Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, October 30, 1897, Page 7

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sary nourishment, hair needs, Hungry The hair fs like a plant. plant fade and wither? Usually lack of neces- The reason why Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its normal color, stops hair from falling, and makes it grow, is because it supplies the nourishment the What makes the Not to Be Cheated. ‘Time was when there was ‘only one ise in the town of Mechanic Falls and that one belonged to an old man of somewhat eccentric ways. One day a young man wanted to hire the chaise to take his best girl to ride. The owner greed, but nothing was said about the price. Toward night- fall the young man ‘brought ‘the chaise back. “How much asked. “Where did ye go?” man. rhe young man named the place. “How far do you call ‘that?’ “Twelve miles.” “Nope,” said the old man, “it’s only ten.” “I ‘tell you it's twelve good, lon; s, and zh to know.” 9 is the damage?’ he returned the old “Hm. I traveled ithe road before you was out of dr but ten miles. Both of them were ‘losing their tem- apidly. Never mind how far it is,” cried the young man; “you tell me how much I owe you, and I'll pay you and get asses, I tell you ‘tain’t atching his breath, the old man thundered: “Young feller, ye don’t owe me a cent; but, by mighty, I'll be durned ef you're agoin’ to cheat me on the distan Lewiston Journal. by Dr. H. H. ons of Atlanta, Ga. The great- ecialists in ‘the world. Read tisement in another column of treated fri An Intelligent Listener. t A professor of mechanics at an En- tlish college records that he once gave a lecture upon the locomotive, and was particularly struck by the sorp- ion of one juvenile listener. He spoke ‘o this student after the lecture, and asked: I've ‘been over it times | | | | | | | ! | { “Well, I suppose you understand all | about the locomotive nov was the reply, Il but one And what iis that?’ said the pro- ‘essor, kindly. “I can’t make out what makes the ocomotive move without horses.”— Lit-Bits. $1000 Given Away. Think of it! One thousand dollars n gold coin offered free by the Sterling to the friends and orsers of s Candy Cathar- The Sterling is honest and re- le, its offer is liberal and attra » and Cascarets are the best medi- preparation ever discovered, Don’t s your share of the gold, for you n easily get it by reading and an- swering the big ad in this iss Uniform. “Did you find any irregularities in his accounts?’ “On the contrary, they were remark- ably regular—he doctored them every day Detroit News. Coe’s Cough Balsam is the oldest and best. 1t will break up a cold quicker shan anything else. It is always refiable. Try it. r about Macklin? Mr. Dulley to his ‘Hicks—Did you They led the Rey. bedside last evening. ‘Wicks—You don’t mean to say he is 4m a dying condition? Hicks—Oh, mo! Only a bad case of swsomnia.—Boston anscript. POMMEL 228. SLICKER Keeps both rider and saddle per- ‘El fectly dry in the hardest storms. Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for 3897 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— it is entirely new. If not for sale in your town, write for catalogue to 9S A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mess. ir amicted »i*> | Thompson’s Eye Water, OPIUM MORPHINE and WHISKY HABITS. HOME CURE. Book FR! Di HOFFMANS, Isabella Bidg., eo Ee Ke de Ce No. 44—1897. How He Got Of. Magistrate (to prisoner, who is be- fore him for begging)—What makes you beg? Prisoner (whining)—Because I can't get any work, your honor. Magistrate—Would you work if you adly, your honor. Magistrate—What work? Prisoner—Anything, your honor. Magistrate (rather stingy, with. an eye to business)—I hdve a heap of weeds I want taken out of my ground, would you do that? Prisoner—Yes, your honor; only too glad of the job. Magistrate—You are discharged. ner—Did you say I was dis- our honor? M ate—Yes; you're discharged. Prisoner—Then weed your blooming Moments. List of Patents Ixxved Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Julius D. Brainard, St. Paul, Minn., storm sash and window screen hanger and operator; Charles E. Cottrell, Min- neapolis, Minn., barrel lining; Arthur F. Crandall and G. W. Byrnes, Ber ford, S. D., form: cabinet; Daniel la- hey, Graceville, Minn., wheel; James M. Graham, Drayton, N. D., sash f: tener; Ernest F. Jewell, Lake City, Minn., book support; Richard Lord, Kasson, Minn., hub attaching device; Henry M. Peterson, Horace, N. D., windmill; Daniel Reed, Eagle Lake, Minn., air ship; James Runions, Cokato, Minn., sleigh; Peter A. Schu- macher, Reynolds, N. D., end bearing for shafts; Christian A. Skeie, St. Hil- iare, Minn., snap hook. Merwin, Lothrop & Johnson, Patent 910 P. P. bldg., St. Paul, Minn. He Followed the Advice “Tow far can you swim, Willie?” in- quired the visitor. “Oh, I don’t know,” replied Willie. “Across the ocean?’ persisted the isitor, facetiously. liouldn’t wonder,” answered Will- ie, promptly. “Why, Willie, do you know how far cross the ocean?’ demanded lie’s mother. Jon't care how far it is,” retorted Willie. “Pop told me.once never to admit that I couldn’t do a thing until { tried and failed, and I never tried this.”—-Chicago Post. flow’s This: We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Cutarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. *, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersignea, have known F, J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carr out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.; Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O: Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system. ‘Testimo- nials sent free. Price 7ic per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. People Killed By Jealousy. The physicians say that the enter- tainment of jealousy has a disorgan ing effect upon the body, and ¢ it is disturbing to the mind. A jealous weman may have been as lovely as a May morning, but jealousy upsets her. Jealousy guarantees biliousness, Bil- ss makes bad temper, cross These, too, are disturbing to the cook, and she sends bad food to the table. The man can't eat it, and his business goes wrong all day. A jeal- ous, bilious woman is a bad mother, She upsets the children, and money hgs to be paid out for medicine for them, Domestic jealousy becomes in tiine very dangerous. Professional of busi- ness jealousy kills. The woman who whispers a convenient detrimental word about an associate into the ear of her patron or employer may benetit for a day. In the end he concludes she is untrustworthy. Why the Trust Expired. “I oncet belonged to an anarchist club,” said Meandering Mike. “It was a great organization. We had some fine plans for reformation laid out.” “What became of it?’ asked Plod- ding Pete. “De club disbanded.” “What broke it up?” “Dey refused to trust us for any more beer till we paid fur de last keg.” —Washington Star. Not Interesting. Miss Wheeler—I don’t like to enter into a conversation with him at all. While you talk with him he is all the time bringing up foreign subjects.” Miss Scorcher—loreign subjects? Miss Wheeler—Yes; things not at all pertinent to bicycling —VPuck. « = — " THE RECORDS SHOW CURES OF Rheumatism BY THE USE OF ST. JACOBS OIL OF CHRONIC CRIPPLES AND OF BED-RIDDEN INFLAMMATORY CASES. THERE'S NO DENYING, IT CURES. STEALING LITTLE ONES. An Industry Which Is Showing Sign® of Revival. Away back in the dark ages when civilization was slow in coming and the barbarities of the vicious member§ of the human family made innocent people shudder, there were organized bands of ruffians who made it a part of their business to kidnap children and sometimes grown persons, and hold them until various sums of mon- ey were extorted from the agonized parents or friends. Of course children were their favorite prey, as they were more easily kept and could not escape without assistance. Terrified into si- lence, shut up in some interior apart- ment of a building, or concealed in a cave, many a child has dragged out a wretched existence, frightened, ne- glected and at last murdered or thrown into dens of vice if the demands of the kidnappers were not» complied with. Since the time when Charley Ross so suddenly and mysteriously passed out of knowledge, but few attempts have been made to disturb the quiet of American households in this way. But of late the disposition to extort money in this manner has seemed to be grow- ing, and, in spite of themselves, Am- erican parents are feeling more or less concerned because of the dangers that menace their little ones. There is no punishment severe enough for the vil- Jain who snatches a child from the heart of a quiet and unsuspecting fam- ily. There is a moral and emotional phase to such an act that is by no means met if the miserable wretch ends his life at the hands of a justly en- raged mob. There is that, however, in the alertness of the American mind that makes it somewhat difficult for acts of this sort to go unpunished. It is not the easiest thing in the world for men of the sort who do deeds of this kind to escape detection. Such things might have been possible when the country was new and sparsely set- tled, and when there were unbroken forests an unexplored caverns all about the great hills that environ some of our eastern cities. But the habit of observation is very strong in the average Yankee, and any unusual action or appearance is quite likely to be observed or commented on. There are towns in the vicinity of New York City into which a stranger cannot go and lounge for six hours without the detective force is warned of it and knows his movements thoroughly. If there is the least suspicious action or expression he is not free from espion- age as long as he remains. It is great- ly to the credit of the meh to whom the safety of these places is entrusted that they are rarely mistaken in their estimation of the men they shadow. In one town within six years not a mis- take has been made, and dozens of stragglers have been apprehended and either put behind the bars or given to understand that in moving on was their only safety. In the case of the Conway child it was developed upon inquiry that if this scheme worked satisfactorily other children were to be similarly captured and held until money could be extorted from the par- ents. But the sudden coming to grief of this effort has, it is hoped, shown the persons who contemplate such villainy that the undertaking is altogether too risky to pay. It is a fact that ninety- nine out of a hundred crimes are de- tected and the criminals are punished. The hundredth escapes sometimes merely by fortunate circumstances, and sometimes because a thorough sifting reveals the fact that the criminal was too close to the household to be prose- cuted. The cold-blooded fiendishness of the kidnapper of children is scarcely paralleled by any act in the history of crime. That all efforts should be made to prevent a recurrence of such acts every well disposed member of every community will devoutly wish—New York Ledger. When Trees Go to Sleep. Trees ind plants have their regular times for going to sleep, as well as boys and girls. They need the same chance to rest from the work of growing and to repair and ci. ‘he machinery of life. Some plants do all their sleeping in the winter. while the ground is frozen and the limbs are bare of leaves. In tropical countries where the snow nev- er falls and it is always growing weath- er the trees repose during the rainy season or during periods of drought. They always choose the most unfavor- able working time for doing their sleeping, just as mankind chooses the night, when he cannot see to work. In connection with this interesting fact, a Norwegian observer has made some interesting experiments, in which he has tried to chloroform plants, and he has found that the fumes of this an- aesthetic or sleep-giver has a marked effect on the plant, making it sleep harder and grow faster when it wakes “1p. Back to the Old Home. J. H. Hairston, a colored convict who recently escaped from the Virginia penitentiary, has just sent a pathetic appeal to the superintendent of that institution to get him back. That of- ficial on Tuesday received a telegram from Hairston, dated at Farmville, in which he said: “Please send up here after me at once.” This is the first time in the history of the institution in which one of the escaped inmates indicated so much anxiety to return. His wish will be complied with prompt- ly.— Ex. An Odd Fence. The most unique fence in Maine is that of a Harpswell fisherman. His front yard is surrounded by the swords of swordfish, many of which have fig- ured in exciting episodes.—Exchange, INSION Wantinctounb.< > ity Rrospeutes Cisims. ims, atty ince Late ine fam ine Syrsin last war, 1sadjudieat Tho Indians Never Had Them. NEW DISCOVERY: eis | WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE quick relief ana cures worst We Could be as Free From Such Troubles and as Healthy as They Were if we wut Followed Their Example. There are few people who realize that a cough is really a serious matter, and ifneglect- ed, it may result in troubles that never can be remedied. It is but a short step from the first slight tickling in the throat to a severe cough,— and then,—the first thing you know you are down with pneumonia, kept away from your work for weeks, if indeed, you are ever able to go back again. What is worse, this apparently slight cough may develop into consumption. ‘This means months of suffering to be passed through with death the only hope of relief. These coughs, colds and everything resulting from them, were un- known to the In- dian. The reason is theIndian’s great care and his watchful- ness over his People are Altogether tco Careless ia a ett oe Bias SBE ME BER A betrer Scale | forless money than ' has ever been offered. Jones of Binghamton rd tases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 days’ | Of Weakness in Men They Treat and time before the public a MacicaL TREaT- Primary, i in o} Y A SPECIALTY =: Lag Life Force in old and young men. No (SO: ome forsame price under sameguaran- | @ WONDEKStL TREATMENT—magical in its tract S nocharge, if wo fail to cure. Ifyouhave taken mere who are suffering from @ weakness that eury, fattened Be ¢ A DANGEROUS WARNING S8omethi WAGON ad 1 | i | new Regard to Coughs and Colds. Binghamton, N. Y. tment Free. Dr. H.U.GREZN’S SONS. At‘anta, Ga, ses Fail to Care. LO oD giso An Omaha Company places for the first: ment for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous ee Bore $= and Sexucl Weakness, and Restoration of BLOO! worn-out French remedy; contains no eet Papper g tag faatyanel meiner Phosphorous or other har:aful drugs. Itis- st ele niles pare ee eco effects—positive in its cure. All readers, , otash, and still have aches and | blights their life, causing that mental and Eas ucous Patches in mouth, Sore Throat,®) physical suffering peculiar to Lost Man- pimales Gopper Qolored Spots, Uleers: 08 | hood, should write to the STATE MEDICAL Pat ie this Secondary BLOOD Poise | COMPANY, Omaha, Neb.. and they will ely FREE, a valuable ou! we ntee to cure. We solicit the most obsti- | Send you abso! nate cases and challenge the world for a | paper on these ases, and positive proofs of their truly MacicaL TreaTMENT. Thous- case wecannotcure. This disease has always baffled theskill of the most eminent physi- ( ands of men, who have lost all hope of a cure, are being restored by them toa per- cians. $500,000 5 ao behind our uncondie tional guaranty. Abso! See sealed on REMEDY CO. | fect condition. This Macica, TreatweNt may be taken { ! gpplieation. ddress COO! | | at home under their directions, or be § will Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, ILL. pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who CURE YOURSELF! t CURES ante, ig @,for unnatural paster to go there for treatment, if they , inflammatio: . i ; Free Sample, or C. O. b. fake. They have $250,000 capital, and guarantee to cure every case they treat orrefund every dollar; or their charges may be deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a cure is effected. Write them today. $1,000 ¢ | FOR VALUABLE INFORMATION. not wo striewre. ~ of mucous membrane: Prevents contagion. “Painless, and not astrin- ITHEEVANS CHEMICALCO, gent or poisonous, Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for $1.0. oF 3 bottles, $2.75, reular sent on request at the first symp- toms of any trouble, a of the remedies which had been used for hundreds of years in his tribe, and which for generations had been proved to be a cure for all such troubles. All those who suffer from: coughs should follow the Indian’s example, and take Kicka- poo Indian Cough Cure when the first symp- toms appear, and they will be like the Indian, —healthy and free from more serious compli- cations. A few words of praise comes to us from Racine in regard to this wonderful cough y, which reads as follows :— ‘0 ull suffering people: { had a very se- vere sore throat, Could not speak for a week. My friends recommended me to use Kickapoo Indian Cough Cure. I took three or four doses after four o'clock in the afternoon, and the next GIETS | Nota Lottery, but a Contest} GOLD. of Science, Skill and Art. morning, to my great surprise, I could speak alniost as well as ever. It finally cured me. Yours truly, Miss Katie Halberstadt, Racine, Wis.” Kickapoo Indian Cough Cure will positively do the same in your case, if taken from the start. If your cough has gone too far, and your system has, in consequence, become weakened, take Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. It will purify your blood, strengthen your stom- ach, liver and kidneys, and by making these <reat organs of the body strong, insure health. ‘To such remedies as these does the indian owe his perfect health and long life. Kickapoo Indian Remedies may be had e* all druggists. Kickapoo Indian Sagwa sells for ¢~ per bottle. 5 h 1 100—10th PRIZES.. 00) 6... - 100 in Gold h 225......... PRIZES........ amounting to.....$1,000 in Gold SOUR OBJECT = i: Yoorsnt o.avaken a universal appreciation of the great merits of CAS- 9 § CARETS CANDY CATHARTIC. We also want to increase our business by aching the people what diseases Cascarets will cure. If we can by this plan in a month's time, & induce 10.000 people to become users and well-wishers of this wonderful laxative and liver regula- @ tor, which even now is selling at the rate of 5,000,000 boxes a year, it will pay us to giveaway @ insicad of spending It for some other form of advertising, ody knows what enormous sums of money we spend ai i ly for advertising. We ris worth asan advertising medium. If give it attention, it will be big money tn kets. Your answer to this advertisement will help us find out, and we are willing to pay for the information. WHAT YOU ARE TO DO: Andvailments cured by CASCAREMS CANDECATHARNC ly use $25,000 a year by not knowing just what a pal n find out just how many see this advertisement an Open Cenfession, The preacher was having a sort of test meeting, by asking the congrega- tion questions on their conduct. “Now, brethren,” he said, “all of you who pay your debts will please stand up.” i, In response to this there was an ap- parently unanimous uprising. “No said the preacher, asking the others to sit down, “all those who do not pay will please stand up.” One man alone arose. “Ah, brother,” said the preacher, “why is it that you, of all this congre- gation of brethren, should be so dif- ferent?’ “I don’t know, parson,” he replied, slowly, as he looked around over his friends and acquaintances in the meet- ing. “unless it is that I’m not a liar, and ‘cause I can’t get what the people round here owe me.” & give cash prizes m $1 to $100 in gold. The correct list gotten up in the most artistic and original style will be awarded the first prize, the next eee second Pur eandso on. Also. if your list contains ten or more correct names, you will re- § oa SPECIAL CONSOLATION PRIZE. By exercising care in preparing your list you & Ought to be able to secure part of the $1,000 cash award, but under all circumstances you ® will be a winner. ‘The distance you live makes no difference, as all are treated alike. ys AWARDS WILL BE MADE PRI MPT » This advertisement will appear in this paper pAMARDS WILE BE MADE PROMPTLY: ony twice prenare you fist quichiy tr § will be honestly awarded and promptly sent. ‘Here are the words to be spelled out. Be sure @ you give them in their right order? J. CO*ST**A*I*N tne cause otnear » 8 §**R ST *M**H. rermentation of un digested food, instantly stopped by CascaREts. ly all other diseases, cured by CascaRets. *p*ce 2, HE* D*C*E. 4 aun, throbbing pain, $ 9% P*L*S..A painful irritation caused by ‘ETS. constipation, cured only by CaSCARETS. ‘caused by bad stomach, cured by Cascaki 3, B* LE* US *E*§.-4 condition caused { 50. F *ST *LA anuicer caused by bowel irreg- ‘ularities, given a chance to heal by CascanETs. by torpid liver, cured by CascaREtTs. 4. LE*Y L*V*R.torpia conaition of anim- $ $3. 1 *D*G* *T * ON improper assimilation of food, relieved by a Cascargt after meals. portant organ relieved quickly by CASCARETS. 12. DY * P* P**A. chronic inactivity of the ‘stomach requiring patient use of CaSCanErs. 3 5. PI * PL * $..an eruption of the skin, re- "moved by the purifying effect of CaSCARETS. . B* OD BL** D.1mpure condition of the 3 14, | * $0 *N* A. sicepiessness due to-disense vital uid, CaScaRxTs purify the system. of the digestive canal, cured by CaSCARETS. t2-IN SENDING YOUR LIST OF WORDS, say whether you went the prize money sent in gold coin or whether you prefer bank draft or money order. The cash awards offered are given without consideration as the box of Cascarets sent prepaid represents more than the value of the 2e¢ you send with yourlist.| The only thing we wili ask is that you will exhibit your cash award. either Ingold or in form of meheck, as you choose, fora few days in your own draggiet’s show window. This entire offer is an honest one, made by a responsible firm, whose honor- able reputation is known to every retail druggist throughout the land. Cascarets ure the most per- fect medicinal preparation ever discovered, and you will be delighted with them. They are the st The Water Cure for Searlet Fever. ‘The most striking feature of the lat- est annual report of the Health Officer for Leicester, just published, is his emphatic testimony to the success of the “wet pack” method of treating carlet fever. He reminds the corpo- ion that in his previous report he had spoken favorably on the subject. | Since then he has subjected about 200 : sure t dered test boon for women and children and’ we want to make their merits known. mention this paper in your letter, as otherwise your answer will not be co: pany. will give this contes: Mr. H. L. Kramer, Treas, and Gen. Mgr. of the Sterling Kemedy Co1 careful personal attention. As he is now at the famous Magno-Mud Cure and Lithia Water Baths, of which he is principal owner, be sure to address H. L. KRAMER, Indiana Mineral Springs, Ind. — RESPONSIBILITY. MEME Che « REMEDY CO., makers of Cascarets Candy Cathartic, are favorably known to every publish: i Panker, retail and wholesale dru 6 BL* T*H*S. Brown spots on tie skin, } $3, C*L*C..aeriping pain, attacking obil- caused to disappear quickly by CascaRETs. dren most frequently sptopped Dy CascaRers. The Ideal Laxative, jst In this countr; ‘whom we refer our honesty and financtal ability patients in the fever hospital to the treatment, as compared with about 800 treated by other methods. On the whole, he indorses his previous favor- able verdict on the method, and adds: “The more I see of the packing meth- od of scarlet fever cases, the better I like it.” 10 car iter every condition 1 Of this contest. If disantiaficd we will te i Riise Secoiutety GUARANTEED, Ne ee ec ae ote) GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE! Walter Baker & Co.’s Breakfast COCOA Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. Costs Less than ONE CENT a cup. Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark. FITS PermanentlyCured. Nofits or nervounessatter irst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE, $2.00 trial bott Da. R. H. King, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Pl nd. treatise. delphia, Pa Age Gently Stealing. “Elvira, will you look for my specta- cles? I have lost them.” “How many pairs have you, moth- er?” “Three pairs.” “Then I'll look for the third pair, as you have two pairs on top of your head.”—Judge. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam. Mmation,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Walter Baker & Co. Limited, Dorchester, Mass. Cs (Established 1780.) It Worked . : it Worked a Change. pusratn J “What's the matter wid Biggers?”’ asked the gentleman with the red “ Rs 5 OF ALL KINDS, ON TRACK, INCARLOAD LOTS shirt. “I thought he was always so at every station in the Northwest. Write or wire us radical in his beliefs, and wanted the for bids, Don’t hold your Grain for higher prices; sell money of the country divided up now and buy an equal amount of December or May evenly. Now he doesn’t say a word.” | We execute option orders in all the leading markets. “Because,” remarked ee oe with WE ALSO BUY POTATOES IN CARLOAD LOTS. the Havana whiskers, “his uncle has Don’t fail to write us, at the main office GFQ, A, MOOMAW & CO just left him $10,000."—Cincinnati) — Branch Omess: atnin OficnsOcmtexebanenes | ICAG Commercial Tribune. Sacer MILWAUKEE. MINNEAPOLIs, MINN. Established 1879. WOODWARD & CO. nwvereous GRAIN COMMISSION ows Orders for Future Delivery Executed in All Markets. Low Rates of Grain Storage Made in Minneapolis and Duluth. Write Us. We sell your Corn, Flax, | FREE—The following Catalogues on receipt of 2¢ each to pay postage OB* Hay, Wheat. Oats, Bar-/ them: Baby Carriage Cat., Agricultural Implement Cat., Harness, Buggi®% ley. Rye. Ship to us) Cutters and Team Bob Cat, Drug Cat., Stove Cat., Musical Instrament Cal» andsend usthe shipping] Bicycle Cat. Send lic and our large Supply Catalogue, containing over 17¥- receipt as soon as it] pages and 100.0W cuts and prices. will be sent, express paid, = ce. Wecan save yoa dealer's protits| T. M. ROBERTS SUPPLY HOUSE, _ 2. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, for cash and send you the proceeds at on 88 we sell on the same marxet on which he sells and at the same prices. 7 a es fl

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