Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Number 12, Bloomington, Monroe County, 12 May 1893 — Page 2
A
TEE TELEPHONE.
Br Walts a Bradfutk,
BLOOM1NGTON
INDIANA
GOSSIP ABOUT WOMEN.
It said there we D7, 15& widows in Haasaohuvette. Miss 2ara Bartqp, of Bed Cross fame, has sailed for Europe. Mrs. Cleveland drinks no wine. When wine is served she takes apoUinaris. Lady Colin Campbell Las become a regular contributor to the Saturday Review. Among Mrs. Cleveland's gifts at Philadelphia were two pair of straw slippers. Mrs, Sheridan was regarded as one of tht hftndsoaaest women seen at the -Philadelphia celebration. A woman who a fewyears ago was private secretary to James G. Blaine and admired by everybody, is now working in a Haverhill (Mass.) restaurant. Miss Octavia Hill of Boston, recently entertained all her tenants to the number of 700 or 800. Miss Hill will fee remembered as tbe pioneer in house tenement reform, Mme. Astie de Valsayi-e, the discontented woman who wanted to fight a, duet on ti e field of Waterloo, is row petitioning the French government to alow women to wer men's ctolhes, Miss Kate Field's first lecture to the Alaskans was delivered in a dance house t.t Juneau, . mining town. The miners liki tbe entertainment, and offered her a vote ?f thanks as remuneration. Sarah Bernhardt is reported to have shocked the Parisians by declaring: "I cannot play any more in Paris. You Parisians are too poor. I like butter ot my bread, so I will have tcreturn to America.9 A female evangelist in Indiana is te'li ig tbe girls chat not five men in a hundred are good enough for them :o marry. The girls go right along marrying, however, and every blessed ime of them tainks she gets one of those white sheep. Mrs; Frehnghuysen, widow of the Senator, is building a colonial mansion at Lennox. The marked feature of this house will be 4Mo dining-room, with an oblong window designed by Miss Frelinghuysen, which will have the effect of a frame, the landscape outaide being the picture. Nellie Grant-Sartoris lives in Southampton, Borland. Her home stands riear the river, aid is as comfortable and as picturesque as most English homes are. The house is two centuries old, and has been added to by each generation. Besides this country bouse, oar father-in-law has given hex a house in London. She is very comfortably fixed as far as money and houses go. Mrs. Sartoris is the mother of three children; the oldest, a boy, is ter, and the youuges:, a girl, is fiix. Eianine Goodale is lecturing in the East, during her vacation, on the Indian quest on. Miss Goodale began her career as a postic prodigy in connection with her sister. She has not written much poetry of lace, but has contributed some very interesting prose to the columns of tha daily press in New York. For son? 3 years past sbe has lived in Dakota, devoting herself to teaching Indian girls bow to trJse care of themselves as' other girls do; that is: how to sew, to make bre id, and to carry on simple remunerative industries. A Wfill-known belle of New Orleans has a passion for Brazilian bugs, which are supposed to lrv) on air. She wears them in her hair and about her dress, not only in private, but in public Sometimes, when in a h any to get home, she will patronize the democratic street-car, where she is the observed of all tt passengers on account of the bugs crawling over her garments. These buj;s do not roam at will; they can go to a certain distant and no farther, for they are held by a fine ge ld chain which is pinned to her c ress. Some years ago this was a popular fres.k of fashion, and tLere is a possibility of its leing revived ODDITIES.
Tucson, Arizona, has a six-toed, six-fingered Mexican boy. A piano over a century old and still playable only fetched $1 at a Reading, Pa., sale. An Oil City man claims the prize for sunnowerft, having one in his garden that measures fifty-four inches in circumference. Cayuga County, New York, got an honest treasurer, Horace G. Cook, forty years ago, andfcas religiously kept him in office ever since. Hetman Strickler, of Reading, Pa., hasthe larger and most varied collection of b ltterflies in existence, which he has refesed " sell for$is,ooa A littie Michigan girl has without assistance picked and mounted on cards ar d exhibited at a church fair 2,125 specimens of four-leaf clover. An albino squirrel was captured at Cameron, Barron county, Wis., which, tho ighof the rtsd-sqnirrel species, is pure white, not a colored hair appearing. F. B. Wood, of Lansing, Mich., has . map of Albany, N. Y., made in 1854, the surveys thertfor being made by Jay Gould, 'vho is now rich enough to live without working at his trade as a surveyor. A t2herry tree of the white ox-heart variety on tie premises of John Capura, of Oioville, Cal, bore this season 2,800 pounds of fruit It is eighteen years old, sixty feet higti, and six feet in circumference. Of all the smokers of New York, Will C. WLliion, of Seventy-third street, has, perhaps, the largest collection of merschaum pipes in the United States. The collection must be worth at least $20,000. laxter "Wilcox, of Union City, Mich., owns a cucumber vine that is sixty-five feet long, bears several cucumbers from tiiree to four and a half feet long, and doesn' ; seem to te half through growing yet. At Dover, N. H., the other morning P. Rowiter had eggs for breakfast. Opening one he found in the center another entire t egg, shell and alL He will have it pul, under a glass and kapt it as a curiosity. Ihere lives in Troy, Mo., a little girl about 8 years old whose head is almost en iron gray, and it is steadily and perceptibly growing grayer, and the present indications are that long before she reaches womanhood her once raven black hair will have become snow white. Fright caused the change in oior. Mr. and Mrs, J. B. Collins of Jamestown, jR". Y., were reading in their sitting-room the other evening when, after several preliminary sniffs, Mr. Collins said that sorietuinr was turning. Mr. Collins at the same timo saw smoke arising from the carpet Investigation showed that the colored .gkus globe had been melted by the burning gas and was dripping down upon the carpet, causing tha smoke.
HIS WITNESSES, t Miraculous Testimony to the Truth of the Gospel. "Christ Came Who Is Over AU' Or. Talmage's Sermon. Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooktyn , last Sunday. Subject: "Over Alt Forever." Text: Romans ix. 5 ''Christ came who is over all." For 4,000 years the world had been waiting for a deliverer waiting while empires rose and fell. Conquerors came and made the world worse instead of making it better; still the centuries watched and waited. They looked for him on thrones, looked for him in palaces, looked for him in imperial robes, looked for him at the head of- armies At last they found him in a barn. The cattle stood nearer to him than the angels, for the former were in the adjoining stall while the latter were in the clouds. A parentage of peasantry. Ho room for him in the inn, because there was no one to pay the hotel expense. Yet the pointing star and the angelic cantata showed that heaven made up in appreciation of his worh what the world lacked. "Christ came, who is over all, God
essed forever. Amen."
1
'Foiaeleea powder" never hae been much
of a success. It hae been known t speak loader than words when discovered on the lapel of a am i coat, Haw York 0axmer clai
I suppose that the majority of those here to-day assembled believe the Bible. It requires as much faith to be an infidel as to be a Christian. It is faith in a different direction. The Christian has faith in the teachings of Matthew, Luke, John, Paul, Isaiah, Moses. The infidel has faith in the free thinkers. We have faith in one class of men. They have faith in another class of men. But as the majority of those perhaps all of those here assembled are willing to take take the Bible for a standard in morals and in faith I make this book my starting point. I suppose you are aware that the two generals who have marshaled the great armies against the deity of Jesus Christ a.-e Strauss and Renan. The number of their slain will not be counted until the trumpet of the archangel sounds the roll-call of the resurrection. These men and their sympathizers saw that if they could destroy the fortress of the miracles they could destroy Christianity, and they were right. Surrender the miracles, and you surrender Christi-
anitv. The great German exegete !
says that all the miracles were myths, j The great French exegete says that j
all the miracles were legends. Ihey propose to take everything supernatural from the life of Christ and everything supernatural from the Bible. They prefer the miracles of human nonsense to the glorious miracles of Jesus Christ. Now, I take back the limited statement which I made a few moments ago, when I said it requires as much faith to be an infidel as to be a Christian. It requires a thousandfold more faith to be an infidel than to be a Christian, for if Christianity demand that the whale swallow Jonah, then skepticism demands that Johah swallowed the whale. I can prove to you that Christ was God not only by the supernatural appearances on that Christmas night, but by what inspired men said of him. by what he says of himself and by his wonderful achievements. "Christ came, who is over all." Ah, does not that prove too much? Not over the Csesars, not over Alexander the Great, not over the Henrys, not over the Louises. Yes. Pile the thrones of all the a?as together, and my text overspans them as easily as a rainbow overspans a moun tai n top. Christ came who is over all. Then he must be a God. Philosophers say that the law of gravitation decides everything, and that the centripetal aud centrifugal forces keep the world from clashing and from demolition. But Paul says that Christ's arm is the axle on which everything turns, and that Christ's hand is the socket in which everything is set. Mark the words, 1 'Upholding upholding all things by the word of his power." Then he must be a God. If I ask how much estate vou are worth and you say 10,000 or $100,000 or $500,000, I believe what you say. You know better than any one else. Now, Christ must know better than any one else who he i3 and what he is. When I ask him how old he is, he says, "before Abraham was, I am." ' Abraham had been dead 2,028 years. Was Christ 2,028 years old? Yes, he says he is older than that. Before Abraham was, I am." Then Christ says, "I am the Alpha." Alpha is the first letter of the Greek alphabet, and Christ in that utterance declared, "I am the A of the alphabet of the centuries." Then he must be a God. A man comes into your place of business, with a Jewish countenance and a German accent, h 3ays: "I am Rothschild, the banker at London. 1 have the wealth of nations in my pocket. I loaned that large amount xc Italy and Austria in their perplexity." But after awhile you find that he has never loaned any money to Italy or Austria; that he never had a large estate, that he is no banker at all: that he owns nothing What is he? An impostor. Christ says he owns the cattle on a thousand hills; he owns the world; he owns the universe; he owns the next world; he is the banker of all nations. Is he? If he is, he is a God. Is he not? Then he is an impostor. I have shown you what inspired men said of Christ. I have shown you what Christ said of himself. Now, if you believe the Bible, let us go out and see his wonderful achievements surgical alimentary, ma rine, mortuary, Surgical achieve
ments! Where is the medical journal that gives any account of such exploits as Christ wrought? He used no knife. He carried no splims. He employed no compress. He made .20 patient squirm under cauterisation. He tied no artery. Yet behold him! With a word he stuck fast Malchu amputated ear. He stirred a little dust and spittle into a salve and with it caused a man who was born bi nd and without optic nerve or cornea or crystalline lens to open his eyeii on tha sunlight. He beat music cn the drum of the deaf ear. He straightened a woman vrho through contraction of muscle had been bsnt almost double for well nigh two decades. He made a man who had no use of his limbs for thirty-right years shoulder his mattress and walk off. Sir Astlev Cooper, Abernethey, Valentin? Mott stood powerless before a withered arm; but this doctor of omnipotent surgery comes in and he sees the paralytic arm useless and lifeless at the man's side, and Christ says be him, "Stretch forth time hand." and he stretched it fcrth whole as the other. He was a God. Let philosophers and anatomists go to Westminster abbey and try to wake i.p Queen Elizabeth or Henry VIII. No human power ever wakened the dead. There is a dead girl hi Capernaum. What does Christ do? Aias, that she should have died so young and when the world was so fair! Only twelve years of age. Feel her cold brow and cold hands. Dead, dead! The house is full of weeping. Christ comes, and he takes hold of the hand of tbe dead girl, and instantly her eyes open, her heart starts." The white lily of death blushes into the arms of her rejoicing kindred. Who woke up -that death? Who restored her to life? A man? Tell that to the iu latics in Bloomingdale asylum. It was Christ the God. But there comes a test which more than anything else will show whether he was God or man. You remember that great passage which says, "We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ' The earth will be stunned by a blow that will make it stagger in midheaven, the stars will circle like dry leaves in an equinox, i;he earth will unroll the bodies, and ';he sky will unroll the spirits, and sduI and flesh will come into incorruptible conjunction. Day of smoke and fire and darkness and triumph. On one side, piled up ir. galleries of light, the one hundred and forty and four thousand yea, the quintillions of the saved. On the other side, piled up in galleries of darkless, the frowning, the glaring multitude of those who rejected God. Between these two piled up galleries a' throne, a high throie, a throie standing on two burnished pillars justice, mercy a throne so bright you had better hide your eye -est it be extinguished whh excess of vision. But it is an empty throne. Who will come up and take it? Will you? " .So," you say, "lam but a child of dus1;. I would not dare to climb that throne." Would Gabriel climb it? He dare not. Who will ascend it? Her e comes one. His back is to us. He goes up step above step, height above height, until he reaches the apex. Then he turns around and faces all nations, and we all sei who it i?. It is Christ the God, a id all
earth, and all heaven, and all hell
kneel, crying: ''It is a God! It is a Goi!" We must all appear jefore th judgment seat of Christ. Oh, put your tired head down on thts heaving bosom of divine ccrnpassicn while he puts his arms around yea and says: kiO widowed s.oul, I will be thy God. O orphaned soul,' I will be thv protector. Do not. cry." Then he touches your eyelids with hi 5 fingers and sweeps his .ingers dewn your cheek and wipes away all th e tears of loneliness. Oh, wnat a tender and sympathetic God h?.s come for us! I do not ask you to lay hold of him. Perhaps you are not strong enough for that. I do n :t ask you to pray. Perhaps you are too bewildered for that. I only ask you to let go and fall back into tie arms of everlasting love. Soon you and I will hear the click oE the latch of the door of the seprlcher. Strong men will tak us m their arms and carry us down and l iy us in the dust, and they cannot bring us back again. I should be s cared with infinite fright if 1 1 bought 3 must stay in the grave. But Christ will come with glorious icon-, ociasm and split and grind up the rocks and ler, us all come forth. The Christ of the manger is the Christ of ,he throne. He Outdid Himself. Boston Journal. A good man who lives in a thickly settled locality some miles from Boston has the misfortune tc be extremely deaf. Like many others similarly afflicted his voice is at times remarkably loud; this is especially true in his devotions, and it is currently reported in the neighborhood that his morning prayer can be heard for half a mile. A neighbor not long since having occasion to isit his house in the morning found Us owner at prayer, and not wishing to interrupt him he waited outside. The tones of the voice within grew louder. Each 6en fence whs un w ittingly spoken with more vehemence than the preceding until the prayer was ended with a prolonged shout of :Amen!" The visitor was E,hout to knock when the sound of thd wife's voice arrested him. With a skill born of practice she almost rivalled the tones of her spouse as she said: "Well, I guess you've drove all the rabbits out of the swamp this mjin-
TOPICS OF THESE TIMES. WOMAN'S RIGHTS. Progress is the watchword of the nineteenth century and the weaker sex has caught on to the spirit of the age. Public discussion and sentiment has opened for them many vocations, spread wide the doors of great institutions of learning and given them almost unlimited opportunities to throw off the yoke of servile submission to the tyrabt man. Many continue to marry and go on in the old-time way, but countless numbers prefer to pound type writers and go to college. A nd when the girls get to college they hold up their end of achievements in nearly all depaitments of student life. The reading world has been much agitated of late over ths reports of the hazing outrages at Delaware, O., whereby a number of students received serious disfiguring marks from nitrate of silver applied by students of a higher grade in alleged sport. Hazing had been supposed to be an exclusively boyish trait of character, but the world has been shocked at the developments of the investigation at the Ohio seat of learning, which have
disclosed the fact that young lady students have been guilty of equally cruel torture upon the persons of their fellow students, using the same vile means of inflicting pain and mortification upon their helpless victims. We are progressing and women are getting their rights, and the girls will tldo us the boys do," and the time may soon come when girls will be (:nc better than boys" a calamity to avert which prayers might well be offered.
THEOSOPHY. There are many people of great intelligence who have allowed their minds to be led astray by the weird and visionary ideas enunciated by various male arid female mountebanks who style themselves 4 'Theosophists." Those of our readers who have read enough of the current lit-' crature of the day on this subject to form an intelligent idea of the claims made by these self-constituted apostles of what they are pleased to call "The Wisdom Religion" "will be glad to know the esteem in which thev are held bv well informed critics in New York, in which city the American Branch of the World's Theosophical Society has its headquarters. From one of these critics we glean a few leading fa?ts for the guidance of our readers that they may not be misled by impostors who may trust to their credulity and ignorance for a temporary notoriety or social preferment. Theosophism was founded by Mme. Blavatsky, a Russian adventuress and suspected Russian spy, who was exposed as an impostor by the London Psychical Society after a thorough investigation. Blavatsky claimed supernatural powers, but she was proved,, to be an audacious trickster who even ridiculed her own dupes, of whom Col. Olcott, an American, was the chief, and who still remains a great Theosophical leader. A convention of Theosophists was he.d in New York last week, but their pioceedings were not characterized bv anv tangible manifestations of superior erudition or wisdom and the practical results can not be said to have been as great as may be seen at au ordinary spiritual seance. Ail the ideas worthy of consiJeration in
T iieosophy w ere appropriated by Blavatsky from Buddhism. The rest is doubtless pure humbug and trickery. The Thecsophist movement, although it has attained some notoriety in certain quarters, has comparatively few adherents, and has not the elements that are likely to make it a great success, even as a fad or "fake."
brief stretch upon the path of the world's progress an epoch in the record of man's achievement. It is not necessary that we as American citizens should be unduly impressed with the dignity with which high rank surrounds a titled nobleman, but few thinking people can fail to accord to this worthy representative of a wonderful ancestor proper respect and all honor and consideration. That he is the Nation's guest is meet and proper, and that he shall be royally entertained will be the desire of all patriotic citizens. That he is a man of liberal ideas and progressive sentiments, a gentleman and a scholar of fine attainments all will be gratified to know. Naught that we can do can add to the enduring fame of his great ancestor, but the Duke and party will affoid a pleasing opportunity for the display of social amenities, and of paying tribute to a character to whose heroic attributes the world is so greatly indebted. UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE. The idea of universal suffrage is becoming troublesome to many of the monarchies of Europe. Some of these countries have for many years given 4o their subjects this right on many questions, but in others various restrictions are cast about the exercise of the privilege on the few questions on which the populace are allowed to have a voice. The movement for universal suffrage in Belgium has attracted a great deal of attention, but a similar movement in Sweden has matured almost unnoticed. In March a People's Parliament of 130 members, met in Stockholm to act as the representative of more than 1,000,000 disfran
chised Swedes, to demand the removal of the restrictions on the right to stand up and be counted. At present the parliamentary electors of Sweden number only about 300,000, as all men having taxable incomes of less than $200 each are excluded from the franchise. The People's Parliament will demand an unrestricted manhood suffrage. .The refusal of the lower House, on a recent vote, to lower the property qualification was the cause of the organization of the present movement, and of the choice of the Peo pie's Parliament. ,
Pen Points. Onion County Standard. Some men are not content with biting off more than they can chew; they try to chew it. Youth is the time to make mistakes; we have more time to regret and profit by them. The abuse heaped upon a man must be considered as a tax he pays for trying to be a public benefactor. bne of the happiest moments in a man's life is when he accidentally overhears someone speak well of him. A never failing sign of spring the bock beer $?n. Oldest Tree In the World, London Notes and Queries. Rev. W. Tuckwell, in "Tongues in Trees and Sermons in Stones" (George Allan, 18D1,) says: "The oldest living tree in nht world is said to be the Soma cypress of Lombady. It was a tree forty vears before the birth of Christ.'" Bxt AIohonse Karr, in his "Voyage autour de non Jardin" (Warne & Co., transation edited by the Rev. J. G. Wood), says of the baobab (adanson?a digitata:) "It is assest that some exist in Senegal that are 5,000 years old." . Modern Architecture. Visitor "What is that heavy, gloomy-iooki ig building over there?" Resident "That is a theater and pleasure resort." Visitor-" And what is that graceful, airy gothic structure to the right." Resident : That is the jail." Not True Works of Art. Painter (indignantly) "Why is it that the jury has refused all my impressionist studies?" Chairman of the Jury of Award "They wouldn't stand the test. They didn't iook just alike, no matter which side you stood thern on." It Is Not What We Say But what Hood's iSarsaparilla Doss that tells the story Hood's Cures
Friendship is an intimacy based on mutual esteem, and those who can multiply its experiences to an indefinite extent are fortunate, but probably few in number. Friends are desirable to all but it sometimes becomes a matter of regret that people of very robust physique are unable to control, or are unconscious of their effusive affections, and find it necessary to give vent to their cordiality by shaking hands with a grip like an iron vice. Serious discomfort is often caused from this innocent source, and dispatches record the death of a man at Bristol, Pa., from blood poison, induced by the crushing of the finger nails of a cordial friend into the palm of his hand
at a recent meeting. A firm grasp
of the hand when greeting a friend
indicates a certain earnestness anc honesty that is altogether preferable to the inane fashion of the mar who allows vou to take his hand a$; you would a pump handle, with utter indifference, but it is altogether unnecessary to carry the ceremony tc the extent of inflicting physical injury on the person of your friend or chance acquaintance.
Miss JLizzie May J)air Hveruill, Mss.
i
After the Crip Nervous Prostration No Help Except in Hood's Sure It Saved Her Life. '-ilare been suffering for two xws past with Nervous Prostration which was brought oa Dy a very severe attack o' grip. Had Cold Chills lmo$t every day for nearly ifcree years. Have iow taken, on rpcommen laiion ot my drugl Bt, three bottks of Hoci'i Sarsaparilla. What five doctors of fcoth Boston and this city :ould not do, those three bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla have done for me. j am now well and run walk without a cane. I feel grateful to Hood's Sarsaparilla
is I believe I should not be alive if it were not 'or this medicine' Miss LizziE May Davis, Haverh 11, Mass. Wooo's act ccsily. yet promptly and fflc'entiy. on the Hver and bowels.
AN UNDERGROUND ROAD,
nag
THE NATION'S GUEST. Not the least interesting feature of tuis Exposition year is the visit of the Duke of Veragua, the lineal d esc endant of Colum b us, to the United States as the Nation's guest. The average American will find it difficult to grasp the idea T.hat this distinguished foreigner is able to trace his lineage back through the mists of time and ti e uncertain data of history with an undoubted accuracy to that uadau.ited voyager to whose genius and determination and unswerving conviction the human race is indebted for an event whose consequences have been so grand and far-reaching; What the history of the world would have been had the discovery of America been delayed another hundred years is
J idle to conjecture, but t uit the elfect
of its discovery at the time of Columbus' venturesome voyage into the unknown and shoreless seas, whose mysteries had for ages battled the skill and science of sages and philosophers, was propitious and salutary, few will care to deny. Four hundred years to an American seems an age, but comparatively it is bv.t a span, a
London's Electric Railway Is 300 Feet Below the Surface. Boston Transcrip. London's electric railway run? from the "city" to Stock well, a distance of four miles, more or less, and lies buried in the ground at a dpthe of 300 feet, nearly, at the city end., and is reached by elevators. This great descent is rendered necessary for two reasons first, the road goes under the bed of the Thames, and second, the city commissioners of sewers, who had a great say in the matter, agreed that if it were so low down they would only charge a small sum for the ground. The train consists of an engine and four vestibu.e cars, so that it is possible to pass from a smoking carriage to nonsmoker and vice versa. The seats are not arranged like our Pullman, but are fixed in the same manner as are the seats in the electric cars here. The train is drawn with an engine with a strong battery and works very well unless the power gives out when there is a delay sometimes of half an hour not very agreeable in a tunnel just largo enough for the train, admirably ventilated as the tunnel is. Since the opening of this uniqie railroad the fares have been altered and improved terms made, so now you .can go half way (i. e. to Kensington Oval) for 1 penny and the journey from Stockwell to the i-ity is regularly done in fifteen minutes. Thero are no tickets, but yoa can get commutation tickets for three, six or twelve months at reasonable rates. The air in the tunnel is always fresh and, even in summer, cool.
KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort aittl improvement and tends to nersonal enjoyment when rightly usecL Tbe many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by moro promptly adapting the world's best products to theneeds of physical being, will attest the value to nealtn of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tlifi remedy, Syrup of Figs. Ita excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the tasus, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a jcrfcct latative; effectually cleansing the systero dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing C(rtistipatio:ru It has given satisfaction to millions ani met with tho approval of the mediwii profession, because it acts on (he Kid neys, Liver and Uowcls without weakening them and it is perfectly free ftom every objectionable substance. Syrup of F:jrs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whuse name is printed on every package, also the ziauie, fcyrup of Figs, and being well infciiiicii. yon will not accent anv substitute ii tiered.
BE GREAT)
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fiSHiLOHSft
Cures Con:nrrptlnn, Coughs, Croup, &r Throat So'd by U Druggists on a Guaranty. Fr a Lama Sid Back or Cheat Shtioh, F'r(HM Ur will air g)tat MtifocUOi!.5 MSttfc
