Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 16, Number 5, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 18 April 1894 — Page 2
TOE NAPPANEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. _ - ® KAPPANEE, i : INDIANA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Part*. CONGRESSIONAL. Regular Session* Th* resolution for the coinage of Mexican dollars at the United States mints was agreed to In the senate on the 10th. A resolution to limit the general debate on the tariff bill to June 4 and to take the Anal vote on June 6 was referred to the judiciary committee. A resolution for the coinage of Mexican dollars at the United States mints was agreed t 0... In the house the tlmo was occupied in discussing the post office appropriation bllL On the 11th the tariff bill was discussed in the senate, but only a few senators were present.... In the house a bill designed to establish a banking system which would supplant the present one as bonds mature was introduced. Lack of a quorum prevented the transaction of business. In the senate a joint resolution was introduced on the ILth proposing a constitutional amendment relative to marriage and divorce. ▲ bill was Introduced providing that no one shall perform any labor or engage in any amusement on Sunday to the disturbance of others in any territory, district, vessel or place subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. The tariff bill was further discussed. .... In the house a rule which the committee on rules brought in, imposing a fine of 110 for every refusal of a member to vote, caused a long wrangle. A resolution was adopted revoking all leaves of absence, except on account of sickness. In the senate on the 13th the urgent deficiency bill and the tariff measure were further discussed. A bill introduced by Senator Peffer requires the secretary of the treasury to issue 1250,000,000 of treasury notes, to be used to meet all the expenses of the government and to be lent to states, counties, towns and., individuals on proper security and without interest ... In the house no business was transacted owing to lack of a quorum. In caucus the democrats, by a vote of so to 44, instructed the committee on rules to report anew rule to ascertain and record the presence of a quorum, whether voting or not. Senator Quay said in a speech on the tariff bill in the senate on the 14th that it was framed In the Interest of foreign pauper labor. Several amendments to the rules intended to prevent filibustering were offered by Senator Hill— After a vain attempt to approve the journal the bouse adjourned. The new quorum couuting rule would he reported immediately.
DOMESTIC. Farmer Uriah Scam.an was flogged by white caps near Bourbon, Ind., because he had ill treated his wife. An attempt to wreck the Lake .Shore flyer at Huron, 0., was discovered just in time to prevent a terrible catas0 . The discovery was made at Protivin, la., that the 15-year-old daughter of J Tuckish was buried alive. The region about Durango, Col., was in feverish excitement over unparalleled gold findings in the La Plata moun tains. The Aspen national bank of Aspen, Col., went into liquidation. The Frothiugham arcade, one of the finest business blocks in Scranton, Pa., ■was burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Extensive preparations were being made in the.rural districts of Utah for a large Mormon immigration to Mexico. Alexander Watson was arrested at Omaha for having four wives. No. 1 lives at Grand Rapids, Mich.; No. 2 at Coldwater, Mich.; No. S was Miss Marian Corey, of llainmond, Ind., o nnd No. 4 was Miss Fannie Dixon, of Chicago. Edward Cash, aped 21, while attending the sick bed of his young wife at Gatesville, Tex., was called out by a mob and hatiged. No cause was known. Judge Wiley declared thfe Indiana fee and salary law unconstitutional because Shelby county was excluded from its provisions. Over a foot of snow fell in western New York and western Pennsylvania. A general strike, to begin April 21, was ordered by the United Mine Workers of America in convention at Columbus, 0. The strike will involve over men and will cover the whole territory between eastern Pennsylvania and Colorado. The condition bf winter wheat as reported by the statistician of the department of agriculture averages 80.7 per cent for country, against 77.4 last year. Twenty society people at Platte City, Mo., were indicted by the grand jury r for playiug progressive euchre. A Northern Pacific sand train was wrecked near Chicago by collision with a horse and switchmen William Andrews and dames Donohue were killed. While pouring molten metal in a •teel mill at Middleport, 0., ten men were horribly burned, four fatally, by the hydraulic apparatus giving way. One man was killed and two fatally Injured in a freight wreck near Hartford City, Ind. Great damage was done along the Atlantic coast from Boston to Baltimore and many vessels were wrecked and more than a score of lives were lost. A mob of Hungarians attacked the Frick works at Youngstown, Pa., and compelled the guards to surrender fifty employes. Mrs. Louis Larson and her 1-year-old baby were burned to death in a fire •t their home in Wild Rice, N. D. The sightof Ollie Roberts, of Sedalia, Mo., aged 12, was ruined by the Explosion of a cigarette loaded with powder by another boy. W. G. Livingston's stable and storage warehouse in Chicago was burned and twenty-two horses were suffocated. The incendiary who has been causing so many fires in Springfield, 0., turns oat to be an unknown man who parades In woman’s attire. Postmaster General Bissell has issued an order providing that hereafter only names of one word shall be 'accepted for newly established post offices. Col. Breckinridge announces that lie will run for congress regardless of the result of his present trial. The old guardhouse in the United ffitates jail yard at Fort Smith. Ark., waa destroyed by fire. The building was noted as having held many famous union and confederate prisoners during the late war. A sneak thief stota $3,500 from the TVailace exchange bank at Beaver J’alls, Pa.,
Long distance telephonic communication between Washington and the Chicago post office has been established. David G. Ackerman, superintendent of a jewelry factory in Newark, N. J. t was accused of robbing his firm of $25,000 in’gold. 1 The plant of the American Glucose company burned at Buffalo, N. Y., the loss being about $1,000,000. Richard B. Girard, a discarded lover, fatally shot Miss Laura B. Martin on a train at Charlottesville, Va., and then shot himself. California commonwealers, 1,300 strong, seized a train of twenty Union Pacific coal cars at Uinta and were coming east Frank Crews, a farm hand near Col linsburg, Tex., killed his employer, Thomas Murrell, Mrs. Murrell and a son in a quarrel over wages. The total number of hogs packed in the west the past winter was 4,884,000, an increase of 250,000 compared with last year. Edward Wright and John Miller, aged respectively 15 and 13, of McMillan, quarreled at Guthrie, O. TANARUS., and the Miller boy plunged a pocketknife into Wright, killing him. At Chadron, Neb., a bandit stole $2,500 from a bank and locked the president of the institution in the vault. William Buck, a manufacturer of La Porte, Ind., was killed by a train while crossing the Lake Shore tracks. There were 218 business failures in the United States in she seven days ended on the 13th, against 238 the week previous and 187 in the corresponding time in 1893 All classes of employes on the Great Northern railway between Lariinore, N. D., and Spokane, Wash., were on a strike. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ehded on the 13th aggregated $890,769,077, against $t48,G02,181 the previous week. The decrease, compared with flie corresponding week in 1893, was 20.1. Dogs raided a flock of seventy-five sheep O., and killed sixty-five of* tnein. The total production of coal in the United States for the year 1893 was 179,32(5,612 tons- with a valuation of $205,250,479. William Lewis (colored) was hanged by a mob near Lamison, Ala., for murdering Robert Shields, a white planter. George Ashworth, who mortally wounded a woman near Indiauola, la., killed himself to avoid arrest. Nearly 100,000,000 bushels of available wheat in the United States and Canada was reported by DradstreeUs Dr. James A. Hutchinson, Thomas G. Knight and Frank White were drowned while duck shooting near Rockville Center, L. I.
The Massachusetts legislature defeated the bill prohibiting treating in places where liquor is sold. Judge Dundy ordered the Union Pacific receivers to restore the wages of employes whiefh were cut last September. Charles Wisdom (colored), aged 22 years*- was hanged in the jail yard in St. Louis for the murder of Edward A. Brexler, a tobacconist, on the night of April 24, 1892. The gold production in the United States in 1893 was valued at $35,950,009, an increase of £1,578,423 over the previous year. Striking coke workers drove employes from their work atUu ion town, Pa. Gov. Pattison was asked foe troops. Thirteen persons were said to have lost their lives in the fire at Buffalo, N. Y., that destroyed the glucose works. * J. W. Watkins, a well-to-do farmer living near Iliawatha, Kan., fatally shot his wife and then committed suicide by taking poison. Domestic trouble was the cause. Operators threatened to put nigroes at work in the Blue Creek (Ala.) coal mines, and a race war was likely to follow. During the year ended Mjirch 1 the city of New York expended over $15,900,000 upon its needy population. The schooner Jennie Carter went ashore at Salisbury Beach, Mass., and the captain and his niece and six sailors were drowned. Twenty-four buildings in the heart of Santa Cal., Were destroyed by an incendiary blaze, the loss being $255,000. At a conference of representatives of w'omen’s organizations in Washington resolutions asking congress to consider the Breckinridge case were adopted. New Yokk society leaders are actively at work to seeure an equal suffrage amendment of the state constitution. Seymour Nkwi.and (colored) was hanged by a mob at Rushsylvania, 0., for assaulting Mrs. Jane Knowles, a respectable white woman 81 years of age. Jack Crews, the murderer of four persons at Gainesville, Tex., was lynched by a mob. The jury in the case of ex-Secretary of State Joachim, of Michigan, charged with falsifying public records, Was unable to agree and was discharged. The residence of August Krinkie near Janesville, Minn., was burned and three of his daughters, aged respectively 10, 8 and 0 years, perished in the flames. Madeline Pollard was awarded sls- - in her damage suit in Washington against Congressman W. C. P. Breckinridge. The West End Land company at Nashville, Tenn., owning about 500 acres of suburban property, failed for s!so,ofifi W’haiuhe Radbourn, the widelyknown bhseball pitcher, formerly of the Boston club, had the misfortune to lose an eye while hunting near Bloomington, 111. Many houses were washed away and much stock drowned by a cloudburst at Troy, Tex. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Capt. Thomas Davison, the last survivor of the battle of Stonington, in 1814, died at New London, Conn., aged 93 years. Db. P. Harold Hates, known all over the United States and Europe as a specialist in asthma, died at his home in Buffalo, N. Y. f aged 70 years.
Returns from the town elections throughout California show that the republicans were successful iu the great majority of case* Oregon republicans nominated Chief Justice W. P. Lord, of the state supreme court, for governor. The people’s party in Tennessee nominated A. L. Mimms, of Davidson county, for governor and' A. E. Garrett, of Smith county, for judge of the supreme court Ex-Congressman Grange Ferris died at Glens" Falls, N. Y., of apoplexy. From'lßo7 to 1871 he represented the Sixteenth district of New York in congress. ** The republicans of the Sixth congressional district of Indiana renominated Henry U. Johnson, of Richmond, to succeed himself in congress. The republicans of the Second district of Oregon renominated W. R. Ellis for congress. Gen. Henry W. Slocum died at his home in Brooklyn, N. Y., of pneumonia, aged 67 years. David Dudley Field, famous as a lawyer and a writer on legal topics, died of pneumonia at the residence of his brother, Rev. Henry M. Field, in New York, aged 90 years. John T. Davis, the richest man in Missouri, died in St Louis, aged 52. His wealth was estimated at $25,000,000. Zebulon B. Vance, aged G 4 years, senator from North Carolina, was stricken w T ith apoplexy in Washington and died within a few hours. He had been three times governor of his state and a member of the senate since 1879. In a letter to Gov. Waite, Robert MeReynolds, an Oklahoma silverite’, urges him to join in a movement for the secession of the western states. Senator Morrill, of Vermont, celebrated his 84th birthday with a reception at his home in Washington. The republican state convention of Georgia has been called for August 29. Funeral services were hehl over the remains of David Dudley Field at Calvary Episcopal church in New York. Many distinguished men were present. The remains were taken to Stockbridge, Mass., for interment.
FOREIGN. San Domingo has adopted anew monetary system with as a basis. The steamer Faraday left London with a portion of the new cable to bo laid from Waterville, Ireland, to Nova Scotia. The Dutch general elections resulted in an overwhelming defeat of the government. Karra Rega, king of Unyor, has been defeated by the British, and his territory will probably soon be annexed to Uganda. John Clark, of the well-known thread manufacturing-firm of Paisley, Scotland, died at the age of 07 years. David Wiener Sc Sons, merchants at Vienna, Austria, failed, with liabilities amounting to $2,500,000. \7illie Wilde, at one time the husband of Mrs. Frank Leslie, was married in London to Miss Sophia Lees, an Irish girl of wealth. Restoration of the queen was still cherished by royalists at Hawaii, who refused to take the oath of allegiance to the new government. Civil war lias again broken out in Samoa and many natives have been butchered. Mr. Gladstone’s sight had grown so dim that he was unable to recognize friends. Complete collapse of the expremier was predicted. Admiral de Mei.eo surrendered his troops to the* Uruguayan authorities and the rebellion in Brazil was at HU end. LATER. The funeral services over the remains of the late Senator Vance, of Georgia, were held in the United States senate chamber on the 16th. No business was transacted. In the house a rule which provides for counting a quorum and for fining absent members was agreed to. The Indian appropriation bill-(50,455,800) was reported. It abolishes the office of superintendent of Indian schools, reduces the special agents from five to thre<* and the inspectors from five to two. The cokers’ strike in the Connellsville (Pa.) region was said to be practically ended. Perry Baker and Miss Rail Conklin were killed by the ears near Muneie, Ind. The young people were soon to be married. Alex. Johnson, a Richmond (Va.) negro, was whipped by white caps until he was almost dead. Judge Nott, of 4,he court of claims in Washington, decided that the president could lawfully approve a bill after the adjournment of.congress. The democratic state convention of Pennsylvania will be hel4 at Harrisburg June 27. The death of ex-Governor and exUnited States Senator James M. Harvey, of occurred 1 at his home near Juuction City. A hoiler exploded in a sawmill near Bainbridge, 0., killing two men and injuring four others. The Belgian steamer Deßuyter, which sailed from Brighton March; 12 for Boston, was reported lost. She carried a crew of twenty-eight. Gov. Waite was upheld by the Colorado supreme court in his contest with the Denver police’ I board. Charles C. Stevens, a wealthy member of the New York cotton exchange, was found dead in his berth on the ltock Island road at Wichita, Kan. Col. Oliver Lathroi* Shkperd, U. S. A., died in New York of heart failure. Nearly 9,000 miners were on a strike in Alabama. A lone highwayman robbed the stage near Milton, Cal., of the WellsFargo treasure box containing $2,000. Joseph Ray, the oldest odd fellow in Indiana, died at his home in YNestville, aged 99 * * Seven hundred young chickens were burned to death on Joseph Farley's place at Oxford, O. Official figures obtained at the treasury show that for nine ahd a half of the present fiscal year thdj government expenditures have exceed* edthe receipts by $03,000,000. ft •
WON HER CASE. , -/ , - Verdict of the Jury In the PollardBreckinridtfe Trial. The Kentucky Congressman Is Assessed Damages in the Stun of 815,000—H0 Asks for a New Trial—Washington Women Take Action. THE COLONEL MUST PAY. Washington, April 17. —The PollardBreckinridge trial is ended at last and Madeline Pollard has a verdict for $15,000 against the silver-tongued congressman from the blue grass region. The jury rendered its verdict Saturday after having been out a little over an hour. There was no expression of approval or disapproval from the crowd. Col. Breckinridge himself rose to make a motion for anew trial and the court adjourned. There was nothing but expressions of approval and regrets that the amount was not larger among the few senators in the senate chamber when the bulletin was announced to them and rapidly passed around the chamber. The jury took fifteen ballots before reaching a conclusion. The difference was mainly over the amount of damages to be granted,and there was but one man on the jury who favored the defendant On the first ballot one juror vote;! for the defense and hung out for a time, ' but his colleagues thought he did it more for the sake of argument than bo- j cause he was strongly in favor of CoU 1 Breckinridge. A number of ballots r were required to reach a compromise | I on the amount of damage to be award- j j ed. Two or three jurors wanted to j give the full amount of $50,000, while j the others thought that merely uomi- ! lial damages would serve to express j j their opinion that the congressman had i j treated Miss Pollard shabbily. | Col. Breckinridge was very cool after lhe verdict had been rendered. He declined to speak at that time for publi- ! | cation, as did his attorneys. Miss Pol- ! ; lard was somewhat excited, but not j hysterical, while; awaiting the result [ and broke into tears when she heard it. j She declined to be interviewed, and ! her attorneys said that she was anxious , to efface herself from public sight as far as possible, now that the case had ended.
As might have been expected with a woman of her temperament, the long strain of the trial culminated in a nervous collapse, and Miss Pollard is' suffering from nervous prostration. She was taken Saturday night to Providence hospital, a Catholic institution in a quiet part of the city on Capitol hill, where she is attended by the sisters of j charity. The attending physicians do not anticipate any serious effects from her illness. During* the trial seveial communications came to Miss Pollard and to her lawyers from managers of theatrical and opera companies offering high salaries if she would appear in almost any capacity under their auspices. Hardly had the veydict been rendered when a meeting of prominent Washington woiptm was called to take action regarding tins case of Col. Breckinridge. Representatives of several feminine met at Willard's hotel .Saturday'night, and, after an interesting conference, adopted resolutions calling upon congress to consider the qualifications of Representative Breckinridge for membership in that body. Some of the organizations'whose representatives took part in the meeting were the Woman's Suffrage association, the Woman’s Christian Temperance ! union and the Pro-Ra-Nata. Mrs. Sarah La Fetre, the president of the local Woman's Christian Temperance union, and Mrs. Ellen S. Mussey, the’widow of the late Gen. Mussey, who is herself a practicing lawyer and is prominent in movements for the advancement of women, were among the leading spirits of the meeting. The resolutions adopted were: "To the House of Representatives, Washington D. C.: We, representatives ol the women of Washington, aiming toward the establishment of a higher code of morals and against the atrocious double Standard which has cursed society so long, declare that we do not believe masculinity to be a license for uncleanliness, huqtlmi. holding the same high standard for womanhood w hich men demand, one equally high shall of manhood, therefore That we must have ehasity for ehasity, under one rule of right, bearing as rigidly in Its application upon one sex as upon the other. From o this standpoint we ask congress to consider the case of W. C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, regarding his conduct so unbecoming a legislator. He it further ‘ Resolved, that we, daughters wives and mothers of the commonwealth, express our belief that types of the highest manhood are to bo found In congress; therefore, we ask in full confidence that the house of representatives joiu in the sentiment now presented by us and take some definite action to insure the high character of our country’s administration, and help the future national councils to present a clean and unchallenged body of legislators.” A prominent lady and leader in social events in Washington said Saturday night: "The Washington women have been quietly holding many indignation meetings and after the trial they will be heard. The notorious conduct of congressmen and public meu at Washington is a national dlsgraoe, and the women are now thoroughly awakened on the subject and are determined to demand a better . order of things. "It is an open secret in Washington that there are women, beautiful, brilliant and fascinating. whose relations with congressmen or other public men high in the councils of the nation are either perfectly understood o r hub peeted, who are met at every turn at the most fashionable functions, often in the receiving line, or, elegantly dressed os usual, presiding in the tea room or acting as assistant hostesses. Society knews all this, but so powerful has been the influence of the numes back of them that no one has had the courage to drop the women or rebuke the men." SISTER OF^~MER~CY MURDERED. Berlin and Surroundings Excited by an Assault mid Killing. Berlin, April 17. —The body of a beautiful .Sister of Mercy was found by the side of the road lending to the Grunewald colony. There were evidences that 6he had been assaulted and that she had made a desperate fight. Her throat was cut A man who attempted an assault upon a stout country girl about the hour the Sister of Mercy was filled is supposed to have done the ■murder, and the whole city and neighis excitedly interested in his J ca^%£v.
The Shroud. The snow came softly, silently down Into the streets of the dark old town: And lo! by tbe wind it was swept and piled, On the sleeping form of a beggar child. It kissed her cheek, and it filled her hair With crystals that looked like diamonds there; And she dreamed that she was a fair young bride In a pure white dross by her husband’s side A blush crept over her pale young face, And her thin lips smiled with a girlish grace; But the old storm king made his boast aloud That his work that night was weaving a shroud. —Tom Hall, from "When Hearts Are Trumps.” Tbe Way with ’Em. When the editor strikes a streak of gold, Does he work it for all it is worth, And put up a sign: “I am running this mine!" And get a good share of the earth? Not much.' When the dollars havo weighted his till. . And he faces prosperity’s gales; When he hears tbe cash talk, And he’s king of the walk, He enlarges the paper and—fails! —Frank L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution. Tiierf. is more Catarrh in th’!s section of the country than ail other diseases put together, anu until the last few t was sup posed to be incurable. For e. yreut many years doctors pronounced it a local diseuso, und prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to euro with local treatment, pronounced itincurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in dose3 from 10 drops to a tea- | spoonful. It a.:ts directly 011 the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer ! one hundred dollars for any case it fails to ; cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. ! Address, F. J. Cheney Sc Cos., Toledo, O. 1 pTSold by Druggists. 75c, j Hall's Family Fills, 25 cents. Lena — u l<’rcd didn’t blow his brains out because you jilted him the othenught;'lie came and proposed to me.” Maud—" Did he! Then lie must have got rid of them in : some other way.”—St. Louis Humorist. False Guides | Are they who recommend the use of mercury to the bilious, and gullible indeed are t£oso 1 who follow such advice. Blue pill and caloI mel poison the system. Hostetler's Stomach ! Bitters is a safe substitute for such dangerj ous drugs. They arouse the liver when in- ; active most effectually, and promote, not imperil. general health. Constipation, malaria, dyspepsia, rheumatism yield to the Litters^. JoiiNME— “Mamina, I heard the preacher pay to-.day that matches were made in : Heaven. Is it so”' Mamina—“Of course. Why not?" Johnnie—“ Well, I don’t see any uso for mu tokos. There’s no night there.” I MoVickei'**, Chicago. Saturday. April 28. ends a 3 weeks’ engagement of "Darkest Russia.’’ April 30 “Amer-s ica," the great world's fair spectacle, begins. 1 Seats by mail. "What dis country wants,” said Uncle 1 Mose, “is some sort ob patent contraption ! where a man can drop a nickel in de slot an’ ! git religion.”—lndianapolis Journal. 1 Boheeey—‘‘Sco old Snobson’s wife iu box K putting on nirsi” Snoreley—“l’m glad to see that she lias put on something!”— j Hallo. “Yes, he’s my dog. He answers to the name of Jowlor.” "How can lie answer to 1 it: You’ve cut his tail clear off.”—Chicago : Tribune. ♦ | “Thomas, I see that the D., L. &W. rnil--1 road had an accident yesterday. What docs. 1 D., L. and W. stand for?” "Dead, living ' and wounded, sir.”—Hallo. Y Caller—“l suppose you want Robbie to i follow in his lather’s footsteps and—” Mother—" Well, I should hope noL He is horribly pigeon-toed!?’ The Public Awards the Palm to Halo’s Honey of Horehound and Tar for coughs. 1 Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. j' - • I “How do you like my dress?’’ “You look positively handsome in it. Without doubt, tailoring is u great art.”/-N. Y. Frees. “Your face is burning.” “Yes, that beast Gauly lias just becu making light of me.” — 1 Boston Gazette. . I “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” are widely known as an admirable remedy for I Hoarseness, Coughs und Throat troubles. I “Appearances are very deceptive,” re- ! marked tbe tenor. “Yes,” replied the prima donna; “especially farewell appearances.” ! Mrs. S—“ Well, here wo are in another boarding-house. We are regular Arabs.” | Mr. S—" Yes; folding Bed-ouins!”—Life. The dollar you throw away when you aro young will be worth three dollars when you are old and need it most. *• i A sionT draft on a blind man is when blind man sees it that way. YTiur Gas of the Light Brigade.”—Brooklyn Life.
Young Wives— Who Are for the First Time to Undergo Woman’s Severest Trial, we offer “Hothers’ Friend” A remedy which, if used as directed a few weeks before confinement, robs it of its Pain, Horror and Risk to Life of both mother and child, as thousands who have used it testify. “I used two bottles of ‘Mothers’ Friend’ with marvelous besults, and wish every woman who has to pass through the ordeal of child-birth to know if they use ‘Mothers’ Friend’ for a few weeks It will rob confinement of pain and suffering and insure safety to life of mother and child.— Mrs. Sam Hamilton, Eureka Springs, Ark. Bqok to Mothers mailed free containing voluntary testimonials. Bent by express, charges prepaid on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. BRADFIELD REGULATOR GA.
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