HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-05-23, Page 6yeap "..,
THE WI'G utll TIMES M1Y 2:
11,11 tie s!et t•f Min.'e, it .cc,: feteily
Intrat'd 1';; her reesetn latching tire from
the kitchen ntuv .
Mee,. r11,.iii ineeee mi of1,'lubrul:ehac
been tied .itte l -;: t ue t•i:ar,_-e of ,tttc':npt-
ing'. to }rtai.•t'.. i?
ti laeoe. tltl•t'tt 9 rituals
14fr t Net' lir ''1; sst't , Con:. eve, Ont.,
writes: " rime. d jt t ra dca;.rril,T•d
trouble u:; p. • i 1.+. z,roi (Nile said I could
never be earo-;i. 'sit' ilio ese spra•.ea all
over me eve.) ou my face told stead and
the itehi: ;eel burning t.t)s hard to
hear. I uee i '•i:t :!. lox,'. of 1)r. i•imee's
Ointment n' :1:'': etttire:y cured not a
sigu oil a :ewe to he seen. 1 ca l Itardiy
valise this t)l::tnl•'.)t eno;lgh.
James I
,,
ee,
of Stony
Stratford,
tfsld
Engine:if, lies been 1•e -chested church
�••' he has
.,1 1011
parish,
a )t t
"n • hie !a 1 ,
for
t i
warden 1
•d . z
�'t••a:er
i) years.
)i.
Fecu}
A man who evys he is'tolee years old
turned lei, is an Inds : to town the other
day. lie's old enough to know better
than to turn up in Pittsburg.
DO YOU KNOW.
IfiEVITAIR}NG EGYPT
T h t when about to boil tniilc in tin
t"•'till it'll salict`pan to rite it first with
fetid water; this prevents it sticking and
the r;a'.n'enan e: capes the inevitable
seral,iet so tiisaetroes to the enamel.
The cellar is the best place for can-
ned ,lois, olive oil, lard and cheese.
It should be kept eernpulousy clean,
airttl daily and white -washed at least
once a year.
That an even tablespoonful of corn
smirch coeised in a tableepoonful of but-
ter until smooth. to which are Added
milk, eggs and seasoning for the usual
omelet recipe will prevent its falling.
$100 rtEWAItD; $100.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased tv earn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages, and
that ie catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires a con-
stitutional treatment. Hail's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting direct-
ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving
the patie.lt strength by building up
the consitutiun and assi:ting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors have
so mueli faith in its curative powers
that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
To remove grease spots from car-
pets mix fuller's earth and magnesia
together.t
her in
equal proportions. rtlons. k
orm
this intop
a paste with hot
water er and
spread on the spots. Next day
brush
off, and if necessary, repeat the pro;• -
cess.
That potatoes boiled in their skins
make nicer salad than those pared raw,
Cold baked potatoes likewise snake
better fried potatoes than when cooked
raw or boiled.
Poor appetite is a sure sign of impair-
ed digestion. A few doses of Chamber-
lains Stomach and Liver Tablets will
strengthen your digestion and improve
appetite. _Thousands have been benefit-
ed by taking these Tablets. Sold by all
dealers.
During alterations at Dover Docks a
bed of oysters was discovered. Quantit-
ies of Channel oysters are landed on the
quays in the season and it is thought
spate from these has fallen in the dock.
Hon. George Perry Graham, M. P.,
Minister of Railways and Canals in the
Government of Sir Wilfrid Laurier,
has been offered the Presidency of the
Grand Trunk Railway Company as suc-
cessor to the late Charles M. Hays,
who lost his life in the Titanic disaster.
It would surprise you to know of the
great good that is being done by C'ham-
berlain's Tablets. Darius Downey, of
Newburg Junction, N. B., writes, "My
wife
has been using
Chamberlain's ezI
ins
Tab-
lets and finds them very effectual and
and doing lots of good." If you have any
trouble with your stomach or bowels
give them a trial. Sold by all dealers.
Do you know that an editor or a re-
porter can in his rounds stop and ask a
hundred persons "What is the news?
And ninety out •of the hundred will rep-
ly, "Nothing special and yet fifty out
of that number know something that if
not found in the next paper will aston-
ish them greatly and disappoint them
more, and perhaps makes them madder
than hornets. Don't be afraid to let the
newspaper man know it.
5 IIEST AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
Mets. \rssaov's SaorrrrNG SYRUP has been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS.
ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for DIARRHOA. It is ab.
solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take 120 other
land, Twenty-five cents a bottle.
WASHING EIDERDOWN QUILTS.
LOI1D KITCHENER HAS ALREADY
WORKED WONDERS.
The New Administrator Has Renewed
the Youth of the Country by De-
veloping Agriculture and Repress-
ing Strife With a Strong Hand -
Archaeologists Put In Their Proper
Place -Is Building Good Roads.
The world know; L''rd Kitchener
as a great soldier, remarkieltle for fore-
,ilit ilii patience. Ill the negotia-
tiuns at the end of the Boer War lie
showed himself a tactful, broad-mind-
ed diplomatist. In Egypt, ,
in four
)
,.
months, 11 , .
l is universally andgrate-
fully
rate
3g
full• r�eo 1'.
et llzed as an administrator
y s
of genius. E
He is
:strongn
but ti
m
)
a
the k' always completely accessible,
finding no responsibility
too great, no
detail too unimportant. His interests
cover the whole life of the country.
IIie ability to speak Arabic fluently
brings hind into direct touch with the
people.
Since Lor 1 Isitcleener has been in
Cairo an almost sturtling i tituulus
has been given to national prosperity,
and political unrest has given way
to a welcome and obvious tranquility.
Pereonality counts for even More in
the east than it does in the west, and
Lord Kitehener's personality has fas-
cinated Egypt. Ho is revered by the
Sc udanese as the savior of their
country from anarehy and misrule,
and the Egyptians have come to re-
gard him as the one Ivan essential if
security and prosperity are to be at-
tained.
For the moment at least, the stirrer
up of sedition finds his occupation
gone and the so -Balled Nationalisin is
Silk or sateen covered eiderdown
quilts can without difficulty be washed
at home.
Two things however, are necessary
to perfect success. First, the quilt
must be dried out of doors, on a sunny
breezy day; and second, it must be
rinsed through several clear, clean
waters.
Make a strong suds of a good white
soap shaved into boiling water. Add a
teaspoonful of household ammonia to
every gallon of water, and let the quilt
soak for half an hour in a tub half full
of water.
Squeeze (don't rub) the dirt out;
then change the water, using tepid
water for first rinsing and cold water
to which a handful of salt has been
added for at least two other rinsings.
Squeeze the water out and hang be-
tween two lines in the bright sun,
stretching the quilt as nearly flat as
possible. Shake it occasionally during
the drying process, and turn over once
or twice, so that every bit of down will
be dry and fluffy.
The hotter the sun and the greater
the breeze the lighter and fluffier the
quilt will be when finished.
The American Jersey Club has built
a club house in New York city at a cost
of $111,000, At the annual meeting of
the club it was reported that during the
year ending March 31, 23,334 cattle were
registered. against 21.761) last year. A
banquet was held in connection with
the annual meeting. at which Holstein,
Ayrshire and Guernsey Breeders' Assoc-
iation were represented. That is an ex-
ample of fraternity which might well be
followed here in Ontario.
Children. Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S�t
Cr AS D O fesR'. 0 A
Dr. de Van's Female Pills
A reliable French regulator; never fails. These
pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the
generative portion of the female system. Refuse
all cheap imitations. Dr. de Van's are sold at
85 a box, or three for 510. Mailed to any address.
Th. Scobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont.
"Get back to the Land" is a favour
ite word of advice with all speakers,
moral reformers and such like, as a
cure for the high price of living and
all other ills that oppress us. It quite
comma as Horace Greeley's advice,
"Go West young Man," was to a past
generation. Well, those people needn't
worry; most everybody will get hack to
the land if they have a little more pat-
ience, and they will stay there a long
ti1no after they go back, too.
out of favor. The people are realizing
the possibility 01 security and all that
follows security, and they themselves
are giving the colts shoulder to the
agitators, one of the most prominent
of whom has, within the last few days,
shaken the dust of Cairo from his
shoes and departed for the more pro-
mising atmosphere of Constantinople.
Lord Kitchener has avoided, where.
ever possible, overt and abrupt action
against the sedition -mongers, though
more than one of their organs has
been quietly and unostentatiously sup-
pressed.
Cultivation of the land is in an
eminently healthy condition, and the
growing under.etanding of the power
of the land and the good -will of the
administration in checking the habit
of the "countrymen" of burying their
gold as a precaution instead of em-
ploying it in the development of their
holdings.
The cotton question looms very
largely in Egypt. The erops have in
the past suffered severely from the
baleful activity of an infesting worm,
and a eunrnlis stun has been appoint-
ed to probe the whole question and
decide how the evil can be most effi-
caciously treated. It ie characteristic
of Lord Kitclleuer's desire to develop
the Egyptian's sense of responsibility
that lie asked Prince Hussein to be
chairman of this commission. By do-
ing this he gained the sympathy .ot
the Khedive, pleased the people, and
secured the co-operation of an ener-
getic and capable prince.
A determines} effort is also being
made to prevent the use of bad seed
by establishing Government depots
for the sale of seed. This will destroy
the frequent custom of paying part
of the price of the cotton In seed, and
will strike an indirect blow at the
middleman. There is also a proposal
to issue seed free for employment in
Government -controlled fields,
Agriculture is also likely to be stim-
ulated by another timely reform. Hith-
erto large areas have been marked
off for prospective excavation by the
enthusiastic Egyptologists, and these
areas have often lain idle for years
waiting for this excavation. Now it
is being released for cultivation un-
less good and solid reason can be ad-
duced for believing it to he a worthy
subject for the archaeologist, who af-
ter all, is of less importance than the
peasant. While every facility will still
be given to ]line, and while any terri-
tory exhibiting any promise for his
labor will still be reserved for him,
the excavator will no longer be a
source of agricultural wastage.
As regards treasure trove, steps will
be taken to prevent the rule which
divides the spoil between the Govern-
ment and the discoverer from being
interpreted in such a way as to cause
a constant outflow from Egypt of her
most valuable antiquities.
The physical improvement in the
Egyptian is remarkable. The stature
and stamina of the natives, both mili-
tary and civilian, are the constant
theme of admiration to the foreigner.
Ophthalmia, which used to infest
the land as a veritable plague, is
steadily decreasing. The traveling
hospital inaugurated by Sir Ernest
Cassel has done-piendid wc,rk, and
steps are being taken to combat the
injury done by ingrowing eyelash in
children, which is now recognized as
the great cause of mischief, and to
remove which deformity operations of
considerable difficulty and delicacy
are often necessary.
The Budget is the great measure of
a nation's prosperity, and it is there -
fere noteworthy that the financial ad -
vis es note on the budget has been
g;ected, with great satisfaction.
Trade is glod, and tradesmen in
Cairo who Have suffered ever since
the "slump" of five years ago, and
who have been adversely affected by
the war, express themselves as hill of
hope and confidence for the future,
the hotelkeepers Ieserving the sugges-
tion that their business has been in
some degree curtailed by the attract=
tions offered by Luxor and Assouan.
One small but important instance
of Lord Kitchener's proverbial "rlriv-
ilig power" may lie noted in the road
v
i'h is being made to nehmen,
Lord Kitchener is still an rliinee
with a Roman eye for road.. It is tlif-
feeu't for the stranger to realize that
tootles to thio delightful resort, with
ata marvellously powerful sulphur
baths and other curative privileges.
is still imp••ssible by motor -and the
order that the reed should be ready
for inapeetion by May 1 has been re-
eetved with..gretificatton.
Electric Restorer for Mem
Phosphonol restores nere in b
to its propeveerry tensvion ; restores
vini and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual
weakness averted at once. Phosphene' will
make you a new ratan. Price 58 a box. or two for
55. Mailed to any address. The Scobell Drug
Co., 81. Catharines. Ont,
About once a week dip brooms in hot
soapsuds; it can be done on wash day
when the suds are at hand. It will
make the brooms both tough and flex-
ible, and will increase the wear of both
carpets and brooms. Put a screw -eye
in the end of the handle and hang up
the broom; that is the best way to keep
it. Patent holders may be bought, but
this answers as well. Always keep a
new broom for sweeping the carpets,
the old ones may be used for the out-
side stairs and yard, or have a coarse
broom for that purpose; never use the
same broom for both.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTO F I A
Lame back is usually caused by rheum-
atism of the mspcles of the back for
which you wil find nothing better than
Chamberlain's Liniment. For sale by
all dealers. :.1;. • II
Now is the time to get rid of your
rheumatism. You can do it by apply-
ing( hamberlain's Liniment and massag-
ing the parts freely at each application.
For sale by all dealers.
"I never could understand why more
farmers did not keep bees," says W.
A. Freehon in Farm Stock and Home.
".'here are some se constituted that
theywithin a mile of a
come dare not o e
hive, but the most of us are not so un-
lucky. Pew things are relished more
than stoney, and bought less. Any far-
mer may care for a hive or two without
much extra expense or bother. Get
the boys interested and encourage there
to increase the number of hives by
letting thein have everything they
Oahe in the line of profits,"
Had Palpitation of the Heart
OD D BAD SORE FORD YEARS
ZAM.I iJ C HAS HEALED IT! .
l� -•- a
Mrs. Wilson, 110 Wickson Ave,,
Toronto, says: "About four years ago
;i :')re epot appeared on the right
side of me' fare. This spot increased
is eizo until it became about half an
ilio li in diameter and very painful.
I went to a doctor, but the ointment
he rave Ino did not have any gond
e -i get. The sore continued to dis-
charge freely, and was most painful.
hot it cauterized, tried poultices
and all kinds of salvea, but it was
no good, and I continued to suffer
from it for four years!
"A sample of Zaln-hull was one day
given to me, and I used it. Although
the quantity was so small, it seemed
a
to fdo thmere Supsompe1Y.
good, so I purchased
ur
more box did mo mo e and more
had
r I a
, before ,delight, b e
and,to
do
good,my 5 ,
been using Zam-Buk threewee
weeks,
I
sawgwas going to heal the
i g
that t
sole. In less than a month it was
healed!
" I know a lady in the east of the
city, whoso husband suffered for
years with an open sore on his Ieg.
On my recommendation, Zara-Buk
was tried in that ease. The other
day, when I saw her, she told me that
it had healed the sore completely.
"My daughter, who lives in Leth-
bridge, Alta., has also used Zam-Buk
with the same satisfactory result. I
think it is, beyond all doubt, the
finest healing balm known."
Such is the opinion of all persona
who have really tried Zam-Buk. * It
is a sure cure for eczema, piles,
abscesses, ulcers, scalp sores, ring-
worm, cuts, burns, scalds, bruises,
and all skin injuries and diseases.
60c. box, all druggists and stores, or
post free from Zara -Bak Co., Toronto,
for price."In case of skin disease use
also Zam-Buk Soap, 26e. tablet,
Weakness and Choking Spells.
When the heart begins to beat irregu-
larly, palpitate and throb, beats fast for
z time, then so slow as to seem almost to
;top, it causes great anxiety and alarm.
W!ezn the heart does this many people are
kept in a state of morbid fear of death,
and become weak, worn and miserable.
To all such sufferers Milburn's Heart
anti Nerve Pills will give prompt and
i;.rmandttt relief.
Mrs. John J. Downey, New Glasgow,
N.S., writes: -"Just a few lines to let
you know what your Ieiilburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills have done for me. I
w1troubled with
weakness
and Pal
i-
toiott of the heart, would have severe
„holing spells, and could scarcely lie
down at all. I tried many remedies,
lett got none to answer my ease like your
l'itty. I can recotlunend them highly to
all having heart or nerve troubles."
Price 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for
$1.25. Por sal at all dealers or will be
mailed direct on receipt of price by
The 'r, Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Oat.
•t
THE AMERICAN DISEASE: -
Indigestion, Chrania and Acute, and the
Pioestive Organs.
Indigestion, a phase of dyspepsia
which has been called tbe American
disease, is very common, and its dis-
agreeable symptoms are but too well
known. Chronic Indigestion, or dys-
pepsin. Is very prevalent, and in med.
teal phrase an acute disease is opposed
to chronic in the sense that while a
chronic disease runs a long time the
acute form is attended with severe
symptoms and is likely to come speed•
sly to a crisis.
Acute indigestion, therefore, is a con•
dation in which the digestive organs,
because they are either naturally weak
or are worn out, overworked or tempo-
rarily abused, fail to perform their
functions and the whole system is
"outi
thrown of gear." This may be
due
P
timari1y
and
d
ir
etly t
o
overeat-
ing ea
-
iu or to eating improper food, to gor:
tug the stomach with inadequately
masticated food, to retarding its nor-
mal action with too much liquid or to
other local influences.
In cases of acute indigestion or dys•
pepsic there generally is intense pain,
often followed by sickness and vomit-
ing of the surplus or offensive matter
by which the stomach seeks to correct
the effects of abuse and regain a nor-
mal condition. But it does not always
succeed. Other measures of relief also
fail, the machinery breaks down, and
death ensues.
The main difference between chronic
dyspepsia and acute indigestion is that
one is slow death and the other quick.
The moral as to dietetic habits, eating
and drinking, is too obvious to need
pointing out. -Indianapolis News.
Stingy Husbands.
The tightwad drives the wife and
mother into the suffrage tents. Some
men with anger nearly smother when
asked for fifty cents. The housewife
works around like blazes, and when
she needs a yen, her husband springs
reproachful phrases: "Great eat Sco
tt1
More wealth again? You'll have us in
a sorry pickle your conduct's much
too fast; have you already spent the
nickel I gave you on Monday last? No
money left, you haven't any? You
need some shoe strings, Belle? Here,
you may have this hard-earned penny -
invest it wisely, "well!" No wonder
that the dames, disgusted, are kicking
in their tugs; no wonder plate glass
fronts are busted by wrathful lady
thugs. No wonder that the girls are
saying: "I'll go my way alone; 'twere
better earning money haying, and have
it for my own, than be the mistress of
a palace, to live in discontent, with one
who fairly breaks his gallus when
part-
ing from a cent!" Ten thousand wives
who live with misers are plunged it
dark despair; and if they join the bold
uprisers, the tightwads drove them
there. -Walt Mason.
LOOK HERE!
Positive cure for thick neck and
goitre, bitten by rabies, cancer, gravel,
gall stones, ruptures, corns, bunions,
cured, best blood purifier, cures pimp-
les, piles in worst form cured at home,
running sores; mail orders promptly at-
tended to. I will be at the Queen's
Hotel, Wingham, May 17th, hours 11
a. m. to 10 p, m. Don't fail to see me.
Also the 19 and 20 of each month fol-
lowing. If Sunday should fall on one
of the above days, I will be there the
say following.
Catarrh and Edzema Cured.
Mrs. S. F. Gibson & Son
112 Oxford St. (near Carnegie,s
Library.)
GUELPH, ONTARIO.
HAD VERY BAD
COUGH
And Tickling Sensa-
tion in Throat.
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine
Syrup Cured It.
AWED BY NAPOLEON.
Queer impression the Emperor Made
Upon Countess Potocka.
We waited rather long, and it must
was s not
be acknowledged our curiosity w
unmingled with fright. Of a sudden
the silence was broken by a swift ru-
mor, the wings of the door opened
noisily, and M. de Talleyrand advanc-
ed, with a loud and intelligible voice
uttering the magic word that made the
world tremble, "The emperor." Imme-
diately Napoleon made his appearance
and halted for a minute as if to be
admired.
So many portraits exist of this estou-
Ishing man, his history has been so
much written about, all the stories told
by the children of his old soldiers will
live so long, that the generations to
come will know him almost as well as
ourselves. But what will be difficult
tograsp is how deep and unexpected
tbo impression was which those felt
who saw him for the first time.
As for me, I experienced a sort of
stupor, a mute surprise, like that
which seizes one at the aspect of a
prodigy. It seemed to me that he wore
an aureole. The only thought I could
frame when I recovered from this first
shock was that such a being could not
possibly die; that such a mighty orgap-
ization, such a stupendous genius,
should never perish. I inwardly
awarded him double immortality. -
Prom the Memoirs of the Countess Po-
tocka.
Tho Pulse Watch.
Among the ingenious devices for the
physician may be mentioned a watch
constructed on the "stop" principle
whereby the number of pulse beats per
minute may be indicated. A push but-
ton is pressed at tbe beginning of the
count and again at the twentieth pul-
sation, when the cumber of beats per
minute is shown on a dial without the
necessity for calculation. Still another
push on the button brings the counter
back to the starting point. to the ordi-
nary method of taking the pulse the
observer Is obliged to do two things at
the same time --count the beats and
keep his eye on the second band of his
watch. With the pulse watch only one
operation is necessary, the counting of
the pulsation up to twenty, when the
push button is pressed. -New York
Press.
Miss C. Danielson, Bowsman River,
Man., writes: -"Last fall I had a very
bad cotitgh and a tickling sensation in
my throat. It was so bad I could not
sleep at night, so I went to a druggist and
told him I wanted something for my cold,
and he advised me to try Dr. Wood'i
Norway Pine Syrup which I did, and ate,
taking one bottle I was completely cured.
Let me recommend Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup to anyone who suffers from 1►
cough or throat irritation. a
Dr. Wood's Norway Pint- Syrup is
without a doubt one of the greatest cough
and cold remedies an the market to -day.
and so great has been its success there
to
are numerous preparations pu 1) to,
imitate it. Do not. be imposed upon b
taking one of these substitutes, btt
insist on being given "Dr. Wood's" whet
you ask for it. Price, 25 cents a bottle{
put up in a yellow wrapper; three pins
trees the trade mark; manufactured onljl
by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Totontt;
Ont.
English Earthquakes.
English earthquakes are not uncom-
mon, but we can rejoice that they have
decreased in severity, for the damage
done nowadays is as nothing compared
with the ravages wrought by early
English earthquakes. In 1580, for in-
stance, part of St. Paul's cathedral was
wrecked by an earthquake shock, and
at an earlier date Glastonbury abbey
had been completely destroyed. Staf-
fordshire, where the latest shock was
felt, would appear to be the earth-
quake area of England, for shocks
were also felt there in 1003. Even as
recently as 1884, however, an English
earthquake was severe enough to re-
quire a mansion house fund to repair
its ravages in the eastern counties. -
London Chronicle.
Complexion o
a FAlire"
You owe it to your
skin to give FAIRY
SOAP a test—it keeps
the complexion fresh,
clear, bright and healthful.
FAIRY SOAP is white;
and, being made from
edible products, it is just as
pure and good as it looks,
3
t.,
w-
. 5
-12
comes in a handy oval cake; it floats. It is
dainty, refined, delicate in perfume. It has
the appearance, odor and performance of a
high class product.
The price-- 5c •— is the only cheap
thing about FAIRY SOAP.
Made by
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
Montreal
"Have you a little 'Fairy' in
your ho
Subscribe For The
Times $1.00
a Year
London Street Beggars.
Speaking of the swarm of beggars
and "panhandlers" in the English me-
tropolis, the London Times says: "The
streets of London never fail to attract
the professional beggar and never dis-
appoint him. The Mendicity society
tells is that a beggar can earn more
than the wages of the average working-
man and that 'It is probably no exag-
geration to say that well over $500,000
is given away baphasard to beggars aid►
the streets of London every year,' "
Her Discovery.
"1 have made a discovery," deelareib
bride. : „►. . ,•
the,.
"Yes. 1 find one can cook as well ou
R stove as on a chafing dish. Really, I
was surprised." --• Louisville Courier-
JoUrnal.
Ise never wrought a good clay's worst
who went grumbling about it.- Qct
marl.
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