The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, September 28, 1898, Page 3

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~ re particularly careful in the laan. of colored goods, such @ way that even dyes Ta are not waranted fast will not Ne shirts, starched and plain shirt a: iste, ties, socks, eto., cleanse: ironed and finished by ths Star Steam indry in a manner which cannot sunk fail to please, STAR_STEAM LAUNDRY, JW. YOUNG & SON, Proprietors 120 North 4th Bt. ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD ‘Time Table in effect Jaly 3, 1898, coun No. 18 ton, 1235 pm 12 OF am Arrive. Paducah. ...206pm | isam 90am Leave. ILLE AND Nowra BourD— No 2 No a Waducad arrive. Princeton... 34 pm Evansville Hepkinsville Nortonville 4 4 pi Qoneral Ciey "5 35 pm Central Chey Hopkinsville jatehen . New Orieans..: Exposition. | Omaha, Nebraska) JUNE 1 TO NOVEMBER 1 | ——1898 —— Best reached from the south, east and) west by the MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY In el ing Horse Branch Spm sony yee Sovre Hoowp— mI ‘ Lea ©lnetnnad 410 am 6 Loutsy tlie he bors am e) of reclining (seats free of extra charge), Pullman buffet sleeping cars andcomfortable high-back seat coaches. REDUCED RATES FROM ALL POINTS DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE See agent for tickets, time tables and | other information. , R.T. G, MATTHEWS, T. P. A LOUISVILLE, KY. Mf You Want Your Laundry | e it done by THE CHIN ry ” Glethes calle pd for ent 102 Broadway and hgh in m Metropolie return oa a Gay. ‘Take ry only pay pa oA MBE ia til Second Hand Goods Highest cash prices paid by WILLIAM BOUGENO & SON We also carry # street. 308 Court alee a ried for what ¥« THOS, MEMPHIS DIVISION N <2 15 pm 120 am am 40 pm 60 am a oes" oop \ata0 ann t2 Sham *iSam ¢ 20 pm 92 6 210 pm 3.48 am 11 0085 Wp 220 pm 844 aim 400 p $20 pm 8 1s am +218 am 158 pm sam ' .8 90am 7 pm ST, LOUIS DIVISION ‘Tickets, or reservations GP. A. Chicag nt equipment, consist- | strest cars direct to hotel. ‘yuropea, Pian handling Leece Block. No. 2M 400 pm O%am 600 pw 16pm 7% pm ave sam 1 pm 68002 wpm | #908345 pm No 11 Som am 7 oy | 320 pm 6pm } vutaville chair care " PENSIONS! ALL THE ILS NORTH-EAST 4° ’ NORTH-WEST Doctors : ARE. BEST REACHED Prescriptions VIA >THE | Evansvilleé TerreHauteR? Hamers art ou Immense Stock NASHVILLE tention by experienced in pharmacy when entrus 2THROUGH THROU VESTIBULED (vay sl al owcacurret we chico F.PJEFFRIESGP.A On MILLMANLESA care: TRAINS DAILY the doctor orders.” EVANSVILLE.IND NASHVILLE, TENN. Prompt Delivery | | A. L.LASSITER | to B, , DAVIS city. Architect and Amert National Hank 8 PADUCAH FOR A JOKE, OR FOR NECESSITY rman DRUGGISTS WRITTEN he havin; The bo Lee's di | of clothes | uniform, longed to lost part of said they will probably leave the state anc turn to Illinois before very long. in t t4 all are interested, A subject «and give you better | pleased with what we | ao for y I charge you 81.00 to $1.90 for same quality spectacles other parties charge you 83.50 to $5 for. being to hot, or cold, or it being late to go, to remain at home. other day some one asked her if liked going to sebool, to which quickly replied: ‘Oh, yes! I to go all right, but I Mal Eg Undertakers and embaimers, J. J. BLEICH, 223 Broadway | WAR CLAIMS!| jocosely asked him how far be his ordinance off the table, a, + 2 ST. LOUIS EXCURSION Via Iilinois Central Ratload, z A As he had a regular account at the MONDAY, OCT. 3, 1898. Mr. Lee Shanks, who wasamem-| hank and a balance of more than | ber of the Rough Riders, relates some] 800 at the time the check was drawer ONLY $3 FOR THE ROUND TRIP | interesting experiences he had after] jo was naturally recial: : - | he left Padueah several months ago. | |y jn view of the fa he dishon- 1 only on special train leaving | Just before he returned home be was} Gred check went to the clearing house Paducah Union depot Ia. W.,/a guest, with seventeen comrades, at} and passed through many hands and returning on any regular train, | Miss Helen Gould’s place near Tat-} He complained at the bank, and }to and including train No. 01, leav-|rytown—*Woody Crest.’? It is a} there was a mild consternation among St, Louis at 8 o'clock a. m.,| delightful place, and the soldiers had} {he officials, not because of theamount October 7th. everything they desired. They were] of money involved, but because the These tickets will be good 3 whole every day, promptly. | 8AM HOP SING & CO | r tea and fruit kes or wat heapest and beat— | LLER Preside | | blood and buil STATE HOTEL. | ial rates by the . BAILey, Propr. victieen 4th yal. bth on Forry ** ST, JAMES HOTEL SAINT LOUIS EUROPEAN PLAN Rate. 75¢ and $1 per Day | Restaurant, Popular Prices SPECIAL 250 DINNER SPECIAL BREAKFAST | AND SUPPER | Hee tateak or mutton chops, potatoes, 5) affected. days im St. Louis. Pais will give purchasers an op. heart’s content. Miss Gould, whom portunity to visit the great Veiled Mr. Shanks describes as a very band- |Prophet) parade on ‘Taesday night, |8°me Woman, visited the place daily, Uct. 4th, also to visit the exposition | #84 chatted the boys with « friendly several times, and t abandon that was most refreshing to |St. Louis Fair ‘ly 'Bir| them, especially when they remem- Tbursday.”* | bered she was worth millions. The Olympia ( Im- In New York the boys’ very lives perial,”” ‘Havin's Standard,’? | ¥& saad miserable by the street and ‘‘Columbia’’ theaters e in{ urchins they encountered on every It 1 uate hotter ver Matte 4 ie ns, | band, This ie one of our special events, and | ‘‘S8y, Mister, ‘re you » Rough is a great opportunity. | Rider? Well please gimme a bulle td 2} -Tcotae: Ageats would exclaim, as a long teain HOW TO HAVE A CLEAR SKIN | Rough Rider down the street. FREE PROM PIMPLES, Mr, Shanks is glad to get} To be beautifal «| bave a fair}home. He is one of the few—per- kin, you must have pare flood andy haps the only Rough Rider—who health. ‘To do purify the up the health with| when he was killed. ‘and Blood Paritler of od ap the best Tonic the age, Botanic Blood Balm (8. B. |B.) Itis the old standard and re A gentleman on Jefferson street is liable remedy. It never fails to cure} the proud possessor of a 2-year-old | of Bi and Skin dis-| boy who is just getting big enough to throw stones. got pebble including caused by poison in t POSITIVE 10 A lady friend of mine hus for sev- eral y troubled with humps and pimples on her face and neck, for which she used various cosmetics in order to remove them and beauti- fy and improve the complexion; but ensee, pimples which are » blood, in the front yard until s been man was told by his father that next time he threw a rock throu; window he would be the victim of a whipping. The next «i these local applications were only the boy went ou! temporary, and left her skin in| throw more rocks, and as bis aim worse condition, I recommended|not as good as his intention, an internal preparation—known as}other glass was broken, When Botanic Blood Balm (B. B, B,),| father came home he was met by which I have been using and selling ;| boy, who said; “Oh, papa! nickle and promise not to whip bottles and all pim- i; her skin is she used three j ples have diseppe ‘soft and smooth and her general] I'll tell you something.”” health much improved, She ex-| The father agreed, and handed 5 | Presses herself much gratitied, and} over the nickle. | can recommend it to all who are thus Mrs, 5, M. Witson, Iron Mountain, Texas. Blood Balm (B. B, 8.), $1.00 per| the mopey, large bottle, ali druggists. Send for} 6 of new | et our no Ca Cal! , Moore, : DEALER IN Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods of All Kinds. ene line «few da pho On account of tae St. Louis Fall| Kighteenth—which is now in Ma Festivities the Llinois Central Rail-| His name is Walter Bennet, and be} oy of absorbing interest,” said Wil- road Company will on Tuesday, Sept. |left here about three or_ more years] ie Wishington \T3th and each succeeding Tuesday) ag He is now only 17, and he is} “J did,” replied Miss Cayenne, “Tt | ‘until Oct, 26th sell tickets to St.) known as the ‘Kid from Kentueky.’’} vas very fortunate that you had it Bee and retarn at one and one third | He went to school in Paducah, and 1 on that very expensive, soft | e forthe round trip, good for]remembers many people bere, He vaper. I keep it on my writing table | 5 seems very proud of the fact that he} 4]! the time. Whenever I need al! On Thursday, Sept. 15th and each|is from Kentacky, and is a fa blotter, I tear outa leaf.”—Woashing- He is three days. with all who know him, succeeding Thursday until Oct, 27@h at one fare for the round trip, good for three days. + Oo account of the St, Louis Fair, tickets will be sold from Oct. 2 until} to be San Francisco by a number ef who live in this part of the state, now in Manila with his MY D 1d, | the sry £08 Oth. J BY raduates \d to our Enables us to give you “just what We deliver medicines or prescri tions promptly to any part of th. Superintendent! OEHLSCHLAEGER & WALKER AT RANDOM. This morning there was a crowd of Illinois soldiers in the city. They] event showed the wisdom o} | were down on Second street fitting] viser. Ashe had predicte report out one of their number in a new suit] was short and full of pith. dt read jon, and were afrsid they would be sent to Cuba, and for that reason ran away. They which theregis general interest is the subject of ‘glasses, here are few A little miss who recently started people who do not need them. May | to school evidently does not like it. sk in not having *|/She bas since invented every con- ceivable excuse, such as the weather don’t like it When Councilman Ezell made his motion last night to resurrect the sa- . “ loon ordinance, one would have Re eis 180 8'FH¥) ought, from the chilly reception it binge ihe i af ee Ai ney accorded his motion, that he had} [4 veer taken from the window In like manner, anyone who re been wearing those linen pants again, | When be addressed the comacil, said he moved to take the ordimanve JAMES A. WOODWARD trom the table. It was laid on the ; ‘ . 1 Stat ek Claim Avent and Notary table at the last meeting. After| ,, Occasionally a bank makes a stupic ; SRY. | there wasn’t even a second to the} blunder jmotion, some of the councilmen} , Not long ago a depositor in one of driven about the grounds in carriages and were feasted to their ged gamins followed each not standing next to Hamilton Fish ‘The other day he out and amused himself shying threw one against the fropt window. The glass wae broken and the young upbappy If you'll give me a broke the other window today,"” was the only thing the boy said, as be went around the corner to spend book free. Blood Balm Co., Atlan-| i ; i ta, Ga. Lhe youngest soldier in the regu-| people who do us no good | é . | lar U.S. army is a Paducah boy,.and ba ee: * oT ys. ) Ys re @Low kat OF LOUIS is the pride of the regiment—the sin good soldier, and was seen at Oct, Sth inclasive at one tare for the| He was formerly stationed at Fort 00 seta log ab Oct, | Sam-Houston, Ga,, and has been in A, YEISER, Wholesale Agent. TO THE POINT. Pithy Report Made by a Rough-and- Ready Mining Genius, A certain eastern company, that some time ago was anxious to pur. chase a silver-lead mine, found itself in a state of uncertainty What seemed to be a really attractive mine was found to bein the market gotiations for its purchase w tered upon. As the ore assayed well, and every thing looked propitious, a mining ex pert was sent to examine the mine 1is report was favorable; in fact, it was too favorable. Ie certified that the ore was there in larg and that it was extremely valuable His unqualified yy used. the suspicion of the would-be purchasers If the mine was indeed so valuable why was the price so low? The com many determined to investigate more closely At this point a well-known mining man of Spo! ominended that @ certain roug! nd-ready genius, @ man who h graduated from no col lege, should be sent to look at the mine. } at quantities “Youcan depend onh said the mining man, “and he will tel you not but the truth. You had better trust to his report, which, in probability, will be short and very much to the point.” The advice was followe s judgment,’ substantially as follows “Dear Sirs: I have m an ex amination of the ‘Cliff Dweller’ mine and report that tie ore is there as rep resented, ays high, that it ie there in plenty, but to get your sup plies in and your ore out you will need a pack train of bald eagl The mine ground of inaccessibility Electrician BANK MAKES NO MISTAKES. his be- at ita 1 re. was rejected on the —Miner and too The} But Once in a While Gets Caught ir she a Bad Blunder. she A bank never makes a mistake like it is not supposed to ac e fact Everyone has heard stories of mer receiving too much money at the pay s window and attempting t back, ment that errors only to be give met with t ceives less th amount due him will have difficulty in impressing that fact he the larger banks had a small check “thrown out” on the ground that he had no money on deposit. got bank was shown to be a fallible insti tution If it became known that regular de positors were to have their check: thrown out through sheer stupidity what would become of the bank's rej p utation for careful dealing? ‘The depositor was allowed damages equal to the amount he had on de. posit at the time the check was drawn A suit for damages was thus pre vented and the fact that a mistake had been made was hushed up.—Chicage Reeord. HAD CHILDREN “NEIN.” Schmidt’s Unconscious Defense Before » New York Magistrate When a middle-aged man, who said that he was Peter Schmidt, was ar raigned before Magistrate Brann im the Essex Market police court charged with being drunk the magistrate said to Cierk Dy: “Ife looks like a hard- working man. If he has a fi 1 think that I will disebarge him.” Schmidt, who is a German, speaks English imperfectly. “What's your business pack was ?” asked the he a carpenter,” replied Schmidt. “Are you marrie magistrate. Ja,” replied the prisoner. ny children?” e,” said Schmidt “What's that?” asked the magis- trate. the gh a questioned the t to as the his] “Nine,” again replied Schmidt. the] “Well, if you have nine children to support it would be don them te fine you. I will discharge you this time with a warning,” said the magis- trate-—N. Y. Sun. Expecting the Unexpected. me, Tootsy—It’s always the unexpect- ed_that happens | Wootsy—Yes; one can always ex- pect it.—Town Topics. ~-How much time we all waste on pila.| “T hope you found t ok T gave son Star. boys Getting Along Nicely. "LA GREOLE” HAIR RESTORER Perfect Hair Dressing and Restorer. If your ‘decane doesn’t handle, send $1.00 to us and get one bottle, or 85.00 and get six bottles, CHARGES PREPAID to any part U. 8. or Canada, sae WAN WL VLEET-MANSFIELD DRUG CO, 05 MEMPHIS, TENN. BERT, Lecal Agent. SUSPENDED ANIMATION. Interéeting Instances—Scientists Are te Do Some Experimenting. Experiments are to be living creatures of various sorts the purpose of ascertaining just how far suspended animation can go with safety to life. It isa well understood fact that certain animals hibernate, and a numlpr of these are to be col polnted=Big Crowd in At- lected and placed under the most favorable condition for experiment \oetpe teens w They will be constantly watched to COLORED DEPARTMENT. RENCE, FIRST DAY OF CONF Bishop Salter Presided—Ofli Elected and Committees Ap- ers The 19th session of the West Ken note the temperature at which con sciousr leaves them. ‘The state [tacky conference of the A. M. K. ment has been made that men inthe }ebureb, convened this morning in this city at the A. M. E. church, corner Seventh and Ohio streets, at 9 o'clock. Bishop M. B. Salter, who arrived last night on the 3:40 train over the I. C., was present and presided. The opening of the conference be- ceremonies of polar regions have been frozen in ice bergs and have recovered when the ice melt This has been discred. ited, but a number of scientists are confident that such an experiment could be ¢ d suceessfully thought to chill the WELL, IF THAT DON’T BEAT THE BAND Uncle sam sav ible uals whatyou will say “g a ain i orp ith th 1 that it will reanain in a forpid slate ae svand prayers, Sacrament was|WHED YOU se@ Ou. extremely low prices on polar bear hibernates during the en- |administered, the election of officers furniture and house iurnisaings for the month : of August. in furniture, took place and the various commit- We are oper iog special bargains tees were appointed. A list of the , iron beds, st neath carpets, mat- tire winter, but the male is alw out aud on the alert for food. An: s that hibernate are usually very Jofiicers, together with other matter, /tings, trunks, etc., for the month of August, in 4 fa at at the beginning ‘of cold weather, will be given tomorrow. ‘4 rg v4 iz wut come out in the spring extremely | age Wm, io Steward, of Louls- Sy to byes poe for our fall stock. Now is thin, The fac are all dormant pd * e time to buy cheap. luring Une pared. Indeed eertan {We Ky. editor of the American) “We gre also manufacturers of all kinds ot will be in the city tomorrow peak at the Washington street Baptist churth at night. He will be} on his way home from Choton, Ky., where he has been in attendance upon Bap creatures m ve deprived of some portion of their members without ap: parent pain, A bat was examined after having been in the torpid state mattresses and awnings. The leading uphol- sterers and repairers of furniture in the city. Your credit is good, for some tine, when it was found }the work of organizing an associa- , 4 iat iis wings were broken. It wa? | tion at that place. R x ial pparently dead, but after being held — WD. . a n the hand for a few minutes it be The ‘Lilly Whites’’ and the van to move uneas “Lamp Blacks’ are on « bigh ram-] Telephone 896. 203-205 South Third. covering was found to be vicious in] page ia old Alabama agaio. the extreme, ping and biting dian: hil’ ¥ everything sarge wel biteie the Bishop Salter and Rev. T. A. Thompson arrived last night from woodchuck and hedge | rouisville where they were enter- reach. The antites : t hile ve vietibe Paki . Wl tained Monday evening by the ladies’ diate bed in the neat which thay have | Of Quinn Cha; al A. phe Ke church, of r which the Rev. Thompson is pastor. prepar for themselves, they may pleco sinem roll a k * without show Services were held last evening at ing any musciousness. These |the A.M. E, church and a good creatures, however, are very sensitive} sized audience was present to hear to sho« \ t blow of an ax|the sermon by Rev. E. D. Hicks, of upon t tree in which they have] Birmingham, Ala. made r homes is often sufficient to ed is, kill thew ‘lon one occasion e| Upon the theory that it is an ill hedgehog died merely from rolling | Wind that blows nobody good, it may a little distance and striking against | D¢ Said that the present cu: in laun- a log. fanatics of India permit [4t¥ prices at Louisville will work a themselves to be buried alive, as is blessing to the dude. You can get supposed, and many of them have {YOUr shirt laundered now ia that city SS been known to remain for a long|f0f five cents. z period in whe to all intents and] In this month, September, the year purposes ave. The question arises £658 ended and that of 5659 began, whether there is a scientific reason for | according to the Jewish era, from the Is rapidly becoming the favorite with the people of this city. It leads al) 4 all this; and if so, by what theory}ereation of the world. And the others, for the reason that it is - which has just begun, willend some time in September, 18: The beginning of the New Year’’ is called, rosh-bash-shanab and the day of atonement which oc- curs at an interval of ten days from the other, is called, yom-hak-kippar- im. This bit of information is pub- lished for the benefit of those of our readers who have besieged us with questions regarding the recent se vices of the Jews. can these conditions be accounted for, | ‘New Year,’’ and how can they be produced at will =wN. Y. Le PHYSICS OF THE CENTURY. Some of the Important Discoveries Made in the Labratory. The physics of our century shows @ great advance in what is called the kinetie theory of gases, for which Clausins and Maxwell paved the way, and which permits us a deep insight into the infinite fineness of matter and the inconceivable velocity of ite internal mot According to Clerk Maxwell, the most minute living be- ing that can be seen under the most powerful microscope still contains a million (according to Tait, two mil- n) organ or atomic groups; we cannot form any coneeption whatever of the incaleul bly great number of the finest his- tologieal elements for which perhaps no method of igation is at our command Finally, the century, ehortly be departure, has ac- complished in the physical domain of its*most val » feats by the liscovery of the X or Roentgen Taye, ABSOLUTELY PURE HANDLED IN BOTTLES AND FY THE KEG BY PADUCAH BOTTLING CO. = F, J. Bergdoll, Proprietc: Tenth and Madison streets Telephone 101. Orders filled until 11 p.m “~a Pop, Seltzer Wa‘er and a. kiads of Temperance Do“ The dispatches state that the fa- mous Tenth cavalry will be wintered in the south at Camp Wheeler, Ala- bama The minister of a country church was greatly annoyed on Sundays by women turning around every time apy one came in and so interrupted the sermon. At last, he bit upon a plan for stopping it. The next time he preached he gave the notice out: So that no one need turn around, I will call out the names of the persons entering the church during my ser- vice,’ avd he started: “Dearly be- loved brethren—farmer Jacobs wife—the text for today ion KEEP OUT OF REACH OF THE SPANISH GUNS! + TAKE THE... C.H. & D. » MICHIGAN THREE TRAINS DAILY FINEST TRAINS IN OHIO FASTEST TRA.NS IN OHIO » molecules hve fore it whieh permits our eye to penetrate te | Miss . laeaa mia Michigan and the Great Lakes constantly growing in popularity. Fs hith "penal ths of pula - Sh Svils, te eepe Ih omy cow ME, Everybody will be there this summer, For inform- hitherto regarded as opaque, and u i ven * thereby make almost ous haaeale and Mrs, Smith wis a new bonuet ation inquire of your nearest ticket agent. of the Arabian Nights, Not less won: |00— "7 Here be tiscovere | hig derful and unexpected is the success, | Mistake and wig tocrcren likewise belonging to very recent | bimeelf, but 1 “o's the time, attained by the experiments in es the foe nmned liquefying and solidfying gases, like dl —Neoga News oxygen, nitrogen, carbon cid, Elder Hall, whe conde dso ° ° chlorine gas, and atmospheric air— Ludwig Buchner, in Appletons’ Pop- ular Science Monthly The Historic Hudson. successful w revival tere last winter, is in the city shaking hauds wivh bi new converts and many friends. Mr. Steve Avant yesterday. Mrs, Carrie Sims of Mayfield is in the city, the guest of her niece, Mrs, Miss Mary R. E. Greif &Co = seis] GENERAL INSURANCE : Eom Hughes, of South Seventh AGENTS. aN ae The Sun reaches the people who ee are not afraid to turn loose « dime.| Telephone 174, ” PADUCAH, KY was in the city The Hudson river is, in one way o1 another, associated with most of the history of this country. Discovered by one nation whose adventurous vo: agers sailed upon its waters along di tance into the interior, its banks were conquered by another, and the Duteh province of New Amsterdam was eclipsed by the English colony of New York, Jt was the scene of many stirring events during the war of the revolution; the ill-omened expedi- tions designed for the conquest of Canada started from its upper waters, the retreat of Washington from the battle of Long Island was across a portion of the lower stream; the flight of Arnold, the capture of Andre and many other incidents of historic im portance characterized the Hudson as the most no’ river in the early annals of the rid. Not even CAKE WALK, There will be another up-to-date cake walk at Friedman's hall, on SCIENTIFIC AND FIRST-CLASS Ninth street, tomorrow (Thursday) Eo but good order and a splendi¢ of REPAIRING De HORSESHOEING assured all. Come out. All work guaranteed. FUNERAL. Mrs, Ellen Willing, of West Tenn- essee street, died yesterday, aged 60 born the Pe ac ts memories of years. She wi in Shelby : the civil hatth } its vie. [county in 1838, and had lived in this a i te ear hthe Ih » --St. Jeity for some time. he was a mem- : Louis G Domne ber of Queen Tabernacle, and Court Street bet. 2d and 3d. on also of Wasbington street Baptist peas de. somel when | church, from which place she was on ' buried this afternoon at 3 o'clock ONE TRIAL fag, Extepnal Tonle Agalog 0 the [ny While ths Sui Shines Rev. J. W. Hawkins preached the This ee | | Skin. Beaut y Magic. if agate funeral, which was uoder the au- | THE DISCOVERY & AGE Come on,” said one Coregn sa [spices of the above named taber- Nef | "Woman was the Inventor, ‘ > something t u ‘ nk Cor ple: eos jood forces to. the, mur y #100 REWARD #100, ihe woe seetek slesseees “You know, the king decided some A ‘The readers of nis time ago to promote himself to fem- in all and that is Cuvarrb aren ‘Only positive cure snowa tothe Catarrh ‘beings, consti nstituttooal {ts stage Cure ts medical fraternity. aise: Y “Well, he desires us to look up some more titles so that he can con- for them on himself while there is yet time.”——Washington Star. He ent. It is always said immed an operation forappendicitis, that the tient is getting along nicaly, but he aie next at just the same—Atchis nirative were, that they offer Or es 3 ioe ‘any case that tt fails to cure Dell: Doa’t experiment, but get the old ge SClIRNEY & 0, ‘Toledo, 0 Plantation Chill Cure, RPS? “sAmily Ph are the b

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