Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 January 1896 — Page 7
r
mm
^
V V s V I i r i r H
t
V
The Cottofi
w
because of a run down conwhich Lingers ditlon of ^ system^ and is not affected by ordinary cough medicines, will yield readily to
u ;r u u u V ¥ ¥
S 1 ¥ W ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 9 ¥ V
AMERICAN SHIPPING. would pray for congress.
Annual Report of the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation.
Old Laws That Cripple tho Growth of Oar Merchant Fleet, and Should li« IU— pealed—A Free Ship Hill li cco zu in e n d e d.
I&cotiB dmiktcrt,
because it gives strength to the weakened body and enables it to throw off the disease.
¥ 500. and $1.00. All Dru^ista. W
If You Are Going Anywhere South This Winter You should write and get correct information in regard to the lucllittcs ollercd by the Louisville & Nashville R. R. THIS CAN BC OBTAINED OP I. K. RIDGELY, K. W. Pass. Agent. Chicago, 111. C. P. ATMOP.E, Oea'l Pass. Agt., Loalsvill?, Ky. HOMES IN THE SOUTH Can be secured on most liberal terms and nt low rates. Write for County Map of the South to cither of the above named gentlemen, or to P. SID JONES, Pass. Agent, la charge of Immigration, BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
Can a man live, but CHAS. KIEFER Can furnish you with all the other things good to eat, at lowest prices, such as r roceries, produce, canned goods, teas, coffees, pies, etc. ( A L L A M> (. O 3 0 T EMPTY A IT A Y.
HUMPHREYS’ _ VETERINARY SPECIFICS Tor Hones, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs,
AND POOLTBY.
500 Page Rook on Trentment of Animals uud Churl J^ent Free.
cnuBfl < FovprMtC'otiirrMtionA.Inflnmmnti ■A• A. < SidunI .HtmiugiiiM, Itl ilk Fever. IS. H.mSi ruiiiN, liameneNA, It li<‘iimuf iui
ameneMNt It liciirniit iam* > NuauI l)NcliuruL.4.
C'*G«»*i>lmemp«>r,
ILD.—ISoi* or GrRb>«, \\ or inn.
nuuli*, Uenves, umonit
FsFs—C’olle or Gripen, ]Si‘llyncht > . G.G. — .^l iH< n rriuKc, llemorrliHgCH
- . Jim’urriuge, llemorrliHgcH. II.II.—I rinary nml Kidney ISinenBea. I. I*a*Eriipiive DisenMCK, I^Innge, J. K.—I>im u«<‘« of l>itfe»iiou f I*aruIyNls» Single Bottle (over 50 doees), - . liable rn«e, with Specifies, Manual. \. td-riuary 1 ure Oil and Medicutor, 87.00 Jnr l cteriuury Cure Oil, • • 1,00 Sold by DrnffirUUt or «rnl prrpaid anywhere and In any
qnaulily on rrreipt of price.
Ill irilKRYS’MKD. CO., HI A 113 William St. t lewTork.
ETJMPHPuEYS’
HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFIC No.
28
In use 30 years. Tho only successful remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, and Prostration, from over work or other causes. $1 per vial, or 5 vialtt and Urge vial powder, for ^5. Sold l»y Prugglftta, or sent j>t>stp«i(i un receipt of pnea. lit amrUkYS'BkD. IU., Ill A HU HUlUa SU, Kewlork.
WHAT A STENOGRAPHER EATS. Sumptuous Lunches of Kolls, Coffee and Ginger Snaps. The price of the lunch that the New York girl eats \urie.s from five cents to two or three<lo!lars,*say» the>>Vw York Sun. It seems hardly credible to the uptown trirl who drops into n fashionable restaurant and eats dainty nothings at 50 cents u swallow that she could satisfy her hunger for a nickel. Hut that is the way the downtow n stenographer manages to live on he five or six dollars »t week. Five cents will buy a good sandwich anywhere, but that is not quite enough for even a typewriter’s lunch and this economical person has found it better to eat three penny rolls spread with two cents’ worth of butter, as they are more “filling.” There are several different kindsof penny rolls, but the most common are milk rolls, "long buns” and “horns.” “Three horns and butter" is a favorite lunch which sounds heavy and indigestible, but tlie "horns" ure only crescent-shaped rolls which are as wholesome as toast. The ten-cent lunch offers more variety of choice. For a dime one can avid coffee or tea or cocoa to the above-men-tioned five-cent meal. Beans furnish a large proportion of the typewriting population with lunch. The New York girl varies her bean diet by having them baked in Boston style one day and in New York style the next, but no regular downtown luncher ever stops to dignify the dish with its full name. It is either “ham and Boston” on "ham and New York” and it can be had for ten cents. Between the five and ten-cent lunches there are a few alternatives, but it is possible to get two "long buns” or two "horns" and coffee for seven cents and for another cent a couple of ginger snaps winds up quite a sumptuous lunch.
Lead-working is the most disastrous of all trades to health. On board ship thaday is divided in seven “watches.”
Nil. 22 SodIIi Jactson Strecl, GEEENCASTLE, IND. llitilding Association stock bought ; ml sold or taken as security for 1 ans.
« »' --wr«•.. «
HELEN R. HATHAWAY, H^Tota-rv ^-ciblic m Acknowledgements taken and all other no- * tar vl business attended to. 22 S. Jackson St., Grkkncastlk. G. C. Neale, Veterinary Surgeon. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, and member of the Ontario Veterinary Medical Society. All diseanes of domestic animals carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers’ .Livery Stable, Oreencastle, Ind. All calls, * day and night, promptly attended. Firing and Surgery a specialty-
Mardi Gras! Mardi Gras! The time honored custom of celebrating Mardi Gras i Fat Tuesday at Mobile and New Orleans will he on a grander ul)c | more nla( , nilicient sale this year than ever before. Monday and Tuesday, February 17th and tsth. the two days just previous to Ash Wednesday, the bexinninx of Lent, will be Kiven up to KrorKeous parades, splendid balls and merry makinR in general. Thousands of dollars are spent by the citizens of Mobile and New Orleans on these annual celebrations and the scenes are those long to be remembered by the visitor. The Mobile and Ohio Railroad will make a rule of one fare for the rounil trip with liberal limits in connection with all Northern, Rustem and Westarn lines from all points in these sections of the country to Mobile and New Orleans. Be sure your ticket read via tlie Mobile and Ohio from 8t. Louis or other junction points. Call on your nearest ticket agent for particulars, or address W. Ft. Rowland, Gen 1 Agt., 215 North Fourth St., St. Louis, Mo., Chas. Rudolph, Dist. Pass. Agt , 829 Marquette Bldg., ( hiacgo. Ills., W. H. Harrison, Jr. Dist. Bass. Agt., 220 Fourth St , Dds Moines, la.; M. H. Bohreer, Dist. Buss. Agt. 7 West Fort st., Detroit. Mich.; F. L. Harris, Bass. Agt., 10 Sixth st., Cairo, 111.; E. E. Posey, Gcn'l Bass. Agt., Mobile, Ala.1139 The Silver Craze. Silver has greatly depreciated in commercial values, and may he found impracticable for money purposes, but thousands suffering from dyspepsia, indigestion aniLponstlpation have found that 50c or }1 in silv# invested in Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is worth its weight in gold. Trial sizes > 10 doses 10c , by W.W. Jones. « j n
D. E. WILLIAMSON, ■KWoYWSA^ u\ YjCiUY, GKKKNCASTLU, INI). Bnalness in all courts attended to promptly
VI
Monon Excursions. On the first Tuesday of each month until further notice we will sell one-way “settlers’” tickets to points in Southern States south of Kentucky and Tennessee line at greatly reduced rates. Jan. 27 and 28, Feb. 10 and 11, and March 9 and 10, we will sell homeaeekers’ tickets to various points in Southern and Southwestern States at one fare plus two dollars for the round trip. Return limit thirty days from date of sale. For full information address J. A. MICHAEL, Agt.
Children Cryfor Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryfor' Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryfor Pitcher’s Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her C&atorta. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria When she had ChUdrjb, she gave than Castoria.
The annual report of Mr. Eugene F. Chamberlain, chief of the bureau of navigation, shows that the number of tonnage of our merchant fleets for the year has been nearly stationary. On June 30 it comprised 23,240documented vessels of 4,035,000 tons, a decrease of 50,000 tons since June 30, lb04. Thu decrease is attributed to business inactivity two summers ago, the production of our ship yards iu April, May and June this year much exceeding the production during the same months in 1804. The chief events have been tlie initial trips of the St. Louis and St. Haul. Our fleet on the great lakes outnumbers that of any nation except England and Germany. The ix 1 port is devoted chiefly to recommendations for the repeal of many of our navigation laws of the last century, which were copied verbatim by the earliest congresses from laws of King George III. of England. Commissioner Chamberlain points out that every other nation long ago rejiealed these laws, but we alone retain them as a handicap on our merchant marine. The free ship bill, which was the chief measure advocated in the last report, is again recommended, but more brieily. Mainly from the fact that Americans cannot buy ships where they please and sail them under tlie American flag is due the fact that the United States and Italy, alone among maritime nations, have a smaller carrying eapa city on tlie ocean than they had 20 years ago when President Grant urged eon-1 gross to pass the free ship bill. The signifleant fact is adduced that last year going and coming tlie voyage between the United States and Europe was made only 252 times by vessels under tlie American flag and 10,233 times by vessels under foreign flags. Assuming hat the free ship bill may not pass this session. Commissioner Chamberlain proposes as an aiternutivetheoxtensionof the act under which the New York and Baris were admitted to register and the St. Louis and St. Paul were built in tlie United States. Leading ship builders have declared their approval of this proposition, and tlie bureau believes that it will be adopted at the coming session, the good results of the experiment in the ease of tlie four steamers named proving that the principle can with entire safety lie made general. The repeal of one of our most unbuisnesslike laws, tlie law exempting from tonnage taxes in our ports vessels coming from ports in which our vessels are exempt from that tax, is strongly recommended. During tho seven years of its operation American vessels have been relieved of about $10,000 taxes in German ports, while we have exempted German vessels of nearly $500,000. Similar revelations, though not in so large a scale, follow examination of returns from other countries which have come under this law. The report also recommends a reduction from three cents to two cents per ton, tonnage tax on vessels from nearby ports. Free ship-building materials for American vessels in the coastwise as well ns the foreign trade is recommended, and tlie repeal of IS sections or* statutes relating to minor matters ; s advised on tlie ground of their uselessness. HE TALKS ABOUT ALASKA. I'nlted States Commissioner of Fisheries Interviewed at Denver* Joseph Murray, United States commissioner of fisheries in Alaska and special agent of the treasury, lias just passed through Denver on his way from Alaska to Washington, having lieen summoned by tlie president to report upon the boundary survey, which has been the cause of national interest within the last month. In a brief interview with a representative of the press Mr. Murray said: "The published reports about excitement in Alaska, British seizures and tlie building of forts areall bosh. There will lie no trouble. There are no forts building; there is not a brick within 1,000 miles of the territory. “There are no armed forces there excepting about 25 Canadian police, and a better lot of men or more useful detachment for either the Canadians or ourselves never went into Alaska. They have gone to the head of tlie Yukon river, to watch for highway theieves, who are infesting the gold camps. So far from there being a ‘guerrilla’ fight and ‘excitement at lighting pitch,’ the folks up there hardly know there is a survey running, and none of them know its real intention. “As for the details of that survey, you will have to wait until Washington announces it, for l cannot say a word." CHEAP AND COLORLESS GAS. Prof. Halllec of Arkansax Hu* Mada a DUeovery. Lezon Balliet, professor of engineering, chemistry and physics at the Arkansas Methodist college at Arkadelphia, has discovered a new method for the manufacture of illuminating gas. The gas is colorless, capable of giving a very high heat, and will yield a 12-eandle power from an ordinary illuminating burner. The process is purely chemical and is the cheapest known. The discovery is attracting much attention in the scientific world. nig Washington Apple*. Hailstones as large as lien’s eggs have given place as a remarkable natural product in Washington state to apples os big as footballs. lied apples 15 inches in circumference have been produced in several districts, and pippins and greenings measuring from a foot to fourteen Inches around are almost plentiful.
Lir. Coml^n, a nil ml Minister, Dcsirt-M to I'e House Chaplain. Another blind uiun has come forward as a candidate for the house chaplaincy in the coming congress. Be is Uev. 11. N. Couden. of Michigan. Dr. Couden promises to limit tlie length of his prayers. With his infirmity and his promise he stands well equipped to get votes. The long-winded ministers make poor chaplains, for most of the members do their prayiug at home, and t here fore like to have short invocations in the house. Dr. Couden lost his sight in the war. He is chaplain of the Michigan G. A. It., and has been quite active in grand army work for a numlicr of years. Every city in which tlie blind pastor lias preached lias indorsed his candidacy and recommended him to tlie tender mercies of their representatives. Should Dr. Couden be chosen by the house, and Dr. Mill.urn lie retained by the senate, tho congress of the United States would have ti\o sightless men praying for its welfare and invoking Divine guidance for itsaels. IN LOVE WITH A PICTURE. CurrenimnUenee nml Then 3Iitrrlage Follow* with i* Missouri Man. A marriage, solemnized tlieotherday at Versailles, Morgan county. Mo., but not made public until several days later, lias much of the romantic about it. as was learned when tlie bridal couple arrived at Sedalia tlie other evening. Tlie groom is Ulysses S. G. Chase, of Woodford, O., and the bride Miss Minnie F. Walters, whose parents reside at Lincoln, Benton county, although she lias been living with her grandparents at Versailles. A year ago Mr, Chase obtained a photograph of Miss Walters from a friend who had visited at Versailles. Soon after he addressed a letter to her, requesting the privilege of corresponding. Kegular exchmnge of letters followed, and last Sunday Mr. Chase arrived in Versailles and proposed marriage. He was accepted, and the bride will now present her husband to her parents. WAS IT A HOODOO? Singular Series of Areldeuts Which Recently Attended queen Victoria. An unusual series of incidents oe-[ eurred during the qfleen’s recent jour- 1 ncy from Balmoral U> Windsor castle. ! First, her majesty’s favorite collie dog j was killed on the railway. As j Princess Louise was boarding the train \ at Aberdeen she missed the step of the ; coach anti fell, and crawled into the j carriage on her hands and knees. Next, j the pilot engine which always precedes the royal train was. in some manner, thrown from the rails, and this accident caused a long delay. After arriving at Windsor castle her majesty went out driving and came near running over a bicyclist. The latter jammed his wheel into the wheels of the queen’s carriage. The bicyclist was slightly injured. Her majesty stopped to inquire us to the extent of Ids injuries and expressed herself us greatly pleased that the accident was not more serious.
p BEWARE (N niWE. __ The first" . tw'pce of iNINB 3 gYe st. Jacobs on oz*->v, > c*-; m*v I L,. i . <lST VO . c. 1.,- - C o, 3 HAPt . •*...« > .•. ■■.. -v CENTRAL NATIONALS AimK O-KEEITCJVSTZLiH:, XJSTX . l»I It KOTO ID-, R. L O' Hair, Pres; M F. Me Ha fie, Vie* Free , M. 1) hrv1„t> • ash.; J. L. Rapdel, Asst. Cash.; E. II. Evans, IF Il.'Alltr, F. A Arnotn S A Hays, Quinton firoad.street.
WATER THAT EXPLODED.
A Bart«nder*t L:;prrltm<'« Under Fire of a l uHillude of Seltzer. “Do you know,” said Billy Clark, of the Grand hotel, to a Cincinnati TiniesStar reporter, as a big seltzer bottle fizzed and two or three men on the outside elevated a foot each on the railing and looked on, “that these seltzer water bottles will explode easily?” And the three men ea<di put a foot down on tlie floor and moved slightly away. “Sometimes just the temperature of the hand will do it, the warm hand, placed 1 against it while bringing it from a cold room, or sometimes while lifting it one will strike it against the counter and it will explode and the metal top will he driven with great force by the gas. One time, while at theGibson, I refused to give a man a drink. He took it very much to heart and went away vowing he would get even with me. 1 hud turned about as he went out and had my back to him. Suddenly there eiune a sound like a pistol shot. 1 tried to turn around and couldn’t, and I was sure the man had carried his threat into effect and had shot me. Directly following that explosion came another and another, and there was a rapid succession of explosions. Then 1 knew the man had opened a regular fusillade on me, and yet I was riveted to the spot. I could not stir. I thought I had been paralyzed by a bullet. Come to find out one of these seltzer water bottles in the far end of the counter had exploded and tlie concussion lied started the others, until all had exploded that were on that shelf. And the man had gone away and I never saw him again. But I never will forget my experience of that night, when 1 was sure I had been shot.”
J'ott'ti>/#iji Truth .\nfiee. 1 will lie at m> oRict, local-fl in my house at Oakalla, on s*tDr(ti,y ol each to attend to such ot my otticial dull, a* ran ho transacted on that di.y the hu-iiie*s of issuing order-an,I receiving vou, her* will he especially attended fc»t on thes»e <la\ s. * 1 tf G. F. Lkwih, Trustee.
Ifiisfe i'*.s yiofirr
I will attend to my official duties hr Truslee of Y\ ushiUKton township nn the second. fourth and lift h Hutu relays of each month at KeeiHVille, and on Wednesday of* each week
at my residence.
mf
■* *•» - -* u I CAM.
S. G. Bond.
GIGANTIC SKELETONS DUG UP. Ilemarkahle Discovery Made By Exoara* tors at Anderson* Ind. Excavators at work in the west part of Anderson, ind., made a startling discovery just after dusk the other night. They were at work when a portion of the earth gave in, and they found a sealed cave. Investigation and further excavations opened it. There were a dozen skeletons i«i a sitting position, all facing the west, on the iuside. The scene was a strange one and caused a decided sensation. The skeletons seemed to be holding a council of war. All were erect. By their sides were the remains of what had once been their trinkets. Mostof the skeletons were of abnormal proportions, indicating that the race thus buried was a mighty one physically. It is but a short distance from the celebrated Indian mounds.
NEW CURE FOR CONSUMPTION.
A Now York I'liyslcian Publishes the Formula. At a crowded meeting of the New York County Medical association the other day. Dr. Hubbard W. Mitchell exhibited the formula for the fluid which has been exploited lovely as a positive cure for consumption. It was made public and is as follows: Water, 2 gallons. Magnesium sulphate, 77 grains. Magnesium chloride, 740 grains. Calcium chloride, 185 grains. Potassium chloride, 9244 grains. Ferric chloride crystals, 90 grains. Hypochlorite of sodium. 70 quarts. Hypochlorite of potassium, 70 grains. Dr. Mitchell said the formula had originated with J. W.IIiggins,achemist, and said five eases in which it had been tried had resulted in absolute recovery.
MET AND LOVED IN PRISON. Warden's Daughter Flopcs with a Pardoned Murderer. Ilylon L, Skinner and Annie B. Curry, daughter of the warden of the state prison at Eddyville, Ky., have been married under peculiar circumstances. Skinner was received in 1892 for seven years for killing Martin Bigwood, and came near dying in prison. The warden's daughter nursed him, and interceded after his recovery with Gov. Brown for a pardon, after which the couple eloped to St. Louis. The warden and Mrs. Curry have forgiven them, and they will return to Kentucky.
ISrtkts Dickens’ Fat Hoy's Kccord. As Nelson Kayburn was crossing tlie railroad track near Kingston, O., his horse was struck by a west-bound freight. The horse was killed and a part of the dashboard tom away, but Kayburn, who was sound asleep in his itiggy, knew nothing of it until some time after. The buggy was hurled 25 feet.
WIDOWS TAKE TO PARROTS.
Polly Is a Great Favorite wl:h the Lone Women. Parrots have never been suspected of having a mission in life hut one has been discovered for them in Brooklyn. An attendant in a shop where nnimals and birds are the stock in trade was asked if all the parrots that talked were trained by sailors, says the New York World. "Not at all.” he said. “If you should come in here during the week following the arrival of a cargo of parrots you would soon find out that there ure a lot of women in New Y'ork who make it almost a profession to train parrots. The best customers we have, however, are Brooklyn widows. There is one woman who comes in after almost every cargo we receive and buy* at least one or two parrots, sometimes more, which she intends to teach to talk. The women who do that are mostly w idows. How do I know. V. by, they tell us so. And why do you suppose they want the parrots? It’s for company, they say. They say they are lonely and the parrots are company, because after they talk to them enough the parrot talks back. “That is why widows like parrots better than canaries, they say. One in Brooklyn keeps a little notion store and sells candies. The children see the parrot there and the parrot is speedily sold and taken away os soon as it can say two or three tilings. Then tlie widow's loneliness comes over her again and she comes in search of another pupil in feathers. She gets three times as much ns she paid for the bird and if it learns rapidly and has quite a number of words or sings a song she gets even more.” So after ail even Polly has n mission.
COIME M WES The close observer who calls and sees OUJi GOODS AND LEARNS OVR PUK ES That we sell the very best Staple and Fancy Groceries, Produce, etc. the lowest possible figures. Don’t want to get rich in a day are satisfied to sell firstclass goods for the least possible money. Give me your orders and I will fill them to suit you- I want your patrouage. tr J J WEIDA. Dogs as a rul ■ live, about lif.een yearH, though there have been instances of colios living over twenty years. TOLD BY THE THUMBS. Au Alleqcl Indication of Nervous Derangement Tlmt 1* Ohse-ved Commonly. “When 1 went to a nerve specialist first,” said a man who was once an invalid, "he told me that one w ay to judge of the condition of a person’s nerves was to watch his thumbs. Ever since that time I have found the greatest fascination in looking at people’s thumlis. The doctor said that if thej moved involuntarily outward it was u sign that the nerves of that man or woman were not In the best condition. 1 find myself cow sweeping the line! that sits opposite me in a car, and if that doctor’s test Ls a good one there is a surprising number of people in his town whose nerves need looking after. There arc few among the women w ho do not involuntarily move the thumbs outward at intervals of every few minutes, and when your attention lias once been attracted to it the process of watching their gloved hands grows very interesting. 1 have found the habit much less frequent among men; but take the average number of women in a cable car and it will be a surprise to you to see how many of them indulge unconsciously in this little habit. I only hope it does not mean anything as serious as it might indicate if that nerve specialist’s diagnosis wan a good one.’’
A Natnrsl Ilrnige Pier. One of the oddest bridge "bents," or piers, in this country is to be found in Sonoma county. Cal. Two large redwood trees growing side by side support the timbers and rails of a bridge which crosses a small ravine or creek at a place where the roadbed is “5 feet above the water. Californians refer to it ns “the only natural wooden bridge in
the world."
A Rotharhllfl's Yartit. Extraordinary luxury is displayed in the new pleasure yacht, the Viglio, which Baron Nathaniel Rothschild has had built for himself nt Glasgow, and which is now being fitted out from London. Thousands of pounds are being lavished on the furniture and fittings. Tlie carpets, for inssf.iieo, are s]»eeially manufactured, afid curtains mid upholstery work are decorated with pictures, not painted on the material, but actually woven in it.
The Snake Hail the Dent of It.
A Quaker driving a single horse chaise up a narrow lane happened to meet a young man who was also in a single horse chaise. There was not [ room enough for them to pass each other, unless one of them would hack I his carriage, which both refused. “I’ll not make way for you," said tlie young fellow, with an oath. “I think I am older than thou art," said the Quaker, “and therefore have a right, to expect thee to make way for me.” "I won't*” resumed the first. He then pulled out a newspaper and began to read, as he sat still in his chaise. The Quaker, observing him, pulled out a pipe and some tobacci from his pocket, lighted his pi[K\ and sat and puffed away very comfortably. “Friend,” said he, “when thou hast rend that paper I should be glad if thou wouldst lend it to me.” The young man gave up the contest.
Fse for Horse Chestnut*. It is popularly supposed Hint horse chestnuts are ve^y unwholesome. Nevertheless in Turkey they are roasted for coffee, fermented for liquor and utilized for horse medicine.
(CARTERS IITTLE IVER PILLS
All from FiigllMh IMrtls. A complete set of British birds’ eggs is worth about £200 ($1,000).
they Bulhl Many Shl|>*. Not less than 100 new vessels were launched by firms on the hanks of the Tyne during the month of August, and this is tlie largest number of ships launched there in one month during the present year. An Immense Telescope. The great telescope at the Virginia observatory has an object glass 27 inches in diameter, set in a steel tube s 33% feet in length. The whole weighs nine and one-half ton* Why let your hair turn Kray whou Hall’s Hair Receiver will prevent it!
SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. imatl PHI. Small Dose. Small Price.
