Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, March 12, 1900, Image 3

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    "Do Not Barn the Candle
At Both Ends."
Don't think yoa can go on drawing vi
tality from the blood for nerves, stomach,
brain and muscles, without doing some
thing to replace it. Hood's SarsapariHa
gives nerve, mental and digestive strength
by enriching and vitalizing the blood. Thus
it helps overworked and tired people,
tHccdlS SaUafmlitta
/DrßuirsN
Corel all Throat and Lung Affections.
COUGH SYRUR
Qt the genuine. Refuse Kiibotitutea. A
Vis SURE/
Dr. BulTi Kilt curt Dyspcpiia. Trial, toJOrje.
The Earmarka.
"Tour son Is devoted to art, Isn't
he?" asked Reynolds. "I suppose so,"
replied Easel. "He's continually draw
ing on me."
First-class passengers In England
have Increased only 10 per cent In 10
years, while the number of the third
class passengers has Increased 41 per
cent.
Beauty la Blood Dee*.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
snd that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 20c, 60a.
Why It Was Red,
Slmkins —What makes your nose
red? Tlmklnß—lt glows with pride,
■lr, at not poking itself Into other
people's business.
Den't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tonr Lire iwiy.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic:. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To*
Bac, tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, COo or gl. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Fisher Girls Travel In Style-
So prosperous has been tbe herring
season at Yarmouth that the Scotch
fishing girls who have been cleaning,
preparing, curing and packing the fish
were able to accomplish their 500-mile
journey home to Peterhead in a
special train, which stopped only twice
for changes of engines. The train con
sisted of two fine corridor coacheß and
three comfortable saloons, and at the
rear were four luggage vans, all full
of personal belongings of the girls.
The ordinary garb of the lasses when
pursuing their vocation comprises
short top boots reaching to the knee
and short skirts, with oily frocks over
them. They wear no hats or bonnets
even In the pelting rain.—London
Mall.
Nearly every member of the Russian
Imperial family rides a bicycle.
THE NERVES OF WOMEN
Lydia B. Plnkham'ti Vegetable Compound
Relieves tbe Suffering from Over
wrought Nerves.
41 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : I am so
grateful for the benefit derived from
the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound that I wish you to
publish this testimonial that others
may know the value of your medicine.
1 was sufferiug such tortures from
nervous prostration that
life was a burden. I could
not sleep at all and
■Jr was too weak to
_/ - W\ walk across the floor
\ without aid. The
reached a
condition
where my heart was
affected by it, so
often lie
down without
almost suffocating.
I
Pinkham's Vego
~ table Compound
and it worked like magic. I feel that
your medicine has been of inestimable
benefit to me."—Miss ADELE WILLIAM
SON, 100 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
Thin, Sallow and Nervous
41 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM 1 was thin,
sallow and nervous. I had not had
my menses for over a year and a half.
Doctored with several physicians in
town and one specialist, hut did not
get any better. I finally decided to
try your medicine, and wrote to you.
After I had taken three bottles of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound and three of Blood Purifier, my
menses returned, and I feel as well
and strong as I ever did, and am gain
ing flesh."—Miss LENA GAINES, Visali*
Tulare Co., Cal.
TAPE
WORMS
,L A tape worm eighteen feet long at
least came on the 6ceue after my taking two
CASCARETS. This lam sure has caused my
bad health for the past three years. lam still
taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of
notico by sensible people. "
GEO. W. BOWLES, Baird, Mass.
M CATHARTIC
TRADE MARK OIOISTERID
Pleasant. Good. Do
Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c. 25c. 6Uc
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sttrlißf Remedy l ompnnj. ChleifO, Montreal, New York. 913
W-TILRIP 8OI(1 and guaranteed by all drug
- I U-DAU gists to CXJKK Tobacco Habit.
CARTERS INK
It is made to give satisfaction— I
und it does. Have ycru used It}
$300,000,000 IN GOLD.
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN
FROM OUR SHORES.
Another Chapter In Oar Financial Hit
lory That Show* Futility of Main
taining General Prosperity and the
Gold Standard at the Same Time.
The Louisville Courier-Journal, In
Its Issue of Dec. 22, ult., brushes aside
as a mere bagatelle our shipments of
gold to England. "The gold reserve
In the treasury," It says, "was $241,-
423,427 yesterday, and the total amount
of coin and bullion was but a little un
der $400,000,000." This, with $141,000,-
000 in the banks and about $600,000,-
000 in the country, in circulation, is as
sumed to be a splendid showing, and
to elevate the United States to the
front rank as a gold country. But now
comes a circular from the directors of
the mint to the manufacturers of jew
elry, gold leaf supply houses, and all
dealers and manufacturers who use the
precious metal In their work. The
Chicago Tribune gives the substance of
the circular in the following succinct
language:
"Lost or strayed—s3oo,ooo,ooo In
American gold coin. Any person who
has Information of Its whereabouts will
please communicate with the director
of the mint." The truth is cropping
out that we are short of our gold cir
culating medium the enormous sum of
$300,000,000; it is lost. Not from the
treasury, but from the circulation
among the people. This means that
there are $300,000,000 short in our mon
ey, and when we add to this shortage
the sum of $241,423,427 in coin In the
treasury, and the bullion to make up
$400,000,000, we have a shortage of
$700,000,000 of gold coin on our total
stock of gold coin. It appears that
Prof. Faulkner doubted whether the
stock of coin outside the treasury was
what It was assumed to be, and the
director of the mint has been so Im
pressed by the professor's statements
that he 1b going to try to find out.
The treasury department knows how
much money the treasury contains, and
the banks certainly know how much
money they hold, but all our officials
have been going upon the theory that
our gold coin in general circulation is
exactly the difference between the
amounts in the treasury and in the
banks, and the public have been fed
with that idea until they have been al
most made to believe that we have
plenty of gold coin. Even the Courier-
Journal, usually so careful in its cal
culations, has been deceived by offi
cial reports. Under these circum
stances, therefore, it does not make a
vast difference to the public welfare
whether we ship gold coin to
England or not. It may transpire that
we are not so heavily laden with cir
culating medium as we have been as
suming; Indeed, the recent stringency
appears to demonstrate the fact that
we are short, and short $300,000,000.
From this may be deduced the actual
fact of the necessity of using billions
of make-shift money, usually termed
"industrials," but all speculative, and
the further fact of the positive recur
rence of panics accompanied by the
demands upon the United States treas
ury to rush to the aid of the market.
We do not believe that Director Rob
erts can ascertain the whereabouts of
this lost money, for it does not exist,
except in imagination, unless it be in
old stockings and teapots.
THEY WILL NOT FORGET.
"The voters of this country will not
forget the multitudinous scandals and
violations of platform pledges, the In
credible increase in public expenses,
and the peril In the tendency of af
fairs," says the Helena Independent.
"They will keep their wits about them
from this time forth. There never was
a time when so many voters knew so
much about the history of their coun
try, and so much of the science of
political economy; every year the
number grows. These voters will
know, most of them know already, that
"booms" are ephemeral afTairs, and
that over-capitalization of trusts and
monopolies must react upon somebody,
and they know full well that the work-
Ingmen will be the "somebody" upon
whom the reaction will fall.
"Not a voter will go to the polls
next November without having studied
the question of the menace of militar
ism In a free country, the deception
and treachery practiced by the admin
istration toward silver, the violation of
the pledge to improve the civil service,
the departure from the teachings of
Washington and the fathers on the
subject of foreign entanglements, the
operations of Gage and the United
States treasury at the demand of stock
gamblers and a favorite money clique.
"Panics have been coming so fast
as a result of Republican legislation
that temporary conditions of boom will
not convince the Intelligent voter that
reaction will never come. They will
not forget."
FALSE PRETENCES.
It Is beginning to be made clear that
William McKinley owed his election to
his pledge of international bimetallism,
which held enough silver Republicans
in line to insure his election. In his
recent annual message he comes out
for the absolute gold standard, thus
manifesting his deceit and duplicity In
1896. Congressman Champ Clark of
Missouri, in the debate on the currency
bill, said:
"He-not only recommends It, but he
urgently recommends. The chances are
a thousand to one that had he uttered
that sentiment in the campaign of 1896
he would not now be in position to
send a message to congress and there
Would be no gold standard congress to
receive It It was the pledge in the St
Louis platform to secure bimetallism
by International agreement that landed
him In the White house. So says Hon.
John M. Thurston. Republican senator
from Nebraska. The pledge of an Inter
national bimetallism held enough sil
ver Republicans In line to give the
election to Mr. McKinley."
By what subterfuge Mr. McKinley
expects to be re-elected in 1900 nobody
seems to know, but oven the devil has
a persuasive way of quoting scripture
which deceives the children of light,
and it Is presumable that some great
fraud, or fake, will be dressed up In
attractive colors like circus posters to
draw the crowd. Forestalling an evil
is better than repenting for Its exist
ence, and a political evil must be fore
stalled. This Is an occasion when the
personnel of Mr. McKinley is involved,
and he is too much mixed up with
grievances that go to the destruction
of the public welfare to make him a
desirable candidate on any platform.
He would betray every plank if he
were told to do so, and his entourage Is
of that suspicious character that com
pels one to hold his npso while In his
presence. It Is corrupt, and could not
be Its owh master if it -fished to, for
It is In the power of British finan
ciers.
STATISTICAL LIES.
The ordinary weapons formerly used
by the father of lies to entrap mankind
are effete and childish. He has, how
ever, Invented a new device, which op
erates upon men like fly-paper on flies
—lt catches them every time. In "sta
tistics" modern man will find his down
fall, particularly in that branch of sta
tistics known as "financial." The dev
il scatters them In our midst, and we
struggle and grasp after them like
drowning men at straws, and every
man seizes upon the wrong fact, and,
of course, makes a wrong application
of It. Anent this new disposition to
get wrong and then stick to it in spite
of the truth, the Louisville Courier-
Journal is a living example and a
warning.
"During the past twenty-nine months
there has been an international trade
balance In our favor upon the mer
chandise and gold movement of sl,-
I 190,000,000 Vor about $492,000,000. To
this must be added silver exports of
$25,000,000 yearly. This produces a net
apparent value of considerably over
$1,200,000,000, but this is subject to the
invisible movement of exchange in
i volved in the payment of interest
abroad, freight charges, travelers' ex
penses, and so on.
"How much of this has been settled
by the return of our securities from
abroad we cannot say. The amount
is large, but it cannot be figured out
with precision. Beyond question the
debt to us is large, and as we are in
creasing our merchandise exports and
only moderately adding to our ira
i ports, there is no chance that we shall
become embarrassed even by the loss
of $40,000,000 or $50,000,000 on this
movement."
The vinegar in the molasses, the
trap, the pitfall and death blow to the
statistics is labeled with "How much
of this has been settled by the return
of our securities from abroad we can
not say." The truth is, our tremen
i dous balance of trade has been wiped
out by the return of "our securities,"
and instead of being a creditor nation,
we are a debtor, and paying our debts
in gold. Moreover, our debts are al
ways increasing. We are worse off
than the little Argentine republic,
which actually receives its balance of
trade in cash and not wind, and what
Is paid her in gold Is recouped by
drawing on us. We are the scape
goats, the holders of the sack which
the whole world draws from and gives
us back "our securities."
Senator Aldrlch, In drscusslng the
gold standard bill from the Republican
standpoint, uttered the following re
markable thought:
"No sane man believed for an In
stant that the opening of our mints to
the free coinage of silver at the ration
of 16 to 1 would raise the value of sil
ver bullion from Its current commer
cial price to Its mint price."
When It comes to "value," there Is
no Intrinsic value of any kind of bul
lion converted jnto money, not even
gold. In trust circles the "value" of
a thing is the price that can be ob
tained for it. So the w .ole of the
senator's argument amounts to the cu
rious supposition that, with silver bul
lion raised to $1.29 per ounce at the
mint, people would still sell their silver
bullion at 60 cents. This Is what the
silver producer is now uoing, and It
is what the Democratic party protests
against. If it be Insanity to desire an
advance in the price of our most val
uable product, then the sooner we all
become Insane the better for the coun
try.
The profcrs ons and practices of the
president have become so mixed that
the average citizen can hardly tell
whether he is speaking politically,
morally, or just for effect. 11l his an
nual message he proclaims the fact
that wo are at peace with the whole
world, and then he wants a large
standing army. At the last session or
congress Senator Coekreil stood up like
a true American citizen and declared
that no such undemocratic statute
should be engrafted upon our legis
lature to shame our institutions, bur
den our taxpayers and menace the
perpetuity of our form of government,
if he could prevent it by the exercise
of every legitimate resource* of opposi
tion within his power. The senator
has again declared his determination
to set his face against the schemes of
the imperialists, and, with his strong
personnel and dogged determination,
something will have to yield.
Cheap washing soaps and powders, too,
With alkali are strong;
The dire destruction which they do
Is sure to show ere long.
But Ivory Soap will never hurt
The fabric, howe'er tender;
It makes short work of stain and dirt,
But no work for the mender.
COPYRIGHT ISSI BY TMI PROCTER h GAMBLE CO. CINCINMMi
Try Vrain-O! Try Grain-O !
I Ask your grocer to-day to show you a
package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink
that takes the place 6t coffee. Children
may drink It without injury as well as the
adult. All who try it like it. GRAIN-0
has that rich seal brown of Mocha or
Java, but is made from pure grains; the
I most delicate stomach receives it without
distress. % the price of coffee. 15c. and
Mo. per package, bold by all grocers.
Tarantulas are being raised in Aus-
I tralia for the sake oi their webs, the
filaments of which are made into thread
for balloons. They are lighter than silk
and, when woven, lighter than canvas.
Each tarantula yields from twenty to
forty yards of filament, of which eight
twisted together form a single thread.
Household Uinta.
If there Is one thing on which the house
wife prides herself, it is that of having her
laundering done nicely, so that the wear
ing apparel may be the admiration of all.
The washing Is a small matter, anyone al
most can do that, but to have the linens
present that flexible and glossy appear
ance after being ironec'. requires a flno
j quality o' starch.
j J. C. ITubinger's new laundry starch,
I "Red Cross" and "Hublnger's Best"
brands are his latest inventions and the
finest starch ever place 1 on the market;
not a now staroh made by a new manufac
i turer, but a new starch by the leading and
only manufacturer of flue laundry starch
In the United Spates.
His new method of Introducing this
starch with the Endless Chain Starch Book
enables you to get one large 10c. paokage
of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c. pack
age of "Hublnger's Best" starch, with the
premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare
panels, or one Twentieth Century Girl cal
endar, all for sc. Ask your grocer.
The costliest thimble in the world is
that which the King of Siam has pre
sented to his wife. It cost $75,000, is of
gold set with diamonds and other pre
cious stones, and resembles a half-open
ed lotus flower in shape.
There arc five official reporters of the
House, and they draw $5,000 a year
each, in addition to what they can make
by reporting the proceedings of House
committee hearings.
• 100 Reward. SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that scienre has been able to cure in all
Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
(hire is the only positive cure known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de
stroying the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
Its curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that It fails to cure,
bend for list of testimonials. Address.
F. J. CHENEY & Co~
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
It is estimated that greater quantities
of gold and silver have been sunk in th„-
sea than are now in circulation on earth.
To Cure Constipation Forever*
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 25c
If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
Two-thirds of the world's sugar is
produced from beets.
M rs. Window's Soothing Fy rap for child ran
teething, soften* the gums, reduces inflamma
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic.3Bc a bottle.
In Chicago there is a woman in
:hargc of one of the street cleaning dis
".ricts, and at \ onkcrs, N. V., a woman
las just been appointed sanitary inspect
or.
Plao's Curo for Consumption has no equal
as a Cough medicine.—F. M. AHIIOTT, 888 Sen
eca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 180 L
An accommodating tradesman in Car
narvon, Wales, announces that he sells
wines and spirits of all classes, supplies j
patent medicines for headache and has j
in his stock Bibles and common prayer
books.
How Arc Tour Kidneys 9
Dr. Hobbs'flpnracuß Pills cure all kidney Ills. Sam
ple rice. Add. Sterling iiiuiuuy Co., Chicago or N. Y
The Congregational churches of
South Carolina, composed of colored
people, have formed a State association. I
Fits permanently cured. No flt. or nervous
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise
free. Dr.RH.KMNE.Ltd.9BI Arch Bt.Pliila.Pa.
There was less poultry buying in Lon
don at Christmas than for many years.
Educate Tour Bowels With Cascarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. |
10c.260- If C.C.C. fall* druggists refund money. >
REASONS FOR SOME WARS.
Apparently Doesn't Take Maeh to Lead
John Ball to Fight.
An English paper has the following
to say on the reasons for some British
wars: "From all appearances it does
not take much provocation to set John
Bull at war. William the Conqueror
made war on France because King
Philip had made a slighting allusion
to his embonpoint. More recent wars
have been brought about by trivial in
cidents. In 1840 a large trade in opium
was done by British traders in China,
and the Chinese government at length
forbade the Importation of the per
nicious drug by our sailors. The edict,
however, had little or no effect, and the
trade continued, till at length the
Chinese imprisoned a number of Brit
ish subjects and we promptly declared
war. Our second war, in 1856, ought
never to have come about if its origin
is taken into account. A Chinese pi
rate hoisted the British flag at his
mainmast, and was afterward seized by
his government as a bloodthirsty ad
venturer. Had he failed to run up our
flag his capture would have been re
garded as a good thing here, but as it
was, it was taken as an insult, and we
made war on the Chinese for refusing
to apologize. The horrors of the In
dian mutiny will still be remembered
by a minority of our readers, and the
cause which led to it is a matter of
history. Cartridges greased with cow's
fat were served out to the Sepoys, who
refused to use them on the ground that
the cow was a sacred animal. We In
sisted, and almost without any warn
ing, the terrible massacres followed,
which were only avenged at an enor
mous expenditure of lives nnd money."
Half |i
a Bottle
Cured Me
"About thirty years ago I
bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair
Vigor to stop my hair from
falling out. One-half a bottle
cured me. A few days ago my
hair began to fall out again. I
went to the medicine shelf and
found the old bottle of Hair
Vigor just as good as when I
bought it." —J. C. Baxter,
Braidwood, 111., Sept. 27, 1899.
Keeps
Thirty Years
Ayer's Hair Vigor is cer
tainly the most economical prep
aration of its kind on the market.
A little of it goes a long way.
And then, what you don't need
now you can use some other
time just as well.
It doesn't take much of it to
stop falling of the hair, restore
color to gray hair, cure dandruff,
and keep the hair soft and glossy.
There's a great deal of good and
an immense amount of satisfac
tion in every bottle of it.
SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. '
Write the Doctor
If you do not obtain all the benefits you
desire from tlie use of tho Vigor, write
the Doctor about it. Address, j
Dr. J. C. AY KR, Lowell, Mass. [
j I IIIIMIIIHI I
MILLIONS OF "WOMEN USE CUTICURA SOAP exclusively
for preserving, purifying, and beautifying tlie skin, for
cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the
stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and
healing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths
for annoying irritations, inflammations, and chafings, or
too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes,
for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic
purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and
especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet,
bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce
those who have once used it to use any other, especially
for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of
infants and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate
emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great
skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the
most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated or
toilet soap ever compounded is to be compared with it
for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp,
hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,
however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the
purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it com
bines in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz., TWENTY-FIVE CENTS,
the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and
BEST baby soap in the world.
COMPLETE EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL TREATMENT FOR EVERY HUMOR 51.25
consisting of CUTICURA SOAR (20c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales ninl soften the
thickened cuttcIe, CUTICUBA OINTMENT (am.), to Instantly allay itching, Inflammation and
IndtaUon, and soothe and heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT (00c.), to cool ami cleanse the
A HINUI.E SET Is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, dlsligneing skin scale
and blood humors, with loss of hale when all else falls. Sold throughout the world CUT!
tee drug Ail) cwtM. COAT., Sole Props., Boston. •• All about Skin, Scalp, andUair." friii
Definition of Brlo-a-Brac.
Little Dlclt—Uncle Richard, what Is
bric-a-brac? Uncle Richard—Bric-a
brac is anything you knock over and
break when you are feeling foi
matches in the dark.—Puck
|"Y/"FOR " 4*OENTS I
■ Wa W u ' *Y 1 ni * *'" Vi d" h ° X
X i " 5 ,t " Wl 'y ( rr] j IV J ) t '' OI1 ' 0t^QOe X
fl " Flower Seeda, 1: a
* * l >k°* '° r l
X et oarllotttTomato iliant on earth' C™" A
Z ions a. iiuiK hksiicu., i.ai nosst, ms. Z
—6
r. N. u. s oo
iON ip I>A VS
' GIBSOMIA^SPA.*'
g CUBES WHERE ALL
E in tlrao. 5 Sold by driiKKiste. C
I qpHai BEBEMMMSEMj I
Learn telegraphy
... for Railroad anrl Cojnmer*
clal Service. Young Men Wanted lm.
mediately. Positions gns ran teed- En
• k i.r °i lße st ?mp 'or full pirticularn.
<. W. Dotvell, Manager, fliek.vllle. Ohio.
HOW TO GET OFFICE
the (4overawe it Office Training School, \\ ashing
ton, D. C. Women Eligible. Positions IVnnanent.
MORPHINE^
Rmfn We wl| l *rnd anyone
111 Morphine, laudanum, or other drua
nr.s. . I,4bll 'trlii | t p eiitinpnt r free ofrbarire,
or the most remarkable remedy ever discovered. Coniait J
ft* rent Vital I'rinrlpleheretofore unknown. Re,
rrnctory ft nsCN solicited. Confidential correspondent-*
jam 4
DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH
1 urea < OIIRIIH nn<l Colds. SjL?O2 S y a Pft
Preventh CcMiHumption. K II fl § U
All Druggists. M* B a* lb Bw 1B
VI IK.INIA FARMS for sale at nru ban
gains. Have a lew exception M\ nie(
farms with good new buildings. Sond t'o*
list. A T. STEWAKT. Car on. \ nglnia
FHILUONDOTIARP'O^S
y Most t ruk*-<1 of |Hitat')i>n oarth! Our,Ayj.^
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