Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 32, Petersburg, Pike County, 17 December 1897 — Page 7
M’KfNLEY AS A REFORMER. How the Prealdeat Dtwkarvci aa ** Obvious Duty.*' The president is not much more consistent in his treatment of the currency question than he is in his dealing with the matter of forcible annexation. **I earnestly recommend,** he says, “as soon as the receipts of the govern* ment are quite sufficient to pay all the expenses of the government, that when any of the United States notes are presented for redemption in gold and are redeemed in gold such notes shall be kept and set apart and paid cut only in exchange for gold. This is an obvious duty.” Why an obvious duty? Because if the redeemed notes are paid out as the law now requires they are more than tjkely to return for re-redemption. Thus it becomes necessary to keep replenishing the gold reserve, and this can be done in no other wsy than by selling interest-bearing bonds. Hence “the great cost to the government” under existing law “of maintaining the parity of our different forms of money.*’ And this cost is especially great "in times of business panic and when the revenues are insufficient to meet the expenses of the government. At such times,” the president truly says, “the government has no other way to supply its deficit and maintain redemption but through the increase of its bonded debt.” If, then, it is the obvious duty of government to hold greenbacks in the treasury until somebody is willing to give gold in exchange for them in order to obviate the necessity for repeated issues of bonds, that duty is most obvious and imperative in times of panic and when the revenues are insufficient.
i et the president does not propose to begin the discharge of this obvious duty until “the receipts of the government are quite sufficient to pay a’.l the expenses of the government!” ilowcan he explain his recommendation that the obvious duty be not discharged at the very time when, by his own showing. it is most imperative? The government is running behind now at a greater rate than ever before and there is an official estimate that there will be a deficit of more than $21,OOO.OOOjduri'ng the next fiscal year unless something is done to increase the revenues. According to republican theory, therefore, another panic is due and liable to occur at any time. But. panic or no panic, the shortage is a notorious fact, and it is a fact which should prompt to the immediate discharge of that obvious duty. Respecting this duty it is to be observed that if it should be discharged In accordance with the president’s recommendation and if the banks should be required to redeem their notes in gold in accordance with another of his recommendations the greenbacks would soon be permanently retired and they might, as well be extinguished. Such runs on the treasury as occurred during the last administration would bring the last one of the greenbacks into the treasury, and there they would stay until some one offered gold In exchange for them. Who would offer the gold? Not the national banks, because they would hold fast to the gold to meet demands from holders of their own notes. If others should offer gold and take out the notes and pot them in circulation the banks would quickly gather them up and present them at the treasury and draw out the gold again. Thus the proposed measure would almost certainly result soon in the complete retirement of the greenbacks and practically their permanent retirement. This would the more certainly be the case, because, as Senator Allison has pointed out, if the banks were required to redeem their notes in gold they would decline to accept silver or its certificate representative, except as a special deposit. They could not afford to be loaded with silver if required to redeem in gold. The resulting discrimination against silver would produce very serious complications. Not the least of these, probably, would be depreciation of silver and silver certificates, which the government could not remedy without borrowing hundreds of millions of gold to maintain their convertibility. —Chicago Chronicle.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS. -Poor Mr. Secretory Gage's currency reform scheme is getting the ha! ha! even from Tom Reed.—St, Louis Republic. -The gold advocates ought to be good to the organ grinders, for these musicians handle .nothing but sound money.—Chicago Dispatch. -After his tussle with the democrat* and the Foraker men in Ohio Mr. l!anna considers haring the grippe a harmless diversion. — Kansas City. Times. -The Dingier robber tariff is a failure aa a revenue producer; but it is a grand success as a tribute taker, and that it what the monopolies and trusts gave their money to Uanno for. —Illinois State Register. , -The deficit for the first five months of the Dingley law which was to “atop the deficit at once" is $2,000,000 greater than the largest deficit under the Wilson law for an entire year. Bad as the Wilson law* was its greatest deficit for a year was $44,000,000. The Dingley bill make* a deficit of $46,000,000 in five months.—Utica Observer. —i—Just think of it! Here is the man who discovered William McKinley, elected him to the presidency, mortgaged hia administration to Wall street, “fired" John Sherman from the senate to make a place for himself and dragooned a governor into appointing him, now having to make a desperate struggle to get the vote of the republican members of the general assembly. And all this in a little more than a year—Cincinnati Enoulrer.
WO POLICY. H«w« B*fnUinu “Uf la the At*** on the Money Question. Chairman Ding-ley is as uncertain about what congress will do this winter as are the dozen or more other members who hare felt called upon- to express opinions. The only point on which he speaks with anythin; like positive conviction is that there will be no “reform" of the currency. In an extended interview given to the press before leaving Maine tor .Washington, Mr. Dingley said this: “If the senate were republican and in harmony with the majority of the house on monetary questions, I should look for currency legislation; but, with a free silver majority in the senate antagonistic to the ideas of a majority of the bouse as to what constitutes a sound currency system, I do not see how it is possible to secure desirable currency legislation of a permanent character until the senate is brought into harmony with the house." This language is important, coming as it does from the republican house leader, and gives credence to the belief which has been growing in the public mind for months to the effect that the republicans will be glad enough to avoid all discussion of the currency question at the forthcoming session of congress. Their hope is to take advantage of tbo senate situation as asubterfuge affording the best means at hand for escape from a most embarrassing predicament. The truth is that the majority in the house is about as badly divided on the money issue as that im the senate, and agitation at this time would bring humiliating exposure. Democratic duty, therefore, is plain. The republicans in the house must be smoked out, and the democratic leaders could perform no better party service at this juncture than to smoke them out and reveal their hypocrisy and pre
Mr. Dingley does not say solo plain terms, but t'he tenor of his remarks indicates the belief on his part that the house republicans will pursue a course of masterly inactivity on the currency this winter if permitted to do so by the democrats, because of the lack of a definite reform policy. He then proceeds to outline a policy. “I shoukl be pleased." he says, “to see legislation which would remedy the want of flexibility of our banking' system and would separate those functions of the treasury department which relate to rtie government demand notes and certificates used as currency from those which relate to current receipts and expenditures, and thus better protect the reserve." This is practically the scheme which, it is presumed. Secretary Gage will urge upon congress, but which, it is understood, has not the sanction of the president. Without McKinley’s positive indorsement it is not likely to find enough favor in the house to even threaten party harmony. —St. Louis Republic. PROSPERITY AND PANIC. Hard Times Prices Better Than Prosperity Prices. Republican newspapers are doing all they can to impress upon the farmers the idea that prosperity has dawned in the United States because of the election of McKinley. The rise in the price of wheat has been spectacular, and. although it was caused by famine and short crops abroad, the increase in price has been exploited to prove that republican legislation is the producer of prosperity. This argument has been urged with constant reiteration, and has bad more or less effect, but there are some statistical people in Iowa who are stilbunconvinced. Among these disbelievers in republican sophistry is the editor of the Independent of Forest City. Ia.. who indulges in a little mathematical caN cuiation, with results which are not at all comfortable for the republicans. With unusual generosity this editor takes the panic year of 1803 and compares the prices received then by farmers for seven leading agricultural prod- j ucts with those received in 1897. The prices are those quoted on the Chicago market November 13 of 1893 and 1897. For 1897 the record stands as follows: 500 bu. corn at Me.. {130.OC &*0 bu. flax at II 09. Mo.00 600 bu. oats at 21c... 105.00 500 bu. wheat at 94c.. 470.00 100 bu. rye at 47c..... 47.00 40 hoys. 300 lbs. each, at {3.50. 470 00 20 steers. 1.200 lbs. at {3.10.1.224.00 Total _ __914 00
Turning back to the panic rear of 1 s>93 the statistics give the following results: 5ft> bu. corn at 39c.. 31?5 CO 6-tO bu. flax at 31 16.. 6W.CC 600 bu. oats at 29c.;. 1<5 <V 500 bu. wheat at 63c... 313.00 100 bu. rye at <?e. <7 Of *0 holts. 500 Iba. each. at |6 SO,.... 780.00 20 steers. 1.200 lbs. each, at 33.62...... 1.348 SO Total ..33,410.® With McKinley prosperity the farmer receives $2,941 for the product* io question. With acknowledged panic and hard times in 1S93 he received $3,410.80 for the same kind and quantity of products, a balance in favor of hard times prices of $409.90. Comment is -unnecessary.—Chicago Dispatch. * -The trouble with the Dingley bill is that it was framed to do two entirely Inconsistent and contradictory things, and thus far it has succeeded in doing only one of them. As a prohibitory tariff act it is undoubtedly a success. The importations since it went into effect show this. As a revenue producer it baa proved a colossal failure. The constantly growing treasury deficit proves this. What sound reason is there for expecting the effect of the Dingley law to be one thing this year and a different thing next year?—Philadelphia Times. -The fact chat Mark Hanna has permanently closed the headquarters of the republican national committee at Washington, which he had promised to keep open until the next campaign, may give a hint of what his late fight Is Ohio cost him and the party.—St. Louis Republic.
BUTCHERING MADE EASY. A CosTsaicnee of Real Merit for Mo*. Kill lev Time. One of the advantages of living at Woodland farm is that in our viilags there is a young butcher who well understands his business, and who makes a practice of going about among the farmers and killing their pigs fox them, or their beeves or lambs. Thit butcher goes to the farm, takes his large kettle, his scalding barrel, his hanging frame, his lard press and sausage mill, and kills the pigs, scalds and cleans them, cuts up the meat, makes the sausage and renders out the lard, and charges for it ail, ?! cents a head. When at our farm recently 1 noted the very ingenious arrangement h« had for raising and hanging the hog. and by his permission 1 here illustrate
FIG. 1. and describe it. It is very cheap and | easily made, and any bright boy can j put it together in a day. By its use a boy can easily raise and hang a hog that weighs 400 pounds, and the frame will hold six or more, after being dressed, and six 400-pound hogs is as much as any ordinary family ought to kill and eat in one year in Ohio. Fig. 1 shows the side view of the frame. It is made altogether’of oak, two by four stuff, and the legs are bolted on so that they are easily taken off tc store and carry about. They are set staggered, ns shown at the end view Fig. 2. The large wheel (B) is about , two feet in diameter, and the spindle on the same axle (C) is four inches, sc that one pound pulled down on the
FIG. 2. rope running over B, pulls up six pound: on the rope winding on the small spindle (C). The crank (i)) also multi- I plie« the power by about three times, sc that one pound of force supplied tc the crank lifts about 18 pounds, theoretically. Of course the friction cuts this ' down somewhat, but the heaviest part of the pig killing is the easiest when this machine is used. The large wheel (B) is easily made by sawing out two discs of hard plank and putting in pins around the circle, spacing the discs about four inches apart and putting the circle of pins about four inches from the circumference. A, in Fig. 2, shows the iron support for a short cross-piece that holds up the small end of the spindle on which the weight is raised. The bend is made so that the “gambrel sticks," j which rest on the two stringers, may ! be slid past the pieces(A) without be- ] ing caught by them. Mr. Hess thought first of patenting j this idea, but afterward concluded to j give it to the American people. It has ; more genuine merit than nine-tentha of the things that are patented every day.—Joseph. E. Wing, in Ohio Farmer. Tobacco Stems and Stocks. The stems and stocks of tobacco, which are waste products in manufacture, are rich in potash. These stems give about IS per cent, of ash, which may contain as high js eight per cent, of potash. It is not, however, advisable to burn the tobacco waste in order to obtain its fertilizing ingredients. In combustion, the nitrogenous constituents of the waste, which are also valuable fertilizers, are lost, although it is true that both the potash and phosphoric acid becomes more immediately available after incineration. In order to promote the absorption of the fertilizing ingredients of tobacco waste, it should always be finely ground before applying it to the soil or mixing it w ith other fertilizing materials.—Western Plowman. Crapping Without flotation. It is not alone because it is exhaustive ;bat successive grow ing of one crop on the same land ia bad practice. It ia ' precisely the way to breed insects or j fungous diseases or to extend the growth of noxious weeds. There is not , much successive cropping anywhere now. The value of rotation so as to in- j crease soil productiveness is better un- j derstood. Yet when settlers go to a new country they almost always crop I toil that has virgin fertility with the crop that pays best, which is repeated •ntil the crop begiqs to fail. Almost always the settlers on new land are poor. There are so many disadvantages j in removing to the outskirts of civiliza- | tion that only those go who have not the money to buy farms anywhere else —American Cultiva.cr.
CALENDAR FOR 1898. ^
YOU CAN’T STOP ’EM. News comes from Attica, Ind., of the destruction, by fire, of the big laboratory and office building of the Sterling Remedy Company, makers of Caeca rets Candy Cathartic and Xo-To-Bac, the original guaranteed tobacco habit cure. The tire broke out in one of the packing rooms on the third floor during the noon hour, and had made considerate headway before it was discovered. As soon as it became apparent that the fire department would have difficulty in combating the flames, the work of saving the thousands of valuable documents, contracts* files, millions of booklets and tons of advertising matter was begun with the utmost energy. The Sterling Remedy Company is the principal industry of the beautiful little city of Attica, employing several hundred people, besides being affiliated with the Indiana Mineral Springs, the famous Magno-Mud Cure. Hundreds of men, women and children vied with each other in carrying the contents of the burning building to places of safety. Meanwhile the proverbial energy and and presence-of-raind of General Manager Kramer, of the Sterling Remedy Company, was displayed. He quietly walked away, and secured a big show room near by, and had all the office furniture, charred and dilapidated as it was, taken there. Before the boxes had ceased burning, in which the tire originated, orders were t>eing dictated in the make-shift office for new supplies, and car loads of material were ordered by wire while the streams were still playing on the ruins. Several shipments were made the same evening from goods saved, and on Friday morning, all departments were at work in various rooms about town, while a gang of men were cleaning away the wreckage preliminary to rebuilding. The Maw of Moderate Means. “I can’t afford,” said the man of moderate means, “to go to many places of amusement, but I am admitted free to the play with the longest run on record, ‘The Struggle of Life/ ’ — N. Y. Sun. For Babies and Children there is nothing so good in the treatment of coughs and colds as Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. It cures croup, whooping cough, cold in the head, and gives sweet, refreshing sleep. Children love it, old people like it. “What do you think, old boy; I stole a kiss from tbat haughty Miss Juniper!” "Pooh, that's nothing. The last evening I was there I saw her poodle kiss her 17 times.”—Cleveland Plaiu ..Dealer. Ceaghlng Lends to Consumption. Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles, 50 cents and 91.00. Go at once; delays are dangerous. John Doe—“Is that long-haired poet still the star boarder?” Richard Doe—"No, indeed. He is not in it anv more. He married the landlady.”—N. Y. Journal. Hot and itchy—as a frost-bite. Cooled and Soothed—as a cure by St. Jacobs Oil. No man can love a woman, no niatterhow beautiful she is, if she can’t cook.—Washington Democrat. THE MARKETS. New York. Decemb er 13, 1897. CATTLE—Native Steers.1U' 4 COTTON—Middling.'.. 5Vfc FLOUR-Winter Wheat. 3 73 WHEAT-No. 2 Red. to CORN—No. 2. ‘0 OATS—No. 2.. asra PORK-New Mess.. 8 25 i* ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. . S'.® BEEVES—Steers. 3 » 4* Cows and Betters.. 2 SO & CALVES-(per head).... 5 00 to BOOS-Fair to Select. 3 30 to SHKEP-Fair to Choice. !T5 «« FLOUR-Patents. 4 70 to Clear and Straight.. 4 00 to WHEAT-No. 2 Red Winter... 1 01 to CORN-No. 2 Mixed....... .... to OATS—No. 2. to KYK-Sat. 43 to TOBACOO-Lugs.. 3 00 to Leaf Burley. 4 80 to BA Y-Clear Timothy. 8 00 to BUTTER—Choice Dairy. 13 to EGOS—Fresh... to PORK - Standard (new).. to BACON-Ciaar Rih. Mtto LARD—Prime Steam.. to CHICAGO CATTLE-Natlve Steers. 3 35 to HOGS-Fair to Choice. 3 20 to SHKEP-Fair to i Wee.. 3 00 ® FLOUR—Winter Patents.. 4 70 to Spring Patents.-.... 4 40 to WHEAT—He. a Spring.... 80 ® No. 2 Red (new). 101 to CORN-No. 2. to OAT'S—No. 2. to PORK—Mess (new). 7 35 to KANSAS CITY. CATTLE-Native Steers. 3 » O HOGS-AU Grades. > 10 to WHEAT-No. 2 Bard. 83 to OATS-No. 2 While. to CORN-No 2. NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High Giade CORN-No. 2. OAT'S— W e .stern. HAY-Choice. 14 50 to PORK—Old Mess... to BACON -Sides. to COTTON—Middling. to LOUISVILLE. WHEAT-No. 2 Red.. 96*^ CORN—Na 2 Mixed. 20*A OATS-No. 2 Mixed. 24 to PORK—New Mess. IN n BACON —Clear Rib. 5*to COTTON—Middling. ® 5* b 40 M 87* 9 UO 5* 4 90 4 00 10 00 3 37* 4 50 5 00 4 00 1 02 24* 21* 10 r 30 12 00 10 00 19 17, 8 2* 5* 4* 3 *0 3 40 4 75 4 90 4 HO 89* 1 V3 26 . 22* 7 40 5 00 1 33 85 23 23 5 00 35 28 15 00 e 87* 3* to* 27* *£* » 75 « 5*
MRS. LYNESS ESCAPES The Hospital and a Fearful Operation. Hospitals in greatcities are sad places to visit. Threefourths of the patients lying on those snow-white bedst are women and girls. Why should this be the case ? Because they have neglected themselves! Women as a rule attach too little importance to first symptoms of a certain kind. If they have toothache, they will try to save the tooth, though many leave even this too late. They comfort themselves with the thought that they can replace their teeth; but they cannot replace their internal organs! Every one of those patients in the hospital beds * had plenty of warnings in the form of bearing-down feelings, pain at the right or the left of the womb* nervous dyspepsia, pain in the small of the backTthe “ blues,” or some other unnatural symptom, but they did
not neea tnem. I Don't drag' along at home or in the shop nntil you are finally obliged to go to the hospital and submit to horrible examinations and operational Build up the female organs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will save you from the hospital. It will put new life into you. The following letter shows how Mrs. Lyness escaped the hospital and a fearful operation. Her experience should encourage
other women to follow her example. She says to Mrs. Pinkham: L “I thank yon very much for what you hav« done for me, for I had given up in despair. Last February, I had a miscarriage caused by overwork. It affected my heart, caused Ea me to have sinking spells three to four a •a day, lasting sometimes half a day. I ^ could not be left alone. I flowed con* stantly. The doctor called twice a day for a week, and once a day for four weeks, i ' then three or four times a week for four \ months. Finally he said I would have to undergo an operation. Then I commenced takings Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and
auer one weeK i oegan to recover ana steaauy improvea until x was cured completely. By taking the Pinkham mediciue, I avoided an operation which the doctor said I would certainly have to undergo. I am gaining every day and will chterfully tell anyone what you have done forme.”—Mrs. Th06» Lyness, 10 Frederick St., Rochester, N. Y. «
T'mbrelln Chatter. ?*May I borrow your umbrella for five minutes?” “Why don’t you use the one you borrowed last week?” “T’m keeping that to loan to you.” “Well, I’ll be over in five minutes and get It.” “Then you won’t let me take yours?” “Yes, take it a’omr. I’m still two ahead of you.”—-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Try Graln-OI Try Graln-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIX-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee; The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomachs receive it without distress. 1-4 the price of coffee, loc and 25 cts. per package, bold by all grocers. A More Amuatns Ojcupatton. He—There’s no use crying over spilt milk. She—Of course not—there’s plenty more to spill.—Brooklyn Life. Cold weather aggravates rheumatic pains But St. Jacobs Oil cures—any time. The dance they sit out is the most de hghtful to a pair of lovers.—Chicago News. That Dreadful Cold— that fearful cough—a danger signal. It is sapping the vitality from your lungs. Today a Dottle of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey will cure it, to-morrow it may be too late. This remedy will speedily cure a deep-seated cold or a serious cough, and give strength to the lungs. All good druggists sell it. There is no happiness in having and getting, but only in giving; half the world is on the wrong scent in the pursuit of happiness.—Henry Drummond. In Winter Sciatica is worse. Any time t St. Jacobs Oil is the best cure. . Everybody at a fire knows best how to put it out.—Washington Democrat. I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my boy’s life last summer.—Mrs. Allie Douglass, LeRov, Mich., Oct. 20, ’94. Hope—The untiring effort of a woman to find a burglar under the bed.—Chicago News. %
Made Free with Them. “Whar'd yo’ git dat load er lumber, Br’er Black?” I “Down ter de Healin’ Ba’rft church.’* “Sho ‘nough? lias dey tord de buildin* down?” “No, sah. Hit’s dar yit, but I hearn Par* son Blowhard say dat de pews wuz free, an* ! so I riz up arly dis mornin’ an’ went down [ dar an’ ripped up a pa’r ob em an’ fotch ’em erlong.”—Boston Courier. The Last Man on Earth To recklessly experiment upon himself with hope of relief is the dyspeptic. Yet the nostrums for this malady are as the sands of ths sea. and, presumably, about as efficacious. Indigestion, that obstinate malady, even if of long perpetuity, is eventually overcome wjth Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, an appetizing tonic and alterative, which cures constipation, fever and ague, bilious remittent, rheumatism, kidney complaint and feebleness. The Spoils. Citizen—To tell the honest truth, do yo® think you are earning your salary? Office Holder—Man, I earned it four times over in the campaign.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Isn’t a scald a burn? Yes; and St. Jacobs Oil is a cure. It never does any good to look bored. Use a club.—Atchison Globe. The Mortality Record would be greatly reduced if every home were supplied with a bottle of Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. The great lung strengthener and exterminator of coughs, colds, croup, and kidney affections. .431 druggists sell it. Women say of every pretty girl that sho might be tolerably good looking if shedidn’t know it so well herself.—Washington Democrat. _. To Care a Cold la One Day Take Laxative Brorao Quinine Tablets. AH druggists refund money if it fails \o cure. 25c. Oft the shoulders of the young and halepoverty sits but lightly.—N. Y. Independent. Never trifle with pain. It may fool you. St. Jacobs Oil never fools; it cures. Never take a girl’s judgment of beauty. —Atchison Globe.
CAUSE FOR ALARM. How baldness begins. How to prevent it.
Evfrr person, male or female, shrinks from baldness. It adds to the appearance of age and is a serious discomfort. The cases are rare when the falling out of the hair may not be stopped, and a new and healthy growth of the hair promoted. The hair grows in the scalp like a plant in the soil. If a plant flourishes, it must have constant attention: it must be watered regularly and find its food in the soil where it is rooted. It's so with the hair. Neglect is usually the beginning of baldness. Dandruff is allowed to thicken on the scalp. The hair begins to loosen. The scalp loses its vitality. The hair, insufficiently nourished, begins to fade and to fall. The instant need in snch a case is some practical preparation which, supplying the needed nourishment to the scalp..will feed the hair, give it strength, and so produce a strong and healthy growth. All this is done by Dr. Ayer’s Hair Vigor, the most practical and raluable preparation for the hair that can be obtained. It tones up the scalp, does away with dandruff, stops the hair from falling, restores the original color to gray or faded
hair, and gives an abnndant and glesaw* growth. Those who are threatened with approaching baldness will be interested in the following voluntary statement, made by Alderman S. J. Green, of Spencer,, Iowa, ke writes: “About four months ago. my hair commenced falling out so rapidly that I became alarmed, and being recommended Dr. Ayer’s Hair Vigor by a druggist. I resolved to try this preparation. I have been now using it for three months, and am much gratified to find that my hair han ceased falling out and also that hair which had been turning gray for the past five years has been restored to its original color, dark brown. It rives me much gleasure to recommend this dressing.**— . J. Geebm, Alderman, Spencer, Iowa. Those who are interested in preserving? and beautifying the hair will do well to send for Dr. Ayer’s Curt book, A story of cures told by the cured. This book of too pages is sent free, on request, by the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Maas.
Z<0 A WORLD WHERE “CLEANLINESS NEXT TO GODLINESS” NO PRAISE IS TOO GREAT FOR SAPOLIO
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