The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 03, 1886, Image 7

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    HOU SEHOLD.
A FEW points in reg: ard to cleansing
things about a house are worth remem-
bering. Cold rain water and soap will
remove machine grease from white
goods; soap and water applied with a
-bit of old flannel will remove grease or
dirt spots on carpets, which should after-
wards be rubbed dry with a piece of
soft cloth; oil or grease on c»rpels may
also be rubbed out with 1: din meal,
the latter being replaced as 1ast as dis-
colored with more meal Lill the spot has
disappeared. tarnished brass candle-
sticks will shine like new ones if rubbed
with a solution of oxalic acid and then
polished with the finest emery; whiting
and benzine mixed to a paste will re-
move grease spots from marble; colored
matting shows dirt readily,espec ally in
dusty weather, but this and other Kind
of matting may be wiped clean with a |
cloth dampened with salt and water; |
chlorinated soda, which may be pro- |
cured at any druggist’s will remove ink
stains on white wash goods without in-
juring the cloth, the application being
by simply pouring a few drops on the
stained surface; Benares or any finely
etched brass should be cleaned in this
way. Wash in pure hot water, rub
with a bit of soft cloth dipped in lemon
juice, rinse again in hot water and pol-
ish with a piece of chamois skin.
se ne——
TISSUE PATER MATS. — Open a sheet
of tissue paper, fold in centre length-
wise once, then fold the other way
twice and cut. There will be six
squares. Fold across cornerwise three |
times, cut deep, round scallop, now un-
fold. Youhave six rounds of eight
scallops each. I use four sheetsof green |
tissue, different shades; dark to light is |
best. Fold and cut each sheet same as |
first. Take one round of the paper, |
fold one scallop lengthwise in centre |
on one wire of a common hairpin, hold- |
ing the head of the pinin the right |
hand, press in gathers the paper with
the left hand, towards the right, with-
out breaking the paper shirr each scal-
lop inthis way, then take one round |
of each shade from dark to light and!
tack together in the centre,and you will
have six handsome mats. Now take
some rose-colored paper. red, pink,
yellow and cream white, fold and cut
in the same way three rounds of each |
color, size three inches each, and
in the same way. Take a piece of yel- |
low paper on a wire for centre of rose,
put them on the wire, and you will|
bave a handsome rose. Place equal dis-
tances apart, one of each shade around
the mat, and fasten in place. They
make pretty mats for fairs.
cms
A DECORATED GOBLET.—An inter-
esting home-made method of natural
decoratfon consists simply of taking a
ior a little common salt water. In a
day or so a slight mist will be seen up-
on the glass--hourly this will grow un-
til in a very short time the
present a beautiful appearance, the
ziass being enlarged to twice its thick-
ness, and covered with beautiful
crystals, packed one upon another ex-
actly like some peculiar fungus or
mal growth,
will run over. The glass cia
additionally beautiful by placing in the
salt and water some common red ink;
this will be absorbed, and the white sur-
of producing inexpensive or beautiful
g different shapes of vases and shades,
an endless variety of beautiful
can be produced.
——————
four ounces of butter and the same
weight of sugar. Add to it four oun-
ces of bread crumbs, the beaten whites
and velks of four eggs and two ounces
of wheat flour. Beat well together
and stir in oue gill of milk three ounces
femon. Turn the mixture into a but-
tered pudding mold and tie a cioth
over it and put it into a pot of boiling
water and let it boil for an hour and a
half, Make a sauce of four ounces of
white sugar, ome glass of brandy or
noyeau and the juice of one lemon.
to the beaten whites of ‘wo eggs and
turn at once over the pudding in a hot
dish or serve it in a sauce boat,
APPLE MINCEMEAT.~One pound
tart apples, one pound currants, one
pound suet, one pound brown sugar,
two lemons, one tablespoon ground all-
spice, one teaspoonful ground mace, one
wineglassful brandy. Peel and mince
the apples, chop the suet (ine, stone the
wash the currants, squeeze and strain
the juice of the oranges and lemons
{chovoping up the rind of one of the
lemons), and mix the ingredients to-
gether with the Sula Adding the spices
and the brandy. hea all are thor-
oughly mixed, cover closely and keep
in a cool place.
BUTTER MAYONNAISE — Take a
spoonful of flour and beat it up with
the yelks of three eggs. Then add
about a teaspoonful of mixed mustard,
half a saltspoonful of salt, half a
teaspoonful of pepper, two table-
spoonfuls of vinegar and three table.
spoonfuls of water. Then take a couple
of slices of bacon, cut them into dice
and fry until they begin to be colored,
Then, pour in the salad mixture, stir
ring it over the fire till it becomes thick
and smooth, Pour it out into another
vessel and continue to stir it until cool,
adding a little more vinegar and walter
if needed to bring it to the proper con-
sistency, which should be like that of
custard.
WAFFLES, MIX one tablespoonful
of butter and one of sugar; and add the
yolks of three eggs which have been
well beaten. Beat thoroughly and mix
with one quart of milk, flour
enough, in which has been put fwo
tablespoonfuls of baking powder, to
form a stiff batter. When well mixed
add the whites of the 8, which have
been beaten to a stiff th, and bake
in the waflle iron a delicate brown.
A xi1CE dish for breakfast or for tes
is made of sweet potatoes boiled,
move the skins, rub the
through a coarse colander,
into
flat gales, dip lato flour, and
fry in
hot butter
Divine vengeance comes with feet of
lead, but it strikes with the hand of
iron.
thine
MANY hospitals and curative insti-
tutions use only Red Star Cough Cure,
for throat and lung troubles. It cures.
Price, twenty-five cents, Bt. Jacobs
Oil cures rheumatism,
Riches do not mean happiness,
“More than all other Lung Remedies,”
is what E. W. Fairman, druggist, Dayton,
Ind., writes of Allen's Lung Balsam. He
has sold it for eight years, and it gives sat-
isfaction in all cases, 200, Hc. & §1 per
bottle, Druggists,
a ——
Bodily enjoyment depends upon good
health, and health depends upon tem-
perance,
Chronic Cararrg., The result of
25 years’ Catarrh ;—the bridge, or di-
vision of my nose, wis about half gone.
I obtained a bottle of Eiy’'s Cream
Balm ; have used four bottles, applying
it to the affected parts with a swab.
which has about cured up the nostrils.
I had previously tried all other remedies
on the market without permanent re-
Lef.—J. A. Wood, 96 N. High Street,
Columbus, Ohio,
enn i —
No time is isolated ;
future.
In hundreds of cases,
purifying and enriching the blood, has
potent remedy for rheumatism. Hence,
suffer the pains and aches of this disease, 18
fair to assume that Hood's Sarsaparilla will
you, Givelt a trial
Truth is sharper than a | two-edge ad
sword.
Hood's Barsaparilia,
is
EvErRY FPAnt Tig Bobby
filled with veins and arteries ; the last
carrying pure blood to build up the
tissues—the first carrying away waste |
matter, Pure blood is necessary
health, and the waste, if not removed,
is poisonous, Dr. WALKER'S
OF
of ebootior well is
likes what he has
The measure
whether a8 man
chosen,
C—O ——— 7
The “Favorite Prescription,’
Dr, R. V. Plerce, of Buffalo, N. Y,, whose
name has become known over the world
through his success as a physician, and es-
pecially through the reputation of his
NGolden Medical Discovery,’ * has done a
good work in preparibg an especial remedy
for the many distressing troubles classed
as “female weaknesses.’ It is known as
the “Favorite Prescription.” Under its
administration all the pelvic organs are
strengthened, and the woman becomes that
embodiment of health and beauty which
God Intended her to be,
A qi ———
All writing comes by the grace of
God ; all doing and having.
Rupture, Breach, or Hernia,
neglected, often becomes strangulated and
proves fatal. We employ a new method
and guarantee a cure in every case or no
pay. Bend 10 cents in stamps for pamphlet
and references. World's Dispensary Medi.
cal Association, 63 Main street,
NX. XY.
————— A ———————
Rumor controle and i8 not to be con-
trolled.
c—— —
Greatest Discovery since 1402,
For coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchi-
tis, laryngitis, and consumption in its early
stages, nothing equals Dr. Pierce's "Golden
Medical Discovery,” It is also a great
blood-purifier and strength-restorer, or
condition of the bowels it has no equal
|
i
i
hpi
Mankind worships Sucees, but thinks
too little of the means
attained,
Art never yet reached the
ture; she is only an
this explains the reason way
the great Hair renewer, made
pure, unre fined petroleum isso far ahes wd
of all other Hair restorers;it 1s nature’s
OWu | roduction.
A en -
An epithet or metaphor drawn fre
nature enobl es art ; an epithel draw
art degrades nature,
SP,
CONST nr TION CURED.
Clad, sired from pract
is rps an Eas |
% of a simpie vegetad
i per FInALE cure of Consumpti
Asim b and all OAL BD
NO & PO Mmilive an
HLy aud all Nery
i its wonderful cur
e 30d & deatre vo rel “ve
i: send free of charge, 10 all
recipe, in German, Freeh or English,
directions for preparing and using. Seal
ok, Rochester, N
ms A IAI
heart is, so is
As the love to
heart.
ss ———————
ley, 1934 West Chestnut Street,
AAA
After all, fame 1s but a , phantom.
AporEant.
aes yOu visit or eave New Yorx Oty, save
* aXpresaage and §3 carriage Hire, aud slop
at an srand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Cen
tral Depot,
60 clegant rooms. fied up ai 8 cost of one
million dollars, $l and upwards per
day. Ea in Plas, Revator., Restautaat
supplied with the best. Ilorse cars, stages and
Sitatsd annul w i A Famlies oan ve
bette mosey rand Union Hotel
han at any other Aret.class hotel in She ety,
w—— een
“I bold it to be a fact,” says Pascal,
*“that if all persons knew what they
sald of each other, thers would not be
any friends in the world,”
FITS: All Fita stopped free. Treatise and $3 trial
bottle of Dr. Kilne's (ireat Nerve Restorer free 10
Fli canes. Send to Dr. Kline 931 Arch St Phila, Pa
ES tai ———
A modest youth may become a con-
fident man, though never an impudent.
IT 13 DANaEROUS to tamper with
irritating liquids and exciting snuffs,
Use Ely's Cream Balm, which is safe
and pleasant and is easily applied with
the finger. It cures the worst cases of
Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Hay
Fever, Jiving relief from the first
applica ruggists have it,
Price 50 cents. BY mail 00 con's, Ely
Bros., Owego, N.
Sam —————— IAI ————
All honest men will bear watching,
It is the rascals who cannot stand it.
The Postmaster of Liverpool, Floric
writes : “The Iast Hop Plaster 1 got oj
wonders on my rheumatism. Send me
another.” If you have rheumatism or
rheumatic pains, put a Hop Plaster over
the affected part. It will please you. 28e.,
5 for $1. All dealers,
Love those who advise you, hut not
those who flatter you.
they have a
bottle of Big-
W. one should delay when
gr Cody when a 50 cent
oo W tive Care will promptly and safely
iil them, Dollar size cheapest for family
use or chronic cases,
Things past may be repented, but not
The purest, sweetest and bet Cod Liver Oll In
the world, manu lactured from
ers, a the
aswoet J
Patients who
ota nats
or n market,
well, Hasard & Co, Now York,
cured by wang Jubiper Yar Soup,
skin
well, Hasard made by Can
Appear to be better than you are, and
aim to be what you appear Lo be.
Lyox's Patent Metallic Stiffeners pre-
vent boots and shoes from ranning over,
ripping in the seams or wearing unevenly
We hand folks over to God’s mercy,
and show none ourselves,
A, ry
n———
Hide not the truth when ye know it,
—— a —
An t ndoubeed Blessing.
About thirty years ago a prominent phy-
sician by the name of Dr. William Hall
mental research, for diseases of
the throat,
a remedy
chest and lungs, which was of
a wide
name
reputation in this count
of the medicins is DE. WM
THE LUNGS,
ied on as a speedy and positive
HALL'S
and
rel
for coughs, colds, sore throat,
elo,
Tears ure due to human misery.
Frazer Axle Grease.
I'he Frazer Axle Grease lusts four times
Use it
A trial
and save your
horses and wagons, will provethat
we are right,
al fi
> FY ON
BROW N 3
IRON
5 77" Nx
BlTTERS
WILL CURE
HEADACHE
INDIGESTION
BILIOUSNESS
DYSPEPSIA
NERVOUS PROSTRATION
MALARIA
CHILLS ap FEV
TIRED FEELING
GENERAL DEBIL ATY
PAIN 1x Tue BACK & SIDES
IMPURE BLOOD
CONSTIPATION
FEMALE INFIRMITIES
RHEUMATISM
NEURALGIA
KIDNEY AND LIVER
TROUBLES
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGCISTS
The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red
Lines on wrapper
TAKE NO OTHER
ANAKESIS.
rar gives -
faliibie Sa nfo for PII: A
KESIS" ia sold by
Drasrisie er
Price, 0 per baz, PRE.
Pain, mail
sent FREER b
ETARDTER &
Morcerfit Now? are, Ro
manual, of ARARESIAT
os 3 —
the
Truth is an immorts Wer
ERS
Vinegar Hitt
ive and tonic, pu
Vinegar Bitters is the
best Remedy . distovard J for
OIRO gestion,
Peadac he and increasing the
vitgl powers,
| Vinegar Bitters assim.
fiates the food, regulates the stomach and bow.
| els, giving healthy and natural sleep,
Vinegar Bitters is the Alnease
venter, and stands at the of all family rem
edie. No house should ever be without It.
Vinegar Bitters cures Malarial, Billions and
other diseases
Kidneys,
books
on Diseases,
temperance and Tobacco ‘which last should
Te in the hands of every child and youth in the
An
of four cents for registration fees.
RH. McDonaid Drug Co., $38 Washington St., N.Y.
456
mime’ Business Coll ® hi a iaipaie ——
only $4a sitastions furniah | Frit tye sie vaiern
OLD GOINS ==: 75s
Cow Catalogu of a
SOHAY ER, Lambert Ave, 0 Mighiands,
a3
CHARLES J,
Mans,
Piso's Remedy for for Ostareh 18 the
Beat, Easlest to Use, and Cheapest,
AN Nadas
An for Cold In the Mead,
Hay Fever
, do, 5) conta.
ral ”
Bie
Ey bcs AS
LURE. FITS!
aT
Tin
Oy
STA
oni,
EL bd, nial
Y
Absolwtel
Free from Opiates, Emetics and Polson.
PROMPT.
SAFE.
Eos
SURE.
THE CHARLES A. YOUELER 00. BALTINORE, Wh.
BERN A meet
E ures Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
or Pain Barkacha, Hendnrbe, Tootharke,
fiprates, Heuloen, ote, vie
"i CE Fv TY CENTS, i:
® YRS.
FACET] A.
¢ IR ft
“Funniest thing I’ve seen lately,”
said the candy man on the Rock Is-
land suburban train, “was the other
day when a man rushed up to
Twenty-second street
{ to the station agent:
“$11 .b-has the Joliet train g-g-gone?’
**¢Yes, there it goes up the road
there.’
* ‘Does it 8-8-8-Lop-p-p-p=——m
‘¢ “Yea, it stops at Tharty-fir
“ «Does it 8-8-4- top-p-p-p-a-d-
"ey es, it at Thirty
street,
1s ‘Does it 8-8-8-top-p-p-a
t*Yea | al
Fifty-first, Englewood
land.’
“Does it
wh
** “Yes, it stopaat all
what difference does it
You're not aboard.’
‘Just what I'm Ek-k-Kickin
Does it s-:-lop-p-p snyw!
lon enough so I could r-r-ru
ta-take it?'”
si sired
stops ninth
A ny-—"'
Forty-sevent
and Blue
slops i,
Is-
s-top-p-p-a-a-ny wh-whe
stations,
make U
a
»
“wy
:
Genr,
Ou must no
Iie
ins, BLARK
DEINE Cross,
‘He is cutliing
Wie an expression n
Mrs, Bl
| Kind of an expression
Mr, Blank —*""Certainl
' it is incorrect
Mrs, Blank-**
it be?"
Mr.
j cutiing leet
| ery
Mrs
say?"
: Mur.
| baby.’
AK
Nonsen
Biank--**Becau
h. If he were he
Well
VAN K -~-" what
Jank—'* ‘Tes!
's why he
i Are «
That howls,’
———————
Scum of the students at the U
sity of Texas are more given to
than to books, but some of them
! very industrious, One of them,
ing invited to play a game of bill
declined,
*““Why, what's the mat ter?”
{ “I've quit all that. [I get up at five
and study three hours, After break-
fast I go to hear Professor Roberts’
| law lecture:
| five more hours, and 1 never quit my
books before eleven o'clock at night, |
study seventeen hours a day.”
i **Why, man alive, that's too
| That's enough to kill a mule,
niver
Are
On be
i lards,
much.
But you
{ your complexion is rosy.
| have you been studying seventeen
| hours a day?"
“I am going to begin to-morrow,”
responded the overworked student,
“Is my shaving agreeable to you,
sir?” a loquacious barber asked & cus-
tomer whom he haa been flaying alive.
“My wife would admire it very much,”
under torture, ‘‘Ah, said the barber,
often excellent judges of their hus.
bands being well shaved. And you
think mine will sui, sir?"
of itin the world, It was
morning she became angry because |
skinned alive.” The barber lost him-
self in reflection.
“Dox'r you want to 20 to the better
i world, Tommy?" asked a Sunday-
school teacher of her new scholar,
| “*No, mum,” promptly replied the
| frank little fellow.
| “And why not, Tommy?”
+ 0), when I die I want fo go where a
feller can rest.”
“Well, my boy, you can rest there."
“Well, in that song we sung it said
we'll shine there.”
‘Certainly; don't you want to shine
there.”
“No, mum; I don't want to shine
there. I get enough of that here. I'm
a bootblack, mum!”’
A Racorep and dirty little Mr. was
found riding on the truck, under a pas-
senger car, “What are you doing
there?’ asked the conductor. *“Trying
to get to the North,” +* Where are you
from?" Wore “Why didn’t
u stay there?” fow could I? I've
ked the State over, from one end to
the other and found nobody who had
any use for me. Col. and Maj. and
Capt. and Judge have up a combi-
nation against me and I can’t get a job
in the Stats,"
“My daughter. you ought to have
some aim in life,” said a Burlington
father to his thoughitiess sixteen-year
old. “Oh, I am go ie 10, bape pons pond i
have got
the enthusiastic Aoi
E. L. Noyes, Revers, Mass,, was cured of
beau slready!”
Mi. MuLnooby-—It is just glorious
ee watch that sunset} “Lilac,
R | gold” is what the poet says,
{ it? The ethereal
| Mrs. Mulbhoody—0, nonsense!
| are altogether too rhapsadical,
Mr. Mulboody
I 58 poetical, my dear. That
yonder, with its Hives lining
“Yes, that’s all
| I can't say the same
| purse,
| ver for more than——"'"
“Mrs. Mulhoody, you
ribly practical. ”
isn’t
cloud
are
Finsr DELE GATE (in P ‘almer House
William Curtis by signt?”
should like very much to see the old |
gentleman,”
Just then a voice
table said:
from the opposite
And the two delegates exclaimed with
one accord:
*“That must be Mr Curtis.”
———
WATERPROOF 18 the name of a town
on the Mississippl River.
dampest waterproof that was ever seen
in that section of the country. The
water has completely covered the place,
and the people are obliged to climb trees
to keep from getting their feet wet. If
they named the town ‘‘gossamer,”” af-
ter one of those four-dollar rubber coats,
it would have been more
and then they wouldn't have
disappointed when it sprung a-leak,
OLp Gex1 uF ive dollars!
| do you want five dollars for?"
Tramp—I want to wake up
| to Louisville,
“Got relatives there?”
“No-—not exactly. I hear they have
| a whisky pool there and | want
on hand when it's opened to the pub-
What
my fare
Lo De
iC,
*+1 33 J sald a Clark
| physic lan to a patient, while feeling
““that you consider me a hum-
‘*1 think it very odd that you can
50 accurately divine my thoughts by
t " 5
sinmy fen 1
sirest
Lis
Prose
pu ise,
bug.
y 1 1s
my pulse,
ing retorted Lhe
-
To SweerTeN Raxcip Burren.
[ By request Take strong i
oid work the butter over in it
would work it if just
urn to get ter
w,
e-waler,
Jusl as
i from
¥ i 13 t §¢
ig Oui OF
YO
fie .
A Nornrtn
ented a machine
when she |
the
un
Nort
Five
Rive
thie
Rheumatism
vi %
hue
Te doe
ressedy for rheumati
ave suffered
efited by Hond
find r of, tr
eaciditvy ef the b
Ginense builds up
I was afflict
8 1 foun
I was almost helple
iw
Previous to 18
until
did me more pood (han a
}
H . Mass
“Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all drugeists, $1; «ix for $5. Mad
only by C. L HOOD & OO lowed
100 Doses One Dollar
ENSIONS INCREASED
Wris LL. Bingham Washington, D. «
ITCHELL'S
i MASTERY ours ol
Mi Mb BPT
| Baemad t phon ps £ Twine
PENNYROYAL
“CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH"
The Original and Only Genuine,
Prduand snd whan rellaivia Bowsers of Worth loss Indiations
Bagiiale’™ tre fhe Sutus apulle Indisgeaantin
bagtinh 4 shams Sy pa Ohaus roel
EE zt PILLS!
WORMS
fohaster emival Cs
Madison So. Phinda, P
=n Une \RK'S ERADICATED br amine
LARK’
ae ARIS WORM SYRUP
Aw otd.cirme remedy, fe » SUP
al in ta astion. Price 25 conta a boitle,
Me POR “ALE RY DRUGG INT.
F.BaLe
N
aia
PRAVORAT ED HELLADONY,
Aches ani Palos Nurs
psiwass the shoulders
wee
No Rope to Cul Off Horses’ Manes.
Celebrated *BCULIPSK® HALTER
and BRIDLE Combin cannot
Slipped by any horse
Halter to any part of U & free, on
| peosipt of §1 pid by all Saddlery,
i Rardware and Harness Dealers
Special Aiscount to the Trade,
Soha for Price iw
> x iGHTHOY ME.
ochestor, N.
MORPHINE iii.
BASILY CURED, Ru Opfum Habit
DR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jeflerson, Wisozasin |
Blair’s Pills. +.
THURSTON
F—
areat Eoghisa
Rheamatic Remedy.
t and tins Hi»
PATENTS ans Taventors’
wan, Patent Lawyer, Washington,
bo SET ar
BAUGH'S
x $25
PHOSPHATE
Ea
We
a x £%
R KE A DE RS
FACH MONTH.
| 1,000 PICTURES! 1.5600 PAGES!
FACH YEAR,
hedpent ui 1 B Ma Zins
ARCH OF THE MON PHL
YIN EVERY
PICTU RE 2
' opular Month] y for 1886.
of Al BACTIY FEATURES, which
place 11 FAR ATH RAAT
The success { th i MONTHLY has beset
i 3 A i Jus AR the « 5
Imepray Linaot
ine, Entertain
Postpaid, 83 per ye
Pablisher,
“MON
COLORED
The
wPeciten
Cough or Croup
SME DY.
£5 AN GUA
It Contains no Opi um in Any Form.
ALLENS LUNG BALSAM Tar
roe 25 ‘
fe
Su t ks Fr Hottie
ris Mitra) ut
» Bens
ION or any
8 bolle
per Bottle,
oly
Lise lara
and #1
TO PARENTS.
Very pernicious to
regards his own, he
0 yi t CVI
Are Bre
Lo lender
SEA FOAM
of the bad qualities of baking
or saleratus It contains no
10 alum or ammonia
SCIENTIFIC.
chemists who have analyzed Ses Foam
sommend it. Housekespers who have used it
will have ne other. Cooks, whose best efforts
have failed with other powders, are jubilan$
over Sea Foam. Saves fine, saves labor, saves
money
It is positively unequaled. Absolutely pure
Used by the leading hotels and restaurants in
Now York city and throughout the country.
For sale by all first-class grooers
GANTZ JONES & CO.,’
176 Duane S8t,, N. ¥.
EBILITATED
You are allowed a free trial of thirty days of the use
of Dr. Dyes Celebrated Voltaic Pelt with Flertric Sus.
A for the ependy relief and per
nent gure of Nervous Debinty, toss of Vitality and
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trated pamohiet in sealed ensviope malied fren, ry
dressing VOLTAIC BELT OO Marshall, .
nly
All
614 Chestnut Street,
PHILADELPHIA, PA,
fend Flowers by mail and Xxpreas, for
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Receptions.
DINNER PARTIES, &e.
~ | FUNERAL FLOWERS,
Choeilcest Blooms,
lowest Rates.
Send to us for prices, which are the lowest in
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THE FLORAL EXCHANGE,
614 CHESTNUT Street,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
W ANTERSs
1x or Woman in
A he