Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 9 July 1891 — Page 3
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t.,r Hint A for. Travelers.
Nausea from the motion of th may be prevented, says the La ?|vr dies' Home Journal, in the following "way: Take a sheet of writing papei I? iarire enough to cover both the chesi and stomach, and put it on uncle the clothing, next to the person. I v*f" one sheet is not largo enough pastt the edges of two or three together 5* for the chest and stomach must bf 'ij well covered. Wear the paper thu.' '~k as long as you ar.2 traveling, anc 1'' -changed every day if your journey a long one. Those who have tried i. say it is a perfect defense.
Those to whom the term "sleeper' Is a hollow mockery ma}' profit b\ She experience of salesmen and oth ers who travel frequently, and have the bed made up with the pillow to ward the locomotive. Just why this should make sleep easier is not ex alained, but the plan is highly rec 6m mended. you are ever in straits for a clear handkerchief or two when no wash woman is within easy call, try this plan: Upon reaching your hotel takt all your soiled handkerchiefs, was!1 and rinse them, and spread them out smoothly on the window-panes. Bt. sure that there are now creases, anc that the corners form right angels. When dry and carefully folded no one could teil that they had not beer, ironed. Heavily embroidered hand kerchiefs will not look as smoothe as olain ones, but will certainly defy deletion across a car aisle.
Plame(
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oinmer If yc
It is proposed doing away with the aid system of lightning rod protec fcion and replacing the rods with narrow ribbons of copper, which will «se up the energy of the lightning and save the building from destrue fcion.
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PREDICAMENT.
KANSAS JUDGE—" Jury show any SSGNA uv reachin' a verdict That thar Buck Thorn has held out agin the rest about long enough."
BAILIFF—" They've reached it now, yer honor, an' they wisht you'd come in tiie jury room an' hear it."
JUDGE—" What under the sun! Why don't you bring 'ein in here an* let 'em speak for themselves?"
BAILIFF—" Wal, you see, yer honor, they'd stood for twenty four hours leven for conviction an' Buck for acquittal. Finally, to sorto settle it, he opened up a tittle game uv poker, stakin' his agreement agin their money. Buck won an* it so proceeded till they hadn't nuth'n' left but their raiment. Now, Buck's got the slothes, too, an* refuses to let his property1 go out uv the jury room."
SYRUP OF FIGS.
Produced from the laxative and nutritious juice of California figs, combined with the medicinal virtues of slants known to be most beneficial to n:e human system, acts gently ou the ridneya, liver and bowels, eiTectually Hieansing the system, dispelling colds ?od headaches, and curing habitual fionstipation.
The Typical Modem City. "be Century for July. Paris is the typical modern city. the work of transforming the abyrinthine tangle of narrow, dark, uid foul medieval alleys into broad nodern thoroughfares, and of pro'iding those appointments and conveniences that distinguish the wellordered city of ourda}' from the old)ime cities which had grown up formess and organless by centuries of accretion—in this brilliant nineteenth fentury task of reconstructing cities a their physical characters, dealing srith them as organic entities, and endeavoring to give such form to the visible body as will best accommoiate the expanding life within, Par's las been the unrivaled leader. Ber in and Vienna have accomplished ^«agrifieent results in city-making md great British towns—Glasgow.
Birmingham, Manchester, cud oth ers—have in a less ambitious way wrought no less useful reforms bui ?aris was the pioneer. French pub lie authorities, architects and engi ,iaers were the first to conceive ef ectually the ideas of symmetry anc spaciousness, of order and conven isnce of wholesomeness and cleanli luess in urban arrangements.
i: Good As Gold
So enthusiastic ar# thousand* of people over tli oenefi'a derived from Hood's Sarsaparilla, tlia 'hoy cau liardly lind words to express their conti! pace in and gratitude far thin.medicine. "Wortl t* weight ih KOW" is a favorite expression of the* warm friends.
If you lire in need of a pood medicine to pnrif1(JIB bkmd, build UP your gtrensrtli, cure dyHpepsia «r create uti appetite, try flood's Sar«aparilla. .'
K, B. lie «ure to get only
Hood's Sarsaparilla
«old by all druggists, II sir for ?5. Prcparei anly by C. I. FIOOD A CO., Lowell, MURB. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR.
The Soap at Cleans
Most
is Lenox.
INDIANA STATE W.WS.
Seymour has a street railway. Peru will have freo raall delivery. Muncie has organized a trades union. The Anderson flint bottle works will be enlarged.
Muncie glass factories liave closed for the summer. Hamilton county reports an enormous yield of wheat.
Steel ship-building is now an industry of JelForsonville. The army worm has made its appearance in Howard county.
Bainbrif'g* has organized a military company, headed by George F. Scott. Muncie ordered a car load of lire works for its municipal celebration of the Fourth.
A district meeting of Odd Fellows will be held at Lafayette July 10. and at Lozansport. July 23.
Thomas Worrell, of Clark county, has a shepherd dog that knows the narue of every horse and cow on the farm.
The bones of a man six feet in height, representing an unknown race, were found in a mound near English last week.
A copper box filled with continental scrip was unearthed at Leavenworth a few days ago. The bos was inscribed "II, 13., 1S2-5."
A rear-end collision on the Monon six miles west of Lafayette, on the Gth, killed Aaron Hock, of Delphi, and injured engineer Meyers, Frank Wyatt and Julius Dorneko.
A number of gas regulators in Howard county have been recently struck by lightning, and local meteorologists are trying to figure out the-affinity between electricity and natural gas.
Tne busy, brick-making village of Littie Ferry, has a sensation. Charles Miller lie village barber, fell off into a doze in his shop 'ay. Charles Ulazel. who wanted a a "o. awoke the sleeping barber. He was startled by Miller exclaiming: My God, can't see, I am blind!" \nd the man \v .'totally blind.
James Myers, aged fifteen years, adopted sen of James Larltnore, near Anderson, was attacked by a bulldog and horribly bitten. The lad would have been killed, but a shepherd dog went to his assistance and, seizing the bulldog by the throat, Anally compelled hirn to release the boy. Myers was bitten fourteen times in one arm, and the other was also badly tprn.
Isaac Montgomery, ag twenty-two, died at New Amsterdam, Harrison county* Tuesday morning. His death was the result of a fiendish prank played on him a few nights ago. Some of his companions nailed him !n a box and told him they were going to throw him in the river. When he was released it was found that he was ^adlv hurt by having a nail driven in one of his shoulders. Next morning he had lost his reason, and before he died became a raving maniac.
Delaware county claims the honor of having among its citizens the oldest born Hoosier. He lives ar De Soto his name is Asail Thornburg, and he is ninety-eight years old. He voted for John Quincy Adams for President, and has voted at every Presidential election since. He was at Greenville when Gen. William Henry Harrison negotiated the treaty with the Indians, and was a delegate to the conven. tion that nominated Gen. Harrison for President he also had the pleasure of voting for the grandson, Benjamin Harrison, for the same office, nis history is a part of the history of Indiana. Mr. Thornburg's health is reasonably good, and he promises well to round out a century. He lived over seventy years with the wife of his youth, she having died about five years ago. A son, Joab Thornburg, lives in the same house with his father, who Is well up in the seventies and was the first white child born in Oelawa^e county.
Otto Krause, aged two years and a half, wa9 fatally poisoned by drinking whisky Tuesday at Seymour. The child was the son of William H. Krause, a prominent business man of this city, who left Monday morning on a visit to relatives in Germany. The day before leaving Mr. Krause purchased a quart bottle of whisky a part of which he had put into a pOcket flash or use on his journey, leaving the rest in t.he bottle for medicinal use in the family °n his absence. He was in the habit of giving the children a teaspoonful each norning as a tonic. Mr. Krause left on the 4 o'clock train Monday morning, leaving the whisky on the table within the. '•each of the little child. An older brother liscovered little Otto lying on the floor isleep, with the bottle of whisky In his trrns, and failing to wake him, told his "othor that his brother had beendrinkinir whisky. The mother fo'md him as doscribed. She tried to bring,the child back to consciousness, but failed their efforts were unavailing. At 8 o'clock Wednesday morning the little boy died, of what the physicians term passive congestion of the brain, caused by whisky.
The story is again revived that the •host of Mrs. Pettit, victim of W. Fred 01 tit, wife murderer, is haunting the hurchat Shawnee Mound, over which Mr. Pett.it formerly ministered. The ^host-walk is between the parsonage and the church, along a private path fir.-t na le by Mr. Pettit, and after the apparition enters the church it is never seen to nave it. It is also claimed that after the apparition enters the church the strains of the organ can be heard playing the tunes which Mrs. Pettit loved go well while in life. Among these claiming to have seen the ghost is Jonathan Meharry, father of Mrs. Whitehead, the woman who figured conspicuously in the trial of Pettit. Mr. Meharry describ.' the apparition asrenarkably life-like, the face looking trouiled, with th« lips moving In prayer while the hands are wrung In a supplicating manner. He. also heard the organ playing "Rock of Ages," which was Mrs. Pettit's favorite hymn, but the music was unearthly and grewsome. He also describes another sslection as unfamiliar but ineffably sweet,dying aA'ay in a strain which tilled his soul with rapture. Others claim an expedience similar to that related
Word has been received at IUoomlngton of the White Caps beating Luther JOIIPS, the son of a prominent citizen of Van Kuren township, Monroe county. Itscems that the trage was committed almost three weeks ago, tfut out of fear the man
left the country, and it Is probable that tin details wo*iId nearer have been known ^utd he not been so badly injured that it was necessary for his friend* to bri-ig bun to his home. His parents believe that he will not recover. According to the young man's story, he has been the victim of the mob because lie -nistrnated his young wife. A sad part of the story is that only two miles from where the husband lies writhing in agony," the wife is dangerously sick with consumption, and iter condition is such that she could not give the details of the whipping. Tin Journal correspondent has just returned from the bed of the injured man, where hc found him in a very dangerous condition ile is sulk-ring from internal injuries, which were caused one of the masked men kicking him in the back. Ou tin night of June 1G, about 1 o'clock, masked men entered his house, wrapped him in a sheet, and carried him out. lie was taken about cue hi.n Ired yards from the IIOUM and tied to a tree. After beating his hadinto amass of bleedingtlesh, they re!easo him and toid him to leave the county The next morning he went to Ureem county to stay with relatives uni.il brougli back.
The wheat, crop in Knox. Daviess and Gibson has been put in shock, and a tri| across the land is a cheering sight., for th crop is unparalleled. The farmers are rejoicing in the bounteous harvest-. Such: yield was never before known in that par of the country. Good judges place th yield of Knox county at about a miiiio! and a half of bushels, and in each of th other two counties named the yield wi not fall,behiud that of Knox. Already .th threshing has begun, and shipments new wheat East are being made.
PRIZE WINNERS.
Tha Eceent Great Tournament nml t!u ISeHult of the Drill.
The National Drill Tournament at Indianapolis closed on the (5th. It was« complete success, financially and otherwise. The companies stood «3 fellows is the prize drills.
IsIiHE-FOR-AIX IlKIX.L.
First—-Branch Guards, St. Louis, S2.500 Second—Belknap Riiles, Saa Antonio Tex.. $1,00'J.
Third—Sealey Lilies, Galveston, Tex. 5 Fourth—Southern Cadets, Macon, Ga. Fifth—National Fencibles, Washington D. C.
Sixth—McCarthy Light Infantry, Little Rock, Ark. Seventh—Chickasaw Guards, Memphis.
Eighth- Omaha Guards, Omaha, Neb. Ninth—Fletcher Rifles, Little Rock Ark.
MALDKX INFANTHY DlSlTiI..
First—Devlin Cadeto, Jack m, Mich. $1,500. Second—Fletcher liilies, Little Rock. Ark., $500.
Third—Floyd Rifles, Macon, Ga.,$300. Fourth—Pugh Videttes, Columbus, O. Fifth—Avon Rifles, Cincinnati, O., Sixth—Lima City Guards, Lima, O. Seventh—Governor's Guards, Indianap oils,
ATTTILLERY DRILL. 4
First—Dallas /itiilery, Dallas, Texas $1,000. Second—Roekville Artillery, Rockville. Ind., ?&:».
Third—Diclcason Light Artillery, Danville, Il» Fourth—Battery A. St. Louis.
ZOUAVE DRILL.
First—Aurora Zou..ves, Aurora, 111.. $1,000. Second—Walsh Zouaves, St. Louis, Mo.. $.•00.
Not av Tenderfoot.
Detroit Free Press.
Waiter(to proprietor of afar Wes1 restaurant)—Lo".g-legged dude in the feedery says he cawn't eat pie with knife.
Proprietor—Tell him to go Waiter (interrupting)—Did. Saw he-wanted a saw or a hatchct.
Why She Wept.
Now York Fres6.
One of the bride maids was softl\ crying during the ceremony anc her escort, nudging her, whispered
Wbut are you crying for? Il isn't your wedding." "That's why I'm crying," she sanl
THE MARKETS.
INDIANAPOLIS,
Cincinnati—
July
9, I8IN.
a MAIN.
Wheat. Corn. Oats.
Indianapolis..
r'd
«ye.
95 I wC3 at lyer.o Hi
1 w44 o5
3 r'd r'd
CUiCJgo.
58 5S{a
2 r'd 103
St. Louis
J-2U
2 r'd
mamma," little Hoy,
aftejf th guests had oaa/e^- "I dou't thQk Mra. Drown is aGRMstomed to £OQcl society." "Why no*?' "Why, «he\didn't say a single ward while Mrs. Jones was singing."
A controversy upon the cruelty of firing horses has received an interesting contribution from Bombay. Horses and bullocks are fired there, but the practice is extended to tu. itring of babies as a cure for stomach ocha In a certain village, the writer says, it was difficult to find a man, woman or child whose stomach was not scarred by fire marks.
cwvmorr 1990
In the train
of diseases that follow a torpid liver and impure blood, nothing can take the place of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Nothing will, after you have seen what it does. It prevents and cures by removing the cause. It invigorates the liver, purifies and enriches the blood, sharpens the appetite, improves digestion, and builds up both strength and flesh, when reduced below the standard of health. For Dyspepsia,
Liver Complaint," Scrofula, or any blood-taint it's a positive remedy. It acts as no other medicine does. For that reason, it's sold as no other medicine is. ilt's guaranteed to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded./
DONALD KENNEDY f, Mass., says
Kennedy's Medical Discovery lures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of
40
years'
standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and dancer that has taken root rice $i.5o. bold by every druggist in the U. S. and Canada.
mmwr.
8T
1
57
New York.... Baltimore
43
r'd 1 al I 105
05 C4
Philadelphia. Toledo
53 00
2 r'd 1 I
CATTLE.
Export steel's Uouu 10 etioicy shippers Fair to luwdiuiri snippers Common anippcrs StOCi{i*.l*d Good to choice butcher heiiers. Faa- to medium ln uors Light, thin nuiiera Good to eboi Je cows Fair 10 medium cows Common old cows Veals, common to choice Build, common to eiiu.ee Milkers, good to choice
Is the cry of thousands of overworked, debilitated females. They do not feel real sick, but they are hardly able to drag themselves around.
While's Dandelion
Is the remedy needed In such eases. It purifies the blood, stimulates the Liver and Kidneys to action corrects irregularities and gives tone and vivor to the whole system.
Anew method of ODinponndintr Tar.
SURE CUBE for PILES, SALT RHEUM
ami itll Sltla ileju«eA. SwidS Sc-nUmps for Free Sample with Book"fOSsld by all Drugglata and by TAK-OIDOO Iv *+.. ".lo.ijro. Price 5v
Indiana Drwiflat* oupplied by D. Stewart and A. Eeiter A Co.. Indiai ai olis.
•H.SHBLTZ1I
83 05
92
69 59 CI
Detroit. Minneapolis..
41 43
4 .0 t: 1 4 00^4 .i5 3 'i 2 7 g3 I 3 7~V'jj4 a no ^3 t. 2 0 3 5U«4 I) 2 50 vx3 2 1 25 2 3 00 -x 5 I 2 .5 OO^Ji'5
UOGfc.
Heavy packing anu snipping...?t iViixed po.cu.Ua 4 i.O.54 Light 4 5VJJ.| Heavy roughs 3 3.^1
SlIKEl'.
Good tochoijeelippai 2~n$i 7 Fair to uiKiiJin cupped 3 V-vi
Bucks, head 0 MISCELLANEOUS. Eggs, 1? butter, crcamerf, dalrj, »"JC: good country, 1 fea^liew 35c beeswax, wool, .WftSSc, uu ^ttsbc _« Uamai8@20c
A
I it* fimlrnitil Wa irivvia .a |jit*rk
WILL CURS
&
C.ove fet-e 4 to
1 wh I 0.1 101 ....
43
\U I
G^WKOOPING COUGH. -BRONCHITIS. 412 FOURTH ST,
LOGAN 5 PORT, IND.
MIDI i. 7TC Before put LUnLt I
ting your hair up on
crimps" or using curling irons. uampen it with Curlett*, and it will retain that Fluiiy app«»r7 a nee 3 to 6 days. Is positively
larmlosfl to hair and scalp. An excellent hair tonic. Leading society and Theatrical Ladles regard Curletto as indlsponsible to the toilet Prke 50c. per bottle, at stores and by •oail. Agents wanted, address
Mrs. Jennie AlMi'kley, Logansport, Ind.
IP NOT,
The
BE.CT MEDICINE
All Diseases of the Kidneys,
tla9 an equipment worth one-half million of dollars. Send for a catalogue. Addresa JAS. H. SMART, Pres't.
ONE WISH.
MY thoughts are gliding down the stream, Ah 1 faster than the river dows And idly in my breast I dream
Of islands where the lotus grows*'
I fear not rapids, waterfall. Nor whirlpool leading down to death, If Love but my tired heart enthrall
Aod I may sip a woman's breath.,
I care not what reay be my fate. Roll on, mad river, to the seaf Take all the pride and pomp of state
But leave one woman's love to me. lot* Hall.
A Frnglle Structure.
A system which chronic Indigestion has de pleted and rendered nervous and feeble, is in deed a very fragile structure, a tenement fas toppling into irretrievable decay. Excessiv Irritability of temper, abnormal and causeles.' anxiety, hypochondria, hysteria and sleepless aeas—^these are some of the manifestations nervousness. That grand invigorating nervine, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, tranquillzei by strengthening the nerves, accomplishing the double result through the medium of re newed digestion and assimilation. No tonic ii existence exhibits such thoroughness, pro luces suoh speedily appreciable effects as th Bitters. It Is a perfectly reliable sareguarc. against malaria and dangerous kidney trouble, .ind remedies completely liver and bowel lnac tlvity and disorder. Nervous invalids shoulc not fail to fortify their systems with this benign protective, which well m«*«its a persistent trial.
Pittsburg Chronicle: Th** *nan who lectures for a living exchanges orations for rations. ____________ ,,r
DR. L. GORSUCH. Toledo, O., says: 'I have practiced medicine for forty years, have nover seen a preparation that I could prescribe with so much confidence of success as I can Hall's Catarrh Cure." Sold by Druggists, 75c.
It is possible, doncheno, that thi9 may be Indian Winter. ®A TRAINING In cleanliness is a fortune." Complete your education with SAPOLIO. It is a solid cn''« of Scourinr Soap used for all cleaning pu 'poses excep the laundry.
The honey bee deserves recognition a kind nature's sweet restorer. No Opium in Pieo's Cure for Consumj tion. Cures where other remedies fail. 254
For a disordered 1 ver try Beecham'a Pills* F«T*.—All Fit» topped free
Km Tried lt?X "AUffUSt
Mow
Go to your Druggist, hand him one dollar, tell him you a a
known
for the CURE erf
A!1 Diseases cf the Liver, All Diseases the Stomach,
Ali Diseases of the Bowels. PURIFIES THE BLOOD, CLEANSES THE SYSTEM,
Restores Perfect ttealtb.
PURDUE UNIVERSITY!
The State Institute
of
Technology!
1. A School of Mechanical Engineering. 2. School of Civil Engineering. 3. School of Electrical Engineering. 4. School of Agriculture. 5. School of Science and
Industrial Art.
6. School of Pharmacy.
hf
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria
When Caby was tick, ve cava her CHtorla. Whaa she was a Child, she cried for Csstoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria Whea she had Children, ahe GATETBEA OBSUX
BCKCHAM'S PILLS cares Sick Hondache,
VCOPVRlOMT#-
hewls. Oily Skin. *11 Skiii
DIWKMI ctired nt onc« by DU. AMMKTT FRBNUfl ARSKMIC WAFERS, liarm-
by UU.
{A FEliM, |iwrfcc.Hr
i«u. M.injwr inix by moll. aaiiiBie |«ckH«o. Hw. KildUtoa S ng 0k, 74 lilt Conla&d: Strsit, U«w IcrL
TIIKIK TKEATMKNT." A valuable illus rated took of erv«nty-two pafrts sent freeon eceiptof cent* to cover cost ef of mallllaf tc. AddrrM». P. O. Be* WW. PMla.. Pa.
Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very well known to the citizens of Appie^ as ton, Me., and neighborhood. as# says: Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a w® dyspeptic can. I then began tak-
"ing August Flower. At that time "I was a great sufferer. Everything I ate distressed me so that I "had to throw it up. Then in a few moments that horrid distress would come on and I would have to eat and suffer For that "again. I took a iittle of your medHorrid
A N
STAND
FREE BOOK
Dr. Kline'* Gren,
Nrrve Restorer. KorittsftorfirMdMra MwvelluUR rure§. Trenti»e nndt2.no trlml bottle free»« FUCHM. Send to l)r. KlIne.Ml Arch Ml., fkUa..Pa
4,icine,andfelttrucb
Stomach "better, and after
4'
taking a little more
Feeling. *«August Flower my "Dyspepsia disap"peared, and since that time I have never had the first sign of it. "lean eat anything without the least fear of distress. I wish alj that are afflicted with that terrible disease or the troubles caused by "it would try August Flower, as I am satisfied there is no medicine "equal to it." •. &
SPRING EAS COME
And with it you feel the need of something to overcome that feeling or uneasiness and depression^ which has taken posession or you. Take
Or. WHITES'DANDELION
It is the best
Spring Medicine
It purifies the blood, aldsdlgcstfon^and makes the weak strong acid vigorous.
Tho Soft Clow of The
TEA ROSE
to Aoquired by Ladlos Who Use
PQZZQNI'S
MEDIOATED
COMPLEXION
POWDER.
THY IT SOLD EVERYWHERE.
FOR OLD AND YOUNG.
Tntt's I/iver Pills act n» kiwlly on the child, the delicate female tr iuUrin old nga, as upon the vicronu wan.
Tuft's Pills
gi»e tone and strength to the weak atom* aeh, bowel*, kidaey* and bJi
THIS IS
pEONBTMAtf
V/HO
5ELL&
HAM
98 LYE
FOWSSBES AUS PSBMID. G| (PATEMTSD.) FEI The strongest and purest Lye made. Will make the best per fumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes xvttkQUt boiling. It is the best for softening water, cleaasing waste pipes, disinfect ing sinks, closets, washing bo& ties, paints, trees, etc.
PENNA. SALT M'PG CO.
Gen. Agts., Phlla., Ps.
I RE S
KOOT beefl^p,^ THE
GRTTAT"HEALTH
4'M.
v'
ippocitiag. rreew
malm a (SIIODA, Dilfciouii. «|wrkUnf ai
toy OH NBVII tfulr n4ilnM to The 0. K. H1KKS CO.. Phlli4'».
ioUItjrilldliltn. A hit Ploture Book utd CA
CATARRKLTTN^D"..*"?
•jiok'r and permanentlT cored by the n«w ANTI8EP* TO HOME TOtiTMEST." Thonaaoda of mm'reloa* For fr"«i hook wldreR with ot*.TITR N A TTONiwnufimcfio IMSTITTCP
JOHN W.MOfRM Vniliiiiirioii, I.
FNSiON
Successfully Prosecutes Claims l.nte I'rincij.Hl hjinniint i.lVntioi unai 3 yni in last wur.16 ad]udicatiii( cl«tina.attyaiiic«
IN 88-01 INDPI.I8
old proverb be true^
SAP0LI0 is ^reawher l*han
royally ihsel/": TVy ilrinyour nexb-house-clearing: Grocers Keep ih
DO YOU LIVF IN GREASE? As a true patriot art' citize./*j ou should naturalise rourseU by using the best inventions of the day for removing such a charre. To live in Grease is utterly unnecessary vrhen SAPOLIO is eo'A in all tlia storeb, and i/ olishes grease and dii t.
Best Cough ledieine wes where all else fail taste. Children take It without oWeotion. Bjdrugfbta.
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