Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 July 1889 — Page 7

CARL DUNDER.

He Delivers an Address to the Children of America. Dear Shildrexs : Yon vhas all right. Doan’ let somepody make you belief dot yon doan’ has some good times. If I could pe some shilds again I kick oop my heels like a bird und doan’ care for nopody. I shall nefer be shmall again, und wear some kneebreeches und play horse mit a broomstick, und vhen I reflect on dot I feels some lumps in my throat. Yhen a man comes along und says he vhas glad he vhasn’t some shildrens any more doan’ you pelief him. He says dot pecause he doan’ take any comfort and doan’ want nopody else to. He vhas lame und cross, und his bones ache, und his head vhas growing bald, und he vhas shealous of you und wants revenge. Maype it vhas petter for me dot I vhas a girl, but I doan’ know. It vhas awful nice to be a sweet young girl, und to be called angels, und to has der poys look at you so shently like a sheep. If you vhas a girl doan’ you be ashamed of it. Dot vhas all right und according to Hoyle. Maype you can’t climb trees, run out nights und go in swimming py cter mill pond, but if you go py a circus you vhas in der front seats, und somepody always pays for your ice cream und puvs your ticket to der picnic. If I vhas a girl I keep my face so clean ash nefer vhas. I make my voice shust like music. I walk along mit a nip! nip! nip! I keep my hands white und my hair combed, und vhen somepody meets me und says: “Hello, Susan, how you vhas ?” I answer him: “If you please, sir, my name vhas Birdie, und I vhas so weller ash nefer vhas.” If I could be a leedle girl, I learn how to sew, und knit, und make some bread, und shplit wood, und bring up coal, und wash dishes, und hoe in der garden, und den vhen I grows oop und vhas married my husband would say: “Ah, noble womans, you vhas der capital prize in der lottery!” How bully it vhas to bS some boys. He doan’ has some taxes to pay—nopody talks politics by him—he doan’ has some barns dot burn down mit no insurance. Nopody wants to borrow money of him—no gas bills to pay—nopody comes to insure his life. All lie has to do vhas to go by der schoolhouse, play marbles, fly kites, see der circus procession, eat sweet-cakes und grow oop to lie Governor. Dot vhas all, shildrens. Doan’ you bo troubled. It vhas all right. You vhas getting along petter as could be expected by der circumstances, und all you has to do vhas to wipe off your noses und speak nothings' to nopody.— Detroit Free Press.

The Noble Red Man in Real Life.

Chamberlain (Dak.) letter in the Omaha Bee: The Sioux Indians, as looked at from the Eastern view, are a race that is greatly abused by the Government, but from the view taken by the Western people, who have had a chance to study their ways and habits, the only good Indian is the dead one. At the Lower Brule agency there are about 1,200 Indians supported in idleness by the Government, costing annually $150,000. The great reservation contains 24,000,000 acres of fine farming and grazing lands, and an area nearly as large as the State of New York, and five times as great as Massachusetts, inhabited by about 23,000 Indians, or about as many people as live in two tenement blocks in New York City. These lands are not used at all by the Indians, as the Government furnishes them with provisions, clothing, farm machinery (which they never use), cattle, horses, and harness, and in fact almost everything. In the way of clothing the Government furnishes fine woolen blankets which cost about $4.50 apiece. As soon as the noble red man gets his blanket he crosses the river to Chamberlain and sells it for from 75 cents to sl. The same is also the fact with clothing, the most of the farmers dressing in waukapomna, which, is the Sioux for Government goods. Maj. Anderson, the agent at Crow Creek, is of the opinion that the Indians will never become civilized as long as the Government supports them. He is decidedly in favor of the Indians taking their land in severalty, and for the Government to furnish each family with a complete farm outfit, then tell them that they must support themselves, and he thinks that when they see that the Government means business the Indian question will be settled.

The Indian buck scorns 'work and thinks that only the squaws are. made to work. A pretty good illustration of this is told by one of the agency officials. I give it as it was told to me. “Last winter, as I w v as on my way to Brule Bottom, I ran across a team of ponies trying to pull a large lumber •wagon up the hill, but it was too heavy for them, and the buck that was driving ordered his two squaws out to help the pdnies, but still they could not make it. I asked him wliy he did not get out, and all the answer I got was a grunt. Finally, taking pity on the squaws, who were almost frozen, I added my muscle to that of the squaws and ponies, and we finally got the ‘noble red man’ and his wagon to the top of. the hill.” k Another pretty good story is told by a contractor, who had the contract to build SBO,OOO worth of houses for the Indians. The houses were all built, but the Indians did move into them. Instead, they moved their tepees or ! tents next to the houses, and during the winter they tore down and burned (tip all the houses. This shows how

much the Indians appreciate what the Government does for them. They know that the Government will support them, and as long as it does they will be a shiftless, lazy, and uncivilized race.

Joke About Gen. Harney.

The recent death of Gen. Harney, the oldest general in the United States army, justifies the republication of the following good story about the old hero. It occurred at Camp Yerde, Texas, where Harney was in command of the post: He was an intensely dignified officer, and if there was one thing he detested more than another it was undignified haste. One evening, just as he was about to hold dress parade, he perceived that he had forgotten his handkerchief, and as the weather was very hot, he said to his orderly: “Go to my quarters quick and bring my handkerchief. ” The orderly touched his. cap and started for the quarters, several hundred yards distant. After he had proceeded a short distance, remembering that there was no time to lose, he broke into a trot. “See that scoundrel running as if the Indians were after him. If there is anything I hate it is to see a soldier running instead of marching properly. Here, my man,” continued Harney to another soldier, “go after man and tell him I say to walk, d—n him!” The second soldier started after the first, but as the first one kept on running, the second one saw his only chance to deliver the message was to hurry up, so he, too, broke into a run. To say that Harney swore is to use but a mild, expression. “Here, Sergeant, go after that man and tell him if he doesn’t stop running I’ll hang' him up by the thumbs.” The sergeant started out in a brisk walk, but as his predecessor had a good start, he, too, began to run as hard as he could. “If all three of the scoundrels ain’t running like jack rabbits!” ejaculated Harney. “I’ll show ’em.” And tucking his sword under his arm, he started in pursuit as fast as he could run, but suddenly remembering his dignity he came to a halt and walked stiffly and slowly back to the place where the dress parade was to come off. —Texas Siftings.

Beautiful Killarney.

The spectator at Ivillarney will find wood, water and mountain in every conceivable form and aspect, so diversified and in such unlimited change, that it is impossible for the eye to rest from any point upon any spot where some combination of the three does not return a picture of beauty or grandeur. Entirely aside from historic or religious association of thought, and with every ruin, shrine or legend, so quickening to the imagination, expunged, for this simple physical fact alone, the Killarney region will ever remain the most beautiful spot in the world. Forest is here in trackless waste, where the red deer hide, in grove, in copse; in matted masses hanging from inaccessible heights. Shrubbery is here in such luxuriance that its richness and profusion cannot be elsewhere equaled outside the tropics. Water is here in such glints and gloamings as no pen or brush can adequately depict; in lakes that startle one as if in sudden awakening consciousness of surpassing dream; in torrents solemn and mighty; in cascades filmy as streams of lace; in rivers tortuous and wild, songful and murmurous; in pools deep, dark and silent. Mountains are liere with soft and billowy ascent; with crags and cliffs majestic, where eagles nest and scream; with peaks above the All these in all forms are Killarney’s so tenderly, so sweetly and so full of surpassing loveliness, one can no less than throb with the loftiest exaltation and exclaim: “Here stood the great Artificer, and lovingly builded and blessed. ” —Edgar L. Wakeman, in Worcester Spy.

Reason Enough.

“Whenever you punish a child,” sav tlxose wise people who find it so easy to give good advice, “always be sure that the child understands perfectly why you do so.” The mother of a certain Miss Alice acted upon this principle, but is not sure that it is always successful. The little girl was in the habit of crying upon the very slightest occasion. Finally she was warned that the next time she offended in that way she should he punished. Boon afterward she was heard bawling lustily. “What are you crying for?” inquired her mother. “Becauth Bridget will not let me go out to play.” The threatened punishment was promptly administered. “Now, Alice,” said her mother, “do you know why you were punished ?” “Eth, mamma.” “Why was it ?” “Becauth Bridget would not let me go out to play.”

Circumstances Alter Cases.

Fanny—The new garters which you bought yesterday are not pretty at all. Emma—What difference does it make? Nobody sees them. “Ah, but it may rain.” Dolly — l don’t see how there can be any humor in your profession. Doctor—W r hy, my dear, a miser died on my hands last week and I had to give the cause of his death on the certificate as enlargement of the heart. The young woman who boldly states that she likes to be hugged should be immediately repressed.

Potatoes.

That the potato is the most popular of'all the vegetables cannot be denied, for there are few homes in our own country in which it does not form an important part in each day’s fare. Indeed, in the majority of homes it makes its appearance at each meal, either boiled, baked, or in some of the many dishes in which it is the principal part. No matter in what way it is cooked it is generally welcome. As to its healthful properties authorities disagree, but where any harm has resulted from the use of potatoes it can usually be traced to the cooking of them. A soggy, watery potato is one of the most unhealthy things one can eat, yet this is too often tlie kind that is generally put on a table. To be sure, the most important thing to consider is to have the vegetable good, yet a good cook may render a very poor potato palatable, while a bad cook can render a good one positively uneatable. There are few ways of cooking a potato as acceptable to a lover of this vegetable as boiling, uroviding it is done properly. It is a mistake made by many women to cut off the ends or dig out the eyes. If a nice, mealy boiled potato is wanted, it can never be obtained if the skin is broken before boiling. Always choose as good potatoes as can be had, and wash in several waters until perfectly clean, but do not cut in any part unless there is an appearance of rot. which ought always be cut out. Have the potatoes as near one size as possible, put in a pot or saucepan, and cover them with boiling water. Set on the stove and let boil, but be careful that they do not boil too fast, or they will break into pieces before they are done. Before setting on the stove, throw into the water a teaspoonful of salt. Keep the pot covered, while boiling, until the potatoes are done, which will be from twenty minutes to half an hour, according to their size. To tell when they are done, try with a fork, and if the fork goes through the thickest part of one easily, they are ready to be taken from the stove. Remove the pot from the stove and drain off all the water, then set it on the back of the stove with the cover partly off, so as to let out the steam, and shake it once or twice so the potatoes may dry equally on all sides. Serve as soon as possible, and if the potatoes are not mealy, the fault lies in themselves, and not in the cooking. Never cover potatoes tightly after draining, without first letting out the steam, or they will be sure to be soggy and watery, nomattar how good a vegetable they were previous to boiling. The above recipe is from an Irish Avoman, consequently it is good, for no matter how deficient she may be as to the cooking of other articles of food, she is always an expert at boiling potatoes.—Boston Budget.

The Closing of an Important Outlet.

The blockade of a port is not more injurions to its commerce than is even the temporaryobstruction of the bowels to the health of the system. Constipation necessarily arrests the secretion of bile, impedes and disorders digestion, and poisons the circulation. The safest and most effective, as it is also the most genial, laxative and anti-bilious medicine in existence is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, and it is more than probable that its sovereign efficacy as a preventive and remedy for entermittent and remittent fever is. largely due to its reformatory action upon the liver, an organ prejudicially involved in all malarial complaints. Persons with a tendency also to rheumatic, neuralgic and kidney trouble cannot do better than to antagonize it with Hostetter’s Stomacn Bitters,' which invariably checks it at the outset. The weak, moreover, are invested with strength by this fine invigorant.

Swallowing the Insult.

“You saw% sir,” exclaimed the actor, choking with wrath as he rushed into the newspaper office after the evening performance was over and leaned over the editor's table, “how I w r as treated this evening. I was hissed, sir! I was called a contemptible scoundrel, sir ! The ruffians in the gallery threw cabbages and dead cats on the stage, and a cowboy in one of the boxes shot off a lock of my hair. It’s galling to my pride as an actor, sir, but I look at it in purely a business light. There w on’t be standing room the rest of the week. Do it up in a column article in to-morrow morning’s paper, with a scare head over it, and give all the particulars. Here’s $lO.” —Chicago Tribune.

Climate for Consumptives.

The several climates of Florida. Colorado, and California have each been much prescribed for sufferers from lung disease, yet thousands of the natives in those States die of this fatal malady. A far more reliable remedy is to be hud in every drug storo in the land, and one that can be used at home; a remedy which is sold, by druggists, under the manufacturers’ positive guarantee that, if taken in time and given a fair trial, it will effect a cure, or money paid for it will be promptly returned. We refer to that world-famed remedy for consumption (or lung-scrofula) known as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is the only remedy for this terrible disease possessed of such superior curative properties as to warrant its manufacture in selling it under a guarantee. Don’t hawk, and blow, and spit, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Of druggists.

A Suitable Occasion.

First Waiter—Did you ever have the bad luck to spill water over a customer ? Second Waiter—Yes, once; but I got out of it all right. First Waiter—How so? Second W r aiter—Why, it was at a Baptist anniversary banquet, and the gent seemed to take it as a matter of course. —Burlington Free Press. Angry husband—What I wanted was a wife who would be a helpmeet. Angry wife—Huh! What 1 1 wanted was a husband who would supply meat to help.

The Beds of Royalty.

Clarence House is one of the most comfortable houses in London, and is famous for its good beds, for the only daughter of Alexander 11. of Russia is, like many Muscovit-*- very particular about her beds, and wiil tolerate in her house none but the very best. Even when a mere child, and long before her marriage, she was so particular about this very important item in domestic comfort that, to insure the sheets being tightly stretched over the mattress, she used to have them sewn down, for even the slightest crease or wrinkle would entirely destroy the repose of this imperial spoilt child for the night. Her Royal Highness used to be greatly chaffed al>out this weakness by members of our royal family when first she came to this country, but the Queen, who is also very particular about her beds, stuck up for her, and, although now the sheets are no longer sewn down to the mattress, they are composed, of the most exquisitely fine linen that can be procured, and stretched like a tight rope over the most perfect mattresses that can be manufactured in Paris, in which capital the making of mattresses has been brought up to the level of a fine art.

A curious aud amusing chapter might indeed be written about the bedrooms of illustrious personages. The ex-Em-press Eugenie is quite as particular about her beds as the Duchess of Edinburgh or our gracious sovereign, and quite agrees with the first-named lady as to the fineness of the linen and the tightness of the drawing of the sheets, but her Imperial Majesty has an odd fancy to have her bed so low as to give a visitor to the imperial bedchamber the impression that the widow of Ciesar is almost sleeping on the floor. It is, indeed, hardly elevated more than a foot from the floor, as all who have visited in old days the private apartments at St. Cloud, Compiegne, and the Tuileries will remember. Another curious bed is that of Sarah Bernhardt. It is nearly fifteen feet broad, and when the great comedienne is indisposed and receives her intimate friends reposing on her couch, she looks like a little gold-en-liaired bird lost in a great sea of white satin.— Modei'n Society. What In the world Is the use of sitting around waiting for something to turn up? You might just as well sit down in the meadow and wait for the cow tQ come up to be milked. Get up and shake yourself and make up your mind to turn up something. If you have nothing delinite in your mind, then write to 15. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va., and they will tell you a thing or two that will make you jump for joy.

Hard Times.

“By Jove, but these are hard times,” said a jolly fellow’ the other day. “I can’t earn enough to give my wife and children a trip to the beach.” “That’s rather hard.” “Hard! I should think so. Why, I earned only $75 last month, and it cost SSO for household expenses.” “I should think that out of the remaining $25 you could have given your wife and children a trip to the beach.” “Yes, but I had to use that $25 for club dues and the expenses of a couple of yachting excursions I took W’ith the boys.” —Boston Courier. Fob washing flannels, Dobbins’ Eloctrio Soap is marvelous. Blankets and woolens wasued with it look like new, and there is absolutely no shrinking. No other soap in the world will do such perfect work. Guest —“See here, one of your waiters has spilled a plate of soup over this lady’s dress.” Proprietor—“Be calm, sir. We will take the price of the soup out of his next week's wages.”

A Fair Trial Of Hood’s Sarsaparilla will convince any reasonable person that it does possess great medicinal merit. We do not claim that every bottle will accomplish a miracle, but we do know that nearly every bottle, taken according to directions, does produce positive benefit. Its peculiar curative power is shown by many remarkable cures. “I was run down from close application to work, but was told I had malaria and was dosed with quinine, etc., which was useless. I decided to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and am now feeling strong and cheerful. I feel satisfied it will benefit any who give it a fair trial.” W. B. Beamish, 261 Spring St„ New York City. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for *5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar HAMF STIinY Bookkeeping .Business Forms, r ? * V" * •Penmanship,Arithmetic,Shorthand,etc., thoroughly taught bymail. Circulars PKyv>-'T H Business College. Buffalo, N.Y. MENTION I HIS PAPER .him wumaa To ..vuiimu, Johnstown Horror! WANTED in every township. Terms, ,50 per cent.: out htK,*)c. National Pub. Co., 130 Adamsßt„Chicago,Hi. yu.Nl lON THIS PAPER whim warns** to ADviariuii. Clip IOIS IIHIS, Large and small farms and pastures. Very rich land. Delightful climate. Bend for pamphlet. TEXAS INVESTMENT CO., Corsicana, Texas.

AGENTS *7? per , month expenses p»*<i active mail or woman to Mil our good. WANTED by »« n, p | « »nd live at homo. Salary paid ni| promptly and expense. In advance. Full parti fl ticular* aud urniple caw FREE. Wo mean juit cal ADV ’»'■•* Mjr. Standard Silverware oALflni. Co., Lock Box B3og, Hoe ton, Matt. MENTION THIS EAFEK wham wjunaa to .n■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the Wk J*Beßt, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest ||J ■ Sold by druggists or sent 50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. Iglf EM HALF RATES P Farming Regions WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST.

JOSEPH H. HUNTER,gSSjICs#*® ■ ™■ ■ J FKNtflOKi without DKLAY-

JACOBS OH For Rheumatism. NEW EVIDE NC E OF CURE. Several Tear*. mt North it. Foul street Buff«r*d a«rtr*l year* with rheomatlm; an a bit to walk; After rubbing t with St. Jacobs OU U dieappoarod, hat not returned in four jroart. CHAS. OANTHER. In the Knee*. Rochottor. N. T. July S, ’M. Had rh.umitiim in knaet four woekt. One bottle of St. Jacob. Oil cured mo entirely. K. H MAKE, Pub of "Volktblatt." In the Side. Stccaton, Cal., Juno 14,1888. Had rheumatlim in tide for over a weak; uted Bt. Jacobt OU; it cured mo and hat remained cured. JULIUS GEDTKE. At Drvooists and Dealers. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore, M<l. RftoM a day. Samples worth 82.15, FREE;, ratine* not muter the horde's feet. Write BnwuVAPCFtrr Safety Rein-Holder Co.. Holly. Mich. 1 MENTION THIS TAPER on> wunm to .OTtaettaat. 1 CATON’S FRENCH VITALIZERS. i&ZSXTT, vfl 1 Ull Manly Vifet. and the only Lafitimat# Specific for Box uni Dnbilhj tad L**t vitality kavva. A MarvelUua laviMrator, oaiira> »Y btmlsia ly Mail, ft I. • far $&. tltculm fra*. DR. CAION, Bo«taa. MENTION THIS PA BILK hhbn wimm to ad Tennant* DETECTIVES Wauted In ferry county. Shrewd men to act under Inttructhn. I Id our Secret Sorrier. Experience not uece..trr. Send to. .lamps GrannanDstectivsßureauCo. 44 Arcade, Cincinnati,o,! Velocipedes, Bicycles, Tricycles! CHILDREN’S CARRIAGES, Ladies’ and 6ents’ Rattan Chairs and Rockers At Factor? Price*. Good* dehe•red to all point* wltbtn 700 mllet of Chicago. Send for Catalogue. CHAS. RAISER, 62 and 64 Clybourn Avenue, xTjtYpT*; CHICAGO. ILL. NORTHERN PACIFIC Ihlow price railroad lands » FREE Government LANDS. (FIIIUOIII OF ACRBB of each In Mlnnrxota. North Dakota, Montana. Idaho, Waahinjrton nnd Oregon. CClin EAR Potdleations with Maps iteKcrtbingTh* oenurun IW Agricultural, Orating and Timber Lauda now open to Settler* Sent Fro*. Addreta <m MdUßoaiGw. kvtfmttr’ SIS.FREE TRAOE PRICES! t Wo are now Molliiur our WESTwH \ Jm M *L i,PROVED SINGER sewin" MAWwi r SR CKlNE—*iimo a* cut —comiileta ■ with all attachments ami w trnf Ml ranted for 5 years for onlv sls. eg -» a I tend for circular und seefullie-- —. IB JBKfln scriptiou of this mill other atvleg to M. A. SCULLEN & CD., West Lake St., Chicago, ill. MENTION THIS TAPER .... warn.# re eaeaantaa.. RADWAY’Q PELLS 0 The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy For the cure of all disorders of tha STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KIDNEYS, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASES, LOSS of APPETITE, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION, COSTIVENESS, INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS, FEVER, INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS, PILES, and all derangements of the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or DELETERIOUS DRUCS. PERFECT DIGESTION will bo accomplished by taking RADWAY’S PILLS. By so doing ZDyspieyDsia, SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMACH, BILIOUSNESS, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten contribute Its nourishing properties to the support of the natural waste of the body. Price 20c. per box. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. nSTIt your Hton-keeper In out of thorn, mall the price to KADWAY & CO., 33 AVarreib Street, New York City.

A NEW INVENTION ■*ALMER’S MAGNE l"” IUHALLIifUh Patented June 12, JdJSSH Prlce^n^oUwtJ^fflP Magnetism and Menthol as a Remedial and Curative Agent. From time to time many Inventions and devices have been placed upon the market claiming to cure catarrh, neuralgia, bronchitis, etc., many of which are fluid to coutaiu electric or magnetic curative power*. pr. Palmer la a gentleman who has devoted a life of study to the subject of catarrh and diseases of the' head, throat, and lungs, and some time since he commenced a series ot experiments with a view to determining whether any combination could be formed which would kill the parasite and act as a healing power at the same time, and at length suoceeded in determining that menthol, when combined with magnetism, would do so, but how to arrange these seemingly opposite agents so as to render their use convenient and effectual was a question of isoe ky. At len«tli he succeeded in contlping within a vulcanite tube three inches long and about in diameter a perfect mag‘PA I '/’ of “ coll of steel wire, in °£r tb / 8 ™ ttery ls stored a line grade of ttomthol. The cuds of the tube are closed by nickel caps, which, when removed, admit of the S^!i«? b i“ lat i on ot tbe electro mentholized air. The . ac£B a *. a gertqacide, while tb<f roagoeto?P C A I P force stimulating the weakened nerves of u!,7<‘?, 1 , H . eaw< r, d par£B into healthy action forms a wonderfttl healing power, thereby successfully stopping any lurtber depredations. y stopping , P“ e fumes when inhaled are refreshing and cool*s¥j ®j?d tor the immediate relief and speedy cure of “J*, rrl1 ’ cold in the head, hay fever, headache, neuralgia, catarrhal deafness, etc., it is unequaled. It cures headache in live minutes. Sore throat isP n ® ot the diseases immediately affected by the InP a |?Jj. ICommencing 1 Commencing colds can be broken up in 24 ® £e .T iftjtoratloiis trom tills little benefacwwi,L, t iroat . UlKl , ll< ' ud ', al,<:l Produce sound fSfiJSSS? . K ?' e, ‘P at mght. it has no equal. The - P* e , aHal| t anil effect wonderful. hifnwJ oyt> f Ptyiced on the market Deiore. Its price in moderate. Its working it» marthesMnvenUqus lUily € “ n aflord t 0 be without one of Beware of imitation, as there are unscrupulous ir ,' tbo manufacture of a spurious * n A,? f r ,iV« l « tro " K i y resembles the genuine. Instrument? 1011 *' tehUrnomalß - etc., »ent with each. ** yo S are afflicted with Catarrh, send <ll.OO and tC .^ haler ’ wUlch U certain to afford A rTVisv w d . a Permanent cure. Address K. Chicttgo.^ia, Weßt<JlU A KCUt, 271 Franklin St, M 1 prescribe and fully «n----dorse Big G as the only specific tor the certain cur* TO t of this disease. *1 o. H. INGRAHAM, M. D., EY - Amsterdam, N. Y. Ba nrde.lyky *• We hav* sold Big G for rAlUtuisOhaaicalQa many years, and it has W given the beat of sailsfaction. D. R. DYCHE4 CO.,^ *BI.OO. Soldby Druggists, c - y - No. 29-8 o"“ WHfi* WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, In th£ I J>!per. ar yo “ * aw thc advertisement