Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 January 1889 — Page 3

EXECUTING AN ELEPHANT.

Chief, of Adam Circus, S*nua<led la Philadelphia, for Murder. Chief, the most vicious elephant in America, and the murderer of seven men, was executed in the winter quarters of Forepaugh’s circus, at Lehigh avenue and Front street, writes a Philadelphia correspondent Chief was forty years old and had been in this country nine years. He crushed a man to death shortly after his arrival, and since then he has gone from bad to worse. He was known all over the country as the most wicked elephant that ever crushed circus peanuts. Though always closely watched, he would go on periodical rampages. In October last Chief broke from the winter quarters, up on Lehigh avenue. He was in a rage, and was driving men, women and children before him and creating a panic, when the police were called out to stop the mad rush of the elephant. He made such a desperate fight that ten policemen opened tire on him, but it was only when eight bullets had been planted m his left leg that he was forced back to the winter quarters. Chief was at once chained, but broke from the chains that night. He was chained again, all his feet being fastened to the end of heavy iron cables. He was quiet for a few weeks, but lately he made repeated struggles to burst his chains, and, as he threatened to get loose at any moment and clean out the winter quarters, it was decided to execute him. Two other elephants were the executioners. A noose was made in the center of a piece of rope half an inch thick and ten yards long. As two men tried to put the rope round his neck the doomed elephant got in a rage and tried to toss one of the men against a wall. By hard work the noose was finally pulled over his trunk and placed behind his ears, with the knot directly under his throat. Then Basil and Bismarck, the most powerful elephants owned by Forepaugh, were fastened to an end of the rope on either side of their murderous comrade. Then young Adam Forepaugh gave the word, Basil and Bismarck were given a prod with iron hooks, and the death line began to grow taut. Another signal and the elephants pulled w ith all their mighty strength in opposite directions. Chief began to totter. In twenty seconds he dropped to the ground a dead elephant. Bismarck and Basil had strangled him. Chief was ten and one-half feet high and weighed over 10,000 pounds. He was an Asiatic elephant, and was bought from Carl Stagenl ack, the noted animal'dealer in Hamburg, nine - years ago. He began life in America by killing a man just after the ship came into port A year later he caught a keeper and dashed him against a telegraph pole. Since then he had murdered five more men and had tried to kill scores of others. He was a terror when he started out on his rampages, and swept everything before him, even the lemonade, purpie cindy, and peanuts of the circus butchers. He tore down a wooden house at Grand Rapids, Mich,, and when he had finished a visit to a sideshow one fair summer day, at Topeka, the show looked as if it had been struck by a Kansas cyclone. He took possession of the town of Akron, Ohio, and was finally arrested by a country constable on the charge of d sorderly conduct and malicious mischief. He was again arrested in Cincinnati chasing a German saloonkeeper and a hundred pations out of a place on Vine street in that city. He had been employed to appear in a spectacular play a few years ago, and had done good work until the second act, when he lay down on the stage, and refused to let the play go on. While on a “tear’’ down near Cairo, Hl., he grasped a canvasman of the circus and threw him into the Mississippi River, and was ducking him until he was almost dead, when fifty men attacked the elephant and saved the man. He was the only elephant that Adam Forepaugh, Jr., couldn’t conquer.

No Mo[?]e Indian Wais.

‘‘lt was not until the winter of 1576, after the Custer massacre had thoroughly aroused the that the plains Indians were really subdued,” says Gen. Crook. “General Nelson A. Miles followed the hostiles in the coldest weather, and although unable to overtake them, kept them constantly on the move. The Indians, sensitive to cold and illy provided with clothing, died like sheep of hardship and exposure, and one by one the bands, fairly tired out, came in, surrendered, and were disarmed and put on reservations. The winter campaign more than anything else broke the power of the plains tribes, but at terrible expense to the troops, who were exposed to the fury of the Western storms in the coldest months in the year. “Geronimo and his warriors were in like manner followed persistently until they were tired out. This appears to be the only plan of campaign to follow; because they have no home, and if allowed a month’s rest between raids they can keep them up indefinitely. But it is not probable that there will ever be another Indian war worthy of the name.”

Arabian Babies.

A baby’s first toilet in Arabia consists in winding a bandage about its body after it has been bathed and perfumed. The little creature is then placed on its back, its arms and feet are straightened, and the entire body is swathed to the sLojlders. In this position it remains motionless forty days, but the bondages are removed

| twice a day that the child may have a | bath. The Arabs believe that this process will make the body straight for life. If the child be a girl, on the seventh day after her birth, holes, usually six in number, are pricked in her ears, and when she is two months old heavy gold rings are attached to them, to be worn throughout her lifetime, except during periods of mourning for relatives. On the fortieth day the child’s head is shaved. This operation is considered a very important one, and thirty or forty persons are witnesses of it for the performance of certain rites. The disposal of the first hair is regarded as a very weighty matter; it must not ba burned or carelessly thrown away, but buried, thrown into the sea, or hidden in some crevice of a wall. This fortieth day marks the turning point in the child’s life. Heretofore it has only been seen by its parents, the slaves on duty, and a few intimate friends of the family; now, however, it may be seen by anybody, and is regarded as fairly launched on I the tide of existence. Several charms are attached to its body for protection against the “evil eye”—boys -wearing them to a certain age and girls still I longer. The favorite charm consists I of a gold and silver locket worn on a i chain.

Are We to Have Another War?

Some political prophets aver that we shall. Be that as it may, the battle waged by medical science against disease will never cease until we arrive at that utopian epoch when the human family shall cease to be afflicted with bodily ailments. One of the most potent weapons which the armory of medicine furnishes is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which is of special utility as a family remedy, as it is adapted to the immediate relief and ultimate cure of those disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels which are of c mmo nest occurrence. Indigestion, biliousness and constipation are inseparable companions, an 1 these ailments are completely eradicated by the Bitters. But the remedial scope of this superlatively wholesome and genial medicine taxes in also nervous ailments, rheumatism and kidney troubles ; its action in these, as in the ocher complaints, being characterized by unequaled thoroughness.

The World’s Greatest Women.

The Pall Mall Gazette's request for lists of the world’s twelve greatest women has produced this 'collective vote given in order of preference: Joan of Arc 9 St. Theresa 2 G orge Sand 8 Allah Bae 1 Queen Elizabeth 7 Deborah 1 Maria Theresa 6 Helen of Troy 1 G orge Eliot 6 Aspasia 1 Mme. Ro and .6 Mme. de Ma'ntenon.. .1 Cathenn <ot Siena... .5 Monica 1 Sappuo...... 41 Emily Bronte 1 Mrs. Browning 41,)ael 1 Esther 3 Empress Helen I Charlotte Bronte 3 Zenobia 1 Mme de Stael 31 Lady Rachel Russell..! Elizabeth Fry 3 Marguerite of Navarre.! Mary Somerxile 3 Boadicea I Setniratnis. 2|Mma de Sevigne 1 Catherine II 2!Susannah Wesley 1 Isabel a of Castile Stowe i Margaret Fuller 2iJoeephine Butler 1 Mary Wollstonecraft..2lMiss Willard 1 Jane Austen 2 St. Elizabeth of HunMaria licfi-ew0rth,....2 gary ...1 Florence Nightingale. .2 Grace Darling 1 Judith 2 Louise Michel. 1 Cleopatra 2 Mrs. Besa. t 1 Rosa Bonheur 2 Charlotte Corday...... 1 Mrs. 800th...., 2 Hesba Stret.on 1 The Gazette draws up the following list as fairly representative of feminine greatness in all ages: WOMB S OF ACTION. WOMEN OF THOUGHT. Semirainls. Sappho. Quetn Esthe-. Mme. Roland. Maria Theresa. Mme. de Stael. Catherine 11. of Russia. George Sand. Isabella of Castile. iG. orge Eliot. Joan of Arc. Fuller.

Culinary Maxims.

Every bee’s honey is sweet. The house showeth the owner. Anger at a feast betrays the boor. In a good house all is quickly ready. As the year is so must your pot seethe. Everything is of use to a housekeeper. He that is at ease seeks dainties. Better be meals many than one too merry. He that s'veth his dinner will have the more supper. Never haggle about the basket if you get the fruit. There is winter enough for the snipe and woodcock too. Squeeze not the orange too hard, lest you have a bitter juice They who have little butter must be content to spread thin their bread. Many a good dish is spoiled by an ill sauce. The biggest calf makes not the sw< etest. veal. When the stomach chimes the dinner hour don’t wait for the clock.— Table Talk.

A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fits.

To the Editor: Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. So strong is my faith in the virtues of this medicine that I will send free a sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give me his P. O. and Express address. My remedy has cured thousands of hopeless cases. H. G. Root, M. C.. 183 Pearl street. New York.

A Modest Young Woman.

Boston grocer (to young lady)—Turkeys, miss? Young lady—Yes. —Dressed or not dressed? Young lady—Not dressed, please; but you must do up the package very carefully when vou send it home.— We.

Cancer Cured.

Dr. F. L. Pond is having wonderful success in the treatment and cure of cancer at tbe cancer hospital at Aurora. lit There are numbers of cures recently made by him which are truly wonderful. Those afflicted should not hesitate, bat should go there for treatment at onee. For information, address Dr. F. L. Pond. Aurora. IIL At the club: Mr. Swallowtail (reading)—There are only 5,000 elephants in the world. Guest (huskily)—ls that all ? I’ve been here only a week and I had an idea that there were that many in this town alone. A vocation that is a calling—A telephone girl’s occupation.

Samples of Ready Wit

Parliamentary elections usually afford a good field for the exercise of wit. While a noble lord was conducting his canvass he met a bully, who declarel fiercely that he would “sooner vote for the devil than for him.” “I’ve not the slighest doubt of it, my friend,” said the candidate, quietly; “but in the event of your friend not coming forward, may I count on your vote?” Here is another of the same kind: At an open political meeting a man cried: “Hurrah for Jackson!” to which a bystander retorted: “Hurrah for a jackass!” “All right, my man,” exclaimed the first speaker; “you hurrah for your favorite candidate, and I’ll do the same for mine.” An enviable quickness of repartee was show'n by a French actor when the head of a goose was thrown upon the stage. Advancing to the footlights, he said: “Gentlemen, if anyone among you has lost his head, I shall be glad to restore it at the conclusion of the piece. ” Deservedly severe also was the reply of Descartes to a nobleman who, seeing that he enjoyed the pleasures of the table, remarked: “I see, sir, that philosophers can sometimes indulge in good cheer.” “Why not?” asked Descartes. “Do you really imaging that Providence intended the gooa things of this earth only for the foolish and ignorant ?” Chambers' Journal.

Working Nights.

“What will it cost me, Uncle Rastus, to have my coop whitewashed ?” “I kain’t tell yet, sah, till I makes an estimate ob de size and dimenshuns. ” That night the owner was disturbed by a loud noise in the hen-coop. “Hi, there!” he shouted, from au upper window, “what are you doing there ?” “It’s Unc. Rastus,” was the reply, “and he's figgerin’ on de size an’ dimenshuns ob de coop. ” — Harper's Bazar. It is said that in the southern part of Russia the peasants use a coin of such small value that it would take 250,000 of them to buy an American dollar, and these coins are so scarce that a man who has a hundred is looked upon as rich, and one who has a thousand is considered very wealthy. It is strange to regard a person wealthy who owns two-fifths of a csnt, and comfortably well off on one-twenty-filth of a cent. But the value of money depends, of course, on what it will buy. From the fruit preserver we get our jams and from the distiller our jimjams.

The Homeliest Man in Town,

As well as tho handsomest, and others, is invited to call on any druggist and get free a trial bottle of Kemp’s Balsam for tho Throat and Lungs, a remedy that is selling entirely upon its merits, and is guaranteed to relieve and euro all Chronic and Acute Coughs, Asthma, Bronchitis, and Consumption. Largo Bottles, 50 cents and sl. He was only a finished gymnast when he fell from the trapeze and broke his neck. Coughs and Hoarseness.— The irritation which induce dba-ghing immediately relieved by U4e of “Broum's Bronchial Troches.” Sold only in boxes. A man in the gutter cannot be disturbed by the repoit of a whisky pool.

Aged People Whose blood has become thin or Impure are especially liable to attacks of rheumatism, or to that weakness called “general debility." The pains and aches of the former are relieved by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which purifies and vitalizes the blood, while it also tones and builds up the whole sj-stem. “My wife and myself were both generally run down. Hood’s Sarsaparilla brought us out of that tired feeling, and made us feel like young people again. It has done more for us than all other medicines together.” Richabd Hawkhubst, Amityville, Long Island, N. Y. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar NORTHERN PACIFIC !" LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS @ FREE Government LANDS. CFMILI.IOSS OF ACRBB of each in Minnesota. North Dakota, Montana. Idaho. Washington and Oregon. QCRIfI EflD Publications with Maps describing Th. vEn«l rUn BEST Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Lands now open to Settlers Sent Free. Address cm il MDnvw! fee ’wi'fiar’ BSTHMA cured! GERMAN ASTHMA CURE itly relieves the most violent attack and I s comfortable sleep. NO WAITING f. r ng. ■ .Being need by inhalation, its action is im- ■ to. direct and certain, and a cure is theß in all carable cases. A single trial con- ■ the most skeptical. Price bile, and SI 00 ■ WHY YOU SHOULD USE SCOTT’S EMULSION of COD DIVER OIL WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES. It is Palatable as Milk. It is three times as efficacious as plain Cod Liver Oil. It is far superior to all other socalled Emulsions. It is a perfect Emulsion, does not separate or change. > It is wonderful as a flesh producer. It is the best remedy for Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting Diseases, Chronic Cough and Colds. Sold fry all Druggitti.

CTJACOBS Oil ONCE CURED NO RELAPSE. OfiflMl S&ttlUt, 1882. oniiul Stmaill, 188 L B«a»*«4Mov., IZM nurni Itr l, IIH. Mr. IM. «. WUI, U 4 a. wrltaz: "804 Mata rk««- ** j* - * *' matim several yearx; ’•alere* aeata paiaa « grav weree; aaaiaaat Boatha la keU kaaaa; aa •••»<••♦ •••»» •xnataaitoilvatar kaan; AppUeA JaraStad an over vtU «t- cate OU at alght; mack Jeoebe Oil; lr«t applies- relieved la lk« marnlag. tlaa raU.vaC eeoosd ra- Tried It agala; pels taalmoved pata; coaUasod ly left ate eaUrely. I an carad taa; ao ralapaa kava had m ratara at pala In fear yaan; do aa mack illca. Xam completely work Merer." cored." AT DXUSGIBTS AMD DFALSIW ETLBTWHXM. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baffliaork. Md. DIAMOND VERA CURA FOR DYSPEPSIA. A Positive Cur® for INDIGESTION and all Stomach Troubles Arixing Therefrom. Your Drugqiet or General Dealer will get VeraCura for you if not already in stock, or it will be sent mad on receipt of 2S cent* (5 bojeex >t .00) in stamps, sample sent on receipt of 2-cent stamp. THE CHARLES A. VOGE' ER CO.. Baltimore. Md. swu> 88 a day. Samples worth St-50. FREE; ►Xlines not under the horee'sfeet. WriteßrewsCJter Safety Rein-Holder Co- Holly, Mich. Maas. Hn||C CTIinV Bookkeeping, Busmen Forms, Umc a I Ulil ePenmanehln.Arithraetic.Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught by.niart. Circulars tree. Bryant’s Bu«in Kaa Collkok. Buffalo.N.Y. CAI ECAAEM ”» “t'* OH L LU IVI Ell fre J-cent stamp. Wages S 3 Per Day. Pcrnian>il poxhiuM. No postal* answered •Money advanced for wages,<dvertMn< t eto. Centennial Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. LADIES LOOK! A No velty Rug Machine sent by mail tor 41. Satisfaction guaranteed or refunded. Wholesale price reduced to Agenta. New Pricelist of machines, yarn, patterns, etc., and a book of beautiful colored pattern deHigna sent free. ABF Agents wanted. E. ROSS St CO.. Toledo, <>■ CONSUMPTION I have a positive remedy for the above disease; by its use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long standing have been cured. So strong is my faith in its efficacy that I will send two bottles free, together with a valuable treatise on this disease to any sufferer. Give Express and P.O.address. T. A. Slocum, M.C., 181 Pearl St., N.Y, x\ The mother of a member of our firm ha* been cured of a canceroui sore on her face of twenty veara’ »tan<Hiig by taldiijr 8. 8. 8. Pknolkton, Ykaky & Rilky, Draught*, FaruHraville, Tex. Swift’s Specific cured our babe of an angry eruntlon called ICaiv rntiaj'ler the doctor’s prescription had failed, and she In now hale an 1 hearty. H. T.WOBR, Rich Hill, Mo. rfcrSendfor our books on Blood and Skin Dhea*et and Advice t) Sufferers, mailed free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Gt, ELY’S PaTA 0 0 M CREAM Isufferedfrom catdi i-Zi 12 year». 77-cW £1 droppings into f cM’’LADJ throat were w fe* W ing. My nose bled a? r SA most dally. Since /Irift day's use S Cream Balin havehd' no bleeding, the ness is entirely gone. J D. G. the Boston Budget. HAkl "JF S V few A particle is applied into each nostril amia agreeable. Price 50 cts. at druggists; by mall, resdatared. (W eta ELY BROTHERS st> W.rrJi St.. Newport <E YOlf wtaw a z-x_ . purchase one of the celebrated SMITH k WESSON rSa.-Jff9aSK arms. The finest small arms 7/ ever manufactured and the Ik J/ )/ wHWX first ch >lco of all experts. Manufactured in calibres 32,30 and 41-100. Sin- WW gle or double action. Safety Hammerless and iWay Target models. Constructed entirely of beat quality wrought areel, carefully im-jiucted for workmanship and stock, they are unrivaled for fin 1 h, durability and accuracy. Do not be deceived bycheap malleable cast-iron Imitations which are often sold for the genuine article and are not onlv unreliable, ibut dangerous. The SMITH k WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the barrels with firm's name, address and dates of patents and are guaranteed perfect in every detail. Insist npon having tho genuine article, and If your dealer cannot supply you an order s»nt to address below will receive prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue and prices f i rnished ution appiication. SMITI£ & WESSON, tWMentfon this paper. Springfield. Mass.

BRIGHTINEjS&DI AB ftps DISEASE AND HINDKED AILMENTS. Prominent physicians recommend Hi’lKhtiiie, and jobbers hi general carry it. Valuable information mailed free. Ask your druaKist for it or send *l to VVM. T. LINDLEY A CO.. 21H LaSalle St , Chicago" ULtU.W.I. It it «aje to tend money to thit houtt. Mention thit paper when you write, i ; - n , - Mwr ßD iW.OOO customers of ISM gladly testify that they INCREASED ALL YIELDS. IWMf A. IIEIYBTes, often DOUß LED them by sowing BALZER’S NORTHERN CROWN SEEDS. Becanße no other seed is so full of life, vigor and vitality—so prolific and early as Hainers. gtlhiraiai OAT NOVELTY-WHITE WONDER I & e .*J it L, a ;? d QVAllty. Scores of IMB customers say: UttEBSGIAITUVLKr MTUL Ki Yielded 6to 10 times os much os common oatal Itsenor- •"“““’"*£'222*2^—« mous y W 18 d P° to , lte £ reat Aoollng properties, long rXiW-V X'W e * rs and P lum P kernel,-. Early, flne, wonderful. f r waD * B ,jlk crops. Well he can have them every time FIU *Sll il it & « ! ,y sowing my seeds-yielding on wheat, 40 bu , barley 70 ■ 111juKwAM BIAh bu -> I ? ew coru ,a '> potatoes 640 b'l, etc. Headquarters gssasge aSgCMMEs If WF ISm WVUi P ald ' »’■ for Wonder Oet and Grain Samples QJK WKfrLn\NA^S urlOc r ° r <,iaot Cabbage and receive elegant < ».talngue.lflß!HtEßt3M||MK3HMKM| JOHN A. IALZEH. La Croese. ASK ANY NEWSDEALER on. POSTMASTER For THE CHICAGO LEDGER. If you cannot find it on eala at your .lews Depot or Postofllce, send your name and address upon a postal card and get a sample copy. THE CHICAGO LEDGER is th*, beat Family Paper in the West, and should be in every intelligent household. Address THE CHICAGO LEDGER. Chicago, 111.

FIDMC I We want to buy several la this locality. I AnMd . Cuxtis k 'pkiaat. 233 Broadway, N.Y. QMW UwathOTMaMaMkvßWVUMweywavktagtaraatkaa SVtaUl •« aaythiag <lm in IM wmM KltMv am Caatiyonikt run. Tanna rasa. AUreaa, TaVI a Co., Aagnata, Mataa.. ■ Ptso*s Remedy tbr Catarrh ia Um IB Best, Easiest to Use, and cheapest. M ■ Sold by druggists or sent by malt H 50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. ||| M. W. DUNHAM’S OAKI'JIWN FARM. 03,0G0 PERCHERON French coach morses, IMPOHTED. STOCK ON HAND: 300 STALLIONS of serviceage; 150 COLTS with pedigrees, superior indlBl „ BROODMARES (SOlnfoal by Brilliant, the most famous living sire). |W Best Qaallty. Prices Reasonable. V Terms Easy. Don’t Bsy without inspectrlng thia dreatest and Most SueeessTal Breeding- Establishment of Aaaexdcsu lataatlag pnrahaaara, aMraaa, for »O-pag« eaulogn*. M. W. DUNHAM, WAYNE, ILLINOIS. 16 waal Cklree. a. C. A M W. It'v bet Tamar Aim. A Klgta. HELP FOR 22 YEARS FOR THE. EILERT’S A | nif EXTRACT OF CHERRY Hits cured all coughs, colds, bronchitis, and; relieved asthma and consumption for all who have used it. Is not this an evidence of its merits and reliability? It is a surt and safe medicine for all bronchial troubles, and never fails to give satisfaction. Try it< under a full warrantee. Price. 50 cents andsl.oo per bottle. Prepared by Emmbbt Pbopbxetaby Co.. Chicago, 111. THE NEWSPAPER LIBRARY. A NEW PUBLICATION. Wo have commenced the publication of THE Newspaper library. This publication will be printed in the form of what has been known heretofore as our Free Library, and will be published bi-monthly; each number will oontaln a complete novel, blographj- or travels, and will be presented to every subscriber of the WEEKLY WISCONSIN. The works to be printed will be original and select novels and , biography from the current literature of the day. This method of giving to the readers of tho WISCONSIN a number of serial stories during the year will relievo tho columns of tho main paper for other matters more appropriately within tho province of a newspaper. It has become tho custom of many of the leading newspapers of the country to publish, from week to week. Instalments of serial stories In the columns of tho paper. The WISCONSIN has not been in tho habit of publishing this kind of literature; but In order to meet a popular demand for this class of; reading, we have determined upon the publication of a work snoh as we have above described. THE NEWSPAI’EB LIBRARY, as we propose to pubHsh it In conncotion with tho WEEKLY WISCONSIN. Is a novel idea, and has never to our knowledge been undertaken by any other publishers. It practically will give to the readers of the WISCONSIN two publications for the price of one. The first number of the Newspaper Library, con- , talnlng a story entitled “THE GAMBLER,"' translated expressly for tho Newspaper Library from tho celebrated Russian author,! Theo. Dostoievsky, will be issued the middle '■ of January, and thereafter the middle of, March, May, July. September and Novembersix numbers. The price of the Newspaper Library alone will be W cents a year, or 10cents per number. Samples sent on receipt of 4 cts. postage. The Newspaper Library will be sent freb to every subscriber of the WEEKLY WISCONSIN. regardless of other premiums. CRAMER, AIKENS & CRAMER. Milwaukee. Wla. B I prescribe and tally endorse Big (1 us the only specific for thecertaincure TO A of this disease. AMburuteta soi wM a H. INGRAHAM. M. D., [•iff Amsterdam, N. Y. ES Mfffesty kytks We have sold Big G for Itqiwxffl'stalMlfle y e « r8 t it »»» riyen tbo begt o f gmi,. OtaoinnatlJiMß faction.' Ohio. D. R. DY CHF. & CO.. W Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists. C.N.U. ~~ No. 4-80 ViTHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, v. please say you saw the advertisement in this paper.