Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 7, 1909, Page 11

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e iy . 5 e o e quarries. Last : ' kl une m‘:;’;rg&"g. e m Political Plum Back to Life Cured “I dow’t think it will. The matter is | 1 Ty i e SonaT pretty thoroughly investigated uo:- ??3.‘32.13 glym;: ’u‘:"u-ed by the Instant Relicf, Permanent Cure — Trial Package Mailed Free to All been large Portland bro ” week b-g 15 of the Hartford and New y Y went down th: river with of some éspeci; fine b oon - signed to San cisco. ~stone will be transferred to a freighter at New York bound for the Golden State. s et Swimiy Hardly Possible. Now the news comes from Nebraska that William J. Bryan will pro- hibition the paramount issue; but it Not Allowed to Leave the City Pending Inquest Into the 3 Death of William J. Erder. St. Louis, Dec. 6.4Dr. Loren B. Doxey, husband of Dora E. Doxey, will Columbus, Neb., in which it was said thai a bank there received shortl :1’- or mow. An investigation by cOngress | st gencral assembl. office of tree will ‘depend on whether the federal dis- | warden will probably T croaced eeain K'C';y.?:my capnot do it more effec- | by the Bridgeport common council. Vel an congress.” Bri or e t. 8 tres But this is not at al the question. wnri‘d‘:n nlnc:. t.hobrl:m':%arl Holm, If a congressional investigation at this | n, helg office for a number of years. Since that time all dead and dangerous In Plain Wrapper. ‘We want every man and woman suf- fering from the excruciating torture of plles to just send their name and address to us and get by return mail a free trial package of the most effec: tive and positive cure ever known for timle would involve any risk of inter- fering with the effectiveness of thelireos have been removed by the di- this disease, Pyramid Pile Cure. The way to prove what this great remedy will do in your own case, is to just fill out free coupon and send to us and you will get by return mail a free trial treatment of Pyramid Pile Cure. Then after you have proven to your- self what it can do, you will go to the druggist and get a 50 cent box. Don’t undergo an operation. Opera- tions are rarely a success and often lead to terrible conmsequences. Pyra- mid Pile Cure reduces all inflamma- tion, makes congestion, irritation, itch- ing sores and ulcers disappear — and the piles simply quit. For sale at all drug stores at 50 cents a box. FREE PACKAGE COUPON Fill out the blank lines below with your name and address, cut out coupon and mail to the PYRA- MID DRUG COMPANY, 154 Pyra- mid Bldg., Marshall, Mich, A trial package of the great Pyramid Pile Cure will then be sent you at once by mail, FREE, in plain wrapper. Street .. City and State ........... R Church Workens Get No Encourage- ment. A gentleman spent several weeks in “our town,” where he was an en- tire stranger, says a writer in The Delineator. During this time he at- tended “our church” every Sunday. A day or so before leaving, he had occasion to enter a shoe store, and re- cognized i4 the man who came for- ward to wait upon him the usher who had seated him the previous Sundays. After making his purchase, he spoke of the pleasant little church, sald he was about to leave the town, and thanked the usher for his kind services to him every Sunday he had beon there. The latter was greatly pleased and touched the stranger’s eppreciation, and said that he had uskered in “our church” for eighteen years, but could not remember that anyone had ever before spoken a word of thanks to him. 1t is partly this thoughless neglect of expressgin; our gratitude which makes churcl: work so discouraging. ‘Thesc suggestions, if all carried out, will not fill “the church in our town" or other churches in other towns im- mediately, but they might strengthen a few weak portionsg of our armor and send us forth better equipped for the eungquest of the world for Christ. Equality, Not Separation. Separation from the Empire is the policy whiech The Mail and Empire discovers in the speeches of Mr. Ecre- ment and Sir Wilfrid Laurier at Ot- tawa, and of Mr. Graham, the minis- ter of rallways, at Montreal. When we read the speeches we find that what is advocated is not separation, but self-government. Mr. Ecrement says that Canada is no longer a colo- ny of any nation, - That Canada is not a colony In the commonly accepted sense was recognized by the British government when it used the term “Dominion overseas.” Sir John Mac- donald looked forward to the time when Canada would become an ally rather than a dependency of Great Britain. ‘Whatever public men may say, it is useless to ignore the facts. Every day since responsible government was granted Canada has been growing out of a position of dependency into one of equality. From first to last the campalgn for a Canadian navy, or for Canadian contributions to the British navy, has been based on the conten- tion that Canada has grown go strong and so wealthy that it is a shame for her to depend on the people of the g:'m-h islands for defense.—Toronto ar, Watch the South Pole. Latest puzzle: Find the whereabouts of Dr. Cook on any map.—Atlanta Constitution. According to mortality statis- tics, pneumonia is one of the most frequent and fatal diseases to which humanity is subject. Its action is so rapid that its victim if often in a precarious condition before realizing that anything more serious fis the matter than a severe cold. This is one of the dangers apt to follow the neglect of a cough or eold, and is therefore the best of reasons why one should check a cold at the start. A shople, inexpensive and effective remedy for coughs and colds is made by mixing two ounces of Glycerine, a half-ounce of Vir- gin Oil of Pine compound pure and eight ounces of pure Whisky. These can be bought in any good drug store and mixed to- gether in a large bottle. Take & teaspoonful four times a day. It s claimed by the Leach Chemical Co., of Cincinnati, who prepare the genuine Virgin Oil of Pine Compound pure, that this mixture will break up a cold in twenty-four hours and cure any cough that is curable. not be allowed to leave St. Louis pending the inquest tomorrow into the death of William J. Erder, whom Mrs. Doxey (formerly Mrs, Erder) is ac- cused of having killed with arsenic. White Arsenic Found. The report of Dr. W. H. Warren, who analyzed Erder’s viscera, states that in eleven analyses of portions of Er- der’s body he found .3162 grains of white arsenic. Dr. Warren said in a previous report that the embalming fluid used by Erder’s undertaker con- tained no trace of arsenic. Miss Kate Erder, sister of the dead man, furnish- ed the prosecuting attorney today with a letter from a firm of attorneys in RAILWAY EXTENSION. | Preliminary Steps Toward Pough- keepsie Bridge Connection. It is understood that preliminary steps have been taken for the exten- sion of the New York and Westchester line of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Raliroad company north- ward through Westchester county, New York, to connect with the Pough- keepsie bridge system of the New Ha- ven company. The company has of late been im- proving rapidly the Poughkeepsie bridge system, including the double tracking of the line from Pough- keepsie bridge to New Haven. With the completion of the New York and ‘Westechester line and its extensions, the New Haven will give both the Poughkeepsie bridge system and the Ontario & Western a new entrance into New York in addition to the ter- minal epposite New York, which the Ontario & Western now has by trackage rights over the West Shore road. In the fulfilment of the New Haven's plans it will have a system of several hundred miles of road, part of it of almost a western trunk line character and entering New York city. JOHN FITCH MEMORIAL. Bunce Section to Take Up Matter on Monday. Admiral Admiral Bunce section, No, 42, Navy League of the United States, of Hart- ford, will hold its adjourned annual meeting Monday evening in the new armory. A report is to be presented by a committee appointed to make pre- liminary investigations in the matter of a proposed memorial to John Fitch, a native of this state, who was the first successfully to apply steam to the pro- pulsion of vessels. In view of the be- lief that his work has never recelved proper recognition, it has been felt that it should be recognized by a me- morial and that it would be fitting for Admiral Bunce section to take the in- itiative in the matter. Father Tabb. ‘While the world is poorer because John Bannister Tabb is dead, it is the richer because he lived. As a priest he was not widely known; as a poet he was known wherever the English lan- guage is read and pure, sweet senti- ment js appreciated. Father Tabb was not a great poet. He wrote no monumental work. No ponderous vol- ume carries his name. But upon the tablets of tens of thousands of hearts are indelibly engraved the words of grace and wisdom and simplicity that came from his pen. His four-line trib- ute to Father Damien, the priest who gave his life in service with the lepers at Molokai, is one of the most ex- pressive things of its kind ever writ- ten. It runs: Unblushing, to thy feet we bring, Oh, God, an offering As pure as earth can know— A leper, white as snow., Father Tabb had wit and humor in abundance, and the stories about him or by him that are told in the Cath- olic colleges of Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia are innumerable. Father Tabb was not only a poet, but & student and lover of nature. He was an idealist, with the genius of con- densing his ideals into the smallest possible space.—Savannah News. So Like and So Unlike. Only the difference of one letter be- tween Parkhurst and Pankhurst. But ghe would be indignant if you sug- gested that there was any similarity | in the persons —Meriden Record. No Change the Running. Mr. Bryan has a “new issue,” but he runs in the same old way.—Atlanta Journal. PIMPLES And Blackheads Prevented and Cured by Cuticura. _Gently smear the face with Cuti Ointment, the great Skin Cure, but not rub. Wash off 4& <} the Ointment in five minutes with Cuti- cura Soap and hot water and bathe freely for some minutes. Repeat morning and even- ing. At other times use hot water and & Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agreeable, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint- ment are the world's favorites for pre- serving, purifying, and beautifying the ekin, scalp, hair, and hands, and for all itching, burning skin tortures, as well as for the toilet, bath, and nursery. 1 My After the DR. KING, Dentist. No Pain No High Prices have twenty people a day tell me that they had put off coming because they dreaded the ordeal. say for the ten thousandth time, that Now, let me Method is Absolutely Painless. first tooth is filled or ex- | mons DR. KING, Originater of the King Safe 8ystem of Painless Dentistry. tracted wonder why you waited so long. Don't think of having your work done till you get my estimate, which I give for you laugh at your fears and nothing. on't put it off any longer, ‘We.examine your teeth without charge and teli you what it would cost l!o put them in perfect condition. 99 days 10 te 2. Telephone, Our charges are consistently low. Pain- n freé when sets are ordered. Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sun- KING DENTAL. PARLORS, Franklin Square, over Souaerq Bros. ter Erder’s death in July a $2,700 drawn by Mrs. Dora E. Erder. This corresponds with the amount of ::'iu“"n“ collected on Erder’s life poli- es. ‘Dr. Doxey Held as Witness. Dr. Doxey made a lo statement today in defense of his wife. He de- clared that she was never married to Erder. In May of 1909 she was in a hospital in St. Louis, he said. Many operations and illnesses to which she was subject and drugs given her at those times are responsible, he de- clared, for the fact that she is neu- rusthenic. Dr. Doxey was subpoenaed as a wit- ness at tomorrow's proceedings. RUNAWAY MARRIAGES. This State No Longer a Gretna Green for Couples. Rhode Island has tired of being the good friend of eloping couples from other states who ,want to be married with as little delay as possible, there- fore a law was passed by the last legislature to end the lure of the little state for the engaged. After Decem- ber 1 a marriage license issued in Rhode Island does not become legally effective for five days, Nearly a thou- sand couples from other places were married in the state during the past fiscal year. The youth of Massachu- setts will chiefly suffer or benefit from this act, whichever point of view is taken.—Brooklyn Standard-Union. Not Far to Run. { Rhode Island proposes to make run- away marriages impossible within its confines. All right as far as it goes, but runaway couples won't have far and the law. and the law.—Norfolk Virgintan-Pilot. Rhode Island and Newnort. Rhode Island in general and Provi- dence in particular repudiates and re- nounces by law the well earned title, “Gretna Green.” Rhode Island in gen- eral and Newport in particular might win still further public applause by putting some sort of ban on the fash- ionable divorce and monkey-dinner colony.—Manchester Union. The Power Within Us. Speedy marriages are to be barred in Rhode Island. Maybe it will be necessary to get Aldrich’s consent hereafter.—Loulsville Post. Other Gretna Greens. Quick marriages have been tabooed in Rhode Island, but It is never any trouble to step into another state from any part of Rhode Island.—Waterbury Republican, One of Our Occupations. At first blush, it seems as if, when she ceases to be a Gretna Green, there will really be no raison d'etre for “Little Rhody.” However, it is need- ful that Aldrich contiuue, as emperor of the United States senate; and prob- | ably no other state except Rhode Is- land (not even Nevada) would stand for Aldrich.—Albany Argus. Five Days’ Delay. Rhode Island’s new laws regarding marriage went into effect Wednesday and hereafter the state will cease to be so popular a Gretna Green. .Under the new law marriage licenses do not become effective until five days after they are issued.—Bangor Commercial. Premier Asquith’s Plan. It will be well to keep in mind the suggestion which Mr. Asquith himself made in his powerful speech of yes- terday, when he urged that the com- use the same means against what he called the usurpation of the lords that in the past had been used against the domination of the crown. The domination of the crown was end- ed. but the crown itself remains to this day in the enjoyment of very important and stibstantial functions.— New York Tribune. PE—— White Slaves and Congress. The traffic in ignorant, unfortunate and betrayed girls, or white slaves, is of such proportions and power, largely because of the backing of corrupt spoils politicians, that international, national and state measures combined will not easily destroy it. Interna- tional measures depend for their ef- fectiveness chiefly on the laws of emi- gration and immigration, while state measures are too often nullified by local police conspiracies. Our federal legislation promised very substantial results, but the supreme court has killed a vital part of it. Little can be accomplished if the federal govern- ment is limited to duty at the gates of the nation, for there are a hundred ways of circumventing the laws gov- erning the admission and exclusion of aliens, The situation is such that legislative and administrative aid should be wel- comed from every honest source. Rep- resentative Mann’'s suggestions for the | suppression or diminution of the white glave traffic through the instrumental- ity of the interstate commerce clause in the constitution are worthy of se- rious and favorable consideration. Good lawyers in and out of congress will ponder the validity of his pro- posals; to lay enemies of immorality, greed and brutal tyranny over help- Jess women the important question is the probable effectiveness of the pro- posed measure if it ‘he held sound. And this question will generally be answered in the affirmative. Mr. Mann would make it a crime knowingly to transport or aid in transporting white | glaves in interstate and foreign com- merce. He would provide for the fil- ing of reporte by keepers of aliens in disporderly houses, giving the number of such inmates, their age, nationali etc. He would provide severe penalties for any violation of these require- ments. The able discussions of the scope of the commerce clause which we have had in the last decade, in connection with lotteries, trusts, insurance, child iabor, have thrown ‘much light on the things that congress can or cannot do under the power to regulate interstate commerce. This light should enable the proper committees of congress and | the department of justice to pronounce speedily upon the legal phases of the Mann suggestions—Chicago Record-! Herald. Wellman the Expert. So Walter Wellman, near-Arctic ex- plorer, thinks Dr. Cook is a fraud. Maybe; but at any rate Cook got a blamed sight farther north than Well- man ever did in all his fifteen years of unsuccessful attempts to reach the pole. Mr. Wellman, who in 1892 mark- ed with a monument the spot in the West Indies where he decided Colum- bus first landed, started in 1894 on his quest of the pole. A periodical at that time said his “expedition seems to be about as crazy a one as ever started.” Mr. Wellman has “started” several since then.—Meriden Journal. A Warning to John Bull Nevertheless, John Bull must not forget that Lawyer Delphin M. Delmas, who praises the British benchand bar, Is the discoverer, if not the inventor, of dementia Americana.—Manchester | Union. \ | i | 3 gll:- G:“mmn army is using paper o which are said to he of Japan sse invention, criminal prosecutions, it should by all means be put off to a later day; but the prosecutions, while the most ur- gent thing now in hand, cannot possi- bly cover all the ground of this por- tentious sgcandal, and cannot in some respects probe as deep. We all hope that Mr. gumson may succeed in get- ting one or more of the real criminals —the big men in the trust—behind the ‘bars, but it is only too certain that a great part of the rascality will prove to be beyond the reach of legal pun- {shment. The country has a right to know the full truth of the case, and fix the guilt of those responsible for this great body of corruption, both in busi- ness and in politics, Congress only can bring out the truth. Senator Cul- berson and Senator Borah, as stated in the World’s Washington despatches this morning, bave declared most em- phatically for a congressional inves- tigation, and there is every reason to expect that it will be urged upon the senate. The only proper qualification of the demand fs that expressed by Senator Borah, that it should be made subject to the necessities of effectiv prosecution of the criminal cases.— New York Evcning Post. An Irrepressible Conflict. The purpose of Mr. Mann of lllinois to introduce at the cqming session of congress bills so amending the Payne act as to avert a tarff war Canada gives further evidence—if such | were needed—of the folly of auy at- tempt to suppress continued discussion ©f that act. Neither the president nor the speaker of the house, though they 4nsist that it is the best of all possible sevisions, can convert widespread pub- lic dissatisfaction into pleased accept- ance. Mr. Mann's bills are aimed at the outrageous paper and wood pulp with | schedules, That he will succeed in get- ting them passed is perhaps doubtful: n at least another It will *Nts the fight. but their @erve to give the i opportunity to carry o the democrats in the house are wise | they will promptly join hands with | Mr. Mann, and help to set their p:nl,»" | introducti in; right on the one question with which ‘it can hope to win next fall. Probably, thowever, the speaker’'s little bargain with certain democratic members cov- ered this point.—Providence Journal. An Old Type. The death of Judge Arthur F. Eg- gleston removes another of the older ! type of prosecuting attorney in Con- necticut, the sort of prosecutor who conceived it to be his duty to bring out the truth and prove the defendant | gullty or innocent, as the case might be, not necessarily to show him guilty though he had to pull down the heav- ens in doing 0. Let us hope that his memory may serve to raise up imita- tors of that kind of prosecutor.—New Haven Register. l Not That Sort Wanted. ‘Women mav be employed by the census bureau to canvass for the 1910 enumeration. That's great. What a chance to ask questions and find out all about your neighbors!—Bridgeport Post. We 30 Days Treat.You FREE Blood Poison can mever be cured with mercary or potash. You might as well know this first as last. Medlcal autborities sey so. The most these drugs can do is to drive the blood poi: into the system and smother it for several years. Then whea you think you are cured, pitiful mer- | cury symptoms will break out, and you find that your bones have been rotting all the while. r | teeth will begin to loosen and your tissucs, glands, brain and vital organs will show the | terrible destructive power of the mercury and | potash. Locomotor Ataxia, Paralysis, Imbecil-| ity and Premature Death are then almost inev- itable, Any medical authority will corroborate these statements. ‘The remarkable vegetable Obbac Treatment does not drive in the Blood Poison but drives it out. It positively contains no min- eral poisons whatever, so that coce cured by the Obbac Treatment you never run the terrible risk of baving your bomes soften, your merves collapse, your teeth fall out, your kidneys degenerate or | your brain weaken. The Obbac Treatment is a marvel, producing remarkable cbanges in only 30 days. This is why we offer to any blood polson victim living, no matter how bad a case, a Treatment FREE You want to be cured and cured quick—not poisoned with mercury and potash for years. A 80-Day Treatment is yours for *he asking. Yov will open your eyes at what it will do for you in & month. We treat you free for a month. Just write to us and get the treatment free. Then it you are satisfied’it Is the most remarkable treat- ment you ever took, you can continue If you wish. Never in your life will you ever again have such an opportunity for a complete cure, as is given you by this @Great Obbac Treatment This is a square deal. You ‘sign nothing, no notes, make us no promises, except to take the treatment. The wonderful Wasserman Test, the only hlood poison fest known to sciemtists, proves that the bedy is completely purified by the Obbac Treat ment, and that mercury and potash do mot cure blood poison. 8it down snd write to us, giving a full history of your case in detail. We will treat vour letter as a sacred eonfidence. Con sultation and dvice free. We will send you also the remarkable bouk. “Driying Out Blood Poison™ rector of public works. The law provides that no tree along the highway can be cut down by any public service corporation or by the owner of the adjacent property or by any person excepting the tree warden. Saving Fish After Floods. “When brooks, streams and ponds become dry most fishes die,” sal Francis B. Brennan of Philadlephia. “Some kinds, however, like eels and catfish, are able to survive for con- siderable time by burrowing into the wet or moist bottom, which may be quite dry at the surface. This is par- ticularly true of some tropical fishes found in regions subject to drought, where it is a matter of common ob-— servation that a pond depression that has been baked by the sun's rays for days or weeks will immediately after a4 heavy rainfall afford good fishing. The ability of certain tropical fishés to endure drought and to remain out of the water for a long time in the markets depends on the possession of an accessory gill on the under side of each gill cover, by means of which oxygen may be taken directly from the atmosphere. TFailure to notice dead fish after the drying out of brooks or ponds simply means that birds and four-footed beasts, often night prowl- ers, have been there first. One of the most important lines of work carried on by the fisheries branch of the gov- ernment is the rescue of food and game fishes from the overflowed lands in the Mississipni Valley. After the fioods subside shallow pools are left are wholly -disconnected from the streams, and in these the fishes grad- ually perish as the drving of the pools | progresses. Ly sending men to seine these pools the government each year saves and returns to public waters hundreds of thousands of valuable fishes."—Washington Herald. Cannon Flounders. Speaker 4‘1jllnnn flounders about in defense of his abuse of power like a ! man in a quicksand, and the more he flounders the more he sinks and the harder he sticks. He boasts of having the power and enforcing the rules. But does he not know that obnoxious rules [ can not be long enforced by main strength? To claim that he is going to enforce them any v, is the be- ginning of the end.—EBridgeport Stand- ard. Should Require a Volcano. "his bitter and acrid disputation concerning Mount McKinley reminds us that there is no high mountain left to be named for another man who was once president of the United State before he turned his attention to lions and warthogs.—Los Angeles. Times. need hardly be expected that he wil induce his party to fcllow him so far as that—Knoxville Journal and Tri- bune. A Cure for Consumption Dr. J. Lawrence Hill Is Actually Cur- ing Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma, and All Throat and Lung Troubles. He Gladly Sends a Trial Package by Mail to Prove That Even the Worst Cases of Consumption Can Be Quickly Cured at Home. Jackson, Mich., Special-—A remark- able announcement, based on positive proof, has been made by one of the foremost specialists and physicians in this country. Dr. J. Lawrence Hill. veryone who huws weak lungs, Catarrh of the Brouchial Tubes or Catarrh in any form, Chronic BEron- chiti Asthma, ' Chronde Hacking Cough, loss of fiesh, Night Sweats Hemorrhages, soreness or pain in the chest or under the shoulder blader, or any other deadly syinptoms of Con- sumption, should send for a trial pack- age of Dr, Hill's New Rational Rem- edy. This treatment quickly checks further progress of the disease and | produces new resisting power, Appe- , flesh and good heaith. Adl throat and lung sufterers should fill out cou- l;.\.n below and send at once for = trial package wlhch the doctor sends by mail prepaid. THIAL TREATMENT PAGKAGE GOUPON Dr. J. Lawrence Hill, 831 Hill Building Jackson, Mich. I am suffering from throat and lung trowble, so please send me your jarge trial package in plain, scaled wrapper. that T may try it and see for myself if it will do wha$ you claim it will. L. enclose to help pay for package, etc, and a9 an evidence that 1 am not seading for the trial package out ef idle curiosity. ADDRESS After exposure, and when you feel & cold coming on, take Foley's Honey and Tar, the great throat and lung reme- dy. It congestion your systen. fuse substitutes. «tops the cough, relieves the and expels the cold from Is mildly laxative. Ree The Lee & Osgood FINE WHERE FURNITURE THAT ( AT ANY PRICE. SMALLER DEALERS HAVE TO PUT PRICES ON OUR GOODS TING MORE REAL FURNITURE CAN GET E| Schwartz Telephene 502. Bear in mind t cases has been made to the Join the National, and and old-established firm. do all kinds of work comir Agents for the Standard room fixtures, also headqu THE OBBAG GO. 1415 Rector Bldg., Chicago, Minois. | Holiday Furniture a Schwariz Bros. BU YING THAN OTHER DEALERS. ENABLES US TO SECURE THE PICh OF THE NEWEST PATTERNS AT A PEOPLE WHO BUY FROM 1 “The Big Store with the Little Prices” “HOME FURNISHERS” experience, together with the best of material and labor 'ANNOT BE IN OBTAINED ELSK- LARGER QUANTITIES LOWER COST THAN THE PAY AND ALSO ENABLES UR TO THAT SURPRISE EVERYONE. S KNOW THAT THEY ARE GET- VALUE FOR THEIR MONEY CALL AND SEE US Brothers, 9-11 Water Street. hat Sanitation * is one sort of insurance--- because it insures you AGAINST disease and sickness as trace of many serious plumbing system. in fact Universal, movement for Sanitation and have YOUR plumbing systems over- hauled or estimates furnished on new ones by a reliable Barstow & Go. 1g under this head and their is bound to result in a thoroughly satisfactory job. “Green and Gold"” label bath arters for nickel-plated bath room trimmings and sundries. LARGE ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. by BARSTOW STOVE CO., PROVIDENCE, R, I COMPLETE IN ARRANGEMENT PERFECTION IN COOKING J. P. BARSTOW & CO., 23-25' Water Street

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