Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 December 1895 — Page 7
Always Taking eold Is * common complaint It is due to Impure and deficient blood, and it often loads to serious troubles. The remedy Is found in pure, rich blood, and the one true blood purifier Is Hoods Sarsaparilla Hood’s Pills n . h^ OD .>° f y i3,wlth
Servants’ Wages in Ireland.
Advertisements in Dublin Freeman's Journal: GOOD GENERAL SERVANT WANTed—must be a good cook, able to do small washing and take charge of one child; wages £8 per year. Apply to 3 Emmet road. Inchicore. YOUNG GIRL WANTED TO ASSIST in housework and to mind children; wages £5. Apply to 26 Dargle road, Drumcondra, any day before 2 o’clock. YOUNG WELL-TRAINED HOUSE parlor-maid wanted—Good needlewoman; £lO, progressive. Apply, for three days, between 10 and 12, 48 Lower Gardiner street.
Mr. Caine’s Good Fortune.
Mr. Hall Caine was so affected by his Interview with Mr. Holmes, the accomplisher murderer, that he “broke down and had to leave.’.’ Others who met Mr. Holmes on former occasions broke down completely, but, unfortunately for them, they were unable to leave.—Boston Journal. It is waste of breath to talk any louder than we live.
TRUSTING WOMEN.
THEIR CONFIDENCE OFTEN LEADS TO SUFFERING. An Ohio Woman’s Experience, as Here Related, is Interesting to Every American Woman. (SVXCIAI. TO OVB LADT aiADIKS.', It is a very sad fact that the more a woman trusts to the skill of her physician in treating her female complaints, the longer she is apt to suffer. Lydia E. Pinkham fully realized this fact when she commenced that exhaustive study that has enabled the women of the world to help themselves. She discovered the source of female complaints, and produced the Vegetable Compound, which is their absolute cure. When such testimony as the following is given, the woman who thinks should act quickly, and no longer permit herself to trust to incompetent doctors. The Vegetable Compound is sold by all druggists, and every woman should have it
“ The doctors had told me that unfess I went to the hospital and had an operation performed I could not live. I had falling, enlargement, and ulceration of the womb. “I was in constant misery all the time; my back ached; I was always tired. It was impossible for me to walk far or stand long at a time. I was surely a wreck. I decided that I would give your Compound and Sanative .Wash a trial. “I took three bottles of Zydia E. Pinkham's Ve table Compound, and used two packages of Sanative Wash, and lam now almost well. lam stouter.and healthier than I have ever been in my life. My friends and neighbors and the doctors are surprised at my rapid Imfrovement. I have told them all what have been taking.” Mrs. Annetta Bickmeieb. Bellaire, Belmont Co., O.
The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF BOXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two -hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, . like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. ✓ Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and’enough of it Dose, pne tablespoonful.in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. THE AERMOTOR CO. does half th* world’s windmill bualness, because it has reduced the coat of Wind power to l.’Gjvbat It was.- It has many branch - m . houses, and supplies its coeds and repairs aIUUh at jour door. It can and does furnish a better article for less money than others. It makes Pumpinc and Geared, Steel. Galvanlxed-after-Completion windmills, Tllttnc and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Bunt Saw Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed van Grinders. On application it will name one ff. of these articles that It Will furnish until January Ist at-1/3 the usual price. It also makes Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send tor catalogue. Factory: 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets, Chlcaza Cntler’sCar-' Mate of lodine Inhalent and w Pocket Inhaler. Will positively cure CATARRH, BRONCHITIS and ASTHMA. Give It a trial. Price. SI; by mall, sl.lO, All Druggists. W. H. sMU H & CO.. Proprietors. 408 Michigan St., Buffalo, New York. AHllSWlMorphine Habit Cured In 10 In time. Bold by drugglits. fgf
HORRORS IN ARMENIA
TURKS AND KURDS ARE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD. AH Moslems Are Becoming Aroused— Should the Prophet Declare War, Butcheries Would Be Terrible—Sultan Hopes the Powers Will Quarrel Alarm for Constantinople. The heart grows sick over the recital of the outrages and butchery of the Armenians by. the Turks. So fearful were the massacres that it was hard to place reliance upon the eariler reports from the scene of disturbance. But as report after report came in they only confirmed the inhuman treatment heaped upon the helpless followers of Christianity. The testimony from a number of sources, whose reliability is undisputed, is that. the worst has yet to be told. The latest advices are that the extermination of the Armenians goes right on despite the protests of Christendom and the presence of the warships of the civilized powers in Turkish waters. The Sultan cannot stop the butchery even if he so willed. His time is taken up in planning to ward off the assassins who are seeking his life. Therefore the murderous Turks are left free to carry out their blood-thirsty propensities. Until a checkrein can be applied to these uniformed ruffians the massacre will go on in spite of the appeals brought to bear to have them stopped. For days past Turks and Kurds have been pouring into Constantinople from the devastated regions of Asia Minor. Their primary object is the disposal of the plunder which they have obtained during the massacres. They are also hopeful of a richer harvest in the event of the Sultan’s permitting a rising at Stamboul. Their stories, coupled with the display of plunder, have inflamed the lowest class of Moslems. They are ready to seize upon the slightest provocation for an attack. It is unwholesomely significant of this state of affairs that the government is seizing and deporting daily numbers of Armenians of the poorest but most robust class. f l( It is hard for the unseeing to believe — to realize that at this very moment, men, women and children are being butchered within sound of the guns of the fleets of Christian Europe. But such is the actual state of things, and while the sword of the Moslem runs red with Christian blood, Europe stands idly by uttering pub-‘ lie protests, whereas she should enforce her demands until the Turk was rendered harmless for oppression or wiped from the face of the earth. There should be no compromise when civilization meets savagery and fanaticism—the latter should go down to a resurrectionless grave. Since the beginning of the Turk’s rule of the sword in Armenia, only a few months ago, 500,000 people have per-
MAP SHOWING THE APPROACHES TO CONSTANTINOPLE.
ished or are on the verge, through starvation and suffering, of the grave. Of these 50,000 have been butchered outright and day after day the outrages and the tragedies continue, the unfortunate Armenians being crushed from the earth at the rate of nearly a thousand a day. What the sword leaves undone starvation completes, and by the time Europe awakes to its responsibility the Armenian question shall have settled itself by the complete extermination of the Christian population of the country. Holy War May Come. The condition of things in Turkey under Abdul Hamid is strikingly like what it was nearly twenty years ago under Abdul Aziz. Turkey was insolent then as she is now. In 1876 the massacres were in Bulgaria. Now they are in Armenia. Then it was the slaughter of Turks by Bulgarian Christians who despaired of help from the powers that provoked the horrible slaughters in return. Now the Armenian Christians, despairing of help from the powers, have planned and carried out an uprising, which in turn has been put down with ferocious cruelty by the Sultan.* In 1876 Abdul Aziz was called upon, by the powers to introduce reform* which were tantamount to giving his. Christian subjects immunities and rights not guaranteed to his Mohammedan subjects. The result was that the latter were inflamed to a dangerops pitch of revolt. That experience is duplicated now. Nothing more dreadful could happen to Christian humanity in the remote east than the outbreak of a “holy” war, a war in which the followers of Mahomet should draw the sword of extermination against not only every Christian missionary, but every citizen of a Christian state whereever found. When it is borne in mind that the followers of Mahomet number at the lowest calculation 200,000,000, some idea may be gained of what a general religious outbreak against Christianity among them would mean. There are 5,000,000 in Egypt, vast numbers iu the colonies of Southeastern at least 40,000,000 in India and 20,000,000 more In other British colonies.. The Sultan is the recognized head of the whole Moslem world, save Persia and Morocco, where the head of the faithful is Ali, son-in-law of Mohammed. There is only one way of proclaiming a holy war. There is only one man who can proclaim it. The Sultan is that man. When the formal words declaring war against a foe are uttered, according to strict Moslem ritual, every Mohammedan in Asia or Europe must respond as he hopes to attain paradise. All Turkey would be in an uproar at once. The fate of Christian missionaries to the southwest and southeast of the Sea of . Marmora would be sealed. Bloodshed would follow in all quarters of the East. Of course the powers would win in the end. The struggle would be a long one, so far as Abdul Hamid is concerned. His declaration of a holy war would mean his
own deposition; but, In the meantime, and afterward, what? In the meantime, one of the bloodiest wars of history, and afterward the revival of the rivalries of the powers in sharper form than ever. Great Powers Foea at Heart. Although the powers of Europe have agreed to act in combination and probably will maintain that attitude for the present, it is not believed that there is any real accord among them. They are rivals to the bitter end in the East. Their objects are conflicting, and it is only mutual fear which avails to preserve mutual deference. The powers do not care a whit for Turkey or its sovereign, and would sweep Abdul Hamid and his system off the face of the earth if they acted upon their impulses. But to do away with the Turkish empire means to invite a condition of things perhaps ten-fold
worse than that which now exists. If Turkey were effaced as a geographical entity the powers would have more trouble in agreeing as to the division of the land among the conquerors than they have had over any problem of European politics. Turkey must stand intact under some form of government, if the outward accord of the powers is to be maintained. The jealousies of England and Russia in Asia have been forcibly illustrated during the last twelvemonth in the JapanChina war and in the Corean imbroglio. But the matters at stake there are a mere bagatelle compared with those at the Bosphorous. It has been the steady policv of Russia for a hundred years to lose no move on the European chessboard that brings her nearer to Constantinople and the control of the Marmora Sea, and it is the determination of Europe that Russia shall not occupy Constantinople. This is the Eastern question: What to do with Constantinople? The powers would take all the risks of a holy war if they could be sure that the overthrow of
the Turkish empire and its partition would not fatally disturb the balance of power. FORTS OF THE DARDANELLES. What Gunboats Would Encounter En Route to Constantinople. Naval engineers are of the opinion that Constantinople cannot be successfully assaulted by water. They claim that the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus offer a protection that practically means the destruction of any fleet that should attempt to approach the city without the Turk’s consent. The Dardanelles from Sestos and Abydos to the Sea of Marmora is filled with torpedoes. The high, rocky shales bristle with a double line of fortresses. The entrance to the Dardanelles is narrow. The current is strong and nature has done everything to make the straits impregnable, except to furnish the guns. The forts on each side are built upon modern principles and mount Krupp guns of heavy caliber. The two largest forts are at the narrows, the one called
the Namazleh battery at Kilid Bahar and the other the Medjidieh, a little to the northward of the town of Ohanak. Both command the approach to the narrows and can deliver a cross fire that would make a big hofci in any modern fleet. The forts are not the chief reliance. The Turk has taken to the torpedo in a way that will astonish his enemies. The recent naval battles at the Yalu River and Port Arthur show the terrible effect of the modern torpedo when intelligently handled. Th? bottom of the Dardanelles is lined with torpedoes, and there are a number of submarihe mines. The torpedoes are arranged to be fifed by electricity from shore. Nearly all these fortresses along the Dardanelles have been built for many years, some for centuries. They haye been remodeled again and again to keep pace with the modern progress in warfare. The Dardanelles is the Hellespont, or sea of Helle, of the
It directly connects the archipelago, aa arm of the Mediterranean, with the Sea of Marmora, which is practically the immense harbor of Constantinople. It ia very narrow, and resembles rather a river at its mouth than a veritable sea. Defenses on the Bosphorus. Coming to Constantinoule from tha east, through the Bosphorus from the Black Sea, are heavy batteries on almost every point on either side. At the two Novas, where the channel of the Bosphorus farrows, there is a formidable array of fortifications. They are arranged for a cross-fire, and five of them are of recent construction. These mouna thirty heavy Krupp guns each and are capable of sinking any war ship. The Turk has been busily fortifying his frontiers since his last war with Russia, and he is now in a better position to fight than ever before.
STRAITS OF THE BOSPHORUS.
The old fortresses of Asia and Europe stand on either shore of the Bosphorus, about half way up, where the channel is unusually narrow, and at a point once traveled by the celebrated bridge of Darius. The fort of Asia, Anadoli Hissari, rises on the lip of a pleasant rivulet, which empties itself into the Bosphorus. The fort of Europe, Roumeli, Hissari, on the oposite shore, is of singular construction. The ground plan forms the characters of the prophet’s name, by wljom tradition says it was built in six days, by permission of the Greek Emperor. This fort possesses great strength, strategic and defensive. It is well supplied with water and the means of storing provisions. The city of Constantinople itself occupies a triangular promonotory above the Propontis. It has been strongly fortified on all sides, including the side washed by the sea and that which is the base of the triangle and connects it with the mainland. The walls extend twelve miles, sweeping from sea to isea, running along the whole length of the harnor and te/ minuting in the celebrated fortress of the Seven Towers. At some points the foundation of the walls is formed hy huge masses of rock, a species of architecture still to be traced in a few of the most ancient Grecian structures and formerly termed Cyclopaean. In other ports, particularly on the side of Marmorn, the masonry commences regularly from the edge of the water. The most ancient portion of the walls is necessarily that which incloses the ancient Byzantium, now Iriiown as the Seraglio Point, where the apex of the triangle divides the Propontis from the port, and instead of being peopled by the busy multitude of the city, is silent in the stateliness of its gilded palace and overhanging groves. These walls that are now standing were built over 1,000 years ago.
A Serious Defeat for the Arma of King Humbert in Africa. Another tragic chapter is added to the bloody history of European colonization in Africa by the defeat and almost annihilation of five companies of Italian troops, under Maj. Tosselli, by a large force of Abyssinians. The Italian troops were surrounded by 25,000 of the enemy and fourteen officers and 700 of the rank and file perished, leaving the fate of Maj. Tosselli and 300 more unknown. A force has been sent by Gen. Baratieri, commanding the Italian forces in Abyssinia, to the relief of Maj. Tosselli, but the prospects are that the Major and the remnant of his troops will have been exterminated before the arrival of the reinforcements. The soldiers who fell with the exception of the officers belonged to the colonial army. The disaster is the result of the efforts of Italy to establish a protectorate over Abyssinia. Those efforts date back to 1889, when Italy, in accordance with the provisions of the Berlin conference, notified the powers of Europe of a treaty concluded with the King of Abyssinia, by which the latter country and all hei dependencies were placed under Italian protection. Since then there have been rebellions and Considerable fighting, with the Italians generally coming out the victors. The defeat just sustained is the only serious one in the entire campaigns.
Judge Thurman’s Daughter Finds 4 Bonanza in the Colorado Desert. Mary Thurman, daughter of Allen G, Thurman and once the belle of Washington, has made the richest strike eve* known in the Colorado desert mining camps of Picacho, near Yuma. She was prospecting in the hills and found a vein that promises to make her a bonanza queen. Miss Thurman, while in Wash-
THE DARDANELLES.
ington, married Lieut. Cowles, now Uni. ted States naval attache in London. Cowles and she soon disagreed, and h< permitted her to get a divorce. Then she went West to San Diego and lived at Tia Juana, on the Mexican line. There she met and married Thomas Gifford, a dash, ing adventurer, who proved to have e wife and two children. Then she wenl home to see her mother before the oic lady died, but Judge Thunnan refused t< permit her to enter his door, and sh returned. She got a divorce from Gifford, and then surprised her friends by marrying “Bug” Holliday, the basebail player. She is known 'in all the mining camps of Southern California. John G. Cullman, who founded in 1873 the flourishing German town, Cullman, Ala., 01a the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, is dead.
ITALIANS MASSACRED.
MADE A RICH STRIKE.
Fortune’s Whirl.
John James Magee, the Guatemalan millionaire, twenty years ago was a poor collector of Insects, occasionally acting as British vice-consul at San Joae. One day the comiuandante sent for him, and Magee returned answer that hki would come presently. The official sent a squad of soldiers, seized Magee, and gave orders that be should receive seventy-five lashes on his bare back. At the close of this ceremony the commandante cried: “Give him twenty-five more, Just for luck.”' Magee complained to England, and that country jordered Guatemala to punish the official and to pay the victim five hundred dollars for every lash. Thus Magee received fifty thousand dollars tn a lump, which made him richer In coin than most men In Guatemala. Naturally, President Barrios Went Into partnership with him, and the entomologist became a big coffee planter and a dock builder for the ports. Nearly every one who lands In Guatemala now has to pay tribute to him, and he also owns rich mines and timber tracts. Three-fourths of his time he now spends in Paris. His nephew, William Magee, Is a member of several San Francisco clubs.
Disastrous Failure!
We .can mention no failure more disastrous than that of physical energy. It Involves the partial suspension of the digestive and assimilative processes, aud entails the retirement from business of the liver and kidneys. Only through the good offices of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters cau the restoration of Its former vigorous status be hoped for. When this aid has been secured a resumption of activity In the stomach, liver and bowels may be relied upon. The Blttersconquersmalarlaaud kidney troubles.
Mother of Pearl.
Mother of pearl is the hard, silvery, brilliant substance which forms the Internal layers of several kinds of shells. The Interior of our common oyster shells is of tills nature, but the mother of pearl used In the arts is much more variegated with a play of colors. The large shells of the Indian seas alone have this pearly substance of sufficient thickness to be of use.
$100 Roward, $100.
Ths readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces or the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have so inttoh faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any bkse (Jiat It tails to cure. Send for list of Testimonials.* » Address, F. J. CHENEV & 00., Toledo, 0. t>“Sold by Druggists, jcc,
The Difference.
Oh, yes, there is a marked difference between the big man mentally considered, and the little man. When the big man gets an idea he lays It away in his brain box for use when an emergency arises for it; but inject an Idea in the little man’s noddle, and it will leap out of his mouth the very first time he opens that organ.—Boston Transcript.
Dance to Raise Money.
Social dances have displaced church fairs as a means of raising money for the Sunday schools in El Toro, Orange County, Cal. It’s a bold departure, but is popular and successful. Give attention to the first symptoms of n Lung Complaint, and check the dreaded disease in its incipicuey, by using Dr. D. Jftyne’s Expectorant, a safe, old-fashion-ed remedy for ail affections of the Lungs and Bronchia.
Wholesale Theft of Diamonds.
Over $1,000,000 worth of diamonds are stolen every year from the South African diamond mines. A fair lady becomes still fairer by using that salutary beautifier, Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. “Hill's liair and Whisker Dye," Black or Brown. 50c. Bryant is said to have written “Thanatopsis” in a week. The work of translating Homer consumed four or five of his best years. The Most Simple and Safe Remedy for a Cough or Throat Trouble is “Brown’s Bronchial Troches.” They possess real merit. Marshall Pass, on the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, Is the highest point yet attained by a railroad In the United States; elevation, 10,855 feet. Piso’s Cure for Consumption Is an especially good medicine for Croup.—Mrs. M. R. Avent, Jonesboro, Texas, May 9th, 1891. Who waits until circumstances completely favor his undertaking will never accomplish anything. Hall's Hair Renewer is pronounced the best preparation made for thickening the .growth of the hair and restoring that which is gray to its original color. Brazil grows half the coffee crop of the world. Fits Stopped free by Dr. Kline's Area* Nerve Itestoi er. No Fite after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and ».00 trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, Mil Arch Bt„ Phil*. P« Mrs. Winslow's Soothimo Hravr for Children teething : sottens the sums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind 00110. fl) cents a bottle.
T AWARD. | I AL | [UM ? FOODS gone ha” e r few or tyofthis' creases! 3RYWHEREI !i lew York.
Rtabulies™
Mr. Frank Ratliff,* residing at Keyser, North Carolina, under date of June 10, 1895, says: “I was troubled with dyspepsia and my physician gave me Ripans Tabules and now I can eat all I want and it does not hurt me like it used to. I think they are good medicine. You can use my name if you want to.” Ripans Tabuiea are sold by druggists, or by mall If the price (50 cents a box) Is sent to The Ripans chemical Company, No. 10 Spruce Street, New Fork. Sample vial, 10 Cents. C. N. V. ’ No. 51-05 CnUrDNUCNT POSITION* to bo filled. Tske DUf Lnltff.l." I Civil Service Examination and secure appointment, information fr e. Washington ■ orrespoudeuce College, Pa Av. It 4tn st, Wash’ton, D. a
The Modern Mother.
Has found that her .little ones are Improved more by the pleasant laxative, Syrup of Figs, When In need of the laxative effect of gentle remedy than by any other, and that it is more acceptable to them, enjoy it and It benefits themJ' The true remedy. Syrup of Figs, is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup. Go. only. Archibald Clark, a Kentucky man, 1* a aomnunbullst, aud the peculiar direction his weakness taken is to go into his truck patch' and perform the labor he intended doing when awake.
J Get rid at once of the stinging, festering smart of » 1 BURNS oi SCALDS I « ot’tflae they’ll leave ugly acara. Read directions and use I ; fe- - ST. JACOBS OIL : ’— ' ~ ~T- 1 ———■— IXXCENIWh I / r. /X * Battle Ax , PLUG The largest piece of Go oct toJoarcco ever sold for 10 cents.
»NW York! An old-fashioned way •Hi MILES ver of getting there. Slow and safe, but hard [" " work. Most women, have got beyond this kind of traveling—found something better. N° w > why can’t you look at that other old>1'1? fashioned proceeding in the same light—washing things with soap and hard rubbing. That’s s l° w enough and tiresome enougn, / everybody knows, and it’s not as safe _. r as washing with Pearline. It’s really destructive, in fact, the wear of that constant rubbing. Break away from these antiquated ideas. Use modem, -zzz' \ ipl HFj methods. Pearline saves at every 11 ' point. Peddler* and »ome un*crupulou» grocer* will tell you " this 1* aa good aa* OCIIU or “the Mme aa Pearline.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline ia never peddled, tn e and if your grocer »end* you xomething in place of Pearline. be “ HaCK honext— >cnJit tack. JAMES PYLE, New Voefc
“Forbid a Fool a Thing and That He Will Do.” Don’t Use SAPOLIO ii nion’o ft 11 nrA- -a i I ■ ■ ■ I■Bk ■■ quick Consumption,” Mrs. 11l IMW II gW ■fllllßg 11. D. DARLING, Beaver | IW WF V Hfcl Meadow, N. Y., Juno 18,1895 b CONSUMPTION Cures Where All Else Falls. BEST COUCH SYRUP. | IIH TA-TKS POOD, USE IN TIME, SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. »B CTS. 18 JBuiL Double th 6 satisfaction obtained from ‘X 1 MB ordinary soap ° n ty half the expense 1 and bother. That’s why ’ thousands of thoughtful, \ V ■ thrifty women ; use Santa I t Claus Soap. They have [ I learned by practical, thorough y-T/ tests that for washday or every- li *> 2? trA day use there is no soap in the nA 7 world that nearly equals SANTA CLAUS SOAP 3 itH.il 7 Sold everywhere. Made only by v< L-d I The N. K. Fairbanh Company, - Chicago.
BEST nr THI WOBX.D. V tot 4wfhta\\\) nnfi \OxWT7 ¥ ctawntss -\ 1/ % xatarx \s @THE RISING SUS STOVE POLISH hi cakes for genrrJ blacking of a stonU THE SUN PASTB POLISH for • atri«* after-dinner shiafe' applied and mB libed with a elitS. Mena Bros., Props., Canton, Mm . C.kJL
