Newspaper Page Text
34 <
jf
■C»n Out Comt be KKbrtiisIlj Blorkadedf
I« confidence can be felt In the opinion of
mllltarr ami naval officers In high plaoea at
the seat of governments such is the vast extent
eC- ,<m < 0,lst to blockade It effectually,
ou . r nav Y R nd sea coast defenses could
™!J od a'«< resistance. seems to be im-
yosilhlo. \\ Men a blockade of the bowels
™>»ve conatlnation with Uostettor’s
Bitters, which conquers dysuepsla,
malaria, rheumatism and kiuney trouble.
,,J*! 1 ® of parliament are partly
lighted fry forty thousand electric lamps,
which number is bolng constantly Increased.
Fifty experienced olectridaus are employed
to keep the system iu order.
To (Jure n ('old In One Day.
Tako Laxative Broino Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. 25c.
At its present rate of combustion It la
thought the sun will last from 7.000,000 to
15,000,000 years before burning itself out.
■duente Tour Bowels With CsnsnUi
SWW!®; ®. ur ® oonstipetlon fore ret.
10c, 26c. If C. C. C. full, druggists refund i
Money talks, but the silver dollar meant
only about kuif what it savs.
Piso's Cure oured mo of a Throat and Lung
trouble of threo years’ standing.—E. Cady,
Huntington, Ind.. Nor. 12, 1891.
.T. 8. Parker, Fredonia. N. Y., says: “Shall
not call on you fur the $100 reward, for I be
lieve Hall’s Catarrh Cure will cure any case of
•catarrh. V\ a* very bad.’’ Wrtto him for par
ticulars. ?^old by Druggists, 75c.
Scrofula Swellings
Health Wan Very Poor But Hood’s
W •arnaporllla Has Cured Her.
Mjr daughter had scrofula swellings on
her nook and her health was very poor.
She did not obtain lasting benefit from
medicines until she began taking Hood’*
Sarsaparilla. Threo bottles of this modi-
oine entirely cured her and she has never
been troubled with scrofula since I lmve
great faith in Hood’s Sarsaparilla." Mrs.
L. D. Eliner, lluth, M. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America’s Greatest Medicine. $1; six for$».
Hood’. Pill, cure all liver Ills. 23cento.
Old M*rrli|e Customs.
The wedding ring Anger of the Ro
mans was the thumb.
The wedding ring, worn on the left
hand, la symbolic of obedience.
Every Anger of the hand has, at
some time or other, been used for tha
wedding ring.
When Mary Stuart was married to
Lord Darnley, four rings were used In
the wedding ceremony.
At a certain part of the marriage
ceremony In Java, the bride washea
the feet of the bridegroom,
Spanish peasants believe that tha
water In which a wedding ring haa
been dipped will cure weak eyes
The Roman bride, when being dress-
«d for the wedding, Invariably had her
hair parted with the point of a spear.
The University of Chicago expended
more than $1,000,000 In the year 1897.
Of this, $300,000 was In the salaries of
the faculty.
<{ I DO MY OWN WORK.”
So Says Mrs. Mary Rochlette of
linden, New Jersey, In this
Letter to Mrs. Plnkham.
“ I was bothered with a flow which
would be quite annoying at times, and
at others would almost stop.
“I used prescriptions given mo by my
physician, but the
same state
of affairs
continued.
“ After
time I was
taken with I
a flooding,
that I was
obliged to
keep my bed.
Finally,* in
despair, I
gave dp my
tor, and began
taking your medi
cine, and have certainly been greatly
beneflted by its use.
“Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com
pound has indeed been a friend to me.
“ I am now able to do my own work,
thanks to you r wonderful medicine. I
was as near death I believe as I could
be, so weak that ray pulse scarcely beat
and ray heart had almost given out. X
could not have stood it one week more,
I am sure. I never thought I would
be so grateful to any medicine.
“ X shall use my Influence with any
one suffering as X did, to have them
use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.”
Every woman that is puzzled about
her condition should secure the sympa
thetic advice of a woman who under
stands.* Write to Mrs. Pinkham at
Lynn, Mass., and toll her your ills.
Lazy Liver
M I hare been troubled a great deal
with a torpid liver, which produces constipa
tion. I found CASC A RETS to be all you claim
for them, and secured such relief the first trial,
that I purchased another supply and was com
pletely cured. 1 shall only be too glad to rec
ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity
Is presented." J. A Smith.
2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
J CATfiaRTIC ^
Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 26c. SOo.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
StariUf Retard? Coatpoay, Chicago, Moatrcal, >*» Torh. W
5 Tobacco Habit.
ST.
ANDREWS
FOR THU
Liver
CURES
Sluggishness,
8U1LFQ&C College, N, C,K;s£!25TS:
Tuition fort.no $13 r.rSW. Board $3 par month. In
clubs So Scud lor free citulojfiie. The Preside.,.
Inatructlon In Koad-Bulltllnx.
With the building of better high
ways there has nrisen a demand for
practical road-builders aud competent
highway engineers, not only for occa
sional work iu constructing country
roads, but for permanent positions as
street superintendents aud road com
missioners in towns and cities. This
demand is beginning to be reob&nizod,
and preparnrious made to meet it, by
affording courses of instruotiou on the
subject iu various instituiious, public
exlubitious of the working of road
machinery, and in other ways.
As Massachusetts wns among the
first to improve her highways, so she
was about the earliest to provide in
struction on the subject of road-build
ing. In the Institute of Technology aud
the Lawrence Scientific School, Har
vard University, complete oourses of
instruction are given; models, draw
ings and photographs are used iu the
the lecture rooms, aud, visits are made
to works in jprooess of construction.
Anyone may enroll himself in the
course in highway eugiueeriug at the
Lawrence Scientific School, by the
payment of n small fee.
But, however good the iustrnetion
furnished to young men iu institu
tions of learning, it will be some years
before their training iaeompleted, and
more years before thoyaoquire the ex
perience that will make them meat
valuable. Iu the meantime, roads
must be built, aud those engaged iu
ouilding them, and others who aro re
sponsible for the care of them, require
practical instruotion. To aflord this,
iu connection with the construction
of the State highways, has always
been a feature of the work of the
Massachusetts Highway Commission.
In the last four yoars the State has
expended nearly two million dollars
on its roads. The work has boen lo
cated in 125 different municipalities
scattered throughout the State, out
of a total of 853, or over one-third of
the entire number. Fifty other muni
cipalities have built modern roads, or
175 in all; so that almost exaetly ono
half of the entire number of towns
and cities have had experience in first-
class road-building. As towns are
given the first choice of taking eon
trouts to oonstrnet State highways in
their own territory, aud many have
undertaken it, there are hundreds of
men scattered over the Statu who have
had actual experience in building
some of tho best roads in the world.
This alone has proved a valuable
means of disseminating information.
One result is that good foremen enn
now be readily scoured whore, four
years ago, it was a difficult task.
High-class road-building, according
to the most-approved, scientific meth
ods,and the use of modern maehiuery,
in so many widely-separated localities,
has afforded town officials, whoso duty
it is to look after the roads, opportun
ities for obtaining information that
they could get in no other way.
These men ordinarily fill other offices
and are engaged in business, aud have
no time to leave homo to study road-
building theoretically; but, when
roads are constructed near thoir doors,
under competent supervision, they are
quiok to appreciate it.
The Highway Commission employ
about sixty resident engineers, one of
whom is stationed wherever the
State builds a rond, to instruct tho
contractor in the methods to be em
ployed, and he remains on the ground
from start to finish. These engineers
are, in turn, looked'after Jby five di
visional engineers and a chief engi
neer, to secure uniformity. At the
end of the season, all the engineers
aro called together, and discuss the
year’s work iu detail. The meetings
are lively and interesting, and anyone
who has attended them will appreciate
their value.
Besides this, the Commission holds
a public hearing iu each county every
year. Town officials, aud all Jothers
interested in the roads, attend them,
and views nro freely interchanged. An
association has also been formed, at
whose meetings experiences are inter
changed aud papcrB rend. By these
methods tho youug nnd inexperienced
man learus both theory and practice,
and the older practical man beoomeB
acquainted with modern theories.—L.
A. W. Bulletin.
Free Delivery Depends on Kontl..
To promote the business, social and
educational interests of the people are
the objects of the Bond Inquiry Bureau
and the Postoffice Department of the
Government. Having those things in
view, they desire to extend the system
of free rural postal delivery, and will
test it under all conditions. Koutes
have been selected in New Jersey and
Pennsylvania over stono, gravel, clay
aud dirt roads, and the results in each
case will be carefully noted. It is ob
vious that they ranst prove most satis
factory where the work can be done
most rapidly and regularly in all
weathers—thnt is, on the best roads.
In considering this question, E. G.
Harrison, the Government road expert
says, “the advantages of delivering
letters to factories and other industrial
establishments, particularly where
large nnmbers are employed, need not
be dwelt upon. The mails left at pub
lic schools can be distributed to a
great nnmber of families through the
pupils living remote from postoffice and
carrier routes. Letters brought to the
nearest school for mailing can be col
lected by the rural letter-carrier to the
nearest postoffice for mailing. Teach
ers can use these letters as object-
lessons in giving suggestions and in
struction in regard to proper, plain and
neat addressing, etc. In schools re
mote from postoffices, the teacherB
might, with advantage, be made stamp
agents, and in this way families far
away from postoffices can be supplied
with stamps, stamped envelopes and
postal cards. This will promote letter
writing and ase of mails, and will also
insure more regular school attend
ance. The rural distriots are anxious
for free postal delivery. They need
it. It will come with good roads and
be a practical advantage which they
will realize and appreciate."
Circulation Is I.iffe.
The roads and highways of a civil
division are as the veins nnd arteries
of the human system, says tho Suffern
Independent. Life aud health, that
is, busiueBS and prosperity, of each
part can bo bad and secured only by
the freest circulation, and the conduits
must not be nllowed to clog. While
the limb would wither if the oironle-
tiou was interrupted, tho heart would
also suffer. Whore would the proud
city of Now York be without her mag
nificent rnilwnys, and what would have
beon her condition if the great blixxerd
of 1888 bad continued a mouth?
The village with its paved streete
nnd flnggod walks may say, “let the
farmer build bis roads; he is the pasty
benefltted. ” Tlie|lord of the manor
who surrounds his grounds with a high
wnll and morass, and thou beautifies
his place for bis own 'enjoyment nnd
benefit, may be wise if he has within
himself nil be requires to satisfy his
needs. The villnge which has placed
its streots in perfeot condition nnd has
negleoted the highways leading there
to, has arranged, liko the lord of the
manor, to live in seclusion.
Has the village nil it requires? Does
it depend upon anything or anybody
for its existence, growth and pfoBper-
ity? Is it, not, in fact, most depend
ent? Does not every village depend
upon the extent of the accessible area
of whiob it is the oentre and metro
polis, and tho prosperity of that area?
The village cannot shift the burden
upon the farmer, nor tho farmer upon
his brother farmer. Each 1b interested,
and the contiguity of the highway is
but an inoident. Suppose the Erie
Bailroad were abandoned; whoBe loss
would be the greater, that of the far
mer living within one-half mile, or the
one a mile distant?
Effect of the New York Law#
The road improvement bill passed
by the New York Legislature is valu
able for what it makeB it possible to
accomplish, and as opening the way
for notive work by the State. It de
pends for aotual results, however, on,
first, State appropriations to make
Stnte aid a reality; second, publia
sentiment in the counties which shall
be strong enough in favor of making
improvements to force the supervisors,
or property owners, to apply for them;
and, thirdly, sympathy with the move
ment on the part of the State engineer,
in order that when applications are
made for improvements they may be
granted.
The measuro is conservative in na
ture nnd permissive iu form. While
opening up great possibilities, it is
not mandatory in effcot, nor does it
force any improvements on any sec
tion, A local initiative is required in
order to seoure Stnte aid and start
work in nuy locality. The peoplo
have it striotly in their own hands to
decide whether any road work shall
be inaugurated. Under those circum
stances it seems strnngo that it should
have encountered any opposition. It
merely opens the way for work to be
done, if the people favor it, aud it
leaves the poople entirely free to say
whotlior they will enter upon it.
It is n long step forward for the
Empire State to make practical road
improvements possible in this way,
but the work does not end here.
Public sentiment must be educated
up to the point of demanding work,
and in order to aocomplish this the
ngitation for hotter highways must be
proseouted with unabated vigor.
Unequal Axles WUh Wide Tlrea,
Wide tires are uot only good things,
but their value is much increased if
they are nsed on axlos of different
lengths, so that four distinct tracks
are made by tho wheels instead of
two. A concern in central New York
does muoh heavy hauling with four-
inch front and five-inch near tires, and
rear axles fifteen inches longer than
the front ones. It carries four and
five-ton loads and keeps the road sur
face good and smooth.
Hliot* at Had Roadn.
A Pennsylvania paper says that a
Mississippi steamboat could have
steamed along the placid bosom of
some of the roads in the State recently
without fear of grounding.
Tho State-aid appropriation for
roads iu New Jersey is 8150,000 for
1808. The counties add $300,000 to
tliiB, and enough local expenditures
ore made to foot up a considerable
sum.
Many students of-the highway ques
tion believe that there ore more publio
roads in the country than are needed
and that hard roads, in enoh direction,
two miles apart on the average, would
meet every possible requirement.
Wheelmen and farmers with ad
vanced ideas in New Jersey have been
endeavoring to persuade Governor
Yoorhees to sign the bill increasing
the road improvement appropriation
of that State by 850,000. They have
not yet succeeded.
The State Organizer of the Missonri
Good Roads aud Publio Improvement
Association is a woman. She visits
all the county seats, organizes road
improvement societies, sees all the
voters and secures a good membership
list. Her work is reported to be very
successful.
A study of sixteen French railroads
seems to show that branch lines con
tribute to the main line gross receipts
1 4-10 times greater than those which
the main lines earn. If this be cor
rect the importance to tho railroads of
good highways is simply enormous, for
the country roads are the feeders of
the railways.
Hu Forty Uvlai CMIdrca.
A short ride from Mooeup, In what
Is known as the Sparks District, in ths
eastern part of Klhlngly, lives Levi
Bradshaw, whose record for populating
the earth Is auch that he deserves to
become famous. Bradshaw emigrated
from Canada, and has lived in that vi
cinity about thirteen yoars. He la now
In hie seventy-first year. He has been
married three times, and he Is tho
father of forty-one children, forty of
whom are living. By hla first wife he
had alx children, Including a pair of
twlna. Hla sedond wife bore him
twenty-four children, half of whom
were twine. Hls\nreaent wife has pro-
sented him with etaren children.
Bradshaw waa not fourteen yeara
old when he was married the first time.
The eldest son Is now forty-four and
has several children nnd grandchildren.
Twenty-nine of the old man's sons and
daughters are married, and all have
children. The grandfather docs not
know Just how large his family of
grandchildren and great-grandrhlldrcn
has become. He can enumerate up to
100, but is In the Bark as to the re
mainder. He estimates them up to
200 or so. ,
The Kllllngly patriarch was married
to his last wife in Danielson thirteen
years ago. Only one of her eleven
children has died. The death occurred
at birth a few months ago. The rest
are healthy and robust, like the father.
Mr. Bradshaw is believed to be the
banner father of New England, and the
banner grandfather of tho United
States.—New London (Conn.) Day.
Six Months Without Food.
John Babcock, an old resident of
Galien, Mich., is dead, after a fast
w hich probably breaks all records. He
had not tasted food since October laet.
Mr. Babcock was In a runaway acci
dents year ago and received Injuries
which affected hla head. In October
he became worse, and for some readfta
which the doctors cannot explain he
could not eat a mouthful of food. Every
effort was made to give him nourish
ment, but In vain, ami Anally ttys medi
cal men gave up his case as hopeless
and left him to die. He continued to
live, however, week after week, lthout
food, until death came after he had
gone 180 days without a morsel of food
having passed his lips.
About two months ago Mr. Babcock’s
8kin began to harden and to all ap
pearances It was turning to bone. At
his death his body was hard’and did
not seem to have had a drop of blood
In It.—Chicago Chronicle.
IVoiubii In llu*lne*e.
From the Free Frees, Detroit, Mich.
A prominent business man rnoontly ex
pressed tho opinion that thorais ona thing
that will prevout women from completely
Ailing man’s place in the business world—
they can’t be depended upon beoause they
aro siok too ofton. This is refuted by Mrs.
C. W. Mans Hold, a business woman of 68
Farrar 8t., Detroit, Mich., who says:
"A complication of female ailments kopt
mo awake nights and wore me out. I could
get no relief from medicine nnd hope was
slipping away from me. A young lady iu
™, y otnploy gave me a bo* of Dr. Will lams’
Pink Pills for Palo Poople. I took them
aud wus able to rest at night for tho first
tirno in mouths. I bought more nnd took
them and they cured mo as they also mired
several other people to my knowledge. I
think that if you should ask any of the drug
gists of Detroit, who are the best buyers of
Dr. Williams'Pink Pills they would say the
young women. These pills certainly build
up tho nervous system and many a young
woman owes her life to them.
"As n business woman I am pleased to
recommend
them us
they did
more for
methan any
physician
and I cun
give Dr,
Williams
Pink Pills
for Pale
Peoplo
credit for
my general
good health
to-day." Suddenly Prostrated.
No discovery of modern times has done
so munh to onuble women to take their
1 >roper place In life by safe-guarding thoir
teaith us Dr. Williams’ Pluk Pills for Palo
People. Acting directly ou tho blood and
nerves, Invigorating the body, regulating
the functions, they rostore the strength
and health to the exhausted woman when
every effort of the physician proves una
vailing.
For the growing girl they are of the
greatest benellt, for the mother indispensa
ble, for every woman Invaluable.
For paralysis, locomotor ataxia, nnd
other dlseunoH long supposed incurable,
these pills have proved their efllcacy in
thousands of oases.
Beaut? la Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarcta, Candy Cathar*
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im-
K untie* from the body. Begin to-day to
anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackhead*,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarcta,—beauty for ten cents. All drag-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
Mrs. Winslow’* Soothing Syrup for children
teethin'/.softens the gum*. reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. u bottle.
ST.VITUS’ DANCE. SPAHM8 and all nerv
ous flli*oas»*H permanently cured by the uho of
Dr. Kline’s Groat Nerve Restorer. Send for
FREE 81.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr.
R. II. Kline, Ltd., 961 Arch Street. Phi la. t Pa.
T« Car* Constipation Fortvtr.
Tako Coses rets Candy Cathartic. 10c or So.
If C. C. C. foil to cure, druggists refund money.
Tho Now York Lodger is now successfully
sold by bright boys aud girls, who thus
earn many valuable premiums. Two cents
profit on each copy sold. No money re-
tjuirod in udvauce. Send name an/1 ud-
dross for complete outfit, including Prem
ium List, to Robert Bonner’s Hons, Ledger
Building, 160 William Ht., N. Y. City.
No-To-Dm for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit oure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, |1. AH druggista.
Lift Isn't Worth Living
toons who suffers tho maddening agony of
Kcsoma, Tetter and such irritating, Itching
skin diseases. Every roughness of the skin
from a simple chan to Tetter and Ringworm
even of long standing is completely, quickly
and suroly oured by Tetterlne. Is comfort
worth 50 cents to you? That's the price of
Totterine at drug stores, or by mail for pries
iu stamps from J. T. Hhuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.
Dent Tttscee tplt anl Barts Tear Ltfb Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be ma#>
oetlo. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Uac, the wonderworker, that makes weak men
ttrong. All druggists, BOo or 21. Cure guaran
teed Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Oa, Chicago or New York.
Try Ailea’e fsshliii
A powder to ho fhakaa lato r
At this soason your feet foil f
vous nod hot, and get tired oil j
have smarting feet er tight '
Allen’s Foot-Base. It sooli the feet i
makee walking eeay. Cures swollen i
sweating feet, blisters sad callous ip
Relieves corns and bunions of all Min i
gives rest and oomfort. 10,000 tsstlmonlnllu
Try It to-day. Sold by all druggists an4
shoe stores for 25c. Trial pgoknge FRES*
Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Boy, M. 1.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or n*rvone»
neM after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $3 trial bottle and tree tine free.
Dr. K. H. Klinx Ltd., 931 Arch 8k, Phlla., Pa.
Lyon * Co'* '•Pick Leaf”UmohlnsT*h*ce*
give* tho consumer* th* very best Tobeoeoi
they can get. S ounces for 10 oentc It Is fasti
winning its way to publio favor. Try it
The “ Ivory ” is a favorite shaving soap because it
rriakes a profuse rich lather, which softens the beard to
be removed and leaves the skin unharmed.
It costs about one-fifth as much as the so-called
shaving soaps and many who have used it for this pur
pose for years, will not have any other.
The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap Is made, fit it
for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe or
unsatisfactory.
A WORD OF WARNING.—Tbtrt er* uny while ceepe, each represented to to
"Just at good at the ’Ivory V' they ARB NOT. teal like ell counterfeits, lack Ike
peculiar and remarkable qualities of its genuine. Ask for " Ivory " Soap end leelet
upon getting it.
Climbing Up^fDown Stairs
e ARRYING heavy burdens, washing, iron
ing, scrubbing and other laborious dutlos
are productive of an enormous amount of
I suffering among women w$o era already weak
and prostrated by tha ravages of female dls-
; eases. The performance of these heavy labors
, Is obligatory to many women, but the suffer-
j; lug is not. This feature of tha household bur-
dens may soon be removed if women will only
|j take the trouble to ltarn how. A Aw bottles of
PCDCTI PC PEflALE
btlfo I Ltd panacea
will regulate all menstrual Irregularities, and
restore the entire female organism to Its
proper condition. Take St. Joseph's Liver
Regulator in small doses If there is any ten
dency to constipation or indigestion.
BED-FAST FOR A YEAR.
Oarstle’s^Female Panace
wlfc.of one ol our tnnnnts. t
uedlclno bus cured her and i
’anacea fins marie a most wonderful cure on the
. She lmd been bed-feet for twelve montbi. but rour
d elm le loud in her prsjwj of uni. . ..
ill a ON BItOa!, Claiborne, Ala.
Get this medicine from your druggist. If he does not keep It,
send us fl.00 and we will send you a Dottle, all ohargei paid.
L. GERSTI.E & CO., Props., Chattanooga, Taan.
YELLOW KVEIIQIN REPAIRS
PREVENTED takino w* ■ mm saws, ribs,
if A ii i* il L ll BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o.,
Our Native Herbs”
THE GREAT
Blood Purifior, Kidney and Liter Regulitor.
aoo DAYS’ TREATMENT, SI.OO.
Containing a Roglsterofi Guarantee.
By mall, postage paid, 32-page Book and
Test imonials, HIKE. Hold only by Ag*ut* for
THE ammo 0. BUS8 CO., Wi»Hnjtoii,D.C.
r il you li*v« money due you la Te
Atlsors. Anu 98-24
Itest Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. U«c|
■ In time. Sold by druggists. M
FOR ANY MAKE OF Q1N.
ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES
And Repairs for same. HhnfMng, Pulley^
bolting, .Injector*, Pipes, Valve* and Fittings,
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY CO.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
BRDVE5
TASTELES9
CHILL
TDNIC
18 JU8TA8COOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE OO ots*
Galatia, Ills., Nov. 16,2S98.
Pari* Medicine Co., St. Lout*, Mo.
Geutlomen:—We sold lut year, €00 bottle* og
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and hsv«
bought three gross already thi* year. In all o*r e*
perience of 14 years, In the drug business, bar#
icn universal*
truly,
All.NXy.CAHB St COb
OPIUM
N.Mt. NEW HONE CUBE. PilBl.li. We
Dtlc.tl.. Inm w*rk. OurulHd. Write
OR. PURDY, Mom!,.. Tmu.