Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 September 1896 — Page 2

IMITATION COFFEE. The Name Not Fancied by Postuon Cereal Company. Coffee drinker* iu»y l>e interested to know the opinion of some competent physicians in regard to the use of Postum, the grain drink, in place of coffee. Let it be‘Understood that the man jfacturer* do not decry the ure of coffee by healthy persons, but there is a great army of intelligent men ami wointu of the present day whojeannot stand the steady, daby poison of coffee, tobacco asd whiskey without feeling the, effect in some serious bodily derangement. Dr. F. F. Cassady, editor of the “Medical Argus,’’ Minneapolis, Minn., writes, enclosing the money for a third caso, and is kind enough to add: “I folly coined with your view s in regard to the use of coffee and tobacco by neurasthenics (nervous patients'. 1 am using Postum every day and am greatly

pleased with it ”

A great many people who are noti keenly sensitive in their coffee tastes slate that Postum tastes so much like coffee that they do

not notice the difference when it is served j completed

at breakfast.

The makers do not claim, however, that it has exactly the same taste as the hnest

coffee.

It 1.as exactly the same color, and is just as ! piquant and pungent in its taste as the | finest Mocha coffee, but the taste is distinct nud belongs to Postum alone. It is made by the Postum Cereal Co,, lim., of llattle Creek, Mich., and it is not an imiutioii ofany drink, but stands ou its own footing as u wonderfully palatable and delicious table drink, thoroughly healthful and nourishing, and is made strickly of the grains. It is impossible for anyone to judge of the perfection of the product without a careful personal test of it. There are thousands of people using Postum, the health coffee, iu place of coffee, and who have been benefited iu their health tq an extent that commands their esteem and warm friendship for Postum. dVily grocers sometimes work iu cheap imitations of Postum Cereal coffee if the customer w,il stand it.

LENSES ARE READY.

Big OlaseoB for Yorkes’ Telesoopo

May Bo Shipped This I'alL

The liulltllug at Enin a ton Almost Heady to Receive Them-l ure Thut Will

Be Taken Iu Traos-

t>or;.luff Them.

It is probable that the big lenses which Alvin Clark has made, at Cki:nbridge, Mass., for the University af Chicago’s mnunnioth Yerkes telescope v ill be shipped to their destination some time this fall. The lenses have been finished for some time, and the question of shipping tiicau now lies with thofficials of the University of Chicago and not with Mr. Clurk. The delay is caused by the fact thut the building which is to receive the p-lass is not yet

» -i ' qjr« AJ: v.*l»S» I

a:aiL d a r time-table-RIG FOUR.

EAST.

No. 2, r.x. Sunday 8:12 a m “ 4, Ex. Sunday 10:bu a m “ 8, Daily 4:14 p m “ D, Daily 5:21 p m " XB, Dally 2:5tf a m “ 22, Suuday only 11:16 am

WEST.

No. 35, Daily.. 12:3? a n\ “ 9, Daily 8:19 a m “ 11, Daily.. 12:41 a m *' 5, Nx. Sunday 4:47 pm “ 3. Ex. Sunday 7:o0 p in “ 23, Sunday only 6.32 pm No. 36, NiRht Express, hauls through carh for Cincinnati, New York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains f-»r Michigan divisions via Anderson and to Cincinnati. No. I connects with L.E.&W. and with Peoria & Chciago trains west. No. 13, Knickerbocker, hauls through sle pers for Washington, D. ( ., via C’. A O., and through sleepers for New York Via N. Y. C. H. It.; also dining car. New coaches illuminated with g.is ou all trains. F. I*. HVEST1S, Agt. VANDALIA L’NC. In effect Aug 2,1.-B6. Trams leave Greento*

tie, It d.,

FOR THE WEST. Vo. 8, Pally 11:05 a m, for St. Lculs. “ 21, Daily. 1:40 pm, “ ’’ “ 7, Daily 12:20 am, “ “ “ 11, Daily 8:03 pm, “ St. Louis. ,, 3, Ex. &uu_„. 5:18 p m, “ Terre Ilaute. 15, Daily 8:33 am, “ FOB THE EAST. No. 20, Daily..™... 1:10 pm, for IndiauspolU. “ 8, Daily 8:32 pm

‘ 2, Daily

The tube and machinery cf the telescope are all ready, and tauve Itecii so for about two years, Intt the lenses tire of such priceless value that it is not thought 'oeKt to ship them until they cun be sentdirect to their ultimate renting i>liwe so that they will have to go through only one journey. The building will probably be completed this fall. If it is, the glass will then be shipped at once, but if not the glass may not be sent until next spring, ns. owing to the brittleness caused by cold weather, it is not thought best, ns a rule, to move large lenses like this in the w inter if it

can be avoided.

Even if shipped in warm weather, the care w hieh will bo token of the ghiss will lie something remarkable, and the chance of breakage reduced almost to an Impossibility. When each lenee has Vieen packed separately they will both be ready for shipment to Chicago, and this shipment will be made in a parlor ear, chartered especially for the pur]K>se. Mr. Clark and one or two iiBsistauts will make the trip with the lenses, and at least one of them will be on watch day und night to see that they receive

no jar.

BAD TEETH NOT ALLOWED.

C;0o p m,

fi. Daily 4:30 a m, 17, Daily... 12:15 p in, 4, Ex. 8uu__. 8:15 a m

■*, AA * . XJ X- iX ..... 0.*>J •» I4J,

For complete Thu.- C'arj, giving all trains and stations, and for full information as to

rates, through cm -a etc., addn *s

J 8. DOWLING, Agent,

Greencastlc, Ind.

r K. A. Fop.d,

General Passenger Apt., St. Louis, Mo. Th orite

edlOUWlilE. K cW Al ‘-.Ain 1 CM ICA4C RYXO/^J

The direct line between Chicago, Michigan City, Louisvilia Aurt all points North anil .South. The only line to the famous health resorts, WIST BADEN AND FRENCH LICK SPRINGS, The Carlsbad of America. Complete Pullman Equipment. FRANK j. REED, G. P. A .Chicago. Time Card, July 1, 1890; NORTH BOCND. No. t\ Chicago Mail 1:13 am ‘ 8*. “ Express 12:17 pm “ Ilf, Local Freight 11:10 am SOUTH BOUND. No. S*’, Southern Mail 2:10 am “ 5*, “ Express 2:22 pm “ 481, Local - 12:17 pm "Daily. fDaily except Sunday. J. A. MICHAEL, Agent.

Towntthip Trustee's 3 uiice. I will bo at my office, located iu my house at Oakalla. on Saturday of each week, to attend to such of my official duties as can be transacted on that day the Business of issu ing orders and receiving vouchers will be especially attended to ou these days. 17tf U. F. Lew is, Trustee.

Township Trustee's Satire. 1 will attend to my office day Viusiness as Tiuatee of Jackson township, ou Wednesday of each week, from andafter this date. T. M Sanders, Trustee of Jackson township. Sept. 8, 1896. 2ltf

Match Company Insists on Its t7mployes Having Good Molar,v It Ls more than two weeks since the employes of the Continental Match company, in Passaic, X. J„ were solemnly warned to have their teeth plugged or loose their jobs. Yet there are still unplugged cavities in the teeth of the ContinentsI's employes, and only the dentists are out of a job. Six days remain in which these d tleineles may be made good. The Continental employes number about 3C0 .hands, of whom 200 ore girls. Mr. Gould is not n crank on teeth, but it was forcibly brought to hU notice the other day that if v man, woman or child in the employment of i match company lost his or her teeth in the course of employment the employing company might l>e held liable. The widow of an employe of the Diamond Match company lately recovered $10,000 from the company in a suit having no other basis. This set the Continental people to thinking, and the result was that they called in a dentist to inspect the teeth of all their employes. The results were startling. It i\ as found that of 200 young women, In ordinary health, and of rather good looks, as many ns 00 had defective teeth. Some of the defects were not obvious, some were. But iu three-tenths of th’’ mouths examined by the dentist there were exposed nerves. Every doctor knows that to expose a bone, not properly covered with enamel, to the fumes of phosphorus, means necrosis, vvhich is death of the bone. The Continental Match company is only “standing pat," If it stands by its edict, ns the manager says it 55-111, there 5vill be some busy dentists in Passaic next week, or els-* the match ivorks 5vill close.

PATENTS A DANCE. Ij«1« Fuller Wftnta Ficlusiv* Right of llei V\m Invcution. They patent a great many kinds of thbigs nowaday s, but it renaii.ed foran actress to Iment and patent the parapbernalin of a s.-rpeutiiie dunce. The records at Washington show that the ue tress in question has patented n skirt, decorated with serpents iu various attitudes of squirm; another skirt, which is fastened around the head instead of nt the 5vaist; \ nrious implements for propelling the garment in fantastic curves, and a scheme for lighting the stage during a dunce from points a love, belo5v, and all around the dancer. The patent documents ar<> accompanied by illifttratlons. An ugty-look-iug dress 55ith the snakes upon Its surface is a quite different garment to the view when it is being waved to and fro by its wearer, with ten or 15 brilliant calcium light- in various colors shining upon it from the tiles, ii ings, and from underneath the stage. Then its filmy fabric shines like sllier, or gold, or a waving flood of purple, as it passes under the ‘ hanging lenses of the calciums, while the embroidered serpents seem to glide oier its surface with ever-increas-ing velocity, until the lights are suddenly turned out and the 5vhi r !lng form of the dancer is lost to view. The serpentine dance has developed into on undertaking that invoh-es a very considerable outlay and employs the services of many assistants. It is a very different sortof tiling from what It was a few years ago, when it surprised and delighted the audiences at Hoyt’s theater during the long run of “A Trip to Chinatoivn.” At that time two lights 55-ere used in the wings and one more at the rear of Ihe stage. It is not uncommon nowadays to get up a dance requiring five times as ninny lights, each of which comands the undivided attention of an electrician’s assistant. PeriH-ntlne dances In these times, ns may be readily Imagined, are expensive luxuries. They owe their dcvelopment to their present stage of perfection to “La Bole” Fuller, who is the invintor and pah-nice of the various devices referred to.

Womnn In South Dakota Tnabie to C«*t a Well Drilled. Mrs. Mary Johnson Las a pneumatic farm near Lennox, S. D., through the surface of vvhich a pang of expert drillers have been trying for 55-eeks to sink n drive well. Ton dept h of between l-u and 130 feet the tubing enters the soil without difficulty, but as soon ns the air cushion is reached the wind rushes out with a s -rcech like a locomotive, and the 10-pound sledges are tossed Into the air ns lightly ns feathers. The workmen have given up in despair, but ?.!rs. Johnson has submitted the matter to the state geologist, who proposes, if possible, to find out what Is the cause of the phenomenon.

TOE NAILS TAKEN OFF. The Peculiar Accident Said to Have Ilnjspensd an Indiana Woman. Mrs. John Bumgardner, of Lagro, Ind., is said to have lieen the victim of a tvonderful accident the other morning, the cu.se thereof being one of those peculiar and unaccountable pranks sometimes played by lightning. It Is alleged, and upon reliable authority, too, that the aforesaid lady had throe of her toe nails amputated by a severe stroke of electricity, the shock being such us to cause her no ether trouble or pain. It seems that the Indy was walking about the floor with bare feet, having left her bed for the purpose of closing the house to keep out ihe rain, and was just in the act of letting down a windoi-’ when blinded by an unusually terrific flash of lightning. She felt the shock for only a moment, and then fully recoveivd, though considerably frip-ht-cned. Shortly aftervvard Mrs. Bumgardr.er noticed that something 5ias wrong with her right foot, and upon milking an examination she found that three too nails vvere missing. The wounded members bled but very little and looked ns though Ihe nails had been amputated by r.n experienced surgeon ivho understood the art of making a neat, clean job. As !> matter of course, the citizens of Lagro, philosophers every one, have all kinds of tlieorie-s to advance for this very remarkable ease, remarks the Wabash Times, but as it has unbounded confidence in their ability it vvill not disturb the equilibrium of their sage philosophical calculations by asserting that it “do beat all creation.”

Midnight Appeal of n MlnUter*ft TYlfo fauaen Quick Restitution* Rev. B. E. S. Ely, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, of Rockford, III., was a5-. akr-nod at midnight by n burglar w ho stood over his bed and with drawn revolver demanded whatever money he might have in the house. He told him h- had none, but the burglar began a search, gathering up a gold watch and vvhutever urticle-s he could find. He had not finished when Mrs. Ely decided to iniib.' an np;:i al to him. She began by unking him whether he did net have a mother or sister who vvould grieve over the theft ho was about to commit. The, burglar paused In hie \5-ork to reply

that "he once hod a mother and she vvaf an ung I on t arth. The appeal doubtless touched his heart, f< r 1 . left the room. On the- way dovxnstalrs he knocked over a table ’.-earing a flower pot, « hieh he stopned to straighten up, and on ibis lie left all the urthles be had taken from the room of the minister.

MORE SACRIFC1E.

Mies Clara Barton Foregoes nor Trip Homo to America.

Not I»:*o5v it<5 After .VII. A party of men went bathing in a creek rear Trenti n. X. J., 1h-- other day and one disappeared. The others, after a search, went to the c n ner, who repaired to the seme of tl - trouble with a e-oflin and grappling in a. While dragging the stream the ruj post d drowned man suddenly appeared half elad from the bushes and wanted to know wh.it the trouble 5vns. He explain -d to the astonished coroner that while sevlmming he had become sick and craevled to the bushes and fainted. When he came to he found his companions had gene and taken most of his clothing.

rnaotUeil Cm.itttloti of Affair* In Tnrkoy Cttuaen Her Co Decide to llcmovo to ho aa to He Available, If Needed.

(jC-E,

Closed on Account of Rowdle*. Eaton Hall Park, the residence of the duke of Westminster, will henceforth Ik- closed to the public on Sundays, owing to the continual mislH-havior of rowdies.

Has a Fondness for Oats. A colored man in Indianapolis has beer, arrested for the eighth time for stealingonts. He neverstcols anything else, and he hns come to be known as “Oats Powell.”

A representative of the press learned the oth r day idu-t despite her long und wearisome experiences of the tvinter, her anxiety to be at. home and the immense amount cf work which awaits her iu the United States, Miss Clara Barton, president of the American Red Cross society, decided on the eve of the sailing of the steamer Servia, by which she and her p-arty were to return home, that she would not leave Europe so long 8 there remained the slightest ehoncc that her presence would Is- needed In Turkey. In view of the present troubles Miss Barton has telegraphed Intimating her willingness to return to Turkey if she can. be of any service to the Armenians, J and has received answers stating, iqion I the high* st. authority, that there is apparently no immediate danger of further troubles, hut that no one knows wliat may happen from day to day. Owing to the tenor of the telegrams recelved, Miss Barton hits di-cided to re- ! main for the present in England, 55 ithln 1 short call of the field of danger.

A Stamp Machine. A useful office appliance, has been patented iu Europe, in the shape of an apparatus for attaching stamps to envelopes. A rectangular box is fitted to hold 2'*0 stamps piled one on the other, gummed side do5vn, 5>ith two little hooks r. t t he bottom, holding the stamps in place. A do55-mvard pressun- of u vertielc handle fixed to the side of thi l>o\ releases the t5vo hooks and forces down a stamp on the moistened pad. It is claimed that 55-ith this apparatus envelojx-s can lie stamped at the rate of 1,200 to 1,500 per hour. For general use a special stand is constructed, to carry boxes for three or more values of stumps, 5vlth the moistening j>nd In front.

MOTHER AND SON REUNITED.

What She'd Like to See. The Louisville Times says that not long ince a Kentuckian was talking with a young woman out vvest, when the conversation turned to tobacco. The gentleman remarked that tobacco was a very common crop in Kentucky. The lady, it seemed, had never seen tobacco except the manufactured plug, so she replied that she sbovild very much like to visit Kentucky and see a field of tobacco just as It was “plugging out.”

Vienna's Great Celebration. Vienna will celebrate the hundredth anniversary of Franz Schubert nt-x’ year by an < xhibition of objects connected with the composer and a series of performances of his works. Fair Actress Kn-ra^os a Trainer to T*L Her llovr to Do it. In the new opera, “The American Beauty,” Miss Lillian Russell’s part requires that she shall make her second net entrance on the Imck of an eh-phan*. Miss Russell was averse to the proceeding, but the moment that she realized that the elephant was absolutely essential to the play she cast her objections to the wind and threw herself Into tic rehearsal heart and soul. The onl> trouble was Miss Russell felt she could not ride well enough to appear In publie, so in order that there might be no hitch at the opening, she hns engaged Toil Sloan, the champion light weight jockey, to give her a series of ridinglessons. liov. F. r. Bliss Inaagnrates n Novel I'lan for th® Children. Rev. P. Frederick Bliss, of Chicago, '.ho projector of the youths’ congress of the Columbian t xposition, has launched ut (irar.d Ledge, Mich., ’he Jerusalem ( elebretion society. The purpose of the onrnnization is to cenduet annual pilgrimages to Palestine culminating in a. great delegate convention of American Sunday school children at Jerusalem in 1900, thus celebrating “the triumphant completion of 19 Christian centuries." The expense for each delegate, taking In London, Paris and Rome, will he MOO. Thus, of those who poy annually 23 cents one In LOCO may go as a delegate; among Ihe 50-eect, members one in 800 i :ny be .. delegate; and there can be one delegate among 200 of those that pay *5vo dollars. Competitive examinations will determine, who vvill be delegates.

K<*iimntl<’ Story of a Negro Woman Who Pound Her Son After 30 Years. Mrs. Martha Harris and her son,' James Harris, have just been reunited after a separation of 30 years. Mrs. Harris and her son and two sisters, who are colored, vvere slaves on a plantation in Tennessee, about 100 mih-a back of Memphis. When the war broke ! out the muster of the plantation enlisted und the negroes scattered. Ma utha and her children got a passage up the river on a steamer, but at one of the landings ’ost the boy. The boat went on, and she did not know whether , the child had fallen overboard or had 1 been lost on land. She finally drifted , to Fond du Lae, Wls., and, with her daughter, has accumulated quite a little !

fortune.

In 1803 she visited th« world’s fair, ' and in the colored people’s department found a piece c4 music with th- name ! James II. Harris on the cover ns its ; composer. She wrote to the address ; given, und in time received a reply, and the son finally came to Fond du Lnc. 1 He has a barber shop in St. Louis and | has become quite a musician, several of his ■compositions having been in the cole red people’s department nt the world’s fair.

An Important me*, sage often comes by telegraph, but the most important message that ever was

delivered to mankind has l»-en given to them through the newspapers. It is given

again in this article.

It is the inf imation that f)8 pot cent, of all cases of con. 11 sumption can be completely \| and permanently cure<t i \ There is no doubt about it. The statement is not made ci'' recklessly, hut after the ex-

perience o r thousands has made it an in. disputable faci. Consumption i* not a disease of the lungs. It is a disease of the blood which in -.veak lunged people manifest itsi if bv the form ition of tubercle* in the Ipngs and the wasting away of lung tissue The cure f r e. nsumption is simple. It consists in the a luiini iration of a tnedi. tim that will assist ’.he hmgs in throwing off t-ii i rcnlo i* matt r, and that * ill cleanse the system so that thi ; refuse matter will be replaced by strong, h Ithy tissues. That sounds like a very s iple operation, and yet consumption baf: u the combined medical skill of the whi I.: world for hundreds of years. Cons-,imp‘..on was considered incurable until the idv at cf Dr. Pierce’*

■ nr This great

remedy is the most wonderful blood purifier and strengther.er that the world has ever known II i.i the result of years of study and cxp“Timent, by a scientific physician and has been t« sted in every way by him for over jo years It has an unbri 1 n record of success. It cures a great variety of diseases, because almost all disease* ba\-e their origin and support in impurity and weakness of the blood. As long as a man’s blood is rich and pure, he is In no danger from diseases. The blood is the medium through wbich food is carried from the digestive system to all of the tissues of the body. If it carries impure things, or an insufficient quantity of good things, trouble will ensue. There is nothing about that so very hard to understand. It is perfectly plain and natural and rational. The

pal the di-

gestive system ir. perfect order, purifies and enriches the blood and so puts the whole body into perfect tune. This taik i- continued in Dr Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. This 100S page book sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only Woklu’b Disfuniosv Medical Association, buffalo, N Y,

RELICS OF MOUND BUILDERS. Find Bon© Implements, Believed to Be 1.000 Years Old. Great interest Is W-u.ifi-stevl at Pittsburgh, Pa., over the discovery of a number of implements in a mound at Kee’s Rocks, i.hn-.h i* being excavated for scientific purposes. The mound is believed to have been built by the ancient mound builders and the implements found place, the mound on a par with those that have been explored • else-

where.

The work is being dcr,«- under the direction of Thomas Jim >-r, of Pittsburgh. who believes that the specimens found are not less than 1,000 years old and prove that they wen- f.ink-by the mc»st ancient people that Inhabited this continent. The specimens will be placed in the Carni-ffie museum. Since this mound was ojiein-il a month ago 10 skeletons haw been found, many of them being of gigantic stature.

A tYonderlul Yarn. A correspondent of the Toronto Globe reports the most marvelous thing yet lr. the way of mirage. At a certain point on the const of Alaska a town loomed up in the sky, which town was clearly recognizable as Bristol in England, just half way round the world.

Drown His Cries.

In China while the dentist pulls the tooth an assistant stands by and drowns the lament.-ido^of the victim in the toiso of a large gong. Justly the Favorite. Ninety-nine out of every 11X> persons who give Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin a fair trial pronounce it unuxrelled ns a cure for Constipation, Indigestion and Hick hetidache. Ask your neighbor. Trial size 10c, also in 10c Slid i?1.00 bottles. For Rule by \V. W. Jones, Druggist. 3m23

“r lj pr p* y

flMEHQB

*73*/

spec'aclos. 1 ou should never wear ready-made sped.*. !c*s, but have them made to order by

Yon are invited to call at any time and see how spectacle l?nses are ground.

u* •'/■V \ EiT \

ftT*

j®' M

'~o)

u'- •••<•;*- DR, E. SHIPLEY.

^ Philadelphia Optical College,D.R.(Dodor of Refraction). Graduate of Chicago Ophthalmic College, M. O. (Master of Optics). ( Philadelphia Optical College, O. G. (Optical Graduate). Member ol the Philadelphia Optical College Alumni Association.

V 7

IPlPsIsl

CLOVER SEED WANTED. We will pay the highest market price for Clover Seed. BURLINGAME & JANES, CREENCASTLE, IND. Hub Clothirqj Store. 20tf Money Loaned! In any sum, for any time. Must see the borrower in person. No delay. Money furnished at ouce at the very lowest terms. Insurance and Loan Agent, GREEN CASTLE, l\D. ..FOR .. CYCLONE Wind Stonu, Fire, Life. Accident, Live-Stock and Plate Glass Insurance, Loans and Real Estate

SEE

RICHARDSON & HURST, GKEENCABTLE, IND. tf

Two grant oil wells have been discovered iu Alaska.

When the painters strike they don’t brush up matters a bit. Taken in time Hood's Sarsaparilla prevents -crious illness by keeping the blood pure and all the organs in a healthy condition.

It is said that hornets never use the same nest a second season. Rev. Mark Hlnsar, a Dnnkard minister of Deckers Point, Pa., says he can recommend ! Chamberlain’s Pain Balm to anyone in need of a good liniment, and that he considers it , the best he has ever used. Pain Balm is especially valuable for rheumatism, lame hack, sprains, swellings, cuts, bruises burns, and scalds. It is one ofthe most remarkable medicines in existence, and Us effects tvill both surprise and delight you. For sale at 25 and 50 cents per bottle by W. W. Jones.

sep

List Of Bettors Remaining in the postoflice at Greencastle, unclaimed, Kept. 1<1. IguG: Elmer E. Baulk, (has. Grubb, Mary Myers. T. P. Moore, J. \V. Ferraud. Mr. and 5Irs. Thos. Mitchell. Miss Anna Lausm, J i’. Curran. Roaa Opton, Itaehei r,, , j. vv. Bee. Mrs. Anna Black. Miss Ethel Adams, J. 55'. Shoppered. Ill calling for any of the above named letters please say “advei tised.” WILLIS <1. NEFF, P. M.

DURING THIS MONTH (September) I will sell Solid Gold Spectacles for

Is the most delicate organ belonging to tlie en-

tire human system, and yet it is a fact that no 1 'vill put the finest lenses in these frames and a scientific measurement organ is abused so much. Over half of the peo- made in each ease. 1>!e sul ! cni ' s 1 ' V0! ' nng ul,su,tai,ie All Spectacles Made to Order in fly Own Factory. spectacles, i ou shou d never wear readv-made 1 ^ ^

OPTICAL FACTORY, 2d FLOOR. Special Department fgr doing Optical Repairing,