Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 23, 1919, Page 13, Image 13

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    PREACHERS AND PREACHING A
PRESENT PROBLEM
By WIUJAM T. ELLIS
At a dinner table In Constanti
nople, recently, the talk inevitably
swung around to Russia. There
were ten of us, all In uniform save
the padre, and ranging in rank from
a general, a colonel and various
majors down to two war correspon
dents. Fighting, and not theorizing,
was the trade of seven of the ten.
After thrashing out all the old s raw
concerning Russia, the talk oo a
turn. The futility of armed force
as a remedy against Bolshevism had
been admitted by the soldiers.
Then one spoke up: •
there are only two ways of this
Russian mess. One is for e
to be left alone to exhaust itself in
internal strife and suffering, e
the disease run its course The
other is for a great Pr°phettoarisc
to call that essentially religious n^
tion back to God. A _
declaring. 'Thus saith the, •
sounding in the modern tones
maddened mob. They of
the justice and true
the kingdom of God, ' Bolshevism,
horrible substitute th em dearly
when once it comea T e a ther above.
In the name of the a prop het
Russia's need of needs
° f G ° Hearing the City's Cry
That is not the need of Bus .
alone. War is over, but which
queathed acute problems. Ujan
BeCm it^f° St Our territorial ques
war itself. our our mo ral
tions, our labo . r er ance question,
question, our temperance u _
our entire ? oc,a ! a^ fl Ve the 3tates
tions. bid fair to b frolU our cities
men. Especii al y , challenge to
there rises a cry and
which heaven itsel heard
different. Mnevah'svoicewas
of God: what of the ™ nt real and
York and Chicago and Montre^ ?
New Orleans and San won derful
I have been sailing the won
Mediterranean whose ted t he
depths have so often think _
might of Jehovah an runawa y
ing that this is the faltMu l
Jonah as well as of ear . the
Paul, both hearers to cmesAnd t
divine call to , re P en^n c e. lnded
think of Jonah Is to be r char ,
swaf .M "SKh'ss:
mon ,s before our eyes
key and Austna ns that de- I
Germany, the sreat ma n; all j
tied the laws of - C, °„ w crlesa to-day. I
are prostrate a " 4 ,L dbv the jus-
Thev have been visitea o nt
tice of the Almighty. arc
tie peoples they once PI k
free. We do nothave to the
as far us A'inevah op p rcss ion aa
ntWroaned of P the Judge of j
a " ,h \ G Crisis' Without Prophets
Where are the prophets whom
this time so bit *® r < jK e< J ie me re poli
man's prophets only
ticians; "ussi.Vs and
ecclesiastics, Turkey _y iels in
all What about our propr who
Trt wearing mantle of Jonah
to-day V facts fearlessly.
Bet us face the tacis a prpn .
SfftSW m.n. -
throughout the s whole there
JSS,„Tvoi n cS ennsHan
Kffi Sf th. e iS?r tir our prophetic
ESSHSS
S&sTasas
nnrl ecclesiastical functionaries).
Preachers Wl.o Sinned in France
Worsevrt. So widely had P reach
,ng become a profession without
the divine spiritual passion, that
many clergymen, instead of being
leaders and prophets, have them
selves been maintained in a conven
tionally correct mode of life only
bv circumstances. They followed
the code of their calling, because it
was difficult and dangerous to do
otherwise.
Many of these men went to war,
from varying motives; and some
avowedly to escape the tedium or
their distasteful round of minister
ial duties. Of this number a per
centage, small, and yet too large to
Vie Ignored by conscientious people,
suffered a moral lapse. With the
greater number of these latter, the
failure was merely a relaxation of
their standards of speech and of
such practices as wine-drinlting.
Others went utterly bad, sinking In
to sensuality and even crime. I know
whereof I speak; I am not exagger
ating the occasional instance, such
as the minister in Y. M. C. A. work,
who became a confessed and con
victed thief in France. My informa
tion comes at first hand and on the
spot, from the officials who kpow all
the details.
This la horrible, of course. I
shall be accused of slandering the
ministry for revealing the condi
tion. Instead, I am only serving
the cause of truth and power: for it
is far better that the Church should
lose her reputation than that she
should lose her soul. Such hideous
facts as I have stated should send
the Church to her knees. Repent
ance must begin at the house of
God. How can we cry aloud to the
wandering world when our own ut
terance Is choked with sin? <
.lonalis. and Other Preachers
Comic papers and the stage jest
at the clergy; and the mass of man
kind ignore them, as mild creatures
who are ineffective except as kill
joys. The preacher is no longer
"the parson," or "the" person, of a
community: the drift of decades has
steadily shoved him to one side as
a nonessential. Nevertheless, and
regardless of whatever justification
for this attitude there may he In
individual instances, the preacher's
place was never more a position of
opportunity and power than to-day.
Ministers who exalt their functions
as prophets are the hope of the
state. Their office Is above that of
law-making and politics and com
mercial pursuits. For they are the
interpreters of that Divine Will
which is the one hope of humanity.
To be a voice of God, and a min
ister of the mysteries, is the highest
office open to mortal.
Whenever, from unworthy mo
tives, a man of God emulates Jonah
and seeks to flee from tho burden
of a clear message, he enters upon
sure unhapplness and complete fail
ure. Godfe word will be borne, but
woe unto him who refuses to be Its
4 .
FRIDAY EVENING, HiLBJUSBURa oSS&t TELEGRXPH MAY 23, 1919.
bearer! This Is an hour for all who
own 6 ?niHt d the . V<?,Ce to aearch their
sp . inta as to whether they are
th X, declare at whatever cost,
out whlch alone can eave
our Imperiled cities and civilization.
daXLXr. ministers especially face the
becoming Jonahs. The
modern city seems to swamp the
preacher. He loses his prophetic of-
Xrifh u n occasional sensationalist,
witn his eye on newspaper head
s<;ts the Public attention; but
eldom is it in order to cry the peo
ple back to God. There is a strange
unrelatedness between the average
PhJP't utterance and the life of the
Nobod >' feels this moVe
ister the conscientious min-
Old Ninevah* and New
The thing that ailed Nlnevah the
Great, to which Jonah was sent as
a prophet of repentance, was the
very same thing that ails Paris and
all the ends of the earth that have
been carrying their problems thith
er—simply a disregard of God and
his righteousness. From Bondon to
t onstantinople I have been study
ing: the plight of capitals and coun
ries, and there is nothing wrong:
with any of them that would not be
quickly cured by a sincere turning
to Bod. Sin and selfishness, pride,
cruelty and corruption, have begot
ton unhappiness and weakness.
rophets of the Jiving God can do
more-for them than even the world
Peace Conference.
Ninevah is to-day a ruin. I have
visited it. down on the banks of the
Tigris river, opposite Mosul. As I
stood on the mound that marks the
sight of Sennacherib's palace, and
looked out over the still remaining
outlines of ancient walls, confirming
the scripture measurements, I had
a sudden sense of the irresistible
might of the will of Bod. This city
of pride, which once ruled the
world, is gone, and the vaunting
self-praise of its kings, which re- |
mains on the monuments seems ;
ironic" l now. All that is left alive I
within the limits of what used to be ;
Ninevah is a mound and a village ■
Tnntki Yunis"— the Prophet!
Jonah. Nobody knows the tomb
of Sennacherb, but here is the re
puted grave of the man of God,
who. after his dramatic lesson, took
his second chance and preached the
, of ,,r e Pentance to Ninevah.
\\ hat will remain of New York
and Bondon and Paris three thou
sand years hence? No man knows.
I have within recent days seen the
ruins ot Troy and of Corjnth; and
the sight makes a man wonder. Of
this w-e are sure: the great words
uttered therein, the noble lives
lived, the sublime deeds done, will
abide forever, even as Jonah s mes
sage of mercy outlives Nlnevah's
might. Truth stands, though cities I
fail. i
SATURDAY SPECIALS|#|Is
OINTMENTS HAIR TONICS FACE POWDERS TOILET CREAMS I * TALCUM POWDERS SOAPS
Analgesic Baume (French) .. . ,45c Hay's Hair Health 34c, 67c Azurea Face Powder $1.19 Pond's Vanishing Cream 32c Mary Garden Talcum 45c Life Buoy Soap, 2 for ...15c
Analgesic Balm (Park-Davis) . .43c Danderine 22c, 43c, 69c Floramye Face Powder $1.19 Pond's Cold Cream 32c Mavis Talcum 18c Cuticura g 19c
San Cura Oint. ..' 21c, 42c Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur ....69c Carmen Face Powder 37c De Meridor Cream 34c Mennen's Talcum 21c
SVl"?, !o° ' S" Ph ß , Djer-Kiss Face Powder 51c Stillman's Freckle Cream 32c Johnson's Talcum 14c Woodbury Soap 9c
Konden Catarrh Jelly .... .19c, 39c •£££ 2? STT.!!!!!! £ I Garden Face Powder ...,75c Othine Double Strengrh 69c Butterffy Talcum 19c ££ £ <
Resinol Ointmen, 39c. 75c Nelson's Hair Dressing ; 22ci L-Ame (La May) Face Powder, ...... ;;; 45c Babcock Ccrylopsis Talcum .... 14c s^'s^ZZZZl*
vTTI !o C 'ro C n y R S p a 'r Vlß ° r !o C wUK F r. a Palmolive Vanishing' ,37c j ® lbcoc * C "> I ™c"m Colgate Elder Flower Soap ...,13c
Vick s Salve 19c, 39c Q-Ban Restorer 49c Woodbury Face Powder 18c o r ■ on_ Hudnut s Talcum (Tin) 19c 6 • *
Musterole 19c. 39c Herpicide 43c, 79c Garden Fragrance Powder 59c Pompeian Mass. Cream ..39c, 48c ■ Riveris Talcum (Jars) 19c Colgate Cashmere Bouq., 3 for 25c
Men.hola.um 17c, 34c Wild Root Hair Tonic ....43c. 79c piancee p 23c J . SS Talcum 13c, 18c V,olet Glycerme, * *
Sassafola 17c Damschinsky S Dye 39c, 59c v w j Terp-en's Geranium Bath 3 for 25c
Cuticura Ointment 19c, 34c Brownatone 37c, 89c Freeman's Face Powder 21c Samtol Face Cream 23c Garden Fragrance Talcum 73c J er g ens Cranium Bath,
Poslam 43c Walnutta 39c Pussywillow Face Powder ...,39c Peroxide Cream 34c I Fiancee Talcum 89c Castile Soap, 2 for •♦.••..25 c
Camphorole 21c Glover's Mange 48c Pompeian Face Powder 39c j Cold Cream ,29c Rigaud's Lilas Talcum 59c Pear's Soap (Unscented) 14c
—Special— —Special— —Special— I W A W JP* A —Special— —Special — —special— —Special—
60c Value Johnson-Johnson i 25c Value m 11 jm SJP 2 Boxes American i Hot water $1.20
Writing Paper **£ Writing Paper IJ,A KIV
2 For 60c 2 For 25c 2 For 35c * " 23c 55c SI.OO 75c
STANDARD PATENTS FOR THE BABY SHAMPOO SOAPS HOME SUPPLIES Dental Preparations CIGAR SPECIALS
Plnkham's Compound 80c Horiick's M.l.ed Milk. C an,hro, 43c \ .!!!!!!!!! |c !!!!!!!! £ 6 " 2fc
Father John'. 43c Liquified Cocoanu. Oil 39c Water, 4-os. . p epsodent Tooth p astc J7c King Oscar. 9 for —soc
Scott's Emulsion 49c, 95c 39 c>
Pierce's Discovery 79c Imperial Granum 88c Lux, 2 Packs 23c S. S. White Tooth Paste 19c La Ti f tons Q for 50c £ or
Pierce's Fav. Prescription 79c Borden's Condensed Milk, mil ct WATroc Borax, 2 Pounds .... 25c Euthymol Tooth Paste 17c ' ° r
N . , ~ 43c 4 cans 80c ILULUI WAILK3 P ? nc Acld ' 8 " 02 ' f * 3c Lyon's Tooth Paste 17c Even Steven, 9 for 50c $2.59
Nujol,' 20-oz 79c Melhn's Food, 2—75 c Jars •••Jl-O? Garden Fragrance $1.59 DytSa Dye^"' for .2 5t Sanitol Tooth Paste 23c Counsellor> g for 50c
TT ~ , Q Nestles Food 49c and $2.49 S2 q Putnam Dyes, 3 for 25c Kalpheno Tooth Paste 19c
Usoline 39c Castoria 23c J ' 9 Sterno Heat, 3 for 25c Arnica Tooth Soap 17c Gen'l. Hartranft, 9 for 50c
American Mineral Oil 55c Azurea Vegetale $1.19 Energine 21c Pyorrhocide Powder 75c £j nco g £ Qr _
Nervine 79c CANDY SPECIAL Azurea Toilette $2.03 j
Miles' Heart Remedy 79c Floramye Vegetale $1.19 Creolin (Pint) 69c Euthymol Tooth Powder 17c B '
S. S. S. Blood Tonic 69c Lady Murial Floramye Toilette $2.03 Peterman's Discovery 10c, 19c Sheffield Tooth Paste 17c 3 Mojas for —......25 c
SS S Blood Tonic $1 15 Fresh and Pure Assorted Chocolate Dier'-Kiss Veeetale / $1 19 andles ' for 2^ c Kalpheno Tooth Powder •••••• 19c
t. t>. E>. Hiooa ionic q>i.io ujer iviss vegetaie qi.iy Life Buoy Soap, 2 for 25c Colgate Tooth Powder ....15c, 25c 3 La Carma for ......,25c
Milks Emulsion .83c 1 Pound 39c Mary Garden, 5-oz. $2.98 I Rat Corn 15c I Calox Tooth Powder 17c
Sloan's Liniment 19c, 39c, 79c
SSSESS 300 Market St. 306 Broad St. •.
Caldwell's Syr. Pepsin ...38c, 73c : F. E. Cascara Sagrada Aromatic, 3-
Giyco Thymoiine .. . i9c, 39c, 79c , SHAVING ITEMS PILLS AND TABLETS PILLS AND TABLETS SAMPLE PERFUMES o *. bottle 25c
Listerine 18c, 37c, 69c $5,00 Gillette Razor ....... $3.98 Pierce's Anuric 39c Harlem Oil Capsules 23c Love Me 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3-oz. bottle..6oc
Lysol 19c, 38c, 75c SI.OO Gem Razor 83c 100 5-Gr. Cascara Tablets 39c Pape's Diapepsin 33c pj er "Kiss 25c .
_ . n . „... _ . 1 Azurea 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 2-oz.
Lavons 19c, 38c, 75c g Gillette Blades 45c 100 5-Gr. Asafetida 79c Bliss Native Harbs 67c Houbigant's Ideal 25c
Gray's Glycerine Tonic 96c Pinaud's Lilac Vegetal 79c 100 5-Gr. Bayer Aspirin Tablets, 85c De Witt's Kidney Pills 34c Fiancee 25c bottle ...35c
Sal Hepatica 19c, 38c, 75c Mennen's Shaving Cfeam 25c 100 Alo P hen p hls 59c Beecham's Pills 17c : Sweet Spirits of Niter, 2-oz. bot., 35c
Kilmer's Swamp-Root ....39c, 73c Durham Duplex Razor 89c 106 Pe P tonized Iron Tablets ••• 79c Doan ' s Kidnc Y Pi " c SAMPLE SACHETS . 7
* . ~ , n n .... , ._ 100 Lapatic Pills 29c Bitro-Phosphates 73c Spirits Camphor, 3-oz. bottle
Atwoode Bitters 19c 1 P,. Best W.tch Hssel 38c p ier „., p ellets 17c Wendsll's Ambition Pill, 36c ?ir-Ki.s 10c
Cahfomls Syrup of Fig, 39c 1 Pt. Imported Bay Rum S9c Edwards' Olive Tablets 17c Marmola Tablet. ...59c J? Tinct. Arnica, 3-oa. bottle 60c
Limestone Phosphates 34c Styptic Pencils 5c Bell-Ans 17c, 45c Pierce's Discovery 39c, 79c Fiancee 10c nct * I° d ' ne 2 " oz * bottle - 35c
Fellow's Syrup Hypo $1.05 6 Ever-Ready Blades .28c Miles' Pain Pills 21c, 79c Pierce's Prescription 39c, 79c Ideal 10c Comp. Licorice Powder, 1 oz. ..10c
ESCHEAT LAWS
ARE ENLARGED
Provision Made to Get Various
Items and Also For Refunds
Under Acts Approved
Four bills designed to clarify the
State laws governing the escheat
of unclaimed funds to the Common
wealth were added to the statutes
by approval by the Governor and
will become effective Immediately,
supplementing the acts whose con
stitutionality was upheld by the su
' preme court this week as far as they
pertain to trust companies and State
banks. A bill to correct the law so
that It will apply to national banks
Ib to be presented In a few days.
The bills were presented in the
House at tlie Instance of Auditor
General Charles A. Snyder and pro
vide for payment to the State of un
claimed fupds in the hands of
fiduciaries and for refunds if it be
comes necessary, payment to the
! State of amounts of unclaimed dis
tributive shares from assets of cor
porations, etc., in process of dis
solution and for reports from those
in charge to the auditor general;
prescribing procedure for escheats
under'provisions of any act and pro
viding that the auditor general,
state treasurer and attorney general
may upon proof order refunds of
unclaimed bank deposits Instead of l
requiring a suit to be Instituted
against the State.
It is expected that the new acts
will result in thousands of dollars j
being reclaimed for the State.
Can Remove Old
or Decayed Headstones ;
Managers or directors of any |
cemetery are vested with the right j
to remove headstones, fences and !
structures on cemetery lots which I
may have fallen Into decay or be- \
come dangerous by terms of a bill
whose approval was announced by
the Governor. The bill, which orig
inated in the Senate, requires notice
to be given by registered mall or
if owners address is unknown by ad
vertisement -for three weeks.
Other Senate bills approved ex
empt net amounts of insurance pay
able to dependents from claims of
creditors and amending the lateral
railroad act of 1832.
House bills approved include the
code relating to fish in Bake Erie,
establishing seasons and limits, etc.,
providing a method of establishing
title to land acquire at sales for un
claimed taxes or municipal claims;
extending appropriation of $35,000
made to Norristpwn State Hospital
in 1917 for purchase of farm land;
appropriating $06,710.94 for the El-j
wyn Institution. 1
Bolsheviks Used
Instruments of Torture
Against Their Victims
By Associated Press.
Vladivostok, May 23.—Instruments
of torture the Bolahevikl are alleged
to have used against their victims,
have been found by the Perm dis
trict inquiry commission, according
to the Government Telegraph
Agency. They include a chain ship
with thick handle, an Iron bar which
was used to brand prisoners, and a
rubber knout.
"Natonex Worked Like Magic."
This Grateful Woman Tells
Can Now Pick Up Needle,
Though Fingers Were
Numb Before.
"Somehow, I feel as If I ought to
write and tell you the wonderfully
good results I am getting from your
Natonex," declared Margaret A.
Boyd, dressmaker, of 249 Putnam
street, Scranton, In a letter to the
Natonex representative, who is now
' here personally explaining this won
[derful Nature medicine.
"Natonex has seemed to work
like magic," this Scrajiton woman
continued. "I read of Natonex
in the papers and decided such a
Nature preparation ought to be just
the remedy for me and I went
straight and got a box.
"Natonex has worked like magic.
Already I feel like a different per
son.
Stricken With Rheumatism
"Some years ago I was taken
down with rheumatic fever and for
several days was at the point ot
death. Some time after this I suf
fered from St. Vitus Dance, so be
tween the two my health was left in
poor condition.
"Early every Spring for a number
of weeks, I have a siege of rheuma
tism that affects me through the
shoulders, arms and hands. As sure
as Spring comes, my rheumatism
comes. I get such pains it is impos
sible for me to do my house work,
and the blood circulation In my
hands gets so poor and they get such
a numb feeling that I cannot pick
anything up.
"Besides all this misery that I
have every Spring, I have been trou
bled with chronic constipation, and
an inactive liver, and the ailments
that go with this condition.
Soil Possibilities
Of Crete Surveyed
Crete, May 23. —American scien
tific agriculturists are now complet
ing a survey of the soil possibilities
of Crete in the same thorough fash
ion in which they surveyed the
Greek mainland. American farming
machinery and up-to-date methods
are needed and arrangements have
been made to educate the farmers
of Greece and Crete so that they
can increase their yield of crops.
Major C. G. Hopkins, of the Illi
nois Agricultural Department, and
Bieutenant G. J. Bouyoucos, a native
Relief Came Soon
"You can imagine, with all these
troubles, the condition I was in when
I heard of Natonex. I had only
been taking it a few days when I
began to notice the difference. My
bowels became regular, my nerves
are getting better and I am sleeping
better. My complexion is clearing
and my rheumatic pains are getting
less and less every day.
"The new blood circulation In my
hands is more noticeable than any
thing else, for now 1 can even pick
up a needle, and before they were
so numb they had no feeling what
ever. If my statement will be ot
any benefit to others, I am willing
to have it published, because I have
so wonderfully improved that I want
others in my condition to learn of
this wonderful remody."
Famous Nature Remedies
"Here is a case in which rheuma
tism, nervousness, constipation, poor
circulation und biliousness have all
been relieved In Just a short time
by Natonex," said the Natonex rep
resentative in discussing this case.
"Such a statement might seem re
markable for an ordinary medicine,
but the famous Nature remedies
combined in Natonex are designed to
give general good results.
"Read this list of Nature reme
dies in Natonex—see what each one
is designed to do. and you will un
derstand why Natonex wins such re
markable endorsements as this."
The Natonex Nature products are:
Gentian Root —The pure general
tonic to invigorate digestion, moder
ately increase the force of blood cir
culation and create a healthy, nor
mal appetite.
Juniper Berries —Noted for their
diuretic properties as an aid to purifi
cation of kidneys and bladder.
Dandelion Root—Nature's famous
liver tonic to stimulate this vital or
gan when sluggish or torpid und
failing fo secrete enough purifying
bile.
Greek educated in America and a
former instructor at Michigan Agri
cultural College, are in charge of
the American Red Cross agricul
tural survey of Greece and Crete.
100 Animals in Paris
Zoo Died During War
Paris, May 23. —One hundred ani
mals in the Paris Zoological Gar
dens died during the war. After
a bomb from a German airplane
made a big hole In the Rue Cuvler,
alongside the gardens, the authori
ties thought it wise to kill the pols-
Rheumatism, Nervousness
and Constipation Reliev
ed by This Remedy
Sarsaparilla Root —The blood ton
ic known the world over and used
in the relief of chronic rheuma-'
tism.
Prickly Ash Bark—The vegetable
tonic for bodily strength used in
languid or run-down state of the
system.
Valerian Root—To tone the nerves
and to overcome restlessness and
sleeplessness from which so many
weak, run-down persons suffer.
Rhubarb Root—Nature's product
to Invigorate the large intestine
(coioa) and dislodge the waste mat
ter that brings about constipation.
Jamaica Ginger—A gruteful stim
ulant in dyspepsia and feeble con
dition of the allimentary canal. To
warm the stomach, increase the
flow of digestive juices and nourish
the stomach.
Peruvian Bark —The Nature tonic
to subdue feverish conditions.
I.inseed —To relieve congested
conditions and act as u demulcent In
the digestive tract.
Cascara Bark—The best intestinal
tonic known to medical science; to
relieve chronic constipation and to
restore tonicity to the bowels after
expelling the poison toxins created
in food waste.
Bicarbonute of Soda—To purify
and sweeten acid stomach, check
nausea, relieve food fermentation
and gas distress.
Every weak, ailing, nervous, run
,down man or woman here who
needs better digestion, purer blood,
restful sleep, real nerve vigor and
bodily strength cn learn all about
Natonex by calling on the Natonex
representative at the main store of
Geo. A. Gorgus,'- 16 North Third
street. You can even test Natonex
absolutely free.
Natonex is sold by leading drug
gists everywhere.
onous snakes, lest they should es
cape and cause a panic.
Bater the river Seine overflowed
Its banks and flooded purt of the gar
dens. und monkeys, antelopes and
giraffes developed chest complaints
and died. Only the waterfowl
3^^^sm aMADCO ' wxn,i " T ' tAL
HAIR. NETS I ajWRSSrifJ? tHaWS* I
Sterling
Electric Washing Machine
With Swinging Reversible Wringer
THE ONLY MACHINE THAT
DOES IT LIKE HAND
Extension Reversible
Demonstration at Store or in your own
home without Obligation
Sold in Harrisburg exclusively by
Open Every I lliflVr lj 23 W. Main
Evening fl VT VT ▼ A-l V g t Carlisle
1415-19 N. Second St.
flourished, but Coco, the baby 1
hippo, the pride of the gardens died
of ennui, they say, as the gardens
were virtually deserted daring the
war.
Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad
13