The Cedarville Herald, Volume 26, Numbers 1-26
mm m m m iUBmmk ‘into** m * MS** | LOCAL AND WHSUNAU | ’ LMdea Ka!« Ftuur, •‘ «*v.Pt{ro ir.apte syrup a t t*ftepi-yV, . -^Ptfesb'^fkit fruits «f all Lfe<?s‘ o f ' Ctsy 4feCoV, Millard Bbtvu.ks moved Ida fmiily ’0Y8P life&to5Vi lilts tfvcti , \ |jj a d cpatdog and vatiug apples {&c*pc& a t M, II, i$fa»wa«K Juba PlvKV1has n«»vrd lua la /dly Tutu tUft T a r im property v u\;U *1 hy Mr**. .lotnisHU. •Ticket Agent Elmer Keys isityoy- ing it pleasant vacation in Florida and other southern states. Como nn<! etc the fain >ua* lied Gross tank heaters, j ust received a t • Pierce & Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. W .II.. Barber cele brated their twenty-fifth anniversary laBt Spiurday. A large nuinber of ’relatives were present. ‘ Mr O. P . Dillmun id the Spring- field & Washington traction, line, was in town this morning on business Connected with the company. D r. P . R . Madden, P rac tice lim ited to EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. G lasses A ccurately Ad ju sted . A llen Bu ild ing , Xen ia, O. . ’•VietOiotie,—Office No,, ja. Residence No, * Thursday afternoon the farm be longing to the iate Daniel McMillan was sold to T. A. A rthur for §75. per acre. The farm contains about 315 acres. . Miss Kate Niebet returned home .Monday evening from Hartford City, lud., where she has been the guest ol her sister, Mrs, J , J MeCIcllau for several weeks.' ■ 5 The McKinley club of Diyfon Will give a banquet a t. their club rooms next Tuesday- night. Hoy. •Horace Ankdney will give «n address ou “ The Democratic Party." , >—i lijiyc some very nice Bluuketj) in stork now and at prices that. are. Very low, considering the quality Call in' -when you are ready to pur chase; Dorn, the Harness man. The musical coinedy ''Peggy from ' Paris” by George Ade, assisted bjjr W, D, Niebet will be put on at the Studebnker theater, Chicago,. Mon day evening with one hundred in the cast. The costumes are said' io be gorgeous. , ^Loveland- voted “ dry” under the Belti-local option law, Monday, by a inurguin of only two votes. The re sult was, 169 to 171. _„Tlie...campa.ign was hotly contested and the “ drys" wound tip the fight with mass meet ing'every night. WOULD YOU? , Mr. Ormond Kyle,formerly of this place bu t a t present is conducting a re taurant at Clearfield, Pa., was no r it-d Inst November to Miss Mays formerly a teacher in Knoxville col lege, The news of his marriage has ju st been made known to his relatives in this coun ty ,- r * 0t i r « ...Hew Store ♦♦♦ ^ On or about February first we will move into our new store just across the Street and ’three doors north. While moving a drug store Is no easy matter, still we look for ward to the change with pleasure, as in the new ,store wg will have a nicer location, a larger- store- rbutti, new fixtures, .and in ire a lequiue facilities for property taking care of our large and growing business; On r present cramped quarters have | been entirely inadequate to our need.?, but with larger quarters we intend giving more attention to some lines that we could not handle where we I now are. Kvery irnprov- T merit th.it will increase IIthe present high efficien cy of our service will be found in the new store, as also the prompt atteu* turn, careful proscription service and ail the other ultl features that made the new store a necessity. j J ~ > AI*A, if you were going on « Jong journey, you would leave mamma and me some money to use until yuyr return, wouldn’t you? IIow about that journey you w ill! some day be compelled to ta k e ,; and froiu which you will never re- j turn? Don’t yon think yoti ought to leave us a little money then? Messrs. Charles Smith Thomas Crawford and S, IC. Williamson have been in Xenia since Wednesday "serv ing on the Grand Ju ry . ’ The princi pal work at this sitting is;the investi gation of the coal combine in Xeniu . vanil one or two liquor cases. 1 . : ■ „ j,-r • ' • -'V ■■. • •.. Word has been received from Mr. Cliirles Stuckey, who was called-to Virginia owing to the sickness of his' son, Edward, that he is. better a t the time Of writing. He was not injured in an accident as was reported hub is sneering from an at tael of appendici tis.' ■ “ When men think of their death .they arc apt to think of it only in connection with ■their- spiritual wel fare, and not of the devastation. i.u the household which will come because of their emigration from it. ; “ I t is selfishly mean, ibr you to be so absorbed in th e ' heaven to which ycil are going that when yon are dead ■you can go ou t of this world not leav ing the.m a dollar, and yet die happily if yon cannot provide for them. .Yup can trust ihem in. the hands of God, who owns all the harvest all the .herds and all the flocks; but if yon could pay the premiums on n- policy and neglected .them, it is a menu thing for you to go to henveu while •they go jo the poor-house.”---[Extract from a sermon by Rev. T. DeW itt Talmage. There’s another side to the Life Insurance Policies of the Mutual Life Insurance Co., of New York. -You du not 'have to die to'reap t,bc benefit of your policy; and this feature is especially attractive to the young man as it enables him to save money during the productive years of his life, If you are living at the out! of 10, 15 or 20 years .you can sur render the policy to the company and draw out all the premiums you have paid in and receive from 3 to 4& per cent compound interest. During, all those years you have paid no’taxes on the money and you have run the race of life: free from anxiety, lyepause you knew that if you should die your wife and children wottld have received the face of the policy, and now your child ren having grown up, arc Support ing tiiomselves Und you draw' the cold cash yourself and enjoy the. use of the same in your declining years. . This company is not only the largest Life Insurance Company in the world; but it is the largest financial institut ion in the world, being over twice as large ns the three largest banks coin, bined in the world, viz., The Bank oi England, Bank of France and Bank of Germany'. Con you get anything safer? For further particulars call on or address * : W. L. CLEMANS, Special Agent, Mutual Life Insurance Co., of New York. ANDREW WINTER, ' Soliciting Agent, Ccdarville, Ohio. SMALLPOX EPIDEMIC, A. dnricc was given last night in Barber’s hall. The music was fur nished by the Big Four orchestra of Xenia. " , Btn 0 . Ridflway, wmut. * OftwifeQiwafidtf', e w a m ia , . omo . . The plat for the fourth number on the lecture course will open Monday, Jan. 30, nt McCollum’s A lecture by the Hun. Walter Chandler, ft prominent member of the New York bar, Feb, 3. Word was received here Thursday morning that the wife of Dr, Samuel Collins had died the night previous at their home in Allegheny, Pa. Burial will tujte place Saturday from the Sec ond United Presbyterian church. Dr* and Mrs. Collins were well known in this vicinity and the announcement of ihe death of this estimable lady will bo received with great regret. The Day of Prayer for colleges will ho observed in the college chapel next Thursday, the twenty-ninth, at 9:30 n. m. •The Roy. Prof. Jesse Johnson, D. D .t former president of Muskingum college, now professor of Old Tesla- m .m t. Literature ami Homiletics la Xenia Theological Seminary will pi each the ftrrmuu. All are cordially invited to attend. .. Dr. P. R. Madden of Xenia, nrmsled i by D r’s. Marsh ami Messenger, re moved an eye from George Marshall, who lives: cad. of town, A number of iiwiii I m ago Muislnill was acoid.s'iilly shot itt one of his eves Several davfl ngo whim cntiing wood a chip struck tin1injured eve causing the sight of • bath to be elfiefcd. H is thought tlmf. : the op ratron will save tin1 eight of tin* remaining eye, ■ • ■ Dr. C. G. Prok-t,. Secretary ot the State Board-of Health, believes there is danger o f a world-wide epidemic of smallpox and'pointfi to the fact that, all ever the earth, both in America and Europe, die disease is spreading rapidlv. lie attribute.1} the prevalence of the di-caff* (o the disregard to vac cination and thinks that stringent measures should he taken at once to Stuiip out smallpox and to provide for the vaccina thin o f all persons. Bpeaking «f the great increase of the disease Dr. Probst said yesterday, “ Not iihme in the- United States, but in Europe are the physicians battling with the Kfiiur^e Great Britian is lmying a m in u s time ‘with it, "as are other European countries: ' Germany, where vaccinatum -is general, is in the bebt condition of any of them. “ The disease is not epidemic, but pandemic;—ItTsr rtrnlmusteveryvDTmv try and the type has been increasing in maagnnncy. For years it liaRheen kept down, and the people have lost their dread of it; Where it has brok en out it has been of mild form, and little has been thought of its once dreful qualities^ In the past quarter or half century vaccination has been neglected a.nrl the country is full of people who never felt the scratch of li Vaccine point. As these precautions have been negleted, so bus the disease increased until now we are in danger of a world-wide' epideraicr “ A general vaccination is the only remedy, coupled, of'course, with mod ern qUnrintine regulations. Were all the children of Hie country success fully vaccinated, I believe time we would have but little trouble in stamp ing out smallpox; As it is, we stamp" it out in n city, then the infection comes again and all our work bus hee/i for naught. Now that the disease is again raging in virulent, form, 1 think the people will see the need of vneei ,onf lun and oufjte more Hie disease euij he: beaten back. . v “ The present epidemic began in tbe South, where it lingeied 'for several years aud then worked-its way to the North and East, II has now spread all over the Eastern nnd Northern part of the country, is fur ■up in Canada and spreading Westward. "."Tn places where vaccrnatiou lifts been kepi up it is of a mild form, but .where this .has been neglected it is of u very virulent type.-• I t is'of little use'to fight the disease where people'will’not be'vheci . nuted themselves ov consent -to the vaccinating of their children, “Portsmouth has set a good exam pie to other cities' of ..the S tate. A meeting of the manufacturers and merchants of that city was called. A t this meeting every man pledged him-, self that evefy person in his employ would at once be vaccinated or instant discharge would,result. As a conse quence over 3,000 persons have been vaccinated in Portsmouth within the past three weeks, and what at one time threatened to become a severe epidemic of the disease has been check ed The virulence ot the type of the disease in Portsmouth will be manifest when it is known that one-third of the cases have terminated fatally. “Time and time- again have the health departments of the’ cities of Ohio'‘beaten down the^diseaee only to have it break out uguiu. The 'same thing has developed in other States, The only preventive of the disease is vaccination, and unless the importance of this is forced upon the people, I fear that we are upon the verge of a great pandemic of the disease. We health officers cannot see the enil of it and fear the worst,” A SENSATION IN BEN- DUBE’S CLOAK ROOMS. Two hundred and -seven garments a t half price. Not in the history of Bend ure's business career has he ever offered such values just when the goods are needed and when there's to loug a time to wear them. In this sale are thirty children’s hew cloaks; ranging from 6 to 14 years, regular §1.98 to §15 00 eoats nt half price, means 99c nnd §7,50 for the two ex treme prices. Twelve full length Scolh mixtures, 810.00 coats for 85,00; twenty full length and Mourn-Carlos in grey and brown, 88 98 to$4, 49, Bevcnty-five Indies’ coats, half fit ting and Moil to Carlos in the cheaper grades, Black, navy, castor and brown in sizes 32 to 42 at half price. §5.(10 coats 82.50 88.00 c.mil.i'84 00. 810:00 coats 85,00, Seventy Tailored Suits nt half price, 8)0 00 miffs 85.00. $15.00 suits §7,50. 820.00 suits $10.00 and the best of it is, there’s not a last reason’s garment in the store, „ Downiiu: is tinw 'a t his Ccdarville gallery each Friday and piepared b [ease the most crilicid, Portrait Work in craymi and wafer color given special -attention. 16 x 20 life sisse (lrgentics only §2, Cider and be feonvineed of the superiority of lift* ’ Wal k. n . m j a & w Men’s ouits (ELOvercoats * i-44r«ts&' (you need clothing and The late winter has brought about a conjunction of “needful” conditions we need’moneYi) therefore our great winter clearance sale should attract, even more attention than ever before. Last reductions on Suits and Overcoats present you a greaCmoney-saviog opportunity. MEN’S SUITS—One hundred Men’s Fine Hand Tailored Suits, blues, black and fancy, values $18, $20, $22 and $23, clearance choice., ........ ........................** SEYENTY-FIYE Men’s Pine AU-wool, carefully made Suits, in stylish cuts and fabrics, worth $14, [$16 and $18, clearance choice.......................... ........................................... OYER FIFTY MEN’S HONEST, SERVICEABLE SUIT8, former prices. $8.00 and $10, in this clearance sale, choice ,«- - , , , , . * , . . . . . ». ***- • • $ 14.75 $ 10.00 $ 5.00 $11.98 ® $ 8 ,5 0 @ $ 5 .0 0 ® $ 9 .7 5 I $ 7 .5 0 I MEN’S OVERCOATS, long, full, broad shouldered and short boxy coats, best de signs from superior makers, $16, $18, $20 and $22 values, clearance choice.. ,7 • A SUPERIOR ASSORTMENT of medium length coats, mostly blacks and Oxfords, well worth $12.and $14, clearance choice............................ A WELL SELECTED line of “ wear and tear” Men’s Overcoats, regular prices $8 and $10, clearance choice.. ., *. •. YOUTH’S SUITS—Our entire line of Youth’s Fancy. Suits has been divided-into three sales, all finest, best made, choicest patterns; worth $14, $16, $18, c h o ic e .... SIXTY OR MQRE All-wopl Scotch Suits, Hackett, Carhart & Co.’s make, values $10 and $12, clearance choice.......... '............................................. . , ............ A"BIG LINE of good School Suits, made to sell for $7.00 and $8.00, clearance .•■ c h o i c e , , . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . * « . , . YOUTH’S OVERCOATS, all- $10 and $12 values, now $7.50, All cheaper qualities,- choice in clearance sale........ ........................................... ....... ............................... ... BOYS’ AND CHILDREN'S. Suits, (3 to 14 years ) Choice of finest Knee Pants Suits," //»jm q q ss suitable for any season,, worth $7, $7 50 and $8^price in this clearance sale------ y < 5 ^ A GREAT VARIETY of splendid Suits, double and single breasted,.best materials for service, regular prices $5 and $6, clearance price. . ........................................... POST-SEASON purcliascd Suits, all-wool aiid great bargains at $3.50 and $4.00, \SOME SPECIAL SUITS,/made to stand hard knocks, regular §2,50 and $3.00 qual- ■ "ities, n o w •.......................... ............................ ... ............................................ $ 5 .0 0 | $ 5 .0 0 @ m $ 4 .5 0 $ 2 .9 8 $1 .98 Men’s Trousers Department. WORKING PANTS, part wool, wear resisting cloth, §’ 50 and $2 values,^clearance p r i c e . . . V . HUNDREDS OF STYLES in neat hair-line and fancy pat- . ten s , all wool, worth $2i50 and $s;00, now. , . . . . . . . . $ 1 .2 4 $ 1 .9 8 . yj 1 F-isrsiIshings 'Cu t to t l ie .QuicK {■^ 0 MEN’S Heavy Derb’y-iibbed Undotwoai?, inade to fit, price in season, 50o per garment, '2 '7'y-r now, per g a r m e n t . . . , ........... MEN’S Fancy Stiff and Negligee'Shitis, “AmeHhaP , ^ ^ make, regular, $1 and $1.25 qualities,,; A STRONG LINE of Fancy “Mascot” Shirts, ftold; the world over for 50 and 75c, choice \ Vvk . ^ • n o w . . . . ' / . ; ........ .................................... ^ C ? - c J \ . Vf*/ \. ii GOOD, Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, white . > _ K\ • ijind fancy borders, worth 10c, now. . . n t C \ \ SPECIAL LOT of Wilson Bros’ Neckwear, Four- ■ \§ ' inrhands, Tecks and Strings, 50C|Values, ^ ^ 0 A LARGE assortment of" All-wool Trousers in elegant patterns, . blue, black and striped, worth $4, $5 and $6, clearance price-. CHOICE OF ALL .finest giades in the well-known “Paragon” make, worsted and Scotch ef fects, values, $7 aud '$8, price in this clearance rt*[? *7£? sale .................... / O Vjv now___ T h e re is N o i a e - ^ So G o od A s 15he Paragon . m •t./ 0 o •m i / m a d vS jiw ia? r c i l u c i l o i i o f 2 ( > p t 3 r c e n t , o n a l l f i n e b l u e , b l a c k a n d f a n c y E ; M . S y s t e m S u i t s a fod © O v e r c o a t s . P r i c e s f r o m $ 2 2 t o $ 3 5 . C o m e f i r s t a n d g e t t h e b e s t s e l e c t i o n s o f t h e " ® m o s t w o n d e r f u l a r r a y o f C l o t h i n g B a r g a i n s e v e r o f f e r e d . © O . . ■a " ■ IH L . - , Xenia, Ohio, ■i - 1- 5 0 A N D 52 E A S T M A IN S T R E E T . m The “ Oncle, Josh Spruceby” com pany was greeted by u good sized house last night. The play is one of those New England rural sketches and. was well put on. .The clinrm-ter of “ Uncle Josh” by R H . .Clifford,' was well acted and brought out con siderable .applause. The sawmill sconce in the third act wns very real- nstio. The company carries their own band and orchestra, Tbe attend ance last night proves that if the right kind of shows are brought here the bouse would be .packed. U. -P. CHURCH HISTORY, ^OCOODGCCCOOCOO© The business .men who fall to appreciate advertising, are likely to find themselves no far behind the times that: they will never enteli up. I t in n liv n y ir tie tte r <»> a ilv e r* ' d i e « l i t t l e to o in <!<•(, U iim q rto t q u ite ciiomk I i ,. e It la better to use « little inure lime than Is nece-j'airy in the consideration of advertising and the preparation of advertise, incut# than it In to tie ever so DM 1 - '-nrelenu ahmit It.-Saginaw <ib; f, / Evening News. * 500$ We advocate careful tirrptt" ratten of copy nnd fr>fpicnt t-htuiges, the oftvnor the bet-, ter. 1 , ■ [Continued^from first pngo.] Wo accord him a place., of honor in the history arid we esteem him very highly for bis very work’s sake, The tribute) which we pay is wholly un sought or suggested upon bis part, and doubtless would be withheld'had. it been submitted to him, but is offer ed without his knowledge as worthily bestowed on the truely deserving. The choir has had five'lenders in its historj^jmd three of these have di- rccted’the music of the congregation {or fifty years, viz:—George Jackson, Robert .M. Jackson and Mrs, Lucy Barber. The two former were broth ers, nnd.they were cousins to the .last named leader. The “ chief musicians” thus coming from one family as He rpan, Asaph and Ethan of the tribe of Levi, who were the “ chief musici ans” in the great congregation of Is rael in olden lime. There is however the prominent difference that those leaders of old were accompanied with the cymbals, the harp, the trumpets nnd tbe cornet, while our leaders have been denied through nil these years the accompauimcnt of like val uable accessories. Today we can look back in the" his tory of the choir to days oi excellence, when H ranked without a peer in the entire church for its efficiency and skillful rendcripg of the I’ealms. But whe'fr we look about ns and enumer ate tlm vast number of congregations that excel ns in this present day in' musical fucililii's, we. can not, but make, u comparison and tmUi the con trast will llm past, and unfavorable to ourselves,. Not tlml our music has declined po dreadfully, hut be Cftiwe wo lum? not kept pace with the musical improvements of dm age, iTfilopS n new intcra-i is juousi'd jp the musical development nnd equip ment o f the congregation the futfire sietnrian will write ii rather m,inter- But"tve'predict for estlng narrative; him no such fate. The time is not far removed when the introduction of the instrument, -whose power it is to drown all discords, will bo deenjed an absolute necessity for tbe efficient ren dering of praisu by the congregation. And then will the people “ with trump ets nnd soilnd of cornets make a joy ful noise before the Lord, the King ” Mr, and Mrs. 0> I). Merchant hqve gone to. Fayette county wlu-re they will visit lor some time. They have stored their household goods in the Osborn property —Pure Buckwheat Flour, Prepared Buckwheat Flour, Pancake Flour at Cooper’s, —Bulk mince meat and apple blit ter a t Cooper’s. An Ancient Table. Boxing an End, With the football season only re cently over, this story of George Woodruff, an old Yale player, of the strenuous methods of “boxing an end,” practiced in his .day, is as timely as amusing. I t was in 188(5, and the game was played in Cam bridge.. “Both teams played with ton men only,” says Mr. Woodruff, “because Victor Ilard iug had. been delegated <o keep Yale’s unrivaled end, ‘l u u ' Wallace, out of. the game. This lie did hy tackling him at the beginning of film gamri and / keeping up a continuous tackle un til its close. The hall was frequent ly pu t in play with.those two.ends wrestling on the ground some forty • yards away.” “That must be an antique,” re marked .a visitor to a collector of She Had Sixty.two Children. A petition signed by 3,000 per sons has been presented to the Ita l ian government asking fo r a pen-, sion o f §300 per annum to' he con ferred on a1woman named Madda- lena Granetta, wno has given b irth to sixty-two children *—fifty-nine boys and three g irls - -during her married life. In nine years she pre sented her husband with eleven sets of triplets, three groups of quad ruplets, one group’ of six, and the other eleven children name singly. She is now fifty-seven years old and incapable of work. bric-a-hrae who was exhibiting his chief treasure, a handsomely carved oak table. ■ “ Indeed it is,” replied the other proudly. “I believe it to be the fin est and oldest specimen of furniture extant,” „, “j.t may be the finest, hut not the oldest,” remarked the other. “Why, I have an Arabic table a t home •which dates before tbe beginning of the Christian era. I n ' fact, it is known to be more than 2,000 years old.” “You surprise me,” said the col lector, not; a little nettled by the re mark. “ I had no idea there were any tables as old as that. Is its his tory authentic ? What is its charac ter “ Oh^ i t ’s "very simple,” added the o th e r .. “ItVs the multiplication ta ble. I ts history is perfectly authen tic,” ; An Old soak. ■ Jonah had been lodged in hw new quarters fo r the th ird day, . “This is pretty good,” he mused, “fo r a, hall bedroom, and the steam.' neat is ju st film!” . Hereupon the whale, h a rin g it lmd swallowed n lug sponge, tliraw b im oul.—New,York Times. The Firstborn. Y oung . F a th e r--! am amazed, shocked, my d e a r/ to hear you say you intend to give the baby some paregoric, Don’t, vou know paregoric and is opium, and opium stun Is the growth, enfeebles the constitution, weakens the brain, destroys . the nerves and produces rickets, mara nms, consumption, insanity a« death? ' Ytijfing Mother^—Horrors 1 I nev er heard a word about that. I won't give the little ducky darling a drop; no, indeed. Bu t something must he done to slop his yelling,. You carry him awhile, Eaflicv (after an hour’s steady stamping-with the equalling infant} --•Where in thunder is th a t paregor ic 2 ■ ■ i j * w i< 'SriilHr- U4 T W I S T Y * ! ? . & p , c H o e c ii m isy F5i lx1 Sit l a The article tbHv.. tribute's, one by a • an ex-pastor. ' A tribute to the i iaa Church o f Gcd- Rev. J , K. Kyi.-. Although I v, a-- United XYesbytorhu ville, Ohio, I mvh*. care during the '/j ~WoyhooWyeai ^7 uvU ' Bomiuational nano Reformed church, mother united ' v.i shortly after her when I was some, ten The first Sabbath toncled/wasiu that there I made conies.-.* in Christ and was rt e fellowship. For the no other, the eburei now venerable with ways will be, veiy <U not, perhaps, better faction for- her than qf_the One Hundr. Fsalm, ns we have i version now in use praise of that- old ho.tl “ Fo r in her rubbi? Thy servants pleapur.j Yea, they the vm Do favor for her sakl I therefore gladly request of her pastor, ' months has- been' eng:' her history,, to write | the church of my boj1 I have a very vivii the names of riiost o l' th a t church as it w years of her existence the pews in which ill how quickly those j)C| parents and children. tbe church tower d-a, hour of service on th>: how, when seated, th, titude expressed the ' elius. addressed to IV1 fore we are all hen. God, to hear all tinn;| manded thee qf God. I think it would rn to call the roll of sou f of which that ehurel more than half a eei ; - ney Stewart and tam j and family, Levi Mil. . William Bull and fir Kyle and family, Sa‘ family, Johu Turn! Mrs. Elizabeth Turn Thomas Townsley an McCoy und family, i family, Iuhis Towm Espy Mitchell and h reace and family, W. family, Dra Stewart, and family,"George ily, Gou. Robert Ja. John F . Frazier and Jackson and familj and family, and Tin family. Bu t I nee. . all. These were an telligeut, substantia ilids of that whole c .were a people whos Bitnply a name, but eously. and walked God- In the home families, was the h , morning and evenii. ularly offered*.' Th ing the reality of 1individual religimi- was equally import able, the child ivi. trained from tlmir homes and taken to on the Lon-'s day, regularity, it v«us i. trained into the In which made that di’ “ 1 have rnn,i; f _trial oi Aye/® < '}; am prepni cJ f cases of the im’f points.” J . t-ariy 1’ Ayer’s C\) Won’t cure wo never s( It won’t c « | Wo never, elj it Vill ciirl colds oi first sold th ig o ; w e ’vo - o v e r sinoov '• ■Th»-W» Htpn rjc • j fOf fchtO>t!'/ ' l ^4 ■*}»v.<AYX
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