The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, November 13, 1907, Image 7

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A TALENTED WRITER
Praises
Peruna
as a
Catarrh
Remedy
MRS. I. M. TINNEY.
Mrs. E. M. Tinney. story writer.
325 E. Nueva St., San Antonio, Tex.,
writes:
"During 1001 I suffered from nasal
catarrh, which various other remedies
failed to rplieve.
. "Six bottles of Peruna, which I took,
entirely cured me, the catarrh disap
pearing and never returning.
"I therefore cheerfully recommend
Peruna to all similarly afflicted."
Mrs, Ellen Nngle, 414 4th street, Green
Bay, Wis., writes:
I hove often heard Peruna praised and
H is more widely known here than any
other medicine, but I never knew what a
splendid medicine it really was until a few
weens ago, when l caught a baa cold
which settled all over me.
"The doctor wanted to prescribe, but I
told him I was going to try reruns and
sent for a bottle and tried it.
"I felt much better the next morning
and within five days I had not a trace of
ray lameness or any cough.
"I consider it the finest cough rem
edy."
Peruna Tablets: Some people prefer
to take tablets, rather than to take med
icine in a fluid form. Such people can ob
tain Peruna tablets, which represent the
olid medicinal ingredients of Peruna.
TWO CHEERFUL LIARS.
A Queer Cherry Tree and a Back Ac
tion Cannon Ball.
Mr. Flnlayson, town clerk of Stir
ling in the latter part of the seven-
teenth century, was noted for the
marvelous in conversation. He was
on a visit to the Earl of ;iontelth
and Alrth In his caBtl at Taha, on
the loch of Montelth, and was about
taking leave when he was ask!d by
the earl whether he had seen the
ailing cherry tree. t
"No," said Flnlayson. "What sort
of a thing is it?"
"It is," replied the earl, "a tree that
has grown out of a goose's mouth
from a stone the bird had swallowed
nd which she bears about with her
tn voyages round the loch. It Is Just
at present in full fruit of the most
exquisite flavor. Now Flnlayson," he
added, "can you, with all your powers
of memory and fancy, match the
tory of the cherry tree?"
"Perhaps I can," said. Flnlayson,
clearing his throat, adding, "When
''Oliver- Cromwell was at Alth one of
the cannon sent a ball to Stirling
and lodged it In the mouth of a
trumpet which one of the troops in
the castle was In the act of sound
ing." "Was the trumpeter killed?" said
the arl.
"No, my lord," said Flnlayson. "He
blew the ball back and killed the ar
tllleryman who had fired it!" Pear
son's Weekly. 45
Woman Makes Farm Pay.
Mrs. Ida Webster of Pratt county,
Kan., has harvested 8,000 bushels ot
wheat and 3,000 bushels of corn from
her 800-acre farm this fall. The
place was cultivated under her per
sonal supervision, and 12 men work
for her all the year around, and
many more In harvest time. Her hus
band died 12 years ago and left her
the place and its mortgage. Since
then she has paid off the mortgage
and is now supposed to be worth
160,000.
HER "BEST FRIEND"
A Woman Thus Speaks of Postum.
We usually consider our best
1
ir ::c
I m ,m
friends those who treat us best
w- Some persons think coffee a real
friend, but watch It carefully awhile
and observe that It Is one of the
meanest of all enemies, for It stabs
one while professing friendship.
Coffee contains a poisonous drug
caffeine which Injures the delicate
nervous system and frequently sets
' tip disease In one or more organs of
the body if Its use Is persisted in.
"I had heart palpitation and ner
vousness for four years, and the doc
tor told me the trouble was caused by
coffee. He advised me to leave It off,
but I thought I could not," writes a
Wis. lady.
"On the advice of a friend I tried
Postum Food Coffee, and It so satis
fied me I did not care for coffee after
few days' trial of Postum.
"As weeks went by and I continued
to nse Postum my weight increased
from 98 to 118 pounds, and the heart
trouble left me. I have used It a year
now and am stronger than I ever was.
I can hustle up stairs without any
heart palpitation, and am cured of
nervousness.
"My children are very fond of Pos
tum, and It agrees with them. My
slBter liked It when she drank It at
my house, but rot wheu she made It
tt her own home. Now she has
learned to make It right, boll It ac
cording to directions, and has become
very fond of it You may use my
name If you wish, as I am not
ashamed of praising my best friend
O Postum."
,4 Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to
Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Res
ton." . 1"--'.'
r7-knvTvr!jy-h, r1rn rrrv I "lH0P8 T0 ELL '" i '
Woman Elected Mayor.
Within recent times a woman has
been elected mayor of a town and be
came thereby fnmous. It was some
fifteen years ago that a Mrs. Yates
passed a stormy .twelve months In the
mayoral chair of Onehunga In New
Zealand, and her admirers claim for
her that never in the Ufo of that town
were its sanitary arrangements so
perfect and Its municipal debt so low
as during her term of office. Today
In the village of Koelsona, in Austria'
Hungary, the same experiment Is be
ing tried. A young woman, only
twenty-four years of age, has been
chosen major, and with her on the
municipal council are four other mem
bers of her sex. New York World.
The Afternoon Nap.
In Gc-many they have an institu
tion called the Sehlafchen. This is a
little nap In the afternoon between
the ponderous early dinner and the
coffee which Is served at 4 o'clock
Xcthlng is nlowed to Interfere with
this Teutonlr rite. "In a German
country house." says an observer, ' I
hr.ve seen with these eyes dashing
cavalry officers in tight tunics and rat
tling swords disappear about 2.30
o'clock, to emerge in an hour's time
looking a trifle sleepy, but armed tn
every sense for the conquest of the
fair. Students and professors, ma
trons and busness men, tinkers and
tailors, all take their forty winks in
the afternoon and get up strenuous and
efficient." New York Tribune.
Modern Girl Superior.
The twentieth century woman is
far more Inclined to take- a serious
view of love and matrimony than
either her mother or grandmother ap
pears to have been. She may like
admiration, but as a rule, she has no
desire to poso as a breaker ot men's
hearts.
Viewed even from a moral stand
point, the girl of the 30's, the maiden
of ready blushes and simple white
muslin frocks, who was taught to re
gard every unmarried man who
crossed her horizon as a probable lov
er and possibly husband, was much
more "forward" In spite of her vaunt
ed modesty than the bachelor ' girl
who looks the realities of life straight
In the face and understands how the
taking of a husband can prove a curse
as well as a blessing. New York
Journal.
Chinese Girls at School.
New and striking educational exper
iences will be undergone by China if
the three young women who have
come to Wellesley for a higher educa
tion should adopt all the frivolities of
dress of the college girls and should
acquire a fondness for the consump
tion of chocolate and ice cream in the
Inn. But Miss Chichi Wang, Miss
Wing Lia Hu and Miss Faung Yuln
Tsao are not as far behind as some
of their American companions think,
sxcept that they don't wear lingerie
waists and know nothing of American
cookery. The foreigners have sur
prised the other Wellesley girls, In
forming them that there Is a good
newspaper in Pekln especially for wo
men, and edited by a woman. The
newcomers have destroyed one of our
pst fancies about their Bisters by as
serting It is becoming fashionable for
Chinese women to have natural feet
and that all over the empire the
blndlr"of the feet of young girls Is
dying out. New York Press.
Labouchere on Women's Hats.
Last year the fashion ot ladles' hats
was extravagant, and I thought that
the climax of folly had been reached.
A. woman looked when out walking
or driving like the horse at a funeral.
Her hat was a mass of ostrich feathers
that waved far above her. This year
this extravagance has been outdone.
The hat Itself is generaly of straw
and In shape Is like a waste paper
basket reversed. But the straw Is mere
ly used as a foundation for a wondrous
fabric- of flowers, fruits or feathers.
When It Is feathers, they are arranged
after the Ideas of Choctaw Indians.
Some of them are piled on high, oth
ers straggle down the back of the
wearers, and others seem to be put on
In a vaguely promiscuous fashion, for
the essential is to have a great many
of them. When it is flowers they
look like a bed which a gardener
has sown with varletgated seeds, that
have been allowed to grow as they
list The wearer either tilts this huge
structure on the side of her head or
at the back, and seen from behind
she looks as though she had no neck.
The prettiest girl almost ceases to be
pretty when arrayed In thlB headgear.
for the plain ones and they seem
to have the largest hats they are
made doubly plain. A lady, fat, dow
dy and past ber youth, in such a
hat, is one ot the most ridiculous
sights that can well be conceived.
London Truth-
Women og Fashion Taller.
Society women In the United
Kingdom- undoubtedly are becoming
taller with every passing generation.
There are in the present decade many
who are of goodly height, and it Is
noticeable that the debutantes of each
suceedlng year appear to have gained
a little In their average of stature.
Among the fashionable matrons ot
American birth' who hold their heads
higher than the society herd are-Prln-cess
Hatzfeldt, Cora, Countess ot
Strafford, Mrs. Cornwallls West, Mrs.
John Jacob Astor and Mrs. Potter
Palmer. Glancing over the English
world of fashion one calls to mind as
among the tall" women of Mayfalr,
Lady Desborough, Lady Herbert, Lady
de Clifford, Lady Gladys Herbert, Lady
Marjorie Sinclair and the Hon. Mrs.
Skefflngton-Smythe, all of whom are
more than five feet ten inches tall.
But each of the foregoing women Is a
dwarf beside the Hon. Mrs. Edmund
Yorke, whose height Is six feet, four
inches. Mrs. Yorke, who was Miss
Ova Mllner, seemingly Is not at all
embarrassed by her nearess to the
clouds. It's a long way for her to
look down on her fellow mortals, yet
she Is a woman of exceptional sympa
thy and deservedly one of the most
popular hostesses In the realm of Ed
ward the Caresser. New York Press.
Americans Dress Too Qaudy.
One of the first exclamations of for
eigners visiting America concerns the
showiness of costume which is no
ticed in women of good position. In
New York especially there Is thought
to be too little distinction between
the gowns of a lady, In the old-fash
ioned acceptance of the word, and
those of her sisters ot less enviable
reputation.
The difficulty Is not, perhaps, be
cause the society women of America
gown themselves too gayly, but be
cause they are often indiscreet in
their selections ot the modes which
come here directly from Paris.
"After the Americans we purify,"
is a current remark In Paris concern
ing the season's fashions. The most
pronounced and often outre, styleB are
sent to America, since here the mar
ket Is sufficiently broad and varied to
take in all sorts and conditions.
There is, besides, money, and to
spare, in the purses of many classes
of women.
It is, then, after the American im
porters have been satisfied that the
season's models are refined and "pur
ified" for the well-bred women of
France.
During the last year two American
girls who have married Frenchmen
have had the unique experience of
having their husbands request them to
lay aside their extensive trousseaux
and to provide themselves Instead
with lingerie and gowns more refined
and ladylike.
These trousseaux, however, had
been bought in America at enormous
expense, since they were "Imported"
and of. the latest cut and design. In
France they would have been bought
and worn by women of uncertain rep
utation, while In this country they
were chosen by well bred and society
women. New Haven Register.
Fashion Notes.
Long sleeves are used In all tailor
models.
Dark blue or black coats with Scotch
plaids look stunning.
Japanese sleeves are used In many
coats for older women.
Raspberry Is one of the new shades
of felt being used by the milliners.
A waist with a round yoke is apt
to be unbecoming to the stout person.
A walking suit of red linen Is pro
nounced much smarter than one ot
white.
Braiding of all kinds, more especially
that suggesting the military, Is very
popular.
In cut, in color, In trlmmnlgs sim
plicity is the dominant tone of the
smart suit.
The skirt trimmed In panel fashion
Is becoming. The panels may be of
contrasting material.
The little braalded hip Jackets are
very new and are appropriate with
either long or short skirts.
The collar and cuffs of the bolero
are of "mod"e broadcloth. Short
sleeves give the picturesque touch.
Stripes should be used with discre
tion. They have a tendency to make
the stout woman appear conspicuous.
Long skirt suits have fancy coats or
Jaunty hip Jackets, three-quarters or
still longer coats that almost reach
to the edge of the skirt.
Much attention is being paid to a
rainy day outfit. Coats, especially.
an be made very attractive when
trimmed with buttons, pipings, collar
lapels and pockets.
Ons of Them Is Willing to Have His
Income Reduced.
The bishop of Norwich, who Is this
year president of the Church Con
gress, has declared that episcopal
palaces are too large and too expen
sive to maintain, and that they
should he sold. "When taking pos
session of the bishop's palace at Nor
wich," he said, "I had to spend more
than $15,000, and It cannot be kept
up for less than 12,500 a year. If a
smaller residence were provided, my
stipend might be reduced by $5,000
a year."
The blahop of Norwich receives a
salary of $22,500 a year, which he is
willing to have reduced by $7,500.
This self-denying attitude of the
bishop is one of the chief unofficial
topics among delegates to the Church
Congress.
She Did Not Fear Death.
An old lady on her seventy-third
birthday once said, "I do not mind get
ting old, and I do not fear death, but
I live in constant dread of paralysis."
"For some time I have been want
ing to tell you ot the great good your
wonderful Sloan's Liniment is doing
here," writes Mr. James F. Aber
nethy, of Rutherford College, N. C.
"In fact, all your remedies are doing
noble work, but your liniment beats
all. In my eight years' experience
with medicine I find none to go ahead
of it, having tried it in very many
cases. I know ot one young man, a
brick mason, who suffered from a
partial, yes, almost complete, paraly
sis of one arm. I got him to use
your liniment, and now he can do as
much work as ever, and he sings
your praise every day. I get all to
use It I possibly can and know there
Is great virtue in It. I have helped
the sale of your noble remedies about
here greatly, and expect to cause
many more to buy .them, as I know
they can't be beat."
Champion Typewriter Mads Record.
Miss Rose L.- Frits, champion
typewriter, made a new record in
New York, when she wrote from dic
tation an average of 98 words a
minute for 30 minutes, while blind
folded. She actually wrote 3,032
words in half an hour, but lost 95
words as a penalty for 19 mistakes.
Miss Fritz's former record was 94
words a mlnuto.
TESTED I1Y TIME.
A Core That Has Held Good Four
Years.
Mrs. Mary Crumllsh, of 1130 West
Third street, Wilmington, Del., says:
"Some years ago I
began to feel weak
and miserable, and
one day awoke from
a nap with a pierc
ing pain in my back
that made me
scream. For two
dayt I could not
move, and after that
I had backache and
dizzy spells all the
time.' My ankles swellel and I ran
down dreadfully I was nervous and
had awful headaches. I wonder that
any medicine could do what Doan'a
Kidney Pills have done for me. They
cured me four years ago and I have
been well ever since."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-.vlllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Useful Education.
In Belgium girls are expected to
give five weeks out of each school
year to learning housework. The
girl la required to know not only how
to cook a dinner, but to clean up and
care for a kitchen, do marketing,
wash and Iron.
There Is more Catarrh in this section of
the country thnn all other diseases put to
gether, and until the last few years was sup
posed to be incurable. For s great many
years doctors pronounced it a local disease
and prescribed local remedies, and by con
stantly failing to cure with local treatment,
pronounced it incurable. Science has proven
Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and
therefore requires constitutional trentment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con
stitutional cureonthemarket. It is taken in
ternally in doses from 10 drops toa teaspoon
ful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. They oiler one hun
dred dollars foranycaseitfnils to cure. Bend
for circularsand testimonial. Address F.J.
Che net & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists. 76c.
Take Hall's Family 1111s for constipation.
Woman Has Big Farm.
Miss Jennie Pettijohn, a milliner
of Denver, who was compelled to go
to the country to regain her health,
is farming on a large scale In Color
ado, supervising 4,000 acres. ' In at
tending to business she drives 60
miles a day.
SKIN CURED IN A WEEK
After Buffering Six Months With Dis
figuring Red Spots and Pimples
Cleared Away by Cutlcura.
"Cuticurs Soap and Ointment art tha
greatest remedies for skin diseases on
earth. I have suffered six months from a
disease which I cannot describe, but I will
tell you the symptoms. My skin was full
of red spots and my face was full of red
pimples. It made life miserable for me
and I was discouraged with everything.
I went to several doctors, but it was use
less. I resolved to try the Cuticura Reme
dies, and after using them for about one
week I became a new man. The pimples
and the red spots have disappeared and
they made my skin as soft as velvet.
Albert Cashman, Bedford Station, N. Y.,
Nov. 29. 1905."
About 18 cents a square yard Is
spent a year to keep the streets of
Paris clean. Berlin spends four cents 1
for this. . I
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Odor more goods brighter and faslt-r cotort than any otHar dye. One 11. p-kue oolo aU fibers. They d7 watar Mur than any otherdye. To
aa d any garment without ripping apvt. Writ. lor frM booklet-Uow to or. Hau and MIS Ookam, MONKUS UKUU tU (Jains. Ullneia.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
The kidneys are essential organs
for keeping the body free from lm-
Surities. If they should fall to work
eath would ensue in very short time.
Inflammation or irritation caused
by some feminine derangement may
spread to some extent to the Kidneys
aDd affect them, The cause can be
so far removed by using Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
that the trouble will disappear.
When a woman is troubled -with
pain or weight in loins, backache,
swelling of the limbs or feet, swell
ing under the eyes, an uneasy, tired
feeling in the region of the kidneys,
she should lose no time in com
mencing treatment with
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
It may be the means of saving ber life. Read what this medicine did
for Kate A. Ilearn, 520 West 47th Street, New York, who writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I owe a debt of gratitude to Lydia E. Pink
barn's Vegetable Compound for It has saved my life. I suffered with
Kidney trouble, irregularities and painful periods, and my blood was
fast turning to water. I used your medicine for some time and it has
made me strong and well."
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots
and herbs cures Female Complaints, such as Falling and Displacements,
and Organic Diseases. Dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage.
It strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cures Headache, General Debility
and invigorates the whole system. For derangement of the Kidneys in
either sex Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound la excellent.
Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female Illness are invited to write
Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice. It is free.
. He Found the Falls. .
Having seen Niagara Falls, and
having read Southey's poem descript
ive of the manner In which the wa
ter comes down at Lodore, it is al
leged that an American became con
vinced that the Lodore cataract was
the greater. So he went to Eng
land to hunt up the falls of Lodore.
He set out the moment he reached
Keswick, and walked and tolled over
rocks and boulders. He could not
find the falls. He rested and asked
a native: "Can you direct me to the
falls of Lodore?" "Why. you're a-
settln' on 'em," was the heart-breaking
answer. The falls of all the ad
jectives were dry!
Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothinir Pvrnn for Children
teethiug.BotteUB theguius,re(lucesinHamma
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
Longest Year on Record.
The longest year on record was 46
B. C. Julius Caesar ordained that it
should have 445 days, and it did
everywhere within the Roman "sphere
of Influence."
To clear away all the confusion
which had previously existed in rec
onciling the lunar with the solar
year, Cnesar, with the help of Sosio
genes, an Alexandrian astronomer,
undertook a thorough reform of the
calendar.
He effectrl It by making the year
now called 46 B. C, "the year of con
fusion," consist of 445 days, and the
succeeding years of 365 days, with
the exception of every fourth year,
which was to consist of 366. This
method is called the Julian calendar.
Obtained Many Patents.
Walter Scott, the late Inventor and
builder of printing presses, was one
of the 39 Inventors who were men
tioned by the Commissioner of Pat
ents as having obtained patents each
year for 25 years.
Cheap Amusements.
New York city Is making a mar
velous growth In the direction of
cheap amusements. There are now
400 one-cent, five-cent and dime
places ot entertainment, where there
was not one 10 years ago.
H. H. Crush's Sons, of Atlanta, Oa,, are
the only succofuful Dropsy Rpeoialists In the
wor d. Bee their liberal ofTnr In advertise
ment in another column of this paper.
All treasure is good for a man that
is not "treasure for himself."
OUCH, OH
NEURALGIA, STITCHES. LAMENESS, CRAMP
TWINGES, TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP
ALL BRUISES, SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST
THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY THEY CANT RESIST
1 : yuvy
Pmcc 25c
. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES
SHOES FOB EVERY MEMBER OFa
-rue rtun v a-r ai l .ripfs.
K9R ftnn ( To nr on who omn prov W. L.
Ffn u a mmri I mors Man's S3 4 t3.HO ahom
m, WtMfU ( thmn anjothmr mtmnutaoturmr.
THE REASON W. L. Douclu .hoes are worn by more people
in all walks of life than any other makeii beeauM of their
excellent .tyle, eiuv-ntling, and superior weari nm qualities.
'1 he .election of the leather, anil other material, for eaeii part
of the shoe and et-erv detail of the making- is looked after by
the moat eompleteonEam. ation of .uperin tendenta, foremen and
skilled. loemaKem, who reeei.-e the highest wages paidintha
shtei ndtltrv, and who a workmanship cannot he excelled.
If I could take you nto mylargefactorieaat hroekton.Maas
and .ho you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoe, are made, yon
would then understand why they hnM theirahape. fit better,
wearl oncer and are nf irrpafer ynltie than any other make.
My $4.00 mnd 9B.OO OILT EDGE Shorn omnnot bm moaatlod ml any ppfes).
CAUTIONI The genuine have W. I lMuglas name and price .tamped on bottom. Take
No Nab.Ulnte. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas .hoes. If he cannot supply vou, send
direst tofactcry. Shoassenteverywhereby mail. Cstaio( free. W.L. Douglas, brock toa, Mom.
TCI CCDADUCDC WAMTCll r salalastlt.tab.rcwa.rt Muck. Thl. la aa
I LLtunArncno it AH I cu .ei..w.T.urw imai.. .... .Bo.i.ooi.
les. la oasrse of n-rallw.r official. BrtahltdM. Twcratr-on. Tim Main 11... of h. m
M. B. R. In St-aonl-room. Position, paring SBO per smt aad apwtrd .tMol.telr guanuitMcl
oar gradunlMi anri.r . SIM Gnnrmntr Bont. v.. r.a w.rh fnr y..- .Xe..e.-
Writ, lor Cukw. NATIONAL TILKUKirB
MISS KATE A.HEARN
Woman Owns a Big Ranch.
Lady Ernestine Hunt, eldest daugh
ter of the Marquis tf Allesbury, owns
and operates a horse ranch at Cal
gary, Alberta, on a stretch of land
nearly 40,000 acres in extent.
FITS, St Vitus'Dance :Nervous Diseases p a,
manentlycured by Dr. Kline's ftieat Nevs
Restorer. t3 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld'JBl Arch St., Phila., Pa,
The cold storage company of Lon
don sometimes has charge of $750,000
worth of furs belonging to Its pat
rons. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails.- At druggists.
The "lead" of a very cheap pencil
If often nothing but coke
I Pay Salary
by check weekly the only fair
way. None of the "deduct-from-collections"
business for
me. $3.00 per day is the rate.
I mean business; let me send
details. ' - ,
ATKINSON, 1024 Race St., Philadelphia,
Mica
Axle
Grease
Helos the VVaoon dd
.he Hill C
The. load seems lighter Wagon
and team wear longer You make
more money and have more time
U make money, when wheels are
greased with
Mica Axle Grease
The longest wearing and most
satisfactory lubricant in the world.
STANDARD OIL CO.
P. N. U. 45, 1907.
DROPSY?.
MSCOVZM
Ititt aalek rUnt aasl aasak.
IUek as? SMtlsMBlal. mm lttn.Mi4H.i.&T
BfW I. M. tSRIRH'S HUHMp Sos ft, Allaals 4
MY BACK"
and 6O0
BEST IN
THC WORLO
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1HBTITUTSJ, CIaelntut.ll, OHIO.
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