Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 20, Petersburg, Pike County, 6 October 1893 — Page 7

ALU BOSH. TIB* Balance of Trad* Nonsense Folly Eipoeed—Spain aa an Example. It has been given out that we have an “adverse balance of trade” against us of $93,000,000 for the year ended June 30 last Now it is discovered that this total includes an error of over $40,000,000 and that the so-called “adverse” balance is only $30,000,000. But it is entirely in order to demand ef protectionists, who say the balance of $50,000,000 is adverse, that they shall show in what the adversity consists and how we are to be hurt by this condition of our trade. The balance being $50,000,000, it cannot figure one way or the other in a trade so vast as ours is with the outer world. But where it exists, no matter to what extent, protectionists have not demonstrated that it is adverse. They have merely called it so. If we acquire from abroad more real wealth than we send abroad, we are so much the richer; and this is exactly what happens when we have what advocates of trade restriction call “an adverse balance." Their theory is that anything that we are allowed to buy from foreigners or to get from them in any way is a dead loss as soon as it is brought into this country. If France or England should make us a present this year of $500,000,000 in such merchandise as we badly need, the trade restrictionists would calmly count it into the “adverse balance” against us and proceed to assert that i we must inevitably be brought to ruin 1 by it j Absurd .{is this theory is, it is the fundamental theory of all trade restriction and protectionism. All who hold it think that we ourselves .ought! to be obliged to create all the wealth we are allowed to enjoy, and to that end they would shut us up in our country as if in a prison. If, by chance, we manage to import'more foreign wealth than the amount of our own wealth we have offered foreigners in exchange, they mourn over it with all the publicity they can secure by their clamor'ous style of insisting that the presence of this wealth brought in from abroad is a certain sign of existing <?r approaching adversity. Spain was the first country of Europe to be afflicted with lunacy. It believed that the gold it had stolen from the Mexicans and Peruvians was real wealth and that it would be a great misfortune to exchange it for commodities. Therefore it shut itself up inside its own boundaries and shut out all who came with wealth to offer it in exchange. It kept its hoard of gold for some time, and so kept what its imitators call “a balance of trade in its favor.” but it lost its trade, lost its §upremacj- on the ocean, lost the adventurous and enterprising spirit which had made it great, and with this lost the gold for which it had foolishly parted with everything best worth having. This happened several hundred years ago, but to this day Spain has not recovered from the effepts of that experiment in “keeping a favorable balance of trade.” The people of the United States are determined to have a favorable balance of trade, b.ut they will not believe that getting more wealth from abroad than the}’ send abroad means adversityfor them. They want all the foreign wealth they can honestly obtain, and they have, decided in an affirmative the question of whether they shall be allowed to bring it home after having acquired an honest title to it abroad. A balance of trade is useful only for the nerves of bankers, ahd then only in gold-grabbing times. If they all understood the truths of trade it would have no possible use.—St. Louis Republic.

A WORD TO SOME DEMOCRATS. Keep Out of the Trap Set for Y<iu by Republican Calamity Howlers. We are in the midst of a panic. There is no doubt of it The republican calamity howler is abroad attempting to make matters worse than they really are because he is charging it all to the democrats, lie hopes to hold the democrats responsible, at future elections, for every man now idle and for every wage reduction that has occurred since March .4. If the democratic party acknowledges this debt it ■will itself go into bankruptcy at the next general election—and would get its just deserts. Unfortunately not a few democratic editors, and some prominent ones too, are being led into the trap set for them by these same wary republieanhowlers. The howler says: “This is the democratic panic of 1898. It is due solely to the threat of tariff reform. It is alread3r worse than the panic of 1878, and is hourly growing worse. The repeal of the Sherman act will npt stay the devastating progress of this free trade scare. Nothing will stop it but the point blank declaration of President Cleveland that the McKinley tariff shall not be touched for one year from date. He alone has the power to say the word that shall remove the uncertainties that have closed hundreds of banks, put out the fires in thousands of mills and compelled millions of men to accept lower wages, if it did not throw them entirely out of work. Let him say it! Thousands are starving. Socialism and anarch*- are rampant. Our whole industrial, financial and political system is on the brink of ruin.” Up jumps the frightened democratic editor to say that “a certain element of the republican press, in its efforts to create a more serious scare than is at all necessary, that the republican party may reap a little temporary advantage, is making itself ridiculous Half the stories of mills closed and men out of employment are sheerest lies. “If the partisan papers had been fair in their comments on the situation half the actual failures would not have occurred. Theso papers destroy confidence through vulgar and inexcusable lying. Some of them are overstepping themselves. At this time of the year it is custvmary for many mills to shut down lor short periods, sometimes for the purpose of making repairs and renovations, and sometimes because the fall trade has not assumed definite proportions. This xsar they are all herald

ed and the magnitude of each enterprise exaggerated. Correspondents are anxious to earn money, and knowing that partisan newspapers are looking for calamity news, they furnish it to order. Neither is money so tight. The republican papers hare been howling about there being no money to buy grain with. One of the largest commission houses in Chicago is soliciting business and offering to pay all drafts on grain. The men who cannot get drafts paid must have very poor credit and standing in Chicago.” The democrat who talks and writes in this manner is making trouble for himself and his future. He is trying to under-estimate the calamity, because he thinks it must rest upon democratic shoulders. The republicans have got him just where they want him. He has tacitly admitted that the democratic is the guilty party. It is not easy for a confessed criminal to prove his innocence. If he is innocent (as is the democratic party) he should first, last and always assert his innocence. If he does not do so. public opinion will be against him; this, in the case of the democratic party, would oe fatal. Let the republican calamity howlera make things as blue as they desire. The result will be.bad on the country, but it will come home to roost before 1894; and, if the Sherman silver purchase act is repealed unconditionally by September 15, as now seems probable, these fire-alarm republicans may be eating calanyty crow before next November. This is a currency panic. On every other score conditions are favorable Prosperity will again be our guest as soon as we bid farewell to oty false friend—the cheap dollar. Republicans will then stand condemned (and doubly so) out of their mouths. We will enjoy democratic prosperity due to the repeal of republican legislation. It will then be manifest to the unthinking—what is now evident to the thinking—that the present panic is due to lack of confidence in the soundness of our currency. The present calamity may not be as bad as is represented by republicans, but it will be a cargo that will sink the democratic ship if taken aboard. The republicans are attempting to unload to it so that they can save their cargo of McKinleyism. Don't allow them to do it. The present Is a financial panic. If it were due to a tariff scare we should have more, rather than less, money with which to do business. At least one-half of our manufacturers, merchants and business men are using borrowed capital. They sell on credit and discount for cash the notes which they obtain. If business were at a standstill because of uncertainties in regard to the tariff, there weuld be less demand for capital, money would be a drug in the market and interest would be unusually low. On the contrary, money never before commanded such high rates of interest, in times of peace, as during the past few months. And this in spite of the fact that there is today more gold and silver outstanding in the United Stases than ever before. Business wants to go on; this is what makes the demand for money. It cannot proceed because of the apparent scarcity of money and the fabulous rates of interest. Those who possess money will not, for ordinary interest, part with it for more than a few days, until they are certain that it will be returned for 100 and not 50 or 60 cents on the dollar. Here is the cause of the present trouble. Business will mend rapidly upon the repeal of the Sherman act. Byron W. Holt. THE SPIDER AND THE FLY. [What Is the remedy? A joint resolution by this congress declaring that no radical change shall be made in the tariff during its life would restore business.—Letter of Senator Frye to the N. Y. Press.] “Won’t you walk Into my parlor?” said the spider to the fly, ‘■*Tis the prettiest little parlor that ever you did spy.” ** Said the voter to the spider: I reallv must say nay, My father's blood was sucked away in just that very way. He was a worthy man and good, and toiled all the day JMuch work he did, and willingly, for very little pay. But of that little, spiders took, from ever dollar, tithe, In duties laid on all we wore. I’ve often seen him writhe.

For never to a shop he went without the penalty He paid, in prices duty raised or artificially By the profits manufacturers could clap on at their will On all they sold, though made at home, e'en thay helped fill the till And as we little ones grew up, and wanted more and more. These bolstered prices ever rose and pressed him full sore. To level this, at first of all, his beer he had to stop, And then he failed, and even had his baccy for to drop. But still the leak grew bigger and he sacrificed in vain: The more he stinted of himself the duties seemed to gain. Blankets and shirts, our coats and vests, and all that we did wear — Were tawed and taxed, and home-made goods went up as it they were At last the poor old boy gave up, completely wearied out; The taxes on commodities had put him to the rout He couldn't save a penny from the pittance that be earned. And from hiB fate, and lots like his, a lesson we have learned. We know the spider and his ways, his parlor's lovely, true. Made lovely by the blood he sucked from honest toilers, too We’re going to destroy that web, that’s tangled many a one; The lesson of the father's not been wasted on the son. —Jack Plain, in American Industries A Shoddy Proof. The Manufacturer quotes the Record as asserting that “during the last two or three years the production of shoddy clothing has been enormously stimulated ih this country by the exorbitant Increase of duties on woolens by the McKinley tariff” and adds that “the statement is, of course, untrue.” To prove its untruth the Manufacturer quotes figures to show that the imports of shoddy have largely fallen off. There is no relevancy that we can see in this contradiction. If anything, it affirms the Record’s statement What’s the matter with the Manufacturer, anyway? — Philadelphia Record

A Matter of Bmlth. Housekeepers faintly realise the danger of an indiscriminate use of the numerous baking powders nowadays found upon every hand, and which are urged upon consumers with such persistency by peddlers and many grocers on account of the big profits made in their sale. Most of these powders are made from sharp and caustic acids and alkalies which burn and inflame the alimentary organs and cause indigestion, heartburn, diarrhoBal diseases, etc. Sulphuric acid, caustic potash, burnt alum, all are used as gas-produc-ing agents in such baking powders. Most housekeepers are aware of the painful effects produced when these chemicals are applied to the external flesh. How much more acute must be their action upon the delicate internal membranes! Yet unscrupulous manufacturers do not hesitate to use them, because they make a very low-cost powder, nor to urge the use of their powders so made, by all kinds of alluring advertisements and false representations. A11 the low-priced or socalled cheap baking powders, and aU powders sold with a gift or prize, belong to this class. Baking powders made from chemically pure cream of tartar and bi-carbon-ate of soda are among the most useful of modern culinury devices. They not only make the preparation of finer and more delicious cookery possible, but they have added to the digestibility and wholesomeness of our food. But baking powders must be composed of such pure and wholesome ingredients or they must bo tabooed entirely. Dr. Edson. Commissioner of Health of Xew York, in an article in the "Doctor of Hygiene,” indicates that the advantages of a good baking powder and the exemption from the dangers of bad ones in which the harsh and caustic chemicals are used, are to be secured by the use of Royal Baking Powder exclusively, and he recommends this to all consumers. "The Royal," he says, "contains nothing but cream of tartar and soda refined to a chemical purity, which when combined under the influence of heat and moisture produce pure carbonic, or leavening, gas. The two materials used, cream of tartar and soda, are perfectly harmless even when eaterif but in this preparation they are combined in exact compensating weights, so that when chemical action begins betWepn them in the dough they practically'flisappear, the substance of both having been taken to form carbonic acid gas.” Hence it is, he says, that the Royal Baking Powder is the most perfect of all conceivable agents for leavening purposes. f It seems almost incredible that any manufacturer or dealer should urge the sale of baking powders containing injurious chemicals in place of those of a well-known, pure, and wholesome character simply for the sake of a few cents a pound greater profit; but since they do, a few words of warning seem to be necessary. GENERAL. —Z.—“I am told you and Fanny art, now married and happy.” Y.—“Yes, that is to say, she is happy and I am married."—Demorest's. —Mr. Younghusband—“This is capital soup, my dear.” Mrs. Younghusband—"Dear, dear, how can you eat your pie first?”—Inter-Ocean. —A Lesson in Manners.—Chappie— “If yfu want to have an air of distinction, you must look a little tired.” Minnie—“Oh, that’s easy while I’m with you.”—Yankee Blade. —The British government has entered into an agreement with the Protestant and Roman missions in Uganda, by which the geographical limitations and civil rights of each mission are clearly defined. Each mission is entitled to a representative in the^ courts, the appointment to be approved by the resident commissioner.

—Help Wanted.—Bank Cashier—“I have ventured to call on you, sir, to state that you have a very small balance in the bank, and in the hope that you may be able to make a rousing deposit." Senior Partner—“Well, what if we have? The account is not overdrawn, is it?" Cashier—“Oh no. But I am going on my summer vacation tomorrow.”—Clothier and Furnisher. —Among the Kaffirs the price of a wife varies from five to thirty cows. The Damaras are more moderate, and one cow is considered a fair equivalent, while a goat will purchase a wife among some tribes. But the cheapest market appears to be Uganda, where a father offered to bestow the hand oi his haughter upon a traveler for a pair of boots. —The last newspaper letter written by Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper, the correspondent who recently died in Paris, ended with a paragraph bidding goodby to her readers, and saying that before they would have seen it she would have passed away. She foretold the end clearly, for her death occurred two days after this was dated. For eighteen years Mrs. Hooper had nevej; Jiiissed her weekly letter to the Philadelphia Telegraph. —Mrs. Lynn Linton is not altogether without hope for that much-abused institution, London society, for she writes in a current magazine article that though “snobs and tuft-hunters have elbowed and corkscrewed their way into high places and millionaires with"out h's are accepted as equals by the blue-blooded and high-nosed—even now we have the self-respecting Remnant; and the Remnant will have none of these things and bow neither head nor knee to Baal.” —“Wl^t is your name, sir?” the other evening inquired a hotel clerk of a guest who was asking about his mail. “House’n lot,” carelessly answered the man as he leaned against the counter. “But, sir, I want your name in order to look up your mail,” said the elerk. “I don’t want to-know anything about a house and lot.” “And I am not telling you anything about a house and lot,” replied the man rather warmly. “You asked me my name and I gave i t It is H-o-w-s-o-n L-o-t-t."

AGRICULTURAL HINTS ROADS IN NEW JERSEY. What Good Highway* HmOIou tot Colon County. * The fact of the matter is simply this: The rural property in Union county was not prior to 1888 on the market at all. It was held, of course, at nominal value, but there were no purchasers. The roads before being improved were so bad at times that grand juries brought presentments and found indictments against the road authorities on the very thoroughfares now so famous, and the property along them was simply inaccessible at certain seasons of the year. The moment the roads were completed every foot of this property came into market and prices went up with marvelous rapidity, but not to

AN IMPROVED ROAD. Scene on new county ro»3 (Telford) between Elizabeth and Plainfield, K. J. An Immense wagon traffic la carried on over this road since Its completion two years ago. and one team can easily haul a load of four tons over its surface —From photograph. Buch an extent as to create fictitious values. Here are some of the instances in proof: In 1SS8 the property on the road from Elizabeth -to Plainfield, commonly known as Westfield avenue, was offered for sale at $10 per front foot, some of it within the city limits, sewered, curbed and improved. As soon as this county road was finished it went up to $30, and is rapidly being built up. Senator John R. McPherson purchased about one hundred and twentyfive acres just outside the city line, and contemplates opening new streets, paving and improving them and building on them a large number of fine houses at once. Between the senator’s property and Lorraine are two farms. One was bought for $6,000 just before the roads were built; no improvements have been since put upon it, and the, owner declines $30,000 for it. It contains twenty acres. The owner of the second farm has been offered over $1,000 an acre for it but declines to sell at that price. Nest comes Lorraine, the first of the new railroad stations. In August, 1891, a tract of thirty-six acres was bought by a syndicate for $14,000. It has been divided up into building lots and sold for about $55,000, and about twenty-five cottages, some of them very pretty, now stand on these lots. Three acres adjoining this tract were sold for $2,000 after property began to feel the effects of the roads, and have since been sold again at an advance of 300 per cent. On the south side of the railroad track another tract of thirty-six acres was opened up last year. It was bought for $21,000. It is divided into lots selling at $150 to $200 each, and will probably net the owners $80,000. The second station was built to accommodate property owners of Aldene, just west of Roselle. This' tract was a farm of about sixty acres, and was bought for $150 an acre after the roads were built; and the price was then considered big. It has since been sold off in building lots, realizing about $1,500 per acre, and the capitalists have purchased two hundred more acres in the same locality, end >are realizing on it at about the same ratio. Houses are being built on both tracts, and the prospects favor the rapid improvement of all the lots.—Good Roads.

DAIRY SUGGESTIONS. Loose methods or no method at al. and scrub cows make a big leak on the farm. The cow that has nothing but a burnt up pasture to feed on ought not to be expected to yield a profit Make good butter and send it to a city market There is no money in selling butter at the country store. Does grain raising pay you? Well, no. Then why not try dairying? That has been found to pay when the price of grain was much better than now. Milk is now in disfavor with some of the doctors for feeding infants. They say that disease So often comes from sickly cows that it is dangerous. Anybody who tries can get healthy milk. The best cow bred is none too good for the farmer who will take good care of her. It is the farm dairy that produces most of the butter and the farm dairy should be fully equipped with all modern improvements, including the best cow. But the cow is only a machine. She must have good care like any other machine, or she will wear out before she should, and not be able tc do the work that she does do as efficiently as she might—Farmers’ Voice Roads as a Social Factor. The common roads of a country are at once the means and measure of its civilization, writes John Gilmer Speed in an exchange. Without means of communicating easily and quickly from one part of a country to all other parts there can be no very widespread civilization in that country, Neighborhoods and states separated from each other by natural barriers or bad roads stagnate in loneliness and are seldom awakened by common impulses of sympathy. “It is doubtful indeed,” says Prof. Shaler, of Harvard, “whether a sound democracy, depending as it does on close and constant interaction of the local life, can well be maintained in r. 1 country where the roadways put >. heavy tax on human int^rcousa"

uon t Lean Port, Don’t go on a long land journey, don’t start as emigrant for the far west, if unprovided with that defender of health and eonqueror of sickness, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which will defend you from sea sickness, nullify fatigue and ill health caused by travel and change of diet, and counteract malaria. Peerless is it for dyspepsia, rheumatism, liver complaint, nervousness and debility. “Janette, I’m afraid you are a vain little wife. Tou gaze into your mirror so much." "You oughn’t to blame me for that I haven’t your advantage." “What’s that!" “You can see my face without looking into a mirror." “I should be pleased to meat, you,’’ said :be hungry hunter to the antelope, which stood just out of reach. “No, thank you,” said the antelope; “I’ve too much at steak." known are Beechax’* Pills are proverbially kn as “Worth a Guinea’ s box,’’ but they sold at 25 cents a box. The latest method of eloping is by bicycle. In such instances it is love which makes the wheels go round.—Buffalo Express. THE MARKETS. New Yobk. Oct. 2. CATTLE—Native Steers. |3 10 ® COTTON—Mtddllng. FLOUR—Winter Wheat. 1! 05 WHEAT—No. 2 Red. CORN—No. 2. 47*i OATS—Western Mixed. 36*' PORK—New Mess.. 18 00 ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling.® UEEVES—Shipping Steers... 4 50 ® Medium. 4 25 © HOGS—Folrto Select ..“._ *00 © SHEEP-Falrio Choice. 2 75 © FLOUR—Patents. 810 © Fancy to Extra Do.. ISO © WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter . *111® CORN-No. 2 Mixed. 3*H® OATS—No. 2.. O RYE—Nat. 4* ® TOBACCO—Lugs. *50 ® Leaf Hurley. 10 01 © HAY—Clear Timothy. 8 00 © BUTTER—Choice Dairy. 20 EGGS—Fresh. PORK—Standard Mess (new).. BACON-Clear RID. LAUD—Prime Steam. CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping.. 850 HOGS—Falrto Choice. « 10 SHEEP—Fair to Choloe..C2 W FLOUR—Winter Patents. 3 75 Spring Patents. 3 *0 WHEAT-No. 2. Spring. *6li No. * Red...... **ti CORN—No. 2. 24 OATS—No-2. 28* PORK—Mess (new). 17 00 / KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 4 00 ® HOGS—All Grades. 5 85 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red... 5*V4® OATS—No. 2. 24 ^ CORN-No 2. IBM© NEW ORLEANS FLOUR^HIgh Grade. 315 © CORN—No. 2. © OATS—Western.. 331*© HAY—Choice. © PORK—New Mess... © BACON—Sides. © COTTON—Middling. 7* © CINC1NNATL WHEAT-No. 2 Red. « CORN—No. 2 Mixed.:.. 42H© OATS—No. 2 Mixed. 31;,® PORK—New Mess. © BACON—Clear Ribs. © COTTON—Middling. ... © i

FROM GIRLHOOD TO WOMANHOOD. The change is fraught with danger. If there be pain, headache and nervous disturbances, or the general health poor, the judicious use of medicine should be employed. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best tonic and nervine at this time. It brings

the womanly functions, cures female weakness, catarrhal inflammation, and uterine derangements. Seaview, Northampton I County, Va. t DB.K.V.Pierce: Dtar Sir— After taking your medicine I feel like a * new person. 1 shall rectommend you and your ( medicine wherever I go. Your medicine has worked wonders for me and I

can not praise it too muen. ah oi my uiu symptoms have disappeared. Yours respectfully. Mrs. WILUETTA DOUGHTY. Pierce j=. Cure OR MONEY REFUNDED. Ely's Cream Balm RILL CURE CATARRH Applv Balm into each nostril. JCLY BROS..56WarrenSt..N.y AGENT? WANTED, fan make $3 to$i0per day HUU1 I 0 selling the Gem Scissors’ Sharpener. Send2oc. for sample. C. H. RussDJ.,Hartford,Conu. tryxxi mis ?ap*b im7tassj«i«tita

KNOWLEDGE BringB comfort aid improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less'expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to healtl.'of the pure liquid laxative principle* embraced in the remedy, 8vrup of Pigs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial propertii» of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, hjadaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfsction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bjwels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionablo substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 60c and $1 'settles, but it is man - ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if ottered. .WWWWWWW' WEBSTER S I INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY .a Soocwsorof lbs "Inabridaed." Ten years spent in revising, 100 editors employed, more than $300,000 expended. A Grand Educator Abreast of tba Times A Library in ltielf Invariable in the household, and tp the teacher, professional man, self-educator. Askyour Books* Her to show it to you.; [, Published by 1 G.A C.MERRIAM CO., SPEiacmu) ,M ess. ,r.S.A. J MTSfnd for free pre •pectus containing specimen page*, illustrations, tes iinonials. etc. gyDo not buy reprints of ancient editions. ffSH BR^ ThI, Trade Hark la oath, bed WATERPROOF COAT giSTSSJ? In the World I A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. 1,000,000 £ 7 A ACRES OF LANE for sale by the Saikt Pam, DCLl-TH KalLROalt CourasT tn Minnesota. Send for Maps and CircuAn. They will be aer t to you Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Cotaunijsioner, St. Paul, Mini. .^QFrom ISloU lb» month. Harm (by prmoSYDB R, M. Mall Dept. A --- — . ^ O. W. S"5nyd» R. M. Mail Depf MoYloker’s Theater, Chicago Vfltllfelfi |f PH Learn Telejyupoy and Railroal ivUnQ IHCH Agent's Business here, and sec an good situations. Wrt se J. D. BROWN. Sedalla, Mu oriujia xaia papia.tm* tejentA $75.00 to $3S0.00 'ftiSSSX&fgH JOHNSON k CO..KOO-J-4-6-8 Main St., Richmond. Vi* ■arrtAMX THIS PAfU mr} tarn. you writ*. lUniGCCTinU Biliomness. Sour Stomach. Loss of AiIrlUlwEvIIU<1| petite. Vomiting cured by KR1>'<>’§ DYSPEPSIA POW DERS. Price 50c. sent to acf address. Kring's Pharmacy, &44S. 7th SWSt. Louis, Mow

HORSE SHOE PLUC IS WHAT YOU WANT IF YOU '‘ARE LOOKING FOR THE BEST lr CHEWING TOBACCO MANUFACTURED, THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE! THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.

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A. N. K., B.14ea muH wirrin ro abvbbtihf.h* plea ib