James ‘has been trying to get her to promise to marry him as soon as she gets the divorce. As she refused, James un dertook to further his smt by threaten ing to blow her up with dynamite. Tuesday evening during Mrs. William son’s absence, James, who was about half drunk, was discovered in the cellar asleep with a big dynamite cartridge at tached to a fuse in his hand. The police were notified and James was arrested af ter a severe struggle, and was placed in juil and suicided. .A LONG CHASE. SEVENTY-FIVE MILES THROUGH THE . WOODS AFTER A MURDERER, Sunday momin¥l a posse from Wilcox county arrested the negro near Tifton who shot Conductor Whigham on the Savannah, Americus and Montgomery. Railroad last week, having tracked him { from Wileox county down there. They found him in_the woods asleep. They. followed him seventy-five miles through Ty Ty to Americus punday evVClils. Now Jtis rumored {hat bo Killed two. men in Flotida, spume time, Bae GENERAL NEWS. CONDBNSATION OF CURIOUS, AND EXCITING EVENTS. NEWS FROM EVERYWHERE—ACCIDENTS, STRIKES, FIRES, AND HAPPENINGS OF INTEREST, ‘ The black vomit has made its appear ance at Vera Cruz, New Mexico. | Emperor William’s review of the Eng. glish fleet off Spithead, bhas been fixed for August 5. The town of Zbaraz, in Austrian Gali cia, was almost entirely destroyed by fire on Monday. Many lives were lost. The total amount of contributions re ceived by Governor Beaver, of Harris burg, for the flood sufferers to date is about $700,000. Three of Captain Wissman's steamers are r?orted to have been lost on the Benadeir coast. German men-of-war halve gone in search of the missing ves sels, A dispatch from the City of Mexico says: The roof of the Merced market fell in Friday, burying mearly forty per sons. Four dead and fourteen wounded have already been taken out. Soldiers are removing the rubbish and searching for the bodies. Lieut. Frank Reeves Heath, U. 8. N., died at Mare island naval hospital, near San Francisco, Cal., on Thursday. He was one of the survivors of the wrecked man-of war Vandalia, at Samoa. He has been suffering for weeks from dis case contracted at Apia, and a week ago was taken down with an attack of com pound pneumonia. Camillo Bougatti, awaiting trial in New York city for the murder of Fran cisco Sanevito, whom he killed on the 22d of May, committed suicide in the Tombs on Thursday by hauging. ‘With a piece of rope taken from his bed-tick, he made a noose, and attaching one end to a sewer pipe running across the ceil ing of his cell he stood on his bed, piléxced bis head in the noose and swung off. A Chicago paper contains the follow ing paragraph: ‘‘The survivors of the Johnstown flood are throwing away their Bibles and openly disclaiming any be lief in a divine providence. Men and women, who saw their loved ones swept away and drowned, have in their despe ‘ration turned their backs on religion. The great calamity has made more athe- L ists than a century of Ingersolism could have done. A dispatch from Tucson, Ariz., says: The preliminary hearing of the parties who robbed Paymaster Whann was com menced Wednesday afternoon. Gilbert and Wilford Webb, M. E. Cunningham, Natt Follet, Lyman lollet, Thomas Lamb and David Rogers were held to answer before the grand jury. Edward Follet was discharged. All the parties held were Identified and a large amount of circumstantial evidence adduced \ against them. Other parties will prota blv be arrested soon, MANY CHILDREN KILLED. A train contaiming an excursion party from Armagh to Dublin, Ireland, was wrecked near the latter place. Twenty persons were killed outright. The train contained 1,200 people, composed of Methodist Sunday-School scholars, their teachers and relatives. They were going on an excursion to Warren Point. Sev enty bodies were afterwards taken from the wreck. Warren Point, the place where the party was bound, 18 a watering place at the mouth of Newry River, in the county Down. The accident oc curred at a point where the trains had tc ascend a grade on a bank fifty feet high, The first train ascended the grade with out trouble. The second section at tempted to ascend, but the weight of the train proved too great for the engine. Several cars were detached and allowed to run back towards the level track, but hefore they reached it, they came in col lision with an ordinary.train from Ar magh, which was proceeding at a good rate of speed, 'CHARLESTON’S COURT. The coming session of the criminal court, which commences on Monday next, promises to be the most important ever held in Charleston, 8. C. The jury is composed of fourteen mulattoes and negroes and twenty-one whites—an unu sually large proportion of the colored race. The docket has over 61 cases to be tried—l 3 for murder, 16 of assault with intent to kill, 6 burglary, 8 of va grancy, 2 of carrying concealed weapouns, 1 of rape, 3 of house-breaking, 8 of lar ceny, and the rest of minor offences. The oreatest interest attaches to the case of McDow, charged with the murder of Captain F. W. Dawson, on the 12th of March last. It is probable, however, that this case will be postponed. COTTON FUTURES, L The futures were a few points dearer, especlally for tfiis crop, on a stronger re port to New York from Liverpool, Eng land, but speculation continues very sluggish, and after a lng% bu&ex;é began to gfie way under the sélling Movement, under which the ear]y advance was more than the last. Cpp ;;cgs' mu“ cl?rfn%g wenth éfl rally, but contin uved rig in the northern belt. Ogtm oh spat il b 00l Epanch Sl et fvcbfisggr%d,'bfih t was freely met and priced Wereeusier. oL ;g BB SR ARS W Badly In Debt. | The thirteen Southern states, includ lnitl.{emucky and Missouri, have funded de oggmgating $05,858,648, besides an unfunded debt amounting to $20,000, - 000 more. Of the Bouthern states, Ken tucky alone has a sinking fund, and in her case it nearly covers the small debt of the state. Three-quarters of the debt of Texas and about the whole of Missis sippi's sre due to the school funds of those states, so that the debt is insig nificant in each case, In round fig ures, $119,000,000 is the aggregate of the debts of the Southern states, includ ing the unfunded debt. The remaining twenty-five states, eomprising all those of the North, the Northwest and the Pacific slope, owe less than $48,000,000, funded and unfunded, if the amounts in the several sinking funds are subtracted from the nominal aggregate. It appears that ten Southern sta'es are loades with more than two-thirds of all the state debts of the Union. Pure Water. The water we drink sometimes carries contagion with it. Typhoid fever, for instance, comes to us in that way, There are two good, ways of purifying water. One is to filter it, and the other is to boil it. Filters may be had in almost every shape, from the simplest and most inex pensive up to the most complex and costly. People who cannot afford the filters of porcelain and baked clay, snould make a bag of several layers of flannel and fill it with charcoal. These cheap filters will answer every purpose. If we would boil our drinking water for thirty minutes all the bacteria would be killed. The Chinese do this, and rarely suffer from typheid and other communi cable fevers. This method is better than filtering. With a little care, with filters kept clean, or with boiled water, there is no reason why people in any part of the Southern country should suffer from im pure drinking water. National Cemeteries. Distributed among the 85 national cometerivs of the United States are 325,- 230 soldiers’ graves, of which 148,832 are merked ‘‘Unknown.” At Vicks burg are 16,615 graves, at Nashville 16,- 533 and at Arlington 16,254, the other cemeteries containing less numbers. The cost of the cemeteries has been from $250,000 down. At Arlington a single monument covers the bones of 2,111 un known soldiers, gathered after the war from the fields of Bull Run and the route to the Rappahannock. The grave of Gen. Sheridan is at Arlington, Near Salisbury, N. C., in trenches occupying a space not more than four hundred feet square, are the bodies of 11,700 Union prisoners. : e Tre religlous order of the King's Daughters, which has just held its meet ing in New York city, has grown so rap idly during the four years of its existence that it now has nearly 100,000 members, mostly young women, who are devoted to the works of charity and religion. :.___._?_‘_fi._- e What will Brown’s Iron Bittets cure? 1t will cure dyspegsia,, indflifie&tioq, weakness, malaria, rheumatism and gimilar diseases. Its wonderful curative o(i:vower i simply be cause it purifies the blood, thus be-~inning at the fgoundation, and by building up the system drives out all disease. For the sculiar troubles to which ladies are subject it i:inval uable., It is the only preparation of iron that does not color the teeth or cause headache. If a Cincinnati liquor-dealer does not sell on Sunday, his association fines him $lO. Happy Homes. Here's a health to the wives and the mothers ‘Who sit in our households to-day; Who are glad when t.he? brighten for others The hours that go dri tlnfi away. May their eyes keedp the lif t of the gladness, Their hearts hold the fullness of bliss That banish shadows and sadness, And what need we ask more than this? But—how can this happiness be kept? What shall proteet those we love—those who make a Heaven of the Home—from the ravages of dis ease that 1s often worse than death—that is, in fact, a lingering death? 'The question is eagily answered: Dr. Pierce s Favorite Preseription —thestandard remedy for all those peculiar digeases to which women are su‘talect—,-ls what must be relied on to preserve the health of MXG% and mgthers. It prevents those diseases, and it eurés them. It is” a blessing to women and therefore a, &uon;% blessing, because it gives health tothose about whom the hapri ness of home centers, and the strength of a Ha tion is In its happy homes. & Dr. Pierc'ots I’cliets, or Anti-bilious Granules; in vials, 25 cents; one a dose. Druggists. That France is prospering is shown by the fact that $500,000,000 is in savings banks. Just think of it! $140.52 madein one week by an agent rqg}'eszenting B. F. Johnson & Co., of Richmond, Va., and the?' have had many more parties traveling for them who did equally well, some a good deal better. If youneedem plog'me,ut it would be a good thing to sit down and wir.te them a line at once. Anlnvaluable Traveling Companion. No person should travel without a box of Ha.mgfirg % in his his satchel, for they will be found invaluable when change of food and water has brought on an attack of constipa tion, indigestion, or tor&ldity of the liver. 25 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N, Y. THE Mother's Friend, used before confine ment, lessens spain and makes labor compara tively easy. Sold by all druggists. If afflicted with sore eyesuse Dr.lsaac Thomp son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25¢c.per bottle .\\ %‘ Q Q & I‘i‘ b 8 e NOSRS - Jai - e it SRR R X Lo\ ! AN el %% AP BORR N QQ‘ W\ Wi (G i, fi@& LDR Y i ae g gSRTt it R !, & ‘v-‘ o . ”'f’}»fi%i{a’i’hfi’&%fl*\s A Safe Rlood Remedy. B. B. B. is the only safe and unfailing cure for scrotula, blood poison, skin diseases, rheu~ matism, ulcers, humors, eruptions, sore liver, weak kidneys, catarrh, female weakness, pains in the side or back, general debility, serofulous humors, syphilitio poison, salt rheum, pimples, boils, headaches, nervousness, dizay feelings, sinking spells, constipation, blotches, fiflworm, o:moerou:“:rmfitomn, falling of the r and other constitutional diseases originating from unhealthy or unclean blood. It rmgim 10 cure from the first bottle, and never causes addi tional eruptive tendencies, but kills and foroes out all germs of blood poison through the Emper channels of the system-—the {;oma, the idneys and the liver. ’K'y only oune bottle and be convinced. It is the only remedy that al ways gives entire satisfaction. It contains no molasses or sarsaparilla or other inert and use less ingredients, or any poisonous ingredients that will cause eruptions, but is an original pmscrigtion of an eminent Atlanta physician, ‘and will give satisfaction from the very first bottle taken. Try it. Chicago, 111., working women have an or ganization for mutual help and improvement. Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers. Mild, equable climate, certainand abundant Crops. %est fruit, grain, grass and stock country in the world. Full information free. Address Oreg. Im'igr’t'n Board, Portland, Ore. e ——————— S— ¥ YOU WISH A £ o I GOOD SATH £ WESSON Bl s REVOLVER Fufllm;.lg h, ° purchase one of the cele- Q___‘\ s i brated SMITH & WESSON 'S X e arms. The finest small arms (.\ SR ever manufwrnr:fil and the A ‘ o W &nt choice of sxperts, N e anufactured in calibres 82, 38 and 44-100. Sin- (SN leor double action, Safoetadnmmorlou and \DAS !‘arzetmodo!s. Constru mfinflnflyor best quale ity wronx&n mel, carefully inspected for worke muumf and , they are unrivaled for finish, durab ll“ lndnceurloy. Donotbedomivodz cheap mallenble cast- rrn imlcsntion. whi are often sold for the sexm ne _article and are nos only unrelisble, but naferoh. The SMITH & WESSON Revolvers are Itlmc{”'d upon the b yels with firra’s name, address and dates of ;{.te:: and are vfl:arumoed perfect in every detail. Ine sist upon having the genuine article, and if gonr dealer cannot m(pply you an order sent to addreas | below will receive prompt and careful attentiom. Descrptive catalogue and prices fumh?ed upon ap= | prewion. SMITH & WESSON, §PT¥9§fl°n thispaper. Springlield, Mass, IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENT. BOOK T 0 “MOTHERS"” MAILEDIFREE. BRADFIELD REGULATOR 00, ATLANTA,IGA SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. l FARMERS 4 ENGINES, Wood Planers. | SAW WMILL. x' = : ) ~ Also Hrafi's Improved T d b - Circular Saw Mill R "a y With Universal eR AU S Log Beam Recti- _ofie st ‘;::-:» Tt . linear Bimulta- YRR, et S 4 neous Set Work Géxmronnaiseiiiii i ) and pouble Ec- S gl * ;.;.;~;l6j-ks/f centric_Friction HESS ST lat e s e SALEx TnoX Womks, Sslem, N. 0. _Write for cireular DUTCHER’'S e Y% FLY KILLER 7 SRR ake: 3t . Every // Ly F\ ]:{xeegs\:lfi g?ll; a'mt of files. 771 K wiu Stops buzzing around ears, ) a. 3 by diving at eies, tickling your oAI nose, skips hard words and se i cures eacgmtmmngoxpamo. Send ‘55 centa for § shoets to ¥. DUTCHER, St. Albans, V& o ———————————————————————————ree—— Road Carts! Wi 10 per cent. cheaper B § ' than anybody. ug g IBS : ¥ Don’'t buy before g«-ifi ux prices and cate L THE GEO. W, 'fioc‘é}i L CO, o atme this 3 pg”hso %3 VILLE. TNk e e e % JONES gH 5 4 W PAYS THE FRE ,v_,fi_ # % Taun wu‘fogh‘cgge’::r' 48 "'\‘\ 2 Iron Levers. Stcel Bearings, Brass “(".t‘nl'.‘f{h:“?,_‘.".‘ Tare Bc&ms?ra Bémn Box for. 2 “R‘ ;Fi'.\; Every size Scale. For free price lis§ v ‘.;.;; h mention this paper and address Y 7 1) ' JONES OF BINGHAMTON, BINGHAMTON, N, Y, Plantation Engines | {//,/ /_’" 7 With Belf-Contained (& WEZAaiI RETURN FLUE BOILERS, N T FOR DRIVING fe=¢ o= & 88 COTTON GINS and MILLS, PR e f i ) Illustrated Pamphlet Free, Address b. (A = AMES LEFFEL & CO. g ko g| W SPRINGFIELD, OXIO, R 4 or 110 Liberty St., New York. Patronize wooste | BUY SOUTHERN-MADE PRINTING INKS ~ FROM~— ey FRANK J. COHEN, General Agent 23 East Alabama St., ATLANTA, GA. w COLE & DEEBLE, Proprietors, ; 932 1 Street N. W., Washingten, D. C, General information furnished. X Oorrespondence solicited. s SMITHDEAL @ M:fi: i’ PRACTICAL 8 Sorriii 2 Gen / g D.0..k s, nc.’ “: COLLEQE, Richmond, Va. Pasil ema® —Every one to investigate; $5.00 w ANTED judiciously invested will Jead to a fortune; an opportunity for eople with limited means. Send stamp Por particulars, g‘\'PLER & CO., Kansas (ity, Mo. " — i and gesnlgl 6151:.!‘:“.! b?.fi“l{:{e g”tlonfl R W R vty B TOURIER, Bostor, Mass. i , who have used Piso’s Cure for Consumption say itis BEST OF ALL. Sold everywhere. 260 ATUDY ~ BOOR- E » HONE fostati SRR e ) i .y Bryany’s Cellege, ifi'y Main St., Bn%fl fi - —4——————-————‘-—‘—..-.——-————-————-——-——————%-3—-‘ ~ - - ¥ . 8 1 rth R 2. o OB 102 mtior ek e it e ster Satevy Rein Holder Co,,Holly, Mich, PEERLESS DYES 472 Swecen SoLD BY DRUGGISTS. 4 I prescribe and fully en . dorbe Bie fg % the outy mo : tgenlfio or the certain curg arsaed non ]&, B INGRAITAM, ). D G eause Sertogare. | T T Amstmnml&f‘ R Wi e hure sold Rig Gler 3 *’;‘*“’ C o V 0 mw’*m G, Oue JY D RDYCHBRCO, VR el Cb cago, liL. Tt e e el s Moo o i Pl el Re SN GER AR